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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1977-12-14 - Orange Coast Pilotl I I osta e Seventh Bovan Suspect Bis~overed in Hiding II . II II • • • • College T~ain, Couch Die in·Crash Strangler l'ictina? Eleventh Nude BQdy Foun~ ........ LOS ANGELES (AP) -A young woman whose nude body was round today in a bJlllide neighborhood overlooking downtown Los Angeles appears to be the 11th victim of the Hlllside Strangler, poUcesaid. 'Significa~' Rain/ allrJJue {n North State By The Associated Press A moist westerly flow aloft and a series of Pacific frontal systems were expected to bring "significant" rainfall lo Northern California and the San Francisco Bay area late today. The storms continued to move east across the state after droP· Plol 2.11 inc;hes of rain oa 'Cres· cent. City Tyeaday. E\are~a~ ~'helter Cove and Mount Shdta City each Oleu~ted ~re than half an inch. • ' Rain alao fell lrt \Jkiah, Jted Bluff,• Reddin&' and Arcata The storm wne was expected to inch southward lnt.o Centr.al C1'lifomia by Thursday at the latest. "It's looldoi helter than ll bas for a long QIJle.," aaid meteorologist Arthur Gustaflon of the l'la~ w .. tbef servtce forecacms t-=nttr in RedwQOd Clty •• , . ,. Coast • 'Thil fits all the prev1oua e•idencethat we''fe bad before. It appears th.is may be the 11th vtc· ' tim of the Hillalde Strangler," said police Lt. Dan Cooke. But he said ll was impossible yet to say whether the unlden· tified young woman, In her early 20s. had been strangled. Police have linked the stran- gling m11rders of 10 young women in nine weeks !\II the bodies were found in hilly ar 1s in northern or northeastern sections of Los Angeles and its suburbs. An un1denUlied man found the most recent body under a bush along Alvarado Street in a hillside residential area just a few miles from where several of the other Hillside Strangler victims have been dumped. A coalition of feminist groups held a memorial service at the steps or City Hall on Tuesday f9r victims of the Strangler and fbr women who have been rat>ed or beaten. The women staglng tbe z.ne~ortal rites woN rtd capes to symbolize their rage, velJed their faces and gave lttatlstics on p}\)'alcally and texually abused women. They chanted, "Women flgbiback!" Jo,n Robina, of the Rape Crlsb Hotllt\~. said one ottbe coalition'• demafldl la that public school.I of· fer self ~ense training a'S part of the resular physical educaUon currlculqmat all levels. The C)c)alition alto l• dtmaodina that. telephone nusnbua of rape crHl.I .llotliaaaiplaced in a speclll1 ein.er1 y Ustlnt tn ulepbonedl es. Councllwoman 'Pat Russel111id the City Council was sup)IOrtlni the demands Where P<>Jsible and waa forming •n emergel\CY tbelter for rape victims. CoUn· cilwoman Joy Picus added that defense classes for City Hall employees had beaun. .• (SeeS'l'RANGLE, Page AZ> ;-.,1 Before Tragedy Hit THIS WAS UNIVERSITY OF EVANSVIL\.E, INDIANA, BASKETBALL TEAM Terror-filled Hours NB Woman Held H0'$tiig.e by Bandit A Newport Helghta woman was held ht her home for a ternn:.fiUed tbree and a halt hours Tuesday by a knife--..iield.inl" bandit who told ti•r be di be~ sought \>Y polict formuts1er. Pollce said EvelYJt Patriela Schaffer, fJ7, of 328 l:l Moden._ Ave. wp unharmed in the Incl· dent. Tw.,r her trtends were also held by Ille bandit for a aborter time. Mra. Seb~er tota police her or· deal 4tai1id at 10:30 a.m. wbile 1be WM WQl'kh\i OD Chrlst)bas decoraUons f orher front door. She sald she had gone into her kitchen to get some decorations, leavlnc ~ door open, when she was pabbed from behind and ~ knlfewu put to her throat. Accord1n1 to police reportf, Mrs. Schaffer waa marched into her spare ~m where her U · saUant tied her with nylon cord. He then ransacked her home. She 1aid he took some cash and tie found and loaded a .38-callber tevolvershe kept in the house. After that, she said, she-wds freed by tbe man, who kept her in her llvinC room, talkin& and watching television. She said that1 at one point, be ordered sanawtcbel and coffee. Mrs. Schaffer told police the man told her he had tQ stay in her home until· 2 p.m. She aald he talked a lot about bis background and repeatedly told ber be was wanted for 1tabbin1 a 11\ln to death. · · At about 1:20 p.m., two of Mn. Schaffer'• friends arrived and were surprtaed by tile man. BettY Jo Eae, 4'7, of 369 Flower St .• Costa MetL and CJrol l\Qq, <Seenaaoa, ••••A.%> Air Crash Victims Identified EV ANSVJLl.E, lpd. (A}>) The 27 passeogers, ldeptlfif:d by Indiana Stalt PoUce, killed wMn a DC3 carrying the University ot Evannllle basketball team ctashe4$Tuesdaynleht: 1. aoo w~a..c~ Newllurth. ln«I. 2. Warnn Altlllft, 11, '""""*"• Ooldtooro, H.C. J. 'l•Y ~••· 1' "'"""'-• Muneter, Ind. 4. Mike Ol!'f, 1', f~n, llclofado. 111. S. Kr•IO ~fl, ... f'""'"-1, Ci:lnchwYll. •·Mike~. 1t, f""1WNll, Terre H.ute, llld. 7.KevlnKlnplClll,21,Mnltr,l!lderedo,IM. I. 8MN!I LNla,. 11, .....,..,_, Dudley, N.C. '·Stew Miiier, IO,Jlllllot, HewAl'*lr.1 .... 10. ICeltll Moo11, IO,~. Ketlerint. Ofllo. 11.Mat119'eot•, 1', f~ l~POllt. 12. o,... Smllfl, , .. ''"""'*" W.tl ........... Ill. II. aryM T~! 10, Junior, Tell CllY, l1t4. '•· ,I.tin •• WISfllfltlOD, 21, Hl!lor, Ill• cllt~ls. lS. Te11yWklllUm, tt,tenlcw, Je~YIOt, Ind. "· °'99 ....... "·"""~ ......... w,avaMv1111t. "· ... ~ IU!Mtle llUllflat !NMllf'. ave1111v111e. ti. Ch•rlt~ Slllu, 11111ver~1tr c.ittl'Oller, Rv_,,llle. It. Marv ...... 11111,,.,..ty rldle ~. av1Mvll1t. IO . .Hff llMerl. wmn1111• .. •". Ev•sv11 , . 21. Mark Klrk,1trlc11, teem n1111114r, ._,, ..... u.11Urt1<.-..~--.w.•-wte. n. ~ GMd. ,,......, ~ • ......_. Co. EvtM,,...._ tl o. ltulr. tlf'llM tint otflc:er, ..... ""' ~. • 2'.. IPani SmHI\, .................. ........ t7 ... ,, ......,,,....,.........,,Hat ... Jtt .,.,k.. lo .,.. ttlltrl ........ "" pltn --~!Jted .. c:.t. T, Vtrl "'*". Uw llloe. end"'""'· St-1, ~· ............ WVl<.t, 'lllc.:, ... Mo ·-.-1· ~'· Indiana Disaster Kills 29 EV ANSVU.Lg, Ind. CAP) -.- An airliner caratnc a unlveraity basketball team and ot.ben was aisbonae for only about one m,tpute be!ore il trashed, in· vea&4jatora aald today. All 29 •boaid were killed. The cruh of the chartered twin·entine DC-3 into a muddy hJllllde in dense rain and fog Tu .. da,y nilbt killed the entire 14-man Unlvenity of Evansville butetball team and its coach. In adcUUon, the tbree crew mem· tiers and 11 other people were killed. Witnesses said the plane's engin~ was &puttering and the pil~ apparently WU trying to turn back in rain and tog before the craft went down. AU 29 victims were identified, but two bodies were left at the FOAMER PLAYERS . STUNNED AT CRASH-81 scene overnight because the weather hampered recovery el· forts. Mark Moulton, the color an· nouncer ,for tbe team who wu not .on the flight, said the team had been scheduled to leave during / the arteruooo, but was delayed for' more than three hours until the plahe finally arrived to pick up the passenaers. Nalloaal TransportaUon Safe· ty Board investigator Phillip A. Hogue said the plane crashed about a a:Wlute after lt took off. The plane took off and then ap. peared momentarily on radar, turning back toward the airport, before disappearing, Hogue said. There was no emergency radio contact with the plane, he said. The wreckage, scattered over a 20·foot bluff overlooking railroad tracks near a sub· dl•iston. was still smouldering thla morning. Only the tall sec- tion reP.1finec1 intact. ••we're 1oin1 to check the weather, the quality of the aircraft and we'll also In- vestigate whether the airport sbould have been operatlnt un· der the exlating condlttons," Hogue said. The NTSB investigator said the weather at tbe time was fogy and a liJht rain wu falling, cut· ting vlaabilit.y to three-quarters of a mile. He 18id other crafts we.re laDdinl and taking oft at the (See TEAM'. Pace A.I) MERCED~ CASH TAKEN SAN DIEGO (AP)-Pollce say a thief Jimmied a spring latch and bri>ke into a S.n Dlqo auto repatrlboplutnlabi. • • • The dlacnmlnatlna tiurilar dro.e off With a Mercedes IMi1z ~rll car \'al\Md at $11,000 IDd ~!00 ln~ol:OcenH64. lr . -.. ' DAILY Pt LO r s Wedntstd•r Dec.,mt>er I 4, 1 en eac Era of Dope' Arab-Israeli P eace Vowed CAIRO, Eeypl (AP) -Israel and Eeypt began negotiations to· day with mutual vows lo work for a general Arab·lsareh peace set· tlement and an Egyptian t•x presslon of hope that the h1stonc Cairo meeting was "the dawn of a new era of hope for this region and the enUre world." Nuke Device Fired Today LAS VEGAS, Nev. CAP ) -Scientists from the Lawrence Livermore Laboratory in California successfully detonated au underground nuclear de· vice today at the Nevada Test Site about 90 miles north of here. No r adialion leakage was reported from the blast at 7:30 a.m. PST. Code -nam e d "Farallones," the test was the 12th announced of the year, and was felt slightly here. in the form of magnified ground motion on the upper noors of bigh- rise buildings. Mitch ells Face Second Movie Suit The Santa Ana City Council has decided to fale a second lawsuit against brothers Artie and James Mitchell. Obviously delighted with an Orange County Superior Court verdict that 11 movies shown at the brothers' II oner Plaza Theater were obscene, coun· cilmen voted unanimously for an action that will claim the show· ing of a further 24 obscene mov· 1es and 12 obscene previews. The decision was taken while the JUry that found obscenity in 11 films was hearing evidence in the damages phase of the trial. Attorney James Clancy, representing the city, will ask the 1ury at the conclusion of the trial to award damages totaling near· ly $500,000 to the city. That sum represents box office receipts at the theater during the two-year period in which the movies were shown. The new c ity resolution declares the Honer Plaza Theater to be a public nuisance. revokes its permit to operate and orders the city attorney to take closure action. The jury reached its verdicts in the current trtal after viewing 17 of 41 movies shown al the Honer Plaza Theater between Sept. 3, 1975, and Aprll 12, 1977. City councilmen said the new lawsuit will allege obscenity in a further 36 movies shown between April 13 and Oct. 19 of this year. Parents Face Sanity Tests LONG BEACH CAP> -A Long Beach couple who admitted hold· ing their adopted teenage daughter prisoner in a bedroom for two years have been sent to a s tate prison for 90 days of psychiatric study. Superior Court Judge El· lsworth M. Beam ortlered the commitment Tuesday for Ran· dolph and Willie Johnson, who are to return to court for sentenc- ing March 14 on charges of false imprisonment and child en· dangering. The couple pleaded guilty Oct. 11. OAANGICOAST s DAILY PILOT ~:a.~~~.~.=~=::.= ~t-1\lllntC-t•Y ...... t!ttlltl-trt -1-,, ... .,,,.y lM-'I ...... lot CIKI• -Ht_, .... ~. HV'I\~ .. alltf<MI. ''"' VtlltY lrv1•9, lt .. IMIKl ., .. ..,, M>4 ~lf .. ~"°"l~Col\I '-"-1'191-..il· U. I\ ..,..,.,_ at111rQ'1'1 -"' ""-' Tllo The chief American delegate said the United States would do its utmost lo advance the talks "to prepare the way for the Geneva Middle East peace con- ference and the uc hi evemenl of a comprehensive, just...and durable peace ... an overall settiement embodied in peace treaties." Just before the delegates met, Israeli Prime Minister Menahem Begin left for the United States to present to President Carter "suggestions connected directly with the peacemaking process" in the Middle East. Egyptian President Anwar Sadat said in an American television interview that Begin's trip was a "very important de- velopment" that showed "we are really heading in the right direc· tion." . As Begin's plane flew west, the control tower at Cairo airport transmitted a message to the peace talks. The message was signed by the prime minister and addressed to chief Israeli del· egate Eliahu Ben-Elissar. After conveying Begin's best wishes to the conference, the message added: "People every- where hope and pray that Cairo will lead to a foundation of true peace ... which is neceaaary for both Israel and her great Arab neighbors." On other diplomatic fronts: Meanwhile, Morocco's King Hassan began maneuvering for an emergency Arab summit con- ference to consider the outcome of the Cairo talks. Hassan, an early supporter of the current peace overtures, said in Marrakesh that the whole Arab world "should applaud any Arab initiative aiming at peace and at a global settlement of the Middle East problems ... We cannot and must not leave Presi· dent Sadat alone in bis battle for peace." The meeting at Mena House hotel, in the Cai ro suburb of Giza, was called by Sadat one week after his ice·breaking visit to Jerusalem last month. The conference, expected to last about two weeks and then ad· journ for the holidays, marks the first face-to-face negotiation by Arabs and Israelis in their 29 years of conflict. The other Arab states and the Palestinians were invited but refused to come. Fro• P a ge AJ STR ANGLE Self-defense classes have been in demand since the recent strangulation deaths of 10 young women believed to be the victims o f the so-called Hillside Strangler. The first of the vict\ms was found nude and strangled near Griffith Park on Oct: 18. She and most of the others found since had been sexually assaulted. The 10th victim, Lauren Rae Wagner, was found Nov. 29 in another hillside residential area on Mt. Washington. She was strangled but not raped, accord- ing to coroner's idvestlgators Who are part of the Hillside Strangler Task Force. A neighbor of Miss Wagner's was the first eyewitness to what may have been a strangler abduc- tion. The neighbor said she saw two large men escort the young woman from her car a few doors from her home. She said they acted Uke police officers, whlcb fostered theories that the strangler might be tm· personating policemen. No witnesses could be found in any oftheotherdeaths. The 10 victims ranged tn aee from 12 to 28, many of them from the Hollywood street scene where hitchhiking was the common mode of transportation. A few « the women lived in the northern suburbs near where most o£ tbe bodies have been found. :Af'WI ....... WRECKAGE OF AIRLINER CARRYING UNIVERSITY BASKETBALL TEAM MEMBERS TO DEATHS All 29 People Pert1h ••Plane Craahea Into Hlllllde a Minute ~llerTakeoff ·, ILL. 0 so I MILES t lt1dianapolts • • fe11 e Haute IN DIANA KENTU CKY .... ,,..,.... ..... SITE OF CRASH Teem Wiped Out. F rort1Page AJ TERROR· ••• 64, of 1662 Newi>ort Blvd .. Costa Mesa, were both forced to lie on the floor and were bound. Mrs. Schaffer was lied toa chair. They told police the man stayed another 40 minutes, still talking about the murder charge he said he is being sought for, and then left. Mrs. Ege wu able i. h'ee herself from ber bonds and ran next door to phone police because the Intruder had cut Mrs. Schaf· fer's telephone lines. Policeaaidhetookatotalof$223 from thethreepeople. They described him as standing between five feet, eight Inches and five feet. 11 inches tall. and weighing about 150 pounds. Mrs. Schaffer told officers be had a heavy br6wn moustache when be accosted her, but that, du ting blsstay, he shaved It off. PUC Grants ,,. New State Air Routes SAN FRANCISCO (AP> Pacific Southwest Airlines and Air California have been given permanent permission to fly bewteen Lake Tahoe and se•eral Callfotnia cities. The Public Utilities Com· mission gave the airlines lull authorization Tuesday to make the filghts. They. bad been mak· int them on an interim PUC or· der. PSA was authotlzed to l)'perate between Tahoe Valley 4lrport and Los Angeles, Hollywood· Burbank, San Diego and San Francisco. .. . Air California was gran~ permlsaloo to tty bewteen T~ and San Franci&co, San Jqte. Oakland, Sacramento and Or ante COUnty Airport. Frowa P a g e A:I > TEAM KILLE D .•. airport without problems. The Evansville Ates had won one game and loet three this season. The Aces were ftve-Ume champions o( the National Collegiate Athlet\c Association's Divis ion II baske[ball to~ma; ment. This year they moved to Di vision I play. "We had eight freshmen, all new coaches." a spokesman said . "We were just getting started." Jim Byers, the college athletic director, said classes were can· celed today and that a memorial service was being planned for to- day or Thursday. The team was to have flown t-0 Nashville, then take a bus to Murfreesboro for a bnketball game tonight witlt Mi~e Ten- nessee State University. Many of the 5,000 students on the Methodist-aCfiliated campus spent the night praying, talking quietly with friends or meditat· ing. "We c()U)dn't go to sleep," said David Mensing. an 18·year-old freshman from Peru, Ind. "You just can't take something like that to bed." The twin-engine propeller plane, chartered from National Jet Service Inc. of Indianapolis, left Dress Regional Airport here at7:20p.m. , Rick Notter. an aircraft worker at the airport who wit· naaed ihe crash, aatd tM aaw the plane ••disappear Into the fog. "About a minute and a half later I heard his engines cutting out and he went down," Notter .said. "We saw it go into the clouds. We heard a loud 'pop.' We heard Imiulte Dies ~Stabbing SUSANVILLE (AP) -A black prisoner was fatally stabbed in a racial confrontation involving 250 inmates at a state prison near here Tuesday night, prison or. ficials said. The dead man was identified as Jacob Gulley, 29, sentenced in Alameda County to 1 lo 15 years for second degree burglary. He bad been In the California Cor· re<!tfonal Center since June. an engine rev up, then we beard the crash and saw an explosion,,. said PatricJe >\lvey. a Uqensed pilot and ow.ner ef ..Metro Beechcraft Corp., a dbarter service atthaalrport. Alvey saic;J he and a companion J were amObg the first people to arrive at the crash scene. "The fuselage was intact, the left wing was ripped off," he r e· called. "Very many bodies were still in their seatbelts and many were strewn around. It was a mess -jusl a total mess. "We had four people alive. They were just strewn around. The wreckage was on fire. There was nothing we could do for the people lnside of it,·' said Alvey. The bodies were taken in a Louis"1Ue & Nashville Railroad boxcar to a temporary morgue set up in the city Community Cenler in downtown Evansville, 10 miles from the crash slte. In the room where the rows of bodies lay beneath while sheets. which is sometimes used as a basketball court, a volleyball net was pushed aside for extra space. The bodies were later taken to area funeral homes. Assistant coach Mark Sandy, 25, did not accompany the team because he was on a scouting mission at Southern ,J1Unois University in Carbondale, Ill. Cat Firukr Due $1,000 LA MESA (AP> -A re· ward of $'1,000 is being of· fered for a gray, striped cat which wandered off. The reward "represents our savings," said Shirley Ramser, adding; "I know there are people who wlll think it is silly to offer that much but that cat. Laur.a, ls our kid, our UttJe girl." The chlldlesa couple, who are itJ their aos. hired an attorney and put up re· ward posters Tueaday for Laura. a two-year-old feline which they found tn a Humane Sode~ cage at eight week! old. A NW IDIAS FOR . CHRISTMAS ;:::~':"~':t.~~.z.::~ Wt .... y 11•'"111 -......... ,_""""_ 40 Eat Worms to See Rilm. ""'"·'""" Vl<,l'rMIOtttt_Oe_ol~ l're• Poge A I SUSPECT ••• Mn. Kulik was CinaUy found by Detective Gary Black who SHrched Ute crawl apace und,er lbehome. M ra. KWik. whO Ii beln1 held ih lieu of the .,.,,000 ball ~an1~ oh .her arre•l warrant. ;Qin.a ~ Ch rlst.opl\er IUe afd • bet husband's a>ustnees P•nner and one of the alle1~ ~con,plr~w who l• also held In thectw fact~. indictments banded down in N~ vember by t.M Orariae eowi_, Ctand Jury. Ttie onlr one remal{lJoe an larae la.FedoN#Skl. Poll1?e allege Kulik. P'edorowa , lUcba~d and a fourth man, Joseph Shelton Davis Ill, all partners in the Newport Beach Investing firm, Prasadam Distributing, Ino.., hired three men to kidnap and kill Bovan. They allege that Mrs. Kulik part\clpated in the plot wbleh was inoti V atecl by rev edge for Bovan 1s alleaed kldnappins of Kulik in Au amt. The tbree men assertedly hirt?d, Anthony ••Little To0y" )\arone Jr., 23, .Raymond Steven Resco. 28, and Jerry Peter Fiori, 41, all of Huntington Beach, were arrested Oct. 26. Police claim the three cornered Bovan outside the El Ranchi to restaurant. and that Fiorl pumped nine shot& into hin'l. Resco and Marone have been fre~d from jail after posting $100.000 each. Fiori, who faces death ~ty prosecution in the case, ls held without bail. KuJlk was arrested within hours of Bovan's death in Mis- sion Viejo and charged with possesssion or more than a pound of nearly pure oriental heroin. He was later charged in the murder conspiracy and freed after post- ing a $750,000 bond. Davis was arrested Thanksgiv· ing day on the island of Bali after a federal fuaitive warrant was is· sued for his arrest and bis passport was revoked. He was returnlned to Orange County and released from jail after posting $100,000 bail. Teacher Gets Reinstated OCEANSIDE <AP> -7. PalJ) Adkin s goes back to tbe classroom Thursday, nine months after he was fired for~ fusing to fall out special carch monHorine pupO progress in readtng and math. The Commission on Professional Competence, a three.member panel which coo- duct.ed six days or hearings last July and September. ordered Adkins reinstated with foll pay. He is a fourth-grade teacher at San Luis Rey Elementary School. Adkins said the cards, now dis· continued, were prone to inac- curacy and <lid not make a valid evaluatton of a stu dent performance. "I don't think anyone doubts now that I was telUng the truth," Adkins said Monday. Identity Sought RAMONA (AP> -San Diego County ..authorities are trying to identify a man whose badly deo- coml)OSed body was found in a shallow ll'JVe. Aliens reported it Tuesdty. Today's Closing N.Y.Stoeks ~OL.. 70, NO. S.S, • SECTIONS, 48 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 1-4, 1977 . ·c TEN CENTS :1\tesa Initiative Rapped. in Courtroom.. By TOM BARLEY «•O..ly ........... Jf Costa Mesa voters go to the • pol11 March 7 to •pprove or dis· 1 approve a controversial housing project it wj)l amount to a sur- render to a "aelllah majority,'' u Orange County Superior Court judge was told today. Attorney Leonird Hat~pel, representing the Amel Develop- men l Company, told Judae Richard Hamilton that •PPtoval of the initiative would Ult cuM'ent land use laws in California "by 180 degrees." Urging judicial rejection of the March 7 rezoning measure, Hampel said such a decision can· not be delegated to" a small elec· tor ate in a small community." He predicted the use of a similar initiative act.ion to bait the construction of airport.t, off· ahore oil drilllngs and other major projecll. "We would have chaos," he told the judge. Judge Hamilton is being asked to overrule a Costa Mesa City Council decision wbicb calls lor a public vote March 7 lo determine the future of a proposed housing development in north Costa Mesa. , er ' Crashed at Sea Fog Delays Plane Hunt The search for a small airplane reported down at noon in the ocean off Scotchman's Cove was called off after 90 minutes when thick fog cul visibility. Boats dispatched to the scene from the Newport Harbor Patrol and the Newport Beach Lifeguard Department returned to the ba,t'bor when the fog rolled in just after 1 p.m. miles off the beach at 11 :45 a.m after sunbathers reported seeing a small plane crash into the water. Few detaib were immediately available, but a spokesman for the Newport Harbor Patrol said deputies dispatched to the scene two miles off the beach reported finding an owner's manual or logbook of a Cessna 150. The Amel development, it al· lowed to go tbroueh, would put 127 ain&le family homes and 639 apartment units on 46 acres of land south of South Coast Drive and North of the San Diego Freeway between Bear Street and San Leandro Lane. Judge Hamilton intends lo bear arguments from the <=tty of Costa Mesa and the North Costa Mesa Homeowners Association es late?' ln the bearing before he de- cides whether t-0 grant or reject the writ demanded by Amel. Hampel warned Judge Hamilton today that such local facUlUes as the Fairview State Hoipltal and the County Falr- ~rounda In Co.ua Mesa might be threatened if the initiative proc· ess is encouraged by the courts. This kind of thing (the in· itiatlve> can never become tho law of th1s country," he said. •'Land use must be decided by the courts and not by the selfiah majority." The homeowners association is urging that construction in the Ar~el Develop. ment area be limited to single family bome:s and that the acreage in questioe berezonedforthatpurpose. ain?; Eleventh Victim Found ... They had raced to a spot two The plane reportedly crashed into water about 240 feet deep. THIS WAS UNIVERSITY OF EVANSVILLE, aNDlANA, BASKETBALL TEAM Seventh Suspect •· C:Sptured l Bv JOANNE aEYNOLDS Ol_Delty.......... . Elsie CabJ,o KuWc. sou1bt far more tban a month on murder conspiracy charges in tbe slay- ing of Stephen John Bovan of Fountain Valley, wu arrested early today by Newport Beach police. She becomes the seventh SUS· peel jailed in t)ie case which began Oct. 22 when Bovan wu shot to dea~ outalde a Newport Beach restaurant. Sgt. D~l Youle said he and a team of lnvesUgaton found Mrs. Kulik biding under a split-level condominium in La Costa, a re. sort near Carlsbad in San Dieao County. • Her husband, Alexander. who was freed on ball after Ills earlier arrest in. the ease, wu t.ateo inlo custody at the same lime. A aPokesman for the Newport Beach lifeguard department said llf eeuard.s and Laguna Beach firemen were at the seen' at the Ume of the crash. The)' H4Ul been dlspatcbed to answer a call of a dJ vet' fn trouble. He said nettber Ufecuards bOf (bltmea "1tnu1ed the nuh. ll , •u r~ to tbtm by unlfen· tlfled biach visit.on. I 'the-people said they bad ~ watching the plane practldq aerobatic atilnts. They tola UfeJU&rds the craft bit the water at a 45-degree anale. Within an hour of the 11:45 a.m. incident, harbor patrolmen, lifeguards, divers, a Coast Guard cutter and a rescue helicopter were on the scene. A spokesman at the control tower at the Orange County Airport said they bad received no radio di.stress signals during lt!e morning. Ill. 0 50 KENTUCKY I MILES I A"WI,..,....~ SITE OF CRASH Team Wiped Out Terror-filled Boars NB Woman Held . . Jud•e Kneeland bu aetr. the ~ "' trial for Jan. 23. lltistage by BaRilit Police s~d they bad been seek· Inc Mrs. Kulik and tbe otb• mtaain1 futlUv• in Uae cue, Joseph Fecferowskl, ni the San Diego area tor more than • month. They •ald they were Jed to the condomlnlumt by JntormaUon uacovered tn the COUflt of their lnves~~·llhd Jla• ~~ tbed~~ltd..u. Kullll'S~ ' • Police~;~ KUllJt h~~"'iiii~ib"d ....... the r9'1~ imldet ML ... _.... name. When Youle arid a tlam ol ol· ficen, lncludlng a patrolman from the nearby Carlabad Police . Department. arrived at the eon· domlnium, they were greet.eel by <See susncr, ••1e Ai> Newport Heights woman was held lp her bOmefor a terror-filled three afti.• half boura Tuesday by a knife·wieldba&..b-'1dlt wbO told ber he W8il belnl seug t by police for murder. She said she b8d eone into her ldt~ben to get some decorations, leaving the door open, wben she waa.1rabbe4 tJoOftl behind and a lmlf e was put to her throat. were aurprisedbythe man. Betty Jo Ege, 47, of 369 Flower St., Costa Mt!la, and Carol )loss, 64, of 1183 Newport Blvd .• Costa Mesa, were both forced to Ue on the noor and were bound. Mrs. Sclla(ferwaatiec:ltoacbair. They tolcl police tbe man stated eP..Other 40 tnlDutes, still talkina abQut the mwiter char1e be 1ald he ~ IOUlht tar, and thell Jett.~ • Mrs. 'k• waa able to ftee tiinelf ftOm her bonds and ran next door to phone police because the Intruder had cut Mn. Schaf· fer't telePhOftelliles. CSeeTERROR, Page .\2) eaTnMembers EVANSVILLE, Ind. (AP> - Tbe Ulliversity of Evansville basketball team, ltllled In a plane crash, was mourned by once· cheerful fans today. As the students 1aUiered for the memorial service, federal in· vestigators were sorting through what was left of the ancient DC-3 that was to have carried the Aces lo a game in TeMessee. Elgbt of the 14 basketball players killed were freshmen, . just months out of high school. The crash killed 29 in all, Includ- ing the coach of the team, two EYansville boosters and the crew of three. Tower cootrollets tried to warn the pilot about worsening weather, but the call reached the plane too late to avert the crash, a federal invesUeator sald this af· temoon. The Aces, with a season's rec· ord ofl-3, were en route to Mlddie Tennessee State University at FORMER PLAYERS STUNNED AT CRASH-81 Murfreesboro. Their plane had left the airport only a minute before It crashed, scattering wreckase and bodies on both sides of a ravine and down among some railroad traeka. It was a fearful night, with vis· lbility only 300 feet and three· quarter• of a mile. The "go team" of the National Transportation Safety Board, whlcb tnvest11ates and de· termlnes probable causes of such cra1bes, was more than two hours late leaving Washington beca..-e of the continuing bad weather at SV*m'fille, tn the southwestcomeroflndlana. The bodies were removed dur· ing the night in railroad boxcars -the easiest way of getting tbem out. The ill-fated DC·3, a twin· engine propeller craft chartered from National Jet Service ol Jn. dianapolis, had taken off on a (See TEAM, Page A2) J. K. Hundley Plans to Seek Assembly Seat By RAYMOND ESTRADA JR. OIU.Delly ..... S&Mf Huntington Beach Union lngh School District Trustee John K. Hundley, 35, said today he plans to run for the Republican nomination in the 73rd Assembly District. Hundley, elected to the school board last. March, is the third man to announce he will seek the Republioan nod in the West Orange County assembly district which includes Huntlneton Beach, Fountain Valley, parts of Costa Mesa and Seal Beach. Huntington Beach Planning Commi.ssiooel' Chuck Gibson ~ Costa Mesa optometrist Nolan Frizielle also have decided to try ror the seat now occupied by As· semblyman Dennis Mancera, D·HuntingtM Beach. The atate primaries will be held in June <See HUNDLEY. Page A2> ~ fromWMIN~ eeail' Hlllala Sb'alaaler Yktlm• llm been dumped. Shortly before noon a second woman's body was found 100 feet down lo a sully off Tuna Canyoo Road "1 rugged hillside terraba ne,ar Malibu, but lt was not t~ mediately known if the woman was nude. Sheriff's investigators could not say whether she bad been ~trangled or lf it appeared related to the stranaler case, although they notified the Hillside StranglerTask Force. A coalition of fe.mlnlst groups held a memorial service at the steps of City Hall on Tuesday for victims ol the st.r1D1ler and (a. women who bave been raped ot beaten. The women staalng the memorial rites wore red capes to sym boli.ze their rage, veiled their faces and gave statistics on physically and sexually abused women. They chanted, "Women fight back!" Joan Robins, of the Rape Crisis Hotline, said one of the coalition's demands is that public schools of· fer self-defensetralnlng as partof the regular physical education curriculum at all levels. The coalition also ls demanding that telephone numbers or rape crisis hotllnes be placed in a special emergency listing ill telepbonedirectoa'ies. Coast Weather Low clouds and fof throu1h Thursday mominc with variable high clouds ·Thursday alternoon. Lowa tonteht 50 to ss. Highs Thuraday SS to 70. IN818ETODAY Who COl&ld rubt 111eh o good deal °" roakhn and coJc9'JotOf'a1 Too '""'• it .,.,,... JM ft "'°' JUlt 0 Jmdti. mUHon-dollar /raud. See P• A7. l I '. DAILY PILOT C Wild E',.._PageAJ USPECT ••. Kulik •bo allqedly denied his wlfewaatbere. Youlo aaid they searched the three noon of lhe hillside home w1tbout1ucceas. Mra. KUlik was finally round by Detective Gary Black who Harcbed the crawl apace under~ the home. Mrs. Kulik, who is being held in lieu ot the $500,000 ball carried on her arrest warrant, joins Roy Christopher Richard, her husband'• bualnesa partner and one of the alleged co-conspirators who is also held ln the city facility indictments handed down In NO: vember by the Orange County Grand Jury. · The only one remaining at large is Fedorowski. Police allege Kulik, Fedorowski, Richard and a fourth man, Joseph Shelton Davis Ill, all partners in the Newport Beach investing firm, Pra~a_dam Distributing, Inc.,. hired three men to kidnap and kilf Bovan. They allege that Mrs. Kulik participated in the plot which was motivated by revenge for Bovan's alleged ludnappmg of Kulik in· August. . The three men assertedly hired. Anthony "Little Tony" Marone Jr., 2.1, Raymond Steven Resco, 28, and Jerry Peter Fiori 41, all of Huntington Beach, wer~ arrested Oct. 26. Police claim the three cornered Bovan outside the El Hanchito restaurant and that Fiori pumped nme shots into him. Resco and Marone have been rreed from jail after posting Sl00,000 each. Fiori, who faces death penalty prosecution in the case, is held without bail. Kulik was arrested within hours of Bovan's death in Mis- sion V1eJo and charged with posscsssion of more than a pound of nearly pure oriental heroin. He was later charged in the murder conspiracy and freed after post· mg a $750,000 bond. Davis was arrested Thanksgiv· mg day on the island of Ball after :i fcdernJ fugitive warrant was IS· sued for his arrest and his passport was revoked. He was returnined lo Orange County and released from Jail after posting s100,ooo bail. ,• Nuke Device Fired Today LAS VEGAS, Nev. CAP) -Scientists from the Lawrence Livermore Laboratory ih Callfemla successfully detonated an underground nuclear de- vice today at the Nevada Test Site about 90 miles north of here. No radiation leakage was reported from the blast at 7:30 a.m. PST. Code-na med ''Farallones," the test was the 12th announced of the year, and was felt slightly here, in the form of magnified ground motion on the upper floors of high. rise buildings. Mesan Sued In ~og Attack A Costa Mesa woman who claims her 12-year-old son was bitten on the hands, throat and race by a dog while visiting a neighbor's home has sued lhe neighbor for damages to be as- sessed by a trial court. Named as defendant in the Orange County Superior Court lawsuit filed by Minnie Y. Childs, 3103 Samoa Plac~. is Gordon Grovier, 3098Samoa Place. The action alleges that Grovler's boxer dog attacked Thomas Leonatd Childs, 12, last April 20 while he was visiting lhe Grovier home. OAANOI! COAST c DAILY PILOT ............ """ .. "'""',.,..._ Jec\o•.C.-Y VICe l'rlt'°"'\_ 0.-.. .,.._ ,,,_.,....., •. clller 11lef!Olll "· ~ ~ ....... ClllffftM,.._ ~P.IMM AHl•lefttlN .... lfttldlltn Street Scene ,.,. . .,..,... Actress Faye Dunaway approaches the corner of Houston Street and West Broadway in New York while filming a new movie called ''Eyes," in which she plays a photographer. It's her first picture since winning the Oscar in "Network." TO SEEK GOP NOD Assembly Hopeful Hundley E'rom Page 1\1 HUNDLEY. • with a November election to follow. Hundley, owner of a private counseling firm in Cerritos. rapped the incumbent as- semblyman for what he calls "a waste of taxpayers' money" for a recent survey on the death' penalty. "The people already voted for the death penalty in this state," said Hundley. ''This survey was one of the biggesst scams I've ever heard of." Mangers has previously in· dicated he will seek a second term In the state assembly. Hundley, 9372 Cloudhaven Drive. Huntington Beach, said he was also incensed when Mangers backed a bill which would allow people to receive new birth certificates if they undergo sex change operations. Owner and president of the firm called A Belter Citizen Foundation, Hundley said he bolds "conservative viewpoints on law" and feels the tax dollar "is being wasted." Hundley's firm, with offices in Irvine, Cerritos and San Diel(o, provides rehabilitation pro· grams, traffic schools and some drug abuse counseling for offen· ders referred through courts and other agencies. Tbe newest or the five Hunt- ington Beach Union High School District trustees, Hundley was narrowly defeated ln a No- vember, 1976 apedal election by Trustee Doris Allen. Hundley ran for the school board atain and won. Hundley becomes the second hlah school board member to seek h\&her oltlce this year. Board President Don MacAlllster plan11 to seek a Hunt· tn1ton Beach City Council aoat in April. Han1era and current City Councllman Ron Shenkman, both foraier HuntlriataD Beach Union Hl1b ScbOOl • blatrlat truatMll, were CIQ ~ acbool board just bdore movtn• to theft present • IOY•mmental po1tt. E'ro• Page Al TEAM ••• runway heading south, banked sharply left and had completed about a 270-degree tum when it crashed about a quarter-mile from Dress Regional Airport. ''It probably was headed in a direction 1 can't account for at this ti me," said Philip Hogue. a member of the five-man National Transportaion Safety Board. A grim scene faced in- vestigators. The plane's tall, its American flag and number N51071 un- scarred. jutted a\ the horizon. A propeller was 200~t away. The embankment on ch side of the railroad tracks w • littered with electric-blue seats. some of them sltll with their belts buckled. "Every place there was a seat, there was a body." said one young man who helped Qring out the mangled and torn bodies Tuesday night. A brown suitcase. still locked, was standing upright in a mud puddle. A single brown shoe, its laces tied, was nearby. Two first- aid boxes, one with its contents spilled and the other still closed. also were there. Two bodies still were in the wreckage. The bodies were removed to various funeral homes Wednes· day after lying in a makeshift morgue at the downtown Com- munity Center, 10 miles from the crash site. Two pathologists from the Civil Aeronautics Medical Institute in Oklahoma City were to conduct autopsies or the pilot and co·pilot. There was no "black box" flight recorder in the plane. Hearing Set lnCM Death A man charged with Dec. 2 ri· ne killing or a farm worker In Costa Mesa was arraigned in Harbor Judicial District Court Tuesday. A preliminary hearine was set for Dec. 21 for Santos Aguilar Rial, 24, of Mexico. He remains in Orange County Jail in lieu of $250,000 bond. Rial ls charged with the shoot· ing death of fellow farm worker Adam Aguilar, 34, following a fight. A second man detained for questioning in the case, Fran- cisco Zarate Abundis, wu re- leased upon further investiga- tion, police said. Crippled Jet :lands Safely A Hultbes AJrwest DC9 airer.it with 48 J>eople aboard landed safely at Oranae County Airport this mornln& after an apparent hydraulics ft\aUuncUon caused landtn1 sear bay doors to stick In an open po1ltlcll\. Airport craeh crew• were hustled coto the runway to 1tand by H • Fllctt! 187 ft'iom Pbotnlx touched csown. A lire 1taUoo dlapatcllef at the •lrport uJd the Hus_bei "onot mualed••mootblandlnf. Noln- Jurt ... werotlPOi'ted. By GARY GRANVILLE °' .. o.ffy "'61141\llft County Counsel Adrian Kuyper told Orange County supervisors Wednesday that any political campaian reform ordinance they might adopt would create "enforcement problems" In 1978 if it contalna a limit on campaign contributions. Kuyper told supervisoNi that candidates who have already stoked their campaign coffen with contributions exceeding proposed contribution limit.I' can- SQ tar .. the only candidates known to have accepted cam· pal1n donations exceedin.1 vartoua propolied contdbuUons limJta~ at• tile Ulreo county au1 pen'Jtoia who •W aeet ro-e ection 1n 1978. A cwtallmt1.11t on contributions cannot be made re1.roactive to in· elude doMti• already received by candJdates, Kuyper aald. And, he added, candidate. who have not )'el atoktd their totters "wut argue diacrirnlnatary en- forcement of the llmJtaUon pro- vi11ion1." • Th.,1 will cont8nd "~at certain of their ~eote ltav• _.,unfair advant11e because they have already received, before the ef· fective da\e or the ordinance, contribuUoos tn exctsa. of the linutationa." * * * * * * Irvine Ordlnanee ·'Therefore.·• Kuyper con- tinued. "we believe that making such contribution limitations ef- fective for the 1978 elections may create enforcement problems." $250 Limit Voted On Contributions ' Should their legal counsel's words be heeded by the five coun- ty supervisors, it would mean that political reform in Orange County, if it is to come, will not come in time for next year'a elec- tions. By PIOL ROSMARIN Of .. CH11, Plletllett No person may contribute more than $250 to a candidate for elective office in Irvine, nor in TONIGRI' COAST COMMUNITY COLLEGE BOARD -Reiular meeting·. 1370 Adams, 8 p.m. OCC CELEBRITY SERIES - Richard Armour. Auditorium, 8 p.m. SOUTH COAST REPERTORY THEATER -"Knights or the White Magnolia," Tuesday. Sunday through Dec.18. 8 p.m. THURSDAY, DEC.15 FESTIVAL OF CHRISTMAS -Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse, Community Recreation Center, Dec. 15·17, 8 p.m. Dec. 18, 2:30 p.m. OCC LECTURE -"Slim Chance in a Fat World," Women'sCenter, 7 p.m. Boys Planning Pizza Night The Harbor Area Boys Club branch in Costa Mesa bas des- ignated Thursday as ''Pizza Night" for all local residents. Boys Club members will be serving up whole pizzas for $3 <with salads) from 5:30 to 7:30 p .m. at their branch at 2131 Tustin Ave .• Costa Mesa. Half or- ders ($1.50) and soft drinks also will be available. Proceeds will go to the Harbor Area Boys Club. 1''or more in· formation call 642-8372. Hear~· -Delayed LOS NGELES (AP> - Superio Court Judge Paul Egly has postponed Los Angeles city school desegregation heariqs until Jan. 4, granting the delay over the objections oC school board attorneys. support ot a municipal ballot me•aure, under a law adopted T\lftday by the City Council. The COUD(\il voted 4·1 to limit call\paJgn contr~ions "to in· sure that the amount contrlJ>uted by any person does not material- ly influence the outcome or any election." The ordinance was adopted as an urgenry measure and takes effect immediately. Four votes were needed to make the new law affect 'current campaigns for March councllelecUons. Councilman lobn Burton voted no, "with rehab," and Coun- cilwoman GabrieJle Pryor voted yes. "with reluctance." She pre· !erred tbat all private contribu- tions be banned and that cam- paigns be financed with public money. Council members David Sills and Bill Vardoulis, who pro·· posed lhe ordinance, and Mary Ann Gaido, also voted approval. The new ordinance also re- quires an addltional reporting period ol campaJgn disclosures, other than those already re- quired by the 1974 Political Reform Act. Candidates must file state· ments detailing contributions and expenditttres through mid· night of the Wednesday Im- mediately preceding the elec· tion. Such statements would be filed by noon the Friday before elecUon day. The campaign contribution limit or $250 will be..iocreased or decreased annually hued on cost of llviJ11 fluct\.laUons. The Um\t. also w\Jl be increased with boosts in the number of registered Irvine vqters, by a penny per voter. For every 100 more eligible voters, the limit would be raised by a dollar. Burton accusec;I the council of "leaping" into campaign reform, even before the worth of the 1974 act which be said was dubious was proved. ''You 're yleld41g to the pseudo- r,opulist fervor." Burton said, 'in generating restrictive cam- paign laws," Siils argued that a contribuUon limit would assur~ that "once elected. nobody ls beholden to• one select group." Burton countered that the or. dlnance presumes that can- didates can be boucht for pit- tances. Limitations on indivjdual cam- paign contributions h&ve been a cornerstone of various proPOSed r eform ordinances Including those suggested by the 1976-77 county Grand Jury, a reform group called TIN CUP and the county Citizen's Direction Find· ing Commission. ..... Those organizations and others have argued that a lid needs to be placed on the amount individuals can donate to candidate cam- palens to avoid the appearance that heavy donors have undue in· ftuence on aovemmentdecisions. In a hefty memo sent to supervisors Wednesday after- noon, Kun>er said there is reason to believe tbat "contribution limitations of $500 or $25() per election or per calendar year would probably be held to be valid" by the courts. However, Kuyper did not dis- m lss the possibilfty that a limit in any form "might be held if judicially challenged, to be '\lo· constituUonal. • • The Board ot Supervisors• legal counselor also said he doubted if the board can transfer any of its powers to a fair political campaign practices commission. E'ront Page Al TERROR ••• Police said betook a totalof$223 from the three people. They described him as standinf between five feet, eight inches and five feet, 11 inches tall and weighinl( about 150 pounds. Mrs. Schaffer told officets he had a heavy brown moustache when he accosted her, but that during hlsst.ay, he shaved it off. ' Sailor Killed SAN DIEGO <AP) -The body of a 2l·year-0ld sailor bas been recovered after his car crashed over a quay wall Tuesday and plun1ed lnto San Diego Harbor. The Navy delayed announcing his name unUl relatives coUld be told. A FIW IDEAS FOi CHllSTMAS T tt\""5 RoCtits Wi1son-Bancroft-61Yis Princ•-Ounlop-Yonex Voley Balt-Socc. W1 Bo&ketbal1--Foorbolls BoHbalt Racquet Bola & lcicqutta Hondbala & C'Aove1 Badminton Rocbt1 ShutttlcOcb Tennl1W1 Dort Boards & Darts Swim.fins BarWSetl Dumbell Sita oynaa.. Adidas 'T' SWrtt Skat• ... laMbalMltts Runftlng filita ..iQ = ~ .. Af'w1....-. REPORTER LOUIS GONZALEZ WITH HARD-WON STORY He Risked Life in Journey With Illegal Allens 'Wet' Terror Reporter Poses as Alien OAKLAND CAP> Seeking a first-hand look at illegal aliens. reporter Louie Gonzalez donned grubby work clothes and traveled the underground railroad from deep Mexico to the California border. He got some story. Jn four days, the 27-year-old journalist says he experienced bigotry, felt a knife's cutting blade and stared into the twin bar· rels or a band1l 's shotgun HE SAYS SOME O•' TllE AUTUMN odyssey's most terrify. ing moments still haunt him. In a recurring dream, a robber who held a shotJ:un to Cionzalez's head -but did not fire instead pulls the triggl•r '.'lt"s ml'sst•d up my mind." Gonzalez said Tuesday in an in ter\'l<'W. "I havt' rcl'urring nightmares, the whole sho~." lie said his JOUrnl•y has also greatly altered his perception of the fli~ht and pli~ht oC 1llcgul aliens from Mexico. "Th,•y have been t•haracterized as a class of people spread mg like a cancer across th<.• country, depleting the resources of America." Gonz<sl<.'1. wrote al the beginning of his six-part series publis ht'<l 111 lhl' Oakland Tribune "THEY ARE KNOWN BY MANY names -wets wetbacks majados, 1leg~lci:., undocumented workers and illegal0allens. But no matter what you cull them. they are victims or hardship, brutality, cxplo1tut1on and violence, as they expend every ounce of their energy in r<>actun~ for something better ... Gon1alc1.'s onginal plan was to dump all identifi<:allon papers, fly to Guadah1Jara. take a ratWng 54-hour buS' ride to 1'1· ju an a, JOIO with other illegals. cross Into California and eventual· ly sneak north to Oak I and But he never made his illegal crossing, stopping Instead at a secluded mountain ~hac·k a short walk from a secret border entry point The next day h<' crossed at a legal U.S. immigration check· point lll'arSan Ysidro "I llt\DSl-:F.N MORE THAN enough," Gonzalez recalled. Gonznle1 s111d he ncv<'r slept during his journey for fear of be· mg robbed or the few hundred dollars he bad taken lo pay alien smugl(lers. It wu~ a trip marked by four key exJ)4!riences : G<>lll11J1: orr the bus in Tijuana's roughest section, Gonzalez was st al>bt.'<1 in th<' side by a teenager. The attacker slashed at him three more times before Gonzalez grabbed his •rm. He hearrl itsnnp twice. ' ' ·'There was no doubt 1n my mind that he intended to kill me for what I had. It made no difference to him what that was," wrote Gonzalez. who continued on without letting his "fellow" ii· le~ a Is known he had been weakened by his wounds. ' / TREKKING T HROUGH RUGGt:D canyons toward the bordt•r. the group or nbout 70 illegals were told by their guide they mus t not makl• a sound But a 7-year-old boy Gonzalez had befriended tripped and impaled himself on a thorny cactus. The· ho). rhokin~ buck tears, never made a sound -d~pite the dozens or lonJ! thorns protruding from his chest. "I don't know 1f he lived." Gomalei sQa; "He t.<U tn b~ shape " · Dur1n1 the same night, a group or 10 f)andlts sneaked up on the group and robbed them of money tbey needed to pay the men who llrrongcd their border crossinC. J• · "CLICK. CLICK. THE SOUND egloded into the ea.re Jlke loud thunder." wrot~ Gonialez. "$]( !p,cbea fro" JV ead ~td the twin barrels of a sawed-off 11hotcuii.•· Genz~aJUlJ(t\ettlte bandits. • • t , -Flying back lo Oakland -stµl ~~ed in his disgui•• - Gonzaledell the sting ot bitter blgotry. / ·-. '_J.~.. ·· 1 I remember tbe diJCriminaUon of a s.n ~o ~"fYll'Ut ¥I tried to order my first meal In fouNla~ onl)A to,1$9.&aal.ecl at.a>• end of a far counter away ltom themafnstNntcu~" . . !fl,,... f it!.. : " Presley Me~tfii:>e~ To Be Sold Todii,y DAILY PILOT 1\:J DA Loses Prosecution Bid Supervisors, Co-defendants Trial Delayed By 'fl>M BARLEY Oflllto.11• ............ An appellate court has upheld Orange County Superior Cou~ Judge Pbillp E. Schwab's de· clslon to bur the District. At· torney'a Office from the proseeu- Uon or c0tmty supervisors Ralph Diedrich and Philip Anthony and two codefendants. Ambulance ·Ordinance Disputed Last week it looked like Orange County supervisors had neared the end of a year-long study aimed at tightening controls over ambulance firms operating in unincorporated areas. But Tuesday, as supervisors unanimously adopted the new ambulance ordinance, it already had run into difficulty. For one thing, Supervisor Philip Anthony contended, supervisors were remiss in agreeing lo hire un extra county employee to oversee administra- LIOn of the new regulations. Al his 1ns1stence. supervisors voted 3·2 to put off hiring that employee until they are con- vinced the new worker is needed Supervisors Thomas Riley and Halph Diednch favored hiring the worker now with Diedrich saying the sweeping new rules JUSllfy IL l''or another thing, Diedrich said he has been told that some cities may adopt ordinances tha;t differ from the county's. Yet, County Health Officer Morton Nelson said .• League of Cities representatives served on the committee that drafted the ordln ance. He said it had been his inten· lion all along that the ordinance might be adopted by cities so that all 18 firms operating in the coun- ty would have the same regula t1ons and Nelson would be in t•hargeof ambulance licensing. Su perv1sors als o couldn't aitrce on ho"" much ambulance hrms should be charged for their li~ena.cs They rinally i.phl 3·2 in raising fees from the current S50 per n rm to SlOO \\ ith extra charg~ of SSO per ambulance, $25 per driver and $25 per attendant. more th1m double today's r ates: Anthony and Supfrvlsor Laurence Schmit voled agaiust the rates, with Anthony suggest- ing they not be increased. The fee~ should bring in $10,375 annually or about half the coun- ty's cost lo operate the new pro· gram. The ordinance hit another snag when Dean Gross of Jn.Field Medical and Transportation Services said the rules could keep his stand-by ambulance firm from operating in Orange County. Gross explained bis firm opcrates•only for special events such as those, at ET Toro Raceway, wbtle the ordinance would permit licensing only for firms offering 24-hour service lo the pubhr Supervisors agreed to have county officials work out an amendment to the new reguJa- Uons that would permit licensing of ffr~ like Gross'. 'Mlc'board lat~r will be asked to ~l the rates artb\llance firms may Charge their customers. The ruUog by the Fourth Dis- trict Court of Appeals in Sap BernardJno is seen us a pretrial victory for the defense which contended that District Attorney Cecll Hicks' office displayed prejudice during an lnvesUgatlon that led to the indictment of the rourmen. The decision, delivered without Like Mother tomment late Tuesday, almost certainly means that the trial or the four defendants wUI be de layed beyond the scheduled date of Jan.30. The stale attorney general's of· fice will now take over the pros- ecution of Diedrich, 53, Anthony, 41 , financial consultant Gene Conrad, 43, and Dr Actres~ Eartha Kitt poses beside her 16-year-old daughter, Kitt McDonald, during a rehearsal for a rashion show in New York. Miss Kitt is in rehearsal tor a new Broadway show, "Timbuktu," while her daughter is studying ballet and modeling. W1lhnm Kott, 54, an Anaheim dentist A state prosccu~or told Judee Schwab at u recent hear1ng that his office will need mor~ time to examine voluminous eviderice files banded over by the district attorney's ofrice Jt was made clear to Judge Schwab that the trial would have to be delayed for at least two months and possibly longer. He has Hcheduled a pretrial hearing for Jan. 9 None of the rour defendants bas yet offered a plea to multiple felony charges contained in a grand jury Indictment All four are accused of violat- ing stale political campaign and fmancialdisclosurc laws. Assistant District Attorney Michael Capizzi commented Tuesday that he was disappoint· ed at the San Bernardino court·~ rejection of his appeal. The pro:;ecutor said there is a possibility that his office will take the issue to the California Supreme Court but that decision can only be made after further consideration. The decision Tuesday may mean that Conrad will race trial in federal court before the trial in Judge Schwab's courtroom begins He faces trial Feb 21 in Judge Robert Firth's courtroom on charges contained in a federal f,?rand jury indictment Jt is alleged that Conrad was involved in a scheme in which $1.2 million lo advance fees was fraudulently collected in return for his promise to arrange sub· stanlial loans for those clients. The Joans, which allegedly were lo be made through Conrad's now defunct Pension Funds of America in Irvine. were never consummated. Assessor Raps Spending Supervisors Suggest Jacobs Follow Advice By KATHY CLANCY OI Ille o.11, f'I,_ St•ll Orange County's assessor says in speeches before citizens groups that the blame ror risin& property lax biU. rests with gov· emment ss>e"411ng by local elect- ed otricials, not the county as- sessor. · Tuuday county supervisors in effect suggested that Assessor Bradley Jacobs practice what be preaches. They said Jacobs should tell them how a proposed reorganiza- tion for his department that could cost an estimated $400,000 over the next three years might save tax dollars. Supervisors Chairman Thomas Riley said Jacobs has been "an advocate" or keeping govern· ment costs down. "IC you say that. you must mean it for yourselr, '' Riley con- tmued. What Jacobs asked for was a reshuffling or jobs within his de- partment to orrer outstanding employees a chance for promo· lions fie also asked to hire rive new apprai.sers to handle his Increas- ing workload and estimated the costs of the reorganization for the rest or this year at $66,421. Jacobs said the entire re- organization would be complete within less than three years and set its maximum cost to the coun- ty at $372,000. County Administrative orncer Robert Thomas bas estimated the shufflinJ(s cost at about $400,000 and suggested supervisors withhold a declsion until their budJet dellberatimu next spring. Suit Launched Over Nativity AUSTIN, Texas <AP> Atheist Madalyn Murray O'Hair and her son, Jon, have sued state officials in an attempt to force the removal of a nativity scene that sit.A at the base of the 20-foot Capitol Christmas tree. She also asked a federal dilJ- trict court in the legal action flled Tuesday to award her. her son and ''theclass they represent" S9 million in punitive damages. Mrs. O'Hair told rePorters an a news conference next to the holi. day decorations that she doesn't mind the Chr istmas tree , however, because it "is pagan and we are happy lo see pagan symbols.·· But Jacobs said this same pro- posal already was presented dur~ inst budget hearings last spring. then referred to county personnel officials for their appraisal. J ucobs noted his department; budget reaJJy bas not increased since h' joined the county lwo YH,.....0- He said his $66,420 ~est for the rest of this year would cost the owner of a home mssessed at SJOO,OOOonly 16 6cents. In return for that, he said, flis staff wHl bE> able to continue keeping property values curren~ so homeowners oren 't .. sur- prised every three or tour yean; · • with leaps in their valuations. He said the county's cost for handling property assessments is lower than both state averages and those of comparable coun- ties. In addition, the product.ion per employee in his department is higher than state averages. Supervisor Ralph Clark, in agreeing with Jacobs' proposal should have additional review. did commend the assessor for his "yeoman's job . .in making a very difficult department a palatable department." The new q?gw\atiJ>ns i~rease n\edicutl qullnneqt require-' m•mts for arnbuld'nces. sets tra.lntpa st;Uidards for all am- bulance pet$0rpnel, permits coun· ty o!ficlall to outline service ·areas for new ambulance firnu aod.~ requites a publlc hearing before new Ucen:ie• are granted. tA Vouch ob 8,~egance Fire Arson· SAN' DIEGO (AP> -The owner of an aduU bookstore ar- ranied to have a rival bookston set afire, a jury says in convict· 111g Anthony Domic Menna, 36, of ~·~ul. A wUnes• Hid Menna offered him $200 to set (ire to the olbet 1tote .ana 1bowed him how to get Into tllo buement, where the fire brolc• outOct.14, 1976. ·M~nna, convicted Tuesday cl. conap)ftaY to commit ara"n and aldtna and procurtna an anon. wua be eent.el)ced Jan. 19. Gem Talk ., . with a ~r shaped diamond surrounded by emerald! and a sunburst of baguetts. S4.950°0 l~I~ ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~ A• DAIL y PILOT TIS Always The Season RICKY TICKV POLITIX: Most of us can be celebrating Hanukkah. Christmas or New Years ln thls season but rest as sured no such holiday diversions will distract our politicians from their preoccupations. Yes sir, the politicos carry on through mistletoe or Auld Lang Syne. Politics is a poison for all seasons. This became abundantly evi - dent only yesterday when veteran Orange Coast State Senator Dennis Carpenter an- nounced he's hanging up his com · muter suitcases after seven years of shuffling offto Sacramento. Carp~nter, the Republican from Newport Beach, attorney and former FBI agenl, an- nounced he will not seek another term in the state's upper house. "ONE DOES NOT make a career in one job in political t'ife." he observed. Carpen~r·s announcement has already sent enormous shock waves through Orange County's political ranks. Numerous names are now fluttering forth, like New Years Eve confetti, on who might step forward to rm the senatorial void. ll seems most of our local politicians agree with D.enny 's statement that you sbouldn 't grind away your entire political career in one job. You should try for variety. THUS NAMES ARE already being mentioned all over the re- g I on of various current of· ficeholders who might llke to move on. On to the state senate, that is, to keep Carpenter's old seat warm. So far, almost every name in local office has been murmured as a possible candidate. It would be unfair lo try to list them all. Also, probably not enough space. But alas, you can almost en- vision the scene as It is probably occurring In homes of our politi- cians these very evenings. The wife (we'll call her Alice) is already in bed reading her copy of Honse Beautlftll. Husband Harry, DOYi 'ervi~ hla second term as municip4f water com- missioner ,issWI up. SHE LOOKS UP and notices tbat Harry is over bt the mirror. turning from one side to the other, checking bis profiles. "What in blazes at-e you doing, PJ>Sing over there, Harry? Why don't you come to bed?•• : "Alice, which side do l.ou think I photograph be.stfrom? ' ... FROM THE BACK, Harry. Listen, you've got that political look on your face a1aln. Are you tbinkinl about running for that state senate thing?" ."Well Alice, I have been urged bj a lot of people since Denny an- n9lJ~~ed he isn't running again . ~ . "You mean Phil down at the witerwor1cs because he's butter- ing you for a raise. And you've bhn listening to crazy George down at the saloon. He always talks to you like that after three beers." "Now Alice, remember when tile voters speak, public servants .mutt answer the call to duty. -..How do I look here from the r'-'t aide?" NATION I WORLD Dutell Millionaire Meiit~n Ghllty Of Ki11ing Jews AMSTERDAM, Netherlands <AP>-Dutch millionaire Pieter Menten was found 1u11ty today of taking part in the Nazi killing or Polish Jews during World War U and aentenced to 15 yean1nJall. The 78-year-old ert collector was involved 1n executions which took place at the village of Podhoroce on July, 7, 1941, the court ruled. But the court regarded as "not proven'' charges that Menten when he drew an eight-month took part in another massacre at sentence for collaboratine with the vlllage of Ury~ on Aut. Zl, the Nam. But he was aequttted 1941, and said he would be ac· then of cbarcea or aervlna with quilted on this count. German forces and stea11n1 an art collection from a Polish prc>-FORMAL CHARGES against Menten said he took part in the execution of 20..to 30 persona at Podboroce and of 175 to 200 persons at Urycz. Both vlllagea are now part or the Soviet Unlon. Menten denied all the charges. Today's was the second verdict against Menten for his wartime activities. The first was in 1949 Hongisto Oeveland's Top Cop CLEVELAND <AP) -Richard D. Hongisto, the liberal San Francisco County sheriff who sided with gays against Anita Bryant and went to jail for refus- ing to evict poor people, was to be sworn in as Cleveland police chief today. Hongisto, 40, sheriff since 1971 after 10 years as a San Francisco polic eman .,., and a brief sti nt as a television newsman, was chosen by Cleveland Mayor Dennis Kucinicb. The sheriff replaces M i c h a e I HON01no Ahrens, who was appointed Jut s ummer by former mayor Ralph Perk. Mel Wax, an aide to San Fran- cisco Mayor George Moscone, said, "We knew Sheriff Hongisto was looking at the job lo Cleveland. But we did not know until tonight whether or not he g,>t the job. We of courae wish him well." -• WAX SAID the search for a successor would begin im- mediately, but he offered no names of prospects. Television station KRON in San Francisco reported Hon1l1to bad recom- mended former aerkeley Police Chief Wes Pomeroy as his replacement. Hongisto, who reportedly had dinner at Kucinich's home in Cleveland Tuesday, could not be reached for comment. BE ATl'BACTED national at.- ten lion by appearing, with leaders of San Franc;iaco's say community and golng to Miami to oppose Anita Bryant's anti- homo1exual r ights campaign there. Last summer Hongisto went to jail Cor five days for contempt ol court after refusine to evict about 70elderly and Chinese resl- dents,«:>f a low-rent hotel. He said he dldn 't have the manpower to evict the persons without bloods bed. PREVIOUSLY, Hongisto had established a record of jail re- forms, improving medical care, drug counseling and traininl of· deputies. feaaor. ' THE NEW CHABG~S agalhat him followed a series of ex- posures ln the Dutch press in 1978 which resulted In authorities launching a fresh investigation tnto his pasL In November 1978 police went to aneat Menten at his 40-room villa at Blaricum, near Amsterdam, but found he had fled the country with bis wife, Meta, hours earlier. · Three w~eks later he was traced to a motel near Zurich, Switzerland, and arrested by Swlaa police. The Swiss returned him to the Netherlands and he has remained tn jail pendln& the outcome of his trial. M ENTEN'S TRIAL started May 9 and has continued on and off throughout the year. On Nov. 7 the public prosecutor de- manded that the millionaire be jailed for life. - PharmacUt Kil/,s Family, Slays Self Tears of Jog Tom Clawson wipes tears from his eyes Tuesday after finding his mother, Mrs. Edna Weyland. 77. center, safe after a tornado ripped through Northeast 1 louston killing one person and injuring at least40others. An estimated 6oo homes and businesses were destrored by the twister which cut a swath five mlles long and 500 feet wide througb the area. Lamp Caused Inferno? Manger Scene Suspect in Fire Th~t Killed 7 PROVIDENCE, R.I. CAP> -A and sprinklers, and ollicials walked ar()UDd lbe incnr-co~ gooaeneck lamp lighting a were unable to determine ca.mpua weeping and Iookina for Nativity scene may have whether any fire.extin&uisbers missingroommates. sparked the fire that turned the were used. · Peter JobnaOn, ll, or North top floor of a Providence College The fire was dllcovered short• Branford, Conn., a resident of the dormitory into an inferno, ltilllng ly before 3 a. m., and fire doors men 18 dormitory next to Aquinas seven women, officials say. confined the flames to one end of H 11 Id f Mayor Vincent Cianci said late a long L-shaped fourth-floor a • sa 8 ter a memorial Tu~sday that investigators ha 11 way serve4 by t.Wl> service for lh4' dead sh4dents ELIZABETH, N.J . (AP) -believed the fast-moving flames stairways. Only one room. local-Tuesday, "The priest teld us It's Harold Silverblatt worked quiet-early that morning began near a ed directly across the five-foot-~fs~~~~~f God's will, it's part of ly for 10 years as a hospital small paper and cardboard wide hall from the manger scene, "That's hard to take " he pharmacist, caring for and sup-manger scene set up in the was burned, Gannon said. added. "My religion say~ you porting his elderly parents and fourth-floor corridor of Aquinas It was from that room that two have to accept it, but you keep retarded sister. An Investigator Hall,awomen'sdormitory. women leaped to their deaths thlnking,'Whydidithavetohap- st00aysmuthceh_strain apparently was CianciandLt.BernardGaMon whil~ a ladder was being pen to these ""•ls? Wby did it. of the police department's arson maneuvered toward them. Gan-h 5 u When fire and police officials squad said tbe corridor was non said Donna Galllgan of c~vr~~?~J!pen so close to arrived at the Sllverblatt home adorned with paper Christmas Closter, N.J ., and Barbara F Tuesday they found the charred decorations, which helped fuel Feenex, 18, of Taunton, Maaa.. inal exadiinations, which bodlea of Samuel Sllverblatt. 77; the flames. jumped when theladder was only were scheduled to begin today. · bis wife, Beatrlc Ill, ad tMlt THE MAYOR, asked if the de-a few feet away. A third room-were postponed untn Jan.10, and dau1bter, BJ , 39 •.• :naetr eoratlons violated fire regula-mate, am.st.ine Manuel, 18, of most students beaded home for throatJ bad been !)ed. tlons, said. "There are no viola-Newport, R.I., wailed a few the Christmas holidays, ts')tin&to • lions '"""one is beln" ci•-.. for second.I,,_ ... _.. d lied forgetthespectreofdeath. HAROLD, 34, fOUhd with no .... "-.. • ~ safely. ~an waa pu to MreaFtdes MJss Galilean and his wrists slash in as~-He said the 38-year*old brick Medical Examiner John 95 eeoey,thedeadwerelden- noor bedroom. He died ~flortly dormitory was equipped with a Grauerholz blamed the deaths in-tlfied as: Gretchen Ludwie, 18. a fterward in an Elizabeth system of fire alarms linked to side the building on smoke in· Saugus, Mass.; Catherine Hospital, police said. the city fire department. The halation. Atleaat 15 women were Repucci, l8, Bloomfield Hills OHicials at Clara Maass structure met all the fire safety injured,twooflhemseriously. Mich.; Jacqueline Botelho 2f) Hospital In Belleville, where requirements in effect at the The tragedy stunned the 4,100 Bristol, R.I.; Deborah Smith. 2i: Sllverblatt worked, said there ·time of its conatruction, he said. students at the Roman Catholic Milford, Conn.; and Kathryn Jut. was nothing in bis record that However, it lacked fire eacapea liberal arta school. Many women dresakes. 20, Upper Montclair oitsbt iDdlcate why he murdered --------------------------=N~·:.::J..:.. ----------· his family and killed him1elf. "He was very quiet about bis own llfe," said Don Burkle, director or p~arDJacy at the hospital. He described Silverblatt aa a reliable employee who did not discuss his penonal affairs with bis co-workers. Fl..B.E CIUEF William Neafsey !laid the bodies of Silverblatt's parents and sister were found burnine in their beds. Mrs. SUverblatt. an invalidsuf-. fering from diabetes, was found in a first floor bedroom, Neafsey s aid. The rather and the retarded sister were discovered on the second floor of the two-story house. Neafsey said four lndlvfduel fires bumine in the home were brou1bt under control within 15" minutes. Minor damage was done tO the house, be 1aid. ' NOW! FIRST TIME EVER! ' .. . MOVIES IN YOUR HOME. FREE!!* I ' ~OFFER EXPIRES WED. DEC. 21st ONE WEEK· ONLY ~ Northeast Still ShiverS *Buy-our JVy YIDSTAR VideQca'ssette Recorder for just $1049.00 and. we'll' give you an all-time box · office smash movie (va1ue$70.QO) FREE! , 'lJumderstorms Move A.cro1s Gulf CotUt t'emperat•re• . "' LO NC !~ue l4 *" .n A " ~ '° • • • ·" .. » . ~ " • ,. .. .., . u 2' M YI! .. .,. '1 ..21 0 " ... 4IO JS ., ... '",,.,., ~ 41 t.a E~ ·~~ ., • ~ u » .. t ,. " -INl!•-Y Outva4 ·2' ·• ---== 21 1t .. 41 1t .. .., " n n st 1.tt ~ . ss '° 2' .0, .oz .. II .IO .04 t Choose from these ~reat fu.11 length features: Cleopa-· · tra -French Connectior\ -Patton -Tora! Tora! Tora! -The Hot Rock-Mash -Helfo Dolly- Paper Chase -The Agony &. The Ecstasy, - Beneath The Planet Of The A~s (some films ma~ have to be special ordered) • We are your complete video marketplace: Video Recorders, Big Screen TV, VI peotape cameras • CALIFORNIA Orde r T e sts Shield Law ? SAN JOSE, Calif IAP I A JUd&:c hoi. ordered CBS Television to surrender alt non bro1&dcut film shot for a "IJO Minutes·· seernent showing the arrest ott wa accUsed drug dcalcr9. IJ'be order Tuesday by Santa Clara County Superior Court Judee Peter Anello 1s se~n as a lest Of Callromia's reporter shield law, which protecti news media from demands to furnish notes, mm artd other prtvileecd material. Tt\c derendants In the drug c:Jse. John De"'k Blackwell, 19 or San Jose. and David Elliott Pollard. 18, or Livermore. foce tnal here on charges or seUlpg six cigarettes laced "'1th phcncychdlne, an 'animal tranquilizer , to undtrcovcr police on Aug. lZatthe county fairground!. TUE NEGOTIATIONS, tram.action and arrest were f4!ned by CBS. which broadcast only the ar· rest OP its Oct. 23 show, co.hostt:d by newsman Mike Wallace. Defense aUorne) s earlier sought the una1red film foota~e, but CBS refused to furnish It. Robert Mackey, a CBS staff attorney in Los Angeles, said the shield law not only protects un published notes. tape recordings and film but also shields reporters trom contempt citations for refus· ing to produce such material The law, written by state Sen. Alfred Song, was passed by the Legislature and signed into law In 1974 by then-Gov Ronald Reagan. Freed Ms. Libel Suit Dism~se I.OS ANGELES lAP 1 A $2 m1ll1on ltbcl suit filed a1ainst ~b magaune and a Cttelanee writer by Harvey KJu·ma.o. who beaan ont of lhu nation's first free abor· lion clinics. has been d1sm1ssed Superior Court Jud&e Geor&e M . Dell ruled Tuesday thal since Karman was a publlc figure he could not coHect damages uaajnst the magazine for false statements W'\less be could prove the editor~ al'lcd ma.l1ewusl\ or \\Ith a rct•klel>s ws.regart&' for truth 10 pnntu\l fbcarticle KARMAN. 43, of Los Angeles had sued the maJtaimc kild "riter Llsa Cronin Wohl O\'er ll Septembet' 1975 article entitled "The Harvey Karman Con t rov ersy" aad s ubheaded "Would You Buy an Abortion From Ttu' Man'>" Gas Cloud Cover Boat Blast Cause LONG BEACH (AP> Lacko( sections and Ulrew lhe mu:ldle wind to dissipate a gas cloud over two.thirds of the ship out of the the oil tanker Sansinen'a was the water and onto the dock Giant probable cause or an txplosion steel slivers were embedded like tbat-lot'e the ship apart and killed javelins into the earth nearby, eight crewmen. the Coast Guard and windows 2S miies away were says. shattered. The Coast Guard board of in· "The procedures followed ll1 qwry's 44-page report released inspection of the cargo vent The art1l'll' l lu1mcd h.ur was dbhonl'sl. promoted h1 :it thu cxpunsc or women, •urttl'l>ted arc! dun~erous de pro\'1dcd substandard me care """d ui.ed human peramentallon at its wori.t " • Knrman's attorney, Geortr Abrahllllls, areued that Ms. rari the arttele knowing there was .. high probability it was raise, and tbererorc the majla:une \\as negligent • ""' • NCCOODING TO AbrahaMS. IKarm 1to has been canceled from .!-oC\ t.>ral speaking engagem~ aDd "!',unk rnto ~ome obl1v1onl ' .s.ince publication or the article ' Karman opcncd his clinic ui 1968whcn abortions "''ere Illegal A ~arate libel suit fated by Karm¥.n agam~ Carol Downer aftd the Fiemjn1st Womep •._ HealU1 Centl'r was not dJsmissf>Ct, Dell said the center was entitle{I to a d1Smissal but had not pre· sen1ed him with proper plead1~ OG wb1cb to rule. , Karman accused the healtJt center of trying to rum his carl!qf by reprinting and circulatms Uw Ms article_ Tuesday said that as the ship's system ... were inadequate to oil tanks were being filled with timely detect wast~ holes and HE Al.SO CLAIMS lo huve 1n, Se·•water t ,. 't wea'ght after failed to insure tl\e integl'ity ol -r · .. o give 1 vented $(.~'Wal abortion dev1"""' Unloading hydrocarbon r1as the cargo \Cnl system," the ro --i: • • and tcchn1 ques and has accus~ fumes see1;>cd from the tanks and port said. Ms Down' •r or t tJ mg to ruin hun gathered in a cloud above the b€.'cau~· :1 he was unable to lay decks because there was no wind THE REPORT cone laded that claim to his inwntions "h€.'n she A l..AWYEB FOR OSE of the drug defendants argued Tuesday that their conslltut1onal right to a fair trial takes prN·t•dence over the state shield la'>' "The film woulcl represent the best evidence or what actually happened," said Ulackwell's at torne). John L. Williams, of San Jose to blow them away lhe igniting name must have en· work~ at his clinic. . 1':.ilrll'IU Bartl of Bl'CJ\\Odeer 7\lich Therepor1onthe))ec 17,1976. tered the cargo \'Cntilat1on Pendul&, is a S<.'Cond libel suy; clasht·-. happily from San Otego federal incident '>a.id a spark from~ ,-;ystemlhroughholescorrodt.'<lm agai.n-.l M s, Downer, the Anl!llo agreed that the de!cn~e established "good cause" to s~ek the film and said the court "can't help but conclude that the interests or the de fendants in a fair trial should prevail over any con mcttn~ right or the press .. pnson after bemg rek.t.,l•d with :n~ others poorly locatted pump apparently aging pipes runoJng the length or Femi n isn Worn en'!> Uealt~ Tuesd;1v. the first Amrnl'ans freed under ignited the vapor cloud , the s hip. Like Ion~ meta.I fuses, Center amd the Santa Monie~ l ' .S. :\l~~co exchange treaty L'nidenlified the pipes shot the rt am es to the Evening tC>utlook O\'er a May 197~ m•m was among those who greeted the T HE BLAST cracked the 810· rume-flJled cargo tanks, wht>~ aeeount of a demonstratioJt :?8-~ ear old woman on her reJeasc. foot Liberian tanker into three the explosion erupted agahtst K:annan 'f ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Sea Battle Erupts Angry Househoaters Take .Fight Ashore SAN RAFAEL IA P l Angry l1ou!>l'1>0:il 0\\ ncrs after a i.ca battle with sheriff's deputies that saw·mace fire hoses and flymg oars used as weapons have taken their fight ogainst dev<'lopment of a new marina :is bore .. t a meeting of the Mann County Board of Supervisors Tuesday, the houseboaters charged that sheriff's deputies used excessive force In the melee in usually peaceful Sausalito Several persoru; were injured, mclud- ing one deputy. After hearing the testimony, the supervisors voled 4· l lo order the county Human Rights Commission to invesl1911te the incident and come up with a report w1thin 30 days PIRO CARO, the 76-year-old s pokesman of lhe Waterfr ont PreservalJon Association. 'Said dep· ut1es "tned to kill us yesterday. It was not JUSt excessive violence. 1t was in- sanity." Jn a telephone interview, sheriff's officials denied the charges, and said houseboat owners caused the violence, "I don't know of any sheri(('s dep· uties that used excessive force. All of our actions were m sel! de· rt•nsc." said Lt Robert Gaddin1. >A-ho c·o commandt•d th<' 30 man force which movl'(I on the houseboat sc·tth.' ment Monda~ WITNESSF.S SAID a sheriff's armada tried to usher 1n a bar~e borne piledri,..er for construction work. Deputies were met by a flot11la of kayaks, skiffs and canoes manned by the houseboat owners Authorities said the battle came after bouseboaters refused deputies· orders to disperse. Some .protesters s wung oars and two~by-fou rs , sheriU's oflicials said. Deputies were free-wheeling wilh clubs and mace, demonstrat.ors charaed Nine persons were arrested and booked for Investigation on a variety of charges. including unlawful as- sembly. Sgt. Norman Johnson said. Two or those arrested were booked on suspicion or felonious assault on a peace oCficer, he added, THE CONFLICT was the latest in the bouseboalers· lengthy struggle against construction of a new marina they say will force them to move from their mostly self-made floating homes. Jant zen with a gift suggestion Storekeepers Mitch, Monte and Kevin are we.iring Jantzen sw~aters, available in1a variety of colors and styles made o~ wool and polyester. 18.00and .22.f>O ASONY:" POCKB RADIO Tt> , .;>0N'I' AM1 rM podur 1otloo leohl!t1 re-e~opng ororemo, M.de.,llie tuner 2 • .:iflO'TI' spe;iier .:.id ::i h:r.d\orra bt!Ahed ~rr 0•" Come\ .o,.,p•ele .. th •':)lpi\OI'• ~n I f '''Y·"l S~~ 'THE BIG PIOUJlE ~ON'f AM/FM clod ro:J.o tolls t.me w1tn LEO i• )olot """'e''l f,. Jtu•e1 prec.;•o~ • ,., .. ~i·i~tN'M! 'f'p<>,I t': 1' b., • ro A~ .:1"1 m""' o•t,.p· ~,.,...., .• , • , • !. f -,w • ?' "'. • A UITLE S8NY Tti, SQ'll'I' • ~o~) ~ & ..i,,c t. > •'l'lq1!10ered f , br r)'ot, r~p •• 11.~!TO\I {I .JI.Iv h1CJtu•A\ fLA VHI 8' LJHP tlioml!( "'"'''°"· A( 10(' Clp"'Ol.nn Jr\.J ~· II'" I b4 11 / FOR DAVIS•BROWN1S .AWA~D-WINMIMG FACTORY AUTHORIZED SERVICE, CAW 548-3437 - •I - 8 c Ed• • I p Robert N. Weed/Publisher Thomas Keev11 Editor Orange Coast Daily Pilot ltOftft ~.e••••••••w•.dn•••ad•••"'··· oe•o•e•m•be•'•'····· 1a•1•1••••••••ea•r•t>a•r•a•K•r•e•1b•1•c•h1•e•d•1•t°'•'••'•P•a•ge•E•d•1t•o'••• Court May Help Resolve Debate It didn't take the Costa Mesa City Council very Jong , last week to realize that rumors of a so-called "resolution" between the Arnel Development Company and the North Costa Mesa Homeowners Association were greatly exag- gerntcd. A special council meeting last Thursday brought the council, homeowners' representatives and three de- velopers face-to-face for an all-too-rare discussion on the development rate of 68.3 acres in north Costa Mesa west of South Coast Plaza. I lomeowner petition efforts have led to the placement pf a ('Ontrovcrsial rezone initiative concerning the three ~reels on the March 7 municipal el~ction ballot. .,,. • Although Arne I -the major developer in the dispute over smgle-f amily homes versus apartments -offered to reduce ils proposed 539 apartments by 176, the homeowners felt it was too little, and definitely too late. This means the citv is back in court for a decision on the vahditv of the initiative. Arnel fil ed suit against the city· in a last-ditch effort to block a vote on the initiative it daims "misrepresents" the S30 million pro1ect. J\ court decision may be forthcoming next week. This ma\ determine thl' most reasonable route to take. This' t\a~: ('t·rtainly bN•n a most confusing and complex debate. lJowl'V(•r, the initial court ruling only sets the stage for rporc legal l·ntanglements. :· What has bt•cn most frustrating during this dispute --· n(),v well into its M'cond year has been the hard-line posi- tfon!:> of both Arncl and the homeowners. Thb hrl•akdown of communication was clearly evident at Thursday's meeting. The developers mistakenly based the reports of a potential out-of.court compromise on a meetmg with JUSt one homeowner. Because other homeowners say they were not included 10 t his discussion, they were in no mood to talk of last- minute changes that might cancel the initiative vote. The developers can't be blamed for wanting to keep this m ess out of court. just as the homeowners have a point 10 wanting to force a vote on the issue. But the failure of Thursday's meeting makes it even morl' dear that the issue has reached a point of no return, and that court intervention is badly needed. Concern Noted I .:ind zoning and the future developments it spawns 1s 4.ln l' .. -.ul' of increasing concern to Costa Mesa residents. Thl' homcownl'rs · collective concern is generally for a redud1on m mulll·unit or commercial projects in favor of singll' I amlly homl's. This concern was wcll·addressed last week by coun- cilm<'n \\ho initiated a rczomng action from light com- mertial to R·l <low density> zoning on two parcels (five -:.it'res >near Bear Street and Yukon Avenue. Because the north Costa Mesa area is primarily slngle·familv already and South Coast Plaza ls so close, the homcO\\:ners see no reason for light commercial or rugh densily developments. Realizing that such developments would further tax traffic capacity in the area. the council backed the home0\\1lers' request. The sound decision now returns to till' planning levl'I before returning for formalization hy the <'it~ t'Ollnc1l. , . • Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Daily Pilot. . Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and artists Reader comment is 1nv1ted. Address The DaHy Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642·4321 . t J ! Boyd/ Retirement ByL.M.BOYD Seasoned Citizens will tell you there was no such thing as "retirement" in this coun- try until about 45 years ago. At lea.st, as a national policy. And worldwide: retirement didn't become 'a gerieral way or life for the elderJy until 95 years ago in Germany. This comes up because a youthful customer asks what was the standard retirement age 100 years ago. Wasn 't any. You worked until you could figure out how not w have t!