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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1978-12-24 - Orange Coast Pilotl . 'Gifts for l'ature:- • BJ Sl'_EWE.JID'ORLL Wben thf'ff service 1taUom were torn down to make way for t lhln Beach P a r k • lbo o k ator• owrner Jamee Diiiey looked out hi• 1bop window and mused, "To· day the 111 a &ationa. tomorrow the refineriee.'' The ~mark wa only partly n ~ Jeat. ~au.a Laauna 8eacb•a foremoat envlronmentall1t ' would Uke to aeie tho da,y t.be 1utomobll ~ all lts qly ~ c torl -be«>me leas lmpor-. tant In the llvn ot SouUMm C-allJOfm: . ''It'• • ~Doll...... • dMt~ and .it'• noi a part of lM chain ol Uf e." Dilley rem...u; ualq bit thumb to pack doWft a brown plneb o1 tobeceo ln UM bowl ol hl• pipe. Cart ~ lont rtbbou ot aapbatt. replace paru wtth parklaa tau. bamr:r lood city plannfn1. a"d n Southtrn Caltlomla. It la the only way to tel around. he 1ayt. DUiey'• two decadet of eeo- com mentary. wllUd1m1 and phUQffPhy have won hlm the rupect of m.ny ln tbe Art Colony. Aad be'1 1athend a ftw en.mies a)Oq the way. But aftet' 20 yean ot batWna what DUMy tenn• J>fOlr•mmeCI SUNDAY urban 1pr1wl, amoc ditches ano the demlte ot air ventilators fnlturaJ cenyom>. you're bound to collect both admlrer1 and d.ls· Hntera. The outapok n La1unan bu 11mered toOU&h support from fhe community to receive a pro· clam at.Jon declarlq • day ol his choo1ln1 u "Jim DUiey Day." Th declaration, alaned laat week by M~or Jack McDowell. waa followed by a 1tandln1 ova· lion from dUsens packed in the council chamber1. The IOUDd wu f amlUar. He'd heard the 1ame applause many tJmea over the years a.s guar- •• ~,, Dilley Saluted for 20..year Fight To Pr-e1erve County's Fresh Air, Open Space . ' dlan of L11una'a open space areas. Dlllty bu been aellln1 boob and ecolo1Y ln Lacuna Beach alnce 1t5T Yfheft he arrived in town. set up shoo ln a former barbershOp on f'orest Avenue and huna out his algn. He's In laraer quarters on Cout Hith~ay today. s ur· rounded by thousands or hardcoVfJr volumes par,rbacka. hl1 collle "Patrlck · and a comlnuin1 procession of friends who drop by to chat. The RoeweU. N.M. naUve was 1raduated from Pomooa CoUeee tn 1m, and earned a science of theology decree in 1938 from Harvard University. lie e . ;ttnrl>il~Y4fft pastor to a Methodist church in the city or Del Roy in Fresno County the following year. But be left the ministry ln 1939. re· turning to college to earn his maaters degree and doctorate tn hlstory from UCLA. He became a teaching assls· tant at UCLA and later a history instructor at Stanford and the College of San Mateo. After 16 years behind the podium, DUiey discarded his grade books because of poor health. He moved to Laguna Beach and o~ bis bookstore. which rtmalM a bookworm ·s delJght. "I read as much as J can," the former professor says. But he's particular about hla reading materiaJ. You won't find man)' 45tr_qlggy • books in Dllley'a bookstore. 1 "They can buy that from their witchdoctor," he huffs. And he doesn't 10 ln for a lot or contemporary UterahaR. "A lot of that stuff I wouldn't want to rud." be frowns. "It ls thin and trifle, and deudent in the real sense of the term. "It Is full of incoherent ideas, and now a lot of writers are wandering alter the occult. You get so much of that stuff today." But be likes history books, memoirs, mysteries and books on the environment. In fact, It was ~logical writ- <See ECO·CRVSADElt,Page A3> VOL. 71, NO. 358, 7 SECTIONS, 78 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORN IA SUNDAY, DECEM BER 24, 1978 TWENTY·FIVE CENTS I i ,...__.. .. __ I 1Twas t he Day Before • • • I i Santa and sister Shauna, 7, try to coax a wish list from Jeff Van Matre, 4, of Riverside, top, before the jolly Qld soul motions a reminder to children every- where and wonders how to handle the first time jitters of J ennifer John, 20 months. of Fountain Valley. P.S. Mom and Dad, Travis Pa rry's beard is real. HEARTH-WARMING TALE -The Yule log burning lD your ftreplace tonight may have come from a workshop in Costa Mesa. Its products and happily ·married owners are detailed on Page Cl. HEADING HOME -What do you do with an ape that's just Jot too much spunk for polite society? Send btm back to the Alrlcan Junele where he belongs ... but first you've got to teach him to be a real baboon. Page A9. OTHER CHRISTMAS -As you settle in to celebrate Christmas Eve, learn about the observances in more remote places: an offshore oil rlg, an IJ. Unois prison, and an Alaskan radar post and at the St. Louis 1.oo. STILL SMOLDEalNG Famed Irish actor Pete r O'TooJe, known for the diversity or his roles, lashes out at the conservaU.m or his profess. lon but admits his own life la more tranquil now. Page 86. E""" hlMecl .. Allll 1..11......_ .. ltMert llWI Ct Mlll!Ma a• l1111M11 Cl-4 Mewtet 1"1t Catlf9nNa •• NMMllal "-a• C&e..Wit41 OM• on ... ~ Al c-c......."' ........... cw c,...~ .. ...,._ ..... Oe• N.-.S Al '*II Mll,... CM l!f~I ~ a.1 TllMWt a1·1t l•tifrtef-..t ll·tt Tlll"'-.<11 a• ., • ._,... IN Wt"'"-' a• "~ 16 YMIY_._. Cl ,...,.,, .... ., TVWMll • Bodies Discovered Suspect's Home May Hide 11 More DES PLAINES, Ill. <AP) - Tbe remains of five persons have been found at the suburban home of John Wayne Gacy Jr .• and investigators expeet more lO be uncovered. authorities said Saturday. Assistant State's Attorney Terry Sullivan said three bodies were round Saturday in a 4-foot· high crawl space. On Friday, one body was found buried in the crawl space and another was found burled under a detached garage behind Gacy's one·story ranch-style home, about two miles east or O'Hare Iotema· tional Airport. Stanci.in« outside tbe home on Saturday. Cook County medical Examiner Dr. Robert Steln said tbeN were lndte.UOU that the remains ol more bodies wiU be found, but be did not elaborate. T he remaiDI of four of the five bodies were taken to Stein's of- fice Saturday. Stein said the bones were of young people but further examination was needed to determine their sex. Stein said the two skeletons re- moved Saturday were complete. He added that three of the four bodies which have been re - covered were clothed, although the clothes were disintegrating. The Chicago Tribune has re- ported that it learned from in· vestlgators that Gacy. a convict- ed sex octender. had given police statements that migl\t lead them to as many as 30 more bodies, 16 of them around the home. Des Plaines police Lt. Robert M. Clark said authorities also have "reason to believe that one or two more bodies m ay have been dumped into the Kankakee Ri ver n ear the Kankakee bridge." and dragging opera· lions were conducted. Investigators also searched tbe Des Plaines River southwest of Joliet. Gacy reportedly told Investigators he dumped the body of a boy from a bridge over the river. Gacy was charged Friday with the murder of Robert J . Piest. ts. a Des Plaines youth reported missing since Dec. 11. Police said Gacy was placed under surveillance alter Pleat's mother ft.led a missing person's report and indicated her son m ay h ave been with Gacy around the time he disappeared. On Friday, an official said at a bond hearing that Gacy admitted on Thursday that he had killed Piest. 'The official said personal er- f ects, including identification and wallets, belonging to two missing youths were found in the house. He identified the youths as John Szyc, about 21, a former Des Plaines resident who dlsap- pea red in January 1977, and Gregory GOdzlk , 17. or Chicago's. North Side who has been miss· ing s ince Dec. 12, 1976. Police said they also found rubber sexual devices. chains and mirrors in Gacy's garage. An official said the garage was built over a filled·in swimming pool, and police fear that other bodies may be buried there. Sherifrs Police Chief Edmund Dobbs. who is directing the search, said the entire house would be dis mantled if necessary. He estimated tbat the search of the house, garage and an adjoining shed would take one week. The Tribune reported that a sheriff's investigator, who re- quested bis name be wlthbeld, said Gacy, who sometimes performed a s a clown for children at part.Jes and benefits, told police he strangled some of his victims. "Using bis experience as a clown. be would say. 'Let me show you this trick.' such as how to get out or handcurrs... the <See MORE, Page A2> l 'Christmas City' Edgy . .. BETHLEHEM CAP> - Decorators mounted Cbrislmas lights in Bethlehem Saturday as Israeli troops tightened security to safeguard holiday piJgrims from Arab guerrilla attacks. Soldiers at roadblocks checked cars heading toward this hilltop town where Jesus Christ was born. Military squads patrolled Manger Square. Workmen ignored the soldiers as they put up lights in tbe square outside the 800-year-old Church of the Nativity. They framed with fir boughs a plat· form where 10 choirs will sing to thousands or worshipers on Christmas Eve. Mayor Elias Freij, sending American .Oil Executive Dead in Iran TEHRAN (AP) -An American oil executive was kltled ln a ball of machine gun. fire a s be drove to work Satur- day ln the Iranian city of Ahwaz. In the oortbern city of Mashhad, sources aald ~ fired into an antJ-abab demooatraUoo, ki1llni 29 and wound1q 100. The American executive, Paul Grimm, 56, of Marlborou1b, Conn .• WU the first U.S. cltlzen kJlled in Iran in two years. More tban 1,400 Iranians have been slain in a year of turbulence aimed at toppling Sbah Moham- mad Reza Pahlavi. Doctors at Maabhad hospitals said In teleobooe interviews 29 were klll4Mt"'and 100 were wounded in Mubbad violence. The medical aou.reea did not elaborate oa what eparked the Mubbad shooting, but opposl· tJon aourcea aa.ld it came after troops trled to disperse a de· mon1tratlon at the home of SbUte holy man Ayatullab Sayed Abdullah Shiraz. <SeeGalM, P•1e A2) Decorations, Secmity Up Police on white horses will ac- company Monsignor Giocomo Guiseppe Beltrilli on the five· mile journey. greetings "from the Christmas city of the world." made a special. appeal to Palestinians "who need peace more than any other people." It is feared that t e rrorists of the Palestine Liberation Organization will s trike during the holidays to show their anger at the Israeli· Egyptian peace negotiations. Tourists from throughout the · world have been issued special passes for the Christmas Eve festivities. Choirs from the UnUed States, Belgium, Norway, Sweden. • Spain , South Africa and Bethlehem will perform until the Mass begins. Protestant ceremonies will be held near Shepherds' Field, an olive grove outside Bethlehem where it is believed Christ's birth was first revealed. The Latin Patriarch or Jerusalem will lead a procession today from Jerusalem's Old City to Manger Square. Only a rew hundred Invited , <SeeHOLY. PageA2> Purr·feet GUt Foiu Slwes Home for Yule· A skinny tired, gray cat trekked the long way back to Costa Mesa fast week just in time to be abo~t the nlce~t Christmas present 14·year-old Walter Rev1ea and has father Tom could get . Four Shoes came home. "I GAVE THE CAT away about five months ago to some people who live quite a distance away," the elder Reviea said. The cat "of no particular breed .. bad been part of the family for 12 of its 13 years but Reviea's disabling health problems bad last spring convinced him he could no longer care for the animal. Four Shoes apparently has a forgiving nature. Thursday night, a plainUve "meow" floated weakly through the Reviea's back door. When Revlea open the door to investigate, a scraggly, dirty, determined but home-at-last Four Shoes shot past blm into the house. THE ONCE-FAT CAT looked ln such bad shape, Reviea said, that he immediately took him lo a veterinarian. The animal doc pronounced the tom tired but, in spite of bis long journey and advancing years. fit. And what ls the Award of Four Shoes turning the other whisker, so to speak? "He's home. I'm glad he's back," Revlea saJd. ~, ... .. r J\2 DAIL V PtLOT Suno1y. O.C:.mber 1', tt71 Center Pending_ rauina I • 71-·.w-_,,, ' .. SF Comparison Fauhed for 'Piecemeal Data' A study which compar es Orante ~ty unfavora bly with San f'ranclaco ln terms of erneraeoey care rendered to lrafflc Kdden~ vlt'Um1 ha1 been rejected by Orans• CounLy '1 mtcUcll commu.nlty The Oranc Cou.nty Medical At1oelatlon and the Uo1plt•I CouncU ol Soutil rn Callforrua bave .)oloed (O~s to rrovl<IC' a mol"f d«.alltd atudy o the tartt rendeM! to ltatnc vicUma and the poutblt ne~ for trauma c:entuw ln Oranao County "The earlier atudy whltb ap pears to have crutt'd such coo troversy was but"d on tnadc quate. p6ecemoa1 dat•." com· •tnttd Or Richard Calc5 of Newport Bt-a<'h Or C&lt . an t•merRt>ncy cart' apetlalbt. r.a1d nwmbcri. of the tum ""tuch v.tll nrry out the Dt'W stud) 'A Ill hll\"\' U('(\' ~ to "' corell thlt v.t•r..• not available to Dr. John W~l "All be hMl w re inadequate aulopsv reports and death urtlrttate .. " Or Calc•s '\uld "Our study v. 111 be.-bast'd on the complet• and ol\t>n t'onftdf•nlJUl taff htst«t of the individual vtcUms." Or W t. a at>nt>r 1 surat"On In Orana ... v. as ,101ned In his i.tudy by ti.o mt•mbt'r!\ of lht' San f'ranc1S<"O m~>d1<'al rommuntty ~ tno C"On<'h.ldf'd that many Oranirtt Count> trnff1c v1ct1ms d1~ Dffd.kouh bf'ca~e they did Mt hn~ IC'N .~ to the l)pe of lr•uma C't'Oter that 1s being used coda) lO San fo"'ranrlti co. The West r~port concluded that delays in getting Orange County traffic \1rt1m ~ lo bospllals able to provide specialised catt led to a number ot preventable deaths. It note.d that all inJured vic- tl m s In San Francisco are rushed to a major trauma ~t thal 11 slafrtd around lM c~k wlth a wide va rlety or 1pectalist.1 The UU'M 1ur1eona wbo com· piled tlMt report concluded I.bat bout one third ol lbt Orute County deat.b.l lnvoJvtq dam11 to the brain uf ap naJ cord w.n1 "potenUally p~vtntabJt ·• They aatd th•t two lhJrde Of lh f d alhs that dJd oot ln\IOlve the bra.in ot 1plrual cord alto wen• prt'vent.tble Oy C'.'OOtrUt, they 1a1d, onJy one or t.M San Prand•CO pa llenu anat)'U'd wu a potenU&Jly preH'ntable d ath Or CaJet IU'elMd Uull "'1 ftw mt·m~ra 0( Oran&• Coun ty i. medical ·communJt1 would oppose U't prind~ ol trauma <'t'nlt•r treatment for ltafftc vie· 11m1 ··But ~ h.ave t.o huve the ktod of rueful, t 1pon1lbl 1tudy th t 11 needed before action ol that klnd could M taken," ht said "We have to dttermlnt ll i.ut>h en approach ll ftaalb&e LD our co\U\t)' and we have to bear 1n mind that trauma ccntera art verv. vt•ry 4'XJ>41nalve " Bob H\'lllg, ...,Kl11tunl director or Orang.-C'ounty'11 1tmer1ency M t'thr 111 SerVl<'l'lS otnre, •8roL'ti that th•• f'o.-.t of provldlnj lhti t} pt• of truuma renter utlll1ed by Sun Fr:uwl:tco 11 a htctor In Uus study. "But we'll 1et thtim," h<r 111&!d "It's tnt•v11uble Th~y'll pro bably bt> built In to lll•Unai hospitals in key locations In t~ rounty " Heilig thought the UC Irvine Medical Center was an obvloua choice for a trauma center. "Then we could have Mlaak>n Commuruty Hospital (Mlaalon Viejo> as a center ror the south, Anaheim Memorial serving lhe Crash Probed Sicilian Airport Safety Suspect PALERMO (AP> -The death of 108 persons in an Alilalia jetliner crash off the Sicilian c oast early Satur da y has sparked a controversy over the safety precautions at P alermo's airport, scene or two major crashes in six years. Baby Dead After Fight An Anaheim man was booked on suspicion of murder Saturday alter a violent eetrly morrung quarrel with his e ight month· pr~gnant wife, Anaheim fJOhce said. Marilyn Fyda, 28, of 517 N. Sunkist St., was listed in critical condition at Martin Luther Hospital Medical Center follow· ing a Caesarean section delivery of a stillborn male. police said. The woman's husband , John William Fyda. 32, was being held in the city Jail in lieu or $100,000 ball. Police said Mrs. F yda was either hit or kicked in the stomach during the 6 a.m. fight with her husband. Authorities said only 21 or the 129 persons aboard the DC·9 sur· vived when it plunged Into the T y rhennian Sea about three miles sbort of the runway. Most of the 124 pauenfets on the special Rome.Pa ermo· Cataia flight were Sic1Uans re- turning home for Christmas from jobs in northern Italy and a broad, Alit.alia said. An airline s pokesman in Montreal said there were no U.S. or Canadian citizens on board. By late Saturday, 28 bodies had ~n plucked from the Icy waters, the bodies of 16 men. 11 women and one 9-month-old child. officials said. The cause of the crash was not known, and survivors s aid nothing seemed to be wrong with the aircraft until it hit the sea at 12:40 a.m. and sank. Two fishing boats nearby rescued all the sur· vivors. In 1972 an AJitalia DC·8, alao attempting to land in darkness, crashed near the Punta Rais! Airport. killing a ll 115 passengers aboard. Alitalia. local law officials and the national governme nt or- d ~ r.e .d separate pr obes as cnt1c1s m of the airport mounted. north ~ and a llunUnfl<>n 8Hch bolptt.al provldlDI for the trt1tm• ol w .. t '1ounty vk· Uma." ht N kl. HtlUI laid an avenf e ot 1lx vlcllma a day are wlo1 cared for In 0ran&4 COunty under a 1y1t1m whlcb c•U.t for the vie· llm '1 tran1port1llon to tht' netrt'tl 1uJU1ble b0trltal alter on the·1ceo• trea. ment by paramdn. Htllll dMcrlbed the West re· port ae "Improper " Uc aald Weat and h is ooll eaau u an1ly1od "• •mall number of patlenta and thcly used autopsy d1l1 lh•t Wlll, frunkly, qu . Uon•ble,'' Th• W l 1tudy lnvolved 90 pa. t&.cau from Otua County and • from Ian P'rancll~ who died after amval at hoapltala tonow. tn1 aulomobUe acold1 nu . The Orana• County de>attts oc· curred ta m• a.nd the ~un Fran 3 dtatha ln 11>74 and 1975 ll\Nt •ur1ton11 Ntamtncd <'frtUh:at•• and auto91y repone and fOnehacled that 11 or tht IO Or1n11 County dnths lhal wtlf"" not duu lo brain or 1pln1tl oord h\jury wcrti "chi.erly pr v"ntahle " Nine ot the 11 were 1econdary lo homorrhAM•' "The muflnltude or lhu lr\Jury wu 11uch that sur· (llllaJ l'(>ntrol of hemorrhage MhouJd hayu bt.len 110salble," the rttpt>t1 Hid AMlhtr 11 or the 30 cases wtiro JtKIMNi potentially preven lMblu MOtlt o( the vicUms had rombll'M."d chest and abdominal lnJurlee. In eight, bleeding was the caute ot death. Only 12 of the 60 Orange Coun· ty paUenll whose deaths were due to buin or splnal column ln· Jury received neurosurgery. the report states. By contrast, il points out, SS of the 76 San Francisco patients with brain injuries underwent neurosurgery. The report stales that "vtgor ous r esuscitative at · tempts and aggressive surgical intervention" probably could have saved 73 percent of the Orange County deaths not due to brain inj~ The ma rit of the Orange County eat~s occurred in persons between the ages of 10 and 40 years. In San Francisco, the majority of deaths occurred in patieatl over SO. And lbe re- port notes that lbe Orange Coun- ty patients were not as severely injured a s many or the San Franctaco palienta. - "And that's another point." Heilig said. "The new study will be based on much more up lo date data and will be examining Man Killed Repairing Car A Fullerton man suffered fatal Injuries Saturday when his car fell on him while he was working under it in his garage, police s aid. Howard Vines, 59, of 1530 Kingham Way. was found dead by his wile about 4:45 p.m .. after she returned home from shop- ping, police said. The car had been elevated by a s mall ramp and a jack. police said, but muat have bun jarred loose somehow while Vines was working. ., ........... CX>0K COUNTY EVIDENCE INVESTIOATORS REMOVE REMAINS FROM QACV HOME I ,, ......... .41 MORE VICTIMS FEARED HIDDEN. • • new1paper quoted the tn- veaU1ator u saying. "Then he would say, 'Now 'let me show )'OU tbls trick.' and get behind hi• vtctJm and str1111le him with a rope." The newspaper said In· ve1U1aton report~ that Gacy told police 18 bodies could be found bw1ed In the crawl apace beneath hi• home and more could be found In other toca- tiona. Efforts to confirm the new1paper report were unauc· ceaarut Saturday. . I . ..... -.. Autbof'tt$a aahJ Gacy, twice divorced and llvtn1 alone, was eoovlcted ln Iowa ln May 1988 ot sodom y \Dd •entenced to to yean In prlaon. He was paroled ln 1971 said Cook County Auls· tant State's Attorney Terry SWllvan. . , ' . ~ .. • a mucb ,,..atu number of vie· tima." II tho study leads to a declalon to eet1bUsh trauma ~nten In Orange County, Helli& said, It will mean Jhat the selected ho1plta.la wiU have l.O provide a coaUy trauma center with a zc. hour stair that locludea a au.r- uo n. anaesthetist and full operatlna room crew. "That's bi1 money," Heilig said "All the more niuon ror these people to study this lasue in deplh And glve us some com- prehensive data we can look aL" Mission Community Hoeptlal asa11tant administrator Eva Marth aaid t.he trauma center propoul was ramltlar lo her facility and that the hospital had been considered a candidate for conatructlon of such an addition. "No deciak>n has been made at Lhla hospital." she said. "We wo uld .have t o run a cost nnalys1s and. of cour1e, the trustees wlU want to co over aucb a propoeal In depth. ''But lhe reaction here would probably be favorable." she said. "Certainly. the medical st.alt ls all for ll and they aee lt as a valuable addition lo our raclllty." But It will take several months for the probers selected by the medtcal community to complete a study lhal could mean the sav· Ing of lives that are. the Weal re- port claims. now being lost because or the dela in getting l r a ff i c a c cl d &n v i c ti m s speclallud t.reatmen "The delay Is wo bwhile," Dr. Cales said. "We have to know what we face and what. If anything. we have loet under u.e present system of medical can for traffic victims," be aaid. "Certai.nly, we care," be said. "That la why we are partlcipat· Ing In such a study •• E',.._P~Al HOLY ••• guests will attend the midnight Mass by Monsignor Bellritti in St. Catherine's Baslllca, but the ceremony will be televised In· t e rnationally. The c rowd in Manger Square will be able to watch the Masi orrn· glarit screen attached to an outside wall or Bethlehem's police sta- tion. Al the end of the Mass, the patriarch will carry a wooden e((lgy of the infant Jesus from the basilica to the grotto or the nativity. There he will place It on a silver star bearing the Inscrip- tion "Hio de Ver1lne Marla Jesus Criatus natus est" -Here Jesus Christ was born of the Virgin Mary. F,....P.,,eAJ GRIMM ••• An estimated 10,000 Iranian postal workers went on strike late Saturday and there were street demonstrations by stu· dents ln Tehran. A government source reported antl·ahah dis· turbancea ln Kerman, Yezd1 Shirai, llfaban. Ahwu ana A mertcan o fflclals aald Grimm wu riddled by bullets as he drove to work alone about 7 a .m . An unldentllled Iranian oll of· flclal wu killed about the same time in Abwu, aut.boritlea said, but they could nol 1•1 It the cues were related. Siretas and Santa • • • While firemen created u ruckuR with sirens. Santa passed out goodies to children ut the First Methodist Omrc h in Huntington Beach. But little Miss Murret I Doreen Elekes. 