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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1978-12-18 - Orange Coast Pilot.. I , _east China Blas' lladioaetivlty Due Along Coast DAILY PILOT * * * 1oc * * * MONDAY AFTERNOON, DECEMBER 18, 1978 VOL. 71, MO. U2. 2 SECTIONS, J2 PAG•S ~yes ~ave It? I o.lly ............ 9Y ltlci.al"tl lleetM« Whatev~r their visual faculties, visitors to the San 'Clemente parking lot used by Dr. Bruce Ewing do a dou· . ble take when they spot the optometrist's eye-catching sign. But seeing is believing and no one doubts the op. timum effect that the chart has on visitors who know a gOQd gimmick when they see it. A Daily Pilot photog. rapher couldn't resist getting the whole scene in focus. NoRecurrence Seen Of Balloon Blasts By PIDUP ROSMARIN Ofa.o.61Y ...... SUft Though they're not damlng any suspects or accusing anyone, Irvine police coofidently predicted today there won't be a recurrence of laat week~ ex· plodlog balloons tbat tbreatened small craft lNMling at Orange County Airport. Meantime, police are examin- ing fragments of plastic material found atntwn across an X-ray lab of a factory after an explosion Tburaday which seriously burned an inspector there. Police had been ataked out nearby In hopes of 1pot.ting another balloon launchln1. Balloona bid been aeen explodlnc In flreballt at about l50 feet, the altitude ol lntom1na airplanee, on both Monday and W-ednnday. Police l'Ulbed to Coatrol Com· ponents, 2587 S.S. Mm It., tlle source ot tbe exploelon. Tbe company manufacture• mec:haDleal control valftl. • Tn7 found Terry Huff,~ of Oran1e, bumed oa the face, . hand• and chest by a f1a1h ftN in the explot1oa wb.leb knoeked out windows and blew a steel door off its hinaes and into the hall. . Huff, in stable condition at UC <See BAU.OONS. Page AZ> · Radiation Nears CotUt WASJDNGTON (AP) - The E n vironment.al Protection Atency, saying rad loactlvlty from a Chinese nuclear exploelon could arrive over the West Coast by Tu.day, bu ac· tlvated lt1 radlatloa\ monltorll14 •)'Stem. Th!.!~~oelon Thursday at lChlna 1 Lop Nor teat site bad • yield of leas than ao ldlotoMz th~. •cen-cy Hid, and 1DOWC1 PH· sent no buard Nffd on past~ ot 1hnnu aiae. _ The federal Aviation Ad· mlniltration sald no hasard to aviatJoa 11 ex· peeled • * * * Declilles ·Exceed Gainers NEW YORK (AP) -Word of a larger-than-expected increase in world oil prices drove stock prices into a 1barp decline ln beavy trading today. In the first two hours the Dow Jones average of 30 industrials was down 14.46 points to 790.89, dropping below the 800 level for the first time since the end of November. It had been down 17 aft-er--the-Orst-hou Declines overwhelmed gainers by a 16-1 margin among New . York Stock Exchange-listed is· sues. On Sunday the Oraganization of Petroleum Exporting Coun· tries announced that it woud raise prices 14.5 percent In quarterly stages through next Oct. l. The news came as an un· pleasant surprise to Wall Street, which had been hoping for an in· crease as small as 5 percent. )\nd analysts noted thal it compounded investors' uneasi· ness about inflation specifically and the economic outlook in general. ·'I think people are a little shocked," said Charles Jensen at MKI Securities. "The stock market doesn't like surprises like this ." The news also depressed the bond market, which is highly sensitive to shifts in inflationary expectations. The dollar fell in forei1n-exehange while the price of gold jumped by better than $7 an ounce in London. Gold mining stocks gained ~round, while all other major stock groups were under pres· sure. Oil, auto, airline and leisure-travel stocks all gave ground. The British pound crossed the $2 mark, a.ad the dollar dropped more than two yeti lrt Tokyo. One foreign exchange dealer In Zurich said the larger-than· expected increase in the oll price was certain to create more infiation ln the United States and 1 ttie rest of the buyers of oil from the members of the OrganJza. lion of Petroleum Exporting Countries. The dollar closed in Tokyo at 193,325 yen, down from 195.75 at the close of tradin& Friday. Selected world aold prices to-. day lncluded: -London: morning flxln1 1212.20, up '6.80; afternoon fix· ln1 1212..,, up '1.30. -P arf1 : arternoon flxtn1 1214.83, up '1.16. -Fr~: cloee $212.71, up M.15. - -Zvrich.:... 12u.11, up M.se. '212. 75: sna.ao ulfed. -New York : Handy le• Harman baH priu, $2U.15, up '1.55. _.._Ontmue 0 . ' . . Latest Novel'~ Gift: .Dol!eY ' Frolll Killer Bee 'Killer' Doney Nor:elty Gift Edible NEW YORK CAP> -The latest novelty Christmas gift is likened to a pet rock you can eat. lt'sK:iller bee honey: For $3.95 you can get a 5.75-ounce jar of honey reportedly ga_µiered from the hives of killer bees in. Fortaleza. Brazil. · "It's crazy. It's kind of the pet rock of 1978," said Ronald DeChristoforo. one of the three men behind the product. "But the difference is. it's edible and it's good." Along with the honey, you get a history of its makers. The bees were origin.ally imported to Brazil from Africa because they were superior honey pro- ducers. But several African queens escaped: breeding with_.l.ocal }>ees and spawning generations of wild killer bees. The 6ees havereportedly-attaek~ -men_ and animals . Clouds Continue Chance of Coastal Rain 50 Percent A rainstorm that drenched Christmas shoppers and com· muters Sunday and today shows no signs of abating before Tues- day. weather forecasters said. Weather analysts predict a SO percent chance of rain tonight. The storm thus far had dropped 1.5 inches of rain on the county as of this morning. It is expected to peter off into showers about mid·day Tuesd.ay. · After that, ttle forecasters say, cloudy conditions t h rough Wednesday with night time tem· peratures in the mid 40s and daytime highs in the high 50s can be expected. Rainfall is running about dou· ble that of a year ago. but thus far is not creating any problems ln terms of fiood damage or crop damage. "The rain is very welcome to most of our aclivttiea here," S4Bl1l' S4JLED ro SPEEDY S.4LE ··rm a bl11er winner with the money t received than I ever was with my raclng Sabot. "I sold it on the first day to the first caller."' . That's the advertising success story of the Coeta Meaa man who placed this ad tn the Daily Pilot: Racing ubot. fully equlpt. Jdnt cond. S250 fl rm '"""'"''°' stter 6. U you want to "Sale" your boa , lfte11alty ptlot can mna f Hl cub retuml. A friendly Id· •tnr ~u Hap write a but ••lier. Jtllt calna-5'78. commented Irvine Company crops division manager Carl Lindgren. "It's particularly beneficial for our cattle grazing operations and ror irri~allon.purposes ... he said. "At this point. the rain is being absorbed as quickly as 1t falls and 1s not posing any pf'oblems to us .·· Orange County's agricul~uraJ operations officers agreed with Lindgren that the rain. up to now. is a welcome friend to the county farmer and waler con· servers. Thus far. the season's rainfall in Orange County stands at about 5.5 inches, more than dou· ble the 2.50 inches recorded at this lime last year. Southern California Edison Company officials blamed the rain today for a power rauure that affected Emerald Bay resi· dents for more than two hours Sunday. Th ey said nearly 1.000 customers In homes on both sides of Pacific Coast Highway were wit~out power in mid· afternoon when rain damaged a transformer. (See BAIN, Page AZ> S Die in Blaze LOS ANGELES <AP> -A fire that lnveaUgators say may have been deliberately set has JdUed a mot.her and her rpur small children, sheriff's Deputy Marvin Cavanau.c.h said today. Joanne Paul, 2e, and tho ch1lclren. Anthony, to, Enoeh. 4, Rachod, 2, and Mary Ann. 7 m.onth'I, wero found dead in their bedroomJ Sunday at thear Florence area home. ' Gasoline To Go Up 6 Cents? ABU DHABI, United Arab Emirates <~P> -The decision by OPEC to jack up oil prices by 14.5 percent next year sent the American dollar and stock ·market into a nosedive today, but the head of the oil cart~e· fended the increases as o/fi1oye destglled-to help the world economy. Some specialists estimate the price boost. coming in four stages. will by itself raise ~rican _gasoline and heating. oil prices by rec cen s a gallon by late 1979. Energy Secretary James Sc hlesinger said that when other market forces are factored m. the per-gallon increase will prob- abl:v be five or six cents. The average U.S. gasol~ne price was 66 cents a gallon as of Nov. l. .. The oil pnce hike 1s part of the measures to correct the world's economic s ituation." said Rene Ortiz of Ecuador. the new secretary-general of the 13·n ation Or ganization or Petroleum Exporting Countnes. Ortiz. speaking with reporters, did not s~ll out in detail how the price boost would benefit the world. except to say OPEC coun- tries "have got responsibilities and tasks toward the coming generations and toward develop- ment or their countries and find · ing alternative sources o r energy than oil when 1t is ex· hausted. <See OIL, Page A2> Coast Weath e r Showers possibly Jleavy tonight with chance of a thunderstorm. Partly c loud y Tuesday with c hance or s h owers decreasing to 10 percent A little cooler tonight with lows in the 40s. Highs Tuesday 56 to 62. INSIDE T ODAY Grown men fight over IB· year.old athlett• a1 iports become big ~ ... Ste the •tart of a five·port ttrie1 on Page BJ. Al8 .. _... Cl Alt Afltl l.AlllHn Cl M *"'" ..... eJ Nal*lel-M At Of .... c:.itY Atl c.H !:?.......... 9J ., • a14 •1 ·~ es" 94 T....nU. ii5:.. ~ s Monday, December UI. 1971 Oil Price me· Blasted-f'f'VM P Gflf!AI M4YOR FI Gll1S OILINcrm...tsE -RAIN.-. ·--~......;,:...;;:, Officials Say Mo ve Will Fee d lnflatiori NEW YORK <APl -Mayor Edward Koch wu working th~ crowd on Fifth Avcnu«:, havtna a good tlme with constlLuent • when 1omeone 1 kt d what meusur<.'5 the city m1Jhl llikt lo cope with the Increase lo oil prices announced by the OreanlzaUon or Petroleum ~"· Power wu restored to •fl but 50 homes two bour11 later. The remjjlnlng ~ customers-were without power for about 10 hours . NEW YORK CAP> -The d laion to boost th plict of crud oil 14.S ~rct•nt Marly double Hrl er prodkU001 will ff*J In nation in the UnJted Statea and could hurt t.b U oll·producan1 n1- tton1 ttooOmitaJJy, ay &OYft'T\ro aod LMUIU'y ottlc all. Pr ident Cart.er aa.ld Sund!l1 that th lnc,.. o wut butt .t· roru to redut lnllatJon and maintain a world economic retovcry lie aald th oll produc1n1e countries hart' lhe ruponalblllty tor the 1ucceu ot ocooomic pru11111mi , :--:-..... "Wt; tU~GaET THI~ OP D I ION and hope It wut tM-re· COIUldl'rtd bt'fo1e tht> n Jet Ile~ W errt-ct," C1tttr HJd ·'It obvlOUll) 11 aertous:• said Allred Kahn, Carter'• chld In· flatlon ttahttr "I'm v~ry unhapipy becau e I U\lnk ll will be ter· rlbly lf\JUr10U!t to u" und In the lona run to them " Encru l'irt'fftary J•m . h n er, ll<bo ura~ th Organ111 Uon ot Pl'trol um l'~>.portln~ COWltn lo treexe th priC'f' o( crud oil. 1ald "It ts a ubbtanU1&I 1nt r '" lar~n than we had hoped It could h11v~ m.,or lmpa('b not only on trade balancea but alto on the role ol inllaUoo " Tbe cttneral tlmatc of tnc~~ ln t.h~ pncea of 1uoUne and hc1allng oU In the United Sll1tc 1 about thr~ c nu per Clllon SCltLt;8J.NGER PR£DICTt;D TIIAT ADOJ1'JONAL mullet forcea beyon4°1bf' OPEC move ~uld rlliti.c the price of 11110Une at thti pump by MOUl ·r two or lhr cent.a by tbe end or next ye~r Aa ot Dec. l, the avtiraa price of ituaohno wu 66 cent.a a 1aJlon '"Thhi ii b•rdly o mlnlmaJ lnf.reue," A111d SchJesln1er, 1pe1k· me Sunday on ABC telev1slon'• 'laauc..-s and Answers." "ft could have • mrtjor mpuct not only on trade balances, but aliso on the rate of ulflalion, on the perrormance of the Industrial economies " Government and industry otnclals si.id the U S lnnauon rate -about 9\.'I percent -will rile by Ol'lC!·hal( to Ulree·quarters or ll percentage poiot b<!cause or the OPEC dt:c1s1on. A SPOKESMAN •·oa 1'11£ CONSOLIDATED Edison Com · pany of New York City who:ie rates are amone the nuUon's highest -saJd Sunday that the oil price hike may mean u 4 per· cent increase in electric rates and a 10 percent increase 111 steam rates. OPEC, which supplies 37 percent of lhe United States' oil, ap· proved Sunday a rour·step plan tbat will boost the price o( a 42- gallon barrel of crude by 14.S percent by Oct. 1. 1979. In nine months. the price will go from the current $1.2.70 to $14.54. Most analysts predicted a rise of not more lhao 8 percent. The price boost is scheduled to begin with a S percent increase Jan. l, and proceed in quarterly increments through Oct. l. "The economy was in pretty bad shape anyhow -this probably makes il worse," sajd Michael Evans, president of Chase Econometrics. an economic analysis arm or Chase Manhattan Bank. • ''In the rest or the world. 1979 will probably be a pretty good year. Only the U.S. is going tosu!rer a recession." ANALYSTS SAID OPEC NEEDED a price Increase lo cover the losses members have relt because of the decline in value or the dollar, the currency used by OPEC. But it w1U mean a $4.S billion increase next year an the United States' aJrcudy large trade deficll. And the deficit -about $45 JFK, King Deaths No Hard Evidence Of Conspiracies WASHINGTON CAP> AltJ. a SS.8 mj)Jion investigation. the House Assassinations Commit· tee is considering a conclusion that conspiracies can neither. be proved nor ruled out in tM' AS· sassinalJons of John F. Kennedy and Dr. Martin Luther King. Rep. Louis Stokes, D·Ohio, chairman, suy$ he thinks the committee has painted publicly "the outlines of a 'conspiracy" involving a SS0,000 St. Louis bo4nly for Kjng's ussassinatlon. But Stokes acknowledRed the committee has no proof of such a conspii::acy bchtnd King's murder in Memphis on /\pnl 4. 1968. At the same time, a SOO·pa,ge starr draft summary reportedly says there is no evidence of any specific conspiracy in Kennedy's assassination in Dallas on Nov. 22, 1963, but all posslbllities have not been ruled out . The draft report se&ys, for ex· ample, that old evidence of or· ganized crime links lo the killlng has not been proved or dis· proved although "there 1s no direct evidence" of an orgamzed crime conspiracy. The committee also has sug· gested publJcly that conspiracy in Kennedy's assassination can· not be ruled out without tesllnR a rt!Cently surfaced piece Of film lo see if It shows conspirators. Robert L. Groden, a New Jersey photo technician, says his study or the film shows clear movement by more than one shape at the windows from which Lee Harvey Oswald is ac· cuaed of killing Kennedy with a hiJth·powered rirle. OAANOE COAST DAILY PILOT l tM Or-.oi (Ge\t 0.lly PHot Wlff'tWhM'f\•\f(W'I'\ l>•Mt'ltfWI>~~' l\pubfj~_.flPWI'(),_.,,,.,,, c. ... ,. Pvibll\twnfl(~· "' .. , ........ °"" ••• ...,Ol•"'-d -._. ,,,......,_ r,.,,., 101 c .. 1. ,,,.__ H-llo.ocl> H""lltlqt°" "'"'"''°"" t•inV•l~y tr~w-. l~ ... .ihl\,outh(_ .. ,1 ,. ~tftO'I• r900'\IM echtt0ft t' ~t"""'d '4iC!lf0.Y'\ ~ SwMf•Y\ ffW ,, ........ ~t\-hlftO ptMt t\ tt lJO Wl'•t &•, \f'"" C~f• ~ (•It,.,'"• t~ .......... -"'*" ... "'~~·---, .... c- 'tl'(• ,.,n..,"1 •ftd Ort,,_,.,~ ~ .. 11...,M tlGOO< no ..... ,,,,.....,...... """""'"' C.dller c.Mti.t" '--Ill(-,. -A\\l\ttf't MaM01noFdllelf'\ T .. •phone (7'4)~ CIHlffln Adwet1ltl119 .. a.. .. .,.. "'°"' "'" , ......... ......, The committee is to vole on final cooclusions this week. One proposed recommendation is· that the Justice Department in· vestigate the film and the com· miltee's undisclosed conspiraey leads. The most impressive testimony was sc1enlir1c evidence s upporting the Warren Commission's conclusion that Lee Harvey Oswald was the lone gunman in Kennedy's as· sassination. Teams of experts assembled by the committee agreed that all three ·shots at Kennedy's limousine ln n~aley Plaza were fired from Oswald's rifle from a sixth noor window. '.They agreed one shot mlssed. one went through the president's throat and into John Connally · and the third exploded in Ken· nedy's skull. The only contrary evidence was a sound <m a tape recording of a motorcycle policeman's radio. All expert said it has a 50-50 statistical chance of being a p1st-0I shot fired by someone else. The committee d emolis hed James Earl Ray's alibi that he was blocks away in a service station when King was shot. The only purported witness to that story admitted it was a hoax. The committee also presented evidence, as Stokes put it. that Ray stalked King to Selma and AU,nta before the assassination. But the panels of experts, In eluding ballistics experts, were unable to find physical evidence that Ray fired the shots that killed King. Ray pleaded guilty to the. as- saRsination and ls serving a 99· year prison sentence, but now says he was framed. His fingerprints were on the rifle found near the scene out ne saya he had turned the gun over to a man he knew only as Raoul for what he thought was a gun· running operation . Keg Explodes, Kills Reveler MILFORD, Ohio (AP) -A ChrlatmaJ party for a group of utility compan y employee• ended ln traJedy when a beer ke1 exploded, ldllln1 one man and lnJu.rtn1 another . Bernard Warman . 37, of MllfOTd w11 killed and J ames Burdette, '29, of Batavia Yi•• hoapttalbed wtt.b a head Injury after the accident. About 15 wonen ot ClnclMIU OH le Electrtc Co. were at the party. said 81'\tff Stoecklin, a company apokesman. bill Ion this~ year -hu played a key role ln th dccllne of tbu dollur "I think that th OPEC countries may themselves come to rear t '° aharp an lncroaae ln view ot the harmrul ertect Uiat It wlll hav on the world econom,v," Kahn aaid. "You un't en1ct al~ per~•nt 1ncre ... In the prtco of the world'• most Important fuel. and not exl>«-l tbt' cuslomel"I on whom you depend to 1Juftcr und thut 1ufrerhlJ& w renc"t back on you_·_· ----------- * * * l',,..Pa~AI OIL ... · "Tht'::.t' A&l'nnat1ont1 will never rorA&lve us tr wr do not build for the futur«>," ht> aaid. "These countries that have reservations about our decisions should re· aJ1u that we are budding for the future of our p<.'<>plc " Artcr Ule OPEC oil m101sters announced the pnce increase at lb • end C>f a lwo·day meeting Sunduy. Pr ident Carter i.asued a 1tatement eayana it would hurt eUorts to reduce inflation and urging OPEC to reconsider. His chief inflation·ri1hter. Alfred Kahn, called it "terribly injurious." The United States gets 37 per. cent of Its oil from OPEC nations. The impact on the U.S. curren- l'Y WltS swift. l'he value of the dollar fell against all major cur· rencies thJs morning. The cur· r e ncy marke ts .·clearly an· ticlpate a darker economic pie· lure ror the United States be('ause or the OPEC Increase. The Soviet news agency Tass today took note of Western com· plaints about the price rise and sal~it was "nolblng but an al· tem pl to put the blame on somebody else." It said the West's inability to curb inflation is what drove the OPEC nations to i moose a "protective" in· crease to try to keep up. The Soviets are self.sumCienl fn oU. portln.i COOntries "I'm aoing to try w u o less on in my salad." the mayor said ~unday . , . .. ,..,,..._. The 13 ministers decided lo, put the increase, OPEC's big- gest since early 1974, into effect In stages: 5 percent on Jan. I. raising the present base price of $12 10 per 42·gallon barrel to $13.33: 3.8 percent on April 1. in· creasing the price to $13.84; 2.3 percent on July l , raising the price to $14.16. and 2. 7 percent on Oct. 1, pushing the price to $14.54. '-''nflagerne11t Told The $12.70 price haal>een frozen since early 1977. The oil cartel said the increase was necesliary to compensate for the erosion of their revenues and holdings caused by world infla. tion and by the depreciation o( the dollar, the currency in which the oil trade is conducted. Informed sources said two days of maneuvering and in· tervenUon by Abu Dhabi's ruler cleared the way for the OPEC decision. They said the hos t to the OPEC wl nte¥ meeting, Sheik Zayed bin Sultan, and his oil minister, Mana Said Otaiba. were the leading m ediators between Saudj Arabia. which wanted to continue the oil·price · freeze, and Libya and Iraq. which called pubU~c-Jy for -in- creases of up w 25 percent. 0 P EC's 52nd meeting was held in an ornate hall or the Abu Dhabi Hilton. But the real work was done in the delegates' hotel s uites and in the hallways, behind a screen or soldiers and whlte·robed security guards car· rying automatic weapons. Bird Stolen From Laguna Pet Store Tangertne, a. costly cockatoo with a lOWJy dlsposltlon toward those be doesn't know. was stolen from his perch at the Laguna Pet Shop by burglars who broke open u back door to the store over the weekend. The $2,500 white cockatoo with an oranRe crest, is the second expensive bird taken from the shop at 278 Forest Ave. in the past month. Police said thieves pried open the back door and stole a ca~e containing Tangerine sometime Saturday night. They discarded the cage a few doors down from the store. Last month, burglars used the same means to get into the pet s hop, knocklnfl over a lar1e cage to grab Duke, a S2,SOO blue and gold macaw parrot. Police saJd the burglars at· tempted to get lnto two other Forest Avenue shop.a, before succe11rully breakin. into the pel store. Tangertne. a fo ur·year ·old bird, waa reportedly unfriendly to s tranaen and capable of de· Uverln1 a mean bite. Eectioo Conceded Sheila Brewster Rauch of Villanova. Pa .. arid Joseph P. Kennedy HJ. son of tryc late Robert F. Kennedy, have <tnnounred their engt1gemcnt. No date has been set for the wedding. lrvine Medical Center. in1Uully told police he was checking an acetylene gas leak reported in the room and had forgotten to discard a cigaret he said he was smoking, according to officers Police said that numerous fragments of plastic mate rrul and bags. similar to fragments recovered from the explosions or the two balloons earlier, have led them to conclude the factory Woman Loses Purse, Coat A jazz fan who left her seat during a Stan Getz concert Sun· day in Laguna Beach returned to find her purse and coat miss. lng. Cheryl Ann Mills. 25. of Anaheim , lold police someone walked out or the While House Restaurant, 34~ South Coast Highway shortly after 7:30 p.m . taking her purse and a three· quarter length wool coat. She said the belongings were valued at $417. , • • was the launch point "A small numb e r o r employees may be involved in these balloon ffights," Lt. Gene Norden said. However, there have been no arrests. and, so far, police are still just question· 'ing people at the ractory. Laboratory tests comparing fragments or the known ex· ploded balloons and fragments round in the Control Components X·ray room were incomplete to- day. P olice theorized that the balloons were fail e d with a lighter·than-air gas, and that bags containing flammable ac.e.l)'leoe were attached beneath the balloons. Both materials were found in the X·ray lab. They believe the balloons were exploded u sing a f'U se of matches taped together Jn a string. Such a group or matches also was found in the lab, police said. Police have ended their stakeouts of the Industrial com· plex. "There will be no more balloon launches," Lieutenant Norden predicted. Santiago Peak is recording the highest rain level in Orange County. The register al .the mountain location shows 10.60 Inches or raJn &e. far this year com pared to S. 7 ,nches entered in the log on De('. t8, 1977. Trame orftcera throughout the county commenlE•d today that the rt11n is responsible for a marked lncreay in "fender bentler" colliaions, but hae not cuased any major traffic acc1· dents . ''That's because of the nature" or the nun." Callrornia Hlghw•y Patrol olltce.r Vern Smith said. "It's been fairly steady and showery w1lh none of the del- U'1:es that so freque ntly cause m~jor collisions among motorists Who 5imply can't see the road in front of them." SporUI rans and organizers ot outdoor entertainment were less enthusiastic in their assessment or the Christmas weeJc storm. More than 23,000 ticket.holders stayed away from the....Los Angele• Rams' encounter with the Oreen Bay Packers at the Coliseum Sunday. And disappointed Disneyland visitors learned arter they ar· rived at the magic kingdom Sun· day that two weekend Christmas parades had.been called otr. Weather rorecasters warned that the storm is creating wihd conditions along the coast that could prove dangerous for small boats S mall craft warnings are in ef· feet along the Southern Cahforn1 a coastline lo the Mex· it an bor_.ticr The storm brought nothing but JOY lo skiers Snow level:. were down to 3,000 feet at many locations with re- sorts reporting good to excellent candJt1ons on most slopes with prcd1ct1ons that skiil'.lg condi· lions would hold good through the holiday season. White 'Mute' On Slayiilgs SAN FRA]IJCISCO (AP> - Former Supervisor Dan While. accused in· the Nov. 27 City Hall slay1ngs of Mayor George Moscone and Supervisor Harvey Mi I k. refers to that day as "tragic Monday'' but won't talk about it further, his rriends say. Family friend Joe Ryan, who visits him in jajl, said W~ite ti.lks about the murders only with his wire and attorney. With friends. he seems .. bland and stoic." Ryan safd, wanting more to listen than to talk. "I get 20 minutes with him but arter rive min utes there..'s nothing more tq say:· Ryan said. Rock Singer F.Bcapes Crash BIRMI NG HAM , En g land c AP> Pop singer Rod Stewart elfCllped injury when the-Rolls Royce rn which he was rfdang had a blowout and crashed into a .ditch on a s uperhighway between London and Bir. ming ham. Ttle chauffeur of the Rolls Royce Phantom. owned by singer Tom Jones, also was un. hurt A police car took Stewart on to 81rm1ngham where ~e performed before a capacity crowd of 16,000 fans Sunday. RtCKMONO. Va. CAP) -Cit· Ina hi• tn1btll~ to pay the am oont ct money a 1pedaJ court Hid would be requtr«I for a re· count, Democr1t Andrew Miller ha1 cOMeded t.be Nov. 7 tJ.s. S.Dat. el~Oft ln V1r1lnla to Republican John Warner. ALSGARAOE • !>6 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH (714) 644·7030 7 OH-Chiefs t ABU DHABI, United Arab t Eftllrate. (AP) -The d.clalon by OPEC to jact up oU pri~ by r 1'.5 ~ Dflt year ltftt the t; American dolt1r and stock i ta,ea, wlll by ilaetf ralte Ame1'1nn ruollne and h•at.lna· oU r.nces by three centa a 1allon by ale ltTt. r market lll&o a noffd1vt \Oday. . but th• bead ol the oll cartel de-~ · fended the mueaaa u a mbw ~ deal•ned to belp lbe world Ener1y Secretary James Scblesl.Qaer Hld lbat when other market 1~ .,.. factored in, lbe ~r·a•llon Increase will prob- 1bly be nve or 1tx centl. The avera1e U.S. cuoline price wu ee centa a aaUon u ol Nov. 1. f • , ' . l ! l' , t '" t •, economy. Some speciallata estJmate t.k price boolt, comina in four "Tbe oU priee hike it part of * * * * * • Sh£ents a G a l lott't Oil Price Rise To Boost ·Gas NEW YORK <AP> -The deci&ion to boost the price of ct'Ude oil 14.5 percent -nearlll double earlier predicUona -will feed in· flation {n the United States and could hurt the 13 oil-producing na- tions economically, say government and industry officials. President Carter said Sunday that the increase will hurt ef- forts to reduce inflation and maintain a world economic recovery. He said the oil·producing countries share the responsibillty for tbe success ol economic programs. ' .. WE &EGRET THIS OPEC ~ECISION and hope it will be re- considertd before the next steps take effect,'' Carter siid. "It obviously is serious, ... said Alfred Kahn, Carter's chief in- flation fighter. "I'm very unhappy because I think it will be ter- ribly injurious to us and -in the Jong run -to them." Energy Secretary James Schlesinger, who urged the Organiza- tion of Petroleum Exporting Countries to freeze the price of crude oil, said: "It is a subs~Ual increase, larger than we bad hoped. It could have major impacts not only on trade balances but also on the rate ol inflation." The general estimate of increases in the prices of gasoline and heating oil in the United States is about three cents per gallon. SCJD..&gNGEB P•EDICl'ED TllAT ADDmONAL market forces beyond the OPEC move would raise tbe price of easollne at the pump by anotheHwe or three centa by the end ol next,.,.. M of Dec. 1, the average price of &aaolin'9 was 64S centa ~ gallon. "This is hardly a minimal increase:• said Schlesinger, speak- ing Sunday on ABC television's "Issues and Answers ... "It eoc.tld have a major impact not only on trade balances. but also on the rate of inflation, on the performance of the induatrial ecoootnles." . Govern.meat and industry officials said the U.S. inflation rate -about 9~ percent -will rise by one-half to three.quarters of a percentage point because of the OPEC decision. " SPOKESMAN _roa THE CONSOUDATED Edison Com· pany of New York City -whose rates are among the nation's highest -said Sunday that the oil price hike may mean a 4 pet'· cent increase in electric rates anaa 10 ~!'cent increase In steam rates. OPEC, which supplies 37 percent of the United States• oil, ap- proved Sunday a four-step plan that will boost tbe price of a 42~ gallon barrel of crude by 14.5 percent by Oct. 1, 1979. In nine months, the price will go from the current $12.10 to $14.54. Most analysts predicted a rise of not more than 8 percent. The price boost is scheduled to begin with a 5 percent increase Jan. 1, and proceed in quarterly increments through Oct. 1. "The economy was in pretty bad shape anyhow -this probably makes it worse," said Michael Evans, president of Chase Econometrics, an economic analysis arm of Chaae Manhattan Banlt. "In the rest of the world, l979will probably be a pretty good year. Only the U.S. is going to suffer a recession." ANALYSTS SAID OPEC NEEDED a price increaae to cover the losses members have felt because of the decline lo value ot the dollar, the currency use<J by OPEC. But it will mean a $4.5 billion increase next year in the United States' already large trade deficit. And the deficit -about $4S billion this year -has played a key rote in tbe decline of the dollar. "I think that the OPEC countries may themselves come to regret so sharp an increase In view of the harmf~ effect that It will have on the world economy," Kahn said. "You can't enact a 15 percent increase In the price of the world's moet_ important fuel, and not expect t.be customers on whom you depend to sutter and that suffering to reflect back on you." * * * the mea1ure.a to correct tM world '1 economic altuatioo." .aid Rme on1a ol Eculdor. the n w atcre\ar1·1enwal of the 13-oaUon Orcanlution· of Pelrolewn Exportlft& Countries. OrUa, speWllA« will\ reporters, dld not loell CMll in detail bow the price boolt would benefit tbe world, ~cept to say OPEC coun· tries "haft sot respomibiliUes aoct .tub Wwant tbe comifte generaUans and toward develop- ment of their counlriH and find· In~ alternative sources of etter1Y than oil when it la ex· bautUMI. "Tbele gmeratJou wUJ never forsive •if we do not build for the future,1• he said. "These countries that have reservations about our decisions should re- alize that we are building for the future ot Clllr peGDle." Die Eyes Rav e It? Whatever their visual faculties, visitors to the San Clemente parking Jot used by Dr. Bruce Ewing do a dou- ble take When they. spot the optometrist's eye-catching sign. But seeing ·is believing ~d no one doubts the OP· timum effect tl)at the chart bas on visitors who know a g_ood gimmick when ~ey see it. A Daily Pilot photog- rapher ~t resist-getting the w~le scen~in focus. ' " t Your Hometown · Dally Newspaper After the. OPEC oil mlnJaters announced tbe price increue at t.be end of a two-day meetlng Sunday, PresWent Carter iasuecl · a statement saying it would hurt effort.I to reduce lDClation and utlin& OPEC to reconsider. Ria chief inflation-fighter, Alfred Kahn, called it "terribly inju.rioua." , Tbe United States gets 37 per· cent of its oil from OPEC . t natioq. The lmpact on the U.S. CUrren· cy was swift. The value of the dollar feU againat all m,aJor cur· renciea thia moming. The cur· reocy markets clearly an· ticipate a darker economic pie· lure for the United States because of the OPEC increase. The Soviet news agency Tass today took note of Western com· (See OIL, Page AZ> SfJ0/0 Chance Toni ght .Rainy Weather Staying Around A rainstorm that drenched Christmas shoppers and com· muters Suilday and today shows oo signs of abating before Tues.- day, weather forecasters said. Weather analysts predict a 50 percent chance of rain tonight. The storm thus far bad dropped 1.5 inches ot rain on the county as of this morning. It is expected to peter oU into showers about mid-day Tuesday. After that, the torecasters say. cloudy conditions through Wednesday with night time tem- peratures Jn the mid 40s and daytime highs in the high 50s can be expected. Rainfall is running about dou· ble that of a yeir ago, but thus far is not creating any problems in terms of flood damage or crop damage. "The rain ls very welcome to most or our activities here," commented Irvine Company eroat .Jlb.iMoll man~r Carl Lindsren. .. It 's-e.arti~ularl)' ~nefieial for our c.We grazing operations and for irrtJ(•UonJ>urposH," be aaJd. "Al Uli.I point. the rain is being abeorbed as quickly as it falls .ad is not posing any problems tq us." Orange County's agricultural operations olficers agreed with Lindgren that the rain, up to now, is a welcome friend to the county farmer and water COO· servers. Thus far, the season's.rainfall in Orange County stands at about 5.S inches, more than dou- ble the ~ inches recorded at tbls time last year. Southern California Edison Company officials blamed the rain today for a power failure <See RAIN, Page AZ> Bandits H it Costa Mesa Restaurant Posing as representatives from the restaurant chain home office, two m e n h e ld the manager of Costa Mesa's Colony Kitchen al gunpoinl Sunday and escaped with an estimated $4,500 in cub. The manager ol the restaurant at 3211 S. Harbor Blvd. said the men approached him at the cash reglater at about 11 :30 a.m . and asked toUlk to htnrin his office. Inside the office, the men asked to check the restaurant's recelJ>ts. When the manager opened the safe, the two men, described as neat and well dressed, whipped out revolvers. Police said the manager was bound with tape and rorced un- der his desk while the men took cash from the opened safe. plac- ing it in a briefcase. Both men were described as in their late 20s, about s ix feet tall and of medium build. One wore a light blue suit and had blond hair. _ Irvine Balloons· Burst The second stickup man wore a tan suit and had brown hair and a mustache, the manager said. The p air ran fro m t he restaurant and m ade their getaway in a Cadillac believed rented from a Leasing agency. No Suspects, But Police Predict Ending By PIDUP BOSllAalN °' -D.ity ...... StilH Though they're not naming a ny suspects or accusing anyone, Irvine police conlidentl,y predicted~ there won't be a recurrence or Jut week's ex- ploding balloons that threatened small craft landing at Orange County Airport. • Meantime. poflce are examin- ing fragments of plastic material found strewn across an X-ray lab or a tactory after an explosion Thursd·ay which seriously burned an inspector there. Police bad been staked out nearby in hopes ot sp~t~ing another balloon launc hing. Balloona had been seen exploding in fireballs at about 850 feet, the altitude of lncoming airplanes, on both Monday and Wednesday. Police rushed to Control com- ponents, 2561 s.E. Main St .• the source ot the explosion. The company manufac tures mechanical control valves. They found Terry Huff, 26. of Orange. burned on the face. hands and chest by a flash fire in the explosion which knocked out windows and blew a steel door olf its binges and into the hall. fra gments of the known ex- ploded balloons and fragments founfj in the Control Components X-ray room were incomplete to- day. Policeptbeorlzed that the balloons were filled with a lighter-than-air gas. and that hags containing flammable acetylene were attached beneath the balloons . Both materials were found in the X-ray lab. They believe the balloons were exploded us ing a fuse of matches taped together in a string. Such a group of matches also was found in the lab, police said. Police have ended their stakeout& ol the industrial com- plex. police reported. · S4BOI' S.4ILED TO SPEEDY SALE "I'm a bigger winner with the money I received than I ever was with my racing Sabot. "I sold it on the first day to the first caller ." That's the advertising success story of the Costa Mesa man who placed this ad in the Daily Pilot: Ral.'ing i1nbot , full y equipt. xlnt eond. S2SO firm XXX·XXXX after 5. Co ast Weather Showen PoSSlbly beavy ton1gbt with chance o( a thunderstorm. Partly cloudy Tuesday with chance o,..,,.._owers decreasing~ .10 .~rcent. A UttJe cooler tonieht with lows in the 40s. Hlgbs Tuesday 56 to 12. SWcks Take Plunge. After Oil Increase Huff, in stable condition at UC Irvine Medical Center, iniUally told police he was checking an acetylene gaa le• reported in the room and bad forgotten to disc:ard a cigarette he said he wu smoking, according to of. licen. .. .. ---··--Pollce said that numerous fragments of pJuUc material and bap similar to rr-.ments reco\'en;I from the explosiou ol th~ two balloona earlier, have IMt them to conclude tbe iactory "There will be no more balloon launches." Lieutenant Norden predicted. If you want to "Sale" your boat, the Daily Pilot can mean fast cash returns. A friendly ad- viser will help write a best setter. Just call 64.2-5678. 'Kiiier' Boaey . Novelty Gift Edible ~· INSIDE TODAY Grotaft ,,..,. ftgltl °"' ,,_ c:o,,.o1c1 "'. ,.,., QI "'°"' • big buanns. Sft ,,.. rtort of o fft»-porC M1W1 on POflf 8J. .... NEW YORK (AP> -Word ot a larger-tban-etpected increase in world oil prices drove stock prices tnto a lbarp decline in heavy tr~ today. In the fil'lt five hours the Dow JoaH averaae ol 30 lnduatriall WU down 21.22 POinta to '71U.3, droppU., below the 800 level for th• nrst time l1Dce tbe end of Nov· ember. · Decli.am overwhelmed •alnen by a lJ·lmarein amoq New York Stock Exdut"f.:llltecf luues. On Sunday Ortouatlon ol Petroleum Sxpor1la1 Coun· trlf1 umounced tbat It WCMld r1l1e prlcn IA.I perceat In quarterly stac• tbroqla Dext Oet. l . Tbe newt cam• aa aa un- pleasant IUl'prile to Wall atre.t. which bad been baptnc for an lo· creueaaemallaal~t. And analy1ta· noted tbat It eompounded IDYMtcn' UMUI· •• nesa about lnflaUon sped!lcally and tlae economic outlook lD · 1eneNI. •'I think people are a litUe ahoetecl," said Charles Jenaen at llKJ SecuritJea. "'{be stock marltet doesn't like 1urprisea like tbil." Tbe news a19o depressed Ute boncf market, which ii hllhlY 1eutttft to lhlft.a In lallaUoaary expect.uoa.. 'nae dollU' feU ID foNtaa~while the priee of aold by belt.er than '7 an ounce in . , Gold minta1 •tocks 1alntd •toalld. ftOe all otber m*" 1toek ~ ... ....,., pnl· aare. OU. auto. alrltn• aad lellur•traftl 1toekl all I~" around· Tb• Brttiih poad croued tM ti man. a.I 0.. deUar....,.. mon ttaatwo Jm ID TokJO. waa the launch point. . "A 1mall number of employee1 may M lnvol\'ed in these balloon flllbts," LL ~ Norden said. However, there bave been no arreata. and. so (.r, polU:e .... .lt11I Jut quetUoo· int people • tbe f.tory. aboratory tetta compartq (. O•llY P'"' tllll ~· Shored lJp Orange County's new, ~ million Ha li of Admm1strahon ' -sprouted shorings like thjs one over the weekend as .. stress crac~. began showing on outside concrete beams. County officials weren't s ure what was causing the cracks and were studying lhe situation today. Police Probe Gaming Ring; Four Arrested Newport Beach police said to· day they are continuing their In· vcstigallon of an alleged football card betUng ring after making four gambling-related arrests last Frlday. .. Bennett Gene Eromo, 46, of Norwalk has been released on $2,000 ball and Daniel Sanchez, 24 , a Marine stationed at El Toro. has been released on his own recognizance, s aid Sgt. John Simon. He declined to identify the other two suspect&, an Irvine man and a Santa Ana man, pending compleUon oJ 1he in· vestigation. Sergeant Simon 1uud betting markers and more than $5,000 an cash were seized during the ar- rests in Newport Beach, Costa Mesa and Norwalk. Coins and Jewelry Stolen in Mesa Nearly $3,000 worth of. coins · · and· jewelry were taken from a Costa Mesa bedroom sometime Friday.· poJlce SaY.. without in- dications that anyone broke into · the home. Kenneth N. Cllssold of 2532 Greenbriar Lane estimated his ramily's loss at $2,800. Costa Mesa investigators said a burglar could have used a wire or credlt card to open a door at the home without leaving FY marks or breaking glass. Indian Pipe Bag Taken From Store A Costa Mesa antique dealer told police this weekend Lhat someone took a Sioux Indian pipe bag from a display case during the week without paying. Joseph J . Poyer said the beaded, leather bag was last ~cen on Dec. 9 when he i;how~ 1t to a potential customer in his s hop at 2428 Newport Blv'lt. Poyer valued the 18-by 4-i~h bag at $500, poJlce said. ( DAILY PILOT tM Or_ (_I (M<ty p, ... "'""•"k" I•<• _""',......,.._ .• _,_.,., ... °'_ tM\I P.,111 ..... C-. .. _ .. ,,.., __ ,,_ ........ _,,, , .... _ p,,.., ... c- ~. ,..,_ .... -·-°" ...... ,,_ 1•tf\Y•Un ,,.,.,_ L~&Nc,,. '°'1tft( ... A '•nit._,,. .. ..,... ... ,~ 1,~twd-..."r..,.,-., .._.,, '"" llflrtCicNI -'"'''"' pt'""1 I•-' Ill "'"'&.•Sl"t1 t.oi.,,.... , ............ ,.. ·-11.--,,~-~·· ... "'*·-, .. ,. CWWJ \ll(t .......... _ o._ .. ""'-.,_.,...,,. i;.01 .. '=::... ""tJ'::4 ~:.~IMft-.t:=!\..,. ' I',.._ Page Al RAIN •.. that affected Emerald B~sl· dents for more than two hours Sunday. They said n early 1,000 customers in homes on both sides ot . Pacific Coast lllghway were without power in m.ld afternoon when rain damaged a transformer. Power was relltored to all but 50 homes t~o hours later. The remaining 50 customers wer.- without power for about 10 hours. Santiago Peak is recordios the highest rain level in Orange County . The register at the mountain location shows 10.60 Inches of rain so tar this year com pared to 5. 7 inches entered in the log on~-18, urn. . Traffic olficers throughout Lhe county commented today that the rain is responsible for a marked increase in "fender bender" collisions, but has not cuased any major traf(lc acci· dents. "That's because of the nature of the rain," CalifomJa Highway Patrol officer Vern Smith said. "It's been fairly s teady al1d showery with none of the del· og-es th11t ~ frequently chuse major collis ions amorig motorists who simply can't see the road in front or them.·· Sport! fans and organizers of outdoor entertainment were less enthusiastic In ~heir assessment or the Christmas week storm. More than 23,000 tlcketholders s tayed away from the Los Angeles Rams· encounter with the Green Bay Packers at the Coliseum Sunday. And disappointed Disneyland visitors learned after they ar· rived at the magic kingdom Sun· day that two weekend Christmlis parades had been called off. Weather forecasters warned that the storm is creallng wind conditions along the coast that could prove dangerous for small boats. Small craft warnings are in ef· feet along the Southern California coHUine to the Mex· lean border. The storm brought nothlng but joy to skiers. Snow levels were down to 3,000 feet at many locations with re. aorta reporUne 8ood to exceUent conditiooa on moel slopes with predictions that sklin1 condl· Uons would bold good through the holiday season. f',....P.,,e Al OIL. ••. plainta about the price Mae and aaid It waa .. not.bing but an al· tempt to put the blame on somebody elae." lt said the West's iaablllty to curb lnfiaUon la what drove the OPEC naUtlna to lmDOH a "protective" In· crease to try tO k~P. UJ?. The Sovleta are aelf·•ufflclent fn oU. Th• ta min1ltert decided t.o put &he lncreMe, OPEC'• bis· seat since .. r1y 11'74, into effect in 1ta1•: 5 perc.nt on Jan. 1, ra1.tln1 the preeeat but price of t12. 70 per 42·1•1lon barrel to $13.33; 3.t percent on Aprll 1, ln· creaan" tbe Pl'lc• to SU.8': I .I percent On !uly l , raillbl the prtc• to $14.11, and J. 7 percent on Oct. 1, puablq t.M price to tl4.5'. .... , ...... ,., ...... ,.~ . ~ ...... ..-~~-- HB Teacher Strike On For Jan. 3 Teachers say they plan t.o go ahead with a threatened Jan 3 strike after negotiations with Huntlnaton Beach Union Hlih School blstrict officials failed to briot a contract settlement. Ira Tolbin, president of a 1roup tePrelentJni the diatrict's 830 teachers, said the school board's latest Offer wu·rejected Friday after a dispute over blnd· inl arbitration. Tolbln also Indicated that teachers are sUU seeking a one· year five pereenl-p1ly blke - guaranteed retroactive to July 1978. • But district Superintendent Jake Abbott said the teachers ~ave been ottered a guara11teed five percent pay boost only if and when a state Imposed salary freeze ls lifted and the raises are ruled legal. Abbott said the main stum· bllng block in the deadlocked con· tract talks is the arbitration of teacbergrievances.Scboolboard mem ben say bindlng arbitration would erode local control. School board members want to keep advisory arbltratlon. But teachers are demanding that an Independent tb!ra party rule on t.eacb~r frlevanees that do not deal with financial matters in· eluding salary and fringe benefit disputes .. Abb o tt sa id di s tri c t •negotiators have decided to compromise on two other issues dealing with a contract emergency clause and teacher assignment policies ~ The con· tract· provlslons will be worded as they were in last year's teacher accord. Toibin said teachers are stm · ge'ltrlng uv for a strike the day after the )! return from holiday vacation. No furth er negotiation sessions are scheduled.· Bird Stolen From Laguna Pet Store Tan1ertne, a cosUy cockatoo with a lousy disposition toward those he doesn't know, was stolen from his perch at the Laguna Pet Shop by burglars who broke open a back door t.o the store over the weekend. The $2,500 while cockatoo with an oranie crest, is the second expensive bird taken from the shop at 278 Forest Ave. ln the past month. Police said thieves pried oper the back door and stole a cal{e contaln1n1 Tangerine sometime Saturday night. They discarded the caae a few doors down from the store. Last month. burglars uaed the same means to get into the pet shop, knoektn& over a large cage to grab Duke, a $2,500 blue and sold macaw parrot. Polle• •Uc\ the burglan at· tempted to tet into two other Forest Aven~ shops. before 111cce11fully breaking into the pet etore. Tangerine, a four·year·old bird, WU reportedly unfriendly to strangers and capable of de· Uvering a mean bite. GaratJe Looted In Meta Burglary A Cotta M... r11ident told police this weekend tbat bur1lan ..,.,erently cut the lock from Ma t~ll' ,.,.., .. Friday to mat. otr wit.la mu.Meal Wtru. meae. Ind Urw vaJu.d at a total otltlO. Hao 11uu Niue of 2112 Maple St. U.t.d JUI u a Mt of dnama, • tlec!Cric ruttar and four tine. don thorou-"'1 lt• ••policy de· clalon" to accept the completed work often re.ult. ln leaal tm· munlty lr the city la later sued over an accidint oo coinplet.ed tadllUee. •• · Df concern is the $840,000 lake, play area and landscape project known u TeWlnkle HHl. Archlt.ecturaJ features Include a pair of Jakes. fUled in Auauat. an •mphltbeater, a blcycle motocroaa area, two water slides and a system of su·ea.ms and holdine basins. While moet of the work ts corn· pleted, UM lar1e 1raasy open areas at.ill must be seeded. and the project bas not yet been ac· cept.ed by ttie clty. Councilmen iridlcat.ed special interest thll month in the eiiht· root fieep lakes. the downhHJ water slides s urrounded b y rocky landlcapine and a hilltop ·water baaln. Diacuaaed were th e poaatbllide1 ot fencing potential- ly danHl'OUI areas, flllln1 in basin . bottoms with sand to leaaen water depth and leulng the water slides to con- ceastonaira: 1 TeWlnkle park draw s neigbbotlna children without parental supervtalon. coun· cilmen noted. "How do 1 know what's going t.o happen the next day alter it opens." Councilman Dom Raciti warned. ~ftgagenaeni Told APll(l...-• Sheila Brewster Rauch of Villanova. Pa .. and Joseph p Kennedy III. ~on of the late Robert F'. Kennedy, have anno~nced their engagement. No date has been set for th~ weddmg. Qllits Tonight BlastA Hrmti~n Council m 'Inept' By llOISEllT BAltKER Of .. °"''"~ 11.tff Ron Shenkman announced to· day that he Is officially resign· lng from the Huntington Beach City Council at the beginning of tonight's Council meeting. Shenkman said he is Qulttina for professional and family rea· sons but added that the present council "ls the moat tumultuous and -l)\ept public body J have ever been usoclated with." Shenkman previously served on the Fountain VaUe1 City CouncU ~"on the ffunUn,ion Beacb Union Kiah School Dis· trlct board. He said today he will rem8Jn partially a(tJve jn city •ff1"rs "and wilJ figbt the hell'' out of a recent recall drive now gearing up tn the city. Shenkman and three other of· ficials we r e named r eca ll targets recently even though Shenkman announced Oct. 6 that he planned on quitting the coun- cil. M4.YOR FIGH1S - OIL INCREASE NEW YORK CAP> -Mayor Edward Koch was working the crowd on Fifth Avenue, having a good lime with constituents. wh e n som eone ask.ed wh at measures the clty might tuke to cope with the Increase 1n 011 prices ann ounced by the Organl:.uUon of Petroleum Ex· porting Countries. ~·r•m going to try t.o use less oll In my salad." the mayor said Sunday. He swd the announcement o( the recall was almost enough to make htm change his mind "I cam4! that close, .. he su1d tod';'Y· ··rm a street fighter butt dec1ded not t.o be selfish. But t am having withdrawal pains .. The _council. which appears to be solidly deadlocked into two camps, has until Feb 10 to select Shenkman's s uccessor . rr officials can't agree on a candidate. a special election would be held in May or June. Shenkman's term eitpires m April of 1980. Mayor Ron Pattinson said ~ day that he w111 propose that Shenkman·s successor be select· ed,.from,.-th..-rank#S.....-l~-wbo ran fOI' City Council lti 1976 and 1978. Prominent na mes in tha t ~ategory include former Jlunt· mgt.on Beach High School Board P!esident Ralph Bauer. Plan· ning Commission Chairman Ruth _Fi~ley. former pla nning comm1ss1oner Prim Shea •and ex·City Council members Al Coen and Ted Bartlett. Pattinson said incumbent coun· ell officials may also nomlnate other candidates. · Shenkman said today that the dill~rences on the present City Councif appear t.o be a matter of management principles. He declared Lhat council mem· 16 Cows Shot STAT~VlLLE. N.C. (AP> - Farmer&. say .someone &hot 16 cows from two herds lo the lat.est incident of vandaUsm to strike this community since Oc· tober. A dcnen cows died. Four horses also have been shot. bers should 11et general pohcies and the city admln ist r a tor should Jmplcm~nt them But he claims that somt! of· fi c1als are cau!iini turmoil by trying to play too a~ve a roll· 1n day-to·day operations Shenkman generally has betm a lig ned with Pattinson. Don MacAl_hs~r {l!ld John Thomas on maJOr 1ssuls. The opposing bloc is made up of Mayor Pro Tempore Richard Siebert, Ruth Blllley and Bob Mandie. ..A College Aide ·Stricken ~ai·-- Son's Game Saddleback College offtc1al Herm Schmidt of M Issi on VieJo. Is in serious condition today al St. Joseph's Hospital In OranJ(e after suffering a heart attack al his son's football game Saturday night. Schmidt. 49, was !'ltricken at Anaheim Stadium just prior to a game where his son, Craig led Mission Viejo-High School to-a CtF crown. Craig ls the team·s quarterback. Schmidt. of 26636 Portales Lane. ii; director of admissiof\S . and records at the Mu;s1on Vtt!JO campus. A spokesman there said today Schmidt wasn't feeling well earlier Saturday. but thought the discomfort was a stomach ache. Schmidt was principal of El Toro High School until his ap- pointment at the college in June. AL'S GARAGE 56 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH (714) 644·7030 -19 -..... ' ""- 1 I • DAILY PILOT A3 No : W ASHIHOTOllJAPl -~ I 1$.1 m1J.Uoa .. , rd'le'•, tM HOUM AllMllal&I .. CO.mlt.· lff' 11 ~ a "*tmta1 U11t ._...,...._••-loo erovM '*' nled out \a tM • 11Nl•-cl Jolul r. K--oad Dr. Mortie Luthor l<ID&· I Uncovered: -Ille .-,lr~i;i,:•....,'i IMtt•taldioe ID an .Nov"' a .1 • ._an,,11w•u11uve ... -NledDlll. ~Northern Regions Get Snow Rep .. Lou.la Stolle1, O.ot.ki, chairman, II.YI hi LhlW ta. committee h .. paJ.attd pubtlcb' "the ooUiw ol a conaptraey" lnvolvlna a $50,000 St. Louil bounty ror Kini'• u1••tln1Uoe. But Stok• acknowled&ed the committee hu no proof ol tutb . a con1piracy beblnd Kins'• murder tn Memphb on Aprtl 4, 11111. At the nme Ume. a = staff draft summary re 1ay1 tbere la oo evtdeac• of UY 'n• •• "'9rt ..,, •• fOt" ••• ample. tlLll ~ evldeoce ot or- 1 .. lted crime U.U IA> O.e klWnc h.-1 oot been .,roved or dll· proved althoulb •'there ll no direct evidence" Ol an or11.bhtd crime ~pl.racy. 't'be committee alao bu tut· l<tled pubUcly Ulet <Olllplroey (n Kunecb'• a&lutlnaUon CU· not be ruled out wit.bout lettina • recff!Uy awfaced piece ol nim to tee lt It abowl con1plraton. Robert., L. Groden, a New Jersey pbot.o technician. 1ay1 bit 1tud1ot1.he film 1hows clear movement by more than one shape at the windows from Strike by Eiwmies Of Shah Ign0red - .-TEHRAN, Iran (AP> -A :1eaera1 strike called by oppo. . neats ot ttie abab to observe a national d8y of mourni.D.g was larcely Ignored today, but one death . wu· reported lo street violence lD Qum, 7S miles south or the capifal. Demonstrators sboutlng "Death to the shah!" swirled through the narrow streets ol Qum, a centec. ol religious op. PoSillon to the shah. Besides the reported death, at least four people were reported wounded in clashes with the imperial troops. In Tabriz. 330 miles northwest of the eapitai, crowds mattbed through t.be' main avenues lau.nl· ing ~the royal troops, and some clashes were reported. Some_ deaths were also reported, but in- dependent sources could not con- firm the reports. Cl.eveW:nders Top Underdog FLINT, Mieb. (AP) -The Underdog of the Year award, which in the past went to such overtbadowed !individuals as Barbara Walten' co-anchor and Phyllis Schlafly's husband, •bas been-awankd to the 625,000 resi- dents of Cleveland: ·cR·elat~ story, M .) However, Underdoes Interna- tional ii award.in& clllyblle. ""..tln- derdog"' ci~thl 'nh"!'l!:alJtf ~ to Mayor Denn.is Kucinicb. Peter ?o1.oeller . who leads the Michigan-based organization, said the award would cost about $9 million otherwise. The shirt was sent to Kucinich with a suuestioo lbat he Dy it -Crom the City Hall flagpole . The city defaulted Friday on $15.5 million in debts. Both the oppoeitioo and the 1overament rrequently make cl1im1. that cannot be indepen- denUy confirmed in this rumor. ridden nation. Thousands of Iranians stayed away from their Jobi to mourn for tbote kWed In U months of political violence, but 1pot checks in major cities showed many Ignored the strike and pro- duction in the oil fields In- creased. There were no reports or violence overnight in Iran. Troops kept out or sight in the capital but were reported on the alert should rioting rollow mourning processions. The government estimates about 1,300 have died in anti- govemment violence this year, but leaders of the opposition to Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi c laim the d eath toll is rar higher. The call for a day or mourning c:ame from Ayatullab Khomaini. the exiled spiritual leader or Iran's 32 million Shiite A1oslems. Khomaini. who lives in Paris, Is leading the religious and political forces demand.in& the shah ·s abdication. Iran's 37,000 oil workers, who have been oo a political atrike slncie•Dec.••,·began.Murnlng to their jobs Suoday bfrftPonse to government warnings that they would be. ffrea. Officlals-of the government oil company said ttieonew atrike'talt:''.had•.ltt8e or no'effect" on'theindustry. ·· "Ninety percent of the ot1 field workers in Khuzestan returned to work Sunday to boost produc- tion from 2.1 million barrels a day to 2.6 million ln the past 24 hours," one ot'Oclal reported. Normal production ls about 6 million barrels a day but the strike cut the output to1just over a million barrels. -Dettt ......... ._ USA SPANEW EXAMINES CRACK IN HER WALL UndafkH Jltt.,.. In S.n Clemente Houllng Tract On Avenida Palizada lloJDesin CleJDente Facing ·Slide Peril By ANNE COOPER OI .. DMly ,.._ lllft Lisa Spanelli of San Clemente says she's too nervous to take tranquilizers. Mrs. Spaoelli s aid she is afraid the plll5 might Impair her ability to get herseU and her Rock Sm" ger children out of their home at 405 Calle Nina. if the house starts to slide from its hillside perch. V---pes Crash The endangered homes are ~ located in.land of the Saa Diego e 1 RMINGHA·M, Ea gland Freeway at Avenida Palizada .• An n-Last •prtn·g·s tleavy rains .. '"(• r).._. • vvsiJt«e11-Rod Stewart opened '8"craek in· tbe1 slope escaped injury when the Rolls behind seven CaJle Nina homes. Ro_yce m Wblcb he was riding w· k b had a blowout and crashed into a 1thin a month. the crac ad ditch. on a superhighway widened, droppi.a&_the slope 35 · b·e'twe8n"' Loll'dOll "and Bir-... t~~.t. .1'P.d ,.l~,av,ip.,g,,the tw,mes mtna:ham. strandeif°" ~ eda:e of a newly created bluff. The chautreur or the Rolls Residents qualified for rederal Royce PH an tom, own~d by disaster relief loans, and repairs singer Tom Jones, also was un-were to be completed berore the hurt. onset or winter rains. But one delay and then another have put A police car took Stewart on to off the major excavation proj· Birmingham where h e ect. Now residents are con· perrormed before a capacity sidering temporary measures crowd o(, 16,000 fans Sunday. they hope will protect their homes at least through the. cur- cost of a geologist '.s study of their neighborhood. Project directors ror the study. condut'ted by Leighton and Associates or Irvine. is Woodrow Higdon, who has first· band knowledge ol the slide. He lives at 410 Ca[le Nina. Higdon said that although the Calle Nina slide and the Oct. 2 Bluebird Canyon slide are dis- simil•r from a geological ltand· point, they could have the 1ame disastrous consequeaces - larae~1ea1e prop!rty dama1e . Unless steps are"talcen to divertdtafna.le from geololically sensitive points in the canyon . below Calle Nina. said Higdon. cOnUnlied"settliag and.sbU'tlng of the ground can be expected to move the bluffs edge back under the houses. Mate Face~ Rape 'rrial - rent rainy aeason. '.'In the meantime, I Ue lo bed at night. lliterung;o the sup- ports groan aad the walls crack," said Mrs. SpanelU . "A handful of homes may seem a small problem." saJd at- torney Gerald Gibbs, who lives two doors down from the Spanellis at 409 Calle Nina, "but it meautheworld_~_µs.'' Mrs. Spanelli saJCI she believes the city ot' San Clemente was ne1Ugent 15 years aa:o. when it approved the Calle Nina homes. There were no provisions made for underground water drainage In the entire Pl\,cesetter develop- ment. 1he said. la addition, she said, homes were built OD unsta- ble hillsides, with no st.eel in the fouodaUoos. -,._sa result of the city's ap- proval of the home$. saJd Mn. Spanelll, she and her husband find themselves with their enUre savings invested in a house they may have to vacate and may neve r be able to sell for human habitailoo. La.st year they Were oflered $130,000 cub tor their ocean view home. · Husband Charged in Landmark Case SALEM. Ore. CAP> -Greta Rideout was ·trembling as she reached for the telephone and dialed' police. It was a call that would change her life and possibly change the definition Of rape in this country. Mrs. Rideout was calling the police to accuse her husband o( beating and raping her. John Rideout. 21 . goes OD trial Tuesday on a charge of (int· de1ree rape. Authorities say it ls the first time a husband bas been tried for allea:edly raping his wife. "If we win. it is going to show men they can't do what they want with women," said--Mrs. Rideout, 23. "It ls inhuman to think you can abuse and manipulate your spouse beca\llle you have a Jea:al document behind you ... "I called the police because 1 WU In danger. I WU hurt. Wbat happened was a seriouJ criminal offense. I bad to protect myself, m) daugbterandourfuture." She and the other trial partlcl· pants refuse to discuss tbe specifics of the case, peodJ.aa Tuesday's trial i n tb ia WWameue Valley communJty. .~ Mrs . Rideout'• 2~-year-old dau1hter. Jenny, lau1hed and played witb her dolla wblle ber mother was interviewed at the Sllem Women's Crilia Servtee. Tbe service rum a botliae for ripe victims ind bittered women and offers them COUDlel• iDI and temporary shelter. A volunteer counselor frocn the center hq: been a steady tt>Dtpanioa ot' Mrs. Rideout sintt the alleged rape Oct. 10 dw1.n& an argumeot •t the Rldeoull' Sol•DI-. .. _ PUTTING HEii HUSBAND DN TRIAL FDR RAPE -. -· 23, -.,__Jenny, 2\!o more feadtaine and euual. She'• not political." The Spanellis', the GibbS' and the Wegnen' house at 403 Calle Nina are the three homes In most immediate peril. But Frank and Helen Flegal, who live at 411 Calle Nina, bave been sufficiently concerned about potential danger to their own property to contribute to the .. ''There's the question or fraud ,·• she said. "Knowing what we do about the property, until the excavation of the can- yon I• completed, we could be sued ror trying to pass this house off on anybody else." Simply the S.l"<'a1e st selecl ion of Christ IMS gift ideas tn leisure ""1ar for the entire fom1ly . @)~a@@)§@ 44 t-elOn Ill.net. M'#90rt wm..--644-6070 ., _ _...... ....... An elltbound •torm paclcing 40 mpb wlnel_s threatened Nort.bern C.ntn11'1 mountaios wltb more beavy snow today before neetna the state in a eold wakeofftolt, roe and rain. Travelers' advisories were pooled by Ule National w .. Uler Strvlee lor tbe Sierra Nf:\llcla wbere periodt ot' heavy snow were for'ecut above t.000 reet. Adrilotlee w,re also poeted for tbe. ~t Sbaata-Si.sklyou area where some beavy SDOW was forecast aloai wtth mow sbowen that wen expected to reduce visibility ror driven. Sbowers and high tem - peratures in the 40s were forecast ln the San Franclsro area. Small cr1ft advisories were posted with west winds 1uatln& to 30 mph. Tire chains were required ln areas <:A U.S. SO and 1·90 between 'Sacramento and tbe Nevada ~ state line. Ute state tranaporta- Uon departmerit said. Night ft06t or patchy foe was rorecast for most valleys. Lows ~re forecast in the 305 and 40s. but were eapecled to drop to 12 around Lake Taboe. The storm dumped nearly 18 inches of snow at Norden in Donner Pua, and more than an inch rell Ob coastal valleys north of San Fnmcisco. Although it was the second major stonn of the season, it was expected to leave rain and snowfall amounts well below normal for this time ol year. But officials at the State Department of Wat.er Reaoun:es in Sacramento said th•t minimal precipitation presented no problems because moat of the atate's reservoirs are nearly full . Police Find Woman Dead For 5 Years COLORADO SPRINGS. Colo. <AP> -Tbe body of a woman, dead at leut five years. has been found beneath 200 pounds of newspapers tbe day after pollce broke into bet littered ·hOUH IDd dilcovered the _cors,;.e of her slatet, dead a week. Ponce said they_ were called to the home Saturday bf a mallm1n who noticed that •ev.ual days' accumuJaUon or newspapers remained on tbe front porch. Neighbors told police Gretchen McRae. about 80, hadn't been aeen ror some time. Police broke lato the old house and found the spinster's body. She had apparently been dead a week. aaid Clarence West, deputy EJ Paso COunty attorney. AuthoriUes said they con· sidered the case closed because ~ere were no forced loclu. no signs of a struggle, no marks on tb~b9<1¥._ But when police contieted Wllli1m Hopper of Denver, the woman's cousin, he as ked, "Where's her sister~ She has a slater about the same age and they've lived together at that home tor 30 years ... Police returned to the house Sunday. They round the body of Alamlna acRae on 1 sofa ln the middle or the living rQOm , wrapped in sheets and lying un· der stacks of newspapers. West estimated that she had died at least rive years earlier. • • "I b....-1 IA> be on the U.. wbea Of.et.a called," ••kt the couaaelor, Helen, who 1U:ed th1f"ber tut_name not be UMd bR1u1e or ''111 the ll'1fe buab1a out u.. ... Rideout WU indicted Oct. 18 by tho II,~ Co•nty grind Jun -tW Ufh ripe ~ictment In lbe county this year. He is free on 15.000 bail. If convicted of flnt-degree rape, a felony, he face• 1 maximum penalty ol 20 , .. " In prioan and • ll.500 fin<. •ftld«Q, a te1taurant eook, la belaa prosecuted under 1 chan1e ln Ore1on's ripe stttulel 1pproved OYenwhelmlncly by the 1'77 LQ.lll1ture. The di.Jtrlct 1\. tomey's omee ta.Id t.be· chaqe removes m1rrt11• or con· Mntual eobabltaUoa a 1 .,.._. "Hlatorscally, lbere have been 10 many cues of mistreatment of wive• by husbands where she's had oo place to tum. She had to accept criminal acla oo her pereon," said Marlon County District Attor.ney Gary Gortmaker. "The people now re- alize th1t ii 1 major problem, tUkueb person's iodivldutil rilbta ean't be violated w,het.her by 1 hutblnd. friend or brother." 1001 "9f¥WOOCI bfvd .• "9twood vllklge (213) ,.,.7721 ''Oret•'• deflaltelY not a femlnttt," 1ald Helen. "•'• ai•lnlt'*!I<. -• l -' • ~" -- Gortmaker's ofrlce aald Del1w .. aod Jowa ·1re t.be only other-atMel in whJeh a hmbencl eu be tried.for rulq b1I wUe A <baJIP In Now Jeroey law wld mU:e ad cues PoAlble alter Jin. 1. • --.... • .. I 4 CWLYPILOT Intense S tUdy of Missile Deployment IJ ~ W ASlnNGTON (AP)-Sealof ct.llDM Oltklab hH• ret0m· m nded lmAlna.lve 1tudy ol a new Alr F"Ol'H propo1aJ to l1~h UM propoNd MX mobile maa Ue from alrplues nlbet than ltom UM around u ori1i.Dall)' plaanfd. Pentqon -.our ~ \maay alcbt t.M Air F~t 1 udJ• art Hs>ttl~ to be compMUid Ui about tbtM mooULI, y permit· Uog a fmaJ <lfflllon on movtQI abHd with the vanctid mobU1 ml11Ue and the way It wm be bNid. ~ J TR aECO•• NOATIO 'ro DtftnM S.Cr-.tary Harold Brown hm a hl1h·lev I c~u of defeoae 1denUat.t and other enlor otndals lhat the new ~~ivtn full conaktenUon ll th lat t developm.nl In a arch few bet\ way &o daloy_ an nure~new&ntercocn.a.MftW·ranc•. cmlla lebyt.bemld ,..,., Th puah bthlDd lh movlle m111Ue la a StOWlftJ beUef bf military and clvlUan off1ctall that the preunt Minuteman ICBM• In their nxed und raround b&le9 wlll beeomt vulnerable by 1113 or 18$4 to knot'kout in a posalblt Soviet aurprile allaek. Tbll ts bttawse Sovtet mlullel are becomln• ever more ac· curate and a new cenenUon of pcrtrerful, multlple·warbead weapooa ts bc:lDI lnatalled In I.he &ov'let UAM>o. The land·baJed Minuteman lnlAl'-are conaidered a vli.J ele· menl ot the U.S. 1trat ale dtterreat force, which a1IO lncludea ml•· slles moon~ ID aubmarlnee and B·SI bombers which wlU be equipped ln the 1980s with 1maller. alr·bn•tbln& cruiM mlAlle.. The Carter adminialratJon already bu delayed a final dedsion Private Firm to Negotiate on movlq the bl1 new moblle MX ml•slle into tull·scale develop· m~nt becauae ot tec:hn.le!al and COil. queaUoos ralaed about the way lt would bl baled. At one potnt, the leadln1 contender w11 a concept latonnaUy eaUed a "IMU 1ame" under wblcb the new miule ,would be mounted on truck• and moved constantly among U'°'*andt of l•\lnchlna holtt ln euch a way to ma.ke the Sovieta aueaa where they ml.ht be at any 1lven time. ' But. that would have reqw~ lhouaanda of acres of land and met reelltanco trom environmentalists and aome people UYlftC n arby likely launch allet who feared thelT areas would .beeome taraet.t ot Soviet mlulles ln the event ot a war. So lft\Umntt swung during the fall toward aome form of air traneportablt m.Wlle °'•t would be flown about lo JumbcMlze jets and periodlcalb' placed In fhina poelUoru In the around. Tbll. It wu eaid. would accompllab the purpose ol evlldlna • Soviet 1urpriae attack without the drawbacks of the land·based "•hell fame" 1y1tem. . Bu now the Air Force bu come up with what defense ol· flclala. who uked to remain anonymous1 call a promia1nl new ap- proach WM!er whlcb long-ranee mi.-Ues could be launcbell iP the air from abort-take'<>ff·and·landln& planes smaller than tbe Jwnbo Jet1. · THE ()()8'1'01'8UCB a system. the of fl cl ala said. bopMUlly WOUid be let• than the SU blllloo to $30 bUlloo eaUmat.ed co.t qi ei&Mr t.be "ahell aame'' or alrtranaportable "land a.Del launch" syatems. U.S., Taiwan Trade Preserved WASlUNGTON (AP) -The United States, through establish· ment ot a private corporation, fully lntends to maintain all ex· iatlng agreements with Taiwan ecxcept few defense pacta, aov- 'emmeot officials say. A crash program is under way ' to provide f~ the lean disrup- 'tion In relations with Taiwan after the United States extends formal diplomauc reeogntuon to !l'alnland China oa Jan. 1, State '?epartment officials said. Herbert.J. Hansel, the depart- ment's chief legal officer, said Sunday that the Carter ad- ministration intends "that all ~xlstlng agreements with Taiwan, commercial, cultural and others will continue in effect except for tenninaUon of the de- fense treaty." The key mechanism to ac- complish thla, said ·one official who asked not to be named, will be a private corporation em- powered by Congress to conduct business on Taiwan. One name being considered la the Asian· American Services Corp. The c.orporation would be pal· terned after the association Japan set up on Taiwan after breaking oft formal relations with the government there in 1972. President Carter announced Friday that the United States would sever diplomatic relations ·with the Nationalist Chinese on Taiwan and establish relations with Peking. Com m unist Vice Premier Teng Hsiao-ping will meet with Carter in Washington in January and the two nations will ex· change ambassadors March 1. Knifing Attack -Foiled Japan Pnme Minister Escapes Injury TOKYO <AP> -A 21-year-old man with a knife lunged at Prime Minister Masayosbi Obira today as he was getting into bis car, but security men grabbed him before be could reach the new bead of the Japanese government, police said. One security man was reported slightly In· jured when he grappled wlth the )'OUDI man, but Ohira was not hurt. Police said the assailant told them be wa1 Sumto mrose of Tokyo, but they said they bad not learned the motive for the attack yet. The man entered the court.Yard ot the prime Q)lnlster's OfflCial residence posinc as areporter, the police said. An unofficial report said he bad spent the day in a room reserved for reporters in a building near the prime minister's residence. The rePOrt said be did not have press credentials and when asked about this replied: "I'm from the preas and I've been asked to take shorthand. I'm waiting forthereporter." Ohira, ee, became prime mlniater ~c. 8 following bis election as president of the ruling Liberal·l>emocraUc Party. The lut attack oo a J~panese prime minister occurred in June 197' wJlen ~ lCQUDB ~~i; qf ,an uttra-rightlst ol"pnlntlon hll Takeo Mlld · ln the face three times as he was atlending a funeral. Additionally, Carter said the U .S . government would terminate the defense treaty withTaiwanattheendoft979. However, U.S. officials said the private corporation would be used as a way to keep some 50 other agreements. including a lucrative trade arrangement, in force. OFFICIALS stressed that the administration is eager to pre· serve booming U .S .