>· A car going 70 m.p .h. uses more oxygen in an hour than· all the people in Los Angeles breathe during that hour. Or so reports nn oxygen expert. Fascinating, lffactunl. Q . "Those London policemen referred to as bob· bies never carry guns, right?" A. Not right. Aboat one out of every 20 is qualified to use handguns. And 80 or the men on that force are rfflei mnrksmen. Special officers asstcned to euarct VIPs usual· 1Jy pack pistols as do the con· Dear Gloomy Gus Wboovet reautated ~ traffic 111nala aton• PlacenU1 Avenu. rnuat have worked bard to time them JO every U,ht between W1l1on and ;u~rlor would come "Pi red; ConcratulatJoN CJO a job •elJdoai stables who protect the em- bassies. Motel managers report that item most often left behind in guest rooms now is the elec- tric shaver cord. Two out of five people never get wisdom teeth. Q ... Wasn't there a time when Coca-Cola contained co· caine? .. A. Not in the last 74 years. In 1903, caffeine replaced the cocaine in that. ong1na1. recipe. Q. "$#.tle an areument. Which country owns the Virgin Islands, tb6 UnitM States or Great Britain?" A. Both. Each claims halC. Q. "Why did some Indian tribes require thew children to be brought up by their un- cles insteadorulelr fathers?" A."• Brought up" lSn 't exact· ly right. The uncles corrected the youngsters and dis· eipllned them, leaving those C.thers '"" to be frtendly witb their own kids. Leas authorlt:aUve, more lovlng, u it were. f Clalm is Ute blondut of blondee come not from Sweden, a commonly sup- posed. b8t (rom Jr~land • • . If )'OU want to keep a •110 of cut tullpt from droop. inf, put a fw pennJes in thetr wal•r. 60methlD1 about the cop~r. f 'm told • • . In Ken· tuckJ', bear in mind, 1t'1 a1aJrut \ht law to marry your wife·• arahdm<>thtr. . . When the •e&thw b.lmt cold, your cu•a tire pNNUN aou down pound ror •nry lD-4•&""9 C!rop In the tern.· peratu • ,WlU yqu b1o1y Utt tonl.bUOn tUtdlW b tMGtl· ~ 1amt~l0m~wbll1ft rlh~ ~ ft;o •lemftlt pl_ thM~1 Earl Waters High-pay State Jobs Opening Although California 's un- employment rate remains high , the numbers seeking 150 high paying state jobs which will be open to all comers next year has not yet become overwhelming. The jobs in question are the seven statewide offices of gov- ernor, lieutenant governor, con- troller, treasurer, uttorney general, secretary of state and superintendent of public instruc- tion, along with 43 seals in Congress, 80 in the Assembly and 20 in the Senate. The pay ranges from $.57,500 to $22,500 . Actually there arc more than 150 elective offices to be voted on in 1978. For, · in addition to an untold number of judgeships, there are also many county and other local offices at s take. But most of the plums, aside from the judgeships which re· quire one to be an attorney, are lo be found in the statewide, con- g ress1ona I and legislative of fi ces. It was expected that there would be an abundance of challengers for incumbent •con- gressmen by reason of the ex· orbilant pay increase they voted themselves last year, raising salaries from $44,000 to $.57,500 and placing them in the oop 5 per- cent income bracket of tbe na- tion. Where previously salaries may not have been high enough wen- tice successful business and pro· fessional people, it is now far more than all but a few Califor· nians earn. Considering the fringe benefits which include a generous retirement plan. a seat in Congress now has become far more attractive even to those who Mailbox dislike the idea or living ill W asrungton. YET, indications ut the mo· menl are that most congressmen will have no more than the usual opposiUon. That also seems to be true in the case of the top state of· ficers as well as the l~lslawrs whose salaries, at $'Z2,500 plus fringe benefits including $40 a day tax gree living expenses and a car with unlimited ga~oline, makes the job worthwhile. As an example of the s,arcity of candidates so far surtfcing, only five Republicans have tlven 1ny sign of interest in being gov· - -.-:::::--------_... --.------ "We wate supposed to cAst MIM out. 11 ernor and not one Democrat. ln contrnst, four years· ago, 18 Democrats, :.ix Republicans, four Peace and Freedom and one American lndependcnl were in the race foe the state's top job. Still, what appears to be a dearth tir candidates may turn into an abundance when the actual filing time arrives. Those who want to run must file between Feb. 13 and March 10, as a pamphlet be- ing readied for distribution by the Secretary of Stale will soon ad- vise. AT THAT time candidates must pay the filing fee and sub- mit a sponsors' petition signed by 65 citizens, In the case of lhe gov- ernor, and 40 for those seeking legislative and congressional of- fices. Fees range from the $982 for governor and $575 for Congress to $255 for l1'1e Legislature. There are some tricky pro- visions designed to protect in· cumbcnt legislators and Judges. Candidates for those offices must file declarations of intent between Jan. 29 and Feb. 8. Also candidates for partisan offices must hitve been a member of the party in which they se1tk nomina- tion at least 90 days before Hlinl! t1m e and n ot have been a member of any other party for at least one year before that. ALTHOUGH a residence re· quirement of one year rem ams in the constitution its validity has been placed in doubt by rea'°n of court decisions. While the steps necessary to become a candidate roay seem simple, it must be remembered that al takes much more to .,..in. Not only must one have sup- porters and a campaign or· ganization but some legislators and congressmen spend ao; much as $200.000 to eet elected Glories of Women's Lib Fail 10· Impress To the Editor: I have been concerned for some time over lthe ERA In- itiative. finding dqual pay for equal work among the sexes iLc; I only redeeming facwr. The rest of the awesome demands by the hardcore "feminists" m Houston has so outraged me that I feel re· buttals are in order from the women across this land, who hold dear the family concept and the love and devotion between man and woman. I should like to know who authorized Congress to gave this pack of "she wolves" $.S million of the taxpayers· money to hold a lhree·ring circus. where the emaaculatio(l of the male sex was the foremost conclusion. Ms. Vivian Hall stoutly defends this gross spending, Usllog such expenses as publications, mail- in11 and work-ahops. S.he failed, hOwevet, to slate that at the California gathering of 6,000 there were displays of sexual gadgets which would enable women to do away with the necessity of a male partner in or· der for the women to derive sex- ual pleasure. How much did they COSL us? I SHOULD Uke Ms. Hall to f~rther explain why we should be forced to finance federally con· trolled day nurseries when, if 8he hu her way, there would be no cohabitation to begin with? With "Big Brother" already en- croaching in almost every facet of our lives today. do we now turn over the care of our children to them? As for the abortion Issue, I believe every woman has a right to decide oo that for herself, but the responsible parties to an un- wanted pregnancy (with a few exceptions> should be made to pay the cost out or their own pockets. Last, but not least. I was ashamed and disgusted listening ·to two former First Ladles and ·the present Mrs. Carter, ex- poundillg rrom lbe podium on the clories of women's liberation and, believe mo, my heart dJd not bleed tor the pllfhl of the loud, out•poken leab ans in atten· dan~e. , The problem here ls not the IJberatlon or women, but the llberaUon from Washington, D.C. of the Coftarcq who reached ir\to the till and blithely threw $$ million of bard.earned lax. payer•· m9M1 Clo'Wn the pro- verbl&l drain.! MA.RY O. MOORE GHdNetpNr: To tbeJ;d.ltQI': Each Otan1e CoUnty resldept hH a \ital and tarln• 1ood ~lltbor -'J'he AmerJcan Red" Cmn Otanae Coilnty Chapt r • )Olel)i 1~ ~\he donatll)IUI Of Ult .Ainttkan peopl1,1 Reel Oroil N•chtl o,a& to "rovlct. a muhhudt or nrvlcu lo ' f safeguard and enhance the quali· t.y or Ufe bl our communities. Es· sentlaT Red Cross activities in- clude disaster services. service lo military families and the blood program. Additionally. youth. safety and nursing programs pro- \'ide a v:.iriety of educational and s upport activities. RED CROSS needs the generous support of the total Orange County Commu.1ily if fkd Cross 1s lo fulfill its mandate and meet the growing needs of Orange County. Red Cross is each or us, extending ourselves in this voluntary way. When counting blessings this holiday season, we hope the c1liiens of Orange County will re- member the Red Cross. A gift lo the Orange County Red Cross Ch apter at Christmas spreads joy all year. Help us help. NANCY AND STEPHEN E. DONALDSON . E"angeU•C• fo the Editor: One error seems to· be prev- alt;nl in the articles currently betng printed in your newspaper. f An Auoclated !'di! 1e,Ws on the evongelJcal mowment. Ed.J One man dotab'town a church. a Christian university or a Chris- ti an hospital, or even an evangellaUc orcantnUon. These are non-profit corpora- tions, owned and operated by a board 6t tovernon, d~ted to God. THE EVANGELISTS you men· tloned ~e less pay than the presidentao of mpst corporaUons or e~ed most lead.ina athle~ The foraUy 1 of a·. prt•chtr or e\ial\lellsl a°" not lnherlt the chutch or evangeU.tic corpora- tion on hlsdHth. He may a«umulate some wealth by his salary and the P'4blicaUon of books, etc. All f amou.s people writ.e books and \)roflt by tb~ir publication, but Oral Roberts sends me most of his book• free. It's hard to make i>ersonal proOt Crom tomethin1 yougtveawa,y. Faith in God Is Oral Ro~· only product anct ho alv•• that away. He and his orianluUon are 1upported by tho Ups or the irateful reciPlents. What is faith :worth? We are 1ett1n1 theM men ot rallb at quite a bargain. \JIM BOLDING Th~e past nine mon~hs J have been most privileged to serve the Newport-Mesa School Dlstrlct as a member ot the advisory com- mittee on school site closures and the budget. I have now resigned, but would like to state clearly and sincerely that each member of the advisory committee has voluntarily spent considerable time in a very dedicated, con- scientious and fair manner, especially on the McNally High School relocation. Moreover. I want to compliment the school board on its decis ion to move McNally from its present site. Thus. Costa Mesa can proceed with Its needed redevelopment and the school district can re- ceive extra revenue which might be a small blessing to the over· burdened taxpayers. I strongly question the wisdom of the board in moving McNally to Monte Vista. a move which is contingent upon a possible board decision to keep McNally as a separate conUnuation High school. The boa'rd put the "cart before the horse" in a blodlng, limited direction This pre- mature. illogical and shortsl1t-t- ed decision creates more undue tensiot> at Monte Vista. Further, il invites the possibility of ex- traordinary prejudicial preuure upon the board to place McNially on the four regular high school campuses, rather than at Monte Vlata, or a more 'sensible. sepaNle locaUoo. t MtN~ Y js a necessary and viable pro1r"m and should be continued in tome form and at some place. Lack or space pro- hi bits a detailed analysis of why Monte Vista should slay open -ba$ed on commQn sense, as well •s sociological, educaUoaal, logislical and economical ra- tionale. Fot me, the main issue b that no sC!bool, even McNaUy. la st> Important that a strong, effective neigbborhood school llke Monte Vista abould be diJrupted and close11. There '1'e helter options for tJ>o board's conalderaUoo to f1n e thla aenslUv~ tuaUon, which the follo\fing Utnmblo advocates: 1. The school board ~utd de- cide by late December -subse- quent tothe (mJd-Pecember) ad· vhory committt.'1 recommcn· datlona -what elementary school• to cloae due to current and projectad low entollment. While Moote Viata would not fit thiacategary,therear twopnme candldatdlor closure, OM on the far West sld ot Cotta Mesa and th otber located In the county tcr ntory. 2. By late F•btuary, tbe school board could alHS mould deddt on McNall)''!I (ijturt for Rcpt.amber. 1978, looktoi0 at .U the available opUonslnthll t>UJcformat: a. Put McNaUy on tlther one or au four fl/ the re au tu bltb ~hOOl camp b. Put McNally at Harper School. . c. Put McNaJly at the Plaqen· tia site, which was an earlier ad· ministration-staff reeommenda· lion. d. Look at some other site not considered. e. Consider the low cnrollraent closure sites. f. As a last resort, < fleaven forbid! l look al the three bcann~ sates of Wilson, Wh1tt1er and Monte Vista. CHRISTOPHER M . STEEL · Sate Dieting To the Editor: Recent information from around the United States has in- dicated a definite dangerous re· action w the use of liquid protein5 in this country and abroad. Does this mean that all protein pro- ducts are dangerous and should be avoided? You may tak• thl~ one step further and ask Ir we shoµld all stop consuming pro- tein sources altogetbu? I think the real problem thaLexist~ Is not so much the protein source ds it is the use. Many products can be dangerous if used incorretUy · an automobile, aspirin, alcohol. cigarettes, etc. I shudder to think how many Jives have bqcn lost due to these. f think the big probl.-with most of the people on th~e pro- tein-sparing diets b that they lack patience. Let'• face it -it took tbose people years of nutrt- tiohal abuse to reach thtir over- weight condition, 59 wby·involve yourself in a prQgram \bet can tax the body lt\at is alrendy un- healthy? A PROTEIN supplement c<in be safe as long as th source alone ls not tbe only supply or calorics. 1f o person wants to US(' a proteln supplement. fine. but use it for What it is, a supple- ment, I product to u with your ruduced intake of wholt~omc nulricnl·ridi foods. I am not detendini liquid pro- tein ot condonitlg ats use -I ~rtonall,y would ntver ta~o it. My point is that weight los11 can be an t!,l\foyable e>epetion~~ for many people 1f they use the1r head . JI you can gradually rc- d uce your caloric lntako and Im· prove wl'tat foods you do eat, you can •bed unwanL«t pounds at a saro rato: thatis moet important. U;E H. t.ORENZEN Director of Re carch Vc1t• Labar~t.orios NATIONAl -Who Could Resist? Scam Stings Coufttless Tlwusands CHICAGO CAP) -The deal was too good to be true. Indeed. The ads said only $16.95 for a digital watch. Order two and get a free pocket calculator as a bonu1. Ideal Christmas presents. COUNTLESS THOUSANDS of persons were stung last year in a one-man nationwide scam, lured by the next best thing to a giveaway. It was a giveaway, all right. They all gave to Dennis l. Roberts. Orders -estJmated at more than 100,000 -poured in with .payments ror the watches and calculators. But the thousands of bargain hunters got nothing in return except canceled checks. A YEAR LATER, none of the victim• baa been recompensed. Although authorities have re· covered almost half the money. it sits tied up ln ~ankruptcy pro- Judge wbo sentenced.him ln July said of the massive evidence: "I don't think I've ever seenia smok· ing gun in a mail fraud case before." Roberts set up Teltronics as a sales representative for a firm ln Hong Kong that allegedly manufactured the digital watches, to sell ror $18.95 or $17.95 apiece. He appareQUy cUs- played a few watches to convince the magazines of legitimacy. But there were no others. LAST DECEMBER, before the heat of public attention en- tangled him, and with sllgbUy less than $2 million already de- posited in Teltronics accounts in four Chicago-ar e a banks, Roberts withdrew almost $750,000 and wired the money, under the names John or Jack Rodine, to banks in Mexico City. He managed the transfer of a no ther serveral hundred thousand before the Illinois at- Tiie 11atloatclde •ca.. .., .. a gil't!tlte .. -·cOIDltles• tlao .. atlCb gaee t• De1111b L •••erta. ceedings. It's possible that at least some of thost! funds will not revert to the r ightful owners. And more than half the money is bidden in Mexico and may never be found. Roberts, father of the scheme, is spending his time these days at Chicago's downtown fe deral lockup appealing his fraud con· viction. BEFORE HE WAS caught, Rob erts, a businessman <1udacious enough to use national advertising in the modern·day .Christmas spirit, built himself a tidy little nest egg. One to the tune or $1.9 million. He ran advertisements in na· tionally circulated publications such as TV Guide and Parade magazine, and in small.town newspapers, aimed at attracting suckers en masse. But be was too successful. Roberts, alias John Rodine, at· traded too mucb attention to his Teltronics Ud •• a phony setup he managed to pass off through an advertising · agency t o the magazines as a legitimate en- terprise. But he wasn 't un· • covered before arranging for transfer of more than $1 million of those funds to Mexican bank accounts and investments. MANY PERSONS WHO were snookered complained to Illinois authorities, who discovered strange doings. They found', for one thing, that there were no watches. For another, that there were no pocket calculators. They eventually received 20,000 com- plaint.I. Roberts is appealing con- secutive three-and five.year sen- tences, compliments of his May 2S convictlon. A U.S. District Court jury found him guilty of 50 counta of mail fraud, and the torney general's omce was able to block it. An involuntary bankruptcy proceeding was filed against Roberts and Teltronics thls year on behalf of certain temporary. help services, claiming unpaid expenses totaling $15,000. "WE'RE UP THE CREEK," says Jonathan McPhee of the consumer fraud protection division in the attorney general's office . "That automatically stays any other actions." The federal bankruptcy peli· tion. filed by attorney Louis Levit, bas frozen a ll the re· covered funds -$836,000 in bank accounts and another $50,000 in gold coins, recovered in a safety deposit box in Milwaukee. The state's attempts in contesting the petition to allow return of the consumers' money have been un- successful. "We've filed a complaint for reclamation," says McPhee, "which essentially says that the money was taken by fraud. We a lready have a j udgment (Roberts' conviction) to that ef· feet. Since it was taken by fraud, we feel he did not have UUe to that. '·. . . WE AllE ENTITLED to keep this $900,000 out of a re· ceiver in bankruptcy. It belongs to the consumers." But, adds McPhee, bankruptcy Judge 'Thomas Jamea baa not al· lowed hia petitlon. Roberts, says McPbee, "is try. ing to brazen this thine out. He's a really cocky son of a gun. H• wanted to go out owing every- body." Roberts, who likely wlll be eligible for parole in three· years if his conviction is ufbeld, even tried to strike a dea with federal prosecutors to get his $500,000 cash bond lowered, of· , fertne to bring back $386,000 from Mexico, says McPbee. Wednftdty. O.C.mber 14, 19n DAILY PILOT ?ilt THE FAMILY CIRCUS. By en Keane Trea,sury Wins 9Tanclscqn 'Fleece' Award WASHINGTON (AP) -Sen. William mlne bas presented hia "Fleece of the Year"•• d to the Treasury Department for supporting colt· tlnuation of what be called a $400 mlllion·a·year tax loophole for Americana living abroad. The Wlsco.nsln Democrat reeularly presenls .. awarda" to federal agencies that he saya dlaplM' glarlnl examples of govemment waste. · , His latest prize Tuesday was to response to «H~ partment support of a move to delay until the ttl8 tax year a change, approved in 1978 by Cooaress, to scale down a tax break under-which Americans liy- ing abroad can avoid U.S. taxes on the first $20,QQO earned each year. • • Erma tells It Ilk• It la. ... AT WIT'S END In the DAILY PILOr I l: j I r I ~ "'I: ~ 1 . ' ' ' 'I • That's right, dishes at Coast Music. We're not going to stat o new depatment ex anything like that. This is just our way of showing our appreciation for ptl'Chosing )40lJ' piano or organ at one of our stcxes. A 42 piece service for eicJJt i& ycus with the pi'Chose of ony nt!NI piano or Of90'l. No cheap stuff • • • this is beoutifJ franc:iscon dinnerNae that you'Q be proud to own « poss on os a Owistmos ?'esent to someone special. . .... )lo ~ ~ ~ > ! I . ~ ~ WE CARRY: YAMAHA. CONN. GULBRANSEN. KOHLER & CAMPBELL KIMBALL ~ND & UNIVERSAL •• DAtL. Y Pll.OT Skiing to Bono~ulu . Two San Diego men, Tom Calamia (in front> ·and David Calderman head out across the Pacific in jct ski boats. An escort vessel is accompanying them. . lJSC Sailors Win Collegiate Regatta Berger Memorial New Race Series Set The Del Rey Yacht Club of Marina del Rey has announced the in- augural of the William Berger Series, a serlea of point·to·poinl sailboat races honoring the late Bill Berger, a pa$t com- modore of the club. The four-race series will be sailed on the waters or Santa Monica Bay and Catalina Chan· ne l during the nine months period between January and September. Fourth and final race will be the Catahna Channel race Sept. 9. The race, to be sailed -.::=================:=;-Jan. 7, will bethe23-mile Malibu and Return race from Marina del Rey lo the Santa Monica fishing pier, flrllsbfng back at MarinadelRey. A PERPETUAL trophy has been donated to the club by Bill Berger's brother, Leon, and his racing son and daughter.in·law, Paul and Jamie Berger. Second race of the ·IF you think there'• nothing new In Chrlatmas Candy and Food Gifts, then you haven't been to The Nut Kettle yet. Berger Series will be the Ope d · L---'L.-v,...d Pl,..•a San ta Monica Bay nevery ay ~ n.. - third race will be the ~Ill!!:< •· zr--~ BOATING Tasteful Holiday Gifts from .. NEWPORT/COSTA MESA -&.U·8!MO -1500Newport Blvd. WEST 1.0S ANCEtES SANTA ANA -tlll._1___ (7M) .. 7-llUll.-- ~'!~~~...,, ~~.:_~2 m•1....,_ MARINA on REYIViNICB m .14n.1:111 -..._ CANOGA PARK I ,..,, __ - Triangle, a 43·miler Wed.·Set.till9pm ~FcreatAve •• scheduled March 25. The -T.A And, yes, we do_miil La,....•""" Beaich A\~ • USC. with sk1ppcr Uon Ayres and crewmen _i70~·~m~i~lc~C~at:alij·~n~a~H~a~r~bjo:r~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~i:,:~~~~~~~~-=~~~~===~===============;= .. ~!l!Ji-!IJ~!l!!!l Brad Avery and Scott Mason, all of Newport Beach, Lav o v c r . June 3 · 4. :Won the 37th annual Pac1f1c Coast Intercollegiate 'Onampionshlp regatta at Monterey and qualified for the national championship m Hawaii Jan. 3·8. • The Pacific Coast championship was sailed un-~r threatening skles in Shields Class sloops with Cline schools competing. The series went down to the ~al race with only one pomt separating the first lj>ur schools. ~ The UC Irvine team with Tom Burton as skip· ~r sailed a heartbreak series. They would have ~on the championship except for the r esail of one ~ce whlch the UCl team had won . •• :: USC'S SERIES SCORE was 16 points to 17 for Cinnerup UCLA; 18 for U<.: Berkeley and 19 for UCI. t2ther schools in order of finish were University of lfawaii. UC Santa Cruz. Stanford, California 1'1f antimc. Academy and Golden West College. It )¥as the first major regatta for the Golden West )>rew . • The USC coach was Gordo Johnson of Newoort beach. a former top sailor for lhe University of· kawa11. : An interesting sidelight on the Hawaii team ~as that the skipper, Kui Lim and one crewman, ~ul Kim were the two Taiwanese sailors who were ~rred from the 1976 Olympics al Montreal because l>f political pressures. REGIONAL WINNERS who will nieet USC tfhen the national championships get under way in ftawaii are University of Michigan, University of Texas, U.S. Naval Academy (Annapolis>. Universi· b' of Rhode Island, University of South Carolina fbd the Canadian Maritime Academy. • The Pacific Coast Intercollegiate cham-, ieonship dates back to 1940 when USC won it with ~bert M. Allan Jr. of Newport Beach as skipper. Yacht Firm Picks 2 Vice Presidents ~ : Ericson Yachts has announced the appointment Of Curtis E. Densmore as vice president of egineering and development and Robert M. Walsh bf> vice president of manufacturing. • Ericson Yachts of Santa Ana produces 12 dif· ferent models of production sailboats and is ~gaged in researching the new product market. -"The appointments of Densmore and Walsh to t' ttieir present positions will help insure the uninter- rupted growth of the company in manufacturing :1 and marketlna," said company officials. ;Divorce Rate Rises BELGRADE, Yugoslavia <AP) -The divorce rate is going up in Yugoslavia, and the number of marriages is going down. Before World War II, one marriage in 20 ended ln divorce. Since l.955 the rate has been one in seven. or eight. In 1974, there were 205,835 marriages; in 1975 there were 183,665 and 23,221 divorces. v->~NOs RESTAURANT AMD LOUNGE Now Under New OWN~SHIP ANO MANAGE~ENT REMODELED ANO REDECORATED LUNCH DAILY -Mea. ..... Fri. ............ , .. ,, DI.._ SIRYID MCIHYlY , .... ,... ............ , .. '' ,......, .. w . ... "' Fr-. $5.25 CCII! a SHOP DAILY 6 A.M. te 10 P.M. .. What will delight a Junior most on December 25th? --~ A sporty new "*' ,. sweater! sale 8.99 regularly $12 '' You'll see zip ond button front cardigans as well as classic .~ ond novetty pullovers. You'll nottce lots ot tashlOn acoent~ too: cables. ribbing, kangaroo pockets, ond hoods. Some sweaters hove snazzy VOtSlty stripes: others feature jocQuord designs. Choose your favorites from on assortment ot machine- woshobl& ocryllcs ond ooytlc blends fn bright holiday colors. Junior sizes S·M·L Price effective through Dec. 18. - ____ ._.. _____ ~~--------------...----- COUNTY I OBITUARIES Wedneeday, December 14, 1977 DAJl. Y PILOT JI. aa.Ueapp d Research Care Keeps Holidays Happy ights F OCllS . A. wards Holiday trapping•. lrom de<OraUons can ..... metal polaoatn• If •wallowed, G ed lo plants, can turn festivities into misery officlala at the cenw also warned. aeats that, when ualn1 paint to mate holiday cards and decoratloo.s, do·lt· yourselfera work 'to a well-venUlat.d place. Otherwise, toxic fume• m cause headache, nausea and vomiUq. The saml! caution applies to spray.Oft artillclal mow. Of C ~ r81lt oreventragedyiftheproperprecaulions Mistletoe and holly berries can cause 0 n ere '11Ce aren't taken, say officials at the Polson nausea and central n~rvous 1ystem pro. Control Center at UC Irvine Medical blems if swallowed. Vomttina should be two UC Irvine pro-Center. induced and a physician called ii anyone A conference for parents of handicapped fd s,o ts have be e n Care is especially needed around swallows any of these plant.a, report chl.,ren will be held from 7:45 a .m . to 3:45 p .m. awarded resear ch children. Tbe center recommends keep· centerotflclala. • J an~l4 at Cal State Fullerton. fellowships by the Na-ing on hand syrup of ipecac, which can Other hazardous plan ta that should be be conference Is sponsored by the Patent Oo-tional Endowment lor induce vomiting, and the polaoo control moved oVl of the reach of children in· op C mmittee and Regional Center of Orange Coun-the H\.lmanities. 24-hour phone number, 634-5988. elude diertenbachia (dumbcane> and ty cooperation with the county Department of They are Herbert H. Decorations that can cause skin irrila· spllUeatphllodendron. Edu ation and CSF's Handicapped Student Center. Lehnert, professor ot lion and, if swallowed, choking or in- he focus of the con-German, and Arthur tesllnal damage include tinsel, icicles ALSO, WIBLE U.8.-made toys ·are fereQJ:e will be rights and ( ) 14 a rd~r. proressor and angel hair. s e nerally composed of non-toxic resl><'llibillties concern-BRIEFS emeritus ot bbtory · materials, forelan-made toys may be ing tle education of han-LEHNERT, an Irvine. FIRE SALTS USED to produce col· dangerous. Foreign decoratlona also dicapped chlldren. --------resident, collects bis ored fiatne5 consist of salt.a of lead, should be used with care. 1 OTHEB PRECAUTIONS -durlnc holidays 1bould include keepln medications out of the reach t4 ~Ull'lli!llC. and uai.n, extra care in wrapplq refriaeraUne leftover holiday food. Finally, officials at the center w residents who use holiday time fot home remodeling should store solvents in locked or inaccessible places, always clearly labeled and never in a food coo- ~er or beverage botUe where they Registration is $5, second award for work arsenic, copper and other element.a and The poboa control center ~ suc- with information available by callmg Denise OJala on a two-volume history -----------------------------------------------------at SSt·ss.:.>, Ester Bentley at 973-1999, or Becky of German literature, could be mistaken for food. Mc FSl'lain al 835-1030. part of a larger project Refagee Se.l••r Set A seminar designed to assist Indochinese re- fugees in adapting lo the United States will be held at 6 p . .-i. Monday at Costa Mesa High School. No registration is required for the seminar, sponsored by the Newport-Mesa Unified School Dis- trict. Speakers will be Lam Te Trinh of Huntineton Beach and Lieu T. Nguyen of Fullerton, &th former Vietnamese judges now studying law at Western State University College of Law. Giits Collected Th~ Orange County Probation Department and the Volunteers In Probation are asking for Christmas gifts for teenagers in Orange County Juvenile institutions. Donors may bring their unwrapped gilts to the reception desk at Juvenile Hall, Orange, or may call 634-7406 to have the gifts picked up. Editor Appoi•ted Dr. Abraham I. Melden of Newport Beach, emeritus professor of philosophy at UC Irvine, bas been appointed general editor of Philosophical Research Arcltives, a professional journal s ponsored by both the American and Canadian Philosophical Associations. Agende• Selectelf ~ The following agency assignments have been announced: · . -The Orange County Economic Development Corp. has selected the Cox & Burch Advertising Co., Newport Beach, to prepare its advertising, market- ing and public relations programs. Funded by the Orange County Board of Supervisors, with administrative support of the County Chamber of Commerce, the corporation, a non-profit entity, began operation last January. Its goal is to foster new jobs in the county by attracting national growth-oriented industry compatible with tbe county's land use and environemntal con· strain ts. -Mark Industries has selected Estey-Hoover • .Advertising and Public Relations of Ne..,port Beach, as agency of record. -The Western Manufactured Housing l1111titute, Anaheim, has appointed Estey-Hoover A4vertising and Public Relations, Newport Beach, as its agency or record for trade advertising cam-paigns during 1178. -Fleetwood Enterprises, manufacturer of mobile homes and recreational vehicles, has selecl- ed Cochrane Chase and Co., Newport Beach, to han- dle advertising, public relations and marketing for its housing group. Deatlt Notle!ti!S 14Ln.9B•HOM flUMllAL HOMI Corona del Mar 673·9450 ea.ta Mese 846-2424 18.1.llOADWAY MOITUAIY 110 Broadway Costa Mesa 6<42-9150 SMl'IM~UMI COSTA~ CHAPIL ~Tf.17th St. Cotta~• 846-4888 ~Ma Chapel 51$ Broadway Santa.Me• 647-4131 PAClfllC Y11W ~ltALPAll c.m.t9'Y Mortuary Chaptf 3500 Paclflc view Ortve Newport, CaflfMnl1 144·2700 Deatlt 'Nodre11 on which be Is col- laborattng. Publication is expected in 1981. Mard~r. who Uves in Santa B'arbara, is doing research on a history of the Japanese Imperial Navy, and the influence upon it by the British Royal Navy, whose tac- tics it studied from 1936 to 1945. THE FELLOWS were among 173 professors na- tionwide awarded stipends of up to $20,000 for a fuJl year, or up to $10,000 for six months of research. The National Endow- ment for the Humanities offers fellowships for in- dependent study and re- search to teachers, scholars or other in- terpreters of the humanities who have made, or qemonstrated promise Of making significant contributions to humanistic thought and knowledge. Fond8 Nixed Caplfol News Service SACRAMENTO -The stale Department of Rehabilitation is seeking to convince the federal government it shouldn't fund a proposed courthouse for Santa Cruz County because the building does not provide for adequate wheelchair access. Deaths Elsewhere TECATE, Mexico (AP) -The newly ap- pointed chief of the Baja Calffornia Transit Police for the Tecate area has died, apparently or a heart ailment. Rodol/o GuUerrei, 49, was chief of the Tecate Police Department for three years. DACCA, Bangladesh (AP) -Abdul Malek, 74, the last governor of East Pakistafl before it became Bangladesh as a result of the India· Pakistan war in 1971, dfed T•Jesday. TAMPA, F!a. (AP) - Vlrcll "Red'' Miiier Newt.on Jr., 73, retired managing edit.or of the Tampa Tribune and a A great· personal and historic drama This book. b y Robert J. Donovan, a veteran Washington correspondent now With the "Los Angeles Times," comblM1 the flrfthond observation of a rePorter with an eictr00<dl· nory outpouring of new historical moterlol on the Truman Administration Norton $12. 95 w No place like ~2~'S PASADENA 695 E. Colorado Boulcvard/«9-5320 Open Mon.· Fri. 'til 9 PM. Sit. 'ail 5:30 PM EAGLE ROCK PLAZA 2S6-3121 SANTA ANITA FASHION PARK .... S-0220 BankAmericard/MUtcr Charp -------.-,,..------~-v,_.,, 695 E. Celor8do 8hd.. rzr•-. il10t Pltal( Hff COflet of ''C•ntd A Crblt" at Sll.95 (A" 6' •les tu ... 15c for~.) 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Puk rree, EAW.t: ROCK Pl.AZN256-.\121 S.\ "TA ..\~IT:\ FASHIO~ PARl\i.US..0220 Hunk..\mnkard/~la.,tcr Ch1trJtc ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• l'rit·r i111·l111'4•t1 .iulr" la' a1111 ;;;• 1111t1t..,rr/luu1tlli1111. t:.l l'lru .. t• f'harJI,. 111~ \'roou111',. a,.011111. !:J H1111k \narri1·11r1l D ;\l11J1ln 4:!111r1ll' I tl h1•111l1t11111·1• 1•11r fo .. 1•1I t:"I'· U111" ~um•: ------------- \1l1lr1·~ .. ------------ Ci&~----l'i1111t· __ z11, __ _ ror christmas fl-'Otll ourTAL'BOTT tie. shop ... the. mostcompleW.end~ive edection ortelbott ~ avEtilable. ell ntDW co'\orat1one andcksiane ~ ft-antn. f\ne6t eilka available. ell our~~ eilnplyt.beVJOrld8 Anestu.ts . •• ti .. ,,, " Wednffday. OeC4tmber 1•, 1977 'Soap' AppearS Tame 4Teem·. Charged In Theft Every Christmas Brings a Crock.ley Letter HEADS DRIVE Clifford Getea Officer To Lead Campaign Lt. currord Gates of ) the San Clemente Police Department will head the 1978 March of Dimes Campaign in San Clemente, wlth a fund- raising golf tournament planned in April und a bike-~thon in May. Good health for a ll children at birth 1s what the March of Dimes is all about, said Gates. who has been a San Clemente police officer since 1958. Gates lives in San Clemente with his wife and two daughters. He is a member or the city's Elks Lodge and the Estrella Country Club. Robert Bridge will serve as voluntee r treasurer for the San Clemente campaign, said Dorothy Sutherland, executive director of the March of Dimes' Orange County chapter. Anyone interested in helping with the cam- paign can call 979-2270 for adctilional informa- tion. Minister Wrwicted Of Kidnap FRESNO ~P> -A Hayward tftmisttfr hd been convicted of kid- naping two girls from a local shopping mall and holding them hostage for four days. Louis Adolfo Barbosa, 31, also was found guilty Tuesday of three counts of rape and two counts of sex perversion agalnst a l5·year·old Santa Cruz girl. WAIT, IT'S HERE. THE latest Christmas let- tec from the Crockleys : ''Dearest Friends, ••Jii there, again, and what a year it has been for all of us here al the ranch. You'll notice we've moved again. Daddy Crockley just bad to carry out his dream of raising musk ox in Vermont. He's had the idea ever since President Nixon went to China and brought over a pair for the Peking Zoo. Mother Croekley, game for anything, just loves the big bovine ruminants, even if she did get a bad shock from the electrified fence last month. "Speaking of accidents, Grannie Hotchkiss broke her collarbone on Rudy's skate board going down Mather Hill and bad to give up her taneo lessons. For a while she and Uncle Phil were ln the same hospital, but he was sent home after bumlng a hole in the sheets with his water pipe. "Nat' TO WORRY. THEY are both fine now. Uncle Phil is into transcendental meditation with Carmine Sutra, a guru from Satan he met on the all-night bus coming back from the sanitarium in Calgary. Phil brought him home for Thanksgiving. He speaks only Urdu but strums that sitar like a regular Johnny Cash and the twins were enchanted. But for her job down at the abattoir, all com· puterized now, Enid would have run off with him •. You know what a romantic she is. "The whole family was t.oeether at. Thanksgiv- ing for the first time in ages. Elwood walked In juat as Aunty Eugenia was popping her bourbon brownies into the oven, giving us the happiest shock of our lives. He bad been living with some Lapp r• bHleer herders in Saivomoutka, Sweden, and hadn't heard the Vietnam war was over. Elwood bad some. kind of operation out there and now wants to be called Elvira. "REGGIE AND KATHY CELEBRATED their 10th wedding anniversary in June. M usual, be was 9ff on the gold cruise with hia nuclear sub· marine somewhere under the North Atlantic, and she went to see "Jaws" to sort of be wlth him on their special day. Next Sunday we are all goln1 over to the Beatrice Webb Nursery school to see their youngest, Nancy, almost 5 now, in "Ohl Calcuttat•• What a cute idea, and it didn't cost Kathy or the other parents a sou for costumes. She and her cousin, 7, of Reedley, both iden· tified Barbosa as their ------------------- abductor in the trial. Barbosa, pastor of Zion Apostolic Temple at Hayward, will be sen- tenced Jan. 9. T~c., trial lasted only 1¥.z days because evidence was heard by Superior Court Judge Hollis Best without a jury, and the defense presented no evidence or dosing argument. Best denied a motloo to allow Barbosa to remain free ~ on bail unUl sentencing. ct ---------~ NO DICE FORTRL4L <: .. .: . c 0 z < MIAMI (AP) -MU ton ~ Facen was scheduled to be tried for alle•edly ~ klllln1 a man over a ~ same of craps. But be ~ won't be In court. He was abot to death in another dice game. ~~~· GOL1'SMITH ·FINE JEWELRY .tP.~·.. ·. ~. ~· • GENTLEMEN! ., ..._ ·W. MEN ONL y :,• l(JPPING H(Ji.. HS I · . DECEMBER 15 ~~ ~ EVENINGS 7 • 9:30 "fl(• 0 (~ j ~ LEISURELY CHOOSE FINE •• ~. JEYJELRV, HANOCRAf'T.WARES , FOR HOLIDAY GIVING . • FESTIVE CHAMPAGNE 1tt..• · ·CAPABLE STAFF TO ~ ASSIST YOU. ~ • lull uhout our IJ'1,/t Hcyf.i;/ry :~. . . ·~~. ·~- 301 MARINE AVENUE --~ 673-4734 Let th•m h•r• • dry b•df The greeteu gilt you can q1ve a btdwttttr end the res I of thllf femtly 11 an end to °"Ja senout problem. Bedwenlng 11 Mt'loua- 11 can ceuae complicettd psychological problem• 1hl11 Ian e hftttlme. lt'l IO nMdlttt, btColust btdwe111n11. when not cauMd by 1... orvtnlc defect or dliffla can be ended. ~-'-f Phone fOf' our FREE BROCHURE. -· "BeDWETIING • WHAT 1r1 ALL At-edvertl~1 ABOUT AND HOW TO !ND IT." In Parente A report by three Medical Ooct~. Mapzine. FAE!-NO COIT OR 08LtOATIOH. PHONE TOLL FREE 800 -982-5860 Glllt your name. 1ddrttUllc..and lhlt valueblt brochu,r9 will bt m111led to you ptornpcly. B«lwetter agea 4 b 55. PACIFIC INT'L. CRO LTD. OUR 27th Stanfonl Profetllonal Center. l'EAR '7'70 Welch Jld .. No. U•. Palo Alto, CA. 94304 • HAS IT ALL• 11 •••• ~ .. ~WE'RE #1 SINCE 1934 •WE KNOW AND LOVE SKUNG! ·~ ··~ . [j[~:"i~i!:~{~Y:~J§J I • " #1 HEXCEL FIRELIGHT #2 ROSSIGNOL PRO AM #3 DYNASTAR MEDALl$T SKIS Look GT lindiftg, Scott Pro Am . SKIS Look GT Binding, Scott Pro Am SKIS Look GT lfndlng, Scott Pro Am -~-~~ ..,.iltFOl 119915. ::-$220.00 ALL FOi 115981 ::-$245.00 AU. 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Finest selection of Notdico -Scott__: Vendra Mini .. \ • SKI IAW • SKI flOlES ' • AfT£R •BINDINGS ' SKI BOOTS •SKI IAGS e GLOVES • IOOT IAGS · •TUNE UP KITS •LONG •WAX UNl:>ERWEAR • • SOX • TUllTlE SHIRTS • •GLASSES •WINE SKINS • OOGO\lS • IONGO IOAllDS I :x~=~ .......... 1 FOR GOLFERS •Canos.ats •:Golf Shoe• •Practice Gadgeb •Crying Towel• •Golf Hats • Heod Covers • Golf Set' • Boll• • Putters • Gloves •Wedges • Golf Carts •Bags •DtVEMASKS •SWtMflNS •FLOATS •sNORKflS •IOXtNG •D.ul'S •IOOlCUES SPORlS . e HOttSHHOES .I r t r .j I Wednesday. December 14, 1971 QUEENIE By Phil lnterlandi ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ·-,..~--------------------------------. Sex Law Nixed by Justices .. It .. It It HE'.\T :\ '77 EXE('l.Tl\"E )JOTOH 110)11-: Bae Btf;e -Ap11C DEAR PAT: I am ll'lOvlce writer who wants to 1oeate a legitimate ag~. How do I go about doing this, and is it absolutly necessary to have an agent? I L.P.,Irvine Unle1& you have peraonal contact wlth a pablltber or pYOducer1 an agent ls your beat bet. Cllect your Ubrary'a 1opy or "The BroadcuUn' I Yearbook" for inrorm"lon. It Includes a Ust of re- patable agent.. Bowlurl• "Literary Market Place" alto c~alu namet ~ adclreue1 of publishers aad Ill rary agent!( "Wrl&er'a Market" aad "Write s Handboo .. ' are two other helpral volume.. • If yoa dec:lde to s~mlt Daa&erlal on your own, It woald be helpful to tk an experienced writer to give you an bonett ev aatlotl of your writing abWty and offer objecUve c lclam before yo1& contact a pubu.errr producer; Dri"e a Bard Barg8'• DEAR PAT M3 accountant tells me that for tax purposes I wouldbe better off leasing a car than owning one. Do I ha,e any protect.Jon under the law regardingthe term~r the lease, or is it just a mat· ter of taking the bestideal I can find? CK. Irvine Read leasing aJreemeats and advertisements carefully and you'¥ be able to tell If a particular leasing company !s a the up and up. The Moscone AutomobDe Leas Act requires advertisements concentln& auto le Ing that menUon monthly pay· meat& &o Include stUementa of total prtce of the car on which the moottly payments are based, the con· sumer's.llablllty aire end of the leue term and tbe amount of any p payments or down payments. Violations of tbia t are not uncommon, according to the At&ofQey O.eral's Office, so a careful read- ing of car leasing ads 11 a wise move before you sl1n on the dotted One. I Befp for Ctdl 'Vlctl.u' DEAR PAT: I've heard there is an organization that helps parents or teen·agers who run away to join religious cults. Can you tell me its name and address? S.G., San Clemente The Citizens freedom Foundation <Box 251, Chula Vista, Calli. 9101%) bu cbapten and af- IUlates throupout the country. Its major work ID· volves dlatrtbu~ lnlorm atloo about the ta~tlc1 and dangers of c,Jta. It also can offer advice to parenta OD rescue met.bods and tecbnJqaes of poat-. rescue rehablUtaUoa. Retum to Penoeal Choice fBox 159, Liacotn, Mass. 02173> la operated ex- cla1lvely by professlodals. Penonal Choice devotes itaelt to !letting llP a clearlnc boase for Jnfo..rm.Uoa. promoting an educatloaal program and malntala-inJ a national oetwork of cou.uellng and dlerapy se lees. Although tbla organisation 11 loea&ed lo the o&ton area, It c:an provide referral• el1ewllere. I "My name on out' restaurants guarantees you will consis- tently receive the finet>t qual- ity of steaks and prime rib. My many years as a ranch- er as well as a restaurateur gives us that edge. We look {Qrward to serving you and your friends." ·~ GoMService '• I _. TRENTON, N.J. <AP) The New Jersey Supreme Court has ruled that the state's fomlca-tlon law forbidding sex- ual lntercoune between any man and an unmar- rled woman ls an un- coastUutlonal violation of ~ersonal privacy. 'We conclude that the conduct statutorily de· fined as fornication in- v o Ives by its very nature, a fundamental personal choice," the court said Tuesday in voting 5-2 t.o overturn the law. "Thus, the statute infringes upon the nght "I don't llke to complain, but you've left your vacuum of privacy." cleaner on." THE RUUNG said the statute banning "an act of illicit sexual in-1""-11 g W k tercourse by a man. ~ e e or ers married or single, with . an unmarried woman,·· Job C nd • • violated the "zone ot 0 -.i-.ons p~l~acy protecting In -., ., d1v1duals from an un- Pact Accepted Saddlebacl( College's classified employees and trustees have reached agreement on provisions coverinc working conditions in their current employmwcont.ract. The college's chapter of the Calilornia School Employees Association <CSEA), whlcb represents nearly 200 employees, reached an agreement with the administration on the financial portion of the. contract last June. TIDS PREVIOUS AGREEMENT included pay raises of 5.3 percent for all non-teaching employees. The new •greement covers the items not in- cluded in the earlier pact. It is a three year contract with annual reopening provisions tor wages and Cringe benefits. Alix Randall, CSEA president. said the agree- ment contruns stipulations improving the position or employees seeking reclassification to upgraded posts. IT INCLUDES TWO MORE paid holidays, bringing the annual total t.o 15. The additional days will allow employees to take the week off between Christmas and New Year's- M rs. Randall said the administration indicated a willingness to continue talking about the establis- ment of a "closed shop" at the campus and to notify her group of changes in policy affecting the class Wed staff. .rThis is a very satisfactory contract. We are happy with it," Mrs. Randall said. "WHlave • lood district here. We don't have the adversary condi- Uons that exlst elaewhere and the administration •hows a lot of good faith.'· warranted governmen- tal intrusion into matters of intimate personal and family concern.·· The court reJected the state's contention that the fornication statute was needed to guard against venereal dis- ease. protect the marital relation.ship and prevent the propagation of il- legitimate children. "THE RISK of con- tracting venereal dls· ease is surely as great a deterrent t.o illicit sex as the maximum penalty under t.bia act: a fine of $50 and or imprisonment in jatl for six months," said the majority opinion written by Justice Morris Pashman. The court said it was not suggesting that the state may not regulate activities designed to further public morauty. "OUR CONCLUSION today extends no further than to slrike down a measure, which has as its objective the regula- tion of 'private' morali- ty.·· the court said. The ruling reversed a conviction of a man found guilty of fornlca- ttcm after he ~d two f r i e n d s a 11 J!'t e d 1 Y engaged in sexual rela· lions with two women in Newark in 1973. • It • .. It .. FHO\l lll·:nn FHILl>l.\'.\BEH ''ll'OHT~ X2X-XXXX or :>:17 -7777. :-rnS-fi777 l-'.\l. ~·;:; 50 GALS OF GAS FREE • "ORANGE • COUNTY'S ! IMPORT • • • • CAR KING" • * -....:::;..:=;;;.._;;;.;;;.;;;..;;.._ _ ___, • Jt eD-M•lllMr .. _ftl ... fth" Jt Jt • OAR f. 'f It • . .. • • * • • • • • .-G()f'<M'I St." ..... <fD.. or FREE .. • • • • .. • It '*""""~~--......,--~ OIL CHANGES · • 1h recommended by the • factory ror 111 Ions as • you own your car. • • It It • .. • • • It • •• .. .. • • More than you expect In a hardware store. CHRISTMAS HOURS: 8:30 to 7 Daily Saturday 9 to 5:30 • Sunday I 0 to 5 CROWN ••. is well stocked as always! we know what you need. • COMPETITIVE PRICES • CHRISTMAS 'LIGHTS • DIMMER SWITCHES • EXTENSION CORDS • TIMERS • GIFT WRAP • LIGHT BULIS • TOOLS • APPLIAHCES <t''!!!!11!BJ OPEN SUNDAYS COllONA DEL MAil, 3117 E COAST lllGHWAY/lltlLOMET~ll SOUTH OF 1-..,.., MacAllTlftlll <about•b*u) 67,_2100 ~ i1•ueYalue m ·Vs Tonight,·5 p.m. ~r.~~ <'\:~UntainValley· \:,,, .. Grand It .. • ' ~ 'l r: t ff ... '" ri ' 't • .... .,, . ' ... ... I ·'1 . ' " • • • J . • ' • . • • • i • • • " I ' . W~nei.day, Oe<:41mb9r t.i, 1977 • VIDEOCOMPUTER SYSTEM BY ATARI® 16?,~9Combat. v;deo .... ..,._ Many games; ~e~lr.Sea 'eattle and space Olympics. lndY . more tun. Model CS2600 Mission. Mot-e games. TRl·MODE MODULAR UNIT 8999 Kings Point AM/FM Player and record cha~ereoMreceiver with 8-traclc; ger. Odel 115031 7. COOKIE TIMS IOWSAMIOMS ~8~.~59 68¢ .. 97¢ Or911_...... ·-' CLOC«UDIO 41 8~ 'J.995 E.,.,.,,.. No I003 'Ot-tMt..,,_, YIUOW JACDT Cil CUDOUllil 1711 991 WTW'Mr 99't '6• ti I TYUMa 1999 ............ 599 -. ........ ~ ... Of as MIDGET UGHT SIT 411 JO/J WAY A.ASHBUns 597 Al.Jtl .. YILLAGI I o.LJGHT SIT 399 . GOLD OR SILVH 72' GARLANDS ] 99 11-2V." SATIN ORNAMENTS ]99 24· 1 'i4 " GLASS ORNAMENTS C:ldDS. SIA&.S 78¢ &:MP\;.~ l·SNIO~ 1999 ·19ss 1988 Beautifully porportioned branches. Flame resistant PVC. CAMDYCA.HlS 69¢ P'OCUT c.u.c:uu TOl 999 I di9'1~. tMO 0 1 ()67 .-:' STMCAHDU 199 J 7aHM4C>O•us ... SOUNDESIGN TRENDSETTER STEREO $ The no~ ''•Od '° "•'eo unilS 8 9 OfMy COnlrola, ILAal • WHIT! POIT AILE TY • J . • > ! ~ .. • 7999 : 12" diagonal. O\Jld\ tt-1 picture tube. Solid state • chassis plus much ITIO(e. \ 199 333 ' 'nu,_• cera' e1 ~ l ·TlACI TAii PU YH MOYll ftOJICTOa _4 _______ _ -. .... DAZEY DOMUT FACTORY • 18 66 d-" Non-sti~· Easy instruction. recipe book lnclu 9"· surfJc&. Model No OF2.. 1797 HAMILTON BEACH FRY ALL f ·es anything that fits inside the baSket. Deep n No. 2121. 1.4 MACHINE I\' MOUUNEX Oelu•e model l $ 88 system 8 Machine toOd "re · ., Para11on 1688 UTlUMAC WIDOID MASSWill 1444 COClll In t """· SJ 1J88 : 444 . . .... ........ . -..... ~ . -_ __._ -.......... -.... ~ . . ..... J 2'J:l9 MIOdlt 01/'82. Wednesday. Oee.mber 1<4, 1977 DAIL v PILOT A J:I GRIAT GIFJS FROM KNOm BERRY FARM WIMPLACEOR SHOW 3.PACK I 347 3 winn9f'11 In generous 12 ounce Jar.· . Orange Marmalade, Boysenberry, and Strawberry preserves. HOUD.A Y HOSTESS 6.PACK 544 6 half-pound Jars of Grape. Slrawt>erry, Apricot and Plneawte. Peach, Plum and "° Orange Marmalade. IREAD IASKET J.AM-IOREE 788 111RH ~ FRJEO CHICKEN 0NLY ·239 lncltJdes creamy COie Slaw. roll and butter. -SOMETHING NEW- ,,..,_._.,~ ................. ,........ ..... c.,.,.,.,.., ............. ........ c"~u P••.._ M·fla. JI.I Fri. 11.a:Jo Set. 11·7 S-. 146.2071 ' '"' ,. ~· ., TIE SltOWB1 mRSSft6E byW:lter Piii 1597 SM-2 2397 SM-3 2 styles: wa11mount. and hand held, and stat=· --· 8000 pulsating jets of water per mini.rt• to • and massage. Or ediust for regular Sfl'll'/. 1599 1 )88 4Q.-... (11. ... ununrAIU Mltl'S 'LUI& SHllT 2-51 O_ ..,. ............... J.t7 1188 10 .................. 499 ....... tlltt Dt5"MUBIS I I \. I • • rll.J.,j DM.YPILOT Wees~. O.O.mber 14, 1en I 'Star W 8.1!8' I i Theater Bows tO Film Firin in Pact Battk I I PORTLAND, Ore. <AP> -TwenUetb Century· : Fox Film Corp has agreed out or court wltb a • Portlaod theater film to continue showing ''Star ; Wara" at one o! its theaters as provided in a con-· ,. : tract. f• The film corporaUon bad filed suit a1ainlt Tom Moyer Theaters to block the anticipated subatitu· : Uon o! another !Um for "Star Wara" at the West.sate : Tri Cinema. j The other rnm ls "Close Encounters of the Third Kind," produced by Columbia Pictures In- t duatrtes Inc. It will open Dec. 14 at another Moyer theater, the EastgateTra Cinema. Tuition 'l'a% Credit Shelved WASHING TON CAP> -Senate conferees aar~ed today to drop a $250 income-tax credit for ~ollege tuition, clearing the way for Congress to take final action Thursday on a major Social Security bill. Sen. Russell B. Long, chairman of the delega-( ) tion, persuaded Sen. JN SHORT William V. Roth, R-Del., chief s ponsor of the credit, to put it aside until next year. Roth told the conferees he agreed only bet:ause he knew the full Congress would approve the credit if given the chance. "I can assure you that this Roth amend· ment will be around until we get some action," Roth said. Soviet• Step llp Airlift WASHINGTON (AP> -The Soviet Union is airlifting military equipment into Ethiopia, in some cases using misleading information on flight plans ' to get permission to Cly over C01¥1tries, a State Department spokesman said Tuesday night. "We have intelligence reports that the Soviets :• are stepping up their military effort ln Ethiopia ~. with an airlift," s-.td Ken Brown, a department ' spokesman. "And we have expressed our concerns to the Sovleta. 'l'be,e concerns are shared by Africans th•m1elves, who desiro no 1uperpower military in-volvementln Afrtean attain.• l'caeee £a,.. In Salldl ArcMa RlYAQR: Saudi Arabta <AP> -Secretary of, State Cyrus~. Vance antved lD Saudi Arabia today on the lhW Jet of hla week·lona peace mediaUon mlaslon tbrouab tbe Middh East. . He new from Damaacus, wbere he said he and President Hafez Assad "bad a very full and thoroueh discussion or our respective views on the situation In the Middle East. We dJscuaaed our de· sire for a Just. lasting and comprehensive peace in the MlddJe East and look forward very much to a continuing exchange of views in the future." Mondale Vfe.c• Carter Action WASHINGTON (AP> -Vice President Walter F. Mondale says the Carter administration's first. year dealings with Congress can be compared to flt- ing too many missiles at once: they risk destroying each other. ''There's a concept in missilery where you fire too many missiles too close together and tbey kiU each other orr," he said. "It can be fratricide in too many issues landing all at once. "I would say, perb&J>S looking in retrospect, the pace was a little too strong in the first year." be sald in an interview Tuesday that looked back over the first 12 mont.ba of the administration and forward to 1978. Prostitution ~a"' llpheld BOSTON (AP> -Massachusetts' prostitution law has been upheld unanimously by the slate Supreme Court, which added that police must ar- rest male as well as female prostitutes . In the decision Tuesday, the court said the law is not discriminatory because 1t applies to all pros· titues -female or male. The 21-page ruling up- held the convictiona of three women charged with soliciting in Boston's Combat Zone. The court said the women failed to show any discriminatory en· forcement by police. Plaza Newport To Open Jan. 1 Plaza Newport. a '41,000-squ.ere·foot retail center, is due to !)a.completed on Jan. 1, on Bristol .. Street North at Jam bore~. · Swept Off Her Feet Bianca Jagger, wife of Rollihg Stone lead singer Mick. Jagger, is swept off her feet by an unidentified shirtless bartender at New York's ~Ul'dio 54 discotheque early Tuesday monJiol, d•ini a party given in her honor by <tes\itw> Halston. · , C~nflrmed tenants include Gower Street Restaµrant, featuring a "RoUY'*QOd"·&tfie decor and offerln1 10\apa, talada, 1andwltlre1 and desserts. The Balbo• tl\ir Faotory bas leased 1,300 square feet. For more than 30 ~ •. Pn>Prtetors Monte ana Ann Portnoff have practiced the art of designing and manufacturing fur apparel from start to finish. California State Optical will open one Gilts nine Orange County locations with a l,26(Mquare-foot shop. California State Optical is a divillon of Sunland Optical of El Paso, Tex. · Retain apace ls available for stores selling drugs and cosmetics, girts and home furnishings, gourmet foods1 wine and cookware, men's and women's apparel, stationery., cards and books. The center ii owned by L.S.W., Ltd. and beln1 co-developed by ffatr}' Woloson and Bill Langston. SCAM UNCOVERED ••• "The reputaUoo of l'V Gulde. of course, is very high. and a lot ol people feel that when they see &Qmething in it you can lrust it..," McPbee added. And a Philadelphia lawyer repreHntlng both TV Gulde and. Parade, neither of which waa paid fully for the ads, said the publicaUona have decided against taking any action against Roberta at least "u.nW the coa· sumers are paid back.•' such mat.ten and there bu been no apparent inclJ.Dation by Mex· ican aut.bortUe. f.o act in tbe case. So much for 1ueh a deal. Sears 11-cent Cut Eyed On Milk SACRAMENTO CAP) -A contumer 1roup waota the at.ate to eut 11 cuta a half fallon off the mlnlJOuin price Ca.Utomla dail)'men oan be_pald for IDllk used for dl'tnklnf. That move would cut the avera'ge supermarket 'price lo 5'I cents per ball gallon if the decrease were . Plan Scrapped SACRAMENTO CAP> -Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. says bis plan to give blggef' property tax re- bates to tile peor than to middle locome homeowners probably will be scrapped ln 1978. .. Let'• aay lt's an idea whose time bun 't come yet," the Democratic governor said or the so- called "clrcult·breaker" tax rebate plan, which was the most con- troversial provision of a $4. 8 billton Brown tax plan which Republicans defeated laat September. Drought ReUel LOS ANGELES CAP) -Arid Southern California la going to ask federal permission to pipe excess water here from the mighty Colum· bia River to avert future droughts. The county's board of supervisors voted unan- imously Tuesday to ask President Carter and Congress to have the Federal Bureau of Reclamation and the Anny Corps of Engineers develop ,l)_rograms for ~vertbtl ~water that .J'Ufll al011C the border betweeQW~ and Oregon. ... Trallle Tied lip A SPOKESMAN FOR ~e publicaUon in Radnor, Pa., said the magazine has always "tried to l•ke care In reviewing ad- v er Used products. In thls particular case. we did have watches, we dJd have advertising copy, our representatives did vis- it their omce, they did pull out watches and so forth." He called tbe Incident abnormal . When and whet.her that will happen is Wtcei;tain. IN FACT, WHETHER any of the money hidden in Mexico can be recovered is doubtfur, aaya McPhee, since there are no .American-Mexican treaties on In the Sear• ed, effective through December 17, an lnadvert•nt error occurred. The headline on U.e Sewing Machine C•bfnet #8420, lhould tt.n re1d REGULAR hO fntte•d of SAY! *9o. We ·regret the error and 1ny Inconvenience tt m•r have e1111Md. • Three Levels of Fine Shopping & Dining In a Re~ed A~~here PVISUC NOTICE Pt18UC NOTICE .. .. ' CALIFORNIA / "jATION PUBUC NOTICB PUBUC NOTICE ., e e k t. Cl --- AT YOUR SERVICE I LOCAL ~BICAG-0 (AP)-Tbedriv rota car t.h•t Carried three other men oo a .. nJ1ht ot terror." bu been sentenced to 300 Ye•ra to 900 years 1n prison for the murders of an engaatd couple atooc an tnteratate highway. "Th•• is one or the most vicious and heinous crimes J have ever seen ln my 13 years on the bench," Circuit Court Judge Frank W. Barbaro said as he imposed sentence on David Sanders 22 of .. Chitago. ' ' r _ llENRY BRJSBON, 21, was sentenced ~arlier to serve 1,000 years to 3,000 years ~ m prison for the murders. At the Brisbon trial. testimony 1bowed that he told 1 Dorothy Therese Cerny, 2S, and her ·-----·-··----~----~---. nance, Jam• Schmidt, 2$, to "kiss your Jut kl.N" before abootlnC them as they 111.l_ on •roadside. The •l~as occurred June 3, lt73. whJcb aaslstanl State's Attorney M\chael Ficaro described aa a "nJcbt ot terror." · Also cbarfed in the deaths are Stanley Charleston, 24. and Darrell ThomP,on, 21. Under an agreement with the pros. ecution, Charleston and Thompson testilied against the other two and are expected to plead guilty in exchange for sentences of 15 years to 20 years and 20 years to 40 years respectively, Ficaro s~d. · ACCORDING TO TESTIMONY, the four men. met in Kankakee the ni&ht of the murders and drove along Interstate 57 forcing motorists to the side of the road to rob them. Sanders bumped Miss Cemy's car. forcing them onto the side of the road wh•re they were murdered, testimony showed. The sentences came •fler Sanders' mother submitted a plea for mercy. "WHATEVER SENTENCE he rt· ceives, I wlll receive," his mother, Dolores Muhammad, said in a letter to the judge. "l pray you will cons1'ter ... all the Go<l·given talents ~that he and many others possen that will .to to waste while he 1oes to what ls by no meana a place to. get help but a place to rot.'• lrlA-"cw' ......... c ..... OUNCE T .... -1 ..... •• ., He.,...... ... (7J4)S!J.19A --..,,,.---·· .. Wednnday, December 14, 1977 DAILY PILOT AJ$ HAM • "'So •Md ... It Wiii ,._., Y• 'tft Wt GGM" 0.'tleD ,,... .... n.. ...... 'f.irC......_ HOMEY IAUD HAM s.,.., ... ,. "* ...... 0,.,.. ... ,.....°'*"' ...... • Ready to Serve with Jlorley 'n Spice Glaze • Spiral Sliced for easy serv\ng • We Pac:kuge and Ship from Coast to Cout • Full ~rvice Delicatessen • Import~ Cheeses . ~ , CORONA DEL MAI PIUI SPllNGS NOW IN nw ~...., noo L c"'' Hwy. 1 i"Ro Hwy. 11 t lA HABRA I W S. twtt UJ4) 673-9000 Ill It-he Miit. af.1'r»-~~l :;'= ~lH~=E .:,~:o A.new environment of great interest opens in LagttnaNiguel. Doris Alexis, black Rcpu blican career civil servant, has been named as new head of the Depart· • ment of Motor / Vehicles in Sacramento by Gov. Brown. Low Skill ·Recruiting Supported WASHINGTON CAP) · The armed forces may be breeding malcontents and creating di s- ciplinary problems by not taking on ·enough .recruits with low in- elligence scores to fill low-skill jobs, a con- gressman reports. ''There are still lots of bs in the military that equire little skill," Rep. Les Aspin, D·Wis., said. "IF YOU TRY to put a ·reasonably intelligent man or woman into a low-skill job, the result is going to be frustration and a lot of malcon- tents." Aspin said the Pen· tagon recently revealed that 40 percent of its re· cruils were dropped from the rolls before £om pleting their firsl enlistment. He said the Pentagon mentioned large numbers of malcontents and dis· ciplinary problems. , ONE PAR-T of the · problem, Aspin said,. , might belhattheservices- were taking tao few recruits with low in· telligence scores. Inlclltgence tests divide prospective recruits into five groups .. -category I throuah1 ,ca tegory V, which : roughly correspond to .. A" through "F": stu- dents. The military does '"'not accept those ln ,. category V, said Aspin, a .member of the Houae ··Armed Services Com-.·mittee • • PENTAGON figures • show there are fewer •. category IV men goin1 Jn to the military, said ··As pin. He said only .-ebout. S per~t of the recni\la In three yean1 ·have' been in that '""'category. From 1952, the first ·~-tear iucb records were ' kept, through 1m, the. ;last year ot the draft, the .•percentaa• of men ln· ~'eaterory IV wbo volun· ~ \ered or were drafted .. ran1et frOln .a percent .ilo 13 perant. he 1ud. But in the four 1ears tlnce the draft waa boll1bed1 tbe percen· e of cai.e~ lV ma amoni ·NCrilhll b• not ceededlOpercent. "11.,_ lflllltt, Her#Js ail4 Planun» is a colorfbl. picture-packed booklet with hundreds o~practical tips on growing and caring for houseplants ..• how to start an herb gardcn ••• and how to build terrariums. Come in today for x.our free, handy guide to succ:easfUl inOoor gar~cnin~ (Ono per adult, ~. hil!e they last.) • I I } 1 "CROWN" , MARINA TOILET TISSUE 4-ROLL PAK l3c "MELITTA" PERSONAL • -""""' ELECTRIC DRIP COFFEEMAKER 12 oz. capac1ly with #ACM-1 REFILL FIL TEAS 8 Box of 40 ........ 49C M ELITT A"GO UR MET" Filter Fine Grind COFFEE 14 Oz. 2 99 Can 1 ~ REPRODUCED ·. ~ PRINTS ~~T~AL FRAMES ti-----. 22" • 28 .. '' ~'.~ 15.llEA. LEACH Racquetball RACQUETS .'CINCH'' lsti Oz. Cake Mix U Oz. Frostini Mix ~ttottJ• Flavora ol Each Y<>Uft 2~11c ~"" tllOJCE R • "MASTER CHEF" DONUT BAKERY By NORTHERN ELECTnlC 19 88 Makes hot, lresh, home· made donuts in minutes! 112081 1 PYREX "BAKE·A·ROUNO " !~~.~~•k!~KER,,990 8 .88 round pyrex glass tube. DR. SCHOLL'$" ELECTRIC" s . ~ Foot Massager ...._ )\~ Massaging action starts w. ith 19 9 5 ~,.. pressure lrom your feet. #413x • BUSHNELL "7x35" ALL PURPOSE BINOCULARS Stahlttss steel, ••nd ed&e blades. Dishwasher sate. 2.98 CRYSTAL Add a touch of spartn111 tlepnce to your dining. •DECANTERS . ~~~·VAS!$ • FOOTEO BOWL • FOOT~D COMP<>TE • J~~l~E 15.88 EA.· FABRIC SOFTENER 2.29 ''MACHO'' for Him ... by FABERGE :~I~f 6 50 2oz. I --COLOGNE ,.,.7 .50 "MUSK~' Romane _ The Male Scent AFTER SHAVE COLOGNE ~.~~ll;:il .. 6.50 .... With G'"tlna Canl on Box. British Sterling Lasts from DAWN TO DUSK ! AFTER SHAVE C::S::::=:l\ J.s'5·50 oz. I COL.iE !~ .. 50 Mon Triomphe AFTER SUAVE .... 5.50 COLOGNE 6 50 Spf1y Cologne 4 01. e J OZ-•• 2.95 English Leather COLOGNE REGULA A or LIME 4 oz. eech. H1ndsome, stroog matched pieces 1n assorted colors. Eacfl piece has a personal ltd&t .... Colocne, 4 oz. 6 15 Soap-on-a.Rope, 61• o~ I Russian Leather COMBO by Det Oro 4 oz. each: •AFTER SHAVE •COLOGNE ' 8.00·· Russian Leather MUSK by Del Oro 2 oz. each: •AFTf;R S~AVE • ·COLOGNE 6.00 English Leather "BIG SIX" Gift Set ''Around the World Cue'' With lhtelS. 28x22d" 1r \ , I ~ '• . .1.19 < . . -.... . ..,_ .. _ . .,..._ ..... -... - By Northern MOUTHWASll & GARGLE 1soz. 98c Delivers warm sooth1n1 steam. ~13~G4:4'9 .. . -.. .. ..... NORTHERN Heating Pad ARTIFICIAL ) I 95 SCOTCH 6 FT PINE • - • ASSORTED ·GAS PLANES By COX Durable one-piece body. ~~. Tou&h wire tandln& eear. #3314 9.99 500 PIECE !It ''HOLLY HOBBIE" . ~ ~,~~!~!...., ':!fl!:~ ·· · . · Delightful scenes. ·149 114597 • TARGET SET By Placo Knock down full color tar1et. 2 29 #322 . I ;:.. JUNIOR PUZZLE .,1_ By Miiton Bradley li!MI~~~,,;,;. Fun happy puzzles. 9 I 100 interlockin& piem. C #'382 FLUID FACTORY By WHAM-0 Unique study in flow motion Just tum it over Hd Witch OTHELLO GAME By Kohner Mind-tick tin&. endless strate1ic possibilities, MQNQPQL Y By P•rk•r Broa. The WOfld's most popular pme •• Trac 4 GAME By LakHlde House of Windsor PALMAS 8 78 ~~; . KAL KAN M.P.S. CHUNKS DOG FOOD EMPTY GIFT BOXES Christmas Pf lnts" embossed white & foil bo•es. 189 SET OF 3 • SHULTZ MOIST-LITE ''SWEET HEART'' JEWELRY BOX WHITMAN'S -ASSORTED ____ _ Fairhill Chocolates ~:;: 1.95 BRACl1'$ CANDIES Canadian Reserve WHISKY 80 Proof 818 • US LITER • ' [I I .. . . Wednaldly, ~mbet 1'4, tt71 Business AJ•DAILY PILOT C0tutnl Firms Report Purchases, Sales, New Offices, Business T old F a r lt'rst Want• De~af.11re• Far West Financial Corp., Newport Beach, has ann~uoced that it is orrertnc to purchase up to 'l million pnnclpal amount of lta outatanding S\4 sub· ordinated debentures, due Nov. l, 1979, for 1922.SO for each $1,000 debenture, plus accrued interest to Dec. 30, the expiration date or the offer. The primary purpose of the offer ls to obtain de· bentures for surrender in satisfaction of smkln& fund obligations in 1978. Debentures in the ag- Qregate principal amount of $3.238,000 are currently outstanding The offer will expire al 5 p.m. PST Dec. 30 un· less extended. Tenders wlll be Irrevocable unless they arc withdrawn prior to 5 p.m . PST on Dec. 23. The offer 1.s not conditioned upon any minimum number of debentures being tendered, but if more than $1 million of debentures aretendered, they wlll be taken up pro·~ata, as uearly as may be, without purchase of fractions. 1l sso c iadon Donate• T\I Pomona First Federal Savings and Loan, which has a branch office in Irvine, has donated a portable television set to the infirmary of the Stu· dent Healt.b Service at UC Irvine. The infirmary has five rooms with a total of eight beds. Pane l-A ir Wins Contract Panel·Aar Corp. a subsidiary or Standard· Pacific Corp., Costa Mesa, has been awarded a S2 ,900,000 contract by the Raytheon Co., elec- tromagnetic system division of Goleta, Calif. to build electronic enclosures for the AN /SLQ·32 Surf arc Naval Electronic Warfare Suites. The contract has lot releases over a multi-year period The program represents a new generation oC equipment to provide protection against a ho~lile missile threat. Panel.Air Corp 'icrve!i the aerospace and relat- l'd industries in the design. engineering and fabric a· lion of sheet metal assemblies, lightweight matcriab and products using honeycomb and plastic tcchnolo1.a .lfll<"o rd fo Sell S ub•ldlary Amcord Inc. Newport Beach, has signed an agreement for the sale of its Snowmass Corp. sub- !>1d1ary for S7 m1lhon m ca:sh. Tht• transaction 1s expected to be closed during ~-~------------ COMMODITY CALL I 111 I hl· -.nph1-.t1~.ltl·d 1r.1Jt·r thl.'.rl'.., 1111 h "Ill llll mha ,, I rl'll1l'll1hl'I -( n · R ... 540-8121 ~;·· l11d.1\ ·, p111.l'-.-lnmnrnm ·.., -.1 1.1lll!lt'' :.~;. Merrill Lynch Pieice Fenner & Smith Inc. ,, It I lseirs] the first quarter of 1978. The purchasers are a group or pn v ate investors beaded by Tbomu E. Kuhnen of Connecticut and Snowmass. .~eu1p0rt Sltop Op~n• The llrat West Coast shop for Luaene Opticians, which bas 33 East Coast ouUets, has opened at Fashion Island, Newport Beach. The shop was designed by Dale Ransom, prin- cipal o!the Ramom Group of Irvine. ,~ame to B e Chan9~d First Federal Savings and Loan Association of Hollywood wilJ become Pacific Federal Savings ef- fective Jan.1. The associations 13 branches include offices in Costa Mesa, Huntington Harbour and Anaheim DriW119 Site • A"'arde d OXOCO International, a Newport Beach m· dependent oil company, and Ar ace a Petroleum Corp., New York, have been awarded two blocks offshore the Republic of Ghana, totaling 1,250 square miles. Terms oflhe concessions were not disclosed. trSI Reports Orde r • MSI Data Corp., Costa Mesa, has received ma· JOr orders from Australia and South Africa for its MSI 177 handheld, solld·stale data entry terminal. Orders from Japap for the MSI /77, a program· mable terminal that uses disposable batteries, also were reported. PacTel Gets Rate Increase SAN FRANCISCO (APJ The state Pubhc Utilities Commission has granted Pacific Telephone a $12.8 million rate increase, about 10 percent of the $119. 76 million it asked for in 1975. The rate increase will affect mainly bu!itness installations and what the PUC called "underpriced lerminal equipment charges.·· Residential customers will be affected only by minor differences in toll rates. Certain s hort dis· lance toll charges will be reduced slightly. BASIC METROPOLITAN AREA business ex- change rates will be reduct•d slightly lo <·om pens ate for recent implcmcntalwn of local single mes!>age rate timing. Tb.is r~duct1on "ill amount to about 55.8 million on an annual bai.1s The 170-pagc decision on Tuesday deall also with issues of company, monitoring practices. pro- motional advertising, licen!ic contract payments to AT&T and rate design. The firm's pr•ttice of "remote monitoring" of operators as they answer calls was found to be reasonable but all telephone companies were or· dered to print a notice in each t•lephone book describing the J>raclice ' Long- lasting gifts ... ''"~· /,'-, .. A. E lc•Ji.1n1 Crot<11 c-h rom c• ,.,., I I } \ ·i11111lt' 1t1l1l ·lrnllu pr•·<'i .. ion·tlf' .. iltnt'tl 11 .. 11 :11111 llf'nril ... , \• i1h 111-crou" <"hromf'- l'l111r1I •urfll<'"· •) 5 B. (:ro"" 12 ~ ~old-fillt>1l .. N Thi· l"'l'ul11r 1.t11lrl-rillf'1I Cm,.. II"" aml flt'nl'il •1•1 "ill ttllll..•· a •I 1111nl11p. •lorkin~ .. 111(f'1•r. I•}-_, C. lli,.tlnc-tiw• Parkl'r i'tc>rlin• ""' Purkf'r• •n1 .. olh•"rili1111 tlu"'" '"" un1I llf'nt1l •rl 1111tl..r• "ri11111111 pl1·04•11n'. Cr11rtr1I in •l,.rli1111 ·ih .. r. J :lsn • 0. Sh lmmc-r ln11 Tar•••·~ Sh .. aN'e•r !-olff'" •ncl ••Yli"h Tjl,,. m1kf'11a11ual;1, 1M1. Pf'n ind f>f'Otil ""' in "'"•'"' 231\ ~olli t lf'tlrf>t>l•tf'. '-1..5 ~ .. ,. 1111rl'n11tplrt,. llnl' ••f •rhlna l'rl•lrUlttl'ltll'•l ""'~I l'C.ll"' •lhl'f'~ Doll Skates ·tor Claristnaas Among the many miniatures of athletes being cooked up in Santa's workshop this winter is one of skattng star Dorothy Hamill. The original is at left . as she ap· peared in 1976. The doll, at right. sells for a suggested price of $8.88. LA-Lond~n Run Rapped LONDON lAPJ A rival British airline has pledged Tues· day to "fight every step of the way" against plans to introduce dally cut·rate. no !rills Skytrain air services between Los Angeles and London Arilain's Civil Aviation Authority formally confirmed that Laker has applied for a license to fly its Skytrain service on the route T HE AIRL INE WANTS to operate a walk-on ser vice with low Cares run on the same lines as the revolutionary Skytrain service it started between Lon· don and New York on ~ept. 2s: But rival British Caledonian Airways, which wants to rt!Start its OWfl services on the Los Angeles-London route, said Tues· day It woutd fight tfte Laker Sky train application ·' U Laker wants a scrap they have got one -every step of tbe way to the highest. legal authority in the land if necessary,·' said Ian Ritchie, British Caledonia's ex· ternaJ affairs director AT PRESENT THE only airlines fiyine the Los Angeles· London route are Trans World ~lrltnes of the United Sta~s and Ove r The Count~r tiASD UstilMJI Br1tlsh Airways. Both operate cheap advance bookings services costing '405 for a round·lrip ticket, but neither bas a no· waiting. walk-on service com· parable to that proposed by Laker The advance bookana rate is lower than the S455 round·trip planned by Laker. Freddie Laker. chairman of Laker Airways, announced his company's license application for the Los Angeles.London route at a news c0nference Monday, one day ahead of the CAA's formal announcement. Vp• and Do"'ns Ul"S u~~'· .''\1. J I> 10', • 1•, 5i\,. • 1 zv. • •"} 7to., • , •• J .. ..., ,... • t) ,,,,_ .. "'• 3 ... 10 1' .. 'I • '• ~·-. ~ u • J to>, .. ,., .. ,.... .. t p. ... ,... .. 1,,. 1~ , • 1 ' 1' •• .... . "" 1' I • "-Jt., .. '• '"-.. t .. •'I> • - DOWNS Pel. Up ie.t Up JU Up JI.) Up 1U Up tU Up 2t.O Up 2il .. Up llJ Up IS .. Utt U.l Up U.l Up 1U Up 1U Up IU Up U.I Up 11 t Up 12 S VO IU Up 114 Up 111 8i 111 11 I 11.1 Up 101 Uo 10• l.Hl Cha Pct. 2h -~ ()ff 11.• J -,.. 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I(,,_ t t " 23-,,.._ \lo NwtEnrl.20 7 I 36\lo-'Ill -L-&. -~en 20 1 Jl ,. -~ L.FE; 11 ID ra..... Hwtlnd us 1 at ~+ ""' LAO 111¥ •• ~ 2~ \le Nwlnpf •.20.. t 122 -I L.TV .. 201 ~ ... ,, N•llnpf S.. l tUV.+I LTVCppf S.. 3 .. ,1,-ft .HwMU 1•13 23 11"-+-·~ ~G• 1,10 t 14 201111-Yt NwS!W 1 1'> IJ 1 2•11. + Ill L•mS. l.lO 1 9 ~-" Norton 2 t 124 ~,,.., + '• t:::1e~ry.~I~ 1t ;~~-;·;~ =m·7~ ' "~ m:= ::: L-ICll .4014 111 t'A + \ot -0-0 -\. .. rS. .60 S I IO U -v. Ol(C 1.20 1 42 16l41-Vo LHrSp(US.. • .0 -'h O.klnd 5020 14 17'11+ V. ::::~N IJ~1t S~ im-.:·" g::~Pl :hi .; u~~''>:I:~ l.Mf.ON 1 6 l 20 . •• .. Oc'IP'lll I 2S 1 l'I01 n->\ i..t>V•lr. • 61 2~ .• " Octl~l._wl ,. I, ~-~ = .r..ii ~ I~+ °"'' ,rt.16.. 37 -"' ' . 1.:.-• s .. !.<Jin '•I P I INl>I Cio.t CllQ Scott No• ,.1 1"'-• c1o... c114 l/N DAILY ptLQT A J. Frightened? Americans Boy More lnsurancd By MILTON MOSKOWITZ • . Your insurance agent won't appreciate It, but the ract ls that Americana are the most over·J.osured people lD tho world. On second thought, maybe your agent WUl appreciate this distinction, if it can be called that. It 'a certa1nly a- trlbute to superior salesmanship. WE, OR RATHER THE COMPANIES in this industry. insure everything: lives, homes, cars, boats, jewelry. You name it and it can be insured. And we insure against every imaginable kind of dtuster: death, accident&, Job loss, fire, robbery, sickness, s torms, floods. Ubel, malpractice. Since the basic moUvaUoo Ln buylna Insurance is fear - fear that aomethln1.wlll happen -we must be tbe most frightened people in the world. In one way, it malces aensb ror ua to be so insurance-prone. We're the ricbeal people in the world and we thus have the most to lose. Tbe statistics are mind-bogglin g. The United States accouots for 50 percent or all the Insurance premiums paid in the world. We Money Tree spend five times as much OJl lpsurance aa the No. 2 11aUoo, Jiapan. The total premiums paid In this country for all kinds of insurance are more than $100 btWon a year, which worb out to aometb.ine like $1,400 for every household. Don't feel bad if you don't come up to this average. The total includes premiums paid by businesses. Besides, the way things are going, you will soon reach this exalted level. YOUR AUTOMOBILE ALONE MA V one day cost more to insure than your lile, which shows where ottr priorities are. Automobile Insurance premiutrul are currently running at $23 billion a year, up by one-third since 1974. Every year the Hertz Corp. does a survey to determine bow mucb it costs to have a car. Its latest one shows that the average American driver now spends aa much on l.naurance as on au amctoil. Rollin& along with this premium explosion are the giant Insurance companies, which coiled the statgering amounta or money. Prudential takes in $6 billion a year.So does Aetna Lite & Casualty. Metropolitan We collects more than $S billion a year. So does.the Tnvelers. Equilable Lire is near· ing the $4 billion mark. At one time, there were Ille insurance companies, and then there were property and casualty insurers. Now the distinction is blw-red, as each invades the other's territory. After au, ii you have that sales force in place, it may aa well be selling all lines. .PRUDENTIAL. ''.J'HE LARGEST LIFE insurer, bas become the 3lat largest property and casualty lns~r. Metropolitan is the 74th largest property and casualty in- surer. State Farm. No. 1 ln automobile lmurance, b as moved up to 29th place in the life tnsuran~ buslness. Al- lstate Insurance ranks Mth in life insurance. IN-' jumped from 78th place ln life insurance 10 years ago t.o 26th place. Insurance is surely a growth iDdustry, renected ln one bizarre statistic: it provides 1,875,000 job&, which exceeds by 25 percent the total number of persons employed by our 20 largest oil companies. HEW VOlllK IAPt _..'/ Stoctl wl•~ AllorD• ,.,... ................. n . 110.000 M"'-fJl1f •• .. ..... •• • • ••• 19, lto.OOO e ........................ 21.oso.ooc th ... • ... .... .. • .. .. .. • .. 2•,tso.000 .. •96 ................. ..• 211.*.000 IW9 r9•n ego .. .. .. .. .. . • .. • 16.SS..600 ell 1 IO _.. • .. • .. .. • • • • .. S,.Dl0,'60,000 'f.' lo dllt• .. • .. .. • .. • .. • • J,O:lt~.ooo 1 .S to dallt ............... ..,...,.,fl0,7<m WftAT AM&JC Df 0 HSW YORK IAPJ ........ Tote• o.T = i u: ,,. ....., ,.,, ....,.. "' i1 .... 1'11 '°"" , 13 ... JCUl.ll, Due to late trensmfsslon · ·today's llstlng wlll not ecic>ear In the Dally Piiot. l ' , \ NATIONAL Colleges Attract F ew~r Men Bra Trick Ruled OUt ... :/;.,. .. MY 1No1c;ec;no...a 1~ CAUSED Elf~(~ 6Y MY APPEND\>< OR. M'< TABLE Of CONTENTS. " PRICE SLASHED NOW ONLY WASKlNGTON (AP) -Youna m en are findln1 coUege less at.- tractive, e ven thouab that's where the women are, a Census Bureau study shows. The report released Tueadar. suggested fewer men are enrol · Ing because they are not eUCible for 0 I education benefits or they no longer need Vietnam war draft deferments. IT SPECULATED another reason may be that youna men consider a college educatloo less important. The proportion or 18-and 19- y ear-old men who have· completed one year of colle1e declined trom 13.6 percent ln 1970 to 10.9 percent this year, the 1'6· port said. However, during the ·same period, a b.tgber proportion of women the same .,e completed the same educaUoo, lncreutnc from 12.tpercent to 13.2 percent. LARRY SUTER WHO beads the educatioo ataUaUcs branch, said women ba.ve exceeded mm ln education at that age 1roup f« three years. But any galm they are maklng are caused mainly by UNBRIEYAILI u LCD It tllla ,.;c.t LIQUID CIYSTAL DISP&AY& fUllMEaY WITH 100 HI. LIGHT IN BAmlY • LIFE WllGNT BOHSEI LCD CALCULATOR l .... LCD ...................... hr ..... -..., ... "'°' ...... ""' .. _.,, ,.......,,_, ... .., .. .... FEATUIES: • PVSltlUTTI* WIA'l1U11.ue •Dlor·UAI OIGfTAl llUMllA&S •PVSll lllTTI* coemou REGULAR 34. 99 -HOW •Y(ITICAl SUDI nu TUMllGDW •fUll UleGI OYUMIC SIUlll 99 PRECOR SOLID STAn AM/FM DIGITAL CLOCK RADIO WITH WEATHER BAND ,,.~, ............. ,.. .......... , .. _ ....... .. """*· ........ ..,...., _ ...... 11t .... 1 NSWR'CM 3 HEAT UVILS .decUnlna male enrollments, be Hid. Amoag 20-and 21.year-oJds, men with a year of collef e educ a· Uon dropped markedly rom 46.8 percent in 19'10 to 38.5 percent ln 1977. Women &alned from 35.8 percent to 38.• percent. Tbe lar1er aap in the 18 and 19 a1e eroup may be because women enter colleae at. an earlier ace, Suter said. "Many ap rently attended college durt.n the 19GOs to take advanta1e of draft defer· ments," 1L aald. "Others who en· tered the a\'med forces retumed to colle1e tn the 1970s to take ad· vantaaeotGibenefits. "It appears likely as the number of YOUDI persons elletble for GI BUl beneflts decreases, lower proportions of future generaUons of men are apt to enter college.'' BERLlN CAP) -East. Germany soys tt.s mail· clans should practice only good clean soclalllt tricks and avoid "the cap1tallst form of the art," 5ucb a.a conjuring up a brualere Instead of a handketcblef. TUB REPORT SAID more men may bave been tn college seven yean ago because of the Vietnam War. The report Hid the decline among )'OWll mm "might be due to a decrease in the attraction Of a college education." That trlck ~as b•en banned ln n mail clans' union campal1n t~ root out "certain obscenities:• said unlo"-_c~iet Manfred ' .stliolt,-~k. YOUI CHOICI MONTAG BOXED GlfT STATIONERY .......................................... ....., ...... ... .....,.._w-...,.,.,.~._..,... 1'1 2, 4~ CLOSE·OUT BUY OF Pwml POTS ............ _,.....,..,., ... .....,,, ........ ... ....................... ...., .... ,.., .... • ·=159 ... , ... OLD SPICE lnDSHAVE u•&&• YALUll PROnlN 21 SHAMPOO FllEIGI OIGAllC HlllSNIY a.....-.. ....... ~••; GlllmEFOAMY SHAYICIEIM ....................... ,., . ........... • t . t , ' ... . . . .. ...... -. ..... . .. . . . .......... INSIDE: •Television • •Movles--:i:! -I . " -- Plane. ()rash~ Stuns· Ex•EvansTille • EVANSVILLE, Ind. (AP> - Arid "Mccutchan, who spent three ~~ecad es building av,9avwe' into a small college 'baaitetball power, bad the tragic task of identifying the bodl'es of the players be recruited. Mccutchan, who stepped down· at the end of the 1976-TT 1ea•on after coacbin1 31 years and compiling a 51'·314 record. ·was asked to help Identify the l Evansville players followlng a , ltery crash of the team's chartered DC-3 plane Tuesday t night. There were 26 passengers and a crew of nvo aboard. Indiana slate police said lhere were no. survivors. "I keep thlnklne. ~bout all the people wbo have to learn about it," said the man who led the Aces to five national Dlvislon II championships. ''People like the families and wives of our group. I don't know who to call cause I know bow hurt lbey're going to be. "There were 24 o( our people on the plane. At times like this you muat turn around and face thin Rs," he said , choking back tears. "But I've oever bad to face an~ like this." In Houston Tonight • • Exti;a Security . .. For .. ~i~Game l .J ~ • " . ~. ,.,( ,... ., NEW ORLEAN~ ., ·~~ W3:,bington for injuring an op. biggest crowd ever ~posing player in a fight, and part· I Angeles La.kers play'•b l ,.. ly due to the trade that brings couldn't see the pl-.V ·•wbot.1 them one of the brightest young weren't there -onea.