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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1977-11-18 - Orange Coast PilotFRIDAY AFTERNOON, NOVEMBER 18, 1977 . An&hei~ Cops N~IJ. Man ·I• Sesg P"'°"e ··c•per VOL. Jf, NO. m, 4 HC1'1C*I, • PAHi . ... Three Friends Killed Israelis Welcome f 1 Egyptians Entertainer Charo, left, and her titter, . Carmen Molina, both nattves of Spain. plant tandem ktaaes on the cheeka of U .8. Maglltrate Joseph W~d, who presided , ByGAaYGRANVILLE ... DlllY .......... A dazecl and clllortented San Clemente )'OUth, who crawled from the wreekace of an automoblfe accident that claimed three livn Tuesday night. wa&. found today wander· tnc aJ.cma 0rte1a Hichway Jn the ~nbl Due for Four In Death Caae I Guilty BlRlllNGBAM, AJ~ (AP)- A Jury today coovtcted Robert d dward ChambUu of flnt· e m\ll'(ler tn the death of ~ ... !. of tour black stria killed in ~ 1961 bom.blna ol a church u ... ceater ol d..U rtctm u. t1•1ty . Chambllss, a rormer Ku Jtlux lOan member, was sentenced to life imprisonment oo the Jury's recommendaticn. Asked by t.be Judlo whet.bet be had anything to say before sen· tenclns,Chatnblissreplled: "God mowa, your honor, sir, I never ln my life killed &r\)body. l ttner bombed tm)'thinf in my life. And I wu not dowa at the Sh.teentb Street Baptist Church." The jury of eight women and four men, including two black m ud~blactwoman,falled. Bt•st a Bu1111n er .. Cops TmJ. Som Indicted TIVERTON, R.I. (AP> - Police Sgt. Clinton C. Bigelow sp~arheaded an invesli1atioo ~•t led to this towl)'s blcgest burglary bust in two years. But for the sergeant, it also Jed to d14appointment. +l1he department announced ,_ nursday that the investigation resulted in indictments against eight adults, including Bigelow's two sons, and five juveniles. "I don't like it, to tell you the truth," said Bigelow. "But what are you going to do? Justice is justice." Chief Robert F. Washburn said t.he 13 people are charged with !stealing close to $.10,000 ln 18 months. Secret indictments came from Newport Superior Court. "Bigelow is a cop-a good one · and strictly a cop as far as I'm concerned," said Washburn in announcing the indictments. "In a small town, it can be bard for a local policeman who sometimes bas to arrest people he's known his •hole life. But if it falls that way, itfalls that way," The chief said Bigelow never asked to be taken off the case. "It's like everyone," Washburn said. "You have kids, they have ups and downs. What ai'e you gonna do? .. The indictments stem from burglaries of a medical center, three private homes and a used c~ dealership. •• Robert Bigelow, 27, and another man were accused of stealing $.5,000 wo~h of antique weapons from a Tiverton home and Kevin Bigelow, 19, w.- charged with stealins $900 in tires and clocks from Town Motors. A bench warrant was blued tor Robert Bigelow after be failed to appear tn court. Kevin Bigelow pleaded innocent and was released on $1,000 pel'IOllal recognizance bail pending a Dec. Strial. . . Theater, R1inning Give Healthy Highs Sunday 's best stories talk about the healthy "highs" that come from running and Crom · participating in community theater. WORLD'S A STAGE-What is jt that draws people into com· munity theater work? The Daily Pilot's Tom Titus Im local ac· ti>rs, actresses and produotion l)eople explain the lure of the footlights. · COLD CURE? -No, but . rpodern medical science ia on the traal of drugs that help alleviate the effects of Ou Yirus. An As.. sociated Press report looks into Fr .. P.,,e Al ,. . DAZED •.• to its fatal skid while its driver was attempting to make a abarp iurn on a highway curve while :·travelin& at a hlgb rate of ;ipeed." · Killed in the accident were l>avld Border, 21, of 108 Avenida Pelayo, ts. Deborah Lynn Miller, 17, of 113 Avenlda Do- tnlnguez, and Terrence Ryan Palma, 21, of 320S Avenida del Presldente. The CHP officer said the three v\cUma were obviously kllled on impact. He identifted Border u driver of the car. However, the officer said, ft ls believed the light weight l)JQrty ear belonged to Miss Miller and <be journey from San Clemente fo about three milea into liveraide County along Ottec• IUghway was a trial nm for her new car.· Rae'• t'4ro and one-half day "1"e•nderhlgs alone O!'tel• lli1hway didn't end witll s.bort.ly • before 10 a.m. today whell a 1ti1bway Patrol Oftlcer rad!Oed B an ambulance after tlnding youna man "slouched a1alnst bC>ulder a short distance from •roa41n.)'.'' ( SlJND.4l"S BEST.) new drugs now in experimental use. RUNNER'S WGH-It comes when you "feel like an animal ruoninR throuih the woods.•·· Runner James Fixx explains what happens to those who stick with running long enough to feel , its sublime aspects. ESOP EXAMINED -A rarely used plan originally sold as a way to make capitalists of us all, has found new uses, 00"1 as an employee benefit aad. as & way to booat busin~s. TI:iree ;Deny 'Track Fraud SAN DIEGO (AP) -A man and two women have pleaded ln· nocent to charges of defrauding the Agua Calient~ racetrack forei1n book of $39,000 with a sopbisUcated scheme im'olving radio broadcasts of race results. The three indicted by the San Diego Cot.mty Grand Jury are Ann Davis, 40; Ebbra Hullaby, 22, and Warren Jerald Heston, 44, allot San Diego. The trand Jury also indicted two other SaD Dte10 men and Mleuel Rodriques of Tijuana, who was find at Caliente after allesedly movine his clock back two mlnutea to take Jate bet.a from one of the men. A penon WU etaUoned at Santa Anita to tnnamit raoe result.I to a re!Md office in Arcadia. pl'Oleeutors •aid. . to reach a verdict 'nlunda1. Chambliss, 73, ls char1ed with lbe death ot Carol Denise McNair. She wu 11 when she died in an explosion durtna Sun· day ro,ornlng worisbip servlees ot the Slxteentb Str.et Baptist Church ID Birminpam. Chambliss, who bas been free on $20,000 bond, is also charged m the deaths of the three other strls killed ln the blast-Addie Mae Collins, Carol Robertson and Cynthia Wesley, all 14. Miss McNalr'a caM flr8t on court docket. "Let's show the world that a murder use has been solved by the people of Alabamai.'._' laid At. tomey General Bill JSUley in closing rell)arkl totbe jury. Baxley told the jury to "10 back there in the Jury room and give Denise McNair a birthday presenl" The 36-year-old attorney general aaid in view of the testimony in the four-day trial, ''There's no more speculation about what caused the blast. The indictment reads dynamite or other explosives but our-wtt- n esses have testified it was dynamite beyond a stodow or doubt." Art Hanes Jr., the defense at. torney, said the state's case wu purely circumstantial. "ll 's the same old stuff that got Bob Chambijss in this court 14 years ago and acquitted," Hanes told the jury. ChambliSJ was arrested Oct. 9, 1963, on a cbarae of possession ot dynamite. Court records •bo• be was tried andfoundlnnoeent. The Sixteenth Street Baptist Church case was reopened in lt'll • when the P'Bl agreed to cooperate in the proseeution. Baxley said the state was not contending that Chambliss was the only one who bad anything to do with the Sept. 15, 1913 u· plosion. He told report.en after the trial that Chamblias was tJie ringleader of a group of in en~ committed the crime. . · "Why is Chambliss the only one ti e re?" Baxley asked. "Because in Alabama we try them one at a time. You've cot to ~tart somewhere.'• W-UllerDue •• To Viait in Siate'a No rth B1 tbeAuoda&ed Pftls Cold wiods~ mow and rain are expected lo parts of Northern Ca1Uom.1a, late today u the re- 1100 gew tt.11.lnt dOH of wlntery weather. The National Weather Service .said a cold air mus jlwiclnl south from Alaska coul cap the north Sierra with snow down to 2,000feet. A 30 percent chance of rain ii reported for San Francisco tonight and Saturday. AncJ blustery northwest windt, blow- ine up to25 miles an hour, are ex- pected to rake the region. The weather service al.id the cold air now will make tta heaviest mark in tbe •tate'a nortbem tip and the nattoa•a nortbwest, cutttn1 east before unleashing fully Offr mott ot California. Heavy stonm were reported iii Montana and the Rockfa eatb' today u the cold air beaded south toward Callfornia. · Weatherman Bob CaldweU said the cold air flow'• arrlnl would be a bit earller than norm al as wintry activity usually begins in December. lSALT Pact Seen NEW YORK (AP) -Chances of obtaining a strategic arms limitation •&reement In the near future have improved because of important SoYfet eoace..lclm tA> the United Statee concernine tho letting and deployment-of crulu mil1Ue1, the N'n•York TUne1 r.. ported today. B1n.Aaoelatecl.Pftjla ., World comment on the imminent Yls1t'Oi.~·1 :Anwar Sadat to Jarael ran&"ed from "daring .. and ·~ve" to •-un. for1ivab1e.'' but many netJSpapers anCI poU~lea¢ers qreed the weekend trip would have dramatic l.mpact. . 4'Tbe fpeed wit.It which Mr. Sadat ls mo I ~G indicaUon of both the darina and the dangers of bis e~1-." laiA tbe conservative Britiab nenpaper, 'the Dally Tel~b. · THE TRIP, BEGINNING SATURDAY, wlll come ~a than two weeks after Sadat brought up the idea ln bis parliament. It will be the first time an Arab leader was visited Israel since Its In· dependence ln 1948. • '"The q~ wbkb now looms above all ebe la: Can and will Mr. (Prime Mi.dbter Menahem) Begin rise to tbeo.cu~ Will Mr. Wat, after all be ls risking, be senl away lroca Jerusalem emgty.bancfecl· •.. ?" The Telegraph asked in an edttorial. .. If llr. Sadat ls humiliated . . . it would probabb mean not only his dowafall, but the approach or a new war. l1rael will nevet have a better chance," the paper said. f ' IN ITALY, ROME'S LEFI1ST daily 11 Masaigero echoed: "The EgypUan president is putting everything at stalte~he re· turns from Jerunlem with full hands, be will 10 on tory as the leader of th4: Arab world. If he returns with ~~ty ands he will have to~..,. lde4 Of auldllla E1Jpl""41 !l>e oCbet <Oun· trirp. :~ ~e.";,~ ·~··-.-~-... Jak.ftt •=eel=~-~~'"!• • that lf Israel mikes =ve ~. 0 Jt cm brtDC a 100 year peace... • • • • ' . " BtJT 1HB U.DICAL, PAN·Ab81ft' 1ovemm• Ot Lib7a branded the trip "ao unforatvable dfjp-ace an4 crtme ~ecub• th• put, present and fbtare Senerati<N ottJt• Arab natiOD ... Libya, •hlcb bafewfed wttb~ror inonthi 9\'el' c.lro'a relaU.eJ7 conciliatory poUcy tow el. threatened Jo break off diplomatic relatJons wltb de1.nand Its uputs1on from the Arab League if Sad!lt 1oe;s to Jeru1alem.\ . copies ol uae Maarlv Qtwl&>•Per witb bold red belidliJUd ID Arabic and Hebrew ft!adlnl •'Welcome J>l' .. t .. ;;.daL" · In J1malll•, Stypt, Sadat prayed for peace wttJW:a 12 mllea of ma ell front lines. "God 10 with yOU .. ' the COD• greptloo dUiDtecl lJ> a mc.q,ue on th• bank Of &he Sues CanaL The Jara~U govemment an· no.meed tJW Sadat'• ttmerary tncludo -~to the ChUrcb of the HOl)' Sel>blther. the tradJ. tJonal IJteof c&rbt'S.tomb, aDd a tour oi YacJ Vubem, the •aliriiial monument t.O vlethm of the NUi boloca~ . Sai!at Will Viilt the cburehSUn· day; aft# wanhJppiJil at tb8 ·Al Aqsa DJC)lqae, Eat. Jtr\IU.leiil 'a hallowed Moslem tbrine • few hundred Judi from the cfm'cb.. The EOPtian leader._ 1uide at Yad Vaahem will be Prime Minister MeoabenlBqiD:. ·BOVNN ••• Prasadam Distributors lnc., an investment Orm linked tO the Hare Krilbna rdi81 •~t. Held in th• jall on cbarces d murder. eonai>Jr•~. robbery a~ are Jwry Peter F•orl, • • or uan Brook burst 5'.: Anthony Marone Jr., 23, aod Raymond Steven Reaco, 28, both of 10121 Mer· ritnac Drive uul all of Hmit· inltOn Beach. Co-defendant Alexander Kulik. 28. who listl hls ad at S Un· da Isle, Newport Beacb, ls tree today after postina $750,000 ball. A hunt continues today for the four " defenda.n nq are ldentifled as: KuUk't wlf e, Elsie Caban Kulik. 28. ol tb~ same NtWport Beacb ......_; J~ Sb'elloil Davh, •ho knowo as Drdbevnta, ace aod ad4re111 uno known; Joseph Gabriel Fedorow Id, alias Gupta, ace and actiams unknown and Ro1 Christophel' Blcbar«, al9o known a R . DrN 11• u4 u; d unmown. Tbe to~ b~ defendant& ai'Hl KUU are~ u prtn- cip&l iD the WaaiMSllm QPen· tion. The indicU:n.ent refiects the dis· trict attomey's cledslcm to seek the death penalty for Fiori who authorities allege shot Bovan to death Oct. 22 ouulde El Ranchito restaurant in Newport Beacb. Bovan was abtJt times. Fiori. lleaco and Marone haw •. been identified by the proseeo- Uon u beinl liDked wltb or- ganized crime elements heacl- quartered on the East Coast. Court records con.tab\ the al· le1ed lldQpsaiotl ol "°'1 tbat he was the man wbo pumped nine bul1.et9 from a 9 mm pfstol into Bovan. Cou~ records 1upportin1 the indlctm• aUe1e Uaat investors in the Pruadam oraanlzaUon drew several hundreds of thousands of dolliU'I from in- ternational drug trafficking and invested the money In a number of Oranae County b11sinesses. Affidavits on rue at.ate that Flori, Marone -Resco were hirfd by Prasad.an\ after large swm of D)Oney '"'e allegedly embezzled from several firms. Police claim that the three hi.red men were additionally ex· tortlbg money from Prasadam investors. Police rePorts on file indicate thtt the trio obtained money f rOtlt jnnstoh tdentilf~ H Robert Shea llJ¥I Stanton KJeftet .. Both men disappeared at about the tlmeott.beBov m .Po ~ ~· Shta an 'Kieffer kldn e4 Kulik, a partner in tM op~r~Uont anct hel4 hi i $1CIO.oootn ransom. the indictment allefes that aU eight defendants then N!taUated. by deciding to eliminate BoVmi, Shu and Kieffer and wen Ille·· ceQfuJ lD Uiae.HI BoY~ Police ~ still ..ee"ktfta Shea and l<ieff er as rqat.tri•l wit· nesaes 1n the complex ease. The tnd.ictment contahrs tbe statement that Flori. MeJ"Ofte and aeseo met BOvan ollltlde El 'Ranchito whcite Fiori thOt. Nm nino times. 'Die IUD was OuvJrn into the Upptt NeWport Bay and Jat•r recovered b)' Newport poflee. The Grand Jury beard testlnioqy frqQJ a ft'llftb'er of Newport oft!cen as well u ad· vertuin,C etecuti¥e.S Byron Uncle and Wtlllarp trown, attorney Sidney Lestfr and Prank RC)af, a former ~ate" bl Ftoti, llelCO and lfarone. Linde and Kirir were owners~ a now-dt!Cunct adverti!ln.t qea- cy ti«I to a bUliDea venture tn whlcb Praadam wu invest.dut. ( 8 a J • i iJ s f( h a tJ p .. g c b fl F u fj 1 A tl " A $; cl A rulln.I that the Oran1• Coua.ty Dlatrlrt Attom y'a otOce wu l'illty of contllct of lnternt ln C• tJona that led to tho tndlclmen ol SUpervi.sors Ralpb Diedrich aDd PblUp Anth<>ny and two codefett· dant.1 ts beinic appealed today. The Fourth Dltilrict Court of Ap- peals in Sun llemardlno la now rnulllng an appeal Muthorlzed by Dlatrlct Attorney CeclJ Hicks a1ain1t the recent rulinJ 9f Torrijos' Actions Emlorsed by'Duke' Act.or John Wayne. an outspoken supporter of the con- troversial Panama Canal trea~1 bu wired Panamanian General Omar Torrijos coniratwaUDJ him for bis "frank· ness and open.mindedness with our aena~ committee." THE TELEGltAM, sent last Satur· day, also commended Torrijos' "pa- tience wtth aome of OW' leadership who would uae this aenalUve aituaUon for poll Uc al eJCPed,leacy." Said Wayne. a frequent visitor to Panama: "I think your actions will Im· press a great number of Americans and persuade them of the honesty and decen· , cy of your intentions and the di&nity of Touuos the Panamanian people." The Newport Beach resident, who several weeks ago t•am e o~t publicly in favor of the treaty, said in an interview · Thursday that earlier reports of his support were mislead· m g .. "MY ORIGINAL statement that em· brotl ctl me m this s1tuaUon was an in· noc uow. telegram to Gen. Torrijos. ··When I heard negotiations were In process l sent him a telegram sayine ·congratulations and best wishes for a good relationship bet ween our countries.• .. At the time I had no idea the treaty "us ~ood or bad I hadn't made up my mind onc wayorthcother." Wayne said critic al letters written to WAYNR him did one thing: "It made me read the treaty and make a judgmenton it. .. l''or another look at John Wayne and his views on life in Newport Beach. war movies, Bob Hope and memories, see Featuring, page B·l . itron Announces e-election Bid Del" PIMt IUlf ...... TO RUN AGAIN Robert Citron ·-· -·-·-- LB Home Robbed Of Sporting Goods ·A burglar who entered a Laguna Beach area bome via the unlocked door took sports equip- ment valued at more than $1,000. Orange County 1berlff'1 ol· tlcers deputies said the Intruder took golf cluba, a eolf bas. two ten.- nls rl\cketa and a bowline ball from the home of Harlo Jamee Boyle, ~ of 2$ Emerald Bay. while he was away from tbe pre- inilf!. Oranee County Tax CoUector· Treasurer Robert Citron said Tburscay be will seek re-election in 1978, Citron was first elected tax col- lector ln 19'10. It was in 1974 that. the county Board of Superviaors com blned the offices of tax collec- tor and treasurer and appointed Citron treasurer. The same year be was unop- posed when seeking election to the combined posts. When announcing bis 1978 can- didacy 1bundAa)', Citron aald be was maldna an 481'1)' announce- ment to scotch rumors tbat be would seek statewide office next year. He al80 boest.ed of towerina his office's bud1et in six of the past seven yean while the workload "has increased dramatkalty." "Coat rec1Uc1ion bas been ec- compll.abed by using eatabu.hed business methods in the opera- tion of my office. We operate this office as lf it were a profit malt· ing organization." the tax collec- tor-treuurer said. CitrOD said as part of that operation hla oftfoe bu seven fewer employees now than It had iD lm.wDthoulb the amount ol taxes eollected annually .. hu almottdoubled llnce then.•• Oil Prieea Eyed WASHINGTON CAP> Despite the Sbab of Iran '1 promlae towork tor a.tnae oa oil . prices far at leut a year, tM Carter ~n is nactlq · ·cautloualy met watDI that tome 1 oil ~ are 'talklnl about "ver)' au,•"mcreaM:L clal cOD1ultant Gene Conrad, '3, • aQd Dr. William Kott, 55, are ac- cused ot vlolaUng state pollUcal campaign •nd financial dls- closurelaws. Defense lawyers araued ln the hearing before Judge Schwab that Hicks' relationship with the county Board of Supervisors in re- cent years indicated his prejudice against Anthony and Diedrich. Hicks arguea ln the appeal that no such conclusion can be drawn Two Sile Actress' Estate from the mvesU1atlon Into al· leged ~mlnal acUvltiet that led to th(\ indictment or th• two supervisors. The appeal points out that former congressman Andrew Hinshaw and former county supervlaor Robert Battin were convicted despite similar argu- ments that they were the taraets of Hicks' prejudice. It further araues that th• •P· pearance of Hicks and Assistant Ft!d!y, Nol/ember 11. 1'77 DlltrictAttorney Michael Caplnl as wllniiiiidurfiii the tnal of the four detendantl cannot legitimately be re1arded by the detense s acUons lnclloatins btas and pl'eJudic:e. Judge Schwab conceded durihS the hearl.nl that be could t1nd no e\lidence of actual prejudice but told tbe proucutlon that there was ''the appearance of preJ· udice." DAILY PILOT A:f He aad he baffd his rullq OD wbathecalled •<pomrttalbiiUCI to the cllltrlct auorney '• o!Uee· tlvlty in.huent in bl• official Utt pertonal Nl&Uonahlpa with lim'e' of the def erK1urt!J. •" . Hlcka warned alter the appeal wufiledthatJudgeScbwab•anat· lng, If upheld, would result ln "an effective layer of insulation for the Ule1al acts of public of· ficlala." I I Five Ski ~Resorts I To Ope.n NF;W YORK CAP) -Joan Crawford's mind was "distorted DENVER (AP) -~ by intense pain or clouded by Colorado ski resorts ~ill be alcohol" when she signed her th,b weekend after a storm that will. according to two adopted dropped more than a foot of snow . children cut out of the late ac· lntbeColoradohi&hcowitry. tress's estate. . Berthoud Pus aid area, wblcb Miss Crawford died May 10 at operated laat weekend under the age of 69. In the will she marganal condltlons, bad 18 signed Oct. 28, 1976, she provided inches of new snow Thursday and. for trust funds of $77,500 each for willopenfortheseuonSaturday. two adopted daughters, Cathy Loveland and Eldora aid areas LaLonde and Cynthia Jordan. are open on a dally basis. and left the rest of her $2 million Keystone will open today l.Dd estate to charities, chief among Winter Park on Saturday. them the Molton Picture Country Meanwhile, a weather re- Home and Hospital in Woodland searcher with the National· Htlls Center for Atinospbere Research T h e other two a do pt e d in Boulder says the biah·altitude children. Ct)ristina Koontz of weather pattern that caused' last Ta rza na and Ch ristopber winter's snow drought bas notre- Crawford of Greenport, N.Y. appeared this year. filed suit Thursday in state Roland Madden aaid a high Supreme Court asking that a jury pressure area over the West : trial be held and that the will not Coast and Rockies last year be admitted to probate. steered storms north over If the will were not admitted to Canada and then south over the , probate, Miss Crawford would be easterntwo-thirdsoftbecountry. deemed t.o have died without a That weather pat.tern is not will, and the estate would be <Uvided equally between the four nearly as strong this year, be children. said. Mrs. Koontz and Crawford "It's more Of' less been break- charaed that their mother suf· ing down fairly regularly," be rered from "an acute and ad-; said. , vanced cancerous condition" at the time the will was signed, a AP....._.. ;The Colorado Sid industry suf. d · 1 b · d 'SZ'.is tor Ro,,,.•-rered a 39 percent ctecllne tn busi· con It on t ey sa1 was ag. ..: S ... ~ nesa laat year because of a lack gravated by the fact that Miss Crawford was a Christian Scien· Actor Rock Hudson, celebrating his 52nd birthday, gets of snow that curtailed operations·· tast and took no medication and birthday kisses from models Marlena Amey, left, and at many ski areas. , was not under a physician's care. Kathy Clarke before assisting in cutting the cake. The In the flve years prior to last ~ In addition, the complaint party was a surprise, given 'Thursday at Universal year, business had been iDcreas-' claimed that Miss Crawford bad Studios by cast and crew during a break in the shooting inl at a rate of about ts percent a been "a very heavy and habitual of "Wheels," a 10-hour NBC novel for television. year. COMUmttofalcohol'' andh~~=======~~=====;~=======~~~~=======~ not left her Manhattan apart-• ment for two years before she died. Mrs. LaLonde and her husband, Jerome, the complaint chareed. "took deliberate advan· tagc of decedent's seclusion and weakened and distorted mental and physical condiUon to in· sinuate themselves" into Miss Crawford'• favor. The couple also "deliberately worked to turn Miss Crawford's mind against contestants,'' ac· cording to the complaint. ·14 Exhibited · Bodies Buried HIGHLAND PARK, 111. CAP> -Fourteen fetuses and de- formed newborns that were once a part of a carnival exhibit billed as the "World's Strangest Babies," have been buried in a small township cemetery. Clerl)' from three faiths of- fered terse prayers Thursday for what one called "God's unknown children" -cblldren who were once shown preserved in formaldehyde In glass jars labeled "Cyclops," "Frog Girl'' and .. Elephant Nose Baby." As tbe tiny plastic foam ca•keta were lowered into a sintle vault the· Rev. Richard Hunt Hid, 41We also bury the idea that human life should be t 1rote1Q~f spectacle . . . that human :-re ii cheap, or to be ex. ploit.ed.' . Presents THANKSGIVING HOLIDAY . ··PREVIEW featuring •.• LIVING CHRISTMAS TREES If you're tblnkinl of ••1oin1 natural" this aeuoa, be aure to browao tbrou1h our vaat selection of sheared Monterey, rt:/· Aleppo, and Italian Stoae Pines. . You'll find all alt.a h'om 2 It. table.tops to 8 ft. apeclmem of fi.neat quality llvin& &l'8el JUH.ed' to our Southern Callroral• climate. = s29i':: TRIM•A• TREE SHOP Be sure to visit both locations and .J>review . two of Orange County's finest collectiona of holiday d~or. You'll find a dazzling · array of novelty ornaments in hand-painted woc>cl, stained elass, fine pewter, hand-sewn fabric and crochet to name but a few. You'll find everything from centerpieces, music boxes, feathered birds, to reautar decor items such as &lass ball ornaments, tree tops, electric llgbtl, and garlands .of all types •. Be sure to take advantage of our s~8l closeout section at both locations featunng. selected ornament.s & decor ~ta special a•Yiills of at leut 50% off. .. 1 TO TllE CO•Ps: Clearly, thll b11 bee a louly •eek for public imaae of the United Statea Marino Corps which, only el1ht days qo, celebrated its birth· day . .Just think bow you'd Wee ll . Imaam-. 11 Juat after celebrat- ing your natal day , the worldwide wire services moved a pbotoaral>h to everybody ln the globe 1bowln1 you 1itlln1 where you shoaldn 't be eitUn1. Next, one ol your business as- sociates gets accused In the publlc prints or s etting an employee atlre. AND INTHE FINAL indigruty, you 10 out for a little target prac- tice and get accused of shooting at certain parties who are breathinat and presumed friendly. You .might beiln to think your birthday waa a hex. Alas, all ot this has indeed been heaped upon our U.S Marine Corps in the last rew days. The photo appearing on the wires showed some Marines in a depot fiopped In chairs reserved for, for goodness sake, han- dicapped persons. Then ln San Diego, a drill m· structor is facing pre-trial hear- ing on char1es that he mistreated a recruit by firing up his pants leg with lighter fluid. AND FINALLY, off Key West, Fla., we were given a tale wherein two Marine attack jets apparently mistook an old, beal· up salvage ship for their target vessel and pumped a few rocket shots at it, to the discomfort of the treasure hunters. The final indignity there was that the pilots wer~n 't even shooting very straight and missed everything. Thus just after birthday week. the Marine Corps has certainly taken its knock/I. It's high time we said something nice about the marines. FOR ONE THING, t he Marines have graced our regJon for a long time as good neighbors at El Toro Marin~ Corps Air Sta- tion, the helicopter base and Camp Pendleton. ~ ou read about the few bad ap- ples maybe ; but little credlt&oa to the Marines when they turnout their helicopters and stand bf with e mergency medical services when two of our private- airplanes crash ln midair otf Crystal Cove, as happened only this week. NOBODY TURNS DOWN Leatherneck dollars when O\e Marines from our nearby in- stallations roll into town to visit our department stores. used car lots, amusement paru or other business establishments. We're happy to take thelt rent money, too. And how polite the Marines have been while we ea1erly twist their official arrn1 to 1ive up their land holdin11 for 1urfln1 beaches, parka, playgrounds, and even a su11ested com· mercial jet airport. OF COU88E, thin1s cbllftle when tbe world 1ets war-Uke. We all love the Marines then. It'• juat lite Rudyard Kipling wrote about civilian hostllity toward the British Tommy: "For it's TommJI thia, an' Tommt1 that. 'an 'Chuclc 'im out, tM bn.Ut!' But It's '&Mor of 'ia Count~' when the gum btofn to abooe. • • '"~· HowimW ,,, ••n 60ntroVersY Opens sex .Bias session . HOUSTON CAP> -Forted lrom t.hi •Pirlt ot 51 1tat. mtet- lnss and !Urther heated by con- servatlvea' clalma or under· rtpresentation, tbe National Women'• OoAferenc:e is openln&' here to Uy to determine bow to end sexual dlacriminaUon in tbe United States. About 2,000 delegates have been elected or appointed to work on an aeenda on women'• 1,r;.b- ltm1 for 1ubmiNio11 to 1· dent Carter and to Coner .... Th'ey will be joined at tbe lour· Infection Kills 2nd Twin Girl day meetln1 by u many aa 11.000 . economics and reliaton. obaerven. TUE CONFE&ENCS IS TRE COM ISSION on UM "notblna but• phony fesUval fot Observanc, of International feminiata," Elaine DoMelly. a Women'• Year la 1pouortna the spokeswoman for a coali$lon conference. Th• ao'Vernment called the Cttlzena Review Com· supplied ~ mllllon to pay for the mlttee, cor.nplained Thursday. conference and Ute separate .. The elecUona wu. ri91ed. state and territorial meetings The resolutions were railroaded. where delegates were elected. The whole thing was sham from The federal money Is a rallying the beginnini," she said. potnt for anU·f emlnlst crou,pa • But IWY presiding offtceT and :wbocbar1etbatnelthertbeeleet-former cong~sswoman Bella ed nor appointed dele1ate1 Abzug described the session as repreaent tho mal.a1tream or "the most diverse meeting" ever American women. held "because or the democratic Tbe JWY commlsalon chose at-way in wblcb the state delega- Jar1e dele1ate1 to balance del· tions were chosen. eiauons that were not balanced accordlnf to aie, race, ·•WOMEN CAME FROM every place and from every hope and every despair to aee what It is they could do by coming together. They come here~ pro- vide an opportunity for America to complete "its commitment t.q democracy," a aid M•. Abzua. LITTLEROCK,Ark. (AP)-A bloodstream tntecUon hatt taken the life of Ferra Hope, the 2. month -old girl who made medical history by aurvivln1 an operation that separated her from her twin sister. Dr. Steve Golladay, attendlni physician to the otherwise un- identified girl, would not com· ment on the infant's death Thurs- day because or unspecified "criticism and pressure" from the LitUe Rock medical com- munity. Eleanor Smeal, president of the National Organization for Women and an IWY com· mi11ioner, said opponenu or the conference "are on the outside because they were rejected in their home states.'' A,. . ..,..... MILUONAIA! CLEAAl!D OF MURDER CHARGE Glrtfrtend Karen Matt• Kl•••• T. CuUen D•vl1 A spokesman for Arkansas Children's Hospital said the ln· fant did not respond to an· tiblotics. F~rra Hope and ber •ii· ( INSHORT J ter were born Sept. 14 at El Dorado with one trunk, two heads, two legs, two normal mm-.., __ .... arms and a third arm between ,,.... nwr.u .,. ........ the heads. Farmer's daughter Marie Bribe Tale Dt1e'I Ann-Catrln Staviris was WASHINGTON <AP > _ mowing hay last summer Hancho C. Kim, a Washington-when she got a call asking area businessman indicted in the her to substitute for Miss South Korean influence-buying Sweden in the Miss World case, reportedly baa started contest. Last night in Lon- negotiating with House in· , don she won the crown. vestigators to tell what be knows about bribes and gitta tc U.S. of· ficials. The Washington Post said to- day that Kim and b1a laWyera were seen leaving a Kouse com· mittee room Tbunday. after a private, 2\4.a-bour meetin1 with staff members of the Hou.ae ethics committee. B•efllfl Gean v,, SEAITLE <AP> -Production lines at the Boeing Co. will be operating at full throttle during the coming weeks to mue up for time lost during the macblnlata' 45-day strike, a company spokesman says. • . About 24,000 union mem-. were to begin reporting for work today at the world'• tar.est manufacturer of commerdal jeUiners following overwbelmlnf acceptance Tbursday of the com- pany's contrut offer. Drleer~ ~MERICUS, Ga. (AP) -Bud· dy Cochran, convicted of ram· ming bis sporta car tilto a Ku Klux Klan rally In President Carter's hometown; was aen- tented to 12 yeara in priaon and eiaht years on probaUon. "I've aone through the ~ days of my life with no friend,,, no one to talk to lnsof ar as f rtendsbip ts concerned. I foWMt that au my friends had left me," Cochftan tald Thunday after bis stntenc"'' by Superior Court Judie WUUam "·Blanks. 5 Teen-agers Charged With Skull Thefts NEW YO'RK (AP) -Five t~n­ a1era have been charged with 1tealln1 akulla from maUJoleums in two cemet.riee for sale to membera ol a withcnlt "coven." Queens Diltrlct Attorney John Santucci announced the arrests Tb\ll'tdlY nllht after the second skull robbery tn Jess than a monta was dlacovered earlier ln the day.Min the previous inci- dent on Oct. 23, the stolen skull waa that of a woman. SBOR~Y BEPOaE Santuc· cl •s announcement, »Olice m the Bronx i'eported anOtlier crlm dis· covery. Police called to a 1uppondly vacant apartmen by malil· · tenance workers found an altar decorated with a human akul1 and other booes, a aroat lkull, homt, feathers and dried blood. The latest crypt robbery OC• culTid betweens a.m. and 7 a.m. Thursday at Calvary Cemetery. Workmen diacovered the bronze door ot a mausoleum bad been toroed open, a casket dracged ouutae, and plec .. of tbe shroud str•,vn about. The skull was mis· sina trom the cuket. Millionaire Cleared 'Probably' Kno'!s Wb;o Killed Stepda~ter AMARILLO, Texas <AP ) - Millionaire industrialis t T Cullen Davis, acquitted of the murder of bis stepdaughter, says bf! "probably'' knows the identity of the real killer but won 't reveal <prosecuton) ftndout who it is. "I guess there will always be people who thtnk l did it . . . I ltnow I didn't do it," said Davis, 44. it. "I CAN'T EXPlAIN bow at. Davis, cleared Thursday of the feels. it feels good,'' Davis said at murder charge by a jury of nine n victory party attende4 by hia men and three women, was free defense team. state District on $650,000 bond while awaiting Judge George Dowlen and a disposition of one more murder member of the jury that found charge and two cbarees of at· him innocent. tempted murder durlni a shoot· The jury, which heard in~ spree at tbe Davis mansion in testimony t~ more than 3~ Fort Worth on the ni1ht of Aug. 2, months, deliberated Just owr uns. four hours before returning the verdict. · PRqSEClJTORS SAID they "Cullen, I love you," sobbed were not sure what their next Davis' girlfriend. Karer> Master. move would be In their case as she embraced hlm seconds against Davia, who bu 1pent 14 after Dowlen read the verdict: months in Jail. "Not euilty." After sayin1 he mleht know the killer's identity, Davis said: "I THREE KEY STATE wit· would not supply anybody the nesses identified Davis as a name of the killer • , . Let them .. "gunman in blac)" who klDed bis stepdaughter, Andrea Wllbom, 12, and Stan Farr, 30, Uv.;-in lover of Davia'.estranged · wife, Priscilla. Mr's. Davia and a visitor to the mansion. Gus GavrelJr.,22, were wounded. , There were no wKnesses to the shooting of the girl, but the ~te linked the bullets that killed Farr to those that killed Andrea and coupled that clrcumstanlial evidence with the testimony of Mrs. Davis, Gavrel and Beverly Bass. Gavrel 's girlfriend, who a&id it was Davia Who 1bot at them and Farr. Davis' defense team had aimed its guns at the credi~ of the prwecuUon'a wltnesaea, eapeclally Mra. Davi.I. Defense attorney Richard "Racehorse" • Haynes srllled Kre. Dam abOut her lovers and partle. at. tbie hilltop mmton wbe.re, accord- till to teatlmony, druea and sex were easlly available. ' 1 A Pre-Christmas Sales Opportuni,y FQ~ Yo~! SAN LUIS OBISPO <AP) ,._ Twebty-:.even pa11en1en escaped serious bijury \fben a tommuter plane 1kldded1 to a ~ on 1 !.'> nose after ltl front· landfn1 i:car collapsed. The acc1deot occurred Thurs· diy evening, shortly alter the two-engine Swift A.IN turboprop took off from here en route to San f'ra ISCO The pilot reLu.rned to San Lula Obispo "'hen a warnin1 U1ht showed that tbe plane's nose •heel hJ<l not retracted com- plete!} JtoinE%peeted H} The Auoclated Presa A C.1llforrua stranaer -rain - la e' pl'clcd to pay a visit to the a1-t1.· ~ northwest corner today STA.TE nd then drift south for the eeki.'nd. The National Weather Service said an Alaskan weather front ~hould drop more than one-half of an inch o( rain near the California-Oregon border today and Saturday. Si lldfttt Raped . SAN DIEGO (AP) -A San Diego City College student was kidnapped and raped at eun· point. then left locked overnight in the trunk of her car before someone heard her muffled cries for help,policesay. The 3l·year·old Golden Hilla housewife was found about 7:30 a.m. ThursdllY by a resident of the Loma Portal apartment com· plcx, officers said. llelltterfl Bo•hd RODEO (AP) -An under· gro.und terrorist group has claimed responsibility for a bomb attack on a Union Oil re· finery. The New World Liberation Front claimed responsibility for the Thunday bombing at the re- fmery. Auet ... L11eratl1'e · ' LOS ANGELES (AP> -A three-day aocUon of almost 500 works of art netted the Los Angeles County Museum $1,538,580, officials have dla· closed. SAN JOSE STUOENTS T'ERRIFllD OF RAPIST Shet1 Qulnl•n, cen•, Refu••• Night Ct••M• Students Terrified Of Campus Rapist SAN JOSE CAP) -Joyce Swanson wears running shoes to class. She fears she may have to nee a rapist on the 1S7·acre campus ol San Jose State University. "When I dressed this mornJng 1 put these shoes on because I thought I'd have a better chance to get away on foot," the 22·Jear· old senior said Thursday. SOME JI WOMEN have been sexually assault.ed on the campus or in its surrounding S.by·lS block patch ol urban decay th.ls year - six just t.bis w*lt. A Roman Catholic nun was raped ln ber convent Wednesday. Several attacks have come ln dayll1ht. Thursday night, a 3().year-ald San Jose man wu abot ln the chest after he allegedly attacked a woman officer workiq u part of a special patrol unit, police said. SAN I08E POLICE Sat. Bob Burroutha aald that after sur1ery. the mm would be booked fo~ lnvesU1aUon of auault with a deadly weaoon. Police uid the man alle&~Y. aPJ>.roacbecl the otflcer, Jo Ann. Punneo, 30, u she sat at a bus atop, pat a knife to her throat and told her to come with blm, police said. Sbe freed herself and shot blm. Burrouibs said the man would be questioned about tbe colleee rapes. · SOME STUDENTS refuse to 1cbedule nlf.bt classes." "I'm scared to death at night," sald Sheri Quinlan, l • ••1 won't take a class after 5:30 p.m. and I'm afraid to 10 to any campua activities after dark." The editor of the student newipaper, Tony Bl&jak, 22, termed the mood on campus one of "coaUnued surprise." , He aald, "You keep expeetlna it to stop b\4 police aren't catcbtni anyone and lt lan't stoppl.na. lt'a 1eWn1 worae. •• STUDENTS ffDB stunned by thll w.S'• ttnllf ol rapes. ''I can't believe it. A nun wu raped.•• aald Martl¥sl Maanuco. 19.· "Now I'm really scared." · Amy Gnenberg, 19, was anxious about what she would tell her parents. "Whenever they call they ask about tbe rape alt\1at1on here.' I don't know what to say ~more.." .Columni.st AidS ACLU Bu~hwald Baits Lawyers at Fond Raising SAN JOSE <AP) -"Snuff" - • trlaJy-rum wbleb purJ>Qtta to -•how; tbe actual mutllation· murder OI a woman -bu been cancelled by two San 1oae " Uaeaten because ot proteat.s froD'l .an1ry feullnlttl. • "l inlde a mll\alce by bri.nlbll this film in... conceded · "JOio Theater manaaer Jerry Miller Tburlclay after be declded to atop 1b0~ the movte all« a onwayrun. . MILLER SAID the R·rated film would be replaced by .. Tbe Island ol Dr. Moreau," rated PG. · "Snuff'' allo wu cancelled at the Troplcaire drlve·ln Tbunday after It opened Wednesday. It will be replaced by a martial .-ts film. ''I am gratified Mr. Miller responded to our pressure," said Rina Rosenber1, director of the Santa Clara County Commission on tbe Statua of Women. "I hope be and others will abow .:nore dlacretlon 1n tbe tutun when they choose movies to be shown in our community," LOS ANGELES (AP) -Ten· tatlve settlements totallas '813,000 have been a1reed to by relatives of three Hallan . crewmen killed when the oil tanker Sanalnena exploded in Los Aneeles Harbor lut year. Under the aareements made public Thursday, the wldowa ll.Dd children ol crew members An· tonlo Donnarumma, Umberto Scarognl and Calosero d'Asaro accepted offers tendered by owners and operators of the a!O- foot Liberian·reglatered sblp. THE FAMIUES had flled auit in District Court ln March, along with relatlvee of two oth6r dead crewmen, Alflo Zammataro and Emanuele Oreloll, 1eekin1 $5.3 million ln damaies from Bar· ~acuda Tanker Co. of lJberla, lta parent oompany, Hendy Int.em•· tlonal; and Union OU Co •• wblch chartered the tanker. The exploelon, which occurred laat Dec. 17 Just after the taakef From AP Dlspatcbea One hundred lawyers cornered Art Bucltwald ln the Harvard Club. In aeH-defeme be turned to his not·IO·secret weapon: humor. He told the lawyers be recently bad spoken to a group of insurance lawyers, who told him that they "defended poor, helpless insurance companies from cruel and unscrupulous widows and cblldren. Comedian Rkllard Pryor was 1n good condition in Peoria au.) boepltal •• intensive coronary care I unlt after aufferinl what bis arandmotber said was , a heart attack. "I uked them bow the money was. They told tne that tbey Just brealt even on the trial. The bll money comes when they lc>se and have to appeal." The Wasblneton columnist wu ln New York to speak at a fund·rai.aer fOf' 'lbe Civil Ubertles Review, a publicaUon of the American Clvil Llbertl• Union. • • About 500 st. Joseph <Mo.> people sjped a peU.. tiol\ to Playboy mqazlne demandinf corncticn of a statement that named St. Lou.ls u the bom• of Jene.James. Al every Milaoutian ( " · know•, Jamea bailed P'rO,nLE from St Joeepb. c." r A book reYiew.tn the .-------~ m atuin•'• November la· sue referred to "Jeaae f Jame&' bome ln St. Louia, Mo, where you can .. tick· a tinier lDto t!J• bole in the wall made by the bul.IM as It left .James' bod)'." " • R4'J)t ,.al M. "Pete" Mc:ClolbJ 1aya he and Jolla ElailleUIM jolnt17 purcbued a vacation The 38-year-otd star of sueb ftlmt as "Car Wub" add "Silver Streu•• was adaU.Ued to the Methodist Medical Center's emergency room Wednesday. Pryor, a former .Peoria l"tlJl· dent who now lives ln BeverlY Hllla, suffered chest palnS mid was taken to the bolpltal ln a private car, accord1D1 to Illa grandmctber, Marie 817ut. VENTURA <AP> -Two teenqen, one JS aad the other 1' have been releued after the diltrtct attorney declded ~ wu lnlUIU· dent evidence to prosecute them ln the beatin.c cleatb ot an Ol:Urd hilb school senior and the rape ot ha ttance. "After thorouah lnveatJcaUoo. the d.latrlct attoruey bu COD· eluded th.at such evidence ii now lnsufficlat to prOCeed on the cbartes," an official said Tbunday. THE DISTIUCI' attorney's offtce made lta att~mentJust before a preliminary hearing for 18-year~ld Jotmoy Lopes. Both Lopez and the 15-year-old were ordetfld freed. However. the district attorney olflce said new cbar&• could be brou1ht tf addlUOllal evldtmce ll developed. . • CllABGES ABE pepdiq qaiDat • third youth. ll•year-old Ruben Torres. , The trto bad ~o chatted .,.tth the Oct. 1' snurder of Paul Yen-• · ney Jr., 17, and the f>eatlll1 and rape ot 18-year-old Unda Fiene. who rem ala.a bospltallz4d. . • had Unloaded lll carao of Clilde oll from Indonesia. killed seven Italian crew members and an American security auard who WU ln a guard house Oattened when parts of the exploding tanker bit the dock. . THE EXPLOSION' tore the ship into three parts, flung spears of steel lnto the ground like darts and shattered windows 28 mlles away. Largest ot the three ~ntatlve settlements wu $369,000, with $131,619.49 going to Donnarum· ma's widow, Elvll'a, and $114,000 golng to a tna.st fund for each of the chief maintenance enlioeer'• two children. Other settlements accepted were $334,000 to D'Aaaro's widow. Franca. and tbelr children and $110,000 for Scaropd.'awidow, Uaa. A BEAIUNG on a separate ault flied by()rgloU'a re8.ltives a.aJdna . .,,. SlO.s million d•mac• hu been set for Jan. 18 In Diltrlct O>wt.- Claims by ZammatarO" fam!J.y also remain umettled. Court recOrds on the three lel·1. tlementa lnd.lcate that tb• New York City 1•1' firm of Semel. Patruak)' aQd Buchbaum ll to re-· celve a third ot each seWement reached wt.th the Italian familles. Altboulb the U.S. COut Guard convened • boud of inquiry tnto the Samlnen• explOllon lhortly after it ocCW'IW, no otf1clal u .- planaUon of the accident has. been releued. · • .. ~ I! T~~~ footina the bill for the Or""°8• eout•111 H s~l <Ustrlctl ~aeuvered ple11mt news th1a week by :1 state I>epartment Of Education omclali ill the form of :S 1976·77bUlc aJdlli t~ scores. :: TJ1:t were told that Orllftt(e Coast eeconcl. third, eixth ;~ and graiden IJ1 ~e public schools generally out· :~ performed their California claasmates on la:ifi:ar's test.a :~ of basic readlnj, writing, math and 1peWn1 a . :• Hol:;'il hi a separate tally designed to compare dll· :s tricta ol 1 ar soci<H'CODOmic backgrounds tt abouhl be ·--noted that th Oi'ange Coast )'OUDllten ranked just about ; where they woUld be expected. • ;: Along the Orange Coast, the hlghest sCore. were re· !; ported in the Laguna Beach Unlfied School Dtatriet where :; hlgb school seniors ranked among the state's upper six to :: nine percent in all areu tested. :: The lowest Or ...nge Coast score was in the Westminster :I School District where sixth grade reading students ranked . . in the lower 49 percent in statewide compariaolis, although .. Westminster district children 1anked above average in other skills tested. • : ·Statewide, olficiala announced good news for the :' second, third and sixth grades th.rou(b California -news i~ · ~ that improvements in scores 1eneran, outpace4 drops' in .$ ·, < performance. : ! However, the sad news was that-Oalllornia b1gh achool •.. seniors as a whole contibued their depllne of recent yeal'd in all basic skill areas. perbapt, an indication that past fail· . ittp in the state'• educaUcmal ~.am are now com1ng home to roost in today's hieb acbOolgraduates. ·, The experts acknowledge tbat test scores by themselves don't prove bow well or how poorly school di.a- ~ trictl are performintf.,~~ bow well educated st\ldenta really ; may be. Buttbe dee g trend cannot be shrugged off. ' The test reports delivered in Oran1e County this week off u clues to academic performance and let local school officials know where they may need to concentrate addi- tional effort. ti~~-: While test results aren't conclusive han:l·and·fast :~c: ~ proof that our schools aredoini •good or bad job, they•re a ~~ pretty solid indication of what direction our educatloDal ~~ programsaretaking. · , :; : Far nicer we receive a positive indication than i: :f.. 'negative one. ,. !-'! ~~~ 1 What Else Is New? ::. :;· •' ·: :: =· .. .· •: .. .. .· . .. • . : I ·' ' . Political gadfly Woody Butterfield has had all kinds of unkind things to say recenUy about bis one-time protege Orange County Supervisor Laurence Schmit. For one thing, Butterfield said Schmit was deliberate- ly deceitful when he Clled reports covering bis 1974 cam- paign receipts and expenses. There's nothing new in that allegation. Schmit baa amended his final 1974 disclosure statements five times in the past three years. After revelations in the press that they were in error, Sc:bmit also am~ed public financial disclosure and cOnftlct-of-interelt statements in what t\ll'lled out to be f.' sulCeuful attempt to stay .out of bot water. Butterfield baa also cbar&ed that Schmit ID 1974.did not· really work for a hospital controlled by Dr.~. Qtlla when be was receivinJ $1,500 a month .wliiM a supervisorial candidate. The Cella income, which was more than half Sebmlt'• personal 1974 Income, was one of the items that eJipped the supervisor's mind when he tllled out his public disclosure statements in early 1975. Detaill of hi.a work for the Cella hospital, such as wbo hired him and where his desk was located1 also slipped Schmit's mind later when he testified before federal and county grand juries. As a result, Butterfield's allegatlons about hla OAe- time pal, which have been strikingly similar to allegations made against others who have ended up in indictments, can draw but one response: So, whatelseianew? • Optnlont 81CpretMd In the •P9Ce above are thoee of the Datty Piiot. Other vlewt expreaed on thtt page are thote of their authora and 8ltl* Reader comment Is Invited. Addre11 The Delly Piiot, P.O. Box 1580 •. Coata M .... CA 92e26. Phone(7'4) MH321. Boyd. I Bracekt. ••Yet, slrree, BOb .. liil been cleleted from the latelt edition cl Roi«'• 1.'beaa'lll'US, but "bioleedbeck .. b.u bMn added. , ta tht NUe m .. tL!~ to1d, s. • •Ort cl c.ullb •wlml up1tdedon.: . WASHINGTON ben. a btJ,ky federilll JUdl• Uare....-io upiit 5 aov~t·1 plea bar1alatn1 ~aartem•nt wlth Richard Hellu JUltiff 1>9pUt. ment l&W)'UI declared UMdr tent to ~ With a 10.c:ount perjury lndlttiilent a,almt the former ·CIA cllrector -a ftna1 exampl• ot tbe Carter ad· mlnl1tntton•1 ,mblvaleuce m handllna tb6 BeJm.a attalrf Month• of tndecltloo ftft wbat to do about Helllis were followed by · more moatbl of plea bar1alnin1. Yet, wbm the : chance Mlec· · tion of an ob- strep e ro u 1 J u d I e threatened to upaet the , a1reement, the adml&istratton wu prepared to do wbat J>O lreM power bu ever done: the self-destructive . pn>1ecution of ibJ own chief ~ in- . telU1encetor dotnlbla'duty. ·That only helthtens the mystery ot President carter•1 o•n a~tude tow~ Hehnl ln particular and the ~telll&eace aervice ln 1eneral. COntrary to Jdt public z::ementa, lb. CJrter w• ty lQvahed In t.be decialCID to piweeute and then to avoid a trial. Yet Kr. Carter never iave a biDt of bow be truly recarded U.. cue. '"The· Prelidmt WU a tptlimt," one in-- lid er told UI. The PnUdent ii by n<> means wholly re1pon1ible for tbe bumillatlon visited on Dick Helm• to conclude bit dis· tla1ui1bed career in public aervice. 1be DOtion of brtncm& federal chare• aaalnst him for not reveallnl to tbe Senate Fqrelp Relatlou Committee covert operaUom in Chile by tbe Cei1tral lntelll1eiioe A1enc1 <CIA> was started by Prelideat ford'• Atto.rney ~neral, l!;dw ard Levl. TBE INFLBUBLE Dr.~ c;ould not be convinced tbat Jlelma wu only foijow1q b1a oath of secrecy Griffin Bell, Levi's suceeuor in the Carter a@llnlltntioo. WU comidend • more practical man Bell. .))Q1rever, ~ lnto ~bard ob. 1taele1.a1ala.tt dropp~ tbe eaae. Flrat, a11re111•e )'OQDI lawyers in tbe Justice ~ ·~ NO OPP08ft'Bl al'(uments came fkoJD afflclala wi.. mJcb1 be~ to Ul'I• d.NPPblf tbe cat• (IQCb u CIA""~-dlrector Stamfleld Turner or Secretary of State CJrua Vance). Tbus lt becal!U a1eer d~ the SUID• ay to ca from tllil aeJt. made trap. It was tMn that, purely by . chance. U.S. District Judce Bar· ringlon Parker or the Ddtrtct ot Cohimbla was asslglled tbe c.ae. When Parker objeetect to the plea bartalning, the incredl. ble intent to punue a 10. polnt in· dlctment wu revealed by cov· ernment la'W)'ert. With Jtdward Bennett WUUama defendinl him. Reltns quite Ukelf •owd have fiOQ IC· qulttal. Conaequentt1., that Judse P8rttr flnall1 acquiesced was more iii tbe interest ot the nation t.tian of Uelms (~OUih t.be judge could not resist bis un. scheduled ton1ue·lasbiog or Helms trom tho bench>. The outcome was assailed u a "double standard" of justice by Sen. Cburcb and other CIA tnUca, and Viewed as the b~p. pint aolution ponible by higb. admi.niatratlon Ottlclals. But the low morale of career in· teUttence offtcers ctrooped even more at the indlgnittes visited upon their fonner cblef. How much more depressed they would have been bad they known how mucb worse 1t nearlY was. they are forced tO debase th social foundatlon ot their o hap~ .. and teeud\Y, they' '°'to betauPtne•~· Thtt7 have to be tHJbt believe tbe MW aPJitjmQCe fen baPPlilesa on the~ must. learn tut prlmar aaU.factionl iD life eannot be i I \ Bir~ Cros•in11 Looking like a scene from an Alfred Hitchcock movie, these birds swarm over a highway in Stonington, conn. They're on their way to warmer climates. Church Hit.s Did Llf e, Flu Co Die '0/f emive' · TYSlwws From Outer Space? CLEVELAND, Tenn. (AP) -"Maude" nar- rowly edged "Soap" as the prime-time televlaion show most of- fensive to the mUllon- member Church of God, a spokesman announced. And the Rev. Cut Richard.son warned ad· vertlsing sponsors of shows Thursday that made the ''10 worst" list that the church plans to encourage members and other evangelical Chris- tians to undertake an economic boycott if the spo050rs don't withdraw their ads. ''TIDS SURVEY says that millions of Americans are fed up with shows that pander to perversion in belligerent tasteless- ness, depicting un- natural family rela- • 1ionsbips as normal," Richardson said. Richardson. director of' the cburcb•s com .. munications committee which cooducted the sur- vey, said more than 5,000 families from the 50 states were polled this fall tQ determine what" · · they considered the to belt and 10 wont pro- grams on tel~vialoo. . LONDON CAP) -Life on earth could bave come from outer apace and mttjor epidemi~ like 'lnfluema aod the plague may still be cqming from there, say two disti,ngulshed British astrooomen. Sir Fred Hoyle and Prof. Chandra Wlckramasinghe presented the theory Thursday in an article bl the weekly magazine New Scientilt. THEY SPECUIATED that the es· senUal building blocks of life were not formed in the ''primeval soup" or primitive earth -the normally ac- cepted theory -but 1n the core and tails of comets. About four million years ago, tbelr article suggested, a comet could have crash-landed on earth, brln.gln• the primitive organisma from which all life bas evolved. u the theory ia rtabt. the ldertlsta said, it has "profound blolotlcal, medical mid soctoloflcal lmpUca- tiom." U life did start that w~. ln- vulons of earth by fresh blololical material from the debria of comets is· likely still to. be continuing, they reaaoned. which will ensue from extrater- restrial invasions of the future," they warned. I . I . I • • Turkey Trotting Okayed . SAN B'.XFAEI; <AP>- W b tie the rest of America eyu turkeys wlth a ThHkltlvlnt aleam, Marin County wonders whether a live turkey trot can harm a aobbler'a peycb.e. • 0 Moat tur~eyi are happy to be arouncS the day after Tbank1giv· inc," race promoter Ron Youn1 testlfled at a special heartni. "Which is more cruel, beinc . killed I~ Thanksllvi.ne -or beinl allowed to race?" · .!fl', 111"'' 111 \I Cl\ l'l<I I' \:t1 I I I< I > I . I ( ... I' I ( If I I< I f I I 1 I f I -, New tor 19'78 .... ·~·'mil "Color MIP:" Pim .... 0. 80 Varietlel In Time l'or am.&n•. • pectala.LlmitedTo Supply Oft Rando. • • ~ . · PllONl. ! · . ., 546-5521 ·. . 