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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1978-11-30 - Orange Coast Pilot17 ... ,.. , \. Income Tax Vrged For lJ.S. Elderly THURSDAY AFTERNOON, NOVEMBER 30, 1978 VOL II NO "4. •SECTIONS, 41 PAGES • IXOD UC s Sospeet Held Clemente Cop Shot to Death By ANNE COOPER OI , .. O.lly Pli.t Slaff A San Clemente policeman was shot to death Wednesday night while answering a call for a man who said he had slashed his wrists. Richard Steed, 30, was shot in the chest in an alley behind the Sa n C lem ente S un /PO Sl newspaper plant, 1542 N. El Camino Real, shortly before 7 Pm. Less than seven hours after, V.S. Nuclear Retaliation Pliin Revue& NEW YORK (AP> -The Carter administration 1s taking tentative steps that may alter the nation's nuclear strategy, The New York Times said today. The Times said the drastic re- vision of the American policy of relying upon massive retaliation ror deterring a nuclear war with the Soviet Union is aimed at pro- viding the United States with a better ability to wage a limited nuclear conflict in addition to its ability to engage in large.scale warfare. The Times said this change in phi losophy was being un- dertaken quietly, with little, public 'debate, and that c;>rficials willing to talk about it would not do so ror attribution. The current renewed interest in civil defense, with plans for evacuating urban centers, was the most visible indicator that the United States might shift away from the massive retaJia- tion stance. the newspaper said in a story from Washington. Both the re-emergence of civil deCense and proposaJs to build a new generation of larger and more accurate intercontinent.aJ missiles may point to accept- ance of the idea that a nuclear CSee NUCLEAR, Page A2) ~ police arrested James Richard Hoffer, 23, of 1608 Calle las Bolas, on suspicion of murdering Steed. Hoffer was caught as he walked along El Cam ino ReaJ. a block south or !he murder scene. He was transported to UC I rvine Medical Center in Orange. where Police Chief Gary Brown said he was treated for what appeared to be a self· inflicted knjfe wound on his arm. Events. which resulted in Steed's murder anct the manhunt for his killer, began al 6 :45 p.m .. when a man reportedly came to the door of the S un / P ost newspaper offices. requesting an ambulance because he said he'd cul his wrist. + Police were called. An am- bulance and a fire engine were dispatched. Officer Steed. who reportedly heard the police dis- patch over the radio in his patrol car said he would respond. Fife Capt. J erry Galati said he pulled his fire engine into the newspaper plant parking lot, when the police dispatcher in· formed him the police officer (Steed> had not been able to locate the man with the slashed wrist . Galati said h'e saw Steed's _patrol car parked in an alley oehind the newspaper plant. He said he left the Jire engine and walked over to talk to the police officer but found him lying beside his patrol car, bleeding and unconscious. Fireman Thomas Mccorkell, who was manning the city am· bulance with engineer Gary Lov· rien, said he sa"" a man runrung north down the alley, away from the patrol car. The three fire m en rushed Steed to San Clemente GeneraJ · Hos pital, where a t eam of me dical specialists fought to save his Hie. Even before the officer was pronounced dead at 7: 56 p. m., law enforcement officers were massing at the murder scene to search for his killer. <See OFnCER, Page A2) O•llY ll'llot PM .. '' L." P•Y,_. POLICE GATHER TO BEGIN SEARCH FOR KILLER OF FELLOW LAWMAN San Clemente SWAT Teem Shown After Slaying of Officer Richard Steed Tax on Elderly Urged Ex-pensions Chief Raps Current Law WA S HINGTO N <AP> - Former Social Security Com· missioner Robe rt M. Ball. declaring that the nation cannot afford "excessive or unreasona- ble s ubsidies'' for the elderly, suggested today that they be re- quired to pay taxes on one half their benefits. Ball told a conference on "the economics of aging" that some laws al)d customs that. benefit a ll the elderly, regardless of wealth. "will not be defensible in the years ahead.'" In addition to cutting back the tax-free status of Social Security benefits, BaJI proposed eliminat· ing the double income tax ex· emption enjoyed by all those 65 and older. ·'The elderly are not a homogeneous group. f'ar too many -one-fourth -have less income than 125 percent of the poverty le vel." .he told 400 persons at the meeting sponsored by National Journal magazine. But he said there also are "a great many who are quite well off." "In the long run. it is not de· sirable to single out a particular age group for a series of sub- sidies based on age alone:· Ball said. H ea lth . Education and Welfare Secretary Joseph A. Califano Jr. this year questioned whether . wealthy elderly people s hould get Socia l Security benefits tax-free. but no officiaJ action has been taken in that direction. W Ith groups of r etirees a lready wield in g clout in Congress lo raise benefits and liberalize the amounts they can earn without losm~ benefits. any step toward t ax 1n g Social Security benefits would generate a protracted battle. Ball sa1d about one-fourth of the federal budget. $115 billion. is spent on the elderly in the forms of Social Security. other fed eral re tirement syste ms. Medicar e . Medica id. Sup· plementary Securtly Income and other benefits He said 14 percent of the elder- ly have income below the pover· ty level and that without Social Security, 60 pertent of the families headed by persons 65 or older would be below the poverty level. Driving Le~to Busnapper, 13 'lslnnd' H(JJj Many Gifts Today's Daily Pilot guides readers to "gift shopping from an ·island -Fashion Is land .. SAN FRANCISCO CAP) - Darryl Myrick wanted lo see his aunt In New York City so he took 1 bus. 1l took eight officers. two road·clearing vehicles and a roadblock to stop the l3·year-old youth. ''He waa a very good driver," said officer Bob Friddle after h'e c1u1hl up w1th Darryl Myrick and the «>-foot long bus Wedneg... day. "Filly.five an the way. Waan't 1peedloa al all.·~ Friddle chased Myrick through snowy Donner Pass before halting him on Interstate North Oakland, where It was. 80 about a mile west or the abandoned. The younger boy has Nevada border. not been found. "Please don't arrest me,," the Muni spokesman Robe rt 4·foot·l0-inch boy said when be Rod(weU said the buses al the climbed out of the bus . "I'm not-yard were "pretty easy pickings a criminal." because they are parked on the Poltce said the bus had been street and do not...h_ave keys . The driven about 180-mlles after be-process of starting them Is not Ing stolen Tuesday ni1ht from simple, but not all that com· the Munlclpal Railway yard plicated.."' near Fisherman's Wharf. However. MWli su~rvlsor 'Ed Police said the boy's 10.year· Drellln1 disagreed old brother stole another bus at "Frankly, I'd like to know how the same lime and drove ·it t9 he did It," Drellinll uld. t, 'They've got hidden switches and combinations." Placer County Deputy Leroy Osborne said the boy drove 1bout 80 mlles eam. or San Fran· cisco before pulling off the road to sleep. He was seen speeding through lhe toll plaza at Car· qutneibndgeabOutlOp.m. "He was going so fast we c_ouldn"t -get the licen se number." ntd a brtdae official. Police said Myrtck drove an addltlonal ~ mUea ln the morn· Ing before he was spotted 1 The 20-page magazine details gi(t ideas and holiday fashions a v ailable at Fashion Island, Newport Beach: Endorsement Out ST. LOUlS CAPl -The Na- tional League of Cities declined Wednesday to endorse a national development bank, lie.ling-a s urprising setback to • cor· nentono of Pretldent Carter's urban policy. oss Oxford Students Protest OXFORD. England CA P > Richard M Nixon. br avm~ ;, gauntlet of egg.toss ing pro testers and speaking over chanU. of "Creep! Creep'·· a nd '"Nixon is dead!··. told Br1t1sh students today he will "speak up for what I believe ... as long as I lave ... The former president also told the Oxford University audience that with his approval the FBI broke up a Palestm1an guernlla "network" m the United State:-. t hrough wiretaps and break-in::. ~urang his adm1n1strat1on. whJch A 90-minu&.e program, "Nixon at Oxford,·· will be presented at 7 :30 tonight on Channel 28. ended rour years a~o with hii-. • ·resignation in th<' m 1dst or the Watergate scandal A phalanx of ~ecurity men had to escort Nixon through an angry crowd or 500 student dem on s tra t ors, many of them Americans and some fhnglng eggs . when he arrived at th<' Ox ford Union deballn~ society hall to deliver the add res!> The noisy melee was reported when he left. and a n American Secret Service m an. trying to protect Nixon. began swinging wildly with his fist!'. and shouting at demonstrators pummelinf! the Nixon car So m e by s tanders we r t• knocked s prawling on their hands and knees ai. the Nixon mo t orcad e bored its ·way through the crowds of dem onstrators and s hoppers in Ox· ford's Com Market shopping s treet Eighty police officers linked arms in a futile attempt to keep the protesters from pounding their fists on Nixon's black <See NIXON, Page A2) Coast Weather Some night and morning low cloudiness and a httle cooler on Friday. Lows tonight 47 to 52. Highs Fri· day In mid 60s. INSIDE TODA~ The Umted Way fund dnve ii undn wcy and it's ba$ed on the theory that Ora~ County kn-Owa tohal'1 beat for Orange County. Featuring. Page Cl. l•tlex l!noia htMe<1I Ct A"" WtoWt\ Ct L. M. ··~ A• lfMllMl A• •IOtl""s IH Mii'-~' .. C.lllWlll• AS Me•ln 1t•11 CleHlllM CJ.11 MlffMI l"llO!ft I• C-10 " N•tlt11el Nftll 1\4 c .... ,~ "O'••C-r Au a. .. ~ .. .....,. • .... U1tw1•1 P• ,,..1 Mtcll MA1111b 11 1!11'"181""""' ... 11 ,........ '" l"ff""1flt CM~ aie.11 ""-• C'J WH-..r A4 llltWWll..-en ...,_ .._ M AZ DAIL" P1Lo, _s;:::_ __ r..;..h.;;.Ul!4JifX.;;..;;;.;; ... ·:...~-'---:io __ 19_18 Kin Warne d Raoul Theory: Ray's Brother \\'1\SHINt:TO"l I API 1h" ) IUUM' ,1,..1-<l'"lthlllOll' t'Of\llllllh't• ..,:11d 111<1.1, 11 '' lll\l''ll)l.1l llll.: lht• p11 ..... 1h1hl\ th.it lh1· ""''•'111111!1. n.wul 1111ph1 .1kd h\ J,11111.., 1-.. u I Hu~ 111 ,m 11lh•g1>tl 1·1111!\plrJt'\ to kill M.1rtrn 1.uth1•r t\1n jl Jr "illl~ht jl'luulh bt.• mw 11r Ra' ' brottwr,· "' ,, 111111po!1.1t1 yr thl'lll (V J1•r 1 \ tt." 1 \1rulhl·r 111 thl• 0 m..i11 "Aho vl1·.ukd ~u llt\ 1n K int(·~ 111unfr1 ..-. •" " 11 llt'd uboul ttwl cfr, 1•l11p11wnt J' he took llll' "1l1h'..,, ..,land to h ,11() bdo11· tht· 1·um1111llt·l' "\\\• hJH' I q·1•1H'O llllrn 11\,1 t1on of .111 111n 11111o;i11nt: 11Jturt> t hat \Oii 11\•" hJVl' bc1·11 in vol\ 1•tl 1.1-. J 1·11 1 ••ll~Jnr.1lor or ol~·r"l'l' in lht• ,,,.,J:o...,.llJllOll nf M~rt 1r1 Lulh1·1 Kin~·· commit lt't.~ uoun ... l•I Miu k Spt'l!\l'r told J crr) Ra) · Om• or lhl' hrolht·r' laW\t'I\, Flo K(•nnt•dy .IOJ!ril y dt•fTIJntfod S4N FR4NQSCO 'PIAGlJED Cl1r The flower children. the Zebra killers, the Zod iac, the Sym- bion e se L 1ber:it1on Ar m). Patr1c1a ll e <1r!>l, Charles Ma n s on. Squea ky F r omme. Sara Jant• Moore. the Rev Jim Jones <1nd his Pt.>oples Temple San Francisco has experienced the m and mon• On Monda~. thl' cit) lost a ma\Or :inc1 a <>upcrv1!>or, both ... hot to clt•ath unde r the ornate dome of the building in which they worked .. J don't know how much more we l·an take." i.a ys one rl's1dcnl. (SN· P<1gt• B8 l t h a t Spt't 1•1 :. i.tu11·111t•11t ht• ,trtC'k(•n f111m tlw n·1·1ml hut thl' 1 omm1ttt•t• r ha1rmun. Ut•p l.11111' s111k1·i. I> Ohw, ovl·rruh-.1 ht•r 11bJ1•1 111111 Ttw ll.1oul tht'ory invuh 1111t the th" hrothcrh wu~ ttdvtint•cd tH t h ,. , 11 rn m 1 t t <' e ' t. du tf <•oun t•I c; Hob(' rt Ul;akt•y . bdun• .11·11' It.a ) le tlflcd The nt lwr hrntlwr .John. I!. to tcsllfy l'rH18\ \\ ht•n '1111 c·onw down tu I\." Hlukt•\ -..1111 th1· Huoul thoory th<!l ;t't.'1)1' II• r11 IS lhlH the 11\) ... terwu' ,11·111mpllce might .tl'luull 'v 111 on e of R ay's lmll ht•t~. Jerry or J ohn, or a l llmpOSlll' o r the I Wil Of them It seem s to ht' t rue that cath JIOIOl \\ hert· J aml's · m<Jvt•mchl'> "r his fundin g dunng the ru~1tl\l' pt"riod are.explained by .J~mcs bv n·fJ~cncc to Raoul. llOl' ()f th~· brothers IS Ill racl On the s tenc or an contact with James," Blakey ... Had "Is this more th<1n mcre coinc idence'!" J ames Eurl Ruy s ays he traveled from Los Angeles to Bi rmingham to Mem phis. Tenn .. where he was when _t{ing wets killed there April 4, 1968. Ray explamed that a man he knew only as Raoul had called him to Mem phis for wha t he thought was a gun-smuggling operation But Blakev said the comm1l tee learned 0 that Ha y told w1l· nesses al a barlendmg school and at a bar that he had been s ommoned ··to m eet h as brother ·· Similar!~. Blakey !'>aid. at the same tame that J ames says ht> met Raoul tn Canad a 10 Aug ust 1957. he told a wom an "that he \Nas in business wit h his brother . and he was well paid for domg little " f'rom Page A I NIXO N JEERED ••• hmous int Pohce <:artcd away eight d cmonstr,tors Earlier. whe Nixon made has ~ a y into the hall. he got a frat~ndly welcome from the wail tn~ audience of about 800 stu dl•nts. who applauded loud and long "Th:ink vou for the very warm welcome <)f thOSl' tn!>tde and those o uLr;1de for m:iking m e feel very much al home." he said to J au~htcr from the auc1 1cnce ··vou hear these p1·ople out s ide, .. he lalt•r told hi'> hstencrs "It's not pleasant. I'm used lo It • But hl• said his polallcal career has ended "Poht1tall~. I plan to play no role in lhl' p<.1rty. as :i candidate. for a canthdatt· an ythin g ..... NC'verthclc•ss. he said, "I feel as long as I have any breath in me I wall speak up for what I believe . I'm ~oing lo con- tanu(• to as Ion~ a s I live." To do otherwise would not be possible for hi m. Nixon s aid. · · 1 have enough to s it ... and conte m plate my navel on the Pacific . H I did that l would be dead mentally in a year and . rJhys1cally in two .. Ni xon's com m ents on lhe break-up of a Palestmian group came during a q uestion-and a ns wer period whe n he was asked whether the office of the presidency had a corrupting ef feet on the ind1v1dual holding the JOb "There are no easy calls that a p resident m a k es," h e res ponded. going on to g1ve•the Pulcstinian incident as a n exam pie. "The Al Falah group. through t he much -mal igne d FBI. we le ar ned ha d e s t a blis hed a ne twork in the United Slates." Nixon said. ''Thal group was ap- prehended. 1t was broken up in the Unill'<I States. through" what was c alled w1retapr>ing a nd break tn by the FBI." He said the group had been planni ng a terrorist attack like ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT fr,.,, .. t11,...rti t I D,.tly Ptt ... I wl~•1'• f\ 1't\ ,,.,. t ,,. ••• ,_,. ~' ·~114· "'""',,.... ,. .. °' .... , t~, t f-•1r1•1·" roJt'O"l"Otf t ~,,,~ ,11 • t I~ '" ( tf1I ·"'•,f U ·•'11''t t~fOV.Jh f-r1'1t• ttu (· l.t NII t ,,.*..,I•• I" tt" ttv~hnQ1""' 0. .. ~ r ·IU"I ,., n v.11 • ., '""'"'" \,..,,,,,.,,<• v.-•h• ,,,., & 1'l,. itt••+"' ~"If\( t f I.. l"WJlrl'r''1 ""'tl•1• t"" f ,,,., ,., 1' "\.11lut1l•1" _.., ". ,..10• u ... follft Chff I \flo"'J 111 tftt I' At ., ""-' I 04._- "11" •' f .,,,,,.., ... , r •l·• " .• .,.,,,.,. •t .. rt N Wf'H J.j" ,1CfM\IAf'l,,J'~ '~' J•O It (..,-f.ey V11• t-ltt\ "''' ""l(J'lhtr,.INJtf'Mf• ,,...,..,.\ ...... t (1'!01 '"GMO .. M,,,,.,,'"' M•n•q·~ { C:"'v' (~•rttt H L••\ t1t1c ... "9 P Hilt /\',)'"''n' M 1n .. Qt"'·~ ll:ltl·>1 .. Olllc;H (.O'll•M•\A Oll Wl·\tt;••"h'"' l 'tflUnJI nfl'tth 11!M(,111...,.,,..,h .t'tt t H1"'t1~ltDft ,._,,... f'I 'llP\tt.-"' f\fl,-.ut• ""'a 1.4d'J\ft>• • V•ll•w H1tH I" f•11 R•1 -.1 •t~l'tDlf'Q ,,,..,.,.,, T•l•phone (714)~21 Cl•Mlll•d Adve11111no 642·5'79 ~h•O.\• Vi'li~f'M ... f'lftt Sl1.f310 f•"""\•~(""rteil-tf'o •tt-taoe> •• 6"',.0f'l~Ot·"•t (. .• ~,(., "'f'l.o,., .... , •• 540-1220 the massacre of Is raeli athletes at the 1972 Munich Oly m pics. "Now on the one side those who a re civil libertarians -and I understand how they feel will say that nothing will justify wiretappmg .. My question 1s this: should Al Fatah not have been b rok e n u p a nd 1l wouldn't have been broken up witho ut tha t kind of surre p- titious entry -and should we have had that kind of an incident someplace in the United States. "Or wasn't it worthwhile un· der those circumstances where we h ad a for eig n -cont rolled group or rad1c~ls who were threatenjng to kill Americans in a certain area: shouldn't the p resid ent a nd hi s a ttorney general . a nd his director or the FBI. weren't they justified in ap- proving the extra means that were necessary to break it up?'' P roteste rs' cries or "No more Nixon!" filter ed through the windows as the ex-president spoke . Some shouted obscenities a nd r o are d i n unis on s uch s log ans as "Who Kille d Al · lende?" -a reference to Marx· isl President Salvador Allende of Chile. who died in a 1973 n ght· wing coup. Demons trators inc luded 43 Rhodes a nd Marshall scholar!>. a nd m ore th an I 00 o ther Ame ricans studying at Oxford. Som e fashioned the m selves a!> a n ad -hoc g r o up ca ll e d "CREEP." using the ac ronym of Ni xon's one-lime Comm ittee to Re-Elect the President but changing the meaning to "Cam paign to Resist the Effects of the Ex-President." Chances Grim For Survival LOS BANOS CAP l -The chances of survival were report· ed grim for three people m issing a fte r a f ir e d estr oyed a downtown hotel in this western San Joaquin Valley community a nd killed two women, fire of- ficials reported. "Il doesn't look good." for the missing tenants or the 55-year· old Hub Hotel and ba r , s aid Robert Griffin. l!Ssislant fire chief. The charre d bo dies of two wome n tentatively identified as Or alia Perez. 23. and Yolanda T orr es-Rodriques. 2 1, we re round in the gutted brlck three· s tory s truc ture We dnesday, nea rly 10 hours a fte r the fire was reported. Bald Eagle Killed SENECA FALLS. N.Y. (AP> -A young bald eagle, released last year . in the nenrby .Mon- t ez uma Na tional Wildlife ' Refuge, ha.s been shot and killed in northwestern Penn11ylvanlo. oUiclals said. Tbe bird. one ol ll r eleas ed at lhe refuge and Iden· tified by· a leg band, was t he flnl to be reported killed, Peter Nye, a 1tate Department ot Environ· mental Con11ervaUon oTficfal. said Monduy j ' J . "'"w1 .. ....,10 SURVIVOR OF MASS SUICIDE AT PEOPLES TEMPLE IN GUYANA ARRIVES IN U.S. Alvaray Satterwhlte,,1 (SJtCOnd from left), Met by Family a t LA Airport Mexieo Energy Carpenter's R ole Said 'Conflicting' By PHJLIP ROSMARIN Of 14-O•oly P iiot Sl•ll State Sen . Dennis Ca rpenter's involvem ent as a paid consult ant in a San Diego Gas & Elcc· lric Company propos al lo import energy from Mexico is described as a "potentia l conflict or in· tc resl" in a report by etuditors for the s ta le Public Utilities Commission. Th e a uditors recommend that the PUC disallow $541.000 spent by the company for consulting services from a rate incr ease the utility is seeking. Most of the s um -$353.,000 - was paid to La J olla cons ultant Willia m Black . who in turn hired the Newport Beach ftepublican seo a tor Lo a rran~e m eelines with Mexican officials to das cuss poss ibilities fo r a billion d o llar po w e r p l a nt n ear Ensenada in Baja California Carpenter was pa id $44.313 in fees and $2,200 in expenses over a 16-month per iod. · Blac k . Car pente r and two Me xican associat~s of Black planned to form a com pany called Inte r-American Energy Alliance <IEA> that wo uld act as middleman in the sale of Mex- ican power to the San Diego utility . d1ture!> madl· on ~whalf of. or ror the bt•nd1t of. I EA "It 1i. unC'lt.•a r. tlH .1ud1l01~ added. ··wh\ St1n lJH·J!o c;as launched :m ·around tht· v.orld l.'XCUl'!-.IOll to st•(•k prOJl'l'l finant· mg. a fter Mcx.tt·an orfl r1i.1ls ::.tat t•d thcv Wl'l't' not "'' 11rP11ar<'d to consider any !'>Jll'ClfH: fJllJJct·t .. Trips wert' m:.ick lo T ok)'<>. Lond on. P ans. Mun 1l'h and other places. i.lnd rh~1rg<•d lo San Diego G:is Carpt•ntcr WJS not on the tra ps T h <.• auditors furl hl•r 1·111n plained that. as 1111t1all) pro posed. IEA ht•ld tlw 1motal po:-;1 l10rl Ill the CllCI ~y pla n . as cl buyer and :.eller of Mexican energy ··There wa!> the poss1b1hty of t h e m ass uming ot he r maJor functions tn finam·1n~ and con s t ruction of the project," lht: auditors said T he auditor!'> reported that. "If the pro1ect bl'<: amt· a rc<1ht). San Diego Gas would have !x>cn the weakest mc mbl•r of thL troika (Of lhe uta hty. IEA and t h e M ex 1 c a n go v'(' r n m e n t 1 • despite the fac·t that San D1e~c, Gas would bear the c11la n.• fin an c1al burden ·'That was not an the interesb or eithe r customer s shareholders of San Diego Ga~ .. 5 Survivors Of Jonestoun Arrive in LA LOS MCELES 1AP1 Fl\•· survivors of the Peoples Tc:mpll· metss su1c1de m Guyana were t>mbraced by family mcmbcl"'> amid tears or JOY and cries of "Yappet-' ·· as they a rrived here toda)' ··1 feel pretty good I'm happy 111 hE-in the US A ...... aid th ac1nth Thras h. 7f;, who w:is m"et al the: a irport by two nieces and a nephew Th11 San F rancisco native wai. pushed in a wheelch air by n1ecf• Man Watkins of Loi;, A n~eJes. with. whom she will be staying Sh£• would not ta lk lo re porters. except to say she had "been sick the: whole time" she "a!'> in Guyana. starting 1n .June:. l!lii Also <trravang early toda) from New York City we re Raymond Cods halk. 62. of LO!.-An{!eles. Alvaray Satterwhite. t;J, gret-tt'd b~ 20 family members. Carol Young . 78. m et by three rel a lives. and Marian Campbell . 61. g reeted by no family. but t"'o ... ocaal \\Orkcrs from t he Los Angele~ County Social Services Departme nt T wo other s urvivor s. Gro"er Davi!>. 79. a nd Madeline Brook!.. i3. fl ew to San Francis co T hey we re met by a large g roup of reporters but. like the s u r v i vors a rri v ing in Los Angeles. they ma de no com ment Doth were accompa med on the night by a social worker frorn New York Socia l Ser vices F,....Pa~A J OFFICER.:. -. Wiping tears from their eyes and hunc hrng thelf shoulders uga ins t t ht>:r i:rtef. Steed's fello w policemen set about a m ethodical bl ock -by-block search. Three Sun/Post e mployees. who had been working late at the ne wspaper plant. described the man as about 25. with long brown ha ir and a beard. TJ'tey i-1a1d hs'd had a bloody towe l wrapped around one arm S11 n Cle mente police were as· 1:11sted by the Orange County Sheriff's de put ies. who brought two bloodho unds to track the suspect . Tbe north e nd of the tity. where the new!J1:>aper plant is sandwiched between beacbside cottages and apartments and the industnal district . was mapped for search teams . A Huntington Beach police heltcopte r hung above the city. s hm1ng a powerful light on the ground. where San Clemente's s pecially trained and outfitted t ac t a cal o per at1 ons officers combed block after block of the -surrounding neighborhood lloffer was spotted at 2 a.m . by s heriff':-de puties. as he walked along El Camino Rea l. near the Calle Lago intersection, Jus t o ne block north of the newspaper pla nt He was arrest· cd without 1nc1dent. Chief Brown said Hoffe r meets the descnptaon or t he man who vis ited the newspa pe r offices e arlier and had the same kind of wound H.Js apart mc nt is located directly behind the newspaper plant . Brown said. lloffer wa~ to be t ransfe rred to Ora ngf' County Jail from the medical center. following treat· ment for the km re wound. f'roffl Pa~AI NUCLEAR. • war couJd be fought with lhl' Soviet Union, it s aid This would mean nuclear warring that ex- tends over weeks or months but wi thout laying waste to both na· t1ons The news ilaper said that for so me time American m ilitary experts have m a intained that lhe Soviet Umon, in its weapon development and civil defenSl' .policies. ha!'> acquired capability or fi~htang limited nuc lear wars A mino rity view tha t the Unit ed Stale!> -;hould develop the ... ame C'apab1hly now a ppears to have• gamed adherents in the Cet rfe r ad m inh lration . The Times said It said Defe ns e Secr etary llarold Brown and President Carter's national se c urity ad· v1ser . Zbigruew Brzezins ki. were carrying the ball for this view . Jones, Russ Tie Hit MOSCOW <AP> -The Soviet news agency Tass descr ibed a::. abs ur d. Wednesday, "fantastic inventions" reports that aides or the Rev J am Jones conferred at least twice with a So~·et d iplom at in Georgetown and j s . <'usscd movmg the Peoples T :JJ'I· pie colony from Guyanci to Russia The PUC a uditors wrote in their re port : "The s taff has several concerns with respect to the activity of Black and as- s ociates as r epresentatives of San Diego Gas & Electric a nd the roles planned for the IEA. "A prime concern is a poten- tial conflict of interest. SALE SAVE "If there were greater pro· s pective benefits unde r the IEA 1 a rrangement for Black and as· !>Oc1ates. what m centive was the re for them to exert e ffort.<> m other arrangeme nts?" A San Diego Gas vice pre!'>I· dent for public rela tions. Dennis Ric hte r. said the I EA proposal was turned down by company management a nd directo rs Hichter said Black's consult ing contract expired in April and the compa ny has no plans for further contact with him. Carpe nte r said Wednesdav that he saw no conOict of in terest in his work for Black. a nd said he wished the I EA had sue cecde d in esta blishing itself "I would h:1ve loved lo do it :· Carpenter said. The P UC a uditors said the m oney spent by San Diego Gas s h o uld b e c h a r ge d t o stockholders of the compa ny r at h e r than its custo m e r s because of questionable plan ning and execution of Black's er forts to obtain financ ing ro r lhe project. "San Diego Gas." said the re port. "was lax in control over expenditures. and in not provid ing a vehicle to recover expen Businessman Held in Theft SAN DIEGO <APl -A San Be rnardino businessm an wns arrested on his yacht and jailed ror investigation or grand theft, police said. Milton Ray Loyd wus ordered held In lieu of $100.000 ball Dete<:tlves said the a ccusation Involved five forkllft truck11 sold through Loyd's ,equipment com- pnny A shotgun was found after the arrest in the trunk or Loyd's automobilo near h.la yacht In t.hc Mfsslon Bay m arfna. police 88id~ r I I Hundreds In Stock 5199 369 E. I 7th St. Costa Mesa (neat 10 Mane Celenoet • llCl'OM lrom R111ph11 642-1657 17 t Orange Coast EDI TI O N - Today's Clos ing N.Y. Stoeks VOL. 71 , NO. 334. 4 SECTION'S, 48 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA T HURSDAY, NOVE MBE R 30, 1978 NIC TEN CENTS Suspec't Ar.rested , • • eme 1cer am · Delp So 11gl1f 2 Collntians Fight Busing Oa ii y PllOt l'tlolD PUSHING FOR BUSSTOP Trustee Doris Allen By KATHY CLANCY OI IN Dally PllM $laff . Creation of an Orange County vers ion of Busstop was an- nounced today by two Orange Coast residents who hope to halt a proposal that would expand the Los Angeles desegregation plan to local schools. Doris Allen, a Huntington Beach Union High School Dis- trict trustee, and Doris Enderle or Huntington Beach said at a morni ng press conference that so far they ar e the members or Orange County Busstop. But they hope to collect addi· tiona l members al a Dec. 7 or- ga n i z a lion a I meeting in Westminster. And eventually, Busstop mem· hers may circulate a statewide petition for the 1980 ballot that would amend the constitution to halt forced busing of students for school integration, the women srud. · "Our children don't belong to the state," Mrs. Enderle said. "They belong to their parents. We want to have choices; where CHll'f p-...... .., '-" , . .,,. POLICE GATHER TO BEGIN SEARCH FOR KILLER OF FELLOW LAWMAN San Clemente SWAT Team Shown After Slaying of Officer Richard Steed 'He ~ared' Officer~ Trying to Help we live and why and where our By WILLIAM HODGE with Rick Steed, as fellow oC--.&l • £". -i youngsters go to school." 0tt11eo.11rl"t1111SW1 ricers knew him. The two r 1 ~ l-xt>n-·ue S ......... · Mrs:·~·J\11~ .. and--·Mf'S\"·Ende11le ......... San "Clemente· .. Poliee .Qfiice,r ...... w.o.rk~ .. ~ .. g~~.~~~-~_'s beach were reactmg to a m«:lropoUtan Richard Steed probably thought patrol.' ...................... . pl an for lntregatac;>n that he was going to help someone. "We used to talk about ways E gg Att ack tran,scends school distJ:'ict boun-The police call seemed harm-of ma~ the beach patrol bet-~~ danes. and coun.ty I.mes and less enough. A medical aid at ter,".Hai 1 ght remembered. . could involve busmg an all b.ut 1524 s. El <?amino Real with am-Haagbt s voice cracked _agam. 0 ft d three Orange County school dis· bulance and 'fire engine respond-He excused hlmseH, say mg he ,4 f ,,.... 0 r trict.s. ing Code 3, with lights and siren. had to go to work. He went off to l't. --" • 1 The metropolitan plan was the Officer Steed probably thought search ror the weapon that took major recommendation. from a he could help. He was shot once his friend's life. OXFORD. England <AP) - Richard M. Nixon, braving a gauntlet or egg-Lossing pro- teslerS and speaking over chants of "Creep! Creep!" and "Nixon is dead!", told British st,udents today he wiU "speak up for what I believe ... as long as I live." panel of experts ap~mted by through the upper left chest area Across to~ at San Clemente Los Angeles Superio r Court and died for his efforts. General Hospital. a worker was Judge Paul Egly ~ study Los A suspect in the shootang was trying bard to s~~der the loss Angeles desegregation. . arrested early today. of a "good person. ~ r s. Ender I e.. w_h o as "He cared a lot about every-"Rick Steed was a tremendous chaar!"an of the_ Cahforn1a Pro· thing, .. officer Tom Haight re-kid • • '. emergency r o o !11 Family Coalition, com pared called this morning in a broken supervisor Margaret Goodwm fore~~ busin~ to. "peopJe. plan-voice. "He always cared about recalled. "His death was the nmg resulting m the k1nd of treating people fairly... waste or a good person._~~ are The former president alsf\..!o1d the Oxford University audie~i"ll""e--(See BUSING. Page AZ> Hai~ht woTked last summer all pretty devastated ~Y tt. She recalled other times, hap· pier limes, more peaceful times. that with his approval the FBI ----------------------------. broke up a Palestinian guerrilla "He used to come up and have SLAIN IN All.EV Patrolman Richard Steed "network" in the United States through wiretaps and break-~ns during his administration. which coffee with us -we even bought M • E ....-w him bis own coffee mug last exieo ne. e.Y' year .'' Mrs. Goodwin remem- Answered 'Assist' Dispatch By ANNE COOP ER Of Ille o.llr Pl+.I Slaff A San Clemente policeman was shot to death Wednesday night while answering a call for a man who said be had slashed his wrists. Richard Steed, 30, was shot in the chest in an alley behind the San Cleme nte Sun /Pos t news paper plant. 1542 N. El Camino Real, shortly before 7 p.m . Less than seven hours later. police arrested J ames Richard Hoffer. 23, of 1608 Calle las Bolas, on susp~cion of murdering Steed. Hoffer was caught as he walked along El Camino Real, a block south of the murder scene. He was tra nsported to UC I r vine Me dical Center in Orange. where Police Chief Gary Brown said be was treated for what appeared to be a self. inflicted knife wound on his arm. Events, which r es ulted in Steed's murder and the manhunt for his killer. began at 6:45 p.m., when a man reportedly came to the door of the Sun/ Post news paper offices, requesting an ambulance because he said he'd cut his wrist. Poli~e were called .• An am- bulance and a fire engine were - disnatched. Officer Steed, who re~iUidl'Y' be'atif l.be'"potice •disv ... patch over the radio in bis patrol car said he would respond. Fire Capt. Jerry Galati said he pulled his fire engine into the newspaper plant parking lot, when the police. dispatcher in- formed him the police officer <Steed> had not been able to locate the man with the slashed wrist. Galati said he s aw Steed's patrol car parked in an alley behind the newspaper plant. He said be left the fire engine and walked over to talk to the police officer but found him lying <See OFFICER, Page AZ> A 90-minute program. "Nixon at Oxford." will be presented al 7: 3t tonight oo Channel 28. ended four years ago with his resignation in the midst of the Watergate scandal. bered. "We could always count on him to help us with unruly pa- tients." But 30-year-old Rick Steed won't be helping people again. The former Marine was pro· nounced dead on arrival in Mrs. Goodwin's e mergency room following the 6:45 p.m. shooting. Caipemer's Role Said 'Conflicting' A phalanx of security men had lo escort Nixon through an angry crowd of 500 student dem· ons trators, many of them Americans and some flinging eggs, when he arrived at the Ox· ford Union debating society hall to deliver the address. The noisy melee was reported when he left, and an Anrencan Secret Service man, trying to ~rotect Nixon. began s winging wildly with rus fists and shouting - at d e monstrators pummeling the Nixon car. Some bystande r s we r e knocked sprawling on their hands and knees as the Nixon m otorcade b ored its way through the crowds of dem~ onstrators and shoppers in Ox· ford's Coro Market shopping street. (See NIXON, Page A2) CA>uple Face Theft Charge A Newport Beach couple re- maJned jailed today following their arrests on suspicion of burglary when a neighbor al· legedly spotted them breaking into a home. Duayne Day Christensen, and his wife. Denise Lee, both 23, or 19 Baruna Court, were arrested inside the residence in Newport Crest they allegedly broke Into. Detective John Furrow said the couple ls also being in· vesUtaled In relation to a series of burglaries in Newport Crest and In nearby neighborhoods ln wh1ch door knobs were twisted. oft. Show Time These Costa Mesa High School coeds (and friends) will be featured in numbers from Broadway hit. "Annie," during school's "Carousel of Dance" which begins three.night nm this evening. Anni~ (front) is played by Trisha Swenson. Others are (from left> Mary DiMino, Patty O'Keefe, Patty Kouck, Nancy Miller and Jody Andenon as Daddy Warbucks. Cast of 57 will perform in student dance show, which.begins at 8 o'clock tonight, Friday and Saturday in school Lyceum. Ticket& are $2.50 for adults and $1 .75 for studena.. 1 2 Countians Face Bogus Money Charge -Two Orange County printers were arraigned Wednesday in Los An geles on c harges of manufacturing and possessing bogus currency after U.S. Secret. Service investigators conflscat· ed $'730,000 in phony money Tuesday. Charged. and released. on his own recognizance was Guy Sparrow, 46, of An aheim, owner of OCR Business Forms, Compton. Ch arged and released on $5,000 bond was George Minka, 53, ot Mluion Viejo. Assist ant Special Agent E ugene Dagg said Secret Service lnv~Ugators had been watching the two Orange Cow>· Liana for weeks before arresting them late Tuesday in separate <See BOGUS, Pace AJ) Inflation Fight W ASIDNGTON CAP) -Preli· dent Carter ·~ this afternoon he would rlak bi• poliUcal future rather than water down bis ra0t a1alnat inllat1on. ••1 believe that is exactly what the American people want," he told a naUoaal· ly tele\ltled news ~erence. By PIDLIP ROSMAR IN OI • o.ur rti.t Swlf State Sen. Dennis Carpenter's involvement as a paid consult· ant in a San Diego Gas & Elec· trk Company proposal to import energy from Mexico is described as a "potential conflict of in- terest" in a report by auditors for the state Public Utilities Commission. The auditors recommend that the PUC disallow SS41,000 spent by the company for consulting services from a rate increase the utility is seeking. Most of the sum ·-$353,000 - was paid to La Jolla consultant William Black, who in turn hired the Newport Beach Republican senator to arranJ{e meetlnRs with Mexican officials to dis- cuss possibilities for a bilUoo- d o II a r power pl ant n ear Ensenada in Baja California. Carpenter was paid $44,313 in fees and $2.200 in expenses over a 16-monlh period. Black, Carpenter and two Mexican associates of Black planned to form a company called Inter-American Energy Affiance (lEA> that would act as 'Island' Ha. Many Gifts. Today's Dally Pilot guides readers to "lift abopplng from an lsland-Fuh.lon Island." The »page magaaine details l ift tdeaa and atoUday faahiona available at Fashion Island, Newport Beach. , . ' middleman in the s ale of Mex- ican power to the San Diego utility. The PUC auditors wrote in their report: "The sfaff has several concerns with res~t to the activity of Black and as- sociates as representatives or San Diego Gas & EJectric and the roles planned for the IEA. "A prime concern is a poten· tial conflict of interest. ·'If there were greate r pro- spective benefits under the IEA <SeeUTILITY, PageA2) Coast Weathe r Some night and morning low cloudiness and a little cooler on Friday. Lows tonight 47 to 52. Highs Fri- day in mid 60s. .INSIDE TODA V The United Way fund drive ii vndn WQ11 and U's based on IM theory that Orange Count11 Imoto• what' 1 best for Orange Cou11i11. Featuring, Page CI. ·•••ex ll"IN......_._ Q AML--.n Cl L. M. ...... M Mlll"'9• A6 hUMt• •• , Mii .. ~ .. CMIMrlll• AJ ~··--., .. " Cle.tit... C>U MetlHll ...... 14 C-k• •• N111 .. u1 Newl A4 c .. ,._.. .. 0r..,..c.-.., an De• Nttkft M "9f'ti ll·S • ...., .. ,hit ~1 .-Cll Mal1Mtt 11 ·~ •••• , ...... Mall .,. IJNtwlltt Cl•I ~ ltt-11 ~... CJ WH.....-44 llltlf'INW. I JI ..,.. Newt A4 2 DAILY PIL01 N/C i Tax Elderly's Benefits? .. Levy on Hal,/ Social, Security Pay Urged WASHI GfON <AP1 former Soc1ul ·l·cur•l) Com· m1 unoot•r Robert M Ball. dcdort"j( thut lhl· nutlon C'a&nnot ufford "cxcc~lu l' or unl'N1:0.ona bll' uhc.atth•:o. · for the eldt>rl), su.i1wst('(I tod1n thut th •y be rt• quired to IM~ ''"''"' on onl' hlllf tlw1r lx•nd1l~ Hull told .1 1•1111( .. re•n tl' on th<• l'C'Ont)nlll''I uf J.:IOI(" thut llOrtlC la•" and cu5toma that benefit all the elderly. n11rdleu of wealth. "wilt not be d ten»lble in thl' yurs ohud " In addition to cuUln1 b11ck the tax frcl' St8tU'I or Social Security benefltll, Rall propo11ed t'llmlnat.· 1n1e th<' double locomc hue vx emption <'f\JOycd by uJI th03e M and fllder ·'T he elderly i.re not • homogcnt•oua a roup ... ,., loo Birdnap Falls Cockaloo <Aper Yields Four A ):not, hu~twd \OH't' over the telephone informed a ~l\'l'Jl) lrv11w 1·ouplt' earl Wednesday momlng, "We have ~our bu-d If you want to see ltim again alive, you'd better l'Omt• UJl With $2,000 " So b<·~un u Ch~hl> crime tbal involved a pollce i.lakcout b> l"" tlctect1vci. and four officers and a clan- d~~llne swup o( u cockatoo for cas h at a darkened Arco 1aa station. P olkc gut lhl'lr man and tbeir bird-with a minimum 11( violence T HE BJRDNAPPING BEGAN late Tuesday night. Dona ld and Lydia Hess of 3541 Carmel Ave. heard the sound or their electric garage door opener aod peeped cautiously outside to find their cockatoo "Cookie" missing from his perch Alarmed, they.waited. "bit At 1 a.m. came Lhe phone call The•d, they learned to their hstonishment, was snatched for ransom. The Colony homes couple said they didn't have $2,000 but would try to scrape it up. ~ The Hesses stalled for time, took the caller's telephone numbe r and said they'd caJl back. They called police. INVESTIGATOR PAUL JES.SUP devised a trap to nab the bi rdmen. He checked lhe department's "flash roll" used as front money in undercover investigations, and asked the Hesses to try and t1dk the criminals down to a lower orice. Arter considerable haggling, the Hesses talked them down to $600. With their own $100, and with the police money, they had almost that much. The exchange took place at an Arco station, at the cor- ner of Culver Drive and Walnut Avenue .. at 6:30 a.m. Wednesday, with the Hesses timorously holding the money and the police hiding behind available cover. J Es.5UP SAID TWO men drove up in a car, got out and. carrying a cardboard box. approach~d the. Hesses. Donald Hess demanded to see the bard, since nary a peep came from the box. One suspect carefully lifted the lid a fraction. The bi rd was okay. The exchange was made. Police moved in. The sus pects. J a mes Wahl , 19. of Santa Ana, and Mars hall Northcutt, 20, of 3022 College Drive. Costa Mesa, were arrested and booked on charges of burglary, extor· hon and conspiracy. TWO COSTA MF.SA..women .. Llnda Bradley and Dor?na Harold: both 19, who police allege were confederates, later were arrested at their home. at 1086 Glen Circle. Each was held in lieu of $10.000 bail. Cookit> the cockatoo, Jessup said, was, despite the or· deal, unruffled Though the bird is capable of speech, it Is unlikely to testify at trial. since its vocabulary is limited to "Hello." Front Page Al NIXON JEERED ••• ' Eighty police ofCicers linked arms in a futile attempt to keep the protesters from pounding their fi sts on Nixon's black limousine. Police carted away eight demonstrators . those outside for making me reel ver.v much at home," he said to laughter from the audience . Earlier. when Nixon made his way into the hall. he got a friendlv welcome rrom the wait· mg au.d1ence or about 800 stu· dents, who applauded loud and long ·'Thank you for the very warm wcltomc or lhobe inside -and AUCTION SET FOR NEWPOlfl' Bicycles. auto accessories ~d a var iety of sporting goods w11l go on the block Saturday when the Newport Beach Police Department stages an auction. The sale will get under way at 9 a .m . in the parking lot of the station at 870 Santa Barbara Drive. ltemized lists of the pieces to be sold are available al the station. ORANGE COAST \ DAILY PILOT '"" Orot~C.,.\t 0.tlf P1let w1t.,.wt\.tf\1' ~ Ot~t,.,. '"'""" Pft\\ f\OU~i""'°t>\r ,,. Or~ (b.1 t..,""'1'1'11"'0 (0mett"f ~ ... th•M1t·Ot1 "''" O"btl\~O Mor\d•• '"'°"""' r••dH tN c ·'• "'-""-" N••oor• ~ -ttn. Hurit1""'Jli;,n ,._ · " 'oun t4•"' V•llry '""'" Sti10t•b«• Vt1t''•, ..-'t<J \ ,.q1A• "'°" " \Gouin Co • 1 A, • .,.,., '• , ""'' ,...,. l•U'\ '' OVbil\lwd \•tw•rten dl"d ~4n trw-~~;;(~':'~~:''t.~1',~;~,~~JttlO W.\I f~y .. _,,,._ Pf'f\.0-l'lit •hd I' b 1tNr JoOll (Wl9y Vt 1•t'•l'tii101nt 4nd~ftf'f .. Mtl\.ffj' • .,,..m., ...... ~•110< , ... ft~··---... M.itn•Q•nQ l:.O~tcw Cll••lt•" "-Ill~~ , .. " Annt•fl'lt ~NQ•PMJ li.cttton OfltC:H t.'t:.:: .::~~ ~~:o~~·;.·,1.., thlf\tlnQf,nftttf '" t,tl,1)411.tc.n~l*"-•'O -lt0.0 ll•ll•y Hl'OH.o l'•t "°"" "' \.tn O••oo r'"""'·*• Telepllont (714)142-4321 OlaHlfl•d Advertlllng Ma•M71 ~1-•ll•ll•t-Of!I(" at1.fa10 ,,..,. Wft ''"'-"' ...... f1c.t01Nortf\O.e,,..C...,,,,Ct........,• t•" M0-1220 "You hear these people out· side," he later told his listeners. "It's not pleasant, I'm used to it. .. But he said his political career has ended. "Politically. I plan to play no role in the party, as a candidate, for a candidate -anything." Nevertheless, he said. "I feel as long as I have any breath in me I will spealt up for what I believe . . . I'm going to con- tinue to as long as I live." To do otherwise would not be possible for him, Nixon said. "I have enough to s it ... and contemplate my n avel on th" Pacific ... If I did that I would be dead mentally in a year and physically in two." f'rot11 Page Al BOGUS ... cars near the business forms plant. The money. Dagg said, was l'lltnd along with printing plat.es and negatives in Spar row's car. D&"" called the quality or the phony $20, $50 and $100 bills ·•(air." He said they were print- e d on a n offset printing m achine. The agent said has organiza- tion is continuing an investiga- tion or the case but that It ls believed no phony bills were passed. . Hoth suspects are scheduled for preliminary heartna before a U.S. Magistrate in Los Angeles Dec. 19. Tool Chest Taken In Mesa Burglary Burglars reportedly kicked ln the side door to a Costa Mesa "9· ident's 1arage W9dnt1day to make off with about tl,600 worth of tools and Jacki. Howard W. Burns of 194'2 Orange St. said a lo.drawer tool chest filled with automotive tool• and eqwpmaat and two Jack et.ands were taken. Burns told ~lice the cheat wa1 too heavy ror one penon to remove. m any -one·fourth -have lcu Income th•n 12$ percent of the poverty level." he told 400 peraons at th4t meetinl sponsored by NallonaJJournttl maga:lline. But ht-nid thc;rc also are "a areal many who are quite well "" .. "In the long run. it Is not de· eln1bh:1 lo 11lngle out a particular 16'4l a roop for a series of sub- 1fdle1 based oa age alone." Ball ,,..... Pa,,e A J UTILITY ••• arrangement for Black and as· 1oclates, what lnceqtive was there for them to exerl efforts in other arrangements?•' A San Diego Gas vice presi- dent for public relations, Dennis Richter, said the IEA proposal was turned down by comr>anv management and directors. Richter said Black's consult- ing contract expired In April and the company has no plans for further contact with him. Carpenter said Wednesday that he saw no conflict ,of in- terest in his work for Black, and said he wished the IEA had.suc- ceeded in establishing itselJ. "I would have loved to do it." Carpenter said. The PUC auditors said the m oney spent by San Diego Gas s h ou ld be ch a rg e d to stockholders of the company rather than its cus tomer s because of questionable plan- nJng and execution of Black's ef· forts to obtain financing for the project. "Sao Diego Gas," said the re · port, "was lax in control over expenditures, and in not provid- ing a vehicle to recover expen· ditures made on behalf of, or for the benefit of. IEA." "It is unclear." the auditors adde d. "why San Diego Gas launched an around the world excursion to seek project financ- ing, after Mexican officials stat· ed they were not vet oreoared to consider any s pecific project." Trips were made to Tokyo, London. Paris, Munich and other places, and charged to San Diego Gas. Carpenter was not on the trips. T he auditor s furthe r com· plained that. as initially pro- posed. IEA held the pivotal posi· lion in the energy plan, as a buyer and seller of Mexican ener.gy. . ...... "There was the possibility or them assuming other major functions in financing and con· struction of the project." the auditors said. The auditors reported that, "IC the project became a reality, SI.la Diego Gas would have been the weakest m emb er of the troika (of the utility, IEA and the Mexican government), despite the fact that San Diego Gas would bear the entire finan· cial burden. Welte Sues School Dutrict For $269,f)(JO Damages tota ling n early $269,000 are being de m anded from the Saddleback Valley Unified School Dis trict by Superlntendent Richard Welte in an Orange County Supe rior Court lawsuit which charges the defendants with breach of con- tract. Welte claims in ltis action that the board acted unfairly a nd il· legally last April when it com- pelled him lo take a 44-day vac~­ tion while the value of his ser vices to the district was being assessed. He demands a n additional $500,000 tn d a mages from trustees Mary PhHlips, George f(enry and Carole Neustady who with school district employee J ames Mitchell, .are 1dentlJ100 -as being particularly responsi· ble for actions taken against him. Fro'" Page A I BUSING •.. controlled society advanced by the Rev. Jim Jones in Guyana. · She said she used the People's Temple disaster as an example ot "us urping powers. ··Forced busing is a way of taking away an individual's rights," she contended. Mrs. Allen. an unsuccessful state assembly candidate last Nov. 7. said "the schools are to educate, not fqr planning a Uto- 1 pi an society." Mn. Allen said creation of BuH top ls OOl a racist reaction. ·'It baa to do with taking youn11tera complet ely away from lhelr bomet," she said. "It hH to do with local control. •'Our concern• are not neceaaar11y with the intetraUoo aepecta but that we are IOlnl to be movtna you.nsai.n aiOunc1 oa a che11 board .•• boweve1 1qmeone HH H a cure to loic_lety'1ll11 ... said. Health, Educut1on and Welfare Secretary Joseph A. Califano Jr. this year questioned whether wealthy· elderly people s hould get Social Security benefits tax·free, but no official REPORTER EYES SOCIAL SECURITY-A11 action bas been taken in that direction. With groups o f retirees already wie lding c lout in Congress to raise benefits and liberalize the amounts they can earn without losing benefits. any s t e p toward taxing Social Security benefits would generate a protracted battle Ball said about one·fourth of the federal budget . $115 billion. is spent on the elderly in the forms of Social Security. other fe de r a l retirement syst ems. Medicare, Medicaid . S up· plem entary Security Income and other benefits. He said 14 percent of the elder· ly have income below the pover ty level and that without Social Secu rity, 60 pe rcent of the ramilies headed by persons 6S or older would be below·the poverty level. SAN CLEMENTE CIVIC CENTER FLAG AT HALF STAFF City Mourns 'stain Policemen Richard Steed From rage Al OFFICER SLAIN IN CLEMENTE. • • beside his patrol car . bleeding and unconscious. Fireman Thomas Mccorkell, who was manning the city am· bulance with engineer Gary Lov- rien. said he saw a ma n running north down the alley, away from the patrol car. The three Cir em e n rushed Steed to San Clemente General Hos p it al , where a team of m edical s pecialis ts fought lo save his li(e . Even before the officer was pronounced dead al 7:56 p.m .. law enforcement officers were massing at the murder scene to search for hi s killer . Wiping tears from their eyes a nd hunching their shoulders against their grie(. Steed's fe llow policemen set about a methodica l block-by -bl ock search. Three Sun/ Post employees. who had been working late al the newspaper plant, described the m an as about 25. with long brown hair <Bnd a. bear:d. They said he'd had a bloody towel wrJlDDM around one arm. San Clemente police were as· sisted by the Orange County Sheriff's deputies. who brought two bloodhounds to track the suspect. The north end or the city. whe re the newspaper plant is sandwiched between beachside cottages and apartments and the industrial district, was mapped for search teams. A Huntington Beach police helicopter hung above the city, shining a powerful light on the ground. where San Clemente's SALE specially tratned and outfitted tactica l operations officers combed block alter block or the surrounding neighborhood. Hoffer was spotted at 2 a m by s heriff's deputies. a s he walked along El Camino Real, near the Calle Lago intersection. JUSt o ne block north or the newspaper plant. He was arrest ed without incident. Chief Brown said HoHer m~ts the description of the man who visited the news paper offices earlier and had the same kind of wound. His apartment is located directly behind the newspaper plant. Brown said. HofCer was lo be tra nsforred to Orange County Jail from the medical center, following treat ment for the knife wound. Hoffer's bail was set at $500.000. Hayer did not have a gun. when he was a rrested. A police department spokesman said a team of officers was searchmg .today. Jor .t.he .. gun used .in the . shooting. 'No description of the gun was made public. Steed's gun and his glasses were found on the ground a s hort distance from where he Cell in the alley, a few feet from his patrol car. Officer steed is survived by his wife, Kathy. a nd by has parents who live on the East Coast. The young couple hved in Oceanside and had no children. Steed joined the San Clemente P olice Department two years ago. after serving as a reserve officer . He had p revious ly served with the U.S. Marine Corps He wa:. descr ibe d 3 b a popular. dedicated policeman, well liked by his fellow officers. Marines Join K/,an to Get Fast ReletJSe ByTheAssoc:iated Press Young Marines may be trying to get arrested a s Ku Klux Klans men at Camp Pendleton in orde r to be discharged early, said one private after a flurry of s uch incidents. At least 16 men have been in· volved with a lleged Klan ac ta v1 t1es within the last month, base officials s aid Wednesday. All of them are under 20 years old wtth ~ than ~1x ·months·in the Manne Corps . In most of the cases. KKK slogans were written on the locker of a black Marine, or whale sheets with KKK mark· mgs were discovered in fool lockers The unidentified private said 1n an mter v1e w Wednesday, "II you a re in. it takes them months to d ischarge you. But if you claim Klan membership, they will kick you out right away. The guys know that and they artt using that route to get out." There wai. no official reaction to the cla1rn -------- SAVE This Christmas 369 E. 17th St. Costa M•H (neJrt to M•,,. C.len<hlf • ecroea trOl'll AtlOl'ISI • 642-1657 M-..fri. I 0-6 iiiil w . 10-5 Suspect Wo11nded By Sh 0 t 8 A 0 1\1 armed robbery IUI· ~•cl wa8 •o und e d b y an Anaheim Uquor 11tore cltrk lato Tu lday r:Uabt and then dumped ln lht-p ark ln11 lol of Oc t Medical Cflltl'r by hll allft_ed accom_p11c • tacrordln& to poUce. They rePortl'd tht" woWlded man, Lawn-nee K Gorham, 11. or Or~ . WU 6truck by three bullet.a he ron from lhe Uquor 1tore to the WOlhng getaway car Corh.am wat> s.ud to be In .allalactory cond1t1on today ln the jail 5ec:Uon of the medical ceoter His allc~ltd <'<'om phee. Stl" Qulnt.-ro. 20, of Orsna~. wa lodtecd in Orun~c Count)' Jiii! Pohce stud Qurntcro wn:. at rested by J l'•'''lllW Orange pohccmun short Iv a(\t'r dump- ing has woundt'Ct c·ompamoo m the medical ct-n\ ·r·~ purk1og lot. Potire bt'ltevt-Gos ham und Quintero rombint'<.l the1 r talents 1 to rob the liquor :ilore a t Lincoln Avenue und Gain Strc~t l.tl about ll:OS pm Tuesday They dad not say how much was taken in tht) robbery or, for that matter. 1f th1• robbers suc- ceeded m taking any money from the store A FAMILY GRIEVES --Members or Mayor George Moscone's family grieve dunn& memori al services for Moscone and Supervisor Harvey.Milk Wednesday at San Franci$CO City Hall From left are son, Christopher . 15: r -~ ........... widow. Gina: da ughter, Rebecca, 17, and son.';Jonathan, 13. The Moscones' other daughter, Jennifer, 20, was just off camera at the left of tttis picture. na11 VDllnT 45 Mexico's Quake: (J()(J Hun MEXICO CITY CAP> -As many as 000 people were treated for shock or injuries after six earthquakes rocked Mexico City and southern Mexico. RePorts ol some deaths could not be con- firmed. Local newspapers and radio stations reported between four and nine deaths occurred as a 1 result or Wednesday's quakes. Red Cross officials denied the reports. "No deaths were caused by the earthquake," said Capt. Juan Alcericio L6redo head or the Red Cross national am- bulance service. Red Cross officials said 107 people were injured. most of the m slightly, and another SOO we re treated for s hock, and most damage w buildings was I slight. Francisco Danz Dukrel, head o f tlt'e nationa l amate ur e mergency radio service, said a c heck by-his org ani zation showed there were no deaths. Officials at the morgue in Mex- ico City and a spQltesman for the federal judiciary Police also said no deaths had been rePorted. Bendit R o bs Truck Driver A bandit held up a dehvery tr uc k driv~r in Hunt ington Beach Wednesday afternoon and fle d with $80 in loot on a motorcycle driven by an ac- complice. Moscone K ites Held 4,000 San Franciscans Al,t,end Requiem. Mass Saxon Says UCI Campus T o Stay Ope n The fll'St shock Wednesday af. lemoon lasted 70 seconds and caused panic among Mexico City's 13 million ~pie. Many we r e in s kyscrapers or In elevators oo their way w l~h when it struck shortly before 2 p.m . Thousands of American tourists in Mexico City fled from the ir hotels , many with their bags. Five more tremors were felt in the capital before 6 p.m. Readings on the first and most severe shock ranged from 6.5 to 7.9 on the Richter scale. Mex- ican seismologists said it was probably one or the strongest series of quakes in the country's history. Driver Michael Acosta, 29. employed by Mctrolme Parcel Service, was sorting packages in his truc k a t 2 :35 p .m . on Brook hurst S t reet n ea r Derbyshire Lane when a bandit stuck what fell like a pistol in his back and demanded money. The thug grabbed the cash and . hopped on a gold and chrome colored motorcyde that sped a way. Both holdup me n a re believed to be 1n their 20's. Police have no suspects SAN FRANCl SCO CAP> San F ranciscans celebra ted a re- quiem tugh m ass today for slain Mayor George R. Moscone a~ three of his children read passa ges from the Scriptures and his fourth child broke down while leading the congregation in prayer. His 18-year-o ld dauJthler. Rebecca. wept, crossed lwn.elf. a nd was unable to finish the prayer.· The estimated 4,000 people in St. Mary's Cathedral 1nrlud ing hundreds or Moscone's col· leagues m public service r espo nded, "Lord , hc<!r our Low-i n come Dousing SUpervisors OK ··············· ·· Voluntary Approach A voluntary ap proach , de- signed to encourage but not re- quire developers lo build more homes for tow and moder ate in· come families, h as be<'n en- dors ed by Oran ge County s uper visors. Super visors a ut horized the d rarting of a progra m that would offer incentives to de· ve lope r s.jn u nincorpor at ed areas who arc willi ng lo provide less-expensive home~ Such incentives might include · s peeding the proces sin~ of lower·c~t housing projects and allowing builders to construct more homes than norma l zoning would permit "I don't think 1t is going to w o r k • ' ' s a 1 d S-u p c r v 1 s o r La urence S<:hm1 l, who cast the lone vote <.1J.tainst creating ~uch a program. The idea or requir ing de· velopers lo build homes for low and m iddle income families was proposed early this year by Super visor Thom as Riley. Rut a 50-mem~r study group, including representatives from the county. b uilding industry and low-cost housing advocates, recommended that a voluntary approach be followed instead County officials said they would be developing the compo- nents of the new incentive pro- J(ram between now and June and 1t would be included in a new hous ing policy which 1s to become part o r the county general plan. In the meantime, they said, s upervisors can continue seek- ing voluntary commitments from developers to set aside a certain number of new units in the lower-cost price r anges. prayer" as she walked back to her seat with her hund covcnng her eyE.'h Moscone's other ch 1ldn·n maintained their C'Ompo::.ure at the puJp1t although 21 yl'ar old Jennifer's low vmce cracked c1uran~ her reading from th<• Hook or Wi!>dom whic h con. duded. "He ph'aS<'d God Wlth his low " The mayor's widow. Gina. in the front row with ht.•r children and Mo scone's mother. Lee, held her head h1~h while her t·hald ren read the ptts!>age!> When Chr1stophl'r. 15, returned to his ::.cal Ot'Xt to his mother. -.he s miled and squeezed has knee Monsignor Peter Armstrong. a Jo nl(-timc family fri end who ~ave t he . e1g~!~:minut.c; .~9mily,. called Moscone "truly a pcopll• person" with a "passion ror compassion." The congrci:<it1on. 1ncludinl{ Moscone's mother. chuckled whe n Armstrong recalled <.t childhood convers ation in which the two aJ(reed they would both like to be muyor "Geor1te just smiled at me. a~ he a lways smiled. and said . 'Oh . you would not have• a chance you are not Italian·." San Francisco has a trad1t1on of electing Catholics of llalwn ancestry to the mayoralty Armstrong red;ted to tho~<' 10 s ide and an add1t 1onal 4,000 per sons listening to speukcrs outside the cathedr~I the trad1· t1onal Catholic beliefs ubout death: ··w e believe that death 1s not an e nd. but <i bci:(mning. that Geor ge has pa~~vd through death from this present. tem- por ary lir<' to a perrcct, pcrma ncnt one . that George, who saw God to faith on Earth. now i.ec!> the Lord fac(··to-rart· in Seaside Resort Backed Niguel Project Now Faces Coastal Panel By KATHY CLANCY Of IN 0.11¥ 1'1191 De ve loper s. or a nroposed 592 -a c r e seasid e n·~or t · r es idential community in Laguna Nig uel face one more major step before putting the carpe nters to work -winning Coastal Commission approvals. Orange County su pervisors sta m pcd the ir e ndor sement Wednesday on the Avco Com· munily Developers Inc. proposal for a 3,68.5-home community on prime coastal la nd between Oana Point and Laguna Be ach. Before doing so, howe ve r. s upervisors added stipulations that at least 350 or the homes be priced In the so.called afforda- ble r ange ror middle -income families. Jn addition. supervisors asked that Avco omclals develop a circulation syste m within the community to reduce the use of autos nnd hold down traffic con· ge s tion o n P acific Coall.1 Highway. ""' They al.lo ordered draruna of alternate plans ror malntalnina open apace set usldc as part of the development. . County planners said once new iolng and other county ap· proval1 are completed early next year, Avco would rresent the plan to tho Co11t1 Com· mluloo.. It was the theo·ncwly formed Coastal Commission that ob· tained a court order in 1972 halt· ing grading for a now-defunct development on the Laguna Niguel shoreline. The land has bee n left idle and scarred since then while Avco offic ials developed n ew pro- posals. "Its history and the planning, I think lt ll safe to say. make it. no stranger to this board." Avco Vice President Jim Smith told Supervisors Wednesday. But after more than 100 meet- i ngs with loc al ho m eowne r groups and county a gencies, Smith said. "We think we have a plan here that is a good one." Smith's opinion was shared generally by Paul Kramer of the Laguna Niguel Community A.'S· sociat1on. "Conside ring e verything we think Avco has come up with about the best design they could for the /roj~t." Kramer s ald. "I woul say we are almosl ap· proving." Anthony Oras60 of th Souto Lacuna Civic Aasoclalion bad a. different view, ar1ulng thal the plan should not be approved un- tU a trafftc study of Pacific Co11t Hlabway ia completed for t.be entin re11on. "The plan as it now sits 1s 1n com plete," he argued. Grasso contended the Avco de- velopment alone would add from 6 ,000 to 7,200 dally trips lo the highway, not counlinJ? added t raffic rrom other future de vl'lopmenl. "Coast lfi J.ihwuy will be an m- crC'diblc traffic jam," he said .J ess i ca Dean o f th <' Capis trano Bay League of Women Voters called the pro- posal "an excelle nt com - promise" but opposed approvmg plans for one area adjoining Dana Point until new planning for that eommunaty is com- pleted . In add.H.lon to the :i,695 homes. the Avco complex would include a two to three·story 300-room hotel on o coastal bluer south of Nigue l Bearh Park overlook.Ing Dona Point headlands. It also would offer an lH·hole public J(Oll course on both sides or Coe t Highway perhaps with two holes reached via tunnel on th coastal side of the highway Av co otncials ;also plan sccntr ove rl ook s , bi cyc l e o nd ped estrian trails, t e nnis· racketball tacillly, oonferencc center and c.-omblnatlon reelden· Ual-commerclal addition to Monarch Bay Pl111. ll1•avt•n. that wh ile death separateo. u. ... now. 1t 1s but ror u time onlv. for 8000 we will be reunited· .. Mosconc·s (·;;iskl'l was covered with shiny white cloth bearing a broad gold cross. Gov. Edmund G Brown Jr . who arrived with an un · preredentcd six bodyguards. and some 35 mayors attended the scrvll'e The service wus broadcast la ve by the c it y'~ m aJor television stations Moscone and Supervi sor Ha r vey Milk were s hot and killed in their City Hall offices Mo nday. Former Supe rvisor Dan White, in police cu.slody, al· le~edly has· confessed to k1lhng t he two men. according to lhc San F rancisco Chronicle SACRAM ENTO (AP> -Is the University of California going to close ooe of its schools or cam· puses? Absolutely not, says UC President David Saxon. News stories had mentioned Irvine. Riverside, Santa Cruz u nd the D a vi s Schoo l or Medicine as possible candidates foe closure. But Saxon issued a statement Wednesday saying. "On the con· t rury. students a r e being ad· matted for the fall of 1979 to every school and to e very cam· pus as the admission process goes forwa rd." He said some people seem to think a UC budget c ut is a fo regone conclusion. But he added that Gov. t dmund Brown J r. had said effective programs would get first funding priority. The National Geophysical Institute said the epicenter of the quake was located beneath the Pacific, about 10 miles off Puerto Angel, on the Oaxaca coast. Police in Puerto Angel and Puerto Escondido s aid waves came 600 feet inland. But the police in Acapulco, Mexico's biggest Pacific coast resort, said there were no tremors there. A Oaxaca Police spokesman said the shocks were heaviest in the area of Jupita Oaxaca and continued until 10 p.m . "I saw everything shaking and there was a tidal wave in the swimming pool," said Vivian Garner, 38, or Hackensack, N.J. Available For Immediate Delivery Classic Wall Unit An attractive wall unit in the warm informality of Rural Oak. consisting of 3-80" Pilasters, 2-7"4" shelves and 2-42" shelves PROFESSIONAL IN TERIOR DESIGNERS specklly priced ot s449. • , • " _.,... _____ _ \ ! I Thndw. HD .,._ ». ttn Slowing Do1W1 the Cops OtJa VAUANT POWE.a.EM: It appean today tbat ""' o more lncUINU• are abcM.lt to 1-heaped upoa our ln· lr,pld Calltomla Ri1hway Patrol u lt battles .,.mat 1rut odda to keep tb peace ud the ~tnUe·per~bour ·~ llmlt oo Orana County'• tretwa.)'I and elffwbere Even u tblap it.and now, CKP otncen who pall'OI our freewaya are workina undtr tDOl"lnOW hancllcap1. Authorllle111 v.·otft let them roam about tn pa1tel· rolortd patrol eats U-• the dl)' police l\(YI do so tbey tmcok up beb1Ad motorina mJiereaDt.I. The highway patrol haa to 10 out lt-re In bl1ck and ' Bums Kilkd Pinto Victims . I ELKHART, lnd. (AP) -Autopelel performed OD two YOUftl Ill· ten killed tut Aupt la a f1ery Ford PiD'9 crub coallrmed tbat they dled ol bw'nl. a proMeu&OI" Mid today. f.llkbart County Proeecutor MlcbHl Cotentlno, wbo announced the re1ultt. la&d the autopel• bad beeD order..t ''to ellmlnate any QIMI· Lion ·about the c au•• o• death." of Olceola, lnd .• ud their COUlln\ A a rand Jur)" bad cbar•ed Donna Ulrlcb, 18, of Roanoke. Ill. Ford wUb recklea. homicide ln were killed when tbelr Pinto ex· the accident. on pouodl tbe Plo· i>loded In namH after belnt to wH unaate. etrud: from the rear lD nortbem Jadiaa.. · COSENTINO SAID , .. uiu °' An E1ldwt County crand Jury the .utol)ll• by Dr. Jamee Beu tndkted Ford Motor Co. on three ot Jndlanaoolla and Dr. Robert eount.sofreckleuhomlclde. StelA of Chicato. both noted The cat In which the youn1 forenalc palho~otit • w.ere com· women died was amon• 1.s plete Wednesday. he , bodies, mllllon·Ptnto aJMl Bobcat aedanl exhumed on , were r. that Ford had agreed In June to l burled Wednea nl&bt, be recall because ot governm~nt ~dcded. •1~ had Id 11 1 complaintt about the fuel tank. on•~WJ"' H eu ... t. waa "almost lmpo11lble" to P08D ATl'O&NEY8 claim perform autol)llea on the teen· the Indictment "falls t.o char1e agers became ot tbe condltJon ol tflat Ford's conduct waa the their bodies. prosimate cause of death" and Coaentino a&ld today the bodf. have filed motlon1 to diamiu the of a third victim, buried ln J • crlm lnalcbarges. linoll, waa not exhumed becauae The lndlctment accuaed Ford "H then two nfl_nned tbe of recckeuly dealcnln1 the Pt.n· ori1lnal fi.ndlnl•, lt would not be ~ in ~uch a way that lt would oeceaaary." name and bum upon rear end Impact." The girls' Pinto ex· THE VJcnMS. Judy Ulrich. ploded after being atruck by a 18. and her ahster. LyM, 18, both . van traveling at 50 mph. NATION I WORLD Elbberg €oa.Vted Daniel Ellsberg, who released the Pentagon Papers to the press in 1971. was found guilty Wednesday of third· degree criminal trespass for demonstrations at the Rocky Fiats, Colo., nuclear weapons station. After the verdict, Ellsberg. second from left in front row, linked arms with supporters and sang a protest song in the courthouse at Golden. ' '. . Firestone Accepts 500 Trade ~4 '•."· • ..,.. --·-~~ ~=-.. .-..--::.-. ..,. ... -~---- WASJUNGTON (AP) -The Firestone Tire & Rubber Co. and the government have come to terms on several unresolved is· sues that led t.o confusion and coqtroversy ln the recall of 10 mill1on Firestone 500 steel- belted radial tires. In a major concession. Firestone agreed in a final docu· menl signed Wednesday to trade new model 721 radials even for worn 500s -those with tread that Is less than 2·32nds of an inch. THE COMPANY BAD told its dealers not to accept these Ures because in many states their use ls prohibited by law. The company claimed many worn tires were being turned in by persons who round them tn dumps or junk yards; and the agreement calls for a trade-in on worn 500s if they are mount~ on a vehicle. Firestone and the National Highway Traffic Safety Ad· m inistration. the government agency overseeing the recall, said they hoped the agreement would end the problems that have existed since the recall was announced Oct. 20. penalty." Boaz said. Firestone race s a ma x imum fine of $800,000 m the 1976 case. The negotiations that led to Wednesday's agreement had been continuing between the company and traffic safely ad- ministration since the October "agreement in principle" was announced. -.. . --"" -. . ... . -.. -. -... . ~ New Police lntm:~or Model WUh High Ga.s MilNge white unit.s that can be s potted from about four miles away. . Meanwhile, the local cops are nabbing speeders by hiding behind busbes and billboards and pointing radar guns at the bot-rodders, tbua nailing offenders witb science. Puzzle ~re"' Times Closes Door ROBE RT BOAZ, traffic safety administration public affairs director. said no civil penallles are inyolved ln the current re· call. But he added that the question of civil penalties in a 1976 recall o r SOOs has "been held in abeyance" pending the·outcome or the agreement signed Wednesday. Sl'ATE 'HELPS' IMIATE l:SCAPE NASHVILLE, TeM. (AP> -A double·amputee inmate walked away rrom the minimum secun- ty section of the TeMessee State Penitentiary, using artificial legs furrushed by the state. THE HAPLESS HIGHWAY Patrol officers have been denied radar. The CHP stilJ uses tbe 1920s method or eas· ing in behind the bad guy on tbe Santa Ana Freeway and clocking his speedometer excesses. LONDON (AP) -The Times or London published the answers to today's crossword puzzle today before suspending publication because or chaotic labor relations. "We left open the question or a civil penalty" in the 1976 case. Boaz said. adding that there is no connection between the two cases. Billy Jack Shelby, 37, servmg a lO·year sentence for second- degree murder. left the prison so metime Tuesday evening. author1lles said Britain's most famous newspaper said today's edition might be the This method sometimes requires patrol vehicles or considerable powerand·speed if the CHP officer is to over· take souped-up coupes or foreign sporty cars that don't s hirt into high gear until they are flirting with 80 miles per hour. Now the word comes out of Sacramento that the CHP may face new handicaps In this arena. They may no Looaer be able to buy those big. powerful Police Interceptor sedans that have kept the freeway peace. THE VILLAIN, according to news ctlspatches. is new federal demands tbat auto makers show better fUll-fleet gas mileage figures. This means building cars with smaller engines and tinier bodies. Thus it is that the California HJghway Patrol is going to start testing s maller patrol cars. You can be certain these little cars will work out just fine during the rush hours on Orange County's freeway. Nobody's going anywhere then anyway. It's the other times, when traffic s lackens and s peeders start playing Willie Weaver out there that the CHP has to fret. You have to hope that the federal demand for im- proved gas mileage doesn't reduce our California HJghway Patrol to peanut power. List.en, some of the tiny Poopalong Fours that they're building now to replace real cars are so small there isn't even anyplace on them for the CHP .to mount red lights. The fire extinguisher and police ractlo will have to be bolt· cd someplace on the outside. CAN'T YOU J UST hear some Highway Patrolman now as he shouts over a loudspeaker at the speeding motorist. "Halt, or I'll wind up my rubberband and come catch you ... " Next thing you know we'll be putting the CHP on horseback. That might be a lltUe tough on the street cleanup crews but It'll do wonders ror gasoline mileage. last for two or three months. The Times Newspapers Ltd. also is suspending publication or the 193-year -old Ti m es' stablemate, the Sunday Times, and three Times weekly supple- ments devoted to books, educa- tion and higher education. THE SHUTDOWN will leave Britain with seven national daily newspapers and six national Sunday papers. But the Howse or Co mmons schedu l ed an emergency debate on tbe shut· down or the nmes papers. "Thel death. or even lengthy silence or any or these papers would diminis h all of the freedoms which we so readily take ror grante d ," a Conservative member, Patrick Cormack, told Commons. Lord Thomson, the president or the publishing company. said there was "absolutely no inten- tion of permanent closure." But the company said it would not reaume publication until solid agreement.S were reached with its 4,250 workers on a package of proposals. CHIEF AMONG THE pro· posals, as far as the publishers are concerned, are new pro- cedures ror handling disputes to prevent wildcat strikes that the Snow Due in Michigan Minnesota Mercury May Dip to Minus 25 Temperat.a AttMny Albu' GU. Atn4rlllO AIMnl• 8•111mor' 81~m•rtll 8ol~ Bo\ ton Butta lo Clllt eqo (tt>Ctrwwtl Cleveland (OIU.,.bu\ 0.1 Ft. Wiii 0.n"9r Oe•Mol-~lrotl Dulutll ~ feirtNlnO Helene Honolulu "°"'Ion lllCl'~ll' Je<h'vll,. 1(4111'' (lty L•• Yeo•• Lll1,.Rou i..t A119tlft 1111 .... 1 Ml,.....,k .. Mt"r,.$1, P, N•allvllle HI L.• Pre •O 11 ~I 30 H 1' •• o .n ., 3) ?~ 17 •• .. 11 0 3/ JI 40 31 JI ... OJ o n 43 37 J'I 34 .. •I ... ,, ... " ~u n .11 •• 17 '° u 8J u •I ~ .04 .. ti u .. n n ~ )I )' •t .... II ,. 3' ,, .. 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Alle11tlc Cfftl ttHI .. r1l11 1"4 4f(ttlt '""" ...... ~...,.., """"'.,. lll•tvO'I ....,.,. ..._,,11...... ... Ctr•ll1111 lllf Otetlll I• Ille .............. In 1111 -1. _,, sutttred ""'" or '"ow •-n octurreo In tll<f Pt<lflc Horlllwest, "orllle rn C•lllornle -Ille nonll -<ffllr•• lnterlftCMllMln reoion A I•• •now llurrnu dotted nor11We&1em Wyoming, Mllitllwttlern Horth Oekol• •ncl 110rl11trn Soutll Oellol•. Cdferral•. A per~;, ,unnv '"'"' over Solltllern Cellloml• 1111• ellClecl wttn • return to <IOlldfrwu . too -tllilltll• cooler ,,,.,,..., .. ..,.,. ·~""' In co.utel MCtklM • Tiie HetloNI W..ltltr Service -dlcteel • 111011 In Ille mld·.Ot lf'I -nl-n lM A119tles, -re the llloh••• ........ ,. EtM""'9f'e. 11111'1• """ tNI Ill llW "'kf..tOI •lonO .. -•· rw•• ,. In I"' lend ¥ellef'\ In Ille tos In -tetn erH' Incl Ill-U to /S HI Ille OIMl'h • «JNa.aw---.. c1 .. r1no betof't ,_ Frleln. LIOl'll ¥erlebte wind\ 1110111 end mornln9 llOln. HltM Friday In "'9 "''°to\. ·' co .. 1e1 t..,,per•tvret w111 ,..,. llelwHn •• •11ct "· lnlend tem· "'"""' •Ill ,.,. .. '-.. -... n .. wet..-''-r•tvr• wm •to. ..., ..... n-. T"YHOAY SK-tow 1:17pm. ·I I S.Cono llllfl •:~p.m, •-* tt•IDA'I' Flnt low , t • • "' 1 1 Flnt "'"' 10·01 •. II\. •.1 Se<tftd '-S:l1 IMll. •I l SKonGlllllft 11:GP."'· 41 SUll rlMS ••<111•111 , "1t 4:44 111.m. Moon rl"9tt:4t • 111., Nb Si» 11 m .,., ... .. HlllllllllMI! 8Nctl! w .... lfW'M ti '°"' '"' Wiii .......... c..llllllM .............. ~.----.. tflrM fttt ..-. ....... 1. CeM!t...,. , .. , . compan,v s ays have cost $7.S million tn sales and advertising revenue this year. The Times has a daily circula- tion or 292,000 and reportedly loses about S2 million a year. FIRFSl"ONE HAS been asked for its comments on the 1976 case a s the first step m a negotiation process tbat pro~ ably will lead to "some civU ALoan For&ery Ask us .. about the Simplifier "I don't know why he left," said Jim Dickman, director or the pnson·s minimum securlt,y section. "He could· get around well on h1s artificial legs. He dido 't use crutches or canes." -· ~111111 · 11111111 -Simple interest rates, calculated daily -Payment terms tailored to yo ur needs and qualifications -No prepayment penalty-the faster you pay us back, the less you pay . THE BANK OF CALIFORNIA Nvwpor1 Bc«h °"'"· 1401 Dow St~. Newpon Bueti 92663, (714) 833-~I t -I I To Slayings SAN YRANClst,'O <AP> f ormer 8'a.J>ervisor Dan Whit hab coofesaed to the murdeni of Mayor Gt<"1r1e Mo cone and Supervisor H rvey Mlllt, "atcordtna to a n1port publi Md today. . The s.n "'ranclJco rorucl reported Ulat police aa d Whilu • •• gMVt uw ti"alont "a complete natemenl," but th newspaper • f(uvc no dctmhi of the purl>Qrwd conl . Ion and dtd not ay wb n It •. was m dt· ~ Polu·e Ch1t"f ('borle Gatn and hom1cld ln1pector frank .,,. F'alwn refused to l'Ommenl oo the ne papc!r r port, and While' :~: UtlOrney could DOI be.• rHChed for l'Omn>ent ·~': • Tilt; l'HRONI L•~ ALSO l't'ported that p0Hct> believe the JlWl mun kllled i:.c>th m\'n by shooting th •m caJmly lwlc• In the back ol the he d w; Utey lay wounded on th noon of their city hall offltes Uumamt.'<l sources closto to the mve UgaUon wer • quoted Ill> ~aytng that powtl.:r burru. amd the •v.o ~Jy djMcent beud wounds an cucb mun 11bowed Ult• hots were fart'<! at extrtm.,Jy close> range An W\DUmed paltre om cual WW. quoted M aying. "Looki. hkt: ht> gu.ve the ~oup de grocc to both of them " WIUTl:, WHO WOULD fact! a mandatory death penalty 1( con· "1Clt!d wlder a specaal statute covenng the murder of public of f1r1als. Ul'J>\!llred in court bnefly Wednesday His arraignment wa1o po1otponed one wee" lo aUow him time to gel an attorney The former supervisor surrendered t-0 police Monday about 35 manute1> after Moscone and Milk were shot to death. lie turned over a 38 caliber revolver which police now say has been matched with bullets recovered from lhf! bodies. A TOTAL OF NINE shots were fired -four at the mayor and five al Milk. police said. The Chronicle said polace beheve both victims were standmg al the lime they were CirsL shot, and that each crumbled wounded to the floor. Then. the newspaper said, it is beheved the killer leaned over the victims and fired the final two shots. CORONER BOYD STEPBENS said that an both cases the vie· tam s were "alive at the time the head wounds were administered," but he would not say if the bead wounds came from the last bullets fired in each of the murder s. P roof that Moscone and Milk were slain an a calculated man- ner would be crucial to a prosecution attempt to show the acts were deliberate and premeditated. · . After White turned himself in, he was brought quickly to the Hall of Justice where police inspectors questioned him for half an hour. Shortly after that. attorney James Purcell a rnved and was closeted with White for another 30 minutes . Fatal Crash Hearings · Thurldey. Nowrnber 30. 1871 CSlJS Cuts ~Must' No Agency Exe""" Brown Says "It's not 'lf: lt'a not 'maybe,' It's not •can't something happen.' it Juat 'Is: There's no argument about tt. The only question is bow can this be accomplished in a tbougbUul way." OAILVALDT AS LONG BEACH (AP> -Stressing that the era or fast.growing govern- ment spending has ended. Gov. Ed· mund G. Brown Jr. warned trustees of the state college and university system that 11' agency would be ex· empt lrom cutting lt.s budaet by 10 But Chancellor Glenn Dumke told percent. the trustees that such cuts would ftetie-Jfaa""" Earlier this mooth, Brown directed cause substantial harm to the CSUC ' ..... all state department heads to identify system. Richard Silberman. five or more Jowe"t priority pro-former banker and grams in their depa rtmeots that "I cannot believe that the 6S per. hamburger tycoon, could be cut for a savings of about 10 cent of the voters of this state who h as bee 0 0 am e d percent. passed Proposition 13 were cuting California director of "Anything that has depended on their votes ·against low-cost higher r· b ,,.._ Ed the historic rate of growth will be education provided so efficienUy by maoce Y uvv. · changed," Brown told trustees or lbe the C'&Ufomia State Uruversily and mu nd Brown Jr. CalifornJa State Universities and Colleges," Dumke said just before Silberman, 49, will ""~ _:C~o~ll~eg~es::..::00:::.....:W~edn==· ~e~sd~a~Y~·~~~~~~~B~r~o~w~n~s~pok..:.:.;.e~·~~~~~~~~~-re~p~l_a_c_e_Ro__;y;.._Be~U-,_6_1_._ UcnJamln Fernand ez, a Republican and n ative or Lo~ Angeles, announced h.is presidential candidacy at a National Press Club news conference Wednesd ay in W a s h i n .g t o n . · D . C . Fernandez, 53:· will vie for the nomination with R ep. Philip Crane, Illinois. : Snowmobiles Ban Proposed FRESNO (AP> -A proposed ban on snowmobiles was praised and criticized at a se<:ond hear- ing on Yosemite National Park's proposed master plan. D.J . Weber of the Sierra Snowmobile C lub said that recreation activity is the only one denied use or the park in the master plan. But Thomas Starr said at a session here that national parks were not designed to provide all urban uses and snowmobiJes are incompatible with most aims of the National Park Service. ~ff~ Jud 1uut ~ Ad!, r(Jl£ a/;md ~ ~ 4/w" C#lJM, ~ tlewprnt !J!Mv. . . . O<»W~ klcalut J ~ w{de, )1~~ . i: i\ ~ I !Jo "l:. ~ ? 1 .... J> Cl ~ ... ~ 'See, Avoi,d' System Rapped ~ ~ wa anda6~1 ff;~~-·· ffeu:.muf~:~ 'W~f Raza / &rrnv at: ~of:- tovf.) . , . ~ ---~· > ~ I .,. r; ! SAN DIEGO <AP> -Observa· lion and rums from a test rught indi cate the crew of PSA Flight 182 probably could not have seen a s mall plane seconds before the two collided Sept. 25 over San Diego, killiog 144 people. a pilots' group s pokesman said. Capt. Roger 0 . Crim, pres1 dent of the Southwest Fh~ht Cr ew Association. wh ich r..epresents PSA crews, said Wednesday that the tests cast doubt on the "see-and-avoid" flying procedures of the Federal Aviation Administd1tion. Crim held a news conference during a marathon 12~-hour session on the third day of Na- lion al Transportation Safety Board hearings into the crash, the deadliest air disaster in U.S. aviation hi story. Bail Alloaeed LOS ANGELES (AP) -A balding computer expert ac- cused of stealing $10.2 million from the nation's 10th largest bank a nd excha nging it for Russian diamonds will be re· leased from jail after his family and friends put up their life sav- ini.ts to pay bis bail of $200,000. U .S . Distr ict Judge Matt Byrne said· Wednesday he would free Stanley Mark Rifkin as soon as he could verify the value of cash. s~curilies and real proper· ty offered as bail. . Rifkin was arrested Nov. 5 1n Carls bad. Calif .• after allegedly c STATE J smuggling the diamonds inlO the United States. Sclu!ttte IJncovered SANTA BARBARA CA P> -A letter alluding to "the painting of the copies" has been fo und in the trunk of a car owned by a museum security office r , Ronald Mousouris. and may link his father, William G. Morez, to the theft of $1 million in paint· ings, police said. The two-page letter was found Monday night s hortly after Mousouris of Santa Barbara was arrested following the theft or three works by Fren ch im- pressionist Claude Monet from the Santa Barbara Museum or Art. police Capt. Gerald Lowry said Wednesday. Se..t~ Enettded SAN QUENTIN CAP) -Con· victed rapist Daniel Caudil)o. who achieved ll level of notone- ty by figuring in the campaign tc oust Chief Justice Rose Bird, has two more prison years to go. The state Community Release Board acted on his case Wednes· day. It gave Caudillo an extra year because me mbers found the crimes for which he was con· Goodness what taste! 8 oz. Medium-Sharp Cheddar Stick. 4 oz. Graptne Cheese. 5 oz Smoked Edam Bar. two 2 oz Cheese Sprnads. a package of Lil' Oval Wafers plus Strawberry BonbOns S691 Ph••Ot _ _..., ............. m send gifts ... Come In end ••lect food gift peka for ChrtatmH. T•k• wtth you Of we'll ahlp. We'll h•ndle •ti the d•t•ll• end even encloH • peraonal greettng. victed, burglary, robbery, kid- napping, rape and other sex crimes, merited the maximum term , plus two extra years for auempting to inflict great bodily injury. ~DerbtJ' Settle• Sult H 0 LL Y W 0 0 0 ( A P > Without admitting g uilt. the ~ . .11 f I t ~ Brown Derby Restaurant has --------------------------------------aereed to pay $3 000 in civil pena lties and $1,632 in legal costs to seWe a suit alleging it represented frozen food as fresh. State officials, who alleged the violations occurred in November 1976, said Wednesday the restaurant had accepted an in- junction in the stipulated jUdg- menl barring it from labeling any food product as fresh if it had undergone any preserving or freezing process. Fen Bfke Vrged SACRAMENTO <AP> -The s tate Tra ns portation Com· mission s ugges t s tbat the gasoline tax and motor vehicle fees could be increased to raise money for highways. The suggestions, which the commission stressed are not re- commend · ms, are in a pre- 1 i min a r y r e port t o the Legislature . The commission plans six meetings by Dec. 13 to get pubUcieactian_toJ~r:L Fashiin Island * * * * estcli Plaza * * * * MAllHll'S YtLUGI D4HAPOIMT 496-2670 ....... ,..,.,.., . .,.., I A w So. Calif. Oldest Carget Co. Since 1879 year end SALE This is our last and best sale of the year! Hurry in today for great values in carpeting, vinyl flooring and draperies to spruce up your home for the holidays! NOW Country Traila: Fabulous color line for a short saxony plush totally installed over heavy carpet cushions. Regular $14.95 s129~Yd. Toto"y 11>1tollcd OW!t heooy poddong Bordeaux: Our favorite 3 ply Saxony with a true decora- tor color line. Redecorate now Regular $17.95 Cn4) 751·"24 Our own line of Drapery Fabrics now on sale for the Holiday Season. All at Designer Solarian by Armstrong with 1he sunny finish that keeps Its shine. Average 9x 12 room for as low as .. All Armstrong floor Care Products in Stock! ... We Were 99 Years Old? Next year we will be 1001 Watch for our Centen- nial Celebration in 1979! ·. A8 C Orange CO.SI D•"•"''"' Editorial Pge ------------------------------------------- The>IMS Keevll /Editor Robcr1 N. Weed/Publisher Thul'ICWj, November 30. 1978 Bdfbafa Kre1bich/Edllor1a1 P-oe Editor 'Mayor' Stretches GoOdwill Policy tll • ~''"'• "''"h·uh ,.1 lh•t th l '"l.a tt•-.1• .,r,• upM•t ht·\ .. tu ... ,· '' "111 be• '""''"''' ~h\tt '"' trctfth· :H.:1u1l ur in 't..all,'\t .lt Utt· "''''' '"'''"'" t'( ltt•iu ~tn"·t und Paut11rlno \\ \'llUi.' Uut .tt h-.1 .. t th,• 1w'"""'' J''''Jt'('' hu:-bt•t•n approvt'Ci. lh'-..itk~ llh' r ,,,.t th.tt thH\S::-''"''" mo',~ :-lo wly ~11 <'Hy llall. l'\t'n \\1th j ltl~> prl\>rU~ 1tt•m hll.t• th\• :-1~0111. Coun l'ilwom;m ~urmu ttt-11n: httll t't>mnwnt thnt b,•nr r .,. JH'Uling Sht• po1nWd out tht> in.._t,tllation of tht' :,lt:nttl will by no m ean." e limmattt htuurds for x.QUn.: llt'Olll\• who nttt.>nd Bear Street &·hoot. , A case in point happened ufter u loudly demand~ !>1gnal \\as installed near Estanda High School. Six traf f 1c accidents followed in a short period. P arents must continue to tell their children to be c.:a reful \\hen c rossing the busy Bear/Paularino intersec· lion. even a fter the signal arrives. Re-hearing Fair Ad milling lo a "horrible job" in past public hearings. Costa Mesa Mayor Ed McFarland h as asked the City Council to hold a third hearing on a proposed disco club in the Harbor Shopping Center. Although the pla n is stron gly opposed by s ome res i· dents or College Park, the hearin g <Dec. 4 at council chambers> is a correct move. Past council votes. both n egative, were backed with little information. The decisions seemed more of a mora l judgment than practical rulings on factors such as poten- tial traffic noise or congestion. A rusco may or may not be appropriate at that loca- tion. If it's not the propone nts should at least hear some :,ound ·r easons why. The a dded hearing shows that the co uncil can admit to past mistakes and try to clear the air. • Opinions expressed In the space above are those of the Oally Pilot. Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and artists Reader comment 1s invited. Address The Daily Pilot. P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642·4321. Boyd/Tricky By L.M. BOYD T he casinos or the Las Vegas Hilton h ave 60 cameras in their ceilings. Each 1s swivelled and hidden by a plastic pod. Each is con· trolled by a remote switch in a m onitoring room. The watcher there knows all the tricks. all the sleight or hand gimmicks, all the manipula- tions with cards and dice ex· ecuted by the swift cheaters. H ave you ever mixed grenadine with rum and lime juice to make a Bacardi? Neither have I. Merely put {orth the rhetorical q ue ry ~reliminary lo report that grenadine is pomegr a nate syruf), that's what. Q. "llow much money do the lop spcechwriters get for p~ttlng t.o~cther, say, a 20- minute talk?" A. Understand $1 ,800 is about tops for something of the sort Q . ·'Somebody from England Is English. From France, French. But what do you call somebody from Monaco?'' A. Monegasque Q. "Anybody ever m ake a fortune helling on the horses?" I\. Quite a many. Ever hear of George Smith? Or m aybe you remember him by his allH, PitUburgh PhJl. Chtlm ls he won $1.7 million Dear Gloon1y Gus playing the ponies. Now go tell your dad what I've told you a nd see if he'll lend you a stake. T he people who die of bee stings outnumber the people who die or shark bites by 10 to one. If you want to swat a fly, s trike just a little behind it. Flies take off backwards. Question arises as lo why the derringer pistol is so spelled when the inventor or same spelled his name Henry Deringer Jr. with only one "r " in Deringer. Imitators put similar pistols on the market immediate ly, a nd one of these tossed in the ex· tra "r," on the theory, I pre· s ume, that no copy editors would be buying the guns, a nyhow. Don't believe this kind of trickery could get through the courts these days, but it was com · monplace years ago. • Whe n the coffee cartel jacked up its prices a few years ago, It may not have been so smart after all. Sales o f tea p e r capita h ave jumped 2IO percent in the last decade. Odd, isn't il, that extreme· ly fat youngsters generally score an average of nine Point.a higher on I .Q. tests than do the slimmer kids? It'• getUng downright ridlculoua when one ha• to drive to thr ee diflerent'poetorflceaon a Saturday at\emoon for sta mps. S.W.8 . ~==110!~.I ~--· J 'ICt.; ... ....... -. .... ff Nicbolu von Hoffnl811 Inflation SpellS Profit to Some In rubllc lirtt, nothing Is l'\'er aa almplu a It 1 ima. so that the •PP•l't'nt n'1Uonal unanimity aln.1t lnflutlon bcun a second k>oll. I• tv•rybody really that much a1aln1t u or ore some people luat aolng · hrout(h lhl' m otlo n it b\• l' A Ul t' lhl' mou media and lht" MK"lety '11 p~ 1t la~ flicun·• .,,.~nd 10 much f'Mtal)' In vtlth lna •a•lnat It ~ Aflf'r months ol tuls\' isllu•ts. ont•c• the• pre.td<'nt indk ated h•• mt.:hl t~ st-MOWll ubout cutlln~ lhl• .iro"1h ralf 1n thl' money, that h.-m1aht r<'ttlly ht• fhrtinK ""h ttn ('f\{I to 111011tlon. t~ri• "all u ck•rlcted ttrumpinesi. In l'NllUO CIUBr1l'l"'l4 IN 0111Ell momt•ntl' in our hl!llMy. publlr llgurc11 have been uvowt'd and sincere-lnflatlonlst..<i. tlf'rbflr1 Hoovt•r wus. to namt• ont•. but while thl11 lsn 't lht' year tel ad\'ocntc lnn ation, l'ome puo ..... ~ .. > Mailbox pie like ~rae Meany do com· bin(' u pro rorma opposllion to rising price lcv~h; with u rorwual to bat'k Uw Rovernment policies moiJt llkely to flatten the J(rowth curves. Even th<• electorate ii; more ambiguous on lhc subject than we aro led to bellrve. Those s o<'lal l<'8 leaf rnadtirs, the p ublic opinion pollslcris. tell us th:U "lnfl oUon I~ the number one ls"u" In this country." but it may uls o bo <e very tepid numbt'r on" lf people w re truly and deeply concerned. would two th•~ or the rluhon· voters htlv<' lit{lyed owny from the poll ing ploccs lust Election Oaay ·• No. whall• p('()f)lt• nre doulJUesi. \\Orrled, many m111ions Of U5 Ob· v1ously un•n'l worrwd enoul(h to tukl' l'Vl'll th<' rnlntmal Slt:P Of stumbhn1: uround the corner to pull u ll·vt·r In u pollmR place. OUR monochrotnul1c musi. nll'dln l'hnnts lhot 1nflat1on hurt~ II~ till. but II lot or Ult know darn wl'll It hurti; sorm· ur u:-. more thnn otht>r!l. Inflation hurls t'rcditors und helps debtors Thl• Kt'nt•r11I knowl1-<lt.:f• ur lh1s :.el!· ... vldenl fact explains much or thl' force bt!blnd the continuing real estate boom. You don't hav~ to be ll double· dome master of businesa ad- ministration with a Coke bottle eye glass to know that one ol the .iood things in life is to borrow IOO·cent do llars o n a house mortgage nnd pay the loan back with 33·cent dollars. The nice peopte In Washington who print all that money have given you two.thirds of your house and garden for Cree. The tens of millions who own real estJtte 1n the expect ation that innatlon will be kind to them are theoretically counter- ba I a nced by other m illions. especially older peoplt who ln•e on fixed mcomes. But. writes Christopher J enks:' professor of sociology al llarvurd. "Social Security is now adjusted a lmo&t <'ve ry yeur to keep pace with in· nation." EVEN THOUGH private pensions have not done equally well. the per-capita income of individuals 65 and over rose 76 percent· betw~n 1970 and 1976 while the per-capita income or lnd lvlduah; agc.-d 14 to 64 rose on. ly SJ percent. Sinct> the Consume r Price Index went up 47 percent during these yean. Individuals 14 to 64 ended up with about the sam purchasing power in 1976 H in Uno. while individuals 65 and ovc•r Increased their purchasing Power by 8 fifth <For m()rc. 11ee Jenks' "Why Worry About lnfla. Uon? .. in the Sept. -OcL issue of Working Papers.) In sum, a whole big bunch o' people have either advanced their standard of living or stayed about -:qual during the wor11t of lhe tnllaUonary years. ·A lot of them may be worried that. if inflation continues. the future won't work out as well a.<; the past. and. assuredly. one or the great ob1ect1ons to innation Is the extra e lement of uncer· tainty it brings lo already uncer· taln human existence. Thus, e ven people who profit are Wl· nerved by It. BUT HOW are the self-same people going to react as it dawns on them that they may be the ones who pay the price for end· mg inflation or at least taking it orr the backs of lende rs. tht.· class that has paid the highest price for the lowering dollar? In California, we now have the variable-interest-rate mortgage, in actuality a mortgage with to· terest paymenu which nucluat.e according to the ebb and now of innauon. In • lot of states that kind of mortgage would bump into the us ury laws, the moraliStic name ror price con· trot over fn(){ley. and a lready we're hearing from lenders that, unless these laws are repealed. they·re not going to make mortgages. The tussle which will ensue - unless national interest rates dive downward -will be a dis· guis ed fight between defla- t1onists and lnflationists . The same kind of fight is likely to break out In other sectors or tht• economy as va rious groups and 1nd1 v 1dua ls learn it ain 't necessarily so. that while infla· tfon is like the rain in that it falls on a ll of us, it is also like the rain in that it lloods some gardens while il makes others bloom. Another View of 'Workiilg Mom' Scene To the Editor : Are we expected to sym- pathize with your staff member, Anne Cooper, because she has found "it's work being a mom"? Was she under the impression that she gave birth to a little doll who would sit placidly and need no attention unless mother had the time to s pare rrom her other career? Perhaps, if she had taken lime to read the "trivia" that her daughter brings home from school, she would have not ed the scheduled conference day holidays and planned ahead. S he wonders why teachers can't manage to talk to parents without shutting down schools, as in her school days. Because of the unavailability of time that parents have to give to ·their children's school these days. the teachers have been forced to try scheduUng the working parent at a convenient time. Whal is con venient to the working parent? Sometime a fter 5 ot course. Should the teacher have to put in a full day of school and conference on lnto the evening? County Airport may wish to know more about this airplane and how it may a ffect our uniquely attractive environment. The 8·727·200 tri-jel airplane is the noisiest jet airplane In mass production. exceeded only by lhe B-747 a nd the defunct CV ·880. Even with power cut- back. the B-727 noise is 100 db. EPNL, EPNDB at 3.5 nautical miles rrom takeoff. The B-737. by contrast, Is 94db <half as noisy I and the DC·9 is 97 db. YOU CAN measure noise yourself without instruments by s imply talk.Ing In a conversa· tional voice to a friend at a dis· tance or 10 feet while a jet airplane is flying overhead. If the 'ftiend can not hear you, the noise is too loud. The 8 ·727·200 weighs 191 ,000 lbs. mes fJOO miles per hour. and carries 134·189 pass<?ngers. The ones propo_,ed for Orange Coun· ty have been modified tor a s nap·ln extended range fuel tank a llowing them lo fly nonstop to New York, Washington, and Hawaii. District franUcaUy spends the money they have left over. It ls this kind or purely w asteful s pending that must stop. SUSAN M. HALEY To the Editor: With saddened heart I am writing to the local newspaper about the demise or yet a nother "neighborhood" school, Viclon a Elementary in Costa Mesa. due to the .. declining enrollment .. of the Newport·Mesa Unified School District. What saddens me is' the fact th at the three schools the Victoria students will be sent to a re lower in seholastic standing than Vi ctoria. The school board is using the basis that the good students <from Victoria 1 will h e lp raise the schol astic st anding or the other three schools. when 1n eHe cl the opposite will prove true. The students from Victoria will have los t their incentive to Improve themselves due to the loss or the special academic atmosphere ot Victoria School. A conference day has been created so that the teacher may contact as many pare rt1s as PoHible wilbin a short per od or lime, giving the working parent more flexibility in choosing their lime for conference. T he air Intake tor the center engine on the 727 is close to the body or the airplane. Durinit AS A TAXPAY E R. I am landing It must be run at high saddened to learn thut my so.n Power to prevent it from dying ...... can no longer ~alk to school: a nd the airplane from crashing. ~ but must be dnven every day JOHN SWI NBANK due to .the location of the three Bulll·in Wa~t~ INSTEAD OF the · Pilot publishing yet another article on the poor overtaxe d-working mother, why don't you look, into To the Editor: how m a ny first and second T he California Taxpayers' As- graders wear keys around their sodation reports that the real necks to school and go home to impact or Proposition 13 ts two empty houses to wait UH their years away. In the first nscal parent& come home? Why don't ye ar of 1978-79. Calalornia's 58 you take a survey and find how counties and 416 cities will many 9, 10 and ll·year-olds are manage fairly well due to the expected to go home and take dJstribullon of $4 bllllon from the care of their s ibling 6-and·7· state surplus. year-olds? J have s poken to tl Is sald that reserves will not teachen in tears after these con· be available In two years. The ferencea at the indifference of state will have no more than $2.6 parents who feel that their billion In available funds lo children are "mature enough" offset a projected shortfaH of $9 to handle life until they wander billion In local revenues. home frorn work. <Of cour1e. the nel1hbor Is always available to THE SOLU110N to this dllcm- "look in on them.") ma is not in raising taxes. Waste J •t tt ti q ill ti and unnecessary spending should th:ntedlo=. wr~p~Ut~~~n u~~ be cut. Efrtolencr In 1overnmcnt challenging H pectll or parent· s hould be a goa of federal and hood. and atart empha•lzln& the 1tateofficials. I of h I to be 'bl A1 an example, I cite the Po~~mec!: :_Idea o":..~~!a? e Newport·Meaa Unitled School SHIRLEY SHEPPARD Dl1trltl. ll Is elven a certain amount or money for each fl11cal n1 Nele.;;:e;..._ _____ __.YMe""a,....r. If the 1chool di1trlct does ptAd all Uae funda it.. Jw To the F.ditor: been allotted. then ll recclv~ c1u .... ~ about the a.a fundl the next 1ear fiscal propoHI to fly B-727-200 Jel )'eU , So, at tM end ot lbe "u" alrplaaM in and out of Oranac Newport-MeH Unified School • schools available in the area ror him to attE·nd. From my house, now my six-year-old son can walk to school in less than five minutes with no dange r of crossing one single busy street. As a college-educated adult. I am saddened to learn that a pToved method or t eachinit 1small claSMS with dedicated p e rsonne l a nd pare nt Involvement 1n the learning process I wi ll he rlropped by the ways ide in the favor of saving the tax dollar Ho be 1t pe nt eventually on bU8ing and special classes to enable our aludcnts to p ass the m a nd atory examinations to graduate from high school L What happens In 10 years or less when these kids who had such an excellent ~tart ca n 't p ass r eq uir e d examinations? Who is to be blamed? As a peishnlst . I realize that the school board wlll not change lti;i collecllve mind und re ·OJX'n the ~chool : even though 1t make~ more sense to me to close o school low ln scholastic landing ~ ttudents to • · school wJth higher schola1lic a bilities (Such 11 Vlctorfa Elementary) and ratae the scholastic standing of all the students. P e rhaps when it's time to e l e ct new Sc h ool Boa r d mem bers. we the voters should ·be more awa r e o f th e candidates' feelings towards the education our children will receive in the Newport-Mesa Unified School District. MRS. PAT METCALF "-rtPell•loO. To the Editor: I was pleased to see that at least one of our local news media look Supervisor Riley LO task ror his proud pronounce· menl that he was going lo use his ·'obvious PoPUlarity to help Re publican candidates in other orrtces In future elections." Si n ce Riley holds a non- partisan office at the highest level of local government, I find it deplorable that he is even con- lemplatang using this ofrice for p romoting partisan Politics - and let's race it. that's exactly wha t would be happening. Tom Riley was an absolute unknown until Governor Reagan appoint· ed him as Supervisor Caspers' replacement. Any popularity Riley enjoys now is due in large measure to the exposure he has received as a county supervisor and obviously any influence he may have on partUan Politics is due to his non-partisan elected Po&itlon in county government. Any supervisor who even at· tempts to tum the office or coun- ty s upervisor Into a partisan football should spend some lime reflecting on the fact that a supervisor mu,.,t, without bias fi nd prejudJce. fairly represent a ll of his constituents regardless of their political affiliation. Is Tom Riiey so naive as to think that his commitment to the Re publican Pa rty t o ai;sist Republlcun candidates, will al· low him to perform hi• awesome lask -a tu k that is difficult eve n without the complication of prcuurea rrom your polltlcal party? SHIRLEY L. GRINDLE Form er Chairm a n , Oran1e County Plannlnl Commissloo • l.t1U~11 /rom rcadeTI ore llltltomt. The nght to t'ondenit letttrs to /it IJXJCC or thmmott llbtl u reet'f'Uftt. uuer1 of 300 word$ or~" wW be R'llft prtJttft!Ct, All letttrl mUlf Pl· cludf ftfM'ttrt and~' CM "41MI "'411 be .tUiWwld_ Gii IC· qwd •J nfJlcWnt rfG.tOfl .. appatfftC. PWf "JI wtU aot tJ. pubffWd. MORE OPINION ThunicMy,NoY9nlber30, 1978 * DAILY PILOT A 7 Nick Thimmesch U.S. Testimonials for Jones Deceived Guyanese -·-. ---- W ASmNGTON -The Co-Th mo1t cdebrated waa that Operative RepubUc of Guyana. from Ronlynn Cart.or. whom unde rpopulated and rlte wtth Jonea dined privately with economic problems, was al•d to bf'forl' tbt 1978 elecllon. lute land to lhe ltcv Jlm Jonero althou.ch Mn . Carter now down· and bl• P"°pte·s Temple cult. arades that event to a "anaclJ " Unsophisticated as lhis poor na tlon la. it had no rcuson to hU' ll EV. 'ON£ vi ailed Cuba peel what Jones wu capablt' of .1ft«'r the elttl on. described hls Arter all. from th'• time he ar hopt's for brHkin1 down the rlv<-d io 1974 throuah the penod burn"" betw~n Cuba and lht ht 1977 when LI S • and cx_prcSHd tus 1upport preH rcporu for ·a new moral tone" Jimmy ln the U S Carter ~llV<' the country. Mn raised tough <.'Mtt·r wrote that aht-enjoyed qu estions bt.•1na ~•th Jones durina the tibo~ brutali· t•ompa1l{tl. Md was hopeful b!ll . t y and ex tdt>a~ on CubM rould be acted on plol tut1on . l\ut th1R wus mlJd compared J onn pro· with what V1t'C Pre:11ident. Mon. v 1 d e d a d4 h•. II E w Secretary Jollepb steady flow ol A Califano and other prominent pralserul en pubh<' figures are reported to dOrsement.s trom uuaucnt.Jtll ac hJve ~ntten UvistsandpolJUcal figures Aeeording to the Guyanan ------- 1ovtirnment, Mondole aald ht wus J:rcut.J y 10J1111rcd by the work of Jonea · c·hurch. Califano saw JonH us u cnnmp1on or human dqcnlty a nd u prot ecter ot tr edom. Sen. Mike Gruvel fD- Alaaka) t.houaht his church wu ·•almost too iood to bt: true". and Don Edwards led a pack of con1res. per110na <Philip Burton. Ron Dellum•. et al) lD praise - ·'I only w111h there were more like the Pt'<>Ple of People's Tem· pie Chr1sUan Church." OH, HOW th 11e pols must now w111h they h-0d never opened tht-1r roO\lths Such ironaes Joe Johnson, once deputy mayor of Stln Frunctsco. told bow 1f It wasn't tor Jones. the S F police defartment would have to be en arged to cope with street youths now happily dispatched to the G uyanan mlss 1on Mayor Rtchurd G. Hatcher or Gary. Ind . took special note or how Jones helped the elderly und provided health care for the poor. Mrs Ca rter. Mo nd ale, Califano -a)I were trapped by never ending d emands for teslimonia18 on behalf or a re- puted do-gooder (Jones). well - wired poll Uc ally. and c;.pable of delivering bjg, cheering crowds Uor media) and ultimately. votes. Their folly ls under· .stand able. • But what to say of those ac· tivists and politicians who wrote -.bristling letters of support for Rev. Jones after the pre~11. had char ged that be was beating church members. boarding their money and abusing the elderly? Thi s criticism m ounted in msd-1977. and a picture of Jones as a maniacal demagogue began the "sensational journalism " to emerge. Lt. Gov Mervyn M. DymaJly lauded Jones, as did the San SUDDENLY, Guyana's prime Francisco NAACP and the minister. Forbes Burnham, was J apanese Youth councal, and deluged with letters, mostly other uplift groups. from San Francllco, claiming Prime Minister Burnham has that Rev. Jones was bein« scores of letters from these Im· smeared. Curiously, nearly all portant Americans, and hun· the letters were dated August 2, dreds from ordinary rotk -all 1977. worshipful of the charismatic ~~liforn ia Assemblymen Rev. Jones. So the disturbing Will!~ _L .. B~own J r. denoun~ed , press stories didn't sway him to the viJldjcttveness . . . racasm investigating J ones. . . . and othe r d espicable motives" in the press criticism GUYANA'S socialist economy or Jones. Enola Maxwell of is a failure. A "brain drain" crip- Porter Hill Neighborhood House pied management, and far more likened the persecution or J'esus people wanted out than in. So Christ and Dr. M811in Luther Burnham welcomed any &i>OOPles King to what Jones waa going wanting to settle, particularly through. idealistic relil,ious groups. A labor union official sc0red Now regrets hang out aJ1 over "cynical news write rs," and the place. This tragedy further another liberal activist deplored afnicts the sad nation, Guyana. a Holiday savings are happening now at ~'?Y Com~ny · · ... Just in time for Christmas g1v1ng · Potvester blouses Solid color crepe de chine In go-with-all colors. Sizes 6-16. blouses 418 Nordlcwor~ electric wok Heavy aluminum. non-stick cooking surface. 6-qt capacity. Includes steam troy. tempura rock. heat control to 425 degrees. Table server.· housewares 74 reg. 39.9¢ 34. 99 were 52~28 r or a lroo cepv of Iha moNtocturer's warranty. '""''e lo Mov Comoonv. PO BoK 5045. Los Angelos. CA QOO!)S FASHION 4-day junior raincoat sale Sove 25%.Nov. 30th thru Dec. 3rd. Junior petite 3-11. 5-13. reg. $72 51.99 iunior coots 24 Wool/nylon flannel blend pants Propor· tloned petite/overage 8-18 dark tones. Many styles. were $34 25.99 misses' separates 101 Long sleeve tuxedo shirts Misses· sizes 8-16 1n care-free polyester. White or beige. reg. $23-$28 15.99-1 8.99 blouses3Q t Wool/nylon blend misses' skirts Tremen- dous selection of plaid and solid colOf s. 8-18. were $26-$36 16.99-23.99 misses' separates l01 Bonded coron oxford car coafS Acrylic pile collar /hning. nylOn Quilt lined sleeves. 8-18. were $70 49.99 women's coots 426 Cotton poplin car coats Snap-off acrylic plle lined hood. nning. Elastic waist. camel. 6-16. were S65 39.99 misses' coots 426 Cotton.rayon suede ca r coats Nylon pile collars. Quilt hning. side zippers. 8-18. were $70 ' 49.99 misses· coots 426 ,. LINGERIE CO'ZV grannv gowns, pj's Worm cotton flannelette fOf chilly evenings. Prints. S-M-L c omp. vol. $16-$18 11 99 lingef1e 504 Nylon wraps and floats Many in our col- lection from • Vanity Fair. Sizes P-S-M-l . were$19-S26 13.99-16.99 fingerie 448 Nylon trlcot long gowns Sove 30%. Boudoir shades with lace trim and nylOn satin piping. 5-13. comp. val. $13 8.99 Unger1e 132 "'\ Full figure bras Underwire and soft ct.JP styles In white only. B. C. D. special 3.99 Unger1e 44 Nylon satin tailored briefs Bikini styles also with lace f rim. cotton ponels White. colors. 5-7. 2.75eo. or 3 for6.99 lingerie 28 LADIES' SHOES "Temporole" by Fomolore Leather u~ per wiTh High Therefl Cretan® sole. Woven detailing., reg. $42 29.99 women's shOes 457 Suede leather sandal Polyester molded . wedge. cushioned insole. Ankle strop styl- ing. special purchase 18.99 women·s shOes Q "Raisin" by Fomolore® Tops in comfort' with Get There® Cretorf' sole. Woven de- tailing. reg. $42 29.99 women's shoes 457 MEN'S & BOYS' Save 40~: long sleeve dress shirts Great fit for every man In pclyester and cotton blends. comp. val. S19 10.99 men·s furrishings 6 Boys' Quilted nylon Acrylic/polyester plle lined. sleeve hning.,_8-20 reg. $45 boys' CIOthiOQ 14 Jackets acetate 29.99 "Ole" genuine leather boot Features a Save 25~ on men's ski jackets 100% mid-heel and zipper. Soft and supple In this nylon with polyester Inter-lining. SJzes S-XL season's colors. reg. S50 39.99 or 38~. reg. $35 24.99 women's shOes 112 men·s outerweor 116 "Lynee" by Footworks The dress-up Selection Of men's jackets Large ossort- fovorlte with mid-heel. Shng style 1n ment of short and rancher styles. 