·Talwan trade, which ls projected at $1.4 billion this year. By comparison, U.S. trade with mainland China. while growing,1 wa5 just under $700 million for the first nine months of this year. The trade arrangement was one of several efforts by the Carter administration to stem growing censervative clamor that the president bad stabbed Taiwan in the back~ ONE OF the leading Senate s upporters ot Taiwan, Sen. Richard St.one, D-Fla., conceded on Sunday that Congress cannot overturn Carter's dec:lsion, but he said Congress must move on its own to support'l,'•fwlllt' • ff .JWL'•"'"'i!t Jr";,, "h"'' • _. '' ow11:ver, ~en. aarry Goldwater, R·Arh., b ad threatened court action over Carter's deciaioo and other con· servatives•·a.y 1 tbty•·m·~•l'M,."11 " tempt to stall &?date cofttlf'fni'· · tion of an ambassador to China. Eleven Killed in 3 Pennsylvania Fires . mattress, the Beaver County cor· the re was just too much frame home. state police re· oner reported. smoke." ported. Soutli of here in the small mln· Larry Malone, 30. and Mary Otieago's Finest These "ladies of the evening" are male Chicago police of. ficers. dubbed "Charlie's Angels." They were among more ~an 100 policef1:len and women wh!> participated in a· massive weekend vice sweep of the Wind y City. Police arrested 592 men and 41 women,in the crackdown aimed mostly at the paying customers. a police spokesman said. Cleveland Workers Brace for Faceoff CLEVELAND <AP> -UnJoo leaden representing Cleveland's 10,QQO civU 5'l'V81Qta ~aced themselves for today's aowdown with M~~'Denail ltuciniala over layoffs .•. ,..,,,,,,.,,,. , ,,.,,.,; & ,,.._,. Local bankers, meanwhile, cooslden!d suing the city for de- faulting. · Kuclnich was to meet with the re~resentatives of 17 public· emp!o1tt ~<ffiwr.· f Jo.JmW~~ ,a ached¥}\\ ~ ~~9,((tt RJ. ~'°"-'~.of tht(~_,(~1,~-9 i-51• tt~:I; ~-the b~ .o .. tbl' p[QirAQJ '«~ tall.on the pollce 8iid re depa ments, sanJtation and street repairs. . TWO UNIONS R EPRESENTING Cleveland's 1,875 police of- ficers have promised to fight the layoffs in court. "The city ls. going to be one bell of a jungle If be (Kucinich) lays off ball the police and firemen," saJd David Isaacs, a pharmacist at an all-night drugst&re here. At six local banks. whlcb bold SlS.5 million in overdue city notes, executives scheduled meetings to consider how to collect on the debt. PITTSBURGH <AP) -A child playing with matches and a woman smoking Ln bed ap. parently caused two fires that killed 11 persons in southwestern Pennsylvania -10 ot them Ing town of Ronco, six chlldren •LSO killed were four Jane Bechtol. 19, an unmarried " couple who shared the rented "SOONER OR LATER we will have to file a suit against lbe died Saturday in a fire apparent· children of Jane Mills, who was home the past two months. were city" said Roger Hippsley, a Central National BanlC spokesman.~' children-. · A lhlrd fire of ~own origin klllcd one young girl and critjcally irtjured another. Rhoo· da Dean, 9, died, and Sirkasda Evans, 2, was burned and Sul· fered smoke inhalation Saturday ly started by one or them play· not at home at the time of the treated for bums. at tinioJltown "Bu't we don't want our JlcU.on to be construed by the public as ~e • / ing ..wlth-matches .near an ~ve~tt: Hospital and released. banks starting to abut down the city. We are n« pulling the rug out stuffed chair, state police said. 1'wo ot the children Jacqulln The dead children were iden· from under the city, we are not going to tag property for seizing.'' In the Aliquippa fire, flames 10, and Tanya, 2 were found tified as Kim Malone, 10; Larry were ~onflned to the dead dead beside their bed in the frool Malone. 9; Bryan Malone, :>; · On Friday, Cleveland became the first city to default since the womans bedroom bed F u I 9 and W'lli rN Depression when Kucinich and lbe council failed to agree on lhe "The mattress ~as the origin room. e c a. ! 1 . 8.'11• 11 m othy Malone, 4 ; James mayor's plan to raise taxes, or the council's suggeaUon lo sell the , when fire swept their home in the Home wood section of Pittsburgh. of the fire," saJd Beaver County 1,00• wmere found dead an a televmon Bechtol. 2: and Theresa Bechtol, city-owned light company. Coroner Harper Simpson. "She · . _t_h_r_e_e_m_on_lhs_·--------------------------------- w as a heavy smoker. She "The boy was sitting in a smoked in bed frequenUy." chair like you would go to sleep. ( ~ A FIRE north of here Sunday . In Aliquippa resµlted in the deaths of a 72-year-old woman and four children from dense smoke from the woman's burning The woman, Mary Black, was The 1lrl had her blankets on the found dead in a chair in the noor," said Simpson. kitchen of the two-story home. She wu clutcbing a telephone. In the Ronco fire, the charred bodlea of lbe six children were found in bedrooms of a one.story f "She apparently attempted to telephone," saJd Simpson, "but Snow Buffets Rockies Accumulation Clo1e1 Mountain Passes Tempe""ww Alllany lllllli'<Wt Ancllor•99 Allle•lllt Atlt11tt 111-trO 11•-trO !IOI .. llo''°" BvOtlO Clwliln WV Clllt.t90 ClllClllNll Cttwltncl Cotvl'lllM.IJ Delflt,Wtll Denver Detroit Ovlutll ftlftwlkt Htr110f'd ... _ H-'utll HO•"'°" lnd'tPOll• J«U'vlllt J_.., Ktft'I Clf't usv .... Llttlt Roell 1.otAntela Lout1vlltt Mlt"'I ' . HI Le~ 3' " .02 l6 Jl .OS " 12 .,. " 10 5A 21 10 0 10 .0 ,, l2 OS 0 26 J1 u .02 44 21 ,.. 21 '' n 37 ,. '° u s.s '3 37 ,, tt n 30 1• 11 , '° t• 1' • IO 10 '° 50 ,, ,. ., ,. " u '1 'O ..... .f1 .. . S'7 SI .02 41 " II .. -- m ... A rft'tft Cel4 We•• ~--== lb.!W It.ii..,.,, Oulv4t4 IWWI ••• ••• .,,, ...... HllltllfllMll ,,,.,, ......,.,.. •«Ml "°""' -"fltft _..,., Of -to O¥tr lllr• '-' INll• wntne cOlldl• llOftt"9f, ., .. •• " ' " Ill .. ' • .. .. CALIFORAAA" SACRAMENTO (AP) -A state mil<'alewauon J.a l••"1n& CaUfomt1•1 n eouaty ae'9oo1 auperlntendent1 at JeaaL ''° million 1bortL.. Oov. Edmund Brown Jr '1 .. -1nanu Depart· meot rePort.a. But the department uld Satul'day the 1bott1J• won't at f ect moet r~plar ~uuUonaJ protrall\J, whlt'b are run ou\llde the 1upcrtntenck1lt&' omces. Tbe Le1t1lature save the superln\lndenta m million lhis year tO mue up for ProposlUon 13 property tax loaa 81•1• ICIU. /fl•• POMONA <AP) -A "·year old Pomona man was kllled In the Hploeioe Of 1 Pipe bomb ap- paNftQJ bt6M maoWactONCt In hl1 hotM. polrie aald today. The body ol William J. Miiier ( . STATE J was found wide his home after nei1hbora called police Sunday afternoon. Tbe nelehl>ora, who also dous~ a fire ln Miller's home with a garden hose, told officers they had heard two other -Qten, apparently associates of Mlller. discussing three previous bo,nb· ings with him u the men left has home. Searcla Coatb•ue• SAN FRANCISCO <AP) ~vernmeot rescue boats con- t.tdue to search Hawaiian waters for a research vessel with two University of California physicists are aboard. Missing for nine days aboard the vess_i?l Holo Holo are Michael Shannofl, 34, of Berkeley and J ames Sand\Jsky, 32, of El Cer-rito. both of Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory. Auction Baited SANTA MONICA CAP) -A second temporary restraining order bas been issued to bar the sale of the late Judy Garland's memorabilia that re'malns in the possession of her third husband, Sid Luft, following an au-ction of her belongings let month. In Hollfiteood? .............. In this Los Angeles Herald Examiner photo, Abbie Hoff._ man. radical Ol the 1960s, ls identified as second man from the right. He is sitting with three other people, whose namee were unavailable, be1ow the Hollywood sign. According to a local cQlumni,st, Hoffman is in Hollywood preparing a movie of his lite story. Jazz Great Ellis Succinnhs at 44 NORTII HOLLYWOOD (AP) -Band leader and composer· trumpeter Don EIUs whose name was synonymous with jazz festivals in the 1960s, bas collapsed and died at b1a home of an ap- parent heart attack. Ellis, 44, hailed by contemporaries as one of the outstanding jazz innovators of the last decade, was working u a freelance writer up to the time of his death Sunday night. He bad recently re-sumed his career after long recuperation from a severe heart at· tack in 1975. HE BEGAN ms CAREER in the late '50s with the bands of Charlie Barnett, Maynard Ferguson and Ray MclGnJey. He re- turned to Los Angeles, where be was born, in 1963 to form his Im· provisationaJ Workshop Orchestra. }fe bad alread~ appeared at the Ne~rtJa•J Fetil,ivaJ in 1961 and -the•Arst ·rntematlonal Jazz Festival In Washington, DC., the following year. Santa Monica Superior Court ~· Judge Laurence Rittenband scheduled a Jan~ 5 bearing on a lawsuit flied by Garland's dauf.hter, entert&J~r Liza Min- nen • Wflo Hl!S ·~11r . f6' bave auction pr<>Ceeds placed ln her mother's estate. FOLLOWING-lllS-RETUllN_lQ Los Angeles, where he began gr:J<J4A(e siYO-\ft\. ~l.,\lQLA , EIUs ~ .bllt-O'ff;~3-piece orcheatnt. " wblch"became Jl reg}iJar attraction •t the Monterey Jau Festival through the early '70S. - r · Marine Bar es All Ellis' appearance at the 1968 Berlin Jazz FesUvaJ became the basis for a television special. INDIO (AP > -A 19-year-old Marine driving near here on In· terstate 10 Just east of Palm Springs gave no more than "the oare facts " when be was stopped by California Highway Patrol oCCiceTs for alleged reek· less dri\ltng -be "(PJ>n't :wear· ing a stitch or clothmsz. When officers stopped Carl Pagel of Camp Lejeune N.C., they quickly discovered he wasn't wearing any clothes, CHP said. They also learned the car be was dnvmg was re· ported as stolen from North Caroltna, and Pagel appeared to be intoxicated. A PROUFIC COMPOSER, Ellis' works were performed by the Los Angeles Philharmonic and Stan Kenton's Neophonlc Orchestra. He also wrote music scores for motion pictures, includ· ing ''The French Codnectlon. •' Ellia' best-known gu,st trumpet soloist'appearances were with Leonard Bernsteln and the New York Philharmonic when he played Larry Austin's ·•1m~rovisations" and in 1964 with "Journey Into Jazz," Glinter Schuller s experimental improvisation. HIS OWN EX P ERIMENTS were known for variation in time and meter and the lnfluence of Indian music. Ellis had formed the Hlnduslfnl Jazz Sextet with lnwan musician Harl Har Rao about.- 15 years ago. He Is survived by bis ex-wife, Conrue : two sons, Brav and Tran, and bis parents, Ute Rev. and Mrs. Ezra Ellis. Funeral arranitements were pending. 11nn~ STaAIOHT IOURION WHISKfY to l'tlOOF 011111.UO A"O l()'fTUO ff JAMU I, IWI OISTIU.IM CO , C&.UMONt apM. KY \ ,. Mondly. o.c.mber 1e. 1979 DAILY PILOT A5 Sexual, Muconduct With Girl, 14, Probed LOS ANGELES <AP) -A hearlna was scheduled today for five city fire(Jgbters auspended from duty ln t6e wake of an In· vHtll'•Uon lnto alleaed unlawful aexual cond\lct lnvolvina a 14· year·old &Jrl. One paramedJc w11 tired and the t&r4ttabten. lncludlnJ a cap- tain, wer" relieved of duty pend· lnt the board-ot-rtghta hearing today. said Fire Chief John c. Gerard. HOWEVER, THE DJSTJUCT attorney's office has not pressed felony charges against the men involved because the teen·ager's mother refused to let her teaWy. said Al Albergate, district at· torney spokesman. 1 "l can't talk abOut this now." Gerard said Friday. "I don 't have complete lnformaton on it. It's under a reviewing process, and I can't state guilt or in· nocence. It's serious enough that TEEN RETURNS $10,000 FIND lNDIO (AP> -A 13-year-old Mecca youth turned in a purse he found Sunday to police here - without knowing that it contained more than $40.000 in netotiable , bondsandcbecks. Police aaid Raul Machuca found the pune Saturday after Noam-a Carty, 47, of Riverside forgot it in a reataurant. The youth round Ms. Carty 's t elephone number inside and notified the woman that be bad it. said Sgt. Richard Davis ot the ln· dio Police Department. their rlChtl have to be pro· tected." IN IT8 SUNDAY edlUona. the Loa Angeles He.raid Examiner reported that police det~Uves lnveaU1ated personnel in four fire atations alter the glrl told po1lce she hid bad aexual reJa· Uona with men tn eacb of them. The paramedic. fired two weeks ago, filed an appeal wtth the Civil Service CommlBSion early lut week, the newspaper reported. . I , THE ALLEGED texual mla· conduct wu reported an mid· October when fireflahtera called police to remove a 14-year.Old 1irl from a ftre ataUon lo the northeastern section of Los An1eles, said Lt. Dao Cooke of the Loe An&elea Police Depart· ment. The •lrl reportedly told of· flcers al that Ume that she had bad sexual relatlona with men from three, and possibly four, fire bouaea, Cooke said. Firebomb~ng Kills LOng Beach Man LONG BEACH <AP) -A 30-year-old Long Beach man was killed and two others were i.ltjured when a firebomb apparently was thrown through an apartment bu.lldlng wlndow, police Hy. Leon Thibadeau, wbo was employed aa a piano mover. died Jn· stantly Sunday momine when the bomb bluted through a aecond· story window and started a fire, Long Beach police officers said. TWO OTHER PEOPLE in the apartment -Frank Koon. about 22, of Norwalk, and 1.S year-old Shonda Chadwick of Para- mount -received rplnor ~uries aa they scrambled to safety following the explosion. Both were treated at Doctor'a H<>1pltal In Long Beach and released. The fire bomb demolished the Thibadeau apartment and damaged five others In the building for a total of $1-0,000 damage, fire officials estimated. · POUCE QUESTIONED several people who heard the fU"e bomb go crasb.lnl throu1b the window, but none or the wit.Desi.es were r~ to nave seen anyone throw the device. Neighbors told pollce the Thibadeau residence had been the scene ol loud partying and at leut one flabt Saturday nJght and early Sunday. The motive for tbe bombinc was under lnveallcauon. ~ta-Dena Raw Milk HIDE-A u r AV Shop now.whlle selections are plentiful. .1·u •vn1 Use our Hade-Away Plan. Int Again SACRAMENTO CAP> -Raw mllk sold by the state's largest producer. Alta-Dena Dairy, has been foUn<f 'co-be con· tamlnated w it h salmonella for the second time in two weeks, state officials safhJ khtij H~allh Services Department re· ported that bacteria that can cause salmonella. a --(tttfifit'WA ll=f" ·~·~ti o u s~ 'stomach' disorder, were found in feces of cows in an Alta·Oena herd. The dair:y was ordered to pasteurize mHk from that herd and remoye some raw milk from sale, the department s aid. Last week AJta·Dena was ordered to pasteurize raw milk from another herd after officials announced a salqionella . finding; <1' whi'th the d a1ry CllS· putcd. The ring is hers. Her happiness is yours. S L A VICK 'S 18 fashion Island • 644-1 \80 Nl'wporr Bt".1ch U1tun.1 Hills • W cscm1mcer I'• .,_ ,,. ~"'' • r1J111....,. .f'YI,.~ p&a.. t11t """'"°411 I •pt"'..._~ .. M_.n c..,,,,,_. Our satisfaction is knowing that when we're making her hapey. we're making you happy. And that tu.epens most with our fine large diamonct collection. These diamond aolitaires are l·ust three of he ways we can ma"ke people happy iwo at a tun~. our Young Mans Dept. Doug and Tom are wearing what more and more students are asking for ... oxford cloth button down shirts, khaki pants, La Coste shirts and swea . Maybe there's a young man in your ... family for the same thing. ll'.!tl ltVll'lt. Newport S...Kh CJhfornlil Phe>M o.ll-~001 \ I. tel . :i. ,., 'k •• .. IO I, I; '· ., • .. .. .. .. •· " ., n r " \ lt'• IClmeWhat diaturblnc to note that amon1 the ran ol new bU1a introduced at tho oPeftlq MlaMJn ol the n w atate Leplature, oo fewer than lour were deemed nftffMl'Y to help cope with the rtaiDI Ude 0( acbool van· dalilm and vtoltnff. Ben. David A. Roberti, O.lm Anaeles, _presmted the quartet ol related m u ur that renect the con~ of 1chool aut.boriU • oot only ln larae cltJes but lhroU&boul the ata~. .. Sen.te BUJ 70 v.-ould lntteau parental Ua blllty for ucta of vandall m commJtled by ctil.Jdren from $2,000 to $5,000. Senal Blll 71 would lncrcue th fln e for vandallsm to $5,000 and require aom Corm ol raUtuUon aa a condl· Uoo ol.probaUon for tb olfenden. · The th.ltd blll, SB 72, would ~uire school dlatrlctt to compll data relatlna to vandalia m and other form of school vlolence and relay the lnlormaUon to the sta te Department ol Education. · The final blll, SB 13, ·would create a special unlt in the Department ot Education to atudy and combat crime and violence ln the public schoo!a. . Jt ls unlortunate lb at the twin problems have become s o severe that sterner laws aeem needed to restore order ln the acboola. But we must aaree that the atep seems necessary, both to protect the taxpayers' investment in school property and to help shJeld teachers who too oft en have been the ~rgets of vicious Juvenile behavior. Placing more responatblllty on the shoulders of parents and demanding restitution from offending youngsters are reasonabfe moves to take while the ex· perts examine causes and seek cures. - Waniing That Worked When UC Irvine chemistry professor Dr. F. Sherwood Rowland warned in 1974 that excessive use of aerosol sprays using fiuorocarbon propellants could endanger man and his environment. few would have believed that the theory would , within five years. precipitate new laws and new manuf acturinS methods. At that time an estimated three billion of the familiar spray cans were in use in the United States, dispensing hair spray, deodorants, insecticides, paint and a dozen ~ other products · - Dr. Rowland contended that if the use continued the ozone layer that protects the earth from ultra violet rays would ultimately be depleted by as much as 2S percent. And the growing bombardment of ultra violet rays would inevitably increase the risk of skin cancer for human beings. damage animals and crops and even alter the earth's climate, he warned. Initial skepticism faded when the National Academy of Sc iences. after an 18·month study, 'confirmed Rowland's fears. So the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, the En· vironmental Protection Agency and the Consumer . Product Safety Commission laid down deadlines for the phase-OUt ot nu.orocarbon aerosol sprays -a ban on manufacture effective Dec. 15, Ur78 aDd an April lS, 1979 cutoff date for aale'ot ex1lt1nc stocks. Since many manufacturers began to switch to more .acceptable types of 1pr41J1 j.wo years ago. the good news is that there alreatly has been a 40 percent reduction in the 1se o( nuorocarbon propellants. All of which may indicate that ingenuity probably can get around most of our environmental hazards once the warning is sounded. Purveyors of Gloolll The aMual pre·holiday dlrge of the shrinks. pro· ressional and self.appointed, tbr=tens to become a self· fulfilling prophecy. / Along wit.h Jingle Bells, Ch carols and gift wra J>'come the awful warnings about-the negative effects o( the supposedly joyous holiday season. · It's the loneliest time of the year, we're told. The suicide rate will go up, buried neuroses will surf ace, along with latent alcoholism, housewives will be harried by the pressure to bake and decorate, their husbands will fret about bills , the kids will either be confused by Santa or driven to outbursts of unadulterated greed. Everywhere there are dissertations on how to cope with ''holiday st~s." How we ever survived the season without this barrage of advice, God knows. But before we let them brainwash us· into a state of total depression, let's remember that most Christmases. at least in retrospect, leave warm and joyous memories, some lasting a lif etirne -including the ones when the turkey wasn't quite done, the gift sweater didn't fit. Johnny hit his sister over the head with his new dump truck and Uncle Harry bad a drop too much. P sychologists notwithstanding, even these minor calamities can be fuel for a few chuckles in holiday8 to come. So.don't let the shrinks steal Christmas. • Opinions expressed In the apace above are those of the Dally Plldl. Other views expressed on thla page tr• tboM of their authon and artists. Reader comment Is Invited. Addreu The Dally Pilot, P.O. Box 15450, Costa Mesa. CA 92926. Phone(714) 642-4321 . Boyd/Perfect Home ByLM.BOYD What'• your nodoa of the ideal HUlng for a boule? The Japanese lradlltonally belie.ve a perfectly placed house abould race aouth, ovtr· Dear .Gloomy Gus tni.r .. uq to 1ee lht atory about pu.ab1nl an Americ•:ar• t to Mexico one beaded, • Deflcal Widta1." 11'11 11 IOV• emmtot tctiooy ot tbe b1(hlt order. C.8.C. ~, .. , .......... .,. .... ...... ~ .. ,-,. ..... ... ,~ ........ "" .. _... ·~~ ..... . looldng a pond, wltb a alJ'eam on It. ual tide, a long road on it. west aide, aod beblnd it, hllla to the north. One 1mall lale about-World War 11•1 gaa raUonlna cllnga ln my memory. Or ma)'be lt bu more lo do with the ca Uber ol bJ"" help that was left when moat au the youna men Jumped Into unlform1. Anyhow. a cuMln1 mechanic w b o wanted to hoard tHolloe banded a canful of It. to. bl1 new helper and told him to to out beblnd tbe abop and bury It. Tbe helper came • back, and 11ld. "Okay, t buried it. Wbat'U I do wlth tbe can?" Ir your hair tum1 •~en. my dear, it ml1ht not be anyll9lq In the 1h•D).~t coadU._.., wba&ewr. \;OUICI be •Imply that tlMtre'• too much ~ ln your wa&tr Ph>e1. That happened a couple ot blaadl aunlna atu· den ta at Yale Unl¥enlty. Mandly, Dec9mbtr 18. t978 IRS TrieS Social Engineering Jt la a hurtful thln1 t~ bave to public ly a aroo with South Carolina '• Republloao Sen. · Strom :nturmond. t'or onqe In his 'Jona career ol error. tbe an· tedlluvtan 1entleman w11 rtlbt In oppollna the IRS'a propotaf to take awey tax x mpt atatua to 'p rivate 1cbool1 whacb dla· crtmlnale. The 1cnotor 11 arguing his case on srounda whlch ar.i much too nurrow. He's uylnfJ t h a t sin ce many schools couldn't or wo u ld n 't comply they w o uld b e f o r ced t o close, thereby d u·m p ine a pea pot run of ,, new atudenU on to the public school systems and the tax· payers who support them. That may or may not be true, but the taxpayers also support private schools In signlflcanl measure by not making them Jack Anderson pay laxet. No one can HY f<W 1ure Ir taxpa,e rt would be 'helped or hurt l a larae number or private acbool• were rorced to close by the IRS'• 11clion. The situation would pl'obably vary from community to communJty dependlnc on how much unused claasroom apace ls available. NO, there are more Important and perauaslve reasons for ob· JecUne to this Idea whlch hu re- cel ved considerable support from liberal and civil rlchta l1'0UP•· The flrst Is that It l• abominably poor publlc tollcy lo u se tlte Internal Revenue Service for anytbln1 but collect. Inc taxes. Not that we don't do It. The, tax.code ii hardly more than a compilation or 1lmmlckJ de· signed to help thla Industry or that, to provide capital here and there, to encourage lnvesttnent In one sector or the ecoaomy or a nother. Jt baa yet to be proved that this maze of exemptions, Immunities and privileges s erves any general good altboup lt lndlaputably aerves the private tood or those fortunate enouah to be the beneflclartea. . ManlJ)Ulattna ttx colleetlon haa at lea.st a paUna of ntutrall· ty about It. but to UH It to further aoclal an4 pe>l ltlcal IOll1a 11 yet more queeUoaable. We've already done that by eHmptinc the 1reat Phllanthroplc found•· tlona from t.axaUon. At best the result.I have beeh meaaer: at worst the foundations have squandered the tnoney they ought to have paid in taxes In a mannfr every bit a1 bad as Congress wutea the tax money •which la actually paid Into the Treasury. THE UIS should have no other f unctlon but to harv"t taxes. Anytbtna else ls too daqerous. If private 1ch'ool1 are to be forced to int.efrate, let Coaareaa deal with the Issue full on. Let a law be paaaed and let the Justice Department enforce It like any other law. Tt)ia begs the question as to whether private 1cbool1 should be forced to lnte•rat.e at all. For 1ome, Jlke Jewl1h tchoola. lt would be next to Impossible un· ten Sammy·Davt1 Jr. has a lot more kldl than he'a talking about. Upper·class private scMols probably are reasonably well In· te1rated. They havo both the money and the motlvatlon to find black students. The poortir sort e>r private school, the kind of Intensely middle·clua place set up or at. least expanded as a re· suit or court-ordered lnteerauon. Ian 't golng to have the dough to offer black families 1cholar1bips for their children. These are the kinds of schools that will close and may.,. tbey lbould close: there'• no cleQ'tq manr. of them exJ•t oaly becaUM lbe r pupils· pareou don't want the ir chlldren u1oclatln1 with children ol another race. HOWEvt.:a. the point or civil rlf ht.a legislation Is to providt> al our children and all ou£.peo- ple wlth an equal chance and a real chance al good schooling, good employment Hd all the other ywnmy things in life; it's difficult to see bow Integrating even the most racist private school helps to achieve that goal. About all you can say of forcing some Ught sphinctered. nasty. Calvinist school to Inte- grate is that tbe little Aryans ln the fourth grade will have to gaie on a black child. This may or may not improve the kids' racial atUtudes. but should at· tJtude Improvement be the busi· ne11 of government or should Justice and Uberty? Justice requires us to focus on the maino us1neas of maklqg sure all our children are given the tools of competence for a full and enjoyable lire; liberty re· quires us to put up with a wide variety of eve n th e moi.t despicable diversity. Instead of dabbling in sociaJ policy, perhaps the IRS could conflne Itself to producing a simplified tax form. Crippled Cuban Leads Fr~·;;doin'Figh.t . .. ..... ~ .. ... . .. ..... . ... .. . W ASIDNGTON -Three years ago, a blinded and maimed prisoner cried out to us from a Cuban prison. Tony Cuesta smuggled letters to us about the brutal prison condJllons, know· ing be would be punished for lt. "I am sure that I will never leave this prison alive," he wrote, "and there i s nothin g anyone c art do about. lL'' But mlracu~ lou s l y . C ues ta di d l e ave th e prison alive , a n d h e walked into our office the other day like a &host from the past. The indomitable Cuesta has been fl&btina acainst Cuban die· tat.ors -first to oust Fulgencto Batista, then to overthrow Fidel Castro -since 1958. Cues t a's priva t e war agalnat Castro almost ended In Bob Greene May 1966, when the commando pulled the pln on a hand gre.nade to destroy himself and his burn- ing boat rather than surrender to Castro's patrol boats. His suicide attempt was a Kristy failure. The grenade blew off bis left hand and blinded him, and he was thrown Into one of Castro's Infamous political prisons. Despite primitive medical care. hunger. harassment and ttr11tilltty 11t the Plamts-of Caatre>-'s prison 1uarda, Cuesta managed to survive. He also managed to keep flgbUng. He conducted clandestine religious services in the prison, and he smuggled out letters of protest to us. His personal battle Is won. but Cuesta has a new cawie to tagnt for: the freedom ot the prisoners still languishing In Castro's prisons. He told us he won't rest until the remaining 3,500 political prtsonen have been re· leased and permitted to come to this country. . . . The biggest obstacle i.s not Cas tro, who has s uddenly become more lenient. but the United States. Cuesta la out· raged that the JmUce Depart· ment woo't permit the Cuban r.risoners to eater en muse, but nsists on screening each one to weed out Castro agents and common criminals. The department until reeenUy had been proceaalng about two doien cues a month. Then At· tomey ~ral Griffin Delran. nounced that priaooera would be processed at whatever rate Castro chooses lo release them. This should lncreue tbe rate to about 400 a month. At the same tf me, Bell hu ap· proved tbe mus admission ot 21,875 rer~eea from Southeast Asia and another 1.000 from Leban0&: They'll be brou1ht here en muee, wbJle the Cubans are proceeMd one at a time. TOXIC GaEBNE•Y: Every year, mon Ulan haJr a mllllon children are po6lolted by items found ln the home. Surprisingly, plants are the leading household poisoners. Toddlers who balk al 1splnach epparenlly have no healtaney in sampling leaves from Mommy's potted plants. A memorandum prepared for Rep. ffarTy Waxman, D-Calif .. deecribea the altuatton. "Plant poisoning ln humans is a serious problem -particularly among c hildren," the memo states. "Although the most conscien· tloua IW'fttl' may keep '1raln cleaners and bleach under lock. they may unknowingly allow their children to come in contact with a more lnnocent·looklng pol1on -the household plants.'· While most accidental plant Ingestions are not serious enou1h to requJre hospltallza· lion, some vtellma are severely arrected. the report .notes. Among the common domestic greenery the memo cites a'S hasardaut are pbllodendrons. elepbant-ear, azaleas, diefren· bachla. cast.or bean and oleander. Wonn Defenders Call The01 Tasty, Nourishing The ftnt rule or JournaUam than 90,000 Amerlcan11 raise you learn ls to 1et both sides ot worms. Worm tanchers take · the 1tory.1bat's basl~ worms very serlolaaly. But once tn a wbJle a story And, to put It mildly; tM aeema 10 one·alded ~hat you response by McDonald'• of· for1et there lJ another viewpolnt llclals make them hot. to be told. Such a story was the "WORMS ARE very good to one that appeared here the other eat,'' said Darrell Rlcharda, day about tho false rumor president ot Earthworm• Inc. tn sweeping the country concem· Elk Grove Vllla1e, JU. "I have tna McDonald'• bambur1ers. eaten worma many times, and The untrue rumor HY• that they are not cUacuattna ln tbe McDonald'• uae1 red worm least." meat In lt1 Richards• feello11 about eat· hamburgers. Ln1 wonnsMem to.,_ typical ol In the column the worm raoehera who are up· I attempt.id set al>out-t!w McDunald'r con· to track the troveray. '"'9 worm men admit rumor down, that McDonald'1 hu a rtabt to a n d t h e n deny uslna worm1 In tta bam· q u o t e d burier* -but they reHDt any McOonald'.a lmpllcatlon that there la otrlclal1 u aometblna wroa1 wttb eaUn1 Hying It'• a worms. turible Ile, "Wonna an over 70 pnunt and what'• more. lt'I bart.1111 prottlD,'' Richard• aaid. bu1lHN. • 'Tbey•n very 1ood for Jou. t lb~ tbat WU the 111111 ol There'• DO .aloriel lD tbem. I it. or couru McDonald'• Uke to eat worm1 ln an omel.U. ~ouldn't want people tbinkinl or ln a cake. but you can eat that there are worma In a Bia lbem plain, riabt out of the oven. Mac. Wonna ar. 1Umy and dll· "To PNPaTe worma. Jeu boll au1tln1. Juat thl.nklna about eat.-them for nve or ... mlmat.. lD lnf them 111lckenln1. hot water, and thin "!'-'..!•\ fov 1hould have remembered or rive times &mW~ N cleu. . that ••• &be oddttt 1tory bu Thlt purift• tbe worm1. 1'IMlll anotbet lkle. you put tbem Oft I eoollie lbeet After tbe McDonald'• 1tory and bakt them In a 850-de_lnl •DDUNd. 1 talked to a number ov• ,_ aboul II mmutel. 'flM1 o1 ·worm ranebert around tbe come out c::.r· 1lmllar to • country. Worm rancblnt lt a ., rrtacb try. ol Wl• blta ol mlllion a year bUlln ... ; more bacon." • Richards -who has 6 mlllJon worma at b!I ranch -said that, UMd u an lqredient wltb othc.'l' foodl, wonn1 have an almo.t neutral t.ai.. "I like to uae them lD llibt·colored cakes rather than Chocolate eue1, because I like to'" the worms when I'm •Uni Ulem," be Mid. "You watch. Ttie a, will come when people wW eat a lot ol worms ln UUa country.'' Ed Hapr, m1°.,.r of North American Bait Farms tn On· tarto, Cal., said tbat not only dot• be betiHe worms make 1ood food -hAa t!Ompany bu spooaored a worm·reclpe COil· tat ror tbe lat tbnte years. ''Lal ,... w Ud over 4,000 worm 1• • from aJI o•er tM United ........ Haser aaJd. .. ,.... .......... net" .... ,. • ptna ..... Wida "'181. •• Ha•w 111111la8t. ''dilMle proper. ly, ua. ....... -=:otetn IU~ ..... far otMr . You cant ..-deteClttbem, ...... you lleow hter'n ~n there. They're like 1breddtd wbeat. Crumbly." Jim Wolfe. OWIMr of World Wide Wonnt ln 0. Plalnel, tu .. h11 wrtttta a cookbook devottd IOltlY to worm twfptt. "WI W~ to convtace peo. pie tbl wonns can M UMd ln tuly dl1ht1.'' Wolte Hld. "We've included 100.aDd•IOIM- odd r.clpea, lncludlll1 1peel&I ~bapten oa ve1etarlan worm ' diabes and special dietary worm dllhes." Wolle said that be has pre- pared a complete siJC'·course meal made wllb worms. and that be f avora eating worms 't)ecawie worms bave "all eaten· tlal am.iDo ackts, hlgh proteln, low chole1terol , no cttbobydratea. "Worma are areal. Every time I eaterta1n I UH them. I dltacree wtth people who aay worm• have no tule, thoueb: I thlnt they have a sllgblly aarUcky aalty navor. "We have a peanut butter cookie made with earthwonna. At nrat people are reluctant to tr)' it, but then they Hy, 'Hey, that'• not bed at all.' The firla ln the offtce can't keep from e ting tbeln at.coffee brew." Ralph OeR\lyter, owner of the W6'eomtn Worm and Ecoloe-y Factory ln BerliD, Wis., said be .. Hll" to UM a lltU• lemon" wlMn Ile ..U worms. .. IT'I A proHn fact that there'• notb1nl barmlul about eaUa• wonna ll UMy're properly repared," ba Mid ... Wormt can C used every whlcbway u far u NCIPll are toncerned. I've .... wonn rectpl• for every~ tbln1 from turt.y 1tu"1Q1 to lee cream. I think people would " • lot ....... off ...... WOl'IDI than a lOt of UM lhlnll they eat. How do w bow w6•t'a lD our food?" 1 , .. • • .. ' ' • •----NATION _ _.,.. __ --------· Mondlly, December 18, 197J DAILY PILOT A 7 ' aperbtrcks Womap HOO-hot Romantic Epics Dttl\OIT \AP> Wh~n the cnat bilrban dream t.omet the dull reality ol diaper• And cir poollnt. mllUOM Of Amerit• wo~liiro ~ thOie papubwk romaaea lor.~ape. Julia Grice waa dJflec'eQl; •\>eJU •rftl.n.c ~~. I . U wu •low ~n1 at flrtt -atartiq with U1ht· payln1 tell'\leaiQril a.nd ''bow Lo" IMc" for ob srure rnqailoH. · BlJTTODAV. RE R two oovela \n prtnt. a third ~ch will be pubhsbed next 1prt.n1 and aoolbtr comina In a year or so You can lau~h al lb paperback market If you like. bYt ~mtmber thla· i.n 1976. U.S. aoftcover publlahtta iu&.MKI more than ~ hlatoricals. They sold 40 million copl~ -about two a aecond. "My 1\utr Isn't l tuature, we all know that," Mn. Grice suJd. ''It b escapllt readJ.nc -rtadl.01 to 1ive ~le pleasure '' In MOit so.~allfd hiJto roma.nc'9. a youna and lhl')OCent htrolne from a romantic, by10ne era ls eenllr raped and othe~ defiled Vttule traveUna tp uoth: •laces l?Y ateamboat, Hlllng \lesstl or COY· ered wqon. Th•Y all have happy endJoes, however, as a soft· h earted C.J.Jnt Eastwood-typne'l"cues the sweet YO\lOI thing. In Mrs. Grlce's latest epic, "Emerald Fire," raven·haired Emerald Reean is wrenched from enslavement on ft "',...... Louisiana planlfllloh JULIA GRICE and into a re(t•bot romaocec.a the Callforni~ Trall In 1847. .. A LOT OF WOMEN READ FOUR to '5fx of these a week," Mrs. Grice said. "They're hooked on them, just like the soaps.•· Mrs. Grice said her success comes ln part from knowledge or her audience. "Cripe, J lived out there in suburbia. They were my neighbors," the 38·year-0ld writer said. The past tense ls no slip of the tongue. With her publishing success has come financial lndepen· dence, and this year-she left her lawyer husband and their split·leveUiome in suburban Rochester. She Jives with her !"wo sons, aged 12 and 9, in an Ann Arbor townhouse. p "AFTER I LEFT HIM I SJ'ARTED to almost unravel myself, and I realized that one of therea· sons I was able to write this kind ot tblng was that F1D1d Drive Sla t e d CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (AP) -Harvard. College says it. plans a $2SO million fund·raisiDg drive -the largest in its hJst.ory -so ll can give more scholarships lo attract middle·income slu· dents. Noting it cos~ $7,500 a year to attend Harvard, Dean Henry RosovsJcy said: •'The standards for flnanctal aid set by the feder-1 ~rmnent and the Ivy League don't recogniz~ th~o&ds"' or students from families with $25,000 to $50,000 earning power. We hope to ralse the standards. It's in our intoreatt.opushuptlMUmit.a." . , . I waa Just al rvC!d ror romance ln my own mar· r1att.'' Mra. Orie Hid. ·•1 waa true·blue a1 a l\Ou.sewlt•, Jual llk lhe woml'n that are read1n1 mi bOok.a • mOCJt of t.htm. "•un'l allppln& arou.ad oc aAYthln1. And l rHlbilid that waa on or th• reuooa l left hlm, ·' 1he conUnued.. 1•1 reallif'd that I wanted to hav• a more 11tl1f>1"ftl relallonthlp -and l dldn't want to be 1llpplna around " Now that 1ho'1 on her own she hu become hllhly orsa.nlU'd and b"'ahMH·like about ber work -complete with dally pqe q~ and advance J>reparotlon for novela that may be yean off. ~ "WHAT I TRY TO DO 18 GO to the llbrary and llnd aome ot thf' writers that have been well-loved in tho pQt." the said •·About a year aao I •tarted to rerud Peurl S Buck "When l read, I try to aak myself. 'What maket th.la book ao good?' and, if l'D\ loslna In· tereat, I try to figure out why." But whllf' 11he's writing for a mass market. Mra. Grice docs not consider her novels trashy. "ll 1 do have a sex acene, I want it to arow out o!lhe materlaJ.1 want.It to fit," she said. ''l've learned there are two kinds of fantules tbat women have," Mrs. Grice said. "One ls sex fantasies where the fantasy goes all the way through intercourse, and the other is what l call ·romantic fantasy.' "l'VE MET A LOT OF WOMEN who have told me they have these romantic fantasies -and I had a lot or them. too, when I was married. They're the kind wh~re a wqman would meet someone and he would fall ln love with her. And she would go over these details and embellish them. "And H, would stop ai the point where th"y go ~to t.h1' bedroom, ~auso that wasn't the purpose pf the fantaay,"' i;ne said. CHRISTMAS DREA~ By the late Norman Aoc:kwell. An enchanting gttt tor plate collectors. ~ OWK YI Century ago In subdued Victorian styte. A "true Rockwell cla9eic.'' $24.50 JENNIFER AND JENNY FUR Bv Marian Cerlsen re· garded •• ~me rlca's finest fen'ele artist. One of the best buys In Lim It· ed Edition Collectlng. $45.00 Visa and Master Charge accepted. -nurgen Park West, Inc. Huntington Beach, California 92646 , "",....... VIRTUOSO Menuhin GUITARIST Segovia NEW YORK <AP) - Symphonict.am .E'1ro91e. an iiaterna· Uonal mualc or1anl••· t.lon aeeldna . to prqmote world harroony, baa scheduled a )larch 3 fund·ralafng cpncert. An organiiatlon spokHm1n said the event wlll be at Carnegie Kall and ln· elude viollniats Yehudi Menuhin and Ruggiero Ricci: guttarist Andrea Se1ovla: Outist Jean· Pierre Rampal:· and pianists Jorge Bolet, Gary Graffman. Byron Jan is and J e remy Men "bin; sopranos Roberta Peters and Maureen Forrester, and dancers Jose Greco and Nanal.orca. Master s of ceremonies are to be Peter Ustinov and J ose Ferrer. Piero Gamba. president of the Sym· phonlcum Europae Foundation, will con· duc t the Winnipeg, Canada. Symphony Orchestra. LITTLE MADONNA &I Ted OeGrazla. famous Western M l1t. 10\4" on Falnft)nt Chine. banded In gold PHtel ~ack­ ground enhances the co4ora. From the original oil paint i ng "The DeGrazia HC11 1day Serles." I ~ ••• ... • • ~• ,; f • 1 r; .. f • ature's Precious Colors~ in P.endants .. o. Tourmahno $175 8 . Amethyst S145 . C. Peridot S365. O.OpaJ S365. E Aouamartne S295 CHRISTMAS STORE HOURS: 10 •·•· &o t p.m. Monday th.-oolh Friday H •.m. &o • p.m. SaUp'day BonkAmmcord • Vila • Ma.Mr Charge . CHARLES H. BARR Wtlldlff ....... .._,,,,IN Awe. ,,,,. ... ,.., ... J • t A Christmas Collection ___ _ ~ CMllLDllDn APPMEL Sf'EaAl.TY ---· ""4111 ............. '40«JIO AIOC:... ... ,~ ,WW-M4ZZ1 i.......-.... 9 ,,.,.,,,,,,, I _,_ . ,....... 1111111 • o.ii..o ~m• .-..~ ,,..., HOMe Rl•m4•• .._ !181'32 """Co 64MU1 ·=t:.~ Ce••••-=• ,.. 77111 ........... • .. ... BCl!lll' c......,.s ... --flllll.1oll0 ... ~ 0-U.. l«).TTT1 c .... s-..... 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'*°714 ~filldCo -.nn ....__ ~.,. .._, ...,...., -llWm '--~ -..,.,.. _,,,.,.,~ JW.Ql ,,,.,..,.,._.,.. ~19 ~ltd. lfll«Jlll _.._ 1M.f:11I w-·.c-. f?l.3J73 .wit• .. ,,., ~·~ ... 1m -·--'40~ """'f'• ..,.,., .Joyc9~ .... M4111 •lilW• :112:1 l!Wle(• W>iat fOODlllMCU t;.8:-' m1 L-1· ,..,.. M039 ........ w... M-Cllll ""'-'• 5*0'141 &Aoi ....... MNtte ~ ~,., .. ......... ,..,,..0,.,. ""'--· 117.-0 -·-'-MOa>I ..... aet.olll 111ncvc...e .... --. M»CIO ~,...... ..,, -...... ~ ,,,.,. "1cAn ~ c-··c-114/IM ..... ~ Mllttmlly ..,..,,. OtillM ... ...,.. "8t eo., T'oo ~ ,....c.-...,. .......... _..,..,.. JIWIUrf. MX:lleOW ..... "°""' M21711 ....... lll042 ......... ..... ...._"_ ..,., ,_.&..0¥ .. ,.... CNt""'-4'1 ......, Nous.i.-9'10ecal W111M1 •.i a..........-~·· li40tcm lollf'• MrJP -· tte)ll01 ••C-°"'"''°"" z----Clio " • ....w ~·-6111 ..... ~~ •1m "'""""'""' ... ,,.,. Mol\>Co '•""°"' wm1 MUr8""'MU ,,...... ..,_._..., ..... --c;.no• &'"9Gle7 ._...._. ~10 ,...~ .....,, c. ... ~m• -...... (.of. 9871'00 ---~ e.40l900 Ti. ... MO.e111 ...... C>ooo "'1·C. ~ ""9Q1 ...... ll"O.eGI ....,..,,Soll'• ... IUI !IS) OOll c..r. MMOlt Wf/lltllllllJI• ..0.11t1 -.c.-vu11 ..am 0.-·1 MO-<lfll c-....~ ... , .. ww:u NllANCIAL ThtG.tirl .... ........ [ .... '40 .. 11 __ ......, 1199)0 0-...Lld. teo.1902 ~,_..-,.,~,. lliltlMlioo .-21os llitl>GIA-11311,,.. Guy~ 161tl00 C:-,.0...., ... 1,.. c.......,_ .. ~ ,,.. .... .....,. Gddorl 11--· 1&4ee11 c ................... ... ........... ..... ...... .. , ..... ~· .......,..,"-MUI) '-OollllM.l• ...... ,..,. ....,,.,._., Mltll ................ .... Mlrwl11-#t M43U u..or ..... ~ TNL--.. .....,. 0..TNO.T_. ~ ~lllep ~· 0..-C...... ... ,.. '-IOI...,. .. ,,. . "" °"""""""' ~ ~APPAMl ........... ,...... ...... ._., .... ..- MMK alOll I~ 11¥91 I.~ wi19, d9ei -11'1 ~ ...... _.,,_ ....... ..... c-~ ... '40 MO f-Wtlll .. n.a w....r-....., ACROSS FftOMSOUTH COASTPlAZA VIUAGE, BRISTOLWEET AND SAN DIEGOFAE!WAV •• . .. ~ . I I'· .. lk . ., k .. " to I. I, .. v • "' i .. ,, 11 " .. " '• I LOCAL I NATION BO at Offe.e Plan Stir_s Newport Furor Gree• Clarbt•u Former ffoUywood stuntman John .. Mon· ty" Ryan o( ~osta Mesa hugs his wile, Peggy. as they accept cash collected by Newport &each police from Sgt. Les Chap- man. The money -almost t600 -was of. .-sf ered by coastal area residents who G·l·F·T S.11eU. Relief learned that Ryan, a stroke vjctim who hasn •t bees1 able to work since 1970, was robbed of his rent money after cashing his Social Security check in Newport Beach· earlier this month. tor at the· sehool who lost his home in the Oct. 2 disaster. Corona del Mar and Tbe baJUnc ol • atrlall office bulldln1 proposed for a waterfront lot tbat C!UrrentJy boldl a ~ r•rd baa become the center o • clvle tlrr in Newport ~•cb. Member• oC the r~1ional toa1tal eomm6•kla '8v• dealed the proJec:t •permit eftet letters taktnc oppoeln1 vlewa on the proJffl ..e fired ott by a COU• pie of clUleD lfOUps. lt now =an that the City Council la to enter the fray Juat lo end the lckerlna. Meanwhlle. the projeC!t's backers aay t.belr development ;. dead. The projfft was proposed by Ed Zehner and Chari~ Pl£Jleri · who wanted to convert the small boat yard at m 20th St. into a 7 .497 aquare foot office building. Pi1ne.ri is the partner: of Newport Beach Plannlnl Com· mi11iooer Paul BalaJia, who took no part in the discussions or votes on the proposal when it was before the PlannJns Com· miseioo. Commlsaloners 1ave the pro- ject their blessing Au1. 3. After walling for the appeal period to expire, the builders took their Ocean Course To Be Offered In Dana Point A lO·week introductory course on oceanography will be offered starting Jan. l through the Orange County Department of Education's Marine Science Onshore LaboratOt'Y in Dana Point. The class for adults will meet from 2 to 5 p.m. weekly at the onshore lab, 24075 Dana Drive, county officials said. Participants are asked for· a S25 donation for the course which includes fees for lectures, lab experiments. a Ude. po8trtaut and an oceano1rephlc trip aboard the floatinl la6, the Fury II. project to &he coHtal com- mlaaloe. 1 Muawlalle. city councllmen app0tnc.d a !Acal CoutaJ rtan- nlnc Committee, a sroup of cttl~ens who are 1upp0sed to produce a document on land use thal will enable the C!ity to re- 1atn control fl lts couttl aooe from tbe coastal commwlon. The group bu made it.a nnt ltem of buslnea1 the develop- ment ol a special 1onJn1 de- 1l1natlon to preserve the city's marine oriented busllleuea. The committee found out about the projec:t to replace a boat yard with an otflce buildlne and cried foul. . In a letter dated Nov. 21, com· mlttee Chairman Jerey·Klnl in· · rormed coaata1 ci>mmilllon Ex· ecutlve Director Mel Carpenter that approval of the project would .. cause the destrucUon of existing boat yard facilities (which> wJJJ Jeopardile the city's ability to prepare an LCP Aetlon Tonlg•t Land Use Plan ln conformance with tbe 1oalt of the Cout.M Act ol 1978." When plannlnc comml11lonen found out about the letter, they became unhappy. Commlaaion Chairman BUI Agee fired off a letter on hehaU of hi• 1roup restatlns tbe city's approval of the project. He empha1l1ed that was the city'• .. omclal POii· lion." Al 1 .. t Monday's City Counctl meetinc. Councilman Paul Hum· met cited the letter-writing lnc:l· dent.I and asked bis colleques what they wanted to do. Council members didn't aound like they wanted to get involved in Lbe debate qver the office pro- tect. but they acreed to consider insUtuUna an official policy tbat wouJd prol\lblt C!Ommlttees, board.I ~ • commlalons from en1a1lna tn letter·writina cam- pa11ns. The proposed policy 11 to be dlaC!uned during a council meet- ing ln January. Mesa to ·Mull Sale Of Old City Hall The sale of Costa Mesa's old City Hall to a private school, an Arlllel Development Company demand for approval of a COO· troversial north-city houaln& de· velo,ment and methods of en· forcuuc the 1976 sign ordinance top tbe city's council meeting a a end a for tonight. . The council is scheduled to re- view an appraisal of the old city hall complex at 19th and Pomona. streets and discuss the property's possible sale to Mardan Center of Educational Therapy, which has leased the facility ror nearly 11 years. The council also will consider legal ramifications of a demand by the Amel Company for ap- proval of a fmaJ tract map for constntf!tf. 1.035 .._inc• unltson• otpropert,.... 1 Bear Street and Sunflower Avenue area. lawsuit. Dlacussion of the sign or- dinance roUows a resolution by the Costa Mesa Chamber of Commerce seeking enforcement of parts of the law while holding other parts temporarily In abeyance. The chamber's board of dittc· tors is asking the city to crack down on signs which never have been granted penn1ts. The chamber board suggests that parts of the ordinance deal- ing with phasing out lar1e signs approved under an earlier law not be immediately enforced. Bluebird Canyon landslide victim Dale Ghere thanks Beth Hanson for the con- trfbutioos she and other. Corona del Mar -School studenta and faculty made: to biin and hl.s family. Ghere is a science inatruc-~wport. Harbor HiJ~ School s~ts and culty r;aiaed ~ Sl~g ,., nee. a ralfle ind donations.• · ~ Additional iJ1formation may be Amel'• dem~andlllllis'ba obainecf':Pft)a .. , f !Celtolr.'". -nee~ state~'!! 495·2274. · cision invol-iin«-• lJ.S. ·Hispanics Seek Political Clout By The AHodat.ecl Press "But we are trying, and we panics, Nuestro, wit.h arti~les ment to newcomen. Calle Velnticualro, like many have made some real proeress." printed in Spanish and English. Of the more than half the His· Latin American sidestreets, Many leaders, like BaJdene-ln many ways. however, the panics here who came in their smells of frying bananas and · gro, agitated loudly for change Hispanics have remained a own lifetime, many are not In· throbs with mustc. Women in · during the early 19708, organiz-silent minority at the national clined to make waves. A number woven shawls pause to chat near ing national campaigns and re-level for several reasons. have no documents and could be gaudy murals and graffiti-con· giorial parties. _ de~rted. ~~_choose ~ be de mine "imperialismo." T H o u G H Bo v N D by conservative. The st~"'-officiaUy 24th "WE FOUND THAT we fi~l language Roman Cathollcltm "A 1ot..1•t.~ I ..._. Street -11 in San Francisco. had to organize our own com· and a common respect for tr.adi· ua ~e peop e are U!a_' But It is. no less La~an parts blUnlties locally, and most of us Uon Latina tend to keep withir ter off here than they were at of New York's .. . ide" ----.-. .-. ---,_ -.'.-.. ......._ ---.-. ~ SholMF," sai~ Lui.ala Ehzquerrohos. a Lo ~Side _....,...·.: ........ ~ ...£.JL...wr~~~~..-..~ an ranc1sco eac er w e ~a~e; major o.s.-;~,,..,.~" "·, ~W#!r ~9f••f'••te• tlHee• .... I•~· f~mlly came r~m Nlc.~ragua. ,,' ~--·~ ~,. ..... .._.,_ ... =r•n· • ·~~el ~~':;!~1 un· THE ~ED States, is ~e mw.lat .f~ •I ~ tltNI H•teq llt ~· ~f,y bla~~ .. ta ~Bil· fourttt larpet ~anlsb·spea~ S.••:;2• '"•• 'r.•r.JI ... ,,.~,,. ~cs. j, ~~~0:1e~::id1:.:r~::ionanci ~I M?•J•.S.e. •N••lfti ~·-·•tA~-~~ a high birth rate "Hispanics" dle~'"9fe • • • 't.errtbly;-bGt'·10u h to"• may outnumber blacks within a • specialist in histo to know decade. are now busy down at the grass national and cultural groups. a boat lt, •• says Tucaon educator The country has perhaps 20 roots," sald Baldenecro. When a Puerto Rican ainnap Lupe Castillo. ~~~~oEi~~U~n 1!1::~~~::: le~:'e~!~:C!~~ n~0i;:~10~~U~ ;-::s~~ the :J£~:"~~~~-:O: b Aliso,,,!here ~Me di rMen~ on Americans. maioly ln the Cesar Chavez, and he ls OC· plained ~ as c glues. AIJY -'xacan· Southwest, but there are several cupied with the farmworkers." , Americans and cu•ans want million Puerto Ricans nearly a Voter registration drives and "I Just don't approve of these fully bUingual progr.~s in tie million Cubans and ~migrants issue·oriented campaigns have mlxed marrta1es." •cbools so thetr chl'fen won't from a score of nations. made Hispanics a major force at Said a Cuban ln Chlcaao. wtttt for1et their berltqe. Also,theremaybeeightmllllon local and state levels in the its large Mextcan -Am erlca But others ••~at their Ulegalallens. Southwest, New York and enclave: children ll1ree.d1 Sfaulsh Florida and ahou"• cone_, rate on AND HISPANIC community leadera, ao fJr a small and dis· parate group, have begun in earnest to work toward buUdina national political clout to match the numbers. "It could take us a gen~Uon to get together," ,says Sal . Ba ldenegro, a Mexican. · American activist from Tucson, ,Ariz. · "Yes,-I feel food wbia I Enallsh. CALIJIO&NIA GOV. Edmund hear 6paniah, 1"a ~ erta"t * G. Brown Jr. courts the llnica ~~e. rm • Cu •• not a • tnAThTIMI Ma:e.tot.beni~. vote. ln 16 stales, ballota are tn * t61lrinc -Spanish as well aa EnaUaa.. ;' si~stiet~ho Rlapaaic• are In WasbJngton, five ffJ9anic .E'EN lflTllQI 1u~ tbe '°i: est ~ congressmen make up a •'Brown backsroundl vp, widely. ad le etb'J!!:fOUP· Caucu.t." and President Carter famlltes baw rootl llere vl:: 11 tfllK~be'a ~ has appointed a number of Hb· in1 t~ and, ~ P OJll'I -.w pe, ... ~ paniCI to key j(;>bl. n.re ii all() d1110)Vecf i~nn tJae 11 mehJQI pat t1tej hllher lUn tbe UtlQnal -verqe a national ma1•dne lor HJs-helped to , feel no attach· -even wtlbout countln Uletal aliens. . Better Up Than Wiighi Twenty·eeven percent 6f ffil. panic families were eamtnc •• than S7,000. For non-Hlapanic famllles. the fisure was UU per· cent. Only 40 percent of His· panics have nnlshed hllh school, compared witb . 46 percent ot blacks and 67 percent of wbltes. . Pilot Re-creates First Manned Flight · K1Tl'Y HAWJt, tf.C. (AP> - BveeytblDI waa n,ic17: the brave Pilot. clad U. •black suit .and •Wf eollar; die plane; ttl :delicate IDUlliD IDdwintaut. Bat :Sen Kel1"1'1 au.tDDt to r9Cri* the historic Wrl1tlt • brothef1•.' ru1htberefellebort-UW~. · Tile 9"11& .... , ,,.. CM 1Jlb ennlveraary of th• nnt mlDMd, powered mot, by th• famoua IM'Otbtl"I at Kill Devil Hllls. KStLSTT BAaNB88£D IWaH1r tmo bll replica ot the Wa,bt ...,.._.. pJue, which i.1 oa 1 WOOiien track atop a f • ... sand dune several hundred feet from the •pol h1J famOU1 pfe. decesaon med. The Boulder, Colo., enclneer wanted to match Orvtlle Wright's 12·second, 120·foot IUghlofDer.17, 1903. About S,000 people, includlna U.S. Attorne.}' Qenwal Griffin Bell and Tr101portation Secretary Bre>ck Adt:!d watcUd • tbe plane lum downblll at a anaU-Uke 5 ltlllb -:. and 1topped at tbe 91111 Ol lb.: tnck. O~ Rl8 SECOND try, Kellett fained new appred1Uon f8t tM problems tbe Wrtlht brothen encountered. A 1u1t Of wind bl•w hJm and hi• ptue off the track. The thlrd attemP.t. however. save the crowd a blt more ot what they bad coee for as the plane's~ &ia.dfllf&be crocmd for Hverat tecond1, However Kellett a~1 _after watchlnc a vtdtotape ~ .. U..t th1-..ta11 dra11.S. NH•rtbtleH, h• ttUl pro· nounced the ·1111ht" • aucc .... SUCH P908LEM.S as poll~ brutality ud dllC!rtmlnacJon cut ICl'MI die dlvia\ons. Cultural expressions -like mualc, theat8 and art -meld dtfferent Latln backarounds. Sports heroes and tycoons and arti1t1 lnsp(re new pride and set 10111 over\a,ppln1 national back- 1rounds. · The National Council of .. Rau -the R•tt -a loolt 1roupinc of Hlsp•nlc or1an111. tlon1, met this year wltfi the tb.e.m-1.! "Several Sl)'Jet: One · Volce." tJNITY. 18 likely to be btlptd HISPANICS A GROWING MINORITY A Street In Ml•mh Uttte H.v1na by America's mobility. The vartoua comm..,Utiea are rapkl)y disaol.UW.tllelr traditional bowl-dartet, l)ifme.Ung every part of the COUlllly. Miami more than hall Cuban in popuiatlon, has a Puerto Rican mayor. Chicago has a huae Latino pop"latton, a mlcrocoaa of the natlolt'81 brea\dChtl. Even ln North CaroUna, wbeN .H,spanJcs are the fewest, a tortilla factory sup· piles two Mexican reataurants. The llna are hardly clear. YankM lluaer Reul• Jackson, black with a di1Unctly non· HlapanJc name, Is 'the aon or a Philade!pbla Puerto Rican. TRI! ll08'I' divel"H mixture Is In sa .. P'ranellco's Ml11ion Dia· trict where a nel1hborhood supermarket. C11a J.,ucas, stocks 36 kl~ds of punsent saucea, not countln1 ketchup. Owner Frank Preciado, Mex- lcan·bom but lon1 a U.S. cltlitn, renecll: "My customers? Everyone. From everywhere. In a momi.nc I wll1 hear accents from 1 doaen Spaniah-spealdng dllf erent coun. tMes." Sometimes, on Call• Vein· tlcuatro, Preciado even bean En1ll1b. ' I 11. .. ri. '" ~ •• " to '· I, .. y • .. ' " " II • I· n .., .. r .. ' • ... llANY WHO WITN88SED 11'8& e••ly nlcbtmare of tu torn bodi Ud 1mol ftl wreckl8e that wu a Pacific Southwest Air Jet, or wbole Jobi drew t.Mm to the 1tt.. eaneot e.cape the terror. Two polJco Ottlcen tiave betD \MMe to won. Two rwldeoll of the North Park netOborttood horrified by lhe cr .. h, ha" left tM efty. Ot.beri are aelllnJ, their hom•• to move from the lJDdberah e1d ru,bt path. As i>retldeot qt tbe Academy ot Salt Dt.Qo Paycholo1isla, Davldaon offered tree cUnlul setvlces Immediately after the Sept. JI trlCedY to · l the hundreds ol workers clOM to the ac.e. ' DAVIDSON AND HIS STAFF received responses for help from 30 polite officers. Medical workers, clergymen. firell1hters, area residents and several reporten al5o soupt help-some for a few days, others for longer. The symptoms, Davldaon said, were coosiS· tent: lack o( sleep, lrrttabllity. bizarre dreams, flashbacks, dllflculty in family relationships, anger. loss of interest lD sex. and a teneral feelln1 of belple8lnea and fruatrat.lcxi. "Most people we talked to Just required a frame of reference," Davidaon explained. "They bad never seen anything so devaat.atlnl. Tbe sights, the smells, the -aensaUQm -they were all outside their range of experience. Tbere was no .,,. time to undentand it." ~ POLICE OFFICERS WHO CONSULTED Davidson and his staff did so individually and In confidence, be aaid. •'They were concerned that the PD not know t they were there," he said. "1be police still have a macho Jmqe, one of total control. They weren't able to discuaa their problems at the PD for fear of belnt vleWecl aa emotionally unstable. \ "We provided a release valve for a lot of pres· sure that had built up," Davidson said. "lt .is un· ~ imaginable for an individual who witnessed the f scene not to have a strong rea<itl'On." . ' I Train Gives Baths TOKYO <AP) -Chinese tailworkets in the re-.. 1 mote western province ol Sintiang bathe in' a • mobile "bath train" ln water heated by solar ~ eoer1y, Peking's Rslnbua news agency,J'eP.C)l'ted. · Hainbua said tbe train '18110 ~cover.~· ' ~ lDg 230 . .....,.1.-.. \•be~1'•ter~•'•,.._. -.• 1 ,."""_.11 two-thirds of the year. The train h•..,lt&t}illld•ll• bath facilities. 1';. t. ) \ ', (, • , • ·an1 I A uemblywom an •' Afarlan B•rtet0n haa annoUOC*I the openln1 of her dlltrict offlee. A1 of today, the office fa a t 833 Dover Drtve. 6uJte 7, Newport Beach. The phone number l1 631·3U4. Mrs. Berctson's dis· trlct atatt includes Julie P r oeber1 of San Cletnente, Dave RukstaJl1 of Mission \Viejo. Kay Cotton of ~na helm and Gloria · Walla Seelye ol Newport . Beach. ~.December 18. 1978 Speed your holiday parcels to twelve major cities. • Counter-to-counter Jet-Pac DAILY PILOT for small, rush parcels under 15 lhs. From $10. •' • Open an Air California Freig ht/Jet-Pac account and make it easy on yourself. • Serving: Fresno, Lake Tahoe, Monterey, Oakland, Ontario, Orange County, Palm Springs, Reno, Sacramento, San Diego, San Francisco and San Jose. •fiCAUFOllllll ' Gall Jet· Pac Information in Fresno. (209) 252-7376: Lake Tahoe. t ,_ (916) 541-4704; Monterey. (408) 372-3090: Oakland. , '1\ (415) 562-4940; Ontario, (714) 983-5514; Orange County. 1' I~ t ~ (714) 540.6262: Palm Springs. (714) 327-8547; Reno. t .){1~ SanDi~~l:.~~)~Qg~f~~~~o~~j~j7.0113; ',''JI,.. · SanJose.(408)286-1570. l #,I C Af-4 INFORMS In the ... ..... DAI LY Pll.OT ' ( I 1 I l ' \ t .. " ,. • •· n • " t .. t e ~ • ...J • l AJO OAlt.V PILOT Monday, December t I, 1978 -. • -Cotnlty Seekb,g .,- -:Y.~ .... .-z-_ .... -Santa ... ............ . . , \.J'41A:a ii:'~ .. .: ~ .. Y'~~'A .. ,_.;: By Aamva R. VINSEL • · 'it71/l/;,..,.Ji:-.t.; • • • OI -O.lly "'lltUl•ll ·7,'.";'.f'.'~ :~'".'~: 'Tomnt. l':lvla and Potty Dom· " SANTA CLAUS, allu Me.-l der, 14. a llu.nUnaton Beach tie~ achool croaaing auard wh• not f ollowlne hit cboeen work 11 am- ba111dor to the world of cN .. chuckled. 1.1n I• I '. GiftS . ~ ~ lnl(u~t lcnow today that there la ln· ,, : f ~: ·;t :~~::"> . d SanlA Cl us i'J~ ~ · Tomu. 8. the burn·scar~ Tijuana . ~ ... ~~1!9.-J• '·/ ·· cblld tracked down and befriended The public l1 invited lo • lti~~~· ··• by HunUn11ton Beach bouaewlfe join Orana County 1ov. , fl!lltt\a'rn. Vlrtlnla cuuuo. met hlm al h.ll flrat ernm,nt emploree• in '!_. ·~ci. ~~,,, ·~ cla11 hrl11tm11 party •l Sequoia holiday fut vttlu · ·~n ~l"·.;.~ Elementary School I at Friday. Tburada,y and alao to • : ;,. U~ 11! ' Only ThunMiay TomH res"med donate t oya to he lp ..... ~ ··:r:::i~~5 / '.:. ~llllft ofter rt-tu~nlna from Stanford b rl1hten Chriltmu for .... F.tttJil .u.U..~ linlvenlty Mt-dlcal Center and the foater chlldron ....,.. J m ~~~·., , Jateat ln Ii 8 •rles O( many pluUc IUr· County Supe1rvl1or1 ,erles Cb airman Tbomu RU y • • y Invited coun&.y resident.a A&E YO REALL Santa to brlni a aaclr lunch tor Tin. Given Claua7" ukc!d Tomas. wondertna ll ••} feel Uke I'm kind of a '"lal' Santy Claus." obseoed the Oltfine aircraft company machlntat. H a mburcer• ror lune-'" rollowed by a 11tt exchance a.lid •ch child recelved a ttockJna atuf~ "1lh modest toys. · · ~ TomH' slaters El\lla. a t d· •t•der. and Patty, a klndtq P ell. had Heh met San CJ (allaa Merl Grider) at H Center, ln Hu.ntinalon Beacti. the U ·4:i a.m. f UvlU 'I'" t>l. Nlck ,bad Unw lo visit Mrs . Lucy ln the county Hall ol Ad· M •aner 1 smoll cl H of apeclal THEY A1TEND reauJar cl~ses iat mlnlatralloo lobb). On Ero,ow· n pupllA at lh~ Wrstmlnater campus Webber Elementary School. whete Broadway a nd Santa a not too far (rom hi• new bOfl\4 Elvia's Cbriltmaa party fe~ed the Ana Boulevurd Santa A "Hom eowner '• Jlla mothtr, Marla, rode the school bnaktng of 1l traditional exl* Ana · ' Guld• fo~ Debris and bur. with him to Kpend tbe day. while plnata sent north by her gr athetl County employees will Erosion Cont rol," a 21-ht• talhcr. Y•n clo. was at work on ·'She (Elvia> is really do Well., join them for lunch '1l1d page pamphlet wtlh Ups his carpentry job says he r teacher, Mrs . atby a C hristm as c arollnc on b ow to preve nt Tomua' face, which underweJ.?l five Campbell. "She's good at hlt 1 the seulon featurin.t thti erosion and landscape houn of surgery In which 100 stitches boys when they tease.•• uolveraal communlcallon even if they speak dl!fereot Jansuaies. SINCE BEGINNING her mission to h e lp Tomas, to who m the cbarl1 matlc Catholic Chicana lady says wu a mlaa~ ordered by her lord on a Holy Land visit in 19". Mn. CuUUo now ltanda baclc. Thou.Jandl of dollars sent to ln· terplaat Inc .. at Stanford Unlven1ty Medlcal Center. wti,re doctors ud nunea devote JW'gioal skllls free to dl1fi1W'ed cbUdten have tJken care of Tomu' needs. The Domincuei' arc together •lain ln a modest triplex -at least tern· porarily -and there are other lltUe ORANGE COUNTY ones south of lhe border whose suf· fering needs ber attention. ONE OF TOMAS' girt exchange pre.senta Friday was a toy carpen· ter '• tool set, wblch cau&bl Santa Claus' eye. "If you play wllh that long enough. you can be aa good a carpenter as your father," he told the boy. · "I'm gotn1 to work ... to build a houae, ... aald the impish Tomas. whose horribly distorted face once drew taWlts and thrown sticks and stones from Tijuana playmates in the aftermath of hia accident wllh a can o f paint thinner and a book of matches. IQ time for gifts Joplln Boys' Raoch but'IM.'CS ~ bas been were taken, 11 lareely unnoticed by Little Patty is quickly ad~na. to Choir , .. ited by e 0r...,. bis classmates, aome 11lpuy r e• klndergarteo, sa)'1 ber ~ac Jlts1 \ ln addll100 rHldenta Count)' En'llronmllltal larded, at least. one with canffr. Dolores Beal. since. cbUdtea ve e . may brio& a lon1 un· Manasemeot ,\cency. I I -r, ' wrapped gifts for the Free copies can be ob· Bl d c 0 • county.sponsored Opera-ta1ned at the Public In· 00 . .. ent'er pen· I g lion Santa Claus, an er. formation Office, Room . fort to s uppiy books. 103, New Hall of Ad· clothing. toys, gam es ministrauon. Broadway and records to chlldreo a n d S a n t a A n a in foster homes. Boulevard, Sant a Ana; Toys should be re· the Public Service ceived in the county Counter. Room 117, 400 Public Inlormatioo Of· Civic Center Dr ive fice by 10 a.m . Thursday West, Santa Arla, or at for display under u the Environm e ntal Christmas tree during Management Agency the ceremony but gifts South County o m ce, also are w elcome 26052 Getty Drive, The Orange County Red Cross Blood Center will be open ·New Year's Day from 10 a .m . to 2:30 p.m ., and J an. 2 from 8:30 a.m. to 8 p.m . The Blood Center will be open from 8:30 a m . to 8 p .m. Mondays, 8:30 a .m . to 3:30 p.m . Tuesdays through Fridays. and 10 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. Saturdays and Sundays. · The center is located at 601 ~­ Golden Circle Drive, Santa Ana. A bloodmobile will be at le St. Bonaventure Catholic Church. 16400 Springdale in Huntington Be h on J an. 5 from 3 to 7 p.m. A bloodmobile will a lso be a lhe Advanced liealth Center. JXIO N. Bristol St .. Newport Beach. onJan. 8 from 2:30 to 7 p.m. For an appointment to •nate blood at the bloodmobile or the ~emer. call 835-SJSI. through s p.m. Friday. Laguna Niguel. ' Am trd s fares o.re as...,easy to take as our trains. And with this c))upon, it's an even better bargain. So visit that friend or relative. 'Idke the lcids sightseeing. And maybe for the first time, enjby the trip goillg 4l1d coming. With prices and comfort Jilce ours, you ca.n 't afford to stay home. Amtrak's worJcing on the railroad by getting down to basics, JJJce cost, comfort and convenience. Because we figure if were going to get you tO)eave the carat home and get you on board, we've got to give you a great ride. Ar,.d a great deal. Call Aintrak or your travel agent for all the det4ils. .. r------------~~-, I ~~ ~~ I. I excuTSJon fares Mond•y·Frld•1 city J»in trnel agtint. Wh•n 11ccompanied by an t1dult. I between Los Angele1 and S.n Diego. TlteH fares children under 12 ride lot hall. Ticht• r.Jid /Ac, 4 are only available when thi3 coupon Is preHnted. through M•y 25, 1979, •nd good !Or 29 d•1uJter ~ It can be redeem.ed /or one or more tickets"' date of we. No stopovers permittod. Facsimiles or l I AmtraJc staUons alo~g the route, on the tram whe;i photocopies of thts coupon not acceptable. ~ Jhs~"Sl~>soar·.-= #t> LoaAngeles S -$ 3.30 S 5.40 $ 7.40 S 7.90 $ 9.50 S/2.00 $/4.60 Pu»ertOn 3.30 2.20 3.90 5.40 7.40 9.00 12.00 I I 5-JtMA/la ,_40 2.20 2.80 3.30 6.90 8.00 10.50 Sua/IMll Cap. 7.40 3.90 2.80 2.20 3.90 6.90 8.00 S.n CJ.mente 7.90 5.40 3.30 2.20 -2.80 5.90 7.90 I Oc.uaide 9.50 7.40 6.90 3.90 a.BO a.80 s.90 I DeJMu 1a.oo 9.00 8.00 6.90 5.90 2,80 3.30 S.nDlego 14.60 /2.00 10.50 8.00 7.90 5.90 3.30 I l:/QD: ltound·lnp .. t:llfl/fOll lu•• •nd toupon .. .,1ng1 only •"•IJ.bl• Mond•r·l'tfd•' .... _________ _ _4..J Wl'U IUN'lfC).U'IMI Otlf'llll .IA1£1QAD. . Amtrd St1t1on, 2670,.V•rdugo SttHt, S.n Juan Capistrno/Call toJJ.ltH. ~. • ~ ... • 'B1n ·-~.,, powerful calculators Texas Instruments quality \ -now slimline -the all-tJme favorite TJ·SO -updated scientific, with stat11tlc1. and new Constant Memory'" • for professionals. students · • 60 functions pre-programmed • allde-rule Vig 1n degrees. rachans. or grads. logs. poWers. roots • statlatlca-...mean. standard deviations and variances ~llGllll'I~:·~· pi, tactonal ,, .. , ..... ,ator IS G.Jmed'off .• • . ... I~ :4 1' Ust"fi .... ~ '!!!"~~ Analyst-II"' financial, atatlstics, and new Constant Memoryr• • now Shmllne. in vinyl wallet-to take along- weighl only 3 oz. • prep1ogrammed for com· pound lntereet, annuity payments, amortization ICMdulea, pr ... nt value, future valDe • llnear r8Q19SSIOn, trend line anatyals, mean and standard" diMatlons NEW 45.00 • memory retains data even When calculator Is turned off • big LCO display, automatic Jhut-off ~ N•W in Auguat 1 "' .i -forprofe ......... TI ... • •Ude ruse. aladatloe.. programmabte • 32 progrM1IT'ring ... • trig, log, hyperbql!O, f.,.., powers. rooca. %, % change. linear regression. ,,,..n, variance. standard devlalion functlonl built·in • 10 UNI' ecceuible memories • 8 prtp«>gremmed oonversions • 140 page C1lculator Declalon Miking Sourcebook fot englnMrlng, eotencea. opnt1one ,...ard!. management . favorite for 1tudents Tl-30-allde rule, with math book • 48 pre-programmed math functions .. slide rule trig. leas. power.&, roots. reciprocalS • 4 memory keys,%, pt. change,.,11""" • :f"=~anuaf. • cany caee. and 224 page ~of math facts, games, puutes • 49.95 new in November Tl-1030- tlke along, wtth memory • In vtnyt Wiiiet folder, weighs f1Mt3oz. • 4 memory keys., %, square root, constant • 8 digit display. negative 51gn. decimll point charge on Yiu, Mam.Charge, ArrierlcM ex,,... · South po-.11 Plan . . 545-0431 "'9nle Hfflt Mall Wnt Covina Falhton ptaza Del Amo Falhlon laua,. °'*' t\WW>Ol t1'CI SuncI.tv . . .. . -• I . • I. I t 'II· " '° I. I, .. Iv •• • ' .. II .. • .. • .. , • CAltFQRNIA I NATION r ~. Oecem'* 19, 1979 l" DAILY PILOT A J J -Be'1:erly Hiiis Stio11~rs Extravagant AS Eve r i LOS ANGELES <AP> -It you've Cor1otten the Duchesa ~ . Windsor'• dictum, ''You Can Never Be Too Rieb or Too Thln," Geary'. hu ll for you 01 ftlraved hacl Tbne may be 4l rec• on comln1 in IJ'1'9, but. tr ao, the word hun't rotten to Beve-ty JIDl•. wMre nt.ravqant llfta arei u popular H ever Ulla Chrlatmu. IN WATCH .s. THI& 'S a Pla1et quartJ with Uaard attal) and 1old buckle trim for 12,680. Jt'• only thr miltimel~rt thick, or about~ a millimeter .. A1earded Edgar M. Bronfman, chairman of the board of Seagram Co. Ltd., bas been given the 1978 United Cerebral Palsy Humanitarian Award. The award also went to John Miller, president of the Hearst Corp. Shirts Have CB Handle MONROE, Ohio CAP) -Hey, Florida BandU, Tiger Lady, Plow Horse and Diamond Jim. Lois King hasn't forgotten you good buddies. • Mrs. King, a Jonf·time waitress and ci lzens band radio buff, bas met so maoy truck drivers she can't remember their names. SO SHE WENT to a novelty shirt shop and paid $144 for a special order. '.'l'ber•'• al.lo a a15 1old·pJ1t.ed dl1ltal wat.eb·peo that dlaplaYJ the d1te and Ume to lbt 1eeood, whlcb YoU cu Lbtn write down Oavad Ortell. a J*b Rod~ Ori e aaor., ltlU hu a few Sl10 tt•rllal 1Uver calc:u.lat.or1 but l1 out of the $'150 1terUn1 111¥ T' t lepbonel eh1pba.nt·1 h ad and priced at SJ ,toO. At the Tc>y St.or•, ln addtUon to 8 nUeys, ltoU.·Roycff aad Fer. rarla, meo are 01Un1 a yellow and black Scorpion Rotoway ont·man belicopter wtt.l'I a rqe of '75 mJlee aod a price t., ol '"·000· AL 0 ON DISPLAY It a .. ova noas• 1s nDdlnC s100,ooo l.Amborahlnl Countacb 100CS ~ ... Hid owner -with ti top apeed ot JOO mJ>h Md Prter OrsetJ. ''You can't aeU ... a lS foot, one-man Jet that la Juat cuaa " -aa faat but balf u much. You Or~ell wu able lo flDd ''Tl'Ul)k can rest oo drit\wood·and·mlu Un • • a two-foot loq, allver-furn(turo wblle you're abopplnt. plated telephone 1b1ped Uke an Bunny Sheehan, autatHt ... coupon UmltOM*"'MdOMC...,.,_C. 11 '* c-.-a... Die. " ..... Dec. rt, 1171 SUPERCOUPOI Fro ...... A Annall' Stir .TmnTldlf 00 (1•22 ... ) per -lb. -She bad the handles - or CB names -of her favorite friends custom· printed on shirts for them.· ............ Added . "This is the one way I'll be able to remember them a long time, .. ma Mrs. King, 50. "THERE'S A STORY, a mearuw behind eacb one of (hose names," she said. The shop needed three monttrs to imprint the shirts with the names Mrs. Klng bas chosen. More may be added before tho shirts are fmlsbed. New Execo.tive S AN FRANCISCO <AP> -The Bay Area Air Quality Manage· ment District bas a new chief executive effective Jan. 1. Named to the post was Milton Felds· tein. 60, who will suc· ce ed D.J . Callaghan, who is retiring after 17 years. COl'S lJSING R4DARGUNS SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -San Francisco police have begun using hand·hcld radar guns in hopes of catching more speeders. The battery-operated devices cost $1,500 each and can determine the speed of an auLo a quarter mile from the gun. Two radar gurus will be used 16 bours a dal on heavil)' traveled streets. Cmn~ .... , •. H• per lb. All Ralphs Turt&eys Are USDA Grade A Golden Premium Meats ,,.-.c~GIWft .79 ._._ ~ Acalitg Chickln ,,., ~Beef 8rilket II. ~~ 121 ,,.._,,_nn. ,,., ~ComilhHw •• ~ ....... '--.,....,. 2'' ~~-o,...• W.ltlatm ,,., .. ~ ..... 1 ... c1••i,... .. ~,., ,,., .. 2'' ~- Pantry Fiiiers D ...... .-.c.-. C1111111on Ml( , ... 