21'4.I. below I sat on her luff e l I sidewalk >. ignoring even lhe puppets tha t helped amuse the children of 14 needy fumillcs who shared the fun Satur- day. SALT Talks Stalled By Mystery Snags BRUSSELS <AP> -U .S. and Soviet negotiators broke orr the strategic arms limitation lalb In Geneva Saturday without an expected agreem e nt and Secretary of State Cyrus R. Vance tutned his attention here to the stalled Mideast peace talks. Both Vance and Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gromyko said In Geneva alter the talks ended they sun hoped to complete a new SALT agree. ment "ln the nearest possible future." They gave no details or the disagreements which still stand in the way of a treaty. Failure to reach an arms ac· cord in Switzerland wu caused by an unexpected snag that de· veloped Saturday mornina alter the two sides ~ad nearly com· pleted their work Friday nl&ht. In a brier statement at the a irport after arriving In Brussels from Geneva. Vance spoke only of Ilia planned meet· lngs here on the Mideast with Israeli Foreign Mlnlster Moshe Dayan and Egyptian Prime Minister Mustafa KhalU. l n a Joint statem e nt In Geneva, Vance and Gromyko s aid they had "essentially reached agreement on most of the questions on which dlsagrt'e· ment had exlsted ... We agreed ln principle on a m~tll'll of the head of the t~ ~ states. The ques· Uon Qt Umlna la ~~ be a subject ----...........,...- for careful consideration by both sides." Asked how he would describe the Issues left, Gromyko s.aid, "Some are important. Some are not. They must be resolved before there can be a summit." SUNDAY DAILY. PILOT ,,,_,, Ot•,....( .. \I 0,..1, P1tot wt th wtu<" t'\t8m-- ~ ·,,.~~ .. ,,~,, ..... ,,,,.~°"41ft4P CN\1 ~ublt~(~• .,_M,•t~H,l..,,.,.ff• ~'"""·· ~" ,,...,.~ J:11d•f tOf' C•l41 #ifW #llt .. llll'PO'f (tirHr(ft U...-if11"tqf~ fl.t'..._trl f:OtlrtM tflf'V•fl .. IN 1fW' l.~ .. ,.~( ... Sovtf\(OA" A \tftOlr •t'O~l f'O+ltOf' •\ CMID'l"-""9 Mtwro.,. .. ~ WN.tio n. Gr•n<+~t OVfth\f'-•"11 0•~1 ,, •'QI) Wf.\1 .... \Hwt (~f• N f"W ( •lllOf'f\i •• ,._,. .. ... "'""'""' Pttt\•Ck"ll •'"1 P11tJ11Y\t • JHll a (.,..-.,., V•tf>P•~"°""'•~r.--• ~M,.,,,.O', '"·~·\ t\•011 t f!1tv• Tl••"'•'" M-,....,~t110t"4 f OH"'' Cet"•IM...-. ,_ .. , .. ,., OfflCH t.Mt•AM\A l)Ot/tle~t~y\lre~I ~V""tiMffil't lt .. t,,l~V''\Hfft H~lf'Wlfo-lf8'r•cl't tlt ltfW..,..,."'°'1te¥4•d Tel419h0ne 17141642-4321 Cl .. ,ltled Adnnltlnff42·M71 .. , ..,,, ~.,, c •f'W'l'"fe 4tf.eto0 t '°"" ~· ~"""'• (OW'W•C"°""""""~'".'\ t'O·t220 ' DAILY PILOT Brush ,~ ------.!.lot Christ~as Accident Diverts Talent Byl 8 AHELM Ot -.,..,, "*" "-" Durln, tho dry, swelter1n1 1ummer of un. Dodier baseball IUJ' St rv Ga_rvey waa suffering "'llat h deacribea aa lhe wont "slump" of hJs ureer One day ht-fore • 11m , the famous .. Mr Nl Guy" f\nl b19t"man II~ to 10 up to lhe atanda lo mt-et an a Yid fan Awaiting ttim ln a box at wat a 13 year old atrl Her race. aglow with happin at mtttmc Garvey, was framf'd by loo• stral&ht blonde batr that fell down ovt"r h"r should rs and covered the t o p ot h r wheelrtuu r Garvey air ady kn~w Ann .. Annie" Ruth ot Palo Vt-~. hud b~ n 11 quadrlplt-a\c Slllee age frve: and thut ~h• had at tended alm0tt ull the l>oda~r home games that sta!ton lie chatkd for 11 few manutes. promising he would ~t·t u 'l·ouJ>lt' of hits" for her. Annie recwls worrying a b&l after Garvey lef\. "lt'S an easy thing to say, but not so easy to do... she says or hu; promise She didn't want him to feel bad if he didn't deliver The outcome was quite the op· posite. "It was probably the finest day of my career during a reg· ularseason. ··ht· s<J)"S H e hit three doubles. two home nms · one a grand slam, and set about "four or fi ve" team and league r ecords. Garvey has called Annie his "good luck charm" ever since. That day sealed a friendship based not onJy on mutual ad- miration. but also on an unusual depth of understanding between two people, because chances are more than good that ir Annie had not suffered her crippling faU nine years ago, she would have been every bit the athletic champion Garvey is. Instead ~t age 14, Annie is an accomplished artist. Reproduc- tions of her oil paintings adorn Ann Ruth greeting cards, chief SPUNKY ARTIST Ann Ruth product of a company she set up this year. And one of her most beauUful. paintings appears on the cover of Orange County lllustrated's December issue. Inside is a tribute to the young artist by Newport Beach builder and poet T Duncan Stewart. Anni e's extraordinary creative energ y, those close to her say, is a re-channeling of her exceptional athletic ablliUes, which characterize her physical· ly active family. Her father "lettered" in three college varsity sports and is an ex-college coach; mother holds the women's single's tennis title at a local club; an older brother is a nationally-ranked water skier , and another brother and s ister also excel In several sports. "Annie was the best athrete by far,'' father Craig Ruth s ays. She learned to swim earlier than her brothers and sisters. She was water·skiing a t 4, Tearfu] 011ster Khrushchev 'Shocked,' Cried MOSCOW <AP) -Nikita S. Khrushchev was "in shock" the first weeks after his 1964 ouster as premier of the Soviet Union, sitting motionless in a chair for hours and unable to hold back his tears. That is the picture or the oust· ed leader in forced retirement, according to a remarkably de- tailed, 7 ,000-word article written by dissident Ma r xist historian Roy Medvedev and circulated in the underground here. Entitled "Dictat or on a Pension,·• the essay is said to ••w1,ot10to ~NEDFORLOSTPOWER Nlklta Khrushchev have been assembled from in· terviews with Khrushchev's im· mediate family and his few frie nds, some or whom ap- parently volunteered informa· lion. "Khrushchev never again thoueht of returning to power," the article saJd. "But he con· tinued to pine after it, indignant at his recent assistants, many of whom were promoted to leading posts." One was Leonid I . Brezhnev, then Presidium chairman, who r e placed Khrushchev as the supreme Soviet leader. Med- vedev's essay contains the first public criticism of Brezhnev by Khrushchev, whose memoirs published in the West left off after his ouster: He died In 1971. In other revela tions. Med- vedev wrote that Khrushchev: -Opposed the 1968 Soviet in· vasion of Czechoslovakia, re· portedly calling It "a very big mistake." He was quo\ed as say· Ing: "It could have been done somehow differently.'' -Listened to the Voice of America, BBC and other foreign radio stations for news from abroad despite bJs own orders• while premier to jam Western broadcasts. -Disapproved or the trials or two dissident writers, Andrei Sinyavsky and Yuli Daniel in the mid·1960s and even "spoke with sympathy" of prominent human rights activist An"rei D Sakharov. -Never regretted his decision to allow Alexander Solzhenitsyn's "One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich" to be published here. although he felt uncomfortable with the Soviet author·s later works . Med vedev, who with his biologist -brother wrote an anlysis or Khrushchev's 11 years as premier that was published in the West, gave this account or how Khrushch ev fe ll from power: On Oct. 12, 1964, when three Soviet cosmonauts began a dar- ing space mission, Khrushchev "in a joyful excitement did not notice that all the phones in his residence had been cul off and any communication with the out- sid e world had been inter- r upted." The following day, the COS· monauts asked to s peak t o Khrushchev, who was then vaca· tioning at his dacha on the Black Sea. Instead, Brezhnev got on the telephone to congratut,ate the spacemen. "Asked about Khrushchev, Brezhnev at first did not answer. But then after a silence, he saJd: "ghrushchev is in the air." That same day, Khrushchev rushed to Moscow to attend the first meeting or the ruling Presidium (now the Politburo> called by the Communist Party leaders without his.knowledge or consent. At the unpreced ented con· ference where Khrushchev was voted out. he "frantically and rudely fought against all hl.s ac· cusers." But, realizing bis battle was Jost, be endured the "num· erous hostile remarks from the audience" in complete silence. Dethroned, Khrushchev im· mediately went to his dacha re- sidence near Moscow where his close relatives were gathered, "Medvedev wrote. "The first weeks or his retire· m e nt, Khrus hc hev was ln shocki" the article said. He was "at a oss and did not bide lt. "The recent all-mighty die· tator would slt moUonless ln a chair. He could not hold tears back. When in one of tbe Mo scow sc hools wher e Khrushchev's grandson studied, the principal asked him out of c uriosity, 'Whal ls Nikita Sergeyevich dotna now?' The boy answered, 'Granddaddy ls crying all the Ume. "' M e dvede v ex plaine d Khtusbchev's e motional col· lapse as being most natural for someone who so long held the re· igos of power. I and at 3 was enrolled tn t1 tt nnla clua w1th 'l'tacy Auat.ln, coached by Vic: Braden, who •c· cordln1 to Ruth, ducr1bed An· nle H the "belt ot the bunch." But, ln 1988. the brtaht athletic promlM came to an abrup\ hall lhree day• ~fore Cbr iatmas. Looklns back. Annie's father aay1 her life seemed "fated." Al 2, •h• WU ris hed Un• l'On1dous from the bottom of a awlmmlnc pool and revtved by mouth-to-mouth reau1cltation. At 4, the family home cau&bt flre and AMie wu ltapped ln an upstairs bedroom. Her mother arrlvtd home just ln Ume. to re- vive hM aaain Tb" ll&l\c blow came to Annie a year later. She tagged along one day when her mother took an older brother and sister to a gymnastics class at the local YMCA. • As the two tumbled with the cla11. a restless Annie watched from the sidelines and began \0 imitate the other youngsters. When she tried a somersault from a nearby balance beam, she failed to tuck her head pro- perly. Her neck broke as she hit the noor and the irreversible damage was done. For the next nine months, An· nle was hospitalized. her sur- vival critical. Even if she lived, doctors said, she would be confined to an iron lung. Breathing on he r own would be "medically impossi· ble.·· Recounting those months, Ruth describes bow Annie's amazing re<:overy was a family and friends affair. a.11y,....., ........ From the beginning Ruth and his wile Marion decided to pro- tect Annie from negative at- titudes whll e s he was hos pitalized. One or the other parent stayed with her day and night. ANNIE'S COMPANION TERI GENTRY, DOG, DUKE, GIVE ADVICE ON PAINTING At times, Ruth says, doctors and nurses choosing to discuss the glooany diagnosis within An· nle's he aring were almos t forcibly removed from her room . When the critical pe riod passed and Annie came home, the family continued its efforts. With the help of friends, the Ruths spent long, often seeming- ly unrewarding hours teaching Annie to breathe, to do the im· possible. W ith in months. Annie responded. Finally only her F ..... PageAJ nights were spent inside the iron lung. Annie ca n n ever t a ke breathing for granted as most <SeeANNIE.PageAti ECO.CRUSADER BADGERS OFHCIALS. .. • KEY ENVIRONMENTALIST Jim Diiiey lngs that sparked his interest in town planning, which in tum in· itialed bis concept of the L-.iuna Greenbelt, Inc. -today a 1,00&-member organization bent on preserving the open space surrounding Laguna Beach. Dilley was one of the founders of the Laguna Greenbelt, and served as its president from 1970 untll 1976. He suffered a heart attack in July 1977, and has become less active in the group as a result. But he's stUI willing to make his opinions known to anyone who cares to drop b y the bookstore. "When I moved here the road * * * was open clear down to Dana Point," he recalls. "There was no Lei.sure World, no Mission Viejo or Laguna Niguel, and San Juan Capistrano was just a mis· sion crossroad. "We had our towns then, be fore the big corporations zoomed in here with pro· grammed sprawl and dictates for our lifestyles.•• Dilley blames large deve~ ment firms for the decline of town Identity. "They don't believe in towns." he says. "Look at Ross moor. They said they were building a leisllre community for the elder- ly, but they got carried away * * * Why Not Victory Week? He's the father of the Laguna Greenbelt, but when the town tried to honor him with ttis own day. environmentalist Jim Dilley suggested a victory week instead,· to be celebrated in the 10.000 acres of open space comprising the green- belt. "It could be a grand week or celebrating. justly deserved by us all," the bespectacled bookstore owner told Laguna councilmen last week. And what could be more fitting than to hold a village party ln the green canyons surround· ing Laguna Beach-the pristine countryside guarded like a mother hen by Dilley and his eco-group for more than a decade. "It could be a grand town jolly-up," the 66- year·old Dilley said, suggesting the council con· sider late spring for the outdoor happening. That date would just about coincide with the deadline for a final $5.4 million payment by the city to a developer for the purchase of 522 acres in the greenbelt once destined ror homes. If the city comes up wfth that final pay. ment, and Dilley believes it will, the land will be reserved for recreational use and open space-not the urban sprawl that Dilley claims wipes out town identity. • The wedge.shaped piece of land purchased by the city for $6.75 million, is called Sycamore Hills. It was the subject of years of battling between Laguna Beach citizens and Rancho Palos Verdes Corp., owners of the land. Rancho. along with Newport Investments, planned to build more than 2,000 homes in the rolllng hills between Laguna Canyon and El Toro roads. But a stubborn City Council fought that ef- fort, attempting to change the zoning of the land to prohibit all but about 150 units. That action spurred a nurry of lawsuits aimed at the city, the council, DiUey and a handful of Laguna's more vocal citizenry. More than s:n million in lawsuits were filed in 1974, charging the city and Dilley's Laguna Greenbelt,. Inc. witJ> conspiracy to pre vent Rancho fn>m making reasonable use of it.s land. The baWing ended earlier this year when the new City Council announced a settlement bad been reached with Rancho. The city would pay $6.75 million for the Jand. Closing estrow on Sycamore Hills next summer would be a major victory for Dilley and more than 1,000 Laguna Greenbelt mem- bers &h.rougbout the COWlty. 12 Leads m CHP Case WOODLAND <AP> -Police were checking .. about a dozen .. leads Saturday in the search fot" the killer of two highway patrolmen, found shot by their patrol car bes ide a foggy freeway. San Rafael police sald the kUler was believed to be a dark, buahy·baked man who. along with a ll&h.t -balred woman, robbed a girt bltcbbiter in San Rafael 'lbunday night. "We're work.lnc on that lead and about a doU!D others,'' said Sft. Bart SlmJ)IOD of the YoJo County Sberlff'1 Office, which is tn c:har1e of the lnveau1auon in· to the patrol death.I. Pat rolmen Roy Bl~ber, SO, and Wllliam Mike Freeman, 3$, were alain about 3:50 •·T: Frt· day on lnt.ttstate S> Just .f!tlll of . pq:r Al • • Sacramento. A YoloCountydepu. ty sheriff patrolltng ln h is cruiser heard the abota but by .. the time he reached the highway patrol car, the killer bad Oed. At the scene, officers found a temporary driver's license wblch bad been llaued Thursday in Vallejo to Anthony Peter Carlo, or Carbo, described as 23 years old, ~foot-7, 170 pounds, brown b.alr and eyes. dark CGm· plexton. The name was not clear, and invesUgators aaJd it could be phony. Police aaid the man 1uspected ol the crime ln San Rafael. 83 miles W9lt ol Sacramento. used the name Anthony. One report Hld a motorist who pUMd the. blfhway patrol car reported aee na a dark. buaby·ha).red m a n ~1lklng . . .... from a light-colored, old ea· model sub-compact car which the officers bad apparently stopped. A police ~cast said there may have been a woman ln the car. The San Ratael robbery vie· tlm said the couple who robbed her bad a late model Chevrolet Camero. Inveattgators were aJao check· inJ tbe posslbUlty that the killers of tbe patrolmen bad slain and robbed a couple who managed a motel in Reno, 110 mlles east of Sacramento. The vicllms, Wllllam and Irene Hemryt both as. were bot.b abot ln the nead ln the Silver Dollar Motel Lode•. 'nley wen found Friday morn\ng, but police belie-ve they we..-killed Thursday nlibL ~ ____ ..... __ 9 2 s wllh the high profits of sprawr and didn't leave one bit of open space for leisutt." And planned communities. s uch as the City of Irvine also come under DiUey's withering attack. "J lbougbt they were going to build a town, but where is it,'' be asks. "You see broad boulevards and lots of industry that Is drain· ing Los Angeles, but where is the town? .. Dilley approves of the green s pace between housing tracts in Irvine, but he says the sense of community is lost. "The trees and mini·parkways ln Irvine are just a buffer for the automobile," he shrugs . He says the answer to urban sprawl and the lack or town identity lies in large greenbelt a reas-open s pace-between cities. And he says, it's not too late to change things even in urbanized Soutt>em California. "London is doing it," he points out. "When they redevelop an in· ner borough. they open up green wed ges, as t hey call them. between boroughs. a nd that restores their original identity." But the automobile remains Dilley's pet poJJution peeve. He te rms it ''the Monster," and says it's at the crux of society's constant pressure for more urba n sprawl. His solution, at least for Laguna Beach, is vlewed by some as rather radical. "Laguna should place a c:eil· Ing on the number of cars al· lowed ln town," he says. And the r e s hould be a ban of a utomobiles in the downtown section of Laguna. "More than l ,000 towns in Europe exclude the automobile from their central areas," Dilley says. "And several J:uropean cities have successfully placed a ceil· ing o n the numb er of automobiles allowed in town, us· lng the clty Ucen.aing power to maintain that ceiling." That would lead the way toward lncreased use of transit systems. he theorizes. In fact, Dllley's years.long haranguing at council meetings over tratnc problems and bis constant endorsement of mass transportation systems, en· couraged city fathers to ln.stftute a transit system in Laguna Beach. It remains today the only city. operated transit program in Oran1e County. But there are still all those cart ow. on Coast Highway. Which ts discouraging to Laguna's mustachioed environ· mental watchdog. "l don't expect changes over· nl•bt," be says, watching cars full or Christmas packages backed up to Forest Avenue on the hl1hway. .. After all.'' Dilley chuckles, "It toot aJl tbeee yea111 to 1et thin&• this meeNit up." ' ..- .... ----mm·= I CC ea . I .... 4 DAILY Pt.LOT Weekly review of Orsngo Coast hlghllghttl OeltT""' ................... C1ear Air And Fieecy Cloud• Over Newport Gray skies clurcd up Tuesd•y 11nd t'ht'tlr.d m1U\)' Orange County residents an.er a thrc4'·dity torm thllt dumped almost two Inches of rain in lbla arn. The rainfall brings the season's total to 5.78 lncbe!I, 2.7~ Inch mor~ than the 3.01 Inches recorded by this tlma last yoar. Sa n Clem ente Slide rupture threatens homes While rain was s till falling Monday afternoon . land on the 15th fairway of a San Clemente golf course abruptly dropped so to 60 feet. directly adjacent to the Shorecllff Mobile Country Club. After investigating, officials advised evacuation of eight of the mobile home park's residences lo· cat.ed near t he 800-foot, horseshoe patterned fissure. A geologist who earlier had inspected the area after small cracks appeared on the fairway, said cause or the slide was water saturation in the 20-root to 40-foot depth level. Heavy watering of the course, not recent rains, was the cause, the geologist said, adding that the fissure is located on etn ancient land.slide area that last moved 5.000 to 20,000 years ago. More "m-3or movements" were said to be un- likely. liiji,Ij Who's a lousy mayor? l rv1nt> Mu yor Bill VardouUs was reportedly spe<>chless Tuesday when Councilwoman Mary Ann Galdo a ssaulted his posUton. · · 1 think you ou~ht to step down. Biil. I think you·re a lousy mayor." Mrs. Ga1do said, accord mi? to those attending the closed session. The follow· mg day. reacting to the cound lwom an's sugges· lion. Vardonlis said. "We IH'l'l' discu:.SlnA the JOb performanre of the cit y man:1i:ier when she blurted that out. My fePhng was. what dOC's that have to do Wllh the pnce or peas in L1unu." Laquncl Beach VAAOOULl8 Rotten disposition ignored Somc.'fmte s t1Jfe " costly cocuwo, with a reputation for hav1nJ( 1t "loua.y d11J)!Jiltlon" frum h 11 JK>rch at the Laguna Btwt·h P<>t Sh<1p lHl weekf>nd ln 1pltt! of his rotten at- titude•. Tangerine•, 11 whltR f Pt1lht!rf'd fowl with an orange ert>•t. 111 vol~ 11t 12.~JO. Polle_, uld lhe thieves pried open the buck door V> g••t th .. hlrd, u•ln& the aame means as buralur8 of a month l~for., wht> 1r•bbt.td Duke, 1 $2,500 blueund &old mucuw NATIONAL / INTERNATIONAL I WEATHER Boy's Present llACINI. Wlt. <AP> -1'bli Ct\rhlm11. Shawn Bonen· t..rttr'• family wlll open lbe 1lfta lbe JO.ytar.old boy 1ot for them after dtctdln1 a1ain1t furlhtr treallMftl to proton• h1t Ill• II• htMI decided hi• ''days don't ('()Uftt unleu they're 1ood d1y1." Shawn, who died of a rare form of t'an«r lut Su.nctay, had dl1tu1Hd hit decltlO(' In a tape· rttorckid Mllk>n wttb the Rev. Michard Ollofl of the Ftrat Bap. l11t Chw-th ln R•cloe. 11MO• AND DAD etmt ln. 1nd the docton came In," Hhawn tol,.cl Olton. "They sald It probably wouldn't work, and Ult did work, lt would atop worklna aooner or lal r and I would die. Or I could Jual 80 otC treatment, you know. and Just, ~ou know. tll•Y Q\ horn and j1.11l die. "And I detlded nol to take the ANNIE ••• (FtomPageA3) l*>l•le dO, and phyalcal helpless· nt'taa \• part ol ~r dally rouUne. !\urh UmltaUon.a are naturally frlahumlna and mtahl cause many to cautiously withdraw In- to " ht'nvUy-protected environ· mttnl. Uut not AM.le, Ruth says. She llvH every day chin out and lull at~am ahead. Her Ute ls as full os most any teen-ager's. SHE LOVES speed, anything that goes fast -amusement par Ii rides and cars -and has asked berfatherto "rev up" her electric wheelchair. She loves to gamble. frequent· ly plays poker with her parents. and loves to go to Las Vegas and play the slot machines . She likes to play soccer. doing so by manipulating her wheelchair, and has played in a league. She is a member of the Na· tional Charity League, one or her favorite activities. Local chapter members often visit and help residents of convalescent homes, she says. And. ln the ninth grade at Miraleste High School, she is a student council officer, and car· ries a full load of classes. A recent and "favorite" ac· quaintance is Dick Van Patten, star or the TV sbow "Eight Is Enough.'' The two met at a celebrity tennis tournament. Van Patt.en made sure Annie was the cent.er of attention, and soon after invited her to accom· pany hlm to another celebrity event. The natural curiOlily of people meeting Annie ls "how does she do it?'