38-46. leather. reg. $31 24.99 reg $35-$55 24.99-39.99 women's shOes 431 . men's outerwear 116 \ " t-• ... • .-. •••• -• • .. .. • • • .. • • • .. • • ............................. ·: • • .. • .. • • • • • • • • .. • .. ............. ~ ............ .._ .................... . HOME save 55~ on fine chino Four popular Songo "Four Crown" patterns in 65-pc sets. open stock vol. $350 set 149.99 chino 46 50-pc. "Cherie" Oned~ stainless Get 8-eo.: dinner and salad forks. soup spcons. knives. 16 teospcons. 2 tablespoons plus o bonus of 8 Ice tea spcons (S20 value). comparative value 79.99 59.99 housewares 156 7-pc. monkey pod wOOd salad set In- cludes large salad bowl. 4 Individual bowls. 2 servers. From the Phillipines. 24.99 housewares 2Q "Country HouSe" tea kettles by Krischer 2 and 3-qt. In white porcelain enamel on steel with colorful decorations 15.99-18.99 housewares 151 10 -pc. Lecreuset cost iron cookset Enamel finish. Get 3!., l'h-qt. cov. sauce- pans. 2. 4V2-qt. cov. dutch ovens. 1;· 9'h" open fry pons. op. stk. val. 154.70 set 89.99 housewares 135 Mikasa full lead crystal stemware "Wim· bledon:· "Belvedere:· "Coronation" pot - terns. 4 sizes. You choice reg. 8.95 eo. 6.95 glassware 126 . .... ' . ..... ··--· .................... ······ ........................................ . ................................................................. I I ' J, 1 j . ' t DAILY PILOT Thurtdlly. NcMnmf '°· 117' It's Not AU Frivolity Ent rtaining in W a ltington a rious Art WASHINGTON (AP) There's morf' lo c>nter lainan11 l.n Wastunaton than b•Vllll a llood time At partJ , f\ltur m<'ellno ~tw n dapl<>m»ta ar~ arrang('(f Stran.c~u who w\11 m l aaatn and aaatn rht-ek each oth rout Important lnform1tUon 111 pa" ed on Somellmes an exch111n1t •l a ru•rt)' run d ft>et the ('()UJ"St.' of world events "THE STEaNE. T P URPOSE l.VRK8 und<1r the highest frivolity... intone · hi torl•n Arthur Schle11lng~r Jr ln hill lntr'OOucuon to thr newlv publlahl'd book, "t;nlc>rt11inan1 in Wash1nicton," written by Lucy Moorhead Allhoot:h Mn1 Moorhl'Ad. w1f of ()(>mocr11t1r Rl'p Williom Moorhf'ad of Pt>,nns l\'ania. c11lh1 t•n l<'rtulnul,ll m lht> notaon 'ii upllaJ "• ~ritnmcant and useful ~nh•rprnst'." lht• promam•nt Washangtonum~ s hl' lntcrvitwt'<I :thun tht> labC'I "hostess " ..... w ....... WRITES BOOK Lucy Moorhead I "NOWJJdtty W\)tnt>n ' want 10 ho involved rn i.erioub ttuna~. and for 11 lonl( llmt'. mlll'h 1•11ll•r ta1n1ng an Wabhsngton was a mearunglesl> t-x t>rc1 e . g1v1ng u frivolous connotatwn to being called a hO!otebi.. · :.a ys Mrs Moorhead. who has given hundreds of parties during her 20 years in Washjngton - but wants to be known as a writer. Entertaining Is an art, however, and Mrs. Moorhead's friends who have been around of. flcial Washington long enough to know what wlll s ucceed. have s hared their party secrets from s tate dinners at the Wflite House to fox hunt breakfasts. Evangeline Bruce, a writer and the widow Ambassador David Bruce, s uggests inviting a varied rrux or guests . .. DIFFERENT GROUPS LOVE gaping at one another:· she says. "Mix ages, have several beautiful women. cultura l lumina ries, writers, painters. sl<1ge and screen s tars." LORRAINE COOPER. WIFE OF J ohn Sherman Cooper. former ambassador lo India a nd F.al>l Rerhn. advises hostesses who want lo ha .. ·e an outdoor party t.o_ check with 1he Faan.ei:.'s Almanac ror the weather forecast. Ti> avoid seating crises in case of last minute dro11·outs or arrivals -a familiar Washington l>Ynd rome Mrs. Cooper keeps a small table for two or three so place cards can be reshuffled. And sh(' never seals husbands and wives together, because "they all make much more of an effort 1f separated " Mit·hacl Edwards, an "inte rnationa l bactll'lor.'' warns against having "lemon couplei.·• Plan 'Backfires' WASHINGTON iAP> -Federal officials say s mugglers who brought one ton or hashish into the country 1n crates' marked "dinnerware" planned to s ubstitute the drug for real dinnerware prior to the Customs inspection. Out the five men were caught while swapping the hashish near Dulles lnlemational Airport and charged with conspiracy to import hashish. which as a concentrated form of marijuana. ttron 1Jorh1a: hu11batnd t1 and wivea he aaya can b(S "ltw dt>nth ot 1.1 purty " MRS. AVt:REl,L UARRIMAN STRESSES the 1mporl1tncc ot tht• loc1.tllon of th · bit, because lhat llJ inl•Vltably wlwrll IX!Ople conareg1Ue. M ~ Ihm lmun ulAO note11, "There is power In llll' 1m11orumro ot pulling J>OOl>le together. It you ii1•l tht' r11<hl 1x·oplt.' together you should be able to ll'l I ht• (•vcrirnu uJone . the conv.ersation runs ltht•tf .. • Author su,.un Mory Alliop a~ds up the de· purl u 1 t• of hn.:1•rinu ((llt'Sli. by ju11t getting "quieter und c1ulc•h'r Ami I stop offe ring drinks " !<'or wt•c•kt•nd houiie parties, Polly Fritch\!y, whoiw bu:tbund, ('laylon, is a columnist; says UUC'l'il. ahould .ilway11 be informed about s uch th1ng11 uis whut t<> bring to wear apd when brcukfu11t 1~ iwrv,t:d MKK t'RITn .. :v ALSO llAS SOME advice fiir weekend l(ucsls "Don't steal the Sunday pupt·r." aml. · No mutter how much you might be u1 ~ed . don't i.tJY on fo r Sunday nlgbl supper. Mrs Moorhead herself likes to give dance part1t's with ~ood. continuous dance music She ulso l>lrl'Sl>l'l> how important it is to greet guests '.\-Urmly "Gucsb who feel wanted begin to come alive. lo sparklt>," s~c l>UY:i Mn. Moorhead advises hostesses not to try too hard or worry. about perfection. The perfect guest. how(•ver, !)hould make an effort, especially by show1n~ interest 1n his or her dinner partner. ·'There are a lot of people in Was hington who ran talk," sayR Mrs. Moorhead. "But not enough guests who w1ll lislcn ... 111" \ ,·,11 ).:l\l' your fJn11ly the pcrk1.:1 gill. Mo f>nh .11 c l'l1IOYl'<l by everyone · young or old. ~.1k .int.I c<.onomicJI ( 150 M.P.G.). Pr .1t.1 1<.JI l1Jn,portJt1on Jntl lot~ of fun. ~ lcimpll'lc Sill l S, SL RV/CL Jnd RtN T ALS \\1th .1 l,11~c ,clc<.tion to choo~c lrom MOTOBECAN[, BATAVUS, CIMATTI. Now at MaPed City in Newport leach. Financmg Ava1tabl& 2906 West Coast Hwy.• (71 4) 642-8870 11·~ a good night to bring the family t11 our hous(! .. old·fal:ih1011cd, rclaxt!d and cozy. Enjoy all the !>UCculL·nt roa~t bt'd you can eat. Plus soup and salad, our famous f ricd chicken, garden vegetables. mashed potatoes and gravy, hut corn bread and honey butter. Only $1.95 for adults, and cVt!n less for small chUdren. Cocktails and wine optional. VISA and Mast<.'r Chargt! welcome. Dinner: Mon .• Thun. 5-9, Fri. 5-10, Sat. 4· l O, Sun. l 2-9. 11w 81.c Yellow Routte in Coeta Meaa 11 open for lunch Monday throu1h Friday, 11:30.2:00 p.m. The Big Yellow House 1639 East Im rial Highway, Brea • 3010 Harbor Blvd .• Costa Mesa Save on Panatella Silhouette Slack1 in easy care texturized polyester fa bric they come in a11orted fall colon. Waist sizes 29-42. $} 399 Rer $20.00 NOW ONLY (1ood for 10 days only, so hurry!) ,,LEVfS·~~ Clauic Wild Weat aweater .. vin11. Our crew neck. poly/ wool 1h etland blend in heather, colors of: srey, navy, Lt. blue. beire and brown. S.M.LXL. Rer $18.00 NOW$}499 Alao, Civona V-neck aweatera available in: black, brown. camel, navy and blue. S.M.LXL. Rer. $16.00 NOW$}249 ( the1e price• rood for 10 daya only. 10 hurry!) NATION We've ()t JV()re f()r Juat in time for holiday partie1. Save on Satin jeana in a11orted atylea & colora. Sizea 5-13. Reg $23.00-$25.00 NOWONLY$}499 Faahion at a peat price ... aavinr• on fine gauce sweaters from a favorite maker. aweatera Rq $24.00-$26.00 NOW $}599 to '$}699 PartySav~ a, satit). jeaQS ~ SAltTft ftrtfl J4JO Jo Otl11ol Ave The Cornef Of Ofi/IOI And ffioc Arthur 714-Q.57·el00 CERRITOS/ ARTESIA leOOO Cficleiv J T 116·Qiil.·660J Aoo/1 ftOm Aobr\fOll/ WESTMlnSTER rtORTHRIDGE \54U Opldttl Wwt Jt 19J20 Nordhoff Jt. Next To Odden.~ Cotieqe UJ·QQJ·JOQ7 JOOOE.foolhll (7l4)8Qe·~ /lmolt FfOl'll Horttwldqe Ploie llJ•.W·lbQl lllflllGlQll IEAQI Tempe G No!dholt ~-Comer---1...i:°'1.&1~.......,_~~~~~ PASADEnft MRnoe. '°' ~ c.r---10111 Adol'N Ave. !TORE HOUR/ DAILY lO·Q JO Comw...otlt~lt ~ ' ' (714) 964·3323 JAT 10·7 00. JUN TO·O 00 .. ·-· ................................................................... ·······~· .. • • . ~ .... '1 NATION DAil. y Al.OT A• '4-A-Night~ 'An An~wer to Halloween THEFAMILYW'Ucus By RUGH A. MUWGAN Al'--lelCM""11 I I RIDGEFIELD. Conn. -Mallboxea cruahed, uprootff, t.brown down rav n Flow•r pou l mubed. Porch fUmiture carried off Ot.ceniUet lcrawlld on feocet and parlted <'&rs '1(1\h ahavlfta foam ud, worM, apray paint. In New £.nclMd this annual orsy ol mlndl dett.nldlon l• known as Mischief Nlcbt. Jn New J~ney and part.a ot Pcn~lvanla lt la called, for reaaou anknown lo me1, Cabbqe Nt1hl Acrou lhe land lhere ar~ other nam for lhl nltbl ol barbarity. IT HAPPENS EV'tltY OM'. 31, the.('vt of All H1Uow1 Eve. lht-m&ht bf>forl' Halloween, and fnouch time baa pa std lo sl)('ak of al wltb<>ut fear of repriu.I. Th rulprtt.s are al9t'ay t~ a1ers and Shtrhl I)' older t ypes that 'Moptds. molorb1kvs and motorcyc1 would I Ud· to check drivers' llcenses for the COl'l'tct age and d oly le»f their 11i>ark plugtt Bnd gas tenlt covers. call for 1.0. cards In the local gin mills. ALL RAla 8WWERS WOULD 8£ carried off PAaENTS, OF COURSE. WOULD BE dis· Into captlvtty PO<'ket combll would inexplicably cour11~ from loaning out the family car and all be bulled or Hape with rowit or mlssln1 teeth. mlaht find it a nice night to re-occupy the porch On Adult Avt·n11lni: Angel Atrocity olaht all swing or insist on their choice or all te levision pro- ampllntr.. t>t~rt>O lj1>eitkt<rs. h•pc decks, electronic grams . Some or them might go hog.wild on 4·A in1t1umtnt8 of all kinds would h•vc their wires cul nJtbt and even strike up a conversation with their and tht'lr 11luttis removed Plua hOuaes. taco off1prine, if they can thjnk or anything to say and stands. dl1euth\'QUt'5 und all movie house1 and find a common la n1uage to say it in. drive-ans showing ··Gn.•111w," "Up In Smoke.'' Out-vandalized at their own game, the "AnlmaJ JT0W1t•" und 1hnllur youth-oriented rucka H11loween vandals mlght next time around even · would aulf<'r power bluckouts revert to civilized autumnaJ pursuits like ducking Loe I radio l'tullonb would ht-ncouraged to for apples. biting a candy apple on a string or cut· play only Luwrt'nct· Welk und l~11tm l.anln albums Ung out a jack-o'lantern from a big yellow t._...,.. •• ,. .................. ,, ....... \,_.. ..... lhrou&ho\lt lhl' d:.ty 1'eat•hrrs wouJd be invited to pumpkin. pll~ on whom work Barl~r~ would only do crew Some might even find it more fun than bashing where you sweep y04K feet, cub Tht• police m1"ht fmrJ thas a convenient oipl In mall boxes and using hubca~ for frisbees. Grand mo." "This is ~~~~~~-=-~~~~~~~~....::;...._~..;.:..~~~~~~~~~~~~--=:::.:..::.:.:=..:::.::::..._~~~~~--~ (~• J shnlffa d"PUll('S down c:;&..--South <'lus •~ ·'young . . ~ .................. ~---~-.-. ................... ~-....ia.-... -.. ........... ~~ ..... ._.....,_,. trick or treat without th<' opllon of• treiat 'These autum1.uil rates or rum and ravage pro. bably beaan as a l>Ourcl~ or innocent merriment. u S d 12 5 pressure valve of youthful practical joku .. . un ay - permuted and no doubt encouruc:ed by parents to p ents .. "' I ·J take some of the str1un ort long hours ol homework j . res .. . . ~ ~ ~! :::~ri:0lr~::~fit~~p~:~::!~~,~~~:;r :~~ 'A WICKER WONDERL ~ ruthless rum unmatched in c1v1hied climes s mcc ~ ., the Vandals left the bank:> of the Vistula deep m· J > side what is now Poland a mt11enium and a h1tlC 1 · , ago to sack the great city or Rome. . , "Decorator look without the decorator cost!" ) THEY "1ERE LED BY a teen-ager. too, the t., youthful mad Kang Generic. and egsed on by 1tn ~adult, the vengeful Eudoxia. widow of the Em· f-peror Valentirtian Ill She invited the Vandals to ?; do their thing m Rome as sweet revenge against , the Emperor Maximus, who had murdered her )l husband. • ~ Besides desecrating the temples with barbatic ~graffiti. smashing the statues of the gods and car· ~ rying off the porch furniture' from the villas along •the Appian Way and around the Forum, they also carried off Eudoxia and her two daughters. i Would that the same could happen to the ~spineless, mindJess permissive parents who allow I!. and encourage these modern day vandals lo em· •: bark on their night or reckless ruin. Would that '.~they and their urchins and all similar specimens of ~ slack-jawed Americana end up m the same deep ~ ravine as the mailbox. r OR MAYBE ARRIVE AT mE railway station next morning with some s uitable obscenities '.spray-painted on their double knits for the Jollitica· C lion of the other commuters. ~ By George. thcre"s the answer. The Emperor : Justinian finally got rid of the Vandals afte r a bun· ~ dred years of menace, nuisance and mischief by "a vandalizing the ir headquarters in Carthage, ,, Corsica and Sardirtia. Doing what the Romans did ,. -playing their ruinous game. out·vandaliting the vandals -might be the solution today. History tells us all.er J.ust.inian turned the tables on the Vandals, '"they disappeared without a trace." Like Eudoxia and her t wo daughters, presumably. So here then is the game plan. Revenge Mis· • chief Night or Cabbage Night with a nother .. hallucinatory holiday to be called "4-A-Nlght." ;. with the four A's standing for Adult Avenglng Angel Atrocities. ON 4·A NIGHT, WHICH COULD be observed a month after the eve of All Hallows Eve, all sorts or t horrors would happen to youth throughout \he "land. ~ Batteries would mysteriously disappear from .. transistor radios. ; All dungarees, denims and blue jeans would be f consigned to the laundermat or the basement , washing machine and unavailable for school wear. • Molasses, maple syrup and thlck gobs of I peanut butler would find their way into the •sprockets and gear boxes or all 10-s peed bikes. ' ' , , f ,. I ' ~ OJO-rrotl~tnl 1Ft1Da:lkweOO MEMORIAL PLATE , "Triple Self-Portrait" On Gorham Fine China I Norman Rockwell, America's most be· loved artist, captured the hearts of over three generations of Americans. This is an opportu- mty to keep lhal memory, lhat love alive. His painlings are unforgettable. . Remember him and his humor via his own "Triple Self-Portait". Gift a lasting. lov- ing memory. Collect a cherish~ memento: the Gorham NomH1n Rockwell Memorial Plate. This special lO'h• collectors' plate, trimmed in 24 Karat gold, has a commemora• tlve Inscription on the reverse side. A tribute to a great artist. . ..•.•. ortly $37.50 Phone or Write Now To· -nurgen Park West, Inc. IWt Office Box 6114 ~~~=H~h.-CaUfomio91tUll (714) 964-2965 , J Lifestyle in Wicker & Rattan For Today & Tomorrow ... J .. i Immediate Delivery so that you i • can 1 finish or add to thdat . J 1 specia room for the Holl ays J J ' i . AL : 4 NEW SHIPMENTS OF , ! j FURNITURE ANO DECORATOR ITEMS ; J Complete Groups with hundreds J J of fabrics to choose from at prices ) ; starting at $499 (6 pc. group) J J 103 W. 17th St. Ask about "•TfH •T • J J Costa Mesa • Furniture Plaza's • fL-y--, 2 J f 642-9841 "Comfortable Credit" '".~.....,.. ~ J ~ ~~-~~.-.,......-:.~ .......... """*.._91'4'1 .. ~--~--.-.-.. .. W!O .... ~"Jl..ro~~~~--...... ~~---....,,. ............... ~~--.. ~. ,AOOINO ANO PAOFESStONAL INSTAUATION AYAIUBLE SANTAANA 2911 So. Brlatol 1 ""·"°""Of lo. Co•tt ............ ,.,.. WHl!dere tffl t • let. IA I • luft. 11·1 558-8287 WESTMINSTER 11131 Beach Blvd. " ..... c....., .. Md'Mdeft Mon a '" ttt t • r .... WM. Thur• "' • ...... • luft 11·1 893-7546 WUtC~YS fill t • S"AT TIU. t • ~AY 11 5 •FACE ESTIMATES ... YOVlll H()Mfl EASY CRCOtT 1[fl"4S • 30 60 90 DAY NO tNT£At8f ACCTS • tlANllAMtflUCARO • MASTll'A CHARO! SAY• .., ... 1,211" .... I I I. ) I AJ8 DAILYPtLOT ......... OFF GAME? Oawald Jacoby Jticoby . Eyes E11d Of Career DENVER <AP> Os""uld Jacoby 1s gel ting ready to bridge the gap between full-time em plo} ment <1nd ret1 re· ment • Al 15, Jacoby. 42 timt'~ .national bridge cham - pion and author of a bridge column carr ied in more th an 400 newspapers. says he's not playing as well as he used to and "it may be time to call it a day." But he is not ready for retirement quite yet. ··I shan't quit until I've written my 10,000lh column," said J acoby, in Denver for the North Ame rican Contract Bridge L eague's fall cha mpionships. "That s hould happen sometime m 1981." Talks Set On Nuke Warfare WASHINGTON I AP) The hard facb ol nuclear w r how It could st.art, how it would M foudll and wh1tt 1t -.ould leave In It.a wake will be dJac~at'Ct by 11 pnncl ol acner~l11. ad m1ral1, 11clentl"ta and po la l1 <'al ex pe.rta in 111 conftrtnct• hert• nt•Jt l v.eek The nu<>lcu wnr con ft'rcnrt' W'lll be h~ld Dec 7 at the Kenn~-dy Cf'ntl'r AUCRdllUltt .. by IOVltlt lion on\)'. Uct'lpt tor news r~rs 11.osts for t h e cun fr re nee 11 r e rH1 r•·d Navy Adm Gene f< La Rocque. director of the Center for Oefcnise lnfnrmat1on, and Ric hard J Bctrnel , 'eoaor fellow <It the Inst itute for Polley ~tudies. .. Jt la hJgh time that the American public be given the facts, chnacal ly and objecUvely, about the realrnes of nuclear war," the two h osts ~aid. "This c;onference is aimed at permitting the public to undecstand the probJem of nuclear wa r in conc r ete. re- alistic tenps ... not in generalized abstractions with little meaning." Suit Fded " SA N FRANCISCO (AP) -'Ibe government filed a civil condemna - t ion auit in federal court ror "the t.aJdng" of 1,136 acres in Monterey and San Benito counties as ---------an addition to Pinnacles DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS 642•5878 National Monume nt. The property is owned by Laurence a nd Pa tricia Wi l son of Salinas. Foracou~le or a crowd • Cooli buroen for o b;g p;a,ic or jvt<y •leak• for IWO Wffll ~ifchell• range convenience. With lou mote full ond flavor. ~~ Model #3200 WITH POST AND BASE Req. 'l 1900 During Demo smoo HOUIS: / th ••1 ,.,.,_, t.t s••w t-6..., tM NATION (}feat YiJt !Jdeas! · FROM [iao tifina Village Gifrs good enough ro earl See our Gingerbread houses ond edible Chrisrmos decororions and ornomenrs. Lorge ossorr- menrs of Chnsrmos confec- uons. For you ... or as g1frs. Ask obour our spe cial rum and kohluo cokes for your holiday enrerro1ning. VILITS .Latin. dmpcw .. .; ,, lt. 1 00% corron gauze blouse rnmmed w ith lace and ribbon. From Puerro Vollarra Mexico. Srunn1ng fashions for all occo- 14KT gold anchors, boars. dolphins and more. A large selecrlon of charms. pendonrs. chains and rings for very spe- cial people! Disrtncrive a ccessories. fash- ionable foorwear. and many other great gifr items! 2ulma's FASHION BAZAAR Oeounf ully designed Jonorhon Logan grey f lannel wrap. Sizes 6 ro 16. A wardrobe must. A Christmas best I . MACY JEWELRY THE SIGN OF QUA LITY Fine custom jewelry design. Now in Lido Monno Village. 67.J-5658 I ! \ The look from Paris This year can be a special gift for some- one speclal. -HANG Nflll For your complete holiday nail core. Our beouttful 14KT gold pns. .·Chains and charms make sensorionol g1frs. We're on rhe 2nd floor of The Ooordwoll<. Darling. disr1ncnve clothing for rhe lirrle ones on your Chrisr- mas list. Sizes: infant rhrough 14. Cure stuffed animals. too! 675-1703 Hand cur & polished norurol srone heqa pendonrs. availa- ble tn more than 1 0 drfferenr stones: tap1s. malachite. tiger eye. From S5.95 and up. Cho1ns nor included. See our wide selecr1on of imported gift irems! F\m Trre Games Handcarve.d wooden nur· crockers for rhe holidays! Ar rhe Fun Tree you'll fll'ld unique gifts fo r someone special. New fanrasy games: Dun- geons & Dragons. Lord of rhe r\1ngs. Gome World. FINE ADULT FAMILY GAMES In The Mini Moll The best selecttori of Funky fashion for rhe hohdoys ... plus many great glfr ideas! Unicorn Co ~ For Holiday Magic at Unicorn Co .. see a beourifully Tailored su1T from Sir for Her. accented by one of many distinctive blouses ... For specimen shell. decorative shell. coral. fine shell prinrs. cir- ca early 1600. r, uly unique ;ewelry and g1f r 1rems for everyone on your sh?pp1ng hst. 673-0605 You'll find these and many other great Ideas or The VIiiage. Over 40 shops ond one·of-o-kind boutiques to choose from. Shop Udo Morino VIiiage this Christmas Seo son for the greatest gift fdeos. 2 Hours FREE parking on Saturdays and Sundays from 1 O AM to 6 PM .. Located neor the moln entrance of lido Isle In Newport Deoch. Toke Newport Dlvd. to Vlo lido ond rurn left . _/ f . J .,NATION M'fttt 1-l •lu S plU ... On Entering Retireme:rit Ex-neimma1i Joim World of Social Security EDITOR'S NOT~ Edmond IA Breton holtH>en uii ~ Prttt r~rlcr tn Wa.11d?IQwn ftrl("t ~2 aACf PMu co~N'd Cmigr~u acnct 10~ lit• ·~<'tolty 11 tt0110mlc nf"WIJ --J By t:OMOND IA" BRt."TON WASHlNGTON (Aftl When you 've bN-n r.:· por11og for Y••atrs on Social Sc-cur1ty and otht-r re· Uremtnt lc.-~111l•tion und your own llmt· comci. yuu know JUSt what lo do und rt.-d ll•pe 11hould prac.· Uc:ally unue lt.st·tr Rut waat Murphy'& law "If unythanl( <'Ot\ go wrona. at w11l 1" hu not bet'n '"~Ul\.'<i I brought all \hese •nd my wi fe. who was ap· plying tor 11pou.w' retirement benefit.I. her docu· menta and our {O&J'l'\age certilic•te. Anne •"arrar at the neighborhood ~cial Serurity o ffice w as frie ndly, bris k •nd knowledKeable. She took under~ minutes to check and copy our documents. fill out the Corms for us und answer our questions. Only oue red tape loop was dangling. We want· ed our benefits deposited directly in our bank ac· count. But a bank official h•d mista.kenly told us this could not be arranged until after we actually got the f1rst check. Nonsense, said Social Security, get him to fill out the forms and we'll put the money into your account right away. AND WITH mtS. WE WENT back to the bank to fill out forms. But while the bank was readying them. there came a quick trip lhat delayed our sig na tures. and the mails were s low and .. ·~ -... Thur9dly. ~ 30. 1978 DM.Yfltl.OT AIJ CLOSING DOWN TO AVOID BANKRUPCY LARGEST ORIENTAL RUG WAREHOUSE IN THE SOUTH Wt heve been commissioned by dM owners of CASPIAN RUG WAREHOUSE ot Oauphme St., New Orlean' to sell their entire inventOfV of ~ 3000 HANDMADE OR I ENT AL RUGS rMny of which have Men in stodc for y .. rs. WE WILL OFFER THE PUBLIC IN THE SOUTH BAY AREA OVER 400 OF THESE RUGS TO BE SOLO BY PUBLIC AUCTION ON: Sunday, Dec. 3 • AT: Marriott Inn 900 Newport Center Drive Newport aeach Auctldn-..r: A. AatMtr lntorm•tJott! Cell Collect 213-eff.e323 A&1e1lon 2 PM Pr•vlew 1 PM TettM: Cfth I Chedu A, A It A. Inc. • Mrs. l\1ury Oblcdo. wife of (',()\. Edmund llrow.n Jr .'s iserretuy of health und welfare. Ma r lo SO flt:KF. I STF.P OFF Into retirement wat~ lot11 of r hffrful a~urancos from Social ~urity - but no Medl<"Ue Nmt or other ~vldent~ thut l havt ~witched from havtn~ tnxes dt.'<iucted for the rel\rt•menl pol 10 d1ppaof' Into lhat reservoir Will tbut bit of 1:ovt.trnment Rrt:t:n reislly get LO me ut the ~od of my fin>t month of 1dlene~!>-> . anyway. our application wound up silting un· __ __....._ ________________________ _ • Obledo. has filt.•d · for lega l i-.t·p ~rutwn . They havt· lk't!n mar rtcd 2J Yl'Jl'S DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS 642 -~&78 Not to worry. upcoming retarees I expect l''-t'r) t~ to v.ork out and offer a conducted tour through my expernmce &nd some gwdehnes Social St•<'unty says to apply three months before your ret1remenl dute. Intending to retire Friday, l apphed Sept 7 IT SA\'S TO BRING ALONG a birth certificate or other evidence of age. your Social Security card and the W2 slip you got at the end of the last year showmg the total amount deducted for Social Secunty. 25% OFFI AJ1Y Lms Ill STOCKI To fit all maior brands: Canon, Fuiita, Nikon, Olympus, Minolta, Pentax, and others. DAVES SPEGAL DEAL Compoct, Uc)htwftcJM, Precise, the fuika 605 35....,. C•:•ro SAYE 50% Fuiica 605 w/2.2 Lens and Formula V Lens 60-150 Zoom w/macro and Soft Camera Bog Reg. Ust Camft"a .• $299 Lens ..•• $363 la9 •.•... S 39 Total •... $70 I H.n.: ......, '"' • Set. 9.5 t•hlffc.-d • Momr c-. · • DAVE'S UAIERA ~74 EASr 17TH • • COSTA MESA, CALIFORNIA 642-1012 fAll Prloes Limited to Stocit on Ha1'\d) finished untll lhe end or Sept~mber Then the appJication was held up a month by Social Security itself . .A problem of· computer personnel. J was to be told, somewhat vaguely. And that's why I'm stepping o(( into lh•·UD· known with only verbal assurance that my first benefit payment wiU show up on my bank balance in J anuary an~ that if. Heaven forbid. I need Medicare soon my big uncle has emergency pro· cedures for provlding it. By the way, getting my private pension and health benefits started r equired a bU more paperwork than did Social Security. but so far there have been no blips. Some things to think about: IF, UKE VS, YOU WANT retirement benefits to go directly LO your bank, be sure to talk to bank peo'ple and satisfy yourself lhat they know what to . do and will follow through. They can't start until you file your application for benefits with the gov· ernment. Apply the full three m onths in advance. Murphy's law, you know. If you cannot get a birth certUicate. Social Security will accept other evidence or age. A phone call can find out what. But i! you can get the .,certificate. Unless you have the document . contact the state or local office where your birth is re- corded. Evidence or age and your the Security card. or at least the number. a re the only in· dispensable documentation needed ror applying. Remember that Medicare falls short or cover· ing expectable health expenses. You will probably want to carry some supplementary insura nce - and when you start looking aroWld, you're in a jungle. THERE SHOULD BE A NEARBY omce for the aging that may be able to help you, but I didn't have much luck with that. I ga~red a drawerful or brochures. compared premiums and benefits and decided my best buy was a modified conUnua- lion or my company ins urance plan. If your employer has such a plan, check with the person· nel department. Important: If you buy more than ODe policy, make sure each pays full benefits and does not off- set the other. You don't want to pay twice for the same lhiug. If you have a spouse approaching retirement age. get out a pencil. A retired person may draw benefits ~itber on such a person's own employment record or as a worker's spouse. While the situation may change because of the lncreaae in working women, when a couple approach retirement age now it's likely lhe wife's past earnings have been so much Jess lhan the hus band's that she will do better to qualify as a spouse . ln any case, Social Se<:urily, is obligated to figure out her rights and give her the better break. THAT LEAVES nlE QUESl'ION whether a spouse under 65 s hould begin drawing reduced benefits now or wait for full benefits at that age. Social Security gives you the figures and leaves it LO you to de<:ide Benefits to one retiring between the minimum age of 62 and age 65 are reduced actuarially. For a retired worker. the reduction comes to 20 percent at 62: A spouse, entitled at 65 LO benefits halt that of the worker's, would have that benefit reduced LO 37.5 percent at 62 If there is not much difference in age, retirees tend to opt for immediate benefits, accepting a s mall permanent reduction in income but getting payments right off. That's what we did. But It ls worthwhile to consider the a lte rnatives thoughtfully A flNAL "OTE I HOPE IS upbeat. Find out what other benefits come your way at 65 - sometimes at 60 -such as discounts on medicine, other goods, theater tickets, bus rares or reduced or even waived twtion. These are local and vary. At the moment, the only hard piece of evidence I have that r am a privileged elder Is a handy blue card that lets me ride Washington's subway and buses at half fare ~ • Gelson's • The Guild Drug • Imper ial Hardware • Children's Unlimited • F'ri nge Benefit -c -., ::s -· Q .., Cl) - • C') Q 3 ~ c (") 8•1 "'" .,.s,, ')(.,, &,.. [ For convenient, personalized ~ service during the Chrutm08 season ~ 0 ~ ... (;) (% • Perpetual Savings San Joaquin Hilla Roed & San Miguel Drive • Spnd Castle Gifts • Magic Mirror Benefit Properly tubbed and cared for your living tree can be used , year after year. (Nursery Special I POIMSElTIA PLANTS 0...- lm"fy ••• Tape r e d candle. fresh flowers. greens and mini packages i n a marbleized bowl. We can send it nearly anywhere the FTO way. lf4i•I 546-5525 ... ,ot UG. 2.tl PHONE • 2640 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa DAILY 9 • 5:30 • SUN. 9 • 5 Ove r the years. people have found many ways of making their Christmas trees bloom with dazzling beauty. This year we at Bayside Center have decorated our 12 live trees with candy canes; which stand for the crooks that the shepherds used White shopping this Christma1 at Bayside Center, you'U Rncl a relaxing experience with convenient parking. Merry Christmas BAYSIDE CENTER, Bayside Drive ar Jamboree Ro*1 (at the encrance to Balboa ts/and) \ .4 J 2 DAILY PILOT T/IUl'lldlY. ~ 30. im Litter Patrol EndOrsed upervisors Back Plan to seek State Money proposal to 'lttk 1266.0~ In l\at.-fund to finance a hltl'I J>ftll"OI l)l"OJCr m for jUVt.lnlle or fender hn~ tw 11 cnetor ••ti IJ} Orange ounty 11u(Mlrvl1urfl The fundJ would linanrl' 1•• ,rn nslon ul the 13 your old J uv~nll.-Court Work t>roarnm. 'h1t'h allowtt ome offt"nd ,.. LO wo rk o n p a rk , 11 trttc l and .. Htt'w.1lk r h.•un up <'rt'Wll ruth1•r lh .rn "l>t>nd l lmt• In 1·o unly JU' 1•0111· 1ru.t a t ut ton:. R hahilitation Officer Named Lo s J. llamlet. tlununa:t00 Beach, has been elected to the board of directors of the RehabilltaUOn lnsUlule or Orange County Rt'·eleNcd to the bou rd were W. Ri<'hard Smith. Newport &ac.•h, ontl Hob Swank Jr .. Irvine. Those current· ly ser ving terms on the 23-member board include Rasjlda Miserak and John L Newman, bQlh of Costa Mesa J ames C Owens. Co.<1ta Mesa, wall elected member at large RIO 1s an arftliate of the Easter Seal Society of Orange County I (JAC.~ Al'Wt.tc!'!Olli J REVEALS 1n the DAILY PILOT KITTY 1..UEOIO:. 1i1 11up •rvls ln1 county vro balion officer. uld th · 11roernm would be ex 11 u n <I r 1t ( r o rn u b o u l I 0 0 voun1111lt•rs ut u umc to aboul l :t~ Tht• youn1uu1ir1t. as11lgrled t.o th t• 1>rogrnm by Juvemle Court, urt• 11 u1>ervlM•d by vrobation roun11t•lo111 A rt t•r t•1t pun11 11111 . d .,un·ut> 1wrv1tt•l\ by lhl' i:1 to 18 year old voung11tl•r11 would be available f 0 r b (I l h (' It y U 0 d C 0 U n t )' hH·llltae11, t•ounty oWcluls said AS PART o•· THE effort to ·t·k tht< state funds. county of· tu.•1al• ~wd. re:.olut1ons of sup- port will be solicited from the county's 26 city councils. ' The a nl1 la tte r f unds a re uvaalable unde r a one-year-old 11tate law lhal imposed a lax on bualneaaes that produce poten· lJa l Utter. The fund.a then are allocated for litter efforts on the basis or popula tion a n d hi g hw a y mileage. county officials said. REX CASTELLAW, chief de· puty county probataon officer . s aid the new proposa l s houJd 1rn ve the county money while permitting a cut in the backJog of scheduling juveniles to ,the work program. Th • number of youngalertt 1111 slaned ha11 Jumped from an a veraae of 96 a month ltusl year lo 133 thJs year. he 11old. County officials will seek an additional $34.769 under the new 11tate Jaw to hire two litter en· forceme.nt oUicers. Six Arrested In Drug Bust Ana heim police said today an e sllm a ted Sl00,000 worth of h e r oin wa s seized ,wnd s ix persons were arrested in a raid or a downtown apa rtme nt late Tuesday night. Police said the narcotic bust w as in an a part ment a t 216 • Gulnlda Lane. Seized in the raid were 538 grams of heroin a nd one·half pound or culling agent. police said . They identified the a rrested s us pects as J avier Es pinoza. 19, Luis River a , 35. a nd R a u l Coronel, 27, all of Anaheim . Also arrested were Elba and Miguel Velesquez. 18 and 21 r e s p ecti ve ly , and Migue l Alva r a do . 19" a ls o a ll of An aheim. -)!Hy Deaaah - £rt>n rirh people like lo •a ve mom>y! That'• uihy I buy /rom llomf' Slw rrn . lnr. Sp Pcial 1arin1r1 now witli 2 0 o/r off cu.1to m d rnpt>rit:,a. and J. irf(inia cu m 1>1 In rv>') Mountain Areas (XJ (,uy ~ 0 p bl" f' ~ s~~d !.?..., Mo!n area~~ m y ho ww !" Designer Wallpaper. Draperies. Woven Woods, and Mint Bltnds Shown in your home at Builders Prices. So conven ient! Virginia Hanley Home Shown, Inc. own , 1827-A Weatcllff Dr., Newport Beach Inc ( were closed to lhe public have been opened. ac- f cording to Cleveland NationaJ Forest Supervisor ~ F ritz deHoU . t ro DeHoll said. however. that some county roads g / less traveled in the T rabuco District remain g a" closed . 8: ~ BLACK STAR CANYON Road and Skyline o: l\ 1 Drive, parts or the Main Divide Road and other ~g l less traveled roads in the Trabuco District. remain :: closed. !! In the Palomar District. the Uppe r Santa Ji Ysabel Road is too narrow to travel and pa rt or the /!J ..J mountain has slid onto the road. Other roads ~ around Palomar Mountain are occasionally closed, Of <Jeotu~111q depending on weather conditions. K.lam" Anderson a nd She pp Head roads in the ~ Descaso District are a lso closed . • The Palomar Districl ranger's office in Escon· dido, 745-2421. the Des canso district ranger's offi ce (714) 752-2775 II , in Alpine. 445-6235, a nd the Trabuco dis trict ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-~~~~~ r anger's orfice in Santa An a. ~-21~. cun provide c urrent road condition re p0rts. VISA' Medical Computer Use Meet Topic Developments in com puler use to advance medical practice. especially analysis or X·ray images. will be discussed during an all-day symposium Dec. 11 at UC Irvine. The symposium, open to the public without charge, is scheduled from 9 a.m. For Christmas . the finest in lurniture from DICK METTEER w,. feature HeNedc,n Bo~e< arid Tf.omcHville on O\I beou11ful new showroom Our e•per•er<ed ~·· ore ready to cnsi\t yov 01 no extro chaqP., "' fur,...V..oq y~ ~"' 0t oHI( .. ORANGE COUNTY ' DICK METTEER Fine Furnishings & Interior Desig n 1727 Westcllrt Drive. Newport Beach • 646-1678 Open 9·5.30 • Closed Sunday Evenings By Aooo1n1m&nt Holiday poinsettia Beautiful poinsett ias the traditional Christmas plant An ideal holiday 91ft or buy for yourself. Grows to 3-ft. indoors rsclCPenney NEWPORT CENTER 644-2313 FASHION ISLAND STORE ONLY to 5 p.m.in174 Computer ...-------------------------------------.., To enjoy a 2 .. hour Newport Bay Cruise on the "TIKI'. including hot hors d 'oeu vres a nd cocktails! It's our way of introducing you to a new con cept for enjoying a lifetime of INTERN ATIONAL vacations through time-share ownership o f a vacatio n villa! DATE: TUESDAY, DECEMB ER 5, 1978 TIME : 7:00 PM -9·00 PM PLACE: THE "TI KI", Lcavini1 from l hu clock at the CANNERY RESTAURANT, 301 0 Lafayette Avenue, Newport Beach. DIRECTIONS: Take the NEWPORT FREEWAY west to PARK LIDO, and turn left. Proceed to LAFAYETTE AVENUE, and turn tight to THE CANNERY. Advance reservations required. Reservations hm1ted to 40 couples, and you must be over 21. You could be cruising righ t Into the vacation opportunity of a lifotimel CALL (TOLL FREE): 1-800-552~8901 --~'"""'·" ~ ~ ........... . ....... ll1P11M11, Cul 1111111 ... n.• ..... , Sciences Building. In· formation presented al the conference is expect· ed to be of interest to physicians a nd lay per sons who want to learn more about this field. a spokesman said. Funeral I sit for Mr. Harby CYPRESS <AP) - Me m orial services ror forme r Los Angeles City Counci lma n R a r o ld Ha rby, who d ied las t week at aee 84, arc scheduled Friday. The Norwegian-born lforby, who died Friday In Laguna Hiiis after a long Illness. came to the United States in 1910 and to Callfom1a in 1918 as u s hipyard worker H E WON HIS City Council seat with his first effort in 1939, de· fea Ung the incumbe nt Robert MacAl isler . lie was removed from office in UM2 for using city car on an oul·Of· \ s tale trip, despite th~ fact the council voted to confirm the car'a use a s offic"8l business. He was overwhelm · lngly re-elected the next year and held office till his retirement In 1957. Survivors include hlR widow, Emma. sons Ha rold end Thornton. five ttrnndchlldren and two g r c ttt · 1randchildrt n. W with an outdoor gift suggestion. Storekeepers are'wearing prime northern goose down vest s with a nylon outer shell a~d leather weste_rn yoke . worn over midweight cotton flannel sh1~t~. A perfect g1fl for on who enjoys outdoor hvmg. Services will bo al '------------=--~~~~• Foreet Lawn Nemorhtl M11n~A111'!t11'.111dlMJ..tcr Charge llllfl ~ .. -...,r,,. IO.!tl hvtfll.• Nl•wpo1l lk.1ch (Jlttorn1.i. 11Mw 04l 70ol Perk in Cypres1. WeMdlff PLu.. illl ( L M. BOYD ) INFORMS In the DAILY PILOT CONSUMER ., ~ •• lt'\I "' • 'Thwldly. Nov9mbet 30, Ul78 'fFTC Proposes Ban On Health Food Ads ~ Alex Haley . author of ·Roots,• con - ceded in federal court UU&t three passages from anot h er book· found their way in to his bes!,· seller. But "Ire said he had not read the other book when h e included them. ' , r . ' WASIDNGTON CAPJ AdverUM· f'Qenu ror "health roods" would be prohibited under a recomm~nded federal rqulaUon "Aa conaumen have ~ome more conacloUJ of health and the par\ 11utrlUon plays In malntalnlnc health, they have alao ~m• more Vulnera ble lo health related clalma tor food producta." the Fed ral Trade Cotn· mlHloo staff aald alter a row.year •ludy. TH& 8TAFP' a COllll NDEO that the five member commJaaloo ban •d• for "ht allb rood1" and talabUab 1tr1 ct d nJUooa rw what ••nalural" &ftd .. oraaruc" fOOd arn Th• commJNion la ex1>41c«.-d t.o act on th reeomm ndatlon h xt. yeur If adopted, the re•uJ•Uon could be In effect in about a )' tr Tbe nc;·a bureau or <'On umer protection Hid, "Tbc.i t<'rm 'h(l1dth food' falHly aU.rlbuteft •J>t' lal or superior bealtb·1ivln1 properll lo certain foodl and . rannot be d finfld °" qualJfled In •ny mr11n1n11fuJ way " THE aeGVLATION ALSO would -proht'bil ratae daiml WU\'h 88 lhotiti that rooda can by lb mwelvt.'I vrevt:ot or treat dlleues Any food advertlMd as "natural" would have to be frff or art.Jficlal In· "redlentl. Foodl could not be tout.cd &11 "or1antc" If fertili zers or p 1llclda had been used on them. In add.IUon, advertJaer11 could ~ claim I.hat a food ll nutrlllon&Jly bet· ter lhM other fooda merely becauae ll qualltlea u ellber natural or ol"· a&inlc. THE PTC STAFF uld lbe re,Wa· tlon la needed becaute of the lncreaa· ms number of mlaleadin1 food ada. It nld the food lnduatn lut year apent SALE ENOSSATURDAY. DECEMBER 2NO ... HURRY, SOME QUANTl'flES ARE LlMlTED! more tban $1 .3 bUUon lo promote Hie . Another eecllon or the propoted rule would reqwre adverti.Jement.a that di.Ku.as the fat or cholesterol content or a food to dlaclose "ln· formation necessau to enable the publJc lo understand aod evaluate the claim." The staff said advertisements would be permitted to dlacuaa l1AkJ between diet and the rtak of heart disease. but false or exa11erat.ed clalnia about health benefit.a wou.ld not be penrulted. HEY KIDS ! COM£ HA VE BREAKFAST WITH SANT A TifJS SATURDAY AT9:00 ... '""'..._._._ AM IN OUR BUFFETERIA .. ONLY 9lc Wards this weekend. ~ Special. Juniors' sporty-look acrylic sweaters in 2 great styles. Choose ZIP front hooded or gss pullover placket Htyle Lo11g !flt..'Cvci:s with cord tram EA. on yoke ll nd s le<!VC patcheff. ~rted colors. 8iwsS,M,L. ,J t.:"t< )H IU.fU;(.'TIO'lli SAVE•2 GIRLS' SHINY SATIN BLOUSES $'lLOUSE REGULARLY $9 Choose from an 8B80rt.· mcnt of l o n g s leeve blou1rna. 80% Arne t and 20'# nylon. 7-14. $8, 1mlin 8klrt. ............ $6 Cjllll.'i' PA8lllON~ SAVE•S STRAPLESS BODY BRIEFER FASH ION Smoother, sha-} 788 phor figure. In :J4·:38D, :J6·38C a nd 0 11 izcs. REC. $23 FUlJNDA1 ION:, FUN CHANNEL °F" TELEVISION GAME Men's wool and· nylon shirts . in bright lumberjack plaids. Wool blend HhtrtEI you can wash by much 1 nc! An WS!:IOrt- ment of colorful plaids with square bottoms, 2 pockets and long sleeves. S,M,L,x.L. 1097 REG.$16 Mt.:-1'8 Pl'ltNIBHINGH PLACEMAT SETS FOR DINING Aboca h emr,indocora tor 499 colors. Hand wash.dripdry. P laccrnal as'lor\rncnt with SET napkin rinJ(14 ................. 6.49 IU.IJUl'llfl /\NU I.IN~.~ SAVE'2 WOMEN'S ACRYLIC SHAGGY SLIPPER Fluffy Maiden• 3s1 acryl1cp1le . AsHortcd color11. In whole sizca. R.EC.5.99 SllOES SAVE'21 RAIN LAMP $.ETS A ROMANTIC MOOD 29· high, 12· al!9 chain. Gent.l o ... U "ra in" effect. ••24,38" ... _ ... RE.G. "° Oll"TWARE -;~. ---··r' s -pec-iaI. Handy La Machine® elecbic food preparation system. suoes,chops,grat.es,grmds. 4988 urees and much more! kas continuous feed; no need to stop while using. . With accessories ....... 79.88 REC. 69.99 HOUSEWARES SPECIAL LCD 5-FUNCTION WATCH FOR MEN 1sss Sport.brown face shows hour, minute, second. and month/date Sleek yellow me ta l band. A great gift idea for him. >1:-<1 ... 1~:WELHY SAVE'3 MEN'S WESTERN STYLE TWILLS Slurdy J~uns of 797 pol yest.er/mt.ton. Front, buck poc· kets.Sizcs~9-40. REG. 10.99 MEN'S WOICK C'L<fl lllNO SAVE•to .. GRASS GETTER" EDGER/MOWER 'l'nms,mow1umd 2088 sweepe. Safe ny· -.,-- Ion cut.tlnK hne. Trtnuner .... 49Jl8 REC. 39.99 Cl/\IHIES ~01' Fun toys for entertaining the little ones on your list. 'M "Jaws", a gameof s k1ll 549 as you use boat hook to take pieces from hts mouth. (e] "Whoop8" doll .......... 9.88 © TCR .. VanJam Race,48.88 TO ' I ~ SAVE •s -----~ UNFINISHED TOY CHEST/SEAT Sturd} partic le board to 1488 finiHh in yourchild'sfu· vor1te color. :nffh, :12ffw. I 5"d . Storage be nch, too. REC. 19.99 lilJll.lll'll(; \ti\ 1 1-:1111\l-"' SAVE 1/2 GIRLS' JOGGING TOPS AND PANTS IOO'~ acrylic in 550 waehuble color arroy.Sizesf'.14. EACH. PC. 5.50, 1hort.a, :l.75 REC. Sii Cilltt..-, flllt:"llSlll'llli~ SAVE•47 ~--VERSATILE 10.IN. ENCH SAW OUTFIT Cutllto :i'4d,dc. .. ~22 vclopB:i!·hpmnx. ""II:. St.and , 'l oxt.cn· 1uon11 includcd. REC. 288.• ltAl{l 1WAKt,; A WARDS CHARG·ALL ACCOUNT CAN HELP MAKE YOUR CHRISTMAS MERRIER Do easy prices ring a bell? WAlllllll'lllC INl,f'<)LIC"Y•lf°"_ .. ,........,. ... ___ 1,....,., .. f' ff IA#lf ... , .... ,., pttoi• " ""'"-ttl fhr• l~fitl ..... ~lteftWUllUMtftl•eJW IAtf'ltt •d••mrruul11M11"''""'•u•IW..._.1p~tuN1 .,,... ...... ~ ........ -.,.. •• , "•rdao4•11t1 .. ,....i;ri;t•-nll111t~,_.__._. __ COVINA ROSEMEAD SANTA ANA MONlCLAIR EAcu; ROCK SAN BERNARDINO LYNWOOD RIVUStDE LAKEWOOD COSTA MESA CANOGA PARK Wt.ST LOS ANCEUS NORWALK TORRANCE I ULLEATON HAWTHORNE PANORAMA CITY HUNTINCTON BEACH HOLIDAY HOURS ••• MONDAY THROUGH SATURDAY 1 :30 AM TO 9:30 PM ••• SUNDAY 10:00 AM TO 8:00 PM ............... ·-·· •• -- •I -. AJ4 CWLY PtLOf H , In case bcachgoers ro ight not notice the "Can Your Tras h" motto on the s ide oi this trash bin at Slst Street in West Newport Beach. an anonymous donor has contribut- ed a rake. The point is lhat along with all the other pro- hibitions noted on the bin, it's illegal to litter the beach. Irvine I.and Eyed For North Campus Saddleback College officials are preparing to recommend new growth priorities t hat would place acquisition of Irvine <;ompany land a round the district's north campus at the lop of the hst. The revised priority list should come before trustees in J anuary as part of the college's five year plan for growth. Assistant Superinten· dent Edward Hart said Tuesday. OFFJ~ HAD planned to purchase a second 20 a cres of the proposed JOO-acre s ite with local tax money this year. Hart said But passage of Propos ition 13 fo rcM trustees to lfelete the pro· posed purcha~c. a n action Hart said could jeopardize the dis· trict 's option to purchase the re- m aining 80 acres by 1982. The college ha s a l r eady purchased and is de veloping a 20·acre site at Jeffrey Road and lrvine Center Drive in Irvine. "WE ORIGINALLY intended to buy the third 20 acres with some state money through the fi ve.year plan of slate funding for building projects.·· Ha rt said ... But everything was held over for a yea r <because of Proposition 13 ) so now we're asking for the second 20 acres in our 1979 request.· In the wake or the J a rvis-Gann amendment. Hart sa id. the col· lege must now use state money for building programs and land acquisition. That means offi cials will ask trustees to rank the acquisition of the remaining 60 acres as a top priority for the 1980 (iscal yea r. · THE SO-CALLED five.year plan is a state progra m that pro· vides funds for community col· legc building progra ms. Allpca· Lions a re based on a complicated formula using st udent a tten- dance figures and instructional space available. College officials must have their priority list at the state Fina nce Department by Feb. 1. There, the list is analyzed and a decision will be made about in· eluding the Saddleback priority list in the 1980 fis cal year budget. "It takes one and a hall years to get s o methi og into the bud g e t ," Ha r t s a id . "In February, we'll be ma king re· quests for the 1980 fisc!al year.·• 'Emotional Overload' Bay Area Official,s _. Fear Suicide Toll SAN FRANCISCO CAP> -Staggered by slaughter in Guyana and m urders in Cit y Ha ll , residents are struggling with vast depression and fears the suicide r ate will skyrocket during the coming holidays, officials and clergy say. "I've never seen an ything like it," Valerie WaidJer said Wednes- da y ove r the jan g le o f telephones at the San Francisco S ui c ide Pre vention Ce nter and supervisor Harvey Milk ln where she has worked for nine their City Hull offices. years "WE'RE SEEING AN awful lol of depression and confusion a mong the population. We're getting the news so quickly that il is very diffi cult for people to assimilate it," s he said. "It's like an emotional overload." First came the mass murder. suicides on Nov. 18 of more than 900 Peoples Temple members, many from the Bay area, and then this week the a ssassina· lions of Mayor George Moscone CITY CORONER DR. Boyd Stephens said in the 12 months ending last June, there were 194 s ui cides and 233 the previous year . he said. "Right now we're down ... but we're going to have at least 190 this year." Stephens added. As of Wednesday, there was no e vidence any suicide was directly related to the Guyana slaughter or the assassinations, "but the r e's al ways that possibility," he said. 15 School Choirs Compete in Carols Chol.rs from JS selected Oranae County bl1h 4chools wlU com· pete for MOO in prizes at the Park Newport Carollest. Preliminary rompetition will be held •t the Park Newport Apartmenta front 7:30 to 10:30 p.m .. Dec. s to 7. Final compeUUon wlll be held at the Park Newport Spa at 2;30 p.m .. Dec. 10, and feature the three schools with the meet point.a accumulated during the prelims. Partlc1paUftC In the Christmas music fesUval wlll be Anaheim, Newport.Harbor, El Dorado, Orance. s.nta Ana.__ Canyon, Ploneert Whittler, La Quinta, Loara, Bol.sa Grande, Monte Vlst., Paelflu, California and Corona del Mar high scboolJ. Tbe Park Newport Apartment.a are located at the lnteraeetioo of Jamboree and San Joaquin Hilla Road in Newport Beach. Indians Claim Acreage L·os ANOELES <AP) -The Prt•h1tOili bund ot Ml11~lon In dlan ii'! rh•lming 320 l\,cres In the lilnuthem Rlverl'ldc County d c v c l o p tnt!nt . ttun e h o Cullrornl• Th ·r. b8 Y President Che•Ht.'r A Arthur f liVC It to lht•m In l.882. "Wt.' have uboul SOO members und u lot of lbcm don't have any land now." i.a1d i.pokei>man Vin· ct1nt l b11nei uftcr an Escondido attorney till'<! the lawsuit Tues· duy II\ h."Cif'J'al court · TUE ATTORNEY, Art Bunce, 1111ld the 1mJt identifies three cor - 11or ulions and three individuals us rt>gisten'<i owners of the un· dl·v~loped land about rour miles l'USt of Temeeula The suit :,aid that Kucor Realty Inc. owns 70 percent of the land. LOCAL./ CALIFORNIA Sky Mobile -Other owners were identified us Sttfe<:o Tille Insurance Co .. which holds a portion in trust; ;ind these Orange County in· krcsts Murdy F oundation : John A. Murder Ill: George Trot· lcr Jr. and J .A. Murdy. Alter extensive research. said Bunce, he determined that Lou.is Wolf. an early settler of the are a . had asked friends to file fraudulent homestead cla ims for the property. Bunce said they admitted In affidavits after Wolf died that they never Jived on the land or homesteaded it properly. Th1s high wire act of sculpture in metal. looking faintly like a S alvador Dali piece of inspired madness. hangs surrealistical· ly across Harvard Avenue. near Warner A venue in Irvine. The wires carry 66.000 v olt!) to ut111ty s ubs t a t ion s w hi c h trans form the vo ltage into lesser strengths for transmission to homes and businesses locally. Water WoeS Continue -· THE U.S. attorney general asked the U.S. attorney in Los Angeles to file s uit a gainst Wolf's heirs in 1892 and return the land to the P e cbangas . Bunce said. but the case was dis· missed a decade later because the U.S. marshal was unable to ser ve papers. Source of Turtle Rock Trouble Puzzles Irvine Today, about 180 of the In· dians li ve· on the reservation in Wolf Valley. The su.it asks for an account- ing of all profits gained by the listed owners from the land and a n uns p ecifi ed a mount o f damages, plus water rights and an inj unction preventing d'e· velopment of the property unW the claim is settled. Musician's Son Still Critical LOS ANGELES (AP) -The 7-year·old son of j azz trombonist Frank· Rosolino wu in et<itical condition today from a bullet wound inflicted by his father before the elder Rosolino took his own ure. Rosolino. 52. shot his sons, J ason. 7 and Justin, 9. before turning the g un on himself arid committing s ui cide Sunday. police said. Justin died from his wounds. legatlaon Oaai Irvine's Turtle Rock area resi- dents apparently will have to li ve at least another month with a ground water problem that is damaging carpets. inundating lawns and browning out trees. shrubs and grass. One problem. a ccording to ci· ty oUicials, is that nobody knows where the water Is coming from. Ano ther problem. they s aid Tuesday, is that the rain season is a pproaching and m ay add to existing troubles. CITY COUNCILMEN Tuesday night established a two-man sub· committee to work with consul· lants . the Irvine Co. and Broad· moor Homes Inc. of Irvine to de· te rminc the origin of the water problem and to come up with a solution. The s ubcommittee. Mayor Bill Vardolllis a nd Counc ilma n A r thur A n t h o n y : w e r e authorized to spend up to $5,000 as the city's s11are for another study. This one. by a hydrologist . is expected to take four weeks and may not even provide a solution to the soggy problem. Laguna Beach High School Joggers Lynn Watkins. 17. and Cathy Smith, 13, C1lf1'Y on a conve~tion white -com· pleting laps around the school track durlng Tuesday's hour·Jong jogathon to raise money for athletic and band uniforms for th~ school. More than 130 students and teachers parUclpated ln the nm. recelvlna a minimum ot 25 cents per lap for their efforts. • THE HYDROLOG V report wa s recommended Tuesday by Tom Nielsen, the Irvine Com· pany's residential development vice J>('esident. The company. he said. has s pent $7.000 on e ngineering and soils studies in addition to the Sl .500 already spent by the city in trying to fiod out where the water is coming from. Consulting geologis ts Con· verse. Ward. Davis and Dixon of Anaheim have determined. after drilling a dozen test wells. that Turtle Rock's hillside area resi· de nts are overwate rmg their lawns and that it now appears an "ancient strea m bed" runs beneath CuJver Drive As a result. the city has asked area residents to cut plant and lawn watering in the hilly area by 50 percent. SO FAR. CITY administrators r e port. about 60 homes ha \le beeh affected in the undulating area between Culver Drive and Turtle Rock Drive south of University High School. Bob Storchheim .. city inspec- tion se rvices administrator. said the hardest hit a rea is along Tabor and Har cum Lane where s e ve r a l carpe ts h a ve be en da m aged by water flowing into Stab Suspect ·Released for Lack of ID LOS ANGELES CAP > -A 43-year -old man arrested after two Skid Row transients were wounded by a stabber has been reelased because witnesses railed to identify him in a police line up. authorities say. Police Lt Dan Cooke said Wednesday that John Wesley Porter was set free. Porter had been arrested after the Nov. 19 s tabbings of J ose Ramirez. 27. and Ricardo Seja. 24. Cooke said Ra m irez and SeJa were treated for knife wounas <1l County-USC Medical Center but have since disappeared and of· ricers have been unable to find them . T e n pe r sons h a v e bee n s tabbed fatally in the Skid Row area In recent weeks. but police said the two non-fatal attacks may have bee n unrelated to the killings. homes or seeping up beneath concrete slabs. Mos t of the a rea's $100.000· plus homes were constructed by Broadmoor Homes in 1968 and 1969 AT THAT TIME Storchhe1m !'13ld, test drillings showed no wa ter within 20 feet of the sur- face. Although city staff members say there is no probability or hillside land slippage even if 1t rains hard, they are preparing contingency plans to fight addi- tional water problems. Included as a possible stop gap measure is sand bagg~ng_: Meeting Set On.Housing The Ca p is tra no Ba y Are a League of Women Voters will conduct a meeting tonight in San Juan Capi str;.ino on "La nd Use and Housing" m t~e South Orange County area. The meeting Wlll take place at 7:30 p .m. at 32432 Alipaz St .• Suite J . It is open to the public. The meeting Wlll focus on A y . CO Developers current plans for the Laguna Niguel a rea fronting the Pacifi c Ocean. T he area 1s located between Crown Valley 'Parkway and Selva Road along Pacifi c Coast Highway. Kids' Moving Program Set Another session of Orange Coa s t YMCA 's Move m e nt Education Program will begrn Monday <Dec. 4 > and continue through Jan. 5. The program is for children a~es three months to 6 years to develop perceptual a wareness. motor skills, social interaclJon, self expression and have fun ab well. Signups are in progress now Cor the Rug Rats (3 months lo 1 year ). Possums ( l to 2 years ), Squirrels (2 to '1 years > and Fly ang Squirrels (4 to 6 vears1. For further information con· tact the Orange Coast YMCA al 642-9990 lndivid11al Firsts OCC Takes Second In Spee~h Eff Oi-t . ~ Orange Coast College 's forensics t eam finished second at the Northridge Speech Tournament held at Cat State Northrldge. Chuck Post. Newport Beach, won first place in speech to entertain. Because of his victory . he will appear at the Comedy Store in Westwood for one night. Post teamed with Trish 'Swenson, Costa Mesa. to finish seeond in duo In· tcrpretation. JOEL SW ENSON, Cos ta Mesa. was first in impromptu, Brian Wa rric k. Cos ta Mesa. finished second 6'l speech to en· tertaln. t....... Beach: Lela Barbosa. Hunt- ing t o n Be ach : a nd Dian e Davidson, Costa Mes a. OCC'S &EADEllS' Theater reached the semifinals with Its presentation of "Ulysses. Come Home." The group included Post, Betti Doss. Trish and J oel Swenson, Karl Hartman, Warrick and McQuerrie. The OCC iquad will compete Semlflnall.lts for OCC included In the fall championships Dec. Klm McQuarrte, Hunlin1ton JHO at Cal St.ate Northridac. OCC's debate team oJ Tom. mya Cosco and Da ve Natkln, both of Costa Mesa, won third pince. -------.--------!o--f._..., .. ·' CALIFORNIA I FOR THE RECORD 'fhurtcMy.~30. 1918 ONl Y Ptl..OT .415 QUEENI E . For the Record Caesareans Plan Meet •IA .. N•S • QEll8TON£S ....... POUNTAH• VAL&AY COMMUNITY NOtll'tTAL NOVCMa l • I, "" 11111 .,.. Mro Oen•te H119nn w ............. ..... "°"' ........... ,. ,. .... Mn..., .... .,,., ..... I.Mi. ..-. .... .. Mt •1141 Mlt Oav1t1 O•IH"• .. _..kl.., .. ...,,. ....., ...... , .... Mr •Ml Mn •l<ll•t4 1<01111> ""'"""' ... ""..,. ,.,., ........ #14111*• ....-.--. .... 1'9UftUlftV....,,,eH'I n-.~~--~_..,.,...,.,..,. ¥• •l'IO Mn 0..vld (,.,trn("4>fl Ht111t•no11111a...11 '"' Mt •l'ltl M " l•"f l11I•• We,lm1n•t .... ,. Mt .... Mt\ ff!OMH 0••"~ 1•11111.,...iOOl ... I\. ...... Mr .... Ml'~ J4l/llfo Woc.dy, C....a ........ ,,t N011••••1t '· '"' Mt encl Ml\ Mhl't .. I l •ll•tO, l+Vftt 1119\0I\ .._II 9111 MOYaMa la to ¥• ..... ~ c, •• .,,.,,. C,tlllleftd, t1ununo1<1111 lloNUI. t.uv Mt fl>(j ltl\h l)M'ltel l "4 lrvl ... , •v HOYa¥a•• II flllo, •no """ ( "•' "'' JOl>n.o,., Mynll"1jlOll .. Ml'I Dov MOVIMalllt tt .-.. ll 11 Uw latcat trH:Xl'C:Uti\'111 tus You'd be urpnu'(J ho~ ; 1t'i. t:ut down on rt~U8ta for 11a1a.ca " Mt ••Id '"'" M1tn .. 1 a .. tt!IMI. ---------------------HunllnulU11lle.c:11 01r1 In Califor11ia Agency .Wants Oil Spill Law SACRAMENTO <API -Stronger laws and re gula llons to reduce the thre1tt of oil spills in Ca lifornia wuters have been recommended by a s tate task force. The group, appointed by Resources Secretary H\J ey J ohnson, said Wednesday state and federal laws s hould rt'qu1re those responsible for oil spills ·to pay for environmental. and property damage. En'ORTS TO PASS SUO I a Jaw, including one which would have boosted possible damages ·for one spill to $2 million , were soundly defeated at the last session in both houM:S of the Legislature Dcpul) Resources Secretary Richard llarmon said he was aware that the opJ>OSition was :.trong, but said he hoped the proponents could build a bet· ter case this tame. And, he said, the problem grows more critic(jJ as more and more oil 1s moved .through California ports. ll E SAID ·THE EFFORT to increttse the lia bility for spills may ·meet a better reception in the Congress than in the Legislature. The task force also recommended that the Coast Guard tighten its regulation over the man- ning, equipment and movement of oil tankers and that state and federal a~encies set stricter stan· dards for operation of m<t rane terminals. Give your budget a lift, sell your ski equ i pment fas t i n the Skiing classified ads of the DAILY PILOT 642-5678 NOVl.MH :•t• ,,,., .no Mr' H•rtv l•vtof f-. t•ll'I ll•ll•v l!OV Mt Ann Mr\ \dtttu•t W1f\•'-•'· Munttno1u1' HNI<,, Q•• f ltA• •nn M t\ Vvrt •..ri.nie1 Fountt1ln Vttllfl'V tJllf M r eno MO C.elt H• .. toe•OOI"• H11nt•nQl<lftl\4> ... ,. boy Ml '"'" ~~~~~~.t.:.,~~ Founl~1n ll•ll•v 1>ov Mr •no Ml\ MJ>r• Men~on. H11nt· lnQlon tl•M." qttl HOVEMIElt 1t M r "'"0 Mr\ D•n1el Fie", We\tm1n\tt't g+rl M r 400 Mt\ Gu't 80f<ttir\ trvln•, bo• HOVEMllEJI 11 Mr ell<J Ml\ 0•)fn41~ flOINll Hu,._ llnQton B•Mn, 01r1 "OVl.M91!11tt M r ~na """ lt•ll•bh<1ndl S•n~•••m. Hunlmqton R•t><f'I, 0"1 SA" CLE,,_l,.TI! OENE•AL HOSPITAL NOVEM9 1!1114 M • ,...., M" Eownrd M4!w, D•n• Point. ol•I HOVltMIEA 1$ Mt ttf\O Mr\ S1dn_.y Cho, S•n Cl•m•n•~ boy Mr end Mr~ W.lrrwn Oe lAno•. Mh\10n V•l'tO q1rl • NO\/EMBElt 11 Mr ""° Mf\ lt•<1•<1rd JOhns, S.On Cl• m~n•~. boy NOYEMIElt II Mt ttnO Mr\ Jonn I • P•tflft S..n Cit m•nl• boy E x hibit Set This Weeke nd A pre-Christ mas arts and crafts exhibit a nd sale will ht> sponsored by the Niguel Art As- sociation F r iday a nd Saturday from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. at tht-Alpha Beta M a l l. C rown Va ll e y P a rk way a nd Alicia Parkway. T h e e xh ;bil wi l l feature a large .ielection of oil and acrylic paint· in gs , har.d·c r a fle d jew e lry, p otte r y. Christ mas er ua ments and decorator items. WHO IS WHERE 15 fa<dt ~ cJUnJ,sf,j .Nwels by josepns ti searching for dlamondt and -ov•MHll " T he Caeti1arean Birth t 0 t h e p u b I I c • gem.10t* from ptlYale ind1Yidual9 and .. 1ates. Caretul Mr. -' M•t c;.,. oo•-... ,.,. AuoclaUon of Southern p artlcutlU'IY to couples ••amlNiaon end eYatuation by OOt eicpe'1a Highest C1t1Mll ... ~•M••• • California will meet. at 8 a nd women who ha ve pticet peld. ~I_._ MG-9086 '°'9 dally. Saturday HHS, M• .11e1 Mn AIMllM 111tt11. ._ p. m . Tuesday at the experienced or who an· 8u~ doled.~ tor Betty Grace or Fran~ VlnderWall ~~~~::=.:-:.:: ::!rty ~:~~n1~f~: ~·,~~.•te • c aesarean lewels by lo.seph ..,., .. """"·•'''· TUilio Ave .. Santa Ana. l''or further inform&· Mr _ '::':':!: ~ . ._. __ Th_•_m_:eetin.:.=='='~a~re~o:J)4'~n~~ti~o~n~, c~a=l~l 97~4~-5S48==·~--_J~So!!!u!!!th!!C!::oest!!!!!Pl!au!!!•!:n!33!!8!!!r!!!11!tol~. Cosl!!!a!Mesa!!!!·~540-~~9068~~ C!t1Mft14 ...... 1'l•r"- L~etUn ltlNNIOY·~J, -llC!Mt1 J .. tt.olCott•MneelldVlctorle,0 ,of aueMPen. L.AMB.()l.IN -L°"" E....,., 20, M14 ICetlllHll Merle, 11. Niii Of S.n Clemenle. DEEGAN 8UGEl -M fcllee l Wiiford, 17, ot COil• MHe -Merl S•aclfff Vllacp • H...tington leach M• mid Y0t6itown • phoM SJMSl 1 Mott.·S... I 0.6 -k t & Sat. HI t iul love our gift selection . • ~ho ~~ KALEVALA FREE GIFT WRAP • Ae<llel, 17,0f~Hflt\. ________________________________________ .. OE GUZMAN·MA5AGANOA ------------------------------------------l!tne\lo Pf~. 2', Of H<illtlflOIOll Be.ell •lld Melbe Ott "-'°· 2', of Molltetwllo WEl.Li>-LEE -Jeo. '°· -511errl Ml<ct..lle, 71. botll of Westminster. HAVAAAETE·AUOO -Jow lull • JI, elld CJMN• Kkt. It. both of C•I• Mew. FA EGIH·M<INTYltE -lore111 l'erdln•lld. ~. encl $elldre Lff, ,., llotll ol HUlltlngtOll 8HCll POLLOCl(·OEOLEA -Scott Jemet, 20, of Ntwp0r1 8eK ll •nd O•Wll Sl••ll. ''·Of ,.,,..,, .......... GUTIEAAE1·8AYAN-Andrtw, 21. Of Fullerton, end 51My eou .. n, 2•. Of HuntlnQICll) 8HCl'I, BEL H IAH·Gl880N5 -M•"ut t Frenc"· 3J. ot Wettmln•t•• •t>O •• , .. AnN. "·of 5-nl• An• OIACIC5·TAYLOR -o .. n Wlfllern, 26, ot Santa AN •lld P-1• Go . n, Of L•oun• HUI\. CIPOLLA·GIACOLEOO Mk ... U Jeme\. '7, -JcNn G , 611. llotll ot '"'lne. Yule Fete Scheduled The Laguna B e ll Chorale is sponsoring Yule festivities Dec. 6 at the Laguna Beach Com· m u nity Presbyter.Ian Church, including lta an· n ual "Hanging of the Holly and the Ivy and the Eating o f the Gingercake." The Christmas pr o- gram begins a t 7:30 p . m . in t he c hurch, located at 415 Forest Ave. DonaUons are $1.SO for a d u I t'S and $1 f o r children. For reserv•· lions, call 494-3904 or 494-7555. . TV Games, Toys, Science Kits, More·· TheShacW Makes Santa's Work Easier! AH Items Shown are Featured on National TV •.. Hurry for Best Selection 6 FAST-ACTION TV GAMES TV ~oreboerd'" by Radio Shack• 29¥§. 3995 Buv now and SAVEi In- cludes photo-electric p1stoJ, remote control, variable ball speed and much moce Req 6 "AA'" bans or AC adapter 60-3081 AC ADAPTER FOR ao-3053 495 TV SCOREBOARDS MORE TV SCOREBOARD FUN ! TV Scoreboetd by Radio Shack -~ CHARGE IT (MOST STORES) controls. adiustable ball speed. auto matie/manual ser· v1ng and bounce angle Req 6 .. AA .. balls Of AC adapter 6().3060 II CUDDLY ANIMAL AM RADIOS "COMPUTER-CAM" CONTROL by Radio ~hack TOY CAR AND TRUCKS 1095 1595 ~~r~::,~ f omtule-1 bcH by Rlldio Shack TO Redlot lnelde 499 .,.. Whit• Ten11tf 12·977 Brown Spenltl 12.979 6().2376 . "ec:coon 12·971 Bleck Poodle 1 2·9BO PetllnO-M 12·967 • lf9fl. One tV Nft. Each Country MOUH , 2·976 Brown Spent.i (lhown) 150-IN· 1 ELECTRONIC PROJECT KIT ~· ..... ,.... ..... ,_,,_, ._,..._C~Clrc1lltt • , • ..._., LED Dlfl#fel ,,,._,, .... ,.-• .,.._,.......,.,AC~r ·~·~-1 -.... -..... by Sclen~ Fair~ WALKIE-TALKIES-FOR ALL AGES Spece Palrotat by Arthert> ...... , ..... 16!~ 14~ • f ectt 119(J, J •'C· beffl, • Au#tenlk•"1 Styled lfefJllc8• • You C0ttlrol OrfMfl Cour .. -l'IO r;<O CllOCU I Drop·ln Came Control Direction "FIRE CHIEF" TOY HELMET ELECTRONIC FOR EXTRA FUN fkcnt 6'f6-8981 ZZ.30 cliu-vilttl J\OtUt ai. i:kt eutMr of ~it6m f ()..4001 1().4002 •U,,. ........... • t«tlllf ~·1•111 a11t1oft •Ult IO .............. • C.-. IC ... -"" MotN • l H t "" ,.,,,,,,. , .. ..,...,. . ,..,...,,. .. ,.,., •• .,,,,.,,, $#,..,, • lfequlr-.. ' ''C .. ,..,,.. ~ C.-0-_. ~ • e.11#"' ..,_ C..K., . ,...,.... "'~ ........... "'....,,, • I .4J• OM.YptLOT There's SomethlncJ for Everyone on your llst. Gtflldtas Kai MEN'S & BOYS' WEAR Buy One Pair Golden Wave Pants You G,t One Golden Wave T-Shirt Free! or Buy One Pair Levi's Movin' On Jeans You Get One K&B T-shirt Free! HARBOR~ENTER Gtflldcas 20% OFF With exception of Model 2001 ALL NEW SINGERS GtflldGs HEADQUARTERS FOR ALL YOUR IAIY NEEDS CURITY PREFOLDED DAY AND NIGHT DIAPERS Six TWnty :EE.emu .......... For Mmd ...... A y :,o:~~ .................... 51 Ott You•gla•d -= HARIOR CENTER I • . . .. 2300 HARBOR e COSTA MESA HAllOI AT WK.SOM Gtftldtas Select from a COlllplete Line of • LINGERIE • SPORTSWEAR • DRESSES • ACCESSORIES • COATS -Al for Her •.• for all occasions GtflldCas · CHRISTMAS HOLIDAY SALE! UPTO V2 OFF LEJOM IELTS IALA ... Cl ... E TIES HAGGAR PAl(TS GtflldGs Over 400 Tiffes NEW Science Fiction Paperbacks 1979 Tolkien Calendan THINKER USED · BOOKS Over 60,000 Paperbacks ~Hanllacks • Used Paperback ExcHnc)e I for I Plus .25c • Ww ......... w.w .... ...., ........... .. W... ._ M J 0:00 te l :JO _ __. s.t. 'O:tO .. J:JO '·~ Glftldtas MEN'S VELOUR ROBE • Kimona Style • One Size fits all • 80% Acetate. 20% Nylon • Navy. Burgundy. Brown, Medium Blue • Gift Boxed Holiday Priced ONLY-Sl 0 -rstlCPenney H.t.or C...tw •Coda MeM 2100 H.._.-.cl. GlftldCas l!BZliSll FlonMllR Hlllh P11ppl11 Jm llMlll Ce.h TopMden Stacy AdmM After Hows Mike Mata•w Ut.S ..... Hnll P .. plH f mnolm'e Ian Traps Sbkca Clmb Dr. Schol lentes'Clo Grasshoppers IC eds Nike Nww's Shoes -'-------------------. ~ .....,.HE--.. IN ..._ SHOE HARBOR CENTER HUT 546-~775 Gtftld(as FINE ARf " ANO SELECTED CRAFTS SHOW Some of the finest artists from many areas of the world will be displaying their work in the WORLD WIDE ARTISTS Fine Art and Selected Crafts Show at H AR BOR SHOPPING CENTER for 3 days only, December 1st through 3rd. Specialized artists will display their work 1n media which includes oils, watercolors. oriental acrylics. wood carvings. pen and ink drawings and graphics. Craftsmen have been selected for the uniqueness and fine workmanship In their penlcutar field. The very best In metal sculpture. weavlngs. pottery. paper tole etc. wtll be shOwn. .. I I 1!'N•s•1o•e ... :.·O .. ut•d•oo•r•s .. ·s·t•oc•k•s .................................................... ~ ... f!Orts •Comics •Movies ThUl"lldey, November 30. 1978 DAILY Ptl..OT 8J :;..--~--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------"""~ ~ IRISH EYES -Justin Jones (right.), a Notre Dame fan for nearly all his life. and granddaughter Allison Thilman, represent the new and old breed of Fighting Irish football fans. Jones, the Dally l'llot ,.._.. w •lcllanl 1(-l•r brother-in-law of Knute Rockne~ was in . Ba I boa this week a fter watching last Saturday's 50th meeting between USC and Notre Dame. i .~wo QBs Teams TW, 5-5 i On Coaches' Kings Islanders rAll ~-. ' · -ru11enca DURHAM , N.C. CAP> - Cluarterbacks Rick ~Leach of ¥ichigan and Chuck Fusina or Penn State were elected to the -Americ111 Football Coaches As· Mciation AU-America team in U,e first tie vote in 10 years . "The voting was simply too d ose to call, .. said AFCA presi- de nt Carmen Cozza of Yale. ''Both Leach and Fusina are 1 ireat players and great leaders. They both c l e arl y are All .4mericans." THE ONLY PREVIOUS lie vote involved quarterbacks Bob- by Doug lass of Kans a s and Terry Hanratty of Notre Dame ht 1968. The dual selection all but over- 'hadowed the selection of the na- Uon 's three pre mier running backs: Heisman Trophy winner lilly Sims of Oklahoma, Charles White of Southern California and ~arles AJexander of LSU, the only offensive player to repeat '8 an All·American. Sims received the most in· tbvidual votes and became the 4oaches' choice as Offensive \>layer of the Year. .. ~ ROUNDING OUT the or. tensive team a re cente r Jim Jlitcher of North Carolina State, ~ards Pat Howell of Southern alifornia and Greg Roberts of klahoma, tackles Kelvin Clark of Nebraska and Keith Dorney of Penn State. tight end KeUen Yf inslow of Missouri and split end Gordon Jones of Pittsburgh. • Linebacker J erry Robinson of \ICLA. the leading defensive •ote -getter. was the only re- peater on the coaches' defensive \eam. Al so chosen were linebackers ISob Golie of Notre Dame and tom Cousineau of Ohio State, a lferensive backfield of Henry )V illiams of San Diego State. Jerr Nixon of Ri chmond and ~ohnny Johnson of Texas, and a iefensive line of Don Smith of Miami. Fla .. Dan Hampton or Arkansas. Mile Bell or Colorado State. Bruce Clark of Penn State and Al Harris of Arizona State. " Cool Off Slightly I NGLEWOO D <AP> Considering the recent develop- ments of New York Is land· ers a nd Los Angeles Kings. their 5 .5 National Hockey League tie Wednesday mght was no surprise. That's because both teams have been red-hot lately. The lslanders now have a 9-0·2 rec· ord in their last 11 gam es while the Kings are 6-2·2 in their last 10. Wednesday mght's result added one point to each club's season total. "WE WEREN'T S MOOTH tonight." said New York Coach Al Arbour, whose team needed a pair of third-period goals to salvage the deadlock. "We got off to a bad start. But we grinded, we grinded a nd grinded in the second and third periods. ll was a very important point for us ." Los Angeles Coach Bob Berry. who celebrated his 35th birthday Wed nesday, d idn't seem as satisfied with the tie. "I was especially disappointed s ince we had a two-goal lead go- ing into the third period," said the fi rst year Kings· coach. "l don't know if we let down or we can't stand prosper ity or what. It looked good for a while and then we were hanging on al the end for a point." BRYAN TROTTIER scored after just 1:09 or play to give the Islanders an early lead, but the Kings bounced back on goals by Mark Heaslip and Dave Taylor to take a 2-1 advantage. Claude Gillies and Mike Bossy scored second.period goals for New York, but Tay~r. Butch Goring a nd Marcel Dionne tallied for Los An geles to give the Kings a 5-3 lead entering the fi nal 20 minutes. But Mike Kaszycki and Gary Howatt tallied for the Islanders in the third period to even the score. DIONNE'S GOAL raised his NHL-leading total to 18. He has scored at least one goal in the last five games. tying a Kings' club record. It is the third time Dionne has accomplished the feat "We were not playing tor a tie ID the l a tter stages Of the ga m e," said Arbour. "Both tea m s were trying to win and we both had good c hances. But neither could convert. "We started to put pressure on them in the second period," he continued. "We played four lines and six. defensemen to keep our troops fresh while the Kings went with three lines and four def en semen in a tough game." THE ISLANDERS, now 14-3-4 overall. outs hot Los Angeles 33·15 over the final two periods and 38-32 overall. The Kings. 10·9·2. attempted 17 s hots in the first 20 minutes to only fi ve for New York. "We weren't executing well in the first period, .. said Arbour ·'They got a couple and we JUSt gave them away. This is prob- ably our worst game on the road in quite some time. "We've been playing sound. We struggled all the way. We've been playing very well up until tonight." * * * ~GORE BY PE•IDDS N~w Vor-1 ' ,_\ l o• Anqctl!!• 1 1 o-s F lr\I PerlOO I. N~w Yo••. l fOlllM " tTontlll, Herrl\I I O'I 7 LO\ AnQ<OI ... H .... •llP I (l\pp\, 8. WllMlf>I J IS l. I CK A1'9<'1e\. Taylor 11 IOIOfl~. Murdoch! s °' Ptf\eltle\ -MurCloCPI. LA, I 71, L.ewt•,NY, 1S.H Second Period -4 Taylor 11 fManery, Wllll•m\J 7:11 s. New Yori!, Giiiie> a lllonv, TroltluJ 7:43 b Lo\ Anoett\. Gor1n9 14 I Palmer I •·JO. 7. New Yori<. Bo•\Y IS ITrott•~·. Giiii~\)' IJ •• L~ Angele\, D•onM lft IWllll•-· Oorl"IJ) 14 Ill. ~nalll.s -Hemo1on. LA. 9 rn. Potvin. NV, 14 Joi. Palmer, LA, 19 OS Tturd perJOO -• folew Yon. 1<.n1vo1 • Uonelll, Lorlmrr I 2 JO. 10 New York, Howall s IMerrltl<, WMlt•lll 13 71. PM•llY Hart, NV. s lb ShOI\ on qMI -New Y«W'I< S·l .. 14-. LO\ Anqele\ 17-'+--31 G0411H --Yono, ReKh LO\ A-I"'· len •ro A -t.srt 1 I Ugend Lives On Rockne Kin ~l.s Golden Years By E RNIE CASTILLO Of IM Delly Pl ... S'-" Justin Jones never played the game but . he could qualify ~as an expert on football. especially Notre d ame's brand. "I was a poor boy. 1 had to work ... says the 76·year·old Jones. "But we live right there in South Bend, not more than a mile from campus . The lrisb are my football team." B EING THE BROTHER-IN·LAW of Knute Rockne also helped Jones become su~h a fanatic that he hasn't missed.. a Notre .Dame-USC game since the early 40s. He was in Ba lboa this week after taking in the 50t.h anniversary of college football's greatest in- terse~tional rivalry "When Notre Dame plays here we're with t hem." Jones says proudly. "Somebody has to help them out. This was the first time we new out here, though. We used to lake three weeks lo drive out here. see the country and of course. catch the football game ... "We" includes wife Antoinette ("That's no name. that's a disease"), daughter Nancy and son· in· law Chris Thilman, who proclaims "Actually I hate Notre Dame. I'm an JU On· diana > fan." The newest addition to the p1l· grim age is granddaughter Allison. JONES, WHOSE SISTER Bonnie, mar- ried Rockne when Notre Dame was anything but a football powerhouse. says he wouldn't miss an lrish·Trojan game for anything in the world. . "They always have a great foolball1 gam e," he says. "It's always their biggest gameoftheseaon ... Saturday's game. in which USC kicked a field goaJ with two seconds lefttopullouta 27·25 thriller. was "the most excitmg game" of the series. says Jones. "It was all SC in the first half and all Notre Dame in the fourth quarter J'dsaythatgame was tops." THAT'S SA YING A LOT sin ce Jones has followed the Irish even before the days of the Paying Off a DefJt University of Arizona senjor Frank Garcia lost a bet on Saturday's rootball loss to Arizona State and Wednesday he paid the debt whi ch was the task of pushing a ten- lamed Four Horsemen. In fact, Jones-says he was a prime recruiter for the Irish in a roundabout way during d ays of prohibition . "We'd have the after-game parties in our basement and everybody would show up, the players. c~ches and even glee clu.b," Jones says. "I 't say what all went on down there bee e I don't want to get into trouble. But after he game, the players would go home and'tell their buddies 'we know whJ!re to go.• I w~ sort or a recruiting officer for them ." \\., • Born in 1902, Jones has ~I) not only football but America change. "l'fe seen the first airplane. that was built, I remember when Edison fi rst came out with lights and I remember the first t ime USC played at Notre Dame," he says. "1929 it was. I missed '28. They playedthaloneouthere." MOST OF ALL, J ones remembers Knute Rockne's famous "Win one for the Gipper" speech. "ll's just like Pat O'Brien says it in the movie ... he says. "George Gipp was a halfback in the old box formation and he came down with pneumortia. But when he was healthy you could give him the ball and nobody could catch him. ·'Whenever the players would get down. Knute would give them a pep talk. A lot of times he brought up the Gipper." Rockne died in a 1931 plane crash but his legend will liveon rorever. Jones says. . "He was really a nice guy," he says. "If you and I were s itting down bere drinking a beer he'd join us. He was more than a foot- ball coach. He was a super guy." JONES COULD QUALIFY as a super ran. He has been followang the Irish since 1918. days m which his wife claims "you could hnd a seat 10 the st.ands just about anywhere then ... The coupte have follow~ the Irish on the r oad to Philadelphia. Oklahoma. Florida and of course, Southern California . AP W~ ms ball with hi s nose, all the way around Old Main. a landmark building on cam· pus. The task took 30 minutes. r MElS BACK Olff OF ROSE BIDDING Sailors Sail On NEW YORK CAP> -The New York Mets. saying Pete Rose had turned down a package deaj_ offer in excess of S2 million, sai'd' today they have \fithdrawn from the bidding for the former Cin- cinnati Reds' star. The Mets offer amounted to a $600,000 contract ove r three years with the additional op- portunity to work five years for the Mets in various capacities. such as broadcasting, promotion or public relations. Newport Poloi.st,s Now 26-0 By ROGER CARLSON 0 1 IN Dally Pl ... Slaff LONG BEACH-Goalie Drew Cree kept the undefeated' Newport Harbor High Sailors afloat in the early going and the de· fending CIF 4 A water polo champions put it away in the third quarter as they s ped to a 13·7 victory over Dos Pueblos High Wednesday night at Belmont Plaza. Coach Bill Barnett's Sailors, who are 26-0 for the season and working on a 40-gamc winning streak, meet Sunny Hills Saturday night at 9 at the same site for the crown. Sunny Hills reached the finals with an 11·9 wm over Chaffey. !Wagner's Move Ir~ Reds' Fans It was not one big laugher for the perennial Sunset League champions as Dos Pueblos broke from the gnte early, posting a 3-1 lead with 2:07 left in the first period. BUT TWO MISSED PENALTY SHOTS against the suf~ating d.efense of Cree in the net-one a pe eel block, the oc.her a near· miss-kept the oleta·based Dos P..ueblos unit ' I CINCINNATI (AP> -Dick Wagner, •ho fired Sparky Anderson and apparent· b plans to let Pete Rose gel away, has ).roubled the waters in this old river city •here pro baseball was born. Nine months after being named presi- dent or the Cincinnati Reds, Wagner bas the natives howling for his head. "I THINK THE WRONG man was hred," said City Councilman Thomas Brush. "Have they gone bananas?" asked 11ayor Gerald Springer, Incredulous at the •ews . tn a 49-hour period, Wagner declared at the Reds were no longer interested in ose and axed Anderson as manager alter ne-years., • • IT W.\8100 MVCH for Mary Helwig, a 54-year-old widowed house cleaner from nearby Mount Washington. Hours after the stunning news, she strung up Wagner in ef- figy on her front porch. "First Pete. Then he dropped the bomb on S~arky. That's when I decided to hang him, •she said. "Pele is a legend here. He's our Babe Ruth. We've never had 'anyone like him. And Sparky got a dirty deal ... THE BACKLASH quickly gained num· bers. An executive of a nationally known hotel chain sald he will not allow Reds' promo- llon al mate r ial In h is slx r eglonal establishments. "The only person J ever beard s ay anythlng nice about Dick Waper Yf.JAS Sparky Anderson, and thls is what be ri I gets?" said Jeff Ruby. Holiday Inn's re· gional manage r. Ruby. for years, has housed many Reds ' players and coaches during the season. "l won't go near that stadium," said Rubv. ~. RADIO CALLERS echoed Ruby's senti- ments. vowtng to boycott Reds' games. Others supported Wagner's stand. saying Rose 's demands would break the club financially and that. Anderson lost control of the team A Cincinnati radio station !\cnt Its sym- pathy to Anderson and offered him the job or sporU director. MeanwhUc, Wagner rejects the Idea that his job Is on the line "I would rather be the aggressor ln a situation Uke this than slt back and find our club In filth place and say l ha~ done nothln.i about lt." • from breaking thJngs open. . r "Cree kept us in the game," said Barnell. "It was his best game of the year." IARN&n In the end it was a typical Newport Harbor victory with Jamie Berges-bn and 'Tom Taylor eech netting five goals. But it wasn't a two-man show. THE SAILORS TOOK the lead for good on a Taylor shot after nergeson stole the ball to make it 5-4, and moments later Cree blocked a shot and Taylor hit again. Down 6·4, Dos Pueblos had a chance to get back in it with Newport a man short via a penalty. But Oeofl Fults intercepted to stine a last-second scoring threat berore the hair. IN m E TIDKD QUARTER Bergeson scored agaln to make It 7·4, then Dos Pueblos took lt.s last 1up u Cree took on an opponent m a one.on-one duel that was virtually a penalty ahot scene and Newport down a man asaln. Cree blocked ~ abot. Newport scored again and It was all over. ~__,,=-....... -------------===~------,,,===========================-----====~=:.;:!:=::=~:==;=================== '· IJ2 DAIL V PILOT A C.DIUI• R•port From th• World of Spott• t rongly Deny Aft r Rod <:arew t'rom AP ot patdtn NEW YORK Th<' Nt'w York Venlu•e'l Iii stron.:ly denlf'd a publl"\hed rtpott today th111.. they v.t•re tryiru: to work out trade with Min ne11oh• to oblwn ~·ins •t•r (t~t ba11eman ft c>d Cart'\!> · AbM>hn r l • totullv. unl'qulv<X'ally untrut'. · Yunkt.-e Pre1mlt•nt Al Rnik·n 11101d wht•n aslcNi about IJ Mory an the St Paul {Minn 1 Pton"~r f'rt"'~ which :;old tht• <kal )n· \Ol \'t-d t~ Y•nks At>ndtnJC rir:fl busomun Chris Ch mbhs~. oulfi •ld..r Ju.in lknl· qu''' · p1tt'hf'r Ken t'hty and $400.000 to thti Twms for C.:urt•w .. We've .cot prclt v .iood h nit baseman ht•rt-already ... rtosC'n ~uJd or l'hambh:.. "Ir you look ut h1~ llRliJ 1901. h1 i. homt·rs (12!. h111 butting .-v4"ragc l 2741 a.nd h1s uhlhly to phty t'Vt>ry dJy, and this yeur hl' wus 11 goh.lcn ~loH•r, und hf''s only 30 years old. you 11e1 the ld<•a he 1'nowi. how lo cuaw pla v bllbeball "Wt: have had no tulkl> w1lh M1nne11ota uwolvmg any or tht> players mentioned i.nd that includes Carew." Rol.en addL'd Asked If the Yank:, were mlere.ted in Carew, Rosen rcpltL'd . "Thal'~ not fair. Thjjl's like askmg 1r we're m· t~rcst<.'<1 in Gror~e Foster or Jim Rice or Vida lllue You'd have to be out of your mind not to be mte.rested m them " Pat~rno to S taff at r fttlt Stat~ NEW YORK -J oe Paterno begged to be re lievt.-d from any Spt>culat1on aoout the New S• York Gfants' coaching Job and insis ted today • · that he would remain at Penn Slate as long as the school's and his own rootbull philosophies remained the same "First or aJI, let m e emphasize as strongly as J can, lb.at l n~v!!r have_ been offered tjle Giants' job," Paterno said. "No one from the Giants hai ever talked to me and neither have I talked to them. "That's the first point. The second point is that such speculation Is very unfair to John McVa y (Giants coach> who is doin~ a good job. 1 want him to succeed. It is unfair to gH me mvolved in this kind of a situation. ··Also, il 1s very unfair to our own football team which is looking forward to playing either Alabama or Georgia in the Sugar Bowl m what could determine the national championship. They should not be put in the position or having lo wonder whether their coach is going to leave or not. So, I am .asking· please remove me rrom all or the s peculation." ....-----Quaie ot tlae Dat1----- Pete Rose, referring to hjs manager al Cinrin· nati, Sparky Anderson, who was recently fired: "I 'd walk 1h.rw.l&b hell JO a gasoline suJt for him. It was a knife in him. His heart won't be the same agajn." E rrittfl S parlu 78ftrs Pan Spla'9 The Philadelphia 76ers' Julias ErVlog m· scored 18 points in the second half and four more in overtime to lead his teammates to a 120·114 victory over San Antortio in National Basketball Assn. action Wednesday night. Bobby J one• ,.added 22 points to the 76er attack. George Gen ia, the NBA's leading scorer, led San Antonio with 35 points ... Center J ames Edwards helped rally the Indiana Pacers from a JO-point third-quarter deficit lo a 101 ·99 win over the New York Knicks. Edwa rds had 23 points and 14 rebounds . . Rick Barry r eturned to the Oakland Coliseum to a mixture or cheers and catcalls that turned into a chorus of boos as the game proceeded in a 109-94 victory for the Hous ton Rockets. Barry, who left the Warrior.. as a free agent lo sign with Houston last s ummer, scored 26 points ... Sixth m a n Fred Brown broke out or a rive- uv1Ho game scoring slump with 26 points ror Seattle lo leud the SuperSonics to a 12S·lll triumph over the New Jersey Nets .... Philadelphia's Darryl Dawld.ns was admitted to a hos pital for treatment of a neck injury and has been placed in cervical traction. Ra..,,en, r1i tslJurgta, Toronto 1t1w· It was either a 5.3 victory or a stalemate ~ Wednesday n1~ht in National Jlock"Y League , action as the Ne w York R~ngcrs, Pittsburgh and Toronto w<>rc vil'lorious The Range~ got a pair of goals from Dean Talavous to stop AUanta . . . Ttiird-pcriod goals by Wayne Blancbln and Rancb· Carlyle helped Pittsbur"h snap a four-game losing streak with a win ov<'r Washin~lon . Lanny McDonald scored twice .for Toronto, which handed Minne!>ota its eighth con- secutive los~ and 10th in 12 ~amcs ... The Chicago Block Ha wks ttol a goul with 5: 17 left Crom Ivan Boldlrev to gain a 1·1 tic with Vancouver ..... The Delroll Red Wings firti shed 2·2 when a disputed goal by PnJ Gard.Der with l : 16 left gave Colorado it.CJ tie. The Red Wings claimed Gardnt>r's shot had hit the c rossbar of the cage and never ('rossed the goal line. Referee Bob Myers felt otherwise. S tone Sfgn• 1t'ld1 Ortolft Hight-handed pitcher Steve Stone signed a Iii four-year contract with the BalUmorc Orioles after compiling a 12·12 record with the Chicago White Sox ... Spor t sca ster Ke n Colem a n a nd former Boston s lugger Rlco Petroc:elU were named as the radio announcers tor the Boston Red Sox for the 19'79 season. They replace veterans Ned Martin and Jim Woods, who were released in a policy dis pule involving marketing. A•tf"9 El'en L ead 11.S. American stars Tracy Austin and Cbrts Evert had hltle trouble today as the top-seed4"d U.S. team crujsed into the quarterfinals with ef- fortless wins over New Zealand in the Federa-• tion Cup tennis tourney at Melbourne. Austin downed Bre nda Perry, 6·1. 6·2, and Evert crushed Jady Cbalenor 6 l, 6·1 .•. Swedish star Bjorn Bora was ordered to resl for' two weeks after sufrerin.c a pulled leg muscle Wednes· day n ight during a 6·3, 6·3 loss to Adriano Paaatta of Italy In the four· man Ramozzotti Classic. Borg fell to the court and remained there for a cou· pie of minutes, grimacing with pain. after he slipped early In the first set. He then re1umed playing and completed the match. Today he could hardly walk. Vilas GtrulaltlJJ defeated Job• McEnroe, 4-6, 7·6, 6·3 in the other '1nit round match . . . Pascal Portes of Fruncc UJ>llel Australlon Sa.eve Docller· Au1T1111 ty and Ruulan Aler Me&reveU downed Joe Balky of the U.S. al the Ind.Lan Grand Prix tourney In C~lcutta. Portes won, 6-4, 7·~. M.etrevell rallifd to wln 5-7 6•3,6•J. ' I ._,,_, T•i.., .. l•• aADIO: Ba.-.Htblll -ctnclnnU w. Atllltta tn Ac· Uon at Anaheim Convention Center, 8 p.m .• KYMS (106 FM>: Houston at USC, 8 p.m . KFJ (MO>. Tritons' Defense Gets Test . FOOTBALL Saddle back logs 106-96 Tour-ney Win ... LANCASTER-Ed Patrlc,M, and Randy Whleldon comblrEd for ~ pot.nu to lead Saddleback CoUege to a 106-96 victory ov'r Collc>ge or the Sequoias here Wednesday In the opening round of the Antelope Valley basket· ball tournament. • Son Clem nte football Coach Alli~ Schaff hu been HyinK his 1>111 defen1e Is on • ot the best In ClF 11incc the aeeaon began. On Frldoy. he'll if'l a chuo~c to prov~lt San Clemente must travel to M anhnllnn Beuch for a second round <:IF pluyoff duel agams t a P•8J·m1nded team with an air oriented name-the Aviation Fukons ' ·•we still feel our st:condary is 11 aood as any. but they're going to be tested." Schaff says. "Avwllon is basically a passing t~u m That's their o bvious forte." TH E PIVOTAL FAcrOR in the gume. sayp Scharr. could just as easily be the pass rush as the secondary. "Their pass blocking is very good, and we've got lo rihd a DI-"-to Avlel*' Mi.i- P•0<~d nonll Of\ Sen 01<'90 F•Hw•y 1~1 10 tnoltWOOd Blvd Proo~ ~"' on tnot•- 81vd lo ~lten Beech Olvd Tur" rlQlll Ofl Men"611 ... -II 81Vd Sc,_. " IOUlto el JOU M•nll•U.,. BMcll Blvd way to break that down," Schaff says. "Anybody can hll a re· ce1ve r ii they have enough time. We've got to take that time away." And San Clemente will have to find a way to do that without the he lp or Guy Goodwin. a de- fensive tackle that many scouts believe is the best lineman San Clemente has. Goodwin frac· lured an arm last week and is -lost f'or the season... "One or our quarterbacks (Junior Charles Presley) is also out. He sprained an ankle. But other than that. we're pretty healthy," Sc h a rr s a ys . "'Considering how late In the sea s on >l is , we 've been fortunate not to have too many 1njuries." SAN CLEMENTE brings in a 9-1 r ecord, but Aviation isn't likely to be awed by that-the Falcons also have a 9·1 slate. They went overtime before s queaking past El Toro last week, 20-19. Coincidentally, El Toro Is the only team to beat San "Clemente this seas on . The Chargers handed San Clemente a 24-14 loss arter the Tritons had rolled to impress ive. one-s ided vie· tories in their first three games of the season. "I look for a very close game against Aviation. because it looks liJce we match up preUy evenly on paper," Schaff says. "The injury factor could be a very important one . Ir one or the good kids for either team goes down. that could have a big bearing on the outcome." QUARTE RBACK DON DILL operates t he Sao Clemente w is hbone offense, and the backfield is deep in talent, with Mike Wade. Jeff Danner. Mike Lewis and Nate Rowsey sharing the duties. Wade and Banner also fill vital roles on the pass defense, while Mike Calvert rounds out the squad with experience. . "We feel Calvert and Wade are as good as any d efensive backs in the county," Scharf says. "The Calvert ramlly has produced some girted athletes. Mike's brother, Corky. is a starter as a freshman for the University of Utah." A•ln..,_l .. 11 " TorrM"l(.tt 0 I& l llWncllllf' 0 ,. Mlr&(O'.IA 10 J flseovf'Oo I 1J Hervaro I JS Leu1J-I 11 Ltnno• A cu• PLAYOl'l'S " Ae-• 10 El TO<O IOll .. " M frale'\tfl II Pirates Open Tourney Play O r ange Coast and Golden West College basketball teams take to the courts tonight as tournament action begins ror both. Orange Coast , hos t or the Mil es Eaton tourney. plays Eastern Arizona in its firs t round encounter at 7 o'clock. The Pirates are currently l·l on the youn.g season. Golden Weal, undefeated (3·0> in early acUon thus rar, travel!• to the wes t end or the San Fernando Valley for its l(ame with Moorpark In the 10th an· nual Moorpa rk tournament. It's also a 7 o'clock game. 0.MIV Piie! Sult_ SAN CLEMENTE WIDE RECEIVER MIKE CALVERT. The Gauchos, 3-0 on the year, m eet West LA tonight {71 in 11econd round action. Patrick hlt eight of 13 shots from the noor and had 23 poinL" while Whieldon canned 10 of 19 field aoaJ attempts and finl11hed , vMh 27 points .. Despite the1r Kh$f pa hooting, Saddleback as et tea/Q" s hot just 38 percent from the noor . Bruce LaVallee and Ben nacon also scored in double f1gure!'I for the Gauchos. who went over the century m ark for the second time this season. ~IMI ""'- s ....... , .... •• "tp ~ I ?l HtllM•\ ""'"'"' ri.t\IMhef 81ttHh~ voci1 ~ lhnm1t ro1el\ ' o 1 p.,,,0 I ) R Sollfot . ' . 10 I 11 I n U W~letclon ' 7 • l ft It lAV•lf.. •. I ti 1 1 \ eec.,.. , ' 11 1 ' " "-•O-., n n n 1n • '' M<Cou•t • • ,. I I \ H<t<k•I I n ~ A n I~ Norri• n O O 41 14 'lft M~lllnoe I 0 • B•'""" o o 11 Amlltel I 0 I r.&11• ) 0 • Mow .. d I 0 1 8.tql.... 0 0 0 ro••h 1\ l!> '°" ... 111,,... ~1-r \1"'4 Tlliel touh ~ .,,._. n, .....,...,. .. , n Fou1w out J __ , ~~~~ :::::;;-• (!io>O-HI. Te<hnlt.tl 'OUI Edison Defense Ailing But Chargers Still F arored Over Chaffey By DAVE CUNNINGHAM OI I ... O•llY Piiot St.II Edison's nanl'·game wanna n~ s tre a k -th e lo n gt>s t b y a Charger footba ll team in eight years as teetering on the health of the Chargers' highly-touted defensive secondary. Two or Ed1son·s f1r:-.t string pass defenders a rc trymg to r(" eo.ver fl"'Gm the Uu, and uJI . leaguer Steve Davis. the Druly Pilot's Slplset League Defens1v<' Back of Lbe Year. is surfenng from a sprained ank.lc Whether Edison 's Se<.'ondary can stand up to au that abuse 1s a key to how the t eurn will do Friday night <8 o'clock> in a Cl,... Big Five Conference playoff game against Chaffey. COUPLE T HAT WITH tht• focl that Chaffey will have th(' gam e on its home turf. and 1t becomes very difficult to favor Edi son , <•ve n thou1t h th<• Cha r gers ar<' Orange County'-. No. 1 team in the Daily Pilot rankings. But Edison has been inst alled by the Daily Pilot as u one-point fa vorite. anyway. Coa ch Ball Workman rculazes his team IUts its work r ut out for it ·c h a rrey ':. o ff e n se 1:-. s pearheaded by a 9 9 s1>rintcr ttt the wide receiver s lot. Scott Bennett (6·1. 18.S l. He scored touchdowns on passes of seven und 35 yards on l•'riday as Char fey stunned a solid Mater De1 learn , 34·7. "TH EY BEAT Mater De1 by 27 points. That's all you need to know about Chaffey's offense." said Workman. "Lately they've• been throwinJ:: the ball very well ·'They run very unus ual form ations, complex defenses a nd mulllole sets." Workman -.ays •· M J\ b1 ltwy rt• J l11l i.martcr than Ed1\on k1ch Wl· could nrver tcath all that · One of tht> UOOI thodox rorm:i t1ons lhul Chaffry will UM· 1s d 0•"9Clion\lo (Mlt~¥ MtQ~ Pr0<,'ttd north on N• •POI• • r-Hl'fllHV f\\• tri t~ R1vftr\1dfo 'f•"ftWA\I l~U f'..o to>ct\1 ,,,, t~ 'fl lu ~·O"•d• 1t Pr-()'""'1 Mrl" '" M 1f)n ...... ,. ,,, f '-'tlld Av..-furn OQf'lt r.n r ....-1.1 '• hnQI I ~Al .. n nn IMt et 114\ '" t-u< 1u1 ,,, °"'"'IM' defense where Chl' linc-backs up three or four yards off t ht· ball Rut rven on di ves and quarterbal'k sneaks. they wcrt- Jble to hold Mater Dea 10 Jone yard gain or h:\s with that formation MATER DEi IS lh<' only com mon oppon('nt bet ween Ed1son and Chaffey The Charger:-. pulled out a 14·6 victory. whltt• Chaffey's playoff wm was 34 7 Other than those stricken by the.' nu bug, Edison Wiii ht• at thl same strength 1t was for Fnday s 21 13 tnumph ovt·r Will.on Jugn of J lac1cnda J Ie1ghls Itunrung back Mike Oottcn ·r 1s 'iOmet1mcs cons 1d(•red the .. um and substance of Edison'') offense, and he'll be at full ..,trenglh Ooth.•r('r is avcra~1ng 108 8 rustunJt yards J)(:r game WITH TA I LBAC K Rob Mllucky stall mJurc-d, at might be argued that J::dlson has a on<.' di m e nsion a l offe nse. but Workman will hear none of that. .. I u nd e r s tand our quarterback throws the ball pre- lly well, too," Workman says. "'Dotterer is important, sure. but we can do other things, too." Junior Frank Seurer (pro-- noun l'ed s 1g h ·c rl i s th e quarterback. Since coming back from a fractured Jaw three weE'ks ngo, Seurer has complel· ed 20 or 40 passes and thrown for l>IX touchdown.'>. Clo•llory 1•11 A·IA Faces Bearcats When the Athlel{'!. 1n Acllon basketball team makt's 1ls f1 r.1t se a son a ppearance at tht· Anaheim Convention Ce nter tonight. al wtll find itself an an unfamiliar predicament -tryanl( t o s nap a two ~am e loi.111~ streak. Only fi ve times s ince li1ll Oates became head coach thrct· yea rs ago has AIA s uffe red back-to-back los~e~. Excludmi.: World Games compet1t1on. Al l\ hns never lost three an a row in the Oates era But 1t will be tou~h to keep that trivia 1lem intact torught Good Beat CHAFFEY!! (ffl against the Umvcrs ity or Cincinnati. The Oearcats are led by All-America hopeful Pat Cummings a nd former NBA coach Ed Badger. Cincinnati has 25 straight winning seasons and has averaged 22 wins the lruit four years. Cu mmings. a 6-9 forward- Cl'Oler, earned All-Metro Con· fere n ce honor s las t year. averaging 18 points a game. -· Also back from last year is 6·4 f:!uard Eddie Lee. Badger spent the last two years coaching the Chicago Bulls. FOOTBALL / SKATING CdM's Bright Star Sea Killg'~ Blocks :__:::_:.::.:..::.::c:L:::.:: B)' ltOGt:R C,\Rl..SC.lN °'"" o.;1, ~! ...... tt It ha! been an lilCknowle<Jged tact that the Coron• dt-1 Ma r lbgh Se• Kinas h•ve amµlf' oftt>ruuve "'el\pons in their quest for tht: Cl I-' Cientral Confert.-ncc foot ball ehan11Hot\.Sh1p The Se• KJn~ h•v~ • 11tcrlin.a run ner In tallbuck ,.1urtin llullbard CIO lourhdo"'rull and u Oehl 11;enrral whn runs the option u11 well II.I\ any 1n Quarterback Kurt llr()("kn1an But Coach Oh·k ~1orrls hlils another ge1n II\ lhfll biickri\'ld:n s1·nlor."'ho seldom ~et.s the re .. oi:nilton duti him since he doc4n't ('tirry lhf' bnll thal o(tcn. ii nt·vcr 1t1. rt•c\'L\l.'t and dl)tls noc niukc any tackle.~ WllAT llE OOES 00 1s ·block 11 i:o f)ave Br1gtit 11' blocks that §ptlnM llul)burd and 1t 1s L)ll\'1• Dr1~ht's bh>tkt1 that 11llow l\rock 1nan to J.>UhS or run the Ol)t1on. /\ ~·10, 18S·poundcr, Brighi <'ti rr1rs the ball on ott't1s1on and has ptlt'(J up 270 yards on S9 cur ru:s, KOtld ror a J>llir or tou<'hdowns Thuraday. Nov.mber 30. 1918 DAil V PILOT 83 Eagles Win Tari,· Terrien Simi-la.,. !:J;.fu~5s~ •. ~~.,~!t~!,, ~th Tean18 H~ Toug!i Def enses waste an)' time In be11t· REDLANDS There are &o m e h ··-. ted( lna ..... New.por..Wlarllor • -t t,.iking 1lmileritles between the gam~. ~ accoun ?r 700 yards. S2·15, In Wednesday's Redland8 lllgh Terriers a nd Ne rt DAVE C?9RRENT~ has picked up wre111Un1t &eQOn opener. II arbor Sailors as the two gi~or 41 ~lnts t.hls year with four-for-four The E•1le1, after Friday night's CIF Big Five Con-on field goals and 29 or 30 PAT at. drop p Ing th e ri r s t rerence quarterfinals lootball game tempts . J;Us two field goats beat ~har. 1natch. re.r1t..<d uff 1even a t Newport fey, 6·0, 1n a gume Womack beheves vict~rleti in 11 row. _hi· The blue.·clad Terriers of Coach his team sho~ld have won by three f'lt1d1ntc i.t 1Strlng of fi ve Paul Womack play tough defc touchdowns. 1>ln~. Of lh~ 10 E.stan~la d.ldn't win thei r league c h::: Ch.affey ousted Mater Dei, 34·7, in w_lns. thrL'i!, were quick plon s hlp. los t by 8 couple of th~.f1rs~round.. . . .. p1n11 Riek Rush had H touchdowns to Fountain Valley ha I like thi s s1luat1on . 'ays 1.25 1>i n In the 10.l·Pound recorded three shutouts have ~w ve Womack. "The Sunset League and ~lass, Dave ~rcn:i? had had the dependable field goal kick~~ the Citrus Belt League . We _lost t.o a I 28 fall 111. the 191 and came through in their pla ofr Fount.am Vall~y early , bul 1l was d1v111\on uod t .. d Lowry opene r with 810.1 victory 'I 14·!4 1n. the third q uarte r and (feel r.1.nntd his 145-pound foe · we ve improved a great deal. We l 1.32. "WE'RE VF.RV impressed wilh ~5neawny.w .• ~ could play derense as well ••1.ori<i.N.PM..,.nH•• .... '• N " • l.••• 1N1,.........,,..,,.,., 1 :tt ewport llarbor 's defense,'' says 10J 11 .. , .. 1r1 P•""""81•'" • " Womack, who has the Terriers In the OTHER GUNS in the Redlands sta- 111 D l-• !El Dlft<led G•"•" c bl . I d 0 , •• • IF playoC!s ror lhf< 13th t ime in 15 e inc u e runne rs ave llubby n~ o "''""" 1E• II'""""' Jon•• years . R... ._....... 1195) and Mark Blankenship 11901, ~1:~._ .. ...,,1;11.,.,.....,,, .... , •' "Newport's offense is ~imilar to who double at line backer, and All· •»-f 1, .. ., ,,, -p,,..,..,," • ours. We try not to make it too hard Cl F . candidates Denny Earp !of· ,.__W•ft9tf1 .....,l>'f"•<><"''' on our def .. n.se. •• fe'j1ve guard> and defensive end u~-•· l.-• !El "'......, • .,..,.. .. R C I 1 n The Terriers. who do not list a arril o. ~~-s. ... _.. tH1 11tc. v, .. °"'.., player over 200 pounds. rely on the ll!Eou,.010-n .. ~~ ... i.. iE1<1K. o.r>• •:J.• running of tailback Mike Marshall ,. ,_,,.inv.i""' ,. }6 P•cnk H~-G ,...,C•!flllt<.P......,u.J (1651 and passing or Chet Dawson. ~; :::"'..= ,; ~ ~:::..Spr!ftq!. " ' ' ALL MAKES! 833-0555 Ask For Our lWI SP!Cl.WST at HOWAAll Chevrolet But Bright's .,.·orth is uot 111easured in yards and most filnS ,..,II have a hard time recognizi ng Br1~ht 1f their eyes areon llubbard <int( Brockrnan. :•;.-10'"""1Ei pimedl.-1U•dl Dawson and Marshall have each run 1 £1 ... -1t c•" c.cw-0•a.-"""a...,,,,., "••-P·.,..•~1N1-11~10f~11. for eight touchdowns and the passing 7: ~::,;:;-"' '! 10 ~· ,.,...,.,. NEWPORT BEACH h<as been rspeci al I y h\!lpful to ~;:=~~=====::=~~====~~======================~=====~~:'.~ ~rlght's eCfcctiveness as a blocker. A ltpQ ff to Corona de\ Mar's use or a rullbat·k as a blocker is seen in the las l two winners of the Sea Kings' bloc ker of the year award-to fullback:; llrnd Stasscl <ind Marty DAVE BRIGHT "BR IGlrf IS VER V 11npot1.a.nt to our offense," says Murr1s as tus team prepares for 1'1iss1on Vi ejo Friday night in lhc second round of the Cl F playoffs. "lie takes a ~real de:tl of 1>ride in his blocking and \4'ould just as soon make a ~ood block as a good run. 1-tc lea~ on our s peed option to the out· side It is one reason it has worked so we ll for. us. And in our passins: scheme, whether we're ~oing-to pass or not is predi<'att.>d on Bright's block on the defensive end." · Off.season ,.·nrk with the w<:iJ(hts In Cos ta Mesa Green. llUIJRARO ANO BROCKMAN wi ll ~urcly continue to take the s potlight 1n Corona del t\11:1r 's title chase but il will be behind BriA"hl. ' .And the future appears bright, too, wi th sophomore Chris Bright and fres hman Hill Bright looming 1n CdM 's plans. Skating Finals Set ' The fina l lhrcc days of th e Southwest Pacific Re~innal figure s kating championships will take place at the Ice Capadcs Chalet on Paylarino Street in Costa t\1csa t~ri­ day through Sunday. The three top winners in cat'h or 10 d ivi~ions will advance to lhe P<1c1fie Coast sectional championships in Santa R~a . .Ian. 7-14. The nationals will. be held in Cincinnati, Jan. 30. Feb. 3. . Cc;>mpetilion is in juvenile 18-12~. Junior llO-l8-J .lilnd .senior Copen) c lasses. The public is in\'itcd to watch lhe performances any or the three days. Among the ar!'a skaters who did not have lo qualify but will be C'Om- pcting in this weekend's compclititon tire Karen Bcrzon or Newport Beach and her pat1.ner Gary Forman or 1-l unlingt.on Beach in gold dance; and lhe senior p11irs duo or brolher and sister Hal and Lyndy l\1arron of San- ta.Ana llcights. Area skaters gainin~ the finals in- ('[ude : Tom Dickson and Jim Mullen of N!'wport Beach 111 JUnior men; Jim Cygan of Costa l\1esa and John F'ildig of Garden Grove in novice men: 1t1aria Causey of Irvine in novice ladies _ .. _ .. , ..... ,, ......... ~ .. F"'h•'IS<~-le MO•nlftQ ~ ... o .. IFlqu••>I I 10 NDV"• M•n 1 • 10-Juv~nu~ l!O•• I 10-9 ~D-/u••"'''" c;,.,, 10 '0·11 10 lnt•"netll•I• MPn 10 ?0-17 JO- lnle•ff'..UIM' '-'"<I"'' . ':;_':'.'f":: ... s:.~: .. '~'tz~~~ .. ~ c.::::-lAd .... Ev•n1t1Q 'loe•°""" 1 JO.• •~f;•Olll• Dfr<l<P !lnlll"I Pound I I d • 0\ ~n•o• Pf!•• !!>ft<I'! P•"'l••ml • O\·t 3'-Gold 0.-• <l~1to•I llouM. J 0,oN:<:'IJ S.ol~•••r'• l<Md"N M!)rftl"'l-'io>'o 1Fio<1"1Ptl 1•!1 JO-NoV>C• lM!it• "lle•l'IQOft Y ••""' l-1 ~~-J~v~n•ie (;Ir!\ !F•~ !>•111· l"'>I 1 \~J ·~ J"""" L..O"'"' f ...... •I Pr<>a<,....J JO~•­Ju"'°' M-151>1><1 t'r<)Q<o•<•'I •·~ O'-lnlt""''(JI.,,.,,.,... ""~~ ~ ..... ...,1 £"""'"" ~ I~ ,._,,.,,,,"""''~I• t...ol"' !F•"• s .. 111nq\ I 70 9 '' No~I<<> ,,. ... IF•~· !>•"""QI ~ •S 10 lO !>P~•O• 1 .,.,., 1o;n 0n Pr~Qr 4m1 10 .Jl).10 ,o. 00111 1.l»n<e 11,.,,, .. , "'"''""-051'1 -.. ., •• S<Moful• "'u~,.....,,, 'iM•-11 40-.Ju•oft<l• Dov' If'•,,.. <;oAt '"IJ) l .cf.)-flr""I" D•M• U 1nAI ll<><rr•cll I l l'll Novi<• L..,IP\ 1f·r.,. Slo~l">(ll J ol).• \11-J...,,.. Mo,n '"'"•!>•••-! e ..... ,n<i SM.,.,,.. 1e 01-J""'°' L"<I••• tf'•H ~·1 lr111l I 1>S-1 JO -G01<1 0.n<e !Fon.It R<>•"'"· F•-!IA"l"I I SO·• !>6-~'or l.""'"' IF•.,. !>••l•"Ql • lol>10 111- 'iooft•Of P""' lFr .. S..•h<>Q! •So Small 11 oracl1caJly Ills 1nlo your POCkel • Revolullonary new clec1ror11cs • E•posure system •S ® luUy automat•c, etec1ron1c and uUr1t-&ecurato •Film Loading •S easy 8nd fool proof • Durab!eand sturdy all metal body • Winder available SANTA Will Bf HERE Rrinn the KIDS -··sz-..°"" See PENT AX Cameras Demonstrated At ..• Cal's SJmi-Annual SIDEWALK SAL1 · PAKfAIT1C l'ltCIS ( ... ONE DAY ONLY!,_',;~": .... Saturday. Dec. 2, 10 a.m.-4 p.m. •• • SIZE 155180R13 $38.95 ER78 ·14 $48.95 FR78·14 $50.95 GR78·1,4 $55.95 HR78-14 $58.95 FR78·15 $52.95 Big Savi .... --"· _ngs On Glass Belted Radial Whitewa lls! The Gene1al Jet Radlal leatu1es two ply llberglass belts, a radial polyester cord ·• body, and an aggressive 5·rib tread design. Sile BR78·1J tubeless wn1tewan, PIUS Sl.9~ fed. E•. T•• Sale Ends Saturday, November 18 1978 ' . REGULAR _Fed. Ex. SIZE PRICE .. Tax $1.43 GR78-15 $55.95 $2.75 $2 .36 HR78-15 $59.95 $2.94 $2.51 JR78-15 $62.95 $3.08 $2.65 LR78-15 $63.95 $3.22 $2.82 P185/75R14 $48.95 $2.08 $2.45 P195175R14 $50.95 $2.21 RAIN CHECK Shou10 our suppl~ ol 11-0me s11es 01 lines rut1 short auri~ this event ,,,.8 wilt hono1 any 01de1s pl1eed now for !uture delwery al the advertised price • POLYESTER CORD TIRE DEAL! Wlie They Last' Th• G'"'"' OU•l·St .. t •• ~ s359s 01a l. A great long mileage lir e. Built with two steel 511£~78-ll be Its and radia 1-p ly con· IUBH£.SS ~t1uction fo1 long l'COl'IOm1-WHlf£WAtl cal mileage. ' Pl~~ $1.9'Jl .tT. The General Poly-Jet s239s features a smoolh riding polyester cord body, and a · wide, Ila! tread IOr traction. ¥~z:e~~~·lJ Wh1tew11U plus Sl.64F.E.T 78 and 83 Series RETREADS ALL SIZES ONE PRICE! WHITEWAW IF A'IAJU.IU IHCWDES IHSTA.LL A.HDIA.LAHCE s1as9 Tu 11.9' 12.40 $2.58 12.76 12.96 $3.05 $2.83 llOJ $3.19 $3.3' BLEMS 3 POPULAR SIZES MAJOR BRAND STEEL RADIALS WHITE SIDEWALLS 65 GR78xl 5 ....... _s 4500 ... + 1.40,.,. . ..... s 3 500 40 P20S/70-14 ... + 1.40..,. 59 P205/75·14 ..... _s3 700 Thet• 131 •ehiclff,' ti1et will flt MOtt ... + l.lllllT Mld-1l1e U.S. F.£.T. 1164 u n 12.13 $2.26 12.42 12.GO 11.78 12.45 1265 12.86 .93 SPECIAL BRAKE OVERHAUL Far c ... with ff'Oftt •sc/,.... bn*e1 1-pten.1 1 1ns1au O.sc Pads -hn1ngs 2 Rebuild wtieel cylinders 3 Resurface rotors & drums .c Pack 1r·oo1 Wheet bearings 5 1ns1a11 new front grease seals $ 6 lns1a11 return a hOld-7;599 cfOwn sonngs 7 Bleed & llush Mas1er CyUnder 8 Inspect brake hOses Moott U.S.-' 9 lnsoect rMSlet' cyhnders .....,. ,.,.. \O Add nui<:l •I necessary -ot•••ll.Ult 1 I Fload Test "'-"'c:m GENERAL TIRE Sooner or later, you'll own Generals General Tire Slore prices and credit terms. Product avallablllly •nd prices may vary at Independent dealers diap1iylng the General sign . • COAST GENERAL TIR~ . -2855 H• bcw llYd. j VIS4" 1 Costa Meta. Callfomla •1 540-5710 . .. . . . . ~ .... .. . ... ' .. ..... ---.. --~ ... HOFER TIRE SALES 8249 lolsa Midway City, Callfomla .892-209~ I -----~-~~-~-~·~-~-·~~· ~ .. . .............. 1·- .... PAIL~ Pll.O T Bask tball .. Titans Roll To64-50Win ,,....,.,.Dl __ _ Guard Kl•IU\ Andt•Non ron-d 18 po1t\ to I ad Cal Slate Fullt•rt0t1 to 1.1n t· 'I) 64 !!()non conll're-nte colltKt> bukNIJall vh·tor) o • .,,. vt 1llni Wt1coru.1n· Park.Ide 1\K''ittay hi«ht Tht 'l'ltaM, "ho rturht'd lht• rinal o( the NCAA w t\•m fh'Ml<>flal pl ~off la l Marrh. D()W have a 2-0 rt'Curd 'fh Jlonl(Pl'I drot>PC.'<.l ID I 2 Fullt"rton won th~ gnmt> at th (fff thro'* 11n T he Tit~ mode 22 rMrt N04ll'l to 11 for Lht lhna:t•n but bit on 20 or j.19 11ltt•mrit.~ rmm tht' frN> throw lloe to eight of 10 for W111.rons1n Parl'lldf" • Th~ tc•nlt-wa dost> for th•• rir I 10 m1nut .. befo~ fo'\Jll rton pulled a1uy to it 3'J 28 adv.mta'l'' Al hatrtlmt. The T tt 10:1 \o\ttl'n t ~f'riou11ly threatc~ ufln the mlt•rm1" ion.~ Forward Kt>vln l lt•t•n n 'lw · 11> po inl'I for 1''ulltrtoo 01.,,.,. NI. •8~ Sa'°ro....ao ~,f t<;UGENE, UH· thl·t,:1111 u t.'d tht• Clr't hull !ihoottng ol llob Clo'' ,ind J11hn Murru' alonu w11h fres hman·J eroml• W1ll1"m' .:.11m· h1,:h 18 ix1111ti. to rout Sac·r..1mento St oil\•. H!J ·H in .in 111h·r~wrt 1mrnl baskf.'tball uaml' W1·dnt'Mtt1' 111.:hr Murray and C'lo~i. t'11n1bmt·d in ttw f1r \I hull for 14 points. h1tlinR on 1 of 9 \hots <'lcN .. fin1shN1 lht• .iume Wlth 12 polnl.'S unll MurrJy hat! 111 J>(11l Opdyke led the Horot•ts with 11 11mnt' Wculd11gton I . 11, f~r,,,,.., :n FRESNO Terry Kt•ll) scorc·d M 1><11111s in th1: tmit hall a.o; W11shmgtpn Slal0 shot a torrid 77 K J><"r l'C nl from the n oor ancJ ~ t.'nt on to ~at 1-'rl'sno St at•· •17 37, m college ba!->kct't>all WedncMJuy n1ghl For the Ramc. the Cnu~ar:, fin1!->hcd shoohng !i8 8 pC'rccnt whlll' tht• lo:-.c•r' h1l only 34 9 percent Ke lly l<'d both l N1ms with 16 po1nt!'i I\ rt1t> Williams led fo'n •snn with t:J point~ SW Lou,.lana 73., llftlO 11 LAtAYE:'M'.E. La Andrew Toney liank""two fr.:e thro ws w1lh b l X second:. le ft to ~1vc !'iOuthwestt•rn Louisiana a 73-71 victory over Nevada Rt•no Wt•dnebday night. Southwe,tNn trailed through most of the '.:cond hulf and was b<'htnd 71 67 a fter Nevada Hl·no·sc·on·n it~ la:-.t points with :! 09 t.o play. Toney ,;ink h1i. frt·e throv.s 1n a one a nd one situation Toney lc<l Southwestern with 27 point!> Johnn~ I l1~h was tops (or Nevada Reno with 21 D.-Paul 1·1 .. Evan•ml.le $S fo~VANSVILLE. Ind. -Center Jim M1tC'hem M'ored 20 pornts Wednesday night. leading OcP<iul 10 a 74-55 victory over the University or Evan!'>v1llc: 111 the rebuilt and struggling Aces' firM hom•· ~a me srnc<· lht• entire basketball team and l'Oach "l'rt' k1 lll'd in an airplane crash nearly <1 yc~r ago The J\ce1>. pl aying under new Coach Dick W Jllcrs with a !>quad of freshman and transfer s tu dl·nls, were no matr h for the cxpencnn·d Blue l>e mons who hit tO or lhcir ftr))t M s h11ts trom the • f wld l(arucu 91" f'airlriflla 6IJ LAWRENCE . Kan Sophom or e ..:uard Durnell Valentine a nd freshman forward 1'1Jny Gu v combined for 30 J>Oint~i lo w ad the fourth· 1 ;.rn k ed K a n sas Jay hawks p ast Fu1rJ eigh 1>1t•kin11on. 9 1·68. W1>dnt·~'1 <1y nig ht 1n the .Jay hawks' season ope ner Valentine fi red in 12 of h111 Hi points an the firi.t h:llf as Kansas rated to a 51·27 advantaae with the ht·lp of 13 Fairll'1gh Dickinson turnovers in the first :!Ominutcs Paul Mokcsk1. K <.1nsas' 7 root I center. scored 12 points a nd snar <.'d c1ahl rebounds. Syra~•t> I 02. N_. Caro.. A&T 11 SYRACUSE. N Y Senior captain Dalo. Shac kleford scored 25 points and guard Hal Cohen added 15 lo l ead ninth ranked Syracuse over North L1rolina A&T. 102 77 , in collc~t' bas k ctb&ll W cd nesday night Center floost•velt Bouie <t l!..O had 13 points for lhl' Orani,:cm1•n while Louis Orr added 11 as Syracuse used a balunced scoring attack lo offset a 26-poanl performance by the J\guies' J umes Spar- row College Basketball WISf <."t \lt\•tt r vtlf"tfott t 41 w.'I, .,,.,., \td• )0 (Al l ul-M t•, U\IU 11 Color •OO 100, Color-M l""' i. • o,._,. wc•-toi.1 « P•r;Mrdln" 81. ldahO SI &6 ~"" 01"00107 l aVetn. &J w;,. hbot"n Y tn 6/ Atr r nu,. \If W1t,tunn-tM \f ,, f ''°''"' ')t JI wvr1m1N118 r. •a\ W•\I ~ EAST ( CJhJ..-fti cu. R•t11,t..•IA11t fJC\IV I.A , .... 1 ... 111 ... 11 .. 0ooo...,,1 /1 I •'tAfff I f, f\uc•rwtt )ft I IUH,.,,,.Jll'l""ml'llll'l l>ll MA .. '\•U'""' ..,f•tt\ , ... "'"""' ... ~ ,,, on"<» V1tOIOIA /If '"~ .. .._ 'H U) f.W·t.twAr,. Al f'ltt .t>urratt tftt f'tO (1•t•r.O• )fJ Pr 1nn>t<Ju N7 W""f)ttf'r h-. • f"•t)Vtdf>nrr•M /4\\,'4'0Vt~M. UUIQf'f' 10 t t'tumtitlt I< j 'ti konttv• ntu•..-171; ~"1"""'',"''"" ). ~t f ,,.,'f •'-''" ltJ '' M1t t\iil'I \ '7 !:>t Jo"•ot't't~ l•1t "' Pio·~, .,.. '-ton ,...,,. 1'>9 AN-,,.,,, .. ,• M ~rf•< UV> J(» N1,rtn ( 1tH)h1\4 A.A t 11 W t'\f YH(ltf'H'4 4 W tfl••m 111ut\ M••r,. Water Polo (ll't-A Wtl•t ..... NI wPO'f H<trllot I) °"' p, ...... l\ I ~1111t1r HUit II. LMll•w • Cl,~A Wal., 1"94• l 1 OOr.OOt,IM10• ..... ,,."°''I) ·~·"'""'. C" 2•A Wal•t Polo l • C:.,...0. U IWll c.ar(loon, 11 ~" ... -" <:,..,,., o .. ~ 10 CONTAINER STORAGE. INC. \OUTl4 Al,.tMmA ll •u'\Un p,,, ••• h4 "'" f\1rm109_.,.. 