2640 Harbor Divel .... Costa"' aa DAILY 94iSO SUN. 9-S • l t ·~-.......... •FELT MAGAZINE WAS OUT OF BALANCE' Playboy H~ld _Line on Sexual Expll~ltneH Dire Buyer· For Fee, She Slwps RALEIGH, NC. CAP) -A nurse who goes shopping for a hobby 1s renting herself out for $15 during lhe coming Christmas season t.o people who hate to fight lhe crowds. . For lhat $15 fee, Anita Strickland will sit down with you to decide who gets what gift and how much you want lo spend. Then for another $15, she'll go out and do the shopping, up to 10 items. Aller that it'sSlanitem. ' , IF THE CUSTOMER PREFERS, Mra. Strickland wtll do the shopping for a fiat rate of $1S an hour. ''I got the idea from a woman's magazine I was reading last summer." scild Mrs. Strickland, a nurse at Rex Hospital here. "The article said you. ,should try t.o run a business doing something you 1.ruly enjoy. And I truly enjoy shopping." The woman in the article bought gifts "year round. "SHE EVEN HAD A REMINDER ~ervice where she'd send postcards r eminding busi- nessmen that their wives ' birthdays were coming up," she said. The woman charged $30 an hour. ''That seemed like a bit much to me, so I just kind or reduced it ... Mrs. Striclfland's rates and other conditions she puts on her services are set down in a contract drawn up by an attorney. . . EW YORK <Ae>-Tbe flaybQy pbiloeopber, mii.b a•et. la)'l•bil szoo mill{on empire la aft. tl1na Into middle .... after a namboyant youth lindlroubled adolescence. . • . · Tbe lut few yeara ba\fe not been kind to the 51·ye&N>ld lkfner. His fabled Playboy manslon in · Cblca10 la on the block, bla $4 million Bunny jet bu been aold, the Internal Revenue Service la examln-tnc bis books and bis lon&·time &irUrtend, Barbi Benton, decided to spend more Ume OD ber televlllon career tban OD He!. A.ND BIS MAGAZINE, ONCE da.rinc, now ap- pears tame compared to HusUer and others on the newatand. Wont of aU, Pen .. t.boUH, h1a Jons·tlme rival, la on. ~e verge ot 1urpualnr Playboy an elr:culatlon. Both now euaraatee advertisers about six mtUlon readers, a drop of a mWJbn for Playboy alnce 1972. But after an extensive finan· ct al reorganization, Herner says· Playboy is on the move again. A Pla)'boy club juat opened in DalJaa and he aays, alx more u1t1i • are planned worldWide the next six months. A hl&b·powered campaian bu produced a re. cord nwnberof ad pages ln Playboy's Decemberla- sue, and new magazines, including a sex public•· tion for women, are on the drawin1 board. And because of his auccesa in running casinos in England, Hefner ls easer to open a $60 million casino club in Atlantic City by 1980. UNLIKE MOST SUCCESSFUL publishers, much of Hefner's expansion wu outside the com- munications field. He opted instead for Playboy clubs and hotels, Playboy bar lrinketl, a modeling agency, record compan.y and a Umosine service. "Some ol the divebity was a mistake, some was fortunate. If we hadn't gone into \be clubs we wouldn't have been in the cutno businels," he said in an Interview ... Wben the recesalon oame On the early 1D70I) it became 1tbvious. I th1nk New York City and Play~~ •ot all of the publicity in terma of it... • Hefner 11ld he was aurprised by l'l•yboy'a im- pact OD the macanoe world, noting that four of the top 10 seUing ma1azines on the newatanda are sex· oriented. BUT BECAUSE OF AN Olll>P from Hefner two yean ago, Playboy held the Une'""on sexual ex- plicitness at a Ume when other maaazl.nel were testing the legal limits. "I fell the magazine was out oI balence. The no· lion of the magazine from the beaindlni was not that one could draw a line In terms of what was ac· ceptable sexual content, because that changes as society changes." Hefner aWl tries to dissociate himself from bis sex maiazlne rivall, insisting his is "a lifestyle book in which sex ls one very important part. ··it l! just not as radical or avant-1arde or dif. ferent today because society bas pretty much caught up," he aald. THOSE WORDS ALSO APPLY to Hefner, although he 1Ull bas the popular imace of the urbaj:ie, swioginl bachelor developed through hh "Playboy After Dark" television show several years ago. "IT SA VS I CAN DISCRIMJNATE as to what shops I 'II go into. Like I'm not going to go out and buy a bunch of pornography or anything like that. ~n~ I'm not going to. buy anything that's too big to fit in my car No furniture, no bicycles." She has no special techniques t.o make the work Baptists easier for her . • • ·1 'vc shopped for a long t1me, thou1h, and I can _<l_o_t_hi_n_gs_p_r_<!t_ty_q_u_ic_k_'_' ---------Hit Gays THE FA:\111.Y CIRCt;S B HEATH, Ohio CAP) - Y BU Keane Ohio's state CQnvenUon of Southern BapU1~ took a s t a n d a g • l..n s t homosexuaJlty and ex· pressed appreciaUon for' singer Anita Bryant's / drive against laws to guarantee legal rights to homosexuals. Similarly, In Berkeley Springs, W.Va .. the 1tate South em Baptist conven· tion adopted a resolution declarlne tbat "homosexual acts are clearly sin." 1NewCampD8 ". •·• . I come from Alabama with a bondage SAN DIEGO CAP) - International Unl veralty-Europe, a cot.Poratlon United to Ualted States lntema- Uonal Unlvenlty bere. bu acquired a campus' near London from the Royal Muonlc lnatltu-wm for Bar•. ottlclala . .,.. on my k"'e ~ . ." 1 His ncent appearance u ~tof~C'• •-s.tu~ day Ni~" Uslevtaion abow piay.cs oo the lma"• portra Hefiler aa a "'Captaln MaCho on tli• Planet ot Men" and the bolt ot a teltvlllon abow "Sex In ClnemL" .NATIONAL But in penon, the 1wln&lnl bachelor becomes tbouchttul, deliberate and almO.t intellectual. Life liiiii-iiiiiiii:iiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim;~iii;iiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiii bat elowed tram the beetle 1980t, ho laid, and be ex- trclau far 1 ... d.lrect control over tbe maculne than in the put. BB 8J'OKB BNTRUSIA9TICAD.Y Of hil move to Loi Anaelet from bJa native Cblcaco, wbeN be started Pl&1boY with a '800 ~ tnvettment. ""Tbe fUture la in Loi An1eles," Hetn.r 1aid. •1 ' think that •hat la bappeninf tn IM Anceles tn terms of llfeatyle 11 whu. the rest ot the country la 1oina or wanta to ln term a off ubicla. llflltJ'le and a lfeat many other thln11." Hefner got bi.a Journallatic start publlahlnc a campus humor magazine at the Unlvenlty of 11· linois, from which he graduated with a dell'ff in psychology in just 2~ yeart. AAe:r an Army bitch, he married hla cblldbood s~i1dlvorcin1 her 10 years late and sweartn1 oft marriao. AFl'EB WORKING AS A COnDITBll with Esquire, be decided there wu l'OOID for a fOUD1ter version of that ma1azine tn the male mllJ'ttet. Set. tling on the name "'Sta& Party" ud Che cYmbol of a jaunty deer, be waa forced to twitch to the lat aesual "Playboy" and a sophisticated, tuxedo-clad raM>it for bis first.laaue in October 19$3. SOUTH COAST PLAZA HOT& COSTA~~ MOYEMIEI 20, 2i & 22 I 0 A.M..MIDMl&Hr S..&H ....... Mew Modlll "' O.ps. . N Pl.r to Cw:..t Slyl9t Wortraopl • c.c.m hllr ... Mon .......... c• 17141 581-6550 •. "America and the rest ot the •rid wu ready for this dramatic sexual and aodll cban¥,e," b• said, looking back on that first crude issue. • We bad come out or a period of a lO·year depression, a JJI•· jor war and a very mixed political period -the ______ ;.;;,;... ________ ,__ __ _ McCarUy era immediately after the war. . ........_ .... "So with increased affluence it's quite un-• ,,.... ,_ derstandable why people were willlJ1i to throw off lwilll •... some of their more repressive attitudes," he said. ~-. .1'.'11 Alllf IJS Schedule Readied - Saddleback Colle1e•1 spring semester schedule of claasea la be- ing mailed this week to 115,000 residences in the college district. Contained in the booklet are a registra· tion timetable, course listlnes. details on col- lege programs, atudent services and a spt!clal. application for enroll·\ ment ln Saddleback'a. otf·campua classes. Anyone not receivlne" the schedule 6y Nov. 2S can request a copy by calllne the Office of Community Services at 831-7813. FREEIRiAN·; I . ' AHD llANO · EXTRA VA~ANZAI ·. ·WITH· ARMONDA YOUNG GENE SULLIVAN Our own Mast.,. of ~IOdV ATOURstou •• ;. NOVI.Mia 209' SUMDAY 2:30 P.M. · S,nm..tlr • HAMMOND ORGAN & PIANO cEMf11 2114 .. c..t HWr·· c. •• 411M• ' . 171416.fM'JO • . . . • ~ .. . . . . . • • .. . f • . • . RVICE &~ Yf@M[f ~®l?WO©@ Trala p.,.dt .. n-Rallroa*d'f DEAR PAT· I am a store owner. but also a con· sumer. J bought n 1ct of trains at a large toy store last December to use as a window di5play in my store. I took a lot of time and asked questions about the traln's operation lo make sure lt would serve my purpose. 1 was told then that the store's policy waa no refund on trains. It turned out that I couldn 'l use the trains and I returned them In perfect condi· lion for a refund This was refused and so was u credit. 1 felt that the trains had been misrepresented, but credit still was refused. L took the saJe11 slip and ~talked out or the store This bothered me all year. ~o I talked to the store's m~mager. He finally agreed to issue a credit. but I am so angry that all I want 1s my money back. Do I have any recourse on a refund in view of all the aggravation t.hls situation has c:ausedme? P.A .. Huntington Beach Aa a store owner, you sb<Juld know that a mercbao&. ba11 the right to refuse to l1111ue a cash re· fuad1 especially when a notice to that effect ls post· ed. A credit ls often granted when a consumer re· queata It In a dJplomatlc and poUte manner. At this polDt, forget your anger and take the credit. Forneula Can Loo•en Stopper DEAR PAT. My parenl.5 plan a visit soon from Illinois. Several years ago my mother iave me an antique cruet that has been in our family for more than 100 years. It needs a good cleaning, but somehow or other I managed to get the top stuck! Can you tell me how to remove it so I can restore this cruet's appearance before my parents arrive? W.M .. Dana Point l>ue to the age and value of this crurt, your heat bet would be to use a chemist's formula composed of two drams (one-eighth ounce) denatured alcohol, one dram glycerlo and one dram common salt. Apply a generoLtS coating of thls mixture to the stopper where It meets the bottle, aod keep It wet for 24 hours. Give the stopper a very gentle tap to loosen It. Dedatured alcohol and glycerin are av all able at most pharmacJe.!>. Seedfl Gilt 1Uake• Salty Treat DEAR PAT: We were given a whole bag oC fresh sunflower &eeds rccenUy. Can you tell us how lo salt and prepare them at home? G. P., San Juan Capistrano Soak the seed11 overnight in a 2 percent salt solution (one-fourth cup u lt per gallon of water). Dry and spread the seeds In a shallow pan. Roast plain or with a small amoWlt or fat or cooking oil a& 400 degrees F. Sunflower seeds need careful watchlnn at this temperature, and frequent 1&lrrtog to keep them from scorching. lns11ran~e 1tf l%up Snare• Reader OEAR PAT: I had medical treatment in June -ilnd July. My bills were submitted to Blue Cross of Southern California. I expected payment within 45 days, but received nothing. My September phone calls brought no response either. Why lhls delay? P.L .. San Juan Capist,ano Blue Cross checked lt1 recorcb and re.ported 1 that your group coverage was dlscoatloued Feb. 1, 1 1!176. ~k with your Insurance aiewat aboat &hb, 1 and contact A YS agalo. Blue Cross wlll follow ap on your complaint lf It bas made an error In yoar cov· erage eUtlblllty. If another Insurance company took over coverage of your group plan, your claim should ~ submltted to It. • I •• Fr1day, N<Mmber 11. 1977 DAI&. 'I' PILOT WEEKEND S.A.·11~£ I SALE ENDS S~I>AY, NOVEMBER 2<Yl'H ... ftl.I liURRY. SOME QUANTITIES ARE LIMITED! Save $15. SAVE $4 Misses' sleeveless fas hi on ahellt9ps. 1!!6 Cowl nt:ck t1hell is perfect for ttea· l.40014 to come. A collectible clas1ic to w~ar under n suit, over a skirt. with ,pnnt.d or t1horts. Nylon knit Rhell jli easv-care and machine ,foshabl<1. Thiis garment. not only looks b'Teill but is priced right. Special. Look tiharp and b6 "harp m t"Om· fortable Jong a.nd vhort aleove 11h irts of e~&ycarecotton/polyc1tcr .• Machine washable, no-iron 1hirts can also be worn on casual occa- .i1ons. Choose from a big arTay of Ktyles in man,r oolord. Jn 8-M only. 3/8" vari-speed drill, sander or sabre saw. Et entiul tooht for the handyman! :111.inch variable 1988 i;pecd drill with 0· 1000 rpm. Re\'ersiblc. Heavy-du· ty 1 i1·hp motor. Dual oclion Hander haR 2 speeds. YOUR ~400/3000 rpm. Orbital. straight motion. Variable CHOICE 4-lb. polyester insulated aleepinib~. Sleeping bag provides extra warmth and comfort 69'1 for camping trip!f or even at home. Rugged nylon outersheJI with aoft and warm cotton flannel Un- i ng. Zip 'two bags together for a double sleeping bog. Handy 100-inchuluminum zipper. Washable. • speed sabre ~aw. 0-2800 !ipm ~-inch stroke. Buy' REC. 34.95 SAVE! MISSES', 112-SIZE STYLES ON SAbE 25-SOo/0 OFF REGULAR PRICE Big selection of junior and misses' pantsuits, dr~es, conl1:1, pants, shirts and much more. Hurry in for savint(s! ' SAVE •100 19-iN. DIAGONAL COLOR PORTABLE Solid state. J. 349ss 'but.ton Auto Col- or t11ntnai, AFC ~ for be1~ focua REG. 449.95 1/2 OFF LOVELY FASHION STYLE HANDBAGS SOo/0 OFF REGULAR PRICE Sturdyandroomywith shoulderatrap or dou- ble handles. Wipe clean polyurethane. White, blnckand more. 2s-·soo/0 OFF* GIR~S'PANTS TOPS Speeial .election of be;uti. ful pant.a, topa and d re8ies to choo1e from. Stock up now with big eavinga for you. *REGULAR PRICE ., .. I SAVE 29% ·MISSES' STRIPE FLEECE FLOATS Striking multi-988 t1tripe loun~er11. Acetate/n,Ylon. In mi1111es S-L. REC. $14 1/2 OFF · INTERIOR LATEX FLAT WALL PAINT Covers in one 499 coat and driea CAL. quickly. 26 col-• ora. Waahable. REC. 9.99 SAVE 42% MEN'S FINE KNIT VESTED SUITS Ch.oice of men'• ~'2% HUIU in popu-.... lur tonea. Reg. Of'f' REG. longs. 38-<40. $85-$100 SUtTS . . ·.\ •( •I • 1 •• ! r •• I I r ' Th 1"4fnk1 fv • .,. on 11 a lanal f ,. '"fW'kcy OJU>" N••ttu aJon.& Lhe Southland coaat and thls 11 the wee~enc.l ln wblch ullon will f Turkey ShoOt ca~e <kfflbQat.> Sun dny t celebrate the annual holiday. One of the bl1teet amt most tradi· tional of the 'Thanbclvlna reaattu is 1Jpon1ored by Balboa Yacht Club and usually draws a host of aaUors com 'J)etlnc ovet inside and outside couraea. BYC'a Ttirkey Day Regatta i1 scheduled Saturday and Sunday for all classe1. San Diego MISSION BAY VACUT CLUB Turkey Oay i\egatta (all c:lasses) Saturday, Sunday · SAN DIEGO Nk\'¥ SAJbING- CLUB -Bill Bunce Memorial race (open ) Saturday, Sunday Another tradlt1011il holiday event Is Alupilo1 Bay Yacht Club's Thank1givli'l1 reptta, also to be held Saturday and Sunday at Lona Beach SAN DIEGO YACHT CLUB Woodward·Cosmlc Lady Serles CCal-20, Cnl-25> Saturday, Sunday; Fall Trophy regatta (Catalma-27) Saturday, Sunday; Giddings Fleet Championship (Soling> Saturday, - Sunday; Crew's race Clnt ·110) Sun- day Soutbena CalltornJa Yachting As soclation cal ndar: IM Aaiele1·Lon1 Btacll ALAMITOS BAY YACHT CLUB - Turkey Day Regatta (harbor and ocean courses> Saturday, Sunday CABRJLLO BEACH YACHT CLUB -Point Fermin Invitational, Sunday Santa MoaJca Bay WINDJAMMERS YACHT CLUB Junior·Senlor Intraclub Regatta (keel boats) Saturday SILVER GATE YACHT CLUB Turkey Series CThunder'bird) Satur· day, Sunday CORONADO YACHT CLUB Longstreth Series <lnv1tallonaJ han· dtc a p) Sunday SOU~TERN YACHT CLUB Graham Shand race, Sunday Norill a~d lnl1nd ANACAPr\ YACHT CLUB Fall DEL REY YACHT CLUB Drumstick Invitational (intraclub > Sunday Coastal Serie, No. 2. Saturday PIERPOINT BAY YACHT CLUB Plerpolnt Trophy Series No. 4, Saturday POMONA VALl.EY SAJLINO AS· SOCIATION Class racing. Sunday WESTLAKE YACHT CLUB Turkey Day Regatta. Sunday MALIBU YACHT CLUB -Turkey Day Regatta CmulUhull ) Sunday PALOS VERDES YACHT CLUB .. Welcome Aboard· By ALMON LOCKABEY There ·~ a new yachting organizat.ion on the horizon Its called TPA CTraMpac Anonymous > de· ::;ig ned specifically for sailol'S who have the urge t:very two years to sail In a Los Angele! to Honolulu race. Founding father of the new group is Tom Leweck of Callfornla Yacht ChJb. Marina del Rey. who sailed this year's Transpac aboard Dave Meg - ginily's Decepllon. Says Leweck: "This is a non-prom organization designed to protect sailors from unscrupulous yacht owners who make promises about sunny July sailboat rides to I lonolulu "A GROUP OF US GOT ToGETHER after t.he last Transpac and decided to do something for mapkind," Leweck explained. We have established a 'hot line' <213) 4.54·4455. for those thinking of sail· ang the Transpac so we can talk it through before they make any commitment. "Now there are some gu1s who know how they want to spend p1:1rtof their July -but if one is on the fence. he should call me He has a right to know what to expect ·· LEWECK RECAL~: ''YOU fantasize about gelling a suntan, but while you're out there there ls no sun. Even if there wei-e, you 're bundled up in foul weather gear most of the time anyway. The only time you get out of your aalety harness ls when it's time to get some sleep on yourotrwatcb. "There are some skippers," conlinJJed Leweck. .. who claim that if you even conalder dropping the spinnaker you 're out of the race." Leweck recalled that when he crawled off Deception at the dock in Honolulu and tried his TPA idea on friends stumbling off other boats "we ull agreed that forming TPA was performing a public service ''NOW WHEN iOME SIUPPE& tells you la.ow wonderful the Tranapac II, you can call me," says Lewcck. "It 1 can, I want to help someone .. somewhere. But not too far away. l dra~ the line on collect calls "But." he continued, "1 feel a driving need to n~lp mankind-toaive back toyacbUng wbatlthaa g!ven to me. So mankind can call me and alve me b1a malUng addres• and I "ill mail him a tree mem· bership card in TPA. Mankind nffda both aides or the story. Knowil'l& that, what'• 13 cents to met'' NB Skipper Holds Lead In Regatta John Ward of Newport Beach continued to lead the Hoble·16 national champiodship regatta at l''ort Lauderdale, Fla. TJwrsday in a close race with Hobie Alter. Capistrano Beach Thur,.s9ay's races were sailed in extremely lights ranging from zero to fi ve knots. WJ\RD HAD A low score of 4:V.. potnta, one point betterthanAlter. In third plaee was lluntin~t o n 8eac h policeman John Hauser. followed by Wayr,c Sch afer . Capistrano Beach, and Jeff Canepa. Santa Cruz The regatta continues through Saturday NY Boat Show Dates Told The New York Boat Show. largest in the na· tion. opens it.a doors al the Coliseum Jan. 14 and runs through Jan. 22. Show Officials said the 1978 exposition may be u record breaker Jn 1971 over 400,00G peopJ.e passed throueh the turnatlles to aee .tGtJ bOats. The January show will feature more lban SOOboats PUBUC NOTICE ll'1c;r1T10Ut.•USINUS N.AMI STATIMINT TIMI loll-1"9-~.,.0llfltlMtr.1- at work Tb•Y .,. tryinl to f\nd out where the dia· eqe ii eoi:IW)1 from and track down people wbo have coatractecl lt. llOlt JjphU1.s vicUrJU are 11 to IO yean old, th• P9PWaUoo aroup he said la the most MxuaU1 ~ve, but there have been e11e1 ln older I.Del youqer individuals u well, Ntllonhld. BB AL80 SA.ID TUB heaviest concentra· lion ot the dlaeue appean to be lD Santa ·Ana, altbou1b cues have spread throuabout the county. Nelson uld it la bard to detect exact loca- Uona becaUM people viaitinl county clinics for treatment often are embarralHd and do not atve correct addres1e1. reasons tor tbe lncniue. Jt could be cauted be infected lndlvlduala, perhap1 pros· Ut\ltH, who have moved Inti> Oranae Co ty,bOI , Nelson said county health offlclala, rather than prlni:1N!y1lclw1 trea& IDOlt of tbe county's syp1 victims. The county medical staff baa expertlH 1D the disease's dlacno.tt pd treatm~t u well as aophiltleated dJatnoetic eqUf pmeut, be said. TBE STATE AND fedttal ••enci11 have sent twO moN public health tnv..USaton to Oranse O>unty to ulllt two othen alNady One• a 1yphills vicUm has been treated, ·the health Olticer continued, the dJaeue no Jons er la lnfectJ.~us. NELSON SAID BE HOPES to uncover ·clues within the next few weeks lndlcatlng MANY PRIVATE PHYSICIANS send thetr patients to the county lot treatment. Nelson said, and many indJvidu&i. prefer to co to. the C<!unly_ ~C~Ule they. are U;DCO'!'· ; ....... OctlNr "' "" Mr. _.. ~ 0..... T-, Wt 8•11'-"tr•, Huntl ........ h. girt oc-.rta,tm Mr. al>d Mrs. Tenv Colftn, uo U.. Le,.., .tA,C:O.C.Meu,01'1 Mr • .,,_, Mr .. Roc.tt V.ttmore, Ml C••lllhen Drive, Hl#ltlr.gtoft ha<11, girt Mr. -Mrs. £Ille« M«ur, a21 ~l•ITlarM Onw, C#aM clef Mar, bOy Mr. •114' Mn. Olarlel War•, ,.., p_ .. , QR ... .._... \lettey,Doy _....,"·"" Mr. •"41 Mo. oaty w .. u, ~• Lil9IM ore .. , CGIUWM,My IN. and Mn. Ttllllft ~I. 4012 Morn1no11ar Orhrt, H11nllnel0fl 8HCh,gifl Mr. ancl Mt1-CNt'9t CllnCll, ~A PreMdtftl Plau, Colla Mew, llOy Mr ..... Mn. 0eM Okk"-, 22112· A span $11MI. &IT~ olrl Cordova Plans Talk on Taxes By O.C. HUSTINGS Of Ult Dalfy ........... Assemblyman Ron Cordova, D·El Toro, wlll dlacuss new legislation on property taxes and law enforcement at a luncheon meetini of the Costa Men Rotary Club Nov. 23. Cordova, elected lut November, representa the 74th Aaembly District along the soutbem Oran1e Coast and part of northern San Dieio County. The meeting wilt be held at South Cout Plaza. • • • COllOOYA State Sert. Deaah E. Carpenter, R- Newport Beach, will Hlell the past leatalattve session and of. fer a forecut of the comJnc 1e11lon at a Dec. 6 luncheon meetina of the Greater Irvine Industri•l League. The me~i­ ing will be held at T\te Registry Hotel. • * • .. ... . . . . .. ::F .... PANSIES AND VIOLAS Fabulou• gardep colof In bedl, bas.- kets or pots-blua, ytlloln, orl09a andwhlta-; I , • PRIMROSE · Ro\i•r• h .. 'both' En"llsh and Felry varieties-the fo¥ndatlon of any spring \ • flf~dcn-avelleble In ·white, yellow. ~ r4cl.pt""6'. onnt•and blua. .. . .AZALEAS BcautlfW flowerlng .wrgrun planta, , . truly • Calllornla favorite In red1. pink•, whites and -.ome unique varltt~, .. Mr. -Mta. Ooneld MC~••· sm 5-ttM Orl•, ........... llHch, llOY A number of Oranee Coun· ty Republican leaden have endorsed Marian aer,non for raw· 14th Asaembly District, accordlna to lnformaUon provided by Mrs. Bergeson'• campalcn head-quarters. ! . . STOCK CYCLAMEN Spicy-sweet "••.-at tn " vartaty.ot PVBUC NOTICE ~1a111ou1 IUllNlll NAMl! ITAT•MaNT Death. Amorii thoee u.ied as support.ins the fotmer Newport-Mesa acbool lrUltee are Newport Beach M•r:!a.Milu Dostal and council members Doaald Me and LaelDe Kaelaa, and Coeta Mesa Mayor Nonna Henaot an~ CouncUmanO..alclSaallwo.1. wood. r'rie 101iow1ne I* IGll Is OOlf'll lion!-_,,, RENT A~F&R, 1122S.nc11Lll,., c.ott•M•M. CA. n•v '""'" Melnl•. lltt 511ncll '--· c..ot1t M~. cA. mv Also named as endonin:f Kn. Berseaon are VIENNA, Au1tria. Dr. and tin. Tltomu Dou, PHI Salata, Nucy (A P > -K • r i v o a · and Buddy EbRD, Ed and ,.._, kh~aeMr, Scllueulcs, 7t, who Dorotlly Yardley, Doreea Marean. DacDey Pnlak, bowed to Nui pressure Dora Bill and Al Bally. · T/111 bllslnes1 IA tondl.clecl by Ml ln- c1Md4191. • PalsyMthu• Tllll s......-.... fll..S wllJI tlle COllftl'I' Cl-of Orlln9I c-nlY on °'t. lt, lf71 · PVBUC NOTICE in 1938 and reaianed as A.u1trian chancellor, died Wednesday near Jnubruck. AU1trla wu annexed by Adolf HlUer shortly after von Scbuschnlgg•1· · reatana· tlon. · MIAMI CAP) -Rae~ ·,.ICTITIOUllUIUlHS traek d•'"elo ... r 8Ce•• N.,,,._STAT•NNT l' _.... TM 1011ow11111 ..-•• c101no _.. C1l4er, 71, an old·tchool :;:!~ao" cENTIUl cu:ANHs, entrepreneur wbo dld 22,2 Harllor aiv.i •• c.u Meaa. CA bualneu on a handabake 92 ~uNG.JA KIM, 411 "· DMrl1llll and personalty kept st Anahelrn,c.u.,. track .d more thaa 40 111•• _,,... ,, tone1wc\ad 11y • i..-comtan1111 died Tburs- oMctM•1v...,,. Kim • daf ..-nllht at Bllcayne 11111 .....,.... wM ".., wtttt • MeclJcal Center afterauf. ecwni, ci.t11 ot °'..,.. ~Y "oct, ferln1 hll 1eventh heart 31.1'77. flll4W attack. , ... 11.-Or-. C-' Oallt' ,.... "°"·. 11, ... ~. tt11 "1J.T1 . l't8CI laO'nml NTNS'~ 027 MllnSt. Huntington 8eaah 63M53t , -* • Backen of incumbent HuntlnltOO Beacb Clty Attorney Doa Boafa are plannin& a tennla event Sunday on behalf of their man. It is set for s p.m. to mldnl1ht at ~ Seaeliff Tennis Club. NB Attorney Tabbed Newport Beach attorney Robert Charbonneau la one of three Oranie County lawyers named to 1erve on the atatewtde board of the California Trial Lawyers Aaaoclation. Httis a directot of the Oranp-Oounty ehapter of the uaoclatlon and hu aerved u It.a U'euuref. Joinlnl 1\lm on the at.ate board are Santa Aaa at- tomey Vernon Hunt and Anaheim attorney Glen Buhore. An outstanding plant for bedding or color• lncl•dlpg \llhltt.t. ,,ink• an4 pot• and a great decorator Item. rN• make •tock a cut nowu favorlee. Multi-bloom O~ come In ~hlta, Plant u a border around your bulb recW, plnbiadvariegattd~olon. ,_rd«n. •., .. 1 ', , -t ,, s.n ~ HIDa Rd. at ~w BML. N.w,on 8wh. (714) 64().,_ Open D&Jay 9mn m6pra .:..247UChttilanta OM. MIMlon VieJo <?J.~1 ~.nu ........ _.--.. ..... 'P!"""' 1 ,. A 11 OAA. v "1.0T '""1· NCMml:w 18, 1177 Business ·· 2 All They Want ls a n Outhouse !r..~~!I. NORTHFIELD. Mau. -To find DaA and Robin Woodard'~ hOllle, 1'Jll drive ov~ • mountain cm • blackt.op road 'llnlll the l?J•cktop enda, dttve dowo a rutted dirt lane u.nUl the Jane ertda, then you walk. 'We're Being Harassed BUt Don't ~ow Why' You walk and climb half a mile up a twilting, boulder·alrewn pat!\ ob6cured by fallen leaves a.nd pl.De needle•, following a stream that tumbles down the steep hllWde over mosay rocks. Deep l.n th.ls idyllic wilderness the only sound 'is the brawling stream. THE HOUSE IS utterly isolat· ed among the trees, a handsome two·sfory house covered with weather·mellowed cedar shakes. Nearby is an acre clearing where Dan and Robin grow their own groceries. Robln cans the produce and stores it in a root cellar. Dan built the root cellar. Dan also built the house, sawed every board, drove every nail. He ls a fine carpenter and a re· sourcerul man; he taught himself the craft. Robin is resourceful, loo, and giving. She teaches sew· ing one day a week in a nursing home BEHIND THE HOUSE stands another tidy structure. With its two atained·alau w\odowa, alao hand-craJ\ed by Dan. tt mtebt be 1a small chapel, but lt la not. It ls an outhouse. Tbe most troublesome outhouse you can imagine "We oame here because we like the woods, the outdoon," Dan Woodard said. ''We Uke privacy. All we want iB to be left alone. Instead, for three years we've been In and out of court and it isn't over yet. All because of an outhouse. "SOMETIMES IT gets pretty silly. One official uks why on• earth we want an outhouse and another says lt we have an out· house everybody will want one. How do you deal with that?" Dan Woodard discusses his o\.lthouse woes with remarkable calm. A less forgiving soul would be learinfhls hair. Dan 81\d Robin, both in their early 30s, met at UCLA. From lhe start, they treasured belng alone. After graduation and mar· riage they rented a cabin far back in the redwood mountains or Northern California. THEY WANTED their own place, thoufh, and began a [ .4MERIC1 d -# search. t.ravellnf tbe cOWl1.ry Wl· hurriedly, enjoying tbe scenery and each other. In the spring of l.9'14 they found this spot: 96 acre! of romantic mountainside with its crystal brook, ample firewood and garden clearing. No electrlclty, but they prefer oil lamps. lt was ideal. Dan applied for a building permit. H• was told he would need a septic tank. He explained that he planned to build an out· house. "NOT ONLY WOULD we have to build a road so a truck could come up with a tank, which would be terribly expensive and spoil the beauty, but we really do want an outhouse," Dan said. "An outhouse forces you to go outside even in bad weather, and once you're outside you're glad· lo be outside." The town said too bad. no out- house. Against the Jaw. Dan waa told to stop building not Just the outhouse but also the house. Endorsement: Big Deal Humphrey-H awkim Bill Loses as It Gains By WALTER R. MEARS 141'5-l-4~ ..... So President Carter has en- dorsed the Full Employment and Balanced Growth Act of 1977. Big deal lie also endorsed the Full Employment and Balanced Growth Act of 1976, and that was a lot stronger economic medicine than the version he favors now. AT TIUS RATE, with another endorsement or two from Carter, the meas ure might vanish altogether. Jn Washington shorthand, it's called the llumphrey-Hawlons bill, after Sen. Hubert H. Hum- J>hrey , D·Minn .• and Rep . Augustus F. Hawkins, D·Callf., who proposed it to mandate gov· ernment measures to put the un· em ployed back to work. They wanted to set by law a limit on unemployment in the United States, and to reach that goal if necessary with jobs financed by the government as the employer or last resort. WHAT TllEV'VE GOT now looks like a bill or last resort s ince. as a Carter lieutenant not· ed, the new draft doesn't compel anybody to do anything except set economic goals -which would themselves be subject to change. Any new programs, and any new spending to cut unemploy· ment, would be subject to separate action by Congress and approval by lhe presidenL In successive versions of tbe bill, the target unemployment rates have become progressively less ambitious and less binding, .'\'En-·.~ ANALYSIS as have the provisions for gov· ernment measures to reach lhe goal. ·THE ORIGINAL measure, . which candidate Carter opposed as inflationary, set a ceiling of 3 percent unemployment within four years or enactment. With labor, liberals and black groups committed to the bllJ, and with his rivals Cor the nomination supporting it, Carter held out for months. lie said he was no less com· milted than the other Democrats to curbing unemployment., but that the bill as It stood would have meant double-digit inlla· lion. CARTER NEVER was very enthusiastic about the Hum· phrey-Hawkins formula, but the bill became a symbol and en· dorsement a campaign necessi· ty. Besides, the measure had been modified so as to set an un· employment target of something over 4 percent. So he endorsed it during the presidential primary campaign, and again in his recommenda· lions for the Democratic plat· Corm of 1976. All or this raises the ques· lion of how Carter came to be in a position to negoUa'e a atm milder version of the blll and to announce with COf\liderable fan. fare that he was endorsing bis handiwork. The answer Is simple. He got himself elected president. WHAT CAME OUT was a bill establishing a 1983 aoal of un- employment not exceeding 4 per. cent with, as Carter noted, "flex· ibility to modjfy that eoal ll necessity requires,'' and without compulsory measures to attain it. The jobless rate now is 7 per· cent. The biU would establish a federal commitment to full employment -which sounds just as good as it did when Congress first made that declaration ln a law passed 30 years ago. It would at the same time com· mil the government to combat in· Oation. IT Al.SO REQUIRES that lhe administration and Congress set specific goals for unemployment, produc:tivity and other economic targets each year. That's the kind of work thelr economic ad·· visers are paid to do anyhow. For all of that, the bill's sponsors and promoters said they were happy with the en· dorsement, apparently conalder· ing lt a foot in the door they can push open later to gain some of . the mandatory meuures they wanted in the first place. Given Carter 's form chart on the tubject, that may be wishful tbtnltlo1. But then agaln, the Humphre)'·Hawtqns alUance of labpr, liberal and blaot otganlaa· tlo1u could p r o \'e more penu aalYe at pns14entlal cam· pai,n time than Jt la no,ir. --~~~~~~~~~~~~~--,11-raou~nr Your ;-~... team DoyoureallJknowwbat happeDs. when basin• profit8 goupar dawn? Whet, 3.000 Amel1cana were asked r~ntly aboi.it tlll! efrf'IOt of prollll on their hve1, tht>y QaY<> wrpmlno•l'l$WGB. Some lW!lci when bu Illness proht1 go up, pr~allO 90 up. Othera said r.09 profits c..iuM pl'lces lo QO down, ~r~ 11\.,.ny catd prol!tt hdva no effect on their hvet 41 all;. Ttlla Isa problem. IJ we doo'l understand our Amartcan EconomJc Sy,tem, how can we make Intel~! d8Cblons .sbout It? What to kee,P? Whlit to change? To help c;i1ve you a c\eererplClure ol our ayllem, a eptcia} hook· ~ hu blen pre- pred. Jr1 easy to N5d. lntemtfnQ • •nd free. Send for '1ourcop'f now, E~Am•Tlean 090hl to know whAt hsy&. S.nlltlve ~M In, bu•tnen. cfetlcal• negotlaUona, llalaon: lnternattonal and ctomtatlc; dlacrett, confld•ntllf, ~· Write/wire P.H.. 4010 Park Newpert, 224 New port Beach, catlfomla 828e0. ~f.3~· scores T.4!'f' AGAIN In the DAILY PILOT lie wanted to finish by wtoter 10 be hired a lawyer, 1ot a restraininJ order acalnat lhe to ... n and built bb home. The case ume up in February and the cou.rt'foundla bla (avot. The town eave him a permit for an outhouse. ''WE THOUGHT THAT wu. the end of it, but a week later the plumbing inspector arrived. He sald we could have an oulhou.M, but the atale required Indoor plumbing as well, plus a wasblni machine hookup. Why, we doQ't even have electricity for a washing machine." The inspector himself an""the absurdity, resl,ned rather tban enforce the rule, and went with Dan to Boston to plead for a variance. They returned and found a sumrnona from tbe town for bulldlog wit.bout a permit. Dan lost that case in court but woo it on appeal. The ju<Jae ruled that the town could hardly have been unaware of bis plans. "WHAT WE NOW have la ap- prov al in the state court but no variance from the 1tate Board of Plumbla1 Examiners. That's still unsettled. "We have the feelint we're be· ing harassed but don't know why. I guess they think we're at.range. At one hearing they kept pointing out that we were from California." He lllulhed. "Ac· tu ally I'Pl from Mlchi1an. "We don't want to cause trou· hie. The last thing we want to do ia bother anybody. All we want la an outhouse, just a simple out· house." A modest deslre, Dan and Robin. Hang in.there. Over Tl1e Counter M4SDU,._,. NYSE COMP0SITE N Nete Ed tlon CAB Details -ONB LOPiiG DISTANCE CALL ot three minutes or a 15-word tdeiram to aoy potnt In rnainJand Utllted States to ·a1ert people awaiUn1 the plarie'a arrival, or to rearranJt the1cbed.Ule. • . l -A free meal If the delayed filcbt would bavc provlded a meal, especially If the delay extend.I beyond normal tneal how's. -Paid ovemtcbt lodgin1, if the delay is at a polnt othe~ than a stopover or point of oricin durin1 the evenl.q. -Limited ground trana~Uon -such as between the airport. and a hotel -If the de- lay la expected to ex- ceed four boun. Airline qents may not be ••are of the rules ~auae of t.belr complexity, ao passeniers not offered these services ~hould uk f~ them. If the request is refused, not.·~ ~eep tapll and write to the airline to loqulre aboU\ relmbunement. ALSO WllrrB TO THE OFFICE of the Consumer Ad· vacate, Qvil Aeronautics Board, WasblDlton, D.C. 20248 aad outline the ~mplaint. It wUl 1tve analyall and. If necessaey, uk the airline for a explanation. Like. othe!' common carriers, air carriers ·do not ¥.uaran• ~lr operating achedules, th• CAB HY•· 'Generally 1peUin.a,,. lt says. "air canter tlmetabl• are deal•ned to abow tbe Umea at which achedwed alreraft v· riv ala and departures cu be expected to occur W#~ 75 pet.. cent reculartt.1.' 1 • lo an edition of "Air Travelers' lf'lY 1Ulb~·· to l>e r~­ leued soon, the CAB provides a listing of services. Amone . the bigbllehta ~ -MEALS. 'J'llEY ASE N'Ol'GENEULLY considered part of tbe fare; therefore, no refund ls due if the meal tan 't .HtJ&lactory or id't ""ed. · · · -......: Hotel room 8nd car rental services. While the carrier may provide aucb services, it does not uaume Uabllit1 if the car is unsatbfactory or the room unavailable. · -Smoldnl. Tbe CAB baa ordered carriers to adopt pro- cedures to make sure that people who request aeata ln the no-amok:lnl aection .. wW be accom~~ted. -FAllE SVllllllAJUES. DOMESTIC AIR carriers are required to pnwide summaries (free at ticket counters) of normal and discoant fares available for majol' cltfes. i -Fare changes. The CAB is conaiderln1 allowina passengers to use previously purchased tick.ta after a fare increase. -Denied boardina compensaUon. The board also is · consldmitg a proposal to change the ell&ibillty reqWre- menta and the total of compensation due to puaensen de· • nied seata for which they bave conftl'med reservations. Air carrlen must otter a speeifted -11lount of comperaatlon. Thia does not apply to lntenta.te and charte? ~hta. After Zig-zagg!M, Market He~ .PP. NEWYORlt CAP)-Tbeatockmark9tstaaecl a modest ralty todt.Y in the Jut •Wion of u en&tk week on Wall Street.' 'l'he-: bow Jooee averaae of JO lndu.trf w wu up 3.IO points tom '1& • At tbe NYSE el0se 'TliUiiilii.tlie Federal aeMrve ,. · )rortecl a $U bWJonJut0p ln the baalc measure of U..money supply. • But traders seemed to be taldna ~ vlew th.at the in· · creue would Aat~pt uuf.IQrtMi cndlt.-&lpteaiJlC bl' the Fed, at least for the mom111t. Some analysta alto 1u11ested th.It u upwa.td rewtalCIQ 'l'buriday of covernment ata.tiltlct on the thlrd.q\larter gro-.irtb hit• of the economy had IDCOW'a(Od U.veiton. . SCocbl•Tfle Spofllg"t Oo.ilottn_._,.ragn New Y_.,(#.f') Flflll ~ ·---JToce&Jlr . 1 ·--Ti~ z .lt':a i!"S:+ ~ lJ ~~ ~~lit! m:tt t.D· '"""" ...................... -~4t TFM ••••··••••·•······•••• UUl1 ., •••••••• , ••.•••••• ,, ts• ................. , ........ . ' NIW YO«K C"P) ... V tt.aam · ~ ...................... , ~ ...... .,, , .............. , ... a .. t:.·:::::::::.::::::::::: f;'~·.:.:.:.::.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.::;=~~ fii" ::t: ::::::::::::::: ..;rnJi!JI .ML.II • Haw YORI( (A~> • 1 l t I I ! .. super savings on Eort shirts for men 5.99 RE0.7.99 l ong sleeve sport shirts for jeans or slacks •.• wear under sweaters or sport coats. Choose from a wide selection of col-'. prful plaids, solids and chambrays In one or two-pocket styling. Machine washable and dryable 100% cotton, 100% polyes; ter or polyester I cotton blends. Sizes S-M-L-XL. boys' flannel shirts on sale REG. 4.99 EA. 2FoR•s 4.19 EA. Bold, colorlul plaids with long sleeves, chest pocket. Wah· able pre-shrunk 100% cotton flannel. Sizes 8 t~18. . .. women's knit tops -3 styles Turt1eneckaandcowt neckain REG. taa ti solldt or cowl neck with turt1e-5 99 neck lnaet. Acrylic knit or cotton • blend. Junlorstzes S·M•L. a 6 99 • girls' turtleneck tees Versatile, comfortable tops ln solid colorw. Easy-care polyester/ cotton knits. SlzH 4-tX. reg. 3.49 ...•.• 2.97 REG.M 3.47 Slzea7·14 boys' warm;n quitted nylon Jackets Down-look atyle with Oecron• II REG. 22.99 . polyester flberllll end 1009'. rtp-. 4 9 97 stop nylon lhell. Eaty-care. ~I • Slze1 S·M·L·XL. 1· entire stock of 10Kand14K gold jewelry ~1/3 ·off Rq. 11.97 to t132 SALE 12.&9 TO 81.11 Exqullitely deligned rings, pendants, chains "~~,.u~~~~ and earrings in an gold, or gold with diamonds and other preclout ~ semt-pt9Cioua atonee • Shown,.Just I few from our epartdlng collection. Fine Jewelry Dept. sale l entire atock Of •10 vinyl.handbags 8.99 .REG.t10 hooded leather-look coats ·RE0.19.99 14.99 Slngle bteelted, tie belt ltyte with aide end top pockets. Potyvtnyl chloride, nylon-lined. Lug- gage color. Slzel 6to 13. Coet Depertment save on girls' nylon or plle Jackets 20%off saz. ..X. f99. •18 ••• 1UI "' &ma7·14. 1 I I INSIDE: •Tel vision •Ann Landers •Sports •Horoscope FrtdlY. November 18. 1171 DAILY PILOT ' ~itizen Wayne I By DENNlS McLELl.AN Of Ille Dall1 ,llet I t.ff The British film crew had JUSt arnved and \\as unloading equipment in front of John Wayne's house in the exclusive Bayshores sec- tum of Newport Beach They were there this particular moroing to film an interview with Wayne for a special on Bob II ope, "The Road From Elthan." It will air m England next May, the Brlt~h-born come- dian's 7Sth birthday. The equipment was hustled down the side of the ll-year-0ld house and onto the green-tiled patio. where a m111d was setting out a coffff pot and a tray full of mugs each bearing Wayne's Ukcness and a title from one of bis more than 150 movies. ' Partially covered by a green-and-white ttriped canopy, the patio overlooks a well· wnanicurcd lawn and, beyond the private dock, a JTlillion-dollar view of the bay. NOT FAR OFFSHORE two rented rowboats float idly in front of the Wayne residence. It is difficult to tell whether the young fishermen are there to catch fish or -more likely -to catch a glimpse of the legendary star. . They don't have long t~ wail. Through the sltding glass doo..r, that unmistakable gruff voice can be beard. John Wayne strides out onto the patio. "Geez, I just thought you were goiDg lo ask me about Bob," he was saying to the interviewer, t. Charles Thompson. "I don't have a script." , The muaive, 6-foot_. actor -as be does moat people -dwarfs the slightly-built, bearded Thompson. Wayne is dressed casually in a tan sports ab1rt and jacket. His pants are charac- teristically turned up, forming cuffs that ~nal maroon socks. They stroll onto the lawn where the star, who years ago learned movie-making under the masterful direction of John Ford, offers his ideas on how the interview should be shot. " .. .I was ju.st saying we could be here and we could get that shot and then meet you here, .. he suggests, gesturing with a beefy hand. WAYNE AND THOMPSON finally sit down at a table at one end of the patio near an open sliding glas1 door. It leads into an office occupied by twoaecretaries. A brown dog walks up to the table; Wayne <See" A YNE, Pase BS) .. "' \ ; . . .. ~ , ~ ' . I < • , ) • .. • John Wayne says of his visits to the front: 'Most of the kids had gone to the Saturday matinees with their first girl end seen me with a big hat. So I meant home to ttJem. I gave them something to write home about.' ., J I 'I . , . ( I l ( . .. • .. \. ; I • I ' . ' .. ' 'Geez, ' he ..: Christmas can be less costly_ and more fun if you do it yourself. By LOUISE VOOK ~ .......... .~~ > 1 ftldty, ~ 11, 1117 ANNLANDEAS/~OAOSCOPE . ate Mlllett on the W~m.en~s Movement 7he women's movement can go forward or backward .. . . I think it would be very tac!:<Y if we blew it.' 8y CBERVL ROMO . Ot•o.w,,.......,. The Women'• Movement will t>. oo trial thla ,.,..eekend dunne the International Women's YHr Conference in Houston, with feminllta and anti· feminist forces batum1 on the tssues ot the EquaJ Right.a All\endment, abortion and 1ay r1•hta. These three iJsuea, according to author, educator and feminist leader Kate Millett will either cause the movement to 10 "forward or ~ackward." The petite, bespectacled woman with aalt· and-pepper hair flowing over her shoulders, was speaking Thursday afternoon to a packed auditorium at Orange Coast College durina the. school's annual Women's Week. Addressing the audience, the champion of women's and gay rights and the author of such best-sellers as "Sexual Politics" and "Flyin1f' said she was on her ''way to Houston." She intimated the movement "was in a scrunch" at the moment and speculated the con- ference m1gbt be "very tough." Dr. Millett said: "There is always the problem of subversion whether It be from the radical left or the radical right . . . What happened in many of the stales <when seleeting delegates to IWY) was that the ·radical right was able to take over." She applauded the women's movement for •.• Women are 1oin1 throup an awak~ •.. Can we fllhl about tblsf ..• Vnf0rtunateJ1. we are oow n a posttk>n wherewebavttodoJUll, that. rt <ERA> has to 10 through veey 100G and l 'm confident the real interests of woa:aea WW c mo out on top." Dr. Mmett 11.te'Sffd that :women cul Un In thll 1eneraUon without belDI artected ~ wbat the movenmit tias done:~ .. We have to afk oursel\195 'Did you UW\k: thla wu 1otni to be euy?' No. we dJdo't thlnll lt was •= be ea11 .•. We have cb.tqed our lives ()Ully, but we baveo•t Co"Gfl'OGtM power yet." . And "yond tbe lstuet of ERA. abOriJoa aftd aay ri1ht1, she stated women will bavo lo be1tn concemfnl tbenf'selvea with another type ot op. preasloo: phyalcal abuae. .. We are kept In OW" place throulh vloleace; \ throusb rape, tbrou•b wife and chlld beaUn• • . • And there lt power iD any kind ol o.PllnUlve situation; there Will be power -nated, brutal power-it'a always there:• And then Kate Millett amlltd aUbe audlenc. a¢ saJd aoftly, ''Tile women'• move.me.at can 10 fo?Ward or backTlard: we can have anOtb so yean ot the 'mystiqu~· or somethlnt; but I don't think so .•. 1 lhink lt would be very~ U we blew it ••• " . . . . . Don't Push Child lntO School _. ·-· ___,;.,_..;.._;.....;..~------' D EA R AN N LAND EHS· Whil e visit· ing 1n a neighboring state my husband and J were having breakfast at a table next to three women who had not seen each other for q uite some time One of the women said, "l had the greatest disappointment o( my ltfe last Sprang My :grandson nunkcd kin· : dergartc•n " • B C'inA a fi rst·grade : teacher l wanted lo tell : her that th e c hild 's : parents should have kept : the boy home another six •months or maybe a year. : There is nothing magic : about a fifth birthday. : Some ctuldren arc ready ·for kindergarten at four ·and others are not r eady ;until SIX. . . A•• Laadft-9 . "Flunking" kln· dergarten is sometimes th e biggest favor a te acher can do for a c hil d . To s e nd a youngster on to the Clrst gr ade when he or she is not ready can be a grave disser vice. The un - prepared child who can't keep pace with his peers becomes frustrated and learns to hate school That one year can make a big diUerence in the life of a Little person. · tf __ u_o_r_o_s_c_o_p_e_...,,,) ARIES <March 21-April 19): For valid answers, get behind scenes. Visit one confined to home, hospital, Much could be shrouded. in secrecy. Leo, Aquarius figure prominently - ·' and so does th,pumber ''.1." TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Emphasis on desire, ~hes, romance, illusion, creative en· deavors, fancy and fantasy. Aquarian is in pie· ture and so is Pisces. Ride with tide. You will get what you want -but no guarantee it will be good •• for you. : ;. •' GEMlNJ ()lay 21-June 20): Empbasl! on career, presUge, ablUty to communicate in meaningful manner with superiors. Be fledble. :Xee~ diet resolutions. Roll with Ude as social Ute· , :· . ·accelerates. . ~ANCER (June-at4uly 22): Accent on journeys, long.distance coinmunications, writ- ing, publishing and d"'tribution. You get chance ~ to prove a point but onJy lf sincere. ~ L~O (Julf 23·Aug. 22): Be wise 4'DQUih to • ·analf~e. Take nothing at face value. Means dlg1 i do your homMt>ork. Member or opposite sex li ·' smlUen with you. Don'tletttgotoyoW'bead. -~ ; VIRGO (Aug. 23:Sept. 22): Walt' and see. l·. Emphasis on how you st.and wiUi part.Mr, lnclud-ing mate. Taurus, Libra and ScOrplo flgare pro· m\nently. Family or home leaal aft~ arab , spotlight. Play pa111ive role. · ' . LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Define terms. Get ~ service records straight. Refuse to be intimidat- 4 ed b y bureaucr ats or "psychic vampires." : Means maintain your own pace ln clear, In- : telligent, enlightened manner . . . . . . . • • ~ 4 ' : . . . . . . .. . . . 4 . . .. - Parental pride can be a very damacma thine. - A TEACHER IN KANSAS DEAR TEACHER: I'll bet a lot of maligned kin· dergarten teacben are· delighted you wrote. So am I. Tlaaok you for some solld input. DEAR ANN LANDERS: The letter from the woman who had been bugged for years because she didn't know whether her two children were boU1 born on Sun- day prd'rnpted me to write my first letter to a newspaper. I know a lot of people look on you a.s a friend, Ann, but for tbe love of Mike, whydotheybother you with stuff like that when there are people waiting in every pubUc library Jn the country to answer such questions? Librarians are trained t~ dispense informat1on ·on almost any subject you can think of. We Cove our work aod enjoy look· ing up anawera. So please print this letter and encourage the public to telephone UI when they want to know sometblna. Thanks, friend. -DURHAM, N.C. DEAR DURllAll: I wl•b tbe penoa wlao wrote to me alMI asked for a •ood meal loaf re· dpe bad ealled BER JJbrarl••· Tlaa.U for your leUer, boaey -bat where were yoa wbea. I needed you! DEAR A'NN LANDERS: I have this terrible need to express my feelings. Please let me do it through your column. My mother died yesterday. She sutfered a great deal ol pain for a 1001 time. The worst aeony for ber wu know· lng tbat lbe WU CBUllnl all of ua a lot of anxJety over her terminal lll· ne11. She kDew we lo.ed her very mucb. Mom took her own life. It wu not reported u aucb (ahe swallowed a whole bottle of pllla > but a lot or peo- ' ple who visited her re- cently bad an idea that she would do aometblna like that. ~!ready seven people •• ~YDle (From Paie 81) have telephoned and Morethanonebalfoftheperaons three have come in involved in domesUc court cues person to ask for detalla and more than one half of all Jn. about bow Mom died. I mates in state correctional feel It la none of their faclUtles have alcohol-related business. Please tell me problems. Once aealn, accordini to what to say to them. -thespoke.spenon, theesUmates are SIXTEEN AND ALL .conservaUve. CRIEDOVT How can you \ell if you have an DEA& SIXTEEN: alcohol problem? Representatives S a 1 , ' • M o m d I e d at the Care Unit, ·ao alcoholism peacefully." Notbl•C treatment proaram, located in more need be added. South Cout Community Hospital Clods wbo preu for de· in South Laguna, say there are tails .-Jd be ._..red three w~ to tell: by a long period of .. When alcohol begins to create allence. It caa be tbe problems for you, when dnnking mos& effeetlve response becomes more important than the of all. other lhinp ln YQU.r life and when CONFIDENTIAL to you lle about your drinklng," 1ays Brain-Drained And Bill Raymond, community Depending On You: A services coord_lnator. hilarious book ror cheer-Alcoholism IS considered the na· lng up your house-bound tion 's third leading killer disease. friend (or anyone) I! Art It la recognized as more than a Buchwald's 2S-year col· social problem, but a physical and lect.lon or columns: psyc~ological addiction oftentimes "Down The Seine And requiring medical care . Up the Potamac" -It crosses all economic strata, Publisher Putnam : and, says Raymond, there are Price $10.sS. It's a side many !Illac'onceptions about the splitter. disease. One being that most problem drinkers end up in the gut· ter as Skid Row winos. Club CCJUndar nma each Wednncfail in the Datl11 Pilot and contaiM notice• o I UJC»'Mft 'a and aervtce club mtttinga and event• for the f oU<MUJg week - Thurlday through Wedne•· day. Send notices to Club Ca~. DoJl11 Pilot, P.O. Bor 1560, Co.ta Meao, CA 92626. Be aure to include your name and phone number. Notfcea miat be in our hand6 two week.s m advance. To r•queat a pictur•, write "' call the Feature. Departmtnt, 642..ull. That's untrue, be says. That seg- ment of the population accounts for only five percent of problem drinkers: The other 95 percent are people with good Jobs who general· ly have a home and family. Another misconception is that beer and wine have less impact. than a drink o( harder spirits: •'There ls the same amount of ethyl alcohol in a glass of wine or beer as there is in a lour-ounce drink of hard liquor," says Raymond. And unfortunately, people today are complicating their drinking problems by mixing alcohol with other chemicals, such as tran· N •MKElt q utltiera, pain ptlll, am- phetemines. marijuana. cocaine and oth~ drug.a creaUn• poly-1·· diction. Youn1er males,· aa11 Su11n Mardon. proaram coordinator at the Care Unit, are more e.: toward polyaddicUon by com street drup with their drink; but even older ,J>ef'S<>ns, t.akini pre- scribed medication.a, may unWlt· Ungly t;>ecome victims. 1 "The pure aJcoboUc ls becomlni .a rarity,'' S"YS Raymond. But help ls available throuil\ a number of community resources, including the 24-bed South Laauna facility. First, there must be a wtlllnc- hess to accept you have a problem, and then, says Ms. Mardon, "The only requirement to come lnto our program is the willingness to stop drinking, or using whatever chemicals you may be uslng. It must be voluntary." And Raymond adds: "Morethm 65 to 75 percent ot the people who have made a commitment to beUer their life will make it the first time . . It depends on your atUtude. Besides not taking the substance, you have to change your lifestyle." · If you have a d..rinkina problem, or if someone you care rot does. the followina nwnbera could help: Alcoholism Council · · 835-3sao· Alcoholics Anonymoua 556-4!555 Al anon 838-0865 Care Unit 49t-13U Raleigh Hills Hos~tal ~~~m Saint Joseph's Hospital 833-9111 Or check the yellow pqes ot your telephone book under "Alcoholism" or call your nearest mental health office. I I ~ I <Fro r ,. au pa~ hun on th lleact. " ell, wbat the heU are we 1oan1 t.o talk t ben e do turn on the camera?" b s, ton• more questlo.olnl' ' than· gruff, "My 1ocletlon with Bob is beauUtuJ, but we ·v never~ intimate." ~ wom&A tian!h the aetor • rnuc of coUee (" J.ne Sbootist"), a man turns oa a brltbt cameraliebt. "~h. we're coltif to have that crap on. AU n«ht, tays Wayne. Someone clamps a small rnlke to h11 jacket, the film bes1na to roll tnd Thom1>3on beeins the interview. "How lona have you known Bob Hope?" · "IT SEEMS UKE _.u rny llle," says Wayne. "One of Bob'a children was named after my daughter, Melinda, and our wives were railed in close assoclaUon,by rellaloq ... "We'veo&y~r made a plcturetogelber -I'm a lousy starignt man ... Bob bas dedicated a great deal or hJs life to other people. I just think he's a man to be admired." T~e interview continued, Wayne genially commenting on Hope's "great humor and desire to be 1811ve." Then Thompson asked whether Wayne thinks Hope's Vietnam war views hin- dered bis career. Tb~ Duke sprang to life. "Well I hope to God he was supportine our side of the war," he boomed. "What else would you want him to do? Nobody likes war -any war .. " It soon was time for the final camera sel·UP and Wayne and several crew members meanwhile wandered onto the l14wn. Offshore, the two rowboats were still firmly in position. WAYNE WAS ASKED if he has much privacy living in Newport Beach. "Oh, hell," he grollled. ''We have the tours." He mimics a tour boat guide: "That's John Wayne's house! Hell, I have to wear my wig -I can't even come out in my front yard." The crew laughs, and Wayne, viewing a re- porter scribbling in a notebook, softens "No, it's wonderful. They have k1d tours." His voice raises in pitch: "Hi, ~r. Wayne! What did,)IOU do with yoll" horse?" The voice grows gruff: "I canned it -you'll eat it tomor- row." The crew laughed again as Wayne, a Newport Beach resident for 12 years, remem- bers visiting the beach area often as a boy. ''Thal was a sand plot and out ln front of it was a mud flat. See that old Pavillon down there. That's where the kids used to come every sum- mer. We used to run through the mud, then run the girls offlhe beach." AFTER THE FINAL shots were made-and before beginning another interview-Wayne escorted the Britons into his mammoth, memorabilia-filled den. But first he autographed a picture taken in his matinee idol days. "That was taken long ago," he mused "I wish it was this year." ' In h.is den, the 70-year-old Ringo Kid showed the visitors the rifle he used in "Stagecoach'. and John Wayne in 'The Longest Day.