38 OM I ~~ ~--d ~Fol 2!: .42 ~ CllllM.C,.._.., lllMlll _,,. Dole Pineapple ~ ...... .,,.... . Jolly Timi Popcorn a:: .57 ~Pied OllVll ~K.=syrup 1::--.59 ~ Hoi'Rol Mix ---International Appetite I - man11er at The Bird Garden, a 1.5·•cre Van Nuya extrav-aanaa of w aterfalla, plants, streams and screams. reports a brilk Chrlatmu bualness In bud&les. canaries and cockaUela. The Blrd Garden Ulla it.a blrda untamed or tamed, which la ex· tra. "WE HA VE A TRAINER and tbey pay extra if they want t.o have their bird tamed," Ma. Sheehan aald. "Once they're tamed, they'll come out Qf lhe ease, alt on your finger and you cao play with the"." Tamlftl can sometimes add a lot to the price.Of a bird. For ex· ample, a Moluccan macaw la USO replar and S1,2:i() tamed. Doll• are alwaya popular at C hrlatmaa, and The Grand Gesture in Woodland Hila. bu life···~ nrloo and fabric "aoft 1culptute1' for $800. Tbe dol.l can be anyone you want - youraell, your spouae or close friend -all owner ,Jlm Devereux needa la two or three eood picture.. DEVDEVX ALSO HAS the Baccbua wlne opener for $150, a solid brass cootraptfoo tliat corks and recorka with the flip or an atnuenL wrist. At Alda Thibiant Skin and Body Care Center, Maryann Prideaux reports that patrons are buying gilt certificates for facials, body massages and t.be latest, "body facials." "The skin doesn't slop at the face," Mrs. Prideaux noted. ·'The whole body n eeds molslurizina, so we use a brosh and then a full body message with special oils and then a body mask to make the body smooth and the skin soft llke a baby's." For rour ~ conMnlenct A1lphl wlll open I &m. Sllurdly, Dec. an4 Sunday, Dec. 24. Check your locll ltore for holldaJ hour1. R1lphl wlll be cloMd Chrlltmel Der, Dec. 25. Including Swift Butterball, Armour Stir, R1lphl br1nd frozen turkep and • wide Mlectlon of frelh turkep ... Allo 9"H~ Chlcklnl, comllh felM hlnl, ltuffed turkeya, tmoked jWllor turkep, turkey br••ta 1nd hind· Super Dell ~ •·Ille' lrnperill Mllgfi• ~~ .. -c....menyGet• ~ "-.....C.-Y"""' Sour Cran qu1rt1r1, duck• 1nd ~·· Frm 1111pt-. Talb Tlftay" broclm , ;: .59 H .. 19 -I :: .71 To help JOU llllct Ind ~ J01W holder ta.by. Avlillble at II Rllphl meat depnnentl. Frazen.lrade A AnncuStar ~~Tamtanay (11-221bt.) Super Produce ~ r....- ,_..a,_ .. ~ Crtlp C1l1ry ,,., lb. .29 ea .29 ~ i...,_, .......... OelMllC>eltcloue3 lb. 79' Appl11 c::: I Super Holiday Spirits Super Floral ':.' 1•• 1·~ ... ':.' 1" ,~ ... 1•• 21 ... 39 '*' I -.: 111 ~.-,, ..... 88 ... I 1-:.."'· 8" 1.:..•·104' 1-:.."'·13" '·""'· 8" K ' 1.:._11r. 9" 1·:..··1011 1.~·· r 1·:..··13•. 1,:..i.. 7'' '·:..··r ... _ .............. Here's a super gift Idea from Ralptis .. = .. c...... .... ... .................. .., .. ..... .......................... ...... ......, .... ........ ---. ... lttl) •·1ttt "1' ........ ==~· ..,,,.. ...... .... ....... ... .... .. ..._ . .,.. .... .... , .... ,...... ~Mldetoe .......... ~ Afrtcln Violeta D Mi'ad Bouquels .. ch ,39 .. 99 "' . Hc:h , •• WNle luppty Leela Frozen Foods · ~.57 ~.59 ---......... .................. __ ... __ ---.--~--------- llJCllUlfllt ..,., .... • t na st. CtSTUISA •SM .... 118' 1111 .. Ill• NSU •-.-: Uflll au r-IZM ..... llST'I. ... a .. U :=-CISTA llSA 112'1 17l' ST. mtll . . • ,--' ,. .. \: • I, " to I . I. '· '¥ •• le & " II ,, • .. " ¥ n Ir .. " "' .. - Mond1y, O.O.mber ti. 1178 ; t ' PEORIA . l lt. (AP> -O ld k cDonald probably couldn•t take lt all the fann thes days. Farmlna. once the pa loral ldeal, bas become • hlth·presaure bus · neu with blJ Investments, bll r ponalblUU and bla probl ms . "THE MY'l'll OP ft h air and c11ual daya under lh shad• tn't'I la 19methln1 out ol lht' '• :• H id Larry Cbate, director of a rural mental health clinlc In IOUthwMt Iowa. "All lb hurry or urban hrto h.H cauibt up wlth lb m in rural areas" The U S National ln•tltult' for Oc cupatlonal Safety and Hnlth •IY• owning and run.nine a farm ranb lo the upper 10 perreol ot 1.30 hl•h· s•re s occup Uoru1. Thal may 'IUrprl city folks. bul 1rs nothmg new lo farmers ays Harold Dodd. p~ldent ot the ll· lem• as old u t1rmtn1 lta ll -UJ\ predictable weathtr. auaonal work load• -loom lat1•r beeauae the 1take1 are mudt ht1her. · A UT• EA.ION llonn or I nu tuaUnc tr•ln or Uvn*k martcet can cotl even • 1ntaU firmer h&&n• dred• ol ~andt of dollan "?tfany ol our f1rm•rl haY9 cmr SI mrnlon d'ollara lnvtattd, and that '1 tomethlft• to IO tiO bed and cone em yourttU •bout at blpt." 111td Art Weal Of the New JtrMY Farm Bureau. "Thi• waa Juat not true 10 years a10. You didn't have tht'tfl kind. ol prettur !' · 19'ois farmers _Union • 1 "WHEN I INC&EA. £0 my <>Peratioo from UIO to 1,400 aeree . I ~eatly multlplled my problems, and along wlth that came gre•ter stress When t.h nauon waa founded and farmlnt wu lartt1Y phy1lcal In nature, about ti percent of Am r!cana were Carmen. Now, rewtr than 4 ~rcenl remain en rarm•. and f'Xpt'N i ihe modPrn farmer. while .not 1'1 P much phyalul labor. fin 1 hlms~lr .in·· crea1lnsl1 overwhelmed b)' factota ;=~~~=:;::;::::=::::; over wbJcb ht bu DO conwol. . "It's not the way it used lo be 25 years ago," be added. •'There la so much greater pressure financially, so many greater problems. so many greater worries." The farmer of lhe 1970s faces rugh day-to-day costs and an enormous financial investment. Even prob V Trustees Eye . ids to Repair ~l l)amages· 0 RU n:AU dE p1ychqto,jcal: social and economic now," said Jerry RobU\SOn, a Un1verllty of Jl. linoaa socaoloelat who specializes in studying rural Ure. "We ~re not afraid ot t.be Indians. but we are afraid of lntemaUonal trade. foreien people buying up farmland. whal's going to happen to the dollar. We're certainly afraid or drought, but we're afraid of the Environmental Protection Administration too." Tht neult is that farmers and their families pe havlngJo de~ for tb4' first Ull:lf w\lh pte§st\rts one• • thoogbt UnflftKI to city tife..1 . 1 ; In a survey-by. The Furrow, a farm magazine, more than ~ per· cent of fa,rm~i> -,vho rtfsponded said Uiey suffer more fr~rr) ~tress piai ~o years ago. More than half said the stress meant increased irritability; one.fourth said It caused digestive upsets; and many complained of depression, sleeplessness and headaches. Despite plans to raze a fire-gutted classroom earlier this year, Foun· lain Valley (elementary) School District trustees have voted 3 to 2 to advertise for bids for possibl'e re· construction of lhe damaged wing at TO COPE WITH increased pres· Harper School. sures. schools such as the Ub.iversi· Sc hool board President Dick Plum ly of Minnesota are giv\Jlg stress said the action does not mean the seminars for farm pe'dple. Al school wing. gutted by fire two workshops. some farmers talked years ago, will definitely be rebuilt. openly of using alcohol and dru1s to "We just needed some cost combatlhestressofthejob. estimates," Plum said. "More people are going to doctors \ ' . . \ .. ) IN41'1ME · :. FOR ... " CHRISTMAS. 8x10 Color Portraits Ready While You Walt. by Stuart Na Ide th f • ~ . .. \ Now you can get a pro slonal 8xt0 c;olor portra1t of yourself or meme..rs of your famlty. ·in seconds. 1 Imagine ... a large-format photograph ready to go moments after the sitting. And, our wide selection of frames and moonts wlll give your portrait an extra look of elegance. Portraits make Ideal gifts and oors are made more Ideal because they're ready for giving right away. 8x10 color portraits In an Instant. Call for an appointment today. Only $24.95 stua rt 645-6800 naideth 557-2914 photography 1803 Newport Blvd. Costa M esa NATION I LOCAL IN YOUR LIFE Conbt & Co.., "' ,,.,"' }"'''''°""' "''"rwt" ~ftrs niierytJtl"Rp ""''" willt '°' •fCJtri•frrutJ hmt. S11IU. tportco.ts wontttl ll«b, toooi IWtlltrt. •ilk tin; tWrytltl~ for tht ptr· , ftclgl~for#M """ irt ~r l1fr. For hi• funriou! ltilflrnotllr', °"' 11nklth~Rt1· Inn Rabi of l.W. vtlour. $60. • QA~~o~!J1e!n ~-~;,.i~WJ~ 'Mort. & Tws. 10-6: Wtd. Thurs. Fri. 10-9: Sat. 10-5:30 JOOO Bnstol Strttt North, NtwpOrl Belt. n4/955-2900 News from al( over California • is rounded up each day Plum and Tr us lee Betty and psychiatrists all the time," said MignanelU voted against the action. West. "People thlnk farming ls such ~=================::!~~==~~~~!!::=~=::=:::~~~~£.:.....:.::...:.~~~~~~~ "I'm adamantly opposed to doing a peaceful way of life, a thing they'd ~mylbing about Harper except raz. like lo do. But the fact ls that many ptg the (burned out) win&," Plum 'farmers 1 !Jnow would give their pid. rtght arm ta.be ab)e to trad~_... 1 The board had VJlted.oa~ i...ze~W clty co\llAu fgMM1hile ~e lhc eight· room building .at 18658 San· -· · · (h~y feel tntF' pl"fiS'Ures 'IJIP!o ta Inez St., Fountain Valley. much greater." J TRUSTEE KAR»l 1 • ,td In favor of razing the buHding at ihat time but voted in to advertise 'for bids th1s time. SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -In~ digents charged with possession of less than an ounce of marijuana are entitled to a court appointed attorney and trial by jury even though the o(. fense ls punishable only by Cine, the state Supreme Court has ruled. · Trustees Shella Meyers and Roger Belgen also voled to seek the re- building cost estimates. Deputy Superintendent Glenn Hardy said the bids will not be re· ,ceived until mid-February. ' ~" ~ .,.,oo •• • ,,.,.,,, {11-1•'' ,, ,, , •• , '"'.-! l'I? /XX) It. ·l/;fJ ,., .... ,..,.,, ,,. ''"""'' f.A\e v• ,, • .,,•r·••I '''""' Ho ~w--uso.oo. W••ll OoYt •. WJ lfh w ... ,., 1t \I~<! to~ II (I 'JO r11111,,,> IJ(tu ure venl•d '''"" THE SEIKO QllAIUZ DIVER'S WATCH. FOR MEN WHO CHALLENGE THE SEAS AND THEMSELVES. This special Seiko Quartz Collection features models water tested lrom 500 feet ( 150 meters) to 2,000 feet (600 meter~). The collection offers Instant day/date setting, bilingual models. Aid they all include ~xternal rotating elapsed · timing bezel~. screw·lock crown$ and second hands that move in precise one·second lntervals. Divers will appreclato their matchless Seiko accuracy and dependability under water. Many ruggedly handsome models to choose from. Soc them all. Seiko Quartz.SQ ... A.H. WEINERT' FINE JEWELS 32 Fashion Island • Phone 644~040 Newport Beach I• • .; AIR fe CAUFllllllA Reno from Orange County and Ontario, for as little QS $37 one Way. Our lowest fare saves ~~u $9 ov_er the neare~t (;omw- tlhon. Daily nonstbp. jet service from both cities. Take off for Re no. Sparkling nightlife. Posh, new casinos. .Big name stars. Harrah's fa- mous automobile collection. Nearby ski slGpes and beauiif ul Lake Tahoe. Call your Travel Agent or Air California reservations. Daily flights to Lake Tahoe too. In Or- ange County, (714) 752-1000; Downey, (218) 9'~4-33) J; Laguna, (714) 496-6000; Los Angeles,, (213) ·627-5~01; San Clemente, (714) 496-6000· River- side/San Bernardino: (714) 825-6900. -----' 'I -' "· n 10 I . .. IY •• Ill ~ " ,, •• • ) JI • ' ' ) • • • , 1 . , NATION I AT YOUR SERVICE 12 1flllll•• Tiit Exlimit Big Busine8s NEW YOIUC (AP) -Tut•k"•••,..... ,.._ than 7 million aabJ•t• H P••re•• of all ) E1Ypt as Naturi• aao. Bat la ua utioe tae boJ ; klql bu u~UNd almoet • mUUOG _..~·So . .., fir. \,; ..Al lf tbat ....... , = u.. Mee .. ~ tlan ruler'liu ueo-.,F~ McM••• ud J • black marbt '"•h HI• tMit are c....._ la oa the epklemlc of 1'1t·wonhlp lD the Uni~ stat•. t SINCE NOvmsa .... A TOTAL ot S.I f million l*>Pl• ia ftve cW• uve vi....t dlle ..,.. tn1 el.blblt -of reUc:e r.o"'ed from Twt'• tom~. Before April 15. when Tut depel1a New :Yott fw San Franclaco. an llddittoul 1.3 1n1Woe will ne the relict here. Whee TUt pi~ Lo. ..-... tll1I ,.., ... . hlbtt otndell ..... told~· I( ............... . ln1 ad.,,....... Ucua tor u mueb .. ~ eo.., were~ \o lay Qee OD tbe ale~Mter Dd aold objeeea beaa 'l'llt'• tomb: ~ All the 1.3 mlWoa Uc~• offered b7 Manhat· tan's Metropelltu Muaeu. .. of Art -_,,free, aome for a to-cent aer•ice ebarc• -were • I. aoapped up tbne montha •to. . · • Bll"I' Al TH& TtJT FEVEa IOU'ed ln New : York with tbe e~btt'a arrival here tb1a week, • scalpers' were cbarsln1 from $15 to $50 a Ucket. ~ Metropolltan MUHUm offidall said that they "4 were seeking an injunction to ~ent a ticket ~ a.gency ln'Un.ioa City. N.J ., from aeWna tickets at $20 each. Callers anawertna a New York City newspaper advertisement were offered the tickets. * Bruce Ratner. the city's Comumer Affairs commissioner. warned that it ls WeaaJ to resell tickets to the exhibit and uked tb• city's newspapers not to accept advert!Hments for such sales. · "Seeing Tut is the status symbol right now lo this city," said a Metropolitan Museum official who declined to be named. "ll's even superseded sex." Sebuater, which published the boot Just two moothlago. NONE OF THIS SU&PIUSES Hoving. A former director of the Metropolitan and tbe man who masterminded the Tut ellb.lbit's 7-city, 3·year U.S. tour, Hoving says he knew all &Iona precile: ly what he was doing. "Alter we concluded the negotiations to bring the exhibit here, I wrote down what I thought the attendance would be. I figured l million a city. It averages 1.2 million. That's no\.t)ad.'' be says. If Tut attendance isn't bnpresalve enoulh. consider this: EXb.lblt officlm report that more EVERYONE, IT SEEMS, IS CASlllNG ln on than 25 percent of those who've seen the Tut. relics Tut fever ManhaUan books""'---feat t bad never before entered a museum. Tut drew . ...,.,., ure separa e them But why., Tuta~khamun sections near best-selling ficUon and TUt ruled Egypt juat nine years before be died non.fiction. Bloomlngdale's department store la of. t th of M b l • feriog a host of objects ranging from Wedgwood a e age 18. any sc o ars say the boy ~DI s china1.oatotebagwfth"ILoveNewYork"lnscrlbed reign would merit barely a sentence in any tome + in hieroglyphics. .. on Egyptian history -except that tbe eye. . blinking gold and alabaster wealth of Tut's tomb The Metropolitan Museum reports that sales was unearthed in 1922 virtually \mt.ouched slnce it or its Tut relic reproductions and publications was sealed more than 3.000 years earlier. l~ng ago .totalled ~ore than $12 milllo.n na· RICHARD MORSCBES, METltOPOLlTAN . llonwld~ since 197.6. profits will go to finance Museum Vice president, believes much of Tut's i renovat.ioooftbeCairoMuseum. -........ modem appeal harks baek. to the tomb's «Ks· r:,-, An "astounding" 80,000 people have paid$12.95 covery In 1922, "one of the great archaeological 1or '"!utankbamun -The Untold Story" by Thomas finds-intact-<>f all time. It aroused enormous Hoving, say~ a spokesman for Simon & excitement at the time and it bas become one of * * * * * * the great names or history. something that prac· Uc ally every schoolchild hears about.·· Tbere'a more \o Tut fever than that. says Hovlg_: .. The yo~q boy has a magical ;..m.-.m. ~ple-"e g-.eo aee lt and tbe word ba gotten around that this exb.lblt ls really sometbing unique. Purchase Car, "'7et Tut Ticket . ....-..... lmo\111 ~~talke4.llW>li::.~~ 1JJiQL ~ RANDOLPH TOWNSHIP, N.J . <AP> -1'le hottest ticket in town carries • $4,000 price tag - but a new car is thrown in. Jim Salerno said tickets to the King Tut ex- hibit in New York City go to anyooe buying a car at his Pontiac dealership here. The $4,000 price tag ls for the cheapest new car ln stock. but be said tickets also are given with each used car purchased. '--- "I don't think this Is goi.ni-m-create any buyers. But I think I may be able \o away people already in the car market from one brand to another-ours,•' be said. er ~hlP~•~ went iJltb.tbele objects. Tbe)l loot u lf they were made lat week, yet we know they're 3.200 years old," Hovtnc says. HE 11CKS OFF OTHE& TREOaJES for Tut fever; the appeal of the legend that those wliO un· earthed Tut's tomb were cursed; fuclDaUon with the ancient Egyptians' ~ of a Ufe alter death, ancient !"gyptlan embalming techniques and the mysteries of bieroglyplilci. -- Word of mouth played a n>le ln the Tut ex· hlblt's swelling popularity, says Hoving. "The phenomenon just snowballed u the ex· bi bit moved across the country.'' ... ·For Your , Shopping Convenience ' ' ' Fashion Island Stores Open 10:00 to 9: 30 p.m. Monday Through Friday· Until Christtnas ' - (Mo-stores open Saturday, December 16 & 23, until 9:30) • r -·-· .. ·--............... ___ .. _ .. _,...._ " ------···· \ ":rhe difference between better • beat.•• .. .,, ... I I \ t.tondlf.~ 11.1m oAILvPtloT AJa ~ ___ "Cot o P'°'*"'" Thn write to Pol Dunn. Pdt•wW cut-nd •• ~ilte GMWr• ad Gd ..... MftJ . t! to eolw bleqwt~1 .,, o<>wm,,,_ and budneu. Moil t1 ~' ~ to POI Dunn. At Yocir Sm/kt, 0ronQe l COOll DoUr1 Pilot. P.O. Bor 15'0. Cotta Ntto. CA • tMH. ·,u "'°"r 1111111. "po..U. au t>t ~ • but pltOMr1 mqwrle1 or i.u,,, noc mtludmg tilt rtoU'f'1 I"" ICllllW. addrt11 oJtd ~1 ltour1• p#tOM 1tumbttcormo« becOMitUrtd. TllUcolumnappHrldo'· l~ rzef'pf Saturdoy1." "111,,, .. Net Ce.,..-EN• ........ DEAR PAT: Does a wlU cover all ol my J>l'O-j perty! I'm particularly lnterelted in bow it affecta . community and jolllt property, u "11 u lo· · l aurance polides and savtnaa boGdl. l ~ K.K .• Colla Meaa 1 .\ wtll ,.. ... , Me9 M& .,_ d ,_ ,...,.,. I ty ... fad, k ._., ceYer .... ~el ,.....11, •' at au ... eam.nda ,,.,.,., M '**' '7 eDer I .....-....... •arrla1e Ceseeti& fer IMert~ t IM llfta> • coaa•..a&J .......,.. E"9 ..._. OM ...... ••1 UH ftll&rl .......... la ~ way .r........, ....... &Jae •ant .. e. &Mt partaer owu laalf ot al &Ille eem•al&J ,, ... .,.,. Jolllt •uey ,...,erty nfen .. pr•ny wit 11 a ti.me, car er clliled.lllC er aaYillCI acceut. I llel4 .. , hN -IHre people u "jolll& ........... . ,..., .. .m ........................ .u u.e JrilfCiliJ ...... UcaDy ............ edler ..._ ud Is M alfeeted by a wUJ ... &M cue . ., l Jllllt .....,, &J.e OWllftl ... Mt ......... ~ ... wife. .. Ufe • we polJeiel ,...,.Uy are M af· g feded by ••wlD. fte proceeda el tMle ,..lel will •• dlredlJ .. ,._. •••ed U bftefldarlff. Cer• I &ala VA naYlllp boedl are M 1..ened by y•r .w, bll& .. dlredly so tile...-URed .. ••roo•• · c,ay •-..>•tile f~t of &IMI ...... -· WEIGHT WATCHERS COOKING DEMONSTRATION WfTH SUSAN• DEC. 20-22 ""-~~-~~ That's not a bad proposition just as It stands. But unlike most other forms of Investment, In a Mutual Savtngs retirement account your prlnclpal ls Insured against loss and Interest Is guaranteed. That's not all. FOf qualified Individuals, there can also be a meaningful tax savings. Here's one example. You are forty.five years ofd, plapnlng to retire •t sixty.five and WOO< fOf a company t~t doesn't have a retirement plan. • You opene Mutual Savings tax.·defened lndlvtdual Retirement Account (IRA) and depoelt $125 each month for 20 years. The funds deposited each year reduce your taxable Income by that amount on your federal and state Income tax returns. At age alxty·flve you wlll have deposited $30,000 Into the account. With Interest earned, your eccount balance wlll be $7~,358. AgeNow 35 45 55 T~I oe.o.Jta @ S1251Month $45,000 $30,000 $15,000 Account B•i.nc. AtAgeH• $188,526 $74,358 $23,054 'S.MCI 011Cunet1llHll'V•tral•of8V.4833~•rtl'Vatyi.ld.~ oatlyl Oii mtnt"""" 3 '(Mt 191111 -f'ltl F«ltrtl f90Ulallont '*l\IKI 1uo.11n11at Ptnally loi .. 11., wltl'IOl ... t l. Mutual Savings has other retirement plans lncludlng plans for non·worklng spouses and self ·employed lndlvlduals. Make sure you're not missing out on Important tax savtngs. Come In and discuss your future with a Mutual Savings counselOf today. Your retirement account at Mutual Savings ls Insured to $100,000 by an agency of the federal government. ~ ~ ~~ :ill nu: D I (j M MUTUAL SAVINGS -IN'!-- Onty after rettrement do you pay taxes as fundt are withdrawn at the rate detennlned by your Income tax tncket at that time, whleh could be much tower than during t•·•····-····~1 ·---~aho.w your ng,_.a; TJftJ -&IQJJ)it •. variation• on the qample given. I I, d PY tie " 10 I . I, ~. Iv ,. "' & k .,, ,, ~ •• n v " Ir •• .. ., .. .. • ) CALIFORNIA I NATION -·~-----------~------------~ o €ombat litte State Earmark8 842~,-186 I PAllDE OF LIGHTS SACRAMENTO CAP> -Callfonla bu awarded SC2'f ,lie lD antl·Utter 1rant1, lDdudin1 fund• for frH "poop«~·· for Su Frandlco J>et OWDel'I and aa.larte& for IO lo clean up roadaWe Utter. Other 1111111 will pay for a part. limt Utt« control otne r ln Rucbo true. tM path de rt town near Palm 5prinp when rorm r PiW . dent Ford liv , and hire 20 )'outba to d ar Vetlllln Counb't be~ and roacll of dtbril. TBS GaANTB Aas Ut t\rtt of f7 mlllloa that wtU be luued by the tlate Solid WHlt Mtnll4UDtDl Boatd from 1 urn anll uuer lax Oft q"fld\UTn. wboltHltn and rt• tallere. board apolltaman Jack O'Neil Mid. 1u11ta& of tbt ta 1rant1 ar• $142,Me to UM Callfe>r"Jlla Ccnltna· Uon Cbrpe. ~ put IO CCC aMmbln on rour bld\wlQ'I to ploll up UU., and m .u7t.o San Frandacau tor •. Inner Qty. I Mott ol U. S8D Prancllto .,.t ll Hrmarked fOf' purcbue of trllh ,... c.'tptacl• lD dl1 park• ud u ud- Utttr ldvert.lalna campalp OD U.. MunJcl~ Railway. IUT "·'" IS earmarked for fducaUoft and purebue of .. ....., .. tbouund•• dl1po11bl• pooper uoo~n. ftldt eoet ~o renu each, fOf' dlltttbution to ,...... to elHn up aft« t.betr pet.a. TM'.<>OC emn wttl be ... pees to work lOUr .,,... ... p6ck!na up Uttef and IGl'tial lt for recyclln1 from four bllbWl)'I, U.S. 199 IOUtb of tbe' Or•aoa border, u.s. ~O t11t o1 Pollad PlDll. lidentate 1$ eut of Saa BMaardlao -9 IDterlta&e 6 near Gorman. · cc ........... ..... WfftlUd Or""' W*lt ,,._ n. -~ ......... o. • .., Dec. 16 thru the 23rd ,.. ..,. • ltettn ..... C4ll Ntw,_1 laplew Yedlt a.it 631-1900 ALL THE BEST TO V1 Singer Says He's Banlaupt NASHVILLE. Tenn. <AP> -Country singer George Jones has filed ror bankruptcy because he caonol repay $1.5 million in debts, bis al· tomey said. S . Ralph Gordon . Jones' lawyer, said lhe petition was filed ln U.S. Distrjct Co urt 10 • Nashville. ••THE BANKRUPTCY has been two )'ears in coming," Gordon said. "He found It harder to continue when he had so little money aod he wu being hit by lawauita for payment from .. 11 sides." The p e tition llats about 50 performance .,....,,. dates in 1977 ud 19'18 ""' which Jones misled and ror which he owes pro- moters an average of $6,000 each. "GEORGE DIDN•T feel ...he was performing in such a way that hla rans were getting what they were paying tor," Gordoo 4a1d. He said one of lhe rea- sons wa' J ones bas a drln«I~ problem. Sevetal months ago, Jones was ordered lo ex· plain why he had Calleo $36,000 behind in child s~pport payments to his ex-wife, singer Tammy Wy nette , and their : daughter, Georgette, 8. Jaycees Modify Charter KANSAS CITY. Mo. CAP) -The Kansas City Jaycees chapter bas taken steps to keep both its voting women mem· bera and Ila charter. Tbe Jaycees said they have established a "holding company" lhat will Include women members and at the same time comply with a national Jaycees order to drop lemale mem· be rs. Tbe boldJ.08 company, lhe Greater Ka.nsu City OrganlzatJon for Servtce and Trainlnl, will take over all the Jayceet functiou. The Jaycees chapter will CODllnue u a "paper enilty" to al- low tbe group to retain itanaUooalcharter. Land Accepted HAYWARD <AP) - Directors ol the East Bay Regional Park Dis· t.rid.have...UDani motyl)t voted to accept the donation ol 1.200 acres ol ranchland u a r•· glonal park lo tbe Hayward-Union City area. J ......... ............ SAFEWAY &IFI' eERTIFleATES If you're sttll looking for just the "rlghi-gift tor the perton who has every1hlng. Give Safeway Gtft Cer· tiflcatea. It's a gift that will please anyone on your Christmas hat! , ..... I Jahn or Victor SMOK HAM Manor HOUll, Young All S•f•w•rs Wiii Close EMly On ChrlnmH EWJ And Wiii B• ClosMI ·On Chrlstm.s D•Y Monday D.c. 25th TOM TURKEYS USDA Grade A. c Frozen 1a.22 lbs. Manor Hooae Toma over 24-lbs. priced hlgtler per pound. BEEF RIB ROAST . .. USDA Choice . Beef Large End s 88 cumsARK 8:!:.~ ~$895 BLACK VELVET 80-Prool $465 Fresh Pork Roast . s= :~:e t I ' If Whole Beef Ro1md Tip Canadian~ Include S1eaks Of Routs. 9.12 Iba. Boneless Choice Beef. Whisky ~ Pa!!!v!!!~ .......... ~ '1" INGLENOOK NAVELLE Blue Nun 80-f>roof . W?Qky Lllldnumllch 7Crown CHAMPAGNE or COLD DUCK ~!'!a!~~-~····· s~·99c !2~~!!!!'"-•1• Frenctl Colomt>ll'd Of Cllenln Btal\C ii Ztnfandef Ruby Cabernet $ 2 •9 -J:, Blanc 3 $5 :""°i, = Cllld Sharl Riii i: a. • 41 Fllel Mignon a~0"fo.~~11 a. '3" l8lf Rib Roastuso~,;~ Beef a. '2" Sallml Ctalb ::X,:., · ta... '1" __________ .......................... ....... ICE CREAM MICHELOB Bf.ER ,,. ~6~'179 ~~$,99 "1 • ..... ...... SF!!!!'E .... FlelsChmann's ~:;.~~~ ~69° ~j§c l~,Bob's Drasslng c~!:. = 9'c .. INC~Strawberrles BelF~~2W:-01e ~ 9gc BJ PUMPKIN #~>Cream Cheese Lucerne =-4gc ICKRAZO -·-·---~ID ·RIM ·--···- Personal Touch s111 ..... •1• · Pol .... 2Type106.................. • . ......... 9X·70LandFllm ....... .. PallDllor I Type88 ................ •4" FLORAL aououns ~~~c~~:.!119 •••••11-·2·· lOYely 8 ... Pienta ,.. Bonel H (Water Smok-A-~Fuu~c'!:g~~~ .. '211 !~~~~~z~}~~aa.S1ll Fresh Ovsters Jolly Rodger ~eatern 10«.s111 ,,,,, Washington State Extra Fancy Red or Golden Delle lo us. Aftjoup_..us No 1 Y-Ba~e Bott, Fry or to --Mun us No t ••• Crisp CeleryF~= :1'!1111 -38• CrllpC.,ota 2~48t __ JlllawJlalaM IJS Ha.~41' Tua li8plfrult ~~ llter 11 Real Beard, Real S..ta FABERGE i':..imr.= .,. 28 -1=-- ---· ' . .. r BOATING Boats nter Holid a y Race ~raws Hardy Only hll'ditll ot bardw~n1ton . braved lbe ctUU wthde end rain Saturday and Sun· d•Y to wap &tP th• yur'a. competltlon ln the Newport Harbor Y•chl ('lub'1 Cbrlatmu Reaau. Winda oo turday were light but cool, and on Saturda.y a b.rl k front brouaht 18 to 2S knot wind• lnte nperaed with raln on lMlde and out.aide TWENTY-TWO BOATS m three t'lau turned out oo court oubtde tbe ba)-. and ~ ln ab cleu howt."<'.l up for lhe compeUt.aon 10 lde the bay. Tropby wlnnen PHftF (6) -l, "h aaJead , Bob Cb&llmi.o, LSF. and Alan Anclrew1, 8YC. SANTANA·20 <5> l. Bullt-t. Richard Brown, BCYC. 11'CHEL1.S <11) -P ntc Rod Dav"· SDYC FINN (9> -1, teve Black, BYC; 2, Bnao Gant1, OYC: a. Tom 8ll1tt'll , UYC UOO-H (I) -I, Paul Murphy, BYC ; 2. Rick Ba~. VYC SNlPE (8) -l, Stt:vt> Garland, SMYC. 2, Jim Encli•h. CBYC. SABOT A & D < 13) 1, Kevin Dumatn, ABYC ; 2, Jerry Norman, BCYC; 3, Casfand.rl Smeltzer NlfVC. SABOT C (7) -1, Jlm Otis, LAYC. 2. Debby WHU~. SSYC. New Monitoring Syste lll -Introduced Para,gon Electronics of Bellevue, Wasb .. bas introduced a monitoring system for large vessels, botb pleasure and commercial, which warns of most emergencies aboard sfiip. The Paragon ScanAlert can provide con· Unuous monitoring for up to 64 senaors onboard any size vessel. Tbe system O\lJl monitor engine temperature, oU pressure, freezer and refrigerator temperature. bilge water level and water making salinity, as well as fire, over-temper ature and ol.her s afet.v and convenience functions. The .ScanAlert r~uires an isolated, norQ)ally open or normally closed contact sensor. On detec· lion of any failure, an audio alarm is sounded. A 16"characler screen displays a message specify. · lng the source of the alarm. Any message can be factory.programmed for each sensor. During times when no emergency conditions exist, it is a digital clock with the hour, minutes and seconds appearing on the screen. Show Sticker Cotl8t -Cuilrd Wants It A Coast Guard sticker stating the date Oil which a vessel's certificate of inspection expires now must be promrnently displayed on certain ex· cursion or party fi shmg boats. The new Coast Guard regulation became effec· live Oct. 15. It applies to all vessels that carry seven or more people fo r hire. If lhe sticker sh ows that th e vessel's certificate of inspection bas expired -or if the sticker is missing the Coast Guard advises that 1t would be a good idea to look elsewhere for a boat ride. The sticker must be posted on the vessel where it is readily visible to each boarding passenger and w f.atrolling Coast Guard law enforcement person· ne. The new regulation Is an attempt to help peo. ple recognize those vessels that have been inspect· ed by the Coast Guard and are iJ\ full compliance with the laws and regulations written to protect passengers on vessels carrying passengers for hire. I Trousers by Corbin Ltd . Plaids and solids all wool or Dacron/wool blends. Just right to complement your Blcller or sport coats. 17th t. Irvine Awe., Newport I Hch, C..llf. (714) 64S.0792 Rectpee to add dining pl ... u,. whlle .ublractlng celorl•. DAILY PILOT Plate of the Day • C AL I r 0 R NI A • ,:J = , ~~ji' C ·LECT·T • . ) : ( ·LECr·T -Ownod by Ron Louin of Teriann self'ct Tea 111 the nunw of the Herb Tea Co thul Le. sin owM. Harbour Yachters - Sail Yule Regatta Tbe Huntington Harbour Yacht Club wound up the year'r> yacht raclns activity Saturday with the Christmas Ltghli. Invitational Regatta for . Sabot sailors. The winner 1n the semor d1v1s1on was Bob Martin of the Santa Monica Yacht Club. BUI Herr· schaft of the Balboa Yacht Club was second. and Shirley l:Jruner. t;utmllo Hench Yacht Club, was third. Winner in tht1 Jun1or·A dtvtsion was J eff Busche of the host club Juruor·B winners were Keith Luton, llJIYC . and Paul Noring, HHYC. Flotilla Started The U.S. Cout Ouard Auxlllary_ has added one moreflotiU•t.o the (amt ly of volunteers In the clvlll•n ·compo,nent or the Cout. Guard. · FlotUla 22 was offlclal· ly chartered at • meet· Ing In La1una Beach and all 22 members and staff officenr. were sworn ln by Lt. Daniel R. Irv· lng, U.S. Coast Guard District 11. Lieutena()t Irving ls the direct.or of the Auxillary. Wilson E. Brown Jr. is the commander of the new OoUlla and William llofrman is vice com · mander. Flotltla 22 will be headquartered in San Juan Capis trano and will implement the ef. fort.a and cooperate with all othef' nottuas along the Or~e Coast from Dana Pomt to Newport Beach. The USCGA assists the Coas t Guard in search and res c u e operations. conduct s free safe boating classes for the public and con· ·ducts the Cou rtes y Marine Inspections for all boat owners. Mondey. December 18, 1978 AJIY LmS IN STOCKI To fit all malor brands: Canon, Fuiica, Nikon, Olympus! Minolta, Pentax, and others. Wide Angle Teleohoto ~aero Teleotioto Zoom -·- Mow o,.. Uwtlt 6 pa WHblgkts T1lnt Chrb""- 0-'IL v PILOT A Is ~ M-1 '·' • s.t. t·I , .... w1c_,. • ......_e._.. DAVE'S CAMERA 474East17th • 642-1012 Coat• Meae, Callfornla -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------~ Our Cand.lntick U Phones. ror anyone wuh .J fl.:ur for dt·s1gn. this Jan Age nylt' m red. blu:k or wh11c with goltl·phtcd inm wor~ a\ wc:ll m modem ~·tung .u 1t c:loc~ m .lll An Deco decor. Our Cbestpbone. For tht' m.m who taltn pride lll lui den or office, thu htdc·away phone with rc1ractabl<' cord com<'S conccal<'d in a handsorn<' case-. Push Button Only. Brown Lt":ithn or Sut·d(' SISS.• lnl.11d Clipper Ship Top S16S: This Christmas, give someone you love a gift that's sure to create a lot of conversation. A beauti- ful GTE Designer Collection Decorator Phone of their very OWIL And now you can purchase the complete Decorator Phone outriglit {outside shell and mside components) at your ehone com~any. So come see all our Decorator Li.he Phones for yourself at the GTE Phone Ma.rt. And take hom e a gift that speaks for il1lclf. • --.-~ ~~Iii'~~~ .' Empttts Deluu. For th<'' O ur Mickey Moose Phone:~ For rht· ~J or 1he " ~ult who h.a~ rvcrythm!(. this au1hrnnc Walt L>1snc-y Producuons"' drsiin '' a ddi!(htful coll('ctor\ 1trm rhJt ~<XS JUSI as gr<'at in .a rh1ld\ room as ii d<Xs in a \C1pl11sticm·d pop :irt sc:tttng. Pmh 8u1ton Sl2S.• 01al Sll5: wont.in w11h .m t·v<· for ..k1a1I, 1h1\ rlq~.im frcnch \tyk pll<m<" with ~old-plarcd tnm come\ m a1111qu« ..... whnc. hlu<-:mJ ~ yellow. lf you're still undecided, ask about our Gift Certificates. COmesee foryoarself at the (€ii ;t Gii»~ For your C0'1ve11ieuce1 your GTE Pho~ Mart accepu MaJctr Clra~e, VISA aud Ba~kAmerlcard. • H . tty "" 'M , ... " b• re \I· in ,., '" •• I> ' \ r ,, e• I ~1 n ·. ,, e: ti: th I( ft le 'd fi n 1VC e' lOI ev b l ·e : :lo \d . rttl •an ~ Ck ' vf WO for or -6'' 111 80 PllOOf Crown Russe Vodka 7!>0-llll 3'' 211 IMPOlllCD fllOM POllfUGAl lancers White Or Rose CHABi1s BuRciiNov orn1-osr ··- : Inglenook Navalle Wine 59 ( '' . . .,. FRESH LAllCASTER IRADE A -OM--l-URKE¥ I I 1 ' . l -,..., ., (k ,, •• ,. ,, \ I I • ·- " . . .. ' • r • ~.•• \ - Ree~uitlng: Colleges' Big B11sine~ ~ Money, Pressure to Win Invite COilege Basketball Clleating By n D aOTB£~EaG ltoya "will M boy&, opedally lo colJ!le profatdorKentucky's 1977tootballprogram. ) Valvano and made the commitment to big-time ""...,.. ""• bHk tbaJl wh re the loUypops at.and 6·foot-8. basketball atfona. The let'ne wu Wlnlord 8oynes' 1Mnc room can 1tulf • buket ruu ot &oodles and have the "COLLEGE BASKETBALL HAS KEPT me Rulan~ the nation~• leading freshman In Oklahoma Cit,y. Two memben of aud mla PotentJal to tum a Onanclal altuaUon rrom sour --"" bo d b ht 1 l t were alvtna lbe ~na hlah at..._. star a leuon t out of the fund-raising business. and I bate bee· scorer cu"' re un er, roug ona ns ant 1 •1 b k ·~ o 1wef't glng money," said J .D. ~organ. athletic dirtt· respectability. That's what the new freshman· n co~ eae as et all recruJUna tor at UCLA. which ~s won more basketball eligible rule can do for a program . Earvin l "Larry ClJlman wanted mt' to stay ln tht' BOVN •WHO CHO E GILLMAN and San titles than any other school. "Basketball pro-J ohnson. nlckhamed "Magic" for ttha?.lle. can .. Uvlna room Otnny Crum wu pulllnc on mt to f'r&nc11co over Crum and Loulav111e and ls now grams make more economic sense than foot· -J with a basketball, matenatned at ,.._an 10 on the back Porch ao we could talk alOQe It a rookie with the New Jersey Nets, was recruit· ball " ate last year and ... -poof! ... the Spartans \ waa a tuutna war and they alrnott came to flh I F S. It's also much easier' to turn a basketball on the Big.JO title for the n.rst Ume in 20 years. \ blows My moth r finallh calJC"d a trUC and • f • • IN-,..rf· nt-s program around than a football program. Only~ Coaches are almost un~versal In their dis· threw everyon out ot the OUM. ('d by some 360 tehools. and it wun't because of five players take the court at one time, and it tastt for the freshman·elig1ble rule. They say "Cau-w•a up~•o TO co .. E a•,.., hi• colle1e board acorea. ColJede buketball to· often takes just one standout Hoot.er to get the fres men need a year a~ay ~rom the microscope mi ,... ~r.. ""' ""..,. d • f'ckle alums to remember their alma mater so they can adjust to the ngors ~ college and iAt t the nat momlnc. but &bowed up at 7.30. ay 11 lees college and more buketball. The " · basketball. When they don't adJust or don't The San Francllco people were at a hamburaer coacbea will tell you there'• more pressure to Little Iona College, a basketball nobody make the starting lineup right away. the result Joint acroa tbe at.reel -It wu Uke a alike-out wtn and, consequently, more cheating -i.e.. located north of New York City, hired an ag. is more sophomore transfers. -and when they saw Crum come to my house, buying of high scbwl talent. gressive head coach. Jim Valvano. three years they rushed right over. It's all big business now and the successful ago after a 4·19 season. Last year V~van<> lured .. FRESHMEN TRANSFER SO MVCH they "Ttus kind of stuff was going on for three , teaqu make the most points and the most super frosh J eff Ruland away from Kentucky need a revolving door," said Notre Dame Coach mopths. At rant I en.ioyed it, but then eot tired morjey. and Indiana. and the Gaels went 27·10. This Digger Phels. "There's no loyalty any more to of it. It's incredible what some or these schools Kentucky, last season's national champion. year , their sights are on the NCAA Tournament. picking a school. They enroll at one school, have can do tl ~ey put their mind to it. grossed $1.66 mUUon, $250,000 or which came an argument with the head coach and go "It wu an unreal situation. Grown men • trom maklng the Final Four or the NCAA "IT DrDN'T COST VS VERY MVCH more elsewhere." fighting over an 18-year-old. It was Wee two kids Tournament. The basketball program showed to win than it was to lose," said Brother John G. The freshmen-eligible rule and the NCAA's fighting over a lollypop " profits of nearly $700,000 -more than the Driscoll. the school president who hired See COUEGE, Page BZ I .._____________________________________________________________________________________) A .. WI ......... ESCAPE ARTIST -Los Angeles Rams quarterback Pat Had en barely escapes the outstretched arm of Green Bay's Ezra Johnson at the Coliseum Sunday. Haden picked up five yards on the scramble play a nd later ran for 27 yards to set up a touchdown. I Rams Join Holiday Spi1·i1_, Pack Sacked, 31-14, at Coliseum By HOWARD L. HANDY Of ... o.lty .. Met Stefl 'TtDa.r the week before Chrlstma1. And all through the Colileum, The no-allows iotte milling, All 23,191 o/'em. Philadelphia or Minnesota in their opening game of the NFC playoffs Sunday Dec. 31 at the Coliseum. If Philadelphia beats Atlanta in the wild card game Sunday, at LOS ANGELES _ While vi· will be the Eagles. If Atlanta wlas. the Rams will play Min· • s ionsofchampionships daocedio nesota. Minnesota's Vikings their heads, the Los Angeles bo th .r f !Rams turned a misty day inti> a ast e poorest recoru o any rainbow of hope with a 31.14 vie-playoff team including four run· tory over the Green Bay Packers nerup wild card entrants. Mm· Sundayafternoon. nesota <8·7·1) and Green Bay tie d for the NFC Central The victory clinched a home Di vision title but the Vikes ad· field advantage tor the National vance by having a win over the Football Conference Western Packers with the other game Division champlon Rams ln ~Y ending in a tie. playorf games before the Super Bryant was the catalyst ror Bowl i-. tbey are lnvolved in. the Rams on offense with John Jb the P ppelletti and&aae offerll&u J~e COlllention. Ing 'hirh~nmning ro8tii"" with ----:-r. ... . . I on whleti the · exce ll e nt block i ng performances. Cappelletti, coming orf an in· jury that caused him to miss the previous two games, carried on· ly seven times. "CULLEN i\'AS HAVING a good game and he deserved to carry the ball as much as he djd." Cappelletti said ... It was better for me that I didn't car.ry 1t any more. the way things. turned out:· Bryant came to the Rams as a defensive back but bas made the transition to offense in outstand· ing fashion. He was the league's leader In kickoff returns and s~QS>Ad i~ punt returns one . seascM. • But Sunday was has bigg game . "We were fortunate and t 1 good field pos ition toda ~ Bryant said in a quiet voi• "Cappelletti and the offens1 line opened big holes for with their blocking. "This win should give us · momentum we need and should prove to the fans that have a good football team. I ' fort unate today ... COACH RAV MALAVASI ' happy with the win, especi: with the special teams and . Ram runniJlg game. "lthlnk CUllen is getting bet • • and better," Malavasi said. • •· is getting a feel for it and be l . See RAMS, Page 83 :~:~d~eg~:~a~~t~~s0r'~~:~~: Dome Field Advantage• tnbuted substantially to the VIC· t. f tory and the special teams came through with flying colors to · m8!i~i~,8~~!~ei~::~~tv~~a-. Ra1Hs React to Fans; Fans React to Ratns for the Ratns. Cullen Bryant, relegated to a reserve role when Lawrence Mccutcheon is healthy, had has biggest day as a pro, rushing for 121 yards in 30 carries and scor· ing a pair of touchdowns. ll was a day on which rookie Frank Corral ·captured the Na· tional Football League scoring championsbJp, concluding the regular season with 118 points. And it was a day on which 23, 197 rans who had purchased tickets, remained at home by the fireplace or someplace other than the damp Coliseum. There were 42,500 on· hand, however, and they were treated to the best performance by the Rams at home In several weeks . THE VJCl'ORY MEANS the Rams w i ll fa ce ei th er By ERNIE CASTILLO Ol I .. O.Uy Pllet SIMI LOS ANGELES-There ·won't be any epidemics or Ram· mania breaking out in Los Angeles this year. Like the pro· verMa prophets ... the Rams seem to be without honorln lherr own home. ' The home field disadvantage of being booed by what are sup· posed to be partisan fans m1ty seem odd considering the Rams sport the best record in the Na· ttonal Football Conference < 12·4 I and areplayofrbound fortbe,sixth straight year. But the Ra"1 management recently gave two years notice on their lease at the Colis~um. opting for lusher digs in Anaheim, and the team itself has a history or ~iag rosy during the reJlular 'ieason but a ll thorns in the playoffs . A tend~ncy ror con· servatism hasn't helped silence the boo· birds, either. To get reasons and rdctions from i>oth parties. two simple questions were asked before aod after Sunday's regular season finale against Greel\ Bay: Whal do the fans think of; the Rams • and what do the Ra~s think of t he fans. The answ~rs were hardly surprising. 'l'lae Ra•• . QUARTERBACK PAT Haden. who spent his co11ege careet.at USC and has aJtemated between toe a I hero a nd scapegoa(: '"There's no emou on and feeling·_ between the Rams and the fans . You 'll · never see Broncomania here. I mvself would never boo SAUL anybody. even a plumber if does a bad job on my sink. know some weeks we don').. pla we ll as others but we're not tr~ to screwup." Retu"rn s pecia list Jae Wallace, a crowd pleas "Fans arc fans. Ir they're gc . to boo. let them. They j shouldn't boo for no reason. 76ers Post 103-96 Win don't boo people when they·n top. Ask them if they would l to be in Chicago. cheering not. But the fans here, gene ly, are okay." Lakers Miss Dantley INGLEWOOD (AP> - Pblladelpbia Coach Billy Cun· ningham was quite lmJ>ressed with the play ol centers Caldwell J ones and Darryl Dawkins against Los Angeles, made more impressive by the fact five·time National Basketball Association MVP Kareem Abdut-Jabbar was the man opposlng them. "Our two cent ers have become much more offense· minded," Cunningham said after the 76ers beat the Lakers 103·96 Sunday. ·•we had 23 shots from the inside and converted nine. This forces the defense to respect our inside game. - "JON~ HAS PLAYED well the past four or five games," the coach added. Dawkins was the big man in· side for PhiJadelphla against the Lakers, though1 as be scored 14 points, pulled aown 12 rebounds and blocked two shots. Jones contributed six points. Doug Collins led the winners with 26 point~, Julius Erving added 19 and ttenry Bibby had 18 -·including six in the last 1: 14 as the 76ers put the game away. Coach Jerry West said after the loss that the team really misses forward Adrian DanU ey, Sunday's NFL Report TH Game The Upeela Tbe lJDe fteScere Cbar1en at OUen Oilers bf 9 Chargers, U.34 BUia at Colt.a Col~ Blllt, 21-14 . Packen at Rams The Rama byt Rams. 31·14 8rowtt1 at Bengals Bene,ls by4 Ben~•· 48·16 Cowboys at Jets Cow ~by4 Cow YI. 30.7 Sainta at Buca Saint.a '4 SaJnta, 11-10 Giant. at Eaales Ea1lea yl Ea1l11, 20-3 ... ters at Lionl .!JODI ~0 Llona. 33·14 Chiefs at Seahawks Seahaw by 3 Seahawk~. 23-19 ~ Vlkinll at Raidera -Raiden by 4 Raid•n, 21.20 Falcons at Cardinals Even Carcflnlll, '2·21 Tonl~ht'• Game Patriot.a at Dolphins Do phlna by 3 ., ., ., ., • ' , . who's been sidelined by an ln· jury. "It's hard to take a 22·polnt scorer out or \he game and re place blm when everybody who be replaces think they have to score bfs points,'' said West. 1'111.,_ ..... ,... u. ........... FrvlllO 8 JOM\ c JOflt\ ,,,.,. .. ColllM 81b0y 8rya111 Dew.it\\ Mia S1~11 Tote" """ ""'' I ).4 " Orr 1 0-0 • ' M • WlllWt 10 14 21 l M t AlldllhlellOer II M IS 1 M 4 Hl•Oft I 0-0 16 10 H ,. Price 1 CM> 4 \ I IO II FO<O , 1'1 .. 4 0-0 I Hue!'°" I M J • ,., 14 8ooM 2 2-3 • , 0-0 • 0 0-0 0 42 1• 1• 103 tole!\ 4J 10.IJ .. k-"'Ollarten ""llfftlplll• 2t ,. '° 17-103 l~ ,.,.._._ II 2' n ,,_ .. tolel IOUll: ""''8*1P"I• 11, LG.I AllOflft '° Fo11ltd out: Hl•on r.c11111e111• Cellln• 11'1\lledolplll•I. Wiik•• l lOt .,,, ...... Al· leMel'Ce: k. IU. Giants Fire McVay; Robmtelli Quits . EAST RUTHERFORD. N.J . (AP) -Coach John McVay, un· der attack throulh ~uch ot a dis11troua 6-10 seuon, was tlred by the New York Olanta todty and Andy Robustelll retll{Md u the National Football Ltacue club's d1Nctor of operations . Mc Vay'• job ftll Into JCOpardy dutln( a aix·1•me loaln1 streak a1 tht Giant.a dropped seven of their latt el1ht games. Robuatelli uJd th•t hll de- ci1lon to leave the club bad been made before the aeasoo beaan. ' ' . Tight e nd Ch arle You another USC grad: "I think Ram fans a re looking for a Rut they pay to come here ; they like to be entertained, J like the opera. Criticism? should be give and take on b sides. Some is warranted. so Is not." Safety Dave Elmendorf: · comment " WIDE REC EIVER Wi Mille r, who hails from Den' "l think the crowds here di give the players what Is noo to keer going. We'd be a loJ ter or if the crowd would for us. I don't think we've g 1 that from the crowd and we n •, it. I think if they would sups us. you'd see a lot better lei If you beat a team by 40 pol the rans want you to beat th by 80.'' Kicker Frank Corral. a UC grad who has ei;capcd the f( wrath this season with II game heroics: "I wish they'd us do the playing on the fJ and them do the cheering." Center Rich Saul: ·•Jn the J people complained we hav• won the big ones. But we've' the bl& ones this year. It's tOI wlth 16 games to get up ev week but we rta ve the b "t record In the NFC. How are ; 11olng to improve on that" Go defeated, unscored upon and · every gameby50Polnts? But.ti pay their money so they can anytblneth ywant." Tork Goes Down •; • ,,,, GUARD TOM MACK, a Defensive end Pat Toomay of the Oakland Rlliders throws •~ran Tarktnton 00> of Minnesota for a 17·Y'ard lo s ThP Raiders held on to wtrr. 27·20. Sunday in 1be Oakland Coliseum I \ )'Hr veteran: "The fans de , bolher me . They have bothered me In 10 years. I wo like to have them rooting for See F.,'NS, Pafe 83 • , ' ,.,.. -... & I )co· E r. f<,~ ilb1 ' .. Al· on rty ... Mr •· fl "" " •v '· t t I f ........ .. DAILY PILO l Monday. OtteemtMr II, ll11 A Caoaule R•po,, From lh• WOftd of 8por1• Ricardo Has Hi 8 t Day Witl1 Four Fi Id Goal f'ON'nAl'. Mlt'h R~ RJcardo kir1u>d [il four fatld •ullla and added thrff <•onvf'nilnn •. • polnll to a.ncreutt bl• srason M"Onna h >tAI to !12 p0lnla Sunday as 'he ()etn)ll f .tom loPfllt'd th,• San f'ranclM'<> 49frs. S3·14, in a Nartsonal )o'ootball l.t"•IUl• Ila me hcno. Ricardo. o 1rad. uatl' nf Costa f.aa lllwh .. net Ur•n1r Cout Colk-tt". h d b1 ~' d•Y aJ 11 oro 1n · <·tmn11 l~ "l S>O'nU.. Jli.. tot.o.J ol 92 ut thir1t ht•'.\I In th1 NallonaJ P'ootball Confer ·on bduo1l the R•IP ' t'r•nk t 'urrttl 1 lllU 11ntl Raf t>ISeptlenot t>a.lla..' t1M 1 .. Klt'ardo k1ckl'CJ • 19 uni nt Id 1n•I In lh~ ftn.t qu1r1t'r u/kr th1• I.ton. n • cuvert'd • fumbled punt I fr h41tJ 40 > arder m \he s~ood penud 1md ~dell lucks or 31 u.nd 22 > lirda m tht> rourth ~riod. uch artt'r an lntt·rt"t'l•h'Ct puss H1cardo ~ncJt"d \he '><'U'-<>n by kl~ mat 32 ol 33 conv<'f'!)ton uttl'mpl.'I and 1uc.aoo ronnl'cla.nit on 19 of 27 f1elll aiouJ lrlc Ula lonaett fltld goal of the ~cu'°" was a 48 yard t•trort lie movrd from Mth pl•c~ lo third in the rrnal point 1>tandmgs wilh Sunday'i. effort _____ ,,_,e ol •~ Da11 ------. .. Quip.happy Lou Hob, on thti luwmb or being a college football coach· .. A hfettme contr•l·t for 11 coach mearu. 1f you're ahead an lhe third quurtl'r and movmg lhe ball. they can't r1rc you." MldllfP Estahlbfl D11blo1U R tt-ord• Tht! Minnesota Viking~ cstabhshf'd a pair or [!] dubious National t~ootba11 League rc<'ords ~un 4. ~ day The V1kes' 8-7-1 rc(·ord left them with a S.11 winning perrentage. the lowest (•ver for <1 d1v1s1on winner. And by bemg out.scored 294-306 dunng lhc regular season. Mlnnesota became lhe. only.team in leuue history to win a d.1v1s1on crown whale g1vu1g up more points than al scoroo. The VOO.ngs lost to Oakland. 27-20. but won their 10th division crown in the last 11 years. Fred Biletnlkoff and Cbarles Pbi.IUps scored touchdowns 17 seconds apart to lead the R&der win ... Houston and San Diego staged a 38-point second quarter sconng circus but Charger quarterback Dao Fouts ront:inued the show alone 10 the second halt. fini shing with 369 yards and rour touchdowns passing as the Chargers won, 45"24 . . Al Hunter ru~hed for more than 100 yards and sooroo his first a1LETH11t0 ,.,. two touchdowns of the season as the Seattle Seahawks beat the Kansas City Chit::fs, 23-19 . : . .,Im Hart threw three touchdown passes m a 28-pomt second quarter and r~ ror the third and rourlh TDs in hii. NFL career, steering St. Louis to a 42-21 romp over \he Atlanta Falcons ... Buffalo's Terry Miller scored on a 60-yard run while becoming the 10th rookie in NFL history to rush ror more lhan 1,000 yards in a season to lead lhe • -·-"ButJ to a 21-14 win over Baltimore. J Qua.rterl>ack Ken Anderson passed for two touchdowns and ran for another while fullbark P ele Jobn!lon ran for a club-record 160 yards as the Cincinnati Bengals exploded for d' 48-16 wm over Cleveland . -. Archie Manning com- pleted 25 of 36 passes for 250 yards to gave the Ne w Orleans Saints a 17-10 victory over Tampa Bay ... Tony Dorsett rushed for 121 yards and scored two touchdowns as the Dallas Cowboys tuned up for the playoffs with a 30 7 vic- tory over the New York Jets ... Wilbert Montgomery scored two fi rst quarter touchdowns in his stxlh 100-yard . : I . • • I r! I d 'I I • ·~ plus game of the season as the Philadelphia Eagles beat the New York Giants, 20-3 ... The Cleveland Browns gave head Coach Sam Rutigliano a new five-year contract &Adoo'• 41 Point• Spark• Knfrlcs Coming orr the injury list after being sad· m died wilh a bruised toe, Bob McA~ scored 41 points to lead the New York Kn icks by the Atlanta Hawks, 115-105 ... Tom Owens scored a career-high JS points. lncludlng 15 of lS shots from the foul line, to pace Portland's Trail Blazers to a 1.2.1-.110 wm over the Denver Nuggets. Davld 11,Jompson_'s 22 pomlS led the losers ... Campy Russell scored 2..1 points and Austin Carr addea 19 as l'he Cleveland Cavaliers beat the Seattle SuperSomcs. 101 -91 ... Reserve Junior Bridgeman scored 22 points as the Milwaukee Buck~ downed the Chicago Bulls. 117-101 Artis Gilmore scored the Bulls' first 12 points • . . Uoyd Free scored 30 points and Randy Sm ith added 28, tng- geraog a fourth-quarter spurt that car- ried the San Diego Clippers lo a J16 110 win over the Phoenix Suns .. -Sonny P arker led a balanced attack wtlh 19 M<11000 points to pace the Golden State War· riors to a 104-96 triumph over the New Orleans Jan. Leonard Robtnsoo led New Orleans with 26 points Sabra IJnfleatna llnd~r l•gH• The new~t coach in the National Hockey ra League also is the most successful. BUI Inglis ' look over lhe Buffalo Sabres seven games ago and since he replaced Marcel Pronovost the Sabres have won five in a row and tied lhe other two. Sun- day. they downed the Vancouver Can'-'cks. 6-3 as Gary Adams had a aoal and two assists ... Right wing, Rick Middleton scored two 'oals and set up one as the BO!\ton Bruins won for the runth consecutive time at Madison Square Garden, downing the New York Rangers. 4-1 ... Reserve Dou Lec:ayer scored with 6:39 remaining to give \he Chicago black Hawks a 3-3 tie with the Pittsburgh Penguins and first place in the Smythe Division ... Den· ala Marak scored two goals and ket up two others as Washington outlasted Toronto, 7-6 . _ . Renie Leach /) scored twice to pace Philadelphia to a 4·1 win over the St. Louis Bl ues ..• BW Smith stopped 21 shots to log his first. shutout o( lhe season w; the New York Islanders stopped the Detroit Red Wings, 3 o Tele1'f•I•~ Radio Following are the me)or sports events on television today. Ratings are: I./" 1 excellent; ./ ./ 1 worth watching; .f 1 fair; ./forget It. • 6 p.m., Channel 7 ./ ./ ./ NPL FOOTBALL: New England at Miami. Announcers: Don Meredith, Frank Gifford and Howard Cosell. New England's Patriots have a lready won t"9 American Conference Eastern Division title and Miami Is assured of second place and • wlld-card playoff berth In the same dlvfslon. The first game between these two tNms was a high-storing affair with New Englend winning, 33-24. Even If Miami wins and bottl r.cords ere 11·5 after tonight's game, Ne w England Is stlll the champion because It has• better record within Its division. Playing et hOme In the Orange Bowl, Miami Is favored by three points. RADIO: Football ~ The Ne w England P•trlots at Ml•ml, S:SO p.m., KNX (1050). Jaclt Buck, Hanle StnJm ...... Raid r Rap Vddn ··11 '" Ilk n '''''""' 1•11111«' It 1111 ju•t lu ~ ftblr to n ~·· •r w111 ON. IM CllOUf' " ,,, .. \ "'' houn . 1\hll.uh•IJlhl1t f'tuU'h nlt k \'t'l"mf'il un••r \hC' F.•fCln '"'"' tht' Nt'W Yot'k rnunlA, 20 3. i.ntl 1110111t•d a "'"'off b111 th for tlw f1111t Um" lltlW"f' I '1' Wl' h d to do It ull ov1•r µauln ~md Wf' wt•r • ot the• point wt' ur<· now. wC1'd wln C"VflrY gam\' " Clnclnnntl fullhor~ Pf'tt' Job.ruion 11ftflr thC" Bcnaal~ had bombt.ll'dt.-d the• ('lcvt•llmd Browns. 48· 16. for their thi rd straight victory urt.,r a 1·12 st11rt. ' "Suli.sfit'CJ" You bet. Comini! mlo the NFL. your goal l!i to gel 1.000 yards. It's especially fm por tanl to get. it 10 your rlrM vear. and arter the kind of ad vers1ty we 've had, 1l's even more special." Buffalo':, Terry Miller after becoming thl' 10th NFL rookie to rush for more than 1.000 yards an a season. ln l.he Bills' 21·14 victory over lhe Baltimore Colts. "I've had my low moments. but I've never doubted mysel!. I have confidence. AJI a guy can do is enJOY lhe game and play to wan .' -New Orleans quarte rback Archie Manning, the league's second leading passe,r. after connecting on 25 or 36 passes for 250 yards and the gamc-wmning Tt in a 17-10 vic-tory over Tamp Bay. ·'This is Ute b ll l really want· ed." -Del roll Coach Monte C lark a fte r the Lions had walloped his old team, the San Francisco 49ers, 33-14. "Ir we're together again next season, I predlct the 49ers will be the toughest physical team in the Nat.tonal Conference.i._ bar no('e... -San Francisco \A>ach FYed O'ConnOr after the -Cters lost to Detroit and finished with the worst record (2·14) in the Na- tional Football League. .. r believe in myself and it's a great reeling to know that lhe or- ganization believes in me, too." Cleveland Coach S am Rutigliano a fter receiving a new. five-year contract follow- in~ a 48-16 setback by t.he Cincin- nati Bengals. ,Coast Area Sports Calendar "'~" Basketball T__. H IQh Sr'-! -c.on.n. Cl*I ,,_., V\ 81•1r oll S 11 m In Troy Tour_,,. T...-.v H•IJll SchOl>I COf'On4 091 M•r •• TrOy Tour...- ~,., lrvuw Hlqf> •t Don lUQO T~I. Ci•rO.n Cirove •I IA9Uf\A S.«h Ill. S.ugu> •• M ••IM II) Collf'O" OtM\9" Cout •' Golden "'"''' II JOI SMll• AM .. $MdleO.<k 17 1111 ~ HIQll S<h00t-E'1..,.141 et ECfllOll (8): 1,..1..,. RI Don l"'IO T__.,.; Coton• clel Mar et Troy TOlllM ...... t Coll~~-al LA He~ 11 301. UC lrvlM •t HortMmArllO'\e (7•;jl)). TMon6ty HIQll S<i-1 '"''nt "' Oon l\191 TournMMN co1100-Gotel*n Wot •• $•n 01990 Ml!\~ 11 :IOI P:f14.ty HIOll S<Plool-Newl>ott H~ V5, 0-Hllh Al SM1dltb6<k Colleot Ill. ColleQtt.-S.001-k et GolcMf\ Wu l '7.301. 8•k•"flfllditt0t~Coot 17,:JOI. s.tunlay HIQh Scr.ool-0.MOI' lllYtllltlOflal f -1 ll'ounl•lll V.tf14tV "'· CMl~I •I t i G#ey "' Ett.,,CI• •• It 20; Newport Harbelr .... ,..,, .. Clere •It: M9rlne v•. El ModtN al J:JO; S....11• n Co.te Mew et j IOI. ~r , ...... , HI .. S<llOOl-«tmedY TOll<nMMf!I. ....._.., Hltfl Sc,.,._EI Toro lit o.n. Hlltt .,, r:nMy MIQI> Sc--.Mlftne n El Toro •I Ml••- v111017pm I. Wre.Utng Tll9Mey (OlltOe GolOl>f\ WHI .Ill llT\perl•I Velley II ""'' .. ,..., (Oii-~ Ott90 -W •I Goldtn We~t Ill Swtmmlng _, ROllUl(I Hllllet l!ClitOft Ill• M I ..... ell Baalcetbell T...._ Hltrh k --0-Hllll et S.Ut11 TOfHflC• Tovt11amtnt: Hllflll"910f\ lltacll, HtWl>Otl H•rbot. ,.Olllllflll Vellty et Gerftn Grovt T 011r11eMl\I • T .... y HIOll l<llOOI-Or~-' lrlllN !JI; D-Hiii• al Soutll TorrltftCt '°"'''0; G••Cftn Orovt T-ntmtfltl CVPftlll T~tllfMftl. H'-' k..... ~ :::i:L.. C,.._,.t Cit JO am l. 0-HllO el Soutll Tomuoc• t-11ey, Oeroe11 or-T-y, CVP<fft r-110. "'""'*' Hlfll le ....... -l • Oulllle •I lrVIM Ct • M I Oen• Hiii• •• !.lwll\ T6Hefltt Tavrnty Cvpn.,. fOvfntj ....... , Ml ... $( ...... llWlllCA .i S.1111 Clt-111• m JO • M 11 "°"It_ .. C .. Oftael*I M¥ '' l~I Fletd Hockey ,_, HIOll k""' OI--T-~. CMMlol "' M41r •• ,,,_ .. m , ... , ..... ,.,.., "-,oi--, ... ,_, FOOTBALL /BASKETBALL ,,,, ........... An English Sack Ot•troit's Doug Engl.Jsh grabs the shirt of· Sun Francisco 49er quarterback Fr~d ie Solomon for a four·yard loss in Pontiac Sunduy. Solomon was drafted to play quarterback for the 49ers after the first two QBs were injured. He led the 49ers in fumble recoveries, three of his own . ,.~,.·~·· COLLEGE BASKETBALL RECRUITING •• r c c t• n t I 1 m 1 t o f 1 S basketbuJl scholarships for any it-year per.1od have all but ended lhe chance for another UCLA dynasty. The Bruins won 10 out or L2 NCAA champ1onsh1ps dur- ing 1964-75. Phelps may not lake t he system. but he understands 1t. Last year he r~ruUed one of those super freshmen. Kelly Trapucka. who led lhe Fighting • Irish all the way to fourth place m the NCAA Tournament. PHELPS KNOWS I F H E doesn 'l chase down the freshmen who can play D1vis1on l basket- ball right away. someone else will. And Phelps and many other coaches interviewed by The As· sociated Press say that lots or those chases end with lhe player receiving illegal inducements of. cars, apartments1lnd money. "It's a cancer right now that's t e rminal.·· s aid Phe lps . "'Dhere's mor.e. ch11ali.ng out the r e . PltiJ)e .ri<h~s. tickets. clothes, money. Any thing somebody wa,nts. somebody will gave it to him." R eggie Ca rt er, wh o transferred lo St. John's last year after berng on probation for accepting cash, a car and an apartment at Hawflil , said Hawaii was like most other schools ." "IN TIIE BIG unaversiUes you have to win, and cheating Just helps you get there.·· said Carter. "I think Hawaii was typical of most major colleges. only Hawaii got caught." ft is not s urprising t hat players take money and other inducements. How many 17-. year·olds can resist that kind or temptation? It is not surprising that coaches make such offers. How many 40-year-old bench Jockeys wa nt lo walk the streets? "I was fortunate lo have bad a way out." said Bob Cousy, former coach at Boston College. who said he joined lhe business world rather than become a col· lege basketball cheat. "If not. I would have done what everyone else did. .. Wi th today's cnd-Justi£1es· the-means philosophy. it's fair to more than a pat on the back. The say that every level of recruiting alumni ls not satisfied with a .500 gets into gray areas. You're aJ. seasonany more." lowed to maintain your prin-:SO tne pressure to get these ciples more as you go down the blue-chip high school seniors is I dde Jl• al ,,..,l ·mposs"ble if felt in many areas. The m,.•or a r. s m..,... i 1 fallout ls the Division I c0ach you're working on the upper himself. The AP surveyed the rungs." 202 schools which have played HOW DID IT GET that way? Division I basketball continuous-Money. television and greater na-ly from 1967. 78. The poll re- lional interest seem to be lhe best vealed \hat only 20 coaches -10 answers. percent -have stayed at the "You don't hear about many same school over that 12-year track and tennis coaches being period. fired." said Coach Dean Smith The survey also indicated that or North Carolina. "There's just ~oaches are currently changing not that much interest. When JObs at a greater rate than ever there's interest. there's pi;es· before. There were 31 coaching sure." changes -15 percent -du.ring In the minor sports the re's no 1967-68; 36 changes -18 percent press ure t o fill th e b ig -duringl972-73,andS4changes fl e ldhouses.1. like Kenl~cky's -27 percent -during 1977·78. 23,000-seat nupp Arena. After .. RECRVITING IS SO . the scandals of \he early 1950s . 10-and early 19605, basketball pro-tenslfied oow that promises and grams turned away from the offe r s are constantlr, bei~g big.city arenas and tried to ln· ~ad~." aai<1 Dav~ Gavitt, retir- sulate .. .lNir~rUQ,f JR,.H'f'~ ,, ing co~_alJ>tovidence a.o44the constl'iicteC:t campus cowu. 1980 Ol~d>Mtr. "Aller )ro- And ~y ~·te'atnS ftll ' ml•lnl tM ,.Ayer tbe•orld"'t's those arenas and a.re seen on almoatlmpodibleftlftheco~to television. have the player's respect. H e can't coach him. so be eveotua.fty gets firedorquits." PENN SfATE, FOR example. sold only seven season tickets for basketball last season, lhen fired its lonl[time coach, John Bach. Dick ~a.rt.er was brought in, and season ticket sales are over 1,000. In the past three seasons, only · 20 teams were seen on the 35 na- tional TV games, not including the NCAA Tournament games. Notre Dame and UCLA topped the c hart s with eight ap--~earances . Marque tte h ad seven, Michigan and MaryJaoo five and Kentucky four. This year. the same elite bas ketball schools dominate NBC's national schedule. There will be, however, seve n newcomef's on the screen, in- cluding four schools which had last year's freshmen sensations -Johnson and Michigan Slate, Duk e a nd Eugene Banks. Kansas and Darnell Valenlule a nd Southern Cal and Cliff Robinson. "TELEVISION HAS brought the alumru face to foce with their a lm a m ater," s aid Gene Smithson of Wichita Stale. "He gives more money and he expects Joe Vanclsin. former coach at Yale a nd n ow e xecutive secretary of \he National As· sociation o( Basketball Coaches. s aid coaches used lo be teacher s, members or the faculty. "But now university ad-ministrators see basketball as lncome.produclng. Like in any big business. ii you can't pro- duce the revenue, you're oul o( a Job." .. Coaches are the last of thl' cowboys." said former Mar· queu e coach Al McGui re. "Very few of them stand the test of time." Tuesday: The cheaters. and bow lbey do it. Nets' King Booked NEW YORK Ct\P) -New J ersey Nets basketball star Bernard King was arrested to- day o n coc;Une possess ion charges after police found him slumped over lhe wheel or his car in Brook lyn. NFL Standings AMEIUCAN COHl'EltEHCE E••• OIYIUOft ~v-.surt• A•m• JI,~ ...... 8"V 14 C1nt111Mh <II. Cl~wlend II> PertJcular People Select JOHNSON & SON Home of the "Golden Touch" • Nr w Enotano vMtam1 W L T l'<I. Pl' PA 11 • o .7JJ 3SS '6J 10 j 0 ... , ,.., 211 0411•\ 30, NOW VO<h J Ph I Ntw Ori-II, T-8eV 10 PhllltOtlllfM• JO. Hew York Gl:tm\) O-troll U. 5erl Fr...clKO It NY Jeh 111111•10 8.tillrn~• • Pltttb\ll'Qll V HCIUtfOfl Clto••IM'd (l11<1Melt • Oenwr S.nOI ... O•kl...O ~•flit t(fif'IW\(fty ~ 8 0 '°° ll'I JM ~ 11 0 .lll 301 U• ' II 0 ..)ll ))t '21 Cetotr .. OM IMll .. , 0 10 • 0 • • • • ,, 0 W.•IOIYI ..... ~IH ,,. 1'S .•1S 213 N ·* ~ ,,. .2SO 1U 2lM oq .o .. umi.a • 1 0 ,)4) MS lOt • 1 0 .)U lit ,., • 10 ~)031' t 1' 0 UO 1C 1'1 MallMM~• '0.11•• y Phtl-IPfl•" W•\ll•flOIGn S• lOllll NV G1tnl\ • M •ftM'\OfA Gretrf\Bn O.trou (l\<(-'•"'114 B•v IEa .. Ol"'tlelt If t 0 • I 0 • • 0 6 tO o 1> IO o Gt..trelDIV™-' I I I I I I I • 0 I t 0 \ II 0 ..... °'"' .... HO .. lOI Jt.J 110 no ·* 21J "1 .llS , ... "' JIS ~ N .'131 ,.. JOit .Ut Jft 2 .. .01 7'0 JOO •• lSJ ,,. ,,, '" ,,. 51. LCM11•'2. All.tnl• ti 8vtf•IO 21, 11.ttllmor• to !.Hlllt ». "-CllV 1• OHleflCI ,7,~'114.•,. Saft DletO 0 , ~ton 24 ,...._..o-. Ntw Cf191...., 11 Miami C0-.-1 1 .• o'cltt~ 1 l'U "°"" SCH•OUU AME•ICAH COM,.E.IENCI ,_,..o- M1Ml'\i vL --· 'hll IO 11t -mined ~'·'*·· O.n,,., or Ml.,,.I •1 l'ltl\llUl'Qll ~,0.C.JI O...wr or ~litlfl <ti Ne• Eno4ell<I S-U.,,Jea.7 Al'C CM,...msl'tlp NATIONALCOHl'l•CNCI ~···~ Pt\11.oflllflll II AllOltllA s.i-y.o.c.ao M1Metot• Ot Al"'41t• •t 0.11~ ~.OK.31 • "Very courteous, very fair. entoytd the Iott four « five yeou cwoclatton." r lo' All9"1"' 11 • 0 .7JO ... ftj .s.a uo "° 01 ,., ,. MtNIHOi•Ot Pflll_I..,.. •I t..G• AllOtl~• ~.J .... 7 HFC Q\e~l'tlll s.My,J,,,,.,11 .ALUI SMITH MOOU Leouna Hiiia. Calif. v Alltftl• t 1 0 Npw Orlfff\\ I ' Cl s.n Frei!< 1i.<o 1 14 O IH ?t• )10 Su~r 8-1 )(Ill "'' Cll•l'l'PIOft .. ~. ~,., CIMlmplon el Ml.,..I • Ctln( ""° C11vh1an 1111~ v Cli11<""d wll«-"'""'°'' O.rlll Orange County's Oldest Lincoln-Mercury Dealership JOHNSON & SON THE FAMIL-Y LINCOLN-MERCURY STORE Home Of The "GOLDEN TOUCH" 2626 Harbor Blvd., Co ta Mesa 540·5'30 ,.,. • ., \ I ·- ( " A " " "' "' .. A A ,ti A A " "' • .. .. • • • I I I I ' ' ' ' ' ' GOLF I FOOTBALL I HORSE RACING Gell Roandap Nettles Fires 78 In Mesa TOUmey 81 HOWAllD RANDY ~ Ol 1119 "-''' ,,... ....... Thla i• lh blqe t )t'lr yWt'for the To)'• tor Jo lrvl~w aoll t.ou.mam Mat C..'olta MlP Gottud'Country C1Ub. The: tnlr)' l C \ot'tt~ by al leu.t IO •oll ,.. thJ year wllh the count at 320 •ccordln.c to chaarman St.9¥ Pappu Oral.a N ll • th honorary chairman or th v nt 111\d third b m n for tht New Yon Vank , flttd an even par on the first nlM S.lurday. lhc:o f ll to 42 on th b ell for a 1 ,.., o( 1K lie •• pr"e1larin& for lh · Am nu n AlrUne. l.Ow"o•meot 1n ~'10 Raco wht're he will bu paJrCld with a pro fOOlball play~r TO • V£AllS AGO NetU ~-on the tournament pd lu t year teamed wtth I.hf! Rams' Rlcb Saul He plarus oh re turn1n1 bul doesn't know who~ partner Wlll be tbla Ume around "11wl tournam ent at Costa Mn.e iA for a very worthy c ua and I am pl1 bt'd to be t.he honorary chairman." N Ul told m mbc.'rs of the C'Otn mtttee bdott> t tna off When he was two uodtt par alter sb hol • be waa cbtded lhllt th11 wasn't the way lo b. an bonorttry chatrm&n wionln1 It alJ. Wh t e ve r tllt-r e ason. ht> cooled off atlt-r that and ~ays, ··1 came back to my U!)Ual game cm the bnck rune " ••• MOST PEOPLE feel that a prQf essionaJ tour golfer must shoot s~ar rounds in order to be among the top money winners on NETTLES the tour. Not so. If a golfer were physically able to play In every major toumament on the 1978 PGA tour -40 events, excluding team and second tour competitions -and shoot even par. he would have: Won the Tourna ment Players Championship and the U.S. Open; earned $298,748 for the year; and, finished among the top 10 io eight tournaments. In addition to the TPC and U.S. Open victories:Mr. Par Shooter would have placed rourth an the Glen Campbell Los Angeles Open; tied for fourth lo the Memorial; finished second in the CBJladian Open: tied for seventh in the PGA champiomhip; tied for olnth in the Colgate Hall of Fame Golf Classic; and, would have taJcen third ln the World Series of Golf. Furthermore, be couJd have year's money.winning race by pla Watson was first, winning $362,429 *** finished second in the g In every event. Tom• 24 events. JOHN MAHONEY, JR. of Laguna Niguel is one of five pros who have earned an exemption from qualifying for the Andy Williams Sao Diego Open goll tournament Jan. 24·28 at Torrey Pines. Mahoney, Larry 'Benson of Long Beach, Vic Martin of Palm Desert and Eddie Merrins of Bef Air gained an ex· emption on the basis of their 36-bole totals in the Southern California section stroke play championship. Dave Barber wbo woo the mat.ch play title at Hunt· ington Seacllff this year, ts also exempt. · Cllec ld•g A r eoa Co•n~• 8fG CANYON -Tijuana Christmas Tournament: A Fllght-1. Gabby Bailey. Gwen Willia aw, t>wfy Whitlow. Barbara De Franco, 46. B Flight-1. Jane Clark, Myrna Bames, Sallie I RVINE COAST -Most Pars Tournament: A Flight-L (tie) Nancy Newland, Shirley Hams. 16; 3. Gloria Da Ros. 15. B Flight-1. {tie) Helen Balentine Rose Harold, 13; 3. Belle Mumma, 12. C Fligbt-1. Joan f-urry, 14; 2. Ctie> Fem Sproul, Jenda Horne, 13. D Flight-1. Ernestina Valdes, 15; 2. Marilyn Cramdon. 13. Three Blind Mice Tournament: A Fllght-1. Gloria Da Ros, 54; B F1ight-1. Gloria Gartz, 54 : C Flight_:.l. Gretchen Ostberg. 51: 2. Bernie'6tetson. 54. D Flight-1. Helen Mundy, 51. LAGUNA BEACll-'l!tw Gross. Low Net Tournament for the Women's Club: A Flight-I. Helen Collins, 85 (gross); H arriett MacQuist en, 65 <n et). B Flight <Gross) 1. Margie Reese, 93; <Net)-1. Mary Kronman, 63; 2. Margie Davison. 69. C Flight <Gross)-1. Anne Mer- ritt. 115. Monthly winners: A Flight-Gross and Net: Martha Beaumont, 77 and 53; B Flight-Gross: (tie) Margie Davison, Margie Reese. Louise Loucks. 93;' Net-Reese_., 59. C Flight-I. Billie Teachout, gross and nel. 109 and 69. NEWPORT BEACH -Women's Low Net Touma· ment: A Flight-1. Bea McCracken. 45; 2. VaMje Sturgis. 57. B Flight-1. Olive Wonacotl, 43; 2. Marian Ring, 60. C Flight l. June Ca.in . 49 ; 2. Jan Meacham, 56. ON&S Tournament: A Flight-I. Helene Anderson. 21. 2. Mary Smock, 22. B F light-I. (tie) Lena L'Africain, Olive Wonacott, 23. C F!Jght-1. Jean Meacham. 26. 2. Lucy Thronson, 27. Best Nine: A Flight.-1. Helene Anderson, 19, 2. Martha Ciampa, 24. B Flight-1. Lena L'Africain. 22 ; 2. Dorothy Walker, 27. C Flighl-1. J oy Hughes. 25. 2. "'Adrienne Reel. 27. Turkey Shoot-A Flight-I. Mary Smock, 51 ; R F'light-1. Marian Ring, 50; C Flight-I. Jean Dion. 44. Low Net Tournament: A Flight-I. Mary Smock. Sl ; 2. (tie) Bea McCracken. Mart.ban Fleener , 54. B Flight-I. Marian Ring, 50; 2. Dorothy Walker, 52. C Flighl-1. Jean Dion, 44 ; 2. Jan Meacham. 45. .... l FANS. • • but whm they're a11ln1l ~. ll do 1n't matter on bit. frualr•l· ed" Nobody ln this 11 more rruatratld ~me. ... Runnine back John Cappellet- ti · "Sometlm ll feel• 10oct to play _on th• road. If you set booed by an oppoell)g crowd. it fir you up. To set booed by the home crowd ta a psycholoalcal l~tdown." n.e,., ... llarokt Wacbman, M.O. Gar· ron and Adolph Shlman, from Lona BMcb, have been Ram rans lnce the team moved to California but they're not above crltlcaung t.b6 team, from U>e owner to the peanut vendor: "They bave Ute mate rial but· they need a new quarterback. Th e n ee d a TALLER quarterback, lel's put it lbat way ... says Wachman ··u ow about a new owner," odds Shim an. "and some taller t11hl ends. Plus. they need frethet' peanuts to sell in the stonds . But J· a uess we'll follow them to Anaheim if we can get the same seats and if they don't r&Js.e the prices." "WHAT THEY REALLY need h1 a new stadium." says Garron. "This." he says pointing to the decayin~ Coliseum, "is doing them In ' Dan Diamond, Joe J~szeck and Carl Sundbeck, 1e'lichers from Santa Barbara. are only partial observers of the Rams but they too have strong opin· ions. "They're boring." s ays Diamond. "The only time they're excitinf is if they have to work in the las two minutes." "They put me to sleep," says Sundbec:k. "They're just too pre· dictable.'' ''THE RAMS ARE very pre· dictable," says Jeszeck. "They throw on first down nowadays but they're really predictable once they get near the goal line. Then they choke." Mike Boyce, who drove nearly two hours to see t.he ga,JDe: "[ came all the way down from Palm Springs to see them play RO I guess I must feel It's worth ll in tbe rain. Their offense Is ,stinlng, not enough Innovation. Rut the defense, that's the best lo the league." r William J effe rson of Los Angeles. between attempts to sell some spare tickets: ··Every year they do the same tblng- they come up to the baller's box nod blow it. Tbey'l'e1ust like the Dodgen . They make us lose faltb. What's going to bllppen when they m~ to Anabefm? Thetll stl1l be our team. They ho t bring any other team iL here to replace the Rams. We've been with them too long." EARL BELL, Granada Hills: "I don't like their style of play. I don't think they use eooufh Im· agioatloo in their offense. don't think they use en~h pitches or short passes to their backs and that's one of the reasons de· r e n ses c an key on the quarterback. I don't thlnk they'll get it together for the playoffs. 