•Jios~,~ s~ars of the game, Adrian banishment marked a $rl re-~ Dantley. cent past, and one who may Added security measures are I represent a bright tuture. ptanned for tonight's National • The Lakers may have been Basketball Association game , caught looking back and looking · between the Houston Rockets I ~head. They weren't up to play-and the Latcers in anticipation~ ing the New Orleans Jazz in a (a'n reaction to Kermit 117·94 National Basketball As· Washington's one punch fight last I sociatlon loss Tuesday night week with Houston's Rudy Tom- before 31,119 fans in the ianovich. Superdome. A spokesman declined. Los Angeles was short-handed, partly due to the 60-day sus- pension of forward Kermit ·racle Shot Gives 49ers 185-84 Win WACO, Tex. -Cal State <Long Beach) bad to talk fast and shoot faster to win a basketball game Tuesday night. How fast? It was after the scoreboard clock hit :00, but before the game·endmg buzzer sounded. . Jn that split-second Larry Hudson cot oU a 55-foot shot. ll went in, and Long Beach had an 85-84 victory over Baylor. Jn the final second ot the strug- gle at Waco, Long Beach led Baylor 83·82. But Baylor took an 84·83 lead wben Arthur Edwards was fouled and sank two free throws. Long Beach coach Dwight Jones argued that although no time remained on the clock when the foul was called, the flnal buz:aer had not yet sounded, and the 49ers were entitled to take the ba11 in-bounds and try to beat the I buzzer. \ Hudson, who had six points in ' the game, took only enough Ume to spin and throw when the ball reached bim. and Long Beach boosted its season mark to 5-2. Larry Gray paced the 49ers with 22 points and 11 rebounds. Edwards led Baylor, 4-2, wlth 26 paints.. . On TV Tonight Channel 9 at 6 to say what security measures would be taken. "It may be an emotional game, but it won't be a violent one,'' the spokes man said. ·~ w Wash'Mgtolf has been sus- pended eo. days without pay and fined $10,000 for decking Tom· janovich in a game last week In Los Angeles, Tomjanovich re- m a ins in a Los Angeles hospital with a fractured jaw, oose, skull and concussion. Dantley, 21, was the NBA rookie of Ute year In J,976-77 at Buffalo, where the former Notre Dame All-American averaged 20.3 points. The 6-5 220-pounder was recenUy swapped to Indiana for Billy Knight. D~y bs come through bis passages as third leading scorer Ill the leaaue this season, averagini 26.S per game. The trade earUer Tuesday cost th~ Lakera their baclJup center, 7-foot James Edwards, and 6-5 guard-forward Earl Tatum. Rookie Edwards had shown promise while the Lakera were without Kareem Abdul-Jabbar for 20 games recently, scoring w ell but rebo.unding aJld defend· in~notsow 'Anytime. •have a chance to get som.~~~Dantley it's dif· ficult to "Lakers coach Jerry. LOS dUl·J• •,OIOr 111aw Merl-1•,Jamesl, LosA119eld lteWOfl-ti 1' 2' «)-111 Total fOU4s -LMA,...i.stt. ""'°'*-u . A -i1,01t. McCutcban aitd be left h1I of. In Watson'• ttrit 1tHon u flee at tbe small, private head coach, hla team, loaded Metbodilt achool lo the middle wltb freshman Pl•yen, was 1·3. of the afternoon, j.._t aa the ~ A11bhot ooach Ernon basketball team WU aathertnc SlmpBOIJ wann Owentboro, ~. for the trip to .tho airport. The o~ a recrutun1 trip Tuesday team was headed for NJ.ahvlu., night. He wu alttln1 in the Tenn., from where the players •tanda at a high school aame w o r • to h av e b u 1 e d to when bo wu paaed to the office Murfreesboro for tbe l•D'l• ancl told of the crash of the W~nesday n.labt w\&b Mtddl• plane clJT)'lnl his playen and Telll)ea,ee State. • fellow coaches. "'My mind wat "I W:tabed (Coach) Bobby just a blank,,. be aatd. Wataon well and I noticed that -Also spared wu Evansv1lle's almoat all of the pla1en were ·play-by-play radlo man, Joe there," said 14~teban. ''Tbey Celania, who aald he bad never mu at have Jett soon af. missed a team trip in nine terwards." yean. He passed up the Tues. * * * Air ~rashes . Nuib.erous In Sports By 11te Aisoelated Press Tuesday night's cNlsh of a plane chartered by the Universi- ty of Evansville baaketball team continued a string of air tragedies that has involved spocll personalities and clubs for a number of years. Some of sport's all·Ume greats have met thelr deaths in plane disasters, including Pittsburgh Pirates outfielder Roberto Clemente, whose aircraft dis&p· peared on New Year's Eve in 1973 while on a mercy tnission to the earthquake victims in Nicaragua. day nflht plano rtlle becaUJe of a speech be had to 1ive to a 1overnment class at a nearby hl'h school. 'Tbalt acUvity probably saved my life," said Celania. ''If I hadn't had that assi1nment, l would have been on the flight." Celanla's friend, M'rv Bates, who was twice Indiana's ape>rtscuter ol the year, waa on tbe tu-fated plan~ "I've never been in as deep aliock," Celanla aald. "It eould ba"e been the reverae.'' , Two of Evansville's most famous alumni. pro basketbtll stars Jerry Sloan and Don ¥ Buse, reacted with arief When told of the trage4y. "A lot of those people are my friends. I'm just 10 shocked," uid Sloan, who led the A~ to Division II titles in 1964 and 1965. "One of those k1d1, Jt!ike Duff, ls from Eldorado, Ill. which is right next to McLeansboro, which ls t'tlY home town. I wu responsible for him going there." Sloan retired from the Chlca10 Bulls of the National Basketba ll Association two years ago because of knee prob- le ms. He was blred as See Plane Cl'ub, Page B-! Unbeaten former heavyweight boxing champion Rocky Mar· ciano was killed on the eve of his 46th birthday when a light plane carrying him crashed near Newton, Iowa on. Sept. 1, 1989. Golfing star Tony Lema was killed on July 24, 1966 when the small plane carrylne him, his wife and two others went down tn Lansing, Mich. Rafael Osuna dled in a crash near Monterrey, Mexico just a week after leading the Mexican tennis team to a stunning upset of Australhl lo the 1969 Davis Cup. CRASH AFTERMATH -Universitf f Evansville athletic director Jim Byers <right> and the school's assistant basketball coach,· Ernon Simpson <middle) answer ...... questions in an early moming press con· fcrence following plane crash Tuesday night which claimed lives of the entire Evansville basketball team. College football coaching legend ·Knute Rockne met a similar fate in a Kansas corn- field ln 1931. Otber air victims are Chicago Cub• uco1td basel!U•lf lten Hubbs; Wendell Ladner of buketball'.s New York Nell IOd auto reolna driver Grala am Hill. Tragedies ot teatn-wld.e lmpact have included the er~hes loYOlv· ing 'footbell ~ams ftonl Wichita State. Manhall University and CaUfornla-Poly ot San Luis Obispo, and the United States Olympic Figure Skattn1 team. On Nov. 12, 1970, 45 ~layers and nine coaches -the entire Marshall University comple· ment -were killed when their plane crashed whlle approaching an airport in Runttngtoo~ W. Va. One of two planes carrying members of the Wichita State team crashed Oct. 2, 1970 in Colorado en route to Loaan; Utah, kllijnc 14 playen. Sixteen players on the Cit Poly-SLO club dl6d on Oct. 29, 1960 wlltn their chartered plane went down in Toledo. Ohio alter a • eame &eainst.Bowlliig Green. Eighteen members of the Olympi~ Figure Skating team died when their craft crashed ln Belgium on Feb. 15, 1961 en route to the world cbamplonshlps in Czechoslovakia. European teams also ban been bit hard. Eight members of Encland's Manchester United aocaer te,m were killed ln a plane crash near Munich, Germany ln February, 1.9$9. Ten years earlier, the Jtaliah cham· plonshlp soccer team Torino of Turb1 was wiped out when it.I · pl(lne crashed in tl\e cent.er of Turin. ~·' Spons Clipped Slwrt ·Jenkins Go~s · · · BOSToN -Vete~an pltche; Ferauaon Jenkins of the Bolton Red Sox today was traded back to the Texas Rangers from whom Bo~ton obtained him in 1975, for minor lea1ue hurter John Poloni and an UDd.lsclosed amount of cash. Jenkins, who turned 34 Tues- day, won 22 games and lost 2\ in his career wjth Boston. He posted a 10·10 record last season wiLb an earned run avera1e of 3.68. It had been rumored since the end of the last season that Jenkins, who cameo to Texas from the Chicago Cubs of the Na- tional League, would be put on the trading block. JenklQIS came to the Red Sox in exchange for outfielder Juan Beniquez and pitcher Steve Barr. NEW YORK -Steve Cauthen, the tint jockey ever to Win $6 million in purses ln a single year, was selected today as winner <1 Sport's Illustrated Sportsman of the Year for um. The 17,year-old jockey was the aecon~ hone, ratjng fl6ure to be 10 honored. ne 0.rst was a hone -Secretariat. the 1978 Triple Crown cbam_pion. Tamaer ACl.,a•ce• SYDNEY, Auatralla -John Newcombe 1ave notice that he waa nearin1 top form today, despite tosm. to Roscoe Tanner ln the New South Wales Open ten· nil championahJp. Tanner won the 90·mlnute matcb &-3, 6-'7, S-4. But Newcombe made it clear that bll Wuatrloua tennis career w11 fu from over, pointing out atterW&rds that he was only 80 ~reent YI> lo b1a but form. "l wante4 toiv•Urlna JllOr. •t the Jlnh1h and couldn't 1et It but . you can't expect miracles," WQblngtoo State to a 6-5 mark Newcombe said. · this season, his first as a bead' Earlier, Vilas Gerulaitis easily coach. The Cougan,, tibo saw • defeated John Lloyd, 6·2, &-2. two head coaches leave for better Stan Smith lost to Chri• IAwis, Jobs the previous two years 6-4 , 4-6, 6-3 and Tom Gorman before Powers was hired, had Jn. I beai David Carter, 4-IS, 1-5, 6·1. serted a clause In his contract io I discourage another defection. , Pattelf-Picked AIR FORCE ACADEMY, Oolo. -Bill Parcellf, an assistant coach .at Texas T~ for the put three years, w41 selected head footbaU. coach at the Alr Force Academy Tuesday. Parcells wlU succeed Ben Martin, who coecbed the service academy team for the past 20 years. COLUMBIA, Mo. -Warren Powers agreed Tuesday to pay Washington State $55,000 plus nine percent interest over Lhe next three years to become bead 'coach at Missouri for an annual salary of $35,000. "It was something my wife and I felt 'f8 bad to do," Powers, a Missouri naUve who played and· coached at Nebraska, aald Tues· day of bis c011tract settlement with Wa!hln&to9State. The 36.yeal'·old Powers led 1t'ifJgl• to €811 BERKELEY -Former • Kansas City Cblefa coach Paul Wiggin returned to his home in Kansas City Monday after a weekend visit to the Univenity oL California where be is being con- sidered for the head football coaching Job. Cal athletic director Dne Maggard ia expected to pick a succ.essor to Mike White, fired two weeka ago, within a week. Roger Tbeder, who was an assJs- tant for aix years under White. is considered the other major can- didate. lMtOll ••-red SAN FRANCISCO -Stan- ford 's James Lofton, described as "probably the best colle1e athlete In America" by bis fool· ball coach, Bill Walsh, has been selected Northern Callfornia AthleteoftheYear. Coliseum Refurbishing' Plan I LOS ANGELES -A new 1yn· theUc track and a goal-llne-to- goal-llne press box are part. of an 18-polnt refurblsbinl plan the Coliseum manaeement baa laid out to get the stadium ready for the 1884 OlYmpics. Cost. rot the work would be $8 mllUon, Coliseum 1eneral mana1er Jim Hardy aald Tues· day, inltead ol tho Sil ml1U011 to M mlllloft be had eatimated aix inonths aao . Tho present track bas holes ! and tears lll lts aurface and exist· , ina locker and press areas would be Inadequate for the large num- bers o( athletea and newamen ex· peeled to be oo band for the Olympics, be aald. A concrete wall around tbe . perimeter of tho stadium, fn· stead of the present cl>ain·llnk fence, and a closed-circuit televWon a)'ltem are proposed ror es tr a ucurtty. \. 1 1 82 DAILYPILOT Newp~rt ~ Staggers Millikan By BOO ER CARLSON OI .. Dl6ly """"" Newport Harbor Hlth'a over· whelmin& balance proved too much for Loni Beach MlWkan High '1 Rama Tuesday night aa the Sailors ran rou1babod over Millikan, 73-66. The win puts coach Jerry DeB u s k '1 Sailors in the semifinals of the 49th annual Hun- U n g ton Beach Invitational basketball tournament Thursday night against Katella, an 86·37 vic- tor over liunUngton Beach Hilb 's No.2squadinTuesday'sopener. The final score is not really in- dicative of what the sailors did t.o Millikan, a team bouUn1 vlc- torlea over Fountain Valley and CoronadelMar. With 5: 17 remaining the Sailors had a 64-44 lead and they were do- ing it with a talented crew that almost defied anyone to pick out a standout. Bill Sweek led Newport with 20 points, but also in double figures were Pat Baker and Rieb Putman with 11 points and Brian Maravich and Brian Freeman with IO counters. The Sailors bad five players scoring in double figures and Maravich was the leading re· bounder with 10 caroms. Millikan tried to overcome the deficit in the final quarter with a searing performance from the field, hitting 11of14 from the field (78.6 percent), but it was too little and too late against Newport's balance. Millikan's last mild threat was in the early moments of the final period when it cut the deficit to 56-42. But that's when Sweek hit a pair of free throws, and after a Millikan basket, Sweek and Stekol hit from outside, then Sweek hit on a drive to up the lead to64-44. While Millikan cut the lead to 66·58 with 1:57 to go, Newport s howed poise under pressure and Stekol 's three-point play with 1: ~ left put theeod to any doubt. Tonight's agendtl has Millikan back In action against Huntington Beach's No. 2 outfit at 7, followed by one half of the championship semifinals, Los Amigos (Garden Grove) High's Lobos vs the Bruins of Long Beach Wilson at 8:30. LIMllHunlMI 19 ti ,. ... 8.,11~11 1 1 2 IS 6ergmaA O O 1 o BrOwA 0 2 1 7 Marty 1t 2 2 24 Moore 3 o I • Hept-2 0 3 4 Wallace 6 3 • U Yamashita o o 1 o Totals 29 a IS " CIJI~ 111tpflp 4 I 0 9 s , • 11 s 0 2 10 s 1 2 11 s 0 2 10 7 • 2 20 1 0 0 2 St•kol Putmaft Maravl"1 BaQr F,..._ sw .. k Paq11ln 3Z 9 12 7l Sartllya.rtlr'a l 8MltllkaA H ... portH-- IUtlllal•I WhltldOI\ !>aH byA Oo<IMllY Lemon• Patrick vanord.r FrM•rlck LO!Mt Al•a lolals ... ,, ... 10 • a 2• 3 2 4 I 10 • 1 ,, 2 .. 0 • s 0 0 10 1 2 2 • 1 o I 2 2 0 1 • 1 0 0 2 3S16U .. 17 IS I ...... 2A 17 u 11-1J fJ1lMwt.ll .. d1Ne.2 Smith MarlllA OIPletre Norri• Gonuln Wllltney Kark11t Totals "" ..... 4 I 1 9 • , 1 11 , 0 3 • 0 0 • 0 2 0 1 • 4 0 2 I 0 1 2 I ker•llyo..rtien !Catella HuAllntl.., llNCllHO. 2 JS 11 11 2s-46 7Ulf-41 .IAnlkrille Wl11• LOUISVILLE -Rick Wilson's cJUlch baskets, including the win· nJ!r with one second to play, and Darrell Griffith's defensive play id the waning minutes.llfteCI lOtb- ranked Loul.aville put No. 17 Purdue 68-66 in a college basket· 1$11 g~me Tuesday ltigbt. --..... -· ....... LEAPING TRITON -San Clemente lllgb's John Carson (31) goes high in attempt to score against Corona del Mar Tuesday night. Othel'.'S watching the action in~lude o.1tr ,.. ... ,...... .,, ,...... 0'0-1 San Clemente's Shawn Mulligan (25) and Mark Klein (43) and CdM's Rick Starnes (12), Shawn Ahern cmiddle > and Jeff Burden (right>. Laguna Falls El Toro Breezes To 61-43 Victory By ERNIE CASTJU.<> Ol .. o.tty ...... IUH They were playing for keeps this time but the second basket· ball meeting between El Toro Hlgb and Laguna Beach High Tuesday nlgbt turned out to be a copy of the first one-an El Toro victory. With sophomore Ron Holmes and transfer Rick Reid combin· ing for 38 points, the Chargers opened the South Cout League campaign with a relatively easy 61-43 victory over the visiting Artists. El Toro beat the Artists, 87-54, on their own court S~turday after the score wu tied at halftime. But thi.a Ume around, the Chargers never trailed after Holmes con· nected ca hla ftrat shot aad be and Reid took tuml _,coring from UD· derneatbtherestoftheway. Reid, a 6-3 senior, was the game's b1eb scorer with 20 points and anchored the CbarCers' zone defense that denied Laguna Beach the bigb-peroentage, ln- slde sbota. Holmes, a lean M forward who was six-of-ta from the field and p"1led down nine rebounds in ad· dltion to scoring 18 points, could be the key to a bright tutu re for the Chargers. He is one or three un- derclassman starters. The others are 6-5 freshman ceoter Wayne Carlander and 6-3 junior guard Matt Simpson. Both teams were plagued with turnovers but Laguna Beach was more affected by them. The Artists bad 21 turnovers, U of which were bad puses. In a 3:23 span in the second quarter, the Artists threw the ball away six straight times. El Toro capital~ on four of them for eight polnta that ballooned Ill lead to2S-9. In the second half, the ArUata started to nm, press and cut their turnovers down. But,flve straight mi.ased abota kept them from get- ting close enou1b to mate a serious cballenae. However, their pressing tacUca started 11'4ni El Toro problems and the Chargers began tbrowlna the ball away. Twelve of the Chara.-· 20 tumoven came la the -etand ball. Two Of tboae came ln the flrat ball m1nute Of tbe flnal period but wound up costiq El Toro just two points when Lacuna Beach could just can two of four tree tbrowl that pared themandn to41-33. {, ~ BJD VECVNNINGBAW Of•Deltr .......... Co~_~l Mar opened defenae of lta SOQtb Coat Leque basket· ball crown on the rl&bt foot by beaUng the team con1ldered its primary threat. San Clemente, la a 39.33 same Tuesday at Corona delMar. The Sea Kings did it with a smothering defense which held John Canon, San Clemente's bil· 1eat 1un. to 11 points. Shawn Ahem waa. a11ltned to guard Carson, who at 6-7 •lands three Inches taller than Ahern. Every time San Clemente tried to feed the ball ln$ide to Carson, Ahern llV81 attached to him like a alameaetwin. Tbe Sea Kings double teamed Carso11 wbmever be touched the ball, and It bothered the retilrn1n.g all-lea~ 19 much ho mll1ed tUi first 11.x shots and finished the game with just flve buckets in 19 attempts, a clip of26 percent. Al a team, San Clementewun't much better than lts beleaiuered star. The Trttona shot 33 percent in the first qnarter as they fell behind, 12-8. ButCoronadel Mar'spatientof- fense kept the tempo of the aame slow and the Sea Kings never real- ly blew out the Tritons, despite thelrpoorsbootlngdisplay. The third quarter was San Clemente's undoing, aa the TrltonscoanectedonjuatoneoftO shot attempts and tallied only three points in the entire period. Conalderlng the dismal state of llftaira for San Clemente's of. fenae, tbe Trttons were fortunate to trail by only six points golag in· to the fourth quarter. That was beeau.se coach Jack Errion's Corona del Mar squad waa content to take plenty of time working for its shots. Although PLANE CRASH. • • Ron Holmes sani a pair of free throw1, Mike Holmes followed a bucket with two more free throws, includlna one on a tecbnlcal foul. andElTorowasbomefree. I : Continued From Pace B·l Evansville's basketball coach t~s spring but bad to leave the j9b after one week because of a coaching conflict with the 1'ulla. lie remains an assistant coach with Chicago. · "There's so mucb to think Sports Calendar about now," a~d Sloan, who was in Chicago while tbe Bulla were bostln1 Denver Tuesday night. "I want to set my thoug~ta totether and do what I have to do because I know I bave to do somethlng." Buse, who led Evaoavllle's 19'11 club to the NCAA,.t1Ue. DOW play1 with the NBA'a Phoenix Suns. "That la eom~. You bear about thai kind of 11tuft. Jt real· ly does shock a peraon," be said. "That'• terrible. I had never had anythin1 like that happen to me, you know, where it happens to someone you know. "I've been out of acbool alx yean aow, and I realb' am not that cloee to tho ~le. But I bad met the coach thll 1prtni. Re was a beckuva nlc• IUY and I thought he WH aotna to do really well there. X-mJu.at a~ a l<JU forwordl:" U...CGJ .. " ... ~ 4 o I I lrAlll I 5 SU lltldMftlMll I 0 I to Pettt.on I 1 0 S Ct ........ 0041 NKIMW O O t 0 u,... • 0 ... l!llVMI I I ' • ........ 0 0 1 0 ..... I'' t Tetet• 11 1na .. 0 .. ,,.. ....... R. HollMI ' ' 2 18 M. .... Mee 4 I I'° ..... , .. ., Sl"'"9n I I 0 I CM!..., 1014 Lee 0111 WU-0010 ,..... lt "" 61 Dlahlos, Dana FaroriteB Collect South Coaat ffpeners Ba1tey conbibuted 11. but Mll- sJon Viejo cliaplayed more depth and balance. Tbe Dia~OI had four players aeon In double fipres, led by hie ~·"'1' potnta. Cloee "8bl11d _.. Illa Bolter &Dd Mike Boblrtl. Mcb .SUI. ta, wblle Jim CUllUllina pitched In 10 po!ntl. · . Muanua ln ca.ta Meo, tbe boli lluP"llCI found them va burlid IJ8der' a Dna Hllla OD· 1laulbt almott trom the openlna UpoftiAlter OM period Dana Hilla rtcld to a J.0.potnt lead, aDd the ~~fib.lna were never Mrlouab' llQfed. Alt.boaah Dua IUll.I doesn't tiaH)a 'pllfer taller lhaa t-1, tbi Dolpblu •ere abU.tOO..trebound Cotta M .. ».22.·~ Malt.lop are atrldt• wlUa .. abarWt atltUAf · Uiaeup IA U.. J~ aHraclDIUDder'alx fott. Bam\llla• 30-Polot 1pree wu BASKETBALL the Sea Klnfa reeled off ~gbt 1trai1ht polnta durinl the third quarter, they took nearly I~ minutes to dolt. Coach Rieb Skelton decided to rest Canoo fot' two minutes dur· inc the fl.naJ period, and when be returned only three minutes re- mained and the Sea Kins• bad a comfortable eight·point .advan· tage. Juotor David Koehler bad a bot shoottna night for Corona del Mar, soofina20tolead bis team in that departlhent. Mark Klein had 13 points to pace San Clemente. S.•Cl...._..CJll tatlCW-tltlM9r Gedoov '1 ~ ': ': C.1'1Gn S I I 11 KtelA • I I U S.IMllUeM 0 ' 2 1 lttpMm I 0 I • kMl!ltl" Allern Hll<ll<oc• 0..-8'"" ftalns Slit Ml Totala U S 10 IJ Totala .. ft .... 10 0 110 3 0 2 • 1 0 0 2 , • J 2 a o 1 • 0 t I 1 0 l , 2 1111lJt S-.tyQu.a ....... SIMI Clemante I 11 J 11~ Cofone !Ml Mii' 12 I I 11-it Mater Dei, Edison Log Cage Wins Ediaw School's Chargers <Hun · each) bad an easy time in dis lng of hoet St. John Bosco Wib (Bellfiower > in DOD· league buketball acUon Tues- day night, 77-59. Mater Del's Monarchs (Santa Ana) ran over host Tustin, 68-0. but Irvine High dropped a n...o verdict to Anaheim in first round play of the Anaheim tournament. Mike McCourt was the leading scorer for Edison with 20, can- niJlil 9 of 17 from the floor. Jeff Tutton had seven rebounds and Paul Freudenberg five while Glenn Garrity had seven assists and Keith Poletlek, in a reserve role, badslx. Coach Don Leavey used re- serves all of the final quarter and much of the tblrd stanza. "I was pleased with the sup- porting group oft the bench," be said. Krell Kanemaru 11cored 10 points, had fOLU' rebounds and three steals fn a reserve capacity. Hater Det moved In front early - and had liWe trouble in b?'ingiu its season record to 5·2. ~Sal Gaytan bad eight assists and four steals while John Saunders had seven rebounds. Anaheim, boasttn• a definite height advantage over Irvine High, eontrolled the boards. 1be Colonists were led by M cent.er John Miller who bit 24 points and was one ol the top rebounders. Jim Rudy of Irvine scored lC points to match his season average. Irvine returned to play at 4:45 this afternoon against Ora.nae Hilh 's Panthers. Mater Del, DOW 5-2 OD f.l>e season, awaits Cantwell High <Montebello) Friday ni&bt (7:30). Edison la also S..2 and draws a home uslgnment In non-league action Friday. The Chargers tackle Lowell (W'hUtier) Hl8h'a Patriots in an 8 o'clock tiff. ,........,_ __ ~(71) ,.,. ...... """" ....... ~202~00dWl 1002 TllAIH 5 0 I IO R..ty 6 I I 14 Cnlnl" S 0 4 IO Mont-.. I I 2 4 one. 11te#1tw ltts MU.., 11 I •M ~ t I t I Horton I 1 • s 0.VI• • a • • ....... 1214 .... llt1 ~ I 0 I • ICl'Mller 1 I a I Paul 1 o I 2 ~ I o 1 I Towla D 7 1711 TMll• ,. • U«> 9Gr'9.,o.rtlft 10 t1 • ,._,, 1 I ti~ ,.,, .... MMwDlltll) .... ,. ., Oerde I I I I MtO.. t. 111 .-....-, t 1 .. a Oe'l'\M ...... ~ 41 IU ,..... I 0 I 4 5-"'*'t 4 I I ti lctwlt& 1 t 0 I Cook 201• Ni.ttM t I I I ..... ,,,, """" I I 1 I ' • t • J ..... 1 ' t , • I I I • ' • s 0 t I ' •• 'I • I I •• . . ' . a I • • I I t I Uta De ....... "'*' s. llt tOl4"94etlM It OS I I 4 4 ,,UdtR ..... I 0 t 4 4011~ t1ll I 1 1 7 ~t I I t • I I• T•• • 19" • ' '11 le-.., ..... ....... ..,, .. ~ .......... . ........ AZUSA;...caplatrano Vall•J' Blsb, comln1 Oft a pa1.r ot •· tol'lH ln the San Clemente bHketball tournament: opena play hl the 11th anduu Ania tourney 'Duanday with a 1:15 p.m. eamo qainlt Montclair. The Couaan are led bJ Bob Charles, who II av rait.Q1 IS polntl a fame In five outln11. He hU a1IO cll~ed on~ laltM free thl'O'W atle(npta, ~ """ ........... aitt-< 1ttfl wvan.,-........,:~ ~ '"' ... ..._, 61-~·~ .. ClllftlrOlll)........,_ ,.... ... A--. ' ,, .... __ _ • DAILY PILOT 8.S,l . For Hif.h Sch.oou • Alamitos Racing Entries ~a ·wrestling anria Tourney Claa•p• These standouts \\'ere tournament wres- tling champions at the recent Estancia tligh (Costa Mesa) Invitational. Kneeling from left -Ben Warfc (Edisonl. Frank Curry !Edison ). Jeff Gardiner <Chapar- ral ), Ron Uyemiitsu (Canyon J. Standing -Tim Piercy <Tustin). Ma.rk Slaughter (Santa Ana Valley ), Wally Waipa ITustinJ, Todd Boyer <Edison), Eugene llarris ~Chaparral ). Eric Van Skike I t ... oothill) and Kevin Sloan (Estancia). uski.es Arrive Tuesday; Workouts Set at OCC Monarchs Lauded ua-o. ..... (Q ....... ~ ... ; 1:at.. -----· "l t~tO,_ ........ t. ,~.,..a ..... ~. ,, ... ,,,. Nllllwtcl ....... ..,....,l;Jf. ~IDl•o,i.r...,J.J. 1~101-"'"""'" lfl ~:llMk ICI ....... Mllll'I"• O:U . --· ....... ...,_Ufl Ctttl"""" 91-S ' otl Wtlo...,_1:•. MO-Mii• ISl•"'*'-M. t1t-.....ts1_.__......._ 1~-1Slmt....,ttrn1._ 1U-\.tl""'ISI ............ ~ .. t»-Ce ...... t"• .... •·• 1•.....IJotloOrno (Sl .... ~1:41. 1U-ll~lll•Ho1Mw1:u. l~-•lllilll~te:P. M&-A ........ 111 ... V~l:._ US-W•llwlll ........ 1:4 m-..,tl) ... WWU...lta. Mwt-V--Cll ... -....ne:ct. .,...~ oc... ............ __,_ tal-IM'tll:•. • ••• .. K»•.-...e:-. 1tt-te.....,.IOl ........ t:a. ; ..... $1111 '°" ............ : .... m-011wt1011Mcr.....e:n.. 1~10la.: ........ 1M. ........... .,, ... ,,...ti .. ws--t ..... «»• ..... tiu. 1.U__....IOla.:M¥tM. "5 ... 171,~ ltt-T--.01 ... Mi'Ml. , ..... 11••=--IOl-"rtwMit. -· --~n. .... .. ff-TUtflnlwo IOI ... °"Wlllf 1 :IO, ~11MMtlOl ......... O:J1. 11r-o.oir.10l_..,twtlilL 110-M11lt11 tol ..... T.uttl:J$. U7-fl-IOlpill ....... l :SI. 1U-4dt<lftr IOJ-~I :~. 1a-49111,.1 t01pi111 ....... 111:•. H~IO) ... 'fkUwl:IU. IM--IO),..~O:M. lM-ScotlCUplf!Mac~l;IM. 11J-<...,..Mw10l•M • ..,.., l :W. ltl~I ....... (l!!I"'" PIMllom IOI •·:rt. H,.1-Mltlw IOl-..,"'1Mt. J4.MltCM:Y.t.lllln' ...._""" 7 T""' ---'• ........ 1)1: 1. w ........ -...; a. ... °""""'*,,; .. IMllflopll'l"•:s.o...,tM. s.... c ......... -ti....,.,. tinil -'•I'll: tt-t. oi•-u: 111-a. Cerll1"11; , ..... iu-H; ,..,..... The University or Washington, hicb will face Michigan Jan. 2 in the ose Bowl, ia scheduled to work out 'ne times at Oran1e Coast CoUeae, ginning a week from today. P•cUlc Coa1t Athletic A1socl•tion' acbedule by tugllnc •Ith Portland, Orecoa, Cal and Northern COiorado. Los Alamitos ....... 1 ....... ~:ws-1. ........... ;.,....... .......... :,~ Orllll;" ....... .... The ffuakjes will arrive here Tues- ay and will headquarter at the Mar- iotl Hotel in Newport Beach. Washlngton coach Don James says 'steam wiU work out in the morning he first week and drill in the arter- noon the week after Christmas. "We want to work out during the morning on that first week so we can CRAIG SHEFF give the players ns much rree time as possible and for some of lhe social ac- tivities to which we've been invited." I says James. "'For imtance, we're tentatively .scheduled to go to Disneyland Dec. 23 I and we may have something on the 22nd. We'll eliminate the dlstrac:tiOM the second week and really get after it," adcb James. Mich.igan, a 14-point favorite, will drill at Citrus College in Azusa. To s•y that UC lrvlae's basketball te•m Is in for a long season may be a big anderst•tement. Co•Ch Ti.m TUt's young Ante•ters are Z·! 90 f•r, but the sc:hedale •head b murderolll. UCI .-.U talented Boise Stt.te Fri· d•Y night, then may h•ve • 1Ugbt breatber against Aurora College Satard•Y at Cnwt'ord Hall. Bal 1&'11 l>e loep oflerlhat. TUl'a club w•rm• ap for a 14-game A.ad It won't 1et aay euter when conference play rolls •rou.ad. Wlth the esceptk>a of Saa .loee SUte <1-4), all tli.e PCAA teams h•ve1 wtnninl records. Fre1no Stale Is 5-1, lncludln.I a win over Cal. Cal SC.•te <Loag Be•cb) Is 5·2, c•pped by •n 80·71 victory over Utah last S•tarday. C•I ~late <Fu llerton) •nd Pacific have pl•yed well and are both 4-Z. UC Santa Barb•ra Is 3.z •nd has be•ten Stanford whlle loaln1 ill over- Ume to USF. And San Diego SC•te, which ngures to be a conteoder, ls 2·2. If TUt's team finishes seventh or better In the PCAA, It'll be the c:o•cbing coup of the ye•r. Saddleback College's basketball team bas yet to play a home game (it hosts Mt. San Jacinto and S..nta Monica thls weekend), but the Gauchos have been very impressive in fashioning a 7-1 record. But if you think the Gauchos are anxious to fmally play at home, one might feel a UWe sorry for LA Mis· sion College of San Fernando. The Pree Spirits have played their first elaht games (they're 1·7) on the road aod they a till have six more to go before home game Nd. 1 on Jan. 3. Mission does not have • gym. naslum, so It uses Kennedy High <Granada Hills) and San Femando 1-ligb for Its games. Steve Rakb•ll•nl, the former Edison WJll <Huatlactoa Be•cls) st•adout, ls ex.pec&ed to tr•nsrer from San JOR State lO Goldea West for tbe spring &emes&er, where he will pole v•Wt foe tae Rmtler1. Bal R•khshanl i. re1•rded u a m•clt MU« qurterb•ck, tbu lie ii a pole·v•alter. U he decides to tl•1 at GWC ud. play foo&b.U, t.he Rutlen •boukS be aroa.g •cabt. Area Basketball Soccer Results ProScoree ,, -• Race Results -Barom, Vikes In Cage Play * * --WR-r....,. S.~ IS.NII•! -O•wlll ll•YH !lllU! ... 0.11; l'E- Ft•nk Ol•l'•l•tro !SI. 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Goin J•110 1-.11 T,.IMOMIW-1 in "'-'' K•ttwlnl !T•NWAI U.60 1.60 11t °'""'~~(--z) 4.• !11 Tlm•-lt.lll. ::: Atlor ... -Hltlf&IH,.Ntllor,Fosl °'"· v ........ lkllo. c.tcM ~. ''' ••mll?Ooo,TNrd-,llOlwlC"°" 1n u:auctowi..~t.1-,. ~~ .. --.. ........... alOMTM •.t.e:• -»0 ¥Miii,) ¥ .. t OI01&111t.M-.~-'1ACll. t•COND llM:9 -il10y-alYMr Clllb • .... Oolmllll. """-U..-. H~ Pldloll S.-IU-Mlghll:IV..._..,I lU l"IWN'dl I.JO •.10 l.OIJ o...tor .... !~I ._. J.otO NlllNt' wn-l'T._..l JMI T ..... -.... l"an'1E•iYJll (HMll lit CoP'I' """' 1c.i11 1n lloKMM..-!Mllclwill W CMolll•ISMl lLlpNl'"I 122 AllO r1111 -itll"t. loll, U""9 Ge l'i.tt, Olil .....,.._, tl'9tlfM WUU• Molll:•McM$ 0.Ck" •• llCMQIWI) "' IN. ltoot1o.d IM"9f;I llt GoC.IK1,.cc..-..1 UJ ~ "'"™ ltACE -l50 , ...... J ,..... TllltlD lt.t.a ->50 'l'-0.. 2 yNr .... °*'*'9-~ .......... P'lilrM ...... -.... l ...... _,..$1,000, 5bl9f' ....... ~) T,,.Pokt~I W.1.11HoltMt'.i.110.lllmlNll si ...... Ut .... I FrlW .... C~) FotlJ.cWIN~I T .............. IAOMTI .i.le~oclftclc..a;..1 'E•t'I' l'I!., INr'M'll • • ..,..uaUGl'l'7 COM-1 119 Wald'I .. 11, "' ___ , zut , ••. 20 IU TM CMv"""1t !Hartl •.Cit f.# I" flfty5lp~) a.• 1n T.__,._. !It AlllO r ... -, .. Go .k't, W-4 122 CMloca,-.,. ~. ~ ir:osr. '" lltll'!YI l.illlolW, ~-I, s.-t , ,, °'""9'' ltt SuoklWIJ -RMI Trtt.M, ....... ~. Dlf'Kt~,,,.,lthlt Basketball Scores l'OV•TM•aca-•r-•-· -..Ctel...tng.~$2,IOO. .. __ IM'l'IMI -,. J .• o... ao1110".1H11..,. (GlrdoZal TMt,CI-!~I CDt.LaOE Holl• .. ••• Jt, o.r!l'nOUlfl .. !_.tt,Ca.1'1'1& N1o9tr•n,eoin.11u jot . .>ot\11'1, H.'I' ,61, <:ol..-nbla M VIII-• 51, .... IN:..tonlol DYii• "· Chlu90 ., Florla.f'J.~•ts O...el•TICllN;~-J4 LMllt'llUo .... ,.......6' Ml•"'I• Olllo 'J. Wrlglll SI." C.I St ... (l..ollg .. _..)ti, llrt!W ... ,,~ ... WNtl ..... er~'" v..,.n,M<.,......St.w 1-1',l!..--H HW No.11.-U,Oll~St.9' Pao;lfklO, Slrl •r.,1dtuS1:11 Sl.Morn ... 5Kr-.. St.11 W•llllnet.., SI. JI, Gonta9& J2 W. Wallll"91.., .. Pao;lfk, On. tt --"'-MAMIUll• TOUltlU.MSMT •fflrt'W. N. 8"Mft SI ........ I M.AllwrllW•JV It UAHEIM TOUIOIAMlltr Ml•• ca.. '1, Or.._ st Cyora.a N. Mloallol .. '9 $orv1M II, 5Yllftr Hlrt:t H H'IAtll.'I' Mil.LS TOUltMA# PT S.Fr•1J,~" S.nl• Meri<.-11, ,.......,.. Jot Torr_..,,c.N.l',,,..-a-'I. Hlnl'I T~ 60 ""'""°""· ...,..,_., ...... .u. HM>ll,... 22 • H~W.~•U t.OAllATOUllM-IMT J~f...._ .. CMl•-11 l3 LMAl ... ,Yl!!•PN'l<ll SAM DIM.AS fOUllM...,,,.IMT 11ow1-u, _.in c•1~11e1 Sol (C_,.._ .. l O.mi.<i H. S... OI,.... • !ltllrdl ._...._ ... e.11 t1 ---1 "°"o.o1oti..1 "'1fTA AMA TOU...-a"T '-" ..u.m!IM JI, R-'IO Al..,ltO. u SMl•APIOSl,~'1 OllMfell LSAOUI Can'/'• ~m> '1, El O..ldo " .... , .. FvllotlM u "'-'•a. 1:.--"' V•IMC:i. M, U. HaO<a Jt cn•NOMUAOUI compt.M'7.~tt K.-H'/' It, WMI.,.,, 60 s-,u.n. ...... . c.-.... -. v.ii., ... -· ... Banquet Trail OOU>I: ..... , --Motl ••1U•ldt ,-11yor-To11y ........... :11 .... ., .. ....,.......... OtMotl: -..toloU 0 ..... fllM SltW• MllcMtr; "'otl lrnpr••t~ 11>1~111\K ..... flm•-20.1• t ,MI J.111 '"" AIM •--............ , ! ....... Gott• Goa,,...~11o,-rr .... 1.wcky '" kt•k .... .-Sl'I09l<V ~.Mr. --II •nc" 11~ t. f-0. .... o.,tlel, ........ ~"H tlACE -•10 ylll'di, J ..,_, ... ... °""'*'S. PutJOU.-. ...... !Caf'#U) t.00 S.0G •.OO Mr,WH .... ~(tlolitllfllSAI •-• 011a-v-cw..1 J.11 TI--&bl AIM rM -~ O.O. T•tl .. &ogtol,Un~,l'"'LH..tll .. ~- JIJI"' lllAC9 -.. ,___ I .,.., -~ ...... p.a. Llmlbltu CT--1 It.• J..0 •.llO F ..... l .. 1-l~I LIO JMI ,..,...,..,1o1,._.CHorO UI Tl--1UI ,,..., __ S..,._.., ........ . Til'l'J' Mi-.... SI ... e.. .......... MK:1 .... No.Cr.,,.. The Int GJft hr Santa ~ti# ·~.r-· wright , 'Mou ~ ~----Sbo-p ..fM~ SHOES 99 Fallllon l1land ••• ~ewpon Beach ••• 7Sl·ff;Sl . . Tl __ ._. AllOton-llr .... -F...,.,Go O•rllhl, Tt,_ ..... , , M•IH In ,,,,...., lt-'9\«, °"' ~. s.... Klllll•H- U IUCW '"°"""' C:-a. a t-11.MI ............. ., .. El OH TM 11.r.ca: -CIO'ordo. J- Old1 • w11.At-. l"vtwM,JCl6. "-tilKUr., IJl.llllOlll 10.60 W•nllGol~•I e1.1r·nHl llli'lk.,..ll TllOWl ---- .... l.lO J .• L60 .... Alo.o roll -vt•a Vlif•, Go 5'11 Mio, T•~Ofl.llehTw H•Krotd!H .. Sunset League basket,. ball powers Fountain Valley and Marina (Hun·" Ungton Beach) take to :~. the road Thursday in'··: tournament action. TbeBaroaaofFountain Valley co•ch Dave Brown, recent cbam. J>ions of the Marin•·Wealmilllter. ln- ''ltational, tangle with Porterville Hllb at 6:'5 ~ in the first round of the Arro)'oGnmdo tourney. • M•rloa, meanwhile, . • under the band of coach · : st.eve Pcporicb, baW. ~ tlae bost 'ldpqol ID the ., Santa -'°""'"" •.. , ''"°· I l SEIKO BEAUTY, 'QUALITY AND VARIETY. LADY SEIKO •. A.H. WEINERT Filte Jl:wel• ~ Fuhlon lttland." Newport Buel>• 14•-<llMO • ' •• • • .. .. ___ ,.,._,.,\_~ft~ ............ , ............ ,.. \ . . fl.I DAILY PILOT \\ 11>:\l.SI> \' IY...o l.'00 I OM NIWI • NEWS ~OHll The pau11'*1lc9 try to c;ope with an oll Mii that hu en.ipted right undef- llMlh • llOUM. • THI IAAOY llUNCH 8obt>y and P.cer camp out In the backyard to look fOf UFO'a. II) THE AOOKll!S A patrolman gell lnvot11eo In 9UIGldal attuat1on1 llO lhll lie might be killed In Che line ol duly lo Mc:ure hit temlty nnanclally &D ZOOM Q5 F0008 FOR THE M~FAMILV .. Whole Flah" <ml A9CNEW8 6:308 MOVI! • * * * "The Bella 01 SI Mlr(a" (Part 2) ( 19451 Bing Cro.by, lngtld Berg· man A prlftt and a Mot1*' Supeflor rebuild a parochial ldlool al1er pet· aulldil\Q a aklnHont to donate 10 their cau1e (I nr.) CD MV THAU SONS Tne ell-male OougiH hOUHhOld bac;omH 0 refuge !Of en allrac:llve girl danc:« who haa bffn alrieled from her eparl· men1. fD OVER EASY Mlllleenl Fen wt ck, steamed cnlckan & yams, dlacouni. on taxtuba '1i) FAMILY PORTRAIT "Paycnologlcll imp11c11 t1on1 0 1 01vorco" (I) CBSNEWS ~ MERV GRIFFIN Guella Manar11/11 Mohl.Ian V~. Burl Reynolds Doug Henning 1:00 Q NBC NEWS IJ LIARSCLUB 0 ABCNEWS 0) I LOVE LUCY "The Mutlache C!) AOAM-12 Olficera Malloy 111\d Reed loolc tor a robbery 1uapec1 help a woman on e car crUh and Miiie a ramoly <11apu10 fE) MACNEIL I LEHRER REPORT 1) Black Sheep B~k Ro bert Conrad <left> returns as Pappy noyington in the new Black Sheep Squ a dron series and Sco~t Hyl_ands guests as a chaplain m the ~trst episode of the resurrected show tonight at 9 on NBC. Channel 4. '1l> YOGA WITH I MADELINE Cl) TO TELL THE TRUTH 7 30 tJ A CHRISTMAS STOOY Gumdrop the Moua" dli· covers Hiiie Timmy's unde· h11eted let1er to Santo on Cnrl1tmu Eve Q 8HAMANA Guetit· Zee Zee Gabof IJ NEWLYWEOGAME 0 Bl.000: THE OTHER OAOUGHT 0) THEBAAOYBUMCH Eddte comi4nces Greg that 1ne Old conver11ble ne 11 trying to get rid olf Wiii be easy to ltx llP I!) t.£r8 MAKE A DEAL fD LA. IN'T£ACHANGE "SnapehOla" '1l) STAASOARO 'T<>Ppet" CJ) 1128.000 QUEST!~ 9 FAMILY FEUO 8:00 1J Cl) GOOO TIMES "Requiem FOf A Wino" Wfllona and the l!.vana clan leorn 11 precioua leuon In love. Ille and death when J J prntdes over a moll unuaual wake Q GRIZZLY ADAM& 'TrGck 0 1 The Couger' Adami end Nakoma muat track down 1 couger that Adam• onea kMW end loved .. a pet but now 11 belleYed to hive gone mad In the wllda of the Nor1h· _, IJ TOTHEWILO COUNTRY The f'oa1"'9 elq)IOfa """ rlctl and unique lalend kle with Ill for ma of Ille. ae EIGKTIS !HOUGH 10 8'11111 (2 hn.) • NOVA "The Red Ptaner · MAB • from Ille beginning ol Htronomy lo the NASA Viking mtaalona. G MAGIC Of OIL PAINTll'40 "StlllUte" 1:30 fJ Cl) IZY&ZHYK The guy1 at u. OQ!M'tunlty C«lter 'IV to ~uerade .. a 11reet oano to oet p11<1 tor nlmed lntervlewl. CD WHATDOYOU KNOW ABOUT HOM08EX\JAL/I)'' Ablgal V1111 Buren h<»t thla progr1m dealgn«l 10 Cllarf. ty prevalent quettlona and "mylna .. 9bout homoa.x- uallty Q5 OVEAEASY Miiiicent i:-tc:ll: M~ chicken & yams: dlacounta on taxJcaba. t .001J 088 MOVIE * • • "The Nnl-Man" ( 197&) a.. Connery, Cor- nella ~ A Middle Eut dlplomat au-lellow U N. dalegat• With a COft- trOYerllal plan fOf si- thal "*• him • ..,,.. f()( --.lnaUon. D 8lACK SHEEP 8QUADAON (8-t Pt9mlere) "Divine Wind" When the Nllne of a aquadron member IOCOf'- reclly tume up on 1ne klli.d·lrl·aotlon list. the ptlOt decidea he'• marked tor death. Pappy ctattiw with lhe combat prlaal (Scott Hyt1nd1) over how to handle the tituatton. (IOf'merty Baa 8'8 Bl~ Shee9) IJ TO TH! WILD COUNTRY Life on the grus prairie In Canada, Where men atlb ride the range end rope ...... a IAON8IOE A c:oUe~ profeaaor ~ a mancfld man aller a student In his a.a tlllea her own lite. TUBE TOPPERS ABC D 8:00 -Ei1ht is Enough. wm· Geer o(The Waltons guestsln this special two-hour episode as u burglar who earl'; orr the family's presents. CBS fl 9:00 -"Th~ Next Man." Scan Connery plays a Middle East diplomat whose controversial plan !or peace marks him as a target for as- sassination in this topical 1976 movie wlth Cornella Sharpe. NBC S 9 : 00 · Black Sheep SQuadron. The canceled series "Baa Baa Bfack Sheep" is resurrected under a new title with Robert Conrad playing the maverick leader of a World War 11 fighter unit. tire.) 1C>:OO D '°'-.tCt!! WOMAN "Merry ChrtstmM Watdo" A. orally Old benk robber (t.io,.d Nollll) cl-.. lenta a.. and pulte off a ..... of bf..., da)'lloN l'IClldUpe to .,.,,. .._ .. lmpoHtl•lled elderly • Mindi .... llell9 a cnn.t.- mm wClh al tile~ ··=COMO "Ol<M Engllah ChnatmM" Pwtula Clet1c, lAo Sey«, Gemma Ctaven and Olym- pic elcltlng ~ John CUrry join Parry In LC>Mon f Of a holiday party at a TudOf caatte, a lllopptng 9PfM In H1rrod'1 depart· ment stont and a vl•lt to St. Paul'a Cathedral. m GITaMART An attempt 10 ......tnata CONTAOL'a otliel 111118 and l<Aos """8 t.o the one man the organtutlon tMll '*' do the Job • Maxwell Smart • .Pm.AL ''Ponrelt Of A Nuf'ae" A ~·typjcal di)' of 9CtMtl9I ~ Jt111t at1e C8ll PfOWfde care beyond the tradltloMI CC)flo- oapt of nuralng care.. ID MAM AU8IEU. From SONY It Buffalo, the netlor!'• IMdlng pollllcal h~ oommanta on la~-Ulntn. polltlc:al arena. 1o:ao•• NEWS e AMENCAHA. IJ MOYIE ••~"Fair Wmcl To Java" ( 1962) F,.i MaoMuNay, v-Rallton. Ni American -end • ll'C>UP of pllot1 battle over dlamond-. (2 tin.) .THIOOOCOUPlE ()eoet .. ~ put OUI when ,... kw*• '* lor-mar wlte to .,_. the apal1m9nt wtlle ,_ no.- II beltlg painted. • HON£YMOONER8 A handaome mambo tnatrualor'a ettona to enroll the wi-of Ralph and Ed u pupil• craata an uproar, but teach lhe hua- bancla a lealon. fJD DICK CAVETT Gunt! Nell Simon. fl!) MACNEll. I LEHRER R90ln' 11:30 8 CJ) HAWAII AVE.O McG.n'ett Mid Oll!VlY Wil· llama try to llQUN out how • murder auapect (Monte Markham) Cl/II ~ to be two~ at one time. (R) '0 TOHMIMT Hoat: Joflnny Caraon. au..: a.--Welk, omy Glllalpla, Rey John· eon, Delly Pston. " LOVf. AMEJUCAH STYLE "LoY9 And The loud- Mouth I LO'le And The ~Up" 89 8TARBKYI HUTCH TONIGHT'S LATEST LISTINGS MOMNO 1l:OO. lWIUOHT ZON9 "Third From The~ .. • llOMVIR RNMOOO Tom mlll• 8 peln"" ci.d- alon: Wenda ln1plr•• ~~ Tom,.....,_, Olwtle and Jefhy PoOI their IClfr'O'#t: ~·· In the kltman tor Tom. • MOVll •• .,. "Rtcooh•I Aomltnclll'' (19&6) MarJorie Main, Ohltl Wiiia. The head coolc at a dude rancn trlel her luctc al matctlmaklng and maoic. (1 hr .. 30 min.) 12:30• MOVE • * *'" "Inherit The Wind" (1H0) Spencet Tracy, FredriO Maren. The c:ourtr-betll• ~ Cl.,anoa o.rrciw Mid WI\• '*" JannlnOI 8tyM o9w the 1MCllfno of o-w1n·1 theOfy of 9Yellutlon In T- neuee achoota I• uamlned. (2 in.. 25 min ) 11:111 ~wvsmrv MOVI! ••~"Viall From A DMd Min" (1974) Alfred Dralle, ......, MacRaa. An 8'6- erly ata• collector la betf8yed by hla young .... and an attorney with • pandwnt for murdlr, (R) 12-Me(J) KC>.W< "8WMt• Than Ute" Kojak turn• to an ex.addict (Nev- Hte Brand) lot help ~ hla drug addicted nephew la Involved In a murder. (R) 1:00 D TOMORROW GUMt: Ray Prkle, former speechwrlter IOf Preatdenl Rlcherd M. Nh1on G ISPY When Kelly ta implleated In Che murder of a Ruealan ballaflna, .... and Sc:ott .,. given eight houra 10 dltprOYe the charQM Q) MOVIE *** "Atlllf In Trinlded" ( 1962} Glenn Font, Rita Hayworth. A be&Utllul wom1111 becomaa entan· gled In a -1oua game of elll)lonaOa. (2 hrL) 1:30. MOVIE *** "The Four Oeyt Of HeplW. ( 1913) Jelr'I ISoral. LAa ~.During Wof1d War M 1M ~Of Naplll reYOlt agalnlt the Nale on the -of the Amer1ca/I lnvUlon. (1 Iv., 30 min.) 1'1111rsda•'• Dafld.e /flo.,le• MOANINQ 9:308 **~"LlldyGodlva" ( 1956) Maureen O'Hara. George Nader. A Saxon nob6aman and Illa oom- moner wit• thwart the ~ plo1 lot Nor- man ~t. (1 h< •• 30 min.) 10:008 *** "&luaOI Noon" (1847) Wiiiiam Hotden. Anne Balder. Four atunt ,..,. IMve • aamlval In order to carry the U.S. M ... (2hrL) AriUWOOk 12:00 • * • "Rlltralf" ( 1935) Spencer Tracy, Jean Harlow. A gruff tleharman la toroed IO WOttl ~ of an equally •°'91 young lady In • tuna r.ctcwy. (2 hrs., 20 min.) " ~. ··~"The !Ollera" (194e) Butt L.anc:utar, Ava .. Channel Litltin9• 8 KNXT (CBS) Los Angeles "Y• -Nictlollt, There It A Senta Cl-" A 199Cia.I gltt hidden by Joan belore lier death raa10tM the Brldlord'a tp4r1ll •Iler a burglar (Wiii GM!') dil8P. pears wttn 1/lelr Cl'lfls1mu preaanta (Two-hour epitode) CD M£AY ORIFF1N Gu.ts: MehatWll Mllhelh Yogi, &n Reynolda, Doug Heoolng, Squire Ftldell. 9 GREAT ~ "Clloreograpby By Blllan· chine With The New YOfk City Ballet, Part I" Edwwd Villella lncroducea • pro- gram r .. turing Tzigane, music by Ravel; the Andante Movement from Dlvertlmento 15, mvllo by Mozart and The Four Tempermerill, music by Hindemith. "A Blind TMCtler In A Pub- lic Sdlool" Can ne do hit )ob? "Pariah" Two pollcemen are ll8ln by • vengeence- aeaklng m1111 whO wem1 olhaonl wlll IUtf9r unte. 8Ull"ally Is punllhed f()( the ahoollng death of • young boy. (R) ~.~8 Gardner. A ~ boxer becorllM llwoMld wlltl .,. l)"ldlelt•. (2 lvt.) Q KNBC (NBC) Los Angeles B KTLA (Ind) Los Angele!. 0 KABC·TV (ABC) Los Angeles (J) KFMB (CBS) San Diego G KHJ·TV (Ind ) Los Angeles ®) KCST (NBC) San D1eqo 0) KTIV (Ind) Los Anqeles &> KCOP·TV (Ind) Los Angeles fE) KCET·TV (PBS) Los Angeles '1i) KOCE·TV (PBS) Hunllngton Beach 0) CAROL BURNETT ANO FRIENDS G.-11: Eydie Gorme, Alen Liiiie l!J MOVIE • • • "The Americano" ( 1955) Glenn Ford, Frank Lovejoy. A Tax11 cowboy lln<la romance end adven· ture wl*1 ha eltempta to deliver pme Brahma bUlla '1l) AUSTIN CITY LIMITS (]) MOVIE *' • • ·~ "High Sierra" ( 19• 1) Ida Lupino. Hum· pnrey Bogart. A gangaler on the run ,,_., a bealtl- lui gill In the mount.ina. (2 I!) SPECIAL "The Treuur• Of Tuten· khamun" Muelc, llleratura, technology and paln1Jng1 ot ancient EgyS-aocompe- ny hlghllghll of objlcl• round In the tomb ol Tulanl<hamun. 11:00 Io• CJ) a NEWa HOU.YWOOO CONNaCT10H -~ C!) GETSMART Tiie diary of a retired CON- TROL agent dlaappeara and Smart 19 MSlgned to lhe-rch. 19 CAPTloNEO A8C NEWS * * "Thi Dey The Hot Line Got Hot" (1969) CharlH Boyer. Robert Taylor. A ml~·UP In INnk• al an alrPOfl Involves a young man In an espionage plot. (2 hrs.) **~ "Woman 01 The Town" ( 1943) Claire TreYot, Albert Dekker. Bat Mattera on, frontier 3:00 III "Champione In Nlght- mar•" (1ff7) MeMn Doug· tu, Anne Bax.tar, (2 hr9.) 3:30 D * * "The Dlaappew-ance Of Flight •1~· (1974) Glenn Fofd, &tadford Oii- men. T-...._ pur-.Ang an uoldanlttled tlylng oOfeol, ~.(1 hr.,80mlft.} Will Archie Bonker Be All Out of the Family? ARCHIE AND HIS TV 'FAMILY' Can Serie• Survive Without Him? By DAN LEWIS TVO•USenlu Carroll O'Connor has set the condi· tion~ under which he would consider continuing as Arch.le Bunker next season. He doesnt want to work before a li ve audience anymore. And he doesn 't want to work in front of three cameras or on tape. If all these no-nos are approved by producer Norman Lear and CBS, then it is just possible that "All in the Family" will survive on television beyond this season. O'CONNOR HAS the trump card. His current contract expires at the end of this season. It ls possible that the series could survive without him, with the focus perhaps on that eogag· log dingbat, Edith Bunker (Jean Stapleton), as has been suu~ted. but there is guarded feeling over whether or not "All in the Family" would re- m ain strong without the bigoted Archie. That he is willing to continue if his conditions are met is a revelation. Periodically, Archie has been report- ed ready to quit in the past. But he won't mind the weekly grind if he can have the luxury of working leisurely on a filmed show. "THE.RE IS 80 percent less strain working with film," O'Connor said during a recent visit to New York. . He's bad six full seasons of "All an the Family" before live audiences <live-on-tape, before three cameras> and this seventh sea.son will be the last. It's far too strenuous and emo· ti on al. "When you work live, it's llke doing a new play every week," O'Connor complained. "You really sweat up. When you do it on film, without an au. dience, you can take yout time, redo scenes if necessary. The strain of the pace working with film Is the editor's problem, not mine." O'CONNOR SAYS he realized from the start that the series bad a good de- al of social significance, but be didn't expect it to be successful. "That's why I went into U in the first place," be explained ... I thought it would flop. I figured the press would love it, but the public would bate lt. It turned out just the other way around." There's a bit of irony in o •Connor's ultimatum for keepinJ him involved in the series. Evidence last season of fading popularity gave the impression that CBS might not even care if O'Connor continued or "All in the Comedy Writer Standing Pat BJ J,\ y SBARBUTT "the guy who predJctsJ.he past... 0 WE'D GO IN THE back studio and wtna LOS ANGELES (AP) -When last seen, McCormick, born in Lakewood, Ohio, and •em." be said, meanin1 they made it up Pat McCormick sat gloomily in a educateclatHarvard,saysbeandBariman sa.nascript.•'Tbenltoccurredtoua.maybe Hollywood bistro. He was bemoanlng a also will have a sequel soon, "Studio B-2.,. we could do that with a 1yndicated radio great fiscal lose incuned by bis investment It features other players in addition to the show, just 10 In and wln1 it.•' in a diaper service In Sun City. original cast of two. Pat was asked wby tbey thought tbey He recently wu asked bow he plans to re-It's strange McCormick is loose in radio . could succeed, conslderin& that these daya coup bis Joss. humor, as he's been a full-time TV writer the market for network or syndicated radio "Well," he said, "I bought into a ever since a pal, comedian Jonathan Win· humor ls tb0u1bt to be drier than a • cyclamate factory. . . '' ten, wanlled him work oa "Tonight" when Bedouin•• instep. But the alx·foot-aix, 250-pound Irishman Jack Parrwu the main event. "Weil, it was because the commerclala needn't depend on that for a livlng. He's a Asked !or an explanation, be said bis for-we did were auccesllUl and because there Family" wound up its run after Uus season. THERE WAS LITTLE talk, O'Con· nor noted, before this season began about the fate of the show beyond 1977. 78. But there bas been a re· surgence in the ratings that obviously rekindled the network's interest. "For six years we were the No. l show on television," O'Connor noted. ''Then they moved us to the worst spot on the schedule -Saturday night at 9. And we went 'down' to No. 11." The series was moved into Sunday nights at 9 this season, and quickly moved up into the top five some early weeks, ·No. 6 into early October. and alw~s in the top 10 the first seven ween of the season." So CBS showed new interest in securing the future of the sbow. After all, CBS doesn't have many bit aeries this season. THE FATE OF THE show lJ>pears tied to economics. U switching to film doesn't cause l>roduction costs to become prohibitive,. there's a re· asonable chance it will continue. · "It bas to be up to the network and then Lear to decide il lt makes economic sense," O'Connor said. top com• writer here, with 5,,.., yean OD ears career began atx years ago when be we.N a eoupte of other syndicated shows on. - ''Tonilht." Jl)us credit on a string ol com-and Banman, who makee wmmerdals, the air, lib •Chicken Man,"' he Hid. ''So W~IYe you MUSIC and PICTURE! ••Stai'JtoUd" I• «J;/apecialjQldmovies. teamed up to do.off-tbe·w.U comedy ads weaaveat17. • y .. Moacla• night at the ca.....,. reatau· .-.J:,i'f:four"=-~-¥..~~.~ =g •orioua produeja. All were for ,.;~n-1o1iave-'*"7so ~b:";e~BUc:h.;.•ldneachWdM .. =!t ·Boben Altme't .. BUffaalo Bill mil Ute lil-• at 7s30. We feature the Soatblan•'• l»eit •• • -d1alll '' Burt ReYDOlda' ··~ IDd tbe d • • rt>· • ment and give It to you ••• wltli a emlle. ~-s~~-=~~~~. NB€ Fa 1ug·m :u;at•mrs ~ • eltbea, oace hooorHd u •-ne World.'• . ~ TallHt Leprecbaun " baa ftt anotbtl" • ~•A r:areer'°'°'-uuadtocolll~t.•"*1• NEW YORK CAP) -NDCJ. afttr 1:1°topt•,;:nm:r9f.'7nt~~~rn: , of entertahlment beretofcn De11ev9d u~ challenilna ABC ln tho Mtw.a• qpt f()r • the _.th .. ~ nlo:,;,11 ., .. ;.; .. &tact. the prtme Ume televlaloa ~..,.. ~ 1uec.. moo •A ... ~--r, He 8lid a parU)el', Al Bamnan,~produce tho earllputoftheaeuoa, tl~lD a:'JOV·pert novel for TV, NBC fill to lut and •tar m a ebow called .. Stadto B." n·1 a Wn1 place. partially the result ct a 1tron1 place and bu been the,. alaee -ttiret urlH of w•lrd 80·Hcond lntenlews •howtn.1 in recent weeta by CBS, A.C. -weekl In• row. tbeJ'Ye IJDdlcated to radio ttatJODI n•· Nlellen ftawe11bow. The top 10 abowl: ~al!fllnceJune. me. ABC, 11ttbadbOeti12 ottM~vtou u ~--=r.r~:-~r,:r.;:.m:+.::.=.' : ;tllcCOl'IDlck, wboaay1l90atat.Soaaairt.be weeka of tbO 1euon, wa1 No.1 in the rat-~.i]i••a. .--......_ T.!:._~ o... idlata. always J1 tb lbler\'t1w • ll'• iria• for tu 1feeJt eodlni Dec. 11. The ,,.._ ..• i:~!t,~.~~:i • oubUUl 11111: lof tbtm ,ver will mate nelwork'aTUiidaJ n11~t.blli "Laverne iDd -..ctet.™~!';;t;t.'J",,;:~ .. •:..; • Jtarbara Wa114ira' Bit of people la need of Shirley," ~Unued a uena btJun lD late :!W.:;.,:......, ...,.;.11t11H•• '~. 0ttober8nd brolteh~ Ol\COM tb•weit.'I ~~~·~-' -,~~-:;.:t" a 90& ~.ON& II a hamp«ter moatwmbedprOCnms. WM.-:...-~~~-:_n,~. ,_ .= 11...;.;...-,...,,.-... ...... ..,.. ..... iio0iiiiiioio!i.-l'li aa•W1111L;Aaotbtrla t.heU.Ul9tman NBC flnllhld ori'd to ABC the rtrat. t..~.=.. . ...:=,.,,...-.. ... ,_1w-_...._ tQ'tu w.til. ADoaillr ii a WCirtJO Pat elllJI MYeD of l HOit, aftd hit I blab Mme."' llldut. • l \ ENTE!RT AINMENT I MUSIC: DAILY PILOT •IJ .. . , COLSON BOOK Pre-Christmas Coneerts \Yul Cheers Call 642-5678. Put • few words to work for ou. WASJUNGTON (AP) -Film crew1 be1ln locatlon shoolln1 in W a1hiniton today for the movie verslon or Charle• Colaon's book "Born Alain." "IL.ACK CHllSTMAS .. 1.HIAY--Mt·11M .,...me. IXCOIUST II'"•• .... ,-n&n ............. "GYMIAU. I.ALLY" -Jilt .. ,,,_ __ "OMIOMOMI" "'' IAT ,_ '11111 II II ...... u "DAUY O .. JU.•• "'' -SIMIAD•THI IYI Oii THITIGM .. 1:50 (Q, : ,,.. ........ lllliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;iiilliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilliiiiiiliimiiiiiiiilimlllliiiiiiiil ...... , , f , , I "I don't do miracles, they're too flashy!" A CARL Rt\NtR" ~A''l" ~~~o SEE IT AGAIN FOR THE FIRST TIME! AT EDWARDS N EWPORT CINEMA SH OUR 8EAUTIFUl ANTIOO! CARS ON OISPl.AY INTHE LOBBY S9elnt .. tw w.,.. et Edwards Newport Cinema le •Jc• Me6ng tt for the ftnt time -ert eapertenoe lnco,,..,.W. anywhete. Our h"19 71dl foot "°'""(the tarveat lndoof mo'lle screen in Ontftge County) and '*' •xMltatlnt ala tracll Dolbr etereo eolA'MI ey"*" totd1 tlftvefop JOU In the adloft: You don't "wMdl" It, ,og're peft of It! Th• to.a, the Lill toroe la wtth you at Edwwda Newport Clnefll•. EJrpe<lenced Oally Al 7:30 •nd 10:00 •ndon S•tutdey I Sund•f •I 12:00 • 2:30 • 1:00 • 7:30 •nd 10:00 '.fWo loe•l concert or1anbatlona cbote t.he acouaUcally aplendld Santa Ana H!&h School audltorlum for their pre..Cb.riatmu orterin11 lut weekend and both drew richly deserved at.and· in1 ovations from dellabted au- diences. TOM BARLEY MualcBoa mlrera 1ave you a resowidan1 tribute laat Friday and Saturday and tt wu not one handclap more than you thoroughly deserved. .dellabt.ed maestro Zubin Mehta as much u an appreclaUve audience. The flawle u Beetboven-W aaner·Scbubert-Strauss progJ'am was a splendid "hon voya1e" giftifor Mehta Who hurriedly left the On lo Sunday In the same auditorium and an equally lm· maculate oerforrnance from a Los Anaetee P6llbarmonio Orcbeetra that <See CHRISTMAS, Pa1e Be> Our Irvine Muter Chorale set tbe feaUve ball rolllna with tho annual "Christmas with th• Irvine MU'ter Chorale" and this ea1erly awaited Yuletide offerin1 wu, aa usual with the IMC, impeccable In content and dell very. Dlfftoult, indeed, to make any special selection from this rt ch panop- ly ot Christmas music but a little arm iiimiiiiiifiiiiiiiii..-~=::---:-.7--:;-----:----­twtattn1 would penuade thlt writer to offer an atra round of applause for the Poulenc "Four Motets for tbe Seuon ol Cbrlatmu.' • DIRECTOR JOHN Alexander's cbaraa were in fine voice for a pro- 1ram that included tho worka of Moo· teverdi, Bach, Poulenc, Bruckner, Tscheanekotf and Berlioz and, of course, the traditional Christmas. carols and songs that conclude this de- lightful offerlna. Jt WU IUDI aa only the IMC can Bina it: baMtingly beauWul and atorloualy phrased with Alexander d1ll1e0Uy leadin1 hls cbolr in a work that drew added humWty and dl1ntty under hiJ inspired direction. 11CLOCKWORK ORAN OE" l:&OOHl.Y TBANlt YOU, IRVINE Master Chorale, for this ·very lovely Cbriatmu gift. Your lesion of ad- "SOYLENT GREEN" · ON "'WI ,,. "'°' ...,.. QOM INC.OUN1UI Of --... " ... , .. ....,, .. ". IOl•ICl ___ rwt t U•"' ...... , .. ·--•• .. _,MIYllOTIUI ~-tt­................ "-·-•11•·-·-1 d)lll.mJ .. :~" am.m1t~~e all .-;:..:a I~ 5fi'~~" am•~~ol fOllt<TfllN ~ Vfll l EV IJIUVl IN 'llllllll ti,.. ltWftl ... Rll All If us • -- STARTS f.RIDAY ·~- FOUNTAIN VALLEY ..•.•.•. 839-1500 CENTURY 21 .............. 772-8902 MISSION VIEJO .•.......... 830-8990 CINEMA WEST •.•......... 892-4493 HARBOR CINEMA .•........ 646-0573 ORANGE MALL ............. 637-0342 BREA PLAZA .•.•.......•.• 529-5339 STADIUM D.I .•........•..•. 639-7860 LA MIRADA D.I ••..........• 921-9996 MANlf'S SO. COAST PLAZA • 7:JO•t:JO ... THIUTUIS I :Jo.J:JO.llJO 7cJM:JO C.IU l&n• ltll lluUI ,..,'" MAH'S SO. COAST PLAZA CllUIHI ,. .. 1111111 •1111 MAH'S SO. COAST PLAZA .......... Mt-ml MANN'S CINEMAUNO 1114 St """' AllNt• IJS.1"1 ''DIADLY HBO-llJ .... ,._,_,"*' "CA .... ._., ....... "OH. GOD" lPG WllDAYS •:•MH-1 .. 11 IAT'l'MIUTVU .~, ........... . .., .. , .. .. 1111,.. '"FllST &DVE .. IRt WmDATS-7:0lol O:JO •HAllAD DPlllMIH'f'" wmDAYs-e:41 NOW PLAYING TBROlJGB JANUARY 8 tOX OfflCI & ftLl'HOHI HSUVATIONI C>nH DAILY Tues.-Sat., 9 A.M.-10 P.M.; Sun .• Noon·7 P.M.; Mon. 9 A.M.·6 P.M. (714) 979.5511 California's Most &gont Djnner Th.atre ~1111la11l(\n 3503 s. Harbor Blvd. ~&'" Santo Ana Half milt Hortll of tn. Sill Ditco r reewiy betMnd Downey Sn in is Al Maiof Credit C1rd1 Ac~pted For After Theatre Ooncing & Entenolnment THE CELEBRITY LOUNGE NOW OPEN WNCH fNm 11 a.rn. Mon.-Fri. Starts Wednesday, · December 21 st! "It's hard to imagine anyone who will not, in the end, lW'D on to 'The Turning Point'." -Rkliard Sc\kktl. Tl•~ M11utne .,. K\Tl~TH l'l'\71 nmx-A HARB4KT ""°'nut A \'.\t IA!o~ llln' ~HlllUO' ll.U.l'!.:!IJ6 Tl'M,\1,\ll f'IJl.\I TW' llliO!ltlTT 111/llHAU. IAll YllHMKOV -IS.'</ II: /IJttlff.VI . . ,._ llAlj'TH.4 «YnT•MAhHAl.L Tlltlllf':>-011..,Af(fHll\'Y U./Y: • Alllll~4.'I/ IAJ U.TTHJ:ATH•·--\l•llA llArf.-,AltTHl'lt I.Al llli.\Tlf ...._..11~·11~1tT lfl}!;il_,A/fTHl'lt I.Al /IA.\TS--•HUIHUrT ltl/l>.'I 1'11/,'l/T!I /IY DI W"Clt" '1/0W IY fArMlllAfA fllflll "1tL\l:T , i;;~_;~YSTll (::=~&; edwards HUNTINGTON HACH AT II.US, K.L 84M311 .. LOOKING FOR MR. OOOOBAA'" 1t ~ 6:45·8:1Q· 10:40 "I NEVER PROMISED YOU A ROS~ GAROEH" " "LOVE ANO DEAtH"lt Ame UO '-tM • 10ft "DAM,,.ATION ALLEY"'° "FUTUREWORLD" PO 0.. uo""'" •• '°'" • "BOBBY DEERFIELD""° "ALICE DOESNT LIVE HERE ANYMORE",. ...,t:OtMoe••1o:t0 •• DAILY PllOT F ..... r.,,.as CHRISTMAS CONCERTS. : • audltorium tor a Loodon plane and a inu.lc en1a1emeot 1n the Bntiab capital. IN FAcr, THE concert was set back to 2 p.m. from its original 8:30 )>.m. slot to fit in with Mehta'a over· aeu engagement, It very obviously made no difference to an orchestra that was in tine form for this unao· customed matinee performance. Beethoven's "Leonora", Schubert's Fifth and Strauss' frothy "Till Eulenspiegel": grand stdtf for a Sun· day afternoon and made even more so by Mebta'a unerring baton. But the piece de resistance, for this writer at least, waa a deeply movlna performance of Wainer'• incredibly beautiful "lJebestod" from "Tristan andlaolde." IT NEVER FAILS to find tbl1 writer fightJ.na back Lhe tears. But the task becomes well nigh impoulble with Mehta on the podium; under hla baton the "Uebestod" bullda up to an emoUonal intensity that the 1enaltlve find diffJcult to deal with. Merry Christmas, LA.PO. HWT1 baek, "2'.ooby." Let's have more ot the same-soon. Margaret in Film, • MONTREAL (AP) -"I made all kinda of mia· takes but it was a very successful day,•• Mar1aret Trudeau said after a day on the a.et of "Kin&s and Desperate Men." a film now being ahot in Montreal. Mrs. Trudeau and other performers appeared at a news conference for about 60 reporters and photo- ENTERTAINMENT I MUSIC ••'LOOKING FOR MR. GOODBAR' IS ONE OF THE STRONGEST MOTION PICTURFB EVERMADE-ANDO OF THE BEST! ''-litSm111t, S1·u· fork {)atfy /\'nu "Rlv•tl"9 ••• • CsramatJc blockbuater .. BtUC9 WIHlam.on--Aaytioy "Olane Keaton buma a hole through Jtl• acrHn." Re. Rffd-fitfrYortl Dally Nfwa LOOlllGFOR . ~ ~IR.OOODBB graphers. lntwou..t.n ''There's a tremendous en_,rgy in mak1nl a film," tt P Al'WI..,..... MOVIE DEBUT Margaret Trudeau , 6:41PM 0Mcitl.ed • !C.t. -SiM. I :45' '~1111-------.11 Jaws I ~Kang ~ 1\Pw.1nv1S., ~· IPGI TRllnE 11 ··---... "SlAPSHOT" "THE MAN WHO SKIED DOWN MREsr· ll'GI A. "D~TfOH AWY .. y'A MCI'°' THI ACTION' ... A ·-SMOQy. THI wetT" V .. ,,_STING" {PG) ' ·~ "TORSO" (A) "TEXAS CHAINSAW MASSA R!" she said. "It was yery demanding and lnteresu.n,. ~ .. ~'r,. It's a new role for me. It allows me a whole new .-...-. ._._,_ ,.... ... .... lc1 .. kind of expression." ~!!!!!!!!._!!,""!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!;!!!~ Mrs. Trudeau said she liked her role in the picture.! as the wife of a man she sess "as he is, not as tbe rnedia does. "Certainly I feel it's a role that is a very st'ron' one.'' '"Julia' is a gem. · Jane Fonda in her finest role .. :. Vanessa Redgrave is glorious •. Jason Robards gives one of the year's most memorable perf onnances." BHed on a t:'Ue story Dally7:00, 9:15 SalJSun 2:00 4:30, 7:00, 9:30 edwards NEWPORT MURCOAST HWY.aMAc:.UTHUI. HwronOommaa 644-0760 --- ""The Greatest American film in all motion picture history -AFI. Washington. O.C . Nov. 1977 HURRY, LAST WEEKI POStTIVELY ENOS TUESDAY. DEC. 20 lnlt~llc und The operation that can·trigger 51 human tJmebombs. TRAVOLTA ) • Featuring •.. •Club CatencMr Make the bird special with orange rice stuffing. . . . In many parta of tbe country the bl& queatlon at Chriatmu la -will lt be a IOOd one? But at least one thing ls always certain -the bollday meals are sure to be as delicious u ever. This is a time when nothin1 la tA>O extnvasant and each dinner table is laid with tbe beat tn food and Ht· tings. ·/ A big rout turkey loon ao beaut1tU1 on the · Christmas dinner table and provides plenty of good eatina for a holiday crowd. What makes this a festive choice ia a special Oranae Rice Stufflnl. It's rich tasting and delicious with Juicy orange sections, raisins, walnuts and sausage in a brown rice mixture. Comlsb hens ari always a holiday f avorlte. Serve them split, along with wheat pllat with orange sections and you'll have a VW1 d,Uclous and elegant main course. In this recipe, lhe Comish hens are wrapped with bacon before baking, then sprtnkled with herbs and orange juice. All of these seasonlnia impart a marvelous fiavor to the holiday hens as they bake. (See TURl(EY, Page C!) · TfJe stars: Comish game hens surrounded by cranberry side dishes. Ganie Dens For a different kind of Christmas dinner, try glazed game hens with berry stuffing ring mold. A'trulv great entree for the holiday season, suc· GWE: cu lent "Berry Glazed Game Hens" combine 1 cup Jellied cranberry sauce handsomely on a platter with a molded "Cranberry If.a cup catsup Stuffing Ring," brightly filled with "Berry Pink 'N Juice of l lemon Pickled Peart." "Musbroomberry Sauce" is a de-~cup horseradish licious accompaniment not only for game hens, but Sprinkle game hens inside and out with salt and al!io other game. meats and poultry. A vegetable pepper. Place on a rack in a shallow baking pan. In trel't for the eye as well as the palate at anytime is a bowl, mix all stuffing lnp-edlenta and press mix· "Cranberry Stuffed Acom Squash." And, for the ture firmly into a well buttered 8-lncb rlnl mold. ftrand fmale of any dining occasion, •'Cranberry Place hens and stuffing into oven and bake tp a pre. Puff 'Pastry Torte" Is a superb dessert. easily pre· heated moderate oven (~ depees) for 1 boar. In a pared. saucepan, combln.e all 1laze lngredien~ and aim· -Each of these recipes can be used individually mer until melted and smooth. stlrrln1occaalonaUy. 1n planning a variety of menus. Every one will lend Remove game hens from oven 15 minutes before its flavorsome fiair for feuting with finesse this they are done and spoon aome bf ilue onr them. Christmas. Roast another 15 minutes. Unmokl stufftnl rtna 08· · to a platter and surround with came hens. Spoon re· · " ... G 8 maininl glue over hens. Ganilab with pan1e1 CRANBERRY G..-ZED AME BEN sprigs; if desired. Fill center of stufftng rina wltb WITH BEDY STUFFING JUNG MOLD Berry Plnk'N Pickled Pears. 6 Comllb game hens, thawed If frozen, giblets removed Salt and pepper 1 package (8 ounces) herb-leasoned stufflnt 2 eups heflb or frozen.fresh cranberries. rln1ec! and drained . 1 <!UP coarsely ahrtddtcl ~ • . 1 cup tomato juice • 3ecP l <!UP melted butter or marprine t l , MUS~MBERRYSAOCE 1 <:an (10~ ounces) beef lfavy ~CllJ>dryredwtne •· 2 cupe tresh or frcnen·freeh cranberrtea, • rinsed and drained 1 can (6 ounces) alicec! mushrooms, drained In a saucepan, combine sauc. ta1~lenia and •st Buys \. Kmet~tlom are l!'ldnall1nturnin1 to normal after a chaotic Tb=vinl bollday. Ooa1umer demand for iffl traits ancl ve1etabl• fe~ aeneralb' ape•~ c.ant aup-. pllera to back oU ln their 1b1pQ) . M a whole, the marbt 11 stable with lower pncea beine forecast. Turkey stuffed with an orange-rice mixture for Christmas dinner. Goose If you're looking for instant cheers from your family this year, try a touch of tableside excitement. After you've spooned the warmed, naming apricot brandy over the succulent apricot stuffed routed goose, be prepared to take a bow. Your Christmas dinner guests are certain to.applaud you spontaneously, right at the table. Your holiday meal this year could surely be the higblightoftheseason. The goose has meant Christmas around the world for almoat a thousand years. Compared though, to the geese of even several years ago today's commerciall)> grown product ls more meaty, and has Car less fat making it more fiavorrut and easier to prepare than ever. The fat that remains serves as a basting agent as the bird roasts making its preparation virtually trouble·free. The excess fat that does remain may J,e rendered for use in place of shortening in many other recipes. The all Clark meat of the goose means that the breast is Just as rich and juicy as lhe meat of the thighs and legs. It's delicious change from your usual holiday fare. If you 're looking for instant cheers from your family and friends thls Christmas, try this touch of tableaide excitement. Not only will they enjoy watchiftg the aoft blue glow of the flaming aprk:ot brandy as it engulfs the golden roast goose, they'll al10 delight In tasting th.is Chrlstmu triaf tlon ·of "bundiedi or years. You'll have brought It right up to date ln a most elegant and dramatic manner. Take a bow. . BRANDIED APRICOT STUFFING 1 cup chopped dried appricots 14 cup apncot brandy 2 tablespoons sugar 6 cups day-old bread cubes 1 cup chopped walnuts v.a cup raisins 1 teaspoon salt ¥.a teaspoon poultry seasoriln1 ~ teaspoon pepper A day ahead of serving time, combine chopped apricots, brandy and sugar in a shallow dish. Cover and refrigerate, sUrrlng occasionally. When ready to stuff goose combine apricot mixture with remaining ingredients. Toss lightly to mix well. Makes ~b stuffing for a IO to 12 pound goose. (Flame Goose in Apticot Brandy). The entire alcoholic content of the brandy used in ihls recipe evaporates completely during the roasting process leaving only the brandy flavor remaininK. • Routing a goose 'Proi)Grl1' ts easy. A two· phase oven temperature, removal of rendered fat. and a meat thermometer make thiB self. basting gourmet's clelipt an .n-time favorite, even for those who haven •t eftl' cooked a eoose ••• Goose CFromP•pCU APPROXIMATE TIMETABLU FORTHAWINGMETRODS Room ...Pounds I RefrieeratorJCool Water I Temperature. ... 6 to 10 l to Ht ~11 Hos hours 6 to 10 hours ..... ;J.o to 14 11AI to 2da)'ll s to 6 hours 10to12 hours Routlnl 1. lC goose ls frozen, thaw according to dlrec· tions given above. 2. Preheat oven lo 400 degrees. 3. Remove neck and giblets from body cavi· ty. cook them promptly or refrigerate until ready Lo use. 4. Hemove excess fat from body cavity and nt'ck skin. Reserve fat and render for use in other cooking. Rinse bird and drain. 5. Wings may be retnoved at second joint or lied flat against body with cord around each wing and across back. If two end pie<:es of wings are removed, cook them with neck and giblet.I. 6. To stuff, fill neck and body cavity loosely. Fasten neck skin to back with a skewer. Tie legs together, or tuck in band of skin at tall it present. <No need lo truss.> 7. Place goose, breast side up, on rack In roasting pan. Insert meat thermometer deep into :>ide thigh muscle. 8. Roast uncovered for 45 minutes to 1 hour ldepending on size of bird) in preheated 400 degrees oven. No need to baste. 9. During roasting, spoon or siphon orr ac· cumululed fat and reserve for use as a shorten· ing in other cooking. This should be done at half hour intervals so that the rat doesn't brown ex· ccssively . 10. After roasling for 45 minutes to 1 hour, re- duce oven temperature to 325 degrees and con· tinue roasting. 11. Roast until thermometer in thigh reg· istcrs 180 degrees to 185 degrees. Stuffing temperature should tflSO be checked and 1l should register 165 degrees. 12. If a thermometer is not used, press meaty " part or leg between protected fingers. It should feel very soft. Also prick thigh with a fork. The juices running out should be beige in color, not pink. ••• Turke~ <From Page Cl) TURKEY WITH ORANGE RICE STUFFING Cook rice accordlna to packqe cllrecUons, sublUtutlq oraqe J\alce for \.it cup:of the w•ter. Bruk up aauaac• 1D lar1e aklllet and eook with onion until meat 11 done and omo._ ta 1olden but not brown. Add cooked rice, pocaltrJ aeuonlnc, rallllna, walnuts and or~• aeetJou; m1x ll&bt. 1Y. Sprtakle ult and pepper 1n cavitles of turkey. Stuff turkey with rice mixture. 'ne lep to1et1Mrt then to tall. Fut.en wln,. beblDd ~ck to bola neck akin. Place In roa1tin1 pan and rub ouulde of tur)cey with.~ Juice reeened from lee· ,tions. Cover loosely wltlrfoU. Bake in 32S dell'ee oven for 2 houn; uncover and coottoue bume J \'1a to 2 bou:ts or until turkey tests done, bastQlg occa1ionally with pan drippings. Remove turkey from oven; transfer to heated platter. Add water to drippinp; bring to a boll. Thicken, if deslred, with 2 tablespoons flour ailJted with 's4 cup cold water. YIELD: 8 senhlp. ( Q&A Potato Eaters Unite ) Store Hours: 9 to 9 Daily _ .. 5unc1ay I 0 to 7 "*" .......... Thurs., Dec. IS ttn Wed., Dec. 24 Pric" ~ .. s ............ We Gtcdy Ace.pt ~ St .... W• lner•~ Tiie~ To Ulllt q .. ttttlu ........... s ... to~AMWW•MI• ..... H8'SorTOMS LOWER PRICES I OIDaYOUI TUIDYI_. Wl1H roNJlt a..-i 10 to 24 US. IA.It M MAM IAILY WEBBER'S - SIUFFlll~ MIX llGU9iA1 •COIN •MC> NO Pll$BYA""5ADDED ~ DUcXUNGS98~ FOSTER 01 IACKY FAtMS FRYING CHICXEN 59! f • ! I FOOD A Berry Good Holi~ay Christmas delights and daule not only come in sally nbboned packages and Crom 1lis&eninc or- naments, but the dandy delecta- tions we chooae to create dunna lhi:. most festive holiday. The scarlet cranberry. which ls al on- ce scintillatingly sweet and tart, is a marveAous source in drinks, relishes and sauces for assorted celebrations treats. Here are five berry recipes which will brightly and tastefully suit 11 varlely of yuletide occasions. Pr~lty little "cranberry cheese tarts " are a perfect choice lo mt>rrlly end a Christmas day lunch After in· d1v1dual tart pans are hned with pie crust, whole berry cranberry sauct> is layered on the bottoms Then a fluffy mix of cream cheese. eggs, sugar, milk and vanilla is poured on top. Once filled, the mint pies are baked for less than an hour till golden brown. When cool, they're topped with wtupped cream and addi· llonal berry sauce. Serve your tarts on a platter or on separate plates garnished with holly leaves. A time saver for the busy hostess. the pies could be made a tlay or two ahead, nnd refrigeral· cd till baking. "Berry .f<'ruitful Christmas Mold" would be a splendid addi- tion to a buffet spread. Cran· berry apple drink and grapefruit JU1c·c colorfully encase a fruitful blend of theed pears, spiced ap· pie rings anti grapes. This shim· mt•rmg dish can be made ahead .rnd kept refrigerated till party 11ml' A bonny holiday treat for kids, and aduJ!.!. too, 1s ··cranberry Snowballs .. Using a !ip1cc cake mix. fres h cranberries and cran- berry apple drink are blended in- to thc baller which is baked into cupcakes. Once baked, the cup· cakes arc generously covered with a cranberry frosting and flaked coconut. Make a quantity at one time and keep for special holiday snacking For u Christmas-lime dessert da7.Zler, "Tiered Cranberry Fruitcake" 1s truly a piece de re· :.1stance. This enchanting cake ls made in thrl'e molds. and iLc; s uperb navonng and pleasing texture come from such good in- gn•dicnts as pumpkin pil' spice. fresh cranberries. raisins, dates and waJnuLc; Aftt•r baking, and before tiering, each of the cakes 1s lightly glaz<'d with a white. orange.navorcd frosting Once the layers are in place. the cake is garnished with plump fresh cr<1 nberrses and a sprig o( holly lt•a ves So appropriate in its tree· like tapering. this marvelous cake can serve ru. a decorallon on a side table or as a centerpiece during a holiday fea.tt. Whether It lbe first or t \\ e I fth niabt, '-Christmas festivity wlU tip especially gra<·ed by a fine d~k. and "Glil· tcr1ng Ctanberry Pun~b" with Jts scarlet 1Jow is J l tlibt. ft blends cranberry Ju.ice eocktall, l'laret, apricot and • ange Uq. ueurs, .'Bnd champagne into a drink that ls 1W"e to enhance lbe gay spirit of the season. CRANBERRY ·CHEESE TARTS 1 package < 11 ounces) pie 1·rust mix 1 can (8 ounces> whole berry c ranberry sauce 1 package CJ ounces> cream cheese. at room tempera lure 1,, cup sugar 3 eggs 1 cupm1lk 1 leaspoon vanilla Whipped cream or topping, additional whole berry cran· berry sauce Holly leaves for garnish Prepare pie crust according to package directions. Roll out crust and cut into 6-lnch round<J. Fil rounds into six 4-lnch flan <or tart) pans, lining the bottom and sides, making a stand up edge on each. Spread a thln layer of cran- berry sauce over bottom or pan. Beat cream cheese until fluffy. Gradually beat in sugar and eggs until smooth. Now, graduully beat in m ilk and vanilla Pour in to prepared pans. Bake in a pre· heated moderate oven (350 degrees) for 35 to 40 minutes or until pulCed and golden brown Cool and then decorate center of tarts with whipped cream and additional whole berry cran· berry sauce Chill until ready to serve. BERRY FRUITFUL CHRISTMAS MOLD 3 envelopes unflavored gelatin 4 cups (1 quart> cranberry apple drink I cup grapefruit juice 1'.! cup sugar 2 pears. peeled, cored and diced I jar (121,:? ounces> spiced ap· pit.' rings with syrup 2 cups seedless green grapes Mix gelatin and 1 cup or the cranberry apple drink in a saucepan and stir, constantly, over low heat. until gelatin is completely dissolved Stir in re ma1ninJ,! cranberry and grapefruit juices and su~ar Chill mixture until syrupy. Fold in pears. diced apple rings with their syrup and grapes. Pour mixture into a 2-quart mold Chill until firm. To unmold, dip mold into lukewarm water for a few seconds. tap to loosen and invert onto a platter. Chill until ready to SCr\'C. CRANBERRY SNOWBALLS Cupcakes: 2 cups fresh cunberrles, rinsed and dramed ·~cup water v .. cupsqar 1 package 08"11 ounces) spice cake mix 2eus ' 1 !As cups cranbJrry apple drink Paper cupcake liners •'rostlng: l package (7.2 ounces> nutry while frosting mix l,z cup boiling cranberry JUICC cocktail 2 cans (31~ ounces each) flahtl coconut In a saucepan. mix cranber- r1e!i, waler and s ugar. Cook st1r1 ring occasionally over low beat, for 10 minutes or until cranber· nes are tender. Cool. In a bowl, combine cake mi"· eges and cranberry apple drink, Seat un~ smooth. Line 3-inch muffin pan cups with cupcaJce liners and place a few of the cranberries in· to each Liner. Fill cups ~ full w1tti batter. Bake as directed on package label for cupcakes. Co9l. Remove cupcake liners, place cupcakes on wire rack, cranberry side up. Frosting: lri a bowl, beat frosting mix with boil· ing crnnberry juice until very thick and flu(fy. Frost top :,ind sides of each cupcake. Sprinkle top and sides of cupcakes with coconut. Pile cupcakes on a serv- m~ plate TIERED CRANBERRY FRUITCAKE l cup butter or margarine l cup vegetable shortening 3 cups sugar 8 eggs 1 cup milk 6 cups unsifted all·purpose flour 5 teaspoons baking powder l teaspoon salt 3 tablespoons pumpkin pie spice l package (15 ounces) raisins 2 packages (20 ounces) pitted dates, chopped I can (8 ounces) walnuts, coarsely chopped 4 cups (1 pound) fresh cran· berries. rinsed and drained Glaze (below > Fresh c ranberries for garnish llolly sprig for garnish In J large bowl, cream butter and \'egetable s hortening. Gradually beat in sugar. Beat in c•J,!gs 2 al a time. Stir in milk, then flour. baking powder. salt and spice neut mixture until smooth. f'old in remaining ingredients. Spoon batter into greased a.od nourcd pans filling pan ~ full. Bake in a preheated moderate 0 0 eON5UMER5 mike' PRINTED 'ADVEITIS/Nfi BEST .. •• •• •• •• A recent study by the' American Association of Advertising Agencies shows that consumers are most favorable to the ads they see in the print media. Second are ads in the electron\c media, and least favorable are outdoor ·and direct mail advertising. . · The AAAA study concentrated on consumer attitudes toward advertising and sought to pinpoint the issues which mold public opinion. The study found that the overwhelming majority of the public endorsed advertising as an essential institution in the economic system. Five cranberry recipes to tease every set of holiday tastebuds. oven (350 degrees) ror 1 hour for 1-quart mold, 1 hour and 20 minutes for 11 2 quart mold and l hour and 40 minutes for 2-quart mold'. Unmold cakes and cool thoroughly: while cakes cool make glaze. Place largest cake on serving platter. Spoon some glaze over top or cake allowing excess to drip over sitles. Top with middle s ize cake layer and repeat gJazmg until all three cakes are used. Garnish top with fresh cranberries and a sprig ot · holly. Glaze: Mix 1 pound confec· tloners' sugar wilh graled rind of t orange and enough milk to make ·a mixture ag thick as heavy cream. 1 cup apricot brandy 1 cup orange liqueur l botUe (4 /S quart) cham· pagne, chi11ed Tee cubes. orange slices In a large punch bowl, combine cranberry juice, claret wine, apricot brandy, and orange liq- ueur. When ready to serve, stir in champagne. Add ice cubes and orange slices and stir until icy cold. Serve, ladled in pWtch glasses. GLITTERING CRANBERRY PUNCH 2 quarts cranberry juice cocklail,-chiUed l bottle (475 quart) claret wa.ne, chilled Holiday Pumpkin Bread 1 cupaugar 1 egg 1 can (16 ouncet) pumpkin 3 cups Blsqulctc~ bnlng mlx 1 teaspoon pumpkin pie spice Yi teaspoon ground cloves y, teaspoon ground nutmeo 1 cup chopPed null Heat oven to 360°. Grease loaf pan. 9x5x3 inches. Beat all ingredients except nuts and glaze in large mixer bow1 on low speed. scraping bowl frequently. 30 seconds~Beat on medium speed. scraping bowl occasionally. 4 minutes Stir in nuts Pour into pt111 Bake until wooden p1cil inserted rn center comes out clean. about 1 hour 10 minutes Remove from pen-cool completely Top with browned butter glaze Whipped cream or creamed cheese And a special offer for 209 o ther delicious Bisquick recipes. For a limited time only. we re offering our S2 81SQuick cookbook tor Just $1.50. It's filled with all kinds of tempt111g recipes-all made with B1SQu1ck. the baking mix with 45 years of quality and experience behind 11 So send your name and address and s1 50 to General Mills. Inc . Box 769 Minneapolis. Minnesota 55460 And we:11 send you your cookbook --- ,, · If you 're planning a party- ,;--{or I riends -or the off ice -, ... ·~, PARTY PLArnRS! ~ Rancho's party platters make it 80' ,_.aay !or you! And tbere'a a ulection that J'~l make it just u euy for your budget ~ it ia for your plannin1! •"- 7j: Holiday Spirits h' . liiDUCmSl.00! ~AY TIE $869 'Scotch Bottled for us -and you! J.75 ltr ioord's Gin ••.. s399 ~hve 50e on quality! 1.75 liter a·· -Dewar's Scotch s799 Great Scotch reduced lite flfth Dry Vermouth •• s295 ljoilly Pratt-reduced 50e fifth lfiglenookmm ••• s339 c:t'nin Blan~ Zinfandel-Mqnum · .. u! . SJ99 f#hiskey It Ra:ncbo'a • 86 proof· fith •• ~ . ..., ...... .....,,. ...... ,.... .................. -.1 I &irt.,.,..u .... ,. ..... .. ''· ,. ~~: Frozen Food • •• =GE 69C · ~frdaeye'• brealdat drink-and the 12 ounce can 1tretche.. tbe •vines! t:arrot Cake ••• s 139 ~ (~Oregon Farmt-'--1<> eood! 17 oz chicken ••usm •• · s211 M(>rt.on'a-two pounda of good eating . ' Ravioli •• .•••.. 79c Choo.e Meat or Cbeeee ••• 16 o~ Pq Chicken Pie •••• 39c vao ci. Kamp'a •• • '° utiltYinal 71A oz ~& 59c 2!a Olont ••• 12 oz ,,.ckage I . '. .• . -. I - .. ' . . PlllS I EfRCT ....... Dtc. 15, l&. 11. 11 .......... CHRISTMAS AD 1n ttlft ,,.....,... Monday • .,..,.., 19 l I.I ., l #" •• (II • ~ da.y• ahead -before the big holiday - ~ .ure to be hectio. Smooth them out by plannin1 ahead with El Rbncho! For the holiday• -and for the day• jwt ahead of you. Teriyaki STEAK BMP ROAST Round cut U.S.D.A. Choice bee! lnunl ll1ak :i! ................ 1llll Nothing beata the hearty aatiaCaction of beef at it'a beet! Lean, tender El Rancho quality· round cut of Choice beef Swiss Steak ••• s1°? Ch·1· Be f con s101 11 e -·... , Beef Shanks ••• 89~ Round cut U.S.D.A. Choice beef Doea aot txeeed 30% fat cont.nt .. Center cut! U.S.D.A. Choice beef Omaha Roast •• s1 2? Thick cut U.S.D.A. Choice beef round Stew Beef • • • • • '15? Extra lean-Boneless-Choice beef GENUINE MILK.fED VEAL Featured every d-.y at El Rancho IBBf Bond =.i~ .......... 1llll A treat that's sure to delight the folks! Loin Cllt of El Rancho'• better beef-tender ~nd taaty! Ground Beef Jrd s1 1? Lean! Dee. not exceed 22% fat Sliced Bacon. . . '1°? El Rancho'• thicker "ranch atyle" IEESS iOASi 5 1~9 Shoulder clod Choice beef chuck Steaks•-··· s1 3? Doee. not exceed 15% fat-3 per lb Sausage lfUlmll • s1 1? · l!:l·Raneho'• authentic t1avor mat CHUCK STEAK 79t U.S.D.A. Clloice, to be au.rel Super Fresh Ground Beef~! s1 3? Doea not ~xceed 16% fe.t content Bratwurstauan. s1 3? Pork, our mllk·fed veal, ae&10ninp =.A. CHOICE $ 159 Shanks • Weetem grown -fine for braiaing ,,,,,, IBBIB SNAPPING UdSP ••• ~ ••••••. II! Nothing beata the flavor of prden·freth soodneu! ••• tbeae are garden-fresh, criap and flavorful! Th.is • week. enjoy quality yoU :remember. CUCUMBERS · ::,a;.= 129.~ · . TAIGERINES · 39c • GRAPEFRUIT =~" s s1 ._, • iiioe! FOR ROCllCI out yow Diii plans with Values! from E Rancho , ' l FREEi . . . . . 110 I ROSE PARADE TIC~$· ... ................. ,.. ... . . ., " --.llleot """Mltl! ,...,. .. .. ners .-r-. %1Jidlitl ti 1111 .... - martM Mats ... ~ M. ....... frtt Plftilet WlllOS' NAMES WU Bl, . POSm TUES. DEC. 27'· ·: FRESH DUNGEJISS CRABS We'll gladly crack them-AAEE! Idaho Trout •••• 49! Freah frozen .