· other movie firearms in his large gwf col~Uon. The cavernous room is filled with 50 years worth oC memones: plaques, citaUons, awards -including his Oscar for "True Grit" -books, Charles Russell Western sculptures, and a Hopi Indian doll collection. Later, in his spacious, picture-filled livin& room, Wayne talked about hia upcomin& 1peclal on ABC on Nov. 27 -the first ol a1x in two years. This one is called "Oscar Presents John Wayne and the War MQvies." .. IT HASN'T REALLY anything to do with the world war and not much to do with .h>bn Wayne,•' be said. •'It's a beautiful history of the mores and the bxcitement of the '40s, and they tell it through motion pictures.•· Wayne's career was fiourisbin1 in that period. In 1942 alone, six of hb movies w_,re re· leased. Many made in that era were war movies. "Let's see, we made 'The Fighting Seabees ' 'They Were Expendable,' 'BacktoBattan'.:." ' He was asked if they were made primarlly to boost the morale of the fighting men. "I think actually that they established in the hearts of the mothers, fathers, wives and sweethearts that their aons. brothers and husbands were bt!roes in their effort. "The flgbtinf men wanted to see the other type of pictures -that there's notbin& ilke a dame." LIKE BOB HOPE, John WJyne visited the troopsduringthatwar. UnlikeHoi>&. who usually put on large 1ta1e shows in the rear areas, Wayne -wearing his while cowboy bat -visit· ed the front lines. Once he even loaded a band onto two PT boats and put on a show at a beach-head. "Bob was a great entertainer. He could bold together and work a big show. My only value was to go up where there was a litUe beat and say hello to the kids. "Most of the kids bad gone to the Saturd~ matinees with theJr first girl and seen "e with a big haL So I meant home to them. I gave them .something to write home about." He has letters from soldiers who wrote him after the war thanking hlm for those visits. "Those are nice memories for me to have," he says. · . ' "'l'HEY WERE PLEADING with me to do a picture to ii.rt right now." he says. 0 lt's bot too risque a picture, but it doesn't flt with tbe character or image the people have of m~. "I don't need the money that ~d ri,Cbt ~t the • moment, he says, adding with a lauah. u he .. •• steps outside, "Butl may later.'' John Wayne feels that moet oHhe movies be· ... • in1 released today are not the kind ot entertaln· :• ment tbat should be comina out of Hollywood. It:• is, be says, a trend that bas stopped motion pie-•: tures from being an American babtt. The actor gazed at the b~ ill front ot his house. The sky was clouding op and the two rowboata were gone. What does citizen Wayne do • in his spare time? "You people don't live me time," be says. "what with charities, community affairs and try. , lhg to make a livine to pay for the bureaucracies •· in the world." • · He allows that be fishes, birdsboots. and en-• joys ''Just beinc on a boat with my ltidl. Natural• •. ly, once they fly the nest they have their own Uf e, ... joys andresponsibilltiea." ; College Admissions Workshop . Eapecfally for hJgb echool juniors and MnlOtt •• and their parent.I Newport Beath Marriott 900 Narport ecnt.r Drive' Friday, Noverober 25 10 to 12 or 2 to 4 • Should J go to college? Where sMJJ I go to college? Will I bt admitted? Can my famUy afford It? Atamy acora too low?.· Which college offers the best prosJamS for my in-.. and ablllties? The Problems of Buying Sleepwear: Each Ms.Sion will be an Informal, general dlscUSlkln an-. swertng these questions and othets of concern to the cotle~·bound student Queslk>n and aruwp-period With emphasis on Individual concerns. Students and l>&'ef'ltl may also request a separate appointment for lnfonna~ pertaining to specific college choices. • LeMerr MsUvn J. Blum, M.A. Educcor and~ Dlttdor. of AdmlNlons \ Parents trying to buy sleepwear for their children race a harder job than ever, because of questions raised this 'week about the posslbl( safety or a chemical used to replace Tris as a name retardant. fabrics, ask questions and study JabeJs. Tris, now suspected of causing cancer in animals, was once used in up to 60 percent of all children's sleepwear. The Consumer Product Safety Commission - CPSC -banned the sale Laboratory tests of the or garments with Tris in replaceruent. Fyrol April. but the ban was FR·2, have produced overturned on technical con flj ~ting and In· grounds and an appeal is· conclusive results. pendine. Jn August, the There is no simple commission reported home test for either Tris continued sale of Tris· o r F yr o I F R . 2 . treated garments and Consumers who want to started going to court, on be sure of evolding these a case-by-case basis, to chemicals will have to .. get the items otr the watch for specific shelves. Thrift Shop .Pickup Tris also was used in some, but not all , polyesters. A spokesman for the product safety commission said gar· ments of polyester blended with some other fiber are less likely to contain Tris than 100 per cent polyesters, but added: "When you 're purchaslnc new gar· men ts that are polyester, ask the retailer whether the garment bas been chemically treated. U you don't get a satisfac- tory answer. don 'l buy.•' Shippee said Fyrol FR-2 was used only on 100 percent polyester knits. He said the as- soc1ation knew of no case sold under the brand Shippee said these. whereitwasusedonany ... names Verel. SEF. fabrics account for only woven fabrics. Kaoecaron, Cordel an about 20 percent or the Fet: $5.00 .-r pmon. PleaM make ramratlons by phontn;,\ 626-8124 Of 624-6647 -Not all 100 percent I_!• an~d~Le~a~vi~'l::.... ----~.!m~a..!r:!k~e~t:..: • ..J1h~o~w!!e!v_!e.!r~._!!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ polyester knlta contain Fyrol, but it is impossi- ble to tell simply which ones are treated wltb other chemicals. Fabric names must be listed on labels, but names of chemicals used to treat· the fabrics are not in- cluded. I I l I . WB•tel .. ,~ . ~ ....... ·_ -: ~t'• DoOt" I mw.MOU&acw ~aerMUJ VILLA ALEO 1;30 &ewrrOHED 0Q9ublt, Double ••• Toll And· !!.OUl>le" _, ADAM·12 "'oothllt OMtlon" It HODGEPODGE LODGE ··~· e:oo caa ticews • NEWS !MEAGEHCV ONl!I. A paramedic Who !OMS conti.- dence after hit flt9t call gain• It back when he~ a men In • car accident. D MOVIE ** "Amazing Apea"Oocu- mef'tary Narrated by Biii Burrud. (2 hra.) m THE BRADY BUNCH "You're Never Too Old" m THE AOOKIE8 Terry trlee to INm why an o4d friend launched a Mernlngly MN1el111 attack on a patrol car officer. fBZOOM D FOODS FOR THE MOOE.AN FAMILY "From Scratch Baking" (fJ ABCNEW8 1:30 8 THE PRICE 18 RIGHT m MY THREI! SONS "Doublu A Go-Go" • OVEREASY Tenneaee Ernie Ford; tax law. and widow'• benefit•; credit buying and aervk:a. 8!> FAMILY PORTRAIT "Sexu., lncompatlblllty And Dysfunction" (I) C88NEWS QI MERV ORIFFIN 7:00 8 THE MUPPET& Gueat: Don Knott1. D NBC NEWS 8 UAA8CLUB Q A8CNEW8 G) ILOVELUCY "The Quiz Show" Q) ADAM·12 The team._.,,,. that crime hH no reapect for age or race. Ql) MACNEIL I LEHRER REPORT 8i) CALIFORNIA TONIGHT (J) TO TELL THE TRUTH 7:30 8 ALL-STAR ANYTHING GOES D FAMILY FEUD 8 NEWLYWED GAME 0 0 HOLLYWOOD SQUARES G) THE BRADY BUNOH Cindy'• lciloolmate teues her beceUM'Of her lllp and Pater I• called a coward for retulJng to fight him. ti) LEr8 MAKE A DEAL 9 2'TON10HT ell> VOTERS' PIPELINE "County Beat" Cl) THE MUPPE'T& Guest: Dom DelulN. 8:00 8 (J) WONDER WOMAN lust For. Fun Jo Anne Worley and Ronnie Schell (center) pose witb. Mousketeert' AlUSon Fonte and Curtis W~ in the musical adventure, •The Mousketeers at Walt Disney World," on The Wonderful World of Disney, Sunday 7-8 p.m., on Channel 4. Wonder Woman rnuat IO~ how atop • deranged ldentl1t (Roddy McOowall) from ravag- ing Earth with artlflcally-· Induced volcanic ert.1ptlon1. D CPO SHARKEY "Don't Make Wav•" When a detachment of WAVES la quartered In Sharkey'• barracks, he attempt• to get their leeder (Bevtrty 8andera) Into a compromlltng potl11on 10 they wlll be moved out. 8 MOVIE ** "Treasure Galleon•" (1972) Adventure Story. True adventure of the recovery of the.C.bled treasure beMath the sea when a hurricane .unk a Spanllh armada In 1858. (2 hrs.)_ 0 9 .DONNY ANO MARIE Guests: Cindy WHllama, Paul Lynde, Jay Otm0nd, lruce Kimmet. 8 JOKER'S WILD OJ CAROL BURNETT AND FRIENDS Gueat1: Steve Lawrence. m A FLOWER OUT OF PLACE A tpeelal taped at Folsom (Ten- neaee State Prlaon) h01ted by Johnny Cash with gu.at• Roy Ratings Guide 1-lft ere ratad 11<corellng to t1o1r offk e ~. -IH lor TV .,. lud9edll'(ur111<.1 tr 111 * * -Excellent * * • -Very Good -• • -Good • 1'7 -Fair • -Poor Clark. Linda ~t amd. Foeter Br00k1. ·· 8D '1'i> WASHINGTON WEEK IN REVIEW ·e:30 I CHICO AND THE MAN CONCENTRATION CR088-WfT8 fli) tB WALL fTREET WEEK "Some Time Next Vear" Gueet: Bernadette M. Bartel•, vice pr..tdent, Shew&. Co. 8:00 8 (I) C8S MOVIE ***"The ThrM Mulket ....... (1974') OllYer RMd, Raquel Welch. Three of tM king'• soldier., together wtth their friend D' Magnan, .. .,. the royal famlly from a plot being hatched by the wlly cleric, Car- dinal Rlchelleu. D ROCKFORD ALES 0 @I ABC THEATRE "Mary Whltll" Ed Flanders, Kathleen Beller, Flonnaul1 Flanagan atar In thll dramatlza. tlon of a companlonate young woman'• dedication to Improve th• world cut lhort by her untlmely death. 8 IRONSIDE "All Honorable Men" OJ MERV GRIFFIN Q) MARCUS WELBY, M.O. A man needing eye surgery poetponee It ao he may 1ee hla flrat ohlld. fJD VISIONS "You Can Run, But You Cen't Hide" JnvolVlng hlmaelf In a street theater group, a vi.tnam veteran worlca out anger once aimed at hie family and IOClety. 6l) ARING LINE "Hu President Carter Let Down The Blacks?" Gu.st: Vernon Jordan, executtve director of the National Urben League. TELEVISION NBC 8 8:00 -CPO Sharkey. Sbarkct:r (Don Rickles) finds a detachment of Waves in hi.I baincka. CBS tJ 9:00 -"The 1.'bree usketeen. •• Th latest remake of the Dumas cluaic with Oliver Reed,. Raquel Welch, Faye Dunaway, Richaril Chamberlam· and Charlton Heaton. ~ ABC (7) 8 9:00 -"Mary White.,. Kathleen Bellet stars as a young and compassionate woman· whose dedication to improve the world ii cut short by her tudden death tn th.ii new TV anovle' with Ed Flan· ders. · KOCE 910:00-•'The Servant." Dl~k Bogarde ua '1Qle8 Fox portray a wealthy man artd hi.I 1er-vant whose roles are araduallY revened in this 196' mo~e With Sarah Miles. . . 12:409 MOYl! .... ''Tiie Sergeen•" (1"8) Rod Steiger, John Phtnlp Law. All ~~t l6de ~ lld9, a pair Of iC*Rer1 become clo". frflnde.; (1ttr.,30 min.) 1;00 8 MIDNIGHT 8P1!CW. Host TM 8'*"*" Ouellt:-~ ~. AYW&ge WNte 6Mtd, HMtwaw, Gato Barbieri, ~Prfol, Ronee Blakt.y, J.J. •.. ,., . '*~'Calllng Northald• 717" ( 1048) J.,,,.. Stewart, Helen Walktr. A l9pOrt« re- opena an ~..Ofd c:ate hi.ta.y to tree a wrongly Jmprjt- oned man. (2 hr1., 30 min.) 1:30 8 TALKABOUT eM<ME *** "Johfmy Stool Pigeon" (1149) Howard Duff, Shela.y Wlnten. A gangater II freed from Alcatraz on the oondttlon that M locate t"9 wheNaboflta Of • MrCOtlca ring. (1 hr., 30 min.) ·1:361 NEWS 2:00 MOVIES *** "And Soon Th• Oarkne11" (1971) Pamela ~rankAn, Mlchele Dotttce. One of two Englftl'I glrla, on a blcy- cltng hOUday, cflMppNrl. (2 hta.) **'--i "The Man Who Heum.d Hlmtelf'' (1971) AoOlt Moore, Olga o.org.Plcot. A bull· • neeaman di.oov.ni that ttla eicact dou.,.. la llvtng hla llt. for him and I• doing a b9tter Job than he could hlmtelf. (2 hra.) ~ \ 11 l<D Y"a ~INQ 1:00• ~LO ANDni&MAGIC. I~~ PTLCLUB ELIMEHTARY NEWS 8AMVORTY VOGA FOR HEAi. l11 ORUOUSE 1:80 PACeSErTERS . e 9 L»F-A-l YMPICS m MOVIE ··~ "CrippM CtMk" (1952) o.otge Montgomtry, Kattn Booth. Two gowmment 9gentt lnflltrn a gang of outlawl Nwotwd In looUng gold mine.. l hr •• 30 min.) eARllt. SEA AND lkY HERITAQI . 1:00 I Cl> Ml8TER MAGOO ptNK PANTHER MOVIE ** "Bonnie Partc« Story,. (1t!S8) Dorothy Provtne, JllQk Hogaii. The adwntlnl of Bon- ni• P1rk•r, th• woman dM&*ldO who, with ban. krobber Clyde a.trow, terror• Ii.ad ttle Welt during the0 Depreaalon. ( 1 hr., 30 min.) G MOVIE 2-.258 NEWS 2:30D .. EWS 8 MOvtES *** "~To 8' VfitY, VfitY popuw• (1065) a.tty Grable. S1*ea North. After wttMlllng a murder, two ~ dancerl ** ••He11t1,. .. (1948) wunam· Elllot, Marie Wlndtor. A ~· bier prom .... to bulld a chlWCh •ft• hla ltfe .. 8eY9d • tM COit • ~ ' n.e for U*r 1iv.. (1 hr., 55 min.) ··~ "F1y By Night" (1142) FUohard Catteon, Nancy KtOy. A doctOf, llCCUlfd of murder, la' able to dMr hlmMtf after he ~ that a Na:zS apy rtng wu f~ltlble. (1 fir., 80 min.) '3:008 e NEWS . 3:.IO. MOVIE *** "SIMlge ~,, of a mlnltt•'e. (2 hrl.) 1 I AOMPEA AOOM EARTH, 8M AH08KY UO Cl) 8UG8 BUNNY I AOAO , RUNNER I IWMIY PANTI I NnWrT8 .-ar Of: F.AMIUf.8 "Ambition" After Jam•• Lathrop wlne e deelgn ~ tlotl '°'a~ ~t,. ""' wtf• Sarah gMle birth to a .on .. • Putting Out the 'Contract on Cherry Streei' .. ,. Penny Peyser, as J1utae Franklin's daughter Bobby, f eei. ber social llf e has fallen into a rut. bn The Tony Randall 1 l;how, Saturday, .• :30-10 p.m., OD Channel 2. ' ARY BUCK Anhalt bu written aueh other fllma as "The Young Lions," "The Bolton Stranller." "Yembe1 of tbe Wed· dins," "Luther" and "Jeremiah Johnson,'' which be wrote with John • MWua. Two of hi.I films. 0 Prlcle ucl the i>a11lon .. and "N't u a Strancer," starred Sinatra. • • BE MID 'l'llB reuon h• CIOelil't write 1J1«e for tel•villon ii atrt.ctb' economic. . 1 •'Top mooey for televlilOD la D>,@ an hour. wbich meana I 1ot M,000 for 'Contract on Chen')' Street• 0 b 1ald. "For tbe aame amowat of tlme 1 could m.U• a lot more ...nuq a theatrical movie. I dld ctit '100,000 for 'Roots.' whlch was a real· breaktbrouSh foi-telovlllon. •'The whole tblng •it~ payln1 Writers ii be.Danas. The .Writers ~ • b\lllltd. The three networks are ln •· monoi:IOllltlc poaltiQD ioCS tbtY force i very ~ow profit mtrabi oo UM pro-ueen. Ttie;y bl~ the pri;ducoera toto ac~ a mtnJ.mom ~ ~ the procf\lcer PIH•• lt on to ·th• -.rrlter." ,, , · anthol~ series called "A Time for Klllln1. ' lt starred George c. Scott and Michael Parks. He aald be wrote ft !or a chance to direct. "I directed tor 11 days and It noat)y drove me up the wall," be sald. "It wu ttd.low. It wun 't nearly u much fdb aa manlpulatine cbaraeten an paper." ... lnstitute Cites . Classic 'Win~' As. ·Best FiJin • w ASWNGTON (A.P) .. 0 GoQ.• Wttb the WJncl"' waa chc)fen the sreateat American n.Jm •ver pro. duH~, ed1ln• "CaHblanca •• aQ4 · "Cft11eo Kane!· · , Lllltan G1-h '1'4 F~ wr., --. ' there, Ud lo wve Ell.Ubeth Tlllor Warner and Ethel K~. ~ included James Stewart. Henl')' ._. da. ud Charlton Heaton anc1 Heft.rt· Kl11ln1er. • TBB .OCCASION' Thunctay DIOt waa the Amerlcao Film lnltitatte'a 10th annlvenary gala bell.at at ta. Kennedy Center. Earlier. at a Wldte House reception Pretident ca&1eir paJd tribute to fllm1 aa 0 a tns• people'• art form." · • Gears• SteYona, dlre"etor Of the 1.D, atttui., lald Uie ID clwJc abGut ttie Civil War was the peateat amoaa many eqwtY sreat rum •. "Tba lm ... project.s ID tnmi lli qute an accurate plctute of What our nation h beta aDd 11, '" aalcl CirUt ~ a4dlnl Ula' movlu •f!iave touebed d our Jlvilt ••• t.Dcludl.DI mlMI • farm bo). . . f ll g p 0 1 • ANN ARBOR, Mtcb. <AP>-lt'1 not all that lneon1ruOU1 to' hwp Ohio State·Mlcbl1an foot· ball aames in wltb rare wlna vtntap autos, pa1.nt1D1e by the areat muten and claHlc novela. 'The rtvaJry may be un- matched. ..... ~aturday, lt will continue at ,aucht1an Stadium before nearly 105,000 fans and a na(lonal televlalon audience. As UIUal, the Bir Ten Conference cham· . pfonshJp and a Rose Bowl berth WUl be OD the line. Texaa·Oldahoma, Southern California· UCLA, Harvard· Yale, Army.Navy, Olthhoma. Nebr111ka, Texas·Arkanaa1, Notre Dame-Southern Cal, Alabama·AUbun\ are amoo1 tbe many creatrivalries. But in Big Teo count.I')', Ohio State·Mlchigan games have M .equal. · "You can't match tbla rivalry," said Michigan coach Bo Schembechler. "Protesalonal teams could never match this. . . What a class le! " Woody Hayes, the irascible coach of the Buckeyes, con· curred. He called the rivalry "the greatest in all of sports." Spons in Brief Hisle Signed By Milwaukee MILWAUKEE -Outfielder Larry Hisle, one of baseball's most aought·aftef free-agent players this year after leading .the American league in runs batted in, was signed to a Iona· term contract today by the Milwaukee Brewers. Delalla of the contract were not immediately available. The 30-year·old Hisle, one of the me.ny members of the Min· nesota Twins to choose the free- agent r'O\M, batted .301 witb 27 home runs and 119 rbi. He was 12th in the balloting for the AL Most Valuable Player Award. With Milwaukee he wlll bat fourth and play center field. Jn 1975, when Hisle was out much of the season due to elbow surgery, he hit .314 with 11 homers and 51 rbl in 80 games. Last year he hit .272 with 14 homers and 96 rbi. Connor• Win• LAS VEGAS -Jimmy Con· nora needed only 47 minutes to dispose of Ken Rosewall, 6·0, 6·2 and get back into contention ln the $320,000 WCT Challenge Cup tennis tournament Thursday night. Dick Stockton took the lead in his four.man div1s1on with a 6-3, 5-8, 6-4 victory over John Alex· ander. Ilie Nastase finished round- robin competition with a perfect record, nipping Roscoe Tanner, 5-6, 6·4, 6·5. VIias Ad1'ance• SANTIAGO, Chile Guillermo Vilas advanced to the quarter finals of a Grand Prix tennis tournament with a 6-3, 6·4 victory over Erick Debllcker Thursday. In other matches, Alvaro Betancourt defeated Jose Higueras, 7·5, 2-6, 6-4, Gene Mayer whipped Emilio Montano, IAKERS TANGLE . Jff7Jl PISTONS INGLEWOOD (AP) -The fn. jury-riddled Lc>e Anteles Lakers will attempt to reach the .500 mark toni&hl when they enter· taln the Detroit Pfstoru In a Na- tional Ba1ketball Association game. The Lakers bring a 6·7 record into the contest at the Forum in Inelewood, while the Pistons are 6·6. 6·3, 6·1, and Jaime Fillo! ouUast· ed Ion Tir1ac, 7·6. 7-5. \\lso, Victor Pecci defeated · Lito Alvarez, 6-3, 7-5, Patricio Cornejo overcame Peter Elter, 6·3, 1·6, 6·1, and Belus Prajoux beat Jaime Pinto, 6-4, 6..t . Orantes '" Se.au MANILA -Manuel Orantes moved into the semifinals or the Phahppane International tennla championship today beating Louk Sanders. 6-2. 6--0. Dick Crealy defeated Tim Wilkinson 6-3, 6·0 m an earlier match to move up against Orantes. Geoff Masters advanced by beating Tim Gullikson, 6·2, 6-1, while Karl Meiler eliminated Tom Gullikson, 3·6, 6·1, 6·4. Nlckla ... Fire. 87 SYDNEY -Jack NiclClaus stormed back into contention in the Australian Open today, firing a record five-under-par 67 on the course he recently helped re· design. Nicklaus, overcoming a dlsap· pointing five-over 77 on Thursday's first round, was back in top form today. At the end of the second round, he was only three strokes l>Ehind the leaders, New Zealand's John Lister and American Don January, both tied at 141. DffJh Surri1'e• WEMBLEY, England -Eddie Dibbs beat Billy Martin 7·5, 6·7 6·3 in a tense match that lasted nearly three hours at Wembley Empire Pool Thursday night and reached the quarter finals of a Grand Prix tennis tournament. In other second· round matches, Bjorn Borg defeated Andrew .Pattison, 6-2, 6·3, Ray Moore eliminated Ove Bengtson, 6·3, 6·4, and Wojtek Fibak downed VJJay Amritraj, 6·3, 6·1. ~SoldOttt SAN FRANCISCO -Sunday's San Francisco-Los Angeles Na· tional Football League contest was officially declared a sellout today. clearlng the way for local televisinl of the game. AJA.Salb SEATTLE-Guard Brad Hoffman Jed a balanced attack with 14 points as the Athletes in Action ran away from SeatUe University, 101-94, Thursday night in theChleftain&' basketball :Season home-opener. O'Brien< S~~cumhs Tinr QB Won Heuman in '38. • ,,,.., Ncw.nber 11, 1'7'7 DAILY. '9LOT AlUiou1b Mlc:hlcan h•• a AlabamalntheSugarBowt. 40--.s lead in tb• aeries, 1lnce "There'll be 1reat plm made Ohio State joined the Bis .Ten ln on emotl~" eald Schembtebler. U03, tbej¢es1t.Udstt28·28-$. addin1 that he ii "an ecnoUonlll Thi• 1i tho 1otb Um• in tbe Jut guy" and hu to control bla emo- 11 yeara ~ 1he l•m• 'Will de-tions on the ald•Hue. clde the conference Utle and'-Hayes onc9'itore ~P yard Roae Bowl rep~1entat1ve. markers 1n anier •t lrflcblaan ActuallY, 9lli'> state already Stadium. haa ~Unc&ect at. feut a Ue tor the Scbembechler said tf.!ae were a title. Mlehtaan, upset J.4.0 by aPOrtl wrtter, he wo"1d '4ti'Y to Mlnneaote OCt. 22, needs to win brine out the fact thlt tame la to sf*re ttle leeaue chlm· really what football Ls all atiout. pJonshlp and 1.tn a Jdp, to You can 10 back throu1b biltory Pasadena for the Rote Bowl and see how lmaortant th 0 a1atn1t the PaclfJc-8 cbasbplon. gamea have been. .r ~, Saturday'• loser wlll meet 'Thla same mu take a dif. ......... PUght of tlae Goalle_ Vancouver goalie Cesare Maniago (30) gets the worst of the deal as Boston's Rick Middleton trips over Maniago's head in ~ational Hockey League actio!'l Thursday night at Boston. The game ended in a 4-4 standoff. . -. Blomberg Gets $6()6,000 CHICAGO (AP> -Blll Veeck, who came up with some bargain basement free a1ents last year. b up to h.b old tricks althou1h the ante is somewhat higher. Having hit the jackpot with third baseman Eric Soderholm and pitcher Steve Stone a year ago, Veeck announced Thursday the signings of first baseman- desienated hitter Ron Blomberg of the New York Yankees and pitchers Ron Schueler and Jim Hughe• from the Minnesota Twins. "In each case we spent more money than we can afford," Veeck, who refuses to reveal fieures, said with a laugh. ''Ne1ottaUons are private mat· ters," said Veeck. "The impor- tant things are pitching and hit· Ung. Forget the dollars. They are Smith Paces UCI, 61-56. Portland State transfer Wayne Smith came through in every de- partment Thursday night to pace the UC Irvine Anteaters to a 61·56 basketball triumph over visiting Melbourne, Australia. The 6-5 Smith cubed in 18 point.a, in addition to 13 rel)ounds . and 1 a.salats aa the Ant.eaten of coach Tim Ttftopened the 19'7'1-78 camp•lgn by streaking to a 28"1.S bulge. Kirk Christ wu also a bl1 fie· tor for the winner•, scoring 19 polota and ~•bbing 10 rebounds. He wu oertect from the field, hlttin1 a1f elght attempta. Playtn1 ~fore l,0'151 the Ant.. tater,a• b111Ht lead tn the. eecond b.U was at 59·50. UCI abooteta connttot4d on 52.8 per. ceot ot their lhole ftc>m. the field es OJ>pOHd to • 33.8 rate for the Australiul, wbo lolt earlier to UCLA and Cal Sta~ {Fullerton). UCl's next venture ii Nov. rr at the Unlv ... llf. of Portland. satlsfled and so am I." However, hitting and p(tching in two of these cues are somewhat unknown. Blombera bas played in only one game in two years and Huebes worked only four innings for the Twins and spent. most oC last season at Tacoma where he had a 9·10 record. SthueJer had an 8·7 record with the Twins. Although Veeck would not re· veal figures, lt was teamed that Blomber1 had aJped a four-yeat contract for about $600,000. There was no lndlcaUon as to wbat Schueler received, but Huibes appeated to be another bar1aln basement •cquisitlon. Blomber1 has to take up some ol the slack left by the losses of Riehle Zisk and <>star Gamble ln the draft. Zisk, who bu since slgoed with Texas, bit ao home runs, and Gamble, still unsigned, blt31. A shoulder operaUon sidelined Blom berg in 1916. . .. WASHtNOTON CAP) -Fullback Johll Rl1tins. out ol ac· ~on because or JQJury, ts a. hllhett paid member of the Wuhlniton Redakloa who lead the National Football Leap tn player payroll at SU million. the Wa1blngtoo Poat reported 1n Tbunday'a edlttona. . Tbere are U players •arnli:ll more than $100,000 _per yeu or ·mqre, Wlth·H_l_fpu bl&best paid with a S1:5 ~on five.year eon~ tract. RJalnS, llko HVual other Red1ld.Ds, hu elected to be Pild under delt.rred compensation for 'tax purpose1. RlHln•' payout wlll bo done over 15 years, the Po.t quoted sources u saylal. Quarterback Bill Kilmer, now ln a Teaerve role, 11 second hlabut paid, at about s110,ooo annually, with wide receiver Charley Taylor at $13$,000. aunntng backa Calvin Hill and Mike Thomas reportedly are paid $125,000 a year each, 81 is , safety Jake Scott and head coach : Geor1e Allen. ~ The Post sald the figures. aft 1 approximate, were compiled ; from interview• with present and : fonuer members of the Redskin i te•m. tront-offlce personnel, 81· t aistant coaches, u well as other ! NFL IOW'Cel. l At the moment, the Redskins • have 57 players on their payroll i -43 oo the act.lye rostet, two , more on the taxi squad and l2 Oft • the injured resene list. That I would mean the average Red.skin • salary ii '83,000 and cbanae. • Last year, the Wubiniton Post : obtalned the financial records of l the football team from 1973 I throu1b 19'15. 'Ibey •bowed the Redskins players• aalary payroll had increased from JU million l in 1973, the year tollowlnc the , Super Bowl season, by St mllllon. t The Red.Skin.I have 16 players • under contract who are 80 or : older, with a total of 18 players i having eight or more ·~eara et• if pertenee in the league. The uiore veterans a team has, the hleher the payroll, with Allen at the con-• t.n>il. • • Amoni the other leadia1· f salarle1: center Len Hauss .l $100,000; quarterback Joe f Thei•mann '80,000 th1s aeuan. , $150,000 µext teuoo; tJabt end 1 Jean l'uiett ~.ooo, defensive ' tackle Di.ron Talbert $110,000; • fenatve end Ron MeDole $100,000; linebacker Cbd• Han,rger $100,000, comerbaclc ' Pat llcba' '100,000 and 1atety, Ken ouston $110,000. • SOLID FRONT·· This trio of Fountain Valley High stan· douts will be paving the way for Orange County back of the year Willie Gittens tonight at Orange Coast College against Fontana in the first round of the CIF playoffs. They are (from left) Bryan Caldwell, Larry Budgen and Al Koenig, each a first-team selection on the All-Orange County team. • Edison Has Tough Task At St. Paul Barons Battle Font ana SANTA FE SPRINGS -Edison <Huntington Beach) High's Chargers chall enge Angelus League co·champion St. Paul tonight (8) in the first round of the CIF CB1g Five Conference} football playoffs. The Swordsmen of St. Paul are 71,'z·point favorites to advance to the quarterfinals behind the run- ning of Rick Valenzuela, passing of Tim Cowan and a rugged de· fense. anchored by linebackers J im Pallares 098) and Bob Ybarra (205) Valenzuela has averaged 5.5 yards per carry and has scored seven touchdowns. Cowan is a deadly passer when he goes to the air, but does not have two of his best receivers tonjght, ac- cording to St. Paul coach Man- JOn Ancich. Chris Arena and Mike Gallego are reportedly sidelined with in· 1uries. Still, the St. Paul defense, an opportunistic offense and the intimidation of playing at St. Paul give the Swordsmen a dis- tinct advanta,:!e. Coach Bill Workman's Edison C hargers enter without ~ophomore quarterback Frank Seurer. who completed 64 of 153 passes for 892 yards and 7 touchdowns. Senror Chuck Crawford lakes over for the lbjured Seurer Crawford has completed 2 of s PJl:iseJS lol"'l.2 yards this season. The runninl tame, *hich must move against St. Pau~ if the Char1er1 are to stay within range o~ tl\e swordsmen, re· volv'• around tailback Jim Criss and biabackup, Rob Milucky. Fountain Valley 13-point Faoorite at OCC Fountain Valley High's un· defeated Barons, the No. l seed an the ClF {Big Five Conference) playoffs, battles defensive· minded Fontana tonight (8) at Orange Coast College in the first round of the eliminations. ll 's a rematch of a 1976 duel at the same site where Fontana marched 96 yards in the waning moments to eliminate the Barons, 14·10. Tonight coach Bruce Pickford's Fountain Valley crew At .Mission has been installed as 13-point favorites with Willie C25 touchdowns) Gittens paving the way. Gittens is Orange County's back of the year and draws a crowd oo every play-even when someone else is called on for duty. While Gittens' credentia.ll are valid, the Barona have more go- ing for them with quarterback Doug Thompson (1,280 yards and 10 TD passes) and receivers Stan B ackyard Brawl: CV, Diablos Mix .. ' Bill Cunerty has coached against Mission Veijo High twice and never lost, but tonight his team is a 12-point underdog in the opening found of the CIF foot ball playoffs. Cunerty's two victories over Mission Viejo came when he coached Dana Hills, but now he's moved inland lo first-year school Capistrano Valley. Game time tonight at Mission Viejo's stadium is 7 :30. Although Mission Viejo has an apparent edge in experience and talent, Capistrano Valley bas a jump as far as scouUng Is con· cerned. playoff noC by virtue of its 5-3 record, but Murio expected the Cougars would be placed in a bracket with smaller schools. Even Cunerty was a little sur· prised. ·'I think our victory over Bishop Montgomery Ca S·A division school) bad something to do with it," Cunerty says. "But we've got 1,300 kids at our school and Mission Viejo has 2,800. We 're definitely an underdoe." Capistrano Valley's offense is centered around quarterback J}rad Parker and halfback Robin Charles. Parket has completed. exactly 40 percent 9f his pa.saea and rushed for a '·' averac& while Charlee has a '7.5 average and 10 touchdowns to hl~ credit. Shibata, Kevin Margerum and Gittens ol,lt of the backfield com· bining in the air. Too, the Barons are tough up front. Bryan Caldwell, Larry Budeen and Al Koent1 are first. team All-Orange County linemen and the defense bas actually out- sbined the offense on occaslon. While much of Fountain Valley's creden\lals are of the glorious nature, the Steelers are a team to be reckoned with. Although Fontana stumbled three times and finlabed fourth in the Citrus Belt League, the Steelers are capable of sbuttine potent oflemes off with a defense that bas no weak links. Pacing Fontana's defense is linebacker Russ Silverthorn (6-3, 200) and linebacker Kelth Hartline (6·2, 210), while the Steelers wishbone offense ls keyed by quarterback Dell Can- nady, a 5-9, 170.pounder who was one of the mainstays in the Fon- tana arsenal last year. Fontana coach Dick Bruicb, who was an usiatant at St. Paul in 1975 and at Fontana in 1976 when Fountain Valley lost to both in the playoffs, is the architect of the Fontana defense. Gittens bas rushed for 1,164 yards on 140 carries for an 8.1 yards per carry avera1e, w)llle Tim Henlgman and Jim Freeman add punch at fullback with a 5-yard averaate when called on. "-1alJI V•llft U- 0..... ~ TE Stanton l'IO llO "•YH AT Clllnnlcl 240 ZU CAidweii • AG Oeftnl• 190 215 1'11'111 ... C C.ld""I 21S 190 I.am~ LG Budgt!( 1'0 1'• NICllOl10ll LT l(Mnl9 US 1'0 Hen)9nwln SE Mar .. rum 1'41 190 8\1119tn 011 TllOmPIOfl llO 170 Pactllte Tll Glllet11 17S 1eo Sftlbeta Fii FrMm... 205 IH ~w Fl.. Sl'llbfl.t 1111 165 Sclllefer 011 OT .. o OT oe LB LB CB CB $$ $ .- Newport Harbor abd St. Fran- $ (La Canada), two prep i ball teams known for their toulh defe1tte1~ clash toD11bt (8) at NewPQrt'llart>or Hilh ln a nnt round Cit playoff (Bif 5 Con· ference) baWe. The bolt S&Uors, wbo finished second ln tbe Sunset Leaaue and carry a 7-2 r~rd Into the con- test, bave been establlsbed six·point favorite. by tbe Dally Pilot. It will be Newport's first playoff appearaocesince tbe 1974 campaliJl wblle St. Francia will be ma.kinl its sixth 1tralcht ap. pearance in the post-seuon al· fair. Newport bas a 3-4 reccn-d. in the playoffs with two ot tbe victories coming in 1974 when bead coach Bill Piuica led the Tars to a 10-2 record and the Sunset League ti- tle. The SailOl'S lost their second game of the 1973 playoffs and were elimtnated in the first round in 1970and1972. St. Francis, runner-up in the Del Rey League, carries a 4·3·1 record into the playoffs and re- lies mainly on underclassmen. Only six seniors start for the Knights. In five games this year, the Kniehts have given up one touchdown or less. They have al· lowed opponents an averaee of 8.8 points an outing with one s hutout. But offensively, they • FOOTBALL I MISCELLANY a)l'.ergo just 14.3 polots ~r lon&lJ'l>.iO' ...... Newport's forte la alao defense, havioc allowed opponenta lea.s than nine PQU!ta per same while reelSterlna three ahutouta. Of· Cenalvel)', the Tan retr hea~ on the p tn1 of Pr••• wons. Lyon• hu com pitted 55 ot mat tempta for 878 yard.a and "" touchdowns. Flanker .Wayne J(j•parek LS 1 the deepthrellt. Ttie bleceat question marlC for the 1ame is the availability of St. Franc~' top running back, Heney 8tll. A 8-0, 200 tailback witb bOth slze and speed, Bell was held out of tbe Kniahts' season thlale last week for dis· ciplinary reuoos Head coacb .,ack Friedman said he wcn't decide until game time whether to start Bell, who gained over 1,000 yards as a junior aoc1 892 ln seven 1ames thla aeasqo. Tbe Knl&hts run out of Uie pro I formatlon on e>f!ense and employ a S-2 defensive alignment, something Newport bas run up against all season. ....... ..... u_... 08-Detlllllt T ,...,., ,,, 1t7 A.._ AG C.l'MIWI 2AI 201 Stwtls ,.~ •rec.,,.,.,. ioo ,., • ._. c 8Uf"' '1J 201 •l•tl Let Allleft m 1'1 ~ L$> A..,.. ttS -WR H~ ltt lM Ctf'urn Qe L~ 1• US Hltnl Fa W.,,.._lle 17' 1'9 Ktlfl'ICJI TB JOllMen 1,. 14' ·~-l'L It...... 11' 11' K....,_ Tritons, Aztecs l'ie Esper~a Picked to Win Esperanza High School will be favored to defeat host Saft Clemente High tonight (7:30) in opening round CIF football playoff action despite finishing third in the Orange League. Esperanza is a 7-point favorite over the South Coast Leaaue co- cttampion Tritons. passin1.1n nine sames." The defense is spearheaded bY Chris MoMon at tackle, Bol>. Wood at linebacker, John Scar1yl ln tbe secondary and Jef.f Carpenter and David Siedel ! ends. San Clemente'• defensive unlt is headed by Mike Murphy and Dan Montoya on ~e line, K~vlh' The key to success for coach Stewart at Unebjcker and Miker Pe le Yoder's Az tees is Calvertlntbeaeeondaey. quarterback Mike Ludwte, a 5-7, Leading runner for the Asteca 155-poundjunior. is Brad Goettsche (5-11, 175, sr. "When Ludwig went down in who has averaied 5.1 yardli ll our fifth game and was out for carry and bu 970 yards for the - three aames, we lost two in • sea.son. l row," Yoder says. "He's de· Ludwig doea the passln1 aDd finitely tbe key to our offense." ~as. passed for clqse to 900 yanti San Clemente will counter with 1n sm 1ame1. a strong running eame, McElroyiUheleadinflfOUl'K! spearheaded by quarterback gainer for the Triton• with fl09: Mark McElroy. Coach Allie yards in nine games. He bu Schaff runs in a series of ball car~ passed for 270 additional yards riers at the halfback positions. but bas completed OAly 11 aerial& • "Esperanza bun 't run against in 5' attempts. He bu bad fOUt' too many tea.ms using the option intercepted. run," Schaff says. "If they shut 1t11a-.1.tu.i9s us down on the ground, we1l OM1me ....._ havetogolotheairmore." ~~ ~~" =· m :~~ Both teams boast strong de· oo l'MM 1u 1as 1 1111 tensive units but n-no .. anza will c SIMICINn 1.so "' ~· .IWI.,_.. 0G "edt'-'-US Ito a\'rd have an edge in weight. oT 1<1119 110 ,., ~ ... .,. "Delense ls our strone polnt, •• : :~ :: = r,::' Yoder admits. "We have fiven J H• 1mtM1 • * ,., C61\0911 up 1 •. 100 fards, both rushlna and ~: ~= :~ :: ~:"' ~ NO OT1' OE L8 ~ 08 It $ • drtss has scored tw;ce this rf ar and has Carrie~ the ball 108 ..,me• lar 472 yards-a 4.3 avera,e. Coach John Murio says bis MV staff thoroughly scouted the teams be thought the Diablos mieht draw in the playoffs, and Capistrano Valley wasn't one of them. "I don't know anything about them and I've never seen them play," Murio says. "I was really surprised they were given 2-A status, but they must be pretty good toeettntoourdraw." Mission Viejo has a multl-r a c e t e d of le nae behind quarterback ScotC Speai: and a · t.rlo of runnin1 backs, -Mike Ochoa, Alan Parker and Bob Casper. Area Sports C~endar :.Mllucky, a bref,kaway threat \fitb 4.6-second speed for 40 ~··has run for 198 yards on 50 ~rle$ and also bu lwo TDs, the l~gest a 21-yard scaml)er. ~ Bolstering Edison's game ii Uae return of backup tackle Tim Wynalan (6•1, 225) and tbe elevation of sophomore Tim~- 11an (6-0, ~) as a backup of. f'insive guard. # llllMllU_,. Off-' o.1.- 1E He.-201 ,,, Barte OE r Hallel "' llO Prlnll OT • Read\ n• ttS Wt4tl!WI NG HellleJ 201 11$ flM'lllnert OT IJG 0\ll'lllty llO 19i Cockl9 01 i "~=aid 210 I 75 GIOINn La 110 ,,,, = 1..8 ciJ.?.o its uo " ca ... c:. ''° llO Otvl• (8 ;.e Prlllll let ltO .... ., SS • Rllo*I , .. 170 H'fCMr s As a free lance team, Capistrano Valley was fiven a . Gaucboe Honored Saddleback College'• Bill Bunge and Jeff Myers have been selected to the All·Mlsston Con-· rerence water polo ..team, aa picked bY the circuit coacns. Palomar'a Paul Hubbard wu 'chosen the most valuable player. ........ o.r. _ .......... .,_ "~ """" M9mt,. ,.8111 l'ettey .,. ,.,.. ~ ,,...._.,, 1e11 wri-.hff,.,.._• l'rM Orm (IUWl"llo.I, 84.tllllt WM...,. CW- tll*t.k), JIMC.W-w w .-u~ (O.. ...,,, fllA O.Tilomes Ma °"II Y• fatrue> • Mlt'lr floon ~).,,... Ont4 ~-Cleftl«lllHlllol. ' t FOO LL/ORO Preli01s Sia tea WALNUT-Ten area ctoaa COUDtl')' teama and ao addUtonal aht in· divlduall wtll be coinpet. int in the CJP PrelJfD.I Saturday momtn1 at Mt. San Antonio Colle1e. First race ta ate. Four 1chool1-Coita Mesa, Corona del Mar Fountain Valley and Mater J>ei (Santa Ana>- have teams entered in both the boys and Sirls competition Edl1on <H ntlnaton Beach) featur • ranked team the gJr divlalon while <Huntinaton Beach en- t.en a team in the boys' .division. All have excellent Cotafer Scores T' D chancea of advanclne to · the finals Nov. 26 at the C M , . same site, as do each or osta. ~sa s Gary Confer _(92) 1s seen backing into the end zone the ball dozen in-for his ~1rst Harvard varsity touchdown, In the Crim.son's 38-21 dividuala competine in loss to highly-touted Colgate. The 1976 graduate of Estancia High the prelima. was on the receiving end of this 22-yard scoring bullet from Brian They are Mark Buckley. Confer had three receptions for 54 yards in his first LaBonte (Mission Vie-varsity contest. jo), John Goldstein~~~-=-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ (Edison) and Mike Mccaa (Estancia or Costa Mesa) in the boys division and Natalie Fernandez (Estancia), Tami Darr (Mission Vie- jo) and Dale Sprink (University) in the girls division. To advance to the finals, teams must plact> in thetoptiveln their heat races. individuals must place in the top five. Corona del Mar, ranked seventh, and Marina, ranked fifth, are in the first 4-A division boys beat race which ap- pears to be the toughest In that race are Foothill of Santa Ana (No. 2), and Eisenhower of Rialto (No. 3). McCaa is also In that race. Fountain Vailey and Costa Mesa, ranked fourth and eighth, are in the second heat race 9:25 which includes No. 1 seed Palos Verdes. Goldstein and LaBonte are among the five Jn. dividuab In that race. Mater Del:\he Angelus League champ, b in the first 3-A divillon heat race (9:50) .. In the girls division, Mater Dei, Costa Mesa, Fernandez and Sprink are in the fint heat race (10:40), Fountain Valley and Darr are in the second beat race (11 }, Corona del Mar is in heal three (11:20) and Edison is in the fourth heat (11:40). Poloists Res11me CIF Play SoCal Grid Coaches Tab Rustlers to Win Golden West College should beat Santa Monica Saturday night in their Southern Califorrua Conference foot- ball showdown al Santa Monica. At least that is the consensus of a poll of the other SoCal Conference head coaches, taken by the Dally Pilot. Three coaches-Bill Young CLA Harbor), Don Lent (Cypress} and Lui.her Hayes (Los Angeles CC) tab Golden West while LA Southwest's Ron Mims picks the Corsairs. Rio Hondo's Marty Blackstone rates it a tossup. Here is how the coaches analyze the game. Bill Young, LA Harbor -''I think Golden West is the more explosive team. They have a very good offense and the defense isn't bad. We were able to score points on them (a 50.33 G WC win> but I'm sure they have that corrected now. Golden West usuaJly doesn't have weaknesses long. ''Golden West is good enouita to move the ball on anyone and Santa Monica has had trouble offensively all year. I wouid pick Golden West and the score should be something like 21·14 ... Marty Blackstone, Bio Hoado - ''I'm not sure who will win, I really don't know. I know who I hope will win, but I won't say. Jt'U be Santa Monica's defense against Golden West's offense. If Golden West can run the ball on them and can hold San- ta Monica to one or two touchdowns, Golden West.can win. I won't pick a team, it's really a tossup. Even my coaches have a bet going, and they're split. It should be a low-scoring game." Don Lent, CYP'eff -''I favor Golden West, but both have excellent teams. Santa Monica's defense is ex· cellent, that's their strong point. But Golden West bas a much better of- fense. Last year Santa Monica won (3·0) because M Golden West mls- takes. If Santa Monica wins, it will be for the same reason. "Santa Monica has a lot going for them. They don't make mistakes and they 're playing at home. Golden West has a good opportunity lo win because they pass the ball well. But I think ttus is the year for Goldeo West. It should be about 21-13." Ron Mims, LA Southwest -"I think Santa Monica is the stronger football team right now. Their defenst: is tough to score on and tough to move the ball on consistenUy. Base<! on that defense, Santa Monica sbou.ld be the favorite. I'll pick Santa Monica and the score should be somewhere around 10·7." Latber Hayes IACC -"I Would have to pick Golden West. Santa Monica has a good defense, but it's hard to shut down Golden West's of- fense, which is so diverslne<t. Golden West runs the ball well, puses well and they have a cood line. I just don't think they can be shut down. If it's a scorin11 duel, Golden West would bave to be favored. I 'll pick Golden West by three points." 30 Volleyball Teams Compete In Tollrnament The sixth annual Orange County junior high school girls volleyball tournament will be held at Orange Coast College Saturday with more than 30 teams parttc1pat1ng. 1 Action In the tournament gets under way at 11 with the championship finals around 8 that night. , Lbtcoln Middle School (Corona del Mar) has won the event three times RIVERStDE-Eatancla <Colt.a Meaa> HhJh'• Eaalts, in thell' rat poat-eeuon football play alnc.1970 and a ond alnee the school OP,ened tn l~. duel undefeated RlVerslde Poly tonlthl (7:80) ;at UQ;aJy Id la: ClF (Southern Conference) pf 1yof11 acUon. Al 1take la a berth In the qua&Urftnals and tho Bean of Rlvenlde Poly are 7-polnt IHorttel. Larry Thomas. a 5·10. 1JO. pound 1peedater with 1tren~. 1lvea. tbe Beata the 4'dl•· Thomu bu rusb a lor~1l125'1 · yardf on ~ tit.rrlel ancf'.naa ICOJ'ed 18 touchdoWu. ff• bu U• cellent acceleratloh and .. toulh to atop. Quarterback Jack Woodhead hu thrown for a)'2 yal'da out of the option offellH and Villa Park coac& Te<t Miallen saya thla about the wt: "PolY runs a bu1-banl otreueover the 1uarcta, then hit.a you with the abort pus. U l!!stap, cia can control the ball and not ran behind early, it can win." Tbe Eagle3' bread and butter is tbe same combln..,ion that bas carried Estancia to a 8·2-1 record and third place in the Century League. Quarterback Dave Jeranko and receiver Mike Camp make t.he most noise, but pouible 1ucceas ljide1 on the s houlders of runners Kevin Hagan and Andy Dominguez. Steve Cunlff is a two-way stand- o ut in the Hoe and Kevim Obymako, a third team All- Oranee County choice at of- fensive auard. makes thlnp hap. pen inside. Estaneia bu a vet6ran front line which exeeutes with pre- cision and this ls the 'type ot I\ REDLANDS-A dtfenalve 1tru1cle tooma at tbe Untvoralt)(.. of Redlands football field tonllht (7:30) when the Mater Del Hf&b Mooarcha of the Anaelm Leaaue tan1le with the Rfdlandl Hilb Terrlers in a first.round CIF playoff 1aine. Both teams came on well at the end of the season and each hu boasted a !trong defensive unit In the late outings, Mater Del finished in a tie for first ln the Anaelus League, win- nlns three while losins one. The Monarchs, in league play, al- lowed 30 points while scoring 4-C. Redlands, after a dismal start that saw the Terriers Josina to No. 1 ranked Fountain Valley, 35-6, 1ave up only 24 points in the final eight fames and bad ftve shutouts. '"Defeme is the strongest part or our ••me," Redlands coach Paul Womack admits. "But CdM, llawkS Clash ... .Sea Kings Nursing Injuries Pro Scc:ires Golf Spots Closed with Enalgn (Newport Harbor) taking _________ _ over tbe top spot last season. All positJona in the amateur field for the aatellite Bing Crosby pro-am toll tournament at Irvine Coast Country Club Jan. 20-21 have been ftlled ac- cord 101 to chairman Maynard Frank.Un. The tournament will contmue Jn honor of' tho late Ctosby with proceeds going to Hoa1 Memorial Hospital through the aponaorltl• 5$2 Club. PGA tourlnt pros wW not be de- termine<! until ·the week of the evetit. Those who tall to qu•llfy for Pebble Beach will be eUetble to compete at Irvine Coast CC. Cindy Kendall and Kristen Brown, both members of the Llncoln team and players for the Orange County Volleyball Club during the summer months, wlll participate in the tourney. Other schoob competing include Marine View (Huntington Beach). Imperial (La Habra), La Pu (Mis· slon Viejo), Davia (Costa Mesa), Fits <Garden Grove) and Queen of Ansel.I (Newport Beach). Two dlvlslons, one for seventh araders and one fof elehtb sraders. will be held. For further lnlormatlon. call 893-4538. Movla wtt•o•t SoandANUM Popeom Wlaotrt Batter ·4 evidently, Mater Del alao bas a 1tron1 delenalve team because all of tbelr leque acol"el have been low." "We llnlahed the year pla.yln& like we should have been playlog all sea.son," Mater Del coach Wayne Cochrun says. "We fe4 we were capable of playina th~ Way all the time but SOIDtthinf happened 1n the early a am es." While it flfures to be a low- scorlna game, both teams have been able to move the ball on ol- lense with Red.lands averaglog 28 pointa anouUnc. Gene Larson (5-10, 160, sr.l .directs the Re<tlanda power-I at- tack from quarterback and has completed so percent of his pass attempta rortheseuon. Rlck Tyler (5-9, W , ar.) is the' leading ball carrier for the Tel'-' rt era with 933yardsin152 carries.' He has scored npotots. For Mater Del. quarterback Tl.m O'Hara bu completed 3$ of' 99 pus •U41pta for7« yardl and aix touchdowns. David Gomales ls the top ball carrier with '176 yards on 132 car· riea for a S.9 averaae. H1s l'UD.fting mate at halfback. Mike Dotterer ls the '-adio1 scorer for the Monarchs with M polntl. ~ ~ H Reye. 1to 21S TilcM'nbolr9 LT LT Or"y 19S 20S Gt-LG ~()~ DD 17S S~ Ra 1'0 115 Avllt ·N RO erewr \IO us s.v ... RT ()l'aoy "' 17S RllM!CaM La 5IE weecs , .. 1t0 OIMll L8 Qa O'H---klileft LB Ha~ 16'6 MO MCO-ca HI OoC'-,., 170 ..... Cl ,L Or.me 1tO MO AGUI,.,. .s s999 -· HORSE RACING I CROSS COUNTRY Alamitos Race .Entties 10t 111 '°' 111 112 112 llOUa TM 11.ACl -61<1 fl#' ....... J ~tr •149 ., up. O•lfNne. Purw ..,.... Clllmllll •"-U..O. l!len Pert MM IMenel Price CMnmltlMll IC.Ulla) How RUCle (Nlllryc.t) Dynemk Met < Dtlembe > Lt Ke Atuf (LUayl Klnt~Cluel Ft5'RoPtU-I WllO Hit T"9t (leNu) ~lWH\ Cc.rr..cal 117 11• ,. 114 114 '°' 114 120 117 114 ~l .. 'SOOU" Mee~ allltl lllNtmw, SI; t. l~ .. IGU&l.CC Oltl Ol1111y ~ V .... lt Owla-ltt~ \!Ir-a; IGtoa1-1 ""' u~.MttlltDe _;...._Of8,. P .... 71, t. Olt>J_R_u.t, AM tlhot. PttWldl,.lllellNT_.,,U. T•it. 11, "-""'' 111ttn N'*"· MUAvaao.cc MIMI Virhnnty, 71, \Ntl)-1 Prttltltnl'a (Vlt Teur11t~11t : M«eMtl .... I..._, U; t. Liii lraint, CNmpltfwNJ PlllM-Cite ..._ jt; l. A~H¥pff,$t, 4, (U.l Jiiiie Mf I'-~. ~lle'a kH, Htltft Rlct, Kty Ve~llo, l'f ..... ~ ,_.._. -.f. Mimi Evtryn ""~· "· L IU.l JM Grllf, Smla. ~·· l'lftM-:of"ll.,lllt Miiii• JoM6on. .o. 10 111411 Dorla 1m111 def ic.11., Mii1fN; Tr...,tra htpt. J tenn• Simm•. Cilorle l'lltflt-o..tlt l'renc-..1 *f ow. 'lwtldMt, betty""llli-,tl. Wtlll. ai.i.-'l Fl..,,.-f"tt ... Hot••-· Delta Forte on... •. MU ... loblll• WI-. Mtla V.nll in•no • C.lnty. Flftftt-..ltMDrMdlfNe19fle IC .... uueu Day T__,,t ti-better crt1t ~""' TevtM111t11t: A SOUTH COAST CHAMPS -Corona del Mar's girls cross country team recentl>: won the South Coast League title. The squad is ranked No. 2 in CIF, with the CIF prelims Diiiy~ ..... scheduled Saturday at Mt. San Antonio College. From left are Diane Jones, Cindy Laux, Mary Jones, Kris Hamasaki, Barbie Ludovise and Cindy Stoughton. IMnbfoa IMlmtll --· IMllll of lounomtl. l6'0NI I. JOy<t l'lf9'1t-1. Hitt Ctle 9'-, MM99r• hormen, Senoy Ovtrty lHe<ltllCll lrtllltr9, JO~; t. lllel Pllylllt ""™ RACll -·One•n.= lll•mll•. '"· Lii ... :>u110t\, 811).1l>f>)llll 1Sln1e L..eflil'9,MIJYAM8utlllel,*1~. I ., .. , oldl I. \IP. Clelmlng. Pvrw AM <.<.I, tn; z. Helen e.r1eaon, L11<1 e Pllthl-1. a..blfr• "990. nv.; 2. 110,000. ClelmkieprlceSI0.00019.0CIO. xnOl»llln 111111 GlnYO<t Ctl. Jtrr<t M.-, l""'*'I. Jlh; J. Oltl ...... Reclm•n'•a.nt (CMllH$) 11J Onl, Allc.•Mil l&elMAn.CCI, 111. Alllley,A~l-ttofl,SS. I Mr,M111kMllllR-lrtll llJ tr.el) 1. Dorothy H11mpl\rlo, t 1'114lllt-f, Mfe Tetultl, fl; 2. Konek INOQllU) 110 MtrllWI LOii TYCll•r tRellCl\O lMln JOI· ""'" OOl\kln, 82¥1; J . (lie) OeUle CdM Girls H~pirtg for Upset R-1 ~lllle (Stetllnosl 11' q11tn C.CJ, SUe Foley, kletrM H.cnten ,,_._ klt~Grllltt, >4. RIM1t1Uc.l\n(Mtfll) 11a WIClort• C.C.l, IS>, i .......... a.lier, 5trellt Pl4IY Tour~: A Fl .... Prime Int_. (8eltaur) 110 bernltce <.<1tlln IMIHIOl'I \119jo C.CI, IGretsl-l, ~ 8rlllnent,17•J. Pt91rtm Ttll,_ (8f'oOln) 120 1 erry Reta. ~nor• Rooen !Mluoon Pttyllls ~ n (Netl-1. DOl.;; 111t1oc<.>, ~' Pr~K*ll • ..s:i.a,.,.,lklrclli.,11. llXTM ••ca --., ....... a.,, .. , SANTAANA CC • ""'"' (GrtH)-t. Owtt"y olOl.All-enc..Pufwl'..000. PrUIOtnl'1 CllJ To11r11tmt11l JOf'Ull, 100; 2. -"'• Gall, 1CllJ. Mire< It RtQUllt (C..111 122 Olempionll\lp FlltM-c.r01t M11 INtU-1. MMv 91tl&, 7S; z. ~ By Dave Cunningham Ot .... Dellf ,llet ~ As success stories go, the Corona del Mar girls cross country team bas to rank pretty high. "We started as a nothing team," admits coach Bill Leach. "But we got them to start believing in themselves and things have worked out pretty well." That's puttine it mild- ly. The Sea Kings girls <they call themselves the Sea Queens> are un- defeated through eight meets. including the South Coast League finals, and they enter CIF competition this weekend as the No 2 ranked team It's quite a turnabout from last season, when Corona del Mar's team was practically non l'Xistcnt. ··w e had three girls but no real coach and we forfeited most or our meets," says Kris Ha masaki, one of only three seniors among the top seven runners Last year the girls' program was operated under the direction of the boys' coaches, but they didn 't have an abun- dance of time for the girls. This season Leach, a history teacher, and bis wire Julie, a student at Orange Coast College, volunteered tA> take over the girls team. "We didn't know a th mg about running," says Julie, "but we did know a lot about training because we've been do- ing it ourselves." Bill and Julie compel· ed in the 1976 Olympic Games in kayaking. If nothing else, they felt they could provide the girls with a decent physical fitness pro- gram. "We told the girls the goal is not to win. but to run and finish ."' says Julie "We stress fulfil). m e nt a nd improve- ment ·· Bill says some of the girls had never run dis- tances before. "Tbey were pretty naive at f irst," Leach says. "Some didn't even know that the lowest score A·"990ftlMllc:Nlll lit AllOll ... Lolita~,. Vic .. Mlnllley,n. ~'IJtl INlcoclernwl 112 ..,.,.•~t'• ,,....., ...,.lie u-- WiOS 10 cross country. Barbie Ludovise. Chris of the season. but now vo01eerrt1.Meirl 122 *iM'iil1e it•R.M. "";-.::;;;..~ tl't'911t <~>-1• u-ow.111. But I always felt we had Brestel, Renee Alvarez the Corona del Mar girls A..JodtclllMl\chelll ,.. screo11neOe1w.-....-.;1i,,,.,a1c1 :1~=.:r::ic~'K~ t t. J.. d Cind Sto h . th I . h C..nacllanMetodf(lr-IMllG) '" Fllgllt-MrfllttfMllOtfMllW-•• , po en 1a . an y ug ton. are setting e r s1g ts 11 .. 15-'kltlOelembe> ,.. Stl!Ph•re FllOl'll-4Nry Murp11y 911 • tto~vONcc Leach's reeling was Also running for the on it. A·•laneSdl---40ltralnedentry Allee .. ·-~·--1. Pttyll19 l'ruldtlll'I o.p Tovrnt lllaftf: right. With an 7-0 record, team this season have And if they win, it will HVttHTM uca _ • '"'_,..· rn,......:;~~~ ~~';.~~=: Corona del Mar easily been Karen Goody. San-be an upset because Ma1e1en tleln\llll. a 1. • YMr olds.. uiwo,..,i.-NatT___..A "lellt-~ .. ..,...,..,.....,.,......,, ranks as the surprise of dy Giffen, Barbara nearby Edisbn Hieb hn•· u ,ioo. C1•1m•n11 '''u "11t!M <>Gn91-1. '"'"' ....... "' Sacre1trv'• l'lltM~~ Ew •• b So th Co Le R 8 d t k e and L 0 re n (H ti gto B h ) I ·IS-/IUGI, Ulttl-1. Ult) Marthe ... lll'Mfll, L ... IM NI•. T,.._9r'I Ftlellt-t e u ast ague, un n n eac s Her• it., 1s1e11in.1 111 ~· e1a1m11,11. Marve ou1o11 OM virt1n11 O'BrMll. and perhanc of all CIF. Psalid as. considered the class of Werrlflt 1t-1MeM1 111 • Fll-1\t lOrt111-1. TMtll'lt DlrKtw'• Plltfll__,..11 ~ ""' .....-Kele LIM P-(IMtlllt) , 117 T.._y, ti; 2, Hef9n Cln•lllll. t4. MMy ,,__ !Me~l'I._. 1C4" "The schedule helped Talk of a CIF title CIF.ButCoronadelMar uZMFe-cR-uu> 111 1Ntt1-1.Htrn.ttMac~6';2. ~b9.,...0vttvwti1t1ew ...... c;;;..,.. us a lot,'' Leach says. would have see med has been making upset .... ., • ......_tw.dl 112 ftut1tL.aPwl•,61. 1i--1. ,_ ..... , ... 10; i. JN11 "We had the easier absurd at the beginning victories a wayofllfe. =::n:·:·=~~<BetN> ~:: in:11:•:.=:.=~:::; ~~:'&'.~~,_..,.,,,,; meets first, and by the ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~---~....;;;..-~ time we got tA> the tA>ugh teams we had some ex- perience." University High <Irvine> and Costa Mesa w e re considered the South Coast League powers and Corona del Mar knocked them off in succession by narrow scores-26-3 1 over 'University and 23.32 over Costa Mesa. On Saturday Corona del M•r tries to keep the string intact by surviv- ing the CIF -prelims at Ml. San Antonio College. The following Saturday Ml. SAC hosts the CIF finals. · The Corona del Mar hopeful s include Hamasaki, Diane Jones, Mary Jonet. Cindy Laux. Alamitos Race Results THE NEW TOYOTA CEUCA GT UFTBACK. A CAR WHICH MEETS OR EXCEEDS ALL 1980 FEDERAL FUEL ECONOMY AND SAFETYSTANOAR~ " Clew, Treo l'Hl l'w T"""41ey f'I RST RAU AbolA 41, t11rlOl\(ll Aj>pelOOM, J yNr OlcK. 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Clalmlno. ..., ....... ... ..,,,011111 (Mtf~) .... lM uo PrW'a llltMl~ll.# aMOtt Mauro(H...-1 UO Tl111t-UM/S ,. .... •.n -Mill~(··· CMnflt Hept, W .. ._.,...,, IClfttc..u.-; ,,. O&llftCll krat<llMI -Htfle GoM Tlmt1, ll*wvd'I a..