81 Olil411l()M4 ( • lv N Mo•o>MMI .,, ,, '.,_,_ W~•I., ti < tro Cl'\411011• ... Ml\\IUIPPI )I tH(1 Oor111nlon .. ; Ol'Of'll" M•\On 11 111<"-"• AIUlnll< Cll•lt•'f <,w I OU""'"" ,, Nr•lld.t-Rrno II f ut,.rw. ~ '~1th.l•rn ~tht>O•\f 64 \/Ml~ ~"'11<>tdllll MIDWEU' OftPo"\ul 14 l v.iu't~Vlllfl ~\ 0fllr011'4,NOMl(l\IOM"7 0 1 "•ft>••'1. fAlrlltlOl'I Olr•ln""' •8 Mi.,.)u•ll• 10. ~Ir,_. Al>Oer S6 MtAm• °"'"\II, Mu••HIC!Um •6 NOrlll ( .. ,,,,1 ..... " Nn"'"""".'" ., 0 ••1 Rt)t>oN\lol l'M"'" \f \\ PurOu~ ~ )(,..,,1,.r ()h~ \t \I I mm ~I ..... flll1V11\ I\ OT Wl'\t4'rn Mtt l'ltQAn I) VMICMr .-i,•1 ~· SOIJT14WfST • •m1tr 14, Te-•\ SoulMrn n Ho" .. f~lUI\ lUI""'"" ~ ,,.,,.,,., A.rtien..-, "'' ~· frwn 1'rllnat0t>93 ICU I I f•aA\ (I P-"097. Mt<tw• \hhft ~J , .... , Tl'(fl 11111 NO Mot\l•M )• JC Basketball JC:ll•'41tt ... n -..w-· I.A 11•r"°'l2, OctlC~nl•I Jll 4• <•tt>\\INWll IA. 5oulh-t~rt1 I~ <,,.nla AM \01 ~4 Mion1t" '1 ""'.._ Y•ll.., Twr ... , '"" 11,M.1 i..nJ.cmto•I ( 1H hlU t'I. t.A Ml"IOll ~I "'"''-M, P"'°"'"' " W~\I LA •I, f'OFIMWlll• llO ~11!4).M• '°'· ~·· .. r.1•no .. 1. 97, RI'""'""" 11 Anlel<I~ \/ .... , .._ 8'"<-t1 At1tont Wlt\t"'n "· W"\I Hiii\ t? BASKETBALL /OUTDOORS IHeli ........ Record Fever When you want to try for u world record trout. you acek out the man wtlh t..he local knowledge. You ask around and try and flnd out who 18 the best guide in the territory. T rout fishing guldes have to know some secr et hJdey-holcs where big trout lurk, or they can't make a living, right? I have never owned a world record in my hfe but I have the bug to try and set one. I HAVE B EF.N READING the r~ord book published by th<' Fres h Water Fisn lna Hall or Fame. IHH1 d1ttovercd there are several records o pe n in the cut-throat, brown, golden a nd rainbow trout categories that look hke they might be eas y lo set . While m<>l\t record trout have been taken in P yramid LaJw. Nevada. rumors have It there arc bigger fis h to catch In Wyoming nnd Montana Chcck1nJ! Into the matte r deeper. l dis·. covered most or the top trout guides operate o ut of Moose. Wyoming, a wide spot in the road 12 ma les out or Jacksonllol(' UNEXPECTED VISITOR -W et ll cr · St rt•ld1 " Yo n f! o f Ne"'port Beach "n:q>pl'd lh1::. gr aceful , wild s wan in /\l'Wl}()rt llu rbor recently. The bird Is one ol u !11~ht of five s wans now wintering in the bay. N o rma lly. s wans nest above the arctic circle a nd <t re rarely seen this far south. AND Of' TU~ 13 W\'OMING licensed J:Uid es 1n Moose . my c hoice for the man lo lead me to a record waR Carson Hubbard. I learned from s><--oplc whose opinions I trust that flubbord makes hiR own rods and ties his own flies He has t he reputation of havin~ J!1ven names lo big trout s w1mmin$t in o ut of the way streams like Mosquito Creek and J enny Lak<· because ·he has caught and relea sed most of them on th· barbless hooks he Ulll'S , Swordfish Fading? 1979 Figures Cause Coneem Among Fishermen By DICK ROBINSON .D.oll' ,.llo« OVl4Ht Wtll., From Mu'!-Ufltll Thanksg1vtng wt•t·kcnd. some 10,000 broadblll have lx•t•n slau~hlcred for the market hy harpooners m the ('atahna Channel The catch arntiunls to some· two million pounds. and doubles lhc record takl-of i-wor<lf1sh in 1!>48 The whol<•salc price (or the drei.sed fish tumbled Crom $3.50 per pound. l'etrly in the year. to Sl 25 per pound in Octob<>r. Now, with fower fish to kill. thl• price ha:. n st.'n to $2 50 1w1 po und 1 IT HAS BEEN a record year for s ports me n catching these ~real ~lw:lwtor~ on rod and reel, too Sornt• 70 hrn<1dh11l have been Wf'tght•d·in at th<' Ba lboa Angl- mg Club to lop the record 29 fish 'portsmen caught 1n 1971. If s wordflsh we re like tattle , 1t ·would take 80 square miles of n<'ean to sustain a herd of 10.000 broadbill up to the size where they rould be shipped lo u feed lot for '3ttcnmg. But broadb1ll are not c allle. The <.'Ompetition fo r food 1s much ~r,.ater in the sea Largc•r ureas of ocean. a nd the whole food chain, are ne(•dcd to s ustain the den11.cns living in the wulcr world. THIS YEA R 'S G REAT s wordfish kill has become the concern of both commercial fis- hermen and sportsmen a like Evf'n though 98 percent of the <'ommerc1aJ fishermen voted lo ba n the spotter airplane that was \l!jcd hy bome to find and slic k !roadbill. lhc catch was in· cred ibly largl· De partment or Fish and Game MiTd . ..lhe reason for the up- surge In swordflshing i s like ly a combination or factors induding water temperature. oceanic con- d 1 t ion s. food avaJl ab1laty, weatncr. and of course. tn· cr eased fishing pressure. But we simply do not know." WITll 11tESE LARGE num· be rs of broadbill in the chaM el. fis hing pressure was heavy. This year the Df'G issued some 750 comme rcial permits. A normal issue is 400 lo 500 permits per ye:i r There are others who have ac· cumulated som e hard da ta on the mo\.ements or broadbill. And the information is not e ncourait· 1ng In the liithl or this year 's kill. In 1973. J .S. Beckett. a scien- t 1s t condtJcting broadb1ll re - s e u r c h fo r th e Fi s heries Re&earch Board of Canada. out of the S L An d r ews. Ne w Brunswick biological station, conc luded broadblll have de· finite homing instincts. They re- turn to the same area each year like salmon. R<'cketl considers bro11db11l Jocal lo the waters in which they are round. and s ub- 1ect to depiction. 8 ECKE'IT'8 KNOWLEDGE is ba s ed on h is s tudy of 60 swordfoth tnat were free tagged with darts. •n nll. tags were re- covered from 14 fish. or 23 per· cent. when they were eventually harpooned The greatest distanre traveled from point of tagging to point of recovery, after 15 months. was 128 miles. The shortest distance was six miles in 18 m onths. This gupports Beckett's belief broadbill are local fish because or the very high percentage of recoverl<'s. while the recovery rate rrom fa r wandenna marlin and sailfish amoun!.b lo I~.,:. lhun one pe rcent AS TO OUR own knowledg\'.Of local broadbill movt·mt'nb. e arlier this y('ar, ll o r a cl' Witherspoon and ll11l Pigg. with the cooperation of the National Ma rine Fisheries Ser vice. Issued broadbill tagging poles and tagi. lo inte rested sportsmen The results or this study are as yet incomplete But from June . to d ate. e ight lags have been re- covered from a total o r 17 s wordfish tagged representing an astound1n~ recovery rale or 47 percent in five months . T hough a ll the tagged fis h were recovered locaJly. travel rates hav<' not been calculated as yet But <'V<'n with this m1 n 1ma l 1nformat1on. com· m c r c 1 a I r 1 s h l' r m c n a n d s ports me n ar e talking about depletion or the local swordfu.h population that appears to re- turn here each year like whoop- ing c ranes t o the ir n ativ<' habitat SOM F. THOUG HTS exprrsst'd are. "sh o uld the re be a morito rium on t ht> l ak e or "-WOrdr1sh until we know more a bo ut their habits'>" "Should \here b e co mmercia l nnd s portfish1ng llm1ts placed o n broadb1ll like the yellowfm tuna and anchov)' quotas" .. One cnmmcrcrn l fi sherma n expressed the idea lo limit the number of commcrc:ral licenses and the take. He. feels s uch an art would stabilize prices of swordfish. preserve the broad· bill resource and prevent the vachtsmen from t ur.nang ln~o com me r <'1al swordfashcrm l'n bet ween co<.'ktall parties on thclf ya chts Besides that. aoy guy hvmg in a town named Moose that lefl s unny CaUfomia lo becom e a :i;k1 bum. has to be anaJlnghtman. WHEN HUBBARD CAME to Cahforn1a rcccnlly for a v1s1t. 1 m ade a date with blm. Look here. Carson. I !.a1d. He rc 's the r<.'cord book & I havf'~ ~hanre> Tunned und bearded and drcssoo 1mpec- (' ably in a tweedy outdoorsman's s uit. l lt>arncd th<· 34 yf'ar-old transplanted Cahfor· man hai. develoi><•d th1• taciturn speech or mountain mt•n. lfc doesn't say much. But whe n he talks, you li!\te n ··Ye~." h<•s;.11d "W(' !->hould be able lo find a cut-throat for th1' category an the Green or Sna ke River In Leigh and Lcwu> and Grassy lakes the re are hsh in there that would beat unylhinl( here for the goldens we will have to f1 i..h Fla t Creek . or the G rosventre or Yellowstonl' River.. We will walk fish here. a nd boat fish there. If you want lo try for the Mountain white fish or mackmaw lake trout re· cords you'll have to come 1n June, and it 's cold " "THAT'S OK," f SAID. I can stand the cold, "now tell me about the largest fish a t'lie nt of your's ha!> ever caught " llubbard considered th1~ for a moment. 'Th<'n ht· :.aid , "Well, Dick. we got hooked up with tht• biggest trout l havP ever seen . When he Jumped. he looked l1kt• o marhn Then he went down mto the s hallows and I thought he'd wr:1ppcd some snags. That ':. when a frie nd tame by "' another boat and volun- t<•cr1•d to dive down and untangle him. So over lht• i.1dc he goci. a nd comes back up almos t immediately He told me he couldn't help mt· l\nd when I as ked why, my friend told me th<' hu~<' trout had c;wam 1nto an old JUnk car :.ubmerged in the Juke . a nd Tolled up the wmdows " ThC'n lluhba1 d la ughed with me ··come on to Wyoming, Dick We'll g ive " world record a ~o. Out you have to rt>· member. ther<' b not muc h to do around a campfin.· at night except take a couple of s norts and tell stor1e~ And J've got a million orthem .. . Clam Season Begins Tis· tht• s ea son of 011• Time "•'•"' clammin1t too. ,.0¥ JO t 11 urn 11 °"< I 4 111 I 2 So m any thou.:htrul men. whose livellhoo<I and s port de· pends on a healthy swordfish rf.' source. are asking sear chinit question.". "Will there be fish next year? Have we e ndangered the species with a t ake like thJs., I s the swordfish season o{ 1978 like the year or the gr ent buffalo kill? Will the fish gn the way of the sardtnf'S tha t are no n- cxisl ant?'' B F • hi Re d Good A ser11 ·s o f good ass 18 ng porte winter sea11on clamming tides beg ins t oday. UHTA UIUIAllA )J .1no1 ... -40J roe> f><n Favorable low tide!> wall °'' o .. ,,. , °'"' Oor °'" 1 I " ,, •> •• ... I 0 , " 0 8 I t) O• I If 0• '" 0 , I 71 01 VNFOltTUNATE l.V, THERE are confilclJng opinions among marine blologjsls as to the world wide population, 1.1nd how the brondblll migrate On one hand, some hwlog1sls helieve s wordfish are numerow, 1n every ocean or the world. As lhe rls h are caui;cht. other broad bill m e re ly move into thi'I ('mplied spoce to rm the popula lion gap. Bob Bell. b1olo~i st for th1• Heavy counts or rock cod and rock r1:-1h are being reported by the sportsf1shinK landings . The bass fishing Is also f(ood to ex celle nl With the c hanging tem per aturcs offshore. the mackerel iJnd bomto bite Is big one day a nd nut the next \Allllfl MONICA )• "nOIM\ .. f)on1lo,"' "'4CUrrl 71 rCY-""" 7 hAllflul 'l'IMtd<ud .. Ol!HAllO .. ""II"'" .,, roca <00 O uo \llAl)jHlf, 74<-<00. ~ llnQ COO llf!DOlllOO 63 •nQI•" JO ml\001~1 1 <O• 111(1 /M roc.• tOd VE Hrt111A II 41110lot\ 110 100 tOO. llO •~<I '"""'"''· llinoroa l"Olll' HUfHIEMe JO•noltr\ JtS lotl<lOCI •1 fl'fhMOoer qC.,..(1)(1 nO(>I~ MAlllH4 OIL Ill'\' ,, •no'"' l.IO •04'~ •llO f .. Mitt k.trt'I OC:IEAHSIOf ?6 M\Ql.r\ • bC>ntlO g, !Mu ~ rO< • 11\11, •JO rrl•O•rel .0 roO (CIC! ,.,,..o'"•t». niu-o•oo continue through Jan. l o""" w""""" \J ""<I'"" '" """ ~ Dcliciow. cutmg. m a bollllo • IMhDUI '',,....,'•rel ll~ too tOO lll~WPOllT 11t;ACH IArl • '-'"dlf••l t JOr SpCC IC!I Of cJami. •llO'"" ,,w"'"· 11111'"' found alonR the roast in '""""o'H covt u .. 1101~" """'"u°"' ~I u de p I b mos. I 1 t Water T e mps Newport Huntington Santa Mo111('t1 Hermosa Redondo 69 degrees 69 degrees 68 degrees 69 degrees 67 degrees tlenN:-ks. c·o<'kks und razor clams. T hey arc JtOOd fried. stea med or ruw 1n b u tler a nd tomat o s a uces. Those people over 16 years old are required lo have a hsttinf( license. Ot< I ·~ 0 6 °"' ·~ . ,. 0 , °"' 11 I 4' Ill OK 7• J Tl . ' °"' ,. ''~ I \ , .. ' '" J ., I\ ll•' II • ti I • ,~,. ' ' II 11 Trout Plant ******************** ~ ~-----7GU1 ,fi.nniv<!llr~OltY ------ iC iC ~ iC Reach Down Again TARS * * * * * * * * A. Ctmat"'11 Gift For Him Or Hor ~HICA'S CUjt '1141 91o!Nd cowfll!k to wrltlatond rep.ol•d _,. 1111g1 New orfll4111c 1lyle tol• .-lttl bu"t·ln wedo-in 'Oi. luffy i.oflltt linN for bo,. foot tOnlfo" • '°"· .41.tJ olio for_.,. Jt.ts ~ ~~SHO ES • iC .. iC .. iC .. il iC .. .. .. FIND THAT BLUE PRIDE YOU DID IT BEFORE! YOU CAN DO IT AGAIN!, BEAT REDLANDS .. ir ~ I001ttn. Parent-. & Friends ------..:... * * * * * * * * * * * ~~-~.~~.•ii!!!!2aa_-430...,.3~~~ .... ----~!!!!!!!~~~~~~~"~f••h~n1~.,.nd·Newportleach•7st-1111 ......... -.. ~ ·~ .. -., ' I .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . t l ( '( ( ( ~ ,. . SKll~G I HORSE RACING I BUSINESS .. Thl>l'lday, Novemti.r 30, 1978 DA.II. Y PILOT Jll New Skiing LaW Hit-and-nm la MiM.lemea1w r By OAV6 C' NNINGRAM Ol llW OeH• ,. • ._. l wtt Uit and·run driving has alwa beto Il l cal. bul did you know that hit-a nd run ldma 1. •lso • "lolal>on of tht law• A Calttom1a Matt• l w auU>ort'd by Aut-m blyman Norm W at~r" co Lodi• nlakt• it ml'ldrmttaft()f' lo run anlo t nother k1t>r. lnJure that l)('f'SOO, and lt'ave thtt \l'<'n of the-1u~c•~t Th(' law ha bttn In ~trtrt Ccw 11 months, but o fur thtrt have btf>n no rcportl'd ca'\t-ot prt>ucut1on undt'r lht' lt>"tsl1Uoo ""'E ARf: AO\'l. I G 11kwn 1n our htt>r'*turt nbuut lhc I w i.11~6 Don (_· _KJ_I _c ·_J Rakl'. mun11wl•r Jt Mammoth Moun. tu in Sk 1 Area "It is 1llc1t.il to hit 11nd run. but 1t 'ts u hurli h.1 w 1 o en<orct' '· He addc; th.it \'n(ort'flnwnt its pretty much the re rK111s1b1ht~· of e1U1t:ni. and cmplovf't'll of lht' &kl art'as A r1t1zen :.. arrt'!St 1!> the onl)' option tu these ~rwn:. If you'vl• E.'\•cr been doing a s nowplow "hen some self-uppomt('d frcestyler comes barre ling down, knocks your teeth out and skis away with a rontcmptuous laugh, y<>u know the meaning of frustration · Now. at lea st. we have some measure of recourse. If we can catch the bum. we can cart him off to the authorities and have his ltCt ucket re· voked . Nearly A ll A r~,.. 0,..... Near ly alJ Southern California ski areas a.re in full or partial opera· lion now. with M t. Baldy the lone holdout. Snow 1s being man ufactured night· ly m ureas where s nowmaking equip- ment is located. and skiing remains fair to good at Snow Summ it, Holiday Hill. Mountain High, Wrightwood. Goldmine and the other local spots .. Ma mmoth Mounteln stlll has a pretty thin ba~t· ( 19 h1ches > and hu on ly opened nine llfu Th y o~ moro anow up wr to 1ct tnto tull awtn,a, but help ma) be-on lh way Th National Wt>other Service-~•Y• a storm •y11te m 111 brewlnw in the nortbtm part of the lhtlo and snow Ourrn•t. ore flll~('t~ thl1 week In the S1c-rr •" Wht'ttwr MDmmoth can siphon o(( aomt or that remlliru. to oo 11t't'o, 'but 1n any c-o. t. rorccastcn 11ay thl' storm will move lnla nd beforo 1l rta<'hf"!t the Southern CalHorma are1111 Tho11c who only akl locully have ht tle to look forward to. Loi. Angeles art>t.1 mountains wUI have cool. Windy and dry lo\1enthe r t hrough thu v.c0t•kt•nd no nt-w ~now 1n the un· med1att• future . 1'1fJM Sld ltt9 IJ11d4!rte .. N11:h t 1>k11n1t at Snow Summit heg.ln hH> weeks ago a nd cooUnucs ct.111) from the top of the mountain. fl ours llrt' from 4 ao to 10 p m llllder thf' llHhLS Snow Summit Is ulso gear ing up for a four day class Dec. 4.7 lo improve i.k11li. nf parallel skiers who would like to bt=come s ki instructors. In· forn1ataon is available by phoning Snow Summit at866·4621. A~ Otten B ig...,,_. The world's top professional s ki racers are expected at Aspen Dec. 10·16 to compete in the $80,000 Pro Spree. billed as the richest purse in skiing. Those in the enlry field include de· fl'nding c hamp Andre Arnold or Aus tria, Jungle Jim Hunte r or Canada. Terry and Tyler Palmer , Ha nk Hashina, Werner Bleiner and Austr ian rookie Hans Hinterseer. Sluuta ltf>"'I Clo•~ DotDrt Shast a Bowl will be closed this season while owner Carl McConnell l ook s t o re locate h is r esor t elsewhere. Shasta was plagued last s eason by bad wea the r a n d avala nche. CM Cobr a s Seek Title Skiing Outlook A Costa Mesa team is scheduled to play Satur. day in the Junior All · Am erican f ootb a ll (ha m pionships for the first time ia seven ye ars, a team spokesman said. The Cos t a Mesa Cobras. composed or boys between 8 and 10 years of age, 1s lo meet the Orange Cowboys al 11 a . m . for the clinic level championship, said J eff Overstreet, Cobra spokesman. Th e c ha mpions hips, slated for Orange Coast Colle~e. are hostt..>d this year by lhe City of Cost a Mesa. Motorcraft M•rP •r~ tnr 1.ttnf M-'\ttrf\ ,.,_,con OIOOtn, L .. \.trt Peril No rtttCt<1 9•r.el -0.... I 1004, herd PK•tcl and ... , •now 2 ch.tl<i 00flMr Slt1 R~ll No <'epOrl $06.t Sprl.... No ,,.""'1 SU<l8f 8owt -8'w' 3 f~I. P¥~td oo..o~r Jdouoiec11.it1r•11M11 1rem T•-~ NOfH>Of'I N•n" $Utr &w 1 lrM, ll•tn tMCk~O Wiii\ --loKlfo\, t tun\ ""d1CMI~ Aljll ... ~ 8.t'W' f 1.-.1, WPI p;Mko-0, 5 <MlfS-t wrlfl<~ ftll .. .,,......,_Nor-1 .... -., 8ow4 NO r~_.i • ,. ..... V;tl..., -Al 1,100 ,,.., •IPYll llCM> ~~ 1 ltd, -t IMCl<t'CI I 90" 0010 eno 'CIOubl" <11.tlr\_ "~"·'°° ,..,., ~l@ ... llon, beV t IOOI. -P<IC•ed ' bunny p1e11"" "'"" I cloubl~ <"•" T•llMSlrl hwt-Nor-1 lfH ve111, V•tlty -8&Y. t"• '""'· N0.0 ~r. l ~ ct"'I'' And t tr•m. T•"" v.1...., g.1 IMllftt e -~ il>CM\, \C>r"lftQ <C>nOthon. 3<1>""' Mt 1141M-SI.,_ -··" Clo\'d \IWU 5'11 11~11 8"\t' I loot, """ YIOw, 3ch.tir\6"" 3 surf•o ltfl\ l(trtrwO.O Mt---611\~, '"''· co"' 'now • cf\tun ~ 1 wr1M• hU Bu r llell..,-MI 11$ 8.t\f' J fttt, P<l<k.cl ~r. I doubtt <M•f\ Battery GN SERIES 36 MONTHS 6Volt 24·~ 29'~. excnanoe excnanoe CN·1 Hard Shell Finish economlcal 18 oz. size. 22 FC 24C 24F. 29NF ... Auto Thennostat 0..99 .... -ll;t\I' 10 111(,,..\, DMkltd PO-<. S cM1r\ •nd 2 rC)pe IOW\ a • ..,., f'n t -8.tse lb fffl, firm pac•ltd • /ltl\. Me,,.,,,_..-..HI 8-?l ln- c ht'-\. PcUkf!iid OC>Wdfjr With wm~ 01> '1ktn I CMtr\ encJ l wrt.a<• 1111• J u"t M•uMelf1 -88~ 2 fo l. o.Kltltd ~ W1lll -oO\IKlr\, . '"""' Clllnef'tMi-Nor-1 Pro Scores "~"-......... ,, """· ,,,,,I.nit 101. N~w YO<k .. Pl\11-IDtMa 110, 5611 ArtlOlllO 1 U loll Golden Si.t.e t09. Houslon t.t ~•Ill• ns. N..,... Jersell 111 ltat ..... 1 --.-. L•-111"'\ S, N@W YOf1< l\IAno.n) Plll\b<IO"fjl\ S. Wi1\f\l'191on l New Yori! R6"Ql!r\ S, All.tnl• ~ \/&ncovwr 1, Citic_ I T OtOlllo ~. MlMe.Old l O.lroll '· Colclf"-' w.,._ H«hY """· Ol/f'~ 1 Bl•"1H•oham • Wlnnl0f>9 •. -EnQlend 2 Hydraulic 11/2 Ton Jack Rugged all steel boav. vet light wetgtlt fOr easier handling. VALVDUIE. Gonzalez Top Seed In Tennis Andrea Gonu lez of Ne wv<>rt 114'rbor High as 1op seeded In slngle m th e &i rl8 \Pnl'l il tn d iv1d ufll section a ls at ('ypreu College Satur day with four other area alni;:le$ play<'ra und rive doubles rombines com· pcting tor a spot In the flnnls Go n za l e z . th e d au£hlt!r of former pro· fcssion11I great Pancho Goo zaln. 1s the to p representative from the Sun11et LeaKue. Ly nn Meyer s o f The Cost of Livin g 1967 1978 220 2001----------- 180 16011-------- 140 Take-ove r Of Airline Battled SAN DI EGO tAP> -Pacific Southwest Airll~s offtclals say tha t Harold C. Simmons of Dallas ls trying to seize control of their company. Simmons. 47. already control• more than 20 percent of the San Diego-based air line with h is Valhi t nc. or Dallas, which is engaged in a proxy tight with PSA. Eis toncla High is the ' th)rd seeded player 1n : ~ompetation that will flod the two finalists In both singles and doubles eompeting in the fin als at Irvine Racquet Club. Dec. 11. 100 80 IN A MEETING with 150 s l oe k holderi. T uesday a nd th rough newspaper a d vertise· nfents, PSA has geared up for what appears to be a bitte r bat· tie. "We .fire con vin ced that Ha rold -C:-Simmons would be wrong for PSA," the ad says. A special stockholders ' meet· 1ng was called for Nov. 20 to m ake corporate changes that woul d dJscoUr'age any takeover. Other singles players Crom the area include Ann Koehler of Corona del Mar who will meet Gon zalez in a second round mat ch arter both d r e w opening b yes, Mimi Krogius of Dana Hills and Wendy Pearne of Mission Viejo. tn doubles compet i· l ion. Marina's Dianna Bo w a n and C ris t y Han s ink a re second seed ed with Miche lle Ford and Tenley Krefer o f C orona d e l Ma r fourth seeded. T here a re four sec· tion a l m a t ches being contested Saturday Hollypark Results fll<K W~•Y (10tll "',~ ... , ... " """'" Flr~I <6<1>-Kfltqlll C.,.no IAublnl J 80, 1 IO, 1 llO. Smo4<• Cilll ISl>'IO!J\I • "°· 3 «>. 0."1«0 '°""'"". 00 ~P<O"d r•c• Hu,,tf!r\ Starft"I IR•lcMorOI SI 60, 1190, s 40. little M•tt11p IL-I 4 20, J 00 S.,.,,,,.,., JoM 111•11-•nonaml S 80 Tntrd •.t<-S.r1 Glen•"'" I~,, nl\) ' llO. S 00. 1 80. C.000 Artd T tlll' IP•ltr\•rtl 'eo .• l>O NO (•I 11/all.tndtnQll.tml 4,.oO IS E •<Kl• <•·SI pelOJJtoOO l'OVrlll r«e-1.AdV Kay (8<1110Ul"I 9 40 4 00. 2 40 ShdO• 0..1 l~ltr~nl J 10. 2 <IQ, lOU<ll ()I Tl,.,. I Pttrryl 180 F '"" •A<" -TOP RlnQ IC•mocwtll S llO, 3 40, 3 .o0 5QIU'(f Tlmt' (~IM<\I • 00, J •o. Buller l(lnQ !Norm UCl•lrl 11.40 S E•e<l<t 1•41 !Ntd SIOJ SO ~1 •111 rece-Pomp•no Jo.,n !BPllllcM II 60. 20 20. II> 10. Ooubl• K lllQ IC•mric.111 4 00, iJ 10, f'•m•IY Ootlor I RelU!fordl • 60 !i>f',,ltrtlll r•ct•-C••l••ll•dow IWe•"burnl ll 60. I 40, I 80. Surf Bo.tro I Pwl~I 6 60, • 40. C.rt.tnt• (0n1Qm•nl 9 60 U E•a<le 11-21 Pot•d St"IW . t:IQMll rec•-Goulb11rn Adlo< !Norm l• (latrl 14 00. 1.10, • 40, .. ,,,,.,., D••-(Holll " 20. 9.20, Wei M0,_.111 fSl\ctrret>ll 00 Ninth reel!-Stoic" Oo11blf' I l'•n•uQlllYI ?t to. • eo. \ eo 8111 Rader IS<l'Wlll\I i. llOt • 80. AtlCIYl TtQ4'r 181.t<~tNnl 10 411 T•f\th f4'iC~-l o tn Try~ .. I GovclrHul , 60. s 60 3 llO Pron~•'\ !oplrll IMIPl!lll 9 00 4 40, JambO Do,. 18trNll • "° n E•a<l• 1).\1 p,.,o Sjt 20 JS Exu la ll·SI Pd•d '140 so Altendence-\_.,. Prices Gooa Thru 12·3·78 weeoe Tire Chains for compacts 1217·1230 19~~ SOt1rce: l fltH• ol L•Nt Statistics, De f. of Lobor Af' WI,.._ Clwtf COST OF LIVING DOUBLES SINCE 1967 BUT THAT MEETING was delayed until Dec. 12. PSA 's pre· sent m anagement has proposed that a n 80 percent majority be required to approve any busi- ness combination with anyone who owns 20 percent or more of PSA stock. C'?sts, Pay Double; Pinch Hurts A nyway ln addition, the pro posed changes provide for the end of cumulative voting and foc_stag. gered elections. in which three board members would be elect· ed or re-elected to three-year terms at each annual meeting. NEW YORK <AP> -The dollar may buy onJy half as much as in 1967 but average paychecks are twice as large as they were lhen. the government says. However. that doesn't mean you haven't been hurt by inflation. Simmons claims the amend- m e nts wo uld e m asc ulate stockholders· voting rights and has denied he seeks control. Government figures on personal income. adjus ted ror inflation and toxes. show that the a verage an· nual income per person in the Unite d States is a lmost $300 above what it was 11 years ago. But one private study .con- cludes that it will take until 1983 for an average family to recover the buying power it lost in the r ecession that hit t he United States in 1974-75. ter off than we were in 1967." s aid Jay Siegel. a consumer economist at Data Resources J nc .. a l;ex1 ngton. Ma ss .. economtc-research company. "THE NET RESULT of this p roposal is to kee p someone from taking p1eeemeal steps to get control of PSA and dea t with himself,'' attorney Da ve Hall of PSA told stockholders. ECONOMISTS SAY the gov· e r nm e nt figures m ask some dra matic cha nges m an infla· tionary economy But he added that 1967 1s a re· lat1vely favorable year for com· pa r1 son bee a use consumer prices were rising at 3 percent to 4 per cent a year in the late 1960s. The airbne was confined to California flights s ince its incep. tion 29 years ago. until a de· r egulation bill signed by Presi· d ent Carter last month a llowed PSA lo serve Reno and Las Vegas. Nev. "We probably are a little bet· Gov e rn m e n l fi g ures (See INFLATION, P age 86> Tax Preparers Plan Institute A 17-hour institute for general ·lax pract1· tioners will be conducted Saturd ay and Dee. 9 at Orange Coast College. Costa Mesa . The. institute will run euch day from 8 a.m . lo 4;30 p.m. in OCC's F ine Arts Hall 119. The hall is adja cent to Me rrim ac Way, next to the a uditorium. . , EARL'S f'LllMeUtG • "EATl ltG Alll(OOIO \I lo< 1•1•)/ ~''"'',.. ltmr,ldfh.-1 VCNf l~ (eH\.tUH """'"'•''"'' 'fo..t• At•"' CO~UME~642-17SJ 1U•~t 81 ... MISSION Vtu o495-0401 1"21 """' .. C...ll•-_,.,. 0 ,,... at A••r h • .1 Call 6(2-5678. Pul a few words lo work for ou. TAX SHELTER Salesmen Sold Investment Excel1nt Write-off Offke-Onks Phones Avalable I rM.DOWNS (714) 837-7A33 The institute is co.sponsored by t he Internal -------------------Revenue Service. R EGISTRATION FEE IS S30 and includes two luncheons. Tickets a re on sale in lhe college ticket office. located in the Admirustration Building. The office is open Mondays through Fndays from 8 a.m . to 7 p.m .. and Saturdays from 8 a m. to noon. Registration also will be conducted at the door . Lecturers a re I RS agents Nate Brenner. Wilson Liu. Addie Friedman, Bill Brown . Howard Goshert and Ray Clairmont. Lecture topics for Saturday's session Include .. Foreign Tax Credits." "Tax Consequences in Divorces and Separations" and "Tax-Free Ex· changes Under Section 1031." Dec. 9 topics include "Tax Shelters," "Minimum Tax" and "Current Developments." More mf'ormation is available at 556·5880. 3 More Airlines Win Fare R ights SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -The California Public Utilities Commission has extended to three more airlines the authority to raise fares by 15 percent or cut t hem as much as 35 percent. The new fare policy wilJ be avallable to Swift Air Lines. which serves points between Los Angeles, San Franc isco and Sacra m ento , Yosemite Air Lines a nd to E ureka Aero Industries, Inc. The three also will be allowed to experiment in diffe rent markets, at d ifferent Umes of the day and different seasons of the year, the P UC said . The PUC had granted similar requests by Pacific Southwest Airlines, Air California and several other lines. Answer Page. For the phone calls that can't wait. Answer P11ge offerJ the most complete selecl ion of "beepers" in Southern C111Uornia. We have regular beepers, two-address beepers •· even silent beepers that vibrate notSelesstyl And every beeper has just one job: to alcil you 10 Important phone calls in· stanlly. anytime. anywhere In J..Q.000 Slll!!!e mile~ or Callrorma. (No one covers more lernloryl) If you h11ve Answer Page. yot/11 never miss a crucial call again, because when $Omeone wants you, they slmply dlal your number on any phone and your beeper gives you the signal. It's as easy as thaU You pay one low monthly 1ate. with no llmil to the num· l>er of "beep$" you can receive. no specl11I equip· ment to Install 11nd no u tra phone charges to pay. So why wait? Call the number nearest you and find out how ecisy It is to stay In touch c1ll the time ··with Answer Paget 11~Sl\JER ffilJE 731-7777 O• ull 1n101mA\1on 101 lhc ftni .. ct P11a' olllu ~-rut you. .. ,..,., .... , ... M:.1 ....... Earn Top Dollars on Republic's Money Market Savings Accounts Motor Oil I 0.0520 10 Annual Yield 9.SSOO'o / 4 ftrmu •I yifld rrsult t 11 luMt / 4 W('I(' "' ltmdltl '" KCOulll "' Annual Rate ~m<' r tit fOf ~ ~·t lnt~fHI p1•nolly 101 Htly wt1hd•o11111I • A•6 month (26 week) certificate • l/4S more than paid tiy any commercial bank • St0.000 minimum deposit J • No b1oke1l!lge fees or other c:hergel'I • funds transferred from other mstltuttons without cnar~ sae 54c ~-QT. MACHINE SHOP SERVICE AVAILABLE South Coast Auto Supply 688 We st Baker (at Bri stol). (7 14) 5.45·840Q. United Auto Parts 2902 W. Coast Hi9hway, (71 4 ).~~6:164 7 .. • Rate available Nov. 30 thru Dee 6 AUTHORIZED BY THE FEDERAL HOME LOAN BANK BOARD . ...... Every tJ me the Rooster Crows your Money Cirows RFS REPUBL~C ~§P.~~f4L SAVINGS 11111111 SANTA ANA 17th St. We6t ol l'(cwport f reewoy (714) 541·5286 ANAHEJM 202 Anaheim Pl.ua. 500 N uchd St (714) 956·8290 LAOUNA NIGOEL 302J2 Crown Volley Porkwey (714 l 495-0850 WESTMINSTER 134 We$tminster Moll/Bolsa ti San Diego Fwy. ,7t4 • slH 53-17 ltUI Hod Off\ce1ALTAOCNll2246 l"I Lcike fl~ '21JI 791-1281/681·6611 __ . ,. "' .... ; -DAil Y PILO r I ~. No'4mbel 2IL 1078 Business MGM Fliekers, Sp1•1•ts B> MJLro ~,)" rn Nant")t'•fb Jl\Hl .. ••ltw\\• c vs thf' .,., t lll d t..cu, for t>t•11 lrol or Mt'tl'\) lit•li.h• 'II hH, onct' tJw pr'\'mt('T "'''"''" '* tur•· produ{"ft' •n 1 aotl\ .. '""' Tb• Wt '· In °'• form 1~f 1\11 l K •' r k or 1i.11. ,, I' uh h c tt , 'h' CaJtromian •t•u ~H: M " m l~ ~ of ~ 1n11 "u m1lh1•n In I l Clfld Kt'l IHlf'ltln " '" .thh lO A('t'"DnlUl8tf l't•1't1~h :.hotN°' ll• talrP MW\I ,-,11 IT "'AS \ !ofrl'\f,9'(. rld1·.11 for an E.u.lt>m romhjn1 lhoc h .. 11 auncd t•oolrul of M(;M '"11 )'4tlnt "orlwr rtuit 1.~1mb10t• \Ullo mude , • ., ot llw !'M-.a.-r m hQU<l f 1nteruts •Dd tht> 1'1m1• Inc p U b I 11> h I II .: I tit 1· rt'' h 1' h 1• n>ao~~m~l lb\•\ 1rut.1llt"d h.ict fall~d w t urn th1• <'Oftll)An\ around Knu.lt : Kerkon.lll ~~ uhlt• 111 buy hut MGM :.haf'\.':s u· :10 1wr cent I lbuo th'\ e<1grnm I am .:roup rmd in I ,7 Tudav K••rkorHtn 1" !'!llll tht' h1r '«' t h r,•holtll•r rn MC M tit• t\111d d 7 mtlhon .i.lmrt•!'I or 17 '" rct>nt of tho total T ht•' 11n• •tho worth t•o11•11dt•r hl>h mrn 1· 'hao 'Jlt-)' 'lo\t•rt' lllflt' \l J f\ .t~O In St"Jllt"mbu K ... rkonon 'lold J.'lOU 000 ... h.. ror $24 ., tn1lhun l h•t ·a tnr1,• whut h~ 11.i11I for lhrm 111 t • Tll I t•K t. Kt'rkor11rn "·" tt. "1'· 1~1d ... 11rfH ult t I lllt' hc:'t'Jll!\I It madt• nw\ll'" lhjl bombt'd ut lht> box om<'<' That wH th only thin.: II kntw how to do make mov1ei Koi korlun t uught It how 111 '10 something l'l n Ruo (' ..... fl()'. In 1 • K ... rkonan wall Ousb "1th the SIOO m1lhon pr<><'~ from the-1111le of Tnan5 lntcma· tional A.lrhn . a chortt'r' cur· nc·r . to Tra"bamt•nt'a Corp. \\1th th.a• booty h.l·rkor11.tn was Sp-:&k No Evil Yes, We Have No Depressions WASHINGTON <AP) -"The danger of a serious banana 1s in· creased tl wt: do not bring the 1nflat10n rate down." says Alfred Kahn. Banana? Did he say banana'' "We went through the deepest banana 1n 35 yea r s." added Kahn about the recession or 1974·75. Re did. He said banana! But why? WHY WOULD THE chairman or the Council on Wage and P r ice Stability s u bstitute "bannna" for "de pression" and "reoctaion"-when talking l.o-re Porter.;? · Because some people in the White House wer~ irked two wN.•ks ago when he predicted the nataon could f ace a deep depression if President Carter's new anti·lnJlation program doesn't work. All he had meant, Kahn said. was that he is "persuaded the dan~er of a serious recession would be enhanced if we didn't try to bnng inOation down." From now on, Kahn told the Wasllingtoo Presit <31ub, "You'll never hear the word depression come from me." Tax~ anJ 1nfl.111vn. c~umau:J co he 6-7% m 1978, .uc m,1kins.: ac harder fur people to rt't.11n or huilJ their a~~·t~. The IR"l h:" .1i.:gri:'>-'1vd y d11nin.11l·d m .iny !ax 1nccnt1 vcs u ... cJ l'y.inve ... ior' in thi: Money Tree Il l Cl V 111 j( 0 n t h I' ~· e f r 0 0 t S .. 1multu11e ou:-.ly 1 He ~u' buyrnK control or MC:M Ht· w:t'I buyini.t control of \\ 1•11 krn Alrhnes 3 · lie wnR l:iunchinl a new com pany. lnkrnatlonal eisure, th.ut w~ building the largest hotel in Laa Vegas. the Intent•· uonal. THE lt70 REC~ION put a all.c hl crimp tn these plans. Kerkor1an had out.standing loans collateraliud by s tock that was dropping sw1tlly in value. To eii1:ape f ro m t h is bind, Kerkorlan had to retrench. He sold the International to Hilton Hotels. which renamed it the Las Vegas Hilton. To ward the e nd o r 197 J Kerkorian, still in control· of MGM. was ready to move again on Las Vegas. this time under the MGM umbrella. He had previously built the largest hotel in Vegas. only to have to give it up to Hilton. Now he wouJd have MGM top the Las Vegas Hilton by building the MGM Grand. TOE GRAND opened in 1973 and It was followed this year by the MGM Grand in Retlo. Both have huge casinos and both make heaps or money. If the bottom line m eans a ny thin g, it's a winning strategy. ·IA the year ended Aug. 31, MGM earned $49.3 million on sales or $401 million. Both were IETHA .. RIL FOR GOOD HUlTH By Terry Grant, R. Ph. If y o ur famrlv now fl:"l\t. Yt·r with till' l•in ... 1.t111 f,tx l:iw rcvl\1um , there arc still opportunities available for inw,111r' cu ,l1eht•r or defer both invei.tment and <'njoys i.:ood health -Be Thankful If you havt> not been st•riously ill t.hi!'I vear H(' Thankful If :Vour physu:ian, or other members or the health team hovt' helped you or vo ur lov e d o n <'s overcom e a hea lth prob lem -Be Thankful. earned incom(' (1 t' ... alary :ind comm1<..~ll)n). If ynu rt.in ~our 197~ prOJ.T.lm n ow, 1.11hcr th.m w .111 fill year cnJ. you'll h.ivc ample !lffil' 111 .m .1ly:c .ind properly choo't' dw <IDl' whtc h will tr1t'ct your ohicct111t" For a per o nal con.,uhation, 1111 lmlm~ 1f yc111 w1~h yuur f.l'( .1unmc\' ••r C.P A .• tnn1.10 Parker Dall", enior Vice Pre11idcnr, ti (il4 ) fl.44 4112~) <'I th1.. 1,ldr1..·" •lumn hduw. Morgan, Olmstead, ¥~Kennedy &Gardiler k>c"'""'"'"' ln11e,tml'nr R.mlcer~ Smee 191n M, mher' Nt-w Ynrk S1r"'k Exd1anJ1e and Other Prinup.11 Exch.m11e~ I tl'o Anv•·lc, · 'i.1n h .mu..cu ·Newport &"ach •New Yor~ · t 111:,h ,1m, Or 6(lt1 'Viuth O live ~irttr, Lm An11elc,, CA 9001 4 We a r c thankful 1 tx-eauM• we can supply th<' mt•d1cin es and sickroom needs so importantly necessary to overc·oMe :.ic kness susl a1n J?ood health and somPt imt•s t.'vcn save livt'i> Wt' a r e a l s o thankfu l f o r th e opportunity lo serve vou. YOU OR YOUR DOCTOH CAN PHONF US when you nt.'t.'d a dclivt'ry. We will deliver promptly without t'Xl nt chan:e. A great many peopl e rely on us for &heir health needs. We welcome requests for delivery st.'rvice and char!'(<' uccounls. PAIK UDO '"AIMACT "'" Del•ery 351 ....... l ood .......,.. .... 642·1510 NO MINIMUM DAY IN DAY OUT INTEREST PROTECTED TO $10,000 * -ANNUALIZED YIELD 7.18%. .ACCOUNT PROTECTED "I' lu. rnM .. mttm .~ $10,000.00 ,,, tho Th1rf1 (,..,.,"'"'I "'l•lf ·•lhMI .,, c ... 1.1 "tun ttllly ... "'"'"''"' '"11 ... C .,1111111111 h 11 "" 1 ii I ••I•· \ ''''I" nl l'haplrr 7 of thr C .<hf4>Jn111 ......... '"' C.;wC1• "'"' '" .~~''""''"IWKl 1"111"'1· 1111Ut1 c,UAll!\NT' COllPOllAI IO\ m <\I IHlll-.1-\ '" \flTill::R A COVE.RNMF.NT CO/ll'OIC .\TION NOil AN l"l~TRU~IENTAlll'Y Of''nlf, !'ITAn ; o r C:ALif'Ult IA . ANVIL r..i.r~;, i: °"'• 705 South lvd., Cltlldale, C811f 91204 (2131 241-8882 12131 24S. 768l '11iRIFT 1108 w 17 SllU Ana. f.ahl. 92706 17141 558-9571 , records. Ju a result. the follow- 1ng t. happening: On Dec. 22 MGM wUl dis· tri bute a 5 percent stock dividend to shareholders. Next Jan. 31 MGM wlll s pUl lll stock 2-for·l. meaning it will lSSUe two abares Of Stock for every one now held. It wiJJ then up it.a dividend by IS percent, paying 15 cent.a each quarter on every share of stock. WHAT T RIS M EANS for Kerkonan is the following : On Dec. 22 bis holdings will be Increased from 6. 700,000 shares to 7 .035,000 shares. Next Jan 31, with the split. his s hares will tot.al 14.070,000. And next year, with the pay· ment of a 15·cent quarterly dividend. Kerkorian stands to colle ct annual cash dividend payment.a of $8,442,000 from his MGM stock or $2.110.500 every three months. The logical question. for those who have watched Kerkorian in the past~ What will be do next? Slioes Move (Jp Hemlines have bottomed out and the U.S. Shoe Corp. con- siders that uplifting new!>. More leg display 1s forecast by the f asruon in~try . according to corporate chairman Philip Barach. ttmg the accent on lhe shoe and leading to predJctions o more s ales. Inflation Still Hurts <ConUnaed From Page BS) s how that from 1967 to 1977. average income from s alaries and wages almost doubled from $6,307 to $12,307. When that's p ut in per capita terms -divided among the na· lion's entire population. not just wage earners -and adjusted to account for inflation and taxes. real disposa ble persona l income rose from $3,971 in 1967 to S4,271 in 1977, a difference or $300. lnrlalion so far this year. which is running at about 9 6 percent. means that the actual income gain is a bit less than that. BUT A U>T OF that gain was achieved between 1967 and late 1973. when the n a tion was plunged Into recession by the Arab oil embargo and s ubse· quent price increase. The recession or 1974-75. wh1('h included 12 percent·a ·year mfla· llon. short·c1rcwted the rise in dispos able income Siegel. who recently complf't· ed a study on consumer prices. proJects 1t will take the average family until 1983 to get back the buying Power that at had an 197J That proJection assumes some progress fi ghting mnation und a mild recession next yt:ar. LORA CO LLIN S, AN economist at the Conre n ·nce Board. a busmcss research or gantzation. notes that wht"ther you have mun• 10 real tncomt• now than you did 11 years ugo depends largch o n who you ;in· "If you takt.> out for infl:Jt1on and the tax effect -federal to· come and social ~ecunty taxes you still hav<' to hustk JUJ)l to s tay even." !>he Sdy!> Even workers climbing the in· 1 come ladder by getting raises that keep up with n srng prices lace an income squeeze because t hey move into higher tax brackets. which take more and more away from real spending power. Miss Colhns also points out that ror people on fi xed incomes who tend to spend more of their bud~ct on essentials, the pnce pattern in recent years has created extra chff1cult1es. Altho u gh Social Security benefits e:tre now tied to the gov· ernmcnt cost-Of·livmg index, the American Association of Retired Pe rsons argues thut since 1970 prices for the elderly have nscn dbout 4 percent fas ter than over- all p rices be<'ause more or their budi:l'l goes for items hardest hat by pnce mcreases. .---------------------------------------------------~· Over The Counl<•r NASO Listinqs fJp• a nd Doemu Ne,.,.. I TIMf' 0C '1 t"tr<Lff" ~ ~'~!~n~ ~ Nt<;!>OfS & A°O.lOfw 1 Vlowr ,, 8 A~roft..­ • (vlCIHI 10 f\O-m lh l1 AlldL11 ti r,.twvSot t t NF n"(t1 U M4'0"1:fr1 '• :~ 't,,u;t0;'J AdY•"<t<I ~<llMd Un<h4~ TOl•t l\\Uf"I N~w '°llJI>\ Nrw fOW\ Tot•I WI~ MUTUAL FUN DS ti Har vf"\t I~ ModConl '" NfbunSc 10 ltM[ pl Jt \I., .. 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NL 1-dlllt U 90 IS '16 P11Qt11> 10 JI 1111 I ( \ STOO<S I BUSINESS ... Thursday's CI08ing Pri e . . • NYSE COMPOSITE ...-~ - TRANSACTIONS Thurtmy, HoYember 30. 1878 l/N DAil Y PILOT 81 WomenB01•t Rulea for 8utxB. Blaated By JOHN Ct/NNIFF A,.~~ Women who want to make it tut In the business world are being red false notions about how the modem corpora· tion works. says the man who pioneered manaaerial mobility studies. The rules, routes and skills involved in success are the very same for women as they are for men, according to Professor Eugene Jennings. wbo has studied mobility and the corporation for more than JO years. MORE RECENTLY HE HAS been studying the careers of a dozen fast-rising women. "Their formula for success Is the very same." said Jennings, a graduate pro- fessor or management at Michigan Stale University. According to the Jennings formula. corporate success comes fast.est to the person who becomes a crucial sub· ordinate to an already mobile superior, complementing or supplementing the superior's skills. NQ.w he's concerned by what he sees developing. a corps or mentors. some self-appointed. who claim to be able to teach women how to do it. Their notions of corporate H!e. says Jennings, are often unrealistic. By becoming a crucial subordinate lo a mobile superior. he explains. a mal) or woman is carried along by mobility itself. Pity the subordinate. however, if the superior is a shelfsitter; the sub- ordinate will be too. cu••'"" Through lhe mobile s uperior the subordinate wilJ be provided with visibility and exposure -visibility to see the all-important ··sponsor," and exposure of his or her talents to that sponsor. SPONSOR? TIUS PERSON can really boost your career . a career that aJready has benefited from being a crucial subordinate lo a talented. promotable superior who provided the visibility and exposure. Anyone who's ~oing anywhere in a big corporation is likely to have someone supporting him. Sponsorship. ac- cording to Jennings' analysis of corporate life, comes in four degrees: 1. There's the evaluator. a person who stands strongly with the higher-ups so that his or her opinion regarding the subordinate is weighed heavily. Still, the evaluator is the weakest degree of sponsorship. 2. MORE POTENT IS THE nominator, possessor of power lo actually suggest a name for promotion. Even more powerful is the next degree of s ponsorship. to whom Jennings assigns the. actual title of sponsor. 3. The sponsor. be relates. is so highly regarded up· stairs that they dare not antagoruie him or her by reject- ing a nominataon. The sponsor has a strong record, is a prized executive. a person with clout. 4. The fourth level of s ponsorship is the promoter, the one with official corporate authority -the title or omce - to promote. Jennings makes a subtle distinction between authority and power. AUTIIQRITY. POSSESSED BY the promoter, comes from the office. he observes. But, in a given situation, the sponsor might have superior power because of talent or personahty or past accomplishment. That's the way it is, says Jennings. no matt.er what the mentors in their lect11res. books or personal interviews are telling the women. Market Auni~ Neim FroTn Caner, Fed NEW YORK (AP> -The stock market edged uneasily ahead today while 1t waited for money s upply figures and President Carter·s news conference Uus afternoon. The Dow Jones industr1aJ average was up 8.92 points to 799.03. with tmost of the gain the final hour. Advancing issues held a 2·1 edge over declines on the New York Stock Exchange. A s low volume t enected the caution in the market, analysts said. The release of the latest money supply figures and the pr_ess conference by President Carter both are due just after the market's close. St~laln The Spo11ight NEW VORK !API· ~~· • t> m ""~ enO net <~ OI I~ """" mo,1 """"• NAW V'O<-<;tock F XCM"<7" 1\\U~' '""""" "41001\(lllY el mot• tn.n St ~=~n,, UHi ~~:= ~~ • l:~ Ch.,'IP lrtt i:i&.SOO 10 • "• CentSo Wf''\t n1,100 U''• • •tt lt••<o ,,.. 1t1.ooo 7J'• • • > Carrltr Cp t~1 !IOO 74 • "' -----------------'NCO ltO 111 TOO 0 BiK y E ri• t 18.100 I~'• Se•r\flo<tll Ill tCO 71'• • "° Pv~•< E'G 113,SOO 11'°' ~,~':r~~~ ;:::= ;i~ : 1~: RO~~rGo 1~3.500 It'• • 2 Afll-dtrMn lnd 1 ).1 JOO a t • Comw E01\ ISi 7CO 11>"" • '• NEW VORot IAPI '>Al•\. rpm Ori<• 11ftd Ml C"""Ot' 01 tn• tM most atllv• Amerlten ~too E•t ""nqco •sWh, tr•CllftQ ft411~11y •I mclrP tn.;r> JI SVl'llU C:orp 217 l'CO ll"> • ?\Ii Al!\rllnl .. 161.700 J1•1) • 1 h•ln1111r 111> 'IOO ,,,, -'"' Ere<ulttlnCI 1oq,<l()O •~· HouOHM • 81,'IOO 11•1, • 1 J\Mmctr• O II 100 1...., • l''t lube>\ Me• Sl.SOO ''"' -t.<. Am(J&lll 0 . S00 ''' • • 1' .. H••'UMI CP .00.JOO 111'> • • La.wsTh wt l'l,200 14"' •I•• M'hat S toc-k• Did NEW V'OAIC ']'Pl Act>IA"<•O ()ttllneCI Un< rte~ Totot '"Ut'\> N~w luqlt\ NftW fOllll'\ MEW YORI( APCl•O• llMI PreYIOUS Gay Wt!e"-MOftlll aqo V'ur llOO T"° YU",_ J•tt t to oat ... 1917 to a.i• 191' to.,.,,. \ALES IAPI ·NV' Stoo ~"'C' ••.<J00.000 71.160,000 <i<W'<I •l.Ol0,000 7•.220,000 13,;l()(),000 l>,717,S.00.041 4,l•Uoo.ooo •.ns.•11,000 WMAT AMEJI 010 NEW YORK IAP) AdvAnC"<l O.ctln<!d Un<Ml'l(l"(I Tol"91 IUll"\ N~" PUQlt\ N.-w luw\ ' . . . . . ~ . . . . .. . . . . , ti -..... ' • -• DA.IL. Y Pli.OT CALIFORNIA I MUSIC I OBITUARIES Pl•te of the Da1 Lonzo nnd Osear Humor Punches LI! LAPIN-()wned by TroU1:1 Van Tryon ot Lot A.nae.le.. Jl 11 Frt:nch f~ r1bl.Nt. M1. Van Tryon· wanted everybody 10 know lbat 1he collectli <JbJetta in \he 1h1pe or""w1lb d~•l1n1 of rabblu. /"""" Two Teen-agers Attack-~61 MIAM I IAP> Two teen agers comrn•n· deered a car rrom s parking IOI, robbed its di!· abled, 61·year old occupnnt 11t Munpolnt. then dumped him in a garbal(<' ont:iiner with a plastic i:t•g over his head, police ~11d Hermnn llgovsky, who h.ul v.·alted In the car while hL! sister shopped, was cul Hnd bruised but not seriously hurt. The youths. 16 and 17, were arrested on charges of suspicion of 1:1tlem1)led murder, armed robbery and auto tht.-ft llflfTOM OEWl!V l-EE 8£Nf0N, tt'•-~~ OI CMI• llll~W. C• P•~-•*•V °" HQ• .... i... "· ,.,. '",,. -Ol llO Lhlt>q '""'""' OI All,. ..... !!~ fJf ~-~••• C l!v, Ml•..OUrl ,,_ .. -vitn wotl be"""' .,,. ~'"'°'"·DK-• 1. 1•11 •I 10 00 111111 •t Tiie S..rn••M-.k•~ ~.,,,.,.,, Death Nofffe• f • Ollftl•fl""I wllt .... """""G""' 6t•nnon "' \I J61\n 1h• llAl>l "I (•lftOl1< Cl>u"f\ 6•11 6•0•11"""' -·tu•••G""''O'~ .Fast-or Faih Hy 'OE EDWARDS NASllV1t..Lli.:. Tenn. <AP > -:-Lonl,() & O•car figort: lhey've rtot five 11econd! to do lhelr Job -or lht1y f11ll . 1'hti com~)' teanl h•• been 1>erformlng on the Grand Ole Opry for I\ yelira ind l:s 1Ct1ltlng extra t"aposure with •cveral appeii.r1nce1 on the "Hoo tt•w" tt•lf'vlalon 11how llullin Sullivan. or Oscar , I&· cclcb1·attn.w his JOth an1Uvcinary as 1 comedian 1i1nd rnandolln 11l•yeron the Opry. ' i\S COMf:UlANS, TllEY AGREE you've got lo IH'I ra.,t "Our ma.uM you've Kot lo make the guy lauith for lh"'91'[ tln1e in flvt: seconds," Sullivan !!:aid \11 an lnl.ervirw. ''Then the setond laugh Mn1c5 cwiy. This 11ounds kind of crude, bui you shouldn't t;lve ·cm time , · 10 !honk Vo~.ne..'<l quick. ( ,., •"'ff'"LLE ) cutl·hy 11tuff. J ll'IJ P' I Sullivun. 59, 18 a SIJlJND mc1nt>t'r or the original l.Qnio & Oscur ucl thut dotes to World War IL Dave lh>oten, 43, is the lhird Lonzo A typical l..onio & Oscar Joke: "When Oscar dies, he'll have u new bruin. The one he has has never been used." SulUvun calls il "country humor." "IT'S NOT CORNY -it 's runnier than cor- ny ,·· he said ''It has more punch. "Wi:.'ve built our comedy on tearing down sonJ:S. If someone has a sweet song, we change the words to muke it funny . "Expression means a lot to me. And we try to make comedy close to life. When we go into a town for a show. we pick up things from the people we\ mecl and the things that happen to us. We try to , figure out what people will relate to." Sullivan said. t1,,_1o.W11-s.i.oncro.1••"•-'; in D hs "I USUALLY TRY TO PEEK out at the au. , .. ,.,..,,, wllf ~•!I .... Wit-5.pol<>q• eat d h k" d f c•i. c--..v. wm-""'1"9'1. ,,.,. 'd1ence before the show an see w at 1n o au· ""''1 s""u" '"'"'11 L..oo""" _,...,,, diencc there is If it looks like a sophisticated au-~=·· "1 Ii 111nst . c011• w.. ElsetAJMre d1ence. "''e do certain things. If it's not. we don't. 'f"NITMAN "A comt.>dian's job is twice as hard as a IHJRYl cowaqo rEH!TMll"'· •• l .ON OON (AP) -An-5;nger's." "4ort\I ol C.00.1• -.... C• P~-'""'"¥ ""-,.-. "7f .,.,..,...,_of,, -dre Morell,-69;8'Bi'itish---Ji. }Oke'nCvcr getS Old, SU!liv·an Said. Lovinv 11•0111"' "' ,.,,11• G••w 01 actor who starred in the "r..1t>I Tillis told a i'oke the other night that I W•'""•· t-• Mlll'4trr o••w••l~ ~·•,.It•• .. 111 ~ ""'" "" F•ld••· "Quartermass and the was t clli n~ JO years a~o. '' he said. 0e<""'i..' 1. "" n 11 00 ""' •1 ,,.. Pil" television horror Both Su llivan and llooten lament the lack of "'•"'''"' H•l •<>tt•I C-•m ••••v. 1>1v~ ... ~. c. !J.m11to 1.,111111 L•""b serial during the 1950s, hun1orous rccord!'i played on radio. ..,..,,.,,.,, di•«•"'" 411 e . 11111 s1. and later appeared in C.Mt•M•i.a.c• ;:;::"' the movies "Seven Days LULU Ef!!EL !.APP, "4•"'<1 •*•• ·r 0 N 0 0 n . . a n d ~;::~~ ::w.;:~ !=1!'11~·;.: ··Madeleine,'' died. ""Id.., Fr><&.v, Oe<;omllot< 1, 1•11 at 1 00 P M •t lne H••bOr L ...... ,,..,..,0 ... 1 c,,_, wllh Pa''"" £_,,.. Wortl\W •nil P•1ror Ertte<I R, o--..n 61 ,,_ c,n.1.i1'°" ~I lrmoi. olh<l•I· •"4· !ktvk:•• ......,.. ,,,. dl>ftllotl of "•""'• l-.-..-...1 Oii ......... ,,.,.,,, C""•-.l-!OU M P11£US ROl-llHO f'REOEMICIC PllEU!., ••· ~111ett1 ,,. Cr.I•-· C• P1"V<l ••nY <!n Howt!l'nf>O:r "'· ,..,. •• ,,,. -OI 11. IHlowt!<I l<O!~ ol CMr,..\ "'*'" QI HtwPo<I 8'!.otl\, C., !.o'..,•t•• -'"' •~•-Ill will ,,,.. DI-Ct ltt New PO<! l>!C'tWy f w;.,.o ....,,th lVlhUI L~mb "'°''"•'•· 01 r ""'!ti . c .... 1. """' .. ( .. "".-.;~ .... -. JACICIOH EVEL YH P J"Cf15£1 H, •nioo-ttl nl H~wpotl !lfl.oth, C• t:< .. ,"111 ... ,., ·.,,, NOftmbo>• 'l'I, tt11 '" , .... -nl st. l!•l<nlf•<I "'°'""' ol MiC-1 J..:~-of •-•m, U , -1"'1 ~!""' 01 tl•lf'n E <lw•"h ol S..<ttll•'. """"''ltQI"", E 11•• &tty <ti !.o> .. m •• W'"h'nol"" W•l!t< F•nk"""-DI Wyomlnq, Louo .. 01_. SACRAl\1ENTO (AP) -F.M. "Sandy" San· dusky, 79, known st atewide for his in· volvemenl with intema· tional expositions, dit.>d J\.1onday. He was direc· tor of cxhibi!Ji and con· cessio n s at the California PacifiC In- ternational Exposition in San Diego and 'lhe Golden Gate Interna- tional Exposition on Treasure lsl;and in San Francisco. .,, L•"'"'o". ,., ....... n., "•o•· .. ~· Fi·shermen J-.. n.h4U-41\0 OI Ltwo\IOfl, ld•llO. F-•41 ...... IU"\Wlll ....... ,.,.,,,, .. .,.~. """· Nov-JO. !91• •I 1 00 PM •I lM MPt<l .... >t Fu.,,.rn! t<Dmfo C"-1 ... c i. .... , ..... W~\h•r.Qlnn ... 1 .. "•"''" Plan Meet Hr .:e11 .. , 61tk:~l"IO In!••......,, *'ll ~· ., L~ .. ,~ & c•~·• "'rm"""' 6.,..,.,,,"' L"""'""" t11e1>11 Fn~no\ 'fhe Unite d Fi sh - wl>Q WI"" lo Wn<I tl(W•I '"llV'lir"'"'"• . 0 . . ..,..., ii... ... 10 ,..., Mt-•~h•ni'Fu.,,.,.•1 er men s rgan1zat1on 1<0""•· •1X10 11n .,, . c•n••••on, of Southern Calirornla w.,.,,.,,q,.,,,9'M(O ...... l1111Ull\•11Ldmb 'II h Id . r· I """""'"'•· 411 £ ,,,., M , cosi. ..oi.w. Wl o 11.S 1rst annua ""*'I""•--· m eeting from 6 lo 9 K HH!:EWlfl\ T d l lh £ARLP.stHr>11Si::wE1S.•••iMn•"' p.m., ues ay a e Co•tt Me ... c. P•.....,.-•,ott Nov· Ebe ll Cl ub , 5 15 W. «mbe• 11. ""· Hf' i. "'<¥•....,by'"' Balboa Blvd., Newport ....,,,...,, Eli.I Cotero ol C0.1• ..oi.w, c"·'"°"'J.,_.,'k.,_i.01 c.1t". Beach. .,.,,., <• -M"''*' !.<-... o• The agenda includes Maywood. Ce , 1 Q"11qh1p,. Jud<!" I • "YO U CAN'T GET TllE DJS to play anything over four limes because no one wants lo hear the same material over and over,'' Sulli va n said . "Comedy is the least-paid profession in the music business." The group and its rour·piece band, "The llardt1mcs," are on the road performing about 120 days a year. Their shQw has something for every- body, with country music, bluegrass, gospel and country·rock 1n addition to comedy. Bot1v1 .... u. ........ c. -""trot•" c ect1on or officers and .,,..,,,., o1 "''" l.Om•. <•. 1 t...,..,.,. i i rectors, general b~usi- DD<M1" ot f'""~ •n<I E...,••U 111 c ... ,.. d "~w.....,.... ,,.,w.<•.'"•'•"""''K1 .. .,.v_ot ness an guest speak' FAST PUNCHES-Lo f t I fl d co"• M•w. c..o -K•1hl.,,. """~n For further information nzo, ron e , an ot 14 11n11~010" fl•••"· c•. •~o ~ '"Ontacl UFO. P.O. Box Oscar a ppear with their band, The QrMlcl<hlld< .... F•-• .....,~ <•fl to• ~ v.,.1011on"" 111ur ....... "°"' 1 00 PM 1538, Terminal Island. 11ardtimes. b.ack row. on Grand Ole Opry. lo t JG PAA M lit-II Q•-.. •W Cn•~I. --.jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimmmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii' Gr.,VP•lllll-•K.-,-,io..v ~1 II 00,1,M •• Ho1 , !41>111<""• c"...,"''· O••-· IAltt..IBGollOH FUHHA.lHOMI 646-2424 Costa Mesa 67J·94W llU.llOADWAY MO«YUAlY 110 Broadway Cos1a Mesa 642·9150 $WfH.'fU'n41U..U.MI MOITUAIY WHTCUFJ CHAl"ll Crerrn tory •Flower Shop 427E 17tli S! Cos1a Mesa 646-4888 l"IRCt U:OTHllS SMITH'S MOITUAIY 627 Main St. Huntington Beach 536-6539 SHlfNI MOl:TUAIY 976 So CoMI Hwy. Leguna Beach 494-1635 I S33 N. E1 GatTlll'IO Real San Clemente 492-0100 rtM FAMILY COLONIAL ,.,.......L "-7801 Bolsa ~ve Wes1minuer 893-3525 PAC"9C YllW ..-.o11At.P.4ll Ceme!IKY Mortuary Ctiaoel 3500 Paciltc View Drive NowPOrt Beach 1544-2700 --· MOatUAltlS Laguna Beech 494·9415 NOW OPEN! Cormier Leasing's n ew facllity at the e n· trance to Irvine Auto Center. You can lease a new car or 1ruck from the Cormier Professionals who wllt program your individual needs. Maintenance le asing our specialty. Free Loan cars av- ailable. Located just east of the San Diego F;reeway. Take tho Lake Forest Or. turnoff, go east to Rockfleld. then make a lelt. It Come in and see us today! 768-8026 cormier leasing 'RIDING THE WIND' 'Squeak}' Fromme I KIDNAP VICTIM Patricia He•r•t ,, ... 1,.,..... PROPHET OF LSD Timothy Leery SF Grief De11:vy Bizarre Violence Questioned SAN FRANCISCO CAP I -In the chiUy. beautiful city that has inspired song and poetry, Rriet hangs like fog amid a plague of bizarre violence that has led re- sidents to ask : "Wh y does it happen here'!" "I feel so sorry for this city," said a citizen sha ke n by the murde r Monday of Ma yor George Moscone and Supervisor Harvey . Milk . "We've had the Zebra killers, the Zodiac, the SLA , the Peoples Temple and now thi.3. I don't know how much more we can take."" THE TEARFUL THRONG or 40 ,000 residents who gathered in numbed shock outside City Hall Monday ni ghl tried to provide the ir own ans wer. Carrying candles and clinging to lheir neighbors like survivors of some natural catastrophe or a war, they sang, "We shall over- come." Columnist Herb Caen, among the most influentia l men in town, summed up the feelings or his beloved city in the San Fran· cisco Chronicle. "Horror upon horror. Shock upe>n shock," Caen wrote. " ... The vocabuJary ot grier and dis· belief stretches only so far .. At the end or a week of inrredi· bl e headlines. all or us were left s tunn ed . e xhauste d , ove r · whelmed by the Oood or bloody 'senseless' information. "... IT WAS ALL senseless. Li ke the hundreds dead in Guyana ... And yet there must be a thread connecting all um violence." The thread that connected Moscone and Milk , Cacn said, was one common to many of · their constituents: ·'They loved San Francisco." So did Jim Jones. And Charlie Manson. ''Th is is every misfit's ravorite city as well as the favorite city of a lot or straight, normal people," said San Fran· cisco Examiner Editor and Publisher Reg Murphy. - "It's the most photogenic city In the country," Murphy added. .. It's also the most accepting ci· t y. It contains some of the brightest minds in Ameri ca ... But there's an odd mixture or the highly Intellectual communi- ty and the crazy community.'' THE ''CRAZY COM · munity" bloomed. in the 1960s. Long·haired youn g people call- -Ing themselves "hippies" and "Flower children" swarmed in- to San Francisco's tawdry Haight·Ashbury district. They were turned off by the VietnBm War and "turned on" by the prophet of LSD, Timothy Leary. The flower children were hallucinating on drugs .. "We were riding on the wind," one of them would remember. Her name was Ly nelle "Squeaky" Fromme. Years later, she would try to kill a pre· sldenl. She came to San Francisco with the ragged Charles Manson "ramily" in 1968. Manson, guru of a band of young misfits, had passed thrriugh Haight Ashbury earlier, staying long eoough to learn the power or drugs ~nd a word, "Love." He look his "hip- pies·• to Loi Angeles and or· dered mua murders. . IN RAIGtrr ASHllVllV, teen· a,ers "freaked. out'' screaming in the agony of LSD ''bad tripe.·· Some died alter taklng "street dru1s" laced wllh strychntne. Some conimltted murder. Those who survived drifted to drug re· habilltation cenler1 or moved away. JJy_t ttte p_l1_1u,,ct_ they_ hid brought did not aie. It le1te.r«t and bunt In the '70s, San Fran· cl1co's most violent decade 1lnce the day1 of the BarWry Coaat. Zodiac's m1ss1ves have con· tinucd ~poradically. He has not been caught. Police say he pro- bably killed six pe rsons. He boasts of slaying 37 victims J N 1'72 , A MIDWE S T preacher. the llev. Jim Jones, set up his Peoples Temple in San Francisco's poor f"lllmore dis· trict. In 1973, a wat.Je or random street killings terrorized the Cl· l y. The "Zebra killers," struck without warning, killlnR whiles a t night. Most victims were !!hot. One w as rape d . another beheaded. In April 1974 , it was Ot.Jer Four young Black Muslims were arrested and charged with 14 murders. st<ven as!laulls, one rape and an attempted kidnap- ping. The Zebra murderers were convicted in 1976 a(le r the longe!lt trial in San Francisco history. On Feb. 4, 1974, the daughter or one of San Francisco's first famili es -Patr1c1a Hearst - was kidnapped. I.f e r travels through the radical underground exposed a seelhinl( subculture or d isa flected young revolu- tionaries known as The Sym- bionese Liberation Army . SIX OF TllEM d ied that l'i pring in a flam ing, s ui cide s hoo tout with Los An geles pol ice. ·The others -Miss Hearst and William a nd Emily Harris -drifted back lo the on- ly Am erican city where they could hide -San Francisco. They eluded police for 18 months before their capture Sept. l8, 1975. Thal September was a month fo r vi ol ence. In nea rby Sacramento, Lynette Fromme aimed a gun al President Ford and was arrested. Jn Snn Fran- cisco, days arter Miss Hearst's capluri', a middle·age radicaJ. Sara Jane Moore. fired a gun at Ford in famous Union Square barely missing him. "Is n't anything happen1nK anywhere but San Francisco'.'" a newscaster asked. In 1976, Patricia Hearst, Sara Moore and Squeaky Fromme went to prison. Radical groups such as The New World Libera· tion Front bombed buildings and issued communiques. IN 1t77, m E plague seemed GURU OF MISFITS Charte1 M1naon lo pass. Ci1y fathers remem· bc1 cd the town's old slogan. "Everybody 's Jo"avorite City." The city's large homosexuat population savored political vie¥ tory -election of the first gay member or the city's Board ol. Superviso~ -Harvey Milk. The follbwing year, 1978, wu one of promise. Record numbers or tounats Jammed cable can and hummed , "I Left My Heart in Sa n Francisco." .Then._ on Nov . 18, another nightmare began. Democratic Congressman Leo Ryan, investigattng the Peopl~ Te mple 'CWt~ had-~n shot an<I killed on an a1r.ttrip in remote Guyana. Three newi;men and a tempi~ defeetor were slain with h•m WITlfJN JtOURS, a horror story unfolded. llundreds of San Franc1!\Can.'5, who hact followed Jones to a promised parudise in Guyana, obeyed his command to commit mass s u1 c1dc. In the deep JUO~le, troops round more than 900 bodies pilt.>d upon each other Jones had been appointed director or the ~lousing Authori- ty by M05ronc. Thus, when the 49·year-Old mayor was gunned down in his orfi ce Monday. s peculation stirred of Peoples Temple involvement. There was nonl:", polfcc said. It wa s much si mpl er. As Moscone and Milk lay in pools of blood inside the mnrb1e- and·gold City l·lall, a dil'ig runtled former supervisor, Dan White, was booked for inyestigation of murder. lie had come lo City llall to seek reinstalement as a s uperYisOr. Moscone ha d re- fused. "[ DON'T KNOW how we're ~0111R to put this city back together ag:un," said the citizen who called a lalc night radio ta lk show to mourn tor San Francisco. Elsewhere, said llcrb Cacn, they ca.J I this "the kook capital." "We who have hved here a IOnf;l time resist lhat descrip- tion ," he wrote. "What others t•all 'kook.."i,' we look uJ>(ln as characters 1n a charade we s mllc a l . W e think we un · ders l and the s ho w, having pla yed our own roles for so many years. ''J\f D)'be '°''C arc wfong '' SHOT AT FORD S.r1 Jan• Moore 'Workfare' Program PltµJned__f!Y _U.S._ WASlUNOTON IAP) -The 'Agrtcullure Dr.partment h&!I I P· proved regulations !or a pilot program In 14 treas lhat will require some Jobless poor people to eam the\ r federal food stamp benellta. Assistant Secretary Carol T\lcker Foreman said that eligible ·'cities. counties or other polltlc1lsubdlvlslons'" will be considered 11 potential sponsors. Tho 14 areas for tho SO·called workfare project will be selected later and the pro1ram lsto be1lnnext1pring. . • . ,, ~';31• San Julln C.pi11rano ·11 ....... 1n ltet and llmJ, a murderer calHn1 hlmaelf "Zodiac" 1ent •rt•ly ~ ipeeaaaea to local new1papen. "Kllltns people Is more tun an-kllllo& w.tld-tame," h wrote. · The Pf'ORram is designed lO provide public aer"lco Jobi! to thote who cannot find regular work and would require atamp recipient.a to \\'Otk.offthevalueofthe!rcouponalf_a,fimil)'.!.llncome.i.1-leulbanU.1--~T---,...:. 1tamp1'valUe. ·~ • , I I -' . .... " ........ ~· ... ~,..,~ .... ,...,.. ' .... ·-.... -.... . . .. ,., • -· eot.tcs /CROSSWORD MARMADUKE "When he gets excited hi.$ whole life seems to flash before him, except the port ot obedience school I' SUPERHEROES SHOE Cl.ASS1F1£D f>.DS : Now Yoo COME ON IN HERS WITH ME·· NO ONE'S GOIN<: TO BIT~ You .. I by Jeff MacNelly by Tom Bitiuk t OON'T"IU WMEG ~ Al'l'f ~ )t)tAlr ~INffoS ... AGATHA CRUMM OR. SMOC~ by Mell 'Thutedlr. ~ 30. ,,,. "PEANUTS DAILY PllDT • by Charlts M. Schulz 1HAT STUPID~ BROWN ! HE AAD M NERVE 10 SA'( °™Al l1M NOT PERFECT! by am Hoest by George Lemont I Slightlfcfalnaged in air drop. INTENSIVE CARE SEMI- INTENSIVE CARE GORDO by Gus Arriola TUMBLEWEEDS by Tom K. Ryan -----~,.._-ml O 1MfftU.OF1HRIUSJ R't.e.55 ----......_ .... NANCY ... r j 1 l i " WHAT'S YOUR DOG'S NAME ? VOU, FAEJOLOOS ONEl ~~ PON7 OOAWA'/!-l1LL MSH INStPe ANP Ft:ltH HER JUST AS FAST AS MY LEGS CAN CARRY ME! J NAMED HIM WHEN H~ WAS. A LITTLE PUPPY··· by Emit Basllmilltr ···HIS NAME IS "TINY " TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS S2 Stumble 1 Asian coun· 54 Vended try 55 Nervous 5 Destined 59 Fabnc 10 Flu!h 63 Insect 1• Singer Paul &C Unqualihed ea Actual 15 M1deas1 Arab 16 Rant 11 Hairdos 19 Frosteo 20 Fastener n Colonists 23 Speech de· 67 Eccleslastl· cal law 68 Argual>4e 98 Possesses 70 Spills 71 Concludes DOWN 1 ~e units UNITED Feature Syndicate Wedn•ldl(a Pu me Sol'9CI I 'I Oi l .. . .. , ... I , o !u • I, 111 In II •In t lh . M I lul11IJ l 0 I " 10 I • lc •la 1 I· 1111111 I Ir a • IM I • _, I• Ir •• .. '" '• .. ... •I I -~~I I AC - l &••I C011 r r c.hl" 111 " ' r -sta 1 0 ,_,1,r, . ( I Ill II C ( .. ' .. C:l1 I - - , I 11 IL -· Ir ,,. ,. """ .. ' • 0 IS . " " ' ,- I I ( c ,_ .. II IC S [ I ' .. f I 1D101r ll s II I S ( 1•1• I• II •l IC IS f I 0 .. ' I I 0 5 •DIAll I l .. .. l s feel 2 Jean loullder -44 Ceremonies 25 Fence bar Schopler. Mara 47 Of the past 26 Allsplee Pseud 24 A1om1G -C9 Trickery 30 Fuses 3 Gumbo 26 Calls 51 Dyestutfs 34 Divert • Specimens '7 Embodiment 53 Punllive 35 Ridge 5 Best ZS Pollderer 55 Halrstyle 37 Vaccines II E1<1st 19 Oenomlna-56 Rushed 38 Fuel 1 Summer lions 57 Scrawny 39 Kinds lints 31 Garden dor· S8 Kidney: •2 U.S S R 8 Record mouse Comb. form •3 German 9 Avers10n 32 Honesty 80 Black river 10 Auto pans 33 Impudent 61 Alleged 45 FOOd scraps 11 Edging 36 llemlzes force .a Sprees 12 Finished «> Art of gov· 48 Magazine 13 Marrie s ernmenl 62 Seine:. leature 18 Straightens " German 65 Hang 50 Furth1e 22 N.V. Gi1n1s· POW camp IOosely ' 8Je DAILY PILOT Television TONIGHT'S LATEST LISTINGS 1111 !<'ill\\ EVE'NtNG a.001•• Ne.WI DitEAOO.OY ONE.I II'\ Oet~ -IOUa ~ paremeJ1c Gao• 11 anec:i.eo by .\ "'~ 1 -··--~~ G ~ A t'll'naoar boco"'•• ir1Volvor1 in a c11rne nng • T'H€ aAAOY IMJNCt4 ~He• tH»• CJtm A.ocliutl -lO• I l)O()I l41t>le In tne flr1td,• u a Q•ll ~I MQleGta 10 mont!Of\ to MIU that 11 a 00/l'\lf'O ., ITAfTTt O' SAN F'MNCalO() A rec~ .. no tlM k•.O "' 111 Old mllOfliOI\ IOt '""'• m•n JO veera Ml lf1-110~1 Pd wll~I 11 llfll<llll'\(\t 11<1<'1<1 h<ly Ot&.t~t 83 OVER EASY Gutt••• ttugh Oowna '•tner. -11n<1 Of~ l'i) FAE.EHANO SKETCHING T OUC:hllC>li•I R ... l .... 'II Attd APP<-.1•111.ltl C8S N£W8 AICNEWS Ji11gle Bt-1& 8 30 tD I LOVE LUCY ll'ie Ri<lilfOt•• and tl'lo Mertzes APPtill Otl '""' QUll anow · How 1 o R.i111 ro..1 M8lt1804' &;) MICHAEL JACKSON Guest Pnyt1t1 Ei_, lwo Popuhllloo GtOWlh ' 011<i<; IOI ol lmmtgratton pohCiO. m HUMANITIE8 THAOOOH THE ARTS Rug.,:l·ci~ Ann und And)-hold on to one of S.1nt<1':-. rdndcer a:. ftagged y Art hur !'.l b atop thr an 1 ma 1 ·~ head 1n the a n 111HllC'd :.11~·<·wl .. The Great Santa CIJU!> ('a1~·r" tonight ti t 8 30 on CBS. Ch.1nrwl :! P .. n11ng Thing& We H.iv" Passed ({) CROSS-WITS (!OJ MERV GRIFFIN N1nflll 't'~dt•flO Jll•O,; "''"'m' his 'lt&y 1n10 th• SenlOIO yaro and Fred a IWIWI &) MACNEIL I LEHRER RE POAT m 0£SIONING HOME INTERIORS . Woll To W&ll ' 1:00 8 C8S NEWS I N8CNEWS •UAR8Cl.UB A8CNEWS 1:30 IJ WORLD WAR It G I DIARY 0 (]) JOKER'S WILD G) SIX MILLION DOLLAR MAN Steve teams VP wnh an E S P ••~ 10 rflCOY9< a stOlef\ secret CO<le bOok from the unoerworto Cl) SANFORO AND SON 'll.•m1kaz1 Flower 0 1 Dea1h·· 0 YOUNG PEOPt.E'S SPECIAL "The Rebel Slav•" A young slave cn11<2 se<v05 a membf!f or Ille Conl8df.'f· ate l01ces at the Batlle or Geuystiyrg 8 NEWL YWEO GAME Chan11el Listing• • KNXT (CBS) Los Angeles II KNBC (NBC) Los Angeles a KTLA (Ind) Los An~oles' II KABC· TV (ABC) Los Angele!. Cl) KFMB (CBS) San Diego 0 ltHJ· TV (Ind ) Los Angeles @) KCST (ABC) San Diego G) KTTV (Ind) Los Angeles Q) KCOP·TV (Ind) Los Angeles &l) KCET· TV (PBS) Los Angeles till KOCE·TV (PBS) Huntington Beach . I THE GONG SHOW TIC TAC OOUGH ADAM·12 r M olhcer• covor the w 1er·r10t11 ID 28TONIOHT Nlao" 41 Oalc>td Fount!r Prt'\10ent N1111on Attdrtt1Jioeo,,. \IUdt'nh .ti Od c>td UnlVf!r\I• Iv In € ngl"nd "nd M\Wf!I''" OUC\hOn\ U1) NEWSCHECK (,() $1.98 BEAUTY SHOW QD) MATCH BAME PM. 8:00 8 Cl) FROSTY THE SNOWMAN A lifeless snowman Is 11an1f0<m8d 1n10 a happy. 101ty soul when a magic1an·s hat lands on tns heaO (RJ II PROJECT U.F.O. "Tl'ie Island Incident" A ~IOI anc:t three natives of a South Pac.lie 15lanc:t 5'jjht a U F.O. 0 MOVIE • • "• "The 111usr1ated Mon" (1969) Rod Stetger. Claire 81oom A woman P"fSU80eS hef hv1bano to have l'iis body taltooed w1lh 1ymbots relo11ng to eventa 1n his hie (2 hrs I D ll1J MORK & MINDY Morie. uS1ng an Ori.an age mech1oe. turns himself into a rom11111ic Old geotteman II) COUii Mindy a deOrWMtl 'Or andmOlhN a u,o 6..i. Al\O O..tr0y It tne 11r1m commt"<! g1vtt1 wh1111 '"' 111et1 Gtell rencta on the MC)Otl • CAROl. IUAAITT AHOFMN08 Sl>.ila • T~ F•1111ty " • The Wl6lllnQWOlt ' • MAACUI WEU't', M.,O tfl} OANll!L f'08ff:R. MO ~ltllnQ OteotCS..\ 1.30 8 AAOOE.OY ANN AHOANOY 'The Qr1141t Senta C111vw CAOll' HllOOllOY Allll 11\d Andy trv to Slop tho tvtl Ar.••l'\Oflf Gr&IUllTI WC)ll trorn 111king over Santa• ~·h<>C U tJJ) WHAT'S HAPPENING II M4'J MovH Out Rel moWll o..t Of !)is apart. '™""' "'"" Rerun and 11110 one "'"h 11 baauttful .. ornan G) THE 000 COUPLE ~ tll•• rev•..V• 1n llasnback tl'ie heehc events teao•no up to 0.c&r s mamage wnen both were In the Army~e m TURNABOVT "Early Warning" Gerri Lenge 1nt81V18WS a former maslectorny patHlnt 11\0 Or Robert Sc:hwettier. •nO profiles lhe Monn Mllltec· torny Servlees t .00 IJ (I) HAWAII FlVE-0 Danny falls 1n tow with • hlQh school sweeth&art (Kathet1ne Cannon) who tufl'\s up in Hawaii. 0 QUINCY ' No Way To Treat A BOOy" Ou1ncy 01Scove1s three murnmtll«I female bodleS In a house ml!ab1t8d bv odO characters 0 ®) BARNEY MILLER Oetecllve H•ms Is mtSIBk· en IOt a robber by two vnt· lormed patrolmen 0 BILLYGRAHAU CllUSAOE lrom ltdn>o '''"· 8) MERV ljlAIFl'.fN II) WORLO EVANGELISM SPECIAL CD THE LONG SEARCH "A Question Of Balance" A Conlucian respect tor tl'ie past and ancest0t1. the cosmte pattern of the f 80. t ha loc3I go<li wt'iO d1spenM1 iu11ice. and the p1aca11ng ol ghosts of the doad 11a some ol the aspect& OI TRNSl'n lnVMll· gat8d by Ronakl Eyre IRl TUBE TOPPERS KCET 9 7:30 -Nixon at Oxford. The former president addresses students and nnswcrs questions at England's Ox· ford University .-.. CBS 8 8:00 -Frosty the Snowman. The classic children's fantasy repeated tor the holidtjy season. NBC U 10:00 -"Fame." Richard Benja min stars as a writer who has trou· ble coping with success in tllis new TV play by Arthur Mille r <See review below> 8:30 D ®l SOAP (El)taode 35) 89<1 attempts lo end ma 1tt11r wnh Sallv. Cl\elter 01511ppear1 whtte ll1oPQlng tor net s1oe1c. !no•. end Elaine 01sap- peara from Oannv's be<I 10:00 II (I) BARNABY JONES J R 's htgh &Chool sweet· nearl comes 10 him tor help when l'iet lorme< hus· banO 1>eg1n1 t1'11eaten1119 Mr 0 FAME An obaaire wmer IRlchatO een,.mlf11 acQutres a new Mt ol problem• when he becomes an overnight senaatlOn 01) NEWS G O 20120 41) OP£H DOORS: THE Ul TIMA TE WEAPON fli) WE AIN'T WHAT WE WAS A very Old black woman (lay Monica) recalls what 11 has been ltlce being blaolc 1n Arnette& (RI CD NEWSCHECK 10'.30 G) Cl) NEWS ~SPECIAL "St Gaty Tiles" Gaza St. Gaty M<etellel and pre- paros t1lel IOI a final rnosa· ic whleh 1e1tec11 the hie ot the earty colonial perlOd 1n American history. compar. 11'9 rua own.Ide 1n Hungary W11h the struggles 01 tne cotonmltats 11:00 I) D G Cl)(!]) NEWS 0 DATINGOAME 0 LOVE EXPERTS G) THE 000 COUPLE Oscar reveals a ltllte· knowo romantic ao1to0e 10 Fol1•s past G) MONTY PYTHON'S FL YING CIRCUS Mr ChtOQ&r w•Shet to learn hOw to lty. 11 co.. rt• oua htJ&cller wants to go to Luton, an AIMflcan gun- man want• to go to Cuba • • tn a bus (Al tl3 OICKCAVEn Guest Jule• F111tter. 11:308 (1) M'A•S•H rn a lelle< hOme. Hawkeye relates tales ol a mowng boely encl an .mpatient lieutenant 0 TONIGHT Host Johnny Carson GU8S'IS C1ncly Wt111am1. Snecky Greene 0 TWILIGHT ZONE A man 1mos himself in the past and tries to prevent P1estoen1 L1nGOln s assas- s11>11tl0f\ U ll1J STARSKY & HUTCH ,;The Heavyweight • Star· sky anO Hutch seek •he help of a boxer to e•P<>Se o warehouse tiyrglary 11ng (Rl 0 MOVIE * •• "VIVI Ma.." ( 19691 Peter U•llnov. JOl'\&tMn Winters A groop of Mex•· cans relive the Alamo 1n preeent day Texas (2 llrs I G) THE CJOHG SHOW Q) GETSMART Smart must protect a CONTROL witness 11ga1n61 KAOS from assass1na11on fl) CAPTIONED A8C NEWS MORNING •2.00 0 TWlllCJHT ZONE Wealthy Paul Rao1n dttanges an 1ntt1c:a1a revenge tor tnoee lie thinks have wronged him 1n his tile G) "LFREO HITCHCOCK PRESENTS A woman 1elvses to lend a man $50 to l'lelP n.s 0111. lrteod 41) HOHEYMOOHEA8 Ralpn trlM to rttmolO hl1 c:hWact9' tor• AHoe • ae«e. ooly 10 have n., Hll hlm 10 return 10 1111 okl _.if 12:06 8 (I) C88 l.ATE MOVll • • ·~ "Columbo fhe Moat Dtnoerou• Metcn" ( 19731 Pet91 Flllk. Lau- rlll'\Ce H•"'e'f An Ametl· can eneaa Ch1mp10n l(~IJI h11 Au111.r1 ooun1111pa11 10 1n.ure hlJ cla•m 10 tile 1111e 12:30 D MOVIE • • • "Mambo • ( 19SSI S.lv&N Mengano. Shelley Wint911 A .aieaglfl rlMI lo tame .. a oance<. aided by oAn ldmiflng QOUnt. I 1 hr , SSm1n ) ID MOVIE • • • "The C•Plvre .. I t9St) L-AyrN . r., ... Wrighl. A man In Mextc:o J blc)Ome& a fugitive when he 11 un1u1t1y &CQuMd of rob~ (2111'S) ., MOVTE • • • "lmttlltl()(\ ()f Liie .. ( 1934) Ctavdette Colbllft. Warren Willl11m Two wom- en 8nd the<• Oeughte<a snare trlendlllltP and WC· cess but ne-.et ecti- 101111 ha1191ne.ss 12 Ill'• 1 12:37 G OJ) 8.W.A. T. "Cour1hOUllO" HolOup mon who escape 1:1118' e two m1lhoo ootlar heist !)401 10 tree their captured PD'l· ner CAI 1:00 II TOMORROW Guests Paul Krauoe•. editor of an underg10Ynd m11gu1ne. al\O N-York Post COIUmntsts \tic ltllgBI and Lo.. Grossbetget 1:30 Cl WANTED: OEAO OA ALIVE "Epitaph· 1:431 NEWS 1:45 NEWS 2.-00 0 NEWS O 'MOVIE • • • "Creek-Up" ( 1946) Pat O'Brien, Claire Trev0t A murOerer. opetlllng 11 lorged art mu terpoeGe racket. VICttmlles a muse- um eu<llOI 12 hfs I 2:13 8 MOVIE ' * • • "8t10e Came C 0 D .. ( 194 H B~tte Davll. James Cagney A run.away btKlt! and a flying Cl4!1tv9fY boy team up 10 carry on 11 v«'f unusual rove atta11 ( t "' • so min I 2:258 NEWS 2:30 0 MOVIE •• C&11torn1a" 1196•1 Jock Mahoney. Faith Domergue Callk>rn1ons untta 1n an ettort to break with Mexico anO g11111 admtUtOn into the Unnocs States ( I hr . 2S mil'\ I G) MOVIE • • ~ "Deya Of 01ory" I 19441 Gregory Pack. la.met• Tournanova Rut· 111n 0U9'illaJI waoe a bm., fiOht egU,tt I~ WIVadlnQ Nazi torees ( t hr • 30 min I 1;561= 4:00 MOVIE • •• _. "El Ranc110 OranOe" I 19401 Gena Aulry, Smlley Eklrnetta A cowboy help• three chit. dren uve their ranch trorn be4ng rec>0"81Md ( I hi ) Cl MOVIE • • • "Aot>911•" 11935) Irene Dunne, F'red A1ta1<e An ""*'IC•n football nero. Wl\lle 111 Patle. !Inoa hlmMlf the crwnet of "'' most faehiorlable d•-.Jlb<>O lfl tne c:ity •tter tne oe11h of h1J1 aunt (2 Ill'• I CD MOVIE • •.+ "Mafln, Monlter Of Terror .. (1966) Jun F1.t11mall1. Ryurwo Goon. The oowntr~ peas- ants~ 111/Jage are ohamptonecl by• war- ~ lthr.,30m1n) •:03 8 STEVE EOWAAD6 "'rfda11·• Da11t ine~ Movie• AFTERNOON 12:00 D • • "A SW1ngin' Summer· ( 196Sl James Stacy. Witham A W&11rnan Jr A groop of t-19~ take over a plaee on Lake Arrowhead. with the 11nan- cta1 910 of ones lather. and engage popular 111ng1ng ~oup& ( 1 hr . 30 mtn I W * *'Ir "Tney Met II'\ Bombay" (19.C !I C1ark Gable. RosaltnO Ruuell. A pa11 of jewel lh1&ves 11 forced 111to llghllng the Jepanese 1n11ead ol searching tor tne same treasure. (1 hr .. SO min ) 3:00 ({OJ • • '4 "What's Up Tiger Lily?" (1966) Woody Anon. Tafsuya Mihasllt I op ftpteS anc:t battwnq be8Ut•es get lft the act wl'iOn !hey OISCOve< a plOt to steal an egg sated recipe I' hr • 30 min ) 3:30 G • • 'Ir • First Men In Tne Moon" ( 1964) EOward JuOo. L•onel Jeftries 1 hree astron•ut& tracll Clown 11n elderly &Oventur· et who e•pl&ll'\I a prBVIOOS tunar landmg ( 1 II<.. 30 mlfl) NBC Wipes New Slate Clean, Starts All Over LOS ANGELES <A P ) -NBC began the rn78· 79 season with eight new series. Now it has none. In an unprecedent~d midseason move that mar~s the first true programming salvo or its new president. t-'red Silverman, NBC canceled all its new prime·time shows Wednesday. The network, which dropped "W.E.B." and Joe Namath's "Waverly's Wonders" earlier this season, announced it was axing the six surviving newcomers. plus David Cassidy's new police series, itself a replacement. It also canceled the second-season "Project U.F.O." NINE SERIES WILL premiere in late 1 January and early February, NBC said. Out are: "Grandpa Goes to Washington," .. Lifeline," "Sword of Justice," "The Eddie Capra Mysteries," "Di ck Clark's Live Wednesday" and "Who's Watching the Kids.~· NBCsatd. ln are: s ix new hour-long series, including one about the never-seen wife or NBC's famed detec- Miller's TV Play Lack~ng in Punch By JAY SHARBVTr LOS ANGELES CAP) -Network TV oc· casionally airs an original drama by a major wr iter. Great, but sometimes an Aw, Gee play re- sults. It starts promisingly, then fizzles and you sigh, 1'Aw, gee." Such is on NBC's Hallmark Hall or Fame toni ght at 9 on Channel 4. fl is" Fame," billed as a witty. ironic. lighthearted study or s udden success. ll comes from Arthur Miller, the Pulitzer Prize- wi nning dramatist. Richard Benjamin ~ r••rs a s yo ung TV REV I E W -play wright Meyer ShiM who, after years of dts· creel poverty, has hit gold . His comedies now lurk everywhere and his mug currently is on the cover of Time magazine. ANYBODY RECOGNIZE NElL Simon here, shout "Bingo." Despite his wealth a nd Time cover, Shine wan- ders about in a wrinkled jacket, baggy pants. a day's growth or beard and expressions that go from bemused to amused to sardoruc to annoyed and back again. An ambivalent, seedy-looking millionaire, he is both obscure and famous and uncertain which one he wants. He seems to regard tame in the manner of a condemned man who, while on the scaffold, nervously asks the hangman: "Is this thing safe?" A CLOSE PAL IS a barkeep, played by Nlpsey Russell. He t.olls In the upper-class saloon where Shine OOCf' worked. He keeps urging the scribe to "start acting who you are," buy new threads, a Rolls. Shine allows that he does okay now with women. but when he carrtes on with one, he feels three parties are in bed: "Me, her and my fame. It does something to the intimacy." Summatton: This "Fame," whll~,•dmirable in aim, comes aci'oss sort of like a cruld's top. It's much fun when first spun, but then it sloy;s, wob· bles. falls down and aimlessly roUs away. To which I can only sigh, "Aw, gee.'' MOBILE DISCO SUnOGnCI 5ouli05 Professionally tailored to your music ta&te and the occasion. OUI lOW PtttCU CANT• Ml\TCtB 995-7064 live, Lt. Columbo, and three haJf.hour situation comedies. all scheduled for Friday nights,. ONE COMEDY, "Brothters and Sisters," about sorority and fraternity life at a Midwestern col· lege, was announced two days after ABC unveiled its midseason schedule that includes its own fraternity sen es N BC's oth e r Friday comedies are "Turnabout." with John Schuck and Sharon Gless as a marnea couple who switch ident,ihes, and "Hello. Larry," starring McLean Stevenson as a divorced father with two teen-aged daughters. It's Stevenson's third try in a series after he left "M.A.S.H" several years ago. "Sweepstakes," a new hour-Jong series about winners and losers in a big-bucks state lottery • also will air Fridays, NBC said. "THEPIHK , "4Mnl8S11UW I ~;· Return Of The Pink Panther. 9:10 The Pink Panther Strlk9a Again 6:15 a.•10:10 THEATRES-ORANGE CO SENIOR OTmNS S2.00 SO. COAST PLAZA "GOIMG SOUTH" CNt "'' ,-11:0 ~ .. ,, ........... 11 -n1.....,,.1t-.a• SO COAST PLAZA ...... 1111 ...... r ...... ..,eto.d Wiii...,.. ,,..,, Dec..._.22 ., NBC's other 6(J.minute midseason shows are· ··Mrs. Columbo~ starring Kate Mulgre w on Thursdays . -"Little Women," another Thursday sen es. based on Luisa May Alcott's novel. -"Supertrain." a Wednesday show set on a giant. atomic.powered train produced in the style of the movies. "Silver Streak" and "Foul Play." -··B.J. and the Bear ," a trucker senes ~tar­ nng Greg Ev1 gan and Claude Akins -"Cliffhan~ers." a Tuesday show that in - cludes three separate 20-m anute thrillers in senal form Shopp jg without getting Dialled. Giant shopping malls Jre just made for convcn· 1hem with your own c:amera. Then. cvcryon<.· Ctlll tional shopping. . enjoy a delicious homL .. style dinner nt one of At Knott's Berrv Farm. we think Chris1mas shop· Knon:o; ~rca1 places to cut. ping should never be conventional. Which seems Chrisrmas shopping a1 Knous. Unlike all rht• big pretty narural for a place wt th 32 d1ff<'rent store'> malls. the hc!lr part is 11 really does ft."el I ike Chris1mil!> specializing in one-of·a·kind 1h:ms. here. And 1ha1'.o; becJusc the Knott family wouldn't For example. where else can you find an old· have it any Olh(•r wav. • fashioned bonnet shop. a rent general s1ore or an •Get in frl>e to shops inside the paid admission Indian trading post. And what betrer place 10 st-c area from 6 p.m. 10 9 p.m. Monday thru FriJay the complete assortment of Knott's Hol1dJv G1h until December 23rd. Packs rhan right here on the farm . •Of course. there's always fret! admission to Be sure 10 bring the kid s along shops ou1s1dc the Mn in GJre from too. They can chat with Sama ttia 10 a.m to 10 p.m. wh>le you take fr« pictur., of J o 8 •Mos• major cra fo canfs accept<..!. 5EllRYF~.~ 8039 Beach Blvd .. Buena Park, CA 90620 •(7 14) 827-1776 • frt.'C Parking ~- CJ >rt 11" .a ed -Y· ot r. ta th .ns il Ve •n a th ot 1e !d - ~ r 1f tt e 0 n e e l e• e s e f e j ) ( , r ) t ENTERTAINMENT / INTERMISSION ThUt'lday, No119mber 30. 1978 Mu•lrab and Dralilas MATINEES SATUllAY & SUNDAY HEARTS CLUB 9ANO 'IPGI 4 Shows Close Out '78 I " JESUS CNRIST SUPERSTAR" 110 MM If Ill ()• HWILO GEESE" (R) THE BOYS IN COMPANY c· "BOYS FROM BRAZIL" IR> "MAGIC"1R1 Two musicals and two dramas comprise lhe "df'stert" ror Orange Cout pJayaotra' banquet ot thutcr for l978. the final four producliona of lhti year ~fort> tht holiday hiatus. Lcad.ioa o!f lhe IM is· llow lo Succeed In Busi· ""~• W1U)Qul Really Trying.•· whkh open~ Wed- nesd si y nl11hlJ ail Sebuattlatn '• Weal Dinner Ployhouse l'""ri ay will see lb curtain rising on tht Nt wpon tllnbor Community Theater's produc· lion of tht Chmtm..a mualca1 "Scroo1e." t!XT WF.f;K WlU. (Ind "Th~ People VI . lnei Garcia ." a dQ<'u·dnma. m8klng Its Southern CalUomla JJrernicre u l ()rnnge Coast College Wed· "UP IN SMOKE" (Al O<'sday fllllhl And lhe last '78 show to open will be ~lj~[;Jll!lwl!~lllll ..... , the chtllrr "The Bnd Sct'd" at Suddleback College Thur~doy ' J a mf'8 Gl~450n l¥kes the Robert Morse rote of lhe upwardb mobile window washer in "How To •--•II Succeed," while Juck Rltschel is cast as the com- pany pre11ldent Connie Woodson and Aleshia Brtvatd provide lhe romantic interest. wh.Ue Den- >-----------------~ nis Fox Is thl' office fink 'UP IN SM OKE ' (R) "EASYRIOER "MAGIC"(R) "CORVETTE SUMMER "MAGIC"(R) .. CORVETTE SUMMER NATI NAL LAMPOON'S ANfMAL HOUSE "SLAP SHOT" A .. GREASE" (PG) J AMERICAN HOT WAX ' ALL ORIVl'.·INS O,.EN 7:00 P.M.Ml6"'1.Y C"ilCI Under U Fr•• Unl•u • 1(1<1d°fe Pl•'l't1ouno ··How to Succeed" plays rughUy, except Mon· day, through Jan 1 at Sebastian's, 140 Avenida Pjco. San Cle mente. Sunday m~t.inees also will be offered Reservations 492-9950. TOM ADAMS TAKES the title role of "Srrooge" in Newport. beading a cast of 31 men. women and children in the musical version of the Cha rles Dickens classic. Rick Yorba is directing the ensemble. • "Scrooge" will play three weekends with Fri· day and Saturday performances at 8:30 and Sun· day stagings at 7:30 al the Newport Theater Arts Center . 2501 Cliff Drive, Newport Beach. Reserva- tions 673-5115~ The mood sh.ifts to the darker side of the stage next week with the opening Wednesday of "The People vs. Inez Garcia." a dramat~zation of a true incident in which a young woman killed a man wbo she said had raped her. Sharyn Aguilar-Elliot will play the title role OTIIERS IN THE CAST are Craig McNair Wilson, Steve Martin. John Pezenas and Kathy Intermission Tom Titus Lone. with William Purkiss directing. The show runs Wednesday through Saturday only with an 8 o'c lock curtain. . "The Bad Seed." Maxvll Anderson's tale of a rtuld murderess. opens a two-weekend run 'f)\urs- day in the mam theater at.Saddleback College un- de r the direction of H. Wynn Pearce. Eleven-year. old Patncia Cast plays the angelic devil in her fourth Saddleback production , Production dates are Dec. 7.9 and 14·16 at 8 pm. and Dec. 10 and l7 at 3 p .m. Reservations 831-7414 or 495-2790. CLOSING OUT ITS (our-weekend engagement at the San Clemente Community Theater. 202 Ave. Cabrlllo. Is lhe comed y "The Pen is Deadlier" un- der the directton or J oanne Applegell in her swan song for the Orange Coast. The show runs tonight throu~h Saturdav at 8:30. Reservations 492-0465. Also windif)g up a five.weekend run is Neil Simon's "Last of the Red Hot Lovers" at lhe Westminster Community Theater. 7272 Maple St .. Westminster. Martin Fuchs stars in the comedy, which gives final performances Friday and Salur· day al 8:30. Reservations 893·8626. Continuing through next weekend are "The Time of Your Life" at South Coast Repertory t9S7·4033) and "The Women" at the Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse l556·54S9l. The Harlequin Dinner Playhouse <979·5511) has "The Pajama Game" r unning nightly excep~-Mondays through Jan. 7. • CALLBOARD -T he Irvine Community Theater still needs two Pigeon sisters to complete its cast of "The Odd Couple" ... auditions for the actresses. who should be able to handle a C0ckney accent. will be held Tuesday at 7 p.m. in Room G3 of Rancho San 'J oaquin School. Michaelson at Yale. in Jrvine ..... Studio SehOol for Stars .. .., •'-?13/~31-9~0 MMISCAAHeMNI~ COMO A HOISIMANC"I '"" \OYI AHO DIAYMl"I ""'11.J CAMI e MNI fONDA COMH A MOUIMANcl'O) ,."" LOYI AHO DIAYM "'°' fta CONWAY MT WINT nllf....WAY CNI "UI M llUON DOWI MOIOtol C...eM •~ ... !~: "U' IM SMOKE-CIJ 494·15'4 WU&n-l':lf&-SAT/$1116--,_,,_t .. ,,_ .. l~M ' ' ~ ... ., ......... 494·1514 JACll~--"GOtM' SOUTH" INI ~ "OUT\A W IL.UIS'° ftM CONWAY MT WINT TMIT....WAT (NI """ M llUIOM OOWI MOI0101 ............... All IMU" MDIMM rlOM .,ACI ("91 ~ M CNOMN l'OI IMUlTMml I. MR ¥DINI (I) 2. YIXIN (I) ('1 l.°'"1,...,, I ..... u.-u-· 1 .... Ult .... "'.,,. ... 1.-...-.--.. a. .............. ..,. ... ., .,.. 1. tlOOWI Yum ... t.•-·=~= I.A lllCAM Cit By BOB THOMAS LOS ANGELES CAP> -It seemed like lunch hour at college, with casually dressed students lounging in the '\14t.umn sun outside the classroom. There was a difference: graduates of this school might become movie stars. It's called the Columbia ·Pictures Talent Development Workshop, and the 30 students have come from Toronto CAnn Latuch>. Osaka tMarikio Tse) and points between. The program sei!ms new. but it's actuaUy a throwback to the era when ma· jor studios maintained staffs of coaches to teach young actors drama. singing, dancing, horseback riding. fencing and whatever else actors needed to know THE WORKSHOP IS located in the heart of what used to be called the Columbia ranch, a col- lection of outdoor sets and sound stages that is now part or the Burbank Studios. Dean of students is Joshua Shelley, veteran actor, director and coach of such performers as Jon Voight. Mia Farrow and Cicely Tyson; During the lunch hour Shelley munched on a sandwich and talked about the pro- gram. "It started last summer when Danny Melnick, who was then head of production. called me and suggested that t bead up a talent development pro- gram." said the balding, wry-faced Shelley, who is an original member or the Actors Studio . "Danny said he wanted me to give him three people who in four years would cost $2 million." BRISTOL CINEMA Costa Mesa 540·7444 CINE DOME Oranoe 634·2553 NOW STADIUM DRIVE-IN Orange 639·8 770 UACINEMA Westminster Mall 893·0546 r:'OR ORANGE COUNTY PAOORAM INFOAMAT10N CALI. Mc·FAEE -·• NO •UIU ACC~PllO fOll °"' '"°"OllOfJ" THE ORANGE COAST SYMPH ONY ASSOCIATION PRESENTS ORANGE COAST SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA JULIE ROSENFELD ... JOSEPH PEARLMAN Violin . . . .............•••..• Music Director 1 PROGRAM Concerto for Orchestra ..•....•• G.F. Handel ''ROMEO AND JULIET" ...••..• S. Pc-okofieff SuitP No. 2 Concerto ...•.....•...••••..•••... J. Brahms VIOLIN and ORCHESTRA DECEMBER 3, 1978 -4:00 P.M. OCC AUDITORIUM Admission: $3 -Students: $2 TICKETS A VAJLABLE AT TICKET OR'ICE OCC AalmllcraUoo aa.r... 1'7'01 Falrvlew M.. Cotta Ma. 556-5517 I I JI __ """' ____ _ ... # • COLUMBIA BACKED THE program with an investment of more tnan SlS0,900, and Shelley launched his search for tomorrow's stars. He re· viewed 8,700 applications and interviewed 600 hopefuls In New York and Chicago. He was criticized for not seeking talent in Hollywood. As 1t turned out. 18 of the students are from the Los Angeles area. .. All of the 30 are today's faces. not the pretty races you would have Sei!n in the Universal talent program in 1948." said Shelley, who was a me mber of that class. along with Roek Hudson. Tony Curtis. Piper Laurie. et al. "They're a different generation. even from when I last taught acting s ix years ago. This group is much cooler: they don't express themselves or let you in on anything. The moraJlty has changed too. They're very casual about sex. Their ex- pression for making out is to 'lake a shower.· .. NOW PLAYING OIWllf lllAll CllOIA WUT OJlllOf 637·0340 Wes1111tns1" 892-4493 llO PUSU llCUPTU ,_Tilt._.... ·"A cdmpeWng thriUer.,. NOW AT A. fHlATI£ NlAll YOU CltlEDQM( n 0."'91 634 ~~ ll9WPOll Clllf:MA 11-llatft 6'..0lbC) ffMMtT 1t OAIYl·lll -lm1t1\ltl !13' 6292 fOI ~ CO\llm l'tlOOAAM lllR>llllATIOll CAU SlUllU SOtlllf. ttO rASSfS ACCEm:O fOA nos (ltQAWll(lfT edwards BRISTOL CINEMA •n~ 4l ~CAITMUI I 0.1,444 .. -~ ........... WED.·SUN . 1t:4S, 3:15, e:oo, 1:45, 11:15 "NC:XDfAU..EN'S ~ """•'•••~ I.INTERIORS I ~.;:~·-~~.::::~ . . -r..-a_~-...... " .., • .,_... • • vuqp 2~~tfl" ... ~ 1 411~ , .. , .... Plue IRI "SECAEJS" Plue -~· •• ••• "SOfilE800Yl(IU.£0 , ,:·~ ;-'!',. ,-:;=-:-;:-;;:;r.nnA-:rr.r.;TER" HER HUS8AND'' 979-Cl41 IUllOH M()Oh "SLOW DA..._N_,C.,.,l~N=Gc......--~~:.;.J .::::.:·: :::• BIG ~;:.~(PG) a . ,· Wl;~LOE ~;:~~ .., ........ ?~···· ~~ ... , ,. ~·· , ••• fl .. PIUI ··couHl DRACULA :':: = :: ANO HIS VAMPIRE BRIDE'." JOSEPH E. L.EVIHt: PRESENTS "MAGIC" STARRING (R) ANN·MARGRET f Jftt CJ ~JJ/IJ '"DOll'lb l'G J A.A TOl.IOEN S "THE LORD OF THE RINGS" (PG ::41 Jt.~~:~~' eoun.r flt SOUTH,. Dracula ... .: Ptu• • t111101rt BrKI~ "MESSAGE ~lua "THE GROOVE FROM SPACE" (R ) TUBE" ----1 e wards IN MA fST •-----1192~91 ~ ~~-s .. CJ >rt 1l" : a ed "Y· 10l ;r. ta th ns i\. Ve ·n a th ot It! ed tf • - g If r ,r It e .. •JZ DM.Y Pt&.OT ENTERTAINMENT I MOVIES He's Just Rolling Along !? MERCUR~ SAVINGS 11 -Nice Goi119' I \ Former Secretary of State Henry Klssinger gives u kiss to ABC-TV reporter Barbara Walters at a luncheon held by the Anti- Defamat1on League of B'nai B'rith honoring all three televis ion networks. British Star Shines iii U.S. By BOB THOMAS HOLLYWOOD <AP) -Latest arrival from England: Malcolm McDowell, the innocent-faced, v1olence·prone brainwasti subject or .. A Clockwork Orange." The British actor is starring here in "Time after Time," a fantasy being directed for Warner Brothers by Nicholas Meyer, who dreamed up the confro~tation of Sherlock Holmes and Sigmund Freud m the novel "The Seven Percent Solution." This time the plot is more bizarre; H.G. Wells pursues a doctor friend, believed to be Jack the Ripper, from Victorian England to 1979 San Fran- cisco via Wells' Time Machine. Novelist Meyer is making his directorial debut with the film. It's McDowell's first film in America, and he hopes there will be more. "AN ACl'OR MUST GO where the work is, a nd at prt?senl lhere is no work in English films," he :.aid. "The studios are at a low curve right now." • The 35-year-old Liverpool native denied he would leave England becatJse of the stiff taxes that have made expatriates of Sean Connery, Michael Caine. Michael York and otner stars. Saad McDowell, "If you like a country, you must accept the good with the bad. I will always keep my house there -England is my home, my roots. Sut I don't feel strongly about working there. I don't mind where I work." McDOWELL MADE IDS film debut in the memorable "If," then achieved international at- tention in Stanley Kubrick's "A Clockwork Orange." It was a film that disturbed some people because it seemed lo revel in violence. ''I thought of it as a comedy," said McDowell. "The fellow I played was a hoodlum who enjoyed violence and rape, who started beating and raping with a smile on his face. It was my idea that when he started one particularly frightening attack he would sing 'Singin' in the Rain,' that great ex- pression of exhuberance." . If he stirred controversy in "A Clockwork Orange," there's no telling what wiU happen when he appears in the already legendary "Gore Vidal's Caligula." V1daJ himself has disowned the movie with scathing remarks and threatens to sue if his name remai~ on it. The film, financ;ed by the peo- ple who brmg you Penthouse magazine, has evoked stories of scandalous goings-on during the Rome shooting. THEY'RE ALL TRUE, McDowell indicated. The filming sounds like one long centerfold for Penthouse magazine. McDowell spoke of some of the unspeakable acts he was required to portray and added. "I was always careful to place my hand strategically when I got out of bed.•• He worked for seven long months in Rome un- der the most chaotic of conditions. "During one scene I leaned against a pillar and discovered my ha nd was wet with paint," the actor recalled. "I gl~nc_ed over .and saw a. painter a few feel away, pamting the pillars gold m the middle of the scene. ''The whole production was disorganized, an1 there were some hideous moments among the peo- ple who ran things -more drama off the set than on. During one big argument I said, 'Why don't you go in my closet and borrow one of my cos- tumes? You're all playing the bloody emperor."' HOW DID AN Acroa of distinction like Malcolm McDowell become involved in ljUCh a pro. ject? ··1 loved the character, and I thought I could do something with it. I wanted to play Caligula not as the mad emperor but as a man of power who went through three stages: 1. wheedling bis way into power; 2. doing strange things but really en- joying his powe r as the most important man on the planet; 3. undergoing a breakdown and doing hor- rible thingS as part of bis death wish. I didn't want to play him as a complete idiot from the begin· nlng. "How It will come out l have no idea. I just hope there is somebody left on the picture with a degree o( taste." · Newa from all over C1llfoml• la rounded up ~eachd•y In th'e DAILY PILOT CINCINNATI CAP > -Tom Jonell known locMlly IHl Juwu says h d04: n't h1tve lime to ao to tbe iirocery or po.'lt office and muy not reod a ncwspupcr for days ll 1uJt.11 ham JUSl lane. bow ver Inc,. Auaust . the M HHChuaeU.a naliv~ hH been poundln1 out rllfllmc tunes •bo rd the Ml111Jslppl Queen fttWt'n nllhtt a week and five hour. at day. "It· 11om ethlni I a lway_s thouiiht or dolna ... the 28-year· old Clnclnn1tll realdcnt said . "fo'or MJI ( k.now, lbe world couJd ............ Supw~1guw.,-... wtth QtM9-ltned tanlle. r11Ptd hot w1tet '9COvery tyatem• a"4 wiero~ llVlng ~ 1•~~. .................... 71.9 .................... -•:•I ~ .............. ~ .,. .. ·.--.. , .. , .. ·--·--....... " , . ... "' . -..... Sll ll be at war and we'd be sail· Ing on Ow river." Jazzou. who heard about the JOb whtle working as a piano tuner. said passengers and ragtime fans came up with his name "Someone came up with Janou. after Jazz and the Yazoo River in Misaisalppl where the boat traveled." "When this gets old. so m e thlni els• wi ll com~ along," he says. "You ask me what I'll be doing in 10 years. 1'11 probably be tuning pianos in New England or 1 could see m yself as the owner of a ragtime saloon." YOUR DAILY PILOT CAN BE RECYCLED. 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Reg. 2.19 1~ . -.... 7 INSIDE : •Ann Landers •Erma Bombectr •Horoscope :United Waf ·orange County ought to look after Orange County. Orange County knows what Orange Covnty's problems are.· 8)' J OlTll OLSON OI -&Hit~,. .... ,._.. Llko many an Am<'rlc11n 1nslllut1on. tht• United Way has romf' under alt 11har of criUclsm Somt' h ve called 1l monopolistic or overly Ila.&~ s1vt' Other1> h.ive arru.sed 1t of lw rns narrow mloded ln u, M!lt>etlon of me>moor uaencu'f!.. . But t.ho6e involved with UnU\'d Way maku no apolOiti . "ls Umtt"d Way aggrc"1ve and dedicated• Yes," aMcrtt'd Paul Jt;tter. a ''it•e pre1udent of thl' Fluor Coq>()n1llon 1md • member o! thti public and corpoute informa lion committee for Region Five "~e a&t>logil.e fur our waya of raising money? l l'i; professional. tln intelligent way to go a 'this " Eller .reflect~ lhe view o( many bu!l1· nessmen involved 'tl.11lh UW lf pnvate charity doesn 't take care ol ph1lanthroplc needs, gov ernment will have lo and it wdl cost more. And loc~ bodies should take care of local needs. Etter st ressed. "Orange County ought to look after Orange County. Oranp County knows what Orange County's problems are .. His com pan y 1s involved , thro ugh corporate gifts, employees who contribute money and executives who donate time , because there is "a deep feehng of communJty involvement on the part of the corporation. The feeling ls that United Way w1U...make our area a better place to live." Etter also suggested that the focus on busi- ness as a springboard !or charity refle<'ts the fact that "giving has been a neighborhood effort but ltow is a countywide effort. "We're helping the whole community. Everyone's benefiting in one way or another. We're attacking the serious problems." Charitable giving once was the bailiwick of the church but gradually, organizations such as United Way and AID have assumed the responsibility of soliciting funds. United Way grew out of a community cam· paign to help miners in Denver in 1887 and was born in Orange County from a 1924 community chest campaign in Santa Ana. In the · '4-0's and 'SO's community chests were formed in 16 county cities and in 1971 five merged to form Southern Orange County United Way. Two years later seven funds combined to make the North Orange County United Way and m February of 1975 the United Way of Orange County North/South was oHi cially born. United Way is represented in the western portion of the county by Orange County United Crusade-United Way West, which has offices in Garden Grove, and which remains splintered b ecause leaders ther e feel funds raised elsewhere are not given to lhat part of the county. The other main charitable organization in the area is AJD United Givers, headquartered in Tustin, which operates from a somewhat dif· ferent viewpoint than United Way. It considers Rodeo Ridin' Shari Korff is heading for the Oklahoma City rodeo. By MARCIA FORSBERG OI tlM Dally ~li.t S!Mf Three days before Th~giving, il looked doubtful that barrel r acer Sfiari Korff would m ake il to Oklahoma City by Dec. 1 in time for tlh e National Finals Rodeo . H er horse. Geronimo, had colic, and her trailer rig was broken down. But by the time s he had eaten her last forkful of turkey and dressing al a family dinner Thursday afternoon. Ge ronimo was recovered and the trailer was repaired. So Shari Korff was, literally, orr to the races. The small woman (she's 5'2", 100 pounds l and her horse (he's 14.2 hands high, barely out or the pony class> have a chance to win big money anc1 the world barrel racing title at (be 10-day NalionaJ Finals Rodeo. She'll compete against the top 15 barrel racers from the United Slates and Canada . A member of the Girls' Rodeo Association since January, the 21 -year·old Huntington Beach resident stands second in the state and fifth in national barrel racing competition. DESPITE HER accomplishments, she's a • rookie who's been barrel racing for just two-and·a·half years. Arter "ending-up 20th in the nation in 1976,'' s he set her goal -the Oklahoma City rodeo. "It's the one that e veryone shoots for, whether you're a bull rider or a barrel racer,'' says Ms. Korff. But she admits that as a child s he "never dreamed of doing barrel raclng. All I wanted was to have a horse to ride on.·• That horse turned out to be Geronimo, nicknamed Gert, raised and tralned by Ms . Korfr since his birth when she was 10. "We kind of raised each other." she says. ltllt'lr . "donors' oraanlullon" where those who l(lvt-the money decide where 1t goos. Several oth_,r araas-rooLs groups, such as Con<'erned Citliens tor Charity. have been formed u an "a1t4'rnaUve" to United Way. Thl'~O aroups. a spokesman said. want donors to have more voice In how the funds are dis· tributed Unll.00 Way haa been charged by some crlllca with overlooking smah agencies fOI' lhe more tradJUonal ooes llUCh as Girl~. Boys Clubs and ChUdren's Ho~pital. But Merritt Johnson, director or UW /NS stud that two or his sta/f members are "geared to work wilh s mall agencies to belp bring up them up to speed" and that minorities are "well rupresented" on the adml.sslons commit· tee "We Cund a lot of s ma ll; community grass· roots agencies." he said. The current list of agencies seems to refiect this. It includes Alpha Center <counseling> In Placentia, El Modena Service Center in Orange. the Community Participation Council in Santa Ana and National Sur! Life Saving, Huntington Beach. Monies are given judiciously, Johnson said. The application process is long and involved, often taking place over a six-month period. Each prospective agency b screened so there will be no duplication or services and funding will not be too generous or loo skimpy'. J ohnson pointed out that though some of the agency names are familiar. the programs are different. "The groups change focus," be ex· plained. He estimates that United Way receives five requests for admission each month and only eight "solid" applications for a whole year. As or November, less than half of the 1978 a ppli· cants had completed the paperwork. "Generally s peaking, three to four ne w agencies will make it each year," he noted. The United Way staff of 26 does olber jobs besides working with screening and budget com mitlees. "Last year we gave seminars !or small agencies and a course at Santa Ana College for leaders of s mall agencies." Johnson said. "1JnJtea Way ls riot just a f\lnd~alsing.or· ~lion." It also relies. during Its campaign which ends today, on tbe help of "loaned executives" from local businesses and industry who work at their employer's expense Businesses also cooperate by allowing payroll deductions, which a re a sore point with large agencies who are not a part of the United Way family. UW defends this practice, however . by say· ing that lhls form of fund-raising Is "one of the most cost-effective ways to raise money." United Way has fbis privilege, Johnson said. be<'ause of its track record. its "proven ability to work with companies." He denied that UW has ever made an effort to block other charities• use ol payroll deduc- tion. "United Way has never wanted to have i. closed system," he said. AID-United Givers also has a payroll plan and also sends its board members out to "sell" new corporations a nd businesses on the i1ea or joining the CjBmpaign. Unlike lJniled Way, which campaigns in the !all. AID Ylt'>rks year-round. And. claims Jack Collins. director. its ·12-month· formula lowers costs and 'Olfers a "broader distribution pro· gram.•· The payroll deduction feature or Umted Way is the rallying point for West Orange Coun· ty's solo effort. Bud Greene. executive director. said that 26.8 percent of the population of the county lives in his area but it has only 9.9 percent or the in· dustry. "Our problem is funding services." he said. "We have an average age or 2A in our five cities a nd one or the leading juvenile problems. And we don't have the highest in~me in the county. "Only three of the industries which employ over 500!.people in Orange County are here. Our workers give $200,000 which is DOl returned to fight local problems. This hurts charity.•· SHE MENTIONS THAT although Gert has his mother's spoiled temperament ("Sbe was a little out. of hand and I hated ridiDI her"). he also bas "a lot of personality. This UtUe horse of mine has an awful lot or heart, and heart's more Important than breed. Shari Korff: off to the barrel races. "Even though he's a mutt -an uncertain combination of We ls h pony, Ame rican s addJebred and quarterhorse -he puts bis heart.into winning. You don't need to go down to the racetrack and buy an expensive $2,000 or $5,000 hone In order for ll to be a good barrel horse," she says. EvideDUy not, becau1Je tbe Shari-Geri team was a wiMer from the beglnnJna. They woo a couple or state championablpa ln their first gymkhana attempts, and they took second place tbe first time they t'rted barrel racana (th• circling of three barrels set in a trtaniutar or cloverleaf pattern> In an open rodeo. ' "MY FlllST Pal2E money in barrel racin1 was S181U8 at Ascot Park," Ma. Korff recalls. Her wlnnine• Increased lo ~llhlY $2,000 pet year. and she has collected more than $13,000 In prize money durinl 1918. · 'Tbe lut time I held a job was May •f 1977 when I worked et a western ltore in Santa Ana. Now I'm a professional rodeo coatestant and t carry a brtefcue just like any otMr-basinees person. I keep tnck of winnlnea and expeQHa." · Sbe rides the rodeo because ol tbe freedom · -"I don't have to work indoon, and I've aot my own hours -and the travel OppommltJet. "DarvlNG BY mynlf feta ttnq onee in a ... 1reat wh.lle, and it isn't the actual running of the barrels that tires Gerl, but the trailer traveling. Sometimes we drive 12 houn a day." Every once ln awhile, she s~s. a bull rider or calf roper wW travel with her to the next ' rodeo. Her fierce·looklng Doberman ptnacber l• usually along for the ride, loo. "Sometimes l have problems when thln11 brealt down on the toed, UJcetDy n,. A.ad l have to track down veterinarians sometimes so t un 1et beahb ~rtificatet for my bone before I can set lnto eonie states, .. 1be ... ,.. But Jt's all worth lt, "e1pocially when ya whr." I West County s ucceeds in its belping effort because it is able to otrer agencies a "local" home in its office building, which it rents at a low cost from its owners. "It's also a matrer of philosophy," added Jack Kennedy, associate director. "We're try. mg to keep the input at local levels. Big is not always good. We don·~ want to get any bigger . We want to make decjslons personally." West also prides itselr on its high per-capita donation -$11.94 annually as compared with North/South's $7.17 -and says this happens because "we're a ble to get right at it personally.·· ··We're feisty people," added Collins. "We have more involvement with social needs." Collins also says his board will remain "agency-oriented." He does not believe a merger probably will take place with North/South. (( Unit.ed Ways resist merging, they are not righting national trends, according to Steve Delfin, manager of media relations for Umted w ay or America. "If anything, United Way is moving in a dif- <See UNITED, Page C%> Cheryl Roneo A Dairy Experience My son is considering having his hair cut While that may not sound like anything terribly important, let me assure you it is. If you 'r e a 16-year-o ld wh o feels your cotton-colored locks arc an important part or your lifestyle and project a certain image about who you th1nk you are. then just considering lire as a ·•jar head" can be traumatic. So what, you might as k. is causing him to even think about a trip to the barber? My son met a girl. Not jusl any old girl, but someone he refers to as the "Miss America type." They met between the bookshelves at the local library and a ppa rently there was instant rapport. Late r , whe n he staggered hOme· carrying more books than he 's read in his entire life. I immediately asked him if something was wrong. His eyes were dreamy and far away as he stood clutching a book to his chest telling me or the Incident. Did he ask her out on a date? "Mom. you don't under stand." he explained. "She's a Miss America type and Miss America types onJy go out with guys who have cars and money and sturr." I was positive <as only a mother would be> thal he was selling himself short and Ir this girl had any character or f~llngs for rum at all. it wouldn't matter if be had a car or not. But m y ingenious. post-puberty ch1ld was working on his own solution. "Do you think I can get my hair cut this weekend?" · Choking on my coffee and dropping the newspaper, I could only respond with a shocked, "Why?" After all, It had been nearly a year since I was even a ble to penuade this boy to walk ~b a barbershop door -and then it was only because he said he want.ed to watch the barber cut someone else's hair. "Well, I've been thlnking that if l get my hair cut I'll probably be able to find a Job (he is firmly convinced e mployers di s · criminate against people with long hair ) and lhen J can a"ve up and buy a car and then. . . " T he next momlng brought a swift change of heart. Jt occurred right after one of my son's best friends, sciaiors In hand, trimmed three blonde halrs Off his 6eaa. The man-chlla ruabed out to the kltcl>en to ask me if he waa "rulned." I told blm I dldn 't lb.lnk so. (SM ROMO. Pase CZ) ., ... , ........... ·'~ . ,..._ . .. . . . . ..... " I Signs of Alcoholism DEA.ft READ ~RS The rot towi n1 self. que-stlonnaire appcarM i.n the lla.rvard Medical School Letter of Aua:uil 1'71. It WU pr1nted w1\.h ptrml11ion from A)'e.l'll L•bor•torie1 11nd rec· om mended u • mt-llftl of llf!lf·t t:alin& fort.hole who 1uspec1 they l'.MIY b1ve a drlnkin1 prob · lcm EARLYSYllPTOMS \lh e flr tl 1ta1 e o f All·oholilm>: Are )'OU belinning to lie or feel 1ulll)' about your drt.riklnc! Oo you 1t ulp your drlnka! Do you try to have a fcw--enra drinks bl'tor~ joiaJna others in drink· . f 1~uat you drlnk at ctr· tain Umet -fur ex11u1· pie, bd~ luneh or a :$peclal event ; after a dll•P,PO'nlme nt or q1.utr rel'! .1 Do you drink beeauae y ou r ee l tired , depre~. nr woni~ .. A re you annoyed when family ar friends Wk to )'OU a bout )'OUt dr1ok· . , lRI , • Att ~09: bt-lllnrYn& ta hitve memory blackout.A a nd oci:a11lo nal plSIOUU ot MIDDLE S\'M P'l'OMS (An ext.eo111on or early l )'mp(oma): Are )'OU ma.kin& more promises and tellin1 BAYSHORE ANIMAL HOSPITAL takes pleasure 1n announcing that DARCY L. ANDERSON, D.V.M. has 101necl lhe staff le< lhe procflce ot Vctennary Medicine and Suroerv Or Anderson whose spec:1a1 1nte1ests Me orthopechc surgery and 1n1erna1 medicine will be 10tn1ng Marvin R Maas. D V M and John A Kullel. O.V.M Docton' Hours By Appointment 20n Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa "'-646-1664 Dresses are back '. it '\ and we've got ·eml :~ Not jusl a few \\ mor e lie• •bout your drinktnc? · Ar• lherti more llmerJ when )'OU need • drink! Wbu aober, clo )IOU rt1ret wb•t you have 11ld or done wb.Uti drlnk· ln•T A re )'OU drtnldnl mar. ottun alone, avoldinl t•mlly or dole trtenda? Do you h•ve wff.kend drtokln&'boutt and Mon· day hanaoven? Have )'OU bffn IColn& "on lbe waaon" to t.'Qtl· trol )lout drinkln&! Are m emor y blackouu and panoub b et omt n 1 rnore frtquent 7 l~AT F. SYMPTOMS (the advanr.t:d •t.a&e or alcoholisn1 1 · Do )'OU drlt\k to live 11.od hve to drink! Are you noticeably drunk on lmport..,.t oc· casloo.a -for example, a a pecl1l dinner or meetln•? Do you sometimes eet. the ''sh1kes'' in the mornina and take "a Qulckooe''! Do blackouts and pa111out11 now happe n very often? Have you lost concern for your fa01 il)' and others around you? If you see yourself In the column today and want h e lp, contact Alcoholics Anonymous. (Look in the phone book. I Fo r those who don't know : Al co h o lics Anonymou s i s a tellow1blp of men and women who 1bare lhtlr experience. 1trenrth and hope with each Olbtr In ao l!ffort to aol'le the.Ir common problem. The only rtiqulreme nt for mtmbalh.ip 11 •·desire to 1to'p drink:lfllt. There are Do dues or f~ for AA membership. The primary purpose of an AA 11 &o ~ tober and heir. other alcoholic •ch eve IObriety. AA doet not "recruit .. membera. The person w;lth the problem should can AA ud uk for help. P eople wbo man the phones will inform the caller when tbe ne•t meetlne-ln hla or her nellJbborhood will be held and he (or the> will offer to Had someone out to talk about the problem llDCl make plans to brloa the prwpecUve membettotbioext meet· lng. AA'1 deQnlLloo of an alcoholic 11 a person who. when be starts to drink, cannot atop until he i1 dnmlc:. There are a large variety of alcoholic patter ns - some drink only beer; others drink only on weekends; atlll others drink only after 5:00 p.m . (Many never miss a day·s work and point to this acbie'o'ement as proof that they are not alcoholics.I To those who drink to "d rown their sorrows." I say - it won't work. Sorrow knows how to swim . ( Horoscope ] FRIDAY. oEc. l Dy SYDNEY OMAllR ARIES (March 21· April 191 : You overcome odds, you win with longshots. You surprise and delight with com- bination of ambition. de- termination and humor. Gemini, Sagittarius peJ sons f ig ur e in sc enario. Superior wants to make room for you at more elevated position. Submit plan, format. TAU RUS (April 20· Ma)' 20): You're able now to reach more peo· pie. to get pulse of public. You locate what had been nUssing, You find ways of le aping over red tape. You ac· tually may turn an ap- parent losing proposi· lion into an overall win situation. Aquari an could play significant role. GEMINI <May 21 · June 20): 1Get involve4 -trylng to sit on fence now could create con· fusion. loss of prestige. Accent on finances of partner, close legal con· tact, s pouse. Cycle edges upwards -be confid e nt, patient, persistent. Member of opposite sex does care and will prove It . CANCER (June 21· July 221 : Emphasis on joining fortes with fami· ly member to achieve goa l . Taurus, Libra, Scorpio could figurE: prominent!)'