1'he momentum isn't there. It's too late. "But I love the Rams. It's a shume because they have a lot of talent on that team. For some reason they just don't jell. I just hone they prove me wroog." Manuel Rivas, a Redfands resident who has been following the Rams since their LA begin· ning, wasn't as kind. "They're disgusting," he says . "But I've been a die·hard Ram fan ror 20 years. going back to the days of Waterfield and Hirsch . and I'll go down for the third time and still be a Ram fan. But they're Just so da rn methodical. You can always predict what they're going to do." Among the die·hard fans was Bob Castillo. part of a van-full or rans from LOng Beach. "If we didn't like them. we wouldn't be h e re ," s a ys Ca s tillo . "Criticism ? Absolute ly not. especially when the coach's wife is right here." Mary Ma lavas l ros e to husband Ray's defense . "What othe r man," she asked, "has done in four moolhs what he has. IL took the re§j. of them over a year." Mondey. Oectmber 18, 1978 ROCKET SHm IP..! FROM ROD LAVER 'ti ILLUSTRATED BY JIM JONSON 1- f)J NaT f'l/llCll EYcRY V'tJIJEY I • 0 WH~ll '/8(1 M~re ()(/T lt/10€ TO 1Ht !JKK.HANO.. 'ltJIJ SHOV/.O HAVc elkJf)~H can~L ~Al 'f ()(11!. V~/,U'/ TO PllM P A /.11TU SlloltT $Mr !!tGlff IJV~R. 11fe NCT. lllfcAI Yd(IJ! OPRJN~l/T t5 t>CcP. 71115 IS A SUR! PAYaFI" SHPT I () 1118 Ul'llttd fNtllfe Syndlute, Inc Ft--Pflffe 8 J RAMS BLAST PACK. • • a big game today. "There is no question but that a game lli<e this helps build our confidence. I really don't care wbo we play next. I think the week's layoff will do us good because we need the rest." Quarterback Pat Haden. a graduate of use. after needling UCLA grad Corral by saying, "I thouaht they only had basketball players out there at UCLA," turned to the playoff satuatioo. "I thank this te am as in· credibly hungry and tired of be· ing robbed of the chamf ionship we feel we deserve. I fee we can beat any team we play and it doesn't matter which one is first." CENTER RICH SAUL pointed out the fact that the Rams have be aten six of the other nine playoff teams and haven 't played the other three during the regular season. This in· eludes Pittsburgh, Dallas. Min· nesot~1 PhUadelpbla, Houston and Auanta. lo Sl.DJda.y's victory on a wet. slippery field that waa played in a tleady. driJzllng rain, the Rams never trailed. Bryant scored the first two touchdowns on runs of one and five yards. The first came in the opening period and the second in the third stanza. Haden hit Willie Miller from 21 yards out and aft.er Corral kicked a 24-yard field goal. Rod Perry returned a pass ant.ercep. tion 44 yards for the final score in the closing seconds to put the decision away. Green Bay made lt 14·7 in favor of the Rams on a four-yard run by Terdell Middleton and closed to 21·14 in the fanal period on a 22-yard pass from David Whitehurst to Middleton. That's as close as the Pack came to victory. sco•• av OUA•Te •s Gr...,.eo 0 011 14 l o• 4~1M I O ,. 10 J• I.A -9,,..,. I rvn ICo,..<11 •l<l<I LA • Bry;tnl \rvn ICor••I ~l<kl CB • N'l0dlt101,. '"" CM••col "'OU LA Mlli.. ll 1»•• h em H-n CCo<•fl kocl<I (;8 -Mldell•ton 11 PO• lrom Whllehv•\I IMercol kl<kl LA Corral 24 l A -~ u lntttcepuon rt lurn l(Of•" -IC kl A 41·* GAME STA1'1STICS ~1 .... 111owns0 A .. ~~Y¥d'> P~•l"9 yerd> A•lvrn y¥ds PftYS. -p""" F Ufnl>l"'-IO<U p_."" __ ci. o• II 1'11\ 1'6 0 I',, l ")0 ~ ,, " ,,. ,,, 100 • 1•1 , ,. 1·1 HI ~n a.u INDIVIDUAL LEA OE as IH1SHINO -GrHt' e.'r M.-eton 11 JI Smlltl 'In. CutDffflh J.\ LO• A119tle•. fl,y..,I :JO. 111 C~i.ttl 1 ••. H-n) 11 PASSING -G<"'1 8<ty Wh41-t\t 17's.I 1 ... ()ovqlM\ t t.0. 1'1 L°' AllOfltt. H-" • ,._, uo R ECEIVING Grun Bey, Lollon ) '7 M<Gf'0<91 -MIOOlf'IOn I 11 C vll>ft _,.I\ I 10 LO\ A~l1$. ~\! ....... --l 10 "''"" ' JI ' DAILY PILOT &'J Alamitos Entries '•.-..r•O...,,.,,.....•Mnn .. t•U •AC£ e10 '"~ ) y.ar Olf\. l''""' u.1 CJ..,...noprka,U.000 llny IU"•I ICMI ICMOOltl. lltrtlno flt MO JO<r 11.!tOC>l<\I , Tr1Kkl1>9 \l•lfffl 1"4111 l•O .. C.o H•••ll On IM HOUO ll'•ft k '°4••~ '"'"""'rl, Lii Out LO<l<I O(nl@MI H !CONO •.t.el "° v••d• , ., .. , otds . (Al br•rt Pur,..'7,100 ~••ltnl1>911tk• U ,000 H"Ull l(•tOOttl Vntly lfrHWl•I. M e Ciooo On t(<l\trot· '>Kone> CltOlll' I II• Old1• bu l C-1• (MYIH). Cht r04>r Oo IH••IOl\I TM lltO llAC• )lO Y••ct• , yeM Old\ ... 000 Cl•lmlno "''" t!S 000 ll•CI fltOOCI IMY~I. lroOI• (.l>lt"P Kt 6"1\ ll •r..,.m1. <••Mk 1'1{lfllt r ,,,_r...,rl, JC)tlnfty Oh 1Dn10ll•I. llttlVll\ ,, .. , Or-II I \uMy T~ ('>uMOfl'fl. Ov\IY 8tJ LUOY 18-t I F••l"O II"" DI•• l(ardot•l Jel 0110 lf.l•rll Aho [HOilll• c.-two IMv•••I, MuM<• I FrftlOfll I ,.OU •TM •4CE 400 v•rd" 1 .,.., tld m114M"• Pww '-l.400 ~ C.em• "ncl NOMt\ ILIPfl•'"'· 1•99'HJ • I< l'S...,.Dltrl Aocke1 [&\Y IClerl .... I Sir 'r C.0 IC••-•I ~1-lngCouft\ Cfr~11rel. ~ Girl IM•rll c:;.t Sofne 00.. 4~tdot•I. 1 fllflTM llACI -870 Yltth ' yHr oldl::t. PIHW S1 100 Cl•lnlll'Q Ptl<e U .000 Pt• .. ctyo ltWkle l(Mdol f l ~0• llt•IU A~ ~' !"""'IOI. O~alO Jl lt l\•• ITIH>ure l. Aull\ COPY l'"IOfl& '· O•umeft l~M•I. C~le U ncllllO llCll I, O;ie<lf<' ~ IW1tcll I 'Sllt'TM •AC• -)lO Varel• ) ""' old "I: P11•w, ».lOO c 111m1no prle~ 110.000 s1c11v• C.,.,,Y 15umpter l; Gelt WIY IY IT •H•U•~•. 11011 on 819 Me .... ILIPfl•m l, 1• l.eft'r•" •Cle••-•; Zoo ZOo IC.OOi•I. W•rm/N' Up!Adeorl , 'SEVl;NTM ltACE -..., verdi J YH • Olla & "D PurM \$ ~ Clalmlr>g P•k• $10.000 ~ l•G Aw•v O..t 1~1p11am1. Mr ll<Mn k lllou9h l. Ou\lv'~ Go ICl••ln~I. Or• " IP"'"•' I . C••IQ Go 1Cr t1•Qerl, Al \ •II• I Mylo I, ChllldlD IC•rC101el ; ChtQv• '" 18roou1 ~ l!tOHTMltACI!. >X>•arO\ I Ytt•olel\&..,.AI· towenc• Punr IJ ,j(IO ' Uou·n Ma rk IM tlfh•lll ; BuQOfd ~on t!,umpte•I, Peym<lnl 0..lerreCI tHerll. ll~rty l•I I •n• IC.rdo1•1. VICIOtl 18•ftll\I; Thto - Wll<ll !Cr•-·•·"'' ~voeo 1Tr.,.,ure1: M1 lll•OO lllptyml NINTH •ACll! CJ0 Y•rO\ l Yt¥ Olds & UI>· p.,,,. '°' 100 c 1a1m1nq 11tk• "·~ Popp" John I Ad••• I ; 8 19 l tme Ao~••• IT••••urtl. "llOf'I SP"l'O IC•Urol; lloO IM Cheri IH"11. Met• IUCk IW.,dl, 11-ll>dltl<>" ... •C••oo .. 1. '"'" Fiiiy tli<tnt.O. Mr fci4• IW" IP•"""I J Alamitos R esults ~~., , ........... , .. ~y/..itllt """' 0..-,,~ ~1"1 rar:• OvOl'l Ote•oe tCerdOt•I • A0.-4.8() 110. v1i.1~11r 1e-•1 •.oo. e . .io: ~, .. CM ll(,,.il I• llO U E«<t<I• 1~11 paid S~lll. ~cond rece 81Q 0.Y ~nt IW•rdl H 90, 1110 & .0, laot,,...11 ILu01e1 10 .0. ~ loO; L,..ln "'" R•b ICAlrdolfl \ 00. , '""d , .. c~ ou o h••' ~••••n ee .... int 1r •'""'"' J '°· • 10. 1 c.o -Roc••h e .... R....a IROt.19"1s"°·510 1 llO, Go S.tU<n 718•nU~110 \\ r .. 1c1• ll·ll .,.Id .. l.00 U E••<la 13-11.Pllld \\ti 00 t • ~ our tft •«,...·S...PPY Tlqer IClerls\oPI I?«>. UO. J IO. !ihtt•• LOO>• I Rou(jll I S.llO. l 40. $1""' AOO•• P•" CLlphaml) '° f '"" rac• 6a1>1>t1no flA\h tPemerl 1 00, • 00. l 00. Vanol'• Jet 18footo\l 8.10. •IO. fwen lvlnr .. !>klcloo IMllchelll 5 10. SS E .. clA ••II ... lclll"OO Sh ih ,_.. C.•ar:h • Jeo Bo• ll1l>fl•m1 I llO. s 10. > .io. E••r s.i. !Hartl •.OO, J.eo; Too ()e<a a.,,,,.., cr_.•1ic.o ~ ... ntl\ ··~ °'""" ..... .,.,_ "<• ~ lf.1Kllle t 10 00. II 211. 5 llO and Th.i h~ ~o, I 1 .. 1~ .. l 1'!00. '40. S Ill. SM11.o ICMClo .. 14 1\ ~ ... ct• 1111 .,..., u u !O u e .. cl• 11-11 .-.11 U4• ~ I £10hll\ r..-11 f"rl•r Bob IPem,1rl 1) 10.fe 1oO ' Ill) w°"""' No More IH•ye•I • «>. s oo. ,..., ' J •l 'H•r111 eo Nlftl" reo h rtlflC Fl9ht•r l&.rdl f:1 00. 11 00, 100 !>lwc:~•~ ll'Pmerl ISloO. jp611 P•H fl•• Botli. IClerluel It .0 ~S Ea<t<t. 'II •• O<>•O U IJ lO A ll•rwlan<• 1.111 I Basketbtill, Hockey S I 5 00 Minimum Tax Sheltered Investments · Belketball NATIONAL aASICETaALL AU N. ,.,....,.~. . Ali.Mk Otvtai... W&\hlnqton Pt11l•delph1e "ltw Jer~y N-VOflt &o\ton W L n ., II 'I I/ 17 1S 11> 10 10 CtMYatOM.ie.. P0 . .01 110 .. ~ ,.,, ~. ... 4 , .Jll ""' HOU\IOI\ All•nl• 14 IJ SI• Sall Antonio Ctn•••rwl New OrtHM ~lroll I\ 14 )If I) 1• Sii II " .Jiii 4Yt II 71 ~ S" tO 10 UJ S'~ Wnt<lnl Ceolf..-e -01,,..,... IC1tnWt (11• II 10 Otnv~< IS IS (Ill<-17 II Nlllw•u-.,. I) 11 1...,1.,.e 10 II sum~ PhOtf'Hf Lei!.,., P.clf~OIYll .... 10 • 10 ,, Pwlla<KI Goicle" St•tt S...Oll'QO 70 I) 16 u 16 IS I• l'I ua - MIO l '" fOO • 1 ,., ,,,, .JSI I~• IU -u s 1 -,., .SU S \I• \· 0 4 I'' Evert Wins TOKYO -Chris Evert defeated Martina Navratilova. 7·5. 6-2. to capture the $100,000 first prize ln the Emeron Cup 78 tennis tournament Sunday:- s-rt'• k«ft PIWl-lphlit IOJ. Ulten ~ ""'"' V0tk Ill. All.on!" 10\ (ltVlllllftd IOI, SHIU~'ll (IOIClen $1t lf 104, Ntw 0.-1<'"'1\ •• M llw""""" 111. ChtttQO 101 POrll1tnd 173. Oionvtr 110 S•n Oleqo "'· Plloe<" • 110 TllftltlWl'tO&m.\ Ho 9A""" M:htdull!CI Hockey B~lltln 1 I •O I .)A 100 ~ MlnM.OI• t0 16 l )) 16 101 Norr~Dl¥1>-•lncoMe & Growth Montrul 71 h • '6 1111 11 ICl1141• ll n • JO 11q IOI ~ Plll\Ouron " 14 I n 1 IJ "• •Mo M••'-' 0t1ro11 1 1b • 7l •1 111 •Retfhlered Seculflib WA\hlllQI,,.-. 8 10 • 10 '6 l'IO 01tly ~•'f'•S<0rn l\utl•IO h, VMW-OU¥f'• J •I 0 YeW'I f1f bperi-• '"°w Yo<• °'1-t\ l ()lotrOll 0 l'nll-•C>N• • .,, 1 """ 1 Gerald L l(cnc* WOtlLOMOCKEYASSN ko•lon •."""' '°'~ u_,. 1 644-2507 w L 1' PU GF GA -~w~·~·h~lnql~on~I ~·-~~10~·~--~~~~~~~~~~~ ~bt< " 11 4 )& l)t tOll Plll\l>uf9f\ l {l\IC-l, 11<' N•W Eqlnd I\ 'I I> )& 130 111 c1n<1nn1111 I• i. • n 114 "• Edmonton I• IJ • 71 •01 " w 1 .... 1s-q 11 11 • n 110 104 Bir,,.lllQ...,.. 11 I) J 11 io. 101 ----~--------------~-., • lrwll.,._.l•S II 1 11 1' tlO • "' __ _,_.'°"' ~'f'•S<­ Eclm-11, S-Oo<ll All Sier\ 1 So•••I All·Stetl 1 BlrmlnQh•m l IOll Ntw E"!l4;tnd• OuPDK•tOft WintupeQ6, C1nc.•~ti l ,......,..,c;...... "IO ~mttS<-locl NA1'1~,,:..~n LUOUE ~-· PlllrkllOt•I"°" W L 1' Ph 0, OA H V 1\lltl'Otn" • I 0 I» IS Atl•t1IA 18 II 3 J'I IJ7 IOS Pl>llt dttoNe II 11 •. ll 10. I" ..... -----------It:~ N V A8ft9'" I• 10 A _i. Ill '1 •-----------41 5,,,.,U. Otv ll!oft (hlCM)O Vt1ncouvtr c o1o•<ICIO SI LOUI\ 10 IJ 1 11 11 ,. ' 1• 6 11 ~ II 6 11 \ II ..... c:om-· -IMOIYIJi... Bo\ ton Toronlo 11 S6'8 UO 94 ,, " ' l4 ti) 101 Wright s Arch Preserver CdM Play8 In T ourney Corona del Mar High's Sea Kings, S·l on the seaaon, enter the Troy High Invitation a l basketball tourname nt tonight with a ftr!lt· round test. atJainsl Blair at s . SPECIAL CHRISTMAS SPORTS MEMBERSWP EACH NEW SPORTS MEMBER WILL RECEIVE: FOR CHRISTMAS ••• CLASSIC QUARTZ STYLING DY OMEGA Shoes 4KI 482 . . • The tourney pairing!'\. 3: 15-Mlsaion Viejo vs . FootbHI ; 8 :30-Brea· OUnda vs. Troy; 6:•5-EI Do)ado \'3. Buena Park; S-Corona del Mar vs. Blalr. CAPISTRANO RACKET CLUB ctwsTMAI WICIAL • Two Recquetbell Recqu911 (MO Velue) • Free S..W..k f ennla Clln~ for Huaband •nd Wife ($50 Velue) • Sport8 Member1hlp lncludH UM of: • Six 3-Wlltl°RecqvettNll Courta • Phy1lcal FtfMN Room • T•nnla Couf19 Otl lundey 2 p.m.·10 p.m. • All 8ocf•'£venta • &O M•t• Pool" • Qymnealum '°' BHketbell & Volleybaft• 'Vlldtt COll\ltvtllM $100.00 DEPOSIT HOW ANO 11"1.AH(ll OU£ Afl>llllt. ,,,., •• HO OUll llNflL APltlL 1m 170 .. N!WHOP£ 8TA~IT FOUNTAIN VAUIV In bteutltuDy llOft u lfaktna -PolWtni Uleck (No. 481 IOf Rich D1tk Brown (No. 482.) With Wn1hl'• teft\Olli Vtl flu t0le • ll!lhtwticht end ftnlblt yet wt111 Hkt irun. A A I C D t l't Ullt '1JllJ el'ttt&U I Uatl 11160 •11 Sitt• INlf '" iroc:t "'"''bit Ill lo#O -·· ~fl'¥1JJJ t ' 1 Sj DAILY PILOT NltCl •OTHHS , ~ MO«TUAlY 627 Main SI Huntington Beach 536-6539 PIBfAMILY COl.OMAL fUt4HAL HOME 780 1 Bolsa Ave Westminster 893-3525 PACtFfC VIEW MIMOllAL PAlll Cemetery Mortuary Chapel 3500 Pac1f1c View Drive NewPort Beach 644-2700 ... ,coaMtCIC MOltTUUIH Laguna Beach 494-941 5 Laguna Hill~ 768-0933 San Juan Cap1'>trano 49!>-1776 IALn.IBCMlOH FUtBALHOMI 646-2424 Costa Mesa 673-9450 l&L llOAOW AT MOa'NAlY 11 0 Broadway Costa Mesa 642·9 150 SMl1"·tvnteu..u.MI MOa'NAlY WISTCL.lff' CHAPEL. Cren-et()(y • FIOwer Shop 427 E. 17th St Costa Mesa 646-4888 A PUBUC NOTICE PICTlnOUS &USINlU N~ ITATllMaNT Mondat. Deeem~r ttl HHI Deaths Elsewhere BERKELEY <AP) Ne wton B. Drury, 89. director of the National Park Servicefrom 1940 to 1951 and one of the na· Uon's leading conserva· lionists for m ore than 60 years. died Thursday BALTIMORE <AP > - Blanc h e Callowa y J one s, si s ler or bandleader "Cab " Calloway and the first woman to lead a m a1or American dance band. died Saturday al a hospital here. motlonaJ Problem Hysterectomy Unpredictable ti.~ UR.. bT~lNCllOUN 0f"ar Ur. Nt lauolm: My wife needs lln oiwra· lion Uul 1tht1 urt11 u& 1f ht•r world wtll come l1> a~ Nld W1"v" bet•n murrlcd tJ )tian , and hlive a fine 'oun 1& a.on Wt-btJth wnnlt d ut loo.st five children, but nCJ" 1t t.'t'rtl• thnl sh.-won't~· 11blt to have any mo re SH E c.o u: HOM•: •'kOM lht• doctor's office about two \lrt't'ki. 11t:o with Uw bad ncw!'I \hut she m't'ds lO have her ute rus r eniovt'd Of eourse. that "ould t'Tld Wl)' chanl'c of childbea nng But it seems to tht- DOCTOR IN ~THE HOUSE ) ' do~·tur, Wld ml" includ~ that !!h•· htt!S no chotc('' She net'<I' lht• operatio n She h ••~ som e l a rae . fibroid tumors in her ute rui;. Lhat ha\ c produced m uch bleeding for months 1t has been ge lling worst> SHE IS ANEMIC, HAS lrn.l her appetite und strt>ngth. She's so nervous , CVl'n sleeping pills don't help her gel a good night's slt.-ep. She has been refusing s urgery Al last I ha d her g~t the opinion or another gynecologist. He con· vinced her that she needs the operation right away. She has agreed, but is very <Anxious about it. Js It bud as aJl that"' Mr. E . DEAR MR. E. Unlike an operation for a bad gall bladder or nn appendix, for example, a hys terectomy (or lhl.' thought of it) can trigger many emotional problems. In a young wlfe.-like yours, inablUty to have more children may be the cause. Or, anxiety about sexual difficuJlies. ln a n older woman, hysterec· tomy m ay produce anxiety about premature aging for example. I HAVE KNOWN BOTH young and older women to take hysterectomy in stride -no more upset than if they had a tosiJlectomy. But both you and your wife should r eaUze that no ooe can predict bow well any particular .patient can withstand hysterectomy. She may surprise both you and herself by no~ having a severe emotional reaction. A recent study by res.earchers of 40 women aged 18 to 40 at the University of California found that 43 percent had only mild emotional reactions immediately after sur gery, and 18 percent had more serious reactions. SUPPORT BY THE f'AMll.Y IS essential. ln some cases, psychiatric counseling helps. A year after the operation about one in three of the women studied still had some of their hyster ec· tomy·relat.ed problems. <But remind your wife, Mr E .. thattwoout orthfee DlDN'T.) M EDICALETl'ES Dear Dr~elncrobn : I have been on diuretics for m onths to lose weight. I'm one of the foolish ones who insisted on losing ••fast" or not at all. Yes. I've taken off much weight Cmy doctor says "mostly water"> but I've become weak and nervous. I've been told that it's all due to potassium be ing washed out of m y body because of the diuretics. My doctor h as given me a prescription for potassium and has instructed me to eat a banana or two a day. I'm still weak. Isn't there a special diet? What foods are high in potafislum? -Mrs. H. Not Tecltnieian APWI,.. ...... Nar11 Boaaad Prmce Andrew. 18. s on or Queen Elizabeth 11 . has passed a medical ex· am und aptitude test for t!Olry into the British navy. lie will upply for a 12-ycar comm i s s ion in Fcbruury or March. NewWate District.- Bond Sold The 1 rvine R anch Water District has sold $13.8 million of generul obligation bonds to s up· port a new water and sewer district. Low bidder was a syn· dicale headed byBankof America. wruch obtained them bonds at a n et average interest rate or 6.94 percent. The 23,021 acres o f the improvement district encom pa ss the northwestern part of the IRWD. north of the Sant a Ana Frooway and west of El Toro Marine Corps Ale Station . The bonds will be used to finance particlpaUon in the Diemer lntertie, an intcragcncy pipeline project sponsored by the Municipal Water District of Orange County PHILADELPHIA <AP> -Bill Bailey, 66, older brother of enter· tainer Pearl Bailey and once one of show busi· ness' best known t a p dancers, died Wcdnc:.· day. Science Job Wanted LONDON IAP I Edgar Lus lgarte n , kno wn lo crime buffs around the world for his r a dio . TV and film d r a m a t 1 z a t i o n '' f cele brated murder trials. died of an ap· parent heart attack Fri· day in the Marylebone Public Ubrary near his London home. LOS ANGELES (Al') John Ric hardson Maice, 78, general agent emeri tu s of Northwestern Mutual Life lnsurnnce Co .. died or c ancer at his Lo11 Angclc11 hom e. Artifact Found SIMI VALLEY (AP) By JOYCE L. K ENN ED~ Dear Joyce: I've been working as a secre tary for seven years since hig h school, and I'd llke to look for a career In science. whJcb h,s always loterest· ed me. Only I don'~wanl to end up In some boring lccbnici'an•s job. Sugges· lions? -P .W .. Chicago, Ill. Learn computer s kills, perhaps at a community college's night classes. At the 11ame time, begin a n 1ir~a·wide survc>y of potential employers: firms which produce technical products, re- i1ca rch institutes. sclencc·Oriented government agencleR. r Arter Identifying prospects, which you can do with the aid of a reference l\brnrlnn. call personnel offices and ask for recruitment lllcrature and un· nual reports. (..___C4RE_ERS_J lege degree in science? THE MOST EXCITING jobs go to those with a Ph.D. As a practical mat· t er. it might take you 10 years to earn this credential. which would give you a la te s tart. Further. by the mid·l98>5, all technical occupations. except engineering. a rc likely to be s wamped with applicants. Dr. Vetter says ... Other alternatives to lab work you might achieve without g raduate education suggested by Dr. Vetter in· e lude technical writing, and in · duslrial sales of scie nce products. The allied health field Is still another way to apply your Interest In science: any number of health jobs allow you to work with people instead of perform· ing the technician tas ks you say y.ou doo'l want. flit followlfl9 llffWll' .,. OOlllO l>v\f 11tttM! CllUSTV 9AEAO. 11• Ceo.r WrMt, ff-' e.edl. CA '1,,.l A Chumash Indian artifact has been dis· covered on the site or an old Indian village in the western part or the city. Simi Valley's city e n· vironmental pla nner says. Dr. Michael Kuhn said that the s tone ob· jecl, which is three In· Chet ln diameter, may h ave been a gam ing ball. IF A PARTICULAR company looks good. call back for an appointment with a pcr!\QnnPI executive; say you seek career advice, not Immediate employment. Tell the executive you've returned to school to study computer scie nce and would. a~ preciate knowing about specific op· portunities which might be available upon completion of your studies. In· quire about entr'y·lcvel Jobs and career ladders. One la.st thought: do you really kno w enough about the work done by science and engineering technologists and technicians to make an informed rejection? Many in this a rea do nol feel they hnve "boring technician's jobs·· c..-111• 8.i.lnt Co , • <-""'°""•• •Of'POf•tlon. 2'• C9dw '"'"'· ..,__.,, 9N<ll,CA'*3 T Ills """-' b COftClu< led by • t Of· DOUllon. Cl'Ollltllle OelllftO Co .llrtl«ICC>Ntn ~.., .... , • , Tiii• •I"'-"' w•• Iii.cl wit" tl'le ttvn1, (lllftl Of 0.•flOe '°""'' °" bt<tmber tt. t'7't P*41' '11647' Publlt!IM Orll\Ot CMll O..lly ~Uot De<. It, U. "7t, Jen I, t, "" 5'41·71 PUBLIC NOTICE Stay in touch with helpful personnel executives RO you 'll hovP a head start when you're reudy to begin your new career. This advice comeR fro m Betty Vet· ter. the ranklnll authorU.y on science careers for women. Dr. Vetterdireets the SclcnUflc Manpower Commission ln Woshtniton. Why doesn 't ishe think you lmmedlately should nlm for a col· ~LY PU.Of CLASSIPllD ADi &a-98'9 READER SERVICE: The Seumhfic Manpower Commllsion hal published a ucond edititm o/ ··Prof e111onol Wom.m and Minontie• -A Mon~r Doto Resource Service " Thb contatnt atottsticol data on tht participation o/ the1e group1t in the lohor mar~t. 1''or o thret·JXJIJ'! .rummory of sample: hlghlighl1, encloae a ltomped. aelf-oddrt1ud, ~ white envel~ Wtth your requeit to me ot th11 newapaper. Aile for "Womtft & Mlnormes Data Summa"JI." P BUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE lfOTICE Of' .-ueuc HU•lllNG NOT ICE IS HEllEBY GIVEN 11'•1 • IMl(>ll( l\tutrlr.a wm i. Mid by lhe (oh (-ell of I,,., CHY Of C.0.le Mew on Jenv•r • 7. 1'7•. •I •. lO p.rn . '" !he COIH'(ll C~ ol Cltv H;MI. 11 Fltlr Orlve. CDS .. ~W. on I,,., foOowl119 tlefl'U" r O RMAT 1 0 N OF V"'O E RGllOUNO UTILITY OISTlllCT NO 11. B<ll<er Slrttt from ,,..., Coron• clef -F.-•Y to &.ob Sir Ml NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN !NI II H id to-~ pl«e, MIY Mid •II per~Oll\ llll~ted ""'Y -·· ilftd bit M••d b' the C1ly Co""c 11 011 ll>f •forf....,nl-Item\ E•LIEEH P PHl!iHEY, (ltyCl•t1l Put>tl•'*' 0r""99 COl\I 0..ty PllOI O.umtwr It. ltll \t~/I PUBLIC NOTICE P UBUC NOTICE "ICTITtOUS IUStNESS H~STATUUNT TM IOl-119 --I\ ~ buli· M O •l l'ARAM LTO. 4.IOO C-\ Or · s.,i1e nt. ~ llH<JI. c... n..o 0 \•m•ll B•U•ll. 1510 Park .. __ t,-OOOBe«ll C• ttMO Tiil\ l>U\llltU I\ cond\l<l,.d bY • lln\llN P*'tNnl\IO 0.-.. a..r.11 Tiii\ \leltftWtll WA\ liled wllll llW (.,u.,ly Clerll. of Ot•ll9t Co""'" on HO•t ml!et 7'. tt11 '""" Pullll\-0r"'9P COIU 0•11¥ Pllof Ol'C 4, II II. ts, t•11 S4'14 11 PUBUC NOTICE HEAL TH I CAREERS I OBITUARIES PUBUC NOTICE P UBLIC NOTICE PVIJUC NOTICE ITATIM9Nf CW' WlfMOtlAWAL "•OM PA1!11'Mllt$MI" Of'9••Tllt0 Ulltl>e• 'ICTITIOU' IUMN UNAMI '"" ... ~ 119'*' .... "'"""'..,, ..... ,.,,., .. ,,,,., ,,..,. .... 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"'-' JA • • ~ -f!::;' ..,, • ~ \11-1. 1 r ~ ~ ,... ~aHd by a hoallby 1 percent In """" ~ '"' \\ °' ., I 141 -"' -"•1~ A • 11'--"' .. v.-"' "' t~ November, the government. 11ld t.o-i::W.~ .. '!~ 11111 :~ e:.:: l:~r, ~ '4_:1il Ht(r,• ec,,.: ~ ,~,\t i 1 ., -"'4 ~ ~ di)'. ffl~ ~.i pt1 ·~.i ~~::1 .,.;~ i;1,J; ~ f~ = ::&-~• :1-l~ trl·1 ·:,~·1··: ~ ~~~re£;~:1i~r~i t M... II -" a , .. i:: fft.:. ~ Htl"'j' 'l t 11 ~h = ~ '°tit 1 • : "''JI,( 1 ~ " .... _ ..... m--""-ot •13 6 bUUon. "''" • -" ~Pf•PS . i..n ~ i.tmceo 'J '" =•II •'.l w rl;of •• •~· .,..., .. _ V'llT-• Mondly, December 18 1978 8 "' ' DAILY PILOT tJ. Credit Counselors Service Assists Those in Debt By SYLVIA PORTER l ••l In• lll•l<l-l How much debt can a borrower safely handle? Many traditional rules of thumb about what con·. sumers can afford have been mllde obsolete by Inflation. More flel\ble credit terms have resulted In stretched-out loan 1p8118 and reduced monthly payments. Widespread use of credit and bimk cards makes it tough to k~p track. AS A BF.SULT. SUCH agencies as the community· sponsored, non·pront Consumer Credit Counseling Service. a re reporting that mounting numbers or consumers need help, both in avoiding debt troubles and in getting free o! them . There are 200 offices in the United States; tbey provide confidential budget counseling and debt management help. Thdit.lonally. the service's act1v1ties speed up when the economy slows down, but this year most or its offi ces are extremely busy. lo Jllinois. client~ must wait for as long as a month before getting an appointment. ··w e are seein g more and more serious cases of individual con· Money's Worth sumer indebtedness.·' says Byron Rei mus of the Service's New York office. "Consumers are coming to us at the last minute -when mortgage payments are five months over· due and when legal or colleetion action has already been taken on theifaccounts. "EVICTION NOTICES AND wage garnishments are much more frequent. as well. Our counterparts across tbe nation are seelng the same thing " .. Families in a jam don't want to deal with their money problems." adds Gerard A. Loreai., i.ervice presi - dent. "They feel they're not trained to handle them. They feel guilty that they have never had a bud~et before. They regard facing up to their financial position as an un· pleasant task and they procrastinate." Who are these families? Jn the greater New York area. a profile would show a family of four. with th~ husband, probably in his mid-30s. earning $13.600 a y¢ar. · The family would be committed to repay $7,600 in debts to nine creditors and. on a monthly basis, they would have obligated themselves to pay out $360 more than they earn. THE PROFILE FAMILY RAS begun to take cash ad· :vances on credit cards to pay for such necessities as food. rent and utilities. and has started to juggle bills. paying off one this month, delaying another until next month. As a general rule, most families should not spend more than 10 percent of their monthly take·home pay to re- pay debts. excluding the mortgage If credit repayments hit 20 percent, there's trouble. Many overextended fam1he~ get consohdahon loans. The debtor 1s left with a single, usually smaller month!} payment over a longer period of time . ·•Bur TIIE HELP CONSOLIDATION loans g ive con s umers is illusory," Lareau says. "Once consumers have them, they feel free lo begin s pending all over again. Once you take out such a loan. it invariably leads to a second or even third re-consolidation loan. Don't ever get one ." he urges. He offers holtday advice to anyooe who might. be tempted to overs~nd : ·,,... .. I. Keep soft eopies of charge account receipts '· 2. Look at the receipts before shopping to get an idea" of how much is already owed. I 3. Don't m ake Christmas Joyful at the expense of : January, February and March. Econilmists Yiew 1979 in Bwiness By JOANNE REYNOLD Of tM O•llY l!JIM Stell "Wells Fargo is sllll bullish about 1979 ... declared Johp I Kelter er, senior vice president of the bank's real estate ln f dustries group, "tho ugh we've had to diminish our 1 estimates of the size of the bull •· ~ Kelterer's. quip eould have been t he keynote for 1 Friday's conference of the International Council of Shopping 1 Centers. a group of commercial developers which met Ill J NewportBeacb. SIX ECONOMISTS AND BANKERS delivered predk tions about the 1979 economy in a panel chaired by Ranney; Dr aper or Divers1f1ed S hopping Centers. , Jn addition to Kelterer. the panelists included Robert, Parry. vice president and chjef economist of Secunty Pacific Bank: George Oraziadio. vice chalirman and pres1-, dent of Imperial Bank . Dennis Fitzpatrick. pres ident. Beverly Hills Federal Savings. John Wulsh. western re..i gional director. Aetna Mortgage Loan Department, an~ Bob Camptwll. a mortgage loan broker. Although there were variations In the dcgre<'S of the predictions. the six panelists agreed on a few points , The climbinR interest rates will continue Into at lea:.J the first quarter of 1979. but should be declining by lh' second half of the year. / -THOSE RATES COMBINED WITH federal monetary policies aimed at sbonng up the dollar abronc1 will produce a recession. -The recession will have a greater Impact on the re tail market than on the development businesss. The recession will not approach the seventy of the 1973·74 r«esslon because all major lendina institutions will continue to have plenty of cash for loans. Draper concluded the session by delivering some wnt t en forecasts he hnd his panelists prepare RE ASKED E ACH OF ntEM to predict wh•t the prime rate would be on July l , 1979 und on Jan. l, 1980. He also asked them to predict the tnter est rates for com mer clal loans. There results, he said. covered a wide range· ·"': On July t. 1979, the prime wiJI range between 9.5 aod 12.5 perCf'nt.. accordln& to the experts. with the median be mg al 11 .5. On the followlna J an. 1. the prime will range between rune and 10 percent. On July 1, lt79, the comrnerclal loan rate will range between 9.S and 10., percebt and the predicUon~ had It dropping to a ranae of 9 to 10 percent by the foUowtng January. WJULE THE EXPERTS LAUGIJED at them5elvea as &.hon predlcUOM were read , their messaaes ot cautJou~ op Um lam heel not been loet on the audience The banlters and ltnden ur1ect the audience of mort than IOO bullDeamen to COftlldtr a van t,y of lnnoV1Uve met.bods offtnaM~ft \betr Pf'Oledl. Wallb In urtai llOP-&IP Onanclna for ea•erly ln lhe yea~ to walt out the Lenee ratedlmb 111mmed It up: "The leodlna LutJtu.t:looa, au.cb u oun, expect an In· creased cull now from our conaum..-buslne.aec. B\.lt we reco1n.l! that where you (lbOp cemer developen) are cctn· cernecUbere ve few quaHtJ 6DPOttMDIUffl •••ll•b&ewra (a. teNtt "-•1~10perctllL •• t • ! t ill • .. • .• • t DAILY !LOT Monday. D.c:a.mt>er 11. te1e Telerision TONIG-HT'S LATEST LISTINGS ' ,,. 1'\I> \ \ CvtNNO HO I. HIW8 ONCI Tod* Cf not lo d4t ..- .. a Il l d.-w lilt •Ir• ~·t • Hf\. fOOlaM.1. ,..._ I ogi.nd fialt1QI• 111 MWlll ~• G ~ M Md I~ 911 •Id MC> t-""'II A ""09 ·~°"'~"-"' tr11no 1 b1111i1r • '-Mild • tl4I IMOY 8UNC"4 MlllAI If• 10 cuno IN ot-l)fotlMm Ill fli9 llOINI ':!t_ lf\ltilllno • PIY ~ • -~°'MH ''""'°"°° All.. a bel1' rOOOlry A .,. -· .. 11111 OMIO* wNn WW I~ OM Of the _ WI_ WI me Cl-• ~IAIY 1141 ll•o.m end Lll'lll ...,,II lc>t Ille l'ue ~ of cnt111m•1 IRI 0 l.m\.I HOUl&OH THl "AAIM r ... , .. ~ an Nl11t11t1111 lttend to help wtlltll -IY 11111 IOl*Y l!Outl '* fllh9r .. llWIY 8 MOYll * * * ' lllllt Of Tiii Flllld" I I l l 81d1)ty Poillt•, LWI liklll A IOtf'Mt 0 I ·l~h· I r •l(llfllh To • group of l UIOj)Mll OUl'll wtllMI help- HIQ llMlln build I GlluUll (2 hl1 I G MOYtE * I '·• ' <11ient Nigl!!. Lon.- ly Ntglll ' C tff91 Lloyd B<lc:IQea. Snwar, Joli. A .,..., of ,,, .. lQ9', 1)11(1 .,... ,.. oeoC>lt .. • 1-.ih of tn. -llOWW'(I MCfl Of'* '°' 1 br141f llrne (2 hf• l • HUHAW ~II T--ErnHt f ()rd JOOy Ml ... • MOVIE TUBE TOPPERS ABC (7 ) 6:00 -Monday Night Fool· b a 11. A Khowdo wn b_e lw u n two American Conference East powers, the New England P atriots and the Miami OolphlM. , KHJ <9> 8:00 -"Silent Night. u:me· ly Night." Lloyd Bridges and Shlrter Jones star as two strangers thrown inti· ma tcly together on Christmas Eve in this 1969 movie dra m a . NBC (4) 9:00 -"The Deerslayer." J ames Fenimore Coope r 's classic story 1s presented as a new TV movie with teve Forest and Ned Romero. *I "The law" 11117•1 wlOoW whO It frightened by 111 ffna09 of '* rec;.t111ty doOmld hutband GIMI llOtl JOM D•~· IOI\ ~ .. ~ Howlfl.I • Oel>Oy Boofll St111 KW'!1 8 TWlt.IOHT ZOHI TlleMull• • MOVtl ••• ''TM l ()flQ. l()llQ Ttlllltt" I tllMI Lucille IUlll, Dwe1 A~ A p.tllt of ~·~•hlllfl· OUI honlymOOn tn f lt\t ... ton trllllet, 12 h•t I I THE OOHO IHOW O«TIMAAT 11. l)INUlll Vtlll to Ille PDfk !Ufl'l lnlO 1 lttll .. tltOll • CAPTIONEO A.IC HEWS 9 MOW! e • o;, "The Movie M"'tr" f t967) Rod Stelgcl<. Rol>ltt C"'CI All llQlno protluc.f ,,.,. to mlHlt.ifl GOfllfol of 11 ltlCllllOtlll fHm c.ompany 12 11<1 I ~RNING 12!00 8 TWILIGHT ZONE Owlt ...... °""' tile ()lyn'CI"-_...., Of '°"' Gold ~ ..... -----* *', ACI 0oe 11116:11 CleGtQe Hamilton. JHQn floblt01 1 Ile lute of 1111- ', Jlldd HlllCfl. JOf>f> 9eQI '\ --.utlOl\ll homlclOe t•Mll .. ntl th• 1>1ckroom m~ behind the ~ ... deP'Clld 12 10-.301 • HEWS I AMENCAH SHOAT STOAV A pilrlO. QNttn u I blfth d!ly pr-I. hll I l ltl flOI pow« CY« ttioM wno u .. \, -nowJofJ Mllt "'• 1>10-100 •••ono IOI I J<tw!MI bOy "") t-30 l'J (() 0Ne DAY AT A ., .-J G 'AMel.Y ~ l:lrl~ At11u11~1t hi ........ CJ) O.NIWI 1-30 . I LOW UJCY A<liy end the MlrtlM ... the Olfl!tll C"41t11Cl4111 In u..cy·111r11 ~ <'hurhe. Brown chipi, away at hJs self trnµost'<i lw:ik or rinding the rea l m~an ing or Chr1 s tmas an the animated i,pec1al ··A Ch&:rlae Brown Christmas" tomght at 8 on ens. Channel 2. fD l'i) EVlHIHO AT SYMPHONY Fln&I Al-" by Olvld Del T redlcl. "Ancient Alfa Ano Oaf'OM. Su1t11 No 2" by Ott«lno Rnpignl UO l'J (I) 'TWAS THE HGn'IUOAE CHRISTMAS TIME 8••1>••• • ,,.... ·101> bee-I fuH·llmO l)fob· ~ wt*1 llWI doltn·' lllil Ille tMponeiblllly lllel goet Wllhtl 0 HICMOVll! I MtCHAE. JAOKaON PA()Jf;CT.UHIVEASI "l h t Atltonom•• 1 hlgfl ...... tonfflflltlel tvtl belate the u S 11 to tust the 6-1 bOmbe< , T:OOIUn•=ms • SAHFOAO ANO &ON &.amonl'I unc!le ti• 11'1(1 Ml-him $7,000 1f ht h1I t111t one ,equ1r...,..., ..CHEWS NEWl YWED GAME (() JOKER'S WM.O soc MtUJON DOU.All • MACHU. I l.EHAEA AEPORT ;. MAN s·-~~ """"'" Ill lmpOftent E.Mt Getman MMnlltl IMv9I I a INTAOOUCING INCX.OOY "Aloml And Molewlol" 7:30 e DllCO MAOC Claaaaf!f Lbl lags 8 KNXT (CBS) Los Angeles e KN8C (NBC) Los Angelos I KT~ (Ind ) Los Angeles KABC-TV (ABC) Los Angel as (I) KFMS (CBS) San 01e90 G KKJ-TV (Ind ) Los Angele$ Q'I KCST (ABC) San 01090 e ICTIV (Ind) Los Angeles e KCOP·TV(lnd) Los Angeles • KCET· TV (PBS) Los Angeles 81> KOCE·TV !PBS) Huntington 8'Jac.h Shakespeare {Tries Radio • I ByPETERJ.BOYE& LOS ANGELES CAP> -NaUonal Public a Radio's Shakespeare Festival Is a fun W11r1))~· · spend an evening. Unless. of coune. you've got some clean socks that need to be rolled. With all that good TV silliness available lo sedate the work-wearv mind, rad.lo Shakespeare seems a bit n gorous. I mean, why listen lo forsooth noise when you can see Laverne and Shirley'! But 1.ounds! The good folk al NPR promise light entertainment, even fun and some chuckles. with their two-hour, four-part "Shakespeare -a Portrait in Sound." It's now in production and , scheduled for airing on NPR stations early next year OF COURSE, "SHAKESPEARE can be fun 1s a phrase not to be completely trusted. It's often uttered by craggy.faced literature professors just before they assign the tragedies and "Troilus and Cressida" for next Tuesday. But there ls re ason to trust Robert MonUegeJ, executive producer for the "Portrait In Sound" project. when he sn s, ·•w e want to be Light enter· talnment with this project, not ju.st get some a c ade mic t o glvc a lecture on Willi am !Shakespeare.·· F or one thing. th e portraits are n ot Shakespearian readings but little r ad.Jo drama. that sw-rnlse what Shakespeare's Ufe must have l>een like from childhood to the easy Ille of retired poet. MODERN AMERICAN Man, played by Arthur Hill. is taken on a time· journey to Olde England in search of the true WHliam Shakespeare. Hill eoes fjrst to Stratford, where Shakespeare spent bis youth, then to London and the Court of Queen Elizabeth, where Shakespeare quickly learned to be a political creature. "It's the IUe a nd times of Willi am Shakes peare," Montlegel says, "and what we don't know aboul him we conjecture. It's neahing him out l.n a colorful way.•• Ounte Petit &•own .inti I hi Tr GmmjH, 0 l(H8C 8P!CW. ·Mommy Wtto?" Kelly l lflO& O•plOt .. the ptOb- leme laoed by working mothiir• I DA TINO GAME TIC TAO DOUGH AOAM-12 MllloV end ~ C094I won Ille llclc of holidlV lj)lfll Oii ''*' tOUf of dutv fll) H TONIOHT "Tho PotlUCI Of Educl· 1100" l)f Obet Ille QUMllon "WhV do ... '"*' publ< e<lllClllOn , .. m JUUA CHll8 AHO COMPAHY · lnl0tmlll ()lnnef ' (I) S 100.000 NAME THAT TUNE 1:00 8 (l) CHARLIE 8..0Wti, CHRISTMAS WhllO motif of ll'lfl P9'10UI& I oeno t>uey 1111mwv .. w11h the commetcNll •111>41C'• ot I Ille YUNl!lde -.0.l, C,,.,. ./ '//. -~ A •unoty c.loctomeket, a family ot mlee and S11t1t1 IOln IOQ81"4lf to l<ld !IOI•· day c~ to the C11t11tmu MllOl'I (R) t:45 0 ®J TO 8E AHHOUHCED t:OO 8 (() M•A•&•H F1t!Mlr Muie.try WfllOS a l)f'l-Chrlltmu let11tt ttome detelllng tlHI genet 11 f 891. Ing of depreMiOl'I II 1119 4077111 •• llll llOlldty .... llO'I IPC)rO~ 0 MOVIE • • • "White Ctwtstmu" ( 11154) Bing C<Olby, o.My Kaye A comic ~­ lakl en entertllHW'llll'll Jot1 in Ve,.,nont 10 help • 10<· mer 09'*11. wtlo IS In datl· Olf of loelng 1111 Inn 12 h••I • MERV GM'FIH 0UMll Nini Bllnchltd. 8 11b1•1 C1rter1. M•ll COfllna. C'-vf l!eg9, JOhn MtQurtay (R) [;MOVIE SulJstitute Mother "Th" Oeflflleyet" (Pr11m- ..,,e) Steve F0t1Mt, N4ld Rometo Jiwnet Fen+rnor1 COO(>et't CIHalc novfll al>Oul en lndltn end h•• white blood l>•Olhfl•'• Miieti for • ,kldnepped ;1~1tOld "Tiie Ore•t Che•ub Knn-r Strike" 11'1 the 0 11111 Deo<ea.ion and a youno 0111 on ,.., '''" lob ha• ..... '"" 1()\19, with Ill e11ne11 r1t1lc1I l1llow worllet IRJ mOMAT PEAFOAMAHCE8 "Mourning 8econ>fls (lee· lrl A Tute Of M11tdel . Aflflf Err• Mannon 1Ytt1ts a '-1 1ttd, cnn.une pe>tsone llvn (Pert 2 OI 5) 10:00 l'J (I) LOU OAANT HONI Wl'llM a oont1o...r- 1lal •l«y wtilell ..... ()If tirewort. 1 In 1111 city •oom UG HEW8 q) HIGHT OAUERY Ptyof\IC lt1VMl1Qa!Ot Ollty COl!lnt '' ~ICI to netp tt Larry Davis, shown pf'eparing dinner ror his children. 1s a mong the subjt.:.cls on a KNBC documentary, "Mommy Who?" about the pr ht of the working mother. It airs tonight at 7:30 on Ch annel 4, rrated by Kelly Lange. Cavett Gets 'Word' 'NEW YORK (AP > -Several months ago, Dick Cavett and four guests spent a lively hour conaider- i n g ~be fu t ure of the Englis h language. treatme nt or th e s ubject ... Porterfield says or ttie "Wordwook" series, "but It hits mo!St of the Points that were interesting to us. ''Tiie 81111 Hotel" by Sle- Pllllft Ctll'e An lllHtn 1tt1tvet 1n •~-·Iron· t1et town eiu>eetlng to ftnd '"-Wild W•I Ultlfnatlly. hf! tat-end wons n.s owndeath ~I 1t 00100CIJIII NEWS UAASCLUB MOVIE • .... "Ttlnlty IS son My N&tne" f tll75) 8uO Sc>en· oer. f flff-. Htll. lwo brotllef1. petty tulllen. 11ndure m 1ah1p1 11nt1 04Wlfl1Ufn .. llley tty 10 r¢1 wrongs (2 hrs I 8) ll4E 000 OOUPl.E 01c1• 1nd Felllr ire anoctted to INfn 11111 a ccwnpullt dating Mtvtce ,... mltehld Oecar With OIOlla. F_.,,., .. -wtte. Cl> FERNWOOO 2MQtfT G~I•: Hugll Stoeum. oPet• 1111 Donny Lou S1vege, Mir..,_ Co• 9 OICK CAVETT • How Legit Imel• •• 8lactc Engli.11?" Gueets. GelwYa Smltri.man, J-Sledd. J L Olllattl, JOhn Simon (Pan t of 21 11.30 • (I) AOCKFOftD Fll.£8 AoctltorO does a flVOt lat .. '°'"* flancee and winds up on lhe middle of a blllle be._ Ille polic. 8110 Ille undefworlO 0 TOMOHT '"' 10 11 • Ai.fMO HITCHCOCK Pft(.8£NT8 A bu_.,,,111 1111 MC· ond lhOuglll• l bout • hltchhrk11 •lie• hi I llrNd'f pieltld """ up -· HONfYMOOHlR8 . Rllpn'a ldlllee to Ed on now 10 ~' 1 l)fomotlOfl '**fl'"· !Mvlng Ed with· oat a )ob 12:308 AOUEA IUPEASTAA8 • ALFAE:D HflCHOOCt< PM8ENTI A min IS robbed by lllfM hllChllllllrl I nd Htkl ·~ • MOVIE • • "Joh11ny S toor Pigeon" ( 19•111 Ho..,tl Ovlf. Shelley Wlnltwl A ltlllUty agent "" • ganollllt flfll ~ he Wiii llld lllm IO 1111 undltwOfld oonne<:llOnl Cl Iv ,30,...,, 1 12-A08 (I) cea LATE MOYIE * * * "Tile Lui TNN! I s-Pltlt" ( t9Stl Eltll· bet II T aytot, Ven JOflnllOn Tiit .. ""*~ rlturnlnQ to P1rta ~ the flral ltme lllnC"Al WOtld Wit I fond bll• tflt,_. and d11•Hut10t1· men•~• 1:00 0 TOMOAAOW <>--11 Ed anti l0t•- W8'11t\, ""'° IOp 1-Ch• KOCE Offers Yule Special An onginaJ tolevision specjltl. "Slm,ele Gift.I;: Six EplM>de11 16" Ofristmas:• aJrs TUeSday at 8 p.m . on k OCE·W.Cltannel 50. • There will be repeal broadcasts on Thursd ay at 2 p.m. and Friday at 10 a.m. Award.winning cartoonist and graphic de· signer R.O. Blechman has brought together a group of America'-s~ost talented"-a:nd acclaimed animators and artists to create originaJ maten al and adapt existing literary works which relate to Christmas. CAPTURING THE RICHNESS. JOY a nd sometimes bittersweet qualities of the season "Simple Gifts" consists of an overture and six serf· -contained segments, each about a holiday gin or one sort or another. . "The Christmas Boy" finds a shoeless. ragged watf transformed into a richly gfowing Christmas t ree -Illustrating the gift ~giving oneself for the sake of others. "The Great Frost ... a sparkling and •harming episode from Virginia Woolf's "Orlando." 1s the love story of a sample young nobleman and a mysterious Russian princess whose boat is ice· bound on the frozen Thames River. IN ••A MEMORY OF Christmas," a sen es of dramatic 1)hoC.Oiraplii iflu.strale/laywnght Moss Hart's a chingTy i mpove rlsbe childhood re· miniscence. "My Christmas" by Teddy~evelt. is an en· try from the young Theodore Roosevelt's diary on his eleventh Christmas, and in contrast lo the pov· erty of Moss Hart's childhood. describes a day filled with love and gifts. "Decembe r 25th. 1914 ," te lls of a n ex· lraordlnary, sbort·lived truce which took place on a Christmas day during World War I. "Toonerville Trolley" brings back to life the well-loved trolley car and Toonervillc folk11 creat· ed by the late FontaJne Fox. Finally. "No Room at Ute.Inn" Is an arumated re·lelllnaofthetradittonal Chrfs(mas story. ttt In l)tVCll.c pMnomena. I LOW IXP£ATS t·30 0 HEWS 21>0 Nf:WI O«TIMAl't Thi CllM!f ,,_ to o-t eotl'· P'lmGOUfY COYef~ IOI' OOHTAOL 111 • maoazine et I IC.II 2:301 NEWS 2:4t NEWS '· t t MOVIE * • " Yt "TllO Ho«llum Prfnt" ( tl>6 t) 0on MUHllY. Cl1101 WOOO A p.iett 11101 10 llelp c;1lm l1111t by t>w:omtno • part 0 1 t'*' . WO<ld (2 hf• • !. min I TU#•day•• Doyfl.af! /tfo.,le• AFTERNOON 12!00 G •• 'Ir "Weekend With Fet~" 111152) V1" Heflin, P11t1~l1 Nfl&I A widow and • w1c:1-decide 10 oe• m1mec:t. 1nd eventu•"v get tlltm chlld1&11'1 coo9MI I 1 hr., 30 min I • •" • "Ship Of Foolt " (Patt 21 ( 1965) Vivien L900n, Simone Sign0tet. A mo111y HIOrtrnMI of pn- "41R04l' I 918 !Of cad Io •ha<e dlMll quarter• wtwle 1r.1wllng to Bt--l\lvetl I 1 11t , 50 '"'"I 3.00 OJ) • * fl "Oe1our To N()Wllere·· I 19711 George Pep perd. C11r111111e 8elfo•tl An lnaurance •nVH ll{latOf flnd8 bOlh POllCI elld b u tllllSS HW~I Ill fOUt mu,. • tl9ta ano .,, ll'morld lnick r OOt>ery I t hr • JO min I ,:30 0 * * •1, "l lle FOfbin Pro1ec.1· ( tll61l) Etlt. 8tHdllft. SuHn Clatk ComputM P'OQ•amme•• d•K.Over theo• aupremu • Com()Ul9' 1111 llnkOO up w1tll •II Sov>tll lwwl Ind 10:. plet\rnng I 0 C>pef Dll lt\de- polldetltly ( t hr .. 30 min 1 -11,. ........... Bark°" 'flO• Ne ws cas te r Ha rr.)' Reasoner returned to his old snow. '!60 Mrnutes. • • S unday night after giving up th e CBS p o s t t o a nchor ABC's even· ing news fo r ei~ht years. The voice of Shaltespear~ls heard only ln r e· citala of some sonnela and a few key monologues from his plays ; the real la back.at.age stuff -a pro- mising notlon. ¥•Ybe we'll find out youn1 WUUe really wrote plays to impress the Avon lady as s he p111sed through Stratford. "We wanted to get away from that kind of drearily professorial ronnat and make the point that language Isn't somet.hinf, that has to be left to the llnguJsl8, ' Cavett's producer, Christopher Porterfield, says. "After~ two previous shows. the segment of ·the language commuruty we he ard from most was the one we call 'the aludent's ri&hl to his own language' group." the producer saya. "They don't believe schooa. sbould be ----------=-------------------..:.. "WHAT YOU'U. LEARN is a hell of a lot of what Elizabethan Ufe wae Uke," MonUe1el aaya. • • ''The background. the milieu that Shakespeare Uved ln -thlnga Uke tbe pox and how ll deformed people." The pox? Light entertainment? Well, re- tpember, th1a la NPR and ~hakeapeare. The "PortraJts" aerlet la dealened to comcide with the pubUc TV'• prOducUOOI ol Shakespeare's .. 1)lay1 early next year. To play the characters ln l Shakespeare's Ute, Public Radio bu enllat.ed the acuni 1killa ot Hill, Charles Nelton Reilly, Joan Hackett. Marian Mercer, Pet.or Donat and othen "ho don't need the money. "WE AT NPR DEPEND on. It ,tremendout amount ol 1ood will," Montte1e1 • ., •. -... _ ~~' '"" l'I fl't'IN(, e.TI~ - t..•(714)M-271l ............ Mflt,.,.. (7J4) '21·4070 . ,.. ..... ........ (714) "3·1806 .... "So we got Ed Ne wman, John Simon, John Denneth Galbraith and Agnes DeMllle to talk with Di ck about where language Is going, and the reaction wa s immediate and favorable," he says. FROM THAT IO·MINVTE d is· CUHIOP -actually, two hall·hour TV programs -wu born "Wordwedc, .. a five.part look at the state of the lan1ua1e. The .ertes or half-hour P."°' arams -"The Dick Cavett Show ' - will be broadcast tonhrht througti Friday at 11 p.m . on KCET. channel 28. "It's still far from an exhaustive preoccupied with correctne111 In grammar and so on. rather that com· munlcaUOn comes first." BOTH THE SUBJ ECT, and the format were particularly appealJng lo Cavett, Porterfield says . ··From M practicli.i standpoint, M half-hour Isn't much time. and Dick often feels squeezed' by that UmlU.· lion. And there's really no rea.ll\On why a single show can't be divided Into three or four-or five parta . "In addition to that, lanf'uaae le one of his 1tn.a." Porterfield aaya. "He hu a hetght.ened sense or It u an Instrument for communication at many different levels." ........ ....,.... C.11MN11t41 WG&U ., '", .. ,., .... If ............. .. ..,., ,, (1141 ,,, Mt ., ..... ...,., .. °' 111•1 a 11111 CHRISTMAS SHOPPER'S LA-Z-BOY SALE , ) l I .. COMICS I CROSSWORD MARMADUKE by Brtd Anderson "She means well, Marmaduke. ' Pretend you like it I " SUPERHEROES SHOE MOON MULLINS FUNKY WINKERBEAN MISS ~EaCH r('qj.;;(? . ¥~ by Pasko, Tuska & Colletta AFTER 5AM ORl\IER AC.C~£5 HIM OF INTERE.5T 114 ANOTHER WOMAH, HUNTER M~GAVIN FOLLOW$ HIM INTO THE ,AIU<ING LOT! &El!EVE NIE, 5AM ... I HAVE HO IHTERE!71' IH AAV WOMAN, OTHER TAAN /llV WI Ff! AUNT FRITZI, FROM NOW ON WE LL EN.JOY OUR FOOD MORE. M""" ~ ~--· I I~ .. ... ' c;;J AGATHA CRUMM THE ~INTER WAKr6 TO KNOW WH'-T '1b(J WAHT TO SAY Ot-1 YOUR CHRl~TMAS CARO, MS. CRUMM. we ST'RAIGHi"E: N OLJ'I C ROOKf;P STARe;S MOTLEY'S CREW t DUNNO WH6M l'U. 6~ HOMe.~L.. ... WIS'R&: HAVIM' A C~IS'f'MA5 P>.'1Y 1'0P.AY A"f WOIZ K ... Mondly. 0.0.mber 18. 1978 by Tom Batluk PEANUTS by' Mell c - UM·"" 006T l!>AY- l1M WRITIN6 A SfDRI( FOR SCHOOL " w 1SH ING,~ A.MER~ ~Rl5TMA6··· DAil Y PILOT •7 by Charin M. SCh(lt1 1rs ALL ABOO'T SANTA CLAUS AMP I HIS RAIN 6EAll. by Bill Hoest -. I ) on :he Uy .he 7p· TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE in- s a d" SOCllirY FORT1-IE PR&VE/tJTIO>J QI: cATAS~ -it>A't/tA~/ ~ by Harold Le Doux AC~OSS 48 Grollo 1 O•t'~~ ~ Na1lhead S State ~1 lsotate<l 10 Rota1c 52 01sks \0 Roman goo ~Learns 2 1~ Tankei words 16 Roman SS Ad1us1ed w11ter 61 Pos111>'9 11 f.oree 62 Soon 18 llauns 6l Ma•1m 20 Sermonizes 64 Existence 22 On lhe Lahn groun<J· 6S Female an1- Ba11et mal 13 Wooed 66 Observed g4 01minur1ve 67 Incline sutht OOWN 15 P11 1 Pant 28 Trcxhes 2 Mushm 32 F11eplace orrncc pan J was borne 3J Furniture 4 BO<ly part 1lems S - -pearl 35 Memento 8 Vent11a1ed la Russian 7 Sr Pterre name and 38 The end MtQuelOn .a Trick 8 Naff Educ. 41 Make me<ry Assn '3 Renovate 9 Synthetic 45 German ar1i-. 10 Shaded Cle 11 Two ~Happens be· 12 Roman road lore 13 5tlou1 UNITED FMture Syndicate Stturdey'a Puz.lie 8ol¥ed 19Say 21 Hints 24 Ink ingred- ient 25 Biro sound 26 Man'& name 27 Over 18 Paths 29 Flow JO Kind ol <I own 31 COnlempt ~Discharged 37 Sard, e.g.: 2 words 39 Suppofted 42 Become lardy 44 ROd 47 01 an Italian region ~Lme< 51 Sut>1ect 5Z Bat>y car- nage 53 USSR rl'4er 5' Tartness S5 Le¥el 56 Cockney's 'orge 57-Mu'Of ~ Numerteal suffix 80 June words is nal a ll re· m- 1 a ind tho in ns. ng yo;, on- . a aer ,ke ,___., - ( -... B8 DAILY PILOT Mond•Y. Oecem1>e1 ,;;9-;,;;;;,,:-----------------------------=------==, -£NTE:RTA1NM1!NT7116P M~u::>o---..a.:-- **' M '"°""' $1'-«TIO W .. ~-..._ ¥CMJ IAlllOL CINUCA ITAOUIM OllVl·IN CotU Mt~ !>otO r•u Clr•"Ot UV It 70 CIM[OOMl UA C'"fMA Or•no• bl4 ~!>~ w 111\oM f,tl)I 893 0'..AL 'OM°"""' ''SOYS FROM BRAZIL" (Al "MAGIC"<R> "UP IN SMOKE" CR> "THE GROOVE TUBE" "HALLOWEEN" (R) fUl•ll• ... ., SlldhtM TOPLP1 1. "S2nd Street" Billy Joel <Colum· bla) 2. "A Wild And Crazy Guy" Steve Martin (Warner Bros.) 3. "Greatest Hit.a, Vol. II" Btrbra Streisand <Columbia) 4. "C'Est Chic'' Chic--(AUanticJ 5 ... ·oreue'Soundtrack" <RSO>' EABY U STENING l. "Time Pas .. aes" Al Stewart <Arista> 2. "My Ufc" Billy Joel (Columbha> l . "Ooh Baby Buby" Llndll Ronstadt (AJylum > 4. "Too Much Heaven" Bee Gees <RSO> 5. "Our Love, Don'l Throw It Away" Andy Olbb m S<)) SOUL SINGLE 1 "Le Preak" Chic <Allantl(> 2 "Got To Bt> Reul" Cheryl Lynn <Columbia) 3. "September" Earth, Wind & Fire <Columbia> ..... ''l'm Every Woman" Choku Kahn (Warner Oros > s. "LOVO l)on't. Live H t-rt· Anymore" Rote Jtoyco (Whltrleld> COUNTRY RINGLf;B 1. "The Cambt.r" Kenny Roa<>n (United Artist.I> 2 "Ouraer" ond Fries" Charley Pride (RCA> 3. "All Of Mc" Wiiiie Nelson (Columblo) 4. '"fulsu Time" 'D,on Williams CABC> 5. "Don't You Think This OuUaw Bil's Done Got Out OC Hand·Glrl I Can Tell" Waylon Jennings CRCA> a MASJ&ftlEa ol AHIMAJIOH ••• , a l«MST ol FUN and AOVENJUaE Sharhutt LOS ANGELES <AP> -Jay Sharbutt, who' has written The As . 1oclated Press' daily radlo·televlsion c(>lumn for the past six years, has been named to suc- ceed retiring William Glover as AP's drama critic Sharbutl. who was baaed In Los Angeles, will relocate 1n New York and began his new assignment in January SUCCEED I NG Sharbutt as AP's Radio· TV columrust 1s Peter J . Boyer . who had been writing the AP 's weekend music column from Loe Angeles for the pa~J two years. Yardena Arar of the Los Angeles burtau will take over the Music Makers col- umn. Sharbutt. 38. was born In New York City and at- tended Fordham University. He Joined the AP in Richmond, Va .. in 1966. and has worked in AP bureaus in New York Washington DC., and Saigon. "'MAGIC .. (R) "CORVETTE SUMMER" "MAGIC" CR) "CORVETTE SUMMER" NA NAL LAMPOON'S ANIMAL HOUSE "SLAP SHOT" fR l "UP IN SMOKE" "EASY RIDER" (r) ~ n1---~:c~u.­ .. =I LOO«M.::T::w.~ am~~ I =:rr.f.:::~~ cSlll,,;~J =-~r'°:r" ~-·---" ftllNlll ......... ALL Olt11.1£·1HS O~H 6:.lOP~~ Y Cllll• U11der t2 ~, .. Unleu • KkMi. Pl1wewN Sell or trade your old aids fat.with a new Skiing classlfled ad In the Dally UA.Clly~ e-~ ll-0. ... ..,_ c-·~ , __ Y....,~lfl ---1- ~· .... ... ,.. ~"' Piiot. 642-5678_ Santa's Real bee for yoursell at Huntmotcn Center NOW PLAYING OWAIDl•WPGaT•1 Newp«t Beach 644·0760 -=--Ortngt 634·2553 . ~n THEATRES-ORANGE CO SENIOR OTIZENS S2.00 SO COAST PLAZA "UP IH SMOtcl" Ill SO. COAST PLAZA Mii"""' " ~n 11 nu Hlllll ...... cntUl CA...cl ....... HOUVllt'S STOllY" CNI ..... ,_.~_, . .. ~.,,. ,..,_ T .... , ... a..M w•....,_ ,,..,, '",,...,az a-.·•-DAILY PILOT Stuart Anderson's GIFI'. CEKl1CATES The ideal gift for everyone~ AE. VISA, MHltrcher~ crf!dlc card• aa: .. d. Do your holiday ehopplng In oar place. It's easy. Ju~ add your Gift Certificate needs to your lunch or dinner food check. Available In all dl!nomlnatlo"". Valid Tn any of our fifty-four locations throughout the West. l The gift for all season• ••• and all reasott•f Good at all Stuart Anderson's Restaurants. Al8eka Founi.tn V""1y kMttO ~n BIHl!ln MdVlftoe Gafden OtoYt BoiM O..yti10n Ever1n Ariaofte PleesantHell lowe ~u:::n FllderllWly Sacflmtnle> P1tc0 ~INN' S8n~NH 0.•Moll'll• Mllweuk18 Renton ~-ChVI• 11" Me!M~Aoao Salem Spok8ne E Clmllbeck Rd. El~ FllurOflve w .. hlnftOn Taoome: ~ l<e Y Vii. ... ., ... ~ Te!TIPI S.111111 keon $pof11NIM Omehe AUrot1N v.noouver ==o NIVHa Elliott W W118w.tll c•omi. Rlf'4) ~. YllUma ..... llleld SerlllMe Downtown •rtti.t\~ ~~ Sanl8Mena NewMe•loo CfOM«)llCll '\llnooUYer 84oc;kton Muquet~ ~ RidllnonO f/lluaJ BT. .. OJIE A•8TAUAANTa @ FOUNTAIN VALLEY, SANTA ANA, GARDEN GROVE .. • • : ,...,, ,., .... __,,cf .. , ... cntJllnif=:.I ~~~=.u.(a) •• l,;=J :=:~=: .. ..-11C-1&.-H•IWMIH&J CMIKMI~ .. "Ur IH SMOKI'" Ill '"" "OYTUGIOUSH ,.,._. "COMIS A HOISBIAM'' INI ,', ·' '.I .-:3-.J11 I I •,f '; ~j~ft """' "COMA" trGI llCM.UO ttlYl'VIS "llG AXH P\Alt .,.. "HOUSE CALl.S" IOT~ MWI 2 CNt ""' nNTOllUfll n»1 O'NIAl • CAMllCI .....,. ..... 4"9Al. c.....a ..... OLMl'1 .,., CMt ... n:: .. ,., --""" IMY!la ... ...... IOI• ICIDIMl111t .... _ _., ___ _ - WALT OllMtY S "PINOCCHIO" (G) l)fu•f'•.tV'•tt• ''ll4E SMALL ONE" DAILY 1:05, 3:20. s:as. 7:IO, 10;00 JOSEPH IE 1.EVIMt; J flt.flt . TOUClfN'S "MAeGiC" "THETLOERD STARRINO IRl OF HI AMN·MARGRET RINGS" (PG SUM·FRI OAll' .... l •• 12 •~. 2 •S. ~ 00 , .. • •• ., " 1 IS 9 30 ,....,..----,:-=r.=':<""::== •~::::.. IU.rt.a ... l>TT)lf-..._ .. _ ...... u.... ...... "I" (PGi Plu1 DEATH OH THE NIU · WALT OISNEY'S(G) "PINOCCHIO" PLUS FEATUfltETTE "THE SMALL ONE" . ,. R~~·, GOIN' ~-• .}< l\NIC I ~ wel.i an.l'T'U CH££CH a ~·n '(P CltONG'S UPIN SMOKE Catch all the local sports news In the DAILY PILOT .... ..._ INSIDE: •Ann Landers.. •Classified •Hor~co"pe Business is taking a second look at salvaging employees vrhose problems have been caused by stressful working conditions. · 8y an:ava. ao•O a hy to redudnic tumovtir IUld In 09 .. ....., .....,._ t~a11nc producUvlly No one ti Immune rrom t.he el· "In • non c1r1na otnce the~ I t•olttreuoot.heJC)b pit who rar.-leave and lhe And not Ions •a.o employee1 medlc>trt Pf'OPle •lay," lht' ••ya. worlllq ln hisb t naloo poatUoo.s adding that corporauona which of. who = b~u na barbttw-ates f•r crtaUvt tolutlonl lo problem I be ll tolvlna and encour11t per'l<>O.Del or • c m ' ca ed on the to leam to relu a'-tually have cut ca~t and perhas-Ored. Umeloettolllneea lnduetey bad UtUe patience rew ft'or the employee who feels he thoee who cildn't .bav the fOttltudo mu.t et.ay ln • non caring environ- to cut lt mnt fOI' tloanclal or other reUON Todav the lreftd la chan11 .... and <tbou1b 1he 1tron1 ly suggests ' ..._ 1endin1 out resumes and explorina bualneu ll laklna a second look at ot.~er attecnativea>. she recom- ulvaalnJ. valuable •mptoyeea. mend• aaylng to himself, "Well, 1 Thouah the ·practice i• allll know 1 did a damn good Job no ceneraUy confined to large cor· matter what you think." . poraUona Uke inaurance aod oil Phy1lcal exercise, as well as companlee, employees are often ar h l book d referred to alcohol aod drug re· ae . e P a an courses. can babWtatJon nrndrams Cpald for by help reduce stress. Being able to ,.. -e talk with a friend and then receive. the company) or sent into privat< honeat feedback la another way to COUllJellna, ' Jl ( Key executiv-, who m"•t __ cope, as we as pro esslonal '""" -.. ..,., counaellng and biofeedback. stantly acUuat to chan1ln1 coodi-Working mother s are In a . . Oona. are often candidates for dis-partfcularly stressful position, e ases like hyperteuion, ulcers, aayi Nanci Andersen, a cltn.lcal rhe umatoid arthrltla and heart biofeedback therapist In private Bob Warmington, center, wtth other employee$ in the company gym. disdae. practice and who also works with Some companies utilize biofeed-patlente at Long Beach Memorial back techniques, self-hypnosis, Hospital. r ecreation programs or yoga to They reer guilty about not being I Personal Coli.eern .. help individuals team t.o relax and able to take care of the home, be control stress. wlth their children and at the Judy Albert, a licensed mar-isame time work. "More and more riage, family and child coUDHlor, women are saying 'I have to be works wiQi private industry and successful lo validate what I am Bob Warmingtoh belie ve s 'We are a people business and what yo u I do Vl(ith that asset is how far you are going to go.' teaches a stress control course at doing: and along with that, I have Coastline Community College. to be supermom and superwlfe She Points out a fe w factors and all that goes with lt.' " which might help the individual Ms . Andersen recommends set- recogruu behavior likely lo cause ting priorities, seeking com- eventual heal\h problems. promises and, above all, she says, ''Do you always move, walk and accepting "It's all right not to do eat rapidly? tfre you Impatient al everything perfect." the r ate at whkh most things talce But lf you're forced to deal. with place? Do you try and do two or a boas who makes Simon "Legree more things at one time?" look like Santa Claus, breathe In addition, sbe aaka: "Do you deeply, talce a lot or walks around feel guilty when you relax for the building, meditate In a more than two boun7 Or have you bathroom stall, exercise, and give forgotten wt... you last watched younellalotofgoodstrokes. The co,n1 10 warns / indJvtdual 1utrerlng from the er. aomethinam lov P'•ce?" la there really any hope for the r.~~-an!t~f,; )-t=.;·~ :~:;':~ thel~.;t.!~ wested: that 1lve penonal they are concurrenUy •r:ndlng fulflllment rather than just "leas time becoming what worth monetary reward and corpora· becoming as a person because lions are changing their out-look : they are too bwly getting." "More and more corporations Employers would do well. aug· ate saying, 'We won't just say gests Ms. Albert, to realize that you're fired. We'll try and get you ' how they treat their employees ls aome help.• " Exerc ise to Alleviate Stress . Lie down, tr pos91ble, ln a quiet, darkened room. Clc>fle your eyes, place arfll3 at your aide, legs un - crossed. Alternately contract and release part.a of your body, one at a time. Hold your muscles tighter and tighter for about 30 seconds. Then let go vecy slowly and feel the sensation of relaxation. The foUowina sequence should be followed: •Clencbeachfist. • Bend both elbow• and Upten your biceps, bard. • 1Ugidly straighten both arms. ··Wrinkle your forehead. • Frown deeply, terwing every muscle ill your face. • CI01e eyelids aa tightly as possible. • Clench your teeth; lncreulng ten1lon in the jaw, cheek and neck areas. • Press your tongue against the roor of the mouth. • Press tbe head firmly to the floor. • PWlh your chin agalnat your head, straining the head forward. • Shrug shoulders to the ears. • Inhale as deeply as J>()8Slble and bold. slowly exhale. Repeat. • Tense the abdominal muscles without pulling them in. • Pull In the 1tomach and hold. • Arch your back and bold as long as poulble. • Preas both heels t.o the noor. • Point reet and toes away rrom the bead as far as possible. Then point toes toward the head. As you pass through each atage, p1tuse and think about reeling re- laxed and ma1lne the tension pa11ting through your body. Later on ln the day, when atreuful ailua· lion• occur. remember the reeling of relaxation and recapture it. Unretlrlng Tutor By CHERYL ROMO OllN Dally Pl .. 1$1.tll A velvet.smooth green lawn skirts the entry walk lo the turn of the-century glass-paned doorway. Stepping Inside. there is an Im· mac ulate indoor community or tiny shops and ortice11. There 1s a cozy, round conversation pit in the center and nearby looms a huge, s late colored boulder with a gushing waterfall cutting down it.a glistening rru:e The rooms are accented In earth tones. The floors are blanketed with lush. arasa-colored carpeting. Soft awalc and the eur&Jine water tranqullke I thet_!t.llltH•L ~I r._ 'iiirngUU'ough ptiler door. there ii a start.liq and d ereiif mood. Hu_Bt! auper-1raphJcs of cartoon characters and exclamatlon points reach out from the walla and pull lhe viewer Into a Dis · oeyland sort or fantasy. It is the playroom. ,,. An Opper level features a cozy, Indoor • patio and stepping down a few steps there's a redwood decked, bubbling Jacuzzi SWTOWlded by hanging baskets or Cerna. Jusl a few steps further is t he enclosed, cheery yellow kitchen with plaid carpeting. Coffee Is brewing and notes are tacked on lhe refrigerator door. To the side Is a regulation basketball court and a stand-up scale with a jog- ging schedule affixed to the wall. A foot- ball rests on the concrete floor near the men and women's locker rooms, the .racquetball court. the weight room. What Is this place? A utopian com- munity or the future? An elegant COUD• try club? It's neither. It is the corporate headquarters in Irvine of the Robert P Wormington Co.. builders and developers or com- mercial and residential properties The multiple recreational facilities are for the use or Warminglon's 40 employees and occuslonally clients. It Is the philosophy or this 4-year old firm. which moved into the new facilities a year af(o. to show, personal concern for each employee, lo make everyone feel a part or the family. The phJl050phy appears•to be working and a company spokesman explains the turnover rate is almos t nil ; four employees have left 1ince the firm's ln- c~ptlon. Magnolia Smith has dusted off her teaching · skills and is working wilh two children from J_aos . ------- Bf DENNIS MeLELIAN ....... ~ .... - .. It's been 18 years 1lnce MapoUa Smith re· tired aa an elementary school teacher. But two monthl NO the 83·)'ear·Old are•t·grandmother had aufflcient cause t.o dust off her teacblni 1ltl01. And what wu tbt reason fOI' the Huntlnctoa Terrace resident to come out ol ret.lnnntnt? Actually, there are two reuona: •year-old Vla and S.yHr-old 8", the two eldtilt children of the V1n11. • rtifutee famUy From Laoe. For more than two..monlhl Mn. Smith bu bHn tut.orfnc tbe boy1 iD lnil11b at twice wMlt· Jy HNklM &it tbe fouatala ~.u.y bocne of Mr. Ud Mn. BW Vluon. Th• Vanp have been llv· ln1 there linee atrlYlftC lit tbe Unh.ed StatM Sept .••. "When they called for IMlp In tutortns t.h•m I YOluntMftd," 11Jd Mn. SmJth dunns a break ln a recent Hulon. "It 1lvt1 ra• aomet.hlnl wortll1rb.Ue to do. ADd l'v. tQjoyed lt quite muda." 1~': family, wbJeb Red LIOI becauM of th• -imllt tatecww,-.pentthe past two )'tan la a11l•11M11PiD1....alud. TIM v...., lMludlna UM6r ab chUdren and Vonr• .,.,_. Ol4 •"*-· eame t.o th1I country f-t .. I\• 1 wlth the help of the National Methodist Church Refuaee Program. They are 1ponaored by the Finl United Methodist Church of Fountain Valley. Via and Bee. who attend Courre1es School, aren't the only ones who are trylns to learn Enall•h u fut u po&alble. Their father t1 tak- ing tbrff En1ti1h cla11es a day and their mother lalc:et a class In the evenlnf. The Vanp will continue ttvtnc with the VlDIODI &mt.IJ they become self·•ulflclent. And the major concern, or course, I• to tearn En1lllb. ''Tbe chJlclren are ea1er to leam," laid Mn. Smith, who tauaht fourth and ntth 1r1dea In Lot Anlelet for 21 )'Hn. ''I've noticed quite a blt of proeresa and the)' HY they',. dotna well In 1chool.'' · Mn. Smith 11Jd the library bu helped her find the appropriate booU and her 1rand· dau1hter. 1 bllln1uaJ teacher ln Ontario, h11 sJve• ber mat.mall aod ld•u f« tua.ortq. And how Jons doel ah• plan to make her twice wtllikly v1a1tl with Yla ud Beet "Al loea Uthe)' nnd It helpful I'll tODtlnue to come.'' Ifie Hid wttb a •mile. •1tt'1 nice to be wtta. )'Mmldlildrwa•llla. '' • --.. Entrance to Warmington Co., Irvine. Bob Warmington. the 36-year-old cor- porate president. feels encouraging his employees to use the r ecreational (acllities IS good bUSltleSS, "( think peo- ple who exercise are in better shape than those who don't -mentally and physically." Working out on the Universal Gym or joggmg before thC' official start or the day at 8 a.01. or playing basketball or racquetball at nOQn, he feei.. hel~ to alleviate streaa, particularly ror._ the high-powered executive who «ten ,indi. himself the victim ol heart disease. ul · cers anct alcohQla.m. Each of the employees has hls cw her own key abd the recreational racmues may be used al any time of the day or night. ~n days a week. But this partraarch or the corporate family doesn't feel merely providing sporting activities for hli. employees 1s enough. "We are a people business and what you do with that aRset 1s how far you are going to go." he says. Bob Warmington. whoi.e business has prospered dramatically. remembers his employees' birthdays with parties. gives Christmas bonuses and holiday eather- lnl(s for employees' families. Everyone in the ofCice )S on a first· name basis and there are no Utles on corporate business cards -not even the president. Bob Warmington personally greets each employee by name in th morning and says he believes an keep-• mg "all lanes or communication open.'' Three month~ ago he hired an Ln - hou!>e staff psychologist who doubles as a public relations mpn. Walter "Bud " Brandt, PhD. explains Warmington, 1s supposl'd lO fae1Utatc even more personal comm uni<'atiod at a <litrercnt level. Brandt admit.a hi s position is "not all roses" and at first lbere wai strong re- • sentment towurd him from some mem- bers of the "ramJly." H~ has begun a volontary physlcMl fitness proeram and an incentive plan for employees who want lo work on "negative areas" in their lives such as drinking problems. :,moklng and weight C'Ontrol. Though all of Brandt'" counseling work 1s strictly conCld<inllal, he sayi., employees who are succesi;ful an con trolling such negative areas receive 8 trip for two from Warminl(lon to either Las Vegas, San Francisco or Lake Tahoe for a weekend. Each employee's performance is re- viewed every six months a" oppoled CSee CONCERN, Page CZ> • t •• the real Santa As real as .,.1s beard at Huntington Center TOTEM SPORTS CHRISTMAS SALE 150/0 =S A~L WOMIHS /0 CLOTHES ·10%:'~ 9••llty Atllletlc l~•''"'ut & fHlllo•.._ Actf•• Wo• f• Me.I, w ..... &~ CAMPUS VAUEY cerra ........ ,.._ 752.7315 LAGUNA· BEACH SCHOOL OF ART Winter au.... Jan.l -M•.10 • J9"'84ry • Art Hlat()rf • P11nt1ng-Beg1nn1ng & Aovenoed •er.wing & Compoallion • SculOture • Pnotography • life Drawing· • Wet«CO!Ot • Color & 0..1gn • Prltttm1klng • Coramlca • Rellu • ChtkSren'a Art • Stone CMVing • Communtc.toon o..gn EVENING CLASSES •Phot~ • 0r-1ng • Jeweky an art school e>eperlenoe with a unique environment Wri• ·"'OM fOf .,.._. (714) 494-1620 2222 Latuna c:.nyOft "411. L..,M a...., c.tlfomll 12951 eas For Yule ., .... ·· .. , , .. ~ ... , ·.·~:-<J·e ! ~ '-• . . ' ..... . ... { __ B_o_r~•-•_c_o_p_e_~J- . . A THIRD DIMENSION IN STEREO SOUND c. Stereo FM/AM Radio .cl .. Tradl T.-Phrpr. Model 1706 offers you everything you need for super stereo ... except a high price tag: Full-featured tuner/amplifier to pull In weak stations and a fine performing built-in 8-track tape player . Two sealed back speakers with a special vented design project great soond.1 ~~;':~: !~~---- CHRISTMAS -L~ ONL y "'' . ........ .. '• / . · . THE RED BALLOON WHISTLE ••• From Fronce In o variety of ribbon choices to match tHot Chri1tmo1 outfit. Six Oollan. • I • ,. ..... Even thouah Tlmmy the Bugfer missed the rehearsal, our lively Corky the Drummer and Tubby the Tuba Player join Hobo Joe, the &lloon Peddler as they puade for your delight. Handmade and decorated in cheerful colors and set on a white onyx base. Juit a part of a large collectl9n of laugh-provoking clowns. Drummer, $40/Balloon Man, $SO/Tuba PL1yer, $40/llmmy, not shown, $35 r,• . ' ~ .. . . . .. . · ... ·' : . 'I . ' . . . ... .. . . ... : .,.,. '.~ .,. .. .. B.D. HOWES and SON FINEJEWELERS FOR FOUR GENERATIONS NIWPOIT llACH )412 vi. Udo /675-2711 LO\ l>NCllH/'A~MAISAHfA aMllMA '"lM ~INCS I HAWAII --,:----- • ~ I -4 • I. l, .. !I .. I J If 11 "· IH· id 'lt 111· ()O ltJI 1th ng ull 1n n~ 01' up .. &k 35 tU tll!>· Ille ~Rl' >n u oor f4 183 ••• fi.wr iO<l. tr . tsc. ... ----------PUBUC NOTICE "CTlnout elillMIU NAMaSfAf ..... llf? , ....... ~ __ .. ....,._, rwn •t (Ol r C>4h•ICAU, ,,_ S WI" SlrM Swll• ( ,..,le~ CA ~1'07 Nll(llHI M.it(ll\~• I-, U ( ...,.,,}, c...-. ~ 0. .,.,. '''" ...,._. "( ........ '-' lly.,,. "' Cll• ... •I •-"'-'t-. ""' ... _ -,, ........ -co'"''" ,.., .. o• o.~ ,_,,, .,. ..... ,. "" .. _ l'vb'I•-()--C-OellJ ,......_, ...... 11 Q9( • "· ... ••lt ,,.. ,, ltOTICI 'tOC1HOITOll• SUl'••1oa ClOUH OI' Tlll llUT'I ()II CAll'°"NIA f'OI t 11 I COUNTY Of' Ol41110I -.a.<rJm . l•lale of OUOl f V JOHNSO .. KINGMAN OK .. Me NOflCl ,, H II( av (jtVfN ...... ,,..,,~ ..... ____ ...... ,.._, ell __.. -"" <i.i"" ~t .... ~~ .. ,_ ......... . ,,,.m, ••Ill'"--"witv """'"-"-"' '"' ., ...... , ... , ....... ----- tit-c~ .... M iw-~ '"'"" ......... _, _,,."" .. , ....... deflltnod at He N••M<t C•,,I•• O•tw, N-1 llMOI, '"-#Mell ,, Ille •let• .. 11\1\lft•O ot '"° IUI ""....-... alt-'-'_.,,_...,.. IN ui. • ..io•~. wttM<t .... , ..__ ..,., , .. ftnt ........... Df .. 1. Nllko. 0 .... ~1 ... IL Vt~.,.._, 1(1~ E11tC111111•0l.,.Wlll .. ,,. ..,.,. _,... ~ uw Of'l'lCU Of' SH!ILA "'11.A.IOttlltSHINR -......... Otllllw Otho s.IWA. ~ ..... c.. ...... Tet ......,. Ai_.,. ... _.,. PwblltNd a-.,. coast 0.lly PllOI De< ''· tt.~.~ I,"" "",. PtJBUC NOTICE ,,CTITIOUS aUSINESS NAM9 STATllMENT Tllo t.i10W11>9 MtM>f\\ •ra doing bu~-... TIEA ANO SYMPATHY i.ts , .... u .. A-• ' C•l<I Mew ,. 97UI Slloll• TOftl Brunet, )It ~la l .. l»t. Cos .. -· CA m17 Cllarltt 0 BtuMr. 3" S.1'11• 1~.Co. .. Mt"8.CA'2U7 ltftde Je•n Slllller. Jtt S.,.,I• l\Hel, Cos .. Mne. CA m?I Tiii• busiftfts " <~ltd lrf • ljeNtal__... Sr.Ii. TOftl ar-Tllls , .. ..,_,. .... Ille<! wllfl llW' C-IY Cler11 of ~ COunly Oft Ho ..... ~ 1'. "71. l'IOUZ2 PIAlllSfted ~ eoe,t o.lly PtlOI Q9(. 4. "· "u. '"' Wl1·1' PUBUC NOTICE NOTICE INVITING a10S , NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN IN! \telecl p,_.1~ for furl'llSlllng <1111 ta bot. malerl••s. l'Q11lpm1'nl. lr ... 'f)Orl.CIOn--11OlNf1..:1111 .... •-ired tor Ille IMPROVEMENTS AT PARIC DRIVE, EAST OF POMONA AVENUE. will .. recelWCI ~City of CHI• -<JI Ille offl<e ~ City Clerk, 11 Fal• Ortw. Cott• Maw, C•llfornla, ""'" tlle...,..... of 11·00 .. m . Ofl l>eCPrnllff 26, ltll • .C wflk ll llml' . llley Wiii be -""" INIMICIY anCI r.ael •IO\ld in 1"8 Gou!V ll ~ ~­ P•oCIOHI\ Sh.Ml bear IN "' .. of '"" _. al'ld -,....,. of tlle biCIOtr IMlt no _, dl'""9U1Slllft0 ..-... At\y blCI r.alved •ter tlle w.-.IH clotlne llma tor t"8 necelpl Of -"'911 be ,,.. '""'"'to 1"8 biCIOtr, ~ II s1'eM l>4' Ille~ ~lllY ol llW -IO MO ltwl NSllld llr«91-lft~ time. A Sitt Ill Mil. SjlecJ-4 Prwl"°"' ;.;i~.J:-~llJOllJ lo 1110 Oefter•I .. tile ~ Sc>edtb- liOftl m•'f bot_....., .c '"" Office of .... City En91.-•. n F•I• Ori .... Costa Mew, C.!llO<fti•. ""°" -· re1un0.bl• peymem of SS.00. An eddl· I~ ,,._of \1.00 ..... .,. -,, Mndltd by ~II Pt.,,S, \CMKlll<•· 100•" .nci other contract do<umenh mo •IM> ll4I H..,,.l'eel at !fie ollke of Ille C ltv Clorrll of Ille Citv of Co\I• Mf'W Eacll bid \Mil Ii. m.O. Oft tile ProOCKAI '°""· ~ P-t '"'OUO" p.7 P<OvMHG In l!w Conlre<I 00<-U """ •11•11 be accomp•nleO by a Orllfl~ OI ~\ C~k or • bOd l>o<>4 ror not l•n tf\•n 10"0-of tiw -nl of lhe DOO. -INY-IOIM Clh 01 Cml• NWNl NO ,.._..I "'811 bf" con\toert"d urueu M.:tomQi&n1.0 b'I \U(ll ,., ........ , <"«k. ca.ft °' _,., bOnd. No blO -bot c-ldl>reo uni••• 11 ,, rnaoe on • bl"* torm '"""'~hPd ~ ltw Clly of Costa Mew •nd '' "'-In .oc<orll.onc• wttll tr. 0t011is-• of .,,. Pr-opowl r*"'utrf'mentS.. E .. tl'I bt«IP• mu\I De lk•l'-.ed .ono tl\O prtQ11<11lll~ •• rt!O"'Ad DY I- rr.. CllY Coun<ll ol ow City of Costa !Mw re~ nw r!Qhl 10 r.il!<I .,,., or all Did•. EILEEN P PHINNEY Clly~ofllle CllvofCbllo~ Pulltl\IWd Or-. C.,.\C Deily Pliot Dec. u. 11. 1•7' s.o?·11 PUBLIC NOTICE HOTICl!Ol'SAlEOl'llEAl PAOPEllTV AT PlllVATE SAU~ In tM Stioenor C-1 of IN St.tta el C.llMrllla, In -fOI 1"8 (A)unty Of San frontlKo .... ~ '" fll• Mattu of Ill• Estal• o' ARTHU II W. PHllll PS, alM> ~nown 119 ARTHUR PHllllPS,A W. PHllllPS, -A. PHIU.1PS,0.U.WCS. Notoo I\~ QI .... tl..c IN.,.._ otnloneo wlll .etl o1 prl••I• , .... 10 ,,,. lllQl>e'll ---··-~·to <OflflrmatlOn or soiCI ~I« CCM.lrt ort or af1•• tlW :!'!ft cs.v of Decemwr. ""· al Ille office of 1108Elll A RElLUOMINI, Suite 1000, )00 MOfllO°""''°' SC'"t, $an FtMKh<o, ••104. CountVOI SM Fr-11<01 Slate of Callfo•nla. all tM rf91'1(. Utta aftCI ln- INHI of ..io dlCMWcl. In -to ... Ille certain rHI ~ alt...,t.O In ll'lt County of Orange. Stal• of Callfornla, Pllrtklllor1Y Ck'$C:rllltd •• foll-I, lo-Wit· Tl>I' WHI "1 of IPW Nonflwest IOo Of 111e N_. v. or me Nortft ..., Of lot I, ~loo 1t of TrKI No .... In'"" City ol HunllnQIOl'I 8tacll. County Of Ota1>9t . !