~.., 014 .. l/tllent CMrlefllW, ..... -.. • IRem1re1l 3.PO Z.40 2.4001t Blence Beby IMtrwdo) UO 2.10 Moende'a Glrl (Benll&I UO Time-I.It Al'9 Ren -"-" PaUlt, Kettl• •• lllenc!Jtwtl Scretcfled-L.o,,.lyEOUC.WO llXTM RAU -970 yercn. a ., .. , <>IOI & llP. Claltnl"(I. Purw $6000. P°"'N lloUiet IMllcllelll llM UO 1M Mr.Wlltow$p1nel(ft0Ullt)4,00 J.ot 11¥•11111 (T,_tl • UO Tlmt--.0 AIM atn -Goier'l ~. auitle ~'"· ,. •• ., She Got1-tao 51111, u .. O\tr9t. 0.-'lll'tf,,,. .._.,, Mall<· i.tl4M'I HtKraldlM S<retc,,.. l-r R111tt, Snep-py 811a ss aude-2·oi.IDtJ • t·O..fltt MMlillt, ,.i;141.1t. Ta NTH RACI -711.H'lonet.1 y.,r olell. FlllltL....,...llt,000. $4H'9"1\'I~ IMtM) 4 <IO UO 2.20 Prlnceu v-tea.I a.ot 2AI DK«elW Otftctr l~c.edlll J. to Tlmt-1.m(J No1ete•U.. aL1VaNTII RACa Ont tM ,,,. '"'"· J .,.., o4dt ... ~. P\W ...... UwOIO-.., IKll'tl • lUO , .. IA n ... 1'~<11.11111111> Uf~ MertletMINlrol CAllwctrct> Tlfwlt-UD/S u •Udl -7.4.Jlt Of oe-..• ~ .. T,..11'-.PMl$SI .... Toyota enoineenng advancements and wind tunnel test refinements have produced an ~ aerodynamic wori< of art ""' The cockpit instrumentation 1s a beaullful example of funcllonal eng1neenng Optronal ixJ.er steenng and automatic transmission Optl()OS} sun roof (Available Jan 1978) Aechning bucket seats With newly designed dllver's seat with adjustable llrnbar =::----.1.-.J support. tinted glass, 5-speed ~erdriye tranSmtSSIOO and ,""MIFMIMPX Stereo are standard ~ \ , I I } STORIES BY JERRY HERTENSTEIN OIU..IHllf ... letMMf A!> so often bappem, a Joss turned out to be a blessing In dls- gwse for sculptor Bijan Bahar It was 10 years ago that then photog_rapber Bahar had . thousanda of dollars" or equip- ment stolen in London SHATl'l!!RED, HE returned to San Francisco where be started * * "to play with acrylics." Today. at 35, the Irv me re- sident ranks among the top sculptors using acrylics, in this ciµ;e, Plexlglass and Lucile, as his media. Elevan of Babar's pieces. some called back from New York City and Chicago, will go on d1s- pl ay Saturday at Muirhear:t Galleries, Ltd. in the South Coast Plaza Shopping Center, Costa Mesa. * * * Bahar la one of three top artists tn the exhibit. The of.Mrs are Los Angeles' Arthur Secunda who produces colorful abstract land and seascapes in collage form and Europe's Victor Vasarely, bailed as \be inventor of Op art. A champagne reception from 2 to 6 p.m . Saturday and again SUnday, 2 to 5 p.m .. kicks oU the show. The exhibit will .be at the galleries through Dec. 8. Hours are Mondays through Fridays, 10 * Indian Culture Hi,s Art Heritage Gives Abstracts Spiritual Qtiality Dan Namangha 1s a Tewa ln-~1an who grew up on a llopi re !crv at1on And it's the artist's knowledge er his people's customs and . f.· \ ... \ I" ~. . .. t.: ~ i\.~.-,. ; '} . . . ··' . . -:""'.' .'" .. · legends that has enabled him to gain wade acccp lance al the young age of 27 llis pamt mgs, collagt·s and s culp lure s ar c t on exhibit """''"o"" at the Orange ou s t College Art Gallery t hrough Dec 6 Hours arc Mon ays through . Fridays from 10 .m lo J p.m . and Monday and 'uesday evcmngs, 7 to 9. The allcry is on the main campus, :101 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. Namingha (pronounced NA· MING-llA > started pHinting al age 7 and received many years of ' form al art education. In addition to high school, he studied al the Univ e r sity of Kans as, the American Academy of Art an Chicago and the Instllute or American Indian Arts in Santa Fe,N.M. • "IT HELPED me a great de· 1," Oaf\ said quietly while talk· g on campus. "But one day I ealued how much I bad earned oe the retervallon. I re· lized who I waa. and where I ame,trom by beina with non- ndtans. "ll tl)ade me realite wllal was ~ppenlng, that I ~~n't have to ontinue my formal atudies. So I rned back to it <his culture> as y main source Cor inspira· on.)" · ' I ll shows. ' Dan has taken Urat experience plus what he calls> "vistons" to turn out some extraordinary. . vividly colorful a~tracl work. ; ' CLOUD MANA,· A 72 by 60 INCHES ACRYLIC . Hts paintings and collages are striking, moving and spiritual. '\l don't know, it's we1rd. I see visions wflile sleepl.ne and am so excited the next day about what 1 dreamt I 'II go into the studio and work before I lose it," Nam- ingha said. One painting of an area where he. Dan, used to run in the sand hil Is as a child is done in bloc kl or reds, yellows and browns. It looks anything like sand dunes, but Namlngha fxplains he paint. ed it as if looking at it from the air. "I'm uslng tradition. but in. contemporlll)' for'ftl1," Pan said. "It's in the .put, but yet in the present. It's like filling a gap." '' a.m. to 9 p.m .• Saturdays 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. and SUndays, noon until Sp.m. Once Bahar had returned to San Francisco and started ex· perimenUnJ, it atill took him two years to "decide what to do. "I LITERALLY 1tarved, livin1 on soup," tbe eradua(e of Newpe>rt Harbor High School said. "I worked 12 hours a day." It was only about two ye an ago that the native ot Iran be&an to experience "success. I was fortunate, an artist is suppose to starve 10 to rs years. My starva· lion was short," Bahar said. His sculptures, all untitled, sell from $900 to "close to" $6,000. He leaves his work untitled so the "viewer can !ind what they wish." Otte piece m the exhibit has ten 12 by 8 inches. quarter of an inch thick sheets of Plexigtass with' circles, 10 inches in diameter on the outside, coning to 2'h inches """ in the center. A color wheel in the base "pulls the viewer into the piece. "THE CHANGING colors keep your interest throughout the ex- perience." Bahar said. "You can look at it from a pure point of view or eel into the colors .• Bahar's work: makes it appear as thoucb he uses a draftsman's approach. Untrue. He arrives as his finished pro· duct through what he calls three phrases. ''FIRST, THERE is the creative proceHing," Bahar said. "You have to be seriously into art like a religion, live it and train yourself to it so that every· thing goes into the sub · conscious. "The subconscious reads and sort:I it and reeds things to the con.sciou.s:• Bahar said. "Then comes the ~xecution or the form and basic design .the clean- ing up of what has come in sloppy form from the subconscious to the CODSCIOU.S." ---.......---------... -·----.. Bijan estimates he spends about "10 hours" cleaning up a piece visually. "The idea could have been four years in the sub- conscious. As we're talking this could be an experience that comes out in a work six monlbs or six years from now.'• he said. ONCE A piece is shaped. Bahar leaves it at the rough stages and hands it to ass11tant Jen Palermo, who sanda and polishes it into final form. . ·'I bate to sound corny." Bahar said in further descnbipe his transparent pieces, "but they are like a door to your lmaginaUon. '' The stme can be said for th' work of Secunda and Vasately. Secunda's art at first appears as only strips of bright color. But as in one of bis worb. ''Volcanic Eruption," it ls as the artist explains, a "chromatic tt· penence1 The viewer is pulled back into space with the motu1,.· tains and the idea iJ one of goiDJ b8Ck in ti.me,'' Secunda said. Vasarely's work is defined with many etral&bt edges and •• nctan1Ular shapes yet spiritual. ' . (2 • YfllLOT frtd11. ttov.mb« 11, 1877 . Art Pieces Teasers utchrnan's Work SpQrks Debates. • B78TBVB IUTalEU. : °'*.._._ .. ,, . .1~-=- ol~ U your Idea of f\1n ti to •tin at a complex pie~ art aaly to be reduced to tau. f1l frultraUon a vlalt to the Vorpal Gallery ID Laawi• B.aeb ehoUtd put you in seventh heaven. "People come tn hare tor three-hour atretches .just to look at Eschen, .. ·~ Donna Harris, cO. director off.be Callery at 328 Glenneyre St. She's speakln1 about Dutch araphic artist Maurits Eacher, whose faacinatlng 1eometric art forms are made more to teue than to pleaae. 0 TREY'LL COME IN here and araue with total strangers over what's bappen.tnc in the picture," the art saleswoman lau1ha. Glen Eytchison is the other half of the direc- .torabip at Vorpal. His knowled1e of the artilt. who Esefw!r's l11tl•lt9 .Pri•t• tlaat ... .,e .. ltegla11fag. or.-d leCl1'e •a•tf fl•l~·goer• fcucladted. died in 1972 at the age of 73, can keep the listener in rapt attention for hours. Escher's works are recognized by almost everyone, Eytchison will tell you. Eye-boggling situations that are impossible in real life, appear not only realistic in M.C. Escher's world, but quite plausible. TAKE TWO PEOPLE walking on a staircase, sid(t by side, moving in the same diredion. One is goiug downstai~ and the other appears to be going upstairs. Impossible, but there it ls. . ..That's the architectural Escher," Eytchison :;ays, painting to the print, appropriately called ''Relativity.'' "It's the impossible buildings that play mind games with you," he said. "He deals with perspec- tive and distorting perspective." ANOTHER ESCHER FORM is periodic space fUlJog -taking a Corm and movlng it from one side ·to the other so it becomes an entirely d.ilfer-ent form. An example or this style is "Sky and Water," where flying birds on a light background merge Into fi sh with adark background. It becomes impossible to determine at what µoint fowl turns mto fish. His persp~ltve pieces include "Ascending and "Descending," a 1960 woodcut portraying monks walking upstairs and downstairs on a structure that leads nowhere. "THAT WAS HIS STATEMENT on organized religion," Eytchison points out. His infinity prints that have no beginning or end leave many gallery-goers fascinated, Donna Harns ~aid. "Like this fish that swims in a figure eight,·· indicating a colored print. But it is the geometric perfection of his work \hat awes most visitors. "Escher was really a lousy mathematics student," Eytchison laughed. "That's what really makes these prints interesting." ORIGINAL ESCHEBS -the signed prints 4o notcomeo!!the wall cheaply. "Our prices run from $3,500 to $25,300 for that copy of MetamoPbole, •• Eytcbiaon aald, poh1Un1 to the 14·foatlonf print. Tbt coslb' print drawa the most atien1Jon at the ullery, bothdlrecton claim. lS•ch~'s work 1aJned the prinUQ,jlket ub· welcome acclaim in th., Ulilted States u • reawt ol the psychedelic era, Eytchison aatd. "SeNien prlntera beaan pirating work and maJdn1 po- at.era_wltb 1audy nuorescent inka." . SOME OF ms MORE interesting works, such as "Dream," became '3 posters called ''Bad Trip." Eytchllon said the agtnc artllt dkr not like the succesaful ripoff of his work, and once tumed down personal letters from Rollill1 Stones sl.nler Mick Jagger todesian a cover for an albwn. But the originals st.ill dr-w the attention, 10111 after stapled multicolored posters have come off in· cense-filled living room walls. .. WE SOLD $11,000 in Eschers last week alone," Donna Harris beams. "One 11.lY came in and boughtfive for investment purposes," she said. The Laguna Beach gallery, alon1 with three other Vorpal gaUeries in San Francisco, Chicago and New York, own about 100 different Escher prints. "We've got access to about 35 more through a collector who ls trying to sell his," Eytchison said. MOSf ARE NUMBERED prints, but some have no print designation on them -a sign of which print in a group of 50 or 100 the particular piece ia. "Some people don't feel secure if their print is not numbered," Eytchison said. "But we can ac- count for the number of prints of each piece that are in circulation in the United Stales and Europe." But there are surprises. "HERE'S A PRINT called Nonza Corsica which showed up at an auction in Europe,·· Etychison says of an early architectural piece. "It says it's number five of a run of 30, bJJt no one has seen the others.'' How much for the work? "It's yours for $90,000," the aatlery director shrugged. Auditions Set For Musicians The Festival of Learning and Performing, sponsored by the Community Services office at Santa Ana College, has scheduled auditions Dec. 18. The auditions are slated for room N117 at the college by appointment only. The Festival of Learning and Performing provides a learning experience for the student of s inging and accompanying, according to Susan Brenner, founder and director of the Festival. The sessions offer an opportunity to study teachers of international note from opera, art song, drama and voice, she said. Appaintment for an audition may be made by contacting Mrs. Brenner, 54.3-0543. Applica- ti ons are available from the college in the Com· munity Services office. '· 1ACTINO~ ~UR~ 1117 EAS1' FOURTH STllEET.SANTA ANA 714111311t00 HOU.\'WOOO IN CELEBRATION OF THANKSGIVING South «=oast Plaza VILLAGE . . .MIND BENDER -Eye-boggling situations , such as the columns in these drawiftis that are impossible in real life,. appear not only realistic but quite plausible in artist M.C. Escher's work. INDIAN ART. ~ . ••••'IMIJOLU IACX IAS11 Ate SAVI Invites you to meet the very PoPular and well traveled MAD HATTER & HIS MARIONETIES · .... Saha dcry, Mo• ....... , ,... Loved by children of all ages THI MAO HATIB WILL PllfOllM AT 12, I, 2, • l P.M. I (CofY1)1Jmenta of 1he Rostin Monteuori Schools)., Tom Turkey here that day to wfah y0u a happy Thanksgiving SOUTH COAST PlAZA VIII AGE """' '" u.w.a. WITH 1HISI COUPON~ . M ~m.t V RIETY -Workls ln a variety or mcdium1b11rt1St1 Victor Vuar_tly \JI' Sc<'u nda and Bijan Batlar al. ·Muirhead Gal l~rles Ltd., South Coast Plua, Ol*\S Satur· day. Dally lOa.m ·9p.rn., Sat.1()..6,Sunday2·5 'AREAS' i\llRE~TING Constructions drawings and scale models by Michaef Davis .it Santa Ana College, 17th at Bristol. Hours 11 a rn 3 p.m. Monday· Thursday. Friday 10 a.m to I p.m . Ends Dec. 9. ( Concert Series ) HANGINGS -Artweavers II. show of eontemporary hangings and dimerunonal ob· Jt'('tS opens Nov. 23 at Bird's Eye View 1:.t1lery, 3420 Via Oporto No. 3, Lldo V11la~e llours, Tuesday through Sunday, 11 a .m ·5 I'm ORIENTAL ORIGINA~ Special ex- h1 b1t1on or oriental art l~ome for sale1 at < ·11 apman College Guggenheim Gallery, opens '\uv JO. Open 10 a .m.·5 pm. MAC.'RAME AND CERAMICS Hun· tn•ss Gallery, 2811 Villa Way, Newport Beach. Judec DuBourdeleu's sculptural macrame ;inimals and Walter Reiss crystalline glazed ceramics. Tuesday through Sunday 11 a m..4:30p.m.,through0ec.4. POLAROID PRINTS By Norman Locks '.\-1 anipulated color prints in groups or single prints ut Susan Spmtus Gallery, 3336 Via Lido, Newport :Beach. ONE MAN SHOW Lyne art1sl H. ~an· ford Day of Orange County, shows paintmgs and drawings through Dec l at The Hobbit <;alien ,2932 E Chapman A\ c . Orange INDIAN ARTIST Works by Dan Nam- ingha in continuing show al Orange Coast College Art Gallery. Through Dec. 16. Open weekdays 10 ;i m J p m . Monday and Tues- day, 7-9p m Frc<' PllOTOGRAPIUC WORKS li\' Kenda \orth, DC Space. 235 Forest AH : Laguna !leach Mondav·f<'riday, 9a m -Sp.m AB~'TRA(,7 ARTISTS -Show a 'anely of works through Dec. 4 at Festival of Arts l.l<:ilil~. Lagunu Reach CA~E KA'S F.YE reflects vision of W<1nda 11:.immertrnck al Occ·s H1ppolyte Bay:inl Ml'mnr1al Photo Gallery, weekdays 8 ;i m Sil m P.\IVJ'INGS PARADE D Works by Fil :\1ollola ~lwwing al Pomeroy Art Gallery, 5651 I.1n(•oln Ave Cypress. Open daily through lkl' 9 Real Cantonese Food eat here or take home STAG CHINESE CASINO 111 21st Pl., Newport Buch ORiolt J.95~ Hoo" to Mldft19hl Dolly-WM!i"'ch Ufttll 1:00 a.111. O•U I\ •L•U l'4 HloAI Oll ULt> FT--. o ~-"'9 Hlllt., VI-of JM loJ Join U1 ift • Troclti_. THANKSGIVING DINNER Garden Fresh Salad, Choice of Dressing or Soup ROAST TOM TURKEY Old Fashioned OresalnQ Giblet Gravy Cranberry Sauce Fresh C:.001ed Yams Vegetables du Jour Pilgrims Pumpkin Pie $5.50 Chlldrew (under 12 years) •••••••••••••.•...••.••• SJ.SO ~'""" ..,._.,_ _ ' ._.. ............... 34344 STREET OP THI GRIEM LANTERN DAMAPOIHT .fa%% A rtist Due Jazz artist Ilcrb1e Mann will appear at Gatsby's Rendezvous m Santa Ana Mon · dC:Jy at 9:30 and 11:30 p.m. Reservations may be made by telephoning 751·2666. '.\1a.nn 's conced is in conjunction with· the establishment's one Yl'at· anniversary ob· sc r v a nee The l·'ou r Fresh men ar~ scheduled Wt>dnc~dny . Nov. 23 at 9 :30 and u ::m p.m . .The> night spot is at 2414 S. Fairview Hoad Participate Mes siah for Everyone Tht·n· an• hundreds or performances or the Me~~iah every -..car, but 1t i6in 't often the au- dience gel.., J rhanc·t• to actually participate m one. Th<.• Long Beach Symphony Orchestra and Choru s art· pre senting a s pecial performance of 11:.indel 's masterpiece in which lhl· aucht.>ncc 1s inv1tt.>d to smg with the choir on such chorus<'s as "llallelujah·· and "For Unto Us \Child ls Horn .. The t'Hnt 1:. scheduled Sunday, Nov. 20 al 2 pm. at tht· rirst Baptist Chur<.'h , 1000 Pine Ave . LOOI: Beach The concert also marks the debut of the Lon~ Bt•at·h Symphony Chorus. Tickets for tht· l'Oncert will be available in actvance from lht· Symphony Office or al the door. for S..1 For I urther information. telephone <21:!' rn;.;1203 RESTAURAftT KOTO celebrates 3 successful years In Newport Beach by presenting the ARIGATO SWEEPSTAKES Come to Kolo for your tickets LUNCH COCKTAILS DINNER 1 JV ;•1 Knrman Ave Newport Beach f r r~~rv•1t1ons call {714\ 752·/151 53000 IN PRIZES l I J • 'I • () Cl/I ' 'Ft1rkey Don't look now but that Um• of year hu rolled. around aaain when Tom Turkey should be tak·· ins ort for tho back wood•. Tbat..'• if he doesn't want to end up arac. in ii a dinner platter ln our aMual tribute to the pllgrhn faUiers. lncredlt,>le as ll seems, nearly a full year has passed since the lut Thanksgiving obflervance. Check the calendar, m fact, and you'll sec this year's celebration is only six days away. So it's anything but too early to start stimog plans tor the way you 're JOmg to enJOY the tradl· tional feast. Get doubly busy if you 're inclined to follow the modern trend·setters aod bypass home eating in fuvor of an all the-trimmings meal at a favonte restaurant. In recent years Thanksglvin• has become a day of record crowds at most places. And that condition frequently leads those scramblinR for last minute rel· ervalions to settle for somethln& less th an first or second choice. There's a wealth or dining out possibilities In our area but you'd better act soon to avoid dlsap· µointment. If help is needed to select just the right spot, peruse these pages for the best available information on the Thanksgiving offerings at local restaurants. ALFRESCO DINING attracL'> us not unlike the way the flame lures the moth. That's why we're excited about the report or a new place launched only this week in Corona del Mar With the promise of fine food and wines in a delightful garden setting the Fernleaf Caffe opened its doors at 2640 E. Coast lllghway, near the intersection or MacArthur Boulevard Telephone 640-7092 Joint proprietors or the Fernlcar, we've learned, are Pilar Wayne and Jacqueline Hagan With a daily 11 a.m. open· ing. present plans call only for lunch and afternoon snack service. With the world's best climate ror outdoor dining we've always I am ented the dearth of such ra(•il1ties in Southern California. So our gratitude, congratulations and best wishes ore extended to Pilar and Jacqueline for their venture DAILY PILOT C3. OUt 'N ADOut Norman Stanley -..We'll be checkiJlg out the Fernleaf's offerings at the very first opportunity for. a long lunch hour. Because once setUed into &t relaxed outdoor atmosphere, don't expect us to eat and run. GETTI NG MUGGED with your meal ts the latest touch of something different at the Registry Hotel in Irvine. But don't get &eared: the experience, m truth, will net nothing butlun Your "mugging," you see, is done with pencil and pad. Because Sunday brunch guests at the hotel can have their com plimentary caricature drawn by artist Tim Clark. Tim 'i; artistry is offered Sun· days, through Nov. 27, Crom 11 a.m. tolp.m. Still another entertainment feature at the Registry is singer Frank Sydell, a top·notch vocalist now appearing ln the Grand Portage Saloon, Monday through Saturday at 10 p.m. and midnight. Sydell 's repertoire ranges from Cole Porter to contem· porary tunes, including selec· lions sung in French, Spanish and Italian. He has appeared in clubs throughout the U.S. and Europe, including the Purple Onion in San Francisco and L 'Atelier Hotel in Gstaad. Switzerland. The Registry Hotel ls located at 18800 MacArthur Blvd., acros.'.I Crom Orange County Airport Telephone: 7S2·ff117. TH E FINAL public area of the Harlequin Dinner Playhouse will debut next week in conjunction with the opening of the new show on Tuesday. The Celebrity Terrace, a private dining area with intimate booths for parties of two to eight, will open lo terrace season ticket holders along with the holiday production, "She Loves Me." Fentures of the new addition U.·-.. elude a special gourmet dlnne~, , private service and a private box to view tho st&&e show. Already ort and running, t.oo. is 1 the Playbous Celebnty Lounge; open daily Monday through Fri- day for lunch from 11 a .m . Al:so ! featured ia a double bubble bap· t pyhourfrom4 to6p.m. Luncheon menus vary d'1\yt and offer selected hot items as well as sandwiches and a sa!ad bar. Specials start at $1.95 &n4 there's bulfet and table service. The Harlequin is located one half mile nort~ of the San D~ Freeway at 3503 S. Harbor Blvd., behind Downey Savings, Santa Ana. Telephone: 979·5511. •1 *** A MAJOR CHANGE is the latest restaurant news out or' Newport Beach. Spokesman Wal- ly Cruttenden, Jr. reports hlsl family has acquired Harry's New York Bar & Grill -located 1.11 the "Devil's Triangle" -and reopened the spot ~u­ Delmonico's " Prior to the acquisiuon the~; perty was owned by the Crul· . tenden family and the restaurant operation was leased out on ll" Joint venture with the operators of Harry's Wally told us that Delmonico's features the finest seafood and aged beer, including New England live lobster. Also, a ne«i' addition is an oyster bar in tbel' Eastern tradition with freshl oysters, clams, mussels, shrimp and crab. "' HE FURTHER indicated that the name Delmonico's wesi chosen to emulate the famous restaurant of the same name in New York -and to emulate it lt( every way possible including service and a menu that offers fresh roods only. James Cruttenden has mov~ from Cblca,o. SUNDAY BRUNCH ATTllE ARCHES "Newport's Fm.est" 10:30 A.M. to 3:00 P.M. kom a tptch1culcr Hilttop View Join us In a TrodlffOftCll Pacific Coast Hwy. At Newport Blvd. 645-7077 THANKSGIVING DINNER Garoen Fresh Salad, Choi~ of Dressing or Soup ROAST TOM TUfU<EY Old Fashioned Ores$lng Giblet Gravy Cranberry Sauce Frebh Csnd1ed Yams Vegetables du Jour P1lgr1ma PumpJlil'l Pie $5.50 Cllif..._ (under 12 years) ........................ SJ.50 °""*' .. .,.. s ..... tc1..,..,. ~:00,... ."'"..._ .............. _.. 10000 CRAWFORD CANYON RD. SANT A ANA 997-7411 Open All Day Featuring Complete Bre.tkhst and Dinner Menus Plus OurTradltional Thanksgiving Feast With ~J~t~Y 4.95 Ch1ldrens A:>rtions Available RESTAURANT AND LOUNGE · ·:7~h8~·· HOLIDAY MENU FRENCH FRUIT COMPOT§ -CREAM ~· CHICKEN SOUP· RELISH TRAY: Crisp Carrot Sticks,· Celery. Green Onions. Radish Roses and Marinated Cauliflower Roast Leg of Lamb . Mint Jelly •••••••••••••••.••••••••••• 5.95 llckory Smoked Ham • Cumberland Sauce •••••••••••••••••• 5.95 Prime Rib au Jus .....•...........•.• 7 .25 Roast Tom Turkey · Cranberry Sauce .................... 5.25 [Halibut Steak • Sauteed in Butter .................. 6.50 ' All Entreee lncfUde, A1ce P1111. Candied Y•ms Of'. Mashed Potatoe. and Gravy, Corn on the Cob, S~e OrMeing -Choice ol OelMrt; Puml)kin Pie with Whipped Cre1m, • Ch~olet• Ot Strawberry MoulM, Mince Mut Pie or Ch ... • Bllntree -I~• CrNm or Sherbet l - COCKTAILS. RESTAURANT Tradltional Thanksgiving Dinner THE NATIVE Texan iii-·-··---· ROAST YOUNG TOM TURKEY 1L'lth old /oahiontd. apple fl Jl"IV1ftd dreHl"'1 ROAST PRIME RIBS OF BE!!F .au ;u. With WhlPPfld Mrl~odUh IQUCC BAKED SUGAR CURED HAM, ChampogM S<uice Complete with all llul trimmings Served from 1 PM Turn Inland at our algn '1106 Coast Hwy. Reservations SOUth uguna 4'9·2'63 ~~~ comblne1 hi• musical ability with comedy. He can fill requests for ballad•, comedy nuxn · bers, blue1rua, rock, · 1win1 or old movie songs. The fair is open dally on the Loa Alamitos Race Course 1rounds from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. Racing beiinl at noon daily. 'LighlJJ' Entries Flow In ,, .............. ~- t lf!"mt-r•~ LDf~ -S8·nu A , .. c-Drwis It may "seem" a Iona •.:,u •o .-.. ~.. I -· time away, but the DANCING AMO Newport Harbor Area t SERVED DAILY UNTIL 7:00 P.M. t EH'llltTAJHM!HT Chamber of Commerce • cuCEPT &Aru110AYl TUE. THRU SAT. already la receivinl en· t A. SllRIMP rrMPURA and S[SAM[ cmcKEN t 9 P.M. TO 2 A.M. tries for the im Festival A pa1a10 pleasing combination ol of Llihla, the parade of • mar1n•1.,dchtcken1nd1hrlmptempura $4.95 S..Mll•• ,......_., le•t decorated boats in t B. rr.MrURA S[AfOOD OINNtR ~ •ll•w 11t ... c-tyl We N e w po r l H a r b o r Bu11rrt1y shrimp arid llle1 01 soie c ••Id • 1 • e 11 t II••• 1ponsored by the Com· d•PP•d 1n • b•ll•r and deep-froPd edledl.........W •• •••· modores' Club of the A 10 1 golden porlect1on S-1.!IS t Al -""f It c-i..... Chamber. ·I c. """' NIKU w ,_......,We""'* P"'1 The parade will be Thin 9llCH 01 btol. c ... b.ck oft-. D9&11Mj. • h Id i hU f t propered with onion. ~oy StlUCO t .w.rt..... . ·-' ,.... e n g y rom Dec. \ 7 and seven condiments Sl.95 be pl•••"Y tlellcJhttcl wltti through 23. Trophies and u. STEAK TJ:RIVAKI on 111oderot• bner•t• other prizes will be t Cho1ce11 beol magn111cent1y broiled 6. priH ..,,.._.. awarded for the best ~ 10 please your dlscrlm1nallng tasto 54.95 I KON.A LANES ~.~~~.r:itor~~:btess,tdbe~ ;r RICE SOUP OF THE DAY TEA t t 269' HARIOR ILVD. corated homes along the ti COSTA MESA routeoftheparade. :t• '.JllDlft II Anyone w1tn a boat &, 54S.lll2 that can be decorated I ~=~:~~;;;=-with lights can enter the : Find Us on the North Side of Your parade. The parade I unbe routeat6:30p.rh.eachof .;· tf\ a'/\:~ ------------TWO TOP SIRLOHf $ AND BATTER·FRIED ~~~~~~~~~J~~··# ~-SHRIMP DIMNERS aboard the 20th Century Limited for a unique dinina ex• pcric~cc for two. ~troll chrou"h yesteryear's ~e~rabili.'\ 'f!(c;r;) ·. and dmc on Top Sirloin and Batter•Fr1ed Shrimp an an ' •>-'.:;/:. cleaant, ptlvate dioin; car. Your two dinn.ers will alto include. soup or mixed-green_salad, baked potato or rice pilaf. and hot French bread with whipped butter. On•the .. Mall at South Coast Plaza Near the Carousel on the t Fashion J.sland, Newport Center A A o.11y Pilot forms and begins its .. f Rcscrvu t ions honored: 644-4811 t Recyc:led. the six nights. · SPECIAL ARRANGEMENTS FOR YOUR PARTIES oranoe For further inform a· COHI Coll~ t • t bl k ~~-_;;;..~..;.;,._.;;.;;...~~~:;::_;;::;;_ __ _;,_.,,~~....;...~~.:;;;;;;::..::=-==;:;:.=:..:::..:;:.::~:_::..=:..:a *.1 .. ,.,1.,11Uods .. ,_w.N .. oi!-.l .. tft0w1.,,...... .. 1' ... 0 1si11rorttclat ion, en ry an s or r•cvc11n11 ccnw re&ervatlona, telephone for Cost• M•w 644-8211. THANKSGIVING MADE EASY· ' At the Registry Hotel's Orand Portage Restaur- ant. We'll serve you a feast from our special menu while you revel in the day long offenngs of music by the Pacific Strings and the evening sounds of Fred Libby's piano. A marvelous way to spend Thanksgiving with family and friends. And just think ... No dishes to wash afterwards. Special Menu and prices for chlldren. Thank.5givtng Day November 24~ from Noon tll 8 p.m. t Drama Rollil Iii 'Streetcar' 11211 rec1flc COMI Hwy• H11nt1ntton lkh • 12131 &92·1321 3901 E, COMt Hwy.• Cotono Doi Mar• 17141179.otOO TC*let!T,MOV..,...att WIU.IAMI' 'ITllllTQMl Ntmef o.1ue•1111ta111111two~n1 Oran.. c.ot•I C.11• Drema ~• Ti..t~tlnltl'll--Set....,,tp.m. ,,.. ellOADWAY MUtlCAL. .. , .. ,. I Hiil"' ell W llNf'Cll et Clll ttlte '"llerton 1.ltti. Tllffttr, lenlgllt, s. ........... .......,. ~" ., • p.m. uC9PC~otS"m Tkketl u.1s .......... u l"llllTUAL llAu.AOlllll l11tl Merl•Ul-01_ ._.,...,pertcwm • frM c_. et Caiv.ry °"'* flf OeM P.w. GD 1119 Wr, _...,. ot 1 :JOp.m. llOUONI, TOUTI, TllAM"I 91 llroaclwey we -1r•Y9CI In "Guys £ Oollt ,'' Ill 5mMIJM'I Witt! 0'- Pleyll-~!on et 1.0 A-Ide ~~~======~==~=====~::::~~ Pk.o. Sen demefM. TkMtt, lnforma-"j lion ti ffl-tt.50. CALL FOR RESERVATIONS Enjoy a Special Touch of HYATT for THANKSGIVING DINNER IUl*AnOHI ACCIPTID NOW PO. N1W YIAU 1V1 APPEARING EVERY Flt., SAT. The MAD HITTERS DlllER SliOW Anaheim Hyatt House 1700SOUTH HARBOR BOULEVARD UPll0\11• Ol,ney11nd (714) 772-5900 'KNIONTI 011 TM• WNITI ~ ... wr1Mn r-to11191!t "',_ llnueCI ""' ot Selltll CM9' A•rtory, 1121 New'port lllVCI., c.ci. ... Melo, t p.m , J p.m. Mlltl.-.. ~II• en ll<k•ll, tlmn-Cletelet....mi. HNIOll lllCITAL W ..,_ Jelln Edwerd Nh1 • lellt*I Atcltol Hell, Pelm end Grend In 0r.,..., ChepmM Coll .... c:..rtelntl1:1Sp.m. FrM. ILACK 1'11.M "llTIYAI.. at Santo AM Collt11t 'onllnues wllll "Tiit GrHI Wllllt .._ .. 1 p,m. toftlQht In 011nlep Hell, Room 101. IVl!NING flCMt .iAU IUl'l'I ti C.I Slate Lent llNch ltt114FM CSULI encl CSU NOl'\lltle19t JMJ tn_,,bltt •I • p.m. In the Unl""'nlty Union l>llllCll110, L'"9 lie.ell. Mmlulon $H0,$21ort-. 'TNE MUSIC MAH' In Untl 1-Ptrfotmanc .. at Lono lletdl 0•1« Llglll Opera Anocletlon'a Joreltn TllHltf, UGO Allentic A .... , '"'1elft I.JO p. m. tonlglll end Setureley, tick.ell $2· $7.JO. lnlonNtlon t\ (2UI 'll-1924. $!MON'S 'OfAl'TUt TWO' con· Unuu Its ""' Al lllt Allmenton Tllt•ler, ot Vie Musk C.n .. r, L.os A~ln ltwou(jll NOY. 2t Rtt«V• tlons, prlc•nl ma> 9n.1w.. $ATUllOAY,NOVaM1•1t 1' IAltOOUI CHORALa, llNGEH ot Ora11941 Cont ColitVt perform et I O"lllATIC NIOHUOHTS from ti• motor ...,.111 the "Kl .. 1...il flf Col SC.le '"'...,_ ltllCllHlt vocallttt perform ot I p.m. Tklleb P eftll $1 (lor'111d!M1bl. JOf'L.IN TO WOM0.11, lnllllc DY bltcll ~wllllleU.INK.._,. fer dencert et a.n-c.i...,_., SeWtOay ~ In ~lel Hell Audlterlum, m N. Gl-11 Qro1111•, et I p.m. A'llmlt1lo11 U 0011trel, U lluckntt ond 1tnler clllant. •YMNAITICS WONDlll 01111. Olo• Cotbut onCI USSR troupe ol etlllttet ,.,.,.,. ot tlw ANlwlm Con- vonUen c..Mor et• p.m. Gall~ l-cetMrfet .nc-.11cPti. OltAND I.AND llNOllltl lllOl!lleht F amlly Dey Pkn1c ot ltotllln of St. Potrtctr ........... 7DI ...... Mldw•Y City. iAN llllANCllCO IAl.1.IT rt• t11m1 to UCL.A• I:• p,m, onC1 Syn. day et 2!J0Mdtp.m. In two premier wor1ts inc,.,.. ,.,..,... ~­Royu Hell, t l(Mll $S.~ $1.M • T lc ketUI UCL.A, MuMI eoenclt .. $UN DAY, HOY•Mlllt II JAU I~ CONC&llT el Ore1199 eo.st Goll909 ... ,_""-' m111lclon1 et 2 p.m. In OC(; Allelllorlwn. AGnltsloft t 1.50, ov•ll• bit •• door. NAa .. llCNOllD CONClllTO performed by Igor Klpnlut <:Mpme11 Co11eoe·1 Memor1t1 Au011or1.,,.., w N. GIHMll. Qa1.aln ti l :IS p.m .. eel· mlUlon t1, t6 Olld U. Oll~NH COUNTY YOUTff Sym. ~., Orcllelll• perform• flrsl Of "' •1911111 -·· _... .. P111mmt,. !::=:=:=:=================L----------A11dllorl11m. Lemon •I <:Mpmen, Fullerton, ti • p,m. Tlckols 11.50 Have Your Turkey WithA Turtle. Make the holiday reaJly special. With dinner at the Velvet Turtle. Feast on a traditional turkey dinner with all the trimmings. Or choose from a wide variety of other enticing entrees. All delicious. And all very sensibly priced. In Newp0rt Beach,· at 59 Fashion Island on Newport Center Dr., 644-5313. Also mPullerton, at 1450 N. Harbor, 111st north of Brea Blvd. 871-9340. Reservations accepted. We honor American Express eJ other ma;oc credit cards. .CS..111, lludtnb,. 8lllltr <llluN 50 con ts. !JOU a COUNTY NOS play In or· .. n recite! •I First f'rHbylerlen Oll&Kll Of GerWI Grww, Euclid ot ~.Clllleltftlltolne•t•p.m. 'IN llAaCH Of' llUINO,' o Wet· renMlllorflffn.~lll 7:.JOp.m. !11 Oronoo CMst O.U• ~111Drlum. AdmlalOft ti tN door, S2. Miiier Nr• '°'""'"'.,..leltwi.r. ANAMllM ftOL.tCI VAllllTY llltw •• '-"*' Collter, fMtunl tn""1elntrl ll I : ts p.m. OtLllaT AND SULl.IVAN'I "PlretMof ~""'91111M2p.m. lmotln"> 111 Ille M111lc Ce11tot "WlllOn. LMMotML *"Yon city Opera ~ perlonnt V. won tllrouoll .... ,.....,_...._ tlcktta °" <•lllnt Tlw Mllllc c.ntw. MONDAY, NOltllMa8112' .iAZIMAN M•a11• MANN performs ot Gebify'• ltOlldo1Yout, 2A14 S. Felrvlew, s.tlta AM. TltMt ~ rewrv9llaNtt7SI·,..._ TUllOAY,llOV8Mll•a DANCI .. IL.Ml •••t11rlno WOfkS lOllf of MerU CunnlngNm GM\pejty llt 1"4 .. _.., MW1he Gnflllll aa-ot -et Or#llllt \ ' SINGS TITLE ROLE -Samuel Ram,ey of the New York City Opera sings the title role in Boito's 41Mefistofele," at the Los Angeles Music Center's Pavilion. The opera ts being staged in LA Saturday and Dec. 6 at 8 p.m. CMllc.llegl lllN ArUHell 11•. CSU I.ONO HACH Jui tonctrt bl'. 1lwd1e ton_..,.. ot lhll lllli-.1· ty, I p.m .. ~ 111\lon ~u- 1111,.._ rMn. ~ U.50, .W. dtfllUZ. "MEET ME AT THE CRESCENDO" ~,,~""~QD dirt'\~ . 1721 MANCHESTER A VE. ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA OCC ITUOINTS SOL.O 111 per1orm-lrt fhot musk"'°'°" In F Int Arlt Hell I It ti-· A4nlllllien ..... ITOP !'Ott LAUGtf$ al Ir. Uff 5-, tU2 S. hit lrbtll, Newport 9M<ll, c..n.cii.. Kip M*lta, Oen- ny ~ 8lld .11111 5'rnwlt "911 tt ,, •. c:.nt.,..,... t'eahing f '3 . i (THE SHOW THAT CHANGED LAS VICAS) CAI. STATE &.ONG lllACH S.,m· pllony Orcllutr• performs •I AMhtlm H19hScNol, 1:JOp m COIMIC V!OliNCI lllU • )Ooll In 1 ::io p.m. ltdlirt•I Sento,,.,.. to11eoe Pl-terlwn, BrlUOI al''"' St., Se11u AneFrte. WllON•lfAY,NOV&Ml•llU 'l"IAKING Of' 01a1,1• It 11 .. rcs et CrHC.t-11'1 AnlNlm ~I I JO end II p.m. l4'tW tnim Le• voe-wlll ""' Tllanll .. Mn• fllGht. R_.,,otlont et fj6.1410. Gl•L 01' GOLDS II W•ST -na at Miak c;.Mr ..... Ilion, runs llv'ollgll Nov. 20. N•w York City O~r• pertorm•nc• Information et (2UI 97N•t. ' YOUR DAILY PILOT CAN BE RECYCLED! Orange coast College operates the official center for Costa Mesa. PRODUCED BY: Rory Calhoun (erry Schafer CHOREOGRAPHY BY: Rene De Haven BRING THIS COUPON IN TO DIPP11Y DONUTS DURING OUR GRAND OPENING nus "' SATURDAYNOVEMBER19ANDF0REVERY DONUT YOU BUY, YOU RECEIVE ONE FREE (Offer good up to one dozen delicious donuts) . • .. SHOWTL'AES 8:30 pm. & 11 p.m. Wed. Through Sun. For Reservations Call: 714-956-1410 t 714-956-1412 • l t 4 lit the r«'~t production :'The Roy~ Fa.mi· ly" at Che Latuna Moult.on Play.h<iuae. Betsy Paul.~ayed a faipoua actress whose IOn, also a pro(eNlonal actor, came home for a brief ud hectic v • /, Sunday nl1ht, Betsy and David Pau~ whOse · actlill ablUty have made them quite famous lo ·tb• L"'tl\lda area tor: tbo put JO years. wm have a vltlt from their own 100 -a professional actor who 'j dolq quite well tn bit field. GINUIHE CltlNUE MANDARIN DISHES Specializing In Chinese A lo C.Orte Dishes Graham Paul and h11 fellow memben Of the Otrabama Company, a tourfq theater fl'.OQJ>, Will make a one-nlght atand at tbo , Moulton Play ::1.. 1bowcasin1 their latest produet!on. "Ola '· .. ·.rney'll also offer excerpts from Yi•lr "RJverRaft ttevlew" whlch they'\'e toured dowia the Mtmaalppi River for the paattlve summers, LJJNCH-OtttNER DAILY Fooct to Ta O\lt ,11 ;30 A.M. to 10 P.M. Paul 11 the central flcure 1n "Glas•,'' an averalf 1uy who wanders throulh Urne and space throuib a acl~ntltlc looklq ~us. The play "Martha.isn't that Ladf Godiva " the strip sirloin steati. " Let us start by confinning the whispers. Food at The Five Crowns is scandalously good. So visit this authentic 12th century English coach house and dine as the Lords and Ladies of London did. FNE CRWNs:~: 3801 East Coast Highway, Corona de! Mar. (714) 675-1374 GRAHAM PAUL ..-.....--------------------------... 21'1ovies \G11;1~¥'1.f Th1l&'lfAfG ~~:~~=~d J/.•'8••n••.. ftlm program has been . 4 • J4 Jt.11). '<_A FAMILY FEAST" scheduled for Nov. 25 by the Sons or the Desert ELEGANT EUROPEAN ENVIRONMENT ~~~~~:~·~sh~c~!~ choice of: TURKEY, HAM or STUFFED FILET of SOLE w/CRAB MEAT, salad, dressinv, cran- berry sauce, 2 vegetables, p0tat~, bread, pumPkin pie, beverclge SERVED 2.30 P Jl 8:30 P JI. THANKSGIVING DAY •SUPERB WINES & BEER •RESERVATIONS ADVISED 18774 BROOKHURST ST., FOUNTAIN VAUEY FOUNTAIN CENTER PLAZA 963-5334 ._ ________________________________________ _. . ~&adt .Marriott's The program at the Mercury Savings and Lo an, 7812 Edinger Blvd ., Huntington Beach, will open with Laurel and Hardy in "Swiss Miss." Jim Backus is the voice of Mr. Magoo ln the other film, "A Christmas Carol." The program begins at 7:30 p.nr: Mesa Due Comedy "The Happy Time," a comedy directed by Pati Tambellini, opens tonight at 8:30 at the C o s t a M e s a Ci v i c. Playhouse. The play will be staged Friday and Saturdays at 8:30 _p.m., through Dec. 3 at Costa Mesa Recreation Center off Arlington Drive at the· Oranee County Falr-groundl. ~--..-..,------~~.-. ...... ----'-·· J\u tee vQa\'ave revlewa lD 1uch-mtd1a u the · New York Times. W 11hlllston Post l.rJCl NaUOilil Observer. · GltAJIAM PAUL (named for form• tasunt. . man•einl dlt~tor 1t11p Grlham) ta a foundlhi member ot the Otrabanda Company, wblcb waa or1anized 1ix years aeo at Antioch Colle1e iA., .Ohio followlnc a production of Harold Plnter•s ''The Caretaker,' In which Paw and a frleod, · Roger Babb, had appeared. 'l1le •how wu direct- ed by a vllitine pro!e1eor, Tone Bruun. a proml· nent Belgian pJaywrt1ht and d.lrector who of· tered to help t.hem·oriwze a sroup and direct their flr8t play. The reault wu the Otrabanda Company, which premiered In New York's Cafe la Mama. The troupe baa alnce expanded from lta orltinal five rnemben to 11 and hu Cft&led and pro- duced four.major productions and five summer. shows. . The group•s summers are spent crulatng· down the Mill!alppl River on a raft from St. Loula to New Orleans, istopptna to perform at towns along the route. While Paul and othera sail, the equipment ls transported overland. OTIL\BANDA IS BASED in New Orleans, but for the month of November, the company is making a West Coast tour of its latest work, "Glass," which will be staged in Laguna Sunday night. Curtain t,lme Is 8:30 and tickets, at $S each, are tax deductible. Reservations are being taken at the playhouse, 494-0743. *** The Fowitain Valley Community Theater is ollerlng an original cast album from its summer musical. "Winnie the Pooh." The score was writ: ten by Clark and Pat Burson, the latter aervine as director and musical director of the children ·a show . The album, featurine the young cast mem- bers and called ''Pooh and Friends," is beina sold at SS apiece, with proceeds (tax deductible> going to the theater's bulldinc fund. Those wtsbini to purchase an album can mail their request.I to the Pountaln Valley Com- munity Theater at P.O. Box 8403, Fountain Valley 92708. Questions may be directed to Pat Burson at 988-0784 or Hiida Roberts, 962-1243. WILLIAMS PLAY AT OCC -Stanley Kowalski, played by Richard Fehring, menaces Blanche DuBois, portrayed by Pamela Franklin, in Orange Coast College's production of Tennessee Williams' "Streetcar Named Desire." The play runs today and Saturday at 8 p.m. at the Drama Lab Theater on the Costa Mesa campus. t I·: cAirPorter CJnit Wotel meDJTeHRANeAN ~com. Remember those great Thanksgivina Din· • ners you enjoyed so much? °The Newport Beach Marrio.tt in- vites you to have an old fuhioned Thank51M111 Turkey Dinner with ~ •llWIOR'J' 0 OEMTIJa us, and all tho trim· mings. You'll be carv· ing your own turtce..r.. and the Jeftoven belo111 to yo\L flOa.se call for inf onnation & resm1tion1. Phone 6404000 Pacific Ballroom 900 Newport Cmttr Dr. . INtERMISSION /AUDITIONS TJ«~r86iVING-' At 'THE ARCHES 11:00 A.M. to 11:00 P.M. 8 EntrttJI •• SJ.ts 1n,1ucses Soup or Stied, Onwrt end a.vere9'. ""-tv1tlon1 lu9191tect • Pacific Col8t ~ •t Newport Blvd. 645·7077 1500 ADAMS A VE. w ...._. IWI ,COSTA MBA . . . 140..f_tj'= THAWGIViNG Dimll 9 lb. TURKEY For Four $0UP POPOVERS 5 95 per person , • Carve your own turkey and take the· rest home . • Larger parties, laraer turkeys; smaller. pert1es, all the turkey you can eat. .• laked Hom with fruit Sauce •5• Plf pel'IOft ALSO ON MENU: PlllEIB•llAINELOISTEI FOR REURVATIONS 536-255$ • CHILDREN UND£R 12, 3.95 t ' enic' Funny. LidO Production Well Done . 9)'JEaaY llEaT IN Of .. ~ ....... .. Arsenic and Old Lace" hu Men wound the theater a l~ Ume. But lt always makes for entertalnlnf, U1ht· hearted comed~. Soud, Newpon Beach. r o 1 e o t Mort I m er Curtalntimelt8:30. Buwater. NatbaUe Community theater is Mlcbaud, looklna a bit difficult to appraise. llke llelen Hay", la Tho•• wbo ply tbe board• adorable es the • .-. do &o out of love. The old, but not ab innodnt Oran1eC9¥titfortunate AuntAbby. to have tome fine Alan Levy la a scene- "amateur" actor• and stealer as the GerlJlan aclreua. · doctor sooe bad, Dr. · Someoftheseap5H1arin Einstein. Knuckle· "Arsenic... cracklne. scar-faced' For example, there is Tom Titus has the au· Michael Bellit.z in the dience u well u the two eye-rolling, arm-wavlnJ a unts and brother. -,;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;::;;:::;;:;;;:;;:;;;:;::::;;;;:::;;;;:::;;;;:==::; Mortimer, disliking the character he plays, the evU Jonathan. The Joseph Keuelrtns written play concludes a abort run tonJ1ht and Saturday by the Lido ltle Pl ayers at the Udo Isle Clubhouse, 701 Via Lido ANTIQUE ROW SEVEN UNIQUE SHOPS CLASS TO CLUTTER 2428 NEWPORT, COSTA MESA ··~011/f " Mt I. C04tT NWT. U.--.llACH hwy~ JERRY IURN•s . · DIXIECRATS ·a...t f.U & Aff nat _, .S.ttf ~ Delfr ...... ..,, .... CHARGEI -Aunt Abby, played by Nathalie Michaud, and the Rev. Harper, played by Everett Olenick, ponder what to do wttb Teddy.· portrayed by Dick Stewart, in .. Arsenic and Old Lace at Lidolale. . . Evelyn Wtlaon doe. well u the "stunning" flance of Mortimer, Elaine~ Her Um1nt neecb work. · Everett 01&ni.ck plays the part obtfie 'Rev ... 'Harper and Roy Woolsey. and Bob Jameson are cast u Mr. Glbbl and Mr. Witherspoon. . Poor Mr. Wlthel'lpoon. Tbe superintendent of Ha Dale Sanitarium is 3:'nna1 '1ct.lm of Abbr. llDdKIJ'tha, tbeirebanee to 1et .. ODt up" Oil Jill· bound Jonathan. P.-------------.. 1· .. · J & Chinese Cuisine· 1 I //'/l' ORlENTAL COCKTAJLLOUNGE I Featunng Tropical Drinks Mixture Just Right in 'Action' I f BAMBOO . NOVEMBER I I l TERRACE SPECIAL ;1 .• ~ JI~ ~it o-...ForTwowW... ·I . ....,,..~ I ~, sui ""' ...,._ I I : ... · a.,.... Mee 11.21 · • "'-'" ... -Egg tall. 11-&0 Rib&. Shr\nlo Ch.Ill I I . .I! l;m . Soup • e,,119M -s .... .,,., aow Prill. 1 I , Im BIOCQOll 19Mf, ~ ~ • ,fled Aloe • I 1 M -COOlolle • ·• • " · OllW i.qllNe ~ 30. 1177 ~ ~ For 3 0t More Md--l'l'w• a-.._ I Ls3 EASTtmi ... c<>STA\1ESA MS.~ ~ .... --'1!11-----.---......... Ka111·a llltJt_H DINlllR IQ(K l AI ~) FINEST CANTONESE FOOD AT FAIR PRICE S NEW BANQUET ROOM PRIVATE PARTIES & GROUPS UP TO 120 PER SONS Kam'\ Corona D•.·I Mor t 1 21 E. Coo' I Hwy • 6 73-991 9 Al\o Vhit K ani·., Santo t\ no 1421 E. I 7th St. • 558-2626 UV[ [NTEQfAINMEN f & DISCO I >'EARN-NVERSAR>'PARTY TUES.Nl;Jv.22 ONLY PILOT ,Cl': -JohDSimon, New Y«t "One sweetheart of a marie. ~ continUed delight." -Jeffrey Lyons.WPlX·TV A WCBS Radio "Comedy Is born again. Easily one of the funniest romantic farces...zingy and exhilirating." -Tom AUen. Soho Weekly News .· QS DALY Pl\.01 LOS ANGEL§ (AP> -ud1 ~d stars make m.Ullona ot dollars from the movies, but lhey lose millioas more to film plrai.t wbo ra d the prollt treasure cbesl of upwards of $100 rnltUon annually throu,1b Ule,al ~)'in• and dts-tribuUon. • Thousand.I of bootleHed prints, includinc 1ucb box office slants u "Star \Vara" and 1. CHURCH CANTATAS BY JOHANN SEBASTIAN Friday, Newport Bach Choir and Chamber OA:hestra Diane Ellos, mezzo.soprano Alvin Bnabtbill. tenot1 II Dale Monch, baritone Johan C. Kliewer, baritone Charier Friesen, condurtor November 18 Ill " AN INTRODUCTION TO THE INSTRUMENTS OF THE ORCHESTRA Mcmben1 or St. Andrew'i. A:V EVENING OF CJJ.AMBER MUSIC Chamber Orchestra Saturday, November 19 10:00 a.m. IV. West C.oast Ensemble :\tike !\laureas, director Saturday, November 19 7:30p.m. MUSIC BY RALPH VAUGHAN WILLIAMS St. Andrew's Sanctuary Choir and String Orchestra Hetty llabb1tt, piano Alex Johnson, organ · Jonah C. Kliewer, baritone Charles Friesen, conductor Sunday, November 20 --7:30 p.m. A donatl<"' o( 1wo dollan wlll ~ rfqt>etlrd al ntnh I. II ond IV C'tuld r1r• rovtd«I teHr'llhon nu &.11 ?ml) St. Andrew•s Presbyterian Church 800 St. Andrews Road, Newport Beach "'LOOKING FOR MR. GOODBAR' IS ONE OF THE STRONGEST MOTION PICTURES EVER MADE-AND ONE OF THE BEST! At two Edw•rd• theatera Speclal performancea for your added convenience Dally-Cinema Center One 7:00.9:30 , Cinema Center Two 8:00.10:15 Friday-Cinema Center One S:G0-8:30-10:45 Cinema Center Two 7:00.9:30 Sat/Sun-Cinema Center One 1:00-3:30-6:00-8:30-10:45 Cinema Center Two 2:00-4:30-7:00-9:30 . . ven11ance of Darth Vader 1olne after Luke Skywalker and hP pals in "Star Wars, .. but with somewhat less success. ; .Jt'a difflcult to estimate bow much the piratu coat. the lnduatey. "Figure ~ $20 million to Ult L11>1lde flg~re oUlOO mlllion," says AWatant U.S. Atty. Vincent MareUa, while H. A. P.mter an FBI ex· pert on ftlm piracy, aald, "I Just' don ti know. I do know It's tremenaoua . . . and. we have only touched the tlp or the lceberc .•• "WE'ftE TALKING ABOtJT millions," saya Ricbard Bloesure, himself a reUred FBI •tent and the Film Security Office's assistant director. ••we fieure that the film collector• in the country alone sell and trade $60 million in booUeeced ftlms every year." Confesses former bootleHer Tom Dun- nahoo: "lt was the bluest money-making busl· nea.s J ever was in." In 1975, the Motion Picture Association of ~merica set up the Film Security Office to try to eope with the problem and industry officlala say increased security ha.a helped. ,., S'l'ILL. IF SOME()NE knows the riebt , penon, he can aee "Stars Wars" or "Lookin& for •'Mr. Goodbar." The eolne price for those hits ls $1,000 while films aucb as "Annie Hall" cost $750. Print.s are obtained, Porter aald, when so- meone ••approaches a projectionist or studio worker and offers bim $1,000 so he can 'borrow' the film for a couple of hours. But that 1uy fully intends to make maybe three or four copies." Van•••• Redgrave Hin• th• tcrHn with h e ,r v I b r a n t perfor"'8nc•. 'Julla' la wondarfll." ~ .......... -~ "Jane Fonda •nd Y•neaH Redgrave .,. clot• to perfection. •Julla' la moving In It• glowlng commitment to th• power of 'friandthlp." . 311* CEITllHOX PlesetllS * •• uk • .....,.. A RICHARD ROTH Presenlahon ol A FRED ZINNEMANN film JANE fONOA VANESSA REDGRAVE , JULIA----- ~:~,WlO JASON ROBARDS HAL HOLBROOK ROSEMARY MURPHf.., MAXIMILIAN SCHELL~"· 0itec1ed by Produeed Dy SCfeeriplay 11¥ Based upon Ille SIOfY f1i FRED ZINNEMANN RICHARD ROTH ALVIN SARGENT LILLIAN HELI.MAN 1lm.:r!=.~;;; GEORGEroELERUE c~i~!"~~ox (ii). Dally 7:00, 9:15 1 edwards NEWPORT · F~~:~~30!:!°~~~5 HEAR COAST HWY. & MACARTHUR 8:3CM0:45 ,mWl'OaT 0 OENTmt 644-07 &O su;;~~30 The screwball comedy about the high school senior with ,a , system for everything! FILM PIRATES .. 1' +. ROCK TAL: .C ·tics Tti•n t~ ·Stage Rock Writen Try Hand ~ Making Muaic 81 A aoalNSON Are rock crlUcs truatrated musldana 7 Some detirutely are closet rockatara. while others have even aone 10 f a.r u to perform. Tbey clon 't always make fool• of themselves; after all, tbey 've learned aomethlnl from the years of watcbine the IK>-Called profeaaionala. t Some tock writers like Jon Landau and Richard &bi.Mon (they've written for Rollin& Stone, Crawdaddy, Creem, Hit Parader, and Jtock Scene) were in bands while in colleae. turned to writlne and didn't attempt to step on a stage again. <But both have produced others' albums.) Othera, like Jon Mendelaohn <who received acclaim with a legendary putdown of Led Zep· ( IJOCK TALK ,. ' ) BUT LENNY KAYE, who plays guitar in the Patti Smith Group (and wrote for Rolline Stone, Village Voice, Hit Parader, Creem, Cavalier, and Rock Scene> started out ln a band called The Zoo m New Jeraey in the mld·J.JIOS. turned to rock criticism, and then went back to his first love making music. "I 've pever really separated the two," said Kaye. ''To me, it's all the same celebration of rock an,d ~. Playing on a stage and sittinl behmd a ~iter commenting on someone else 'a perlormance are different experiences however. WRrrEll TRIXIE A. BALM (Villaee Voice, Rollln1 Stone, Creem, Hit Parader) currently performa with her band called Nervous Wrex, and Lester Bangs's <of Rollioe Stone, Vill•I• · Voice, Oul, Creem, llit Parader, Penthouse) re· cent CBGB'1 sets were examples of how it's possible for anyone to get on a ataae and enter· ta1n. · A few week• aao e ~ rock critka got tocetber for one nlCbt only ~Paul'• Mall <in Boston) for • performanc Gt.'.!1Crltlo and ti\• Badmouth•." Mu1lcian1 la~luded MlobHl' Bloom (Bolton Phoelllx) on but, 8ncl LanadOll' Winner <Rolllnl Stone> on piano. Wrtter Jimmy I1&ac1 <Realpaper) dld a Beyap Perl')' lmltatlon, Ken Emerson (Phoenix, Rolltn1 Stone) mimicked Jame1 Taylor 1U.1in~ "Fire "°d Rain" -and fell ul"p ml4lo08. Such role-sb1ltinl is, of coune, the el{Cep· Uon. MUliclaDS often aren't word oriented, and writers tend to feel 1uperlor to your aver.,e rock star. But lf thla "trend" cootinuee, perbapa the musiclam could review th• critics. I know tome. who would leap at the chance. One writer who seems intent on a serious - performing career 1s Glenn O'Bnen (Interview, Village Voice, Rolling Stone, Oui> whose band Konelrad debuted at CBGB's lait week. Despite the au1picious punk roc k locale, Konelrad really Isn 't "new wave", it's aflasbyauitarband. A different kind ~J:S~ of love storq. ~,..,., O'Brien has an arroaant at.aae prnenct, a · e sin&ine at~le, and Konelrad's sonJS have tiUes as · Neutron Bomb," "Seize the •ans of Producti on," "Electricity," "Hard wa" and "Industrial Accident." "DAMNATION ALLEY" . "3 DAYS OF JHE.CONDOR" (R) · "LOOKING FOR MR. GOODBAR" (A) "SMOKEY ANO THti BANDIT" "THE STING" (PGJ. "BOBBY DEERFIELD" (PG) ALICE DOESN'T LIVE HERE ANY MORE" "NETWORK"(R) "THE OTHER SIDE OF MIDNIGt:ff" "THE SPY WHO LOVED ME" "THE DEEP" (PG) "DAMNATION ALLEY" "3 DAYS OF THE CONDOR" ~) "SMOKEY & THE BANDIT" ''THE STING" (PG) . ., "KENTUCKY FRIED MOVJE" (R) · E GROOVE TUB.E" "TUNNEL VISION" ''HEROES" (PG) •"rHE OTHER SIDE OF THE MOUNTAIN" . "Fl RST LOVE" ( R) · 'ALICE oOESN'T LIVE HERE AN.Y MORE" (PO) ARTll FELDMAN ANN-MARQRET MICHAEL ijOR PETER USTINOV ..id JAMES EARL JONES "THE LAST REMAKE OF BEAU QESTE" •bo stm 1nq TIEOOI HOOARD. H!N!Q Ql&SON • TE!Rij·THOMAS Scrccnpl.i" bi MAITij r!\.DMAN & CHllS AWN • Sk•11 bq MAIT~ ftl.OMAN & MM OOOllC~ Mu>1c blj JaiN MOll1S • Directed bq MAIT1J PElDMAN • Prod11\·td l'U l)lWAM S. l\.MOt! · QO.llUTURI . 11YALINT1NO" WALTER BECKER (LEFT) DONALD FAGEN ~ong BeacJi (J;vicC[_,iglzJOpera presents Meredith Wiltson's MV.o LAST )Ul'l~ GREAT WEEKEND MUSIC fP;itll11ng the famous LONG BEACH JUNIOR CONCERT BAND FRI 18.30 PrW $6.60, 6.60, 4.60, 3.00 SAT 18 30 pml $7.60. 6,50, 5.50, 4.00 SUN MAT 12.00 pml $5.50, 4,50, 3.60, 2.00 perlormances at JO ROAN THEATRE 6500 Atlantic An. Write L.B. C1v1c L111ht Opera P.O. 8011 20280, L.B. 90801 f£i ' Phone 432·7926 PdlrlER cdsD'f fONEs .... t , STEELY DAN BAND Steely 1'~n Make Jazz-rock Fushion · ll)' WILLIAM HODGE OIU.DaUritW...._., Acld vocals laced with U•ht musical ar- ransements that evoke visions or aural perfec- tion drift tbrouSb udl IOlli on StftJy Dfn '• new Aja album. a work that must be labeled the quin- tessential Jazz-rock !U5hlon disc. Aja i5 the •ixth collecUon of songs released by the reeluslve LA·bued songwritin& teem of Walter Becker and Donald Fagcm. The album epltoml%CS Steely Dan Ill, a period ot extreme flux in the band's membership and evolution. BUT THAT FLUX JS precisely from where teely Dan draws its strength and orig!nallty: lt js not a band In the classic sense ~ach of the prevlous three albums, Katy Lied, Tbe Royal Scam and Aja, has been the Jone efforts or Becker and Fagen backed by an awesome gathering or LA 's f>est studio mwucians Steely Dan I and Jl were periods or less flux. the ditcerentiation being mainly the transition or . CITY CEMHE CINEMA~ SA. FRWY fr.1ANCHCSTUI f.X I O.G. FRWV ICITY Oft. f.X I SO UTH COAST tttl A rwr l..&r.uN/I ff( A(H ·u. \)U lHEATU 11----c • :~:.:::: =~ "THE LAST REMAKE A "CHATTO IOX" (R) Of BEAU CESTE" (PG) .,.vr_··•-iMTV_c_n_fR_•ao_MO_v_•e.,.·, "PLAY IT AGAIN, SAM" ~ "llLITIS" 1111 . $p«,.I Pr-12.30 to 2;00 p.m. 1 lt•Uf!f S-. & H~ SI.JS IAT CfTY CIHTRE Cl"IMASI IHce~ S.. • Holdays; S l.l5 Open Doily 12:30 p.m. "BILITIS" (R) WkOAVS.· 1.00.14010 U SAT /SUH l a..J 40-S 10 I 00.1 •1t U SO. COAST PLAZA ~ 10 l<olltlSI ~61111 ltU """"' "THE USCUEIS" IGI $ .... lOSAT I SUH i.~ ..... u ''aJOE A WILD roHY" • •J.• OSAT SUH 'i.• .. > .~ ... ., .. S COAST PLAZA ~ltlmtll SI ~'1111 1111 ,••""' '1F YOU DOH'T STO,. IT, YOU'\.L ~ IUMD" lal I 40 SAT I SUN • l .. S JO.I 40 "CAY UHCLI" SAT I s~~~~~1 go.to .'~ CINEMALANO lflH• M•r•w •llllf• 6U 1'41 jt(lrUllll\ 0 0H, GOD" IPG J WDA'U _.,4~1e.11 SAT/ IUN ,,~, .......... Mt)~l .. lt CINE MALAND 1'11St Mar .. , J•,~•UHNl UtlUIC"" • "AlST LDVE" ll) •:J0.10:U SAT I SUk • 4 JJ.l'.JID "YALIHTINO" t :tOSAT I SUN i.1 ... 1s.11.10 s.ADDl.EDACfl l"'LA Za o f,..tM'\I U IU .. ..._................. . ·- "THICHICHN CllHOHICW• ll'GI O\U IAT/Wl'-l:IJ.l. ... t:U "THI HAAUD DHllMIKr' lat 1 Jt ur 111.._l,ff.1•JO "THE LAST REMAKE OF IEAU GESTF' (PGJ I •H II SAT $UN I .,_, I~ 4k IJ I 0 • I~ ''1'WI 11seu1u· • l)SAT SUN ?1~1u•u -MQ Dlf'OSIT, MO llT\llH" I n \AT SUN 1.i1n l'OUNTA ... -u..E y _,, ..... ~\~::rr.::.i,t. II ... - "SMOHY~ lHllAHDIT" .. UlAT·--1 1 .. , ..... ,. "THI Stl~" 7 IUATSUH- >1 .. 7,. "lHI CHICJClf4 CHIONICLIS" ll'GI t 0 JAi .