. Mon ev ia In picture and you will re· ceive your share. Main· lain low profile. Study Geminl message. Stick with number IS. LEO <July 23·Aug. 22): Wh at seems far from reach can be brought into proper focus, perspec· liv e . Key is to get t oge th e r with co - worke r s, those who sha r e your inte rests. Give "survival instinct" full rein. Spotlight on employment, de pen· dent s , r e lati'o'es in transit, delayed mail or message. VIRGO <Aug. 23-Sept. 22 l : Dig deep -you could strike pay dirt. Key is to accept more r es pons ibility , to cba ll ena:e and be challenged. Capricorn, Cancer individu als fi gure prominently - and so does the number 8. Yes, emotional in· 'o'Ol'o'ement is very much a part of scenario. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Stick to factua l material. You'll be tempted by one: who of· fers get-ri~h·qu lck sc h e me. Remember your own· security re· quirements. P r otect yourself in c linche11. Don't give up somethine for nothlng. Land, home are likely to be involved. You'll conclude tramac· tion and have results of "test." SCORPIO <Oct. 23· Nov . 211 : Short trip could be on agenda. New contact proves sianlfi· cant. Dl!!iplay indepen· dence of tbougbt, ac$.ioo. If !iOU ho.oe on ~em for the S1ngfe1 Colendar. •tnd it to CherJll Romo, Feotur· Ing Depar1nwn.f. Omnge Coa1f DaH!i Pil41, P.O. Boz IS, Coda Mt!IKJ, Ca. 92626. Pl«ue inclMM your name. oddrf!tl md phone number. in her size but N •. 111,. ________________ ""I dozens of them. PRE r_ftA .. D OPENING ' • l And they're /uSI \' -vlV'n the kind she'd SPECIAL I choose hOfsoll. , Shop Ella Nor"s Dew.io, & Pritlt Color ..... fllll -spe<lallsts In half·slus al J 99 lbl I • 12 ....... 110, 126, '20. 127 •• sens e pr ces. • 20 lbp.lol.11~ 126 .......... 'Z19 • 241bp.lol.135-•.•••.•••••• 349 Loads of gift suggestions for every budget. Gift Certificates from is • 3'1bp.lol.131~ •.•••.••.••• 449 H.UGa.lllCT SPECIAL ~s llAll-slZE SHOP fULLnTON 7240re...,rMtill LAGUNA HILLS l~ttill1 #oell HUNTINGTON llACH ... Hvtofl"'fltell (M .... • COSTAMISA ll05~1hd. '"' l, ••• 0 ,..... ...... "'" 4th Print FREE! -c ... 1 .............. II i Serilcff A•tl~l1! ~ Ol!E.N fl'ettift~ ond.Swndo'1.(f•c•pt_C°'to Met.a} lonkAm•ricord • Mosler Chor,. DAY -f HOT01 · Inc• -E. Collll ltwy. • c:a.on. Del -••••1 ' t I ••• United <Fro• Pase Ct) rerent direction,'' he said. ''Not onJy do we fund bul we provide ttcbnical alMlilltance to aroupg that are not part ol United Waiy. "We 1UPJ>Ort all the voluntary sector. We do not try lO control the whole lhln1. · · Delfin anawered chara:ea lhal Unlted Way is tryi ng to manipulate all voluntary or1aruzaUons In the U.S. and tum them into arms of a aovena. menl bure1u. "Of the $36.5 billion raised tor phll•n· lhroplet last year, United Way ool)' raised $1.2 blWondlhattolal.'' heaaid. · "We are trying to shape public poUcy to ensure a stf'OQe 'o'oluntery sy11tem through effce· live expenditure of ta• dollars.·· \ He outlined United Wey of America's new "procram (01' the future," which says that UW hopes in the comin1 yean to improve its com· munlcations program and general management and sef'Yiees, and "create and Improve workiDg relation5hips with labor.'' When the United Way camp\.igners come around each year to bu!:lneu otnces and rac. tortes. more ls happening than just a pua.h for donations, small or laree. Merritt Johnson stressed. The money which come.a through corporate and private donationa. mainly thro\lgh payroll deductions, pnwides a service that wouJd ha'o'e to come from llOmewbere, be stresaed. "If United Way didn't exist., something would replace it." United Way is, according to J . Robert Fluor, chairman of the Fluor Corporation. "a mirror of the ima1e of the communiUe:s we serve. "We reflect social pressures in real time. With the increasing emphasis on community planning we (UW) should be an early wamin& system for problems before they occur.·· He belie'o'es that In an "enUgbt.ened society" the cost of "underwriting a community's health and social welfare, its educational and cultural opportunities, is part of __9!e cost or doing busi· ness." -. While 00.,iness foots much ot the cost of charity, United Way mU3 t "'de'o'ek>p guidelines for distributing It. he believes. which are "Da· l1oaal in scope and local In Impact." Whether United Way or AID de ... elops the guide lines, both will help foot the bill to an almost equal amount. United Way N/S collected just over SS million in 1m and ArD reported Contributions or nearly $7 million for its fiscal year which ended April a>, 1978. · Though the dollar amounts seem adequate. they are small when compared on a per capita basis with other areas of the U.S. United Way donors in Rochester. N.Y .. last year gave t.he highest per capita t.ol.al of S20.44, as opposed to $3.74 for Orange Count)', which has fi'o'e million more people than Rochester. It is a lack of feeling for a "borne town"' Merritt Johnson belie'o'es. "Guilt is low on the lisl of why people gi'o'e. It's commuoit)' responsibilit)'. '' ••• Romo. <From Page Cl) "Mom, there's a problem with my getting a haircut." "Really, what is it?" ANN LANDERS I HOROSCOPE Kid Costs Our ecoMm,y is in the news a lot these days. Every Ume I read of a move by the president to remedy the situatioo, I say a Siie nt praye r : "Please. God, don't lel him borrow from Amy. We ·re not that desperate.'' People who have never borrowed from children could pQ11,aibl)' see it as a way out. After all , it is a fact that children control the wealth ot this country. But, for those parents who have never tapped them for a loan, it 's an experience one never forgets. It was children who finl Initiated some or the loan expressions we have rome to know and fear . Eipressiona like : "I'll break both of your legs," "How would you like a cement over· coat?'' a nd ·•1 un - derstand you have a mother in Jersey.'' I had a neighbor once who fell upon hard times and h ad to withdra"' S700 from her son·s sav- ings account. The kid had a wire service tor a mouth. No group was too small to enlighten UPHOLSTHY ... , ..... ...... Im .......... C......_-M&.llM Carolers wanted lo participate in Marine Corps Toys IOf fOfs 0to0ram a1 Hunhr'lgton E""° Bo-.beek with all the intim:tle de- tails and confidences s urrounding the loan and the repayment. One night he came Into a cocktail party in his pa- jama5, went over to his mother, kissed her light· ly on both cheeks and a nn ou nc€'d lo udly . "Noon tomorrow." Somehow. it seemed ~ruel when you stopped to consider that the $700 was the first payment to the orthodontist on the kid's overbite. You never really re· alite how much wealth a child can accrue until you s top to cons ider these facts: (a) A child does nol pay for room , board. medical expenses. en· tertainment, charitable contributions, education, Center. PhQne 89 7 ·2533 for rh.-..-on who c.or•• ... Marine Corps Band Concert Do Something 00-nt for the Holid.ysl ,_. __ ,. .... __ _ -a.---~ -------· .......... ----· ... .... l_ .... ____ • c.-......,,... ·---. .......... &~.-.............. • 1-h•wr w.,,.c;. !o<-olooW-•el "ll "'IJ"'' otAHOI JT-&Covnuy ·~7-8128 "It's my band," he said. <To date, he's the only member oC lhill organization.I "I won 't be able to get up in front of an audience with short hair. I need to mainU.i n an image. And )'OU ha'o'e to I~ lik~ a rocker to be a hit.·· Commu'1ity lree lighting J';:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;:; ceremQfly a nd holiday S lliing classit i.ct ads band concerr free !his ar• the best place to So that was it. He was faced with a classic connict ol interest: whether to try and find a paying job In a grown.up world and accept the responsibilities that come with it, or to savor childhood a UUle longer. lt l'mlinded me o( my first job in high school. I went to work to earn money for social activities; but because I had to work nights and weekends, I didn't ba ... e time for the Social Ufe I couldn't afford without working. I tried to explain to him that the real reward from your first job comes with the paycheck and the reeling of independence it gi'o'es. Even if you ha'o'e to make a few sacrifices forifl'. The cotton locks are still intact. But there is a young man at our house wbo hu started hJs own curb-painting business and who practices guitar every night. A trip to the barber is still being "considered" -and so is "Mi ss America." Wedding al'ld rngogement GMOSD1Ummt1 run on Sunday in the Doily Pilol.. F'orm.t ore aoolloble at cUl Doily Pi1oc offices or by colling Ille Features iHporl· mm!. 6f2-G2 J. · To avod ditappoirltrnmt. prolptefi~ bndrs art' reminded to haoe lheir wedding 1torie1, wnth o. black· and·tohite gl.ol1y of tht' brldl!' or ol lhe couple. to lhl!' Featut"ts Deporlmtm one Wttk bl!'fort the iveddmg. Engogtmtnt onnounc"11mt1. with black-end· wlllle Q~ ol the /uture britW or the couple, rnwt bf' rtteived b!,I the F"t"Glutt'.J Dqo.n:ment nz ~ek1 be/ore lhf! IUf!dding dote-. GRAND OPENING IN GARDEN GROVE 7461 &.AIDIM GllOYI! ILVD. Comer of Western ......... 17141 894-3960 Fn at 7 pm dedicated bt.ly or setl sJd wear and lo Toys for Tois !_CfUipfTMftt in the Dally Huntington Center Man Pilot. Beach & Ed1noer at 642·5671 Ssn 01990 Fwy. A Christmas Keepsake PAPER UNLIMITED Wnlclfl Pima 1112 ........ _ CIC 548-7921 "Butte Kntl •Ac! Ill • Jonathatt laoan • Bleeker SI • Allee S1uart •Hopewell ® •R&K • M1sly Har-IX>r • Th~ V1naoer • Ro~emane Reid • Beach Party •Modern Jrs FAiile OUTLD --• I I I I -- I SUPER SALE \ ' OPIN TO THI l'UIUc: -AY. SATllllDAY, SUNDAY, MOMOA.Y, DIC .... 10 2. J._. 4 I 0 A.M. lo 7 P.M. WIN FREE FABRIC DU-S -y 2-S YOllMUSTll \•••t•rr TO- TNlm• ·----------------------~ INAMI •••••••••••••••.••••.•••.•..•..•...••• ( I I I ADOllSS ••.••••••••••••••••••••••..••.•.•.•• I I ~ I 1cnY •..•.•.....•.••••........•.••••....•...• , I -I • -,_ I JIP •.• · .• -: .•••.•.•• "90•• MO ••••••••••••••• I I llrtnQ TWt Couoon Wfttl You I ~----------------------~ I • ( -... -. . • . ~ -. -••.••• ,.-. # "' ...... ·.r.:;t;l,.A.'1 I --c- Opr)' R gular Cajun Speed: 'Full Blast' I\ JOt: DWARDS l\ASll\1W t-: fl'nn tAl'J "A Cajun hu lVrO !'>\it•t•d:1. Jimmy e . t-wman IUUd "Off and full b ai.t • 'l''"m o llol i. C:aju11 Full blatst u~ pl•>~ l'uJun mu1Slc He enjoys 'Ul:iillh' Th 1mllal '("'Mand for Cajun Cajun N \\'M.\N AMl 111$ BAND "CAIUN Coun· t1 ~ · mak~ up lht• onl~ C"aJUl\ llt't on the Grand Oh~ <>pr)' llt• . hl·l•r. on the Opr)' 22 ye111r: end only Hi of lht• Ml nJrrt•nt Opr) acts have been In the ;,h\ll\ '°''~''" AlMt: w1lh Doug lo\ersha'A', ewm&n rorma the \ anguurd for ~11n.·ndmg lhe Ce.Jun sound from the bU) OUIS of 'IO\Jlh l,01m1ana lo t.hti subur~ of Middle AnH•rtc.i ~;..""'""· •' fr1endl) follctiy ~I year-o1J, aot his 'lurt un Utt' l.oulMunoa II u' rlUl' in Shre\t'JlOrl. l.,1 "hilt• u dynanuc )uun~ ""'t.:••r-n11med El\'' Pr~sl \ "a" on th(' 'hCI\\ • "\\t• loul.t•d upon l11m a~ u kid ~l the hu) rid~ ... Ne\\m.:ul re· c·alll•ti in <111 tnl~rv1ew "lie Wtl~ Ollt' Of, kind ; hl· chunttt'<i the wholl' spe<'lrum tU\d countr) music had Jenn Yt:<1rs 1n the lute 1950s and e<1rly 1960s becuusc evcrv· 'h Ing revol vcd around Elvis "He was a loner NEWMAN from the beginning. but very nice to everybody. H~ just clidn't say much to anybody, though he was friendly and respected the other acts. You just didn't get to know him well. PUaLIC NOTICE ,.nmout 111t1N1u MAMaUAHMC•T t I\• I llOOllll ... &111•-I\ t90ift\I IMltl ... " .. ltllA S HAllt •jA,.PfNINCI tl67 <i•'*" o..... .... e;., .... C,re'H, CA ti .. • ltll• !\All ""11111• Uot 0.1-wt • 1 Hvllll ..... .,«Jo (.A .,... fhl• 11•"'""" I• t-~ltcl b' •"In •••Hiii•• 1111•0 ""'""'· flll\ •-I wt• llltel wltl\ IN COiin•• C'*'" •' 0 .. 4'91 C.Wnh •" No••M .. I 16, lfl1 , .... ., l'-*lll,_. 0tlt'Qt (Mt1 o.llY li>llot M • U • OK 1 u ltJt SJl+ll ----·------Puau • NOTICE ~·. v PlllUC NOTICE lltOTICI OP NC)M.1tH..oNll8ILIT'I' Motke I\ Mtetw Ol'Hll t"•t IM II'!'· -··~" wlll .... .,. ··-·•tue ,., •"• 0-111• cw 11.t1111u .. conl•.ctot1 by ""Y-otw 11MN\ l"Y,.11, on o-•"•' llllt IUlt OtlH tNt t-My. .. -t .. MY ti ~ ....... bf#,)'79 ,_, tcNell'ntr tl•Ylel~• .._.~.CA9M6J ,.ubll\llM OrMI09 CMtt O.lly "'lot NOY M,Oec f,,,1'1* $4.lt,11 -------~---PVBUC NOTICE ~ ,, ..... l'IC'TITIOUI I USINIEH •AMa STATlllldNT "ICTlTlOUS I USllHH Tiie lollcwlllQ pe<Mlt\l ••• 0.1"9 NAM& UATIMIENT 111111,..u at• Tiit foll<IW!nO --•• dol"9 llutl· "'NEWPOllT INTE•IOflS," lltO M\\ •• :! Co.SI H~y, Ne-1 8e~I\, CA Fiii[ 0 TWO GROUP INC , t 91..o C'•lllornlt CO<pot•llGn, •••1 Meu 8•rllara PawleM.t, 2Sltl Cotdlllac: Orlvt, II t , ~· ....... C•lltornt• 91101 Drive, u oi-Hiii,, CA 0.n 8ttr9 '"'·· • C.lllon\I• <Of· G••oo Pawi...... Jj3.11 c:.dlllac: -•tletl 1 .. 1 ....,. Orl'H, R 9, S.11la Orlve, Lt~ Hlll1:6i. ·- An•, (•lllornl• '1101 Tiiis llu1INH I• cOfb.ctect by ... In· Tl\I\ butl,....t •• condlKteJ by ~ <0<· dlvldua'- por•ll"" Gr999 fa .. ~o &~ etro '"' Tl\ts tl-nt wu lllt<I wllll .,.. •""18er9, County Cieri< of Oranve County 011 Prol9en1 & Se<rtlery Nowml>er 6, 1'11. fl\I• st.i.,.,.nt ••• flltcl wllll the WIESTEltN MUTUAL f $Clt0W coun11 Cl•rk ol Or•nve County on COit,., Noveml>er 10, 1911. p HM IE. lrtll Sl., Ste. 0 "ffll1 T111tl•, CA f2'IO Pullll1Md,Ounve Co.1st Oally PllOI, Eacrew No. •MU·M Noomt>er n. JO .... Oeumber 1. u, Publll,hed Orenoe Coast Dally Piiat "" Me w. 'I, 16, ~.3. JO, 1971 SttS.11 S34N8 ·------------- PUBUC NOTICE PlJBUC NOTICE "CTITIOVI I US,INHS SU,.£1t10:=.T M TME NAMe ST.llTE.MaMT ST.llTE cw CALll'OtlNIA 'Olt Tl•• IOllOWlllQ penon Is dol119 IMISI-TMECOUNTYO,Olt NOE "HE KNEW WHERE HE WAS going and Of· nms~'~ve DUNN ANO COMPANY, NO.A-tem A fered very liUle apologies to anybody. He was out imMk,,.ison~ .• si.u5•1..,.1,,,,,,.~ NOTICE o" MEA1t 1No o" r t t .th lh l ' ' h """ ,.ETITION l'Otl "lt09ATE 0' WILL o con ex wi e coun ry music entertainers: e mu ANO rco• LETTE1ts THTAMEN· dJdn't consider himself a country mu.sic enter· S1tP"'"' K. OvM, ~3 0•k T'" TA1t'I' Lane. 1 rv1,.., CA 9111 s tainer. Tiiis bu>tr.u Is conducted Cly •n In· Est•t• f1' C J McCORMICK •~• CHARLES JACKSON Mc:CORMICI(. "Most everyone on lhe Louisiana Hayride said dlvl<N•15111)1wft K. o.-~<e.wd. he wouldn't last -that he was a fad," Newman re-Tr.i• s1.1.,.,,...1 w•s 111ec1 "''"' ,,... w~L~~~c!.~1~~~~0<:i1~~c":c '~! membered. "I didn't know what to think. I was ~~~=~~1~~.~. oref\9e '°""1Y"" 11i.o Mr•"'• ~1111on 1or Pr-•• of used to Western s wing music with eight or 10 musi· ""m w111 and tor 1uuance 01 L•tt•rs cians and here he came with two musicians and Pu1>1lsl\ed Oran~ C:O.•t o.uy Piiot !_•.:!~:.."~~"!:=.~~.~=:',,!~ • , Nov 21. 30, DK. 1, 14, 1918 tore em Up. ' U "•78 11\e time and plKe of MlirlnQ Ille Mm• From the Louisiana Hayride, Newman moved -------------·~~'oo~~~~~~~~·:;~~1!~~ to the Grand Ole Opry where he. Marty Robbins PUBLIC NOTICE ment No. J of Mk! court, •t 100 CMc and The Four Guys generally get more encore ,.c-rinous IUSINins ~:~!~:~:'"•·In tn. CltY et s antun.t, calls than anyone else. NAME n ATllMENT O•ttd Nowmtiert•. m• NE\V1'1AN SAJO TUE NAME GRAND Ole Opry "is magic. "And it seems to be getting more popular as rar as people wanting to see it. We added two Th<! 1011-lno o.rson I• doing bu•I· WILUAM E. St JOHN, MU •• County Cle<' MISSION OR ... PERIES. 71 B•llXMI IOVLE, ATWILL & lt091NSON Cove\, NO•PGt1 8each, CA 9160 11t5. EllclldA- Jamu T, Sc:l'>l.llt:r, 21 B•ll>O• Cov· ,. • ._,.n•, C:.llfenll• '"" ts, N•wPO<'I 8H<ll, CA '266.l Tri: OUI ,._,,., Tl\ls llu•lneu Is conducted by •n In· Att-Yt IW: ,...~ PUBUC NOTICE ·-~-~-~~~---- PUBLIC NOTICE lt·SU. .. NOTICE TO CltEOtTOltS NO.A .. nu SU,.fltlCMI COUltT 0" THE STATE Oft CALl~ltNIA 'Olt TME COUNTY 01' OllANOE In 11\e Mattffof Ille E•t•teof ALVIN GOOFltEVANOEASOfe. Oe<eawo Notke .s """lilY 9"''"' to <-~•tor• "'"'"9 c1.i-~IMI .... Mk! Oe<e danl to flle .. Id <I•'"" •n "'9 otlke o4 Ille cl•rk of IM •lofnald coun °' to pruent tl\em to the ~i(lned •I IM OllKt Ol llOLENY f'. MORIN JR. & \#OLNEY f' MORIN, 1J~I Nort• C•l\u•n11• Blvd , los Anqelf', Catltornla '°'721. -kh latter offl<t I• th• pl•<• ol Cluslnen 01 the un der1l911ed In •II l'IWlnen ~r1•1nlno 14 ••Id •llel•. Suell Cl411m~ wit" IM neceuary voucllers ~• be lllltd or PrHenled .. afOf"tH•d '"'"'" IOU• m°"'"' atlef Ille first pul>llcellon Ol '"''notice. Oelecl No~r ff. 1918 Wllll.,.,, F. W•rd E •t<utor of tht Wiii of Mk! Oe<ede >I PUBUC NOTICE SdNI PVBUC NOTICE ltSUllJ 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 NOTICE TOCltEDfTOltS SU,.EltlOlt COUltTO" THE ST A TE M CAL,,OttNIA '01t T"E COUNTY Ol'OltANGE NO. A·t1S.U D In Ille Matter ot tllf' E•late or SHARON PUTERBAUGH TOOO Otceaseci. Noh<" is .,.,..,., qi,.f'n lo creclllor~! h•vln9 cl•1ms -lnM Ille ... 10 (I(>(~ dent to tile .aiel <l••ms in Ille off•<t o)\ '"-clerk of thl afor~•d <ourt or to pr.sent llltm to 11\e unOersl9"t(l •I IN Oltlce ol A.AYMOND L LACHMAN 1101 Oove Street, No. #110 8ewpMt Btecl\, C.Htoml• 92660, w111<11 r.rner offk• h the plt1ee of buslneu ot Ille u,.. oeru9ned In all matter. pert•ln1"9 to ••10 ut•I•. Suell cle1m1 •111111 tl\t neceswry _,..,.. '""'°I Cle 1111!<1 or 1 P'•'•"t•d •~ ••orew1d *'"'"' tout f "'°"'"' •fi.r 11\e lint pul>loc••ton ot .Nsnollce. O•led No-6, 1'11~ GLENM fOOO Eaecutor ot 111e w111 of ..,.., 0e<eoen1 ltA'l'MOND L LACMMAN A"_y .. i.- lltl Oe<rtS.._ .... 110 N••-' lead\, (.allfonl~ ttut Pul>lllllt<I Or-Co.tst Oelly P1to1. Noveml>er 'I, 1•, ll, 30. l'i71 PUBLIC NOTICE lt·SZJIO l'ICTITIOUS IUSINEU NAME ST ATl:MENT T l\e lollow1nq perw11s are On1n9 buliMS$H THE GIBSON. COMPANY, 1J1J S.E. M•ln Slre<!l, lrv1M, CA 91114 T"t Ma"'en GI~ ComP.tny, • Call!ornla COtl>Of•llon, 2:113 S.E, Mein Slrttt, Irvine, CA 91714 Tiii~ llU\tntts I\ <onelu<ted II• e I L y dlvlOu•I. P~llll•l\ed Oranoo CO.st O•llY Piiot, Jamrt T. S<hllltr Noveml>er JOal'd DKtmo.t 1, 1. 191t shows on Friday for the YOLNE'I' '· MOltlN .H. & YOLNEY I'. MO•IN A"WllO'fl .. Law 1M1N.~91"4., • <orporall°" p I L [ ~ -'~IR/ILLE J summer. Tllll 1lolement w•• llled with th~ ~ua-11 I ~~""' "I think it's been SOVND successful for a number _ _ of reasons. It's located In Music City, U.S.A .. and when you think of Music City, U.S.A .. you think of the Grand Ole Opry. It's a variety show with danc· ing. humor. bluegrass. Cajun, modern country, traditional country and sometimes a big pop artist. "Plus, country music rans remain country music fans. They may like other music, but they still come here lo bear the Grand Ole Opry . A lot or ·em think the Grand Ole Opry is really the only place to hear country music." KERSHAW, NEWMAN SAID, "HAS probably done more for Cajun music than anybody. He's hod so much lelev1sion exposure and is a fantastic entertainer." The \\ord ·'star" is not in his Cajun vocabulary County Cl.,.I< of Or•n9& C~unty on Now. 20, 1911. ""'" Publl•l\ed Or_,.. CoHI Oally Piiot, Nov 2l, 30, De< 1. u , 1918 PUBLIC NOTICE "CTITIOUS IUSINESS NAME STATEMENT T tit loll-1"9 perM)ns af"e doing butjnen ••• GAROEN VIEW .llSSOCIATES LTO , 'I0"1 T•tllert A"""" '111, FOUll- .. ln VAllO, C•llior'n•• '17111 J•m.s L CleytOft, ll'IOI Ptseo Bonita, l 0$ Aleml-. C•lllO<'nl• 'I07'0 Byron L. Wiiiiam•. 1'21'1 Sllnl• Ct< Illa Clrcle, Fou,.t•1n VelltY, C•lllOrnl" '7109 Tl\lt Clu•lntts I$ cofl<luett<I Cly • 11 ... 11.ci ~r1r\er\/Mp. J-L Cl•'t'IOll Tl\lt stat-t was lll@CI wllll tl\e Ceunly Cle•k et Ou"Ot Covt\I' on Nowem11tr 79, 1978. FllMJ2 Publl\-Or-.. Cot•1 Dally PllOt, Hovemt>er 30, -Oe<embtr 1, u, 21, ,.,. 0 ~n " ne of my biggest problems has been the -·--------·-- PUBLIC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE FICTITIOUS austNHS NAME STATEMENT LOI A,,..., Cal!fontla "9M Pul>ll•l\ed Orange Coa~t Oelly ,Piiot, N • .,.,,..,., JO ...ci C>Kemt>er 1. ••. n. ..,, bu~::.~.~o~~~wino persons are dolnt ------------- SOU THWES t-ASSOCIATES, '""' PUBLIC NOTICE ~=:~~.~= 111. Fountain 'Valley, ------.-.,-,-,..------ J•mes L. Clavton. 11'01 P•$ff NOTICE TO CltlEOITOltS Bonita, Los Alamltos. C:.llfomi. '07'0 NO. A>f™t 8 yron l. Wllll-s. 1'21' S.nt• su,.a1t101t COUltT M TME Ce< Illa Circle, Founl•ln V•llev. STATI MCAL.ll'OttNIA FOlt CelJfoml•W709 THIE COUNTYCWOltAMO• Gltftn E tti.nte..,, to1S S<ark!n In 111• M•1t•r ot tl\t Estela of Co.irt, 0Vblln,C:.1Homl••4566 EVELYN ICAOENUNG, Oe<tnecl. lee CMnahen. ll11J Santa SoOllla, Noll<• I• !ltr.ciy or..., to creditors F-t•ln V4111ey, Cttlfoml• '1'270I llavln<:1 tl•lrm ~ln•t '"" W'd <le<• Jove• Heyward, 601S Sc•rletl !Mf'lt to Ille sakl cl•rms In u.. offke of Court, Oulllln, Cellfornle 9066 Ille cl•r• of 11-.rt0<-lcl court or lo H•rold Ce lrler, 601S ~c•rletl pre>ent lllemlOl,..underslQMcl •lllle Co.irt. Oulllln, C.llferm• '""' office ot STEPHEN w. WE8STER. Eric 0 . Hetson, 1'I01 Wall<tr, L• VICTOR BALAl(ER, 114.S S.n Mulno Pelm•, Cellfomlat062:1 Orlve, Suitt llS, Salt Muco1, Tl\ls .,uslneu I• conducted Cly • C•lltornl• 9211&9, -"" latttf' oHlet h gener•l 1Mr1nenl\lp. tllt plact ol Clusl1ttn of tllt un· J•mos L. O eyten dtrsl9ned It\ .i1 mett.,.s 11ert•ln"'9 to Tl\ls ste'-"I was llled wltl\ "'4t t.ald etl•t•. Suell <l•lms wllll -~ Co.inty Clerk of Or.,91 County on Nov. n•<•n•ry voucllers must lie llfecl or emberl,, 1'78. pruttlltd •• atoreM•d within tour Flt~ tnOtltflJ •Her the llrsl pv1111u11on of Pullllslled Orange Coast O•lly Piiot, 1111• notkt. Novem!Hlr JO .ttld Oe<emt>er 1, 14, 21, Oated Nowmtier u , 1911 The Mtirv1tn GiMoll Company Bv M<lrven Gll>M)n, Pr~dent Tiiis 1tatemen1 was lllec! wlll• 1,... Countv Cl~rll ol OrenQe County on Noveml>u I, 1q11 . ltlCHAltO I:. ICNECMT, ISO rcvi... It.it...,, hrM a Mc llltlri<ll f'IM0t7 ... Mt<Artltw ........ ,. T "•st Offk • ... 1'10 N ... -1 .. ad>. c...,.., Pullllsl\ed 0r-. C:O.•t 0.1ly P1lo1 . Nov. 9, 16, U, JO, 197' SltJ.lt PtJBLIC NOTICE NOTICE INYITltfG llOS Staled prcoosafl will tw re<e•Yf!CI •I '"" ollk~ of "'8 s.<ret.,., OI Count, S.nH•tion O.strl<t No 1 •• 1~ Ellll Awn.,., """"""" Vallev, C•llforn1 .. 911Ga on or Cletore Ille llll\ O..y ol O.um~r. 101. ar 11 00 am , .or "'""" llml! '""Y wlll tie P"Clll<lv opened al'd -In Ille olllee or 1"-Bo•rd ol Olreclor\ •I 1oeu Ello\ Avenue, F-t.m ll•lley, Cellto•t\••. for: INTERIM SEWAGE SLUDGE FACILITY SITE PREPARATION AT COYOTE CANYON LANDFILL JOB NO. PW.flf>t L word 'star.' I've never been able to associate myself with the word 'star'. I'm an entertainer not u sl ur.' ' 1·971 Nel\Cy IC, Let E•ecutorof 11\e Wiii , 8ids ere •-lrecl 10< the enllre wor' oescrltwO herein. Social Security Tax Called Drag WASHINGTON CAPl -A Harvard economics professor says the $100 billion paid into Social Security each year by employers and employees is a maJor drag on the econom~ Marlin S. Feldstein, in a speech to the American Council of Life Insurance. said the money would be put to better use in private sav· ings or pension plans. But Brookings Institution economist Joseph A. Pechman told the gathering of insurance ex· ecutives not lo belie've Social Security "is in such terrible shape that we ought to scutUe it." PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOU$ IUSINISS NAME STATEMENT PUBLIC NOTICE "CTITIOUS IUSINEH NAME n ATIEMENT l'ICTITIOUS I USINHS NAME STATEMtNT The IOllowlno penon ll 001119 ~sl· nes•••• ltASHMIR E~TERPRISES, '16n LaC•P•lle, Foun1t111 ll•lley, C..lltomi• 91108 Jostpl\ c . J Dempsey, ,.,, l•C•Pllle, FOl.W\leln llallet', C•lllOrn•• '2708 This bu1lneu ls cond\Kted by en In· dlvldual JOWilf\ c. J. Otrnt>MY Tllel st"'-was llltc! "'''" tt-. County Clffll of Or•llOt Co.inty en Nov '1, "1' ""m Pullllshed OrMoe CO$t Dally Piiot Mov .ilO,Otc.7, 1•.21, 1'111 ~,. PUBJ..IC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE 01' INTENTION TO E NGAGE IN TME SA LE 0, ALCOHOLIC BEYEltAGl!S h Wllotn II M&y Concern: Subject to lswance .. Ille llctn\e •e> .ilffl 10<, notl<• I• herebv Qlven l"•t et Wid Deaden! STIE,.MEN W. Wl!ISTllt & YICTOlt IAUICElt AttwMyatLaw 110 "*" MariM Driw S11ltt 111 Se" Marc ... C.lltentla tteH Pul>llV1tc1 Orange CAasl D•llY PllOt, Mo.,.ml>er 1•. U, JO -Oe<emner I, 1',. »OH i tllt un•,11t9ne• proPOHI to se11 ------------- •lcOf\t llc -r•9n at Ille preml1e1, O.scrlllt<I a1 !GI'°"" In IM JOKt pro. VlcledbtlOW: 1uo N-1 Blvd .• C.St• Mesa Cellfornla Purtuat1t to WCI\ lnte,,.lon, tr.. un c»rsl~ 11 ~'1''"9 to tl\e Oe9art ment of Akof\Ollc Bewraoe Control '°' •uu•nce f1' .,. •1<-k l>ever•Qt license tor llceft~I tor !MM pre. "'"'" u Iott.wt: PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE TO CltEOITOllS SU,.EltlOlt COUltT 01' THE STATE Oft CALlf'OttNIA 'Olt THE COUNT'l'O,OltANGE NO A·"111 EUate ol MARIAk L. OE L ... GRANGE, Oe<:NJeel -------------1 .. ,, .. NOT ICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to tM credll0<' f1' !'--~ n<tmed Oe<t<1et1t tl\•t •II per~ havlno <lf ims ~eln't ,,,. W IO dee-I ... redl.ll..ct to Ille "CTITIOUS IUSINUS NAMtl STATEMENT Tl\t 1ot1owl119 persons •tt doing CIU\lnH\ <II' WILLIAMS PRODUCE CO., t8009 Sky~r-Circle. S<lllt F, lrvlnt, CA 92'1• Rolltr1 L Wiiiiams. no1 8ollooft Or •• MtwPOrt Btec.I\, CA '1'261>3 M •llnda L. Wl lll~ms, 2801 B•ysllOre Or., Ne-' Btecl\, c ... t?W Tl\11 buslneu It conouct~ by •n In· dlwlduol. AOber1 L. Wllllo"'• On Sele Beer & Wine I Publk Pntml-1 (;«.tic! 0 . MlllSa(I Pul>llslled Orange Coe~• Oelly Piiot, Nowemllef JO, 1978 S4AS-7f PVBIJC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUS IUSfNIESI NAMI! STATEMENT Tiie fo11owtno 1»non I• 001"9 bul l· MU at; HIGH IAOl.IE, tt'I .. "•1-"t CW., l'-t•I" Yall4fT, C:.Utttl Lewh H. P9ttJt, II, 111114 Palmetto Cir., Fountain Valley, CA 911111 lhtm, wltll the nenssary -""''· 111 ,,... oflk• of tM clffll Ol the •Clow.,.. tltlecJ cour1, or to pruent ,...,m, w1111 the necenMY vouche•l. to Ille II<\· de"loned ., JOHN H FITZSIM· MONS, •nomey t i ~w. '4 Soutl\ Coesl Hl9"w•y, La9una Beach, Calllorf\la 9'.lf>SI, wl\lcll Is Ille prece ot l>uSIMIS of, .... undl!n'9neO In •II m•I· t•rs perteln4no to the •1•••• of wld <»· <-nt, wl1"4n ICKW motllM •lier 1"4t !Int publk atlonfff tl\l•nollce. Oeted O<IOtler JI, 1'78 Marw L. Blrlu E(ac:utorottllt Est ... Tl\e wori. Is to Cle OOM accorc:tlno 111 11\t Plllns and -.illc"11on' °" '"'° tn 11\e otllut al 11\e Secretary ol the 01,. lrlct. and wld PIMIS .,.., SPK•lkcJllO"' ere bY reference ,,,_ a pan of 1111• nolke. Plen\, \PKlllcallons efld otN>r Pro. posal do<"'"""s may two oam1~0 •1 ,,.. ofltce of the County S.n11<111on o ... lrl<I No 1 .. , IQl.M Ellis A-Fovn. l•ln Vall@Y. C..lllor"'·· ,_., of IM ptens afl<I 50e<ffk11tloM m•y Cle - lainea •n 11\t ~·,.,...lloMcl ofl1<t "'' Ille 1011-lllO Cost\. Wl\1<11 YKI CO\I\ a•• t\01 rtfUt\d•DI• re9•rCllO\ 01 wlltlller ti. plan\ anct 'P«•llc•llon\ ar~r-f"tur~ General Prcwmon• ano St•no•rCI Sppcl!kat-lor Count• S,,,.•Mllon Olstrlct\ OI Or-C-ly C•lllorn•• .,,, Edihon ICurf'efll ~'"°" dpplK• Ille to •II Olsth<I iOClsl. • \10 00 O.ttlleo p<ans ano -lllcat1ons 10< •bOW WOrk . \ ~ Plans and SPK•h<•t•ons w11f bft "'<!lled to Pf'01C>Kllv• bldOen, 11 re quul•d, tor • tee of U 00 lt\On relundalll•I to cover Ille <o•I ot 11C1$1eot" '"" "6nclllno """ bids must be m•~ In .c cordaf\Ce. •I'll all bidden ,....,., comp ly, with St•••. ~r•• """ 10<a1 .... , •PPllCOlll• ll'\olffto, """ "~ directed In IMPl'ot>OS61 lorm, plM\\<lnG lPltClllU· !Ions. Bidden are 11tre11y notl!ltd that PU'1U•"' to Pl'OYl\lons of 11\f L•l>Or CoOe of 11\e State of C•lllorn1a, IN eo.ro of Olrect0<\ of County Sllnll•· llon Olstrkl No. 1 NS lldoc>tl'd ,,.. P••· s s I F I E D T"t •011ow1no ~non\ ·ar• 001ng t>us1ne•\ a~· Tiie IOllOWlllO person ,, OOlnQ Cluil· ness•s: Tiiis tl•temtnt wn fli.d wltl\ ttle County Clerk ol Orenl)e County on Nov 13, 1918 ,, .. ,., Published Or•not ONst O•llY Pilot, Nov, "· 23, JO, Dtt. 1, 1'71 Thll IMlslntss ll 'Ol>Oll<IOO b'( .... 1,,. dtvldual of thl •CIOY• n•mtcl Oeud<lnt JOHN ". "Tuuo110•1 AlterllOYall.aw ••111'19 ret•of 9'H diem WAf1H, •• ~ , , termlnect 11'1 the Stare Olrec:l0< ot 1 n· NEWPORT BRA!>S WORKS, 11>3S Superior A"""""· !,uu~ 6. CMtO Mew. C•lllornie m21 O• ¥10 M H11rr11., .,~ C•llrlllo, Co••• Mna. C.lll0<nl• '1?~71 R1cr.aro M 5HOff 150!. Mclr9<1rel Orove, NewPOr1 B .. cll, C•lllor"I• ''""° l 11" Clu\IMs~ " conOu<I~ 11, • vener•1 ~rt""'"""P O•vKIM H•rrll ll\I\ "•l-1 .... 111!!0 Wllll IM Counh Cler._ ol Or•noe Counly °" Novtm11tr IS. tt11. ,, .. ,,. Pul>ll\MCI 0.""0t to.~t 0.1ly Piiot, No.,.m11tr 1•. tl. JO -C>Kemller 1. ,.,, PUBLIC NOTICE E N GI N EF.RING DEVELOPMENT MANAGEMENT ASSOCIATES, 116 fto<kvlew Orive, 1rvlf\e, Call!omla'2'1S S•my Aly Adl\•m Pl\.O .. 2 .. Roovl•w Of1vt, 1rvlne, Celllo"11a 9171S Tlli• bu~ntU "condU<ted by an In· Oh1klval, Slimy .... ......., Tiils \ta'9meftl WM lli.d wltl\ the County Clerk of Or•noe County on Noveml>« 14, 1•11. AL8AM ... SILYA. • ..,..., .. i.- "' N~ Cil"'9r Ofl¥t, Sllllt HU N• ...... a.di, Cellfenll• t2Mt ,....,. Pul>ll~ Or-Olooit 0.lly Piiot Novemll<lr II>, 23, 30 -0.Umtlff 1 ltll l ..... s H. Pettit, II Thi• Ital_,,. was lllM wlltl IN S?tHI COunty Ck!rll of 0r.,... County on -------------Nov.,,, 1'11 PUBLIC NOTICE -~--------~~ l'ICTITIOUS auso•HI N.,_. n•n•NT Tiit 1e11ow1~ '9rtClft• ar• Clotno lluslMHft" f'OftEllllOST LIOOORS, 1ot9 A.W laker St., eo.ta Met.a, CA W. ~ J.IU. Inc., :lt1tt Ana -la Lii., LaQUNI Nlouai, CA mn Tl\ll """""' i. c~ by a <•• pora•ionw. a. J.A.J. i.ic. Wlll'9m o.MMI, P'"10tftt Tl\lt ... ~ .,.. llltel wtlfl tltt e....tl I 'I' Ci,tll Of Or 411199 CNflt 1 Oii How, 20, 1971. l'ttsne Put>lltllecl Orang. to.•t O•llY Piiot Now. JO; OK. 1, 14, 21, ltl't PUBLIC NOTICE Ou•trlel Relat~. 11PC>ll<llll•e to tN work to Cle done tor 11\t lo<alit• tr• .. s-t .. CMllH ..... O L..-. INKll, ~mu AtterMy '9rEllK- Put>ll•-Orang. Coast Delly PllOI, Noom11t1 '· 1•. n. 30, tm -le" 11\e work Is to bt perlormH In tompfl~ Wllfl Sec:tlOll 1173 ot tM 6 LAllOr cooe ot tl\e Sltte ot Calltorn1e. and 1, lll•O '" 11\e olflct 01 '"' Secr•l•trY of IN Count~y ~ Ols 1rk t No. I Of Orange c- PVBLJC NOTICE E8'1\ 1)1(1 Wll Cle Oii IM pto. 4 pou1 torm lumlSl\tCI bv ti-. 01\lrl(t ----~--------1 ano ellCIOse! In 11\e .,..,.._ W4>!>11et FlcTITIOUI 9USINISS bv 11\e Ols'1'1« Cle«inQ ,,_ 1111• 01 tM NAM41 STATIEMIENT -k allCI !Pie,,.,,. --rflS of tM Tiie lollo•l"9 P9t'9f!S •r• 001110 lllOcier Wiii\ no OIMr dlsll119ul\lllr19 M lrtftl.SI "'*r•rs1.111st11e10tere._s11>1111yo1 2 O•ANGE ANO MAONOLIA Ille l>IOd« to -ttwt l\IS 1>1C1 Is re s H 0 p p I N 0 c £ N T E A <el...., '" .... Obtrkl Olflo Ill IM PAA TNl!ltSHIP, J1'0 H-81..., .• aclr•u ....... ....,.,.,tel lorll\ In pr-1 Svll• )10, CO..UI Mela, C.lflomla fH26 time. Anr bid receivl'G 11lltt th• Wllll•m E. w.1 ..... ..St ""'llOr Kl\edlll" Clolin9 11-lo< re<t•P' Of Poln I ('Ir ., H11nlln9ton 8••<11, llld\ lh•ll Cle ret.......ci to the t>tOci.r 11n C•lllol'lllt ftMt ooeMfl. ' Howard f , wrtetro, Jr., IJttl EKll ~must Cle •k~ 111"" • ~urdy Strul, G•tctell Growt, Stale of C•ll•1t1" and ~ltftd Iv C:.lllornla._.. '9110fm Ille _, -><ti-Ill crwi Uwr-S. l ucll.,., *llJ C.._ Pl•"'· •~lllutlont and contr•c t s1 ... 1, T Ofltllet , Catltoml• 90503 doCUMAll!l. "· E. McMiiian, 10••• Ecltewooel A bid bOf\cl "°' len tn.tn litn percent A•tnue, O.roett Orov•, Olll101n1• 11n1 Of t"9 tote• bid •mount w111 IM' t2..-0 rtOUltecl wtttl tee" Die!, ....0 llO Clld J eO, R, w.._, ttin Vl•t• P••r• sll•ll Cle cOMlcllfect """" \UCll OIG Or., L.atuN Nlouet, Olllfonll• ••n ~u•llY It -'°"" "-•••n S.ld blCI Cl\.,IH •• M.,,,.l>urn, "Ut lllOncl l'llAY llt lfl 1 .... -Of., ......... . Sll•t"moor """ HunUllQIOll llH<ll, °' cerlltltcl cllK-. ~1•ble to IM DI" Celllor11I• .,._ trl<t Wllll-J. Krt111t•. ,.., T-1141 , ... lllo<inSOI Olrectonot tllll Co.inly Aft-, •a. &,AiftO ""'"· C.lllOMla SatlltallOll C)jf!rkt No. 1 reser1tet IN "'°4 rtttrt IQ rtlte1 .,.., or all blCtt tnd to Cl\erlet L ....,.,1. •J tlll Street, w•1,,. eny °' •11 ll'l'f!OUl•flllH. Ma"""ltt119"t",Callf«!ll .. 0Mt 8VOfllOl!ROI' TH! '"'' l>IKIMH I• <oncN<ttd ... • IOAltOOf: Ot•i.CTO•s ~rtl.-..+llfllo, COUNTY$A.HIT•TION wttliMll,W.1.., OIST•ICT..0 I, Tl\lt st...,_,. -lllM wttfl tM OfOf.,,.c-ly, o-ty c1tf'll ot o",.. c:.untr .., C:.IHonll• No""'*' IS. tt7&. J, We-5't1Wtltr, ,....,. Set•-· ~Or .. c:... 0..1, ~. ll'llbtls:NeOr ... ~ 0.lly ..... 5 6 7 8 DAILY PILOT TheB1goes1 Ma rketplact• On T~ Orclnoecoasl DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS °"" <•11 •...,.,., 642-5678 I••• C•1Nt11 Acap<ow•1 EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTU NITY . .. . ....aahet''t Notice: All real estate advertised in th111 newspaper u; l!Ub· jfct to t.be Federal F'air Hou111n& Act or \968 wluch makes 1t Illegal lo udvert111e "uny pre· rer ence. hm1lat1on. or dlscn nunatJon based on race. color. reUg1on. ·ex, or natlOOaJ ongan. or an intention lo make any such preference, hm1ta· uon. or dl!cnmanalton." Thts newspaper will not knowingly accept un> advertising for real estate wtuch lS m viola· uon or the 111w ••••••••••••••••••••••• IOOJ ••••••••••••••••••••••• STIALITI $61.900 3 Bdrm, 11"1 ba. Just re duccd for fast sat~. VA & f'HA terms . Don 't snooie, you'll lose! Agt 546--0351 MANSION ON THE SAND A ma gnlf1cent ex peneoce of ocean living: Pn vale road. guarded entry ! Secluded sand)' beach! f> spacious wood d e c k s 1 S e c I u d l' d garden s! A true masterpiece ror lux unous Uvmg • Don't wau . there is nOlhmg hke 1t anywhere!' Yor detuils ca~ liBil REAL ESTATE SALES "Best locauon in H 8. /Liberal commission split /Unbelievable walk-in bus. n'uU time manager /Fully equi ppe d ofr w/secrelary NEW MANAGEMENT LEADY SHIP 84~4466 ........................ 1-------==-~~ G1w.. 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• MESA VERDE HJGm..A.Nar. Best buy in Uus neat area. 3 Huge 1~~!!!~!!!!!!~~~~ bdrms. 2 baths. large 1- r am ti y r oo m . 2 flreplaces. Near schools. f'lew on the market &l 185.500. You haven·1 seen tJus ooe. so call us al s.<>-ll5l ~HERITAGE • • REALTORS UNIVYSITY PAIK FHLAMP Motivated seller just re duced tughly upgraded 3 bdrm Rutgers rnodl'I S7,100t.o$117.900 malk lu park & library. Only sleps lo adult pool. Jacuzzi & tennis HurJ"\' on UUs one! 545-9491. FAMILY HOME Across rrom the park 3 (~1wtt1541arnJ Bedroom. 2 bath. central air. bw It tnb including Real Estate dishwasher . Forced a ir heat, wall l o waJI carpet· 1ng. des igner drapes The list goes on and on Pnced to sell qwckly at $$,900. Ca 11751 ·319 I «;::SELECT T' PROPERT'ftS FOUNTAIN VAU.EY FOR$75,900 Great ne1gtlborhood Sharp 3 bdrm ho me w1rmly rm Good floor plan Bnck f11>lc ~h1ngle roor. Near all school~ & shopping fenced pool Sl:ted lot. Better hurry• 1 545-9491 MESA HORTH 'nus 4 bedroom. 2 bath home is bt!auufully up· graded with 11 htrge add on fa1111ly room complete With s lump S I On(' ftreplace. It also features a serond r1replace m the Uvtng room as well as rrwt trees and o gas BBQ IJl the patio area Owner!> arr rrolivall'Ci. make an offer Asking $82.100 Ca II S56 2660 «=SELECT I PROPERTIES car s"bikes• • c;kateboards • trucks*baby carriages •tea car1s'*trikes rol terskates • walkers"toys ·wagons···· scooters• hot r ods• coupes· trailers*hard tops· convert- ibles· motor homes* lawn mowers*limos CUSTOM LOT ON SPYGLASS L a rge ('as1ly hulldable corner loC'ation on lht• top s treet on Spy~lnss Hill One o f t he only custom sites left in Newport Beach . $350.000. r A Cot.OWlll. IAMl8I CO. 644-9060 2111 SANJOAOUtNHILLSRO IN NElW'C)ftTCENTE" SllK & ,IND• YOUTHS C C T T T R 8 R C V 0 S H L H Y A , A S K U L S E E H 0 E H T U W £ J P H P W H I P P E I 0 0 A L R H 1 8 A A 1 L C l R l P L T U V S L l B N H I J R E 0 S S E 0 E R E C V P P N S 0 T 0 T R A N J 0 X C R H E P E L R E L H H H A M C H Q H 0 0 V E H R l T R V E G T E T G U J L 0 S R B E A H I S C U U A C L B H l L K S Y T 0 E G S S U D J E H R L R 8 J H M S B N A R E H 0 T R L l A l 0 D A l G A 0 8 E L E R E C 8 S I 0 Y C P Mk E l l L 0 E A~ G ~R ~ A PA U S P T l D T Bl S I ~9--~ E E 0 E R L l A H E R H H G 0 A 1 0 R R Y T L L H P A G N H T 0 E C L K T .........,.., "al.. -~ ,, ... ,,.,,. ... anclOe<tmbt1 '· '"' TIN • >JU·tl ....._IJJ,_.._...a.:=::=================~~ f • . . ... . . .. . • -,..j f I ••• """"" -. " • •a ................ ._ . .. . ... -...... ... I ~"-.,!DAll~-;!V,!N.~O~T-----Thur!d!r~~!fl·J!Noi!!!!a~;-~p.m..;t!J!1'?!_ ....... ,... S. H..,,H '°" S. Ho.Mt for S. Hot.Mt For S. Hot.Mi Fol-S. -····••·•·•·•···•·····•· ···•···••········•····· .••............ , ....... ·············••·····•·· ····•••·•·••····•······ ·tho 11'-S. ...... ._... ..._.,,_,. ....... ,,.._.. 8nu• IOOJ ........ 1002 .._... 1002 G""'11t 1002 IOJ4 . ·•••••••··••••••••·•••• •••.••••••••.•..•..•••.••••••••••••.••••.•.••. •••••••·•••·••••••·••·· •·••·••••·•••···•·•···· ·····•······••••··••••• •••!+················ ....... , ...••.• ~ .....•. 81Mtel IOOJ 100 ., .. ,.. llOI •••rel llOJ ________________ _ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• UDO ISU Buy \'icw from 2 patio decks enhances custom 5 bdrm .• 4 bath tradlllonal home: Uke new. Ideal for "nt rtaining. SS00.000 OCIANRONT Qua lit craft. man ·hip tn mahot trl m & oo k floors, ets off this londnfark : 4 BR. 3 ba. home In f tnC' t locution. ~· labJI hed trees & luwns. $475.0<Xl "'WPOIT HllGHTS Fushion,islond vit1~' from 3 Bdrm. Country tylc hom~. U l"d bnrk & rou14h :cuwn woods: \\tmmlng PoOI. Jocuizl $205,000 IACI IAY f'rnt• 4 bdrm . 2':. both family home on quiet cul d ~ c. Oversized pool. &>luyhousc. storo~c $169.000. Terms. IAYFllOMT Sl!\'l'rttl fml' bayfronl home, with pll'r & ~lip AVALON Well constructed . 3 BR . l bu. ottk rloor. partial basement. concrete roun<tut1on. Sl20.000-Fec. BILL GRUNDY . REALTOR S i I H,1 'f '•1c!1 l !r •• "'• 1• ,. ' ,... 1f) 1 Servrng Cost;i M£">a lrv1r11· Huntington Beac.h N ewport Re.ic.h ~ ,,, .... f<l\11\ J I ~ii:' "•r ''O'll 1t M.1• macnab I Irvine realty LIDO ISLE WARM . COZY & CHARMING! 2 ·s l o ry, 3 BR home w I s t r eet -t o· st re et location . Cathedral ceilings lend to the light & airy rcelin~. Walk to tennis, beaches & shoppin g . S287.500. Lynne Valentine 644·6200. c E-76) DREAM HOME AIOVE THE HACH Dov er Shores home on ly a few steps from the beach! Totally customized w/t'verythin~ you might possibly desire! 5 BRs -family rm - formal dining rm -separate library -51/2 baths. Charm & a view in Newport Beach ! Offered at $439.750 on fee land. Barbara Aune 642·8235. <E·77l 642·1235 MW200 901 Dover Drl11e H1rbor" View Center Irvine at Caml>U' V•lley c.tnter 752·1414 ,, .. u,......., :a:iw....,,. .. _ .. ,. ..... JICle ...... "''" .. -•• Oto .,, .. 410.. .... ........ .. -:1t-"'°' .......... .. _ ··--·-u r,., .. _ ·-.,. ., __ ........ ...... ~t.-~= ,._....,. '"" n o. """' ""' .,_ EASTllUFF AIANDOMID PIXR s Bedroom. !l hath. ndl'r murkl't value ol only 1168,&00 ll4llOI VIEW llllS SACllPICI SI 0,000 DOWN 3 Bdrm. 2 bath Ownt•r wf It carry baham.1c• ot IO'l. No quttllfylng. Call tor dC'tualh COSTA MESA UMDB COMSTWUCTIOM Deluxe 13 umt proJcel, ln xlnt luc . Br· rng your tnv('Slors' ft'lrst u1er depreclatlon still avail. Can close l!, crow Jun. 1979 fo"or mort> mfo. call 641-5112 lC. TAYLOR CO. Lingo RIM&Tm. PllS11GIOUS MONAICH IA Y TIRRACE -QWet reflec .... of ......... .... , ..................... 4 ....... ~. UllOlttlnlchd •lew of S1d••••k Mh. ..t .... ... , .... of s ... c1 ...... for ..., •• .$264,000 499-4551 or Cotta Mesa, Irvine, Newport Beach, lnc. 23' E. 17th St., C.M . '31·1266 NationWide Network ot JodMdu.alty Owned and Operated Real &tateOfflcet ... winter or summer from this new hsUng at 112 46th St .. N.8 . This 4 bdrm. • 2 bdrm. duplex (with 4 baths), has many plus features incl. fiexi· ble flnanc:log. <Even land contract). A great rental area. Dbl. garage + carport. Fast escrow. ~187~ N WPOAT CTR. OR. 759-fl11 ONM SAT/SUM Up1raded 3BR bome. Located al 14331 Webber Plac!e, Westrniahter. On· 1y 17.800 754· 7800 Alt. CE llDlll ILlllS CD. OVER 60 YEARS OF SERVICE 4 I DS, POOL. S7t,900 MAalMA -WATllNONT s 174,100 fanest w1tlerfront Jiving.boat slip available too! 2 ft .. ireplaces. Step·down living rm. formal dining room. AIJ natura l wood kitchen cabinets, food center & grill too! Wet bar. View + mirrored wurdrobcs higWl~ht master wing. 2 Patio-sundecb. et k to shops und restaurant!~. Common p00l spa, sauna & gy m -call fast!! 752-1700 llHZ ........... llYcl .,.. ... ~Club Mesa Vtl'd41 fHCutiv" 4 bedroom family ho~ reawrioa 11\Allken llvlna rm~ l>luab carpet.a. Dift. ln1. family room and fireDlace. Sl.35,75Q. BK R. ea tr 540-1120 MllllL --Wh al more <.'Quid you usk for? Well. there·~ new curpctinR. Ut(:' pool 11J heated und ftltcr~ct Cit ·~ a "l{ame pool". nl'ver del'P<.'r thun :n. lhere'i;; a 6.300 :;q . ft. cul de sue lot and all for $79.900. I l.UIC STAITIR HOt«. '". 900 Priced r iaht with 3 Bdrmt . now car pets. 1-rge lot, and many fruit t.reee. Only S..900. Ca II $46..5880 U,.. l ()U tt()M S REAL TORS' 549.5990 1525 Me\.t Vurd11 Drive. Ea". Costa Musi ,1ISQ in Co10111.1 tli•I Mt1r , .ii b 7& &000 '.\ l>Ll 't '.\ TAYLOR CO . I\ t· ·\ I T ( > H s • , ; I 11 I . I ~I · ll; H CAMYON CUSTOM NOMI Fabulous view or B.C. golf course! Lu~h courtyard entrance to this fine 4 bdrm l·story w/f~mily rm + billiard rm. formal dining rm. gourmet kitchen & beautiful pool. Spacious. elegant master bedrm suite w/huge walk-in Mr . & Mrs. closets. WESLEY M. TAYLOR CO •• REALTORS 21 I I San J~lft Hiit Rood MEWPOIT CENTER, M.I . 644·49 I 0 I0!/2.lO~ "" 1ff ,.,,ic-1ffw.i"- Save SSS• II ' my to c1eate new window treat menl~ lt't mp11sinaly e1sy to sew eltiant swap. Jabots. eotntet$ ano 11rape11es f0t l1Ytn1 room bedroom. den Add w11mth. colol. cll11m to any 100111 Par tem 1S01 s.mple d11ectt0nt $1.50 IOf each 111tte1n AOd 40C eadl patttfn for hr$1<1ns 111 m11I and handl1ni S.. '5c Wfar 11 loose and llowlOJ. OI Met ... OS • pthff in all the lullnen wtth f Needlecraft Dept. t belt II s soft SOit soft boettl' Oa 11 y Pl IOt W1JS! Fasluonable bci. tops rat ... Ill, Ol4 ~ Sta., lltw Ifft sietwes. TA RY 10011. Prillt ...... P1111Led Pa11et11 9001 Hatt ..._, Zif, ''"'"' ll1111w. Sim 10\t, 12n, l•lot. 161.t. NlW1NOW1 Our 1979 NHDlC 18~ 20\? Sitt W-1 (lki$1 31 CRAil CATALOC-D* 200 C>OC>u ~ l 3181iios •~1nc11 lab11c '" d~ans. 3 tree _panem ponied inside Stnd 15t 5"" l.M .. _. ....... a..1~lllr '""""' Sl.50 • .. •II """" .. fim UI·'"'"-' Ollltl .. Sl.50 dl9I .............. S.. '9: 127-AtcMM '•' 0.. ... Sl.50 MAmll l~"'-"' , Sl.541 -. ln.f'ltillt Qllftt ••.• Sl.50 I De "2 U..clfll 'tfOltllMlti .. Sl.50 Pettern Pt..... l BStikll'•'PlkllQllltb $1.25 Dally Piiot U2411ff '•' PlffW!ta , SUS UZ Wiil lltll ll. ... '"' 121·,._~ . Sl.50 11Y 1•11. Pri11t ...... UH_, ltu.e:,-lt ..... l l.00 oms. ZIP. Slll 1M mu 11'-lllffy fl!lJ Qiifts ... l.00 ........ us...,.. CitcfMt ...... suo Let'' 111 PfKtic•-,ou ret m.1...,... Glfll ....... sue more for i. S •lien JOU sew' 110.11 JlffJ ho.......... 7W Setld fGf ""' rALL·WINTtll l&S.. & 1111( .......... St.ZS •WONDERFUL* *CHllSTMAS* •Pll:SBfl'• ForAIV...,_. SIOO u.dtt-lTf"fft S66.SOO CSpedal Prtul CALL.SANTA 541-0425 IN YOUR INTEREST Ir the current interest rate is preventing you from owrung your own home or trading for a dif· rerent ooe. call us! We have condos & houses wbe~ we may be able to -:.$;1 HERITAGE . . REALTORS 10%DOWM Owner fina.ntf!d 4 bdrm. 1..-l I~ -2 ba. Harbor View home. • IAUIU 1117.'°° Owner/Broker Executive's 6404M$4 1006 ••••••••••••••••••••••• i duplx. lncludlnl bay fl'Cllt to be excb. down m a pkg. 213/fl1W21DO owa• WILL TllllBL. FtMAMCI --· Why walt ... tnveatlaate •----~--- Ws new listiag. Grell 1--------BaJboa Island location. 2 Bdrm. front house la oldie but goodie: newer 2 bdrm. rear apt. has rrplc .• + .. +se p . owner's unit with frplc., dbl. garaf(e.1249.000. ~IEACH UAL TY 67S. "42 81f20/o ASSUMAIU For th1s upgr aded J bed rm home, copper plumbing. 2 Car dtchd gar. TOlal price Ml.950 . PayableSWlpermo. For further lnfo, MS-9161 arrange financin~ that ..... r1 I 1• I 007 will appeal to you. Call ••••••••••••••••••••••• now . OPEN HOUSf RE Al TY / LSEOPTIOH TurtJcrock Glen garden home. Lovely 3bdrm & view . S1 so .ooo ~"· Owner/Broker64CMl454 ~~~~~~~~ TREE LINED STREETS and well trimmed lawn~ lead to an excepUonal ex· ecuLlve home. Lavishly entertain ln the large liv. ing room & s pacloui. ramlly room. s huge EXIC HOMI 3 Bdrm O>ndo. 2~ ba., bedrooms lncludln6 u Prof lndacp, beautiful frplc, 2 car attach gar. sizable master suite. famlb' home. 5br. 3ba, pilme loc. prof decorat· Owner desires any offer D.R., Fam rm. Over \.4l ed By owner 591 •900· submit terms. Priced acre vu lot. l~ yrs new. _S4().._t_96S_. _____ belowothensatSIOS.000. A'AU:ST:4;.E· s1l~ aowN &~~ UALTOltS $1 loo MONTHLY __ 1_48.o_1_1_1 __ 4 BR executive home. ,......_ .. .._.. 1040 Make your shopping beated~.Jacuza.I. bar. ••••••••••••••••••••••• easler by using the Daily no credit needed, move .__ ______ _ PUotCluaified Ads. lnttoday. ~19 .. ~~S<C=~=cj)~}A~-8'~i-:;:::;f};;;::S=. =- 11iot lntrigt1ing Word Gom• wHlt o Cltt1U./e _. .... QAY .. POl&M •.............. of .... ._ .......... ~ti. ...................... _.. Super 4 Br 2 Ba, lrplc. cmr kit N/W HB. llu.t aee. Convenient to e\'er• )'t.hln1. A1J terms. A.tktni $80,000.-.. im $8500 ··-UC-::::-- ....... "',_ "'"" .. _ NIWPOIT ILUFFS Choice Offering. Split Level End Unit . Prime Private Location On A Lovel y Gree n be l t. C u sto m Decorated In Warm Earth Tones. Two Bedrooms With A Convertible Oen. ''Original Bluffs" -1114,500. -A "Joy Of Newport" Listing. fAstt!OftS·TO,S(WCATALOO. "'5 t•tllitlM ..,_ . 11·• •SI.SO ct11po1 for ft'tl pet. l .. llllllllt ,...._. . 1.00 .,. °' '°"' cllolct. 154 ies.1 ...... c.i..t. . .• sue 117.fllllll ....... ~-114-1..e.t .... . . .... ·= ,..._..... M IU.HOIMll• f.... . .15f DOWN ' .. "=-" :: .. ·-:::w ·-·-11Uotwot .,_ ·~ •o;;r Ntwal . -. . ... -.. , .. -. , .-,,_,. .... -, . ..-. "" .. ,,. ., .. . . . . . . . .. . . lat..-. ue 112""-QIA ....... ~ ........ II I * .. .M Ill ... ~ ..• , ,, .n.. . . . . . . . ........ ' . ..,._ ... . -...... . ... -.... ,, . No Quall'1tn1 I Aa11umc payment. of Undet-~! I beclroocn. 2 bat.hi. , ....... c:...t w.u.. 714-1202 . . . . . . . :.. ol. er o. 111 Ir, ., • ., •• •• p.. p. tll ,2 1$. .. •• " ii, 2 la 'U ft t . )' • ,, •• • 0 e '· '· . r • I •: J 6 '-',-. : -- 11 ;. I ~.~.~: ..... ~::~~ ....... ~~~!.~~ ....... ~.~.~ ....... ~~.~ ...... .... ..._ • .._. t040~1t_. 1041 Mt?M•• 106t s..-~fwW. tJOO ~~~-~~...... lh~No_w_m_ti.t __ 30_ ... 1_w_1 ... a _____ _...DAL..-... v ... P1LOT.-.-...__.QI_ w-ft\··rty 2000 ...... u.............. Ho.tea u ........ d •••••••••••••• ••••••••• •••••••••••••••••• ••••• ••••••••••••••••••••• •• c.,...,.. I 071 ••••••••••••••••••••••• SM RNate peclaliita HO.. + Al'f uuu•••u•u•u•••••• ' IO ACUS ••••••••••••••••••••••• BY OWNER · 17 nlce unit.II ••• •• • • • ••• • •• ••••••••• ••••••••• • ••• •• •••••••• •••• ••••••••••••••••••• in E. Chsta Mesa • Com· ..... ,.,_. 3206 llllwlk9• IMdt l240 L.,_......, JJH 3.4 or l bdrm modcla Ca & C J8R h + .. , • *Sft.900 OWN. I• z aty, 2 In .... path of ~owtb avail some W/"OOI usey o. OUH nP• OVt'r Dr condo by t.bt' lake U"'I' .-. _;,,.. " pr R2 811 cornur IOl. •8.. 00 .. l < 71 between Oran1e unty ~ view DI R, L/R. den • ... o nl · 4' and San Ole10. Can be bo or houses " • pts ••••••••• •• •• •••••••••• •••••• •••••••• ••• •••••• • •••••••••••••••••••••• Appx. l2 yrs old 29'1 BAYE'RONT. Bra..od new New~a.nt·2 bedroom Nl OUEL S HORES : down. Owner will finance 3 8 R o n No. 8 • y $5$0, or 2 bedroom + den SpaclOUll 4 bdrm, 2~ ba. 1164-380.1 w/c.orner view. Lrg loft" $~75. Cedar & window fem rm. bearh, tennl1. _ :DJlton Propel'tl«"J • 12.2),000 APc>tonly 21~st 516 QJc eplit. Term1. NIWUSTIH61 Andrewa Rd . A1t S....Me 1010 FAIGO 8 ··-'•· . •-at Ana"-im stylites. brick pat .. •900 home. Five blocks t{) $635/mo. 4113·6293 or 'HatlW• rw.uc South Laaun• two ~ ......... ............. 1/fTt.&717 or 1/523-4462 H.tl1w ory boar wlU\ &UHt County. !I kr, 3 ba, 2 •8V OWNER·8~~ •11· 700 CllS wuw. ,.... '"" rm Lse. I.A, last + de· be1teh. Private 2·c11r 1:n.1w area. Owner want.I sale paelt.613-1206evea. garaee. Fully mai0 • •--------- ••••••••••••••••••••••• wut 1'ret ahadtod tornt't tr,,lca. z car au•••· Ii eumable lolln ·No quabf· A ~o Mcwy Down. llbr coo lot 1'1mbl r1n&tldn.1 fMd yard Owov out ot ln.1,Sbt. bU1e family rm Rlve11Jde Counl,Y at a thla year • wlll com Ider tamed yard. AduJta, No t bdrm. 2~. Terrace, IO'X. down. land sate con eoro. .. Mw l222 pets. lngiare at 535 lllJI Plan J. club, pool. tract lO qUJil buyer. A. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Street. (7l•> 980-633l. Jae. be• One ye11.r do Slit. C•ll Phil $1~7.I counlty MUil Mii or lie w/llreplace " t lereo ma In Frwy offnmp Btt\loollM l t.9'7 .A.It • wtopt to buy . Good PrtmeloraUoonurpark Sol1'M! excellent com WUUarn1. bkr. 7fl8·1356. JASMIMI CltHIC lease. S850 pe r mo . I l04 "'""--t )II--.. u-rm. ••».000 &4i '7W71 w/tM.l\il, pool etc..lovtily mere: I al pcUotlal. Rapid· ~ --, tru 1h1ded •treet. 1.Y devclop(na area and 2 3 Covln ... -4-plexea llun Be ... 'lul~ I --'· ped 2 Sharp 3 r!R, 2 b•, new 675-el92, Ml·~ &..,.• auu a1JW1t'a crpls d.rpJ walk lO bcb tlnirton Beach. . 20% br. 2 ba. n. dining rm. $525 O.,, 2u/'3l·IJ.Z ' Beautiful Condo racing l '!1.r.'!t--Bta~NCI' 4 dupln. letliadlftl bay IQl.100 Call :13&-039'1 mlJs cl Freewoy fron· "'"'""'"'"I ""' • front lO b ~" tqe. lnve.t« tcnna. 497-24 57 d ow n I n ci:c pa~alcu S.. l...-I 016 'AICIO ••••••••••••••••••••••• t044 dwn. 9718% intereal. ocean view. S775. mo. facinr golf c:ourtt. 38r, SUl8.500ea.1·771·3343 644-lt88ore1100. ..,_..._. 2Ba. $495 mo. (114> ....,._ 2u1 .. '3l>O ••••••••••••••••••••• •• 11m .551or 11522.2090 Brootndd. 4 bdrm • a.I~~~~~~!!!" SNC. IUY ,..-~--rc-....... ---- 100+ wUt.s ToP oc loc 2 Ir a Br 2 Ba fenced M7·$228. 31641 E. Nme Adi.Lit. 7 yf., S?.8.300 pe~ ~~i:E ::~· aduJta y rd, ga;age, 'carpel, 1_0r_. _______ _ ,.,Y • 3 b.ttb In •Int Upper ~ Atth U.y. -- kl"fll You'll~>' lbe un. h I I .,.s...lew °"w ocean view $ BR. 4 Property I 600 W\Jl. C&osed l2·3l. Pnn-~ 675-7258 drapes, blt-1na, child OK. 1267 clplt.'3 only Skr. 631-1234. · 7292 Garfield. 846-2277 Mis ..... Ya.Jo icndf'<i urpt'1l:n1t ~ d; Sl'Ft'TACUl..AR VIEWS IO'Xt dOw1I WUJ NU Oft 3 ba bome with 3600 sq. ft. ••••••••••••••••••••••• l&Mf'Wallp.P'lf 6 us.of from Uua or.tom family yr land eclfttrad. e.aut cl Uvtnc ~· A steal al NEWSUOPrlNG lltlAI( EYB4 2 Br l Ba cottage. frplc, Walk bcb. BR ••••••••••••••••••••••• I S°lo DOWM :;_~~l:e:75. Agt. den .lO Fr PI~ . 's ~ 9b:: ~:~~ =·i:RtO 2~~: mirrors Lttal"r rur hJnwo ~~• noor to 2+ dm bona ln 1uarded '350,000 CENTER yard olft·~ maumum t ril1n1 flreplu·t' commtatt,y. llOl Vacht JW•BY NewportBeachArea. 4·Plex 4' SngJ Family. Kids/pet OK. 968-6065 predate. $650 + dep. pnvicy Slf119 t<1 grhool Huichtt bl«ll htfakfa.11t Marta No quallfyina UAL TOil '7M 111 Triple net leases. First & fl.H'r .. 1tt1unal tucil blr 3 bdmw. 2'" batl\3, 7011 732 8622, Ru yurs rent guaranteed. Aasume. Seller will Im mac 1 Br house 3 br,l~ba.allnucpt,pnt a.811 San Vlncente. Call nnance. Mngml avail. w/beams&fplc.Blockto paper.solarianflr,SUper RenataatS56-770'1 Ag~ ~.!.ryo:>~!>~98er ocean. $525. 675-8138 ~i~·S:~.;.,lsll lst +de· ••Free pool service. 3 br, 2 R .. al11tlca ll ·• fnmlllduutl ... rm l..ott1or »OS50 Primehigbtralficcount. q"cli: ~pn rcu , 4'll1ru s1u50o.. O..-IM•Nh 11.000 Sq, feet rentable .....,._.., .,..,.,.. 2 Br. l ba. new crpt & .,.,.. ..,.,.,... ba f~e ....... paint .... c CAL&. H l..U l I ·a. W--. IHlty ---------1 ·•••••••••••••••••••••• •pace. S'780,ooo. -Coal!Hwy ....,..._, ~..._Co. Prlncl~als only · • ,..,_ · .-.. -----=---'--paint, garage. dshwbr Vacant 4 br, 2 ba. crptd, 231151 · y, 543--0663. Ill~ Avail.now.$440.640-1804 bltns •. pauo. near beach. Ml• rtltedl l26' red hill~ l c [ ABt-;ACll JH( BLUFFS ForW. 1100 6Jf.J400cw 4t...,5 If Ablolutcly lmlfiaculatt1 •••••••••••••••••••M•• ...... 751 2 I 00 3 Br 2 ba frpl" *""" mo shopping. Kids. pell ok. wpol • • .... -· . $425. 968-7148. • •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• lsl & last. Avail. Dec. I MO. FREE RENT SACKIJ<.IC E • Be1'ut Wood bnd1to 3 Hr 2148' PLUS t.>ll!lllU\l 2 Hr rondo pnc~ lwlow m>i rkt:t Bolh nr htlr.\t 613-431 I 0...'tk'r / A.,'\ LOOKING TO USE YOUR Y.A.? WOW• Wha l an op porturuty, We buvc 3 and 4 bedroom homes priced from S 75,000 to over $100,000 thol will sell V.A. ., ... or full dela.1ls. ca ll I.Oday Dunlex O\lerloo1t!Xi; ocun on bluffs or Captstrono 2 Bdrm " 1 bdrm un1l3. pe rfect rtmode l for homu With IOCOMt.' $1".000. i-OOlDP 3 Bdrm!~ bath. formal EXCITING dUuna. 1pUl level con· • • domln.lum ()pen s pace u..a... ..... rt lch v1~w from llvlnR roornuu rlfwpot Dbl widh lot Estate sale and master liWte. New Smack dab ln the middle h i Unl(. O ffered al of beautiful Newport Sl5l,$00 Cal15'0-ll5I Harbo r A garden ·~-"~ HERITAGE Swe~Vus rcacdul ge;~-n & mtn . • REALTORS lfle~vepenil)t'ctlveto ---------Ille, ry home on l11rge, l ttJaJo Dowt1 well landscaped wooded v-,. lot $2$0,000. COlSOP SAU IY OWMEA Enchanting VIEW-!°=m. 3 ba tlitate situated m ex· Lusk built home. Quality quasite gardens with rock C .. ""'l.s, custom window PoOJ, 4 Bdrm. & 3~ b8th -.... home with separate treatment. all builllns . JA CU ZZI -SPA . 2 G;biuarters. $32.S,OOO. f i replaces. walk to ~ schools. shops, tennis. (7141955-0177 2115 ........ parad ise +pet , marve lous pvt beach, walk to shopping in Newport Harbor's most exclusive area. (KZ0757 > ColH01 aio Pocfflc -... .... Sain 2706 Harbor Ste . 206·A 540.5937 3 MO. FREE RENT When you buy this near new single wide Glen· brook, in a s •Park minutes from bch, (LD3W073) Mobl.HoftltStore 8t8"8895 Turtlerock, 4 BR, 2~ ba, LGgl9MI Hiits 2311 faktli• Or. Jam rm, newly decoral· .··.·.·.··.·.~.· ... -~.·.··.·.·.··.·.·.·.•, 3 Bdrm. 2 bath, 1700 MOllUHOME IMFOIMA TIOM Rent, option to buy info. rei>O's, loan assumption etc. Eas)' finance 0.A.C. 9offices. ed. S1J6.500. 833-3819. sq.ft. Shake roof, 2 fplc MOVE IN IEFOIE VA-FHA nttMS h ome. Vacant, see are availa ble on this anytime. CHRISTMAS -great 4 bedroom, family $115,000 New WoodbndRe Es tat.es room home which sits on Mobile Hoftlt Store Santa Ana 554·7070 Anaheim 956·1011 W. Anaheim 761·1442 Westminster 848-8895 E. Anaheim 956-4500 o r R o x a n n e a I $77 ,500. ~Propwty 2000 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 30HALOT Eattslde Co.ta Mesa 3 separate houses on cor· ner lot. Sul)t'r location. $1.58,900. A pt€\TIG€ _,.--+--~ HOM€~ 3333 W. Coast Hwy. ·Ne 645-6646 DO IT YOURSaF ADDICTS!!! 6HOUSES 1n Eastaide Costa Mesa, can buy on contract at only $32,500. each. Need some TLC. bul in up· graded a rea n ear schools, transportation. and shopping! All at $19S,OOO <must be sold t.ogetber). 752.1920 k 9UAIL A-~~~~~ 10,.. Tll l:JO , .M.I STOP PAYING IEMT! 1st 642·5290. LOVELY LAKEPA.RK NO FEE! Beaut. new 2 & Own building & land, CostaM4tsca 3224 2BR, l~ba, lam rm, 3 BR apts, nr channel, good lax s avings, low ••••••••••••••••••••••• giant spa & gas BBQ. 7 yrly rentals, NB. Also, 2 dwn, new 3,000.6.000 sq BRAND NEW blk:s to beach. KldJ/l)t'ls, & 3 BR apts on Perunaula ft. Park Irvine Business yard~J a serv. $495, yrly. 675-<191'> T•"" '"ru Ce te ..... ..-n New t.ownbse type units. .., ...., "'' n r . ....., ..• ,,.v East.side. 2 br. 1 'h ba. lst/I sec. Avail 1 Jan. Sat. l.ohforS. 2200 fncd yds. upgraded Dy 536·7929, ev/wkndt--------968-5007 moo. Modem 3300 sq rt ••••••••••••••••••••••• crpt.s, drps, bltns. Small cu st m 2 s ty. 4 BR. OFFICE ILDG SITE child· pet O:C. From S395. Dix 4Br + sewing rm, w/pool. Lrg Back Bay HunUngtonBeach mo. Ori ve by 2548 2•..;Ba, frplc, dshwshr, lot 645-i783eves. 27.000 sq. fl. lot near Orange Ave. then call +intercom. ove rs 1ied ---------Pacifi ca Hospita l. 5 eves (213)431·7318. dbl garage, p atio, Big Canyon , corner. Poi.ntsShop.Cntr&C1vic playhse, lots of storage Bordeux 3 br. 3 ba Center. s1ss.ooo. IRAMD NEW attached to triplex nr French country kitchen, David Bourke RJtr F.astside beaut. new lge 3 bdl. ~ mo. 536-1659. all "&menities, $1300. mo. 546-9950 br. 2 ba duplex. Frplc. 817 Geneva. Dec. 1st. Agt 758-1111 ; din rm. enrl. gar. Adult.s 837-0666 EMERALD BAY LOT only, no 'ittts. $600. mo. 9161 Guss Drive, H.B. 4 1--------- Drawings'Coastal OK Catt & leave msg 751·9905 Br. 2 ba. close to Edison Luxurious 3 BR. 2~ ba 6~ High & beaches. SSlS. Condo.on water. F1oorto S335-small 2 bdrm. house mo. 8.Graves963-6767. ce1hng Palos Verde Choice Harbor View lot. 2220 Pacific Dr. CDM. $200,000. Wilt build lO swl or sell. Owner/Bldr. 543-0148 eves. LACOSTA CCMLSIADt Large lot on La Costa Ave .. La Costa. Name on next allocat.ion or sewer perm.its. $37 .500. Terms. Ph. (604 > 763·1224 or write C W.K. Ad U4 Oat· ly Ptlol PO Box 1560. Costa Mesa. Ca. 92626 + dinning rm. No pets. stone. frplc, wallcovtr· ChHd OK 213·851·3220 9432Sunrldge. H.B. 3 br. 2 lngs, extensive mirrors, avail. Dec. 15th. ba. clo6e lO F.clison High S 7 50 mo . 558·UU ; & beaches. $49S. mo. 8 . 675-1938 Bachelor. util paid, single Graves963-6767. •---------only. no pets, $250 mo . Large 4 br, patio, 2 car 642-<m3S.648...,W.18thSt. 5 Br. 3 ba, fam-rm. din·g garage.SllSO. mo . Balboa E id 17th •. rm,2sty,3cargar,clslo Island (213) 876·2723 asts. e. n ear "' bch. no pets. Max 6 mo eves. Tustin. 3 br. 2 ba. 2 lse.S600.call 968-8342. ---------garage. fncd yard. RV BAYFRONT parlung. Avail.· Jan. ''79. 3br. t ~ ba condo. Next to Brand new 3 BR on No: 325 Rochester St. $475. schools, st«ea & beach. Bay wlcomer view. Lrg mo. 642·2231; 642-3693. Pool. Park & Tennis loft & sky lites. bnck pat .. courts 536-2990 $900 mo lse. 673·1206 NEW 2 Br. 2 ba twnbm. · eves. plush rrpt'g, frpl. Jae. lr¥M 3244 1---------PLUSHTll-PLEX Xlnt CM location. Two 2BR & one 3BR w/wet bar . frp le ·s. e n c I. PANORAMIC garages. & lndry rm. OCEAN VIEW gar, av8JI now. $495. Isl ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 bdrm . View home In mo. & cln'g d ep . Orangel ree Con do 1 Harbor View Homes Marianne. 640-0663 or bdrm. Lake selling, tenrus. pool, Lse at $650. Don't miss lh1s one! Full one h air acre $1'14,900 Newport Beach lot In lhe 646-7414. Adults. No pets. pool. 1_640--06 __ 1'_6 _____ _ tennis. etc. $325 mo . TOPO'TiiEWORLDvtJ Condo. Cape Cod style. a premium fee lot pro. • Adams Plan. 4 bed. 2~ vidlng pricacy and ore I ba.,$123,000.CallGeorge street RV parking. . 646-8811 (714)552-3700. Fw appt c~ _u_•_JC_EfR_. -0-MT-IM-.;;.i 644-72 I I ANYTIME exclwnve guarded gale WOOOIRIDGE New Woodbridge Estates Washington Plan ready for rrove 111. 3 bed & den. 2~ ba. $166,000, Special COMPLETB.Y ~ fR€HIG€ community of Harbor FURNISH&) ' /~ HOM€~ Ridge. Will .accom· ---------•Dbl wide New Moon rmdate 4A t~.nnlS court. AHTIQUE IUffS 3 BR 2 Ba Easts1de Costa Mesa. $495 mo. Call Pam or Larry. 546-5880 Avail Dec. I. 675-9229 Newer Jbr, Vaulted ce1I· ll&fTALS in gs. A/C, guarded; 2 BR 1, ... b •• 25 Comm pool, t.enn15, BBQ. • ~4 a .. ·· .. .. ... SllOOm>. 759-0087. 2 BR. 2~ ba. .. ... $475 1---------~NIGE. (}AILEY & IACI IAY 311· w/8xl4 encl porch in 5 3333W.CoastHwy,N8 -Call Jack Cus te r a t •park. in c 1 u de s 645-6646 t714)640-6776. E's1de. Beaut 4Brlden or S BR Sep fam rm wlfrplc. 2000 sq Ct $595/mo.557-8623 2 BR. 2 ba.. . ..... $55() County. 5 Br. 3 ba, 2 ASSOCIATES CONDO. Pool, Jacuz.zi. j suuoo. microwave & TV. l9FOURPLIXES ATTENTION BUILDERS <SI4796m). . lrv111e . 10 Unit Condo 2 BR. 2 ba · · · .. • · . · . $550 frplcs, 2 car garage, lge 3BR. 2ba.... . .... $475 fncd yard. $S7S. mo. May 3 BR, 2 ba ........... $575 lsew/optlObuy. 549-1971. upgrade package in· --------- eluded. cau George or It's Gorgeous! 2 Sly, 4 br, R o x a n n e a t fnnl dln'g, lrg FR, 2~ ,.,., ..._. ...... MoWI. Hot. Store Take over 9~% loan. On· site ror sale. FUiiy zoned .. -.......,, ly $400K Down. Income, & d t b 'Id T Spacious 4BR 2ba apt. 2 fireplaces. cpt 'did.rps. 2 car gar. 673-3747 3 BR. 2'h ba ........ $625 1--------- 4BR.2..., ba ......... $195 West.cliff. 3 BR, 1..., ba, Cal 645-1531 ......--. $22,135 per mo . Pa)'· rea Y o u1 . . ments only Sl4.000 per Welsh Agent 152·9092 4 BR. 2'12 ba .......•. S800 pat, encl yard, super for 4BR.2'hbo ...... $1095 fam. No pets. $550 (714 )552·3700. ba. upg,rd's galore ! Bltn ---------Charming moblle home In BYOWNER.hard to find. va~. gar ofinr. brick OCIAHFIOHT Newport.900sqft,1BR, Univers ity model in patio, pror ndscp. All l·BR beach s hack In ~8/?rpfc~'la~n~~. nie;_ Village JU. 3 Br 2 Ba. this & more for only super rme West Newport. macuJate. A must see formal dining, living, $132,400 Realty World, Super ste1I at $275,000 fplc. cathe(_lral clgs, tiJe 768-8585. wilbSSO,OOOdown. ~1~;"6.~!. 2 O • 9 0 O · entry. fully landscaped. Log.a NicJuel I 052 JIFF lttlEIY superb location across ••••••••••••••••••••••• RIAi.TOil 675-t I I I NEWPORT' BEACH from Unjv Pk. Warm f amily home . O pe n Laguna Niguel EA.ST BLUFF By Owner House 10.s. daily. 4001 · Lovely sin gle w ide S T Beaut. Exec. pool home. Panorama w/8xl4 ex· Realty pando In low renl park. tern ree l..n 552-0143 • ~% uaumable loan· no IRVlNESPECTACULAR qualifying. 4 bdrm. fam. ((>Cl28063). Beautiful oak hrdwd rm. totally upgraded. ~Hot. Store noonng in entry way & Owners leaving Country. 84&-8895 kitchen. Separate family OCIEAMVIEW Desperate. Let's talk. --------- & d1mng rm. cul.de.sac 3 Bdrm, lge family & din· $172.~ location, Commun . pool, ing rm on pool sized lot. t'/flolMTIREST park & tenrus crts. 4 Ir" Ideal home for hol.tday BR with . 2"' ba + + + entertaining. Jn pre· Newport Heights, stun· aU for only $106,900. Call stigious Monarch Bay ning remodel; 3 bdrms .. today, terrace. Truly a home family rm., le suodeck. JEFFREY-HOLMES for the discriminating Take over low equity ·Ltd buyer. $295,000. loan. no loan fees. Super <714> 842·7481 493-9494 495-5220 buy aU146,500. --~~~--1 NEWUSTING CULVBDALE 496-2413 830.5050 Prime Newport Heights, AT COST! MksioftVl.jo 1067 extre me ly sha r p 3 ••••••••••••••••••••••• bdrm .• 2 baths, with The financing is right · It's lhe livable Plan 42 with 3 bedrooms or new carpet · new hQt water healer · · upgraded floor-ing and w lhe buyer. an opportunlty to purchase at an interest rate of 934"k . call for details on Uusone. red hill ~:.:. 552-7500 TA.ICE OVER 9'/•0/o 3BR beauty. 11 mos new. Soft earth tones. formal di n ing, frplc. air, skylight, patJo. gar opnr. Low maiot. can today. $118,900. REAL TY WORLD 76M585 Newport leadl I 069 ••••••••••••••••••••••• UPSIDE DOWN BEACH HOUSE. shake roof. oak floors, greenhouse & much rmr61 $137,500. CALL646-4463 -· LEASE OPTION Several fine homes in top areas. Owners anxious. can for details. 645-7221 ~~D~U·!:;:;;~.~ ~.::::t:o . ~21 .-~ c.11645-ISll · Ocean side or hwy. level --------· IOl, easy access t-0 beach. e Needs paint. minor re· SACRIFICE Wntclff .ifffty pairs; ideal for home & Beaut 4BR, pool, spa, lge ------------Income. Hurry, only yard Xlnta""' s1•2500 HarborVlewPalermo S"'",900 · ' .. a. .. ' · 4 Br 3 Ba Lo dn. LR 673-4311 Agt. Mission Really 494-0731 Assume 9'At% loan. FEE BIG CANYON-125K! ! 833-1840 $175,000 CRESCENT BAY 2 Br 2 Ba condo. Assume New 3Br. 38a. DR. frplc. 9SK loan at 10%. Can famrm,vlew 67J..6634 close 3/1/79. Ownr. 551....a38 Hove option ti) buy --------- $137,000 home ror $99,000. Npt Crst 2 br $105.000. Am willing to sell. Bo Npt Shn from $94,500 494-5158. 497·3448 Marina Realty 642·8850 a..,_. Mlgud I 051 LO!Jl9Ml Mig1111 I 052 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• fllc~,~ BY OWNER Lusk HV Hills. beauUfu.i corner lot, •Br, 2Ba. many xtras lncludlng all appliances[ $210.000, fee. Owner wi 1 finance al 10% to qualified buyer , minimum dwn, 3% to bkrs. 644·m&O or 152·6105 MUST SELL 6 Ptll. FREE RENT •EXCITING• Me1*ileach •OM ntE IEACH• Sea caps & sunsets over- looking the blue Pacific. pvt beach, 5 minutes from Fashion Is land. Semational triple wide borne. Calfonlla ftactfic ~HomSaln 2706 Harbor St. 206-A 540.5937 FAMILY PARK Gorg~ 3Br. 2Ba Bar· ringtoo in one of Ora.oge County's leading family parks . Below marke t value. (SV7760·76). MoWI. Hot. Stott 848-8895 REDUCED $2 ,000 For quick sale. huge 24x60 Shelby1 1973, 5 •Anaheim Parit. Walk lO great shopping. Vacant, lmmed possession. Financing avail OAC. (V857HO) FAMA. Y PET PARK 24x60 Uocoln, lln5. like new air, Alcan siding, washer & dryer Included. (S9152U.X). MOBILE HOME STORE '56-4500 6MO.FlllRIHT OICASH lqUIYAUMT furnished aln1Je Kit, lov. ely adlt pet p ark. mo, &:Iler needs ca11h ! Momt• Dettrt. ~~sJl~6 Byers. BKR. Resort 2400 ---------...................... . 12 UHITS ldylJwild m>untain cabln o.JISW9ftRT 11r '"'CH on \Ai acre. Needs ha n· ~-··,--~ dyman. $50,000 Owner 50 from II~. Wiii trade Box 571 ldyllwild 92349 for large fixer-upper un· Its . Call Rick Byers, IHI ..... BKR. 714-556-Tm bch.p 2100 4 8.1. duplexes incl. bayfrout to be exch. dow n in a pkg . 213/684·3200 39UNITS IUEHAPARI Take over loan. Only S200K down. Income, $9,09.5 per mo. Payments only $6.800 per mo. Won't last. call Rick Byers. BKR. 714-542·3676 4 B.I. duplexes ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 bdrm. 2 ba. Condo KJhel, Maui. On water. $160,000 value. $82,000equity. For similar Balboa prop.' PI P.~ 2'00 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~erfor rrotel in Orange County w/ca.sh flow. Principles only. SHATDH REALTY 64().&59 incl. bayfrout to be exch. --------- down in a p-k g . ._.. 213/684-3200 ••••••••••••••••••••••• By owner ocean view HOilles,_,.shed triplex S. C. $235,000. 4. ••••••••••••••••••••• •• plexes S. C . $195,000 '46oalslalld 3106 each. 4·plexes O. P . ••••••••••••••••••••••• $235,000 each. Minimum Bayfront. pier float. 2 BR. $50,000 cash required 2 ba. 123 E. Bayfront each. Prin. only. Financ-$'195. Herb,2131478-3577 ing by seller. 496-5275. Newport leadl 3169 IEACH FfXH ••••••••••••••••••••••• $115,000. Magnificent beachfront 5-n Clement~ Tri·Plex. Wesl Newport borne. 5 Easts1de C M. 3br. 2ba. swtmmmg pool. 642· 1952 days, S57 .2783 eves. Fireplace. 3 lge bdrms. 3 baUls. ceramic tile. wet· bar. microwave. dbl gar w/opoer. Brand new. s uper coodo. 631-0424 CoUege Park 3 br, 2 ba. 2 J car gar. yd & patio. No lf~Z3 c.01pg,~fRVlffE dogs. $425. 979-0136 ----------W bridge condo 3 Br Xlnt location E . Side, 3Br, l'f• Ba . S42S mo. Eves. 28a. bltns. family pre· 642·9910 ferred, no pets. $525 mo. ---------ref. 54()Q62 3 br, 2 ba, Greentree. Lge yd, cu1-0e·sac, patio cov- 64&-2389. Npt Hgts 3 Br1 Ba. frpl, lg yard, garage, no peis. S4SO rm. 548-3247 Newport ShoreJ. 3br, atruim, beach. Pets OJC . $550. 673-4311. 3 Bdrm, 21,; ba condo. Pool, 2 car garage & opener , near Hoag Hosp. & beaches. $525. 673·6106. HARBOR VIEW HOMES Carmel Model 3 bdrm. 2 ba. fam. rm. dbl. gar. gardener incl. S67S per mo. Ca 11644-7tm 'J'ri.ptex, front unit, lrg 2 er $460. &W-4646 bdrm, frplc, with lrg. back yard. New crpt, Turtler ock Highlands 3 Br 3 Ba. nr school, drapes & paint. $350 mo U>wnhome. brand new 2 children welcome. S600 Ask for Cl.tff after 7:30 8 r + ~en . 2 LB a. pr mo. 642-3713 aft 6. eves64&6420 panoramic vu or hi1ls. 2 Lux W t rf t Co d car gar. w/opener. Many "sOl Udo~'. c:'u Rit~ •:i. 2 bdrm. new r rpt. fn cd upgrades, pool. $575 mo. 67J..lQ20 7S2 5710 yrd, gar. Kids, pets OK 955-3166. or · eves. $375 11'1), 548-8204 646-2316 UDO IC'.I Ii! s • ......__ Woodbridge. smgle fam1· -_..... Beaut E·slde 3 BR, gar. ly 3br, 2ba. Ava1l lmmed. 136 Via Trieste Sracioµs fncdyard.AvlDeclthru $500 759-0143. ho me w lge ivhtg June I, only $400 rm +d e n . Im m a c 64.>0227. ? bdrm. I ~ ba. Town $1250/mo lse. 1 ~br house. New cpls, drps, swve & pa mt. Ut1l pd. $275 + llll & last. $100 sec dpst. Call aft 6pm. 642·3915/979-1743 Ho me Assoc. pool & Waterfront Homes Jacuzzi. Heritage Park 631·1400 tennis & racquet ball . crts. $400 per mo. 1 yr. Harbor ~ghlands 3 br 2 tse. tsl. & last + security ba. lge encl patio. No deposit. Ca II 644·5309 pets. SSSO. 546..flJ58. 3br . Iba. frp Ir. 24 l 6 _A_v_a_ll_._now_. _____ --------- Orange Ave. S42S mo . 4 er · H Bltns ti * IAYRtOMT * 642·7671 btwn S.S. m gts. • pa 0• Plush third floor condo; pncedtosell. Bdrm. 2 batbs+dorm WeUlocaled2·1·1. loft. $1100/mo.to June 1 BR. uUI paid , range. BER'nlAHENRY Yrlylseposalble956-587 1 $325 rro. 648'h W. 18th lg fncd yd. Wtr, grdnr pd. walking distance lo Lido $565. Agt 640-5357. ""-Bdr i s • ...,,..,. 2 ms. & den, REALTORS St ,642·M35 215 Del Mar 492·4121 2 Br ~ W !J:R BOATOlarm ___ ln_g_E-·s-ld_e_h_o_me_b_y TURTLEROCK. New ll large living rm .. llCl'IJI· BR I-story; over 2000 sq. private elevator. thick fl. lmmed. occupancy. carpel.Jng. mirrored bar • 7UMTS-C.M. SLl P . S6SO/mo lse Orange & l7lh on quiet Beaut. new building. FUrrushedorunfum. culdesac. 3 BR., 2 BA . Only $725. Agl. 551·6427 a reaJ showplace, below BRANDNEW tbe market at $1000 P« Fireplaces. xJnt location. WClftt fe owt Hot.s ~~~ r":::~ ~~~~~~~~ TSLlnvmts 642-1603 6l1·1400 paint, paper & crpts . rmnlh. Orangetree Plan 3 Con· do. I br o.n lake. Adults. 671 ... 400 IEST 7 UMIT WINTER RENTAL Nice yard w/ gardener. Apartment building by $525. 965-3649 Pool. tennis. Avail. Dec. HARBOR lsl. $325. mo. 644·3361 bus. 49'7·1488 home. 12242ndSt., West N.B. the beach. Only $365,000. Drive by & call 3 Bdrm, 2 ba, yard, pool+ THE LAKF.S-Largest un· Terms. 3 BRfum'd lower Jae. Frplc, 2 car gar. kids it, best view. 2Br. 2.Ba, SC01TRIALTY $400lnclalluUI. & pet.s ok. $450. 675~70 attached 2 car garage, A 1>1vis1onor 536-7533 ~blktnocean Agl.or495-1786eves . frplc. leMis, pool etc. llurbor lm•cslml'fll Co. 213/447-0435 Immed occUJ)ancy. Mesa Will entertain opUon $500 1--------- MUST S&L Verde 2 sly, 4 BR. den. mo. avail 12/1.5. 493•2047 48r in Hts. Na decor. !JC DcondiUP~UEXon,' gSood79•5001,.:.aGtloodon. HcMIMt U..M ld .. d 2~ ba. 2037 Calvert Ave. • -leodt 3241 fncd yd. Pets/kids OK "'"" •••••••••••••••••••• ••• BIU 831 ,_,,. ~ •~.,~ 213/"'"4 _0wn __ er_l a..;;gt;..,_.m-_·_77_37 ___ G1Mr~ 3202 . ·u.1• ....................... ;m vu1·1116. P¥ 6UNITS F.asts1de CM, $245,000. 4 Hae + 1 Dplx, ea . wt icarage 4' yd. S-2Br & HBr. $40,000 dn. Ownr will carry ba!Jnce. CaU Cwt, 642-5554. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ...__,-LA 322,, 3 Bdrm. 2 ba. 2 blks -----------• beach, SSSO. mo. 1257 N c ••••••••••••••••••••••• Cat.lllina St. 497.1744. ewport rest Condo . FREE llNTALSEIVICI Hundreds lo chooAe rrom 2·3-4 BR Homea $375l0$S2S Call Mack. 982"7788 28 28a de dbl More than 2000 1q, ft r. • n. garage, 'th ,_ bdr nr new. nr marina S400 2 BR. Walk to town. W1 ocean vn:w. 4 m . mo. Weber R. E. 493-7716 Laguna Charn1. Lease fam. rm. formal din. M75 $310, no pets. 4$4..1286 Pt't' mo. incl. uae of pool, Niguel Shores Twnhm. Jae. It tennis. e4S-O:l95 3br. 3ba Fantuuc ocean 2 bdrm. Cbarf'I house with Agent ____ ll!B_iur. ____ , view. Pvt bch, pool, ten· pol·bellY stove. Walk to ;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;:;;::;;;;:;;::;;;;:::::;;. MONARCH IA Y TERRACE Beautiful 3 Bdrm, 211'J bath custom home with a panoramic ocean & c!>asll!n~ view. City lights by night. Exqu1s1te ly decorated thruout, heate<f pool & jat'uzzi. $305.000. ---------~ nis, guarded community. beach. On quiet 11lreet In RH'ALSRV1CI USO mo . 493/8033/ So. LaR. USO per mo. Hundreds lO choo8e from 82S-4763 _-._-_38'7_2 _____ _ $6000 On lbh pa r lh l ly <~>. 44 DUPLEXES DOWN ..... ::.~::~ :s:ir:~. $1.&2 111r DAY A CCM.DWIU IAMI• CO. 496-7222 831 -0836 TllrteM•ecte..,,._ L..-..... Aslume1 bal $143,500 at prox 900'. Financing Cul ·de-uc n el&h · SU2S/mo. S Br, pool, Im· avatl. 67~7984 borllood, 2 It 3Br on lrg mac.Ownerwlllcarryat ---------loll. modern apu . 10%. Vac. n o credit Mobile Hc>mt fum or an· Purchasers provided needed. prlnc only . tum. Acrou at.reel •hoP· w/Uatofrenta1 lnquiries ~. pl.rqc. ~. l8500 nrm. I 0% DOWM AV AIL OCEANFRONT &G-mo. 548-475ll °'*1 Every Day Pvt bucbJ. ocean view trlr FAIRVIEW t~'lli·NoLoan Fees home in :::;.C. adult partc. wJ1L~!:':::e'&'rer f15,000. 492·U86 ; (213) GARDENS Char•QWntard, Alt _•_'l&-Gt __ . ____ _ mGSOAGytJme Rave aometh1na to Nil! 147-611Z SINCE l"' ClaMUMd ac1a c10 It well. -------• ... ... • • ., • 4 .... -... 2>3-4BRHomea BEACH HOUSE, Sbr' L .... Hlls 3250 S3'7S to$$2:5 fencd yd, frplc le ean1. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Call Made, 96.2-77811 S3'5 _..21188 New 2 bdrm. 1 ba. alr -G-_._--G---E--l--• . . cond. frplc. Nr Lake $400 an,.,n rove xe~. ~pe Pa•tt•Y.a., 3234 mo.673-~ ~,8~.3~537~3866 a .••••••••••••••••••••••• --------- ---------Deluxe Tiburon Coftdo, ............ 1206 38r, 2~Ba. pool, wet ~...... 3252 ••••••••••••••••••••••• bar, AC, $49$ mo . ••••••••••••••••••••••• QUAINTa~. Loft. DR N7-4525 • Bdrm. 2 ba, Fam rm. & ckn. Yrty. $3'7$+uUI. tfldta4•.._. 1140 At.rtum, all bltJM. Ocean Agent. 67~11 ... •••••••••••••••"•••• view, p\"l ~•cb. ll1ue1 2 Br ~Ba. w/frplc Avail. now 3 br. 2 ba, tzll'. Shottt.S800. T!ie-l465 lcdbl 1ara1e. Avail. petlo, frlcd Yd. Klett It 3 BR. 2 BA. on quiet hill. Dec l.Jwy l. Aft. peca. 1425. Atlt No tee. asaoe. pool, 1475/mo. teOO. 87MOG 9114·2588; f'TW971 $4f.G74. '151-511l That's ALL you pa1 fora 30day ad In the DAILY PILOT SEIVICE lllECTOIY DO JT NOW I 64~1671 Q CWLYPtLOT l'hur!d!r,'*-"lilwaG.1111 Af tua•au.t.n. Af tmata........ ...... ........ 4JOO ............ 4411 Mll'2ta1a.Trwt Leat&'-d SJOO _, _ __. ...... -............,._ ___ • ~--;,,;,,.;;;;;.;;;;a.i..;.;;;;;;:;;,=~:..:.:::.:.:.. • • ••. • •• • •• •• ••• ••• ••• •• •• ••• •• ••• ••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Deillli IOJI • ••••••••••• •••••••••• • I' n nu.fW-'*•• HwnU..hra'rt # • *" I 11t1u.t.n. , .... ...._ ...... 3140 Mt~.._. Jl6t 8->. r.m. rmm .. toabr ....................... LOST: Oerma•~rd ••-••••••••-••••••••" •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••• •••••••••••••••••• a, Lis-a lallh.ap boalt •OFRCl/llTAIL *CASH FAST* puppy. Jl&WAiD ! tll ...... Uff tL•-t._........L •1 •6 c:..t.M9M llJ4 TownbouiM\ lovct)t, 1pac O..chelol' u.olt \'t block w/N1m.SI00.4'7•Llll ._&o2100Sq.P't. lmNEYlNlODAYS W-OD&,~Ullff ..-• r-_._. • It ~ Uae 2 br with from buch. All uUl pd, •Alt__....,.......;....... ·-·••••••••••••••••• ...................... ••••••••••••••••••n•u pvt, pted entr~ + 2 No llidt. no peu. 201 E ~ penlOft &o lbare •ID~-:;iu 2bd•JrdTruetDeedl LOST:sc:onm SWiii ..Cl pal.lot Soma with au. Balboa Ulvd. $250 per ab Nwpt Htt hM. 11'5 DuaNnt .pudial lllllioal'wuadalSva Bllt male. Reward. •Lodledpr. w/l&ator 1ara1e w\mmln• pG<>I. rro + aecurU.y dep. Call rm UUrlut·+ •·OK, -.2ZS4 etr"' <7•4>56M250 PLEASE. C•ll (114) llWPOIT BEACH •l)(WpaUo, lridty rm JKu.n.l Tconll couru. J SUeSM-1107 ttb on. tO·HU or Need~ T.D. money on Dl-3850or(hS)-..U(l8 •~JcabincUPll~ bik lO tf&anUo-'<m ahol>· I.Arp raoderD 2BR 2ba e41o744hft.IPll. •llTAILVACI San Clemente beach LoR· mill.ab llU. ll/24 •Gu beat. pa cookinl. ~ c:!« ~~~ A:~a~ ~te pvt apt. Clean, New home to atwe 1mAe •dOOaquarefeet frCIDl snpertyJeo.150 K. Vic' Newport Bl.' Cll. autxit..111tt&ll trH Seo Plod vm .. , i»S5 cpWdliil. vaulted cell· or fesmle All .God • •PrlmeCoutiUO-ay PrlD. OQly. WIU pay lK ae.'1'81S2 I ,ast ol th n w homes on the w tu ror le onl.). Ll\ia 1tnd entertain \n ttle{tancc m your new custom home with d i1tner lnt~riors. Ccnvmlence oriented to Include 3 l',tr ,::ua.atS wtth uutomnllc op n rs . kltchen with m1c-ro·wove ranges. elr cl 1nln~ ovens, tru.,;h c·ompnrtors, and BBQ r&n'1t' l<>J>b . "'l't bun-in Slit models: fir c pht~l'S 111 l1v ang r oom s & bedroom". indoor I ound ry areos: ,:u<>sl sWh.'. fo mU y room .md murh more Dock ovn11ob1c to all tmants Shown by appointment Cnll L.lnda lla un t714 ) lb3 3150 (8 to5 wt"t'kda>'S) •Adwta, DO.-.. lla~on VlU••• LAM lnp. Ip walk·ln Cloeela, ,..... oceU .. cu.yoo ...-... .:f: _R ~. n t I • J 0 h n ·--------~ I bd[m .. ~.. ff 8.. Cf&4,__ • ''°"_,o, bltlna. »'lei 1ar. vltV:, jacuul. Very ==apenclln8 lldUDley. l.C.1110 F~orueay/dfll•bmt aclalt. mVal~e. lluatatomo.-blk to beach. Sorry no private Laa Bcb. ,.. ' z:tzl!:ldMAve.C M. a 8". di!ldntn welcome. children or pets . ~: ..,00. per mo. -.aMeu ulver/lrvlne en.Dr. IU-'NOS no INU 9tat'Unl at '270 S52S/mo, uUI. paid. to&aJ. Call 540-,_ daya _s-_7211Z _____ _ 6£AU11f'Vl. 1 br, Iota ol mo M<e80'7. •6844 or4"7·21116tv•. WWMIT BEACH FOUND: Yng female bltn1. pool, walll to N;;;-S Polota. Com· S.Ce.-• 3176 '-dnhlelnCMarbcb, •wru ............. •••••••••• CaUcoloncbaindcaton lhio(s. m) from bch t:r1'5 modoro Clr A~ a br ...... _ .................. °';' abr w/,.._, II/I'. SJAO C1•1ry V-. *1111g u•• 5100 Dover in WeatcUff. rm A~. no ~· ill tOda w h.-ome See rn1ir Nlcol 1 HR. loca.~ nr. + 14 uli.I. Bill, MZ-3583. SllapA OHlcit •••• .. •••-'•••••••••••• _80 __ ••------- W llMSt Ml at 74"1 O>mmodor• Ctr. G~n~m•l Ho1p. Call Avllmmed. ~A•..._ PENNY FOUND: Amt~Shep. rem ~Ide I Or. small but AIK s. cat5 535-680'l for lnlo. '5 appt. am.te, aoiah. to abr b e $90 te $400 MO n>a. Vic N.8 .J CdM ~~::.CS =m ~~~t,,t. NEW I Br 2 Ba. clollu to Soedacular oce.n view. &lllr. condo. pool, frp't. flllll.I area.MS-1508afto/evea Moo Fl'lt-lpm bl!.m.PJOperrm. t200 m>ve-ln allowance. den. own rm. S2'5 mo. U$ FOUND fem. Wl~hair 9G4 2937 2 br, 1. bll, new blda. 105 Call Sue or Renee. Terrier, tri-color. 4 11o·a. ~~.1::. :t"L~tl! --.-.-.-.,.-.qm.. ~~:t.::.~~aso . 158-1411 1n)unld. 86-l.508 aflm" WJJ.5*51B) 2 Br l\11 Ba. bit Ina, new Room, ulll pd, r,eu. 1 , 1 w•--a...11 4IOO KY Sl _ev_ea_. ------ carpeta/drap••· ~net. Afl lw .. ,_#1htd Adult. 1 cbilcl OK. ()ya -• FOUND I bk Shep w....-.Yllelle 111ar., p111Jo. Nr beach. orU,faMllN:d ltOO 751 ·3'4l;Evea 64~11JO ....................... Sell any Item or com· mill.~y~~mo. Vic: Deaut11ul IHl'W aduJf •pta park. 1bopi1. ~ mo. ••••••••••••••••••••••• PaL L.-.._....... binaUoa ol !Wnu for 1'15 N B.fCdM area 645-1508 No Pool J OOU. t271I THE EXCITING 4 8 f · 1 I 3 0 I q ft , or lft1 with a Peony aft.a.Jevea . ---------i ................. cl Sc~ rm~e ~c=. PALM MISA.APTS. House to abr In CM. $250-MOO/mo. Am. Pb PWtwr Ad. J liftea for i uth SPANISH MIN\JTESTONPT !'-1..;.~mo.~~l""'" penoa. 841-D'J. eonaecut!ve dalyw. Each IOUND, blk/alvr Germ. Bach_ m~ APARTMENTS 8CH • "" ...,.. ....., 1ddiOonaJ line ii tor for Shep fem aPJ)l'OL 3-5 Bluffa coodo. 3 BR, 2'' •• ••• •••• • • ••••••••••• ba M15 P« roo., mo to He ,art•ec.11 31" mo. Jl43 VllitJi Oroada •••••• •• •••••••••••••• • R S2fl0$305 38R,.Weatrninster:2 BR Bacb.l&2BK LOOKINGTOLE.ASE LbdclaYl.Qaaraeit! yra Vk.N'B/Cdllaru. OCWROMT ~ts~smuso :0...1..~:..-:::· call an • fromS230.atuP. hl._.91:.t 4350 !f~o~~,~~ NoeommerdMM&. 86-.1508.tb.ieves 3DR.2bll, WDtr S4.SO TSLMgmt MZ·tfJOS Adulla,NoPeta HBuu.to-m4 For more Information REWARD!! for return or 3 RR 2ba $.$()() '31.S. SpaclOUI 3 br apt, 2 1.SS1Mesa0r. • .. •••••• .. •••••••••••• udlOpla~Y°O'&fldcall ' .wnlr 2 Br. 1"1 0.. townbouati, bit, f.aUo, 3 kids ok. (601.klsEutoCNewport Siagle S40.2033A.nabelm ...... 4110 boya Black Balboa S•STOOCIAM "arao~. pattlo pool. ,. Bl A ~··bl ... ., llll Crulaer, taken on .. "R 2 .. -•~-.. .. Av•I . now. 147·0867 aner vd.> ve • .,.,.. e _.,, •••••••••••••••-••••• 642·5&71 11/22/78. Plea•'" call, 0 ., • ... • wnlr ......., 1· aC""''" f1rephtc1.1 Adulll 9 c.... -..... p I t 1 t 3 C,... ~ LEASE OPT I OM 2 8 h nn I Yrlu*"u. -. 4:30 am·.,,,m:M&-"""""' acen a • ,.. '4 Acre feoeecl yud OD c h i ld heartbro .. '"n. r • c a e • ., _,., only S375. 631-4984 6'2--3'&4 Monrovia Ave. Suitable """7857. .. "' PAlll LIDO 2br, gd loc walk to ocean, I bo t t l t .....,. 2 Bdrms, 2 baths. frpl, EASTSIDE stores. Stove, refrlg. MOllLEHOME Double garag~, 20lb1 Is ~~ 1' r ra, e c l'NllU 1 ~ _Lolt_:_Sml __ b_lk_M_al_e _P_oo_· Severalflne homeaanlop adult.sonJy.$4.Z>unrurn. Country selling. 2 br & $300.538-1285. IHFORMATIOH Olive, HB, .so. A 10 -+::--------~·~ dJe mix, lJ.lB. Reward areas. Owntins aox1oua. den, split level. skyUghl, ---------Rent. 'fo!oo to buv info, alnile. same area $35. I_.. w-... 4600 VI w -•·Uff ,,,_ .,~.,~ Callfordet.u1li. 645 7221 (rule, many extras. No 2br. 2ba. 4 elex. Cpts. ..., 900--....................... ANSWERS c .....,.; . ......-..... ·r -'-bl ins G I d repo's oan assumption, _, chlldren/peltl. l8o E. 21st ... ...,, l · arg, enc etc. Easy fi.nance o A.C. .. .. _ Bualness ma o ,need a Lo8t 11·3' Loe haired or· · associated Sl. 646..t262 days; tive & pat.lo. Nr Hunt Ctr.~. 9olficea. •Sbl&Je,Harbor-nuams, bachelor apt , mobile Neuron-Dunce-ng/wht. 17 lb. male, 21 wknd3~9S43. 847-21_19_._____ Mobll.Ho.nt Stan C.ll.atoraaeOGl)'.$35 home or! 3 nigbtl per Arbor-Expose -llorristypecat.644--2S52 ll 11 0 ~ £ II'> P [ 11 t T (, P; 833-8974 k N k PRONOUNCE QUICK IN New luxurioWJ 2 br & den, W. Anaheim 761-1442 ---------wee · o CO'O Ing. Synonym: A word you Lo8t: Toy Poodle, white, • N e w ;i br. l lh b a 2 ba. bllM, incl. reftjg. Westminster 848-8895 Oversized atorage 752-2310 daya; 551·'470 uae when you can't male. Vic: l&tb & 'v1' ~ lulb •'1° 1' ~"~ Wntclffl~ 4 Br. 2 Ba .• new carpets, Easlllide, patio, luxury SmaUpetok.$440mo. Anaheim 956-1011 garages. 10xl2x24 eves. PRONOUNCE tbfJ other NewportBlvd.~9'293 --·r blt·ms, $600. 2 Br, carpel· crpU, drps, bltna. s mu 11 Gemini RJty 839-6623 Santa Ana 554-7070 EHlaide C.M. $48. mo. Trailer space wanted for ooe. Udo Sands 3 b bous 2 ed. drapes, 1 Ba, $400. chJld-pet ok. S'.rlS mo. E . Anaheim 956-4500 846-4262 da)'ll; eves & lOx.52 trailer ln xlnt. -.-__.,-&-..___..------LOST: Med Ille blk dog, r e, &lh acT06S from beach Drive by 2536 Santa Ana ---------•--------wtmdaMS-95U .... .--5300 "G .. •1 " Yi Co .... ff 67b~l!150·orfD!'!.15• S625 . 213/357-3016 Ave ... _ncall "~"N>G') Walk to beach, bacbelo~. ---------cond. 494-44.57 wk daya. .,.,a c -~ wy ..--......,....., • u..: ~. •-· •-relri aU utiJ LL......a.•..a.·1 ~ ~.$3Smo. m 1 MZ-32'78wtada. •-•••••••••••••••••••• at Riveraide, N .8. --------.-BALB0AOCEANF0 0'NT g.., .. e ... g, ~ -~· w-·-·--·~ --------·-· c-"'co Cat F-~1211 3 BR. 2.., ba. Spacious 2 BR-S390/~ 1 Bdrm. stove. oew crpt, paid. Sl.80 mo. 531>~. Beaut.i!ul park-like sur-.... ~~i.zt~· bikjwtitJIOld. 111.a. vk;'.l1·...:.....;;-· __ r:1,;_;_ _ __.----- condo on the wa ter Agent6ll-4.990 dills. Nocblldreoorpeta. _962_·_8060 _______ rouodlnga. Terraced J 0 a r e a L 0 1 ....-·~cat OIS Fri w/boat sbp up to 40'. 2 4M6-4.382. l""'9 3844 pool, sunken gas BBQ, Offlu..... 4400 WAMTID TO Allaoa/Trabuco Rd. 11/24 78 Irv Terr. cargarw/autoopnr Dis sparkling fountains, ••••••••••••••••••••••• n-.......... ., ...., REWARD.CaUeT.M11186. . • I ftls MESA VERDE 3Dr. 2Ba, ••••••••••••••••••••••• llBfT _... .. __ , 1>nc t1 ve l'lmen1lte3. Gf...,.&.~.._., nt!wly d~. wsbr/dryr, Or81Jgetree Con1io-. i s pacious room s . EXICUTIYI Fouod2abUdop,ter· 496-4601 wkd)'ll. _..__ Separate d ining area. lOr ..,, lAJll Siam. caL No taJI. rler mix. 1 blk F. 1 ---~----••••••••••••••••••••••• $525mo.87~7 bdrm. pool, jacuul, ten· walk in cl08eSlS home SUfTIS Vic Brookhurat/lod S..C..._.... 3276•........_-•,.•11+ 3807 rua,aaW\a,exerctSerm. like .kitchen. Walk l~ Luxurlou.a offices ex Laguna/NewportorMla· HB0 9G-Oll64Rewud' ·•old en M . Vic . ••••••••••••••••••••••• -··••••••r••••••-=:••••••• Spacious. quiet. 3 bdrm $28Spermo.661-0633 ecutl ve aecr etarv ·• sJonViejovtc. · · · Goldenwest/Seacliff. be bd lOwnbse apt w/lge pvt Hui BrntiFurnngtooCenter. S32S ' Single tlOOllCient.ioul ell· LOST 4 mo o Id ._~_'lMO ______ _ Steps t.o ach 3 rm 2 Newer2BR,2ba,yearly, pal10. P ool. Adults . LogllllO•ach 3148 t1ersonal phone COY· t I . f .-ba den, lndry rm newly Adhs, no pets. Eves·, Sorry, no kids or pe•~. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 Br FUm $390 erage, receptJoo.iat. COO· eNcY r~~-ernn~~~ Auatralian! Shep, Blk • Found led P. rt r m ••7< ""' ''BrU-'•-t....e S395 ference room verox · · """'""6 1·2 ~ ...t.r..-. ,,,__ b--'""e •-Vi palll • a · u · ... "· 213/257·9792. u lV\. 4.0<J381 orG7" "'""~9 I IR & 2 IR _._k..._,, "' ... """' ' .. ' I ..... , ""''~... ...~ ... """' ,.,_., ~, • c LILI"-., E 213 330 l••••• · _,., '"-1" "'"'" ....,...~ ASl"I 2 Br Furn•-.. ~e •~35. ..,.,..ru, r -ase or month or argesLUUioa_ .. ..,._, one blue ..ve. REWARD. · ,.vcs. · · """" --CK.-view, wal to ......... .... ...,..., LA' bolR J Send _, !.--~~~!_ __ wknds. 714-492·4770 UJJ1Sta1rs lg 2 Br t Ba Apt, 14 blk orr Newport be h S 41 0 • $ 31 0 • Adults, oopeta. UUl tree. to moolh. Near ao. Coast or · 80• occ. Vic ot Weatmlnlater • W _A.....1.-....__ -3298 w/ balcony, washing otvd, 12l E Bay. 2 BR, 1 549.1 116 499•3922 La Quiftta Hennoso Plau, O.C. airport & full info · Will arrange lo Newport Blvd.645-3833. Found: 2-tone grey cat . •• nwwn..-.n-facil. & gar. Yrly $400. ba, $295. No chHdren or • 16211 p k.s'd L freeways. Call 979-21411. meet with YoU lo mid· Haa bad wound on neck ••••••••••••••••••••••• Calldys675-5196 oreves pets. Avail Dec 30.3 __ D_R_&_2-ba_lhs_,_w_/_r_es_a_w_n ~~: ane December. TJianlts. LOST Blk/l(rey large Vic:Woodbridge,lrvioe: ~/Mo. Completely re· 675-8213 ~36l6all•pm. knotty cedar exterior. Cl blkW .. of Beach > Ryan, 632 Metape West. male cat . Blue collar 57279 modeled. Super area. --. Ope be 1. b''-"So f d HEWPORT/llYM BoundBroolr.N.J.0880:5 w/bell. College Park -------- 3UR. 2ba. 957-846I Lux . bayfronl very lrg. 2 Lg bachelor unit Pvt. n amed 1"· rm.. <3 ,....,; · · 0 E mger) f'.IUServiceSultes ---------• area.54S-MI. FOUND: Shorthaired --lldrm, 2 Ba, condo, boat p atio. bllin~ etc. No fpl. & clear cedar panel· lt.DCMlll 4000 $295Moolhly Mil • FOUND Yog ti~ German Shepherd . Hws ftlrNlhecl or s I 1 p av a 1 l . Ye a r l y children or pets. s230 , lng. New Ulland ~1tchen ....................... Call Phyllla 968-t'189 .~·-4650 _._.ped :fem cagret. Vylc C ~~ female, red, AUaota & u..fwnllhecl 3300 S7SO/mo.675-0'775. 1110 Victoria C.M. & baths ol ceramic tlle. -""'' BeachHB S36.ewJ <>•-ve & -c Great view ---------••••••••••••••••••••••• Dr It Pirate Rd, NB. ' • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • bd v.r b r 1 • 646-3197. Tues & Thurs. .:;xu "· • • --------13 rm. 2 a. re c,.100 callaft4. nr. beach, No. Laguna. •.A.._..._.._. 523 SQ. ft. otnce space to Christmas Tree Lot f750. ta-ZS31 Loll: REWARDfor8mos MOllLIMHOME ~~~ 0~·d~e~~~Y·c~~~ S700MoAgt494·7M1 Lovely gardens· Brooks aub·leaae in Laguna 17251 Beach Blvd, IJw>L POUND Allltraliao Sbep !.~ German Shepherd. _ .... TIO... 2 Br, crpta, drps, carport, wtr. faU HJUa, $308 month. Avail. Bcb.1142-21134 11 22 Call t Id ••• · ooa/taJI. Vic Deleware & ·~ A " 631-0234or67S-3600 small yard, DO dogs. HEISLERPARK~EA 2 •KitcbenFacll.avaU. Dec.l.IL8:JO.«XJO .G.u11 ° enuiy. !~l!!LS· HD. 842·0348, Rent, oplloo to buy Ullo, $310. 979-01.36. bdrm. beamed ce1llng.s, •Jacuzzi, heated pool -.a.-.. .. n-..&/ _...., n.1>0's, loan assumption 2 bdrm k50 rm. Yearly. car port, year round lse. •WltJyordaiJymaidsrv. Deluxe medical auite, ................ , el.c. Easy finance 0.A.C. 3131h Alvarado Pl. Call I bdrm. fncd. yl'd. gar, $42Sm>.494-4451 *'l'Vltpboneavallable ground Or .. Corona del w-.ft·---••{•9 9offices 63l-0234or675·3600 utl. pd_ K.uts, pels OK ---------S Wk liar. RealooomicsCorp. ••••••••••••••••••••••• MoWett..Ston Ca~. ·-.. 3818 S30054S.s204646-2316 S250.1Br,cozy,clean,yr-A.slowas 63 67s.41700 .. I 1• ,.. .... ---l.y. I blk to town • beach, 2ZT7 Harbor Ow a ... 5005 ~~ ~~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 Br 1 Ba duplex, back mllea or whitewater ColtaMesa 645-4840 1200 Sq. Ft. $480. mo ..... ~:-....... ?••••••••• wes'trrumte~m 848-8895 5pacious8Rlower duple11 . 2 yrd. gar, sOnml pebt. c~!d view, upstairs. No Marguerite Pkwy .• Beer TaYerD, CM area. Arulheim 956-1011 fr&-• s ome ocean OK. $340 ve y ....,.. ldd.1/pets. 2.20 cwr Dr. IALIOA '"" Avery OD s. D. Frwy I Eat. 13 yn Grau f1000 Santa An 554_7070 view, wshr/dryr area, State St. then ca II 494-7891 Mlaaion Viejo. Pruter pr mo. Ail help run. 8 O/W, gar. Xlnl storage, 640·5181 dys, 548·4301 L ___ M&-....1_____ $ 6 5 · u P week 1 Y Mgml831-7444 $16,000 dn. ~. &45-4474 ---------1 qwet neighborhood. 5 eves. ogllllO.,..,...... 3152 w/k:Jtcheoetle.675-8740. after3 30 Condon.W-min from Oohe ney ............... •••••••• Nr. O.C. Airport. Delue 1---:_. ____ _ F•Nllhed 3400 Beach. rec. area. Child 2bdrm. l balh Prv. paUo. 3 Br, 2 ba twnbse w/oco Roo~~':;~le:~~te olficea w/ae.c:retar ial DANCE,ARTSTUDIO. •••••••••••••••••••••••OK. $'.rl5 mo. Call aft gar,cu1-de·sac,$32Saft6 vu. & ame niti es. S48-9'1M ,_ ee:rvice.752-56216. N.8.flightraffic. HA.CH COHDO 6pm; cro-9i97• 213-592-3147 $800/mo. 7141 846-0205 or Xlot hlw~vialblUtv, new caUS:Jl-0.186 All util pd. 1 b I ti. 213/SQl.1671. •175 El Toro male pre· 1 Wllh pool, jacuzzi. & CoroftadelMtr 3122 r, ge pa o, ---------•ferred. ' crpl.I, t. A/C, under-lawallw• clubhouse. Localed ln ....................... refrig , bltns. S225. He.,._t•ach 3169 494-4605 gmdparlt'c.Ocean&hill Off!art.lty 5015 Sea Harbor. 2 Br up81JUrs, Crplc, snnn, Adult&, no pet.a. 645-8:i79 ••••••••••••••••••••••• views, from 500-1200 sq ft ••••••••••••••••••••••• 16961 .._water La Jg sndk, gar, 6 blks to or 548·1517. PARK NEWPORT F\trnlsbed rooms In Costa avail. Sfi9.1186, 499-3922. ...... f:t110l(Boe'!.:rul..J.o4r778l 6o7c"e9al~~ S425Geo~5r2g·7811. IRAHDHEW Bache lors , l or 2 gMar~ageho.ls~t.·IQuilUlte&t,cposeans: No.Costa Mesa,700sq.f\ . .,...,..... v ..... .....,. " weves e. 2&3br,2ba,allelectrtc. Bed.rooms&Townh-Ousea lea $350/mo. Ground floor. Fr $ 50 Ing depo11it. $135 + utU. Colldonlilll... l Br. walk to beach, Covered parking. $375 to om 349. Ref. req. Call 754·0960 Tom, 540-2200. Un,_,..llled 3425 carpeUdrapes, Stove & $ 4 7 S mo . 6 0 0 W . Spectacular spa, total ••••••••••••••••••••••• refrig. l adult. no pet.s. Hamilton. 838·2917 or recr eation program. Room for rent, kltch & IA.Y VIEW Jo~or Lease. Plush 2br, 8 UliJ pd. $325 yTlY 673-7552 642-2164 t sodal program. 7 poola, 8 l.odry priv's, possible ex· On Lafayette • CaDJ1ery I'~ b coodo t nhse Pvt tenrus courts. At Fashion change for child care. Village.12DOSQ. ft. . a w p' 1 •• Freshly painted, 3 BR 2 FOURSEASONSAPTS uland. Jamboree & San Female pref. 67S·M47, BILLGRONDY f::1~~sC:U::.e~nofs~ BA. 4-ca,r gar. bit-in Spac. 2brl0wnhowie, l \.IJ Joaquin Hilla Road. 751-4046. Realtor 675-618' club house. Walk lo bch. lulch, paUo, frp, le, Non-ba, pvt patio, pool. 17141644-1900 Water pd. $450 mo. We s.mllrs. please. 415 Jri1. Adults. S300. 735 Joann ---------Room w/bath. SlSO/mo. + Ofnce-&ore e> F'l.,crpt, will interview pets . SMO/mo.673-4329 Sl.646-6483eves. Steps &o beach, yearly. $75/sec:urity. Walk to So. drpa, A/~t...!!.301 Beach 9625339 Lge rmdem 2 br, l br, Coast Pl aza . No Bl .• H.B.~EM2·28M · Nice upper 2 Br l Ba. Studio duplex, c rpts, upper, frplc, all bltna. s mokers, no pets. Newport Beach, aubleue Towehauea crpls, blt-ins. DO pets. drps, front yard, d e· $375&··-. vrly. Garage ~3817 '"'-.... ••IV\ 67c .,......, '"ched ., ts ........, 1 office space. approx. UnfW11ilhed 3525 '"""· ...,,,.,, .... ,.ar. no pc •no door opener. 842-3490; _V_cic_...ati _____ l _..t_ds __ 4_2_5_0 Get °" tbe rlgbt track with the Dally Pilot's CHRISTMAS GIFT TRAIN! Appearing every Wednesday start- io.c Nov. 1.5 lhru Dec. 10. For m>re inCormallon and to place your ad CAU..NOW 842-5678 •••••••••••• .. •••• ••••• d . kids. days ; 645-2899, 642-4657 _1_ooo_aq...;..._ll_._M4-48G0 _____ 1 2 Brrront uplexS340 es·8420927 ••••••••••••••••••••••• $60000 Yrly;No pel·chlld: Pp. _ev~·-·-·-----1 LIOOISLAND ENSENADA BEACH MIWPOITllACH Cub bu.ya' Corporate NEWPORT BEACH·3Br. 2\A&Ba, plush cpl!!. xlnl rec facil. drps mcl'd. Ml~'.rl08 eves. '331ri.s; Gar,644-4340 2 bdrm. 1 ba. comp!. 3 BR 2 Ba, freshly paint· HOUSE. Sleeps 8. $40 CMtrhl. riet 8 . 2' ~ 11 m it e d kitchen, patio, lndry fac. ed & new cpt. Encl So. day. 9&M073. •--190 ft __ _._ .. , .. Interest with A.vailaMeHowt i•rage, 1870 Wallace. I *650 J Kl -~------~ :i ..., ........ ......, R N h I pal o. • . . oae, Pal Sprtn Condo maximum projected re· 28 apt. o pets or lose to a opp n g & 645-6822 5SEMIS88 u•te m gs on Mo I• t • o I e children. Call Linda al schools. Older children · ... Mission HUI• Country j turn of $120,000 In 2 67~2311, aftSM&-64.57 OK. No pea. $325 mo. OCEAN VIEW, yrly 2BR 1 Club.968-5430 645-323 clap. ~Ouckt7N893 lcAoal.a.d 3706 2BR,2ba .• frpl,2 caq~ar. 646-l85054.S-6W Ba. duplex. $4SO mo . Big Bear c•bin: sips 1', Dix l & 2 rm otficea aclJ, ••••••••••••••••••••••• On Jasmine. $506 Mo. $350 3 ... .2 la. ~or&U-36.39 pooltable, color TV; 2 Airport Hotel from IMVISTOltS Cute2Br 1 Blil .2carp11rk· Agt67S.S000/67S-6494 Ups tairs. Family. No LJOO VIEW 2br, frplc, Crplc'a.~16 SlM/m>.833-3223 $5000 to '20.000 lnvest-~~i. :~~~ta. S4SO Charming 1 BR front ri.!:a ~So. Coast C:~ep. D.R. AdllS. Lake Arrowhead Office avaU. beach area. :e~.~ ln~da~·~ house,apt.Garage,fplc, ~-----------------lakefrontcoodo,slpe8. Only $80/mo. Y ou ro.('IU)'ISGl53 2 bdrm 1 ba. rrplc, No beama,plusb crptg,bltn E. SIDE-Ideal for day Al1Adultsnopet.s.2bdrm 83().7022 answer my phone.--------- pets. Avail. Dec. l $400 microwave, gardener. •lpr 2Br 18a nnnl no 2 ba from •320, Jae, pool, BIG BEAR CABIN 673-llm. Woukt fOU like• bullness 67S..9'l29 Block to beach. $525 " ' ' ' """ ' clubhouse·. Shown by ol YoW' own? You don't -----------1 6'75-81.38 peta.S280rm. 5'8--08l6 2 BR, frplc, slpa 8, week Downtown Huntington need an otnce to atart. LARGE 48r, 28a, frplc, ---------2 Br t Ba. Eaatalde, 251 appt. only. 549-396S or weekend. 140·5565 Beach. 210~ Malo St. 3 Bello at home. IUJI or $5..'IOmo. yrly. Very unusual Bachelor. 16th Place. Upstairs apt. WISTHEWPOIT eves. office• available . One p/ttme. lt'a Ideal for 752-1918 No cootlng facil. Ulil pd. S3t0 rm. No pea. Call 3 ..... _ 1 b f a---a.. ._ iRa..--. ... 00 one2·rm1_$rml2D..t~. ,.!·~JUO. tuband and wtre teams. ..... S200/rm.67J.5586aftt:ao Pamat546-5880 DUI""'" • .. un urn. --~ .... ""....,._,,. Call 845-e?9S bt 7 & 9 r1N1111llla 3707 $465. Yearly. ....................... wn ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 Br. 2 ba, front d1lex. 2 BR duplex, crpta, drps, IAUOA-MIWPORT c.tdowlt YICTOIHUCliOA.llA _ri_or_a....:PP':..:._11_· ____ _ BEACH, View, pier, 2br, frplc, gar, adlta 450. fncd yard & paUo, no UAl.TY 615-1970 U"'9 ... l•Hl Lag1au Beach. 3 rm. lnvtlklneuTa5".olpro- S500. Adlta. uUI pd. TU Call~7513. pets,$310.Ms-3485. SharuhOmeoraptmenl 1ult.e Incl. powder rm. nta. A~ul builder May. 300 E. Edgewater 3 B 2 Ba f l g I Udo hie-Bayview 2 br. h... .... ,..,.,,'AnJ TT •• ""TID ~ !'!t1ft. S3IO mo. LM. aeeka fundl, $1.5,000 per <Um-2866 r • '1> c, ara e deck elec. Jar, adlta. no ~ .. '\..U'. Ul'IUl"U ......,._, bouae. Staort t e rm, · 1525 pr rm. pet.a $:iOO tae 87S-0.'171 ......,. ~ .-....--ho. aecured. Oceanfront 3 br 2 ba lge 673-2832 0.. Poillt 1126 u..oc ~ ~ ~~ ....... ,k Well mt.abl'd Paycblat.rtat Mr. Woolriclle~, fam rm. Avali. n~ lo ,.__,._ ........___ 3l2 .. ••••••••••••••••••••••• On F inley canal with c.> ~ ~..q will aha re attractive June l&th ssoo mo -.--... 2 Br Twnbae, 2 car doclt,2Br1Ba,gar.nlce 13Ml.S4Siocel971 aulte,ntfrequired,flexl· W-.W ...... 1010 Prefer family . Dayi ••••••••••••••••••••••• fataee,frplc,der'i~vtyd, yard.CallBW673-3417 ble a rran1eme n u . ..._., ................ . 875-1080or642-33S7 LA MANCHA. APTS yr Old bide. S4 · mo. Owner'• apt r unit ROOMMATES 541-7890 llo¥e )OW' c.n. to my ....,...._. 3741 LarJ: i ,2.a bedroom mMm.1 4 BR, z .,.:: ~ P'rm'. Swe-M-S..• 4410 ._...,... ....... '°' lD· ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1ara 0 aptl. Dah~b:~ Nice ZBR S2'1S. Refri~. ocean vtew'f 2 Car ~ ..1... p1 •--1 ............ ._... Pim Wilber Ht bHnl end aar au lO D/W ... _ co-DID~. Y-....................... ------··-l.AGUNA BEACH MTR Pool.' Oaa0 Pd. 'm . a ve, • 1ar wtP. ~·· .......... to ocuo. AcM•WeltJ• ....... ._..._ INN. S75/wk It up. Maid Pl Mi-~ cpt'C, drpl, 1ar, sa&-Q14 v .Jan. LStb. S750Mo. • Wea..d R.tfennces TOPLOCATIOMI tterkcts11t T ..... IO"'I aerv •• co&or iv, heated · eve. JUN. cau aft 8 P.11. Clll4M2IZ 1111&MI..,_...., D9Ni' • pool. UUl. (7l4l4it·SZIM. a Br, S3llO. Families oolY, 2bdrm 646-5177 • Sutt91ftalrWtallabop •••••• .. -• .. ••••••••• BN.CoaatHwy. no peta. Woodland. AptlncludlnacUuUU.. 2br, l!Ma, l•UDdrf rm. 1 Newport Beach ocean ~·-~ lftlllrt'f O"''"an .. lew w/co"e 2~!·J!~Hi. 116 E. $325494-1872 car•ara,vearlyl"Smo. Viewl .• ~50' J.cl uuJl • tentll. ,_'550 ___ mo_._Blrr___ LUWW , """ kM d J b •B' u~-·-.. 441~ St1aab o r e Dr . n #. • · nc u · ·-..... ocew px, a 1 r, ,........, ...... 3140 675-7479 59-'11.11 am or M0-1357 STOllSPACI ....... balcony, rrpl. $495. Nft large 2 bdrm, 2 ba, ... •••••••••••••••••••• · Smith-_... Patu• ~. BEACH. l•T.D.'t. .. 4'M866 bll.nl, patio. No pet.a or dbl ~· n r • lllllT.D.a--.. --------lddl. '*· 363 Hamllton, SRARP. beach 1.2 • 3 BR, Dover Twnhle, 1or. Retired bach to aha re Can bt UMd very nicely Mt••rt•9Ch 37'9 l/m..(B!Oclayaorwtnda lrplc, diahwthr, garage frpl, waah/dl')'tr. pool. w/ m1nldahomlni uADtique8bop.AvaJla· Falnl&T•mUlDeellN9 ····'·················· "~·-13 11peµo..•a:w1 Adu.lttS425mo.646-9".2. younah Sat R blel>ff.Ut.'31.UO/mo. .....~Ce. ......._ ranc on moft • ~s••••-M•z111 •a•11 Beach dp1" W/et'lcloaed 3 Ddnn 2 ba frplc 1ar 541.3338 _,_ _,' • - carap 6 lndry ra~. 2hr, 2 Br, 1 ba, au elec. Brand Slllild VilhMnt blk to' bch. 'y. rl>" 'S6SO'. ---·-----'1WJ I I .._. C ••H '485 mo. 961·0427 o ""'· 187 E. 18th St. $400. N W bd ;'jr~ 01> 67M870A1ent Roommate.'•· 2WO to•--------~ ,.. C4S rm.Agt54t.so32 ~ •SIU t!"l. :.~ . . shr28rtum.condoKlaa ~£.Ill.ARE JM~ PASn Bacbelor Apt .. by a Bd.,·3 Bd .• nr . new, from $Sl.5 + DOOla ten· Delux 4 BR, 2 babcr"i&~ Viejo. No pet1. :sr. ~ff. rewpon.,rre . Oocnmkta911l In M hn, ..-ater.WoWd. Gprefumal C.M.·N.8 ., all bltna, nla wat"111r1. ~11 '**··~to ' 752•0707 dya. Al or t. aneen, 5 to alb In,..,_ ua mo•t a1.a .o.11mom patio-yd; 1oa1a w/frplc, rrOm Su Dleio ""'1 yrlylae. 1103• Colleen. li'IOIWmo.Btlllalll.S c .... >. bt, lad'•· r•· mcklled 1ar: lftdry rm drive North on Buch to s Br, I carporta, lmmed. Dtacnm. penoa to 1hr AJ>p ro• 300 1q ft, fluact, etc. Com· Beachh'ool I Br 2 Ba, ·Or W I D boo Ir UJ>, llc'..W. tJMn West on ~~free l••ry. ocuafroat twnhae, dowotowa Huntlaston -re11t • l1d•1trt1I rwerlY or winter r nlal. f 15 0 • $ 4 1 S . 'r S L lld'..,_ lo 8t1wtacl DJ/...._ IN Bua. t-S. tqma. Pn ••• Br. cUI., •edL llO ..... ..... 1oA111 alto Hall. Call eau•.l•Uttfl>M. •~DY41·1'llrl. vma,..<TM>-.alll 1TJ081ut1oNDr. fl'pl.-.-•U.••• ... 1111m.urr . .... . ._. ...... .-.-... ,..,_ ... , ....... ... The Little Train That Canl GET STARTED ON THE RIGHT TRACK EARLYJI Se ll Your Holiday Gift Items on the Daily Pi lot CHRISTMAS GIFT TRAIN PAGE This special gift guide will ap- pear each Wednesday from Nov. 15 thru Dec. lJ reachlnQ 108,000 prime f amlly households with select market coyera~. For ln- formatton and nelp in placing your ad call a CHRISTMAS AD-VISER 142-5878 YOUR UNUSED ITEMS COULD BE SOMEONE'S CHRISTMAS GIFTS TOYS SPOR11NG GOODS JEWELRY POI'S ar PLANTS ANDMADE ITEMS CATSarDOGs Gin CERTIFICATES AtrroMOBILES Thl19ln .ct only '5.00 ••• Of thl• l&ze•d only St.SO Laf19rala99 Hellabte CALL TODAY 642-5678 .. I l• I ,. 7 \ 1 1 . . pM. 't !!.QT Q • • • • • • ... '. • ·SERVICE: . . ' . . . OAll.YPWr CT ORY • • • M.,•-.i/TrF1...... ...., t' r• 'I t• •1c ;hi r••••''•"-1 P ·•1 S.-.ke ......•................ . .............................................. ······················· ............................................................................................. . ::u wort., oriJ. det.1,nA. H1 v las • o Al r11r 1 &ICTlfCIA.M lf1ul, •::r~;•der dYmp llINl·MAU> S!RV. Rel· L.M S.-Rot.oUllin11. Sod PETERS PAINTING PERRY'S PLUM Bl.NG Nque Sbop9Ui1 teniicc Meliua't.aioc:W.Coa.t Pl'l'iml chef will ~•,er Ret.<bmm'l.lnd.Rubl lril. It , u.t wrk, b&e!:utp.trndpanonael. or S•eded L 1i wn •. F.llpr'd. Re•• Rate•. Complete 1_>l11mb ln g ~~~·~l e . flwr, NB. 541.».tl "aaooaW)'. Call IOOD 15)'no·p.r. LkJTll(NI decmUOonsctc. lh·lJIT ~. lodl')'. Sll·IMS Sprinkle rt. p~~nt_!_oa.-P'l'.e.c..___.&;t. Calh Gene Mr¥1cies. Dra1.n "•ewer _.. .. _ _... · - 'W'•C•..,. •m i 1 ,~~C~AU.~!J6~4~6~1~1~2~'~-1l~t~F~1~;;;;; 1~-;r. .. ~-~·~··~-~;~l~H~n~-11 ,-.w,"', •.eoCl>nt'•" .... , ,· 1----------1 ~~i:.1. "a/tir ~l:e~ ~--•••••••••••••••••••••• He.!d btfp lot'C:, koli· ., ... ••••••••••--•••••••••••• lri1. Reh, telllOn. Owca a n ' · 11 1c · Palntinc. EKtt/lnlr. Ex· 873-lUll ••••••••••••--•••••••••• ••J~ •-•·----~ pl •• -OCC St··•-· ~·--• •• .., ~-..,.._.-•314419 , Xlnt re 1 . f!'d. -· neot, _11_ . ual work. etcblri&. T•RJP •neoa;:-,,·, '='1-•!:""= -·~•••c·~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• _,..,, t •uu u-. .. ·--m.71» .... '"''""1'"' -i ....... 1 ..... I c. -.. ..,_ ,,... --.., Tfui u.e trim Roo c'dl&t:IG&:li Dave ·.-'P"' ,..,,..pm1 Y°';l" ~. homl!/ mtinntt 1:m Mala,S.A. MW -MD-ll9ll K 6 8 Wood Y•nc\D.I , ' ' Wt UI help e:)Qa 1,our , --"--home LR copperf I will RV. Rileys ldl. Hl·740l •au:r arr.en• p ta6fencerepair 61J.S1QI. hl:ue for the boli ayt, Ja~......_.aper. Prof paintlna. Ext• Int. rePpe an av. 1 Ba hme evm. c...rl}CW4•h MIMQiO,...... Wiii MW or cln. anY\Jlhl1. ~II The MQPPl-'b Cle•n· ~~~· 'f';,Jri;::: Low ratel. Hera. Ftee fqr sm, 2 Ba ms. Guar. 1~,==------- +rs• « •111'n ••••••••••••••-•••••••••l-ih-~·~·;;-----:ltamall.tot1u11')or,... :is.rvite4-)'.ot'Dlahl. u 'di -•·•Nob ro flliL53M780.~ 1yr.TopHatPlumblD1. ,_ r w •I -c -· u . ~.--••••••••••••••••••••••• ·--•·•"••••••••••-•••••• -.ment •orlt com nUal. reaa. ralea. -· ... , •• ----· ·~ •S.¥11 w_,... .. n re:l&I 6: rul°de11Ual. C••1••••••••••••••••••••• Clllanytio.-.... l-'-"'-'"'i'------1-~--~~-~·--.,..·· --~-IF\oe EKt.er. PainUn& by Ce ramic tile in¥ta lled: onv.-ll.)'l•Parltlnl lot ..._31>J I • e an 11pa . Hau lt n ~. Woman for hcMAle clean· Dtl·ll Landscape. Reas. R. Sinor. St.. Uc .. ina. Try PlumbmJ rl!J)&lr. Spec. in llri. 1oowcrs &: lUb5, •Rep.al,.. •S..k-o•llna -........,,..~ ~!._o_..da-••P ... tn1M,!,.mme CllEAPEST ~111lin1 In in1._r.x..~,...own lrana. Prices. Prof. landtcape n .836-5M.53'hrs. '°'imdelin&lr ~rTre· M'1·2Gll dya, 53'1·8280 •Lie. NB. C M s•s -.......,.. -T• -· town. Yr H ..... t rnatta ·-~---~-·~--~--&: aprinkln 646-7070 an. pipe. Good pnces. op evm •-~-•-t. •••••••••••••••-•••••••• MZ>a..145-UllO , -I. ' EXCELLENT PAINT· HatPhun.binl."1·31-9' ' ,__ II()' honm , Co •V£.RYLOWJ•RtCES• 1 --'-~-----:--3 FINICKY FOXES. 1 j;;;;;;-------i lNC. Reuonable ralel. p I Soeclali&inl In t-eramic ....... ~I« o.nuou.":1~~"'aai=. OaOlll'drftiqMalnL Lit• haulln1·moYln1. M.H .• ~ond~a~ta , t111 1 f Fteeestimmtel.548·2'106 1°": ! tile entrie1A:Ooors.Free •••••-•••••••-••••••-••••• ... __,,1, __ 0 .. _7.,~. Georll! Wl·ZOU Garap.Yard cleanlD1. horms, C'f, -.-~·• of ,_. 11 Mil I net 1!8thnatei11112·b)83 -~ -....... ,,....,... MJ.0105 01) ICK new CUll~n. ••••••••••••••••••••••• lnl, f.'"'• 6 wa paper. •••••••••••••••••••••••i:C='="=;·='-"=----Bk.kp1, pa1rolll ta llea, f!l pa-. prc1irott l1ean· Rem.rat.. Dvtime.Evcr.46'Nly Brtckworlr:. Small jobs. Outl. work .~ rea•. pr. nndoftwiutproblem111 Tl'M s.r.ic:• nn..nt, II.ml.I. O'IDN. NB C1 1: rdw l!;• rr... e t Re&llOft Strona 1tudeolfTree 147·18'14, 48·68'\L Nftport.. Colt.a Mma ls F'reeeet.&.eve. 547.at u .. · ·~.1 ....... · O'Kttfe ••••••••••••••••••••••• arN.W1n...m.llll ••-•--••• ... •-••••••••••••• -· -~ ~le·-• •-uh 1-••"• I · --75 -·-~ ion E ~ R d 1 atM. • ~.1 ..... c. ~.... .............. "1Df,.,,-.,,, eves. -a•••a-...a. Prop. ocmnt Co. t.andac:*Pfl .., • .,at s X· L I · I ~mo e • repsir, !en. ~-nat.4M-2U9 " _____ ,"9 5*>-23'.ID pert ahaiplng, thinning, •l:'l aec:reta r la c:arpanlr)', old l flt~ 0.1-l&;.l..andKape -C 11..... nfEQ.EANINGLADV Olimney wieaver. block, Ref1 offered. Eves, stumprem:ival.l'JS-2821, lift"Vlt'81 I*' e1.p. Tape cnf\amanablp. II )'I'll lei NB/CM ·~II -·· i:tr~ hHclD'1. reli•· ttooe, bttck. How •bout a 631-30llS/6'J5.l.266 tr•a..criptlon, Jrv1a l! &l'\!a lJ~"d. llr. PaJam· Btla.1416-70'10 ••••••••••••••••••••••• b6ie ~. 1'8n ratea, ftreplaeeforChriltmas~ .__.__ 1..:la&:::.·---::--:----- KJiUt."'59*7 bo IO!Dlt LOWCOSTTOYOU. lmuted.552-DM. 6'5-ltn Cuatom painllo&. I'm =...:':?................ Tftriel,all(acets, C.,..••1 Ot ••"'• £:il;Pt'l1 ,.,.niftc 6 y11rd SiY"•mple•• """••-' ... ,"".,'.•, Miyako Howiecleanina. Wock. 1lum119tone, walls, ==~1 g,'flaJ":!: are REPAIR &i REROOF. All bi&ot •~l.!;!'ee:e&l. •••••••••-••••-•••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• t le•Dllll. R.anbl rates. ~ ... · ~ PfJ"lMs &: howlea. planters, a idewalks.1-,---·--·--·--· --1 t )' p e 1 ·ah in a I e ti · j'ij;i;G~~-~~-~~:--:~ Carpe~h!r, Jt"'rN lllt. Any Cltta qua&., '° ovffh~MI. i«l:·9833aft 4 ~--:--:-.,----1 cwkly Hri ), Mon· Fri. drtws. MS-'1649.131-3:181 "-o & Orp T..... rock•hake•·compo·lar · IU,t al It; r .U. ;obs. ~II AJlan Of" fr-•e cai , W 11110 Dli;;;;;s;;;i~.---1 1"-,,.._h 101.b ft e•p. '1·10AM . ••••••••••••••••••••••• Frffest.S41·5830 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1'on.)o. ~ o.-.......i:-m.Ja ••• , .. ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••-• ll'J5.4m ....... Pl t ' •-pa· 25 ~ rt u~·t g JO ~-· ••••••••••••••••••••••• aoo uni.ng • re tr. Hon"•on Roor·ong E• .,...pe ...,..,... enn : a.ctr-I.... •••••••••••••••••••••••AMWAY Co1metlc1, Ha bome RI )'1Sexp.Mulet'dde1.in · · yrs. experience, free r-...s.--nu HANDYMAN:C~olr}', Nutril.ioo. Houffwares, ve .~ _ _. apa . "WeMoveOurTail·Gale mu•ic. This coupon perleoced roofers-not estimates, call Dannie -r-· •••••••••••••-•-••••••••• 1-ri I I 1n •-lo.&. ua...--. domeatia. For You!" sales men. Low bid, Al-nd 1-·-· ••••••••••••••••••••••• H..._,..Blctrfc e ..,._. ca . pum K • Jfome Care" Comm'I. E\'ERY NPOK 'N Loca16State-Wide wonhSS.1111·1"33 631-4M.1 .. ., '.........,..,, SibaflijlOO 4 at.eam clean Uc3Z'J IJ6N-a'14 flr:l . .56:mo M2·11EM CR ANNY. 14S·21l9, Serviee.Call: Plsltw/•~ WIMlowCll••:n Color. bri&ht1tb(.'nl, •ht MR. FIXIT -..2110 ........... .,_ ...... __ Move•." -r-Re-Roof FM Lrs& ~ (·pta;10 min ~each.Clean • • a.ii;.~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Call Anytime ••••••••••••••••••••••• liv, din rm, hall $15. Avg :f',:=~"S~!":n ~~rpenle r , P1•,lntlntJ. l4-1dlatl: I L d Cf\' I · ~ Neatpatcbes&textures 894-00l ~~~!~<leen""on· ,"',· Pm,r. rm S'J~, l"QUC'h SlO. th no:-u. r•~. yr. 1n ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• I ~-~~IS'!!T~. ~·~·~l-~14~lt! IR.;;;('7,;;;.-;;;:---;;;;;;;;:I ..-ullllJW a rea. · S.S. Gwtr cllm pttl odor. ~mall ~l·OJ.51 area.548-1152 • ROBIN'S HOUSE · Europesn Landscaper. ,/ Roof repairs : comp, ralel.Rd's.642-7893 Cpl repair, 1S yrs u.pr.j ~~~~--_!:~~1 ---------1 Q.EANING SERVICE. Top wort. Fair price. lnt,ext.servin&areafor7 PATCHPLISTERING shinr,:le. shske. Faru .i-"=""="'--""-=-- Oo wort. rny-.df. Reis. SEU. tdJe hems with a SEU. kUe itema with a for a lhornughl)' ck"b Malat. Refa. 646·4871 yn:. Prol. quaJ. work. A 11 t )' p ~ s . Fr f: e Guaranteed. Uri an. ve tomethin1 to aell! ~1-0101 Dail)' Pi&ol C1ualfied Ad. Daily Pilot Clauihed Ad. hoY&e. 540--08S'J d)'llevea. Heu. Dave 516-8CZ5 estimates. C..11 S4(l...682S 5tt.e12~ Clas&ifwd Ida do it well. ....... ,_ Htlp'W•lod 7100 Htlp'W-7100 Htlp'W-7100 HolpW-.. 7100 Htlp'W-1100 HolpW-.i 1100 H.ipW-71 00 ............................................. ,. ....................... ············--····· .................................................................... . n o •r1e ..,! •••••••••••••••••••••• rt"-......... Loator Found a~! Call ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·-~:ij;'Cuu:'-'l '•":::::::••1 •::;:;;------·101a1'feun ror Urmusine Clerical. lmmed. open· ~ Dental As1't, Busy ND Animal A111atanc Sdlli1h& A/PO.BK Jliliiot .. e••'c BANK service. PT on call. Call ing, ~Yins. agcy h8s Mature adults t.o work reatorstive pa ract1ce League. 531·2273, no(ee. lwttw:H. 7005 The Jolly Roter Inc. a Toyota Agency in Hunt· TB ( ERS t.-tpm. 770-2118. opa:Un& clerical 11reas. ~ at the Orange needs sharp ~t.huaJJtic, Lol!t: $S0 Reward ror re·••••••••••••••••••••••• dynamic, fut 1row1~ 1Daon Beath need& ell· -~0-ULD--MO-NITO--R--1 Exper. helpful. Salary Count)' F a irg rounds exp. asslstant.63l·~IO. uun of "lllaggje", 4 Y REAL ESTATE restaurant chain, bas perien<'ed used car P.AITTIME ~rerorccbiJdrenCoot comm. w/abtlity. Rapid snackbar. 1$ openings. D8CTAL/~ okl bm/wht lll.RL Spr. LIC""'"'SE ~~c~:=~ =~c .. ~«daay~!'t: =•i:,'h:,'t~fn~ meals. take Dlse ~~~nce':ri'.ht . Ari co . starting Wary 13.50 pr P l time . Will train. inger spaniel. 67S-04~ ~ Oen. in our general of-best. cf benefrta, call Mr. and Loan or bank ex· measures to control ""'""'its. a )'. S49~l&I hr. Oob' rdiable people .544·5.1'5Tustln ·- 640400 SCHOOL flee accoonb payable Smit.b847..&s.55. -perlenei pre!ert'ed. C11h bebavklr. Tr11nsport to Jlldy.!7l·"T7Z2 l-"""""~~a~pply~.~Ca~ll~642~"':'!783~1;':';;;:~;;=:;":;:;;;::;;;-; Found': Brown fe m dept. We provide •Int ~~~~~~~~"!'! handlinl required. Es:· after school activities. Clerical Dental A5s't, chalrside, 6 Ooeker Mi.JI. Older doll. OFFERS workingcond&benefita. = cellent uJaot. wotki.ni Swlmrnin& tenni s Caiit~hna 1t rms. experience. Musl Newport area. MS·I~ Please apply in person A.trroMOTIVE conctiUom and benefits. muslc, & danc ina •-y CONSnUCTION 'have X-ray licen11e . aftafeves. Gwst l.Khn frff to: •AUTOLOTMIM! C.llorapp&yatbrancb. ~·Other dl.llies •• Hasloll~ava\lable Ca lo i r W.k• LaitmaHilb.83'1·6200 11111 Joly IOQar late Chevy dealer ot'ren full· AMERICAN reqiared. 2 yn exp. S500 with many nne $Uper •••teala1IY1t. D&n'AL ASSISTANT 5350 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •CrtihCburseavailable 171M12 ~ A•it tirne permanent posi· M per mo . Pvt room &: companies & \bey·re all for n'lll)Oi hm bldr. Must W1th chairsMie&: rront oC· •~ ~-fZ714 tioOll to uabit new car&: 5 ''VI GS board. DOT 3016'17010. FREE~ '· rl •Matcriab provided. ...---.-. -service managers in I"-Ad paid by employer 5.4ft ,055 be handy w t.oo ..... ntal flee ex per, very ex1blc ~ c l a11ea f &r 1 ~~~5~4~6~0~3~3~1~~~1 varied &. lnleresting 2353.SCalle Contact Employme nt .,,.... !~ar, 1ab11ity ~ ~~ hrs lo fit your schedule, ~~~itt'~~:~~~r •Choose. :1n ~~). t~,k._!:. Jdeal for .. s't!emi ~e~= La~~16 Drvdopment Dept.. C.....'%b!P9rl Ii 11 oomm -:~:::r~ BR EN ~~:~r Part · l 1 flle · Outc:alif.9,4it·Sll1 &night classes. API'MANAGER r~"'" auto. mecu. p. ~uol~W>lly CHRfSTllAS HELP Y CO. 500 Ne'tr'l>Ort Ctr Dr, 1;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; --°'=='-"'.CC-'-'"---1 Pl .....,.,. for SS unita in Costs for advancement. e .....,.,...... 2790 CM S 200 N H "--PREGNANT! Caring, • acement-up to ""'"' M .. a. E•pe•'d eouple. Mr. Pierce, HOWARD ~""!'~mp~lo~>~e<~m~l~f~lh""!'~j f\lil&partUme.packiDg • te .. _, ....... "'""""' Oestgne• -ronuniMion. ,.....-~• Dov , ~ •• -1 &: shipjling. Golde n'.'l ALLJ08St'REE AUn: RArthW" oonfidential counselinR& Husband mus t have ..,.,.. .. ,.,,et., e • ..-.... i Ma,ic Wand, 948 w. 17th :;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.le;;;>:;;;;;;;;:,<,;;;;;-;;;;; I PCB re!enal. Abortion, adop· fo)'ftJWttk ma int. exp. Wife bltlrpg,. cSls=-~·Ncewpo==rt_Be_•_•_"-__ Bltlr.pg Exp lhru financial • Cook· Dinner House ekp uon&keepmg. Sales Training. e It p . Ca 11 eve s ,1 AUTOMOTIVE statement, flexible hn .. 