•• net wt. 4 oz eacb Cooked Shrimp s31?. Juat ri,ht for abrirop cocktail Scallops • • • • • • • s3 5? Large and delicious ••• Alaskan · Halibu Steak • ~ • s35? From Northern aeaa for tine flavor FllESH FlLETS EJQJSH SOLE MiJd flavor they'll appreciate . Delicatessen Farmer John-ready to Cry! 12 oa Rondele Cheese 79~ Spicecl-Herb & Pepper or Pkln-4 os Cheese Spread &9c Laughing Cow's 6 ounce wheel Wispride Cheese &9c Sharp. Wine or Smoked-8 oz CUJ» Cheese Fondue s1 9• Swm Knight-ready to heat! 14 oz Italian s 1 s9 Salami Oatlo'a.iDthe 8 ounce chub Mayonnaise QUART ••• 79c esigned for Giving .•. W onderin1 what to Jive? ••• they'll love pttins an El Rancho Flour GOLD ma .......... 59~ Yo\1'11 a~reciate the il•vor • the value • in the Springfield label !!t~!!!w,,.'.!'l~~ s:~m=•~ .:~9c tomatoes wm ...... 45~ ,, ' ,• Prica ill effect Thun. Dec. 15 tlwulh Sun. Dec. 18 Open daily 9 to 9 Sund~ 10 to 7 , . No '°~• to ckaler• Choose the familiar Bleached or Selt-Rilins or Unbleached -5 lb bag~ Facial Tissue :h· 49c .. 1.S Ttiat reliable Scott value • aoft. and atrong -in 200 oo\Atlt package Bleach GALLON SIZE •••••••• 49c Odden~ fiotn Sprincfield·I~ that value! No 2~ can I ·'' Look to SPriftlfield to offer you quality at a budget price-oevery time "' Morsels mnn ••• s139 Cit Food ••••• : • 20° Buttencotdi, Semi·Sweet ••• 12 oz Kai Kan· all vt.rietiea· 6~ oz C&D Wild Bird Seed 49° mi. TmDS •••••••..•• ~· .• no ~ldldcl nlW·bol: ot ao ~-.. --~ ••••••••••••••••• 23• RtsU'-or 8pearalnt.-pee).,. Of 11 , I' I~ l FOOD Rere'a a bo~y cake Uaat wW bne everyone fuesaln& what makes it IO loocf. Bued OD t.be traditional fruitcake, thb lmqlnative reel~ caU. for home-candied canned pineapple, wttb t.be aurprtae addition of . candled beets, carrots and celery. The com- bination prodqces a col· orful "fruitcake'' that ia dilferent and delicious. Beat of all. it doesn 'l need lone aging and can be 11rved on[y a few clays after baking. The recipe for candied pineapple la a popular old favorite, euy to pre· .Par.a and lull of flavor. (Wben candy1n1 the plneapplo and veeet.blea, mate a Uttle extra tor baking or a pretty and unusual boll· day confection mb.ture. > The cake, liC!atly 1ptced with clnnaD>on and AJltmeg, calla for brown sugar to give lt a ricb color and taste. 'l'be addltlon of pineapple j\llce or sbeJTY also adds navor and belpe keep the cake moist and Iona· luting. Serve the ·'Candied Pineapple-Vegetable Fruitcake" as a festive accompaniment to bot mulled cider, eggnog or coffee. Or wrap in· ••• Hens <From Page Cl) simmer for 10 minutes or until cranberries are tender. Serve sauce with hens, or game, poultry or meats. BERRY PINK 'N PICKLED PEARS 3 cups fresh or frozen-fresh cranberries, rinsed and drained 6 lirm pears, peeled, halved and cored 2cupssugar 1 cup white vinegar 1 tablespoon each whole cloves, whole all· spice 1 piece ginger root or 1 tablespoon powdered _ginger 1 whole nutmeg 1 cinnamon slick 1 teaspoon salt Water Combine all ingredients in a large saucepan or kettle and add enough wa~r to just cover the pears. Cover and bring to a boil, lower heat and simmer for 15 minutes or until pears are tender but atlll hold their shape. Pour mixture into a covered con- tainer and chill for several hours. Drain juice (use this for punches, gelatin desserts, or for marinating fresh fruit) and spoon pear halves and cranberries into center of stuffing rine. CRANBERRY CROUTON STUFFED ACORN SQUASH 3 acorn squaab, cut into halves crosswise. seeds removed Salt lh cup melted butler or margarine 1 onion, chopped 1h cup chopped parsley 1 package (6ounces) salted croutons Grated rind and juice of 1 orange • 1 cup fres h or frozen.fresh cranberries . rinsed and drained 1 cup chicken broth 6 bacon strips Remove slice from bottom or squash so they will sit level later. Sprinkle cut side of squash with salt. Place cut side down on a greased shallow bak. ing pan. Bake in a preheated mcr.:ierate oven (350 degrees) for 1 hour or until easily pierced. Tum squash cut side up. Mix remaining ingredients ex· cept bacon and fill squash with mixture, piling it· high. Losely cover stuffing with bacon. Replace in , oven and bake another 30 minutes. -·-. DAILY PiLOT C$ -. I dlvldual allcea in clear modera~ heat about 30 almmer ~to 2S m.ltnltel, I plastic and tuck them m. minutes, t.rn1na pineap-until most ol 1 ta to an auortment of pie occNioaally, untn ab1orbed, 1Urrln1 cookies or other gilts fruit ll transparent and quently IS syrup from your kitchen for a syrup reaches 230 down. Tum Into welcome and tboQahUul d •Ir eea on candy strainer and drain ta)Cft!Jlembr&Qee. t.bero;iomdllv. Drain on Tum celery out onto CA JEDPINEAPPL& •iro rtckt over a pan, separatlnl pt . EGETABLE •hallo !'pan to catch Let dry overr,tli t. ' R\JJ'l'CA.KE 11rup. Let stand over-Jdaket about 2\t cupa 3 euPt home·C&Odled ru,bt. Carefully scrape candied celery. p l n e a pp 1 e ( recipe syrup into akillet, beat to CANDIEOCAaaOTS fOJlOWJ) bollinl, and add the 0&8Erl'S 2 cups c andi ed pineapple. Simmer l (1 lb) can allced ve1etables abo\lt 1.S minutes, unUl ' carrots (or diced beet.a) 1 ~ cups pee ans syrup again reaches 230 1 ctzp sqar 21% cups silted all-degrees on candy ~cup water purposenQur thermometer. Drain as Drain carrota (or 1 teaspoon baldn& before. Let pineapple beeta) well. Combine powder dry on racks for several 1u1ar and water and ait 1 teaspoon salt 4tt a ya , t be n r o 11 t n onr moderate beat until 1 teaspoon cinnamon granulated sutar. Store au1ardissolves.Addveg• ~ teupoon nutmeg in tiChUy covered COD· etablea and simmer ;o 1 cup butter or talner. Syrup may be minutes. Remove troin margarine thinned. JUJbtly, and beat, and let atand fn 1 lh cups sugar (halt used u toppinC for pan. ayrup ovem.l&bt. N'e'st brown) cakes or waffles. Makes day. beat to bolllnl. and 4 large esp about 21A cups candled simmer 15 to 20 ml.nut.es. '14 cup sherry or pineapple (aboutlPoQnd . until moat of aynap la pineapple juice 6 ounces). To ea•tly abaorbed, st1rrlna aenUy Coarsely chop candled plaeapple -ees. fC)Uo• • now and then. Turn into pineapple, veeetables recipe as above but coot wire strainer, and let and peeans. Resift flour ball the pine.apple slices a y r u p d r al n f o~ with baking powder, salt at a time. minutes. Spread ve1 and spicea. Cream but· CANDIEDCELE1'Y ble out on Oat pan, ter. Gradually _,.~ In • cups cel'ry strips, let dry ovemlcbt or un sugar, creaming untll about¥.lxl\.ilncbes no longer sticky. M light and Ouffy. Beat in 2~cupswater aboutll/tcups. 1 eggs, one at a time. Stir \.i teaspoon eocla Note: If 2 cam of qa~ i n f 1 o u r m I x t u r e 1 ~ ClQ'9 sugar rota or beets are cooke4 alternately wilb sherry Co~bine celery, 2 cups at one Ume, Jt will ~ or pineapple juice, water and IOda. Heat to Pineapple-Vegetable Fruitcake neceoa:ey to cook U.. beginoing and endin& boillng, and almmer s in syrup a third time.a with flour. Stir ·in can-minutes. Drain, discard btne auaar "'th remain· auear dlasolvea. Add and let celery stand in atand overnlcbt a MCOQd di e d fr ult ·and water and rime celery lDI '4 cup water, andatlr celery, and aimmer 15 1yrup overnight. Next time, and ftn1ah • vegetables. and pee am. with cold water. Com· over moderate beat unW minutes. Turn Off heat. day, beat to boilln&. and the third day. Turn into9-inch tube pan -----------------:-~:-------:---"-----------------~+- lined with greased brown paper. Bake below oven center ln slow oven (300 deerees) with shallow pan 9f bot •ater on floor of oven, about 21h to 2~ ...-flours, until cake tests done. Remove from oven and let cake cool in pan. W-rap in foil and store in cool place. Makes 1 (t-. inch) tube cake. H-OME·CANDIED PINEAPPLE 2 (pound 4 ounce) cans pineapple chunks 3cupsaugar Granulated sugar for storing Drain pineapple thoroughly. Sprinkle half the sugar in bottom or pan 9 x 13 x 2 inches. Top with pineapple chunks in single layer, and cover with remaining sugar. Let s tand overnight. Turn pineapple and the syrup that forms into , lO·inch skillet, and beat to boilln«. Cook over Best Idea Since Shopping Carts ~~'"" J . '·~Now you can do a week's shopping ~~ without forgetting a single item! Use pre-printed shopping lists prepared for you by PILOT PRINTING. 140 aeparat• pr1nttd 1t•ma, plua eddltlonal epac•• you can tlU lft yourMll. 34 StaP•• 21 VegetablH 14 ,,,, ... t Sakety lt•m• 5 .... rap. 11 Meet and flat! entriH u Dlillylte"'9 20 MIC9llineova I Save up to 50¢ on Maxwell House A.D. C~ Brand Coffee. This Christmas make your coffee perfect coffee! .. r1 (9 0All Y PILOT Cookies That Speak Il'& that lime a1atn when cookies, candle. and all type11 of sweeta become s u c h an important part or the holiday seuaon. While the variety of recipes o.re cqdless, rinding some simple lo mako recipes ure a must durlni this hurried time of tho year. Peanut Bulter Cookie larao bowl, combine Remove from cookie Mlx Peanut Butter Cookie sheets, cool completely. \4 cup butler, Mlx,butterande&e; mix Spread each letter with aotlened according to package •about 2 meaaurtng le1t directions. On a lightly teaspoons Chocolate noured board or cloth, Glaze. Allow glaze to set C R 0 COL AT E roll 1 ~ measurln.-c at room temperature ror GLAZE: teaspoonfuls dough Into 5 m 1 nut ea be r ore One 8·01. pkg. (l 4" loaa. Place onto serving. · cup) Seml·Sweet Real ungreaaed cookie sheets, C H 0 C 0 LA T E Chocolato?.Jorsels shaping Into letters. GLAZE: Melt over hot 1 me a au ring Overlap edtes and press <not boiling> water. ta bleapoon ve1etable together t.o seal. Bake at Se ml · Sweet Re a I lI ere 1 s a v er Y shortening 375 de1rees for 8-10 Chocolate Morsels and <'Onvenlent easy-to-make COOKIE : Preheat minutes. Cool on cookie veeetable shortening. • . ..... _ ... ,, ....... - Wlynot make cookies that realtyssy Merry Christmas? FOOD · recipe that can involve to 375 d 1 sheets ror one minute. Removehombeat. lheent~efamilyglving ~lv~e:n~:.._:~:e~&l'~eea::.·~n~::::::__:::_..=:_::::::__=:=..==.,:.:.::,::..=:.=.:.::::_~~~~_!!!!!!!!!!~=::~!:=~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~~!!!!!~~~~~~~~~~---w-~~. you time t.o spend on Qther holiday proJects. Convenient. because you are using the delicious tasting Peanut Butter Cookie Mix. Following the instructions, make individual letters to read MERRY CHRISTMAS. Top the letters with lhe 1lmple chocolate glaze. Once completed, the cookie letters can be refrigerated and readied for friend s and neighbors, wishing them a very Merry Christmas. CHRISTMAS LETTER COOKIES COOKIE: One 12-oz. pouc h Cookies For Kids When school is out and the children are home en· Joying Christmas vaca- tion, there'ssomuch to do -theycanplayoutdoors, visit friends and do their Christmas shopping. Or they can have real run and make their own Christmas cookies. ORANGE SUGAR COOKIES 1 cup butter a4 cup sugar l egg plus 1 egg yolk t tablespoon frozen orange juice concen· trale, thawed, undiluted 21h cups sifted all- purpose flour ·~ teaspoon baking powder Chopped nuts Candied fruit Cream butter, add sug· ar gradually, blending thoroughly after each addition. Beat In egg ~ olks and orange concen- trate. Sift in flour and baking powder; beat un- til smooth. Put dough in 3 <'m pty 6-ounce concen- trate cans from which hoth ends have been re· moved. Chill thoroughly. Pus h dough out of cans with slightly smaller bot· tie. Slice 1Ai-inch thick. Urush with beaten egg white and top with. 1 hopped nuts or decorate \\1th candied fruit. Place, about 1 Inch .1 part , on ungreased rnokie sheets. Bake In a .l!'iO degree F. oven 12 to 15 minutes. YIELD: S dolen cookies. Ot\ANGENUT BARS l can (6 ounces) frozen orange juice con- centrate, thawed, un- diluted 1h cup rolled oats lh cup mixed can· died fruit 1tii cup chopped walnuts 1h cup shortenlnl lf.acupsugar 112 cup unsulphured molasses 1 egg 2 cups sifted all· purpose flour v.. teaspoon Hit 1 t easpoon eacb haking soda, ginger, cin· namon Combine undiluted orange juice concen· trate, rolled oata. fruit and nuts; re1erve. Cream together 1borten· Jl'lg and sugar. Add un· sulphured molasses and eea; mix well. Sift together flour, salt, soda and 1pice1. Stir Into molaaaes mixture. Add fruit mixture; blend well. Tum Into areued 13 x 9-lnch baklnC pan; Jpread evenly. DU• In 325 degree F. o\fen 40 mJnutes. Cool. Froat with Oranae lcln1•. Cut Into S x 1·lnch bat1. Decorate wllh candled cherries. Yltld: About 36 bars. *OltANGI ICING l 1_., cu~ amea n· ~c:Uonert • aQM•t 2\ii tab9eapOODI tan1elwce Combine 1u1ar•. an ... 'ulce. :BleD4 to pr.1dln1 con1l1teJte1. How to have a 'Dickens' of a Christmas ... Check out our penny pinching discount prices. That holiday dinner. It's a tradition, like reading Dickens "Christmas Carol". In fact, just say the word "Christmas" and some folks will go into an instant reverie about sitting down to a damask cloth spread with the kind of feast they read about in Dickens' books. Plan your holiday festivities Fresh Meats Fresh Meats around the good things you'll find below. They11 help you create meals with tastes and aromas that will ... call up a treasure tone of warm memories in years fo come. A note to Scrooge: P1ease take an accounting of our prices. We think they're very good indeed, sir (or ma'am}. We hope you think so, too. And on that note, let us wish you and yours a Very Merry Christmas, F.ach and every Oner .. "#Fresh Cut Trees · .: f:~: For one-stop shopping : .. : :;.~ :· convenience, me>&t of our stores _ · · :: .. ~~ .. carry a large array of freshly ~~i ~ cut Christmas trees. Youil ' ~~ . -find Douglas Firs, Noble Firs ''>-· ~t! and beautifully shaped ~F Plantation-grown ~ .. : ·.: Flf'S. CQmpare the quality. ·'-·'.: Compare the freshness. And compare 'the pric.el Canned&Packaged Dairy & Frozen liquor 'Ml.SCH a'-TIFIEO DI.CON )l.(JO ••••••• , •• A •••• ~ ••• , Ut MG 1.19 A ~~~r>.•&OLCNl.29 b ~~.~.~ ....... •DLiw1.55 A :E_.~~ . .. ," AIG..49 J: ~.~.~CNl.85 D~ECUT ~R?.~!LD.68 LAAGE END RID STEAK DONOO> DEU .......... LB DONEL£SS RUMP ROAST OONOW OW" ~ON CUTLB 158 138 T·DONE STEAK bONOID OW lOtl .. .. .. .. • • ... UI 1 , 98 TOP SIN.OIN STEAK OOh(W6 00ta0 OW LON ........... Lil. 1. 98 DOl'IELESS M)UND STEAK OOOCl(D ow ......... ~ .............. LO. 1.38 DOHEWS TIP STEAK OONOCI> OW AOt.M1 .................. IA 1 .68 00t4El.£SS STEWING DEEF IONOQ)IUJ ......................... t0.1.46 !TAJ.JAN STYLE SAU5AGE . HOIOllMlD ....................... Ill 1.48 SMOKED SAU5AGE ttl.IJltlU.W•UOLW.OllOW ..... 111.1,48 POAA LOIN P.OAST M.Olllo.a. 311 •Ill&. "'1 ........ IA 1.28 FP.DH SPAAUIDS loMl.l.lllll......... ~1.19 PORK LOIN IUD CHOPS .............. .. •• . II 1.68 POf\I( LOtM CH~ llHCOLC*.. •• Ll 1.88 OOM l£AH <WOJND MU 000.,. Dl(l[D mi,., . . . . Lt 1. 2& DfU H£CK DONES -...... , ............ ···"'·4& 0££F SPANNO$ ff'Ol(ll C. OOl'IOlll]) IA ,68 LAO'f LIE DACOH ..... PtlG .96 L ~~-~~ ~'! 1.09 NIDLET'S (()Nol .. ... .. .. • .. • .t)O! CN0.28 L ~~-MIX .•• 3 .. 0LeQll ,59 PIE CJWST MIX llllT't CllOCJOIJ\ SllOt CA IWGUM 1 t Cl. llOll ,4 9 E~~~~OL .... 34 L ~.~~.~~ ... 37 Delicatessen }' HARVEST DAY 6~~0~~.13 l t<JW'r ca.DY CHEE.SE ~ tiWl~,.:120I. HOM3.69 1 SWISS KNIGHT F'OHOIJE ......................... 1.Cll..PIC0.1.&9 1 ~!.~~UOL lllll.89 t ~!.~.~.~WA.49 I ~~ ....... UOL0.1.39 l ~~.~~~~1.97 Dairy & Frozen ·Produce HAWAIIAN 29 PINEAPPLE matl PWUWLY~ e D'AMJOU PEAAS 24 U.S.HO.i ~A.A\OP.,, lA. IW> DruCIOUS APPLES ~N>:ot .......... 3lO.CttoG.65 C\ltY6CJllllt ••••• , .......... _._.,. ........ 19 IWSSET POTATOO • IU.t<O. '~ ••• , ..... -............. 11..19 Health & Beauty Aids VO.S ttAIP.SPMY HOH MAOlOI. N:O. Oii IMC. ... e OL lit.ii , 0 7 I' ALDEIU'O DAI.SAM b ltGMI r, IN!H CQ0104[I\ 16 Ol. llL 1, 09 ! ~~.~L~~a~1JJ9 J: ~~.~~~ .... 1oot111..99 L ~~~~~~~.11 Household & Pet I' ~MUMrOtl b IJOl'lllic..VYOIA'r ....... ~UlfllCll.l,59 PAmPlATES "-'A•'•' ................... ,,..tO:>CLl't't..99 SMC>rOAM ClJIS ""'4 .. • ••• • • ••• • .. • .......... ,, (l ...... 4' 9 L ~.~.~~ . ...o~ Mi..4& .. FOOD Citrus Salad For Holidays The vibrant colon, 1 teupoonsalt traditional to lhe winter ,,., teaspoon pepper holiday season origin at l ~ teabpooM drttd ed, it ls said, to dispel an h.•af tarragon, crumbled clent fears of the long Combine ingred.lenls winter datkness. Rich in small Jttr. Cover and reds, verdant, hopefu1 shake unlll weJl mixed. greens and fiery golds lit Chill. MMkeb about ~- the dark halls 01 -~~ij~~r-=~i;iiiiilii~~~~iiiiiiifiiiiliiiii~~iiii~~~~iiii~!ill yesteryear, they alsc graced the holiday ban qu~ts in the form of festive foods. Even today cheery. colorful fare enhances the holiday spirit and kindles the warmth or the season. And what d1 · shes are more enticing to both eye and palate than vivid, fresh holiday salads? The season's bounty of fresh oranges, tangerines and tangelos l end Fresh Holiday Citrus Salad its luminous golden hue. Chunks of the fres h citrus and c hopped green celery combine with unflavored gelatin, fresh orange juice and creamy cot tage cheese for a gloriously sunny molded salad. And what a daz :ding addition to a holiday buffet it makes! The United Fresh Fruit and Vegetable As- sociation says that holi- day salads won't lack for striking greens either, not with the abundance of leafy spinach and tender avocados availa- ble. Their shades con- trast brilliantly in Winter Avocado Salad, accented by bright fresh grapefruit. Both slices and balls of buttery avocado rest on a bed of uncooked spinach adorned with slices of red onion and yellow ~rapcfruit sections. FR t:Sll JIOLJDI\ Y CITRUS SALAD 2 cnv~lopes u n · flavored gelatin 'a cup sugar 1 t teaspoon salt 1:: cup cold water 3 cups fresh orange juice 1 cup fres h citrus pieces. divided <Any combination or orange~. tangerines nnd tangelos. peeled and cut into small chunks.> 4 tablespoons finely chopped celery. divided •,:i cup creamed cot. tage cheese Combine &elatm, sug- ar and salt in medium !>aucepan; blend well Add cold water. Stir con· stantly over low heal un· t1l gelatin is dissolved, 3.5 minutes Remove from heat, stir in orange JUICC. Arrange '-6 cup cltru~ pieces and 2 tablespoons celery in 5-cup mold. J\dd 11 ,. cups gelatin m1xlurl' Chill until .almost firm. ln small bowl , beat cottage cheese until smooth . Beat in remaining gelatin mixture. Chill, ~t1rring occas1onally. un tll mixture 1s consistenc)' of unbeaten egg whites. Fold In remaining citrus pieces and celery. Pour over chilled gelatin In mold. Ctull until firm, about 4 hours Makes 6-8 -•-O#MUT• UIOCOOOTIOIOALl.•-•no tO l'U.a TOii . • Oii YOUll -f -L M C:HUM'UU. Y lltflHCKD <r, s~~.,-----.-.J~9c ~UsM-~Ji°f~u~ -· $ 19~1 PEPPERONI PEPIJNS = ... u. 1 -·UOUfTOSOll 89C ~--'!I!-:_:.--;.::::_:~_ ---CORN DOGS 10.Mll "'°'" ....... u. deli. OSCAJIMAYlll 73c SLICED BOLOGNA ._ ,.a. .. u. OICAll ....... 111 s l 0, SLICED IOl.OGNA U.Ol.1'110.lA. "°"" $12'' suao BACON .u ,.o .... u. OICAllMAYCll • WAIOl-TIW $ 49! SLICED BACON •N>z ""c ... t~ 1 · CltcAllMAYPI $14'1 suao UCON ,.., .. o. .•••. u . iUiiOT f}un ............. ,. LI $1 29 -111"'°~ $291 COOllDSKllMP ......... u (A $109 Fresh Holiday Citrus Salad. LB. ... CHUCK ROAST 'r.. BLADE.CUT POINSETTIAS IHl"POf DAILY PILOT ®Jr-'' IEYllOLD'S FOIL ,.,,C HtAVYOUTY 11-37.seo.n. EA. PLASTIC 6 ; CUPS , W87 100/5-0Z. 77h OR c 100f1-0Z. 11ian1 '"°z. 31 4 CORN ..... ""°"'llt;-L CORN ..... . PEAS .... ~: CT~ t ' . ' r - Q OM. Y PILOT' , Wbat to cet th "Shm Gourmets" on yourabop- pin1 hat? Here'• O'V 1li01mer'1 Chrl1tmat Catalog of gift Ideas. . .from stocklna stulfers to bank-bualera: FOR FISH FAN· CIERS: a fish poac~er, clam opener, shrimp cleaner·dev~lner. A lobster steamer <and a lobster to steam In it.) A SOCKFUL OF Wednetday. Oe~ember 14. 1877 FOOD he Dieter.s on ~liriStmas ~hopping IASt.· SH• Gourmet By Barbara Gibbons TURKEY PASTICCHJO 1 and one-half cups protein-enriched large m4cetoni, uncooked 1 beaten egg One-quarter cup plain low.fat yogurt 4 tablespoons Parmesan cheese I finely minced onion (or 2 tablespoons nakes) 3 tablespoons chopped tresh parsley 1 teaspoon oreeano One-half teaspoon cinnamon Pinch or mace or nutmeg SAUCE: 1 and one-half cups skim mUk Salt, or butter- ftavored salt, anti pbp. per. to taste • 1 ea liChUy beaten I 3 tablespoons grated Parmenn ~beese ' Nutmeg / onion, paf1'}ey, oregano, elnnamoo'tlnd tnace. Set aside. In a saucepan mix milk, nour, ult and pep. per. Cook and stir over moderate heal until sim· mering. Slowly sUr one· quarter cup white sauce into beaten esr. Wail one mlnut'e, then stir in re· malning hot white sauce. 2 cups diced cooked while-meat turkey 8-ounce can plain tomato sauce One-quarter cup 3 tablespoon• instant blending flour Cook m1caron1 in holl- ln g salted water till tender. Drain but don 't rinse. Stir one beaten en into hot macaroni. Stir In yogurt. Combine turkey, tomato sauce, To assemblt casserole~ Layer half of the m 1caroni mixture ln a non1tick eight-inch iquaro cake pan. Top with turkey mixture. Add remaining macaroni mixture. Top with white sauce. Sprinkle with cheese and nutmeg. Bake at 350 degrees for ~o to 50 minutes, Wltit set. cut Jn squares to serve. Makea six servinss. under 245 calories each. SPICES: fill a Christmas ; stocking with jars and .--~~~~~~~~~~~~~;..;.:_.--~~~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~_;_~___:.~~~~~~~~~~~_._~...._~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~!'- tins of hard-to-find herbs. FOR GARDENERS:. the wherewithal to grow your own: a collection or seed packets for a backyard herg garden or windowsill herb garden. GARDENERS WITH NO SUN: a seed sprouter and beans for beansprouling. A TASTE OF TRAVEL: a collection or seasonings from a foreign grocery. Real Hungarian papriku, f1ve- spice powder. imported !>oy sauce. FOR FRUIT FANS : a c l ear pla stic fruit · shaped ripening bowl (turns green peppers red and makes tomatoes taste real!) A cherry pit· ter. Melon baller. Pineapple corer. Apple sectioncr. For antique fans: a real or reproduc- tion "apple machine" that clamps on the table and peels, cores and slices in one easy mo· tioo. Membership in one of those fruit-of-the· month type club!> that send exotic fruit all year. A fruit basket. WEIGH STATIONS: a s uperscale for the bathroom. Look for the kind with color markers C you set your ideal weight. Any day you weigh over, you diet' J Or. spring big : a doctor's ~'ale. K.ttchcn scales for · . .dghing portions ... vailablc in every price range, from tiny postage scales for stocking- stuffers : to expensive precision instruments and fancy fold-up wall mounts. TIME-TELLERS AND TIME-SAVERS · a kitchen bell timer. A crockpot that needs no watching. A pressure cooker to cook m one- ~hird the hme. For big r;pendcn1: a microwave oven. MORE SHARP IDEAS: a i.et of really good knives. An electric ~hcing machine for slim· s licing lean roasts. A knife sharpener. Stain· less vegetable peeler. An electric vegetable peeler c yes, they really make th(•m ! l A set of skewers for broiling foods "en brochette.'' F 0 R F /\ T FIG UTERS· a set of nonstick cookware Ccvery slim cook needs 111 I A soapstone griddle <the original nonstick cookw3re J ' !-'OR EGG LOVERS: a l)onsl1ck omelet pan 'doubles as crepe- maker. > A divided o'melel pan for stuHed cunelets. An egg slictr. An automatic egg-cooker f9r cooks who can't boll water. TRIM TURKEY SOUVLA.IUA <Quick Greek turkey kebab1> One.quarter cup low- f at ltallan salad dressing Pinch of instant garlic ' Optional : pinch of dried mfnt 1 pound cooked~ark· meat turkey, in 1 and one·balrineh cubes 4 bell peppers, ~eeded, cut 1n squ•res 4 on1ons, peeled and ftuartered 8 cherry tomatoes 1 tablespoon salad oil Mix the salad dressln.1 with the 1arlic and mint. Marinate the cooked turkey cubeS ln the mlx· ture for 30 mtnutes or mor~ or covered In the refrl1~rator several hours. Thread the turkey cqb~• on 1kewer1, atternat1n1 with the veie~bles. Add one tabJeepo<>n oil to the re- maintna marinade, then "use the cotnblned mix· turo to bru1h the ' akeweu. Brott ar barbecue two Inches rrorn-heat source tor aboat'ftve minutes, each side, JUlt until aeutd an4 11 .. t~d throu,11." v.,.ublei 1hduld be 'hot \ut cruncbJ. Serve~ lour~ tbOaf 3111 eilOiii eacb. Ralphs is dele1mi ..... You w0n't pay a. la Grade:A -turke ,~:S ~:r.--... ~ ~\•···· Frozen 17 to 20 Lb. Average , " ~~\ ·.: :::::-•• "Grade A~~ Tom \'\\~::~::·, Armour Star ~-11~ ·~.~ \ ·~ Turkeys ~~ ~ ~~,--/~~"~"·-" Linit one per CUltlOmer .,._ < •you wQn't pay a lower price... J .-"- lt'I tl'ue. It ii Relfhi line«• dnlr. that Ihle C l'trlltmM, pl.I woni pey I low« p<lce on Or• A frozen hen or tom tult11y1 thin RelpN price on Armour $t. lronn Grade A turkayt. Thia ohr appllee to our lb mlfor food chain competlton' ohlin.,idl, non- r•trlctld prtc:.. Alpha hta, F ulo, Ludly, Marttt lalktt, 1.-ey 9nd Vona. Otf•r 1ff.c:llv1 O.c•mb•r 15 through Otc«nblf 24, 1177. So W you find I .. OSI Gra A Tl#My lot .... cal""" GrtytOn It 1-t00-282-1800. You een help mike Rllpha the one pl8Ctl lot tt1I bill v.U on 'f04ll haldly llftey 58 8Mf Loin-10 to 14 lb. A•g. Whole Top Sirloin per lb. per II lb. IHf 1.oln-BonelH• TopSlrtoln Steak per lb. g·a Wetlf Added Com King Boneless Ham per lb. Golden Premium Meats 79 Froun·With Pop Up Cooking Geuge FroHn·Wlth Pop.Up Cooll'"9 Gqe ·== ~ .58 ·==~ .68 &;J TipRo;t·"~, ... ,~s~~ 1sa ~ C~Gr~retll "' Roaitlng Chicken .. =&..111C..,.. Stewing Beef ,. .., 1" ~C~ Styte Ribl SDA 9Mf CIMtr·C..,i.r Cll1 ~.a1c1 Round Bone Roast ~Nii;;com ~Alumin:.m Fo11 Frozen Foods ~~~'R'cis~ ~ iMf Taquitoi ~~MealWam. Ill. ptf 1" ~ si.fdn Peri Chops 111. Pantry Fillers '2ot. 28 Clll I 2~ .67 1l'••a. 89 ... I H-.95 ...... ':' .79 111 ,. .. "' , .. •• ' A .. ullr or Cor11 Br.ad Mrs. Cubblson's ~Mix From Ailphl Own llMfr FresllBaked Pllns*ln Pies Super Deli ~II--CreemCha•e ~chi•~r~ ~rn-;;;.m Wines & Spirits =-.49 ·i-. 45 · .... '::: 1•• Super Produce ~~ ~c.....,...._..,,..,. Large Tangeriw ~'"-~ Super Bakery Super Floral .... .29 ':' .29 .... 25 :t..49 2::.49 . ·211 t flt. I ' .. . .. . . '. .. ... . .... IA LECllE LEAGUE: T1lil Jnlne O'O&lP will meet at a p.m. Thursday, Dec. 15. at tbe home_ Mary Jensoo, fl Feath•woodf TIM Ttffll~ Irvine. . TE•PLE BATY ADM 8IBTEIUIOOD: aabbl Mark S. Miller, spiritual lelider Cll Tel:Dpl• Bat Y abm ot Newport Beach. will Qeak .a CoplDa With Chrtatmu at 10 a.m. Tbut.s11.-IHc. 11. PLANNEP PARENTHOOD A880CIATION-: The Or&n1e eoUnty clinlc wW c1edlcate lt. oew. l1r1er facilltles at noon Tbundq, Dec. 11, M 1801 N. Broadway, Santa Au. COSTA MESA. WO•ENtS CL'VB: Amua,t Christmas brunch wlll be held at 11 Lm. Frlda7, Dec.16, in the clubhouse. SUPERMARKET SHOPPING SPBBB BENEFIT: The South Coast Junior Women'• Club in Fountain Valley and the Fountain Valley Wo'men's Club are sponsoring a Holiday Supermarket Sboppinl Spree drawina at Falio's in Fountain Valley. Tickets are available at the door througb Fri- day, Dec. 16. Proceeds of the spree wfll bep• the Danny Choroser Medical Fund. Heu a l'oun· ta in Valley y0uth suffertn1 from DyatoalJ, a rare nerve disease. · LAS ARTISTAS CLUB: The Southern California group will meet for a Cbrlatmaa P~ atll:IOa.m. ~. O.C. ie.atlbeLuallnarlea nsta--.~Part. •OTaiU or 'l1nNI: TM Oranio Cout pup· WW meet at I p.m.. Sa~, Dec. 17, at Ed\IOD Communlt7: ... center. Huntlqton .Beach. for .• ~dalldren'• Cbrlltmu party and ~pet abow. . lnform&Uoa and naerv&UODI are avallablo tromoi-~bu.-.-r. ROUDA.Y CH'LDaKN'I PaoG&AM: Tho Colla ... and 11 .. v .. Bnaida Llbrarlel will eo-&pODIOI' a ventriloqullt.~puppet and. m.,SC pmcram for ehlldren at 10:'5 aJD. Satur- day. Deo. 1'1. at tbe rocnaUaD eemer, 8' Center St., Colt.a ll•a. More information la avallable from tho Mesa Verde BnDch, 5'8-5274.. DANA POINT BAaBO&: Santa ...W sreet children ID Dana Point Harbor Saturday ud 'SUnday, Dec.17and18, aboard a decorated Dana Wbarf Sportflabln1 boat. He will take &Mm on free rides while checkin1 thelr lift U.ta, Boat rides leave the dock between 1 a.m and 4 p.m. are belni bolted by Dana Wharf 51)41M'Ui.JJ•. in eooperatlon wtth the Dana Point Ha14Mll' Alm'11CU11t.10D and El Camino Real Junior . Woman•• ub. OllANGE COUNTY PHILBARllONIC SOCIETY: Sp1&1ua Hll1 committee members and their 1pouae1 wW ialber et T p.m. lkmda1, Dec. 18, ln the home of Mr. and Mrt. LIO)'d LDllia tor a CbrJ.stm• cockt.atl part)'. !w • • - IUNIOa EBELL CJ.118: TbO NeQOrt Jkaoh· 1roup will aullt the Irvine club.with u..t.r()pera- tlon :Janta Claus on Monct.y. Dec. u. At 10 a.m. Thursday, Dee. 22., ·U. Newport ,Beach cl'ub memben and th• cbUdnD WW pro- vide Cbrtatmu caroll and ~ta for Port MOia OaavalelceotHoepltaL MONDAY •OllNING Cumez 'J'!Mt annual i#- Cbmtmu dinner pa.rt)f for the LQuDa poup•a memben -4 su-ta la t8"1M4 tote p.m. Mon· ·day. Dec. it, at the Bal 88.T ~Nld:llOau Lewin, known u the RoJal llalldan, wU1 pre- unt a mact.cal comedy revue. The HUlltlqtoa Beach club Wl11 JDeetfor ltt an- nual Chrtltmal party at 10:80 a.m.. llGDda>-. Dec. 19. at the Huottnaton Beacb 1-· J'• EXEanlVE WOMEN INTBDJAftONM.: The Oran10 COUDtY Chapter will meet for cocttalla at 'I p.m. and dinner at I p.m. oo ~ day, Dec. 20, in the Balboa Room ol ~ ScMdb Cout Plua Hotel. Guests are to brine an unwrapped toy fordona- Uon to tbe Marine Corpa·l])ODICIC'td TQ)'I for Tots p_roaram. 'ftelervattou are belDI taken byJlary Hernini, 5fl-8371. • a•NAJ B'atTR WOMEN: The Ana•rove . . . Mother Fe~ the Bugs Will Spread ~ - DEAR ANN LANDERS: A woman who signed herself .. Hate To See It" asked what a mothcr·ln-law can do to get her son's wife to clean up her filthy house. Your answer was "M.Y.O.B." J have a very oice (but hot·tempered> daughter· in·law who keeps her home like a pigsty and I DO mind my own busi· ness. If figure if she doesn't object to cockroaches running up and down her kHchen cabinet.a and ll my son c an put up with bedgbugs, it's their pro· blem, not mine. What does bother me, however, la the tear that lhey mjght bring their animal lUe into my home. They visit twice a week and 1 a\ways worry a bout them starting a A•• Lallders famll)' ofbup here. ADY mother. Wben I was su11eaUon•? -NEW siQgle I dated three KIND OF PROBLEM divorced men and lt wu DBAR NEWz Keep heartbreaJdnl to 1ee the you eyes opea ud Utt: clrcumatanca that their spray ean ready -Jut cblldren lived under Just in can. U It wW 111ur becauu the mother wu yoa feel bdaer, anaage granted custody -one in &.o have e:dermlaatora pal1icular whose ex was come ID a CCMlple of tlmee living with her lover. Not a year. only were the children D E A R A N N confused but both had LANDERS: My heart been molested -a boy aches for the Weekend and a firl. In spite of this Fathers who must watcb the father still could not their cblldren belnt 1et custody of his destroyed bftbe e~wlfe. children. I am not a Weekend I am now married to a Father. I am a sideline man who has been mar· ried before. His former wife has men in and out of the house constanUy. The children have at various times slipped us notes asking if they could llve with us. We would love to have them but the judee says the mother is bett.erfor the children. I worked for years as a le1al secretary and saw women wbQ were not ht to raise a dog sranted custody of children while a devoted father was pushed into the back- 1round. What can be done! -HURTING DEAR HURTING: Get a food lawyer -plus 1tro111 evidence -and ftSht this lllequlty. The cutody picture Is cbang. lng. and It'• about Ume. DEAR ANN LANDERS: After 33 years of a very happy marriage, my loving, de· , .. ~ ,..,. voted husband passed away. 1 wear my wed- ding band on my l•ft hand as I always have, and I intend to carry bis name as long as I live. If a man wants to en· joy my company, buy me dinner or take me to a film or play, fine, but I think the presence of my ring will serve as an ever.present reminder that all I want la COM- PANY and that' a all be la going to get, too~ Do you·aeree with m", Ann? Some of my women friends don't. May I hear from you? FAITHFUL FOREVER INN EW ENGLAND DEAR FAITHFUL: Your letter borden on the beWgerent. Why are you so combative? If you waat to wear your wed- ding ring, go abead and wear it. Moe& widow• do. l He's a Santa Who Rec~ives SEA1TLE (AP) -After 25 years in a Santa suit, printer Edd Davis has learned the ropes: lialen carefully to the small people who climb on your knee, make no promises and re~y on the "aurprtae pactqe." Davis, 47 years old and a rotund 250 pounds, also puts a different twist on playing Kris Klngle -he receives rather than &i ves. ''l give out only some candy and take gift or· ders, but I don't give any presents," Davis said. "The people bring me items that I dlstribule to needy groups." He say1 the youngsters often squeal with de- light and shove even harder to gel cloae to a San- ta they cu &lve to. "I just ask them what they'd like to have. Many tlmee their dreams are really great," Davlssald. A• for ebaali•I your JSame -•by "ea tllbak aboat It llldll eo.aebM7 ukayoet I DEAK ANN LANDERS: I mow what beteroaexuallty 11. t know what~· ty ia. I am ldlO aware of the nature ot biftxuati- ty. Please tell me what category I belong to. I am 22 yeara of age and have never been on a elate. 'lbat '1 not all. I have never b.ed a real converaaUOll wttb a alrl. There's a very lovely yoUill woman at work I · would love to be friends with, but abe doesn't. know I'm alive. A lot ot guys meet ctrl1 at sln1le1 bul, bowlin1 al-leys, aporta eventa and throup volunteer work, but my penonapt1 la so bad I th1nlt lt'I "best if I ju.at stay by myself. Anv Altvlce? - MIDWESTERN ODD- B~L DEAa F&IBND: la aaewer to 1••r flut ~--r•·AJ-yaa are a llleterwm.I wlto la P•latall7 •_.Ml a . ..., .,_. ........ _ m•tly ..eariied. Pint, 1• a booll called "81l7aea1-Wlaat It b-Wlaat To Do Aboat It,•• by Pblllp Zlmbardo (pabll1ller, · Addleon· Wnley ). Read It e.arefal· ly. Yoa'U aadee It ••1•, ••u DOH ol &Illa wow for yoa, 1•• n~ed pro- feufoul llelp." Dr. nm- b a r do I• a •aperb peyelloJocll& wbo ..... b.l1 o.-. -or I ..._.d HJ plama. Be teaches at S&a•fonL . ( ) TBUJL8DAY, DEC.11 By~NEYOllAIUl •. AlllE8 (Mareh 21-April 19): Secretl, ln· trlgue, glamor. romance, clandestine arrange- menta are featured. You are on brink of obtatn. Ins aoUd result8. K•1now11 pereeptioa. patience and confideoCle. T*'tJllVI (April 20-May 20>: Love, creative • lnvolvementf eatured. Capricorn, Cancer persons figure in.picture. If speculaUog, stick tonumber8. GElllNI (May 21.June 20): Accept challente. One who pulls strtnia of authority will be in your comer. You close deal -arrange· menta for tranaacUon a.re concluded. Aria, Libra Pllll' by roles. CANCER. (June 21.July-23>: Lont·ran1e plan• could be temporarily thwarted. Seek new, .• more immediate ways of acblevlng 1oala. Leo, Aquarius figure in picture. In matters of apecula· Uo11. cbooee number 1. LEO <JulY 23.Au1. 22): Follow tbrouah on hunch, teacbln1 pro1ram. Check ftnanclal 1tatus connected with partner. mate. Aquarlua, Cancer persons ftaure promlnenU1. Dia beneath auiface indlcatlom. VIRGO (Aq. 23-Sept. 22): Display Veraatlll· ty. Glve full play to intellectual cu.rloalty. Make inquiries. Cheek rt1hta, permlsaloaa. SpoWabt on partnenhip, publicity, marrla1e. J J l ~ UBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Do IOme rebuild- inf, revlewtn1. Check fine ~t. Obllern rules, regulaUona, safety requirements. Aquarlul, 'r•urua Ud Scarplo flpre lD eceoarto. K•ta•••n steady pace; eschew the 1enNtioaal. 1 i SCORPIO (Oct. 2.S·NoY. 2U: IC:ahanie t fdea1, ~press emotions. Acftat • ~ '1 specwaUon. aftuof heart. GuDt. ~'° aiore in picture. Vitali~ makes comeback -)'Our' personal mqnetJJmfluea. 1 "\ 8AGITl'Aalt1S <Nov. 22-Dee. 21): Getnlld '1 appraisal: be aware of cottt, potential. fatmta, ·· Libra figure promlnently • .Jewelry, art objects command attention. Build for1ecurtty -do"1¥)1at ·· you can to combat tnftaUoQ. • ' CAPBICO&N <Dec. 22·1*11. 19>: You tnay not have all the f ac;ts -know It and wait, delay. Relative who wants to do battle should bo tolerat· ed,notobeyed. ' AQUARRJS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Avoid throw· ina "good money" aft.er "bad." Pull j.Q reins. PISCES <Feb. 19-Mard:a 20): Yo" reicb more people -your measaie 1eia r.crou. Your sense of percep\loD ls hellbtepecl: "I use tbe 'surprise package' a lot. I say, •You '11 be happy with most anything Santa leaves, won't you?' They almost always say yea and that geta the parents off the hook, especially when the family can't afford to give them much." Davis got started in the Santa business while stationed in the Navy at Bremerton, Wub., in 1952. The sailors bad a shipboard party for needy children and be stepped in when the uailned Santa got alck. fRANCI&-ORR Since then he has appeared at various func· lions from Ohio to Oregon, but now he does It only for non-commercial oreanlzaUons and "Juat for the fun of It.'• He takes nearl)' a moptb ofUromhia regular job aa a printer for The Seattle Polt·Intellisencer -either on vacaUon or leave -to appear at - schools, community clubs, day care centers, children's homes, hospitals, nursing homes and some private residences. • Because he knows and t~achea sign language, one of his special vlalts la ·a party tor deaf children sponsored by the Nortbweat HoapltalSpeech and Hea~lnl G~. Printer Edd Devis has played Santa for the last 25 years. ... - fine stationery cocroia del mar· hooded swrzatshirls for ehristmas ---· - I , , ' t I Part of the audience. At left is Faye Albert Eccles who has sung with the Mormon Tabernacle choir. SOVTHCOAST · ACTORS VO.OP Ofltrt mwd\ant '-'«M mem lleolllPI tor tr.inlftO ~ pl«t..,...t 111 tM fllm·TV '"°""'"'· ,,tltl l'l'llt\ c-lcM•ff· . (710 957~282 WB fCllFF PV.ZA BALBOA l!>l.ANU Newport Beach 1Cll M70'r>e Av., 5-48-4121 67!>-lll04 Messiah Sing-along ,,.. .. ;:;.·.,'" .. , , , / All of the 200 participants at the First Annual Messiah Sing-along were enthusiastic. . '· Most of the chorus was there because 'we just like to sing.' By J UDITH OLSON Ol tlle Dallr Pltot Steff Just imagine. One-thousand-one-hundred mnety-ei1Zhl music lovers getting together to sing The Messiah in a giant Christmas concert. It dldn 't quite <:,ome off that way Saturday at Orange Coast College, though, because only about200showcd up to sing. But all of the participants at the First Annual Messiah Sing-along at OCC were enthusiastic clapping for themselves and their director, or: Justin Colyar. throughout the evening. The idea of the concert was to allow people who love the Kreat work. but have no opportunity to perform tt. to simply sing and enjoy. "We copied the idea from El Camino Colle~e." Colyar said "I was very pleased tonight. We had a good. workable chorus." One woman said she had seen the same kind of thing done ma distunt city but with a universi- ty choir as the core. Colyar s:ud he had thought about doing the same but didn't have lime to make the arrange- ments. "It's ni~e to have a chorus to form the ' nucleus," he agreed. Thos~ who didn't have scores for the sin~· <Along borrowed them from the OCC music de- partment. "securing" them with drivers' licenses. <'harge cards, car keys and other valttablcs. which were "ransomed" after the concert. The hit of th<' evening was the tenor section, three men strong until Alice Rohdy of Newport Beach graciously stepped in to join Dave Nasby and David and Bill Wolfe. . The two Wolfes, father and son, were part of a five-member family group singing together. They came with Caroline Wolfe. David's wife their two daughters, Linda Wolfe and Lenor~ Rowland, and their son Bill. "yve ju!\t like to sing," Wolfe said, noting that his son had ma)ored in music at OCC. Oth~r people were there just because they thought 1t would be fun and a good thing to do at Christmastime. "I have sung part of this in church choirs in San Francisco and al Immanuel Presbyterian Church m Los Angeles." said Carolyn Bjork of Costa Mesa. ''llhoughlit would be fun." Bill Burnette of Hunlingtoh Beach, a com- puter programmer, came to celebrate Christmas. "This also was an opportunity to participate m an oratorio without being pro- fessional," he noted. He has accompanied church choirs but never sung, he added. Bruce Cole, a studel\t at Cal Poly, Pomona, shrugged. "I'm here to sing Christmas music," he said. He has never sung The Messiah but has ''been an audience member." Lisa Huizenga, an alto from Costa Mesa, said enthusiastically, "l love to sing it. It's the best music." Sisters Jackie Ivy or Cypress and Merci Schmidt of Long Beach read about the sing-along in the newspaper. "We think il's great to sing The Messiah without having to go through re- hearsals," they noted Three members of the Newport Harbor Lutheran Chureh choir, Dav• 1Uld Ruth Ann Nasby and Lois Wendt, came to eajoy the even· ing together. One member of the soprano section. Faye Albert Eccles. doubtless had memories of.bigger renditions of The Messiah. She used to sing in the Mormon Tabernacle Choir. Another participant said she had hoped to sing the oratorio without any rehearsing, but Colyar did keep it to a minimum. He slarted with the easier sections, if any can be called easy. then progressed to the more difficult: "And the Glory of the Lord shall be re- vealed." "O that t.ellest good tidings to Zion,"· "For unto us a chlld is born .... " Even though the auditorium wasn't even a third filled, the thrill of singing one of the world's great choral works was still there. There may have been a few mistakes at this First Annual Messiah Sing-along, too, but they were overshadowed by the voices raised in tribute to a great composer IUld music that has endured for generations: "And tM OlorJI of the Lord !hall be r~. And aU fle1h 3haJl 3ee it t~ther for the mouth of the LoTd hath spoken U ... " Alcohol Group • ~IU .. •JOU•UY••• if · · •1mnw~7 · • t W ams of Drugs ns•T BERS CALIFORNIA The Alcoholism Council of Orange County is urging holiday party goers not to drink if they are taking medications -prescribed or over the counter. Brochures entitled "If you drink, don't drug!" are ~Ing dbtrlbuted by pharmacists. who are members of the Orange County Pharmacist Association. In part, the brochure re- ads: "Alcobollc beverages when taken in com- bination with medicines such as sedatives, anti- histamines, or tranquilizers may produce an un· desirable or even dangerous effect. "The best and safest bet when you•re using medications is to leave alcoholic beveraaes strictly alone · or ask the advice of your doctor or pbarmacist." An Alcoholism Council spokesperson says the cases of dual addiction (dru1s and alcohol) is very high and now comprises 35 to '° percent of all problem drinkers. She added that many phy1lclans are not aware, when prescriblna drug1. ~hat~ patients aro dritlk.lni. .. Alcobol la a drug and most people don•t think about taklnr two drugs to1ether." aaid tbt spokesperson. is the Christmas Store for Large and Half ·Sizes See o~ great selection of: Director for the event was Dr. Justin Colyar. Think Twice About Pet WASIIlNGTON <AP) -If you're considering a warm, furry, living bundle as a Christmas gift for a child this year, the Humane Socie· ty of the United States urges you to think it over carefully. More than a million puppies and an undetermined number of kit- tens, hamsters and other little creatures will be given as gilts tbiJ season. the society says, many of them with llUle thought about care. "Chrjstmas is a time of excite· ment, chaos, visiting g'uests.. traveling and noise. Cbristmas may be the very worst Ume to give a pet to a young child -for the pet as well as the child," said Dr. Michael Fox of the society. Some children, he said, get car· ried away with all the gifts and treat the animal as just another toy. The puppy or kitten may become confused and frightened, and the result is that both animal and child fail to adjust pro~rly to one another. One of the best systems. the society suggeJts. is to gift wrap a e__hoto, leash or dog bowl for Christmas giving, and leave the puppy at the kennel untfl after Christmas. Santa With A Real Beard The real Santa·s at Huntington Center daily to visit with the kiddies. Photos available 11 you wish -while vcu wait -$2.50. Free holiday puppet shows every Thurs thru Sun thru Dec. 18. Also Dec. 19-20-21 Beach Blvd. & Edinger DoSomethi Diffmnt For-3! Holidays1 Toke o cour'9 ot JRP John Robert PatNers The Schools '°'Your Personal~ ORNIGE 3 Town f, Country (714) 547-8228 OP~NIN6 DECEMBER 15-17 • 10 a.'!1.l6 p.m. BEAUTIFUL CLOTHES BEAUTIFUL SERVICE BEAUTIFUL NEW STORE BEAUTIFUL OPPORTUNITY FOR HOLIDAY SHOPPING . I FOOD Holiday Breads can be •uUY and economically prepared with frozen bread dough. A variety of breads can be made from the b11tc dough by kneadtn1 lo ralalns, candied fruits, nuts, cin- namon, and other spices. Then shape the dough lnto Chrlatmas tree rolls, braids, a Dresden atollen, large loaves, or ln- dlvldual sugar plum loaves. n~corate the breads wlth con· ~ectloners lcinJ (powdered sug- ar mixed with milk or different flavorings such aa brandy, lemon extract, orange juice, or almond extract. Use colored coconut or sugars, candied fruits, and nuts to out the fl.niahing touch to the breads. Wrap the breads ln plastic wrap and Ue with a bow! Whal better way to say •'Happy Holidays'" CHRISTMAS TREE ROLLS 1 pound loaf frozen bread dough 1 cup chopped candied fruit 1tt cup chopped nuts Let loaf thaw at room tem- perature (1 hour or more). Fial· ten or roll out slightly on UghUy floured board. Place candled fruit and nuts in center and fold dough over. Knead fruit and nuts into dough. Shape into 17 balls. On a well greased cookie sheet arrange five balls in a row horizontally. Place four on the next row, then three, two, and one to form a tree. Use the re· mainlng two balls for the trunk. Do not place balls too close; al- low space for rising. Let rise ln a warm place. Bake 375 degrees about 15 to 20 minutes, or unUl golden brown. Cool. DRF.SDEN STOLLEN 1 powid loaf frozen bread dough 1-'z cup chopped candied mixed fruit 'I• cup raisins 'A cup chopped nuts or blanched toasted almonds 1 tablespoon brandy, if de- sired Let loaf soften at room tem- perature (1 hour or more). Flat- ten or roll out on fi gured board. Mix together remaining ln&re·, dients. Place mixture in center of dough and fold over. Knead into. dou1h, using more flour lf needed. Roll into oval 11 tncb thick. Fold as for a Parker House roll. Place on greased cookie abeet and roll doulh lightly with noured rolling pin. Let rise in warm place until doubled. Bake 375 degrees 20 to 25 minutes. Wblle hot brush with 1 tablespoon white com syrup which has been mixed with 1 teaspoon brandy. SUGAR PLUM LOAVES 1 pound loaf frozen bread dough 1'°' cup raisins 1h cup chopped candled fruit YJ cup chopped nuts Let dough thaw to l'OOm tem· Is peratore. ~ alnlaC iasre- dlents and kJ)ead df>\llh. On lilhtly finured roll doulh out to 8" x-12'-rec ••· Beain-nlna with,., elde roll dCMlib Ulht- ly to form loaf. Seal eocb. Place tn li1ht1Y ll"asecl loaf pan. Let rile aDd bake In 350 dearee oven for 25 to 30 mJ.n\ltM. TO BAKE INDIVIDUAL SUGAR PLUM t.OAV!:S: cut dough into 3 pieces aft• knead- inl ingredients into douch. Roll each piece out to 3" x 7" rec- tangle. Beg.lnning wjth 3" aide Ughlly roll dou1h to shape into loaf. Seal ends. Place In ll1htly greased 3-W' x S.'N" loaf pan. Let rise and bake in 3$0 deeree oven for 20 to 25 mlnute1. BRAID 1 pound loaf Inn'° bread dough l cup raisins ~cup chopped nuts 1 tables~ cinnamon Let dougl,l thaw to room tem- per at u re. Soak raisin• in lukewarm water for 5 minutes; drain t.boroughly. Mlx with cin- namon and nuts. Kn~ad ral!ln mix hire Into dough. C\lt dC>ugh in- to three pieces. Using the palms of hands roll each piece i.DtoJ4" rope. On lightly greased baking sheet seal ends of the three ropes together. Braid losely. Let rise until doubled in size; bake in 350 degree oven for 25-30 minutes. RUM ROLLS 1 one-pound loaf fr<rzen bread dough 1 cup sugar YJ cup water IA cup rum or 2 teaspoons rum flavoring 2 Tablespoons melted butter Let douth thaw to room tem· perature. Cut loaf into U pieces Place each-piece in greased muf- Cln pan. Brush tops with melted butty. Let rise' In warm place until dough rises 'h inch above the pan. Bake in 375 degree oven for 12 to 15 minutes until golden brown. Tum out of.pan. Mix sug- ar, rum, and water together; br- ing to a full boll for % minutes. Prick top of rolls wllh fork while hot and spoon rum syrup over rolls, Sprinkle with powdered sugar and top with cherry. Rolls aboald be reheated before 1erv-ua1. LARGE DINNER aoLLS 1 one-pound loaf frozen bread dough 2 Tablespoons melted butter Let loaf thaw to room tem· perature. Cut loaf into 12 pieces. Place each piece in lightly greased muffin pan cavity or on sheet pan. Brush tops or dou1h with melted butter. Let rolls rise in warm place, free of drafts, un- til dough reaches 'h Inch above pan. Bake In 375 degree oven for • 12· lS minutes unW golden brown. Tum out of pan Immediately to cool on racks or absorbent paper. Minty Wre~ths PEPPERMINT CllR18TllA.S WREATHS One 12-oz. pkc. Sugar Coolde Mix 1e11 1 measuring tea- spoon butler. softened 1 meuurtni tea- spoon 'red food coloring IA meas urln1 lea- n green food color· 'h measuring tea- p o on peppermint tract, divided Drageea (silver- lored candy> Peppermint Christmas Wreaths. I l Preheat oven to 375 e1rees F . In large. wl, combine Sugar kle ~. eag and bat· ; mli accordln1 to cka1e dlrecttona. vide dough ln half. To e half, add red food lorln1 and \4 meaaur- g teupooo peppermint tract; blend well. To m ainin ball add 1reen food colorin1 and braid l9getber to form a ~ meuurlng teaspoon wre6th, pressing ends peppermint extract. tocether to seal. <For Chill doups 1 hour. On a best re1ulta, complete ll1hlly floured board or cook1es one at a thuf! so cloth, roll 1 rounded that atrlpe do not dry measurt.Q8 teaspoonful out). Place on ungrelHd or each color dough to cookie abeetl. Decorate measure 7" in length. wUh ,drqeet. Bake 6-7 Placelst.ripofeacbcol· minutes. Makes 11 or dough 11de by side and cookies. Wedneeday. December 14, 1977 DAILYPILOT CJJ frozen bread dough makes rum rolls. HIGH PROTEIN Frozen dough is base for several Christmas breads. 99 Ho(iday Stock-Up Buys! Ched .. ar Cheese Lon~~~~·~,yle '1 79 · II Random w,1gh1s ... Lucerne (Hall Gallon $1.17) Luc~n• ~. . . . .. ·.. • .i...:..::.-...... ... PORK . SPARERIBS . . or Drumsticks. Grade 'A' Frying Chickens.· RUSSETV POTATOES ~Great For Baking, ~Broiling or Frying c _____ ,. . -......... ' .. PEOPLE I CAREERS PUBUCNO'nCE •1c:TIT10UI •USINIM ltAMafTATaMllNT n.........,,.,.,_.,._'11_ -l'lAll Tllll LAJll'. !UH H•I• ....,"9, ftvlne c;.1110.tlfe 11 ... rt I" "'.,,.,1 .... 9" IO't1 H•h Av.-, trvtne. c:.411.,N• J, A "8ynoldl ' C.. • C.OltlOffWe CW"'f-'*'• 1tlt N-1 C.nltr Or "' ... "'-' 8te<ll "'lltorn•• .JoM ~ Catrt.... ··~ If••-·· ClflW. o ....... Ctlll .. n•• 'tlllt h61MM II Nlllll <cnduc 1-0 DY a .. '"''"" "trt""'lltlp. R-11• Warml"QICWI flllt •lettmenl llltd '"''"Ult CtlUlly c1 ... 11el 0r.,. eour.1von Oeumber J .,,,, . ,, .. 1'4 Put>llsNCI Or<tnoe GMll 0.lly PlloL O.c.ambtr1u.11.lt1m smn PUBUC NOTICE rrlCTITlOUS IUSIN~U NAMllSTAT~MllNT Tl>e lolf-1"9 porton I\ dcWn9 Dull· M U H CATALINA SUN ROOF CO ,._ $uo1rtor Avenue, Co\le Mt'•· C.lllornt•9'tll Peul Tonorl<• ••>Acee•• Avenue, Coron• <NI Mel. c.111ornta O•lS Tiii\ 11v.i.-s " C-..Cttd by ti\ In Olwlcluel l'eul Tonortct Thi• ll•ltmenl Wll llltd With ,,.. co .. nty Cler• of Or1n99 Co""l1 on O.c1m1>er 2, 1'71 ...... PuDll•M<I Or-C-•I Dally Pllol, December I, I•, 21 71, 1'71 S0.1·11 PUBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITICMJ• IUSINEU HAMl STATIMllHT "T lie to11ow1nu pw"'" .,. CllOlllQ bull-', neu 1s HYOllA8AfHS, Ut C. t•th !ol,.«I, .............. . to111 Mo\.t, C..1otorn11 '1tl1 lloDorl 1>n11111 Weyo•nt. l/Qt -·---------->llt19te kow,,.'"'""·C•tttorn•dtlll/ Phtfllp C.o 0>e11>er9. S10 !o. Yn.u, PUBUC NOTICE Mon1ucv .,., .. , C..lllo<n••9111A ·-lh" Dv~ln.H .. u1nouct,a oy I "ICTITICMJS •UStflflU ~ ... , •• p.orl ... r\lllr>. HAM!!" $TA TIME NT llClCitr1 Pf11111pllv•Yf>el\O The •011owm9 ""''°"' .,. oou•9 tu" tru , \t•ttn"ltnl ... , tllt"d Wt1tn •"• """'~ (ounlytlorll010ren90<-oun1yonhov· ANJIM MECHANICAi. 9Sll emb or JI. ltll lOUC•n. F°""'i.1n lf•lltr CA~'°"' 'U ni J1me · A St .. 10 9SSI Tou(en. PuDh\IW-cl Or-Coo• D•tly Piiot, Fou11t••n "•'"f1. CA 92IOI Nov ll. lO. MIO O.C. /, 14, 1917 •'lt9·17 P lom.on l'aul-ner. lS9 Fowler . omor1t, CA Th i• bUSINIU Is COl\O..clea by • -90,,.,,,_,,_.,.,p PUBUC NOTICE J.,....,,. ~" .. '• Thi• \lale .... 1 ..... llllCI With the -County Cltrk of Ore,... County °" rrtCTITIOUSIUllNl!H O.c I, 1911 l'ICTITIOUSIUSINllSS NAM«STATllMllNT l" .. J17 HAME STATRMENT TM toll°""l\9 por>OI\ " dOi"!I l>U\I PubftiNCI °'"'lit Coe\! Oalt• Pilot l11t toll-lt19Pfftont areOOl"9bvll· ntutt.EAN SWEEP INDUSTRIAL Dec 14.21,211,1977,Jan.A,1911 Sll)·I; NIU .. : E -----------SCOH, TELLIER, IGOE &. co ~.~h.'::':.~o.2:4. MIMOl\ls. Hunllnvton 1000 OV•u Street. S..111 HO, Newpon Eow1111 J Entk1ue1 104 Mempllh. PUBLIC NOTICE bMcll, C•lltorl\•et?..O Hunt1n91on llH<ll, Celll<>!'nt• M•ch.otl c. 1900, ""' s..,..... Tiiis Du•lneu I\ CondUC:la<I DY en In· FICTITl°'-'S•USIHIESS :,~:· Huntington IM•<ll, C.ehforno• Olvldual NAMr STATIMENT Eow110J En•1<1uo1 llll'IOllO..·"'IP''""''•tt00tnobu" FIObtrt N 1•11•9'. Jr. )410 l Thll Sl•l-1 .... ,,,.., with ""' ""' •• .,.,...,,,,. Onvo, l'l>Ool\t•.Arltonal.Yl2• County Cl•rk 01 O••nve Counr~ on f>t!ACH CITll;S SElllfiCE CO, ~h•rw1n N. !>coll, "n E.01 December U, 1911 OJI (r11u PtllN, Hunt1n111on Buch, ~;;••1td ~oulh f 110.:n1> Ar11on• ,..,U CA,,.., P•lblt\NCI Or-CN\I O•llY Pftot. Re lptt M Llnl.,n•~' •Sll (r•\I• l •·•• t>u>1neh " tonouclea Dr • Dec 14.11 11, 1977anoJal\ • "'" P••m•, H""'i"Ol""ll .. cn,CA~lul !l•n.-•I P•rtnerV>IP Sl6+11 lt•lph A l•rbrnl•r, Ult C,..,. M•<'-1 C IOOf P•lma. HunttngtonllucnCA.,M' Tnl\ \l•ttnenl w •1 '•led Wllh tnt 1-----------ll\I\ bu\1"'1\.\ It. tonctUt ltd by 4 tounty C.ltfll Of 0r.,. to..nly 01\ NOV· Qtner•I P•rlnt•Y>•P. tmoer21. 1911. PUBUC NOTICE ltelf)f>M Unltrf\ltr FIS71J Thi> sllltment wt• flied wllh ,,... PuDlt\lleCI 0r"'llt C.0.>t 0•1ly PllOt, f ICTI TtOVS au St NEU ('><Inly Clerk of Ore"Qt County on CK hov.U,JO,-OK/,1 4.1911 SOOS.I/ NAMf.STATEMENT 11,19/I PUBUC NOTICE l'ICTITICMJS IU.INEU HAME STATEMENT Tiit toll°'"l"9 --,. OOl"!I bu•I ,...,,, .. llCJ(l S HOV~t O~ WAX. •SI y., 1111\ ~lrttl. Co.te-w. C..hlornt• Robert L ~urbo. HU/ ll1d0e Routt Or .... fl Toro, C•ltl0<nl•91ttJO Tn1\ Ou\fn•\\ I\ te>nO\K.ltil by 1n 1n dt¥teh.i•I R-tL •ore.• '"'' \t••titnent ¥W•\ hft<t ""'''" ltw <..ountv t11rk of C>rtlt'Qlt County on ~o'w' tml>o-r 1•. WI/ FUIM • ubll\n.G Or 411'9 Cb111ot D•• •v Puo1. Nov. 1J. JO, .no~. I, I•, 19// 'i/Xi1-ll PUBUC NOTleE FICTITIOVS austHt:SS NAME STATIMf.HT Tiit to11-1nv --•• OO•no bvsi n•»•' MJB SMALL Cl,.,AIM~ A AT-TORNE V SERVICE. 11/S Mew lletOt Orlve E!, CooUIMe.ot. Celltornt•U•26 Ntuy J.I.,..,. llH<, 211S Mew Vora. Drive E, C:0.11 Mew , ta111orn1• tJolll Thts bv~,..... Is condlKteo by tn .,,. ffvl4Utl. MervJeyneBHt l "h >I.Cement ••• filed wllh tlle C-•Y Cler~ ol Or-Covnty on No•· ..,,.,_, II. tt71. FIS71i6 Publl'""° Or~ Coul Delly P110I ''-v tl. JO. and Otc. I, 14, 1911 SOOl-/~ PUBLIC NOTICE l he IOllOwt"IJ porWll\\ ,or•OOUIQ Du\I· FJ41>1 l\OH.. PuOll•lleCI ()raftgt C.0.\1 O•llY Pllol. !tEFIVM LABORATORll~. llJOl. O.c 14,,,N,l,77,J .... •.1'11 Sl14 II St Anort·w' f'14 c.t". ~•nt.; Ano. C.allforn1a "210) Alb•tl l Hewitt •» C>•nh•, Coron• <HI~·. <.11110.n•• tJol) k&Ult I.. Howitt, •l~ 0•11114, C.Oton• 0.1 ltMr. C•i1tot"4• •ltl) !>colt l.>•I• br-••r. 290t On•..,.,. fOfr•n< ... C...11t0tn•4i-.OSOJ 1 tu' ov .. 1,,.\\ 1\ concttK1eG by• un11t td P•rtnervup. ALllllU l Hi:. .... l lJ PUBl..IC NOTICE l'ICTITICMJS auSINE5S NAME $TATllMINT Th• lottowtnv pon on 11 dofno -...sl· n.uas 0 J OElfEl..OPMENT COMPAN Y, IJOS 81y11CN Ori ... IOwpar I Beach. C•llloml• .,..J t tu1 ,,.,.,.•n• .,., tu.a •11n tN-C.oul\ty Uor~ OI Or~ C.OUtlh on,,,.,.. •mt>er1o. i.11. Lonni• M °""" Ill, IJOS llaysldl Ori ... NewPOrt Bee<I\, C•lllo<nle ,,.., ,_, T~h Du~tr>Hs II conducla<I II~ 1n II\· PuDll•n..o o..,. Co.•t CJ11ty 1'1101. Olvlduet Nov JU,•noC.... 1,1' /1,1¥/1 w.1.11 Lorlnl•M Ovnnlll T"ls •1•1.,...1\1 we\ 111.0 wllh lht -----------Ceunty Cl•rk of Or•noe ~ounty on PUBUC NOTICl: 0ecem11er '· "77 ,,_ l'ubll1,..., a.--co .. 1 oa11., P11o1. NOT ICE 0 , l'UILICMEllTIHO Dec u, 21. lt, 1911 MIO Jel\ .• , 1tll In 1ccorC1en<e wttn Se<Uon '37. 10 of SJlt.71 I~ Hull!\ -s..tely Coo., •• 1m• -----------PUBUC NOTICE m•11<H<1 l11~.,.IS4. S111U1••11'1•, tlw HUIO\ F1clllllH R••I•• c-nmn ltt of 1"41 er-. Coul\ty HMllll Pl.,,. '""9 Councllwlll llOld . public "'"""9· SUl'llll~ COUllTOrrTHI W•OllOO.y, De<amber :It, 1t17, 7:00 SYATaorrCALlrrOllNIArrOll pm. N••POf'l h •<ll City <Auft<ll THll COUWTYOrrOllANOll Cn1mb•"· JJOO Ht•Porl Blvd., N6.....,.74 NtwPOf'I &.-",to ro<elve Pllllllc lflPUI N 0 T IC I 0 pr HI A II ING 0 rr 1110 develop recommeno111on1 to ~ l'ITITIC* flff l"llOIATI! Orr WILL c ... 1111celt of Need ApollCAll°" •ub-ANO t:ITTalH Tl!STAMINTAllY mllledby ANO AUTHOlllZATION TO AO· Ho19 Memorl•I Hospllll MINISTlllt UNOEll THE Pr"bYltrl11\, •t N ... Porl lltvO., INOlll'INOSlfT AOMINISTllATIOH N••P«>rl BHCll, tor u ..... ~., ..... ,,,_ orr ISTATISACT. l•Mln <1.0 wrvlU from thlr1 .. l\ Mds Eslelt ol lflCTOlt LU DWIG HAHN. lo lwenly t>edl,Pl"Of~l<O\l\"3'.l4 Oe<t•~ lnttr•\l~O cwrlltt o~w•no te ~.. NOTICE IS HEltE8Y GIVEN .... , 1mfl\t tn• eppflcillon elld Sl •lf GEltT lt UDE !ELF REDA MEYEllS An<1ly•t. m•Y oa so••'"" ollku of Ille 111• lllecl herein• Ptllllon ~ Probeleot Or•"!le Cout>ty Heallh p,..,,..,,.0 '°""" Wiil 1nd luuanceot Lell9rt Test•men· HOJICE INVITIHG 1105 ell. m, aWOn Lll\e, S..lle ,,,, fll'llll\, tery end f"' •ut.,.,rh•llOI\ lo ••. C1lltornt1, .,.._ the ••o•rn of ' 00 mlnl1ter _, lhe 1..mp.,..,.,,1 AO-REC E 1 PT OF PROPOSALS SoltO e.m 11\d • JO pm. Moftdey lllr'Ougll mlnlstr•llon ol Eu.iH ACI, nit<~• P•OPO>•lt wlll !w rtcalv~d•lll>eofllce l"rldo . lo wlll cll Is made tor furt her of the Co>1• Mn• County water Olt-Sinvl• coe>ltt Of '"" Sf-4t A"•IY•ls H•llcuten, -lf\lt ttw 11-'""° p4ace trl<l, Owner of,,,.•"'"· IOC1ltd .ti l .. S ..,11, .,_ •v•llMllt at 1,.. Or-C-ot l\e.,.1"9 lht ...,... '"" -set IOf Pl1cen111 Avenue Co\l• M•u, H01llh Pl•nnll\Q Coul\Cll 01110~ Jan l , lt71, •I 10·00 • m. In IM c111tor nt•, vn1 11 s 00 p m .. on wllnou l chlr11t M<llllPI• coplfl of..,. tour1room of Otclolrlment No J ol Hid D•ctmt>er 12, 1q11, for ton\trtKllon ol Stell Analnh, or COPies 011,,. appllCa· COV'1, et 700Clvlc Otltltr Drive Welt, In R•dhlll A""""' W•litr Main R•IOC•· INCltyolr.tllUIAN C.tlloml• tlol\ TM >lie of tne -• " IO<.otect In llon, wtll be evallalll• '"1 .,... i i-.ro ' O•Md 0.C_ 1; ttn ' 11.a11111 11venue1ie1-101 .. 1e.oll of toslofre~tlOll llOt..,ts_....,.> WILLIAMll MJONH 8rlslol $1r"t IO IU 1 .. 1 w .. I of Clll\lon For lur1 her lnlormellOfl, Cetlle<I County t....k • Slreel. Guy.V lllCel\I O• Patil, Plrec;tor Of l"HILll" L. HILLMAN DESCltlPTION OF WORK Tht lttvlow. OC~PC.. lO'l Fa\ltlon Lelle, U7 .. l"Hllt_..Ottve work ll\tf-l'°'l<"l11ton ot •PP<oa Sullellt. TU\lln,Ptlot-. IJ1 IM I W-1•MHl4k CA'1JIM 1met•ly ))) tlnur IHI of 1._lncn Publll-0.--Coe\! Delly Piiot. Tel CU>I ...110 mo<ler·llM<I -cotted ""I pt po wtl!I Dec. 14• nn AttorMY iw· ,.,..111-•PPurtol\11\ces; app ro1lmelety 11 _ Sl00-l1 Publlsr...o 0r•"9t Coe•I Dally Piiot, llnur 1 .. 1 of »Inell dl...,tl., ~Inell PUBUC NOTICE Oeu mlMr 14, u. 21, lt71 SU1·11 11110 sl"' call'IO . ...a mh<ell-• • Neunaan's View Some Silence Aids Thought? NEW YORK <AP) -Tetevt.sioD's news and public atralrs commentators might conslder a little silence now and then, J\ISl to elve the viewer time to think. say• NBC'a Edwin Newman. "I believe some silence ls helpful to thought." says Newman, himsell. a lboughtlui man, "and I believe to some extent radio and television dis- courage thought and renectlon. -"l'M TALKING ABOUT SOMETWNG every- body in this business comes to at one time or another. You're on the alr and you want to show you're more amusing and more trenchant than the people you're working with, or aeainst. "We ought m some sense encourage thought." Newman says. "I'm !>aying we ought to make an ef- fort to shut up.'' Newman speaks with the authorJty or a cor· respondent who's been on thC! spot more than once -often, he says, in situations in which a lil· tie dead air might have been better than com· menlary. "When John F. Ken· nedy's body was r e· turned to Washington in 1963," he recalls, "I was on a building over Penn· sylvanla A venue. And when the caisson bear· ing the coffin came into view, I had to show l could be more vivid and more colorful in my description than anyone else along the line. NEWMAN "As I was talking, I heard someone in the cont rol room say, 'Tell him to shut up.· Jt was very good advice." NEWMAN JOINED NBC NEWS IN London ln 1952, after beginning his career in journalism in 1941 with International News Service and United Press. He later ran NBC's news bureaus in London, Rome and Paris. and has been based in New York since 1961. He's been the s ubstitute host on NBC's popular "Today" program several time-.;, has appeared on "Meet the Press" a nd often reports on news specials and documentaries. Two best-selling books, "Strictl y Speaking: Will America Be the Death of English." published in 1974. and "A Civil Tongue," published two years later. earned Newman a r eputation as a watchdog of the English language. NEWMAN, WITH A QUARTER-CENTURY in the bus iness, is a particularly worthy observer of television's role as a provider of news. TV news, he says, s houldn't attempt lo replace the newspaper, "and l doubt that anyone in television believes that. "To me. the key question is, how broad a service are we to provide? If people are dependent on us, then how much should we do? Should we olfer programs we know will inteTest only a small seg- ment of lhe public?" HE'S CONCERNf;D ABOUT THE effect or the television reporter's presence on a news event, b11t says, "There were staged events long before television news. We haven't brought anything new. "The difficulty arises." Newman says, "from television's technology_ We've made everything more immediate and more vivid and made reaction come faster . . . But I don't believe we need to alter what we do because of that. We report the news and need lo without regard for the consequences. "The importa nt thing is, if you're in the news business. you abide by the traditions and rules of the business. The fundamental question ls, does tt warrant being covered?" Air Traff ie Control PoHtla Te.pt J ack Ford. 25·) ear· old son of fo rmer Pres ident G e rald Ford. sa ys he was tempted to r un fo r Congress, but now is glad he said "no" to followin g in hi s father 's footsteps. He says he wasn't sutri- cienlly committed to politics. Aid Set For Baja Tourists SAN DIEGO <AP> - The new governor of Baja California says a special attorney's office will be set up soon to aid and defend tourists visit· ing in his Mexican state as needed. The plan was dlaclosed by Gov. Roberto de la Mad rid in a speech to 500 civic and tourism of- ficials, who appla\lded - enthusiastically. A bill to set up the new office will be submitted in a few days, he said. IF THE BAJA California congress ap· proves it, a move re- garded as a formality, the new "prosecutor" with a statewide staff would operate directly under the governor after Jan. 1. . "This new organlza· lion would see that our guests always receive from lb.e authorities ar.d other individuals the just, legal and honest treatment to which they are entitled," De La Madrid said. HE TOLD a news con·· ference later that the new office would be em· powered to prosecut.e un· fair treatment of tourists as well as provide them wllh legal defense and asslstance. Oilier wot1t. COMPlETIOH OF WORK· All work ... -m11st 1M comoltted Willlln t0 caten<11r SUl"llllOllCOUllTOl'THI d•'I" lfltr Otteol u•cllllon of the COi\• STATIOfl'c;AUl'OllNll• rro• ..... tree I l>V lheC>#Nr. THI COUMTYOrrOltAHOI MOTICll TOClllOITOltl OPENING 01' PAOPOSAL.S; The -A-t1"1 _ .... "116 PUBUC NOTICE Military Offers Entry P•GPOHI• wm be pubflcty o.-n..s •ftCI NOT I Cl 01' ".A It I NO 0, SUl"llllOllCOUllTOI' THI re.O el S:OOp.m. Oii O.C.mbtr U , lt71, l"llTITIC* l'Olt l"lloeATll OI' WILL STATI OrrCALlrrollNIA 1'011 ••,,,.Celt• Motse Counlr w'"1 ... oi .. ANO rro1t LllTTlllS TIUTAMIN· THI! COUHTYOl'OllAHO• By JOYCE L KEN~EDY trlct olfl«. !«Mall., l'MS P1«tnll• TAllY ANO "°" AUTMOlllZAT10N '" , ... Metlt<Of .,... esi.teof OA\flO • ~ Avenue,eoatetMl-a.C..llloml• TO AOMIHISTllt UHDlll THI CHAltLESSHEPAA D,OecHsed. 0 B TA I NIN G C: 0 NT It ACT Noll<• 11 ~ 9t_, 10 <!Wltors D J I Id Ilk t 11-.a OOCVMENTS: The -111cell1111• .,. ~N,0111.i;!~:::~~DMINISTllATION FlaVl"9 cialm• ~Int Ille Mid -·· ear oyce: wou e 0 IUJU out tnlllled, "S,.ECJFICATION NO. 7M hl•I• ol WALTElt HOGARTH. CNnt lo file said ci.lm1 II\ Ille olllu of What J tan about becoming 8D air traf· FOR CONSTRUCTION OF ltEOHILL O.ua...,, Ille clt rtc Of Ille eforKllCI COUr1 or 10 fie controller. and tbe work Involved. A V E N U E W A T E 11 M A I N P'tlenl 11\em lo lht -nlQMd al Ille RELOCATIOH .. Pl and Ill NOTICE IS HEREBY GlllElol th•I office of SOI.TOH & JACOBS, e pro· -D.A., Providence, R.I. . ans spec , •• ~ECU RITY PAC IFIC NATIONAL ltulonel corpor411on, llJO fut lions end ell contrect Oocumtnts may 8ANK ,..s llled llereln a ~llllon lo.-Florence A"911w, P, o. 81~ 4I«, ...--- IM 0-.,.1,..41 '""' ottiudt1IQNtect for Pro1>e1e oi w111-1or '"'~"001 Lot <>ooorner. Ce111om•• '°'"· ""'1<" ,.11., Air traffic controlle rs have recot111 01 Pf"OllOMll•, or •t Ille Olll<• of lt n Te.tanwnle<Y ..-0 lor Aulltottu· offl<• ts fM plec.e Of bv\h.,.H Of UM un-·bill t li id I Jemu M, Mon1oomerv. Col\sutli"9 oon ,0 AomlNuor .,,,.,.. .,,. 11\dflpen. res pons1 ty or preven ng m a r En9ll\Hrl, 11\C., 1780? SkV Perl! Circle, delll Ad'"lnlslrellon of E•'9tn Acl, ·~ <NrllQNtd 1~11 malltn ~··•1111"9 to lli I r . ft A ood h Suitt >OI. 1,,,1,.., tetltornl.t, UPOI\ PIY· f•rel\Ce lo -ch II made fOf' lur~r Hid tSltte Suell cletms With Ille CO lS OflS 0 aJrCr& . g apprO&C ment ou .,._., oi s20 for m ri set o1 partk lllen. _, lhM 1,,. ume...a 11, .... :!::!~~ ':"!'!';'.!::' .~11:~.C:..!~ to lanJiing ln this occupation is leam-spec lllcttlOl\S end 1ccomptl\yl119 Of MltlnQ lht WIN IMS i.11 Ml for "*'lllUllWl .. llf'SC pullltcetlOll of 11111 lng the work through m llltary Service. Or•Wll\9S, S.ld<Nposlt wlll be refUl!CIH Jen. l, 1'11 .• , 10·00 •. m., '" .... l\Otlct. T~e nation's 17 000 non I UPol\ retum ol lht SP«tll<•llons •ftel courtroomolC>epartmenlHo.>oheld O•le<IO.CemiltrU.1'77 I superv sory dr•wltlQI In OOoCI <onelltlon wlllll11 :IO court,et100CMc c..itwOrlwWesl.ln ~ulflL.$11tOtnl CIV Jlan tower and COntrol Center COn• 0tys .,,.,. "-,,....,,..,..,,•re-" 1MCl1YelSl"4•.t.t..,c.i""""-· A.ml111Ur....,Ofl'llettt.ei. trolle-ar .. emplo ed b th Fed l AecluteClptllllsol~~ntlConlr«I Oel..t0« .•. 1tn. olse14l~;.,llll • ., .. Y Ye era orewt"9• '" -tn ,,... '"'"I<•· w1wAM1.1uoHN, WlllAMelltd AvlallonAdminlstration CFAA). 1101\S, T"9 tal• or !tit reclU(ff .,,... c.unty Cltf'lt MK. TON &Mcoe& 1"9S Is.-. -· ... If of I .. orlt lntl rrLOll•t•YOUNOlt091lllTS A ..... , .. Yw sc:alt.lll~~·df-1\9Uftdtllrtd HAllOILSY,NU"STIOLa•. .. ••.• ......,A.... THE MJNIMtJM ENTBY require-lMYmty_,.,ur<IMMdatr ... rodlretlOll &KUH&.a ... o .... .,.. menL Is three years' general ex· <OSI CllOI r~bltl trom Jamtt M. •ttw.~lt.,S411 .. Jm 0.WMY,c.I........ per1•n"'6 Or 10ur vears' "'Olleae -Or MOl\lt11mwy, ConWlllnQ •nolMtfS, Let ........ CAMO , .. , ..,.,.., '" .... I ' " .. '"c. .. ...,.. • ..,, ,...~ ,._..,~ 0r.._ c..te i:>eur l"ttol. an equivalent mix of experien~ and P"OPOSAL GUARAHTllf:. £eel! Pullll~ OrMQt c:out Delly l"llot O.C..14,Jl,21."'19MJen.4,1'11 education. propose! thafl be ectompenle<I by • o.c. u. u ,20, tm s210.11 sn1.n cert111tdorc.as111 ... ·tc11tckor111obOll4 Wouldn't a college two-year air ~~":,::=:.~0::'7:~:9 ~~ PtrBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE traffic control program, or a four· c-1y wee ... OC•trkt u • ...,...,, .. ------------------------1 year aviation program help you to 11111 111e Mddtlr, 11 '"s '"'-1 11 a<· NOY1cao,.,.u1L1cH1A•t11IO repare ""d gl e Utl (tpleO, wltt ptCf'l\Plly t&ecule Ille COi\ lll"Olta THI OllAHOI ClOUMTY p "'' V YOU a COmpe Ve tml, _,,.... ............. of work-n's 90UDOl'IUl"lllVISC*S°" edge? Apparently not. FAA studies ln· compenWIOn .,_,aft<l,9'\Clh1rnl\t1• Al'llOl"OHOZONIOtAMOI dicale that specialized grads fare no sellslecl0<y leilllf~I Pff~ent• bonCI NOTIC~ IS Hl RE llY Gii/iN !NI the Or•not County 8oerd Of Su,.enllOrt belt th Olh h h th . In 1"' emount ol IOOpertt11IOI tlle lotll wlll ,,.._e,..l<llearlflt t&cenlldtf e reto~1111o114.JK,._Olatt-tocat• er an OrS W 0 ave 6 tnnate l>ld price -• tt-•nct ,.,.,,rl•• -ec1 ..,,., .. ,,..,..,. _,,,.'"i.rly s1cta Of Stitt• M• .. _..,. -.111,,.....fy 100 abiUl)' for this exacting work. 111 1,,. • .._..o1100.,.,<tnttf\ll••.,.•• 1 .. 1M1UtlMlftvef 0rc11er.s0<1.,.,,..,.*"Ant"•ltl!Uw.... Somewhat like a short order cook _,d~. TM Orelllll ~If l'IWll"f Cl(tlmlMloll llM rec...,._.d !Mt IM •ftcl w•o" AATCJ: "',..,.,...by 5e<· ~·~Y 119 "''"""''"' t..-At ""' "°""'111 Atr1<v11wa1 '''Oft ... .,,<-Ju1glin1 ordere from five screaming uen 111i et 1111 Callf«lll• ui'-Codt, 1101">" Ol*kt c. •t 11100> 11111 "Gfot.tp ~fl• ci1111 a,.1r1c111111a>" 01.. W"lte .... a ..,..ntroller must ttnm--· .. ate-,,.. 0•11~1t twit dtt.,.,,.lllM lltt 191\tret trlcl wbJKl t.Nltllo'#lflOCtlldlll.,.t: " • •, '"' """ prtvelll119rlleHlwtO"t111i.10Callty t. Al'I e"'°'ttceC -lysl1 -~I· .. _ Wiil M ~!fled .. lie ly dechie pr\QriileS With COO}, Saf6lY· Ill ...... "' .. --......... ~ .. Htt11110ffltnfW"9f•Wvtr111C•tlM,-..Crllicltlfl~llll .. ort«lwNIM conscl0ul)ud1Cmtnl. C-.IH ef '6ld weQt tele *Wmll~· tflvl-tlltMfllllllll .. ~tUf"Clf .. rt41Vcllell11K•-'t'WecflltWIMI~ tloll• tre IMl,,...Mll et"" etflCAI of htt Jl•M•ro. o.Mf 9n9 _,. IVtlleblll....., ,.,...., t, l"t1tf It ~t ti billltll"' l'lflftlll, ulit rfM't IM lillllllt ..... -.,y T1lit C..tl'~W INlll .. 1 llf#'I ef Mid ttanl• • .,...,...... .. bf tllt HHIUI ..... 110 tl\elt lie.......,..,,, MM,_.. e. --... .... 11,_ ..... ,,. c-...... ~ ..... °'**.&MA.. """""ltft, fef mi.lltnend ... •al, lll•,._ • .... tflY "*'°"'41'*Cltr ~t 11111\ ..,.ill11tt-1•uttt111WMn111hlAli4letllllfttl ..... r..,llWlt11CflltWJiltl11> tlfMlll JIY not ... ,._ Ult tllfCll.._,,,... '"'"!IOI.,~ 'felllllt refflt el ..._. It Ml _.."*' TIM,..,,, #"*'"'Mft it1111 elt. .._ t111trt<e1•-IMIMlll. rtl'fctll. • lfll,...,..111 .. ·~«IM,_ rr1t••...,...-i•.,.1e11. ~Mt. ,.,.,~...._ ........... --.Ht .......... ClMll,~•lretltn li'ao.llCT ADMINltTltATlO~: .Alf J\llldl"I et.111"9rtfl~,...._,,..,...,.,._.Oll#.,.,..911,,..._,\'._ ttll 4iMll-........... tll lllle .,..l«t..,.... •I '1•e.M.W .. _,.. ""'Mftft ft tllt ............ ..nl!llL Atl 1111.......-.. CM .-flilll ti...._ ....... lMr---tlftl!MWte.....,._, .... ..._ lf~"l~~t•ltlf'ltlC!:._,.1 II #M ... ;1A1114l 1Mt tit!•-dlftlle irllf 8't ,.,,_. tl~ll!t#C ....,_ ef• .....,,..... -..._"~·..__,!flt ltc1tntllt ..... w&1tfflfeMl~tlft1Kltl'tc ... 161MstflKl•• ...... lflt<• • ......,.., .., ,,_lllff'M Ottlt, toNetp(el#llflU.ClillMY•lll~..,,..... ..... ,.,, l#YJ~ ~Jftnllt, fttt•, . flerli.fflltrlt!fllllilM!tl\,.,_ll'tlllVl ... lel~llllttllf"'UtltlfteUltfll '•!""", ........ , ~':!'!..~ .. , ....... ... tfllct fl .. °"' fl•...,.• ... m..n,...... • 1119 c:e-cr M• .. ·-111.-..................... ,,_, '"" ........... --"*'" ... ~ .. C'ilrttllt~ OWHla'S lllOffU .. IUVCO, ..._.__0Mtltlt,_...lfl1 .. c.itr.__......._. ... o.k T• o..,._ ,_rfW ... rltM • flltJecl ~ °""--. ,_ • .,_, t.tl!ltrllt• ,....,.,.,. s»•1 ....... 1tlet '" t11Y Well .... • llilW 111\' ""'""•llf ( .... 1'·U. .. ..,.,_.A , 111•1141, .. ttNlit._...lllWteln-P• ... O.C.-'-1'1f, ""'!!"""~, . . •"(,-...... -·· ....... :~.J.r.S:"" -""· _.u. .. 1 CAL.•~IA N I ~ WA A~ Cl ..... tf~ -' """' T UI.• ~. 'Ctll .... M • ........ o.c., •. "" ( C4REERS J SIX FAA REGIONS hired begin· ners this fall. To track nel<t year's openings, stay in touch with Federal Job Information Centers. Controllers are required to pass tough physical exams annually. PAT· CO people say the work at many altports ls too demabding, that con· trollens "bum out" too often and re- ceive medical retirements loo fre. quenUy. PATCO wants the exposure to operating positJons cut back to no more than 32 hours of each-40-hour week. In response, the FAA says air traffic control ls not a unlq\lely Rtreufui occupation. and that con· trollers can retire w1Lb tull benellll arter 20 years, or take a pay cut and be transferred to a less busy airport, or be retrained by the federal govern· ment for as~nd career. SOURCES AT BOm the FAA and PATCO believe that automaUon will not make controllers obsolete. Com· puters art making the Job easier, but humans a.re needed to manaie tM ayatem. 'lbey•re probably rl&bL. Remembet the 111 about the pU~ less alrUner lD wblcb a computer voact auures passencera: "Relu and don't worry. Nottltns can 10 vt r o n g ..• n o L b i n e c a n g,o wrone ... nothlng can 10 wront." OCCS~Team Captures ~hy DAJLY PILOT D lane Austen Script Sold_ .. From AP Oloa&cbel The auto1raph manuscript of a hitherto Un· known play by laae A•s1en, the early 19th century novelist, was IOld for $30,itO at a Sotheby•1 aucUon ' lnLondon. Tho manuscript. of a play called .. Slr Charles ' Grandllon or the happy man -a comedy," is thou1Chl to be dated around 1800 -the aam, e>ertod tbat pr~uced her famous works "Pride and Prejudice,•• "Sense and Sensibillty" and· "Northancer Abbey" -and to be a free adaptation ot a novel by Samqel ftlcbardloll. • The manuscript, sent for sale by the novelist's great-nephews , was bought by Oxfordshire bookshop owner David Astor, who said he bought it because he was a great admirer of Jane Austen and wanted the work to remafn In Brltaln. .. Jesse Carr, secretary-treasurer of Alaska's statewide Teamster Union Local~. resigned from the N aUonal Bank of Alaska's board of directors. Bank President Edward &umuoa said he believed Carr may have been concerned about a possible contlicl ol lnte.re.st. 'J'be bank banaJes some Local 959pension fund monies. "Heck no," said Teamater 1pokesman Dean Bers. Carr is lncreaslngly busy ln his union position and felt that "he could not devote the time thil particular position required," he said. .. Sir Wla1tan CburchUl's "darling Clemmie," his wife for 57 years and his widow for 12, will be buried alongside him in the family plot at Ox· fordshire village, her family announced. Barone11 Spencer· Cbarcblll died Monday of ( ) a heart attack at the age PEOPLE of92. _ Her grandson , ----------- Wins ton Churchill, a Conservative member of the House of Commons, said the funeral will be prjvate and will be conduct· ed by the Rev. John James, who officiated at Sir Winston's funeral in 1965. Burial will be in the churchyard at St. Martin's Church lo Bladon, near Blenheim Castle, the ancestral home of the ChurchUls. .. Dr. Armand Hammer, chairman of the board of Occident.al Petroleum, received the order of the Aztec Eagle, Mexko's _highest award for foreigners. Hammer, 79, of Los Angeles, ,wa s honore d a s a "dis· linguished foreigner" because he loaned his private art collec· lion for viewing by the Mex.ic&Q public in May and June accord· ing to Uia Buch, official of the foreign ministry protocol office. The award was also given for Hammer's busine8s in,terests in Mexico. Occidental wholly owns Hooker Chemical Co., a firm in Mexico producing in· dustrial chemicals. • More than 300 "Bradley brats" -children de· livered by the natural childbirth method -joined Dr. Bober& A. Bndle7 in celebrating h1s eotb birth· day ln Denver. Bradley, who call• h sell "the gr~d old man of natural childbirth.~ developed the method ln the late 19'05. Since that Ume be bu delivegd more than U ,000 cb!Jdren. A steady parade of well-wishers honored him durJng a seven-hour open house. 1 • Rosalynn Carter showed otr lhe While House Christmas tree and said it bed been decorated wlth more than 2,500 ornaments made by retarded clt1zen1 from all over the country. Circling the 20-foot fir in the White House Blue Room, Mrs. Carter pointed out a peanut chain from Georgia. sea shell or· namentf from Delaware, glitter· • trimmed pine cones from Colorado, mosa bird nests from Texaa and com husk dolls from Indiana. ..,..c;ww She eald the decorations reminded her of Christmases at home ln Plains. Ga., where the Carters cut their own tree and then made decora· tioM for it. * Pope Paul V1 named Cardinal Carlo Co•· falonleri. an 84-year-old Italian-born mem her of the 1 Vatican CUria for many years. as dean of the Sacred College of Cardinali. , The Vatican announced that Cardinal Confalonierl, for many years president of the PonUllcal Commlssion for Latin America, will replace Cardinal Lugl TracUa, who died Nov. 22. • Tbomaa E. Orc*.H, so. bas ,...,._. been named president of Foremost·McKesson Inc. He succ&ech WllUam W. Morllon. 65, who becomes chairman. Drohan, now execuUve vlce president. lakes over the presidency of the wldelJ dlvenltied $2.6 blllion food, chemical and land concern on Jan. 1. Morison served as president slnce mo. * Former Gov-Arcb A. Moore Jr:-of West Virginia says he will seek the U.S. Senate seat held by Sen. leanlnt• Randolph. Randolph, 75, announced that be wtll Seek another 1lx-year term. His Senate term expires in January 1!179. * Jolla J. •1.1et, 17, baa been arr~ed u an adult on chariea of partlcipatJnc In the kJdnaPlns of the YOUDI aon ol a wealthy San Pranclsco Bay area bual· nea1man. • ._ Reiser'• attomey, wnuam Halm ... entered a plea Of llmoeent du.tin' a brl bearln1 before· Judie "lllnMl is1enoa an .Munlelpa.t court at Redwood Clt.)', ~endant 8cG&i' Jotepll nm---. lt, a.tHr are aectised of abduetlq Na.la Let.U.. U, 11 be walked \0 1chool lr0m b1i Burl1ft1amt hoale NM.11. by Brld Andtnon BOOMER t " ()1t11u., ............ -.. /J./; ~~ "I'll bring you anything you want! Just don't lick my face again!" FUNKYWINKERBEAN 00 ALL OF <,lQ()R Ft5H LOOK !JroN 400 A5 1HE GREAT PROVIOEK~ CASEY NO! ™AT L.rm.E 5POifE.D ONE 1H~E lb A HERETIC. RE.BEL ! . '-: MOON MULLINS f GERIATRIX WHOAREYC>V . kl DD I~? IT'S JUSTASWNH BARSTOOL I 'M 5TIL.L Tl?'/ING HS JUST KEE:P.$ TO CONVINC'E GE.Q~E INS ISTING THAT IT IT WOUL.D PO HI/\\ SO D1Dt-11T CO HOWARD MUC~ 600D TO HUGHES ~'/ .JOIN YOUR CRUISE 6001'1 10 MEXtCOJ DENNIS THE MENACE MISS PEACH GORDO ~($,«'/ IMt:'JEJC,Ol.JAilO~ .AC.T- FU MANC#U f JUDGE PARKER TUMBLEWEEDS by Tom Bltluk WHA'T'S Wl\JN6' Wl'Tli '1'00R HORSE, L.oTSA 1.UCI<? SUCH JUNK IN YOUR VARD···WMEN WILL IT L.OOK NEAT --~-6--Jtl-----i AGAIN? by Wm. F. Brown and MIJ tasson · ~~Plll' AOA~~ MY HAPPY ~UIZl DOOLEY'S WORLD -so~ \\MAT 'TUE OU> WISE MAii SU>... '"mOOA I DIFACuaY ~ F.'/EI(( ' sowr~· I OR.SMOCK so Now -rHA"f' vou've. eecoMe A HOSPl-Y-Al-,VOL-<.JNTE!~R OF YOLJR OWr-4 FRee Wfl,..t.., i:::>eAR, WOLJC...P YOO SIGN 'THese FORMS, PL-E!ASe ?- MOTLEY'S CREW ~ r t J J 0 by Gus Arriola by Harold Le Doux PEANUTS lty Charles M. Schulz NOTMIN6! a ~ NOTHING! I NOTHING! .. f • ({ ~ " . .. ' ~ by Roger Bradfield by George Lemont by Templeton and Forman !POST O FIFI CIE ~ • ~ . , . ·'GE) EJ ., .. . '! .. TODAY'S CROSSWORD PVZZLI 1 Slmulaltd 2Unbound 3W1terb0dy 4 ln·ti.twffn 111 .. 1 !SCl1w1 ti Vtrbel UNITED FMture Syndicate TUMdef•""altloi..d: Toltdo 42 All-Star 22 Unrn11ked Ganie'""' 24 Butnot -··· 44 Reln-.now llllXllnt 27 ·····out. 45 a. gr ... Sank t putt ble 1 • 28 Sin 41 Burning 30 Pl11'1 rlftr 48 Doer 31 Stingy 49 En .. rt1ln1Mnt 32 ·-· l>f'O· medium Cetllng 50 Hetti! 33 LIYtl!nen . 91nu1 34 Albtt11 Ind SJ OIHl.Ulde T1a11 52 Pef1lnbUlltor r1ncher1 53 Siu 11t1r 35 Extra ptayer 36 Rural 54 Orttflltnd cro1t0Ytr 1tttltmtnt 36 ·--cell 55 Renown Energy 511 For. othctf's llllktr t1lle • ... t • ., ~:-P:~ ::: .. : .... ~.=:::·:·:·" p.,_ ...... ~.U C'lwllla• •• y, ........ . SERVICES 8tok 1 O.r.-1ory • EMrtOYMENT & mPARATION !<'hoot\ ln•lruct.on JOt."-Aftkft• Hrlo "•rtlf'O )I&. t M£RCHANOIS£ Aur~.­ b~rt.• h .. "4 U•i•tt.•li •ittMr-& ~liHflra..M .... i. ... hHU.lW ......... t ..... Jw. 11 .. ... l"""\.4,~\•~•a ,..,..,,, ...,, .. , ... ........ , .. ...... .u.--. ·~ -. .............. ""'' ...... ... ,... """" .. 1 ... , ...... 111 ) ••• h•fttt ,.,, ... l. \•ll ..... i:.l =:i~c= Ill.II =·~•"-I• 1: \ .11 .......... .... I•• T~t9.s. Htr\.Mfr-M ::::: BOATS & MARINE :~ EQUIPMENT l"ll IQlll ••le '"" 1...U ·-.... 111• UU.t Gt.-.1 ilu•h Ma.M llw-H f' •1.-b,Mar1.fl4' L~11J "°' ..... ~ ... tiu.i.11o k• .. u ... ,.., "'-••• l)al] •·.t. Slljle I~ • &l .. h,,,....46 .• , tk.•U•.~••• TRANSPORTA HON I •fl A•n'T•lt ""' \ en•ptn ,,. .... k<rM •J.0 f ff'tbU C".1 ~~:; ~~:!•.J;':r~ ·V··K~n· '"' \( .... # .. ,,., -<flt" lh ,. I ,, 1, ....... 1 •• H I l9Jl1 Tr111l--n 1 .111 Ill.JI AUto'W'n1o 1 f•n ,, ., AUTOMOBILE ':.'.Ut l..t,...f4• ': lli.#1 Aoh-.i1it• I I ...... k•·•f•·•i1••11 i..1.11 &'> 'J:l,jj ~·tt J ... t j( I z_,.M ~\lt ..... l l>r1u Tn.c&.' : \..-tt .._---.. "'"h1l•J "" ~ ~ AUilO:-i \it. .rnh I , .. , I ..... Ill> "''·"' iii ... ·~ ....,, ...,., AUJOS, IMPORTED ("'""'•I Ail• ftuttwO A11o1h A llA Jh-•lr~ lt\l'A (•It ou-(vi\ lliU1•n ... ,, .. ,, •• ., ....... J .. l,. .. ,, Jtil 111 1r1.. .. ,,lltllll••"'•" 1.a.fl'!Liot&ll•~j .,., . \1 • .. 111 \t1, \hoil ...... ''1f1h' ... I•' I''',,.. 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"'·~ ... , ,_. .. ~,, , .... , !fl10 .,.,, Only the Dally Pilot really tells you what's new in your local community .•• every day DAILY PILOT SEEK & FIND• HOCKEY nrtruc ons; dden words ow 1peeer orwar • bed!· wsd, up, down Of di~ly. Find tech end boic It In. Rtf•~• Blue lines R1ght W1ng ~ Off-S1de lines~en Ice Sk~tes ~ ... Forwards Power Play Goalkeepers ~ Center Body Check Stanley Cup T0110rrow; National Grasslands * DAIL V PILOT 03 •tc11 f:.{l'f1 •tnlol• I 0 The Bluest Marketplace on the Oranc• C~st tlllj)loymtnt &. I t' lut1nn,, ln•"l"'*n1 lo r•IO"t iol S000 SO. 9 DAILY PILOI CLASSIFIED ADS htp0tat1on • 1000 7199 Mt<chond•\t , 8000 I09' lo<it, It Mar WM ~~n<1 fn•"'' 'tr•onol> lt•I & ft11r>d SOSO S.99 Semce> & Rtpom 6000 609'? You Can S~ll It, Find It, ( 642 •5678 ) Trade It. With a Want Ad One Call Service Fast Credit Approval lqt.f Pfl'ltlll 9000 9099 AlllOll\Obllet • ··-f tQlltpOtf atioft .. 9l~"" led &hie HouM1 For·~ HowM1 For S. Hottttt Few S. Houses For Safe' H«MttH P~ S-. Hottt.1 Fe.-s.t ········~·········••t•• ······················~ ..•.•...•.........•........•.........••••••...•...•.•..•...•...........••••••.••...•......•• ·•·•••·•••••·· •••··•·· 1--...-----•ICiGPeet111M-.tf'rolol 1002 c., .. ,.. 