__., 45-lU·•OI "THI''°"-' THAT TIMI POaGoOr 110'"''1111<-J H ·I If Fagen Crom co-voeal.Jst lo lead vocalist Cor the band's repertoire. W tth the initiation of Steely Dan lll after its Pretzel Logic album, the permanent aroup became ju. t Bo~ker (1ultara> and Fagen <key boards •md synt}\esliers> puraulne lts musical inclinations toward a Jui-rock com· • binatio1\ that ,reca\Js t.early jau and 1axman Charlie Parker's be-bop daya. Ala 19 the culmtnation or Becker and Faien ':s quest for the perfect musical background for their someUmesobscurelyrical1tatemenbJ. And JI the album's filth w.ee.k as the Uurd best-selling record In the country is an indica- tion, they have aucceeded. ) POSSIBLY THE BEST TRACK on Aja is "Deacon Blues:• a haunUng work, underpinned by tight jazz rllts, that is a monument to the ra&t· paced, occasionally hedonistic life of an LA musician: ·'I '11 learn to work the saxophone l play just wbatl feol Drink Scotch whiskey all ni&ht lone And die bebind the wheel." In addition to LA saxman Tom Scott's superlative horn arraniernents, AJa includes som e nifty, ruor·like gultar work, particularly on "Peg" and "Josic." While Becker and Fagen continue to dis· count any relationship between their lyrics and William S. Burroul(hs' classic book, "Naked Lunch" (The Dan took its name from a sexu.at device described in the novel), their songs are populated by the same seam y relationships and street characters that abound in Burroughs' work. Ajtl is no exception to the rule. Aside from iL'> abundance or personal allusions-which actuaHy fluOte Ads Group Studies Action The Los Angeles Drama Critics Circle fLADCC) has announced it will urge its mem· bers to expo&c cases where reviewers' quotes have been deliberately misconstrued in theater advertising. The LADCC hopes embarrassment from such publicity will discourage producers. performers. publicists or anyone else who place advertising from misrepresenting critics· comments. T he LA.DCC urged those who design ads to check first with critics on comments tbey plan to use, whenever possible. THE ASSOCIATED STUDENTS SPEAICEttS COMMITTEE PUSEMTS SUBLIMINAL SEDUCl"ION ARE YOU BEING SEXUALLY AROUSED BY THIS PICTURE? A MUI.TI-MEDIA/LECTURE PRESENTATION BY WILSON BRYAN KEY AUTHOtlOP SUILIMIMAL SEDUCTION AMD MEDIA SEXPLOITATIOM TUESOAY, MOV.22. 1977 a:oo r.M.: give the songs an enticlnsly myaiterioua quality- Aja ls undoubtedly the cleanest and beat Steely Dan effort yet. W• ~ •~• to tholl~ ~ our «rM!dl ~ 1ec~ atended "-~d P-.non -.. lor •-"'9 tl'IW lriendl obo1a ''-'• )'CKll'9 a.:.t, • • ou11tond1119 obility. Thu incr«JM 1n reqoeill few h.1 point111qt hell bMll • to ••oliuble ~ -tho.qi 1o <JO ~ 11 ~ for a tempoiory lod ol ~. ~ •• -do hawe o Yf11Y de .. ~ select~ of old -Id po.ntinq• by ~!led ah1a l0t be<Nry ond onve.iment pwpo$9S, ond - •"••'• yO\I to come ard """' °" QOolefy ond bt~ ot ~ leiM.I• • ttwoucJI ivdad> of pc)nl.nc;ll and other trem10.. • AW merchando1e catt1~ on untardtioncl 7-doy mon<t)lbciC1 qtJOIOl'llH UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA. IRVINE COMMITTEE FOR ARTS PRESENTS: Tu.aday. Ho•etrber 22 1:00, .... YJUogel'heatn COMPUTB MUSIC, """' JH1 a.rt.a fre.cob Tuetday, DecHlber 6 8:00 p.m. COMtri Hal IWT1'0WSIU AHO tGl.$0M .. Tiekeb: ~ Aclllilt"-• S4, ~. St9ff ' 0....... ...... • U , -UCI ~ • S2. AY ........ .UUCI 101 Offk•, 9:30 ...,., to 4 ~ M4lll _.,.. -4 .__.., w....-· C.il Cr , ... fer Am .. llWl71. • () .• ,, 1-.i,_ ._. .... "You drive a hard bargain I Okay, I'll release all the dogs for my freedom!" FUNKY WINKERBEAN ............... 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MOW 4'6 Pour .t8 1ocent e>lece 51 8ell9VH • 53 GIYera 5.t Bad m11t•ke" 55 Adhere 56 Hereditary • units • 57'Formol ~ e>rec1p 61 Small. 1 " l I 1 E'R.E·DEAI . . . ·VOLVO 2 6 4 Grand Luxury Automatic Luxury eQuipped with factory air conditioning. power steering & 4 wheel disc brakes, fuel in1ectiOI'\ & transistorized ignition, electrically adjusted remote control mirrors, pow~r windows, infinitely front bucket seats. tinted glass & more! 58477 Plus Tax & License ACT NOW -OFFER LIMITED PRICE GOOD THIU NOV. 2 1. "77 '·'~~ MllRQDIS · ~~MOTORS • VOLVO AND ORANGE . COUNTY'S 1-J...-....i~~~ OLDEST TOY OT A DEALER ' · The car you lease does make quite a difference. After all, you don't drive the· lease, you drive the car. And When you lease a Mercedes-Benz you drive some- thing special indeed . Whichever Mercedes-Benz model you choose, you drive one of the world's most respected automo- biles. A car with legendary engi- neering, meticulo\Js craftsmanship, outstanding performance and safety. Something else: you'll drive the '.. car you lease for two, three or even . four years. Most cars look out of date all too quickly. But when yocl · lease a Mercedes-Benz, you drive a · car with classic lines and ttmeless· ness that is never out of date.1 We. have several leasing plans to offer you. One is certain to ma~e it more convenient for you to drive a Mercedes-Benz than you might have thought possi· ble. Call us today .tor the · surprising facts: 1 , , .. .1:.~•~ •• • • . .. .... . ..,. .... -......-...~ .. ~ .LEASE DEALER DIRECT. 504 DIESEL SEDAN &.WAGON 1.N STOClC *Mfg. suggested retail price, delivery, optional eQu1pment. license&. tax not Included;· ME\V 178 FORD rtNTO 2 DOOR SIDAM ·~ ,,,.,.... lr.,_..Mlon, reel< ano 1><noon "-· ""'-" '9nlllOr1 •Y9tttm. Ill v~ INci<el ...._ -IAQ. -· -co.en. -nc , .. .,,,_ CMllr-. 2 J ~lie 2V . _,,,., -·--S.. f 109'!07 ~·~ ,o.;o DUNTON'S PRICE NEW 178 MUSTANG II Z DOOR HilDTOP ._ ,_,.,.. ,,.,,..,,._, ~onl ""' br-. r-. --•-.no aur->OM-11)'11•111. coniourea DucJ<el _,. colc>«Uy.a cue --1*'"11. _,.,., ,,,_...,., ~. ·'"'nometw. alT'C> I •emo oq .. IOChable g..,... bell. -ltGnle<. 23 Ill••'"' ~v. Clht0tn11 vn•S&lott '°""'men' BR 18.ctJ -.w Jedi.iii ,., .. AM rlOK>, ••ttme>t .teeenl OIOt.ie). lu1ury Int.,..,, Q1""1> -1101167 Slk. •ON DUNTON'S PRICE s3999 NO DOWN PAYMENT PROBLEM AT DUNTON FORD 177 FORD F-i2SO PICKUP . Sucier Sharp at • SuSMr Price. • Auto. Trane .• Power ""ring, $ 5199 Serial No. (1E96135). 166 FORD MUSTANG tire~. bucket seats. A nice one! V-8 3 ~AM radio. whitewall s 1599 (616ZZV) .., • NEW '77 FORD RANCH!RO 500 400 CID 2V 8-cyl1nder, Callforn1a emission eQutpment. 5 H78x14 B wsw. tinted glass-complete. 90 a,mp alternator. Ser. # 184286 Stk. #5420 3 51699 • NEW'78 FORD ICOMOLINI VAN 351 V-8 engine. glass·foted rear door. exhaust system-reduced sound. transmission 011 cooler-aux. emission system. 1ransm1ss1on cru1se-o.ma11e. 4 ~J!·,~:u~rRw:!, ~~.1 g~1;r~~~~'., glass·t1nted. door latch & lock·rear. door-slld1ng side cargo. cooling pack•g~xtra. steenng·oower. shock absorbers. heavy duty. bumpers~ome front & r.,ar. grllle.b,,ght surround. Ser. wAG5195 Stk. •050. • 54799 MEW'77 FORD F-250 CUSTOM STYLESIDE rtCKUP 300 CID engine, chrome front bumper • full foam seat. folding 1eat back. dome lamp, headliner. 6800 GVW ~. ammeter/oil pressure gauges. r:iower tlfftfng, dual bright swing lock mirrors, ttnt" windshield, extra coollng rlldlator, I,.., ltep bumper. Ser. tZ08020 Stk. .5<475 \ CALL 546-70ZO FOR FREE C.8EDIT CHEC.~ ~ DUNTON'S PRICE NEW 177 FORD LTD LA.MD.AU 4 DOOi PU LAUD HAIDTOP . FACTORY All COHDITIOMIMG. .IWIUC NOTIC& tUHalOllC041aTOflTNI It ATI Of' CALI llO«NIA IJOR YMICOUNTYOflCMIANCMI ........ oaDlltlO»IOWCAUll flOR CM•MOIOflM&MI n lM -.. 11'9 Ntliic.tloft Of \NSUlt AHIAltl "'"•'·~i:.:•tlllon or MANSUR "'ill I Ill .. •1111 Uw c ten .. 1 coun ter • .,.., ~ "-11 ,,.,., -ff9m MANSIJ R ANM• 1 \llANIUR AHSARl•O\INl(ll IT IS HlltEl'I' OltDIRID lbet ell raof\f 1.--i.ci ltl Mid _,_ • tr Mlore ttlla <~ et II e.m~ c-rnwr ,,, tm, 111111e c~., ~nment a to allow c ..... wtly 11111 ellc.etlClft lor ol <~ of MIM .. ldMIM.,.,_ T IS FUaTHla ORDt\RID UWll e iy ol tNa ordW to tllOw ~ lie >1l111M OllC8 e -.II tor fM.r Ille• ...... '""' PflOI' to IN MY of MMI ''':j In o.lly f'tloc. a ,..,.._...,. 911 ••• clrcul.Uon jN'lnl9cl In the c;.ou,,. •Or••· JA TIO: H<W.1, lt11 lftlerVanT.wnhow J\IOQe of"" ilopetlor c-t 'ubll1M<I OrtnQe eo.11 Delly l"llot, 1. •, 11, JI, 2$, lt71 •m.11 PUBUC NOTICE NOTICEOFSAlE 0" REAl f'ROPlllTY ATPRIVAT£SAl£ ... AU019 IN THIUUPIERIOR COURT O,.TH£STATEOI' CAl1'011NIA P'~ THE COUNTY 0,. OllANGI " Ill• Melter Of Ill• ~····· of PUBUC NOTICE SUl"•atORCOCl.TOlfnta ST AH OI' CAUl'OllNIA f'Olt PUBIJC NOTICE ....... SU l'EaJOlt C04.lat Ofl TM• IT AT& Ofl CAU flOlllUA ~ll TMli axlNTY ~ORANGa PlJBUC NOTICE Mi111 IUl'lalOlt CIOllH Of' THI ITANOf'CAUJIO•NIA l'Oa TMlcOUNTYOPOllAMOI PUBUC NO'l1CB l"U8LIC HEAIUNGS WILL II HllD av TliE c:m'TA MEI.A PL.AM· • 5 , .. 7 8 D A . I L y p I L 0 ·T p •• hr .. Motlii: .. All rffl lltat. ad•ertlled tn tb1a °"'G!I: ll 1ub· !::. to the al l'alr ou1lnt Act of 1H8 which makel it UletaJ to advertl1e "•nJc pre· :::rc:I.o~lmli. oo, or UoG bated on race. color, rell1lon, aex, or national ori1in, ot an 1DtnUoD &o make any 1ucb preference, Um1ta-·Uoo, or dlacrlmlnauon." 'lb.la aew1paper will not know inf ly accept any advert 1in1 for real ..tale which II ln vlola· Uoaoltbelaw. •••••••••••••••••••••••• IMCUDll&.E VAl.UI a Bdrm, lam rm, 2 ba, 1uper •~arp home. Owner wl C!OQS\der VA Of l1IA. .New c~ new ~nt, covere patio. 1 .. 11onal landacap· lnl. brick ~ace Bet• tu caU OD bla one. •nn..-... O'fN 111 t •II S IUN i(i Hi°l<lf(t• ~sm111 and PLAHTS are f'RISEMTS rtaHCnY PllSCRllEO FOR CHRISTMAS Sell them from underqur DAILY PILOT CHRISTMAS TREE •ppearini each Tbursd1y Nov 171.h l.hru D~ 15th For more ln£ormallon and to phtce your ad CALL NOW 642·S6'18 Cl..tSSlfll9 HOUIS AdvertiMn may place U.r Ida by \tlep~ a:ooa.m. to5:aop.m. Moaday Uml Frid•'/ • l\o .. S.bUU)' OOSTA MJ:SA OP'FJCI!: ~Y · HUNnNGroN BEACH 1ms Beteb Blvd. · .• ...ino lciAOUNA B&ACR ·'- lW Ollllfte7T'8 ,JA.-. .. thCM· ... . tr.~ COATS & WALLACE ':rP REAL ESTATE, INC. ~ tOr.AllY 11\\NI II I OMPANV ~I RVINI ltll SOIJlh COASI AHi II SI NCl l'Htl $Prv11u1 \.o<,l.1 Mc· .. 1 I r v111t· Hu11t111qlo11 BP.11 Ii N1·wport 111 ·.ir.h Wl-'.S l.J-'Y '\J TAYLOR CO. I{ i-: 1\ I T' \I\ s " I " (., . I ! I· II ; CAMEO SHOlts :._ $310,000 Excltlng ocean & sunset view from this lovely 3 bdJ:m home. Beaut. step. down living rm, den w /Wet bar, mstr bdrm w/separate Mr. & Mrs. bath. formal DR. -all o'lookil!C pool. WISLIY M. TAYLOI CO., llALTOIS . 2111 S.Jo•:w::a....... . MIWPOIT CIMTll. . 644-4910 SAM DllGO . FANTASTIC COUNTY, ,. unsqut: pl'QPlr· JN•VJSTA, Nortb San 'tywtthroo1Dto•d41ddJ- &ao Cou;ney. 2 BR, 1116 t1ona1\IDitAI.Two1 Wnn Ba 1Jaome ot outataa41n1 unJ&a ~ 3 bdrm wm. caual.lt1, Nb' air eood.i ooe a bdrm ~. Total frpk, .,ew crpt. Iota o aeh41dUled lneom tUJ5. 1tcc'-.1e space, 2 ~r 1v. 'l'b!I I.I a wbantr. Call heated ••fm'I pool, •nn . cloae Into town " frwy's. ONN '"' • rr ~ ru"' fQ., N<I• ~1i£~~:~~ re IDll 01d, 4 BR. 2 Ba. Uv-rm, A. .... tam-rm, attach. 1ar. ADULTS V"LY frplc, Ire vlew Jot on . COMDO quiet cW.clt4ac ol 11Dt Ga\ed commpolty two boaM9. Walk to Gram· bloclll from Ul9 bucb . mar, Jr. Hllh It Hi&h Ideal two bedroom for Sc b h. A 11 u Ill• bl• th• perfect couple or $50,000. ao yr am· liA&le person. Tbo price mar1hed loan bearln11.1 u under $70.POO: Let'.s t'OOJ am:n,w pcrceota1• ute. make an oa.r, call "'· '81.500. M&-1313 COMOOS 2 BR .. 2 ba., in xlnt • 9/IOACRE Tustin compl•x. ai,900 B •cK B ·A.y 2 BR .. alr·cond.1 ln " " Jrvtne. Only $58,000 HorM oon-ala, 3 1mall ~ '14',000or ofr. Ownrl All 919-5333 IN CARLSBAD-on OPIN 1119 °11-s WN ro11NrCff ~:Jl~;iL1; i~ llHI ft. sz.ao.aio. ,• AU a e uroperda, aee MtM V ... Owner-A:tent, Paul SPECTACULARVIEW Wopec:ball at W.R.11. Tiie Golf Club with a Realt)', 124 Carl1bad 1pa.rkllng lake i1 70\lr PA••MOMODEL Blvd,, Carll~ad . back yard. ,.. acre. TWO & A VIEW U YO\l W1 find a belt.er 114/1»ZU Spanl.ab 5 Br, •be. ()pen SpacioLll i •lory with buy, b\G' lt! •BR, family HU~ ... GT_... hotJM P'rt and Sun onlY or panoramlcvlt1ilromJ,.be rm. w/frplc, 2-story, 3 """ "" by'.?:: 1'190 Panay tlr-~r leveL Li&aUriOUJ ~~ .~::~ ~t ':On~: llACH cle. 540-0608 1"' ~Jr:U c::=: UndeJ' ioarket.at si•. Tae> NIAi llACH I.GI 2 STOIY t10l:l1nl att 0017 a fn#of • ~~;022~ • $107,000 MHAMO. HOM! the featul'es o this floe; i .Foar ctpntto bedrooms, Newly d;ecotated thruout home. Pdced '°" • 'Yery JM...:t.wa. ____ ... ~ 1Dclu4inl bui• auaater with carpeta, drapes·aad quic~ sale al $$9,500. \.~~~·~). 1i&t.t. Tbla lart• tca1ed pa1bt. Short dllt&nce to CALL1&t.am.. .. -· . home 11 desiped ror i 1bop1 nd 1ebool1. ~. c:ELErT ~ ... -n-aa Wn11Y that en.Jo11 betn• 8ellen an aaxioua. eau ~ "°" ...... .._ ......... x togetber.JU1tonemUeto tor. YOUt' appointmenl.. PROPERTIES 8Pa0oua 2 bldrin, 2 ba, saodybeacb.Ownerma1 ~2313 , ............ ....__;:....;.. _ _,_ ___ , "2 w. 2' ba, b e fncd help finanee. Celltot •l>· Nt119•111 rUNroNNict• •-------•I yard, e car 1ar., ocean poinlmeDt. "2 Tia 5'2.100 vie• • abort waUc to •.••. ..,,£·Y. •••• 1 WW bQy a duplex. 1 blk. beach. Prtmu•ldentlal , _ "' . from tbe ociean; a a aru6.~~lf~ :=·:'ti ~~~i(fu~~f6KS~~~·!!]~;E~~~~~~~[ bdrm.• a bacbflor, wlth _.. - a dbl. ~e.Ltuebol4. HURR I Call World TUIUY1AIGAlM M.AaVaOUS 8TNl6S -om Evtl Wide eroun. f13..454S. Landmark Condo. Just M()N.ACO i--------1 ltept frooi the beach. Call ua about. tbla Im· associated 1\6J , ... I W ', kt /I I •' 1~ ', , , '/'1 I t , :• ---- OCIAMMOMf B1 o__.. d~, 2 Br 1 Be-ea UDil. W. Nwpt. &6121.9;55M221 • MADOR Plmst>' to ., in lmure •nim. one owner 1 • VllWHIU.S thne. Play tenn.1.1, work Bedroom, converUbJe ..,_~'>'Ptdni.d abedrm In aboo, \hen go for a den home in Harbor ~kw817n.w awtmfcrela.xloJacuul. View HQ.mes. Tbe warm and lAvttinJ. or: !eaud.f\11 place. Call DOW OM*'I metlcQJoul care f..ctatanly'117.000. !'l .. C:.it ' 'ft !:J":Z ~=~ --)J.~:tJ~ I I ' h '-ii I' I I I ' I .J , j ~ ~ ' '*I I ;..I I Ill I -.,. • ··= ~ And the bJthl~ OODl• DlmifB price of sm,.eoo. --------•I fee WUI plHH JOU' pod4 "'* CilU...7211 • rJn Nif,rt l.l/\ll fY I. ll'J'JOC 11\ Irr, ll-- THE HEAL ~!~TrHS_ • HA YI YOU SUM SU VllW7 BeautifUl homea by Broad.moor in a beauUful setting overlooking Newport Boach and Unique has several ex· cellent listings on them. A variety of floor plans, an with views and all are located on quiet cul-de-sacs with easy access to community pool, jacuzzi and tennis. Priced Crom $237 ,000. In case you didn't know, Seaview is a new lt'Vine Village community with a slightly Cape Cod flavor of cob· blestones, paned windows and 'tarnished brass. U~ICJUI: li()Mf:S REALTORS', 675·6000 2443 East Coast Highway, Corona del Mar also in Mesa Vt>rdP, .it 546 S990 G...,... 100 Ge•rel 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• EAS1SIDEGI SPANISH ESTATE IEACH 2 STORY 411.,00L $71,900 Parkllke grounds enhance formal entry to this elegant home. DOM~ LAUGH -~ ,llllOUS ow ... ~ .... -.......... tJci'r. fot1r be...,._ U.., wltlll "°m ... =-•••••••lvilll,.... ..... ..... cMfortllllt ~,.. ..... ttGllt ftlaplKt..t ............. a,all•ll to ceYered,.... ... for •wt•ht ... a INlppy Iii.-W .... a MW ~ to ·c'"" -tlih f .. Ullg. $ 121.000. CP.S.-la..,.14n•tttt.J••Nd•-,. side fc*t'' .._. OWlllllt two '--10 .......................... ~ •af• ,...a..., ..oee. ......... COLE OF NEWPORT IEALTORS 2515 E. Coeat Hwy .. e ... dtil Mw 675.5511 I I 002 G<eftffal 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ' . . .. ·- 'PENINSULA POINT WALK TO BEACH & TENNIS 5 br. 4~ ba, 3300 sq. fl, FR. 1tudy, FDR, fos.11 atone frplc, vaulted ceiliJ)B in LR, wet bar, workshop,· beach shower. laundry chute, space save~ closets, Spanish tile entry. oversiied 2 car garace w/elec. door opnr. , NEW AMENITIES INCLUDE TEAK WOOD FLOORS, carpeting, landscaping, sprinklers, ext. lighting, ext & Int paint. KITCHEN includes double self.cleaning oven, Kitchen Aid dishwasher, trash compactor. OPEN HOUSE Saturday & Surtday ti to$ 421 SEVILLE. N.b. ' (Balboa Penlnauha Point> COLOMW. IEAL ESTAn IJM.lli81 963-8961 808·2636 -2\3-~2-3302 1002 GeMrtll 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• EXECUTIVE DESIGN ero~ :JlkAI~ Panoramic vieW of Blue l'aclflc. New cu.11tom home In e11tub. nelghborbood. 4 B<lr~. muid'• quJrt.era. film.rm, Jge llv·rm "/frplc, formal . din·tm. muter 1u1te w/fl't,11 & waJk·ln cloetta. Open stllirway leads to a third ltn·ef crows neai library, vlewitli the world. ?tJ•ny declca & p1U0t. Her~·s an xlnl opportunlly for )'OU to participate will\ the builder In the ael~tl~ of flnl1b molerioll best suited to your t..stes ff dttoratinl ideu! $355,000. Sat II Sun 10 to 4 BUit.DER ON PREMISES SAT. &tSUN. tG-4 671·3781> 551·4245 139.5487 -~-·--. ....... . ..................... . ·PIOODOWM Cmtam S Bit, a BA rudl home OD quiet tiff 1 treet nr. So. ca P1au: OO't lat at SJl,000. Ai\ 6'5-81'1. nt 21. -••IUYa.s SH.000 SoP'r townho!Jfe.· a •tort • bdrrns, a baths. Only • yn old. £nd unit. Cl . to pools" parb. 751-uai ~ W'-llkt!r t; I t!t! WYSIDI C.M. 3 Br 2 Ba on one of Eut•ld•'• dHlr'lble 11t•t1. E .. Uy cnaln· tah.t 1ard-. many xtru.; at a price you can attord. Callloday! IMVmHG Lovely 3BR, FR, cul<le· ~. IP UC, Ira. yd. 2038 AJlao, 645-9161 otr aotb " Irv. Dr. by. 3 BR .. ,_ Real'-• SANDS 1125,000. Open &ln H. + ....... area. v Oceanfroot property on A&l846-10MorS15-"80. attrac:Uve home. IQ,llCIO. Beacb Road. 3 BB, ! BA. By appt. ~1. Hurry l ~ • roaring rare ln New COodoe, z Br. 2~ Ba . MESA VERDE IUY A VJTllAH the lonly rocltflteplace. 2 frplc'1, ceramic Ul (Br l~Ba. la comer lot. A HOME .,. you watch aallboata & kit.clwma " bath Pool 1uper abarp w /many Use that VA on Ulla Im· sequlla. $300,000. spa. l75-49J2 Broker xtru, alao RV or boahc· macuJate Costa-Mesa 3 AHCHOltA•E Ftt1St4 MEW ceu; t119,500. Bkl' llr • bdrm, 2 bath beauty. All UmMG Blackl98-'187t new kllc'hen, new copper IMYESTMIMTS Wu model 2~ story 4 plumblng, new car~t, 17141496-7711 bdrm home w /loft, new drapes. Lattice matr bdrm tulles. PooJ ireenhouse, fruit trees, CoroM .. M9' I 022 st 1 e d 1 o t • pat lo . And Snarldv :!~~i11!!! ::_ ~1~ win· ••••••••••••••••••••••• waterfall, Rah pond. Btn Immacwa're-i :be!room Ol'r1Hlf9·11 HVIH<rtflJfCt• COAST HWY. home. Call now t.o .aee home, dlninJ area, fami· [~ I Commerc. bid& .• trouble lhh unique home. ly room, bate patio. ~j ll~OH}t ~~1~~= .. ~ ~i\mmuamw iW.~p~~~~fi Desirable Eutalde J bdrm family home on huge lot. Large Uvlng room • btflly plmeled. Laree cov 'd patio. Recreational vehicle parking. Owner will pa polnts ao you can use your Gt benerits' 646-7711 Spacious living room. 1''1esta party room over· looks I ush courtyard. Wet bar. Garden view kitchen Spanish tile,---------------- NO CREDIT NEEDED $68,000 BIG 4 BDRM llSTVllW Real Ealate 644·7383 ~1120 RealDtate mirror s & wood EXCLUSIVE IRVIHE TaliCE dramalJcaJly blended to complete mood of Open 1·5 Dallr ________ 1 Callfomia lifestyle. Open stairs 1tweep to huge ADULT COMM. IM master suite & guest OCIAHSIDE quarleri;. Gl's try no Magnlflctnt 2 br down Hurry ! M"usl w/custom lnlenor Great sacnface. Call 963·7881 View! Super lndscpd. & < "' '' 1· 1 • ·o~p1.rr - 1800 sq. fl. + + 4 br, 2 ba beauty! Upgrades tbruout, wood cabinets, tile, fruit trees. beaullCully lndscpd., 2 car gar. Laundry rm Family area. Move-an cond. 1 will carry con· tract al 8"'2'7o. For sale by Owner I Agt. Ed Chernow. 646-8080 · IESTPRICE Compare thia 1barp J bdrm coodo w /otben on the market & you 'II agree you cu't be"t this view at any price. Al $145,000 thia wUI nil tut! f46. '1711 SIAYllW Broadmoor, Jot 36, Yacht Resol~te: only new Ham~ Model availa· ble. 3Bdrms. $26S,OOO · OPIH SUH. I ·5 PAUL MARTIN Real E&tate 644. 7383 USTSIDIGI 9AAB8 I. 3 bdrm c:uUe bD J&e lot. I llftlllit.ll Hdwd noon. Nr So. '"#I ti C411 ........ Cout Ptua. RV entr)'.•-------- Call now to inspect. Nr. Yoc..Ntts ~ Newport • San D.leao for~ Frwys. M.Wtil Sharp 3br. New paint e;'J Walker l~ lee thn.lout. remodeled kil. Us lot. Only 1112.500. ~:~:~n~~::~ [®·lfl&HI REALTORS . = - 1839 Sabrina Terrace FAHT •me VIEWS ......... MW .... lltg inf...,_ Terroct locatlea. lay & oc ... ·~ frOlft spaclou .. ~ .... ,... ltw ,;i...Mw dtcor. SpatdlMJ pool mte1 1ge eon.-... ~...._ a.y walk to 3 yodtt clubs. S421,000 llld'9 ,lcmd. OUAUTY DUPLU __ .:.:Re:::al~El::ta:te=---l-~'l'~Ol.:.;.a:.;.r...:.R;...;lt.1;:..•~1-·956-_;..,;INO __ 1~~~~~~~~1 --------• 3 Lr& Bdnna + 2 bn 4' 2 211a HOUSH MESA VERDE BEAUTY Ir& bdrms + 2 ba . • ._ 48r2Ba,JaeFamRm.2 714-729-596' Don't drop the ball! Get a ~~~~~--~ job with a low-cost Daily Pilot Classified Ad. Want Ads GMHol Ca 11 642-5678 Phone 642-5678. 1002GeMt'GI 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~II. macnab I Irvine ~ realty FINER HOMES FROM $46,000 TO $195,000 llG. llAUTIRIL & HOUDA Y READY! Super Montego -you'll love it! 4 BRs w /lg. family rm. Beautifully decorated & interestingly landscaped. Priced at $157,500. Bob Owens 642·82.15. (Z-11> I st AHHIYEISARY OR SOttl You will love this beautifully cared for 3 BR, family rm Anniversary Estates gem on lg.va acre cul-de-sac lot. Lg. fireplace, walled & fenced rear yard w /plenty play or picnic area. 2-car garage. Priced to sell at $112,500 fee. A•super buy! Tom Al- linson 642-8235. (Z-12) SHOf'PIMG-TD4H1$-GOLF All within minutes of this spic n • span townhome in University Park I . 3 BR, 2 bath end unit. Only $87 ,500. Dorothy Ha rd castle 642-8235. (Z·l3) UDO 1VltHIM(i IASIM Spacious, beautifully decorated townhome on the bay. 30' livhlg rm w /fire1,>lace & views of Lido Bay. Muter suite overlooka)>atio & foun- tain. Maid's qtrs. Pier & slip. $395,000. Lynne Valentine 844.QOO. (Z.14) .. l. PLAN With lots of upgradet l 2200 sq.tt..1 beautifully decorated & an idea floor plan w /2 BRs, 1 bath downatalr& & ma#ter + 1~ batlla . uP· Carefree ''Bluf !1" living for o~ lY $184,500. Quick e1CTow possible. Jean Dales 642-8235. (Z·15) W aterf tont Ho••• 2633W.CoastHwy. Newport Beach 631·1400 $60,000 FULL PRICE 4 Bdrm, H~ bath l9ft liv. rm. Near new carpet, big master bdrm. Bright sunny kitchen & eullng area I Lge yard with R&tio! Call now! 8'2·2535 Ol'fN '" 9•" \ llJIJ '"~' '• I =~ .......... ~!!~· ~~~~-........ ~~~2 1~1am1 PEMMSULA POINT 4 Bdrm.. 2 ba. home. All amenities. Lovely area, few steps to beach. $189,500 UDO ISU Newly remodeled 4 bdrm.. den, 4 baths, living rm. w/cathedral ceiling. Lge. master bdrm. suite. $224.~ -- BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR J•l l Bny\•d•· Q,,,,,. N 11 6/'J 6161 , I 1002 GHAr.e 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• MANAGER WANTm REAL ESTATE A high earning opportunity with a well known standing Real Estate Co. Open- ing a new office in Costa Mesa. Must have experience. Salary + Applica- tions confidential. Repty to Ad #88, Daily Pilot, P .O . Box.1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626 ------~ G1•r.e 100 GtMr• IOOZ PIJMEDUPLIX •••••••••••••• .. •••••• ••••••••-••••••••••••• Well planned •well built FA•••aoOK UTATI 6000Sq Ft Clltm Homo lbe ele&anct of French Country architecLuH combinea bdutlfully with mUd Southern 2 bedroom, 2 bath unlu "In great Costa Mesa nelghborbood. iach unit baa lt'a 01'D prlvale yard, eara&e, built-In electric iltchen fl eoonomleal naturpl eaa beat. Very eaay i~ rtnt. =~-19Qf.CAL~ llAUTIFUL MIWPORt DUPUX Two l1e 3 bdrm, 3 ba un· it.a In very rare condiUbn. It looks new. Private palioe for each unit, two car 1arage for each unit, wood'bumlna fireplacea, Mexican tlle entry. Mucb more. Call us ror details. 646-1171 Complete pvcy. vaulted 0!1t I LOT sly. boat or RV storaae, beamed cellin(s, frplcs, 3Br, den 2 frplca, beam REDUCED $114,500. over looks park. Priced ceil'I· 1500 sq ft. Rear Conv or Aaaucne VA. to sell. 644-7461 or bouM It 3Br, 1~ ba, Open ijae 11/20, 1-SPM. 6'4·7509 . frplc. UOOt\:J1~.000 by owner. 556-eoc8 Newport btate IHVHTMIM1' + MEXT TO IEACH . C~=5 s br home w/Camllf rm OD R.2 lot, l&. ~for Tbl• spacious sunny '8UCllS llGHT l anon untt. Prime Nil· home feat urea 5 larf e tal area I Unbellevabb' bedrooms each wl b Pvt party, cnUlt sell ooe prlceclattBZ,!IOO. pri•ate bath. Family of two proptrtlea on 71~7IOO room with wet bar " F1owerSt.. ln East C.M. 1 super custom ldtc:ben. doplex or 1 lot w /'/. The Paint ta tresh ln " houla. m.an <Q. New carpets. drapes Cu y..a..a. It shut.tad. Spectacular "' n~Jl • B Ag.Q/l ~ ·~··''''"'"'"' fireplaaia " &1lljo doors. 2 Br each, xlnl1~me. • A1IO features 4 car car. locaUon. Sl20.000. Blu. l U 1-IOMUS A1r cond .• hot water c:lrc. •-"-~--•-32~/1._si._9023_.,...,......---$67 IOO pump" all on double lot.1--------nu. u JU• 3 Spa.c~ Homeolferedat$330,000. IUAdlrt/l"ttton . bdrm•, Jae co&&otr1 Ealtaide eo.u M•a. s-2 llilcben. huce poo1 abe bednn homes A: room for lot. Don't cniA thia one. 209 MAlCISSUS more units. 300' deep Jot. Qall 14'2-l'lOO • HWTY·lot.1 of potenUaJ Of'aNIHtorHVNIONN<I• ~icon-. !• 1111 • ~ ~ "r· HERITAGE . REALTORS J•' ',,' U I ' • )!'V'ltl\"" "'t 11t •, Tt •'' !lt \/I• C•l't ff', J I J I ¥ii -• • • •suquroATl*M T~AOVAMTA .. .. ce R·l Lot w ,soo of this opport of $53,900 for Huntington ••W.n't Jut Networ k, Garden Condo. Single level front unit . ........, ...... t_Rlty, ag.5000 2 BR SJ?aC LR. Functional kitchen.~ 'o A• V~ I 03• Pool facilities too! Call Bill at McVay, •99•••••••••••••••••••• 968-4456 or 968-3191. 1 • --~~~~~~---·~--~~~~~--· I t .seller Needs Help ~~~~!':.~~~.!!.~. ~':~ ............ !!.~~ Tranar erred , m u s t 111a c r I f i c e ! B c a u t. Span11h style 4 bedrm .home. Super b11rgam at • a1,750. ~ 2 br. 2 ba w, large bonus · hn. Brand new carpets & palnt. Priced to sell &.900. ~y SPAMfSH TIM.IVB. OMLY StCM,tlO. 5.51-3384or 552-3867 Euinalve'• b\al• ho.me. •--L I 4 bl1 bdrm1. I ~iba. ~ -I 04 fnnl din rna, ~v~ralled ··~··••••••••••••••••! f amlly rm w /Wet bar & bli brk Crplc. ·Charmine courtyard. Sbow1 lite a model.759-~l H1•.1I f \/.iii: /111 ciuo c;,,.,,,, .. v,,. ~,,,.,., 4g4 9473 5 49 0116 1 L.J\GUNA NIGUEL 49>1730 SOUTH LAGUNA 4w-4Ml FOr.:IES r E O LSON .~.. . ... , ...... LIDO SANDS Nice 3 br home, l blk t bcb. LotJ of dccor11lo solarlaa & even your own jacuni. orcered al Sll.5.000. FULL.St REAL TY 546-0114 -:-~~=-.. -------- - LAGUNA BEACH 497.2419 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ......... FwW. BEACH AREA·Vlklnc 24X60, ln beau\. cond 2Br. 2Ba +LR w/wet bar, d1bw1br $37,500. Aat.646-G!O . -... __ ,., __ ··-------·· . lflltelc,11 llfAl l'IAll I I ' ~ ,.. I JI I ' 1 • • " I • Ill • , 'l,.I 'I ' i • ON !JEACH, VISW of MAIN CHANNEL. Decoratoi I Story 4 /;:Mar:n~h l1V:rp . •---------• PENINSULA PT. Les-a Br, 2 Ba to ocean " Bu· tr ~. '3'75/mo. Qw'tnin& 2 Story I bd SJS.1S83 4 tam r... home. 1 bd. 1 t., f:rpJ, DD cpla, ---------1 Hardwood floors, paCfo pCat.ltofttzMJmo.UW.,.... 3144 IMS/molse. ~ 1~1aat1 tr 8eC. ~ •••••••• .. ••••• .. •••••• W Al..JC to Beach, pool " ~a .. ODI)', DO pe t . •--.u S lell.Db. Excltlq 2 1toey 4 csc.ans. Call e9e. llQn •-bdrm•, 1615 mo be. 3 NEW 2 bt, 2 ba condo, 28R.Zba ··· ·· ..... = bl1h,1uiidec:U&atrlum. acron· from So. Cat 2BR+D,Zba ·· · ... $500 Lare• home on WATER 1 UIR, 2 Ba .... • .. fm/535 1rith boat dock. Z 1tory P au, $05 mo. Pool, 4 av 2"'· Ba -· !Wl-38 ... n . . . . . • . . . ...... wltb 4 bdrm.a, ram rm. ---------1 48R,1Ba •••••• $7'6n50 din rm and prhJlc)'. Newport Beiibta area. S1200/IM IN. newly decanted 2 br, 1 LIDO NORl> best be. eacl pr., tncd yd, tioo. Exec 2 Bdnn, d , patio. Kldt ok. $345/mo. ~ rm. New ln ll out. Mel pm, ea..1808 flftJ/mo. ON LIDO. Special 2 bdrm+ + +. Glamou.roua bideaway. $850/mo. ON WATER,. Fabulous VIEW 2 bdrrn w /beautHul decor. '700/1"0 lte. SJIORT TERM rental of 8 bdrm + boat sUl> teOO/mo. w ............. , c••1t-t4oo ( I r L I J . I ' 1 ~ ' 1" t .. I ' f J • J I I \ -----· . .. \ 7 f 0 ,, .Ii• e e • » 1 " j n ·F I I h • II 11 a e • t J J I l 1 . 1 , , 1 l . -• . ... ... .. ILY0 --.,·~ •• • ,..,.,,4\J'' .,, ~ • !"n y,\ ~· -.. • r •' •' J ·--"'----'--· ,.. .-. ,,__ .r L • -.,_ -·---------,-.--------.-=-_,:-.\ A1 dd lt ..• &ulld u ... Oi perit. .. Hammer it ... carpet SERVICE 1··11- 1 flEC __ ~~o .,1-·-:TUii70ft .. ]Satcn lt ... Plpt tt ... Remoae1 tt .. ~ I .t ... ~ement lt ... Wire lt...Hoe it ... Clean it ... Mo"e v.:.J Roof Jt...Landsca~ 1t ... T1te lt ... TrJM Jt...Sewlt ... · • 11.ll. .. ress lt ••• Palntlt ..• Nail lt ... Ptaster lt ... Flx It... W Haul It... Add it ... Plant .. It ... Alter lt ... Learn It .. . !~~1!!!!!'-:0 ,j·:~,...-:_ C1•lltfCuruet. 81drt~ GrJOitl..t n -~ Moy... , ..... }P.,.1M9 .... ...... • --..... 11!_9 ............................................................................... , •••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• B•J .-OIA.ll ltrY. earpeetry, HY typ•. Ct m • o t W or It · t' ...... llectrlc Skiploader, dwnp truck, HOUSECLEANING it our "Two Men Wiii Move EXPERTPAJNTtNG EDR,IDDLEBEALTOR T:a.~f.~~ :;::a·,_~· etc. A190 Dr~veway1, pAtlbt'' Uc32'71JS MS-697~ haulina,treework:,grad· Bualne11. Rellabl• You". We handle bl• a.t.omworklcmatcrlal S•Ulfyln& buyere Is ~ l51.Ql8i .... 311 c{aL AA I, ~ way~;...J!!aaooa • • ..., ___ . lnl, demollllon, etc. service, Janlce's Rai· mov .. Of flee> "Local refi. lrH eat: acllenalftce11S7. -i.--tlta. _.,,,1'1 ~ 811-1257 eeclY Ann .. tUS-1800 houaebold. Dl1tance " Rlchard~l '*8111 •--...i _. ...a ~ •••••••••••••111••••••••• I I l kl . · --•waw ~ee. Bepalr/Malet. AU Oaor:ret.e work. Block~oon· W tLLt 11 C T oca. • •o pac n~. ._.., ·--·--...... 4 Carpeatr:Y-fara1e. •brick, ahunp • eoD• vl..Q)ll;.c~bu:r=~~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1cttzl~Ntito~ AYO~ =.1af ia:til~ A~~s<f!':f:J,~~ •••••••••••••••,••••••• A.rthitectunl O.lan eabloel. pa.HI 1. patio cnte wall•. Security bolldaya. l1 yra llc'd OCC Stl.dent. Bl& ~ T D~RVE OUR BEST. Ph:8"M'7& Edw ... Prod a.c con. ROOFS FOR LESS !"ll ~··CU.tom,.. ooven.etc.-..001 Bulldeu. IU·tlll, cntr. Cameo lnterion truck. Truh, tree trim. 7~ --: tr.~111.'nn . AD \ypee, fln1n avaU. d'fr:':>n~ arr:t'~~ ~ti -· S.nlw MH111M 531-8440 etc. 8.andy 842·5703, ....._./P•t•tt . Fret .. t, Uc/bOnd'd, ln· Comm'I ~ ... ~~ ......... -...... Ca11tc ector ._. 1 -0 ~ HOU MOUSE •• .. ••••••••-•o•euu PBOFESSIONAL PR~P II'. &1n1ot clt11eu dbcoL . ,_,_.,._.... illl ... ~•••••••••••••••••• ·-•·I -~ OUALlTY S I P~PAIN'l1NG •PAlNTINOEXTEA. ~•DJtlma ~-. •• •t~ . -·.-• ... an w ay Y··W'I ....................... OK-ent. bll tnack: Haul· ;'\ erv. w a E 'd R R • Reu/lntr Ltc 2.M741 I _, or mine. Repairs le llARltSILERCONST. WE"""'"'JNG-•&tuTT'b<> 1nl ciean·UP tree. c~ Personal Touch". x r • ea1 ., ... .........._ .... • · Repaltt 1.Jc'd • Inaured ....................... cleaning too! Guar wOl'k NtwCCll»t. Rel/comm'I. ....., .. ,,,&.,..,. .. ,nuro AftY11job.49!.1M& Ref'a.Otll: Pam•9SZ2 Free !at. Call Gene ... _,.t. 7JM • • AJ}.tYll' . Free ut. Call Baby11tU.nc1_ m1 home, at btger 1avinp. Free Rmadd,remodel,.Patio ~~lb.lot.ea~, lh.AL-•:a! _...1 1 __._ _ _... m~ PlaltW~ . ii~ ·~541,5!)36Walt any a1e. ~ o~ nilht. ell,MS-3648 . Llccontr.Callm..wu ..-.e--c--......... PROFESSIONAL p It ....................... .;;;;:.;;,... ______ _ SUS per br. Call Julie at...._ __ poo ,,_···-a l•a p D 1 .. L 1 .. , d Dll It Landscape Main· "••••••••••••~•••••••• :,•••::~~.~··:_::••:•••• ~ Inter/Exttr. aa:.· ·VERY N~T PATCH Tie SC.3460 iXlllDI .. ... m c"' n. · · '"or P • '", tenan~: Mow • Ed1e. Furnaca 1erv1ced, call ~or ~V\IUt ouu p.-.ces, work r"2-038IS ' JOBS•TE:XTURE ...................... . Color bn1ht.eners, whl en&lfteen & Gen l Bwld· Full malnt, hauUai, anytime. Do it now, save callSOD•SOIL, 1\1& fmesL 893.1439 Oi:raatlc Tile. ZS yn ex· DafCare.NearSo.Coalt cptalOmlftb&each.Clean tn1 Co_ntractors . clean·UPI, rototllllna. eaerey. 15 Yrs Eitper. 831.a751 PAINTING. lntr/Extr. per, apeclalty entry ~aza . AIU 2/up. Uv,dinrm,hall$1S.Av1 Specl~lulng resid/· FreeF.al8'1J.51Slt 4'1M1'18 1 Expr'd, hone.t, neat. PlllnWltg waya,treeest.tMS:Mtaa. -88:58 nn S'7.~. couch $10, chr comm l, new or adds. Tree & Pant trim, or re-Reas. Llc'd. 994.1045 •••••••••••-•••••••••••.. •~•--IMt 5-nlce t5. Guar ellm pet odor. 640-7020 Japanese 1ardernln1 Ha•1de•mtg move. Roto-soil, 1prklr J>ave HOMES ERS p ... ,,.. ~- Cpt re~-1•• lS yn eJtpr. let'Vlce. Tree trim, clean ••••••••••••••••••••••• rpr. lawn renov /in1t. AV ham.,. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• .,....... ~ ~a c:~ '-• It Healln1 Free eat Do work myself. Ref1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• up. Hau 11n1. am 1 nIESUNSHINE GUU.S _,.._. Pro t Pa Inters & ao hr Honest'• reliable RUSTY'STR.EESERV. N~==r. 531-0101. ELECJ'RICAL SERVICE lndscp'e6'2-140a LOCAL M•DlllY paperhan1ers need MrVi~. BofA, M /C OK. Good~.l.owpnCfl ..,. g 1---C'"'T" .. chr •-suALL c d•-f . HOUSECLEANING ••••H•••••••••••••O•• worit. Clean, neat, work 751.al50or84'7..Q38.1 fl'rMeata.~·5388 673-2940 ·--· _, n.a...La>..... . .. "" ...... , _ __.. Cff • SPECIALISTS guar. Free e3t 93'1·0941. ---------_....._ ______ -1••····················· JOBS842-8233 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Bonded, inaur'd. Fr~e Brickwork. Small Joba. ~ REPAIRS A: REMODELS PR 0 FE S S I 0 NA L ._.....Senoia For the open air afrair. HANDYMAN est. 2' Hr aerv. Takln& Newport, Costa Me.a le . Reuonable, q uatity '.freework. le Landacap. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Any occasion·penooal rtEI.:Cl'RICIAN1 Priced NOJOBTOOSMALL bolJdayreservaUoaa. lrvlae.67S.3175eves. Pamtinf, Extr/Inlr. Ex· work Euceoe538-388I ins Serv1cu. 827·9581. We lick, stick, & ~es1 service. Cabana Cater· i l·free e•t mate on 5'8-0059 .. 540-9525or552-0245 . pr'd, honest, neat. reas. · 645-<1514 quick. ChrutJJla1 Carda lftg. 1145-9858 largeoramalljobs. MoYi9g Uc'd9&"1M5 Dave CHRJSTMASSP~CIAL --------hand addressed. En· Ucemed 673-0359 Hand.Yman bom~ & ren-WklY bl mo or 1 time for....................... lSt $1115 2St "95 Uftinllt.,y vel/labelJJ typed. Mail, Ce•.t/C:O..CNte ELECTRIC G tala. Installatlona, re· holidays. Own trana. re· MOVINO&HAULING Interior, exterior paint-lav/rmFRElwtour ..................... .. stamped,lltuCfed le sort-••••••••••••••••••••••• & INST'", .. ~ENDTESTI N pwrs &cleaninl. 751-2762 fer892-43S7 LocaUlloa1diatance I n g . S u P r e m e extr pala.l.9f5.9006 Sleeptra t89, Std 1ofu ed CalldallyexceptSUn·1n n..a..&.o.. • ime 646-6952or836-5768 workmaoab!p. Call Jack $129. moat cbu S75-day9tonoon 646.1388 ~EMENT WORK. All & material only. Jim Light hauling, ear clean· Utbt boueecleanlng done . 968-'188' F.atr Prtca State lie &in· labor. Variety fabrics. . . · kinds. Reasonable. Free C b r l s t. y & S o n . ln& le exterior palntlna.. by expr'd German lady. S~ Idle items with a sur. Exterior 1 clallat. Ho w a r d ' 1 C a t m Classified Ada 642-5678 esta. Call 75CM162S 714/f1'9.7312af\ 5. Reliable, reaa. 536-7056 Xlntref.a. ~hr. S46-4831 Dw.ly PUotctaa1lfled Ad. Want Ad Help? 642·5676 Try me-C.licote~SSM Upt\olat.ry788-0106 OfflceRtftfal 4400....._.._,... Lost&f'.owl SlOOLod&'-4 5100 Sdlo•& HelpW..ted 7100 HelpW..W 7100 HefpW..t.d JIOOIWitW..e.4 7100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~· 5015 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~tlon 7005 ........................................................................................... . DElUXEOFFICIS ....................... LOST · Neutered male, Lost, puiie bred Calico, ....................... ASSIST. APT MNGMT Cl:IILDCABE-Your horoe Cook lrec*fost CommJ & indatl spaces lOO"fo Tax Shelter In 'Real Himalayan cal, beige wh~ w/Urg ~~~ ,~!e, MUSIC LESSONS from Christian couple needed. BankingLO .a....,. or mine, "California SmaU convalescent boep 200 lo 2000 ::>q. n. ru 10.,; Estate with xlot joint w/brwn ~rltlngs & blk ~ co ..;r La · &~ profea~lonal teachers. Man to do maintenance, ._., Home" area. 5.59·7071 c.M. area. Will train: as35<6(t. ft. La&Nig&ael& venture Cap. Ga1na. CaU face. Vic Warner & 497~ ay, e. Most instruments .. woman todoofflceworit. OHICEI c ...... s .......... ~ M-..-549-3()11. Mission Viejo arJ!as 541""°54 or ev~, wknda Newland, KB. Reward! Voice. PIANO 847-8605 ~ •~ ""'" •---------Handy to S.D. Frwy: 644-0762 968-1683att3PM LOST: RABBIT I Blk COUNTRY, 557·2361 Mlft. 21" lnatallment le Sell needlework,• yoUrlcook, dependable. Call for . Call: 831.1400· w/white marking on feet *Allto 51111.,eno. Ute comm'l ~lendin& home ar otbera, you detaU.. Nettport Harbor ---------1 MoMytoL.o.I 5025 & nose He's full grown Experlen~1aJeaper'lon e X Per .. re q 'd · chooletbet.lme. Work10 Elb~e.6'7MUO New office bide 4 blk:a •••••••••••••• ••••••••• SCRAM •EJS 54G-2110i • Jobs W..ted, 7075 needed for new & used Progressive independent to 15 hrl, e8111 approx ..._ __ L from ocean, downtown I t 2nd Ir 3rd TD• "I. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Porsche, VW It RV 1alea. bank oUera xlnl benefita. •'86-CaUJudye42-5379 l\AJOW., uper. ~. Full lltl( Bch. soo·sq It. $350 ~ANSAVAlLABL: ANSWERS Tan. female doxie-poodle PRIVATIDUTY Immediate opennlo1. c-:~~~:IAHK CLEANING WOMEN r..=~i:1~:cr~· ~~~~ ::J504 wkdys, Credit'notlmportant. Stolid-Fraud-We~·R~~.~~·liff, HUltSI .ur-~e°o1~n::.m~~l1Ffu~nfn~ m,5200 WAN1ED . $4 br. 414N.NewportBlvd.NB w n 8 lroker,491·3102 Gaudy-Grisly -'""' terview; aak tor Sales 53SE.lltStTuaUn Irvtne/NB, Bunt Bc1' MH'JOO 141MMssRetttal 4450 DIGITAL AlsoQuada M P!qual()pporEmployer area.Muslhaveowncar.--------- ....................... Money Available, many He t.hl.aka he got a great PtrlOllGh 5350 557-6441 /)7-4100 4tl-45 I I 968-946 •COOK 4 DElUXE OFC'S sources, all projects. value ln an antique. H• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Expe.-'d Dluer Cook Conf rm., seat 25, all S!'IOKmm. 752·6052 bought a DIC ITAL Drinltlftgproblem'l' Retired cpl would Jook Automotive • Bankiof Cf='a~~· j~~i:!~rc wanted.Goodaalal')t,Ap. paneled. sm. whae in re· Speculalors-investora· Graodlatherdock. Call Alcohol Helpline after house &/or doga New Detail Shop needa TEU.E:R pay. (l)Ml-0114 PIY l-4pm, San Clemente ar 1 or 2 yr. lea.ac. Lake reallon. Short term Lost. small Eng~b Sel· 24 hrs a day'835-3830 while owner vacations. help. Ba~cra;beq'd. . lnD. 125 bplandlan, San Forest area, Kent money avail fast. Call ter. white w /brown PREGNANT! Xlntref1.6"-7230. Topwace.paid.Eqlfte IrvioeN ~.:' CLEANING Lady, Clem.492-8103. Harkins. Bi11Davenport549·9803 freckles female· vie Carlofmconfid•ntlal '-1al Secretary. Free Steamers, enc painters, .a!:noo En1llall speOaklnc.i.-....v..K/ Exper'd DIN 714·581-9393 · • . • · .. ...., buffers & poUabera, up--· Japanese pref. nee or~ • • ---------1Ma.wy W.ted 5030 Balboa Penin. 675·0440 counse 1 le referral. lance, in your office. 5 bolstery aMunpooere 'twice a wk. Will furn. NER Ai BREAKFAST. $280 lse. Store·Ofrlce, ••••••••••••••••••••••• evea Abortion, adoption & yrs expr. 645·2912 'Banking ri~.642-9'2.Seves Day &bill. loll)' lloter r d keeping. ' check out, pick-up " de· . Ta.&.ill 1727 E Dyer Rd. Irvine 960sq l un er 30'. 194781( you're not gettla1 LOST· Dog, male Golden APCABE 5472563 631·M401vmae llvery.Applyat p..--.. M Wed Frl • i~tit and' PM ' BeachBl.HB.84.2-2134 13.83 •returnonyourln· Retriever, Orange" · 2058HarborBI CM ,......., on. • · app.., wn2 4 • vestment, call Sandv Santa laabel, CM . U ...... •av1-1 Hs.kk'pr.NoUmetoclnor • efS-1030 • f« our So. Coalt Plaza Clerical Nwpt Bch. Nr. Mariners n -Co 837 :n J ._"' Y -ahop? Nd help at your ()(c. Exper. pref'd. C.ij "'f • • COOK Mile Square. 700sq ft. Of· """8• Ajax · · 44 646-l952evea. o.tc.I Mau-parties? Also Ute cook'&. At.rrOMO'nVE ~~ Bou•ka, ~ c&MIOI 261 •Average yield on pay. ~ E d -.. -.:a ~ for am. rataurant. Opp. r1cl' or store. 0 Avon oHs to Ajax investors. Lol'll yellow & white & forfht ,_of If! xp & refs. An rea, P.ta C......,.•a! fornla Fauera . ~1 RBV for f~ mfmt. Apply · Sl~1194•67Hl06 _ Jan. tbru July, 1977. torangeCockaUel, Maple ServiniallOraneeCo 551-2896· G«setfor'781Cbevyde· Sarino&Loan ~ '-~ 2633W.CoutHwy,N.B. lnciatrial R..td 4500 St.ale law permits a pre· St., CM Sat. 548·1283 135-7313 Housekee~/Companioo aler lft srowinc Oran&e ·333S BNtolSt, CM 6C34'15 , ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• payment penally charge , '""t hs 1 "'day ... County Airport Complex EqualOpporEmployer We have ao laimedlatei.-----'----""'-'--equavalent to 80% of 6 FOUND Well tra!ned •MICHELLE'S* • -· ~ wa, aeeb two part& coun-open.in& for a qua.llfled COOK ; M2.2000Sq Ft months unearned in· Pileoo. vie Maanolia & OutcallMauqe n!la.Nrbch.540-0857 tennen with GM dealer • llAUTY Senior Clerk in our . WithOFFlCE terest oo the balance. siaterF.V.847·3938 10All·2AM '131..uG llale2Seeebplecework, parts experience. HAIRDllSSIR 'Purcb.aaln1Dept.Typlng Fbomeor •~all retlremeat 496·5601 1 l p t ill tu apeed of at teut tOwpm "' Lal Bcb. Call Morteage Brokers ~-Found; Ferna.~ cat. long e ectron c mechanical P=::r1au?:un~I•· Clwli• jobs, work wlth required. DuUea to In-. 4N·N58 for det.aila ~ ""~ .... ·~-.~-.-............ !~.~~ fered to Callforrua res1· halredCbarcoal&Whtte. SP.lri .... l•adtr aasembly. Own shop. ,__unltyforadvaoce· ua. ~-~!20~t "1 elude lJpln& •nd dl1·1....-'appt:..;:__· -------dentsonly. Brookhurat/AUanta,HB. lllSSo.EICarninoReal AakforNalm,9'79-3927 ..,.,...,.. ln Bob receani~.,;&1,u.ua, bibuti olallpureh ~-= --------·Investors needed for 982-0488 San Clemente. Fully lie ...... w·--a....a 7100 ment. W4! tra . See life lna • all beoefrta . d OD d J tued !Cook tor B•1D burier FttOMlOTO 1,000 SQ. FT • F pt 492-7296 • ...,. _._ Cook HOWARD Paid • h Ud · or era an re a • ~~App. Orange County develop-F o u ND • y n ,. • b 1 k . or ap · ••••••••••••••••••••••• Chevrolet_ Dove It Quall • vaca 0 ays. forms. . Minimal fllloi. ~ w. l E 11 t t • * SHERJLEE * C!O.. N ..,......Be __ .. Buy aalon growlne ~ .. -.... f.:lbilll• tor ,.... • men · •ce en re um femaleLabmhtdoc. Vic. .,... e .. ....,.. ~ __ ... ~o , ..... -•-..-.J.111... J "~ i t t $705 000 ,._....,,""eel. A---a.... .. . . --'~ ....... "' UI pre· f-·-• ., ....... m-t ·-. on nvC3 men · • Ma1nolla ~ Yorktown, ~ .. ., aueue .. .._ uaaJIDI ·-·t aaloa• Tb all ...,_., ........, ..... -needed. all or part. HB 963-2226 HouleCalla·ByAppt. TM'OIARY 6;2313 · en c expedltororrelat.tpos1· COOl.FJ11- Slorage wiits from $15 Secured. Call Robert · 838.QS31J ReliAer Today to work AYON JC-. ... IYS . tton. , Dayahirt. Exper'd ba lo- . mo. Indoor & outdoor RV Campbell 642-5010, even-Found Fem Ing hatred on varloul accounUn1 a. • ... ~ • uitution•l cookhi1 & boat storaec. Mgr on inga 675-MSS Siamese vie Edward & DANCE OF FtJN booltkeepln& uslgn-24 ........ blcmd Please apply in Pt'NO!l nudd. Call autb. µremi.se. 24 hprs security. Marl-a. Trwt Slater. HB. 842·7839 ~p· ns~a11o'n~laldOanAMce t"o meots. Work close to a.n.e-. ..... : N.wpcwt letleh to: -~ The Storage lace, 18305 T".'T9 your home. Figure ..... Mew F.qual()ppol'Employer i---------;J;un~n~l~~~~'.ofEllis, ••~••••••••••~~.~! 1:!cef:i'dv1~'1f;: ~J: ~~d~h~~ N. ~:~u n':edS:d ~b::~~t FerAYOM • • TRENDATA tull "C=•· Xlnl Phone964-1607 =:~~et~mTD~i =.:62Calico cat, vie. :~~~o~:::~ Oruc~Half'a =~e-:J~~ti!b ~~~;, 1:t~~nc'v'1'!';~ Sf••~=.;.,... -:=~~.,.11= Rtftlals W..ted 4600 A&ent.496-0800 Harbor View Pbaae Ill, BobJama-LlcMuaeur 500A5ccounM-'~~~501 C:.to::.r,:oJ0c!;7:::~ area.IJ1,.2!8l Dh ..... · Ceater6t.CM59 S-$. ••••••••••••••••••••••• LOWEST NB.844-1145 Outcallt-9,494-5111 .. lllll,.o>W 7-1.3:!8 IOYS·GIRLS ·~App11edlla;MtlC80o - E . f ,,_ 1 hild __ ,,, No. Tower, UlliQD Bank ... •• _,, v 3400 W. Secentrom *COOKS* xe(' .. W1 e "' c n....-.. Lolt: 4 Mo old Dog, J¥hite Wanted Singles 835-0489 In The City of Orange .......... yean UK ap. ""Ve· Santa Ana, CA mCM 2 br hse/apt Orange Co. 1"'9rtttlatft w/brn head le 1pots. S30·8844 Saddleback 71,,._ .. 103 ninl wotk. Obtalo new (71 ) .. ...., -Ext21J Colony JQteheo DOW ac· Dec 18 thru Jan 2nd for ,_,,.... labvslthr W..eed aublcriptlom for the Dal· 4 --cepting appllcatlom for vacation. Up to $200 wk ht T.D.'s. abo Short hair. Nr Eatancia Sln&le Club, free broch. F11lr' a & 9 veai Ids lJ bt ly Pilot wor"'-· 'flth an akl1 L.-1 _ _. T.D • --H.S. Reward.548-6396. Or' yearo . I -~ua1n....-...-•ty ·bre ut coo-. PIT, or exch tor bou&eslllln& -• -· .... DY ~ bouaekeepinc. Tue1.-adult ·~ Earn • .. t:.~·11·-F _..... ..... i.. .. pav ~W.lr while you vacation. FalrestTermulftcel949 FOUND; Bull Maatiff, *SA.... 'S* Acctn&Superv totBOO Weds.-Tbure .• 2:80 to l20 to SIG per ~ or · m......,er / fn.,....~7spni.' all;. 581·74.26 Sattt.rMtg.Co. medium size male, o.tcallMassoge Mat'ICntrlllgr S20K 1:30 In Mlaaion Viejo. i:oore. Call 2UJ S8'7.o181 No phone c.U. pleaae. Wanted. Small house 642-2171 545-0611 Brown" white. Harbor a 6PM-3AM t?a-0329 Loan otftcer to $l8K '30/Week. References re· 000h·5pm, 213/ 4118-2478 CLERK foi order proc~•· 3211llatbor, Cold.a 11-.. w/yard,· ln CM area for WE BUY FIRST" 2ND Glsler.968-9108 BREAST RealF.atlsB&nkEsper. qulred.CallUl-9682. 5pm·9pm,CallCoUect. l.ni. Buay ore & pbooei. CocD Moonnhr Iii b1r workinl cpl w/cblld on TRUST DEEDS. ~GT. Found: Male Germu . ENLARGEMENT ~Eltate := Babysjtterforl8mo.&irl. auiituiif~ ~~~~u~=pt{f.'}: inC Up'd broiler coob: the way, and doe. n~ shepherd mix . 1'lrollgllHyfllosh lrviDePenoanelAltneJ' Irvine area. Mon t.hru ~ flc exper. duirable. Plee.ae llPPl1 In petlOft ~-49.'18(714) Eutbhlf.a,NB.1«·9100 Group therapy. weight, 488El'1Uleo.taMeH Frtday.752-2208. Irvine Cotn~u area. btwn 1·5PM. 11541 SUB-LEASE 2 Br or .t ma•u••/ y--"'. male adult Collie, depnasion • •ex Im· Sulten& !'2-1470 Baby1ltter Mon Tuea ·WILSHIRE Apply..t. ~ ulpment. ~~Arthw ur Blwd, S.A • lownhse in Park PWIORllll/ Vic-: Brookburst & potwe.1·7pm531-0:l3' ,__ --· _, --2pm·8:80pm. Wltbh ... .,......_. :!_ uJlmler Santa -_ , Newport.Call6'4-4898. Lottlrfoilld Adarns,H.B.847·3168 EXOTICll'!l..llLS ...... ,,fH1tsOa.-... walklnl distance ol T-~AAc"~"JJC.iDi C.-..._Ceob ....................... . • _.__ Moote Vllta School.· .... ADDllea&a ... f'or -Some~~. bat Dot HELP! l~king for place ANU•&:l•llh 5100 Loat: MaleYorltle, lrvhM MuaaplsModeling =::1.1J1~e0o~: 5e-878B. Tbe~='PcdJons a:~~~~.:~ lmportHt. Pl .... ca,ll w ~ve tn exchange for••••••••••••••••••••••• ColJe1eParkarea.Gra3 ~54z..318J/5'3-3250 "/oDally Pll°if PO Bo• BABYSJT'"'ER Aft. iiJ..o Aceount olftce. Gd tyn.. theCbetatDetM.i.eo1 maint /1ardeo work. ·-"'T' •w & tao, approx 10 Iba, ... .. .. ..w r 8000 l 640-5119 ~· tvanlli• ~ -need.s dally medlcaUon HAPPY BIRTHDAY. 1560. Coat& esa. ea Scbool/ilclt cb,ys, perm. ~ Inc. Ute 10.key adder. '162· or apply n DIUlfDUPTCJ $95 Reward. 551-4685. BILL 11211121 Irvine. 552-0317 Women's ll"taeApparel C.all 548-70'0 for appt. ~ 2·5pm, 428 Jlart-Two car pra1e wanted DNUUI Jt.o.eYou. TemporaryAaoclata IDCaleWy,NB. for storage 714-558·1459 Loat ldtten. blk. Vic M•a Karen ACOOR'a Co-Op alwa71 BABYSITTER, 1in·ln, TbruQu1.atQla Now CLBKTYPIST Newport /Costa Mesa DIVORCE $95 Verde ·Eut Is Rhodes. searcblq tor thole leek-okler chUd. Rm • brd. Thnl Jan 'iat ~position foc Blll· COUNTER GIRL· area Ba.lie DtvoTCe Only Call 548-0012. Reward. Pcnonal atoriea of your iDI employment la the Hl'I lk!h. e.rs. M7:oto't MOH-SE'la. · lnc Clerk to luuraoce ~ tJme • W. l9t.b St. ' 4A _2507 ·' kld.s or pets. PidurH eDiertainmenl lnd111try. orll60-2866 E•-' co. lb ~J! .Bcll. Good ..... • WanUd Furn lBr Apt. for v-LOST: Brown Lab-Dob1 OK.Box5282HB AUaces-tnea. 95'7.QZIZ. ._oeer ~ • Sal to S500 ::_~late occupancy ~~/~:~~=c! SIXUALIMPOTBfT Adnrt1a1oa 1:r8~u~!°1:;. == ~d, co. benefill. = ~Ilk~!:!: cheat, vie. Alton 6 Wel1ht lou, l>reaat D11:.,5l!•RCH Yf/owri &ruap pr~'d1 SeMOCUll) ~ ·-Hndwlcb ahop. Call ....._•/111 .. st/ F1ower, SA. please cal: en.Iarsemeot by hyp •• ~ liiA IG·21M. " ~~~uonal Clerk ~Jrecepl.iontst. .bet1n11•1,DM11.9. RRmCa Tom.751·21.85 DOlll.531--03M(U.'1) ::f:IASSISTA~_! BABYBll'l!R.adltltfor1 •~-T.Ikn-Handlln' :;:-.,e::•i:~1i.':!~~! 1!~1_!ature, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Loat youoc black Lab. lr: Beautiful, Yhaclou1, tnduatriola&MWY. mo. blby tll,rl. Mo.o. Wed lUtwllToStock uewapa,.,.totnce. Varied p,......_ aor qw\::A l8". ...... Terr'1ble T CM U/14m. Call Debr• .paulonate womaQ to·pttpate" ..... Is l'rl. lan'l·lpm. Nr • 1ApplyhaP ctutia Phoae85e-2890 HDd•lcb abop. Call Oppoillilllt 5005 6'U188or768-5888 ·W.A.S.P. from old faall· cord raulta ol •urv•1'· a:i.a.•zaoor8'1-5$GO . ~l'ridaflpm-Spm . Wnl•l,UN919. ....................... Loll: S1amae Sealpoto1 ~~tr~'asrO:~ =-•C.:l:i:! BAB~Slti'Jm.N~Eo 11: •i'tt.:!1!•..,.,.. ~=;c,... Tradewtnds Li·lcounter belp. hrt ~r u-U'\9 stOU female.1119yedca&, lm01 old r~ •:C,ud ab&e to t.)'l)e 6 f»mpoM EveniD.P 6 1'MkeodtJ -llaJvv...,• bPIOYft' 541-7863 F(r. Apply at Encly s ~~ ·~-... 1$ old. ''Slaclwl'•. Jn/Unh · AYI: own lettcs. Apply. Na• Chrla nct'-16 • a ~ . · Donuts. 2S51l Oeroolmo •llll .. lltil_.lto.llfll .. •la.dllilHla Dt,NB.B.eward.54M874 ~~~=· tloo~at..u Corp., amall~NM&U" 8US DlUVERS 8~ Vu Ca"1 .... W.,...... M.K.V.'7-.oTD • ~~ !ep::::,.• 8:\ 30 FOUNlJ"BMMi type fen bl. & to &op income 4311 ~.B. <Near Balfytdttet DMcSed lo mr l1Pt bultl. Keep nn at NU oc: p/tim.e. App~ to lcMttc ci*ker:'Eirp•ci on- wltboul Ueen.ae. New do£Vlc.Adam.alilkacl .,.._clr.et.w/lOve~bOme. c:>CAlrport> E. home for 1 yr old bof. J:"bom-.Wllltnln'for Bar J::.tn•1er, Z· P¥Jt Jy.Sala17CJl*L·CallJlm lease avail. Alt for Mel BJd,HB.llCM99TalUPM !."~ m~;,1!i;ul'il:. A11:llllowS1 f1H• CoRa M•a area. Oft a~u1t,~;,'l[f,f~ 1 r!:'mAt!\if~tn:_ni: «Al.tf6.1153 6'15-81.20 • -' TODAY . . :i PO BO& '1aeo, Costa ~·p:,i::.,.l'uDThne trana.~7MS~U. ., ·~~~~" per 'tno. dlan;SUCI.m. • ~~:ll ... r ' -• -1~-::: PLAMTSaGll'l'S Found mour Aq. 15 Ktaa.Ql.811a1J ·, -r ~ _ 114" ,·w. 'l• .• 1.i-fcoCitA&t~ "t Gl£I NEWPOllTBIACH 'HAPPY:BIRTHDAY ~-~!!frlloamount •• _!!c U.&•411t&'M ~Coupl·~-aw-.JIAMCCOMtun.:..1111 ~·1. ·~-i.LM..MAi•'s _'. w··--s WellatabUabld.Pmtel .__,.,y\l mea.M--. W~•9il!. to~••nil.11 bull, -Ii ~~'d, Alt-1111•~rH 1 pusoa operation. 'MUUMODILSj WUhiathaiftte•/7our LOAN ll~..,..;·~P/&Jm~ LeMDld40br'ltMusott MUN Health force• u1e. ~ fema.lO~'~' UC,..,.. , Et(,b.MuatbewW~' OMC:a "4 • 12"2 8~bif•1 ~~~;fldtl•!J'o~u1, 1·P1Um• evenlo1a • Term• aYail. TIME, ~ QPOX mo wu, y" WR•. ,.. IMn. Kr. Ball. • • • __.., r---1>17 aatu1'd•7• mao••llll 751-1400 , , , -,. . 9th . 6 Cbapmaa GO tJ OU1CA1L OMLT 1&M. ; • .~~ • A -· .. "'-'"-:::.•~>:.:: 1t . SIC. , •. _ lm, cw e¥'f Place-1··Juolor· Sal.a p...,oau _ lill•7911 . • Ir .1.•a·-••e I '• c ., .... Ull~ "··1 d ·• t"'tt~ IDlll&Jililtlt.'GOed)obt>f" 1~HlllDI sub•erlpUou TIAYB!'A•.CCY' • 10 , __ -__ .. 'J "~fl.~ble.1t.a1t Bkkp~ 1:.; a~ Caf .. erll/ D u~~.r a • par. 1~1·.J.·. . daillr to dl>Clf'. 11*1""'8 :Let\11 abo.rfQCllMJwto -· ~.8&,.~1~'J_~PY1111f1~U•1,n . Xlot co. Sal ..,.· ·='=~lf.•11!: CllU4nll-tlt• 1.Y•• ot lN't• 1tatlon &Wt aa~. ~ .. 1 , Barlade..,.._i•tm .:JJIKTUD~Y 'U. ~ at .. John Knit., _ ww • t•IOl)ot,.Upm &at So. Calll.r-Coellt•ll WQOD. i>--. collect. tsp.mit.DeCllHJF.1'Gtal ' • -.~ ;_ • 4: DAvtDllt 'C ltllJ Bu&flao. Jnlne •• CUPJIMIAIAMK\ lciilm'·• m. QrlU ••• -,~lu. 17'U lU•HT-oaH. Afl•I' ll•~tup •·-~P•ta\i•I . • f'dpd 3inal• •••019i AIJiMYLOVB, } •nn. . ·1i; • ~"·--L :,1Undwler ......... : SkY 'Park 1, ~ c, S:OOpal<m -~1171. ~·::,-Clp1*J,niq~r.cJ.$2S,OOO. o.nm:n -.~ -ilmBOEANNA, AaClll'l'£Cl'UJAlt ~, 'llCD~A" 1 ~r Jobt fl.lo nan 1"\M.eamt• ,_ _-, , '7l~l. ..... ,,. '-.• ~ Clitllle &cbool M .. _ . -. . IJJlAFTIMAH ;;; U~loeb ·-· OiUm.t:rra:1.: •· ... ~~..., '~idoa/HlftPt'-li\Oe/;. CUtroOIAM ~ Olbhitt .W'lbt:OiD'if Ltietl,_.. llto "'-JoNO'r:_1tuL.lll.-Z 11'--c tCALLNANCY aanc trowtg Hunl• C7t41,474111 ~· ~J1r,.d-.'c .. ioa..dedlniiMd,&ocare N*-Sfor~~Prdea .;....,. =·.JC4\lle .• !, .... , .. _ ......... ·-·ltt.t"'VI• a.. HIP,1 ' • ANDIA'Y ).nltala,;?la. ~,.,.., .. 1_ •. r11i11 lolr n&anled l5 u aid •llJlnrr)!• .. ... lnid:, m.trfl rw IA:lt.w ~ altt!OU.I FemP41ft\Q. lnlb9lae ~Ill..,, . 41"n.~_.'"I V •~ ;M~\_i iH:·:·; 1,t!rmane t foll ~~· lb'L 1.1 _,..iablt; wt,'dQUllla! DI&~ .,C.Hot-~ .. ,,,...,,j; J.l1u• Animal A11l1taDct .D•rlt ,. Wi/OHOl41>' ... l·~:!<TM ;~ ~~ ... ~ ~ ~1r i<5Pl& ... UU,_:,D1U•11•.-:AU .... .... ......... -~!(jpWid·• Las-m.mano1 ..... , ... ABWAJtO •·-~.~ ... ,. 11 unn,•m .. •1 ~-Ip '~...: •• ;aftfPM,~-.·~·"-'P plliet.Qal7 ... ..... •j-.. _-,..,~ ... ~~\i 1~-~i ,,_ .,• ·'' l; .a.lw ·~ ~;m.,TJIT. •, "'"'"""** 'f.": .,, •. ~-• -~ \~/'~1IJ.c:. ~.. ' -· '" rl•P· ~ wJIO'itl4 ''° ...,.,. 1~t ""'.no, ~ -T .,, " "'!";"-~ • ~ .,,., f!Ol-X>oh••.r ., ar~ A~• .. ..ll ·-,, nl• iMtl4 •P:PlYi Call . P*• J'WbOrD" ')eflcnrOOl;lDI• cbt kt. L4lt I fk Old maWt PQP Dm ~:"'to :MIO ,,.araU.a. a:pet'~ f% WA~ r,,, .Q•!f~uo Bc'b, lm• il>.\lliV:.PIUJT ,r,. """'.tu ·lllilin •· 'JIOll,&allllblt.Ofl.Co1 •Kl]0•',.""'°"8Mnt. Drt...,.Gcrlnlblp,.:'1c1'1'~1• Ualq~• m.Wq laterHUa1 worlt. ~~-r~~fotJW• ~TUE '1.111:«1P:,,.,~ '-, :tdl CJ.;wlJUllll Jlltr. Ann ........ l 8/8. ·)l~la. 111.b: Clil. Pl'OlraJP~~~iUOl ................. 1. ™·--~ 1~!! •••• ~nt.r-·c~ .... \g,Yl1flJRSDAY ~Co' ::- .... •• ' I ........ '1 .11 ' ...0.,IOllU f\'1it~•t.;l49111,1_,,,.. 11 .. ,...,,M.·m..,. 1' ,_ EVDY J. Y.1~ ·->-·-' "' ' ~~ ld.i.1111111Mi1 ....,. ' f .. , " -' . , .. 1 HllftW..W 7100 ~WtlitH 7100 HlfltW• d 7100 H.lpW_.ed • 11oojHtepW..W 7100 ~~~ ••••• ?!!~ ............................................................................................... ,.................... ·1 ... W...eM 71 .... W..-H 7llOHeilpW..te4 7100 MAIMJIMAMCIMAM 'AliCHUTllJGGB • ,_.HOMISAUS ..................................................................... Sbopr.lnl Center ~pue eqwpmt.nt ror Reil\auraa& SICllTAIY/IUYB Tlredoltheroutla.! CUtii.TOD o ..aD -W ~tm nater depend•· air drop Pack pel"IOMel ... IW c t ~I (;r.,IHICf'9l•rJ to u.e c:<mtrouer ~ J6bl1for7oul i a 14; PhE HO\l Penn. poa. Apply IQ HOU••Kf' ble. Waab ildewalkll. parachutes. Airborne " ~i.: be ,..JM>,nalblt fe.r a portion or UMt CaUU1Now At 1°' ,... c -~ le . 1 per10A 1flm·Jpm. Lno L 1 VI· IN • PULL· palntln•. 1ardenin1 & training f'e(}ldnd. No ex· RESTAUIAMT purcbulnJ runctlO&. GoOd typlot 1k1lb and IJMOtS t>t~":a ·-·m 'lo r; ~ pbone calla), A1k for CHARGE perton to run Ol.ber ntlatedduties. Xlnt penen~~ecnaary. Paid OPEHIM~ clerlo.I accunc:y nec:euery to handle TIMS·Ltrt &.ll _, loo St Andrp Clay Ell11, NtwJM)rter b • e b o I d l o N B . Jut> for retired penon. while traiJllna. For Army C ••• •• JL 1taU.Uc•l t¥pto1 reqwrement.I ud ot.h r du\1 ' UBRAIUES Rd NwptJkb. · lnA. llaT Jambor• Rd, Relpca.lbWUet include ~ enllatment. cau now for -• ot thla po1.1Uon, Pay common1urate with ex· Equal ()pp .:mpbunJf ----~~-----1 NB mg care of ac1.r1s. a1 11 & • · ddai.11. 'perleftee; Good company benent.1 lnchidtnJ t 01!2.J HELP. needed ful General Office -Reeep-1.5 Ai ~I dulJea. Must MADCTENANCJI! MECK. Cotta Mesa :WO.l028 COob •Counter weea vacaUOn an..r ont year, compa"1 paid &partUmework. lion" overload be mat11re1 out1olo1. Must have mlnlrnum ~ Hu:nt&a 982.ml Penonnelnttdod. IP"OUPinlu.ral\ce cndltunion,etc.Applyat: 541-?m Dt '-1 penooable •be able to yrs uper In 1eneral Part•"1U·Ttme. • ---eee~. ve._. 0 relate to teeu1en u a Plaotmatnt.ContactRon PARKING ATTEN.r n.y,'5NI ti _ ........ t c•·.a.ay DAtLY PfLOT DELIVERY P ERSON p.r.ope.rty m.&na1e.ment IOWl'MU An enersetlc Cowher 71'"5$7-mo... OA.N'r.t P /tlm«.: Mldnlr A lyt ~-....,_ P/Ume sa M h A 1' J>OI Req'a typln1. pro-per90nw/~aJutandard1 .EOE ' • ·~nds 4 evea. Must Npp ~J:~ 330 W. IAY ST .. COSTA MISA lo pe~1on . ~lo~~~ blem aolvina. workln1 ol nutneu, cleanlln4lt1 ha\'e CaUf driver'• Uc. ovl ru bctweenQ>eboul"$OU:OOa.m,.s·OOp.m. Nunery. 2030 Newport w /num ben, auertl ve · le cqanlutloo u well u MAMAGB Call 875-8611 8am to 5 pm Call for appo ntment plea1e Blvd. CM.8441-7441 Phones.5.640-4630. a penoo who enjoys "'e $110~ Part/Full/Time tllke or· 18&40Goldenwwt 642..itJJI. eat. 276 TUtl$ElVICI GENERAL OmcE ar1.a ls deitlrable. M1.111t To supervlSe adult& and dura le make dellvertet. 'Weatmlnsler, CA Equal Qpportunlty Employer s l),ay w•. Sal + comm. l>t'livery person, Freeway drive, car is grovided. coumel camera. Muat Avs $$-$7 per hr. Muatl~~~~~~~~~ Apply, 3000 E . CoHt Auto Supply, Avery ABILJTY&DESIREfor ~~befl~j le°at8~· beover?.5,enUhaslaaUc. have reJlable .car "Reataurant ...... W-*cl 7tOOHefpW•hd 1100 Hwy,CoronadelMar. Parkway ut San Dle0 o R Es p O N s I B L E "-f!anu1•I wor na w n · out&olng and enjoy peo· --...., We -in. 1'-11 The .. _..... • • I vt rm 11.. ba S.I ,.....,_ "'• -N '$ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••·~•.