1c81="'cCll_. ___ .,.._~ Cleri cal only. O>ntact M1ch11el. DESIGNER APCARE 547· c.ll For o.talh !213 18RS-38Sl. USIDCAl Small busineas Pref CLEANING WOMAN Momperfen-ed 64().7440 Mani.la<.turerolelect.ro- c:o,.....,y GIRL 131·1 001 493-0442 ~-u_. ... .,,.. c•:::•=-='=""=.,,_==--1 wanted, must be able ll1 MICROALM COOK mechanical products rt<· """'"' KateU.' MCHITICTURAL ~ .,... TIUILDEI do all pha s e s o r F'ULLTIME qtires aproven PCBla'!l- ESCORTS R.f!lllfl;tateSchool . Dl.AFTEIS Experienced. Must have .,.,A housework. $4 .$0 hr. PROCESSOR C!H-0600 outpenonwhowaol3 an * * ,.._ . ,.._ . Seniors &lnt.ennediate 1mog ticease. Too pay Head lamlnator/looler. W.3110 oPPOrtuolty to make ex· .. •-,.1 •• 1, J20Jt ..... 1D1DO ..... puitrano lmmed.. need ror Type v plan. full benefit• &: muat be serious, self· I c~~~-----Q>OI< Pl C=~:"''c:c-:-:---''-'-'~"'-~~·~S..'!"!~Jueo~~Ca~~io~u!aoo~-1 eeded I -do"ately' ,_..,._ •· ., .. tot t ~~-~T-ttUent wages. us , be a>mmercial&indw;trial n m .. -. s ... """ •Wl I • e ----~ Ou• co,porate he ad· Pl -t i m e lun c h & · I · ol ed -. • .....,.......... j JD 0 •-ly1o"~·iceM1• •••••• p Squa•ed "-'~<.gdt~•t;,p'-"• ~· Sa ·mumate y mv v Wh..11 ..,.... t'r e ncb Colle&e girl pro e els . · on ....... ~'" · · · vaa>uo .... ~ ..,..,. quarters has a n i m · breakfast coolil;. rTI, t new pro)e<'ts fr<>m C'Oll· -181SSo.EI Caminofteal wishes bou.'lework, 1u . Hartfelder, A .l,A. Bnab.541·21'13 -pb penonality. ntaet mediate~& in our &:Sun.Salaryncgot1able. cepOon lo fiekt use. We 1 San Clemente; Fully l.ic. ttt,live-in.B:J0..8833 Al'Ch.itec.'l. 1689'1 Algon· Bookkeeper. l.mmediate Cheryl btwn 2·$pm busy documentation de· CaU~lSforappt. want an individual who l _ _!~~~~·~Pr>l~-~""~:·~7296~-~.;o;;~;;;;i;;L'-7o;7. q\&a, Ste B. Hunt. Bcb. opmj.ng. muJU'<lffice in•· 1;';";';";;''';"";;;" ;;;;;;;I part.ml!!nt (or indtvidual Coob, DeUvery driven , wants lD grow with a ..lolKW......., 7075 Pb t 7t4 1146·0&77 or ·-hu opening rw lo· with some offi ce e1'· rreat te:am. Equal Op. ANITAformerl.)'of ;,::•••••••••;;;•;:.••••• IZIJ):WZ..l6l7 JRVINE dl'Vidual w/bookkeeping Q.ERJCAL perience Dr microfilm· :-!::i~ f:t~o'!,.! portunity Employer . GOLD EN TOUC JI c an .-;'Co=del Mar:i')'~ • ASSB•R 13~1000 nper. SMne im. exper. 6 PAV DAYS Ill&. personalities & tak e l~M~ll~t~·-"~7-~~""!'~~~ now be ....., Z9'14 Ref of i!!lec·mech device s "'"""".......-..'E h e 1Pfu 1 but n ° 1 11 pride In lbdr wo.-k. Over reached al 1'114lol96-3462 -·· . . ""' •vmv• ''" MCesaary. S.I comm. LEFT u~L .w.;1,1 ,"'..""",, m"°'·· ,,""".r1"1"m' 21 & able to work eveli. . N al .. Ride prec. Cln work, sm mrg •-"'UTOS.A.LES wlabtlity.Allcobenefita.' "'' .. ..., " MICHELLE'S state Cert. NW"Se'• Aid ro.Noexpnec. Forappl. .-Kalhy.SIMun .,.. ..... ,STMAS camt>ra,ttronterandre· S2.80 to S3.00tostar;t.AP· Dri•en w/e xper, look1011: for (Tiol )fHZ.8584 . OPPOITUNrTY '-"FWU lacedeq1.11pmenL ply aft Spm dally. Mc & Operate rmdern equip· pnv. duty patient. Moo· Busi ness is aood 1 &Dbo)' uperienced day Earn e-.:tra Chri1tmas If you are de tailed Eds F'anuly Pina Parlor menl & door t o door •Outc.al• J"ri,'1·2PM .CM/NB area Auembly -lite.Dependa-HOWARD Chevrolet tft poaltion. Apply in mooeynow! m i nd e d · with a o1_10E.t7thSt.c .M· transp.Callf.dnver11 h(' 11AM·2AM 835-3749 prel.C.llPatti.M&-4140 ~.aUlOaccnaory.C.M . the Oran1e County person. 611 Sl ~e py TYPISn mechanical ability we'll j;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;,;;;;;; req'd. No pri&r exper RIOE WAHTED: Babya ittinl· days. Chris· M&-lZU Aif1M)rt complex must HoUowLIJ.La1Bcb. PIX be willing to train )'OU. COOKS nee. Good dn "1ng ree it Deapera t ely needed tian home t to4 yn. s.c. I add three salesmen for ---IUSl--~0~,---•CCT'"' -us Weollcrexcelle11t s1lary mySL. No Sunday work. Ptua ~7171 _._.,s,~·.as EZ~M!ll•lea1e "' ..,.RUii. aodbendit~m. Now accepti.Dg applica· Or11n1e Coast Yellow M&n·Pri at 5pm from . -40 Generous pay! Opp. f~ PIT Apply . Le kEYPUMCH OPH licm.ror Cab, 17300 Mt. ll~r· m"""" •• A •M·'~,"a t?. c.•,d·· •• Want to be a Live·ln P~I SIOMl,,MECH,, advancement. Auto. ex· Biatnu. ,'f,~ort .... -"s TACO BELL DAY &:NITECOOKS rttulM, I'". Vly. , "' babysitter, hlekee per 05 ... ona ava w ast perleoce oot reql.dred but Blvd, Npc. Bch. ~Cl'.A Apply m person Grove. HELP. (f&r 1 ~ w/rm &: brd SUiette 8J'OWina Ne~rt-Beach previous aellinl helpfuJ. M\althavepbooe&rel.ia· J .P. MAC 'S Dodi: attdn't. rull timi·. rm'a ) SS.00 wk Call 96G-39ZJ ' co.,involvedmusembly HOWARD Chevrolet, BusDriVttSfotChrisUan bleU'aftsP.l.ong&snort· 17lllldH•A•f' RlliTAURANT JJ .20/hr .fb en eriti;. ~494"'!c·~7872~-~:r.==~~~~?.:~:J~~ oCrompaM•camer• un· Dove &i Quall Sl1. Kbool. We will train. Ap· term aaslgnmenl!I. Holi· lniatt,CA 9 27 14 101t2Adams A\·e . ."H.B. Pl.lb.lie contact.\ &: t»o•t ....... W'...... 7100 its. Applic~ntll 1houid es· Newport Beach. ply; 16135 Brookhurst, day le-vacation pay. Bcnerrt.a tn clixte pd vac., ex per. helpful. A6ply ••••••••••••••••••••••• per working wlamall -~-------F.V.113-'1131. Hospitalization plan Eclual()ppor\tmil)' t-mployee d iscount & Lait e Mission V\ej&. paru, good mech apt., & BABYSITTER &: L1 .1;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1 aYailaWe. £m""--r MI F health insurance. E.O.E. 22S 55 O'N ei 11 Rd ., A.CC~ en,Joy .Betlditaitlclixte 2 lbkprfor2bo)'s(l\'J&i41 ....,,..., 7»1318M/F. ~~e~~~dl Conlrct Wiling Asst weeks vac .• 1 week aiclt 71\M to4:30PM Mon·F'rl . l•ll11a Serric.H Pref acng. bk Ill pg or leave,&: prol'll. sharln& to $200. p/rm. 983-21612aft. 5 SW'IRYtsOI Clerk (or rrnnt desk. Must COO«WAMTED OONtrr SHOP, early Afll •-th bill! T k name a rew . Calll --~------""po n slble f o r ha"e cxperu~nct-NC I! El;pr'dlinecook:wantcd shl.ft ,f\.llltime,woman s ...... ,ama • y. fl · M7·9051, aslt for Ra)' Babyl;tterfor2chldm,7 for busy downtown Apply inperson,Dipp1ty The Dai I)' pi I o t Ul~ applications now, in· GUlman. &: 9, Mature woman . supe-;..sl:fi coordlnat· ll• C Ort 4200. Apply Mr McN eil Lagwia Restaurant. Call Donuts, 18.'W Newport HI, CTRllf.NISTM AS, GI f'T ~~..r,·1~~~,.,..start 12Jt /78.1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1 '1 : 3 0 . 8 : M' ••• m... ~-·;R ... ~·:~.·~· s•~J1· 41 .... ~g~~'ill ~:~~~a1.:.2~nsa rorappt. 494-9'1&5, ask for CM. \ ru stops or yourl:~~~~-~~;· ;;;;;;;;;;;; 2::.M:J)pm. )' m .. ......_ NlnaOC" Lynn. 1-"=-------s bopping coovenl.:nce HB. S10day. 9112-4814 . Ing It payroll functions ol CActou From r;"";;';";"·;'"';;;;·;ll;5;1 ;;;;;;i DRAFTSr.fAN t!"ery Wednesday si.art· ASSEM.BLY the district. Minimum Orange Co. Airport) COUNTER HELP ror dry COORDINl\TOR ing Nov. Utb thru Dec. Bab)'llitterwanted for 1 yr qua 11 I I cation s : F.qual()pport Employer cleaninl!: plant. 7AM to Newport Beach mfr. de 10th. CALL NOW ! AC'dng Bkkpn& old 1lrl, 2\'J wits full know~eofschooldis-Q.ERKS 2rM. co Hrs. guar11.n· sires a self ·st 11.rtl n~ ~ TEMPORARY TRAINEES Ume .S..$195 ttid practice•, basic 'te«l.552-ll22 highly motlvaled in· ~gist.er IClday to work principal ol accounlln&, l;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;j d i vi d u a I t o a :1a is 1 MASSAGE oa various a ccounting (OR EXPERIENCED) data proceuiDg apPlic•·1~ UJQTEM CCMal1'8 HELP enRineer & drawin" ' FIGUR.EMODELS a nd bookkeeping a•alrn· MICRO Banklna lioos&procedunit.$Yra Q.ERIC "'L P/time. dependable. 11 coordination product1&n menta. Work close to TRLERS ol tcbool diatrict bUli· II' OpenlnpNowAvallable to 3 PM . Capt Mike 's Plea.~cail Mr. Doering ESCORTS your home. Fl au re rk-*rOlll'cs ness exper la de1ired. Op~es ror full or p/tlme clerks FlsbFry&u..28'1s s.u.il:l!IO OUICAU.OMLY Clerks to Sr. Accoun-~ SJ.MS to •1'108 monthly. T on 2nd&: lrd sttills. No 1---,-~.....,..,...--::-:.,-l'"""-'"-'------o.p...,.._... ~ n=d tbru·out =~:: :;e~~t1 J?ft Immediate ~V~le~t·~: A mtior tile lmurance ~~~~~~~~ .. Zs~ Cl'T/Uf'HOLSTBY 0w'01rt:~~ r:~~~;o~: 631·2140 · ~~i.u·a poeiliOdll la our Produc· trltt, 11 Ll1btbouse company headquartered st managtta to 13.60 hr. CLIAHllt perience helpful or will GOLD9I GIRL Accoantempe tion Department. We will Opeftinnc. Lane, Fountain Valley, bl Newport Beach has Managento$.5.:i0hr. Ad· BeaeU\1, Appl)' 11o10 train.6&2-11143 $00S.Main,Ste501 train the rt1hl In· w~-corner New l a n d It opPortunties for In· vueementopportuniliesl,~"~"":;;""'~·;;·c~ai~;;;;;;;;;li~::0~~~~~ U-••v1-1 No.Tower,UnionBanlt dividua.11 ln the micro-1.t.1-Talbert. Pllin.1c&e.dlloe dividuallwiUtlkillall.Od tolboHwOOqualify.t'or Drapery all around -----.__ e1--• Ind •-Career opp1:1w. ... 1 ,.,,.,,.EOE aeneral otrice ex · drarn gJ.rl needed im · ~--:y:i In 1neQtyol0tao1e ~'-UICI wi .. ,,. 11 II --._ .., · · · · In o/ information go to our CUSTODtAH _ Prr or ..:."--r. p,,1 -n<i-•103 .., act ,._.. -l '""!'""!'""!'""!'""!'""!'""!'""!'~I perience I or more 1 .,.~,. "'__ ... ~~ ---...I!.-_. ! ~ • ~ -~ ·~r~~···· u neares '"' """'-'' N'"w--•~•onu•genUy older WDman Call -_".'.:~~~·-~~~r~~~:J~§~~;;~;;;;;1 Comprebenalve com· tlYI rt -• .... ....., ,_,_,,... .. e : tact the prnonnet 'offi ce ... -.. ·-, H . .., •• ~ ServlngallOrangeCo. pany benefit.a Including ;..r::. lllrllot ••· C"'"HIERS at n Y unt1nl{lon,;occ·.=-=·------7313 -~-••,a] end den ,.,;a •Word Proce11or-Beach Qty School Dlst. r DoN' AccounUni i.;'i~ea'i'ior a~piy i~ • ftosltl•• ... PwraaDeDt p/Ume open· \ypi,q 80-IS wpm from IJM2LampeonSt Ul2/rmnth. Apply '135 D~ER. 18 yrs old, full XXD•-•Of a 'M XX Jl•c-a.a• 09 .......... •••1111 .. blo. A11o hltttvlewtn1 did.aOI-GsrdenCrove~-4840 14th st .. J{untingt on lime.JUIW.CoaatHwy, ___.. rw .-""'-" r;:r•on. 52 ampua lo• Cb•I Im b I · •·uol~Employe• --~.--i. ~rtlkh . .. tlr I d I I •• rt Be h Oreo~• Ceooty. 1 •• e p. ..... ~ :uo::""" ~ ,...., .. ...., au u nu .. e R r s , 'The Jolly Roger (De. has ve, ~.ewpo ac • PreYioUll cub rtllaler daneeate:xhlbiuon•rap an entry le\'el opening (7.14)~. F.q\W Op. ~ ~-bllPI I A >l 1 -o.rk·'I')'pt6t DllYaS M!:l&ions. 9AM to olAM for an industrioua in-poriunlty Employer ;;-~~ • ..... ;!:!'on 10.lM t~c)M~ C.~Wtitnt1 Delivery Men, run time. Ii hetpera, upcr. (or Inc": every day. 2060 So. dividual locking for OP· mff/b. st••4l•t lt•••flts Qold.,,A~81woCllrehouse oGmeralOerb Scllool needed lot pany rental furn rmvln1t co, i-·1T . Euclid, Anaheim, exc1l· portunltycoarow. Must N :mo.....-uur Uni W b 1 d' t Earn~toAOoperwk. stores. Appl y 202$ Gordo n Movin g & ~~~ ... ~ br record in I be proficient with 10-key TRANSM~K ,..+,..~.,.. ...Wlo t>! Cata&ot Sbtiw1oOm b -e aveU mm• ... "rye Low tuiUon. Placement Newpon 81vd,C.M. St.orqe,768-0IKl . .....,. ._ adder. PoslUon t'alls for -'-w a an Eq uol Op port , · )'OU q · ···•·• 7Sl 9"4 1---------1='-='"':=="'--.,.,..,-filin1. audltin(l of dally· ;:;;, frlead y aalll ~ MIF. we off•• un'que Work· -· · · Otlivery rmn, over 18 for 10RJVERS for dental lab, Man. 39• Prof. to meet sales repart1 for our CORP ::"-*• lnceavtroament.lftadd.I· COLLEGE OR HIOll earty am newspaper lo PIT, must have valid tit• datu It friead•bip &: gmen1 dutlea. APPb' m .....,_.Ill ... , , ... bW, Evet fl ' fuU paoy betl.ell\1. Pltaae bomebo&d dutlea. Mon S3DOIMOO mo. + bonus. C.ll$f9.200:2. women for aft. &: eve. restauranl &: mlat. • ji'.'.OA ... Cuhier Cefic~· Ucm t.o eJ.ttUent com· SCHOOL GIRL, Ille NB It CM. Perm. pit. &: .ooct driviD1 record. ~o~~a~~r.-0Ad"274 person, 1704% Clilldte l~""!'""!'""!'""!'""!'""!'~~I fHM ''''' lwltles, time, Apfb OU\ , conhl<.t ' thr\I ft1 '3. b.r •• no smok-1 ~-~~~-.,:=:.:...:...:_:.::~1·=::.:::~~~j";---i~·~Y;~•;';'~· ~·~"°~'r·~"~·~· ......... ~~~~;E~~ IAaaill ..... HOUM Mt. .,.. -11 1lad .... o.c. A1rpd. iq, own lrltlll). Bis c.. J· ... ..,. .. U&O. Coata Me11a, CA "tA -, Pa 1 111 DJCm.,..NO-l.115 Delive17 FT. muat hav• D:pandlrulcoloOltinafor sme. RehbW. a-ti.IN~ • ,.,111111 ..... lty Ca. drlftl'I Uc It ad driv· Pl!Oll6e willlzli to work. ""-<ooltln• ,.....,., 30 lhllt ~mplex. lte C•ltlng : CATD..ING Dtpalwat C()ML.Tt-MOYllS Ins record . Call NMl.appear.Gooddriv· l'l'll.int.611'ow:adkfeP4:nl Prot...._ona1 ••ailable •IXftAS• Mart•ret tor appl. inl rec OYer 11. Co . ~:~t~,~~e~~c 1/:!a~ ~~'R~lou:: f714tf7)..J124 twaUe...,..affatn. PACIFIC needed lmmed. by i ~"°"'~~'°~·-----vehlck!a.12.85 per hr + «·1$411 ;;rc;..: No up rtq, Btr\Mdln StrYen MUTUAL Holb'wood cul.Int dlrec:· Dental incentives. Call Mark WW train. Jbr 11pt. Nr waL$ ca.-.•Ct•wa Cookl ton.-..o,25-40.fa,6 CHAIRSIDEASSIST. 7$1·3111 s~~~~: ~No La1una . FARGO. r:::_:g 1QONe=Otnt.r '~ii:-:.~a~O~ X·~Ut,M&.JIXJ1 Self ·h)'pao1la lape1 All Aboard ror thre Dally 1;;;:;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;1 ffoss*,all)'lteaouttet NewsiortBeaeh, CA-.0 DWMI type. Holdinl ln· DENTAL SECR_.,,.AJlY/ S.0.510a. Pilot t1fRISTMAS Olrl' 11 IANI W.TWMdlll,Ste• C7W)MO-za ~ Ul1s w• ('2141 BKKPR. Salary Ol'G · ex· Men or wom11n is Yrt 0t ~~='------ITRAIN. For more tn· MMmoUv. =---Ne:wpool18tadl I -1 111 ;124o1 . VIDEO pe r or (Dlleafl CM older. Know the coa1t &.ineu executive «Ml· format ion. call a MICHAMCS --Eeual()ppononlt)' CASTlNGSERVlCE Mi-30ll0 dU•.Net•llO•weM:or pie, •vall to bou.teait Jan Chrt1tma1 Ad·Vlsot at Autotmllve 6 Ute but 40 a.II C..-111..... 711-I U "-zw MJf' l::::':::-:':':::O::-"'."'. __ .'.':"'" l·---:---::--::-.,,--1 more. Orariae· Cuaat 1 lhru Feb u. X!nt "f'1, MJ.Sl'JI "'" l~""!'~~-~~~""!'~1C011PANJON lntereaUn1 DENTALASSIS1'ANT Yellow C.b, l7JOO Mt., CaJl t'Ompany'1 Calif. mtintt••oce. Oranae . _._ Wllll'I¥ ......_ I; • )"IU' oil Lady. Am· Oral....,,. olc, dent.al Herrmann, Foufttaln • brw:h,l'JS.4340. A.mbiUcM eouplet •ant· <W. Y.UOW C.b, 17aJO II()• OS',:._-? MOTICI bulatorJ". f.7 hotln 2·3 ••per nee. (ull·tlinc, Valley. t No of !Mater lft1to1~nt.famlly Mt. "-mama, ra.talD • Mir ...... Oiir how D'""h. PUot CJua. dQaper""'"*·D•\lfhler H.B.ICl.-W betwn Newbopa • Wanted: Hypnotist ea. tocom. an a f~ or pert Valley. <No of Bi•l•rl~~~~~~~~~I 1'*'1lttlllDP11 1n.d :4: dlsPl• UMW worka da1 lime. Call ~lkl) perl...c.d in Rep"e8tion Ume buta. £am from belweea Nawbope • You doa\ ..... • I• fW•ldta•Dllll PUat ....... "1di a/Cl:bWl1 "41·1172 day &TS·1312 Dental orfleel eJ1p. I-!~~~~""!'~~ of P•at UYe1. Man~ llG>-$400. C.11 for an lili· l:llelld.). ''draw , ••• Wtwii ,_ ........ lllr9dGrJ ta.w --· 0..,-Ma n ..... Cdlt. e!llalrtkte RDA. X-ll_, I· Wth.e.A.C. c/oTbe Dal ·tr.1ft','7M711.. place u Id la u., DeU7 • tM ·,...111111 1 II _.. tnUd .O aQ nluJ lie. t hwted buar, office, Drul Cletll·Al•l M1r. Pilot Boa lHG, C. · PUD&W-MllCUI-..._.,, 1'or •n •· i•t ,•••Ila Pttonelllll\Nqafut•IUllD Top 1al. blta.tta. HB o.n.Ues,liftl•~. W.Adtal, tlltAdl Ca.llMl-1171 Adi IG·'"8 _....,., .. 1\»caD .. -. NNITI. ' PUotWm.Ada. IDTm/1151.!91!= Eapprl'Hl.llOomS. ... .. -I • • ·-. . ' • . .......... • t . . .. . • . ... ~· ·-~,~-·--~,---~,-·,-~~···-·-· . I • 1 _.q ___ DAll__.-... v_Pt_Lo ... r ______ !!U!!f ...... .-... ... ~· ~..;.;;.. .. ,...-;;;;;..;;S0.~1.;;;m;.;.. ~~!!~ ..... ?!!~ ~~~~ ..... ?!~~ ~~!!~ ..... ?~!~ ~~~~ ..... ?~.~~ !~~~ ..... ?!.~~ ~--~~~:! ..... ?!~ Help W..e.4 710 W_... 71 H M• W-.4 1t00 M•un womtn for part ----------------Sem<'C! Station Attenda11t •••• .. •••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •• ~T••••••••••••••••••• Urm ... kMplnU°b. •· •)IU nme. Dau· -2 •d• 11J~ A11m•hn OlRLCOOK ,.._....,,Cool ~·0 ~=k~rp. M IECOYINC CUii Sales CoutHwy,Cd .,0 DlvenlftM welt« load tn AN . Moa·P'ri Ltte houuk .. pln• • K Orttvnv111 ... S1nt1 AT l':ASf': IN VASlllON ISLAND n. LOO« Set'vi(le Stat\on AUtnd .. mlfa laatrumfol.I Ad TU7UJor84'790t took dinner. M.f'. Ana Known for European r Dshions Flt or PIT,, 111 ahltt.. vaM"t IOMUC'I, ma V•c · --~ Baby elt I boy II Ntr.WPOICT Hfl:ACll th h So h C rught mir Jna pd T~ l.clf11,C.M 41461115 aoctrl ~~!..-~. '-iv~ Ytt Mu1t havt' uwn Mrchanlr VW •:wlH'rt lfua u lull llm\• o pt•nl11g in its roug out ut em a lookinj( for 2 wqe.1Drl1htpeni.ca.u .,_q---... ..,, trampnnatlon Rfl rt'q 'WI ref 1 wantf'd Slartillll 1 1 1 t t u ''" to • 30 or 3 8Jtf{ress1vc faflhlon oriented ladies rorlntervlew831H541. EJ«ll'Oftln motlvatll(turlodivlduel 7•111111hft81)m II fl()OOtl40(1 1Mnlhly, re•('(' \I nu ( l'JHlf mt•n ' n ~ .,: ' WhO h ave U definite fas hion -TIA1t• w/front o rice •P itep.ndtntC o n n Mouduy lhrou.ih 1ritt1n y. ba ckground & hav<! management S"i u~ia.c.-·~ PNJ' tor ooe litl Qf tnneedof3ktoy auo<·l•l• ..,.. .. ,.... mt :Mtt r LIAll CALL '44-I070 We.._.,, potnntial. We have a·mm ...... late full & Service Station Att.endll\l 11t Shell Station ' llert1 Rent ·l ·C•r In So. Laguna. Full lime, perm. Job w/fr.lnr<I' bendllll. 49Ml41, 32.142 So. Coaat Hwy, So. fl<'e ,,..*"' bkpt ~llp to tw'lp mr ln an Hpand -.;;.;...___ A•k frn Nml<'v W1lMl'll "" ~ ek!rt es l'O w •Int n Abllily to handl• 1q .,_...,.... UnUmll~ Medic•.!. pt lhN r.r .. p part time positions nvatlable. belM'f ft work~ cond = • ocher vanOUt tncoome., Call ~ '"" .n Uanilt Clrl Frtcl1y for @) (g ~@) ~ ~ Salary + comm + co benefits. lna w ~':. "~;~~ ~t:=.H.~n':a ""~·fT$Tt!G.\ ' ~°'~:..~~rev~ 0 CJ e> c:> ° Cull for appt Mon thru Sat 10am·6pm t'llP ~·o AP9l>' LAHK pnlfttlromm 11\lt'f'VI w lHSPY'.cTOR TKAINEE dJ<'al lKk&md. M V THI LO()t( P..NC1INtlF.RlNO. IN W will btt S.l 10.r:n tpm \0 •••m •ll uh.._ of to I 7 ~ u lnhioO 1t1Md newpart center 644·5070 I 6444100 La&Wl8. • llllbSl.NtHM.a,aac» On.Jyquahn.dappbcanll 1pecll<M1 'Mu1l pau --c.U •n ror appl Sal1ry ph)'AJcal • t>.ck IL r1y M«lk&l ~iootal , aJ ~uuelc A.au_.I n d1pHd1 on 1b1IH1 lrvilw ~'JG f. 0 E lffaitt. front ulrlr11 I.Ito Oht'rtlflt'd work ICMld ln IJTUOM I N S U t. A T I () N lypln •• ull Ortoda ' male lnatrun~nta Ad IJll'iTAU.Elt.t,. l'\all llnw Oi3(>'9() P•TE.UP ReaJ Dute Serv St.a Help needed Im· med. Full or pit. Apply 900 E.Catllwy, N.8 . •o-..-..-A•UR-.. -..,..,.---SEAMSTRESS (com· Shl,.u..a....tory vane IUnrtkt . lZ:ll Vir Orul opportutlltY tn In lmd work Rivt'nl<M! al\d MEN W/TKUCK8 Dr'HRN l-Ona.C.M N-7 IM crene yoor lnrume 1n Orat11 Co area Xlnt WAN'J'1'!0' rUl.JU t-.l('('troolc pa,.. LI Call ror opt ror Jouriu•ym n Jmmed OJ>t'f\11\1• ror tO with at leut 1 y .. r , •. SICUTUY to Man•fer 1n Real E•t•le of lee. lmrood. open1n11 Y.icper. re· qwred cau 496 an.3 tor ~· "''' merc1a1> to work at Sportswear mfg, ateady. COUNTER borne 6U-29'll good pay. Mi-3472 M>U>atMCI •Jlpl,W .;;;..;.~--Waa eboY9 1C.'a~ Xlnl men w/lnackl. for rttlnvt pt1rltnrt. ptef~r1bly llARNt~TYrt~ C'cunpan7 b t notll1 "'p/Ume worll. Mu11t ~ new11paper. f.•Ulldnt •---------•Stock Clerk wanted, rull Hnp Sumstreu needed Salls tune . CoaaUlne Health by Schock $01 29th. fil Foods, 548-9637. ~YWllabop t:usll Mn• G-R·&.A·T Ada m a ln1ul1tlon ln•oudpbytlralcond No l'Ompany ~lta Apply Qimp1any tw~Ollt SALi$ J OI HO W "511111 t'JCP MC WIU tram Call btllwecn 111\M • 6PM. R'rAL~CUNA NIGUEL Newport Beach, 67~1823 &COOKS ST()CJ( room and lnvefl· Seamstress needed. full tory control, part Umo, or pt·Ume. good pay. ex· musl be ab!~ w handM! per prerd. 631·4660 or overage cartoo weight of ,...._..., ,........_, 675-SOM.. 7• lbs & be capabl~ of ~ d11y W-Ofk ~ OfltH f'hut'k 884 3418 • M~y thru Friday. ::,7ARTSALARV OrKN GUOP PAV 0000 1Mf9fTOIY NOONAIU~ UA&.toa ~00: fortryuul UOURS, COOD C'ON COMftOLCl.. W•ot«I for Hu Middle --------i 0 I T t 0 NS M A N V t-:u •ltlft" QPportunlty In Sc_hool_M&-_343'1_ l'J.-rtroolc-. FRINGE Rt:NF.1''1fS od., 0 Co t'AS'r GMWtNO <'OM nP• 101 rae•• NW'11('11 AkJtll. a 11. ru11 • ELECTRONICS TECHNICIAN lmn..-du1te oprnmits and oppo rtunll1 ~s In an 1•iitabh1hed t•o In tht' Oranao Counly 1111rpUrl .,, ... Apphcanta tu IJ'OIJbl.-snom. repair. »nd W!<l tlt'l.1torur systt·ms ltecent t1n11lo g 11ncl d1a11al eicl)fnt'Me pr.-· lt:rred Call M7·0419 l'ANY PRO MOT 1':s hrm Mu1t be abl~ to pt lime Jo:•p rienred t,ype, file, • do In houae '3 S4 br Trainees ac fROM WTTlllN TKAIN follow u111 SaJery S700 & ceplt!d Meu Verdt• ~ A ON ARG E TM ~) N ~ up dependlnl on n Conv llosplt a I. 861 •" T ... R T '". . t .... p~rteort-OUe1r1 ell Center C M ·~ " " ..., Ct'Jk'nt rMd1ca_I ~ema __:.. -----Mt:() I AT F. I. V ' Apply in Ptlrton. Put NW"¥lllA __ ~:;,,VE~? tN~· ~ Miiia SCI ENTU'I C .... SUAIOI m ;1.PF'UL Wt! HAVt; ORILLJNO CONTKOl.S. 3-11 St.au '"~rtll1cd only OUR OWN TRAINING 4040 Ca mpu it Or . $4. hr Hohday bf'ncf ri«>GRAM pu·r ON HY New~ort Huch. CA. av1tll lmmed Bayv1uw TIIF. COUNTRY'~ TOP E.O '· Conv, ~ Thunn. C.M 0 R G A N S A I, 1:! ~ 642--3.'IOS E.0 E. PEOPLE CALI. AT J ANITOllAL NURSING 0 N c J,o; F 0 It Full lltnl' l'UiilOd1ans. ....... ~ ;...;;;.~---;;..i.-...;;;;;;;~...j INTEHV1£W ORGAN Nwpt area. d•)'·4'Vtl0lnl( "• .... • EXCHANG E . STAN ahUta. inual be U.S ""' ,.... fl11:row5ecy $1200 NUNN714/~7302 clUIC'n Good w11ges. pd LVH"SorRN'S Mf'l11 J>ayuble S900 ----hohtlayg & bonu." lnccin· Above averafe wages & Ht'ccpl 1100 I Uvea Wiii train. C.11 health bene lt1. Apply PIT AC'd.s Pay lawhr ~1•d1 Wort&er days (714 )~M.~ N Jo: WP 0 RT C 0 NV Please Call For Appt Gr'OUJ)(bi apnnklcr man ----CENTER. lSSS &tpcrior Irvine Penounel Mtency needed by llununiclon Labor a t o r Y A 1 d . Ave, Npt Bch. 488 E 17th. Costa Mesa Beach City School Ols I Knowledge of lal>?'alory suite224 642·l470 tnrt. $931 rm. Apply 73S procedures. E•p 1n OfflCl~SmOH -----....14th St.. Hunllnl(ton phleboto my Call Job secunty. advance· ~-----Beach 5J6.#18Sl Margaret ror appl. ment, informal environ· EXTrtA CHRISTMAS ~0140. menl. first class medical MONF.Y & dental plan, profit OF.MONSTRATORS GUAIDS WAHT£D Landscape sharing. Bring us basic Fr1d&yt1 & Saturdays fUll or pl ume 2 yrly Must-have experience in lypinF. skalls, attention to 10 6 near your home rallies, Apply 610 K 17th interior plant ma an dctal . abiUty w show up 71417~5.'>73. St.Santa Ana. tenance. AnaheimfLA on Ume and we will tram route available. Mon for a variety of ac.-. f'-E M AL E F:-; c t or y Halrdrcisser w/following. ,.'rl. Southwest lnlenor Uvities, We are a strong. ~COAST DAILY fltLOT 642-~ 330W S.ySt. Co!!LaMdl Equal Opportunity Employer ---,. .... Set-Yk • Evenina •'IT days PIT Muat t)'pe. bener & E 0 E Cell 84MOOO .. or realtor aasoelate. have need for 3 •ct.Ive 11leaperaoo1. desiring aucceu. ..... f • .., lftlWfs llYetn XJnt comm. Ir faclUt1es For app't. ~II &'4·1133 Aak for John. Kathy or BilJ RE CE I VING & PBX MARKI NG STOCK Answering serv ice C.1..E RK Full lime pos QPeralOI' full & PI T Call Muat 'have exp. with 835-3.'161 hw'dware merchand1Se PBX OPERATOR Apply in person. Build & ., _. ....... '"6ffoM ---------' ma inuloing stock rt• ......... A9e II cw SECRETARY corcitl Startlng $3.llO hr. ................... Ne.ti Pryde Sails, &u-4501 to $1000 Student for pl·tir11e clenral work, 20-30 h111 per wk T1ce's Rentab4, 1930 Newport Blvd., C. M. We off9r-CJOOd pey Fantastic POl 1l1on fnr 9ld ~ btMftt1 a. person with s uperior ~ ,........_ sick skills for expaodJ.nK c;o ....__ __... L...Jlt...t-near OC airport. Xerox _...., ..--_ .. ,,, ~experience •al claco.h .ct od-752-2377 SW.VtSOlt t N I <NOON> y a" c e •• • op . ewport Ser re ta r1 a Ur"cnlly needed by llu" portw11Uea. Serv1c.. " ·• ---------• t1ngton Beach City School Oislnct. I 2 llou,... per day, $3 S7 per hr AP· ply, 7M 14th St., Hunh 111gton Beach ~1. · , SECRnARYI Ortlllge Co Arprt a rea. Grow, 181.0Z Culver Or. Inter busy 1w1tc hbrd. Irvine F/T & P/T s hift.a 1:! 0 E --------TE C H E M"'ny '--nef. ray accord · ReceptJoru.at-Secret.ary T S«ret.anes A R P R I!: Need u lt-starter wt good lYJ>lDR & SIH s.k1lls for .)Ob w/lots of vanecy 10 Irvine MO 7~. E 0 E .. "" Corporate beadquarten. aco M BuJU B ok SCHOOL Ing lo exp. 546-3333 or for commercial real &)Or on r eraie Cert1f 1cate or eJC 1133-3333 Firm seeks exp. outg0tng estate firm has an up de c 1 persons for new omce in penence. Hours 2 to 6 PEOPLE PERSON oorrung opemng for lO· ar OS N B Typing reqwred. Moo.·Frl. $2.IM> per ho"r Bus man seeks PIT as dMdual with excellent Send resume & salary re· 64()..6820 soc In Whl supply . recepUonial/secretanal 210 lri1toe qtarement.s to Jo' N.M C. T--1....1-1-T-i---skllls. Brand new lrvme COSTA MESA o e __. ........... 63l·S588 offices. Good benefits ""~ual Opply 111 n ckell Ave Ste. OpUcallmechanical 4' Permanent part·lil'Tlll re· Co n l a cl M on 1 c a E°iriployer M/ F 8()tj Mia mt.. Fia 33131 cahbrallon technici:111. lief office m»nager. Ex 714·~1313 ---------Secretary·Rec:epUon1s t Mu11t have met.al work· elusive motel In Laguno Exp. full tame, phones. Ing :i.hop exper. Great OP· Beach. Work Fr1day11 & ltlCB'TIOHIST ~'1RoglrMop good typing ~kills . porturuty Ill rapidly ex·. Saturdaya.494-8521 lmme d opening in Wome n n eeded for Pleasant acti ve real pandmR company. Call pleaaant surrounding HouaeclearungServ. estate development of· _De_lt.roru __ c..:.,_s._S-0403 __ . __ PRE-SCHOOL Must be abfe w greet the 5'f8.(YIS7 lice. Orange Co A P. ---------TEACHER public & ans phones area 833 2237 For 4 yr olm. perma· Neal appear. pleasant &i1l Loll hand workers ror · nent.~dys548·3771 personality & It secy Hood Sails. Women & Seeretary sluJls reqd. $700 & xlnl Men welcome MK·3467 ADMIMISTRA TIVE TECHNICIANS Workcn; $2.90 per hr to 70'4 or rental space S3S Gardens. 714/S57·01SO. establlahed. growiol( 11tart Merit ra1s1•s . wk . CdM Ca ll cvs U.rbara. smallcompanysellingw 541t·Sl2S. 1SZ1 Monrovia 544 1796. Landscape llelper. Exper music stores throughout PrtnUni Ave.N~ _ llmrSlyllst in lndscpg/masonary the world. Start$650 .... & benefits . Call Margie Sa1lmaker needs stock SEClfTAIY 759--0909for an appt. girl. Near airport. (TREASUftER> See our ad 1n today~ cl;.ist1 tC1 e d under CLl!:RICAL/MICROFI LM PROCESSOR. FIMAHCE ca. AssL w11nt.ed at M 1chacl he If u 1. n 0 n . s m k r ~°lit~ :~o %~ da)'ll. needs MANAGER I g:i~~·ri~~7~ulttng 962 7817· PAYABLES, BILLING 'fr111m-e. IWq1.Dres ablllty Legal Sect 'y to work1n COMPUTER. 10.KEY w/f1Hures &cons1dcrable Health •·ood Store n~s1 Santa. Ana. Heavy typ. INVENTORY EXP. ,·ontact w/publtc 1n pt·llme Clerk. Xlnl op. 1 111g, phones Short hand CAN BOOST 1*n1on & by phone. AJ>· porturuty for a mature req Call Mari:nrel for STARTlNG PAY prv'd for vetenins O.J T. person who eHn work appl 64().0140 645-6630 in Nli Apply in person. 1'ac1fic Fri, Sat, Sun, approx JI! -I Fin ance Co 13.233 hrs.548-7751 Live.In. middle aged OfficeManager·Sales Harbor Hlvd, Garden --·----woman w/ch1ld OJ(. tol Good opporturuty for ad· Grove Homemakers come to babysit for rm & brd vancemeot. Wllltrain/no - ----work part tune w1lh Ex 498-1241of\6PM experience necessary. l"umiture rel1mshlng re I t•c•ut1ve llome (;a r c Must be 25 yrs old or pair Pickup & delivery Services & use the skills older & be avail. on 646-386R you already know. Maclurusl Snturdaya. SS'li..0824 or General rr II 968-00.SSleavemessage I GEHL MACHINIST 774. ·6090. 1525 Mesa o ice. cavy NODUCTIOH Verde #206, O>sta Meaa. phones Typmg. f1hnf(. Ha:ITESS, days and even 10 key adder. Good mg&.exper .. mature. full Exp w/stalnless steel. Packers & Material phone manners es!Wn·I u~ apply 3300 Pacific Top .wag es & full handlers for plastics t.1111. Small mfr. Salary Coa~t Jlwy, NB. btwn benefits , fabncaUon plant. Apply comrrw nsurate w I ex· 19 l2nooo · Orthodync F.lcct.rorucs In pl'rs. J<'a brl ca terl penence. Call for appl. 1599Supenor, CM PlasUcs Inc, 8U W Ulth 642·1!116 Ho11less /cash1er. e x 646-1616 St.C.M. -----perlenc·ed, AM 11 h1fl, __;_ ______ _ GIHE:AAL 0FC Rlue Dolphm. 335.5 Via MAC H IN 1 ST I AS Painters. knowledgeable for pt~raphy ~tudlo, L.ido,NR. SEMBLER. Newport ~ad~.' A~I~=~~~ Yo~ ~hx~ 1-'/T pris. Lt typana & Ilk· Beach mlr of food pro· pcrience. Call 642·2928 kpg _<.;aU~a840 -llOTEL cesslng eq1.Dpment needs between8·30AM·4PM General office. late book· I DESIC CLBI( qu11llfled person with all · · kt:ep1ng, good phone tull & part lime immed. a~ machine shop ex· PAINTER, ex per a nd per!lorudaty 64!°>-6525 penenec Must have own mature. part time. $5.00 ___ --openings. Advaocemenl toots,. l'lease call Mr. per br. Must be neat & GEHIERil OFFICE appty. Apply 10 person Doenng 642-9090 clean, 67~9518 fubnc rmport firm in T HE IRVINE HOST Mu1s1on Viejo ret1wres HCYfEL, 1717 E. Dyer ---------i;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;.; u1•t>uratc ty1>1!.l for .Rd_ .... s •.• A______ PAIMlll J:t•neral oCfice/orde r ---------MACHIMISTS To perform 11killed level dt"1k Pref. M~saon Vie· ---------work in preparation & JOI Irv area. S /11, or HOTEL Marhlnlsts e•perienced painting of varied ex· ~pt.>eilwnllng helpful. 40 HOUSEMEH 1 n 8 n >' Ph a s e 0 r terior & interiur aur· hr week . company F\Jll & part lJme open· (.;oldbcading contact faces. 4 Yrs exper as lJcncf1lJI r·~ II Hel"n or 0 E S U T S C H i n ~ •-desl ....... .,..... to "" "' ings Advancement opp. o · d ( 7 l ~ ) '"' ·~ ...... Tonyat11n2922_ A I i h ceun111 e ... .. mo . ~plv In .... ty. pp y n person. T e 7 7 oo I # ----75 . 5 or wr te. r:-· fount Valley General <Xf1ce. Accurate IRVINE HOST HOTEL, 0 E U T S C H C 0 . ,...,.. l It I d A 1717E.DyerRd .S.A Munic ipal Airport. chool Dial rlct. lll yp n requ re . ns. Ughthouse Lane, Foun· telep one. n on·amkr ---------Oceanslde,CA.92()5.4. Lain Valley, corner µrd S alary opcl\. ---------Newland Ir Talbert. t-'al· Airport area. 649-2400 HCYfEL F.qual Opportunity ing deadline Is 12/4178. -- -HIGHT E:mployer M/F E.O.E. GENERAL LABORERS TRAINEE ~SEMBLERS PACKERS Must h ave r eliable Lranap. & phone. Looi( & AUDITCLBIC Good oppor for reliable penon w/an aptitude for numbers & calculalor KklllB. NCR 4200 exper preferred. Enjoy l(ood t.'Ompany benfits. Apply 9am.Noon, Monf Fri penlOIV\(' I. MAllRIOn HOT&. llOO Newport Cent.t'r Or Ne¥1J>Orl Beach F.quaJ Oppor Emplyr 11hort term u111gnmenl8. ---------llolidey & vacation pay. HOUSECLEANERS & flospltsllullon plan HOUSEWJVF.S. we have 11valli.ble. work for you I Ca II VOLT I I """""' Jtt --.ft• .... II,.. lie t •, ~28.'ll; 968.2810. llowiekeeper, live l.n or qut. some D\glu1h req'd, tiood w/chlldre.n · 3 yrs & 9 m :>'s. Leg NII(. 8.11-7368 eves. Maids wanted, top waget Part-lime Warehouse paid. The Inn at La1U11a. hels)er. Mecb'I inclined. 211 N Cst Hwy, Laauna Excel. for college stu· Maintenance Mechan1c. dent. 982-3637 hn 7am·3:30pm. hr SS.$0 p a rt . t I me Le g a I hrstart. E.0 .E.549-3281. Secretary. Excellent --------•I spelling, grammar and MAIM1'84AMCI Mag II experience re· C U S T O ~ I A N q'-'red. Deluxe Newport ($757.020> PLAN · oHlce, Airport area. NJNG/CO·ORbJNATOR &la~ co~naiµ-a~ with ( $ 1 3 9 2 • $ 169 4 ) expenenc:e.20to25houra MA I NT I p Lu M 8 ER per week. Cont.act mane ( s 1 0 6 l • $ I 2 9 5 ) I _63&-__ 5300 ______ _ MAINT/ELECTRICIAN rAITTIMI m~i~~hl'J~ ii":i $3.~ hr. Mon·Frl, 9·3. ($1009·S1229 > Apply Deh Clerk. 549-lA.22 Newport·Meta Uollied ,AITT1ME S c h o o I D i a l r I ct , Dell C&erk S3 ID $4 hour Cliwtned Peraonnel ()(. 549-1422 ' rice, Mon/Wed/Thur Ir ~-.;.._ ____ _ 11 k t'ri, 9am·l2 Noon. TuCl8 'All TIMI wanUld. working mother, N Be h "-_... PHOTO TYPESETTER/ PASTE-UP ARTIST Recept1on1s t lmme d . 979-1483 MaJOr real eslate de opening, lg ins. agcnc> veloper. based an lrvtnt'. seeking energetic Sales seeking an expenenced person. m~t be eager to ELLEN CARTERS 1nd1v1dual to act a s learn, walling lo work l.adleshaberdasher secretary an our ex· wt people & able lo han 131 Cashion laland Mall e<-ullvf' orrit'l?b The ideal die phones Ul bus)' ofc N B. Now inlervlcwtnR candidate will have, 2 4 All co beneflt.s. Salary exp.salespenion yrs 11ecretanal ex ,.._ ...a. u.. 1-1-comm. w/ab1l.tty. Kathy Sal-pen,nce with goOd usaJ(e '-'PPD~ "' ow -549-8161 ""' ol Englis h grammar e ho11H prhttl•g .ad ---------•·abncexpen ence must lh addition the CJI 1phlcs dlpe lwnt. Recept/Sec'y, r:eal estate __ necess ___ a_ry_64&-__ 4040__ qwal.tfied Individual must knowledge req'd. Lie Sales be highly .orgaru.zed. de ~lllUIHllh: E x-pref'd. Res1denllul real LOVEPEOPU;? tail minded & be able to lft t est. olfc. F\JIJ time. Jn. Have some sales o r workunderpressure w~ eRCe ,., ..., qulre963-0002. medical background, oHcr an ouls land1ng mMI typlftcJ 40 wp111 _;... ________ Demonstrate face & compe nsat1onl beneC1l •• ,_ Receptionist wan~. at body ma•uaaer In pre package. Xlnl l)'J>tnR a M1cnae l G1r ruon 's ""' .. / h d 1 stage dept. st.ores. Com-mus t w eavy C· Excelle11t co•p•RY Haircutting Salon . mission pot e ntial t aphonf' & S/H not bl1Afll1. ,.._.-..a.. _642-0t __ 7_o. ______ $2000+by Chrnstrnas n ecessary. F o r im· TACOl&.L TB.EPHOME SOLICITORS Expen enred Only. Sell Daily Piiot, Highest com - m1 u ion paid. Your phone al home. Onr 21. 1 o. Card. Call ~sa. l·3P M Tow Truck Onvers ex· per'd. Top pay. Apply G&W Towing, 7408 Otum Way, C.M. 642·1252 TOW TRUCK drivers needed Must have exp & live an CM 646-9638 -rrr Start lm~dlalely. Call medwte roruuderat1on. tit: RELIEF NITE Dawn. 213/381 3906. please submit r esume. rtn SETTElt 0 complete with 11alary h1~ AUDIT R 5 a 1 e 8 N 0 tory lo, Gena Mew fUll or P/llme. Will tram NCR 4200 exper. Also QUALIFICATIONS <'X Aetna Realty Group typist. 004!0 wpm. Call Dapalwnt PACIFIC MUTUAL Desk Cler~operu.og. Im· ce~ desire for lh1s ex· 2082 Bus~ Center Or. Terry 64S-61 I l mediateoperung. Call for 100 I 927 " cc lent opportunity for 11 · rvtne 1.. Volt>\ Parkin .. Attendant, appt, Roger Markland, 97"'1""" " &4S-4Mo high income . cas h """"' f e male appli c ants boouses and bener1t.s m Affirmal1ve Action welcom:. 644·54;04 bctwn 100 Hewporl Cetlhr Cos l a M es a a re a . Employer 9am·Jpm. R ettardless or ex· _________ 1 --~---- Ort•• Hewport leoch, CA R. E. Sales "Lie. OnJy " THll«IMG OFACAlllEI IN UAL tST A TE? perience, write G .L Wa1ter·Waitress Eiq1 Read. Box 696. Dayton. •Secre•"""BS * Pnvate Country Club in 92'60 C7 14J640.3521 Ohlo4S401. L411 N 8 . Cull fot appt GenJ Of c/ Pegboard S 12K 644·5404 · Free training lfyouquaUfy. • SALESPERSON. ag· Employers Pay AJI Fei!s gresstve, POSit1ve al· Uz fteinders Agency Wa1tre11s & Pau:a help. .... Opp•~ ...,tazerM/F Cal 1714) "1.0660 lltude. f\ill or pit. Ex· 4020 Bal"<.'hSl, Ste 104 8 JO·S 3024 2 Crown per. or will train Apply Newport Beach. 833·8190 Valley Pk way LaguM in peraoo, Standard Shoe Call For Appt/ f)sU.b '64 N1gue..:...'•·------ Store. CM• 3077 So WOODWORKS. exper'd Bristol. lo help wllarge product lane. Apply 1n person ,_.odlctlOll T,.._ USIOEMT AIDE Rubber hose producta. Prefer 21 & over. all SALIS SECRnARY Irvine area. Musl pass _shift.a __ • 63_1_.asss_____ &J61Uoo in district sales company physical in· Resllw-anl TACO BELL. otfice,onegirl,locatedm eluding back uay. Call Laguna Beach, needs re· Garden Grove. Reqwre for appt, 540-7639 E 0 E. liable full & part time 60 WJ>m typing, 80 wpm day counter help. Apply short.hand. 3 to 4 year'!! f'llOGltAMMB/ In penoo, 699 So. Coast experience preferred. --·T-Hwy,LegunaBeach. good benellts . Cal l --~ -714-1198-~ Are you an IBM sy1tem ------------------111/U computer operator RESTAURANT ~les wanting a chance to Wholesale Nurs e r y learn program mini' ARE YOU TIRED OF A Represeni..live wanted The right candidate will DEAD ENO JOB? for Indoor Plant Sales · learn our operallon11 Ir Knowledge of indoor become halt time OOYOULlKE plant material & some operator-·half time DEALING ules uperlen<'e r e -prottram~r. Prior pro-Willi PEOPLE, quired.. Call (7J4)747-4540 gramn\lng expenence or for 1ppointmeot. Sal1ry education desirable! but WEAREWHAT pluacommlas1on. not required. Pay t II be YOU'RE Sandwich man. exp, FT. con;i~naurwat.e w th exll LOOKJNG FOR... Apply in person, Gary's penence. e are a we Deli,~ E. Coast Hwy. established & growlnf( At J ack Jn The Box we CdM Orange County COrp with ---------excellent working condl· have da)'. night •nd tlom It benellt.e. Apply In gravey1rd openinga, full penon or 11end resume or prt-Ume · with aalary hl.ltory : HOM~MAKERS n. Joly ICM)lf' a.c I'.• 17042 ..... AYe WELCOME! lnttlt, C. 92714 S3.004a.50/hour atartlna Mtm J.M. Colttf' salary. Over LI apply In 17149546-0Jll peraon et any ot the followlnl COSTA MESA Secretary SECRETARY El Toro I S addl e back Wood P r o d u c t b , 2 4 8 1-: . Eme r s on. Ora n ge . 631 5001 WOOD W OrtK I NG ro1ltlo11 req uirH a TKAJNJ<~P.. top pay, ...._ of I Pf' b9ftldng Ma<.'Gre.ror Vnchls, J631 ..--.& ~ Placentaa,C.M. e...,......f'wee, ........ , to type 5 5 WrM and Woodworker, experience L I d f reqwred. Chance to go sofM altOW • CJ9 o for with ~rowing com· •• aCCMmh dttJnd. µany. Good wagu11 Ir l"dh•ld••I 111111+ b • company hencf1t". Apply Qlatonltr ori...t.d and tit :t!Ol W. M;.icArthur, ... loy wortd wt I• _s_·llll_w_A_n_a_. ---- belly, tn..-, offke. If Yard Man, rental center yo11 wkh to explon hSL"' operuni:s for 2 men. thh opporh1tlty rooch knowh'<lge helpful, nc11t handwnting nee. fwthw yoM •Y COft-Weekday orr. wur train. tact the _per10Hel 1930Newport Ulvd, C: M .... by ~ Mtrch••M 1714)973-3724 WELLS FARGO BANK ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ 1005 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Antique Music noxes! Slot Machines I Clocka! llUGESELECTION Awric• ............ G6ri .. 1'41 c.w.-Dri•• 146-4741 <Acrou From OruaeCo. Alf1>(>rt) Equal ()pport Employer OWle eeper/Babysltter 5 3pm .• 1601 18th _.., -..05 s e e k s m a l u r e •0 ewport ic ' £very Sunday and Every houaekeepcir babyaltter · .E. other SaturdJly ind Sun· llALHTATI &ocaUona: Schedule your Christma • shoppinll •totJ8 with the Dally r•11ot 'K CHR ISTMAS 01 .. T TRAIN. CALL NOW 842.5678 l~Offlce 40 I Cl•k C...t.r Drht s.t.AH Open Wed. thni Sat. 1802 Kettenn«. Irv. (7l4)7~-1777 ---------•tor-2 achoo! a iced di)' m>mlnP, Drtver to SA&..ISNOPLI --------1 children. Lovct,y home in MAIMT-HAMDYMAH drop bundl•• ot D•lly W•ley N. Tiylor Co. ll a Gmtral Nwpt Ucb, bra 8:30AM· APt malnt. ln bulldinl Pilot ID oarrlera. M111t a.year old firm wholly Work Loni T~mpor1ry ~·30PM Mon.Fri. Refa clean·14>, CM, NB erea. havevanorlargealltlon ownedlcc>peHtcd by Ila Aul#'ftment.e Open w 1111 l'l!qUlrt!d,.,1•.&t().M-08 Full lime, Some GJt• woaon + JCood drlvlna founder. Wt aro not a AU Sk1l1ll per I enc e n t •de d . ~.Call 142-4321, Hie 11.1baldlary. branch or c.11 llar /!&a llousekeeper needed. PM MZ·Jeo:t. '°"Harr)< SeeMy or Don franthiae _ Just heatt JACK IN THE80X . ..._aw.. •171t&T .... .,... ....... ..... "••I I 111tT4*y ::e.~~7~etirement MANAOER·F1brlc .... WUlluna. q_uarters wllh a round· T "06 I .,.. PMJ TIME tht·c loclc acceu to 517-v HOU1ekeeper Ji1th exp. perioncerequired manasement for U· Getlnonourl(IOdadvan· ~o~ off ice • $panlab 1peakln1 OK. CaJUU..Cr7·'47l aJltanceatan,yUme.Our cement09PC>rtu.nitle•' $4.00hr M2-7<X17 M•""AO•R r'UftlHlf'~ ln·houle vldto tape )lit· EQuat<>pportunlty 0 overload · · ,,... .., LtUWlftN '"'" ... t.r1tnln1n>ro-£mpioyerMt F tt~eeper FT I& PT Ru Iden t m• n a «i • r . Adl&lt.t wtt.11 outatandln1, sram by Tom Hoc>ldn• la ~~~~~~~~ •~~~~~~~~j 1ood benefits. EOE Br1nd,,... eo unit •dull att.rtdivt penooaUlle• Ult flntlt r HI e11Ute Bayvlcw <.;onvalt•cent •pt. complex, C. JI. Cou· who elltoY wortlln« with i I all bt w GenOtn~ llOllp. 20~~ Thurio St. ~ w/w[le \0 wortc liall klda. SWt 1t •uo .f:i' ~~av:~ ~I efor ; Merrhandlalna clerk C M 642>35()5 Umt. t hour. PhoneMZ.ml •t. u leapertoni with t n• ~:'~;~:'o4:!'!'i•~i llou&ekttl)fr, llve·in, lo TSLM1mt • 142-1803 ~.8ETWEICN4:00.S:OO =:i·\Ocb.::-~·~~ flee 4utieA. Start al '675 care for wheelch1lr ...,_= ~ >'·ot\11'~ Alllfw..... hllh 1t.endardt. Your LWl4".n mo. Conlad Bllvt'rly "°" •trolce patient. (714) :Jrviduel / m~I Equal=unlty own awhate dells It no °" Jlldy Powtr. Ml-7702. 411trto:M: <714> 11Ml517 tYJlinl lkJJ: :'Ma.a 0 ••· • & u part.ti.. aalttpeople. U.Tot·\1m division of· HOUSEKEF.f'&R 6 perlenc.. aonMad re• eed rt OoauD.i1111oD 1pUl ~p to (let. -CHILO CARE. IJH I.a. (IWNCl Newport Cent.tr. you ll .. ,. ~. lnMtvlew by •P· Gift WrllPPtf wltb 11per. •'500+rm'lt boeinl. f!vn 'fop Salary It 1ood ~~~ DOWaatooly, Ree Hanll!J.1 • E. lTtb 5'W·*4., 0119 711-... beMllUea_:.~llMO.-o for In CIH•llled to 1olve • -•ealtfN.'l'&JlorOo. St..Ooata• .... _ Sua•n Mr. -· ,.._.,oblem. 8MICon MMllO . ,) ·-· SCHOOL BUS ORJVERS-4 houri per dly. Salll')' $4.56 per hr. Lie ~ wtll train. Apply Newport·Meaa Unified Scbool Dlatrl ct . Clualfied Pel"IOOD4ll Of c:. Mon/Wed/Thur 6 Fri tem-u noon. 1\le8 lpm· 3pm. 1&01 Ulh St • Newport Beach, CA. E.O.E. SIMtO .... M /F SEC'Y /llCEPT 40 hn wffk MlnJmum t.Ylllrul. pletl.'lanl 11urroun· cfinlla . a ·30·5 30 . Whole .. le onllquo r.o Contact Mr . •!berl, l(en~t•I man•jjer, 751· T454 for mlervlew. Servlct' Station Atten · dint, u~r'd Day t. EvM F\all fs p/llme. Ap· pl)i, Shell Station. 17th It Jrvtne, NB. Need ae11oln1 cook/ Servin• station attcn• 1tewerd/ ltewardtH danll, (ull lime. part ~experienced oMd l.lmt. ev• • wf'tkend11. 1 . CalJ btwn HPM Ne1t twidwn~nll " •P· 7 8TJ.DOO pearance a mU11t! Apply l'SIO Newport Blvd, C.M Have eomet:htq you want \0 ..U? Ct ... lt.ed ada '!be INlelt draw lft tM It well -Call NOW, We11t ... a Oall,y Pilot ta-M?a. a...afied Ad. &e5f7&. Schedule your Chr11tma 11 "!mg stopt with the Del Pilot <."HRISTMAS 01 TRAIN! For help In placlnA your •d. c11l •n Ad·V!Mr at e..2-~ Our leue w.a c•nceli.ct •we mual move over 200 It ma by mld·Ott. All ltema diJcounted from ~·50%. Ti.kt advaa. • ttiae ol our mltfortWM. ''Tht 0.ntef' ol 'nme." IOlO Redhill Ave, CM. M>-1741 r 7 l I , I I r ~'2' IOHIW•ae IOIO •---I HI Mhcal 1-11110 1Y ·-•••••••••••••••••• •• ••••••••• Hiiii •• ti!IOk . •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ·-1-1 ~..1!~ 1~--M. drt11er ..,..,. ~ mITTVr. 1125 or belt. AU Wood l:kdbeda SAT/SUN. lltl.51 MOl»tord Kcnmon-W•-'her-dry11r ••••••••••••••••••••••• BlrometttS4096Z·211SM . With Natlt't:tl6es Or. ltO. Sofa, child'• •"4 Sl.50 both. a mllc. JDL •pc11kers L110. S mo1 $ Schwinn 1Jd oqu6pmD11t rumi1ur .. Ml·TIM2aft 6 ~ S"'10 pr. 131·~1 11n !.~~•:•~•••••••!~.'.! * 178 * WY¥•miat , •,-,..-,·n1n-,-,,.-..... ~-"""•c•~•"1-n-,-.' c•cPcM:;;;.·------- FREIOllT DAMAGED .. ~~bl!~";~~!.. E 11 t a1 II! Sa I fl + Si.rd tt-li·lO. Porl'et't for M'111gn1VOJ1color1V. 24." llOTJ'IOINT SA.Lt-:. 3308 Cent""" ne fhhorhond 1oodie1 llollday1 So1ne never lkl1111Uiul rabtnd Workl W. Wamtt nr Harbor, Modd Hoin.!"'m 100 • of It om a, Mu11t worn l..itM than .,.. priCI!. 1re1i1t. l.2$6'4-111&3. &nta.AM.1'19-29:!1 --cll!lln out 11:•ra1e & 493--lll:W ..... ,....._. ";:7";'7".;'-77;--;;-;;I -,,,--!'!!~-~"'---I hook. GU·:tMO 121) 'P11m C L E A R A N C E l>itPl"Yod D"I •• u... bn'Jk.11 Ln. NB.. Wt1:11tt'Uff l..itton Micro S yr1 old ......... BARGAINS . U•ed Sofajrl..oY., •. ,'::": •. sllfl area 117).B~POf"\.IMIW• o;;.;;;••••••••••;ctiO Rd'rip. wshn 6 dryert, T•blea from UR 2·f•rnP~ C•r•ae Sall!!, Ina: in.ch~. 8111.ol kuia ••••••••I.••••••••••••• 8-tAppL S31J.(Wll. 5 l'c' Hdrmt"' .-. •• · • · lltl B11b;i "toys t'loth1n1 •a. liP"!ad UIU&'Jwht. l.50. C""ll l'AW lnqiirwrrnm IM ' I I ' I • • ...._ n<» ''Sellabla F.6---1" oo '· 11mP1. cue •· W1sbrf Dr1r1/ Refr\11. Ce l _._ llett!.l 1pukert a mcitt Whlrlpool r,ort di•· wot1dn1 or not 957..aW Model!~ f'Uni 2246 Conllat nt•.I, CM, hwNlwr. whl • UHd onb •• h 1 "'.--~~~..:__ __ jl~s.tl;;;Sua;;".'---o. ti mo, I yr old. l12$/bat n •nmore w11 er, 1•11 11 • ~xm ofr.91&·821, dl)'t>r, SUD ca .• or ROO Kl ...,... 1060 both.Xlnt ro11d ~I na '''" ••ler b•d ••••••••••••••••••••••• ATTENTION H•r111in ;;o..;::;.""::.;.;;;:c:..:::::::::.'....I W1len:klrold •nlirm t .$. .V11b qtr. aiddlng, 11 1;.. Hunt~ A IC ul6rt or Col<UJIO' Z dr Refrll• '4+M9i4 Tr.11.ill •huw F...nitu.hl .1.111n1ple • eh111u out rree~rl"CWnbo SID AU Wn:~m. Xtnt d&. •coot ~tt>ln!I Av11! 11t rorlr. bot· MT·l<M8 wood C'hos~tnl block Ti r k IWO-Oflclo>____ lont pnce&. lkKinninM _ _ 411" round UbM! with 4 -Oec • ln<'I the roUow· Kllnmo re w111b11r1dr,l!r m1tr.b1n1 bentwood / t-la!i.h:r 6'1('.k w Mur~11n Ins: Wetto•n i'c•na, wed, "ood cond, ft5U eane C'l!uwn.. SJ?) Coif"" G 1 1 , d Call ant; &61).961!1 ~t>&. • 2 end tabk.l. m " n !I: )'rfi " ma rnur. Jute cord, hot __ _ IJ79.11l8 Mlc'll h&l IAr.•Soe·lkMtl pacU; lboe 1t.rh111, .J>an· 9070 ••••••••••••••••••••••• t1a a:Wwilll._. Ne•ded Ly Newporl Oc1eh Doctor. Ple.11Kto l'&ll al\ertl pm, 644>1tl'!M Oock 1p11ee to aecom· rrodate 100· ho.at for rtnt ln Newport llarbur. C.11 P11lll, IS33-IOIO bet. 8·$ M·•·. Tr••r rt._ ••••••••••••••••••••••• 9120 • •••••••••••••••••••••• 11/t!.W G.E 11'1 .9 rcfrl1·I-'-"'-:.:.:'-------ATTENTION ll or1it1 tybo1e. 1ipper1, boat fr e.t'tcr. 11 tnttll' dr Gamt'Set,.bkenew,w/t'll Clwnf'r• Spot·iu l tuu\.lware&horHbliek h111rvf!11 t tcold . szo0 tr.11.leal.J!POlolr J.o:veiaor Christm.r.1 aide oo"in ndi.n1llQ\llp1nt111t.llow-.. Ml...W7 AM, M&-1~ nlnlC~ 4 A cornplcte M·t·, l·:lplfl tMouah I>«. Mopeds, new& used. I d 2.L &zy &: sell. Five PoinU M A 'l'AC w11i•her, t i')i.d tbb., I ('()( lbl of me "ln1tequi:r,11lili111 3190a.1-M·n '""""Dr. Moped.IW8"828 llarv"61. C'.olcl. Xlnl <.'Ond wal11Ul •l•lu. Utpr> SM fo,. the ~xpd. n t:r ur "°..., ......,,.. ~. fM all S, 2 Over1ituf( brginnt!t Both Enallih&-C.M. !Al Kt:dtull 6 Sin Mooed· '76; Ciao . 1200 II YAMS TO CHOOSE FROM! Thur!!!!y. No\lembel' 30. t978 SOUTH ORAHGE COllMTT'S LAllGEST SANTANA DE.ALBS! _.....,.., '" .. ...- ~·s.ttf chair& '20«•. Ira mirror w .. •tC11E·n 1ly l~ equip · ~pol~ ~.:follll .. Jf!!!)e1 GJ"hln••,01" 1wl1tb ",hp miles, xlnt cood. S300 Or ---0 · --w1wd frium Sls, dc•k mrtot ver)'lhlnV from · ......._., 0 n, r r , m oy bcslolftr.642-3396 · A.ti / o ·Ktef6 &: Al"rritt 111• s:n. de5k Limp "'· 2 thl hO~ blta to 1addld. The I c1~°'c1c""""==:'"inl:=.:•c· ----1 xtras. IZ200982-72ZI aft 6 C1".C!rt..s 9520 'm vw,.~mptt avo('ado rani(e. 112) t.mps. pottery S6 both, betit ~ 11round, L611115· 14" Clipper maionary ID!lh...._.. Two mopeds, Puch-Maxi ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---~ ti0-8429 salN(llllte t"'ard tbl S!t. &Of1 ol C'lnse ouu • dL-.. 1aw-. B.lade inC'ld, S750. .... .. 9030 Cells::.&1219 ·-· d' -· t • 1 cont lnutid items al110 6.000 euatom No•m•n After4P.M. '48FOROWOOOV -~~ 9 ,90 K~1n:ore cleetnl· dryer, 11,, .. 1 v r1uu1 c ra. . U . ••••••••••••••••••••••• FUUyrestored!l13"""' --ldnt cond S7~ n'l>atly kln11. Queen 11o1 1iva1I iil unbe 'livably low wrut.e bri~k. <lx<I ai1e. lY SALE OF SAILS FOXY GT Oelwtt. 1978. 675-6161 _, ••••••-••••••••-••••• ~~ bo1 aprin~. nwtlft.'51 • pricc a. llourll. M · t', ea. orolfer&eaWI Sails, covers &i bags. 1500 miles. Adult owned. WIWIUIUY --,--,---:::::=:::_ ___ , fl'anr $!.(), "'"' 11 Ml'dit l·~mlhrowjhl>f."'4.'21. 1 -'"'-'"-'=~==--t •·kon' ··-.--tTo'm Cla•••'< R•pii 1921 cw•· '" ~dbntsu""' 1 lib 3190/1.i.rportLoopDr. S1i1t0ec2,I0--5pm . "" ....,.,..._~ ca TO•DAT'SUN 1rlpuol ~de by Sidi: a ,mus se y C.M. IAl Redhill, San Mlsctl••-Sun0ec3,12-3pm. Mercedes Roadster on P"'"FOROR"OT lkrng, Mark 1 ~""~· 3 Due :S. 64$-78)7 an 5pm, .,.. W..e.d 1011 Baxter&:Clcero Bravo Vespa Moped, low vw Chassis. All running .u.u "' cm . o&d, l'Ql'il new $l200, Mlldaywknd.". Diego f'wy ill Kohl Irvine ••••••••••••••••••••••• 129F ad"' CM mi., ninswell. ncb minor gear&:...,.,; .... tot.a.Uy ,,_ TOl'DOU.All ii l'Omplex.) Cull 556-8871 ar """· body wrk.1<12), Julie .. ._..... lliiil•-c '" rorsooo 111:t-M32 9 Drawer Dresser, 2 nitt! for further info. Good used en1. for llonda 642-7238 &ll..QOO"J built. Bl lanced eogine I•,•.•~ . .::.~·-;:~·=''• - .u-lands Wh'te 1 KA 90.sL. Will trade antiq .l ---~=:..::=:_ __ 1-===------oil cooler. 17500. Ph _.......... ._ 1015 s . I . 1....... Ho•1hoklG-oock l 06S clock or pay re111on. ATTENTION Boat 1978 Yellow llonda Ex· 67S-6200or642-9358 "0'0'0'•'•"•'•'•'•'"•'•"•'•'•0'0'0°0·.•.•1;;:::~;;:"":;-;:':"'6;:-;;;=:;:I••••••••••••••••••••••• cash. S<l!J.TI4J, .546-8965 0 w n er s . S pe c I a I press, rear basket.a, 290 ~-1.-•-• f"-K f" 1 Christams sample & · i'k 1 lecrwatl; rl PUBLIC'"'RNITURE '1-~·· 5 ...,.. ut.-u ; ·~ench enmore 1nes pow e.r .....__,_al 1 1 1 1 mi . 1 t ne w. Z75. y-9530 ·u import. $600 value. ex. mate Vae. 2 spd. with _.... e ose ou sa e a un· 64().Z135 * lll'JION• eond. clean. Sae. $150 beat.er brush & 11ttal'h· lme.--..+s 101] believably low prices.1c=""=--------••••••••••••••••••••••• IMlll s.t•2930 rnents. N e w $300. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Beginn.illg Oec.4. All re--Motorcvdin/ Mini 1JX>torhomeoo1'~ord FRIDAY1:30PM R Sacrifice $100/Best ArpOdyaseySympbeslzer qular hardware items Scoohn · 9150 .Ecoooline chassis. Xllll IDeditnW._) ~5* 962-~ +anvil case. xlnt cood. avail al tale prices. ••••••••••••••••••••••• cond. Loaded, Self co.1· C,"'TATE Matching blk naugahyde ice=='-------1975 or b111t offer. lnclda every.thing from !ISO Yamaha Sell or t.tade tained. l1295day 5'9-dO STOCK LJQUlDATIONS couch. 2 chn;, ottoman, lM cu.ft. chest frttzer, re-c""iffi•"'~'~'~°';;;""H;;-04~19··;---/ anchor cha1.n to de.ck ror dirt Bike. 979.5467 ex.3Sh0me 957·26<IO MASTB.S AUCTIOH 1150· l54-0M7 ::i~:;oo~im 837. 6234 ; Offkeo FM wit• e 1 ~r:t~~ ~::~::r::~ 1_'500 __ •'-""~'-°''--'•~•·---1 4 Wheel Drlorn ,SSO 2015\.'!Ne....,:iortBlvd CM 2 Kn g bdrm sels , ~ &c,ii,.....t 1015 save.Hours,M·F,1·5pm i4 HondaElisnore.New •••••••••••••••••.,•••• 833-9825 64&3686 bunkbds, tea cart, wd ---r 1070 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 11. ......... ,--2 bl 1976 J-' din " 'I 1 . ... .. .._ ....,.... I. re t eng. Racing lype .,.,..., 'g llel. cpt. port refrig, ••••••••••••••••••••• FuJ e ectr1c cas h re· Jl90Airport Loop Dr. earb. $350. 26585 Aventda l&IEGADr:-414 licycln 1 020 porttv.C&ll640-4775. EOiquisite for holi.day. gister. Reblt, like new, C.M. IAtRedhill&San . Oeseo MV.830-5912. Automatic. pvl". steer· ••••••••••••••••••••••• Queen size 50la bed St2S R.armnd &i Ruby Dumtr I c""":=:o·"642-=."31=::.:..· ----1 Diego Fwy in Kohl Irvine l----------I ing. wench. AM I t'M '""'llW . · uig. Appr. $1875. sell Complex.I Call 5.56-8811 Honda Z50XL. 1975, good 11 b '""'"',, INN Paramount. Table & 4 chairs S75 Sl200.Appt.541).J9l7 High quality ofrice furn. r,..Pr•• ..... ftrinfo. rood., lo mileage, ss1s. stereo tape ro ar. 3ol Campy & extras . 64().2fBO Executive ortice,/;i;;;:";;;;-:'j~;;;;;;;=:.--..,;;o/~968-~~6812~---:__--_/ "'!.hitespokeNheels&oo-s.:H5. Ph.559-SOM secretarial. reception, looh. Power 9040 ly40,12J Jlli,,eS. U136771l. =="-"=:.::""----IAnliques . lland woven MiKt l wous 8010 conference room . ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·11 Yamaha Mini Bike, in ~~~10 19" Free Spirit 10 spd orlenlAI rug . 6pc wall un· ••••••••••••••••••••••• 644-83§ lime for Christmas. $175. )4.,....._ WE PA1'T0P DOLLAR FORtoPUSEDCARS ro«EIGN.OOMESrlC ortl.ASSICS U )'()Ur ear is extra clean see us fll'St. IAl&llUICll 2925 Harbor Blvd. Cost.a Mesa 919-2500 WE BUY USB>CARS CALL PAPPY Used Car Mgr 540-5630 1011\SO\ & SO\ • LINCOLN MERCURY bike. like new $50. it. Triple dresser. 2 mir· LUGGAGE TA.GS ·---------· Grand aa<ks s-'8·1156orcvt..'S675·2213 96.1·1366 rors&2nitcstands.King Nearly new Citize n lft ~a...ult ... ...._M~~~-ao25 size waterbed.2JTX>old, fromyourbusinesscard. C R·2000 c lec Cas h 0 ··•-Wholo· "-"'"'''' 75 400 ·4 H onda 2150 Uilf'borBlvd.,C.M. 2626 HAABORBL\t0. ~ V"RTillD heater, walnut. book case send one card for each Rea•!iter, S290. 644·0238 DDu• •--vo:: .. -. S800 or Best Cherry~ 64~5700 COSTA MESA ••••••••••••••••••••••• headboard inc Id. baU tag plus one spHre . We I "'-"'-=::::-=::::.:::::.::::::_I Stan !\tiller Yachts 646-0'195 price 49341134 r eturn permanently Pl'h 1017 (Zl3J598·9433 COST"' MESA WEIUY --VPILOT W TCMAMCaPOI l97a utr. lift! IUY Oii LliSl MOWI -5ILICTIOH ........ •IMW• •llSM•'S* '14J11Gt"csp. ('131..Pf'l '75510ia air (~MLI '762002411>. c•PQM> '11 Dli4gp. t:83SPll '76saoi411f{315RKSI ..naoc; C91'JEl '131D:a ($11980l1) '78nal4tP. (505WPt-'I Abo llmited number o' U178 Dli.'a ill Miii aval"'" ble.C..11'5~~1 __ .. 1n.zt40-9 ~ -~ d1Jes.Sttvlce-Leuing IO'I Carvor,lllC. RolhAoyce BMW IMO Jamboree Newport Beach fi40...G444 - CREVIER &I SY &atoAOWAY SAlfYA AMA 835·3171 INliWlllll•ft -111.ACMW!: •USIDIMWa• 73 Bavari1 SIR l51'1HJ PI 74 200241pd (8HQ015) '7S 2002 Aldo.air( KtZ2361 '163.0siS/R (029RKM I '71 UJ:<lspS/R l0&79 77630csl4/spd fTR5962) 71633cslaSIR (012VPVJ CloMd• S. d.,. IOIMcLAllEtl's $ GfTTOWSMOW! 711MW733la BRICK& BLOCK WORK . . sealed attral'tive taf & ••••••••••••••••••••.••• ::;;::;;::;~"~14~>~.,.~~·Zl~"~;::;;::;IM~oro~"'~Y~<~i~e~· ~y~,~~~·~·~'~'°' I . "' "' USID CARS! MARTY Dinette, formica, lbl with 11lrap, meet.ing air ine Cl>ckaloo: W/cage. lJllret· '68, Must Sell 1125. C&ll • ..__.C/JEEP We're the new Chevrolet 64&6818 & 646..a.239 leaf & 4 swivel chrs. 11ZO. 1.0 .. require~nl!'!. Pre· 14 5"48-6494. Alft 7 ~unYE r-...... & SS:S.1366 vent.IOISS&lheft! Fora tatype. ~~~best? *I INC•Llf, ~~~:le~.1~elrnve':d 11".A~ -r--•~ 8055 personalized ta(I: enclose SEA RAY'S YAMAllA 1976-2:50 En-Tr A DIMO's... ~,...... 1 0]0 --r -wallpaper, fabric or Macaw parrot. very col· duro. Xlnt rond. Mu!< yow-used car! 33li 's wilhaut.omalic. air ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• "Day Glo" paper & we cdul & t.anie. $890 inclds JJ' to JO' sell. 1525. Ph 673·&M1 2»4 Harbor Blvd. JOE coad., s te reo. :. lluy Pentax Spotmatic with Garagesaleofabandoned will back &i trim your 2 cslm perches. Evs eves COSTA MESA MACPHERSON wheels. Low mileage. "50mm 1.4 Takuma,.. art.IE! '•Jes. DecM6 at I pm. tags. Or try t.wo cards 645-2347. HARRISON'S Must sacrifice 750 Hinda. ' _ __;7_1--'4"/_5:_4_;_9:_-1_:_0:_2:_3:_ c~o· ~ I too! 28mm2.8Hoya&7S.205 uerto esa Apt!, baclr.toback. SE•B•'Y S ,-n 5 •• """' Vivitar lenses. $350. 1959 Maple Ave, Costa PRICES: Pl..os &Or')OllS 8090 ~ -IOAT ~.~,,.!!~=!"..;,~~~ct '7 7 Chev . BI a i er 21 Auto Center Drive 1150N. Beach Blvd. &&i-0900. Mesa.Managerapl5. S2eaor31SS ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3101CoastHwy,N.8. .....,,.,,....., Cheyenn~ pkg.s . Maay IRVINE I LaH.abra Cah IOJS FRI/SAT/SUN. 17261 415tagsSl .60ea. 10 Upright Players &i 5000 6]~·2547 Z..'78 YAM ChapPJS 5$ce. inU ext extras. $1500/of· 761-7222 !At Beacb6Wbittierl ••••••••••••••••••••••• Chapparal Lane, II R., o10t9~Sl.1so1 e40a. rolls in stock. Car t y ~~~"""~""""""~~~1 New, xhltcood. Great for fer. 646-1'152 1-----':..::;:_.:.:==----714/522-5331 --· . C To-d-"-'" 1 . orJTX>re . ea. Player Pianos. 801 W. •G• Ch . C aft Co . Christmas96S-0348 T..... 9560 W"'.....,EDI. ~--Suod•-,-.,..,.1an Kittens, FA re-,,g, """· rn, win SalesTax lneluded BakerSt..CM.54Q..8908 .,. ns r ~air. 1 -'==c-==-=-~~,....,--"'"I .... ........,.. ,,g Ris lered, top s how ea~pys, spreads, cur· NOCARD" Ford VB 110, runabout, Motorttc.-a.Sdt/ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Late model To yotas, I~"!' ...... "!'"!'"!'"!'~"!'~ pa~ts. Beautiful Jong lJ!i1n1 , clolhcs. beds, Draw your own Or send Fine used Pianos for sale. topcond. $11100 . .548·3385 Re.t/$+11r'Oft 9160 '14 ~ Too GMC 4.54 eng. Volv06. Picktql6 &. Vans.. I: hair.6Jll·9308. bikes & much more. na~. addre51'i, phone & Grands·Ornate Oak up 20, Sklpjick l9'72. open, ••••••••••••••••••••••• 36.000mi.$5000 Callu:st.od.ay ! '732002,xlnlcar,AMIFM, Mli-1895 we'll make one card per rt.s·Spinels. good_ .. ,..._., 117J·l.cMckm /;;--h;;;;.,..,,,:;:;:;";;;;:-;:;;;:< /r~!P.• ~ ~ radials, "'600. Persian kittens, champ ~stP''-o <~ ........... ~..... ~-· ... sired, CFA registered, GA.RAGESALE llg.Add25teach. __,.. ___ __:673-:::::34"'-17'-----I LuasyMotort.o. 72 Ranchero, top cond. shotsSIOOup. 546-9965 Maple sed.y desk ; antq Send check or imney Ot · 8600 milton ~ve. Jl.B. FuHY aell contained. Ha.ssbell, air shocks. gas I It~~~~~~~~ '75 BMW 2002, AM /FM cc=co;="'°'='-'='---l oak rocker; Small wood derlo: 516-1775 St.attrart.18.with85Merc. c111erator, z air condi· saver. 6 ~yl. Mu&t sell. st ereo cass., clean. 004JI 1040 office desk; :solid wood PILOT,.IHTIMG Cull covers. trlr, '4200 tiOOen>, roof top "air. TV 979-6C.57. , ~,......:::..:::::'c__ ____ _ ••••••••••••••••••••••• dining set w/5chn: Anlq P.O. 8ox l560 Wurlitz.er console piano. ~""=--c""'=""'o'c';__ ____ I antenna , C 8 radio. 1..::.::0::::_:________ ''".._....~ •· English Bull Dog. AKC, vanity with mirror & Costa Mesa. Qi. 92626 Like new. $1200/bst ofr. ft Se AM/FM stereo tape, like '72 Explorer Ca mpe r "'-'"~;r;; :-;:O.f467 '76 530.i, $9750. Silver i female. 13 mo 's, s how bench ;4}Jioodbarstools;l --';~;;;;';;';';;;;';~;=''-l~W!•~·u~de~li~•!•~•·c"'~~:!!JU!2~--'75 22 · a Ray Day newlires&.otherextr•s Specia l.~. radials.l~~;;;~~~~~==~Jj"'~·!'<~k~/~•~m:;""~'~'~·~oo...-i:::·~· quality,$450. 960·61Zl. unique rollt.op desk; An· CoC,OPY MllAI CH.INEI Piano. Wurlitzer 'Spinet, Cruisc~~'~Tool too numerous to men· ~~s.;...:~ 6, xlnl-[. PA!O ~a ORN 67S.S67'leves. ~;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;j tique mirrors; wood piers spd, ate xlnt cond. S750 or be&l · · lion. Very. very clean. <.VUU- 0 • ... -· r u 'UT Cclpri 9 71 5 • cabinet; Small brass rrX> 1 .kd .• copies1 a nylhln1". g, ofr.642-5"!95. BERTRAM ·'8' 1974 . Look nl th.is one before 1973 OodRe pickup. Runs WEWILL ••••••••••••••••••••••• shipa I a nte rn ; up· 1 e 1 nu w s upp 1es I J;~~~~M;;~;Giij Perlel't. rond. Fl.Ill elec· you buy! CallTrui;nan at good. SUB5/bestolrer. BUY '71 Capri : new eng., sun· holstered rocker: aotq SZ00.$800.968-2163. 1Sew111giM1 hhl1• 1092 tronic1 • ..:specially 7S4·18SO root. AM/FM . 8 Track. PET WORLD Bostons, Chihuahuas, Coc:kl'n>, Yorkics, Shih· T z u, P o m s, Min . Scbnauu:rs. Pups & stud service. 714/531·5027 plates, dishes, pots, Cp( Mills sells direct on ••••••••••••••••••••••• equipped lot' aport flS· Asking $9~0. 960·3233 pitchers & cup&; miac. (ull rotls only. lowest Used.Kenmore;Solidma· hing. A\<&ilable !or in-'63 Fonl Ranchero, xlnt YOURCARF'OR Eves. end tables & runky priccsanywhere549-8lBI pie cabinet, good cond. spectiQ11Sat.Dcc ·2nd,lO cond. w/Z89. $1600. CASH! furniture. 15·1125. All /;;;i;;~;;;:;;;:=,:;:;::;:;,;~ /~18>il1:'_!67~~~1~632~__::__ ___ / to3. l\llboa Yacht Ba!Sin, 61S-0211 thlaweek. 646-9823. Mailing boxes. Heavy du· SUp 40, Newport Beh. ty cardboard: Ideal for 1093 Call Jim Bryant 640-t522 "11 Datsun Long Bed PU, vw·s. IMPORTh. Old Eng. Sheepdog, C JI R I ST M AS ma.llingChristmaspkgs.1 r:;:::;><;;;::;;::::;~11;;:, or641M839 l3300.firm. '!eut.ered M1;1le, 21h yrs. BOUTIQUE; Dec. 2&3. ~mpletemailingkit.sor:I ;..::..::::..;='------1 673-3261orfi75.6727 CALL SPORTS son alle rgic. 497 ·2295 I 2 PM lo 5 PM . J 0 individual boxes avail in 1950 Cus&om Chris Craft n Pace Arrow, 28' dual TOM OR FRANK eves. Deer~ o o d Ea.s t . 8 sizes, from 4" to 18.. w/trailer & xtras. Xlnt. root air, loaded w/xtraa. '73 Toyota Pickup, good 842·2000 <Oeerf1e ld) Irvin e . cubes. Assorted gift box· cond.$2400.642-.2344. S&-SO<IOen cond. runs good, $1675. Chihuahua AKC female. 559 ·0987 Lot s o f es al.so. To Order caU 97f.J927 \Orm. fawn/wht. A real h d d ti CHRISTMAS CRUISER il_Ellplore24'Loaded.Lo doll, 6'S-Z4S4 ornema e ecora ons Boxers: 741·1152-3441 We, 1-.=-..;..c;.._..,;....;.-l 18. Glasspar Cabin Crsr , m1, side bath. !478JQ1l 1977 a CAMIHO · &&oys. ·deliver. 11 75 OB, w/trlr & oover, l7950. Whlsl dlr.1SZ·068'7 CONQUIST/\. Air, pwr. P!JPPIES Beautiful .Irish Lots of goodies! Every 140Gal.Aquarium.oomp. Bt:\' 'F.itl SJlOO.Ms-1682 1-"'::.;6'5-:=~2963=c·-----I windov."S, sealll & locks, >etc ter~~lden. Rclne1vcr t.hin R goes! Sat 9-3 only equipped wi st.and. $400. SELi. 't:1't _...a.. Rlftl/ 73 Roadliner. Class A stereo 8 lfk; .• tilt wheel &i --~ination. 25 10071HilbboroH.B. Callaft.5.752·6760 'rR . .\D£ •t::\t ~ 9050 Mot.ornome 21·. Roof.air. cruise,(1077228 ) . RE1'T 'E1't· ••••••••••••••••••••••• generator. 27.000 miles. SS775 Chone' pi"'h 00' •• 75' Exoeiient boy ot 11900. CORMIER Leasing rmtor yacht, hourly or 1-536-=-""--·------i daU)'67S..217U7~1411 T--"--T-el 9170 AtlrvineAutoCenter .---.-. • .... 2366.1 Rockfield Blvd. looh. Sal 9060. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lake Forest Christ Sh"h T Garage Sale. M.isc items. Auto washer & 24" col· mas 1 zu pup-Dee. 2 & 3. J23Z Colorado orL'CI TV. $100 ea. Gas piei fors1dc, very cheap. Plac• CM d I El I OIJl494-8774. ~~c·c· =c·-----1 ryer, 75., ec awn To plaee YO\lr ad in GIG •~c , .c""=w"•c•·~l2S=·~-=-=~· __ 11 this eolumn call m.toYou 1045 ~"" ,- Jim_ ~ Manna;....::;,, Valkswapn t t-'ormerly Harbour VW 1 18711 BEACH BLVD. HUNTINGTON BEACH ~•••••••••••••••••••••• 'T'URTLEROCK SALE CHEMIN OE FER t-:lkhound Mix . M/neut'd. Dix While Sew Mach1 SASSOJENANJESANS 642-5G78 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Must sell!'x~' lrlr, fum., 76M026 must be cmved. Mon·Fri -'-----'-=..::::=:::____ Allllos. .. .,wfed Ii,<, yrs . Greet w/kitls. couch. chair, 2 antq 10 ~ Cindy·Dfll 634· 1o:n, cv solid oak benehcs, China, Adult & children slus at ,...,..._ 44' Sl7K DAILY PILOT 8-4 :30. $2500/bst offer. '72 Chevy Luv. runs good, ••••••••••••••••••••••• 842-:Mm>.Jerry. MOor ~toffer.Call G e1111:al 9701 ......... 5.56-n61 leaf table, 6 ch.rs, JO gal discounted pricet. Gall "=='='='='='='== J ·<M-Crn lank air comrreasor, any day 633 ·7319/ -CilleCat.aUna '78 VaeaUOneer, 24', self Puppies. rrec to good G&S eye leve range,1c""=.·"l""=c·------I Geu!JetSet slepln bind· ShMMilerTochh contai n ed. Fully '7S Dal8Wl long bed. AC, home . Hall Lab. 8 wks New Qn Si waler bed Lil . be hi f ll'lgs. Top ot the line. $45 1n4) 846-215' equil:.';", au options + k?ather. White deep dish old. 968--7010. w/linens 2 lawnmowers .etnne mem n P or 962·2655 !213)-••-AM IFM d 8 .. ~-•->o ml 13•-1 r MUCH ·MORE. 6232 Tiffany's for epl. $7S0./5;;ti;;;~;;k"I09'4/•~~~~-~-~~~ awn qua '"'"'""""'· . .-or. To good home. older SitrTa Palm Rd. Irvine. C&ll (1)528-6517. SportWJ&oods 1094 _ =·~~ .. -~oy~ 6:f5·0666, 556·31<12, -9720 • ••••••••••••••••••••••• •DATSUHS* ~s.loclloo OfAll- SALC)..LEASJNG PARTS-SERVICE COSTA MESA OATSUM .284511AR80R KLVO. "540441 0 5 40.021] •DRIYEA * * LITILE.-* SAVE A LOT SHOP&COMPARE BARW!CK DATSUM '' '• "• 8Jl.ll7S 49J.Jl7S .. We need to buy clean Dauun USlod can" $Will Pay Top Dollar I COSTA MESA OATSUM Be agle mi11. i.:reat for fo'rt/Sat 1o.4 -.12 A~,. made Oriental ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·mTradewinda '31 ·furlln~ "8"1-::;:.">JJ9="· ------ol~rcouple. fl62·47M ~... nc _:.. '~~"':=""'"61:::.:....,::=:::..· --I Lu •-rug, like new. IO·spd jib ....... 180% Genoa, fuJ I • '16 VSUl!IJ, visor.nares, ZS.U HA RBOR BLVD. t-'cmale Irish Setler 3 yrs Gar&Jter I-TI/Sat. Washer, men 's bike. Ladies bike, s p Inn a kt r gear, '15 221,ii' Komfort. SIC. cslm paint & pinstrip-ALL ABOARD for t.he 5•• '410 54"02ll • . ' SZS.Gasdryer,S25Ten· .. _ ti!I · I ed I <-•-a· -••iP'6 · 1m · M DllilyPilot CHRISTMAS .._ ""' tiet: s new.family, g.ood 0.,, lubie, s••. Lot• or allll'lxlntcond.546-0150 ucau u tnsu al n· """"Lv•u, lt ... vuu, • pmg,es mL ualstll. honwe Loving obedient w terio r . Two s1iling Used 6X's. $4000/make l35!>0/beslof(er.644-41<11 Gllo'T TRAIN!!! For 1975DATSUH · · · ' • 11'.ood junk cheap 2332 World's finest Matklln aabolll and New~ort orr.83.l-06S2 or:i.51·5788 more informaUon and lo trauied pedigree, loves CoiK·teC M · '""'-=:;:-"'=;::--;;-.,.---1-"'-"~""'-------I 1 '°"' d ii 1210 children. Prcsenl owner a · · H.O. train ~e!. Never mooring a vaila le .IA.los.r.ic•,I'.... p acelSTMa ca a asthmatic.494·6614eve11 Moving ."'-•n·, 1 doy o·•y, u11ed. Sacr1f1ce $85. ctlOO CHOO CHOOSE Survey $23.000, will & •-... -~ .. 9400 '72 Chevy 9 pass . CHR. ASAD·VISOR 4 s peed trans. In ex· ........... •u 6'5-3746 sacrifice. (213)699-0476 ,,_ _. Suburban very good 642·5678 cellentrondllion in11ide&i d Sat, Dec 2nd , 9am·3.' ".:::.::.:o·c__ ______ I '°"'"'"·!-m the Daily d 2>J ••••••••••••••••••••••• d · I l b l c~~-'==.o..-.,co-~I -•• c-•MYP> 2 A orable kittens .S f db 1· Pilot&&> .... •v ays,( J'191).706llevtn· con .a1r.p a,p ,auto. Attal 9705 ..,.. •. """ · hsebrkn. loves kids , 1.1 18 ° a· he ited oa rdsnl, Tiffany Membership, IA! CHRISTMAS GIFT .in~":::.·-------tOh.p. V.W. Eng, ror sale, $1850 Call art ) : 30 -. 0 ,,,, , OHLY $22 75 toea, husband allergic wnrmwer, ger, ya price, call after 5PM, TRAIN! Every Wednes· - . lSOO eng. parts after 6 673-3745 ••••••• •••••• • ••• ~ 613-3"1(11 toolll. bicycle parts, lee 53M&IB day beginning Nov. 15th '14 Catalina 22 w/galley, pm.486-0135. ...::==------l18Spider c:onv. Xlnt coad. -"-'-'-CC-------1 skatcss.i.8. much, much l -'~""'-------1 thru Dec. 10th. Call ; trlr, extra•·· P .P .f-".::::.c=::;::::; _____ l17SDatsun.natbedwl plpe low mi. Alloy wheels. .._.,,.....,. r.: wllwe 105 0 mo re; 462 Magnolia. Craftsman 10" radial saw 6U-5678 531~88!H. 213/5118-6514 Goody ta r , Cu s lo m rt ck. 33,000 mi, 12750. Must seU. offer. 646-75'97 2l:i0 Harbor Blvd., C.M ••••••••••••••••••••••• C.M. onstandwithdrillchuck. -~=------powers L78:x15 Set of S Call962-7817. ..... 9707 64.,.5700 MAm s CONTEMPORARY furn. Xlnloond1210642·300S o~~~·~~rkl:r;e~ '!1~.p~eR.M!.~ari:: whltelaincl.S2505<1&36S4 '74 OMC: ~camper spec, :'. ••••••••••••••••••••• 1·,."· -o-.-.. " ... ...:.:c.,::..:.,.",",-.-.-.. -*~ -. ... _ ES,,,E, 1 S* 5ho1~5aeho101d5 item 9 • 49 . FURS n:o.okt.$50962-2.6M at. S1500 or ll'll:ke ofr . ..,_..,. ..... _ lo mi 540--4115 dya or '13 Audi lOOlS, AM /FM, 1een at 508 So. State . \, ..... ,or l 1i1 un · pm. Reasonable •t762or831·3255 • ~ 5«M)()87evs/SUn sunrl, ltlnt. oond, 68,000 Col le1e, Anah eim . MatUBoxSpmgic , .•. 128 Begonia, CM. 9:i7-11481 4118-L398 TY,..... ••••••••••••••••••••••• mi,$1800.67s-42SJ 774-0300 ~Sets 199 HIPl.Shree lotl 1.100 14. Good cond. Allll•"111/ •-9 S701 ":::::::::::::::::::-==--:--l-'-""='------- KingSct.s .. ·::·::.'::$119 G~;RAGt: S1_L 5 E : Toya Chrlstm.aa Boutique, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sl050. or be1t orter. C l:iuiC:s 9520 ••••••••••••••s.•••••••• 1m Audi lOOLS, Cbi!rry '76 8210. Autb, macs. lnquirefroml0·6 IS('. f'ti· .... at. 411 DecoraUona. Inna Hills CROWN mase1eves. ••••••••••••••••••••••• '76CHIYIOLIT nind.1179599>21'9evea. radk>cus, bW'g alarm . .. Sellablal-Alp11nol'' KinpRd.,NB. High. Sat. only, Tues. ,15 CYCLONE by 615uper90.~%~11tored, SUlf•YAH 675-Ml l days. 126Ml.5'5-9168 Mode~f~,..ury Fu UDICORATIMOo :;.~ o. P . 496·2086 RENT -I JV Catalina. I summer's ~~black wt .. Cluaic. Autom,a t ic, AM I FM '13 lOOl.S. AM /FM itereo, '782IOZ. Mi.rtt eond. Lomi, m EL TORO. Rockfiekl tol-'"'-''='----::----1 ft use,garaged.1·526·7601 -·-£ llttreo ape, pwr. !iteer· AC, auto, xlnt cond. AM /FM. $8900 .~C•ll $49-30'71 Cav~• h to Blrdror.11. John Wayne T«;nnis Club LOW AS -======"-'=-Modem Cluslc-'88 Im· lna .1 1hpainl·back s tat•. $1950.552·189'1. ~eW!:'. to Dunemear Rd. family membershl~, SIO MO '13ERICSON32'.7ba~s, peri•ICrownCoupe,full 1peca t.crulsecon-l -'-===='----1-'-"-'===---- .* *I Buy** Dec 2 3rd. Orlcntal din· priced for quiek s1 el Fr d U • 1 • -,.-,, l:·~es'"',,1•41,•988••_·,.."',, pwr, air. leith. Int, tro• I, ""• ..... , "'°'T · 11iu•. '?? Aud~ spd. 2 new '76h0i at1W1. orarige, apk. tng rm Mt, seat.a up to lZ, SlZOO +transfer fee. Cal ee e vtl)' n 11rt1 • radlala:. CarduUy maln· a1 1n a. a com• um, 11-transp. 1995. w s , n.,w t1res.i...~low {'ri)()IJ UM!d fo\amlturt & 8 vel vet ch rs l300. befote9;30am,640-5665, (714) 549-7024 da)'I (213)830-5100 U1Df'd. Top cond . .k AP· wheels It '4)w mllea. Llc. ,..,.,._;:;;;;::;;;::;;;::;;;::;;;=;liml§:<ie!. !Xin~l~"°""=·~U<~!~n~ Appll1nce1-0R I will Coldlpot. 14 cu ft refrtg Pinballs Foofballil Guar ~=I,./ pearance. O.at offer. 1813:54Ser. PS317. 1-63!-0832 - MllorSEL.LtorYou. w/lcem1ker t100, Olym· Adel.l3251t·up. FamllY O>IOr25"MarnavoxTV to70 l--==~------I $1477 ·•· '78 2:tlOZ, tmnc. Sliver, MAST8S A~TIOM pie mualc Ht 1100, Crin· Attade. fMO.ZWl ..,!.1~56 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·-M-.......1-_..., FotCtuaifltd Ad i.tereo, air~ :fl. $8850. 64M616&1J).9625 btr'C')' velvet k>ve couch .,, ... , SLW!S AYAILAILI ';:.,,.~-•WI· ACTION C..llownr. 41 ~~~~~~~~~ 1100. Oris oil p1lnUn11. Everest·Jennln11 wheel .rvc ~ver wilh S.E.A. YACNewport648-0551 8'1s-1741 C.ll• -port. lfl"IPl)rator cooler, chair. brand new, pd iraphlc cquallier, 2 Daily Pilot '18 Dauun 200SX. Beat CASJIPAIO •pr overtlze whit /Urea, 1310, 11 S300. Alum . acouitlc apeaker11 & :JO' Avalon 1mortn1. rn 'st ttlllman·Mlnx, 100C1 AO.VISOR the '79 prtce•. Aut.o. "'or Id med fW"Q, anti· auort HO train part•. crut.chet $10. Cane '5, To&hiba turntable. Xlnl front ol Scart·a &. swim trMapOC'tltkm. '300/beal 60-58'11 1tereo, Al C. tcconl q~•clr1V'all61.SW PLUSl.OTSMORE. ~ cond._,..9792 --o 128000 ---., ---· llrt.pe, rldlala. JllOO ml. v•.r .,., , , . vo... , Ull' ,u,.,._ 91NOO, PYt P\)'&11.912(1 " .... -•• ~ .. . . ..... -..... .. -•· ..... ~ f• .. . -' . t7JO aaaa Ovtt 200 fiat.a to ,. OLC ddu Xlnl cood l'hooll4-frum plusan Lo mi, • 1pd. J3SOO ouu.tandrng ~lt!t'tlOO 1 J0.6 30$41 l Usa ul Sport.a ('I~ • l J)ICK MIUXM Mllf'a••... '740 MOTORS ••••••••••••••••••••••• l20~Wamer.S A '18 ~2T.OOO m1 S7 2W MIDt cond ·73 Faul 128 '"'"'9-(ian ~7000 8.13-ll~ __ _ ITU Good sha~ swo 'Qt Mtl"\'f'des ~. IM 00.flMI • ~tAC ~. PW, PB. PS. '76 Flat Xl9. ong (l:..~r. ~C. n~w tirts. $4300 xlnt t'OOdlttOn &-st un~t 49'J.l7ao ______ I 5.52-9060 \ --"~JJtored Classic 'SS ·m 850 Spyder. nt!W tires. M"'~edes 2208 Sedun new brks, gre11l cond. Sunh"Of. mec:h & t'O:. S 1.200 or be!lt of r. 5411-7102 rnet1dM~ xlnt $81100. 675-6200 °""2·9358 H.da t727 'T1 4MOD. Auto. air, 1m-....................... llWldMew '79 mac. Lo m1. ~st sell. 640-5565 e v es, dys r 5!111 ............... ••••••••••••••••••••••• .......... t140 ....................... '13 lhrcedH O OS E. &wf, Ukt new. tlJ,IOO "1H411 -.,, Merlwde9 me. • tu appre<', wbt/bhM, llhr Int. 110.250 ...... a -... t742 , ...................... llH'4 MOA Jarl• o r whO • Man I• Good ~rca. -.1110 uk for m . . °"' t746 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1• Opt'l Mania Oo\q)t Id Ulln&., 1uto lralMI. vlnyl t.cJP, ~bk'. Ml MIO (t¥1, d'l ·!3113 ev1 ,. .•. t7IO ••••••••••••••••••••••• "Ta 914 2 0 e3 K, a.lnt t'ond, new • Mich. b*l ur .,.tons. Mt LSJ.J da11. ...a~. !:iunday • '71 IZI 1how rm cond RN_ eoaorni. *31.000. Pvt ply .... . ~ 914 2.0 1m/fm ta~. ~.000 ml. $6.'iOO meo11 --"7l 911T~$7lllO Xlnt t'ond ~ er. Silver 49t 66117 --61 &i~r90, ~% restored. red w/black tnt , Clault'. ~-31161 "73 914 1.7, 1mmac $4600. Steve Dys 838-2982, eves 631·5335 ·n P Targa, 17.000 mi, Platimum. Bamboo ltbr, b I k o 11 o y w h I a , Blaupunkl casee lle, $22.000. 642-4210 dya Tom, 6t0-052.3 eves ·Ilhe914'•·~•blkoo lo ml. mU.t sell this k. See-make ofrer. HONDA Cars 754-6341 MA9'4Y '00 l90SL reblt eng. both I To CllooM FrOM! ~· really pretty. Must se ! $7500 ~ 7508 71B, 759-0808 i5 91'1.o Silver/ Metallic, 5 s d . am /rm . Blaup~, new dutch, mags , 6,500 Home 552-7297 wrk, 645-8384 PIP. UNIVERSITY '67 250SESedan. snrf. air. a. .. w. One Owner, true classic. .... Can • GMC Showroom t"ond $7500 Tn1eb Cull Helmut 673-3750 2850 Harbor Blvd .. '71 Mercedes, AM /FM , Costa Mesa 540-9640 PW. PS, PB, 1mmac, um 911S, S'Oroof. AIC .. AM/FM Stele<>, alloys, leath seat!\, coppe r rretallit' bro $17,600 714492-9847 '68 912 Targa, rtblt eng . new Korus, Ml!:helins. '74 C1V1C Hatchback, low SS700. 968-3Jll m1 radio, heater. $2595 '59 MB Conv. Rebll mlr, 00-2960: 642·3431 new ures. top. uphlty. - 1978 H on da Ct v I c elt' $6500. Make trade. Hatt'hbat'k. 1.160 m1, 4 492 1566: (213)478-4824 . AM radio, s r war · ~ ., . pd Y 77 450 S EL 25,000 ma 1m etc. SS800 firm. m 7Z?9 ........ , .... ••••••••••••••••••••••• .... t7H ••••••••••••••••••••••• TIST DllYI OUI 'UCAI OFTHIYIAIH Good in~ lo 1totk. llt.U1''1 W 'a l.,t 1 ••• I MAJDA/WAULT a uo llatbor Blvd. t'08TA IUSA 641-1700 ~~~ ....... !?!~ "l DCAUR IN U.S.A. IOY ~CARVH ROLlS·ROYC£ u ... ,."'..," ......... ( .. ....... (t(llt~AYS __ ·~ Sllvtr Cloud J Sl9,000 WM144 l.MJ Kol1I Royce, white, Vtr'J nictl CUftd. $19,500. 640-7030 '71 RR 3'1 K ml. Deep ~reet\/ ~ae lthr. $26,500 4\o'f RR 291( ml. ll'ftft wtth bell: tthr. 132,500 PrlvatL' atty 831.-.0 Toyoto t765 ••••••••••••••••••••••• .-OUYOU S&LYOUI TOYOTA. SEE US! MMqutS TOYOTA Ml.SSJON VIEJO lll-ZllO 4tS-IZIO •SHELL• long bed only, windows, side & rear. Spoiler on top. Xlnt cond . $275. Call Russ all 5 pm. 536-7013 74' 4 dr Corona St.a wgn. 4 spd. A/C, AM/FM 8 trk. Super cood. Runs great. Nu radio. $2300. 768-8253. '73P.U. SUIOO ~-3551 eves. '74 CeUca. mags, A/C, $2700. Eves & weekends. 979-9515. ....._ a.p1rW Meet, UM4 , UM4 1Allto•, U•ecl AMt.1, Uaecl ....................... ....................... ....................... ....................... ·················--···· !~!!.# ••••••••. !??.! ~~:! .......... !!!.~ ~~ •.•••••• !!~~ ~~~ .•.•••..••• !!.~~ ~!~ .......... !!~~ ltnl Super . Beetle, 38K mUCl•. Good rond '2300 Eve 6 wtmdl f7t.t5U. '72 Coavertlble, 4 sl>d. AM /FM tape, ~tm Int, aharp. (011731) '2150. Wblal dlr. 7U.Ml7 or ... .,. . .. t17J . ..................... . ~ VOLVO SAUS.•Vk:I AM>UASIM6 OVERSEAS D!UVERY EXPERTS IMUlltl VOLVO l•Hatbor 8Jvd. COSTAM&'iA ...,_tJOl.540.9467 OIUl81COUMTY VOLVO EXQ.USIVEL Y VOLVO IAlr1ell VolYO DeeJer lo Ora.nae County! BUVorLE~E DIRECT !JH/..,\1 ;• : ·ou'\4; v VOLVO 2025 s Manchester Anaheim 750-2011 •71VOLVO262C Spedal limited edition car btilt in Italy & de· signed by Bertone. car has less than 12.000 miles. 4 speed overdrive & leathe r interior. (8'4VCR). OHL Y S 14,599 . .......... ~ c .... -.. " 646-tlOJ w HO·f467 '75 164 Sed, auto, air, PIS. AM /FM , lthr, s harp $3950 (490LWM > Whlsl d1r 752-0687 or 645-2963. lt1tCADIU.AC &DOI.ADO Thia OM 11 l.OADE.Dl LeaM or bu,)' Immediate DtUvery! (14131 . SAVll HOWAID a.n•t Dove. Quall St.I. NEWPORT BEACH IJJ.OIH "78 UMd Monte Stereo + lt74 UMCOLH 8'1 289. Beaut orig cond. t.aPt' P~r & ••r $12$ CONTl...-rAL Vuy clean. new rad.lab • per mo Sl.50 IUcR 39 mo COUPE 122SO. Ph673·3600 c:lo$ed ln leue. $41·3320 Landau lop, full p()wer. 9955 '73 C.pn~ Claulc Sports spilt power aeat.s. leather ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sedan 47,000 mt '2500. Interior, fat'lorx air 3 Oldll Ome1a·4 door . 67$-33& cood • Uh wbet;,11 crw.ae V8. automatic, trant .• control &r AM /F11utereo. pwr. 1teerin1 &r brakes. "71 Bel Air auto. air. good (IM8800). a.Ir cond., AM/FM 1tereo t I rea . r un i 1 ood $3799 t.pe. only $2,000 miles" $1001 &eat oUer 213 In excellent condlUon -.ms. <55tPIO'L Prl. pty. lf74CADIU.AC $2250/bellt orfer. Call S.AM DI VILLI "!.3ufo~rac!!f c~' 11a;r, 549·~ days; 545·3788 Padded top. tull ~er. P.P. M5-5e65 everunp&weekends. fad.ory air coodlUonln1. '75 Monza 2•2 h whb .. '75 Cutlass Sup~rne. air, Ult wbeel~cn1110 control F\llly loaded. ~-.;;;e ·71 l.lncoln C:Ontinental, radials, tilt whl, xlnt " A II I r M at• reo. olr. m ,u1oat\6pm. no accidents. 645·0380 cond,$2800. 963-12'2 SHARP!S<4983"1'99J9C>. d.YI , 646-5644 eves aak for '78 Cut. Supr. Brgm. Blk. '73 Malibu Sta Wsn. 3 Mlcbelo All options. Xlnt cond. NN1ER5 CAOIU.AL AUTO CENTER .. ... ... =~very clean.12450. Mlrc..y ttSO ~ Pvt pt.y 673-1<192 ••.••••••.•.•.•..•...•• """° 9957 THE.AUMIW ORANCECOUNTY'S ••••••••••••••••••••••• SAIL MIWIST '76 Squire Wagon. Pwr UNCOLN·MERClJRY str. root rack, dlx inlr, Dealership bl now OPEN auto trans. radial lir{!11. '75 CDV. Cabriolet top. 1''"--t..t UY FLADll01r. l t . o o o orig m 1 Leather lnt. F\IU Power, .,...,.. 5 S h AC. AM/FM 1J track. fOOS..CoaltHwy. UNCOLNAMERCURV < o w room cond > Must sell, movln& eut. ~·ecll 11H 8AutoCoenter Or 492-7296 MIOO PP. aG 1465. 494-1134 SDFwy·h:t~J'~rest exit '_'7S_Xln_t_cond __ . -4-spd-. _mo_d._ lf7SCAIMUAC .,,,. Cb II ___ l_l _0._7_00_0 ___ I ~jJ~600/Bestoffer213 ..... evy • no eng. ---~-----SIDAM DI VIUI flaired fenders. 2204 '72 Col. Parle 9 pus wag.,,,._.... 9960 POWER SUNROOF. Delaware1B.H.8. Wh ite. fully loaded!••••••••••••••••••••••• Padded top, leather in· Xlnl • l2D> 675-6161 tenor. fuU power. s plit 83 C h evy Imp a I a . . . '66 PLVMOUTII Satellite power seats. A 1111 FM lower~. mag ·wheels. '62 C:Ornet xlnt rwuung 2 dr hrdlp. Low mileage, at.ereow/tape player. Ult rebtt hi perfonn 327. over cood $425• rebll engine, radio, wheel factory air cruise $1300 invested. Best of· · sts·285l "!eater. air cond.(needs ' le le ' fer. 9fi8..8975 Also 1 set repaJrl. power steering control ow males. spoked rirm brand new Mnt.g 9952 & power brakes Gd . 0.EAN! <892NDM ). $450 • ••••••••••••••••••••••• transportation. lm5. Can $5999 --· -------'6S 8 cyl. reblt. eng. & be see n this weekend. '78EJCaminoSur.rSport trans. good shape. Sl595 CallSSl-4435 . NABERS CAOIU.AL AUTO CENTER •1 .-.. •• "' • Has every aval . option. Call 963-8n5 9,000 mi. Wrnty. Cost ---------'Tl Volare sports coupe. moo Will sell for $6,150. '64 C:Onvertlble. Perfec· Xlnt cond. Must sell Private Party 831~ lion+ +. Klghest orr over 847 ·7458. "73 lml>81a. 4 dr. clean. $4500. 640-2S64 1P--Ollffoc------,-,-,-S IW73Sedan de Vile. 44,500 AC. J>s. PB. as king '74 Mustang II Auto. 4 t'Y ••••••••••••••••••••••• ml, fully equipped, orig. $1550.559-5862eves A/t', Pis, ste reo new '73 Pontiac Grandville- owner. Best ofrer. tires.loau.$2450752-~ Automatic trans .. pwr. _&42-852.8~..;._..;._ ______ 1 Cllrystlr 9925 .66 Mustang 289 GT. 4spd. s tee rang. ne w p w r. lt76CADILLAC ~;;·~;~~~·:;·;;;;,::;~ new brks. tares. rblt ~e:~~~~~:; C<Mft DE VILLE white/blue top, $4795/of· lrans.$3500. 546-l9fl8 & super d ean! Must see Cabriolet top. leather in· fer58S-Zl68or493-5105 '75 Must II. V·6. 4-spd, to a ppret"1ate' Asking terior, full power, fac· A/C tom1 $2600 Sl900.Call497·3667. lOrY air condJtioning & 1974 Imperial LeBaron. 4 • 83l 7oo1 A M / FM 5 t e re 0 • dr, fully equipped, xlnt ·77 Trans Am. lo mi, xlnt SPECIAL! (930N0X). coOd. $3.250. 493-T145 64.5 Fs lh«. 3-s pd, st.le 86t t'~. lo down. take over . '$5999 C...,. 9933 o(ralS2000.30IORedh1ll. ~nlS. 995·1800, ••••••••••••••••••••••• CM. 10-5. Tues/Sat or 1o--------- '77 Pick Up s hell w / • •••••••••••••••••••••• NABERS CADIUAL AUTO CENTER '74XR7CI I ded t'all "The Center of ·11 Ponllat' Bonneville Musl:,;f~! • Time" 549-7741 Brougham Only 27,300 custom int. stereo. clean. $3800 S5M467 8J3.8719 Tri .... 9767 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '76 TR-7, Brown. s nrf • AM/FM cass. S37SO. can aJ\5pm. 559-7233. 9905 • • ••••••••••••••••••••• l974 AMC Sport.about. 4 dr wgn. auto. AM I FM stereo, root rack, tilt will. air, Jmmat'. $2150. 493-1122 . . .. • ••1.•1.. •'• llllU • &•' .. • • • • • ~ • tfll' f • "78 Seville, fully loaded. excellent condition. call 89f-1762 631·2683 ·m Mach I. 6 c·yl. 250 eng,. rru Loaded. very dean. 23 mpg. Many extras $SSOO Ph 9SS.1010 work, 1973 XR7. PIS. PIB, air. Mi.ntrond.S2950 661·3628 644-6593home FM/AM stereo. l ownr. '71 f'lreb1rd Ebpnt. PS. Only 42.500 mi. Offer. '73 351 auto. pis. p/b. a/t'. PB. 350 slick. radials, Dys 646-SOll. 673-2965 ~e892o 1 N 133 ea 839 r '!:!' 2 fe t't FM/8 lrk stereo Runs eves. ~ · ""'' greatSl300. 549-1217 'T1 Porst'he 911S 'hfia, VolbWCllJlll 9770 Recaro seats. Talbot ••••••••••••••••••••••• • runty SJ.700 962-7982 or mac. rare wh1te wilh tan 9623920 mt S25.000or $4.000&as· 76' HONDA ACCORD: sume lse. 833-3181 days I Under wrnty. ale. nu lrs. S44-6340eves& wknds. Mell ttl 0 um1 rmS4~768-4341 Spoiled rotten 62 190 SL •••••••••••••••••••••• 1977 CADILLAC Co.EDE VIUE Cabriolet top, full power. factory air conditioning. till wheel, cruise control. stereo, low mileage & with t yr/12,000 mile warranty. LOOKS SHARP! (999RSI) ·m Mech'I sound. needs AMtol, Hew tlOO AaltcK. Mew 9100 body work. Make offer. •••••••• • ••••••••••••••!•••••• ••••••••••••••••• yellow w/belge llbr. ' JOCJUCI" 9730 Nothing s pared. Mint Sl,000 stereo, allo>s .l 1976 VW UlllT . Dr. 73 Century Buick, ••••••••••••••• ••••• ••• cond. Call 714-838-5790 $19.800. 673-5005 Automatit' trans. & only I xlnt cond. $1600. Just 14 XK E JaJ!uar. t2c. Con· '70 280S. Looks new. F\11111978 924. Sunn. stereol ~.0'12~!~~~~~) •• ·.~:e~ s~: ?f:'b~ Ford 9940 eves.714-968-7841 • •••••••••••••••••••••• vertible. $10,000 or orrer power. AC. First $4300 tape, aar, absoJute mint Mirad4t airpo~ area. 546-WIS 1 takes. 96().5016, 846-6636. I cond. 752-c.isa. "-"-""'-'R--;--··PHIL LONG ..._... -78 Century Wagon . AMtos. M•w 9100 ...._, H•w '100 AlrhK. Mew tlOO 2lSOllarbor Blvd., C.M. Special Edlllon, 5 yr ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 645-5700 wan. V8. super clean. $8999 FORD. '79 MGBS '78 Triumph Spltfln IQUIPPID WJTM AM/FM. ~AGE RACK, CUSTOM PAIMT STIJPES Ir WHEEL 'RIM llMGS All p,,_ Pluo T .. & Lic.eft• c.r.~Tol'""'Sale Olw GoodThr11 Moftdey.~4.1'71 SUPER SELEOIM FANTASTIC PRICE REDUCTIONS Jaguar ~ 621AJAIUG Eight trade new reblt eng. sunroor. Cherry! Must Sell! $~ Ask for Ed546-92JS '76 Bus. auto. ~r. FM stereo cass .. Z..~. ex. clean. $5000. 962-414!i $6100. 962-7223 NABERS CADLl.AC AUTO CENTER ' ••I' A""' • • • • .......... 1. '78 Regal Turbo Sprt Cpe. Like new. Pur June. Every e xtra incl moonroof & special fact painl.$7900. Pb 844-46M ·--------- • ~ .. 1 0000 .• '1SC.dUm>Formal.$200 61 ~· 7 • ma s. per mo. S2000 R&R. 1or great cond, S325. 541M449 per ml. 36closed 10 lease. or9fi8..7138 541-3320. ·m Poptop Camper. \I.try 9 --------t"lea n & dependab~. C:.lllic 9 IS FOISALE $2250. Ph 673-6559 •• •• ••• •• •• •••• •••• • • •• COW AMY CARS ·71 VW panel van: new eng. paint. interior. tires; Many extras . $2750/bs l orr. pp 646-7239. '64 VW BUS. Xlnt cond. $1000/or best offer. (213)~ 645-3441 '71 vw Squareback, orig. owner. very c lean. $1600 firm. 548-863S eves. '71 Super Beetle Convert .. yell o w , n e w t o p , AM /FM, xlnt. Aft 4, 492-6775 ·m Bus: bed. Ice box. stereo. reblt eng. $1795 661-3930 • o,..c:o.ty·s s..-.c. ..... • PURCHASE ORLEASI YOURMIW 1979 CADILLAC NOW! • NABERS "73 CdV . . . • • . • . . .. $2950 '70 CdV ............ $950 'llJSdV ............ $850 '720lds98Cpe ......... . HUDSON BAY REALTY, LTD. (714) 645 -9950 l974 Cadillac El Dorado convertible. yellow, white inter ior. S4.000 mUes. Xlnl t"ond. Fu II power . $6000 . (714)675-9450; after 6 pm (114 )640-1498 "78 ievute 2 tone sil~er. 6,000 ml. Wrnty all op· Uona. S500 lake over lse. Private Party 831·6040 Cotmf'O " 17 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '7 7 ?.;:_:!:*¥1!:::. $ 2595 Get on the right lrat'k . cn•ATA~ OKT with the Daily Pilot _________________ ...;;....;;;...;~ CHRI STMAS G I FT, '69~ !~,!d to tWICI -s 1995 TRA IN ! Ca l l a _,, ... _ _.,,.,.,..., Christmas Ad· Visor at ••• 1311m 1 OK T 642-5678 '7 BCHIYT MOHi.A WAGON$ 4495 •u1omt1oe .,... •---o 1111 -luOO--·-.. _.., ,_ -........ (l)IU'.~I Ol'tL' 1973 Pinto Runabout. air xlnt cond. Fue l recall t'ured. 36.300 Mi. must sell. bestolfer836-7312 1•----------------- 72 LTD. 9 pass wagon, '7 5 ~?!!,S~ •!!~ ....$ 2'695 S1200 or best offer. AC. 00o0 ,,.,,... •e.....,c;, OK y radio, also. van top t"arry II--------------...;__;;....;~ all, w/pop up l e nt. '78 IUUI 4WD'• MAKE 837-6234: 831-9700 Xl22 ::· -·--_ .... ., i5 Granada 2 dr. 29,000 OFFER mi. Michelin tires. Vnyl 11-~:--:::--:~~~~~:-----~~~~-• ~P~Very ctean. '78 ~~=-::~$3395 '74 Gold VW Super Beetle. Snr1. gd rond. 642-0182. ~ 2600 Hait>or ~ ~ .. Mesa. 540-9100 '76 Granada: air. PIS. '77 Camaro LT. It tan/ta n Vnyl top. Prv. Ply. Very '7 4sw•IU court $ 1395 t'loth lnl. loaded. AC. PS. t"lean •'>'Kl'I 552 0067 or '" •••••-,....._ -; PB. Ult wht. AM/FM 8 _, • -,,_' ·-·-trkatereo. $6100. '40-4023 _s.59-4232 _________ •---~--~~~-----ONL __ , ____ _;_. '70 Bug w/'76 eng New I~~~~~!!!!~!!!!~ paint. Like new. must bee & drive. $l895 PP dys.49H876eves '73 Country Squi r e '76TllUMf'Hft7 $4395 77CDV exce ... ""'""d.. -._a's6 9920 Wagon: Very good cond. • ._., ,,_ •-:io.ooo- 675-8532 aft 4pm. Baj1t w /strong duel port. 1800 eng. FUii roll cage. Extras. $1500/o fr . 752-7919. "'··b :111 .,.. .. ., .. M lU _.,_.. $17SOorbeStoffer L"'N<"'"""°"''p:J71JKVI ~ flfJ et top. eta c ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ca11Helmut673-37SO OKT paint, leath ~ats, pwr 1973 CHIVltOUT sea$87t.s50,anppt.~~~cootrol, CANICl 4 DOOll "16 Ford Cbateau, 'HT. '78 ~.~ .. ~~!"?,,~~:~ ... o.$6395 • · ............. 17 ()plkllw lochade Landau Custom deluxe con· '~" CCMr, fNOt a -1000 .... --.. WI w 9IOO top full pow __ ,., r version. Poptop,sbower. ""'"'1-*1 OMlT --"• • er llUU ac-rully equip. Must see to ,._ ______________ ....;._. 5100 DOWN "111t Tu & UGt!W t.ory air conditioning. appreciate. 754·1948/ SPECIAL! \380HRH ). ,,,.c: ""'"' $1999 ............... 73 Maverick, 4 dr. 8 cyl. ~--------....;.....;.;._ ____ _. NABERS CAOIU.AL AUTO CENTER $4777 THEODORE ROBINS FORD ·'''·" te/llll\OR lllVO (< >'111 Ml \II '' \ ! (11110 '72 Malibu 150 Super clean l lllnt cond. a/c, $1750 Low Ml."548-4757 '87 C.maro 350, an new, tires, ma11, radl1tor, rront end. Reblt t.tans, SU.50.-..U. ' A /C, P /S, AM/f'M stereo..! vnyl. rad ti, gd cond. tlMS. 644-41311. tt7JUMCOLM COUPI Padded top, leather In· t.erlor. ruU power. rac· tor)' alr cooditlonln«, tllt wheel Ir stereo . l1MIDB>. $2699 NABU~ CADll. I AC. AUTO CENTER '11 Muaa2+2Rtbbk, Uke new. on111.ooo i:!i:1s1 AulO tnull, All r 1 na to ..U fall. $41.IO. uall ~ r •==========-=-----• Ooadn••' new tn, '71 a.. w m PU '* ..., brtla, ... 1boeb. Mil '1GI I* mo.•.., new tr.--. .. « cloledllft ..... Ml·-· 1*tolf.r•IM4 \ . . . . · . Supplement to Coast LIFE. Nov. 29. 1978. Dally Piiot t Nov 30. \97~ ASHION ISLANJ 2 FASHION ISLAND-Supplement to Coast LIFE. Nov. 29. 1978. Dally Piiot 'Social Expression' Shop Caters to Everyone Valley Hallmark In Fas hion Island has ornaments galore this holiday season. The holida31 ornaments range from yam ornaments lo nostalgic ornaments with lbe look of stained glass and wood. Marketing Director of Hallmark, Randy Harris, said. Other items include cards, gift wrapping, candles and party goods. "Va lley Hallmark is a social ex· pression shop catering to everyone. "We will be engraving t he cus to mer 's na me and date of purchase on the ornaments bought at the store," Harris said. Valley Hallmark is at Fashion Island in Newport Beach next to Bob Burns Restaurant. \. • ... -. ,- o.,.. Kirk hold9 theracld ........ , •·~omament at Valier lldmertc. Nov. 30. 1978 ' Worldly Luggage PIM hi.Ill • for trh6 lo IM corwa of._..-. oen be tDuftd .a .. _.., L""f: In , .................... __ ,d "°"°"~1~. 1 A mark of excellence since the mid·ni lllteenth century. Then, it was carried not as a status symbol. but simply becauH It was the finest quality available. Today, whether you want a cover for a tenms racket. a pull'1M1 for a world cnnse, a duffle for t,f1e gym, a wallet for your hip pocket or a special Christmas gift, you11find it in Louis 'Alitton at Bullocks Wilshire. Featured: 15"MuseNeS225 Luggage. Handbags, repr~entative selection all 4 BW stores. Large satchfl $1!1) East/Wf/St camera case $210 _ Canal boat handbag $215 21" pull"!an $275 ......... M«Jium roll $125 . - Checkbook cover S2'2 Key case S22 Flyer carry-on $325 ~ Cosmetic case $78 French purse $58 24· pul/msn S295 1s· voyager $255 Lady's garment carrier S480 6UllOC~5 ~lSUrn[ * (/) c "O "O a; i ~ t I 0 0 0 Q:> !e r-:;; m z ~ l'g -~ 0 !!. < ~ 0 .- z ~ ~ 0 .... i i ~( Single duffle $235 l_:!/ ~ __ M68.ES 3050 Wt.shire Btvd. 382-6161 9:~ to 5:45 daily. Stlt 12 to 5 • PALM SPRINGS (714) 325-157110 to 6 daily. Sun 12 to 5 • WOODLAND HILLS 887-5151 and NEWPORT (71 4) 759-1211 10 daily Mon-Fri tll 9'30. Sat til 6. Sun 11 to 6 I<-> 4 FASHION ISLAND-Supplement to Coast LIFE. Nov. 29, 1978. Dally Piiot • Fashions don't start atJ ean Ryan, they just get there first. 1']ewport & Anaheim JE:l.IN RVAN ~ASHIONS 48 Fashion bland Newport Beach 714/759-0506 101 Anaheim Plu a Anahei1)1 714/5.35-5558 Nov. 30 1978 * Fashions .Go Sheer Daytime to evening fashion this holiday season means sort, sheer polyester dresses in nattering noral prints. Thal's the report from JC Penney in Fashion Island. Light or sophisticated dark col· ors, border prints and soJid colors, all in styling that mo'les ea sily from ortlce to holiday gala , will be fashionable. The dresses are made or 100 per· cent polyester fabric which is chlr· fon·llke. almost weightless and very feminine. Fu ll ·bo~tied s ilhouettes pre· dominate with dolman s leeves and mandarin collars. Soft shirring ·al shoulders ·and narrower skirts p rovide an up·to- date look. Two-piece dresses are more con- servatively styled with tie collars and blouson bodices. Prices are $23 to $42. They are available In the dress department of J C Penney at 24 Fashion Island in Newport Beach. BegiMing Nov. 24 JC Penney will be open from 10 a.m . to 10 p.m. Monday through Saturday and 10 a.m . to 6 p.m . Sunday. Fine Furs Designed in NB Hundreds of thousands or dollars worth of fine furs are designed and manufactured in Jo,ashion Island al M. J a cques Furs. Shoppers can choose from hun- d reds or furs -· over $1 million worth. The American Jo,ur Industry is on the threshold or completing the fifth consecutive year or increased sales. M. Jacques F urs is owned by Michael J acques, who studied fur technology in free Czechoslovakia. He won a s cholarship which enabled him to continue his studies in Pa ris where be was privileged to ~ Beverly Woltman Models 100 percent potyeater sheer floral print top with solid eklrt. work with the leading European couturiers. "With the resurgence of all types or furs. M. Jacques' extensive back· ground in every phase of the fur In· d ustry makes him highly qualified to give his patrons expert advice on these furs." a spokesperson said. Furs available include: Black Willow mink coats fo r $15,000, Russian Lynx coats for $40,000 and Golde n Amber Fox coal s for $13.000. Furs start at $300. M. J acqucs Furs is locuted al 14 Fashion Island. Call 644·4661. . . Women's Velour Tops in 4 great styles and six beautiful colors. including v-necks. turtle neck.and zip fronts s13 to s2s .. It's a Natural! 1 OOo/o cotton sportswear vest. skirts and pants: m wine. rust. beige & brown co-ordinating embroidered blouses. s7 to s14. Women's Fleece Robes Junior f ult length blanket robe with hood & monl< 's robe belt In pastel colors. Misses full length button front or wrap styles In jewel tones or soft shades. * Supplement to Coast LIFE Nov 29. 1978. Daily Pilot s1s. 14K Gold Serpentin~ Chains 14.99 to 42.50 18k Gold Beautiful desi gned jewelry to suit all your fashion needs: charms & zodiacs ... from$18. chains & bracelets •. $32and up Fine Jewelry Department Save20% Cocktail Rings Ladles and Mens rings In 10K and 14K Gold settings, including: opals, rubles. sapptllres. emeralds, amethest. topaz & other popular gemstones•. s17 to s2s. ·Excludes all rewelrv where dlamooos constitute the largest value. The JCPenney Version Willow leather deck shoe For the yac htsman. Sizes 70-130 Visit our shoe dept. today. A super value at sao. Chistmas Place rt leach Fathlon Island 6U.211 I ·' \ Nov 30 191~-'SHION ISLAND S 14k Gold Initials ..... NOW18.50 Armitron• Chronograph Watch , with Alarm Mulllrunctlon L.C.0. A. unique watch that combines the visual with the audible. gold tone •........ 99.95 silver tone ........ 89. 95 Men's Velour Robes ·$45. HOOded Monk's robe with contrasting stripe on sleeves & border . 37.50 Calf length velour robe with notched collar in solid colors. s10. Sofid color kimono. 1lzes s. M, L, XL OBN MON . ..UT. 11A.M. ·IP.M. IUNIMY 10A.M .... P.M. 6 FASHION ISLANO-Supplemt1nt to Coast LIFE. Nov. 29, 1978, Deity Piiot Nov 30. 1978 * ' - Kethl Rylft of Jean RJ•n '•INon• modell • 'IOltlo Tr•ll• 1111 J-.. . '1 • In trt tone. ~ ~ _ • . . Seasons Affect Style As the seasons change so will the styles in clothing offered at Jean Ryan Fashions, said L.owner Jack Ryan-. -- Ryan said the winterand spring season will be full or exciting t\ew silhouettes in fabrics. Examples include: -The nubby look Dots on fabrics -Neutral coloring The South Rises -Soft relaxed design in clothing. -Fluid and uneonstructed styUng styling -Two·piece suits and dresses -Soft elastic waistlines Ryan said the fel]l inine look also ls back in style. · J ean Ryan Fashions is next to The Broadway and Neiman-Marcus at Fashfon Island, Newport Beach. Thi• hletorlc•I doll depicting• Southern belle may be found at Bullock• Wtlahlre In F••hlon lal•nd. ...... unmistakably traditional ... our moet complete M.lection o£'Uw. 'W'Orld'& f'inut import.44 ecoLtish t'Wltds, combintld With the fine&t natural &boulder tailoring available. . ,. r ;"" ~ . ,. / . ~ ~~) . -----. Supplement to Cotat LIFE. Nov. 29, 1978. Deity Piiot end L.A. Tlmn, Nov. 30, 197&-FASHION 1SLAHO 1 ·- rm so excited about my visit with each one of you. ru be in my Santa House in the fnall'a Stage Court. And here's a special treat. You can have your picture taken with me-a lleadM m•at ..._ plM&opapll for a nominal charge. They're presented in attractlve folders-something your parents, friends and relatives will always ~njoy, ... Here's when you can vtslt me: Moaclay·FltdaY 11:00 a,m.-1:00 p.a., lataldaY 10:00 a.&·1:00 fa.of laday UtOI &&· .. p.& See you soon! In Newport Beach on Pacific Coast Highway betWeen MacArthur and Jamboree· - .. ··~ 8 FASHION ISLAND-Supplement to Coast LIFE. Nov 29, 1978, Deily Pilot ,I Nov 30. 1978 ,- It's nice to have an expert ' on your side! Master Furrier Since 1933 M.JACQUES DESIGNDS AND MANlJFACl'URERS OF WORLD'S FINEST FURS J4 FcWdon Island Newport Beach 644-4661 .........---..--.................. !I ..... .; ....................... Supplement to Coast LIFE. Nov. 29, 1978. r;>ally Pilot Goodness . what taste! 'Re send gifts ... Come In and Mlect food gift peke • tor C""9emlla. Take with you or we'll ship. Weil Mlde aH the detaffa and even •ndo• a pe190nat greeting. TexasSpaad 1 lb. BEEF STICK• Summer SausaQe, 12 oz. Miid Midget Longhorn, S oz. Smoky (smoked cheese bar ), 7 oz. Plain ~. 7'h oz. Belle Fleur (a natural French type semi· soft cheese>, 8 oz. Edam Stick, plus Strawberry Bonbons. 16.98 plus guaranteed dellvery charge If shipped See this and many othergi(t pales on displq ' lllOY. 30, 197&-fASHION ISLAND 9 Handmade Tweed Coats Have Richer Coloration Much ol the tweed sold by Ai Ease la band-loomed inScoUand. "It bas a much richer coloration than domestically woven tweed," buyer Al llayman said . Mayman said At EAH in Fashion Island baa an outstanding selection of tweed sport.coats in the women's and boys' departments. "Tweed can be worn from Sep· tember to May," he said, adding that if the shopper is considering a quality cotton sportcoat, tweed is not much more expensive . .. Tweed has a depth of color you do n't get in wool or cotton." May man said . Mayman recommends grey or tan trousers with the tweed sport.coats. He said the clothes should "not overpower each other,'' but rather, each item should enhance the out.flt. Beginning Nov. 24, At Ease will t>e open 10 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. Mon- day through Saturday and noon to 5 p.m. Sunday. Mary Jo Lorenz, left, Robin Plnd and Jfm Finnegan model flne garments at At EaM In Fashion Island. Fashion Island ........... MNIJI -...M 'II t W. 'II 6 S-IJ-1 •••• Westcliff Plaza '"' .. .,.... ........... Ml4t7l ~,., ..... ,., ... ,., **** MAllNB'S YU.A .. DAMAPOIMI' . 4tW671 ......,. .... ,.. ... ,., 10 FASHION ISLAND-Supplement to Coast LIFE. Nov. 29. 1978, Dally Pilot Nov. 30. 1978 New Hickory Farms Opens NB Fashion Island Store ServiCe is the key at Hickory Farms' new store in Fashion Island. · Enthusiastic salespeople assure customers easy shopping and courteous service. Mike Munz owns both the Fashion Island and Westcliff Plaza Hickory Farms stores. He suggests that gift packs make excellent gifts for firms to send to key accounts. Munz said Hickory Farms ac· cepts phone orders for gift packs. Call 640-6030. Gift packs may include cheeses meats, jams, jellies, dried fruit Md teas. Prices range from $3.95 to $79.98. Gourmet selections from a gift pack often are an ideal complement to a holiday meal. Hours are 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Mon· day through Friday, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturday and noon to 5 p.m. to Sunday. · The new Fashion Island Hickory Farms store is near the playyard between the Lanz and Red Balloon stores. Park near J.C. Penney. Evt s&abermen of Hickory F•rma ahowa a food Pffkcatted 'Megnlfl- A1al1t.nt 1Mnager Doreen DICoatanzo of 1 packagHof Nltural t•••· Healthy Treats Fla Shoppers can munch a healthful lunch and shop for a decorated jar of carob-coated almonds at Truly Naturally. Truly Naturally Health Foods at 63 Fashion Island is both a restaurant and health food store. During the holiday season, de· corated jars filled with healthy treats such as dried fruit and carob· coated raisins and almonds are featured. A selection of gift packs of herbal que.' ~~~~~--:-~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~----.,.. •• -~~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!"------ . --........ FASHIOO ISLAND Newport~ 944 8808 FASHI~ SQUARE a.nta Anaae&-T797 HUNTIOOTON HARBOR Hufttt'JW'OI• ........ , • .. . --·.~~···.·······~" .. . . . ..... .. . : .............................. ... . from our holiday collection The Red Balloon Christmas dress . . . by Florence Eiseman In sizes 4-14 ..-----75t~ r.j\t\t\tWllSOlt~ ----..... The cruise f avorlte . • • detailed as r.ou love them. Camel calf trimmed n white. There are no finer shoes made In America today ~ .ffuti~ SH 015 ., ..................... ..... -- Siles AAA.A -6 to 10 AAA • 5'12 to 10 AA· S to 10 A · Slh to 10 B • ~lh to 10 C· S'h tot Supplement to Coaat LIFE. Nov. 29. 1978. Daily Pilot Nov. 30, 197~ASHION ISL.ANO 11 .. '*"" 'ruly N•tur•lly Inf Hhlon l•l•nd hold• gift br The Holidays s also will be offered. Because or success of last year's sales of t packs, a larger supply is of· ed this year. ··People are looking for more althfuJ gifts," said Assistant anager Dee DiConstanzo. "The corated jars make very attrac· ve gifts." Hours are from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Tuesday through Thursday, 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. Monday through Friday and 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. on Sunday. A. H. WEINERT Fine Jewels SPECIAL SALE PRICES I Tarantulas, Hermit Crabs Make Effective Holiday Gifts . Hermit crabs and tarantulas make effective gifts. ''People come to Russo's lor gifts such as electronic paas-thrOuah doors for cats and dogs, and custom designed wrought Iron bird cages," a spokesperson for Russo's Won· derful World of Pets said. "Christmas sales of puppies have started especially early this year - after all, who wouldn't like to find a cute Russo pup under the tree?" Sweaters, coats, fancy collars, hair brusher , toys, chew bones, cat f urnllure and aquariums also make effective gifts: "Last year, more than 4,000 stockings for dogs, cats, birds, hamsters and even fish were sold," he added. He said "Mamma Russo" band· made more than 2,000 dog and cat stockings. "Russo's Pets wu voted the most popular store in Fashion Island for good reason,'' the spokesperson said. • M•nager Darlene Gratz poM1 with ~enrleUa, a lc.arlet Macaw, In front of Ru110'1 Wonderful• World of Pet• In Fa1hlon llland. DIAMONDS SET WHILE YOU WATCH 3 Days • November 30. Dec. 1st, 2nd .02 RD ..... I •••••••••••••••••••••••••• 20.00 .05 RD.,, .......•••.•••••. , .••.••••••• &0.00 .08 RD I ••• ' •••• ' •••••••••••• ' ' •••••••• 8().00 . . 15 RD .....•.........•..••• ,,,, ••• 150.00 .20 RD ......•.•••.....• , •..••••• 250.00 .25 RD I • • •••••••••••••• ' •••• ' .350.00 .33 RD. . ...•••.••• , •••• , , •••. , .450.00 .50 AD .•• ' ...•...... I • ' •••••• : .895.00 .50 RD . . . ... , ....•..••.••.... 1200.00 ~l'!t-.75 AO ..............•.......•. 1200.00 fl:!llli:'~ .75 AO ...•..•..•...•••••...... 1800.00 ,, 0 .98 RD .....••.•••••••••••••••• 2A00.00 , .99 RD .....••.••.•••••••••.••• 27'00.0C> ' 1.02 RO .......•......••..•• 3400.00 Q>oo~~ 1.26 RO •............•..•... 3800.00 2.1s RO •.........•........ noo.oo 3.58 RO •.••.....••....... 17,000.00 5.47 PEAR ............... 33,000.00 I I MOUNTINGS GALORE TO CHOOSE FROMI FREE , RING CLEANING ULTRASONIC FREE CHECK YOUR DIAMOND We Destgn The Newest From Your Oldest! A. H. WEINERT FlneJewels . ...... . . . . . . . . . ...... ... . . . . . . . . ......_ ..... .. ' . . ....... - •• • ............. , ....... ii Mr. Alc'*'<I M8l8er atart9d at • ~ young ege to beCOme • setter and de- algner. This f#nOUI Frenchman'• con- sidered one of t"9 flne9t at hi• crtft '" the jewelry world. WM• you watch. he wlll perform hi• wt of Mltlng. Mr. Brad- ford Tumet. our Oft1)t'9mlMI teweier. wlll Mo b9 ... to a&n. potWt Md help you wltti yo&.-needl and aulst wltf'I • signing. Do you hlNe tentlmental fewel• In old outdated mountings? o.ther them up and bring them In ao our e..,.m cen • sign new fabuloul collectab!M. Before your 9Y9' your PNdOUI diamonds will tke a new t1te'""O look In ttie new mounting you aelect. STORE HRS~ Thuf'S. 10 to 9 p.m. Frl.10to9p.rn.•a.t.10to&•8un.11to5 Viti • Miiter Charoe • AtNfloln Expr919 ' , 12 FASHION ISLAND-Supplement to Coast LIFE. Nov. 29. 1978. Diiiy Pilot ,· ,---------~-------------- • Pre-Holiday Sale STARTS FRIDAY, DECEMBER 1st . ---------••.,. .. ••wwwmww ROBE & GOWN SETS NOW Robe REG. $42 s2sss MATCHING Gown REG $19 s14ss -------------i ........................ i.i ... .. SELECT GROUP OF Jumpers REG. •so to t 54 REG . kotoMa NOW NOW s33ss s29ss ,.. .................... Dl!Sl ................ iiiiiili ................ t FASHION ISLAND 644-441 1 Nov. 30. 1978 On Premises Repair Shop Guarantees Good Work A.H. Weinert Fine Jewels has a repair shop on the premises. "Most retail jewelers send out to wholesale repair shops," said Brad TurQer, supervisor of the repair shop at A.H. Weinert in Fashion Island. "Jl helps when I'm close to the source," he said. "Thal way, if" a problem comes up" Turner is avail&· ble. Turner studied al the University of Kansas and owned a jewelry store in Laguna Beach for fi ve years. l.n addiLion to repairs. the shop is equipped to design custom jewelry Hours are 10 a m. to 9 pm Mon· day through Friday. 10 a.m. lo S.30 pm. Saturday and noon to 5 p.m. Sunday. Goldamlth Brad Turner creates jewelry et A. H. Weinert Fine Jewe l•, Faahlon laland. HIDE AWAY Shop n9w.while selections are plentiful -Use our Hide-Away Plan . .. OUR TIME IS MONEY . SLAVICK'S Fiiwr~lcn S.nu· l':>I l8 Fashion Island • 6 11· 1 lSO Newport Be.ich ~un.i Hills • Wesrminsrcr .r.., (1"'•ht La A1111dn • ~ O.qcu • a.., Vc,11•' ..... """'""''~,....._-~~ -\,.,..,....,_l.,.... .,_.,ANll •f\I M.-.tiw-,._ These unique Corum watches are completely handcrafted in Swit7.erland from authentic gold coins. $20 gold piece for men, $5 gold piece for women. A. Man's automatic, $3,950. B. Woman's, $3,200. \. 1 ~ , , ' • Supplement to Coast LIFE. Nov. 29. 1978, Daily Pilot• Nov. 30, 197&-FASHION ISLANQ 13 LI•• M•rquez model• a two piece evening pant aul for TM Place. • • Career-minded Miss Gets Style "Our clothes are styled for the career-minded mlu ln alH1 3 to ia. •'The Place 11tocu a selection of __ silk clothing, novelt7 fun, jackets, dre111ea and dlaco 1hlrt1," aald manager Marlys Scbellbase. as a picture ot Shirley Temple Clothes ran.re ln price from $5 to $80 and The Place h11 popular name brands. The Place is ln FasbJon Island lbopplngcenter, Newport Beach. Store houn have bff n e•tended be1innlng November 24 for customers' convenience. M ra. Schellbaae aald The Place i. fl""'11£td FOR BETTER SHOES -ALSO- CARRI ES A COMPLETE LINE OF ·AT HOME FOOTWEAR .... MEN'S Evans, Manistee, Thurmocs, and Sioux Moes Sizes: 6to13 •Widths: A to EEE WOMEN 'S Daniel Green, Oomphies, and Sioux Shaggies SIZES: 4to11 •WIDTHS: AAA to E --.CHILDREN'S-- - Sioux Moes, Sioux Shaggies and Wellco SIZES: 6to13 •WIDTHS: A to EEE 14 "'Stf0t4 llLA .. • MIWPOIT MACH 644-4HI 27 East Main SI . Alhambra (213) 282·3878 Bank Amerfcard • Master Charge • Hemphltl Charge Alon1 with clothln1, an array of coJlecton' ttema are offered Anllque dolls and old •heel 111ualo are avall1ble, Mn. Schellbaae aald. The item1 Include the tmUIUal, such acroaa f'rom Clark Kenned1 Florist. .1,~,._-..,........,...-.llliliii-.--..-...._-. __ ..., ________ _, ' i t· 14 FASHION ISLAND-Supplement to Coast LIFE. Nov 29. 1978, Dilly Piiot 1nd L.A. Times. Nov. 30. 1978 I Paul Perron atanda by a dlaplay of Florahelm and Cote-Haan men'• dreH •hoe• In Hemphlll'a. Hemphill's Shoes Continues to Fit Customers After 45 Years Hemphlll's Shoes in Fashion Island has been an independent business for 45 years and is famil y-owned. . Bryan Hemphill said, "If l can't fit the needs or a customer, then I'll place a special order." Orthopedic shoes, running shoes· and conservative styling in shoes are offered. THE GREAT SHAPES FOR THE GREAT ESCAPES Perfect for short trips or for c.mying your &ear lo the Hemphill's carries such name brands as Florsheim, Sperry Topsider , Clark's, Adidas and Penaljo at moderate prices. Customers with wide or narrow feel who are normally hard to fit can be served al Hemphlll's. "Mucb or our business is done with repeal customers," Hemphill said. dub, this double-h.tnc.lled Roll Dul Ile arso rcatum a dctach.tble shoulder map ... S95.00 This stylish Racquetball Bag has c1 vinyl lincc.l sh0<· compc1rtmcnt, 2-ucquct pouch and oidjustuble shouldf'r strap ... $41.50 lmec!mtuthcrma~G1\St:15-=> '" ~~ .ire made of durable Cordura nylon · f,1brlc with tan belting leather trim. 125 FoshlOn Island (714) 759·9101 near • ·-· ....................................................... _ _. ... ~ ••• t ••••• ._ • Stock Room Has Diversity Huggins Shoes ''fits customers." "We're known for carrying nar· row widths that can't be found other places," Manager Ned Anderson said. Huggins Shoes, in Fashion Island near Bullocks, does 75 percent or its bu siness in 12 sizes or women's shoes. Anderson said Huggins Shoes has more stock space than most other stores and offers~a wider selection or shoe sizes. This does not considerably raise the price, however. Anderson said 30 to 40 percent of merchandise is a few dollars under most other stores Huggins Shoes lonows the evolu- tion or fashion. ''We avoid fads," he said. "We try to determine a natural evolu· lion. We don't stock something that's just a flash in the pan and will soon go out of f~hion." Huggins Shoes carries only leather shoes. · Hours are 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Mon· day through Thursday and Satur· day, 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Friday and noon lo 5 p.m. Sunday. An elegant dlaplay of ahoea for faJI end winter greet• customers at HugglnaShoes In Fashion Island •. 26 Foshion Island Newporl 8eoch Phone b40-+423 J ., Fashion Island has the shop & restaurant you've been waiting for! rruly Naturally NATURAL FOODS FOR EVERY TASTE Good Selection Healthful GIFT ITEMS DECORATOR PACKS! • Dried Fruits • RawNuts • Carob Coated Nuts • Honeys AND MUCH MORE 63 Fashion Island 759-1541 Supplement to Coast LIFE. Nov. 29. 1978. Daily Pilot . t-iov. 30. 197&-fASHION ISLAND 15 Organs and Pianos Ma.ke Excellent Home Gifts "Families can enjoy a musical Christmas with a family instrument -the piano." Owner Charles Yates of Yates Music Store in Fashion Island said pianos and organs are girts the whole family can e njoy. However, guitars are the most po,pu lar instruments, he said, with band instruments close behind. "Drums also are popular at Christmas," he said. Christmas records and tapes aren 'l always bought for gifts, but they are bought by many people, he added. "We have a plus on our side. I · taught music for the Newporl·Mesa Unified Schoo l District," Vales said. Yates Music Store is open from 10 a m. to 9 p.m. every day al number 61 Fashion l!>land. Owner Charles Yates featur.es Baldwin pianos at Yates Music Store In Fashion Island. GET INTO THE SWING OF THE SEASON ... Our graceful sway of a disco drtss moves into the social season gracefully ... sensationally ruffled at bodke and hemline. Coral, blue or rose washable polyester in petite, small and medium slz~, $34.00. FASWON ISLAND • l.allm• Hlll3 Mall 11..11111111 • Har11or Stlooll4nc Center 1CO.t• ,. ••• • Ore11,. Ptua ~ C-t« •O•Nln 0'"9 • Dil A ... fNh*' 54twir• 1Torr~1 • /- .1 16 FASHION ISLAND-Supplement to Coast LIFE. Nov 29 1978 O_!!lly Pilot. .. Rena Page, left, and Alta Whtte of the Red Balloon In Fathlon ltlind greet Chrtatmat 1hopper1. Children Can Enloy High Fashion at Red Balloon Red Balloon has high fashion for children "It's a special place to buy clothes fo r children and young wo men," co· owner Maryann Reynolds said. "Our backbone is the tailored and classic look. "We try to give a good presenta- tion-we're noted for our displays and service." she said , adding, "the salespeople have good taste and enthusiasm." . Red Balloon d eals mostly in sportswear. For young ch ildre n, mono· gram med sweaters are available. "If they accident.ally leave the sweater at school the teacher knows to whom It belongs," she said. Shoppers at Red Balloon range from infants to 20-year-olds. Pre·teen'merchandlse -for girls ages 10tol3 -also ls offered. Hours are 10 a.m. lo 9 p.m. dally, 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturday and 11 a .m. to S:30 p.m. Sunday. Thi• e1wttt11 .. "" In PaaNon t•nd ., .......... t1te feMIYe apfrtt .... ,,.,. .......... , ........ ce. ............ . " , Nov. 30 1978 * Al's Garage Carries SOphisticated Wear Styles at Al 's Ga rage in Fashion Island are dressier and more sophisticated than in the past. nel by Gant and in corduroy by I. Pierre Cardin.• "We don 't Just h a ve Levis anymore. We have dressier items, such as vests for men. . "I guess people are just starting to dress up more in this area," Manager Lynn Mattson said. She also said, however, the fashions at Al's Garage are com- fortable and casual. "We expect our Western snap shirts to be popular for gifts." she said, adding "we have them In nan· ·Pleated pants by B.P Britches and by Bugle Boy also are expected to make popular holiday gifts. "Our Chemin de Fer brand for men and women definitely is going to be popular at Christmas," she said. She added that the wide selection of velours is moving well because they're "son. beautiful and nice." Al s Garage is·open from 10 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. Monday to Saturday and from noon to 5 p.m. Sunday HenrrAtwro,we1ra1Jan...,...,..c..-, • .....,~.a. .... 1 * Supplement to Coast LIFE. Nov. 29 1978 Daily Pilot Nov 30. 1978-fASHION ISLAND 17 Fine Time Piece .BU1Munsonof8'avfck'11Jewe,.,..1nspectawatchfo;acu1tomer ~ttheFathlonlt1and1hop. A GJFT OF TEA ROSES Tea Rose to bubble her, shampoo her, perfume her. A Tea Rose Experience. All gathered In one dellciouK collccllcu1 111 1111,.. fuh11lc111i. Cnlfoctors Gtn Pre1W:11tntlon. Onh·~m~ Ill,• l'.