1002 GIMNI IOOZ G.....e 1002 Cioe•r.. 1002 Ga .. ,.. • IOOZ ···········~··········· •••••••••• , ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ::: ................ ! •••••••••••••••••••••••• ~-ORSt AdvHff...-. should check their ads daily -~eport .,.. ron h1111wdkttety. The DAILY PILOT GSIUftWI Uablllty for the fint l• cornet IMertion only. P'UbUlher'1 Motice: All reol estale 11dn•rt~<'<I in thui l\C11.i.papcr 11> ~ub Ject lO IJle fo't'<ll'rul fair Hous1 n~ Acl or 19611 whh:h ma kt~s 1t 1llc&al to advertise · an} pre fi:rcnce, 11m1tut111n, or d1:.crlminal1on bai,ed on race, ~or, relil(lon, sex. P849MSULA POIMr 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/cathedrul ceiling. Lge master bdrm. suite."'$224.950 llG CAHYC>t4 4 HH . fam. rm . 3 baths. Beautifully decorated Broadmoor Plan 3, on extra large lot, $325,000 BILL GRUNDY , REALTOR 341 Boy\1dt• 011v~· N P tJl':J 6lt.rl or national aria.ii. or an "!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! mltml.Jon to naake uny -sueh preference, limit&· lJOO. or d1 scn m1nat1on." GtMral 1002G.......e 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• This newspaper will notl•--------•I GREAT RATES AT SOUTHWEST BAMK knowrngly aceept an} advertising for real eslute which is in viola· llonol the law Houses for Safe ....••........•.....••. IOOZ .........•.•....•..•••• 3 UNITS EASTSIDE This \daally locate-<! 1n come property may IX' JU~l what you are looking for One 3 bdrm, :l bath & 111.0 1 bdrm units close to shopping & tram.porla lion 646·7711 DUPLEX Deluxe 1.1nits. aol( course 'lllew. 2 Bedrms eAcb, private, quiet. large l(aruges. Perfect retire· ment home end income CaJI 540-1151 ~HERITAGE REALTORS MARVELOUS MOHACO c..;;ill us about this im maculale one owner. 2 bedroom, convertible den home in Harbor View Homes. The owner's met1cuJous care to every maintenance ---------• need will impress you. i---------•I And the highly com CH........ petJtlve price or $136,500 _...ING fee will please your Older 2 ~rm with b11t pocketbook. Jot. Only $49,500. Low. Call 644 7211 low FHA down payment. • A Great Rate For U1ed Car luyen <The same as for new cars.) As low as 9 95 annual percent1110 rate. A Gnat Roh For Mew C.. luyerl CConvenlent, easy pro- cessiog. l As low as 9.95 annual percentage rate. AGrecrtlate ForHo..OWltWI C"Second Trusl Deed" type equity loans.> I SORRY, MO SALE For your decorator. that is : this beautiful Lusk .. G" Plan is already decorated from plush carpeting to expensive wallpaper. Wail until you see It! There is also a terrific tiled patio. off the living room that ib completely private. 4 Bdrms.'. 3 baths $174,500. Call today! 673·4400 DM•lon of Hart. lft•n"""" Co. GeMral 1002 GtMr .. 1002 • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• YOUR PERSONAL TASTE ... can be easily ~pressed tn this popular Montego Model in Harbor View Homes; it's the best priced home of this model. with 4 bdrms .. family rm. & formal dining rm. It hardly looks lived in it's so clean. Price only $145,000, including land 1 7,59-0811 . ~COATS & WALLACE '::rJ1 REAL ESTATE, INC. A LOCA LlY OWNLO COMl'ANY l\t RVING THl SOUIH COASI ARLn SINCE 1961 PARADISE GAllDEMS -you can profit from-the owner's green thumb in lhis elegantly landscaped home In Eas~blurr Wh y not make an appointment to see this 4 bedrm be~ uty m one of the best residential neighborhoods for only Sl51 ,000. CaM 640-6161. GOOD APPIECIA. TION -now is your opportunity to own real estate at just $58,900 in lovely Mesa Verde. See tbis 2 bedrm Condo in a fine location. CCII 546-4141 • Serving Costa M esa-Irvine Huntington Beach-N cwporl Beach GIPMral I 002 G .. tral I OOZ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• MESA VERDE SPANISH ESTATE 4 IR· S 142.000 BEACH 2 STORY Stunrung 4 bdrm. 3 bath 4 IR.POOL Mei.a Verde pool homl•' $71,900 Truly an oulStandlng en· p 3 r k .1 i k e grounds tertainment home Huge enhance rormal entry 10 llvtng & family rooms.' this elegant home. Frplc 's. Spacious Spacious Uvini room. k.ltchen & family rpom overlook giant sparkling Fiest.a party room over- pool! ExecuUv~ ll•fng at looks lush courtyard • alls Wet bar. Garde& view a re tic price! See il kltchen.SpanJsblUem1r· today. Call 646-7171 t rors & wood dramatical· prev1~. 1 bl .A...a om~ 11111." ~ 1vN ro111 NKt • • Y e ........ to complete mood of The Calilorrua ~-l~lmi ::~:~~r:.~~~ Gl's try no down. Hurry! Must sacrifice. Call 96.1-7881 Call anyt.Jme elm scon REAL TY _ 1 ' •• _ G.....-al I 002 GtMrOa I 002 9 5 percent plus two PTS. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••• •••••••••••• plus$1SO. coRo;.~ELMAR ti:1sa&1 536-7533 -STOP IN OR CALL SOtrnJWEST BANK HIDEAWAY /VIEW L.i~una 's best huy ;it SI l:!,000 :! lk'<1rm 2 baU1, 211.!\t!b . OCliHFROHT Lowest -ptftcd IJPI¥ on sane!. Nwpt AskinA $295,000. Submit trade. 308 E Oceanfront ~-7219; 559-4221 CUSSIFIED HOURS Ativn1""'" m:w plu1·e lht·lf ;,d, hi lt•ll'J>hOOP II Olt a m to ~ 111 µ "' l\londuv thou Frul.n H lo ooon S1tlurdu \ n l!-.IA \1 f'>/\ cw~·w..: .~tn W fl:t, 1'42 ~714 lllY;1;11N<i TO'l lll»AI II 171475 ll.•;wh lll\ll !'>4tl J:i:.!il 1.AGUNA BEACll 11116 C lrnneyrl' Lai:una Buch 494 'l~ SADDl.EBACK 2S20 Lii Pu Road l.u~una Hiiis Sill 1\310 "\OllTll C"Oll;llTV 1ho11lrl>t's.101220 CUSSIFllO OUDLIMES l~adhnc ror cop~ & 11111~ •~ S.:lO p.m lhf' d;,y ht•fon· pubhenlum. PX· lTfll tor Sundav & Mon- 11.1v f:dit1ony ,. htn flc•u!lhnt' 1~ Sl\lurd.t v 1 12 noon CUSSIFtED IEGUUTIOMS FH ROR... Advert1HM1 "'1ould check, lhiifr ad~ d:ulv & r•rort errors lmmt>d1ntely. Tll F. DAILY PILOT a1urumeJ< ha"'hly for lbt firJt tn· <'IWTet't 1nse"lon only; Ci\NCF.Ll.ATIONi: V.'hc-n kilhnii an 11• tie suru ID make a rl'cord bf lht KILL NU~UtER 11ivm )'OU bv your ad taker 88 rt't'tlipl O( .)'Our cancellotlon. Thia kill iunhl'r mU3t hr p~· tcd bv the 11rlvertl~t'r 1n ease of a d1q>ut4', ("ANCF:l.l.ATION OR CORR F.CTION 0 ... NEW Al> tH:FORE RUNNINCI ~ery l!ffon I~ made to kill or cdn"rct • n~w od thul h•f hclcn ordered, but w. aijlvt J!U~n· lt't' to dO Ml Wllll tht' .. hu" appeared In the ~per. • HEW LISTING! OCEANVIEW 1 Steps to oeean, deluxe duplex, 4 & 2 bdrm units Pork 3 cars $189.900' \1ay tradc ror home near the bay• Balboa lay Prop. Realtors * 675-7060 * associated BROKERS-REALTORS 102'• W Bafbn11 ti 11 166 I EL TORO Z.1417 Roek!ield Blvd, 830-3122 Li\UUNA BEACH 800 Glenny re ·197-1771 MISSION VIEJO 28662 Marguerite Pkwy. 495-6600 BALBOA JUBt introduced to the market1 this charmer will make a delightful beach retreat for some lucky ramHy. At only $140,000 how can yoJ go wrong? 646-7711 VATEIMS OHVISH,500 Best buy In the area. Air IACK IA Y conditioner and some Hr. & 'TED POOL other nice xtra 's. Calling ~ us 1s a must .... The dog $81 900 biles! A quick escow and 3 Bedroor:i Newport thi.11 year's be~t Riviera two story. Huge Christmas present 111 dirung ro:om ~r family Y=,/':'!;,"fJJN10at N>tc• robrn. G1e,nt1c patio. I ~~~~*~'.""''. [ f'i1R$1tl1 .P.EALTORSii lrand New Duplex SpaciOOI 3 bedrm, 2 ba, & 2 br, 2 ba, huge med yard, 6 car gar., ocean view & short wulk to beach. Prime San Clemente residential area. ottered at $W,OOO. Submit your terms and HURRY! Call World Wide Brokers, 673-4545. Have something to sell? Class1Cied ads do It well. Wanl Ads Call 642.5678 G•nerol I 002 GeMral I 002 .............................................. TOPAZ ON WATIRftOMT $450,000 A rare jewel property on the comer of South Bayfront. Where can you find two separate homes for enjoyment and income. Both have fres h decor and aN! completely furnished. Quality 3 bdrm home. 2 story, redwood deck and lar"e master bdrm. Separate & c harmmg 2 bdm cottage with fireplace. On:tb.ore mooring avail. Fabulous VIEW of Christm as parade anp ~vlllon. Owner will exchang~ for units in Oran.re ounty up to si.000.000. IESTIUY 3 Bedroom with masSI\ c i.tone fireplace & ex· ponded living room , formal dining room. warm country kitchen. Located on a large lot with RV access Close to shopp1nl!. & Newporl· Mesa Schools.-Priced ot a low $64,900. CALL 556-2660 C::SELECT I PROPERTIES WALkTOTWO IAYNOHTS $298.900 Brick, beams & warmth Beautiful 4 l'.t y r old duplex on Balboa Island. ~pec1ally laruc i & 3 lldrm units Bakonwi. & pal.las - WATIRfRONT HOME.i, REAL ESTATE 631-1400 OCEAN VIEW New-lllXD?'Y 2800 1q. n. hOme, steps from beach FREE Gracious entry, dbl fplc, form•I living rm, w/ ocean view. formal din· $ 0 inf' rm, Cully equlp'd 1 DO kltch w/bre•krast bar & • tile separate serving 1n carpettnr wllh the Island. Lee family rm purcb ase or lara.t 4 adjacent to beautiful Bdrm. 2 ba California landscaped & tiled Ranch atyle home on courtyard. Upstairs quiet tree lined Street. master bdrm w/waJk In Gourmet kitchen, formal closet " pvt btth.. Addi· dining 4l'e« vtews park t1ooal bckmt w/bath & l Uk d with outdoor patio & e goun •· Veterans oHers e n couraged. ocean view. Spacious 2 $72""" car garage w/3rd out· •"""· door parking area. For J.C. Hash IHlton the dlscri mlnate. Full 1 ___ S_4_0._S_l_O_,I __ broker cooperation. Price reduced to $315.000. Open House Sun OVER65? 1_.PM, 2173 Ocean Blvd. Own a bome too valual;>le •• •• • to sell without heavy IA.YCREST EXEC tax? Then why not 11ce POOL HOME complete· one or our trained l counselors for ways to '1 remodeled 3 Br 2 Ba reducelaxes.Nochargel executive home w/decorator patio Confidential! Phone for pool. 2 fplc"s, all new appointment! 675-4961 cpts, cabinets & tit THEc•wso ... co. thruout hou se. ,.., " Pre,Uglous location. Dbl REALTORS gat & home jU11t repaint· 2819Newport Blvd. N.B. ed. M_ust sec to ap--------prec1ate Broker cooperation. Priced BY OWNER $195.000. Open House Sat. 1-4 PM. 1634 Skylark, C.Sfolll Nwpt::. O'Neal 5,0001q ft ~ 1Ac:. Rcmdt Estate 714'·751-6371 St.able, 1eparate maid or 1uest home enclosed ~--------111 Island for aviary or animal enc.k»W'e on ap- COMMERCIAL INVESTOR'S LE.ASE SPECIAi.A PUX -in the heart or Coronn 2 YRS MEW del Mar Approximately H••R ocm• ... 4000 square reel on """' fl;A" ground noor ptu." 2 small $45,000 DOWN apartments. Porkmg for Pnde of ownersb1p uruts up to 30 uulomob1les. M< w1tb fantastic stone Per square root. fireplaces. Enc loud COLE OF HEWr<>RT garages. All beautiful REALTORS spacious units. Owner 67r5511 bought another • must go-sacrifice! Hurry! Man} NEWPORT DUPl.DES Two NEW duplexes from St'1'9.000! Prime Newport Helght.s locatiorui ! Firi;t user depreciation 1s super. F'ast escrow. All 3 bdrm. 2~ bath units. Jog to water. Be.st buys m Newport.PLUS-a peck·a· boo ocean view. Call fw.t 646-7171 additional investment opporlaruties. Call now• 963>7881 0.11~ 1119•" HUN 10111 NICI' ' [tjljlltl TWO~RSOLD '-DUPLEX Close to the beach. Clean 3 & 1 BR, cpt'g, drps. bit.mt. 4 car. etc. $159,900 JACOIS REAL TY Find what you want in 675-6670 Doily Pilot Classifieds. -------- G9Mf'OI I 002 GftMf'GI IOOZ •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• WANT TO IEAU Y ENJOY UFl7 Sail your boat Dn the lake, pedal your bicycle on miles of beautiful . trails. All this plus a lovely 3 bedroom, 2 bath home can be yours in Woodbridge for only S!J2.500. • COLDW8.L IAMlll co. 644-1766 2111 SANJOAQUINHIU.S"O. IN~CENTI!A FAMU.YHOMI IRVINE TEIU\ACE·S bedrma, 4 bathll, Cor~l dlnl.ni rm.. f amlly rm., Ureplace. Entertain arouJad. the 1parklln g pool. Ottered al $2'4,950. Fee.6'4-1270 pro x Im ate 3\.IJ acre ~· Adjacent approx G, .. ,.. I 002 Gener.. t 002 3 acre pa.reel also avail ••••• .. •••···-••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• in whole« part. 7451.P ... a Hih Dr • .AaA clM Shown by appt Celt to quallfied buyers. (714) 521-8430Courtesy LO bk.n, ------~~~~~~~~~~! F1nd what you want 1n r. Dally Pilot Clasalfiede. t 002 G....,... I 002 NEWPORT. IEACH DUPLEXES SHORT STVS TO llACH $175,000 Fu.mlsbed. See Blld hear the surf aod bask ltl the sun or Newport Beach liYing. · Short steps across to the beach. Large 2 Bdrm unlts with patios and balconies oUer excellent rental units for summer/winter rentals. JIWEL OM APOLIMA $Z7S,000t Soarlni 2 Story living room with beams and warmth. Remodeled 3 1>4nn, den. larae dining nn. Help mak the paymertb on this home by rentln& tho charming bachelor unit: ~ Toriific Value! l ., DAit. Y PILOT •.•....•••............• ·•·····•·•·········•••• -...._.,_..S. f•W. ..._...._..Wt Howte1For'We ~IHch 1011 e..teMHe IOJ4 ..._..Few~ r tt.NtfwSale Houl•t'°"S.-~· .. •••••••••••••••••• ...................................................................... ·••••••·•···••••••••·•• •••••••••••.....•...... ·········•••tt••······· ••••••···•············· ·······~·········· !•••• IOOJG...,el t002 Gwr.. 1002 .......... • 1002 OCEAN VJEW 2 b1r. frpl, C....Mete 1024 ............. IOIZ Le9M IOSZ •• •••••• • • • •••• ••. •••• •• .. • • • ••• • • ••••••• •• •• • •, • • • • •••• • ••. •••••. •. • • •• • •. • • •••• •• ••• •.... q u t e t a l . C 1 t o _,SIDI •••••• •• • •• • •• • • • •• • • ••• •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ••• •• •• •• • ••••• ••• •••• ®herbert hawk ins Rtl\LTORS 9UllT CUL-DI-SAC Ut,t.00 3 bedrooms. H·4 baths. close to •ll schools, patfo w/c'edwr decking,· dishwasher. near new hot water heater '~ block to beach CHllSTMAS IOMUS S 107,000 Spend your Christm<J::, m this lovely 2 s tory, 4 bedrooms. 2a~ bath in beauliful Anaheim Hills. Wet bar, auto energy time saver. air purifier for asthmatics. Many extras. Decorate to your heart's content. Separate dining room, large family room. IY nE SU U7,t00 Walking di s tan ce to beach, community pool, J bedroom, H2 bath, condo. Lender will finance to investors. 11055 MOIJllolia St. Fot.ttoin valley 963.alt 1 VISTA CHRISTMAS PRESENTS Beautiful land is available to you from a ll level to a knoll with a 360 degree view. All plantable. Call us for prices & locallons. WE ALSO HA VI 2, J, & 4 hdroom HOMet, with or without acreugt• What price range do you pref er'? A sura DUPUX IS ALSO AV A.IL. 1 Side has 3 Bdrms & 212 baths. Approx. 1638 SQ . Ct. of living space. The other unit has approx. 1400 sq. ft with 3 Bdrms & 2 Baths. These unit$ are close into VISTA. apd about 12 minutes driving Ume to beacb. Super s harp! Great tor the two family situation or as rentals. Sl30,000. OR A COZY 2 IR HOME W /St:WCE ROOF and a charming little _guest house. Strictly prldc of ownership. S85.000. URBAN SUBURBAN REALTY 17141 727-4200 or (7 I 41 727·0520 bt!ach schl, Rm rorboal. COSTA Ml1A RV. et1: $85.000. Prm on •7• OOO •Y OWta h 493-5472 • 6 • <>PenSit!.J•S · 3 Bedrm, hu1e lot. Qiper dean a br, 2 b•. Corona del Mar I 022 Complete wlth hardwood f m. rm .... q~ul-d~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• noot, dbl 11r, tOvered llC. Nr 20t)l fr lrvint. HOUSE A LOME paUo &i quiet street. Out Drtvo by ~ 'A!i.o as worth lh1s price. Bul oC state owner n~ Im· call 5' 8 ... ;1.\9 T o you can live near the medi•te •alt. Siq>er blA)'· <!U>OMaot beach in Corona del Mar hurl')'! Call 54f.5880 & have tenants help pay ... $175,000. NORIMS REALTY * 494-8057 * $13,450 DOWM COROMA DR MAR -J.~ HERITAGE . • REALlORS WHTSIDI IARGAIM RUS!flC CHARM OH BLUFF $74,900 ONE OF A KfNO! Heavy wooden. opell bl!umed ceillna l'll&hllghte this custom home. Complete Lingo Rul&JATt .. IAST HIME CONDOMIMIUM · . -Saaur wl -" wtttu tolf cw .ttw. TM• ...... ~*""'-two b.et. leww IM 1111U f••tn11 11ew cer,ttl•t• elr c...-dtt1011ilgo Wtt• applmeces _.. .. , telf-C~ OHtl -.I rtfrl91f .... • ....., ..... llvt.J wett. pool ... 8IMI fecall . ... sts.boo. 491-1720 2 BR. 1 BA home on R·2 lot Li ve in front unit while building 2nd unit on rear of lot. Ouutand· 1ng Investment. Only Sl34,500. CALL 955-0350 Th11 3 bdrm "Sun1hlne" home on " t•orn•r is pnced tom your bQdaet. This Is a 1reat alarter home. Investors al110 :.hould check thl1 xlnt rental baraaln at only 167,000. Call now on Uus one. 545-9491 ~ Walkl!r 1: I tm with 3 larte bedrma. 2 Ml b-lhs. and oversized DANA llvln1 rm. 8500 1q.f\. POINT estate size k>C.. 1.oned R-4. .se.1&12 SOUTH LAGUNA 49M.$51 .LAGUNA BEACH 417-a.at ttl ,,, .. , ollf I'"•'' 'J• 641 •'••I 'I ' •'' BfTERT AIHMIMT CENTER ... Spacious 2 + fam-rm. in pnvale Irvine Terrace. :\Jany custom features. NOW VACANT for Im· !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!B!!l!!!IB!! medi•le-occupancy and Real FAit.ate priced for fest Hie! lrriM 1044....,... 1044 1;~-; ... ~~ ... ~;,..-1;•; ... ; .. ;; .... ;;;;1 H~~'::'=1 ·lic:;u;r·~wi· ~·;~;············ East.side Costa Meaa. S·2 A beautiful Melbourne "Pl..-Hol.)daV&I. bed.rm homes " room for 1 nc ~ 1 ~ more units.~· 4eep IQt. Fm.tat• Valley I 034 near lhe park and ~nnls 2 St-0ry home tn "The Hurry-lots or potential ••••••••••••••••••••••• courta. Nicely upgraded Ranch" area or fine here! CallS4&-5880. 1--------•I lhrou&hout. It has cen· homes. Mother·ln·law 4<¥;> HERITAGE l{ulJ pri ce $161,000. EXTRA NICE 644·9S13 4 B e d r m , 2 ~~ . • RlALTORS ~r:,lNa~rR ~ndA kh~ quarters. 4 bedrms. MOTIVATED Asking formal dining,den,brick fireplace. Extra baths, $98,500 $00,900. BKI\, 540·1720. Costa Meta 10241--------•I baths.·Meadow home. ml!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~!!!!!!~~!!!!!!!!!!!!~~!!!!!!!!~~ • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Sur r o u n de d by n e w ;;;; DUPLU MPT HTS A. TTIMTIOM homes. Walk to schools. ~~~~••••••••••!?.~~!:.~~~! .......... ~?.~~ !:~~~! .......... !?!~ 1 :.~~!'! .......... !?!~ Su~~ !ri'd~~~:!~~h1p Lvly 3 ~~:~)'rm 2 liaUUitolil' ·~·eeil • .,.· 'liiil·lilil~~~ :.! BR. 1 BA units w nl'w 1t.ory home w/lrml dln 982~11 f:I: 546·8103 TARDEU. "#I ht CaMfwMe" 1-:SLEY N ~YLOR CO. HEJ\ LTOH.S !->i 111 ·1· l ~t4n IA YFltOHT A.rT -FOil LEASE Lovely 3 bdrm 2 bath triplex apartment for lease. Plush cptng, lge rms. Terrific bay view & on sandy beach. Close-in toe. Walk to s hops. S750 mo. WESLEY H. TAYLOR CO., REALTORS 2 I I t San Joaquin Hiib Rood NEWPORT CEHTU. M.I . 644-4910 100 G....,-al 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••• FINANCING A PROBLEM? ......•................ TWO&AVIEW Spac1ou' 2 story w1lh panoram11· view from the upper le\•el Luxurious tile entry. plush carpet· ing & central air condi· t1orung are only a few ot the realures or this fine J IDRM IM OLD CDM Light + airy and cheerful is this 3 bed room, 2 bath home on one of your favorite s treets in Old Corona Del Mar. Just walk down the tree lined a venue lo shops. restaurants and ser vices. Then back home to fancy flooring and roomy comfort. Proudly presented <Jt Sl38,SOO. UNl()UI: ti()Ml:i REAL TORS'. 675·6000 2443 East Coast Highway, Corona del Mar dlso rn Mesa Verde. a1 546 5990 We have properties where the ownt>r 's h<tVl' agreed lo helµ work out rmancing •LAGUNA BEACH <VIEW> •NEWPORT IEACH <llARBOR VIEW> home. Pnced for a very ....................................... .. c1u1ck 'lale at S69,500. <.;ALL 751·3i91 ~SELECT shake roof. In great loca· rm Right on golf course.1 ________ _ uon.only$i39,500. AHOl'ds eraclous enter·--------R.a.ucH .,., ... Ln C .6'LL 955 "350 tainlng In l&e fmly rm &1--------• """ ---"" kitchen w/futa.tic view TltutOM 551-2000 & open reelina. Phone to· ALL TIRMS UNIVERSITY p ARK Ox· U t ''''t r1u llt'./'1•r,rJ• Ml l\L-T(HI'• I t .n LI JPt It•, day to lnspect. S4S·IM9l Unusual Ond In a sharp ford. 3 Br, 2~ Ba. bonus Balboa model with 2\.'J rm. 2200 aqf't. New cpta, baths. 3 tee bedrm•. drps, steps from mej. ~ Walker t; lee MESA VERDE Real Eetale ~ac. P•tlo, dbl f.ar .. greenbelt~ pool. Owner. Priced to sell-chol<'e ---------1 A.FHA or convent onal Avail lmmed. $112,000. location. Jpprox. S blks ENJOY THE te~~::.1:~:>.963-039l 1_552_-8587_. ______ 1 from Counlry Club. 3 + HOLIDAYS W111 Metworta l.>en Needs some T.L C.. au THIS but priced at $18,450. One " ) r. buyers protecllon gorgeous 4 BR home warranty. Call Jerry S. Profesa1ionally decorat· Hulltf1MJ10ttleoch I 040 G11lespie. e\'s ~2·1S631. ed, beaut. park-like ••••••••••••••••••••••• yard. Vacant It ready to · GIUEC'.•IE rpove·ln rasl! 4 BR, frplc. very clean _. 54"3666 $7t,79S. Approx USO sq fl. REALTORS ve Owner out of state. 96J.lt l I eec) .. U'4. WA.MTED Hi ve bu ye r fo r Sycamore Plan on cul de 1ac <Woodbridg e Creekside> Wrile P.O. Box 3001. N.8 . 92863. Agent. UNIV.PARK Deane Home. Jbr, :.!~ba, Fix .. uppaa1 din r m , r a m r m • EASTS l 0 E C 0 N D 0 · ~ ""· $142,000/trade. 673..8437 Wftela11 RCAI f~T/\Tl Beaut decrl'd 2 Br, l'• 3 Bdrm. 2 Ba~5.000 ------ Ba, w/pool, rec (m & Ukc new. by owner. 438 Close to Golden West lndry fac. Won't l;ist. Princeton. 4Br. 2ba, College & shopping cen-LEISUR! TIME? $69 000 W p 11 R I 29 f ters. Open Sun 1·5 . . m. owe ea pool. $89,900. 642·37 al SO CALIFORNIA RLTY This frieodly 2 BR. 2 BA f':-.tate. ask for Carrie s. home widen & elrium -1!!7-1751. 546-56()5 will od all --------New Condos. 2 Br. 2v. Ba, 1 · 11 rri~':°~ar%r e~~eU:. F·1x & Save$$$ 2 frplc'1, ceramic tile S&S Resa ~ ... Spec1aodat1. talning or just plain llv· . ,, . ' k1tchen1 " beth. PQOI & 3,4 or 5 ..,rm ~ els Use your imagination. apa. 675-4912 Broker avail, 1ome w /pool1. Ing. Adjacent to swim & With paint. carpet and -..o:t tennis club site. $98,900. some fixin' you can turn NICI IS llGHT Pennington Properties VAWY 640.9900 METICULOUS That lS lhe word for the maintenence of &his beautiful Deerrl1ld 3 bedroom Alf:n. One of I r vl n e's artest 3 bed r o o O?.~ mode 11. SHARP Al'ID CLEAN. Now $98,900. RAMCH II.ALTY 551-:2000 UNIVERSITY PARK A beautiful Fordham completely redone. New carpets. paint, water heater, etc. Also a coay nreplace In the masl1r bedroom. Read)' for you to move mlo NOW! I PROPERTIES ~ Lh1s large 4 bedrm. Cami· Pvt part)'. mull HU one --1 Y ho me • n t o a or two properties on 5.a.1 • IY OMIURB t~ r showplace. B1& family flower St In East C.M. i -""...,. R2Q\ Es Q room pool i.ize back d 1 1 / 3 Br, l~ ba Condo. Liv - Mariftt bat &tat• 640-5357 rRIVA.CY You ·11 enJoy the serenity of this Bluffs t.ownhome. Best dollar value in lh1s prestige neighborhood. J Bdrms . 21·1 baths, o wide greenbelt. Move-in l'Ond. O wne WESTCLIFF tran&terred. Not leas Secluded front patio land. Sl3S,000 lo\'ely mature tree's. C f C I h leads lo this delightful 3 • • 0 eswort v bcdrm, :.! bath home. REALTORS 640.0oii Large country kitchen ---------i wtfplc . Well planned for expansion & room for pool or garnges with al ley access, SH4.900. PETE BARRETT -REALTY- .&U·SltO COU.IGEP.UK 3 Bdrm home. Open most EASTS I DE CHARMER Fantastic home near Golf Course? Large lot! New carpelll It paint! Low down ' Call Red Carpel. 754. i202 aflemoons & on Sat & Peoph: who need People Sun 10·3 204 Wake That's what the Forest Rd $77.SOO. By DAILY PILOT ownrt agt. 7519999 SERVICE DIRECTORY --------•I tS all about! G.Mral 1002 G~rol 1002 .............................................. Burr White Realtor :?901 Newoort Blvd.--------- Newpo1 t Beach, CA 92663 ~AEkl3AH£ Amuse family, fTltftds willl tllest my nowltlts. PrtetiCll! eo..t extrl roll of pa)ef witll clown ~y; tlOo chet """· cat • bullny CG"· .,. .. .., tKIMb. Ult WOf· ated. kl.at Mlltn! Pettetn 7284: d1rectiw lot all four. Sl.21 fOt uch patt11n. Add 35' eadi patt.11 fot f1rst~u 11r1T11tl and Mndhftl. 5-14 tr. Alia ..... NHdfecreft Dept. 10s Racy Lines! yard.' 3 car garage. & ~::i~ 87~~s:J2 ol w 2 rm, d in rm & inalde · much more!! This won't laund rm. Upgraded. No SIX llA.MCHllALTI'. 551-2000 l~t ! Call now &aS-0303. R 2 c o m m o n w a l l . ROOM TO IUILD ~.~ 'Phk ~L.:.M ~'o MOONLTDHS FORESTE OLSON •IVC. I"•• r 1 'Jir:•~ Recently remodeled 2 AGTS. bedroom home on R·2 •-------•I Prescott Model ln Wood-WOULD YOU LC191M leoch I 041 ••••••••••••••••••••••• lot! Great income polen· FOR SALE: San Miguel-bridge Place. s Bdrms .. 3 COMSIDll ! •·~---. Oal.S87.500. seacoest-atmotphere 2 ba., ram. rm., highly UP· llvtnr 1 block to the ~esa Verde Golf Club story home. Hlah brick & graded; on veey I.Irie beach, with 2 Bdrma .• 2 s Br. rantasll~ view. ~1£. 1Quall l wr_oughtlronfenclngfor extrulze lot.Oreatloca-baths1 privacy, nice Acre S295,000, Shown by Place pnvacy. Billiard r.m . lion. PLUS, membership neighoors & flexible appt. only. 1790 Panay p _..... family rm w/mas~ive In SWIM CLUB. terms? Would you COit~ Car rap....-.,.. . fplc, glua form . dine. sider our 0 -Y-O for · Agt. 540·0608 i4oo ~53,·~:=o., HACH Custom pool, laced in $85.500. brick w/deck. Prime '' HORIMS REALTY MesaVerde4-5Br.2Ylba. HANDYMAN'S beach area. yacant and 4,t~L---•494-1057• 2 story. Sale or trade. for A eaay toaee. 8kl'S36·9311; Ji,.-_.""l_I,~ Eastside home w/ R2 zon· DRr. .&M HOME Hwat"• ~.... 'I-)' Unfim•sll..-~ ing. Agt. 831-1257 '"" • ..:;:r l "•2 ~:'1Pflll~I "'"' ..;...;.:::..--=-------! Fantutlc opportunity HcrualW -833·8600 A!!fu 4 tor the handyman 1eek· •••••••••••••··~··••••• Business in& a Iara• worklhop at OCEANFRONT That's the theme on tAJs Save! ~~~' :1:.catefi:[.~! Sunset Beech •51~C.U.PUs~IR\'lltl older custom home. GreatEa&tsldeloeatlon, for mechanic, wood 2bomea,2 lota.Bkr/Aat ~ftzJGi~~C~f extra large lot. fq~lt worker. eleclrlclan, or 846-5686 1--M•O•M-'S•H-o•u•5•1-•I It has been ~ • ts ~~~~r~~·j~: ??? Belter hufr11 Call ATDAD'SNICE · :~~GVtff~~~ Ing, living room~. SIAGATI Sycemort model in RENOVATE!>~ fireplace. Trailer park· OE;EPWATER TNHSE Creek1lde developaumt .,. .. ODEL.....,. S 1 I $79 500 BKR II Lowest f:rlce weterfront o( WoodbrJd1e. Sue•r ft.,,.., c.u. praw . ng, · · · ca l ...... 10 l99 500 Call to ln1 3 BDRM. J'LOOll 540-1720. ; a ... ..., • · • JocaUon of this 4 BR. 'R, PLAN. dinlns area, bllt.. day. DR makes the price of I h a C TARllU. PURCELLREALTY s11111.,-m-•de1lr1ble. In k le tn le ~R. ••~-'-141·2848 ...,._ .,... GARAGE. Spaclou. Uv. ~ESA VERDE ' Br + rm. has MASONRY ''#I ••c~ifontl•.o• Fem Rm. lmmed OCCP)'. ........ 1044 ~1r:P~\Cifp =~~ ---------t by owner. $84,500. Alk THRUOUT o t 1 tor Bob, 752-8258 ••••• .... •••••••••••••• • """ •U •e Don't five up the shipl1--------4 •IUTPAMILY ·~~~~~~~~me of GLASS WALLS "List' it 1n cla .. med. SP ... Rl(Ulli..l'MIW HOMI 1.; THAT AFFORD A Ship to shore resulta! ""' " " SCENIC OCEAN VJl:W. 842-5678. BUYERB CHOICE OF WOODBRIDGE Cootrad.or ls WQl'l&fPtQ --------t COLORS-now under Vacant• roady1 3 Bil. 2 CROSSING areawarralntarouQttlbe con11truction-thh BA. TUrtlt Rocuc Broad· The Vfllase of Wood· nlace.'Concrete ll befnc Sl 62 DAY custom 3 bedroom, 2 moor. Larte pool·H lot, bridge. The best of both r.CON'CRETED'', etc., • Dir bath home wtth ftreplece country atmo1pbere. worldl. Architecturally etc. When all of thla Thal's alfYou P•Y Cor "fenced yard ls In lovely $114-* unique !&3 bdrm at· • • 8 us IN E 8 s ls a30d!l)'adlnthe Eutsidearea. l!lli" 6jMW taohed as detached re· FlNISl:IED'', Jft can DAILY PILOT ~1 tldencu from S96,990. move rt"1t ln. roroar1 SEAYICE 'l!!H •--~1....;.16....;.1 ----1 Sl27,SOOMMu DIRECTORY • Woodbl1dse 2 Br + den, 2 MISSION UM.TY DO IT"'OW! b a:..; Br oad m 1o ko r 118$$. Cat.H•Y, Lasuna ,.. $ w/a,.num, cor nr a e, ....___., .... 711 642-5'71 71 •tt20 158,500 pools. & \ennls. Sl07,000.1--""-._---:-_..,... __ _ --------"'1 M01euM1t. tuo. Deane home-Univ. 551-G685 fMVISTMBn' .. Park .. ltentlnatoa" mdl --------0 PORTU"'IT w/pool, Jacunl " etr'. UNIV. Park Vlll•ae Ill, .. P n Y: • Otlm pool deC?klns. 22IO aaoo lq f\ detached home ~W\11 ~=of aq. ft. Mlnl-bUnda b\.tmloc. • bt hlthl1up-..J:. ., para; ni': thruout. Comlnt Coot· Jraded thruout. ta. ~d. cond. mo.ooo top ltove. haah •trlultl, '134.9()0. Ownr '5l...a2 auto. 1priokler• • lit.et. ~att~'J~pm~--......::.....~txflr Ont/Af.MMM& 1 1try lbr, 2ba Broad· ,.. .6'•Dtmm. moor. Corner, uro'* ..,,...... rr trompark. Lndlp'd, auto OMGAllMl&T aprttlra, drp1, crp\1.1.;....:.;;..;;......~~-----• '100,000. OWnr. 5al-G()f1 WOOD•IMI PRESCO'l'l' i.st Woodbrl~tMm .. a Bib1n or • +dea. Overahed ot. f~ll lndlepd. ldeel fot . All upsrded. Mu cen pavtn Ult. A/C. Liv, dln :p;-·'1EHI•• nne. J bath. J C.r aar. Nr park. Welk to lake. tiH.000. Brkr/Ownr NM111or ma --- otWINt..... ....._u.ti.,• bd Ho 11t1 Uaf• hiec' w.dnelday, Oecemt1et1•.1m * DAILY PILOT D .. ···~·······~~·········· ....................... ••••••••••••••••••••••• c __ • ....._ ........___ •• t..allt-........... ......_,..,. t 2000 C.W .. M.-lJ22 .....,...._ ... _. J240 H1•nU.fu • tul U.fwR11h d ,. 'rti1 .. ' ........... ............ ~........ • ............ ;.! ........................................................................................................................ ~. ---·-·······-········ ·············-······· ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ba i .___... 3169 ..... ......,,.. ..... l76f .......... ·1010 Mmwpoti .._. 106' ~r.11-• NIWUmMG Bay •lew a Br 2 • aar, 3 BR, 2 BA, pool. eoeed _...... CrnllttllilO 3271 ...................... . --·············· -····················· 'Y1P'""' 1100 _.. 14 uwrrs newer duplex OD park. yard, a car 1ar., cloee to .............. ·-······ .... ..,. ________ ... vn "" A l 111/-• .,.,,. "~~ """' hJ ._ b ,_,,, • ._.••••••••••••••••••••" -. Br •·e Fam Km 69 T ..... _ 1 1 B .... v .... -· .,......,......, ac I • 1 ii-. _,mo. FANTASTIC Npt Terr ,.__ b k ... • LIASl/OPT10M ... ....,.....,..... ••••• to1i.-, .our r ..... per J.at"laat.87M5'5. coado. 3 br. 2 bl. rec 3br, 2b8, ,....,. rm. ac • ~·~"l' ~~i/b°d~! NEWPORT HEIGHTS. ·-l~. 1 BR. adult, bey al m .aoo pcir unit. Newly remodeled 3 br, 2 area11 w1b/dry BBQ yr;!. teMll, DOpe.\a. $335 B · w/c.aUiednl c~ AU UP· John S.. aJt, Ste-2020. mlU ptl prk. $12,000. WiJl1oqwck1 Cali: ba, S. of Hwy. $650/mo. 3 Br t.ownbolM, 2 ''°. ey, frpl j 460 mo . .;54.1202 m!,482-6171 ~e .,.. .... ,..., •. prot lndscpd .. Quall P1-Pro,P. . _bl••·~. aJt • .tpm Days 536-0343, Eves & frplc, bltna, crpta, d.rp9, Marcel •it ~ 32t0 ..... .,.. • ~ .::i. 1 ~ wlmds67S.'1931 pool, pvt paUot, x.lnt loc. ' ' "' ..... tlno»••lly tou , ""!!~ 8 Mon. Owoe< occ•plecl aance U YI OM " ..... -........... . lot Oirntr 7-.5181 S. ot UWy, 3 Br 2 S. $625 new Good tenant.a ootv ! 4 ao a~ ba c:~ HWly BIG' . . WATr!JU'RONT APT. leMlll ~ " mo. Beaut manicured sm:mo.8ll444S " THIGOLPC:OUlSll ~·ct. lrpl, pool, p&U,o. Towohome 8Br,dl.nrm, 1.Jdo area. l DR, l BA, SwiMta ~aps.~--· hme,blk\Oahocll,parka, Ba1<:any00Townbome,2 $400.831.a741 liv, rm, Zba. 1600 sq fl pool, boat 1llp prvl'ii· .t.aoW&r...WC.Wo ~o 845·9181 bc:b. lawn rnalnt. incld. BUte to.bch lrom t.hla lge br. 2 bl $700 per mo. sN'<'='= ,_ 1 . • $75,000. 551-1234 Total leC. bldg. Fee land. fJ.ewa. YQU' own pvt bch. Ownr. 5'8-1732 1WCW')' twnbm W/Ylew ol MO-Sn• w_,_...... ~• • • -wa-.a . I 052 $87.~ ~d5 & ~ welcome or Jltes at Qite, warm frplc, •••1•.................. · --rm-._,... 6~1 "740 a.t111t1 onl1 )Where )'OU TAX SH~ 3 BR, 2 ba., beamed cell, jacun1. pool, dbl aar. 4 br, a ba, fam rm, 8200 AJmc.toew,4bedrm,2ba GREAT RECREATION· ••••••••••••••••••••••• ., ... ,.;;"'c~ever. a or a BR. -MIWl&.M den,lrpl.$525 Avtjl now. $49~ mo. aq.ft.1'44Santiago, N.B. w/tple, DW 4' epta. Swimming, saunas. i ,RIV •cv1. F~--11~/J< ~ES, Musl see to believe. ··-• I • "·k· 4 Bil, 2~ ba., lge. yard. 213-92&-2890 $1000mo. A.gent, 5'1·5032 p r e s t i I l o u a health clubs, bllliardi.. " ltlllOJ \!:J ~~·~!' FW1941 8 wutl, IQ,Pef. oc. "'° S6SO I hborbood U7S b Foothill patio home. :? -1$IO.OMo.l...tal in&$350,000. 2 BR apt. Cathedral cell, DELUXE, new 3 br, 2th SEAVIEW 3Br, 2~ ba, ~Agent oofee. • niabt·Jl& ted lennu, Btdroom1, totally 1m , brigbt•air)'."95 ba. xt.ra la. dbl aar.1 blk lam rm, Ocean vu, • • courts. Pro & pro sbop. maeutate; aurrounded NEWPORT COST4Ml$A f@ . --'-I SEA LION REALTY to bch. Encl'd yard. $S2S pool/tennis. Security. $42S lie. s Br, l~ ba. din &oil driv1na ra~e. party by, &reenbelt, localed un TOW ..... HOME 1977 SlryJloe 1 BR. 1 Ba. WESJSIDElU&JY 873-5354 •97-3388 mo. 86N20eor"8-2331 $89$/mo. (Zl.3)43()..3829 rm. ll Uv rm w/frpk. room. comer of quiet cul-de n pjusbpat.l'oporchfortb!Jl u e -W Gardener. Children OK. FUN ACTIVITIES . sac Priced to sell al $Sl,SOO spedal coople or per$OO "·"'"' • 2 Br bae, S. or Hwy, walk Really neat, 2 br, l ba, HARB 0 R V 1 E RedCptRltra96ll-78S5 Fulllime dtrector. fret• $75,900 C66) who ~oys l~Ur')' Love· to beach, nice patio. ms. DW. cpts, kids/pet OK MONACO with p~avate Sunday brunch, BBQ'i. Superbly arranged & ly Joe. 'Swtmmtnc pool, Callbef9A.M,oralt6PM. $3!50.983-4567Alt1oofee. courtyard, beaulifully 3 Br 2 Ba, fplc. pro trips, partle11, sport proven 2 atory fl~ plan etc. $18,900, NH817. UNIQUE N~ c1;, m 67s-.c907 taodacaped. UpNaded lndacpd. pvt pat.to, USO. tournamenlft & more! in popular area. Top CAIJFOl\.NIAPACJFIC LUXUB Cute,2bedroombome,re-thruoul. Avella e for Incl 1rdnr. Jo Kelly, BEAUTIFULAPTS· value tor the money, Call Mobile Some Realty COMPLEX 3 Br bowse, crpts, drps, ally sharp. avallable sale, lse/opt or rent at M6-l31l &M-1985 · today,645·7221. 2'106Harbor,S\.e208 Strool O.C. Joe. Uncur-fireplace. UOO. mo. now. Call Mack at $625/mo. Owner/ A&t , Singles. 1&2 bedroom~ 53().59BT renUy r~ted. $6.24,000. 6404l208 962-7788.$350/mQDtb. 75-0619 Cadow. 11•1 rum. It unlurn. Model!>. CENTURY 21 Owner. Ul-'7204 or --IMfwllllhlcl 342 opendallyl0to7. Room WestcNff R....._. Costa Mfto.Mwpt ldl 495-SJOIJ VERY Cozy 2 sty 3 br + 2 br w/1ar. $260. '?~·. Weetcliff Shopping area. ...................... mate service avail. :\o Ml••Vlefo 1067 .. _., DOUBLEWlb E den homo. Sm. yard, Water pd. 2710 A 28r, 2ba, frplc, paUo. LANDMARK Matnolia lease required. Sorr}. ••••••••••••••••••••••• DOVERVJLLAGEadll LUXURY!\O.)'IE frpl.&U.Molomo.S$76. Delaware. 836·4120 pool. $425/mo. Call Atlant.aHB.Adultaonl,y aduluonly,nopela. twnhse.2br,2~ba.frpl. Lovely 2 BR & bat&. ZHOUS~ 7S1HSall6PM . l-5pm. 64Ul84or7D-'1799 over 40. Million $ re OAkwood HILLTOP VIEW Ownr. $85.500. 645-6081 adulH>et park. Gorgeous ~r ~~ c~al:ed~~~ 2Br1 Ba, LR, fplc, comer S700 a br Coodo. Cls to facll. Security, all applle Garden A p&rtmenb Magnitfcent 3 br home. SEA VllW comer lot with beautiful s10·000, Two spaclou,., 3 bouse.$395. Two story, 3 BR, l~ BA Fashion leland. Short -.136hves. "".,........,....,. upgradedthruout, lncl'g. New upgraded, Bar landscapin,. Very Bch-m .house1. Frplc's, 644-7220&549-8755 condominium. Fully termonly. 7»-0067 2br. Pool, encl0ted gar 880Irv1ne talllthl cntrl llU'. Priced $5,000 private porch & patio beamedcelllna•&mocet carpeted & draped. Fl .... IRHOME Child. OK. Garde ... ~~1.r_ ...... below mkt. $109,900. Harbor, best view, room with pllllty of O.wen; .... Mod ll vt "" C l "·-...-· _ _.. for pool $25,000 less than roses. climbers, bum· Subm&toller. Costa Men 3224 em app ances, P ' BIG CANYON Absolute-Grove. $300 mo. a 1700 16th St ~'?~5t~·~7800~~a~gt~·~~~~~I m1trket at $250,000. mingb'""' feed .. n, etc. ••••••••••••••••••••••• yard. Washer/dryer ly smasbla1' Au•usta &18-1188, Tim Moran <Dover ut 16th\ uiv .-~ 11111 b1"1 boot.up. Pool ft Rec. rm. "' r 70 644-4597 PLUS awlmming pool, ~~ SPECIAL Chi 1 d re n 11 P et 8 Plan. A maat.erpleee o. l>Yplexet u..funa 360 642·81 3 Br 2 Ba, carpet, drps, S-Clemtnte 1076 jacuzzi, s.huffle brd, 5 Br 3 Ba home on golf 1 s350/mo dramaticdesi111wltbun •h•••••••••••••••••••.i~~~~~~~~~ patio, ~nd:.cpd, fncd, ••••••••••••••••••••••• social activities galore. (n41 IU-tlll course. Opt avllll. 12/LS. ~:.~.0S:!: Call TOBIN surpu 1 s 3 edBgRolf &coX!!e 3 Br duplex, pvt yard ::~·ipw. S47·~ or OWMHOFFBlS Only $21,900. Llc. $89Smo.640-2981 p R 0 p E R T y ;.;:;M th • · patio, dbl gar. bltna, 2 BR w/patlo, steps t M.wpOrtle h 1971REHT HD9~:roiaPaoific MESAVERDE4-PLEX 3brcottage,pool.jacusn, MANAGEMENT , HASTIMGS&CO. child0K.MS-1758CM ~~Inter or }rl .. ••••••••••••~••••!?.~! GUARAKT'HPLAM MoblleHomeRi~ty Immaculate at $167.000. d.ishwasher,adultsonly. 846-1311.Nofeetot.enant. R!ALTOltS 64o.1560 .a. 1 ... ,..... ..... -------- tiO f'l. bay front, 4 BB, den, 7. Pie>. nr bcb $349.000. 1106 Harbor, Sui .e 208 Agt Prtn only 642-8550 MS-3498 j!~.:'!~:: ............ San 0.-wte 377 6 pier, on Peninsula. 6· Plcx nr bch $255,000. • • 540-5937 Lots for W. 2200 New Brookview Condo. 3 Hunll WA TIR VIEW .._ ,.._.. 3706 ..................... .. \tarsball Rily 675-4600 Tc~:f~o<'J~~~r$~!1:~· AcNogefor .. 1200 .. ••••••••••••••••••••• Br, 2drpsi.. Ba.11 au, cond. H~~ 3242 ~bome located in the .............. .,. ....... 2br. util pd. S2'70 mo. Jim ....................... CHOICEVJEWLOT c::· Pvt'aumato~· ••••••••••••••••••••••• Coves.2 BR,2~baths.2Deluxe,cbeery2Br,q~!et 498·1000, ext 518, •II IARGAIH J; AMCHORAGI FIVE A. CRES Ne 111 e Gell R 8 0 c b p 1· Jac.:il. 0No e pets' Walk to Shops·3Br. 2~Ba, Prtv. patios. Upgraded adlta only. No pfts. "fl5· ..!8'0149 art 6 --IMVISTMIMTS loaded with oak trees in Change in plans force• ~· o Nr S CoaBt pool jacuui $500 mo. appll's. Security, pool & 6'13-43N •DELUXE 'HUMTERS C7141 496-7711 the Cleveland N at'I t.be sale ol 0~ •65 acre: Plaza~ · Ask' for Mary Ellen jacunl. 6 Mo. lease, BACH. Full kitchen, utll OCEANFRONT• Sparii.line Newport ======~==I Forest.,So.ofOra.naeCo. tulltopequestriaulot.8S · IWO·l789or846-l31laat. owner wlll conaider pd. Very Clean. Xlnt 20r.view,sundeck,$.ioo Bei\~h pool home· 3 Municipal water, aenue x lOS .. level area. P~n KIDS(Pm OK tonger. $1500/mo. loca. $200mo. 173-3175 498..a799: 492.5300 Bdrm, fam rm & din. IMVESTMEHT rollin& knolls, beauUful only. Aalting $99,500. h E/Slde2Br.ear.$34.S. rm. BeautHul carpets & OPPORTUNITY view sites. Owner will 831-2.l&Oeves. 646""848or67~ I"'-3244 Attractive ~ br w/gar .. nr drapes. ertced for a fast Three butte Medical carry. Terms. BKR. ~-Desert •0 •-0 •u••H••••n•• t.owo •water. $300/mo . .a. I ... sale at '118,950. Hurry : bldg. Reception room. (7l4)876-5n7 Resort '2400 3 Br, 1 bath, cpt/drps. Uruv Pk III, 3 Br 2~ Ba. +Ulll.875-2771 nfJ:..::.. ........ .a CalJS40-ll5l AJC.Canberentedal~ OR522-2080 ·-••••• .. ••••••••••••• Waaber/dryer . stove.+ bonus rm , Oxford, 37 -per .sq ft. Owner Wlll ----------1 Kida OK $40cmo Ph •OM< cA7-.o~. ·-"'"" .... ,, I ... 01 ••••••••••••••••••••••• consadertradee&terms. S-I0.20ACRES RVACRUGI . ~oi540-W3. ......... ....... ,.,....,...,....-.-........................ GaMrll 3102 ... '!,S~· HERITAGE . • REALTORS $252,500 "93-023 eo Acres with dirt trails, harp 3 bedrm, 2 ba, Bluffs OOCldo, 3 BR, 2 ba, BEACH, View. Pier, 2 Br, ••••••••••••••••••••••• No. Idaho, 40 ml. No. of gorgeous view, fresh NOFEEI Houses, condos. w/fplc, cpts. Super area. xlnlccod.~Mo-$450, l Br $375, $325. •Bach SlSS. Long Beach. Spokane on Hwy 41. water sprloe & gold duplexe11. Reotal Kld&/pet OK. $395. ~ent6"-ll33 Adltl, utll pd. 303 E . Slv,ref.utllpd.Nopets. }Mi MON'rBGO 4br, 2ba. ~~ ((). ~~:r:S~e~~r~: ~I!~°:; n ~'"::~ll~~ n ~~ Pavtlioo, 87M912 Bk.r. 963-4567 Agent, no fee. TB4MIS & llACH F.dgewat.er. (1} 171-2866. 1W83M8'1' fam rm. Ownr. 2015 Port ~ill 1~1 bing & hunting. $1200. Silverwood &Arrowhead So: Coast Plaza area. RENTALS 3 Br 2 Ba, Newport SM Room for 11in1le IGIMMP..._.. 310'1 ChelBea. 640-1981 P ""',.'J,Z.;i per acre. Call Robert Lake accesaable lrom Village Creek 3 br, 2 ba, 2 BR, I Ba .•.•....••. $345 Shor es home, newly pel'IOD. Nr.10th"St. Bay, •••••••••••••••••••••'• --1 .... y VIEW ,.1\A)Ag'v TumbWl,SS&-3610 thisJ>rOpert)'. frplc. 2 car gar. Pool. 2BR + D&F. 2ba •• $400 painted & decor'd. $550 beach. Non·smltr. $125 Balboa Penn 2 Br. decl( ~ , ·-'----------, Onl.)'$47,060 644-0499or546-8240 2BR + D,2ba. .. SSOO mo.640-2981 mo. '7U·5'6·0601 & gar, new cpt.s. paint. yr 2br. 2ba Mobile Hom~ in --------FIVE ACRES Call George Frey for 2475 Orange Ave. 3 Br 2 3BR,2Ba ....... $475/S35 NO FEE• H dos 551-2351 ly uoo. 673-2077 1·'<clu s ive Ra ysirlt> Prffldenti .. Hts Hard to n nd horse pro-info: Ba , children & pets 3BR,2~ba .... $4751495 d 1 . ouaesR.cont 1. ,.~...L..IM• 3722 67S-41670. Village Om rm den Be HinkleR I'" 4BR 2~ba SS00/625 up exes. en a -----. · • • "C" Plan. 2 BR, 2 &, l pcrty. Brand new 3 BR, 2 n • welcome $475 mo $200 4 BR• 3 8 · · "'".,""/75') Pavilion, 675-4912 Bkr ••••••••••••••••••••••• N' b h & 1 B Sl90 & lndry,. wet bar. Pool, Je\'el 2 Cnr gar. A steal BA home. Huge family 542·3'56 sec. 546-7945 • 8 · · · · ·"""" -----OCEANFRONT 1 8 $350 ace ac · r. J<tCUZZI & clbhsc:-rac ul "'"'A,900. owe 2nd. Try wet bar frplc 3 -5 BR, 3 Ba .......... $875 Luxury Condo 3 bcdrm 3 r. $210. Rap. adll. uw pd Bo at s I 1 P av a• I . lO'"Z'"°down 495-5006 by room. • .. R ... Estate LRG LUX CONDO 3 BR 2'':1 ba HVllm11 $650 bath den waik lo beach. wmt«. fplc. patio. gar, No pets. 106 E. Bay Avt•, $59,500/ofr.675-7903 cB·~R~arage. Won 't last! Wawted 2900 SoC6tPlazaArea38r, Pool'. tennis. $650/mo. 613-7787eves. apt~ ---owner. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2•~b all . ppl & aar 37~"' Ba Ibo a o c ea n r r on (714) m -5691 ...,. 8• mJr 8 Av.U 18 moa. leue. Ask Cotto M..a ... Qwet 2br garage apt. Cpl dramatrc duplex . .i&>--------ORS22-0530 WUlpaycashinaflashfor Pools, tenntb c-rts ''~~ forJay,Apnt.644-7270 ••••••• .. •• .. •••••••••• ~ref. No pets. 1309 W. HUGE HOME 0 your house, units or land $495/mo. '§ SIO ~ •· u• •• _,./yrly 67""""" lx1r0lli. Perfect owner·, AT THE IEACH llaiMM Property 140 Orange Co. Back pay-S44).659'1 646-2143 'Tl'~/. udi~~ ..... ~ _.. _..,.., ""<Wi>U home w/income or supe N t b 'It ••••••••••••••••••••••• ment.s OK, Call anytime e. •st C.M. . ....... 'J,, WALK TO BEACH. POOi St o, l .-uoom STEPS to Beach,~ br, I .. ~1~;;[~w~t:t ~~~~ :~~~i~!~=~ 1r:S~~:C!~n{1~e:r1 R1~ ScottRealtysa&- 7533 . NewT ownhome umt.. a 833·8600 ~~:~~:~!~:~~ ~~'!:"~JIB~. :::$325/yrl .Gp"wtr. ~-..,__..,.,--------1 20x35 family rm .. 3h Estate Co. Exclualve R..tab Bdrm, 2 story. Calb ceil· deck & atrium. $e'7~mo 5484155or..,._; LIDO SA. ..... DS baths. Steps to finest R.E. nght.s ln ahopplng ••••••••••••••••••••••• lngs, fplc, step down llv-lie. STUDIO " beach in San Clemente. center. So. Hunt. Bcb. Hoaeesfunllallect ing rm.dlnlnarm. patio, lf5Z3C.U..V,~~ LA R GE b o m • o n WBLYIAJIS ••• ••••••t••••••• "ilce l br home, 1 blk $349.500 loc. Call 962-2456 Aak for ••••••••••••••••••••••• gar $500 mo + $10 cred1t WATER with boat ~lt, Full Kitchen 6 TV 3 8)', 3 b a. at..-vu, dbl bcb. Lots of decorato Vince ..._ • .._.. 3106 report +1100 DOft refun· urtle Rock, Campus 2 Story w/4 bdrmi, fam Llnea.,,UWJU. gar, frplc.Mbl. $350. 3111 solartan & even youro ....................... dableeecurity bond &$5'J View. lbr, 2 ba. atrium, rm, din rm & prtvacy CLOSE TO OCEAN !@!:82li8or ~5107. • jacoui. Offered n S c1•R-1-.. Total move an pd .,,_ Sl.200·' •• -00 5 Br, 3 ba, furn. 450 .._ wet bar lndsc spr .... , 'mo ... e. . Royal S. .... Mohl c:or.. del )Mr l12l su~i Ra ·ar.•LTY 3 Monarch Bay Plaza lftCOIM Property 20 moot.h. 673-e900. Aft 6, Ls1.,; Mmontbste Vtt~ t_!!6°oi etc. Lov'ety. ready Jan 1. LIDO NORD ~t loca-2080Newport Blvd, CM ...................... . ~ 5A Laguna Niguel ••••••••••••••••••••••• 67"158 N o~ Blvd..,.'W:l of $500 mo. Call MS-2233 lion. Exec. 2 Bdrm. den, 642·2Gll ! 546-0814 496.-7222 131.0136 2 BR HSE +duplex, enc. p-t-...1 3107 Or~ge, S. or 'net Mar. dys,833-8282aft5 diolq nn. N• ln & out ,._;;;_;;;;;;;;;;;~;;._..r-~~~~~~~~I garages. Good C.M . loc. lcAoo -a '700/tno.. SUSCASITAS . ~ .... ;_:- $92,500. Bkr.631·1234. ••-•••••••••••• .. ••••• Di1ve by & call 968-el83 ON LIDO. Special 2 Nicely furn. latge & 21. tt ___ -_ BY OWMER S.~c:'trGRO 1071 DELUXEC.M. TRIPLEX 2B:fbci:1~?:"ci '::ib!!4 or963-0878fMappt bdrm+.+. Glamorous small 1 br. Aiultl, OGl.y, "' ~ VIEW of lights. 4 Bdrm.••••••••••••••••••••••• W/owners' unit. Seller 7 1 4 . 8 l 9 • a 9 9 l 0 ; 8 Br 2 Ba, cpts. bltns, fplc, hlde4wa)'. $850/mo no pell. 211 Newport fam rm, HVH Montcgo. WHY PAY MORE? may carry loan, or. 213-~ Cncd yd, RV space. $450. ON WATER. Fabulous Blvd. GARDENAPTS Stepg to P<>Q\, 1ac, tc·nmb Now just $84,000. Big two s h o P s . $ 14 4 • 9 0 0. 5'9-0022; 642·0550 VIEW 2 Br w/boaUl de-1 &a br furn. Adu.Ila oaly. OORONA DELMAR SL59,000/bstofr. s tory home with 3 YEAGER REALTY, eon.a.-M .. 3122 E.Broadway3Br.1Ba,no cor$650/molse. • No 'pets. Good location. 2 Br Townhouse. frplc. Pritt °"'Y 64'4·2601 Bdrm s.. 2 ""1 baths. 556-6171. ••••••••••••••••••••••• gar, new paint. cpta, 64S-0632 Pool. teno.l.s. Some ocean ~~~~~~~~~ fjm1ly-d1nine room. TRIPLEX.c:.M. · z BR, block & ~to bch. drpg.$400mo.6'54461 Wat .. ~owlHo.1 & Qtallna "1ew.. Close ---------1 wood r o o C, b r 1 ck .......... .._. 3740 to Fashion Island & fine IAUOA PEMIM. Dup~x. 'located acros street from beach & bay; oa1J for detal.1.1. $349.500 fireplace, tlle ldtchen, Great East alde loc, $550. 6"-U60 NPT.Hgt.s,braodnuabr, •• .. •••••••• .. -••• .. • beacb.AllolBr.6'4·2611 tr .u.h compactor, elec-oewv 3br. 2ba, frplc, yd. 2~ ba duplex, frpl, els to SMALL BEACH H<Yl'EL ~~~~~~~~~ trlc garage door opener, (2) 2br, l ba. patlce. encl. ll ...,. schla & sbope. Kida OK. Rooma$12.50Week i: etc. By owner. Call -AptU50/mo.58f.705I 498-2709 . .._DO REALTY 67J.7JOO SunhoUow 2br, l~ba, UP· ~~~~~~~~~graded crpt, Crplc, COV· : ered patio, gar & ---------.carport. Call eves WISTC:LIFF 496-462.5 1090 Beautiful 3 bedrm, 2 bath li"--"'-home with 15x24 family ... "" r ro . $155,000. Catt••••••••••••••••••••••• 546-5880. CLUM & MEAT ·~.~ ..... HERITAGE • • REALTORS ~~~~I MEit YOUR MIWHOMi! Convenient & quiet, 2 bdrm., 2 ba. condo with all the ameniUes. Very 8ilOd buy at $~1.800 ~HI 833-9781 Hester-Brown RI Al 10~~ I Good Write Offt Great rental a ree. 2 Trfpleice1, 6 urtlts, all 2Br, 1Ya ba. $235,000 So. Cahl. Realty 546-5605 Wf1etan ~IAI i'll\11 • ... ~ DAILY PILOr Wodnaday, OK •mber 14, 1977 Offkclent.t 4400 ........ t..t It Found 5300 .., L . •••••••-•••••••••••••• 0,pa~ty SOOS ••••••••••••••••••••••• -·-• • • ~·.ta u.twa. ~ata ~ ..,....... ... ~ :MJ•q ft deluxe olCaco, W. ! ...................... f'ound Slam .. e cu~ fem, Jobe W..t.d. 7075 ....., W..ted 71 O~ Help W014t.d 7100 ••••• • ••• • • •• •••••••••• •• ••• ••• • • • •••• •••••••• ••• ••••• • •••••••••••••• 19th St . Co~t• M•aa. l yr 4'cl ,.,C' Newh•od ••••••••• •• •••• ••••• ••• ••••••••••• •• ••••••••• • •• •• ••••••• • ••••••••••• e.t•MMO ll24 CottoMffo llZ4 ,....,_. .. oc.. 3169 SI~ mu Tom.S.10-2200 l ~IUSS'r\RT btwn Yorktown & Matur~ wom:n cto ln &h)!!lltt-r "''•d~d sun lus.AM!lytfTrae ·:··.::······:~········· ....................... ••••••••••••••••••••••• NO. COST A MES.A -YOU IN vou'R OWN <i,1rt1e_!!S HD.~ 9M3 . holllAl & utfttt•tt1lt!1tnlll& d3)' ffiOl'nll1'\, !I' IS to lnl'I Ill rn prtwldH cn\ry tlt~l'iJA S~H:~A J1040l Qwl'l Countr) \'l\'W BAYt'ltON'I' lw :l Br 2 BUSINESS WITll Found· Vouna lr1•h Set· Kehon1able. rat-.~. 10 tS C;ill '44 ':'10011 lu ''?'°f JIO'tto~oO·lf•terter nUI in lt eel n r11nt ., l:I J I d It l HJ. lit.tr pnont) to !'!mall •S Hm llll:hq flS321 mo " r 11t11fal'lton a11•r11ntet-d :l JO l'M. •tonday lhru C..I U11l &33 '"' . l>ennu. "''" d('IUXl' ;.? bc\11 Wiii -I:. t c u.~t'. u ilp . boul :-Ip )WO 833 94"2 • 12'h \j It '"Ill ore $60 mo C~AFT WORLD lcr .•mule VIC Meu. 01 Phon~ l;.a2 3400 lln }\()Ur fo'rldB> &: l>\'n nl 1 .-~reonnf'I uiuls LO\l'h 111u11·1ou1> UlS ti:I ~~P'Pl t.'vi. •4.olh qCtlt(eotcSlSS mo lNTt.:KNATIONAL, '°' N~wport Blvd, c;.M. Y ......__ Service of lrvlnt'. 20H2 l 11" nhomc i.~ Pf' w ll h 1 Br t J :.ti.ide wood beam ---All ground floor. front INC " 545 3047 Help W..ted '7f 00 Babysitter "tint~ Tut•i., Mil·h~l!l<ln C:amJly room& SMO/mo. <'t'ilu~K & c.sbmeu. stove 2 Br 1•1 Ba.1'wnhliei.tyle, prkg, AIC, uttl pd , prof We ure now expa!'dlng FOUND. Fllmale Shellie ••••••••• ... •••••O••••• morn1nas. Cotonll del --lJ U A l L r L. A C t. . • , udlti. 110 pt!t:s 5255 bldg, etc our operauons and mv1le • Mar area. 813-0609 IUSIOY l'R0Pt'RTl£6 INC &. n•ln g S2M mo.130 E .· ~0-2200or540-S101 )'OUlOJoanoureverarow. Vulley V1t•w&Chapman, A • 'Bkk Aggrcuh" le w•ll <Tl4l 7~ 19~ or ~ 85.5:1 2tlth St. 7~ 06t!O ~ 2682 Ing number of hlgbly •uc Gardt•n Grove. M4·M41 cct~IMP09tARY pna groomed. dinner hou!ic evenloga or week.ind• Me.a Verdt! 2 Br 2 Ba, Spacious. bright lbr. lba THE IFFICl!NT ceaful buslneaamen and F o u No: D t k I Ru 8 t Regt.stet Tod~ to work ~~-P/TIMI c-<pt•r. prof'd. Apply Vic· RENTAL AG ENT ON i.poc1<>uti llv rm, w/fplc, apt, new w/w cpl!., bltns, ALTs:DNATIVI businesswomen. female do11, Dec 9, vie on vanoua a~countln~ & lor llu110 Inn, 361 Cliff PREMlSESSAT&SUN. dinin~ rm & gar ct05e to S300 mo. C11nnery urea. --r You will manufacture Ma 1 n 0 I I a & 1 n . b kk 1 " t1l"n· For-our So. Coast Pluu Dr, Laguna 8ea1!h. Mon· h "· 's.,u ti73 6522 Mo. to ml>. rent Incl : plutic products for ... I' H 8 ...,., .... 18 oo eep n,. as • ore. Will work Mon thru Fn3-5pm. ,. OR l 8 d I C .. ti OPli "'trunap '"°"mo. --R t h 1 l' . t l ll .... anapo UI, •• """'""' menls Wott clO!ill lo 9 •----------.. . a up l.'it. t.>u. ~HlOO'J afl 6PM e c e p . 8 e r v . . w o eaa ang o re a -----·h Fl f''n. 4; 1~pm to :JOpm "' drp:., refrii;. ittv, t"nr l - -2 Br apt, step!> to ocean, persooallzed phone cov· stores. Fin1mc1ally re-FOUND: White JTI8lc Poo· your om&. gure SJl:s 9:45·6:30pm. t-:xpcr Bus driver, reaular p/l (4 ~ur No pets s:a o mu Oanal'oint 3126 ut1I. pd. S370. mo. ern~e. con(. rm. mail wardingandis thefourlh die, vie Oran.:e Coast Clerks to Sr. Acco11n· pref'd. Call Kath} h1-sperday). Bealnning 1•'6· 1:146 ••••••••••••••••••••••• &t;!-1334 day, 642·6S78 ~Vt' i.l·rv . undt'rground prkg largest growing 1ndu1olry Collc11e. s.&6·6'lSS tan ts needed thruout Boui.ka, S4Q.406IP 1;alary $4.63 hr. Apply in Panorama , 1cw new l'ln N--"h n & more an Newport. in tbe U.S.A. Oi•unge Co. If' Cullfornlu f''cdl•ral flt!l'!iOn b:r 12121177 Sad· ---------1.,t ·•t 1: 4 I ewport •7 orl'i.. I r. TJU:l!:XECUTlVE We v.11l setupa complcl~ft·ouND . F'em u lc RobertRn s Savintito&Loan cllc H.l ckVallcyUnlfled COS TA Mt;sA 2 ;,~·;t~1~1 :;.:.~"109feit. dplx,fptr,.i B11 i.ngl ~ar. SU ITE.ti·t0~70 factory at yourlocutaoo. Doberman, under l )r, A~countem~ 3333Btlsto1St.CM St·hml U1i.t . ZSG31 DI!>· lll'<lruorn . for OIJlurt· 1 · · I( • --SSOO mo. l>-IS-7 150 -----You or )our opcratori. v1r El Toro. Luke Forest SOOS. Main. Sl~ 50\ Equ»I Oppor t::mplon·r _eno l>r. \l 111~1on VieJo. utlu lh un i~ "lo llt.'h Sl'AltKLl"llG 21ir d<>n. SI''" 3 .,r ·•b-i •n•·I ''Jr Offal'C Suite, new build· w ill be thor o u g hly ,area830-7S13 No.Tower.Un1onaank Ill s;ws <• l'•h h '''" o .~ •• i •. .,. m.:allorpa rt lblks ·""b · h ---lnThe C1tyo!Oran.:e Bus1nc1o:tOppor.Uot t• i-r mo ,u111 -a tv.n w ocean vu. IJlk tobcJth U,1kony.no ' , tram""' )'eitpert:s1nt e1''0UND· ,, f • I ""c'l"" Trul'k andustr11.1I routl:' l'la1·c Prupertlc~ Int· d bl ~a r ~.J7S Cheri 1.., tromoce11n 438!\laanSl. O\eralloperalions. , · youn. ema e 714/.....,... - 1;1-1 1 7Sl l'J20 or 5411 HS~ hb t 11111 19:i tiSi5 __ -h';i..Mgmt 1;.i2.1603 llununron Beach. S36S. we secure all nece21sary ~a~>~dk ~~c r ~· lV1~1·-----... --•1 Banking ~~:y'ec~k I~~~~-"'~~~~ weeke nd.., ,\~k fu r IBt.'droomapt itarai:e. SCll'IClemente --3176 ~.1:0;~~~~5Sq. rt. retail sales ouUelS ror Wes tminster Blvd, Accountsreceh·ablebook· UMIOMIJ>.MK p/ltme chocker. Call Wanda l male lo beach Al Dana ••••••••••••••••••••••• your finished product Weslm. Cannol keep. keeper. Apparel import HIEWPORT JEACH belwn 3&.s afternoon>- ___ ---Point CdM dlx suites. ut1l pd, < N 0 SELL f NG 1 S 8t2·6798 company. Co~ta Mesa. JIAS AN OPENING IMB·lOJO. ,3 0075 Sparklina 2 Br2 Ba condo. A c. omple pkg, rrom REQUIREOOFYOU l. Must have expenence. FORANEXPER'D --------- Foxhollow VlllOCJe l!I · gar. m1n1 ocean view, Sl6S. Nolsc req. 675.6900 Our experts will make Lost male cat 10 mo old, able to take off trial PROOF Of'ERATOR c-re PttnCM 621 W. W1l1>on 646 2010 2 Br, li;e. modem apt. S32.5 mo. 633-4.720 (71-1) repeat _calls to_your fac· blk w/wht markings vie balW\ce. Send resume lo To work a Vertlcle Com- FURN OR UN"'URN SJOOi mo . •COST.AMESA1r lory, 1mprov1ng your Beach/Garfield.980-1286 Box 131.. c/o Dally Pilot Please contact Doris mer cl al Camera . •2br town home w/frpl Eve~ 493.o:J1s Spacious 2 Br garden apt. Deluxe office space w/ ma.nufacturina technl-. p 0. BOx 1560, Costa Mitchell, 610 Newport Familiar wltb PM'l' pro· •L..ge patio & enc gJrage S2604f!.r11m:noo. r ""•.3471 wet bar. 830 sq rt 30' sq fl. ques and locreaslns your LOalST: Phood/lbel[ Terr., Mesa. S'a· 92626 Ctr Dr SSl-5280 cess. t:xper. pref'd . •Adull.!i only Hunti-on leach 3840 "° ...,... &l2 ~ "'" 6"2 7.,,..,. iales. You must be capa· m e, w t w " spot.a, -· · l''/\i Co .. _ f •-A I · I • ..,. "'"""' · """' ble of lnv-Uoa $1,9'15. •tondard, 11 ..-. \11'c, An· Accounting .. Aual Oppor Employer me. · ""'"e '""· P· Poo &Jaruui J\JI :•••••••••••••••••••••• lbr. Sngl mature person, """ '" " v .r•v ,.... ply, Pennysaver. 1660 SllARP 3 Br deluxe beach 00 children or pets. $2lO DANA PT. 750 sq. ft . 3 yrs which Is the total lnvest-nlve,..ary & Irvine, NB. CASH RECEIPTS Placenlio Ave, CM Woodland Village umt. O/W, frpk, patio, 229 Avenida Del Mar. new. •, .. ba. $3SO mo. ~ent. No further money 646·5274 CL:ERK BAR MALD. Steady work, --------- •ar Avail 9602358 213597·0236/•134·6319 1s necessary.Youmusl . · It' llbl F /TI Call carWashCoshier MS Paularino llcout1lul. new. adull <1Pl~ Grt!at IOl·:.itwn 2 poul!>,:? Jat Ul.ll'> ~ __ · -49'lS771 --haveatleastl60 sq ft ol FOUND: White m.ale, Inler~hng pos lOn re· re a e. me. lmmed. employment IRAMD MEW Tustin 3890 DE.5K ·office space avail. operaung space a~aila· s;;J:e, :f~· ~~,~~t~;S~ ~~c~~1~ogK~~/ :~~et~~: 631.9842· avu1l. ror full & p/timc :i Br 'apt/condos, conve· ••••••••••••••••••••••• on Coast llwy .. CdM . hlt"forfactory. · · ' lng "11 /\ ti BARTENDER cur wash cashlel'll. Wt: nicnt lat·. S units avU ·IOO S240. UTIL IMCLO ::1~cgiJ o~ ~?cs~~k k Pr ' BE YOUR OWN BOSS 548·7893__ per~ h:i·pr~f.0~0~~ ef~ Experlent'ed wm troin. Clfll 6444400or up !lti-1 1507, ~-17SI__ \\';itcr. !lll~. clcl'lrtc1ty. --AND HAVE A FINAN· Yound: Long JI aired lovely new facilities in Call Bob. 979.7550 _SJ:_'J 3105. :-.lcw delux ... 4plex 3 BH t' n 1 q u e 1 & 2 n r ft'NilllON ISLAND Office f N /, E ~ t:: ~ D ~Ni Siamese mix female. C.M. Apply, personnel IO"'T BUILDER CJ..ll_W_Jt,;,_S_H_Ha __ p_ ~10H• 1111mmcdlall•b llud ll."101 $::!:!5 S:!·I."> 1 lldrm Sl65·)2iS :! Udrm Sl!lj ~Ji;, trpk. bltn:. WD hkup L'osnplctl' rcl·rcal1onal & !>et•y sen ices or secy FUTURE J N T.HIS Huntington Beach. depl. National Sys tems Ne:f'roductLIH \ard i:ar $J9S MS JtiW. IJ cll1lll .. , Adulli. only '>Pa re a\'aal + copy HIGHLY SUCCESS1''UL Mil 7308. __ Corp, 4361 ~1rch St. N.B. !162 421K Sorry.no iwlli mal'h1n l'. Share 1267 BUSINESS. 1''ound : Samoyed, vic (NearOC:Airport)EOE. LoolongForExper'd California Apb i.qlft trom $250. 640-1070. 11 Wri d Eteclnc1ans llcnlal Oflll·c ''cw delu'e twnhs apt•. '" .,., N A Ca or te (1J1clu e /\dums & Beach Blvd, ACCTS REC SECY L•nolne Installer• () u I !) ti ' ·' ,.. 149..:. t!wport vc PVT or & R t telephone number, H B Sunday. 537 ·2273 • PLLu"m .. ~rs " pt·n ai} 1br 21'1.1 fplc bltn~ WO Tuslln.Culttod11y. c ecp · urt!a ca•FTWOILD Type 70wpm. Expcr. "" {~1~~~:f~'~1~~ hkup pauo dbl attach gar 832-6122 f 0 r r c 0 l • N P t ftA FOUND: Doxie mix, yg w/accts recei\·able & col· Carpenters _ __ ~J95. !>IS·:irot. 963·42lll -Heh/ l"a1>h ion Isl and• IMTERMATIOMAL maJe. no he. Vic. Main lectlons. Profit sharing. Top pay, xlnt work mg ---Apar!ments Furnistied rum or not. $250. Call: lf41 Soledad Dr. s L. & B 3 1 boa B 1 v d . Gd work 1 n g con d. coods & good benefits, 4 WESTl•YTRll'LEXES :! Br. I IJa & J:arage. orUnfuntlsMd 3900 768·3574 MONTEREY, CALIF. Balboa.675-8523 Westminster. Phone Mr. Dayweek. A C'hll dron ok. Walk lo ••••••••••••••••••••••• 93940 Uoyc't697·2S15 APPLYlNPERSON COSTA MESA lwJt'h $2ti0 962 ~ THE EXCITING lusJMss R...tat 4450 ( 4 0 8) 6 4 9 • 4 6 7 1 or Lost: Brittany Spaniel, Ad . . DOWN EAST YACHTS Ovl!r 18. 1''/t11ne Apply Metro.CUrWash 2950 Harbor Bl, OJ Cashier 1-*TellerTrH Friendly patrons art' wa1ung for your s1neer~ touc h. Call Wendy . 833-2700. Dennis & Den· rus Personnel Service o lrvtnc, ~Michelson. BHA~DNt:W p•LM..,..,., ... •"S. ••••••••••••••••••••••• (408)~2 Gm eyes, rust" wht., vertismg 700EASTALTON,SA 1 Ur From $280 .\tlil t11vc, dean.:! Br, l' • A ..,~A A CLASSIFIED :! Urf'rom )305 hath i·oncto )295. Pools. ~11 NUTF1i TO NPT LAGUNA SHOPS Money to Loan 5025 fem. Vic. Bolsa Chica, IOAT IUILDEI CLASSROOM AIDE .J Br. 2 BJ ~·rom$39S play .1rca:., clo~e 1n BCll. Downtown, xlnl locallon. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2"13·1!2•143R2. e w 8 r d PHONE SALES F Xlnt oppty lo wk part ti73·fl.16tl Bach, 1&2 BR. Approx. 000 sq. fl. & 470 I ..... ~_....Ir~ TD ' "" Good eam1n& potential ast growmg company time (3-31t:t hrs per day I I I J t ---fromS""". &up. Ml . fl Immediate oc· ••·MN ~,..... · · t d need s s upervis ory w/'"luden•· t·n a c•···rm lt•J ut1 u nt•w uni .:..;u LOANSAVAJLABL"'' Rewar . Lost Female for aegressive, molivat-1 .. ... """' l1111ldm"~ Xlnt lot·utmn 'f)uiet-Clean-Adlts Adults. No Pets cupancy. ..., K h d d A tchaepa,c0l1t10Ywe1.n'!!pclo1!.e5e1. sflca"· Mu & t be b 11 in g u a .. l""''J',J··s·aOi. Realonomics.675-6700 Credit'notimportant. ees un pupppy, vic e person. tlracl1ve ., ..., 11t·.1r So <:oust PIJ1J ='i1·Jrbl'Jt·h & .. twp,,~Br ..,., »r __ 3 0 Brookhursl&Hamilton. i.alary+comm,good co. l Ena/Spanish. hav e U 11ldrcn welrnmc. "" ~ Ha. fl\ t pat1u, gar, s:uo (5 Bllu, East of New part .. DELUXE OFC'S ......... 493. I 2 963·9313. benefits. Good typing on IOOS: equivalent. or hi&h schl JJCh Rl·ntal ulf1ce open mo. ~I l:!'i!J Blvd. 1 "" IBM elec typewriter & MECHANICAL graduation. mulll enjo)' dailv 10 ;, 840 8ukcr St, I -546 9111;o Conf. rm . seat 25, all Money Available, !1'80Y L..OST . lge neut. male good spelling es1'ential. ELECTRICAL & have some exper in !Jlk Wot Bristol 1 llr bltmi. D W. gar. :-.r paneled, sm. whsc in re· source~. all pro1ects. S1amei>e cat. Vic. Top of Mus t be ambltiou:i. CARPEHTRY working w/children in a s51.~1s Hi•a l'h (;arf i c l\l . URGE1&2BR ar.lor 2yr.lease.L..ake S50Km1n.7~-~ the world, Lag. Bch. persuasive, & like peo· TOOLIMG learning situation ---------1 S26S mo. 55-i 7:!1~ --FROM $205 f/~t·s t area . Kent Money Wanted 5030 644·6400 days, or 494-1588 pie. We need good mel) SS4a.16a3ryhrra.ng1en'?·79anhnru. a~ol Quiet bldg w1b1•aut1ful or an:-.. ••••••••••••••••••••••• eve.s. FORAPPTCALL bl " LA CASA BLANC.A Seawind Village lndscpg. cov'd s ar:.agcs. ___ 714·581·9~J3 H you're nol getting f'ersonals 5350 Diane Smith, ~~3e~hiJ> ~a!e!pon~lb~i~~ ~~e!\v~~fZi~~t~c ~~~ Boch, I B,...Avl Now New l&i bdrm luxury ad u I l s , n o Pc t ~ . Approx. 400 sq. rt. C·2. 13.8%• return on yourin· ••••••••••••••••••••••• (714 >537·7510 t Y I n th e a b o v e Ol11t. 14121 Cedarwood All ut1ls pd . rpt~. drps. adult apts an 14 plans LEEWARD APTS ~020 AIC, al 130 E . 17th St, vestment , call Sandy Drinking problem ? or (213) 628·13M categories. Top pay, xlnl Westminster EO&M/f' pool. lnclry. fal.·l> Adult:-from S:!l>S + pools, ten-Fullerton Ave. l blk E. of $150/mo Doyle 548·1168 Ross. Ajax Co.1137-3744 Gall Alcohol llelphne 13261Cenlury Bl. G. Grv. benefits. All correspon· • "'er J S. no Pl'ltl iH r II cl • Newport Ave. 1 blk S. of •Average yield on pay d o '>c A Knight-Ridder dence kept confidenlial. C1en'cal d 11l drcn Ca ll Sue ni~. water as. pon 5 Bay,631·n·x•7 NEWllSO sqftlol300sqrt · · Z4hrs a ay.....,.3830 Newspaper From !"un Diego Frwy .,..,., orrs to AJUX mvestors. ~--------1 Write to Ad m, Dall) SECRETARY :;~t; 7707 o r llc nr y clr1\" ."rirth on n .•ach t11 rcllul sLorei.. Newport Jan. thru July, 1977. PREGNANT? EqualOpportEmployer Pilot, P .O. Box 1560, G-lng flnan"''al lnsl.lt ~:! !11~17 ' .~ °' Pier locauon. Next lo s 1 · r· d I r~t u CA 92626 ,.,.. '"' _________ 1 ~lrl''addcn then We5tl on f • S r Sh late aw permits a pre· C ar1ng c on i entia AmbitiousCoupleWantcd """amesa, . seekspersonw/&Omere \lc Faddf'n to Scawmd Roomt 4000 ~11g~~1;" 5 ur op. payment penalty charge counseling & re~erral. to manaie a small busi· Boat Carpenten al est/clerical back I Ur. 1·rph drp-.. ) d. \ 1llai;t• 1 •1 ~ lH<lJ<1H18 ••••••••••••••••••••••• -eqw\t.alhent 10 llifidor 6 Abortion, adoption & ness. p/llme, Wdl nol in· ~-Tool'-&round pref'd, but w1I carport K 11h ok \i o ., n k h S2MO li.e Storc ·Offler. mon s unearnt.> 10 kecprni: terfere w/your present ..... ..~ tratn attract ive 1 , S''''S li4' 2.,~ 111 :; D<•lu"' -Br m ·l·J>ll',. Nr oom w itc eneltc terest on the balanr e . APCARE 547-2563 pa needs ex. personabl• iodiv. Ge 1 o).:s -~ ;) -1 • 5 l'mnls 1-;nd s:ar ~o S50 week & up !:lflthQ rt under :lO' 19.!78 Mortgage Brokers. Of. Job . .Must be willing to .. .! Br. 2 ha . J ll hltns. frp h" rx·t'i Mtl I 184 , h-i6·34 12 S48·9i5S Beach 81• HB. 842~ rered lo Callfoml11 rea1· LIMO.A Ir YICIU leam.'Mr. Hall,64Z·lS:W. ~~~ b~l~~n~8ac":e'!; :~~Tr~ th~rt~:~ _ 1·n1 I i.:a r h Jlron ~ Ll\'E "frar'ftw Beat;.-1\mba11sador Inn in Co'ta &.ogun. Hl9'fl dent.sonly. o.tcall Mas~ AN OHIO OIL CO. offers boat tooUna. Xlnt Com· co. Call Carry. 540-605S Laundry rm $J25 Casad-' Sol ~lesJ. 'lZTi l1,1rbor C:l•n· l7~ Forbe~ JW ...... ~ T t ForttM FUft of it! PLF.NTY OF MONEY pany benefits Including ~tat Personnel Aien ........ L ~.1°mt ''':! 11.0:1 a 11 ,__ -' .,.,. ,.._-,~. rvs pl"r cawh bonus-. fnng" Pa d .. ted I •-L'fe '" " .,.. tra y .. ..:at"''·:,.,;,rooms Rctail offtcc673 sq.lt. DtHi 5035 ScnmgallOrangc Co. ...., ~ = ~ 1 ,. 1ra • 1 cy,2790 Harbor.CM l · ii-tw~li fulAcJull i\pts ~l.\NY v.1t h k1t ch l:'n . Hl:'lail \\Urehou:ic 1331; 8357313 benefits lo mature in· Insurance. Pacifica by--------- :.! Br. ' onticello coo a lo. (;a, & W;itci Paul phone & TV s" 1mmang ,q rt . ••••••••••••••••••••••• -d1\·idual in beach area. Kipper Yacht.s. 928 W. CLERK TYPl&T, Canon pool & H'!l' rm. Sl50.ino 21tiol Brookhur~l. llD pool, Jal'uu 1, and rec Offl(:e 288 sq.it. LOWEST *MICHEL' e.oe: * Reg a rd I es s or ex· 17th Sl. Costa Mesa. Business Machines. bas Enr ~ur, lndry httup. 962-6653 room. Dally & weekh ,\\ail lmmed . ..., ., per1ence, write G . S. opening for a mature "12·HOUS . . f s·" L•. E I-'--...... ~ Outcall Maasage Read, Pres .• American ·-~ID.......t....lcl-ener aetlc 1'nd1'v1'dua -----READY HOW rates 1otarung rom ..., a .i:.otate qwt1eb _.., ... _. lOAM·2AM 731-4462 --~JTI _,. h :! Br. 1•-: ba townhouse 8 d week. AgtSt.eR-1 lstT.O.'s.alto Lubricants Co .• Box 696, Pacifica need• ex-w/at eas0t3 yrsprevlous " n;1t10 610 Joann 8t :? r , painle . t·rpts, 645-4840 831-1633or 544·0933 2ndT D I-~ S.Jrfhal ...... Dayton, Ohio45401. pertenced Bolt Elertrt. exper. utiea varied & .. drps. 1 h;1 Gas ~love. • ·--,.. clans. Xlnt Company lntcresUnrwtaomeover Small ~t!I. 548·7638__ Adullb. no pets. $250. 425 Plus family room, TV. 4500 Fairest Termulnce 1949 181SSo. El Camino Real ASSEMILERS benefits. includlng paid time po111ible. Requires :! br toWJ\h.se. 2 br ::ipt 12th. Prl vale entrance. N<J ltdAtriat Retttat Sattler Mtg. Co. San Clemente. FuUy Uc. We will train. Apply 7am medical & life insurance. neat appearanoe, Uict & -.. pool &jacuzzi. smoking or rooking.••••••••••••••••••••••• 642-2171 US.0611 Forappt.C.729G MacGregor Yacht Corp, Pacifica by Kipper accuracy. Salary com 645·2'198 Laguna leach 3848 Male $110. Pen. Point6400Sqftorlndustrtalpro-DA.NCEOFFUN 1631PlacentlaCM Yachts. 928 W. 17th St. mensurate w/ability ----1••••••••••••••••••••••• 673-4419 perty w/1800 sq fl or air WANTED: 2od TD loans. Bt!J nude gtrb dance &: Costa Mesa . call Personnel for appl T ri plex. I BR. rarpe ti.. Luitury nlhouse 2 br 2 cond of cs. 546-1653. 2956 Oceanfront Properties. rap session. l OAM to ASSEMBLER TRAINEE ~700 111 ~. bllns. l\dults. no ba di:Crm frplc big YocaffonRetttats 4250 RandolphJ\ve.CM SSOM Secured by Del 2AM Mon·S•t 625 N. SANTAANA Boatoperators,20tonln-3191Redh01Ave.CM. 1wt-. S2J:;. I'h:5il8 5777 v 1· e w s 't 0 c k. t 0 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 2 0 0 Sq ft. In. Mar Houa~a. Wlll pay EuclidAnahSSlMllSO Calls.9·2475. land license, all shirts--------- :! llr 2 Ba + loft & "alw, downtown S47 S mo. Cabin, BIRPBclarb.lslpsl 4·ll8. dusVComm'I 2952 Ran· 10% +lOpomts. Also will FREE SESSION W/AD ASSEMILERS I opeD .nl. WPnll·let top AOd Bo#93, COCKTAIL " 49H379eve~· 957·0282 S3S up. oo t ' c r v, d I h A . CM C II seeU $40M 2nd TO' 1S% . a1 Y o • . . " WAITRESS 't\ rdr1~. ~ar. pool, no · · · · ---dbl frpl, 491·8611. 0 P ve, a d is co u n t. p I p RELAXING M~SAGE WAMTED 1560, Costa Mesa, CA. Learn in 40 hrs the most 1>l'l~ ~Jj()-6-16 2'JOl __ I Ar (k<'un \ it•w, blk to Sk lst r te accom· 546·l6S3. (71'1)642·S032 Daya only. Bob James-Uc Masseur Ca n on Bus Ine s s 92626 ex cl line, gt amorous . bt'h. Adi ts. no pet s.· iers._ . a Outcall9-9,4SM·Slll Machines. Inc. has im· hi hl I Off leatftt Patti S275 S295 494-3280: ~odalions in Tahoe. 5200 R--£al Wont.cl 4600 18% Yield $45,000. 3yr2nd med. openings for as-BOOKKEEPER I Y pad profa.. Day .! Ur apt & 3 br twnh!'le. 199 3900 1or4mos.S46-3428evs ,...... s T .D. 10'7o lnteresl MASSAGE semblers in their /C._ or eve snetons. P!ace- rl,hv.hr!\, closed ~arages, ' · ••••••••••••••••••••••• quarterly on 11 acres calculator manuf. plant. F ·~ meotassist. Goodjobop- llRQ. r.a)o & water pd <.;on\ erL 'd gar. furn or BIG BEAR CABIN kfpldc, Wanted to rent: 3 or 4 Br. Bon.sall; $44,818. 4 yr lsl FfGURI MODELS \ 1 to rsonnel dept Property m anaaement por. l..\~lANCU\APTS unf.2 blks to bch.lblkto sips 8• week or w 0 · menr~merofl;\eacb& T.D. Sale at$12,000. per ESCORTS a&~~~I Ave, Cos~ co. seeks individual C411714/751·91f4 778Sl·oUPlacc.C~t fo'orei.t. ww cpts. panel· 640-5565 Warner. E /Slde of acre. lS'Ao discount. OUTCAUOMLY Mesa,92S26.556--47oo. w/extenslve experience So. Calif. Cocktn1I 642·507 3 1nR. uul pd OH street Rentals to Sh... 4300 Beach. 142.2293 < 7 14 > 7 s 1·4 8 2 7 or an property man:igement Waitresses, Inc. 1792.<! --parkng. quie t. $170. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ...... 'I••"'/ (114>493~115Seves 6Jl-311 I ASSISTMAMAGl.R acnls payable. E.D.P Sk)' P•rk Bl, Ste c. Lari:c 3 Br Townhouse 494-4154art.IOAM "LlveBetterCorLess" a. ., ...,._Yi-' .. •onooo 3 EXPER'D. Must bave cost analysis, trl1l lrvme,C.92714 "Ith patio. earage + u d ,,...c. i .. .,., C1\I _.,, • yr. MODEUNGOUTCALL food b A1r.._ ... A & be balance. etc. Salary f poul. Quiet complex Studio. H ew. yard, derk. HC>Ule-Motes nil ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2nd T.D., 10% quarterly AFTER 6:00 people.~vt cour! commensurate with ex-COOl(S Adults. no pets. $350 walk to town & beach. Yourbestsource ror ....._, on 20 acres prime Viat.a MON·FRI 847-652C try c lub. For appt. ~r. Located in Laguna Breakfast. Lunch, din- 645·33!11or675-5949 $175. Eves 41M·3672 Loc1 a0llngCoa 8R.oom1ma971te Opp~ 5005 Tlan0d. J..~O·,! byr lulst * SAHDY"S * 644.5404. lauel. Call Jim Howe.11 ner. Exper'd. Apply in n r. . ince ••••••••••••••••••••••• .• -·"""· ""'' eq • 495--0875orl31·9'50 person, Ma Barker's I BR, new crpts. paint LG Studio. Ocean view. 132·4134 SAHC&.IMEMTI t y. 15% discount. OUTCALLM.ASSAGE ATTENDANT. ollice, Restaurant . 212 E. 17th Wtr pd .. $235 mo. + $225. Irvine 833-6081 p Shop & 0 1 (714)751·48 26 or 973-0328 p/tlme.Bayvlew?tf anor, ·loolck..,.... St.C.M. ~100. dep. + $50. clean wkdys, come by wknd M/F. $225/mo. Channel et room n1. <n4>8-US3e"ea '>C/\W Bay St Sat •-sun N.B. Investment nrm.1-----~~--0p s 2 3 2 2930 Co H A t a J Fu Retiring after 7 iood ' wPALM & C.AID* ....,.., · · "' • ,._,,.,•-"t=-.~M-mi_: en un, J ·. 58 ast wy, P. apt. Wntr. renta . rn. Fln 1 tl •-.... _. { 4:30tol2:30.642·350S F/CCommtsalonsbkkpr. __,__.. !!:. 15th St. C.M. 673-32'12, 673·1Ml yean. e oca on "' ••=~· ••EADIHGS• hq's exper. in pegboanl For dinner hoiiff. CaU -Sharp2DR.view.S425 clientele. P-~ Advise Ii help on many AUl'ODETAILER sys. Know1 In readlng Doni pt.00091 Newly decor'd 1 Br. cpts. SEALIONREALTY Need rmmate M/F, on BERTHAHENRY Lolt&fooilMS matters of Ute. Llc'd d t t orap . drp.<i. lndry, $230 mo. 497·3388 673·5354 Peninsula, $125 mo. Call REALTORS ..... •••••• .. •••••••••• ~lal Holiday Reading Self·motl"ate , bard eompu er rep or s. COOK Adi ts. no pct11. \970 Ch I d If aft8,631.o824 21.S DelMar 4924121 ••n•cwwb 5100 . Available for Partl"• world.ni. 159-0377 640-01ZJ. DinnerH-.. ~exJ>t;. Ap· Wallace. 646·1850 oft ° Ce con ° at go "" IOYS AIRL """""' 3PM.S4S·6lS5eves course; 3 BR, 2 ba .. Christlam female, to 1hr TIAYaAGEMCY •• .. ••••••••• .. •••••• .. or Groupe. 221 W. Whit Automotive •• S ply in person, am's -vaulted cell, lge. deck, deluxe rum condo. $150 Let 111 t bow you bow to A VERY HAPP.Y Uer Blvd, La Habra, Ca. New Detail Shop needs 12-16 years of age. Even· Seafood no. 2, 3901 E. L~e 2 Bdrm, ma bo. 2 trees: pool, w1hr/dryer. mo. 646-6300 at.art an aieney. TraveJ (213Hl974272 help. ing work. Obtain new Cout Hwy, Corona del Story, pool. Kids OK. no $450 Mo. Agt. 494·7578 ft not neeesaa,... ToUI OWN 1 b Top waiea paid. Entlne subscrlptions fort.he Dai· 'Mar. pets. Nr t1chh1. S2i3Sfup Male, looking for beach ex,.. "#" •, your own le ep one Steamen, eng .Painters, ty Pilot working with an ---------2310 Santa Ana Av~ OCIAHFROHT apt, and roommate to stutup &t r:geratln; • or answerer. No monthly buffers ., polishers, up. adult. supervisor. Eam 1ST COOK Exp'd. only. 64S-5088or <213)371 403'.! DB.UXE share expenses. 673-4437 capital requi .S30,000. 35JH charae. The Telephone holatuy 1hampooers, S20 to $30 per week or Full time. Pvt.. Club. --..._. 1 Mo.,..._ art6P~i <714>831-tJU .. Shop, 3803 AUantlc, L.B. check out, pick.up & de· more. Call (213) S!Hl·0296 Beocf1t1. 673-3SU Wed . l..~e 2 Br.cleanupper,in4 2.2BRr;S:f00646-0505 G --., PLAHTSHOP <213)42J8-t338 · llvery,AppJyat noon to Spm. (213) thruSUn. plex. Cpts, drps, avl Dec. . ~ . 4150 Lady alone mU1t ael~. • 2059 Harbor Bl, CM 498-2473. 5pm-9Pm. C.11 22. Adlls. no pets •--w1-...1 3152 for._. JA I N t .,.. ANNIVERSARY ... onEoILEE• 6'5-1030 Colle«. r~metlc Sales, eaper. "-'"' 7485 ............... ,..,....... ••••••••••••••••••••••• .,.ea ewpor .uea ,..,... ..... """' .,...,. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Location. """tab"-hed 5 "-rtlfi-" •• -Full ti W ttd / t .... mt vc 1 ..... 1uaue~c AUTO Bri&bt cou. pie wil.h abllJty me. permanent Two 2 Br, tower. s225Nlce l"2Bl',S26S&up. i'~m:.'9/1a8'".,8!•t'fc yrs. Ho1pltalhat1on :JO HouseCalla·B1Appt. POUSH&WAX tomanageabusinessluU poe.Prest1eet>ruiSt«e. ~as /wlr heal. pd. pool & rec room. quiet CdM/NB/CM . Cali forces ule. TJME, 838-e838 DetatlM p . i or p/t Unltm1ted in· bch area. ?tlr. ElwOOd 6:U-2l77. 360 Victoria area. 831-7766 75i-1574 751-1400 BUD & BARBARA Guy 29. 5'9", beavpet, Exper'd :ib~t~~~ come. • ~150 ro• Families, small children Htiwporilnch 3169 OfflceR..W 4400 DtMMaHOUSI lDCld&McMiit bat la.J.na •eicbt fut. of'Qllnet,Gdsal + 8?3-3609,~ Coumelon up to 2 yrs, 2 Br apt.. S235 •••••••••••••:;::_•••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• NEWPORT BEACH G d 1•. Mell nice sat lot dai.. co,."!-Perm.anenUob. Houle Counsclcn, tnar· mo. 2(117 Wallace Ave. s;asmo; Nwpt~.lov• n ·na•n 9000 Sq. n. u.ellmiled r•• 1p,•r•t1 ••·p .• o .•111a.G.G.92114Z ~CuWub IUU.OQCS rl•d epl only. DO cM .8'8·~ ~~.2~~~~nopeta. ~617W~lFF·NB parklna.Ownertoobusl TOO! r.-..s.tyac ' 13'0 HarborJU,CM S..c..it,._ ;::!~~rs~· eL!::.!;e EASTSIDE cozy 3 br, AGT.Ml~·· ~~:r;·0!u~~:,:~ LOTSALOYI . .:-~: ...... ••••••••••:! ...... AutoTramM~f?lnlc J1Nowlntervlewbt1 itm. ~peoees 6 a.al. paUo, 1ar•1•, bltrts. PAltl.,.IWPOlT ·ISOI w·~•u.Dr. TDtll.Tll·UOO-.,~~-'' .~ From=• •OW ProtfllSkJnalMUNre.oft ~~·t~~·1.~ ForSTAn Oakt.NeKolMt."MMTK .$2'75.18021.atSt.5'8-2127 Bachtlqu, 1 or' 2 W'lt5llTT • ,1 , ·llhan1M n.a.. C,,N. oo-l, .. -mia41loo_. '~-" ASSI AMT •. '" Bedrooma&iTownhqu,et _NGWportFtnanclalCtr X.•odtc~ptbi~ Kain· _._!.. H,_ .. -~~t :lt:,•L1oenH4 1~10. quallt ted aa:n CUSTOOIALN•L· COUM11R4MIL .. , MISAPIMIS 'f't'omfZTUO ~OHlciS.t tenaMt, lar1e eo~· 1 t1i. • ..._ 1'~$; .. \t•·t •~·Toow.see&1• Exper.inaninu • Appt1 at C•m•o ,.Newst.udloaptt280.1Br Spectacuh1r •pa, total CallooSlt M&Ji~r inercl11l acc.'OUb~ plua .~.,::~~~ ·-··r"'"' >J!=1 • 1·~" (~~1:1 ot}aottOriattetvtc. cruner~ lHO &ea saas. Avail. Jan. lat. r~cr .. tlon protram111 <nC>~Uld&~ eq\Cp.estr~ ... 1, Ch'tht•u• Olft .. :e1;: ... i !".ew!.own • lafl!Clulred.Xlnt-:o. I MJpel,N .... ';i.~'-!·; Pool, Jacuut & laundry IOdalpf'CICram.'r'iOolJ.. · "1.c" t t r•~ ~ ·· bcn Ott c'...,oM•·-·~.a. rm.AdulLt,no~.Opep,,icnnllcourta At·taaJU0n htaftftlrie.c 8Pteul1ton·fnvt11KO,. ~ Certl lcal .. aval . ....................... a·vo· N'···mi m>l r • I It v~... ···~-, dally. ~ H1rla Ave, iitt.land. J~ •San Ofc epac. In N01H>at-ftHltora tl\ort. t•r' ma.1119 ~·-· 1..,_ .. ,1 "*'Y~ 7071 M!naa~~:.1 Slit/~ C.M. <Meu Vt'rdo br1vo J~uAaHlllllloH; Airport Area. Recepuon. •v•l fNt. SllU Dtva_;, We'll eater.~ bollday .............. ••••••••• 1oam-ooonfsS.5pll\ Sm. corp., b Hed In ~t' olt llarbor 81\'d ). I\ 2!1714t64~1t00 _ ,..'. pboOc ury •• coiirennce 1·pcJft-9I03 _., J-.~·;rt;'.. bashmtt.oemte.Swsor PR.ACTICA~ NURSE. CIWfs~ ...... ra 33Hlri.WSt.CM Ir-VIM'. Telt'phoao CX· .. Ml..:a.l4'7. • l. ·-, ---, tirm. kltcb, tee)' HrV1 d.it-IA.IL SaVICU 8arbua.49'J'-3!Ma1. , \ PtT, ntahl fW dt~. N• w-1'..Qua10pporgmp1,yer fJ.rt a«tj/~ E· Id hom•1 tarac2 ur. J--~~ ... .-.. "T· • ., ·'"C'" 1, =sto~r,»:ac~~:· Wark wttJi 1aJ1 roaic.n. a..t•,._· -. 5300 _r~cau4'Mue:,, ~= 1:~1W 1\ \ peuo want~ choat. BACHROI APT.~t. -. ·-=-·~ 7acbi own t'I. Mat\1 ,.. .............. , ......... Wiii btr'your nurae • ·----"'Tl"H ' ... -_.. tCilul'l•«-,tietp'i~11m-1pm • . !$300.fllO.l?,.;ua ' ALLUTlLSPD! "'1111..:.IXICUTIVISUms 'Nlirdl. iax. Rrpl)' BOx 'I.net. Mon. 11121 .... pb)'llC•' theraplat. R..-__...I~ " Wl.Qchelt'J _l>oltutJlouM :>Or. 2ba. crp~, clrJll.. suo 1 100' troM lit ocean. 1.•B •a '1 t lt •I b 1 d 1. ~x J;.111 c!t~M~~·: N Stam e, ot. )'f.' A'•all. for daf wOtl. C.M! ~to~:1r::-~nte~~~ ForQU&Jfl~Ad ,•.: , :.U &. l'D.Ooib Mese . ,.mo. Imm~ octupal\C)' !ki1111•f1mtithed. Avail Penon&llled i>bOn co•· 1 Ca l2DI • r • old. temalt. 1payed. u ~ •• '".!. .. · x per 1 • Call ~7~ 0 ~ nllh A~ON .._ ; , 2$22.8 Sint. Allll Ave • ..,,... llOl E. BalbOa Blvd: •ase,MC)'Ht'Vlt•, eoot. . ,· ' +1" ., i{wtann1 nea toll•r. v1~; su--t:vQ 7.1399,,.,,-,._,.. !\ Ca • I You~ II 'a ~to 646-3llt 1 • _, ' Yrl1 CM> per mo NO room. xero• It more. ~ 'OCEANFRONT'' .. ~ Roclltd1e aM vtctotta 1• _.... -,. DallyPUot "dra ~l" w~ you " 1i,PEB. ~.1a~ s ... aj EP1 trwj u , Near MARKET '~ or. Laauna s .. cb. 111e tMUtl draw 1n lh6 . _ AD·VISOR p1a.c.e ""t~·~ Deity PINI •b•L cu. Hat ta -.ntrran1tinu1 't . So Cout Pl 1a rl"l'Olit uat aell! Na ooo yr. ,.l\e..-ardl I 414·94ft or hW t, •• 1 DaUy: Rllot lind what 'JOU waat 'bl Ma.SGTI Not Want C&l1Jll049 -DlllyPUOC.Cluallledt.. • s:m .. 91'9~•1 <, ..;(. ~l.ea.ml , 4i' l ... ~11 Mll:ai>PM t•a...&n.dALIOiMTi: l• Dally Pllol Clwlflfi!S: -. ' J -MZ..-ra • ., .• -~. -,_ 'l: - .. W.cfnMday ~mber 14 1 gn * DAIL V PILOT D 7 r.-~.J • Add it .. ,Bu1ld 1t .• Diaper 1t. .Hammtr it ... Carpet Jt...Cement lt ... Witl! 1t ••. Hoe It .. c rean it .. ,Mpv e .... it. .. Pre.ss lt, .. Pamt it Nail it . Plaster lt...F1>e it .. SERVICE DIRECTORY Plumb it ... Patcn 1t. .• P1pe it ... Remodel 1t ..• Roof it. .. Landscape it...Tilc it...Trim it ... St?w 1t .. Haul It ... Add it ... Plant It. . Alter it .. Letlrn it .... . ..... $4' .... C..,.. s.n1ce c...t/C..c,.... Gwral $9"1c" HaeMc..__. Hc:.Mc...... 1 ...... ....,,....... hWteMJIP...,.ttcJ looflng •.......•.•.••............••••••••••......... , ................................................................................................................................................................. . ,.. ... .. L"'-"' p l • t t b noo1o·s t'O 1t 1.t:ss B•JAppJJanc~Scrv ,arpetr1,.nw11ll;1).'t'H.lti.A1.,, C•mrrcli· work FREl lHR LAIOI HOUSEMOUSI ATT.En : ne&ltor. II ruw ants a •1&Y u•YMICHA.t:;LS PAINTING All IY"''"· ltriJtl ,,,v~il TRlPCHAJHa.:no u1· mine. R1·1>o110 & Uldclt.' brfrk. ttlump & ror membl!rs . All .. Lundh>rd•. Expert. ex· ~cea.'tryme.freue11t. t!Xt .. hou1e11 & comm. ..-.. • .. ~S. M<11n, S A dHnan1 loo! tiuur work 'CUlwreto wall• Security St!rv1l·~11 $10 hr or lt!1>1> ~UPAe rL·lolnYa ISeTrovu. cwh {,u per. clea.n.tna or bms & SlUclll\llr. 836-5555 bids• 675 ~141 :art 5pm 1'h•e e:.t. 11~1 bond d. 111 .l bl'"' t '-'-~ n... ~ l ti f t top ~r. S~:nior C:llll.Cllb d1:.c11t ~ a.zi 957 Ottlf ,..e HHng:.. n.... ._w~c:i-~ 9118 673·5013 R r c· II P 536 9~ u . ren •· aa • . P&lnUn E t /I t E Prot al r I t 1.,.1.~ --_ e i. a 10'\ · notch, de~nd. service & • 1. x r n r. X· esalon an mg. top w.& 001 :in)llmt> _ ArcWtedl .e . ---ASpMmCoocrctc & t ree Gtadfng . est. AJ»e> Holiday ctean-pr~. ~t, neat, reaa. quality paint. Re:.ulti. •••. :;rn!!:: .......... Shampoo• :.team cle~. romoval & rlC'onu1,,. •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• R~maRrier • Houseclean· ma ailvcr pollahlna win· Uc d9&MMS Dave quaranteed. Lh:. 346996. ·~~OFS m:sttablled hlrtco11~ Color bri11htener1>" wht Free E11l 631 5071 <!1..i~1 _,,_ '"•· e 1• reaa, own .. _:_ t i:;u -..4143 646-8288 wrc<:t , c:. a 35 yrs •1 I •Da!an-t::ri11lneerlnf "!>U lOnun bleach. Clean LI ed. · · ..-.-ouucr. Dump truck. lr11N. 642·1403, 64.5-3439 ..., ... , • (!. ~ Interior, exterior paint· lla.rold Gunn ~9 2961 •Coc\:ltrucuon New llv, din rm. hull SlS. Av.: l'ens Haulllng, tree work . a..dlc .. fng i o I . S u p r e m e Pa1otina. Homes-lotr. & --- &ddlUoos. Rt1>1Comm I. rm S7 50 <'ouch SlO ch• a......r1c• grad n". demo etc •••••'-•••••••••••••••• workmana.bip. Call Jack Ext~rior. Specialty . Sewtncif Alteratl°"5 · rp...., S5 Guar t•llrn pet odor. ••••••••••••••••••••••• .,...... Walla, paUos. new lawna, _,_. pt.I. ra e. .... ....,._ P D I Co <Lift 1020 · • • •• ..._.. 831·1.257 s~ c•--t .,,.,,. """""' A i.o , ·"1 "c"" ••••••••••••••••••••••• ------' C H-.n-Wt d I et M --------CUSTOM Sl':WINfi. Xlnt c_,...tw 'pt repair 15 yrs expr. ~t:CTRICAL SERVICE -... L n ow,., wa • c. r. sprkleu. iron work. AeousUc Ctngs shot. In· Plas .... /Repalr quuhty. ali.o altcrationi.. ••••••••••••••••••••••• l>o work myst'lf. Rcf:s CALLSS15 1lc,&SMAIJ, ••••••••••••••••••••••• ynn96C).5844,536·m1 fountaln1. Llcenae d tr/ExtrSinclalrorDunn ••••••••••••••••••••••• dollclolhe:.97!1l070 ev DOORS, window~. ~1~101 JOBS84.2.8233 Tree/plant trim or re· SUMSHIHEGIRLS 837-4353 . FAwa.rdtProd.RC.Con· VERYNEt\TPA'l'Cll Tiie --- t:dbinets, !>ht'lves H·.._ ... _....n~t-' move Yard. cleanups, ~-tr.~S2ee7Sl-1747 JOBS&TEXTU1n: , ~ ~ nc lawn work. Lite movlna. All types of home&: omce .--.. r Free est 893 1439 •••••••• •• • ••••••• • ... • Rough/finish. Pickup WeCare CarpetCleaneri. LicJ27136 IW5-6974 548.5863 clean\ni packages. ••••••••••••••••••••••• PROFESSIONAL PREP · t' 1-; KAM 1 C ti 1 t• work 642_!l7113 -~ar;:1~~c~~:0r:t::~:1I ELECTIUCIAN-Priced -----Special Apl:I & R.E work. Brickwork. Small jobii. R& PA111NTlNLGIEX:;.,E67R4.1 PATCH PLASTEfUNG Nt•w/rl'moocL l•'ret' 8,,1 <.;urpeoter, ull phasei., re· ri h r , ti . t Stucfont, big truck: Haul· Bonded/ insured. l''rl'e Newport, Cost.a MeH le eas nn. c. -. A 1 1 t y pc s , F rt· 1. 1.1 m I J 0 ha we 1c0 mt• moocls. patio covers work guar ·rruck mount laerael·orresemaJt!bl JOmbs~ l' on ini:. dean.up. trees cut ests & Instant ser vice. Irvine 675-3175 evd. Free est. 638.7394 estimates. Call MO 6825 na '>,126 aft 5 urut Fr l'SI, reas rates .. A b 494 7669 540-9525 & 552 0245 """ -~;:;.Jree ht Rd IHS·3'il6 _ _Lice~ 673·Q359 G~~~t" JO . • -------Bnck. block, slumpstone, Y10UNG11MAN. 5 yraFexpr'PlaciW"'J TrHS..-.ice St Cl , H 1 1 G .... _._ -----llaveaclcanhouseforthe planter1&twalls,a11ot.tle n wa cover1nai. ree •••••••. •••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• CUSTOM FrtAMING .eum citn o Hay aruen .. .., Houffdean.lllMJ Holdldays. The Moppets & concrete. Reas. Uc:/· esta.MS-8S76Andy HOM"'"AVERS Pl b R dd· OK D . Spct·1al, l'Al le uphol (3 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••.,•••••••••u ••••••• Cleanlo1Serv. Reliable, bonded. Cali Bob . &:..;> •• um . Removals, trlmman,~ w~fi' ~1·~ . ( r) Rms) $19.!r5 up to 400 WEEDING-CLEANUPS Want a REALLY CLEAN reas &refs.5'6-2393 673-0164.963-1339 ~palnt'glipaperhan&· $Ullh& HHeaUng.&Fr~·eblt: pruntng. Frel: t>:i..t. Ltc ti. u · sq.ft.+ hall & bath free! weeldy Mllinlenance HOUSE, Call Gin ham mg. Clean. work auar. 10 r. oneal re 11 c fully Insured 642·2624 Jnterlor r emodelt na. L·l-F ESystems Freeest 642-fl'J07 Gll"l . ..t'r~estMS·SJa Housecleooiog with a P~P .. rllMJ Free eat 957·0941, ser;lce. So~~~C OK. W.tecbecb nanel1ng, cab1nc". roo'~ 631·5350 64S-J939 art ti personal touch. Refs. ••••••••••••••••••••••• SJ6.4383 751· lSOor , w .... 0 It L d M •••••• •• ••••• •• ••••••• • reproduction. Eves.Cemtat/C rete ig an scape ain·Allces Housecleaning. M6·2'20orS36-6728 PETERSPAINTING P.-1-&YourC He RMll!KWalttpalr Pine & Solicl Ouk 675·4697 ••••••••••~••••••••• tFeoallnce: IMotw h& El~ge. Reas, reliable, ref11. Own Housewor'-· 0...,.., 4 bl . Expr'd. Beas Rates. llimal' OS ••••••••••••••••••••••• waterbeds Complete hne -u man . au 1ng, trans 64.2-7207or646-487l A . v,....n • e, Free Eat. Call Gene AverageExtrlSlry$395 p I t b f CEMENT WORK. All clean-ups, rototlllloa. · Experienced. for est call 2St.oey$545 lntt$4.5rm an your ouse or & acc. Rcui.onable NEED Hal'? k111ds. Reaeonable. Free Free Fat. 67S·~l6 Ught housecleaning done L.J . 538-2473H.B. ~ Price.incl ;,,_trl/labor Chrlstmaa! K~K Paint· Terry's N w Pt· Ba) l'Sts. Call 7S0.662S by expr'd German lady. PROFESSIONAL Paint-Guar/lmr-Freeest. in&Callu.stwo. 499-S?SS 642-0161 Help yourself to a Heaping selection of Qualified Hopefuls lo the DAILY PILOT HELP WANTED A~ , GtMralSerYIC.frl Xlntrera.SShr.S46-483J ThelmmuculateCleanins tng~ Jnter/Exter. Reas, Uc.320881 Ted~7085 --C: em<' n t Work · •••••••••-•••••••••••• Co. YOUR SATJSFAC· workauar642--0386 • Don't drop the ball! Get a The rastest draw in rt111' D rl v e w a Y s • Pat 1 ox. H.ANDYMAl'i : Oarpentry, TION GUAR . 759.()377 The fastest draw In the job with a Jow·cost Daily ~est.. .a 1>J1ly Piiot walkways. Kcusonable. electrlcal. plumbing & Flnd w~at you ~ant in Have somethin1 to sell? West ... a Dally Piiot Pilot Clusil&ed Ad . Class1fled Ad. Pho111 free es ts. ~·0757 noors. Pb 847-2787 Datly Pilot Classifieds._ Want Ad Results 642-~8 Oas1ifled ads do it well. Classified Ad. 642·5878. Pbooe 6t2-S618. 642·5678 ~~~~ ..... ~!.~~ ~~r.~.~·:.~ ..... !!~~ ~~r.~!~·:.~ ..... !!~~ ~r.~~~ ..... !!~~ ~r.~~ ..... !!~~ ~!!~·~ ..... !!~~ ~!.~!~~ ..... ?!!~ ~~.~ ..... !!~~ ~-~~·:.~ ..... !!!~ Counterg1rl • ll11usecleuners. own J,i:,rutort~:up~e. ~ay\~;; Maintenance·Llte. days. HURSUAID~ ·~/TrM s 100•--------·1SALFS PEOPLE, rnakr De~~~ct~~~!~~~dM GEN'LOFFICE. trans.Top$$ Ba~k\ayDr~J· Ap_ply. 1131 Bac:k Bay 3·11. Full or p/Ume. Ultra modern co seeks SALES ~~Sh0oui;:. E1 ·Z seller. _ _ _ Full lime Irvine Runch 642-7207 or646·4871 • ! Dnve. Newport Beach. Mesa Verde Conv Hosp., happy lndlv. for PR pos. A FUNNY e c Phone COUNTER G1rl/Pnntm.: 1-'.irmcr 's Market.