· Where is the defeatism and de pression that comes naturally tb many with much smaller problems? RECENTLY A psychologist in pursuit or answers to such ques· tlom interviewed Annie as a s ub· fa chapter in a book now be· written on "gutsy" people. uled for other chapters are s uch folks as Jonas Salk. Picasso's wife, and Dinah Shore. But, Annie isn't much help in discovering the "secret" of what to her appears to come natural· ly. She seems a bit puzzled by the questions. When pressed to answer, she gives the credit t-0 friends, family and church. What la her reaction to so many people thin.king she's so terrific? "l don't know, I never . "her voice trails off as she thinks about the question then re· aumes. "I think it's really nlce when people say that." treatmfnt. because I had been throu1h all that 8"d it was hard.' And it wouldn't 1uarantet that I would Uve." 8onenber1er aald the family. • whleh indudea Shawn's two brothert, Chad. ~. and Troy, 8, traveled to Florida, visiting Dis· ney World. Busch Gardens and Sea World thlt year. They at· tended a Milwaukee Bucks pro b11ketball game and Shawn met the players. The day before be dled, he at· tended a Christmas party sponsored by Living One Day at a T i me, an organization for families of children with cancer, but he had grown nearly too weak to speak and became easi· ly ~lnded. THE BONENBERGERS say the presents under their Christmas tree will be opened on Christmas Day or Christmas Eve. "They're going to open their gifts from Shawn just like they're from anyone else." said Mrs. Bonenberger's sister, ~usan Ross of St. Paul, Minn. Japanese Ho Ho Ho, GI Legacy TOKYO (AP> -Mos t Japanese are Buddhists, but they do a lot of celebrating at Ctiristmas and they aren't frugal. Some spend more than· S400 for a bottle or Scotch to add a little glow to the holiday they call "Kuri-su-masu." "WE JAPANES E are Christmas Christians." said Yuklo Nomura, interviewed while buying a $233 radio· controlled toy car for bis 11· year-old son. Nomura said be celebrates the holiday "because it's an excuse to eat and drink." The Japanese got their first taste of Christmas durina the postwar occupation of U.S . troops . Nearly anything American was considered rashionable then and Japanese businessmen saw the profits to be made. Christmas coincides with the traditional year-end gilt giving and employee bonus season in Japan. Some typical gifts : gift. wrapped boxes of fruit (rive cans> for $52 ; one salmon in a wooden box, $78, and "sukochi" -&otch Whisky. One brand costs $415. WHIPPED CEEAM cakes with "Merry Christmas" written across the top in English are a must for children. The cakes, complete with miniature "Santa Ojl&an" -that's Santa Claus - cost about $7.70 each. "Christmas is fun and there's no harm but at New Year's there is a deep spiritual feeling for us," said ooe Japanese woman. 5 Hurt . .. ~ .......... PRESIDENT HOLDS NEWEST GRANDCHILD, BORN FRIDAY S.reh Rosemery W•• Born To Judy, Jeck Certer Carters Celebrate At Plains .Fish Fry PLAINS tAP> -President Carter attended an outdoor fish rry at a farm near here Satur· day, ignoring angry protests downtown by American farmers and Taiwanese. The president and his wife, Rosalynn, also strolled through their woody backyard looking for a Christmas tree to cut. and planned to dine with friends in the evening. In good s pirits after his recent severe hemorrhoid attack. Carter turned up at the fish fry given for reporters. The presi· dent. dressed in blue jeans. ate a full plate of fried catfish but re· Matt of dee l'ear Chinese Deputy Prime Minister Teng Hsiao-p'rng h as been named Tim e Magazine Man of the Year. The m agazine noted the selection followed China's recognition by President Carter. Editors called him "tough, abrasive. r esilient." rused to answer any s ubslan· tallvequestions. "NO PRESS conferences," the president pleaded with a smile as he arrived. He strolled to the table and asked the cook : "Have you got apythlng to eat?" The impromptu visit al the fish fry followed a morning dur- ing which Carter rested with his family at home and was ex· amined by his personal physi· clan, Dr. William Lukasch. The doctor said Carter was recover· ing on schedule, White House aides said. Near the family's red brick home almost 40 tractors put· tered in a slow circle In a vain attempt to get the president's direct attention. THE FARMERS, members of the American Aertculture Move- ment, had blockaded downtown traffic with their tractors Fridal in prot.e,tt of the administration s farm policy. Home Visits Cheer Army BONN <AP> -West Germans sympathetic to the financial pro- blems the shrlnldng dollar has created for U.S. soldiers have in· vited 4,200 Gls into their homes for Christ.mas dinner . Lt. Col. John A. Walker Jr .• spokesman ror the Army's Euro· pean headquarters in Heidelberg, said the figure does not Include soldiers invited back to the homes they visited last year . There are 190,000 U.S. Army personnel in Germany. "Many of them strike up last- ing friend.ships through the pro· gram," said Walker of the "Christma.s Season Visits" sponsored by the Army and West German officials for single soldiers in dozens ·or garrison towns. Utah Chase • in (. BRIEFS ) FARMINGTON. Utah respondent Richard <AP, -A series of high· Dudman and Elizabeth speed chases and gun B e c k e r o f t h e battles ripped through WashingtoJt Po s t unable to stop their colony have refu,,ed to permit the freighter Huey Fong to dock here and it Is anchored a mile outside the harbor. four north Utah towns escaped after Chree ter- Saturday leaving five rorlsts shot and killed vehicles, which skidded persons, tncludlng three Malcolm Caldwell of the 30 feet down a bank and MDs E~d law enforcement o(· University of London In into the river. All were f Ice r 8 • l n j u red • the attack Friday on a rescued. only one man WASHINGTON (AP> authorities said. government guest house was hospitalized. -A House subcommit-. tee proposed Saturday One man was arrested In Phnom Penh. ~. AfdH that Congress take a b y D av l s Co u n t Y a...a.1-~ali. fl .. _nd i u1 t sheriff's officers Salur· • ~ r HONG KONG CAP> -rmer •ua n reg A'· White Yule for North CJlill Stretclu3s From Midwest to Ecut IJ.& .!S•••.•1 ••,,, ., , ... ,. • ..ci. ... ,,. .. ~now tOllllftueO IO lall \alutd•• lrom po;tlOft\OI '"" "°''""'" RoOIOl •C rou the O•-ot•• •nCI lfllo W 1M'Ol'l\lft llalll Wf\ tfpOtlOd Ill WUlar11 W••ll11>91on ,, ... ano ~ '"" ••"•'" Gull or '-UAl<O f ••••• _,_ ... ~·• llwed "°"' ..... ,,, $0<tlft OMOI• t<~• l)O(IUHI• o t •Oul lltrn MlntltlOlt Into Wl\C&fl\ln A winter \!Orm wal< h ha• Ottn po•l.O IOI' noro .. , n 111111tl\ llltOV(lft !001¥ '>~I••-.-. rnMll' •unnv lfom IM '°"'"""' Pt(lllt c-1 l@QIOll Into ,..,,_,, hH>, -o-rtr parh 01 lllf MIOClle AllM\tk Co•"I f ftata-. • nllfl'llltr ot .,.low·r•ro rt .. lnt• lfl -II\ Otl!OI• •ftcl Min ....... "Hdlnt' In W.. ltOs jlftCI lh .... ,,.1 ... llC••• lftll(ft Of ,_.., •ftcl 11111 Ovit CMit tlwoutll flOflllO, with lOM• l h repOtltd Ill .. 11111or11 rtotkN. <INlf ....... lwr P'OINT COHCl,TIOfi l O THI You can Cltarge DAILY PILOT Chn11fle4 Ma M2•5671 I -. ~ ..................... ---------------~ HOMl~V " MelCICAN llOflOf!" AHO OUT eo MIL ' l.itllt •MIMM w!Mlo will\ '"'"'" -· ttw'9ll9fl _.,.. .. , ... -.\le• 1, 1 lo n ll!ICK• w1t11 I 10 7 ,_ wind wOftt llol' .... ,_. I tG t ioo. -.•ton, •Mil P'•l<lly lot 1e<e11, ftll\t llltllf IMOl4f\ ml.,,..,ftlnt Otlletw1'41 , .. ,. a.., ....... 0.Ml1 .,_ lftOtll'f lolt Will\ 119at "•••t1•tt• l•"lfM••lllrta Tw\4l1y llW9'!fll ,..., ... ., " .. lfl 0- V10ey 0 to,,, -""9rh U 10 61, anel 10 .. t Ot•tn In tOl. lewt wlll .. lft .. 0-Y•llt• .... ~ lo ""' .. 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'Ml ,,fft S.•111• 5"1iell0 WOlliflt*' • II day evening aft.er three SCRANTON (AP> -A Doctors boa rde d a Ing Blue Shield plans in Ce r S 0 n S were he Id 100.root steel bridde that freighter carrying 2, 700 order to break up the e v· ( l dominati<Jn that doctors 01ta1e about seven collapsed here Saturday 1etnamese re ugees o ', hours ln a Clearfield was Inspected two evacuate three sick have in setting medical !~ .. home. Late Saturday, weeks ago, the city's passengers and remove payment schedules. 44 ,. omclals were searching chler engineer said. the bodies of two others The report said that :; : for a second man. One car was on the who died during the doctors constitute a ma· •) ., Authorities said the bridge when lt dave journey from Vietnam. jorlty on all Blue Shield ,. "' 1 rt d Sat boards ol directors and· r. n incidents be1an shortly way, authorilles said. t was repo e ur-,. n alter mldntghl when Drivers of a second car day. thus face a possible con· :: ;~ poll ce offl ce r s A I ton a~n~d~an~~o~ll~tru~c:!k......:w:!:e:!.re~_.::::O.:.:ff:..:ic:..:l:::als=-:of::....:th:.:j:.:s..:B;.:rt~t.:.;.l;;.;sh.:._..;.;fli;;;... rt;_;;.of_in_ter_es_t_. ---- ., ,. Turnbow and Dennis · !: ~ Luc11 tried to atop a car ---------------------------~~TT •' '° believed to be stolen. ~ ~~ The car, with two men '' t! ln It, sped away and !~ 21 police vehicles were hit •4 u at least alx Umes bf. " '° bullets from a rtne. o · :~ ~ fl c l a h a a l d . T h e u >1 wounded ofllcera were reported ln 1ooct condl· lion. ll'rfter K Hied ST. LOUIS (AP> Two Amerlcan journalltts escaped un· hurt from a terrortat al· tack in which a British 1cholar w11 killed ln Cambodia, the St. Louis Poat-Dispatch 11ld Our th•nka to you for your petron899 durtng the yeer. We h•ve purcft•Md •• our Chriatm•• gift to you the Chrlatru• muelc which wtll be .. red on KNOB Rlldlo 91 on your FM di .. from 1:00 p.m. ChrtetmH Ev• to 8:00 p.m. ctwtatm•• Night. Thank you 81181n for being our cuetomer. from en of ue here at 1'fte Eart'• Ptuinblng, Inc .. w wtah you • Merry Chrtetma• •nd • H90PY New Y••r. W• hOpe thl• brtngl you •nd youra ouiCNt•tm•• gift. TBZBARL'I Plumbing, Inc • from An Our Or•nt• COUnty Loc.UOna Saturday. Thi new1paper said ''":ir'1.--.l.i..-----------...:~~----------­Po1•Dl1patch cor· .. STATE NEWS ( ..... OeceMbtt 24. ,,.,. DAILY PILOT AS Tall Tales Eana 20-Year Sentenee ~ LONG BEACH <AP> -ffla daqhte;la 3 now. .talltac bel1et lellODI wtth other Uttle airla. And ll UM ,...... tbat luded. Bob WlWama In priton for · aJIDOll » YMrt 1tlll burn, lt does not show when aoob Ill ber. At 40, the tall, darkly handlome Williama .Hem• to have alreacty Uved Mveral lives Aller ~ wath onl~ "a coaunoct., a bunk and a loothbru.aa,.. he • drlvtn• • Continental with • Cartier tlock. 1be 1nu wbo pl"C»ffuted bim 21 )'tart llO for two murders " now beetlna h1I bW for a pa,rdarD. WILLLUI WU ll, a Mlf det.cribed "puk kld." when be alaPl)td ll1I .Srtfriend durlnc an • arsomtftl and wound up n a Nortaen. CaUfomJa Juvenile correction camp. Tbe lNI Incident lollowed a variety of other probl ma with author:IU.. but it wu nothb\t c:'OO\pa'" wllh t.be Kaf'kaftque evtall lhat we~ to COCM. Lodled ln Deuel Vocat.Sonal JnaUtut.e, WllUama sot word that hll 1lrlftleod wu plannlnc lo marry aom~tlse "She wouldn't answtr my letters and I had no way to reach htr to tell hJlr I wU IOf'T'Y and I want· l'd her to wall for me.·• WUUams rttalled In an In· tervlew. Fhwly, W'Ullama found a way. He tonfessl'd to murder. • • • ~ . ,. .. ,........ clrcUJNtancet, btm c:onfeaaln& and exhibiiifta cer· lain knowledte and lhe Jury figured he was the auy." • • • Compton hu written Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. ur&lnl a pardon for WiWam1, but the gov- ernor's office hu yet to act. One poulble com· plication ls that Williama hu fiJed damage suits totalin1 $100 million aeainst the city and county of Loa Anaeles, the city of Long Beach, the Los Angeles Police Department and the dblrict at- torney's office. "BOB•s CASE WAS one where he wu convict· ed because be talked too much," says Roger Aga. janian. a Santa Ana lawyer who has been in- etrument.al in getting Williams off parole and who represents him In the damage suits. "But they never corroborated his confession and juat weren't wUUn1 to listen when he retracted. Tbe governor's offic;e supposedly did a clemency investigation but they never found the letter. They screwed up and because of that, he stayed locked up." Does Compton still believe Williams to be guilty? ·•1 just don't know," he said. "There was nothing we could do but put it to the Jury and let tbem decide. So we did and they decided. But there's no question that his mouth C(ot tUm into trouble, because that's all we really had -the confessions." , • Matthew lilanettar's body was found below a steep Paloe Verdes cWf on Jan. 3', 1958. The San Pedro motel owner had been robbed, shot to death and his body thrown over the cWf the n11ht before. Williama told aut.horiUes he was Maneslar's klller. a.AIMED FALSE CONFESSIONS RESULTED IN 20-YEARS IN STATE PRISON Bob WllMeme, Left, Seeks Pardon, Sant• An• Lawyer Roger Agajanlan at Right. • • • When Williams first hit the streets after almost 20 years behind bars. be found adjusting to life on the outside difficult. He bad never seen a freeway and was bewildered by the metropolis Los Angeles bad become . ... KNEW THE COPS would bring me back to Long ~ach for questioning and I figured I could gel ln touch with my girl once I got there." Williams said "I figured I could never be convict· ed because I knew I hadn't done it." 8urg~s cue, which was an unsolved murder," h~ said. "I fagured that lf I could convince them l bad done the Burgess murder Just using details from tbe newspaper. that would prove I could have made up the first confession too." It didn't work out that way. Williams was con- victed of flrsl-degne murder and sentenced to lire in prison. Two years later . his appeals falling, he confessed to another murder. • • • Ralph Burgess, a clerk In a Lona Beach furniture store, was shot to death Nov. 20, 1955, during a robbery. Williams, now serving time in Folsom Prison, told authorities he was the lrig- german. ONCE AGAIN, TIUNGS didn't work out that way. Williams says five convicts watched while he wrote out the second confession Crom the newsapaper, but he was not allowed to call them as witnesses in the trial that followed. Still a hothead, Williams defended himselr "with a legal tablet and Perry Mason book." He was convicted or murdering Burgess and sentenced to another life term. It would be 17 more years before he was released -the time spent in some or California's toughest lockups. "I was subscribing lo the Long Beach paper while I was in prison and I saw this article on the His penitentiary life is an incredible kaleidoscope of experiences -Charles Manson .Jonestou·n l'i~tims Buried Hymns and scri plurc were the o nly ceremony Saturday for Esther Dillard and three' of her childre n. all round dead in Jonestown. Guyana. where 911 P eople's Temple cull mem bers committed Suicide or were s lain in a mass ritula. The service at the Greater Getshamane Church of God in San Francisco was the first public funeral for the cult victims. Daughter, 7, Flees As Mother is Sl8in SAN DIEGO CAP> -A woman returning home for a Christmas ballet with her 7· year-old daughter was stabbed to death by a stranger who of· fered lo help fix her flat tire, police said Saturday. Mrs. Judith Page, 31, died from dozens of stab wounds in· flicted as her terrified daughter ran from the scene, police said. Mrs. Page and her daughter,. Kimberlie, discovered a flat Ure on their car after attending a performance of "The Nut· cracli.er Suite" Friday night and accepted a man's offer to help, officers said. . A puserby jotted down the license number of the assailant's car. police said. Investigators were searching for the JO.year- old man in whose name tbe car was reliSlered. .8NilwrKHlftf SAN FERNANDO <AP) -A 23-year-old man was arrested for investigation or the murder of bit 4-year-old brot.heri who was beaten to death wbJ e the rest of the famlly attended church, police said Saturday. Investigators uid Manuel Gonzales Martinez and bis lltUe brother. Manuel Adrian, disap- peared from church services Friday nllbt-When Gonsales ar· rived bome early Saturda1. _be led bl1 father to the boy•s l>Octy, about a mile from the church. ,, .. Bal•• Pla11n LOS ANGELES (AP) -More than 200 airplanes were being diverted Saturday n11bt from Los Anselea International Airport due to a t.blck shroud of 1 tot. alrporl offlc:lall said. Jn acfdWoa, ~P to 10 aircraft ( Sl'ATE J were delayed from taking off, said airport operations spo kesman Michael DiGirolama. The fog closed several runways starting about 5 p.m. \llcil• SIWcUMIJ• SACRAMENTO (AP) -The second of two ex-convicts found in the trunk of a burning car on Nov. 15 died at University Medical Center Friday, police said. James Craig. 39, bad shotgun wounds in the face and nec:k and severe bums when he was pulled from the car, parked orf Garden Highway. The body of Edward Barabas, 28, who bad been shot, was also found in the trunk. SeaC'lal•• I RICHMOND (AP> -One man was missing and a woman was lo critical condition Saturday night after the boat in which they and another couple were in capslzed near Polnt Pinole, the Cout Guard said. Tbe other cou· ple swam to shore safely. No names were released. 20~inacftl SAN LUIS OBISPO (AP> Twenty persons con~lcted of trespasatng or of failinl to dis· perse during a protest at Diablo Canyon nuclear power plant have been fined $400 each, given a 90-day suspended sentence llld placed on two years probe~ Morn of 9 Slayer of Husband AUBURN CAP> -A mother of nine has been convicted of first degree murder for persuading a daughter's teen-age boyfriend to kill her husband. A jury returned the verdict Friday against Mrs. Isla Sue Babcock. 39, who denied during a two-week trial that she had asked anyone lo kill h e r husband. MICHAEL LEE Rip · penkroeger, 18, testified that Mrs. Babcock asked him to kill her husband, Alan, 39, and gave him a loaded shotgun. Rippenkroeger, who has been allowed lo plead guilty to a charge of second-degree murder in return for his testimony, said he shot Babcock last Aug. 19 in an open field where Babcock was shooting at targets. The youth said Mrs. Babcock had told him that if he killed Babcock he could have bis tools. But Rippeakroeger said be did it, not for the tools, but because of Babcock's brutality to his family. MRS. BABCOCK. who had slx children by a previous mar· riage, testified that Babcock, a supermaTket maintenance worker, bad beaten her and the children and aave her only $15 a week to feed the family. Her children ran1e ln age from 16 months to the late teens. Rlppenkroeger said Mn. Bab- cock had failed in prior attempts to 1et her cblldren's frieodl to kill her hmband. Placer County Superior Court Judie Wayne Wylie .et 1entenc· Ina for Mrs. Babcock for Jan. 18. Rlppenkroeter will be H~ Dec.28. a ..-·-.. • was a teen-age acquaintance and other prison mates included "Red Light Rapist" Car~l Chessman and mass murderer Juan Corona. Williams spent month after month in soli- tary confinement for various infractions. pass- ing the time "walking around and flipping a button off my shirt in the air. then going and finding it and nipping it again." He never heard from bis former girlfriend. No one visited him during hls last 10 years in prison. ••• Williams was released on parole in February 1975 and immediately began working to establish his innocence, supporting himself in the meantime as a chauffeur and general handyman. He married and fathered a daugbt.er, but lbe drive lo clear bis name never lessened. THAT DETERMINATION eventually led Williams to the basement rerords room 'of the Harbor Division police in San Pedro. There, tucked away in an old cardboard box, was a letter that changed William's life. The letter was from a supervisor at Deuel Vocational Institute. It said Williams had been in custody al the time of Manestar's murder. On May 31. a Long Beach Superior Court Judge agreed to release Williams from his life parole. thus effectively ending his sentence. One of those testifying on bis behalf was former deputy district attorney Lynn "Buck" Compton, the man who prosecuted him in both trials. "I waa unaware of the letter at the lime:· says Compton. now an auociale justice on the state Court of Appeal. "ll's not for me to say we bad the wrong 8"'Y. although I'd hate to think we did." The former prosecutor concedes that the cases against Williams rested almost entirely on the con- fessions. "He could never have been convicted without the confessions.'' Compton said in an interview. "We never came up with a gun or fingerprints or witnesses or anything. We had the bodies. the Hit auesement of life outside after almost two decades inside? "TllEllE AllE MORE NUTS on the outside than there were in the joint. The only difference Is the ones out here haven 'l gotten caught yet.'• WiWams recently finished co-authoring a book on his life, appropriately Utled "Backfire," and has also signed a movie deal. Williams says he hopes lo salvage something from the 20 years, but he also wants to get a message across. "I must have been half.crazy lo do what I did." Williams says. "But I figured the justice system would take care of me because I knew I wasn't guilty. That's one of the things I want to say -it won't." The Neptune Sodety ofter•• 9'mple and dlilntned cr•lftatlon ••rvlce with dlsHmlnatlon •t •••. deMr1, or mount8tns. Your Soctal Security and Veteran• Adrnlnt9tr8tl0n benefit• may cower our cremation Mt~ •• For llftmedlate need, or tr .. pot1totio, caft or write. fte N~ Seelety 2.taO W. Coaat .....,..Y Newpcwt .. Kh. Ca., '*3 OP ;;:: 646-7431 ~~ :.:-'~-;~;;,;;;;:, ::-..!!...~-==- I NAME· f 11t1..._ ...... -. I IMlH••lllO....IL I ADOAEU· e---..ca..-. __ ... ,. '_,_..__. aTY_ STATE --111et9.ca..-11-___ ;;;;, Junior Executive Delly Piiot carrier• ere young bualneHmen and buelneHwomen, providing a uHful. lmportent product to their cuamera ••ch day, end earning a proflt for their effortl. In becoming eucceelful 'tndependent bualne11 people they learn to menage their time and their money, to be relable end reeponelble. and to deal eucceMfulty with people. They lnveet their monthly ptOftt8 In their hobble• and recreetlon, end In cloth•• end In Nvlng• for future plan•. And they hev• their own money to UM for treat• and good tlmet. Delly Piiot c.rrter boy• and gltte ateo have oppof'tunftte• to enjoy apeclel tripe to piece• Uk• Dlaneyland, Knott'• Berry Fann, C.talna. Meglc Mountain and otllef fUn pe.c.e. More then 900 boy• and glrta •'°"I the Ort1nge Co•at are ln bualneH for them...V.a and doing nicety. thank you, •• D•Rr Piiot c.rrtera. We think they're trelnlng themMM• to be the bualnen •nd dvtc leede,. of tomorrow. • • --------------------~-------------Mllto: I am lntereated ln becoming a Dally Piiot carrier. PteaH tell me I o!ity Not Qrculedon more about It. I P.O. Box 1• Nam• ..............................