•_!Tow Tr ..... It Drivers ex· Freeway,Ml..slonVleJo CHANGELLlNG posl· vey P "' · pie. Dependable car a Fuller Br11sb Co. ME £0 -lion esaenUal. Basic of· is $550 per mo. + rm " mu.st. Available even· 7SWC'71. per'd. Top pay. Apply, Delivery Penion. p/tlme n ltilla & bll" brd. Send resume to M. ings &-9PM & Saturday. PAMJLTPIUA SAW SECRETAllY O.WTowm1, lOOO lrvlne , for busy Newport travel s:! res~ibm~~ ::: Seeger, PO Box 19547, call 642·4321, Ext. 2SO PIX AMwer s.,.. 'A.RLOIS SUPPLIMIMT N.B. Unique mortgage Ave, NB"2·1Z52 t. agency. Must have quired. Exper'd in Irvine Ca 9'2713. between 1 : 00 and P/time days & evea. Ex· •1..-.... YOUI IMCOM.I bankln1 firm deatrea TRACllB> motorcycle, a1b11e l~ foreign freisht forward· Ho•ie.aplltr s:OOPM. Ask for J im. perpref'd, butwilltraln. ,._-., $$ secy t,o Sr. Vi> Needs VIHICLIM·1&101.1.a.i.1ic travel frwys. WI wor .. lnJhelpft.11 631-4640 ~1&1.-... _..~.... Equul Opportunity Good co. beneflt.5. EOE. •-$$S$SS xll\t 11kllls w/plus1nc 5'Wf'V'" approx 5 hrs doUy Mon· ,_.._,...,__ Employer 6*-8000. .._.udn 1 PAITTIMI · • perso nality & ap· Tank, personnel car-i Fri. Hrly wage le Ga.UALOfftCE Immed. opeolna• for •hA.,.ryDrhen ~MOMIWOAK peuaoce Call .Sandy. rlers, earth movers C mlleaae paid Neat, Look.mg for a 3 afternoon both men & women on MANAGERS PIX OPEltATOR Part-time ~&S for HOUSIWIVIS 'J5a.76'10ext215 r Equlprne.nt r epalr " clean appearance ao 8 week helper for CdM theeveningshil\. Exper ltlSIDEMTMAHAGER N.B. location. Hrs women" men wltb out· m•lntenance. No ex· • abllolute mual. 833·9611. Ins agency. Occasional helpful, but not nee. ASST MANAGER 6:30am to 12 noon. 13 Hr. IOinl personaliUes who COUIGI STUDIMTS SECIETAlY fLe9al pedtnce ieqwred. Paid f Dental Assiat.Chnkie. 3141 u.~ of own car. 673-4801 Apply Jn Person We reqwre a well pre· Contact Sandy, S40-14GO. take pride in Ulelr work. Guaranteed Hourly Some coUeJ!e education wblletrallili\&. For Army 1 days. Pref. CDA or RDA 9AM·SPM G~:r~~~';'o!;~~al ~l,:S t~us!S::at'e ~~~ PLANTS. exper. in in· Over 111 is able to work :~~0P~~3rs,n:.· ~~~ :u1~~1;::u:;PJanr;: :ft:tmen\ Call for de· or mm 2 Yrl exper 654Cam.inodeLoeMare1 Linkletter Sell Storage tenor & exterior care. e~l~lyS2 .. ~;~p~ ~orcomet.o250E. Ph833-362'l ColtaMesa 540.1028 714/833 1631 Gen'I Helper San Clemente facility Po111Uon re· Full & part Ume. Gd pay ~)'· 17tbSt .• Costa Mesa. 5 __ E_C_U_R_l_T_"_G_U-... -R-D-i· Hunt. &eh 962-8821 • De tal • qwres, meeting public, & benefits. 675-5657 · Ml ... ED'S ~ ,.. ~onbc omce needs P /time Mectianical Housekeeper B11byi.1tLcr. bkpng, & minor maU>t .• s . " . SALIS Security Palrol Guard TRAVa AGEMT ull & Ptr RDA F . knowledge beneficial. hve-ln. Ref required. day work wk., paid vac. PLUMllMG Fmnlty,taar9ion .Experienced sales FJUme. Must have Calif. Part Ume, expr'd ooly. 1 n · range Apply 11154 Placentia. Prt?fer Eng spkinii. CdM Medical Ins. apt, Call Expr'd drain cleaner 11808. Bristol, SA persona Deeded. Many Stale Certification lo 146-3445 Newport Sch. beoe ta.6"2·59W7 CM area645-S885 (714)64().4630 waoted.Eaml400tos.'500 4lOE.l7th,C01tAMe11 companybene:111.Apply carry -weapon. Min DENT AL ~SIST GEN. ore. Typing, riling, HOUSEKEEPER ? for 2 per week. Call 491HQ1 --------I In peraon to John or salary $3. 75 hr Call btwn WOODWOUERS Progreaaive,_F. VLYofc In congenial ofc. Entry adlts, pref Uve·ln, plain MAN AGE MEN T btwn8AM&SPM. Dave. 8-SPM,Mon-trl,04-8572 Mlllmen, assemblers. n eeds br1 g ht • ~n . level pos. w/gd. benefits. cooking, pvt room. bath Couples or ma tu re Printing. Versatile photo RETAIL AMCAltPOMTIAC sec'y P /T. 9·1. Good sanders, sprayers ~ thuslaatic chalu1de Start immed . See & TV, own transp. No alngles wanted to help typesetter/pasteperson. GMCJRIHAULT typist , Minimum 60-qs steiners. Exfierlence w/expanded duties to Claudia at Boat Transit smoking. 714-492·3227 manage am business. oeeded'ormoothlYytrade CLERKS 2000E1atSadtaAna ·w rd s. 0 Per ate required.exec lent pay& complete the team. Xlnt ln. 1 ..... Log A e • --------1 1 benettu. 3201 W. oppor. Sal opcn.·962·2432. c~·· ...... an v .. H 0 u 5 EK E E p E R . Mo11t be a mbitlous & publication. Exp. desired Sales calculator -nsurance MacArthur Blvd, Santa -:-:---1...::::.::_ ______ -t Mornings, seek ing willing to learn. Mr. on A.M. Compset or FASHloHSHOIS .etp.nec.$ihr.95T·l33'1 Ana. DEN1AL Asst. Mature. Gingham Girl houseclng responsible adultto keep JUckok~ similar equipment. Help wanted lat. 2nd & Prefer young woman Service Stallon Allen·-------- chairs Ide exp, en · service nds women p/t, house tor workJng cou· MARIHEHARDWARE _956-_2580 _______ 1 3rdshills.Noexperience 18-25,w/fasbionexper.to dant. exper'd. Day & YACHTSAUS thuei1U1l1c. 63J.l420 lop S. cur nee 645·5123 pie. no cruldren. 7!18-1679 S A L E S & s o m e Pradilctlon Worker req'd. We train lbose sell yowig shoes & bags. Eves. Full & p/Ume. Ap· Experiented yacht sales Dental, chair11de. F /T, -;;:, Friday P /T. Must Housekeeper, maturo 7.3 w .are ho u • e work . Woodworking machines hJred. Applicant.I ap9ly Apply in person at: ply1 Shell Station, 17th 4c r:-oon, FU'~~ !~~'rt,: -exp. As of Dec 1 X-ray type. Call btwn 10-6PM shift in auest home CM. 1''/t.1'!)4!· ~NB. or plasUc moldin( exper. at: Dales FootwQrks. S. Irvine, NB. . Dealer. Call he. reqwred. Xlnt op· 494-6255 646-6716. · pref'd. Will train. Call UTOTEM CoutVWqe.'19-9252 Service Sta. Nl•bt Attend SOUTHMl'll:S_.H port. 525_ -6450__ ___ Mature, respoo adlt for fc pt 645-4403 "'k A 1 ........ ' -. , GIRLS HEEDED Insurance Property le early A.M. newspaper _or_a..:.p.;.._. ___ . ---1 •-•.-••11!11--1 ~Or S Diles aw · PP y, YActn' SAUS DentJI C.hairs1de Asst. Sandwich delive ry 5 Casualty Secretary. Ex· deUvery,msthavetrans. ProductiooWorkenllght, STORES Shell,17lli&lrvlne,NB 714/673·9211 Pleasant eroup prac. da~ wk. 4 hrs day. Own per. nee. Xlnl benea. l40-Z7!58. hand coordu•atlon a N.8 ln,cludu al.ternale transp Earn ovr S3.50 Fred s. James Insurance .._.. •TURE 1 •DY must. Xlnt opportunity Sal AMs. ExperJ only. hr Call Ham ·lpm Bkr, Lag Bch. Call ~ ...,_ for housewives. O.C. RDA pref'd. 640·1122 ~ ' Mau r i o e 8 u d I e y , wceoUy needed 1-dy .to ·Airport area. 714~7013 D h h C ooks & 494·10117 or 541·80511, care 3 or 4 (lays a week ~581~:!s:s~s.will train olf coun1e needs girl _EO_E_. ______ for refined gentleman P/time _help needed ror Apply. l 'us s Coast p.nrtttmeweekeods. w/Parkinson's dlaeue .• •mall ,ice cream store . ""' 551 ~ 552 1224 Able to walk Some lite Exper d only need apply. llwy, Laguna Beach. · • · housework. Pleasant Must be maLure lodlv. Located At. 12.442 Lampson. G. Grv SlO W. Soutb ~ Anaha) 111 Del Mar, C.M. 88$ Olenoeyre. Las Bch We are an eq_ual opportunity employer Domestic llousecleanen •GOOD JOI* ....... ClllC• AClltllCy working atmosphere. Call be\wn a.s. 84.2·7747. for housec leaning Pensioners men. 2 days LAGUNAJUC:LS Ml.L'Sttuavecar.Callevet1 AskforSandy. RITAILSALIS serv1ct. Full & p /t per week. Car, no Needs person full or after6:30,SS7·3814· 9-'ftyAtlW99Ce SHOESALESMAN 646-1006or673 8158. drinkers, no selling. p/tlme with general In· MECHANIC'S helper for lmpedor /fech Cathy Jean Court Side Don--ut maker, fuU or p/t .. 1-Pe_r_m_._67_3_·2289-----1 sur~ce ~ackgro\llld In· tune·ups. Salary open. Xlnt oppor In small co LooklnJ for top Jro· SALES Appy at F:ndy's Donuts. O V E R N E S S • cld g typing " rating. Apply at: 2500 San Joa· for qualified man. Age ression for one So. JC,BIHIYS 25S71GeronlmoRd. M.V housekeeper, live in , Call Jack 837 ·2800 quinllill11Rd.,CdM open. Hardworker. Xlnt ~:t1!~~s :;:!:~lo:!~w4~~ 24 ,......1.._.. 768--0773 perm. ll08· Gd pay. pvt. wkdays .._.. __ .. _1cf!urd M• benefits. Mission Viejo pay " beoems, lllnt u-letldt qrtn. M1.1»tdrive&cook. ~ area . Call Llllian, potential for advance· nwwporf DONUT SHOP Pia have ref's. 673·7315 or Kltchett Sllpe"lsor Helper. S ould have 581-3830. ment. For Interview call Now lni.vt.wiog For! Shifts: 3 to 11 AM . 6 lo 2 673-5268 F/Ume Xlnt waaes & mechanical ability & --R-AD-IO-CO-NTR--0-L--ruck Reed at T5S·088$, COMMISSION · AM. 2to10 PM. No expr. GUAUS -benefits Reply to ~~~t~=P~M~P· TECHS from9tollAM. SPICIAIJ$TS nee. 3205So. Bristol, CM Classified ad no. 66. c/o t".T • wit.h knowledge of fun·---------• Men'acJothlDl•carpela ~btwn 6 & 11 AM . ~~~&ll2 ~i::r~ Daily Pilot, PO Box, MEDlCAL·F'ront Office damentals, llF exp. IM,F/flMI F /tloie. Xlnt co. rea. car & phone necesa. 1560, Costa Meu, Ca poaiUoo opeit Ear, Nose helpful. Aircraft Model 11·7. Mesa Verde Conv. beoeftt.t. l DRAFnMG Gd pey. cau 752.2313 9216218 Is 'Throat, facial plasUc builder also an asset. lbp, 661 Center St, CM 108S:= i~~ Fri t Mechanlcal drawing on· I &-tU--sur1ery. Irvine. Die· M.llcottCorp.547·3055 ~. EqualOpporEmployer Jy, ror Irvine Manufac· GUARDS -....... iirl'Vl'"W taphooe. typtngt filing. RM s.peryilor' turer ot Precision Tools. Full 6: p/Ume. All areas. Cleft bW.tn&. some bacit office. • .. -_-....... -._-._--•-! 7·3:30, ea.ta Mesa area • . Plea .. rrt worklfte condi· Unllorma furn. Ages 21 Full Ume nlahts & day Gd secretarial skUls. ~"""""""' ti·ons ror male or f•male. or 6Yt'. Retired welcome. • .. , ... ,._. .... bond bl Start *5.50. Send reswne. Aft Y• A CaU5&81. " ............ ~a.,...e, • e. Ad IS D Aly P 'I l ~ Call 979·6080 tor In· Apply Universal Protec· expr'd Cos•• Mu.a · • • 1 0 • . ltMIEstelelfoUr .....,.rrettOpr. tervlew tloo Service, 1226 W. Slh ~Si P 0 Boll 1560. Costa Are 10U self-motJvated Will traln. Co. benenta. --------1 St, Santa Ana. lntervw Mesa, CA 921826 and interested ln ma nag· 96U648 ,, Draftsman t\1'1~12&1-4Moo·Fri. LIQUORCLERK MEO OFFICE TRAINEE inga Real Estate Office•--------- PLANNING & ClV P/time,2NlgbtaA Wk with eager salesmen. . SALES& ADY Engineenng Firm-seek& ao.dyman • P /ti me· Call642.Q37 Ute typing. must be able u;ft .. eamtnc potential. for maternity boutique. exper. engincenng de· Rell.red man who enjoys to work eves/wknda. .....,. 1 Si on draftsman. &31.1700 planline. watering & put· LOT IOY Spanish belpft.11, MS-ml Excellent opportunity Mutt be ~per'd. Sa " 1 hool with established offiff in +comm. 5Sf.SJ34. DRIVERS ~::.[or sma 1 ac . F /Ume or P /time AM. M E D T E C H Newport Beach. PSeue Early AM, 3-6, deliver, Call631·211MO. Venapuacttire e.x p. send full resume to SALESLADY. LA Tim~. C.M. & So. a~dyman·Mecbanlcal L-.VS .. U-R P/Ume, call for appt. Adtl.U. l>Aib' Pilot, Box S.A. $350 mo. 545.077 ability. Run tool room, -640-0140 1580. C01ta Mesa, CA Bob mech'I repairs & plant Apply all. La&una Beach 9263' --------~ malnt. 2621 S. Birch St, LumberU>.,l7~La1una '!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I DRY CLEAHBIHG _s_A._______ Canyon Rd, Lag Bch. r ~or 54().8217. 'USSEI y MAN to do repair ---------1 ComblnaUon. ex pr pre· & building projects for L YH /DClr SWft !erred. Lag. Hills area. retailing flnn. 5 to to brs. Every otbtt wlmd off. •---------1 &17.()840 per wk .. SUO per hr. Must be dedicated to Mr. Donut. Nite shin. --=----"------•---~., • .r--'v Call: Jane 846-00U iooC1 pa tint care. Apply. 25-45 Yn. Full lime. l.3S ~ ~ r 144$ Superior Ave, NB. E.17thSt.CM Service Sla. Attendant, Serv. Sta Help needed hn· med. Fllll or p/t. Apply, 980 E. Cat Hwy, Nwpt Bdl. SHIPPING /RECElVING INSPECTION SPAS1111.,.,... wanted. FuU 6 P /Ume. 67s.673Q ' Sr. Jdid Needed J~W~t.Jy Long • 1b0ri ~rm as sianmeata. Holiday & vacatton Hos ltalisatlon The president of a lead· A R D W A R E & 842-2410 ing So. Calif. footwear Housewares sales peo· • ~A GOOD JOl7 retailer needs top notch pie. Full or P/time. No ....... ~""..-..IST• f'Ul,.L-nME --------.ava· a 1t. l ' ho Ilk nl Cro Hard ~~ Male or female. ···p. execut ve sec y w ea tes. wn ware, WAGESUPTO ~ .. fast work for top pay. 31aT E. Cat. Hwy. CdM The penon we are look..1· ,_bel_. _1o_A_M ____ _ 1ng for can tak .......___...___ c~ shorthand 100 wpm, ty rwn-n/ _- 6 o "'I p m , h a n d For fine N . .8. reatauraoL llloerarlH, coordlnat Exper. pref'd. Flex hrs. executives. 44 br week. Apply at Restaura nt calhy Jean lnc. 3194· Kato. 4300 Von Kannan, Airl>ort Loop Dr., C.M. 752-7151. ~. 1~-------- Factor,·eewln1 tralnee HOSTESS nauialtyde & can.as. EL TORJTO no• In· :ms s. Klhlon, S.A. Dye terriewina for boeteu. ~W. " Newport Frwy, DQ 6 evenlnS posltioa days · uaUable. Apply ln · ~Mon tbra Friday PACTOIY WOUBS I to 5 PM. or Saturday. ----------1 STOCK BOY /DRIVER Part.or F /time poelt.lcma rn...-De&lp firm w. Lee "Auotlates, 570 Gleboeyre, WI Bcb . o.u 4N-0787 SUPER STOCK QAL To work ln retalUng atore 1n N.B. 9:301o 8:00 Mon· Fri. S3 hr. Call Jane Ml--0011 . •AMBICAM OAK• 1be laraelt rAolt COID• prebenal•e IJlveototY of American Oak ADllqlleS 1n Calif. We tMIY d1reet & pua t.be s•vin.11 00 to Alto, AnUqu UCUOO.aN .. au. a V'Y lowest ptlcea. Loca\C!d at: 750 E. Oyer Rd Santa Ana W 1b1iNewportFrwy) 151.1921 Open Son·Wed tM Ct Tbun-Sal 11).f o I 7 I Lady Kenmore, Washer 4't gas Dryer, S125 ea While. 97 5-6446 W esting h o u se 1015 DOBERMAN Pups, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Champ. lanes. 10 wks. -Blk1 Rust, must sell. PUBLIC FURNITURE SJS.7788 --------· *AUCTION• TCM!h7:lOr.M. B~~:~=s CDfflen Welcow9 J Gold Crown Parrots CONSIGNMENTS BB Parrots STOCK LIQUIDATIONS PARAKEETS Lovely bdrm sets. rAUEl'SrETS armo1re1, chests. bunk Next to new RALPH'S beds, a !tel or adjustable lwm beds, dining this, al Ford Rd.N.B. chrs, china tops, coffee &1 ___ •&4•0-0$00---- end lbl1, color & blk 4't ---------• look see • • • • • • check our chri.stmas tree! The Dally Pilot Christmas Tree page is your special place to advertise Items for 'Sale as gifts at Christmas Time. This special gfft guide will appear each Thursday from Nov. 17 thru Dec. 15. Run as many times as you wish. try this size ad for only 1710 For help In placf ng your ad under OUR TREE, Just call the I DAILY PILOT ---~--- 2 Fam redeco. sale. &Jucb ' rum. &laa.t dra " win· anre Sale: Sat & Sun T8S1 Rona.ad, H.B. off Bch bet Slater traJbert. ake It Away! Frl·Sat DAILY PILOT .. ~EW_ 1977 30'Searay Weekender 1 ONLY ·CLOSE OUT $27,895 HA.UISOM'S SIAUYS 3101 Pacific Cat Hwy NWJ)t Bch 831-2547 ~--~~----~~ IAYLAUNCH Diesel, l8'. 67~788S 35 ' .FLYBRIDGE Sportfl1her. twn GMC die.els, CB, VHF, AP. Haller, recording sounder + lots more• --------1 Very cln. Must sell quickly ror new boat $.U5K, 87S.lm2 9060 ••••••••••••••••••••••• WAMTIUULTS? Sell your boatthru SOUTHWUTHN YACNTSALES . RJ.11/MIWPC)IT DM•as <n4)87M211 HOllll61ACI ExceUent cood: smo. <m>sa.5~ CAL34 ~r CGDdltJOn s:n.oeo. Ev•/Wtmdl . .rf.Cl8M 23' 1'7l AqaariUll, do, utr • m.lll1 xtras. -.41111 or Sl·llOO ~2' ~rleaoa , pedH&al at.8atQl6ccunpda.zlAt nu, at.ereo. VHP Ir ' 1~~~~~~------!.!'t!d!t!!!JtJ. ~~!!.!J11.!Ll!1t77~ fto6n.nw..I t170 4-...Drf.," tHO 4w..eto.t ... ti o · . ·'tl60 Y-tl70 -. . ~ ........................................................................................... ~············· .. I I . """' -11' 'Pr0wJtr, Hlf•eia.rt.' AMC-JW e....;... • "TJ El C•mbaO a 000 ml -....... Dediil JO 9110 9cMkss 9110 J9.sclC!C94: SDOO. • fl lac.It. Jm -ONen. Pll. Alltril•t-tii' air al)&o' ~ FOJU> Wlodow vu, .. ..._ .......... ._~............................................. . m.... nns-~•-••Y' P/B,V~eaalne.lui1a1e AotaotJdiuiii.ooiT • Vl.locllwbl.b.M,~ta BuSaialPorUCar _ "'"'e_...-..... rack, AM/111.,.track. I . • cpt'd. tot wJbl back Qtroela' .,, a. W4NT l): 50' aUp for Im llalo° Glllll 1000, 1;'.:,~ r.::~k ~i '• ~· T1n7, SIC. xtra · J=~~ yr or ::oao ml .urice '19 I CJl GMC PU wbl t.li-. awhel Hltl •• 1000. mi'~· Gr&1 W/blt tthr. SallbHt n1wber•! ~ tllb, IZIO llPH. aJaoc ete Sl50 'Call dHD. alJll I.~ Call aa-.alM--Y contra 15LOOO mllea. Just had complete ~ 711-11.IZ New~ otr •110TAllto1All oa.t..., ttOOO. ukinl __ ._ .. _:.7 • l»aDOf. ~ .. _..,_ U ,8001 117·9'710 or brtjob,.i.t ~taba • ......_w~ tltO Qba . • _____ ....;_,;........;._~ .... Call&ftwt•OOPll .. ~ p.m. · AllllodellN••6Uaed .._afterl:IOPll e..2Uld)'I ~ . -...-. 1 . l>0 _7r old 11' Power --*4a ~a '....._._ u .. _..,._ ..,._ 11' Ftnball 'IS. Self-coot, IA•bllAvailable ' eva ..................... ~. ._. · 9705 ''Owk Bea"'7" DMC1a 111 ~eni.~:01~ dbl axle, alpe I, fully C....MeM 75.,..,Cla1i.-'GCHEVY~tQDSbrtbcl.. WIWIU;IUY ' abetla.n44M-UM 7:.f:.:u~T ~:;, ~ Kaw.eoeoa . .,,.w,n ~ fl•OO or ofr •• AMCJHp ~~ ~w 23S. • cyl eq. Gd. coed. YOURDATSUM ......... fOfO &oappndat.e.sm-mo 2GUIAR~<>BBLVJ), wheel, Joel rack ~iufa. ·r/ofr.~NhftWll · PAU>l'ORORNOT •••••-0 -••• .. ••••••• ....._..._,_,., ea.tall.. . 54l40Z3 controt.OJl'J'1'0&4ttrea• oa.Uanl • TOPDO&.MI Boat•RVBton 1paces Ho ad a 7 5 O .. l9 7 a.t/St•• f 160 Mtos...ffa,!..P... ........._ , ,. wbeiela. (8271) 1 1ear, 77FOlD JOttTOP.CAIS avail. sao. mo. Newport ~rt cUltOm front._ •• ._ ....... -...... lrA-:f n~• MOO 41m"'S ~7 U.000 mile wura.ntr n.50PJCKU.P. 7J~ce.iiit Dunet llJl Back Bay eml, b&ra, Mat, ea.baUlt, R t lt77 Eacutlv ......... , ... •••••••-• t J. 5 'a• CJ• T •I' a\'ailabJe. Autotranlt., l)Oftr,ateer-One OWllel' ieer. '&"9(1 Dr.N~8ch'"410 '170Q. Tl · .::to~bome 'or Mini~ '64-'71 lJHd Ku.ate., ~. W~ioneera, S4tf9 ln,I, air .d>Gd., (1EZ15Sl) trene .. 'loaHA) 1 year, '75 500cc SUsu.k1.. Like nu motomome from Herb Parta. 880 No. Parter, Plct·ups, UJ)to'1.200db11• • Copel•llM'" 1year,12,000 mile war-12,000 mile warranty • Lo ml St.on i · Friedlander Call any of Orable.C&1U'7-20CN> • c:iouia .. 5 yr &O,OOO m e JOOl.l!i.tSA.,..._. rautya.allable. .avail~ Tr.......... . •• OI' 1 yr. these ~ ~ Hallable. ~L.. $4999 . WE IUY sa•••· . ... -.................... ea..,. nw111 v... •.i.:., mJe,.~ •· ~llMtne.c ,,... '160 · c.,1..,..dMtn • CUA.MCA.as copet-..tMtn C a}J"-W./ t I JO 1::,~ ':u,~ID.tsee r\m· 537.7777 ~ exeept radiator. 2001 lit, SA55B..ooc> ... :;;;~~~·;.;•• .200U!'tat SA~ • ftUCICS tool E litSfl~ ....................... apprec. $700. 6'11-73 121 .. 111 '78 Dodse •Spoiler & · 1971 TOYOTA ....,._.,._.. Y-9570 Allll 9707 For ~·= :e11 cabover btwn3•4PM Motor.............. Et~ $25, Van or RV ........ Mr LI k e NE" r v a .... -................ ·CONND I ••••••••••••••••••••••• cam~er. xlnt cond. 107 • • woodmacumerackSlO · 4-WllHIDrt•• automatic, pwr. steer: , 1973-FOADVAM . u.L Im Audi 1001.S, needa Reawm•b\e. CallAl-7058 '800 ~ od I lt/2 lo 32 '78 Dodi• •tetrin• wbi Very low mll• •priced lol. a1r CCIDd.. 6 la •xtra, •. "Wladow w CHr:vBQl[J, trout bn.bl It llluffler. Dat111n camper abell 751-444c.;> • Fullyaelfcont&lDed w/eover •· 2 Chrome totelll (fi25NDN). atr&de&nl (lDlraa). hpeed, VI, mac wbeela ~IR oth•rwlae alnt cond. complilte $.100 ZZ&l"A': . ReMnenowfor wbls,ll\ll,U..5d)S!J.Mls· llLLYATES SAYEMOWI . apedalellhaostlsbr;;i 212allarborBlvd. Plrat U700 takea, RutpraDr,cX Honda XL250, •7,, Gd. :~;:JY.r=R aionVlejoao.5112 VW-PORSCHI °"• fully carpeted " C06TAllUA ,_.., ___ i_.,., _____ _ -""""'---"------1 ccmd.,atru"50. HOMERENTAU BoD-ba.rforamlPU,"5.4. SaDJmmCaplltruo cu1tomlHd Interior. ~ 54 .. IZOO '72Audll~,Sl9QO.Xlnt ·~~~c!:i. campe 54CM3l9 925N.HarborBlvd,S.A. chrome Am. Mep· for 137-4100 493-4511 '('nN51W). WEPAYTOPDOLLAJ\ cond. ll&bY xtraa. _49S-OC171 YAM '73~TX850. Immac **~·2503•• Datsun, •100. Cmpr SADOLllACIC FORTOPUSEDCARS 540-482S ----'------1-cond, Paaseqer back . ¥ount'1 bracke~. '20. '78 Subaru Stat. Wan. 29&5HARBORBLVD. YALLIYIMPORTS FORElG(ll,DOMESTIC 1-IM-W---~-- 8' CMPR Sips 4. icebox. rest. Color matched llCYI'ORHOMES b4'M8S1Keeptryl.ng New Uret. XlDt cond. 5404410540.0Zll 131-20404tMt4t orCLASSICS t71Z atv, A/C, jacb, like ne Fairing, $950/bat ofr. ·Fr !?00RR~77 .. ,,...,, M&-lm im ....,,.RD "'·Tone to llYoUI' car la extra clean ••••••••••••••• .. •••••• tfll50.8'7·2Da.ft5PM ~7517all5PM. om-.w ... .,........ .._fwS. , 'v ... ua m Im Chevy :Van,~ Ton, wmllnt. Oli\MGICOUHTY'S ' A RENT Flreball 23' s.u ....................... J.! J L ~.!. :...<r.!_ 5 • ~l~~::e:rom-r:· black. 400 va. 400 Turbo . ••ua IUICK OLDIST 8' C.bover Camper, el 73 BOND ST90, autQ . .... .... / -peaa.uu • .., .. .......,.ge, • -t ape, 1 e auto Gabri•l sbocu 292SH&rbor Bl d & '4, refrig, atove, f3911 . clutch, x1nt cond. $300. coot. Auto/air. CC, CB, clZ! t;._ tSZO lllDt ccad. atraa. fil95. tank•, air 1bock1, BFG,TA!iOradiala· man7 ,.,_._ v • . · cuh.541-21M 768-1132 stereo,1l11986'5-228S --•-Pb751-C7'Mafter5pm. chrome plpet, chrome -. ..... -• ._.._.II•• 911-2SOO ------.----1--------• . ••••0 ••••••••• .. •••••• ates>bWQPel' foe lamps ,_ .... _-_. ____ • __ _ Matortaecl llUs 9 14 '7' ·Ho ND A c B 2 o o "l3 Holiday~·• xlnt cood. '49 Cbm"olet. Rum fine. "ll CbeV7 Bluer, loaded, button tart, maaa ii "75 Dodge wtodow van TOP •••••••••••••••••••••• w /xtraa., absolutely Travel/living comfort. Good rubber. $300 or bet .xmt cond..'8700/beat of· cmtom. PJ.inl "200. Pri. · V-8, PS, P8, air 'AM: DOLLAR '78 BATAVUS Moped perfel't. 1100 mi, $600. B.O. over filOOO. 6'6-4378 air. C.11488-*7 fer,, 551·17511 pty. Call 815-oeto att.r • J'M. Tinted window. PAID Sales&nice-Leuing . RoY Caner,hlc. HSOO. S280 or belt offer. 857-8390 . 29 ft. Apollo motorbom41. '8'7GranPrixCoovertible. pm. ~.81KH01.2 87W9'70 For. Sale: 1975 Honda Muat see to appreciate! Full pwr oew paint & Claulfled ada sell big '74 Ford Courter l'1IDI Id "15 CbeV7 many xtru FOR CLEAN FOXI Deluxe Mo ed. CB300T Xlnt cond. $550., Call John Felter'at Micbelln ndlala. Eltce,P-I iterna{ 1mall ttema or nu tlrel, mmt Sell, le.av: xlDt conc1'. lluat sell tbb RcUs fcoyce • • BMW 1540 J&mbo'99 • NewportBeacb ~ ~·~] S350. or best ofter. 5'8-804• eve~ and 642-00l.Oor540-821l. · Uonal condition. $2500. any tem Just call in& country. $2COO. 'week. Make offer· 646-4732or641H834 weetc.nds. 1!Tr1 23• .tfeld " Stream, 8'75-0CMOor873-22ZSSteve. 642-5178. ~ 54CMS314 um BMW 530-1 llao. Full elect lncld'I ••rf, ge-nutne lthr int. ~e DU. Dys~. w~or eves a.ft a.•• Awtot, M•w 9IOO ·Alllot, M•w loaded w /atras, 10 ml, Alltol. M•w tlOO Alllol, Mew tlOO Aldos, Mew 91001.....,---M-•-w---,-l-OO- ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••-•..!..••••••• $13,.500. 848-1130 aft 4PM ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••-,••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Take the . . SOUTHERN SAVINGS ROUTE YOU ARE FREEWAY CLOSE TO 5 OUTSTANDING AUTO DEALERSHIPS THE '78s ARE HERE! lHHl':i Bl l\CH BL VO HUN! ING !Or~ (I( l\rl-t M;> r·111 '•10 OH / IMPORTCAIS AU.MODB.S WE MHD CLEAN USIDCAIS MOW CAU.PUPY 5440:.5630' 2626 HARBOR ILVD. .• . .COSTl,.ft\lSA WllUY USIDCAlSI WAMTIDTO•UY Q\allty med 1*\fa. · lOYCAIYM.._.W .1540 Jambcne&.4 NEWPORTB~CH 64o.6444 1977 IMW UOI ' speed, a1r conclUoatna. stereo ca11ettJ1 ~ metallic paint. (141RXlt). Ll•• aew• mun ... toappreciatel SADOLllACll . VAWY IMPOITS IJ 1-2040 4~t4f CREVIER a LoTuS • FIAT ~ion ·MERCEDES BENZ ViejO Imports 4rMI UlTIMATi D«IV-.)'M:I" m 'luY OI LUY HOW -&. de&Jertblp in the Irvine I SY fl l~llWAT We're the new Cbe.-roi.t & . Au&o Center. We need SANT~ AMA SOUTHERN OIA.MGE COUNTY'S GROWING AUTHORIDD DEALEI 28701 Marguerite Parfcway. Mission Viejo 714/831-1740 714/495-1700 .. ·-.,.. ____ ...., ________________________________ . . '• 0 BARW1CKDATSUN E) MISSION VIEJO lMPO~'.fS. E) ROGER MILLER CH~ROLET O · ALL~N OLDS-CADILLACGMC 8 SADDLEBACK VALi.EY 1.MPORTS SHOP& . COMPARE IN SOUTHERN ORANGE COUNTY , ' .. .. . .• • IMMEDIATE Da&VBY •• . .. .... ,,. ROGERMtu.eRSAYS,: ~cs cuatomens · SAUi. JEIVICI'• LEASDNi .. twc1 to find. : MIW a USED CAIS & TIUCIS 1 ~to1ceep:mtne . .-bV g&Ving oooc:t aervace. • ~ 8: ~ Hw)<,.1r. 8Mct1'. ~Uornta 484-1131 a Me 8811' ' . 'youruaedcarl · 831Gl71 · JOI '*UU'llUft.,...MACtl!NS MAC PHEisOM •USED IMW's• ,.U&VROLIT 'TT~41~*8EU ~.-'Tl 8ZOla S/n 171RSK 21.Aut,oOtnterDrlve '7UOCl241Pd8f8401PDP IRVINE Tl 820!4 ap 01JRTP 761-7222 ctwclO.Snd&JI Aulol. Mew tlOO ......_Mew ................. _ .......................... . ., USEDVWs . • . • . • ' a ' •) I ) . 1 , , • I :...;;.:J MIHIOt/ VltJO IMl'OIHS •. !Jllllo JY ~t/04 '7' Caprl, V6 , ' spd, PW 9725 MercedH lea 9740 MG; 9742 yellow/blk, AM/FM "-•••••••••••••••••• .. ••• '. stereo SZS50 6'1-7633 ••••••••-•••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 548-7"° . · ' 1975FfAT . · 1974 M1%210 lt76W.MIDGIT · 1 .. 4 SP.' ...... _ SEDAN. In showroom , 1.....a ndJo heater ca~ 11 ....... P /S A/C A -..-coadWoo with very low .-. • • ~ .uJ• • • , Very low miles & v~ry -"-.. Ult s-to an.. •Pfflal at.ripes • deck ·All/FM cusette, beat cl 1 <•94NJM) .. ....,... -""' ,. rack. Lesa than 20,000 oiler. 552.3721 eanPri. ced to Sell. '' preclate! 1111793~. We males. (2'9RJL). Ex-. · have a good selection of ceiled1 ri.Qp t '7' Caprt1 'apd, AM/FM, . IJLL YATES other MBZ'a ln stock. ~·LY 538695 sunrf, xmt rwutina cond v" 48,ooomi. $2200 • .ea.2.311 VW.PORSCHE San Juan Cap1Strano Dahm 972 137-4100 493-4511 ....................... --------* .,RIYEA * * LlnLE. •• * SAVEALOT SHOP" COMPARE HARWIC K DATSUN ,,,11.l11.J11 l .1p1...,f1 ,11111 831 ·1375 493.3175 '75~ 280Z. Mags/radials, AM /FM, 10.000 ml, ·Super Clean! 640.2360 dy, 640-lCS ev. MISSION VIE JO IMPORfS •• '· f ... _ .. . ,. ... " ....... . M IHION VIEJO IMPOlllS A • , Io ol '•••••I ••• l.ll, .......... . 831 174 8 49S-1104 :,: .• MIHION VlfJO IM PORTS ······ ll•······ .. ,, ....... ·-·-. BJ I I 148 49~. I 104 COSTA MESA DATSUN ••••••••••••••••••••••• liil Tha71tAnHen All models & colors. 1.-dlate Dell•ery Today! 8 3 1-1148 495-1104 '712110SL, both tops. Auto. 1976 Poascu~ =.lilM•:tnL air, tape, new Ures. Must ntr0 .. ,727 aell..Offer. 675-3959 . 914 2.0 5 apeed. AM/FM steno ca...U. 6 appearuce ~1977 Haft Got To Go! COSTA MESA DATSUN M IB1 ..:IN VII JO IMPCJPTS . . . . .. . • ¥ ...... . 83 I If 1(1 49.S-1704 NEWPORT DATSUN ••••••••••••••••••••••• lt71Ml%210 SEDAN. Tobecco brown " ln Immaculate conch· UOD. C22911FW). Mmt see to appreciate! MOW OMLY 1'9'5 M ISSION VIEJO IMPORIS .... .... "··-·•'a•""'• • •· •• •· "• • 8JI 114 8 495.1704 -----~-- IJ"OUP. ( 00738). w. Prtced-$7600 MllACU . MUDAJllMAULT 2150 HarbOr Blvd., C.M. 641-1700 . '· AUiacENm . 1425 IAKER ACROSS ntOll FEDCO COSTA MESA • 1974DATSUH 710ZDOOI 4 speed. AM/FM radlo, vinyl top 6 ma1 wbeela. ('105LIY). • •IMC&.UDm In~ _J)ric• la a IT~ 12,000 MtUS&VICI AGlllMIHT te take tbt 1a1Xlble out °' bu1lnl a uNd car. -. ... ~_!0~00 '"YINTOIY TOCHOOSINOM AU.MMCIS& AU.MOO&s • The Datsun 510 Is back. The 510. Best all around Datsun yet. A wnote new Hne of eoonomy cara. Datsun 510. Perfect size. Perfect prtce. The Datsun 610. lt'i7 Ca t' '11 y.._c.. full -· l9cloty w -4., lwlUtY Int. -oomlafl ...... lllC, -4 CO!llrGI. AM/FM tcereo, coeoll rool I many .. 1r ... (Maa46). ... --- .. Mew 1977 RAT.SPIDas ~ . . . . ... 55995 :. .. . + AJC & DeMr l,_.;,ltd.~ . . . ' 1 • 1 ' 1 ~ ~ : • » II D • 11 a h )t L aJ b· fc b stoclr Mo. Dacri,.._ 286 Loaded 248 Power steering. Automatic, Silverado 226 Automatic. Power steering, White 205. 4'-Speed, Power steering. Buckskin 175 Automatic, Power steering, Yellow 167 Loaded, Brown 161 Auto .. Pwr. steering, Air Cond., Cruise control, Brown . 160 LOl SOLD hite 128 Power steering, Automatic, Brown 349 Six cylinder, Stick shift, Tan 368 Six SOLDir, Stick shift, Yellow Stock No. Deteriptl09 305 Loaded. Blue/Blue 298 Work truck, Automatic. Power steering, Brown/Tan 297 Scottsdale, Silver/White 255 Camper truck, Red 249 Camper truck, Heavy duty equipment. Tan/White 241 Work Pick-op, White 240 Automatic, Power steering, Slue 239 Work Pick-up, White 238 Workmen Special, White 236 Work Pick-up, White 176 · Heavy duty Work Pick-up, Whit.a 170 Loaded, Two tone Sliver 166 4-Speed, Six cylinder 118 Loaded, White 98 Camper Pick-up, Yellow 97 Camper Pick-up, Blue 72 Automatic. Power steering, Blue 71 350, SOLD tomatlc, Power steering, Blue 63 Camper Pick-up, Yellow " 52 Automatic. Power etea1ng, Yellow 373 Camper Special, Loaded. Tan 249 rCamper S Tan 240 Automatic, steering, Blue 241 AutQmatic. Pqww steering, White 1 ION - Stodl No. Dacripllo9 307 Flee SOLDoaded, Air conditioning, Brown/Buckskin 306 Fleetside, Loaded, Russett/Buckskin 258 Loaded, Buckskin/Tan 257 Loaded, Russett/Buck.skin 256 Loaded. 464, V-8, Yellow/Tan 223 Loaded. -360, v..a, Two tone Blue · 189 Load SOLD. Engine, Two tone Blue 369 Loaded, Camper Pick-op, Silver/White 371 Loaded, Camper Special. Yeftow/Whlte 370 Loaded, Cac.nper Special, Yellow 4-WHEEl •IYE StockMe. ~ 169 ~ fon. Power steering, Automatic, Blue 168 'hTon. 4-Speed 131 ~Ton. Loaded. Yellow 351 Loaded~ Ton. C&mper Special, Tan "My 10tt1facflon has been auuriNI by the people who car•." . RONBURDETr Santo Ano: Orange County•a oldeat Llnooln·Mtr!l«ll'Y Dllle<lhlp \ ...... .JOHNSON ltSON ..,, cr101 vau.a Very clean. Pvt Ply. 64CMM54 I I I ' 7 ! " J; Loaded with air conditioning, automatic, power steering, powr brakes, tilt steering wheel, r.allye wheels, vinyl top, radio, heater. (6082) (3G87 A8R405920). 1977 TORINA• XS ·~· IORONA• XS EXECUTIVE DEMOHSTRATOR· .. ILACK OM II.ACK OM ll:ACI" . "EW 77 . DlscouMrm . All the power assists MA. KE OFF. E I lDS .::n~~t~o:;.r~~"a1n~~r~~~ s2577 PLUS a power •t•reo. t11t wheel. cruise control. f much. much more. (64526) . sunroo . t3z51K1M128311> (3Z57K7tyl726897). . . Off ... ALmcuaPllCI . 1978 I C TRUCK ·CE IER ..• , ••••••. 1978 GMC Y2 ION PICKUP (TC0148Z2506393) 4 WHEEL DRIVE HEAD9UARTERS Ot; O~GE COUNTY •::: 0 '78 IMC SHORTIED 4x4 ~ ve , power steering. radio. heater, ·• speed, tocking front hube, chrome 1bums:>ef. gauges, heavy duty f rontaprings. (TKL 148Z502•27) . ~-IMMEDIATE$ I; ·~LIVERY IMMEDiAIE $ DELIVER•· a • .. • 21 ~ ~ M Li as b\ fo b< 1 1 I , art '72 OLDS 91 COUPE Wlth pwr. windows. steering & brakes, AM/FM 1t9'eo. air cond . vif'lyl top, heater & tllt wheel (615FWAJ. 172 FORD PtMTO .. '72 OLDS ToaONADO Full power, factory air cond . AM/FM stereo. 6 way power seat & low miles (450FJQ). '73 OLDS II C:OHVMTllLI With automatic transmission, air Automatic. air cond .. pwr. conditioning, radio. hHter and low steering-brakH·window1. AM/FM mll••· (1oeGBKJ tte,..o &tape. (23e8WV). . IAKE YO.UR CHmlE '74 DODGE CHARGER With power· steering, radio, heater & vinyl top. (199835). 172 PLYMOUTH DUSTER 6 cyl. engine. automatic, pwr. steering & brakes. air cond., ~lo& heater. (072GJV). '71 BUICK SKYLARK COUPE Air cond.. vinyl top, pwr. brakes & windows. tilt wheel, AM/FM radio & lowmlfes. (333CUR). • • J '73 PONTIAC . GIAHD NIX Full power, factory air oond., Ult wtlMI, vlnyl top, rallye wheels -Loadtdl (338RXN) '74 GMC SPIJMT . (T • 177 OLDS 91u.&4CY I . 4 Ooot. lo.ded including air oond .. AM/FM stereo tape. fi0/-40 aptft pwr. ... ,. dlt whMI. cru~ control, \llnyt toP I only 8,000 mil-. (1S5RIW), •75· CHRYSLER COIDOIA. With power steering power brlk" With air oond., ~ vtnyt top, P-. ...ti 6 AM/FM stereo & 'tape and 1 1; windows. AM/FM $tereo, r~ial tlrM ~ conditioning. (~5U). rallye Wheels. (305MQG). 'llDODG "' PtCICU~ BRAMD NEW 1977 PLYMOUTH ARROW llAMDHEW 1977 PLYMOUTH FURY I-DOOR SEOAM 318 CID V~ engine. automatic , • transmlt•lon. wsw tires. ·. 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VOL 70, NO. 322, 4 SECTIONS, "8 PAGES FRf DAY, NOVEMBER 181 1977 Coast ¥ietim Wanders 1Ja%ed 2% Bags By GAllY GRANVILLE °'*OIM9" ........ A dazed and dlaoriented San Clemente youth, who crawled from the wreckage of an a utomoblle •ccldent that claimed three lives Tuesday m,ghl. wu. found today wander· mg along Orte11 Highway in lbe Santa Ana mountains. A California Hiehway Patrol o!ficer ln ruvenlde County ~· ported that Georee'Rae, 11, of 187 Avenida La Cuesta, San Clemente, was found "suffering from obvious head lnjurlea •• about three milea from the scene of the accident. Even though Tuesday nleht'a single-car triple fatal accident wasn 't discovered unlll Thu.rs· day, a search for "a young man whose ba1r was malled with blood" began late Wedneadl)', the CUP officer said. Toucblnl off the search were reporta trom a telephone repair man and a local resident that a serioualy injured youn1 man was wandering through the area re- portedly looting for hia home and refusing offers of help. The injured young man's joumey began sonie tfme after 10:30 p.m. Tuesday nfabt when the ,iew lightweight auto In whlch he waa a passeneer skJdded on an Ortega Hi1hway turn, rolled over, crubed into a bridee tm· banlrment and then tumbled into a JO.foot gulch. The CHP said the auto went in· to its fatal skid while its driver waa attempting to make a sharp .... Jury Indicts 8 • m Bovftn Countian Slain In Shop By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of .. o.lty Pllet ltaff Homicide investigators today were probing the background of a Seal Beach man who was murdered in his Signal Hlll shop Thursday, without a word ex- changed between himself and the slayer who fired a single shot Into his bead. The victim, Robert F . Mrazek, 33, was to open a carpet-laying firm today in the building where he was killed. He died almost in· stantly, police saJd. Detectives said they have a witness to the killing, a man 1 employed by Mrazek. They declined to idenUf)' the worker who was close by when the ata.y. ing occurred. Robbery was ruled out as a Jnotive in the m\lrder. wbich OC· turred u Mruek wu re~ amusement machines at Illa work bench in the Signal Hill shop he rented. "There's no motive right now.·' said Signal Hill Police Sgt. ·Robert Deeley. Authorities Mid they were told a tall, lanky lalin·descent male in his early 20s ran from the shop to a waiting car driven by another man seconds after a single shot was beard He had reportedly strolled lnto Mrazek's workshop no more than 20 seconds earlier and in· vestigaton said there were no sJgns of a struggle or even any at. tempt to steal anything. PoUce planned to Interview Mrazek's wife, Helen, owner of a Los Angeles bail bond aeency, and bis partner In the carpet business which was to open today for possible clues to the kllUnt. . "He was friends with every. body. He didn't have any <See SLAIN. Pa1e AZ) Three Peny Track Fraud ' Stiike Near For United WASHINGTON (AP) - Thanksgiving holiday passengers could fjnd their travel plans disrupted next week because of a strike set tonight by flight atten· danls at United Airlines, the nation's largest air car· rier. Tbe head or the flight al· tendant's union says a walkout "appears likely," but federal mediawrs said contract talks between the union and United were con- tinuing today and mediators were "op· limis tic" that an agree· ment could be reached before the strike deadline. The contract between United and its flight atten· dants already bas expired. leaving the attendants free to strike at 9:01 p.m. PST. That ia the time a 30-day 1overnment coolin1 off period ends. II-year-old Abducted; 2 H1D1ted BURLINGAME (AP> -An 11-year-old boy was abducted by two masked men as be walked to school today police said. An orange-colored van pulled alongside the boy at 8:25 a.m. and two men grabbed the boy and sped away, according to another youngster who witnessed ttie ab- duction. He ran w tell a school crossine guard. who called police. The identity of the youth was withheld by authorlti~ Police Sgt, Oliver Kruttschnltt said the van was located a hall· hour later abandoned in the Bur· ling a me bills. He said an all-points bulletin waa hlsued for a 2~·ton truck seen leaving the bill.a area at about the time the van was aban· dooed. It was described u bav· ing a blue cab, white rear and a red arrow on the side reading "San JOCl&San Rafael." Kruttscbnitt said the truck was flrat reported aa beln1 a rmtal vehicle, but that couldn't be verified. ·~here. Jt no clear motive," Kruttaehmnitt said. addinc he wu unaware of any ransom de- mand. I> ground and bellcopter search wu launched by police, the Sao Mateo County sheriff's depart. ment and Callfom1a Highway Patrol. ·council's 4Tr.ps Blasted By ROBERT BARKER oe .. DeMr NMa.... Plans by four Huntington Beach City Council members to attend the National League of Cities conference in San Fran- cisco have sparked a debate among city officials. Councilman Richard Siebert said the trip is a waste of1tax- payers' money when the sUbject came up at Monday night's city counclf meeting. He expanded his statement lat.er this week to say that the trip by tour council members la a slap in the f•ce of taxpayen and that it ls not rt1bt to take city rnoney andleaveU.ctq. The four offtclall t#bo plan to attend the conference fn>m Dee. 3. 7 Jr• Mayor Ron Pattlason aftd council rnembers Harriett Wteder, Nt'lnlla Olbbll ud T4Ml Bartlett. Pattinson and Mn. W*ler de· fended the trip Tbund.ay as 1Je. ing in the best lnt.reata ot the city. Pattinson aaUI it is unfortunate that Siebert made the criticism inasmuch that Siebert bu never attended a league meeting. Patllnson said that national pollcie.s are determined at the conferences. "There ia a lot of bard work that goes on. I think the more representatives the city sends, the better off t1 wW be," he said. Mrs. Wieder said tbat the league lobbies for measures that often protect taxpayen. ·'Ir the people are not represented, we are not fulfilling ourroleaaanombudaman. "We can't represent the city by staying in Its 27 square miles. We are not an island," she said. She added that if Siebert wants to be mayor. be will have to broadeq his horizons. Patlinaoo. Mn. Wieder and Mrs. Gibbs are members of na· lion al committees. Tbey. along (See TRIPS, Pace AZ) Singer:'s Ex Reports. Theft Applause Greets ~t~an Advance JERUSALEM •(AP>-Greeted by wild applause ftolD Israelis, 60 Egyptian otticlals and Steuri· ty men arrived in Israel tod"1 to prepere the way tor President Anwar Sldat'dWltortc tiip. But 1A .nost of the Arab wcn1d opJ>otiUab boiled up aaalnat ·the fll'SW•• Yislt by an Arab leader to the Jewlah It.ate. In Waallln1ton, President Carter said be spoke with Sadat by phone and.fouad the E&)'Ptlan Jead~r .. Yer1 excUed. en· thuaiutlc and coafld.ent. He hopes bil visit will be aoccesatul in breattni down the anhnoatttes in tbe Middle East.,. Carter .aid. Cairo Jladlo. reporting the telephone eonveraatlon, said Carter was 4'Very lmpreaed" witb Sadat'• move and con· gratulated the E1YJ>UAA .. for tak· inf the best road towardl •cblev· i.og peace0 in tbe Middle Eut. Hauan Kemal, Sadat'• offtee director ud leader of the ad· vance patty. emerpd b'em the govemma1t ~·at Ben-Ourton Airp-ort, 80• tDllU WHt of Jmaaaletbt ud ll.ld bi Arable: •·we are Yf!!lt happy to be:Jl9eN, Bild al*"111 at tb welcome accorded'1fk S.,,UU plane,; ·•we • mt ...tth a:.....,... m our hWt anc1 tattll 111 Al1lh9 aDd we lhtll llaYe lallh bee-.. ou tnt.ndon1arepunand1W•d0 want peace.•• • · Tbe ariival cf the Bantlu acl· vance party wu broadcan 11" ()I\ l1i'eell telet'liJoG. TtileY. were areeted ..... JRH&l -.m.; ierpan. blllli·Blllal'. Uil Bpbralm B•ron, Por•llD IWLiltrJ~~~ turn on a hlahway curve while .. traveUng at a blgb rate of speed ... Killed In tbe accident were DavJd Border. 21, of 108 Avemda Pelayo. Hi. Deborah LY.an Miller, 11. or UJ Avenida ~ mtaguei, and Terrence Ryan Palme, 21, of 3206 Avenlda del Presidente. (~DAZED, P11e AZ> Case Traffic In Drugs Probed BJ TOM BASLEY Of•Dllllf ........ Arralpmenta were scbedWed ln Superior Court today for four of eltht penom lndlcted by the Oran1e County Grand Jury Clll multlple criminal cbarles that include the murder of Stephen John BovanolFOUD:ta1D Valley. The Grand 'Jury WH rold before laauing the indictment late Thunday that both federal and state officers are cont.llnii.og to lnvesti1ate aspects of the ease that tndlcate the presence ol-an · international drua trafflcklng · ring in Orange County. An lndlctment la a formal charge D:Ulde aia1.n.st a penon by a Grand Jury. It doea not ettablllb IUlhor lmlecence. Pollee MHl the cao wu taken to the Grand :1w-y to aue Ume it1 rnovln• the bearlDll into SuperlCll' er.rt. ca!. P=1:;7~-= °: -m unlclpal C!ourt but ln• vest11aton felt 4'1• to the oue•a complexltt that beariqg Wou.kl be extended over a Iona period ol time. So they toot their evidence to the Grand Jqry imtead. The proMCUttoo claims It will orter evtdtmce to prove that three of the eight de:teftda:ots named in the indictment are linked to East Cout crime syndicates. And the other five, lt ls cl.JIQed, are prlneJpals Jn Praaadam Distributors Inc., an investment firm linked to tho Hare Krishna rellatoua aect. Held in tbe county jail on cbarfes d murder, 'Complracy, robbery and extortion are JeTrT Peter Fiori, 41, of 198U Brook.burst St.; Anthony MM'Obe Jr., 23, and Raymond Steven Resco, 2.8, both ol 10121 Mer- rimac Drive and all of Hunt- <SeeBOVAN, P.,eAZ) , OOUPLE FIGHI' FOR Ol!l1IOUSE Offlclala ln Northfield, Mast..9 think Dan and Robin Woodard are stranae. "The)' kept potnting out tbat we were from Calltomla, '' Dan aald. But all the Wooduds w-.ot Is • an outbouae. Jules Loh te11a why on Pqe.Al.2. . .. Coast Chance of 1bowers tcillgb\ and earlJ 5atu.rday l>eco~J pa'rt1j Cloud1 &Del 1Y 1'tDCl1 5atur· day ~·,"Chance ot lhoftn tAmiabtao percent. Low• _tO~lc\~ u to 5$. Hliht~ eos • . DAIL.Y Ptl01 H/F w ASHINGTON (P) -A boOk tiy a former CIA of· ficer claims that U.S. Ambassador GNham Martln and the CIA station chief ln Saigon were lulled by Hwlganan and French diplomats into believing a negotiated settlement of the Vietnam war was possi· ble, published reports say. The re&ull was an .. institutional disgrace" for the ugency because inad~uate planning ror the eventual evacuation left thousands of Vietnamese col· • Jaborators behind, subject to. North Vietnamese retribution. the book asserts. The book by Frank Snepp also says former U.S. Ambassador Ellsworth Bunker offered a $3 million bribe to a moderate opposiUon leader, Gen. Duone Van "Big" Minh, to create the semblance of A contest for President Nguyen Van Thieu in the.1971 pl'esiden· tial ele~tions. Snepp spent five years in the CIA's Saigon office. lie was the agency's principal analyst of North Viet- namese political affairs. I Its book, tilled "Decent Interval,·• will be published next week by Random House. Pl'epublica- l1on reviews of the book appeared in today's New York Times and Washington Post. BOVAN ••• ington~ch. Winter To.Hit State By the Alsoclated Preu Cold winds, snow and rain are expected in parts of Northern Oalllomla late today u the re- gion jeU 1\1 fl.rlt dose of wlntuy weather. The National Weather Service said a cold alr mass plunging south from Alaska could ca.P the north Sierra with snow down to 2,000feel A 30 percent chance ol rain i& reported for San Francisco tonight and Saturday. And blustery northwest winds, blow· in1 up to 2S miles an hour, are ex- pected to rake the region. The weather service said the cold air flow will make its heaviest mark in the state's northern tip and the nation's northwest, cutting east before unleashing fully over most of California. Heavy storms were report«! in Montana and the Roekiet early today as the cold air beaded south toward California. · Weatherman Bob Caldwell said the cold air Clow's arrival would be a bit earlier than 'New Leads' In Slaying Of HB Man· C~~~danl Alexander Kulik, 28,,Who lists his address at 3 Lin- da Isle, Newport Beach, is free today after posting $750,000 ball. · norm al as wintry activity usually begins in December. Investigators say they have de· veloped "a couple of leads .. in the murder of Huntmgton Beach resident Robert Myers last Fri· day near Barstow ·San Bernardino sheriff's Detective DeM1s O'Rourke said he would travel to Huntington Beach to pursue the leads, but dlQ.n 't wish them publlcized for fear his mvesllgation would be hampered. O'Rourke said that searchers have failed to find a trace of the 57-year-old Myers' missing van, which apparenUy was taken by has murderer He said airports m Los Angeles and Ontario have been alerted to be on the lookout for the vehicle. A student at Marana High School reportt>d seeing a burning van in the desert area near Adelanto last Sunday. O'Rourkc said the van did not belong lo Myers, who was a longtime resident of Laguna Beach. Myers' vehicle 1s a 1974 Ford Econoline, license number :i5656H. Jt has a while bubble top over' a gold-colored body. F Otµ9 Killed As Car Soars Into Ocean VENTURA (AP) -Four persons were killed after tMir c~r careened off U.S. 101 and plunged into the ocean just south of the Santa Barbara County. Vrntura County line early today, a\lthorities said. ; A 21-year-old Union City worn an was rescued and taken to St. Francis Hospllal m Santa Barbara, said California Highway Patrol officer Al Goldberg. The• victims, whose names were being withheld, were iden- t1£ted as the survivor's 3·year-old daughter, her 20-year-old sister· m-law, and the sister'·in-law 's · young son, all of Unioo City, and the survivor's 40-year-old mother h'Qm. Cbicaeo. Ill.. saldr Cold berg. The vehicle went over the center divider on the h1&hway and the driver then apparently overcorre<:ted, sending the car over a 45-foot embankment and into the ocean, Goldberg said. The driver may have fallen a~leep at the wheel, he said. . 'l'h~ Ventura County Sheriff'• Dpartment dive team and the Coast Guard bad recovered three bodies by 8 a.m. today and bad lptated the foW'th, Goldber1 11ald. A hunt continues today for Ute four remaining defendants. They are identified as : Kulik's wife, Elsie Caban Kulik, 28, or the same Newport Beach address; Joseph Shelton Davis. also known as Drdhavrata, age and address un· k)l o w n ; Jo s e p h G ab r le 1 Fedorowski, alias Gupta, ace and address unkaown and Roy Christopher Richard, alao known as Rashada Dave age and ad· dress unknown. The four bunted defendants and Kulik are identlfled as prln· clpals in the Prasadam opera· lion. The indictment renects the dis· trlct attorney's decision to seek the death penalty for Fiori who authorities allege shot Bovan to death Oct. 22 outside El Ranchito restaurant in Newport Beach. Bovan was shot nine times. Fiori, Resco and Marone have been identified by the prosecu- tion as being linked with or· gaolzed crime elements head· quartered on the East Cout. Court recordis ~ntain the al· leged admission of Fiori that be was the man who pWTped nine bullets from a 9 mm 1 istol into Bovan. Court recordl supPQrt.ln1 the Indictment allefe that tnvest.ors in the Prasadam or1anization drew several hundreds of thousands of dollars from in· ternational drug trafficking and invested the money in a number of Orange County businesses. Arfidavits on file state that Flori, Marone and Resco were hired by Pruadam after large sums of money were allegedly embezzled from several firms. Police claim that the three hired men were addlllonally ex· tortlng money from Prasadam investors. Police reports on file indicate that the trio obtained money· from investors Identified as Robert Shea and Stanton Kieffer. Both men disappeared at about the umeof the Bovan murder. F ..... PageAJ SLAIN ••• enemies," a friend, Dan Wethern, was quoted as teWn1 Si.pal Hill police. The slain father of three youn1sters lay sprawled beside his toot.laden work bench u the acqualnt.ance talked of blm oa.at- side. A bottle of cbampape liven Mrazek as a al.ft aeveral years ago still sat Oil hla office desk, w aitlnl to be opened for a celebration t0medv. Clo11e friend.a of ¥ruek, Mr. and Mrs. Wethern tola ln· vesUaaton they were toy1tifled by tbe.ID\ll'der. "Whenever I was depreased, he'd tell~: 'You only have OM life to llYe .•• , "Mn. Wethem to~ a rep«ter. HB Driver 'Improved' After Crash A Huntln1ton Beach men critically inJured In a beadoncol· llston or lib auto with an En&llsb sports car waa Hated in somewhat lmPTOved condition to- day at Huntlniton lntercom- munlly Hospital. Clyde I. Younkln, SS, ol 18302 Nassau Lane, wu stopped at a traffic signal at Heil Avenue and Edwards Street Wednesday night when the collision oc- curred. The other driver, Mark R. Sex- ton., 17, or 16392 Maruffa Circle, Huntington Beach, also suffered serious injuries and was listed In good condition today at the same b011>ltal. Nurses said Younkin remained in the Intensive Care Unit but his condition bad stabilized to guarded slnce the accident about 36 hours earlier. F,.._PageAJ TRIPS ••• with Bartlett, attended a state League of Cities Conference in San Francisco last Sept.ember with nlneothercityolfictals. Three other city officials had planned to attend next month's 'conference, but canceled out for one reason or another. Siebert, a critic of out-of-town travel• since his election, said he could see the mayor and one other council person attendJng the conference, but not all four.· "I can't see spendlnf taxpayer money on these kinds o ju.nlcets," he said. "I would like to see us take care of our own problems ftrst... Perhaps when we get this city's problema solved, we can addresa the problems of others," be added. Siebert characterized the COO· rerenee as one where officials '·go to a few meetings and socialize a lot.'' · · Expenses are expected to average about $350 for each traveler, Including air fare, hotels, meals, taxis and registra· lion. • !SALT Paet Seen NEW YORK (AP) -Chances of obtamlaa a .Uatelie anu llmltaUoo· .,nement ln the near future bave lmJll'OVed because of important Soviet coneeaalons to the Unlt.ed States concernlns the testtns and depl01m.ent of crulle ml.esiln, the New York Times re- ported today. Big Stringer_ Lori Jackson, 17, Newport Beach, prepares her nine· month-old sheltte, '"Lisa," for a swinginc time. Lori says Lisa loves to ride in swings. F,.._P.,,eAJ DAZED ••• The CHP officer said the three victims were obviously killed on impact. He identified Border as driver of the car. However, the officer said, it ls · believed the li1ht wel1bt sporty car belooeed to Miss Jtf Uler and the journey from San Clemente to a bou~ three miles into Riverside County along Ortega Highway was a trial run for her new car. Rae's two and cme·half day me•nderints •lonf Orte1a Highway didn't •nd unUI •hortty before 10 a.m. t.odity when a Highway Patrol officer radioed for an ambulance after findlna the young man "slouched againsl a boulder a short distance from the roadway." This was the second auto tragedy for the Rea family ln six weeks. On Oct. 7, 16-year-old Rolland Joseph Rea was crltlcally in· jured when he was thrown from a car near San Clemente High School. The younger Rea boy remains at Mission Community Hospital in Mission Viejo\ where hew.._~ reported in etab tl condition w· day. C.arter' Accused ~ . ORLANDO, Fla. CAP> - Former Callfomla Gov. Raaalct Reagan aceused President Carter Thursday of u1tn1 "• form of blackm.U" In attelil\>t.s to convince the Senate to raWy the Panama Canal treaU•. Theft Report Backfires For Transient Huntington Beach police said today Uley arr~ted ' burglary suspec:t Thunniay wheo he walked into police headquarters to report that bi5 car had been stolen. . 'Police said they .iu'tPouh1ied the car belonging to John Isenor, 30, a transjent, when they found it WedqPICIQ ~~Hf tAf Hf/Ill or aft aUlrhpled eon1\ructioa burglary at607 17ih St. !senor was free in $10,000 ball today after his atTest on auap1· cion of attempted burglary plus vandalisni and assault charges contained \n warrant.a issued in connedion with analber invldent in Fountain Valley. H~es~il}-y Ready tO Go LAS VEGAS, Nev. (Af) -It took elgbt cmys1 ISut U Jurors have };eet'f ~ted for a trial to de· termiJ!e whether .1foward Hugbes. wroteithe 90-~fid Mormon Will. A r~gblar jury panel or five men and three •omen waa chosen Tuesday, and It took two days t9 aelect the four alternates for the C8:\IC!· The attemate se~tlon wu completed 'lburs8ay, but open- lnl si.temets won't be•ln u.nUI No\'. 