------:--;-:-Kurdex. Inventory Con· 661CenterSt,CM. CallCari,833-2700. Den-Solicitors, at home. ~hop, Npt. Bch Openini: 838·2851. 9 lo 5 wkdys Housec~eaning :Sen Ice trot Posting Clerk. Mu:st Manaoement HURSH AIDIS nil 4' Deonis Peraonnel THING 673·_50_1_3_ _ a ,.1. 1 mm~ d. Ca 11 --needs Eoc :spkng gal full . have good math cap11bi1i· • Service of Irvine, 2082 s nd ch Sh p t'44-8233 for appt. GIRL FRIDAY pi t. Car nee. 'Dop S. ty & ledg1ble handwr1l CAREER 3-ll, exper. pref'd. Coun· Michelaoo. HAPPENED ~rs ~:am.i::;;. ,.:~t~h~;1 1 Girl Ok. Lite bkkpn". ~7-0609art5 mg. Exper. prer'd. Hrs try Club Conv. Home,-----------" c..oa3001 llC_....,..,.,.IST fo'r1. Call or apply bef 11 Dula Processor, f/t. comp 10 Key, type Phone 8-5, Mon thn.i Fri. Good MAUIGEMENJ _. · U-llVT" or art 2pm, Sut>er acct'g serv. Some sel·y'I personality. Call 960·5377 Housekeeping Cringe benefits. Apply, M Parking ittteodaou-Valet For Construction Co. ON THE WAY Sandwich, 675 Paularino. ~1'.~~~·g exp. helpful GIRL.<; LEAD HOUSEMAN ~~~~~t~t~~:.cs, 350 OPPORTUNITIES p/Ume wknds ·" eves. ~:'~.1U~~l~~!n~ TO WORK C.M.54s-4867 ----------Own your own busines" OutstandJng opportunity Musl have Calif. drivers AM &5 PM. 962~ • Deliver y Driver & Sell cust. b1k1011 .. Fun & forrehablcperson. Good LAIORATORY license. $2.65 per hr+---------Seamstress, pay com Production Worker. $3 lo pror1t. 642·24 55, J v. rompany benefits. Ven1punctu re Tech. At Jack •• The lo• percentage or tips. Call Receptionist/Order Desk. I DIDN'T ~~~:~~=.t~al~ ~~~g . :.tart. Call 642·~--messg. Apply9am·noon P/time. 2 to 6PM. Call Family R"tmranb 675-8611 after 4PM for Good w/numbers. peo- -----Mon·FrL Personnel ror appt. 640-0HO appt. pie, pbooe contact, typ. WANT JO 60 Dtllivery. general. Must have valid Callr dnvcr~ llcen.-;c & good dr1 vin~ rccOl'd. 54.8-~ GUARDS MARRIOTT HOTR. Jack In The Box hali im· Part/F\llVTime tab or· ing. Needs to be neat & 900 Newport Ctr Dr LEGAL SECY mediate open1~gs for ders & ma.Ice deliveries. pleasant. 540-1144 If_.,. ftot Newport Beach Sm. business lit1gat1on management traLQees In Avg $5·S7 per hr'. Must w- Full & p/t1mc. Work any Equal Opp EmplY1" m l( firm in Npt. Cntr seeks San ~lement~. San Juan have reliable car & RICPT/TYPIST hcrflng fWI D E LIVERY Person ::.h1rt.N.B.area.Uniform1----------t cxper.legal secy. Must Capistrano, El Toro. phone.Wetrain.CallThe Our co. is seeking a wottcingorNldng nced4td for bu!ly Npt furn. Retired ok. Teleph have xl n t skills . Laguna Beach. and Fuller Brush Co. qualihed, enU>u1lastlc good truvel ai:enc·y. Musi & car req'd Nal'I co HOUSEKEEPER. Live Shorthand req. Submit DanaPolnt.areas. 754-6471. recpt-typist w/a gd. CAU..~":!~ have motorc,Ydt·. able ti) \~/top pay & hcnerits in. Refined lady English resume 10 confidence to ---------1 pbooe per&00alily for a travel (rwys Will work Call 83J..46939am-2pm i.peaking. 6 dys. Re(s re· Ad •987. Dtuly Pilot, ASST. MAHAG!I PART TIME busy, rriendly ore. Must AN INTERVIEW approx.Shrsdully,Mbn -----___ qwred.NB.573-4256 P.O. Box 1560. Costa S I0,400-$12,380YR SUHDAYOHLY have front ore. appear. IASIPAY + lhru Fri. llrly wage & HAIRSTYLIST enjoy the HOUSEKEEPERS _M_es_a_,C_'A_._92_62_6 __ _ Drivertodropbundleaof _CM_._54&-__ 2982_____ C~~la~~HJn~~ mileage pd. N~ut ap relaxing profession of No ex per. nee Xlnt LEGAL SCTY MAMAGEA Daily Pilot to curlers. Restaurant help for Jack-C.aual. Fun Alm0&pbere pe<ir. a must. 833 96!.?__ :1km care. Xlnt salon l>t'nefits includ. i.1ck pay Legal Position avail. in S 13.000-$19,760 YI Must have van or large ln·Tbe-Sox, Immediate FUM-TIME SECRETARY f'ast growlng Rea I Estate firm near Orangl' County Airport. need~ secretary w/xlnt. typing skills & ability to com pose correspondenc~. Zerox 800 knowledal' helpful. Real Estate fn vestment or escrow ex per. req'd. Salary com· monsurates w/exp QUAIL PL AC!-: PROPERTIES. INC. (714) 752-1846. DELIVERY or parts & _~_0659____ Bayview Conv. 205S H.B. Law Firm. Some st.aUon wagon + iood openlngaonallsbiftsat3 p••·T·TIM• d -Thulin CM6423SOS APPLY IN PERSON driving record. Call CoataMesast.oresPlease -'" yar cleanup pcr:.on for H • •RDRESSER -·-. --· --• =· in LIUgation prer. "'"" """l k f H Ir you read well. like to••--------truck. ""--t t ~ 0A7"'"1N FRIDAY, DEC. 16 ~--.as or arry applyinperson: •• mg co. "uns a e!I, w t some chentel. Nr bch, llOUSEK EE r ER. Mon Y open . .,.. ·<>U"t 0 Seeley or Don Williama 38S E. 17lh St, talk on the phone & want · SJ.nAc. c~~l76900Westmmi.ler . .:d prk'g. 673·5342 Thurs day & Friday. own employment agencies ~~~ENAl~ A~~~ 1206BakerSt. toe{\joy)'OUrjob ... Call SECRETARIES • • • o>.J"t' Sat transporlatlon Some _need __ c_al_I. ______ ANAHEJM SHERATON PIX AatwtrS.... '2235Karbor Blvd. DEllVHY -HA~!)Y\IAN rooking. $30 per day NB LIVE.JN Com panion HOTEL. 1015 W. BALL Wanttoworkdaya,al\.er· TIME/UF£ & TYPISTS Mes~enger/Couner OWNTOOLS area.640·l751 _____ housekeeper salary RD,ANAllEIM. ~~e:::1:S'?' l~:r~1---------LIBRARIES INC Be prepared for the up 5 day K~k. P1t1 0 mc am. or S.l8--llJSc>roits.6423 HOUSEKEEPER pref. open. Prerer cultured RETAIL coming holidays. Earn µ m . now r i: <.: o . --student, S2 50 hr. CdM woman uble to tru\•el Or semi briefresume lo: ~~'!::ts o: ,:~:.' ~t~~ 83., 0095 top SSS on temporary as -~ 314:1b~wn II & 101\~I 1~~~~~-1~:Y~ 1r;;:~~~~~~c area. 640 ~6 _ _ ~~3 ~1ii~~w~~:0~1~ J.L SMITH pay for exp er• d CJ.ERIS F.quaJpP~D)&l.rLmlf ~~~~~d~lQ.7.1~~:;1(~~ J>ental as~1st. 1·ha1r~1de f>iMer llou~c exp. pre· Housekeeper, hve in Non-smoker. No heavy operatora. Call &40-08l2. _ __ ,. , 1mmedialeplaF.ement. exµ'rl only. X ruy Ill· rd Apply virtor Hugo N.B Pref. driver!> lit· housecleaning. Good re _E_._o_.E_. _______ , UTO'RM ---------1 ~8~ f £ · Great opporl for right Inn. 361 Cliff Dr. Lag. Send written reply l\l<ll <·ommendat1ons. 493·4601 FOOADSuMbslll iERary'ol,NC rlXAMwerS9" eo....-111eeMcn.ta 1------·--·1 oove )rCloe ·d· ~on.847-7611 BchMon-fo'ri .3-SPM Ing salary requirements btwn5&10PMforappt. ~id ~W··•-"· SAL"'" u. to Classified ad no !I07 P/tlme daya, evee ft ..... ~ &:..;> DENTAL ASSISTANT 1---------1 clo Daily Pilol. PO Bo"t Llve·in wanted. Pr:vate Ralston Purina wtmda. Exl*° pref'd, but lat, "~Stdlla 557•0061 R.D A eligible. ortho or. HOTEL 1560, Costa Mesa. <.:a room. Ocean v&ew. Company will train. Good c~. Noexper.req'd. Wetraln 11.ECTRONIC nee, cha.JrS1de exp. prl'!. COOK 9'.!626 B 0 a rd + 11 a I a r y . P.O. Box 183 benef'IU. EOE. t40-0812 thole hired. ,\pplicants OIGAH SALIS 1723 Birch St, NB Newport Beach 498<~Z40 :492·2728 San Diego. ca. 92112 9am-4pm Mon· Fri. apply at Ut.otem Stores 640-0121 Enjoy excellent com· 18 hours a week. $3 hr --. -------An Equal located at: • HIGHEST C 0 M ·i·----... ---• D"""'TAL pany benefits. Working with Senior 1.<>oki°' for bright young Oppor1pn1ty Employer P 8 X Te I e p ho 11.e lllDeUlar A\te, C.H. MISSION /G UA RAN· .,. ... , Appl y9am-noon citizens 536•5352 gal for an architects of· Secretaries, F&&cll 6 J.1110N.PacitlcC8tHwy TEE I FR ING E RECEPTIONIST Mon·Frl. Personnel · !ice. Must be able to type ---------• p/tlme positions open. LalUJll Beach BENEFITS. Sell in high C~ta Mesa :>48· 707'1 MAIR Ion HOTEL Hsekpr for 2 adults. pvt weU. Call Ternr, 675·6200 ~a1ement Po:ltlo~i W'alli.ng to ttajn for ri1ht We are an equal traffic shopptn1 ma Ila. Dental Ortt1odo nt1·,. OOONewportClrDr rm/bath. Refined lady 88 exper. aec. nq. people.645-8712. opportunity employer Some ability to play lhe '° Newport Beach LVH7·l PocoCandJes,40FHblon ~--:=:=-:-:---·1-••------·I organ req'd. Previous Ch a irsidc A11:11~t F.qualOppEmplyrm/f who prerera good home Medications & treat· Island.Newport Beach. PIZZA sales exper. useful, but P lime. Some dental e:< i---------•I to high wages. 644-8819 me n ts. Meu Verde HelpWanlA!d. Need some llM7•J:30 we wUI ttain you. Call _£_er· pref'd. 642-732.S___:____ -Conv. Hosp, 661 Cent.er MANICURIST, expel". Apply by phone, Country Club Conv. Mr. Lynn,893-Q31. Dttltal Ortho Assist I lotel St, CM 548·SS85 673-5342 TbUJ"S. Sat. 548-7863. Horne, 549-3061. 1--------•t Secretarftt/G. Ofc & Leclal• to $11.000 Empfoyers Pay All F~ Liz Reinders Agency 4020 Birch.~t.e 104 Newport Bea~ 833-8190 Call ror AppU&tab '65 SECRETARY Exper. not nee. 644-1405 Coshler/Coffe~ Shop Mature woman to care for RM 11·7 SALESMAN :.. --_--dllnghthpef rk.cv· pexlrsorn· for H.S. GRADS MACHINIST kids, ages 3 & 5, CDM PLUMBERS Full or p/tlme ... esa Nnrem.wpoSortmCeelnetgearl eLxapv.r· -ay s I l. .o< nni<c & COLLEGE TRAINED area. Min. 31 hrs/wk. • .a Ex per. in electronics Des Engr/Deg toS18K benefits & oppor ror arl 4 Day/40RourWeek $12.5. Must drive, have Drafnmen 4Bepalrmen Verde Conv. Hosp, 661 field. Needed to cover pref. but aui:hL conside1 Accountin11Clcrk $750 \uncement Apply in General machine work Mu1t have own truck. CenterSt,CMS48-5S8S S.1',. valley area. XJnt trainee. Intelligence, Y t N 2 4 No ex per necess. No on quality aerospace referencos. 873-2897 arter Earn s·-a w.. Wll" ----'------.. _.. d •· t · ~~7~~i!epcrs~~~~~~ ~~~to0n ft~~~·1. ·4~~5 stnkesorluyo(fs. Plenty compon e nts & as · SPM lnlin 75~ .... 11 SailmaltlnlfP01ltlooavall. ~~::!gtt~~e:e,~~~~8r!~ :~~~ean""Rui~1~~a:; .. lrvmePersonnelAgency Mo.cArthurBlvd.N.B. or work. Call 5:l9·1l83, semblies. Mu.stbeabloto MEDICAL ore assist · · lnmujorsallloft. Exper. company. Send resume 644·2071 488E17lh Coslu t.fesa ---9am-2pm. work from detailed plan· Lite typin1, Spaoiati Prlntlng/blndery penon desirable. bu1 not nee. to Box 59. %Daily Pilot. --------- Su1te224 64.2-1470 H ningsheets&bluepnnt.s. helpf\11, wW train. Must P/T, Moo-Wed. Appl] _548-__ 3467_. ______ , P.O. Box 1580, Costa SECRETARY ~ otelDESK CLERK Apply In Person be able to work eve9 &D· 1660 Placentia Ave, CM. SAW Mesa, ea. 921826 Typist. Recept. A/Paya. ------·-Monday-Thursday d/orwkndll.548-'ml Wed,Thun,Frt,9-5 S~ ---'-------1 ble Combo. Good typing DISHWASHER NIGHTSHlFT Eclerlftdustrin ltte: M 1 h k S .,. p Ro Du CT 10 N / SALESMAN & gen'l ore: skills req'd Wed thru Sun PM shift. Excellent opportunity INCOMETAX 210lI>oveSt,N.B. eta 11 op wor er •. 3.ilV MATERIAL CONTROL YOURIHCOMI Electrical Department Engineerinc ofc In Lon~ Mesa Verde Conv. Hosp. for conscientious in· PREPARERS Ile. Drill cut & pop nvot. CLERK/ Ti'alnee. Ex-· SSSS SSSS G Hrs per wk. Sat & Sun Beach movina to S.A 661 Cente .. St, c u d1v1duaJ able to work the MACHJHIST Surfglas Joe 973.9013 ._. , ... -........ a must. Exper'd. Apply, wtrull benefits. Ca 11 • '"' For employment in the · deslrable, but not man -· '""' -all night shift. EnJ·oy D·1verslfled wor" load "-RlmaHardware 2131437-6401. Santa Ana, Costa Mesa. "' Mothers Helper, Mon. d.a.tory. The followl~ ---~-....WOIK m ••• ~ DogGorooming Asst good company. benefits. mfg electronic i n · will all( Typ;ft.. ·---~ 2666HarborBI, CM Mature. Wiii train. i\pply91lm·noon. Fullerton areas during strumentatlon Modem thru Friday. Refs. Non qu y: ~-r.-HOUSEWMS G44·4000, CdM. Mon-Fri, Personnel the tax toason. Must shop. Advanced Kinetics s moker. Call aft. 6, wpm, accuracy more COU.EC'ilSTUDIMTS SAi fSMAN L'•-~-1 MARIJOTTHOTEL haveexpertence prepar-Inc., 1231 Victoria St .• ~ ~~D~~ Guaranteed H o urly P1umbiqDepartment """""'on cw 900NewportCtr Dr Ing personal inC1>me tax CM.64&-11~.E.O.E. MOTOR ROUTI pertlsaccurateoolOkev. Wa1e Plus BonUI. 5:30 G Hra per wk. Sat &Sun Come one. t'ome all! Newport Beach returns. Competitive Ma ,. pm to 8:30 pm. Call amua'-Exper'd, Apply, SECRETAIY Interesting. rast paced Newport Ctr Law ok Mag ll. legal exper. pre fd. Good sal. 644-&400. Rapadlyexpandinicom· EqulllOppEmplytm/f u lary aod excellent MAILCLaK Daily Pilot route ln atb, mua& poJHll 646-42ZJorcometo250E. KermRlmaHardware panyneeclsgoodpeoplo: working conditions . ~cleuplnte1',esting,po1s ~=~o:d!cybth~~·~h e.:!~~~.,':~~:Y~ 1'1thSt.,Calt&lleeL ~Harbol'Bl,CM SECRETARIAL Allsembler trnes. ship· Hours are 9:00 A.M. lo in promote roli\ watbln Friday plua Saturday6 Telephone. cooaktwab~ ---------1 Contractor seen offic(' pin&/receivlna cler~, 5:00 P.M., weekdays 00• co. Call Cal'i. 133-2700. cz. • ...a ••• momi'""· Gross iacomtni 6 out,oio< SALES SALES PERSONS, eMy employee with good ~~: ~l~a':~~~~d:r:: j ly.Sendresumeorcall: Denru1~Dennls Person-~r mon~UO cuh ~•Ila. Contact w! SALES PRQMOTION ~nst'::~~eJn~°:! =: ~l~:r::i~. semblera, lnspcctora, HOTEL R John Miiier . ~Serv&ceortrvine,208.2 deposit required. Call euatomers , vendor• • BACKGROUND-Pro Crystal Prisms, sell proposals & billings and electrlu l inspectors, HOUSE-'EEPE Tax Manager Michelson. 642-4121..,uk for Circula· Parent c om P • o Y • aporta oppty tor someone themselves. Contact: other related duties. Ex failure analysis. teat Day & Evenln~Shitts Fidelity Federal MAIMTIMAHCI lion. Personable t elephone wtth advertisln14' tlckel CRYSTAL per. la a plus. Good work technician, dynamic Weare currently seeking Savin1s&Loan ICH ....... IC penonaJlt,y • matmer It sales ablllty. Proven ENCOUNTERS mg coodJtiona "sala~ trim. EDP operator. reliable Individuals to 600N. Brand,Blvrl. M . "'" M01'ottaoun im~t. Cell 'lblnUoe track record required. 642-6342 Call 5574771 Mon. thru Company pays hourty loin theE ho~1aek"plng 'I ndP.10 .1Cae31 r:i:::~et~l:uor::aal~d DB.IYJa'f Mdiv~:100r.Jofa~Jborda>, .. ~ Caree r oriented, in· S I p/ti Fri. employees, Ure, medic•I eam. xce. 111t com-Ge a e. .91209 To dellvcr largo motor ,. DJVWn ,.,.. terestlng financial a eaperson me,--------&dental Ins. panybenefii.s. (2J3)244.ftll repairs of P.roductlon route ln S. Laguna and Co. (we°"1leeuual0ut packa1etorria. btperaon. mature. Gifts __ ~ ~-'!.ti SF.cRETARY-Pt. time Environmental Com· Appjy Pam•noon equipment.. Permanent LU1&nl Niguel. Must door f u T nit u re> · Submit resumes to R. ques. H.B. Call -· Need person wtnexlblt.t munlcatlons makes Mt¥t·Fri.Personn.t Equa10pportunlty f:'~k~~!~!.11~~ h&vegooddrivlqrecord 114-m.41!1 Jatte, 1100 Quail, Suite achedule.Mln.20hrsper custom thin film, hybrid MAallon H01'11. Employtr M/F collent beneUts and and deE*d&ble ·~· SSO UAl. IST Atl 101. Newport Beach, ca. SALl$PllSOMS wk. Shrthd, typlna req'd. microelectronic: comPO-900H~CtrDr,NB worklnl conditions. cash dePQllt required. P f 1 al 11 o4 92l!el» • Eilperi«lced. 30~ corn· To Ull. exec. V.P. of r~ ~nta(lcircul~. wat 0 Equal()pp b pf.r_rm/1 lnaural)ce Prosrerty fl I ncludln c 11 P•ld ~r,o:;:':J.!;oH:~ .::'..-::C,;i, -~:•to Sal =rin::i.~0;1kb~~i aleslatefinn.833..ms p:r\~:it~n g~pJ01l; Qaaualty secretary. Elt· holt~, company ~•id Seeleyorl>oDwUU•M• complete otflcf •t•ff. i.c:'at dr atttat aupply 'nllMJ377 SEC'Y M/F. C.11 tor •Pl>!• Mt. HeN1 ~_.or ~$.~ca11>'!!~~~!':! :fcf'g.l' =~· 11t::i Ml••f ".,Del•• yl Com~==l:!!' center bu an lm med. Wet,..... SI ZIC Our rompapy b 9eetin!l =~~thnl J•n. ~:.'v~~·ard+p~!~~~ Bkr, Lu Bcb. C•ll ~V:.".=:t:.~eJt;; llatuN r•p. tdwt lot FS~=-C.U ~r;_,fmkk~: Profitable a4Hnblna en enthuslaatic aec'y 1. Carol ¥oO~rtby , raurlfe e:,8/~:t.· et>Dt>WIOD.Ml bfftct. earl)' A• d ell v. Must 0t •:: • .--.-• • blell~~~l.~:Put ~.~ad.'~"'°" u~°!':l~l3'a~~: f!llY!rocuntfttll Newport•c Inn. 1101. 94~01 o~ • 1' t AM •PK Mo~Frt. tO bt"9trie01 • .,.2'78e. .,_ .. , ~· Salary+ blcen· w,...., v to n ~ paodloa aecntartal CocnmunJ~U'l.OJ ~Rd, NB. ~o go . '":L •! ...., l'OIQ~applieauoe: N £ w s p A p EB CMitWllC:rea ... tlv• (Ol_Dpematioo pro-=r~I~ t'e!: aentcetotMC.M.area ~Pulhlillll5'. ~c~pl~-EOE, . . ~ ~, .. CAUflO~ DELIVE RY J OYS· , ·~· W. lMA. CM cracn; Frlble ~netltl 6 nil ~I Semce ot M be 4kpendablo • • _ ~ta MeM ' MOUSICLiAMM• • ~lNT~Ot\J)UtGNSR 1666t Y•I---Quiel azion et for Reaf..a..s,u;e.hll>k ~~l~~tt lrvtfte,IOIUllcbel9on. aelf·startcrr. Pay ~m EXEC.Sec.toPret.Xtnt . r•soNNIL ~d ~:1 1&1> • 9"M ,Quiltma•912·11• 1 wutiid Ue.to :.eo11~ raptdl11N>tfln1 oom· ::=rate •latmi. :..~~l~::.'Jt~11 0ay wor1t:ifJttm• • ~~uJ:•~~riln:.1}1.: Sl7•tlt0 J NlGH'l' CL ERIC Good com~~11!,~ .. 8ch r.·,:~·a1c~r. =Tl~~. ·s·ECYtn•~ aal.'OOei>,tcJ..*f ::;t. P/Ume. Wk~d A •vn many nem• brand1. ..__. etJuy. ,\»Dlj ln P9rtOI) ,ai.o(JI00:..',:;1,. ,.-,.fl•!"'• e 1 I • tn1loeal businm ... Pull 0 __. '"pls•~~r1• U-·. ~~~~~~.,._.~]-==-:·:-~avail. Nied"wtndotr p 1 -• ·"'~ ,.. orlly AJr--.1•b• ll°'41t. ~ • ~·· ·• • h. '.•• T 1 -~~"" --or p/tlmo~ t4en or -v .. ,.., ...... f"Ui{o.ft-J\al~--.7(0,.1'Wal .. iall0~~Dtt ro-)rt.hf1 d•• 1,ner ~-___...,.·-·r SplfW ZZ!IONe"'*"BlCll ', lluh .. M• ;ca s·· .. ~·L <1Jom1n. Some leads. mustbopenonable.NB ' ri111 tt W prevfP.U fura turt · · -. ' " lllltme ........,.;· few Rt. AWNrW' '1u.o565 Loren buy •~eetronleab flrml ~;'hi sco-~ · stor• flt Opptr to NOWllJ'HITIMI ·" ...m'AIDU ~. '~ .;rr.;-lw'dwm for a ltr•cllva Tennis -• · Call Hr.Al· area. • • ~ ·\la~~ d\!'u!· I~~;. s. ... u....... wort t nport Beach for jab Makara Lo fhttk' ' a OIOMUll '·....it .e.on.; Blacb loe. =~Coron•~ M~!· ~·as.£m SIM10a CmUNS Good 1.-ltlie beft~Ota: ·.-6 • , ~ m• • 1 & of yr wh n ih1 Dally PUot Help Xlnt ~enefiC • lnel!W; Hal'I co. w/bemftb. &¥• Maxi :C,:1W ,.. · Sa l H: We n e•d 2 You can 1upplea .. nl '1"40fl Avnet El••· HOUSICLUM8S ., )t;randb,.:ut Optt\ la Weant.cl claulllc • tr -.lck ~· JlllYvW Clnlv. per. MC. Call B. Mor·:---. -ulctmtn to Hll ad· )'OW' preMnt incomo b> t.ronlct, 191> c00im1~. Hard worattni. ulf 1W~lf;i:la&a.,~;,:} ~'.r~1,1M job _109,.I.aal h nqt a5'nunin.OI~ nw.. MS-tnl Mcm Uu·u vertistni f« loeal dlr c· benoflU81 other Sr CM :tJ; .,,,.,j .,,..,~ inl!U••t..d Catl?B9103'TT.-,.""' .. ,.!i t. UllreJOUlll-t.Ouldv ~ ' P'rifor'•Jlllt. ' t )' OA~Qg RAl.E ed• la tcri••·cd commlulon, ClUUns. Do tt hl,)'Wr ' ·.. ".. .. ~ , _ • ., . __ ,, l ~~~11 ·~w·!~J.'.J ... Olfmn1 )':OUr strvlc!l' Clai llled ads ·a.tu bl1 fht J>aJ1Y J>llbtbrla1hap. prot«ted t.m'tlory. edv 1pare time by •iattlnt OENIRAL0"1CI! r. ~1ou11elufttl',I need•4: '"' ,...,. -""1~Wlh u Ml h• Utt Job ~lt~cns, amlllj h~ms or n.-futMt draw ln tbt ;,.,, reau1t1. To place JOW' 11111 t per pnfeaTed, with your frt nds. C.U ~~~~~~s'"'.u '~~~::a• ~cc; , •. JI ff[1'..114i-'Jil! Ii= Cll~°":.~ I ~~~<--; u:\ c~i•,,, ~~~~ ·=~!~,: p -~ l:::::r~~-· ~=~~ ~ L=\.""~ ' ~ .__.,,...'"'. ~~ -~;l'.1 -_-1r: . ..,. ' -·~ ~..,. ,o"'="' --·-r ~-~ .~ -v• , ~... • -It • I ...:;::;,:.....;;;DAl;.;.;;L;.;.Y..;.~..;,;L;.;O;.l;...._.:;•:....-.....;i*IP'ed;;;.;M!d!y=~·.::0.C.::.:::.::m=IOe=.:..t .:.;l•:i.•.:.'1~1:.,:.1 Dem 8040 hu•a • 1010 Mbc .. Wltll 1010 -~ ,.._, ................................................................ . -..... w ........ 1 1001 • W .&. ~ED Mllcal••... • IOIO Oftlcie fwait ... Ii ~ & ..._. .. . ,...... •rwv I 00 Hllp W..t.4 110 lri1h S.U•~ .. P11ppl.. 9 Carree table. autO. dark ""I ....... •••••••••••••••• ....... 1011 ... ..... •• , ....................... -................ ....................... ald.~.cauans. color. tood co11d.lU011. TOP CASH l>OLLAR locloCcat ..... • ............................................ . :">401rl' Mil ,\,l ml1uu, ~ $40.s.a.M:M PAID FOJ( YOUR 1 .1 Year old. Llmll· Ci-ud tOIO ''"'P"r d. t-\all ur p, timu r I .. S l STIWAlT IOTH ptt "··", 8 month.a female uovinl to East Coaat, JEWELRY. WATCHES. Medela • d "a e. a econ d . ••••••••••••••••••••••• \wl> Ar~u :>t.ill1>n, l7th t ~p .. ono •es AMTl'"'lllS °"" ,.. ART OBJECTS. GOLD, One actle modfl Sollo• Delk/book type w/~up· "" 4 fb d "lf\ Uh!, C l1 SLAP A SMILE ~ · ae.istered. $25. t4e·4716 must sell, rumllure It s IL VER g p; R v Jc E, Sailboat. complct.o $400. plies. $450 . ..,_1221 "; f~,or(~!!, .. J;{ 0 a" ' •AMERJCANOAK• aflcrUcwcekend.I. nmc item.a. 64Q.0292 al\ FlNE FURN ... AN· 1 Kav•n R.C. KeHcoiter. N 13" , ll I • . 'i.a1.a26 :wn1rl" St11t!on Atten· ON YOUR FACE P~~':\n'!':~~~J Boxer pups, AKC 6:30 TlQUF,S.&u-2200 eompletelnclucUna yro .• !~ter fo':~ •hee __ ___;;__;___; ___ _ 1ldnt, ~ll~r d D•y & 0 •"' R 1 •• .... Ch pi D d 1 noala & all nee. support ..,.,.. .. ,, 89 u or m 8' American hber1las& 1-;H'S 1-'ull & P tlml" Ap American a.k An .. ,..u.. ea s...,r.,.., am on esk, mo ern sty e, LUGGAGITACiS equip. Prof. buUt 6 u11e. S2 ...... Ma1ter dinghy. Almoat new. i•I)', Sht:ll Swllun, 17th & & A BULGE lo Calif We bll.Y dlrect Ii sited. metal w/wood top. $35. trimmed Coat woU ove <llarie or VISA. 2UI A •'>AL ~da Irvine, NB. . pas.a the savlnp on lei 847--0688 ae.9124 from YOW' bu.110111 card. SlOOO Sell $500 G',lectric Manne Ave. Bal lllnd. _.... ya. You Al•o AnUquc Send one card for each · "' ""''1 .,....-600'7 .__._ ....,.__. __ service Sta. Night Attend ~ Or 5 nita a wk. Apply, Shell, 17th & Irvtne, NB srrvlce Sta. Attendant P/11mc. Nllal appear. & handwrlllnie only nood .1pply. :?~90 Newport Ulvd,CM Sf>rv. Sta llelp need~d Im · med. Full or p/l. Apply, :l90 E. C11t Hwy, Nwpt lkb. ------- scwini: 'frJtnl"e. Wiii train if you have horn(' -.ew1ng e'Cp~r. 3025 S Killbon Ave, S A. (Dyer W. &Newport Frwy) Sotdffer/AsM.-.... 'Im 2 yr<1 soldering & '41ri n ~ expor. r eq'd !'!Omo dnll pr~. mech'I Jssembly exper. helpful Cole Instrument Corp, E 0 E. 6"2·8080. IN YOUR WALLET · • ""to Yoe 1045 · ~ plua one apare w e R.C. power boat wtwate _. ..... • -.. --ReproducUoos ..-e avail. ••••••••••••••••••••••• r--s. 1055 · ti cannoo at siren Over a• •~ a. o I•• 1090 ._.__. to-so attbevuylowestpriceti. u•-..o 1 b' .. r .b 3,.t. =.;::•••••••••••••••• e urn permanen Y .--• ... -.,....,...... " TIME/LIFE Located at· .. ....._. ma e, ... -• .,. TIAW sealed attractive tac 6: long $400 Complete. •••'••••••••••••••••••• •••• .. ••••••••••••••••• LIBRARIES 750£ ov'ERRD.S,A mo'1.Lovable. PUK.ICAUC vn 1lrap meetlo" alrllne 675-31162or645-:.200 New8raodNamePlan<>1 CHRISTMAS Has both full & part · • "' ....., _.,.., MANY ""INE IT.EMS OP' D ' u1 • Pre 1~ over coat. SPIC• .a.1 c. llmcPo1illon1ava11. (AtTheNewportFrwy) -·.-. ESTATE JEWELRY 1 .. req remenla. • HwltBchExcJualveTEN· BeachMualcCentcr -- 4 l<'unlovlngarticulate 751-t922 FREEKI'M'ENS ' vent lou Ii theft! For a NIS CLUB membenhle. 17404Beacb Blvd H B HIGAIN, port.able VHF. indivaduallwhoare OpenSun·Wedl0.6 3malo,2female.1lwks. ART OBJECTS, AN· persoaallzedtatencloae 963-4870 8'7-3536 ' '· Re1$299.9S,now$199.9S euaertoleamhow &Thun.Satl().8 646-lZla TIQUES, PINE J'UllN., wallpaper, fabrlc or GEMTRONICS, 380 tomaketop$SSSSSS$ ETC. PHONE FOR IN· "Day Glo" paper fJ we GOLF Membership in Baby Grand Plano. &ood while line depth re· --------Belae min. Poodle mix. FO. &s BROCHURE. will back & trim your Irvine Coa.at CC. $500 + CODd. $1500 or best otr. corder, rei $47S. now We Off..-: Antique Collection ; spayed rem. To adults 6622100 tap. Or try two card.a tramfer fee. Call: Shell 55'7""10Devebelt 5299. Hourfy S .. ary cry.ta!, copper, brass, ooiy Nd.a gd hm. $31-1980 •--...... ,,..... back to back. btwn 9 & 5, Mon thru frl N E WP 0 RT BO AT Guam.Comniulollt silver. china. depression ' ---PRICES at714-871-2100ext2885 GRAHD CENTER htcenffn iloftldea glass, furn "some Avon. LABRADOR Puppies, 6 Mo4lll S2•or31$$ all d AallMJlll.U!l.. 15S5Newport Blvd, CALL US TODAY AND START SMIUN 833-8095 TIMI/LIFE UIR.A.RIES, IMC Equal Opp Emplyr m/f 498--0672 wk s. Per f. r or I Scale model Solloi 4/:>taga$1.60en. PLANT Party, ay, vw-~ n.-eo.taMl'$a MS-6015 Chrtatmaa. 8'11·7245 or Sailboat. complete $400. 6/9tap$l.50ea Dee. 15. 640-5815, Ir Mia· A11tlque Plano Co. & --.-----;,_;,,;~ SpedalShowhMJ ~ lKnanR.C.Hellcopter, lOormoreSt.40ea. sloo~yDr,CdX LoulaPianoServ.Recon· S~cnflce·l Gray Marine of=-• n•ack Lab fem. spayed. to complete lncludillg Jyro, Sales Tax Included flllEWOOD dlUoned Am~ean UP· 1n & V 8, 1c om p I et e • uo floats as all nee • .upport NOCARD? rlgbt1 frem .oo. s· w trans. c ean 25 br 'I Est good home. Well man· equip. Prof. buitt & Draw your own or aend $151corddelv4~ Kawai Grand, •el'f reas. since OH. 1 Chrysler Jewe:x... nere<Urt.raloed.~ trimmed. Cost well ot name, addreu. phoae It MOVING ! .Blkea, train, Beaut. Art cue Granda Crown, co mplete evs/wlmds over $1000. Sell $$00. we'll make one card per layout. bar, crib, baby at pvt. pty prices. 895 w/lnns. N2-9236 leek Deer 1 •~ Yr old rem cat, wu Electric R.C. power boat ta&. Add 2So each. tbin1s, l°"'' clotbea, Glenneyre. L&poa Bdl.. Full slie Blonacle from 1196 H...._MC/Vlaa abandooed. nds &d bm. w/water ™ "•ireo. ·Send check or money or· fUm. l&GJ,Pa, motor C'J ~ LI bertyshlp compass Sm blk, wht, spayed & Over 3' lon1. S400 derto: cle,ek.611·2342 1bom.u tranalator or11n, works. Navy grey paint. AN11CiMJE llASS shots. Very lovable Complete. 675-3562 or P1LOTPllMTIM<i model AW Id condl· Ready to rea&ore. $800. Bathroom Hardware. ~ ~2200 P.O. Box"80 SCRAU I £TS tlon. A1k\oa UOO. ~days. Fly Fana, lilbt fixtures, ~I d O»ta M•a. Ca. 9aS26 "" 6'5-Zf45 -........ p 9 furniture hardware & Darling Be e type og FREE ANSWERS --. oww o4o Sr. Typist Telephone Sales collectibles. Open Dally fully tral .See&you'D GarageSalealpswblle WATERBEDS Bab)'&TandPlano,walout ...................... . We wall train. Earn l<MI. Solllvans Antiques, love.MZ-8005 quantitleslalt..6'5-7221 DISCOUNTED Bakuy-'fumor-51'5 Yamaha. Xlnt cond. FORSAUt!! Ncededlmmcdiatety Christmas money. 1237 So. Main., S.A. YorklePoo,male,6me .• c~llllll.l"l"URJ21 Froml117.77complete Novel-Malady-A&ldniSM00.988-4S70 '77 Sea Ray 24 ft. Long & short term as d . 1 Ml-4174 d h f ...,, .a... H •iu7seo YOUJLLOA.N model 8 Weekender with 70 :.1gnments. Holiday & Salary an commas 00• nee 1 • ome or Wettclfflta.Mu ...,.ua eavea__.. Sien in a bank parking Wurlitzer 280 ut· hours. Must sell; bought vacation pay . Call. Sl\eraton Solid Mahog. Chri•••OOS.l20l ~ a .. SlotMllChlMt lot: "Prive Carefully. terlly Grand Piano new boat. Pri. pty. Call nosplta1t zut.1on plan -63~.aak forl>on $deboard <Buffet). Lov· ,_...._. 1050 Honet 1060 Unusual Genun made The Wt Ytu Save May Sl,OOO. &42·3082 brand Jerry at ;.l\ailnble. TeleDhone/RKeDt e.lY Heirloom. 1 Cam ................. •••••• ••••••••H•H•••••••••• AnUque Slota. Several to Be YOUR LOAN.'' new. 54WIS8 New PTT 'telep6ooe 111.nce 1914. Only $450. By STOllEWIDESALE Thorou&bbred, chocolate choose from $700 ~an, Tbomutl'Ollbador 546-1200 :.} s lcm or P DX oper. appt. 497·312.1 New fc uaect rurn, ap~'•• bm, lf b~J .very aten· 497·Z143 • • 11:u;:r:r:i. i:ac~: co1or·ilo, lnatnaments, •---°'"------ Exp. pref'd. Type 45 misc. Willon'• Bargain Ue, U Yra CJIO, a7Ml42 child's rocking chair. 2 euy lurnini, exciting SEA RAY'S 3848 Compus Drhe 546-4741 (Across From OrangeCo A1rport1 J:.qual Oppor EmplO)l'l' wpm. Salary dep on Appl..-8010 Nook. MS" 8lA W. 19th, Da)'s.JSIM2Revea. boUday Is all year run :.k1lls&exp. • ...................... CM.&U-T930 fsMS..a262 Fec:toryS• ebildren'sbilles556-'17A8 Uke 'liraad ~ $800 or Callll33-98ll FRGHT DAMAGED Reghtered Arab Cookie Jan, Bath ac In<toor and Outdoor makeolter.M6-2831 Alllf71.....,_ HOTPO.lNT SALE. 3308 **I BUY** Cbestoot. 1 yr old ceu,factory2Dda&di1 plants. Beautiful pie· 18'.JO• Tow Truck Drivers ex· w. Warner or Harbor, Good used Furniture le :~~:t~·bo'!:~~i~t'. continuted styles, &ellln tures booltabelrs anti· Hammond Sploet <>raao, ~t~·T!:fnf.~~ ~:~~ Santa Ana. 979-2921 :Jfilia.ncea--OR 1 will ,1500• firm. 176.8130 below wholesale. Dir que cb.alf. candlea, etc. must sell. $900/0ffer HAIUltSOM'S CASH PAID ors'" TforYou, Ev•. welcome. Yon tbru Sat Sfl6.9177 &-3183 SR"' • "'T Ave, NB642·12S2 ....,.._ Twaa Winton, 3196 '""'""" ~"~~lboe boar~rdope1nraautol0r dfocr· -TRAVEL TRAJNEE For ._"!!_shr/ ~!J:!'7 ~eJ..rlg MASTlllS AUCTION Jew• r 1070 Cammo Capiatraoo, S Leather pedestal waler PCloao 90 e°r ·v a1 :r my 2C h 3 a 2327 So. Maio. S.A. ~vuav .. WOl"IU&lg or ...... -..,.,_ 646-16'6 & IJJ.9625 ...... ~ .. •••••••••••••• Juan Cap. (acrosa fr E bed. Kiogaize. Complete. , • · 54°"'6555 Jleri.hap. Xlnt frrnge We will tram. gd typing ........... Pl ) ...,,... ., • ., ,...., Beautiful ebony, 8 . Mov· henchls &. workmg con· rrq non·smoker, oo ex-, CASH PAID WANTED ~ ua _..,,.,_....,,_ log. S..000/bst ofr. by 3101CoutHwy.N.B. tlitaons. E"p d person per nee, full travel Rec o o di ti one d For gd used furn. anti· TOP CASH DOLLAR Mhcil••-SUD, 12/18177. Please call 6ll·Z547 1•rt>r'd. ~all Gordon benefita,640-0111,9·5. Refrigeraten, wubera queal,clrTV'1, 957-8133 PA ID F 0 R y 0 UR Pinball Foosball Videos W..tecl 1011 forappt. 7SIMM.58 pp 26 ft . Thunderbird rJ y lor for a ppt. TD"'VEl. "'G~ " dryers. Freight JV'UT'C'T'Dy WATCHES New&Wled,guar.del ........................ .,, ball ~-· F ul (off bore i l4·546-7070 -,,. ..,.., damaged&ModelHome S~ft.loa&cuatomplldded ~"~ • • $350."up.Mo-ZMl -m QlllaUle, 10 yrs. orm a s >. 351 ----Exper'd only ror tem· returns. Guar/del. Also portable bar with ART OBJECTS, GOLD, Late 60'• or early 70'• old&llkenew.$800. Will V8's, all navlcational TAX PREPARERS porary m Jan. Possible new appllancea at coat + multiplex tuner, 8 track SILVER SER V l CE. Brittanica or Colliers ftnance pan. S62·3512. gear & ground tackle. 111gh volumc·:vear fiumepos.75'-1.565. 10%. DUNLAP'S 10960 &turat.able-allarebuil1· ~cru\l:l.s.~" AN· DIR~YOU ~~·~after s.wllttMaclla.11 IOtl ~ u!:r~ln~~:,.~ iro~ndtaxok. needs ex-Typist. f/t, 5 day week. Talbert (at Euclid) FV. los·plu• two custom . a•• h I b ••••••••••••••••••••••• wbeel l•ailer included· per d people for pre· take orders some ~10pn7da)'ll wrought iron baratocQ. ang ng er Malle.. erssewtns machine al f 11 Ca .... s checkers fro t • · a"~-! 581·74'6. Rolex -..·1deot wa•-h 0 ardens S2.49 up for L....1 -Lo 1013 , .. ca"1~~. Call N""CY so u canvas. 11 11ar~r • , · · • n tele phone collections. _......, r•at "" k•. h • ,. h 1 ..-.1-wn ... ""'~ ... , .... ... John Felt.er at642-0010or 11fc ual. contact Mr. Call Jam 546•0606 8•5 .. w/date & custom made 1tc ens, 6 ang ng .. ••••••••••••••••••••• 63HIM2or ....... ·1u."' Mo.821l "aundersonor Mr. Trapp M ·Ft • WANT~D: Apt. sl.ze 21 SOFA&LOVESEAT J8K brae let. $2,500. plarints $~.49 up. Also YAMAHA 1600uitar, like c-rti-Goocll 80f41..::..;..:_,;,,;,.;...;.';__-----1or tntl•rvw a l Western ~ r · electric stove & small """·"""" Af can Violeta from 98c $ AA-5 oo ....--, 28 ft U Ullte Spo_..,_ .. _ ') fri to air t BOTHPIECES$199 ~°"'' · new too.Al~ : •••••••••••••••••••••• · n '""'""r. llusincs~ Services, 563 TYPIST. must be fast & (24' re gera r .... us 9 Pc Comer 0 ...,.m $l39, 1''or the cat. live utnl 55&-0637 Fischer Superglass l owner. in mint condi· W.19lhSt.CM642·0212. accurate, diversified beclean&lngoodcondl· ·--.. $1.49. 17382 Gothard, . snow1kla, 195 cm w/o tioo&loaded!Customlo· -work Contact w/pubhc tioo.96().170lor536-364S Sofa & Matching lov· EMERALD Ring & H.B. (North of Slater) St.eel stnng folk guitar bdngs.·$7S.MK·SOO Wood t.erlor. pilot, A.D.1''. l TEACHF'ERllS nr OC Airport. Send re'. WILL BUY some ap· eseat $300. ' Drawer ne c ltl ace w I m an Y 847·5141 w/case, xlnt cond. $85. 170cm w/ Eckel bind· V.H.F'., sunlog. outrig· \ ~l·lt!mcl or u ·tl1mc . sume to Ad. No. 2S, Daily pl.lances working or no. dreaser$18. diamonds. Exquisite set· 833·7572 days~ 673·3925 ings-$45. Sid boots·sites cers. AC/DC natural gu (, .• nc., in erna Pilot POBoxl560 Costa ••~-·-'"""S?"o c.tftAlrMtwe tiJliS.631-1328,631-1374 eves. 6'"'-7 8'"'-10·•750 _,, ..,,.1n·geraUon & cooking 1111r1•l l e .. rn1ng skill~.· ,"'csa'.Ca."""'""' ' """'scrapme .... v•.r......, ""'• • .,..,, ••• ,_.., '"' • .. .. " ... ,__, 1165 H.tMw la. CM UY ... odc 1075 Singer buttonholer $15. 135 & $45. Glrl 's lee blmini top w/encloeure. • nm1Jan}. hebadquarter-; -T Y P 1-S T / 8 K P n ISE TRASH Compactor, 64M 111 ••••••••• .. •••••••••••• Span s tyle chandelier AMto Hsp S25 skates-Slz.e SN. skate bag new Chrysler manifolds. rn Santa Bar ara is ac excellent cond. $150. $25. 2 Span style banging CIU 5S3.a58Z & skate dreH·Slze 10 risers & elbows plus ex-• cpling apphcaltons for TRAINEE Newport 6'.'>-71134eves Reg.Morganmare,broke la.mpe$1Sea.546-2687 (child).all fot $50. Call tra foel, Call Dale at 1cpresentat1vcs in the Beach CPA firm. typing · New c u sto m made to ride & drive, blk 138 8"2709 I.A Orange County nrea accuracy req'd. W/train Scars Washer & clec wrouaht iron barkart parade Morgan gelding, &42-0 • • Training provided. xlnt in bkpog. Small office. dncr. while, $200. blh. wtt.b 2 glaa she1v• ~a Eng, Western (714) income, very sat1sfyln~ beneftta. 714-752-02'14 Reing. 675-0Q bottle holders ·$7S ;1_338-__ 1_011 ______ _ work. Call M,-. A~cock at . -.. Hlghback casual chair "=Llncr'* 1071 •-..-----------------41 805>969-0760 WAn"ESSIS HeavyDutyG.E. Wru1her, . ..,,. •"-) • ' & Dl~hwi&hcr. Apply in & Hot.point 220Y Dryer, (needs recovennc> ........ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ...;;..;.--------f ________ .._. -~ St,avro·s 5030 w $UO. both. 494-9891 Call&GOl.38. Lathe Colcbeater 1975 ----------- ,._......_ N • • · 17"x60" $5 775. D S G C1>t Hwy, B See the new Kirby Classic llledit cabinet $145, hide-" 30" $t'ooo Sb. . • 1 a·bed, queen sz, oak 14 x , . aper Warehouse UI demoostrated n your dresser w/beveled mir· 16" 1974 Strock $1,400. Immediate openani:s for Shippil'ICJ/R•c · $800 home at 00 cost or ob-ror. Must sell now. Aft Punch Pre&J 19'l4 .30 too TECHNICIANS Technicians with ex· Bu..-,y co offers impor· ligation. l Room of 5 ....... 645-7857 $3.300. (213)961~ • · carpet shampooed just ~r:.::::..·-;..:.:...:..::~·----r------~---fl<'nence in test and trou· tanl post to consc1enUous for looking. 759-0629 CASE BA~ 68f ext. nlc r.hootlng or <lli:1tal J>l'IS. call Bill. 833·3700. BEDS--IEDS Xlat cood. $1500. 28A 1' .111g1cc1rcultry. Ocnnis&Dennia.Person· Rebuilt Kirby Claulc, MattressltBoxSprllig 5th St. Santa~ u,l nelServ1ceoflrv1ne,2082 likenew.$139.95 Only $47.a aet ~·eva,5SiMi1Sal •SENIOR TEST Michelson. 75.9·06.29 SoCabeds only SllB. 1-.;.....;~•-""-........,_..;..- TECHHICIAN y ACHT SALES Call to see if any left = ~~ $~t~::,~~ L>utics tolnclude selupo( Exceptional oppor. lkydes • 8020 SOFABEDClTY tc:.t memory modules. w/onc of So. California's ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2251Harbor81,C.M 1_64CM __ 134 ______ _ timing and control ll!I· largest yacht brokers. GIRLS 20" 3 spd wilb HI· 83l"'580 · 12DOAMP Hobart welder • .., <! m b 11c5 • m 0 du1 es Good 1alea background & Rise Handlebars . Eartbtooe velvet sofa. portable, comp $500. 1 •·nl'I05uces. boat know'l req'd. Call banana seat, xlnt cond. oak t rim $125. 711 T'rucut Armature lathe •TECHHICIAH JerryHellrung,631-3133. $25. 831·2551aft 6 wkdys Larkspur Ave. CDM, w/mtr. $25. Ilise. elec. UNITED anytimewlmda 640-175'1 mtn. 3 pbue, 220, 440 & 1; months to l year ex· YACHTBROKERS 110. Variable spd. mtn. perience m digital logic OF CAIJF. N.B. Ofc Boys 20" BUte l!lX. Ex· 2 uaed a.ar s~ ifll lcreductioodrhes, snake troubleshooting. cellent coodiUonl Used aeata as bacb. · tep ofr. & 1 weldio1 tbl . . Merchmdiae very lltUo. Must sell! $15 ea. sn5715. aft e. w/casten.$25.5'8·2595 1,ood working coodt· ••••••••••••••••-••••• 77&-1076aft.er6Pl\rl. Cash. llonb. hbur.il fringe ......... 1005 Two 3 Spd Raleigh Fold· . tlll:1l••081 1010 t)t:n~f1ts and competitive ••••••••••••••••••••••• b 1 s·-ea KING sue Waterbed ..... •••••••••• .. •••••• rJtes with a growina away icyc es. ......, · wtrrame. Uoer • new , omputer-oriented PUIUC AUCTION Ultenew.6'5-2700 beater. sao. BUt Leather university Athletle Club 11rm. Send resume or ap. MANY ITEMS OF FINE BICYCLE llrls 20.. Hide-•·bed w/mattress. Membership rcw •al• a plympersonto: ESTATE JEWELRY, SchwinnF~rLadullfod $50.673-l.SZOeves. $275. 833-2704 bu1loes11 ART OBJECTS, AN· I • hrs. I TREMDATA CORP. Standard Memories DM5lot1 \fl i\flphod Magnelica Co :i.100 W. Seaeralrom Sontu Ana. CA 92704 t7t4J ~-3605ext.213 TIQUES FINE FURN Xlnt cood. MO. 942•9936 3_ pc Baalett gold & wbt --------1 ETC. PilONE FOR tN'. CHER Ry GIRLS klnlbedmuet.$85. Bede, queen, twins,! 'O •-BROCHURE 7~ Recliner, B/W TV, Sew. ~ . "' · CRUISER. Fenders. spr· M a ch. Pat n t l n g 11 645-2200 1nger, tank, ex. co11d. Beaut Med design Trestle Sculptor, misc. 67$-4845 SlOO. 675-6602 DlnlnC Tbl, w/31.eaves, 6 ----------·•• MUSIC IOXIS 3 Men's10.Spd: :as•·, 2S" & chrs, $1500/btt offer. Pvtprty m\.Gtsac, 2 Rem· CLOCKS 23.. r .... _ .... One l·whlr Tlo.235.'l Ing\® elect. typewriters. ....... -<Ast c $ec>O ea. Will Slot Machines, Nlckclo· blke1'9S4r71'at\6 take ea. Call 846-8882 deons. phonographs. -"'-.. U -• World's laraest selec· Scb ... .,.n ., naray. AJDt Equal Opportunity ~ 1 o n . A 1 S o g i { t S , cond. $35. --•E•m•p•lo•y•cr-M•/•F--1 Cu rn It ur~, a n liq uea. ~ SAMEDAY 1 DEUVERY For tale: 8'8" 1urfboard, excellent concl. ~; eleo- trl c ball sultar $40; Glbaoo "Kopycat'' elec· trie aultar brand new $100. Call Keo. nea a 8M-377S American l~lernational; Boy 's 10 1pd s~reber, ---------1 1802 Kettenng; Irvine, like new. excellent, 754-1777. Open Wed.-Sat. $50/0frer. M5.o588 TECHNICIAN ELEC. rransducer dei.11(n & cahbraUon. Breadboarding Posltloo E·M Assembly Seod resume or rail Chuck Estrada Girls Hµrry Bike. sood , ___ _... __ , condltkms:s.., WHOLESi\LE 1 · ' TO THE T.RADE C.•r•& EN GUSH e.,,..... ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1010 SHIPMENT Blk 01,)'mpus OMl·MD, • 200mm 1.5, OCfthotruclt .. Ie elect m.trdrivo, ll18 COD• ThlU' Dec is. MJi. \rOl pip. $SOO/bat ofr • ..... ~.1.__N I dt-7108 152'2 a..lliibki C4ltl toll H.I. (714• .,,.11 Meu'1 Ml polea 1. l.Jtll tbl, poll, 1ki.llet1. JIU lki pama, misc. 131·1222 ,. teak wall wilt '250. Tbt aaw $50. Alrleas IPl'ayer AOO. Comm U " buffer $300. Clarinet MO. Spool beds, Citea 1800, $125 ea. ~d.ya Peu1eot 10 1pd, toocl cond. $90. Drk room equip: Lita ............ . tra)'I. t.qb.1&1. 648-*1 4 CoD''J atyle.,ptabaU macbintt. Good coad. ... USE THE DAILY PILOT CHRISTMAS TREE GIFT PAGE TO SELL YOU~ HOLIDAY GIFT ITEMS OUR PAGE appnra •verv 'Thlftday from Nov. 17 thru Dec. 15. The more r.ou run th• I••• you pay. For ntormlltlon a help In pfllClng ,our ad aUyOUf CHRISTMAS AD-VISER 842·5878 YOVll UMJSED ITEMS COVLDBE SOMEONE'S CHRISTMAS 'ti C.mper, clean. xlnt cond. nu mtr. $111!$. ~or 5'8-202'2 "11 VW Pop Top, bal en1. cust paint. aeatl, Mac r..ttat.. $3500. •~1500 MIMrtlild IJkH t 14 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Motobecaoe. Brand nu Aa low as !I 9S unnual en1. f\&Jl 1hoclu. Perf perceota1:c rule. cond. $875. Brad 675·95e8 77 Ulce new, 400 ml, 2 spd auto, cost 1430, make of· ftr. 878·3622 Puegeot Moped, blue. ti A Gl"Ht lat. For New Car luy..-s <Con' cnicnl, easy pro l'CltSlng ) --· .. i3 DODGE Xlnl. ln-<>ut. 47000 mi Family con· venion $3600 14$-9420 '68 Chevy Van 250 en&. 6 cyl. reult, l~.IJOO mi. crpt & panel. mw.t sec' $1595 mo old. Xlnt. cond. $350. As 847-6382 '"" .. s 9.95 annual llrm 5-S8·71f.!H pt•n·cntage rat(• - Autos W °"tfll 9590 CIAO Moped, Deluxe Beait offer. ~6·14.28 9150 A G,..at Rate For HomtoWMrt ("Second Trust Deed ty~ eqwty loan:. 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 9.5 percent plu ~ two 1974 250 Yamaha MX· PTS plus $150 Terey lut front fork, Boa ahockl, etc. $600. Call 862·9898 after 7 p.m. •74 Honda Elsinore. nu en1lne & trans., 12Sec, 32mm Mlkunl cub. $MO. Clean.751--0755,John 1977 350 Yamaha Enduro lo mi, ridden 5 limes, new cond. S7SO. 8·S, ~·33S3: arts, 640-7822 STOP IN OR CALL SOUTHWf;sT BANK EL TOHO 2"417 Rm.k111:ld Blvd. K.I0-312:! LAGUNA BE1\CH 800 Glennyrt! 1!17·1771 )llS~ION VIE.JO 1974 Rickman Zundap 28662 )largu1•n tL· l'i-"~ 125cc, JSOT .replica. 4~1:,.1,1,00 perf cond111on, 700 nr1g - m1. Make offer &15·2942 Anti.,.s/ ufl 6 PM Clonic1 9520 '75 Yamaha 250 Enduro Xlnt cond. S550. 49·1·7996 eves. --------- '7-1 Suzuki 125, S225 Ru ns ~real. 546.1281 .1fl GPM '75 YAMAll \ 125 Enduro. xlnt cond. 'er) low m1 $400. 54.2·374!) '72 Hodaka 125 brand nu eng. Never used Im mac. cond ~~ 61tH>3M Motor Hom11, Sale/ Rent/StorO«Je 41160 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Rent a 1977 Excuti\'e Motorhome or M 1n1 motorhome from Herb Friedlander. Call any of these numbert; Hl-6777 517.7777 121 .. 181 S 1000 OFF ALL HEW *CHHOKEE *PICKUPS •WAGONHRS ()ff l'r Goud Th ru 12 HI ii HURRY 30 To Choose From COPELAND MTRS 2001 E Isl SA 558·8000 ••••••••••••••••••••••• WEWILLIUY YOUR DATSUN !'AID FOR OR NOT TOP DOLLAR FOR TOP CARS BARWICK DA TSUH "\.11l.J11,111 • qt1t..I .lllP 8ll-137S 49l-l37!i WE BUY CLEAN CARS & TRUCKS CONNELL CHEVROLET :!828 Harbor Bh·d COSTA \lESA 546-1200 CREVIER &I ST & HOAOWAY SAHTA ANA 835·3171 Tiii ULTIMA ff Dl'llVINQ MAClllNI! •USED IMW's• '77 530i 4.S pd 2865 EU '77 320ia S/R 177RSK '76 2002 49 pd S/ R 40IPDP ·n 320& 4 sp Ol3llTP 'l6 S30IA S/R 712PQM Closfll On Sunday1 '1fi fapn If. \C. lo m1 Priced to i.el I hefon Chmtma~ 552·372ti ~,': s) 000 lklo.11,. Un \II 1•1;1, ' ·'"' ... , ., .....•.•.•........... 1978 M'rceclea aoQD,•2500 ! m i, leatbet. su.nroor. ,. Mexico radio, $1,000 un· • d er w indow prtco. 71~2341 • • S1 MBZ 220S, 4 dr, Im· • mac, second oWIU'. $8000. ,. 631·2420 • 1967 230 MBZ. Runs fine, • aood cond. New interior. • ti res, • i.===;..;...;....-==;.;J Wtdnetd1y. 0eo.mb« 14.1177 '74 EL DORADO $$950. XJnL cond. f\ally loaded. 873-26G DAILY f'tt.OT •• '78 Grand Torin~ all pwr . 1lereo, AM/ FM l ·lrk xlnt cond. $3500. 731-40! or 751·5050 '''° '65 CONV. V-8. auto. Ex· cellenL S2«:15. Ca II &40-2522 '66 Mustang, P/S, P/B, iood cond. $1000. • 545-6253 alt. 4pm 9911 .... ( Larg8 Selectl• of • THUNDERBIRDS • LTD's • LTD ll's • GRANADAS •FAIRMONTS •MUSTANGS • FIEST A's • PINTOS. -'h\ I . o1· l:arge • ectlon .NEW 177 FORD PINTO 1~ ..... s2399 TRUCKS • RANCHEROS • BRONCOS 4x4 • F-1 00 • F-250 • F-150 • F-350 NEW 178 FORD FAIRMONT JDOOlseAM 41s>eed manual transmlulon. front dlec brakes, carpeting, ~ll~nyl bucket eeats, accent paint stripes, waw t1re1, convenlente group, power 1teenng, deluxe bumper group, AM radio, tinted glas1-complete, llght group, deluxe wheel oovera. Ber. t1050e1Stk.10151 s4099 • J. •73 DOD5E 1-IM SUINa YAM '74 PINTO v.a. .. io.-.. tda. -·....., _.., ~ ,,..,, ....... -U& t.-.v ... t04M • RUMAM>UT 4 l9Md. ... ,..., E""9 -°"' cc. IOICUt -~ '76 FORD 176 CHEVROLET • CAMAltO ' ., ... ""°' ........ ~ ........ ..,.........,. _dllC....._,... ................... .... ..... WllMl-1.k:. ..-.u. ... '"''' 1 ·LEASINI! ' . THEODORE ROllMS LEASE COMPANY . LEASES ALL MAKE CARS and TRUCKS AT . coa.1n11v1 RAIES MEW'77 . FORD COURIER ICOMOMT PlctEUP 108.9 Inch wheelbase, 2300 cc engine, POWet front dltc brakes, bright front bumper, AM/FM radio & cueette. 4-IPd manu•I trans.. 14'C»-pound c:apacfty, class 1 trailer towing cert. wtw tlree. Ser tP23607 Stk. tT1821. Demo. 53699 176 FORD ~WYAM .._ lllOl..., lldarl'•eonc:J;:••• ,.......,, ..., ..... 1000 ......... CM .. -UL tMllXTC a "'*"T 55199 , 172 CHEVROLET LUY~ ~T~I .. rdol ,_.,,~ llhtll. Lk:. "'4TT! NEW 178 FORD F-100 STYLISIDI PICKUP , Chrome front bumper. full foam seat. folding seat bacl<. dome lamp, headliner. 302 V-8 engine. gauges-emmeter & oll press.. power steering, mirrors-low mount, power brake•. glass tinted-ell around, cooling pcakage, bumper-rew1tep painted. Ser. tAJ0270 Stk. t T04'22 54799 '75 CHEVY MOYA HATCHIACIC ... llUIO. "-· .... ooncl~lonlftg. -•'"'1nt. p tnMa. redlo, .-er. A -OUfft I.la. ti~ 8 ,,.,,)& 176 FIAT 1 lit ,eye.. ........ ~,.., ..... i--. ..... -. ~ wtlelll. ~ t t4'N:IO .. 16tli\ After oon N.Y. Stoeks ' VOL. 70, NO. 3.CI, ' SECTIONS, '8 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY. CALIFORNIA WEONESDAY,DECEMBER1~1W7 TEN CENTS \ trang ~r - Short Run..,a9 HB AirpOrt.; Safety. Cited By ROBERT BARKER Ol tlle o.tty ...... S4jlff O((lcials testified in Hunt- ington Beach Tuesday night t.ha.t. Meadowlark Airport Is operaUns sarely and is In conformance with state and £ederal standards. They said that there ._r4? no grourads to cl<>&e the private airfield. Earl Tucker, aviation consul- tant for the S~tte Division of Aeronautics, said that a safely in- spection was made earlier Tues- day and the aJrport passed re- quirements. Tucker said that the airport at Warner Avenue and Bolsa Chica Street is operating under a grandfather clause adopted in 1954. ~THIS WAS UNIVERSITY 0, EVANSVILLE, INDiANA, BASKETIALL TEAM TO SEEK GOP NOD Assembly Hopeful Hundfey J. K. Hundley Plans to Seek , Assembly Seat By RA VMOND ESTRADA JR. OI -Deity f'lt14 ltaft Huntington Beach Union Jti&h School District Trustee John K. Hundley, 35, said today he plans to run for the Republic•n l)OmlnaUon in the 73rd Assembly .District. Hundley, elected to the school board last March, is the U\1rd man to announce he wlll seek the Republican nod in the West Orange County assembly district which includes HllDilneton Beach, Fountain Valley, parts of Costa Mesa and Seal Beach. Huntihl\Oll Beaeh Plaoning Oommlut~~&aek GtblQO and Costa Meta· oplometrtat Nolan rb:zelle aJso bn-e-4eclcted\o try foJ' the~~ DW otc"phtd·bY M· Htpblyrpan O.nqt1 Man1ers, l):JlunUrt~ Beach. ".l)e state • pi:ll)'aertn .. vnu be held in June f.hb • November election to ~now. HUTadley, owne? of a private eounsellng nrm in Cerritos. Tapped 'he incumbent as· Mnqblyman ror wbat he c&lll ~·a 9'atte ol taxpayers' mooe1° for a ree~•t 1ul"!e1 on the cl••th nalty.. . r •~be :Deol>le already v6led f<W the death ~ty ln th.I,. 1\.lt.e," nid Hundley. "Thia auney was one of the biceesst Jcama t•ve ever heard of." (See HVNDL&Y, Pa•t Al) He aatd, however, that thefe 11 a question that the airport would. meet requirements on runway length if it were to apply for a license under current le&i.slaUon. crash KilIS Cage Team The runway should be 2,400 feet Jong by state standards, Tuck-er said. 29 Die; Piwt Apparently Tried to Tum Back The Meadowlark runwar is 2.010 reet. Frank Allen, a division chief with the FederaJ Aviation Ad- ministration in Long Beach, agreed that the runway is slight- ly Jess than the recommended length. "It is perfectly safe, however, and Is adequate to handle the type of airplanes flying from Meadowlark," he said. The two officials, along with Robert Bresnahan, Oranee Coun- ty Airport manager, appeared before the HunUngton "Beach Airport Committee Tuesday night. Commit.tee cbairrnan Richard Si bert toda e itin•l must I • tederal 1tan· datdt • etlr•Une if addi· tioaal cttandards are necessaary ror °" safety of the airport and surrounding areas. He said that federal and state standards are a yardstick for the com rnittee to study. Siebert said be is most en· couraeed by what be calll con· scientious atepe planned by pilots to poltcefll&hts. <Bee AIRPORT, Page A2> Sniper Hita Fireman; Cops ~ Slay Smpect EVANSVILLE, Ind. CAP) - An airliner carryln1 a university basketball team and others was airborne tor only about one minute berore it craahed, in- vestigators said today. All 29 · aboard were killed. The cruh of the chartered twin-engine DC·3 into a muddy hillside in dense rain and fog Tuesday nl1ht killed the entire 14·man University of Evansville basketball team and tu coach. In additlon, the three crew mem· tJere and 11 other people were killed. W'lDeQQ Hid the pJane•a englfte was aputlerlng ~d the pllot ~u, •aa trying to turn back ln ralft and fog bef ote the craft went down. All 29 victims were ldentified, hut two bodies were left at the FORMER PLAYERS STUNNED AT CRAIH-1 . scene overnight because the weather hampered recovery er- forta. Mark Moulton. the color an· nouncerfor the team who was not on the Oight. said the team had been scheduled to leave durine the afternoon, but was delayed for more than three hours unUJ the plane finally arrited to pick up the p~gent. N.Uonal TranaportaUon Safe- ty Board investigator Phillip A. Hogue said the plane crashed abOut a minute alter it took off. Tbe/tane took oil and then ap-peare momentarily on radar, BULLm'JN turnin,-back toward the airport. SAN FRANCISCO <AP) -A be.tore disappeartns. Hoaue slid. i•amH •i!o •alolahaed • ~. fbere wu no emergenc1 ra~ clesper.Me ltialofti w-dt Hl&e• cpntactJritla~.l'lane, he sat~ alter WODdJpg • n,.. .. Wal The~.,... 1cattered <J.'et' killed ID a barra'e ., 1unllie. a 2Qifoot· )thart overlooihfl tear saa, and blgll·1re11aN rallroJd tra~• near a au~- water ~at eaded • Z'ii·liour lk'e dtvlal~ was atlll SD\OUldertna today. this ~.'"C>liiy tbe tall sec· Uon remained intact. ••we're coins to check tile wuther, thfl quality ot the aircraft and we'U also In· • veatlnte whether the -1rPort 1bould ,..ve been opentlU~Ull• cSer tbe e&latlnc eoadlllpu, .. Ho1Uelalct : The NTSB lcv .. ugator.RICIJM weather itJbe. Ufne ,.., tqq1 •std a U~filai wu falllril. cut· ting vllabllily to three·qUarttri of a rnUe. He aaJd other crafta ILL. 0<-3 Cruhs Q so I Mfl(S I lndianapolts • • Te11e Hanle KENTUCKY ,. .. ~­SITE OF CRASH Team Wiped Out were landing and taking off at the airport without problems. The Evansville Acea had won one game and Joel three this season. The Aces were five·tlme champions of the National Collegiate AthleUc Association's Division II basketball tourna- ment. This ~ar they moved to Dlvl.alonl play. "We had eight freshmen, all new coacbea, •• a spokesman said. 11We were Just aettlnJ started ... Jtm Byers. the cohege athletic director, said classes were can- celed U>day and that a memorial service was being planned for to· day or 'lbunday. The team was to have flown to NaehvWe, then take a bus to Murfrees)>oro for a baaketbail game toni~t with Middle Ten- neasee State University. Many of tbe 5,000 student. on the Metboclllt·affiUated campus spent the nlgbt praylns, talking quietly wt\h friends or meditat· lng. ·•we couldn •t 10 to 1leep,., said David Jleoslng. an IS.year-old fres~an fro~ Perq. lnd. 0 Y<MJ Juatcan'ttakesomcthiitg like that tobfd .. Tbe twin-engine prot>elJer plane, ebettered ftom National Jet. Service Inc. of IndJan.apo.lls, left Dress Regional Airport here at 7:20p.m. Rick Notter, an aircraft worker at the airport who wit· nessed the crash, said he saw the plane "disappear into the foe. "About a minute and a halt later 1 heard his engines cuttine out and he went down, .. Notter said. . "We saw It go into the clouds. We heard a loud 'pop.' We beard •n en'lne rev up, then we beard tJte cru" and JIW an exDIOll(ln," aald t>alric1t ~vey, a ll~taiid pilot and owner of Metro Beechcraft Corp.. a charter service at the alrport. Alvey tald be and a eop1pililoa were amOlll the ftnt people to arrive at tbe crasll ttene. "The fusel ... w .. Int.act. the left wine was ripped off," be te- called. "Very many bodies were still in their seatbelta and tnany were strewn around.~ It. was a mess -just a tot.al mus . uwe had four people alive. They were juat strewn around. Tbe wreckaa• wu on fire. There was notblng we could do for the people inalde of lt. .. said Alvey. Tbe ~es were tuen in a Louisville & Nashville Railroad boxcar to a temporary morgue set up ln the city Community Center in downtown Evan1ville, 10 miles from the crash site. In the room where the rows of bodies lay beneath white •beet.a, which ii sometimes used as a basketball court. a volleyball net was pus bed aside tor extra space. The bodies were later taken to area funeral homes. ' Assistant c0ach Mark Sandy, 25, did not accompany the team because be was on a 1couttn1 mission at Southern Illinola University in Carbondale, Ill. * * Air Crash Victims ldeniified * Eleventh Victim Fo11nd LOS ANGELES CAP> -A youne woman whose nude body was found today in a billalde no.lgbborbood overlookine downtown Los Angeles appears to be tbe lltb victim or the Hillside Strangler, polic-esaid. •'This fits all the previous evidence that we've had before. It appears this may be the 11th vic- tim of the Hlllaide Strangler, .. said police Lt. Dan Cooke. But be said lt was impossible yet to say whether the unlden- Wied young woman, in her early 20s, badbeenatranl)ed. Police have linked the 1tran- glin1 murders ol 10 youna women 'in nine~. All the bodles were found in hilly areas in northern or northeastern sections of Los Angeles andit.ssuburbs. An unidentified man found the most recent body under a bu.sh alon1 Alvarado Street 1n a hlUslde residential area just a few miles from where several of the other Hillside St.rangier victim• have been dumped. A coalition of feminist croups held a memorial service at the steps of City Hall on Tuesday for vicUms of the stran&ler and for women whO have been raped or beaten. · The wotnen staging the memorial rites wore red capes to symbolizethelr rage, veiled their fac~s and gave statistics Of\ p~•lcally ,and sexually abused women. '!'bey c:ltan\ed, 0 Women • ft'b\ back! 11 Joan Robins, of the Rape Crisis Hotline, •aid one of the coaUUoD 's deJDaodl isth.t public scbooll of.. ler aelt.ddeaMthinlhJ as part or tbe retiller PbYsical ed'ctcatson curricUlum atalllevels. The coalition also ls demanding that telepbooe numbers of rape crisis botllnes be placed In ·a special emergency listing In telepboae directories. CouncU~oman Pat Russell said the City Council wa,.g supporting the demands where possible and was forming an emergency shelter for rape victims. Coun- cilwoman Joy Picus added that defense cluaes for C!ty Hall employees had begun. Self-defense classes have been in demand since the recent strangulation deaths of 10 young women believed io be the victims of the so-called Hlll1lde Strangler. The flnt or the victims was found nude and strangled near Griffith Park on Oct. 18. She and most of the others found since bad been sexually assaulted. The 10th victim, Lauren Rae Wagner, was found Nov. 29 in another hlUslde residential area on Mt. Washington. She was strangled but not raped, accord· in& to coroner's lnvestlgators who are part of. the Hillside Stran&Jer Task Force. • A neighbor of Miss Waaner's was the nnt eyewitness to what may have been aatran1ler abduc- tion. The oel&bbor said sbe saw two large men escort tbe younc 1Voman from ber car a few doors from her home. Coast Weatlier Low cl•uds and fog throutbTh~ mornlq with viriable blgh clouds 'Tbund~ anernoon. Lowa tonlabt so to 55. Hi1bs Tbundaye to 10. INSIDE TODAY Who coeeld n.uc ncla o good dtal on uiokhe1 ond calculotor1t 2'00 /nJ, ft '""''·JM•'°°' JM.at o m..ZU· mtntori-cloUOr Jft;Uld.. SH PaQt A1. ,\2 DAil. Y PILOT Cantpaign By GAR\' GRANVILLE Ol IM CM!ly l'llllC t&Mt County Counsel Adrian Kuyper told Orange County supervisors Wednesday that any pohllcal campaign reform ordtnance they might adopt would create "enforcement problems" in 1978 1f it contains a limit on campa.gn contributions. Kuyper told supervison; that 6andldates who have already stoked their campai&n coffers with contributions exceeding proposed contribution limits can· Site Sale Stalled by Trustees Huntington Beach Union JIJgh School District trustees balked Tuesday at a plan to put a former district office site up for sale for $200,000. School board members agreed that a list of possible uses ror the money from the proposed sale of the 1.2-acre site should be drawn up and considered at their next meeting Jan. IO Omc1als al the Huntington Beach Church of Religious Science "have expressed a !>trong interest" in buying the surplus district land located at 1902 Main St., Superintendent Jake Abbott told trustees. "Even though the church has expressed an interest, we are re· quired by law to allow the city and county to bid on the proper· ty," said Abbott. The land, which includes a con- demned woodframe building and parking lot. ls just south of the Huntington Beach Police Station. Ass istant Superintendent Charles Hess told the board the money from the proposed land sale could be used for any district purpose since it was purchased from general funds. School board President Don MacAllister was the only trustee to vote against the delay or the land sale. M acAllister said the idea of the sale could be approved before a list of the possible uses or the funds is drawn up. Trustees Helen Dille and Zita Wessa said they would like to see much of the land sale funds go for books. supplies, equipment and facilities at newly constructed Ocean View High School in Hunt- ington Beach. In a separate action Tuesday, trustees decided \o spend $175,000 for supplies and books at Ocean View High School. District aides said the money was needed to "get better prices" on the sup- plies this year. But MacAllister said, "Ocean View is not a second rate school." He backed a plan to use the funds for a proposed athletic field and parking lot south of Huntington Beach High School. Mrs. Dille and Trustee Doris Allen said they oppose any plan to use the funds al Huntington Beach High School. The land up for sale is just southeast from the school. Mitchells Face Second Movie Suit The Santa Ana City Council bas decided to file a second lawsuit against brothers Artie and James Mitchell. Obviously delighted witb an Orange County Superior Court verdict that 11 movies shown at the brothers' Honer Plaza Theater were obscene, coun· cilmen voted unanimously for an action that will claim the show· ing of a further 24 obscene mov- ies and 12 obscene previews. The decision was taken while the jury that round obscenity in 11 films was hearing evidence in the dama es base of the trial. OftANOE COAST HI" DAILY PILOT nbt be held to tnawer for tl(Ceed· Ina the llmitat.lolt. • So tar. the only candidates known to have accepted C{Ull· palen donatlona exceeding various proposed contrtbutlons limitations are the three county s upervisors who will seek re clechoo in 1978. A curtailment on contributiory; cannot be made retroactive to u\- clude donations alreadx received by candidates, Kuyper s aid. And, he added, candidates who OU Finder Due $1,000 ' LA MESA (AP)'-A .rf:I' ward of $1,000 Is befng of- fered for a gray, striped cat which wandered oft. The reward "represents our savin~s·~'. said Shlrley Ramser, adwng: "I know there are people who will think it is silly to offer that much but that cat, Laura, is our kid, our little girl. 11 The childless couple, who are in their 30s, hired an attorney and put up re- ward posters Tuesday for Laura, a two-year-old feline which they found In a Humane Society cage at eight weeks old. Front Page Al HUNDLEY. • Mangers has previously in- dicated be will seek a second term in the state assembly. Hundley, 9372 Cloudhaven Drive, Huntington Beach, said he was also incensed when Mangers backed a bill which would allow people to receive new birth certificates if they undergo sex change operations. Owner and president of the firm called A Better Citizen Foundation, Hundley said he holds "conservative viewpoints on law" and feels the tax dollar "is being wasted." Hundley's firm, with offices in Irvine, Cerritos and San Diego, provides rehabilitation pro- grams, traffic schools and some drug abuse counseling for offen- ders referred through courts and other agencies. The newest of the five Hunt- ington Beacb Union High School District trustees, Hundley was narrowly defeated in a No· vember, 1976 special election by Trustee Doris Allen. Hundley ran for the school board again and won. Hundley becomes the second high school board member to seek higher office this year. Board President Don Mac Allister plans to seek a Hunt· ington Beach City Council seat in April. Mangers and current City Councilman Ron Shenkman, both former Huntington B..~ach Union High School District trustees, were on the school bl>ard just before moving to theh• present governmental posts. Ero• Pllfle A J AIRPORT ••• Pilot representatives said Tuesday night that they will monitor activities at the airport. They say that airport owner· operator Art Nerio has agreed to ban chronic violators from the facilities. Pilots have called for the un- dergrounding ot utility wires near the airport and remarking of the runway, they are conaider- ing a cutback of hours for night flights by student pilots and the installation of additional ligh~ ing. Councilwoman Harriet Wieder, a member of the airport panel, told concerned pilots that she is supportive of keeping the airport open. The city council had earlier considered taking steps to close the facllUf as a public nuisance but backea off because of legal ramifications. Th~ ailport is licensed and un· der the control of tbe Dlvllloo of Aeronautlca while the Federal Aviatlon Administration over- sees the pllota. CommiUH member Ben Borcomon complained that there have been eight crashes invol'l· tnt Meadowlark planes ln tho past year. He said that low nights over h1i home and at PUrbJ scboola have .been a probl~m. Curbs· Hard -to , . bave not yet stoked their coffers "wlll arcue dtscriminatary en- forcement of the limitation pro· visions." They will contend ''that certain of thelr opponents have an Wlfair advantaee because they have already received, before the ef- fective date or the ordinance. contributions in excess of the limitations. 11 '1Tberefore', • • Kuyper con· tlnued, ••we believe t.l\at making such contribution Umltationa ef· • Cectlve for the 1978 election.a may Seventh Suspect ·captured Bv JOANNE REYNOLDS Of tlle Oeftrfllll4 ..... Elsie Caban Kullk, sought for more Ulan a mooui on munier conaplra~·charees In the slay- ing qf stephen John· Bovan ot Fountain Valley, was arrested early today by Newport Beach police. . She becomes the seventh sua• peel Jailed in the cue wf\ieb began Oct. 22 when ~an ytas shot to death outside a ~ewpdrt B•ach restaurant. . Set. Danyl Y oule satd he and a team of investigators fQqnd Mrs. Kulik hiding under a :tllil1l·level condominium in La Costa, a re· sort near Carlsbad ill San Diego County. Her husband, Alexander, who was freed on bail after his earlier arrest in the case, was take11 into custOdy at the same lime. Judge Kneeland has aet the trial for Jan. 23. Police said tbey had beens~­ ing Mrs. Kulik and the other mfssing fugitive In the case. Joseph Federowski, in the San Diego area for more than a month. They said they were led to the condominiums by information uncovered in the course of their investigation and the owner or the development recognized Mrs. Kulik's photo. Police said Kulik had rented the residence under an assumed name. When Youle and a team of of. ficers, including a patrolman from the nearby Carlsbad Police Department, arrived at the con- dominium, they were greeted by Kulik who allegedly denied his witewasthere. Youle said they searched the three floors of the hillside home without success. Mrs. Kulik was finally found by Detective Gary Black who searched the crawl space under the home. . Mrs. Kulik, who is being held in Lieu or the $500,000 bail carried on her arrest warrant, joins Roy ' Christopher Richard her husband's business partner and one or the alleged co-conspirators ~ho is also held in thecityfacllity. mdictments handed down in No- vember by the Orange County Grand Jury. The only one remalning al large is Fedorowski. Police allege Kulik, Fedorowski, Richard and a · fourth man, Joseph Shelton Davis Ill, all partoert in the Newport Beach investing firm, Prasadam Distributing, lnc., hired three men to kidnap and kill Bovan. HBGroups Colkct Toys ForOC Kids create enforcement problems.'· Should their legal counsel's words be heeded by the five coun· ty supervisora, it would mean that political reform in Orana• County, It it ts to come, will not come in time for next year's elec· Uons. Limitations on individual cam· pal1n contributions havo been a cornerstone or vartOUt proP01ed rtform ordinancea lnctudln1 those suggested by the 19'l6·17 county Grand Jury, a reform Street Scene group called 1'1N CUP and the county Citben's Direction F\nd· ing Commiulon. Those or1anlzations and others hav• argued that a lid heeds to be placed on the amount lndlviduals can donate to candidate cam· pai1n1 to avoid the appearance that heavy d~on have undue ln- fluenc!' oo 1ovemment declsiorus. Jn a beft)' memo 1 nt to supervll()rs Wednuday after· noon, Kuyper said tbere la reuoo to bellev• th!t ·"contribution ... ~ Actress Faye Dunaway approaches the corner of Houston Street and West Broadway in New York while filming a new movie called "Eyes," in which she plays a photographer. It's her first picture since winning the Oscar in "Network." Trustees of Huntington Beach 'a Ocean View School Dis- trict will meet briefly Thursday to choose a health insurance plan acceptable to both their teachers and other district personnel. The session will be al 5:45 p.m. in district headquarters and Superintendent Dr. Daie Coogan says it is expected to last only 10 to 15 minutes. Teachers originally wanted coveraie by Blue Cross as part of a current negoliatton packaie for wages and benefits which u sUll unresolved. Several tnsurance firms have made coverase offers and one of them is to be chosen by the board of trustees a.t the Thursday sessions. A special meeting scheduled for discussion only on proposed plans tO sell $2.5 million in dis· trict-held bonds for upcoming projects Monday night was can· celled shortly beforehand. Two among the trwstees could not attend and so it was decided to lncorpo~ate the financial briefing into a regular meetlngt,n the near future. , Sale of the bonds will pay for U1e district's purchase of a piece ot property from the state and transfer of dlstrict offices from an existing sile at Beaob Boulev8J'd anctWamer A\'enueto Rancho View Scho0I, which was closed tor lack of eorollment. Urnitatlons or $500 or ~ per election or per calendar year would probably be he141 to be valid·• by the courts. However, Kuyper. dfcj aot dis· ml11 the ponlblllty that a llmlt Ip any form "miit\t be held, if judicially challenged, to be Un· constltuUonaJ. 11 Th• Board of Supervuors• legal counselor: al1.o .-.i11 he doubted Uthe boai'd ~D \raDS!et any of lt1 po#e3 to a f alt political umpl..ls" practice• cbm m iaslon; • * $250 Limit &t Umfer ~Irvine Law By PIDL ROSMARIN OI .. Dlillf ...... loUft ' t No person may contribute C'nore thUl S2SO to a oandldate for . elective ornce In Irvine, nor in support of a municipal ballot measure, under a law adopted Tuesday by the Clty Council. The council voted 4·1 to limit caD:}palgn contributions "to in- sure that the amount contribut~ by any person does not material· ly influence the outcome of any election." The ordinance was adopted as an urgen~y measure and takes effect immediately. Four votes were needed to make the new law affect current campaigns for March coun ll elec:Uom. Councilman John Burton voted ~~ "with relfsh," and Coun- cilwoman Gabrielle Pryor \'otecl 'ie•. "with reluctance." She pre- ren-ed that all i>rivate contribu· lions be b4Med and that cam· paigns be financed with public money. Council members David Silla and BUI Vardoulis, who pro- posed the e>rdlnance, and Mary Ann Galdo, also voted approval The new ordinance also re- quires an addltlonal reportina period of C&Jnpalan disclosures- otber than those already re. quired by the 1974 Political Reform Act. I ' • • .,., E1~·t • I .. OrangeCoastOallyPllot .. , ona ..-ge Wednnd-v, December 14, 18T7 f\ober1 N. Weed /Publisher The>mH K•lfll/EdltOf Barbara Krelblch/Edltorlal P-oe Editor Trustees Obliged To Avoid Secrecy Tru..,tees at Huntington Beach City <elementary) ichool District have gotten themselves involved in an ap- parent power struggle between the new principal at Dwyer Middle School and a group of teachers. Dr. Frances Bennie says some of the teachers have been trying to drive her out as principal ever since she took overinSeptember. Reports are that Dr. Bennie is trying to change some education techniques and is meeting resistance from some of the teachers. Teachers and board members officially will say only that morale problems exist at the school. · · However, the situation was regarded as serious ~ough for the board to call a special meeting recently. f.l'hat step may have been necessary but it certainly wasn't •wise for the board to go directly into a secret meeting. The executive session was specifically against the Wishes of Dr. Bennie who asked to hear the charges so that s he could respond to them. There is another elenTent to consider. Four of the five school trustees have received financial contributions from teacher organizations in the past two elections. Norma Vander Molen is the only board member who hasn't re- ceived teacher help. Because of this teacher support, trustees must go out of the way to act circumspectly in dealing with personnel matters such as this. Rushing into secret session is not the recommended way to go about assuring the community the trustees are acting without outside influence. Take a Bow! Rather often, governmental agencies and their various departments are taken to task either harshly or gently in lhe news media for inefficiency and shortsighted- ness. But, by the same token, it is only fair that smooth fun c· tioning, foresight and efficiency should not go unrecorded. And so it is with pleasure the Daily Pilot joins the South Coast Regional Zone Conservation Commission in commending the City of Huntington Beach planning depart- m ent's recent work. The staff prepared, completed and presented the first coastal wo:-k program of any in Orange County to be ap· proved by the obviously pleased commissioners. Their plan 1s comprehensive. well conceived and stresses p"res- ervation of open space and historic sites. Environmental concerns such as the Bolsa Chica wildlife preserve are abundant in Huntington Beach's set of guidelines for city C\"olution. Commissioners at the same session, on the other hand, flatly rcJectcd M~nhattan Beach's work program and re- turned it to city hull with an unsatisfactory grade. In Huntington Beach, a bow is in order. Wning Confusion Efforts to rezone land in Huntington Beach's Gothard industrial corridor to residential use have been debated for the better part of a year. One 19-acre parcel on Slater A venue near the reilroad tracks is an example. Rezoning of the parcel was rejected by the planning commission last summer by'cl 5·0 vote. Because there was confusion about the appeal process. the matter came back to the planning commission. This time it passedS-2. ' A proposal by developer Louis Graziadio to include '~omc low-cost housing in his project apparently swayed ~some commissioners to reverse their earlier votes. Others ·felt residential use could jeopardize surrounding industrial ~property. • There also a re questions about soil conditions and : costs mvolvedtoimprovethem. : The city council this week rejected rezoning of in-t dustrial property in one area of the Gothard corridor by l voting down a plan to build residences on 40 acres north of : Talbert Avenue. I The matter of rezbning the 19-acre Slater Avenue 'parcel will be up to the co\Ulcil Dec. 19. With it.a flip.flop J history at city hands, the issue warrants a more satisf ac- : tory handling than it got from the planning commission. • • J Opinions expressed In the space above are those of the Daily Piiot. • Other yiews, expressed on this page are those of their authors and l artists. Read.er commen1 1s 1nv1ted. Address The Daily Pilot. P.O. : Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA62626. Phone (714) 642·4321. ' i-----------------------------------------------. .. 1 l Boyd/ Retirement ByLM.BOYD Se850Ded Cit.lzens will tell I you there was no such thin& I as "retirement" in tbls coun· • try untU aboul 45 ,years ago. l Al least. as a national policy. S And WQrldwlde. retirement didn•t become a aenerat way ol life for lhe elderly unUl 95 years ago in Germany. This comes up because a youthful customer asks what waa lhe standard retirement age 100 ye.ui ago. Wun•t any. You worked W'IUl you could fiaure t out how not tdlhavo to. s Dear· Gloomy Gus Th• Hu:nUnaton Buch City Council showed real fore1t1ht 1ivtn1 abqut M,500 of our money to 1Urf en. It th1- pa 1m Hl for palll11 MetdOWlart jltkltaout ot t.Mturff Q. "Settle an argument. Which country owns the Virgin Islands, the United States or Great Britain?" A, Both. Each claims half. Q. 4'Why did some Indian tribes require their children to be 'brought up by lheir un· cles lnsteadof their fathers?" A. "BrouJht up" lsn •t exact· ly right. The uncles corrected the youngsters and dis· clpllned them, leaving thoS"e fatbert free to ~ friendly wllh their own kids. Less authoritative, more loving, as it were. Claim la the blondest of blondes come not from Sweden, aa commonly sup· posed, but from Ireland • . .It YoU want to keep a vue or cul tulips trom droop. int. put • few pennla ln their water. Somethlnc about the copper, l'm told • • . In Ken· \ucky, bear In mlnd, U-1 •11ln1t the law to marry your •lfe'1 Sri.ndmolher •.. When tho weather turna cold, 7our cu'• tJre preoure 1oes down a pound for evny lO·detreet drop ln the l•m · Ptratun. • • WUI You bU1 lilt conlffdola that cheu Li the an, IY.lam• tftowia to mu wbettO tMie ..... ino tlem1nt (l cti11fe•T ....................................................... _ Earl Waters ~High-pay State Jobs Opening Alt~ugh California's un· emplo ent rate remains blgh, the n hers s,1teklng 150 bi&h payln1 state Jobs which will be open to all comers next year has not yet become overwhelming. The jobs in question are the seven statewide offices or 1ov· er nor, lieutenant eovernor, con· troll er, treasurer, attorney general, secretary of state and superintendent of public Instruc- tion, alone with 43 seats in Coneress, 80 In the Assembly and 20 in UM! Senate. The pay ran1es from $57,500to$22,500. Actually there are more than 150 elective offices to be voted on in 1978. For, in addition to an untold numbe r o r judgeships, there are also many county and other local omces at s take. But m ost of the plums, aside from the judgeships which re· quire one to be an attorney. are to be round in the statewide, con· gressional and legislative of· fices. It was expected that there would be a n abundance or challengers for incumbent con· gressmen by reason or the ex- orbitant pay increase lbey voted themselves last year. raising salaries from $44,000 to $57,$00 and placing them in the top S per- cent income bracket of the na- tion. Where previously stlaries may not have been high enough to en- tice successful business and pm. fessional people, it is now far more than all but a few Callfor· nian1 earn. Considering the fringe benefits which include a generous ~tirement plan, a seal in Congress now has become fa~ more attractive even to those who Mailbox dislike the idea of llvlog lt\ Washington. YET, indlcaUons at the mo- ment are that most coneressmen will have no more than the usual opposition. That alao seems to be true in the case ol the top state of· ficers as well as the Jeaislators whoae salaries, at $22,500 plus .fringe benefits including $40 a day tax gree living expenses and a car with unlimited gaiJollne. makes the job worthwhile. As an example or the scarcity of candidates so far surfacin1. only five Republicans have liven any slsn of interest in being gov· -- -----=:;.. -··--_... ------- "We. W<.?t¢ supposed to <Ast film out." emor and not one Democrat Jn contrast. four years a10. 18 Democrats, six Republicans, four Peace and Freedom and on~ American Independent were in the race for lbe slate's top job. Still, what appears to be a dearth or candidates may turn lnto an abundance when the actual filing time anives. Those wno want to run must me between Feb. 13 a nd March 10, as a pamphlet be.- Ing readied for distribution by the Secretary of Slate will soon ad· vise·. AT THAT time candidates must pay the riling fee and sub- mit a sponsors' petition signed by 6S ciUzens, ln the case of the gov- ernor, and 40 for those seeking legislative and congressional of· fices. Fees range from the $982 for 1overnor and $575 for Congress to $255 for the Legislature. There are some tricky pro· visions designed to protect in- cumbent legislators and judges. Candidates for those offices must file d eclarations of intent between Jan. 29 and Feb. 8. Also candidates for partisan offices must have been a member of the party in which they seek nomina· lion at least 90 days before filing time and not have been a member of any other party for at least one year before lbat. ALTHOUGH a residence re· quirementof one year remains in the constitution its validity has been placed In doubt by reaaoo or court decisions. While the steps necessary to become a candidate may seem simple, it must be remembered that it takes much more to win. Not only must one have sup- porters and a c ampaign or- ganization but some legislators and congressmen spend as much as $200,000 to get elected. Glories of Women's IAb Fail to Impress To the Editor: I have been concerned for some time over the ERA in· ltiative, finding· equal pay for equal work among the sexes Its only redeemb1g factor. The rest of the awesome demands by the l' ~rdcore "feminists" in Hou.ston hliS so outraced me that I reel re· buttals are ln order from the women across this land, who hold dear the family concept and the love and devotion between man and woman. I should like to know who authorized Coogresa to give this pack of "she wolves" $5 million or the taxpayer!' money Lo hold a three-ring circus, where the emasculation of the male sex was the foreruoel conclusion. M s. Vivian Hall stouUy defends thls gross spending, listing such expenses as publicaUons, mall· Inga and work-shops. She tailed, however, to state that at the California gathering of 6,000 there were displays or sexual gadgets which would enable women to do away with the necessity of a male partner in or - der for the women to derive sex- ual pleasure. How much did they cost us? I SHOULD Uke Ms. Hall to further explain why we should be forced to fmance feder.ally con· trolled day nurseries when, lhhe has her way, there would be no cohabitation to begln with? Wlth "Big Brother" already en · croachlng ln almost every facet or our lives today, do we now tum over the care of oar children to them? As for the abortion Issue, I believe every woman has a right to dec1de on that for herself, '"1t the responsible parties to an un- wanted pregnancy <with a few exceptions) shoul(l be made to pay the cost out or their own pockets. Last, but not least, I was ashamed and dbeusled liatenin1 ·to two former First LadJn and· the present Mra. Carter, ex. poundln11 from tbe podium on the alorles of women'• UberaUon and, believe mt, my heart did not bleed for the pllaht of the loud, outspoken le1bfan• ln at~n· dance. · The prob1em here .ls not ~ liberation of ..,men, but the Uberation from Wuhlnatoo. D.C. ot the~ who reaehed lnto tbe UU and blithely lhrew $S mUHon of bard·HM\td tH· payen' money down the ~ verblaldralDI . MARYO.MOORE Sew.r£ ..... To the Edltot: Recnt •=•per arLlctu coverbtl Oii traauotlolll ot tbe ',,1a1e GI flye • rH at. W11llii..._. Mlp lellOol an.t the. walallt ol "" ....... etBL ·to .tM ~ .... Hlil' leboOl,man.-._......._ ......................... Jy nor clearly stated my voting position. I would like to clarify my reasoning to the taxpayers and this seems to be my only way todoao. Four years ago the Huntington Beach Union Hieb School Dis· trtct condemned six and one-half acres adjacent to the HWltlngton Beach High School and declared eminent domain. Prior to con- clusion of this proceeding, the Huntington Beach Con.pany (owner of the land) entered into negotiations to sell the property to the high school district. Ap· pTaiaals were set at approx· imately $35,000 per acre. The dis- trict had a multi-million dollar reserve and an lncreasing enroll· ment -meaning we collld afford to buy the property. APPltODMATELY one year ago when I first came onto the board, the proposed sale was brouaht before the board in lhe form or ajolnt venture with tbeCi- ty or Huntington Beach and in- volved 12acres-ftve acres fort.he high tcbool district at a price of $100,000 per ~ere and aeven acres for the Qty of Huntiniton Beach at n~ cost due to th• kuntineton Beach Company owtn1 seven acrea totbeclly. In MU'ch ot m•. our board of trustees w411tudylnl the 1977·78 propoeed budaet. The!naJority o£ our members vcitect to consider cuttina back on our bu.sing (ex· cept for SeaJ Beach) du• ts> a dis· mat flnanclal plcture. At the same time. they were consider· in& putdWinl the Huntington Beach property. t objected on the aroundl ol tho que$Uonable Iii· cal wl!dom oftbll move. The end result beina, on April 12, 1978. lhe board voted 3-2 on selling five acres of Weatmlnater property to purchue the five acres 1n Hunt-tn~ton ~h. HE&E IS where the confusion be1ln1. Tbt proc~1 from the sale ot the Westminster acreage were to be committed to the purchase of tho Huntington Beach land. "The iH\le of our de· fielt •P9ftdlna budcet was ie· nored and Ute rationale dlrected only to an even aw1p ot land. The t1od at Westminster ta worth ap- proxlmattiy $80,000 per acre (tU0,000); the land at Hunt· lnlton Beach eottl 1100 000 per acre (*500,000). Tbedevefopm nt of the larid at Hunlillllon S..cb into •tbletJc fielda ua .• -parklnc lot l1 to c0tt approximately another on.ball mill.km dollan. Ne\ler hll UY. ~un proposal of the Jolat eDaeavor been broutb~ tidon me u a board membel' ao mctiilu (Jauch lea commtt> wtWj 11111 WM\ or even •bat WW be ca tM laicrq. Tbe ~-:1ta~li Uoioll Htih~·~llate1'Plan ~J.ctl ... ~--f()f' '*lt JO '9al'I. ;m• lta . lllllldle.. ... ...... :19" Will "::J.~'!"~c:: . . .. --~·~•t , least one and one-bait million dollars. The recent passage oC AB 65, to comply with lhe Ser· rano-Priest d~on. will spiral our district's f.dl!bme d1>'4'nward .within tbreeyean. This same issue was brought before the board four tJmes and needed four yes votes to pass. Four timei' it received three yes votes. The board is proceeding with the transaction anyway. They have looked for and found a legal loophole. Ir the loophole goes unchallenged the sale and purchase will proceed uncontest· ed. My final question to myself was, "If this issue were placed on the ballot would the voters vote to purchase more land?" I believe they wOllld not. DORIS ALI.EN Member, Board ot~tees, HBUHSD Monet1 I• Kew To the Editor: Our president speak.I to us of fear -fear ii we don't aave and conserve energy -we will be weak. Wby ? Maybe because he has overlooked us -all of ~s - the auts)t ~erican people! Why not uclte us -with what we can spend at the grocery store -at the Cadillac dealer -or whatever-MONEY$$$ .. The good ole American way is for us put our money and our energies wbe.-e the buck is! IC you want more ()it -U you want problems of any «ind solved, all you have to do is make it profita· ble (more than Just a regular wage or return on hard-earned bucks) to buy the solution. That's what bas m~ us take the risks -the big reward $SS. In the paat few yea~ under lht aulse of s~pping oe the oU com· panles' shoea our iovemment and our representaUves P,Msed laws that exclucted smait sJie operators from profitably aetUng investors <who got tax bre•k.s> to find and develop now oU and ias sourcc:s. Why? non•t we need lt? Sure we do, but it'• upensl\te to find itl If and only ii the rewaidj in dollars are there -biaer, more and be\leY'. lhan anUctpated profits ln other bualneau -Will we risk our money, our talent.