•......... Age.... . ..• I Coat• ...... Callf. 92821 I s42.4321 Street ..... , . . . . . . . • . . . . • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . .. • · · · · · · · · · · · .. • I . I City . . . . • . • • • • • . . . . • . • . . . . • . . . ...•••• Zip •••..•• Pttone ••••••• ·I DAILY PILOT . . I ---.-.- 8 ;;;;;;-.0r_an_gb•c•-0•as-tlla1-·'y•e•ll•a•t .• f •• .;_c.l .. i_t_o_.1_•.f .. 1.1 •• J .. ____ a_ g .• eiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim&i-n•dl)'-.· o.c.m•-bef-~~·."~1';..-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~R°'*;;11~~N~. w~eed;;~1P~u;~'~1,~tl(!;'••r~h;fl0n"t; .. ;s~~~";.;"'~";e;a';to Good News· Makes Holiday Brighter Readers of\ n k wh n wspapers don't print mo~ &ood news Why column ofter column of 1loom every day" Unfortwt lttly, Ln ome periods of history, U JWJl eem s th re are ll wful lot or uorl.n11nl thfn11 happ nang around us One columnla on thl1 paa rec ntl "urmJ t!'d that perha~ t>.d Mwa ls "lood news" ror somtt Pt'OPI\>. ll mnk(' t~m r I that their lot ta not so bud ofter ull Th t mnv bt> ~o. hut peru.~m« th Chri lma ·New Year l8Su of S Nl'v.s & World Report. we round that reading a whole: bunch or good nc\\ can be a cup or holiday chl"t•r The nuttonol ne~ magaun~ asked corre-spond nts across th(.• nation lf anything aood was hoppcnJna in their or os. The re ponsc v. n~ more thwt cne<>urag1nsc. Some samples: I N 81\LTIMORI::. th~ r 1l y -;pon o red the rl'hubihtuuon uf J tlt•<'tt) 1n~ ncaf(hborhood by selling rundown old housc..•o.; for u payment of $1. th n fmancing rehubilitataon work al '1 p~rrt•nt lnh•rest. Private finuncln~ was not av•ulubh: bt>caust-of the condition of the Ot>ighborhood. Th<' f1n;t $1 home. w•th 35.000 worth of restoration "ork . no"' 1s ,1 handbomc two story. solar-heated town hou~e l''ifh.>en more hoUM!S on the block are occupied and hundreds more throughout the city are being similarly res tored. creating new and attrachve neighborhoods from what usetl to be slums IN J E ROME, ARIZ., an old mining center that had become a virtual g host town has been brought back to life through tht\ efforts of u group of college drop-0uts who probably "'ould qualify as hippies. The population is back up to almost 500. residents make and seH custom fas hions. there's u volunteer fire department, a mining museum und houses ure selling for up lo $40,000. And Jerome has bee n declared a National Historic LC;tndmark . IN ROANOKE . VA ., 200 disadvantaged members of the Young Adult· Conservation Corps are chopping trees and clearing brush along the Blue Ridge Parkway for $2.65 an hour. hacking away a t a 10.year backlog of work lhat the Nation a l Park Service couldn't afford to have done at prevailing wages. The young people can participate in the program for a year and many report the experience helped them ~et in physical and mental s hape to complete their education or qualiry for good jobs. IS C.\l\1P T R ES RIO • TEXAS, a camp us ually rescrvl'd for young people was turned over for part of last summer to 65 elderly and handicapped Texans who enjoyed canoeing, horseshoe pitching, working on crafts a nd breathing_ fresh air. The slate paid the bill and the YWCA. 1wMch ran the youth camp, maCie the arrangements for the oldsters, most of whom had never been to a camp before. IN SAN DIEGO, as m an y Southern CaUfornians already have heard, the community took on the task or restoring the historic Old Globe Theatre in Balboa P ark after it was destroyed by fire. Enough funds were raised to put up a temporary open -air amphitheater in time for the summer opening of the 29th annual San Diego National Shakespeare Festival. And by the s pring of 1980, the Old Globe itself s hould be rebuilt. IN JACKSON VILLE, FLA .. the mayor went water-skiing on the St.. Johns River, so polluted a decade ago that it was d escribed as "a cesspool in motion." Federal, state and local funds. to the tune of $132 million, have turned the river from a dumping ground for human and industriaJ wastes to a sparkling stream once more inhabited by fish and birds. IN PEORIA, ILL., a non·profit corporation chartered by t he state is rehabilitating youths between the ages of 17 and 24 who have been convicted of drug offenses, burglary and other crimes. The firm takes contracts for s uch jobs as taking apart old engines and recovering usable p a rts and now m a kes e no u g h t o cover three-fourths of the cost of the program. The youths a re paid $3 an hour for the rough work and it's estimated they've paid more than a quarter of a million dollars in taxes on their wages since the program started -instead of staying in jail at a cost of $15,000 a year each in tax dollars . IN BOARDMAN, ORE., new technology has made it possible to raise profitable crops in a desert area formerly used to tee;t rocket engines. Huge, electrically driven sprinklers irrigate 27,000 acres of once-barren land where potatoes. wheat, corn and alfalfa are being grown. The cultivated land is part of a 100,000· acre testing s ite opened for agriculture by the Boeing Aerospace Co., and this is just the beginning. Meanwhile the population of the town has grown to 1,200 and . the one-time gas station-res~aurant crossroads boasts a shopping center and a housing tract. That's just part of the good news unearthed by the U.S. News s le uths . We hope it makes your Christmas brighter. too. • Op1n1ons expressed in the space abo<1e are those of the Dally Pilot. Other views eKpressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment is invited. Address The Carly Pilot, P.O. Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626 Phone (714) 642-4321. Boyd I Bloomers By L. M. BOYD Amelia J enks Bloomer didn't invent that article ot fem\nin~ apparel known as • ' bloom ers . She just liked to wear same. Mrs. Eliiabelh Smith Miller devised them. t hey should be known as millers. but lt's too late to change ruJ that now. Q . "Did W l ll la m Shakespeare ever cat tomatoes?" A. Possibly but not pro· bably. 'Ibey were introduced fro m South America to Europe by the Spaniards on· ly 33 years before h18 dettb In 1816. Q. "Why are some poliUcaJ preclnct3, thoae that glve the trend ot an election, known as 'bellwether' dlatrlcta?" A. ln days of old tn Engl1nd, a bellwether wu a eunuch •beep wlth a bell around ILi neck, aeoeraUy the noclt leader. Nickndmm h \ ' Danger: Exploitation of Taiw~ WASHINGTON -EvMtuaJly. thal vut tloud of duat born ot Pretldeat Carter'• delonatin• announe m4t>l on Communist Chlna wm Httle. Rtalhlnl lh.b. thoH 1enulnely concerned about T1lwao muat know that the dancer la not an invulon. but threats to Taiwan'• economic future. Su~rpowers don't right wars tbeae day1. Commuo.lat Cb.Ina rite• as " aurerpower. no because of lt1 econ· omlc or mlli· t a r y 11 trenath. but for tb s heer size. poSulatlon an nuclear weaponry. The Peking regime would be mad to Invade Taiwan. Big powers aren't supposed to act in such ~mly fashion. The nast y fights today are between smaller nations -the Vietnamese and Cambodians. Rhodesia and guerrilla forces. Israel and the nelgbboring Arab states . Besides, a China·Tajwan war would be long, bloody and a disgrace to the Communists. IN TUE REAL world, the big powers are in economic, not military. combat. Jn Peking, Teng Hsiao-Ping is trying to push Communist Cruna into this fierce, but bloodless, fray. Indeed, Communist China has Mailbox ml11ed the an11t economic boom ln Asla because of lU ldeotoakal p1roehillltm. B«auae Vietnam turned out. our headt away from Aaia. we Amerlcant are only aware ot the Japanese part. of tbJs boom. Tbe niallty LS that two bllUoo people Uve east of Iran, that tbJs Aala cont.a.Ins eo percent of the world's teen-agers and children, a nd tbua . in the years lmmedJately ahead. will have a workCorce capable of making this region econ omically powerful and a huge consum9r market as well. · EVEN WHILE absorbed in ideological dJsputBtions. Peking sampled and enjoyed Western prosperity by raking off some $2 biUion a year from ita sales of· goods, food. water and banking services to Hong Kong. T hese Peking Puritans run 40 department st ores in the British Crown Colony (whjch they could conquer in 30 minutes), use ad agencies and radio commercials to peddle their wares, and indulge in capitalistic relations with evil Western banks. G iven the U .S. pledge to continue selling weapons lo 1'aiwan after ··normalization" with Pekin g. the Ca rter Adminlstation could slill make Taiwan vulnera~ to economic harm if it allowM>eking to take advantage of the new ball game. T hat's why Sen. Richard St.ooe < D·F la .) and other frt~ods of -:-oAAHGC COUNTY H~I. OF ~~ltUSTRATJON Taiwan are lnslatJog there be atroncer euarantees from the U.S. to Taiwan. IN 1'78, there is S7 biJllon trade between the two nations. with Taiwan enjoying a $2 billion surplus. There Is a1Jo $4.5 billion in U.S. Investment and loans in Taiwan. and hundreds o f excellent relationsh ips between Taiw anese and American private firms. Anyone who h as vis it ed Taiwan comes away praising th hard-work. enterprise. and oe<llcation of the Taiwanese people in building a nation on. a mountainous \S land nearly devoid of resourres. Moreover. Taiwan is a world leader in spreading the wealth among its people. lls present per capita income is $1.:JOO (it was only $132 in 1952>. For the U.S. to allow Peking lo demand that U.S. firms route all Taiwanese trade through Communist China would be a betrayal of moral principle -if we. Indeed, have any left. THE WORST scenario would be a Communist blockade of Taiwan, with the U.S. helpless to act because that would amount to interfering -by Peking's logic -with the internal affairs of China. Taiwan, like Japan. needs access to Persian Gulf oil , European and American credit and mari<ets. and to the raw materials of the world. Now Teng Hs1ao-Ping recenU> remarked that Commun ut Chlna would permlt Taiwan tc keep ltl tt0n0mlc Independence. But while Teng is a llberaUilns Influence, he Is an oJd man. Younger Chi nese 0Ulc1ale coming up are more purist and leas Jl kely to 10 ror Western ·'contamination.'· For the moment, however , Communist China -a nation poorer lban India -seems to bE rushing into a market-oriented, rather than a centrally.planned, economy. In the past year, Peking signed over $60 blllion in contracts to import., contrasted with its S9 billion annuaJ export total. ' SOONER OR later, th e Chinese Communists will have to export t60 billion in goods or services to make thia up. Peking ls pressed to quickly improve it.a economy. Jf it plans to exploit Taiwan to help reach this goa1, then President Cart.er has blundered. If he made a deal with Peking allowing Taiwan lo keep its economic independence, then the passage or time might s mooth what now seems a jagged situation indeed. By the way , w as n 't it candidate Carter who r ailed against secrecy in diplomacy. a nd a presi dent making momentous foreign pollcy decisions without adequately consulting Congress? Oh. well. • 0 • t) . • I ·~ . ' 0 •• (I . ' .. . -,,• Keep on Celebrating Annual Touchstone To the Editor: This letter iB ln regard to your editorial concerning the content of elementary school "Win· ter/Christmas" programs. Last year at about this time, letters and phone calls were received by many school districts In Orange County from various groups concerned with conslitu· tional law. These groups con· veyed their views about the con· tent of the J>f'Olrama presented in the schools. These views, however, are not entirely aub8tanllated by court. decl1ions. The Calllornla stBte con s titution provides that children may be taught "about" religions, but they may not be "indoctrinated." Though no specific guidelines can be drawn rrom court decisions, one prlncl· ple seems to underUe them all: It ls not the material whlch ia obJecUonable, but the manner ln which it LI preNnled th1t violat· ed the law. Thus, "Away ln a Manser " can be defended on the buls of its autbellc and muaicll quallti•. However, IC It la preaent~ lit conjunction wilb a nativity scene dimmed llahts, candles, etc. lt becomea re· Uslous lndoctrlnation and does no\ belooi in a publlc school pro-en m. OtJa CRILDaEN obviously must be made aware of their cultural and hlltor1cal herltace. And to tsoore the Judeo· Christian ~~lpatloo ln t.M de· velopment ot Wiilem elviltu.-.. tlon Is Impossible. Each year the passing of the winter solstice gives us an opportunity to ex· a m ine and enjoy the various ways ln which this event has been celebrated for centuries. The music of this time of year, b e it H annuka h so ngs C hristmas carols, or even "Rudolph" and his Uk, provides a ll of us with an a nnua l touchstone to our past and is as import.ant a part oC our heritage as the mulUpllcaUon table ... in some ways, more so. Hopeful· ly we can conunue lO enjoy it. DEANE BOTTORF Wont .fof) Haz ard To the Editor: I h av e h eard a l ot of unjustified complaints about the police in recent years. but this latest one about the San C lemente officer 's funeral <Ma ilbox. Dec. 19) rea.lly takes the cake! Who shall we hear from next? One of the killer's friends denouncing the slain officer for having lhe audacity lO s tep ln front of the bullet that ktlled him? A policeman puts his life on the line every time he goes on duty. Other city e mployees. except for firemen, face only drowning in a sea of ink. J . W. REIO • ~rers from rtadeu OTt wtlcome TM nght ro condemt letrtts to /it IJ)OCt or elimmote libel ii rtttrved Ultn1 of 300 word& or ltu will be gll¥ft prefn-enu. AU letters m"'1 in· duct. ltgnchire and mailin{l oddreu but namer may be withhrid on re· que1r 1/ "'I /iclent rto1qn la apportnt. Poetry will not be publllhed. Manger Story Modernized Oh. dear Crieadl, t never thought we'd have a plutlc table cloth, or a f ithy in oae tub th1t 1queab and squlrU whlle I ac.rub, or a playpen over tbeni Where we could have used • chair. not to meatlon a wind·UP swing but, oh, I'm glld we have that thine! Nof>! I real1.Y clld not think we d have a lock beneath OM sink that daUy testa my every su.ncth. or trlp1e locks on alldina doon that make IOinl out a borlnl chore. or ye.now IQuub upon my face and in my hair and every pl~! ' This Chrlt!tmas eve we wlU see toys and more toys beneath our tree: a ablnlna f~ and eyes of blue lauahloa -lovina you know wbo! No, I never lhougbt we'd have alJ this, but God's been 1ooct and did not mill muns our home and our hearts wttb Joy all wrapped up ln one little boy. So now we·~ tome to that time cl year when we lhlnk ot our friends, wl1hln11 them near, we wish you love and peace and cheer and all ol lhe happlnes1 w• have bere 8fl AnM McQulon, Cotto McJG I M ..... 0 a § s a a ... I J ' Wlio limit Expressions-of • ? ., aoat:•T JOaDAN •OS& Rokrl Jonlott Roq ta milUrn Co Uw ~ COGi1 Uflldanoa U~CltuTde atCottoMc*J A1 peteftnJaJ u ph1m puddlnc and holly, lh deb•ta rtnc ou1 •••ln with th Chn1tm11 bella "How far t &D •e io." "' art k-S. ·•an n mo'\i· l1\a rell,SOUS upttU ot Chriltm from nur a.cbool..s end civic llrt 1" O\ben k, "Ho far can we ao ln aUowtna lb e lhlnaJ In!" For the m t part, we're k)oku'' at 1 triple problem. reU~<Kl.' btl r. AnUm~t and aom DOl·alwriiya-pl uanl allemaUv. to ow-currtnl pracllct11 "'E AaE A plunlilOc naUoa Some foUci will tell you that lhlJ d bllf Is a rtlaUwly new phenomenon •• 1omethln1 that camt' about toward the tnd ot tht lu t ctntury ,..ht'fl we let in millions ol Easl Euro~ Je~. Japan e, ChineM, etc . But then t've apohn v.-lth aom~ d~cendants of Ear~y American fnmlhei. who'vt told me thal It rHIJi all bel•J> w1t.h • m ot 1-;n1llsh PTotest.ant.s and Spanish Calho1Jc1 who came 1n to their An«t\ral lands walh 50m ll.r&J\ge no Uona ol bow to wonhlp the anat aphi t. Most ol UI don't study ou.r his~ very well Few are aware that those Encllab Prot tan~. at leaat t.M ones In N~w Eoal.nd, made It a dvll crime to celebrate Christmas. Even in tbe C•thoUc ~onial emplre, 1t was • pale shadow Holiday in Hospital Carols Curing Joatt TaJ1'1'11J(Je w N I of Newporl B«Jeh wnt~• o/ a J1'n1ious holJday conff'Mmrm I'm groggy. I've lost count of the people flowing through my private (?) hospital room. I've just undergone abdominal surgery and lost a trio of private parts <don't ask!) "So you got hit by a Mack truck?" my doc· tor says. He thinks he's terribly runny. "If it was, he was disguised in a doctor's smock." I parry 'Tell me if this gets too much." he says ·'and I can st.op for a minute " THE SNIPPING AND pulling I hear and feel are my sutures coming ~ut. Charming. Radio station KOCM is playing Christmas carols I breathe deeply. I am now an expert deep breather: from shots, from the great taking of blood <mine), from ,all the slings and arrows or outrage wblch bombard patients. Talk about assaultandbat.tery. Doi have a legal case. I doie off .my attention spans NO, I AM NOO' losing my mind. I'm aw1m- m1nf out of peaks and valleys of anesthetic: my .Q. alone won't recover for two weeks (and that la the only functioning organ left ln my en- tire body). Pink ladies call out m y name. Flowers ar· rive from mysterious sources. I grow tired or my own name. Why not assume another? From 8 to 10 a .m . the pace races madly through my room. Thereafter, dead quiet. t can- not get a newspaper or a shower cap. Minutia is divided among the professions. Wh at catastrophe if an RN brings me a towel or an aide comes in with a prescribed drug" OR WEIL, l'M NOT complaining. From the fifth noor I can see the sun rise over Newport Harbor and then at night watch the sun set behind Catalina in purple and pink pyrotechnics My private ocean ... my city ... I shift from one hip to the other. My left side Is the pepper shaker <many, small holes) as compared to my right side (a few large holes) which is the s alt shaker. To elude pain I hook my attention on KOCM . It's comforting to know that people are RUU Christmas shopping in Fashion Island. The music performs up t.o par: soft, palatable music but the commercials depress me. Besides. a dog is barking in Ume t.o "Jingle Bells". NO MA'M'ER THAT my gifts are already wrapped and hidden under our kJng-siie bed. Nobody should be in the hospital during the holidays -as a patient, that is Visit.or's hours exhaust me "Well retlas," (I ignore gender) "I'm turn· ing in now·• INANE. l'M ALREADY in bed. Both husband and daughter spring to their feet and disappear from my only reality. my room. More pink ladies beariQg potted plants. Ob well, just another day at the hospital to this enormous staff -one public service which hever st.ops. But wh y me during Christmas? I don't belong here. I don't even bark in time t.o "Jingle Bells" ot I.ht ttJ brat on that "' 've come to know. The plain f•ct ls lhat lo Enallah cc>IMlal America, lhcre ~ oo Chr tm as e•l•braUon in echoolJ or In ctv1c UI . A 0 TllA..,8 whN'tt ~enUment entera In A fl r nur revolution and lbe eJtablJshmenl of cona t itutlon•l IJOV r nm.,nt, tbore aroso "Am n can c1vU rtU,uon " Ct-n :rally PAA \.ant in aplr1t. North Euro- pean lo culture. It w lb mbodim ot of the Amt1r\cM 11plrlt, translated in.to a rouah re· llAlnu'I fl'atnework For mon than • century. mo'lt Europea n lmm11ranta enthu•laslJcally bent lhemaelv to bl~d with It, fetilnf thal thla waa the w•y to be a true Am ncao. fl wat1 tho heyd1ty or American expansion, but al10 of the 1ubJu1at1on or the Indians, of nBllvlam tanU Catholicism > and the Ku Klux Klan While Wt' muy bemoan the lOM or what we <a II the "1nnocencci" of thla period. our farewell to that era w1t11 also a wclcomtna or an era or 111urallam. of ll rich v1trloty of Ute. experience and uodenitanclanii. IT AUK> MEANS H)'in& i ood·bye to part of what only ~ot i!lartoo In lhe early 18005: the re· lh1lous aspects or Christma& celcbrallon in schools and civic life. That can mean saylna good-bye to a lot or be u\y and eloquence m song and prose. It can mun that we subsUtute banal and greedy ex- pre11s1oni; of Chrlstmas. But it can also mean that we have access to a wide range of tradi- t1on1I and emerctn1 m1t.ertal to lhare with one anoUltt. Let'• r.ee It: CelebraUou such as the old Norse Yule ant.ecl1te CbrlaUanJty by c.turt• lf not mUJenia. Yule loga, holly. Chrbtmu treet and feetivala of Utbt were all there before a child named Jesua waa born. And "The Nl•ht Before Chrlatmas," Dickens' "Chrlatmaa Carol," "Rudolph" and "The Miracle ol 34t.h Street" were all created ln the put c.atury and ahaU. TOGETHEa TIJBV attMt t.o the enduring human celebraUoo ol the winter aolltJce and the im•1in1Uon and 1eneroeity ol the human heart ln lnventiq expressions or peaet! and coodwtll amoo1 men. If the achool1 choose lbe venal and tutele&s, Jet ua not blame either the diversity ol our na· Uon nor a willingness to reepect aplritul dlf· rerences. Furthermore, Just as the ChrlatJan ere.· UooJsts are arguing for an alternative t.o the theory ol evolution t.o be presented to public school atudenta, let us never forget that the re· Uglous aspect of Ch.rbtmu is not mere sweet sjghlng over baby J esus. THE DOCTRINE OF the Incarnation represents a theological baais for a radical theory of hlatory and politics: oameJ)' that world history at the moment diverged from tu earlier patte.m into one destined t.o a dJvtne re· voluUon which completely changes the sort ol eovenunent we should have. And this tbeoey meant Lbe aovemment ALL people should have, not Juat tbOle who ..,.. believers. We do no JuaUc• to lhe m11nitude ot this con· cept b~ trivlalillnc lt, nor I it ralr to inculcate lU mythical bQla into small childr•n ao as to biaa them in favor of the more complex ideas that they will hear when they mature. Non· lnterventioo ol the state In religion means just that: that public power is not used to precondl· Uon anyone'• mlnd t.o accept a religious doc· tJ1ne. The r~li81oua societies of our nallon arc stront and healthy. They are perfectly capable. lf they have a wtU to do so, of stating tbelr cue for thla radical view of history. Io my ex- perience, few or them are wilUng to either Invite non-members to come and teach their children or tum their Sunday School lesson pht.nnlng over to a group of non-beUevers. WRY 111EN SHOULD they want a public agency t.o do their work for them? The answer. 