>I ... of Caflfonlle, H per roeo •acord9cl in..,_ tel. P.,.. H- lt of MIK-MIMI(. In h otlke of lM County Rt'ot'Otf of laid COul'llY. E ec•Pll"9 and ,_..,,,,.. '° the Unit· f'CI Stein ol ,.,.,.,.k._ all ... ~. "~"""" -... otltff -.e<loll 0.-l••m•Md IO I» PKllllM'Y -llol to '"" 11<00..CllortOI 11....-.......... . tOftt•IMd tn-~ .... notlOn In cloposltt In Yid ...,.. MW ~ IOf 1~ 111e of t11e U111'9cl SClllH. to09tllff wllll tlle ti11tt of IN United Slot" 111ro11on IU ewtllerlted •"" or ,. ___ I_ 4lt .,.,., 11-10 .,.,,., upon U ICI I-ertd ~ IW, "'"-• .,,., ,.,,_ ,.,. -· "'"'no '"'' com""'°''°" '°' ...., --., ,,,. 1ury occaslone4 ,,,.,....,, _,..,, \..Cll I-~ to."'°"'· *'II..,., rltfth (11,.n.ls.e l!l(Clli019d ~ ""' ....... _ .... y be·~''"' .. " ... ,_,,.,,IOl'I f)f '""" tNttrW• ........ ,.,... .. '"'arved ttv Ille Vllltad StatH ot A~l<o. In Clf'ld _.,... Setlt1 .. r I. i.4', 11'1 9oOll ..... ~ '11 to 4Jt HW.lwslwe. OHIClol ltoe....,., Term' tf .... cMft '" towfwl ,,_., Of t"9 Ul!lleO $tMH"' ~Ol!flnnellelt ol u11. or ll•rt fatll e nd tt•lettt• •"ld•"t•d ltY 1101• ••turtd •• MortOlott ... """' a... .. lllt .,.....,. Iv Ml to10 Taft~ Of_. eld le bt ..,..,_ With 11kL .... ""91«1 tol ......... .....,.. .. 811h Of ~ 16 llt 111 wrltlne '1flfl Wiii .. '9Ct1 ... 4lt l!W oferew14i effkt •• a11, ti-ef'Mr lllt fln1 oue4k•llOl'I """' 8fld llffot't .. Of ..... OAIH ""' Mii dty Of O«efMer, ''"· VIOlaPNllljlt l..C.lltrl•ofllw lh191t °'-"""'°' .... ,,A.......... , ,.....,., .. w.. •.. ,, ...... . IMI ,,.IK,_CA .. ... ~,.,,..Or .. CNtt o.llt ~11.t, 1*. tJ;,.....,,, "" .. ,,." - 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 D A I L y p I L 0 T c L A s s I F I E D • 5 6 7 8 ' --_ .. DAILY PILOT (3 Monoiy, 0.0.mber 18. 19'18 The Blgge1t Marketplace on the Orange Coast DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS You Can Sell It, Find It, Trade It With • Want Ad (842-5878) One Call Service Fast Credit Approval ......................................................................................... J ............................................... . CW...,... I 001 GeMrtll I 002 G1•r.e I 002 Ge•r.e G1Mrml I 00 I 002 ............••..............•..•..........•••...•....••.•.....•..•.•.•.•.....••••••......•. ~······················ ·················~····· EQUAL HOU5'NQ OPPOATU40TY .. ,, ... ··Mo&•: All re&I f!llate adv•rtut'd In IJW M'W!lpaper II 11ub J«t to thc.o F•rel l''air Hou11n1 A ct lilt. J 968 "'1Mdl mllkd It llkl•I to 1dv•rt1ae '1 aoy -prt-fen-ne9, hm1tatfon. c>r dilomminauon bued on race. rotor, reb11on. i1u, or nauooal on1U>. or ao t.ntA!!OUon lo m11ke any IUCh pttft'l"d<'t'. hmlla uon.ordiacnml.oauon " 1bl.I oewtpuper wall not lmow1nf 11 acc~pt any advert sing for rtal -.ate whlth Is In VIOia· bOn oil.he law Getteral 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• REAL ESTATE THE BEST GIFT OF ALL CLOSE IN 1979 AVOID HIGH INTEREST RATE U~IVU~ IN IRYINE TUll\BOCK TOWHHOMe -4 bdrm. 2100 sq. ft., 2 fireplaces and formal dining, re~dly lerrifiC' ! Esp. at just $131,000! SUrEI STAITER -Three bedroom in Irvine. shows beautifully. cool. serene an d c l ea n . nic e patios and landseaping. Anxious at $86.900. FORMR MODa -Beautiful decor. mirrors. papers and paneling! Perfect! Nr pool. tennis. 3 bdrms. 2 1-"Z baths, only $110,000. U ~ lf)U I: t1()Mt:S REAL TORS". 675·6000 2443 East Coast Highway, Corona del Mar also m M esa Verdi!, at 546 5990 \V I·:s I.!-: Y ~ TAYLOR CO. HE1\ L T< H \S ·,11w1· 1 !Hf; ~ FAMILY GIFr Perfect family home in Harbor View Homes. Beautiful "Palermo" in premium location on quiet corner across from greenbelt. 4 Bdrms with large spacious kitchen opening to family room with mirrored wet bar. Lovely landscaped yard w/large trees, burlt-in fire-ring and BBQ. Convenient to community pool and elementary school. Make the whole family happy! $196,000 including land. WESLEY M. TA YLOI CO.. RIAL TOltS 2111 S.. JoalfUI• ... Rood HEWPOltT CanB. M.I.. 644-4910 Lift ATTHIUACH ... andeQjoy privacy, too; walk to nearby beach & clubbowe where llfe oo Newport Bay floats before you. Spacious. comCortable 4 bdrm .. 3 bath famUy bome, West patio for sunning: extra large, double garagei-allo tbia near exciting Li4o -~:: ~~7100 ... BAY& BEACH 4 NEWPORT CTR. DR. 7H11 la.E & INCOME Two uo.lia, 2 bdrm•.. 1 b&b eacb; allo 2 alogle praces: lot 50Xl20. fee land (you own It>. Local- ed Eat.aide Colla Mesa. e.aey walldnt diat.aoce lo banks. post omce & super markets. $129,000. AWARD WINNER LIDO ISLE Bay view from l patio decks enhances custom spacious 5 bdrm .. 4 bath traditional home: like new. Ideal for entertaining. $500.000 OCEAMFROMT Quality craftsmanship in mahog. trim & oak floors sets off this landmark: 4 BR. 3 ba. home in finest location. Established trees.& lawns. S47~ 000. ·IACI IAY Fine 4 bdrm .. 2 Vz bath family home on quiet cul de sac. Oversized pool. playhouse. storage $169.000. Terms. IAYFROMT Several fine baylront homes with pier & slip AVALON Well constructed. 3 BR. 1 ba. oak floor. partial basement. concrete foundation. Flats area. $120.000-Fee. BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR J.1 1 lloy,,.J,. ()ro,. t• B 67~ t,lol CVrlHOUSI 0Nll-2LOT F.aata&de. Colla Mesa. 3 8edrm channer. Format llvinf rm wtreaJ wood burniDI fireplace. Love-ly remodeled kitchen w/cuatom cabinets & pau thru window to din· mi area. Added oe rami· ~ lY rm. Coaverted gara&e j ~ . may be used for lge I . ·-· 1). • pme rm. All this at an ;":? .. -• ~ affordab&eorice.61U550 .. /, •• \.6-~ Ol'INlllY"l\ll)NIO N .. •I' .. ~. [etHl!td Be your own boss. Owner SELLER'S wW catry witJI minimum caahdown for auto parts SACRIFICE store. Ask for Roy Stemena.Gl·l.266 ofQieta Mesa, lrvi.oe Newport Beach, Inc. ZN f:. 17tbSt., C.M. 1 '4Jl-I~ Nadomride Network of IDdiridua.Uy Owned and Operated Btfl 2 story 4 bdrm + deo. Fm.ly rm w /blt·ln wtne rack. Em True 111\de ol ownership fmly home~ Front yrd lbowpl.acex by foremost deligner. SUbmit today! &46-TlU ~Walker C lee HOME & INCOME hell offtce lnd1p1~ owned end CIP9f•'"· IACK IAY VILL+GE Priced reduced to $109.500 on this 2 stry, 3 bdrm., 21h ba., end 'unit. Owoer a nxious . Submjt your creative financing. " 5 UHfTS WISTMIHSTa Pride of Owners hip. qualit y construction. Separate owners house & 4 two bedroom units. GSI. $1,450 mo. OWC 2nd T.O. Exlnt Location. R.C. TAnOR CO. 640-5112 IAYAtOHT DUPLEX Specious 3 bdrm. ar 2 bdrm. l.lllila with (rplt'. & 4 car gar. A 1uperb ren· tal property w Icily, bay beach amenities. $395;000! Oceanfronts f'rom SS'15,000 •up. ..... ...,.....,. ...... •'75-7060. LAST OF THI MOHICAHS Slt.900 3 bdrm condo. sharp patio. FHA & Conv terms. Almost new crpt.s . Shows btflly . Great starter home or Invest· mmL 5'.5-9491 % 31R-AXER FOIECLOSURE! TRUE! 3 Bedrm llxer· upper, will &o into rorecloaure shortly! Bank baa notified owner ol it'• intent. Good loca- tion. 67XJ07 Lot size. Fu II price just SGS.000! Take advantaae. call 7S2-l700 Now! o-1 .. llf 9 •II \ llJN ICJN ''"'' • l•l&ll MESAVBDE SIS.000. <Mstanding 3 bedroom. 2 bath with a cozy fll"eplace for cold winter rug.bt.s. nus home has been completely re .. decorated aod it is pnced right! CALL 751·3191 HIAPCHIAI' Beaulirul 2 bedroom. t;::: SELECT family condo. with all lhe 'T' PROPERTIES amenities. Pool. ret. .._ tbake roof. auper 7tsltrottl*7 sharp. Move in fast. OLD Owner uudoua. Offered CORONA DEL MAR • aooGS40-38M 4.000 sq.fl. Real &tate Of rices 1.lJZt.b St .• Newport WOW' 4 Bdrma .. 2 bat.ba, family • rm., 18x29 llvioa rm.. u.u ..... .._V..,LUE frpl. + bachelor apt. nrvu ,_ -" YES!!! Tri&* A doobl1• wide lot 1• off Ocea11 Blvd. Formal Uvtng r•• + faaul,y rm w/wet b:.1 5 ~e bedrma. c<H·h with 1l1 own bath. J Sedl.ded private pali~. Spira.I atal.rcase leadin.: to 2nd level. 4 Car enclosed 1ara1ea All tb1s under one roof on comer lot. Don't let thrs one get away! Call m.8550 ............... Surf'Ounds entertain· mmt bome! Large pvt master swte! [)eluu pueli1 tbruout. Party sized eclt overlooks IPU'kllnl jacuul. Stir- rounded by mountain pines! Excellent area! Better hurry! Call ~ F OREST E OLSON owr 2 car garage. Vou $215,000 own the laod. Good ren· Move ln now and enjoy tal area. Priced at Christmas from tbas Sl.57.000. r-1...u1i::auiwU1 home in Corona ~ 142·22S3Eves. del Mar. Plush new associated BllO~ElilS llfA.TOll~ JU]', W liurb.,11 6 1 4 lt+•l Utlt.dRIED carpet. decor a nd ()PIN rn V • ,, \ l tJN '()HI llJ~I • ['Ii lfilitJ New leglalation, new financing techniques and new court decisions, mlkes it eaaler t.baD ever to purchase or sell a pro- perty " dole escrow in a rmtter ol days. For tbe finl Ume, Bfnks, Sav- ings & Loans can provide 'wrap around' Ci.Dancing. that tosdber with seller Mancina cao beat hlab interest rates. Our sWf of experienced pro- fessionals help their client.a ~. sell. or ex· change $63 million dollan worth of re_ I estat.e In the past 12 rnootM. Call now & ask about our many homes. & investmeol listings. call 752-1920. ADULTSOHLY OHL Y $41. 900 . .. end unit condo In, ________ _ Woodbridge · a fast growtnc area. 2 Bdrm• .. 2~ baths: upgraded carpeting & Ule. Proper· ty fa oeW & very sharp I New" fresh l&ndacaplo& wW be dooe. Sl 11.SOO WOMAN Wants to sell you her lvly 3 br. 3 ba waterfront home. Low maintenance yrd. Walk to beach. Close to pools, clubhouse & ten· Dis. JllJt llated. &41-7711 beautilullr ma in lain ed. Large livmg room with maasive fireplace and lot.I ol glus to VIEW the lights. Smooth-n owang floor .~an includes entry and dining/Cama.ly room. PLUS 4 bedrooms. Larie manicured back yard. Come by and see th~ DESI' BUY .. . and you own the land Su bm al your offers! lmmed. pouession. UHDa sso.ooo Nol a condo! This dlarming home is only s. mulut.es from the Irvine Industrial Complex. Located on a huge lot with (ruit trees. Extra:. Include fireplace. formal dinang, aunporch and much more. Full pncc ' . QliAIL PLACE PIOPElflES .. 10,.. TII l:JO P.M.I 2 storY, 2 bedroom condo in aecurtty area. Near South Coast Plaza. FUii price $48,900. Immediate occupancy. Hurry. take advantage. Call 646-44n WATIUIOHT DWLIX • KE:Y • I R€ALT0K-S A 6UMITS $450.000 Eueptjooal Income pro- perty on the water with • boat dock. Perfect for the owner who want.a to live In a 1padous bome and have an locome unit OR home ad separate unil for teeo-a1er or mother· in-law. ft'ont house ia a lovely 3 bedroom' dining rm +-One bed and loft unit with bicb celllng.a. - WATERfRONT HOMES ReALESTATE 631-1400 COIOMA DB. MAR Choice location. One block to Big Corona Beach. Moel unusual lo tbia area. C\lstom buill for original (a nd Prment> owner. Built.lo ldkbens, fireplaces. ooe and &wo bedroom•, ..... ,000. COi.i OFHIWPORT UALTORS 675-511 I WISTSIDI C.M. ~ Cute 3 bdrm home with large yard. All re· furbithed lntlde1 plus new roof. Room ror all the bobtliea car collec· Uona. boat.a, farm-sited garde~s (almost>. ~ forS70,000. WAUCTO llACH 1550 per mo., SHARP. 3 bdr home. Call Mack. 901'111 ..... ...... ....... ..... BAY& BEACH 4SO NEWPORT CTR. DA. J59.f811 BAYSIDE DRIVE! S157~FEE ! MalKal condo, J Br, den. view ol channel, lovely decor. Thia ia the best buy in town amidst homu In $300,000· Sl.000,000 r&Qle. Owner wW consider all olfera. SaJ•leue opUoe-rent. 758-1082. All· For Clutllfed Ad A en ON Calla Daily Pilot AO.Vt.SOR 142-5678 PETE R tile~~ OUTST AHDIHG TVRTLI ROCK GUM VALUI 4 Bedroom. 2~ bath, with (amity room ana wet-bar . Located on cu.-de-sac street. walking distance to e lementary sc hool and commwlity pool. jacuzzi. plus three lighted tennis courts makes this Broadmoor 3 plan a real value at $183.000. Sell with ~~E! It's a BREEZE Classified Ads 642·S678 macneb I lrvtne realty lfG CAMYOH-¥11W 3 BR El Dorado wtfantastic gotr course view! Many upgrades .. add to the appeal of this delightful townhome in a prestige area o( Newport Beach. $225.000. Julie Va n Wieren 742·1414. <H·l09) 642-t23S 644-6200 901 Oo,...r Drive Harbor View Onter Irvine at Campus Valley Center 752-1414 . scc\\:AllA-a£trs· That /nfri911ing Word Game with o Chud/1 -----........ QA' .. f'CMM-----·._ ....... ,,, .... ·-~-dtb.­low IO '°"" hM -..... _. l MEAINA I r 1 r r 1 r . ~..,o~u _x.,.E_E...--.1 t. .l'll'IJ ( ... _G_,l_s_E _N_, 1 M70M ""° '°""'' worry { I I' I I ! Mollt tM ~ ell11a11on ""· __ __._.__ .... ---· . IMte o.yt ougflt IO N'9 rtla 'I 'ANLIE 1-..i•lonaet--~ I' I I I I' •-~~': ~..::=, ~ .,.. -...-..... ., .... J -- $t9,i00. Call 556-2660 WA~JNT C SELECT REALESTATE 'T'PROPERTIES 631-1400 caE: 110111 ILllRS ca. OVER 50 YEARS OF SERVICE NEWPORT BLUFFS Choice Offering. Split Level End Unit. Prime Private Location On A Lovely Greenbelt. Custom Oecoraled In Warm Earth Tones. Two Bedrooms With A Convertible Oen. "Ori~inal Bluffs " -$174 .500. -A "Joy Of Newport" Listing. ® ·--............... 631·1800 · 111 oova DRIVE SlllC & RN MOONS C 0 N L Y L M N I E 0 E D R E A E C 8 S A I A P [ E 0 N I R T N S H R Y A H A £ U N Q N V M R E D E M Y N A G H M O I U ll 0 T I £ 8 T R S P H U G A C 8 GTl IVRPJl~EUEETATENE R U O S A Y E{~ T R X V E I 0 R l A N $ M H H R P I E I E L 0 T T S E D C RAD I L 0 H P o(; ~ f N SJs 0 N D A AANUROAN T KAE8NAE E Z Q U R I A H P C S R M H L 0 E S E T A £ U C 0 £ U E A l I I E L H T Y D L Y C L I R D L M L M A L T R P E T V I [ K C £ J G l E L N 8 S L I S T 0 Y EPTIHEAOH8POLSAMIOE T A D H S ; £ I H M E 0 Y H T C 0 N A .... """· J.,,,.., ~ .• ~ -~It •• ,.._, Obero!t G....,.d. : &ir9'1 Nnld "= .-Olonl ..._ u '"* Cllllna ..._. e 111111 T ttf\yl Ulllbltll T~Mdlll ........ !I I j " I •, , . II If II IV . l<l' id '!> IW (JO 1m 1th n~ u II 35 tll r.111· 1tt1! ~Ill' >no oor •4 113 ••• aso • OM.V PILOT ~~---.............. {ft C;9J Witlkl!I 1: l l!U '"' ................. , ..... 4 Nb. lnchadl111 bar &Giii lo b9 ucti.. dowe In •NIUltl4 ••ALO ST. ~ wUb OWIK'f'I Uft ll, lood loouuti: dbl .......,, I frpk'.a Clur. ..u.r wtU ClllT)' lit TD ...-.ooo ; MIWflOIT MACH llAl.TY '75-IMJ 64Z..07U 1012 ••••••••••••••••••••••• DWLIX So..tHltltwey on lovely Avoc 1do Avenue, a charmma a bdrm. Zaly. ui-lde down houee wtlb ced1r abinl{lti e.lerior and 1undc:clt PLUS a lunrious 2 bedroom, 3 bath apt Covered paUo and 3 r ar ,.,. •. $210,loo 644-7211 /JD.NIGEL GAILEY fie ASSl:lCIATES ..,,,. HERITAGE . . r~EAlTORS IS9UA&JTY U.OITAMT TOYOU? Talce a looll at this ~autifU.I 4 bdrm. 3 bilth Mesa Verde home. It features a year old Clmocn POOi and Jacunl, I.Md brick dt'<'kine and 1undeck otf master bdrm. ca1 I $46-5880 for moreddalb ~HERITAGE • • REALTORS BY OWNER 3 ectnn Coado. 2~ ba .. l..J.U HV Hll.11, blfi. cor-frplc, 2 car alUlcb 1ar, OJtr kit at WI Keele Dr., prime lot'. pro1 deoonl- 4Br •. 2.Ba. many xtru &n· ed By owner $89,900, d udln& all appliances, MO-Ul6s.. SZJ0.000. fee. Owner wlll ---------fi o a o c e al 10% lol ________ _ uaUfled buyer. min. to bkrs. 955-1534 05 c:o.e....... 1024 ....................... ~:r:fs ... fo'or the executive' 3 bedrocun h ome with eleeant floorplan .. TAICI ADV AMT AGE Pnced lo sell at only $69,900. Thia 3 bdrin home realurea new carpet.\ and a large lot loaded with many fruit t.ree.s. For more details call546-~ ~HERITAGE REALTORS atrlwn, builUns, dfolng,1--------- fireplJice, patio and lush yard. $106,500. BKR. Call ~1720 flllllBl. -· TOWNHOUSE So. Coast Plaia. l~ yr old 28R 2ba. Cpta, drps, ek. 546-303'1 7192 fxtA6aB~ Travel lite susons 1n this att1act1re, cozy card1pn l\1'"2~91 Knrt from neck down 111 in SIZES 8-20 "" 11f'Mi-11f ,_..~ .... one p1ect -use med1um•e11ht ._ply J1101t yarn. Wf ~an 1dds drama to yoke. ~ pockets. Pllttrn 7192· d1rec· t10ns for Min I 0.16 1nclude<I. Sl.50 fOf uch ~tttrn Add 40C nth 111ttern lot hrst<lm ill· mail and handhn&. S... ti: Alice ... SUlll IN fROHl, llow1n1 111 Needlecraft Dept. 10S bO t11anks to Ille dral!lf of tilt Dally Piiot IOlll p"*td pantl. Ht'll ~1'11 .. HJ, 014 a.. Ste. .... 1115 btelltl as JOU wal.. into '"'-llY 10011. ,,_. r.;;e, Ille "*'I HI 1!11$ lllUler M*-. fjp, ,...,. ....... P1111ttd P1tttr11 9446· Mtssa NCW1NOW' Ou1 1979 NCCOl.C· S11n ~ 10. 12. 14, 16, 18, 20 CRAn CAIALOG-ower 200 popu Silt It (b11$t 34) t1"1 !> JJ!dS tar dnitns. l fttt ~tttm 60-tMh ffb!IC. ptlllted !Midi. Send 7~ ................... l~bly ,,...., .. 1.50 ..... _. ....,_.., W 121-tlktlwllt Ollltl .... SIJO ._ ..... ..._.._.. 121~·1•0.. .... Sl.51 lK-Criftr "'-'· ....... $1.50 -...,.. l2Uttak ~ .......... $1.10 Hl It~·· .,,.... .. .Sl.50 Pattern Dept.... IZWC!tdf' .. ,llkt.Qllllel .SUS Oallv P llOt ltt.W'll'hft ........ fi.2$ m _. 1• a,~ m.,.,a.Ofh..... .st If 1•11 Mii ID-l~ I....... lM .... zW 1111 .. UNlMt C..... ...... '..fiM --.· I~---. Let's be practlCll-'°" fll ll......, '"-tlMI..... 1.• .. "' Im s ... '" .. 1 It"'"" Cildllt ...... st• SeM "' .., rAU.>wuwm u~ ........ .s1• ·fASMtONS..TO-SEWCU~U".Hll 112""8i ............... 751 Sl ~ CiM111 tor "'9 pet Ill ..... ~ ..... $1M 6tnt ti "" ~. 7!.f I01·--s..tlli .... JI• 111....._......_._. ,......,.. Clldlit ..• 11• =.......... llJ.IS Q111e1 ._, T• .. JV .... 1 ......... 0.... .. 11' 'fl•: 2:· 111.-~ "' ~\ . . ..................................................... ~·············· ........••.•.•.•.•..•.. ·•••·•·•·•••••········· ..........•......•..... ---_..Ll ..... ,,.+'!-';.=m.---~O.U. -lOH.-SGIA lU6 r.:-h J•rtr 2000 s-.rr.,...., uoo . .......................................................................................... ~····················· ···············••······ '"'"' .. HfRITAGE . HL Al 1 Utf~ EmSllE AXEi. 3 drm, bardwood noon. alley •l'f8•. "• calll and re th. rurr wtU ton1ld r ~A t"lfA .. teni» II GOW tu 1111 / OPfN H1llf'>I I#• A• I • •••• THAHMIW ~b' re~ 3 br, 2 ba, frplc, ha.a l\f'W root. plu1nbln11 6 p1inl ll pat.a wJbbq ur~i 2 car aar Lwih .Jandlcap11111 Only $71.~00. Davfd Bourke , ll-•lto r . ~llllS) Pw I ••FHA orVA,.$61,500 3 ~drm. lar1e yard. Qlld cul de.sac street. 645-9lfl /' -' OPEN HOUSI Rt Al fY "WOODSY'' CHARM ... ... accents this top local· ed 3 bedroom, 2 .bath & 3 car garage. F a s t JlOlllM!S8ioo ; Owner BOX· Joui. Lowest price In area. E ·Z to buy at $83.000. 64S-7221 ................. 1040 ••••••••••••••••••••••• COHDO IY OWHll 2Br, 1 ~Ba. bltns. blfl bnck frplc, nr ocn & &bopping, r efrlg. As · 11umable loan, $57 ,500. 983-~2 tnti._ . 1044 ••••••••••••••••••••••• JUSTREHED in The _,.E 1£AUJ ..... T .. WO.I IN WOOOMIDGI OflNa ntl flOLLOWIHG CHOtCI NOPftTllS Viti K•'r l'Opl r " 88.~ Viti i.t •r Elm 72.00Q Wnrntlnatton 0 Plat\ ~.500 Hro •dmoor WUdwood 102,000 l\romhnoor A ll>('llWOod 104»M>O a·o 111!!-'i hford , iw.ooo ('r \'~II di • ~in\OtC SO.U'.900 i'~l'l\OlNI Mtllm& 124.500 "~"t :att'l'I Adomi, so\.O.~ C'rustttn , 11hford tLakcsidc > 149,000 c .. .._,,......_. .. ""'._. .. w y_. r..,.~ la Wu ert• I WOODIRIDGI IEALTY 551-3000 Twllttod Hiit WOODBRJOOE PLACE v.ew cit)' UOl.I fri>ln thl~ 3bdr •• 2 ba., Stoaewood Inc red I b Te lam 11 y. modtl A/C, J•t UJZJ, Lae. n&rtntnl bom• •OR. lot Many Cullo m tun rm. wet b1r, frQ>I w~u By o wner dl.o'•.f,!'!t1$00J_.:. .. rs -------........n.uu FO"r Sa l ~·O p \lon to &31 2W.842 6220 puttbaee tn Woodbridge ._.. •T VllW erc..1ng. Award winning ~ 2 Br 2 Ba h ome . d T\u11•rock" Newport bea.utlrully upgraded. Jlllla, UCI. le MalQn 'Prk $5000 option applies Ii hike San J oaquin low&rd purchase. R. Ha!· model. top condo In dabl, 752,z121 Rancho S.n Jo11q_uln. 21---------Br & den, formal dining ........ ~_. 1041 wet bar. frplc. 1t.eps to ••••••••••••••••••••••• pool Ii Jae. Uke new. up. 1r1de1. $145.000. Ciill ~ 11~ or 752-0392 GORGEOUS LAKE VIEW End urut. l207 .QOO. Contra cl of eale. inc dn Bob Marcel. Moore lnvestment.S. 673-2.511 PAD II HOME A 1ure way lo start the new year Would be in thia most attractive rour bedroom home • Fordham Mo del · ln Unive r si t y Park 's Village I ll. La r ge -Jeehlded lot . two patios · spa • ree land . all this for only Sl33,500 red hill ~ .... 55 2-7500 UMVa$1TY f AltK $10.100 I No one ahodd pau up &biup.cious ~e ln one ~ Irvine'• x1nt areas CUSTOM DUft.U Well.built 3 bedrooms, 2 baths in each unit. Wi~ ocean view, oear beach & adjacent t o San Clemente golf course. $165,000 • YA-FHATllMS are avatlable on Ulla great 4-bedroom. f•mll,y room hom• which sit.a on a premium fee lot I.hat providel privacy and ofr ltreet, perklng. RACQUET CLUB I .Ld~~ loc1led • WIWAMTYOU Over' 1200 -ca ft. doee to all tbe conv~ • bu"!r ' • pre-<llrtstmH apeclal '-• .cal II bedrociYiexecutive home to1e1 uu. coiy 3 bdnn. 2 with upsraded c•rpell. drapes central air. i uto ba home wt many up- 1012 aprinklers, e lectric ll"ldel•aquee1tfcle1n. 1_...__. d• .... 1e door 0 ,... .... r, "OV· ldeaJ floor plan lor only ...,.... ......,,...... ..--.-•.MJ ~ tll,IOO ••••••••••••••••••••••• ere patio, puel1ed · If OMA.a .. family room wtth a tone ""IA' nreplace and no wu llJ.4477 ~ Zbath East Nine noon In the lllteheo. * * on El Nlauel Goll .AaldDI OQly $112,000, Call -------.--Cou ue. Fu rn I ah ed. ............ I OU =rdown or leue al e--1' .• 1.11 I. I .. I I ' I, I 't )! q J SACIUPJC&t IHut. Woodbrtdl9 I Ir llAI' PLUS~ I Br eciG4o priced Mlow 18arbt. Jloc.b nr lW. tTMIU. °"'*I A(t., Blln"BtJYIN IRVINE Woodbridlt Bn111ton, ..,,. ~ vahle suuao. ..... ..u. $117,0IO. :151-49 -·••••••••••••••••••• ..;...;...;..mo....._._-. __ 77_98 __ _ ~C~.L~ ' 1P•CMC la.AND YI.LAM Live •t the bea c h . Adult community, lor~ bedroom 3 bath unit wlth overs 2 car attached garage .wit~ ocean and mountain views. Corpmunlty pool and clubhouse. $135,000. blQOO CALIFORNIA COAST PROPBT1ES CHaJSTMAS SPICIM. AU. AVAIL.AIU OM CONTRACT FOR 1971 CLOSINGS OCIANFROMT!! 4 Pl.F.XF-c; 5 PLt-:x..-s 1'1 l 'N ITS 2.~ l'NITS 311 l'NITI\ 4<1 l 'NITS M f":UIC'AI. Jlf.f)C; 0 "'1"'('": Rl.n<: fin ... ._ ...... wtte. Jri•• dtpt (o IMKll. MMd _.My -.7 A* fw .......,. 497-333.1 )~ lll\U~ CAI.I. 117~,4tiQ6 ~t ll255 ...... ""9et 1012 ••••••••••••••••••••••• /\JEUJELL ,,.i, , ' ,) .. , I •'jl1!• I l11 .11 '· 11tl j "' • .. ..,.... leocll I 069 • •••••••••••••••••••••• EXECUTIVE SPECIAL In a neiabborftood of l m- pc»lng h omes. This 3 bdrm Sturdevant We1lcllff home Is a barpin, priced for you at sise.ooo. There· s old f asbkloed qua.Illy an ttus modem home. Start the new year right in the Newport High School Dlstrict. 'Io see Uus in· stantly appealing home. calJ us at ~1151 ._ $i08 ftM I• •1 I •: Ult I .. OC-VU w /gorgeous grQis & patios encl st.one & Iron picket fences. Lg 3 8d. 21!1 Ba. 2 fplc's, pror dee w/cork walls. Mml cood. -1228,000. Appl to prtnc. 840-11617 1100 NEW SHOP PINC . CENTER Newport Beach·t\rea TMple net leases. fo'm 1t years rent guaranteed. Pnme high traffic counl. 11.000 Sq. feet rentable space. $780.000. Geor"9f EldH Co. '31·3400or 644-1751 OMCE IUILDIMG fllCE 4 mall •ult.es, $89.900. Nu.I' BNlol It Baker • ,. • -DM. !:"IM8-7'7a-• 1 • '. & ~ = Sf' TERMS 133' OCEAN FRONT Beau tiful CO M · New po r t Be a.cit-3 )fFBClil LOT. No. San bedroom & d en, only ·01 ego Cly. $280,000 $125,000. Upgraded split Owne r /Agl. Submit level. Owner will sell on terms. 714/434 1735 Bkr. land contract or Al'J\D. -.. ~ 2000 Call for details. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~21. MlwporiCewhr 640.5357 30NALOT Ea.st.side Costa Mesa 3 separate houn>s on cor ner lot. Super IO<'allon Sl.S9.000. n.c TRANSFUSION MllDED- QUICK In SlX Easts1de Ca>t.a Mesa houses! Buy o n contract at only $32.500 eac h! lo up graded area n ear schools, transportallon and 1hopp1ng! All for $195,000 emu.at be sold together). 752.1920 ' QUAIL PLACE PROPERTIES ... 10,.. n 1:10 r.M.1 DOCTOR'S DREAM A 39 unit apartment wldlng. f\llly manage'.! wi no vacancy. CAS H FLOW. Only $200,000 down, take over Owner mB)' take 2nd TD's for part down. Located 1n Buena Park a l 8572 Western Ave. CAU. 542-3676 for lnfo. Bkrs welcome fl' Sll,500 PER UNIT ... . .. ... SS6.500PER IUILDIMG A VHAGE Two ln·plues & one 4· piex with 6 two bedroom & 4 one bedroom apts. in e xce llant area or R1ve rs 1de. Will ex change' $185,000 Total: 752-1920. ~QUAIL A.!~S~-'°'"" TII l :JO , ..M.I llG7.PLEX IEST IUY IN TOWH TRIPLEX+ guest. ~R€HI G€ Near the beach. Only HOM€~ $365,000. Scott R"'ally ~7~ Great summer /winter. Close~beac_!!_& bay. 3333 W. Coast llwy, NH ---0-1G-P-R-IC-t-:-- ___ 6_4_S._6_64_6 _ -REDUCTION This big 4·plex wa~ $255.000. Must sell Im· mediat e ly . As king ~.000 SCOTT REALTY 536-7533 Beauty Salon Hair styling men & women. Sell or lease 15 yn. Co6ta Me!'>a 6314415 or 751 1722 -I TAX SPECIALS ---,---..._,,...._'-="'--""-~' ,, l I. I .. '· ' lr fl, ii I er ft. >r. so ... cl p 700 H . ton ln1· 100 r••• •• , t. Pb . . lom· ~rl. -600 •••• ·1 '1 I .. 1 '' II If If 11 N i(I' ,,, '!'> Jll' OU llll 1th n g all l lll Ill' Ill' "" .. t.k 35 , ... 15:>• \Ill: )IW )1)11 l)tll' '" - Il l ••• i\t1•1' ec). er . .. ~. ... • \ • ~~~-~!~ ..... ~.~~~~ .... ~:!:.~~~~~.~~~'=.-... -. --~..=~.~~ .. ~!!~~-~·:.~.... Mancl!y.o.o.Moer 18, lt78 DAILYPILOf f' ~ilil-....-szz• k.t.wfludl-lltf.Hrt .... .._. >Z•t .._,, ·~· 07 c.Piii.,1 ... ..JIJZ "*1c;t•l•LWw-a. Apstw•h........_ ....... sw. 4Joo 2700 .. , ... ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, •• ,,r.-;;,,,, ••• •••••ooiil'ehfot'loote·••·••••••••••· -~··-••p•,••••• •• ••••• .. •••••••••••••••• •••••••••ii••-••••• ........ , .. ._lt..t..t.ll•• ·~·· ••t.t•!_!•••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••~tie.ma ••P•clc>ut, s LO~ a:R. ltif, tit -i.D'la1'11r .._.. 3140 ..,_...,,.._.. 3169 hom~.-p;m:-prfl . UOACllSJll br.1Mltl'9'9. Vaerly~ Yrly, .dull.11. no Pt\t. wb.b ftnDleee, Ile ••••••••.......-•nno•••• ... ,,,._._. '•••••••••• ~ 48K t 8A,trpl. In t'•nlral ·C.tifor11I• C.Ullt.UJO&&kfot Mr MnllllnRJ •rAM -.171-00fa/tTW'IOI. Pl''!>· t'nt'IO•ed 11r . Townbtue. lovely, •P•c. &M.·Yliai.Y ~:'.:'.::::::::::------..-----J c P 1 • o Ko b I•• ) • OlilllM. """'"U """"1 Ura.a 4 ~drin 2 b• ~at Cout 1111tiw6y. Ir flome.tilie, 2 br •ith 2BR; 11M .• nrbch .. sas 1rvine home WOOdbridce. SIDl/lttt, New-CWt 1 bdrm 2 be Duphic. Compit'. turn. No pet., no tb.ildr1n, 1MuJ8'*9 ll'llr&nce + 2 3 BR, I bt,nrbth .. M6S Non·•moller 1200 me>. ~aer..ln11cr•P11rT•ll rrp&e,,.,....•Y••I Ev"9 Or-eanrieW.50 Wbe•e.h. '425./mo C1ll 1.fnd• ::...,;.t:.:m't,~hpoo•tt 28R.lbl.,1Jdo .... l$00 CaUnowMZ·4046 . 111 ~-8220011"-te '*1111. blr lem UJ.l5.20 1 .. ast of lhc n •w home& ot1 the WMtf'r ~· lndr)' rm. Winter mail or aft'· 141~7 Jacmd. T.W. court.a. 1 l BR. 2 bl., Udo • · · · ~1,c==c-=..::.~...,.- Mlo. iuu:ncrou. •mallf!r • for lease onl" L.ove and entertoln In 116.ln .. IOO S.e:heltor unit, •low. bUt H 11-• .._ lb.R,tba .. J.Jc:so ••.• '760 toshattlbr<'ondonr parcel••IOQ,d t•rrp• ,,........,__ •ii• 1 \o un_.on 1._.. fUllt.·YlilLY OCC. 1200. incl. uul. •Y.uable. Contart Ktn -~ cle0 uncc In '"'OUr new ('"'"tom home c.e.MeM 3124 1ar;r•· •••b•r/dcyer. ~ emt« OWi. Adult.I. 564mor549 7IJ11 - .. ••••••••••••••• ••• ••••• "h • -'"" ""· ...,.,,,. 0 .. ,.. From 1•••. 1BR,1 ba .. Bal:iltYe s.115 · wit dc:d"'ner inLerlon. Conve;iit-nce . ••••••••••••••••••••••• .... -·~-...... IMW.Ktaekk "" SUSCASITAS S..wtod VU1a11. 1$5$5 -• .-. ,rv • Ba)'ftt:w\thome.pvt1uJte. ~~11 ,1.,1,. orientt.>d t.o include 3 <'•r garagca with z.-1411l.aln, frpk, •lll'ID, 1••'n&1oa vl.Uaael.ane, 3 BR. a,... ba. now home. &at .. r•pl adult. Non-,..,5,su.e. 4--.POOL-HOMI .n uto~l'c opener1 ; kltchcnlJ with ~ • •rmll I bdrm , 1'MCllC. bs•m Hil, a•r, H.B.f714,... .. I. OCllWllnmt,wltorrno. •mok•r. lf.OO . n10 •-Cotil Tll .. ., .. ...,. lnlcro.w11Vr rpnw•o. self·•leonln1 aar. t145 • up. nroceM. M2&S-7u.7111 : IAUOA-MIWPORT moobefore10pm. llOltl .. JIO 4111dnn 1'b.u..nr:p1ac. O\•e.ns. _lr••sh com""p~ctoni, a'nct BBQ ~duH.-;--317~:.-:'Lto ~~l!~ ~~m~'!~Wo-IMLTY 67Ml70 t I lenttd yard, t'QV•r;d b ....., -IOI 466.JO..t -.Jo. !~!'18-Nr. &NU! ranare lQJl'I . wet· urt1 Jn 1111 model1 : lM"at 1 bdrm. Adult.a. No 1!'.10. • 3bdnn. 2bli. t>Wnen utilt.-w.....--__ 4,10 lill•"-'-•l>Mdll!;'!:per ei:...t..--f l r e 11l acel'1 in liv ing rooms & pet•. J1tqulr• lTIMi C...MIM 3124 Nears Poiols. Com· ,' "''.,'•' 6to bts1ch . ••••••••••••••••••••••• ' • b•dr~m• ln"oor 1·1undry •••••· Rodat.er.rt!u ........ ••••••••••••••• modare Cir. Apto. z br. lll"D e or un urn. '"-·bl ~h , · i::_:ara~~~.e,LJ! A~Ulv-;u1l~. fu~~ily r~m 1tnd much tllJ, 2 br. IV. bl, P•lio, Kidl nkotne. 8" mgr ~f~ly or Y••rly . Oi:v:. ,:~;11;1o:vA1.-:: b3' Ownw.. Twn•• f'ur more , [)(Ko~ uvallnblf' to all tenants. ~i:~! ~s:.pti~~ "*7rm . .cllllt.t,nopec.s. Ill mi Commodore Cir. •lnlle. 1ame •rea m . ~~~~1~05~!'!-or ~~~1~"(1!11 ~~~"~t~~~tS ~~::!~d~~~~{# ~ AYe. Ml·wt. :::c ... ;;;m :~~2br4'6en, 1~-·&;s~~beach. :::•r•ae for ren1 . ........ -lk .,_.._. J740 L.ar1e 1,24'3 bedroom 2 ba. bltltl, lncl. retria. 1916 Wallatt', Coli t.11 ••~~.J! ...... ,?~.~! ~ i;,.w /:,': ~~~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• 11rdeo _apt1. Adull1. ~~,SUS~ S..O.•• 3176 MMa.13:1rno.648-ZMa. '"'""· m.bit ...-•Bach Lo•1 Be•ch. n.tlwhr,bltnl,encl.11r. ••-••••••••••••••••••• WMilOAl'hnlelJJOO t qf\ t$ ~ tobch Yr 1., • .__. • • J Ptl•~ OtU pd. SISS ... bbq. P.,ooi. G11 Pd. EXCLUSJV-!: OCt:AN ,_..___ 4400 d~n. °"' bouae fn.m iHN No JM!f,a, t.)Z)W*9• •" J40 llARBOR VIEW HOM ES M1o11t .... 111Sa:tt Pl.t&Z-5073 2 bdnn. l\1i ba Town Hae FRONT I &i 2 bdrm. --UW caioabl 1'18 Lille to .....::_91!!1t'35-..U. -··•••••••••••• .. •••••• Otrn'ltl Mockil 3 bdrm. 2 ' pet,.--11'1... apt··,_ aYtll. Securlt ••••••••••••••••••••••• trada for 1n1I f•n1lly J bdmi trs ft'llced yard O&e IDR. 2ba In Wt.'ll t bl. ram. rm. dbl, .,;ar. l Br. bttna. Poot Adulta. 2 :-W.':r·:"J&ec&~P,.1, ~:r~P.~o~$c3~5cl:: l)'ltem, elevator. di.!I~ SINGLE USH t.1w11th1a. ~•e 3220 I Ori\-. b)' a N•llor\•I' 118 Compltl'lely rl"flor •n ~ Incl. ·wrs per nc>dllklre 911" ptU. '225. mo.. AllS4l·S032 . 8GMJ wuher, dbl. ovens. Pen fl».<1111. _ tJll~ per. mo I •t ~ • rt h to fl e • mo.QlllM4-Ttl1. ·•a8T:s. thol.M wM lrplc &i prv, U.OOOSQ. FT. ..... lllttllOD Cblldttfl pet.11 14~Ut1 1t 1 la•l ln r l ii' IRAMDMIW V.P9CHke ~from 1325 up. ••••••••••••••••••••••• OKCll.llW.allll ~ -~ .. ~Jn~t!8ft~k>ua ~~ ••••• ??.~ !.~~"!'-.2ba,allelec.'tr1c. ..._ -..Uorfall23 Cre11t 1..Dc1tion - • ol ... d ft. I b LAOUN -C ......,... paroinr. 137• UJ -A---2 •-•-•--k wolk to rM 38 wall·•all<"Pb flH'd ome w la•· IYihl A BEA II MTR s41 5 mo . &OO W . ...,...._ "'' ... uc..:' ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,,_, Jd.1'IO. at:!·i San M ti i• rm +-den ·\ 1 mm ir. c . lNN. f15/wll; ._up. Mflld Hamilton . Bll·ZilT or JwUor I BR, I BR At 2 beach, g1r11e. 1350. 010•.. JI 02 LI AA.I Ave. 71f.JZ4f.$236 llwtaer J141 $.IZlO/molff, l«Y., cok1r TV. heated &cz.Zl.14 BR. 2 BA. Stturtty pro. Eveaa-031.8 ••••••••••••••••••••••• --••••••••••••••••••••••• wo·-~-<lfomeo '°"' UUI 1714)4 ... """• videdbypytkey-carden· ·---JllO Rettpt .. Conr .. ore. ORANGE Country Liv 3 .!'}{~~:I~ ~":-,1~.' tludiot'Ondu, at'r<i&t from ..,.Qi:"1'f.OO MsN. CoUt Hwy. .-.. •EeC1'de adult 2 Br, den ~A'~t ;Ip~ 1~1~~ =•••••••••••••••••• :rv,iie~~ur::!r':untl',',· Gnl\rfl: Wll" pd: ~O&:ii ~~J'o<M &i jllC, $3'15· 3 br, 2 tMi, 1&:111 encl p11tlo. C0ZV I Bd.m\, I bath (;o(. 2 81. condo. pool, dbl l•r. call)et, lge _pvt p1tJc> or Sh•rp 2 bdrm. 2 ha . Commerce Park Gvdenerlncl.No~t.s-tage ...... ~ktobeach. MZS.~:MS-fllZZ h•lconiei w /xtr 11 Tropic•l1etl1ng, pool, Nt-port 833-88\J Retut. 3 bd.nn,. 2 •th, 3bdrm 2ba. Larae yard L....L..~ l"'44 ...__.._~.,......,.. S32'1mo 414 7287 2 ~-b ~-1 Pool a u ht tacu1zi. Ne•r So. c .0-~~0-IC-UTI--.-.--fn..lt', lg•'"' yrd, .,,, No-· .,,11 Jon 10 ....._ • ---· · • ...... u •. J •· cir port, -.... e. • P•. g · Pl •• .... Ownerll97" 2 Cia ft " ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ crpt. drapee, lndry tac. ed tennia court. lndry u.a.M.50.f.98.62Ji rm. . I 21~~ a M •, ,""", r "8N·"", WOOOBKOG UdD•lal!.!_BRb.lt3 b111.,2300 12u. rum chum bach. nr aood ~-No pell. l280 facil. Limited preview 1&i2 bdrm Apt. at 1240 & Lu•"ri•~• offSI<••. •-· lcAoel"-d 3106 lwtior/Vlctori~ e r CREt.:KSlt>E IQ • ... ,... ftl, yrs heh. UU~, one rnp mo . 271 E 16th Pl. rentala. From $290 per S260permo.Alao ~bdrm . ecuilv; tet'retar;, ••••••••••••••••••••••• L.arie•br,2~ba111,21ty, oki.tilOC).131·$231. _......... ,........... &M-ow: mo. Modela open daily house. Call ,,~.,.1 or r l • ~•· ~ IO'M 10 d"•k 21> personal phonl' cov -8AYl-~HONT 28R, 2 bil , 2 bdrm.1bl .gara.i@.~ am rm, neir: lo pr · Wll.lktobeachcondo.2br, " .. · &»-7340 123 E. Bayfront l&IS per mo. Ca.II aft. Sprii Perlet't, fam ho me . 2,_., ba, W/D, a•r. Pool, Ma..,..ta..ct 3769 3 Br. 2 ba townhouae. WI ch It a A v,e (at 1Aj;;;i;;;j;F;;;f;i;;;j-1es-age, receptionist, ron· lkrbZl3t f.TB·l57Td•ys. 548-2111 ~./mo Ca ll wk /d )'I ™or~l8Z ••••••••••••••••••••••• Quiet adult living. Yorlltownt Ste, •09M. If lw•ir.n.ltlted ference room. xero.11. 898-Sl33 t'Vei/wllnds i'.ncloeed gar. & patio. Tl4·53&-44M •u.flS•illid 3900 notary Lease or month eo.t. W... 31 J4 ICIDS/PfTS OK ~UI ••UDO ISLE. J BR 2 a.. Ne> peta. MOO. 645-3381 or •••••••••••••••••••• ••• to month. Near liO. Coas1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• EASTSI OE 2 BR llWel)' lice p1tio $730 87$-5948 121115;Spac.2bdrm.apl.2 Plaia. o.c. a1rporl & I J. UIXUR'V 2 br 2 ba WH · Mo s&M:ili.MS-682:z Kldt 0 .K. Avail. now. MOIUHOME rreeways Ca ll 979-2161 L.EASE/PwchaM townhou1e, gar, S39S. Condo. Nr, lalle 2 tilr · MISAPIWIS After4:3'1caJJ8n-0967 . TOWNHOUSE So. Coast 6f.2.~IO.~ PT-frplc, den, Ideal ex· f. BR. very r\lct: a~a . 18.59 I BR 1315. 2 BR S380, ~TIOM SZ3 Sq. ft. offit'e 1p11ce lo Plata. 2BR,,.2bll. t i,.,, )'r New 2&3 bdrm frplc tlCUllve rental. $S50 av11il Port T1g1art Pl. Incl. Poall ~.gar. avail. 3~· 1 ~ 2 atop~ Rent,. e to buy i~fo . .J.llb-lease in Lai.:un 14, uld. One of a kind. Lie bltns, 2 car IM8ge. $450 now.1193-1370or"9-1833 11rdener, ••ter. $100 Adu t., no pet1. 2650 •,... Imo. repoa oan auumption. Hill'I. Pl! month. Av111I. w/opt to buy . P111rllal &l4J 675-f.912 mo. Available now. HarlaAve.549·aM7. •1501 etc. Euy llnanceO.A.C. Ot!c:' 1JiL8:1).6030 l.'nldl.t ol rental tow11rd · · SUPER 5Br, frplc , nr 7:i9-llSZ,64f.-57tm ........... 1271 2 BR duple•. yard, Boffiets. 1---------~hase price. Gd op-Best Eeta:ide locaUoo, 2 pool, .,.., mo. rent free, NNr new townhse, 2 Br, garage, IOU of room. Mobllttto.. Store Delu,xe medlt'll su1tt•, p.irtunlilmortgaReratea br , 1 ba, pvt )'llrd $5T5mo.556-&576 Newport Shore1. 3br. GREAT RECREATION 1"" be, aar. fncd pat.. pl.euant neighborhood. W.Anaheim 781-144'2 itroUnd nr · Corona dt-1 lower. Minimum co11l Adult.1.644--0881 . alrium, jacuiil, nr. •mo.~ PM & kT-Wll> Anaheim 956-1011 ku RealonomicsCorp s.sxm Woodbridgef.BR, rllm rm, be11rh. Pets ok. $5:.0. Swimming, sauna ~. <! -.tndl Westminlt.er &18~ 675-6100 -~ 3 br 2 ba near new 3 ba. A/C, J c11r g.11.r. Nr SIJ.-711110eve. health clubs. b1lh11rd.s . Blldl. Apt. stove 11 refrig. Santa Ana »4-70101----""C"-"'----•• ..,.,..... •och 3169 ~-•i d;, y •'rd . w / ri lake. $595. 962-t945 3 Bdrm. , .. b• condo. n• ghl · IP1J!ht•l'd tt-n n1 s 131"0 >. 21~. l""u·b• toodw""', e. Ne> pets. Adlllta. 42ot 91.b. E. Anaheim 956-4500 ~-S::C~ ~rt~-~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• llol*.up.2carencl g111r. .,... courts. ro pro shop, ar. t'>'-•pa 0,1 OC'. Sl.Call988-0020afi8pm. ....,. Magnificent be1chfronl nil.. Mgmt 642-1603 StOO. 2 Br condo In loYel)' Pool. 2 car 1•ra1e & eolfdnv1n)! ranJ,!t·. J.1Ur1y E-slde. 81 .. H.B LEASEW-2834 Weill Newport home. s Woodbridge. Pool, lake, opener, near Hoag ll08p room TSLMemt_ MZ-1603 3 bdrm. 2 ba. frplc, at-1HEEXCIT1NG Downtown Huntina:ton Bdrm, 2 baths+dorm 3BORM.2V2BATHS etc.Nopeta.833-3JOT &ibeache&.~.675-5216. r'UN ACT IVI TI J-:s -2lr~==~--'-==1 tadM!ld garage $4,7~ per PA&.MMISA·APTS eeacn. 210"'1 Main 51 2 loft $1100/mo.to June twnh.!le, S. Cal Pl11ta RENTALS l-'1llt1mt-d1rl'l'lor . rret> $29$ mo.~ MINIJl'ESTONPTBCJI offices 11v111 1able Ont• Yrly lie possible 9S6·5'8TI &re•. refng, Wt D, air, 2 BR. 1 .. b ,.~ RACH 1650/_. Yrly Sunday brunl·h. HBl.fi.. --25fl3E'den••• ...... ~3 --.--,-•• -.---,--1-10-1 Bach, 1&'2 BR Z.nn sl3>. one 2-rm SI 10, OH WATER gar opn r, S55Q mo 28R.2;;~------··::75 UHlllMsPokl tnps . part1t•:.. s port ,..,.,. .. ,_ _....._.. r, ""a ron o . fromlZSS&up. 900-1S68 2Br home with BOAT SJ6.4976evs: 831·23116dys 2 BR. 2bll. .. : .. ~: . : S52S =.2v!'&t;f:.em~.i~ twrnarnents &i mort'~ Me.a Verde·Zbr. quiet ~~-nr heh. S350 ~:11.5M!'!~ ~-DELUXE OFACE SLIP . $650/mo lse lEASE/hrcltaM 2 BR,2ba.. .. . .. IMO huge bedrooms, 2ba, et:AUTlfULAPTS· C'Ul-de-aac. Reference1. (5 8Ut1Easto/Newport J400Sq.ft PtlmishedOf'" unfum. TOWNHOUSI-:. So. Co115l ~:R.R. i~· · · · · · · ~ frpk, de<'k , 2 patios, gas :nt:lt.-s. l&2 bt.odroom" $300.alt38att 3· lllU2mACll~~LAl'TI bS Blvd! Ct'ntral Oran,·, Wahif1oMHonws Ptaza. 2NBR 2ba, 1i,.; yr ···· · ···~ BBQ. D/W, refrig. Encl rurn & unrurn l\1vdl'I:. Beaut. 2 BR, 2 bo. Mesa .......... ge r. 9am· ..... m!l46·9860 38R. 21,o\i ba """'"" .. --a. d I oo l 1 u ••all --•. 2 Br. 2 b• 1 ----~~-----County Localion ']I· 1400 old. One ol a kind. l..8e '· ·.. · ·..,..,,., ~-·.:c;. ace, laund open 111 Y o noorn Drivo, nr s. •. Cntry ·---38R IV. bil S47S " Sl3$. I Ba, I Ba from -4000 COMMERCE PARK --~---'-w1opt to buy. Partial aBR.•2 .__ · •······ ·~~ r---· ~~-. no pell:. rn11te l>t'rvit·t· ~.,11 Nu Qub. Pvt fncd ysrd, 2 l2&0·1ZO>. ,,,,.1 Jon. Coil.aMeu 919_9997 New u.inuo 2 bdrm. 2¥.r endit-ol renta,l. tow11rd lBR.zb'···· · ··$SS'.O ""' .... t • ........,.9111).5144 lt"ast" required. Sorry. carport w/at.oraae. S'3,5 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ba . S8S() per mo. 759 purchase price. Gd op. 3 BR 2 •• '.· · · · · · .... ,,_ <l<.lulls only. nc> peta. rm. 87J.8139., 631-1116. ..,_81""1800• pool &. Jacuiii. I•-:,:::::::~~=-Totwn II Coun1.ry ShopPtna t:r497-2282 port. until mortgage -f.BR;2;;;'t>!: .. --.:::$650 THllLUfFS OakWOOd 2 BR ~Mtai•. faraae_, · I ** .. •a1t1ri-• Cb'.1.85112Be•chBl .. HB . .. ,,,_ .. , ,_ 1 1 rates lower. Minimum 4 na.z~oa -G ~ A-A--..., d k New2Br frpl p.ik» aec l.o'lelygardens-Brook1 9SMlllO'I l:IR.Sb•~ .... n ..... rren•. «.r.546-_,, 7~ •• ............ ~ 4 Bdrm .• 2"" ba ., a~uen , _ _. .... -.. ta w r / oer oo up, &a&e,..ilU&.iTmnOrida __ wtr~.u r-l~=iiiiiC::Siiins-Jir..R;::~•@S:7:.':,.c>. fll ~·f!.~"s\•rf1ar, :=~~Ila::::::. i:: lm'l&:~~~ ~~~;.:, 1 1~'~rol!l('1'.,r:~·e.·--:,:p1~'. .... ~'ffi .. ~~~ .. :::,:,l c""!..,~·~--~~-~~~---,f .. :~?""',;.,.--iii,.~~-:71~. J '1 ··~ pet . m o . q ~ an. Move UI ~ lrv108Attt.11th'1 pt-time housekeeping. Neatbii.cl, 2 br, 2 ba up-•Wk.lywdaily maidsrv. C.rpeta,drapt-s . Sc.t.Ano 3180 645-1088,.546.62:62 nowatll&OOmo. 64~0M<> Elderly lady. No pets. per, encl. 111r1ge. No .-'f'V&ipboae•vailable UdoM..ta.a ••••••••••••••••••••••• 0-Poislt 3226 ~0.1 AgentMl).5560 Ref't. E¥es, 6-f.S-z331, wat«beda! Adultaonly. /Ulow•UlWk Vf1o1Je Sant.a Ana Condo fnr rent. ••••••••••••••••••••••• /?. 'l1t~ .,. • .,,......_11/s-tlt 6G-Mil2 No p e l 1 . 2 I 7 o 2 2Z77llarbor !On tlJto waler I 2 8d.2&,poo1SJ25mo. 2Br,2BaocnviewCondo. ~lt/.fw Ba11borea, 4 Br 2 Ba. .L_~l6thSt Bac .. lor •. 1 br. U .1 !,!;~hurst . 1 32~. CosUMeaa &4S-'840 Newport 675-8662 ~1·541S. On clitrs above marina, ' rrtv. beach comm. $575 f._..,,..f'r11t 16tht • ti · ~''" QM6&1anylime. 833·8600 l ~mo§~•~in~i.gr~.;;V~•~•~r:-:•;""'; i.;;;;;;;"";:;;·';';'°;;;;;;~I ~M2·l3:U or eves 2 bdr., z b. .. frplc .. gar.. Roomw/kitcbennette ~!J"C~EI: Ho.ftu..funMd.a.oi rm.I.kV-3•34 avail.213/412-922.6 --------lndry nn .. S3llO 920-S376 l60wedt&iup. · sq · r~-r --r " 8 d .,..,,...,.,... Wxurious p11nel ed of. •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,...~••FJlONT4br,3b•. I r , crpt1, rapea, ~~~~=~----1 ---~"":::_·Vl::.:"::_---1 fi I I l G .. ] 0 2 ~. ~·~ IAYl'llO...,. c• ......... , kid. OK , 1240 ·· 1ce5 w 1pec1• ex ras. 111•1 2 2 Deai.i. brand new 4 br + 'l5 3l."MPU5l>a:IP.'11f\IE lmmac, w11Jk to besch. "' mo-~No·-... _,,,,.., .. .., 1-...&.... 3144 Lovely hom e, M ,, Co n l e r e n t e ~•••••••••••••••••••••• denw/famrm,dinrm, 1_...__L Novt-only$750. ~2 BR.2ba.,year-· _.. ................... ,....._ refrig /hot plate . rm /bathroom BIGf. BDRM , near new, man)' xtra1, frplc , ---r---... 3248 MarinalUnUty&f.2·8850 Y •_:>.:.,".T!....-~ 2 bdrm 2 bii . bit. ltns, ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~118ocean, pnv. ent. ~01k_i~clho. n. Con111ct GG M45 per me>. &oU dshwhr, rncd yd, grdnr & ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~""'"' patio, lndr,)'.. K•r•1e. 2 BR, I Ba condo. fJW , AC. ......._. ....,......, 1111 kelllty5JG.TS33 ¥.trpd.$650.Kids ok. No I Br unique quiet 'II ac. WATERFRONT w/dOck. 2Bf(1ba,yrly~ts50 1325. avail. tmmd. 9"-~. g)'m, tennis . CORPORATE REALTY lcA~ ..... 3JOJ petll. Agt , n o fee . 1-'rpl , kid1 /pe ts ok . Very nice 2BR, bltln1. OCIAMfltONT ™ MJO +.No kid!!, peb. Room $200. Larii:e. pvt. 97S.0111 -. j:004-l,;;2.Wl~~'~"';'"j,.,~~ILJii4iOI Rough. $450. Jan. I . ~;.J..,ea wltlxM!t dock. 2BR,1ba.,wntr.S500 ~ • •,.o'°'~""==-~--'-== ba, pvt entr•nct:, cook-I----~----••••••••••••••••••••••• 82286 °•..-uuv STWS TO llACH 2 BR. 2 ba, -.11 elec, new. 11 _...__1.. 3141 ing. 41'7·3687. 12S·SOO SQ . rt . orf1('e!I. I bdrm. ~cott.aite. Close •••lswJOft leach 1240 -=:.==-------1-::-::---:--:--:---:--,--BR Cov'd perltJng. 310 Vic· .....,.....__.. 1-~----~--r From $85. Incl uul. 77!f walk 1o beach, shopµ111g ••••••••••••••••••••••• OCEAN VIEW ~t2dock. 31br.12'•,1ba ~BR', ~':·."",,,•,r: = toria. Ownr/Agt ... 13'75. ••••••••••••••••••••••• AUnlctive room *"l m1 to w l.9lhSt 540-2200. & Pllrit. 131.S mo_ 1n(;ld, f. BR. 2Lni ba. walk to ~ge f. br, 2 ba. s un · ~""-'· llot)', rpc, In 642-2164 ·~ CLIFF DRIVE VIEW be•ch. 130 wk . HU . wl. '21 J2nd. St. 615-7:J67 oet!a/1. 55lKl mo. Al'Lk ror room, 2 frplcs, redwoud ~~n -Vrly 1800. ~==:: ~:: ~:;: = Bach, ~I patio, ~UI paid, CONDO. No. Laguna . 2 1 ,c""=o"'cc.'~-~·-.,-,~, I aoo"'o BSqo;_!htStS!.•N>. B. B~ Keith,962-f.471 . hol tub. Walk lo pv11 ~==-----p•••''DO ..,.. Br. 11,A, Ba. frpl , .dttk, -&·-~ 4050 " ~--" 11 J ... · -LI --mo. -· $600 /mo. yrl1y . Call ~ Agent,541 -$032 CoraslDdefMat 3222 New~Jeganl·2 bedroom ""''""L Av~ . an. 15u1. Delightful 3br, lam rm 2 BR, 2 bt I I p 1 ~ 6f.6.-Zl16 S7J.5089 •••••••••••••••••••••••!---~------ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~.Of" 2 bedroom + rlen 1795. mo. f.99-50f.9 home in Hrbr Vu Hilb. ' rp · ·00 · ' · ft11ard & care for ndivt' SMALi. OFFICI-: t"OR ••1> c-' • · d ---------10n1ovelySt.Pvtyd.Xlnt Adulta.$395 2bdrmll>b• ·-uo ~ vi.u. ,,._ , .. _ ........i .~-11., 2 HR.l'hbathhornc 2<'11 gar111ge & deck. 1450/mo. Waterfront Homes 6311400 .., . o:uar win ow New 3br. a.oo aq rt , con · · -• ~· """" .... .,ao s ...... ......,,, SeniOf'I. Upper middle i:.i••· home. Five blocks Lo 1emP 0 r a r y h m .o-"""'°"--c·cl87_>_._.....,.. ___ ._ OK. noeb.ildru 1325 per detuxe 28R. 2BA. 5575. cJllll3 neichborhood . OC AgentS48·T729 beach. Prlv11te 2-rar Pasuimlc white wat.crl •---------I 1~-=~"""'.;;..="'=°'= .. =-,·'c""=-i Also BACH S300. Adult&, Aitport area, Residenee --- g.ar11jj:e. Fully m111n-va.S8S()Jmmedoccpnc)'. WXUllOUS! i..,Br<•,..•.Ba, ~·*·"""!·, nc>pet.s.494-1375. !>.' .. o~.m111.1n1o m,,•,•~,,1. SAN't~:~NTI-; \.lined yard. Aduli.., No .... _1051 _ om g-• L • h ] 9 --• 2 BR, rrplc, beams, Mrea pet.1. Jnqulre at 525 18tho -~-·--------I SpaeiouA 3rd floor condo U:i10 Aii'1 l7s-Oiia vaa hawport ec 16 51350 27.S/LSZO sq ft . heat. 111r. patio, location, so. 0 Street. (114) IJ60.6331 2 g To R y s u N N y on the bayfronl on Udo ' • ••-•••••••••••••••••• beth &. signs 6 yr old PCH ... A75. SM A{'a('ta ---------1 SP'""Sll 2 b 1,. b hninsula. 2 8drm1. + OHTHl.lliCH 2BR2ba. L'"-"oq •· f'rplc. P.i.ltlC MIWPOIT ¥..,._....._., 4250 bldJl 613-:ar.12. 'lop b~, or, 714 1640. llave~r own fireplace ~,~1 ,"i•••chr.,. 10•• •• •.· den, espentive c11rpet-&ch,kit.ch.bath,uUlpd. :"'.':: h b ••••••••••••••••••••••• r . , 3 bd • 1 . ~ b d enclgar,...,,WI er, gar 81chelor1 . I or 2 L .,.1200 ''\, ft Lll.,una 9263eves. 213 1316-936 or llltmai . rm. ~fmo Adult11 Av ail. ng, mirror.,,,. ar, e-$18$ year round. lit mo dlpl, new cpta. S39S . Bedrooml&iTownhouses 1 k I! Arrow h c: 8 d 8ch. Xlnt iway visibih-l~ba. S475permo. IM82 mid-Janf.!M·2'1tl4. luxekltchen,2aundecks. 150 1ec dep. Ref's. Mesa Verd ~ '154-6216, FTIMn$349.~ labfrontcondo,slPfi8. 1 ~. 1 Al'" 2 l:IR hse wfyard, so. of lhway. $4,50. No pet1. fi'F.>.5000. 840-0::Ul. J HR 2 BA, $.W> mo. Qill Scott 640-6600. Eves 75tf.1212. Agt Tb•me1 Ln. Call Llzo----------$l!O>Pttmonth. 673-U.llOam·Tpm -.1~ •~ 1 1 1 la>-7022 y.new c.,....;J'iun · '-• H92·1Tll ex l . 552 o r •-HHh 3250 BROKER 673-4400 -· -.._...aruar apa, ota undPt Rrn park 'K ~•••••••••••••••• O:eant'ront dlx 2Br, 28', V111 • .... -a• recreation pro1ram, WG BEAR C.b1n. s~ 14. Ocean &i hill vu•w11 "8-!250 -k 1700 "II ..---..., IOCialpr()lram.Tpool.!1,8 POOf•abl I V 2 Sf.91Ul6,.f.99.39'l2 NEW4Br, 3Ba, lg ram rm, T..... JJ90 ...,..... wee • mo. ti 2 Br, 2 ba, new crpll: &i tsmill C'OWU. Al F11hion lrok ... e, co or · I~ ';;i. 2Jd; ':~isl!~: nr schls, 1hoJ)ll &i fw)', ••••••••••••••••••••••• _J_..,. __ .7_,,__ .... ______ , drpi, 1u1tove 6.dahwhr Wand, Jamboree &i San 11>ica. St5-t1Uft AJRPORTOFFICt.:..°" ··-Agl f ...,,~ -.... SllXI mo. owner 962-IJl9Uo Condo 2 BR, 1 ... ha. de· OCEAN FRONT Dix. f. lnel. Encl: 1ar11es. Cou-Joeqi.in llllla Road . ! to J morn swtes. 1111 :".;.....1 ,no ee ........ ......, or892-7~att.6PM ,.. bdrm.2ba.2cargo,.ge, p'9pref.ChUdrenolt.No C7141644-lf00 ser"VlCC!I Nole11sereq"d. ,,,~~n corated, IOI paUo, pool, U pd SHORT TERM Bl!:ACH t)' ...,.....,..., 3252 chlJdren OK. $375 me>. Wurter tBOO mo. ulil. pd. Pill-$330. tJI . e1cepl RENT A 1. p u LL y om 1150. mo Imm~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• llSIJ..2036 Family only . 2910 W. ~.Z32fElden,845·1965. 0.chelor unit .,.., block Fu RN 1 s HE 0 , ()('("Uf)ancy. 2082 S •~. 2 Rrtl0fne adulll: no pet.a: Dining rm +-3 br. 2 b11, H11r11ge i•rdener. MzS f~lc,patio,gar,fncdyd. mo.61~~ Kidl & pet.a ok. S.f.S,5. Agt, nofee. 964-25689'7J.2971 f. .BdrJn. 2 ba, Fam rm. Lff~l~l~llct~r.tjol= ... ~dlorr;~ ~~Front. Up~·OOIT Sunny J bl", 2 ba. lge :m~.·~ ~-u~1 11: AVAILABLE t'EB. For m:~1~~e 200· N II . AtrilllTI, all bltlns. Ocean • ~fwRhlwd JlOO roon.li:klbof•lndows. Delbo• Blvd. S250 per approximately 4 monthsl ~-~~~---­ view, p_\11. beach. Niguel ••••••••••••••••••••••• lbdnn. [)upW,a fumi1hed. Ne> peta. NI': CX:C. $320. me>. + ae<!wity dep. Qall · owners will be 11way, CGl!la Mesa 2 pn¥ahi of-BYOWMER Lusk lfV iDll1. bl.0 cor-ner lot at WI Keele Dr., 48r, 28&, many xtra1 In · rludln1 all •PPllancoa. tJ)O mo. Include• t11x~•. u.i &. aaninr. ~l.S:M or "1S2-fil05 Lee kit:• br, 2 ba, Jrplc, 01hwhr, Cov 'd p.11tlo, gar., lncd1d. Kida & pets ck. Agt, no fee . $4,SS, 96f..25669'73·2971 . 2 Br w11ar. $295. Crpl, fncd )'d, Wiilet pd. 27 10 "D" Delaw111re. 636--412(1 91orea. S800. T58-1465 Slepl to beach. S215 per 7'1.-S. b*'-770'1 Large 3 bedroom 2 bath, tic:ft rum. 1150 e11rh or 11'1>. S48·7863 l -~CC~------1 -~--~-----f firepla~ 1u.ndt1Ck. NO Bl bolh. Good locatum. NIGUEL SHORES : MOllUHOMI MIWUllDAPTS AlfMuJt.snopet.a.2bdrm pda.S&OO.permonlh.2914' Avail. Jan. I. 1919 C•ll Specioua 4 bdrm. 2'11 bt, ~ATIOH Apw IM•h.......... 1 Bdrm• Iott '320. Pool, 2 bit trom '320. Jae, pool, W. Oceanfront, NB. 91S7·l.IOO Of" TSZ-0099 after fam rm, beach, tennis. Rent, option to buy Info, ••••••••••••••••••••••• jacuui, ckleed 1ara1e.. clubhou1e, Shown by 87541130 fipm. $636/mo. 493-1293 or repo't, loan auumptlon ..... ,, ' nd• 3107 O• • wtr pd. AdWta. no appt.only. 5*-31165 831·l"53 ttc. £.aay lin•nce O.A.C. ••••••••••••••••••••••• peca. *Hamilton. C.M. , ,...__ i.•-Ch . 2 b ~r.o&, "'Mo"'· .. '"''1•1 · n . Beautitulllome3bdrm. 3 9olficea. l..G. IMyfront Ver)' lr1. Z ISl.WCll uuu _. arnun1 r ..... toShw't 4300 _,.,mo. rou oor. S BR. 3 bl., fam. nn. Lrg. 1-5 lot. 982$. A.gt. 1--------ba'. t'oroi-1 din. priv11te MoWle Hot. Store Bdrm. Z Ba, condo, boat . .~. elec. 111r. lldlta, •••••••;:: .. ·-··•••••••••• liiiToom~·~,.,_;!2200i;;i;;jl44s:O comm. with t e nnl•, s.nta•·-""'~·7<170 1ll p av•ll . Yearly SBr. 2 ""'B•. fr plc , mpftll475lae67s.<m7 _ ........ ~ 4450 ---""'' 17.-5 cpt1 /drp1, refrl1 . Jacuui&i be1ch. 1615 mo. ~Anaheim 956-.UOO mo. .,....., ' -Wlhr/dryr, yrb' lae, t:iOO On F'lnley canal with U"'-1 lxpittiMt! 752-922'Jor f.99·46il Aneetm DM-1011 2 ~ ~~.,.Ve• IY mo ...... ~~.. dock,2Br1Ba,1•r,nice 9'areahomeo,.ptment TOf' LOCA TIOMI 644-2212 67J.S3S4 4 Br. 2Vt ba, nu S & S ••••••••••••••••••••••• JAS .. MICHH l .. ~~AVAl.LABLE G<llden West Estates. Gourme t Country ldtchm, ram rm w I wet bar, form din'g, 3-t •r gliT. ~/mo Lncl aard. C.11968--4802 w. Anaheim 761-1442 m;·~ado. Pt-C'11i --Y•rd. $5$0. Call Bill l"\.M•k• 0 ''·-... Nll(Ul!I Shorft. • br, 2 ba. Weatmintter 848-8895 113l-0234or8'7S.~ Beaut. 1rounda. nll!e &i ~1 ~ · }Ans ~UM.ITU> ~. Terrace Plan J on Cl'fet. Adu.Ila, no pelJI. 3 rrk ~ ~ ~"'" lge loc. Prplc, ram rm. 3 Bdrm, z~ ba, rroo. pr Ar bun.alow. Pool, l>Dwr' TwUM, dbl 1•r, o.,.~lJo.>'40•-.i tennis, pool , Jacuzzi &i Ol.Utandln1 ba.yfront Nie. rm. yrly. Work In I lirla Jacuui & bbq area . AIJtO frpl, wNh/dryer, pool . 13Ml34 Sine~ 1911 I 7ltli & lllewport ll•cl. Suct'ellful retail shop lpPl'UI. 950 lq. fl. G50 Pt:r mo. 811.r 67S·6TOO beac:h.11rlse.$600.mo. &i ~ier, Z bd, 2 ha, 3 prtf. 313 AJvarado Pl. Zbrt.ownhcue. lnq.171 Ad\alta .. mo.645·9'42. Appro• 300 1q ft , ~,-· ·,~:i:_~hBdNrompe, d1b11 >.,,_...,BR 2: '5b l·233fll I ~. ~:~~: ll0$0 831-0ZMorf1S.3l!IOO. E. 22ndSt., 810. tf.5.~ o.tui 4 Bft, 2 ba, iar, no Nswthl H.B •. <11b0rm.Z"to bn'o' tno do .. W.'?_tow21n0 IMlu!1tln1~on -' ......., ""' · ' ' •· n ce C' ean $200 ut.11 pd I Br dtlplex 1 Br t.chekw UI Incl plU. 1tePI IO bcb, 1575 re • · · ....... •in, mini-385 . Av•ll Dec 15 . home. IYOC'. pool, $f.85 2 l:tr, Z ba, duple& by .,..,;_ •--~... -· •-• W-"--• ·., .. · ' ........... lk4•1103. •moker9. 1200 + Utl l. hll.ll&.1.fl8G.-IS58 IM4-2283att.4. mo,lmofl't"erentw/l1r water, NB. SUS. Mar1na NT.i~~f0 · ~..._e, MO. !.:2.: lll9418le¥esli:wknch1. ~ela..t.il 4100 •Bdrm. 2~ba. twnhle ., •. 546-.Q'7 •• 751-5111. 1,~--~ ... ~·~""~-::--~;.:li~~-~r;-~t~'rr~~f'·:t•· P)ans. c;-J'n:~....:vN,"w, 2 ~ 2 br. 2 ba oondo .••••••••••••••••••••••• 640-1401 71t..OJ63 bit. to beach. Ckn. view ...... Ylefo 1261 C 11 ' '•I ~ult.a.No pell, tll pcl. PIOf ,· 2 Br, lOwahd•••,e. ~. dbllar. 1Ts~ 17th &i Jniioe. Poot, pvt .................. _. i:ii:::u~~it·~:1~:~5f~c~•::~,~·~~~~~-,~!'~5:~1'.·1 ••-••••••••••••••••••• ..... I hid l421 lllllE. L1y Ave, apt9. :, ==' o, .•.:.~.~.I 43rd. <7tf. )f1.S·$88f. en&r.MS-~or6"75-3111. 4 ...-r.J-9 3 O s q t t , For Ad Actien tau a Daily Pilot AO-VISOJ- 642·5618 C1eaa 3 br, Z ba, Jrplc, ••••••••••••••••••••••• QU)91.. . 1Z50 '700/mo Ana Ph 115111151· , dlbwbr, pt:Uo, 1ar, (ncd 31HROUARD8,AOOLTS C•' ln:• .... llll . .,_, •SHAalAHOMI•, ~T . . TOWNHOUSE-Lie 2 )'d. IOdll &i pets Ole. $455. OVER 40. J JJr nr beatb. '"'•••••••••••,•t••••• 0..,.... 3126 UDO VIEW Zbr, frplc, SelktlveC'OWIMUnl-1---·------ BR, l '-tib1. patio"" c•r AJll,, no fee. llf..zsee or .-.911).Llfll ~· 3 bdnn. Zl'I ........ ••••••••••••••• Ntio. ~· AdJtl, ftl.7461or'Hll·ZZM 110& llOSft.Ft. Port,poolli:l•und.;:,tot•e, fTl.2971 .Bllytrt w/3S'boail•U 2 bl. 1175 mo. lrple. 2 2 Br Twob11, 2 tar tl»/ano. · b5BR38Ahoule nn Miotwarehou1e, Com· t;!!r1,.1,ltbl.u;5oc1hlmklo OlnKcl M1111~rt•-' J26f br~2 ba coodo la ~c. -e:hlldt•1 . No pelt. ~'?i:;dnpvtfd, LIDO BAYrllONT : Vly-if•rbort War'l\er, .... ~ .. Parle, Newport. •• n "' Bot t ..... __ f )'r OAu, , MJ..I, mo-Suporb ,1,_ ••nd• M/F. -. Dr, .....,117 ''°'=~w=,,.,--.,--~-11'/Wlter. Avail J1n I. •••• •••••••••••••••••• moo ox...,,-e. 7JO-IO&a t '"L " -1: cauPatl1l4)9M-t8IMI, Wit;uricu J BR, 2~ b• We bar. w1br/dr1•r, ~· Mw 1122 ~ fn>lc, 2 BR. l8$0. f'\ltlMIWllSI. l1n. ....w-... 4600 1 ,--cccc~~~==-1 O:lndo,on w•ttt. noorto adulta onl1. 115<1/mo. ••••"••••••.,•••••••••• lkA ........ >140 l'.iA;;'=>•l.1~1111:,::··,"=,.~-==---IFem rmrDlle u +, spat' ••••••••••••••••••••••• 38R,2ba,huiet•mtm, c•Ul.n.c Palo• Verda P'-'l'=teol,54().1797.off. 2 Br up11.alra. frpk, Ice••••••••••••••••••••••• io·~ •-•modern za 2Ba c d I Re1pon•lble, worlltnv F'p, 2 1ar2• nr par1k &i llk:!De, fr\)lc, wallcovtt• W_...~ n!Oml, c'1te'",n Old, Im· IHARP/NEW •~bdrm J .;;, -:.am cell, ir:_·.., +Jn. :;..'=o: wb rdl tar • e ell a one oc:e•n. SS 5. 845-223, lno, czteNlv• mil'~. ............~ JIJI ~-•• , .. " .. ~:::·:,~-•h..,11 .,,•-,,. ""••'•''m· Nn•. frplt, •II bltna, '425. ~0•11 ~o,•.,m1 M'",,".,"c•.,•1n1 U-12118. sfso mo. 511·1534 : •••••• .. ••••••••••••••• ._... a ''' ea-• .....vn 87S-lta SJll<W.)'.Uma11e .... ,.. •7711.ullforM•t'IC. · Wlahr>3BrcondotnSan ...... ~.,.,.•Mn• J8R2BAN£WCRPTS 2 ... T..... terence1. A•all. Jan. 1a-,part..ftn,tfl)ll.!,1t• Juan C1pl1tr1no , Ual.WrttaClauiflfdAd ·D8 ERPCSH, WALK TO Bl.Uf'1"8, tae. 3 BR. J\t in ell'lhtGssiail SHARP. 15th. O•aer 4aya SlJPER 1 bt, poot, 11r. tldLpr .... el.aar.oP· R«Mtidrwtforooewho ,.... D1Uy PU«, P.O. A . 1490 M .0 -be .. onveenbell. Sl15Mo.Oill a •<'k •aoo1 orS4l·JLZ2. SYH hptt', "'-· R'JI, Adulta. .,, uUI pd, Np\ ""-'· wlll tak• 0¥ .. t hcNHbold •• 15'0, COtlla ..... (JU>431-312S •llO.Aaml.!ff·IW •1111t ..... .O.•:tu·•t. SIOO.~ f'lllPCIDlibWU•\-f.15.0ZM -ortaill'1WIG -, •• ••--.. I -.. ,, . . -" . j , ......... ,. -/ ·-----• ' I~ \. . .. -. . -~ " • ' - -1 ' ' , ' ' I ' '" " " II " " "' "" llh "" 'II '" 11.: up llfl " I .. " , " . .... 1\!1.3 mg1• '"" 1)01' .. Ill ••• ltor ... "· .... -· , \ . . I I r ·; • ... 1 I , --.- • • . .....c .... ~ .... Ofrl/ '~/,apenlHJ \, ,.. .,,, ........................ ..•••.••............... ........................ . ..............•....•...••...........................•...................••••....•...•...... Oia.rn .oft. oril dnl11t1 Slwnpoo • 1team cl an R.emoclel , repair. •en ....... aooc w Coaal Colur bnJblcnl'rt, wbt ta~n&ry , ollll nm .. Hwy, NB $49.Sl.8 rpa 10 O'WI bJettb CIH11 miAa .. nah)p lG yr. In •cs'--;;;; •--a. --bv. din rm. hall IU Av1 .... Ut'd llr Palom ..,... _..,.._ ,,., ri • b 110 t'nt bo , f~w, 1111 loader dvmp U.. i . lfff writ. Uoiu et.c a:n 12:11 ...... ••••••••••••••••••••••• U>WCOSTTOYOU Sl.mpleidt>u can mallr your home beaut ~ ............ Prof apt C'lcananl( Im 8nckwork Smc.11 Juba mocul11l., work. Custa Newport. Colla Meau & MC!aa lll'ra il49 3114 lrvin-0 676-3175e11ea. f.X C£LLENT PAINT· ING. Re.uooable ratt'& Yreee1t1m1LH. ~-27oe ----- Pl!:RRY'S PLUM BING Complete plumbln& 11CrV1ccs. Drain & H we r clll"anlnic Frt>e ewmat.Cll. 2' br aervict- 8'13"3181 -···· ·~ •• •• •••••• • ll. Gu.r tllm pl'\ odor ----------- BTR• JIAP"!!~RicGe~.••o ~ "'l'Str. ll )R UJW-~ "CHn r .. DD wotk m11•I. Ref• ..... •••••••••• •• •••• •• Sludl!Dl 1 TOCI truck •••••••••• •• •• •M•••••• Euc. Jlouaecleao1n1<. DlsllncHve pnaona I ffrvlr" to meet your .... ~~ F\rcpl~. planLen, t>tc . New-remodel. Ref. Eal. 646-04&4 Qbtom Wl&.llpapennf All Work Guar. Free Eat. 675-4158 -------.. .., 30:5 Maui. S A 6Jl 0\01 I' ' ' -4 9Mtwic s...:z 101• c .. s ... Uell'ldl..,...,, .,......., ll'ff trrm. lfon AMWAY Coo\ellu. IU-570:S, IU·32all NutriUon. HowJewarefi, ---.r llon:le Olrt " Comm'I WUJ haw or rln 1n)'th.tna. 6GUl.S4 --~apllMJ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Holiday Emert1•ncy1 PleaMCall 631·S368 afl 5 . Pro( servlte w11h Atlllb l2 yra ex~nence. I'm Van Lines C<JSt& no murf' ! 1mall, my pr1cu art' ....................... REPAIR• REROOI'' All types -a b1nal 1:11 rockshallea (Ompo-tar Free est. 541·5000 ~ • .,..,.. ........ •• •• •• •• •• •• • •• El.ECTRI JAN Pnced t.&11mal.l. comm 'l or re· --------- aidentlal. rcH rates L M S -Rolo . Sod or S fl fl d e d I. a w n 11 , Sprinklers. PlanllnR Cont.t u c 1364419. Xlnl Rds. 6'15 7633 t"ree ci;L. for loculr., sr:mll. •••••••• •••••• ••••• •••• r1&bt fr ti m•l• oo •Sa\t" If > • larpt or 1mall juba Ca.II M)'llme ~ Ua 1tdl-"wj ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mloraae. & long d11t. ,_'1..o ___ &_Org.-~-T---_.-- Drwewa)'••rarkan& lut IJ\...._. • G'JJ~9 •Repairs •S••k~•ahn& •LI<' NB, l'M SAS Oanmdcn Ser'-ra '..a.it Cl(}:Af'E8T huullna In • KOUIN'S H OUSE loWn l"rtt FAUmates a .EANJNO SERVICE. fiG-.S.~ • for • l.horougbly dean mo v • s S I a te LI c ~ R--"tna. A•ph··ll ••••••••••••••••••••••• UUll ft a " ·n_u_ou_S37 3100 Plano t.unang & ~pair. 25 11 ng e. wood shBk•·, "'1Ht1Mj/ft.,tlHJ yneltp.Maater'ddeg.in guat Fr te 1>s t Cud Alphajt 841411 l ~ ~ r,.... l'<Jioila .................... • • • , , I N Senk• CONTACT K 6 8 Wood Veur ln&. w "tdHr p&.t!l 6 (toMO re:p.IL!r --···········.. •• •• • • ..."" ~ClllCIUt~··· ...,, ... 0968 =: ,f:ir::0~:·~·u w1w.~t1ff.!lc20'J h'••I--- .,_ lO yn ~lllQ N-pott i rl'I ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mu~blah Haull n1 . rwntture movUi1. bcM1H 6 1.ard de11 01n1. Ra.iooab&e • Relieble ~l·Z'MO at 05JO fSl 91111 ea,. .. ., --------• Clun upa, Jhulln", l.fau111\t Ir Gea.C'ral cl.,an ·-•••••••••••••••• .. •• Land1captn1 tmmed up. comm & reaid °"' ti • v 1 n • Mn A f( a I r • W'l'Virin&.. MZ 1lll07 oa-•-ra•-......., 1~• .. Quoppott>t:, ""t't' c.is t Any p ,'J'unir"' n.f wllJ r etrr -~. --· ~ ~ ~ C.11 Allam or AIMOftabJy l '•ll •OOn taar4 S.. tlcet aoytJ_.me ____ __, __ 10r\)' ~~ '115J ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lilt h•ulilll·movloi. ------•Ml.RlfT• Caraa•Yard cluo&aa IF YOU Cladtf~ Act. arr rnll~ <:arp41ntn. palnlln& ReM.nts.MZ-070IS hMve a "rv1~ tu ofttt or •mall ''p«)plc t.o peoplu · n.!u raln U yrs in 1oods w ...-JI. rlac.: •n •d 1le1 calla with bl& rt ar8 5e 17$.2 Sdlina 1nyth.ltl1J with a 1n the Oa 11 l11lot »<knlupandb11rr11ultt1 DaJJyPUot CluslftedAd Clasadied Section To plare your clu11fled I DO fT ALL aa a simple malt.er . Phone 64Z·~• ad. call today M2 "'78 ~ JU.Sl caU M2 5678. howe. 540-<MS67 ----- MIN"f.JllAID SER~. el· ~ f.urp. tmd ~ el, Cleanln1i. lndry. ·SMS TIIEQ.EANJNG Y ilficlenl biec.ln'a. relia· ble l«Vice, resn rates1 IDIW"ed. 552.D)t. Want a REALL y CLEAN HOUSE? Call Gingham Girl Free e.t. 64.5-51%3 Miya~o Housecleaning. a>at.s. parties 4' houses. Det.-oraUnr special. (wk· ly service). Moo-Fri. 10 yn exp. HOAM. 675-4233 European Land1capcr ••••••••••••••••••••••• mullc Thia coupo n 7-LOPM. Bob.675-1581 Top work. t•air pnci: PETERS PAINTING WOl'lh~.fM·\433 T-ir.-ic• Mainl Rers . 646·487 l ·-Jl'lll'r"" dys/eves. Expr'd . Reas R'4lvs. Plalhr/l_..&. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Free Est. Cilll Cene •••••••••:?:::••••••••• Landscape CreaUorui Eic • O In o ' s C u 11 t om 552-0458 ~akbel & t~xturea pen shaping. lhmnl~1:. ~::;t'3!.~0'Wie _P_a.111_un_g_E_x_l-r /-l-nt_r_E-.x-. HT. 19J..10t ~removal. 675 28:.!I. estimates. 646·1397 pr'd, hooesl. neat. rea:.. • Spria.klers. trees. IOd. & tree romoval. 10 yrs ex· per. 673-3910. Larry. u c"d964-1000ave PATCJIPLASrERlNG Scoll'a Tree Ser v1 <'t1 Prof pa111tiog. Ext & Int. A 11 l Y P e s . F r e e Artistic pnmmg & rt' Low rates. Refs. Free eiumaies. Call~ movals. 6 yrs In coasl.i I est. 536.4780. S36-4383 ~ area. u(. Ina. 642-~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• COMPLETE CARE ttillllllfca~ F\ne Exler. Pau>Uni by P1umbing repair. Spec. an Tramming, removal. ... •••••••••••••••••••• ft.Sinor St llc .. ms Try remodeling & copper re-<'lttenupa, h c 'd /ini.. CaUege atudenl can beat me 836-SSSS 24 hrs. ppe. Good pnces. Top ~ all prices. lawn y ard HalPlumbulg.537-3194 1--------- ma1nt. Quality work . Sell Uun"s fasl with Dally ---------•Qasslfied Ads. your one· 8'2-9656. Joo. . Pilot Wa.nt Ads. Want Ad RC18ult.s 642·5678 _:itcl9shopp1n1 center. PiN a.• 5350 .W,W..t.d 71 00 H-lpW.t.cl 71 00 HsfpW.ted 71 00 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• He4pW.t.d 7 100 Help W_..cl 71 00 HllpW..ted 7100 HsfpW 7 100 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ...... ""' Trwt •ESCORTS* .. ~ ••.•.•.... ?~.~? t 7Z. I 131 .AJIPORT l.att!nstulg potll100 now open at an aJ.rport In the Orange County are a . LOWEST LMA Ir YICICI Work in pleasant sur- ~ Mel:T;. roundlogs meeting peo.. ............... R--._ ,_of pie as a SttU.rity officer. ltlT.D:a. aho rvtr" •-• We have day II awm& WT .D. Lo.a. Servin& all Orange Co. sblfta available for men ,_ 835-7313 & women who would like ~TermsswceUM9 ---------a cballen1ina career. w.e.-MtcJ. Co. All KAIAHUA Uniforms are furnished 642-2171 545-0611 or Jlurl>le. DaMy wants and on the job tralnlng i.a ---------• to aee you. Please call provide d . Apply in REPUBLIC 2J.W23.7S26. Cerole. person at 1775 E. Center • _ __.ct-I 5360 St.•~, Anaheim . Equal ~:='.:=:-:.~~ ...... _Oppt..;..;;._'.;;...y_E_m...:p_lo...:y_e_r __ _ · HOME LOAN , Going away? Mature, re· ...._. Hospltd liable couple with ex-Groomer, bathe r , n.c .. ,.., ~ eeUent. references will clean.er. F / T in c l. ...... Y• To WMtt stay In your house and Saf/SUJ. n., c-e tab care. s:JS..9410 days 644-5463 ~eves. ~ T-... Locm APT MOR-Cple ror new 2ND'S 32 unit H.B. Call S3M729 ~ ~~ SI 0,000.$100,000 ••••••••••••••• ........ --A.S-•SIM-•IUA--S-- ...... 75'-I Ill Sdlook& PRECISION/MECH Lotl&Fomd 5300 ...,_Holt 7005 Positions avail w/fesl ••••••••••••••••••••••• mnotnno N..__..rt Beach ....................... ,,,_ __ ......,.. ~-...- I.alt or Found a pet? Call Ao1mal AuiSLaoce t.eaiue. 537·2273. no fee. REAL ESTATE LICENSE SCHOOL OFFERS REWARD!! for return of boys Black Balboa Cruiser, take n on 11/22/78. Please call, • child heartbroken. .....Ledw-eFree 66-7157. co .• involved in assembly d oompau & camera un· Its. Applic&Dta ahouJd U · per worklng w/small parts, good mech apl., & er\joy . Benefit.a include 2 \IWleb vac., 1 week 1lclt teave, & profit. s haring to name a few . Call SS7·9051, ask for Ray GlUman. LOST lo H.B. Med/lrg *O'aabCounea.vaJlable male mutt, It brown. •Materia.laprov1ded. !~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ wearingt.aga. Pleaaecall •Smal~ c lasses _for, ________ _ 9112-5315 penooal.ized lnstrucuon. · *°'°°9e own t.a.at.e-<t ay ~EMBLY AUTO MECHANIC · Ex peri enced wit h foreign & domest ic. ~3742 Al!I'OM CYJ1 VE SALESPERSON SdJing Toyota & Volvo. Gmtl earning potenual. Automotive saJes ex- perience preferred. Call Sales Maoa.ger al MAllOUIS MOTORS MISsJON VIEJO ll1·2HO 495-1210 Al!fOMCYnVE •SenkeC ....... / looldl11p1rl Ability t.o meet people well & experience In ~ fields are needed quallficatioos~ Exe. pay, beoelits. pleasant work ing eondillon.s. Perma-nent. opp. for advance· ment.. See Office Mgr. HOWARD Clte•rolet Dove & Quall Sts. NEWPORT BEACH llJ.0555 AuLo Parts · Counter & de· livery. F\111 l.lme. Salary dependent on exper 631-0lll BABYSITTER -resp woman wanted 1. 2 or 3 dya wk, for daytime bab)'liltlnl. ata'1 Jan., rd. 15-0202 Bebyajtttt.El Toro.area, Mature woman, stacting Jan 2nd. wk. days 7 am to 4:30. Care for lnraot. Ref. req. 768-7446 --------• &nlghlclasses. REWARD for Joet female Golden (Ab. Nr Olive St in West Newport eve or Dec 5. I yr old, llc'd & tags Owner devastated. Any 1n!ormalion, no qu~s· lions asked. Call 646·9160 or SJS..4205 or M6-2S72 *Placement-up to 80% romml.ssion. TRAINEES Babysitter-January. ·2 chlld.ren 7 yrs. & 4 yn. 8 · to 6 Moo·Frl. Turt.lerock Free3Week Sales Training. Cal For D.taMs 831-1001 49J.0442 Kate Ila Real aitat.e School :m:n Ca rnino Capistrano I.alt blk/White marking.s San Juan Capistrano Cal. Vat. Shorecllffs .W. W..tecl, 7075 CdM. S25 R ewa rd !••• .. •••••••••••••••••• 673-3834 Pract. nurse. p /l or ---------• emergencies. Refa . REWARD! Lagima, Corona del Mar, 497·29'74. IOR EXPERIENCED l area. Need transporta· MIC RO 000. Will pay above stan· 1:1--• <lard. 955-0389 ~fronlCS Babysitter needed. Mon· We are seekin« In· Fri afternoons. Call davidualll for flnt shaft ~ ln our Produc· 64S-8434. Chris. boo Department. We wlll Banldng train t he right In· SOUTHWISTIAHIC dlviduals in the micro-DIGLENNEYRE electroruca indmtry · LAGUNA BEACH Comprehensive com · reqlires full time tellers. pany benefits ·including Please contact Joan rn.iVor medkaJ and den· ,._ ...,,. 77 EOE lal. Call or apply In .......... -··1 1. person, 3952 Campus 8anJdnc UJST· Female Wbt/blk· Hsfp W..e.d 7100 Drive, Newport Beach, ~ T..,. /gray Slbenan Husky, 6 ••••••••••••••••••••••• <n•> ~-Equal 0p. ....,.... mo. old, has wht star on · Excellent benefit a. back of neck, Answers B"k portunlty Employe r Irvine National Bank. the name of "JODI .. N A.cdng • pog m/f/b. Call Janet Van Dyke questions asked. Call TEMPORARY m.3700. 5ST·l!m Register today to work JRANSMASK EquaJOppt'y Employer ~~~~~~~~~ on various accounting Beauty assistant wanted and bookkeeping assign-(with future I . Also liO Reward return of lost Doble Red/tan. 6 mos. 64M?SS. Vic Elden St. menls. Work close lo CORP. .{ullette manicuris l your home. Figure Clertus to Sr . Accoun· i~~~~~~~~~ wanted. 837 ·42SO or -um--: -8-n-.t-tan_y_S-pa_n_i-el4• tanls needed tbru-oul 1-_837_-8779 __ . _____ _ Oran1e1wht, last seen Orange County. · Asst 8lc.k"pr for small mfr. Billinf clerk for major '"13 p s hi RobertHalf's PTapprx2Shrsperwk. who esale nursery . ,...... ' erry c area. Aceountempe Exp. preferred but wUI SlaUstiul t vplna . In ff. B. Needs medicine SOOS. Ma.in. Ste 501 train rlg.bt person. Call ltiaUve to lmi)rove exist· 9f.i2..982S No. Tower, Union Bank fcrappt. 642-1916. inl ayat.ema. Applicants LOST: Sobd blk short bair In The Cily of Orange Auto tamer needed in mmt be able to five at· female Shepherd/Lab, 714/83.Hl03 Lag Bch, San Clelbente tentJon to detail & have H.B.96CM1211 --------• area. Eves. Dependable ending mind. Coot.act car a must . Call Tbe Mr. Mart.In. 96Ue04. SCRAM-LETS ACCOUMTIHG ~ter. 581-41'1. IOAT IUILDB O.BK Al!J'OMOTIVE Head lamioator/toolcr, ANSWERS Excellent opportunity *"""'° De•nl"-must be serloua, self· for a reliable person to -r at.art.er " wUllog to take Anemia-Exude -join our Accounting PoeltioMlll charge. P -S quued Singe -Finale OeiJt. Typing & adding Oranie Cowlly growth Boau. SU·2873 EXAMINED machine aa well as A/R requires HOWARD Anyone who doesn 't exper pref"d. Enjoy xinl Olevrolet E·X·P·A·N·S· BOOKKEEPER· Fu II wony about the world 00 benefits inclucfine rree J·O.Nl charge, for progessive situation these days meal. Apply Mon/ J<'r l 1. Service Warranty company. Prefer com- BOOKKEEPING CLERK lmmediate opening with a progressive Orange c.owrty Corporalloo of· fering growth and career satisfaction. We ~~ ind1v1dual with 1~·3 years ex- peneoce in general ac· coimtlo1 Expenence on a comput.enzed system a deflni1e plus. Ll&hl typ-loi and fut. accurate 10-k ey by t ouc b an a.beol ut.e must. We otrer excellent com· pany benefits includ111g major medical and den· tal and a convenie nt local1on near the Orange County airport. For im· mediete consideration send resume or letter or inquiry including salary bi.story to: ' rstSONNEL TRAN SM ASK 'CORP. F.Qual Opportunity Employer m/f/h Brews ter's Family Restaurant, openmg in January, now accepting applications for all food ser vice personn e l . Wartresses. buspen;oos. ooolcs, hosts & hostesses. dishwasher , s ervice bartenders. food prep. Apply In person, Mon· Sat. at 10830 Warner Ave. flnVly,Ca. E.0.E. CARPENTERS-with tlJt- 111> exper, good wages. yr round e mployment , fwae beneflt.s. 979-4044 CAR WASH HELP l'UU It Part-Time l8&0ver METRO CAR WASH 2960H.arbor Bl, CM· Cashier: Exp. mature. capable caahJer needed. For coot.emporary retail shoo. f\IU lime. Call or ask f o r Manager. ::= J29 Fashion Isl. CASHIBS CUSTODIANS JAHITOIS LAIOURS needed. Temporary part· time & run.ume positions avallale Immediately. Good benefitt. Apply an penonto: THE IRYIHE CO um Camelback Irvine 644.9011 F.qual Oppor Employf.r e rut.est draw ln the Wes t . .a Daily Pilot Claullled Ad. Call Today 642.5678. 01.!Jdcareneeded,Balboa C LERI C AL I Dis hwashe r . main · Penio. my home pre· SECRETARIAL 8·30·5 Coe* tmance man, 40 brs a (erred. Tues, Thu.rs. 8-1 KnJdR of olc procedures J.C. PB4MEY week 640-7"° . St.art 1/9n9. 67J..mSS CaU for appt. ~5000 ext 2.4 ,_,.a• I.a.ct Q.Btc AL sa>. Newport a.oc1t DRIVERS C1asa I dnvers needed for rmJ whl.sle nursery Applicants must ftave neat. d n appear It gd dnv1ng rec. "Exper an handhng nursery stock he!p(ul. but not nee. Con· tact Mr Molina or Mr Martin. 962-660t. Become a member of our a.euc RECEPT as currently acceplin& dynamic Newport Center Outst.andmg career opp applications for cook. CananciaJ firm. We arc for ma~ure. people onen-Full lime. out.standing expanc1uig & there are lated individual w/~d benefit.a. xlnt working ma~· opportunities for typing skill Work 10 rond.. apply an person. advanc eme nt The pleasant surroundings Mon tbru Frl lOam.,.pm. !ollowing positions are w/gd pay & benefits E O.E. M/F . Dl.1W available.· l·Spm week days. EOE MA.ILROOM F.nlry level position open for mailroom clerk & general helper. GENERAL Cl.YI< Math ability&. Ute lyp10g required. x:int worlclng conditions & company benefit.s or fered. Please contact Personnel or apply daily 8-5; ADP PENSION SERVICES 180Newport.Cent.er Or. Newport Beach 6'4-4360 ext 263 F.qual Oppor Emplyr Cl.ER.ICAL Co!Aitllf Pefla""'I Has lots!t:?vaUable with many fine s uper comparues and \he.y"re all FREE! 540.6055 Cocatal ,.no.net 2790=.CM ALLJOBS FREE O..ERlCAL 1 PAY DAY LEFT UMTIL CHRISTMAS Earn extra Christmas mooeyoow• TYPISTS PIX ACCT CLERKS KEYPUNCH OPER CLERKS Must have phone & re!Ja. ble transp. Lor)g & short term ualanments. Holl day & vacation pay Hospltallzatlon plan ava.l.lable. 3148c...,.ortn 546-4741 (Across From Orange Co. Airport I Equal Opport Employer HOW IS THE TIME for Job seekers to check the Dally Pilot Help Wanted class1f1catlon. If the Job you want ·as nol there you might cons ider offenng your Sl'rv ices with 11n ad m the J ob Wanl.ed categor)<. Phone 642·5678 Qmtact Personnel Of· flee. So Coast Medical Centtt. Jl.8'72 Coast Hwy. So Lag. 499-1311. CLERKS UTOTEM Openings Now Available fOT full or p1Ume clerks oo 2nd & 3rd i.lufts No expe r necessa r y -we lraJll Start $3 per hr AS· i.l managers t.o $3.60 hr. Managers t.o SS.50 hr Ad· vancement opportun1t1es to those who qualify. £-'or information go to ·our nearest market or con· tact the personnel office ·al 12442 Lamp.on St Garden Grove 537-.a.40 EquaJ 0ppor Employer CL.BU( TYPIST Typl n g •~ · 50 wpm . perJonabl e. w e ll groomed. Good benefits Apply THE IRYIME CO 1071 Camelback lrvme 644 9010 CoddaN Woitnss ScJ.ool Earn up to $300 per wk Low tuillon. Placemeol MMist. 751-9194 COML,.. TY ·MOVIES •EXTRAS• needed immed "&y Hol.Jywood c asl.Ulg d1rec · tAJn. busanessmen 25-40. fat & ugly men & women. lads ol aJI ages, doctor & nurse type&, Holding appt. intervie ws in Anaheim area ttus mo Call 17 14> 761 ·1244 VIDEO C AST I NG S.ERV E. , COMP ION/HSKPR Quahfaetl. pe rmanent . hvc in hldy. care & hte h.'lkpg for s 1m1 inv1hd widow . Comfortable Cd M bch home. 3 day wtmds. (Fri. Sat, Sunl al 1100 per wknd. 673--7474 CONCRETE F1NlSHERS ·exper"d. good wagei.. yr r oup employ m e nt. future benefits 979-40« COOKS Expanding restaurant ell.am wlU1 over 50 unatll Fanuly-owned organ1za· t 100 offer s pleas ant working conditions. Good opportunattcs for advancement Excellent company benl'fats. ";x. pt!J't~ deiartld. Apply Ill person. COUMTEll Har Driver-Part Ume. Tues & Ftr. Apply in person; Thin. 8 to JO br. day Gary's Dell, 3309 E . Cst Clean On ving record u..... Cd.M req. COntact Dana before .. -,. · ioam~ CUSTODIAN ---- Independent 5chool needs PT CW1t.odtan for 4 hrs a day/aftns. Call Ball ~1410. DlfVBlS Meo or women 2S yrs o r older. Know the coa!