28. HBMan Arrested 'In Home U.S. deputy marahall arrested Hununaton Beach resident Irvlns J05es>h Richards ln his bome early Thursday OD cbaraeio oUederalprobaUon vlolaUoos. Hununcton Beach pOllce ar· rested RlQbarda, ,7, and tour ts· soclalea last month in coMecUon with the alleaed operation ot a lrl-county football btttinl rillg ln Richards' home at 21831 Seutde Lane. Rldiards was released from Los Angeles County Jail Tburs· day on ~.ooo bail after being booked for the probatioo viola· Uons. Federal Probation Orrtcer James Strozier said Richards was arrested Tbunday for al· legedly leavlng the area without permission and faillna to make reslltuUon on $6,700 in back in· come taxes. Strozier said Richards was gra11ted five years probaUon after a 1972 conviction OP failure to filt fedetal income taz re· turns. Richards and four co· deCendants are scheduled for ar· raignment Tuesday in West Orange County Court on charges in connection with the alleged HunUngton Beaeh beUlnC rtn1. Richards and bls four alleged gambling partners were released on $10,000 bail after their arrests last month. Police assert Richards and the four men operated a $15,000 per week professional and college gambling ring out of his home for bettors iD <>ranee, Los Angeles and San Dieao counties. Strozier asserted that Richardi ha.a made unauthorized trips to Las v~ during the past year m viol.,Uon of proba- tion. Richards will also face a bear. ing before a U.S. District Court Judge in Loi Anael~ within~ weeks on the alle&ed probatlon v1oll\tlons, said Strozier. The federal probation officer said Richards also races charees m M assachiuetts cases on felony extortion, conspiracy and assauft incidents. S4Man, 22,- ·HB Accident ' ' 1 Funeral services were rt111 pendin.r today at Dllda7 Brothers FamUy Funeral Chapel. Huntington · BeacJi Police set. Eddie Groom sa.ld today il la ~ determined which driver ran a red traffic light, causl:al the 3 a.m. accldent at Newland Street and EdlnJer A venue. · He said 1hete were no wit.. nessea to the accident and both Coates and tho other mo&omt. David A. Goold, 18, ol 1838S Santa Alberta St., Fountelo Valley were alone in their cars. Gould was also injured ID the predawn smashup, accordtna w poUce. • ' . . Irvine '· VOL 70, NO. 322, .. SECTIONS, "8 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA Coast l'ietinl Wanders Dazed 2~ Dogs By GARY GRANVILLE °'* o.MT ....... " A dazed and disoriented San Clemente youth, who crawled from the wreckage of an a u t omobile accident that claimed three Uves Tuesday ntj(ht. WM. found today wander· mg along Ortega JU&hway in Ule Santa Ana mountains. A California Wchway Patrol. ofricer tn Riverside County re· ported that George Rae, 18, of 187 Aventda La Cuetta, San Clemente, was found .. aufferin'° from obvlous bead Injuries • about three miles from the scene of the accident. Even though Tuesday niibt's single-ear triple fatal accident wasn't discovered unW Thurs· day, a search foe "a young man -whose hair was matted with blood" began late Wednesday, the CHP officer said. Touching off the search were report.a from a telephone repair man and a local resident that a seriously injured youne man wu wandering through the area re- portedly looking for bis home and refusing offers of help. The injured young man's journey beean so"me tf me atl~r 10:30 p.m. Tuesday nlebt when the new lightweiebt auto in wbictl he was a passeqger skidded on an Orteaa Highway turn, rolled over, crashed into a bridge em- bankment and then tumbled into a 30-f oot J(Ulch. The CHP said the auto went in· to ill fatal skld while its driver was attemptin& to ~ake a sharp tum on a hiab1'Q' curve whU• .. travellng at a hlCh rate ol speed.'' Killed in the accident were . David Border, 21, of 108 Avenlda Pelayo, ti. Deborah Lynn Miller, 17, of 113 Avenlda Do- minguez, and Terrence Ryan Palma, 2.1, of 3206 Avenida del Presideote. (See DAZED, Page A2) Athens Egyptian E assy Hit • 4 Arraifl"ed J11ry Indicts Slaying 8 • m By TOM BARLEY Ol ... DMlf~lletiWtf Arraignments were scheduled in Superior Court today for four of eight persons indicted by the Orang e County Grand Jury on Egyptians Cheered In Israel • JERUSALEM (AP) ..:..Greeted by wild applause from Israelis, 60 Egyptian officials and securl· ty men arrived In larael tod~ to prepare tbe way for -President Anwar Sadat's historic trip. But in most of the Arab world opposition boiled up against the first-ever visit by an Arab leader to the Jewish slate. In Washington, President Carter said he spoke with Sadat by phone and round the Egyptian le ader "ve r y excit e d , en- thusiastic and confident. He hopes his visit will be successful in breaking down the animosities in the Middle East," Carter said. Cairo Radio, reporting the telephone conversation, aaid Carter was "very impressed" with Sadat's move and con· ~ratulated the Egyptian "for tak· Ing the best road towards achiev· ing peace" in the Middle East. Hassan Kemal, Sadat's office director and leader of the ad· vance party, emerged from the government plane at Ben-Gurion A irporl, 30 miles west of Jerusalem, and said in Arabic~ "We are very happy to be here, and especially at the welcome accorded our Egyptian plane. "We left Egypt with a prayer In our heart and faith ln Allah, and we shall bave faith because our intentions are pure and we do want peace." The arrival of the Eg)'ptian ad· vance party was broadca1t live on Israeli television. They were greeted by Kemal 's Israeli cow(. terpart, Ellahu ben·Ellsar, and <See SADAT, Pale .U> multiple criminal charges that include the murder of Stephen John BovanofFountainValley. The Grand Jury was told before issuing the indictment late Thursday that both federal and state officers are contlnW.ne to investigate aspects of the case that indicate the presence of an international drug trafficking ring in Orange County. An indictment is a formal charge made against a person by a Gr and Jury. It does not establish guilt or innocence. Police said the cue was taken to the Grand Jury to aave time in moving the bearings into Superior Court. · A prellmblary heatlJ I tn tbe caae wu sc~uled 1\.eWey in municipal court bqt in· vesU1aton felt due to tbe eue's complexity that heartn& would be ext.ended over a Joni period of time. So they took their evidence to the Grand Jury instead. The prosecution claims it will offer evidence to prove that three of the eight defendants named in U~e indictment are linked to Eaat Coast crime syndicates. And the other five, it is claimed, are prlpclpals ·lo Prasadam Distributors Inc., an investment firm linked to the Hare Krl.abna rellliOlU sect. Held in the county jail on char1es of murder, conspiracy, robbery and dtortion .,. ~«ry Peter Fiori, 41, of 19822 Brook burst St.; Anthony Marone Jr., 23, and Raymond Steven Reaco, 28, both of 10121 Mer- rimac Drive and all of Hunt· in&ton Beach. Co·defendant Aleunder Kulik, 28, who ll5ts his address at 3 Lin- da late, Newport Beach, la free today after posting $750,000 bail. A hunt continues today for the lour rem~ defendants. They are ldentlfted u : Kulik'• wife, Ellie Caban Kulik, 28, of the same .Newport Beach address; Joseph Shelton Davia, also known as Drdbavrata, age and address un· known ; Jose ph Gabriel Fedorowskl. aUaa GupJa, a•e and addrea unknown and Roy CbriJtopher Richard, also known as Ralhada Dave ace and. ad· (Bee BOV AN. Pase AZ) PoliCe Nab· Xelephone Tape ~,...,....,....., •te11n11 COSTA MESA POLICE HUSTLE BANK ROBBERY 8USP£CT OFF TO JAIL Armed Woman Captured With W•apon and Cnh. According to Otflcera Gunwoman Suspect ~~bed in Holdpp By JACKIE BYMAN a. .. _,, Pu.tlteff Costa Mesa police today ar· rested a wonum suspect within half an hour after a bant was held up at gunpoint and robbed ot • $1,200. Police identified the suspect as Dolores Marie Giffen, 21, of Tor· ranee. They said all the cash was recovered. Investi1ator Phil McCormick 1 said a woman entered Imperial Bank at Harbor Boulevard and Fair Drive about 10:20 a.m .. dis~ played a revolver and told a fem ale teller sbe was holding up the bank. The robber then fled with the money, momentarily polnting the pistol at another employe and a customer wbo 1'15 entering the bank at lb was rumlinl out. No one wu reported injured. The~ tben ran acrou the 1 reet and according to wit· nesses entered a car driven by a man.• One witness reportedly wrote down the license number and turned it-over to police. The suspect car drove throqb a housing tract and down several streets to Fairview Road, where it was spotted by a pollce helicopter. The car was finally stopped on the northbound San Diego Freeway Just north of tbe Harbor Boulevard overpass. The woman suspect was alone tn the car at the time. Police saifl they are not sure whether a male suspect la at larce or whether tbe woman was working alone. Wrong Opening 'ne Dally Ptlot lncorrectlY.ft.. wrtect ln a news atol')r w.mes. day that a.ttat ~,~ lriine had •cbtduled ab open bouee th.ii SUnday. ScbOOl Officials say tlie atf ali was held lat SWiday. WmterDue .To Vi.it in State's North By the AMoclated Press Cold Tdnds, snow and rain are expect4d in parts of Northern California late today as the re- gion gets its first dose of wintery weather. The National Weather Seniee . said a cold air mass /lunging south from Alaska coul cap the north Sierra with anow down to 2,000feet. A 30 percent chance of rain la reported for San Francisco tontcht and Saturday. And blustery northwest winds, blow- ing up to25 miles an boor. are ex· peeled to rake thengion. The weather service said the cold air flow will make Its heaviest mart in the atate's northern tip and the nation's northweet, cutttq eaat before unleasbing fully over mon of Callf ornla. . Heavy storms were reJM>rtedln Montana and the Rcieldei early today as the cold ill beaded south tow8td Califot'DJL • IO Men Held in Shootout BULLE11N ATHENS, Greece CAP) - Twenty penon1 belle.eel to be Paleatlnlans trtecl to lake Oftt' tbe EgypUu EmbulJ teidaJ M& were oyerpowered after a 111oo&otd wlda ltaft •e•ben ud police, CM BOJM1a11 a•banador reported tea were~ A. THENS. Greece CAP) -Per1ons believed to be Paleatin· lans shot thelr wa'¥ into the Egyptian Embassy in Athens to- day and apparently took It over. police reported. Witnesses aald there was shooting in the area ud police arrested 10 persons near the em busy builcl1DI· Heavily armed riot police rinsed oa the area, juat off the eeQtral Conatlt.utlon Square where teu• of· tbouaand1 of persons were attendlDI a • polltleal open air rally by Pr •mler CoJL&tan tiae Caramanlil in prepareUon for SU~il---•eJ~. Th• ltflar'iil the embassy came justU bOUra before Em- tJan Preaident Anwar Sadat was scheduled to vlalt Israel tn the face of lti'oQg crtUeism from many parts ot the Arab world. Police said there was •hooting going on tiltbln tbe embusy, "apparently between defe:ndlnl em ba11y staff and tbe at· tackers." Police attempted to clear the area of the thousands milllng around tbe square near tbe em· baasy as the political rally came taacloee. Wit.nesses aald tbat most of the (See EMBASSY, Page AZ). 'vandals Hit Irvine Homes . V andala throwiD1 rocks, brieb and pieces ot wood 1.maabed frt windows tn 22 houses being built in the Turtle Rock Glen Garden ·Homes area of Irvine Thursday. Other damaie included • splin· tered door, a broken akyll&ht ~ walls defaced with obscenitles scrawled in nd Ud blue crayon. Official.a for ln1.De Paclflc Devel~ Co., a bu.lld.lq aub- aldiary ot tbe ln1ne ComPQT, estimated dulqe at '3,800. .I DAILY PILOT By 10.\NNBa 0 Clt .. ra.lfr ........ A move to get two of the delen· dants in the Bovan rtiurder cue transferred from Oran1e County Jail to the custody or th• federal marshal was denied Thunday by Harbor Judicial District Court. . Judge Selim Franklin. The 1udge said Raymond 11n i-· • is aod AJltboQ)' aroae, In.. D WQQ1d have te>,... Ol i1ii tM COUDt.f taCDlb AcconllnatoJudJeFranklln,a 1poke1.1Dao for the fed•ral m•nbat told him that. if 1M marshal took cualody of the two men, their whereabouts would not be revealed and the marshal would take the responaibWt.Y of UCI Historian Hits U.S. Claim to C,anal US claims to the Panama Can al are based on Illegal treaties that would not be rec- o~nized in any world court, a UC Irvine historian of Pan· American aCCairs said Thursday. Jaime E. Rodriguez, an as- ~oc1ate professor. said U.S. in· volvement in Panama is a "t angl('d and sordid history" fo unded in a rebellion fmanced 2Masked Men.Abduct Boy, 11 BURLINGAME CAP -Two masked men in a stolen van ab· ducted an 11-year-old boy as he walked to school today in this San Francisco suburb, police said. The orange-colored van pulled alongside at 8.25 a.m. and two men wearing ski masks grabbed the youth and sped away, accord· ing to another youngster who wit· nessed the abduction. He ran to tell a school crossing guard, who called police. The youth, a Hoover School student, was identified as Neils L<:Gallet, son of a prominent San Vrancisco businessman. Police Sgt. Oliver Kruttschrutt :-.;i1d the van was located a half· hour later abandoned in the Bur· hngame hills. It had been stolen the day before in nearby San Mateo, he added. 1\ n all poinLc; bulletin was JS· sued for a 2~8·ton truck reported set•n leaving the hills area at about the same time the van was abandoned. It was described as having a blue cab. white rear and a red arrow on the side reading ••san J~e-San Rafael." Kruttschnitt said the triiek.wa~ rfrst reported as being lf'i!'~t\[ V'ehicle. but that co\lldtl'~ be verified. "There is no clear motive:· l(ruttschniU aaid, .Wdlng be was IJllaware ofby ra&om dem-.nd, A ground ahd helicopter a~ar<:h was launched by police, the San ~ateo County sheritf's depart. . ment and · Califoftlla Htghwa'y Patrol. Police also reported one or the abductors was described as 19 to 25 years old , tall, with blond shoulder-length hair and wearing an outdoor-type blue nylon JllCket. three Deny Track Fraud SAN DIEGO CAP) -A man and two women have pleaded m- noeent to charges of defrauding the Agua Caliente racetrack foreign book of $39,000 with a spph.laticated scheme involving radio broadcasts of race results. The three indicted by the San· Iliego Count.y Grand Jury are Ann Davis, 40; Ebbra Hullaby, 22, and Warren Jerald Heston. 44, all of San Diego. The grand jury also indicted· two other San Diego men and Miguel Rodriquez of Tijuana,. "ho was ft.red at Caliente after atleged!y moving his clock back two min~ to take late bets from one of the men. DAILY PILOT by the American administration of President Theodore Roosevelt. Rodriguez spoke at a Universi· ty Club forum of fellow tacu'lty members at UCI. Rodriguez said the original treaty to build the Panama Canal was made with a provisional gov- entment of the new Panama, a province of Colombia which separated from the mother coun· try in 1903. Because no established gov- ern ment w as in power. Rodriguez said, the U.S . technicaJJy should have been un· able to make a treaty for the building and operation of the canal. Also, Rodriguez contended, the original treaty provided tor leaae of the land to the U.S. "In perpetuity"-forever-a condi· · . tion llkewise not recognized in in· ternaUonal law. "This treaty," he declared, "as I understand international law, wasnotlegal." Because of that, Rodriguez s aid . the belief of some Americans (including sorne U.S. senators now debatlnt a new treaty to return control of the Canal Zone to Panama) that "We bought it. we built it, we own it," iS baaed on misinformation. The historian said no "giveaway" would be involved in a plan to cede control. The American investment in Panama, he argued, has been more than returned through the years of U.S. operation or the canal. Strike Near For United WASHINGTON (AP) - Thanksgiving holi<UY passeogers could fiod their travel plans dlsrupW n~t week because of a strike set tonight by flight atten· dants at United Alrlines, the nation's largest air car• ncr The head or the flfght at- lc nd ant's union says a walkout "appears likely,•· but federal mediators said contract talks between the union and United were con- tinuing today and mediators were ''op· tamistic" that an agree- ment could be reached berore the strike deadline. The contract between United and its flight atten· dants already has expired, leaving the attendants free to strike at 9:01 p.m . PST. That is the time a 30-day government cooling o(f period ends. . Singer's. Ex • Repor!A Theft LOSANGELES(AP)-Sinter Glen Campbell's former wife, Billie, baa told police she was robbed of a $20,000 diamond necklace when she aw:prtsed a prowler in her HoJ.lywOod Jnlla home. Officers said Mn. Campbell reported 1he was awakened by her d91•1 barltUlf. When she went downstain, abe said she found a masked intruder wbo grabbed her necklace before fleeing. , Detectives 1a1d he apparenUy had entered the house by cut.Ung · the flaps of a ''do1gie door" and ctawUnatbroq&h. 1ettln1 them to court whoo Dfe.UU'Y. • ·1 relt tt •outd be taap· propriate, •• the Judge said In an interview today. "It WGuld be aomethtna Ukeloslng them ... Attorneys for the two men made the motion Tuesday, noting that their clients, who allegedly have Ues to orcanized crime oo the eut coast, have been held in what amowita to M>litary eonllne- ment ln the county jail. That coofi.nement was request- * * * E..._PageAJ .BOVAN. ~. dress unknown. The four bunted defendants and Kulik are identified as prin· clpals ln the Prasadam opera- tion. ·The indictment nflects the dis· trict attorney's decilton to seek the death penalty for Fiori who authorities alleae shot Bovan to death Oct. 22outalde El Rancblto restaurant in Newport Beacb. Bov an was shot nine times. Fiori, Resco and Marone have been identified by the prosecu· tion as being linked with or- ganized crime elements head· quartered oo the Eut Coast. Court records contain tbe aJ. leged admission of Ftorl that he was the man wbo pumped nine bulleta from a 9 mm pistol Into Bovan. Court records aupportln1 the ind~tment allege that investors in the Pruadam or1anizaUon drew several hundreds of thousands of dollars from in- ternational drug trafflcldn1 and invested the money in a number of Orange County businesses. Affidavits on file state that Fiori, Marone and Reaco were hired by Prasadam alter large sums of money were alleced.ly embezzled from several ftnna. Police claim tbat the thl'ff hired men were additionally ex· tortlng money from Praaadam investors. Police reports on me indicate that the trio obtained money from investors identltied as Robert Shea and Stanton Kieffer. Both men disappeared at about the timeofthe Bovan murder. · Police believe that Bovan, Shea and Kieffer kidnapped Kulik, a partner in the Pruadam operation, and held him for $100,000 in ransom. The indictment alle1es that all eight defendants then retaliated by decldlng' to eliminate Boven, Shea and Kieffer and were sue· eesstul lo \be case of Bovan. PO.lice are stlll seeking Shea and Kieffer as material wlt· nesses in the complex case. The indictment contains the statement that Flori, Marone and Resco met Bovan outside !:I Ranchito where Fiori shot him nine times. The gun was thrown Jnlo the Upper Newport Bay and later recovered by Newport police. E',....PageAJ DAZED ••. The CHP officer said the three victims were obviously killed on impact. He identi!ied Bord.et as driver of the car. However, the officer satd. lt is believed the llabt weiaht sporty car belonged to Mias MW~ and the journey from San Clemente to about three miles Into Riverside County alone Orte1a Highway was a trial run for her new car. Rae's two and one·half ~ meaoderlnta alont Orte1a Highway didn't end unUJ shortly before 10 a.m. today when a Highway Patrol officer radioed for an ambulance after findlnt the young man °sloucbed aialnat a boulder a short distance from the roadway." Thi& was the second auto tracedy for the Rea family lD lix week.I. On Oct. 7, J.6.ye..-.old Rolland Joseph Rea wu crttle.ally ln· jured when he waa tbroWn froom a car near San Cltmtnte HlOl School. The younger Rea bo1 remalna •t Miaaloo Communil)t Hoep1tal in Mlealon Viejo, whtre be wu reported In at.able condiUon to- day. od by the two men, Judae • Jl'rank.UJi sald, because the)' fear for their llve1. . Reaco and Marone, atone wtth anOtber defendant ln the cue, Jef'T'Y Peter Fiori, all of Hunt· inftoo Beach, were relocated to Orao1e County under aaaumed names by the federal manbal • They are accused Of tunnlnl down St.epben John BOVab, aGt ol Fountain Valley on Oct. 22 out· side the El Ranchito restaurant in N ewp.>rt Beach. Their relocation from the eut coast wu made possible under the federal Wilneaa ProteeUon Prosram used to protect wit· nel!llea and their families after testimony a1alnst or1anbed crime fiaw'es. Meanwblle, Judge Franklin said he expects the defendants' and their attorneys to return to his court Tuesday. • II# ...... A preliminary bearing was set for that time, but Indictments handed down by the county Grand Jury on Thursday may lead to that bearing being can· celed .. 'A PRAYER IN OUR ti!ARt AND FAITH tN A~H· Anwar Sadat, right, and 'Vic• Prealderrt Hoany Mubarak '" '"" "" lmth lon4111H - lmth tcc•••d ltt11111y CJ EGYPT lllts IOI I JORDAN SAUDI ARABIA SYRIA ,,,,, ....... LAND IN Q\IESTIOM -Map locates IsraeL ,and ~ur .. roundln& Arab countries. Horizontal lines mark ter· ritortes occupied by Israel since 19'13' Middle East War, Peace effort& Su~h as Egyptian Pr~fdebt fulwar Sad,at's visit tA> Israel this weekend, hin&e 1h part on ,bow much of the occupied territory Israel is willing to cede back to Arabs. Fr.., Page Al EMBASSY ATTACKED. ••• struck. F...-P-.eAI SADAT ••• Ephraim Evron, Foreign· Ministry director-general. About 100 Israeli alrp::J workers broke lnto applause several Israelis had to be restrained from rushing the ramp to greet the vlsitors. The motorcade route lo Jerusalem, 30 miles away, was lined with laraell.&, some waving copies ot the Maariv newspaper with bold red headlines in Arabic and Hebrew reading "Welcome •President Sadat.'' In Ismailia, Egypt, Sadat prayed for peace within 12 miles of Israeli front lines. "God 10 with you," the con- gregatron chanted ln a mosque on the bank of the SuH Canal. The Israeli 1ovemment •n· nounced that Sadat's lUnerary will include a vlsit to the Church of the Holy Sepulcher, the tradi· tional site of Christ's tomb, and a tour ofYad Vashem, the national monument to victims of the Nut. holocaust. Sadat will visit the church Sun· day aft.er worshippin1 at the .,_i Aqaa mosque, East .Jertualem s ballo'f"ed MQl11sn 4hrino It lew hundred yards from tile cbUrch. Tbe .EiYPtian leadw'• fawt. Ai Y •d V••betn.. "111 be fi'tib .. btilWr M Begial, ' ' 1n Kuwait, ~ radleal Nib newspaper Al Walan quot.id Ismail Fahmy, who res~ed Thursday as Sadat's forelp minister, sayln1 that be quli because he failed to convince Sadat io cancel the Israel trip. embassy staff had gathered on the balconies of the embassy · bulldin& to watch the nithttime rally and the colorful fireworks display when the intruders Armored police cars took 'G> ~itions around the embassy . and special fioodli&bt& were brought in to U1ht up the em· baasy (roUDd.a. . ·•PrestdentSadat's visit "lnlo- evitablJ )ave s~tioua re- percusSions on dorpestic, Arab and international levels.•• Fahmy wu quoted as sayini. Elaewbere in the Arab world,. Iraq and radical Paleattnlao guerrillas clilled Sadat a tratt.or, Libya threatened to break oil~ lations with Eapt, Syria called for a united front aaainst E«)'Pt ·and walla in Moslem quarters of Beirut carried a caricature ol Sadat with Unele Sam~a top bat and MosbeDa~an•a eye-patch. • OOUPLE FIGHT FOR OUTHOUSE Officials in Northfield, Mass., think Dan and Robin Woodard are strange. "They kept pointing out Utat we were from Calllornia," Dan said. But all the Woodards want ls an outhouse. Jules Loh tella why oi;i Page ,A12. The tw~story em baasy ls located on fasblonable Queen Sophia Avenue off the corner of CooaUtutioo Square. Sayed Eziat Hussein, the em· bassy•s administrati~e attacbe, was reached by telepbone by 'the Associated Presa. He saia! "l"iii confined within the emb~. Threelnen invaded the premUes shootirtg." Then he bung up. One police official •i the aceqe said there was no certain ide.ntit, of the invaders but ''we s~ auapeet they are Pale.Unl'111!1· ' To the militant Arabs, Sadat's voyage la a violatfon of Arab solidarity and recognition of the · common enemy. Iraq's offtclal radio 1a1d the trip "?epresenta utmost treHoo to the Aral> cao1e." -· DAIL V P1LOT Susp~ . y .IUllUiJNE a LD8 °' .. ..., ........ A. move to 1et two of the defen- dants in the Boven murder cue transferred from OranJ• County Jan to the cuatody of the federal marshal was dented Thursday by Harbor Judicial District Court .Judge Selim Franklin. The Judae aald Raymond UCI Historian Hits U.S. Claim to Canal U S claims to the Panama Canal are based on Illegal lreat1es that would not be rec-· ognized in any world court, a UC Irvine historian oC Pan- Amencan affairs said Thursday. J a1m e E. Rodriguez, an as- .soc1ate professor. said U.S. in- volve menl in Panama is a ··t a ngled and sordid history .. founded in a rebellion financed 2Masked Men Abduct Boy, 11 BURLINGAME <AP -Two masked men in a stolen van ab- ducted an 11-year-old boy as he walked to school today m this San Francisco suburb, police said. The orange-colored van pulled alongside at 8:25 a.m. and two men wearing ski masks grabbed the youth and sped away, accord- mg to another youngster who wit· nessed the abduction. He ran to tell a school crosslng guard, who called police. The youth, a Hoover School 'iludent, was identified as Neils LeGallet, son of a prominent San Francisco businessman. Police SgL Oliver Kruttschnitt :.aid the van was localed a half· hour later abandoned in the Bur- lingame lulls. It had been stolen the day before in nearby San Mateo. he added. /\n all-points bulletin was IS· sued for a 2'v'B·ton truck reported seen leaving the hills area at about the same time the van was abandoned. It was described as having a blue cab, white rear and a red arrow on the side reading ••san Jose-San Rafael.•• Kruttschnitt said the tr~k.wH. f'frst reported as being Mlftt\t vehicle, but lhal co~' be verlfted. "There is no Bear motiYet" l(ruttschnit.t. aaid, Mdlng ~was \Q'l&W are ol'lll\)' raAlom dem11nd, A groun4ahd helicopter starch \V8S laundhed by pollce, lhe san Mateo County sheriff's depart.. . ruent and Callrorn.ta Htghway Batrol. . Police also reported one or the abductors was described as 19 to 25 years old, tall. with blond shoulder-length hair and wearing an outdoor-type blue nylon jacket. 1.Dree Deny Track Fraud SAN DIEGO (AP> -A man and. two women have pleaded in· noeent to charges oC defrauding the Agua Caliente racetrack foreign book or $39,000 with a spphilt.lcated !lcheme involving radi~ broadcasts o! race results. The three indicted by the San· Dieao Counb' Grand Jury are ;\nn Davia, .O; Ebbra Hullaby, 22, and W&n'en Jerald Heaton, .u, allofSanDleeo. The grand jury also indicted· two other San Diego men and Miguel Rodriquez of Tijuana,. •ho Wal ft.red at Catlente after alleaedlY moving his clock back two mlnutes to take late bets floom ono of the 1nen. .il DA llV PILOT by the ~merican administration of President Theodore Roosevelt. Rodriguez spoke at a C:dversi- ty Club forum of feUow facu'lty members at UCI. Rodriguez said the original treaty to build the Panama Canal was made with a provisional gov- enunenl of the new Panama, a province of Colombia which separated from the mother coun- try in 1903. Because no established gov ernment was in power , Rodriguez said, the U.S . technically should have been un· able to make· a treaty for the building and operation of the canal. Also, Rodriguez cont.ended, the original treaty provided for lease oC the land to the U.S. "In perpetuity "-forever-a condl· · . lion likewise not recognized in in- ternational law. "This treaty," he declared, "as I understand international Jaw, was notlegal." Because of that, Rodriguez s aid , the belief oC aome Americans (including some U.S. senators now debating a new treaty to return control of the Canal 7.one to Panama) that "We bougllt it, we built it, we own it,'' is based on misinformation. The historian said no "giveaway" would be involved in a plan to cede control. The American investment in Panama, he argued, has been more than returned through the years of U.S. operation of the canal. Strike Near For United WASHINGTON (AP) - Thanksgiving bolic:\PY passeogers could fl.Gd their travel plans dlsrup~ n6t week because of a strike set tonight by flight alten· dants at United Airlines, the nation's largest air car• rier. The bead of the flight al· l endant's union says a walkout "appears likely," but federal mediators said contract talks between the union and United were con- tinuing today and media tors were "op· timistic" that an agree· mcnt could be reached before the strike deadline. The contract between United and its flight atten- dants already bas expired, leaving the attendants free to strike at 9:01 p.m. PST. That is the time a 30-day government cooling o(f period ends. . Singer.' s. Ex . Reports Theft LOSANGELES(AP)-Sinaer Glen Campbell's former wife, Billie, bas told police she wu robbed of a $20,000 diamond necklace wbe.n abe surprised a prowler in her Hollywood. Hills home. Officers said Mn. Campbell report.eel she wa& awakened by her d91's bar~. When 1he went downstain,· she aaid ahe found a m-.s,ked intruder who grabbed her necklace before fleeing. , Detectives aaid be apparenUy had entered the house by cutting the naps af a "doegie door" and ctawUni tbroq&Ji. .. aettlna tbe1D to coW't when .114t¢MJU)'. • '1 felt lt would M taap. proprta~." the Ju41e said in an interview today. "It would be something like losing them." Attorneys for the two men made the motion Tuesday, notinf that their clients, who alle1edly have ties to orcanlzed crime on the eut coast, have been held in what amowits toaolitary confine. ment in the county Jail. That confinement was request- * * * E'...,.PageA.J .BOVAN ••• dress unknown. The four bunted defendants and Kulik are identified as prfn. cipala in lhc Prasadam opera- tion. ·The indictment refiecta the dis· trict attorney's declllon to seek the death penalty for Fiori who authorities alleJe ahot Bovan to death Ocl. 22outside El Rancblto restaurant in Newport Beach. Bovan was shot nine times. Fiori, Resco and Marone have been identified by the prosecu· tion as being linked with or- ganized crime elements bead· quartered on the Eut Coast. Court records contain the al· leeed admission of Flott that be was the man who pumped nine bullets from a 9 mm platol into Bovan. Court records IUPPOrtin& the indictment allece that investors in the Pra.sadam organtzaUon drew several hundreds of thousands of dollars from in· temallonal drug traffic.king and invested the money in a number of Orange County businesses. Affidavits on file state that Flori, Marone and Resco were hired by Prasadam after large sums of money were allegedly em beuled from severaJ ft.rma. Police clalm tbat the three hired men were addlUonallY ~­ tortlng money from Praaadam investors. Police reports on file indicate that the trio obtained money from investors ldentllied as Robert Shea and Stanton Kieffer. Both men disappeared ~t about the time of the Bovan murder. Police believe that Bovan, Shea and Kieffer kidnapped Kulik, a partner in the Pruadam operation, and held hlm for $100,000 in ransom. The indictment alleges that all eight defendants then retaliated by deciding to eliminate Bovan, Shea and Kieffer and were suc- cessful in Ule cue of Bovan. Police are still seeking Shea and Kieffer as material wit· nesses in the complex case. The indictmeol conuins the statement that Flori, Marone and Resco met Bovan outside El Ranchito where Fiori shot him nine times. The gun was thrown jnto the Upper Newport Bay and taler recovered by Newport Poilce. FromPageAJ DAZED ••. The CHP officer said the three victims were obviously killed ·on impact. He identified Border as drlverolthecar. However, the omcer said. lt is believed the Ueht weIJht •PortY car belonged to Mias Miller aod the journey from San Clemente to about three miles into Riverside County alone Orteia Highway was a trial ~un for ber new car. Rae's two and one-ball day meandertncs alonf Ortega Highway didn't end until shortly before 10 a.m. today when a Highway Patrol officer radioed for an ambulance after fi.ndi.ng the young man ••slouched aaainst a boulder a short distance from the roadway." Thia. was the second auto tra&ecb' for the Rea f amlly in six weeks. On Oct. 7, 18-year-old Rolland Joseph Rea wu crWcally In· Jured when he TtU thrown from a car near San Clemente Wlh School. The younger Rea bc>J remaloa et Mtsslon Community Hospital in Mllslon Viejo, wbeN he wu reported In st.able condiUon ~ day. ed by th• two men, Judae ta.nk.Uft u1d. because th fear torlhetrlives. . Resco and Marone, along wtth anOther defendant in the cue, Jerry Peter Flori, all of Runl- lniton Beach, were relocated to Oran1e County under uaumed nan:ies by the rederal manbat. They are accused of JUDDl.ng down St.el>ba:D John Bovan. scs. of FountaJn~Valley on Oct. 22 out· side the El Ranchlto restaurant in Ne~rt Beach. Their relocation from the eut cout was made possible amder the federal Witness Prot~tlon Program used to protect wit- nesses and their families after testimony against or1ani&ed crime fiaures. MeanwbUe, Judge Franklin said be expects the defendants and their attorneys to return to his court Tuesday. A preliminary hearing was set for that time, but indictments handed down by the county Grand Jury on Thursday may lead to that beartnc being can· • celed •. ,.,.,...... •A PRAYER IN OUR HEART AND FAITH IN AIJ,AH' Anwar Sadat, rfght, end Vice PrHld•rrt Hoany Mu_IN!rek --~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.,-~.--:--~~--., ' I ,,. l111t 19'7 lmtlt hft4al1H - lmth om,.d h111t11r c::J ''"" 1 ... { i1;'B?f ••"'"""',. Ste EGYPT 100 lllH JORDAN SAUDI ARABIA SYRIA u ........ LAND IN 0\#ESTION -Map locates Israel, and !Sur· roundin1 Arab countries. Horizontal lines mark ter- ritories occupied by Israel since 1973 Middle East War, Peace efforti !lugh as Egyptian Preijdent·(\nwar Sa~t's visit to Iarael Ull• weekend, hin&e in ,Part on bow much of the occupied territory Israel is willing to cede back to Arabs. Fr .. P.,,eAJ EMBASSY A'ITACKED. ••• embassy stale had gathered on the balconie1 of tbe embassy ·building to wa~h the nlghtUme rally and the colorful fireworks display when the intruders OOUPLE FICHT FOR OUTHOUSE Officials in Northfl~d. Mass., tb.lnk Dan and Robin Woodard are strange. "They kept pointing out Ptat we were from Calltornla," Dan said. But all the W~arda want is an outbouse. Jules Lob tells why on Pa1e:'12· struck. Armored J)Olice cars took ~ positions around the embassy and spedal floodlights were brought in tn light up the em· bHBY grounds. . The two-story embassy la located on fashionable Queen Sophia Avenue off the comer of Constitution Square. Sayed Euat Hussein, the em- bassy's adininistratl9e attache. was l'ellcbectbttelepbone by Tbe Associated Press. He said: "I'm confined within the embassy. Three men invaded the premttes sbootinc." Theo he bung Up. One police official at the scene said there was no cerUin f,dentlty of the invaders but Hwe stronaJy suspect they are Palestinians." ,.,.... P-.,e A.J SADAT ••• Ef.hraim -Evron, Foreign· M nlstrr.cprector-eeneral. · About 100 Israeli airport workers broke into applause and several Israelis had to be restrained from rushing the ramp to greet the vtaltors. The motorcade route to Jerusalem, 30 miles away, wu lined with Israel.la, some waving copies of the Maarlv newspaper with bold red headlines in Arabic and Hebrew reading "Welcome ·President Sadat." In Ismallia, Egypt, Sadat prayed for peace witbi.D 12 miles of Israeli front lines. "God go with you." the con- gregation chanted in a mosque on the bank of the Suei Canal. The Israeli 1overnment ut· nounced that Sadat's ltin~ary will include a vlslt to the Church of the Holy Sepulcher, the tradi- tional site of Christ's tomb, and a tour of Yad Vubem, the national monument to vicUma of the Nut holocaust. Sadat will visit the church &m- day alter worshlppins at the ~ Aqsa mosque, East Jer\Jsalem s baUowed M<»l•m ~ ~ fflW 1'undred yards trom Ule ch~ The EIYPC.lan leader'• •llWe • Ytd v.ttlbe wlll be I _ • ltflnlatd'M~Mgla. ' ' tn Kuwait. the rM.leal ~ hewspaper Al Watall @Otecl !small Fahmy, who restpe4 Thursday as Sadat's forelsn minister. saying that be qalt because he failed to coml1.nctt Sadat to cancel Ute Israel tri1>. "PreSidentSadat's visit will~ evttablJ •ave serloua re- percussions on doiputlc, ~ab and international levels." Fabmy wu quoted as aaYtna. • Ellewhere in the Arab war~. Iraq and radJcal PaleaJll)Jan guerrillas called Sadat a tnltor. Libya threatened to br'9k otf re- lations with Egypt. Syria ~ed for a united front against ltgypt and walla to Moslem quarten of Beirut carried a caricature ol Sadat with On~le Sam's top bat and MoaheDa;an'seye-patch. To the militant Arabs, Sadat's voyage la a violation of Arab solidarity and l'eCOfnltlon of the · common eMl!lf. Iraq's offtclal radio said the trip •'ftpresents utmoat treHon to the Arab caose.'\O Yo~r gran~nlother paid' mOre~ ·1~ her carpet than you ever will. ' . • 1 ... ·-----.. ~~~ sypbtlll, totallnJ: c..-u ot Oet. l. Nelec:Jft aatd the mere.,. prompted eoun- ty ofOclala to feet llddlUoaal, ttate bd f ederat help lo an effort ''to Itel tbll tide ... TUE ft'.\TB AHO federal qendel have sent two more public bultll lD\WUptGn to Orance County to ua1lt two othrn a1rMd1 f!f p BZ AUOIAID TBB tieavleat concentra· tlon Of the dlNue appeart to be In Santa •Ana, altbou&b CHH have apr~d • tllrouehodt tho county. Nellem uld it b b~ to detect exact loee· tlom becauae ~Jevtlittna county ollfttes for ttutmeDt Often are embanaued and do not llv, ear1eet addresses. Once a 1ypbtlia victim bu been tnated, ·the bealtb Olftcer cooUnued. the d.laeue no loGCer ii tnfectioul. • NELSON SAID BS HOPES to 'Uncover 'clue1 w1Wn tho next t..ew w..U lndicatin• • N elaon said county health of{lclata. ratbes tban private pbyalclans, treat mott of the eounty's 1nbllil vtcttiDI. The county meatcal sta.tr bu expertise tft • tbe diaeae'a dlapoell and treatment u well u IOpbiatlcated 4faposUc equipment, ~·~~ • l MANY PattATE PBY81CIANS aend their patients to the county for ueatment, Nellontald, and many lndivlduallt>feferto IO to. the ~ty. ~~UH thy an ~CO~· For. the Record Cordova ·.Platis ,,,,., ... Deatlu . Talk. on Ta~es By O.C. HUSTINGS OflMO&lltPllt- Asaemblym&n Roa Cordon. D·El Toro, will diacun new le1l11latlon on prope~, taxea and law enforcement at a luncheon mtfUlll ot Uae •Cotta Meu RotaryClubNov,23. , Cordova, elected lut Novemw. repr111eat1 th• 74th Auembly Dlatrlct alon• the IOUtbena Oi'ana• Coast and part of northern San Dleao County. The meeUna will be held at South Cout Plan. • • * • • • · State Sen. Deaah E. Carpeater, ft.· Newport Beach, 1¥Ul IUell the paa\ lecialaUve aesaloo and ol· fer•a forecut ot tile •omtn1 ••••ion ea a Dec t luncheon meettns of the Greater 1httne Indoat"i•I Leaeue. The meet· lng wm be held at The ftqistry Hotel • • • Backen of incumbent Huntbttton Beach City Atto~ey Don Boal• ate pluminl a tennis •vat Sundayon behalf oftbelr man. --._ __ _ It la set for 0 p.m. to mldJlllht at the SeacWI Tennla Club, • NB Attorney Talibetl PANSIES AND VIOLAS Fabulout t•rden color In bed•. bas· ket1 or potl-bluct, yellow•, ~•fl9a andwhltet. •• i I AZALEAS Beautiful OCMMrlng cver9teen planta, truly ' Cattforhl• favottte In red•. ptnJu, whltu and 1ome unique varlttta. ' I ,. ;> i AJa OM.Y PlLOT !t,_~~~I, NOR'llfflELD, M111. -To find DAn and Robin Woodard'• house, )'OQ drivo over a mouiitain on a blacktop road untU the blacktop ends, drive down a rutted dirt lane until the Jane ends, then you walk. You walk and climb ball a mile up a twisting, boulder·strewn path obscured by f alien leaves and pine needles, following a :-.lream that tumbles down the steep hillside over m06sy rocks. Deep in this Idyllic wilderness the only sound ls the brawline .stream TUE HOUSE IS utterly l.solat· cd among the trees, a handsome l wo·story house covered with weather·mellowed cedar shakes. Nearby is an atre clearmg where Dan and Robin grow their o" n groceries. Robin cans the produce and stores it in a root cellar. Dan built the root cellar. Dan also built the bou.se, sawed every board, drove every nail. lie 1s a fine carpenter and a re· .sourceful man; he taught himself the craft. Robin Is resourceful , too, and giving. She teaches sew· ing one day a week in a nursing home. BEHIND THE HOUSE stands <mother tidy structure. With its two atalned.glass windows, also h1nd-erl!ted by Dan, it mlaht be a ainall chapel, but lt ls not. It la an outhouse. The most troublesome outhouse you can imagine. "We came h~re because we like the woods, the outdoors," Dan Woodard said. "We like privacy. All we want la to be left alone. Instead, Cor three )'ea.rt we've been in and out of court and it isn't over yet. All because of an outhouse . "SOMETIMES IT get.s pretty sllly. One official ask! why on• earth we want an outhouse and another says if we have an out· house everybody will want one How do you deal with that?'' Dao Woodard discusses b1s outhouse woes with remarkable calm. A less forCivini soul would be tearing his hair. Dan and Robin, both in their early 30s, met at UCLA. From the start, they treasured being alone. After graduation and mar· riage they rented a cabin far back in the redwood mountains or Northern Califorhia. THEY WANTED their own place, though, and began a search, trav~Ung the couniry un· hurriedly, enjoyinl the acenery and each other. Jn the spring ot 1974 they found thll spqt: 96 acres of romanUc mountamside with it• cryat.i brook, ample firewood and garden clearing. No electricity, but they prefer oil lamps. It was ideal. Dan applied for a bu.Udln1 permit. He was .told be would need a septic tank. He explained that he planned to build an out· house. "NOT ONLY WOULD we have to bulld a road so a truck could come up with a tank, which would be terribly expenstve and spoil the beauty, but we really do want an outhouse," Dan said. "An outhouse forces you to go outaide even in bad weather, and once you're outside you're glad to be outside." The town said too bad, no out· house. Agalmt the law. Dan was told to stop buildin& not just the outhouse but also the house. Endorsement: Big Deal Humphrey-Hmdcins Bill Loses as I t Gains By WALTER R. MEARS AP'S..ljtc;.,_,_ .... :-.o President Carter has en· dorsed the Full Employment and Balanced Growth Act of 1977. Big deal lie also endorsed the Full Employ ment a nd Balanced Growth Act of 1976. and that was a lol !>tronger economic medicine lh:in the version he favors now. /\T TIDS RATE, with another endorsement or lwo from Carter, the measu re mi ght vanis h altogether In Washmgton shorthand, It 's called the Humphrey-Hawkins bill, after Sen. Hubert H. Hum· phrey, D-.Minn .. a nd Rep. Augustus F. Hawkins, D·Calif., who proposed it to mandate gov· l·rnment measures to put the un· 1::mploy.8d back to work. They wtnted to IS b1 law a hmil on unemployment in the United States, and to reach that goal 1r necessary with jobs rinanct'<.l by the government as the employer or last re5ort. Wll/\T THEY'VE GOT now looks like a bill or last resort ~mce. as a Carter lieutenant not- ed. the new draft doesn't compel anybody to do anything except -;ct economic goals -which would themselves be subject to 1·hange Any new programs, and any new spendin~ to cut unemploy· mcnt. woul d be s ubject to seµaral<' action by Congreu and approval hy the president. In SU('Ct•ss1ve ve~lons or the bill, th<' target unemploymer\t rates h.iv<• become progressively less amb1llous and less binding, NEJP.S ANALYSIS as have the provisions for gov· ernment measures U> reach the goal. : THE ORIGINAL measure, . which candidate Carter opposed as inflationary, set a ceiling of 3 perceqt unemployment within four years of enactment. With labor, liberals and black groups committed to the bill, and with bis rivals for the nomination supporting It, Carter held out for months. He said be was no less com- mitted than the other Democrats to curbing unemployment, but that the bill as it stood would have meant double-digit infia· lion. CARTER NEVER was very enthus iastic about the Hum- phrey.Hawkins formula, but the bill becai:n e a symbol and en- dorsement a campaign necessi- ty. Besides, the measure had been modified so as to set an lm· employment target or something over 4 percent. So be endorsed it during the presidential primary campaign, and again in his recommend•· lions for the Democratic plat· form of 1976. All of this raises the ques, tion of how Carter came to be in a· position to negotiate a sUJ) milder version of the blU and to announce with conaiderable fan· fare that he wu endorsing bis bandhvork. The answer ls SllDple. He 1ot himself elected praldent. Doyou~lmoWwbat happens wJumbDSlness profits goupar daWnf WI • '.000 A mer \C'l!'ll weru,ked 1'9COOllY about the oll~• • r r )his on tnn1r bvet5, they oave 11.nprl51nc;J enswers. &·n "i wh 11 bmlnet' prol1t1 oo up. pr1c;ee elJO 9C? up. Othern ,.; r''llnr1 pr<l1t~ CdU.98prlo91towdown}Ahd l'ISAJ'lY 1111d pruht t, •Vil n<i •illtd on I heir llv• 11f all • Thci Is o r rc,L~'m. II we don't 1.1ndoralt1·~ 1 our Amer!c in E<:or1.,mt; '"v 11 m, how <"dn we 11'\8~.,, lr1'• :lwlt!lt d«"l:llont ,ijout It? Wt 11 lo kMp? Wh61 toclllln\J& To hnlpq1ve ye11 • clearer p6ct''"' cl oursystem,o~lbook· let 1* bes! pre. Pl\Nd. Ire ee•y to ~. lntetaltinq • iiJid f • Send for • JOUroopy now. }:very Amtirlcan ~t to know what It '1 WHAT CAME OVT was a bill establishing a 1983 goal of UD· employment not exceeding 4 per- cent with, as Carter noted, •'flex· lbillty to modiCy that g,W if necessity requires," and without compulsOry measures to atlaln it. The jobless rate now is 7 per- cent. The bill would establish a re deral commitment to full employment -which sounds just as good as it did when Congress first made that declaration in a law passed30 years ago. It would at the 1ame time com- mit the eovernment to combat in· fiatlon. IT ALSO REQUIRES that the admln!Jtration and Con1ress set s~ctne goals for unemployment, productivit.Y and other economic targets each year. That's the Jclnd of work their economic ad· visera are paid to do any bow. For all of that, the bill's sponsors and promoters said they were happy with the en· doraement, apparently consider· ing it a foot ln the door they can push open later to gain some of the mandatory measures they wanted in the first place. Of veo Carter's form chart on the 1ubJect. that may be wishful· tbldlclo1. But Ulen again, tbe Humphrey-Hawkins &ill.an~ ot labor, liberal and black oraanlla· ti o n s c o old p ro•e more persuasive at preslde.nUat cam- paign time than lt la now. He wanted to flttlab by winter ao he hired a lawyer. 1ot a reatr&hUng order asaln•t the. towQ and buUt bis home. The cue C&.IQe up in February abil the court found ln bls favor. The town 1ave lUm a permit tor an outbouae. .. WE TllOUGm THAT WU· the end of Lt. but a week later the plumblna inspector arrived. He said we could have an outhouse, but thd ataate required indoor plumbing as well, plus a wublnt machine hookup. Why, we don't even have electricity for a washinc machine." The inspector llimself saw the abs\Vdib'. reslped rather than· enforce the rule, and went wttb Dan to Boston to plead for a variance. They returned and found a summons from the town for buildinl wttbout a permit. Dan lost that c&Se in court but woo it on appeal. The judte ruled that the town could hardly have been unaware or his ~lam. ••WHAT WE NOW l)ave la ap· proval in tile state court but no variance from the state Board ol Plumbing Examiners. That's still unaettled. uwe have the feeling we're be- ing harassed but don't know why. I guess they think we're strange. At one bearing they kepJ polnt!nl out that we wer• from Califo~." He laucbed ... Ac. tually I'm from Mlcblcan. "We don't want to cause trou- ble. The last thin& we want to do is bother anybody. All we want Is an outhouse, ju.st a simple out· house." A modest, dealre, Dan and Robin. Hanitn,there. ... .................................... iii .................... illi..................... : I I I Over The Counter · : NASO U5!1*Js 1 ._ ____ ..., ______ ......................... --...... --... ..,.mllll!l!lllllililmiiiliili .... --... 1 7 VOL. 70, NO. 322, .C SECTIONS, "8 PAGES By GOY GL\NVILLE Of .. Olltt .......... A dazed and disoriented San Clemente youth, wbo crawled from the wrock•&• of an automobile accident that claimed three lives Tueaday night. w~ found today wander· ing along Ortqa H11bway in the Santa Ana mountafni. A California JU1bway Patrol officer In Riventde County re- ported that Georfe Rae, 18, of 181 Avenida La CUHta, San Clemente, was fOUDd 111uffert111 from obvious head injuries" about three miles from the scene of the accident. Even tbou,gb Tuesday nllbt'1 single-car triple fatal accident wasn't discovered until Thurs- day, a search for "a younc man whose hair was matted wltb blood" began late WednesQy, th• CHP omcer said. Toucblnt off the search were report.a from a telepbon• rep.&lf man and a local resldent that a seriously iltjured young maii was waoderin& through the area r&- portedly looldna for bis bome and refusing offers of help. The injured youn.c man 'a Journey began &Ome u-me after 10:30 p.m. Tuesday night when the new Ugbtwellht auto in which he was a paaaenger skidded oo an Orteaa Highway turn1 rolled over, crashed into a bridge em· bankmentandthentumbledintoa 30-fQOtgulch. The CHP said the auto went in· to its fatal skid while its driver wu attempting to make a sharp J11ry Indicts .8 • . m Bo van * * * 'U"e in Fear' * * * Jail Change Denied Pair By JOANNE REYNOLDS Ol .. Dllty ........... A move to get two of th'9 defen- dants in the Bovan murder case transferred from Orange County Jail to the custody of the federal marshal was dented Thursday by Harbor Judicial District Court Judge Selim Franklin. Strike Near For United WASJUNGTON (AP> - Tbanks1ivlat holtday passenien could find their travel plans dlsrupted next week became ot a atrtke •et tonllbt by fUaht •tt.en· danta at United AlrUnes, the nation's lar1est alr car· rier. The head of the flieht at· tendant's union says a walkout "appears likely," but federal m~ators sald contract talks between the union and United were con· tlnuing today and mediators were "op- timistic" that .an agree- ment could be reached before the strike deadline. The contract between United and lta fU1ht att.en· dants already has expired, leaving the attendants free to strike at 9:01 p.m. PST. That is the Ume a 30-day government cooling off period ends. Israelis Cheer Early Group Of Egyptians The judge said Raymond Steven Rescoe, 28 and Ant.bony Marone, Jr., 23 would have to re- main in the county facWty Accord.in& to Judge Frank Un, a spokesman for the federal marshal told him that, if the marshal took custody of the two men, their whereabout.ll would not be revealed and the marshal would take the responsiblUty of getting them to court wheo necessary. , "1 felt it would be inap propriate," the Jud&e said ln an interview tQday "It would ht" somethinc like losing them " Attorneys for the two men mad• Cbe motloa lfueld11 ~I that theft eUeists, WhO a1fegecuy have ties to organ.lied ertm• Oft the east cout. have &>e..n held ln what amounts to aoUt.i7 coqllne- ment la U.countJ lall That confinement wu rtctuest- ed by the two men, Judge Franklin said. because they fear for their lives . Resco and Marone, alone wtth another defendant in the case, Jerry Peter Fiori, all of Hunt· ington Beach, were relocated to Orange County under assumed names by the federal marshal They are accused of gunnlnc down Stephen John Boven, 36, ot Fountain Valley OD Oct. 22 out- side the El Ranchito restaurant in Newport. Beach. Their relocation from the eut cQaat was made-possible under the federal Witness PnMction Pf'ogram used to protect wtt- nesaea and their f~lllea after testimony against organised crime fieures. Meanwhile, Judge Franklin said be expects the defendants and their attorneys to return to his court Tuesday. A preliminary hearing wu set for that tills9, but indictments handed down by the county Graod Jury on Thursday may lead to that bearing betna can· celed. Clemente OKs • Seal~~· SueetPI- paramedic8 fiom SOutb ~a were fer• ried out to aid the stricken fisherman bY. the county harbor patrol. Welborne was re- ported in satisfactory condition today at San Clemente General Hospital. 11-year-old Child Grabbed,· 2 · ·llunted RileyWqms PubUc Accesa Along Beach BURµNGAME (AP) -An 11-year-ola boy wu abducted by two masked me11 as he walked to school~ p61lce said. An oranae·colored van.pulled alongside tbe boy at 8:~ a.m. and two men arabbed the b9Y and , sped away, accordlna to an~r · youn1!lter who wttnes$ed the .ab- ducUon. He ran to tell a school cro11ln1 1uard, who called police. . The tdentlt.y of the yodth wu witbbeldbJ authorities. Police Sgt. Oliver Kruttachnitt said the van was located a half. hour later abandoned in the Bur· llngamebllls. He 1aJd an all-points bullet.in was issued for a 2~·ton truck eeen leaving the bills area at about the tlme the van waa aban· dontd. Jt •u 4etcribed aa hav· inJ a b1-cab, white rear and a red arrow on the aide readidg ''San J~ Rafael." Kna~tt.Wd the ttuck wu first reported being • rental vehicle, but Qaat coulcln 't be verlfie4. ''There ls n6 cleff motive," Kruttsd>mni\t said, addl.Qg be wu unaware of any ransom de- mand. A ground and helicopter search wa11launcbed by police, the San Mateo County sheriff's depart· raent ~ Callf ornla Hig6way Patrol. Bandit on Bike LOS ANGELES <AP)-A man who belsi&ed Sl,UO trom a aavlnts aqd loaii '~tion pedaled b1a way lnto oioriitng trafllc. lrbtborlUel taicl. tum on a hlCbway curve while "traveling at a h11b rate Of speed.'' Killed in the accident were David Border, 21. of 108 A da Pelayo, tSi. Deborah L)'Dll Miller, 17, or 113 Avenlda .Do- mlogua, ud Terrence Ryan Palma, 21, ot 32()6 Avenlda del Presldente. <SeeD~D,Pa,eA!) Case Traffic . In Drugs Probed BYTOill BAllLEY lit_....., ........ Arralpmente were sebeduled in Superklr Court todq for four ol •llht per.sou Indicted by the Orange County Grand Jury on • mulUple crlm1n.a1 daarces that include the murder of Stephen John Bovm ot P'ountalli Valley. Tbe Grand Jury was tc)Jd befote issuing the lnd1ctment · late Thursday lJlat bOtb federal and state officers are contln\llna · to investiaate upectl of the use that Indicate the presence cl an international dru1 tratflcldng rinl 1n Oranie County. ~ An indictment ts a formal charae made,acalnlt a person by a Grand Jur1. tt doea not eatablllh .ruiltor~ea~ Police laid the c ... waa UbQ to the Gnnd'Jury to .... ume bl movlnl tbe "earhaaa ta\o Superior Court.. A preUmlnaq beartnt In tbe • cue w• ldMdulecl Tuesda7 in m unletpal court ut ha• veaµ,atort felt dDe to the use'• complextty that heari:r.ll would be extended over a loit• period ot tlme. So they tOOt=evtdeace to the Grad Jury • The proeeewon cl ma lt will off er evidence to prove that three or the ellht defendant. named Ill the indictment are linked to East Coast crime 1yDdlcates. And the other fh·•· It la claimed, are principal• ln Prasad.am Dbtrtbutors Inc., an investment firm linked to the Hare Knshn rellllo111 sect. Held in' the county Jail on charaes of murder, conspiracy. robbery and ntortlon are Jerry Peter Flori, 41, of 11822 Brookhurit St.; Anthony llarcee Jr., 23, and Raymond Steven Reaco, 2.8. both of 10121 Mer- rimac Drive and all of Hunt~ <See BOVAN, Page AZ> OOUPLE FIGHI' . FOR OUI'BOUSE Offtctals In Northfield, Mus., think Dan and Robln Woodard are strange. ''They· kept pointlnl out tbat we were ftOm Callfomla," Dan satd. But all the Woodards want IS an out.boUae. Jules Lob tella wtiy onPaie~ • DAILY f'U..01 1URMINGHAM, Ala. CAP> - A jury today convicted Robert Edward Chambliss of llrat· de•rec murd~r ln the death of one or four black g1r~ kllled In the 1963 bomblnf or a cliur~h used u a carter o clvll n•hta ac· t1vit1. Chambli.u, a former Ku Klux Klan member. was sentenced to hfe imprisonment on lhe jury's recommendation. Asked by the JtJdge whether be had anytlung to say before seo- t<.·ncmg, Chamblias replied: .. God knows, your honor, sir, I never in my life killed anybody. I 11e' er bombed anythlng in my hfe And l was not down at the S1xlccnth Street Baptist Church ·· T he JUry or eight women and rour men, including two black m1:n and one black woman, failed to reach a ttrdict Thursday. Cba.Ulbll&I. 73, la cbaraed with the death of Carol Denise McNab'. She was 11 when she died in an explosion durtng Sun· ~Y morning worship services at the Sixteenth Street BapUat Church ln Blnni.ogbam. Ch1mbl111, who bu been tree on $20,000 bond, is also charged in the deaths of the three other gtrls killed in the blast -Addle Mae Collins. Carol Robertson and Cynthia Wesley, all 14. Mlss McNair's case was first o.n the court docket. "Let 's show the world that a murder case bas been solved by the people of Alabama," said Al· tomey General Bill Baxley in closing remarks to the jury. Baxley told the jury to "go back there in the jury room and give Denise McNair a birthday Dupe Clai1ned CIA Disgraced in Vi,etnam? WASlONGTON (P)-A book ey a former CIA of· f1ccr claims that U .S. Ambassador Graham Martin and the CIA st ation chief in Saigon were lulled by Hungarian and French diplomats into believing a negotiated settlement of the Vietnam war was PoSSi· blc, published reports say. The result was an "institutional disgrace" for the agt•ncy because inadequate planning for the eventual t·vacu ation left thousands of Vietnamese col- laborators behind, subject to North Vietnamese retribution, the book asserts. The book by Frank Snepp also says former U.S. Ambassador Ellsworth Bunker offered a $3 million bribe to a moderate opposition leader, Gen. Duong Van "Big" Minh, to create the semblance of a contest for President Nguyen Van Thieu in tbe.1971 presiden-• t1al cle~lions. Snepp spent five years in the CIA's Saigon office. H e was the agency's principal analyst of North Viet· namesc political affairs. Ha s book. titled "Decent Interval," will be publis hed next week by Random House. Prepublica- tion revic>ws of the book appeared in today's New York Times and Washington Post. f'rot11 Page A 1 ACCESS ••• between the condemned 900 foot !!trip and Doheny Beach State Park several vcars ai;to, but pulled ~ when they saw the prpble ms the county was bavtn, • 1ctiuiring its portion. !'he settlement is complicated by a lawsuit filed by a group ol in\'estors who originally owntd the stretch or beach which is now lieing held by United Calllornla Bank. Riley maintains that the public l·an acquire the entire atret~b or beac hfront if the state and comtty robperate on the whole paclcaee. j·we feel we'll be able to seWe the la wsuit over the beach property under condemnation and the other stretch 1f the county or state, or a coordinated effort or boih governmental agencies, of- f crs to buy the whole beach pro- perty. "said Peter Herman, an as· sistant to Riley. Herman said acquisition of the two-mile stretch of beach and bluffs, "will provide more public recreation faclllt.les that are no loflger available at the harbor." Hughes Jury ..