1.n most cases. ls that they don't! Check it out. for yourself. In many, many cases the people who complain of the lack or religion in public Christmas celebrations are just tho6e who will not traln their own children, support a church or study these things and teach others. It looks. I'm afraid, all too much like another cla11 ol people who are ready to let the govem- ment do their work for them and support them _In a way in which they could support themselves. ~bristmas Isn't Just One Day By CHIUSTINE DOSSEY Chmttne Dof'•etl u o nddfftl of lrviM . "Not. only at Cmutma.a, 1*t oU llw ~ tla1'ough, The JoJ/ thal "'°" giw to othera u tlw ~ th4J come1 back to"'°"" That quotation went through my mind as J wandered through a shopping center the other day. But there wasn't much joy OQ the faces ol shoppers, just a frenzied, harried look. PeoplE were rushing around Uke rats in a mue, ·and my first thought was bow commercial Christmas has become. Have we lost the true meaning ot Christmas? At first, 1 tended lO think so, bu' then my mind rebelled. "No." I thought, "theM people are tense and nervous, and much ol their thinking ia about money. How much can I afford to spend on Suzy? Will I have enouah money ten to buy a present for Jack?" - I am sure that in their hearts the joy of glv Ing wu predominant. FOil MANY PEOPLE, this ls not conflned lust to the Christmas period. TbeM an the ucky ones who delipt ln bringin1 joy into the llves of others all year long. You can find them everywhere: the dedicated teachers, the factory foreman who tries to help a handicapped person, the neighbor who is always wUJ.iq to lend a band. I know many such De<>Ple, but the one I know best is my sister, Lfnd8. who brings jo)' ~ others. and who, ln tum, is blessed by the joy that comes back to her. As a teacher, she gave unstintingly of herself, and was loved by all her pupils. She taught both day school and adult evening school for many years. A lot of boys and girls would have been dropouts from school without her in- te'rest in their welfare, and her encouragement Many adults learned to talk English, and went on to become citizens, because they knew that in ber they had a friend who would be disappointed lf they did not do so. I( Christmas did not exist, she woold have invented It. Take a smaU house; rm it with more people than ought lO be there; arrange to have each person talk very loodly, each in a dif· ferent foreign language; and fill it with laughter and good fellowship, and you have Linda's house at Christmas. Recently. one or her former evening school pupils called her. This was an Argentine woman who was half-blind with cataracts, and bad no one to turn to. LINDA. WHO IS now retired, bas had two heart attacks and has an invalid husband, tootc the woman into her home. secured an ophthamologist for her, and arranged tor eye surgery. · I have often thought that some people •walked all over Linda." Several times when I mentioned that I thought she was doing too much, I remonsb"ated with her, but she did not answer. • Then one day when I was more outspoken than usual. she looked at me. and said, "Do you really want to know why I do these things for people? .. Remember how good we all fe lt at Christmas? Well, when I do things for people. l feel like it's Christmas all year Jong." Delayed Gift Ruffles Feathers By VIVIAN PERRON Vi Vian Perron t.t o relidmt of Corona del Mar. The nature or my husband's business kept us moving from hotel to hotel lo various metropolit.an centers. This specific Christmas we were scheduled t.o be in New York at the Hotel Biltmore. The week before, we bedecked our rooms with the customary evergreen wrealh and holly berry garlands, and decorated a small fir tree in front of the window, with red, blue and green balls, twinkling lights. MY FA'nlER-IN·LAW, who lived in Mon· tan a, wrote that he was sending a stuffed pheasant as bls Christmas contrlbutlon. Previously be had sent us a turkey or a duck, which presented no problem in our own home. Now. however, we were without kitchen facllities, so arranged with the hotel chef to have It cooked and served for a Christmas dln- ner in our apartment . By the morning of the 24th, the piece de re- sistance for the morrow's meal had not arrived, so we adjusted ~ur menu and ordered turkey from the hotel dining room. Advent ol a cold and snowy Christmas Eve round us feeling quite SOM')' for ourselves, with little enthusiasm I OJ' the holidays ahead. Before going t.o bed, we toast ed each other ln champagne, and half.heartedly opened our presents. reserving for the last the one from my practical Mother in Oregon. l removed the red ribbons and green wrap- ping from around a gold foil box . Inside were two sets of six each, of personally mono- grammed bath towels, band towels and wash cloths -blue for my husband and pink for me. Having in mind the bathroom overflowing with Hotel Biltmore linens, my husband guf· fawed. "Just what we needed!" AT THIS POINT, the bell captain telephoned to tell us that there was a package for us from Montana. My husband was con· cemed about its condition. ''ls it on ice?" The reply was negative, so he instructed the man to deliver it to the rooms at once. As quickly as be could, my husband cul the strings. "I wonder what shape it'll be in, com. ing all this way without being chilled. Wow• There goes our Christmas dinner. Better pre- pare for the worst!•· . He lifted the lid orr the package. Inside. on a tree branch, anchored at an angle to a board covered with artificial grass. perched a brilliant· ly plumed long-tailed Montana pheasant expert· ly prepared by a taxidermist. It was my tum to guffaw. "Dark meat ror me, please." Father's Reflections on Perfection Start at Tip of the Tree By PAlJIJNE COLEMAN POMlrMColftnaft ta a refide'fll o/ Son Juan CapUtrano. CopUtrono · The wind 1s sharp and cuts through my J•cket. There's a damp mist in the air. I grab my buodlea, walk fut and enter the frol)t door. I bear the eound or sinetnc and musk. The recep&ioobt looks up with a smile. uyova f'ATRER is in the pat.lent.a' lounae, watchinl them lrtm the Christmas lree." I w Ilk down the hall and stand by the jjoor. Someone it ptaylna the piano. By the wi.ndow •tanclt a tarae pine tree that the employees are trimm1n1. Some are watchln&, others are doitq. I locate my father before he aeee me. ff e ta •lGstns. He loves music. Sln(I well for bit aa•-aowte. . Weavlnt. paat the wheelchalr1, J make my -.,toblllicM, and bend down toklubit cheek. 818 &YES LIGHT up Uke a strlna of Cbrl1tmu u,htl. . "Wbet do JOU lb1nk ol our t.ree?" "It's a beauty." He aludlel my face A cloud seems lO pus ov~ hlaeyee. •Mama \s not goh\g t.o like that. angel on t.op. You girls know better than that. That's where the star goes." I SHOULD BE used to It by now. H1a thoughts drift, become tangled, wander and get lost. But Mama? He hasn't mentioned her for several years. ma voice becomes louder. Jns cheeks Oush, ond he suddenly Jooks stern. ''Then chaoie it right now. You girls·ought to help her more, she's tired and she doesn't feel well." "We wm, Dad," I say. l'VE OOI' TO get him out, b1J volce la loud and can be heard over the aingin1. With effort I maoaae to wheel him around the others, placinc my packages on his lap. The etrl in cbarae of t h e hospital acUvhlu, atvu me an understandinl smile. Oo the way to bls room we pus other paUenta, tome ol them able to move tbetr wbeeJcbfit1 without any help, others ue buddied tocether; tome In• UUle world all tbelrown. •'These are my netahbors," Dad •afl. m1 voice bolda a note of aff ~Uoo. We reach hi• room. Jmmaculattl)' c~un. ..... Three beds all made neatly witb yellow bedspreads. "Are you sure this ls my room?" uygs, DAD, SEE your rad.lo by the bed?" l take the packages off bis lap. • · 1 brought a tree to put oa your bed&Jde table. lt has tiny llghu that blink on Ind olf. "Put it over there " He points to the dresser tn the center. "We can all see It that way." Confused. Muddled at Umes, but the underllnJng of hla true natllft wm DOt be submeraed. Sharin1. 1tvinf, ls on• of the ~ualltles I remember m0tt ol my father .. YEARS AGO, WHEN our to•n'a general·atore provided a t>.rrel for the people to put tn rood for the poor, Dad boulht cookies, candy. nuts and fruit. "You ahould alve them more puctlcal thin11," one woman saJd, ''Food Ulce potatoes and beana." J can sun see the an1er nare ~in h1I raee. "Add two turkey1 to tb1t, ' be told the 1tore·keepet. Tu:rn.tnJ to her, he uked, "Do you plan to serve your ramlb' bean& Cbrlttmu day?" On the way home, be 1aid, "lt'a pretty damn nice to be able to do something for others. It gives you a good feeling inside." I wrap tiny lights around the small branches, hang miniature balls, red and gold, on the tree. On the tip, I place a silver star. "How does that look?" I ask, turning around. He's uleep. His bead resu oa tbe arm or bis chair. An aide and I lift him oo top ot the bed and cover him W'tth a blanJcet. RE OPENS IDS eyes, loots at the U&hled tree. "The star t1 Just rtght. When l see her the first thing I'll tell her ls bow hard you tried.•• "laywr motherstill Uvlng!"theaideukl. "No: abe'a beeo 1one 39 years." r notice a pin on her white uniform. It Ii large and round wttb two word• oa It, "WE CARE." IT JS TllUE{ I think, these! people DO care. "You are at toklod." "We ftnd it rewardi.1'1.'' The girl's voice r1n11 true . I step out.aide. The wind ll colder now, but I reel warm and happy inside. Music, 4ln1ioa and lau1hter. Old folkt made happy. Dad'• 1mlle - and the silver atar at Utt Up ol the tree. _.". . ~ . . .. ICUM Lll"l1A'•N'9 TH :! r , • s a mmntt ·• f f • JU DAILY PILOT Community spirit wa in full force aturday n mcm· bers of cverol t'lvtc 1roup formt>d thl saem bly lln on Marine Avenue on Balbo t lund to park food boxe. for then l'dy lngredlL•nt for o turkey dtnnt•r nntl aJl the lrimmmwc \n•re put an l'Dch box ulonl( with some t'ra<.'kt.•r Jacks for r1111ng slO<' k ma::; Thl' pru1crt . . SJ>t•urht•odt.•tl by th<' Balboa 1 -.lnnd Chamber of ('om mcret.'. O('tkd ubout 400 m ~tt l o . fo'ood dri\f t>~ weu•,or .:unlzt>d In o tht>r Oronaie County ('Jlll'h, al.su to t>t> <.·onc·ludcd for Chru.tmus Eve deli VCrl('l> Bt.'low , Mork Octnck, lO. fm1sh<.•8 has volunlt.'t.·r stml hy t rundllng a <·urt tu the ~nd of the line to ht• drivt•n iJWay ( Pilot Logbook J Holiday's Pulse: Gratitude BY ARTHUR R. VINSEi Ol llM 0.ily l'tl4115C8ft Al the height or this Yuletide season of giving, I wish I could give a pint of blood to the Red Cross. For, you see, I am now a blood brother to others. But it will be many months now before I can begin offering mane In return for new ap preciation of much that's often-overlooked amid the petty concerns and daily details. Never again wall I fail to appr~ciat~: -Walking out into a warm. sunny day under a deep blue sky flecked with smoky, ethereal clouds of chunging shapes. -Solid food a fter days or soup, hot cereal, gelatin, juice and tea. -Mobility, after days tethered lo a hospital bed l by an IV tube. -Friends, family. books, or a chance to look closely al the color or nowers. Never again will l forget that morning, when the last thing I remember after sudden- ly gagging and retching while brushing my teeth was blood ... everywhere, a spinning dizzy. crimson world. ' Getting ready for work, I had wondered a~ai n why I'd felt so lousy for the past month, with no specific symptoms. SU DDENLY THE so-called hidden ulcer erupted in nausea. Luckily, our doctor's office is only a few blocks away. They half-carried me into an examina. Uon room, where he took about a minute to look me over. "You're in deep shock. Oet, him to Foun- tain Valley Community Hospital right now" he said turning to my wile, Susi. "l'U have ~ lnternisl waiting. He's one of the best." SO MUCH OF the ensuing 36 hours is a blank, except for obscure, delirious bits and \)ieces. I remember looking up into the luminous eyes of the akllled Jndlan lnternlst. He wore a traditional turban with a glitt.er1ng aem, set on his forehead, a badge of his faith. Someone mentioned getUng me Into the Intensive Care UnJt. The three-letter acronym -ICU -was Uke a punch ln the •tomac~. ICU .. .ICU?.· .. tan't th1l where tbey • . put those who are in grave danger and perhaps about to die'! Only after four blood transfusions and one of plasma was I transferTed to a regular three-bed room to begin recovering from the loss of half my entire bodily blood supply. The next 36 hours are another blank. The night afterward, I began to form an idea of just how much I have to be thankful for today. Father James C. Caley, who married us just 3'h years ago, crept in about lighL<>-out time for an unexpected visit, wearing his usual black cassock, a gentle, lovable, pedan- tic guy, even though retired officially. He administered Unction, the application of Holy Oil dabtx.>d onto the forehead in the ancient laying-on-of-hands healing ritual pre. scribed in the Book of Common Prayer, for the very ill. BEING A SK F.PTIC by the bas le newspaperman's standards, l have no formal religion, but it is nice to know that God and blood are probably there when needed. Finally, after several days of examina· tions -my guts got so many screen tests they deserve an Oscar -It was lime to go home. The gruff, bluff jokes with nurses and or- derlies were over; that joking is a hedge against what might .have been for me and also their own way of dealing with it too, I think. So I was ready to hear the gory details, or some of them. Surprisingly. I felt no reaction as my wire described how doctors gave me 30170 chances. The emotional impact sank in the sunny. storm-scrubbed November afternoon I called horpe to say the release papers were signed ana she could come and pick me up. NEAR SUSI AS she chatted on the phone was our etema shadow Barney, lazy ltttle dog that he is. He had been bewildered, bereft and sometimes lonely and confused in my unex· plained absence, although he dooa know the meanJng of the word: sick. "Your 'sick Daddy' ls going to be home tonight. The 'People Vet' made him all bet· ter," she told him, In the l•n1Ua1e the three of us seem to speak fairly salialactorily. Barney began joyously 1queaUn1, shriek· Ina. wiggling and performing backfilpe on the bed at that end of lbe phone. And I H l on the hoapltal bed, Just wlpln1 my eyes and unable to aay anythiq at all. PVBUC NOTICE f'ICTITIOUS IWltMIN NAMll ITATI M•NT ,..!,... ,..,_. lllffWI ,, OOlfll ... ". .A & L C()fjSTttUCTl()fj, MIOI AMW L9'1t~ll, 0eN .....,,., C. .,.,. J I Al»li, a.IOI AnWf I.MM-. Oe11e flolflt, c. ,,.,. Tnl1 llutlnetO 11 C..-.CIM lty flt fflo tflvteu.M J t ....... n11 ,, .. _ ••• 111 .. w1111 """ covntr Cterti ot Or•not C011111, Of\ 0.CeMO.r 14, !flt ..... P\lbll•llN o-..... GM•t Deity Pli.t 0.C 11,'4.ll,mt,JM 1,lfPt ,..._,. PUBLIC NOTICE f'ICT1TIOUI I UllNllS HAN ITATIMeMT Th• 1011ow1.,. oeraon• •rt cl0l"9 bv\ll\IOet fltAVl!L HI TW01t1t PACtf'tC PL"14 fl!4VCl., JS. (. 11111 It , • IOI, (0\1• Mew, OI fMtJ "1•dr• ,. ,.,,,ro -J..-l Potro, .00 Cblllo St • COJI• ~--. CA .,.71 Tllh bu\l•••u I• condu(-lly .n ,,.. dlvldu•I AndnP Porto Tl>lt \I .. _ we• Ill«! wllll INI County Cltrll ot 0 ••"99 Gounty on 09< 10 ... .,. ........ Publl'lled Or.-.oe CO.ti! 0.lly Piiot. OW 14, JI. 1'11, J.,, !• U , If~ "611-lt PUBLIC NOTICE .. ICTITIOU5 austMIUS H4MS IT4TIMteHT Tiie fat,_1119 a-<'IOfl I\ dolnQ bu\1 ... ".' ' A"LPH OORR A4CI N G f'NGl~l!S. lf4' Welton. Cotle #HM, CA .,.7. A•ll)ft Ml<"'"t ~r. 11" Wal\Oft. Co.I• M•te, CA '7t~ H•I\ butlnht h COflOuCltd 1>¥ an In· dlvlduet II •IPll M Gorr Thlt ll•l-1 W<H lllftl Wiii> lhft Cout11y Clfrll of Or•f\99 Cou111., on Nov. >O, 1'1t ,.,.,... Pub41\-Or~ C.O.'t 0.lly Piiot 0.<. J 10, 11. ,., ,.,. PUBUC NOTICE f'IC'TITIOUS a ultHIU HAllAI STATllMINT TM IOl-nQ !»<Min I\ dol"IJ buSI· M\\•\ 8"CIC 8"Y V(!TERllU.AY MO\PlfAL. 42'.I 8trcl> SI. ... ew.,.,.-1 O.lly "'"" ~· 9Hcl>, c" t7660 Ge0<q. y ICMICMrl .... 7» St Tl•om••. Or-. OI.,... flll• bu\lntll "c-1.0 b" Mn ln-dlvlOU•I 04S .. Alt1C c;_.09 Y K.._.<Ntrl.,, THOMAS OASPARIC RHld""' Of Tl>I\ """""""" Wit\ "'"' Wiii> '"" N••oor1 e .... ,, p .... d •w•Y County c•-of o..,. County on O.cemi..r 71, "" 41 Ill!> ~ 01 •• Oe<•m~r 10. 1'119. B•IOll•d loffht'r ol M•ry J•tOb ot .. .....,. s.t<r•m•nlo. C•lll "'°"'" 8•t•nt ot PUOll\lled o .. noe CM\1 Dally Piiot N~wport Oucn. 1ovino brotll•r 01 Oec 74. 31, 1'71, Jen 1. 14, 1'14 C.oldl• Gr-m ot &oulo.r, Color-~~.,. and Steve Bel•nt ol &.onq Btacl> l'unerot \@rvltn w111 ~'"'Id T-•v. ·------------ D•cember i. •I• 30 AM •I ''"'Holy PUBUC NOTICE FICTITIOUS auStHISS NAME ST4TI MI NT r.1n11v Cromlon ChUrch '" CllO<•Vo. II· • llllOI\ Interment will be .. tl>e AP\I"· rc11on c.m.cerv In JIAtKe. 1111noh. Smltn Tur11111 L.,..b Mor1u<1ry Olrtc· Th• lottowlnq l)efMln\ ••• 001nq builnen•' ------------·! Sl>N AJl(.0, 17510 8rOOlll>ur\I SI • •ors Neptune Society CREMATION 8URIALATSEA 646-7431 V •ur H< &al -IH'lty #•I~ ..... flt .... ,. , .... , -( ......... t.t<•I<• C.11 ,., ,,... _,... .. Founl•ln VM!ley, CA '1ICI Hyunq Sup L.lm, SHI Oo.tnokt Ave lrVll"t, CA 9)114 $00n R ••no C.hunQ, 4S s.,.rrow Hewk. I rVIM,CAt211• Tl>ll bU\llW\\ I\ <onek>CI~ by • Qf'ner•I par1Mritlj)lp. Hyunci 5'>11 Lim T"i\ \tel-I W•\ fllecf Wiii> t .... County Cll'r• 01 Or•noe County on o.t. 13. 1'71 14 ,.., c ..... , ... ,, FtMJ7J Pubtlst.ed Or~ Cont O.tlly Piiot. -------------tOe<:. 11, 74. SI, t'1•. Jen 1. ,._,. "&Cl Uon4HS SMl1"'\ MOttTUAU 627 Main SI Huntington Beach 536-6539 PlllC 'AMILY COL~IAL AIHHAl HOMI 7801 Bolsa Ave Westmrnster 893--3525 rACIFfC: YllW MIMO«IAl PAltlC Cemetery Mortuary Chapel 3500 Pac1l1c View Drive Newoort Beach 644-2700 McCOtl ... ICK MOltTUAltllS Laguna Beach 494-~15 Laguna Hills 768-0933 San Juan Cat>tstrano 495-1776 IAln..llll~HOH fUMBALHOMI 646-2424 Costa Mesa 673-9450 IB.L UOADWAY MOttTUAltY SUl-7t PUBUC NOTICE FICftTIOUS BUSIHIH NAME STATEMENT T,,. fo11ow1no ~non I\ dOlno bull ""'""" MURR"YCA81NETS.1•71 Sl&ler. 1)1'11 F. HUlllll>Qlon Beac11. CA., .... 1Ce11Mlll S Murr•r, 197t7 H•rdlno ln • HUf>llnoton llN<n. CA~ Tiii\ bu\iftn\ It Concluett>d by•" in dlYldu•I K-'11 S """'llY Thi~ \till-I W•• lll@d wllll I"" County Clfflo ot 0<•"911 Count., on Ot<eftlber fl. 1971. FIMS7' Pul>ll\MCI Or-COHI D•tly Ptlol Dec . 11. 74. ll. ""· J.tfl, 1, "" S.OCPI PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITOUS 9USINteSS M4MIE STATIEMIEHT T"" 1011ow1no persons ••• dolno bulln.UH BIKE WIZARO. 40i E. tftll. ~le MHM. C •· 9"71 Ric,,.,..,,.,,..., ... 0ew11c;e, 40S e . ""' St., CO\t. Mew. C. '?611 Thi• bu\°""s 1, <onduct<ld 1>r •n ln- Cllvldu•t. llkl\Mt'd A OOJWllde This tl•ttrnent wM llled wlln ~ County Clerk ot Oret199 Cour>ly °" No .. ,..bet 30, 1'11. FltMtJ Publls-Orenoe C:O.st Delly P11<11 09<. l. 10. 11, 14, .. ,. S<Ul-18 P UBLIC NOTICE 6ouNTY I OBITUARIES PllBUC NOTICE f'ICTlTIOUW IUllMHI NAM41 t'tATIMINT .Jbll.J~l*.lllU •ta. 1191.D• 11111111•0•• leL.&.VICW P'UltNITUltl OIYISIOH, tan OwlmOtrl Avenue, f11•1111, c .. Hot'fll<I ltlfl ( Ot,.lle Ct , l11c .• e Celltornlt ~"'°"· JOOt lt9dhlll AVllfllte, .... .,,... I , C.,fe M4lu, Celltoml• Tllh but-.. lo <.-.CIN ., • <M• -·•toit 81111 c a..ttlt Co .I~. ...... ~ .. Clltl~mtn of tlwt 9o¥d Tl!ll I~ .. _. II.._ Wiil\ 1"41 Count.-Clerll of Or•nQe '°""'Y Ofl HeWMllef° It, lf1' DU•YIA. MAl.Q)Uoll, 04\'&VITTI ... ........,. .. uw qtl M<IC.....,..,.._ ~· Otlk• ... t111 .. _,.., '"'-"· c.. '*J Pwe!ltlled Or.,... GMll Oelhr P11411 o.c l. 10. 17, t•. 1'11 ~,. PUBLIC NOTICE f'ICTITIOUS au$1NIH H.AM& STATIMINT T1141 foltowlno Mf'ton '' dolno btnl MUI\ "HO NONSENSE .. WOAKSWO ... 101•1 MO.,.lown l.n • HunllnQton 8"<11,C•.,,... 4udrey J o ·A•llty. 10161 .._,_n LI\. HuntlnQ!on &.ec11. c. ftM4 Tnl\ bu\IM\\ I\ tondllclMI bll M In• dlvldu•t. Audrey J O•Aetlly Tiii• ... ,_, ... , llt@d ""'" '"" Counlv Cttrto ol Of•• COUl\IY on PVBUC NOTICE PICTITIOUI IUllHHI MAMa UATIM•MT Tiie tet,....,.. 1M•10111 •r• dOlno lllltf~ ~ OCEAN .. A(lf'IC P'OOTWIAtt, -· lt4'd ... ,, "-· 8\llldlftll 4, '4111• ttt,Cotte~CA~ lter"""" C JtNlftt, IPR Or.., OM•, we..-t'nlnt441r, (A fffoa TMn\n C 0..-t, t•t I(~ "°"°· lf•-1 BM(ll, u. ~ 1tot111d J Colllnt, Jll O•""•· c;.ron.i del MM, CA.,.,, T~lt blltlt>eu It Condu<leil l>Y • ..... •• I IMll1ne""'9 ltr;..-C JIMIM AOl¥CI J Coltlnt T..,,... Ci o..n... Tlllt \t411-I Wff llltd wltll IM C4H!ntv ,._ ~ 0reft911 ~Y Oft ~ .. tfftW JO, ,.,, "'"'" Pvbll11ttd Or ..... Coetl o.lty Piiot DK J, 10, 11. 2A, 1'11 S4'1·71 PVBUC NOTICE f'ICTITIOUI IUllMlll N4Ma IT4TIMIN1' Tfloe lollQwlno --It CIOlno bu•I· """ ... MEHltV STIREO, til' Herbor 81..0 • Co1I• M41w, C:. ,,.71 AObttrf J-P4tQll, 111 JNM St .. Co.t• ~. c. '1611 Tnl• .,.,,,,.."Is C-lld bY •n In· d4vklue1 lllobHI J, Peoef Tl>I\ ttel-1 w•> lllecl wllll 11111 County c .. rt. ol Or-c-tv on Novefllbet ~. ltlt • fltH6Jl P\lb41~ Or ... C.0." Dally Piiot Dec J, 10. 17. t•. 1'11 S447 18 PUBLIC NOTICE °"<•,,,.,., 14. 1m. fl1MtM STATIIMINT Of' PubllSl!tCI 0rMIQIP CoKI 0.lly "llol AIANOOH,._NT OP' USI OF 09< 11. 14,31. 1'11,J"' I, tm Aofl-71 f'lt1'1TIOUS aUSIHtEIS NAME TM tol-lnq "''°"" .,..,. •b.tn doM<I tt.e 11141 Of 1119 Fl<1111ou' 8ut1· PVBUC NOTICE ST4TIMIEHTOf'41AMOO..MIMT Of' UH Of' f'ICTITIO\IS auStHHS MAMI T"" lollOWlllO oet!loni MW •blln 00...0 INI 1.M Of l"9 llctlllou' llu\I""" ,.._ REOAl CERAMI CS Of: NEWPORT. 11111 ~ Bl"d, Cosi. Mn•,CA'1•71 Kevin PMoll e .... 1. Ut2 Ludl- Clrcte. H ..... lnq!Otl e .. ch. CA.,~ H4rold L" Klmtll'll. 407 HIQl\IAnd A~.Monroe.CAJC»U Tiii\ bu\tnen .., .. conduci..ci bY • -r•I IMrtM~O 1tf'"ltl Peut 8Mel lltl\ ttal-t wa\ llled with ""' County Cl•rll ot O••noe C-tr on Nowmt>er 79, 1'11 fl'"41S P<ibft\IWG Or-Coe•I Oellt Pilot OK l. 10. 11. 14, 1971 PVBUC NOTICE FICTITIOUS auStNHS-- N4MI! ST.ATI Ml!HT ln .. tolloWl"O 0<1non• •re dOlno bUii_,.,,., ICUI COHSTJIUCTIOH ANO SUP PLIES. lJOoll Roo c;,-Clrclf. El fO<O, CA ~•ti R~. nlMI Rio Gr.,,.,. Cir (I•, El Toro, CA Ol•nM ROl .. r, 2?1)11 Rio Gr- Clrclt. El Toro, 0\. r Ill\ bu'i'nH\ "conoucteo by an In· dlvlOU•I 01-ROllftr ""'"·-BAY 114014TOR SHOP, 109 Sup•rlor A"enue, Cott• Mu• C•lllorn11 'l?t» ' Tiie Fltll~ 8Wnet\ N•me ••· IHr"" to _.,. w•\ lelecl In Orenoe COUtllr on Mey 79. 191S R•ymond "O""'•· Jr., 20011 SOl\om• Ro•d. "PPI• Valley C•lllornl• '2XIJ • R•vmono Aou1rre. 111, 10011 Sonome Ao•d. Apply V•ll•• C.lllOrtll• '2'.JD1 • Tl\1$ l>lni"'K' Wit\ Conout1MI by • 119,,,,.1 l)M<lne<\l>lp /\I A•Ymond "9111rre "I ThlJ 11•1-t w•\ !Ill!<! with tll<t Countr Cieri! ot Or•-County on Oe<em.ber M, lf1t. F441'7 Publl"'-OrllnQll eo.u °""' Pitot ~~ 1•. 31. mt. Jtlfl ••• ,,,. s... ,. P UBLIC NOTICE P'ICTITIOUS •usueru H4MC ST4T£MIENT TM tollowino 1141''°"' •r• do•r>Q """""'' ... EL CAMINO 4SSOCIATES. 1600 Dove Street. S..•i. IOO, H_.1 &•"· Ce tt..O J•<lt J JOo\lty !IS Patollt•. CO<"on• det M.tw. C. nu~ Jolltl H. CummlnQt, 1• Em(>ty S.d· die 11....i, ll0411nQ Hiii\ Ett.ttn, C.•. ~14 lllc,.ard 8. Phebllt, 1'\S Port 81\l\09 Pl•o. N•-1 8'..:n. C•. ..,..., lhy O W1cll•n. 1~3• B•rtlde 0<1 .... C~ct-4 Mer, C. .,,u Tiii\ bu•lne\\ I> blll"Q ConclUCled P' • QeMr•I ~rTnHY>lo lier G Wlo.en t. Tlllt tl•l-C Wh lfled with 1,...,- f'I..... County Cter11: ol °'•"99 <:ounty on Pubh\-0t.tnQI' C.O." !>.lily Piiot Oe<ember 14, 1971 Flo..>7 Tiii\ \letf'MMI w•• filed will> I~ Counlr Clf'fll ot Ou~ Cou11tv °" O.omtwr '°· 1•11 Ott 7•. JI 1411. J.,. I. U. 1919 SI,. II Publl~ OrMIOt C.0.U 0..oly Pelot OK II. 1•, JI, lt19. J.n •. 197' ~ 1• PVBUC NOTICE P'ICTITIOUS auSIHEU H4Mf STATEMCHT Th# lolloWl"ll """o"' ••• dolno buSIMS\.tt SUNSET V10£0 PRODUCTIOH$. 16101 Beyvlew Or , SUr>WI ke.c,.. C•to10fnl.t I0741 1 Jamt!\ L..., Mon&Qllan, 16141 8•vv1 .. 1 D< • ~ 8'e•"· C•lltl>fnl• 'IO!O 1 JUOllll ~ ~. 1'141 S.rv•• .. Or .~ a. .. 11. C...lltotf>•• 907'1 Tiii~ bu"""' Is conou<lM bY .., .... d1v•dual J~L~ Thi\ \l.ol-W•\ lilf'd Wiii\ - Countv Clerk ot 0""9f' County on Nov 11 19}1 f'lllSJJI Publl\-Ot-CtMt\I O•llY Piiot ~ J. 10, 11. 7•. 