$, W'fela· ,, our ideas, our ingenuities and ourselves to find the solutions! Jr we want results not pro- mises!.. !lot fear, we have to pay for Jt. Most of us do that reeular- ly. We don't Uke to work if we don't get paid! Nobody does! If we want new and additional energy sources -make it very profitable -maybe more of us wm eet and seek a piece or that gold. We the people are up to that challenge. Give us the chance. We 've done it before and we'll do it again -for money! LARRY L . CURRAN Sat~ Dieting To the Editor: Recent information from around the United States has in· dicated a definite dangerous re· action to lbe use of liquid proteW in this country and abroad. Does lhls mean that all proiein pro- ducts .are dangerous and should be avoided? You may take tbi! ofle step (wtber and ask If we should all stop consuming 'J)ro- tein sources altogether? I think the real problem t.hat exists ls not so much the protein source as it is the use. Many products can be dangerous If used incorrecUy - an automobile, aspirin, alcohol. cigarettes, etc. I shudder to think bow many lives have been lost due to these. I think the big problem with moat of the people on these pro- tein-sparing diets ls that they lack patience. Let's face it -it took those people years of nutri. Uonal abuse to reae!b their over· weight condition. so why involve yourself In a program that can tax the body that is already·un· healthy? A PR&l'ElN supplement can be uro as Jone •s that source alone it not the only supply of calories. U a person wants to use a protein .supplement, tine, but us~ 'It for hot It ls, a $upplt· riitnt, a product to use with ~our Ntduced lntak of whoie$Ome nutrient-rich foodR. I am not defending liquid pro- t•in or CU\dioning lts use -I pononolly would never ta.Ice it. My polnt ls lit.at wetabt loss can be an enjoyable upertence for many ~le ll they uso tbetr headt. U you can gradually r duce your caloric intake and Im· prove what foodt you do eat. )'OU can abed unwanted poun«U at a . aarer&te; thatltmostim~rtant. LEE H. LOR.ENZ EN Director or R e~m v 1• Laboraloriu ( Irrine • ! VOL. 70, NO. 348, .. SECTIONS, 48 PAGES jS250 Limit Irvine Adopts Campaign C11rh By PIDL ROSMARIN Ol I ... ~llJ "llet St.If No person may contribute more than $250 to a candidate for elective office in Irvine, nor In support of a municipal ballot measure, under a law adopted Tuesday by the City Council. The council voted 4·1 to limit campaign contributions "lo in- sure that the amount contributed * * * Prob le~ Cited in Reform Act By GARV GRANVILLE OI t• 0.KJ ,., ... SU.If County Counsel Adrian Kuyper told Orange County supervisors Wednesday that any political campaign reform ordinance they might adopt would create "enforcement problems" in 1978 if it contains a limit on campaign contributions. Kuyper told supervlsorti that candidates who have alread1 stoked their campaign coffers "'1th conlri butions exceeding proposed contribution limit.II un• nQt be held to answet for exceed· iog the limitation. I So far, the only candidates known to have a<:cepted crm· J palgn donations exceed ng various proposed contributions limitations are the three county supervisors who will seek re election in 1978. A curtailment on contributions cannot be made retroactive to in· elude donations already received by candidates, Kuyper said. A11d, he added, candidates who have not yet stoked their corcers "will argue discriminatary en· forcemeot of the limitation pro- visions.'' They will contend "that certain of their opponents have an unfair advantage because they have already received, before the ef. fective date of lhe ordinance, contributions In excess of the limitations." ''Therefore," Kuyper con- tinued. "we believe that matin1 such contribution UmttaUona ef. fecUve for the 1978 electlona may create enlorcement problems." Should their leaal counsel's words be heeded by the five coun- ty aupervlsora, it would mean that polltical reform ln Orange County, U it 11 to come, will not come In Ume for next ytar'a elec· tlons. <See REFOllM, Pac1A2) by any person does not material- ly influence the outcome of any election." The ordinance was adopted as an urgency measure and takes effect immediately. Four votes were needed to make the new law affect current campaigns for March council elections. Councilman John Burton voted no, "with relish," and Coun· cilwoman Gabrielle Pryor voted yes, "with reluctance." Sbe pre- ferred that all private contri)>u.. lions be banned and that cam- paiens be financed with public money. Council members David Sills a nd Bill Vardoulis, wbo pro- posed the ordinance, and Mary Ann G aido, also voted approval. The new ordinance also re· quires an additional reportine period of campaign disclosures, other than those already re- quir ed by the 1974.-Political Reform Act. Candidates must Cite state- ments detailing contributions and expenditures through mid- ' night of the Wednesday im- mediately preceding tbe elec- tion. Such statements would be riled by noon the Friday before election day. The cam.P•ifn c;optribution limit of S250 wil be Increased or decr~ased annually based oq cost of llring fluctuations. Tbe limit. al.lo wW be increased wltb boosts in the number of regtatered Irvine voM?rs, by a penny per voter. For every 100 more eligible voters, the limit would be raised by a dollar. Burton accused the council of "leaping" into campaign reform, even before the worth of the 197+ act whlchbesaid was dubious was proved. "You're yielding to the pseudo- populist fervor," Burton said, "in generating restrictive cam- paign laws." Sills argued that a contribuUon limit would assure that "once <See LIMIT, Pace Z) · . Police Shoot Heist Suspect REDONDO BEACH <AP)- A 22-year-old Torrance man. Rob·ert Williams, wu fatally wounded l>y police as he fled with his brother alter allegedly rob- bln1 a pharmacy of an un· determined amount of money, police aaid. ' • WUUJms' brother, Jay, 23, sur- rendered to pqllc' .rter the tncl· dent Tuesday. they noted. Totlay' Clo Ing N.Y. Stoeks WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 1 .. , 1977 TEN CENTS -es Eleventh Victim Found LOS ANGELES (AP) -A young woman whose nude body was found today in a hillside neighborhood overlooking downtown Los Angeles appears to be the 11th victim or the Hillside Strangler, pollcesaid. ''This nts all the previous evidence that we've bad before. It appeat'S this may be the 11th vic- tim of the Hillside Strangler," said police Lt. Dan Cooke. t . I THIS WAS UNIVERSITY OF EVANSVILLE, INDIANA, BASKETBALL TEAM But he said it was impossible yet to say whether the uniden· tilled young woman, in her early 209. had beenaltanl(led. Indiana Cagers College Team Dies In Airliner Crash EVANSVlLLE, Ind. (AP> - An airliner carrying a university basketball team and others was airborne for only about one minute before it crashed, in· vestigators said today. All 29 aboard were !tilled. The crash of the chartered twin -engine DC-3 into a muddy hillside In dense rain and foe Tuead~ night killed the entire 1-'·man University ot Evansvill& basketball team and its coach. In addition, the three crew mem- bers and 11 other people were kllled. Witnesses aald the plane'• en1lne was sputtering and the pilot apparenUy was trying to turn back lo rain and fog before the craft went down. All 29 victims were Identified, but two bodies were left at the scene overnight because the weather hampered recovery ef. forts. Mark Moulton, the color an- nouncer for the team who was not CatFinkr Due $1,000 LA MESA (AP) -A re- ward of $1,000 is being of- fered for a gray, striped cat which wandered off. The reward "represents our savings," said Shirley Ramaer, addina: "I know there are people who will think it la silly to offer that mucb but that cat, Laura, is our kid, our lllUe girl.'' The childless couple1 wbo are in their 30s, hlreQ an attorney and put up re- ward Polters Tuuday for Laura, a two-year-old feline which they found in a Humane Society cage at eight weeks old. on the flight, said the team had been scheauled to leave during the afternoon. but was delayed for more thar three hours until FORMER PLAYERS STUNNED AT CRASH.......e1 the plane finally arrived to pick up the pasaeniers. NalloPaJ Ttan.sPortation Safe- ty BolU'd tnvestlgator Phillip A. Hogue said the plane crashed about a minute after \t took off. Tbe plane took off and thea ap· peared momentarily on radar, tuminc back toward the airport, before disappearing. Hosue aaid. There was no emergency radio contact with the plane, he said. The wreckage, scattered over a 20-foot bluff overlooking r ailroad tracks near a sub· division, was still smouldering this morning. Only the tall sec- tion remained intact. "We're going to check the weather, the quality of the aircraft and we'll also in- vestigate whether the airport should have be.en operating un- der the existing conditions," Hogue said. The NTSB investigator saJd the weather at the time was foggy and a light rain was falUng, cut• ting visabfllty to three-quarters of a mile. He said other crafts were landing and taking off at the airport without problems. The Evansville Aces had won one game and lost three this season. The Aces were five-time cbamplons of the National Collegiate Athletic Association's Division JI basketball tourna- ment. This year they moved to Division I play. "We btid e11ht freshmen, all new coaches," a spokesman said. "We were j ust getting started." Jim Byers, the college athletic director, said classes were can· celed today and that a memorial setvlce was being planned tor to- day ot Thursday. The team was to have flown to Nashville1 then tllJce a bus to Murfreesooro tor a basketball game tonight with Middle Ten- nessee State Unl\>erslty. Many ot the _SJ.000 students on the MethodlJt-aJfillated cahlpus spent tbe nlcht praylnf, talldnc quietlf with friends or medJtat- lnf,. 'We couldn't 10 to sleep," said David Meoain,, an 19-year-old <SteTEUI, Pqe AJ) Irvine OKs Extension Of Road The Irvine City Council ap- proved an environmental impact report for a proposed extension of Bonita Canyon Road in Turtle Rock Tuesday over some homeowners' objections. The council also autho/ized an application for $278,000 iD county funds under the Arterial Highway Financing Program, which would be matched by city· funds, to help build \t. . The two-lane extension would run froQ\ Culver Drive to Sun- nybill Drtve. No date bas been s,et tor cocut.rucUon. The Slena Bonita Commuri.lty AssociaUon, whose members' homes would back~ to the new road, opposed the actions, fear· ing the road would lower their property values. The object in building the road, according to city planners, is to provide additional access lo the Turtle Rack community to ease traffic congestion on Turtl~ Rack Drive and Ridgeline Road. Other Turtle Rock coavnunity · associations favored the tf>ad. • But Sierra Bonita feared noise from the anticipated 6,000 cani that would travel it dally, and possible expansion of Bonita Canyon Road inlo a major throughway. · The council vote was 3*2, with· Mary Ann Galdo and Gabrielle. Pryor opposed. . Mrs. Pryor said the road Isn't needed. The council majority included <See BONITA, Page%) Police have Unked the stran- gling murders of 10 young women in nine weeks. All the bodies were found in hilly areas in north em or northeastern sections of ·Los Angeles and Its suburbs. . An unidentified man found the most recent body under a bush along Alvarado Street In a hillside resldenUal area just a few miles from where severaf of the other Hillside Strangler vicUma have been dumped. A coalition of feminist groups held a memorial service at the steps of City Hall on Tuesday for victims of the strangler and for women who have been raped or beaten. The wom e n s taging tile meJDorial rtt.es wore red capes to symbolize their rage, Yelled their faces and •ave atatlstici on physically and sexually abused women. They chanted, "Women , fi1ht back!" J~ Robina. of tile Rape Crisis Hotline. 11ld one oflbe cottlltion '• demands la that.public scbooLs of· fer seU-de.lense ti'alning as pa.rt ot lhe reeuJ,ar physical education curriculum at all levels. Thf! coalition also Is demanding that telephone numbers ol rape crisis hotllnes be placed In a apeclal emergency listing in telepbonedirectories. Councilwoman Pat Russell said the City Council was supporting the demands where possible and was forming an emergency shelter for rape victims. Coun· cilwoman Joy Picu1 added that defense classes £or City Hall ~mployees had begun. Self-defense classes have been In demand aince tt>e recent strangulaUoo deaths .Of 10 young women believed to be the victims of the so-called Hillside Strao1Ier. The first ol the victims was found nude and strangled near Griffith Park on Oct. 18. She and most of the others found since had been sexually assaulted. The 10th Victim, Lauren Rae Wagner, was found Nov. 29 \n another hillside residential ar~a on Mt. Washington. She was strangled but not raped, accord- Blast Injures Irvine Girl; :Teen Held • in1 to coroner's investigators who are P•rt of the Hillside Strangler Task Force. A powerful firecracker that police said packs the p~ch ot a quarter-stick of dynamite was rolled Into a gatherlnl of University High School students· in Irvine Tuesday and exploded,· injurln1 one girl. The student, Vtr1inJa Griffin, was struck on the ankle by a piece of naming phosphorus and suffered a quarter-sized burn. School officials packed the ankle ln ice and bandaged lt. Tbey aald hospital treatment was unnece81ary. • Police arrested a 17.year-otd boy, a blah school senior, on char1es of assault with a deadtY weapon and il'ft!Uba • danceroua explosive device. 'I'he M80 ft• ploaive waurmaggled from Mu· lco, police tald. A neighbor of Miss Wagner's waa the first eyewitness to what may have been a strangler abduc- tion. The neighbor said she saw two large men escort the young woman from her oar a few doors from her home. Coast Weather Low clouds and fog tbrou1h Thuflday mornlna with variable hlgh clouds ·TbursdQ aftemcon. Lows tonlsht so to 5$. Htaha Thursdll)' es to 10. INllDE TOD-' Y Who c:°"'4 relid nclk ci good deol on \OGtcMI oM colculctort~ roo l•t», ft Htm•. Btll ft eoo.a t'4lt a trudtf· millfotl-doUtir. fraud. S.. P'ag• A1. I.Iii es 1\2 DAILY PILOT Sniper Slain In SF SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -A gunman who maintained a desperate standoff with police after wounding a fireman was killed in a barrage of gunfire tear ~as and high-pressure wat~ th at ended a21!.i-hour 11lege today. Police intormaUon officer Mike O'Toole said the man. who au!-r ered tour or five 1unshot wounds, was identified as Floyd Thompson, 35. Thompson was pronounced <lead at a nearby hospital, a hospital official said. The drama, shrouded in light rain, began when fireman Kevin Gonsalves, 31, was shot ln the right arm after he broke down an apartment door while responding lo a fire in an industrial area near the city's downtown section. authorities said. His condition wasn't considered serious. Thompson's stubborn battle l'nded after firemen aimed high. pressure fire hoses at close range into the first-floor apartment. Window panes and shades were blasted away by the tremendous streams of water that flooded m- s1de. Officers who invaded the apartment said the man was ly- ing behind a make-shift bar- ricade in the kitchen. A loaded 38 caliber pistol was found nearby. Several blocks in the area had been cordoned off as dozens or police and fire officials clogged the streets. Police aimed shotguns at the apartment, using the firetrucks as shields. Tension had been maintained at a high-pitch with sporadic shots police said were fired from the apartment. As the siege wore on, orricials made use of several tactics. Two canisters or tear gas were fired into the first-floor apartment at 5th and Clara streets, followed later by several others. The tear gas rounds shattered the window frame and pierced a shade. At 9:28 a .m . a team or gasmasked policemen, armed with semi-automatic rifles, stormed the entrance or the building. Dousing the Intruder . .. ~ A protesting houseboater throws a pail o( water at sheriff's deputies on a pile driver during a confrontation in Sausalito between houseboat owners and deputies, on their way to install a pile driver to be used in building a new marina. At least 10 people were taken into custody after the fracas. Chief 'Not Forced Out' Timing of Resignation Called U_.f ortunate By JACKIE HYMAN OI tN Oallr Pllol Si.If Dr. Francis Crinella, executive direc to r of Fairview State Hos pital in Costa Mesa, said to- day he does not believe the res- 1~na tion of former hospital head Michael Levine this week was a result of Levine's suspension along with two other staffers. "It's unfortunate that his res- h~nalion came at the same time because it could appear as if he's being forced out," Dr. CrineUa said today. ''He most definitely was going to resign as of the first of January anyway," Dr. Crinella said. Dr. Levine will assume the directorship of College Hospital a private facility in Cerritos. · ' Dr. Levine was fired by state officials last June after nine months in the directorship, re· portedly because of his many controversial statements. Dr. Levine remained on the staff after he was replaced as director by Dr. Crinella. The suspension of Dr. Levine and two other staff members, Sandy Udovch and Lincoln Shumate, was authorized Friday by Dr. Crinella. "Dr. Levine and two other staff members are alleged to have used stale secretarial resources, BettE'r Prires duplication and stationery, for expressing their own personal views of the State Department or Health," Dr. Crinella said. He said letters and copies of re- ports were sent t.o as$emblymen, federal officials and other st.ate agencies. "I had not authorized this," Dr. Crinella said. He said the staff memben had been sus- pended with pay. "It's simply a disagreement as to whether or not state resources may be used to express private opinions about superiors and about the government," he said. Frona Page A 1 Nationwide Strike Called by Farmers TEAM KILLED ••. freshman from Peru, Ind. "You just can't take something like that to bed." The twin.engine propelle r plane, chartered from National Jet Service Inc. of Indianapolis, left Dress Regional Airport here nt7:20p.m. Rick Notter, an aircraft worker at the airport who wit· nessed the crash, said he saw the plane "disappear into the fog. ··A bout a minute and a half later 1 heard his engines cutting out and he went down," Notter iinid. "We saw it go into the clouds. We heard a loud 'pop.' We heard an engine rev up, then we heard the crash and saw an explosion," said Patrick Alvey, a licensed pilot and owner or Metro Beechcraft Corp., a charter service at the airport. Alvey said he and a companion were among the first people to arrive at the crash scene. "The fuselage was intact, the left wing was ripped off," he re- called. "Very many bodies were still in their seatbelts and many were ~trewn around. It was a mes!'i -just a tot.al mess. ''We had four people alive. They were just strewn around. The wreckage was on fire. There Wreckage Found MADRID, Spain (AP) Spanish search parties today spotted the wreckage of a World War II German bomber on a mountainside where it crashed during the weekend en route from Madrid to a British museum, the news agency Cl!ra reported. O"ANQl COM1' was nothing we could do for the people inside of It," said Alvey. The bodies were taken in a Louisville & Nashville Railroad boxcar to a temporary morgue set up in the city Community Center in downtown Evansville, 10 miles from the crash site. In the room where the rows or bodies lay beneath white sheets, which is sometimes used as a basketball court, a volleyball net was pushed aside for extra space. The bodies were later taken to area funeraJ homes. Assistant coach Mark Sandy, 25, di~not accompany the team because he was on a scouting mission at Southern Illinofs University in Carbondale, Ill. * * * Air Crash Victims Identified EVANSVILLE. Ind. <AP) - The 27 passengers, identified by Indiana State Police. killed when a DC3 carrying the University of Evansville basketball team crashed Tuesday nigbt: I. loO Wllttoft. 3"1,cOIKl'I, '"""""rgll, llld. 2. Warr.., Alston, 11,lrn/lman,GoldlborO,N C. 3. Ray ~la, 111...wnan, Munsttr, IM. 4 MllttOuff, ll,1'"1WN!n,El~,lll. s. Kr a lo HecMMorn. 1t, ,....,.._, CIA<IMell. t. Mike J~r, lt, IMll.....,, Terre Htult, llld. 7. K1vlnK1nQSton,11,,..1or, E~tdo.111 I. ltrfte'Y i.-t•, 11, I~. OUdlt\I, H.C. 9.Slt.,.MlllM,10,junlor, NewAlbllny, Ind. 10. Ktllll-. 20, IOl)Nlmort, Ktlltrlno. °"10· II. Martllletlll, It, l~lwftan, 1"411~11. 12. Oreo lmllft, II, lrtthmall, WHI Frolftkfort. Ill. u . a,....,. T..,W, 20, lunlor, Tell Cit¥, ln4. 14. Jolln Ed We1111n11on, 21, 1t11lor, In· dlanapolfe. IS. TonyWln11Un1,n,,..1or.~vll1t,llld. tt. Greo Kiii"'"" 17, ._u lflfor'matlOfl cllrK· 1Dr, ""-vlllt. By The A.uoclated Presa Hundreds of farmers from Georgia to the Pacific Northwest kicked off a nationwide strike to- day. with leaders vowing to shut down farm operations as long u it takes to get better prices. Farmers demonstrated at supermarkets in Colorado and the Midwest. In Ge<>rgia, hun- dreds of rural merchants closed their doors in sympathy. Livestock auction houses closed in South Carolina. And in Texas, some farmers blocked the de- livery of goods from grocery warehouses. . Much of the protest today, in the form or tractorcades. boycotts against grocery stores and grocery warehouae picket- ing, involved Midwestern and Paciric Northwestern farmers - many ot them grain producers, who are particularly upset with prices. But the strike was also felt through much of south Georgia, Auction Hoitse Theft Loss Tops $500,000. Newport Beach detectives said today ihe loss from last Wednesday's robbery of the Newport Galleries bu topped ~.ooo and m•yclhnbhigher. Capt. Richard Hamilton said an inventory Js still being con· ducted to detennine the value ot the 300 ring• and 12 loose diamonds stolen in the holdup. where a number or small cities were virtually shut down. In the Texas Panhandle, angey farmers parked tractors in front of grocery warehouses, blocking delivery trucks. And an air hose for brakes on a tractor-trailer truck carrying bogs was cut when the driver stopped for a red light on Georgia 38 in Pierce County, the sheriff's office said. Thal damage was repaired. Participation varied among the different types of farmer, h owever, and the Omaha Livestock Market, one of the na- tion's largest. reported "normal o r above normal" receipts Wednesdaymoming. "It doesn't look like livestock producers are joining the strike. at least not yet," a USDA spokesman said. Dairy farmers appeared to be ignoring the strike. except in Nebruka. where some vowed to turn grade-A milk into powder and store it until after t.be strike. Murder Charge Se;v;enth Bovan Suspect Hel~ Bv JOANNE REYNOLDS ' Ofti.OeltyPlltUIMt Elsie Ca.ban Kulik, sought for more t.ban a monlb on muroer conspiracy chariu in the slay- Jnc of Stephen John Bovan of FountaJn V-11ey, was arrested early today 'bJC. Newport Beach police. She becomes the seventh sus- pect jailed in the case which began Oct. 22 when Bovan was shot to death outsldo a Newport Beach rest.atlrant. Sgt. Darryl Youle said he and a team of investigators found Mrs. Kulik hiding under a split-level condominium in La Costa. a re-sort near Carlsbad in San Diego County. Her husband, Alexander, who was freed on bail after his earlier arrest in the case, was taken into custody at the same time. J\ld&e Kneeland baa set the trial for Jan. 23. PoUceaald they had been seek· ln1 Mrs. Kullk and the other missing fugitive in the case, Joseph Federowski., in the San Die10 area for more than a month. They said they were led to the condominiums by information uncovered in the course of their investigation and the owner or the development recognized Mrs. Kulik's photo. Police said Kulik bad rented the residence under an assumed name. When Youle and a tum of of. !leers, including a patrolman from the nearby Carlsbad Police Department, arrived at the con- dominium, they were greeted by Kulik who allegedly denied his wife was there. Youle said they searched the three floors of the hillside home withoutsucces&. Mrs. Kullk was finally found by Detective Gary Black who searched the crawl space under. the home. Mrs. Kulik, who is being held in lieu of the $500,000 bail carried on her arrest warrant, joins Roy Christopher Richard, her husband's business partner and one of the aJleged co-conspirators who is aboheldin the city facility. indicU!lents handed down in No- vember by the Oran1e County Grand Jury. The only one remaining at large is Fedorowskl. Fro• Page .41 BONITA. • • provisions in the approval that noise from traffic be lessened by use of landscaping and walls along the road. Councilm8Jl David Sills voted for the greater noise protection expenditures, but remarked that the city appeared to spend more public money for improvements in the wealthy residential area than anywhere else int.be city. Councilman John Burton agreed, and on his motion city of- ficials were ordered to prepare· what Burton called "a catalog or inequities" comparine im- provement costs. Mrs. Pryor and Mrs. Gaido favored even stricter noJse, mitigation measures, wflich CouncUman Bill VardDuUa said would cost an additional $175,000. Police allege Kulik• Fedorowskl, Richard and' a· fourth man, Joseph SbeltoA Davis Ill, ¥ll part.Deni Jn the Newport Be ch tnvesttna flrm, Pra~a.dam Dt1trib'-Uo1, Inc., hired three 01eii to kidnap and kill Bovan. They atleae that Mra. Kulik participated ln the plot which was motivated by revenge ror Bovan ·, alleged kidnapping of Kulik in August. The three men assertedly hired, Anthony "Little Tony•• Marone Jr., 23, Raymond Steven Resco, 28, and Jerry Peter Fiori, 41, all of Huntington Beach, were arrested Oct. 26. Front Page AJ REFORM ••• Llmitatlons on Individual cam. palgn conlributlons have been a cornerstone or various prooosed reform ordinances including those sugsested by the 1976-77 county Grand Jury, a reform group called TIN CUP and the county Citizen's Direction Find- ing Commission. Those or6Janizations and others have argued that a lid needs t.o be placed on the amount individuals can donate to candidate cam· palgns to avoid the appearance that heavy donors have undue in· fluenceongovemmentdeclsions. ln a hefty memo sent to su&>ervisors Wednesday after- noon. Kuyper said there ts reason to believe that "contribution limitations of S500 or $250 per election or per calendar year would probably be held to be valid" by the courts. However, Kuyper did not dis· miss the possibility that a limit in !ilftY form "mi1ht be held, it judicially challenged, to be un· constitutionaJ." The Board of Supervisors' legal counselor also said he doubted if the board can transfer any of its powers to a fair political campaign practices commission. * * * " Front Page AJ UMIT. • • elected, nobody is beholden to one select UQUp." Burton countered that the or. din}lnce presumes that can- didates can be bought for pit· lances. NOW Meet Date Error Corrected "What happened in Houston and why -a report on the IWY Conference" will be discussed during a meeting or the South Coast chapter or the National Oraanlzation for Women <NOW) tonight. The Daily Pilot previously and erroneouslv rep0rted the day of the meeting. The meeting, featuring delegates and ob· servers from ~conference, wilt begin at 8 p.m. in the Laguna Beach Boys Club. 17. loll~. atlllttlc but!,...•''"'..,...• t'.¥tMVlJft, II. Cllarln Slllkt, university ct11v.ller, IE¥tnnlllt. "· Ma"" eetn, uftl\'tf'llty rac11o ~. b.,.. ... 1 ... Accordln1 to Hamllton, the most current loss fll\ll'e bas been set at $&2,000. "We thlnt the loss may tobtgber,"heHld. A FIW tDMS FOil CHRISTMAS 20.Jaffla!WIMt. ... m-.r,E"'-"'llt. 21. Marl Kirkpatrick, lffln "''"''''' ev•ntvlllt. 12. Marti t<llleM, *"" """"''· ·-¥fife, u. ~ OMd. PAllWnt. GNd l411111pM11t c:o. ..... ~llt. tJ. O, Rull. ell11M tint eff\af, ----"-· u. ,_ Snllf\,t~. Mcff'es•"""--tl. 1111 HertWd.91Mfll _....,, N.CIMllM s.rtlce. TWe ~ ......... pl8ft -· llllfttlfi.. .. C.-. Ty Ylll l'Nftl. t .. ,.not. IM .aam.. tc_,, ..,..,.t ti ... ,..,... Jet lln'let .... .,,. '"" .ie1111110fl1°*1w~Y· Inmate Dies Included In the mtsslng pieces ls a Su0,000 rlnl. described by police as a J..5.carat emerald sur· roupded by quarhr·C&rat diamonds, Mt In white •old. - Police ant 1tlll 1eeldn1 the lone woman who held fallery ownfl Robert 01le at 1unpolnt alid cleaned cut tbt sale of th• auc· tlon house at 2541 W. Coast HJahway. Th• 190..,n, wbocallld berMlt Mre. Moore, sot ln~ the olond sallery by maklna an appoi,nt• ment with OIJe U) cllacuas tho aalo of tWo ii.lie•· Once hli!de, she told Ocie her SUSANVILLE <AP> -Abt eccomplJcea were holdin1 hla prisoner waaJataJ.ty nabbed In a 'Wtf t ud bu him handcuff, racial ~froatatfon tnYol'riq bUlld.lold Md Ill bis clerk. ISO lamat.et •la ttate prllOD llMl' Once tht woman left; 01lo c:ao· here TueldaY mabt. prtion ol· ~cted JU Wife. ti'.tOlil him lbO fi"laU 1alcL 1 bad nOt tieia lddUPPld. The dead men wu ldent111tld The auapect ' ts ·-aelc,a:tbed u U .Jffelb GulJeY, 29, t•teft~ in nve !Ht, four lochel tall, Alamida OOunty to l to u ,_. w1t1bla•. J'-~ 9oand1, wljh toir MeOild d~ buqlary. He Uo4.lldef·~ rid b'Ur. She bad had been iii 'lM•C&Utomla OGr· • freekles, O.&l• Uhl, and •P· recUonal ceater aince J~ ~ared to be til hetlate twenUet. • • t I I ( '\ I I Laguna/South Coast Aiter11oon N.Y.Stoeks ~1 I VOL. 70, NO·. 348, 4 SECTIONS, .S PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNI A WEONESOAY,OECEMBER1~1n7 TEN CENTSI 1 K1-ishnas Buy Ch1ircL in La .. a ! By SfEVE MITCHELL Of u. o.11r l"lNt llaft The Hare Krishna religious cult has purchased a church buildin~ on the comer or Legion and Glenneyre Streets in Laguna Beach. less than three months after the pre-World Wadi struc· ture was sold to an Iranian in· vestor. First Christian Sold for $255,000 ~ t l t f l Title was granted Dec. 1 to the International Society or Krishna Consciousness or California for the two-story church at 28.S Legion St .• accord· ing to a spokesman al Title Insurance and Trust Company. The building was sold to ISKCON of California for approx· imately $255,000, said David Vin· cent of the title insurance firm. "That's a pretty good ballpark figure," the title agent confirmed Strangler l'~tina? Eleventh Nude Body Found LOS ANGELES (AP> -A young woman whose nude body was found today in a hillside neighborhood overlooking downtown Los Angeles appears to be the lllh victim of the Hillside Strangler, police said. "This !its all the previous evidence that we've bad before. Jt appears this may be the 11th vie· tim of the Hillside Strangler," said police Lt. Dan Cooke. But he said it was Impossible yet to say whether the uniden· Wt Finder Due $1,000 LA MESA CAP) -A re· ward of $1,000 is being of· !ered for a gray. striped cat wbic.h wandered off. The reward "represents our savings." said Shirley Ramser. adding: "l know there are people who wJU think it is silly t.o offer th)t mu~ but that cat, J.,aur'e, is ou kid, our little girl." T e childless couple, who are in their 30s, hired an attorney and put up re· ward posters Tuesday for Laura, a two.year-old feline which they found in a Humane Society cage at eight weeks old. LB's Andree Mendenhall Dead at 83 Services will be held Thursday morninf !or longtime Laguna Beach resident Andree Men· denball. who died Tuesday at the ageo!83. _ Mn. Mendenhall lived with her · husband for 41 years in Laiuna Beach and was a r esident of 515 Emerald BJiY· She is survived by her husband, Clarence Mendenhall II, and soo Clarence Mendenhall JU, alsoo!Laguna Beach. Mrs. Mendenhall is also sur· vlved by daughter Andree Mahoney ofCucamonta. Ser\fi~ will be held at 10:35 a.m. at St. Mary'1 Episcopal Cllurch lo Laguna Beach, Burial wlll be at West Point Post Cemetery ift New York. 'Cleopatra' ·Showing Set tified young woman. in her early 20s. had been strangled. Police have linked the stran· gling murders of 10 young women in nine weeks. All the bodies were found in hilly areas in northern or northeaslern sections of Los Angeles and its suburbs. An unidentified man found the most recent body under a bush along Alvarado Street in a hillside residential area just a few miles from where several of the other Hillside Strangler victims have been dumped. A coalition of f'minist groups held a memorial service at the steps or City Hall on Tuesday for victims of the strangler and for women who have been raped or beaten. The women staging the memorial riles wore red capes to symbolize their rage, veiled their faces and gave statistics on physically and sexually abused women. They chanted, "Women fight backj ·' Joan Robins. of the Rape Crisis Hotline, said one of the coalition's deftla.Qdslt tbltpublic schools of. ferself-detensetralning as part or the regular physical education curriculum at all levels. The coalition also is demanding that telephone numbers of rape crisis hotlines be placed in a special emergency listing in telephone directories. Councilwoman Pat Russell said the City Council was supporting the demands where possible and was forming an emergency sheller for rape victims. Coun· cilwoman Joy Picus 11dded that defense· classes for City Hall employees had begun. Self·defense classes have been in demand since the recent strangulation deaths of 10 young women believed to be the victims of the SO·called Hillside Strangler. The first or the victims was found nude and strangled near Gri!fith Park on Oct. 18. She and most of the others found since had been sexually assaulted. NOW Meeting Date ErrOr Corrected •'What happened in Houston and why - a report on the IWY Conference" will be discussed dudng a meetinf ot the South Coast cbapt~ 6 the National Organization for Women (NOW) tont1bt. The Dally Pilot previously and erroneouslv reported the da.v of the meeting. The meetln&. featuring delegates and ob· servers from the conference, will begin at 8 p.m. in the Laguna Beach Boys Club. Wednesday. The church was purchased by the Krishnas from Hooshlar Saedi, who is reportedly a Laguna Beach investor. He purchased the church three months ago from the First Chris· tian Church of Laguna Beach for $211,500. according to church Of· ficiala. First Christian pastor Gene Barbee said the church sold the building t.o the investor Sept. 22. The congregation bu been meet· lng in the Human Affairs Build· ing at city ball since the sale. "We had no idea it was going to be sold t.o the Krishnas, if indeed it has been,•• Barbee said. "We sold it t.o a family who said they were going to remodel it as a home." Nolan Real Estate woman. Carolyn :;kenaenan conurms lhal report. "Mr. Saedi indicated he wanted lo remodel the church for a home or tear it down and THIS WAS UNIVERSITY OF EVANSVILLE, INOIANA, BASKETBALJ. TEAM Crash Kills Cage Team 29 Die; Pilot Apparently Tried to Tum Back EVANSVILLE, Ind. <AP) - An airliner carrying a university basketball team and others was airborne for only about on.e minute before it crashed. In· vestigators said today, All 29 aboard were killed. The crash of the chartered twin·engine DC·3 int.o a muddy hillside in dense rain and fog Tuesday night killed th~ entire 14-man University of Evansville basketball team and its coach. In addition, the three crew mem· bers and 11 other people were killed. Witnesses said the plane's engine was sputtering and the pilot apparently was trying to turn back in rain and fog before the craft went down. All 29 victims were identified, but two bodies were left at the scene overnight because the weather hampered r ecovery ef· forts. Mark Moulton, the color an· nouncer for the team who was not on the night. said the team had been scheduled to leave during the anernoon, but was delayed for more than three hours until the plane finally arrived to pick up the passengers. Np.tlonal Transportation Safe· ty Board lnvesUgator Phillip A. Hogue said the plane crashed about a minute after il took off. · The plane took ofr and Ulen ap. peared momentarily on radar, FORMER PLAYERS • STUNNED AT CAASH-81 turning back toward the airport. ·before dlsappearln&, Hogue said. There was no emer1ency radio contact with the plane, be aald. The wreckage, scattered over a 20·f6ot bluff overlooking railroad track!; near a sub· division, was still smouldering this mornlng. Only the tail sec· tion remained intact. '.'We're going to check the weather, the quality or the aircraft and we'll also in· vestigate whether the airport should have been operating un· der the existing conditions," Hogue said. The NTSB investigator said the weather at the time was foggy Bah, Bn1nh•g Carolers Draw Complaint IT APPEARS there's at least one real Scrooge in Laguna Beach after a citizen called police to com· plain about noise T\lesday night. . The offense? . Someone singing Christmas carols near Bluebird Canyon and South Coast Highway. "THAT'S ,NOTJUNG.'' offered police Sgt. VIC Sagan. "We get about 90 calls every Fourth of July from people objecting to the city's fireworks dis· play." " But Christmas carols? - and a light rain was falling, cut· ting visabillty to three-quarters or a mile. He said other crafta were landing and taking off at the airport wit.bout problems. The Ev&Mvllle Aces had won one game and lost three this seuon. 1'he Aeei were five.Um• champions of the National Collegiate Athletic Association's Division II basketball touma· ment. This year they moved to Division I play. "We had eight freshmen, all new coaches," a spokesman said. "We were just getting started." Jim Byers, the college athletic director, said classes were can· celed today and that a memorial service was belne planned for to- day or Thursday. The team was to have flown to Nashville, then take a bus to Murfreesboro for a basketball game tonight with Middle Ten· nessee State University. Many of the ~.ooo students on the Methodist.affiliated campus spent the night praying, talking quietly with frietids or medital· <See TEAM, Paie A2 > Dana Routes Backed by OC Planners Routes for two-mile segments or Street of the Golden Lantern and Camino del Avion north or Dana Point were recommended Tuesday by the Orange County Planning Commission. The routes, endorsed by l&nd· owners in. the Bear Brand Ranch area, won commlsslon ap· pfoval despite complaints from a citizens group that plannina in the Dana Polnt·Laguna Nleuel area is be.ini done "piecemeal" without proper environmental dl)Cumentation. Older Laguna Beach residents can see the rum. "Cleopatra," &tarring Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton, Friday after· ttoon rree of char1e. San C'lenaente AssaUed County supervisors will have the !ina1 say-so on routes for the two roadw~s. Sandra Boostom of the Dana· Niguel Defense Leacue said her aroup also bad beeo unable t.o get all ot the enviroqmental docu· D'\enta presented by county plan· ners to thecommisaJon. Tickets for the show. tree to .,nior citizens, are available from Bob Port.er at tho Human Atfalrt Building, Sl' Forest Ave. I The film, co·aponaortd by 'Laguna Federal S1ving1 and LOan and the Council on A1lni. will be lbown at 2 p.m. at lhe ' South Coast '11\eater. "The people <councy planners) I have come in contact with for the most parl are very bright and want to do a good Job. But I feel that for whatever rea1on .•• these doc~ent.I ue not 1eltin1 out to the public ~ we can mlko " knowledccablt ptat:ntaUoo," 1he1ald. The Dana-Nl•uel Defen1e i.urue !Ju llled suit 1n Oralllt eounty Sti~nor court to k p Golden Lantemhoin beeomina a 1lx·lane bl•h••J from Dlfta Potnt to La~ Nll\MI. Tbe t'oUt.o le.leded tor Golcten Lanten1 ruu north and IOUt.b tbrou•h taie ranch property, <See iotrra, Pge Al> ' build some residential units," she said. "I suggested that be offer the church building to the city !or $1 instead of tearing it down," she said. But brokers working on behalf nf the Krisbnas approached Saedi's real estate man Frank Sohaei and made an otrer on the church, the Red Carpet realtor confirmed this morning. "I honestly did not know who (See KRISHNA, Page AZ) Seventh Suspect Captured BvJOANNEREYNOLDS OIU.Delh•"lllllUft Elsie Caban Kulik, sought !or more than a month on muraer conspiracy charges in the slay· Ing of Stephen John Bovan of Fountain Valley, was arrested early t.oday by Newport Beach police. She becomes the seventh SUS· pect jailed in the case which began Oct. 22 when Bovan was shot to death outside a Newport b restaurant. Sg . YouJe said be and a team of investigators round Mrs. Kulik hiding under a split-level condominium in La Costa, a re· sort near Carlsbad in San Diego County. Her husband, Alexander, who was freed on ball after his earlier arrest in the case, was taken into custody at the same time. Judge Kneeland bas set the trial for Jan. 23. Police said they bad been seek· ing Mrs. Kulik and the other • missing fugitive in the case, Joseph Federowskit in the San Dieeo area tor more than a month. • They said they were Jed to the condominiums by Jnformation uncovered in the course of their investigation and the owner of the development recognized Mrs. Ku lilt's photo. Police said Kulik had rented the residence under an assumed name. When Youle and a team or of-ficers, including a patrolman from the nearby Carlsbad Police Department, arrived at the con· dominium, they were greeted by Kulik who allegedly denied his wife was there. Youle said they searched the three floors of the hillside home without success. Mrs. Kulik was finally found lty Detective Gary Black who searched the crawl space under tbehome. Mrs. Kulik, who is being held ia lieu of the $500,000 bail carried oa her arrest warrant, joins Roy- Chris top be r Richard, her husband's business partner and one of the alleged co-conspirat.ors wbois alsobeldlntbecity!acllity. indictments banded down in No- vember by the Orange County Grand Jury. The onJy one remaining al large is Fedorowski. •Police allege Kulik, Fedorowski, Richard and a · fourth man, Jo.seph Shelton Davis III, all partners in the Newport ~ach investing fll'm, Prasadam DlstribuUng, Inc., (SeeSUSPEcr, Page AZ) Weather Low clouds and fog through Thursday momlng with variable bl1h clouds ·Thursday afternoon. Lows tonight ISO to 55. Highs Thursday 8S to '70. INSIDE TODAY Who could rcM nich o good d.al on i«itcl.in end calculolor•? roo J•"'· ft Hema. But it WGI Nat a mufti· milllOft-doUor /raud. Ste Po~ A1. • L'SC .. ,..I,..... Bl1Ut Site The Millstone I nuclear power plant is closed..ioday after gas explosions iilJured a worker and released a small amount of radiation near Waterford, Conn. From Page Al HOUSING ... ecutive director. City councilmen have opposed rent subsidies, arguing that peo· pie who cannot affort to pay rent in San Clemente s hould live elsewhere. Last week Mayor Donna Wilkinson appointed Councilman William Walker to serve on the housing authority's advisory committee. Mary Erickson, ~ho has led the f1l!ht for rent sub- sidies m San Clemente, criticized the mayor's appointment of Walker, rather than a member or the community at large. Mrs. Wilkinson said s he ap· pointed Walker in response to an 1nvitat1on from Shimizu, which :-.aid, "We are suggesting that the city of San Clemente officially designate a citizen <reaular member) and staff calternate) to the Orange County Housing Authority Advisory Committee." "Bill Walker is a citizen," said Mrs. Wilkinson. "This is a com- plicated program, and we must assure it will benefit the city. "Our representative is responsible for informing the Ci· ty on the program and protecting the city's interest not the t:1tizens' interest," she said. "Besides, I dido 't know anyone t.'lse was interested." Mrs. Wilkinson said she con- tinues to oppose the program, which she is afraid will orrer un- deserving "loafers" a "free ride." "I would feel easier in my mind if I thought San Clemente seniors who need help with their rent are the ones to receive it." she said. "I pray that they will hl?. But I'm afraid it won't work out that way." Suicide Reported WATSONVILLE CAP) -A -i2-year-old man, Jorge Meneses, !>hot his estranged wife three times and then killed himself with a pistol shot in the head, pohce reported Tuesday. Mary Meneses was hospitalized in guarded condition. Reform Trouble Alleged By GARY GRANVILLE OI t• o.11, ttli.t SI.elf County Counsel Adrian Kuyper told Orange County supervisors Wednesday that any political campaign reform ordinaQce they might adopt would create "enforcement problems" in 1978 if it contains a limit on campaign contributions. Kuyper told supervisors that candidates who have already stoked their campaign coffers with contributions exceeding proposed contribution limits can· not be held to answer for exceed· ing the lhrutalion. So far, the only candidates known to have accepted cam-paign donations exceeding various proposed contributions limitations are the three county supervisors who will seek re election in 1978. A curtailment on contributions cannot be made retroactive to In- clude donations already received by candidates, Kuyper said. And, he added, candidates who have not yet stoked their coffers "will argue discriminatary en· forcement of the limitation pro- visions." They will contend ''that certain of their opponents have an unfair advantage because they have already received, before the ef. rective date of the ordinance, contributions in excess of the limitations." * * * Irvine Gets Wmpaign Fund Limit By PffiL ROSMARIN Ol 11111 0.llf f'llet SI.elf No person may contribute more than $250 to a candidate for elective office in Irvine, nor in support of a municipal ballot measure, under a law adopted Tuesday by the City Council. The council voted 4·1 to limit campaign contributions "to in· sure that the amount contributed by any person does not material· Jy influence the outcome or any election." The ordinance was adopted as an urgency measure and takes effect immediately. Four votes were needed to make the new law affect current .campaigns for March council elections. Councilman John Burton voted no. "with relish," and Coun- cilwoman Gabrielle Pryor voted yes, "wtth reluctance." She pre- ferred that all private contnbu· lions be banned and that cam· paigns be financed with public money. Council members David Sills and Bill Vardoulis, who pro~ posed the ordinance, and Macy Ann Gaido, also voted approval. San Juan's Drake Files for Election A North American Rockwell engineer is the first to return can- didacy papers to San Juan Capistrano's March City Council elections. The City Clerk's office said Erwin E. "Jerry" Drake of 311.Sl Via Cordova filed papers Mon- day to run for one of three council seats up for grabs lo elections• March7. Also obtaining -though not fil. ing -papers Monday were in· cum bent councilman Douglas B. Nash, 32906 Avenlda Desean.so, and James F. Thorpe, 279S2 Calle Santa Ynez. Thorpe, a math pro- f essor atSaddleback College, is a former San Juan Councilman and former counl)' planning com· missioner. Al Arps, Susan L. Cummings, Michael Berns, Robert Davies and Jimmy Larsen have all taken out papers for the March elections but have not filed the papers with the City Clerk. Candidacy papers must be re· turned to the City Clerk's office byDec.29. Front Page Al ROUTES ••• through a canyon. County planners said the route will require few cuts into hillsides and be visually more pleasing than the other route pro- posed. Camino del Avion would nm from the exisUng Camino del A vlon at Del Obispo Street west and will require more nu work than the other routes proposed. But landownert said fllllnc Is more visually pleasing than hlllslde cuts. Plannina Commlsslonert a1Jo recommended th•t steep 1Tades be avoided on the roadways so that they will be no steeper than tbe crade 011 Crown Valley Parkway at the San Dle10 Freew~. In a related actlon Tuesday, commlQlonen recommended a zone chanae covertnc toe acNt ot the Be,r 8rand Ranch. The Jandl now soned for qrtculture, a located west Of Del Obtlpo ac:Uacent to Sari Juu Capl1tnn0 iuld ta bllected by tlie future Del A\tloa, Tb1 iooe chant• would permit billdlq 188 bOmea on the 106 urea ~ lnclud• restiictton1 on IOllll buildint belpb .. 11 H II nltt1 on .~alldlDI n11r rid1ellnea. SC Panel (Jpposes City Plan Political acienct professor Chris Barrett of lmperlaJ Beach will tell San Clemente homeowners Thursday how bls city aucceuf\.llly batUed a City Councll-backe4 redevtiopment project. Barrett will speak at• meeting of the San Clemente Homeowners• Asaociation at 7:30 p.m. In the muJtl·purpose room of Las Palmas Elementary School, llOl Calle Puente. I "G AP' ....... -UNA CHURCH CHANGES DENOMINATIONS FOLLOWING PURCHASE BY KAISHNAS The bomeownen' associaUon has opl><*!d San Clemente City Couocll'1 cholc.e of a moderately commercial redevelopment plan for the city's pier-bowl neighbocbood. An appeal by the association to have a choice of redevelopment plans submitted to the city's voters oo the March 7 ballot was rejected Nov. 2. said Howard Musbette, Homeowners presi· dent. Sect Take• Over Structure for $255,000 Followtng Sele to lranlan Investor Fro• Page Al TEAM ••. ing. "We couldn't go to sleep," said David Mensing, an 18-year-old freshman from Pecu, Ind. "You just can't takesomothing Uk~ that to bed." The twin-engine propeller plane, chartered from National Jet Service Inc. of Indianapolis, left Dress Regional Airport here at 7:20p.m. Rick Notter, an aircraft worker at the airport who wit- nessed the crash, said he saw the plane "disappear into the fog. "About a minute and a halt later I heard his engines cutting out and he went down," Notter said. "We saw it go into the clouds. We heard a loud 'pop.• We beard an engine rev up, then we heard the crash and saw an explosion," said Patrick Alvey, a licensed pi lot and owner of Metro Beechcrart Corp., a charter s<'rvice at the airport. Alvey said he and a companion were among the first people to arrive at the crash scene. "The fusC'lage was intact. the left wing was ripped off," he re- c~llcd . "Very many bodies were stall in their seatbelts and many were strewn a round. It was a mess -Just a total mess. "We had four people alive. They were just strewn around. The wreckage was on fire. There was nothing we could do for the people inside or it," said Alvey. Air Crash Victims Identified EVANSVILLE, Ind. (AP) - The 27 passengers, identified by Indiana State Police, killed when a DC3 carrying the University or Evansville basketball team crashedTuesdaynight: 1 800 W_...,,., :W, co.ell, Ntwburgfl, Ind. t. WarnnAls!ofl, 11,t....-. Gol.,_o, N.C. 3. llay c-.tla, ltfrelllnl..,, Munster, Ind. ~.MIU OWi, II, frftllman, Eldot'ado, 111. S. ICralt~n. tt, fre9'1.,...., Cl"'.._11. •• Mika Joyner, It, f~ Ttrt'9 H-. INI. 7. ICevln Klngllon,21,senlor,E._..., 111, I l••MY LAwlt. It, fr-, Oudtey, H.C. •· s1 .... M111er,21.1...ier,HewA1Nny, 1-. 10. IC •Ith Mooll, JO. topflO<hOi •• IC•U•rlftQ. Ohio. 11. Mar11Sletitf,1t, f~ llldl_,...ls. 111n . Gr .. Smith, II, fr-. west Fr-""1, IJ Bry.nTaylcw,20,Jurtl•, TellOty,1114. 1'. John Ed Weshlllgton, 21, ""'°"· In· lll•naPOllr.. IS. TonyWlnbunl,?t,wnlor.Jeff•rsonvlllt,1114. 16 Gr .. IC~ 'll, ._. lllfelnNIUMdlt9C> ""·Even~• ... 17. Bot>~ elllletk ~I,.,........, evan1vllle. 11. Chari" Shike, 11nlvtnllt controller, l!vansvllla. .~:~,~~~ ....... unl-tlty racslo broedcm•. ,O.Jttl ..,,_.,,IMm~.E~. E;:~sv~~~k IClrllptlrlCll, IHni manattr, n Merit KIMM. te•i'l'l '"-!ltr, •vA411111ti.. n. '"'''" Goad, preildlnt, Ooed ~II oeot Co .. f vensvlllt. u . G. Rull, alrllne first officer, addr--ttno...,, u . Pem Sm1111, 11-ani-, addr•tunll,_, i1, 8111 Hwtford, 11rwra1 man.oer. HatleMI Jet Service hro olllera •-rd Ille pf.., were ldltl'ltlflecl • (Apt, Ty v ... """"· ',. pllOt,...., Jamel SI-, llrtlldltnl of lllallonal Jet S.tvf(e, In<., Ille ln- dlalWlpollt c1111ri.r CClmPMI', San Juan Kids May Telephone, Write Santa Santa Claiia bas been good to San Juan Captatruo thta year. Santa bu consented to be avallable so youngsters can call him on the telephone Thursd~ or next Monday evenin1s. San· ta •1 San Juan phone numbert wlll be493-1173orC93·1174. He wlll be a.ntwerina tho phone between t :ao and 8:80 p.m. boLb d•.Y•· Santa baa a1ao anoounoecl he wlU Ptl'IODally answer lettert • wrttteo to hlm from ~ Juan chlldreo. ' • To Write &aota. be"'" to PQt your name and addren on tht letter, Senta'• belpert aaJd. Let;.. ten mlllt bt malled ln' Sall Juan Capi1tr.no to Santa Claus, e /o North Ne. la9'ta'.a pen •aid th• old aenUemao would anaww letttr1 within alewdQI. r Nuke Device Fired Today LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP) -Scientleta from the Lawrence Livermore Laboratory in California successfully detonated an underground nuclear de· vice today at the Nevada Test Site about 90 mllea north of here. No radiation lealtaie was reported from the blast at 7:30 a.m. PST. Code -named "Farallones," the teat was the 12th announced of the year, and wu felt allghtly here, In the form of magnified ground motion on the upper noon or bl&b· rise bulldlngs. Coast Panel Holds Action On Home Bid A public hearing on a permit sought to build a two-story home cantilevered over a bluff in Laguna Beach's Emerald Bay community has been continued inderin1teJy by the South Coast Regional Coas tal Zone Control Commission. Howard Richardson wants permission to construct the res· idence at 99'l2 Bay Crest Drive. bul has encountered strong op- position to his plans. No future date was sel for another hearing on the issue. Coastal commission members since the panel's Inception have taken a hard look at any pro- posed building project in which structures would be on, near, or overhanging seafront bluffs. kss Noise Noted W ASIUNGTON <AP> -The Federal Aviation Administration said Tuesday thal noise from the Concorde supersonic airplane is less in communities surrounding Kennedy Airport in New York than at Dulles Airport near Washinaton. Pro.. Page AJ KRISHNA ••• their client was." Sobaei said. Krishna officials in ..Laguna Beach and Los Angeles ~l<l not. return phone calls J.O reporters Wednesday or today, but one local Krishna devotee reached by telephone said a press release would be forthcoming. The sect 's temple at 641 Ramona Ave. is currenUy in escrow. City officials say the church site. located atop two medium. density residential lots, has a legal but nonconforming use as a church. But planning director Doug Schmitz said be does not believe devotees can live in the church building. ·'If they were to use the church, they would only be able to utilize it for religious worship," Schmitz said. "IC they want lo live there, they would have to have separate facilities." Laguna Names Two to Board Of Adjustment Laguna Beach councilmen have named Arthur J. Casebeer and Stephen K. Riggs to the city•s Board of Adjustment. The two men replac~ Peter Weisbrod and Lew Wbilney whose terms e¥plred J;>ec. l on the five-member panel Casebeer, of 260 Vle'o St., ls a retired Lockheed executive who recently completed a two-year consultant assignment with the Burbank company. He was formerly management planning director ror Cannon Electl'lc, now rrr, -and is a reg. istered professional engineer. Riggs is a 1912 graduate of the University of Washington college of architecture. The 28-year-old arch.itect lives at 297 Arch St. and is employed with Richard ff. Dodd and Associates of Newport Beach. He is a former member ol the board of dlrectoni of the Kirkland Chamber of Commerce in Washington state and a former board member of the Totem Lake shopping center, also in W asblngt.oo. The association ls currently collecting signatures of reg. istered San Clemente voters on a petition to put pier-bowl re- development on the ballot, Muabett.e said. The petition wUl be presented to the City Council on Dec. 21 with more than l ,000 signatures, be said. Additional information on Thursday's meeting is available by_ calling Musbet~. at496-2tMO. Fro•PageAI SUSPECT ••• hired three men to kidnap and kill Bovan. They allege that Mn. Kulik participated in the plot which was motivated by revenge for Bovan's alleged kidnapping of Kulik in August. The three men assertedly hired, Anthony ''Little Tony" Marone Jr., 23, Raymond Steven Resco, 28, and Jerry Peter Fiori, 41, all of Huntington Beach, were arrested Oct. 26. Police claim the three cornered Bovan outside the El Rancbito restaurant and that Fiori pumped nine shots into him. Resco and Marone have been freed from jail after posting $100,000 each. .Fiori, who faces death penalty prosecution lo the case, is held without bail. Kulik was arrested within • hours of Bovan's death in Mis- sion Viejo and charged with possesssfon of more than a pound or nearly pure oriental heroin. He was later charged in the ~urder conspiracy and freed any po6t· init a $750,000 bond. Davis was arrested Thanksgiv- ing day on the island of Ball aft.er a federal fugitive warrant was Is- sued for his arrest and his passport was revoked. He was returnined to Orange County and released from jail alter posting $100,000 bail. Man Held in Fraud MALIBU <AP) -Anthony Georae Fernando, 41, of Woodland Hills was In custody to- day after his arrest in connection with the alle,ed forgery of more than $1 mlJUon In checks between 1973 and 1975, authorities say. Bail WU set at $100,000. Lynn Hart HART'S John Hart SPORTING GOODS • 53 8 CENT ER ST.• COSTA MESA• 646-191 9 A FIW IDEAS FOil CHRISTMAS Tennis Racbts Whon-Boncroft~ Prtnce-~Yonex Voley 8a11-Secar lah Bcnlretbal1-fooltMll1 Bosebah Raccplt lah & lacqueta Honclbalt & Gloves Bac11•1tan Racbts stuHlfcaO• Ttnnlt Bala Dart BOGrila & Dart• SwlmFIM a.bils.ts Dumbel s.t1 Dyna let Adidas 'T'Slirta ... .... losibal•• ....... "' > I Orange Coast Daily Pilot E 1.:aiton·al 111taft.~ ...................................... Ro•~•rt•N•.•w•eed•/•P•ub•11•\M.' ... T.hom .. •.iK.~.v.11.1e•d .. 'tor .. .C-1 D . .,;;;; W9dnnday, Dec•mber 1•. 1an Barbara Kreiblch/Edltorlal P~e Editor ' u ·c Christmas 'Scene' Was Poorly Timed \h:,o ~dtool parents and district administrators have 1'<.'soh t•d a touchy church and state issue in Laguna Beach JU~I 111 lime for Christmas. . l'hl· t·ompromilse came after announcement by the school pnnc1pal that a Nativity scene planned for the ".l5-m1nutc product1on was bemg yanked o lt stage. The principal. with the backing of school district ~dm1nistrntors and an opinion from the county counsel's offi<.'l'. s~ud the scene had religious connotations and thl'n·f ore could not be performed. J>arl·nts objected, saying the manger scene is historic ~net c:ultural in nature. Thev threatened to sue the school Cstnd Lo have the scene reinstated. A compromise reached last Friday means there will a st11l-lile manger scene -sort or an ornament within a Jarg<•r Santa's workshop scene. . . Jt is unfortunate that such a compromise was arnved ~•t so late m the game. District omc1als had ample warning las t 'ear that such a problem might surface again and shou.ld have taken steps at that time to prevent this year 's Christmas "st·em•." Upstairs, Downstairs Orange County Supervisors have been baHling south county watchers with a less-than-consistent approach to a sev<.·n·y(•ar controversy over acquisition of secluded Thousand Stcµs Beach. The h1lest move by the county was to agree to spend $44,000 to repu1r the deteriorating stairway and open it to the public . That det1s1on followed an earlier one last year to buy 143 casements to the stairway purchased at SS apiece. The board had second thoughts when it realized the county would be held liable if anyone fell on the rickety steps. so the county attempted to give the easements back to l l:J property owners. All buL 37 of those former casement owners refused the offrr l'ven though taxpayers would have picked up the tab. Now we're back to the top of the stairs. The sup(:rvbors should move ahead with repairs to the steps, and pr<.·pc.11·c for whatever legal action may be necessary to resol\ e th<.• liab1litv issue. G ranl(•d, there are problems with parking, litter col- lectaon and repair of the s teps, but supervisors have LJlrP:Hly spent more than $24.000 on the project <in acquisi- tion of acldttional eac;ements alongside the steps). The public· should be given access to the beach as the boa rd on<'l' set out to do. Spread College Cost Sadclleback Community' College· District trustees ~cc med JJlcascd to learn last week that they should be able to meet their pro.1 ccted building needs by maintaining their current tax rate. Despite inflation, Supt. Robert Lombardi said the dis- tric:t should be able to expand its two campuses within the next decade with continued pay-as-you-go financing. lie smd this can be done if the district continues to spend 37 cents of its total 95·cent tax rate on construction. Thb, however. may not be the fairest financing method for the district ·s residents. Most of the buildings will be constructed to accom- modate the growth m this massive district. On the pay-as- { you-go system, however, it is only the present r esidents who pay the price Future residents reap much of the J benefit. They. too, should pay. J Because of this. trustees shou1d consider calling a J bond election. It is a fairer way of spreading the costs of the <:ollege amon~ those who use it. l And. since a freeze on the current tax rate means tax- • cs !'Urely will rise with increased assessed valuations. a • bond issue may mean reduced taxes for present residents. I • t Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Daily Pilot. t Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and ' artists. Reader comment is invited. Address The Daily Pilot, P 0 . I Box 1560. Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714) 642-4321 . Boytli Retirement By L.M. BOYD Seasoned CiU:iens will tell you there was no such thing as "retirement" in this coun- try until about 45 years ago. At least, u a ilatlonal policy. And worldwide, retirement didn't become a general way or life (or the elderly until 95 years aeo in Germany. This comes up because a youthful customer nsks what was the standard retirement age 100 years ago. Wasn't any. You worked until you could figure out how not to have to. A car going 70 m .p.h. uses more oxygen In an hour than all the people In Los An1eles breathe during that hour. Or so reports an oxygen expert. Fascinating, if factual. -Oear Gloomy Gus One of oor mall ord•( Christmas cataJ01u a J11t.1 •Daisy Woodstock BB 1un. Ia that for. sboot1n1 litUe bird& in comic strlpa? By the way, Gus, Or1n1• Cout folks bould know &B. auns are llleaal In mo.t ar~ a. Motel managers report that item most often left behind in guest rooms now Is the elec- tric shaver cord. · Q. "Settle an argument. Which country owns the Virgin Jslands, the United States or Great Britain?" A. Both. ~ach claims half. Q . "'J;'hose London policemen referred to as bob- b I es never carry guns, right?" A. Not right. About one out or every 20 is qualified to use handguns. And 80 or the men on that force are rifle marksmen. Special officers assigned to guard VIPs usual- ly pack pistols as do the con· stables wbo protect the em· hassles. Claim is the blonde1't of blondes come not from Sweden, as commonly sup. posed. but trom Ireland ... If you want to keep a vase or cut tulips from droop- ing, put a few pennies ln their water. Somethlna about the copper, I'm totd • . • Jn Ken· tu"ky, bear In mind. ll'I aealntl ~law to marry your wife'• grandmother.• •• Wbtn the weather turns cold, 1our car·a Uro praaure goea doWn a pound for every lO·de1l'ffl drop la lhf tem· peratur-. .•• Wlll~ bby the • cont•nUonthatchedlllhtO&' IY.11me ktwrim to man whtrln tHere ~Sita .no 11Je1nent ~r cb*n«?. Earl Waters High-pay State Jobs Opening Although California's un· employment rate remains high. the numbers seeking lSO high paying state jobs which will be open lo all comers next year has not yet become overwhelming. The jobs In question are the seven statewide oCflces of gov- ernor, lieutenant governor, con- troller, treasurer, attorney general. secretary of state and superintendent of public lnstruc· lion, along with 43 seats in Congress, 80 in the Assembly and 20 in the Senate. The pay ranges from $.57,500 to $22,500. Actually there are more than 150 elective offices to be voled on in 1978. For, in addifion lo an unt o ld number of judgeships. there are also many county and other local oHices at stake. But most of the plums, aside from the judgeships which re- quire one to be an attorney. are to be found in the statewide, con- gressional and legislative of· fices. It was expected that there would be an abundance of challengers for incumbent con· gressmen by reason of the ex- orbitant pay increase they voled themselves last year, raising salaries from $44.000 to $57,500 and placing them in the top 5 per- cent income bracket of the na- tion. Where previously salaries may not have been high enough to en· tice successful business and pro- f essionnl people, it is now far more than all but a few Califor- nians earn. Considering the fringe benefits which include a generous retirement plan, a seat in Congress now has become far more attractive even to those who Mailbox dislike the idea or llvln1 1n. W asbingt.on. YET. indications at the mo- ment are that most congressmen will have no more than the UBual opposition. That also seems lo be true in the case of the lop state of- ficers as well as the legislators whose salaries, at S22,SOO plus fringe benefits Including $40 a day tax greelivlng expenses and a car with unlimited 1aso1Jne, makes the job worthwhile. As an example of the scarcity of candidates so Car surfacing. only five Republicans have given any sign or int.erest in being gov- - --=-----__ ___.. -----_ ___.. ''We wczte. supposed to cAst MIM out.'' ernor and not one Democrat. Jn contrast, four years ago, 18 Democrats, six Republicans, four Peace and Freedom and one American Independent were in the race for the state's top job Still, what appears to be a dearth of candidates may turn Into an abundance when the actual filing time arrives. Those who want to run must file between Feb. 13 and March 10, as a pamphlet be· ing readied for distribution by the Secretary of State will soon ad- vise. AT THAT llme candidates must pay the filing fee and sub- mit a sponsors• petition signed by 65 citizens, in the case of the gov- ernor, and 40 for those seeking legislative and congressional of- fices. Fees range from the $982 for governor and $575 for Congress to $255 !or the Legislature. There are some tricky pro- visions designed to protect in - cumbent legislat.ors and judges. Candidates lor those offices must file declarations of intent between Jan. 29 and Feb. 8. Also • candidates for partisan omces must have been a member of the party in which they seek nomina- .tion at least 90 days before filing time and not have been a member of any other party tor at least one year before that. ALTHOUGH a residence re· quirement of one year remains in the constitution its validity has been placed in doubt by reason of court decisions. While the steps necessary to become a candidate may seem simple, it must be remembered that it lakes much more to win. Not only must one have sup- porters and a campaign or· ganization but some legislalors and congressmen spend as much as $200,000 to get elected. Glories of Women's Lib Fail to Impress To the Editor: I have been concerned for some lime over the ERA in· itiative, finding· equal pay tor equal work among the sexes its only redeeming factor. The rest of the awesome demands by the hardcore "feminist-;" in Houston has so outraged me that I feel re- buttals are in order from the women across this land, who hold dear the famlly concept and the love and devotion between man and woman. I should like to know who authorized Congress to give this pack or "she wolves" $5 million of the taxpayers' money to hold a three-ring circus, where the emasculation of the mllle sex was the foremost conclusion. Ms. Vivian Hall stoutly defends this gross spending, listing s uch expenses as publications. mail· ings and wor~-shops. She failed, however, to slate th al at the Calirornia gathering of 6,000 there were displays of sexual gadgets which would enable women to do away with the necessity of a male partner in or· der for the women to derive sex- ual pleasure. How much did they cost us? safeguard and enhance the quCJli- ty of life in our communities. Es- sential Red Cross activities in - clude disaster services, service to military familie!i and the blood program. Addit1onally. youth, .,af<>ty and nursing profZrams pro- ' 1de a variety of t'ducat1onal and <;lip port act• vi ties. RED CROSS need s the generous support of the total Orange County Community if Red Cross is to fulfill its mandate and meet the growing needs or Orange County. Red Cross is each of us, extending ourselves in this voluntary way. When counting blessings this holiday season, we hope the Citizens or Orange County Will re- member the Red Cross. A girl to the Orange County Red Cross Ch apter at Christmas spreads joy all year. Help us help. NANCY AND STEPHEN E . DONALDSON E.,an~U•t• ro the Editor: One error seems to be prev- alent in the articles currently being printed in your newspaper. (An AaJOCiated Pren aeries on the evangelical movement. Ed. J One man doesn't own a church, a Christian university or a Chris- ti an hos pital, or even an evangelistic organlzailon. Tbeae are non-profit corpora- tions, owned and operated by a board of governors, dedicated to God. THE EV ANGEUSTS you men- ·tioned receive less pay than the presidents of most corporations or even most teadin1 athletes. The family of a preacher or evangelist does not. Inherit the church or evanaeUstJc corpora- tion on hlldeath. He may accumulate some wealth by bis Hlat,Y and tbe publication of.J>~_'!!.a._e.~c_. All Punch II famous people write books and profit by their publication, but Oral Roberts sends me most of l11s books free. It's hard to make -persona! profit from something you giveaway. Faith in God is Oral Roberts' -0nly product and he gives that away. He and bis organization are supported by the tips or the grateful recipients. What is faith worth? We are getting these men of faith at quite a bargain. JIM BOLDING /tlottey Is Keg To the Edilor: Our president speaks to us of rear -fear if we don't save and conserve energy -we will be weak. Why? Maybe because he has overlooked us -all or us - the gutsy American people! Why not excite us -with what we can spend at the grocery store -at thc Cadillac deal er -or whatever-MONEY$$$. The good ole American way is for us put our money and our energies where the buck Isl If you want mqre oil -ii you want problem& of any kind solved, all you have io do is make Lt profita- ble <more than just a regular wage or return on hard-earned bucks) to bey the solution. That's what has made us take the risks -the big reward$$$. Jn the past few years, under the guise of stepping on the oil com- panies' shoes our government and our reprostntalives passed laws that excluded small size operators from profitably getting investors (who eot tax breaks) to find and develop tfew oil and gaa sources. Why? Don't we need it? Sure we do, but it~ expensive to find it! U and only tr the rewards in doll~ are there -bigger more and better thd antJclpated profits ln other b~illeua -will we risk our money, ~ur t•lent.s, our ideas. our ingenitlties and ourselves to find the solutions! If we want results not pr<>- mises, not fear. we have lo pay for it. Most of us do that regular- ly. We don't Uke to work if we don't get paid! Nobody does! If we want n ew and additional energy sources -make it very profitable -maybe more of us will get and seek a piece of that gold. We the people are up to that challenge. Give us the chance. We've done it before and we'U do it again -for money! LARRY L. CURRAN Sale Dled•fl To the Editor: Recent information from a round the United States has in- dicated a definite dangerous re- action to the use of liquid protein~ in this country and abroad. D~ this mean that all protein pro- ducts are dangerous and should be avoided? You may take Uili one st.ep further and ask If we should all stop consuming pro- t ein sources altogether? 1 think the real problem that exists is not so much the protein source as it is the use. Many products can be dangerous if used incorrectly - an automobile, aspirin, alcohol. cigarettes, etc. J shudder lo thipk how many lives have been lost due to these. I think the big problem with most of the people on these pro- tein-sparing dl6ts is that they lack patJenoo. Let's face it -it took those people yeara of nutri- llonal abuse to reach their over- weight condition, so why involve yourself in a program that can tax the body tbat is already un- healthy? A PRMEIN supplement can be safe as long as that source nJone ls not the only supply or calor)ot. U a person wants to use a -protein supplement, fine, but USO it for what lt ill. a supple· ·ment. a product to use with your J'~uced lntake of wholesome nutrient-rich foods. I am not defending liquid pro- tein or condoning its use -l personally would never take it. My point is that weight lo . can be an enjoyable experiettce ror many people if they use their heads. U you can iirndually re- duce your caloric lntake and fin· prove what foods you do eat, yuu con •hed unwanted pounds t. u sare rate; l.h.8t ls most lmportlS\l. LEE H. LORENZtN Director df Rest arch Veaa Lat>Qi'atorles loL. 70, NO. 348, 4 S~CTIONS,: PAGES • Today's Closing N.Y. Stoeks WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER U , 1977 N TEN CENTS Bo van Murder SuSp~ct Captured Of ... Oell, ............ Elsie Caban Kulik, sought for more than a month on muroer conspiracy charges in the slay· ing of Stephen John Bovan of Fountain Valley, was arrested early today by Newport Beach police. She becomes the seventh sus- pect jailed in the case which began Oct. 22 when Bovan was shot to death out.aide a Newport Beach l'f.llt.aurant. Sat. Darryl Youle said he and a team of investigators found Mrs. Kulik hidlng under a split-level condominium in La Costa, a re- sort near Carlsbad in San Diego County. Her husband, Alexander, who was freed on bail after bis earlier arrest in the case, was taken into custody at the same lime. &otclanaan's Co1'e Small Plane Hits Ocean O rang e County Harbor Patrolmen and Coast Guard vessels were dispatched to an area otr Scotchman's Cove al about noon today after sun- bathers reported seeing a small plane crash Into the water. into water about 240 feet deep. A spokesman for the Newport Beach lifeguard department said lifeguards and Laguna Beach firemen were al the scene at the time ot the crash. They had been dispatched to answer a call or a diver in trouble. He said neither lifeguards nor firemen witnessed the crash. It was reported to them by uniden- tified beach visitors. Judce Kneeland has set the trial for Jan. 23. Police said they bad been seek- ing Mrs. Kulik and the other missing fugitive in the ca&e, Joseph Federowski, in the San Diego area for mor e than a month. They said they were led to the condominiums by information unc9vered in the course of their investigation and the owner of I the development recognized Mn. Kulik's photo. Police said Kulik bad rented the residence under an assumed name. When Youle and a team of of- ficers, including a patrolman from the nearby Carlsbad Police Department, arrived at the con- dominium, they were greeted by Kulik who allegedly denied his wife was there. Youle said they searched the three noons of the hlllslde home without success. Mrs. Kullk was finally found by Detective Gary Black who searched lhe crawl space under, the home. Mrs. Kulik, who is being held in lieu of the $:500,000 bail carried on her arrest warrant, joins Roy Christopher R icha rd , her husband's business partner and one of the alleJed co-conspirators who is also held ln the city facility. indictments handed down in No- vember by the Orange County Grand Jury. The only one remaining al large is Fedorowski. Police all ege Kulik , F edorowski, Ric hard and a · fourth man, Joseph Shelton Davis Ill, all partners in the (See SlJSPECI', Pase .U) es ain? .... , ....... Eleventh Victim Found LOS ANGELES (AP> -A young woman whose nude body was found today in a hillside neighborhood overlooking downtown Los Angeles appears to be the 11th victim of the Hlllside Strangler, police said. "This fl~ all the previous evidence that we've had before. It appears this may be the lllb vic- tim of the Hillside Strangler," s aid police Lt. Dan Cooke. Few details were immediately a vaila bl e. but a spokesman for the Newport H•rbor Patrol said deputies dispatched to the scene two miles off the beach reported finding an owner's manual or logbook of a Cessna 150. The people said they had been watching the plane practicing a erobatic stunts. They told lifecuards the craft. hit the water at \ 4.5-degree angle. THIS WAS UNIVERSITY Of EVANSVILLE, INDIANA, BASKETBALL TEAM But he said it was impossible yet to say whether the uniden- tified young woman, in her early 20s. had been strangled. Police have linked the stran- gling murders or 10 young women in nine weeka. All the bodies were f oand in hilly areas In northern or northeastern sections of Los The plane reportedly crashed NB Wants ), ·New Design For Library Newport Beach city coun· cilmen have asked architects at William Blurock and Associates Ito come up with an economical design for the Newport Cenl#r !branch library. Councilmen voted unanimous- ly Monday lo have the library re- de•'-ned and agreed to increase the budget tor the long-delayed project from $673,000 to $857,000. The new design should be ready for council approval in two months. The 14,000-square-foot build· ing, lo be built between the Newport Center fire s tation and the Newport Harbor Art Museum, was lo have be4!n com· pleted by this fall. ' Const.ruction was first delayed when CO\IDCllmen ,applied n>r a fe~eral craot. The,-were turned down after maklnc two trin. Construction 1'1$ further de· Jayed when councilmen added 4,000 square feet to tbe Odfimt, 10,oooo41quare-root plan. After the project went out fOI' bids this fall, cO\inellmen fOWMI that the lowest bid' came in 40 percen\ higher tMn the budget. After studylns their opUona, councUmen decided to have the bulldinc'Hdesl1ned, Strikers to Vote · FONTANA (AP) -SolM 1.100 strikers at Kaber Permuenle 1Dedical facilities in four ciUea were to vote toftlaht on •hetber to accept a new ihree-~ar: ~ tract and end their 44-d•Y' walkout. Within an haur of the 11:45 a.m. Incident, harbor patrolmen, lifegu~ dl~era. a Coast Gutrd cutter and a rescue beUoopter wer~ on the scene. A spokesman at the control tower at the Orange County Airport said they bad received no radio distress signals during the morninJ. A cursory survey or aircbarter sttvices at the airport Called to turn up any missing Cessna lSOs. The area where the plane re- portedly went down is not far from the scene o! a crash that killed three Orange Coast men exacUy one month ago. The three men were taking a lunch-hour cruise in a Cessna 182 which collided with a Piper PA 28. The Piper limped into the airport, but the CessQa went into the water. ILL • Jme Haute INOIANA 0 so KENTUCKY t MILES I .... Wif'e11M4• MW StTE OF CRASH Team Wiped Out Terror·f illed Boars were surprised by the man. Betty Jo Ese, 47, of 869 Flower S~, Costa Mesa, and Carol Rosa, SC, of I~ NewP«>rt Blvd., Costa Mu,., were both foc.ced to lie on the rtoor ~ were ~nd. Mn!. Schafferwutledtoachair, .. Tbeyto&d Police tbe man •land another 40 mhurtAil, .Ull taUdni llbout. the murder chars• be 1ald he l• being sought ror, and then ten. Mn. Ege we1 able to rrte hereelf from ber bond• and ran next door to phone police because the intruder had cut Mn. Schaf· fer'• telephone llnea. (SHTEallO•, Pase A2) Eam MOurn Death~I Of Team Members EVANSVILLE, Ind. (AP) - The University of Evansville ·basketball team, killed in a plane crash, was mourned by once- cbeerful rans today. As the students gathered for the memorial service, federal In- vestigators were sorting through what was left of the ancient DC-3 that. was to have carried the Aces to a came in Tennessee. Etght of the 14 basketball players killed were freshmen, just months out or hjgh school. The crash kUJed 29 In alt, includ- ing the coach or the team, two Evansville boosters and the crew of three. The Aces, with a season's rec- ord or 1-3, were en route to Middle Tennessee State University at FORMER PLAYERS STUNNED AT CRASH-81 Murfreesboro. Their plane had left the airport only a minute before it "8shed, scattering wreckage and bodies on both sides of a ravine and down among some railroad tracks. It was a fearful night, with vis· iblUty only 300 feet and three· quarters of a mile. The "go team" of the National Transportation Safety Board, which lnvestigatea and de- termines p,rot>able cawses of such crashes, wu more than two hours late leavin& Washlnitoo _,.came of the continuing bad .weather at E\'ansville, in the sou&hwestcornerotlndiana. The ~a were removed dur- ing the night ln railroad boxcars -the eui..t way of 11tt1ng them out. The lll·f ated DC·3, a twln- en1tne propeller craft chartered from NaUoaal Jet Service of In· dJanapolla, had taken oU on a • runway heading south, banked sbarply ten and bad completed about a 27o-degree tum when it rrashed about a quarter ·mile from Dress Regional Airport. "It probably was headed in a direction I can't account for at <See'l'EAM, PageA2) Newport OKs More Condos Oose to Hoag Newpor.a Beach city coun- cilmen have approved expansion of the Vers ailles-on-the·Bluffs c ondominiums n e ar Hoag Memorial Hospital, apparenUy ending a battle over density that began in lm3. The 442-unil addition to the ex- isting development bas been de- layed six years by lawsuits filed by the developer, NewpOrt View Inc., against the city and later a gainst the coastal commission. At issue was the contention by the two public agencies that the project crammed too many units on loo few acres. City councilman Paul Ryckoff noted Monday, Just before cast· ing the lone dissenting vote, that the addition to be built on 20 acres of blufftop property wtU amount to about 30 units per acre. M axlmum density currently allowed in the city is 15 unit.a per acre. The developers successfully atcued that their project orletnally was approved by coun· ty eovernment. at the higher <See CONDOS. Page AU sale ottwo rtnfl. , Once lntlde, ahe told Ocie her accompllcea wer'O holdln1 hla wUe and bad hlm handcuff, bllnd(ofd and gag hla clerk. Onee tb woman left Octe co.. tacted bll wUe. Sb• t.oid lllm abe bad nOt been ~Pl*t. An1eles and its sub\.lrbs. . An unidentified man found the most ~t under a buah alon•'~ t fl a hillside reaichntial atea wst a few rniles from where several of the other Hillside Strangler victims have been dumped. A coallUon of femlnlst groups held a memorial service at the steps of City Hall on Tuesday for victi111s of the strangler and for women who have been raped or beaten. Tbe women s taging the memorial rites wore red capes to symbolize their rage, veiled their races and gave statistics on physically and sexually abused women. They chanted, "Women fight back!" Joan Robins, of the Rape Crisis Hotline, said one of the coalition'• demands ls that public schools of. fer seli-defense training as part of the regular physical education curriculum at all levels, The coalition also is demanding that telephone numbers of rape crisis botllnes be placed in a special emergency listing in telepbonedirect9ries. Councilwoman Pat RuBell said the City Coun~il was supporting the demands where pouible and was forming an emereency shelter for rape victims. Coun· cilwoman Joy Picus added that defense classes for City Hall employees had begun. Self-defense classes have been in demand s ince the recent strangulation deaths or 10 young women believed to~ the victims of lhe so·ealled Hillside Stran1ler. ~oast Weather Low clouds and toe through Tbursd~ moraing with variable high clouds ·Thursday afternoon. Lows tonight so to 5$. Highs Thurada:y es to 10. INSlDETODAY Who coWd redtt aucla o oood deal on wotch4• aftd colculato,,1 Too /fto, IC ·~~mt. N U woa 1"' o muUf· mill~ ftaud.. S. Page A7. ••• x I , , \ OA!L Y PILOT N ...... ,_ ... J USPECT ••• N wport Beach lnve.tlnai firm, Praudam D1•lr1buun1, Inc., hired three men to kldnnp and kU( Hovun Tht>y alleac that Mrs Kuhk vurt1c1puted in lhe plot which wa• rnoll v .it\'d by revenae for Bo van's ulleaed kldnupping of Kulik In Aagust. The three men auertedly hired, Anthony "Lillie Tony" Marone Jr., 23, Ruymond Steven Rei;co, 28, und Jerry Peter Flori, 41, all of Huntington Beach, were a rreated Oct. 26. Police claim the three cornered Hovan o utsid e the El R unchato restaurant and that Fiori pumped nlno shots into him. Resco and Marone have been freed from jail after poatine $100,000 each. Fiori, who faces death penalty prosecution in the case, is held without bull. Kulik was arr ested within hours of Bovan's death in M111- s1on Viejo und charaed with 11ossesss1on of more than a pound or nearly pure orienlal heroin. He was later charged In the murder l'Onsparacy and freed after post· 1111-! a $750,000 bond. Davis was arrested Thanksglv· ang day on the island of Ball after u federal fugillvc warrant was i•· sued for his arrest and his passport was revoked. He was rl'lurnlncd to Orange County and rC'll.'ased from jail after postlnf( ~100,000 butl. TEAM •.. this tame," said Philip Hogue, a member of the nve-man National Transportalon Safety Board. A g rt m scene faced in· 'c•stagators The lllane's tail, Its Amencan fl <i g and number N5107l un- scarred, Jutted at the horizon. A propeller was 200 feet away. The t•mbankment on each side of the railroad track11 was littered with C'lectnc-blue seats, some of them sttll with lheir bells buckled. "Every place there was a seat, there was a body," said one young man who helped bring out the mangled and torn bodies Tuesday night. A brown suitcase, still locked, was standing upright in a mud puddle• A single brown shoe, its l;ice1> tied, was nearby. Two first- <11d boxes, one with Its contenlll spilled and the other still closed, also were there. Two bodies still were in the wreckage. The bodies were removed to various funeral homes Wednes· •lay orter lying In a makeshift morgue at the downtown Com· munlty Center, 10 miles from the crash site. Two patholo11lsts from lhe Civil Aeronaut1c1 Medical Institute in Oklahoma City were to conduct autopsies of the pilot and co-pilot. Th<>rc was no "black box" flag ht recorder m the plane. "It Is not required in the charter business, apparently," :.