>l calletl.JQet SUl!l a week or CUSTODIAN more. Orange Cod.,t Oeys. no exp nee. Good Yellow Cab, 17300 Mt wonnngcond. Must have Herrmann. Fo untain car & phone. Piu.me & Valley. <No of Slater ~I ~llii~ Newhope & Data Process111g Protmnr Alllysisl S24K l''/C Bldtpr S12K Secy Aliei.l lO SQO(I Call For An Appl Irvine Personnel Agency 4118E 17th, Costa Mesa s.ute ZN 642-1470 Detivery ptlime AM. LA Times deliv. Laguna Beach only. 494·8496 DBJYEAYMAN for fu:ie fum.1lure st.ore. NB Apply mornings 1727 West cliff Or N 8 Must have valid Calif. dnver's license. DRIVER su::,Il, To deliver DA I LY Pll.OT blrndles to car rien an Newport Beach area. Reqiares van or large at.at.Ion wagoo & a good dri vlng record Call: 642-4321 Aakfor DOit Wille.ts or Hany Seeley Eqt1al Opportu.ity Oehvery man. FT. local r-.a......,. area. Beach Stauoners. 1-----_ . .,......;.._...;.; __ _ 402DCampus Or NB. Electrician w /com · merc1al exp. S..ilary ar Deli veryman for early cording to exp. ca 11 AM L.A Tlme!i home de· h11ery route. Must have 963·7879. 7am-5pm o r t'\:onorrucal car Adults ,_SJS._7625 __ a_ft_6_Pm_. __ _ mly. 2~ hrs pr day No coU~. S42S pr mo net take home. HB a rea 6:B-012.6 "Exec. S.Cretary to ,,...;dettt of ~sing A~y. This opportunal y rC' DEUYEAY /SAUS qi.res excellent lyprni:t Mon· Fri 5·9 eves. own slulls/shorthand. Cllent transp. 531-0811 conLact & some travPI Must ha ve fashionobl1· DENTAL appeMrance & p ro RECEPTIONlST fewoaal telephone man no you want to use your ner. commurucauoo skills as .......... a l'ecept.lorusl Ill I people 'J1us IS a key posataon onented dental practice., 1he successful candadalt• Our team needs you wlll be articulate. one• Newport Beach. 640-7922 who can step into a clll'nl DENTAL FRONT OFC con~ s1tuat100 & takt> Ins ex-per ll typing n ·c· ~hu.r1?t\.,Compensat1on & Nl)t Bch W.ea 6'5 650l.c benefits commensuratt· with expen encc. Dl'ntal off1 <'e n l·ed/J Orthodontic asst wath Reswne should be s ub cheerful personality mattedmconladence to Exp pr...,....rred. Non William Fawcett s molcer 2l yn or over . Bozell & J acobll 536-75.SB H. 8 4121 Westerly Pl. U t3 D E N T A L /\ S S T . Newport Beach 92660 WANTED ROA X-Ray F\lteen clerks needed full lie. expanded dutJes, fr & Ptr between Jan 2· inge benefits. 4 ·~ dayll. Jan 12. P08s1bility or ex Laguna H.tlls. 830-1131 tension to a Cull t1m1• 01ris po&.1tion at-a loeaJ collel(1: booUt.ore. No expen em·1· DefTAL-ORTHO OFC. necessary. Min. wage .tu start. E.O. E . 833·62214 bet.. 2-SPM weekdays ou aht to have his 9am-Nooo.Personnel. Cleric! Some autp. ex· put.crexper.S.larylom· lelevtaionEXAMINEO. MAUIOTTHOTIL pertence helpfur. We mensurate w t abllHy. ll~~~~~ll~~ij~~~~~~~J ,..llAllh 535 900NewportCent.erDr train. Ideal ror semi· Non-smoker. Send 11 -•••••••••••••••••••• NEWPORT BEACH retired Service Mgr. or Reaume lo : Huls b ,.,,.,. ".· F.xper 'd Orthodo ntic chrslde &1or lab as111s· unt needed ror Nwpt <.:enter°' c. 644· l 405 Des1aner F1CURE MODEL l..egil photo ass1gnmt for pa,y. 673--5644 day,/eves GENERAL LABORERS R.ELAXJNG MASSAGE F.quaJOl>DOt Empbr. medwlic. See Trevino. Management Co .. 33208 n..>..J L1 .. · Mt F 2 Used Car Mecb1.oic! Pueo Cerveza, Ste C .• ~ &mes· c .. haeur Excellent opportunity San Juan Capl1lrano, OULcall 9-9, 494-61ll forquaJifted mechanic lo Ot. tm75. PREGNANT' Carina perform vaned, U1ht ~""EPER. exf:r •-. •' L C•.1 ca--mech. WO r ll • aSSlSt ~ UI confidential eowtseUng & -....,.... ~ & AP H ut referral. Abortion, adop-Sal$790to$980permo.2 Used Car Mer. See l>fnoer Piay8b~1 : Uoofskeei>Ula. Yrs ~c aper. req'1 a M!""., "...--• ..... 1 •• t N-f1'i.n60 ............. "' ,._ -knowled"e of a rcts. .. ......... ,,... ,,.. 111 ..,_ nT'-'IUU:. ... ,.~ ED /or fl.cal rec Oar" Sent~ Men. ltl COUNTRY GIRL procedures. App. varied Is lnt ereallna IOOll .... lY Meaa Unified taslllf. Ju1t rtabt for * ESCORTS * School Dial, Cluslfaed leml·retb'ed auto. mecb. FULL CHA.161 ...... _ Pt r 1 on o e I 0 I c I S.Aerce Small eltctronlca mfr .., ,.. • 1157--1414 Moo/Wed/Thur Ii Pr AMIND& ~ condl· oeeda F(C' Bkk1)1". Muat sprtWl-.der tam-Noon, Tues tpm· tior11 ln Or9n1t Cowlty uper tn A/P, A 1R, lllJSo.ElCamlnoReal ~pm. 1801 tet b St., Airp ort complea. ~bank 1'9COOCila· "'-""~·-· ..... 11 U Newport Beach, E.O.I!. Pa-manent. varftd. bl· ~1 elt' 81.laey open. ..,......._._, "''" Y c.1•••-----liilll.tereatln~Eac.. pay, uooa co beneft&a. Call For appt. •· 7299 bmeflta, for ad van· e.&ty <a.13 l '71-1161. XXDAMCIOF FUN XX cement. B Y I~~~~~~~ ... Stet el1r1 HOWAU a..,.,.. 1- Beaulltul nude 1 lrl1, ~-'-""'"l""'twtrmo... . --·-· dlnce.teah1bltton6rae ._._.., ... •v,-~ OovelsQuallSta. -· ... kins. tAM to 4AM Yrt exp w/M del or NEWPOR'r9EACU IJUWa-t.. upertettced, every day. 20&0 so ~~~· b:r:ref~fo~i •---M0--'1-C_I___ ~~ ':::::! ~1 ":4 '\12~':or9:i~t,· Dttt, Clulllied Penoo· how Dally PUot Cl•H· knowled1e1bl• In all aa.wzz nd Offke, Moo/Wed/· llted ads dl.tplu their •l*U ol retaU book· 'nu Is l')'t tem-Noon. ,,.aqe1 with lef.lbltil)' ltMpi.n1.1 C.11 Ul_.712 1'* J_pm.3pm. 1801 16th and Impact T Ou.r ada, we for~ St .. N•wport Beach art proud to 1ay. really --------- .E...O Ill J'Hl&lU ... Pbone-ttaYe ~tblnt to ae.11, 142.1179. Clutllfed ada ilo n. "'fll . . . . . ... . .... CLERKS EARN EXTRA t-40MEY FOlt CHRISTMAS PART·T~ FULL-TIME MO EXPERI ENCE NECESSARY Hirryl ku:mdlat. Oft" .... WW ....,. •wiout phe1e1 of ston o,.rotloft t. Loh of cu1tomer c:oeftd. ..., .. ,.,...... ... , .... •Hlrday. or U-4 ,...._ Satur.da"y .ct Sunday • FEDCO INC. J OlO H;l.,. lt•d. Colf9 M..-. CA 333l W Coast Hwy Htwporta.och PCB DESIGNER Man"acturer of electro-methanicaJ products re· COOi( qilres a proven PCB Jay· & out penon who wents an FAST FOOD Ol)l)OrtWUty to make ex- COUNTElt HRP cdlent wa,es. Plus, be Expanding restaurunt l.nllmateJ.y mvolved w1lh chain with over ~ units. new projf'CU from con· Jo'ao:uJy-<>wned or1an1za· CCIJ(1oD to field use. We lion ortera pleasant wlDt ao lndJvldua.I who workln« cond1tlon1 . wants to 1row with a OOOd opportunlllea for llJ'Nt team. Equal Op· advancement. Excellent port unity Employer. company beotnu. Ex· ·Ml~F~s.5'7~4554~~~~~~ perience detlred. Appl,y _ R49. 1,,....1 ...... ~llACH Tht I aalett d r•w In the We.t .•• a Dally Pllo a..tiod Ad. 14·~ Dial A Ride Ori• .... Operate modern eQ.U1Jl· mtnt & door to dnor tranap Cnlil dnvMs he req'd No prior l'KPN n«' Oood dn"lng rer at mUlt "'o Sunday work Oran1te Coast Yellow Cab, 11300 Mt. Hvr• mwm.f' V\y. WA.HT ACTION? CluaUed Ada &u-5171 . TRAINEE ~SEMBLERS PUERS Mus t have relr~bl e t.ranap. Is phone LonR & abort t«m aNlfnmenu. liolkl-.y It vacation pay Ho11pllallut1on p lun available. ·VOLT ,,..,.. .. ,. ........ ..,. .. v•t• ••c...,..Drin S4M741 (Acrotl •"'rom OranJe Oo, Airport I F.Qual Opport Employer GetOREENcuh for WUITt elephants whh • Cltttttlied A4 Call 142·16'7• .. -·~ o. I ' r •• -· . .. I • •I '· - I • • c. J ;. . ,. , t l \ I .... r T 0 I th be m ch M. "" ... ~M = &: = ... ... .... I I l ....,W.atH 7eOOHllpW~ 11oetWpW..t.4 n ooHll(iw ...... 7tCJD1 .... wiilllt-1tot.W.W..e.~ oo'-Mond!y.Oeoember18,1978 I OAILYPIL.Of CZ. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •H•••••••••••••••••••• : •••••u•••••••••••••••• ~;;T••••••••••••••••••• ttet, W-'94 710G - - •-..&.OMCI ~: ,,., llCOICAJ..OrtrERSON IW.UTATI SALES LADY for H · sicanAJtY :.:,:::.:.:.:.:::::: .. :; .. ,..• ~ .......... !!»!! ~ .......... !~!.! th. a-5, l1Pf $0 WPM, ._.. pa..., (Meckel ..i.. RN, or a .u---......-• cluatve child~ 1tort ln ~ST ..... _... ..,_ra or 15• •115.a.1 a IOOd .-ioe peftOU.11\.Y en · VeJlcy hH LW.) .., to fJ"OOl /bt-ll .-----So Coall Piasa Full ao1werln1 urvlu. a..-Ouy Tl.ll'Mr BMX ,,.,. .....,. a.t ha, .• PttVioUI olt oPlllh\D ror upti11•oced ror r.t.riU&t Ref req w.JeyN Ta)'lorCo Is• tuno txpsrtence 'ei&aen· l:.J'~::r• Ne•pol't l'/UJM. paveyvd a.hlft. ~ bieycle. t8~ Ille. Baille Amber Bu da a,. CaUUl Old ~ Penonnel Salary ~ Al.al9 D>'"I' old nnn wholly Ua1CallS4N$1$ ., I bata.t. }lttft, • Fana Ave. Lacuoa -/b9lofr. Tu.eiaz. Necklace. Tie S.r, Sllck oomnw.mw'~lt •kA •s· . 4""Md • oper1tt'd by lta 0 a a r 'I a 1 e " o D Blach. P l n , C u f I L l n k s , OIRLPIUDAY: pm~. ell l'Ompany tieTICH fCM:ldtr We a.re not a SALESMAN·YACIM'S qua!lftcatlona. k Dri BllXRacw,rwtombuUt. Cl1arette Holde r . s V..Wol<' wort "mnall benefllt Call Ka&hy To "'* ln N 8 Mu•l aubeldlal')', branch or Kona Marine. Lado 640-1112 1:.:·d~op pa;.e.~P=r~ x1nt coed. S2IO/best of. Beaut t4K cokS • antq mfr. ol Math leacltlna ~ __ baVt' Calif lie.me AU franch!M -Just head· Wlait. m /flll-140) GfrW Towlni. 7408 r.......... deep red Carnet Rina• ndllllw.4"1·3'0i>, JAN1TOR1Al. ~wort. rat..oflabt'pet" Call ~c'f:c:'~c~e:'n~o Salee Ptnoo whb up. SK:ll'fAlllS <lumWay,C.M.142-1252 J0'5Sspdbl.kea:tar1eplle u~ !,&~!t --u.-i(.!;A-T-me'J,.f. ~.\~~"~~ =.:rel for appl, m.uuam nt for ... ld.:=..'V:J:n TOW TRUCK drhera :.::::.~; BMX Ldea 5c:.t Ot>• w/6 sidt! SALIS JOI NOW lralned llalnbp w ... od 1 t "h all&Mitel\ ny thne.Ourt<-• Ol"J needed.lluatlulvenplt Dl•moode <wh11:old>;I ~ l -.. s..vw.. 1u-.t'lt0 .. • 1. em ..., arp .... -... ftdeo \Ape llat· 22:SFonstA\le. · ~8~ of flee • 1iveiDQIAS-.. SCHWJNN-ladlee beach I.met Flft ()pala (15~ct OOOD ~PAV GOOD =Oftb'· SJJ ~,.ht lQllt ..... llainUllPn> LartmaBeat'h eN.MrbU.ewlthbQket. "2~c0 ; ladles s per J'lllW, dQs, I ,_. h t. ~Bob &\'1lft> by Tom t{(lpliM la a U -0V9 rlO ad 1aAfllile ..... eu. a.--tacuhar 80tq Diamond HOURS. GOOD C'ON ~mut~ ' _..:,.__ the n.n.,.l n•I Ht.le _.. we~our~~teep -·-rl na <3 .0s center 0 IT I 0 NS MA V pr M I\( 151 5Qll Nllr'NI tralnllla ueUable We e> ftAa'TTIMI J7ll llrce. St MI tradc<A· .. v....... llm's 25" NlabW 10 apd dlamood, 2 aappbirea. '"' F'IUNGB B..f.N t;,ITS bet ~II• I• 'm•I L"'L Y U1 ll·1 Covntry havt an opoom1 for 2 C.11 on rttallera. lt 157 A06 I ~!:..food cond. S75. ct ea. 4 aide dlaolOOds in f'"8TOMOWlNO l"OM · " CluD Conv HOIP 1alwpenon1 with eo· bounperweek. Earn to ..., 1be applicant we are -· plaWw.m aett.l.ng). CIA PANY PROM OT .!. JAtCTOlnAL -. thusl11m. charecter &r '800 mo. commluloa. wa. .. uml' -~hasncetlentor· ..,.._ .... 1...a:;.IOJS ~at $43,1188. B.Y PROM wrMUN TRAIN P IUme Janltonel ,....,.1 -•a.••ua ... A l.ntf'lri\Y &o match our &-Z274. ... ..,. tyOW"lltlftoont pniutional akilla fr ed·ill)h tiiW · appt.. only, ""Min otter. , o R T o P ti ll bl All -.-.... ~ "• h11n atandarda. Your • .u -~ • job. Let lbe \larlecy of. \lertl1lna a1encr ex· -·" .................. P\ltparty. 7H/M7-191s ,,.. M AN AC g M ~ T .,:: ~ tet!n a 90 Prr evetiln&• Expcir own ~vate dnk Ir no ~;aiir-15V'f'"-fend by teropora.ry as-perleace. The deal STARTS · lM ••JO pm 17112 mdultaonly 54hr or1ub part tlme u leapeople. Growwltbaprovenwln· sain~~aulwoBerk into penoo will hue tht .. wwud ... wwud 15DiamoDd.s! Xlntquah M ~U IATEl V ClllllUad in.OW Oxnmlal'°" 1pllt UJ> to n e r . THE REAL four..u-.. e . comea .w•., to handle many Fro-lrvlae oanch fr~! Must sell at .below K E y e o A R o Annl&rooa An . lnitn• 7~. lnt.erv1ew by •P-~ATERShaveZopeo· permanent temporaf1 tMb""• meet deedllnea ~the~ txl2'a. ~~:,~ien ted whl1 g J( pg R l F. N c E S.Yllt. Offtcdlaoa&tr·Sales poiotmmton{.· 1011 for qualified for Office Overload. lnafriendb', punuulve /bm 0 -.GO _......... ~~ ~i~A~~ m PUNCH =:rw.n~~~:o ..!el N. ayi:.c:s10 t=ref:t~iri~;•~fl~~: ~ ~c~f1e:u~ro!~~ W'. ~ lt0BL~WORK i--.--_----1-0_1_0 PROGRAM PUT ON HY 0PaA TOI nperi~nee nec••oa•dary t bu a I as m . H lg h l Y oppottc:fi· 1bia la a k~ ---'tlon. MARTY ••••••••••••••••••••••• • Nl, ..... _ ... 1ft -•-2.,.... ,,.. Must .,. Z5 "n or R t t t P /T I' d .... --•-~jd IUltl. _... ...,, -111B COUNTRY S 'f9P _ .. , •....., ,._ ... older fr be 'av•ll on ecep ion • . . persona 11e • pro· ~-1besucceuf cauu ete --or--... .. 0 R 0 AN !'t AL s per •lU pw:ic<ft 00 key Sat11rda"'" ~7-0934 or ~only. <nmeral (esaiocaJ~avalla· Affiah .... ,~ will be rewarded com· c·-.-1 W&CiAC9ETAC9S PEOPLE C'ALI.. AT dlR-111hmi Xlnt Hlary 77 • 60,.0J• l"":l Meu olfLce duUei U>cl. typmg ble. Fodurthet ioforma· 557 "06 t mensurale with ex· vf'D, rnim ~mess card. o N c t: F o R • ~0.-ru.1 We1tlend1 .. • ·"' M 4' l~key add Apply at Uon. call Derlene Coe. .., perteoce. Reeume shou1d • I·• I• 1030 Send one card for each INT&RVl~W OllG N O.nk.9'1MllOO 8 0 E Vtrdet20S Cc.et.a t.'tia Marina Dunes. 101 N fl4G.2500. You'll be glad ~8~ off ice • be submit.led lo coo· ••••-••••••••••••••••• tac plus ooe 1pare. Wt! EXCHANC E STAN UY PUNCH ORDER DEPT ~YI~.!" .. or call Dee youdici overload ~~:-F~••-P8J&u ~Jri!!'-50 mm return pe rmane ntly NUNN714,..Tl02 Of'MATOI tnunee '°rut ordt',.. ror -164"'._ '"Ull-J'a .. ~ L7.oew .. vuu.-. sealed attractive tafi & GUAID --S.V\'rlll Of!ntn&& edit :"pp\'~rh1~~). A~~ ~~ ~P~=i~~8:8f:t~~: SALES ' F.qual()pporEmplyr ~~a~ll.3 Mamiy•/::44~000DTL. ~~P.:.,q~e:!~e~i:lr~~t'~ A11111tant Supt>nlaor fOt' exp.-r d oper•tors MrWNt •-• itl fi ""_.lrn""fsCO. . NewportBeacbN&IO w/"""' ..... 1 ..... e,*''OO. verJ\lolla&l.heft! Fora Ftr, min 3 yra aper m Un& v ac 1900 ex pe r u""'c consu ng rm. ·---U4I ~--... .._ •"' per.jona.lized tag enclose ~ty work. Ql'r &r ~lplul. but wUI train. PartTimeWeareseeklng Tonmfrontofficelras· Part-timesaJesbeJpcon· SICUllTY 11t.Ut&rosmOH 548·92'7• wallpaper, rabric or phone reqd. Irv In Swill« •lul\ SlOO atuft dif· 1ndiv1dual who enjoy l&5t slaff or lO. Must be tact.inisupermarkets. F/time switchboard C. 1015 "Dlu' Glo" paper & w1• duslriaJ complex. ln· (et'\'f\l.l&I. Salary wtU de· wortina wath the general .,OOtypist Electroolc/ . Job: Check product di&· MAlllOn.HOTa operator. Call for •PPl -••••••••••••••••••• will back & tnm your ·~ Moo/Wed at Fri ~on )'OUt bat'kfrow>d r:J!c· ., ..... pleasant'. re· computer langllage pre· •··11-.. '-. pric' .. g. "hell We are aeeldng a reliable ~~ ••-. Or try two car~ ..... ....-. d I .. .., terTtd. Duties \lariable. ............... ... .. to .. n lb'-Pwstan kitt.eOI, cha~ -IOllm-lpm. Call 833-3000 xper an I com· -i..i-. 4' sell·motavated management, sell djs. person wora. ex n:: +v91ST~ _,___. CFA re.,;••A • becklOback ext lil. Equal Opport ~ by manr fine t;-'P rr work with a ~~e=:::·::11 plays, Pl'Olt&ma -hours. Law enforcement Gf'e8l ~·for typist in ~ $1.50. 546-E... PRlCES: Employer'. &our Idea N.B. IP'OWina new ~mpany. atarter with business al· »otIRS: 3 DAYS PER or se<:urlty experience Newport Cent.er Law Of. S2eaor3/SS locauoo.Forappt.pbont No e·xperience dbde&creativity.$800 WEEK. Scheduled belpful.EQjoygoodcom· fioe.Mv.lltype70WPM. 0.,. 1040 4/St.ap$l.80ea. euAIDSWAMTID necesaary·we will traln. permo.tostart.83S-39S7 between Moo·Tbur. pany benefits. Apply legal exper. • die· ....................... 6/9lags$1.50ea. "'111 or p/time . 2 yrly Lynn Stansf1t>ld Cont.act 1be Shoe Doelor between Sam·Spm, 7 hrs Mon/ Fri, 9am·Noon. t.aphone pref. Knowledge Gennan Sbepberd pups. lOorrnoreSUOea. railea. Apply 810 E. 17th (714) 75&-78S3 &e&-7135 IEC8'TIOMIST per day. Must have own Ptnonoel. or word processor equip. Vsy bealt.hy, good quall· s.Jea Tax Included Sl.Sa.ataAna. AVCO Parttime·Boystoassem· Alert. oui,oing, willing car.Wepay15cpermile. llOONewportCenterDr will be a big plus . ty. AKC registered. "'NOCARO? GUAltl>S FM.dal 5-nices bJe L.A. nmes 2 lo 6 am lo team. no exp nee. Start $S per .hour. Loca· Newport Beach 6'UtOO ~ Draw yOUr oYJo or send a> Newport Center Dr. Sun morn. Mu st live Wort 1n ocean·vlew oC· lion: Mission Viejo, Equal()pprorEmplyr ba1red D b d 9 name, address. phone & P/T,MTf• NB92660 Westm. Hunt. Bch. llces.Applylnperson, Laguna Beach, Hunl· M/F Typilt/~t.front 1::o1ctAKC,i::ls~red. we'Umakeone~ard')it•r Immediate openings ror Equalopply Employer 638-012J6 SuperSboplnc. ington Beach, Costa citnoe. small mfg co. in Mustselll ..,S.6?S.l•J4 tag. Add25<eac security guards in the 610 Newport Center Dr. Mesa. SECY(!ECEPT c .M.SC.7840. •• Send check or money 01 Orange County area. PART TIM£ &he 1310. 9-~ Mon· Ft I. F.qual ()ppor Employer GREAT PERRAN EESE. derto: UrUfonM are rurn.Lshed LAI AIDE Send resume to: Quaker Cor Mias on Viejo or-WAITllSS AKC. male. Best offer. PILOT PIUNTIMG & on Lhe job tramlns 1s E x P e r 1 e n c e d Recept.; UgbUng Fixture Oats Co., Dept A. P.O. thodontic ofc. 9kkpg Expanding restaurant 960-$092 P.O. Box.1560 ~We have many phlebotomy/ back lab EVENINGS company needs bright Bo•4183.Anaheirn,92803 exp, some PR work. ofn =:easant worklnl CostaMesa,Ca .~ inlen!sting positions on d t e ca 11 reoept. w/lit.e typUJg & ~. coagenlal. rel. 4"'2 ........... ..._. ed A Bea•Je pups AKC re· .. 1 all shifts for men & proce u s · Adults with outstanding, pleasant personality. ~RETAIL ~per wk .. benef. sat QJULL ._..11 · P· •. • l'DI. ..... .,.,., Foofba ls. Guar womtf). Burns lnterna· Margaret for appt, attractive personalities Wood Lighting Fixture ofhce supply ~ sta· equaltoabllity.837·l033. plyinpenoa glstered. 8 wtu old. &"del.$:J25 & up. Family Donal Security Services. 640-0l40. ....'ho enjoy workint with Co 0 c A po t tioners. exr retail aales ·~· A~-6fr:. '15H2!18 Arcade. ~ZJ.41 .......... .,..... S3 50 ·• or · · " r · ruJ 1 Ph f Serva·ce Station Att•a - - . ............ ...... .... 1175-E. Cent.er Sl. ll105, LABORERS needfd in • -..,,, ..... n at . per ~2901 person. l me. Ot .. . --.o·Tzu V&lnl>tmas PUP· 1211 SQ. yards or brand Anaheim. 635·4630. KB.indplant.muatbe bour.Pbane642-4321Ext. •--'-appt55Mrll2AsldorMr dant, exir.r'd. Day & '"''a"""N'' 1ples, 8 wka. AKC. newbrown 2 tonecarpct Equal opportunity dependable & in good 250.BETWEEN4:00-5:00 ~uOHIST West Eves. f\a .tp/time. Ap· 400SCbaatHwy, 5GW1 withpad.A1Hor$4 .00~r employer. physical cond. Avail for PM. Financial service ofc . ~~Station. l7th & La&una BeJtch Lab ........ black, AKC. 5 yard.Cali: 551·443S 1st & 2Dd shifts. $3.25 to Alli for Jllw N.B., exper required. ac· • · ~ ... GUARDS $3..50 to start. taal raises. Equal Opportunity curate typ~og. 50 + &!rviC'"-Stati<>d'l Attend. wb, -for Christmas. Glaaas collection. fUll&p/lJme.AIJareas. _Call __ 8!M_-3356 __ f_or_ap;...;p'-t_. __ , Employer WPM.Ca11Myra4-6PM $Alll[S CoslaMesa.exppref'd. Wa.itrea, Ptr. O\ltr 18 M/F . xlnt bk&rnd. P.P.Byappt. Uni forms furnis he d. Moo-Fri833-2462 Iii-Cl.ll631·96ll. Angie's Famows Piiu. 9'11-0183.$200 839.7207 Ages 21 or over . Rellred ~g~~~~fttll TRAIN££ 581-3525. LagHls. ""-to Y• 1045 " .... __ .,._ welcome. No expenence .. p•~tE up ................................... MID.I Truck .;:,uell nee. Apply Universal time.4M-Ol6B • IN -U RECEPTIONIST nlllJ PILOT SBVICISTATIOM Waitresaeswantedexp. Freeldttem,Sweek.s old. ~/bsl oft. 645-3832pft Protection Service, 1226 Legal Secretary, ex· PERSON Immediate rull-t1me UN Island Attendant . :O~~HwyCd.M'". l)'eUow,lblack. 1--4·-"-·-------W.SthSt.reel,Sant.aAna. perle n ced . Laguna opening for s harp , F/Ume. Over 18. No _____ ......;;..___ M2·2208 Potter's wheel $95, , ... ~,, h 9-12 & N·..,~• 831 0223 _ ..... at le••t 1 year ex personable PBX rtteP· mechanics. See Mr WHEELALIG~ENT •· ... ~ F u...,. .. ,ews ours ,,,....... . ....., ... . , . -"th . oth --.. .... ...,. Fairvi-(al .... IAN"' •• , •-• 1050 camper Jae .... $50. v l ... Mool.hru FrL peri~nce. preferably tionialw1 vanous er Thia highly successful ......., -,.._ BR.AK.ETECHNlC .., 962-S056 Legal Secretary trainee oewapaper. Excellent office duties. Please local newspaper has an Falt>CM Newport Tire Cent.et, sf-'••••-••••••••••••••••1-----------------•! or experienced, airport oompany benelit.s. Apply call: <n•> 752-2600. ~ in the cl.rcula· day won wed. salary + etmlSTMAS Delk. can also be used a~ GUARDS area .. Must· have ex· between 9AM tic 6PM, IRVINE tioO de]>arlment. Job in· ~~~~0a1 oommtulon, Apply 3000 411!1.U'UMMMa.? a sm dressing table SI ~ SECURITY cellent typing, 90wpm +. Mooday thru Friday. SAVINGS AND LOAN cludessales, service, col· • r.A .1 E. Qmt Hwy CdV ~r---(lat.e 20's or 30's). over- Co 11 e g e degree i n E.0.E. M/F lectiool ana supervision needed Immediately for • · 52 iDcb round ha.rdrock st~fcbr,ndSTecovering, Ea1lls h preferre d. OIAMGIC04T or teenage carriers. fUlltimework. FuUcom· WRITER imDledin.lng room table S3.s.msorutecardlbl $S. Due to our recent ex· $800-si=.&r mo dernd· DAIL y MOT-Seled'9d applicant will paay beDerus" xlo't pay We're kloidna ror a aWf with two eJtra lea\les & t.tectiiqo u bdbrd $40. pamiort program, Wells _.lnl~ooo ___ . sm. __ N1i___ M:WC Reltaunmt; AppllcaUons receive a liberal 1tarttng IJl'OCl'aJDat.. •• ea. n _M•raot wn• for ow 2 yr okl cblil'I PLUS one au l()I misc drapes reasonable Fwso Guani Servk!M is naw bel~ed tor salary and reaularl.)' PalDt.er maaul.oe. Good op · _. m .,,.u tQJS for price's, 4 Dodge van hiring ..-.curily guard» l'.A<luorstoreclerk. 3ga'=ySt. =i!a. l~sura!~~~ scbediiJ.ed raJset, boou.s BOBWJTHAllVW portanity. Call for in· awtatmuforyourkida! rims, $10, 4 (3x4) ~ ror. NT-ni:ach F.qua.I ~:Oily good opportunity for oppartunlties and many 7'00Wf9lminat.er terview. ~l cau plate glass. good cond. lr¥MtfMtwpotilca. Employer right person. Apply at ~~a~~~ ~':lic:i Weltm.lmter XEROX OPERATOR. __ '7_1_4_J_7_7_1-_1_0_7_6_, make ofr. 645·7857 a h ~t-'!'! MacDonald's needsfull& --------Colony Kitchen. 27142 &Otal and life in· ~75.Sl/6118-7180 Oim'I copy center. No ROCK MAPLE BDRM'....:5pm. __ bef_tOp...;._m_. ___ _ fWurto.. n ~j~J,r~.P:,S:~b~~~~ Pf:~wert og se r v ice Ort.ego Hwy San Juan surance. Position also ServS...Helpneeded lm· ~ntc. Wiii tulo. SET. SO YRS OLD,._ _______ _ ~-.~~ HarborBl,CM. operat.odull&Prr.cau ~~·Mon· Fri. 8 providespll--~ ~thucr:'ulJ~i ~E.Cstf\aU~pN/t.BApply .CaUS57·1747. XLNT. $495/CASH. ~ShiptMftt nl'llllYTIWJ" ,,..._ 83:'>-3561 --·-------car"::"v: ~ pe:OOal ~ nwY, . . Mw ' p •r• _~ __ 1200_______ J.mPorted Cashmere 111 Machi~t-Full time lo ---------·--------SGTPEPPERONl'S -·· .. •••••••••••••• ·--------dian Christmas Orn:1 I M M E 0 I A T E small shop doing R&O . PllXOPERATOR Reilaurant useprivileges. p•~·STORE •.. 1005 ments. beaded wall O,E .... l ... GS f or work. Small mac h. Orange Co Arprt area. ..........,,. <I 1fFH IBUY h · g gifts on·g1·n·I "I"".' 1 1 parts. Minimum 10 yn inter busy swltcbbrd, BOB'S Applicant must be 18 aod Now hiring for full & ....................... ** * * Afan.gm •-H: 1 a 111p•rY sory ••• ..-... Waaes open. Coo· F/f It P/f 1bifts. E 0 E have &ood driving re· p/Ume opeolnp at loca· AMT1ftl11 SHOW & Good \llM F\iroiture & n can \¥ ama ayan offk ho ._, ., rd HOMEOFTHE lion near 0 .C. Aill>ort ~ --01> l I photographs, 31740Coast Mellrity en w tact Mr.Cundallbetweeo Manybenel.Payacco . cord. ... .... bel80l".over.Apply. SALi ~aaces n I wl Hwy . So. Laguna ....t f"OP PAY with c 8&5~ iag to exp. s-16-3333 or llG IOY ..._, HamtinatoaOeoterMall MllorSELLtorYou. $&1 eel 833-3333 lmmed openings in our Hours are approximate· inperaoo. Jan 4-7. Presented by MASRRSAUCTIOM ~~~~~~~~~ ,....ct cowipmy. Ma.ids wanted. top wages family restaurant at l,y 11AMto9 PM dally 2300S.E. Bristol Empire EahlbWoaa. Sell 6461616&1Jl-9625r: pa.id.Tbelnn atLaguna. PBX operator, ex· ......... ....,locaUoos were-Weekeod.s,....•""albulat SanlaAnaHeights ll f Ir ~~~~~~~~~1w.·~ ...... 10ry ""id" Apply lo person Monday 2UN CstHwy Laguna perlenced , mus t be q;",.e"~ prev1oua exper. overtimer~ 549-8674 ~ ava or n o :;: -e.i':::' xlnt.e~o~d,gS3~~t· to Friday, SAM to SPM · ' available weekends & Jdn OW' Criendty team. (NexttoMcDonald'!f' SACRinCE -5 pc bdrm ~· : Hammond Orgun. at.: MAIMTEHAMCE e\leniog.&. Call for appt. Com· .. •ee us today If.,.,,, a-qualified and F.qual()ppor Employer ·--------set ... 48 Ceo .. """ Model -•ftR well ••u. 1:1 ~ WBJ.SFARGO P/time student . work at 8:30·5PM. Moo· Fri. ~ " ln~le-res·~-d .. call the "~ueMulcBosa! ., · ...... ., ' .... .., · .....,., ·· GUAJU) 58VICES Party rental ltor'e. Auly 86-5000 ext 520. bet~~~ Circulati~ Departmeol .... Mahli ()par ~!Clocks! JbDe ~ 644-8322 aft 6pm. 77<>-5343 C ~~2 ~·........... 3125 Newport Blvd, C PEOPLE PERSO(fN 9M2 Adams St. H.B. S::e~ .:~~~ee~U-::. ~~. 5:'°X:. ~: HUG~~ECTION ___ C_AS_H_P_AJ_D ___ ,~':b~:t l~:o~n~ .O swttw"""' MANAGER Bus ma.a leeks P 88· Walhn, WClitrftMs tu will train. Infrared --.c.. For gd used tum, anti· chrs very durable, $300 ,...rt..CA Retired co uple to soc in Whl supply. Cool&Tralltftsl OIAt.EcO•ST Dynamics. 10t0 w. 17th .............. ques&cl.r'IV'a957-8LS3 Small drop leaf tsbl1·. Monday, Tuesday, Wed· minage 75 unit mobile 631·5588 c....,_ ..a '' St,CM.se.ZMS G•rift S20 Ham radio $17' nesday. Thursday, lOAM home perk. Maintenance --------1 A enld 0 L DAILY PILOT Open Wed. thru Sat Queen ~ R.3.n:iS99alt/tbox Cati 631·3474. • " l06PM.CLOSEOFrlday & office exper. req'd. Pensontotie papera3to 6 23952 Y a ea SbopHeb>. top wages & 1 · llll'Oll-· , wn1-------- ut: L1v1ng quarters & am. $10. daily, 3 days carlotta,LagwiaHills ~'=~~t. benefitaforaboptrainee, ~7~:ue)7~~rv. or fu.118 pc '28 ea. Ce n· Must.~!J-M1rrors 9 pt·:. 230W. Wf/lntfW' salary. Send ~ume lo week.882-8422. CookTraiMft MM32l immed opea[o11 tor tury Model Home Furn 10'x6>':ll.8" lbn..217 SPMC. 393 Hamilton. PbooeCanvasser Cd.Mn AnEqualOpportunity ~P1~~s~~o ia~I 548-3m 548-0079 cr.~o •-Ca C2. Costa Mesa 926267. Exp or will train Hrly 73ll F.dinger Ave. H.B. Employer Wioe c.rt with Presa & SOF "' C I I ft,J, 1r --;.!.! _.. -b c It Watt.n A WoitrHHS t.erview. Deltrooic Corp.. B&rftla. mo. Pr band A, v • e ery co or nangerator reeier . Slat.eLlcNoC.{)()36 ~..!!!..tapMon~~·.,..06a r-.-1..Tr.-1---!li;!98akel'St..C.M. crochet Popcorn plaid w/maple arms & cu ft. s.ide-by·s1de, tee EquaJOppEmplyrMtF MANUFACTURING """"•".,.., ,......,...,, -_,,..., s c Hoo L au s Bedapreads. Approx legs. Folds down to maker.1mmacuiale. /\n 4501 Campus Or. Irvine STOCK Cl.Ell( 7ll"alOO". SIOe•. CdM couch. Good cond. S50 or bque brass headboard HOod Sallmakers posi- tions &\lallable tor layoul fraewing. 5411.3467 HOTEL FEONT DESK CLERK-4 day week, 1-11. Some weekends . Call for appt. MS-~ ext sa>. VACUUM SYSTEM OPERATOR We are seeking an ln· Pl771 Equal Oppor Empl,yr DRIVERS-Approx 4 hrs lmmed F(f poe avail. ~l7" best offer. S45-40Q aft 15 & 20 gal. acquanum """ M/F per day. Salary 54.S6per for Ind.iv w/cletlcal ex· ---------• 8pm. _4!rl_·Z1S_1_. ____ _ Help Wanted. Call today, ~~~~~~~~~ hour. Licensed or will per In stock or purchase ......... wwoocl MB-'JKI Restaurant ttalo. Appl,y Newport· area. Ability to due From lrvloe Ranch " MUSTSAC·Spc bdrm set . Newport Beach Athletu· PUlt.iB nt--.&. COOt<S Mela Uoified School Dis· rmnor repairs a definite beyond tbe best 1Xl2's 2 pc li\I rm set. rclnr C ub membership $150 or , ... ..,,,_. t:rtct. Mon/Wed(fbur & plua. Call tor appt. /bm Gary -.a&O lmpa,tbl.s Ceolury Model best offer. 642·2164 or Newport &each area. Company benefits. paid Frl9am·l2, Tuea 1.3pd\, Wf.8tlaods8ank9'79-4600. an>' · · HomeFlm>549-3077 673-0782. Good opportunity ~·API>~yln,person. IS>l.l6thc. ...... N port 00 ..... , ... , .... Calif artist -------oo..8525 ALPH s _....... ew E.O.E. _.....,_. · · DtnJ.ng room set: Tbl/4 Royal & Olympia. sell Beacb.Ca.E.O.E. ---------• Ey\luid Earle, 18X26· cbn, lg butch, solid cor recting electr 11 Pool service repairman RISTAuttAMT ~~~~~~~~~ Stodt Men wanted full or $500 below appralul, pecan.M-2888 typewriters, like nc\\ __....,. experien_... ·--Barbor at Edinger. p/time. Advancement 55-0ll26afl.SPM ~ ·11 t k .. ......,.., .. ~. ......... Secretary needed for -·-"'-. Apply lo I N T I M E F 0 R C06t ..,.,,., ea. w1, ;i c --------4 dlvldual experienced in vacuum system opera· H<ltef ·~·-'r'9 '...,. 7:30 to 4 onday thru Friday. Union benefits. Call for appt. ~. CIXl.enSion 520 tloa. Salary com · me nsurate with ex· 968-8009 ~Valley. counter culture type p:;;.,~daid Shoe Authentic pre-Columbian CHRISTMAS a· Blue $2'75ea. 7141847·9360 Prodlll:HcMtTr-... ~~ore. Eliete St«e, 3'111 s. Brtatol. 1telue1, vuea and sofa, very Id coad. $100. ~allon Pool Tbl. Gd ~bber hoee product.a, ~ ~edk. t::a ~onj NB 0 C.M. artifact.a $36·0628 aft. S51-5118e\lt9 Qiod. With balla & cu~:. Cqmprehensive com· Irvine area Must pass ' ay · 1 ea 645-637 · ---------• ~ All Wood Bunkbe ds f\m:$100.S3H008. pan,y beaefita including company phy1tcal hr ror mature woman Secrttary, Person who ls --------•I ~ppl•tna 1010 wtmat Ir box sprngs Pool table. 4\h9, J 1w petience. ~medical and dta· clllltint hie.It xra)'. Call M&-tr.!00 willing to work & learn TEACHERS-Sub· •"•••• ................ $1& Sip 90la Sl79. Ceo· slet.e. 1'4" thick. $40U HoueekeepeT to ll\le in or laJ. Call or apply in f«appt.540-7139 E.O.E. SALES-AN OHIO OIL CO. for an eitclllnl job ex· sutute. Kindergarten FREIGHT DAllAOED t.ury Model Home Fum. ftrm. M?-'5037 out. Non smoker. own peraon. 3952 Campus PURCHASING/lNVEN olfen hlgb income._plua pertence. Knowledae in throulh ab 1tade. Con· HOTPOOO' SALE. 3808 ~ , uansport.al1.on. NB area. Drive, Newporf Beach TORY CLERK needed casb bonuses, bmefitl to cooatructloa helpful, tact Weatmlnater School w. Warner or Harbor, ---------Fifty gallon aquariun1 ~7314. (714) 5'0-8080. Equal Op· fl\., lmmed opealna. full mature person ln Colt.a AP/AR,'850+.M-4577. D 11 tr I ct, 14 l 2 1 Saa&aAllLl'J9.2112l lDpcGerman Klnl.,.~ eodltand, complot.ewlt" ---------t portunity Emplo~er. 00 benef. Some marine Mesa ana. Regardless SECUT'••y Cedar wood Av e. Stt. including 5 • 8' e"erytblnlf, lncludin.: u---a.-FT & PT. m/f/b. r c 11 of experience write .,... CASllPAID Jone. 1• h1l6 clot.bes at llqMcal Cisb. $150. <'ull ·c-od b.a~·ema. EOE exper · pre 'd . a Re · for srowlnl corporaUon Westmlnater IM-731& ext Wubr/D17r.1Refri1s. llnea clout uso. 847-8896aJter6PM. Yvlew Convalescent 8 a 1 b o.a M 8 r 1 0 e ~~ :deo A~n~ in recreetlon field. Can· 212. E.O.E. ~otDOt861-8W 60S1fl TRANSMASK Hardware 541-9871 tor can .. x • didate lbouJd be a good ---------QaUig11n wat.er softnet on Hoap. 2055 Thurln Sl . lllJllt It cWatla. E.O.E. De,ytoo, Ohio. 45401· l Ith h WA&HEll DRYER SALE HercWon bkte-•·bed. dbl ly $95. Also drink111j.! C.M.142-3505 rDlf/h. SALES CLERK , :~1:,n0!e!11~y . ~u·:~ deluxe m11ltl-cycle u. uaed oace, S145. water R.O. wtlt aad lfll> HOUS8(9HS CORP RealDLateSalea estabU1hed stationery llhonel.type55-80wpm& ~..!. lllDdlla.. ~rt· f13-6338 cabshelltormlni plcku1' F\l1I & PT employment • •< ""Wlkw stort aeeda permanent Clktapbone. Sal.a')' com· wuiv•• bill. rerlD~be4,ct!:\lt $100. NewHooverfloor-t•· ror both Clays • eves. NCJ --------• Inside sa.1ea person. Of· meoaunw with ability. S60,. DAY =:::· ow ce. a tic ool)' $85. 552· 1420 e~~rience necnsary. r-.....-J Weeks ftceaupply experbelpful. Noft·amoker . send re· Wanted qualified sub· _.... ~Yef>'So ;.~ ...,_ I0601---.;_;.---EX>E Cciotad Pett00•oel Mao wanted to clean ~ but not ~eual)'. f'r. aune to Kulsb llluaae· lltitule teac:ben to teat'b -12.121,... • ..._t ....................... Sh a r p 11 m a I I d <' s k ootce So. Coaat Medical pools, fQllUme. TRAINING tn1e beneflll, 1roup ment. 33208 Pueo llllbldtnla in the event ~ ....... 111.-a 7 Yr Ta O.kll.a1, xlnt calicul&tor,$1.5. Omlerll8'72 Coul HWY. _.. Mewc...r meclcal. paid "acaUoa., ~.SleC.SuJun ol 1 won atopqe or IABOAINs.\lted refrip ......... lfU.at MU. Ba1 548-9.274 So.14•1311 MATBW. MewPN.c:lty ~::f.1~1" caU i. ~.CAmrl :"lt~'ii:•~~rf. ...... drJn, par, beat Je.l ...... f75.12S7ev• DINlbJG TABLE SJS l&PR. Liv•ln • btl&: HAMM.I.. •~ut.l1 00> prior s.cretuy. roodMrvtce .,.-. •12. Valid CA ...... waerv~Batt ctml'IMAIPOMY Fouf chain U" ea cl-.n, cook, clrl ve, a ~ dta.lred, not tnlldDC or uperieoce 811ea ~ "°' .... a» inclmt1al nq'd. ADOtY fr Appl&a-Olll, f11oa:tmo for ODlJ SlOO Fftncb Provtn~tal dres~· cse ror 211' GM S.CHLO< required. Wiii train. w m•'7· LOVE P1COPLBT ~·, wtxlot l.YPt.01 • 1.abm!l credeatfal-lo ~ &I w ti Seen a.&Uorcll&.Ula tac table"'· all white .-cbl.;:.;.:._...,_• __ evea_. __ -c =.r·.::i~Pba~ ~net ioatruc-!::::c:t°'::c:::::.,:; ~-r~~': ~ H8 Untoo HS ~~-=t~'.free. -.. =rrsi~.~: ~~~~~ Dllur'locl9 -Outatadln1 ~' .. ,. "'\II. Irvine •Prof..imal OD UM~ Denaoaetral• f~ce • Boa Dalt, l>llot, JLl..~'cir~ ID(n~ii ==r II 10 ....... WI cablnet '25. Outdoor QfPOrtHlt7 lo Co1tl ll·.o.i ...,..,_, · tnlDla& ., ,_ body lllllhltr lD pre-P.O. Ito• t.HO, Coeta for Daed.llDe Dec •w11t1 1020 --.. -......... cbain$10eacb. 548·5044. -. .-.rat •aeacy. E.O. •UDtoMcommlatloa. ~dip&. ltOfel. Com· -.,ca.Dm -. _Ct!.i;;;.& ••• C ............ ~~: llood.• .... .... ~ence necuaary. MEDICAL ..a.otc. or top oUtce mhalon eotentlal .... .., .. ~Uatllllu Low pre11ur• otflce RECEPTIONIST .tocadam. SZOOO+by Chrtatmu. '\__ = Btaaoaeble. P .P . w/f\all renge d daily 1n J'RONTOrn.cE a.,,,,_ OWD bou wtlb a 9t.n lmmedla~ly. Call *r-._... * 557-ml Ii Jf -• 1083 ~.c: td1u~l:•· c ~o,:: ~ .. '!' D • .!!...'.1'1oaa ~~_!C'Ol .. k>caaJ or· 1>nn,m1MH10t. WlwllS ~I NeW::'M. enutn Ju*w l 1070 ...... 0 ·::·••••• 5 •••••••• ,-menaar•t• w/abllJU ... ·~·-·• ex· 1 ... ~. GmJ'>t=;,lf'r,"K SOLICITORS lllX'BIKJ:••'-P· •-••• .. ••• ............ ~11>aatvU"":::, x~~l~lJr -.00or541-320CJ. J:. a.per v~•.:::.:,~· Kalila Really Juat moved lnto to•111 &qlattnJ>atAUffft E.Qal181MedOnb.SeU =:::'.t.~Jr~ llltJST S&LL•I 1trand sns or bol offer. Claulfled. Ad• ere the ~ wW be held ,_...,eel......_ T'btrl&etacq_uelntedwltb Ua&tiledetaAitne1 DllU)PUot.Hlabtltcom· ~ .. ----~ .... ~ fC>Od qu.ality eoatorl4S«Jt . ..... ~• .-e.....rw J.Hf;Utrv 12-IO. S.od lll-7211 ~uslfled Ad•. 41a>Birdl&t.ltAttCM mlaalon pefd. Yo~r ·-'ii~-• NtMr.s~r:-'late· ,..... ,,, yent aaJe ! lt ·1 · i1s*f" \et1el' Ir 1'Bliln6 tM ealat •ll Neu part Baada. m lllO ...... lit boaM. <>vet 21, ": ·~Yd CM ..-val'• • I. Make ._ Vkllln. lW'd lhe&I cue . a,,_...., to ..U ._,. CD· PO llh -· 9uDM. 8E1.L Idle tt.a with a ml U.. lten •nd" c.Dl'ar"'Afrt19'tab-;t4 LD. -OIM. CaU m MIS. Jt olfw. Nlc. Otlt~U -Ml. J ..... ;;;;-r,1_::,:~:.:::::J~a.~.cta~.ca~.mn~a~~~]DailJ~~PUclt~~Cl..mtd~~~A~~aJ~~~,.~~~ited~t ~~~~~~~;:;:~~~W'~~~·~•~·===;::::=.~;;;;:;::;~J:==~~-~~==::d~Oift~.1'1S1111;:!~~:-.a.~~~r~~~===~~~·~S11~1~=====~ ... ' . I -- THEOOOIU ROBINS fOAO , •t,.llf!"! 1 .. t\lli;(I ' • 'A •.-1 I.. f, I• Utllll .. V\ Pty wanla to buy pWlO f()f' ('!lllh 4117 161ti .......... , ....... Sele C2lJ)lf'77 166.S ~ 9010 ••••••••••••••••••••••• lbmmood Rl'llf'l\l Mmlbacr1hr~ t;U-2283 ....................... t= I 9520 OWter Boat.a AvaUable ~ :w 215'. 30'. 32" ., 51 ' ror --ks ••••••••••••••••••••••• puade ol hchts ()I' da)' .. retFICT week·l'Od 1aiUn& Call C .. ISTMAS GIFT Newport Bayview Vatch '48 •"'ORO WOODY NJ.y restored I ll 3,000 87S.6161 Oub 83J.1SOO. Mu11t i;elJ lovely Kawai ' ---------1':~007 ORGAN l.1ke ....... W ·to60 Pril>CfSS Vanden Plu '64, nl'W. Only $2100 Call ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4dr sedan, "Baby Rolls m.3S29 Royce" Rare LHD Lux· • ... 44, •• 7., W')' compact, PS, PB, Pianola Player Piano re ._ ._. " AC.Only53Kml~Ph11UPI' $950 Hobart M CabJe J ·3'•CF2'7 AM /FM radio. New <;ra.nd (reblU $2995 Har· CaloCata.llaa pain\. radiaJa uphobtr)'. nngioo uprt, refnsh. re S..1illw Y_... 18mpg. Xlnt lnveatmenl. t ond 5950 Oak uprta (710148-2'764 S\600. Call weekdays on· rromS950 <21.S) 588-9433 ly. 714-631·4771. PP o.ist Pialto Shoo '68 Clasalc El Dorado, 81m'Harrulton Av, H'B. JZ' Block llland Cutter llD)orbeatolfer. S36-8175 SSO.lm invested. Wiii sell 875-1083 aft llAM Good practice piano for tor In.Im. 080. ~ .56 T BIRD 75% to ed beginner. U pright orS.W.2158 Wbi.t / d. 1 tres.I900 walnut SJ2:5 847·5SS6 or e re n r ... 564-7741 Sabot forCbri1tma1, com· rirm. Q1M . 875-1784 ---pl. including oars & dol· S6ciWJ 8093 ly. eo.~-3223eves. '63 Cadillac, convertible ••••••••••••••••••••••• SiJver/aray. Orig Ownr Rl \' 'E)I ~El.I. 'f-:)1 T J( \IH; ·1-:'1 R E~T 't-:)1 '1'11 pl;wt> your ud in 1111, column c:all 642-5618 -CHRISTMAS =::.:-0159 . PRESENT Y.wdtt 9530 -WANTED• SAIOT SAIUOAT Muat. be in good condl· lion. Call Mr. Muter at 567.am Hoble 16' namer, gd cood. w/t.raller & cat box. lt3)0.~50f7. Udo 14' wiCIL new tdr. Mlnl cmd. 'Sl.500 or otter ~ ....................... •RV J.NVESTM ENTS• -SEMlNARS SAT~SPM "on site" Dale'• RV Rentals Is now sponsoring a mini· educationaJ seminar that wUl in 2 hn. demonstrate a S to 8 t.o 1 raUo of earn· 1011. lov,at.ment.s in IM&e''s Nation wide ren· ctuaively un· With; MA, DAllY PILOT '--==========I Hobie 14 w/traller, gd cood. Ml.Lil &ell before Stan, RHtaunmtl, Quiatmas. 51000/bst ofr. , 'tlMITf:D, NATIONAL WESTERN, KLM, TCS. ANWB, to name a bandtul of over 53 major wholaaaler s which are printing Dale's in I.heir '79 "f1y. Drive" Brochures Select : Loll Angles. Colorado Springs, San Franci&co or SeatUe for the S earning localloo for YoUr RV. Call for rurther tntro. (714) ~Mr . Bar 8095 4119-5037. ••••••••••••••••••••••• M 1 5 c u 11 e d 26' wood sloop, inbrd eng .• RF;STAVRANT equip· $5000. rnent for s ail!. 714/ S57·1881,646-0'l3'1 f&.7&U 1Y.Roclo, ... A.Steno 1091 ••••••••••••••••••••••• RCA SELECTIVISION. S mos old. 4 hr video rcdr. V(.'"1'200. $575. 645 1262 St.creo speakers, •,.; pr1ce! 4 J 8. Laruung, L ElO's, also 4 L-ElO's PllllSIVe radia tors. Art 4 pm. !a-3636. Hobie 14, good· cond. w/trlr, sail cover, xtra hrdwr. seoo. 873-8343 ..... Sllpl/ Docb to10.Uaener ........... .... ....................... --------- SUPS AV AILAILE YAC Newport 646-0551 P\it Hwtlu\gloo Harbour dock for rent. 213·58'l·564S 77YWIUS P•TopC...,- Fully equipped . only 14000 miles, orallge & while. (208UCR) . $64'5 loah & Msine Te-• a t••• ~,....... ·········•••""9••··~··· 20 Buses & Campers To Choose ~omE • •• ••••••• •• • • • • • • • • • • • Alrar9ft ·'-11 0 G.-ral 90 I 0 ................. ., .. .. ....................... --------·1 T HIS 1s where the BOAT ACTION IS For Bu.ving Or Selling And for the latest In BOATING NE WS check CM.Ir front page index daily. 1111.l BEACH BLVD HUN'I1NGTON BEACH ea .. , .. S./ 14i.2000 ... tl20 -------....................... '78 Kawa1ekl Jet. Ski, ()6der camper 4-aale. w/o br'm'd new, never been 1.[uck. $150. Stove & uaed. Below r etail. mni. M0-2100 _631_-ato_40_. ----- t tolwtltd-.. tl40 ,..,... .... ....................•.. ·-.... '540 b U.. .. ••••••••••••••••••••• "78 Puc NewportL .. e '1S VI Vee• Panel Wagon DllW. Extras. MSO/urf er 3llD BP 350 Motor. N~ --======-==~I ~ £veainp aome wortr, body In 1ood nlEMO.PEDDLER 1bape. seoo c:all art. DAILY PILOT BOAT TRAILER l:lrand n e w Tandem trailer. s urge brekes..1. buddy axles, suoo. P"' 673-27:.>. New P EUG J;OT MO· l :GODm wk. o1tee a.6073 PEDS Rea $4ef. ltow Aeklor8ryao $219. Must brio a Ad. 4 -..e Dri•" tHO _631_.., _______ ...................... . 15' Runabout., 55bp motor. '78 Jawa moped, xlnt boet cover. good cood alDd. $200. 1'11 CHIVIOLIT • .... x ... <llo6ce ol 2. Both are f uJ · ly lo aded i n cluding ll*1a1 off.road equip· 1D111L UM> Ir (3129>. Sabot, ulla, oars . 551-1261 873'0562 tllO ~r.= toJO ~·:~·;~ .. ~;·~·;~·~;: •••••• •••••••••••••••• IDOdifled, raew motor. MOWSf2fl HOWAIDca.•rolet Dove. Quail Sta. NEWPORT BEACH IJWIH Inflatable boat tJ'. can new u... many partt. • ....... C-O_>S __ T_A_M_E_S_A_ ... _..,.,_ ac ... p Xlnt c:ond .......... ......, .. , Ir stand. ..... ......, _. ' f:.: bl~ Will like Pd moo. u1c1n1 nsoo. ·~ •MC~J&-5811-38SS olftr o.tr '"'· 111\llt l'U--~ ...... --,.....---to-4-MU. PM'J0.1"9 #I IM AUF. ffollda t?k~XL Good OGbdilloll. .,,._ ...................... SEA RAY'S 11' ta 30' HAlllSOM'S SIAIAYIOATS 3101Coutlfw1, N.8. 6ll·Jl47 ..,, Rertey o.~. IO etder, tlll a/f O'ler sa.ooo. -... tf.8. • lr'IMo. .imoet totally reblt, Beat o fter -..i. l1Hlrw i..... HLO Buy thl1 1tmo1t new -·••••••••••••••·· Hondt IO tor,_, .0. or "II OllC 1 ton Pkk 1,., ~~~~~~~~~' dautht« Oab "1•u Mio tnm. P~ s:!O~u 100 mllea. sue. Pb Dr ....... m-au or al\ 5, MU65'1 \ .. -., COHNllL C HfYRO ll: I . ·.·' !141> 1 lOO lt71 flOIO IAMC...O C\atom, la~u.r pa.Int, ta •t• 6 alJ new rn erlor MAONI l"IC ENT' t I (IK47H7> Prl fly . SMOG 00 QIU •"• 1 "'Ca..~ blue. new-...... --~~~---.,., BMW Ull. 4 apd. 11uf, AM/FM uu, Bur1un· dy /tan in\. Int rood. =· 8731707. 132·2965 117118£.ACHBLVO. HUNTINGTON BEACH -MZ..2000 t7'5 llllOUYOU sa&. YOUa TOYOTA. -SEEUSl 646-4571. '13 Bavana, wt.o. anrf, AM/YM cua . $4700/o( '711 Oatau.n P U , a uto. fflf" M1.11t Hll fNt. P.P. shell. AM/fi'M OU. ~------­rnoo1otr Ml.Lil Mli latt pp~~ 4.'llS£ 1178 Cleulc White w/red. S2000 • like over baWlce ol "50/mo I.e. 831.Jm 'SHOO.' cir. Rune areal. A daMic. MAllOUtSTOYOTA MISsION VIEJO 8J 1·2110 495-1210 '5 Corona 2 dr. 3,000 mi. on new reblt eng. · Nice lnt.trlor. leather steering ----·n GMC a·ron. h 12 natbt'd, ~ ml tak OV~LI ~9811 '71 2002, lbarp, TIU rblt q , IOOd c:ood. ~•t of· fer t.aiet. 496--8628 ----'171:.01 BMW, lo ml $8900. Call Bob Mattel TTO-r.m·. •5117 9742 wheel. wink mirror. & Lach • $800 CaU aft 6 00 ••••••••••••••••••• ••• • pm wk nltea. 888-6073 Nk '11 MG. good rooditlon. no fOC' Bryen enaloe ~ Mt11t ull ---------•zm T..... t767 v-. tl70 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 0.-9720 o,.t t746 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••• .. ••••••••••• 7 5TRIUMPH 7 6 CHIYIOLIT SURl8VAH Automattc. AM t PM atereo tape, pwr ate.r ln1. bi back sea l~. "special paint, cruise con t.rol. p0p top roof. aux gu tanks. Tacomu wheelt & low m1le1. Lie. IB3754 SC!r. P3?A7. .$5477 THEODORE ROBINS FORD 10t>O llARBOR Bl VO (O'>TA Mi!IA 641 0010 ••••••••••••••••••••••• WEWIUIUY YOtlaDATSUM PAJOFOR.-ORNOT TOP DOLL.Al FORTOf'CAIS BARWICK DATSUN ,,Ill I 11.1lit lj q~ I I lll" 831-IYJS 493-3375 CO ... Mfll :HEVr ".' _ • · "< ll.11 I· · ' I~ I\ \1 1·. ' 546-1200 WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR TOP USED CARS FOREIGN, DOMESTIC or CLASSICS II your car is extra clean see U5 ra.rat. IAUMIUICtC 292S Harbor Blvd. c.osta Mesa 979-2500 WE BUY USED CARS CALL PAPPY Used Car Mgr 540·5630 1011\so~ & so~ • LINCOI N · MERCUHY ••••••••••••••••••••••• •DATSUNS• L.ti Select• OfAI~ SAL&S LE~INO PARTS-SERVICE COSTA MESA DATSUN ~HARBOR BLVD. 540.64 I 0 540.02 I J BARWICK DATSUN ,,111 .I u.tn' l(fl'"' 1 .111• 831· I 37S 493.3375 "We need to buy clean Oataun used cars" S Will Pay Top Dollar S COSTA MESA DA TSU~ ~HARBOR BLVD 540.6410 540.0213 '77DATSUM 280% Gokf. velour Interior. al· loys, very low males. um.5~Vlt •tt 6 Z'sto Choose! . mu BEACH BLVD. HUNTINGTON BEACH 842-ZOOO 73 Oatsuo 240Z. Air. stereo. Excellent $3895. 548-53.W. ll174 Datsun 8210 Jltchbk. nds eng. & body work SBS0.~9134 Rot 9725 "1.t Opel MIDM Cou~ gd. trans .. •lltA> ll'ans. vinyl top. reuooable, Sil 3610 cba. "'1 -%182 evs. 9750 ••••••••••••••••••••••• I t77 POI SC HI t24COUPI Hal aU I.he posa1i,1e ex· tru • low miles! (9MRSC) OM.YSl995 HOWAID C ... •ro&.t Dove at Quail Sta. NEWPORT BEACH 8ll-OSSS 18711 BEACH BLVD. HUl'rl'INGTON BEACH 84J..2000 Ta6 &a-gundy with black In· tenor. AM·FM ca11ette. ~ mlla. <D>RH.A > $49'5 187U BEACH BLVQ. HUNTINGTON BEACH 84J..2000 VollJWCllJ"' 9770 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '75 VW Beetle-T awny beige exterior, deluxe an· t.erior. AM/FM Stereo Mags~ radial tires. One owner. Prt. Pt. $2900. Call6J3.2'm '74VW SQUAlEIAC1C Aut.omeUc transmLAslon. AM·FM radio, SHARP CAR! <872KES> $2995 10 VW's To Choose!. '6t ti 2 CCMlpe 18111 BEACH BLVD Black/btack. 7" alloys, KUNTINGTON-B&ACH leather trim. a very 142-ZOOO special car. $11 ,000. ---------Pri•"-PoncJte tn Squarebtci. rblt eng. . .1........ l trans t'lli. •blt>CIH/ Ctade 76POaSCHI [l'.ll'~•·!!=!If· . 'lt4 '11 UlltT •' 2 door. stick, red wtth White with black in - t.erior. 11r c:oodiliomng, a lloys. low m Ilea . (928PCE> Priced To Sel! black interior. Low IDl..les! C472MXV > $2995 18711 BEACH BLVD 18711 BEACH BLVD HUNTINGTON BEACH HlJNTINOTON BEACH 142·2000 ___ 1_4_~_2_0_0_0 __ '71 &per Beet.le. snrf. rm C8llll .• rad.1•14. 65.000 ma Xlntoood. Sl600. 645·0147 '72 91 IT 2626 HARBOR BL VD ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ coupe. s 1pd. al· loy1, etc . brwnt tan BOO. (3113R.JB> '78 SCllOCCO am1••9M EdfKoft Slereo, very low miles. (636lJZW) COSTA MESA WEIUY USIDCAlS! We're the new Chevrolet dealership in lhe Irvine Auto Center. We need your used car ! _JOE MACPHERSON CHEVROLET 21 Aoto Cent.er Drive IRVINE 761-7222 WANTED! Late model Toyotu, Volvoe, Pickups at Vans. Call \II t.oday ! ODDIJ Faot.uuc Closeout. oo ll>78 Models 1'79 Model.s now arriving MUST SELL DICK MILLER MO'l'ORS l.20W. Womer.S.A 557-2132 Just Married Must sell' '77 Xt9, fully loaded. $4.900~·9611 Pri111MPonche ~71188 "71 911 SC petro blue io.ded. 1t.111t cond. low IN.71l8416(12 Priced To SellJ 2ToChoo&e 72tl ITC.,. s 1pd. alloys, brown/ ,,_ ____ __, brown. Sl 0,000 <03tEXQ) '"' .... 'ondw S38--1888 '63 Porsche Classic. •;=:=-====-m:i='=' 9727 Beaut. red cpe. wtnew 18118EACHBLVD ••••••••••••••••••••••• blk lot . "Nr new eng. HUNTINGTON BEACH lr-..d Mew '79 brakes, Konl adj. Jhocb. 842-2000 extremely clean & ---------HONDA Can stralabt. 2 owner car. ~VWBwl : See&drive l-0 MA.MY Only~. C.11640-0738 appreciate. $4600/offer To Choose"'°"'' PrutiDe Porsche or Hunt· _494-_'7886 _____ _ I n..JIVERSITY ln&IOO Beach is now tak· Cbriatmes Special. rl!d ~ las appointment for lf10 VW Convert .• new OkkMObHe wtnt.r r•toratJon pro· U,.., brb. Cleen Prvt ....... c ... • GMC Jecta. Offerin1 factory party sac: '1796. 496-3579. t: b fender Oalrlng, uPd•Ung NC and lacquer paint. of the '74 BUG. XJnt. cond. Be•t --· 2&'50Harbot Blvd loll art. All wort auara.o· olfer. Days (714)881-2666. Mlol. •••trted Oalt.a Mesa S4G-9640 teect.2255tbSt. H.B. eves (213)81M-612l •••••••••~••••••••••••• ~ Hood.I Clvk Sta.Uon '831568, )'ellow w /blk Int. XTRA CLEAN '74 Super Mf9a-o '705 Wqon, IOod cond. Beat New p&IAl, Tirea, Xtrea. Beetle, 27,000 .m l. 5 new ••••••••••••••••••••••• offer .... l Od cond. Mech IOWld. Stmperit radiala, S2MO '73 Alfa O.rllna Mint •74 H o n da Civic. MuatSell146-58'17. ~'°21 cond. BlaupunktAM/F'M --------1tereo. AC. 28 mp a AWMnaUc tran.e. 11475. '7t 914 FM 8 t.reck. e2.ooo 1'10 VW Autom1tk Bug. S9-0581 evea aft 7pm Dir M2·0lS5 ml. Very aood cond. Runa •Int. body aood. 83l•tl Ol Iv im1. "79 ACCO:~aAC, new S311Q04111M22' $1<nl/bat ofr. 538-7348 11M Alfi Romeo Alfetta Nlchelln la. 38.000 '75 914 ~be 2.0 Uur. '64 VW eua. Mut t Sell. GT. allvw w/blk Int.. mi, •Int. cond. SS.GOO. lhlolueety must aeU Im· AQ)'reaaooableofr. met I cu lo u 1 I y m •In· •12116• 540-2S12 med. S1ei'eo rlldlo, l&400. 213~. lllned. 28,000 m~. C..m· ....... t7l0 ~ '7t &!per Beetle, Recent P8lllOla whee!a, bDalUlle ............ ••••••••••• "11 tUSC. Sm(, 6M ml. rellit. Rlellall. Xlnt all ••P· Titled new July 'lll IOCl 3.4 4-dr 1edao. Air. Mint. 127 .500. oci•cood.•3818 tm. $7900. SetlO\ll In· nm with new elec:. har· m.wn 1m.m4o1 -cruiriet cnly. 417·282'7 aft ne11 installed. Under ~ r= c. • I I V W B u • . •1wtmc11. a,ooo. call 1·114-d?-4154 'M C.v.Uble . Runa •d DESPERATE! MY reaa ..W t71J _mom1naa ___ • ----td eeeda~ restor· of'r.~.'1Ml22 -•••••••••M••••••,•• ..... t7• =:r· M w'i'J COft· "12 VW Bua Special Eu.ro-....................... take °""' Pt)'mtot pean F.dltl;i. new ens , CREVIER I U 6 llOAOW.Y SAHfA AlolA 035·3 171 ! If I L tot • I l!lllYltiO MAC ... NI •11.i 'O OMW•* 73 l1&vet111 SIR t5e7HJP> 1'J:XW A1t\01alr(22M) '7U.OINS/R <028R.IUO miracl£~ nia zda '· ~ C.-MeM 645-5700 '740 ....................... plln ..... m.tal. clulcb, brlt•. AMtf''M ..... t7H t•pe, S2HO 840·07 50 ••••••••••••••••••••••• IDDl'll9. ~ aft 2.30 TISTDtaVIOU. ,_PM~~-------~ 'UCAI VtM 9712 ,,..TH1Y1••1.. • ..................... . vr SA '73 J.800!9. A C11nlc for Oood tnveritor)' In stock. Owtatmat. Onl{ 31M ml. Hurry While t,My lftl l I n. ,.._,,,. ID.ol-ta...M. Mll.AC&.I "" \.oVPll• .aa-• • ........ All'. J15«)/olt. 419-1.282 VOL YO SALIS. SBVICI ete '75 Charger SE. 11 000 m1, 5 brand new tiro Pac AM /FM stereo AJI pwr JCh'U, air. AJll4D LIASIMG CC Pl95. ~.9f.62. OVEME.AS Di:UV~HY EXPERTS '74 Oart, •lr c<>nd. radio. '2200 7S2 5071 day1. Mon •"r1 l~ Helen -EARUIKI VOLVO li8G Harbor Blvd C06TA MESA 646-tlOl 540.9467 OIAHGI COUHTY VOi.YO EX<LUSIVEl_.y VOi.VO 1..artest Volvo Dealt•r 11rt>nallte County• BUY or LEA.SE DIRECT gf., 2025 S Manchester Anaheim 750-2011 2 Swedi s h Volv o Mechaft1c11 now u t Ivan 's , 1995 Harbor Blvd . CM 645 1982 Mtol..UMd ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ 9905 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Grandfalher'1 clean o r . '&SCluslc Rambler good cood. $650. 499 1477 Celll•c 991 5 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Polar•. ort11 owner. llOOd cmd 1165/belt of fer. 962 a&M. • tt40 ••••••••••••••••••••••• • PHIL LOf\JG FORD '-••• , ........ ~,,.... ..... h •••. ,,..._..c..,.... ,....._ 1976GUHADA $3999 2 Or. wtth llutomalic. air cond .. pwr •leering. vinyl lop & radio lll GR!AT buy for the money! (850SPP). -CONNELL · CHEVROLET .'X:'X ll.t1 l•1r 11,, ·' 1·11Sli\'VH.~\ 546-1200 '7S C.d Sdn de Vile. xlnt •-~...;;.;..;===.;;;;=== cond. •11 extras. must .76 Cntry Sq 9 pus. aell. SS2QOtor best offer wagon, am/(m lapc . &3431 cnllSe. t/whl All pwr. Lo '76 Cad. Sev1Ue. rull pwr . 1_nu_7:8-_1867 _____ _ xlnt cood Low m1 Sky C """'a 1 . f u blue ~5634 Aft Ii PM ,,,. l:JJK, ownr. u pwr. · air . .P .. P. Must. sell. "76 Cad Eldorado con 552_·_'1778 ______ _ vert .. all avaJI option~ M US T S 1';-L L 8 Y incl. fuel 1n/ect ion Chnstmas· ,75 EUte A<; Absolute per , cond .... do . ea'ts .: ..... n},,.., p .. , WID WS, S m ._...., .. , snrf, AMfoM st.ereo II Ca1mo 9917 trk. S28 O/besl ofr . · ••••••••••••••••••••••• 9&).1-947 Y.TOP Mwcwy-------9-9_5_0 1'18 Camaro with 8 track •••••••••••••••••••••• • stereo. V8. autom•llc. a1r cood .• pwr. steenng It brakes, lJl1 wheel & rallye wheels. Hard to trll fr om NEW ' (2'7S'l'Z'I') ._ucEDSSS COHHEll · CHEVROLET ..X21 llJrl .. r HI\ cl l'llS'I I\ \1 t:.'\ \ • 546-1200 ORANGE COUNTY'S NEWEST lJNCOLN·MERCURY Dealerstup a!i now OP~N RAYFLADHOE LINCOLN MERCU RY l&18Aut.oCenter Dr SDl''Wy Lake to·oresl exit IRVINE 130.7000 '72 Col Park 9 pass wag White. folly loaded • Xlnt • 12.000 675-6161 --'7S Camaro. auto. air. Mttttc.J 9952 AM/FM, 28.000 ma. vt!ry ••••••••••••••••••••••• de.an. SUOO 531-4036 '6S Mustang Convertible. 0..rolef 9920 2Jfi V 8. UUl.O, PIS. fol' ......... •••••••••••••• ;ur, Jus t complett·d ground up restoration b YEAR END mpert cond 494 -0167 CLEARANCE '111 Mustan~ Jl, Macb I , • ....___ eleari, ~d &Mpe. so.ooo AU '78 Demos must go tttl . $11100 IJ&.-8800 tlais in1bflth! See u i. '671\lustangClas&•c.1101. U>DAY. aul-0, PS. vinyl. Must CONHRL CHEVROLF.T .'X:'X 11.uhor Hh 11 I I I('; r \ \1 fo~ ... \ 546-1200 . See $1950 M2-l714 TEEHAGHS grab your rolks and buy Uw. '76 Must 11 Cobra VH Loaded $34951 make ofr. 64(}5891 -------tt77CHEYIOLET '71. vs. P tS. A/C. 53.000 IMPALA SIDAM nu's, S1950 Automatic. pwr steer· 673·8168 In". factory air cond .. 68 Mu:.tan1e. Clean. 289 Unt.ed gJass. wsw tare.'>. Rad10/htr New paint wheel covers & LOW auto p /S SI !50 Ph O'll.Jes. Llc. 8S7RLD Slk ~1isz PJM2. $4777 THEODORE ROBINS · FORD l ObO HA•llOA. Bl VD. COSTA Mr!IA 642·0010 ·w Must3nR l''astbat·k. AM l'"M <'aS.'I, Magi., 6 cyl BlO 1ol r 84().,5660 Old511Dbile 9955 ....................... 76 OLDSMOllLE $4299 2 Dr wtlh V8. air cond .. aut00tit1r, pwr stt!enntc --------•I & brakes. bucket st.•at.' & radio Look!. BRANO 900 So. Coast Hwy. &...,..l.och 49 .. 1131 N1'..W 1 C245NWll>. · .CONNRL CHEVROLET :%!2411.111 ... ,· 111 \" •Cl X'\' I >\ \1 L '> \ . 546-1200 --------• '73 Olds Cut.IHI\ Suprem~. '18 Monte Carlo, 6.000 m·1. Xlnt rond I owner Sl995. Ph646-iS62 VB 350. •1r. xlnl cond _ss_1_.s_ll.8_alt_6_.3'?J>__:.._m __ rwo 9'57 78 MOtifTE CARLO ••••••••••• •••• • •••• • • • LANDAU '72 Runabout. •ood trttns porlnt1on c11 r . Ught blue metalhr with needs body work S300 or custom anterior and b~s l Call 548 ·24H5 loaded with extras ' Delween 8 :.> & 5 Mon· (783U8T) Sat $5975 1-------- CORMIER L . ...,,._... 9960 easing ••••••••••••••••••••••• At Jrvtne Auto Ccnh:r '66 PL YMOU'J'll Satellite 23863 Rockl1eld Blvd. 2 dr brdtp. Low malea~e. fAke Foreat rebll engine. r ad io, /6M026 beater. air cood.cneeds reprurl. power steenng & power brakes Gd. tr&Mportallon. SQ}S. Can be seen thls weekend. CaJ I 551-44.1$ Vega Sta. W'°. '74, to m l. silver, good cond A~klng nw. $52-3223 or M2 ~ a..,.-'925 ••••••••••••••,•••••••• '65 t'\Jry Wngon, runs '77 Cordoba. fu lly good. $300. Strt11f(ht oqli~. lo ma T top, body 642·2344 vlnyf roof. ful l pwr, f'Olltlec 9965 ttereo 8 trade. llhr Int ••"•••••• .. •• •• ••••. •• w/cordoban 1pec. paint. . ill Must sell. $8295. pJ> 73 Pontiac Grnndv c · 548-81131 M S.L AutomatJr traos , pwr. atecr1n1. new pwr. C...,.-9t3l brakes. new shocks, pwr . ••••••••••••••••••••••• wmdowa. AM /1''M tilcrro COUGAR D7 Ir super clean! Must aee 11'75wtt.beverypowerH· lo apprec1atf'' Aa~lnc tn PLUS 8 track at "°· SJ800. Cl.II 49'1 3M'T. enjH control, Ult whHI. t970 vln.y1 top • only 35.000 ••••••••••••••••••• •••• mi1-! (045NYT). •VERYCLEAl'4• $4445 -n T Blrd. low ml. mc.t xt.raa. Mom'• car. M27S. S3401 tt74 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '17=~8/R (0111) n epcl (TJmlZ.) MAIDA/ ... AULT l llO Harbor Blvd. OCSl'AJll:SA Ml-l700 'J'tldt yow old ll"f for '74XR7Clean, loaded. new •CMHtlu with a II~ aa~rlflre' $3,000 '7S V8 Veca Panel Wa1on Dl HP~ Mot.or. Neec11 IOfl'llt w~. bodJ ln lood 1hape. seoo ull •ft 6.00p m wtt . nltu. ~UorBr)'ao ... ,.,. Cl...med ad AJ.1171 BlltOfter 131-3 I Huntington Beach Fountain Valley EDITION .. voL. n ,NO. as-1, 3 sec:rioNs,-32 PAGES---~-~ORANGE..CQUNTY. CALIFORNIA Your Hometown Dally N w p aper MO,NDA v, DECEMBER ts. 191a (}il (:hief~· Say-llik~ Good for U.S. ABU DHABI. UnUed Arab Emirates CAP) The d blon by OP!C to JKk up 011 prtc:-es by 14.S .,.rttnt out )ear 1 nt the American dollar and stock market tnto a no1ediv• todl)'. but the head of the 011 <' rtel ~­ t . fended the lncrff.Sea as a mov-.. 1 de1&1ned to help tb world economy. Some gpt('tahsll Umate the price boost, coming an rour i ta1 ea. will by Us II ralae Amtiril'an iuoHn and heaUna · oU p riC'f9 by three c-enta a 1.i Ion by lat um Ener11 Secretary James &bl lnaer Hid I.hat wh n oUa r market lorce. art ractored In. tlle per-aaUoo tncreue wUl prob ably be five or six cenla. The average U.S. g~ollne price wa.s 68 cenla a f a.lJon as of Nov. 1 . "Tbe oU pl"lce hake 1.5 part or '• 1 * * * * * * r. Six Cents a Gallo•? Oil Price Rise To Boost Gas :r NEW YO~K (AP) -The decision to boost the price of crude oil 14.5 percent -ne arly double earlier predictions -Jwill feed in- flation in the Unil«t States and could hurt the 13 oil-producing na· lions economically, say government and industry officials. President Carter said Sunday that the increase will hurt ef. forts to reduce inflation and maintain a world economic recovery He said the oiJ.producing countries share the responsibility for the success of economic programs. - .. I ~ \ • . ' -: "WE REGRET THIS OPEC DECISION and hope it will be re· considered before I.he next steps take effect," Carter said. "It obviously is serious." said Allred Kahn, Carter's chief in· flalion fighter ... I'm very unhappy because I think it will be ter· ribly lrtjwious to us and -in the long run -to them.•• . Energy Secretary James Schlesinger, who urged the Organiza. tlon or Petroleum Exporting Countries to freeze the price of crude oil. said: "It is a substantial increase, larger than we had hoped. It could have major impacts not only on trade balances but also on the rate or inflation... . The general estimate of increases in the prices of gasoline and heating oil in the United States is about three cents per gallon. SCHLESINGER PREDICl'ED THAT ADDmONAL martcet for.cu beyond the OPEC move would raise I.he price of &-5oline at the pump by another two or three cents by the end of next year As ol Dec. l, the average price of gasoline was 66 cents a gaUon. "Thia ls bardly a mllumal lncreue," s aid Schlesinger, speak· inC S-., CID 4JtC lele:Yllkla's "laluM •nd •••an." 0 auld have a major impact not onJy on trade ~oes. but a1ao oo the rate of·lnflation, on the performance of Ute industrial economies ... Government and industry officials said the U.S. inflation rate --:-about 9t,\ ~eot -wut rise by oae.tum:urtttree..quli'dfa or a percentage potnt because of the OPEC decision. A SPOKESMAN FOR THE CONSOUDATED EdisOILCom· pany or New York City -whose rat.es are among the nation's highest said Sunday that the oil price bike may mean a 4 per· cent. increase in electric rates and a 10 percent increase in steam rates'. r OPEC. which supplies 37 percent of the United States' oil. ap· proved Sunday a four-step plan that will boost the price of a 42· gallon barrel or crude by 14.5 percent by Oct. 1, 1979. Jn nine months, the price will go from I.he current $U.70 to $14.54. Most analysts predicted a rise or not more than 8 percent. The price boost is scheduled to begin with a 5 percent increase Jan. 1, and proceed in quarterly incretnents through Oct. 1. "The economy was in pretty bad shape anyhow -this probably makes it worse," said Michael Evans, president of Chase Econometrics, an economic analysis arm of Chase Manhattan Bank . "lo I.he restoftheworld, 1979willprobably bea pretty good year. Only the U.S. lsgoiog to suffer a recession. ANALYSTS SAID OPEC NEEDED a price increase to cover the losses members have felt because or the decline in value of th~ dollar, the currency used by OPEC. But it will mean a $4.5 billion increase next year in the United States' already large trade deficit. And the deficit -about $45 billion this year -has played a key role in the decline of the dollar. "I think that the OPEC countries may themselves come to regret so sharp an increase in view of the Jtarmful effect that it will have oo the world economy," Kahn said. "You can't enact a 15 percent increase in the price of the world's most important ruel. and not expect the customers on whom you depend to suffer and that suffering to reflect back on you." Fire Kills Mothe r , Four Kids LOS ANGELES (AP) -A fire that investigators say may have been deliberately set has killed a mother and her four sm'all c hildren, sheriff's Deputy Marvin Cavanaugh said today. Joanne Paul, 26, and the children, Anthony, 10, Enoch, 4. Rachod, 2. and Mary Ann, 7 months, were found dead in their bedrooms Sunday at their Florence area home. the mea1ure1 to correct Ute wortd'1 economic situation." u d Rent Ort.ii ol •Ecuador. lhe new aec:retary·t~ntral of the l3·natlon Or1aniaation of Petroleum E p0rtlng Countries. Ortl&, a · g with rep0rters, did n pell out in detaU how the pr boost would benefit I.he world, except to say OPEC COUD· tries "have got tt15ponsj bilities and tu.ks to'Ward the coming generations and toward develop. IJlent of their countries and find· lng alternative sources of eoerey than oll when it is ex· hausl«t. "These generations wUl never forgive us ii we do not build for the future," he said. ''These countries that have reservations about our decisions should re· allze that we are building for the ruture ol our people .•• Die Eyes Dav e It? Whatever their visual faculties. visitors to the San Clemente parking lot used by Dr. Bruce Ewing do a dou· ble take when they spot the optometrist's eye-catching sign. But seeing is believing and no one doubts the op- timum effect that the chart has on visitors who know a good gimmick when they see it. A Daily Pilot photog· rapher couldn't resist getting the whole scene in focus. After the OPEC oil ministers announced the price increase at the end of a two-day meeting Sunday. President Carter "issued a atatement saying it would hurt efforla to reduce inflation and urging OPEC to reconsider . His chief inflation-fighter. Alfred K~. called it "terribly injuriou.." The United States gets 37 per· cent of ita oil fro m OPEC nations. The impact on the U.S. curren· cy was swift. The value of I.he dollar reu against all major cur- rencies th.is morning. The cur· rency markets clearly an· t1clpate a darker economic pie· ture ror the United States ~cause of the OPEC increase. The Soviet news agency Tass today took note of Western com· <See OIL, Page A2> 500/0 Chan~e Toni ght Hai.Dy Weather Staying Around A rainstorm that drenched this time last year. Christmas shoppers and com· Southern California Edison muters &mday and today shows Company officials blamed lhe no signs of abating before Tues-rain todaS' for a power failure day. weaU,er forecasters said. that affected Emerald Bay resi· Weather analysts predict a SO dents for more than two hours percent chance of rain tonight. Sunday. The storm thus far had dropped They s aid nearly J,000 1.5 inches of rain on the county cus tomers in homes on botr\ as of this mor:nmg It is expected sades of Pacific Coast Highway to. peter off into showen about were without power in mtd· mad-day Tuesday. afternoon when rain dam aged a After that, lh~ ~orecasters S(lY. <See RAIN, Page A2> c loudy c ond1t1o ns throurn- Wednesday with night time tern· pe ratures in the mid 40s and daytime highs in the high 50s can be expected. Rainfall is running aboat"dou· b1e that or a year ago, but thus far is not creating any problems in terms of flood damage or crop HBTeacher .. Strike On damage. Fi J 3 ·'The rain is very welcome lo or an. most of our activities here." commented Irvine Company crops division manager Carl Undrren. "It's particularly beneficial ror our cattle gruing operations and ror lrrijtaUon.purposes," he said. "At this point, I.he rain is being absorbed a~ quickly as it falls ahd is noi posing any problems lo us ... Orange County's agricultural operations officers agreed with Lindgren that the rain. up to now, I& a welcome friend to lhe county farmer and water con· servers. Thus far. the season's rainfall in Orange-.County stands at about 5.5 inches. more than dou· ble the 2.50 inches recorded at Teachers say they plan to go ahead with a threatened Jan. 3 strike after negotiations with Huntingtm Beach Union High School District officials failed to bring a contract settlement. Ira Tolbin, ·president of a group representing the district's 830 tellchers. said the school board0S latest Offer Wa3 rejected Friday after a dispute over bind· ing arbitration. Toibin also indic ated that teachers are still seeking a one· year five percent pay .hike guaranteed retroactive lo July. 1978. Shenkman Quits Tonight But district S uperinte ndent Jake Abbott said the teachers h.ave been offered a guaranteed fiv e percent pay boost only if and when a state im posed s alary freeze is lifted and the raises are ruled legal. Abbott said the main stum- bling block in the deadlocked con· tract talks is the arbitration of teacher grievances. School board members say binding ar bitration would erode local control. 81.asts Huntington Council as 'Inept' By ROBERT BARKER Of IM O.lly Pilet S!Mf Ron Shenkman announced to- day that he is officially resign· ing from the Huntington Beach City Council at' the beginning of tonight's Cou:1cil meeting. Shenkman said be is quittini for professional and family rea· sons but added that the present council "is the mo.'!t tumultuous and inept public body I have ever been associated with." Shenkman previous ly served on the Fountain VaHey City Council and on I.he Huntington Beach Union High School Dis· trict board. He said today he will remain partially active in city affairs .. ana will right the hell" out or a recent recall drive now gearing up in the city. Shenkman and three other or- f i c i a Is we re named recall t a rgets recently even though Shenkman announced Oct. 6 that he planned on quitting the coun· cil. He said the announcement of the recall was almost enough to make him change his mind. "l came that close," he said (oday. "I'm a street righter bul I decided not to be selflsh. But I am having withdrawal pains." The council, which appears lo be solidly deadlocked into two camps, has until Feb. 10 to select Sbenkman's successor. Pattinson said incumbent coun- cil officials may also nom inate other candidates. Shenkman said today that the differences on the present City Council appear to be a matter of management principles. He declared I.hat council mem· bers should set general policies and the city adminis trator should implement I.hem . But he claims I.hat some of. facials are causing turmoil by trying to play too active a role in day·to·day operations. Shenkman generally has been aligned with Pattinson. Don MacAllister and John Thomas on major iasues. School board members want to keep advisory arbitration. But teachers are demanding that an independent third party rule on teacher grievances that do not deal with financial matters in· eluding salary and fringe benefit disputes .• Abbott sa id di s t r i c t negotiators have d ecided to compromise on two other issues d e aling ~it h. a cont ract emer gency clause and teacher assignment policies. The con· tract provisions will be worded as they we re in last year's teacher accord. Toibin said teachers a re still gearing 6p for a strike lhe d ay arte r ther r e tur n Cro m holidayvacauon. ' 1 • •' •• ~ Co ast We athe r Showers possibly heavy tonight with chance of a tbunderstorm. Partly cloudy Tuesday with chance or showers decreasing to 10 percent. A little cooler tonight with lows in the 40s. Highs Tuesday :i8 to $2. Stocks -'l:ake Plunge After Oil Increase If officials can't agree on a candidate. a s pecial ele1tlon would be held in May or June . Shenkman's term expires in April of~, Mayor Ron Pattinson said to- day that he wUI propose that Shenkman's successor be select· ed rrom the ranks or those who ran for City Council in 1976 and 1978. The opposing bloc is made up or Mayor Pro Tempore Richard Siebert. Ruth Bailey and Bob Mandie. No further negotia tion sessions are scheduled. '-Killer' Boney IN81DE TeD.4 Y Grotoft meR fighl ONT' 11· 11t:ar·old athlftt• °' spona bttome ~ buaitwu. Sft rhl dart of a /'ft»porl nnea on P•Bl. l•tlex NEW YORK <AP> -Word o( ~ larger-than-expected increase in 'world oil prices drove stock prices into a sharp decline in heavy trading today. In the fll'lt four hours the Dow Jones averace ol 30 Industrials was down 18.79 poinla to 786.~ dropping bel~ the 800 level for the fl rat Ume since the end of Nov· ember. Declines over:wbeJmed gainers by a 13·lmarginamongNewYork Stock Excbanie-Uated lsauet. On SUPdl.Y the Or1an1iatlon of Petroleum Exporting Coun· tries announced that It woud ralae prices 14.5 percent ln quarterly stages through 11ext Oct. 1. The newa came u an un· pleaaant 1urprlN to Wall-StHet, which had been boplne for an ln· crease as small as 5 percent. And analysts noted that it compounded investors' uneasi· ness about lnflation specifically and the economic outlook io general. · · J think people are a little shocked," sald Charles Jensen at MKl SecuriUes. "The stock market doesn't like surprises Uke this." . The neW3 also depressed the bond market. which la highly 1en1iUve to shin.a in lnnaUonary expectat1ons. Tbe dollar tell in forelp eicchanse while the price of gold Jumped by better than S7 an ounce in London. Gold mlnloa stock.a u lned •round, while all other major at.ock ll"OUPIJ were under pres- sure. Oil, auto, a lrllnt and leJaure·travel &tocks all J&v~ IJ"()Und. • • I Prominent names in that category lnchade former Hunt· ington Beach High School Board President Ralph Bauer, Plan· nlng Commlsslon Chairman Ruth Finley. rormeT planning com missioner Prim Shea and ex-City Council members Al Coen and Ted Bartlett. CrOp Dainaged FRESNO <AP> -Preliminary dama1e to t.he cltru.1 crop here hat bffn esUmated llt 40 to 50 percent. with up to 90 percent o( the crop suffering some dell'" of damace. the county depart· ment ot agrtculture reported. Minimum tempereitures 11 \ow u 20 degrees for acvera1 houra were r~Dec--64r c•ualaa a hard tNe&e and cn>s> dam ace . ' 'L ''· Novelty Gift Edible NEW YORK (AP> -The lates t novelty Christmas gift is likened to a pet rock you can eat. It's killer bee honey. For $3.95 you can get a s. 75-ounce jar of honey reportedly gathered from the hives of killer bees in Fortaleza, Brazil. "It's crazy. It's kind of the pet roek of 1978," said Ronald DeChristoforo, one of the three men behind the product. ··But the dlffercoce is, it's edible and it's good." Alona with the honey, you get a history of 1ts makers. The bees were originally imPorted to Brazil from Africa because they were superior honey pro· ducen. But ~veral African queens escaped, ~I with local bees and spawning generations of wild killer bees. The bees have reportedly attacked men and animals .. • \ 'I A.2 DAILY PILOT H/f Monc:!!Y O~mber 11, 181! ;JFK, Hing ~orupiracy Undeeided WAStONCTON <AP> Aft.CT a s.s 8 nulllon lnVt! llJCMUOn, Lbe Hou.ae AIHNWUOOi <'ommlt· te~ 11 con ld rtna 1 t"Ontl~loo thal consplraca can nealhM be proved nor ruled out 1n th u '"°'n~ ul John F . Ke:noed) und Dr M11rt10 Lutb r Kln1 R p Lou11 Stokes, 0 Ohlo chairman, n ys h lhtnka rommltlrt· h 11 /uunled pubbcty "thl· ouW1rw o tt ron,.p1rarv" 1nvt>lv1n1 Ii $M>.OOO St Lou11 bouoly for Kln~f!'I U H~SlnaUon But Stokn at•knowltdaf'<I tht· commlllee hu no proof ot auc-h .a couplracy b"h1nd KloK'" m urder ln Ml•mphl on April 4, l968. At th s mt Uml'. u ~ J>alt' :.liafr draft t.umm rv rt•Portedh ~uys lhcre tr. no c\ 1denl'C of an' spftltlc COMJ)ltety LD KtoAeOy'i aa1u1in1aUoo In Oallaa Dn Nov. 22, 1913, btlt all poulbiJIUN have not been nalfid out Tht! draft r Port uy1, fot f'lt ample. th•t otd vtdf'ne of or- a.-nlied crtrnt Unka to the kl1Jln¥ bH not t>t-.-n prov~d or dl · proud llltholalb "lh rt l1 no dirtcl evwknc " ot an oraanJied t'M me C'OOSptr ry ~h rommltlM> also bu auic jtt"\lt> ,,ubUcly Thi\ <.'on1pl r1u·y ln Kt" Pdy't a a .. 1ln1llnn ran not bf out wlthout t Una a rcctnlJr aurlattd p1ec~ of ftlm tn set' I It how• con J>lraton1 . Robtrl L Grodt'n, a New J 1•rsty photo ttthnlclan, UY• hi~ ~ludy of tht' mm 1howa t'kur movement bv mor~ than one 1b1p• at. tbe wladowt from .. which Lf'e Harvef Oswald 11 ac· cuaed ~ killlna Kennedy with a hllh·pcPNered nne. Th eomrnJlt la lo vote on tin l conclus-ou thl• week. One 11roJHllril ~ec.omme11daUon.__a Ula' thtt JuaUct Dtpi.rtmcnt in· vt1tl1at t.bc fllm •nd t.be com· milt .:'1 undlacloted cooaplracy los1ds T e mos t 1...ro_p t~.!JH v ~ l•U1 m o ny w u SCtt'n tl(tc ttvldt'nc 11up~rttn1 the Warren Commlulon s conclus1on that L t' Jlarvf'y Oswald was lhc lonl' acunman ln Kennedy's Wi· HHlnlttlOO. No R ecurrence Seen Of B a lloon Blas t s Tt•ams of experts .assembled by lht• t'Ommltlee agreed that all t h rt"t-s hot s at Ke nne d y 's llmoU!iine in Oealey Plaza were fi red from Oswald's rlile from a t.l llth noor w\ndow Th••.) agr~ one shot missed. oiw wt>ol lhrou~b lh"e prei.1dent's throat and into John CDnnaJly and lht1 third exploded IJl Ken· ned 's 11kull The only contrary evidence was a sound on a tape recording of a motorcycle policeman's rudao. An expert said it has a 50.50 statlsllcaJ chance of being a pistol shot fired by someone else. By PWUP aOSMAaJN Ol I .. 0..l't '"""' ..... ,• Though they 're not naming a n y su spec t ~ or tH'c u i.rng anyone, Irvine police confidently predicted today there won't be a recurrence of last week's ex· ploding balloons that threaten~ small craft landing at Orange County Airport Meaollme. police arc examin· 1n g fra g m ~nt s of plas l1 c matenal found stre wn across an X-ray lab of a factory after an e xplos ion Thurs day which seriously burned an inspector there. Fro.P age Al OIL ... plaints abo'trt the price rise and said 1t was "nothing but an al· t e m pl to put the blame on som e body else " It said the West's inability to curp inflation 1s what drove lhe OPAc nations to imoose a "protective" in- crease to try to keep up. The SovietS are self-sufficient in oil. The 13 ministers decided to put tbt? increase, OPEC's big· gest since early 1974, into effect in stages: 5 percent on Jan. 1, raising the present base price of S12. 