-rr,-.,1 IHO i,t,•a VALLEY~~ -iT card • gift store 3t Fullloa bla.S, Aerou Fn•.PemJ9·Mt-•t• • .. r ,. I • J " ( • 18 FASHION ISLAND-Supplement to Coast LIFE. Nov 29 1978 Dally Pilol Nov 30 1976 * More Than Wrinkles Made The granny gown has made more th a n a wrjllkl e 1n Lanz of California's success --- ft is a most popular Christmas item. according to manager Chris Acke rman. "We sell a lmost 20 per day," she said. . The granny gown is made-of 100 percent cotton fl annel. It has a r o unded yoke neckline, long sleeves. white eyelet trim and full styling. ~h e s ai d popul a r holiday colors will be flesh tones. white purple, scarlet, bright bJues and black. ese-<.'Ol<>r& will be j n fabrics_ like _ velveteens. quHted satins and silks: Brand names available include: Foxy Lady, Yoong Edwardia n, Hang Ten and Panther Lani also has a shoo department carrying many types and styles. Shoe Strings, Garolinl, Joan and David and Bare Traps are offered. Hours are 10 a.m. lo 9 p.m. Mon- day through Friday, 10 a.m. lo 6 p.m. Saturday and 1J am. lo 6 p.m. Sunday. Kelly Burton , left, weare • Ruth Robin tennlt enMmble and Laurf Solf moctell • wermup 1ult for C.thy Jean-COurt9'de. Shop Caters to Young Cathy Jean-Courtside caters to the young-minded person. It Is an active sportswear store that can fill the needs or today's Joe· cer. A large eeJeclJon or jogging and tennis ahoea for men and women are carried. Warm-upe, Htina, silkies and T· shirts also are available. Cathy J ean-Courts ide carries ladles evening shoes. Labels include While Line Fila and Court Caauuls. Store boun are 10 a.m. lo 9 p.m Monday through Friday, 10 a.m. lo 6 p.m. Saturday and noon to 5 p.m. Sunday. Cathy Jean-Courtside ls tailored to the beach area lirestyle. Benchley on '5th .Avenue of OC ' The new Christmas catalogu_, opens ar Benchley Luggage Limited on "the 5th Avenue or Oran1e County." "Many ~e call Benchlef thtf l1r1eat and most beautiful apeelalty lu11a1e st.ore In the world. "We c•rry the moat e•cluat~. top-of-the·llne lu1101e round .. ... .. anywhere," said a sp0kcsperson for the Fashion Jslaod shop. " Domestk and imported designer h&,118•, brief C8MS and bandbaJS tll girt lists at BenchJcy. Other 1lrt items Include: ~~x· quialt•" Inlaid "'Ooden Jewelry DOJC· e•, 1ame tabJea: manicure eeta •nd picnic bukets. ... ..... . ., .. , .............. _.,, . .. . ... '"""••.,. .... ... .. .. . Supplement to Coas1 LIFE. Nov. 29. 1978. Dally Pilot "ov. 30, 1978-fASHIVN ISLAND 19 Gifts Have Originality "Holiday gifts should be prac· tic al. tasteful and original." Candy Morgan, co-owner of Forty Love in Fashion Island, said, "We· want to help people to feel at home while shopping here." Forty U>ve has a vast selection of tennis, basketball and running gear, Mrs . Morgan said . Sports ac· cessories also are featured. · "We will be celebrating both Christmas and Hanukkah with holi· day spirit." Mrs. Morgan said. European sweaters, sportswear and s tyles ror dining out are availa· ble Forty Love as located next to JC Penney m the Fashion Island shop· ping center Call 640·4423 for further in!orma- tion. Shop to Hold Toy Drawing Visitors to Motherhood Maternity Shops during December have a chance to win a "bundle of joy" from Creative Playthings . Owner Candy Morgan, left, and AHlatant Manager Cindy Sfmovtch model warm-up au"• by Adldtla and Winning Waya for Forty Love In Faahlon laland. No purchase is required to reg·. iater for the January 7 drawing to be held al all of Ole 272 stores operated by Motherhood Maternity, the la rgest_ s pecialty retailer of maternity wear in the country. Locally. customers can register for the drawing at Fashion Island. Baldwin ~~~ the gift your family won't forget the day after Christmas YATES MUSIC ''' .......... ...... ........, 0,..1 ............ .lrl ··~ ~ ... ~ ... l1~ ~ TOYS & t CHEWS •• ,f' ~ .. .· ''• . ' . . • GIFT CERTIFICATES C ... STMAS STOCll.-S °"" 7 DAYS .. · ... ·...!···· ................ .. :· .. • ·.J ... .. .,!.. j ! ~. •• ' 1 • I ~:..1 ..~ ... ... , .. . I .. . . . .............. ' ....... " • .. ..... t If .' t .. ,. .. i •.# • • • • I 16 I I 4..,t . '. ·-. ... . ........... . . . ... . . ..... 20 FASHION iSLANO-Supplement to Coht LIFF. Nov. 29. 1978, Dilly Piiot Nov. 30. 1978 -, cathy jean, HALSTON, CARL JOtES; 3 great names 1 geat sfore. I ' .. ----------• *6foshion lskn:i ~beach. oa. 926¢0 _ ......... _ ... __ _ ... .. Huntington Beach Fountain Valley 0 1T I 0 N Afternoon N.Y. Stoeks .I VOL. 71, NO. 334, 4 SECTIONS, •8 PACES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1978 TEN CENTS Suspect Arrested ~lemente Help StJ11gl11 2 Countians Fight Busing Hy KATllV Cl.ANC Y Ol oM O.!I~ Pl+.! ~I.Ill Creation or an Orange County v1·r s ion or Busst OI) w a s an- nouncl'<I tod ay by two Orange Coast residents who hope to hall a proposal th at would ex pand the Los Angeles desegregation plan to local schools. Dor is Allen, a llunlinglon Beach Union lligh School Ois- 1 rict trustee, and Doris Enderle of lluntington Beach said itt a morning press• conference that so ra r they arc the m em bers or Orang(• County Busstop. But lhcy hope to collect addi· t1onal members at a Dec. 7 or· ga n i zat io n al m ee t ing in Westminster. o.i1, 1>1191 ,,_ •• ~ '•Y"" A nd eventually, Busstop mem- bers may circulate a statewtde petition ror the 1980 ballol lhal wou ld amend the constitution to halt forced busing of st udents for schoo l integ ration , the women said. POLICE GATHER TO BEGIN SEARCH FOR KILLER OF FELLOW LAWMAN San Clemente SWAT Team Shown After Slaying of Officer Richard Steed O•llf Piie! P11o1o PUSHING FOR BUSSTOP Trustee Doris Allen Judge Nixes Huntington ' Police Curbs A rede ral jud~e has f.e fust..>d to order l·luntington Beach pol ice to halt enforcement act iv1tu ... >s wh ic h wer.e described as police h ara ss ment by a ,do wntown res taurant owner U.S. District Judge Andrew 1-fauk denied the r equest Tues. day for a tempora ry restraining order riled by Doulo!las Jobson, o~·ner of the Pier Pizza Parlor at J lfl Main St Jobson l'laims that the llunt ington Beach police officers arc har a ss in i: him an d h i s ~ customers and a re coiu!;1ng him to lose bus iness. Jobson alleges that J)()litc a rc s t op pin g . a r r e s ting a n d searchi ng "well -behu vcd .. in dividua ls without adc4uate or probable cause The suit , riled in Los AnMelcs by attorney David Carpenter , claims Job5on's civil rights have been viol;;ted. Namt.>d as defendants in the $1.4 action are t he City or llunt· 1ngton Reuch, the police depart- ment, ('ity Admin istrator Bud Be lsi to, Po lice C hi e f E arl Robita ille, former !'.1aynr Ron Shenkman and four police of- fi cers. Jobson was given until Dec. 15 to fil e additional legal papers. A hearing o.n te mpo r a ry and permanent injunctions againsl the city is scheduled J an . 8. Deputy City Attorney Robert Sangster stated Wednes day that the judge found Job.son 's paper£ contained "ambiguous 1}hrases and hearsay, were vague, unin- telligbile and lacking in factual basis." Sangster said the judge ruled that J obson's complaint failed to show any facts which would justify an immediate injunction. , 'Isl.and' Has Many Gifts · ~ Today's Daily P ilot guides readers to "gift s hopping from an island -Fuhlon Isla nd.·· The 20-p•ge magazine detaJls sift Idea.A and holiday fashions av1ilable at Fashion Island, Newport Beach. Two Men Murdered SACRAMENTO <AP) -I\ 79-year-old bwllnes.sman and a 25.year-old lf:rvice station alt.en· danl have been slain , brlnglnc Sacramento County,'1 homicide \ toll to a rerord 95 .this yt!ar, .._ "Our children don't belong to the state,·· ~1rs. Enderle said. "They belong to their parents . We want to have choices; where we live and why and where our youngsters go to school.'' Mrs. Allen and Mrs. Enderle were real'ling lo a metropolitan!' p la n fo r intregation t ha t transcends school district boun- daries and county lines and could involve busing in all bu t three Orange County school dis- tricts. The metropolitan plan was the major reeommendution from a panel of experts appoint(.'(! by Los AngelJ"s Supe rior Court Judge Paul' Egly to study Los Angeles desegregation: !'.f r s -E n d e rl e , wh o is r hairman Or the Cal ifornia Pro- Fa m ily Coalition , compared rorced bLL<i ing to "people pl an· ninf(' r(.'Sulting In the kind or controlled soc iety adva nced by the Re v. ,Jim Jones in Guyana . She said she LL'ied the Peopl e's Temple disaster as an example or "usurping powers ·•fo'orccd bu.sin!( is a way of taking away an individual 's rights," she contended . Mrs. Allen, an unsucces5ful st ate assembly candidate last Nov. 7. said "the schools arc to educate, not ror pl anning a Uto· piansociety." Mrs. Allen said creation or Dusstop is not a r<tci sl re ttctlon. "It has to do v.·ith taking youngsters complet e ly a wa y from their homes," s he said . "It has to do with local rontrol. ''Our con cerns are not necessarily with the integration aspects but that we arc going lo be moving youngsters around on a c hess boa rd ... ho weve r som eone secs as a cure to society's ills." Mrs. t:nderte conunuca "we believe that schools are meant to educate and not lo lead the way for people planners to re- gionalize government control by (See Bue.ING, P•g:e A.2:) 'I'll Spt•ak Up' Boos Greet Nixon At Oxford Speech OXFORD, England CAPl ,- Ric hard M. Nixon. braving a ga unllet or egg-tossing 1>ro · testers and speaking over chanti; or ''Creep! Cree11! '' and ··Nixon is dead!", told British students today he will "speak up for what I beli eve . . as long as I live:· Tht-for mer president also told the Ox ford Univers ity :.udience that with his approval the FBI broke up a Palestinian guerrilla "network"' in the United States through wiretaps and brcak ·ins du.ring his udministrution. which e nded four years ago with his resignation in the m idst of the Watergate scandal. Bandit Robs Truck Driver A bandit held up a deli very t r uc k drive r in llunt 1n gta,n Beach Wedne:ida~ afternoon and fl e d with $80 in loot on a motorcycle d riven by an ac - complice. f)ri ver Mich:.iel Acosta. 29 , employed by Mctrolini: Parcel Service, was sort ing packages in hi s truc k at 2 :35 p .m . on Or oo khurs t S tre et n ea r De rbyshire Lane when a bandit stuck what felt like a pistol in his back and demanded money. The thug grabbed the cash and hopped on a gold and chrome colored motorcycle that sped away. Roth holdup me n are be lie ved to be in the;r 20's. Police have no suspects. A phalanx of security men had to escort Nixon through an angry crowd of 500 student dem- o ns t rator s , man y or them Ame ricans and some rlinging eggs, when he arrived at the Ox - ford Union debating society hall to deliver the address. The noisy melee was reported A 90-mlnute pro1ram, "Nixon at Oxford," wUI be preffnt" at 7:30 tonight oo Channel Z8. when he left. and an American Secret Service man, tryi ng lo protect Nixon,"· began swinging wildl y with his fi sts and shouting at d e monstrator s pummeling the Nixon car. So m e b ys t a nd e r s we r e knocked s 1>rawlin g on their hand~ and knees as the Ni xon mo to r c ade bo re d its way t hrough t he c ro wd s or dem - onstrators and shoppers in Ox- ford 's Corn Ma rket shopping street. Ei ghty police offic1 rs linked arms in a rutilc attempt to keep the protesters from pounding their fists on Nixon 's black limousine. Police carted away L•ight demonstrators. Earlier. when Nixon made his way, into the hall , he got a fri endly welcome from the wait- ing audience or about 800 s tu· dents , who applauded loud and long. "Thank you for the very warm welcome of those inside -and th2se outside for making me feel vety much at home," he said to tSee NIXON. Page A?I ·New Jail Stands Etnpty Seal Beach Won't Spend $125,000 on Staff \seal Beach's new city jail , with a capacity of 30 prisoners. stands e mpty of customers to· duy. The cell vacancies, however , don 't necessarily reflect a dra1Ue-drop in crime. What h&ppened wa!'I the Seal Be&ch City Council voted 3 to 2 this week against hirlng fi ve ja\ler1. three clerks and one aupervlsor at 1n annual cost or Sl25,000 to operate the new municipal lockup. The money would have come from the feMra1 Comprehensive Employee TrainlnfJ act. Police had hoped to keep prt1ont1n In the jail for up to 72 houra before tran1pc>rtin1 them to court. The jail {1 In the city's new Sl.2 million police station that wu opened In June. Mayor Frank La11i.lo aald he voted against full use or the jail because of the·trend toward city police to use the county jail and the uncertainty or the federal program's future funding. Councilmen Ron Krcdell and Kent Seitz also voled against making fun use or l,he city's new jail. , Since there Is no one on duty to watch or ·fefld Seal Beach Jail prisoners. arresting officers must haul their charges 18 miles to Oranae County J&U In Santa Ana. "We 1p:nt a lot of money for nolhtna by· putting thal J•ll facility In.'' aald Police Chief Ed Clbbarelli. "We are now runnlna: 1 more inefficient operation because the jail can nett, be used full y," ClbbarelU lld<led. But Mayor Lliszlo said the jail .. .• ....... f • may be~ fully in the future if the council determines that is necessary. Laszlo said a survey taken In October In his couneilmanic dis- trict. College Park East, showed that 157 realdenla did not wanl the council to expand the 1· all operation. even if the facl ity would 11ave taxpayers' money. Dul another 142 resident.a vot· ed in ravor or expanding the Jail operation in Lasilo'~ survey, ReaidenLI who Uve near the jail, 911 Seal Stach Blvd., fe1r that someday prtsonera might be eacaptnc throu1J1 Lhelr backyards, La1tlo ••id. Scanned by • cloted·clrcuit Lelevl1i0n ay1tem, lhe Jail's four cella. two for men and two for women, drunk tank, padded cell. booking and Interrogation rooms are all empty for now. ... !, '' ' ' Sl.AIN IN ALlEY Patrolman Richard Steed Councilman Shenkman Says He'll Resig11 lfunti ngton Beach City Coun- ci 1 man Ron Shenkma n s a id Wednesday he plans to resign Dec. 18 despite encountering "a great deal or pressure" not to step down Shenkman reported that he will carry out his intentions un- less something "drastic" occurs that would force him to change his mind. "But I can't imagine what that would be." he said. Shenkman announced Oct. 6 that he pl anned to quit the coun- cil Dee. 4 but delayed his de· cision two weeks in order to take part in next Monday's City Council session. Shenkman said he want! to be on hand to vote in the r e- organization of the building and • planning departments into one agency and the merger of the r ecreation, parks and human re- sources department with the de- partment o r h a rbors and beaches ... Roth m"rgers have run into a great deal ·or controversy and without Shenkman's vote the is- sues ce>uld be deadlocked 3.3 when they come up for a serond reading. Shenkman. Ron P•tllnson. John Thoma s and D o n MacAlllstc r s upport the mergers. Mayor Pro Tempore Richard Siebert. Ruth bailey and Bob Mandie are oppo~. Shenkman s tepped down as mayor last Monday In order to participate In the selecllon of bis 1uC"eeuor. PattlMQn was e.lected to the Post on the votes of Shenkman, Thomas. Mat:Alll1ler •nd himself. ~Siebert reeelvcd three votes for the m•yorshlp -from Mr1. Bailey, Mandie and himself. • am Answered 'Assist' Dispatch Hy ANNE COOP ER Ol Ii. OfilY .. !IM SlfU A San Clemente poli ceman was shot to death Wednesday ni ght while answering a call for a man who said he had slashed his wrists. Ri chard Steed. 30, was shot in the chest in an alley behind the S an C l e m e nt e Su n /Pos t newspaper pl ant, 1542 N. El Camino Real. shortly berore 7 p.m. Less than seven hours aft er. police arrested James Richard Hoffe r, 23. or 1608 Calle las Bolas, on sus pi cion or murdering Steed . ll o fre r wa s ca ugh t a s he walked along El Camino Heal, a block south of the murder scene. He was tra nsported to UC Irvin e Med ica l Cen te r 1n Orange, where P olice Chief Gary Brown said he was treated for what appeared to be a self· inflicted knife wound on his arm. Events, which r es ulted in Steed's murder and the manhunt for his killer, began at 6:45 p.m., when a man reportt.'<lly came to t h e door o f the Sun / Pos t newspaper orfit·es. requestinK an ambulance because he said he'd cut his wrist. Police were called. An am- bulance and a fire engine were dispatched. Officer Steed, who reportedly heard the Police dis- patch over the radio in hi s patrol car said he "''ould respond. F'ire Capt. J erry Galati said he pulled his rire engine into the newspaper plant park ing lot , when the pnlice dispatcher in· formed him the police orficcr <Steed ) had not been able to IO('a le the man with the slashed wrist . Galati said he sa w Steed's patrol car parked in an alley bt>hind the nt>wspaper plant. f.l e s aid he left the fire cn~ine and walked over to talk to the police o ffi ce r but round hi m lying besidt" hi s patrol car . bleedini:: and unconscious . Fire man Thomas McCorkell, v.·ho was m annin~ the city am- bulance with cn~inccr Gar y Lov- rien, said he saw a m an running north down the alley, away from lhe patrol car. T he three fire me n rushed Steed to San Clemente General (Stt OF•,c•~R. Page A2l Ocean View High Staging 'Camelot' Ocean View lligh School's first major 1nu sical 1>rodu ction, "Camelot," will be performt..'CI toni ght through Saturday as well as Dec. 7.9 at 7:30 p.m. in the campus theater. Gene ral admission is $2; children and senior citizens are St. A sellson ticket at $10 will get a family of four into each of the six rine arts productions plannW for this year. CoasC Weather Some night and morning low cloudiness and a little c1>olcr on Friday. ·Lows tonight 47 to 52. HiHhS Fri· day in mid 609. INSIDE TODi\ V The Unit«I Way fund drl1u: i.t under way and U'• bafed on the theory that 0rongt" Covnt" know1 whl:st'• bt1t /01 Orange County. FtolMri"fl, Page CJ. l•dex I r Tax on Benefits Suggested for Elderly W/\~JllNLION 1A1'1 Form<'r Soc.·ual Sct•ur1ty Con\ Ol l"'llHlll U11h1 1I \1 Hull dt•t l.11111~ ttt.11 th1• 11.111110 1·1mn11t ,1rf111 1I 1•\t'l'''l\1· 11 1 un11 ,, 1111 1 hh• •Uh'>lllh ' for 1111' 1 hl1•1 h !!Ut>Pt''tt't.I t11cl.1\ th.ti th1 \ lit• (\. riu1n•1I lo "'" 1.t\1' un 11n1• h,11f 1111 II h1 •t1t•f I~ U.tll 111l1 t J , .11111 11 111·1 1111 1 lw 1•1 1•1111 11111·, 111 .1v1111• 111111 ""'' Pri1iti11g Of Money Charged Two Or .m•:•· f '1111111 v 11111111•r' "'''''' .1rr ,llJ'llt II \\ 111111 'odJ\ tr1 I .,, \111-:1 It ... Ull I II .tr .. .., Ctf 1na1111l.wturi111< jfllJ '""''''~.1111.1 ho~'"' 1·urrt-r1t'\ ufl1·1 11 S St'1·11 t ._,,., \ tc·1· lfl\ 1·,11,.:.11111 '> 11111(1..,t·ul t•d ~ 7 .ill ,1100 I rl Jih 11fl \ flltHH'.) T11v~cJ.1.> . Char~t>t.I .tnd n ·l1"'"1•1l on ht o wn n·1·11~1111a111·1• "'J '> C u\ <;pJrrt>"'. 111 111 i\n.1lw1rn 11"'111·1 t I r () (. H Bu ... In t·..,' f'' 11 r flt ... < '11111 pion C'h.ir g1·tJ a nd n •lt•a ,t•d u n S5.000 oon1I "; • ., <i1•11r~1· Mank<.i SJ. of Ml '>510n Vacio A,,1:-.tanl Sp1:<.'1al J\~1·111 I·: u i.: 1• n t· I> a 1rn :-. a 1 d S l' c· r I'! Serv H't' 1nv1•:-.tagator:. had b<:t:n watd111li.: lht• l\.\o Ornngt• C'ou11 t1:111' for \.\t't'k' l>t•fon• arrt•!\ttn~ ttwm l:.it1· Tuesday in M:p1Jr&h t·.tr' n1·ar tht• bu ... 1nl''>~ form.., pl~1nt Tia· mrm1·' Da~g l>a rd, WOJl'> found .1lon1: wath prinl ang plJt<.'"> and nt•g:.ill\'t'' rn Spurrow':-. car l>:igg t·:.illl'd ltw 1111a ll1v of lht pl11111\ S~J S.AI ;111tl SIOO 11111~ 'fo 11 ' lh• '.-.;a11l lht·~ w<•n · pr111t 1·d 1111 :111 o fC...Pt prrnt11H rn.11'111 1w ·11w ug <.·nt -;;11<1 111~ 111 g :11H1.J t11Jn " 1•or1t 11111111~~ an rn vc· ... taga t 11111 111 I ht· (',J'>(' hut lha t II .... 111'111·111•<1 no ph1my btlh wen· p.1 i.,1·d B11lh "J'.-.flt'l'h .ire• '>rlll'dUll'd f11r p n·ltm1n:.in ht·•111n~ twfor<.·" ll S Mat:t'.-.lrall· an Lo.., t\n1tl'lt·~. D..c I !J Youlh S tea/,s Sf ., City Bm For N YTtip ~/\ N r'HANCl~co (" p , 1>.111 vi Myrwk w1111tc·<l 1<1 ...i•1• hr .., • iunl 111 N<.·w Ynrk <'rt y Mi ht• look .1 bu' ll took l'tJ.:hl <1ff1<·1·n., t v.11 road 1·lt•ar lllJ.: v1'1111·l1•' an<I ,, r11:11ll1lm·k tu '>lOJ> t 111· 1:1 year old ~outh 111 wa'.-1 a \t•t ~ g<md rlnv1•1 ,· .11tl 111111·1·1 Hob Frrch:Jlc after lw 1•;111~1111 up with l>arryl Myn('k .111d lhto 10 f1.111l 10111-: bus Wednc:-. d.1 \ · 1-'lftv f1vt• all th1· W<•Y WJ'>ll t S(H't'ill11g &l ~i11 .. I-' 1 1 ti ti It• t· h u •..t· <I M y r 1 ck thri1ugh '.-.nowy Uonn(•I' l'a:-.'> lwfrn 1· halting ham un Jntcr!.tate >10 .1 hout u m tic wel>l of tlw Nt•vuda horrh·r l'h·ast• 1l1111't urrc~,l mt'." th1· 1 foul 10 11irh boy -.1:11d when h•· 1'11111lwcl out of the· hui. "I'm not .. 'flll\Jll:ll .. 1'111111• -.at<! tht· bu., h;H1 h<•t·n dr 1v1•n <1h<1ut IHll male" arti·r tH· wg r-.1111!•11 Tue1>da y ni~ht r ro111 1111' ~I 1111 11· 111:d J<.11 I W ;1 V ~· IHd '""'' I-l'>ht rrn.111·., Wharf l'ol11·1· s:11tl tt1P hoy''> Ill year 11111 hr11th1•1 ,111lf1 .rnothc•r hus at tht· -..1111t· llnll' ,anrl 1l1ov1· al to North O:iklarul. wh1•rt: rt wai-. .1 h.inclr1111·d Tiii' ~mingt·r IJ(1y 11,., not lw1·11 foun<I M11111 1>11t1kt".,man lt ohl·rt Ho1·k wc•ll -;:11tl th1· h ui.e1. al thl· ya rtl "'''"' "pr t>ll v l'll'>Y flll'k1n~b h1•1•a11...i• thrv un· 11.11 k1·d on lhl· 't n •1•l :ind 110 nut h:tv(• k(•ys The 1iro1·1•.,, uf 't urt1ni: thc·m 1<1 not blmplc., hut not all thul com IJl 11' a 1 t•d " llc1w1•ver. Muna 'upervai.or Ed Urt•t hng do.aJ,lr<'i'd ORANGE COAST "'l DAILY PILOT ' ,,.. "'--u .. , fl, ,, ••• #4 t ' '' ttt fl•f/11 I'""· I 11,0 '-11,ytrw to,.i r f t•11t lo •II t •Jf"ft.-""f '\lt•t• ti• t l·I• tfl t•• t• 11 ~'"•I A/I• ""lllf Ulf"11f)'1 + f• llt 1111 • I 1 •A> " fh "'V"HI 0•" 1, tt._,1 I'"''''• .,._ +1 It t ,, t I"-_, 11 • •·I I f .... • I• 1 , ' 1 • , t u t t A ""J, • 1 I -,,, t .... '·'~'""' t"Pt ,, I,, , , 111 ("i ,1 f'1·1f')I "'"f'J t•l•••I t ~I t•1 ,., ... t h •t '\ft• I ',,,,4 M• ,. , .. , ••• ,,,.., ... ,,.,., tu, .. ttN Wt.fllf l•r.r ....... ,, ..., "" ,.,. .. { "'' ... '# .... , .. ,,, .. ". "'°' f,r ,, 1411 llM'WO"'' .... ..,,., ...... .. ,, tfMmo 1ti MwfJlf!H'"' ~•rt4fl!t'Hjl I "~hr f"4tt•\t4 l•t' fitUMtD~ .... II A\' t.1i•IM•,..4"1·'\>tl J.IUlf ..... rl••AH .,.,, ,I f)t•Hff f 1#~'1' t I l:Jlf' Hunllncrton lleec;h ortic. .,,,ft.I• .. h·1·• f#<IW4 M,91! .,. ... ,, ' ,., .,_,. ttlf) ., .... OlllCH I •f.J""''' '" ~ ,, , ,., , ,.,,,...ti , ...... , ;,. l1tM .. t ttilth• .•••• -.•.tu1f """'91 h•• • .,#ttlff l\~t I t µ,, '' 1al ~·, .. -,, ... ,., ....... r .. ephon• (714)642.43:11 Cl• .. ttled Advertlllng 64:> H71 ~· .. ,,u.,1tnl11111~ r ... ,,. ,.,,,"'"'''..- $40 1210 ('t4ftU9ftf ttlf f#M. ( .. t I~'"' "I (~ P.' I '4v '""!" ·lei • ••iu,t•.t1~t tfi•vt••I f'fl•ff•• ~· IOUffl un•l"lil l'lt t•h' l'nft 0-,,,1,.,4.,, •• •ltM\11 \••( et ,,_.,".''"M'I •t ''""'''"'"'~' \ •~1 r _. " tt• l•t ft• f it t \II M ~ f•lof, r. • \u.,,,,,, ,,,,, '" ~,,,., '1 ~., ,,..,"'"'' VY ~.-11 t4 "• • 1tflllt 1'1•11m1t•• ~ ,,,.,, "''\) ~"' *''"' ' l.twJ anil I' u~tom,, that hen<.'f1l all tht-• l<f('rh 1 t•14rdh.tH tJf \\ttalth wall not be deh1nstbl\• rn c ht• )'t'Br uh ad · In ud.dlUoo lo t•utltnt( tU•<'k lttt' t." frt'l •t 1tU!'I nf 'ww111I ~l'l'Ulll)' h4'nt•flt,., fl,111 pt111Hr.t·d f'ltmlnut an" lht-ct1111hlt' 1n1·om1· tux 1•11 1•nq1t m11 • 11111~ 1·11 11, .a II t h11•w t\!1 .111.t 11hlt I I h ,. ··Id .. I h \H (' II() I •J h111111•i.:t II• 1111 •·r11u11 Jo"' too mnny oo ·fourth havl' h.11¥ 1m·o11H1 than 1~ perccnl of th" REPORTER EYES SOCIAL SECUfUTY-A 11 1rnH·rt~ lfvel .'' hl' iold 400 pt'n1on11 at tht> mcl'tinl( 1'ponson.'<1 Ii\ N 11l 111nul Journul mutcaianl! 11111 ht• .. uad lht·n· <•l"o are "u g1 •'ltt 111~111} whn on· c1ullt-~ell ult C'11h Sl·ouls al lluntington Bc;,ich'' Hope Vtcw Sthool arc lt·<.uJi,ng Toyi, for T iils drive on the c;,impus Cubs Cfrom lf'fl) Mike Nithob, .Jeff ('us::.cns, .JO!)Cph J anus. Mitchell l'agl' <111<1 M1kt.> Young eh<.'ckcd out some of the 116 toy!> donall'd for th<.' progr<im earlier this week, Toys c.are bf>· IOJ.! t u1-n•·ll over to loc·•tl Marine Corps Reserve unit. which will d 1!-.ll'Jbutc llwm a t Chrislmasl1me to needy 1·hrldrt·n The· good l>c:o uts at Hope View School arc plan· ning another <·ollcct1on d:.i y next Tuesday. ~~~~~~~~~ -! Frmtt Page ,t I OFFICER SLAIN ... 11 1...,pit .11 . \\ h1·rt· a I l'<t m of 11wdH·al '111·t•1al1:-.ll> fought to '>:JVl' h" ftfr• 1-;vt!n bdor'<' lh<· offl<.'t·r wa:-. pronount t'(l dt!ad al 7 5G p m . law 1•nfor('(·ment officer.. wen· ma,sing ;1t the murd~r bcene 111 scurc:h for 111, ktllt•r Wiping tc>ars from th<'1r eye~ :i11rl hund11ng llwir 'houldt•rs aga1n'l tht>ar ~r acf , Steed '.., rellow pohn •mc·n isel ahoul a mc•tho1l 1t:.al hlol'k hy bloc k 't'<lrl'll Th1(•c Sun/Po::.t e m11loyee::., ~h11 had twl'n working late Ill th1· 1ww:.1•a1wr planl, '1l•:.cnhcd l hl· man :L'> alx1ut 2!'.. with long hrown haar and a heurd They ... :11<1 he· rl hatl .1 hlo,1dy towel wr a ppl'd around r>nl' arm San Clt·mcnk poltc•• were a::. ">l'.-.lt·1t hy lht· Ch a11,.:t· County Shn 1H':-. dcpulll's, wh11 brought 1 wu hloc.xJh1111111IN lo t rat•k thl· '\lh lll'l'l Tiii' 11111 th 1·nrl 111 t h1• c1\y. wh1•11• th1· llt'W'.-.JlaJJCr plunt Is '\a 1Hlw11·h1·1l hl'lwt·l·n hc:uchs ade (·11t l<11(l''> ;11111 apartment:-. and the.· andu:-.lrwl 1111->t rtl'l, wak mapped ror M'art·h ll'um.., A llu11ltn1~to11 ll(•:.ach polite hl'lteoplt•r 111111~ a hove the city. '>hanang ;,i powc·rful lig hl on lhl' 1:n11111d. wht·rt: Sun C h·mentc '::. '111·1·ially tra11ll'd and oulflttcd taclacal 011c1 al1ons officers combt•d hl<l<'k :a fter block of the :-.urrciundtnl-! nr·11<hborhcx1d lloH1·r was s1xJlted at 2 a m h.,, ..,h.,nff'.., dcp11t1c!>, as he walk .. d along El Camino Real, nc.•1.ir the Calle· Lugo lnlc~rseclion. JU'>\ on1• hlo<·k north of the 1ww1.11UJX!I plunl I le was arrel>l cc1 without and dl'nL Chad nrow11 :o1a1d llof(c r meets the.• d(•,tr 1p~111n of the mun who Vl~lll'd tht:\1ll1Wlil)ltj)Cr OfflCe!> 1•ttrltc•r t1nd hud llw same kind of wound Ila:. apartment 1:. locutt't.I d1rct'lly IK•h1nd lhe nl·wspu~r plant, Hrown !i:tld I loffcr wal'. to be tra ns ferred to Orange ounly Juil from the m c·du:ul c·c•nkr. followinii lreut mcnt for the knaf wound lfOfft'r 'K b3rl W&tl 8Cl tJl $Ml0,000 Hoffer <lld not hove a J(Un. when he wo11 orre11ted. A police dcpnrlme•nt RJX>kcaman H id 11 team of offlrf'rt1 was ttcuchln.c today for the RUn UICd In lhe shoohn~. No dettcrlption of lhe tlUll Wa~ ll'l<•dt• IJUblic Sked'11 gun rind hl11 glasscb w1•rf' round on the around 8 short d lwtnnc«' from where he fell In thf' alley, a few feet from hll'l patrol c ar Offlt'er S~eed 11 1mrvlved by h 13 wlf«', kathy . and by his par1,nt!> who Irv<· on the 1':1.11.t Coast The young couple hvcd an ON•ans adr and had no childre n Steed JOane<l the San Cle mente Police Oeparlment two yea" a~o. after se r ving ab a reserve o fficer . lfe had prev1ou'>IY served with th e U.S. M annc Corps. lie wa!. d c,c r1be d a s a popular, ded ic ated poh ccman. well liked by his fellow officers lie was the ftr1;t San Clemcnlc police ofrir er Lo be kille d in the hne of d uly in the city's 50·ycar his tor y. "We'll mas!. ham." s aid Fire Cupt. Galuti. "lie was so easy lo ta lk to." "We will feel the impact of the loss or Officer Steed for some t1mt' to come," said Chief Rrown. "In a sm<ill agency 5uch ..... our!., there lb jj hagh degree or cumarudcne, :-.o when we lose M> meone an Lhe lane of duly. 1t is h k1· los ing a part of our own body " Frot11 Page A I NIXON ••. laughter from the uudumee. "Yo u hear these people out side," he later told his ltst enen, "ll 'R not pleaunt: I'm used to at .. Rut he soid his political career hu11 e nded. .. Pohllcally. I plan lo play no role an the party, us a candidulc. for a candidate -am y thlng ." Nevertheless, he said , "I feel us long "11 I h ave any breath in me 1, will speak u p for whut I b<'lfeve . . I'm roin.i to con· tanue lo 011 long a11 llv<' " To do othcrwh1 would not b<: PoKRlble for him , Nixon 11aid "I have t'nough to itlt and c9ntcmplut(• my navel on \,he 'Poclflr . If I did th at f would be dead mentally In a year and ~hyitlcally In two." Nixon's ~o mm e ntit on l hf' break-up of o Palestinian gl'()Up rame during a q uesllon-a nd· a nswer period whe n he w H asked whether the office of th • presidency had a corrupting cf feet on the Individual holdln1 t.he job. "T here urt> no easy calls lhat a pru ldenl m akes," #h e r<'11ponde<l, golns on to give the PalHUnJan In cident as an exam· pie "The Al f'at oh a roup, throush the much mallsned Fer . we tu rne d had est ablished u network In the United State8," Nixon sold : "In the long run. 1l 1s not d~ airuble to :ilnglc out a partlcl.llar lllC group for I S«'r lcs Ot llUb· aid lea baled on age ulone .'' Ball uld. H ea l t h . 1<;ducaU o n a nd Welfa re St>('retary J O'>l'ph A. ('allfuno Jr th11!1 year questioned whether wealthy rlch•rly r>coplc '!h ould Kl't Sol'11tl Security lwnda~ tax rr{'r hut no offtcral JH't1on ha1-> bc:t'n tukl'n an that Suspect Wounded By Shots /\ tleeing armed robbery SU!>· p e e l was wounded by an Anaheim liquor store clerk late Tuesday night and:lhen dumped in the p a r king lot or UCJ Medical Center by his allegt'<i accomplice. according to police They reported the wounded man, Lawrence K Gorham. 3:J. or Orange. wai. struck by lhrf>e bullets as he run from the hquor s tor e to the waiting getaway car. Gorham was said lo be 1n :o1atisfactory condition today an the jail section of the medicul center. llis alleged accom plice, Steve Quinte ro, 20. of Onm ge, wa!. lodged 10 Orange County Jail. Police said Quintero was ar res ted by a passing Orange Policeman s hortly after dump, ing his wounded companion in the m edical center's par king lot Police believe Gorhum and Quintero combrned their talents to rob the liquor store ut Lincoln /\ven ue and Garn Street at about 11 :05 pm. Tuesday T hey did not say how much was taken in the robbe ry or, for thal matter . if the robbers 'uc· c:1•ed ctJ 1n t<J kang any mom•y from the ~tore. But police reportl'd Gorham was struck by thre<' bullet:. fart'<! by the liquor store clerk u:-. he a llegedly ran to the wu1tang car F rom 1•1tgt• .11 BUSING ... uppoantcd Judgeb und other bureaut ralS. · · The women !lta1d detu1b of lhc mctropohlan plun will be prl'- Mmted al the Dt:<.'. 7 public mcel· 1ng It will ht-hc:ltJ ut 7 30 p.m al the Webtman!.lcr <.:ommun1ly Center Stahbin~ Pro be d PJF:OMONT < AP1 Poht•e an• invei-.ligating th1• 'lahbanl>{ de ath of a 51 ·ycar old Piedmont real estate agent. whose l>ody was found half.clothed an her lav ing room. The dcud wo man was 1dent1fl e d as Cetrol W ilson llar low d1rcctaon. With aroupti o r retirees u l r<-ady wlcldlnR c lout In Congresi. to rajse bc>nef1tis und liberalize the amounli. thc:y tun earn without losin.c b1.mcfll1., sny 'tep towa rd taxi n g Socli.t Security benefits would gencrutl' a protr acted battle Ball said about one rourth ''' tht! federal budget. $11~ b11l1on. lb spent on the elderly In the· ........ Extortion ffot Works SACRAMF:NTO <A P l A Sac r amento b ank manage r s ayi. he gc1vf• more th an $50.000 to u man because he wai. told his family was being ht•ld hos tage and would bl' killed if he didn't tuTn ov1·r the money. the flU saad Art Johamen. vate pre• ident and m anager of tht• d ow ntown Wells Fargo Bank. said Wcdnf'sday ht· turned the monl'Y over tu a s mooth·tulking . ca,.,utllly dre~sed black mun an an alley next to the bank J o h ansen said he n · ceived a telephone c·.ill from & man who 1d1:n11(w<I himself 38 an f<'lU llJ(t:nl who said he wantt'd 111 alert rum Lo an t:xtort11Jn sch eme. U.S. Nucle ar Retaliation Plan R evisedJ NEW YORK <A P 1 Tht' Carter admtnis\ralton 1s tuktnR tentative steps that may utter the nataon's nuclear strategy. The New York Times said toda~ The 1'lmes said the drastic re vision of the Americ an policy of relying upon massive ret.ahataon ror deterring a nuclear war Wllh the Soviet Union is aimed ut pro v1di ng the Umted State~ with a better ub1hty lo wagt' a lim rkd n uclear conflict in addition to ab :,ibllity to en~a~e 1n lurge :.cult> warfare. T he Times said this change an philosophy was b<:1n g un dertaken quietly. wath lltllt: public de bate, and t hat offlc u1!:-. willing lo talk a bout 1t would not do so for attribution. The current renewed interest an c ivil defense. with plans for evacuating urban centers. w11:. the m ost v1s1blc indicator that the United Slate~ might s h1fl away from th mass1vC' rctaJ1ci t aon s tance. the ncw'>puper ::.allJ an a story from Washington. Both the re.e mergenn• of l'tvrl dcfcnst' and proposals lo build <1 lll'W gl'neration of larger and m ore accurate 1nte rcont10cntal missiles may point to a ccept ancc of the idea that a nuclear war could be fought with lhe Soviet Uruon, 1t s aad form :. of Soc1ul Security . otht:r federal ret1n·m l•nl sysh •ms, M <' d I <' u rt'. M <· d l r n I d . S u p . ph•m1•nlufy Security lncoml' und othl'r bc.'llt1f1t11 · lie bald M J.H:rt·ent of I ht.: elder- 1 y h11 vc· lm•l)hw b<'low the pover r v lt•v<•I rin<I that without Sotwl ~1 <·u 1 1t y no p1•rtl•nt of the r ... mt11t "• ht•tJ(ft•d hy persons ~or 01d1•1 would be below thl' poverty level 5 Guyana Surv ivors Arri Ve LOS ANG t-:LES IAP1 -Five "urv1 vor'> <1f lht-l'l''>PICS T(•mple nl.l'.-1'. 'u1t·1dc in Cuyan<t were c mhrJ1•1·d f1v foma ly membt-rs am rd tt•ar' or JO'r und rne~ or 'Y1J>Jlt't"" u ... they a rrived h1·11· l <>ft t1 ~ I 11·1·1 llr"ll' good I m h1.111py t1J t,.. 1n lhr• (,St\ ." 'a11I llYdCrnth Thrit.'>h. 7fi. who W:t '> met dt the arq ;ort hy two nieces cJOd <i '1Pphl'W ·r h•· ">:Jn rranr a..,to natrvt· wa:-. (IU hl't1 1n J wh1·e11 hJtr by naCCl' M :uy W;,tk111i-. of Los Angele!., with wh<Jm ~tll' will bt• staying Sht· woul<t not talk lo r e PQrler!>, exr cr>t lo ~ay s he had · · ttt:en '>lt'k the whole time'' she W<J!S tn Guyana. st urtang an J u.ne. 1977 Also arrivang early today from N<!w York Caty wt•re Raymond Godshalk. 62. of 1..o' Angeles. Alvaray Sattcrwh11t:. 61 , greeted by 20 family members, Carol Youn~. 7H. m et by three re l alive'. and Ma ria n Campbell, 61 gn•(•tt'd ,,, n<> family, bul two '>OC'!.ll workt'r' from lht• Le>' Ang1•le' County Stll'tal ~ervace~ Ocpartment Two othl•r ... urv1 vor'>. Grover r>uvi.... 7~. and Mad1:lane Hrooki., 73, f1l'W lo S;an Fr:1111·1~1·0 'fht•) wen• ml't hy & larg1· ~roup of rep<irtcr' but, hke tho· '>U r vrvor:. arriving in Lo ' Anjwle'.-1 thn m1:1d<' no com mcnr Roth w1•re J<·comparued o n lhr• ntght IJ) a '>Ot·1al workn from N«w York Scwwl St:r Vll'l'' Draft Ho rses Carry Coffin BANGOR. Wt:. CJ\1'1 An <tn t1Qu1• hearse pulled by two of hai. own rlrafl hor'>(.''> t•arr1t·d the bod~ of floyrt .Jonl''.-1 to hi:. grave Jt the f'airvll'w Cemetery . Jonl•:-., a n<1t\oo.1lly known bree<ler of ('I vtlt•..,d a le hor!.e'> a nd llolste111 1·iJttlt•. <hed Satur day <11 th<.· .l~l' of 71 llas will 't 1plulall'd thJl h1'> bod y bl· lran,11orkd bv .1 horSl' drawn ht'Hl''>t' Tht• hcarw est1matl'd lo ht· mor<' than IOO year:-. o ld, bc•long:-. lo (;hrford Fos~um . a I.a C'rosw funeral homt· opera tor who col lech anlrqut• Vl'h1eh'-. .~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~ SALE SAVE Hundreds In Stock SJ·99 . ' 369 E. 17th St. Cotta M•1a lne.11 to Mei,. C.•eno~·. ICfOM rrom Ra•Pfltl '642-1657' CALIFORNIA PaperClai .. I • White Admits To Slayings SAN FRANCl~<'O CAP > 1 ... orm,.r Ul)f'rvl!!Ot Dan WMte has rnnt<>t.~cc.J to thl· 111u1 dtr \or Mayor Georae Moscon • 1m d f:iUVl'rVIM>r th11'\l\'Y Milk. aceonhng tt'> I ~port pubUl bt."d today Th~ Sun .,., ~nrt,<'O hroruclt• report~ thut pollce uld Whltl' >:II\,. IO\t><ltl~HllOr• .. I <'Omplc.>h' 1tlltemt•n1 ... but th~ nf!WSflli1>4"r .:uvt• oo d\•tuil' t•f ttw vurp0rtf'd "'°'1rt>"lt-.lon ond did llOt uy "'hen 1t wu muck Poli<·•· t'hwt t'hur h•'I tiaun .met hom1C"1dt" In Vl't'tor l''tunk t"ullon n·ru:wd to t•ommtmt on the newispap.•r rt1'°n. and. Wh1tl•t> • 11ttorn\'\ <'t1uld not h<· rt'•H'ht'd ro1 n 1mmt'nt Tttt; ("llKUNl<'U·: 1\1-'*> 1t·110rtt'd lhdl 1iolte~ tW'hl'v~ the gun m.1n k1lh'CI both 11wn b\ 'h0t)llni.: th"m calmly hvlre 1n tht back of tht' hl'IJd .tlll lht'V h1y wountll°'d M th Ooon of their l'llY hall OfriCC!>o L nm1111~ :.our\•1• .. c:h>-.c to lht> IR\~ lJSCallon WtN' quoted 11!> ,,1y1n.: that powder burn &rnd tht' tv.o nt>arl) ad1ac ot he1td wound" in l'.1rh mun 'howt'd lhl' hots were fared ut l'Xlr~mcly C'IOl>l' rUrlj(\' An UJ)lllrnwd polu·t• nfftc11il "'"" quoll'd "' .. u, 1ng "Look!> like hl' ~Jvt• the l'OUJJ dl• j.trlH'l' to both uf th1•nl " WIHT•;. wno WOl'l.O face a mund1ttory death J>t'Oully if ron VICll'd UJldt•r a 'iJK'Clal l>laluh• (.'0\'l'rtlllit th1• murder ot public Of f1 r 1.sl1>, appt•arcd in c•ourt bral'O} Wt"<lnc:.day till> arn11w nmcnl wu' ~x>stpont-d om· ""''''k \O ullow htm tim e lo Jtel un attorney 1'111· fw 11w1 ..i11wrv1i.or !>Urn·ndt'rt.'tl lo Pollet: Monday about 35 11111rnlt•!1 aflt•r Mo..,t·onl' Jnc.J Miik wt:rt> 1>hot to death fie turned ovt'r u :ix cuhrn:r rt•vol vf'r wh1d1 !JOhce now i.ay hJ:> been matchtf! with bullt•ti. n·covt'rt•d rrom ttw licxht·i. A TOTAi, ,,.. NI NE 'hob wt-re fired four ut thl' mayor and flvt• at Milk . pol1 rt.• ">aid The ('ht on1d(' ~aid police tk'l1evt: both v1rt1mr. were standing :it tht.• tinw tht•y wt•n • first shot. und that ea ch crumbled wounded to tht.• floor Then. !ht• O(•wspaper i.a1d . 1l 1i. believed the kille r lc&ncd over lhl• VIC'l1mi. and fired the fmul two i.huli. ('ORONF:R BOVO STE PHENS said thal in bolh cases the vie· tuns wt•r1· "uhvt• at the time the head wounds were administered." hut he ~ould not say 1f the head wounds cam e from the last bulleli. firt'd m each or the murders Proof that Moscone a nd Milk we re slain m a calculated man· rwr \\Ould be crucial to a prosecullon attempt to show the act!'> w<·rC' dd11.X'ralc and premeditated 1\flt'r Whitt> tumcd himself in. he was brought qui ckly to the llJll of Ju'>lll'l' whert> police mspt:ctors <1ucst1oned him for half an 110111 C..h1111tv aflt•r that. attorney Jame'> Purcell arnvc:d and WU!-> c h1~c·1t•d w1Lh Whitt• for another JO minute~ t .,a tal Crash Hearings OalMffufr lh'OJ u min F e rna ndez, a Hc publu·un a nd native of Lo!'t An~C'le:,, unnounced hJs pn·s1dcntiul candidacy at a allonul Press Club news l'<1nfrn·nec Wednesday in W u~h1ngt o n . D .C . Fern•mdez. 53. will vie for lh t> nomination w1lh Rep. Ph111p Crane. Illinois. nowmobiles Ban Proposed ... n f:SNO (A p ) A proposed bun on snowmobiles was praised :ind criticized at a second hear· 111g on Yosemite National Park's 11roposcd master plan. D.J . We ber of the Sierra S nowmobi le Club said that recreation activity Is the only one denied use of the park in the maste r plan~ Dul Thomas Starr said at a session here that national parks were not des1~ned to provide aU urban usei. and s nowmobiles arc meomputiblc with most aims or the Nut1onol Pltrk Ser vice 'See, Avoid' System Rapped SAN Oflt:GO CAI'> Obscr v& l1<>11 and fi lm:. from a test flighl 1nd1<'alc the <:rc w of PSA t~hghl 1H2 probably t'(1ul1l 11ot have S<'en a "mall plane• '.'<t11·oncb bt•forc tht• two cullukd St·pl 25 over San I>1l·go. k1ll1nc 11'1 JJeoplc, a 1nlols' grou11 spokt•sman said (' .1pl HoJ.!t•r D c·ri m . 1>rc~1 cl1·nl vf lht.· S11uthw1•st 1-'laglll ('rt· w A 's11C' 1 a l11111 , w h ll'h rf'pn" .. l'llls l'~A l'f"('W'>. said \\'t'f1nt•,da\ that the lei.ts c a<,I <louht on the "sPc and avrnd" fh 1nJ,! procedurP!'i of th ' f"cdcn.11 1\\ 1:il1on A<lman1strat1on Cram he ld a nt·ws conference.: during ;1 m ar;1thon 121 ~ hour 'e~sum on the third day of Na t ionul Trans portation Safely Hoard hcaranl(s into the crash, tht• llt·adlu·~l :ur d1~astcr an U.S. avwt1on htslor} Bo ii A 11011.,Pd LOS /\NG ELES <I\ P I A. hal1tin~ t'<Jrnpull•r <·x111•rt uc· l'll'Wd of sl<•alinJ;! Siil 2 mill11m I rom th<• nation's IOlh larJ.(t•sl hank and c·xthangrnl( 1t for Hu'>'.;1<1n chamonds will be n· lt·ase1I from Jail after his family :11HI rru::nds put up their life sav rngs to pay his bail or $200,000. U s Oti.lric t Judge Mull Jh rnl• s:ud Wc•dnei.day he would ft<'l' St;.inll'V Ma rk Hifkin ai. i.oon "" hi' ""ulil verify the value of c .1:.h '><·cunt1ri. :.ind real proper \Ir orrt•n'fl ai. bail H1fk1n \.\as arn •stc•d Nov 5 1n C;irbh.ad . Calif . afte r ull egedly ( STATE ) ... muJ.:ghng the d1umondi. into tht• 1:n1ted Slates .... ._.1w,ne ( ·,.._.or.-r.-d SANTA RAHHA.ll A. <API I\ lrller alludin~ to "the painting of the copies" has been found in the trunk of a ('ar owned by a mus<'um srcur1t y o ff1 rer . Honald Mousoun s. and may link his father. Wilham G. Morez, lo the theft or $1 million in paint mgs, police said. The two·page letter was found Mon day n ight s hortly after Mousouris of Santa Barbara was arrested following the theft or three works b y t'rcnch i m pressionist Claurle Monet from thl· Santa Barbara Museum of A. rt . police Capt. Gerald Lowry su11t Wednesday. .... Pr•f Pn«.-f> E.riended SAN QUENTI N CAP> Con v1cted rapist Danie l Caudillo. who achievc..-d a level of nolorie· t y by hguring in the campaign l' ous t Chief Justice Rose Bird. has two more prison years to go The slate Community ReleaM Board actl.'d on his case Wednc:-. day Il gave Caudillo an extra vear because members found thl· crimes for whil'h he was con· Goodness what taste! Pixie 8 0 1 Med1um·Sherp Ch ddor Stick. 4 oz. Gruplne Cnooae. !> Ot Smoked Edam Bar. two 2 O.t ChO se Soroods. a packaoe ol Ltr Oval Wafors. plus Struwberry Bonbon' ue send gifts ... Come In •nd H'4tct food gift p11ka for ChrtatmH. T•ke with you ot we •at thlp. We ·n h.ndt• •II the det•ll• •nd even encloH • pereonel greeting. this and maeyother-gift pales on displi v1cled. burglary . robbery. kid· napping, ra pe and otber sex t·rimcs, merited the maximum I •rm . plus lwo extra years £or attempting lo inflict great bodily Injury ·D.-rb'fl' Se• tle11 Su if ll O LLY W OO D <A P l Wi thout adm1ll1ng guilt. the Brown Derby Res taurant has al!rt.>ed lo pay $3,000 in civil penalties and Sl ,032 in legal l'Osts to settle a suil a lleging 1l represented froze n food as fresh. Slate offi cials. who alleged the viol:Jlions occurred in November 1976, s aid We dne s day the res taurant had accepted an in· Junction in the stipulated judg· ment barring it from labeli ng any food produt'l as fresh if it hud un(icrgone any preservi ng or freezing µroc•ess. f'~ Hike IJrged SACRAMENTO <APl -The s t a te Trans portation Com · miss ion sugges t s that the gasoline tax and motor vehicle fccs t'ould be increas ed lo ra ise m oney for highways. T he suggestions. which the comm1ss1on s tressed are not re· commend ms. are in a pre· l1m1nar y r e port lo th e l.eg1i.lalure. The commission plans six mcet1nJts by Dec. 13 lo get pubhc reaction to the report Fashion Island MewpertlMdUMOJO M-.-M. 'Tl' 511f, 'Tl's-. 12·1 * * * * estcli Plaza • • • * MA•IHH'S VIUACH DAMA ftOtMT 496-2670 M• ... s.t. 'Tll s..,,., .. .. ~.November 30. 1978 ONLY PILOT AS CSUS Cuts 'Must' No Agency ~mp4 Brown Says ~ LONG 8£ACH <AP> Str ess101 thol lhe eru of fust·arowanJ( govem· m"nt spendlnat hoit ended, Gov. Ed· mund G. Drown J r. wauncd trustees or th ~tate college Mnd university isys lem lhul no agency would be ex "mpt from cutting its budget by 10 pt!rcent Earlier this month. Brown directed all stute dermrtment hcadei to identify fiVl' or more lowest priority pro .crams in their departme nts that could be cut for a s avings of about 10 percent "Anything lhal hus depended on the hislonc rate of growth wlll be t.•hanged." Brown told trustees or the Ca lifornia State Univers ities and Colleges on Wednesday. ~fj~J "It's not 'Ir.' It's not •mayoo, • It's qot •can•t .omething happen,' it JUlt 'ls.' There's no ti1rcument a bout IL The only question is how can this be accomplished ln a thoughtful way." But Chancellor Glenn Dumke told ~ the trustees that s uch c uts would..__ Maft•P••...,...• cause substantial harm to the CSUC , ......... " 11ystem . Rich ard Silberman, "I cannot believe tha t the 65 per· cent of the voters or this state who passe(t Proposition 13 were casting their votes against low·C(JSl higher education provided so efficiently by the California Stale Unjversity a nd Colleges," Dumke said just before Brown spoke . former banker and hu mburgcr tycoon. hu s been nam ed Cali fornia director of finance by Gov. Ed mund Brown J r Silberman. 49. will replace Roy Bell, 61 "' . \ r ~ ii ~ ()', :i: (/ WJt /tad A,o Adi, 1()(,t a/;md ..tlu4 ~ "= ~ • .dlwfJF"f ~_,(#~ Jtew11rnt Bead// ... C<JWI~ M;ca(d J ~·w(de, /1~ ~ F~ ~ wa cmd, alJ~ fa6~ ~-.. ~ mMt IP .ho 1~/ Raza / Ja r~ ae Jtudto Sf - WJ;e,,,) 4 So. Calif~ Oldest Carpet Co. Since 1879 year end SALE 1 51 { J I .... ti- t k) } This Is our last and best sale of the year! Hurry in today for great values in carpeting, vinyl flooring and draperies to spruce up your home for the holidays! NOW Country Trail•: Fabulous color 11ne for a short saxony plush totally installed over heavy carpet cushions. Regular $14.95 Bordeaux: Our favorite 3 ply Saxony with a true decor a- , tor color line. Redecorate now Reguler $17.95 ; Our own llne of Drapery Fabrics now on sale for the Hollday Season. All at ... Designer Solarian by Armstrong with lhe sunny finish that keeps Its shine. Ave rage 9x 12 room for as low as s12 9~Yd 1.,1olty "' •ol~'fl , . .,., f1t·uYy ..,odtJ•'"I ·~1t1lly ... 11111 ... 1 u•O• hcu•y UllllJmu All Armstrong Floor Care Products in Stock! ... We Were 99 Years Old? Next year we will be 1001 Watch tor our Centen- nial Celebration in 1979! ., -. ~ ... JoeNBr.cmSEaGABPBTGo. ' ' (t: .... ' . • ~·In <fl·•"'• MICSA c.,.,.,, ... COSTA ~ ~;,;w "21 s. 8rlttol ...._ -ll't(l> c-.. ...,, Mollll ........ ~ .. -,.... (714) 711-2324 : ''f!J'aJ>tily Otte1UNI ,(>tJU'AJ '/li'j.9 ,. ~ [ffJ c: • • \ I A• 911' _______ JD ... ~ Z--1 ~ ---------•«-<IN.-Publl ........ -T_k_IE ~~noeeoastoa11yP11ot ~u·•&Or'lii JrUfl.e .•••••••• "'.-•• ·.-.......... ·.·.·."·•••••••• .. •'• .. •'··.·.·.·.·•.'<•"•'••;.•,.";.°".',;·,.·.·,,-.,,,·.··"• ... ••-4 Co11 ncil Members Share the Blame CondJUOM ha\le reached a pretty sad l•te lo Hunt· ington Beach's cil)' 11overnment.1tems worth notlnt: -·JoWmer Mayor Ron ShcnJc:m11n's claim he was threalt.'IK'd with maiming by an anon)'mous voice over the tcleJlbone . -Mayor Pro Tem RJchard Siebert's report of a bizurrc lncidt>nl ln wh.iC'h he said his employfft told him that a pollt'<! lieutcnunt had made a threat on his Ure <S1tben de<'lttrc<I lntt·r that he was sure no harm to him W,_,S IO(('JldNI). -Pulirt> 1>1ckct1ng homt--s and M!5kiences of City C<tul'l(il tl'K'ntbers 10 u bitter pay dt.,:pute. ~-stK.-nkman's rt..>Slgnation as mayor and plan to quit the ('1ty Coun ii nltogelht>r later this month -Ncurly 100 ('il Y employees abandoning ship U1 re· l'Cnt montlL'i "1th St\•t..•ral rinng p.artlng bla:>ts al the City Counr1l. The list rould J:O on and on but the m~age seems to he c:leur· ConcJitions 1n city go\;ernme:mt are about as t!rin1 as they l'\11._·r have bt't"n. A b1ttc·rly di v1dt•d t:it y COun<'il n1ust bear the brunt or lhe blaule for the turn101L 1'h1ngs got st:irtt-d off on the wrong foot Jmmediately uflC'r four nC\\' t·ounc1 I n1cmbers took offi ce la.st April. Thn..e or the new offi('ials -Ruth Bailey, Sob Ma.ndlc a nd John 1'homus -JOtncd for ces with Richard Siebert. Thev more or Jess proclaimed that they wanted tO keep u ·n~ore "''atchful eye on development in the city. 1'hey showt.-d an eagerness for laking a more active part 1n day.to-day operations of city government. 1'hcy also said they wanted to be more responsive lo the public Feeling their clout. they nearly torpedoed the election of Shenkma n last April as mayor even though he was the mayor pro temp<>re a nd in line for the job. They also fired the Planning Commission, creating more hard feelings These and other activities helped to polarize the posi· lions or the council minority -Shenkman. Ron Pattinson and Don l\facAlllster. The balance of power subsequently shifted when John Thomas joined the Shenkman group. But no matter how they tine up, the rancor continues. \V ilhout a strong leader at the reins, the council has been operating in an area of mistrust, innuendo and bit· terncss. Relations have been made worse by a clever drive to portray Siebert, Mandie and Mrs. Bailey as the villains who a.re res1>0nsible for most of the problems plaguing the city. ,. This tactic is self-serving, unfair, inaccurate and un- justified. It seems to be part of the spreading infection. Six of the counci l members are hard·working, conscientious and s how genuine concern for their city. Thomas has shovt'n flashes or concern, too, but his performance has been erratic and his attendance poor. .-When he was e lected mayor last week, Pattinson promised to lead the city in new directions. lt won't be easy , but with a strong grip, perhaps he <'an bring a halt to bickering and get things together <Jgain . All the council m emb<.lfs have been guilty or enough lapses uf judgment and behavior to bear some share of the blame ror the present state of city government. All have reason lo reassess their performances and try harder to make the system work. Irresponsible Gesture Jluntington Beach officials and eity police of(ieers a re locked in lengthy negotiations for a salary increase. Of(iccr.; ~ay they need a raise commensurate with the cost-0£-living increase and are campaigning hard for their position. They seek 7.S pen::ent now and another .i perce nt next July. No one can bJame them for the effort. but they went too rar when they recently distributed to the public fliers listing home and business telephone numbers of all City Council members along with their home and business ad· dresses. The Oi er accuses the city of violating contract agree- menL'i and requests residents to call or write lo council memberstovoicetheirviewsontheissue. The practice could be dangerous to the public of. ficials and their families, something the police, or all persons, should be aware of. 1'hey would be among the last, and justiJiably so, lo want their numbers and addresses listed publicly. Inviting public action agai ns t highly visible pe r sonalities is a dangerous business. Police who participated in the campaign should ask themselves what defense they would offer if a tragedy such as this week's 4 shooting in San Francisco were to follow their mi ndle~s act. • • Op1n1ons expressed In tho space above are those of the Dally Piiot. Other views eicprossed on this page are !hose of their authors and artists. Reader comment is Invited. Address The Dally Pilol, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642-4321. Boyd/Tricky By l..M. BOYD The casinos of the Las Vegas Hilton hav e 60 cameras in their ceilings. Each is 1wivelled and hidden by a plastic pod. Each is con· trolled by a remote switch in a monitoring room . The walcher there knows all the tricks, all the sleight oi band gimmicks, all the maniP\lla· Dear Gloo1ny Gus flow come Carter:• volunt.ary price and wage restruint plan do·e s n 't incl ude government. agencies that r'ai1e prtcea by raislna tees? G.J. GIM"" Gel -I .,., _ .,,,u.'l •r n-t• ,,,. " •"' -tlNl'tlJ '9fllotl 11111 ._,, .. wi. --............... ~. ......,, CO..OMtJ,....., tlons with cards and dice ex· ecuted by the swift cheaters. Have you ever ri1.lxed grenadine with rum and lime juice to make a Bacardi! Neither have f. Merely put forth the rhetorical query preliminary to report that grenadine Is pomegranate ~ syrup, that's what. Q. "How much money do the lOp Spetthwriters let for puttm1 totet.ber • .say, a » mbiute talk?" /\, Underatand $1 .800 Is about tops for something of the sort. Q . ''Somebody from Enaland it ltngliah. f"rom France. French. But what do you call 1omebody from Monaco?" A. Mone1uque Tbe peop&e who die or bee 1Un11 outnwnbfr the people who die ol 1hark bites by 10 to one. If you want lo IWlt a 0)', 1trike Just • UU&e behind it. PliH loU GI! bodlwudo. Nicholas von Hoffman Inflation Spells Profit to Some In pubU~ Ille. nothing Is ever •• slm'* u it seems, ao that the •pparent national unanimity •aalnat lnllatk>n bean • second IOOk . 11 everybody roally that much •1•lnat It or are aome pt'Ople ju1t 1oln& through the mot,on s beeiu1t 1he mi•a nledla and th e IOC'iety·~ pn? atl1e figures s pend so much energy Inveighing again.at It? After months of false starts. once the president Indicated he might be serious about cutting the growth rates in the money, thal he mi&ht really be flirting with an end to inflation. there was a decided grumpiness in certain quarters. IN 0'111.ER momenlS in our history. public figures ha\'e been avowed and sincere innationists. lterbert Hoover was. to name one. but while this isn't the year to advocate inflation, some peo· Mailbox pie Uke (i('orge Meany do com- bine a pro forma opposition Lo rt1ina prtce level.a with a refusal lo back the govemmt'nt policies most IJkely to flatten the growth curves. Even the electorate b more ambigUOU!l on the subject than we are Jed lO believe. Those social lea le•r readers, the pub11c Ol>inion pollsters, tell us that .. Inflation la lhe number one Issue In this country,'' but It may also .be a very tepid number one. If people were truly and deeply concerned, would two-thirds or the nation's voters have stayed away rrom the poll· ing places last Elettion Day? No. while people are doublle5S worried, many millions or us ob· viously aren't worried enough lo tilke even the minimal step or stumbling around the comer to pull a lever in a poJLing place. OUR monOchromatic mass media chants that inflation hurts us all. but a lot of us know darn "·ell it hurts some or us more than others. Inflation hurts creditors and helps debt.ors . The general knowledge or this self· evident fa ct. explains much of the rorce behind the continuing real estate boom .. Y<1u don't have to be a douWe- dome muter or buaines1 ad· ministraUon with a Coke·bou.le eye glau to know that one of lhe good things in Ille is lo borrow 100-cent dollar• on a house mortg•ge and pay the loan back with 33-cent dollars. The nice people in Waahington who print all that money have given you two·thlrds of your house and garden for free. The tens of millions who own real est.ate in the e:.:pectaUon that inflation will be kind. lo them are theoretically counter· balanced by other millions, especially older people who live on fixed Incomes. But, writes Christopher Jenks. professor o(' sociology at Harvard, "Soeial Se<:urity is now adjusted almost every year to keep pace with in· nation." £\'EN THOUGH private pensions have not done equally well. the per.capita income of individuals 65 and over rose 76 percent bet"'·een 1970 and 1976 while lhc per.capita income or Individuals aged 14 to 64 rose on- 1 y 51 percent. Since the Consumer Price Index went up 47 percent during the1e years, 1ndlvidual~ 14 to 64 eJMied up with about the same purchasing po..W:r in 1976 as in 1910, while individuals 65 and over increased their purchasing power by a firth. f For more, see Jenks' "Why Worry About Infla- tion?" in the Sept .. Oct. iliBue of Working Papen.) In sum, a whole big bunch o' people have either advancetf their standard of living or stayed about equal during the Yr-Ol"5t o( the Inflationary years. A lot ol them may be worried that, if inflation continues, the future won 't wort out as well as the past, and, assuredly, one or the great objections lo inflatlon is the extra element of uncer- tainty it brings to already uncer- tain human existence. Thus. even .people who proril are un. nerved by iL BUT HOW are the self-same people gotng lo react as it dawns on them that they may be the ones who pay the price for end· ing inflation or at least taking it off the backs or lenders, tht class that has paid the highest price for the Jowering dollar? Jn Califom.ia, we now have the variab~·interest-rate mortgage, in actuality a mortgage with in· lere.st payments wh.lch nuctuale at'cording to the ebb and now or inflation. ln a lot of slates that kind of mortgage would bump into the us ury laws, lhe moralistic name for price con· lrol over money, and already we're hearing from lenders that, unless these laws arc repealed. they're not going to make mortgages. The tussle which will ensue - unless national interest rates dive downward -will be a dis- guised fight between defla. tionisl!:I and innationists. The same kind of right Is likely to break out in other sectors of lhe economy as various groups and Individuals learn it ain •t necessarily so, that while infla . lion is like the rain in that it rails on all of us. it is illso like the rain in that it floods some gardens while it makes others· bloom. Another View of 'Working Mom' Scene To the Editor: Are we expected to sym· pathizc with your staff member, Anne Cooper. because she has round "it's work being a mom"? Was she under the impression that she gave birth to a little doll who• would sit placidly and need no attention unless mother had the time to spare rrom her other career? Perhafis, if she had taken time to read the .. trivia" that her daughter brings home from .school, she would have not· ed the scheduled ronference day holidays and planned ahead. She wonden why teachers can 'l manage to talk to parents without shutting down schools, as in her school days. Because of the unavailability of time that parents have to give to their children's school these days, the teachers have been forced to try scheduling lhe working parent at a convenient lime. What is convenient to the working parent? Sometime artcr s of course. ShouJd·the teache r have to put Jn a full day or school and conference on Into the evening? A conference day ha!'i been created so that the teacher may contact as many parents as po1slble within a short period of time, givin& the working parent more Oexibility In chooiJlng their time for conference. INSTEAD OF the Pilot publlsblng yet another article on the poor overtaxed working mother, vo'hy don't you look into how many first and s econd graders wear keys around their necks lo school and go home to empty house« to wait till their parents come home? Why don 't you· take a survey and rind how many 9, 10 and ti-year-olds are expected to go home and take care of their sibling 6-and-'1· ye•r-olds1 I have spoken to teacben in tears a~r these con - ferencea at the Indifference or parents who feel that tbelr children a.re "mature enou1h" to handle We unUI they wander home frOm work. cOf course. the neilhbor ls alwavs avlilable to "look tnonthem,1') l•n't It tJme we quit lamenting the tedlou1, re petitive, 1.1n· cb1llengtng al'pects of parent·• hof>d., and 1tart emphutz.lng the glory of bavinlJ to be reaponalble for tomeone belldel ounelves? SHIRLEY SHEPPARD N11 •~•22 ... To the Edlw: Al a kla&·Ume e:IUzeo of H\D'lt· ln1ton lhl1e:b, I, ind many """'"· .,. •boolutob' •ppollod • by th e childish . sometimes ludi crous. and even dangerous games the present City Council is perpetually engaged in. These antics are the shame or this city and county. Earlier thi s year. the llunt· ington Beach city residents vot· ed out of orfice two incumbents, and e lected four new council mcmberi. !two inc umbents 1:hosc not to run 1. in the hope or es tablishing sane and mean· ingful city government. llad all co uncil seats been on the ballot, we would no doubt have had seven new council members and a new administrator, had the latter been an elective post. Proof that the citizens or llunt- lngton Beach Want and need a brand new city administration ls apparent in the current chaos within its chambers and other o ff iees. generated a n d perpetuated apparently , by holdovers from the previous ad- ministration. fl also appea.rs that City Administrator Belsito s hould be replaced . It is rumort..-d that many, many city employees have quit. ALONG Wrnl the turmoil in the police ranks, it ls obviou.'I there is a breakdown of the en· tire city IJ()Vemment. Therefore, It seeftlS advisable that not only Mayor Shenkman, but the other holdovers f'l"Om the· prevsnus· ad· ministration, Including Mr. Belsito, should resign. An absolute clean sweep of all those prominent in the current dangerous upheaval in our city must take place. I see no via~e a lternative. Wh en a n entire city's affairs are so out or joint it Is only logical that the ad· minlstratots of its affairs are al fault. .. """' f1/lflf ,... .. ,,.. ,_ .... 7 ..... " The present mayor's bloated budget, along with so many employees quitting, should easi· ly cover the cost or a special election. We arc sick and tired of the treatment this fair city is subjected lO becau.c;c of Uie quar- relling and incompetenee or so many of the current crop of city officials. 8. F'. BORC0'-1AN .......... Sloodcs To the Editor: I am extremely perturbed arter attending my rirst couneil meeting in the city of Hunt· ington Beach recently. The unbelievable. immature, unbusinesslike, un·prol.ocol, pet· ty attitudes, not e:.:cluding rude· ness. the counci l members showed toward each other and the various speakers were inex· cusable. IT "'AS brought hefore the council that more harmony and rewer personality conflicts should be encouraged among the cily employees. Where but in the highest form ot city employee should this be practical" The City Council! Who should set Uie example? The City Council! Wht'n is the Ctty Council ol Huntington Beach going to prove to the world that nol only do we haVe a-city-t:Ol)e proud of, but have a governing body that can and will conduct "our" buslnett.oi in a compatible manner? MARY HELEN REACll B •llt..fN W'a•t f' To the Editor: The California Taxpayers' Al· soclatlon reports that the real Impact ot Proposition 13 is two years away. In the fb'st fiscal year or 1918-19, CaJltornia 'a 58 counties and 414 cities will mana1e fairly well due to the diatrtbudon of $4 bUllon from the 1tate aurphaa. It la laid that re.enre. will not "be available ln two ye911 . The 1tate will have DO mote than sz,g blllloo In available funcb to ol!Nt • projected lllortl"11 ot • bWion l.o)oealrnenues. THE llDUll'ION to um dlltm· ma l1 not in n.lllq tu.a. Wute and~-"'­be cul. Etnc"lener'-la aovenriment abould be a pa of federal llDd 1tat.e of1ld.als .. A• u ••ample, I cite the Newport.·llfl& UnlOed Sct.ool Dlltli<t. II lo Ill-• -..in IUllOUlll "'-,.. .-11oco1 year. 1r the school district does not s pend all the funds it has been allotted, then it receives less funds the neJlt year fiscal year. So, at the end or the year. Newport-Mesa Unified School District rrantically spends the money they have left over. It ts this kind of purely wasteful spending that mu.st stop. SUSAN M. llALEY lt.«Jf .... ,..,. 0.. To the Editor: J was pleased to see that at least one of our local news media loot Supervisor Riley to task for bis proud pronounce· ment that he was going to use his "obvious popularity lo help Republican candidates in other offi ces in future elections." Since Riley holds a non· partisan off ice al the highest level or local government, I find it deplorable that he is even con- templating using this office rnr promoting partisan politics - and let's face it. that's exactly what Yr'Ould be happening. Tom Riley was an absolute unknown until Govemor Reagan appoint- ed him as Supervisor Caspers' replacement. Any popularity Riley ettjoys now is due in large measure lo the expo6ure he has received as a county supervisor and obviously any influence he may have on partlsan politics is due to his non-partisan elected position in county govemmt!nt. Any supervbor who even at· tempts to tum the ofrtce or coun· ly supervisor into a partisan football should speod some time reflecting on the fact that a supervisor must, without bias a nd prejudice, fairly represent ull of his t'OOllituenta regardless of their political arfiUation. ls Tom Riley to naJve as to think that his commitment to the Republican Party to assist Republica.n candidates, will aJ. low him to perform bis awnocno ta1k -a taak that is dlf11cult even wkhout lbe complication of pn:saurea front your pollUcal party! SlnRLEY L GRINDLE Former Chairman, Oranee County Pia.Ming Comml&sion • l.A1ltt1 from rtodfrl Ol'1' wtlcome. The rtQht lo c0Men1t fftln1 to JU tpOC'~ 01" Climil'Mllt libel ii l'f'tmlftf. Lttten ol JOO wordt or t.u wall bt ofUftl pre/trntce:. All &cttm'""" in· dW ..,_urt and rnoUmg oddrtu t.c •nte:• rnav bf w61Mdd CM ,.. .,..,. if IO/fi<i<'il -ii-. Poolrv....UOOIH ... - I SONSUMER l'hurlcMy, NcMmw 30, 1911 FrC Proposes Ban on Health Food Ads WASHINGTON (>\Pl ,-Advertise m cnlt. for "health foods' would be prob lb1\f'd under a recommtl\ded f cdl'nl rqul1Uon "As roru,umt·r~ hMvu become moro <'OM('lou~ ot hc altb nd lht part nulrltloo plli\I In malnt11n RI hf'alth, lhl'y h1.1H• 1.11~ btocomt• more vulne:n ble lo hl'allh rt>htt~ rl•lma for food produce..." the f'f'derell Tr d Com m1a1lon t1lalf r.111d aner M four> ar t1ludy . THE STAt't• REC'OMMENDF.D thot ch,• (Ive nwnll>\•r commuu.1on ho •d• for "health foods" and e tabllt.h atnct dofm!Uona for whit "natural" and "or11uuc:'' fooela are Tt-t• commla loa 11 t.>>tpected to act on the r.commendutlnn ocxt yHr If adoptf!Ct. the ttlfulttt um could bf• In effect to about " H•ur The rrc·11 burl'UU fl( con,um,cr protection aaad. "'l h•· H•rm 'httlllh food ' fllH IY nllr LI.lull·~ "1w1·1al or 1u~rlor health l{I vinJ( 11ro1x•rt1ti1 to certain roods und l .annot tw dt• fin d or quallfll'd tn any nwu11m1<lul ""IY .. THF. at;Gtll.ATION ALSO would prohibit falbc rlldm11 11uch us lhot>t that foodl c-.n by lhunuiulvc~ rm·wnt or trc•at dlit"~ •!> I Any food advertlffd as "natural" would have to be free of artJOdaJ ln· )lrcd ienll. Fooda could not be touted u "or11nlc" U ftrtllheu o r peatlcldes had been aued on them In addition. advertlser11 could not claim lhat a food la nutritionally bet· lt!r than otbtr foods merely beca115e It qu"llfies u tllther nuluraJ or or· aunlc THE Fl'C STAI" .. ' said the regula. Uon is nffded becal.l8e of the inertia· ana number of a.UJJeadlog food adl. It u ld lbe food lnduatry lu t year spent more lhan Sl.3 bUllon to promote Hlet. Another aectlon of the proposed rule would require advertiaements that d1scUJB the fat or cholesterol content ot • food to dl1cl0te "in· formation necessary to enable lhe public to underatand and evalu1t.o the claim." · The staff said advertisements would be permit~ to discuss links between diet and the risk ·or heart diae11te, but false or exaggerated claims about health beneflta would noL be pennJtted. Cewda Al e x H a ley. auth o r or ·Roots,·· con· ceded m federal court that three passages from a nothe r book round their way i nto his best · seller . But he said he had not read the other book when he 1 inc luded them. HEY KJOS! COME HA VE BREAKFAST rMf h.4 SALE f'NOS Si\'l l 'HllA Y. Ofo;CEMBER 2N D ... WITH SANTA THJSSATURDAYAT9:00 •1aA••-~ lf l t ~tKY ,80Mh~l '\~TlTI EH ARELIMlTED~ AMINOURBUFFETERIA .. ONLY99c ~ .... 4 .. 1 Wards this weekend. Special. Juniors' sporty-look acrylic sweaters in 2 great styles. u I lover placket ot y le C'hoose Zip front hooded or gss r..ong :;lt•cvcs WI th cord tram EA. on yoke and i;lccvc patchc~. J\$)rted co lo~. Sizt.-s ::;,M,L. .11;'111111< IU::Ft.~.< II<•'" SAVE•2 GIRLS' SHINY SATIN BLOUSES $7sLOUSE REGULARLY $9 Choo11e from an assort· me nl of long s leeve b louse&. BO<k Ar ne t and iO'lc nylon. 7 -14. $8, sutin skirt ............ $6 !.IHLS f'ASHIO:-IS SAVE•S STRAPLESS BODY BRIEFER FASH ION Smoother. shu· } 788' plier figure. In 34.:JSB. 36·:ll:!C and D s izes. REC. $23 f OU:.JOATIONS SPECIAL FUN CHANNEL .. F'' TELEVISION GAME Men's wool and nylon shirts in bright lumberjack plaids. Wool blend shirt!( you can w~h by machine! An <U..'iOrt· montofcolorful pla1dHw1th ~quo re holtomb, 2 pockets and Ion~ slct•vcH. S,M.L,XL. 1097 REG.$16 Mt..._ S ~I 'l<:O. ISlllNC._ PLACEMAT SETS FOR DINING Abaca hemp in decorator 499 colors. Handwash.dripdry. Placcmut UljSOrtmcnl with SET napkin rings ................. 6.49 Hlmor:-it: ANO LINt;:-1 SAVE'2 WOMEN'S ACRYLIC SHAGGY SLIPPER Fluffy M11iden" 3e1 acry lic pile . Assorted colors. Jn ~hole sizes. REC. 5.99 SHOES SAVE'21 RAIN LAMP SETS A ROMANTIC MOOD ~!r h igh. 12· ~9 cha.in. Gentle TU "rain " effect. s 123, 38" .......... REG."° Cilt'TWARt; 'Save $20. Handy La Machine® electric food preparation system. Slioes,chope,gTates,gnnds. 4988 puree s a nd much more! H as co ntinuouti feed: no . need to stop while ut1ang. With uccessorles ....... 79.88 REC. 69.99 ll<)lls~:WA r<~;s SPECIAL LCD 5-FUNCTION WATCH FOR MEN 1sss Sport brown face i,hows hour. m inute, second, and month/date. Sleek yellow metal ba nd. A great gift idea for him. tT'-l~Jt.Wt.Ll<V SAVE$3 MEN'S WESTERN STYLE lWILLS Sturdy jeans of 797 pol yest.er/cotton. f ront, back poc. ket.s.Siztl82940. REG. 10.99 :-.11-:s·s WONK ('(.,CYnllN(; SAVE•to "GRASS GEITER" EDGER/MOWER Trima,mowsand 2088 sweeps. Safe ny· ..,-- Ion cutting'hne. Trlmmef'. _.,.. REC. 39.99 GARDEN SHOP Special. Fun toys for entertaining the little ones on your. list. 'iJ "Jaws". a game of skill 549 u~you us e boat hook to take pu~ccs from hrs mouth. r~ "Whoops" doJl... ....... 9.~ 1£1 TCR ·Van Jam Racc,48.819 TO -·· I SAVE 1/2 GIRLS' JOGGING TOPS AND PANTS 1 00·~ acrylic in 5so wm1huble color an-uy.Sizes7-14. EACH. PC. 3.llO. 1horta, :l.73 REC. SI l OIHL.'> Fl 1R:'lllSHl:'ll<:S SAVE•47 ~.-VERSATILE 10-IN. ENCH SAW OU I FIT Cuts t.o :114d, de· ~22 velops :.!·hp max. ....-'--- Stand, 2 ext.en· tiione included. R£G. 281.11 llAllllWAIU.: A WARDS CHARG-ALL ACCOUNT CAN HELP MAKE YOUR CHRISTMAS MERRIER Do easy prices ring a ·bell? ~ . ~·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ COVINA llOUME.AD SANTA ANA MONTCLAlll UCL£ ROCK SAN BERNARDINO LYNWOOD RIVERSIDE LAKEWOOO COSTA MESA CANOCA PARK WtsT LOS ANC£LES NORWALK TORUNCE FULLUTON HAWTHOttNt PANOUMA CITY HUNTINGTON lf'.ACH HOLIDAY HOURS .•. MONDAY THROUGH SATURDAY 1:30 AM TO 9:30 PM ••• SUNDAY 10:00 AM TO 6:00 PM •• I \ 7 AJ4 OM.Y PILOT s Tlluredly. ,......., 30. 1'71 ------- Pamela • /~ I I r 150.,000 Benefits Moscon Kin To G t Aid SAN FRANCISCO CAP 1 Th~ wlfe of shun Mayor George Moscone and her four children could receive ~ much ~ $1SO,OOO in city and state death benefits and pensions, offlcials say. Mel Wax. Moscone's prCM secretary, sajd that the fam.lly would receive the eqwvaJenl of one year of ~be mayor's salary -about $:i6,000 -un. der city provisions. I~ ADDITION, OTHER OFFICIALS said, the family will get a one-time payment about $41,700 an death benefits from the city retirement system. That is modest compared lo benefits for survivors of a police officer or firefighter killed in the line ·of duly. Which range from $19,000-a-year upward. But Moscone was in the miitcellaneous ~m ployees retirement system, which covers all non-safety employees. He and supervisor Har vey Milk were shot and lolled Monday at City Hall. Dao White, a former supervisor, .tas been ch:irged wtt.!l murder. WAX SAID EFFORTS ARE under way by Moscone's attorney lo channel tboU3ands of dollars out ol Moecone campaign funds and lo bis family. That will be done "if the peo;>le who gave money to the campaign funds agree," W'ax said. The Moscone family al.so will be eligible for SSS,000 in state workmen's compensation. widow's and children's benefits from Social Security and either a Jump sum or pension allowance from the s tate legislators• retirement system. The mayor served nine years as a stale senator. MOSCONE'S FAMILY ALSO Will. re<:eive a Sl,000 bunal benefit from the state A scholarship fund to help educate Moscone's three youngest c hildren has been establJSbed at the Bank of America, officials said. As a supervisor. Mille wa'i not a fulJ-time of- ficer and was not a member or the city retirement system. Re has no survivors. His supporters asked that memorial cootribu lions be n:.ade ln his name lo further Milk 's work in the field of bomosexuaJ rights. He was the city's first openly gay supervisor. Wine Areas Sel In Napa Yalley ST. HELENA <AP) -Members of the Napa Valley Grape Growers Association have voted lo limit an official "Napa Valley" wine grape area lo the Wat.el"sbed or the Napa River. a s pokesman said. · If the government agrees to such an "appella- tion of origin," it would exclude some grapes grown in Napa County, sa1d Bob Dwyer, executive secretary of &be 142-mem ber association. HE SAID ntE EXCLUDED areas would in- clude the Pope, Gordon and Wooden valleys and the Lake Berryessa region. If the viticulture area becomes official, wines labelled "Napa Valley" would have lo include a certain percentage of grapes from the designated area. Dwyer said the vote announced at a meeting her e was 97 for the Napa River watershed only, and eight for other larger alternatives. He Hid 75 growers attended the meeting, but some ballots had been malled in. VINTNERS ARE EXPECTED t.o take a similar vote Dec. 13. . Dwyer aald he hopes growers and vintners can agree oo a recommendation to the federal Bureau ol Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, which plans to designate vitlcultural areas. Dwyer said he expected lbe bureau to reach a decision next summer. Tokyo Disneyland? LOS ANG ELES (AP) -llickey, Minnie, Dooa1d. Goofy and other Wait Diaoey Productions cbarac:ten may aoon have Japanese doubles danc. ing lD the ltftetl ol a "Tot yo Diaoeyland." I,__ CLEANWELD , ~ SOLID-OX ~~ WELDER KIT ~ 1688 Create1 tbe beat n.eceuary to weld or aolder. With oxygen aticb. IJgbt and eal}' to mon anywbeN. T~ GEOCEL WATER SEAL 197 . ~ A 12 oz. cartridge, comes in white ;.-;.-. /29 or elem. Check now, the big rain.a tr are yet to come. WALL MOUNT SM-2 HAND HELD SM-3 #1011 18" #7021 1997 27" For pleasure and relaxatlon. thla la it. GRID SYSTEMS MAIJlf RUNMER WALL ANGLE. ORCBOSST For dropped ceillnga not on I 9 C me, e1.r:1 .. , we can tell you the easy way to do lt. (fine, tell aw. rm 1tW wondering.) UN. n . .- CALIFORNIA BIACK AND DECKER WORKMATES Got to be the beat Idea to come down the plb for 110me tlme. A table that'• a me, a clamp, a work aurface, a np~. a UHful thing of a m1lllon ldeaa. (a thing of beauty a:DCl a Joy fornw?}. DREMEL SCROLL SAW •SANDER COMBINATION 5497 No. 571. U you know fine quality b.obbyi1t1 toot. you know Dremel. if not. what can I aay? DREMEL4" TILT ARBOR TABLE SAW 7788 No. 580. Muat be the whole world la going blg for Dremel or aom. guy aold ua a bW of gOocb. ROCKWELL RADIAL DRILL PRESS 99!!o12 A fine quality lifetime tool but aubJect to stock on band. Means when they are gone. no more at tb1a price. ,0 . c:::___) SHOP PLYWOOD 4x8 SHT. ~ .. 6" ~·· 797 ~ .. 1097 ¥, .. 13•7 Ob. tbla ad la a tmmotl I am even thinking about tum1ng myaelf lnto the monaatory. Same old atuJf, good prlcH. (A•~'..!"'I": ~~·:i1 <? ·~. SINTHETIK MOTOR OIL 4 7c ~~ QT. RAIN JET ROTARY MASSAGE SHOWER HEAD ;997 Jf you haft aching muaclee at the end of the clay you wW be happy to hen. a good atroag ab.ower "Dl'Uftge. dolt Franky. 2x4 KSH LIGHT PANELS 12! 2x4 foot lhMta. your c~ of Ddam. atar Ute, dear, or white. (did tM old one wear oat?). • McGRAW EDISON RECONDmONED POWER TOOLS Firat ofJ I have to tell you, they are limited to stock on hand. New tool full year wananty. A .....--.....i./ SAJft)ER 8 97 ~·· DRILL 8 97 ~;,cmc.12•7 36" ALUMINUM 197 AND VINYL THRESHOLD ••..•.••..•..• ~~~~-~-~~~ ............... : .... 297 GARAGE DOOR 9 FOOT 1 ~7 WEATHERSTRIP 16 FOOT 247 U1ed to ICJY it waa a way to beat the draft. A little play on word.I. but 1tW good to keep your home cosy. SAWHORSE BRACKETS 77:. #8()() Slap a pair on aome old 2x.5e and you've got a flnt claH 1awhorae. (Did you catch me there?) ITT SECURITY LIGHT 2777 PRESTONEII SUMMER COOLANT ANTI-FREEZE 2 89 GAL The mountain• are ripe for rialting , go prepared. un1 ... the thl•f 109ff to perform wider a atage Ught you can be awe the Ugbt will dlecowage him {her) but good. ARMSTRONG CEILING PANELS PLAIN WHITE •280 CLASSIC •lt5A CONESTOGA 297 #281 177 I" Two by four foot pcmela to make a perfect ce~. (perfect. now .Ur. la a word for Mbate. Call lt almoet perfect). The Disney people and a Japanese real estate firm bave reached a Leotative agreement to build such an amusement park oo a penimula ln Tokyo · Bay. WIEKDAYS g TO~ SAT -SUN 9 TO.~ •VISA • MASTERCHARGE •NATIONAL CARD AD GOOD THRO People, food, entertainment, real eltate, reataurenta. Read all about them In the weekly newapaper edH- ed eapeclally for thl1 area -Coaat LIFE. Coast r., LIFE .. .. . ~ I ~ i (t .. •• I rvine ED ITI O N Today's Clos ing N.Y. Stoeks VOL. 71 , NO. 334. 4 SECTIONS, •8 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, NOVEMBE R 30, 1978 TEN CENTS ect Arrested r .. emente • 1cer S D GAETas k Solon-utility Conflict Eyed By PIDUP ROSMARIN OI tlle D.aily Pilot Sl•ll State Sen. Dennis Carpenter's involvement as a paid consult- ant in a San Diego Gas & Elec· tric Company proposal to import energy from Mexico is described as a ''potential confJlct of in· terest" ln a report by auditors for the state Public Utilities Cot'(\ mission. The auditors recommend that the PUC disallow $541.000 spent by the company for consulting services from a rate increase the utility is seeking. Most of the sum -S3S3.000 - was paid to La Jolla consultant William Black. who in turn hired the Newport Beach Republican senator to arrange meetin2s with Mexican officials to dis· cuss possibilities for a billion· dollar powe r plant ne ar E nsenada in Baja California. Carpenter was paid $44.313 m fees and $2,200 in expenses over a 16·monlh period. Black, Carpenter a nd two Mexican associates of Black pla nned to form a company called Inter-America n Energy Arnance (IEA) that would act as middleman in the sale of Mex- ican power to the San Diego utility. The PUC auditors wrote in their report: "The s taff has sever al concerns with respect to the activity of Black and as- soci ales as representatives of San Diego Gas & Electric and the roles planned for the I EA "A prime concern is a poten· tial conflict of interest. ·'If there were greater pro- spective benefits under the IEA ar rangement for Black and as· sociates. what incentive was there for them to exert efforts in other arrangements"" A San Diego Gas vice presi- dent for public relations, Denrus Richter . said t he IEA proposal was turned down by company management and directors. Richter said Black's consult- ing contract expired in April and the company has no plans for fu rther contact with him Carpenter said Wednesday that he saw no conflict of in- terest in his work for Black. and said he wished the IEA hud sue ceeded in establishing itself. "I would have loved to do it." Carpenter said. The PUC auditors said the money spent by San Diego Gas should b e c har ge d to stockholders of the company r ather than its cus t omers because of questionable plan· ning and execution of Black's ef- forts to obtain financing for the project. "San Diego Gas," said the re- port, "was lax in control over expenditures, and in not provid· Ing a vehicle to recove r expen- d itures made on behalf of. or for the benefit of. IEA." Coas t Weather some night and morning low cloudiness and a little cooler on Friday . Lows tonight 47 lo 52. Highs Fri· day in mid 60s. .INSIDE TOD~ Y The United Woy fund drive u under UlOll and i1's b.'\led on the theory that~ Co:.:nty know• what'• belt for Orange CountJ(. Featt.'ring, P• CI . l•dex •""• ~ Ct A1111 L.a!Mltn Ct L. M ... ,,_ A~ Mel!Mt A& .... ,..... ew Mii-~ .. Celffwllle Al •~It• ., .. \I Cl"""" OU """'"-' ~--M c-kt at Ne1*'411"'""' M Cret._.. et Or....-~ AU DH9I fff4k• M S,.nt a14 •-.n•I ~. M-1 1'9<• M.,._ •1 • ....,........,. ••tr T .. n lslell •tt ~... ' (t.J TllN .. t• e•n Mwel(. Ct WH tffr A• ,_,,,..,.. '" .., .. "-.. "It is unclear," the auditors added. "why San Diego Gas launched an around the world excursion to seek project financ- ing. after Mexican officials stat· ed thev were not vet oreoared to consider any specific project." Trips were made to Tokyo, London. Paris, Mun ich and other places. and charged to San Diego Gas. Carpenter was not on the trips The auditors further com- plained that. as initially pro- posed. l EA held the pivotal posi- tion in the energy plan. as a buyer and selle r of Mexican energy. ~ff Pile! -ltY Lft PayM .. There was the possibility of <SeeUTILITl', Page AZ> POLICE GATHER TO BEGIN SEARCH FOR KILLER OF FELLOW LAWMAN San Clemente SWAT Team Shown After Slaylf\9 of Officer Richard Steed Cockatoo Ransomed Theft Suspe«!ts Cooped A grim, hushed voice over the telephone informed a sleepy Jrvine couple early Wednesday morning, "We have your bird. If you want to see him again aJive, you'd better come 'up wjth $2,000." So began a flighty crime that involved a police stakeout by two detectives and f~ officers and a clan- destine swap of a cockatoo for cash at a darkened Arco gas station. · Police got their man-and their bird-with a minimum of violence THE BJRDNAPPlNG BEGAN late Tuesday night. Donald and Lydia Hess of 3541 Carmel Ave . heard the sound of their electric garage door opener and peeped cautiously outside to find their cockatoo "Cookie" missing from his perch. Alarmed, they waited. At 1 a.m. came the phone call. The bird. they learned t~ their astonishment, was snatched for ransom. The Colony homes couple said they didn't have $2,000 but would try to scrape it up. The Hesses stalled for time. took the caller's telephone number and said they'd call back. They called police. INVESTIGATOR PAUL J ESSUP devised a trap to nab the birdmen. He checked·tbe department's "flash roll" used as front money in undercover investigations. and asked the Hesses to try and talk the criminals down to a lower price. After consider able haggling, the Hesses talked them down to $600. With their own $100, and with the police money. they had almost that much. The exchange took place at an Arco station. at the cor- <See COCKATOO'S HOME, Page A2> Busstop Unit Organized In C ounty Students Jeer Nixon By KATHY CLANCY OI Ille D.ally Piiot SUttf Creation of an Orange COWlly version of Busstop was an- nounced today by two Orange Coast residents who hope to halt a proposal that wo uld expand the Los Angeles desegregation plan to local schools. Doris Alle'!L. a Huntington Beach Union High School Dis- trict trustee, and Doris Enderle of Huntington Beach s aid at a morning press conference that so far they are the members of Orange County Busstop. But they hope to collect addi· tional me mbers al a Dec. 7 or- ga n izat ion a l meeti n g i n Westminster. And eventually, Busstop mem- bers may circulate a statewide petition for the 1980 ballot that would amend the ~tilution to halt forced busing of students for sch ool integ l ion, lbe women said. "Our children don't belong to the state," Mrs. Enderle said. "They belong to their parents. We want to have choices; where we live and why and where our youngsters go to school." Mrs . Allen and Mrs. Enderle were reacting to a metropolitan p l an for intregation that transcends school district boun- daries a nd county lines a nd could Involve bullng in all but (See 8USING. Pase A.2> 'Island' Has ManyGi/18 Today's Dally Pllot 1uldft readen to "lifllhoppln~ rtom an island -Fashion Jal and. • . Tbe 20-page macazJne det.alll sift Jdeas and holiday faahlons available at Fashton bland, Newport Beach Angry Cr~ TosseJJ Eggs at, Ex-president OXFORD. England <APl - Richard M. Nixon, braving a gauntlet of egg.tossing pro- testers and speaklng over chants or "Creep! Creep!" and "Nixon is dead!". told British students today he will "speak up for what l believe ... as long as l live." A tO·mlnute program, "Nixon at Odord," will be presented at 7:30 tomgbt on Channel 28. The fo rmer president also told the Oxford University audience that with his approval the FBI broke up a PalesUnian guerrilla "network" in tbe United States through wiretaps and break-ins during his ad mlnistration. which ended four years ago with his resignation in the midst of the Wate rgate scandal. A phalanx or security men had lo escort Nixon through an angry crowd of 500 student dem- ons trators, many of t hem Americans and some flinging eggs, when he arrived at the Ox· ford Union debating society hall to deliver the address The noisy melee was reported when he lert. and an American Secret Service man. trying to protect Nixon, began swinging wildly with his fists and shouting at demonstrators pummeling the Nixon car. Some b ys tander s wer e knocked s prawlin g on their hands and knees as the Nixon motorcade bored its way through the crowds or dem onstrators and shoppers in Ox - ford's Corn Market shopping street. Eighty police officers linked arms in a futtle attempt to keep the protesters from pounding t heir fi sts on Nixon's black limousine. Police carted away eight demonstrators. Earlier. when Nixon made his way into the hall. he got a 81 Million More In Irvine friendly welcome from the wail· ing audience of about 800 stu· dents. who applauded loud and long. "Thank you for the very warm welcome of those inside -and those outside for making me feel very much at home.·· he s aid to laughter from the audience "You hear these people out- side." he later told his listeners. .. It's not pleasant ; I'm used to it. .. But he said his political career has ended. "Politically, I plan to play no role in the party. as a candidate. for a candidate -anything." Nevertheless. be said, "I feel as long as l have any breath in me I w;u speak up for what I believe . . I'm going to con- tinue to as tong as I live." To do otherwise would not be possible for him. Nixon said . "I have enough to sit ... and (See NIXON, Page AZ> School Bids Increase S k yrock e ting prices of materials and labor will cost tax· pa yen $1 million extra to build an Irvine htgh school, pla ns for which were delayed six months because lnillal construction bids were toobl1b. LaatFebruary theg~nool board rejected bids on construction con- tracts for Woodbrid ge High Sehool, when the lowest bid wu saoo.ooo overwhal was allowed by the state allocatlon board. The project wu re-advertbed for blda. The new low bid of a com· blned 43 c:ootractors needed to do the various con.atruction Jobi wu $7 ,533,000, or 12.2 percent hl1her than laat February's low bid. And that, a frustrated Dave King , director of facilities plan· nlng and development. told the board Wednesday, is despite the fact t.hat about $500,000 In costs were eliminated by reducing the amount ol electronic gear that will be bUlJt lnto Uillh1ah school. Tbe dl.ft~renc.,,,-eombloed wtth the approxJmately ball·mUlion dollar higher bid, mean1 the achoo! will coet Sl mUUon more now to build. K Ing rehactAAtlY 11ked the board to approve the bids, for fear that turther delay would lncrease costs even more. The school board unanimously an reed. ·King said he expects the state allocation board to approve the expenditure ln light oflhe steadHy increaain& costs of construction. "Appatenlly," KJng said, "In· niUonary Increases in materials and interest costs, coupled wjth sl1nificant. but unknown, in· creases antJclpated on labor wage files Jn um. has led to higher COl'l· atructlon costs.·• Woodbridge High School Is scheduled to open ln September ol 1980 . . • ... ' '· ........... , ......... ·~· -~ . .. 1 ••• , ••• ' ·'· I s . ~/ • am Answe r e d 'Assist' Dispatc h · By ANNE COOP ER OI ti• o.lff l"li.t Slatf A San Clemente policeman was shot to death Wednesday night wbile answering a call for a man who said he had slashed his wrists. Richard Steed, 30, was shot in the chest in an alley behind the San Clemente Su n /Pos t news paper plant. 1542 N. El Camino Real, shortly before 7 p.m. Less than seven hours later . police arrested James Richard Hoffer. 23, of 1608 Calle las Bolas, on suspicion of murdenng Steed Ho ffe r was caug ht as he walked aJon~ El Camino Real. a block south of the murder scene. He was transported to UC Irvi ne Medi cal Cente r in Orange. where Police Chief Gary Brown said he was treated for what appeared to be a self· 1n01cted knife wound on his arm. Events. which resulted in Steed 's murder ana the manhunt for his killer. began at 6:45 p.m., when a man reportedly came to the door of the Sun/ Post newspaper offices. requesting an ambulance beca use he said he'd c ut his wrist. '· Police were called. An am- bulance and a fire engine were • dispatched. Officer Steed, who reportedly heard the police dis· patch over the radio in his patrol car said he would respond. Fire Capt. Jerry Galati said he pu)led his fire engine into the news paper plant parking lot. when the police dispatcher in- formed him the police officer <Steed) had not been able to locate the man with the slashed wrist. Galati said he s a w Steed'S" patrol car parked in an alley behind the newspaper plant. He said he left the fire e ngine and walked ove r to talk to the police offi cer but found him lying beside his patrol car. bleeding and unconscious. Fireman Thomas Mccorkell. who was manning the city am- bulance wtth engineer Gary Lov· rien, said he saw a man running • north down the alley, away from the patrol car. The three firemen rushed Steed to San Clemente General Hospital. where a team of medical s pecialists fought to s ave his hfe. Even before the officer was pronounced dead at 7: 5611>.m .. law enforcement officers were massing at the murder scene to search for tus killer. Wiping tears from their eyes and hun<.'hing their s houlders against their grief. St eed's fellow policemen set about a m ethodic a l bloc k-by-b lock search. Three Sun/Post e mployees. who had ~n working late at the newspaper plant, deseribed the man as about 25, with long brown hair and a beard. They said he'd had a bloody towel wrap~ around one arm. t:see OFFICER , Page A2> SLAIN IN ALLIY '•trofman Rlch•rd ltHd \ Printing Of Mdney Charged Two Or .mf!t' l'11u11h pr1111t•r.1 "''t't t• .u·r.tt~11t:d Wt>l1nf'i;dav tn l.1h Antotdt·' 1111 -.·h.tr~t'' 111 m.muf.1t'tur111ll\ 1111tf po .. M·~:r-rn~ bof.?u' l 111 n •11t•\ .1flt·r l ~ St•, rt•t St•rvu~ 1n ...... t.,.dlOr+. \'1111hw I t•d $730.l>OO Jn phu n~ fllOtH''t 1'1wi.d,1\ ('h,11 J:t•d .uul r t'll'll'l'\I on h1' 0\\ 0 1,•1·11~111 ~.llH'\' W j ' liU\ S11a1·1•11w. Iii. u( \r1:1he1m o\\n1•r (1 1 o c H nu , 1111· .. !> 1-· o , 111 , ('nmptun ('h.11 ~t.>d .ind rttlt'U:.\•d on S5 000 bond \\U:. Gl•or1w Mtn.kJ, 5:J or Mlb:>Ulll V1eJO t\:.'.,, j n t SI' 1• 1· 1 ..i I Ate t• n t E u ~ t' n tt D •'.:.: •,.1 11.J St',. rel ~·rv1Ct· 1nvt'Sll~11t111' had bt.tco watching tlw tw o Or:rnge Coun twns ror wet-ks· b\'(Orl' arrt>sllng thl'nl h.ttt.• Tm•stht\ lfl 't'PUr:Jlt' CJr!> nt'ur tht' bUl>IOt'!>:O furmi. plunt Tht· money. Dagg said . was fo•md along "1th printing pl&tt':. and nt-•gat1vtt:. in Sparrow'!> car Da~..c called the quail!} of the phony $20, SSO and $100 b1lb "fair." lie i>a1d they were pnnt ed on an o ff:.t>t printing machine. The c1gent said his organ1la· t1on is contanuing an invest1ga· hon of the case but that it is believed no phony bills were pa:lsed Both suspects are scheduled for pre II mi nary hearing before a U S. M agislratc m Loi. Angeles Ot'C 19 From Page ,1 I UTILITY ..• them assuming other ma1or runct1ons in financing and con- struction of the project." the a uditors said · The auditors reported that, "If tht.• proJect became a reality, S·;11 Diego Gas would have been Lhe weakest member of the troika <of the utility. lEA and the Mexican government>. despite the fact that San Diego Gas would be<.rr the entire finan- cial burden · That was not m the interests of either customers i.hareholders of San Diego Gas " ln other words, there was a lot of money to be made by lEA and its principals if the deal had been approved. according to the auditors report Richter said lht> audit reoort was erron'!ous in assuming the expenses paid Ulack were calculated in the compuny's rale increase reque:.t But Tom L<>w. who supervised the P UC auditors report. di:s· agreed lie read from testimony of Ron Watkins. San Diego Gas munager of the Mexican project. during hearin~s before the PU C m the current rate case Watkins was asked how much money the ulllity had spent so far in its quest for the power plant. "Just over a million dollars." Watkins replied, "Cgo. mg back tol late 1976." Draft Horses Carry Coffin BANGOR. Wis . (AP> -An an· tique hearse pulled by two of his own draft horses carried the body of Floyd Jones to his grave at the FaJrview Cemetery. J on es, a nationally known breeder or Clydesdale horses and Holstein cattle. died Satur· day at the age of 71. His will stiplulated that his body be transported by a horse-drawn hearse. The hearse. estimated to be more than 100 years old. belongs to Clifford Fossum. a La Crosse funeral home operator who col· lects antJque vehicles. He said it was the first time it has been used for a funeral in about 50 years . ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT fP!fl 0rf l\4t-0)1'\t D1'1tf PllO' trrt'n fitn1rn '' '"m IJ•ftl ctt"' Nt.n PU•\\ t\OUt>*i\IWdt)Ytht 0· tf'l"JI eo.,1 r .,tJ •'-"·~(omo.tlf't• \t0t'•'"flf1 t ~ .,, ~~'; ::.=~~~,~~,~~i.n::~:-i:~ ~~~· tA1n V•ll"'f h wl"" ~ArldlfbM'i V•I'"" AfU1 L'\9\ff\llt~~n ~tft.(O,.\I •\•flliQ._r-o.a~tf'iri MW\ • ov'> .,.....,.,, \~•w•OA.,, Miff ~" '"" 1,.1M•f:MI 0-.1ft'• ''°''"'' p1.-h1 '' ctf )JI) '#IP't G"w ';ttfft (Jnt~ M,u 4 \l1IOJnt• f?61', ._ ... """'"" ,.,.'"°'"' •no P\IOI•~ JoO II c ..... , \J•r• .,,ft\tOPnt •"d ~•I~.,,..,.,., .,....,,,,.,"""'' lelt10f" ,,.._, ............. IN-•f!Otd·loo UIMlt• 11 ~ .. , "".._... • ... 11 Al\hlt~t ~"~•nQl.dilt~ Ofll<H CAt\I• Me\O J'IOW••t ky\trftl ... , ••• 0.f( h .... (,••-'l'tt ~t•fft Hvftt'f'llQ•cwttk•'" lt••~ttii .... &oi.1-.V.,f:I ,._tt~•v.-11 ... ,, J\1ftf\•tt,,.._ .. , ~~ (,, .. "'. ,,.._,,, Teltpllont (114)~2t CIH.ititd AChtt111lngM2•M71 • ~ ..... 'l•lhtf' i-..#\Otf"{f ffl·t)IO o.11,,.. ... s .... ...,... SHERIFF'S DEPUTY GETS BLOODHOUND ON TRAIL ·snoopy' Prepares to Track Staying Suspect Fr.,.Page AJ OFFICER SLAIN ••• San Clemente police were as. sisted by the Orange County Sheriff's deputies, who brought two bloodhounds to track the sus pect. The north end of the city where the newspaper plant is sandwiched between bcachside cottages and apartments and the industrial district, was mapped for search teams. A Huntington Beach police helicopter hung above the city. shining a powerful li ght on the ground. where San Clemente's specially trained and outfitted ta c t 1cal operations officers corn bed block after block of the surrounding neh~h borhood. Horrer was spotted at 2 a.m. by s heri£f's deputies, as he walked along El Camino Real, near the CC11le Lago intersection. J usl one block north of the news paper plant. He was arres,t.· ed without incident. Chi ef Brown sa1d Hoffer meets the description of the man who vis ited the newspaper offices earlier and had the same kind of wound. His apartment is located directly behind the newspaper plant, Brown said. Hoffer was to be transferred to Orange County Jail from the medical center. following treat· ment for the knife wound. Hoffer's bail was set at $500.000. Hoffer did not have a gun. when he was arrested. A police department spokesman sa1<l a team of officers was searching today for the gun used in the shooting. No description of the gun was made public. Steed's gun and his glasses were found on the ground a short distance from where he fell in the alley. a few feet from his patrol car. Officer Steed is survived by his wife, Kathy, and by his parents who live on the East Coast. The young couple lived in Oceanside and had no children. Frortt P age A J NIXON JEERED .•• contemplate my navel on the Pacific . If I did that 1 would be dead mentally in a year and physically in two." Nixon's comments on the break.up of a Palestinian group cam e during a question-and· ans wer period when he was asked whether the office of the pre'S1dency had a corrupting ef· feet on the individual holding the job. "There are no easy calls that a president makes ." he responded, going on to give the Palestinian incident as an exam- ple. "The AJ Fatah group. through the much·maligned FBI. we learned had establis hed a network in the United Stales." Nixon said . "That group was ap· prehcnded, It was broken up ir. the United States. through what was called wiretapping and break-in by the FBI." He said the group had been planning a terrorist attack like the massacre of lsraeli athJetes at the 1972 Munich Olympics. .. Now on the one side those who are civil libertarians -and I understand how they feel :-- will say that nothing will justify wiretapping . . . My question is this: should Al Falah not have been brqke n up -a nd it wouldn't have been broken up without that kind of surrep· titious entry -and should we have had that kind of an incident someplace in the United States. "Or wasn't it worthwhile un· der those circumstances where we had a foreign-controlled group or radicals who were threatening to kill Americans in a certain area; shouldn't the president and his attorney general. and his director or the FBI. weren't they justified in ap· proving the extra means that were necessary to break it up?" Protesters' cries of "No more Nixon!" filtered through the windows as the ex.president spoke. Some shouted obscenities and roared In unison such s logans as "Who Killed Al · lende?"' -a reference lo Marx· isl President Salvador Allende of Chile. who died in a 1973 right· wing coup. Demonstrators included 43 Rhodes and Marshall scholars. a nd more t han 100 other Americans studying at Oxford. Some fashioned themselves as a n ad -hoc g r o up c alled "CREEP." using the acronym of Nixon's one·lime Committee to Re· Elect the President bul changing the meaning to ·•cam· paign to Resist the Effects of the Ex· President.'' 1. f'r°"' Page A J COCKATOO'S HOME. ••• ner of Culver Drive and Walnut Avenue, at 6:30 a .m . Wednesda}. with the Hesses timorously holding the money and trre police hiding behind available cover. . JESSUP SAID Two· men drove up in a car. got out and, carrying a cardboard box, approached the Hesses. Donald Hess demanded to see the bird, since nary a peep came from the box. One suspect carefully lifted the lid a fracUon. The bird was okay. The exchange was made. Police moved ln . The suspects. James Wahl, 19, of Santa Ana, and Mar hall Northcutt, 20. of 3022 Collece Drive, Costa Mesa, -4Vere arrested and booked on charges or burglary, ex tor· · lion and conspiracy. TWO COSTA MES.\ women, LJnda Bradley and Donna llorold, both 19, who police alle1e were confederates. later were arrested at their home, at lOM Glen Circle. Each was held In llou or $10,000 ball. Cookie the cockatoo, Jessup uld. was, despite tbe or· deal. unrufOed. T~ the bird Is capable of s~eeb, lt ls unlikely to ttstlfy al trial, stnce lta voe1bulary l'i limited to "Hello." • - Benefits Tax On Aged Eyed WASHINGTON (A P ) - Former Social Secur1ty Com- m lss ioner Robert M. Ball, declaring that the nation cannot afford. "excessive or unreason&· ble s:ubsidies" for the elderly, suggested ~oday that they be re· quired to pay taxes on one half their benefits. Ball told a conference on "the economics or aging·· that some laws and customs that benefit all the elderly, regardless of wealth, "will not be defensible in the years ahead." ln addition to cutting back the tax-Cree status of SociJll Security benefits, Ball proposed eliminat· ing the double income tax ex· emption enjoyed by all those 65 and older. "The elderly are not a homogeneous group. Far too REPORTER EYES SOC.AL. SECURITY-A11 many -one-fourth -have less income than 125 percent of the poverty level," he told 400 persons at the meeting sponsored by National Journal magazine. But be said there also are "a great many who are quite well off." "In the long run, it is not de· sirable to single out a particular age group for a series of sub- sidies based on age alone," Ball said. Health , Education and Welfare Secretary Joseph A. Califano Jr. this year questioned whether wealthy elderly people should get Social Security benefits tax-free, but no official action has been taken in that direction. With groups of r etirees already wielding clout in Congress to raise benefits and liberalize the amounts they can earn without losing benefits. any E:aortion Plot Works SACRAMENTO <AP I - A Sacramento bank manager says he gave more than SS0.000 to a man because he was told his family was being held hostage and would be killed if be didn't turn over the money. the FBI said. Art Johansen. vice pres- idenl and manager of the downtown Wells Fargo Bank. said Wednesday he turned the money over to a smooth·talking, casua ll y dressed black man in an a lley next to the bank. Johansen said he re· ceived a telephone call from a man who identified himself as an FBl agent. who said he wanted to alert him to an extortion scheme. SALE s tep toward taxing Social Security benefits would generate a protracted battle. Ball said about one.fourth of the federal budiet. $US billion. is spent on the elderly in the forms of Social Security, other federal retirement systems, Med icare. Medicaid. Sup· plementary Security Income and other benefits. He said 14 percent of the elder· ly have income below the pover ty level and that without Social Security, 60 percent of the families beaded by persons 65 or older would be below the poverty l!!vel. Frortt Pagt-A I BUSING .•. three Orange County school dis · tricts. The metropolitan plan was the major recommendation from a panel of experts appointed by Los Angeles Superior Courl Judge Paul Egly to study Los Angeles desegregation. Mrs . Enderle. wh o i s chairman or the California Pro· Family Coalition. compared forced busing to "people plan· ning" resulting in the kind of controlled society advanced by the Rev. Jim Jones in Guyana. She said she used the People's Te mple disaster as an example of "usurping powers. "Forced busing is a way of taking away an individual's rights." she contended. Mrs . Allen, an unsuccessfuJ s tate assembly candjdate last Nov. 7. said "the schools are to educate. not for planning a Uto· pi a n society." Mrs. Allen said creation of Busstop is not a racist reaction. ·'It has to do with taking youngster s completely away_ from their homes." she said. "It has to do with local control. ··our concerns are not necessarily with the integration aspects bul that we are going to be moving youngsters around on a c h ess board ... however someone s ees as a c ure to society's ills.·· S4N FRANUSCO 'PUGUED CJTf' The flower children, the Zebra killers. the Zodiac. the Sym· bionese Liberation Army, Patricia Hear s t, Charles Manson. Squeaky Fromme, Sara Jane Moore, the Rev. Jim Jones and his Peoples Temple. San Francisco has experienced them -and more. On Monday, the city lost a mayor and a supervisor. both shot to death under the ornate dome of the building in which they worked. "f don't know how much more we can lake," says one resident . 1See Page 88> Af>Wl....-.0 'I~ C'a•p•' • Natali a Solzhenitsyn. wife of th e exiled Russ ian author . ha s ur ge d Ame ricans to pressure the Soviet Union to allow in· ternational inspections of prison camps. Welte Sues School District For $269,000 Damages totaling nearly S269.000 are being demanded from the Saddleback Valley Unified School District b~ Superintendent Richard Welte in an Orange County Superior Court lawsuit which charges the defendants with breach o( con· tract. • We lte claims in his action that the board acted unfa irly and ii· legally last April when it com· pelled him to take a 44·day vaca· lion while the value or his services to the district was being assessed He de mands a n additional S500 .000 1n d a mages from trustees Mary Phillips, George Henry and Carole Neustady wM with school district employee James Mitchell, arc 1<lent1J1e<J as being particularly responsi· ble for actions taken against him Welle claims m the action that the board's decision to send him on vacation and ~dditionally de- ny him $8,976 in accrued vaca· 'tion pay has held him up to public ridicule . Welte. whose four year con· tract expires next June, claims _ that the four individual defen· dants have conspired against him with a vie w to having personnel director Mitche ll ap. pointed as his successor. He alleges that di s trict trustees have repeatedly denied him freedon to run school dis· t rict operations despite the terms of his contract and that re peated attempts have been made to force him to resign. The individual de fendants declined to comment until they are served with copies of the laws uit. Welte d eclined to elaborate on the legal action. SAVE This 111 Christmas ' •' 369 I. 17th St. Costa MHa c '*'' to Mene C.tenoet 1 KIOM trom R11c>n1l 642-1657 • ~ • ' • ·~ , ! . I LaguitB/Sollth Coast VOL. 71, NO. 334, 4 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1978 Suspect Arrested • Afternoon N.Y. Stoek~ I 'I TEN CENTS • I 'I , .. II t ~lemente 1cer am Calpenter Conflict Pondered By PlUUP ROSMARIN OI -O..lly "''°' S~ff State Sen. Dennis Carpenter's Involvement as a paid consuJt· ant.. in a San Diego Gas & Elec- tric Company proposal to import energy from Mexico is described as a "potential conflict of in· terest" in a report by auditors for the state Public Utilities Commission. The auditors recommend that the PUC dis allow $541,000 spent by the company for consulting services from a rate increase the utility is seeking. Most of the sum -$353,000 - was paid to La Jolla consultant William Black, who in turn hired the Newport Beach Republican senator to arran~e meetini.?s with Mexican officials to dis- cuss possibilities for a billion· dollar powe r plant near Ensenada in Baja California. Carpenter was paid $44.313 in fees and $2,200 in expenses over a 16-month period. Black , Carpente r and two M e~ican associates or Black planned to rorm a company called Inter-American Energy Alliance (IEA) that would act as middleman in the sale of Mex· ican power to the Sao Diego utility. The PUC auditors wrote in their report: "The staff has several concerns with respect to the activity of Black and as- sociates as representatives of San Diego Gas & Electric and the roles planned for the IEA. "A prime concern is a poten- tial conflict of interest. ·'If there were greate r pro- spective benefits under the IEA arrangement for Black and as· sociates. what incentive was there for them to exert efforts in othe r arrangements'!·· A San Diego Gas vice presa· dent for public relations, Dennjs Richter. said the JEA proposal was turned down by companv management and director!>. Richter said Black's consult· ing contract expired in April and the company has no plans for further contact with him. C arpenter said Weanesday that he saw no conflict or in· terest in his work for Black. and said he wished the IEA had SUC · ceeded in establishing itself. "I would have loved lo do it," Carpenter said. The PUC a uditors s aid the money spent by San Diego Gas s hould be charged to s tockholders of the company rather than its c us to m ers because of questiona ble plan· ning and execution of Black's ef· forts to obtain financing for the project. "San Diego Gas," said the re· port, "was lax in control over expenditures, and in not provid· ing a vehicle to recover expen- ditures made on behalf of, or for the benefit of. IEA." "lt is unclear," the auditors (SeelrrlUTY, Page AZ > Or:~~ast Weather Some night and mornmg low cloudiness and a little cooler on Friday. Lows tonight 47 to 52. Highs Fri· day ln mid eos. INSIDE TODA W The UniUd Way Jund drit>e ii under woy and it'• baud on the theorv that~ County know• what'• beat /or Orange Count11. Peatunng, Page Cl. •••ex POLICE GATHER TO BEGIN SEARCH FOR KILLER OF FELLOW LAWMAN San Cleme,,te SWAT Team Shown After Slaylng of Officer Richard Steed Nixon Gets Egg Attack At Oxford OXFORD, England (AP) - Richard M. Nixon, braving a gauntlet of egg-tossing pro· testers and speaking over chants of "Creep! Creep!" and "Nixon is dead!". told British students today he will "speak up for what I beheve ... as long as I live." The former president also told the Oxford University audience that with his approval the FBI broke up a Palestinian guerrilla "network" in the United States through wiretaps and break·ins during his administration, which A 90-mlnute program, "Nixon at Oxford,·· wlll be presented at 7: 30 tonight on Cb a one I 28. ended four years ago with his resignation in the midst of the Watergate scandal. A phalanx of security men had to escort Nixon through an angry crowd of 500 student dem· on s tra tors. m any of them Americans and some flinging eggs, when he arrived a~ the Ox- ford Union debating society hall to deliver the address. The noisy melee was reported when he left. and an Amen can Secret Service man, trying to protect Nixon. began swinging wildly with his fists and shouting at. demonstrators pummeling the Nixon car. Some bystanders were knocked s prawling on their <See NIXON, Page .U> o.lty l'llet Slaff "'9tit SHERIFF'S DEPUTY GETS BLOODHOUND ON TRAIL 'Snoopy' Prepares to Track Sleylng Suepect Loot Nabbed; 2 Escape An Orange County Sheriff's deputy recovered the car. g~. clothing, weapons and money in· volved in two Orange Const rob· be ries early today JH:st-failed to nab two male s~ct.s in the in· cidents. Laguna Beach Police said two suspects entered the Albertaon's Market, 700 Sou th Coast Highway, at 2 :,30 a .m . this morning and approached the cashier carrying soda pop. Car Engine Taken From Capo Student An engine was removed from a car owned by a Capistrano Beach student while she was out of town for the weekend. Orange County sheriff's-officers aald ln· truders took the mO\or from a 1976 Subaru parked on the driveway at the home or Cynthia M. Bedell, 20, of 28662 A \tenJda Laa Palmu. The loss was valued at Sl ,300. One of the suspects pulled out a r evolve r and demande d money The two men fled with $400 In cash. Shortly after, the two alleged· ly held up the Jack In The Box drlve·ln at 43297 South Coast Highway in Dana Point. A short time tater. an Orange County s heriff's supervisor noticed a vehicle fitting the description ol the two robberies parked near a Dana Point gaa station. The deputy noticed two sus· pects go ol( towar~t.b.e restroom area of the service station. nol· Postal Ta:xes Due W ASJUNGTON CAP> -The Postal SC!rvice, which is hav1ng trouble avoiding budget deficits and deUvertng the mail on tame. has lax problems as well, a publl.thed repon. said today. The Waabinston Star said the In· temal Revenue Service has been trylna -so rar unsuccessfully - to collect $10 million in back tax· ea from tbe Poiltal Service. ing their clothes did not fit the description of the two suspects The deputy waited for the two men to return but they failed to show. A search of the car revealed the stolen money. a sawed-off s hotgun and a .44-caliber re· votver. The clothes worn during the robberies were also located In the vehicle. • The car was stolen Wednesday in El CaJon ln San Diego County. No rurther details were availa· b1e thls morning , • 'lskmd' Has Many Gifts Today·a Dally Pttol guides readers to "glf\ shopping Crom an Island -Fuhion Island." The 20-page maa11lne details 1tn lde11 and holiday rubions available at Faahlon Island, Newport ~•ch. Answered 'Assist' Dispatch By ANNE COOPER OI tfle O.tlY f'llet S~lf A San Clemente policeman was s hot to death Wednesday night while answering a call for a man who said he had slashed his wrists. Richard Steed. 30. was shot in the chest in an alley behind the San Clemente Sun /P os t news paper plant. 1542 N. El Camino Real, shortly before 7 p.m . Less than seven hours after, police arrested James Richard Hoffer. 