1'71 S416-11 PUBLIC NOTICE f'ICTITIOUS eU51NHS NANI!! ST.ATIMl!NT Thf IOllOW•"9 ~,...,,, .,. Oolnq tiY\lnenA\ lHE $1l1t TREE, !SCH Sl•ln. Unit "F ," Huf>t1t1'110tl BeiKlt. C• '1M1 PUBLIC NOTICE -----------l'ICTITIOUS llUSIHl:SS NAME STAT£Mlrlol1' Th# •01tow1no Ot'rW>nl •r• dOtnci IM>•lr>tt\ ~ ICOLL·WC'LLS/PALOM.'A. 1901 Dov• Str1tel, "--' a. .. 11. CA.,""° Donald M. KOii. ~Vie LIOO Saud, HewPOrl 8HCll CA,.,..., O•vld P MIO<ll<r,.,.\, II Hell M-. 8"Y Orlvlt. Cor-Otlit del M•r. CA •?&H Ev""" o...... II t. 1 ue Mt'•• Ortv". N#,.,_.t BP.icll, CA 97660 l 1mo1nv l St'"""' tUO Por1 Alb.tn• Ne-1 BP«ll. C4 97660 StMlt y F Broo,,.,.1. S Po'"t Sur O<lv• N•W1>0'1 84>a<ll. C ... 9?6olO 8••nMd F1pp, 17711 HldOMI Valhry Court. lit JOtt• CA '1031 Or,.n W Miii••. 11)1 Sant" .-..-,.,Court. Sotona 8'oMI\, c,.. cno1•, Wpll\ Far~ Mori--Eau•tv Tr\>\I 330 W&•,..noton SI. ~ .... llOI, MMlna d~t ll•v. CA ll0741 l rui bV\inf'ti\ '' condv<lf'd OY • qf.tfWflJf Oo!lrff'VlfC.f\tO T1motllr L S•r-r Tl\h \lltf-.t Wd' 111..0 Wiii! ,,... county CIPr• of o ..... County on DI!< 10 .. ,. FIOU!J Publl•"*" Orenoo-Coe•t o .. ,,, P•IOI, 0e< 24. JI. "It. Jen 1, U, 1'1'1 Jo"" K .. ter Chednter. 11146 -------_ 170)/1 Faller.le•• Cir. Founi.•n Vattev. C... .,,.,. PUBLIC NOTICE Roe.r1,.,.,,. Amu. uoo s. S-ist. • A,,.l>t•m.C. Robert £~M soe11mytr. 1251 0•-.CO\l•-.C• Cl•rencr O."'•' F•lrchHO. ISlOO M<tQnatl•. W.,lmln"rr. Cd ll\I\ bu\llW\\ " conductM by • oener•1 IM!r1Mf'\llfp, John IC C'-''"' Tiii\ \I•'-W~ lill'CI With !lte County Cltrt• ot Ort>nqe County on No.,.mber JO. 1911. P'l'S6D Pub41UM!d Or~ Co.t\I Delly Pltol De< l. 10, 11, 74 1971 ~ .. HI PUBUC NOTICE lt·SIS76 SU .. lltlOA COURT OF THE STATIE OF CALIFOllHIA, COU NTY Of' ORANGE ... A0.1"16 CtTATI~ tn lh• Matt•• ol '"" p,.1111on ot SALL V AHN LI nt f Md TRAV I') J LITTLE on -If of ~HANNON LYN CEJIAFTO, "Mino'. 101 ~,•,.dom frOll'I P11r~nl;tl CV\kldY ,.nd Control l hf! Pf'Opl~ of '"" ~l;Jlp 01 C11ritorn1<t loCLAAF NCE .llllH(ICLER 1 10 Broedway Costa Mesa 642·9150 Pur,uant to th• ldW 1011 arf'! ,..,,.bV (llf'<I •nd rl'Qu11t'd to ;t-dr Df'lor" Ille IUCIQ> ot 1111\ tOVr1. In< alt-d "' Covrtl>OUW. 100 (1vor C•n1~1 O""" WP\I. In llw Oly ot ~ ... An• County FICTITIOUS IUSIHISS FICTITIOUS auSIHISS Of Or•nllf', ~IAI" o! CaUfOfn1d. "I '"" H4ME ST4Tl!MIH1' H4MI! •T.ATIMIHT Courtroom al OPl>ltrtnwnt No 8 on s ... nt.TUTHIU--lAMI MOltTUAltY WHTCUH CHArll Crerretory •Flower Shop 427 E 17th SI Costa Mesa 646-4888 A Tl>e lalloWlno persoo " dolno bu\I Tiit lo11ow1no oer•o<1> ••• dOlno M<ircll 1 "~ •• 4 oo o·<toc~ • m, neu U """"~" •• ,,,..., itnd ,,.,..,. 10 •l>Ow ceuw. It Mv. ORAlfGE COUNTY TRUCICllfG, ART UNIOUE OF LAGUNA wl>yP~ll110Mf\Or\Om41ol ... r>ultAb0. lSJ? El>Oe, lrvlne, CA •UIS BEACH 401 G'-5u John K"vtn O'C:-, )SJ? Ebof-, Lot911n• 'IH.cll. CA.,:;~· He 101·4, ~''°" 'l>Ould not bf' -1n1M1 r.uM lrvlne. CA .,llS Holll• "'""~tin Ouo, ts. Mc>Nrc" dlen ol '"" I>"'"°" "nd t~t•'" of ,,.,a Tiii• l>u>iftn' I' ~ondU<IMI by en In 8•Y. Soul" IAquNI. CA 9'611 """°' l'((O<donq II> 1"" """'"'" Ql'll dlvlOu•I. l!Ol><lr1 O.roi 8uo, 5 Soutll Ston· uon on t11~. lo"'"''" ''"'"'•nee·~ m~<IO JOIWI Kevin o·Qwmor lnoton, Sovlll uo.-. CA.,,,, for turtll•• ""'"<Ul8r\ T1111 ,,.,_, "'"' Wed ""'"' ,.,. T "" t>u,,.,.,, " <Ot>ducr.., br • o .. 1...i ~ ,., "" Cou111v Cltrk .o• O<•noe County on Q4'Mr•l 1Mrtner\lllp 1!.EAL 1 December S, "71. 11_.,, 0 Buo. WIU.14M E. St JOHlf ,....._ Tllh •lei-I we• lilfld will\ ll>e c-ty Clf>rk llnd C In• Publl•htlcl OrMl\Qlt CO.st 0<1ily Piiot co11nty Cttrll of Or•~ Coul\IY °" ol thl' 5'Hlerf0f COOH1 O.<. "· 24. ll, ttl't, Jen 1, 1•1• o.c tl. t•ll. ol '"" !it•te ol -------------l ~-II f'tOH'• C8111Mn1A,lll"'ndlor PubllJhfcl Or-Co.\! o.lly Pilot. ,,.. County Of Or•<>QP VETERANS Rf •nslde Natlo••I C•M•tery h Now Ope11. NO CHARGI for ....... to ••fled •tteraM&lpC*M. c:e1 w lwfou..._ SMITH TUTHILL LAMI M~ ........ ................ ~117' 427 •. 17• St .. Celt• .... 646-4888 PUBUC NOTICE lllCTITIOUI eUllNlll MAMl ITAHMIHT TN lollowlnt _... II dolflQ 111111• M ... , MAltSH4ll DHIGH, au H• Stllt lf\ .......,_.. 111411<11, CA., ... l(•thttlM o ,,.,.,,, au "'°"" Ster L.11 • HftlllOl'I .. etlt, CA fKtO Tfll\ fl;lllNM II (Ofldu(lld by Ill In. lvldu4tl K~O.SllUIH Tltlt lie~ wt1 llltd wllflt tit _,, atf1I ., 0refll9 c-ty on DKtfllllt~ 14, lf11. ., ..... ........... Or .. CMlt Delly ...... DK. 11, t•, II, Jtl'I, •, 1'19 1621 J .... • . . ~-·"· PVBUC NOTICE f'ICTITIOUS IUSIHUS HAMIE STATIMIHT T'l>t 1011-lnQ oer\Ot1\ •r• dolno f)u'IMU•.t HUE AMERI C AN PRESS IHTEllHATIOHAL. l«M Nof"lh Oranci A ...... S.llt• AN CA. '1101 ltobf'rt Melt-Olmst.eo, J029 O•rMI L-. Or..,., C.A .,66'1 Jolln Mer\ C•ldwf!ll Ill, 11041 Much Avt. OtM>QO> P.tr-. CA t?66'I Thi\ tlu\I,..<\ h tOftduCll!d by A ll"'lltd pen-\1\lp. R*'1M 04mu .. c1 Thi\ \lel-1 wit~ llled wlllt 1119 Countv Cler1' ol Or•ft99 County °" Ho11e,,,-7I, 1ne f'ltslMJ Pul>ll•nect Orel\Ot CoMI D•llY Piiot, Otc:emhr l. IO, II, 24. ltl't S4').7' O.C. II, u . JI,""· Jen 1. ''" fh Fre!'Cf\ w. H••dt"9 J r S.V • 11 o.c>uty -------------'SAM HILL An-yet .... 11n11rv11 .. a1.-•• SlllW,. PVBUC NOTICE ------------1 Twtll>•, CA fMlf Publl•heO OrM'Qt C:O.>I Dally Piiat ~ •. u. 10. ,., 1911 µa7 " PUBlJC NOTICE _____ .... __ 7 7 7 3 ·a a a mm ettmn a • J , Not Quite Domesticate~ Enough for_ His Present Domain. Beads Rome HAMPTON BAYS. N.Y. <APl -Rackett· bush 11 ,otn, home -to 1 home be'• never aeen. And Hadtenbu.ah doetn't ewo know ll. Harkenbuab la an oUvt baboon, about 30 pound a and 30 lnchea of IUftflDI. leaploc, threattfl.lnl lnlt.lnct -but IOIDethlq more. HE WA.8 BOaN IN the 8.ltoa ftouce, IA , Zoo aome thrff y ars •eo. • nMR baDdl&&l t.He. It Wal the WIY be ••lkfd, wben IM walk..S. DOt qutte upnaht. but with lbat 1tooped eNd!MU ot Oroucho Yan ln the role ~ ff'u,o Z. Hacbn· bu ab ln ·'A Day Al Tbt fhcee." "Sort ~ Ub be was cam•na • heavy 1ul\cue ln each band and 1lw1y1 had hla kn bent under lbe load. That'• what Hackenbusb lootted Ukt walk· ina. Bu\ ttackenbush Is not Groucbo lilarlt. Re ls a baboon. a.nd he'a 1rowu11 up and Uw UDlled StateA la too amall for h1m. So be'a 1oinc borne to Africa, Tan11nJ1 to be •peclftc. lo 1oln hla own kind. It l1 an unu1u1l expertDMDt on Ute or der of the old radio aoap opera, "Our OaJ Suft. day.·• lo determine whet.her a babom broutht up ln a world of automobiles and lelevialoo, who once had hia own room in a suburban home, can find happineas In a troop of jun1le-wlae · brethren. WUI be change them? Or will they chanae him? · Thal is the question, says Phil Ketover his 26·year-old keeper HACKENBVSH HAS LEARNED a lot of things in the last three years, things of doubt!Ul value in the wild. Ketover believes Hackenbusb understands about 100 words of En1Usb. Since bis new compatriots do not, it la sort of like tak· ing a Ph.D. into Dogpatch. There are two things Hackenbush doesn't like: bees and the word, .. no." He react.s to each by baring his teeth and raisjn'g his eyebrows, which in baboon talk means .. Beat It, baby. or I'll tear you apart." and sundry swear words. Uke all youngsters, he has a simple dislike of the word "no" bec.-ause it crowds his style. M for bees, he was apparently stung one Ume and now bolds a grudge against the entire order of Hymenop· tera. He loves one thing: Phil Ketover. Ketover loves him. Ketover loves all animals and has since his youth in Brooklyn, N.Y. He remembers badgering bis mother for permission to get a pet lion. She told him, "When you grow up and leave home." Two weeks after he ten home be had a pet lion. He Met Soprano Sings Blues Over Firing NEW YORK <AP) -In the exahed world of opera, a mundane quarrel over job security might seem as out of place as Lohengrin arriving on stage by rubber raft instead of by swan. But not to soprano Lucine Amara. After performing regularly at the Metropolitan Opera for 27 years, she has been batUing for two years to keep singing. ON ONE SIDE, a SJ.year-old soprano who admit.s she's overweight and wrinkled but who says s he stHI sings well and is being dis· criminated against because of her age. On the other side, tbe Mel's management, wbicb says her age has nothing to do with it, but that sbe is vocally bland and lacks dramatic presence. .... , -'· Miss Amara says that after 745 performances, sing· ~~ Ing for the Met con· •we •i•plw raaaot lorre tltem to lf!t her ... ,,, ,, .., ..... •ea• aei tiag ..-.el1'f!S .. .. ezpert• o• tdlat•~Olle opera •i•ger fJetter tho• ....,.,., s titutes her steady job and the house is her home. 1be Met says she baa always been more stand-in than star and insists on a free hand in US· ing the best soloists. What sets her apart from many ag. ing singers is h er com plaint to the Human Right s division of New York state -and its ruling ....,..._...........,......~ that she was a victim of age discrlmina · tion. Opera singers, like athletes, have always dreaded the effects of advancing years . Sopranos especially are prone to vocal prob· lems. There are ramous exception. on both sides: Marla Callas, hailed as the greatest singer of the age ln the l950s, lost her voice and retired from the opera stage at 42. Yet Australian soprano Nellie Melba kept going unW she was 67 BEVERLY SILLS, NEAii.iNG 50, bu lost some of her voral splendor. She taced up to the inevitable and set a definite d'1e for reurement in 1980. She is to become co-director of the New York City Opera. But Miss Amara says she's not ready lo re- tire -and so she rejected the Mel's attempt lo settle by offering more than $60,000 for the cur· rent year just to be available aa an undentudy. "If my voice had deteriorated I'd bave taken the money and shut up." Mlsa Amara says. "But I'm not going lo let them glve me 'hush money' when I know I'm as &ood "as ever." " Critics may not all agree. Some never cared for her voice In Us prime. But a New York Times critic who beard her Madame Butterfly lo Stamford, Conn .. in October 1977 wrote that despite a "shaky entrance" and aome high notes with "a brittle ect1e," she brougbt "know· Ing muaiclanahip and well-studied control to her characterluUon" and her vole. often "took oo a beamingly t~trous tone.'' Phil Ketover'a planning trip home for H ackenbuah, his pet baboon, but the creature has never seen the T anzsnian wilds and may not be able to survive a hostile reception by other baboons or nature's hazards. named lt Lion MacDufr. He also r eads ShBkespeare and has a penchant for puns. MACDVFF WAS VSED in a number of commerciala and television shows. He now lives 'with a lriend ot Ket.over's in California. Ketover used to deal in animals, buying and selling them. But gradually be saw bow naive people were in handling them, and he also saw first hand some of the cruelty that befell them. He got out of the business. But not out of love with animals. Ketover knew zoos have a surplus of many animals, in· eluding lions and baboons. He got Hackenbush when he waa only three weeks old. Baby ba· boons normally cling to their mother's chests, but Hackenbush couldn't do that with Ketover, so he would cling Instead to his trouser leg. Only trouble was his tail would dangle on the ground and Ket.over kept stepping on it as be walked. 1llis won't work, thought Hackenbush, so he turned upside down, thus satisfying bis need to cling to bis keeper ANO protecting bis tail. For a while, in Fort Collins, Colo.. where Ketover earned his B.A. in zoology and psychology, Hackenbush had bis own room in Ketover's house, but as he grew older, it just wasn't practical anymore. BACKENBVSH IS INCREDIBLY strong and agile ror hla size. Even when he was smaller. he could rup over a 100.pound ~rman Shepherd. Kelover's dogs respect him and stay away. Traveling with Hackenbush also created problems. Mostly Ketover, whose study of Hackenbush will be bis master's thesis, and bis friend, Janet Martz. 23. camped out, where Hackenbush could be tt.hned loose on occasion. But once, Hackenbusb ran to the car and before Phil Ketover could stop him, he had dis· mantled the windshield wipers and had all or the r adio knobs oCf and in his mouth. Even from his caee. Hackenbusb can crea~e problems. Janet was walking by one day and be reached out, grabbed her by the seat of her 'Operatic soprano Lucine Amara says her voice, appearance are no reason for firing Her claim of d iscrim ination is based largely on a comment she says Met Music Director James Levine made about her lo a col- league in the fall of 1976. "If Lucine Amara would go away,'' Levine ls said to have remarked, "change the color of her hair, have a facelift, change her name and come back within a month singing as she does now, she would be the hottest new soprano around." Miss Amara says Levine acknowledged that remark when she confronted him. She says he added that the public was "tired or her" and that she had "been around too long.·• By that point in her career, Miss Amara - a native of Hartford, Conn. -ha~s dif· ferent major roles al the Met, and soo to add a 27th. And always she could called on to step ln al the last minute if another artist can· celed. "The straw that broke the camel's back" came in December 1976, when Martina Arroyo got sick the day of an "Alda" Saturday after· noon broadcast performance. .. , WAS FIRST COVER and Martina even called me lo say she was canceling," Miss Amara recalled. "But then I learned Gilda Crui-Romo, who wasn't even under contract. was being brought in instead." .r ' ' . , .\{~; '~· ,.,,. . ·~·· \ .. , 1.C. ~· '~·' I ' ~°) I •I • \ 9 'J ' \, .\ .... ,, '' • 'l\ l ·• \... "\ ,, \.-... '~· .. ,., "~ (- "~-~ ~'7 ! Tn 'IUb!lcrlbe J to )UUr ·~ mmmun11~ ne"sp11per C'all I 642·4321 B11iU!N• l~ .. aciti '~.;,i1ry ( or11p.Hnj C >pn1 I "t.· r \ \1111da\ lint ii liri .. t111:1 .. . ,, .• ....... •1·~ f .... , •... ,,1 '!f l ........ . ' ·. Miss Amara went to the Human Rights division, and after a prolonged series of hear· ings, she won the ruling in her favor last April. But so far it's been a paper victory, since she has not sung at the Met again. "We simply cannot force them to let her sing," says Charles Hayes, spokesman for the division. "Il would mean we were setting ourselves up as experts on what makes one opera singer better than another." Miss Amara wants more than a face-saving compromise. "I was hired from 1950 to 1977 as an on· stage performer," she says, "yet I am now told <See OPERA, Page AIOI REGISTER FOR WINTER TRIMESTER at the HUNTINGTON BEACH ADULT SCHOOL / DEeEMBER 28-29 HOURS: 12/28-8 a.-.-10,.... I 2/29-1 a.111.-4:30 p.-. at The Education Center 120 I lolta A•_. H•tllMJf•INcll Cl.ASSES BEGIN OM JAllJARY 2 "Something for everyone ... " FOR IMFORMATIOM CALL ltM7J6 I DAIL y Pl,!.OT A. • • pants and pulled her to the ground. He doesn't much like women. He aggresses against them, bared teeth, raised eyebrows, shrieks. He doesn't like most people. but occasionally for no known reason be takes to a male outsider. Once recently be began laughing in his peculiar way when a teenage boy came visiting. He made friendly "follow me'' move· menta with bis head. and wilhln minutes he had reached through the cage fencing and was groominf the knee or the boy s corduroy pants. picking out llt· tie pieces of gril and lint and rucking them away. That's what baboons do when they like you. IN THE wild. baboons live in a troop or between 1S and 100, with a male bead and a •er'Y de· finite pecking order, females at the botton .• They feed on leaves and roots and active- }~ ~u~ ~:~. m~~~~ Hackenbush likes panzees actively hunt store-bought foods ol 1 ve baboons ror meat. 4 , But the chimps oormaJly kill their prey before feeding, striking the victim's bead on the ground. Olive baboons are not so kind. They me rely hold the prey down and begin feeding on it live . How Hackenbush will fit into all of this is a question. If he has any chance, it is now, because he is old enough to survive, and yet young enough not to present a challenge to the older baboons, which would mean a fight to the death. Ketover and Janet Martz will be close by - in the "Born Free" mode -and will gradually attempt lo distance themselves from Hacken· bush. They will study his acceptance and his adaptation. This hasn't been done with baboons. Ketover would also like to study other creatures, such as mandrills. It is possible, be says. that someday creatures born in captivity can be used to replenish creatures endangered in the wild. For Janel Martz, "1\'s thrilling and in· teresting to work with animals.'' FOR PIDL KETOVER, "It's not a nine-to- five job. That's what's so hard for me to relate to. People with jobs that end. With animals, they never do." Meanwhile. sometime this month in the wilds or Tanzania, a baboon named Hackenbush will see others of his kind in the jungle for the first time. He'll be the new kid on the block. 4 HERB fRIEDLASDF.R IS MAKJNG GREAT DEALS BUY OR LEA SE' FREE 50oi~ .. ·------ .. • Al• ONLY"LOT -----&i~ev .. o..::.m..14. 117J. MEDICINE I CHRISTMAS Star of ~ethlehem winks down on a lot of outlandish places B1fteA.111d11t1e~ J( 1t ... &o nale lMt &bin la D ...... f Planned th1J CbriltmN kw l>oua, ud Pearl, f« Tony, Alu and CU'IMD, for Rudy and Trudy, for BUl and Saowball, or fw ""°''of the .al.mall aLJM st. Loula Zoo. It" alao a-4 to not• U.at UMri WU •\Wt wrl\ln1, nothln1 aptrl al plaaned lor U1 I 1am blert 1l R80.l'ta lntt l'ftllUoo.a C..U.O ln Atlanth• City, UC~ a (ew dMclraU.. The : caelno adm1lted ln Ht\y o..tnber that It hadn't alvto Chrlatmu • tM1u1M but ma1be I would arrana a •h~n• ror eJtk ud Oll*Mtd klda THE STAa OP CbrtsttnN wtM:I dOwia lhla tw on an Am riu ,..,. ..... Ill ..,._, &eye, yule lop and taroll. 8ul bdnl a at•r. It d1MI oe • tot II o.ti•· f dl1h pl~ .. -..u. pl~ ........... epart from lhewarmlh of Chrh 1m111c1,., •PAl't from lhe 1ernlallt.y ol rrt nd1 w ll·hll •• _,.,.t frolft '" rotnfort of family, •1>1rt from Y rythlna I that other pt<>plt' •~ e part of .. _ lla ... la IO \161Venal, ll \tndl lO ., .. ...,... the llladowa peopat cut. Wbat l• lNt 1"'1 Olhtt da)' ot the YHI la mort U-U. at Cbrlatmu Ume. The J>OOr fee& poor.r, the rich richer, the lonely toneller , the happy happltr. • 'I'll& ONLY 8PSCIAL lbln1 about Chrlttmu on M olflhort oU ri1 In U.. Gull ol Mexico " 1 Cbn.lmu ,,..., pnm• rtbl and turllty. hardly 1 1urpri1e or a treal to worktl'I who b1 oan\l'Ht 1et 1tuk thrM Umes 1 w .. k. Al LoMI), Al&llt1, a 'Dt•tant Early Wamlnt alatJon on U.. brink ot lM Ard.le ~u. t.bert It a trM. 1lMk1. bam1 turk91, cucU...S 1111)1, fr h •11et1bl... aaa touch with home b)' ahortwavt or by "Th Morale UDI," 10 ad· mln .. traUve t.el•s>boM uaod for bualnell the real ot &M 'i 1r f'or lut mlnula 1hoppen on Rodeo Urtvt ln Bev~rly Hiila, there w r• men '• t borl• for IYO. a one.man he licopter for tH,000, • tc,vn ~ aown, 1ln. wrapplq ttee, ind 1llnr pant.te. forlhe ChnalmN turkey al •1& • pair IT WON'T BE LAVISH, BUT 10..UONTIM>LO JUST•N CRAWFORD WILL GET GIFT P•;em. David end Cindy Won't Exchenge PreMnts, But He'a Got New Mining Job Al Bo)'I Town, Neb .. lhe city of Jlttle men~ they rtmem~r Chrl1tmu11 p11t, 11 they celebra~ famll)' Chrlatmu thll year. BACI( IN Tlf £ d1y1 when SPtncer Tracy was f'•lher Fl1na•1n and Mickey Rooney was hit wayward c her... Ghrl1tmH w11 more h1ph11ard, I 1 c rt1ln th11n today. Jn lhoM d1y1# fl'•th r r.cJward J . lt"lana1an. Ooya Town'• ound•t. would wear his "mon•lanor rohet," t•f!l.,hr,.t.-mlQnJ1ht ma111, and then vtalt hli. btJY8 to tJ•llvpr 1 rew «1"'9. Thlntll are dlftt1f tlht hlfl~ 'the boyt llvt In c:ott•f" no'# lni.t •( ,,, .... ,, "' Wtlfl, I nd HCh of th• 4 l'Oll•I" h•1t 11 1"" r I tfJ01J1t, 1urro11ttc mothert 1n(l f1U1ffr•, I tff'• •tA JU boy11 to• cot· ta1e 1 •nd Ut•)' "'' • 1;1l•hr1ttn hmll y Chrlatmlffll AT fLMNOOf• _, .\ VU.I.Ir. f'rh1on, Chrl1tm•• •Ill t••u a• 1tt1.V •14h•r 41111 PH • -aJuwl)'. YH,.. •i•• I 1•~ 11~1• tut.e 'hrlatmH at the prl1t#1, oot hi f ., .... ti•~•, 11ttwmt w11n•t all thl• ,_,tlnlf 1rnf ,.11 .. to•t •• h ott\tr ud ffUlhOrUltMt, fO .. l•l•1it WIHJffl fllJ>lllMd. ,.,,.,. wUt ,,.. .... ,, •• If> th# iuno lnrn•'"· but thn IC4'V Oi.vlf1 "1'fftirl1, 1 tu111l11ln, (1t)t11n't u v•ct •O,Vl\Ofif ·~. IOW Uj) 1t1•n 111: th•, .... of &hi >'••r ,.,..,, WJll HI • trld. til;n1 Vbr1•hnH dlnn•r • 'l'h• prl r,q ,.,rnt-.. lnmat.11 lhrM frM t hrlatmu tArdl tAWh, II thty flln't. •lford lhtlr own. TM Halv1Uon Arm_y Nftda • toy to Heh child of an lnm1te, ffOm t$anta C:l1U11. IVT 0Tllla"11• Chr1atmu la IOCMUllo• to I t th~h. ~'-ta"' Wardfm Marte Hell H · plained IL: Jt'a OM ol the hardtll Um .. ol the year to bt away trom tamlly, ao th re'• not thal much mem·m1kln1. Chrt1tm1t1 la the hardtat. Ume of tha yHr t.o not be home ." \Jf at Lonol)', AIHkl, the DEW line crew of 12 wll SM a new movie, play pool and bllllerda -and a few friendl from nearby Alr Force ind Department of Interior Petroleum Rese rve No. 'may bra\le lhc chUI factor of minus 60 degrees to d'j~P, ~-=Y ~e~~a1 on I.be Gull oU rtgs. Arter Christmas dinner, the men go right back to work. ·'Ther can't atop &o atng peace on earth and good wll to men,· says an oil company spokesman. "They have to pull pipe." IN THE COAL fields of southern West Virginia, it is, unfortunately. not buslnesa as usual. The steel industry ls having bad times, and so are the miners who provide that industry with the coal needed to s melt the lron ore . Several thousand are out of work and Christmas looks bleak. "Last Christmas we were trying to save for the strike," says Cindy Crawford, 21, the wife of a miner who lives in Oak Hill, W. Va. "Now lhis year, my husband, Moose, has ~o laid off since Oct. 30." For the young Crawfords, It won't be much Fro• A9 ' ,. ......... BIO SPENDING SEASON IN BEYERL Y HILLS Gift Muat Be So Absurd It Draws Mlentton. of a Christmas. But Moose already got lhe gift. he wa nted most. "He got a job." Cindy says ... He was really lucky s ince so many miners have been laid off. .. HE'LL GET TWO paydays before Christmas. but lhe money will have to go for bills. We 've already dedded that we'll just buy -something for our 10-month-old and something ror our parents. We're not golng to get each other anylhing thls year." ~Symbols Tell f'rognosiJJ OPERA BLUES. • • to only do rebeanab in room, with no more hope or perfonniag before audiences ... There is a dot of land 23 miles off the Maine coast where people prize Christmas, even in their isolation. There are 40 families on Matinicus Island, and it is too small a target for the commercial barrages th·at precede Christmas. So things lead to be aort of pure. It ls an island of ftSbermen. and that ls the only day or lhe year lhey don't go out to sea. .. ' .. • I Hypnosis, Jogging Make Medical News ALTHOUGH THE MET management re· luses to discua the c~some of lt.s written sta~meots convey a preclation for Miss Amara's past contrlbuti to the house -over MANY Of' TUB GIFl'S exchanged are handmade, knit, crocheted, fresh baked. The school house is the stage for a play put on by the island children. Someone puts oa the island San· ta Claus suit, and a part of island residents boats out to the Matlnicus Rock lighthouse to deliver presents to the Coast Guanbmen ata· tioned there. NEW YORK <AP) -Some cancer paUents seem lO know in advance whether they will re· cov~, lwo Texas researchers say. This gut feel· ing is often unconscious, but turns up in the sym· bols patients use when asked to draw an im· aglnary pictureortheirdlsease ·Dr. Jeanne Acbterbere and her hwsband, Dr. G. Frank Lawlis, came lO that conclusion after soliciting such drawings from 90cancer patients. lmages of power and strength. like lmlgbts, Vikings and large anJmall, portended well for r~overy, says Dr. Acbterber1, assiatanl pro. ressor of physical medicine al the University of Texas Health Science Center al Dallu. Machinery, ant.s. lobsters and crabs -the Zodiacal symbol for cancer -appeared more often ln drawinp of paUuts who died, sbe says. "Crabs were dreadful -you bow, there's no stopping them, .. she says. "We would kind or shudder whenever a patient would describe that because the patients uemed lO have such a weak expectation of recovery.