70 J>er 42·gallon barrel to St3.33~.8 percent on April 1. in· creasing the price to $1.UM ; 2.3 percent on July l, ralaing the price to $14.18, and 2. 7 percent on Oct. 1. pushing the price to $14 54. The $12.70 price had been frozen since early 1977. The oil cartel said the increase was necessary lo compensate for the e rosion of their revenues and holdings caused by world Infla- tion and by the depreciation of the dollar. the currency in which the oil trade is conducted. Informed sources s aid two days of maneuvering and in· terventlon by Abu Dhubi's ruler cleared the way for the OPEC decision. · They said the host lo the OPEC winter meeting, Sheik Zayed bin Sultan, and his oil minister, Ma na Said Otaiba, we re the leading m ediator s between Saudi Arabia, which wanted to continue the oll·pnce freeze, and Libya and Iraq, which called publicly for in- creases of up to 25 percent. OPEC's 52nd m eeting was held in an ornate hall of the Abu Dha bi Hilton. But the real work was done In the delegates• hotel s uites and in the hallways, behind a screen of soldiers Mid white-robed security guards car· rying automutic weapons. Talb Stalled JERUSALE M <AP> Foreign Minister Moshe Dayan i;aid today Israel will not resume ~tailed peace treaty negotiations with Egypt unless Cairo dropS tt:e U .S.·backed conditions it proposed a week ago. C..ANOI! COAST Hlf DAILY PILOT IM0r ... (o.t\.to.tillt U04 •ltft.wfttC"ti.l•t°"' .. ...,, ... _...,., l,_l_DftMO.- (O.•tllvCIO-C-, _., .... ,-... IN .. I\~ ~ t~ P'tl .. y ... (°'l4 Mf'W M~'lllL'DOf't .... ft ttwNtft410f'I ~-ft '°""' l•·"YAlll•y lr•lf'Wi' t....,,..A.•(h ~th(M~ A '""fft' f'°'4.nn.f fl'Cltf11W\ I\ QUN1VWod Wv• .. Y'\MlfJ .._.,.,,,.,., ·~ (lirW'I(.~ "*., .... "' 94..-il ,, .. JJO ""'' I H•>t\h ... (A .... ~.c.tlfot"N•ti.i. ._ .. _ Pr•\Mtilnt •"Id Pvbl•..,... JoO. i;.n.., Y~•• PW'•\.,,....t •l'IOOHt-f•~ ~-··ll-t1111 ... T-•AM...,...... ... ,.. •• "9lell ... CM•i.t H "-llltMN r ... II "'""""' ... -"' .. '°" ·-"··-...... o.._ C-• IAll.., HllfttlnalOfl hedlOffloe t1t1Ji; ............... . w111,..,...,.. .. , r o ... ,...,... Otno.e ~,~-,:::: ~~ .. w~=M!. ... ' ' Police had been staked out nearby in hopes of s poll1ng another balloon launching Balloons had been seen cxplochnl( in fireballs at about 850 feet, the altitude 0( incoming airplanes. on both Monday and Wednesday. Poli ce rushed to Control <.:om ponents. 2567 SE Mum Sl . lhl' source of the explosion The company manufacture ~ mechanical control valves. They found Terry Huff, 26, of Orange, burned on the face. bands and chesl by a flash fire in lhe explosion which knocked out windows and blew a st.eel door off its hinges and into the hall. Huff, in stable condition at UC Irvine Medical Center, 1nithuly told police he was checking an acetylene gas leak reported 10 the room and had forgotten lo discard a cigaret he said he was -b moking, according to offi cers Police s aid that numerous fragments of plas tic material and bags, similar to fragments recovered from lhe explosions of the two balloons earlier. have led them lo conclude the factory was the launch J>(>int "A sma ll number o r employees may be involved in these balloon fiight.s," Lt. Gene Norden said. owever, there have been no arrests. and, so far. police are still just question· in& people al the factory. Laboratory teats comparing fragments of the known ex- ploded balloons and fragments found in the Control Components X-ray room were incomplete lo day. Police theorized lhat the balloons were filled with a lighter-than-air gas, and that h ags containing flammable acetylene were attached. beneath lbe balloons. Both materials were foWld In the X-ray lab They believe the balloons were ex ploded using a fuse of matches taped together in a string. Such a group of matches also was found m lhe lab, police said. Police have ended their stakeouts of the industrial com- plex. "There will b e no more balloon launches." Lieutenant Norden predicted The committee demolished J ames Earl Ray's alibi that he was blocks away in a service station when King was shot. The only purported witness to that story admitted it was a hoax. The commiUee also presented evidence,. as Stokes put il. thal Ray stalked King to Selma and Allanla before the assassination. But the panels or experts, in· eluding ballistics experts, were unable to find physical evidence that Ray fired the shots that killed King. Ray pleaded gullly to lhe as- sassination and Is serving a 99- year prison sentence, but now says he was framed. His fingerprints were on the nnc found near lhe scene bul ne says he had turned the gun over to a man he knew only as Raoul for what he thought was a gun· running operation. School Board President's • • Car Damaged Huntington Beach Union Hlgh School District board President Zita Wessa s aid a vandal s mashed the window of her auto parked ID fronl or her Founlam Valley home and caused $53 in damage. Mrs. Wessa said the vandalism occurred just before she left for the Fountain Valley High School football game Fri~y. .. I'm not saying the teachers did it but it's awful strange that 1l would happen now," Mrs. Wessa 11ajd. Teachers and students have picketed Mn;. Wessa 's home duf'ing the past week to protest stalled contract talks. Teachers have voted to strike Jan. 3 If no contract accord is reached. Fountain Valley police have b eefed up patrols in Mrs. Wessa's neighborhood. There are no ~uspect.s in the incident. EnflageMetat Told Sheila Bre'W!ler Rauch or Villanova, Pa., and Joseph P. Kennedy m, son of th laU, Robert F . Kennedy, have announced their engagement. No dato has been set for the wedding. v ' , E',.... P flfl't AJ -~·. ·--- Shored llp Orange County's new, $8 m1lhon Hall of Adl'T)in1strataon sprouted shorings like this one over the weekend ab stress cracks began s howing on outside concrete beams County officials weren"t sure what was causing the cracks and were studying the situation today. . Riies Set Tuesday For Crash Victim Catholic funeral services are scheduled Tuesday for a Hunt ington Beach teen.ager f1ttally injured Saturday night when his motorcycle rammed a dis· abled. lighlless car in Garden Grove . PhiUP Karl Jr .. 17. of 17262 Chaparral Lane, succumbed to internal Injuries about 10 :45 p.m . in the emergency room al UC Irvine Medical Center m Oran,..• • · ,. ,. ....... , • . .... Coroner 's deputies and police noted that although young Karl wore a protective helmet with foll face ma«. dealtf was due to internal i.njuries. Garden Grove police said lhey are still investigating the acc1· dent. wh'tcb was the result of an earlier fender·bender colhs1on that occurred on Weslmmsler Boulevard al Clint.on Street. Damage in that collision mo ments before left one car staJk'd in the Inter section wilh 1l:. headlights out, anvestigalors said. Friends of the voulh were scheduled lo pay their respects al visitation hours from 2 to 4 p.m . and fr9m 7 to 9 p.m . this evening at Dilday Brothe r s Mortuary, Huntington Beach Mass will be said Tuesday at 10 a m. in St. Bonaventure Catholic Church in Hunllngton 2 Quakes Str ike Beach with iQ!_erment to follow a l Holy Cross Cemetery 1n Culver City The Karl youth was one of eight persons killed in Orange County traffic accidents over Lh€' weekend. He leaves his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Philip Karl Sr .. a brother. Shawn, and a sister. Susan. N.ghl ·Cler~· · Robbed ar:· FV Drive-in A pale-faced man, apparently armed, who marched up to the ticket booth al lhe Fountatn Valley Drive.Jn Theater and de· m anded e very mov1egoer's money back 1s sought today. The robbery at the lheuter on Brookhurst Street at the San Diego Fl'eeway netted the man $68. 70, police said today. Theater e mpl oyee Judy McCall, 22, told investigators the man approached her Saturday nighl and claimed to have a gun ·but may have only been simulat- ing a pistol ID h.is Jacket pocket. transformer. Power was reslort:d to all but 50 homes two houn l•t.er. The remalnln1 SO cuatomen were without power for about 10 houra. Santiago Peak 1s recording tbe highest rain level lo Orange County. The reclsler at the mountain location shows 10.60 Inches of rain so far this yeu.r comparoo to 5.1 lru:bes 'e.mered an the log on Dec. 18, 1977. Traffic offlcen throughout the county commented lod1ty that the raln 11 responsible for a marked 1n<'rea se In "fender benderu coHislon , but--trarnot- cuased any major traffic acci· dents. "That's because of the nature of the raln," Californ\a Highway Patrol officer Vern Smith said. "It's been fairly steady and showe ry with none of t.be del· u.cea that so frequently cause major colli s ions among motorists who simply ·Can't see the road m front of them." Sports fans and organizers of outdoor enlertamment were less enthUSlllStiC ID their aasessmer\l of the Chnstmas week storm. More than 23,000 Ucketholders s tayed away from the Los Angeles Rams' encounter wilh the Green Bay Packers at lhe Coliseum Sunday. And djsappolnted Disneyland vlaitors learned alter they ar· nved at the magic kingdom Sun· day that two weekend Christmas parades had been called off. Weather forecasters warned that the storm is creating wind cond1ltons along the coast thal could prove dangerous for small boats Small craft warnings are in ef. f eet along the South e rn Cahforrua coastline lo lhe Mex· 1can border. The storm brought nothing but JOY to skien. ~now levels were down to J.000 feet al many locations with re- sorts rePortio& good to excellent conditions on most slopes with pred1ct1ons that skiing condt· lions would hold good through the bollday season'. Trustees Eye Busing Stand A terse. IO.paragraph position paper condemning the possib1h· ly of children being bused into Los Angeles to hasten de· segresation wtll be discuss~ by "9~an Vi~W· School District trustees torugh't . • The board Is expeded to ap-~ prove the stand outlined in Ute .-o&uUoculttb• 7:30!)).m. m~­ lng in dillriet headquarters at 7972 Warner Ave., Huntington Beach, as formal policy. • -S4BOT SAILED W SPEEDY SALE ''I'm a bigger winner with the money l received than I ever was with my raclnlJ Sabot. ,_ ·'I sold it on th~ f 1rst day lo the first caller " That's the advertising success story of the Costa Mesa man who placed this ad ln the Daily Pilot. Ha r ing 11;.i bot. full~ ~qu1pl. xlnt rond S250 flt m xxx xxxx after 5. If you want lO "Sale" your .. BELGRADE. Yugoslavia <AP> -Two moderate earth· quakes rocked separate parts of Y u a o s I a v i a S u n d a !' t h e Yugoslav news agency tal'\]ug He handed her a small brown paper bag which she rilled with all the night's receipts. The man escaped . be a ded t o ward Brookhurst Street. police said boat. the Daily Pilot can mean • said. He was described as in hi~ 20s. with a pale complex1on, wavy brown hair and brown eyes and of medium bwld. fast cash returns. A friendly ad· v1s er will help write a best seller Just call 642·5678. ALSGARAGE , .· 56 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH (714) 644·7030 I I I '. ' l • • lt!.Vine : 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNlA MONDAY, DECEMBER 18, 1978 .. f TEN CENTS• ~s~Say Hike ·Good for -p .S.~ ABU DHABI. Unit~ Arab itaau. wlll by itself n1l11e Emlrat• <AP) Th• dtcl ton Am~rica.n auotlne and h 1t.sn1& b)' OP~ to Jack u_p oil prlc by oat r.rtCC!I by Lhree Ct>nlll A gllllon 14.S perceot next year sent th_, by ate tm. American dollar and s tock oeray Sec retar)' J amc11 • markel iftto a ooaf'dlvt-toda). !;(hit Inter sa d that when other but tbe Mad of the oil cartel df' market fOl"CM are factored in. fended the iocre~ as a mo\le tht per-1aUon 1ncre~se will pr-Ob desi1ned to help the world ublv be t1vt or six cents The ~onomy. avtrag<' US gasoline price w~ Some speca-11.at.a estimate the 66 cent.Ii a gallon as of Nov 1. ~ price boost, coming an four "The oil price hlke 11 part ol J. sb ~ts .: Gallon? • * ~ Oil Price ~ise r To Boost Gas I r; r .. ~· ~· , 1 ' ' .-- j r l } J .. NEW YORK <AP> -The decision to boost the price of crude oil 14.5 percent -nearly double earlier prediclions -will feed in· nation i.6~ United States and could hurt the 13 oiJ.producing na- tion~ ~cally, say government and industry officials. . Premdent. Carter said Sunday that the 'increase will hurt ef· forts to reduce inOation and maintain a world economic recovery. He said the oil-producing countries shar:e the responsibility for the success of economic programs. "WE REGRET THIS OPEC DECISION and hope 'it will be re- considered before t.be next steps take effect," Carter said. "It obviously is serious," said Allred Kahn, Carter.'s chief in· nation fighter. "I'm very unhappy because I think it will be ter- ribly injurious to us and -in the long run -to them." . Energy Secretary James Schles~nger, who urged the Organiza- tion of ·Petroleum Exporting Countries to freeze the price of crude oil, said: "I( is a substantial increase, larger than we had hoped. It could have major impacts not only on trade balances but also on the rate al inflation." . T~general estimate of increases lli the prices of gasoline and heating oil in the United States is about three cents i>er gallon. SCID..ESINGER PREDICTED THAT ADDmONAL market forces beyond the OPEC move would raise tbe price of gasoline at the pump by another two or three cents by the end of next year. As of Dec. 1, the average price of gasoline was 66 cents a gallon. . "~ is. ttanUy a minimal increase,• said Schlesinger, speak• 1ng Sunday on ABC television's "Issues and AnlMrs." "It could hav~ e ~impftt not 'only on tr&Grb1tsnc"8, 1'UraJ!R> on the rate of i.nOatioo, oo the performance ol lbe industrial economies." Government and industry officiala said the U.S. inflation rate -abou~-~ .. w·u rise by W tff,~U.lrlers of a percen auseortheOPEC"--.----- A SPOKESMAN FOil nlE CONSOUDATED Edison Com· pany of New York City -whose rates are among the nation's highest --. said Sunday that the oil price hike may mean a 4 per· cent increase in electric rates and a 10 percent increase in steam rates. OPEC, which supplies 37 per~t of the United States' oil, ap- proved Sunday a four-step plan that will boost the price of a 42· gallon barrel of crude by 14.5 percent by Oct. l, 1979: In nine months. the price wilJ go from the current $12.70 to $14.54. Most analysts predicted a rise of not more than 8 percent . The price boost is scheduled to begin with a S percent increase Jan. 1, and proceed in quarterly increments through Oct. 1. . "The eeonomy was in pretty bad shape anyhow -this probably makes it worse," said Michael Evans, president of Chase <See MOVE, BLASTED, Page AZ> Whatner their visual faculties', visitors to the San Clemente parking lo\ ueecl by Dr. Bruce Ewtna do a dou· bte take when they spot the optometrist's eye.catching sign. But seeing is believing and no one doubt.a the OP· Umum effect that the chart has on visitors who know a good gimmick wflen they see it. A Daily Pllot pbotog· rapber coUldn't r8tst-getting the-whole 1eene in-focus- the measur.e& to correct the world's economic situation," :uud Ren Ortl1 of Ecuador, the ntiw secc.etary-eeneraJ of the 13 nation Organ uation of Petroleum Exporting Countries. Ortiz. speaking with reporters. did not spell out in detall how the price boost would benefit the world, ~xcept to say OPEC coun- tries "have got responsibilities and tasks toward the coming * * * Declines Exceed NEW YORK <AP> -Word of a larger-than-expe<:ted increase in world oil prices drove stock prices into a sharp decline in heavy trading today. In the first five hours the Dow Jones average of 30 industrials· was down 21.22 points to 784.13, dropping below the 800 level for the f1rst lime since the end of Nov- ember. Declines overwhelmed gainers by a 13-lmargin among New York Stock Ex.change.listed issues. On Sunday the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Coun- tries announced that it woud r aise prices 14 .S percent in quarterly stages through next Oct. 1. The news came as an un· pleasant surprise lo W aJI Street, which had been hoping ffJr an in- crease as small as 5 percent. And analysts noted that it compounded investors' uneasi· ness a6ouf inffation specifically- and the economic outlook in general. generations and toward develop- ment of theit countries. and find. ing 1llternative sou rces of energy than oil when it is ex- hausted. "These generations will never forgive us if we do not buUd for the future." be said. "These countries that have reservations about our decisions should ~ ali~e that we are building for the future of our people." After the OPEC oil ministers announcec:t the price increase at the end ol a two·day meet.in& Sunday. Presldeni Carte r issued a statement saying it would hurt efforts tO reduce innatioll and urging OPEC to reoonsider. His chief inf,ation.figbter, Alfred Kahd. called it "terribly injurious." ~ The United States gets 37 per- cent of its oil from OPEC .. 1 tJUnk ...,.. ....... little shocked," said Charles Jensen at M KI Securities. "The stock market doesn't like surprises lik~ Jb.ilr" T6i news 8llO depressed the bond market. which ls highly sensitive to shifts in inflationary expectatioos. The dollar fell in foreign exchange while the price of gold jumped by better than $7 an ounce in London. IJilg&p!&nat Te,,._,__.....___ Sheila Brewster Rauch of Villanova, Pa .. and Joseph P. Kennedy 111. son of the late Robert F. Kennedy. have announced their engagement. No date has been set for the wedding. -.. - Irvine Balloons Burst No Swpects, But Police Predict Ending By PIDLIP ROSMARIN Ol I .. o.11• ~-...... Though they're not naming any suspects or accusing anyone, Irvine police confidently predicted· today there won't be a recurrence of last week's ex- ploding balloons that threatened small craft landing at Orange County Airport. Meantime, police are examin· ing fr a gments of plas tic material found strewn across an X·ray lab of a factory arter an ettplosion Thursday which seriously burned an inspedor there. Police had been staked out nearby in hopes of spotting another balloon launching. Balloons had been seen exploding in fireballs at about 850 feet, the altitude of incoming airplanes, on both Monday and Wednesday. Police rushed to Control com- ponents, 2567 S.E. Maln St .• the source of the explosion. The company manufactures mechanical control valves. They found Terry Jiuff, 26, of Orange, burned on the face. hands and chest by a flash fire in the explosion which knocked out windows and blew a steel door off its hinges and into the hall. Huff. in stable condition at UC Irvine Medical Center. initially told police he was checking an acetylene gas lea~ reported in the room and had forgotten to discard a .cigarette he said he was smoking. ·according to of· ficers. Police said that numerous fragments of plastic material and bags, similar to fragments re<:overed from the explosions of the two balloons earlier. have led them to conclude the factory was the launch point. "A s mall number of employees may be involved in these balloon flights," Lt. Gen.e Norden said. However. there have been no arrests. and, so far. police are still just question· ing people at the factory. Laboratory tests comparing 'Killer' BoneY Novelty Gi/t Edible NEW YORK (AP> -The latest novelty Christmas gift is likened to a pet rock you can eat. It's killer bee honey. For $3.95 you can get a 5.75-o\Ulce jar of honey reportedly gathered from tl\e hives ol kJller bees in Fortaleza, Brazil. "It's crazy. It's kind of the pet rock of 1978." said Ronald OeChristof oro. one of the three men behind the product. •·But the.difference is, it's edible and it's gOOd." . Along with the honey. you get a h tory of its makers. The bees were originally lmported to Brazil from Africa because they were superior hooey pro- ducers. But several African queens escaped. breeding with local bees and spawning generations of wild killer bees. The bees have reportedly attacked men and animals. -........-.... _ .... ,.., .. , .'S-1 I fragments of the known ex- ploded balloons and fragments found in the Control Components X-ray room were incomplete to· day. Police theorize d that the balloons were filled with a lighter-than-air gas. and that hags containing flammable acetyJeoe were attached beneath the balloons. Both materials were found in the X-ray lab. They believe the balloons were exploded usi ng a fuse o r matches taped together in · a string. Such a group of matches also was found in the lab, police said. Police have ended their stakeouts of the industrial com- plex. "Tlte re will be no more balloon launches," Lieutenant Nord~n predicted. 3 Churches Get Irvine School Pact Trustees of the Irvine Unified School District have renewed agreements to lease meeting space In schools to three more church congre1ations tor six months beainnin& in January. The act1on was taken at a bo1rd meeting last week, without ~nupent. Approval was liven for St. An· drewa lllpUcopaJ Church to use Vista Verde School, Woodbridse Communlly Church to use Rancho Sen Joa~uln, and St. John Neumann Church to use Irvine HiO, on &mdays. The 9Chool board previously approved similar arran1ementa with a ball dolen other Irvine con1re=. The County branch of the American Civil Libert.Jn Union ll IUilll school tru1tee1 ln an effort to IWt the practice. Tbe ACW cantenda tt violaW. proviaiom al the U.S . Conatitu-llon tnvolvtnl the a.paralion of church and state. . --. If nations. The impact on the U.S. curren· cy was swift. The value of the dollar feU against all major cur- rencies this morning. The cur· rency markets c learly an- ticipate a darker economic pie-' ture for the U,nited States becau!le of jhe OPEC increase The Soviet 11ews agency Tass today took note of Western com- <See OIL. Page A2) Shoioors To Stay With Us A rainstorm that drenched Christmas shoppers and com· muters Sunday and today shows · no signs of abating before Tues- day, weather forecasters said. Weather analysts predict a 50 percent chance of rain tonight. The storm thus far had dropped 1.s inches of rain on the county as of this morning. It is expected to peter off into sttowers about mid-day Tuesday fter that. the forecasters say, c oudy condit ions through Wednesday with night time tem- peratures in the qiid 40s and daytime highs i"n the high 50s can be ex peeled. Rainfall is running about dou- ble that or a year ago. but thus far is not creating any problems in terms of flood damage or crop damage. "The rain is very welcome to most of our activities here." commented Irvine Company crops division manager Carl Lindgren. "It's particularly benefi cial for our cattle grazing operations and for irrijtal1on _purposes," he said. "At this· point. the rain is being absorbed as quickly as it falls and 1s not posing any problems to us." Orange County's agricultural operations officers agreed with Lindgren that the rain, up to now . is a welcome friend to the county farmer and water con-· <&e RAIN, Page A2> College Aide Stricken at Son's Game Saddleback College oUi ci al Herm Schmidt of Mission Viejo. 1s in serious condition today at St. Joseph's Hospital in Orange after suffering a heart attack at his son's football game Saturday night. Schmidt. 49, was stricken at Anaheim Stadium just prior to a game where his son. Craig, led Mission Viejo High School to a CIF crown. Craig is the team's quarterback. Schmidt. of 26636 Portales Lane. is director of admission& and records at the Mission Viejo campus. A spokesman there said today Schmidt wasn't feeling well earlier Saturday. but thought the discomfort was a s tomach ache. Schmidt was principal of El Toro High School until his ap- pointment at the coUege in June. Coast Weather Showers possibly heavy tonight with chance of a thunderstorm . P a rtly c loudy Tuesday wilh cha nce or s how e r s decreasing to 10 percent. A little cooler tonight with lows In the 40s . Hig h:. Tuesday 56 to 62. INSIDE 'tOD.4 't CroWll mn fighl ~ liJ. Jl•ar·Old athlttes 0$ aports ~·big buliMu. See the •tart o/ a /fve-part sene, c>.i Poge Bl. l•tlex .,.,_~ All All .. _<9,. AMI~ a a ....... L,M ...... M ,,...,,. ..... .... _, •• =: ............ ... ca!Nttlll• AS ....-c.-; AM c ......... cw hl•l•HfW .. C-let ., ...,,. •t4 C.:.'"" •1 ............ .. ...... M l=' .. ~=·= M .... .... ... ...., M ......... Ct.1 .....,_ ...... ... • • Tht lrvlrw City Council wlll be uked TuHday to hire an en1tnffri"' contultant for the proposed overcrot ~ng of Stmla Ye Railroad tr1aekl at Alton Parkwa)',1 In the lrvln• Jn. du1trial Ooolrlcx·t:llMt. ' Tbc c.'<>untl met'l.l at 7:30 p.m. at city hall. 17200 Jamboree IUvd H hlnl<t, lh"' <'On11ultant lllso will be uaed to seek funding un· der a at.Me Pf'Oll'•m that pays 80 percent ol the currenUy etUmat. ed $1 mUUon ooet. The clty 1Ull ruqulreff ap- provala from Santa Fe J1.Dd the Public UUUtJes Commission to build the overcroHlna. lot.ended to improve traffic flow ln the ln- du1trlal a rea now belna de· veloped by the Irvine Company. HBTeacber rike On For Jan. 3 If applications are,Ruccessrul, city officials sa1d, tne crossing could be built within two or three year11. · The council also meets in a special S:30 p.m. studr session Topics are a review o develop- m en t proceaalng procedures. and an update on a 1Jludy relal· ing developments lo their fiscal 1mpactuponmunlcipalservices. o.lly ........... ...... . Short-d lfp \ Orange County'!> m.'w. SK rhulion .f-.u of Ad.ministration :-.prou\.t.°'(j shorings hke this one over the weekend as s tress cracks began i,howing on outsiije concrete. beams. County officials weren't sure what \was causing the cracks and were studying the situation \oday. . . E'ro• rap A l MOVE BLAS TED ••• Econometncs. an economic analysis arm of Chase Manhattan Bank. "In the restoflhe world, 1979 wilJ probably be a pretty good year. Only lhe U S. isgomgtosuffer a recession." ANALYSTS SAID OPEC' NEEDED a price increase to cover the lo~M'S members have felt because of the decline in value of the dollar. the currency used by OPEC. But It wtll mean a $4.5 billion increase next year an the United States' already large trade deficit. And the deficit -about $45 hillion this year has played a key role in lhe decline of the doll ar . "I think that the OPEC countries may themselves come to rcs:ret so sharp an increase m view of Ole harmful effect that it will have on the world economy," Kahn said. "You can't enact a lS 1wrc<'nl increase in the price of the world's most important fu el, and not t•xpccl the customers on whom you depend to surfer and that suffering to renect back 00 you." Rites Set Tuesday Fo r C rash Victim ) ('athohc funeral serv1cei, art! '>Chedukd Tut~ay for a llunl ington B(•al'h lc1•n dgcr £atally Aut o Crash Survivor Said Serio u s. 1 The third vi ctim of a San Juan Capistrano l'rash that left his two companions dead Saturday 1s in serious cond1llon today at UC I Medical Center ll osp1tal off1c1als sa id Rudolpho Compton. addrcs~ un· known, is m the medical center's intensive care unit ll1s companions, Francisco Mendoza, 27, of Lynwood, and Gilbert Cruz. 28, of Compton were killed when Mendoza lost control of the car on the south· bound San Otego Freeway.near .lun1pcro Serra Hoad early Saturday. The car crashed through the center divider fenc<'. s heanng off the car 's top, a nd over- turn c d. s ltdin~ al'ross the freeway 's northbound lanes. California Jllghway Patrol of· flcers ~aid the car was traveling al a hi gh rate of speed. OR ANOE COAST DAILY PILOT T r-1 '"""'Ot COHI O..fv f>1tn• """"' ""'"'"" 1', Qll\'\ ,, ~.""" .... '""""' ...... \\ l\~1tillt'tfb'tff'lll o..,.... t '"'" r·u~1~CMY""'f•-"t ...,..,..,,.,,.,<'M1fW"' .,,,. '.,,,h\ftt Cl .v.ono.v tt\tOVCl!f' , lldlllt fM ( O'I• Mr,,. H f WfJC)f1 tt..w" ,..wnt1n.,.ftn f\l'~t-f t'U"' t4111nV•tl.-Y ., .. .,..a~f'\t.c~ .,._.tt\l4W\t • ,,_.,,H•tMJ~,....tOftt"PWfth\'-O'atwrO•w .MG '~f" lM Pf"'<~ OVb'I~,,. l)t•~ 1~ .. , f1IO Wr<>it b•• C.trH1 (O"WI """w ( •lltt1rnt••1'1' -N-l>fnk»nt•""-'-, .. ," """" "IK•fl'fe\~1~0.Mfll4~ ,.._.,._, t.<M., ,-. .. -... .. ... n•QlllQ(OI"" a. .... "~ "-"""" "'"''""'M<l•..,,..l•too Offlc .. "''• ...... ,,. ......... , "'"' l •q-un• .. Kf\ , tk C,tt,.,,. 'r' t.ft .. I HVftllfWl'til\ .. M" tltP\•«"~"'•'" Ttl•pllon• (714)142'4»1 CIHtlfltcWIClwtnltlng ~·M7' .,..,.~ .. c·•-.. ......... to:-··~ =. ~:t • .<r..::.::r.::-;io:s.=. r::r •••........ r. ............ ::r.. ... ~ '= ;:r;:t~f;!..:''._' ~··• "'ffttn ,.~-""' ........ .,. ... , c.e. ........ C•llt•rftfe '"''t'rtot 1eft "Y t e rtft t t:a M :=i'.!:Tt.."A ;~t~,:O -"'• ... m ... , - inJured Saturday night when h111 motorcycle rammed a dis- abled, hghtlcss car m Garden Grove . Philio Karl Jr .. 17. of 17262 Chaparral Lane. !)UCcumbcd to internal injuries about 10:.is p m. in the emergency room at UC Irvine Medical Center in Or ange. Coroner's. deputies and police noted lhat although young Karl wore a 'protective helmet with full face mao;k, death was due to internal injuries. Garden Grove police said they ru:e still investigating the acci· dent. which was the result or an l'a rlte r fender bender colhs1on that occurred on Wefttminstcr Boulevard at Clint.on Street. Damage in that collision mo- ments before left one car stalll-d in the intersection with its headhghls out, invest1&ators said . f .raends or lhc youth were scheduled lo pay their respects Cit visitation hours from 2 to 4 pm. and from 7 lo 9 p.m. this evening al Dilday Brothers Mortuary, Huntington Beach. Mass will be said Tuesday at 10 a .m . in Sl. Bonaventure Catholic Church in Huntington Beach with Interment to I follow at Holy C ross Cem etery in Culver City. The Karl youth was one of eight persons killed In Orange County traffic accidents over tho weekend. He leaves his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Philip Karl Sr • a brother, Shawn, and a sister. Susan. .. 'Thief Loots Irvine Home A wine bottle filled with 500 pennies was amonai $1 ,510 ln itema taken Saturday in the burglary of an Jtvlne home ln the. Turtle Rock Vh1ta Apart· men ti. Victim Kathy Korman, 22, of 2 Cobblestone, told police her and her hu1band'1 weddlna bands were stolen, alona with Jewelry and 1tereo equipment. Pollce aald lt appeared that the burcJar prted a 1lldin1 atua door to aet Into the apartment. ~-~ .. 1 TeacMf's sa.v they plan to go ahead wilb a thre&lel'\ed Jan. ·3 11tr1ke idter negotiations with HunUnaton Beach Uruoo High School l>iltric:t officials failed to brant acont.racUettlement. l ra Tolbln. president or a aroup representing the district's 830 teachers, said the school board's latest offer was rejected Friday after a dispute over bind· ing arbitration. Tolbln also indicated that t.eacben are· still seeking a one· year five percent pay hike guaranteed retroactive to July. 1978. But dis trict Superintendent Jab Abbott said the teachers have been offered a guaranteed five percent pay boost only if and when a state imposed salary freeze is lilted and the raises are ruled legal. Abbott said the main stum· bling block in the deadlocked coo· tract talks is lhe arbitration of teacher grievances. School board members say binding arbitration would erode local control. School board members want to keep advisory arbitration. But teachers are demanding that an independent third party rule on teacher srievances thaldo not deal with financial matters in- cluding salary and fringe benefit disputes .• Abbott said di s tri c t negotiators have decided to compromise on two other Issues d ea ling with a contract emergency clause and teacher assignment policies. The con- tract provill<>M will be worded as t hey wer e in laat year's teacb!'r ~~ftt'.""' · r,' I ' Toffiib said t.eachers are still gearing up for a strike the day a fle r they . return from holiday vacation. No further negotiatio n sessions arc scheduled. i;-,....pageAJ OIL. . . Bird Stole n From Laguna Pet Store Tangerine, a costly· cockatoo with a lousy disposition toward those he doesn't know. was stolen from his perch at the Laguna Pet Shop by burglars who broke open a back door to the store over the weekend. The $2,500 white cockatoo with an orange crest . is the second expensive bird taken from the shop al 278 Forest Ave. in the past month. Police said thieves pried open the back door and s tole a caRe contairung Tangerine sometime Saturday night. They discarded the cage a few doors down from the st.ore. Last month. burglars used the same means to get into the pet shop. knocking over a large cage to grab Duke. a $2,500 blue and gold macaw parrot. Police said the burglars at· tempted to get into two other Forest Avenue shops . before successfully breaking into the pet store. Tangerine, a four.yea r·old bird. wu." reportedly unfriendly to s trangers and capable of ae· livering a mean bite. Rented Moving Truck Stolen A rented mover's truck. loaded with SlS,000 In antique oak fumJture. was stolen from where 1l was parked Sunday a bloc k away from the Irvine v1c· • tim 's residence. Steven Newton, of 14 Rock Springs in Deerfield. told police he had loaded the van Saturday night. and wtlen he 'went to dnve 1t Sunday morning he noticed 1t missing. Included among the furniture .were four cabinets, slx dressers. three bookcases, a roll top desk. four secretaries, two tables. two was h s tands a nd a c hina cabinet. Newton said the rental truck was worth about $10,000. plaints about the price risit and said it was "nothing but ah at· te mpt to put the b lame on somebody else ... lt said the West's inability to curb inflation is what drove-the OPEC nations to imoosc a "prot ective" in· crease to try to keep up. Th\! Soviets are seu -sumctent in oit. r1-:•dren Blessed The 13 ministers decided to '-dW put the increase, OPEC's big· VATICAN QJ:Y <AP) -Pope gest since early 1974, Into effect John Paul II sang Italian and in stages : 5 percent on J an. 1, Polish Christmas carols Sunday raising the present base price of along with thousands of children $1 2.70 per 42-gallon barrel to gathered in St. Peter's Square $13.33 ; 3.8 percent on April 1. in· aa he blessed them and the creasing the price to $13.Slt ; 2.3 small images of Jesus the Child Two rtJasters? The Rev. Harry Walsh Cleft ) helps Bishop James Montgomery serve communion after his ordmahon a:, a n Episcopal priest at the Cathedral of St. James in Chicago. Walsh. who also is the police chief of suburban Buffalo Grove. s ays he sees no reason why he can't hold both titles. even with the confe~sion problem. Front Page A I RAIN •.. servers. Thus far, the season's rainfall in Orange County s tands a t about 5.5 inc hes. more than dou- ble the 2.50 incbe5 recorded at this time last year . Southern California Edison Company officials blamed the r ain today for a power failure that affected Emerald Bay re!>•· dents for ·more than two hours Sunday. T h ey said nearly 1,000 customers in homci, on both sides of Pacific Coast Highway were without power in mid· afternoon when rain damaged a transformer. Power was restored to all but 50 homes two hours later The remaining 50 customers were without power' for about 10 hours. Santiago Peak is recording the highest rain level in Orange County. The r egister at the mountain locati()IY'Sbowb 10.60 inches of rain i'o far this year compared to 5.7 inches entered in the log OJJ Pef· 18, 1911,., Tr a1ftc officers" t.hroug~out the county commented today that the r ain is responsible for a marked increas e in "fender bender•'· C?OlUsionl\ buti•has not cuesed any major traffic acc1 dents. "That's because of the nature of the rain." California Highway Patrol officer Vern Smith said. "lt's been fairly steady and showery with none of the del· uges that s0 frequently caw,e major col lisio n s among motorists who simply can't see the road In front of them.'' Sports fans and organizers of outdoor entertainment were less enthusiastic in their assessment of the Christmas weyk storm. More than 23.000 ticketholders s tayed away from the Lo s Ange les Rams' encounter with the Green Bay Packers al the Coliseum Sunday. And disappointed Disneyland visit.ors learned alter they ar- rived al the magic kingdom Sun· day that two weekend Christmas parades had been called off Police Bro be Gaming Ring; Four Arrest e d Newport Beach poltcc said to- day they are continuing their in- vestigation of an alleged football card betUng ring after making four gambling-related arre:.ts las t Friday. Bennett Gene Eromo. 46. of Norwalk has '&en reh:asl'd on $2.000 bail and'nan1el Sanchez. 24. a Marine stationed at El Toro. has been released on h t:. own recognlzance. !\~11d Sgt John Simon He declined to 1den11fv the ol he r two suspect!'.'. an irv1nc man and a Sant a An a m an. p<'nding completior\ of the tn· ve!'tigation. Sergeant Simon sa id betting markers and more than $5.00U in caHh were seized during the ar re!lts in Newport Beach . CoMa Metia and Norwalk. S4BOT S4J L£fJ . TO SPEED Y SA LE "I'm a bigger wmn~r with the ·roon~·lf ·r~e1\t'ed · t,,.an I ever was wrth mv l'3clng Sabot ''I sold it on the first dlly to the f1 nt caller ... That's ttie advertising sucrt>s~ story of the Co:.ta Mesa man who placed th1:. ad in the Datly Pilot. Rar1n i.: .,Jhot It.II\ \'f!Utpl '\In• rond 5250 r1rm XX?C llXXX Jrlcr S H you want to "Sale:" your bo::tt, the Dmly Pllol can m•·an fast cash returns. A fnf'ndly <1d· viscr will help wnt.e a b1•.,1 seller Just call 642 5678 16 Cows Shot STATESVILLE. N.C' <AP1 Farmers say someone s hot 16 cows from two herds in Lhe latest incident of vandalism to strike this community since Oc lober. A dozen cows died. Four horses also have been shot percent on July 1. raising the they carried. price to $14 .16. and 2.7 ~rcent ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ on Oct. 1. pushing the price to $14.54. The $12.70 price had been frozen since early 1977. The oil carte l said · the increase was necessary to compensate for the erosion of their revenues and holdings caused by world infla· lion and by the depreciation or the dollar, the currency in which the oil trade is conducted. Informed sources suid two days of maneuvering and in· tcrvention by Abu Dhabi's 1 uler cleared the way for the OPEC decision. They u id the host to the OPEC winter meeting, Sheik ' Zaycd bin Sultan. and his oil minister, Mana Said Otalba. were the leading mediators between Saudi Arabia, which wanted to continue the oil·ptice freeze. and Libya and Iraq, which called publicly fo r in- creases of up to 25 percent. OP EC'a '2nd meeting_ was held in an ornate hall of the Abu Dhabi Hilt.on. But the real work was done In the detesates' hotel s uites and in the hallways, behind a s<:reen of soldiers and white-robed aocurity guards car· ryiog automatic weapons. Airliner Crashes NEW DELHI, tndla CAP) An Indian ~lrlines Jetllocr cruh -landed. Sunday at an airport In the tout.hem dt)' of Hyderabad, killlnl three boys who were cutUn1 arna near a TUD••Y· the United New• ol ln· dla reported. The oewa a1ency aald l!l ol the 124 ~lt aboard the Boetnc 737 w1tre lnJured. See our exten9ive SQottswear Swo1ter CDllectlOn AL'S GARAGE 56 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH (714) 644·7030 ffOtn ArouncH,,._WOfid Sizes s-M-l·Xl t , ,. I ----- Laguna/SoutJl Coast Your Hometown · Dally Ne•spaper , . . . Oil ~lllefs Say Hike Good for·U.S .' lJt ABU DHABI , Unit d Arab !mlratea <AP> The dffa k>l'I by OPEC to Jact up otl pracea by H.~ ~rc~t next y~ar sent th Am er lean dollar and •tock • market lnto • nosechn today, i ta11ea. will by at.elf ralac American 1aBOllnts und he•Un& oel pric by three centa a 1aJk>n by late tm . but the h .cl ol th oJl cartel d i· fended the lncre as a move tr' dealtned to help the wOTld ttonomy, Eneray ecrt'tary ..James Schie Inger said that when other markf't. fMc are factored ln. the per·alllJon ancrede will prob- ublv be five or slx cenu. The averaae U S gasoline price was 66 cent. Ii eallon as of Nov 1 Some apeclallsts esumate the price boost. coming an four "The oil price hlke la part of * * * * * * ' .... .. ' { ~Ce.ts a Gallon? t I { r .. , r i ! t ' Oil Price RiSe To Boost Gas NEW YORK (AP> -The decision to boost the price of crude oil 14.S percent -nearly double earlier predictions -wUl feed in· nation in the United States and couJd hurt the 13 oil-producing na- tions economically. say government and industry officials. P.cesident Carter said Sunday that the increase will hurt ef· forts to reduce inflation and maintain a world economic recovery. He said the oil-producing countries share the responsibility for the success of economic programs. "WE REGRET THIS OPEC DECISION and hope it will be re· considered before the next steps take effect." Carter said. "It obvio1JSly is serious," said Alfred Kahn, Carter's chief in- flation fighter. "I'm very unhappy because I think it will be ter- ribly injurious to us and -in the long run -to them." Energy Secretary James Schlesinger, who urged the Organiza. lion of Petroleum Exporting Countries to freeze the price of crude oil, said: "It is a substantial increase, larger than we had hoped. lt could have major impacts not only on trade balances but also on the rate of inflation." The general estimate of increases in the prices of gasoline and heating oil in the United States is about three cents per gallon. SCID..ESINGER PREDICTED THAT ADDmONAL market forces beyond the ~PEC move would raise the price of gasoline at the pump by another two or three cents by the end of next year. As of Dec. 1, the average price of gasoline was 66 cents a gallon. "This is hardly a minimal increase," said Schlesinger, speak- ing Sunday on ABC television's "Issues and Answers." "It could have a major impact not only on trade balances. but also on the rate of inflation. on the perform~ce of the industrial economies." Government and industry officials sa.id the U.S. inflation rate -about 9i2 percen& -will rise by one-half to three-quarters of a percentage point because of the OPEC decision. A SPOllESJKAN ,c>• 0 THE CONsoUl)ATED Edieon Com· pany of New York City -whose ratea are among the natl0n's highest -said Sunday that the oil price hike mily mean a 4 per- cent inc.rease in electric rates and a 10 percent increase In steam .. rates. .... f , OPEC, which supplies 37 percent of the United States'"?Jrr, ap· proved Swlday a four-step plan that will boost the price of a 42. gallon barrel of crude by 14.5 percent by Oct. l , 1979. In nine mont~s. the price will go from the current $12.70 to $14.54. Most . ' analysts predicted a rise of not more than 8 percent. · The price boost is scbeduJed to begin witb a 5 percent increase Jan. 1, and proceed Jn quarterly increments through Oct. 1. • "The economy was in pretty bad shape anyhow -this probably ,makes it worse," said Michael Evans, president of Chase <See MOVE, Page.A2) '11ee E9es Rave It'? Whatever their vtsual faculties, visitors to t he San Clemente parking lot used by Or. Broce Ewing do • dou- ble take when they spot the optometrtst's eye·catchlng sign. But seeing is believinl and no one doubta the op· timum erect that the chart has on visitors who know a gOOd g'(mmtcrwflen they ,ee-tt. Dally Pilot pbotof-- • .:-.-.~apher couldn't resl.at aetUf.i the whole scene in focus . the mea•urea to correct the world'• economic situation," aald Rene Ortiz or Ecuador. the new secretary.general of the U nation Organization of Petroleum El(J)Orting Countries . Ortis. apeaJdng with reporters, did not spell out in detail how the price boost would benefit the world, except to say OPEC ooun· tries "bave got responsibilities and tasks toward the coming Pfagoff Artion 1eneratio0s and toward develop- ment or their countries and fllld· Ina· alternative sources of energy than oil when it is ex· hausted. "These generations will never forgive us if we do not buitd for the future." he said. "These countries that have reservations about our decisions should re- alize that we are buJldlng for the future olour people." After the OPEC oil ministers announced the price increase at the end ot a two-day meeting Sunday. President Carter issued a statement saying it would hurt efforts to reduce inflation and urgirig OP~C to reconsider. HIS" chief inflation-fighter. Alfred Kahn. called it "terribly "inju~ous." The United States gets 37 per- cent of its oil from OPEC Despite the Russian Flu. the Dana Surf and San CJemente Aurora mixed it up in a lively playoff Sa~urday in San Juan Capistrano. Despite two overtime periods, the final score was 0-0 and the teams s_plit the regional cbampionshlp for 13 and 14 year old girls. (Additional picture Page · A3.) Bird Stolen · From Laguna Pet Store Tangerine, ·a costly cockatoo with a lousy disposition toward those he doesn 't know, was stolen from his perch at the Laguna Pet Shop by burglars who broke open a back door to the store over the weekend. The $2,500 while cockatoo with an orange crest, is the second expensive bird taken from the shop al 278 Forest Ave. in the past month. Police said thieves pried open the back door and stole a ca11te containing Tangerine sometime Saturday night. They 'discarded the cage a few doors down from the store. Last month, burglars used the same means to get into the pet shop, knocking over a large cage to grab Duke, a $2,500 blue and gold macaw parrot. Police said the burglars at· · tempted to get into twQ.. other Forest Avenue shops, before successfully breaking into the pet store Tangerine, a four-year -old bird. was reportedly unfriendly to strangers and capable of de· livering a mean bite. Broken Gas line Blamed For Flare~p A broken gas line to a water • beater may have sparked a $3,000 blaze to a Laguna Beach apartment Saturday that was quicldy quelled by the resident and firemen. All three Laguna Beach fire stations responded to a smoky blaze at 1590 Glenneyre St. at 10 a.m . Saturday, in an apartment used by Bernard w agner They extinguished a blue l.n a water beater closet within minutes. but smoke from the blue ca~ an estimated $2,500 damage to the ap11rtment and another $500 to the contents. Tbe building la owned by Syd Turner of Loi Angeles. 4 llUrt in Blasts LONDON <AP) -Three bombs exploded ln central Loo- doA ev toaay_ lnJurtna. four peraona, poUce said. .. 'Killer'·.Doaey Novelty Gift Edible NEW YORK <AP) -The latest novelty Christmas gift is likened to a pet rock you can eat. It's klller bee honey. For $3.95 you can get a 5.75-ounce jar of honey reportedly gathered from the hives of killer bees in Fortaleza, Brazil. "It's crazy. It's kind of the pet rock of 1978," said Ronald DeChristof oro. one of the three men behind the product. ··But the difference is, it's edible and it's good." Along with the honey. you get a history of its makers. The bees were originally imported to Brazil from Africa because they were superior honey pro- ducers. But several African queens escaped, breeding with local bees and s pawning generations of wild killer bees. The bees have reportedly attacked men and animals. No Recurrence Seen Of Balloon Blasts By PIDUP ROSMARIN OI t .. Delly l'I ... Slaff Though they're not naming any s u spects or accusing anyone, Irvine police confidently predicted today the re won't be a · recurrence of last week's ex· ploding balloons that threatened small craft landing at Orange Count.y Airport. Meantime, police are exam in· Ing fragments of plastic material found strewn across an X·ray lab of a factory after an explo .. lon Thursday which seriously burned an inspector there. Police had been staked out nearby in hopes of spotting another balloon launching. Balloons had been seen exploding In fireballs at about 850 feet, the alUtudeoflncomln.g airplanes, on both Monday and Wednesday. Police rushed to Control <.:om· ~nents, 2587 S.E . MaJn St., the source of the eiploslon. The company manufactures mechanical control valves. They found Terry Huff. 28. of Oran1e. burned on tbe .(ace, hands and chat by a n ash Ore In the eXJ)IOllon which lmock'ed out wlndowl and blew • steel door olr IU hinges and lnto the Huff, in stable condition at UC Irvine Medical Center , Initially told police he was checking an acetylene gas leak reported in the room and had forgotten to discard a dgaret he said be was smoking, according to officers. Police said that numerous fragments of plastic material and bags, similat to fragments CSte BAJLOONS, Pa1e A.!) S4BlTr S41LED 'ID SPEEDY SALE "I'm a bigger winner with the money I received than I ever .was with my racing Sabot . "[sold it on the first day to the first caJJer." That's the ldvert.lJlng s uccess story of the Coeta Mesa man who placed Ulla ad lo the Daily Pilot: Racing sabot. (ully equlpl. xlnt "Ond. l250 Ii rm xx ir-itxxx alter 5. If you want to .. Sale" your boat. the Dally Pilot can mean fast caah returns. A friendly ad· vlaer wm help w.ite a beat seller. Jwsl c:all 642·5$18. hall. ~~ 4111 ________________ .._ __ __ ' ........ -·- ... l ( . t· -.., --. -·· -~- ~--=-.. • • f / ,., nations. The impact on the U.S. curren- cy was swift. The value of the dollar fell against all major cur· rencies th.is morning. The cur· rency markets clearly an· ticipate a darker economic pie· t,ure tor the United States because of the OPEC increase. The ScMet news agency Tass today took note of Western com· <See OIL, Page .U> Shoivers To Stay With Us A rainstorm that drenched Christmas shoppers and com· muters Sunday and today shows no signs of abating before Tues- day. weather forecas ters said. Weather analysts predict a 50 percent chance of rain tonight. The storm thus far had dropped 1.5 inches of rain on the county as of this morning. It is expected to peter off into showers about mid-day Tuesday. After that, the forecasters say. cloudy conditions through Wednesday with night time tem· peratures in the mid 40s and daytime highs in the high sos can be expected. Rainfall is running about dou· ble that of a year ago, but thus far is not creating any problems in terms of flood damage or crop damage. .. The rain is very welcome to most of our acti vi lies here." commented Irvine Company crops division manager Carl Lindgren. "It's particularly beneficial for our cattle grazing operations and fol' irrij?ataon _purposes," he said . "Al this point, the rain is being absorl>ed as quickly as it falls and as not posing any problems to us.•· Orange County's agricultural operaUoas officers agreed with .. Uod grea that the rain, up to now, is a welcome friend to the county farmer and water con· <See RAIN, Page AZ> College Aide Stricken at Son's Game Saddleback College official Herm Schmidt of Mission Viejo. is in serious condition today at St. Joseph's Hospiia1 in Orange after suffering a heart attack at his son's football game Saturday night. Schmidt, 49. was stricken at Anaheim Stadium just prior to a game where his son, Craig. led Mission Viejo High School to a CIF crown. Craig is the team's quarterback. Schmidt, of 26636 Portales Lane, is director of admissions and records at the Mission Viejo campus. A spokesman there said today Schmidt wasn't feeling well earlier Satdrday, but thought the discomfort was a s tomach ache . Schmidt was principal of El Toro High School until his ap- pointment al Ute college in June. Coast Weather Showers possibly heavy tonight with chance o{ a thunderstorm. Par ly cl oud y Tuesday with cha n ce of s h ow e r s decreasing to 10 percent. A little coolel' tonight with lows in the 40s. Highs \Tuesday 56 to 62. INSIDE TODAY Grown mt7t ffOlat over JI. year.old ath~tea cu iport1 become big buameu. See the •tort of o fiw·porl urlea on Pao-Bl . • l•tlex T ' OAtLY PILOT Stocks Decline , Byl3-1M~· NEW VORK (APl WOf'd d u lar•er-than ea ted lncre_. 1n world oal prtc drove stock p ri cea Utt o u 11'1 u rp dtt I I.De ln heav) trldioa today In the rtrtt fh_.. houl"'I lhr Dow JOnt'• ave-rqe or 30 lnduatnnh wa11 down 21 Z2 volnh to 7M 13, tlropplna ~ .. ·low tht• tiOtl le\l'I for th" fir t Uro t1nce the l'od of No" "mbcr Otelln ov rwh lmcd 1au~r' b) a 13· l mar1ln nmont '* Vor~ tcltk t."xchlll\le-Hstf'da sun , On w\day th Or1anluUon ol .... Petroleum ExporUn1 Coun trlea announc~ lbat 1l .,.-oot.l rahe prlre1 14 ~ oernot In quurterly la1&\~ \hrou1h nut Ort l Th news come-u\ an un pleaunt aurprtat' to Wall Street which hud lx-l·n hoping ror "n in creaasc Ub ism Mil us~ P\'rt'l'nt • • * 1.A.a.d.. ~ notrd com poundt1d lh tor1! un ul · nl' • abclut 1nnat1on •P"lflcally and th f'ce>oomhi outlOOk IQ 1ener1ll "l think pooplto art t• UtU. hoekl'd " tt hJ Charles Jt'n Wl •' M 1(1 Se<>urlll ' "The• at()(k morkt't doo1n't llkt-urprt•C• hke lbl•" ( The nf'-• abo dtprKM!ld the tM>nd manet. which la hl.th!Y C!n11tlve to ablft• ln lnnaioonary upenallona The doll•r fell In rorel1n exth•ni whal~ thto prict- of aold }umped by bett~r than 17 an ounce in London Gold mining atockit. 1•lned 1itround. while all .otli~r m.ajur llOCk ll"OUS-W~r'C UJ'ld r prt'& surf' OH . auto. 111l rllne and lt-111ur~ trav~I stocks all ((8Vl' ground * • * f 're• P•~AI MOVE BLASTED ... Econo'metncs, an economic analyais arm or Chais~ Manhattan B1anJt. · · 1n the rest of the world, t9W will probably be Ii pretty good year. Only the U.S. la going to suffer a recession." . ANALYSTS SAID OPEC NEEDED a price increase to cover the losses members have fell because of the decline in value or the dollar. the currency used by OPEC'. But it will mean a $4.5 billion increase next year in the United States' already large trade deficit.· And the deficit -about $4S bilhon this year hai. played a key role in the decllne o1 the dollar. "I think that the OPEC countries may themselves come to regret so sharp an Increase m view of the harmful effect that It will have on the world economy," Kahn said. "You can't enact a U percent increase in the price of the world's most important fuel. and not expect the customers on whom you depend to suffer and that sufferin& to reflect back on you." Anaheim Man Held On Burglary Rap A 27-year-old Anaheim man is being held in San Clemente Jail today in Ueu of $25,000 ball after he was arrested Saturday on c harges of burglary and possession of stolen property. A San C lemente J.ollce s Pokesman said Robert . Olsen was arrested at his home after inveatigaUon of stolen chrome rims and wheels led officers lo him San Clemente investigators re- covered 240 wheels and rims at Olsen's home, they said. Olsen was a security guard at Western Wheels Company in La Palma. where invesUgatort1 believe the stolen wheels are from. A Camp Pendleton Marine was arrest(Ad last week in con· ne<'tion ~h the 11ame stolen property operation. $7 Million Fund Viewed MATTHEWS RIDGE. Guyana (A P> ~ Guyanese police of· ficial saYft tbe Peoples .Temple tried to transfer more than $7 million or its funds to the Soviet consul ID Georgetown just before the mass suicides und mul'ders at the Jon'e11lown jungle com· mune. Assistant Police Com - m111s1oner Skip Roberts told a coroner's mquest Sunday that couriers from Jonestown were to have carried letters lo Swiss banks in Panama and Venezuela ordering them to transfer funds in Temple accounts to Feodor Tlmofeyev, the Soviet consul in the Guyanese capital. . Roberts also reported that o total of $935,167 In U.S. currency and $62,000 in Guyanese money hHve been found in Jonestown. OAANOI COAIT 1..1\c DltlY PILOT rn. 0r-. c...-1" 0-t¥ ~ ... wttf"I ~., h .... ~-ft­ ,..,fWtod ,,.. ~,,.~, ... ~.uwrt~t)"''"'°'~ (,.,,,,""" ...... ~ ~ra,•fiditk'oft•M• pobh~ll ,,,,,,.,_.. ~ ' tt«t•t ffH t Ai\14 ........ _9"( ..................... ~·-, ... nv.1t.., lr.W l ~.._ft,~CNiA A """'°t•r ........ 9d"tM•l•°'*lv.dl.ttu#MV\M'llll -.. f ... '""'' .... _ ........ pl-.... llt W•\t lt•• ~,,.... (.etl• Mt°'• , ...... ,.M ... "' 11-··-"'··-·""-1tt•• c..-Y•lt Pt.~ltloftt _ 0. __ _ T-••K-IOl14' "::::o~"'4 '*:"J:• CMftltll·... _ ..... "' ........... ~~ Olsen also races grand theft and conspiracy charges in an ar· ralgnment scheduled Wednesday in South Orange County Municipal Court. OIL •.. plaints about the price rise and said it was "nothing but an at tempt lo put the blame on somebody else.·• Jt said the West's mability to curb inflation is what drove the OPEC nations to imoose a "protective" in· crease to Lry lo keep up. The Soviets are self-sufficient fn oil The 1.3 mlnjsters decided to put the increase. OPEC's big· gest since early 1974, into effect in stages: 5 percent on Jan. 1, raising the present base price of $12. 70 per 42 -gallon barrel to $13.33 ; 3.8 percent on April l, in· c reasing the price to $l3.84 ; 2.3 percent on July 1, ralslnii: the price to $14.16, and 2. 7 percent on Oct. 1, pushing the price to $14.54. The $12.70 price had been frozen since early 1977 The oil cartel said the increase was necessary lo compensate ror the erosiQn of their revenues and holdings caused by world lnfla lion and by the depreciation or the dollar. the currency in which the oil trade is conducted. Informed sources s aid two days of maneuvering and In· tervenlion by Abu Dhabi's ruler cleared the way for the OPEC decision. They said the host to the OPEC winter meeting, Sbelk Zayed bin Sultan, and his oil minis ter. Mana Said Otaiha. were the leadintt mediators between Saudi Arabia, wbJch wanted to continue the oil-price freeze, and Libya and lruq. which called publicly for in· creases ol up to 25 percent. OPEC's S2 nd meeUns wus held in an ornate hall of the Abu Dhabi Hilt.on. But the real work waa done in the delegates• hotel suites and in the hallways. behind a screen or soldiers and whit.e-robed security guards car t.yiog automaUc weapons . White 'Mute' On Slayings SAN FRANCISCO <AP) - Former Supervisor Dan White, occuaed ln the Nov. 27 City Hall 1layln1• of Mayor George Moscone and Supervisor Harvey Milk, refers to that d ay a11 "tragic Monday" but won't talk about It further. bla friends aay FamUy friend Joo Ryan who vlJIU him In jatl, aaJd W'llte~ talks about the murders only with hlJ wUe and attorney. Wlth rrlends, he seems "bland and stole," R~• Hid, wanlln1 more to ltateo than to talk. I "l 1et 20 mlnutee with him but •fter five mlnutea there'• nothlna more to HY." Ryan Hid. -- .. --... ' .JFK King ~eaths Consp~acies Not Proven? -WA-sHINGTON fXP -Mfer a $~.8 mUllon investigation. the Hou11e Abassinations Commlt- t.ie la considering a conclusion that conspiracies can neither be proved nor ruled out ln the WI· aasainaUona of John F . KcMedy and Dr. Mai'tin Luther King. Rep. Louis Stokes. D·Ohio. chairman, says he thinks the committee hu painted pubUcly ''the outlines of a CQnapiracy" lnvolvlng a '50.000 St. Louis bounty ror King's assassination But Stok~ acknowledged the committee has no proof of such a conspiracy behind King's murder in .MemphJs on April 4, l968. At the same-time, a 500·pqt1 staff draft summary reportedly says there 1a no evidence or anv specific conspiracy m Kennedy'11 assassination in Dallas on Nov. 22. 1963. but aJI pos11lbilitie1 havt! not been ruled out .. The draft report says. for ex ample. that old evidence of or- ganized crime lmks to th& killing .. has not been proved or dis - proved ~though "there is no direct evidence .. or an organiied crime conspiracy. Tbe committee also has sug· flested publicly that con~plracy in Kennedy's assassination can- not be ruled out without testing a recently s urfaced ptece of film to see if tl shows conspirators. Robert I. Gruden. a New Jersey photo technician. says his study or the film shows clear movement by more than one -ihape at the window• from Preity Nice Mice HB Teacher Strike On For]an.3 - which Lee Harvey Oswald il'I ac- cu11ed of kilhng Kennedy with a hlS(h·powered rifle. The committee is to vote on final conclus1ons this week One proposed recom mend<ltion is thul the J~stice Department m· vcst1gate the film and the com mittce's undisclosed cons pirucy leads Wutc hed by a beaming Santa Claus, the Ttuee Blind Mice who pa1ticipated in the Laguna Beach Storybook Para6e during the weekend prepare to step out. white canes al the ready. They are. from left. Andy Hagstrom. 10. Kierson Smith, 8, and Kara Bullene. 5. 1V Recorder Taken From Laguna Shop· Police said Laguna Beach businessman Bill Thomas was pleased when he saw three men walking down Forest Avenue with a brand new cassette video recorder Crom his shop. The camera store operator said he-was returning to his shop after making some deliveries when he saw three well-dressed men walking down the street with the Sl.000 television gadget. But when he walked into his shop at 218 Forest Ave_ and asked which or his employees had made the sale, he found out the merchandise was not paid for . Police believe the trio walked out of the store with the Sony Betamax while other employees were busy with Christmas shop· pers Friday. P ol iee are seeking three p edestrians. wearing sports Jackets and ranging in age from 30 to 50 TuvMenHeld In Bomb Plot NEW YORK IAP) -Two men one currying a dynamite born b and the other an officer of the New Jewish Defense League were arrested toda y on charges of plotting to bomb the Egyptian government tourist of- fice in Rockefeller Center, the FBI annoWlCed. In a number of firebombings und arsons d1reded at Egyptian orr1cials in the metropolitan area in lht: past few months, <1nonymous call ers have said the New JDL wag responsible The FBI sald the man with the bomb was picked up at 4 a.m. in a rented car al 5lsl Street and 5th A venue. near the intended target. Ring Thieves Strike Twice Burglars made off with costly rings rrom two Laguna Beach homes hu>l week, including an $8,000 cUumond rtng from one house Deborah Ann Shephard told police someone entered her home last Thursday, finding a 1.9 carat dJamond and gold nng In the master bedroom. Police believe the burglars entered the home at 1196 Nona St. through an unlocked screen window in the guest bedroom. In a second burglary. Marion Crabb. ol 1235 OcHn Front, told Police someone stole a rlna and cash valued at ~10 from his home over the weekend. M4YOR FIGHTS. OIL INCREASE Fro• Page A J RAIN .•. servers. Thus far. the seuon's rainfull in ,orange County stands al about 5.5 inches. more than dou ble the 2.50 inches recorded al this lime last year. · Southern California· Edison Company officials blamed the rain today tor a power fajlurc that affected Emerald Bay res1· dents for more than two hours Sunday. They said nearly l.000 customers in homes on both sides of Pacific Coast Highway were without power In mid- afternoon when rain dam'aged a transformer. Power was restored to all but 50 homes two hours later The remaining 50 customers were without power foe about 10 hours Santiago Peak is recording the highest rain revel in Orange County. The register at the mountain location shows 10 60 inches of rain so rar this year compared to 5.7 inches entered m the log on Dec 18, 1977 Trame omcers throughout the cnunty commented today th<.1t the rain 1s responsible ror a marked increase tn "fender bender" colhslons, but has not cuased any major traffic acct dents. "That's because of the nature of the rain," California Highway Patrol officer Vern Smith said "It's been fairly steady and showery with none of the del· uges that so frequently cause major co llis ion s a mong motorists who simply can't i,cc the road in front of them " Sports fans and organizers of outdoor entertainment were less enthusiastic in their a!\sessment of the Chnstmas week storm More than 23,000 licketholders stayed away from the Los Angeles Rams' encounter with the Green Bay Packers at the Coliseum Sunday. Teachers say they plan to go ahead with a threatened Jan 3 strike after negotiations with Huntington Beach Union lUgh School District officials railed lo bring a contract settlement Ira Toibin. president of a group representing the distncl's 830 teachers. said th~ school board's latest offer was rejected Friday after a dispute over bind- ing arbitration. Toib10 also indicated that teachers are still seeking a one year five percent pa> h1kt guaranteed retroactive to July. 1978 But district Superintendent Jake Abbott said the teachers have been offered a guaranteed rive percent pay boost only if and when a state imposed salary freeze is lifted and the ra1ses are ruled legal-. Abbott said the main stum- bling block in the <teadlocked con tract talks is the arbitration of teacher grievances. School board members say binding arbitration would erode local control School board members want to keep advisory-6rbitrstion But teachers are demanding that an independent third party rule on teacher grievances that do not deal with rinancialmatters m eluding salary and fringe benefit djsputes .• Abbott said di st rict negotiators have decided lo <'Om promise on two other Issues dealing with a contract emergency clause and teacher assignment policies The con· tract provisions will be worded as they were in last year's tear her accord. Toibin said teachers are sllll gearing up for a strike the day after t h ey return from holld ay vacation. No fui:_t her negotlat19n sessions are scheduled Gun, Calculator Taken in Clemente Carrdl J Wills of 126 W Ramona, told San Clemente Police Saturday that someone broke into his house and stole u 20-gauge shotgun and a pocket calculator valued at $2SO. Police said the break tn oc curred between Deo. 10 and 16. They believe the suspect opened the rear door b y reaeh1ng through a pet door Th e mo:.t 1m pres:.1vc tes timony wa s sc1c nt1fic evidence supporting the Warren Com m1ss1on s eonclusion that Lee Harvey Oswald was the lone gunman in Kennedy's a~­ sassmation Tea ms or experts assembled by the committee agreed that all thret' s hots al Ke nnedy 's limousine 10 Denley Plaza were fired from Oswald'<; rifle from a ~1xth noor window They agreed one shot missed, one went through the president's lhroal and into John Conf\ally 11nd the third exploded m Ken· nedy's skull The only cont rary evidence was a sound on a tape recording of i: motorcycle policeman'i, rad to. • f'ro111Pa~AI BALLOONS. recovered from the explosions of the two balloons earlier. havl.' led them Lo conclude the raclory was the launen pomt. "A !>mall number of employees may be involved ID these balloon nights ..... tt. Gene Norden said However. there have been no arre&ts. and. so far. poUce are still just quesuon mg people at the factory. Laboratory tests comparin~ fragm ents ·or the known ex ploded balloohs and fra1?ments found in the Control Components X -ray room were incomplete tu day Police theorized that lh1.· balloons W CI'(! (i!le d with a lighter than air gas. and that hags containing rtammablt• acetylene were attached beneath the balloon~ Both materials were found in tht· X-ray lab They believe the balloons wen~ <':-l p!oded u :-1 n~ a fu se o f matches taped together m a string Such a group of matcht•s also was found in the lab. pohn? said. Police have ended thf'ar stakeouts of the industrial com plex • "There will be oo m ore balloon launches," Lieutenant Norden predicted NEW YORK <AP> -Mayor Edward Koch waa working the crowd on Filth Avonuo, having a lfOOd tlme wt(h constituents, when aomeone aaked what me11ure. the cit1 might take to cope wlth the lncroaae in oil prl cu announced by the Or1anllatlon ot Petrol•um Ex· porting Countries. SH our extel'ltil.4 8POtt•~., s_..t., coHect1on ALSOARAOE 56 FASHION ISL.ANO NEWPORT BEACH (714) 644-7030 "l' m Coln.I to try to uae less oll tn my salad," t.be mayor said Sunday. . ,, from .~rcuncH,,.Y«>rtd Sfaet S.M-l·Xl 'J L • II j .. Northern Regi,ons Get snow • y'l'flleA•rdat ....... -~- , -A1r eatbouad •t.oun l)acldn1 1 40 mpt. whtde t.hre,atenecl NOl'°t.l*'n Califonta'1 mountaiM with "'°" MITY HOW today belor• ft8lln.l the etate lD a cold wa'keotrn.t.locandraln. ---t ---- Travtlen' •dtlsorln were pc»ttd tw the NaUoeal WeatMr Senle• far &M S&trra Nevada where periods ol heavy snow wtre f.