23. of 1608 Calle las Bolas. on suspicion of murdering Steed. Hoffer was caught as he walked along El Camino Real, a block south of the murder scene. He was transported lo UC trvine Medical Center in Orange, where Police Chief Gary Brown said he was treated for what appeared to be a self inflicted knife wound on his arm Events. which resulted m Steed's murder and the manhunt for bis killer. began at 6:45 pm . when a man reportedly came to the door o f the Sun / P os t newspaper offices. requesting an ~mbulance because he said he''d cut his wrist. Police were called An am· bulance and a fire eng.i ne were dispatcbed. Officer Steed, who reportedly beard the polJce dis· patch over the radio m his patrol car said he would respond. Fire Capt. J erry Galati srud he pulled his fire engine mto the newspaper plant parking lot. when the police dispatcher in· formed him the police officer <Ste.ed> had not been able to locate the man with the slashed wrist. Galati said he sa w Steed's patrol car parked an an alley behind the newspaper plant. lie said he Jeft the fire engine and walked over to talk to the police officer but found him lying beside his patrol car. bleeding and unconscious. Fireman Thomas McCorkell. who was manning the city am· bulance with engineer Gary Lov· rien, said he saw a man runrung north down the alley. away from the patrol car. The three rire m en rushed Steed to San Clemente General Hos pttal. whe re a t e am of medical specialists fought to save his life. Even before the offi cer was (See OFnCER, Page A2l SLAIN IN ALlEY Patrolman Richard Steed 'He Cared'; Clemente Suffers Loss By WILLIAM HODGE OtU.0.,tyf'ilelS~ San Clemente Police Officer Richard Steed probably thought he was going to help someone The police call seemed hann· less enough. A medical aad at 1524 S. El Camino Real with am· bulance and fire engine respond· ing Code 3, with light!' and siren. Officer Steed probably thought he could help He was shot once through the upper left chest area and died for his efforts. A s uspect in the shooting w~ arrested early today. "He cared a lot about every- thing." pfficer Tom +laight re· called this morning m a broken voice. "He always cared about treating people fairly " Haight worked las t summer with Rick Steed. as fellow of f1cers kne w him The two worked San Clemente's beach patrol. "We used to talk about way!-. of making the beach patrol bet· ter." Haight remembered. Haight's voice cracked again He excused himself. saying he had to go to work. He went off to search for the weapon that took bls friend's We. Across town al San Clemente General Hospital. a worker wa-. trying hard to shoulder the los!o. of a "good person." • • R 1ck Steed was a tremendous kid ." e m erJ?e n cy room <See STEED. Page A2> .... ..... "" ..... .,..__.. . ...., IAN CUMINTE CIVIC CENTIR f'LAQ AT HALf ITAFF Qty Mouma 11.m PoMoemen Rloh•n:t ltHd • ~ ', .. , .. . ' ' • .. ,. .. At DAJL Y PILOT ysc Tl'IUl!dlly. Noo«rOlf 30. •171 Laguna Delays Krishna Vote ff • h'Tt:v•~ Ml'tOfRl.I 0t '"" U.ll• l'llel U•l'I I ;1guna Hl'Ul'h planmnK com 1111:.,w1wr~ hU\\' dt•h•rr1•d ,, dt• 1 1">1\111 1111 ~1 ... th1.•1 ltw 101·.tl llun • k. 11:.h11u 'll·1·t l'Un ui.t· 1.1 r hur<'h 1111•\ 11ur1•lrn"'\I lw .. 1 Chn ~lrt111' 1111 1 1·l1~•1ou' •wt\ 11·1•' I lit• l \H I \l!l'l'lo. l'll nl lllUlilH t' "•'' l'Jlh'(l 1111ll 3 2 \Ot 1• tl t''lllh ' 11llJ1•1·111111' f111111 1·11n1n11 ,.,1ont·r "1•11 i-'1uputnrk thot the p:mel ts ... i..1ntt the l'''' ¥t»H to wo nul rn <J look (or u ~h-06t Thi.' t•o m m11::.1o n ' tu•k W1•cln1•:.tlJy rui:ht ""Jb to rnterpn,t J 1·11\ uril1nJn1·t• Jt'<•hl'IR with ~e of th1· 1·hurch at 2& 1.1·.:1on St ror "Ill ''"'' · l'h1' chun•h had bet>n ui .. t><l h> 1 ongregat1 ons for mo re than lO \ean1. and WU'> bOld la:.tt 'rt'ltr lo .in t run1Jn buN1nee.bm a.·n '4ho :.aid ht• "antt-d lo bu1h1 a homt· un the 2 4 m:ru lot Tlw 111H•s tor . ll<><)~h1 ar ~ul••ll. n •porH•dly p\m:hae.cd the build m14 for S2J 1.500 111 Septc m ll\'r . 1977, und, for wtwte vcr rcu::.on, turned around und sold 1l lo tht' Kr1s hnu ::. fo r $225.000 111 Ueccm l.1t:r The issue battled befon • com rn 1s::.ioners We drwsday n ig ht, was wht-ther the church use was abandoned during that two and a half monlh period du ring which the lran1an owned t he business An attorney for the Kristmas contends the church use would be abandoned if it could be proved the intent of the former owne r was to change the use~ or I hat t here was an overt act -an upt·n act lllat prove::. another W>e ~cis planm'CI for the site . Kr1shn<t l:.iwye r Larry Roberts of lfrvc rl)" flilb said no phmb to l'ha ngl· tlw ust.' of the church ,., er came to fru1t1on under the 11wner::.h1p o f th<' lran11rn. Nc1 11lan'> wt·n· submitted for rel>· 11k nt1al UM '. .ind .. the m~rc tran::.rcr of ownership dOt:b not 1·on.,t 1t ute chun~f> of use · "T hl• fu l'I th at 1l stood idle or w<is not Ubcd. as a c•hurc h also docb not constit ute a change of """" Kri:.hna a ttorney Roberts ron11111wd. adding the burden nf proof of abt1ndonment res ts with tht• c ity But co mm1:-sion c ha irman Rc hnda Black('tcr said he r con l't•rn surrounds the lack of park mg a t the site, which 1s zoned for residential use There currently rive park- tng s pur es on the church proper tv. about one 10th of the num ber r.-quir<'d ror such o u r But Kru;hna 11pok,•11 m1•n 1n11d t h1• hulld1na woa u11ed u11 u r hur<'h for t-0 yet1r1 w\th thl• -..uni• numtx•r c>f pa dona spnct'' Robntt. su1d the Krishnmj "Mr •• onl\ 'et•km~ hur t rc-1U mcnt, JU.'>t hi.•• ••n)' uthl't t<hul't'h •· "When l h e 1?ro11t• rt ) WU/\ lron.,ff'rl"('(j to ISKON 1Thl' In h•rnatlonal ~wl('l) uf K rtl'lbn&a Con.sc1ousm"' 1 all of ll 'luddl·n lht're '' a 111 ohlt'm a nd bu1ldin1C P<-rm •li. are rt>\'Okt'tf · · The cit y n.•vokt'(J a permit Ml lo"' 1ng the s t>Ct to mttke alttrta llOn .. to lht' interior or th bulld· mg earht.'r this year, <'lting the a bandoned churc h uac <izs thtl rl·ai.on Sl'vtr<&I ~r)('aker!> Wednesday r.1ght accused the 11ect of con- tm utnlit to work on the str ucture, dt·~p1l \'lht' "rt>d ta~ " R e altor Lloyd Miine s aid. ·Tht>y have u stop work order and yet they kt:t>p on building " H e wn1> joined by Ln"unun .Jocelyn Cu~hm an who accuse tht> city staff and city utt orney'i; oflice of "s loppy work" adding the l\rishnas are not deserving of "a special e xemption " But at least three of the com· missioners sa4d they wa nted more information from the city sta rr before making a decision on the a bandonme nt. a lthough a ll five commissioners admitted t hey see httle tha t constitutes an end to church use. Commis.<>ioner Fitzpatrick was jOtned by co m m1ss1one r Art Casebeer in pushing for u vote We dnesday night. "l have seen no evidence t he c hurc h use was a ba ndoned ." f1tzpatnck sa id .. Arc we look Ing for a ghost Cm as kang for a t wo-week continuance,>" he asked ? ··Do we want the s taff to go o u t a nd find eviden c e the y ha ven 't yet uncovered'!'· Fitzpatrick !'laid Ute burden of proof of ahandonmcnt rests wi th the city. "and I think we have lo rule on wha t's avuiluble to us" B ut commissio n e r K e n Mullens sided with Blacketer and Diana Dike in approving a t w o -week c o ntinua n ce, a nd directed the city plan ning stuft to research multiple listings on t h.e oriRin al s ale. lo o k a t n e ws pa pe r articles written a bout lll<' transactions. and re- turn with that inform ation to the commiss ion f'rOffl Pogr A I NIXON JEERED ... hamls :rnd knees as the Nixon m o l o r C'a ctc bored itb wa y throu~h the c:rowd s of dcm onslratori-und shoppers in Ox ford '~ Corn Murkcl shopp ing :.ln •el F:1 ghty police officers linked urms in a futile attempt to keep thi· 11rolestc ri. from pounding 1h1·1r fi s ts on Nixon's blac k lirnou~ine Polil'C c arted awa y c1~ht demonstrators . Ear lier. when Nixon m ade his w.1\ into the hall , he got a frn·ndly welcome fro m the Wall· m g audit•ncc or about 800 slu· rknt -.. whc> appla uded loud and Ion~ 'Th<ink \Oil for the very w<irm w1·lrnm1• of lho-.t• IO'>lde and lh11M· outside for making me reel. vt·rv much <t l home." he said to l.111~htcr rrom thl' a udience · Y 11u ht'ar tht•1'>e pt•ople out "'It"" ht• I at t•r told his listener~ 11 · ~ flot 11lcas<int. I'm used to It ' But he said his political career hall ended. "Polil.lcally, J plan to play no role in the party, WI a candidate, for a candidate anything." Nevertheless. he said, ''I feel as long as I have any breath in me I will speak up ror what I believl' .. I'm gomg lo con· t1nut' lo as long all I hvc." To do otherwise would not be JK>!>Mhlc ror him. Nixon suid .. , hllV(' enouMh lo Sil and ORA NOE COA&l ' "' DAILY PILOT '"'" rit4'•~ ,,,. • o ... '• p,,f>f •·•"--"'.c:rt1,,,.., .. r.-".11"-Hf'• ,,,,.. "•\IJ'1t•l1 '-"df'W'r"-'Ot11~'(.ff' (•,.t, t C>t.ib'l\IW'OIOl'l'lf'il'IW •fil"tMl,..,••tM~ Vfl t 1PM1 "•fl MitM•• lf\•"'·•f•" f" t..1 t~ (•~t-. "# '\..f .. •#O'l•I U• '4'" Hunl•"'1'')f'I flir'...-h I 4hlf'I 11'1~ li•ll•1 "•'"" \AO'll•'"*' Ii; V•ll.-y 41"'1 I t•JJfHf'l!•9' "'"'tr.(" .. '\I A lf'W'Jl•~·"""l•JI '""" I'\ Wb41•Pt•tf \4hJ,,, .. ,, ~ \ut'M'tA;o\ , ... ~;:~&M~:.·:~'1~~.·~~~~.;~,:., Wr ' .. 1 ·-.... -• .,,,l'fM"1 """" Pvb'IW't J•O It Cwley V1u ,.,,..\Uj#l\l•ftCJ(lfl"-"' .. ~~ ftt..,_n ICetW'tt f rlltM ':":::.~Ml~ Cllttl"" '--............. " .".'''"'' M.t"•q1ft0 ( °''"' Laaune l1ec11omc. f'ttt()..,",..,,,,, .. ,r"' M.lthnQ AH '""" lit 0 "'1.t tiM •?'\1 Olllt H Cb\lt M"'t.A )li• .,,,.. t ~., \hf'ft "=1;:';,'!' ;~~:'•;,~~."l:~~·o -.t "-"" O••tt • •••••t T .. .,illon• f11 41M:w n 1 Cl•H"l•d AdHrtlllng'4<1·M71 UfUlll ... ,11 A.ff ~1111: T•,1101114 ....... .......... ~ ........ '-'·-, .. ,. Orilflet ~ ........... .,.. .. c:... ' ioe~r JI• ~ )ftfitt. In,..... tt•• ....., ..e ~;~:;.r"·.r.~r='.~.-~~~.:~ '= 1-•tlt•-'W('t~ (ll U '"ttl•r. ••If•• C....• ..._,. (•Ill••~•• \Vl •t• •I• ... H U"lt' n M ;:~~".'l ... ~l> ;~?:.:O _.~.. .... ..... , contemplate my nave l on the Pacific . If I did thnt I woul d bt' d ead mentally in a year and physically in two." Nixon 's t.'o m ment s on the break-up of a Pa lestinia n group cam e during a ques lio n-and- a ns we r period when he was a sked whether the office of the presidency had a corrupting er- f ect on the individual holding the job. "There arc no easy calls that a pr esi d e nt m akes ," he responded, going on to give the Palestinian incident as an exam- ple.' "The Al Patah group, through the much-malig ne d F BI . we l l'arncd h ad c s l abl1 s h e d a network in the United State::.." Nixon s:..11d. "Thiit group was ap prchcnded. 1t was broken up Ir• thl' United States, throug h what was called wir etap ping and break-in by the FBI." lit' said the group ha d been planning a lt:rrorisl a ttack like the massacre of Israeli athletes at the UY72 Munich Olympics. "Now on the one side UK>tiC who are civil libertarians -and I understand how they reel - will say that nothJng will jusllfy wiretapping . : . My question Is this · sbould Al Fatah not have been broke n up -and it would n't have been broken up without that kind o f surre p titious entry -and should we have had that kind or an inc ide nt someplace in Ule United States. "Or wasn't it wo rthwhile un· der those circumstances where we had a foreign-contr olled group of rndic3ls who we re threatening to kill Americans in a certain ar ea, s ho uldn't th pr eside nt a nd his a ttorne y general. and his director of the FBI. we ren't they justified in ap- proving the elClra means that we re necessary to break it up?" Protesters' cries of "No rnore Nixon!·• filtered thro\lgb the windows as the ex-president 8poke. Some shouted obscenities a nd roared in unison such &lo«ana as "Who Kllled Al· tende?" -a reference to Marx· 1st President Salvador Allende of Chile. who died in a 1973 right· wtn1 coup. Demons trators Included 43 Rhodes and Marahall acholars. and more than 100 other Amcrtu.na atudytna at Oxford. Some f uhloned themHlv.. 11 an ad ·boc 1roup called "CREEP," uel"' the acronym of Nixon'• one-Ume Commlttet to Re·Elecl the Pteaidenl but cban1t.Q1 the meanlna to "Cam· pal1n to Retll t the Eff ectt of the Ex·Pr•ri·" - Dallyf't .......... ., ..... Threat To Juror Probed Orange County s he riff's of- ficers are lnvel:ltigating a n mc1- denl in which a Laguna Bea.ch psy ch iatris t r e porte dly wa s thre a te ned with d eath while !'l('rving aR a juror in Ora nge County Superior Court . In vestil(a lors sa id lb al the th re als m ade lo Dr . George ll uns Askenasy. 48, were not ronnected with his service as a Juror They s aid the two me n wbo threatened him in the 1ury as- se mbly room had earlier ad- vised jury co mmissioner J im W1bon t.hat they wer e me mbers or the Jewish Defense League a nd wished to serve a subpoena on Dr Askenasy. SHERtfF•S CRIME LAB INV£8TIOATORS WORK THE SCENE OF THE MURDER Aaght la Offlcer•a Patrol Cer. No. 2 Mark• His Gun. No. 3 la Where He Fell They said bhe threats ap- p e are d t o s t e m fr o m a p~ychiatric report made by Or. Askenasy on a Juveni le accused 111 bombing a movie theater m lleverly Hi lls Fro• Pa~AI STEED ... s upe rviRor Mar garet Goodwin re called . ''His death was the waste of a good person. We are all pretty devast ated by il." S he reca lled other times. hap- pier times. more peacerul limes. "He used to come up and have coHee with us -we e ven bought him his own corree mug last year ." Mrs . Goodwin re mem - bered. "We could always count on him to help us with unruly pa· t1e nts." But 30-year-old Rick Steed won't be helping people agam. T he forme r Ma nne was pro· nounced dead on arrival in Mrs . Goodw in 's e m e r{;ency room following the 6:45 p.m . s hooting From Page A I UTILITY ... added. "why San Diego Gas launched <in around the world e xcursion to seek project financ- ing. a fler Mexica n officials stat- ed thev wer e not vet oreoared to cons ider any specific project." Trips were made to Tokyo, London, P a ris, Munich a nd other places. and charged to San Diego Gas. Carpenter was not on t he trips. T h e a ud itors f u rther com· pla ine d thal. as initially pro- poi.ed. I EA held the pivotal pos t· lion in the energy plan. as a buyer and sell~r of Mc x1cun ene rgy. "There was the poss1b1lity or them ai.sum ing o the r major functions in fina ncing and con- s truct ion or the project,.. the auditors said. The auditors re ported that. "If the proJect became a reality, San Diego Gas would have been the weakest member of the troika <of the utility, IEA a nd th e Mexic an gove rnment>, despite the fact that San Diego Gas would bear the entire finan- cial burden. ·'That was not in the interests of either customers sha reholders of San Diego Gus ." In other words. there was a lot of money to be made by J EA and its principals ir the deal hud bee n approved, according to lllc auditors report Ric hter s aid the audit rcoort was erroneous in assuming the ~·" p e ns es 11111 d n I a ck w" r c calcul ated 1n I he com puny':. rat~· inc rease reque11t. But 1'om IA'w. who s11p~rv1:.~d the r ue uudltor11 re port. dis· agreed . lie re nd rrom tes timony of Ron Wotklnit, Sun Olcgo Gos manager or lht.' Mexlrnn project. during hcnrln!'K IK1forc ttw PUC In the currnnt r11tc calie. WatklnH wH uHkcd how much mont·y tlw utllity hutl s pe nt !>O fa r In it.'I qucMt ror the p-OWl.'r pla nt ".JuMt o vt•r u m illi on doll ars," Wutklns rt.'pht.'d . "(J!O tnfe back tol late Hl7G " Wutk1n11 added . "I believe 1t WH8 C!)tlntatc.'CI ltllll a lolul Of $5 m illion would he• !>pent In as~1st· HIR the Mt.•x1r nn ~ovcrnrncnt m l!l'C u rlng f 1n an t·l n " and cst oblrshin~ a s ite for a oower pla nt " San Diego Gas. Richter sa1d, Ill e hlimaling the C05l Of thC prOJ ect at t.hat 11ame figure -$S million over the next fi ve years , In JW!tlfylng the rate In crea11e. Businessman Held in Theft SAN DIEGO (/\rl -A Sun Re rnardirio bus lnc111smon wais arrested on hfs yuchl and jailed ror lnvet1tlgatlon or grand \heft. police H id. Milton Ray Loyd was ordered held In lieu of Sl00,000 boll Oetectlvca said the accuutlon Involved rive forklift trucks sold throu1b Loyd'• equipment com- pany, A •hotCUD wH found after the 1rre•t ln tbe trunk of Loyd's automoblle near hJe yacht ln the Ml11lon Bay marina, pollce •aid.~ - OFFICER SLAIN ... ln vt·s t 1g a t o r s s a id Dr 1\:,kl-nusy wa1'> warned that hi.' "'ould be killed 1f he did not go to l'Ourt and testify on be half of a pt•rson identified by the two men a :, their "associate." pro nounced d ead at 7 56 p m .. law cnrorcement orfteers were massing al lhe murder scene to search for his killer Wiping tc<irs from their eyes and hunching the ir s houlders a g ain s t t he ir grie f, Steed 's fellow policemen set about a m e thodic al b lock· by · blo ck sea rch. Three Sun / Pos t e m ployees. who had bee n working late al the newspaper plant. descnbed the man as about 25. with long brown hair a nd a beard. They said he 'd had a bloody towel wrapped a round om· arm San Cle mente police were ru.· s 1s tcd by the Orange County Sheriff's deput1e::.. who brought two bloodhound!\ to truc k the s uspl'ct Th e north C'nd of the c ity, where the newspaper plant 1s sandwichc<1 bl'l wN•n heuchs1de eottagt.•s and upannw nti. and tht· industrial district. wui; m a1>P<-'<I for s earrh teams . A Huntington Dea ch polH·e helicopter hung above the cit v. shining a powerful light on tht' ground. where San Clem ente's specially trained and outfitted t a c ti cal o peration s o ff1 ce r i- combed block alter block or lhl' surrounding neig hborhood. Ho ffe r was s potted a t 2 a .m by s he riff's d eput 1e '>. as he walked alonJo? F.I Camino Rt·ul. ne ar the Calle Lago inte rscct11111. JUSt one block nor th o f t he Physicis t flees VI ENNA. A11 !>tr1<1 CAPl T o p-level ph}i..1c1::.t Benjamin Lcv1r h's seven.year battle to leave the Soviet Union e nded to day when he new Into Vienna with his wife. "This is kind or a miracle for me." said the 61 year·old scientist, adding he was "surprised" to be in the West because the number of scientisL" being allowed out or the Soviet Union was decreasing SALE newspaper plant. He wai, a rrei..t ed w ithout incident. Chief Brown said Hoffer meN '> the description of the m an who visited the ne ws pape r office-. earlier and had the sa m e kind or wound. His apartment is located directly behind the news paper pla nt. Brown sa id. Hoffer was to be lra nsferrffi to Orange County J ail from tht' medical center, following treat ment for the knife wound. Hoffe r 's ba il w a s set al $500.000. Hoffer did not have a gun. when h e was a rres ted . A po lt ct- department spokes man !>atd u tea m or officers wa1> scarchin~ today for the gun used In lht• shooting No description of the gun was made pubhc Steed'i. gun and his glasses were found on the ground a !>hOrt dista nce from where h<' fell 1n lhl' alley . a few reel from hi!. patrol car Officer Steed 1s s urv ived by his wife. Kathy. a nd by h1~ pa rents who li ve on the East Collst The young couple li ved in Ocea nside and had no children Steed joined the ~an Clem ente· Poltce Departme nt l wo ycllr'> ago. after serving as a res<'rvc: o ffice r . He h a d p r evious ly i-e rved with the US. Ma rine Corps H e w a s d escribe d a s a popular . dedicated poltceman. well liked by his fellow om cerl> He was the first San Cle mente poltce office r to be killed .n the lane of duty in the c1ty'i. SO·year histo ry "We 'll m iss him.' said Fm .. Capt. GaJat1. "He was ::.o eal>~ to talk to.·· "We will feel the impact of the loss of Officer Steed for some lime to come ," s aid ChH·f Brown. "ln a sm all agency surh as ours. there is a high degree of cam ar ade rie. so when we lose so meone in the line of duty. it 1i. hkc losingapartofourown body " Jury commissione r Wilson 'iaid he ordered the two me n to leave the jury assem bly area a fte r he nol(>d their attitude and the fact that Dr . Aske nasy wai. d early apprehens ive. Or. A.skenasy was not availa- ble for comment on the incident Wednesday Welie Sues School District For$269,000 Ot1 mag1•s totaling ne ar ly S2fl9.00<J are be ing de manded f rom the Saddlc back Valley Unifie d School Di s t rict by Superintendent Richard Welte in a n Ora nge Co u nty Su pe r ior Court lawsuit which charges the dt'fe ndunts with breach of con- tract W(•lte claims in his action that the board acted unfairly and ti· leglllly l~l April when it com- pelled him to take a 44-day vaca- tio n while the val ue or h1i. ser vices to the district was being J ssess<.>d. lfe de m and!\ an additional $500.000 1n damages from 1 rusk~ Mary Phillips, Geor ge Henr y C1nd Carole Neusta dy who wllh s chool district e mployee J J me.., M1tch<'ll . a re 1dent1lu!d a:. bl'ing particularly respons1- hle ror ac tions taken agamst hero Welte cl aims 1n the action that t ht• board's decision to send him on vacation and additionally de- ny him $8.976 in accrued vaca- tion pay has held him up to p ublic ridicule SAVE This 111 Christmas ' White's JiZ: Showcase 369 I. 17th St. Costa M•aa <ne•• 10 Mer,. Cllendtt.1 1er099 1rom Ae•on•I ~ 642-1657 ............... I 0.4 iiiiil s.t. 10.1 . . • - Gil• lft 1 -tn 1d .. -... "' ,. ·d •t ~ 1. 1 ' , 1 ,, .. .. . CALIFORNIA White Admits To Slayings SAN J! RANCIM'O CA (lt Fon" r upervtr.or Dan While ht•·' .conCe rd tel th murders ur Ma ~nr Ceorr• Mosconl' and ;!,~11pt•rv1sor Ua.ncy Mllk 1t'l'Otd1n1 co• repon publl1hed today :· • Th San l>'tanc-1:.eo Ctu·oruclc• ~portl'd that polic Hid Wh1\t' ::. J!MVe IU\'ftllllo? ton. "I com pith' 'latt'mt•rat," but lhe n w p•Pf't fluvc no <h.'hull> '''th purp()rtOO c-unf \t11on ttnd dtd not way wht.tn It t Wai madt> ;; l'ohce <'hu\r l'h rl\~ <~ain und hom1ctdt> ln~pcctor Frnnk ... , •·ation rt•fu.wd 111 t·omrrwnt on thl' Mwapapcr report. and Whitt"~ :·· attorl\~) rouhJ not tw r('Ut'hcd for romment ..... :!:. THl: HRONI L.: ALSO rt'por1ed th•t police believe the JC!!n mun klllt'd both mt•n b>• shoot.Jn~ Uwm calmly twice In the back o.r the hcud a.~ I hey luy wounded on the noon1 of their city hall offtce1> Unnamed iOUn' d to lhc 1nvc$U•auon wt\re quoted Ub •uying that powtl~r burn Wld the two nearly adJatent heud woundi. in t•aeh man bhowt'd thr sh<>U were fired al extremely clo);)~ rtan~tt An 1uuwml'd police off1c1ul wa quoted ~:J bl.IVlng, · Look& hkc ht' .iave tht' coup 11\' 1itn.t<'l' lu both of them • WIUTt;, WHO WO ULD face a mandatory dt.'alh penalty ti con- ' 1cted undtir a bf>t•c.·rn ) s tatute coverintc the murder of pubhc of flt.'Wh. upJ)(•••red in court bneny Wednel>day H1!> arnugnmenl wus i><1st1>on ~ 01w "et.•k to allow him time to get an attorney. ~ Tht• fornwr ~upervisor burrendt:re<l to pohct' Monday &bout 35 nunuh·~ Jrh:r M o~cone anrl Milk were bhot to death. He turned ovt•r a :18 l'<tlibt.·r revolver which pohce now say hus been matched with bullets recm l'red from the bodte~ A TOTAL OF NINE shots wt.·re fm·d four UL the mator und hve at Milk. police ~aid. The Chronicle said pol ice b<:heve both v1ct1ms were btand1ng al lhe tame Lhey were first shot. and that each crumbled wounded to the floor Then. the newspaper said, it is belu:vcd the killer leaned over .the v1ct1ms and fired the final two shots CORONER BOYD STEPKENS sa1d that in both cases the VIC· • Oms were "ahve at the lime the head wounds were adm~tered." but he would not say 1f the head wounds came from the last bullets f1r1>d in each of the murders . Proof that Moscone and Milk were slain in a calculated man- ner wou.ld be crucial to a prosecution attempt to show the acts .were deliberate and premeditated. Artt.·r White turned himself an. he was brought quickly Lo the 1Jall of Justice where police inspectorb questioned him for half an hour Shortly uftl'r that, attorney J ames Purcell arnved and walt c·loM·ll'd with White for another 30 minutes. Fatal Cras h Hearings 0.1Nftd41t~ RenJumrn Eernandez. u UepubHcon and native of Los Angeles. announced his presidential candidacy at a National Press Cl ub news c·onf erence Wednesday in Washington , 0.C . f•'<.>rn~ndez. 53, wtll vie for the nomination with Rep. Philip Crane. Jllinois. Snowmobiles Ban Proposed f'RESNO <AP> A proposed ban on snowmobiles was praised aod criticized at a second hear- ini:t on Yosemite National Park's proposed master plan. 0 .J . Weber. of the Sierra S no wmobile Club said that recreation activity is the only one denied use or the park in the m aster plan. But Thomas Starr said at a session here that national parks were not desi~tned to provide all urban uses and s nowmobiles are incompatible with most <iims of the Natson<il P(lrk Service. 'See, AvoUJ: Syst,em Rapped SAN DI EGO (AP> Observa- tion and f1lml> from a test night md1cate the crew of PSA Flight 182 probably could not have seen a sm all plane ~econds before Lhe l wo colhded St-pt. 25 over San 01e~o. killing 144 people, a pllots' group spokes man said c STATE J s muggling the diamonds into the United Slates. Mlwnte IJnrovered Sl\NTA BARBARA <AP1 A v1cted. burglary, robbery, kid· napping. rape a nd other sex crimes. merited the maximum t~rm . plus two extra years for attempting to inflict great bodily injury. •Derbfl' Set de• S ufl H OLLYWOOD I AP > Without admitting guilt. the OM. Y PILOT .4.5 CSUS Cuts 'M11st' No Agency Exe~ Brown Sa~ LONG 8F.ACH (AP>· -Stressing thnt the era of fast.growing .:ovt1m· mcnt spendln.r has e nded, Gov. Ed· mund Ci. Brown Jr. warned trustees of the state college and university system that no agency would be ex e mpt from cutting Its budget by 10 "It's not ·ir.· It's not •maybe,' it's not ·can't something happen.' it.juat ·1s.' There's no argument about it. The only question ls how can UUs be accomplished in a thoug htful way." -percent. Earlier this month. Brown directed all Rtate department heads to identify five or more lowes t priority pro· grams in their departments that could be cut for a savings of about 10 percent. But Chancellor Glenn Dumke told ~ the trustees that s uch cuts wouJd ,,,.,.. Matt"".,,....... cause s ubstantial harm to the CSUC ~ystem. Richard Silberman. "Anything that has depended on the historic rate of growth will be changed." Brown told trustees of the California State Universities and Colleges on Wednesday. .. r cannot believe that the 6S per. cent of the voters of this state who passed Proposition 13 were casting their votes against low-cost hlgher education provided so emciently by the CaJilom.ia State University and Colleges." Dumke said just before Brown spoke. former banker and hamburge r tycoon. h as been n a m ed California director of finance by Gov. Ed· mund Brown Jr Silberman, 49, will replace Roy Bell , 61. ~· ~·n ">~ ~ll • ~<~ AME.0CA • ~5 ~s • ..EM~~. ~k'REU.'>Tu" ~ () ~ 1ttsle • i ~ I :._'j~. I.. ; (!" Q~ v11 f o~ ()!(ti. cJlv~~ .fJO<Xh ~ ~ ., . .. ~v11~J.s ••• wilk tM f&'~ -tbUvY\ v . IJ.wvfj~ r J Jud ttad 1/) Adi, r(Jlt a6f7ld .JIM ~ 4/w" Ct111IAr ~ 11tw11oit lJecu;lv-. . . ~ /,.f J C<Jml~ ,/or;at.t,d ~ ~ ~ /1~~ f~ ~ wa Mzdpl;~ F~ ~·,. r maJt P J,(; 111~1 J>ta.ca / Jec.rf7U.at: ~sf- '.(;. 1' ~ :' ~ (./I . 'l: ~ ~ ~ /. 1 r I> (;\ ~ ~ > -. Capt. Roger 0 Crim, prcs1 dent of the Southwc~t F'li~ht Cr c w Ass o ci al 1 on , w 111 t· h r~prcsents P SA crews. said Wednc!>day that the tests cast rlouhl on the "see-and -avoid" fl~ ing procedures of the Federal i\ -.1:1t 1un Admin1strnt1on. lcller alluding to "the paintmg of the copies" has been found in the trunk of a car owned by a mu s eum s ecurity o ffi cer. Ronald Mou::-.ouris, and may hnk his father, William G. Morez. to the theft of Sl million rn paint· ings, police said. Brown Derby Resta urant has ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ureed to pay $3,000 in civil penallles and $1 ,032 1n legal costs to settle a suit alleging it represented frozen food as fre::-.h. t'nm held a news conference during a marathon 121':1·hour :-.t:•s::-.ion on tht.• third day of Na ltonal Trans portation Safety Hoard heanngs into the crash. the dt•adJl{'st u1r disaster in U S. ,1 \'1t1l1on history Bail Allowrd LOS ANGELES t APl A haldmg compute r expert ac· <·used of stealing $10.2 million rrom the nation's 10th largest hank and exchanging il for Russian chamonds will be re lcai-.crl from jail a fter his family and friends put up their hfe sav· rngs to pay his bail or $200,000. l1 S . Oistrict .Judge Matt B~ me• said Wc<tnesday he would rr'cc Stanll'v Mar k rtifkin as soon as he c·uuld \'Cnfy the value of <·ash. sN·urtli('S and rC:Jal proµer· ty offered as b:ul. Rifkin was arrested Nov. 5 in Carlsbad. Calif.. after ullegcdly The two-page Jetter was found Monday night s hortly after Mousouris of Santa Barbara was a rrested following the theft or three works by F'renc h im- pressionist Claude Monet from the Santa Barbara Museum of Art, police Capt. Gerald Lowry ~aid Wednesday. Sftalen~~ Extended SAN QUENTfN <AP> -Con· v1cted rapist Daniel Caudillo. who achieved a level of notorie· ty by figuring in the campaign tc oust Chief Justice Rose Bird, has l wo more prison years lo go. The state Community Release Board acted on bis case Wcdnes· day. It gave Caudillo an extra year because members found the crimes Cor which he was con- Goodness what taste ! ''"' Pixie 8 oz. Medlum·Sh&rP Choddar Stick, 4 oz Graplne Choese. 6 oz Smoked Ed11m Bar. two 2 01 Cheese Sp!'eads a package ol Lit Oval Wafers plus S trawberry Bonb0m1 m send gifts ... Come In and ••••ct food gift p•k• for Chrtatmaa. Take with you or we'll ahlp. We 'fl handle all the d•t•ll• and even encto•• a per.onat greeting. Slate officials. who alleged the violations occurred in November 1976. s aid Wednes day the restaurant had accepted an in· junction in the stipulated j udg· ment barring it from labeling any food product as fresh if it had undergone any preserving or freezing process. F~ Bike l/r~d SACRAMENTO <AP> -The s tate Trans portation Com- m ission s uggests l h at the gasoline tax and motor vehicle fees could be increased to raise money for hjghways. The s uggestions. which the commission stressed arc not re· commend · ms, are in a pre- 1 i min a r y report to t h e Legislature The commission plans six meetings by Dec. 13 to get pubhc react1on to the report. Fashion Island * * * * estcli Plaza I 7MI & trlM, .._,... ..... 642.ff7J ........... "T1I t s.t. 'Tl 6 1-. 'Tl I **** MAllMllt'S vtLUCH DANAPOtMT 496-2'10 ........ w."". s...,,.' ,. So. Calif. Oldest Carpet Co. Since 1879 This is our last and best sale of the year! Hurry in today for great values in carpeting, vinyl flooring and draperies to spruce up your home tor the holidays! NOW Country Trails: Fabulous color Jjne for a short saxony plush totally installed over heavy carpet cushions. Regular $14.95 s129~;d. r otolly on1tolkod ov~r "-'O"Y poddo•'l<J Bordeaux:'()ur favorite 3 ply Saxony with a true decora- tor color line."'Redecorate now Regular $17.95 101olly .nuoll .. -d ovor hoovy poddinq. , . \ .! '. "" t, ~m c~~'COSTA MESA l,1:if 2'27 s. lrlltol ~"':'.:... ,.:: :r:- lrur' (114) 751 .2324 Our own line of OfapetY.<fabrics now on s ale for the Holiday Season. All at Designer Solarian by Armstrong with 1he sunny finish that keeps Its shine. Average 9x12 room tor as low as ' All Armstrong Floor Care Products in Stock! ... We Were 99 Years Old? Next year we will be 1001 Watch for our Centen- nial Celebration in 1979! A8 IJSC Orange Coast Dally P ilot Editorial Page .................................................................... _ ~.Nov.tnt>er30, 1971 Thome• KeevH/EdUor ~rt>ara l(rQlbich /Edltorl_, Page &dltM • Fire Road· Plan Avoids a Detour 1l w an ce gesture on ltH1 part of the d veloper. but Laguna Beach council memben know u hot potato wh~n they 're handed one. This t.im4.', the volatile ls.sue c me an lhf: form of an offer from an lrvlnc build r lo flnanl'e and build rour '1Cths ot a fire acl'eu road b(\tween Arch 8 a<lh Uel1htb and the Top of the World rommu.:mses The City &1 currently w"Orktntt on a SI00,000 cmergcn· cy ace roul.e lhot would provtdc lire prote<'Ltoo to Arch .B~och Ht•ights from the rare 5taUon at 1·op of the Wo rld ln uhoul L~~ mlnutes. lt currently take fire equipment more! Utan nlne minute:, to get to Arch Beach Helthts. The lrvlm.• developer . u1d he'd build aJl but the tut t ,000 feet or su for r~._ long as he could alao buUd 32 homes und 18 townhou~e:-. •dont: th<' v i r1ln strip or bru~hland 6ut rcsadent.s or the t~-o communitlt-1 pointed out they want o lockt'<l fJrc urrt-. s rouh• onl • not a.notht'r way for peopl<' to c·onvt.'rRl• on thi-ir rw1~hborhood?J . /\ml. they Mild, lht• ltL-.t l.UOO f t"<'t ul the fire accesci route \\tll tw lht• most c..'\Pt'fl:>tH1 to dc H •lop hecause hc uvy i:radin~ und fill work "'" h a ve to be done. Tberdor<.'. lht· savrng to lhl' l'll) wo uld not be that great . Th(' •'OUJll'll wii,l'ly at:rt~"<I. notm~ the far road ls n~edro now. not m a f('w )c>aTh. 1r und wht-n a develoJ)t'r ::,hould rl'rt-1vc pcrrrus~ion to bwld lht' road So the city is free to procc<·d with plans to hrn e th~ fi re Jccess route ('0n1p1Clt!d in C<Jrly 19W A proposal lo bu1ld mode rate ly priced condominiums on the periphery of a Capistrano Beach community park, lo be located on what is now the Serr<.i School s ite, has real merit. The Capistrano Unified School District currently is using the property for a continuation school and bus transportation headquarters. but administrators have said better locations for both facilities could be found within the district. Last week school board members approved a pre- h mina ry agreement to trade the land for acreage adja . c·en t to district offices and for rel<><:ation or the continua - tion school and bus headquarters. Some ix..~ple may question whether the s ite is ap- propriate for housing, bordered as it is by a busy freeway interchange. And indeed care mus t be exercised to as· :,ure that low.cost housing is not low qualily housing. But given the tremendous need in South Orange County for reasona bly priced housing, while land values continue to escalate the Serra proposal is encouraging. WISe Use of. Funds Laguna Beach's n e wly revised Housing Committee has come up with a plan to use federal housing funds to help victims of the Oct. 2 landslide. Laguna expects nearly $850,000 in federal Hous ing und Community Development funds over the next three .vears. The city is applyin~ for half thut amount to help the residents who lost their homes and lots in Bluebird Canyon. First.year mogey might go toward purchase of an estimated 2.5 acres of land for use by the victims, many of whom earn less than $10,000 a year. The a pplicaUoo also aeeks second-year funding to buy homes along freeway rights -of-way to be transported to the new site. Those homes could be sold or r ented to victims or the: la ndslide, under the Housing Committee's plan. It's an innovative program-and apparently one of the few effective ways of helping nearly two dozen families who l ost most possessions when· the earth moved. • 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 Invited. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560. C~ta Mesa, CA 92826. Phone (714) S..2-~1. Boyd/Tricky By L.M. BOYD The casinos or the Las V egas Hilton h ave -60 c.imeraa in their ceilings. Each is •wivelled and hidden by a plutic pod. Each is con· trolled by a remote switch in a m onitoring room . The watcher there knows all the tnc ks, all the sleight or hand gimmicks, all the manipula· lions with cardl and dice ex· ecuted by the awttt cheaters. H ave you ever m ixed grenadine with rum and lime Juice t.o make a Bacardi'> Neither have I. Merely put forth the rhetorical query pre liminary to report that 1renadine is pomegranate ayrup, that's what. Q. "How m~h money do the top speechwrlters set for putting together. :iay, u 2Q. mlnute talk?" A. Understand $1 ,800 ls about toP1 for somethln1 of tbu IOI'\. Dear Gloon1y Gus How come C arter's voluntary price und wage res traint plan d ot11 n •t include government a1encles thflt rahie prtco1 by raising recs? G.J. Q . "Som ebody fr o m England ls English. From Fr"'1nce.-French. But what do you call somebody fro m Monaco?" A. Monegasque. The people who die or bee stings outnumber the people who die of shark bites by 10 to one. If you want to awal a ny, strike just a little behind it. Flies lake off backwa rds. Question ari1ea aa to why the derringer pistol is 80 s pelled when the inventor ot s ame speJled bis name Henry Deringer Jr. with only one "r" ln Deringer. Jmltatora put similar pl1tol1 on the market lmmediatel)'.1 and one of these ~ in tne ex· tra "r," on the theory, f pre· 1ume1 th.at no copy edit.ors woulo be buying the auns. anyhow. Don't believe thll kind or trickery could 1et throush the courtt1 these day 11, but it was com · 111onplace yean 1ao. When the coffee cartel Jacked up its prices a few years aeo. it may not have been so smart after all. Sales or tea per capita h ave Jumped :» perc.nt In the lut decade. Q. "Anybody evtr make a t ort une bet lin1 on the horites?" A. Quite a many. Ever hear of <Norte Smltb? Or m1ybe 10'I remember hlrn by hie aUu, Plll1bursb Phll. Claim 1t he won Sl. T mlllloft playing lhe PQftSes. Now to tell your dad what I've told you aDd 1ee ll he'll lead YoU a 1take. v 0 " Ni ·holu von Hoff num Inflation Spells -Profit to So~e In pubUr llf~. nothJng Is t'ver u almpte u It IK'f'ma. so t hat lhl' •PCWlrHt national unanimity •l•lnat annauon bl.'lilra a ~ look. la t'Vttybody re•l'y that much a11ln1t It or arc some peoplt' 1u 1t 1olng t hrouab thCI motion s bl'CAUI~ &hu mau medlu a nd th e aoclety'1 pre· 1U1e figure~ .s p e nd so much ener&Y invelchlng aaatut \\? Arter mon&Juf of false starts. once the president Indicated he might be wrious a bout cutting the growth rates in the money, that he might really be filrting with no end t.o mrlatlon . there wa» a decided grumpiness in certuan quarters. IN onu;a moments in our history. public figureis have been avowed and sincere inflatlooists. Herbert Hoover was. t.o name one, but. while this isn't the year to advocate inflation. some peo· . -. .. ·~mr.r· • , .. ·""-. Mailbox pie like Ceorge Meany do com· blne a pro rorma opposition to rlalng price levels with a rt1fusal to back the aovcmment policies most likely to flatten the growth curve1. Even the elect.oral" is more amblauous on the subject than we are led to believe. Those •oclal tea leaf r eaders. tht1 public opinion pollsters, tell us that "inflation Is the number one issue In this rountry." but It m ay ;i ls o be a very tepid nun\ber one. Ir people were truly ond deeply concerned, would two.thirds or the nation's voters have stayed away rrom the poll· ing places last Election Day? No. whHe people are doubtless worried. many m illlons or us ob- viously aren't. worried enough t.o take even the minimal step or stumbling around the corner to pull a lever in a polling place. OUR monochromatic mass media chants that inflation hurts us ull , but a lot of us know darn well 1t hurts some or us more than others. Inflation hurts credit.ors and helps debtor'!. The general knowledge of this self· evident fact cxolains much or the force behind the contlnulne real taitate boom. You don'l have t.o be a double· dome master of buslneas ad· ministration with a Colce·bottJe eye glass to know that one of the good t.hings in Ufe ill t.o borrow l OO·cent dollars on a hou•., mortgage and pay tho ioan back with 33-cent dollars. The nice people In Washington who print all that money have given you lWO•thirds Of your hOUSC and garden for free. The tens of millions who own real estate in lbe ex~tation that inflation will be kind to them are theoretically counter· balanced by other m illions, especially older people who live on fixed incomes. But. writes Chr istopher Jenks. professor or sociology at Harvard, "Social Security is now adjusted almost every year t.o keep pace wilb in· nation." E VEN THOUGH private pensions have oot done equally well. the per.capita income or individuals 65 and over rose 76 percent between 1970 and 1976 while the per.capita Income of Individuals aged 14 to 64 rose on· ly St percent. Since the Cons umer Pnee lndex went up 47 percent during these years, individuals 14 to 64 ended up with about the same purchasing power in 1976 81 in 1970, while individuals IS and over Increased their purchasing power by a litth. (For more. see Jenks• "Why Worry About lntla. lion?'' in the Sept.-Oct issue or Working Papen;. I In sum, a whole big bunch o' people have either advanced thelr sta ndard or ltvlng or stayed about. equal during the worst or lhe lnllallonary years. A lot of them may be worried that, if inflation continues, the future won't work out as well as the past, and, assuredly. one or the great objections to lnOatlon is the extra element or uncer· tainty it brings to already uncer· tain human e xistence. Thus , even people who profit are UP· nerv4:d by it. BUT HOW are the self.same people going t.o react as it dawns on them that they may be the ones who pay the price for end· 1ng inflation or at least taking It off the backs of lenders, th ~ class that has paid the highest price for the lowering dollar? In CaWomia, we now have the variable·interest·rate mortgage, in actuality a mortgage with in· terest payments which Ouctuat.c according to the ebb and flow or inflation. In a &ol or states that kind of mortgage would bump in to the us ury laws, the moralistic name for price con- trol over money, and already we're hearing from lenders that, unless these laws are repealed, they 're not going to m a ke mortgages. The tt.l.'lsle which will ensue llnless national interest rales dive downward -will be a dis· guised fight between detla· tion1s ts and infl ationists. The same kind or right is likely to break out in other sect.ors of tht• economy as various growps and i n d i v id u a I'S I ea r n it a i n ' t necessarily so. that while infla· tion is like the rain in that It falls on alt or us, it is also like the rain in that It floods some gardens wh.ile it makes others bloom . Another View of 'Working Mom' Scene To the Editor: Are we expected t o s ym· pathizc with your staff member, Anne Cooper, because she has round "it's work being a mom"? Was 1he under the impression that she gave birth to a little doll who would sit placidly and net!d no attention unless mother bad the lime to spare from her other car eer? Perhaps, ir she had taken Ume to read the "trivia" that her daughter brings home from school. she would have not· ed the scheduled conference day holidays and planned ahead. She wonders why teachers can't manage t.o ta lk to parent.'I without shutting down schools, as in ber school days. Because of the unavaUablllty of time that parent.a have to give to their children's school these days, the teachers have been forced to try scheduling the working parent at a convenient time. What is conve nient to t h e working parent? Sometime a fte r s or courae. Should the teacher have t.o put i.n a full day or school and conference on lnt.o the evening? A conference day has been created so that the teacher m ay contact a1 many parent11 as pos1lbte within a short period or time, giving the working parent more nexiblUty in choosing their time for conference. INSTEAD OF the Pilo t publi•hlne yet another nrtlclc on the poor overtaxed working mother, why don't you look into how many flrat and second graders wear ke)'s around their neck& to school and 10 home to empty housea t.o wall llll their parents come home? Why don't you take a survey and find how mlD)' 9, 10 and ll·year-old.s aro expected to 10 home and t•ke care of tMlr 1lblln1 l ·•nd·7· year-old•? I have s poken to t.eacherw In tears aft.er lbete con· fentacN at the tndltterence or parents wbo feel that their chltdren are "mature enough'' to handle life until they wander horn• from work. <Of course. the netcbbor la alway,• available to "look la on them. • l Isn't it time we quit lamenting t he tedlou11, repetlUvc. un· challengtng aspects of parent· hood, and 11t1rt 1mpb11izlng tho 1lory ol having t.o be retpon.11iblo for sorneone bell~ ourwel vcs" SHIRLEY 8Hl:PPARD N•&••~ To tbe Edit.or: J vt.tled Lecuna !Hach HJ1h School ln Oct.Ober durin1 thtJr open '*-week. I dlC!lded to do • lhl' whole thing which included a ~u1d ed tour of the school grounds. then going to each class my son had. Jl was a very lnleres hng duy. I was very impressed with all my son's teacners and the way they conducted their classes. 'fhe students were very orderly and seemed eager and enthused about their work. fl owc vcr, my disappointment t•ame at lunch Um c when 1 thought that 1 would eat in the cafeteria along with the stu· dents. Oh it wasn't t he food that disappointed me. it was the ap· palling way the students left the cafeteria and patio area where they have their l unch. The garbage left all around wu'> quite a 11ight to behold. Es pecial· ly when many garbage cans were provided very conveniently at strategic points. OF COURSE the mess didn·t las t long a$ a pa id clean.up <.'rcw. tbc custodians, came IJ\ right after and cleaned it up. I brought th.is Incident to the attention of the PTA bourd at our next meetJna. and they are at this time attempting to work with the sludent council aboul this problem. To me, Laguna Beach Is one or • the most beautiful cities In a ll the United States. And to oo able to live and work here is quite an honor. J am wontierlng what has hap· pe nc ct lo ult tho!ie eco logy· or iented youth that were ~ on top or things just it few short years ago. We are well a ware that Pamela Laguna ffigh is not a brand new bright and shiny building but the charm and location it ha11 cer-taan I y outs hines many oth<:r ~chools. So why does something like this occur? Where is the pride and respect I know we au as parents try to instill in our children towards. personal and public property? ~ Can we solve this problem of narbagc at the school, and try to ~ct our children to "clean up their act'"! JUDY LEVlN Bullt•IH w ... ~ To the Edit.or: The California Taxpayers• As· sociatlon reports that the real impact ol Proposition 13 Is two years away. In the first fiscaJ year or 1978-79, CallfornJa's 58 counties and 416 citie s wlll m anage fairly well due to the distribution of $4 billion from the stale surplus. lt is said that reserves will not be available in two ·years. The s tale will have no more than $2.8 billion in a vailable funds to offset a projected shortfall or $9 billion in local revenues. THE SOLUTION t.o thia dUem· ma is not in raising tax.es. Waste and ~ary 1:1pendint should be cut. Efficiency in government s hould be a goal or federal and state officials. As an e xample, l cite the Newport-Mesa Unified School District. It is given a certain amount of money lor each fiscal year. IC the school district does not spend all the funds it has been allotted, then it r eceives less funds the next year fiscal year . So. at the end of th~ year, Newport·Mesa Unified School District frantically spends the money they have left over. It is this k ind or pure ly wasteful spendiog that must stop. SUSAN M. HALEY To the EdJtor: I was pleased t.o see that at least one or our local news media took Supervisor Riley to task for his proud pronounce· ment that he was going t.o use his ·'obvious popularity to help Republican candidates In other offices In future elecOons." Since Riley holds a non· partisan office at the highest level of local 11overnment, I find it deplorable that he ls even con· templating using this office for promoting partisan politics - and let's race It, that's exacUy what would be happening. Tom Rlley was an absolute unknown until Governor Rea~n appoint- ed him as Supervisor Caspers' replacement. Any popularity Rilev cr\IOya now is due in large measure t.o the exposure he has received as a county supervi3or ano obviously any influence be may have on partisan politics is due t.o hia non·partiaan elected positlon In county go~emment. Any 1upcrvlaor who even al· tempt.a t.o tum t.M office or coun· ty supervisor Into • partisan football should apend some time reflecting on the fact that a supervisor muat, without bla.i and prejudice, fairly represent all or h.ia conatltuenll reaardJeq of their poUUcal altlllaUon. la Tom Rlley IO naive u t.o think that hla commitment to the Republletn Party to asslat Republican candidates, will al· low him to perform hla aweeome task -a talk th•t is difflcult even without the compllcatioo of pre11ure1 Crom your polltJcal party? SHIRLEY J... GRINDLE Former Cha irman, Oran1e County PlaMlng Commlssldn !'I s 0 . 1f d ,. A CJ •• .. ~11 .. •• 'u 11,j ., .,. •tt JU ,,. 7 Orange Coast ED IT I O N Today's Closin g N.Y. t oeks _v_o_L_._,_,,_N_o_._334 ___ 4_s __ c_r_1_o_N_s __ ,_a_P_A_G_E_s __________________ .....,.o_R_A __ N_G_E_c_o_u_N __ T_Y_._c_A_L_1F_o_R_N __ 1A ________ T_H_u_R_s_o_A __ Y_._N_o_v_e_M_e_e __ R_30_,_1_9_1e ____ ~N~/C;._ __ T~E-N_.;;.C~E~N-T~S Suspect Arrested __ lemente 2 Countians Fight Busing By KATllV CIJAN("V 0t the O..tly Piiot \tall Crealion of an Orangf: County vers ion of Busstop was an- nounced today by two Orange Coast residents who hope to halt u proposaJ that would expand the Los Angeles des(!grcgat1on plan to local schools. Doris Allen, a Huntington Fiea<'h Union High School DI!>· tnct trust~. and Dons Enderle or Huntington Beach said at a morning press conference that ~o far they are the members of Orange County Busstop. IU1ly Piiot Ptwte DY lff P•YM am Answered 'Assist' Dispatch By ANNE COOPER Ol llW CUii• Pti.t 5~11 A San Cleme nte policeman was shot to death Wednesday night while ans wering a call for a man who said he had .slashed his wrists. Richard Steed. 30. was s hot in the chest in an alley behind the Sa n Cl emente S un /Pos t ne ws pape r plant. 1542 N. El Camino Real, shortly before 7 pm Less than seven hours later. police arrested James Richard Hoffe r. 23, or 1608 Calle las · Bolab. on susp1C1on of murdenng Steed Hoffer was cauJ?hl as h e walked along El Camino Real, a block south of the murder scene. But they hope to collect addt· I 1onaJ members a t a Dec 7 or- gan i z a lion a I m eeting 1n Westminster. And eventually. Buss top mem· bers may circulate a st<1tew1de pet 1tion for the 1980 ballot that would amend the const1tut1on to hall for<.•ed busing of students POLICE GATHER TO BEGIN SEARCH FOR KILLER OF FELLOW LAWMAN San Clemente SWAT Teem Shown After Slaying of Officer Richard Steed He wai-. transported lo UC Irvine Medi cal Center in Or a nJ(e, whe re Police Ch ief Gary Brown said he was treatc.'<I for what appeared lo be a sell- inflicted kmfc wound on his arm. DAiiy Piiot Pl>Oto PUSHING FOR BUSSTOP Trus1ee Doris Allen Nixon Gets EggAt~ack A t Oxford OX FORD. Enghmd <A P l Ric hard M Nixon. braving a gauntlet of e1tJl lo!-.~ing pro- testers and spcakrn~ over l'hanLo; of "Creep! Creep' .. and "Nixon is dead'". told Brit1!>h ... tudcnt:-. today he will "Spt:ak ur> for what J believe ... as long as l live " The former pres ident ulso lold the Oxford Univt•rs1tv a11<11cnce that with his approval thl· FHI broke up a P:jlcstinurn ~ucrnlla "network" in th<' United State:-. through wirl't cips anc1 break ins during h..s adman1~trat1on, whtci' t\ 90-minute (lrogram. "Nixon at Oxford," will be presf>nled al 1:30 tonight on Cbannel 28. ended four years a~o with his resignation in the m1dbl of the Watergate scandal A phalanx of security men had lo escort Nixon through an angry crowd of 000 studc•nt dem· onstrators, many or them Americans and s11m<.' flinging eggs. when he arriveu al the Ox- ford Union debatmf( society hall to deliver the addr(.'ss The noisy melee wus n ·ported when he left, and an Amencan Secret Service m an, tryinf( to protect Nixon, bc~an s winging wildly with his fists &nd shouting at d emonstrators pummeling the Nixon car. Some bysland<•rs were knocked s praw ling on their bands and knees a:-. the Nixon motorcade b or ed 1ts way through the crowds of dem- ons trators and shoppers in Ox- ford's Corn Mark!:\ shopping atreet. <Stt NIXON, Page A2> · Couple F ace Theft Charge A Newport Beach couple re· mained jailed today following the ir arrests on s usplclon of burglary when a neighbor al- legedly spotted them breaklog into a home. Duayne Day Chrlstensen. und his wife. Denlse Lee. both 23, of 19 Baruna Court, were a rr.:Rted Inside the residence In Newport Crest they allegedly broke Into Oeledlve John Furrow said the couple Is also bcutg In- vestigated In relation to • series of burglarfcs In Newport Crest and In neuby nmghbothood! in which door knobs w re twisted on. , for school integration , th<.· WOffil'n said . "'Our children don't belong to tht• stale." Mrs. Enderle said. '"Thl'Y belong lo their r>arenl~ We want to have choices; where Wl' live and why and where our youngsters go to school." 'De Cared' Officer Dies Trying to Help Mrs . AJlen and Mrs. Enderle were reacting to a metropolitan p l a n for intregalion that transcends school district boun- daries and county line~ and could involve busing in all but three Orange County school dis· tncls. The metropolitan plan was the maJor recommendation from a panel of experts appointt.'<.1 by l.o:-. Angeles Superior Court Judge Paul Egly to s tudy Los Angeles desegregation. Mrs . Enderle . who i s cha irman of the California Pro- F am i ly Coalition, compared forced busing to "people plan· mng" resulting in the kind or <See BUSING, Page A2> Show Tlnte By WfLLIJ\M HODGE Of IM O•lly PU.C Sl.ltt San Clemente Pohce Officer Richard Sleed probably thought he was going to help someone. The poli(!e call seemed harm· less enough. /\ medical aid at 1524 S. El Camino ReaJ with am- bulance and fire engine respond- ing Code 3. with lights and siren. Officer Steed probably thought he could help. He was shot once through lhe upper left chest area and died for his efforts. A suspect in the shooting was arrested earlv today. "He cared a lot about every- thing .'" officer Tom Haight re- called this morning in a broken voice "'He always cared about treatin~ people fairly." Hai~ht worked last summer These Costa Mesa HigH School coeds (and friends) will be featured in numbers from Broadwav hit, "Annie," during school's "Carousel of Dance" which begins three-night run thif evenli:»«. Annie (front) ls played by Trisha s we,ison. Others are (from left) Mary DiMlno, Patty O'Keere, Patty Houck, Nancy Mlller and Jody Anderson as Daddy Warbucks. Cast oC 57 wm perform ln student dance show. which begins at 8 o'clock tonight. Friday and Saturd"y in school Lyceum. Tickets are S2.50 tor adults and $1.75 Cor students. with Rick Steed. as fellow or. ricer s kne w him. The t wo wor~ed San Cle mente's beach patrol. "We used lo taJk about ways of making the beach patrol bet· ter," Haight rem embered. Haight's voice cr acked again. He excused himself. saying he had to go to work. He went off to search for the weapon that took his friend's life. Across town at San Clemente General Hospital. ·a worker was trying hard to shoulder tt1e loss of a "good person." "Rick Steed was a tremendous kid ," e m ergency room s upervisor Margaret Goodwin recalled. "His dea th was the waste of a good person. We are all pretty devastated by it." She recalled other limes, hap- pier times, more peaceful times. "He used t.o come up and have corree with us -we even bought him his own coffee mug last year ." Mrs. Gopdwin remem- bered. "We could a lways count on him to help us with unruly pa- tients ." But 30·year-old Rick Steed won't be helping people again. The former Marine was pro- nounced dead on arrival in Mrs. Goodwin's e m ergency room following the 6:45 p.m. shootlng. 2 Countians Face Bogus Money Charge Two Orange County printers were arraigned Weanesday in Los Ange les on c harges of manufacturing and possessing bogus currency after U.S. Secret Service investigators confiscat- e d $730,000 In phony money Tuesday. Cha rged and released on his own recognizance was Guy Sparrow. 46, of Anaheim. owner o f O C R Business F o rms, Compton. C h a r ged and r e leased on SS.000 bond was George Min.ka. 53, of Mission Viejo. Assistant Special Agent Eugene Dagg s aid Secret Service inve8Ugators had been watching the two Orange Coun· tians for weeks before arresting them late Tuesday ln separate (See BOGUS, Pa1e AZ> Inflation F~t I WASJDNGTON (AP> -Preel· dent Carter said this •ft.ernoon he would rtak hJa polltlul future rather than water down bl• fliht a1aln1t lnflatlon. "I believe tbat tJ exactly what the American people want," he told a natJonaJ· ly televiled newt c.olerenct. • • • • .. • ; • • t ' • • ,...__ ..... __ -• •• ., ........ 1 ' .. I f t t • 1 • • j •• I I ' I ' SLAIN IN All EY Patrolman Richard Steed Mexieo Energy Events. which r esulted in Steed 's murder and the manhunt for his killer, beJ(an at 6:45 pm., when a man reportedly came to lht' d oor of the Sun/ Post news paper offi ces. requesting an ambulance b<:cause he s aid he'd cut his wrist Police were called. An am. bulance and a fire engine were dispatched. Officer Steed. who reportedly heard the police dis· patch over the radio in his patrol car satd he would rebp<>nd f'ire Capt Jerry Galati s aid he pulled his frre engine into the newspaper plant parking lot . when the police dispatcher in- formed him the police officer t Steed I had not been able lo locate the man with the slashed wrist Galati baid he saw Steed's patrbl car parked in an aJley behind the news paper plant. He said he left the fire engine and walked over to talk to the police officer but found him l ying (Sep OFFICER. Page A2> Carpenter's Role Said 'Conflicting' By PIUUP ROSMARIN Of IM O••IY Piiot Sl•ll State Sen. Dennis Carpenter 's involvement as a pai(j consult· ant in a San Diego Gas & Elec· tric Company proposal lo import energy from Mexico is described as a .. potential conflict of in- terest" in a report by auditors for the state Public Utilities Commission. The audit.ors recom me nd that the PUC disallow $541.000 spent by the company for consuJUng services from a rate mcrease the utility is seeking. Most of the sum -$353.000 - was paid to La Joll<t consultant William Black. who in turn hired the Newport Beach Republican senator to arranae m eellnizs with Mexican officials lo dis· cuss possibiliUes for a blllion- d o 11 a r power plant near Ensenada in Baja California. Carpenter was paid $44,313 in fees and $2.200 in expenses over a 16·month period. Black. Carpenter a nd t~o Mexican associates of Black planned to form a company called Inter-American Energy Alliance (IEA> that would act as 'Island' Ha8 Many Gifts ' Today's Dally Piiot guides readers to "gilt shopping from an laland-Faahion laland." The 20-paae magulne details •ltt tdeas and holiday tashlons a vailable at Fashion Is land, Newport Beach. " middleman in lhl' sale of Mex- ican power to the San Diego utrhty The PUC auditor!> wrote in their report "The staff has several concerns with respect to the act1v1ly of Black and as. sociates as representatives of San Diego Gas & Elect ric and the roles planned for the IEA. "A ,prime concern is a poten- tial conflict of interest. ·' lf there were greater pro· s pective benefits under the IEA <See t mLJTV. Page A2) Coast Weathe r Some night and morning low cloudiness and a little cooler on Friday. Lows tonight 47 to 52. Highs Fri· day in mid OOs. INSIDE TODAY TM Umted Way fund drive u under t.OOJ1 and lt'ir bo&ed on the th~ that Orange County lmow1 what'• be1t /or Orange County. li'eotunng, Page Cl . ·1at1e x .. , A% DAil v PILOT N/C Tax Elderl 's_BenefitS_?-=-_ Levy on HQI/ SocUJ, Security Pay Urged WA S lllN GTON 1/\1'1 l''ormt>r St><·1.ll St•curit Com m1 l)IOnt•r Hobl'rt M Bull dt'r larlnll 1h11t the nutlon r nnoc .1Hvrd t'M't'M•I H ' (II Ullf(' MIO bit• ~Ul\!.td1t",' fof lht• t•ldNh su~iw,ll'd ttldu\ lh ut tht•\ be rl" t1u1n•d 111 pa) Ill".'~ on urw hulf lht•tr' h,•11t•f1h n.1ll luld ..i cu1lli:u:nct· un 'lh\! l'l'Ulllllllll'l' ur .ljllOtj" I hat !.OOW 1 ws and cu.tom• lh1t blMftt all thf' eld r ly. r 11rdlt"•11 of wullh. "wlll not be defensible sn lbf' Yt'lml •head." In ackhllon to cutting back tht' tu~ frrt· tutWJ of Sochd S runty l-,.'1wf1t. ... 01'11 prope>scd c:ll mlnat 1n)t tht• doublt> hwomr t10; tix «.>m p t ton <'nJoyl'd by ull lhO.'it• ~ and oldt>r _ · · T • tl I rt t• r l..t i r ~ not u homoaenl'uu& lfre>up .. t'ar too Birdnap Falls Cockatoo <Aper Yielda Four A ~rim hu~ht>d 'oi1" uver lhe telephont! snformed a .. lt·t'P) In int• t·ouplt> t•arl~ Wedtl~ay momina. "We have \CIUr btr\J I( )OU 't\.IOt tO 8CC him again alive, you'd better r unw up with $2.000 · · So OC'lh tn a Chght) crime that involved a police ~1alH·1111t b) '"'Cl 1frt t'ct1,cs and rour olricers and a clan· dc:.tinc :.\\<uµ of~ n><'kittoo for cash at a darkened Arco gas l>tallon Pohce got their m 1rn-and lheir bird-with a minimum c1f v tolt•ncc THE BIRDNAPPI NG BEGAN late Tuesday night. Donald and Lydia Hl'8l> of 3541 Carmel Ave. heard the :.ound of their electric garage door opener and peeped cautiously outside lo find their cockatoo "Cookie" missing from his perch Alarmed, they waited. Al 1 a m. came the phone caJJ. The bird. they learned to their astonishment, was snatched for ransom. The Colony homes couple said they didn't have $2,000 but would try to scrape it up. The Hesses stalled ror time, took lhe caller 's telephone number and said they'd call back. They caJled police. INVE.'iTIGATOR PAUL J~UP devised a trap to nab tht.• btrdmen He checked the department's "flash roll" used as front money in undercover investigations. and asked the Hesses to tr\' and talk the criminals down to a lower price .. After considerable haggling. lhe Hesses talked lhem down to S600. With their own $100. and with the police money, they had almost that much. The exchange took place at an Arco station. at the cor- ner of Culver Drive and Walnut Avenue, al 6:30 a.m. Wednesday, with the Hesses timorously holding the money and the police hiding behind available cover. JJ.;SSUP SAID TWO men drove up in a car. got· out a nd. carrying a cardboard box, approach~d the. ffesses. Donald Hess demanded to see the bird, since nary a peep came from the box. One suspect carefu lly lifted the lid a fraction. The bird was okay. · The exchange was made. Police moved in. The sus pects. J ames Wahl, 19, of Santa Ana. and Marshall Northcutt. 20. of 3022 College Drive, Costa Mesa. were arrested and booked on charges of burglary, extor- tion and conspirucy. TWO COSTA M~SA women. Linda Bradley and Donna Harold. both 19. who police allege were confederates, later were arrested at their home. at 1086 Glen Circle. Each wa::. held in lieu of SlQ,000 l!ail. Cookie the cockatoo. J ess up s aid, was, despite the or· deal. unruffled. Though the bird _is capable or ~pe~c~. it is ~nlikel~. to testif) at trial. since its vocabulary 1s hm1ted to Hello. E'rOllt Page Al NIXON JEERED ••. Eighty police officers linked a rms in a futile attempt to keep the protesters from pounding tht.'tr fis ts on Nixon's bluck limousine. Poli ce carted away eight demonstrators. Earlier. when Nixon made his wuv into the ha ll. he got a frt e.ndlv welcome rrom the wail· mg au.d1t'nce of about 800 stu- dents, who applauded loud and long .. Thank you for the very warm welcome of those m~idc -and AUl'TION SET FOR NEWPORT lllC\Cl~. auto accessor ies and a variety or srortmg goods will go on the block Saturday when thl· Newport Beach Po rtee D<'parl ment stagE•s an auction. The sale will ~et under way al U u.m in the parking lot of the station at 870 Santa Barhara Dri v<' Itemized lists of the pieces to be sold a re available at the station. • ORANGE COAST \ DAILY PILOT ,,..,, ,,,it~ ( .. '"' O•tf¥ P·•~ W!IP't ""'''". I "" °'"""" ,,..,. 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" '-''ht•ftl M•t1.tft+ftQ (nl~O'' OfflcH (O\IAW \<I JJOWHtfltr#\lr.M H~t\:~~~"8:!~" 1 !~~f;'C~'•!!;.~!rd \«Mh f.'•( 111 V1tl•Y 1'101 \A P~u A~.40 •t \•" O•flOO f r"'1#1111 Te!ephon• (71•0642-4321 CIHtlfled Adve"ltlng 142•11671 \ttod .. tNO YAUf y '.ft•W\Otfit.., u1 .. :a10 ~ ..... ~cit,,,..,, •M-MOO ...... _1~0.•.q·t-·~tlt\ '40·1220 ~Yf'J!'~ ~ Olt=,.C::-~: .. ~r'~~. ~.r,., ., ., . .,,.wi,,.._,,,"" ftit'••f\ ,.,., .. ,.,roovr•o ... ,_,., 'Clft I•• ""'"''"*' tt ~..,,1.,,,_ \«OfWJ (fe\\ pe\t•~ H id •I ~ •• Ml\• (•Hter.,fa ,.,.,H rtttlet't tit <•'''..., \l '' =::~·;; :~::.:o l'ftOfttfllf, Mtllt•t • those outside for making me feel very much at home," he said to la ughter from the audience. "You hear these people out· side." he later told his listeners. "rt's not pleasant, I'm used to it. .. But he said his political career has ended.· "Politically, I plan to play no role in Ute party, as a candidate. for a candidate -anything." Nevertheless, he said, "I reel al> long as I have any breath in me I will speak up for what I believe . . . I'm going to con· tinue to as long as I live." To do otherwise would not be possible for him. Nixon said. "I have enough to sit . . and contemplate my navel on th ... Pacific ... If I did that I would be dead mentally in a year and physically in two '' Fr°'" Pa~ A I BOGUS ••• , . cars near the bu1uness form!l plant. The money , Dagg said, was i'l•&nd along with printing plates and negatives in Sparrow's car. Dhl(I( called the quality of th<. phony $20. $50 and $100 bills "fair." He said they were print· e d o n an orrsel printing machine . The agent s aid his organiza· tion is continuing an investiga- tion of the case but that it is believed no phony bills were passed. Hoth suspects are scheduled for preliminary hearing before a U.S. Magistrute in Los Angeles Dec. 19. Tool Chest Taken In Mesa Burglary Burglars reportedly kicked ln the side door to 1 C08la Mesa res· ide nl ·s garage Wednesd ay to make off wllh 1bout Sl,800 worth or tools and Jacks. Howard W. Burna of 19d Orange St. said • 10-drawer tool chest tilled with automotlve tools and equipment and lwo Jack stands were taken. Duma told police the chest w11 too heavy for one person to remove . J many OM·fourlh -h1v1 leu lncomt lhm l2S P"rcent of lhe poverty lvval." he told 400 per1on •t them Una sponsored by N•tlonal Journal m111111ln~. But h(• said th(\re •lso "'" "a 1r••fit nuU\y who ure quite well off '' "In th.-long run. it i11 not de· ,_lubll• to ilinttl1• out u purtlculur Wt.c 1iiroup tor u series of sub. 11ldh1• bwu."C.I ou aj(e alone.'' .8all UfILITY ..• urrungemcnl for Black and as. ocaate~. wh1itt incentive was there tor them to exert efforts In other arraneements?'' A San Diego Gas vice presi- dent tor public rel1tions. Dennis Richter. ajd the IEA proposal waa turned down by companv mtnagemeot and directors. Richter said stack's consult· ing contract expired ln April and the company has no plans for further contact with him. Caroenter said Wednesday that he saw no conruct of in- terest in his work for Black, and said he wished the IEA had suc- ceeded In establishing itself. "I would have loved to do it." Carpenter said. T he PUC auditors said the money spent by San Diego Gas s h ou l d be charged to stoc-k holders of the company rather than its customers because of questionable plan- ning and execution or Black's ef- forts to obtain financing for the project. "San Diego Gas,'' said lhe re- port. "was lax in control over expenditures. and in not provid- ing a vehicle to recover expen- ditures made on behalf of, or for the benefit of. IEA. ·• "It is unclear:· the auditors added. "why San Diego Gas launched an around the world excursion to seek project financ- ing. after Mexican officials stat· ed thev were not vet oreoared to consider any specific project." Trips were made to Tokyo, Londo n. Par is. Munich and other places, and charged to San Diego Gas. Carpenter was not oo the trips. The auditors further com- plained that. as initially pro· posed, IEA held the pivotal posi- tion in the energy plan, as a buyer and seller of Mexican energy. "There was the possibiUty of them assuming other major functions in financing and con· struct ion of the project,'' the auditors said. The auditors reported that. "If the project became a reality. s~11 Diego Gas would have been the weakest membe r of the troika cor the utility. IEA and the Mexican gover n ment>, despite the fact that San Diego Gas would bear the entire finan· cial burden. Welte Sues ... School District For$269,000 Damages tota ling nearly $269,000 are being demanded fro m the Saddleback Valley Unifie d School Dis trict by Supe rintendent Richard Welte in an Orange County Superior Court lawsuit which charges lhe defendants with breach or con- tract. Welte claims in his action that the board acted unfairly and ii· legally last April when it com- pelled him to take a 44-day vaca- tion while the value or his services to lhe district was being assessed. He demands a n additional $500 ,000 in damages from tr ustees Mary Phillips. George f{enry and Carole Neustady who with school district employee James Mitchell, arc 1denttJ1e<1 as being purticulatly responsi- ble for actions taken against him. f 'ro'" Page A I BUSING ••. controlled soclet1 advanced by the Rev. Jim Jones in Guyana. She said she used the People's Temple disaster as an example of "usurping powers. ·Forced busing is a way of taking a way an individual's rights," she contended. Mrs. Allen, an unsuccessful state use.mbly candidate last Nov . 7. said "the schools are to educate, not for planning a Uto- pian society." I M ra. Allen said creation of Busstop. la not a racist reaction. "It has to do with t aking youn1stera completely away from their homes." she said. "Il has to do with local control. "Ou r con c•rna are not necet1arlly with tho lntearat.ion a1~LI but lh1t we are 1olni to be movtna younaaten around on a cheu board ... boweve4 1om eone HH •• a cure t 1oclety11 lllt." Hid. Health . Edueut1on and Wt1tfare SccNtary J oscvh A Califano Jr. thl8 year que11Uon~ whether W<'althy eldl'rly people 11hould l(cl Soc1ul Securit y txint'flt8 tux-free. but no ofrl cietl REPORTER EYES SOCIAL SECURITY-A11 uclion has been taken io that direction. With groups o f r e tirees a lready wi elding c lo ut In Congress to ruise benefits and libcrallze the amounts they can earn without losing benefits. any s t e p t oward ta xing Social Security benefits would generate a protracted battle. Ball sajd about one-rourth of the federal budget, $115 billion. is s pent on the elderly in the forms of Social Security. other fed e r al retireme nt syste ms. Medi car e. Medicaid . Sup- plem entary Security Income and other benefits. He ~id 14 percent of the elder- ly have income below the pover ty level and that without Social Security. 60 per cent o f the families headed by persons 6-S or oJder would be below the poverty level. Dally Pll.t ~by a1<1\ard tc...,,.., SAN CLEMENTE CIVIC CENTER FLAG AT HALF STAFF City Mourns Slain Policeman Richard Steed f'rOtll Page Al OFFICER SLAIN IN CLEMENTE ... beside his patrol car. bleeding and unconscious. Fireman Thomas Mccorkell , who was manning the city am· bulance wilh engineer Gary Lov· rien. said he saw a man running north down the alley. away from the patrol car. The three firemen rushed Steed to San Clemente General Hos pital, where a t e am or medical specialists fought to save his life. Even before the ofricer was pronounced dead at 7.56 p.m .. law enforcement officers were massing at the murder scene to search for his killer. Wiping tears from their eyes and hunching their s houlders a ga in st the ir grief. Steed's fellow poli cemen set about a m e th odical block -b y· block search. Three Sun/Post employees. who had been working late at the newspaper plant. described the man as a bout 25, with long brown hair and a beard. They said he'd had a bloody towel wrJlDOM arounrl one a rm San Clemente police were as sisted by the Ora nge County Sheriffs deputies. who brought two bloodhounds to track the suspect. The north end of the city. wher e the newspaper plant is sandwiched between bcachside cottages and apartments and the industrial district. was m apped for search teams . A Huntington Be a ch police helicopter hung above the city. shining a powerful light on the ground. where San Clemente's s pecially trained a nd outfitted tactical operations offi ceri:. combed block after block or lhe surrounding neighborhood. Hoffer was spotted at 2 a .m by s heriff's deputies. as he walked along El Camino Real. near the Calle Lago intersect.Jon . just one block no rth or the newspaper plant. He was arrest ed without incident. Chief Brown said Hoffer meets the description of the man who visited the ne wspape r offices earlier and had the same kind of wound. His apartment is located directly behind the newspaper plant, Brown said. Hoffer was to be tra nsferred to Orange County Jail from t he medical center. following treat· ment for lhe knife wound. Ho ffe r 's bail was set a t $500,000. Hoffer did not have a gun. when he w as arres ted. A poli ce department spokesm an said a team of offi cers was searching today for the gun used in the shooting. No description of the gun was made public Steed·s gun and his glasses were found on the ground a short distance from where he fell in the alley. a few feel from his patrol car. Officer Steed is survived by his wife. Kathy. and by his parents who live on the East Coast. The young couple lived in Oceanside and had no children. Steed joined the San Clemente Police Department two years ago. after serving as a reserve o ffi cer . He had pre vious ly ser ved with the U.S. Ma rine Corps He wal> dc:.c r i bed as a popular, dedicated policeman. well liked by hii. fellow officers. Marines Join Kfunto Get Fast Release By The Associated Press Young Marines may be trying to gel a rrested as Ku Klux Klans men at Camp Pendleton in order to be discharged early, said one private after a flurry of ~uch incidents At least 16 men have been io volved with alleged Kl an ac- t1,,..1t1es within the last month. base officials i.aad Wednesday. All of them arc under 20 years old with les.." than six months in the M annc Corpi.. In most or the cases, KKK l>logans were written on the locker of a black Marine. or whale sheets with KKK mark- ings were discovered in foot lockers The untdent1f1ed private said in an inlerview Wednesday. "If you ar e in. 1l takes the m months to discharge you. But if you claim KJan membership. they will kick you out right away. The guys know that and they are using that route to get out." There was no official reactioo to the claim SALE SAVE . "• , h.'; I ,:· . 0 , .. Hundreds In Stock 5199 •r CALIFORNIA 1 Ppper Clal- • . White Admits To Slayings SAN fltAN JSCO <AP> f'ormt-r SupeTVUI()( Oan Wb1te b.u conf~ut"d to th murder• of N a)or Otorlt Moacone and uperVlsor Han-y Milk, •«Ord.in& to a report publbhed today The San Francisco Chroald NC>Orted that poUce ukt White • gave In Ulatora " comptele t.ate.ment,'' but the newspaper ai v~ oo dt>tails uf th purportfd conf loo and did not aay whC'n 1t "'~ m~---Pohcc Ch1l'f Ch1arl ~ Gain eand hom1cldC' lns~ctor t-'rank l"alioo rt•fU.o,.t-0 tu cu1nment on the n .. P•pcr rt•port, and Whit '11 .itlornl'.V could not tM.> rt•uch~ for romm nt T IU: <.llllONl('l,t; Al.SO reported lhut polu•t• believe the ~lln 111un kllll'<i both nwn by 11hoohna them calml)' twice 1n the buck of the head as they lay wounde-d on the noors of their t'1ty tuill offices Unnuml'd M>Uret'~ dose to the tnvestla•l!On w •re quottc-d ai. i...iy111.: that po-.der burns and lhe two tlf'llrl)' adJacent bt •d wound~ in l'uch mun tjhUINt'd lht' shots ~ere fart'<J ut t-xtremely \'lo::>l' rungc 1\n unnamt"<l .,ohct> om c1al wui; quokd 1111> ~11ymg, "Look~ like lw .:uvt> the t.•oup du grucc to both of them " . WIUT•;. WHO WO LO fat'e a mand41l<>r> de1tth penalty 1f con '1t.•ll'd under u 5pecutl lllMtut · ("11vcnn.g lhe murder of public of fu-1JI:., uppt.•urcd an cuurt br1cny Wf'dnesduy ll1 ll a rriugnment W!J:. poslpont.-d ont.• w1·c..•k to allow him lime lo get un uttorney Tlw former s upervisor s urrendered to police Monday about 35 111inult•:. uftl•r Mul>cune und Milk were s hot to death. He turned uH•r u 3X t•altbt'r r~vol ver "hach police now slly ha!) been matched with l.lullels recovered from the bodJe!) A TOTAL OF NINE shots were fired -four at the mayor und h ve at Mi lk. police s aid. The Chronicle said police believe both victims were standing at the time they were firl>t shot, and that each c rumbled woWlded lo lhe noor Then. the newspaper said, it 1s behevc..'<J the killer leaned over the v1ct1ms and fired the final two l>hots. CORON ER BOYD ST E PHENS said that in both cases the v1c - 1uns were "alive al the time the head wound~ were 11dmlnastered," hut he would not say if the bead wounds came from the last bullets fired In each ot the murders. Proof that Moscone and Milk were slain 1n a calculated man- ner would be crucial to a prosecution attempt to s how the acts were dehberate and premeditated. After White turned himself in, he was brought quickly to the llall of Justice where police Inspectors questioned him for half an hour Shortly after that, attorney J ames Purcell arrived and was do::.cted wtth While for another 30 minutes Fatal Crash Hearings Oa•••·~ Benjamin Fernandez, u Hcpublican and native of Loti Angeles, announced hJs prc:;adentia l candidacy at a National Press Club new:, t•onfcrence Wednesday in Wush 1n gton , D .C . Fernandez. 53, will vie ror lhc nomination with Rep. rhilip Crane. Illinois. -Snowmobiles Ban Proposed FRESNO <AP) -A proposed ban on snowmobiles was praised and criticized at a second hear- ing on Yosemite National Park's proposed master plan. D . J . We ber of the Sierra S n owmobile Club said that recreation activity is the only one denied use or the park in the mas ter plan. But Thomas Starr said at a session here that national parks were not designed to provide aJl urban uses and snowmobiles are incompatible with most aims of the National Park Service 'See, Avoid' Syst,em Rapped SAN DIEGO (AP>_: Observa- tion and films from a test flight indicate the crew or PSA Flight 182 probably could not have seen a small plane seeonds before lhe two colladcd Sept. 25 over San Diego. killing 144 people . a pilots' group spokes man said. Capt Roger D. Crim. pres1 dt·nt of the Southwest Flight ('re" As!>O t'1at1o n , whi c h rt'J>rt>:.c nls PSA crews. said Wl'dne!>da) that the tests cast doubt on the "see·a nd-avoid" fl ving procedures of the Federal /\ vrnlion Administration. Crim held a news conference during a marathon 12\.'.l-hour ~es~wn on the third day or Na- tio na I Trans portation Safety Roard ht'anngs into the crash. the deadliest air disaster in U.S ;1vial1on history. Ba ii A llo1t·ed LOS ANGELES <A P > -A ha Id in~ computer expert ac · t'll!>l'd or stealing $10.2 milUon from the nation's 10th largest b<tnk and exchan~ang it for Ru~s1an diamonds will be re- leased rrom jail after his family und friends put up their life sav- ings to pay his bail of $200,000. U S . District Judge Matt Hvrne s aid Wednesday he would fn·e Stanley Ma rk Rifkin as soon as he could verify the value or 1o;1sh. st!.curities and real proper· ly om•n-c.I as bail. Rifkin was arrested Nov. 5 an Carb had, Calif .. after allegedly c STATE J ~muggling the diamonds into the United States. !M•hetnr l 'n(•ot•ered SANTA RARBARA CAPI A letter cllludin~ to '"the puintang or the cop1c.'S" has been found in the trunk of a car owned by a museum security office r . Ronald Mousouras, and may link his father, William G. Morez. to the theft of $1 million in paint- ings, police said. The two-page letter was round Monday nig ht s hortly aftt!r Mousouris of Santa Barbara was :.irrested following the theft of three works by Fre nch im- pressionist Claude Monet from the Santa Uarbura Museum or Art. police Cupt. Ge rald Lowry s aid Wednesday Senten~e Extended SAN QUENTIN (AP) -Con victed rapist Daniel CaudilJo. who achieved a level or noton e· ty by figuring in the campaign le oust Chief Justice Rose Bird. has two more prison years lo go. T he state Community Release Board act.c.'<1 on his case Wednes· day. lt gave Caudillo an extra year because members found the crimes for which he was con- Goodness what taste! 8 oz. Medium-Sharp Cheddar Stick. 4 oL Grapine Cheese. 5 oz Smoked Edam Bar. two 2 oz. Cheese Spreads. a package of Lii Oval Wafers. plus Strawberry BonbOna ~ send gifts ... Come ln•nd .. 1ec1 food gttt p•k• fOf Chrtetmaa. Take wtth you Of we 'II ehlp. We'll hand .. aH the det•ll• •nd even encloM • pereon•I greeting. v1cted, burglary, robbery, kid· napping, rape and other sex c rimes, merited the maximum t erm, plus two extra.years for attempting to inflict great bodily injur y. •Der"tJ' SeUle• Sult HOLLY WOOD <A P I Without admitting guilt. the Brown Derby Res taurant has a~rced to pay $3 000 in civil penalties and $1 ,032 in legal costs to settle a suit alleging it represented frozen food as fresh. State orricials. who a lleged the violations occurred in November 1976, said Wedn esd ay th e restaurant bad accepted an in· junction in the stipulated judg· ment barring il from labeling any food product us fresh if it had undergone any preserving o r freezing process. f"eet1 Hike IJrged SACRAMENTO CAPI -The s tale Trans portation Com - mission s u ggests that the gasoline tax and motor vehicle fees could be increased to raise money for highways. T he s uggestio ns. which the commission stressed are not re· commend '•ns. are in a pre- -I i m i nary r c p o rt lo the Legis lature . The commission plans six meetings by Dec. 13 to gel public reaction to the report. Fashion Island .....,_. lffell 64MOJO Mea.-M. '111 ' w . 'Tl ' s-. l J.5 •*** estcli Plaza 179'1 & '""'9,.....,.,. '-' Hl.ff7J M ......... 'Tl t W . 'Tll 6 S.. 'Tl I * • * • MARIMM'S Vlu.AfH DAMA POINT 496-2670 M-..W.'Tlll '-"'' ~.~30.1971 CSUS Cuts 'Must' No Agency Exempt, Brown Says LONO BEACH <AP> -Strusina lhol th era of fast-growing aovem ment •J>f'ndJng bus end d , Gov. Ed· mund 0 . Drown Jr. warned trustees ot the 1tate collogu and unlvenilty ayatc m that nu agency would be ex· empt from cuuln1 Ill bud1et by 10 "fl'• not 'if.' it's not •maybe,' lt'a not •can't something happen,' it Ju.at 'ls.' There's no ar1ument about It. The only queation Is bow can thl$ be accomplished in a thoughtful way." But Chancellor GleM Dumke told '' •t cent Earlier this mont.b, Brown directed the trustees that such cuts would Ne -Al'w........, cause s ubstantial harm to the CSUC 1 lletf mr•ll Mil •l ute de1>urtment heads to ldenlify five or more lowest priority pro· l(r umll In their departm ents that could be cut for a savings of about JO p<'rcent system. Richard Silberman. former banker and hamburger tycoon. h as b een n a m ed California diredor of finance by Gov. Ed- mund Brown J r Silberma n, 49, will replace Roy Bell, 61 . "Anylllln" that has depended on the historic rate or growth will be t'hunged," Brown told trustees or the <:<1llfornla State Univers ities and Colleges on Wednesday. ·' l cannot believe that the 65 per- cent of the voters of this state who passed Proposition 13 were casting their votes against low·coet higher education provided so efricienUy by the California Stale University and Colleges," Dumke s aid just before Brown spoke. ~· ~'\"~ ~o.'Q>~~ •~(OF~•~~~ ·~~~·~·51tn<~ ~ lfes1~· _:· 1 ~ I ~.1 P ,. ;. It q~ VA f~ ~ Cl!'~~~ F. ~ ~ d '-'.erv~J.s ,., wikk tM-f&'~ -tDUd\ "' ~ ._ ____________________ ~ Ii.I ~ ~fjadub, Jud !tad ~ Adi, r(J(t a/;{Jld .,tlud ~ F 41~'! Cl#dt/v.Alf/; t1uv11rnt !)&adv... , l rxmv~ hoca/,d J ~wt&,!'~~ ~ ~ waandPIJ~ fa!J~~ ~ .. , Ir~ mud rfic Uo .. 'YV~fYtazr:t / Ja.!~ae Jtud<:o .Sf:- So. Calil. Oldest Carpet Co. Since 1879 year,end SALE . t: l\ ~ i ~ (/t . :r. ~ 1 ~ 1 t- J,. G\ ~ ,q > This is our last and best sale of the year! Hurry in today for great values in carpeting, vinyl flooring and draperies to spruce up your home for the holidays! NOW Country Traifa: Fabulous color line for a short saxony plush totally installed over heavy carpet cushions. Regular $14.95 Bordeaux: Our favorite 3 ply Saxony with a tr.ue decora- tor color line. Redecorate now Regular S17.95 Our own line of Drapery Fabrics now on sale tor ttte Holiday Season. All at Designer Solarlan by Armstrong with 1he s unny finish that keeps Its shine. Average 9x 12 room for as low as S129!Yd, lotolly lf'l\IOlled "'"' heovy poddm\I lo1olly "'''olktd O•et "'1<Jvy podd•ft9· 30o/o OFF s21& All Armstrong Floor Care Products in Stock! ... We Were 99 Years Old? Next year we will be 100! Watch for our Centen- nial Celebration in 1979! . ·' -~ .... . .,. .. "" .r .., . ... .. • $ tU • H •t-ttdot°t+ =--.... --'·''' C ....... -1fte.M,1..........,..._,l,4~U.-tJJMIMlitW.. ..... ,lll'l\U .. .....,.W, • ,,, ,,. ,~~. I \• ••I I •• . . ' ... ,... ...... . . ...... , ···--·-.. - A C N orange Coast 001tv P1to1 .Editorial Pgge --------------~------------------------------· ~. "1;Mmtitr 30, 1971 R()t)ert N. Weod/Publl~r 8Clrbora KrelblcMEdltort1I Paoe Editor Council TactiC8 Evade the ~Issue Monday. Ne'l'-port 8caeh City Counctl members dtd 1t ogaln -they chanaed lhe rules under which developttr!f have been operaUn& This llme. a miuonty of cou.ncll m mbera decided to ren •Re on Che ocllon lhe)' took f1v months aao releUng the tht.•n brand n~w trame phbinc ordlnance to the d ,,c lo11menlt< thot C4rT} phmnlid rommun1\y wning d · l flDation.~ Al that time rounc1I ml'mber~ grred lhol ·•v\!~lm~" l-Ubsunual devt•lapment had OC('urTed an the Emlrnv. Koll Ct.•nter Newport. Al'ronutronac Ford Cor1~•ruh• Plllta hd Nnrth F ord de\•elopments a nd lhen~fon• lhl' tctm~ of t h <' nt>w lo~ • hould not be applied lo lht•se purn•l · Monda~· mJthl thl'Y ch nged t ht'tr rnlnds Thi& time they voh.>d to ullow tht• dc•\.t>IOf)('rb of tho .. ~e proj~t..s to add only 30 pt•n~cnt """ buUtUn pace of the remainder al· lowe d . After thlll ~pntt> has tx-\"n built. th0tte develop. m('nt ~ win fnll undeor thE' Jurt5d1c t100 ol the ph sang nr d1nun<'t' \\had\ rv~tra,•ti. ne"' hu1ldan)t bnsed on 'mprove. mcnti. u1 thl' ''"' ':. i.' .,t,•m That Jl'lhlO prt•,t•nt!> t"n problems fo1 rst. It is a 4•onl r.1d1l'l1011 •lf .in ar t1on tht• rounc1l look hve months JQO Yt'l tht•r,• .m.• no chan~c~ in circum tances 5ince that f11~l \Oh' "u:. l•tkt•n thut !>hould "orrunt the change on tht• <·rnu1c11'" purl Sl•t·ontlh . at .i>(;.un throws the dec1dtng factor Ofl de - \'Clopnwnt unto the truff1c pha1>1ng ordmann· -a slender reed T\\o \\t>Ck:, earher. rounc1lmcn rh1rnged the rules on that l:m •md ,,;tad tht!v "ouJdn't include construction of :-.trecl 1mpr0\ c rnents a~ 3 mallgation measure, the only devkt• provided in I he ordinance by which new projects can be apprc:wt..'d. So far. counc il members have been unable LO agree on just <>xactly wh nt it is they do mean by mitigation. Tht> r('SuJt or thC'se actions hai, been to produce <t mor:rtor1um. but it's an unjust and unfair wtty to go about at. If the majority of council members want to halt com· merc ial building in Newport Beach. which appears to be the case. they ought to have the courage to enact a moratorium under the t erms prescribed by stale law and t ake the responsibility for whatever consequences. The council majofity's performance so far is making 1l look irresponsible and evasive. Creek Clearance Tunely The image of a rain-swoJl en San Dlego Creek over- nowin~ its banks a nd flooding a sewage plant. sending raw St'wa~e coursing into Newport. Bay, was enough" <more than I to make us s trongly second the Irvi ne Ranc h Water Dis trict's plea to clear the vegetation-choked c han- nel : By all mean~ do it, and quickly. please. Fortunat~ly, that was the identical response of Calif orni~ Fish and Game, which posthaste issued a permit for the work when district General Manager William llurst warned the creek was dangerously dog~cd. If something weren't done . h e warned, there was one chancl' in 30 that bad things would happen. The crnek was meant lo carry the waters of a 100- ~car storm (one of fe rocity that occurs only once in 100 years>. but willow thickets s prouted in the stream bed reduced that capacity to a 30-year storm, according to a district report. Simil ar work to remove the vegetation was halted in 1977 by state and federal agencies that declared the proJe<·t would destroy indigenous habitats. If lht> clogging problem is anywhere near as bad as the dis trict says it is, district offi cials should continue to Impress federal authorities with the severity or the pre· dica ment. They still need permits for complementary dredging of accumul ated sediments to bring the carrying capa<:ity of the San Diego Creek up to par. • Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Dally Piiot. Other view~ expressed on this page are those of their authors and ar11s1s Reade r commen1 Is Invited Address The Daily Pilot. P.O. Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626 Phone (714) 642-4321. Boyd/Tricky By L.M. BOYD The cc.sinos of the Las Veg a s Bilton h ave 60 cameras in their ceilings. Each is swivelled and hidden by a plasUc pod. Each is con. trolled by a remote switch In '"' m onitoring room . The watcher there knows a ll the tricks, all the sleight of hand gimmicks. an the manipula- tions with cards and dice ex· ecukd by the s wift cheaters. 11 ave you ever mixed grenudjne with rum and lime j uice to m ake a Bacardi? Neither have 1. Merely put forth t.he rhetorical query preliminary to report tht1l grenadine is s><>me granate yrup. that's what. Q. ''How much money do the top speechwriters get for putting together. say, a 20- 1 minute talk?" A. Underst and $1,800 Is about lops for something of the sort. Q . "Some bod y f rom England ls EngUsh . From o,~ar Gloo1ny Gus How come Carte r 's voluntary price and wa Re reatruint plan d oes n 't In c lud e government •stencies thal raise prices by raising fees? G J . France, French. But what do you call somebod y from Monaco? .. A. Mon<:g,asque. Q "Anybody ever make a for tune b e tting o n the horses?" A. Quite a many . Ever hear of George Smith'! Or maybe you remember him hy his aliaB, Pittsburgh Ph I. Claim is he won $1.7 million playing the ponies. Now go tell your dad what I've t.old you and sec if he'll lend you a stake. The people who die of bee stings outnumber lhe people who die of shark bites by JO lo one. l( you want t.o swat a n y. strike just a little behind it. Flies lake ort backwards. Question arises as t.o why the derringer pis tol is flO s pelled when the Inventor of same spelled hls name Henry Deringer Jr. with only one "r'' in Deringer. lrnltat.ors put s imilar pialols on lhe market irnmedlately. and one of these to&Md In the ex· tra "r ," on the theory, I pre· 11ume that no copy editol'll would be buylnfC the guns, anyhow. Don't believe this kind of trlckery could cet throuah the courts these d ays, but lt was com · monplace years aao. When the coffee cartel Jacked up its prices a few ~ears ago, it may not have been so amart alter all. Sales of tea per capita have Jumped ~ percent in the laat decade. Your blood completes a circuit OC your body every 23 H conds. Nicholas von Hoffman _ Inflation Spells Profit to Some Jn public tlfc. notbln8 la ever 11 almple aa It seems. so lhat lhc 1ppa"'1\t oaUon1l unanimity a1atnat lnnation beara a isccond look I• evff)'body realty lbat much 11aln1t It or 1ro 1SOme people Just. a ol n g through the mot lO n b because th•• mttn media and tb l.l ~lety 's prt a\I 1e rl-urc:s. ~ p c n d o much cnt!riY Inveighing against It., Aller months of false i1tarts. oncl' th4l president Indicated he m laht be »t•rious about cutting the growth rates In the money, that he m.i&ht really be flirting ~·lth an end to inflation, there was a decided grumpiness in certain quartt'ris. fN O'nff:lt moments in our history. public figures have been avowed and :iincere infiationlsts. tlerbert Hoover was. to name one , but while this Isn't the year to advocate inflatJon, some i>eo· Mailbox pla like George Meany do com· blne a pro forma opposltlon to rialn1 pr1ce level11 with a refusal to back the 11overnment policies most Uktily to natten the growth curves. ~ven the elect.orate is more a mbigUOWI on the subjett than we 11re led lo believe. Those ~oclal toa leaf r eade rs , th~ public opinion pollsters. tell us that "inflation Is the number one 1sisue in lbis country." but It m ay al30 be a very tepid number one . If people were truly 3nd deeply concerned, would two·thirds or the nation's voters have stayed away from lhe Poll· lnic places last Election Day"! No. whlle people are doubtless worried. many millions of us ob· vlously aren't worried enough to lake even the minimal 8lep of stumbling around the corner to pull a lever in n polling place. OUR monochromatic mass media chants that Inflation hur1s us all. but a lot or us know dam well it hurts some of us more than othe rs . Inflation hurts creditors and helps d ebtors. The general knowledge of this self· evident fact explains much or th~ force behind the conUnulns real estate boom. You don't have to be a double· dome master of business •d· ministration with a Coke·boUle eye glass to know that one or the good thing~ in life Ii; to bonow IOO ·cent dollars on a house mortgage and pay the loan bi.ck with 33·cenl dollars. The nlee people m Washington who print ull thnt money have given you l WO·th1rdS Of your hOUlSC and garden for free. The tens of millions who own real estate In the expectaUon tha t inflation will be kind lo them are theoretically counter- ba I a nced by other millions. especially older people who live on fixed Incomes. But. writ.es Christopher Jenks. professor of sociology al Harvard. "Social St>curity is now adjusted almost every year to keep pace with in· nation." I EVEN THOUGH private pensions have not done equally well. the per·capita income or individuals 65 and over rose 76 pc-recnt between 1970 and 1976 while the per-capita income or Individual~ aged 14 to 64 rose OO · ly s I percent. Since tho Consumer Price Index went up 47 percent dunng these years, Individuals 14 to &t ended up wlt.h ubout the same purc h asing power in 1976 u in 1970, whHe Individuals 85 and over increased their purchasing powe r by a fifth. 'ft'or more. see Jenks' "Why Worry About lnfla . tlon?" in the Sept .. Oct. issue of Working Papers.> In ~um , a whole big bunch o· people have either advanced the ir standard or l iving or st~yed about equal durtng th· worst or the Inflationary years. A lot or them may be worrif'd that . if inflation continues. Uw future won't work out as well tts the past, and, assuredly. one o( the great objections to inflation is the extra element of uncer tainty it brings t.o already uncer tain human existence. Thu~. even people who profit are un· nerved by il. BUT HOW are the self-saml' people going to react as it dawn:. on them that they may be the ones who pay the price for end mg inflation or at least laking 1t off the backs of lenders . tht· class that has paid the highest price for the lowering dollar? In California, we now have the variable-interest-rate mortgage, m actuality a mortgage with rn· te rest payments which nuctuaw according to the ebb and now or inflation. In a lot of states that kind of mortgage would bump into the us ury laws, Lh t• moralistic name ror price con· trol over money, and already we're hearing from lenders that. unless these laws are repealed. they' re not g oing t o mah mortgages. The tussle which will ensue uni ·ss national interest rateli dive downward -will bt: a di~ g uise d fight between defla tionists and lnflationtsls . Thl' ~ame kind of fight 1s likely to break out in other sector~ or tht• economy a s various groups and individuals learn 1t ain't necessanly so that while infla- tion is like the rain in that it falls on all of us. 1t is also like the rain in that it Uood s some gardens while it makes others bloom. Another View of 'W or.king Mom' Scene To the Editor: Are we expected lo s ym. pathize with your staff member . Anne Cooper. because she has round "it's work being a mom"? Was she under the Impression that she gave birth t.o a lillle doll who would sit placidly and need no attention unless mother had the time to spare from her other career ? Perhaps. ;r s he had taken time lo read the .. trivia" that her daughter brings home from school, she would have not- ed the scheduled conference day holidays and plaMed ahead. She wonders why teachers can't manage to talk to parents without shutting down schools. as In her school days. Because or the unavailability or time that parents have to give to their children's school these days. the teachers have been forced to lry scheduling the working parent at a convenient time. What is con venie nt to the working parent? Sometime after s or course. Should the teacher have to put in a full day or school a nd conference on Into the evening' A conference day has been created so that the teacher may contact as many parents as possible within a short period of time, giving the working parent more flexibility In choosing their lime for conCerence. INSTEAD OF the Pilot publishing yet another article on the poor overtaxed working mother, why don't you look into how many first and second graders wear keys around their necks to school and go home to empty houses to wait Ult their parent.a come home? Why don't you take a survey and find how many 9, 10 and l l -year-olds are expected to go home and take care o( their sibli1tg 6-und-7· year·olds? I have s poken to teachers in tears alter these con· ferencet at the Indifference or parents who reel that their children are "mature enough" to b and.le life until they wander home from work. <Of course. the nelchbor ls aJwava avaUable to "look taonthem/'> Isn't it time we quit lame nting the tedious, repetitive. un· challenctnc upect.s of parent- hood , and start emphaaizing the story o( having tA) be retponalble for someone betides ourHlves? SHlRLtY SHEPPARD County Airport m ay wish to know more about this airplane a nd how it may affect our uniquely attractive environment. The 8 ·727-200 tri·Jet airplane is the noisiest jet airplane in mass production, exceeded only by the 8·747 and the defunct CV ·880. Even with power cut- back. the B·727 noise is 100 db. EPNL. EPNDH al 3 5 nauticetl miles from takeoff. The 8 -737. by contrast. is 94db !ha lf a~ noisy 1 and lhc DC-9 is 97 db. VOV CAN measur~ noise yourself without instruments by simply talking in a conversa- t1ona I voice to a friend at a dis- tance of 10 feet while a jet airplane is flying overhead. tr the friend can not heetr you, the noise is too loud. The B-727-200 weighs 191.000 lbs , flies 600 miles per hour, a nd carries l34-l89 passengers . The ones proposed for Orange Coun· ty h ave been modified ror a snap·in extended range fuel tank a llowing them to Oy nonstop to New York. Washington . and Hawaii. The air intake for the center engine on the 727 is close to the body of the airpla ne . During landing It must be run al hjgh power to prevent it from dying and the airplane from crashing. JOHN SWINOA~K B1dli-b1 Wa#tt• To the Editor: The California Taxpayers' As· soeintion reports that the real Impact of Proposition 13 Is two years away. In the first fis<'.tl year or 1978-79, Calilomia's 58 counties and 41 6 cities will manage fairly well due to the dlstributt~ o( $4 billion from the state surplus. It \s said that reserves will not be available In two years. 'l'he state will have no more than $2.6 billion in available funds lo offset a projected shortfall of $9 btlllon in local revenues . · THE SOLUTION to this dllem· ma Ls not in r1l1tng taxes. Wa:ste and unnecessary spending s hould be cul. Efficiency In fovernment .should be a goal of cderal and atateofficlals. At an e xample, I cite the Newport.Men tJnlrled School District. It is given a cert.In amount of money for each fiacal year. It the school district does not spend all the fund11 It has To the Editor: been al&ott.ed. then It receives ClUaena COMemed about the tell funds the next year rtacal propo11I to fiy 8 ·721·200 Jet year. So, at the end ot the year~ alrplanet Ln and out ot Oraq~ewport·Mesa Unified School , District frantically spends the money they have left over. It is t his kind or purely wasteful spending that must stop. SUSAN M. HALEY To the Editor : With saddened heart I am writing lo thl.! local newspaper about the demise or yet another '"neighborhood" ~chool . V1ctona Elementary tn Costa Mesa. due to the ··declirung enrollment" of the Newporl·Mesa Unified School District What saddens me is the ract that the three schools lbe Victoria students will be sent to are lower in scholastic standing tha n Victoria . The school board 1s using the basis that the good s tudents <from Victoria 1 will h e l p raise the s c ho la stic standing of the other three s c hools, whe n tn effect the opposite will prove true. The students from Victoria will have lost tht•ir incenll vl' to improve themselve~ due to the loss of th · ~pec1al academic atmosphere of V1ctoriu &hool. AS A T/\XP/\YER. J <im saddened to learn that my son c·etn no lonJter wulk to school. but must be driven every day due to t.he location of the three schools available in the a ren for hi m lo attend. from my house. now m y s1x-year·old son "~'° walk to school In less than rive · m inut es with no danger ot crossing one single busy street. As a college·cducated adult. I um saddened to learn that a prove d method of t cachin$! tsmall classes wilt\ dedlcutcd personnel a nd parent Involvement in the learning 1>rocc11111 will be dropped by the WOySide in the favor Of StlV111g lhe t ax dollar no be s pent eventually on busing and special cltu1ses to enable our student.-; to pas s th e m a nd 3tory examlnaUoM to graduate from high school >. What happens In 10 years or less when these klds who had 8UCh nn excellent start can't pa ss req uir e d ruminations? Who ta to be blamed? l\s a pessimist. I reallie that the school bourd will not chanK~ Its collcetlvc mind ond re.open the school. even though II makes mon• sen.qt' to me to close u school low ln scholastic standing a nd send those student!! to 11 .school with hl11hc r scholASlic abllllles <such as Victoria Elementary 1 and r1tse the ' scholastic standing or all the s tudents. Perhaps when It's time to e lect ne w Sc h oo l Board m e mbers. we the voteni should b e m o r e a w a r e o f th ~ candidates' feelings tow:.irds the education our ch ildrt>n will rece1 v~ an the Newporl·Mes a Unified School District. MRS. PAT METCALI'' Keep ...,,,les 0. To the Editor: I was pleased to see that at leas t one or our loca l news media took Supervisor Riley to task for his proud pronounce- ment that he was going to use his ·'obvious popularity to help Republican candidates In other offices m future elections ." Since Rile y holds a non· partis an office at the highest level of local governme nt, I find it deplorable that he Is even con- te mplatmg using this office for promoting partisan politic8 and let's face it, that 's exactly wha l would be happening. Tom Riley was an absolul~ unknown until Governor Reagan appoint· cd him as Supervisor Ca spers' r eplacement. Any popularity Riley e nJoys now is due in large measure to the exposure he has recelved as a county supervisor a nd obviously any influence he m ay have on partisan politics is due to his non-partisan e lected position In county government. Any supervlM>r who even at· tempts to turn the office or coun· ty supervisor into a parti11an football shoWd spend some lime refleclinR on the fact that a supe rvisor must, without bias and prejudice, rairly represent all of hJa constituents regardless of their political arftliatlon. Is Tom Riley so naive as to think that his commltmt'nl to the Rcpubllran Party to us sls t Republican <'3ndidates. will al· low hlm to perform his awesome task -a task that 1s dltrlcult even without Uw complication of pre11sures from your political party? SHIRLF.V L. GRINOLE F o rmer ChairmJrn, Orancc County PlonnJng Commission • 1.A?tt1tr1 from r~oders are uwtcomt The ngltt to conde11u klltt-' to til 3JJ0Ce or thminale hbfl 111 re1crwd. Ltu~ra of 300 word.! or lea,, wW tM Qi""1! prtfernct. AU ktttU"""' in· cludt tlgnalurt Ofld moal•no addrtu bW nomH mn11 ~ WUMeld on r•· qllllf aJ f141fcl~I rtolOft "oppot'fnl Poet'l/ wdl rwt ~ publl#lfd. Saddlebaek EDI T I O N Afternoon N.Y. toeks VOL. 71 . NO J~. 4 SEC TIONS. '8 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1978 TE N CENTS ect Arrested i ement·e • 1cer lain I SDG&.E Task Solon-utility Conflict Eyed By PIDUP ROSMARIN Ol IM 0.11, Pilot Sl•fl State Sen. Dennis Carpenter·~ involvement :.s a paid consult anl in a San Diego Gas & Elec- tric Company proposal to import energy from Mexico is described as a "potential con flict of in- terest" in a report by auditors for the state Public Utilities Commission. The auditors recommend that the PUC disallow $541.000 spent by the company for consulting services from a rate increase the ulility 1s seeking. Most or the sum -$.'153,000 was paid to La Jolla consultant William Black. wh o in turn hired the Newport Beach Republican senator to arranj?e meetinl!l> with Mexican officials lo dis- cuss possibilities for a billion- d o 11 a r power pl ant near Ensenada in Baja California, Carpenter was paid $44,313 in fees and $2.200 in expenses over a 16·month period. Bl ack, Carpenter and t wo Mexican associates of Black planned to form a company called Inter-American Energy Alliance Cl EA> that would act as middleman in the sale of Mex· ican power to the San Diego utility. The PUC auditors wrote m the ir report: "The staff has several concerns with respe<:t to the activity of Rlack and as- sociates as representatives of San Diego Gas & Electric and the roles planned for the I EA. "A prime concern is a poten· tial conflict of interest. "If there were greater pro- spective benefits under the IEA arrangement for Black and as- sociates. what incentive was there for them to exert efforts in other arrangements?"' A San Diego Gas vice presi- dent for public relations. Dennis Richter. said the IEA proposal was turned down by company management and directors Richter said Black's consult· ing contract expired in April and the company has no plans for further contact with him. Carpenter said Wednesday that he saw no confli ct of in· terest in his work for Black. and said he wished the I EA had sue· ceeded in establishing itself. "I would have loved to do it," Carpenter said. The PUC auditors said the money spent by San Diego Gas s h o uld b e c h a r ge d t o stockholders or the company rather tha n its c ustome r s because or questionable plan- ning and execution of Black's ef- forts to obtain fi nancing for the project. "San Diego Gas." said the re· port. "was lax in control over expenditures, and in not provid· ing a vehicle to recover expen- ditures made on behalf of. or for the benefit o(. lEA." Coast Weather Some night and morning low cloudiness and a little cooler on FTiday. Lows tonight 47 to 52. Highs F ri· day in rn.id 60s. ·it is unclear," the auditors added, "why San Diego Gas launched an around the world excursion to seek project financ- ing. after Mexican officials stat· ed thev were not vet oreoared to consider any specific projecL " Trips were made to Tokyo. London. Paris, Munich a nd other places. and charged to San Diego Gas. Carpenter was not on the trips The auditors further com- plained that . as initially pro- posed. IEA held the pivotal posi- tion in the energy plan. as a buyer and seller or Mexican energy. "There was the possibility of <See UTILITY, Page A2) Cockatoo Ransomed 04141' Pilot Plloto llY LH P••M POLICE GATHER TO BEGIN SEARCH FOR KILLER OF FELLOW LAWMAN San Clemente SWAT Team Shown After Slaying of Officer Richard Steed Theft· Susp~cts Cooped A grim. bushed voice over the telephone i.nlormed a sleepy Irvine couple early Wednesday mom1ng, "We have your bird. Ir you wa.nt to see him again alive, you'd better come up with $2,000." Al l a.m. came the phone call. The bird, they ·teamed to· their astonishment, was snatched for ransom. The Colony homes couple said they didn't have1$2.000 but would try to scrape it up. The Hesses stalled for time. took the caller's telephone number and said they'd call back. T hey called police. So began a flighty crime that involved a police stakeout by two detectives and four officers and a clan· destine swap of a cockatoo for cash al a darkened Arco gas • station. Police got their man-and their bird-with a minimum of violence. INVESTIGATOR PAUL J~UP devised a trap to nab the birdmen. THE BIRDNAPPING BEGAN late Tuesday night. He checked the department's "Oash roll" used as front money in undercover investigations. and asked the Hesses to try and talk the crimina ls down to a lower price. After considerable haggling. the Hesses ta lked them down to $600. With theit own $100, and with the police money. they had almost that much. Donald and Lydia Hess of 3541 Carmel Ave. beard the sound of their electric garage door opener and peeped cautiously outside to find their cockatoo "Cookie " missing from his perch. Alarmed, they waited. The exchange took place at an Arco station. at the cor- (See COCKATOO'S HOME, Page A2> Nixon Vows To Speak Out For Beliefs OXFORD, England CAP> Richard M . Nixon, braving a gauntlet of egg-tossing pro- testers and speaking over chants of "Creep! Creep!•• and "Nixon is dead!··, told British students today he will "speak up for what I believe ... as long as I Live." The former president also told the Oxford University audience that with his approval the FBI broke up a Palestinian guerrilla "network" in the United States through wiretaps and break-ins during his administration. which A M-mina&e program, .. Nlxon at Oxford," will be presen&ed at 7: 31 &oldPt Oii Chunel ZS. ended four years ago with his resignation in the midst or the Watergate scandal. A phalanx or security men had to escort Nixon through an anary crowd of 500 student dem- o ns trators, many of them Americans and some flinging eggs, when he arrived al the Ox· ford Union debating society hall to deliver the address. The noisy melee was reported when be left., and an American Sec rel Service man, trying to protect Nixon, began swinging wildly with his fists and shouting al demonstrators pummeling the Nixon car. Some bystanders were knocked sprawling on thelr hands and knees as the Nixon m otorcade bored i ts way tbrough the crowds of dem- onstrators and shoppers ln Ox- fo rd's Corn Market shopping street. Elgbty police officers linked arms iQ ll futile attempt to keep the protesters from poundJnl their fllll on Nlxon'• black limousine. PoUce carted away elght demonatratoMJ. Earlier, wheo Nixon made his (See NIXON, Pa1e A%) . ' 8730,000 In Bills Fake Money Found; 2 Countians Held Two Orange County printers we re arraigned Wednesday in Los Angeles on cha r ges of manufacturing and possessing bogus currency after U.S. Secret Service investigators confiscat· ed $730,000 in phony money Tuesday. Charged and released on his own recognizance was Guy Sparrow, 46, of Anaheim. owner of OCR Busin ess Forms. Compton. Charged and r eleased on $5,000 bond was Georl'e Minka. 53, of Mission Viejo. Assist a n t Special Age nt Eugene Dagg s aid Secr et Service investigators had been watching the two Orange Coun· tians for weeks before arresting them late Tuesday in separate cars near lhe business forms plant. The money, Dagg said, was found ~ong with printing plates a nd negatives in Sparrow's car. Daaa called the quality of the phony $20, $50 and $100 bills ••fair." He said they were print· ed o n a n o ffset p r i nting machine. The agent said his organiza. tion is cont1nujng an investiga- tion of the case but that it is belie ved no phony bills were passed. Both suspects are scheduled for preliminary hear ing before a U.S. Magistrate in Los Angeles Dec. 19. 