•• The cancer drawings became ooe part of a test she and her basband worked oul to de· termlne a patient's attitode &oward h1J di.leue and his doctors. The test was good al predlctlng whether a patient would do sharply better o r worse, Dr. Achterberg saJd, but less reliable for those Jn between. ••• THE HYPNOTl.8T WHO says, "Look deep into my eyes," may be working lO (IX an eye de· feet. Dr. Paul Farkas of the Amerl~an Op. tometric AssodaUoa saya eolna lnlO • trance has helped some paUeata who tlnd the coot.act lenses preseribed for tb,m uneomfortllble. Contacts are part of tbe standard thatmeot for keratoconus and some form.a ot dJabetet wbere the cornea ls dlat.orted," be says. "Not all subject.$ are hypaoUuble;' 11y1 Farkas, hefd of the uaoclaUoa's committee on hypnosis. "lf a paUent can't respond'° the hyp· notists' suggesUona, tbci procedure won't work." "But for •usceptible aubjects, bypnosla of· fers a way to relax aulfidently ao that a lens can be fitted." • *. W1'1'11 TllE GIFl'·GIVING season at band, two cbemlata at RutHra Univenlty have waroed againat di1po1ln1 of colored rift· wrapping papers by burnlna them hl tbe Yuletide fire. John F. BertqnolU ud Dr. SldMy A. Kata aatd In a report lO tbe American Chemical Society that bumlD1 the papen c.a releue potlOOOUI lead add chromium used In lbe color· 101 plemenu. You •bould abo ltoi> the kids from cbewtq the paper. the ~attben aald. BertapolU and Kats teated 17 8lft wrapplnc .. y .... ,........_ ...... ,11.r samples selected at random and found lead and chromium ln 14, or 80 percent, of them. ••• MANY STATES AND clUes lasue a dally air quality Index or almllar meuure or poUuUon, aometb1.q that's Important especlaUy to the elderly and to persona with heart and lun1 con· dltlons for whom over-exerUon in badl.y tainted all' can be dm:s1erou1. . 'But these repof'U are often ·•eonruaaa, and lncon1lltent," because al least 15 different In· dices are· allU, and 41 dJlf,.-ept word.I ire used,•• he writes. For example, the numerical value ot 2S could meu Ah)'t.hln8 from "ex· t.remely light" to "Severe" he1Jth danaer Dr. Jc.ts ur1ee adopt1on Of 1 Pollutant Stan· dardl Index prep1red by a federal taak force. This u11e1 • ac:1le from zero lO &00 and only fivo desc.rlptlona ranging fro m .. 1ood" t o "hasardoul." *fl • JOOGE118 WHO RVN on t.ho wrona 1urf aco may be butAm.ln1 arthrttla ot the knee, ••Y• the head of rhewn1tolot)' at the Un1venlty of JI. Unols HolpttaJ In Ch1c110. "ConeNte st~et an unnatural Jar lO the knee, .. ta.ya Dr. JC>M SkOle)'. "RUM!nl In a field could be wone. You mlebt bk a hole and twlat ~ kraee, wblcb wu a.Yer meant lo move from aide to •Ide.•• "'l'tMn II nothlDC Yiroftl wtth nannlnt but runnln1 tmproperty on uneven, hard 1urt'acn CID put a CJ"elt dtal of llNtl 00 knM jO&nts." shadowed by a concern for present and future artistic standards. "ln the Z1 years that Lucine bas performed here, she baa always had a eood. dependable voice and bu been well·pr:epared an invalua- ble member of the comp.any," Executive Diree· tor Anthony Bliss wrote in July to admirers who had complained of not bearing her. In a letter to the Human Rights division. Bliss complained lhat Mils Amara lacked the ''vital stage presence" of a first·rank artist. He said that with some ticket prices soaring to $37 .so, the Met feels a greater obligation to streas "theatricality" as well as singing. Theatricality and appearance also have as· sumed new importance with the increasing role of live television. .. TV IS BECOMING everything,.. la how Mias Amara sees it. "lt you don't fit lheir physical picture, they're phasing you out. You have to loot slim ud beautiful." Two 1lngers who have appeared in TV - Renata Scotto and Luciano Pavarotti -both re· ceotly lost a great deal of weight. They re· portedly went on diets alter seeing tapes of themselves lo the televised "La Boheme" two seaaons ago." But Mhs Amara resists the idea of shedding pounds for appearance's sake. "The extra weight is needed to cushion the volce," she says, "to give vocal stamina -especially as one gets older." Whether she will again com- mand lbe stage at the Metropalit.an may have to be decided in court. list Topper In Beverly Hills, built on money and power, Christmas has a different flavor Musing over $170 trash cans ftlled with wines and cheeses, one public relations ex- ecutive sighed, "It makes you wonder what poor people do for Christmas.•' There are fat plastic Santas hung among the palm trees and people shop in sunglasses. There may be Salvation Army Santas on the s treets or New York, but not in Beverly Hills. Not allowed. THE CHAMBER OF Commerce drew the line against any soliciting. "If you allowed them, you'd have every group in town he re. You'd have a guy soliciting on every comer and two in between. But under the hallowed roofs of Rodeo Drive and elsewhere in this elegant cross· section of American elegance, you can buy a NART Spyder Ferrarri for $125,000 or a Gucci· designed Cadillac for $23,000 with five pieces or matching Gucci luggage thrown into the deal. At Marvin Hime's shop there are little treasures -ror instance an ts.carat gold sup- pository. Hime understands this glittering town's ap- petites. "Almoot anything can be made of gold,'' he says. "In Beverly Hiils, a gift has to be so absurd it draws attention.'' IN PENNSYLVANIA'S Amlsh country they give gills too. Sometime In their mld·teens every girl gets a Hope Chest. But they do not indulge In Christmas lights SAN FRANCISCO ed. Just above him ls and decorations very much, accenting instead IAPI -Who hasn't ever ZwtU Zuzstra. He is ac· food extraordinary. had an urge to be al the tually Gilbert Freitas, a Disney world in Florida has a lO·day top or lhe bottom of the retired police laspector Christmas pageant at its Lake Buena Vista telephone directory? who writes mys tery nov· village, but the nation's children seem to be els. He lis ts lhe Zzzzstra In the San Fra ncisco name ln the directory in otherwise occupied during this holiday. telephone directory, a the hope that 8 girl he Wblle lhe adult animals at the St. Louis Zoo -"n nnmed "A" leads · wlll have to live with the memories of ..... met 30 years ago in Ilk Ch t k th nll the rest. Shanghai, named Zola, Christmases past, the babies. e an e e "A" Is actually the wtll see lt and be pro. orangutan, will get special toys. Now what do profe11s Ion o I nu m c of ,!m!.:!pt~ed:.t~o:.,:c:.:a.:.:11.:... ______ >';_o_u...:g:..i_ve_a_ba_b_y_o_r_an_g_u_tao_? _______ _ ~b Smith, a 27·year-old 1llversmlth who sets up u mples of his han· dlwork on the street. He clo!e the name "A," he said, "Jusl lO be the first in the phone book .•' The directory e nds with Vladimir Zzuzzabakov. but hls number wu dlaconnect · Show your love - Give the gift of self ~onfidence and strong reading skills. HERE'S YOYA PART TIME MAID! The Reading Game AMERICA'S FOREMOST READING ACl'ilEVEMENT CENTERS TlftlD OI WAtfffNG THOll Dlfl'TY CLOTMll?-UT UI 00 IT '°"YOU .. ,.__ ........................ _ ....... .., .. ,_,.. .. °"¥ ~. ''"""" ......,,, .,. .. ,,.., dl9llt ... .,., ...... "''" 1420 North Bristol St .. Suite 240 Newport Beach 92660 ~714) 965-1105 Eighl p vor11 11( proven ~UC'C'e1111 In &1ulhern California. A" 1ttlvlt,v nf Amtrltlln l.Hrnlnl( C'nrP41rttlo11 . . .. a a. 2 •• a --··-•• a -·· • ' I ' • I • iNSIDE: •Amt ~nderl----- .,,.,., Dlmmblt ... 1111 DM.V'9l.OT :Epitome oj-(]ollege-Football P-laye ~aeh: De Steve Garw:ey of Miebigan 17 &~Cdl'll.U) CM.. --~-JtOW IQOd ol I foot DIOlir ti Jtkhlfaa ··we d1leuu •trate1y 1t mettmp and 10 CWft' a lot ol thinp," LHc:h uys. "But lt's not my ~lllea u a ptaye-r. I'm out there to do what the c:oach calla from the aklelinea." to \oOler retns. a four-day 1tay in Newp0rt 8eacb and Ucht workouta at uc lnine. Tbe "vacation'' eOda tod1y when the Wolverlnet move to the Pa11dena Hunttqton..Sheratoo. "A.Jao. we're worttna out la juat aboukler pads. In tbe put couple of yean, we've peaked too early. We're slowtni dMtn Wa )'Hr. Tbla vear, we hope to peak right before the,ame.'' quarterback Rlck Lea~b? ~•ll1 to beer Wolverinee Ooatb 8o ~ ............. tell lt. all h needil are wlqa ud a balo. "He'a everyth,lft1 you wlilll; tbt 41Pkome of lbe ~· foot.ban .,a.yer:• StMtnbeclder aald <>f the Bia JO'• amwer to a... Garvey. NOi' TRAT LEACH doe.ln't enjoy aome aort of freMc>m lie'• uUed "• few" audibles al the lint ot 1er1mm11e lbla aeuon, bl nld, lnch.tdlftl OM that produced the winnl"' TD pau 11aln1t Obto State and aenl tbe Wolveriniiet LO the Rote Bowl for 1 third •lr•ltht year. LE,ka, UKE 8CBE•BECBLE~ feels the chanae tn ment.al ap_proacb may be the anawer to Mlc:hl1an'1 0-for·bowl reeord Ws deude. The Wolverines have lolt their lut five J)08l·teuon appearances, lncludin& fOW' for the Roses. 1 there total freedom for tbe players this year? .. I'd li~ to hive t& ol Mm. We uk hlm to do anyuu.n, aod ewrytblf\I." "WITR 80, Y0tJ'lt£ NEVE• goint to get an~ like that,•• Le.ch lauabs. I J' L£Aal WAS AIKBD to dSve over the JOll poll for I t<Mk' ... D. he'd pr'Oblab\y uk ''OYer v.tlich u&>ripl?" BffMIM at Ml~an. lh re l1 oo auch thlfta u a 1rtev11Dee <"Osnm•t· tee. Th coacb'1 wont ii aWJ -latl one, the players follow orders wtt.aout q....Uonlna lbem and Le.ch f lt tb1t's Ow "'11•l1bould be. And jt WU LHCh who apeubeaded a 1roup ol Hnlon who were about lo "•uHest" cbaa1• 1n Mkb11an'1 Rote Bowl pnpara· Uon when !kbembecbler approacbed the 1roup, with the HIM Idea. · They told UI everythlnc we wanted lo Mar," Nfl Luch about the event.I that led "By com~ down here foe a few days, we were able to do a few tb1np we wanted to do " Leach said before a Friday woc:kout at re1. ''In past years, we've felt llke we wanted to IO JOmewbere else Just to set away from ever)1.hi.Jur. Paaadtna bas o&der types of crowds aDd nodung to do in the 1eneral area. We wanted to get away from all that. Wblle Leach b the picture of total de· dicatlon, be's alao the model all-around athlete. He bu sccnd 1& touchdowns passtnt and 12 rwblQI th1s season, st.at.s which jump to 47 and 3f dwinc his fours years as a start· • tnc q~k witb a 38-7·2 record. la bueball, all be did was lead tbe Die 10 in hit· <See LEACH. Page IM> ' • 103-81 Victory Bruins Th11mp ~ . Boston College· LOS ANGELES <AP> - Guard Brad Holland scored a career high 25 points to lead third ranked UCLA to a 103·81 vie· Eagles 43·40, paced by Greenwood with 13 and Van· dewegbe with Dine. lot;' over Boston College lo col-ROLIAND, SCOlllNG on 10 ot legebaskttballSaturdaynight. 12 field goal attempts. is now The Bruins improved their re· shooting 67.l percent from tbe cord to 6-1. 1be Eagles dropped floor for the season. their~ strai~t road game, ''Boston College is an out. after wuuung their first seven standing team and it was a good games of the season. ·-~ to play them. They UCLA LED 5'-4l at halftime presaed the whole game, and it d ded was good for us to wort against an. exten . the lead to 19 the press in 8 game situation" poants early in t.be second half. said UCLA Coach Gary cuh. But the Eagles rallied behind h guard Ernie Cobb, cutting the n1n1 am. Bruins' lead to 78-11 with eight minutes remaining. Outscoring the ~agles 18·6 over the next seven minutes, t.be Bruins wrapped up the victory. TEACHER AND PUPIL Michigan Coach Bo Sche m bechler a nd q uarterback Rick Leach have a good laugh at practice Friday on the UC Irvine football field. Schembechler appears to be demons trating how he taught Leach to throw a football. There's one catch SchembechJer is right·handed. Roy Hamilton added 20 points, 16 in the first haU, and forward David Greenwood had 18 for UCLA including 14 before halftime. Reserve forward Kike Vandeweghe had 13 points and center Gig Sims had 11 for the Bruins. Jones Boys Stmnpede Terps, 42-0 Vancouver Hands LA ~ODefeat VANCOUVER, B.C. (AP) - Ron Sedlbauer scored in the first period and Dennis Ververgaert netted a shot in the second - tloth at 7:38 -as Vancouver goalie Glen Hanlon a nd the Canucks handed the Los Angeles Kings a 2·0 National Hockey League defeat Saturday night. Hanlon. who stopped all 24 Los Angeles shots. recorded his third shutout of the season in helping the Canucks win their first game s10ce Dec:. 7, when they defeated the Chicago Black Ha wks. leaders by a point over the Canucks in the Smythe Division. Sedlbauer scored his 23rd goaJ of the season. finishing a 3-on-2 break by ta.king a pass from de· fenseman Dennis Kearns and backhanding the puck behind Los Angeles goalie Ron Gra hame, whose goaltending heroics -particularly in the third period -kept the slump· ing Kings in the game. Ververgaert ended the game's scoring in the second period by ramming home a rebound of Pit Martin's hard shot. The Canucks, whose shut.out victory belies their defensive re· cord -fourth worst overall in the NHL -used only four de· fensemen, including Bob Manno who bad been recalled from the Dallas Black Hawks of the Cen- tral Hockey League. Rookie Lars Lindgren was scratched from the lineup with an e lbow injury and Randy Holt was benched by coach Harry Neale. "Hanlon didn't have to make too many secood saves because the defense kept the tralfic clear in front of the net," Neale said, adding that bis defense played a more physical game than usual. "We took fewer chances in our end of the rink and, when you clear your zone quickly, things go pretty well,'' the rookie coach poinled oul. "When you go through a losing streak, you always start to wonder if you're even going to win another game," he said. ~aaY .. llUOD$ Los AftQtle o o ..-o V•ncov ... r t t ~I Finl ...,kl0-1. V•MOunr, S.dlluwr tJ etcoorns. 0<-1. 1:a Peflottln-Slrl.,, v.,.. 1.•S; Ma.....,, LA. •:4.1: ~II. LA. !0:14; Slftyl. V41n.._i..at. SKClftd l"'WIM-2. VMC-r, v...,,.rteff1 • flMrtlfl, Offlltl, 1·• ~le-lllltl!I. v.,., ''": T•rw.t.A.e:n •. !:."• ........ ...... ~·-·· Wll-. LA. Slloh Oii tMl-LOa AnoelH ,....._, .. v- COWff J.Mt-~ 0..llft-UI ....... Of---. v-.... ....... -·u.. ' I . Missouri's Wild( er) Sho~ The s.rooHl Cobb led Boston CoJlege with 20 points and forward Vin Caraher had 16. Tigers Outlast LSU, 20-15, in Liberty Bowl M EMPIUS (AP) -Missouri Coach Warren Powers thinks his Tigers' locker room motto says it all: "You are the best." Wilder rushed for 181 yards and rour touchdowns in Missouri's 35-31 upset victory over then No.2-rated Nebraska in the Tigers' last re- gular-season game. THE BRUINS SHOT 59 per. cent from the floor in the first half. hitting 23 of their 39 fiekf goal attempts. The Eagles shot just 42.S percent, making 17 or 40 shots. And the Big Eight Conference team lived up to its credo Saturday as the Tigers bested Louisiana State's Tigers 20·1S in the 20th annual Liberty Bowl football game. It was the first time the teams have played each other. He said he fell like a marked man coming into Saturday's game. "But I always go out to do 100 percent ... I just play to my ability." The victory was the 994th in UCLA basketball history, against 442 losses. The victory gave Powers an 8-4 mark for his first season at Missouri. The game was billed as a match·UP between Wilder and LSU's premier running back Charles Alexander. UCLA shot 52.9 percent from the floor on 41 field goals in 72 attempts. On the season, UCLA is shooting 56.5 percent. The Bruins outrebounded the "WE HAVE A GREAT TEAM, they played hard and they played well," he said. "But I'm not doing anything Missouri hasn't done before . . . the cupboard wasn't bare when I got here." One of the players whom Powers inherited and whom be apparently will have for at least the next two seasons is James Wilder. Wilder, a 220-pound sophomore running back from Sikeston, Mo., rushed for 121 yards and one touchdown Saturday. Most or his yardage came through head to bead clashes with I.SU defenders. ALEXANDER, A 215·POUND senior from Galveston, Tex .. rushed for a game-hJgb 133 yards and one touchdown. For his efforts, he was named top offensive player for LSU, a Southeastern Con· ference team. Wilder. who was seeond to Alexander in game rushing, picked up a trophy as Missouri's top or. fensive player and the game·s most valuable player award. * * * hslMC-...1'11 UCLA fMJI '•ft~ Vowle • o a ~-C~r•t.e• • 4 i. Wll-U Kuhn J O • Sim• Sw-r I 1 • Holl<lftd Cobb 10 0 20 Sl>ri9fty O 1 1 e,..,,;e.. 2 s ' Foy 1 1 6 CMncllt~ I 0 1 Me99tn O 1 1 8-11 1 1 6 Cr..st o 0 0 Tot.is lt 1' 81 Hellli-: UCLA. ~I. "•"''"°" V-e911e Allvms H•.,11~ S.nckrs T11e>mu Tot•fs .. ft. .... l I 1 4 l II IO ) tl IO 0 20 4 ) u 1 0 4 I 0 ) I t 3 0 0 0 41 11 !OJ "THEY WERE JUST ABOUT the best defense I've run into," he said. "It might have looked easy from the stands but it wasn't as easy as it looked." THE 18&b-RANKED TIGERS, seven-point favorites, took command or the game on lhelr first possession, marching 75 yards in 14 plays for a Tol•I '°"'" Boston Col~ u . UCl.A ••: <See MISSOURI, Page 8 %) FO<lfOCI out: SwttM'f !Boston (Olle9f), Sims fUCLAI Att.-IO. ... Today's Sports on Television By HOWARD L BANDY Of Ille o.lfy l"ttft M.n Following are the major sports events on television today. Ratings are: I I 1 ./ excellent; ./ ./ .t worth watching; ./ ./ fair; ./ forget it. 9:30 a .m., Channel 2 ./ ./ ./ NFC PLAYOFFS: Philadelphia at Atlanta. Announcen: Gary Bender and Hank Stram It wilt be sudden-death for the loser and a chance at winning It all for the victor In today's National Foot- ball Conference wild card playoff game between tM Philadelphia Eagles and the Atlanta Falcons. The Eagles are favored by one point over the host Falcons. The Falcons finished with a 9-7 record to reach the playoffs for the first time since entering the NFL In 1966. The Eagles, also 9-7, have not been In a playoff In 18 years srnce wlnnrng the NFL tltte In 1960. It wfu match the Eagles' Ron Jaworski against the Falcons' Steve Bartkowski at quarterback with the Eagles relying primarily on a strong ruMtng game led by Wilbert Montgomery, who rushed for 1,220 yards. ~ 1 p.m., Channel 4 ./ ./ ./ ./ AFC PLAYOFFS: Houston at Miami. AnftOUfteen: Dick Enberg and Merlin Olsen. The surging Mlamt Oolphlns are six-point favorites over the Houston Olten In a game to be played at the Orange Bowl. ..__.... .... I .... With quarterback Bob Griese dlr«tlng the attack in a cool. collected manner, the Dolphins pounded New England, 23-3, Monday night and appear ready to han- dle anythlno the Oiiers can throw at them In tnls American Football Conference wild card game. Rookie sensation Earl campbell sparks Houston. The winner moves to neJct week's competition while the loser packs up and goes ~ for tM season. The Miami defense came Into Its own 3Qainst the Patriots with three Interceptions, a recovered fumbfe and then stopplno the Pats Inside the Miami five on three occasions. OTHER TV 2:30 p.m. (7) -TENNIS -Martina Navratilova takes on Tracy Austin In the Pepsi Challenge Cup at Long Beach, taped. (28) -TENNIS -Tennis stars of the future are shOWcased In the Junk>r Davis Cup, taped at Miami. 4 p.m . (7) -GOLF HIGHLIGHTS -A review.of the USGA-sponsored tournaments, lncfudlno the U.S. Open and U .S. Amateur. S:30p.m. (S2)-COLLEGE BASKETBALL-The Kansas State Wiidcats meet the Long Beach State 49ers. Taped Friday In Long BHch. Eddie Alexanclet', Roman Gabriel report. RADIO 9:30 a.m . -Football: PhUlldetphla at Atlanta, NFC wUd card pleyoff gam.. Johnny Unltas, Jack Buck report. 1 p.m. -Footbatf: Houston at Mt.mt, AFC Wiid card playoff game. Don Klefn, Jim Kelly reoort • (TM Dally PUot ...... ,...... •• w. ......... C ....... L) '·~· . -·-·" . ----·---II t tr> • s a EL PASO <AP> -The bigaest rout in Sun Bowl history was triggered Saturday. by a ques. Uonable Maryland strategy and a wild offensive show by the-Univel'Sit)l, of Texas' Jooes boys -Ham, Lam and Jam. The six-point favorite Texas Longhorns s tampeded Maryland, 42-0. in this 44th an· nual classic, and it was all OYer a(ter the first quarter. In fact, it may have been over aft er Maryland Coach Jerry Claiborne instructed his team to receive after winning the open· ing coin toss. giving away the option to take a wind that was gusting to 4S mph. TEXAS SCORED three quick first-period touchdowns afler Maryland had to punt into a Nind that was so bad the Na· •lion al Weather Service put out a travelers' advisory because or blowing dust. Texas Coach Fred Akers said: "( was extremely pleased they didn't take the wind. If we had won it. I wanted to go with the wind.'' He added, "The wind was a big ractor . . . It was important. let me say that." ASKED IF RE FELT Maryland underestimated the wind because it plays back east. Akers said: "Surely they've played in a wind before." Senior Johnny "Ham" jones rushed for 109 yards on 14 car· rtes and scored a touchdown to be named the game's most. Yaluable offensive player. Olympian Johnny "Lam•• Jones scored on a reverse and caught a 29-yard toucbdoq pass, and freshman A. J. "Jam" Jones rushed 19 times for 100 yards and scored two touchdowns. THAT MADE FIVE touchdowns ror lbe Jones boys. wbo are not related. Ham Jones. playing bis fmaJ game. said: "Today was my birthday (bis 23rd), and this sure makes it a good one. And thia la a grut way to end lD1 career at Texas." Jam Jooes aaJd: ''I was side as a do£ last DiCbt, wttb tbe flu t l'ues•. but I Just made up m7 mlnd to put that out of my mind. ll'1 a freshman's dream to get all this yardage in a bowl ••me." Lam Jones said: "We were Juat ready to pl~. There's no doubt about that. I <f&M!SS I bad an okay 1ame." .. CLAIBO&NE MID: "U I bad tt to do over aaain. I be· Hew I would take tbe wind. IQ warauap1. Jt d idn't seem t.bat 1troa1. But at •2·0 l'Dl CBee TEXAS, •••• 81) .. ----- mac e•ru•·o e ans t r • 82 DAILY PILOT Sunday. O.C.mbet 16. tttl A. Ceoaule Repor• From the World of Sport• Geor ·a T 11 tar Iv ry ael1 8 wl Will I • Rrporl Sa,,. En11lr• Sra•ltrd Pla11rr11 Plfll.ADELf\lllA Al INlSl lour prO!.