- Ready to Go 'New Leads' In Slaying OfHBMan bpteatigSC>rs say f,hey h .... d• \'eloped "a couple 'of leads'' tn the murder of Huntington J3e¥h resident Robert Myers laat Fri- day near Barstow. San Bernardino sheriff's Detective Dennis O'Rourk• said he would travel to Hunti'1gton Beach to pursue the leads, but didn 'l wish them publicized for fear Im investigation would be hampered. O'Rourke said that searchers have failed to find a trace Of the 57-year-old Myers' missing van, which apparently was taken by his murderer. He said airports in Los Angeles and Ontario have been alerted to be on the lookout for the vehicle. A student at ?thrina Hiah School reported seeing a bumina van tn tbe desert •rea near Adelanto last Sunday. O'Rourite said the van did not belone to Myers, who was a longtlale resident of LalUJla Beach. Myers' vehicle is a 1974 Ford Econollne, license number 356S6H. It baa a white bubble top over a gold-colored body. SJC Burglars Taike Antique Furniture Antique fumtture valued by th• Yicttm at $1,200 hu beeft stolen i1Y buratan who f6rced their way Into .a Sa11 Jaaa Caplatranoboin.. Orance County •b•rtlf'• of· ficen aatd t&e theft of an 01'PD. a dlnlnf room table and four cbaln wa1 r~ by P.utcta El.line Land", 2llOl1 San Juan Creek Road. present" T ho 36-year-old attorney general said in vlew of the testimony in the four·day trial, .. There's no more speculation about what c•Uled the bleat. The indictment reads dynamite or other explosives but our wit· neases have tesUfled ft was dynamite beyond a shadow of doubt." Art Hanes Jr .. the defense at· torney, said lhe state's case was purely circumstantJal. .. It's the sarn., old ltUiftbatcot Bob Cbamblbs in UUs court 14 years ago and acquitted, .. Hanes told the jury. Chambliss was arrested Oct. t. 1963, on a charae of possession of dynamite. Court ~ords show be was tried and found innocent. The Sixteenth Street Baptist Church case was reopened in 1.971 when the FBI agreed to cooperate in lhe prosecution. Baxley aaJd the state wu not contendlng that Cbambllsa wu the only one who bad aoytbiq to do with the Sept. 15, 1963 ex-plosion. He told reporters after the trial that C h a mbli ss was the ringleader of a group of men who committed the crime. "Wby ls Chambllsa the only on e h ere?" Baxley asked. "Because in Alabama we try them one at a time. You've tot to start somewhere." I',... Page Al BOVAN ••• ington Beach. Co-defendant Alexander Kulik, 28, who lista b1a addreu at 3 Lin· da Isle. Newport Beach, la free today after poetlq $7&0,000 ball. A bunt continues today for the four remaining defesidanta. They are ldentifted u: · Kullk's wife, Elsie Caban KuUk, 28, of the same Newport Beach address; Joseph Sheltan Davis, also known al Drdbavrata, age and address un· known; Joseph Gabriel Fedorowsld, alias Gupta, qe and address unknown and Roy Christopher Richard. also known as Rashada Dave age and ad· dress unknown. The four bunted defendants and K ullk are ldenUfted u prln· cipala In the Prasadam opera· lion. The indictment renects the dis- trict auomey's deci ion to 1eek lbo detth penalty for Florl who authorfties aJJege shot Bovan to death Oct. 22outside El Ranchlto restaurant 1D Newport Beach. Bovao was shot nine times. Flori, Resco and Marone bave been identified by the prosecu- tion as being linked with or- ganized crime elements head; quarteredontbeEutQOUt. Court records contatn the al· leged admiaalOI\ of Plori that he was the man who pumped nine bullets from a 9 mm pistol into Bovan. Court records eupportfng the indictment allece that investors in the Prasadam organization d r ew several hundreds of thousands of dollars from in· ternational dru• tratnckinl ud invested ~ monet In a number of Oran1e County bustaesee.. Affidavits on file state that Fiori, Marone and R'9co were hired by Pruadam after large suma cl mooe1 were alleaedly e m benled from aeveral ftrms, Police clalsn tbat the three hired men were addltlonally ex· tort1ng money from Pruadam inveaton. Police repol"ts oa Ille indicat$ t hat the trio obtalned money' from investors identified as Robert Shea and Stanton K.feffer. Both men dllappeared et about lhe Ume of the Bovan murder. . Police believe that ,B= Shea and Kieffer kidnap IC\11$k, a partner In tbe Pru Olteratlon, and beld hlm for $100,000 tn ransotn. The t.ndlctment alle1es tbal all et1bt defendanta then l'ttallated by deeldlq to .itmtnate Bowan; Shea and Kleft• ad wer. ~ cessfuJ In the cue of Bovan. Pollce are 1Wl aeeldnl Shea and Kjefler aa mat.rtal wlt· ness• In tM compt e&M. • I ............ LAND IN QUESTION ' -Map locatu lsrael and Sur- rounding Arab countries. Horizontal lines mark ter- ritories occupied by Israel since 1973 Middle East War. Peace efforts such~ E01>tian President Anwar Sadat's visit to Israel this weekend, hinge in part on )low much of the occupied territory Jarael is willing to cede back to Arabs. p,..,. P-·AJ SADAT ••• workers broke into tpplause and several laraella had to be rHtraJoed trom ru1blng the ramp to P'eet tbe vlalt.on. The motorcade route to- Jeruaalem, 30 miles away, was lined with luaell.a. aome wavtna coples ot the Murtv newspaper with bold red be.dllau 1n Arabic and Hebrew rudJDI "Welcome President Sadat.,, In Iamallia, -E-~"£:·' ·sadat prayed for peace wt1 12 miles ot Israeli front lines. ''God to wtth you, .. tho con· gregaUon chanted in a moeque OD the bank of tbe SUei Canal. The hreell eovernment an - nounced that Sadat's ltlnerary wUl include a visit to the Cburth of the Hol,y SeP\llcber, the tradl- tlonal alte cl Cbrtat'1 to19b, and a tour of Yad V85Mm, the naUonal mdnumeot to 'tlotlm• Of tb• Nazi holocaa · -,.7 , • Sadat will vlait tb• church Sun· day after wonblppinl at th• Al ""'•· ~.,J;aat ~ ... ,.,, •• ballowe4 MoJem atir • tow hundred yards !rom the church . Tbe Egyptlan le.der's 1ulde at Yad Vashem wUl be Prime ld.lniJter Menabem Begl.D. Jn Kuwait, the radical Arab newspaper Al Watan quoted bmall Fahmy, who raltned Thursday u Sadat's !orel10 minister, saying that ht quJt because he failed M> conYince Sadat to cancel the larHI trip. "President Sadat '1 •islt wlU in· evitably have nrloua re-percussions on domestic, Arab and Jntern1tlonal JtveJa," Fabmywu quoted as sayln1. Elsewhere in the Arab World, Iraq and radical Palestinian iuerrillas called Sadat a traitor, Llbya tbreat.erted to breu ottre- )aUOl\I wttb Enpt Syria tilled for a united front •&-1tiat Eppt and walls ln Moslem quarters ol Beirut carried a caricature ol $adat with Uncle Sam'• top hat and Malbe Daya.,•e e7e-patcb. To tbe mllitant Ant», Sadat's voyqe b a vtoJatton of Arab aolldartty and recop.ttfon ot"the common eAem,J. ·-' HUtorian Hiu Claim, ·ToCaRal U.S-. elabns to -Uie Panama Canal are based on llle1ar treaties tbat would not be rec-· ognlzed In any world court, a UC Irvine historian of Pan· American affairs said Tburaclay. Jaime E . Roclri1uei, an as- sociate professor, said U.S. ln· volv•ment la Panam• 11 a "tangled and sordid history" founded 1n a rebelllon financed bT the American admlnistration o Prealdent Theodore RooeeveJt. RodriaUez apoke at a Univeni- ty Club (Orum ·of feUow facu'lty mem)>era at UCI. Rodrteuez said the orl'1bal treaty to build~ ,Panama Canal w .. made with a Pt'l> ... nal SOV• emment. ot the new Panama, a provlnc6 of Colombia wblcb aepar.tted from the moth• COUP· tryfn ' I I t ' I lt F...-P-.e.~J S'FREET ••• an oplJoll to b\lY these lots Jut year," }Valker se,id. ••i voted l9r acqulsltlon flt that tiaie an<l araue4 toe lt•t.robi}y. • l, ''Slncethen the owaert sold the • tots, and the new OW!l•tt pl.a tb build there. f •8'f'.9e that tbMe lots wer~ 1~ fw tbe u·· sessnlent ·cfi4Ui~f; but t dOn't think it would be f alr to buy thelll at tbli cioinlW ' Walle• WtDt ~ .w. other counct.lmeG in tbe aaq~ of two Iota a$. 102 and '°' ATelitda Granada, adJaeeat eo ~e alley connecUn1 ta-e .tHet wUb AveniclaM! lier. · CouoeUmen. dJree!ted Cit' Mana•eroer,sd W.U t.1etap. pralaala oo the fOG/t"o tou di! to recomP>e!Odto City Couneil •eon- aultant to~tbo~l.m· -provema:ita.. - ' ·' t f'~P.AJ ~.·._,,. DAZED ••• The CHP officer said &be tbree vtctlm!' were obviously killed on impact. He Identified Border u driver of the car. However, the officer said, lt ls ~leved lhe U&ht welabt aport;y car belQnaed to Ml.as Miller and the journey fr<>m San Clemente to about three miles Into Riverslde County alooa Ortesa Htihway wu a tri-1 nm for her new car. Rae's two and one-btif da.Y m eanderlncs alon1 Orteea Hicbway didn't end µ.nW abortly before 10 Lm. today wben a H~bway PaU'ol olftcer radioed for an ambulance alter flndlnc the young man "slouched. •&al.oil a boulder a abort dbtance from Uie roadway." This was the second auto traaedy for the Rea family in aix weeks. On Oct. 7. 16-year-old Rolland Joseph Rea was critically in·, jured wheobewuthrownfroma, car near San Clemente mgh, School. I · The younger Bea boy=· at Mllskla Community ' in Mluton ViQ!o. w~ ~~rtecl l,lt.ablt • -d , ... ,l~2~Jii SAN DIEGO CAP) -A man and two women bave pleaded to· D<>Cent to cbariet of delraudmg tbe A•ua Caltente racetrack torelp book of $39,000 whh a sophlsttca~ scheiue IDvolmg radio bro-4cattJof race results. The tbtee 112dlcted bf. the San Diego County Grand 'Jun are AU.Dms, 40: .Ebbia !lullaby. u. and WMrea Jerald Jtestoa, ""· all of 5ah Dleeo. The eru4 JUJ'Y. also tndlcted two otb8t So Dle10 men and. Mtauel Rodriquez of Tijuana_ who was fired at Caliente aft.er alle•edb' moviDC b1I clock bact two minutes to take late beta Crom one of the men. A penoo. WU statklned at Santa An:lta to transmit race results to • rtnt.ed office in Arcadia, proeee&Uon said. · 7 . By GARY GRANVILLE 0t•DIMY""'1&1tt A dazed and disoriented San Clemente youth, who crawled from the wreck a ge or an a utomobile a ccide nt that claimed three lives Tuesday ni"ht, WM. found today wander· ing along 0rte1a Hl1bway in the Santa Ana mountains. A Callfomla Highway ?atrol offtcer In Rlverslde County re- porled that Geor1e Rae, 18, of m Avenida La Cuesta, San Clemente, wu found ''sulferint from obvious head lnJurles" about three miles from the scene of the accident. Even tbouib Tuesday nleht's sln1le-car triple fatal accident wai n 't di.seovered unW Thurs.- day, a search for "a Y0\11\1 man whose halr was matted with blood" began late Wednesday, the CHP officer sald. Touching off the search were reports from a telephone repair man and a local resident that a seriously Injured youn1 man wu wandering through Ute area re- portedly looldnl for his home and retusin& offers of help. The injured yo~nK maa's Journey began some tfme after 10 :30 p.m. Tue.day nlJbt when the new UCbtweiaht auto 1n wbicb be was a passeoier skidded on an Orte1a Hl&hway turn, rolled over, crashed into a bridge tm· bankment and then tumbled into a 30-foot IUlcb. ' The CHP said the auto went. in· to ii.a fatal aki4 while its driver was attemptlnt to make a sharp turn on a hlahway curve while .. tra veUna at a h11h rate ot speed." Killed in the accident were David Border, 21. of 108 Aventda Pelayo .. t81. Deborab Lr_nn Miller, 17, oi 113 Avenida :00.. min1uez, and Terrence Ryan ·Palma, 21. of 3206 Avenida del . Prealdente. (~D~1Pa1eAZ) Athens Egyptian E assy Hit 'U"e in E'ea,_, Jail Change D.enied Pair By JOANNE REYNOLDS OI .. Dally,,_ 5Uft A move to gel two of the defen- dants in the Bovan murder case transferred from Orange County Jail to the custody or the federal marshal was denied Thursday by Harbor Judicial Di.strict Court Judge Selim Franklin. The judge nid Raymond Steven Rescoe, 28 and Anthony Marone, Jr., 23 would have to re· No-chnte /U1nJ1 Set By Knievel LOS ANGELES CAP) -Evel. Knievel , the world's most· famous professlonal life risker, announced today that he will risk his skin one last time -in a 40,000-foot j ump without a parachute into a haystack July 4 for $20 million. Knievel, 39, said he would have a "missile-guidance device" sur- gically iQlplanted in hls cbest before making the jump. Explaining he'd heard that persons without spleens could better resist. strong lmpacl.a, Knievel said be would also have his spleen removed before mak· ing the jump from a 829 either near Lu Veiu or Atlantic City. He told a news conterence he would aimfor one of 13 haystacks in the parking lot of a casino. Bet· tors will wager on which stack be will bit. "If I don't make it, the bettors will get their money back," Knievel said. Asked about the odda or JUI'· vlval ln such a feat., Knievel said: "When you live like I do, if YoU consider the odds you mipt not do it.'' Knievel sald he would be "dropped like a bomb" ou.tottbe plane and a "device in my chest wlll act like the bomina device on a Nike missU• and direct me toward the hayatacu.'' main in the county faclllty. Accordlni to Judie Fran.kll.n, a s pokesman for the federal manhal told him that, lf the marshal took custody of the two men, their whereabouts would not be revealed and the m arsbal would take the responsiblllty of getting them to court when necessary. "I felt it would be Jnap· propriate," the judge said In an interview today. ..It would be something like losina them." Attorneys for the two men made the motion Tuelday, notlne that their clients, w1'o alletedly have ties to organized crime on the eut cout, have be.-heldln what amounts to solitary confble. ment in the county Jail. That ~ement was request· ed by ihe two melt, Juda• Frank.1ln aald, becauae they fear for their lives. . Resco and Marone, alons wi\b another defendant In the cue, Jerry Peter Fiori, all of Hunt- ington Beach, wel'e relocated to Orange County under assumed names by the federal marshal. They are accused of gunning (See StJ8PECl'S. Page A2) * * * Arraignments Due/or Four In Death Ctue Gunwoman Sµ.sp.~ci. Nabbed in: HOldop Bv JACKIE BYMAN _., OI .. o.lfJ f'llM tlllft Costa Maa police today ar· rested a woman sus~t. within half an hour after a bank was held up at ,unpoint and robbed ol $1,200. Police identified the suspect as Dolores Marie Giff en, 21, of Tor- rance. They said all the cash was recovered. Investi1ator Phil McCormick said a woman en~red Imperial Bank at Harbor Boulevard and · Fair Drive about 10:20 a.m., dis· played a revolver and told a female teller she was holdtna up the bank. The robber then fled with the money, momentarily pointing the piltol at another employe a4MI a customer who wu enterlne the bank as She was running ou.L No one WJS ~ported injured. The robber the!) l'JUl across the street and accordipa to wit- nesse1 entered a ear driven by a man. One witness reportedly wrote down the license number and tprned Lt over to pollce. The suspect car drove thl'O\l&b a housing.tract and down •everal streets to Fairview Road, where it was ap<>tted by a police helicopter. Tbe car was fln,ally stopped on the northbound San Dfego Freeway just north of t.be Harbor Boulevard overpass. The woman suspect was alone in the car at the time. Police aald they are not sure wheth'1' a male auapcct 1' at large or whether the woman wu working alone. IO Men Held in Shootout ATHENS, Greece CAP) -20 persons believed to be Palestiniam tried to take ewer the Egypttao Embassy tod8,1 but were overpowered after a shootout wttb staff members and police, the Egyptian ambuaadcr reported, one invader wu killed_ and at least 12 persona wounded. Yebia Hassan Addel Kader. told Tbe Alloclated Presa that .. they have been overpowered." The envoy, who wai at hoirie"' • when the attack on the embaasy occurred1 • aaid he bad been ad· vised by 1UJ staff th'1 all the l.D-{ vaderawreca~ . -Wttnesaea said there was • ·aboot.iq 1n the area and police arrested 10 peraona near the embassy bulldJnl. · Heavily armed riot p<>Uce ringed off the area, just Off the central Co111tttutloll Square here tell.I of tbouanda of person• were attending a Pol tlcal ,opeD &tr rally by Prt el' <Joniitantlne Caramaitlil ID.' preparation fOr Su1'da1'1 ceaeral elections. The attack on tbe embassy came Just 24 boura before ECYP" tian President Anwar Sadat was scheduled to vislt Israel tn the face of strong criticism from· w~ .. •-r Due manypartaoftbeArabworld. .,. w r,, ~. Police 1aid there wu 1bootln1 gotng on within the embaaay, ,., I'..!! • • "apparmtly between def~ ..I. 0 r uit in embassy staff and the at. tackers." . ~._._,_ ~O·-"h Police attempted to clear the ~ 0 ' "1 'I ., area of the thou.sands millln1 around the square near the em- By tbe Aaodated Preti buay u the political rally came Cold winds, snow and rain are to a cloee. ~etted lb parts of Northern Witnesses aald that most of the California late today u the re-embassy staff had gaf1.u1red on eion gets its f1ist dose of wlntery the balconies of the embassy weathe. bulldinl to watch the nllhttlme The National Weather Service rally and the colorful tlreworb .said a cold air mass plung:lns display when the lntrudtra south from Alaska could cap the struck. north SJerra with snow down to Armored police cara took up 2,000 feet. · poslUona ~d the embassy A 30 percent chance of rain is and special floodlights were reported tor San Francisco brought in to light up tbe em· <See SNOW, Page AZ> busy~. Z DAil Y PILOT l't'C 'Klans GUilty BIRMINGHAM, Ala (AP> - A Jury today convicted Robert Edward Ch1mbllu ol flfll· degree murder in the death of one of four black girl1 killed In Lhe 1963 bomblni or • &hurcb used as a center of clvll nabta ac- tivity. Chambliss, a former Ku Klux Klan member, was sentenced to life imprisonment on the jury's recom mendaUon. Asked by the judge whether he had anything to say before sen- tencing, Chambliss replied: "God knows, your honor, sir, I never in my bfe killed anybody. I never bombed anythlne m my tare And I was not down at the Six teenth Street Baptist Church " the people ol Alabama," 1-.ld Al· torney General Bill Baxley in cJoslni remark.a to tbe Jury. Baxtey told the Jury to "F> back there in the jury room and &Jve De.U.e 1dcNalr a birthday present." Tbe 36-year·old attorney 1eneral aald in view of tbe testimony in the four-day trial, "There's no more speculation about what caused the blut. 'Ibe indictment reads dynamite or other explosives but our wtt· nesses have testified it waa dynamite beyond a shadow of doubt." Art Hanes Jr .. the defense at. torney, said the state's case was purely circumstantial. "It's the same old stuff that cot Bob Chambliss in this court 14 years ago and acqwtted," Hanes _ told the jury. Chambliss waa arrested Oct. 9, 1903, on a charge ol poueuloo of dynamite. Court records show he was tried and found innocent. The Sixteenth Street Bapti.at Cbur~ cue was reopened la 1911 wben tbe FBI aareed to cooperate ln the prosecution. Baxley said the state was not contendlna that Chamblin was the only one who had an)'thtna to do with the Sept. l.S, 1983 ex· plaaton. He told reportert after the trtal that Chambliss was the rinsleader ol a eroup of men who committed the crime. "Why i5 Chambliss tbe only one here?" Baxley asked. "Because in Alabama we try them one at a time. You've got to start somewhere." The Jury of eight women and four men, including two black mL·rl and one black woman, Called to reach a verdict Thursday. Chambliss, 73, is chareed with I he death or Carol Denise McNair. She was 11 when she died in an explosion durina Sun- day morning worship services at the Sixteenth Street Baptist Church in Birmingham. Fro• Page AJ BOV AN SLAYING. • • Chambliss, who has been free on $20,000 bond, is also charged In the deaths or the three other girls killed in the blast Addie Mae Collins. Carol Robertson and Cynlhia Wesley, all 14. Miss McNa1r's case was first on the court docket. .. Let's show the world that a murder case has been solved by Strike Near For United Kulik 's wife, Elsie Caban Kulik, 28, of the same Newport Beach address; Joseph Shelton Davis, also known· as Drdhavrata, age and address un· known: Joseph Gabriel Fedorowsld, alias Gupta, •I• and addreaa unknown and Roy Christopher Richard, also known . as Rashada Dave age and ad· dress unknown. The four hunted defendant.I and Kulik are identified as prin· · cipals in the Prasadam opera· tion. The indictment refiects the d.J.a. trict attorney's decision to seek the death penalty for Flori who authorities allege shot Bovan to death Oct. 22 outside El Rancblto WASHINGTON (AP > -restaurant in Newport Beach. Than ksgl ving holiday Bovan wassbotnlnetimes. passengers could find their Fiori, Resco and Marone have travel plans disrupted next been Identified by the proaeeu· week because of a strike lion a.s being linked with ·or- set tonight by flight atten-ganized crime elements bead· daots at United Airlines, quartered on the East Coast. the nation's largest air car-Court records contain the al· ner. leged admission of Flori that he Shea and Kieffer and were suc- cessful in the case of Bovan. Police are still seeking Shea and KieCfer as material wit- nuses ln the complex cue. The indictment contains the statement that Flori, Marone and Resco met Bovan outside El Ranchlto where Flori shot him nine Umes. The Cun WU thrown into the Upper Newport Bay and later recovered by Newport police. The Grand Jury beard testimony from a number of Newport otflcen u well u ad-· vert.ialnl executlv• Byron Linde and William Brown. attorney- Sidney Lester and Frank Rout, a former uaoclate at Flori, Resco and Marone. Linde and Kirk were owners of a now-detunct advertJalnc agen. cy Ued to a buatness venture in which Pra.sadam wu invesUnR. lunapBall Hung Ma. 11, Costa Mesa <left> and Peter J ansema, u , · Costa Mesa, &l'e getting the jump on basketball season ~t the Harbor Area Boys Club. Registration for the an· nu al Boys Club basketball program is open through Nov. 26 at the club's EaatbfuH branch and through Dec. 19 at the Upper Bay branch. Cost of $8 per boy covers uni· forms and awards. Call ~8372 for add1Uonal details. ,...,,.l' ... AJ F,....PogeAJ DAZED ••• The CRP officer 1ald the three vlcUms were obviously killed on impact. He ldentlfied Border as driver o.f the car. Rowevw, the otncer aaid. lt ls believed the Uibt welabt sporty car belon&ed to Mias Miller and the journey from San Clemente • to about three miles Into Riverside County along Ortqa Hlpway wu a trial run for her new car. TIVERTON, R.I. (AP) - Police Sit. Clinton C. Bigelow spearheaded an lnveatlcatlon that led to dUa town's bluest burglary bust in two yean. But for the sergeant, it alao led to disappointment. The department announced Thuraci.y that the lnve1ti1atlclft resulted in indietmenta •la#Jllt eight adults. Jncludinc Btcelow'1 two sons, and' fiv~ Jvvenlla. Raymoftd Beaudry's The head of the flight at-was the man who pumped rune tend ant's union says a bullets from a 9 mm pistol into walkout "appears likely," Bovan. but federal mediators said Court records supporting the "I don't like it, to tell you the truth," said Blcetow. "But what are you 1otn9 to do? JuaUce la justice.'' Cblef &blrt F. ~Uhl:Muii nld the 13 people are ctmced wit.It stealinc close tb $30,000 in 18 months. Secrot lQcJtctments came from NewpOri uperior CoUrt. be'• two Ind on•balf day meaaderln11 alone Orte1a Hl&bway didn't eod WlUI 1bortly belore 1D a.m. today when a Hlcbway Patrol ome« ndloed tor an ambulance after fJnd1na tht Yotma man "1loucbed against a boulder a abort distance from the roadway.•• Thia w.. the second auto tragedy for tbe Rea f amlly lD ax weeks. contract talks between the indictment allege that investors union and United were con-m the Prasadam organitaUon linuin g today and drew several hundreds of mediators were "op· thousands of dollar• from in· timistic" that an agree· ternational dru& traffickine and ment could be reached invested the money in a number before the strike deadline. of Orange Co\mty busineases. The contract between Affidavits on file ata~ that ·United and its flight atten-Fiori, Marone and Reaco were dants already hu expired, hired by Praaadam after larJ6 leaving the attendants free sums of money were alleiedli to strike al 9:01 p.m. PST. embezzledfromseveralflrms. That is the Umt a 30-day Police claim that the three government cqoJiac olf hired men were additionally ex· period ends. ' torting money from Pruadam .......:..__________ investors. 'Long' Talk Holds Suspect For CM Police Costa Me&a police today credit· «!d a persuasive talker with help- ing them capture a 1u1pec:t in a $2.~ burglary. Arrested on suspicion or r;urelary was David Daniel Roh, 21, or Tustin, a student at Cal State Fullerton. 1 Accordlfti to police reports, pl UJ1\blng contractor Lee l\aymond Otis returned to bis home at 2871 Santa Ana Ave. sbortly after noon Thursday and saw a man runn(ng Crom his house. Otis then noticed a stereo, m1,T'owave oven and other valuables estimated at $2,650 sUJcked near his rear gJa15 door. lle called poUce. He then reportedly ran outside, '14lW a man he believed to be lhe ourglar In the street, a~d called out that he wanted to taUC to him. Otis then persuaded the sua. pect to come back and talk with hlm and kept him talktn1 untU POlicie arrived. OftANQI COMT • DAILY PILOT Police reports on file indicate that the trio obtained money from investors identified as Robert Shea and Stant.on Kieffer. Both men disappeared at about the time of the Bovan murder. Police believe that Bovan, Shea and Kieffer kidnapped Kulik, a partner in the Prasadam operation, and held him for $100,000in ransom. The lndictment alleaes that all eight defendants then retaliated by decidlni to ellmtnate Bovan, * * * F,...P,,.eAJ SUSPECTS. • down ~pben John Bovan. 38, of.· Fountain Valley on Oct. 22 out· side the El Raochito restaurant in Newport Beach. Their relocaUon from tbe eut coast was made possible l.Dlder the federal Wltneu Protection Proaram used to protect wit· nesse1 and their famlliu after testimony against organized crime~. Meanwhile, Judie Franklin 11ald he expects the def end ants and their attorneys to return to hJs court Tuesday. A prel.laUnary hearinf was set for that tlme, l>ut lndictmenta banded down 'by tb• county Grand JW7 on Tbunday may lead to tUt hnrillC belnl C&D· celed. . Last Rites Sunday ' Graveside services will be held Sunday !or Raymond Joseph lleaudry, 1:7, of Newport Beach, a Auditorium Funds Raised· By Jog-a-thon Corona del Mar Hilb School s~dentl 1ay they will tW'ft out en ma11e to nm for an auditorium for their campus when they stage the campus' first Jog·a·thon Tuesday. Tbe Joectnc event is being staged at the btgh school track from 11 a.m to 1 p.m. aa a fund· ralsln1 event for all of the cam· pus sanctioned clubl and to •tart a fund to build an auditorium on the campus. Student oraanlun 111 anyone who wants to jog la more than welcome to Join tn. . Funds are ralsed by geWne the runnen to get sponsors to ptedel donaUom bued on the number of um.. they can circle th• -640- yard tracktn an hour. Ttie cqaniurs say they expect 1,300 students u well u faculty members and parents to Join in the event. 2 Awards Given For Beaotifieation Two remodeling project. bave. been given annual Balboa i.tand Improvement Association Que Linda awardl for beautlftcaUon. The award in the commercial. division went to Henry and Betty Lucero tor tM remodelln1 of the alte where they opened tbeb'' restaurant, tbt Green Pepper. The relidentlal award went to the home ol Frank and JW Hin· man, lRul»'Ave. master illaUlood cutter who was · fatally !Qjured in a traffic acci· dent. Services will take place at 1 p.m. at Paclllc View Memorial Park in Newport Beach. Mr. Beaudry, who died Thurs· day at Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital, wu injured Tuesday when he lost control of hls car and smashed Into a Ueht pole at the intersection of Newport Boulevard and Mesa Drive in Costa Mesa. He was vice-president of Diamond Cutt.era Inc. of Coeta · Meaa. Mr. Beaudry ia survived by his mother, Airl Beaudry of San Diego; bts Cat"er and 1tep· mother, Gerard and Dorothy Beaudry of Newport Beach; brothers Robert of Los Angel~ and Ronald of San Dle10, and three slaters, Donna Beaudry of Orlando, Fla., Denile Beaudry ot Loa An1eles and Dianne Huel1u of San Dteeo. The !amlly 1u11eats that memorial cootrtbution1 be mllde to the Ray Beaudry ScholanbJp Fund, c/o Di.amood Cutten Inc., P.O . .Box1212, Cotta ldua. "Bigel~ Sa a cop-a 1ood one -and ltrictly a cop u fff u I'm co11ce~ ... aald WadburD ln announctni the iDdJctm~ts. "IA a small town, it can be hard for a local policeman wbo aom~tlmes has to arrest people M's «nOWn hi• wbole lite. But lt:it fiilla' that way ~ltfalllt.batway. 0 ' The chief aald BJretow never a.skedto betaken off the cue. ·'It's like everyone," WashbUrn aaicl. 0 You have ldds, they have ups and downs. What: are you eonna do?" The indictments stem from buralities of a medical ce.its • three prtv.ie bomea and a uaeo car dealenhlo •. · Robert Bttelow. 21, and· anotbpr man were accus~ ol stealin1 $$.000 worth o/ antique weapons fro a Ttve~n banle and Kevin \tgetow, 19, waa charged witb ste~ $900 1h tires and doeis tr.om Town Moton. • A ~ WatTaQi.. WU ias1*I for Robeft Blcetow after be f~iled to ap.,.ar la COQtt. ltri1o. Biaelow &)leaded tnnoc~o.t aDd WU releuid Oii' StOOO perjOQal. recognilaDce bail peDdlna a l)ec. 6trhal. On Oct. 7, 16-year-old Rolland Joseph Rea WP crlUcally In• Jared when be wu thrown from car near San Clemente HI•ti School. - T1' ~ bC)1 Nm .. at hlidOD comiiifliilU Olpltal ~ lJ\ Mlmon Viejo. where he was reported. in 1table condition to.' day. • ton la ht aod SaturdAy. ~nd bluatery northwest windtt blow· i~ up to as mllea an taou. are~ pected to rake the relion. The weathef service ,.Jd the cold alr flow wfll m•~• ltl heaviest mark lo the ttate'1 nortbem Up and the nat)on-S northwest. cuttfQa east betote unleatbl.Df ~ over most Ot Call.fOmla. Heavy~were~~e! Montana aDd the ROddes • today u th• cold &Jr head aoutb ~Ard Callf ornJa. • Weatberroan 8ob Caldwell said the cold a1.r flow'• arrival would be a blt earller than• normal as wintry acU•ltY ~ bealns in December . 7 By GA&Y GRANVILLE Of~o.i~fl-..... A dazed and ~laorlented San Clemente youth, who crawled from the wrecka1e of an automobile accident that claimed three lives Tuesday niJtht. wa&. found today wander- mg along Ortega Hl1bway ln the Santa Ana mountaCni. officer in Rlvenldo Couotr re- ported that Georae Rae, 8, Of 18'1 Avenlda La Cuesta, San Clemente, was fbund '"•ulferioi from obvious bead inJurJes •• whote blilr was matted with blood" belran late Wednesday, the CHPotftceuald. Journey began so·me tfme alter 10:30 p.m. Tuesday night when the oew lightweight auto in which he was a passenger skidded on an Ortega Highway turn, rolled over, crashed into a bridge em- bankment and then tumbled into a 30-foot gulch. tum on a highway curve wbUe "traveling at a high rate of speed." Killed ln the accldent were David Border, 21, of 108 Avenida Pelayo. #8, Deborah Lynn Miller, 17, of 113 Avenlda Do- m·lneuez, and Terrence Ryan Palma, 21, ot 3206 Avenlda del Presldente. · about three mil" fl'om tbo aceoe of the accident. A California mitiway Patrol Even though Tuesday Di~'• single-car triple fatal accident wun't discovered unW TbW'I· day, a search foe "a )'OU.DI man Toucbln1 oft the search wero reportl f!'om a telepbone repair mad and a local nsident that a eerlousb' lnjurecl youq man wu w,ndertng thro\llb the area r. OOrtedly looking for hil home and refu.slnc oflers of help. Tho injured youni man's The CHP said the auto went In· to its fatal skid while its driver was attempting to make a sharp <See DAZED, Pa•e A!) • Indicts B Saddlehack Raise Trustees Hike Own Salaries By IAURIE KASPER Ol .. D.il,f'ltetltaH for each meeting they attend, up to a maximum of $200 a month. Saddleback Valley Unified School District trustees moved quickly and qwetly this week to give themselves a pay raise :.tarting in January. In the four full months -July through October -since com- pensation was established, four trustees have been paid a cumulative total of $270 each. Since he missed one meeUng, Trustee George Henry bas been paid only $240. The board cast a split vote to change its curreht pay rate in keeping with new state Jegisla· tion which becomes effective on Ute first of the year. The trustees have bad many more meetings -four special sessions and two regular meet· ings -so far this month than they've had in previous months. According to the new state formula, trustees who attend all meetings will be paid $200 a month. Those who miss meetings will lose a proportionate amount from the $200 maximum. Two of this mooth 's meeUngs, however, were on the same day as the board's regular meetings. Gilbert Moreno, the district's r Currently, trustees receive $30 SexSlg•Off PoliCe Nab Telephone Tope ~ THE AD IN SEX-ORIENTED publications Pld $1 would buy senders a telephooe number leadl4i to a tape recording somehow laced with explicit sex. in· eluding true to life noises. Anaheim police said today that Emal Anthony Genova might still be raking in the dollars for hia "Dial-A-Scene" phone scheme if school children weren't inclined to share their good fortune. It seems one youngster mailed in his dollar and was given the phone number that promised the spicy one-sided conversation IN NO TIME AT A~ police said, the racy number was being passed from school kid to school kid and the magic number was jammed by calls from youthful 11on-paying customers. Alerted by indignant parents, Anaheim police re· ported they arrested Thursday the 48-year-<>ld Genova of 639 Webster St., Anaheim. Genova was charged with distributing obscene material to minors and latet released from Jal! en $2 ,500 bail. And callers to the $1 number now receive a dif- ferent kind of tape recorded message. "The number you have called is no longer work- ing and no new number has been listed," it drones. Ex-Klansman Guilty Of Girl's Death business manager, said trustees can be paid only for one meeting a day, according to a county counsel's opinion. This means trustees can ·be paid only for four meetin1s - a total of $120 each -so far this month. When the trustees• compensa· tlon was first approved, the estimated cost to the district wu $.1,600, with a posalble maximum cost of $12.000. Under the new 1y1tem, the dla- trict 's cost will reach the max· lmum of $12,000. Additionally, the policy appTOved by trustees calla for adJustments In ac· (See PAY, Pa1eA!) * * * Non-fonded Mandates Cliti1A!d Loa Youni, pffSident of the Saddleback Valley Unified Scbool District BOard or Educa- tion. bas cha.reed that the diltrtct. 1S "~lnc mandated l'l&htlnto the hole" She and other tnaatees have comp)a,ned orten tn recent mon~ that state legislation is requlrini co.Uy pro1rams but not providing any of the money needed to support. those 1>ro era ins To demonstrate tlul obJecbOft, Mrs YOUDJ.and ~ Wllll•m Kohler Wecl:nelday voted agaln.st. a policy provldin& emplQyee representat1ve1 wltb release tlme from tlmr JOb1 to process grievances and neeoUate The state's co eedve bargain· Ing law requires tbat tbe district elve employees this Ume. During contract. neaotiatlODS last spttn&, the trustees also -.ad promlsed teachers they would: adopt the policy. Despite the Pl'Olftln, Mrs. Youns~ lbe policy. 0 1 am tired Of ltate1UaDd•ttn• and not providing the fWldJ to eo with it.' Sbe said the collective bar1alnlng law ii "one of the worst ex.amptd." Kohler made iimlliu obJec· tlons arid added, .. I personally fed that. it'• a ctn of public funds." When uie at.m trustees ex·. <See llANQATE, P••• A2) * * * Sili1J11e"back Bo van •• m Case Traffic In Drugs Probed By TOM BAllLEY Of .. Delly ..... IUfl Arra1&11tDenta were scheduled ~ in Superior Court today for four of eight persons lndlcted by the Orange County Grand Jury on multiple criminal charaes that include the murder of Stephen John Bovanof Fountain Valley. The Grand Jury was told before lssuin& the indictment late Tburaday that both federal and atato officers are eont.inulng to investigate aspects of the ease that lndlcate the presence of an international drug trafficking • ring lnOranaeCounty. • Ao indictment ls a formal charge made aeainst a peraoo by a Grand Jury. lt does not establish guilt or innocence. Police aaid the cue was taken .to the Grand Jury t.o save time 1n. movln• th• healdnc• lot.Q Superior Court. • A~pla~e Greets Egyptian Advance A prellmlnaey bearllil 1D tbe , cue wu acbeduted Tuesd'1 ta munlclpal collrt blit in· ~eatlptol'I felt due to the Caa&'I compl.eXU;r thl.t beuilic wOa1d be extended over a lqna periOd ot time. So tbey took their evidence to tbe Grand Jury inltead. The proeocutlon clalma It wUl • ofter evidence to prove that three of tbe etgbt defendants named ln the indictment are llnlted t.o East Coast crime syndicates. And the other five. it ls clalmed, are principals iA Praaadam Dislribut.on Ioc., an investment ftrm linked to the Hare Krbhna roll&lous sect. JERUSALEM tAP) -Greeted by wltd applause from Israelis, 60 E&)'pban offtc1ala and aecuri· ty men amvechn Israel today to prepare the way for President Anwar Sadat •s historic trip. But m most ot the Arab world oppos1U0n bOUed up acalnst the nrst·evervtllt byan Arab lead.er to the J~b state. In Wasblh1ton. Prea1dent Carter said be •poke with Sadat by phone and found the Etyptlan leader .. very excited, en· thualastlc and confident, He hopes bls vtsit will be successful ln bl,'ea)dng down the animosities ln the Middle Easi," Carter said. Cairo Radio, reporttna tho telephone connrsaUon, aaid Carter was ''very Impressed" with Sadat'• move and con· ~tuta~ the EgyPUan .. fortak· WmterE>ue fng the best road towards achlev• ing peace" in the Middle Ea.st. Hassan Kemal, Sadat's office director and leader of the ad· vaoce party, emerged from the government plane at Ben..Ourion Airport. 30 miles west df Jerusalem. and said In Arablci "We ate veryhappy to"be bete, and especially at the welcome accorded our Egyptian plane. "We left-Egypt with a prayer In our heart and faith ln Allah, and we shall bave faith because our intentions are pure and we do want peace." The arrival of tbe Egyptian ad· vance party was broadcast live on Israeli television. They were greeted by Kemal's Israeli COUD· terpart, Eltahu ben-EJ.tsar, and Epbralm Evron, Forel111 Ministry director-general. A bout 100 Israeli airport workers broke into applause and several Israelis had to be reatralned from ru1bh11 the ramp to greet the vlsiton. The motor~ade route to Jerusalem. 30 miles away.-waa llnW With Israe\le9 some wavtni copies of the Maariv newspaper with bold red· headlines In Arable aod Hebrew read.inf "Welcome PresldeotSadaL" (See SADAT, Page .U) Held ln the county Jail 011 charges of murder, conspiracy. robbery and extortion are Jerry Peter Fiori, '1, of 1982a Brookburst ~ Antho111 MaroDe Jr., 23. and Raymond Steven Resco, 28, both of 101%1 M~ rimac Drive and all of Hunt· (See BOVAN, Pa1e A?) . OOUPLE FIGHT FOR OUTHOUSE Officlals ln Northfield, Mus.. think Dan and Robin WOodard are strange. "Tuy kept pointinf out that we were from Calllomla, 0 Daa. said. But all tbe Woodards want Ii an outboule. Jules Loh 'tells wbt ·on Pa1e.Al2. ( ( Piiot L_.ook J By WILLIAM HODGE °', • .,...., ....... TAX EXPERT HOWARD JARVIS defined experts for an audience In the Saddteback Valley this week as he plugged his constitutional amendment to limit property laxes. Some experts have said the Jarvis iniUaUve W~Qld mean disaster for Callfornla. "An expert," said J arvls, "Is someone wbo let.l'QI more and more about less and less unUl finally he ltnowa •"'1'Y· thing !here ls t.o know about nothlnc. '...' ••• PEGGY BOWMAN Orange County Mental llcallh Department geron· tolog1st, was at a La1una .Hills Gray Panthers meeting Tuesday aaking mem- bers to give her ono word de.acriptions of senlor citizens. The attractive 30-ycar-old woman was trying lo illustrate myths about older people. Hoooa Her audience of elderly people was more than cooperative. Words hke "senile," "Jorget.rul," "sexless." "slow," and ''bUnd" were offered by the audience. And several people mentioned "deaf." Shortly thereafter, Mrs. Bowman was a1ain engaging her audience in conversation when she asked someone to re· peat somelhlng. Mrs. Bowman said she la deaf in one ear. *** FORMER SADDLEBACK College Trustee Frank Greinke fell vlcUm to a typo1raphlcai error on Monday's Saddleback board agenda. On the community college's purchase order Uat was a s:n !>9 expenditure labeled ·'Plague for Trustee Greinke." ••• A SINGLES group In Laguna Hills' Leisure World re· t1rement community Is scheduled for a cuul speaker next week. The tillc of the talk is ''Sex After Sixty." 11-year-old Child Grabbed, 2 Hunted BURLINGAME <AP) -An ll·year-old boy was abducted by lwo ma.skcd men aa he walked to school foday pollce sald. An orange-colored van pulled alongside the boy at 9:2S a.m . and two men grabbed the boy and s~ away. according to anotbtr yQbngster who witnessed the •t>- ductlon. lie ran to tell a achc>O! cl'osslng guard, who called police. ;rhe identity of the youth was w,thheld by authorities. Police Sgt. Oliver Kruttschnltt sa'd the van was localed a half· hour later abandoned In the Bur· llngamch1l~. He said an all-point.I bulletin ~as issued for a 2'Ai~on truck sl'.,Cn leaving the hlUs area at aQout the time the van was aban· tlqncd. It wru1 described as hav· ing a blue cab, white tear and 11 Three Deny Track Fraud SAN DIEGO (AP) -A man and two women have pleaded ln· noccnt to char1e1 oC defraudin1 the Agua Callente racetrac.lc foreign book or $39,000 with a sophisticated acbeme lnvol'llnl rad 10 broadcasts of race results. The threla indicted by tht San Die10 County Grand Jury are Ann Davis, 40; Ebbra Hullaby, 22, and Warren Jerald Heat.on, 44. all orSah Dleeo. The grand jury also indicted two other San Dttao men ancl Miguel Rodrique• of TtJYana, who was flred at Calltnte after allegedly movtns hle-olook kok two minutes \0 take la to bets f(om one or th(j men. A person' was stationed at Saota ArUta to transmit race reeuJt.s to a rented office In Arcadia, prosecutors s id. O"ANGI COAl'f st DAILY PH.OT red arrow on the aldo readln1 "San Jose-San Rafael." KtuUaobnltt aald tbe truck was first rQOrt.ed u belna a rent.al vehicle. but. that cou'dn't be verified. "There is no clear motive," Kruttscbmnilt said, addin.a he was unawpe ot any ransom de- mand. A ground and helicopter search was launched by police, the San Ma Leo Count.y sbenff'I depart• ment and CallCornla Hlghway Patrol. The CHP officer aald the three victims were obviously killed on impact. He ldenUCled Border as · driver otthe car. However, the officer said, it is believed the U1ht weighl 1porty car belonged Co Mias MUler and the journey from San Clement' to about three miles Into Riverside County a1ona Orte1a Hi&hway wu a trial nan for her now car. Rae'a two and one·halr day meanderings along Orte1a Hi&hway didn't end until ahortly before 10 a.m. today wbeo a Hi1bway Patrol otficer radloed for an ambulance alter flndih• Ute YoWll man "alouched a1alnat a boulder a short dlatance from theroadwv." Thi• waa tbe second auto trJ1edy for the Rea family ln·•lx we•ka. On Oct. 1, 18-year-old Rolland Joseph Rea was ~rlttcally tn- jdred wben he wu th'°wn front a car near San Clemente Htth. Sc)lOol. , Tbe yowlltl' l\ta bOy nmalna at Mlaalon Community Hoapital in Mtasion Viejo, where h• wu reported in stable condltlon to- day. By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of•Mlrll'llMllMf A move \0 cet two of t.bf' def en· dantl tn the Bovu munter CIM lranaferred frorn Oran11 County Jail to the custody of the federal marshal was denied Thursday by Harbor JudJcial Dist.riot. Court Judge Selim Franklin. The Judge said Raymond Steven kescoe, 28 and Anthofty Marone, Jr .. 2awoutd have to re- m aln In the county facility. According to Judge Franklin, a spokesman for th• federal marshal told him that, lf the marshal took custody of the two men. their whereabouts would not be revealed and the m arsbaJ "ould take the responsibility ot gcll1DI them to court when neceanry. "I fell lt wouJd ba Jnap• proprlate," the judge sald lo an interview today. "It would be something like losing them." Attorneys for the two men made the motion Tuesday, noting that their clients, who allegedly have ties to organized crime on the east coast, have been held in what amount.s to solitary confine- ment in the county jail. That confinement wu request· ed by the two men, Judie Franklin saJd, because they fear for their lives. . Reaco and Marone, alon1 wlth another delendant In the cue, Jerry Pet.er Fiori, all of Hunt· in(ton Beach, were relocated to Orance County under uaumed name1 by tho federal marabaJ. They are accused ot 1unntni down Stephen John Bovan, 38, ol Fountain Valley on Oct. 22 out· side the El Ranchtto restaurant in Newport Beach. Their relocation from the east coaat wu made poaalble under tho federal Wltneu Protect.loo Pro1ram used to protect wit· nesaea and their f amlUes after testimony a1aln1t or1anlaed crime naurea. Meanwhile, Judie Franklin said he ex~t.s the detendantl and their allorneys to return to his court Tuesday. A preUmlnary hearing was aet for that Ume, but Indictment.a handed down by the county Grand Jury on Thursday may lead to that hearln1 bein1 can· celed. * * * F,...PageAJ BOVAN ••• Still only partially filled, Lake Mission Viejo offers a peaceful view. The 125-acre lake will eventually be filled with brackish water from a basin beneath San Juao Capistrano. But first, man must finish the $4 million, 11-mile pipeline and pumping system needed to carry the water into the man-made Jake. Fro81PaffeAJ GUILTY ••• dynamite beyond a shadow or doubt." Art Hanes Jr., the derenae at· torney, said the state'• case wu purely circumstantial. · 'll 's t.he same old sluft that iot Bob Chambliss in this court 14 years ago and acqulUed, ''Hanes told the Jury. Chambliss was arrested Ocl 9, 1963, on a cl\ar1e of poasessk>n '1 dynamite. Court records show he was tried and focwd tnnocut. The Sixteenth Strett Baptist Church case waa reopened lo 1971 when the FBt asreed to cooperate ln the protecut.lon. Baxley aald the atate wu not contending that Chambliss was the only one who had anythlng to do with lhe Sept. lS, 1963 ex· plosion. He told reponers after the trtal that Chatnbllu was the ringleader of a eroup of men who com mitt.eel the ~ime. "Why l.t Cbamblias th• anl.)t one here?" Baxley asked. "'Because in Alabama we try them one at a Ume. \'ou\oe tot to start somewher4." ,.,..,. p_,,. Al SADAT ••• In lsmallia, E1ypt1 Sadat prayed for peace wlt.hln 12 mi1et of Israeli front Unea. ''God 10 with you," the ccn· gre1ation chanted ip a moequ~ on the bank Of th• Su11 Canal. The lstaell eovernment an· nounoed that Sada\'I lUnerary will lncludt a vl•lt to tbe Ch\ll'Ob · of the Hol)f 8-p\debtr. U-. trldl· tional 1lteof Chriat11 tomb, ud a tour of Yad Vuhem. tba national monument. to YleUrn1 of~ Nut holocaust. Sadat will vialt the clNtcb Sutt• day a.f\et wortbfpptns at t.be Al AqH mosque, Eut Jir\a,...m '• hallowed Mcalem lltttnt a few hundred yardl frotrl the ebW"Cb.· The El)'PtfaA leader'• culde at Yad Va&hern -.m be Pdm• Mtnlltel' Menuem Beffn. .. Historian Hits 6laim . To 6aniil U.S. claJmt to the Panama Canal are based on illeot treaties that woetd not be ;ec.~ ognile4, in any "WOrld court, a UC Irvine historian ot Pan- American affairs said Thursday. Jaime E. Bodrlsuez, an I'S· soclate ptofe!sor, sald U.S. in· volvement In Panama ts a .. tangled end sordid hfsto11" founded ln a rebelllon financed by the American administration of President Theodore Roosevelt. Rodrlauei spoke at a Unfversl· ty Club forum of fellow faculty members at ucr.. . Rodriguez sa1d' the origlna1 treaty to build the Panama Canal was made with a provisional aov· ernment or the oew Panama, a province or Colombra which separated from the mother coun· try in 1IDa. Because no established 1ov· "' e rn m eht was in ~owe 1 Rodrtiru r '&aid, tl1• q . technic .. ly should bave bMft ·' able to make a tNaty lbr the building an~ operation or the canal. r Also, Rodril\IU eotttebded, the original1reatt pro.,itded for lease of the land to ttie U .s. "in perpetuit,y"~orev~r--a condJ. lion 11 ltcwe not recoplaed In In· ternatiOflal la\\t. "This. treaty," be declared1 "as I Understand intunatlonu laV1, w"'notl•i-'-·h . Bee au•. of .tbat. ;&oclrtpH said, the beHel of some Ameflcam «f.dcl"dinc .,qm• U.$. seoe.to1' DOW ,debat.lnc , a new tr~aty lQ return coritrol of ~ Canal ?Aaeto P~ma> that "WQ bough\ St, we ~tit, we own lt, 11 ls based on mi&lnfQrmatton. The bi11torlan said no ''giveaway" would be involved in a plan to cede control. 'l'b• A auric an lin·••t~eat in Panama. be arped1.)a• be. mor• &ban-retunaed UU"oqh the years ot U.S • .operation of tbe canal. ' · .. E'reMP1tgeAJ PAY ••• cordance with the law when the district grows. , There wa.s no d!acussion of the chan,e when it was approved. Howovor, ll was opposed by Truatees Loa Youn1 and William Kohler, both of whom had voled against compensation when it was !int approved ;n July. Both Mrs. Youna and Henry, who voted in favor of lhe chance alone with Carole Ne~tadt and Mary Phillips, said they don't know why there ~as QQ dla- cussloll an the chanae. "l don't have anytblna to say about It because I'm .not tn SUJ>· port of lt. I never have been," . said Mrs. YoW\f. Sbe added U.at the other trustees know how she feels about the issue. MANDATE •• pressed qreernent wlth t.htpair, Mra. Youn1 asked what "worst tflhlt'' -woutd bappen if they re· jected thepollcy, "Your employep would not have ~t. ln your cornrnllh'.lent," said Superlntendent 'IUchard Welte. Havlnlt beard that, ttuste" ~ed the meuur. ob a 3· l\'ote. ~ al.lo cast a split vote OD a poUoy allowlni n~n· ta lives of the Saddlebadt Vllley • Ed1.1cator1 AJf;oclatlon <SVEA> to reruae additional cluUq at their 1choola. 1'b1a, too, bad been promlaed teachera during n~goUaUons. Trustees Ko)ller and ~e Henry obj~ted to this measure. ALSO wanE TO THE OPFICE of the Con.sumer Ad- vocate, Qvil Aeronautics Board, WuhinltAJo, D.C. 20248 and ol,ltl.l.ne the complaint. It will live ualy11a and, If neee••U'Y· ask the airline for a exptanatloo. L{ke other common carrlen, alr carrlert do not euaraatee their operatlna acbedutes, the CAB aaya. "Generally 1pealdn1," lt says, "alr carrier tlmetablet ar. dnlaned to 1bow the Umes at wblcb scbeduled &lrcraft ar:· rtvaIS anid departurel can be expected to ocew wt~ 1~ per-: cent retului~... • · Jn tn ediUoe of .. AJr Travelers· ~ly )U.lbta;• to be rt· • teued IOOll, the CAB p~vide1 a Uatins of servicet. Amons the bt&blis.hta: -MEALS. TUY OB NOi' GENERALLY considered part of the fare; therefore, no retund la due it the meal lan't satlalactoryori1n't1 ned. _ ·-:....11ote1 room and car rental services. While the canier may provide sucb H:r'Vlces, lt does not assume lJabWty it the car ia unsatiaf.etory or the room WUtt'Callable. -Srnoldna. The CAB bu ordered carrier&to adopt p~ cldure1 to mak9 lute that people who request seats in the no.1moldn& HCt1aD will be accom~~ted. -PAD SVllllAUES. DOMESTIC AD carrion are required to provide summaries (free at Uctet cOUJltenl) ot normal and discount fares available for snaJor cities. -P'are changes. The CAB ii conslderiQC anowin. pasaeng.ers to use previously p~u«l tickets ~r a fare increase. -Denied boarding compensation. The board also la , conaldering a ~al to chanie the ellclbWb' reqw~· menta 8Dd the of compensation due to P8IJleD,lert de· nled •eats for which the)' have coaftrmed resenAU&:m.a. Air , carrten muat Ofter a fpeclfted amount of eompematloa. Thll doel Dot~lyto~anddwterOI.,...: J;uper savings on pport shirts for men 5.99 RE0.7.99 , long sleeve sport shirts for jeans or slacks l .. wear under sweaters or sport coats. t;hoose from a wide selection of col-'. ·. brful plaids, solids and chambrays tn one or two-pocket styling. ~achine washable and dryable '00% cotton, 100% polyes- ter Qr polyester I cotton blends. Sizes S-M-L-XL. REG. 4.99 EA. 2 FOR•s 4.19EA. Bold, colorful plaids with Jong aleevea, chest pocket. Wash- able pre-shrunk 100% cotton flannel. .tlli.l~~n Sizes 8 to 18. women's knit tops -3 styles Turtlenecks and cowl necks in REG. ta Ii $9 solids or cowl neck with turtle-5 99 neck inset. Acrylic knit or cotton • blend. Junior sizes S-M-L. & 6 99 • girls' turtleneck tees Versatile, comfortable tops in solid colors. Easy-care polyester I cotton knits. Sizes 4-6X, reg. 3.49 •••••• 2.97 REG.M 3.47 SfzH7·14 boys' warm quilted nylon jackets Down-look style with Dacron• II polyesterfiberfill and 100% rip- atop nylon shell. Ea1y-cafe. Sizes S-M·L·XL REG.22.99 19.91 entire stock of 10Kand 14K · goli:l- jewelry· 1/3 off· Reg. 18.97 to •132 SALE 12JS9TO 87.99 Exquisltefy designed ringe, pendants, chains I~~~ ...,c,.._---~·......... and earringa In au gokt, or gold With diamondt and other precfous and aemi-preciou1 atones. Shown, Juat a f8W from our apatkling colleotlon. Fine Jewelry Dept. salel entire stock of •10 vinyl handbags 8.99 RE0:.10 •· hooded leather·look coat& RE0.19.99 14.99 Single breasted, tie belt atyte with lkfe and top pockets. PotyVinyl chloride, nyton.lined. Lug- gage color. Sizes 6to13. Coat Department • Full cut for better flt. lflOft sleeve lkhMei In space~ and IOlld CQlorl. f>leln or bodytintt atyflng In 100% acryllc knit; llght .-.d Clark colorl. Sfiee S·M·L. · Machine~; Jn. ltnlctoflength, 100% nytonahelfe-With poly- eater fiberflU; or 100% ICfytlc pile with quilt lining.