<11d Hogue. "This whole busi- ness Is under consideration by the• Federal Aviation Ad· rnanlslrallon as lo what they'll c·onsider for charter flights and Jlr taxi operators." Hogue said there had been no conversation with the airport lower that Indicated the pllolll were aware of nny problems. Hearing Set InCM Death A man charged with Dee. 2 rf. fie kllllns of a farm worker In Costa Mesa was arraigned In Harbor Judicial Dlstrict Court Tueaday. A prellmlnary hearing wu set for Dec. 21 for Santos Aguilar Rial, 24, of Mexico. He remains in Orange County Jail In lieu of $250,000 bond. > Rial la charged with the shoot· Ing death of fellow farm worker Adam A11ullar, 34, lollowln1 a fight. A second man detained for quesllonlng In the caae, Fran- cisco Zarate Abundis, was re- leased upon further lnvestJ1a· lion, police said. O~ANOICOAIT H DAILY PILOT Street Scene . ........... Actress Faye Dunaway approaches the corner of Houston Street and West Broadway in New York while filming a new movie called "Eyes," in which she plays a photographer. It's her first picture since wiMing the Oscar in "Network." Nationwide Strike Called by Farmers By The AsSO<'lated Press Hundreds of farmers from Georgia to the Pacific Northwest kicked off a nationwide strike to- day, with leaders vowing to shut down farm operations as Ion.: as it takes lo get better prices. 1',armers demonstrated at supermarkets in Colorado and the Midwest. In Georgia, hun- dreds of rural merchants closed their doors in sympathy. Livestock auction houses closed m South Carolina. And in Texas, some farmers blocked the de· livery of goods from grocery warehouses. Much of the protest lo<lay, an the form of tractorcades, boycotts against grocery stores and grocery warehouse picket· mg, involved Midwestern and Pacific Northwestern farmers many of them grain producers, who are particulurly upset w1lh prices. But the strike was also felt through much of south Georgia, where a number of small cities wore virtually shut down. Jn the Texas Panhandle. angry farmers parked tractors an front or grocery warehou1es, blocking delivery trucks. And an air hose for brakes on a tractor-trailer truck carrying hogs was cut when the driver stopped for a red light on Georgia 38 m P1erce County, the sheriff's otrlce said. That damage was repair"d. Participation varied among the dtrferent type! of farmer, however , and the Om aha Livestock Market, one of the na- tion's largest. reported "normal or above normal" r eceipts Wednesday morning. . "It doesn't look like livestock $19,500.NB Survey Fimls Traffic Woes During the summer, central Newport Beach ''can be described as havlne severe trat- flo con1e1Uon and significant parklnl deficiencies,'' says a $19,500 parkjnl study presented to the Newport Beach Plannln1 Commlulon. That fl.ndinr, which wlll come as no 1urprille to moat realdenta, wllt be dlecu11ed along with possible aoluUon1, at a Plannl.nl( Commlulon study session aet for 2p.m. Thund.ay. The commlsalon wlll talk about the flnt part ct • study com· ml11l0Md from Wilbur Smith and A.Moclata. Atnona the 1u11est1ont ln th• nport are clustered parkln1, peripheral parkln1 wlt.h a ahutt.11 but, valet parking for lhopi>erJ, a realdent11l curb t>atklni per~lt pro1r1m, promotion ot bl1b·occupancy "VehlclH and bicycles, and c1rt1Ln reatrlc· t1on1. !rhe NPOrt 11 pr ... oted for 1tu4>' purpoaet only, wtth no at• tJon r~tld at thl1 Ume. Tbt second pan of the report, on the economic fea•lblllty of tbt ali.matl••· la 1ctAduJed to be prt1tmed 'at a Jan. 5 PlanOlM ~mm1illcb 1tua1 • ~on. producen; Are jolnlng the strike, at least not yet," a USDA spokesman said. Dairy farmers appeared to be ignoring the strike, except in Nebruska, where some vowed to turn grade-A milk into powder and store It until after the strike. It was difficult to gauge what effect the strike would have. IC farmers, food pri>cessors and the transportation industry all participated In a general farm ~trike. "1t would only take about 15 days for lhe consumer to feel It." Iowa·~ agriculture secretary, Robert Lounsberry, said Tuesday But the Teamsters union has s aid that contracts will not permit its truckers to honor furmer picketa and no supportive moves have surfaced in the food processing industry. Some in·· dcpendenl truckers have said they will support the strike but their numbers are not known. The strike, called by American Agriculture, a group formed three months ago, Is aimed at getting Congress to guarantee farm prices at 100 percent parity, a move that would give today's farmers the same buying power that farmers had from 1910·1914. Fro111 Page Al CONDOS ••. dcnilty and city and coastal com- mission efforts to halt work and force a lowering or dentlty were illegal. Councllmen had no choice in opprovlng the final tract map for tbe project. In 197S aner the de· velopers brought a suit against the city, councilmen agreed to a settlement under wliteh they were allowed to impose certain conditions -not pertaining to denltty -on the project. Once those conditions were met, councilmen had to approve the project. However, that approval was further delayed when the coastal commission relua.td to grant a pcrmlt tor the project. The de· veloper sued and waa a1aln backed by the courta. Jn Monday's vote, Councilmen Trudi Roaera and Ray William.a abstained from votlnJ out or pro. teat. Neither were members of the council when tho settlement wq slaned ln 1973, but Mra. Rogera. whose late husband served on the councll at that time, declared 1h1 would never have 11reed to 1lgn lt. Wltb Ryckoff v0Un1 no to voice hl1 protat, the approval puaed by • bare majority of four vot.. Mayor Miian Doetal, who •ald he caat his "afe" vote reluctant. Jy, noted that. under the condl· Uont of tho qreement, there wu nothln1 eln tho councll could{lo, .. By GARV GRANVILLE OfUlto.lly ...... li.tf County Counlel Adrian Kuyper told Ora.nae County l"J)Orvilor. Wednesday lhat any political campaign reform ordinance they mleht adopt would create "~mlorcement problema" ln 1978 It It contains D limit on camp•l1a contrlbutlorw. • Kuyper told supervlaoriJ thul candidates who hove already stoked their campalsn coffers with contrlbutlon11 exceedln1 proposed contribution llmitit ctn· not be hfld to anawer for e~ceed­ ins the llrnltetJon. So far, the only candldatu ·known to have accepted om· paten donatlqns excudine vatJoua proposed contributions Umitallooa are Ute three county aupervlaora who wAL 1eek re- election 1n 19'78. A curtailment on contributions cannot be made retroactive to In· elude donations already received by candldatea, Kuypertatd. * * * * * * Irvine Ordlnanee $250 Limit Voted ~ On Contributions By PIDL ROSMARIN Ol•o.itt ........... No person may contribute more than $250 to a candidate for elective office ln Irvine, nor in Schmitz Eyes Seat In Senate A source close to former con· gresaman John Schrmti said to- day Schmitz wltl announce before Christmp1 that he will seek the state senate seat beln1 vacated by Dennis Carpenter, R· Newport Beach. Carpenter announced earlier this week that he will not 1eek re· election next year. The source, who asked that he not be Identified, said Schmitz' decision wa1 reached at the ur1· , lng of backers. Schmitt, a resident of Corona del Mar, servt:d in the state senate prior V> hit election to the House of Representatives in 1970. He lost that seat to Andrew Hinshaw in 1972, lhe same year he rim UJUIUccessfully for presi- dent on the American Indepen- dent Party ticket. Last y~ar, Schmitz lost a close race for the Republican nomlnlltlon for his old House seat to Robert Badham, who wu subsequently elected to Coneresa. Schmitz teaches political science at Santa Ana College. Crippled Jet Lands Safely A Hughes Alrweal DC9 aircraft with 46 people aboard landed safely at Orange County Airport this momina after an apparent hydraµUca mallunctlon caused landing gear bay doors to slick In an or.en position. A rport oraah c:rew1 were hustled onto Ute runway to stand by as Flilht 887 from Phoenix touched down. A fire 1tatJon dl1pat.cher at the airport said the Hughes pilot managed aamooth landln1. NolJ>. juries.werereported. ' support ot a municipal ballot meuure, undor a law adopted Tuesday by the Olty Council. Tb• council vot4'd 4·1 to llmlt campa1go contributions '*to ln· sure that the amQIClllt ~ontributed by any penoq doetnot material· ly Influence the outcome of any election." The ordinance was adopted as an urgency measure and takes effect immediately. f'our vota were needed to make the new law afCecl current campalens for March council elections. Councilman John Burton \toled no, "with rellab '' and Coun· cilwoman Gabrielle Pryor voted yes, "with reluctance." She pre- ferred that all private contribu- tions be banned and that cam· paigns be financed with public money. Council members David Sills and Bill Vardoulls. who pro· posed the ordinance, ~nd Mary Ann Galdo, also voted approv4U. The new ordinance also re- q ulres an addJtional reportlni period ot campaign disclosures, other than those already re- quired by the 1974 Political Reform Act. Candidates must Ille stale· ments detaillns contrlbuUon!i and expenditures throuah mld- nieh t of the Wednesday im- mediately preceding the elec· lion. Such statements would be filed by noon the Friday before el ectlon day. The ~palgn cootrlbutlon limit o( will be increaaed or decreased annually based on <;ost of ttv1A1 tluctuaUons. The 4hn(L also wlll be Increased with boost.a in the number of reJlllered Irvine voters, by a penny per voter. For every 100 more ellalble voters, the limit would be raised by a dollar. Burton accused the council or "leaplne" Into campaian reform, even before the worth or the 1974 act whi~h he said was dubious was proved. "You'ff! yleldlne to tbq ps,udo- popullst fervor," Burt.on aald, ''In 1eneralin1 restrictive cam- pal1n taw1." SUls araued that a contrlbutlon limit would assure that "once elected, nobody Is beholden to one select gtoup." Burton countered that the or- d I nance presumes that can- dldat~s. can be bought for pit· tancet. AFIWID~fOI CHllSTMAS And, he added, candldatAS who hove not yet stoked their coffert .. will arsu• dltcrlm atary en· torcement ot t.be ttmltation pro. vlalon11." They wUl contend "thet cfri!lin of their opponetltl hove an wU'•lr advantaae bec1ua1 they have already received. before the ef. fectlv• date or the 6rdJnaAee~ contrlbullona ln excen of the limitations." "Therefore,'' Kuyper con• llnued, "we believe that making such contribuUon Umltatlon1 ef. fecUve for Ute 1978 elections may crente enforcement problems." Should their legal counsel., words be heeded by the five coun· ty supervisors, lt would mean that political reform in Oranse County, if It Is to come, wlll not come In time for next year'a elec- tions. Limitations on Individual cam.- paign contributions have been a cornerstone of various proPOSod reform ordinances lncludlnl t.hoH suggested by the 1978-17 county Grand Jury, a. reform 1roup called TIN CUP and lho county CIUten'1 Direction Finct• tng Commisslon. Those organizations and others have argued that a lid needs to~ placed on the amount individuals can donate lo candidate cam· palsns to avoid the appearance that he9vy donors have undue ln· . nuenceongovemmentdeclsions. Jn a hefty memo sent 'to supervlaora Wednesday after- noon. Kuyper said there Is reason to believe that .. contribution limitations of ~ or ~ per electjon or per calendar year would probably be held to be valld'' by the court.a. However, Kuyper did not dis· mlss the possibility that a limit in any form "might be held, if judicially challenged, to be UD· conslltutional.'' The Board ot Supervisors~ legal counselor also said hq doubted If the board can transfer nny or its powers to a fair political campaign practices commission. Froa Page Al TERROR ••• Police said he took a total of $223 from thethr,:epeople. Tbey ci8'Cribed hlm u 1taod.ln1 between ftve feet. eight lncbes1 and five feet, 11 Inches tall and welghin1about150 pounds. Mr4. Schaffer told officen he had a heavy brown moustache~ when he accosted her, but that, durin1his1tay, hcthaved. it off. Newport Lib.-ary Sets Holiday Party · Friday, the News><>rt Beath Library will host a holiday party tor local younpten. The party, to be held In the Mariners branch mulUpurpose room at 200$ Dover Drive, begins at 3:30 p.m. wtth two marlon~tte • shows. Pneni. are welcome to attend with their children. I v ... • I \ . I A• EYAf • I .. Robert N. Weed/Publisher ThOmH K"vrl/f!dltor Oran~ Coa!f Oatly P11ot ..m!I~ tona ~ ag.e _______ W_•.dn···ad·•·Y·· .o •• ce_m·be·r·l···· .19•7•7•-•lllll]l•••ea-r.bllm!lr•.K-,...'b·l·c·h/·E·d·l·to·r· .. ···P·eg··-E·d·lt·o·r .... Density Wording Causes Confusion Z.onm)( and cfonhily can be a confusing topic and Mon· day night Newport lkach city councilmen found themsdw~ stuck with havanl' u try ul making it less baf. fling Th<• ntv ust•s a two-tier system in describing a nc1ghhorhtxi<1 First 1s the zoning clu:::.sification -single fa mil) c H 1 >. l\\>o famil~ <R-1.5 and R-2> and multi-family <R -~! and H ~ > Then comes the density category which is suppo:-t•d lo ll:ll how many units can be put on an acre of land. Monda}. t·ounc1lm en agreed to adopt part of a pro- posal madl' by Councilman Paul Ryc~off to change the 'tfay in which density is calculated Until now, a gross acre t\.istem was used. The number of acres in a parcel was aiv1dcd bv the number of units built there. Now." tht• caltulation will be made by first deducting the land ust•d for 'itreets and parks and dividing what re- main.., !iv the number of units. The l'l'sull of this c hange is to move most ncighborh0<xb. existing or plunned. into new density (·atcgoril'-.. Some development!') previously listed as low density will .twcom<' medium density and many in the medium dt·ns1ly range will become high density. So far, the change applies onl} to R-1 zones. Hut c:ouncilmt•n balked al the portion of Ryckoff's pro- posal that \\ ould a<.'lually make those designation c hanges in cxblmg neighborhoods. Apparently they felt that people who pu) ridiC'ulously high prices for homes that sit on lots 35 feel\.\ ale shouldn 'l be told they 're Ii ving in high density neigh horh'>Ods Fortunately, some clarificallon of the system m ay come out or all this. Councilmen decided to give up on the phrasL•s low. medium and high for describing density since those words ean bt• ambiguous and confusing. I nste;.id, the~ asked the slalf to develop a numerical svstcm lo rt·placc the terms low. medium a nd high densi-ty. When the numerical system is put to use. for instance, 'the word low dmsity will be replaced with a number such as 0-S Thal would m ean that in that neighborhood, up to five units could bt' built per net acre of land left over after land for street~ <.ind parks had been set aside. It ·s a tec:hnic<.il proeess. to be sure. and one apparently in nt·t·tl of clanficalion. But city officials point out it amounb lo no more lhan nomt>nclature ch a nges. It won't afft'l'l •hL· number uf homes yet to be built in Newport. A Housing 'Must' I lousing for low-1ncovie families --or more precisely the lat'k of 1t is becoming a problem of growing concern to cit) officials in Newport Beach. . Tht•rL' are ulmos l no places in Newport where a low- mt'omt• family one with a total annual income r anging from $8,000 to $15.000, depending on family size -can af. ford to live. City officials say the situation is unfortunate, hut tht•y g<•nc•rally do not see municipal government trying lo mll·rkrc with the real estate market. llo,i.t·vcr, offid;.ils in the state and federal government (fon 't \'It'\\' the problem in the same light. They think low- incomc families s hould be able to find affordable places to hn· m Nt•wport Beach and they think the city ought to be ht•lping in this dfort. The stale and federal people have their point and the muscl(• to back it up. F ailure to comply means the loss of tht•1r funds a s uhslant1al portion of the city budget. It seem!-. inevitable th~ t'ity 1s going to be fo rced into ~ding in provision of low int'ome housing. Smee Newport f largely built up, that m::iy take the form of getting •dt•ral funds t•1 thcr directly or indirectly through the ount~ hou:::.mg authority to he usL'O tor mortgage and cnt sub::-.1d1cs ,. ,. -. • P-pin1ons expressed in the space above are those of the Dally Piiot :-Other views expressed on this page are those of therr authors and ~rt1sts. Reader comment is 1nv1ted. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O. , Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626 Phone (71 4) 642·4321. t .. t • , .. ' , • t Boydi Retirement • , By L.M. BOYD I Seasoned Citizens will tell ~ou there was no such thing fas "retirement" in this coun }try until about 45 years ago ~•At least. as A national policy And worldwide, retirement idn'l become a general way of hre for the elderly until 95 ~cars ago in Germany. This omes up because a youthful ustomer asks what was the istandard retirement age 100 'years ngo. Wasn't any. You worked until you could figure out how not to have to. A car going 70 m.p.h. usec; ore oxygen in an hour than II the people in Los Angeles realhe during that hour Or o report.<; an oxygen expert. ascinating, if factual. Q. "Those London policemen referred to as bob· bies never carry guns , right?" A. Not right. About one out f>f every 20 is qualified to use Dear ' G~oomy Gus handgunS. And 80 or the men on that force a r e rifle- marksmen. Special officers assigned lo guard VlPs usual· ly pack pistols as do the con- stables who protect the em · bassies. Q "Wasn't there a time when Coca-Cola contained CO· caine?" A. Not in the last 74 years. In 1003, caffeine replaced the cocaine in that original· .recipe. Q. "Settle an argument. Which country f>wns the Virgin Islands. the United States or Great Britain?" A. B~. Each claims hatr. Q. "Why did some Indian tribes require their children to be brought up by their un· cles l nstead of their fathers?•• A. "Brought up" 111n 'texact· ly right. The uncles corrected the youngsters and dis· clp11ned them, le.avlng th<>se fathers free to be friendly with their own kids. Less authorttative, ftlore lovin11 as it were. Claim ls the blondest of blonde• como not from Sweden, u commonly sup· posed, but. from Ireland • . . If you warit to keep a vase of cut tuliPt fl"om droop. tna, put a few pennies in their water. Somethtq about the copper, J'm told ••• Jn K•~ tucky, t>ear 111 mJnd, lt.'1 against Ule law tom arry y r wilo's 1randmother •.• When the w lhet turna cold,.:your car•1 Ure preuure ioea down • p0und·for •vux 1~,... drop In the tem · P.('rature ••• Wiil tou Miy lhi cont.eaUOA1"at ch•A the on· Jy 1••• known to man wlltnn Ultr• tJdlU no elemUt i:A Chancel Earl Waters ' High-pay State Jobs Opening Although Callrornla's un- employment rate remalns high, tho numbers seeking 150 high paying state jobs which will be open to all comers next year bas not yet become overwhelming. The jobs in question are the aeven statewide oftlces of gov- ernor, lieutenant governor, con· lroller, treasurer, a\torney general. secretary of state and, superintendent or public instruc· lion, along with 43 seals in Congress, 80 in the Assembly and 20 in the Senate. The pay ranges from $S7,500 to $22,500. AcluaUy there are more than 150 elective oflices to be voted on in 1978. For, in addition to an unt o ld numbe r of judgeships, there are also many county and olh~r local offices at stake. But m ost of the plums, aside from the judgeships which re· quire one to be an attorney, are to be found in the statewide, con- gressional and legislative or. fices. It was expected that there would be an abundance of challengers for incumbent con- gressmen by reason or the ex- orbitant pay increase they voted themselves last year, raising salaries from $44,000 to $57,500 and placing them in the top S per- cent Income bracket or the na· tion. Wh ere previously salaries may not have been high enough to en-' lice successful business and pro· ressional people, it is now rar more than all but a few Califor· nia na earn. Considerin g the fringe benefits which include a generous retirement plan. a seat ln Congress now has become far more attractive even to those who Mailbox dislike the idee of llvina ln. Washington. YET, indJcau~ait'he 1'b; ment are that most congressmen will have no more than the usual opposition. That also s~ms to be true in the caso or the lop state of- ficers as well as the legislators whose salaries, at tn,500 i>los Jrlnge benent.1 including $40 a day tax gree living expenses and a car with unllmlled gasoline. makes the job worthwhile. As an exatnple of the scarcity or candJdates so tar s urfacing. only fi ve RepubUcans have given a ny sisn of interest in being gov· - ._..-:::::;. ------·------------- \\ W(l. W'2te SUf posed to CA St ~ out. /1 eroor and not one Democrat. In contrast. four years ago, 18 Democrats, six Republicans. four P~ace and Freedom and one American Independent were In the race [or the s tate's top job. Still , wha appears to be a dearth of cahdidates may tum Into an abundance when the actual Oling time arrives. Those who want to run must file between J.'eb. 13 and March 10, as • pamphlet be· ing readied for distribUtlon by the Secretary of State will soon ad· vise. AT THAT time candidates must pay the fillni fee and sut). mit a sponsors' peUtion signed by 65 citl:r;ens, in the case of tbe gov- ernor, and 40 for those seeking legislative and congressionaJ or. fices. Fees range from lhe $982 for governor and $575 for Con gress to $2S5 for the Legislature. There are some tricky pro· visions designed lo protect in· cum bent legislutors and judges. Candidates for thoseoffJces mu.-.t file declarations o r intent between Jan. 29 and Feb. 8. Also candidates for partisan offices must have been a member of lhe party lo which they seek J\Omina- tlon at least 90 days before filing tim e and not have been a member or any other parly for ut. least one year before that. ALTHOUGH a residence re- quirement of one year remains in the constituUon its validity has been placed In doubt by reason of court decisions. While the steps necessary ti) become a C11ndidat.e may seem simple, it must be r emembered that il takes. much more to win, Not only must one have sup- porters and a campaign or- ganization but some lealslators and congressmen spend as much as $200,000 to get elected. Glories of Women's Lib Fail to Impress To the Editor: 1 have been concerned for some time over the ERA in· itiative. finding equal pay for equal work among the sexes lts only redeeming factor. The rel'il or the awettome demands by the hardcore "feminists" in Houston has so outraged me that I feel re- butta ls are in order from the women across this land. who bold dear the family concept and the love and devotion between man and woman. l s hould like to know who authorlz.ed Congress to give this pack of "she wolves" $5 million of the taxpayers• money to hold a three-ring circus, where the . emasculation or the male sex was the foremost conclusion. Ms. Vivian Hall stoutly defends this gross spending, listing such expenses as publications. mail- ings and work-shops. She (ailed, however. to stale that at the California gather ing of 6,000 there were di.splays or sexual gadgets which would enable women to do away with the necessity or a male partner In or- der for the women to derive sex- ual pleasure. How much did they cost us? I SHOULD like Ms. Hall to further explain why we should be forced to finance federally con· trolled day nurseries when, if she has her way, there would be no cohabitation to begin with? With "Bil Brother" already en· croaching in almost every facet of our lives today, do we now turn over the care of our children to them ? As for the abortion issue, I believe every woman has a right to decide on that for herself, but the responsible parties lo an un- wanted pre1nancy <with a few exceptions) should be made to pay the cost out of their own pockets. Last, but not least. I was aahamed *nd disfusted listening ·to two rormer Flrat Ladles and the present Mrs, Carter, ex- poundin" from tb• podium on the &Jorles of women's liberation and, believe me, my heart did not bleed for the pU1ht ot the loud, outspoken lesbians in atten· dance. The problem here Is not the llbor•Uon of women, but the liberation Crom Wa1h1ngton, D.C. of tho Consresa who reached Into the tlll and blithely threw '5 mtlllon or herd.earned Ju· pqer11' money eso.n the pJ'Oo wrb1al dralnl MAltY 0 . MOORE Q..., fi19'1 .. r To tM.l:dti: Eaffl Pntinl• CoUn{y rtaJdtnt. h11 • vltal and r1rln1 aood ~;#F" Amoriun Rod CrJ>t•. or Count)' Chapter. ~,. ed by Utt ~naUons Of U.t lllftfHn ptoplt, Red Cron .,._.,. out to ~dt 11 "1'1nuitltude of atrv ct to safeguard and enhance the quah· ty of life in our communities. Es· sential Red Cross activities in· elude disaster services, ser vice to military families and the blood progra m. Add1lionally, youth. s afety and nursing prol(ram~ pro· vide a vancty or t'<lucational and st1pport activities. RED CROSS needs the gen erous support or the total Orange County Commun ity if R~d Cross is to fulfill its mandate and meet the growing needs of Orange County. Red Cross is each of us, extending ourselves in this voluntary way. When t•ountmg blt!ssings this holiday season. we hope th(i citizens or Orange County will fC' member the Rt'<I Cross. A i:1ft to thl' Orange County Red Cross Chapter at Christmas spreads joy all year. Help us help. NANCY AND STEPHEN E. DONALDSON E"•rt~H•t• ro the Editor: One error seems to be prev- a h:ml in the artJcles currently being printed in your newspaper. r An Anocfoltd PYtu atrlea on the evangelical movement. Ed.J One man doesn't own a church, a Christian univenily or a Chris- ti a n hospital, or even an evangelistic or1anlzation. These are non-profit corpora- tions, owned and operated by a board of governors, dedicated to God. THE EVANGELISTS you men· tioned receive leas pay than the presidents of most corporations or even most leading athletes. 'the famlly of a pr•acher or evan1eUst does not Inherit the church or evangellstlc corpora- tion onhiade•tb. H e may accumulate some wealth by his salary and the pqbliHtlon of books, etc. All facnoua people write books ai:>d profit by their pubUcaUon, wt Oral Roberta sends me most of his books free. lt'!J hard to mal<e personal profit from sob'ielhlng )'OU give Dft'ly. Faith in God ls Oral Roberts' only product and he gives that away. Ito and bis orltaniaatlon ate 1upported by the Up.a of the aratelul rectplenta. What Ja faith Worth? We are gettina theu men or faith qu.tt. a bar.ca.in. JUlBOLDlNG These past nine months I have been most privileged to serve the Newport-Mesa School District as a member or the advisory com- mittee on school site closures and the budget. I have now resigned. but would like to state clearly and sincerely that each member of the advisory committee has voluntarily spent considerable time in a very dedicated. con- scientious and fair manner. especially on ttie McNally High School relocatfon. Moreover. I want to compliment the school board on Its decision to move McNally from Its present site. Thus, Cosla Mesa can proceed with its needed redevelopment and the school district can re· ceive extra revenue which might be a small blessing to the over- burdened taxpayers. I strongly <\uestlon the wisdom of the board m moving McNally to Monte Vista, a move which is contingent upon a possible board decision to keep McNally as a separate continuation High school. The board put the ''cart before lhe horse'' In a binding, Ii m lted direction . This pre· mature, Ulogtcal and shortsl1ht- ed decision creates more undue tension at Monte Vista. Further, il invUes the possibility of ex· traordlnary prejudicial pressure upon the board lo place McNally on the (our regular hieh school campuses. rather than al Monte Vista, or a more sensible. separate location. . MeNALLY is a necessary and viable proeram and should be continued In some form and at some place. Lack of space pro- hibits a detailed analysis or why Monte VU!ta should atay open -based on common sense, as well as sociological, educ,UonaJ, logistical and economical ta· tlonale. For me, the cnaln issue ll that· np school, even McNo.Jly, ts ao impor\ant that a 1tron1t etrfftlve neighborhood ~hool llH Moq~ Vista should be disrupted and closed. There are better opUont for the board's conslderaUon to finesse this Hnsltlve situation, whlcb the followin1 Umotable advocates: 1. The school board ahould de· cide by late December -subl que nt to tho <mld·December) ad· vlaory commltt 11 rtcommen- da tlona -wha\ elementary 11chools to close due to current and projected low enro11m~t. While Monte Vlata would not lit thiacattgoey,therearo,wopnme candlda\a tor closure, on on the far West tide of Coeta Mua and th• otber located In the oowst1 t rltory. i . By late FebruU'1. the 1choOI board could and 1ho\lld decide Oft McN1lly'11 future for M~ejt\btr, 1918, lookln1 at aU tht avaUabla options In thl1 basic format: a. Put McNally on cllber oae 'f' all four ol t.be resular l\l1h acbodt campUMS. b. Put McNally at Harper School. c. P ut McNally at lbe Placen· tla site, which was an earlier ad· ministratlon·staff recommenda- tion. d. Look at somo olher site not considered. e. Consider the low enrollment closure sites. f. As a last resort. <Heaven forbid!) look at the three hearing sites of Wilson, Whittier and Monte Vista. CHRISTOPHER M . STEEL Sale Df~flng To the Editor: R ecent lnforma'lion from around the United St.Blcs has in- dicated a definite dangerous re- action to lhe use of liquid protein~ Jn this country and abroad. Does this mean that all protem pro· ducts are dangeroU!I and should bo avolded? You m~ take thi~ one step further and ask If we should all stop consuming pro- tein sources altogether? I think' the real problem tha~c:xlats is not so mueh the protein sourc~ as it is the use. Many products can be dangerou~ if used incorrectly - an automobile, aspirin, alcohol. cigarettes, etc. I s hudder to think how many lives have been lost due to these. I think the big problem with most or the people on these Pl'O· tein·sparlng diets is that they lack patience. Let's face it -il took those people years of nutri- tional abuse to reach their over- weight condition, so why lovolve yourself in a pro1ram tb1t con tax the body that ls already \In· healthy? A PROTEIN' supplement con be safe es lone aa thut ~o"rce nlone is not the onJy supply or calorics. It a p~rson wonts to use a protein eupplement, ·fine, but use it for wh•t it ls. a supple· ment. a product to us~ with your reduced lntaka or wholuomc nutrient·rlcb Cdods. I am not de.fending liquid pro- tein or con&>nlng iu use -l peraonully would nev~r take It My point ls that wel~ht loss con be an enjoynblc experience for mony people 1t they use their heads. It you con gradually re· duce your culorlc lntako and Im· prove whot (oodit you do •at, you can shed unwanled pounds at u sat• rate: that 11 most lmportant. LE£ H. LORENZEN Dir« tor or R tarch Ve Laboratorl s • r i I 7 Saddlebaek AiteratGOD ... N. Y. Stocks· VOL. 70, NO. ~'~SECTIONS, 48 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY,•CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, DECEMB R U, 1977 .. ) l. t tran ler es Campaign Reform Contribution Problem Cited By GARY GRANVILLE Of lllt Dally f'llM llaH County Counsel Adrian Kuyper told Orange County supervisors Wednesday that any political campaign reform ordinance they might adopt would create "enforcement problems" in 1978 if it contains a limit on campaign contributions. with contributions exceeding proposed contribution limiti; can- not be held lo answer for exceed- ing the limitation. So far, the only candidates known to have accepted cam-paign d onations exceeding various proposed contributions limitations are the three county supervisors who will seek re election in 1978. • Kuyper told supervisor'i that candidates who have already stoked their campaign coffers A curtailment on contributions cannot be made retroactive to in- clude donations already received by candidates, Kuyper said. THIS WAS UNIVERSITY OF EVANSVILLE, INDIANA, BASKETBALL TEAM * * * $250Limit Set Under Irvine Law By PtuL ROSMARIN Of Ille Delly f'llot Slaff No person may contribute m or~ than S'.250 ~o a C\a.ndidate for elective office m lryme, nor in support of a municipal ballot measure, under a law adopted Tuesday by the City Council. The council voted 4-1 to limit campaign contributions "to in· sure that the amount contributed by any person does not material- ly influence the outcome of any election." The ordinance was adopted as an urgency measure and takes effect immediately. Four votes t were needed to make the new law i arrect current campaigns for f March council elections. I Councilman John Burton voled no. "with relish," and Coun- cilwoman Gabrielle Pryor voled yes, "with reluctance." She pre- ' ferred that all private contribu- tions be banned and that cam- paigns be financed with public money. I Council members David Sills and Bill Vardoulis, who pro·· posed the ordinance, and Mary Ann Gaido. also voted approval. The new ordinance also re- quires an additional reporting period of campaign disclosures, other than those already re- quired by the 1974 Political Reform Act. Candidates must file stale· ments detailing contributions and expenditures through mld- n igh t ·of the WedJl•sday Im· mediately precedln1 the elee- tion. Such statem~ts would be filed by noon the Frjday before election day. The campaign epnlrlbution limit of $2.50 will be Increased or decreased annually based on COS1 of Uving ftuctuatlon1. MAC Hopeful Files Fapers Ao aJr condlttonln1 contractOr ls the first to file candidate'• papers for Mission Viejo Municipal Advisory Councll member electlona next March. , Orange County Regi1tnr of Voters officlab 1ald .rohn Butter. 26822 Ma1dalene l.ane, riled papers Monday to nm for one ol two full four-yur terms up in March. An unexph"eet two-year term ls also up lot trabl In the election. Candldalel' papen must be re- turned to the county Registrar of • Voter• office, JOOO S. Grand tn Santa Ana, by Dec. 29r And, he added, candidates who have not yet stoked their corrers "will argue discriminatary en- forcement of the limitation pro- visions." They will contend "that certain of their opponents have an unfair advantage because they have already received, before the ef. fcctlve date of the ordinance contributions in excess of th~ Ii m itations." "Therefore.'' Kuyper con· linued. ''we believe that making such contribution limitations ef- fective for the 1978 elections may create enforcement problems." Should their legal counsel's words be heeded by the nve coun- ty supervisors, it would mean that political reform in Orange Countr. it it Is to come, will not come m time for next year's elec- tions. Limitations on individual cam- paign contributions have been a cornerstone of various proPOSed reform ordinances including those suggested by the 1976-77 county Grand Jury, a reform group called TIN CUP and the county Citizen's Direction Find- in5? Commission. Those organizations and others <See REFORM, Page A2) Indiana College Team Dies in Crash EVANSVILLE, Ind. <AP> - An airliner carrying a university basketball team and others was airborne for only about one minute before it crashed, in- vestigators said today. All 29 aboard were killed. The crash of the chartered IWtn·engine DC-3 into a muddy hillside in dense rain and fog Tuesday night killed the entire 14-man University of Evansville basketball team and its coach. Jo addition. the three crew mem- bers and 11 other people were killed. Witnesses said the plane's engine was sputtering and the piloL apparently wu trying to turn back ln rain and fog before the craft went down. All 29 victims were identified but two bodies were left at th~ scene overnight because the weather hampered recovery ef-forts. Mark Moulton, the color an- nouncer for the team who was not on the flight, said the team had been scheduled to leave during the afternoon, but was delayed for more than three hours until . FORMER PLAYERS STUNNED l\T CRASH-e1 the plane finally arrived to pick up the passengers. National Transportation Safe· ty Board investigator PhilUp A. Hogue said the plane crashed about a minute art.er it took off. The plane took oft and then ap- peared momentarily on radar, turnine back toward the airport, before disappearing, Hogue said. There was no emergency radio contact with the plane. be said. The wreckage, scattered over a 20-foot blurt overlooking railroad tracks near a sub- division, was still smouldering this morning. Only the tail sec- tion remained intact. <SeeTEAM, PageA2) Delp With Santa Mail Kindergarten ·Kitb Aithd by Fourth Graders By LAURIE KASPER Of 119 Oellr f'llot StaH Even his fourth grade partner thought it was an unusual request for Santa Claus. The smal l, blonJ kin· dergartener wanted to ask the joUy old man to bring him a live sn.ake on Christmas morning. Why? He grinned inlschievously and re"Pliedp "50 I can put it in my mother's bed." Most ot the other young kin- dergartjners at La Madera Eltmentary School were makinc the more usual requeat.J for gun• an~ dOlls and. the toy tnanufaC!· turers' l.atest Tnnovations. Toys adapted from the movie "Star Wars" and something called a "shogun warrior," seemed especially popular. Few of the kindergarteners in Dee Gruenig's class can even print yet. But, thanks to Bobbie Harkey's fourth graders, writing letters to Santa wu no problem. The klndergarteners simply dictated their wantl and wlahes to the fourth eradera. Then, they collaborated on fancy, colorful designs sure to catch the atten- tion and delight of Santa when be is given the leUen on Friday. The project was intended as an opportunity for the kin· dergarteners to meet the big kids who normally just jostle them on the afternoon bus. It also gave the fourth graders practice in printing. Most of the bif children dis· count the Santa theory, but they'd been warned by their teacher to keep it a secret. When one of the younger children annouaced there Is no Santa, his older partner mocked disbelief and grabbed an adult tor support. Still his young charge refq,,ed to give in. All the others, however, seem to have kept the faith. A quiet dark-haired youngster had a loni list of requests for <See KIDS, Pa1e A2) Cat Finder lJue $1,000 LA MESA (AP> -A re- ward of $1,00o is being of- fered for a gray, striped cal which wandered off. The reward "represents our savings," said Shirley Ramser. adding: "I know there are people who will think it is silly to offer that much but that cat, Laura, is our kid, our little girl." The childless couple, who are in their 30s, hired an attorney and put up re· ward posters Tuesday for Laura, a two-year-old feline which they found i11 a Humane Society cage at eight weeks old. 7th Suspect Jailed in Bovan Case Bv JOANNE REYNOLDS Of 119 o.llJ f'flot Staff Elsie Caban Kulik, sought for more than a month on munler ~onspiracy charges in the slay- U\g of Stephen John Bovan of Fountain Valley, was arrested early today by Newport Beach police. She becomes the seventh SUS· pect jailed in the case which began Oct. 22 when Bovan was shot to death outside a Newport Beach restaurant. Sgt. Darryl Youle said be and a team of investigators found Mrs. Kulik biding under a split-level condominium in La Costa, a re· sort near Carlsbad in San Diego County. Her husband, Alexander, who was freed on bail after his earlier arrest in the case, was taken lnto custody at the same time. Judge Kneeland has set the . trial for Jan. 23. Police said they had been seek- ing Mrs. Kulik and the other missing fugitive in the case Joseph Federowski, in the Sa~ Diego area for more than a month. They said they were led to the condomlniums by informaUon uncovered in the course of theJr investigation and the own'1' of the development recognized Mrs. Kullk's photo. Police said Kulik had rented the residence under an assumed name. When Yotale and a team of of. licers, including a patrolman lrom the nearby Carlsbad Police Department, arrived at the con· domlnfum, they were greeted by Kutik "'!ho allegedly dented bis wifewaathere. Youle aafd they searched the three noors of the htllafde home without success. Mrs. Kulik was finally tound by Detective Gary Black who searched lbe crawl apace under thebome. Mr1. Kul~wbols beinfbeldm II u of the ,000 ball carried on htr arrest WarTant, Join1 ROy Chrlltopher JUchard, her hu1barid'• bUllnciu partner aDcl oao of the •Jleaed co-conqtraton who 11 a1lo held In tho city f actnt.Y. Indictments handed down la No- vembe!' by th Oranao Count)' GrendJury. • The onlf one temaloln1 lar•• la Fedorowalct. Police aller• Xull.t, F dorowa~l. JUchud and a· • 8CBPECJ', .... Al) Eleventh. Victim Fo11nd LOS ANGELES (AP> -A young woman whose nude body was found today in a hillside nel g hborhood overlooking downtown Los Angeles appears to be the 11th victlm of the Hillside Strangler, police said. "This fits all the previous evidence that we've bad before. It appears this may be the 11th vic- tim o! the IWllide Strangler," said police Lt. Dan Cooke. But he said it was impossible yet to say whether the uniden· tified young woman, in her early 20s. had been strangled. Police have linked the stran- gling murders o! 10 young women in nine weeks. All the bodies were found in hilly areas in northern or northeastern sections of Los Angeles and its suburbs. . An unidentified man found the most recent body under a bush along Alvarado Street in I\ hillside residential area just a few miles from whore several of the other Hillside Strangler victims have been dumped. A coalition of feminist groups held a memorial service at the steps of City Hall on Tuesday for victims of the strangler and for women who have been raped or beaten. 1 The women s taging the memorial rites wore red capes to symbolize their rage, veiled their faces and gave statistics on physically and sexually abused women. They chanted, .. Women fight back!" Joan Robins, of the Rape Crisis Hotline, said one of the coalition 's1 demanda is that public schools or, fer self-defense tralnine as J)artot the regular physical education currlcuJum at all levels. The coalition also is demanding that telephone nwnbers of rape crisis hotlU'tes be placed in a sitecial emergency listing Sn telephone directories. Councilwoman Pat Russell aaid the City Council was supporting the demands where possible and was forming an emergency shelter for rape victims. Coun- cilwoman Joy Picus added that defense classes for City Hall errlployees had begun. Self-defense classes have been in demand since the recent strangulation deaths of 10 youni women believed to be the victims of the so-called Hillside Strangler. The first of the victims was found nude and strangled near Griffith Park on Oct. 18. She and most or the others found since bad been sexually assaulted. The 10th victim, Lauren Rae Wagner, WU round Nov. 29 in another hillside residential area on Mt. Washington. She was straneled but not raped, accord· ing to coroner's investigators who are part of the Hillside Strangler Task Force. A neighbor of Miss Wagner's was the first eyewitness to what may have been a strangler abduc- tion. The neighbor said she saw two large men escort the young woman from her .tar a few doors from her home. Weather Low clouds and roa through Thursday morning with variable high douda 'Thursdll)' afternoon. Lows tonight SO to SS. Highs. Thursday 6S to 70. INSIDE TODAY Who could ratit ~h a good Mal Oil IOOlC:htl and colc1dotor1? roo f•w. ft It.ml. But U t.OCll J1'd 0 m.Ui· mtWon-dollar /f'OJIJJ. Sf• PoOf A?. ... x t L c I· • t F..._PatreAJ SUSPECT ••• rourtb mt&n, Joseph Shelton Oavl1 Jll, aU partnen In the Newport Beach Investing firm, Prasadam Dibtnbutang, lnc., hired three mt:n lo kidnap and kill Bovan. They allege that Mrs. Kuhk participated in the plot which wu motivated by revenee for Bovan 's alleged kidnapping of Kulik In August. The three men assertedly hired, Anthony "Little Tony" Marone Jr., 23, Raymond Steven Resco, 28, and Jerry Peter Fiori, 41 , aJI of Huntington Beach, were arrested Oct. 26. Police claim the three comered Oovun outside th e El Ranchito restaurant and that Fiori pumped nine s hots into him. Resco and Marone have been freed from jail after posting Sl00.000 each f'iora , who faces death penalty prosecution in the t<ase, 1:. held without bail. Kuhk was arrested within hours of Dovan's death In Mis- sion V1eJO and charged w1lh pos:.esss1on of more than a pound of nearly pure oriental heroin. He wa:. later charged in the murder conspiracy and freed after post· in~ a $750,000 bond. Davis was arrested Thanksgiv- ing day on the island of Bah after a federal fugitive warrant was is- s ued for his arrest and his passport was revoked. lie was returnined to Orange County and released from jail after posting $100,000 bail. Front Page AJ REFORM •.. have argued Lhat a lid needs to be placed on the amount individuals l'an donate to candidate cam· paigns to avoid the appearance that heavy donors have undue in- fluenceon governmcnldecis1ons. In a hefty memo sent to supervisors Wednesday after- noon, Kuyper said there 1s reason to bel1f've that "contribution hmitalions of $500 or S250 per election or per calendar year would probably be held to be \a lid" by the courts. However. Kuyper did not dis- miss the poss1b1lity that a limit in any form "might be held if Judicially challenged, to be 'un- t<onst1tutional." The Roard of Super visors' legal counselor also !;aid he doubted 1f the board can transfer any of its powers to a fair political campaign practices commission. Energy Plan Hit.s 'Snag' WASHINGTON <AP> -With Congress about to ad1ourn, chances are sharply diminishing that House-Senate oegot1ators will be able to produce even the broad outlines of a national energy policy this year. Although several public and private attempts at compromise were under way, there was little indication that congressional conferees will break a conttnu- ing deadlock over natural gas pricing. Without some agreement on natural gas, there almost cer- tainly will be no agreement on the other portions of the carter energy plan. Inmate Dies In Stabbing SUSANVlLLE CAP) -A black prisoner was fatally stabbed in a racial confrontation involving 250 inmates at a state prison near here Tuesday night, prison of- ficials said. The dead man was idenUfied as Jacob Gulley, 29, sentenced in Alameda County to 1 to 15 years for second degree burglary. He had been in the Calitornla Cor· rectional Center since June. The racial groups were separated overnight and some will be bused to higher security prisons today, prison spokesman Leo Shepherd said. ORANG COAST' H DAILY PILOT .,...,........ fJaristmas in the Capitol T~e National Christmas Tree glows in the night on the Ellipse during a test lighting. The White House is in the center back- ground, in this view looking north.' Presi· dent Carter is scheduled to light the tree o~ficially in a ceremony Thursday eve-· mng. Chief 'Not Forced Out' Timing of Resignation C8Jled Unfortunate By JACKJE HYMAN Ol tM O•llY Piie( Si.fl Dr. Francis Crinella, executive director of Fairview Stat e lln..mtal in Costa Mesa, said to- rt;jy he does not belicvt• the res· 1fJnation of former hospital heitd Michael Levine this "eek was a result of Levine's suspension along with two other staffers "It's unfortunate that his res- ignation came at the same time because it could appear as 1f he's being forced out," Dr. Crinella said today. · "He most definitely was going to resign as of the first of January ::inyway," Dr. Crinella :.aid Dr Levme will assume the d1rcclorsh1p of CoUege Hospital, ;.1 pnvati' facility m Cerritos. l>r •~vine was fi red by state officials last June after nine months in the directorship, re- portedly because or his many controversial statements. Dr. Levine remained on the From Page ,t l TEAM KILLED ... "We're goi ng la check the weather, the quality of the aircrart and we'll also in vc•stigate whether the airport should have been operating un· der the existing conditions." J logue said. The NTSB investigator said the weather at the time was foggy a.nd a .light rain was falling, cut tmg v1sability lo three-quarters of a mile. He said other crafts were landing and taking orr at the ait· port without problems The Evansville Aces had won one game and lost three this season. The Aces were five-t1mt· champions of the National Collegiate Athletic Assoc1allon ':. D1v1sion rI basketball touma mc·nt. This year they mov('d to D1\'1~1on I play. ··we had eight freshmen. all neY. coaches," a s pokC'sman s aid. ''We were j ust gelling started." Jim Byers, the college athletic director , said classes were can- celed tcxlay and that a memorial service was being planned for to· day or Thursday. The team was to have flown to Nashville, then lake a bus to Murfreesboro for a basketball game tonight with Middle Ten- nessee State University. Many or the 5,000 students on the Methcxlist-affiUated campus spent the ni8ht praying, talking quietly with friends or meditat- ing. ''We couldn't go to sleep," said David Mensing, an 18-year-0ld Mitchells Face Second Movie Suit The Santa Ana City Council has decided to file a second lawsult against brothers Arlie and James Mitchell. freshman from Peru. Ind. "You Just t·an'ltakesomething like that to bed." The twin engine propeller plane. chartered from National .J<'l Service Inc. of Indianapolis, left Dress Regional Airport here at 7:20p.m . Rick Notter, an aircr aft worker at the airport who wit· nessed the crash, said he saw the plane "disappear into the fog. "About a minute and a halt later I heard his engines cutting out and he went down," Notter said ·we saw it go into the clouds. We heard a loud 'pop.• We heard an en,c?lne rev up, then we heard the cra~h and saw an explosion," said Patrick Alvey, a licensed pilot ~ind owner of Metro Bt•('('ht·1 aft Corp .. a charter service cit the airport. Alvey said he and a companion were among the first people to arrive at the crash scene. "The.• fusclaf(e was intact. the left wing wus ripped off," he re- called. "Very many bodies were ~till 1n their seatbelts and many wt>re strewn around. IL was a me!;s -just a total mess. "We had four people aUve. They were just strewn around. The wreckage was on fire. There was nothing we could do for the people inside of it," said Alvey. The bodies were taken in a Louisville & Nashville Railroad boxcar to a temporary morgue set up in the city Community . Center ln downt.own Evansville. 10 miles from the crash site. In t he room where the rows of bodies Jay beneath white sheets which is sometimes used as ~ basketball court, a volleyball net was pushed aside for extra space. * * Air Crash Victims Identified· staff after he waa replaced as director by Dr. Crinella. The suspension of Dr. Levine and two other staff members, Sandy Udovch and Lincoln Shumate, was authorized Friday by Dr. Crinella. "Dr. Levine and two other staff members are alleged to have used state secretarial resources, duplication and stationery, for expressing their own personal views or the State Department of Health," Dr. Crinella said. He said letters and copies of re- ports were sent lo assemblymen, federal officials and other state agencies. "l had not authorized this," Dr. Crinella said. He said the staff members had been sus- pended with pay. "It's simply a disagreement as to whether or not sl ate resources may be used to express private opinions about s uperiors and a bout the government,'' he said. ''What we're going to do is In· vestlgate the numbu of times It was done and the a mount or re- sources used to do so and uk the three parties involved, including Dr. Levine, to compensate the state for what we feel would be unauthorized use or resources," Dr. Crlnella said. He repeated that he does not believe Dr. Levine's departure from the hospital was due to the suspension. "I had known that he was ln the process of negotiating for a real· ly good position and one that would advance him career· wise," Dr. Crlnella said. "He's been really open about It." Wreckage Found MADRID, Spain <AP) Spanish search parties today spotted the wreckage of a World War II German bomber on a mountainside where It crashed during the weekend en route fro m M adrid to a Brltlah museum, the news agency Cifra reported. l'lrenaan Wouaded Sniper Killed In Gun Battle BlJl.LETIN SAN ~CISCO (AP) -A iunmaa who blalntalned a deapera&e 1&andoff wltb police •Oer -.odtn1 a ftreman was kllled lit a barn•• ol 1un.ftr., tear CH. and bl1ll-pre11ure water tlla& eaded a l~·bour siege today. SAN FRANCISCO CAP > -A fireman was shot and wounded by an unidentified gunman today after he broke down an apart- ment door while responding to a mattress fire, triggering a gun battle with police, authorities said. Clouds of tear gas poured from the apartment window as poUce tried desperately to drive the man from the shelter of the room. The fireman, iden tified as Kevtn Gonsalves, 31, of San Francisco. was wounded in the right arm. His condition wasn't considered serious. Dozens or poUce and fire of- ficials clogged the industrial area near the city's downtown. Several blocks were cordoned orr, as the precarious confronta- tion with the gunman continued. Tension rose as the uneasy stalemate was punctuated with sporadic shots police said were being fired from the apartment. As the siege wore on, officials made use of several tactics. Two canisters of tear gas were fired into the first-floor apartment al 5th and Clara str eets, followed later by several others. The tear gas rounds shattered the window frame and pierced a shade. 'Significant' RmnfallDue In North State By Tbe Associated Press A moist westerly now aloft and a series of Pacific frontal systems were expected to bring "significant" rainfall to Northern California and the San Francisco Bay area Jate today. The storms continued to move east across the state alter drop- ping 2.17 Inches of rain on Cres- cent City Tuesday. Eureka, Shelter Cove and Mount Shasta City each measured more than half an lnch. Rain abo fell in Ukiah, Red Bluff, Redding and Arcata. The storm zone was expected to inch southward into Central California by Thursday at the latest. "It's looking better than it has tor a long time,'' said meteorolo1Lst Arthur Gustafson of the National Weather Service forecasting center in Redwood City. ''It's the best since that good rain we got before Tbanksstvtng. If the computer projecttoos are correct. we should get maybe two storms, with perhaps a day or so ot letup in between, or at least one pretty good signlllcant rain," Gustaf.son said. At 9:28 a.m. a team or gasm asked polic:e mer). armed with semi-automatic rlfles, stormed the entranc:• of the bulldinic Nuke Device Fired Today LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP) -ScienUsts Crom the Lawrence Livermore Laboratory in Calltornia successfully detonated an · under1round nuclear de- vice today al the Nevada Test Site about 90 miles north of here. No radiation leakage w a1 reported Crom the blutat 7:30a.m. PST. Code-n amed "Farallones," the test was the 12th announced of the year. and was felt slightly h ere , in the form of magnified ground motion on the upper floors of high- rise buildings. Fro•PageAJ KIDS ..• Santa. He asked for cowboy boots. cap gun, rescue unit, bike, s hogun warrior. paint set, rockets, stretch mons ter, airplane, train, blocks, a candy cane and five dollars. Why would be need the money if he gets all the other things? With obvious disdain for such a dumb question, he replied, ''To buy atuf(." Another boy said he wants a "real boy horse." He will get it he declared. ' Santa, he explained, is going to put it in bis slockini. NOW Meet Date Error Corrected ··what happened in Houston ... and why -a r eport on the IWY Conference" will be discussed during a meeting of the South Coast chapter of lhe National Organization for Women <NOW> tonieht. The Daily Pilot previously and erroneouslv reoorted the day of the m eeting. The meeting, featuring deleeates and ob- servers from the conference, will begin at 8 p.m. in the Laguna Beach Boys Club. wmmissioner Out SAN FRANCISCO CAP> - Wand a Zanltich, a key figure in the case or alleged laundering of campaign contributions to former San Francisco Supervisor Robert Mendelsohn, has resigned Crom the North Ceo· tr al Coast Commission. ObvlousJy delighted with an Orange County Superior Court verdict that 11 movies shown at the brothers' Ho ner Plan Theater were obscene, coun-cilmen voted unan.imoualy for an action that wlll claim the 11bow- tn1 of a further i. obscene mov- ies and 12 obscene previews. A FIW IDIASfOR CHllSl'MAS Tbe 4eelsion was taken while the Jury that found obscenity in il films was bearin,e evidence in the damages phase of lbe trial. Attorney James Clancy, representing the city, will ask the Juey at the conc~uslon of t.be trial to'award damages t.otolln1 near- ly SS00,000 t.o the clty. That SUI?\ represents box ofl1co recelpta at the the¥te( durin1 the two.year period ln which the movies wen 1bown. The new cl\Y. resolution declares the Honer Plaza Tho~ter to be a pubUc nulaance. revok• lta perm.it t6 9perato ~ orders the city attornq to t.akt cloaure aeUon. ~ Tb~ju.ry reached It.a verdict. In lbe current trial afler vl•Winl 17 of 41 movies shown at the Honer PJasa Theater between pt. 3, 1975, and April 12, 1971. Qty councllmen aaid lhe new law1uit 'MU allqt obletnlly lD a furthe~ 18 moVl• 1~wn be\ AprUUandOCLUofthby ar. f • A.8 Sa E ' ... it ri I .. Rot>ert N. Weed/Publisher Thomas Keevll/Edltor ~ Orange Coast Oa1ly Pilot U 0 a .-g.e _______ •W•e•dn.•.~.•.Y.· •oe•ce•m•t>e•r•t•~ •. •t0•7•7•11iiiliilli••••Ba•r•ba•r•o•K-tt.lb•l•c•h/•E•d•l•tor-lo•l•P•~l!e!lllE•d•lto•r••• Future Residellts Should Share Cost SJd<lltibark Community College Distract trustees seem Ni pleased to learn last week that they should be able to nwl't their proJected building needs by maintaining their t•urrent lax rnte Iksp1te inflation. Supt. Robert Lombardi said the dis- tnc:l should be able to expand its two campuses within the next dccude with continued pay-as-you-go financini. I le ~u1d this can be done ir the district continues to spend :n c<mls of its total 95-cent tax rate on construction. Th ts, however, may not be the fairest financing method tor the district's residents. ~lost of the buildings will be constructed to accom- odute the growth in this m assive district. On the pay-as- . ou-go system. however, 1t is only the present residents who pay the price. future residents reap much of the bcncl1l. They, too, s hould pay. . . Bcl'all~c of this, trustees should consider calhng a bond cle<.:liun. It ts a fairer way of spreading the costs of the culle~e among those who use it. .\nd, sint·c <1 freeze on the current tax rate means tax- es s url'ly will rise with increased assessed valua~ions, a bond 1:-.suc m ay mean reduced taxes for present residents. Achninistrative Shuffle Suddlebu<:k Valley Unified School District trustees moved rapidly on some of the recommendations of a team of munagcment consultants last week. Almost immediately after the consultants explained their proposed reorganization of the district's administra- lton, tru~lces !->huffled seven administrators and created several new administrative positions. The s\\ iftncss of the move was, perhaps, shocking to some d1~triet personnel. But the trustees had been holding off any action involving the central office operation until the s tudy was completed. So waiting longer apparently "ould ha-. e st•n •cct no purpose. t:..,s<.>nt1alty, the changt!S take ~ome of the direct super\ 1s 1on responsibilities off the superintendent and spread lhc business manager's work among three or four peopl<·. Supt Richard Welte said these changes have been needed. In this case, trustees should be congratulate<l tor acting promptly. Travel E cono01y Th(.' I n·ine l 'nificd Sc hool District sent 15 ad· mini'>lratnrs and s<·hool board trustees to San Francisco this pJst wt·ckcnd to attend a s tatewide educators con· 'ferencc. . The l'nst to taxpayers was about 54,000. From th<.· expc<:ted total attendance of 6,000 people, we suspect many other districts also sent large contingents. There 1s merit m the exchange of information and ideas about education problems, a nd San FranCisco, a fine old city with many intercsltng things lo do, may be con- duci vc to discussions and solutions. But because many people who foot the bill in the dis· trict c.ilrcady are feeling the pinch of extraordinary boosts in a sM•ssed valuation, this type of expenditure can leave :-.ome taxpayt.•rs with raw nerves. The meetings are beneficial, but perhaps the ad· ministration and the school board would be wise to find 1'\vays In 1·cclucc the need for so many representative~ to at- 1tcnd • • ~ . ~Opinions expressed 1n the space above are those of the Dally Piiot. !Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and •artists Reader comment 1s invited. Address The Daily Pilot, P 0 . ·Box 1560 Costa Mesa. CA 926.26. Phone (714) 642-4321 . I . Boydi Retirement ByL.M.BOYD Sea'!oncd Cititens will tell you there was no such thing as .. retirement" in lhis coun· try until about 45 years ago. : At least, as a national policy. I And worldwide, retirement didn't become a general way , of life for the elderly until 95 j years ago in Germany. This comes up because a youthful customer asks what was the • standard retirement age 100 1 years ago. Wasn't any. You ~ worked until you could figure out bow not to have to. l Motel managers report that 't item most often Left behind in guest rooms now is the elec- tric shaver cord. ' t Q. "Wasn't there a time -when Coca-Cola contained co- l caine?" A. Not in the last 74 years. J ln 1903, c~tfeine replaced the cocaine in that. orte1na1 • recipe. ' ' Two out of five people never eet wisdom teeth. De ar Gloomy Gus A car going 70 m p.h. usec; more oxygen in an hour t'han all the people in Los An~eles breath<.' durini: that hour. Or so reports an oxygen expefl Fascinating, 1f factual. Q. "Why did i;ome Indian tribes require their children to be brought up by their un- cles instead of their fathers?" A. "Brought up" 1sn 'texact· ly right. The uncles corrected the youngsters and dis- rlpllned them. leaving those fathers free to be friendly wlth lheir own kids. Less authorltalive1 more loving, as H. were. Q. "Those London policemen referred to as bob- bl es never carry g_uns, right?'' A. Not right. About one out of eveey 20 is qualified to use handguns. And 80 of the men on that force are riCla marksmen. Special officers os:dgned lo guard VIPs usual- ly pack plstols as do the con· stables who protect the em· bassies. Earl Wa ters High-pay State Jol>S Opening A llbough California's un- employment rate remains high, the numbers Hek1ng 150 high paying state jobs whlch will be open to all comers next year has not yet become overwhelming. The jobs in question are the seven l'!latewide offices or gov- ernor, lieutenant governor, con· troUer, treasurer, attorney general, secretary of slate and superintendent of public instruc- Uon, along with 43 seats in Congress. 80 in the Assembly and 20 ln lhe Senate. The pay ranges from $57,500 to $22,500. Actually there are more than 150 elective offices lo be voled on in 1978. For, in addition to an unt old number of judgeships, there are also many county and other Joe a 1 offices at stake. Rut mosl or the plums, aside from the judgeships which re- quire one to be an attorney, are to be found in the statewide, con- gressional and legislative of- fices. It was expected that there would be an abundance of challengers for incumbent con- gressmen by reason of the ex- orbitant pay increase they voted themselves last year, raising salaries from $44,000 to $57,500 and placing them in the top S per- cent income bracket of the na- tion. Where previously salaries may not have been high enough to en· Uce succetsful business and pro- fessional people, it is now far more than all but a few Callfor· n ians earn. Considering the fringe benefits which include a generous retirement plan, a seat in Congress now has become far more attractive even lo those who Mailbox dlallke the idea of living In Washing ton. VET, indications at the mo- ment are that most congressmen will have no more than the usual opposition. Tbat also seems to be true in the case of the lop stale of· ficers as well as the legislators whose salaries, at $22,SOO plus fringe benefits including $40 a day tax aree llvlng e-Apenses and a car with unllml\.ed gasolme, makes the job worthwhile. As an example of the scarcity or candidates so far surraclng, only five Republicans have given any sign of interest in being gov· - ---==- · · ------·------_ ___.. ''We w<.?te supposed to cAst Ml!!} out ." ernor und not one Democrat. In contrast, rour years ago, 18 Democrats, s ix Rtpublicnns, four Pence and Freedom and one American Independent were in the race for lhe state's lop job. Still, what appears to be a dearth or candidates may turn into on abundance when the actual CllinR time arrives. Those who want to run must file between Feb. 13 and March 10, as.a pamphlet be- ing readied rordlstributJon by the Secretary or State will soon ad- vise. AT THAT time candidates must pay the riling fee and sub- mit a sponsors' petition signed by 65 citizens, in the case of the gov- ernor, and 40 for those seeking legislative and coni:ressional of· fices. Fees range from the $982 for governor and SS75 for Congress to $255 for the Legislature. There are some tricky pro· visions designed to protect in- cumbent legislators and judges. Candidates for those offices must file declarations of intent between Jan. 29 and Feb. 8. Also candidates for pC:trllsan ornces must have been a member or the party in which they seek nomlna- .tion at least 90 days before filing time and not bave been a member of any other party for at. least one year before lhat. ALTHOUGH a residence re quirement of one year rem ams in the constitution its v1didity has been placed in doubt by reason of court decisions. While the steps necessary to become a candidate may seem simple, it must be remembered that it takes mucb more to win. Not only must one have sup- porters und a campaign or- ganization but some legislators and congressmen spend as much as $200,000 to get elected. Glories of Women's _Lib Fail to Impress To the Editor: 1 have been concerned for some time over the ERA in· itialive, finding equal pay for equal work a mong the sexes its only rcdeeminJ! factor. The rest of the awesome demands by the hardcore "feminists" in Houston has so outraged me that ( reel re· buttafs are in order from the women across this land. who hold dear the family concept and lhe love and devotion between man and woman. I s hould like to know who authorized Congress to give this pack or "she wolves" $5 million of the taxpayers' money to hold a three-ring circus. where the emasculation or the male sex was the foremost conclusion. Ms. Vivian !tall stoutly defend<; this gross spending, li sting such expenses as publications, mail- ings and work-shops. She failed, however. to state that at lhe California gathering or 6,000 there were displays of sexual gadgets which would enable women to d o away with the necessity of a male partner in or- der for lhe women lo derive sex- ual pleasure. How much did they cost us? safeguard and enhance the quali- ty of life in our communities. Es- sential Red Cross activities in- clude di8aster services, service to military families ancJ the blood pro~ram. Additionally, youth. safety and nursing programs pro- vide a variety or educational and • suppOfl activities. R ED CROSS needs the generous support or the tola) Orange County Community lf Red Cross is to fulfill its mandate and meet lhe growing needs of Orange County. Red Cross is each of us, extending ourselves in this voluntary way. When counting blessings this holiday season, we hope the citizens of Orange County will re- member the Red Cross. A gift to the Orange County Red Cross Chapter at Christmas spreads JOY all year. Help us help. NANCY AND STEPHEN E. DONALDSON €.,angeU.cs ro the Editor: One error seems to be prev- alent in the articles currenUy being printed in your newspaper. (An AssocicJUd Pren ttrle• 011 the evangeJJcal~. Ed.) One man doesn't own a church, a CbrlsUan unlvenlty or a Chris· ti an hospital. or even an ev angellstic oreanl1aUon. These are oon·profit COrJ>Ora- tions, owned and operated by a board of governors, dedicated lo God. THE EVANGELISTS you men· tioned receive less 9ay than the l>residents of most cotporaUons or even most teaclliaf 1Utletes. T he fa mUy of a preacher or evanccllst does nor t,nherlt \he c hurch or evanaeusu~· corpora- tion on his death. • He may '!ccumulate some wealth by his aal•ry and the p ubllcaUOn of books, etc. All Punch famous people write books and profit by their publication, but Oral Roberts sends me most of .his books free. It's hard to make personal profit from something you giveaway. • Faith in God is Oral Roberts' o nly product. and he gives that away. He and his organization are supported by the tips of lhe grateful recipients. Whal is faith worth? We are getting these men of faith at quite a bargain. JIM BOLDING Money I• Kf!ff To the Editor: Our president speaks to us of fear -fear if we don't save and conserve energy -we will be weak. Why? Maybe because he has overlooked us -a ll or us - the gutsy American people! Why not excite us -with what we can spend at the grocery store -at the CadiU~c dealer -or whatever-:-MONEY $$$. The good ole American way ls for us put our money and our energies where the buck •ls! Jr you want more oil -ii you want problems of any kind solved, all you have to do is make Jt profita- ble (more than just a reilJlar wage or return on hard-eamed bucks) to buy 1.he solution. That's what has made us take the risks -the blg reward $.$$. In the pastrew years, under the guise ot stepping on the oil com- panies' shoes our government and <Sur reptesontatives passed laws that excluded s.rnall siie operators Crom pn)fitably gettlne Investors (who gottax breaks) to find and develop new oil and sas sources. Wby? Don1t we need it? Sure we do. but tt's expensive to find ill If and only if the rew&rdt in dollars are there -b1gger, more and better than antSdpated profits ln Olher buslhesitcs -wU1 we rilsk our money, our talents, ' , our ideas. our ingenuities and our~elves to find the solutions! If we want results not pro- mises, not fear, we have to pay for H. Most of us do that regular- ly. We don't Uke to work if we don't get paid! Nobody does! H we want new and additional energy sources -make It very profitable -maybe more of us will get and seek a piece or that gold. We the people are up lo lhal challenge. Give us the chance. We've done it before and we'll do it again -for money! LARRY L. CURRAN Sate Die llng To the Editor: Recent information from around the United States has in- dicated a definite dangerous re- action to the use or liquid protein~ in this country and abroad. Does this mean I.hat all protein pro· ducts are dwigerous and should be avoided? You may take Uu~ one step further and ask lf we should all stop· consuming pro- tein sources altogether? I think the real problem that exists is not so much the protein source os it is the use. Many products can be dangerous if used incorrecUy - an automobile, aspirin, alcohol, cigarettes, etc. I shudder to think how many lives nave been lost due to these. I think the big problem with most of the people on these pro- tein-sparing diets is that they lack patience. Let's face it -It took those people years or nutri- tional abuse to reach tbetr over- weight condition, so why involve yourself in a program I.hat can tax the body thar is already un- healthy? A PROTEIN supplement cnn be sate at lortl as that source alone is Pot the only supply of calories. Ha person wants to use a protein aupplemenl, fine, but u e lt. for ,..hat it ls. u supple· 'ment, B product to use with your r duced )ntnke or wholesome nutrlent·rfch foods. I am not derendlng Jiqukl pro toln or condonlng lt! use -I per&<>nally would n~vcr take 1t My polnt is thoL weight loss can be an enjoyable experience for many people if t.hty use their heads. If you ron grodually rt· duce your caloric int:lkil im· prove what foods you d you can shed unwanted po S at a s~e rate: \hatla most lmportanl LEE H. LORENZEN Director oC Rl!'je t>ch V an Laboulories •• ·Ldf1n Jrom rtGdtr• crt wlcom~. TM right lo condtm• ltfttrt to Jil l'POCtc e>r clfmmott htm u ~. l..tdtm ft# too 100rdl or Uu Jail ~ ~ phrltr~c. AU lltttrtftlldt fn. ehl* lffttahlrt ond rni:dUnf oddnu .,., *""'' ,,.41 bf toftMftt , .. qutd I/ IU/Jldoll rtOIOft "~'· Pod'1/ toUl M be P*bli#Wi!. STOCKS I BUSINESS Wedo day's NYSE COMPOSITE 2 p.m. (EDT) Prices TRANSACTI9NS t s OAll.Y ptLOT A J. Friglateaed't Americans Buy More Insurance 87 MILTON MOSKOWITZ .. Your insurance qeQt won't appreciate It, but the fact is that Americans aro tbe most over·lmW'ed people ln the world. Oo HCODd lbougbt, maybe your aaent wlll app.-.ci.ie tbls dlstlnctionl ti it can be called that. It'• certainly a trtbu~to•uPU oraalesmaneh.lp. · WE, oa llATBElt THE COMPANIES 1n this lodus~. lnaure evtt.Ythlng: lives, homes, can, boata. Jewelry. You name it and It can be lo.sured. And we insure against evtr)' ima1inable kind of cllsuter: death, acddenta, job Joes, lift. robbery, 1lclmen, istormJ, flooda, Ubel, malpracUce. Since tbe bUlc motlvaUon ln bczyiQc insurance is fear Lo teal" that aomethlna wW happen -•• must be the mdst frightened people tn tbe world. Jn one way. lt m.aktp sense for us to beeo lnturuce·prme. We're the richest 1*>J>le1n the world and we tlwa have the most to lose. The ataUatlcs are mind-boggling. The United St.at.es aceotants for 50 percent ol all the Insurance premi"ma paid ln the 'W()rld. We spend five ttines as mucb on lnlw'ance a.a the No. 2 nauon. Japan. The toUl premiums paid in this country for all tlDda cf insurance are more than Sl.00 bWloo a year, which WOl'lts oat to SODlethml like $1.400 '°"every bousebold. Don't r.a bad lf you dob't come up to tb1a •ttraae. The total tnclud"es premiums paid by businesses. Besides, the ••Y things are going, you"Will soon reach tb1s exalted level. YOUR AU'J'OMOBJLE ALONE MAY oae qy coat m«e to insure tbm )'our Ille, wblcb shows where our priortdea are. Aut.omobU• lmurance premiums are currently runalft1 at~ bUUoo a year. llP by one-third alllee 1174. Every Jear the Herta Corp. does a suney to determine bow much it costs to have a car. lts latest one abowl tbat the average American driverllOW spends aa much Oil iosurance as on fas and oil. Rolling aloq with this premium explosloo are the alet insurance companies, which col.led the staggeriJ>.1 amounts of money. Prudential takes in $6 bllllon a year. So does Aetna Life & Cuualty. Metropolitan Ule collects more tbu $S billion a year. So does the Travelers. Equitable Ule ls near· inl the $4 billloo in art. At one time, there were life bisuranee companies, 8M then there were propert1 and casualty iJmu'vs. Now the dlatinctlon ls blurred, as each lnvadea the otber•a territory. After all, if you have that salea foree in place, it may u wen be aellina all lines. PRUDENTIAL. THE LA.RGESI' UP£ lns\1rer bas become the Slat largest property and casualty ins\;;. Metropolitan ls the 7ttb lareest property and c.,ualty in- surer. State F~. No. l in automobile lmu.rance, has moved up to 29th pla~ In the lite insurance buslnas. Al- lstate lnaurance ranks Mtb in Ute Insurance. INA jum~ from '18th placetn Ute insurance 10 yean ago to 2e&h place. Insurance la surely a powtb Industry. reflected in OQe bizarre statildc: It ptovidee.1,m.000 jobs, whlcla excee4.s by 25 percent tbe total hWDber of penom ea:u>loJed by oGr 20 1araestoilcompanlee. ' • • Corintiam Win Honors at Work Robert Frank MeC&lllClll, has been natned assist.an~ manager or the Laguna Beach branch office of SoaUtwed Buk. 1 He joined SouthlfestBank ln 1'74 and be has worked at jts LeucadJa, Enetn.ltas. Rancho Bernardo, Vtata, Fallbroolc and Misslon VleJo otnces. • AJMtre G. Bead, Rmtthf~ Beach, bu been promoted to tax officer ln Secwrtty P•clllc lSaalr'a trust department. He Jo'lnecl UM bank u an operator ln 1961. * a-.n •· Hooper, Seal Beacb, bas Joillect .aau of Amer1ca'• trust ~artmeat u a trust admfniltrator tor its empJpyee benetlt trust at Loi An,.i. ~uarten. Hooper pt4vioQsl)r WU employed U a CODIUltant to the Corporate Bet1relllmi PllD AdmiaistratioG ol American Pension Set'Ylcea, Loa& 8-acb. Ht eadier was director Cl( • pJanned~ett.heciaremont{ic~otTbeology.. , .. £ledrclalc Eqlaeerba« Co-pl CalUGnla bu appointed LartJ Bmm, Lake Forest, sales meaier for hotel syst.ms. i-. la former eaatem aales mallaler for Data Host. Systema and developerof Motorola's IQ.Q Seu SYl(em. * Artbr Nut. Mtdlon Viejo, baa bem nained a vice pre1tdent wltb \11lffe4 Cllll..aa ..... Pl1AlJG6ned UCB ln October as an officel' ln the t.naat exeeuUve department. brtntlnc more than 23 ~.,. ot investment coumeUnc ex-pertenceto bll new pmWon. Illa~ recent poaltion imor to joinln• the bank wu ubeadofhlaown tlrm, Cryatallnvest- . mentCo. .. SeftD aew inemhrt have been appolated to U. board of directors tit BukAm,,_ c.p. ID a expanded allJn· ment ol 8ire«on ol tlle corpora&foq Md l\a principal aub-aldiuy, Bank ol Amelict.. Tbey .,. c.a. .._.., Chllrmaa. J>ow Cbemlc:al co.. MlcUand, Mleh.; &.8'tl~ viceobalnnan, H.J. Reiu eo., Plttlbwlb, Pa:;~tb C.llale, necuttve eommJtteo chalnnan, c.rt.r Hawt~ Bale. Inc .• San Francllco; Pldltp •· BawteJ,,:preaJdat.. cart.et' Haw-RaJe, Inc.. Los An&eleat .. P. lleUJer, chali'man, TRW, JDC., Redondo Beach; FrWlla D. M..U, daalrmtn, Tlma Mirror Co., Loi Anaelei; and .,_,a:< . .,..., claalrlun. Watt Dtsn97 Prtldudiona. Burbank.