'lslnnd' Has Many Gifts Today's Daily Pilot guides readers to ''girt shopping from an island -Fashion Island." The 20-page magazine details gift ideas and holiday fashions available at Fashion Is la nd. Newport Beach. Daily Pilot Suspends Its Saddlehack Edition The Dally Pilot ts suspending public.lion of lt.s Sad· dleback edition effective Dec. 1. Home delivery will not be available after today. In appreciation ror his or ber services: your Daily Pilot carrier will receive a special check for an amou.nt equivalent to his or her December route profit. The Dally Piiot will continue publication of it.a other six Oran1e County edlllona. Sadclleback Valley realdent.s wllh 9dvertllt.nc. circulation or news lnqulriea 1hould direct them to the newspaper's main plant ln Costa Mesa, aaGWeatBaySt.,telephoneM2-432J. Welte Sues , School Board For $269,000 Damages totaling nearly $269.000 are being demanded fr om the Saddleback Valley Unified School District by Superintendent Ri chard Welle in a n Or ange County Superior Court lawsuit which charges the defendants with breach of con· tract. Welte claims in his action that the board acted unfairly and ii· legally last April when it com- pelled him to take a 44-day vaca· tion while t he value or his services to the district was being assessed. He dema nds an addit ional $500.000 in da m ages from trustees Mary Phillips, George Henry and Carole Neustady who with school d istrict employee James Mitchell. are 1dentJ1te<i as being particul arly responsi· ble for actions taken against him . Welte claims in the action that the board's decision to send him on vacation and additionally de· ny him $8,976 in accrued vaca- tion pay has held him up lo public ridicule. Welte. whose four year COO· tract expires next J une, claims that the four individual defen- dants have conspired agajnst him wtth a view to h aving personnel director Mitchell ap- pointed as hiB successor. R e a lleges tha t district trustees have repeatedly denied him freedon to run school d1s· tric t operations despite the terms of his contract and that r epe aled atte mpts have been made to force him to resign. The lndlvidu1I defendants declined to comment until they are n rved wlth coples ol lbe l a weu ll. Welte declined to e laborate on the le1al action. ,, Answered 'Assist' Dispatch By ANNE COOPER Ol I .. l»llY Pl .. I ~1•11 A San Clemente policeman was shot to death Wednesday night while answering a call for a ma n who said he had slashed his wrists Richard Steed. 30. was shot m the chest in an alley behind the Sa n C lemente Sun /Pos t news paper plant. 1542 N. El Camino Real , shortly before 7 p.m Less than seven hours later. police arrested James Richard Hoffer. 23. of 1608 Calle la~ Bolas. on susp1c1on of murdering Steed Hoffer was caught a s he walked along El Camino ReaJ . a block south or th£• murder scene He wa~ transported to UC I rvin e Medic<A I Center in Or ange. where Police Chief Gary Brown said he wa~ treated for what appeared to-be a self mmcted knife wound on his arm Events. which re sulted tn Steed"s murder and the manhunt for his killer. began at 6.45 p.m . whe n a man reportedly came to the d oor o f t he S un /P ost news paper offi ces. requesting an ambulance be<!ause he sajd he'd cut his wrist. Police were called. An am- bulance and a fi re engine were - dispatched. Officer Steed. who reportedly heard the police dis· patch over the radio 1n his patrol car s aid he would respond Fire Capt. Jerry Galati said he pulled tu s fire en~ine into tht< news paper plant par king lot . when the police dispatcher in· formed him the police olf1cer (Steed l had not been a ble to loc::a te the man with the slashed wrist. Galati s aid he saw Steed'!> patrol car parked in an alley behind the newspaper plant. He said he lefl the fi re engine and walked over lo Calk to the police offi cer but round him lying bes ide his patrol car. bleeding and unconscious. Fireman Thomas Mccorkell . who was manning the city am- bulance Wlth engineer Gary Lov· rien. said he saw a man running north down the alley. away from the patrol car. The thr ee firemen rushed Steed to San Clemente General Hos pital. where a t eam of medical specialists fought to s ave his life. Even before the officer was pronounced dead at 7 · 56 p.m . law enforcement officers were massing at the murder scene to search for tu~ killer Wipmg tears from their eye~ a nd hunching thei r s houlders ag:.1 nst t heir grief. Steed"!. fellow pol icemen set about a m e thodica l bl ock ·by-b loc k sear ch. Three Sun/Post em ployees. who had been working late at the newspaper plant. described the man as about 25. with long brown hair and a beard. They said he'd had a bloody towel wrapped around one arm. 'see OFFICER, Page A2) St.AIM IN AL&..EY P•trohMn Rldt•rd Steed •. • ,,t2 DAILY PILOT • SB Suspect Wounded By hot A flt.'t'll'I: 1 mt•tl rnhht•q "l.l' p~rt WR' WOUh~Pd h y an n,1ht•1111 hquor '1111 l ,.1,•rll hall• I 111•:.ct1.1> 111.:ht ~11111 11,, n 1tun111t'll 111 llh fl J ' I. I II .c l 111 II f I l I 1\11•tl 11 ..ii l 't•l\lt•r h\ Im. .t llt•~t-.1 .11•t•o11111l11•,· lll't'11rd111~ h • tK•ltn• l'ht•\ I •'1'111 h'IJ t th• .,. 111m1lt•1l 111..in I ·'" t 1 lln• " I ; .. , h11111 J:I II( t )I ,lfl.it• \\ J' ,\flll k It\ fhl I I' hull1•l!'1 ·" tw 1.111 from lht l111ti.H -.1111 t' l11 llll' ".1111111( 't'lll"' iol\ t'J I 1;11r h.am ... ft.!> '>l:tHI tu Ill' Ill ,,1t i..f.1t•ton ('OJHhtJon todu1t-111 I tll' Jual wt·twn uf lht. nll'lht'al t't'llll!r 111' Jlll'J.:l'd ... ,., umpli.·1• !'>h•H Qu1nl1•r11 . .'ti uf t •r.anJ(t' ... •1' tudt:t'1I 111 01 Ullall' Cuunl \ J 111 Polu•t.• 11a1d Qu1ntt>ro wt1:1 ur rt•,lt•d h~ J tJJ 't'lllt: 01 :Jl1••1• 1.c1h1•t•111.in 'hurth .1Ctc r dump 10.: h1!'1 woun1h'd n1mpun1on an lht• mt•d1t•JI Cl'ntt>I 'b fHtrk1n~ lot 1'011<·1· b<.'IH'V l' Go rham an1I l/11rnlt•111 \'110th111t•1I tlw ir t.i.lt:nl!> to rub tlw liquor ~lor 1• al l.tn<'Oln 1\vl'nuc and <:uan Slrl'1•l ul ~hout 11 05 p lfl Tut"bdU) The.> 11lil nut it•Y ho.,. m11t•h wa:. tukl·n 1n llw roblwn ur . tor that muller. 1f the rnbli~r:. lllll' 1.:e1tded in tukin" uny mon1•y from the ~tore But Police reported Gorham was struck by three bullets r1red by thf' hquor store derk a!. he Jllegl'dly ran lot he waiting cur 5Survivors Of Jo1iestoun Arrive in L4 LOS ANGl::LES (API -t-'tvt• s urvivors of the Pcoplci. Tcmpltt mus:. swcadc an Guyana wcrl' embract'd by family membu:-. am 1d tears of JOY and cries or 'Yippee!" as they urrived here today "( fct.!1 prclly good. I'm happy t o be in the U .S .A , " i.a1d llyacanlh Thrash, 7G. who~ wa~ m et at the aarporl by two nieces :ind a nt'phew. The San Fran<'1sco n1:1trve wa:. pus hed in a whel'lcha1r by nll'CC Mary Watkins 1Jf Los Angclei.. with whom she w1ll l>e ~tay111g ~hl· would nol talk to re port~rs. exce pt lo !>UY s he hud "been sick thl' whole 11 ml·" sht· was in Guyanu. sturting in June. HJ77 Ali.o arriving early today from :-.:t•w York Cat y were Haymotlt.I Godshalk. 112. of Lo:. Angclt.•s . Alvuray Sallcrwh1lc. 61, greeted by 20 h1m1l v memhers. Carol Youn~. 78, met by thrf'e rel· at1ves. and Marian Campbell, 61 , ~reetL'tl by no fomil.v. liut two :.0<·1al workers from the t,1,i, Ang1·l t·s C'ounty Social Sl•r v1cci. Dcµarlm1tnl Two othl'r survivors. Grover Oav1:., W. and Mucll-lrne Urooks, 7~. flew lo San frmw1sco. They wt.•rl· met by a lari~e group of rt.•1>0rtt'rs but. like the s urvivors arriving 1n LO!> Angt•le!>. they made no com· mcnt Koth were accompanit•d on lht.• n1i;ht by a socwl worker from New York Social Services. Davi:. was ffil'l by h1:-. son, Grover Jr . und was whisked off b y s he riff's d t·put1e:.. M1 i.s lirooks wa:. met by a local i.oc1JI worker who would not ~ay where tht•y wen: goin~ In Los Angeles. the a rea wa:. ropt•d orr and guarded hy airport security orriet•rs and city poht·c· 'J'ht• I~ other pa:.:.enger:. on the· commercial flig ht didn't know they had flown with Jonestown s11rv1 vorh Stabbing Probed Pl i!:DMONT CAP I Police arc investigating the stubbing deoth of a 51 yeur-old Piedmont real estate agent, whose body was found half·clothed in her liv- ing room. The deud woman was idenl1f1ed as Carol Wilson Barlow. 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'lri:...~"":.~ ,...ftt• ~ ••.,.rl 1-..m•ftf\ "tr.In .... , .., :;:;~::,.:..:.··--· ,,....., .. '"''"'• .. '"'""" Cl•\' .. ,, ....... el (9'\I• JNt• '-1111f'll'll• \V .. \t I l•lt•ll'I .. C•Hl•t U t0 =::~&~ :!:!J.:.!' f'ftMUti' "Mlot..,f O.Uy f'llM ll•tf ...... SHERIFF'S DEPUTY GETS BLOODHOUND ON TRAIL ·snoopy· PreperH to Track Slaying Su1pect f'rOM Page A J OFFICER SLAIN ••• San Clcmentt• police were all· :.isled by the Orunge County Sheriff'i. dcputil's. who brought two bloodhound:. tu truck lht· s uspect. The north ('nd of the l'lly. where thl' 11ew~papcr phml 11> s andwidw(j bet ween b1:ach~1dc cottages and apurtmc·nts and the 1nd11str11:1I distnd, was mapj.)t!d .for search learn!) A Jlunt1nl{ton llt::H'h pohcl' lwlicopll•r hung ahov<• the c1ly. l>hin1ng .i powNful light on the ground. wh<·n· Sau Clt·mt'ntc'-. '>IWCially tr aint'<l a11<i outfitted t act 1cal operations ofriccrs com bed block artcr block or the ~u rroundmg neighborhood Hoffer wa:. SJ)(llt<·d at 2 a m hy ~heriff s dl·put1t:'>. u 5 hl· walked alon~ El Camino Real, nt.•:i r the Calle Lago intNsectaon. JU!>l Ont' bloc k north of the nc'W!>JJaµcr pl ant Ill-WJ:-. urrt-:.l 1•d without inculent Chief Brown :.aid Hoffe r meets lht> description or the man who vis ited the news paper offices earlie r and had the sam e kind of wound. Ha!> apartment is located d1 reclly behind the newspaper plunt. Brown s aid. lloffor was to be transferred to Orange County Jail from the medical center, following treat· mcnt for the knlfo wound. lfo fft•r's ball was set a t $500. ()()()' lloffrr did not h<i ve a gun. when he was arres ted. A po li ce department spokesman said a team of officers was searching today for the gun u.sed in the s hooting No description of the gun was made public. Steed's g un and his glasses were found on the ground a short distance from where he fell 1n the alky. a few feet from his 1>atrol car llw1dreds Mourn San Francisco Says Goodbye to Mayor SAN FRANCISCO CAP) -San Jo'ranciscans today celehr<tlcd a r<>qui e m high Mass for slain Mayor Georgl· R. Moscone, led in pr<iyers by his rour children. a s hundreds of colleagues in public service mourned his tfoath .. Mos cone':-. rlowcr drapc•d casket sat bene1:1th a huge art work or sh1mmermg stuinle~s s teel rod s at S t M1:1ry '!> Cathedral a~ \rov 1-;dmund G Brown Jr . some 35 m ayors and do7.ens or <.:ahforniu legislator~ attended. The church was filled to 1t~ 2 .200 capac1t:-. with manv stand· mg in the aisle.!>. Many more w a 1 t· h e d t h e s e r v i c e o n televis ion as a ll the city 's maJor stations broadcast the cer emony live Archbishop John Quinn of the a r chdiocese of San ft'rancisco presided al the ser vice. Msgr. Peter Armstrong, a long-time family friend, gave the clt;ht· minute homily. Security was light. Brown s howed up with an unprccedent ed s ix bodyguards and the cathedral was checked ror ex· ,.. plosives prior to the service. Armed police were stationed at the Holy Cross Mausoleum in nearby Colma. where Moscone will beentombedlatertoday. Former supervisor Dan White. 1n po li ce c u stod y si n ce Moscone and Supervisor Harvey Miik were shot dead Monday. aJ. legedly has confessed to the <'ri m e s. the San Fra ncisco Chronicle reported today. The bodies of Moscone and Milk had lam in state for six hours Wedne!>day be neath the ornate dome of Caty Hall , where the two were killed. More th an 15,000 persons riled by. many weeping. The Italian family has been in San franc1sco for decades. and Mosc·onc wus born . raised . educated and married In the city. Extra buses were put on line to help San 1'..,ranciscans attend the fune ral M ass. but the mausoleum services were billed as private. Milk's body will be cremated Friday nighl and his ashes seal· tered over San fo'rancisco Bay. f'rOtRP~AJ COCKATOO'S HOME. • • ner of Culver Drive a nd . Walnut Avenue. at 6 :30 a.m. Wednesday, with the Hesses timorously holding the money and the police hiding behind available cover. JESSUP SAID TWO men drovt> up in a car , got out and, carrying a cardboard box, approached the llesses. Donald Hess de manded to see the bird, since nary a peep came from the box. One s uspect cnref\111y lifted the lid a fraction. The bird was okay. The exchange was m ade. Police moved In. The ~U8pcct.A, James Wahl. 19, of Santa Ana, and Marshall Northcutt, 20, of 3022 Colle1e Drive, Costa Mesa. were url'c t.00 nnd booked on charges of burglary, ~xlor­ Uon Md conspiracy. TWO COSTA ME A women. Llnda Bradley and Donna Harold. both 19, who police alle1e were confederates, liter were arrested at their home, al 1088 Glen Circle. Eacb was hold In lieu or Sl0,000 bail. Cookie the coek1too, Jeuup aald, waa, detplt.e t.M or· deal unrutned. thou~ the blrd 11 capable or speech, It ls unlikely to t.eatlry al trtaJ. since Ill vocabulary la limited Lo "Hello." • • rr .. PoerA• NIXON •.. w1y Into "?'he hull . he aot a friendly welcome from the wult lng audle nce or •bout 800 atu· denll. who 1pplauded loud and Ions. "Thank you for the very warm welcome of those inside -and those oul81de for making me reel ver~ much al home." he aa1d to laul(htcr rrom the audience "You hear thl'se 1><·011le out side." he later told hii; llstcneri. "ll'li not Jllcasanl. I'm used to it .. But he said ha s political career hu ended. "Politically. I plan to play no ro le in the party. a:. a candidate, (or a C8Jldidatc anything " Nevertheless. he i.aid. "I feel as long as I have any breath in me I will speak up for what I believe . . I'm going lo con· tinue lo as long as I lave •• To do otherwise would not be possible for him. Nixon said. ··1 have enough to sit ... and contemplate m y na vel on the Pacific ... I( I did that I would be dead mentally In a year and physically in two." N ixon 's comments o n the break-up of a Palestinian group came during a question-and· answer period when he was asked whether the office of the presidency had a corrupting et feet on the individual holding the job. "There arc no easy calls that a presid e nt makes." he responded. going on to give the Palestinian Incident as an exam· pie . "The Al Falah gro up. through the much-m aligned FBI. we learned had e s tablis h ed a network in the United States." Nixon said. "That group was ap- prehended, it was broken up Ir. the UnJled States. through what was called wiretapping and break-in by the FBI." He said the group h ad been planning a terrorist attack like the massacre of lsraeh a thJetei. at the 1972 Munich Olympics. "Now o n the one side thoi.e who are civil libertarians -and I understa11d how they reel will say that nothing will Justify wiretapping ... My question is this : s hould Al Fat uh not have been broke n up and 1t wouldn't have been broken up without that kind of s urrep titious entry and should we have had that kind of an incident someplace in the United States "Or wasn't it worthwhile un- de r those circumstances where we had a for eign -controlled group or radicals who were threatening to kill Ame ricans in a certain area. shouldn't the presid ent and h is attorney general. and ha s director of the FBI. weren't they just1(1cd in ap· proving the extra means that were necessary to break 1t up?" Protesters' cries of "No more Nixon'·· filtered th rou~h thl" windows as tbe ex-president spoke. Some shouted obscenities a nd r oared in unison s uch s logans as "Who Kille d Al· lende?" a reference to M<trx 1st President Salvador Allende of Chile. who died in a 1973 right· wing COIAP Demonstrators included 43 Rhodes and Mars hall scholars . a nd m o r (' l ha n I 0 0 other Amer icans studying at Oxford SALE Help So11ghf 2 Countialls Fight Busing By KATHY CLANCY Of tM Oany l'I ... I~ Creation of an Orange County version of Busstop was an- nounc ed today by two Orange Coast resident.II who hope to ha lt a proPoSaJ that would expand the Los Angeles d esegregation plan to local schools Doris Alle n . a Huntington Beach Union High School Dis· trict trustee. and Doris Enderle of Huntington Beach said at a mornini press conference that so rar they are the m embers or Orange County Busstop. But they hope to collecl addi· tional members at a Dec 7 or· ganua lional m eetin g 1n Westminster. And eventually. Busstop mem- bers may circulate a statewide petition for the 1980 ballot that would a mend the constitution to halt forced busing of students fo~ school integration. the f'f'Otfl Pa~ A I UTILITY •.• the m assuming o the r m aJOr runctions in financing and con struction of the proJect ." the auditors sajd, The audit.ors reported that. ··rr the projed became a reality. S&o Diego Gas would have been t he weakest member of the troika <of the utilily. lEA and the Mexican government>. despite the fact that San Diego Gas would bear the entire finan- cial burden. ·'Thal was not tn the interests or e ither customers s ha reholders or San Diego Gas." In other words. there was a lot or money to be made by I EA and ab principals if the deal had been approved. according to the auditors rep(>rt. Richter s aid the a udit reoort was erroneous in assuming the c iq >e nses paid Ala ck were calculated in the com pany's rate incr ease request But Tom Lew. who super vised t he PUC auditors report. dai.· agreed. He read from testimony or Ron Watkins. San Diego Gas manager or the Mexican prOJect. during hearings before the PUC in the current rate case Watkjns was asked how much money the utility had spent so far in its quest for the power plan t. "Just over a milhon dollars." Watkins replied. "(go ing back lol late 1976 ... Watkins added. "1 believe 1• was estimated that a total of $5 million would be s pent in assist 1ng the Mexican government an se curing rin a n c 1n ~ a nd establishin~ a sate for a oower plan t. .. San Diego Gas. Richter said. is estimating the cost or the proJ ect at that same figure -$5 million -over the ne xt five years. in justifying the r ule an crease. women snid "Our ctuldren don't belong to the Nlate ... Mrs Enderle said. "They oolong to their parentb. We want lo have choice6 : whtmi we hvt> and why aod whore our youngsteri go to school " Mrs Allen <&nd Mr~ Enderlt• wer<' reacting to a metropolitan pla n ror int r egat 1on t h<i l trani.cends school district boun daraei. and county lines and could involve bui.ang in all but three Orange County school d1~ tracts . The metropolttan plan wa:. the maJor recommendation from 11 panel or experts appointed by Los Angele' Superior Court .Judge P<tul Egly to study ~ Angeles desegregation. Mr i.. Ender l e . who 1:-. chairman or the California Pro- F am tly Coa lataon. compa red rorced busing to "people plan nang" resulting an the kind or control!<.~ society advanced by the Rev Jim Jon<'i. 111 Cuvana She !>cud sh(' u:-.ed lhl' People·, Temple disaster <t'-an example o( ··us urping powers "Forced busmg is a way or taking away a n ind1vidual':- rights." sh<:: contended Mn. Allen. an unsuccessful stale assembly candida te last Nov. 7. said "the schools are to educate. not ror planning a Uto· pian society .. Mrs Allen said creation of Busstop is not a r acist reaction. ·'It ha s to do with taking youngste rs completely away from their homes," she -;aid. "It has to do wtth local control. "Our conce r n s are not necessanly with the integration aspects but that we are going to be moving youn~sters around on a c he ss bo~rd however '\Omt:onl' 'il'l'" a s a cure to society's ilb ·· Mrs t:naerlt• contmuea "we be lie'le tha t s chooti. a n · meunl to educate and not to lead thl' way for p<.'Oplt· pla nners to r~ jiCtonal 1ze ftOvcr nmcnt control by appointed Judges and other burea ucrats ·· The wo me n said details of the metropolilun plan w11l be pre sented al the Dec 7 public met!t mg It will be held at 7·30 p m at the Westmins ter Community Cenkr Businessman Held in Theft SAN ornco CAP I A Sun Bernardino buh•nessma n wa:. arrested on his yacht and jailed for investigation or grand lhefl. police said Mtllon Ray Loyd was ordered hl'id in lieu of $100.00-0 bail Detectavei. s aid the accusation involved five forklift trucks sold through Loyd'~ equipment com pany · A shotgun ~al> found a rter the arrest an the trunk of Loyd'-. a utomobilt> near hai; yacht. in the Mis s ion Buy manna. poti(•e said SAVE This CRJ Christmas ' White's .MrZ: Showcase 369 E. 17th St. Costa Mna 1ne111 10 Mane C.•4tnder a KIOll trom Ae1on11 642-1657 M-...flrt. I 0.6 iiiiiil s.t. 10.I .. I I .....--;:....:... -,.. ~ Medium 0.n.ity lllHldenttal m Hlth o.MHr RetklenUal • Oott COUftH CJ ,., .. Ale .. ' WINS APPROVAL M 1p 'hov..., 592 ut·re La~una N1J.!ut•I lit'\ l'lopnwnt µroJet'l that won a1>provul of cmulty ~U!)t•rv1. or ... TUt"•· du) It 1s 1mrtwd1.1lt>I\ north\W~t of 0Jnu Point ht•adluncts. in &Jr1•,i of roa st kno\\ n as Salt Creek The plan caUs for a 300-room hoh'l in Rt·<·rcw tmnal Tourist Commerc1al urea. a ~olC ('Ourst'. 3.480 homes with densi- t' in polka dot area running up to 18 dwell- '"~ units Pt'r acre. Seaside Resort Backed Niguel Project Now Faces Wastal Panel By KATHY CLANCY Ol tio. 0.lly Piiot Developers of a propost·d 592-acre seaside r e~o rt r esid enti a l community 1n Laguna Niguel face one more major step before putting the carpenters to work wmninio: Coastal C'.omm1ss1on approvals. Or ange Count) supervisors stamped their t'ndorsemerll Wednesday on the Avco Com munity Developers Inc. proposul for a 3.685-home community on prime coastal land between Dana Point and Laguna Beach Before doing so. however, s upervisors added stipulations that at least 350 of the homes be priced in the SO·call~d afforda· ble range for m 1ddle-ancome families. In add1tion. supervisors asked that Avco ofricials develop a circulation system within the commuru\y to reduce the use of ~utos and hold down traffic con- g e H 1 on on Paci fic Coast llighw3y. They alsv ordered drafting of alternate plans for maint<iining open space set aside <AS part of the development. County pl anners said once new zoin~ and other county <.ip- prov a Is are completed early nt•xt year. Avco would present the plan to the Coasta l Com- mission It was the then-newly formed Low-income Bousitag Supervisors OK Voluntary Approach A voluntary approach. d<- signed to encourage but not re quire developers to build more homes for low and moderat1: in come families. has bet>n en· dorsed b y Orange County s upervisors Quake Jolts Idaho Area Mr\ LAD CITY. Idaho (AP l -An e<1rthquakc meas uring 4. 7 on the Richtt'r Seale rallied beds a nd s hook windows in sout h eastern Idaho. but there were no rep<>rts of major damage Or Walter Arabasz, re search seismologist at the Univers ity of Up.th 's Seis mograph Station in Salt Lake City. said lhe quake struck late Wednes- d av in the n ortht•rn Pocatello Valier 15 mile'> southwest or here. "ll 1s a remote farm vn lley. with isolatt.•d ranches ond farm-;,.. he s aid. The area 1s onl\ a few miles from where· anothf'r s h ock. m ore than 10() times stron~t·r. damaged area farmhouses March 8. 1975. Supervisors authorized the drafting of a program that would offer incent ives to de· velo pers in unincorporated areas who are willing to pro\'ide less·expensive homes. Such incentives might include s peeding t he processing of lower.cost housing projects and a llowing builders to construct more homes than normal zoning would permit. "l don't think it is going to -w ork." s aid S upe rviso r Laurence Schm1l. who cast the lone vote again~l creating such a program. The ideu of requiring de- velopers to build homes for low and middle income families was proposed early t his year by Supervisor Thomas Riley. But a 50-member study group, including representatives from the county. building Industry and low-cost housing advocates, recommended that a voluntary approach be followed instead. County officials s a id they would be developing the compo· nents of the new incentive pro- gram between now and June and it would be included in a new hous ing policy whi ch is to become part o f the count y general plan In the meantime. they said, supe rvisors can continue seek· ing voluntary commitm ents from developers to set aside a certain number of new units in the lower·cost price ranges. A Collection of Tramps Coastul Commission that ob- tained a court order in 1972 halt- ing grading for a now-defunct dcvelopmenl on the Laguna Niguel shoreline. The land has been left idle and scarred since then while Avco officials developed ne w pro· posa ls. "Its history and the planning, l th ink it is safe to say. make 1t. no strangPr to this board." Avco Vice President Jim Smith told Supervisors Wednesday. But after more than 100 meet- ings with local homeowner grou ps and county agencies, Smith said. "We think we have a plan here that is a good one." Smith's opinion was shared gener ally by Paul Kramer of the Laguna Niguel Community As- sociation. "Considering everything we think Avco has come up with about the best design they could for the project." Kramer said. .. J would say we are almost ap- provi n~ ... Anthony Grasso of the. South LaJ,!una Civic Association had a different view. ar,~tiing that the. pla n should not be approved un· til a traffic study of Pacific Coast Highway is complete<! for the entire region. "The plan as it now sits is in· complete." he argued. Grasso contended the Avco de- velopment alone would add from 6.000 to 7,200 daily trips to the highway, not counting added traffic from othe r future de- velopment. "Coast Highway will be an in· credible traffic jam." he said. J ess i ca D ean of th e Capi s trano Bay League of Women Voters called the pro. posal "an excelle n t com- promise" but opposed' approving pla ns for one area adjoining Da na Point until new planning for that commun ity is com- pleted. In addition to the 3,695 homes. the Avco complex would include a two to three-story 300-room hotel on a coastal bluff south of Niguel Beach Park overlooking Dana Point headlands. It also would offer an 18-hole public golf course on both sides of Coast H1~hway perhaps with two holes reached via tunnel on the coal!taJ side or the hi~hway. Avco officials also plan scenic overlooks , bicyc l e and pedes tria n trai ls, tennis· racketbaU facility, conference center and combination residen· tiiil ·comm ercial addition t o Monarch Bay Plaza. .... WI,.,.... It's not t.he Charlie Chaplin family reun- ion, nor is it that everyone ln Bell· Ingham, Wash., looked like the Little Tramp back in the thirties. The Chaplin lookalike contest . however. was an ob- vious s uccess as attested to ln this photo from the Dece mber isaue of Popular Photography maaaimc. \ f I Clemente Appoints Offici&I Ste wa rt f'"rame. c urrenlly oarks and r~reation director for the city of Exeter. near Fresno. has been named San Clemente leisure services coordinator. Fume. 31, s ucceeds Arlie Waterman. who retired Nov. l. after 21 years wtlh the city. The ne w leisure services coordinator will start tb work on Dec ll. said Cit y Manager Gerald Weeks. He will be paid an annual salary of $18,216. Frame will be the first to fill the c ity's new pos ition of leisure services coordlnator. Waterman was San Cl emente's parks and recreation director. The new post was created a fter the City Council voted in August to hire a private contrac- tor to maintain city parks . Previously. city workers had k e pt up the park s. under Waterman's supervision. City Manager Weeks said Frame will be responsible for parks maintenance and recrea- tion supervision and for grant applications to benefit the de- partment. Frame. a bachelor. previously wo rked for the Los Angeles Unified School District and the United Presbyterian Church. said Weeks. He has a bachelor 's degree in political science and a m ~ster's degree in public ad- m 1n1strat10 n . bot h fro m California St ate University at Chico. Murder Plot Trial Begins MlNEHEAD. England <AP> -A former model has testified he had a homosexual affair for a year with Jeremy T horpe. a former Liberal Party leader cha r ged with cons piring to murder him to stop him from telling about the alleged liaison. Thorpe denies the allegations of conspiracy and homosex- uality. Norman Scott. 38. We<lnesday told magistrates who will decide if there is enough evidence to hold Thorpe and three other de· fe ndants for trial that he was seduced by Thorpe at Thorpe's mother's home in Oxted. Surrey, in November. 1961. Scott t estified he h ad ex- perienced homosexual relations before he met Thorpe in 1960 while he worked at fl sta ble. .............. '•UJH!'CC ea.,,., Nata lia Solzhenitsyn. wife o f the exil ed Russi a n a uth or , ha s urged Americans to pressure the Soviet Union to allow in- ternational inspections of prison camps . Saxon Says UCI Campus To Stay Open SACRAMENTO CA P l -l s the University of CaJifomia going to close one of its schools or cam· puses? Absolutely not. says UC President David Saxon. News stories had m entioned Irvi ne. Riverside. Sant a Cruz and the Davi s Sch ool of Medicine as possible candidates for closure. But Saxon issued a statement Wednesday saying, "On t he con· t rary. students are being ad· mitted for the fall of 1979 to every school and to every cam- pus as the a dmission process goes forward." He said some people seem to think a UC budget c ut is a foregone conclusion. But he added that Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. had said effective programs would get fi rst funding priority. "I a m convinced that no ac- tivity funded by the state merits s upport more tban the univers1· t y." Saxon said. Brown is asking all state agen- cies to outline cuts that would total 10 percent of their budgets. said Brown s pokes man Steve Dusch a . Mexico's Quake: (J()() Hurt MEXICO CITY (AP) -As many as ~people were treated fOr shock or injuries after six earthquakes rocked Mexico City and southern Mexico. Reports or t1ome deaths could not be con· Ii rm ed. Local newspapers and raclio stations reported between four and nine deaths occurred as a result of Wednesday's quakes. Red Cross officials denied lhe reports . "No deaths were caused by the earthquake," s aid Capt. Junn Ascencio Loredo, head of the Red Cr oss national am- bulance service. Red Cross officials s aid 107 people were injure<!, most or them slightly, and another 500 were treated for s hock, and most damage to buildings was slight. Francisco Danz Dukret. head o r the n a tio n al amateur e mergency radio service. said a check by his 'brgan ization showed there were no deaths. Offici'ls at the morgue in Mex- ico City and a spokesman tor the federal judiciary police also said no deaths had been reported. The first shock Wednesday af. temoon lasted 70 seconds and caused panic among Mexico City's 13 million people. Many were in s k ysc r apers o r in elevators on their way to lunch when it struck shortly before 2 p. m . Thousands of Ame rican tourists in Mexico City fled from their hotels. m any with their bags. Five more tremors were felt in the capital before 6 p.m. Readings on the first and most severe shock ranged from 6.5 to 7.9 on the Richter scale. Mex· ican seismologists said it was probably one of the strongest series or quakes in the country's history. The National Geophysical Institute said the epicenter or the quake was located beneath the Pacific, about 10 miles off Puerto Angel, on the Oaxaca coast . Police in Puerto Angel and Pue rto Escondido said waves came 000 feet inland. But the police in Acapulco, Mexico's biggest Pacific coas t resort. said there were no t remors there. A Oaxaca police spokesman said the shocks were heaviest m the area of Jupila Oaxaca and continued until 10 p.m. "I saw everything shaking and there was a tidal wave in the swimming pool," said Vivian Garner, 38, of Hackens ack, N.J . Available For Immediate Delivery Classic Wall Unit An attractive wall unit in the warm Informality of Rural Oak. consisting of 3-60" Pilasters, 2-7•" shelves and 2~2" shetves speclaly priced at s449 • PROFESSIONAL INTEnlOR DESIGNERS Open Mon., Thun. I Fri. Eves. 1 - Af OAa y PtU>T r · Just ,~·.· .. ~oa ting ~· w111a ·~ To•~~\ Marplala Slowing Down the Cops oua AUA.NT POW aLISS: It appean todl.1 that eveo more 1.nd.1¥JUUes Ill.re •bout to be he•ped upoa OW' ln t~pld Calltomla tuahway Patrol aa It b1tU• a1awt 1reat odcll to k•p the ptaee and lb 55-mUe·pe1'·bou.r •peed Umlt oo ranae Count.)''• "-w•Y• and eltf'Wbe.A. Even u lhinca •t&nd now. CHP omcen who patrol our frcewia~ ani work.lni under~ handlc1pt AuthoriU~• won't lt't them ro.m aboUt In paatel colored pMtrol can like ~ city poll~ 1uy1 do ao Ou~y 11neak up behind motoring mlSc~antA The h.11hw11y paLrol hll:. to go out ther-e ~n black .nd ,1 , , ,, . I ·r f •' I \ ~ .,, . • ,/' ' I ;. I ,.. I'" 1 I ' ,.,, ;11: • • ,., .... ' \ Bums Killed Pinto Victims P.LKltART. Ind. CAPl -Autopsies Jerformed on two young si11- tcr11 killed last Auauat In a flery l"ord Pinto crash confirmed lhat thc-y dll-d of burnt, • proteeutor ntd today. Elkhart County Prosecutor Michael Coteotlno, who announced the rt'11"lt1. '"Id lhe autopaltt had been ordered "to eliminate 11ny ques- t 10 n about th" ca u ae ot death " or Osceola, lnd., and thelrcdUlin, A grund Jury h•d charted Donna Ulrich, 18, of Roanoke, JU: •·ord with reckless homicide in were killed when. their Pinto ex· th.-arcidt'nt. on rrounda lhe Ptn· 1>1oded 1n names after bein1 w was ~ale. 11truck from the rear In northern Indiana. COSENTINO SA.ID reaulta ol An Elkhart county grand jury tho au~les by Dr Jamd ~ indicted Ford Motor Co. on three of lndlanoPOlhl •nd Dr. Robert counuofreckles11hom1cide. Stt!lo of Chlca10. botb noted The car In which the young forensic p11tholo1ibUI, were com· women died was among l.S pl.,te Wednead11y. Th4: boche15, million Pinto and Bobcat sedans exhumed on Tuesd11y, were re-that Ford had agreed in June to burl~d Wednesday nlgbl, he recall because of government. uddt•d complamts about the fuel tank. Conl:tenuno had sajd earlier 1t . WU "ttlmost impossible" to FORD ATTORNEYS claim rtt:rform autopsies on the tttn· the indictment "fails to charge agen~ because of the condition of that Ford's conduct was the th~lr bodld prostmate cause of death" and CosentJno. said today the body have filed motions to dismiss the or a third victim. buried in II· crimin~c~arges. hnois. was not exhumed because The indictment. a<:cused Ford •· 1f these two confirmed the of ~ecckessly des1gmng the Pin· original findings, it would not be ~ in such a way that It would necessary" name and burn upon rear end · impact." The girls' Pinto ex- TH E VICTIMS, Judy Ulrich. ploded aft.er being struck by a 18. and her sister. Lynn, 16, both van traveling at 50 mph. NATION I WORLD ,.,........,... El&fJerg Con~ted Daniel Ellsberg. who released the Pentagon Papers to the press in 1971. was found guilty Wednesday of third· degree criminal trespass for demonstrations at the Rocky Flats. Colo., nuclear weapons station . After the verdict, Ellsberg, second from left in front row, linked arms with supporters and sang a protest song in the courthouse at Golden. Firestone Accepts 500 Trade I •'i •• . \ ~, .. , .. • . :• I • I\ .. ---- WASHINGTON (AP> -The f'irestone Tire & Rubber Co. and the government have come to terms on several unresolved is· sues that led lo confusion and controversy in the recall of 10 million Firestone 500 s teel- belted radial tires. In a maJor con cession, Firestone agreed In a final docu- ment signed Wednesday to trade new model 721 radials even for worn 500s -those with Lread lhal is less than 2·32nds or an loch. THE COMPANY HAD told its dealers not to accept these tires because lo many states their use is prohibited by law. The company claimed many worn tires were being turned in by persons who found them m dumps or junk yards; and the agreement calls for a trade·in on worn 500s If they are mounted on a vehicle. Firestone and the National Highway Traffic Safety Ad· ministration. the government agency overseeing the recall, said they hoped the agreement would end the problems that have existed since the recall was announced Oct. 20. penalty." Boaz said. Firestone faces a maximum fine or $800,000 in the 1976 case. The negotiations that led lo We dnesday's agreement had b een continuing between lh1.1 company and traffic s afety ad- ministration since the October "agreement in principle" wai. announced. . . ~ :---·~.;·-r-:·~·.·-:~ . ., New Potice Jntncei>tor Mod.el WUh High Gos Md~ white units that can be spotted from about four miles away. Meanwhile. the local cops are nabbing speeders by hiding behind bushes and billboards and pointing radar guns at the hol-rodders. thus nailing offenders with science. Puzzle Anstmr~ Times Closes Door -.. . .. ROBERT BOAZ, traffic safety administration public affairs director, said no civil penaJtJes are involved in the current re- call. But he added that the question of c1v1l penalties in a 1976 recall of 500s has .. been held in abeyance" pcndmg the outcome of .1.ti.~ .. ag reement s igned Wednesday. ··· ·- STATE 'HELPS" l lVM.4TE ESCAPE NASIMLLE, Tenn. (AP> -A double·amputee inmate walkt:d away from the minimum seeun· ty section or the Tennessee Swte Penitentiary. using artificial legs rurrushed by the slate. THE HAPLESS HJGHWAV Patrol officers have been denied radar. The CHP still uses lhe 1920s method of eas· Ing In behind the bad guy on lhe Santa Ana Freeway and clocking his speedometer excesses. LONDON <AP> -The Times of London published the answers to today's crossword puzzle today before s uspending publication because of chaotic labor relations. ··we left open the question oC a c1v1I penalty" in the 1976 case, Boaz said. adding that there 1s no connec:tioo between the two cases. Billy .Jack Shelby, 37, sei-ving a 10-year sentence for second· degree murder, left the pnson s omellme Tuesday evening, author1lles said. Britain's most famous newspaper saJd today's edition might be the This met.bod sometimes requir~ ./.patrol vehicles or considerable power and speed if lbe CMP officer 1s to over- take souped-up coupes or foreign sporty cars that don't shift into high gear unlll lhey are flirting with 80 miles per hour. Now the word comes out oC Sacramento that the CHP may race new handicaps ln this arena. They may no longer be able to buy those big, powerful Police Interceptor :,edans that have kept Lhe freeway peace. THE VILLAIN, according to news dispatches, is new federal demands that auto makers s how better rull·flect gas mileage figures. This means building cars with smaller engines and tinier bodies. Thus it ls that the California Highway Patrol ls going to start testing smaller patrol cars. You can be certain these little cars wlll work out jual fine during the rush hours on Orange County's freeway. Nobody's going anywhere then anyway. It's the other times, when traffic slackens and 1>peeders start playing Willie Weaver out there that the CHP has to fret. You have to hope that the federal demand for im· proved gas mileage doesn't reduce our C1lHornitt Highway Patrol to peanut power. List.en, some of the tiny Poopalong Fours that they're building now to replace real cars are so small there Isn't even anyplace on them ror the CHP to mount red lights. The fire extlnguiaher and pohce radio wlll have to be bolt- ed someplace on the outside. CAN'T YOU JUST hear some Highway Pittrolman now as he shouts over a loudspeaker at the speeding motorist, "Halt, or I'll wind up my rubberband ~md com~ catch you ..... Next thing you know we'll be putting lhe CHP on horseback. That might be a little tough on the street cleanup crews but it'll do wonders for guoline mileage. last for two or three months. The Times Newspapers Ltd. also is suspending publication of the 193-year-old Times' stablemate, the Sunday Times, and three Times weekly supple· ments devoted to books, educa- ti~n and higher education. THE SHUTDOWN will leave Britain with seven national dally newspapers and six national Sunday papers. But lhe House of Co mmon~ sch edul e d an emergency debate on the shut· down or the ,,mes papers. "The death, or even lengthy :.ih;nce or any of these papers would dim in ish all or the freedoms which we so readily take for granted." a Conservative member , Patrick Cormack, told Commons. Lord Thomson, the president or the publishing company, said there was "absolutely no inten· lion of permanent closure." But the company said it would not resume publication until solid agreements were reached with Its 4 ,250 workers on u package of proposals. CHIEF AMONG THE pro- posal1, as far as the publishers are concerned, are new pro· cedures for handling disputes to prevent wtldcat strikes that the Snow Due in Michigan Minnesota Meraay May Dip to Mimul 25 Tem•eratma .......... All>u'QUI' Junorollo Allant11 e..111mor• 8tY!'aru llol\~ Oo\tOn 81111010 (ht<•OO (ln<IMOll (levelaftd COlv"'Dv• Otlrt Wiii O.nvet OttMollltt ~troll Ovtu!ll f•trtMllh ........ -..... Ho\ltlOll .... '-'I\ J•Ot'vlllt 1(.,, •• (lly LH V•O•• Llnlt lloc~ lM """"" Ml°"'I Mltwov•" Mlill .. M P, ....... 111. Ml 1..o ~r< 40 ,, )I JO )1 ,. " 0 ,, ., j) 7\ I) •• 41 " 43 ll ... •O l/ 31 •• :'tlJ oJ lt •l J/ '" ,. .. " 44 ,, 44 ,. :rt n H ·II ,. ,, 40 n ., 6) ., ~ 04 .. " t) .. n n ~ :II )4 ., .. ,,. II 14 ~ ,, .. l/ 01 •• ., I) ~,... ... ..., h ........ . MOflday-f -~ II Y\l'I 00 ...,. ...... ¥0Vt -lh '; )()to"' c.it llNlior. I '"' --cw. .... u. °'"-"° '9tur• -~,.. " ""' t90 ""' -.c ..... -u .. ,,. lrt ij t ... 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JS >• n • .:re u n 4) ,)4 It .11 " ,. ... 44 •l "' 40 to 0 )2 •l ., 17 C•t•llllO 6J •1 l!I CAfolre t r Jll l,IO AtfowMM » IO l.Aftt ... ,.. .. 0 Nt wllOf'l INdl .. 4t OnletlO 6• 40 P•tm ~1119' " )t Son .. ,Nrellno .. 11 SanJO~ •l 0 Sollle AIM 10 •S &ontt crur 11 •) $ef\UI M•rle 70 40 IJ.8. 811111 .,,, An orctlC •Ir rnou llroutllt co141 t•"'IMr•tlll'et to -afn\ Of Hor111 O•kolo •"Cl Mlt1nnol•, wllllt f\Of111ern Mklllttn llto<eCJ '-...... -· Tiie rnorcwy •et t•llllKl.o to fie to 70 to U ettntt ·-19'0 In IHrf' Of Ml-'61• .... HOA" o.tlOC• IOOey . It wet llOt a c.otO Ill Mklol.-n. !WI e Weflllfl9 "' 1111 .. 4 11\<llet Of -•tt If\ tffKI ,., eotltrll llllPtr Ml<lll_.11 • ,,,.. • ..., _.,.., ·~ etf , ... Atlolltlt C:Otlt tll•••• rtln •n4' elf Ill~ Ir-""" r fttletld ....,._.,. lllf1H1911 -'Mii ,.._Yl•allle, Ille Coroll11u •114 Ot•'•" to Ill• Al ... "'•""'· In tho Wftl, WldelY •C.ltffff tdlfl Or \now .,,_,. O<(Vrr"d If\ Ill• Pee Ill< Hort"w••t, north"'" C•lllOfnl• Ottd -non11 -<tfllr•• '"'""'°""ttln reQlon A few \f\OW llvrtl•• dOlteO nortllttllttn WyomtllQ, \OUln,.tttMn Nortll 01k0to •nd norll•trn South 00011 Ca Hlorrda. A pedoel of \unny ,~ •o O•er Sollllltrn CetttoM•• nll\ •ncHICI •lfn " re1111n to tlOUdlN n . toq encl •1191111• coottr l•,,_,atun\, •-<l•llY In Co.tUet M< llOM. T"" HallOMI WH01•1t S.,..,I(. l)f'e• dlClld • MQll In .... rnlCl·.O• In -lown ~ A•I.., •Mr• Ille "lff'••• .. WldnHCI••· flMW~. "lfM Wiii IM Ill IN m lO-.ft olOftO ... <ootl, llHI 10 lft '"· 19"0 ~•II~. Jn ""' tOt In ,.,_,.,,. ., ... eM .. ._ u 10 /) '" .... oewrh . at.a.r W'ftldler CIHrl~ .,.._ ,_ FrlO.y 1.10111 varl•IM• wtnd• n10111 •nO mornl~ "'°""'" HIOflo Frlcl<ly 111 IN mld.O. C-0.\IOI 1-rehWH wflt '°"" O•lwttf\ 4' eM M . lf\t•nd lem. ,,.,tlur•• wW '°"" •t-• Miid .. Tiie watllf 1.,,_rat~ •Ill M to. .... ..... n.. THUltlOAY $o<-IOW )tTpM •II Se'011411119ft •• )0 P.m. 4 J ""IOAY f lrtt IOW 1 • •·"' I e Finl "lfll 10.01 • m t I ~--t;llll"'· .,, k<Ondllltfl ll!•lP m. 4.t '"'" rlM't 40•·"', Ml) t UP·"' _,._ •. ,..,..,,Mttt U11.1n •rl ···" MllM""'911 9Mc.ll: W-lfWte to ,_ '"' w1111 ........ 1. ~Ill~"" 9ffd.H ....... ~ W--·· lll<" .... wttll _. , ...... c.MlllOll~ l•lr. , .. ., ... • company says have cost $7.5 million lo sales and advertising revenue this year. The Times has a daily clrcuJa· lion of 292,000 and reportedly loses about $2 million a year FIRES'roNE RAS been asked for its comments on the 1976 case as the firs t step In a negotiation process that prob- ably will lead to "some civil ALoan "I don't know why he left," said Jim Dickman, director or the prLSOn's minimum ~ecunty section. "He could get around well on his artificial legs. He didn't use crutches or canes." 1 For &ery Purpose Ask us about the Simplifier .~ • -Simple interest rates, calculated daily -Payment terms tailored to your needs and qualifications -No prepayment penalty -the faster you pay us back, the less you pay. TH E BANK OF CALIFORNIA NV"'1)0rt ~och Offk4.!. 1401 Dove ~lrC!ttt. N~ Be.ch 92663. (714) IJ33.3SI I .. ,. ... -.e-......... -·o•c. ... .CALIFORNIA · Paper Clai tllB .. •'· .. .. .. White ·Admits . To Slayings SAN FRAN .l~CO (APl 1''ormer SupervillOf Dan White ha• : confessed lo lhl' murdt.in <•f Mayor Ceorae MoJJcone un<I • Superv1 r llar-vt'y Mtlk, nct'onhns to• ..-.~port published Loday .. The San 1'~anf1 co Chrorurle l'Clporkd tb1t poll~ u&d White :. ~».vo ln\'csti.J<utorN "u com pl k ~••temenl." but the n~wsp1&por •. j.IUVl' no dch11l u( \he purl)ortt'd ronfM!ilon and did not .ay wh('n it \\ ~lit llHlth.• • Pohcc Chlt.'f Charlt'' G..im wid hom1t·1dt• Inspector Frank ••• F lion rdlu.l'd \ll l'tunment on lhe nt•ws papcr rt!port, .-nd Whitt»:. ·~ .. tioriwv t•uuld nut bt• rt• u·ht't.I for rommcol ~: •• THE C1lRO ICLt: i\L"O l'\'IKldt"d that p()lm: bell v~ the aun mJn kllll'<J both lflt'I\ b} 'hlK)llOl/ tht•m Clllm)y twl('f' in the back or lh e head 8.S the~ lay \\OUnded on the 0 0011> o/ lhe1r Cll)' ball offl('t!t Unnamt-d ourcl' clu~c h~ th .. 1n\esllgatton were quoted a11 :...iymg thut f)()IAtlE'r burn.<; and the t"'o nNarly ad.Jaccnl hc61d "'ound::. in t•uch mnn ~ho"'fld thl' :-.hOt.'> were f1n-d lilt e:IClremely close runge An wu1<1rnl-d 1K1hn· orfit•1al "'.c. quott•d /1 <,aymg, "Looks like ht' gu' t> lht> rnup dt" ~rut't.' to both of th••m · WIDTE, Wll() WOULD fut·t' J mandatory dei:tlb penalty tf con· v1dcd undl•r u !>i>t't'tal :.t.atuLc covering the murder of publJc or f1c1als, appear~ in court bm·ny Wednt'sda~ His arraignm ent was po.stponed ooe week to ullow hun time to get an attorney Th<" forin1•t !<uiwrv11>or .surnmderl'd to pohce Monday about 35 m 1n ult':-. ufh'r Mo.,cont· and Milk were !thot lo death. He turned ovt•r a ~ t•uhbcr revolver 1Nh1t·h police now say ha.s been matched "'1th bullet:-. n •covert'd from the bodies A TOTAL OF' NINE i.ho~ \H'rt' fm~d four at the mayor und five Hl Milk. police said The Chronicle said police beheve both victi"ms were s tanding .it the time they were fir.st .shot. and that t:ach crumbled wounded to the floor. ~ Then. the newspaper !ta1d . 1t 1s believed the killer leaned over the victims and fired the fmal two shots. CORONER BOYD STEPHENS said that in both cases the vie· lams were "alive at Lhe tame the head wounds were admlnislered," but he would not s ay if the head wounds came from the last bullets fired tn each of the murders. Proof that Moscone and Milk were slain in a calculated man ne r would be crucial lo a prosecut10n attempt to show the acts \\ere dclJberate and premt.'datated After Whale turned himself an, he was brought quickly to the H111l of Jusllce where police ins1>ectors questioned him for half an huur Shortly aflt-r that, attornev .James Purcell arnved and was t'lt>M'l(•d w1lh While for anotht.'r JO minutes F a t al C ras h H e arings 'Thunldlly, November 30, 1978 DAii. y PILOT AS CSUS Cuts 'Must' No Agency Exempt, Brown Sa~ LONG BEACH CAP> -Stressing "It's not 'lf.' It's not 'maybe: lt'1 that the era or rast-growlng govern· not ·can't something happen,' It Juat. ment spend.Ing has ended, Gov. Ed· ·1s.' There's no argument about It. mund G. Brown Jr. warned trustees The only question is bow can thla be of the state college a nd university accomplished in a thoughUul way." ay11tem that no agency would be ex· empt from c utting its budget by 10 "But Chancellor Glenn Dumke told .a., pet~~~~(u. this month. Brown directed ~~~s~~~antl1aith!~~ ~uli:e CS~~,,..... MaRowi,.,._ all s tate department heads to identify system. Richard Silberman, five or more lowest pr iority pro· former banker and grams In their department~ t hat "f cannot believe that the 6S per-hamburger t ycoon . could be cut for a savings of about 10 cent of the voters of this state who h as been n amed percent. passed Proposition 13 were casting California director of .. Anything that has depended on their votes against tow· cost higher r· the historic rate of growth will be education provided so efficiently by mance by Gov • Ed changed," Brown told trustees or the the California State University and mu nd Brown'J r . California State Universities and Colleges," Dumke s aid just before Silberman. 49. will o .,,.,._ Colleges on Wednesday. Brown spoke. replace Roy Bell, 61 . __;:_;__::...:..:....:..__~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;:__~~~~~~~~~--~~~~--=~~~~ n e nJ urn in F ernandei. a Htaµublican and native or Los Angeles, announced his presidential candidacy at a Nat1onaJ Press Club news <·onfercnce Wednesd ay in Wa s hin gto n , D .C . I-' •rnandez. 53, will vie for the nomination with Rep. Philip Crane, Ulinois. Snowmobiles Ban Proposed fo'RESNO CAP> -A proposed ban on snowmobiles was pr aised und criticized at a second hear· ing o n Yosemite National Park's proposed master plan. D .J . Webe r of the Sie rra S n owmobile Club s aid that recreation activity is the only one denied Use or the park in the mas ter plan. But Thom as Starr s aid at a session here that nationaJ parks were not des igned to provide aJI urba n uses and snow mobiles are mcom patible with most aims of the National Park Service .... ~ff~ ,. Jud /tad ~ Ad!, f(J/£ a6md ..llM ~ Jlw~ Cl/Yvtl/v .A/n-11tw1101k !)each ... C<J>'W~ M;r;aad J ~ wU(e, fl~~ ~~wa ~PIJ~ faJ;td<nlJ, 111l/l.d~.. . ff'«' m«4t #tt ho fflMldijf Yitaza / Jk fr7lk ae ~Sf:- U!ve-.; ffo 'See , A void' System Rapped SAN DIEGO <A PI Observa lion a nd films from a test flight mdicale the crew of PSA Flight 182 probably could not have seen a s mall planl' seconds before the two col11d<.·d Sept. 25 over San 01l•go, l..dllng 144 people. a p1lol11' group 1>pokes man said. Capl lloger D Crim, pre.'>1 d<·nt of the Southwest Fhi!hl C rew Assoc 1al1 on, "hl<'h rc1>rcsent s PSA c r ('wS, s~.11d Wecfnc:-.cfav that the tests ca:-.t cloubt on · the "see a nd avoid" fh:111g procedures of the Federal \ vi:1t1on Adm101stratwn C'ram held a news conference during a mur:.athon 12 ~·hour :.ess1on on the third day of Na· t1onal Transportation Safety Board hearings into the crash. the deadliest air disaster in U.S a\'lataon history Boil Allowed L OS ANGELES C/\Pl A b:tlrlinl.! computer expert ac <·used of stealing $10.2 million from the nation's 10th largest bank a nd exchang ing 1t for Russian diamonds will be r e· leased from 1a1I after his family and friends pul up their hfe s av mgs lo pay ha s bail of $200,000. U S . Dist ricl Judge M atl Byrne s aid Wednesday he would free Stanlev Mark Rif'kin a s soon a!'. he could verify the value of ea.sh . Sl'cural1es and real proper· ty offered as ball Rif'km was arrested Nov 5 an Ca rlsbad. Calif .. after a llegedly c STATE ) s muggling the diamonds into the l 'nitcd States. St·heme 1./n~oeer~d SANTA BARBARA CAPI f\ k ller aJludmg to "the painting or the copi~" ha.s been found in the trunk of a car owned by a us eum security officer. Honald Mousouris, .nd may link his father. William G. M~ez. to the theft of $1 million in aint mgs, police said. The two-page lette r was found Monday nig ht shortly a fte r M ousouris of Santa Barbara was arrested following the theft of three works by Frenc h im· pressionist Cla ude Monet from the Santa Barbara Museum of /\rt; police Capt. Gerald Lowry said Wednesday. Senten«.-e Extended SAN QUENTIN CAP) -Con· v1cted rapist Daniel Caudillo. who achieved a level of notorie· ty by figuring in the campaign tc oust Chief Justice Rose Bird. has two more prison years to go. The state Community Release Board acted on has case Wednes day. It gave Caudillo an cxlru year because members round the crimes for which he was con· Goodness what taste! .. "" ... 8 oz Medium-Share:> Ctteddar Stick, • oz Graplno Cheese. 5 oz Smoked Edam Bar. two 2 oz Cheese Spreads a package of Lil Oval Wafers. plus Strawberry Bonbons I ~ send gifts ... Come In •nd \ select food gift p•k• tor ChrtatmH. Teke with you °' we'll ehtp. We'll h•ndle •II the det•ll• •nd even encloH e peraon•I greeting. .. v1cted. burglary, robbery, kid· napping, rape and other sex crimes, merited the maximum term. plus two extra years for a tte mpting to inflict great bodily injury. •DerbfJ' Seuw• Suit H O LLYWOOD <AP I Without admitting gu ilt. the Brown Derby Restaurant has ~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--;­ a2reed to pay $3,000 in civil pen alties a nd $1.032 m legal costs to settle a suit alleging it r epresented frozen food as fresh. Slate officials. who alleged the violations occurred in November 1976. s a id We dnesday the restaurant had accepted an in· junction in the s tipulated judg· ment barring it from labeling any food product as fresh if it had undergone any preserving or freezing process. • Feetr ffike fJrged SACRAMENTO CAP> -The slate Trans porta tion Com · mi ssion s uggests th a t the gasoline tax a nd mot or vehicle fees could be increased to raise money for highways. The suggestions. which the commission stressed are not re· commend · ms, are in a pre· laminary r epo rt to the Legis lature. The commission plans six meetings by Dec. 13 to gel public reaction to the report.. Fashion Island * * * * estcli Plaza ''"' • int. • .....,.,. ..... 642.ff72 M-..M. 'Tll t W . 'T11 6 S-. 'Tll I * * * * MAllMB°S VII.LAM DAMAPOINf 4t6-Z'70 M-..W .'Tlll s-·nu I So. Calil. Oldest Carpet Co. Since 1879 year end SALE This is our last and best sale of the year! Hurry in today for great values in carpeting, vinyl flooring and draperies to spruce up your home for the holidays! NOW Country Trails: Fabulous color hne for a short saxony plush totally installed over heavy carpet cushions. Regular $14.95 s129~Yd. l o•olly "'~tolled O•~f hCO"\' poddKt<I Bordeaux: Our favorite 3 ply Saxony with a true decora- tor color line. Redecorate f'\OW Regular $17.95 I otolly .,volkld o•e• hco.y podd'"'J I'.•'.• ~n (~=coSTA MESA LJ"i:J't 2ft1 S. lrftfol ....... --~--· _ ........ LIC- llQo (714) 751 ·232' ( • • • Our own line of Drapery Fabrics now on sale for the Holiday Season. All at Designer Solarian by Armstrong with ihe sunny finish that keeps Its shine. Average 9x12 room for as low as •21& All Armstrong Floor Care Products in Stock! ... We Were 99 Years Old? Next year we will be 100! Watch for our Centen- nial Celebration in 1979! A8 S8 o rano•CO•••oa11vP1101 Editorial Page ------------------------------------------- Thur0y. November 30. 1978 Robert N. Weed/Publisher Barbara Krolblcht E dltortel Puoe Editor 8 o using Flap Not Co11ncil Business It wns jud1clou l l"ViM Clly Council m1jorll} th1l dec ided lo lcuv~ to lht> coorta the problem1 of famlll.:b wll h children who live at Oranatri' Patio Hom~s Thl' homeowners' 86$0C1 &Uon of tht' northern lrvln • nl'IJthborhood volttd lu t ummtr to r~stnN commonJv u ~ ncd rccrt>allonal fac1h hr-. to adults. und to prohibit Lhc rurtht•r rl'ntin~ or ~ulc: or home-. to fam1ht•s wit h children Though d1scr l11unutor) un 1lb Cace, tht' r Uon Wlia. not :.o ~lut•1uf tow, rd <.'hllclrC'n 1t ~ould •wcm The nl•1ghborhood had bt•t'n deslsned . approvl"d by th1.• coum·ll und ad vertised Uhrnukh poorly 'md m t.·o ns1slt>ntl)') us on oil ad ult community Wtule thl' tc rt'ut maJurn~ of rf'!lldt.•nts moved tnlo Oru11~cll f'l' with the undcnttundlntc thf•y w~re paymg ror a s1tunllon of atlults onl~ r•rt'.''-'IH'l' of M.'\.er a l famlht> b t•v1dr m·c th1.1 re~lnc t1on v. .u. oot ull lhat clea r 1'he hom t'IO wnrrs with chJldrrn ~ought reUcf from the ('Ouncal in tht• torrn or J mun1c1pal ordinance The C'ounc1J Wlbt'h :.t.1\ l'd l'll•.ff nf tht• l'untrun·r~). whirh Is a matte r bt>l"•'Pn lhl' fo mtltt>s 1tnd thl· ~al~s ai:ents K •solution flrUJl t•rly IS lhl' J>r'OVtnCl' or lhl• <.'OUrl!> Creek Clearance TmBy Tht· 1 m<1g~· of a rain !>WOiien San Diego Cr c:ek over fl owlllJ.! 1t-. ha nkb tind ft c><x hng a sewage plant. sending raw :.t.•wa~1.· coursing u1to Newport Bay. was enough 1 mm(' than 1 to m<1kc us strongly second the Irvine Ranch W\lte r D1:-.tr1C'l 's ph•<J to clear lhl' vcgetation·choked chan· nc l Uy all nwuns tlo it, und qu1<'kl y. plca~c l•'ortun:J tely, th a t wus the ide ntic::t l responsC' of Cahfornw Fish and Came" whi C'h posthaste issued a permit for the work whc.·n district General Manager Willi a m , llurs t wurncd t he (.'r Ct!k wab d a ngero us ly clO~J.(t•d If something weren't done. he warned. there was one chance in :Kl that bad things wo uld happen. The c·rcck was meant to carry the waters of a 100· year storm <onl' or ferocity that occurs only once in 100 ye an-). but willo w thickets sprouted in the s tream bed reduced that <·upacity to 41 30-year s torm. a ccording to a dis trict n:port. 5imtlar work to rt!rnovc the vegetution was halted in 1977 bv Mat<.' and fedcr~1l agendes that decla red the vrojcct \\ould <lt•stroy ind1gtmous habitat~. If th<· doggrng problem is anywhe re near as bad as the <11:-.lrn·t ~a.vs 1t is. district officials should {·onhnue to impr<'ss fod(·ra l .wthorit1es with the severity of the pre· d1c umcnt They sllll need pe rmits for complementary d redging of :.ic<.·umulatcd ..,<.,dimmts to bring the car rying capacity of l ht· San Diego Cn ·ck up to pa r Needs Second Wok Irvine taxpayers w 1 II pay $72.000 to a San l"rancisco architect to design a $5 million plus municipal communi- ty theater to tw hutlt at Uni versit y Town Center, across the street from UC Jr vin<' Unfortun:.itc ly. a nict: set of plans muy be <111 that re· :,uJts. There are several barriers to the fruition of this idea for a hometown t heater. Not the least of these is the fact' that the amount of money approved by taxpayers for the project is only $1 .4 mllllon. not the $S million·plus that will bl' needed. J\nother passible stumbling block i s the ract that negotiations now ar c under way to locate a proposed $35 million countywidc performing iirts com plex at UCJ, whtt•h h, at'ross the s treet from University Town Center . That more grandiose com plex. whic h also includes a s mn lle r t h<•uter of the proportion planned for the municipal hall, would likely be more attractive of major pn v <.1le donations a nd foundation or govern mcnt grants. The City Council minority was wise in its conte ntion that taxpayt'rs should ha ve been given another opportuni· t y to <'Xprc!-.s, throu~h a lax election. how much money they wish still to commit toward a theater. The community theater was a fine dream, but because there was too little money, it was perhaps too big a drellm. • Op1n1ons e xpressed in the space abovo are those of the Daily Pilot. Other views expressed on lh1s page are those of their authors and artists Reader comment 1s invited. Address The Daily Pilot. po. Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (71 4) 642·4321 . Boyd/Tricky By L.M. BOYD The.' casinos of the Las Vego 11 H i ito n h a ve 60 cameras in their ceilings Each Is s wivelled and hidden by a plastic pod. Each Is con trolled by a remote switch in a monitoring room. The watcher there knows all the tricks. all the sleight of hand gimmicks. all the manipula· lion11 with cards and dice ex ecuted by the swift cheaters n ave you t>ve r mi xed grenadine with rum a nd lime Juice to make a Bacardi? Neither have l. Me rely pul forth the rhetorical que ry prellm•nary to report that grenadine is pomegr anate syrup, that's what. Q. "How much money do Deur Gloomy Gu How come C art er''! voluntary pri ce and waae re1t ra1 nt plan d oes n 't Inc l ude aovernment a1encles that ratae prices by raising fees? G J . the top apeechwrlters get for putting together. say, :i 20· minute talk?" A. Unders tand $1,800 i:s ~bout tops for aomcthing or the sort. <~. ·:somebody f rom England is English. 1-'rom f''rance, French. But what do you call som e body from Monaco?'' A Moncga11que The people who die of bee stings outnumber the people who die of shark blle::s by 10 to one. If you want to s wat a fl y, !.trike Just a liUle behind It. t'lles take off backwards. QuesUon arlBeS as t.o why the de rringer pistol la so •pelled when the inventor or ~ame spelled his name Henry Deringer Jr. with only one "r " In Deringer. Imitators put s imilar pistolis on the market Immediately, and one of thtle loNed In the ex· tra •·r ," on the theory, I pre· sume, that no copy editors would be buyln1 the auna, anyhow. Don'l believe thla kind of trickery could set th rough the courts these d•YI. but It was com· monOlace years •10. Odd, lln't It, lbat extreme· ly tat youn11tera .aeneralty score an aver11e or nine point• hJ&her on l.Q. t41ll lban do the lllmmer klda? Nicbolu von Hoffman Inflation Spells Profit to Some In public 111e. nothln1 Is ever •• almpte as It scum•. 10 that the •pparent national unanlmJty 1alnst tnfloUon bclara • KOCOnd lwlt la everybody really that much a1aln1t It or i.ru •ome people ju 11 t J(olnat tbrouah th() m o t io n :. bccaun• the m 1 mec11 u a nd lhl' 5Mlety'a pre stl&:e t1aure11 w pl'nd 80 much energy lnvolghln.: ugialnst It ? After months or Calise start:i. once the president indicated he mh;bl be ~rtou.s about cutting the growth rates in tho money. that he might really be nirtJng with un end to Inflation. there wais a decided J:rum11lness in certain quarters IN 011IER moments an our history. public rigur~ have been avowed and sincere lnflatlonlsts. Her bert Hoover wos. to name one. but while this lsn 't the year to advocate Inflation. some peo- Mailbox pie like George Meany do com· blne a pro rorma opposlllon to rlalng price levels with a refusal to back lhe1Covemment policies most likely to flatten t he 1rowth curves. Even the electorate Is more omblguou.s on the subject than we are led to believe. Those s ocial tea teer readers. the public opinion pollsters. tell u11 that "Inflation ls the number one Issue an this country." but 1t may a ls o be u very tepid number one. ff people were truly a nd deeply concerned. would two thirds or lht nation's voter:. have stayed away Crom the poll· ing places last Election Day'! No. wh11e people are doubtless worried. many m illions of us ob· viously aren't worried enough to take even the minimal step of s tumbling around the corner to pull a lever in a polling place OUR monochromatic mass media chants that inflation hurt!. us all. but a lot or us know darn well 1t hurts some of us more than others . Inflation hurts creditors and helps debtors. The gcnf'ral knowledge or this self evident fact explains much of the rorce behind the continuing real estate boom You don't have lo be a double· dome master or bustneas ad· ministration with a Coke·bottJe eye alau to know that one or the good things In life Is to borrow IOO·cent dollars on a house mortgage and pay the loan back with 3J.cent dollars. The nice people ln Washington who print all that money h3ve given you two thirds or your house and garden for free. The tens or millions who own real estate in the expectatJon that innallon will be kind to them are theoretically counter· balanced by other millions, especially older people who live on fixed incomes. But, writes Chri11tophcr Jenks, professor of soc iology at Harvard. "Social Security is now adjusted almost every year to keep pace with in· nation ... EVEN THOUGH p riv ate pensions have not done equally well the per.capita income of individuals 65 and over rose 76 percent bct~en 1970 and 1976 while the per-capita income or indlvidunls aged 14 to 64 ros\: Oil· ly ~t percent. Since the Consumer Price Index went up 47 percent during these years. indlvldualR 14 to 64 ended up with about the same purchasing power In 1976 as an 1970, while Individuals 65 and over Increased their purchasing power by a finh. I For more. see J enks' "Why Worry About lnfla· tlon?" In the Sept.-Oct. Issue of Working Papers.> In sum, u whole blg bunch o• people have either adva nced their standurd o r living or stayed about equal durinK lht! worst of the lnllationary years. A lot or them may be worriod that. If inflation continues. the future won't work out as well us the past. and. assuredl y. one.' of the great objections lo lnn(jtlon is the extra element or uncer· talnty it brings to already uncl'r· tuin human existence . Thub, even people who profit are un· nerved by it. BUT HOW MC the self ·itnmc people going to react a11 It dawns on them that they may be th • ones who pay the price for end· ing inflation or at least taking 1t orr the backs or lende rs. the clus that has paid the highchl price ror lhl' towering dollar? In California. we now have the variable-interest-rate mortgage>, 1n actuality a mortgage with an· terest payments which fluctuate according to the ebb a nd now or inflation. In a lot of states that kind or mortKage would bump into the us ury la ws. the morallstic name for price con· trot over money, and already we're hearing from lenders that, unless these laws ore repealed. they 're not going t o make mortgages. The tuss le which will ensue unless national interest rates dive downward -wilt be a dis g uis ed fight twtween de fl a· t1onists anc1 inflationists. Tht• Harne kind of fight Is likely to break out in other sect.ors or the economy as various groups and individuals lt>a rn It ai n't necessarily so. that while inflo· lion is like the rain in that it fall:. on all of us, it 1s also like the r uin in that it floods somt• gardens while it makes others bloom . Another View of 'W or.king Mom' Scene To the Editor: l\rc we expected to sym· pathi2e with your staff member, Anne Cooper, because s he has round "It's work being a mom "? Wa8 she Wlder the impression that she gave birth to a little doll who would sit placidly and need no attention unless mother had the time to spare from her other career? Perhaps. if she had taken lime to read the "trivia" that her daughter brings home from school, she would have not· ed the scheduled conference day holidays and planned ahead. She wonders why teachers can't manage to talk to parents without shutUng down schools. as In her school da)'J'. Because or the unavailability or lime that parents have lo give to their children's school these days. the teachers have been forced lo try scheduling the working parent at a convenient time. What is convenient to the wo rking 1>arcnl? Somet ime after 5 of course. Should the teuchcr have to put in a full day of school and conference on into the evening ·~ A conference d:;y hos been created so thot the teacher may contact as many parents as possible with.in a short period of time, giving the working parent more ttexibtllty tn choosing their lime for conference I NSTEAD OF the Pilot publishing yet another articlP. on the poor overtaxed working mother, why don't you look into how many first and second graders wear key11 around their necka to school and go home to e mpty houses to wall till their parents come home? Why don't you take a survey and find how Puncla many !>, 10 and J J.year·olds are expected to go home and tak<' care or their s ibling 6·and·7· year -olds? I have s poken lo teachers in .tears after these ('O n fcrences at the Indifference of parents who feel that their children are "mature enough" to handle life until they wander home from work. <Of course, the neif{hbor is always avuilablc to "look an on them."> Is n't it lime we quit lamenting the t edious, repetitive. un. ('hallenging as pects or parent· hood, and start emphasizing the glory of having to be responsible for 1>omeone besides ourselves? SIURLEY SHEPPARD 1%7No&R To the Editor: Citizens concerned about the proposal lo fl y n. 727 ·200 jet 3irplancs in and out of Orange County Airport may wish to know more uboul this airplane und how It may a ffect our unlq uely Bttractl ve environ mcnt. The l:J.727·200 lri·JCt airplane is the noisiest jet airplane m mass production. exceeded only by the B· 747 and the defunct CV·880. Even with power cut· back. the 8 ·727 noise Is 100 db. E PNL, EPNDB at 3.S nautical m lies from takeofr. The ~· 737. by contrast. Is 94db <hair as noisy l and the DC-9 is 97 db. YOU CAN measure noise yourself without lnstrumenL'i by simply lalklng ln a conversa· tional voice to a friend al a dis· tancc o r 10 feet while a jet airplane is n yln$! overhead. Ir the friend can nol heor you, the noii;e 111 too loud. The B-727·200 weighs 191.000 lbs. Illes 000 miles per hour, and carries 134· 189 passengers. The ones proposed for Orange Coun· ty have been modified for a snup-ln extended range fuel tank allowing them lo fly nonstop to New York Was hington . a nd Hawaii. The aJ r intake for the center engine on the 727 is close to th • body or the a irplane. During landing it must be run at high power to prevent lt from dying and the airplane from craarung JOHN SWINBA.NK Bullf•in Wcut~ To the Editor: The California Taxpayers' Ai.· soclatlon reports that the reaJ Impact of Proposition 13 Is two years away. In the llrst fiscal yeor or 19'78·79, California's 58 counties and 41 6 cities will manage ralrly well due to the distribution or $4 biU1on from the state surplus. lt 1s said that reserves wUl not. be available in two years. The state will have no more than $2.6 bllllon In available funds lo orrsN a projected s hortfall or $9 billion in local revenues. THE tiOLl.mON lo t.hls dllem· m a is not ln raising taxes. Waste and unnecessary spending sbou.ld be cut. Efficiency in government should be a goal or tederal and state oUiclals. As an example. I cite the Newport-Mesa Unified School District. It ls given o certain amount of money for each fiscal year. Ir the acbool dlstrict does .. "'I've m.a. .._ th1111 fifty lhouaand ao '•"' tN• )'Mr-full can't 11'11 thOM f!nt MNM In:· • • I • not spend all the runds it hab been allotted, then it receives less funds the next year fiscal year . So. at the end of the year. Newport-Mesa Unified School District rrant1colly spends the money they have left over. fl 1s th is kind or purely wusteful spending that must stop. SUSAN M. HALEY Keep P9ilt la Ollf To the Edit.or: I was pleased lo sec that at least one or our local news media took Supervisor Riley to task ror hi.s proud pronounce· ment that he was going to ust• his "obvious popularity to help Republican candidates In other offices In future election1:1." Si n ~e Riley holds a non· partisan office at the highest level of local government, I rind il deplorable that he is even con- templating usinR this office for promoting partisan pohltcs und let's race It, t hat's exactly what would be happenin~. Tom Riley was an absolute unknown until Governor Reagan appoint· C'd him as Supervisor Caspers• replacement. Any popularity Riley enjoys now i11 due in large measure to lhe exposure he has receJved as a county su()('rvlsor and obviously any inOuPnce be may have on partisan politics ls due to his non-partisan elected position in county government. Any supervlsor who even 3t• tempt& to tum the office or coun· ty aupervlsor Into a partisan football abould spend some Ume reflecting on the fact that a Hupervlsor mu.st. without bias a nd prejudice, fairly represent all or h18 conatitueol5 regardless or their poUlical affiliation. Is Tom Riley so naive as to thlnk that hla commitment to t.he Republica n Party to osslsl Republican candidates. will al· tow him lo perform his awesome task -a task that Is dlrncult even without the complication ol pre111urea from your pollllcal party.? • SHIRLEY L GRINDLE . ~orm er Ch airman , Oran1e County Planning Comm ission • Ldtera /rom rtadt!ra ore welcom•. Th• right to condenat ll'ttert to fU 1poct or •Llm1nalt1 ltbtl 1.1 rturl>ftt. Lfttn1 of JOO wor~ OT ltu 111tll be giueft pre/tr~f. All ldtfrr'I mult m· clwk ltgriotsirt and maUifto """'"" but "°'"" mar be wtthlwld °" ,... 4Wlt •J nff'dnt rtcUOn u appoMJf. Pwf 111 wm "°' be pMblitMd • t " CONSUMER FT(; Proposes Ban on Dealt• Food /leis WASHINGTON CAP) Advcrtlise men ts for "health rooc:b... wouJd be prohibited under a rccommt>ndcid tederal reeuJutlon "Aa coo.a.umera h1v become more con1clou1 of h alth and lb part .flutrlUon plays ln ma1ntalnlnc hf'ulth. they hnvt1 ul~o beC'Oml' mun• vulnt•r a ble to ht>&tlth rt'hatt-d C'la1m fur f<Jod products." lht< l''&d rw Trad Com mlulon 1ta/f a1ald aner a four )' .ar ~tudy · THE TAli't" llt:('OMM NUED that tM flV\' nwmbt•r l"omm1uton ban ads for "hnllh foorl~" •nd e:st•bll•h htm·t dl'flnmon~ for "h.at "natural" and "or1an1c · roocta lire. The comml Ion lit expectt.ld to act on the rueommendalion ncd year. It adopted. Ow rc1uJallon t•ould be In t•ffect In about a ynr T he FTC'1 bureau of ron1umtr protf'cUon aaid. "The h'rm 'health food ' fala~ly attrlbut\'' 'I clal or 4-UJH'rtor ~alth @lvlnt1 prop.-r•t.ies to certain foods and . . <'t1111l0l be de llnf"d or qualllled ln any mcanlnafuJ WI)'." THE aF.GULATJON ALSO woUld prohlbU falao tlalma 1uth Wl thole that foods can by thcmat•lvc~ prevent ortreetdi~ , Any food advertlHd..P• "natW'al" would have to be frM cPartlnclal ln· 1rectlent.a. Food• could not be touted •• "or1anlc" II ftrllllaers or pettlcldel had been used on them. In addition. advertlaen oou.Jd not claim Lbat a food LI nutrlllona.Uy bet· t.-r than other foodl merely because It qualtlle. aa elUMr natural or or· aanlc. THIE Fl'C 8TAJ'I' Hid t.be re,Wa· Uon la needed because oft.be locreu· Int numbtt ol mialeadlna food ada. It 11ald the food Industry lut year apent more than $1.3 bUllon to promote H itt. Another section or the pl'OpOHd rule would require advtrtlaementl that. dl1cua1 the fat or daol•terol content of a food to dltclOH "ln· f ormaUon neee.eary to enable the public to WMlentand and evaluate the claim ... The staff Hid adve rtisements would be J>«mitted to d!tcuu Unkl between diet and the riak ol heart d l1t11e, but false or euqerat.d claims about health beneflta would not be permitted. C.Metiea Al e x H a l ey. a uthor of 'Roots,' con · ceded in federal court that three passages from another book found their way into his best· selle r. But he . said he bad not read the other book when he included them. HEY KJOS ! COME HA VE BREAKFAST wrrn SANTA nus SATURDAY AT9:00 ,,.--=:-.• AM IN OUR BUFFETERIA .. ONLY 99c Bring your C · stmas list to Wards this weekend. Special. Juniors' sporty-look acrylic sweaters in 2 great styles. Choose zip front hooded or gss pullover placket style Long::.lt't'vl's w1thcordtrim EA. unyoke and sleeve patchc:f. ASM>rwdcolors. Siv.."t>S,M.L. Jl. "101< l<l:.t Ll:.1'110'~ SAVE•2 GIRLS' SHINY SATIN BLOUSES $lLousE RECULARLY$9 Choose from an assor~ ment of long 81ecve bloudes. 80% Arnet a nd ~0'.f, nylon. 7· 14 . $8, Htin skirt ............ '6 l:UU .. 'i' f'i\SlllON:; SAVE•S STRAPLESS BODY BRIEFER FASHION Smoother, sha· } 788 plier figure. In :J4-;J8B, :i&:J8C and D sizes. REG. $23 l'OU~IJi\TIONS SPECIAL FUN CHANNEL "F" TELEVISION GAME Rcmotu-control 9911 video guml' by ~f'n1rch1ld•. Hus ~2 built.·m gunl4.'8. ....... l:IPORTINO GOOD:; ~~j· 7i·~-rr \ t Save $5. Men's wool and· nylon shirts in bright lumberjack plaids. Wool blend shirts you can wash by much i ne! An MS<>rt- mcnt. of colorful plaicL:> with squure bottoms, 2 pockets and long sleeves. S,M.L,XL. 1097 REG.$16 ~lt.N !'> f"URNISHING~ PLACEMAT SETS FOR DINING Abaca h e mp in decorator 499 colors. Hand wEIBh.dripdry. PlactJmal aHsortment with SET napkin rings ................. 6.49 libDlll~O ANU LINt;:-i SAVE•2 . WOMEN'S ACRYLIC SHAGGY SLIPPER Fluffy Maiden" 3s1 acry l ic pile. A880rt.ed colors. Jn whole sizes. REG. 5.99 SllOES SAVE•21 RAIN LAMP SETS A ROMANTIC MOOD 29" high, 12" ~'9 chain. Gentle ..... U "rain" effect. $1:.t5, 38" ""-·'" RF.G. -OIFTWARE Save$20. Handy La Machine® electric food preparation system. Slioes,chope,grat.es,grinds, 4988 purees and much more! Has continuous feed; no need to stop while u sing. With accessories ....... 79.88 REG. 69.99 HOUSEWAl<E:i SPECIAL LCD 5-FUNCTION WATCH FOR MEN 1sss Sport brown face shows hour. minute. second. and month/date. Sieck yellow metal band. A great gift idea for him. t 1:-.lt:: JEWELKY . SAVE•J MEN'S WESTERN STYLE TWILLS Sturdy jeans of 797 pol yest.er/cotton. Front. back poc· kets.Siz.eti29-40. REG. 10.99 M t::N'S WIJRK CLO'T'lllN(; SAVE*lO "CRASS GE1TER,. EDGER/MOWER Trims,mowsand 2ft88 aweepe. Safe ny· ~ - - Ion cutting line. Trt.mmer. ....... RF.G. 39.99 GARDE~ 8110 1' Special ... Fun toys for entertaining the little ones on your list. '!I ",Jaws",ugameof sktll 549 as you use b oat hook to take pieces from his mouth. (i) "Whoops" doll... ...... .9.88 (CJ TCR' VanJwn R.a<.-e,48..dK TCJY ' I '--SAVE •s .......___....,_JA UNFINISHED TOY CHEST/SEAT Sturd.) particle board to } 488 finis h inyourchild'!'>fo· vorite color. :l2"h, :liKw. 15"d. Storage bench, too. REC. 19.99 HUILUl'llt: \1An;RIAL.." SAVE 1/2 GIRLS' JOGGING TOPS AND PANTS 1()0'~ acrylic '" 5so wol>hablu color urray.Siu.>ii"i·l4. EACH. PC. 5.50, 11horU1. :l.75 REC. SI I c.itu.-. t'lfK:-ll:)lll~c;!'> SAVE•47 .--.-VERSATILE 10-IN. ENCH SAW OUTFIT Cut.'1 to :JV1d, de· •222 velops2-hpmu.x. __ _ St.3nd, 2 cxWn· 1lom1 included. REG.269.99 HA1U1WAIU .. AW ARDS CHARG-ALL ACCOUNT CAN HELP MAKE YOUR CHRISTMAS MERRIER Do easy prices ring a bell? WAllD'IADVt.llTI IJl()~!M"V 11_,,., .... _ ........ ~ .......... ,., .... ,.,.0.-1.- tluttftflM ,.1. ,_,.,._. ., •h "' .. •" ,,.,,,,_ ,_.... •rt1"ttlwt•,......... ..... .,.~,...,.,.._ ttltrt\" W•r4'••1tlotf•rt,.•OtMttf*Wlltlht••lt .r1t'tltth.1thlt,.•lOC'•H TlUt4•tfMt ...,,,. C'IM••""'"•"" "~-· .. i..,•l!pftl•IU..,." ........ nell-~1H•lll,..a"'­-l1 t11t1"'4,._\••"'l-•lleM WAllOll l'fllC'IN(; l"ClLI 'I' tr1• ,,..,, ,, _-..M .. , "6*11M• ... .,,.,., llul• tf I• •I llA """lot,..,.. A ~lel ... If" ,.....,,. .... ~MO• ..,U.•f14111C ulw IM~ll ..... ~,...v1.,,..-t\ ...... , ... ,. ......... , ....... ,... u,.. .............. _. .. , ..... ~."' w • ..,..., .. ",_,..,,. ...... 11111o-.,.,,..., _ _. _ _.. COVINA ROSEMEAD SANTA ANA MONTCLAIR EACLE ROCK SAN BERNARDINO LYNWOOD RIVERSIDE LAKEWOOD COSTA MESA CANOCA PARK WEST LOS ANGELES NORWALK TORRANCC tULLERTON HAWTHORNE ,ANORAMA CITY HUNTINCTON IEACH ,'4 .. . .. . !\ HOUDAY HOURS .•• MONDAY THROUGH SATURDAY 9 :30 AM. TO 9:30 PM ... SUNDAY 10:00 AM TO 6:00 PM ........... ,... • I • - AJ4 OAILY PtLOT use Getti119 l11to It LOCAL Support /flisdon School Units Seek Workers Volunteers for five task force groups are being sought by Laguna Reach Unified S~hoot District oCficlals to support scbool programs in light of Proposition 13. Each latk force is comprised ol djstricl teachers. trustees. stu· dents and members of the community. TASK FORCE GROUPS and their goals, include : -Home to school transporta· lion tas k force: To explore the most economical m ethods of providing transportation to and from school in terms of parental financial support. -Adult Education task force: Discover the needs of the com· munity in relationship to adult edu~alion on a self-supporting basis. -P ERFORMING ARTS task force: Find methods of raising private funds to support. school dram a. music and acting pro- gra ms. -AthJeti~ task force: Raise funds for athletic programs at the schools. -Summer School task force : Determine parent interest in a self·suppe>rting summer school progr a m of art. music. crafts and other classes. APPLJCATION DEADLINE for task force volunteers is Dec. 1 l. The five task force groups are expected to be filled by mid· December. according to Supt. Robert Sanchis . Host FanUlies For Exchange Youths Soughl The El Toro chapter or the Am e rican Field Se rvice is searching for families in El Toro and Lake Forest to host an over· seas student for the 1979·80 school year. The student will Ji ve with the family and attend classes at El Tor? High School. according lo chairman Larry Ka ufman . Cost s incurred by h o!>t families are primarily for food and incidental expenses. The local chapter raises an annual ree to cover additional expenses and each student r eceives a small monthly allowance to cov- er personal ite ms. ·\ lone fisherman gels his bod} mlo a long cast and his f<.•ct into frigid surf al El Morro Beach where water tem- per atures hit a cool 62 this week. I t's that time of yec.r when bathers vacate the beach to anglers who dot the county coastline in quest of bonito and perch. For information. contaet Sally Sanderson ctt 494·8546. Students attending El Toro High School can obtain further information from f o r eign la nguage teacher Lynn Lucas. Interested parents can call Larry Kaufman at 837-7134. OILDRIU RECORD 85% at Toro High Pass Top Exams El Toro High School n.>eeived the res ults of the advanced place· ment examinations administered in May. Nationwide. 72 percent or the l22.000 students taking the examina· lions rec<'1vcd a passing grade. Al El Toro High, 85 percent were s ue· ccssful. according to the principal, Dr. Robert R. Ford El Toro studc•nls passing the exa minations were: J a nice Armstrong, J oanna Di G iuro, Sandra Donato. Mark Gallatin, Perry Gentr y. Mi c h elle C ro mmc. Andrea Holm, James Huges. Melody Kroenberg. Rena Loesch, T erri May. David McKenzie, Joseph Mulligan. Kare n Ray. Richard Reid, Carole Renick and Richard Scalettar Synanon Seeking Return of Tapes VISALlA CAP) Synanon Foundahon attorneys said tape reco rdin~s and othe r ite ms seized by Tulare County and Los Angeles authorities have no bear ing on a Southern California at t e mpted murder case and want them returned. StudemAid Ta/,k Subject Financial aid for students planning to attend college or trade school will be discussed tonight in Dana Point by Juel Lee, financial aid director at UC Irvine. Dr. Lee 1s scheduled to speak at 7: 30 p.m in the Porthole Thf.'ater al Dana Hills High School. 33333 Street of the Golden Lantern. Senior high school students and their parents can make im· mediate application of the an· formation presented by Dr. Lee, said Linda Ains worth. of the high school staff. Younger stu· dents and their parents can use the informat ion to plan ahead ror school rinancing. !)he said DogReseoed Animal Survives Pouoning A "big, beautiful, gorgeous collie just hke Lasi.1e" was out ~f ~anger at the Lake Forest Animal Clini(' m El Toro. after surv!v1ng the convulsive altuck of poison given by an unknown assailant. . Sandy Hog<'n of El Toro. owner of the 4·year-old show dog s~1d her "great watchdog" was discovered in agony by her so~ Tim, 13, on Monday. "I. WAS AT WORK," MRS. Hogan said. "He sounded hyster1ea1, and . for a moment I was scared it was one of the kids. But he said our dog, Maverick, was choking and in eon· vulslons." She t~ld her boy to call neighbors. who drove the collie, wrapped~ a blanket. to the veteffiiary hospital. Dr. Michael Hutsenpiller said the animal was near death and a ppeared to have been poisoned with food laced with strychnine or a common snail poison. MRS .. HOGAN WAS APPALLED that someone could do such a .thmg. and said t hat a neighbor on the Overtake Drive ' block discovered the sumc thinR happened to her Dalmatlon not I long aJ:o. "It's kjnd of scary." s he said. "Why would anyone do It?" · Ex-teachers Plan Lunch The Orange County chapter or the California Retired Teachers Association scheduled its holi· day luncheon Dec. 1 l at the El Adobe Resta urant, 32892 Camino Capis tr a n o . Sa n Juan Capistrano. ~ John Tho. m , director of vocal music a1. Ma rina High School. Huntington Beach. will present a num ber or songs 3!) well as Christmas favorites. pro- gram chairwoman Emma Hen· ning said. Party Slated By Art Group The Niguel Art Association will sponsor its 10th Christmas party and potluck dinner Dee. 8 al the club's headquarters. 31442 E l Ho rno St. in San Juan Capistrano. T he event will honor ch arter members and past presidents. The dinner begins at 7:30 p.m. Reservations should be made by calling 495-5390 or 499·3196 Smoke Touches Off Alann in Clemente S1noke from a welding torch, being used Tuesday on the roof o f San Clem e nte Genera l Hospital, was bl amed for setting off a fi re alarm. which brought city firemen to the scene. First reported as a fire lo a laboratory at the hos pital, local· ed at 654 Camino de los Mares. the s moke was quickly traced lo the welding torch , firemen said. No one was evacuated during the false alarm. Home Burglariud A burglar who re moved the screen and climbed through the open window carried off camera equipment, ste reo accessories and cash from an El Toro home. Orange County sheriff's oUlcers valued the haul at the home of Kenneth Ray White. 34, of 24541 Bridger St., at $2,210. MEDI MATIC PAE OPENING YOUR DAILY PILOT CAN BE RECYCLED! ADJUSTABLE BED SALE . CcMMon ..... Mfo(9....,.. tor-.. 19 eCfl6fll '**· ,....._ ~TV .. ,........ !ft "'-*" OMlfCNt. MM .UHHUd fOf ,..... Mf'nlll _. • • .. lu"°' 111 IM ..._.,...,,. of oeMln c:twllftc ~. cenllec. ~pedlc •lld .,..,.., OOfldltloflt,. You"• ,.,,., .... ~I ALL SIZES ANO MATTRESS FIRMNESS IMMEDIATE DELIVERY ()r.mqo Co.1~1 C<>llOQI.! O{JQrillOS me OlltCIJI COnt(U tor Cosfd Mos11 556-5981 MEDl.,.MATIC 23539 Call• de II Lulaa Leguna Hiiia (next to Akron In Akron Arcade) 83G-8420 .. • Park Lake Stocked TOKYO (AP) -An oil-drilling team in China has been a warded a 5.000-yuan bonus - $3, l25 -for drilling a national record or 19,700 feel in 166 days. Pek- ing's official Hsinhua news agency reported. Stale Department of Fish and Game officials have stocked the lake at LagWla Niguel Regional Park with J.000 trout ranging between seven and eight inches in s ize. Carl R. Nelson. an assistant direc· tor or the Orange County Environ· mental Management Agency. said the lake was stocked at no charge to the rounty. Add1t1ona1 trout plants wrll be scheduled through the winter, he said. if water temperature remains PRDCTDR·- SILEX®. 2 SLICE TOASRI nzoa a•• Attytet .. 1ect1y browned toott, ~-.. outomotlcollyl "s.Mct-ltonlc" Color CoMt'OI doet tM wotd!iflt fot yo;i. Toot! 1 Ot 2 eM<.t Ol )'O\I plea ... Snap C1p9f1 crvlftb ltcry "HAMILTON BEACH 10'' INW Spray and Steam Iron with Fabri- Gulde and single-dial-control for temperature aelectlon. ,_lllCH ' ravorable. . The trout plant supple ments the ex- isting bass and catfish species. Boats, tackJe and bait are availa· ble at the park, which is located off La Paz Road near Crown Valley Parkway. Additional information may be obtained from the park ran~er at 831·2790. Such bonuses are part of the communist gov- ernment's progra m of !ncentives for achieving lls goal or modernization by the year 2000. County officials noted anglers age 1_6 a nd older m ust have valid fishing li censes. Park fis hing hours are Crom 7 a .m until sunset d:Jlly SHOP TILL 9 PM TllUISDA f " fllDA Y OPll 7-DAYS ••• TOOL SALE! ALL TOOLS GIR IOllD PDWEAlDCK • RULE 11'' ~ 11" wide f!ilSV to rt:llll hfilfte urotccrcd tor tooo v.t:ar Po11.er re rum 10 · lengrh ctl<".lJ 1111ctilabre Qq!y 4'' MJI? .-11.u110 6.PC HANDYMAN· SCREWDRIVER SET Contn1ns t1" flf1{f 6" Standard 110 3'' nnd fl" Cabinet !ICJ. 01 anct =2 Ph1ll105 plost•c rack 3";, Jlllll. GJ J'IO lrfr1' 41hUllb HAMMfR 16 01 steel handled hammer Oaked enam£JI lln1sh Aim rcmoorr.<1 face m1n1rm1e:1 ch1PC1tn<) 4i'·Ui!D MITRE BOX WITH SAW Mitre Oux with preset 45° ,u1rJ sou ooQle5 M" bnc~ ~ .. rw Only 4'' 85000 410:11t• POCKET KNIFE Sh11ro blade m tl1· ol l1~s1 rut11nc1 ~.t.i1nlrs!; steel Safetv lork hnlit:; hlndu firm /,,. •...: 10 04! / ,, 1~ ()"irv 1 '' CMINATION S8UARE 12" Qrooved blade Scriber and levol wal f c111Ures 111 handle Metric vr.rs1ons nlso avo1fable \ Ontv 2•• 1m1, ; STOO<S I BUSINESS Thur day' NYSE COMPOSITE 2 R·m · (EDT) Price8 TRANSACTIONS Ouot•llO<h '"' 1-.oo 0-\.., llW IM• 'Wer• M'-\1. Pa<lfl< PllW 9o<JOll..! 0.lrOft •nd Of\\: lfln•ll \toe.It .. U\oonQI\...., f .... Wll l>yttw IMllofwl ,\\-laliOllOf .,_wlfl<n goal•" -·~\llMI ' f 1 r T Thurllday. November 30. 1978 s DAILY ptLOT 87 Women Ht•rt Rules for~ BlaJtted By JOHN CtJNNIFF APl...._..MM.,.. Women who want t.o make it fas t in the business world 3re being fed (alse notions about bow the modurn corpora- tion works, says the man who pioneered managerial mobility studies. The rules. routes and skms Involved in s uccess aru th_, very ·same for women 'as they are roi me n. accorolng to Professor Eugene Jennings, who hus s tudied mobility and the corporation for more than 30 years. MORE RF.CENTLV HE HAS been studying the careers of <• dozen fast.r ising women. "Their formula for success Is the very same," said Jennings, a graduate pro· fessor of management at Michigan State University. According to the Jennjngs formuJa, corporate success comes fastest to the person who bec:omes a crucial s ub· ordinate to an already mobile superior, complementing or· supplementing the s uperior's skills. Now he's concerned by what he sees developing: a corps of mentors, some self·appointed. who claim to be able lo teach women how to do it. Their notions of corporate life. says Jennings, are often unrealistic. By becoming a crucial subordinate to a mobile superior. he explains, a man or woman is carried along by mobility itself. Pity the subordinate. however, if the s uperior is a shelfsitter; the s ub- ordinate will be too. cu .... ,.,., Through the mobile superior the subordinate will be provided with visibility and exposure -visibility to see the all-important "sponsor," and exposure of his or her talents to that sponsor. S PONSOR? TIDS PERSON can reaUy boost your career. a career that already has benefited from being a crucial subordinate to a talented. promotable superior who provided the v1s1bUlty and exposure. Anyone who's going anywhere in a big corporation 1s likely to have someone supporting him. Sponsorship, ac: cordina to Jennings' analysis of corporate life, comes in four degrees. I There's the evaluator. a person who s tands strongly with the higher.ups so that his or her opinion regarding the subordinate is weh~hed heavily. Still, the evaluator is the weakest degree or sponsorship. 2. MORE POTENT IS 111E nominator, possessor of power to actually suggest a name for promotion. Even more powerluJ is the next degree of sponsorship, to whom J ennings assigns the actual tiUe of s ponsor. 3. The sponsor. he relates. is so highly regarded up- st airs that they dare not antagonire rum or her by reject· mg a nomination. The s ponsor has a strong record, is a prized execullve. a person with clout. 4 The fourth level of s ponsorship Is t.he promoter, the one with official corporate authority the title or otCice to promote. Jt-nnings makes a !lubtlf" distinrt1on hctwecn authority and power AUmORITY. POSSESSED B\' the promoter, comes from the offi ce, he obser ves. But, in a given situation, the sponsor might have superior power because of talent or personality or past accomplishment. That's the way it is, says Jennings, oo matter what the mentors in their lectures. books or personal interviews are telling the women. Square in Orange Lists New Leases Eleven leasing agreements and expansion commit ments have been signed for office space in Union Bank Square in Orange, accordfog to Canal-Randolph Corp .• owners. Approximately $2.l million in long-term leasing docu ments and nearly 30.000 square feet of office space are in· volved in the transactions , the company said. Three of the tenanL'i are new to the complex: Attorney Raul Palomo Jr .. Betrand's Security Service and audit de· part m entor Ins urance Co. of North America . Seven othe r agreements represent expansions by long. time tenants: American Telephone and Telegraph, Exxon Co .. Olin Chemical, Pacific Tele phone. Ins urance Co. of North America, Account·On·Us/Bookkeepers Unlimited and Tab Produds . Lloyd's Exxon Service Center, located in the center's tbree ·level parking structure, signed a new lease after its previous lease expired. About 4,000 people a re employed by 3,200 companies in the square. which contains two 12·story towers, one 6·story building. a single·level structure and the parking facility. Di rectors of Exccutive Industr ies Inc .. Anaheim motorhome manufacture r. have approved a cas h tender offer by the ('Ompany for 500,000 shares of its common stock at $8.60 net a share. Thecompuny m ay purchase300.000shares. Tenders will be accepted on u pro rata basis 1f more s hares are tendered than are ultimately purchased, except that a shareholder who owns 100 or fewer sh&res and who validly tenders a ll or them will have them purc hased without proration. TAK ING STOCK Officers and direc· tors of the company h ave indicat e d that they will not lender their shares. A soli cit· ing dealer's fe.e of 25 cents a share will be paid by the company to qualified brokers, dealers, banks and tr ust compariies, with a minimum fee of $20 and a maximum of $500 for any single tendering shareholder The m aximum fee will not apply to shares purchased by a soliciting dealer in a rbitrage transaction . There wm be no df'J1ler m anager for the ofrer. and 0 . F King & Co. Inc. is Information agent for the offer. The offer i~ scheduled to cx11lrc :1t 5 p.m. on Dec. 15. unless ex tcndc!.l ffuof"OC!arfH>n to r,. 4 Celt• Directors of the fluorocarbon Co .. Anaheim. Calif .. have declared a qu1rterly dividend of 4 cents a share on the company's common stock , payable Jan. 31 to shurcholdcrs or record as of Jan. 15. This 111 the company's 11th consecutivi! quarterly dividend. The firm spill Its stock 2-for·l on Oct. 31, crcut- ln1 l, 796,016 shares outRtandlng. Fluorocarbon manufactures non·metalllc materials m nd'c or nuoropla11tic compounds and other related m aterlal!l. It mnrkt'ts products to the aircraft, valve, petrochemical. s mlconductor, construction, medical and other lndustrie11. Rota.,, 10 Bear SAL c..n.u-c Union Federal Savin.gs and Loan AuoclaUon's com· munlty relaUons consultant, Keith Houdyahtll, wm ad· dreH the Runtincton aeacb Rotary Club on Dec. 8 at noon at f.be Huntlnct.on Beach Inn. ltunUngt.on Beach. More lnform1Uon la avaJJable rrom W11 Bun.later 1t 891·235L _, r, ' - • -D~LYPtlOT CALIFORNIA I MUSIC I OBITUARIES l ..,,onzo nod Osear ----Plate of the Day Humor Punches LE 1.API Owne!d by Tro1Jta \'an TTvon of l.o~ Angele!'I 11 h f'rl'nch tor rabbit M"> Van 'fr yon ~ antt'tl t>vt'rvbody to ltnt1w lhiJC '!>ht: l't1llt•1•ts uhJt•1·t .• m tht• "'hapt• nr w11h design!\ or rubb1lb Fast-or Faih Dy JOE E DWARIJS N \SHVll.U:. '1't•1u1 tAP 1 Lonzo & Oscur f1~Urt• lht')•'\lt' flOI flVt' 'L'N>n(fs to do thl'1r JOb Or lht·~ f111l Tht· 1•01m·d v h·u111 ha!\ tX'en Jl('rforming on the C:rarul Oh• Ovry for 11 Yl'..lrS und IS gelling extra t'\l1t>"'u11· ~11h wv1•rul t1111w:iru11res on the "Hee Ila" · 11·lev1io.111n 'how Hol lin Sullivan, or Oscar, is l't• It• hrntrn~ hi!\ :tot h unm vcr!>ary <1:s a comedian und m.indoltn pluyr•r u11 t ht> ()pry AS C'OMtW IANS, THEY AGREE you've got lo iH't f.i!>t 0111 motto i' }Ou'vc ~ol lo make the guy t.w~h fw lht• f11 l>t llflh' rn fl vt' seC'Onds," Sullivan '"".I 1n an llllt•r v1t•w "'fht>n the second laugh coml·:. t'U:.\ '1"111~ i.ountl!> kind or crude. but you 'houlcln I 1(1\l' t 'lll llllrt• AP WI .......... Two T e t11 r1-ager · Attack Mru1, 6 1 M IAMI t APl Two tt•en .tgt'rs comman 111 th111k 't o~.nt•t•d quick. ( ~ ,.~IWILLE ) 1•JIC0 h} -.tuff / 'l~ Su Ill\ un. 59 1-. a S<JUND 11wmllt'r trf th1· un~mal l,onw &. <h.car tu:t that 'RIDING THE WIND' 'Squeaky' Fromme KIDNAP VICTIM Patricia Hearst PROPHET OF LSD Timothy Leary SF Grief Heavy d eered a car from a J.1Jrk1n~ l•1t robbed at~ di!>· abled, 61 year old ot'<'U l'·•nt at ~unpo1nt, then ~umpt>d ham m a gJrba~t' <"onturnl.'r with a pla:.t1c oag over has head. police s~1d Herman Jlgovskv. who h«d waited 111 the clfr while h)s sister shopped, WJ!'> cut and bruised but not seriously hurt cl;.11\':-. to World Wur II Dave Hooten, 43. as the third f.0 11.-0 A typical Lonzo & Oscar JOkc: "When Oscar d1('S, he'll have ;1 nl'w brain The one he has has never b<'e n US('<f " The youths, 16 and 17, were arrested on <.•haq~cs of sus p1c1on of attempted murder, armed robbery and auto theft Sulhvan calls 1t "country humor." "IT'S NOT C'ORNY -it's funn1er than cor· uy," he said "It has more punch "Wt"vc built our comedy on tearing down songs tr somt•onc has a sweet song. we change the words to makl• 1t runny. Bl!NTON 0(WF.Y lfE llENTON, '~'"l•nl Qf (o~t• M~v.. Ca P.t\\•·d ;tw.,v on No'll •ml>"• 19 1918 "' ti... ·lQ<' ot llO l o .. no brotntr ot All!r ~m1th Of Kan"'"' (tty Ml\'\OUrt FufVlrAI Yr-.•fM w1fl.,.,. N>lct on '>alurcMv D<'<•mbfor 1 1918 ,11 10 00 AM •t T"" Rurn\ M•<tw"V ~'!"""" Homr tn Wiiiow \or•na~ M""°U'' tn '"'"',.r\t w ill bf' dt thfil' Wllfow Se>r1f"Q'\ C••v (f>tnf"fHy WtOow SOrinQ'\ Mh ...oura Smith Tutnlll lt1mO NWJr tu•rv <for.C tor\, 47' E tllh St CO'ol• Mt-.. ~-481 l'ENITMAN BVRYL FOWARO FFNITM•N. r• ,.o.n1 ot C ~'" ,,,,.....,,. C• P1t''4"d ~-"" on NOv•mlM'r 11. 1411 •I IN' -ot 11 lovtno orolhf"r nt AtUftl Gr•u of Wdt .. rloo. towtt M1htMy 0'•"•\IOfi ,.,.rvfCf'\ w1u Of' tttlO on Frid•¥ 0.-< •fTl~r I 1'7A di ti 00 •M ~I t~ "''~~''10f' N•hon•I '"''""'~'" At'"''"dt· <A <ttthln Tu'h•ll L.,mn N O•IUMV Clorf'Ctor,, .,, (: lltn ~· (f1\t.t M .. ..., C-4 "'6& 4:W SAPP l UI v £Tiff l ~APP PAw•n ...... nn NCl'Jf"M tJl'>f" 11 "'~ R,.,1<S-nr nt "'·'" ti An,, (A '.,,..., ... , \.•1fltl(. \ Wiii nf"! ,, .. ,a on Fr1d.Jy [)p(r•mbf·t 1 1~111 .,., '1 00 P M flf ,,,, Htirhor I ~wn ~11mor"tl Ctvi..,,..1 w1oi P&\IOr f t1Qf-n~ Worl"V ltnd PA\lfH' f rn,.\t q 0\NN'I Of l~ Chr1·.t1An GQ~•I TrmpJr t>U1ct,tl 1f"'IQ S.-rv1t,.'\ un<tf.lr '"'• 01r1•rtil')n ot Hbrl>Or ldW'\ .v.t>un1 Ollv,. M0'1UdP(, Co,10 M~\a IA()\\~ PREUS !>OLANO FPfOf Pt(ll PR.CU<;"' -..dt-nt of C0'1• N\11\a C1t P-.\U'O n w11y on llov~mbl'r 1~. l~/8 111 ''"' """ of 7 t ISPIOY"d fdthr-r of (' Mrttt\ Pt••u\ ot N f'wPOrt 1¥.tch, Ca <.rrv1Cf"\. dnd 1n ffrmf"nr w1H f.t~,. Otlt<f' 1n Nf·w Port q1chf'v ffe>f~ Sm11n Tu1'ull L4'tmb Mo<IUMV 07 ( l/lh <;t , (.O'lf<' M•\<I Cd Olrt><rnn ~ JACKSON fVflVN P JA(l'~N r~'f<t<ont Of ""'"•POrt S..w:n C • P"''""' ~w"" on P"40'1f'l'f'nl)f>r 78 1011 Al 1nt ,t()I' ot Sil flf'IOv~o mt>tf'w•r ot M•th-H I '"~ "'"°" .... An"""•m. CA IO'lt•t\Q '' 11, ot H,.ttn low .. rd\ ot »•tll~ WdVt•l"WJton. ( 1 ,,. H~, .. ot St-a111,. w,l4>tt1not,..,.. w •II•, Fttn"n~u~r oi W'ft>tn1nQ l ) ... ., 01 '°" f'l f l,.w ,-;1on tti•nn """ I tOr#lontl" f-.,, .. ,,l\U\,ff ctl\O Gf l I W l\tOn 1(1dN) f-ul"'l•ral ~'..,'" w1ll n.· ,_.,.., l)n Thur\ a"", "''""""°"' 10 141~ .1t 1 00 PM ~! T~ Mr·rch.V\I ruMrnl Hom,. (ho\pt I •n C'I~ "'ft>n Wtt'"""l"•" .,,_,,,, f ~tht·r N r )(,.,,,..,"''If fdfmo tnr,.anrn• w ,11 tH1 .it L .. W1'\ & C l.H 91: Mrmor '''' (u1Hl~n\ '" l PWt•.tnn lt'.t,,hn F' If ,.,d\ -..,no ""''" to \f ncl tlorAI trt04Jf,.\ mAt '-Pnd them to Th('I-Mnch,,nt Funt'''' Hom• •OOO 1111 ", CIM~'1on w~'"'"Qlon 'l'UOl <,mtth Tuthill 1.,mb Norlua•v. •17 F 11th St (O\to M,....,, <Jir~ctor' ~-4888 SCHN"'EWEIS D f!>ofh ~olit•e-11 ( '' OlfH 1tH1no w ttl bP Mo,,,1onnr Hr .. nnnn ot \t John tnr f\~f''''' ( '9ff\Oflf C"'HHf h f:it•tf (htMrl'h4t MO,lu41tv tt•,••ttm' Deaths Elsewhere LONDON (AP) -An· dre Morell, 69. a Bnt1s h actor who starred in the "Qua rtcrmass a nd the Pal" telev1s1on horror seria l during the 1950s. and later appear ed in the' movies ··&-vcn Days To N oo n " and "M adcle1n('." du.·d SACRAMENTO (Al» F.M. "Sandy" San. du s k y, 79, k n own s tatewide for h is in - volvem ent with interna- tional expositions. died Monday. He was direc- tor of exhibits and con· cess i o n s a t the California P acific ln- tc rna tao na l Expos ition tn San Diego and the Golden Gate lnte rna- l 1on:1 I E .x posilao n on Trea!>ure Island in San Franc isco Fis h e rme n Plan Meet Th e Unite d Fis h - ermen's Organization of Southern' California will hold its first annual r meeting from 6 lo 9 p . m .. T uesday a t the Eb e ll C lu b, 515 W. Balboa Blvd., Newport Beach. T he agenda includes ·~lection of officers and j 1 rectors, gener al busi- 1ess and guest speakers. For further infor mation ::onlact UFO, P.O. Box l538, Terminal Is land. "Exprl'ss1on means a lot to me. An d we try to make romC'dy clOSl' to life When we go into a town for a show. we pick up things from the people we mel'l and the things that happen to us. We try to figure out what J>l'oplc wall relate to." Sullivan s aid "I USUAU , \' TR\' TO PEE K out at the au- ·d1t'nC(' before the show and see what kind of au· d1en('c there is If 1t looks lake a sophisticated a u· d1enC'e, we do certain things. If it's not. we don't. "A comedian's Job 1s twice as hard as a sing(•r's " I\ Joke never gets old. Sullivan sa id. "Mel T1 llts told a Joke the other night that I \\-Us telling JO years a~o." he said . Both Sullivan a nd Hooten laml'nt t he lack of humorous records pll.lycd on radio ··vo CAN'T GF.T THE DJ. to pluy anything ovt'r four t1mt•s bt•C'ausc no one wants to hear the samt' matcn ~1I OVl'r and o ver." Sullivan said. "Comedy 1s tht• lcast·pa1d profession in the music bus iness " The J,t roup and its four piece band. "The Ha rdtames," <ire on t he road performing about 120 days :i yc:ir. Their show has something for every· body, with country music. bluegrass, gospel and rountry-rock in add1t1on to comedy. llP Wl,...._.o FAST PUNCHES-Lonzo. front l eft, and Osca r appea r with their band. T he Hardtimes, back row, on Grand Ole Opry . E,. RL P !>CHNC rwr is ,.,,.,,,~"'' (O\ld Me\d, (fl, Pd1o'W'f1 f1WAY on Nov • m~r 78. 1'118 Ht' '" \Urvivt•O bv hl't rnotl'tf'tt f rtwi1 C•Ct\ro of C~ta Mr.,.4, C" 7 \On\ Jem{l\ 4>< ht'tt"f"wt•1\ of Vtpn oora c" and M•<PM~t SthnPt-wf)" at M 11ywood. (f . ? tt~uQhlrr\ J111J11" horhle ot lttv,.,.~ Ca .inn Pttlrt<.td Sn1tlP'f ot Atta LomA, (.\. 1 btOlhttr\ D<>nnlCI ot Tu''"' "no Fvf'rtlt of (Oita MP,d, C-11 ., ' ...... tf'r\ Pd''•<•'6 S.v&QP OI (0\14 M~\.d (,,11 1ln(I ft'lltnl'fn RU\yttl nt t1un11nq1on A• tun Ct\ And s QrAndcruld'f"n fr1rnc:t\ m,.y cAll tnr Y•\•1flhon on Thur\d.lW' ttom '1 00 PM to I lO P M ~t 6'•11 ttroa<IWAV (114111"1 ~fd'l'P\l~Wrv~r\~,.~Y~ttl~AM -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ .u Hot., 5'toul<tw-r (~n'lifltrrv Or1lnqp, U LTl-lllGUOH fUMDAlHOME 646-2424 Cosla Mesa 613·94!>0 11&.l IROADW A Y MOUUARY I 10 Broadwdy Co~ta Mesa 6 42·91!>0 SMlnt. TUTHILL-l AMI MORTUARY WESTCllff CHA,EL Crerrotory • Flower Snop 427E 17th SI Costa Mesa 646-4888 "HCI IROTHHS SMlnt'S MORTUARY 627 Main St Hvnltngton Beach 536-6539 SHEHH MORTUARY 976 So Coast Hwv Laouna Beach 494·1535 !~ N El C&m1no Real ~Cle~492-0100 PlltC PAMllY COlOMIAL PUHHAL HOMf 7801 Bolsa Ave Wes1m1ns1er 893-3525 "ACIAC YllW MIMOtllAl ,A.RIC Cemetery Mortuary Chaoe1 3500 Poc1lic View Or1110 Newport Beach 644·2700 McCOttMICK MOITUAlllS Laguna Beach 494·941 5 Laouna Hills 768-0933 San Juan Capistrano ~~1776 ,. ... Complete service facilities A {9p t;/1 AIJIO 4d'~ LUSI N(j CENTER NOW OPEN! Cormier l easing's new facility at the en- trance to Irvine Auto Center. You can lease a new car or truck from the Cormier Professionals who will program your individual needs. Maintenance leasing our specialty. Free Loan cars av- ailable. '" l ocated just east of the San Diego F:reeway. Take the Lake Forest Or. turnoff, go east to Rockfield. then make a left. .J. Come in and see us today! r 768-8026 , .. ' . corm1er leasing 23M 3 Roekfleld B!Vd., Lake Forttt ' • • ~ Bizarre Violence Questio~d SAN F RANC ISCO <AP> -In the chiUy. beautiful c ity th at has inspfred song and poetry, gner hangs like fog a m id a plague or bizarre violence that has led re· s idents to ask: "Why does 1t happen here'"' "I feel so sorry for this city, .. s aid a c1t1zen s haken by thf:' m u rder Mon day of Mayor George Moscone and Supervisor Ha rvey Milk. "We 've had lhe Zebr a killers. the Zodiac, the SLA. the Peoples Temple and now this. I don't know how much more we can take.·' THE T EARFUL T HRONG of 40 ,000 residents who gathered m nu mbed s hock outside City Hall Monday night tried to provide t heir own a ns wer Car rying cand les a nd clanging to their neigh bors like survivors of :.ome nat ural catas trophe or a war. th ey s ang. "We s hall over· com e." Columnist Herb Caen. among the most tnfluent1al m en in town, summed up t he feelings of his beloved city m the San Fran- cisco Chronicle. "Horror upon horror Shock upon shock." Caen wrote. " . The vocabulary of grief and dis· belief s tretches only so rar ... At the end of a week of incredi· ble headlines. all of us were ten stu nned . exhaust ed. over· whelmed by the flood of bloody ·sens eless' information .. ... IT WAS ALL senseless Like t he h und r eds de ad an Guyana ... And yet there must be a thread connecting all this violence." T he thread t hat connected Moscone a nd Milk. Caen said. was one common to m any of the tr constituents : "They loved San Francisco " So did Jim Jones. And Charlie Ma nson. "T h i s is every mis fit 's favor ite city as well as the favorite city of a lot of straight, normal people." sa id San Fran· cisro Examiner Editor a nd P ublisher Reg Murphy. "It's the m ost photogenic city in the country." Murphy added. "It 's also the most accepting ct· t y . It contains some of the brightest minds in America But ther e's a n odd mixture of the highly intellectual communa· t y and the crazy community " TH E "CR AZ Y C OM · munity" bloomed in the 1960s. Long ·haired young people call· ing the mselves "h ippies" and "Flower child ren" swa rmed in· t o San Fra n c isco's t awdry Haight·Ashbury dis tract. They were turned off by the Vie tna m War and "turned on" by the prophet of LSD. T imothy Leary. T he flowe r · c hilc;tren we r e h allucina ting on drugs. "We were riding on the wind," one of them would remembe r. H e r n a m e wa s Ly n e tte , "Squeak y" F romme. Ye a rs Jater, she would try to kill a pre· sident. She cam e to San F rancisco with the ragged C ha rles Manson "fa m ily" in 1968. Manson, guru of a band of young misfits. had passed th.rough Haight Ashbnry earlier, staying long enoug h to learn the powe r of drugs a nd a word. "love." He took his "lup· pies" lo Los Angeles and or· dered mass murders IN HAIGIJI' ASHBUR V, t een· agers "freaked out " screaming in the agony of LSD "bad trips." Some died afte r taking "street dr ugs" laced with strychnine. Some commilled murder. Those who survived drifted to drug re· habilit aUon centers or mo ved a wa y . But the pl ague t h ey had brought did not die. It fest ered and burst ln the '70s, San F ran· c isco's most v iolent d ecad e since the days of the Barbary Coa st l n 1969 ond 1970, a murderer c alllng himself "Zodiac" sent grisly coded messages to lout newspapers. "Klllint people ls m ore lun than kHfln1 wild a am e," he wrote. Zodiac's missives have con · hnued sporadically. He has not been caught Poltcc s ay he pro· bably killed six persons. He boasts of slaying 37 victims I N 1972, A M IDW ES T preacher. th<.• Re" Jim .Jont!s, set up his Peoples Te mple in San Francisco's poor F1llmme dlS trac t In 1973. a wave of random s treet kalhngs terrorized the Cl· ty The "Zebra killers." struck without warrung, k111iog wh1tes at night. Most victims were shot One was rape d , a n other beheaded In April 19i4. 1t was over Four young Black Mushms were arrested and charged with 14 murde rs, seven assaults. one r ape and an attempted kidnap pang The Zebra murdere r-. were convicte d 1n 1976 aftc·r the longest tnaJ m San Francisco history On• Feb 4. 1974. the da ughter or one of San Francisco·,, ft rs t families -.Patricia Hearst was kidnapped Her travels through the radical under ground exposed a seething subculture of dis affected you n g r evolu taonaraes known as The Sym baonese Liberation Army S IX OF THE M died that s pring tn a flammg. s u1c1dc s hootout with Los Angeles poli ce. The othe r s -Miss Hearst and William and Emily Harris -drifted back to the on ly American city where they could hide San Fra nc1s('o They eluded police for 18 months before their rapture Sept 18. 1975. Thal September was a month for vio le n ce .. In nearb> Sacramento. Lynette Fromme aimed a gun at President Ford and was arrested. In San Fran c1sco, days after Mass Hearst·, capture. a m1ddle·age radical, Sara Jane Moore. fired a gun at Ford in famous Union Square barely missing him. "Is n 't anything ha ppening anywhere but San Francisco" .. a newscaster asked In 1976. Patricia Hearst. Sara Moore and Squeaky Fromme went to pnson Radical g roups s uch as The New Wor ld Libera · lion Front bombed buildings and issued communiques IN 1977, TIIE plag ue seemed GURU OF MISFITS Charles Mani on to pass. City fathers remem· b<'i t·d the town·., old slogan, "Everybody's Favorite City." The city's la rge homosexual population savor ed political vie· tory election of t he first g<lM member of th!.' <:tty's Board of Supervisors Ha rv('y Milk. , Th(' following year. 1978, was one of promise. Record numbers of tourists Jammed cable cars and hummed, "I Left My He~ an San Francisco " The n. on Nov. 18, anothe r nightmare began. De mocrat&(' Congressman Leo Ryan. 1nvest1gatang the Peoples Temple cu.It, had been shot and killed on an airstrip in remote Gu) ana Three newsmen and a tl>mple defector were slam with him WITHIN HOURS. a horro r slor~ unfolded Hundreds of Saq Franciscans. who hact followe<t Jon1.•!\ to a promised paradise iri Guyana, obeyed his com mand t,q c·om m 1t mass .,u1 ('1dt.'. In thq d eep Jungle. troops found more th:i n 900 bod1ei. piled upon each othc·r Jones had bl't-n a ppointe d director of the Housing Authori- ty by Moscone . Thus, when the 49·year old mayor was gunned down in his office Monday, spe<'ulataon starred of Peoples Temple involve ment. There was none. police said. It was much :.1mpler As Moscone and Milk lay in pools of blood inside the marble· and gold City lfall, a disgrunUed former supt'rv1sor. Dan White, -was booked for investigation or murder . He had come to City If a ll lo seek reinstatement a s a ... upe rv1so1 Mos cone had re · fused "I DON'T KNOW how we're going to put t his c ity back together again," said the c1t1zen who called a late nig ht radio ta lk ~how Lo mourn for San Fran('a:,,co Elsewhe re, s aid Her b Caen. they call th1s "the kook capita.I ... ··wl' who have lived here a long t1mt-res ist that descrip · taon ." h(• wrote. "What others call 'kooks,· we look upon as character s in a charade we :-mi le al. We think we un· der:-.t a nd the ~how , having pl:iyed our own roles for so many years .. M aybc we are wrong." SHOT AT FORD Sara Jane Moore 'Workfare' Program Planned by U.S. WASHINGTON CAP > The Agri<'ulture De partment has DP· proved regulations for 11 pilot program in 14 nren~ that wlll require some Jobless poor peopl~ to ('am their f t.'dcrul food s tn mp benefits Assist3nt Secretary Carol Tucker Forem an uld that eligible ·"cillei<. counlle!' or other pollUC'nl subdivisions" will be considered as p0tenllaJ sponsors. The 14 nrcft!I tor the so·called workfare project will be selected Inter a nd the program I. to begin next spring. The program Is desiRned to provide p ublic service jobs to those who cannot find rettular work and would require stamp recipients to wor k offlhe value ofthoar coupons1f e famlly's income Is less than the st am ps' value . ...