-.eaat above 1,000 feel AdvteorMI were a1ao potted ror the Mount ShaJta·Sl•ktyou area wl!lere aome heavy IDOW waa foreeast a1oq with anow showers that were expected to reda~'e Ylalblllty tor driven. - Showen and high tem· pffrtlurea ln the 401 were forecast ln the San Frandaco area. Small craft advisories were posted with weal winds guat1n1 to JO mph. Tire ebal.na were required ln areas of U.S. 50 and 1·80 between Sacramento and the Nevada state line, lhe state transporta· lion department said. Night frost or patchy fog was forecast ror most valleys. Lows were forecast in the 30s and 40s, but were expected to · drop to 12 around Lake Tahoe The storm dumped nearly 18 inches of snow at Norden in Donner Pua, and more than an inch fell on coutal valleys DOrtb of San Franciaco. Althouah it WU the second ~ng,t lJp It was the Dana· Surf against the San Clemente Aurora Saturday in the playoffs for the South Coast Region championship for girls 13 and 14. Despite spirited play and two overtime periods of competition, the score remained a 0..0 tie and the teams were declared co-charnpions at close o( game in San Juan CaplStrano. On ·A 1'e11lda Palizad• major atornl of the seuoo, it- wu expected to le-_ve rain and snowfall amounta well below normal for th1a time of year. Mate Faces Rape ~rial Homes in Clemente acing Slide Peril But officials at the State Department ol Wat.er Rnources in Sacramento said t h at minimal pncipltaUon presented no problems. because most or the state's reservoir• are nearly full. llusbaml Charged in LanJinark Ca1Je SALEM. Ore. <AP> -Greta Rideout was trembling as sbe reached for the telephone and dialed police. It was a call that would chance her life and posalbly chaqe the delillltion ol rape in tb1.s country. By~COOPE& Ot .. OMtt ""' ..... Llaa Spanelll of San Cl~mente says she's too nervous to take tranq uillzers. . Mrs. Spanelli said sbe is afraid the pil1a might impair ber abUlly to get herself and her children out or their home at 405 Calle• Nina, if lhe house starts to slide from its hillside perch. The ndan.cered bomee ue located inla of the San DillO Freeway at Avenida Pallzada. LHt apriac'• bea•y ralu opened a crack in the slope behind seven Calle Nlna homes. Within a month, the crack bad widened, dropping the slope 35 feet and leavinJ the homes stranded on the eqe of a newly created bluff. Reaidenta qulllfied for fedlnl disaster relief loans, and repairs . were to be. oompletecl ~ore the onset or winter ralDI. But ooe delay and then another have put off the major excavaUon proj- ect Now resident• are con· sidering temporary meuurea they hope will protect lheir homes at least through the cur- rent rainy season. "ln lhe meantime, I lie in bed at night, ij.stening to the sup- ports groan and the walls crack," said Mrs. SpaneW. "A handful of homes may seem a small problem." said .t· torney Gerald Gibbs, wbo lives two doora down from the · Spanelli.s at 409 Calle Nin•, "~l it means the world to us." The Spanellia', the Gibbs' and the Wegners' home at 403 Calle Nina are the three bom• Ill m09t lmmediate peril. But Frank and Helen Flegal, who live at 411 Calle Nina, have been sufficiently concerned about potential danger to their own property to contribute to lhe coat of a geologist's study of lbelr neighborhood. Project directors for tbe study, cooducted by Lelgbton and Associates of Irvine, is Woodrow Higdon, who has flnt· band knowledge of the slide. He lives at 410 Calle Nina, Hi1don said lbat altbotigb the Calle Nloa slide and the Oct. 2 Bluebird Canyon slide are dis· similar from a geological at.and· point, they could have the same dlsastroua coa1equence1 larae·acale property damage. Unless steps are taken to divert drainage from geologically sensitive polnta in the canyon below calle N"ma, said Hitdoo. continued """"' ud sbifting of the •round cu be expected lo move the blaff's edge back under the houses. M ra. SpaneUt sakl slle bellnes tbe clty of S. Clemente was negllgeat 15 yean .. o. whell It approved the Calle Nina homes. There were no provilions made ror WHlef'll'OUlld water dralnace in the entire Paceeetter develop- ment, abe aald. Jn a4dltioa, she said, homes were built on unsta· ble blllaidee, with no steel in the foundatklal. As a result of the city's ap- proval of the homes, aald Mrs. SpaneW, she and ber busband fincl tbermel"9 with thetr entire aavl:11s tnn1ted ln a house they may hue to vacate and rriay never be able to sell for human babltau.n. Laat a year lhey were offered $130,000 cash for their oceanview home. "There's the question of fraud," she said. "Knowing wbat we do about the property, until the excavatloo of lhe can· yon ia com~. we could be sued for trying tO pass this house off on anybody elae." But Mrs. SpaneW, Gibbs and the other Calle Nina residents are not aure they will be able lo afford the restnacturing of• the canyon, eftlD .ttb fectet"al dia- uter Ullatance lobl. Bids re- ceived IO far for the excavation proJ.e~t ban been close to $300,000, Hid Mn. &,aneW. So the homeownen have asked Leighton and Associates to redesicn the excavation plan, hoping they can come up wtth a compromi.se which will 1ave tbe homes for a p rice the homeowners can afford. "In the meantlme, the ralns are coming," said Glbbl ... And we face the prospect of either drowninCor •aahi.D& olf tbe hill.'' Mn. Spanetll aaid that lf. she and her &usband are able t.o ex- tricate tbemlel"9 from thelr current situation on Calle Nina, she plans never again to live in a hillside home. Police Find Woman Dead For 5 Years Mrs. Rideout was calllng the police lo accuse her husband of beating and raping her. John RJdeout, 21, aoes on trlal Tuesday oa a charge of flf'lt.. degree rape. Authorititl H)' It • COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. tbe firtt time a husband bu CAP> -The body of• woman. bed tried for alle1..U1 rapiq dead .t least five yean, bu hla wife. . been found llleneath 200 pounds "If we win, it LI goln1 to show of newspaj)ers tbe day after men they can't do what they police ltroke into her Uttered want with women," said Mrs. house and dlscovere4 the corpse Jllideout, %3. "It is inhuman to or bet' slater, dead a week. think you can a buse and Police said they were called to manipulate yuur spouse because the h o me Saturd ay by a you have a leaal document . mailman who noticed that bebind you ••• several days' accumulallon of "I called the police becaUM I newapapers remained on the was in ~er. l waa hurt. What front por~b., happened was a serious criminal offense. I bad to protect myself, Neighbors told police mydaugbterandourfuture." Gretchen McRae, altout 80 , She and the other trial parUci· hadn't been seeo for some Ume . Police broke into tbe old house pants reruae to d iscuss the and found the spinster's aK>dy. She specifics of lh~ case, pending d d k Tuesday 's trial in t h is had apparently been ea a wee · Willamette Valley community. said Clarence West, deputy El Mrs. Rideoul's 2tr.i-year-old PasoCountyattomey. daughter, Jenny, hluched and Authorities aaid they con· played with her dolls whlle her sidered the cue closed because mot}\er was lnterviewed at the there were no forced locka, no Salem Women's .Crisis Service. AP-....... PUTI'INO HER HUSBAND ON TRIAL FOR RAPE Greta Rideout, 23, With Daugtnf Jenny, 2Yt signs of a struggle, no mark.a on The service runs a hotline for tornev'a office *aid the ch•n•ae th bod -i ti and batte ed feminist," saJd Helen. "She's , " -"' e y. rape v c ms r ua1 She' removes marriage or con-and ofr-them c ....... I more r~:-'-"" and cu . s But when police contacted women ..... ,,,_e · "'uuu.... sentuaJ cohabitation as a defense Willlam Hopper ol Denver, lhe lng and temporary shelter. noRt ,Pod=aJ~~ indicted Oct. 18 against rape. woman's cousin, be asked A volunteer counselor from "Historically, there have been "Where's her siat.er? She bas a the center has been 8 steady by the Marion County grand so many cues of mlatreatment sister about the same ace and companion of Mrs. Rideout aince f:r{h; ~:,~ct~ of wlvQ by bu.sbanda where they've lived together at that the aUeaed rape OcL lO during free on t5..000 ball. 11 coavlded she's bad no place to tum. She bome for IO year.." an arf'nlleal at lhe RJdeout.s' -fel b bad to accept criminal acts on Salem apmtmeat · of fint.-degree rape,• on11. e Police r.t.umed to the home 'I haDPened *".be on the line face1 a aumimum pealty oc ao her penoa, •·said Marton Cotmty Sunday. They found t.be body of when Greta called,.. said the yean LD prisoD and a $2,500 ftDe, Di s trict A tt or n e Y G a r Y Alamina McRae on a sofa in the counselor, Helen, who asked Rideout, a reetaurant cook, ls Gortm~er. "The people now re- m iddle of the livin, room b h 1 ot ..._ -~~ bea·n1 p rosecuted under a allze th1a ls a m~r problem, • t at er ut name n uoi: WMIU that each person's individual wrapped in •beets and Ying un-becauae of ••alJ the Irate ebangeinOregon's rapestabM& der atacb of newspapers. West husbands out there... approved overwhelmingly by the rights can't be violated whether -uma·-tb .. she had died at G l 1977 T ...netat"-. """e d1"stri"cl at· by a husband, friend or brother ... ~0 ~ •~ --·-·~r~e~ta~·~s~d~e~f~i~n~it~e~yt....;n~o~t~a!..-...!.:::.:..:..~~~:::.:.:~=...:~~:,:_:1~11 ~~;.;;..;.....;.;...~_;_~~~~~~~~~~-least five years earlier. - West aaid both women IP· pareoUy died of natural causes but authorities sald an autopsy would be performed oo Gretchen McRae. One neighbor told authorities ahe atopped vtallin« the home abou~ five years ago when Gretchen McRae stopped answering the door. l'iolenee C'ontinaes _Iran 'Strike' Ignored TEHRAN, Iran (APl -A general strike called by oppo- nenll or the shah to observe a naUonal day of mourniPI was lar1ely ignored today, but. one death was reported in street violence ID Qum, 75 mUes south of the capilal. Demonatratora ahoutlng "Death to the shah!" swirled through tbe narrow 1treets of Qum a center of religious op- poeiUon to lbe sbah. Besides the reported death, at least four people were reported wounded in cluhn wtlh the lmperlal troops. ID Tabriz, 330 mllea northwest of tile capilal, erowdl marched through the main avenms ~ lg tbe royal troops, and some cla1be1 were reported. some deal¥ were also repertod, but in· =-........... Mt tea-....... ...... " .......... atvernment equentlJ ma.kt clalma that cannot be indepen-the exiled spiritual leader of dently conrtrmed in this rulDOI'· Iran s 32 oilllioo Sbilte Moslems. ridden nation. Khomalnl, Who lives in Paria, is Thousands or Iranians stayed leading the religious and. away from their jobs to mourn political forces demandinc the for tboee kWed in 11 '"mont.ba of 1hah'1 abdication. political violence, but spot Iran's 37,000 oil workers, who cbeckl lD snaJ« ciUet showed have been on a political strike many I.snored the atrllte and pro-d uctton la the oil fields lo· since Dec. 4, began retumlnl to their Jobi Sunday in respon.M to creased. government warntnas that they There were no reports of would be fired. Officials of the violence overnight. in Iran. government oil company aaid Troops kept out of sight in the capital but were reported on lbe the new atrike call "had little or alert ahoutd rlotH\1 follow no effect" on the lndustry. moumlngprocesston.s. "Ninety percent of the oil field Tbt sovernment estimates worken ln Khuzestan returned about l;JOO llave 41ed ill anti· to work Scmday to boost produc· government violence this year, lion from 2.1 million bunll a but leaden of the OPCM>1Won to day c.o 2.1 milUoD in the put 24 Shah Mobainmed Besa Pahlavi taours." ~ em~a_l ~. c1a1., t"" Y•t~ toll ta 1¥ 4~..:.~1o ..,. e ... -... itae .,.. ........ ., .. As ............ .... came from Ayauallah Khomalnt a on~. \ Simplv the · g_~a'tes1 selecti1on '.')f Chr1stJMS gift 1deas 1n JeJ!>UrC? \tJt'ar for 1 he entire family. @~@~§@ 44 feehlon 1911nd, fMWPOtt center 644-5070 t001 WMfWOOd blv4 .• welCwood vrn-oe (213) 4,.7721 ) r ) ., A.f DAIL y PILOT Monday. ~ember te. 1978 NATION I WORLD t f lme__JUe Study of' Missile Deploy~nt Due W A.SlONGTON (AP) defense omctals bavt recom· od moviat the bl' n.w mobile MX mi11ile lnlo fWl·•calt devtloP- m nded lntenai" study ot a new Alt l"orct propoeal to launl'h u. meat btcaUH ot t~bAJcal and eott Quett.ioOI ra!Hd about the way proposed MX mobU m a lt. trom airplanti1 rat.Mr thu from th It would be bued. iround u oriitDalb planned. At one pQlDl. the lead"! eontender was • coneept Informally ftltQ'On~ n.UtSunlt«t1fia11t·~~adtee • llect-a ''IMU ••m " uadfr wblc~-tk-aew.. I'll ..... wouW- eacitttf!d to be toll\pleted tn •bout thNe monlbl. bootfully permit· mounted °" truck• and moved conatanlly amonc thousands of Un1 a ftnal decl •oa on movtna lbead with th adv~ mobll• 1aunchln1 hol .. ln auch a way to make the Sovleu pesa wbtre mi1Jlle and Lhe w~ lt wUI be balOd .they mlpt be Ill any elven Ume. • ~ But that woWd hav rt<1uired thOUlanda of aerea Of I d and TUB AECORUI NDATIO TO Delen Seer l&f')' Harold met reei1tance from el\vlronm.alAliata and aome peopJ Uvlna Brown trom a h18h·l ~el cOWld.l ol deleose... •cieolldl.-And Clllatc 11urb1 Uktb' launeh 1lte1 who teared their areq would me 1 oln lal t .. t lh b #..,1 id tara ... vlSovltt m'-tu .. ln thU ¥Ul..Ol l..'+'U· t1eo or c " ••• n w approec be 11ven ,., <'Oftl eraUon la So eenUmont ewuna durlnf the tan toward some form of air lbt lot t d velopment an a IHtth '°" t.be \ wray to dtP.lo,1-_an • traai~blci mlH IJ that would be flown about tn Jumbo41Je Jet.I MUr•~MWan&erconune1u.a1.r-..baW.JUemllt Jebyl.bemlCIJ'!lllt and D4rriodlr.Uy plac~ tn flrh\g poettJoni ln the around. The push ht-hind tho movtle miude LI a arowm1 belief by 'l'hl•, l\ wa• llld. would accomplish the p\lt'O()M ot evadln1 a mllltary and cMUaa olflclala tha& I.be present Mlnutemu ICBM• Sovltl •W'Pt'llO attack without t.be drawbacks of the land·bued In their Cixtld und"r&round buee will become vulllerabt by lta 0t "1ht ll 1une" 1y1t~m 1914 to kno(kout ln a pou1ble Soviet 'urprlff auack Rul now the Alr Forco hu come up wttb what defenae ol· Tb la because Soviet miuUC"J an becomln1 evu me>tt ac fir als, who uk.td to remalo anonymous. call a promlslnc new • curate and a w cenerauon ol powerlul, mulUple-watbead proaC'h \U)der which lon1·ran1e miuiles could be launched in t6e weaPOOS ls ~ma installed ln the Sov\«. 0"'100. aJr from ahort tl&k otf·Hd·J&nding planes smaller than the jumbo Tbt hand babed Mlnuttman rru ii 1n coru1dered a vttal elo jeta · " :i1":!t ~~t~ Sin t~~'~!r1nlet •;: ':;: ~!!!,ct!'.~laow•~~:ci wlUm~ TllEC06TOf'.8VC11 asystem , theorficlals said, hopefully would equipped ln the 1980s with smaller. air·breathlnt cntlso mlasUes be leas than the S2S blJUoo to $.'tO"billion estimated cost ol either the .• . The Carter adm1n11traUon already bas delayed a final dee ls.loo "a bell a am ·•or alt tr a.as portable ''land and launch" systems . . Private Firm to Negotiate U.S., Taiwan Trade PreseJJVed WASHINGTON (AP) -The United States, through establish- ment of a private corporation, fully intends to maintain all ex- isting agreements wtth Taiwan except for defense pacts, gov-ernment O(ficials say. A crash program is under way to provide for the least disrup- tion in relations with Taiwan after the United States extends formal diplomaUc recognition to m ainland China on Jan. 1, State Department officials said. Herbert J . Hansel, the depart- ment's cbief legal <>fficer. said Sunday that the Carter ad· ministration intends "that aJ I existing agreements with Taiwan, commercial. cultural and others will continue in effect except for termination of tbe de· tense treaty." The key mechanism to ac· complisb this, said one official who asked not to be named, will be a private corporation em· powered by Congress to conduct business on Taiwan. One name being considered is the Asian. American Services Corp. The corpor~Uon would be pat- terned after the association Japan -set up on Taiwan after breaking off formal relations with the government thei'e in 1972. President Carter announced Friday that the United States would sever diplomatic relations with the Nationalist Chine$e on Taiwan and establish relations with Peking. Communist Vice Premier Teng Hsiao-ping will meet with Citrter in Washington in January and the two nations will ex· change ambass&C;ton March 1. Knifing Attack Foiled Japan ' P.rime Minister Escapes Injury s~nt the day in a room reserved for reporters in a building near the prime minister's residence. The reoort said he did not have press credentials and when asked ab'>ul this replied: "I'm from the press and I've been asked to take shorthand. I'm wail.in& for the report.er.'' TOKYO <AP) -A 21-year-old man with a knife lunged al Prime Minister Muayoshl Ohlra today as he was getting into b,is car. but security men grabbed him before he could reach the new bead of the Japanese government, police said. One security man was reported slightly in- jured when be guppled with the young man, but Ohira was not hurt. Police said the assailant told them be was Sumio Hirose of Tokyo, but theY said they bad not learned the motive for the attaek yet. The-man entered the courtyard of the prime minister's official residence poalng as a reporter. the police said. An unofficial report said be had Ohlra, 68, became prime minister Dec. 8 following his election a s president of the ruling Liberal-Democratic Party. The Jul attack on a Japanese prime minister occurred in June 1975 when a youog member of an ultra·rightist organization hlt Takeo Miki in the face.three times as be was at~ending a funeral. Additionally. Carter said the U .S . governm ent would terminate the defense treaty with Taiwan atthe end of 1979. However, U.S. officials said the private corporation would be used as a way to keep some so other agreements, including a lucrative trade arrangement, in< force. OFFJClALS stressed that the administration b eager to pre- serve booming U.S .·Taiwan trade, wbicb is projected at $7.4 billion this year. By comparison, U.S. trade with mainland China. while growing, was just under $700 million for the first aine months c:A this year. The trade arrangement was one or several efforts by the Carter administration to 'stem growing conservative clamor that the president had stabbed Taiwan in the back. ONE OF the leading Senate supporters or Taiwan, Seo. Richard Stone, D-Fla., conceded on Sunday that Congress cannot overturn Carter's decision, but he said Congress mu.st move on its own to support Taiwan. However, Sen. Barry Goldwater, R·Ariz., had tbreatelled court action over Carter's decision and other con· servatives say they may at· tempt to stall Senate coruarma· lion of an ambassad'or to China . . Otkago's Finest These "ladies of the evening" are male Chicago Police of. ficers, dubbed ''~barlie's Angels." They were among more ~an '100 Policemen and women who participated in a massive weekend vice sweep of the Windy City. Police arrested 59'Z men and 41 women in the crackdown aimed mostly at the paying customers, a Police spokesman said. Cleveland Workers ' Brace for Faceoff CLEVELAND CAP> -Union leaders representing Cleveland's 10,000 civil servants braced thems~lves for today's showdown with Mayor Dennis K&tcinicb over layoffs . · Local bankers, meanwhile, considered suing the city for de· faulting. Kucinich was to meet with the representatives of 17 public· employee locals to ouUine a schedule for layoffs of 35 percent of the city's workers. lie said the brunt of the program would fall on the police and fire departments, sanitation abd Street repa.rrs. Eleven Killed in 3 Pennsylvania Fires t TWO UNIONS BEP&ESENTING Cleveland's 1,875 police of· ficers have promwed to flgbt the layoffs in court. · · "The city is going to be one bell of a jungle if be (Kuclnich> Jays off half the police and firemen," said David Isaacs, a pharmacist at. an all-night drugstore here. PITTSBURGH (AP) -A cbildt playing with matches and a woman s mDking in bed ap- parently caused two fires that killed 11 persons in southwestern P e nnsylvania -10 or them children. A third fire of "1tknOwn origin k l lle d one young girl and critically injured another. Rhon· da Dean, 9, died, and Sir~asda Evans; 2, was burned and sul· fered smoke inhalation Saturday when -fire swept their home in the Homewood sectio n of Pittsburgh. A FIRE .north or here Sunday in Aliquippa resulted in the deaths of a 72-year-old woman and four children from dense smoke from the woman's burning mattress, the Beaver Co~ty cor- oner reported. Soutti of here in the small min· ing to"IP of Ronco. six children died Safurday in a fire apparent· ly started by one or them play. ing with "1llatches near an over- stuffed chair, state Police said. In the Aliquippa fire, n ames were confined lo the dead woman's bedroom. "The mattress was the origin or the fire," said Beaver County Coroner Harper Siml>son. "She "Y as a h eavy s moker. She smoked in bed frequently.'• The woman, Mary Black, was found dead in a chair in the kitchen of the two-story home. She was clutching a telephone. "She apparently attempted to telephone," said Simpson, "but there was jus t too much smoke." ALSO killed were four children of Jane Mills, who was not at home at the time of the fire. Two of the children, Jacqulin, 10, and Tanya, 2 were found dead beside their bed in the front bedroom. Felicia, 9. and William, 7, were found dead in a television room. ·'The boy was sitting in a chair like you would go.'°"sleep. The girl had her blankets on the noor," said Simpson. In the Ronco fire, the charred bodJes of the six children were found in·bedrooms or a one-story Snow Bllff ets Rockies Areumulation cioaes Mountain Ptulses Te~rai--., Afb/jny .l'ft>u'qve Ancnor•~ A \llevHI• Atlanta 81\ll'lllr(~ Bi\meru eo. .. 8ost0tl 8u11afo Cllrltt11 WV Chlce90 Clfltl flnell Cl•¥t1and Columt>u\ 0.1 Fl Wiii Oenor Detroit °"'"'" FtlrbnO HartlorO .... ,.,.. Hortol\llu H011\10ft lncl'•polll Ja<U'vlllt Junea11 Kan•t CllV l •t V""9> Lttti.lloO LO\A-1• LOlll•vlllt """'"' •J ... ' l Ht Le ~c 3' ,, .02 36 l3 .OS 11 n .u •• 10 S"4 7t 10 0 10 o(I • 41 l? OS •S U ,, u .02 u ,. • Jot 21 ., " ll ,. 40 2J H tl n ,. 1' 1l :IO .. " 1 40 " :i. • IO 10 60 IO ., ,. ., ,. .... 41 40 ..... 11 .. . SI SI .02 ., ~ II .. ..,..... ,. 0 819 ... , ., aJ '·· CtttllM '1 SJ 1 OS El Centni $0 .. .4' U ArrOWllMO 4) 13 I.SJ LOllO S.~ Sf S2 • S4 '""'°'1 IM<1! ,. SI .to Ont4ttlo SS "' ... Pllln $tlrlf191 4t 41 .U s... e.m.rcHno ,. .. ,Jl S111J-SI -.10 S.nte AM M to .SI S.nll M.,.I• S1 •t M Te/IOt Vellt'( n l1 148. Mm 1 ma,. /I. millor W1nt9r ttorm Ml".a IN INMllll•lnt .. l!Of'INl"ll ....... .,., toelev. Clllmt>lfl9 Mt+y -on ttw R0<llr Moulllllfl •tt• H•llr••cloll• trawl 'onc:tllfOfll ci.. "'°'" ~ ....... ~ Nrfy IOOty In "'IK" Of Ille -.11trn Ro<kln . S•m• ft!Oullt•ln ,. .... In VI•" NHef e, fltfthtfn At1ron1 ,.1110 CoMl'Mo _. <'-Dy llP lo t• lt\Qw• o1 ,..,, ..-. Htwewr. ,.,. !NII t lflcNt ..... ltlltll ... """lllM "f:· Net--t--Vl(t •ttCI '"' -\flo\lld ... , _ .. of .... Con· ll11t11ta1 Olvtdt A tr•vtt ecMwry •tl OOi ttcl todly i.t Moool•ne. wtM of tllt Divide Mid wes HPKled to 'l!reed t Ht..vd wlU1o9U't1no winch. Ol8fon1la A wlndWlllPPld f41i11Stomt Orof>ped more tllen en Inell of rain In Soutlletn Celllornl• todey, trl90trlno 11000 •ltrll, -Hplftt llOllO•y lllOPoen "°"1•. lylno ljp traffic -c-1no •t ''"' -0 .. 111. TM ltt<lllty«cvrred e ... fy tod4y I" • •nool·relllltd euto ecdoent • ....., • pl<ti·ljp lrvo c ... rvl"9 tlV" Soutll Gate mtfl pt.,,..a -•I """°'tel 1 .. t Into • mountlllfl un~ .,.., Crnt•• L.-.. -1111no • -•• -lnj1HlnQ tfle _I_ rider\. T,,. 6111191 <.1M1MC1 tre .. len .... VflOl'IH In Ille_,...,, -I'-<! ~···City Hell lhll .... Los .,."' County ,,_ Control OhltlCI <~1.0 Off Its f- 11 .. 1 tate~. TM tlorn'-"'4lktt be9otfl S.turdey nllJfll. OrOOPH a halt.Incl\ In LO• A~I .. by deWll, bringing II• -ton total to •'*" >\II lnclll~ Hou! e¥tn with lest _...,.,PK•· C.at .. Wemller ~· lllnltM, POHlbly llHVJ 11 11_.I Wllll C/\oMC!e Of tllcltdrrstomt, Llthl verlebla wlnO\ n19111 ena mon1l119 "°"'1> Hltflli Tunci.v 51 to ~. CoHlef '--'""'' wlll '"'II" ltttwttfl 50 •1141 >t. lnlefld ttm• ,..,..,.,, •• will ,..,. °''-" '° -,., ,.,..,.,.~,_...,.,,,.,...1111tt se ......... Dtla MONDAY J:U11.m. -01 TUHOAY IJlr\tlOW •: n a.m. ~ •• ' IJlrst hlOfl S:20 • I'll. , 5t<Olld low 11 CIU.m. • • SKond "'"' .,,, p '"· o.s Sllnrl-•·R 1 m .• Mtt4.~ll.m Mooll rltttl l4 11 m., ~'' •t e.m. ,, . frame home, state police re- ported. Larry Malone, 30, and Mary Jane Bechtol, 19. an unmarried couple who shared the rented home the past two months, were treated for burns at Uniontown Hospital and released. The dead children were iden· tified as Kim Malone, 10; Larry Malone, 9; Bryan Malone. S: Timothy Malone, 4 ; J ames Bechtol, 2; and Theresa Bechtol, three months. Al six local banks. whlch hold $1S.5 million in overdue city notes, executi.ves scheduled meetings to consider how to collect on the debt. "' ' "SOONER OR LA.TEil we will have to file a suit against the city," .said Roger Hippsley, a Central National Bank spokesman ... ~ "But we don't want our at:tion to be construed by the public as the ·: banks starting to sbut down the city. We are not pulling th~ r:ug ~~t from under tl;te city, we are not going to tag property for semng. On Friday, Cleveland became the first city to default since the Depression when Kuci.nicb and lhe council failed to agree on the mayor's plan to raise taxes. or the council's sug,estion to sell the city-owned light company. ~· ~n ~ ~~ •~(Of A~• ~·5 ..)E.W~ • XJ'-N OAAl-~ • C\\.~E.U.'5"1l# ~ <) ~ . 1l ~ wesk· c~ ~ ~ ~p ~ ~ ~ f~ ~ eJev~~ jocds ~ ~ ~wicls ... ~ltk th«t-f&'~ -tDUcJi ~--------------------.. Iii ~ • I ' <fl J .. l · • ! f , • ' , r . -------I . LOCAL I NATION • &at Yard Battle .__ ___ ·. Wice-Plmr-St _ s Ne wport uror · j _ Green C'larist•as teamed that Ryan, a stroke victim who hasn't been able to work since le-70. was robbed of his rerft money after cashing his Social Security check in Newport Beach earlier th.is mpnth. The haltint of a small office bu i Id i ni. proposed ror a waterfront lot that currently holds a boat yard has become the center of a civic tiff In Newport Beacll. Members of the r egional coastal commission have denied the project a permit after letters taking opppein1 views on the project were fired off by a cou· pie of citizen groups. It now appears that the City Council is going to enter the fray just to end th.e bickering. MeallW'hfle, toe project's backers say their development is dead. The projec·t was proposed by Ed Zeimer and Charles Pigneri who wanted to convert the small boat yard at 227 20th St. into a 7 ,497 square foot office building. Pigneri is the partne r' of Newport Beach Planning Com· missioner Paul BaJalis,. who took no part in the discussions or votes on the proposal when it was before the Planning Com· mission . project to the coastal com· mission. Meanwhile. city councilmen appointed a Local Coutal Plan· nlng Committee. a group of · citizens who are supposed to produce a document on tand use. that wW enable the city to re- gain control of its coastal zone from the coastal commission The group has made lta first item of business the develop- m ent or a special zoning de· slgnation to preserve the city's marine oriented buainesses. The committee found out about the project to replace a boat yard with an office building and cried Coul. In a letter dated Nov. 21, com· rpittee Chairman J erry King in· formed coastal commissiop Ex· ecutive Direetor Mel Carpenter that approva l of the project would "cause the destruction ol existing boat yard facilities <which) will j eopardize the city's ability lo prepare an LCP Aetion Tonig ht .. Land Use Plan in conformance with the goals of the Coastal Act of 1978." When planning commlslioners found out about the letter. they b(\came unhappy. Commission Chairman Bill Agee fired off a letter on behalf of hls group restaliiw the city's approval of the profect. He emphulzed that was the city's "olficlal posi· tion." · ' At last Monday's Clty Council meetin1, Councilman Paul ff um· mel cited the letter·writinc lnci· dents and asked his colleagues what they wanted to do. Council members didn't sound Uk:e they wanted to 1et involved in the debate over the office pro- ject, but they Hreed to consider instituting an Olficlal policy that would prohibit committees, boards and commissions from engaging in letter-wrttin1 cam· paigns. The proposed policy is to be discussed during a council meet· ing in January. Former Hollywood stuntman John "Mon· ty" R.Yan of Costa Mesa hugs his wife, Peggy. as they accept cash collected by Newport Beach police from Sgt. Les Chap. man. The money -aJmost $600 -was of· f e red by coastal area residents \vho Commissioners gave the pro· ject their blessing Aug. 3. After waiting for the appeal period to expire, the builders took their Mesa to. Mull Sale Ocean C ourse To Be Offe r e d In Dana Point Of Old City Hall G·l·F·T Spel& Relief Bluebird Canyon landslide victim Dale Ghere thanks Beth Hanson for the con· tributioos she ' and other Corona del Mar School students and faculty made to him and his family. Ghere is a science instruc· \ tor at the school who lost his home in the Oct. 2 disaster. ·corona del Mar and Newport Harbor High Sch,ool students and f acuity raised nearly Sl~.ooo Ulrougb a A 10-week introductory course on oceanography wiU. be offered starling Jan. l through the Orange County Department or Education's Marine Science Ons hore Laboratory in Dana Point. The class for adults will meet from 2 to 5 p.m. weekly at the onshore lab. 24075 Dana Drive, county officials said .. Participants are asked for a $25 donation for the course which includes fees for lectures, lab experiments. a tide pool tour and a n oceanographi c trip aboard the floating lab, the Fury II. Additional information may be obtained from J eff Nelson, 495-2274. C•ll 642-5678. Put a re:-words ·dance, a-rame~amtdonations. ---· --'-.-.:..:.:~l!!!~!;l~O~U..~~:; The sale of Costa Mesa's old City Hall to a private school, an Arnel De'lelopment Company demand for approval or a con- troversial-north-city housing-de- velopment and methods or en· forcing the 1976 sign ordinance top the city's council meeting agenda for tonight. The council is scheduled to re- view an appraisal of the old city h a ll comp~elt at 19th. and Pomona streets and discuss the property's possible sale to M ardan Center Dr Educational Therapy, which has leased the facility for nearly 11 years. The council also will consider legal ramifications or a demand by the Amel Company for ap- proval of a final tract map for construction or 1.025 housing units on 38 acres or property In the Beal' Street and S unflower Avenue area. Ci llEICO .. .. airofun ··Jtoult · RESTAURANT 496-5773 ~ 499-2626 . ., .:...._...;.·.;.·----..... ~.;,,,,,) • .llii:JrJ' ~ ' ~ Ont ltour ~111~1rs -(714) 496-1 247 . ~99-351 f!J1n11rrt1.: ~ . &utwn 49~1'57 • ....., -- \. c. . . Will Be Here • Dec.., 5 tflru 2'tC., r •tt3Q"Pt:"to 6 o fff- 1no1 ..... 0.C I 7) . • Monarch Bay Union ' 4 Monarch Bay Ple21 • South Laguna. Catiforma 92677 Tetepnone 496·22~ · '~ Smoo • ,...,...ofti111t•• ~ A•QNlll'lf • •C Cft·4 Don ft. O.Yil ~ .. ........... ) ~ 76 fll'OOUC1• • • OPEN EVERY NIGHT 'T.il e p:m. • 499-2221 • 06-5728 Season Greetings from .•. NIGUEL THEATR E . • iJ MOfltrCll 8ly rlM I LClltu ~l,C.. 92'17 111•1 •H·2300 Season's Greet Inga from 1.AOUHA HIOUEL Mflee UNITED CALIFORNIA 8AtifK JUll~ET~ ,~ ... ,,,, f ~ • MONARCH IAY P.L:AZA ·•SOUTH COAST HWY. AT CIOWM YALLIT PAllWAY • LMIUNA Nie'• ·- • ·lawsuit. Discussion of the sign or· dinance follows a resolution by the Costa Mesa Cluu\lber or Commerce seekin~ en~ement of parts of the law while holding other parts te mpora rily in · abeyance. · The chamber's board of direc- tors is asking the city to crack down on signs which never have been granted permits. The chamber board suggests that parts Qf the ordinance deal· ing with phasing out large signs approved under ·an earlier law not be immediately enforced. • The controvers ial 1976 or· dinance was approved to e Ii m i n a te s i g n i n g c I utter .throughout the city_ as an at· tempt at city beautification. The council also is scheduled to consider installing a traffic signal on Fairview Road to ac· commodate traffic turning into and out of Costa Meb ffigh Mel't'!"'ttt' .. lot. ' ' ' 16 Monarch Bay ~laza Laguna Nagvel, CA .• 'J'JJR7 861-6922 • :La9wz.a 'J ta.C1J. c::Se.wia., ano. e&A RAIL. T0U"8 (714) 496-1265 .. ' .. I I ~--"~ ....... --...;;.:;-~~~~---------~~- .. .. • . ,. . I . . NATION Mondey, December 18. 1178 DAILY PILOT A 1 · Woman Scores With ~ed-hot Romantic Epics DETROIT tAP) -Wheo the areal autM&rban, dream be(iomts t.he dull reality of diapers and car pooUn1. tnUUom ol Arn~ntan "'omen "'"' to th«Jff paperback romanc 1 for eacar. Julia Grtc:e wes dltCeren • be be1m wnUttc lbfm. It wai tlow l~nt at first -starttna wtth U•ht· p1yln1 cont IOM and "how lo'' plec• tor ob scur&matuinu. _ ----.- BUT TO~A \'. Hg llA8 \WO novels ln pnn\, • third which will ~ ~blishcd nexl sprlna a.nd aooth~r romJnt In a ytar or IO. You ~an I uah al the paptrb m atllet U 10"' llke, but remember lh1I Ln 1978, U.S toftcover publlaMtl t11UNl more Ulan I.SO hlstorlcal.L Tbey sold 40 mllUon copl -about two• MCOnd. "My 1lwf lan't Uteulw-e. we all know U.at," Mrs . Grice tald. "lt ls capl1t readin1 -rHdina lo 11vupeople pleaaure." ln mQtit 1U><caU«I blslo rom nct5. a YOUll\l •nd Innocent herol!Ml from a romantic. bygone era Is \ , atnlly raped and olherwi1e deflled while t raveHn1 to exotic places by 1teambo1t, salhn1 Vtllffl or cov· ered wqon. They all ha~e happy endtn11, ow ever~ a1 1 tOft· he arte d Clint Eastwood.type rescues the sweet young lb.ing. In Mrs. Grice's latest epic. "Em~rald Fare," raven·hairtd Emerald Regan ls wren c h ed from en s lave ment on a "~,.... Lou lst~na plantation JUUA GRICE and into a red·bol romance on the California Trail in 1847. I was Just atarved for roman~ In my own mar· rjaace." Ml'1 Grice said "l wua true-bluc ·H a houaew'-fe. Just U~• the J<>men thl'l •r• readlna my bookl -moat of t~em. · .. •Un't sllpp na arou.wt or anythln1. And 1 · -r.altuclthat.w.aa 001 or tbo rhaona l left hlm," ebe contlnl\td "r reallied Ul•t I wanted tohaveam-an 11\ltf)'•IJI relaUoru1h11> and 1 d dn't wanl to be sllppiftl around " Now that 11h '• on her own she has ~me bJahty or1an•ied an uatnesJ'ilke •bbUt ber work complrte with dally pace quotas Ind advance preparation for nov~ls that ma~ be years ~ff. , . "WHAT I Tit Y TO DO 18 GO to the llbrat.Y·Nld lind tome or lho wrtler1 that have been well-toved In the paat, · · sh •~d · · Abou~ a year aeo I .started to reread Pearl S Duck. "When I road. 1 try to ask myself. 'What makee thl1 boolt so 'good"' aJ\<I, 11 I'm losing In· teresl, I try to figure out why '' But white :ihe's writing for a mass market, M rs. Grice does not conJider her novels trashy. "U l do have a sex scene, l want It to grow out ol lhe material l wantiltd Ot." the said. "I've learned there are two k1nda of rantaaies that women have," Mn. Grice said. "One is sex fantasies where the fantasy goes all the way throu&b intercourse, and the other is what I call •romantic fantasy.' "l'VE MET A LOT OF WOMBN who have told me they have these romantic fantasies -and I had a lot of them, too. wben I was married. They're the kind where a woman would meet someone aod be would fall in love with her. And the would go over these details and embelliih them. "And it would atop it lb• point where they go Joto the bedroom,.tecause that wasn't the purpose of the f anl&;SY." ~ne said. _Peace Concert Plaiined • NEW voax <AP> _ Nature's Symphonicum p • Europae, an lriterna· rec1ous tiMal-mualc or11nt11. •·-------- Uon •Mklni to ptomot• f'Alors I •orld harJDony, h.. . \AJ • scheduled a March a • p d ftand-ra11lnaconcert. 1n en ants An or••nhatlon spokesman •~id the e v,e n t w 111 b e at carneite Hall al\d ln· elude vtoUn11tl Yehudi Menuhin aDd Ruggiero Rtcd : guitarist Andrea Segovia; flutist Jean· Pierre Rampal; and planilts Jorge Bolet, Gary Gratfman, Byron Janis and Jerem y Menuhin : sopranos Roberta Peters and Maureen Forrester, and dancen J01e Greco and Nana.Loree. I M a s t e rs o' f ceremonies are to be Peter Ustinov and Jose Ferrer. Plero Gamba, president of the Sym- phonicum E uropae Foundation. will con· duct the Winnipeg. Canada. Symphony Or-chestra. ~ Tourmahne $175 'i "A LOT OF WOMEN READ POUt {O six of these a week." Mrs. Grice said. "They're hooked on them, just like the soaps." _ PRESENT WfTH A FUTURE -For the Hard to Please! 8. Amethyst 1145 C Peridot 1385 Mrs. Grice said her success comes in part· from knowledae or her a udience. "Cripe, I.lived out there in suburbia. Tbey were my neighbors," the 38-year-old writer said. The past tense is no slip or the tongue. With ber publishing success has come financial indepen. dence, and this year she left her lawyer huaband and their split-level home in suburban Rochester. She lives with her two sons, aged 12 and 9, 'ln an. Ann Arbor townhouse. "AFrER I LEFT IDM I STARTED to almost unravel myself, and I reallied that one of there• sons I was able lo write this kind ol th.lng wu that F1D1d Drive Slated CAMBRIDGE, Mass. <AP) -Harvard College says it plans a $250 million fund·raisin1 drive -the largest in its history -so it can give more scholarships to attract middle-income stu· dents. Noting it costs $7,500 a year to attend Harvard, Dean Henry Rosovsky said: "The standards fo( linanciai &Jd set. by tlle-Yederal goiern!oentand the fvy League don't rec0gltlze the needs of students from families with $25,000 to $50,000 earning power. We hope to raise the standards. It's in our ... interest to puah up the limit.a." .. .. ·· ; ~ , " CHRISTMAS -- DREAM by the late Norman ~f. All enchanting gift for plate colledo,.. Palm.d owr ¥z Century ago In subdued Victorian style. A "true Rockwell ci-lc.'' $24.50 JENNIFER AND JENNY FUR By Marian Cerlsen re· garded aa. America's finest ferrete arflst. One of the best buys In Limit• ed Edition Collecting. $45.00 Visa and Master Charge accepted. .-:Durgen. Park West, Inc. "!Huntington Beach, California 92646 LITTLE MADONNA By Ted o.Gr.zla, famous Western M ll1. 10V.." on ,Farmont China. banded In gold Paatel back· oround enhances the OOlora. From lhe original o i l pai n ting "The DeGrazla Holiday Seri•.'' $45.00 'WOMAN'S CHILD "~'s Child Is Fair of Fae»' or eo the poem gem. Bli. bactcground. 8" diamtter. 24K gold r1m Umlted Edition of 5,000. First In a eenes of --.n -that traces the days of the week. S30.oo . PHONE NOW -FREE DELIVERY Post Office Box 6174 (714) 964 -2955 • o Ooat S386. E Aouamarlne 1295 r - CllRJSTMAS STORE HOURS: It LID. to I p.m. MODday Unoaait Frtclay lt a.m •. &o I p.m. Satmday BclfllcAmeric:ord • Vfto • Molter Charge CHARLES H. BARR · Wtlklltf PIN4 .... ~ 11tft& Irv,... A Christmas COiiection . . . ----------------------~~---------------... MAJOM CMIUMIDl'S APPMEL ,, SPECIALTY ~· ~It ..._,.,,,. .. ...., AltC.0 "49-1&15 ,.,.w_ ~ t..e""-.... ·-·· !"11'11< '""-""" 1117 1511 I °"'"" ~,,q, -M-~ HOMEAJR ...... IS -M-l!m MnCo ~· C......,y'1 eon.e c ............ ~~ ~ Bal \, -Olatot.lltl 11115-MlO c:..ns---s-. liC).3:m c-·.s.-. ~~ s. .. 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MMIZI ~·· IM0-4tll c-............,. ~I-llJMCl9 FlNAHCIAL TheOop ~ ~'-~'' A,...._.s.-g. ~ 0.-,,ltd 114().lem Gll'lfloo"""""W• 1111 .. 1eo ........... ~ 9-*ol-ll3W:l9ll Guy l.Mllgllon 5G'l-tl!CIO =:..,~, 6411-11118 ~f-~ TINt::i• M4A ~ ~--.... Ml-3l60 -· ,_ MMl01 __ ,...,_,. ~· ~,,_ ll4041'0J* '-"' Oougllo, lftl "6-1')5 -n-•t -.7711 ........... -. .. ,.., Thel...., ~ -"*"••2 5$JJ6l ......,,_ .... ~ ...... M4MI Or> Tiit OD T-_,_ s---•1,a o....a.... ... ,.. """~ 5-lOlO Ol~APPAML "'-aAlllll 1'44lllO ,_.......,..,_, ~ ~a4T_, .... """"C..""--=~ ,_.,w,.. Ml.zlQ WGJIO T.- ' ... ,. SOUTH ·COAST PIAZA ACROSS FROM SOUTH COAST f>t.AZA VILLAO£, BRISTOL STReET ANO SAN DIEGO FREEWAY. ' I I I l r I • f ~' \ t ~ ' ' I I F'ormer Hollywood stu11tman--lohn "Mon ty" Ryan of Costa Mesa hugs his wile. -Peggy, u they accept cash collected by Newport Beach police from Sgt. Les~p· man. The money -almost $600 "as of· f ered by coastal area residents. who G·l·F·T Spells Relief Bluebird Canyon landslide victim Dale Ghere thanks Betit Hanson for the con· tribulions she' and other Corona ·del Mar, School students and faculty made to him and his family. Ghere is a science instruc· ' .. learned that Ryan, a stroke victim who hasn't been able to work since 1~0. was robbed of his rent money after cashing his Social Security check in Newport Beach earlier this month. tor at the school who lost bis home in the Oct. 2 disaster. Corona del Mar and Newport Harbor High School students and faculty raised nearly Sll,000 through' a dance, a""rutfle·anc:tdonattons. · --- • •• ..-(714) 496-1247 . 499.351 I • .. . . . . . ... ~ f ·' Jll;di/'s. · <'n~ Jiour Cleaners 496-5124 . • . . un•n ' Monarch Bay Union • 4 Monarch Bay P1111e·. Soulh Leguna Ca11lorn1a 92677 Terepnone 496·2253 . ~-... ...,.,..,.~-11111roauc1a LOCAL./ NATION • a . Office Plan Stirs Newp~rt Fur;_or The haltina or a small ofrtc~ project to the coutal com· bu44d-l-Of pro~~a~d_..f-o~r...-.a~~m~.1~1•~•~na----~~ w•l•rfront lot that currently holda a boat yard hll become Meanwhile, city councilmen the center of a civic tifl la appo&ftted .-Local Coastal Plan· Newport Beach. h lna Committee, a group of Land Use Plan in conformance .with tht..&o of e Coaatal Act ofl978." --- cltlzen1 who are supposed to Members of the regional produce a document on land use coastal aommt11lon have denied that wW enable the clty to re.- the project•a 'permtt alter letten gatn control or lta coastal zone takloc OpJ>01ln1 views on the from the coastal commlaalon project were fir~ off by a cou· le f m The group has made lta first P 0 c zen groupll. Item of business the develOp. It now appeara that the City ment of a special zoning de· Council is going to enter the fray slgnatlon to preserve the city's JUSl to end the bickering. marine oriented buaineues. Meanwhile, the project's The committee found out backers say their development about the project to replace a is dead. boat yard with-an office building The project was proposed by and cried foul. Ed Zeimer and Charles Pigneri In a letter dated Nov. 21, com· who wanted to convert the small mittee Chairman Jerry King ln· boat yard at 'l27 20th St. into a formed coastal commlssi()Jl Ex· 7,497 square foot office building. ecutive Direttor Mel Carpenter Pigneri Is Che partner of that approval of the project Newport Beach Planning G.Qm· would "cause the destruction of missioner Paul BalaJis, who Took existing boat yard facilities no part in the discussions or <w hic h> will jeopardize the votes on the proposal when it c~ty's ab~ty to prepare an. LCP was before the Planning Com· mission. Action Tonight When paaitnlnt commlaslobers round oUl about the lelt.f'r. they- ~ca me unhappy. Commluion Chairman BUl A1ee fired off ·a letter on behalf of hit &t<JUP restatlnJ the city's tpproval of the project. He empbuhed that was the city's "otflclal posi·· - lion." At last. Monday's City Council meeUn1, Councilman Paul Hum· mel clted t.be letter-wrltln1 inci· dents and asked ht• colleagues what they wanted to do. ' . Council members didn't sound like they wanted to 1et Involved in the debate over the office pro- ject, but they agreed to consider Instituting an official policy that would prohibit committees, boards and commlaslona from en,a1lng In letter-wriUn• cam· pa1gns. . T.he proposed policy 11 to be discussed during a council meet· ing in January. Commissioners gave the pro· ject their blessing Aug . 3. After waiting for the appeal period to expire, the builders took their Mesa tO Mull Sale Ocean Course To Be Offered In Dana Point Of Old Ciiy Hall A 10-week introductory course on oceanography will be offered starting Jao 1 ,hrough the OrtJoje County Department of Education's Marine Science Onshore La boratory in Dana Point. The class ror adults will meet from 2 to 5 p.m. )Veekly at the onshore lab, 24-075 Dana Drive. county officials said. Participants are asked for a f25 donation for the co1rrse which includes fees for lectures. lab experiments. a tide pool tour and an oceanographi c trip . aboard the floating lab, the Fury JI. Additional irilormation may be obtained from J e ff Nelson. 495·2274. -· ' The sale or Costa Mesa's old City Hall to a private school. an Arnet Development Company demand (QI' approval of a con· trovenial north-city housing de· velopment and methods of en· forcing the lt76 sign ordinance top the city's council meeting agenda for tonight. The council is scheduled to re· view an appraisal of the old city hall compl~Jt at 19th and Pomona streets and discuss the property's possible sale to Ma rd an Center of Educational Therapy, which hu leased the facility for nearly 11 years. The council also will consider legal ramifications of & demand by the Amel Company for ap- prov al or a final tract map for construction of 1.025 housing units on 38 acres or property In the Bear Street and Sunflower Avenue area. Ari\el's demand is based on a recent state Supreme Court de· cisl ... Aavolviq,a t: INIMw> 499-2221 • 496-5728 .. lawsuit. Discussion of the sign or- dinance follows a resolution by the Costa Mesa Chamber of Commerce seekin~ enforcement or parts of the Jaw while holding other parts temporarily in abeyance. The chamber's board of dJree· tors Is asking the city to crack down on signs wh.ich never have been granted permits. The chamber board suggests that parts of the ordinance deal· ing with phasing out large signs approved under an earlier law not be Immediately enforced. • The controversial 1976 or· dioance was .approved to eliminate signing clutter throughout the city as an at· tempt at city beautification. The council also is scheduled to consider instalUng a traffic signal on Fairview Road to ac· commodate traffic turning into and out of Costa Mesa High ..,.,..,,w!UAt lot. MONAftdH BAY "' FLOR IST , INC . 16 Monarch Bay Plaza Laguna Ntgu.el , CA .. 91.671 1561.e822 • 4 Al1' 811A RAIL TOU1'8 (7U) 496·1265 I i ' \ • MONARCH IA Y;PLAZA • SOUTH COAST HWY. AT CIOWM VALLIT PAliW A Y • LA.uMA ....,._ .. ' r ABU OHA81, United Arab ' Emlrat. <AP> -The dffl&lon t>y OPEC to Jact ~on pMc b>' 1'.5 pe~ Mxt year a ftl t.M A·merJctQ dollaf nd· stock market Into a noaedl~e today. but the head ol lhe oU cart I de· • fended the lncre u a move deai1ned to help the world , economy. Some spcialilll ntlmate t.ht-f price boGSt. coming ill four . ) . . . . ( I ') I • ~ f · , , ' I , i i. s· l . ' I .. ·' ' • I .~ * * * • * • Sh Ce11is ~ Gollo,a! Oil Price Rise To Boost GaS NEW YORK <AP> -The decision to boost the price or crude oil 14.S percent -nearly double earlier predictions -will feed in· flation in the United States and couJd hurt the 13 oil-producing na· lions economically, say government and industry officials. President Carter said Sunday that the increase will hurt er. fort.s ~o redu~e inflati<!ft and m~ntain a world economic recovery. He said the oil-producing countries share the responsibility for the success ol economic programs. ·.•WE REG~ET TRIS OPEC DECISION and hope it will be re· considered before the next stepg take effect," Carter said. "It obviously is serious, .. · said Alked Kahn, Carter's chief in · nation fighter ... I'm very unhappy because I think 'it will be ter· ribly i.Qjurious to us and -in the long run -to them.'• Energy Secretary James Schlesinger, who urged the Organiza lion of Petroleum Exporting Countries to freeze the price of crude oil, said: "It is a substantial increase, larger than we had hoped. It could have major impacts not only on trade balances but also on the rate of i.nflation." The general estimate of increases in the prices of gasoline and heating oil in the United States is about three cents per gallon. SCHLE;JNGER PREDICl'ED THAT ADDITIONAL market forces beyond the OPEC move would raise the price of gasoline al the pump by another two or ~ee cents by the end of next year. As ol Dec. i. the averqe price of guoline was 81 centa a gallon. · "This ls hardly a minimal locrease," said Schlesinger, speak· inf Sunday on ABC tel~vlalon's "luues and Answers." "It could have a maJor itnp9ICt not Ollly on trade balances, but al9o on the rate of lnllation, on the performance of the industrial economies.''. Government and industry officials said the U.S. inflaUon rate -about 9.lh percent -will rise by one·haU to thr~..quarters or a percentage point because of the OPEC decision. A SPOKESMAN FOil THE CONSOLIDATED Edison Com· pany of New Yorlc City -whose rates are among the nation's highest -said...Sunday that the oil price hike may mean a 4 per. cent increase in electric rates and a 10 percent increase in steam •rates. OPEC, which supplies 37 percent of the United Stales' oil, ap. proved Sunday a four-step plan that will boost the price or a 42· gallon barrel of ~rude by 14.5 percent by Oct. 1, 1979. In nine months, the price will go from the current $12.70 to $14.S4. Most analysts predicted a rise of not more than 8 percent. The price boost is scheduled to begin with a 5 percent increase Jan. l , and proceed in quarterly increments through Oct. 1. "The· economy was in pretty bad shape anyhow -this probably makes it worse," said Michael Evans, president of Chase Econometrics, an economic analysis arm of Chase Manhattan Bank. "In t~e rest of the world; 1979 ~ll probably be a pretty good year. Only the U.S. la going to suffer a rec.'l'ssion." ANALYSTS SAID OPEC NEEDED a price increase io cover the losses members have fell because or the decline in value or the dollar, the currency used by OPEC. But it will mean a $4.5 billion increase next year in \he United States' already large trade deficit. And the deficit -about $45 billion this year -has played a key role in the decline of the dollar. "I think that the OPEC countries may themselves come to regret so sharp an increase in view of the harmful effect: that it will bave on the world economy," .Kahn said. "You can't enact a 15 percent increase in the price of the world's.snost important fuel , and not expect the customers on whom you depend to suffer and that suffering to reflect back on you.'' * * * th mcut1ure. to correct tht: world's t.•conomtc situat1on," Hld Rene Ort.I~ of Ecuudor, the new &ccretary aooerul or the 13·natlon Or.aan liatlon of P ~oleum Exporting Countries. Ortiz, 111>eakinJ( with reporters. did\ not spell out tn (jchul how lht: price·)>oo11t '¥ould benefit the worlfi. except lo iuay OPEC coun trle11 "ha~ gol respons1b1ltlles and taaalus toward the coming .. generations and towal'd develop- ment of their countries and find· ing alternative sources of energy than oU when it la ex· hausted. "'these eeneralions will never forgive us if we do not build for the future," be said. "These countrtes that have reservations about our decisions should re· alize tbal we are building for the future of our people." The Eyes Have It? Whatever their v isual f a<:,ulUes, visitors to the San Clemente parking lot used by Dr. Bruce Ewing do a dou- . ble take when they s pot the optometrist's eye-catching sign. But seeing is believing and no one doubts the op· timum effect that the chart has on visitors who know a good g1mrruck when they see it. A Daily Pilot photog- rapher couldn't resist getting the whol~ scene in focus. Your Hometown Dally N w8paper Alier the OPEC oil minisien announced the price increase at the end ol a two-day m~g Sunday, President Carter issued "-a statement saying it would hurt efrorta to reduce inflation and ursine Ol?EC to reconsider. Hi.s chief iaflation·fighter, Alfred Kahn, caJled it "terribly Injurious." Tbe United States gets 37 per. cent or lts oil from OPEC N TEN CENTSI nations. The impact on the U.S. currcn· cy was swift. The value of the dollar fell agai,ns\ all major cur· rencles this morning. The cur· rency m arket s clearly an· Ucipate a darker economic pie· ture for the United States because of the OPECJncrease. The· Soviet news agency Tas11 today took note of Western com- <See OIL, Page AZ) ~d Chance Tonight Rainy Weather Staying Around A rainstorm that drenched Christmas shoppers and com· muters Sunday and today shows no signs of abating before Tues· day, weather forecasters said. Weather analysts predict a 50 percent chance or rain tonight. The storm thus rar bad dr.opped 1.5 inches of rain on the ~ty as of this morning. ll is expected to peter ofr into showers about mid·day Tuesday . After that. the forecasters say. cloudy conditions through Wednesday with night time tem· peratures in the mid 40s and daytime highs in the high SOs can be expected. Rainfall is tunning about dou· ble that of a year ago. but thus faris not creating any problems in terms of flood damage or crop damage. "The rain is very welcome to m ost of our activities here:· commented Irvine Company crops division manager Carl Lind ren. =~~r:1aa::t:trti•ty bml!ftcial or our ca e grazing operations aod for l~allon .Purposes,·· he said. ··At this point, the rain is being a~ as quickly as it 'e'ls 'Rd II not poSinfl any problems to us." Orange County's agricultural operations officers agreed with Lindgren that the rain, up to now, is a welcome friend to the county tanner an~ water con· servers. . Thus far. the season's rainfall in Orange County stands at about 5.5 inches, more than dou- ble the 2..50 inches recorded at this time last year. Southern California Edison Company officials blamed the rain today for a power failure that affected Emerald Bay resi· dents for more than two hours Sunday. <See RAIN, Page A2> Thugs Get Unfriendly Cockatoo Tangerine. a costly cockatoo with a lousy disposition toward those be doesn't know . was stolen from his pe rch at the Laguna Pet Shop by burglars who broke open a back door to the st.ore over the weekend. The $2,500 white cockatoo wtth an orange crest, is the second expensive bird taken from the shop at 278 Forest Ave. in the past mgpth. Police said thieves pried open the back door and stole a caJi?e containing Tangerine sometime Saturday night. They discarded the cage a few doors down from the s tore . Last month, burglars used the same means lo get into the pet shop, knocking over a large cage to grab Duke, a S2,500 blue and gold macaw parrot. Irvine Balloons Burst Police said the burglars at· templed to get into two other Fores t Avenue shops, before s uccessfully breaking into the pet store. T angerine. a four·year old bird, was reportedly unfriendly to str angers and capable of de livering a mean bite. ~ No Suspects, But Police Predict Ending By PlUUP ROSMARIN Cit ,,_ 0.lly Ptloi SI.tit Though they're not naming a n y s us pects o r acc us ing · anyone, Irvine police confidently predicted today there won't be a recurrence or lust week's ex- ploding balloons that threatened small craft landing at Orange County Airport. Meantime . police are examin· ing fragm e n t s o r p la s tic m aterial found strewn across an X·ray lab of a factory after an explosion Thursday which seriously burned an inspector there. Police bad been staked out nearby in hopes or s potting a noth er b alloon launching. Balloons had been seen exploding in fireballs at about 850 reel. the altitude of incoming airplanes, on both Monday and Wednesday. Police rushed to Control com- popents. 2567 S.E. Main St., the • source or the explosion. The co mpany m a nufactures mechanical control valves. They found Terry Hurr. 26, of Orange. burned on the face, hands and chest by a nash fire in the explosion which knocked out windows and blew a steel door off its hinges and into the hall. fragments of the known ex· ploded balloons and fragments found in the Control Components X·ray room were incomplete to._ day. Police theorized that the balloons were fiJled with a Ughter·than·air gas, . and that hags containing fl a mmable acetylene were attached beneath the balloons. Both materials were found in the X·ray lab. They believe the balloons were e xploded. us ing a ruse or matches taped together in a string. Such a group·of matches also was found In the Jab. poJlce said. Police have e nded their stakeouts of the industrial com· plex. S4BOI' S4.JLED TO SPEEDY SALE ·Tm a bigger winner with the money I received than I ever was with my racing Sabot. "I sold il on the first d ay lo the rirst caller ... That's the advertising success story of the Costa Mesa man who placed this ad in the Duily Pilot · H oc:1n ~ 'lubo t. f ull) t•qu1pt. >.Int ror11l $250 firm xxi.. 'l(XX'( afk r Ii Coas t Weadaer Showers POMibly heavy tonight with chance of a thunderstorm. Partly c loudy Tueaday with c h ance of abowers deereulng tb 10 percent. A little COOier tonight with lows in the 40s. Highs Tuesday 56 to 82. Srocks Take Plunge After Oil Increase Huff. in stable condition at UC Irvine Medical Center. initially told police he was checking an acetylene gas leak reported in the room and had forgotten to discard a cigarette he said he was smoking, according to of. ficers . Police said that numerous fragments or plastic material and bags, similar to fragments recovereo from the explosions of the two balloons earUer. have led them to conclude tbe factory was the launch point. ·'There will be no more balloon launches," Lieutenant Norden predicted. If you want to "Sale" your boat, the Daily Pilot can mean fast cash returns. A friendly ad· viser will help write a best seller. Just call 642·5678. 'Killer' Doney Novelty Gi/t Edible ~· ' • l IN91•E TeDA Y o""°" '""' JfOhl °"' ,,. JlfaN)ld OlhUt•I GI .,,Orfl bfcorM bilo buanna. See the lfd.rt'..,,, ~ ,,.,..pan .,,.., Oft P•Bl, NEW YORK (AP) -Word of a larger-than-expected increase in world oil prices drove-stock prices into a sharp decllne ln heavy tredina tocllty. . In the ftnl five hour• the Dow Jones average of 30 lnduslrlals wu down 2f.22 points to 784.13, droppln8 below the 800 level for tbe fl rat Ume since the end of Nov· ember. Declines overwhelmed galnen ..-by a 13-lmargin among New York St.ook l:JCChana~lisled Laun~ On Sunday the O.-,an.l&ation ot Petroltum E>eporttna Coun· trles annouaced that it woud raise prices l4.5 percent In quarterl.Y atqea lhrouch next ()(t. 1. 1\e news came as an lm· pleuant IUJ"Prile to Wall street, wbtcb hed been boplq lor an lrfM creauallD&llMSperctnt. And analyst.I noted tbat It compounded lAv .. tora• uneaai· ness about inflation speclrlcally and the economic outlook in general. , "I thfok people are a little shocked," said Charles Jensen at MKJ Securities. "The stock market doesn't like surprises like this." The nows also depressed the bond market. which Is highly sensitive to shifts In Inflationary expectations. The dollar fell in foreign exchange while the price of gold Jumped by better than $7 an ounce in London. Gold mining stocks gained "round, while all other major stock groups were under pres· sure. OU. auto, airline and lel1ure·travel stocks all eave ground. The BriU•h p0und crossed the $2 mark, and lhe dollar dropped more than two yen In Tokyo. • "A smal l number or employees may be involved lo these balloon flights," Lt. Gene Norden said. However, there have been no arrests, and, so far. police are still just quesUon· Ing people at the factory. Laboratory tests comparing Crop Dama8ed FRESNO <AP> -P.relimlnary damage to the citrus crop M,.. has been estimated at 40 to 50 percent, wtth up to 90 percent ot the crop 1utferinc aome -desree of damac,. the county depart· ment of a1riculture reported. Minimum temperatures aa low u 20 deg~ for several boura were recorded Dec. IM. eaualnt a hard freae and crop damqe. /, NEW YORK CAP> -The latest novelty Christmas gift ls likened to a pet rock you can eat. It's killer bee honey. For '3.95 you can get a 5.75-ounce jar of honey reportedly gathered from the hives of klUer bees in Fortaleza, Brazil. "It's crazy. It's kind of the pet rock or 1978, ·• said Ronald DeChristoforo, one of the three men behind the product. "But the difference ls, it's edible and it's good." Along with the honey, you get a history of its makera. The bees were originally imported to Brazil from Africa because they were superior honey pro. dueers. But several African queens escaped, brMdtn1 with local beet and spawning generations of wild killer bees. The "88 have reportedly attacked men and animals. . - ~Ei~HB-Mayo To Quit Tonight' shored IJp Ornngt' County 's new. $8 million Hall of Adminis tration sproull>d shonngi:. hke this one over the weekend as stress cracks began s howing on outside concrete .beams. County officials weren 't surt~ wh~t was caus ing the cracks and wt'rc studying the s1tuat1on today. R. Ibbotson Dead at 78; Rites Tu~sday Memorial services will be held Tuesday for Robert L. Jbbotson of Balboa Island who died last Thursday al Utt! age of 78. Mr. Ibbotson was a chart<·r m e m bcr of Ne wport Cen lt!r Mcthodi;U. Church and an active Mason. He had lived on Balboa Island since 1939 He is survived by his wife, Ruth Jbbobon of Balboa Island ; his daughter, Ruth Gearing of San Clemente ; sons, James lb· _ botson of Huntington Beach and Rober;. Ibbotson of Richland, Wash .. 11 gra ndchildren, and three great-grandchildren Memorial services will begin ;it 4 p m Tuet.day at Newport Center Methodist Church, 1601 Ma rgu<'rite Ave , Corona dcl ~l\1ar Th<' family has suggestt!d rn t•m or1al d o nations to the Auw n can Cancer Society Radiation Nears Coast WASlllNGTON <AP> - The Environme ntal Prolf'ction A~ency, s<1ying rad1oac l1 v1ly from a Chinese nuclear explosion t·ould arriv<.' over the West C<iast by Tuesday, has ac- t 1 v a tt·d its radiation mon1 tunn~ system . The explo~1on Thursday at China's Lop Nor test site had a yield or le:.s than 20 kilotons. the agen· cy said. and should pre- :.ent no hazard based on p~1st tests or similar size. The federal Aviation Ad· minis tration ~<11d no haza rd to aviation 1s ex· l)CCtt!d 16.Cows Shot ST/\TF,,$VILL1':, N.C. CAP> - Farmers s <1y someone shot 16 rows from two herds in the latest 1n<"idcnt of· vandalis m to strike tins community since Oc· toiler. A dozen cows died. Four hors<'s all'!o have been shot. ORANGE COAST N DAILY PILOT '"" 0, .. ,,.,,. (()ll(l\t0.1l~f>Hf't w1tf\wflu(~l\Con"" "4"4""-0 tn .. ~ Pf'9'' I\ 1NOl1V-O by thl 0t"9 (M\1 PowOh\htnQ(omo.n-. ~t•l•HJ1t~"'"' pw1>11,N 11 ~ 1tw""'O" Ft1o.t., '°' C""''• Nt '4 N .. wf~t ""'+c~ H ftfl""f)I,.,. p_, ,Wtl r 1'i*I ,,.,,,.v .. 11r.; ""''""'~""""~fl! · .. vthfMt.t"' "Ott,, 'J•'"''"'''"'°''.-. r-Jll h\hl •1\ '''""'"'' ~ o""J"' fN fllf'•nt•.,.ttfJ\lt! l1f'l")t.l'Ml t\i1tt Jil W1 •I fl11, 'h"1 (tl'\f• Ml!f .a (i1U1f0t~11•if1•2t ·-.... -p,uiditAI •nd Pu(Jl1~ uo. , .... , YI(• ~.,,,,,."' """' f).*"'",.t ,.._,.."""' , ... _ .... .......... M<l ... QllWj ""''"' Ot."IHH l.Mt flte,_,..,, N•tt A\\t\f•"IM.1"•01"0 (~t°'' Office• (M•• ~\· J)Q Wn t 8•¥ !.t,_. L•Qut10 llt••" 1 !'4 GI-ff•'""' ltUfl!l""ll><1 llH<h Jiii\ llHCh lloult•.,d . Tt~hone (114)~ CltHltltCI AdHriltlng 142-M71 ~·rir. :::_ 0:,:;t', ~:.::::.~.i';I.~ ~let er •f¥.,ftHfMfllll' "'tf t l'-M•f .. ~::.;~=::..::""°"' , ... <••• ... '"''" .. " •f '"""" ,, .............. , .. Cfflt ... . (et•tt •flll • \v•u ,..,,Ofl ttv ,.,, .. , U M INft'"' r •• "'•u ,. ,. "*'u"" tM111 .. -. _,..,.,_., ,._,,,, Frot11 Page A J RAIN .•. · They said nea r l y 1,000 customers in homes on both sides of Pacific Coast Highway were without power In mid· afternoon when rain damaged a trans former. Powe r was ret:itored to all bul 50 homes two hours later. The remaining 50 c us tomers were without power for about rn hours. Santiago Peak 1s recording the highest rain le vel in Orange Coun t y The regis ter at the mountain location shows 10 f,0 inches of rain so far this year compared to 5.1 inches entered in the log on Dec."'18, 1977. Traffic officers throughout the county commented· today that the rain is responsible for a marked increase in "fende r bender" C'ollisions, but has not cuased any major traffic acc1 dents . '"That'.s because of the nature of the rain." California Highway Patrol officer Vern Smith said "It's been fairly s teady and showery Wlth none of the del· uges that so frequently cause majorPc o lli sion s among motorists who simply can't see the road in front of them." Sports fans and organizers of outdoor entertainment were less enthusiastic in their assessment of the Christmas week storm . More than 23,000 ticketholders i1 t<1 y cd away fro~he Los Angeles Rams' enco e with -the Green Bay Packc al the Colise um Sunday And disappoint~ Disneyland visitors learned alter they ar· rived at the magic kingdom Sun· day that two weekend Christmus parades had been called off. Weather forecasters w arned that the storm is creating wind conditions along the coast that could prove dangerous for small boats . Sm all craft warnings arc in cf fe e t along th e So uth e rn California co<1stlinc lo the Mex- ican border. The storm brought nothing but joy to skiers. Snow levels were down to 3,000 feet al many locations with re- sorts reporting good to excclhml conditions on most slopes with predictions that skiing condl· lions would hold good through the holiday season. Police Probe Gaming Ring; Four Arrested -Newport Beach police said to- day they are continuing their In· vesllgation or an alleged football card betting ring al{ter maklng four gambllng-relaled arrests last Friday. Bennett Gene Eromo, 46, of Norwalk has been released on $2,000 bail and Daniel Sanchez, 24 a Marine stationed at El Toro, has been ·released on his own recognizance-, suid Sgt. John Simon. He declined to idenllry the otb-er' twcrauapeds. an Irvine . man and a Santa' An a man, pending completion of the in· vestigaUoo. Ser1eant Slmon smd betting markers and more than $5,000 in caah wete seized during the ar· rests in Newport Beach, Costa Mesa and Norwalk. By llOBEltT BARKUl Of .. IHllY flli.t ltell R.on Shfnkmun llnoou.oced I.O- day that h t. ofrkullly re•lan· lna from tht llunttnaton Beach Cl&y Council at.ithu beglnnlna or tonl,ht '1 Council mectf n1. Stt cnkmun 1rnld be Is Quitttn~ fur proft.'flitlonuJ and fumlly rea· Kon11 but uddud Owl the present coubcU "hs U1c most tumultuoui> ond lnepc public body I have ever been w111ociutoo with " HBTeacher Strike On For Jan. 3 Teachers say they plan to go ahead with a threatened J an. 3 strike after negotiations with Huntington Beach Union High School District officials failed to bring a contract settlement . Ira Toibin. president of a group representing the district's 83U. teachers, said the school board's latest offer was rejected Friday after· a dlspute over bind· ing urbUratlon. Toibin also indicated that teachers are still seeking a one- y ear five percent pay hike auaranteed retroactive lo July, 1978. But district Superintendent Jake Abbott said the teachers have been offered a guaranteed Clve percent pay boost only if and when·a state imposed salary freeze is lifted and the raises are ruled legal. Abbott said the main stum· bllng block in the deadlocked con· tract talks is the arbitration of teacher grievances. School board members say binding arbitration would erode local control. School board members want to keep advisory arbitration. But teachers are demanding that an independent third party rule on teacher grievances that do not deal with financial matters in· eluding salary and fringe benent disputes. . . . Abbott s aid d1str1ct n egotiators have decid~d to compromise on two other 1si ues d ea ling with a contra ct emergency clause and teacher assignme nt policies. The con· tract provis;mts will be worded as they were in last year's teacher accord. Toibio said teachers are still gearing up for a strike the day after the ~ r e turn from holiday vacation. No furth er n egotiation sessions are scheduled. College Aide Stricken at Son's Game Saddleback College official Herm Schmidt of Mission Viejo, is in serious condition today at St. J oseph's Hospital in Orange after suffering a heart attack at his son's football game Saturday night. Schmidt, 49. was stricken at Anaheim Stadium just prior to a game where his son. Cralg, led Mission Viejo High School to a CIF crown. Craig is the team's quarterback. • Schmidt, of 26636 Portales Lane, is director of admissions and records at the Mission Viejo campus A spokesman there said today Schmidt wasn't feeling well earlier Saturday, but thought the discomfort was a stomach ache. Schmidt was principal of El Toro High School until his ap· polntment at the college in June. M.4YOR FIGH1S OIL INCREASE NEW YORK <AP) -Mayor Edward Koch was working the crowd on Fifth Avenue, having a good lime with constituents, wh e n som eone asked what measures the city might take to cope with the Increase in oil prices an n o unce d b~ the Organization of Petroleum Ex· porting Countries. "I'm golng to try to use less oil In my salad," the mayor said Sunday. Show Darlened WASIDNGTON <API -The 'audience in a darkened Kennedy Center sang Christmas carols with the orchestra and members ot the AmerkatrBaJlerTtreamr performed impromptu wallies. tangos and chorus line kicks during a power failure Sunday night. Potomac Electric Power Co. otficJals said a mechanical rallure·wtth a breaker at a sub· at.alion cauHd th power out- tage. Shenkman previously served on the Fountuln Valley City Council and on the Hunti"gton Beach Union High ~chool l>is· trict board. · He said today he wlll remain partially active In city ~ffalrs "and wlU fight the hell" out o_f a recent recall drive now geanng up in the city. Shenkman and three other Of· fl cials were n a m ed recall targets recently even though Shenkman announced Oct. 6 that he plaMed on quitting lhe-coun- cil. He said the announcement of the-recall was almost enough to make him change hls mind. ··1 came that close." he said today "I'm a street fighter but I decided not to be selfish. But I a m having withdrawal pains." The council, which appears to be -solidly deadlocked into two camps, has unUl Fe b . 10 to select Shenkman's successor. If officials can't agree on a candidate. a special e lection would be held in May or June. Shenkman's te rm expires In April of 1980. Mayor Ron Pattinson said to· day that he will propose that Shenkman's successor be select- ed from the ranks of those who ran for City Council ln 1976 and 1978 .. Prominent names in that category include former Hunt· ington Beach High School Board President Rali*' Bauer. Plan- ning Commission Chairman Ruth Finley. former planning commissioner Prim Shea and ex-City Council members Al Coen and"l'ed Bartlett. Pattinson said incumbent coun- cil officials may also nominate other candidates. Shenkman said today that the differences on the present City Council appear to be a matter or management principles. He declar ed that council mem- bers should set gener al policies and the city administrator should imple ment them. But he claims that some of· ficials are causing turmoil by trying to play too active a role in day-to-day operations. Shenkman generally has been aligned with Pattinson. Don MacAllister and John Thomas on major Iss ues. The opposing bloc is made up of Mayor Pro Tempore Richard Siebert, Ruth Bailey and Bob Mandie. Police Find Theft Suspect Under -Auto A HoUywood man was being held in Newport Beach jail today on suspicion of burglary after police allegedly round him hid· i.ng under a ,r al the Balboa Bay Club. Stephen Monroe Burdick. 28, is being held in lie u of $25,000 bail, police said. fie is also wanl· ed on a $10,000 burglary warrant from Manhattan Beach, they said. Burdick was arrested Satur- day at about 3:30 a.m. after be· ing reported by a club security guard. Police allegedly fo~nd burglary tools in his possession and a lso said Burdick al first gave them false identification. There were no s igns of a break-in, they said ~Rgogement Told Sheila Brewster Rauch of Villanova. Pa .. and Joseph P. Kennedy JIJ. son of the late Robert F. Kennedy, hav~ announced their engagement. No date has been set for the wedding. Fro111 Pag~ A I OIL .•• plaints about the price rise and said it was '"nothing but an at· te mpt to put the blame on somebody else " It s aid the West's inability to curb mflatlon es what drove the OPEC nations to imoose a "protective" in· crease to try to keep up The Soviets are self-sumc1ent in 011 The 13 ministers decided to put the increase, OPEC's big- gest since early 1974. into effect in stages. 5 percent on Jan I, rais ing the present bas(' price of $12. 70 per 42-gallon barrel to $13 .33 ; 3.8 percent on April I. tn· creasing the price to Sl:l 84 . 2 3 percent on July 1, raising the price to $14 .16. and 2. 7 ptircenl on Oct. 1: pushing the price to $14.54 The $12.70 price had been frozen s ince early 1977. The oil carte l said the increase was necessary to compensate for the erosion of their revenues and holdings caused by worlct mfla tion and by the deprec1at1on of the dollar. the currency 1n which the oil trade is conducted Informed sources said two days of maneuvering an\1 in- tervention by Abu Dhab1"s 1 ulcr cleared the way for the OPEC decis ion. 1'hey said. the host to the OPEC winter meeting. Sheik Zayed bin Sultan, and has oil minister. Mana Said Ota1ba, we re the leading medlatorc; between Saudi Arabia. which wanted to continue the oil·price freeze, and Libya and Iraq. which called publicly for in creases of up to 25 percent O PEC's 52nd m eeting was held in an ornate hall of the Abu Dhabi Hilton. But the real work was done in the delegates' hotel s uites and in the hallways. behind a screen of soldiers and white-robed security guards car rying automatic weapon!>. Lee M. Dort, Stater Meat Chief, Dies Services are scheduled Tues- dar for Lee M. Dort of Corona de Mar. who was director of m e at operations for Stater Brothers super markets for 19 years . He died Saturday at the age of 67. . Mr. Dort was active in the Foolh11l Command . Kn t ~ht s T c m p I a1 of Ca I if or n 1 a in Monrovia , was a 25-year member of the San Bernardino lodge 348 of the Free and Ac· cepted Masons. and belonged to Al Malaikah in Los A_ngcles. Services will l>e held at 2 p m Tuesdci y al P<1c1fic View Chapel In Corona dcl Mar. fonowed by entombment at Pacific View MemonaJ Park. Mr Oort leaves his wife. VoMlla Oort. of Corona del Mar. sont. Lynn Dort of Newport Be a c h a nd Rand y Dort or La gun a Beach. and a ~·ster. Aldene VonderHelen of Redlands. Trailer Fire Loss $8,000 Fire attributed to s faulty electrical outlet t•aused an estimated $8.000 in damage Sun- day to a Newport Beach mobile home. fire department offictab said today The fire reportedly broke out at about 8 a m in a mobile home belonging to Duniel Mulherin at the Ebb Tide Trailer Purk. 1560 Placentia Ave No tnJunes were reported Fire 0Hic1uls estimated lht damage <11 $5.000 to the mobile home and $3.000 to 1tt. contents See our extensive Sp0rt1wear Sweater oollectlon AL'S GARAGE 56 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH (714) 644·7030 from Around-the-World Slztt 8-M-l·XL .,