(>eC [iJ ~Ive Ptuladelphl" t;agles players were ~ecre~ed 411 t in motel rooms du.ring the preseason. nesting for the day th~ National f'ootbaU League club might place them on the roster . the Philadelphia Inquirer reported Saturday. The newspaper quoted sources as indicating that on· agaln-ofr-agaln Philadelphia punter Rick Engles; another former Eagles' punter, Mitch Hoopes. wide reeeiver Randy W1lhamson; and quarterback Mike Cordova all were hid· den by the Eagles. Engles -waived three times by the club -charged earlier last week that he was stashed while Hoopes, was given a go at a roster spot during prescason play. Hoopes eventually was let go and Engles temporarily rehired. Howe ve r. kicker Mike Michel vuMEIL finished the season ror Philadelphia. and Engles also has charged that Michel was given a tryout with the Eagles while still under contract with the Miami Dolphins in violation or league rules. Williamson and Cordova were waived by Philadelphia. Coach Dick Vermeil Is content to let NFL officials, who are investigating the allegations, decide lf any rules were broken. -----Quo•e al the Da11-----. "We're in the wrong division," said Oakland Coach John Madden, pointing out that the Raiders (9·7), members of the Ame rican Conference West, had beaten the top four teams-Minnesota. Grei?n Bay. Detroit and Chicago-<>( the National Con· ference Central. "I guess this makes us NFC CentraJ c h ampions by proxy." added Oakland's JobD Matusak. A li. F raziPr r o .ff ef"r ha Exldbl• ion HOUSTON lle:ivy.we ight c hampion m Muhammad Ali and former champion Joe f'razier plan to meet 1n a ~•><·round exhibition boxu~ match fo'eb. J in The Summit. an arena spokesman said Saturday. The two fighters' amateur boxing groups will receive the proceeds of the match. \\-hich will be preceded by nine other fights. The fighters met thrt•c times pr<'viously, with Frazier winning the first and Ah the n<'xt 1 wo. Trot•ier•11 Fire Goal• Lead l•land~r• total of eight points, both team records . as the , Bryan Trottier scored five ~oals and got a ~ New York Islanders continued as the only un· defeated team at home with a 9-4 rout of the New York Rangers . . Yvon Lambert broke a 2·2 tie with a power· play goal at 1: 09 of the third period and Steve Shutt scored twice to give the Montreal Canad.lens a 3·2 victory over the Colorado Rockies . . . Ron Ellis scored three goals. giving him 600 career points. and lmemates Dan Maloney and Walt McK.ecbnle contributed four points each as the Toronto Maple Leafs rolled to a 6· l win over the St. Louis Blues ... Defenseman Al Sims' eighth goal of the season broke a 4·4 tie early m the thlrd period and the Boston Bruins went on to a 6 4 victory over the Buffalo Sabres . . c mr KoroU scored on a deflection and a JO.footer early in the third period, enabling Chicago lo continue its home ice mastery over the Philadelphia Flyers as the Black Ha wks scored a 5-2 triumph ... Vaclav Nedomanaky's 15th goal or the year, a power play effort at 17:36 or the second period, completed a two.goal comeback and gave the Detroit Red Wings a 2·2 tie wit.h the Washington Capitals ... Al MacAdam and Brad MH· well, each with a goal and an assist, led the Minnesota North Stars to a 5-3 win over the Pittsburgh Penguins . WlllcUon IJp•~•• Alexa•der Teenager Tim WllkJson or the United Slat.ea • stor~ed into the final or a Sydney, Australia te nnis tournament, upsetting Australian veteran John Alexander, and will meet anolher A~~eJ Kli:n Warwick, for the championship. Warwick Cl!CJM:.V J.h~ fmal t?y ~efeating Sherwood Stewart 6·71 7~,6·4. Wilkison won his match , 6-4, 2-6, 6-4. Jn the women's division Wendy 'l'anball defeated Lea An&oaoplla, 8.0, 6-4, and Dlanae Frombolu defeated Reaata Tomuova, 6-2, 64, to reach the finals. ~'• 28 Poin•• Spark• Haaelc• lollll Drew scored 28 points and Batch Lee m chipped in a career·high 21 to lead the Atlanta Hawks to a 10&-91 victory over the Cleveland CavaUen ... lames Edwarda led a balanced . Indiana attack with 23 points as the Pacen snapped a six· game losina streak with a lZl-103 victory over ~ New Orleans Jaz:r; ... George Genia poured ln 34 point.a to lead the San Antonio Spun to a 13().126 win over the Detroit Pistou ... Meees Malolte scored 23 point.I to lead seven Rocket.a ln double fi&urea as Hou.at.on took lta sevenlh vtc. tory in it.a lut nine ouUn1s with a 129-107 triumph over the New York KAlck.s ... The Kantu City Kin11 blew a 21· point lead, then rallied ln overtime behind Sam Laeey, <kl• 8'"*-C and Sco&t Wedmu for a 122·117 deeuion over the Milwaukee Bucks ... Myc~al ,..._,... aeonct 13 polnta ln tbe. fourth quart.er u tM Portland Tran Blasen held ott the Washlngtoo Bullets for a 114-108 vie· tory. ". WoHpack -'lli.ro l es Panthers ORLANDO, Fla. <AP) -Tak· Ina 1 leaon from feUow ,AtJanUc Co1at Confere nce member M ar~lud'1 SW\ Bowl dt\lbbln& e arlier ln lbe day. North C1roUna State deehled &he key to wlnn1ns the Tancertne Bowl would b9 to come out swlnflnJ. Ttxaa Jumped on Maryland early and often for a 42.0 vie· toe")', but North Carolina Stulc.- V!Ul twtck aome ACC preatl(Ce by ju.mplrw to a l'7.0 lead and hold· lllft on to • J0.17 victory over Pit ~t>wiih Soturday nlatlt. .. WE WERI: svaPIUSED to tee Maryland aet beat like that. We fltured Ir we could Jump on them fut Jlke Texas did, we would at.Md a 1ood chance or winnlna." said middle guard John Stanton Stant.on. whose team lost to Marylaod 31-7 ·was 10 on twc;> of tour sack s lo 'cad a Wollpack defense that shut o(I Pitt unUl the c lotlng minutes when the game was out of reach. "They played extremely well, •l\d we didn't," Pltt Coach J ockle Sherrill said . "We <'o uldn 't eet anythlnc eatabliabed. We wanted to uge some different rormaUons at the beginning and had some pro- blems right away." ••THEY WERE WELL pre: pared. They came art.er us ~ beat us. We got behind awful early and just couldn't come back." Panther quarte rback fUck Trocano explained. A surprise play keyed the first hair Wolfpack outburst. Second string quarterback John Isley came in for one series and on a ~rd and short yardage play tlfrew a SS-yard touchdown pass to Lee Jukes. "It felt super. I was reaJly dis· appointed on the other pus' I threw. It was like a wounded duck," Isley said. "We were go- ing to go with a play action pass, but the coaches deelded to gam· ble and go ror a long pass." Pl'IT SURPRISINGLY came out passing, but without success. Trocano finished 17 of 38 with· three interceptions. "We were surprised," Stanton said. "We expected them to be running." Pitt's Fn!d Jacobs was sur· prised. too. ·'I think maybe we should have run more. but the coaches wanted to pass. I fell that the running game would have worked well against NC State earl y, instead or trying something new," Jacobs said. .. But they were tough," Jacobs said. "They came out to get us and they did." All·American Ted Brown punched through : an uncharac· teris Ucally porous Pittsburgh defense for 126 yards and Mike Nall keyed North Car olina State's big·plar defense with a comeback-killing interception return for a touchdown for the Wollpack. SCOllE av QUAllTE "5 N C•rohN St•le I 10 l l~lO Pltt.OU•9" 0 0 l l~ll NCS Br-I Nft IA11t•r klO I NCS FG Ritter SI NCS J -SSP41U from htey t llin~r ·~•I Pllt-FG S<...._rl 21 NCr.-FG A1ntr ~ NCS-FG Alnt• n Plll-J•-• •IJI\ .sc .... n klOI N(~N.il .. ~Ull\ltt<ef>llOtl IAttttr ~o<kl Piii C.ner I run IS<,,.,oert k I<• I A ll,JS. STAllSTICS Finl-• NCS 11 ~'" .. "'""el ,...m i.G-207 3' 1 IO P .. ••no y~ •OJ HI l'lrlurn YMO) IOI 0 PH\#\ 6 9-0 l? • • Punh S·:N. Ml f umbfu .'°'t l 1 1.0 PtNllltt-YatO\ .. .0 l·IO IMOIVICXJAL LEAOlllS RUSHtNG-PllhburOll, J.co4X 111'1, G -· ' 10. A J-t) •• N. ,.,,.,,.,,., !>t•lt. Brown 11 no, 111oen n.so PASSING-Pllhbur9". Tr0<ano tl·ll·l 111 0.l•n•t s 10 I.. N C••Oltll• Stal•. ~"'''" s+o u. htey 1.1..0.s. RECEllll NG P1t1SDur91!. Collier • h. G•u\l•d •-o. J•OC>!o l·?S N. CMolina St•••. JUiio >·'°· 0--l·ll. Hatt H7. FOOTBALL SHORT DAYLIGHT -Missouri's Garry El- lis <43 I finds some daylight in the LSU de- fense during first quarter action Saturday. It didn't last long, though, as tackled after a four·yard gain. E'l"09IPageBJ MISSOURI •• touchdown and were never seriously threatened afterward. • LSU produced some second· tiatr heroics that led to two touchdowns. but two other Bayou Bengal threats were cut off by a fumble and a pass in· terception. Missouri quarterback Phil Bradley alternated the 6-foot-2. 220-pound sophomore Wilder with his senior running mate, Earl Gant. But it was Wilder. picking up 63 yards on 17 carries in the first half. who collected most of the Missouri yardage in the team's first possession. Wilder carried seven times. providing key gains to set up Bradley's pitchout to Gant, who collected the touchdown. LSU, WITH QUARTERBACK Steve EMminger at the helm, came back with a 73.yard drive that stalled on the Missouri 15 and Mike Conway kicked a 37· yard fi eld goal. Missouri struck two more times in the fi rst half. Bradley hit Kellen Winslow for a five. yard TD with 11: 13 left in the half and Wilder bounced off four I..SU defenders to scor e on a one.yard play with 1:21 left. Arter halftime. Coach Charlie McClendon's I..SU Tigers were looking at a 20·3 deficit. Taking the ki ckorr. LSU virtually ignored the Missoun defense and moved 80 yards an 13 plays lo narrow the score by six points. The PAT failed. SCOlll! IY OUAllTEllS Loultl•M Si.le ) 0 • ~ts M•oour1 I U o 0--20 Mh-G~ IJ""' tBroorwu~ k1<i.1 LSU-FG C-•y JI Mh -Wlntlo• •• P•ss from Bradt•' t8rockh•~ klekl M t\-WllOer •run tklck l•ltlldl LSU-Ale-r I run (klO . f.,ledl LSU-W~ •run lp.tU lall<ldl A-SJ.OM STATISTICS LSU llllO r It\! dO'l"n\ 72 II l'l utllt .. YMll\ 46 1114 50-l'OO Panlf'O f ll<O• 110 •II ll•turn y-) •S p., ... , 14·11-4 ",.., P""h •·JI 1>-ll FumDIH·IO'll J I 0.0 Penatt10·YMd\ ..... ..,s IN011110UAL Ll!AOallS l!USHtNG t..ou•t•an• 51•1•, AleCMlder , ... ll M•uourl WlfdPr,. 1u. c;...,11-0 PASSING-UluiSIM• St•I•. WOOdltY 9.:12.J.17' Ml\M><lrl. Bradley 11 '1 t tll l!ECEtlltNG-l.ou01M• Slat~. Oulnlttl• 1>-11. C••M>ll l>-11. MoUOU<I, WtlGH 4·20 BOWARD LBAND" Pro Rod~o For Mesa? Professional rodeo may come to the Orange County Fairgrounds In April if a suitable contract can be worked out but right now the Los Angeles entry appears beaded for G ri!fith Park according to Steve Ford, son of lhe former President of the United States. ·'Orange County is a great l.ocaUoo," young Ford said this week in Palm Springs. "But they have a lot or long. term people in there and we might not be able to work out a suitable agreement. .. GRIFFITH. PARK IS RJGtrr in the center or Los Angeles and they are building an indoor equestrian arena for the Olympic Games there that will seat 20,000 people J understand." Ford is enthusiastic about professional rodeo as a team sport and feels it bas a future . "We have to make the nght changes In management and 1t will go real good." he says. "We know what expenditures we are going to have for next year and l hope we can do more adverllsmg and promoUon work." YoWJC Ford was asked 1r he thought tfis father would run for president again In 1980. "To be honest with you, 1f he knows. he hasn't told his family. He's been a public servant all bis life and if he feels the country is in trouble. I think he will run again. FORD ''HE'LL LOOK AT WHAT the people want, what the partJes want and what his family wants. "I wouldn't like to see hlm go back myself. But it's his decision and I will support him all the way. If he decides to run. I'll be out there with him. "If he doesn't , I'll play golf with him. But I t.h1nk a de· cision will be reached right after the first or the year." Steve ls attending classes at Cal Poly< San Luis Obispo I but will quit school for the rodeo season or 28 matches. Right now there are six learns including Los Anieles. Denver. Tulsa, Salt Lake Caty, Kansas City and San An· tonio. • • • THE 1948 COMPTON COLLEGE football team win· nersover Duluth. Minn. 48·14 in the Junior Rose Bo.w\ w1t.h Hwdl McElhenny at fullbe1 ck, held a 30·year reunion thas wee"K. Mac couldn't m ake it rrom his home ii') the San Fran· cisco bay area but sent a letter to chatrman Andy Logan. "Thank you for starting such a good Ufe In football for me," he wrote to the group and its coaches, Tay Brown and Ken Carpenter . Fro• Page BI Many or the players on the team were veterans of World War II maxed in with the high school graduates or the time. 1l was e1 more experienced junior college team than those or today. TEXAS BLITZES TERPS. • • not sure It would have made any difference." · Maryland quarterback Tim O'Hare said : "Well , I don't know about the wind. It did make o big dtrrerence early, and It put us in a hole to start." The prevtous largest winning margin in a Sun Bowl was Nebraska's 45·6 victory ove r Georgia In 1969. The Longhorn defense was particularly stout, intercepting rour puses and holdint l,000· y_ard rusher Steve Atkl.os to Just 1.5 yards on 10 carries. ''WE PLAYED GREAT de· ronae. and we ended up the year a pretty strong football team," AkeMJ said. Lem Jonea, a Junior from Lampaaaa, TeJta•. and a member of Amer1ca'a victortous sprtnl relay team In Montreal, sco~d touchdowns on a seven· ard revenh! and a 29-yard acor· Crom Mark Mc Bath. '°'*· • •PMdlter rrom Youn1ston, Ohfo, tallled on runa Of <ine and 14 yards and 11lntd 100 )'ards ruahin1 a1alnst the vaunt.cl Terp de.fenae. Ham Jones, a senior from Hamlin. Tuai, 1a1Ded 106 )'ardl • rushing and bolted 32 yards for a touchdown. The 14lh·ranked Longhorns. runne rs ·UP In the Southwest Conference. smothered Atlantic Coast Conference Maryland with a magnificent defense led by safety Ricky Churma n. It was the first lime since 1970 that Maryland had been shut out. Texas intercepted four puses ancl sacked Mary land quarterback Tim O'Hara five times ln the rout, which was Maryland's biggest margin of rte· f eatslnce 1973. KOHIYOUAU8H _,,...... 0 0 0 o-0 T•-11 I 14 0 tJ fu -LMl'I JoMt 1 run tllrale4lffl •1(111 Tu-L-.-.1 rllfl llf•l•n kl(1ti Te•-l•M .i-1' JM» rr-om MCl9'111 Uln · .. .. ,..1ui ro-MCa.111 11'\111 (lral...., •1<u , .. -J--1• rUft 1er•~ '1<111 Tu H.,..,,_Hrun ,,,,.._,,uo1 A-U ,tn .. • &TATllTICS . -. ...._ ... . .. Among the stars who showed up ror the reunion were Dick Hill. now coaching at SA Valley, Ray Thornton of UC Irvine, Bob Moore, Dick Meacham, Les Hanis, Bt\lce Halladay, Dick Rozelle <brother or NFL commwk>ner Pete Rozelle>. quarterback Frank Iacono, Otto Plum, Jeck Giblllsco. and many or the others from that era. MANY OF THE FORME R PLAYERS are now coachinR on the hiAh school level a nd most gave thanks to Brown and Carpenter for the part they had in structur· ing their lives. "I feel like I've been to my own funeral." Carpenter told the 5roup. ··w orking with this man <Brown> and my brother-in-law Cthe late Chuck Williams) were the best yea.rsofmylife." Brown. a man who always built his offense around lhe mottrtal •t hand instead of trying to make the players ad· Just to his theories. s aid: "I got more pleasure out or fooling somebody than beallng lhem by a big score. I can't believe that they need so many coache.s these days. .. , DON'T BELIEVE THERE Is 1 team around, pro- ftHtonal or oc.herwise. that the tbnJe of us couldn't coach and do a Ullsfactory job today." When the three worked together, Brown handled the of· tense. Carpenter the defense and WIUlams lhe acouUnt and plcldng up naws tn the other team from somewhere in the stands In lbe early goinll of a rame. Williams also worked wtth the ends as well u the linemen. 'Jl~elr aucc over the years was proven out and the reapecl Ibey 1alned from their own players was ttttlfted to by all °'°" present ot lhe reunion. I • • \ FRIAR REBOUNDS -Costa M esa's Jeff Sut· lE'riield 1551 and Kirk Dominic watch in o.ltyrtlet..-.~-yGMyA....,_ vain as Servile 's Tim Wisem an pulls down a rebound in action Saturday. Woody Eyes Clemso n 1 • DAILY PILOT 83 Marina,_F y, EsJancia --~~~~--.!-;~~~- . Log To11rney Victories. By ROGER CARLSON Of..._ Dtllr l"llet SI.tit Marlna High e Vikings, the Eatancla Eagles and the Foun· taln Valley Barona sailed into Tuesday 's c hampio n s hip quarterfinals following victories Saturday at the 14th annual Oranie Optimist Invitational basketball tournament at Chap- manCollel{_e. Consolation play ia due Newport Harbor's Sailors and the C09ta Mesa Mustangs Tues- day after setbacu Saturday in the 16-t.eam tourney. M artna stopped El Modena, 79·63; Estancia belted Garey, 64·48; Fountain Valley dumped Centennial. 54·43 : Newport Harbor was clipped by Santa Clara. 67·54 : and Costa Mesa dropped a 79·64 dec ision to Servile. THE RESULTS SET UP a Marina-Servile collision Tues- day with the loser eliminated from the tournament, as are all second-round losers. Marina's conquest of El Modena was the best game of the day as both teams came out s moking from the field with a 38-36 Marina bulge at halftime highlighted by 67 percent shoot· ing by the Vikes (18-of-27) and 68.2 percent accuracy by the Va nguards (15-<lf·22). The Vikings jumped lo a 47·36 lead in the third period, El Modena pared it lo 49-47, then Marina pulled away behind the sterling play of Truiett Hatton and Dave Tiezzl. Weary General Goes On HA'M'ON SCORED a season high of 26 and Tiezzi pumped in 16. also a personal high for the year. The Vlkes were without 6-7 star Randy Heidenreich (ankle) and do not figure lo have hi m back for th.is tournament. COLUMBUS, Ohio CAP> - Woody Hayes s lumped in a chair in his tiny office. Perhaps the effects of Ohio State's unprecedented third straight loss to Michigan, a fourth·place finish in the Big Ten Conference and criticism from long-faithful fans were tak· ing their toll THE BUCKEYES• coach of 28 seasons. less than two months from his 66th birthday, took off his glasses and rubbed his eyes after another team meet.ing for -a Gator Bowl date Friday night . with Clemson. At hand was one of the things he dislikes most about being a big·time college football coach an interview with a sports writer So why, for the first lime in 11 bowl trips. had Hayes decided to travel to the bowl site just three days ahead or the game with the Atlantic Coast Confe r e nce champions? HA YES WILL LEAD a squad of 95 players to Jacksonville, Fla .. Tuesday for the final Gator Bowl workouts. ··w e're not practicing as often. but Wllh more intensity We want to try to get ready without overdoing 1l." replied the game's second·winningest active coach. Hay e!> has 238 collegiat e triumphs to 283 for Alabama's Bear Bryant IRONICALLY, BRYANT had something to do with Hayes changing his method of bowl practices. Bryant's Southeastern Con- ference champions smothered Ohio State J.'>-6 in the 1978 Sugar Bowl. a meeting in which the Buckeyes trained for two weeks in New Orleans. Hayes concedes he could not keep his pla)'ers occupied for two weeks in New Orleans -a contrast to a year earlier when Ohio State practiced for 15 days in balmy Miami for the Orange Bowl. With such a long practice period, the Buckeyes rolled up a 27 10 victory over Colorado. WHY DID IT work in Miami and not in New Orleans. "Jt wasn't too much for the Oran ge Bowl because the WOODY HAYES players had rooms that were like apartments . We practiced i"'1 the mornings. They could spend two or three hpurs at the beach each afternoon. They could even cook in their rooms . There was more to do in a casual sort of way." replied Hayes. Ohio State had not scored a touchdown in its last two 1976 games against Minnesota and Michigan. yet rolled up 27 points against the Buffaloes. This year the Buckeyes did not score a touchdown in a closing 14-3 loss to Michigan. Can Hayes see a parallel? "COLORADO DID NOT have a strong defense. Clemson is stronger defensively than they were," he answered. So what about this Clemson team that lost only to Georgia 12·0 during the regular season and won a return trip t-0 the Gator Bowl. The Tigers took a pounding from Pittsburgh last December. "They're a good football team, both offensively and defensively. They're rated way ahead of us (No. 7 to No. 20 nationally). They know how to both run and pass." said Hayes. THE OHIO STATE dis · clplinarian. target of s harp criticism for his conservatism in a 7-3·1 season, was asked if he would open up his offense in the Big Ten's first appearance in the Gator Bowl. "Probably," h e said. "We plan to pass more. Our passer is in bette r physical shape now. Hayes elected to go with an untried freshman quarterback in the opener against Penn Stale. Art Schlichter threw five interceptions in a 19-0 beating from the Nittany Lions and went on to pitch 21 interceptions in his rookie season. a record in Hayes regime. "HE RAD SHOULDER, elbow and arm problems nearly all year." said Hayes, rising to the defense of his newcomer who ac· eounted for 1,565 total yards and 15 touchdowns. Was there a personal disap.. polntment in th.is year's Big Ten tinish. Ohio State's lowes t since 1967? "Yeah, You usually look at one play that was the biggest disappointment. And there was o n e, but I wouldn 't want anybody to know what it was." Hayes once said he relished coaching one more nationa l championship before he hung up his whjsUe. He raised his bead. grinned impis hly and said, "I don 't think I'll get it this year." HIS OLDER BROTHER, Ike, an Iowa dentist, died or a heart attack. Woody s uffered a heart attack in 1974 and, al his age, the natural question is: Will be coach all four of his remaining eligible years before his man- datory retirement? "I won't promjse anything to anybody. " he replied. His office visitor wondered if the Mic hig a n -Ohio Stat e showdown had become so large that it overshadows any result- ing bowl games. The Wolverines and Buckeyes have lost all but one or their bowl assignments since 1W74. The mere mention of the name Mic higan triggered Hayes' famous temper. He rose to his feet, mumbled some Hayesian obscenities and told the writer. ··You 've got enough.'· Olympic Chief Dies LAKE PLACID, N.Y. (AP> -Ron MacKenzie, president or the Lake Placid Olympic Organizing Commit- tee, collttpsed and died Saturday after climbing about 100 yards to the judges' observation post where he was to have watched the first sider down the new Olympic ski jump. McKenzie, who was instrumental in landing the 1S80 Winter Games for this small village In upstate New York, was 75. the bottom so it was quite a few steps up to the top o( the knoll." said Vis- come. SHE SAID THERE were several emergency medical technlclan.s on the scene and they immedia tely began administering the cardlo· pulmonary resuscitation technique and continued doing so ror about 15 minutes. Dr. George O. Hart. the medical director for the 1980 Games, pronounced MacKenzie dead at the scene . Estancia's Steve Van Horn scored in the 20s for the eighth straight time, connecting for 23 points in leading the Eagles with his inside work. The 6·4 junior worked over Garey's 6·7 defense. attacking the bucket offeosively and pull· ing down 14 rebounds. Garey led only once <8-6> as the Eagles kept the pressure on with the solid play of Dan Mad- dock. Santa Clar a High's Saints. now 7 -1 on the year. provided Es tancia with an opponent Tues· day as they staggered Newport Harbor with the kind of board work, speed and polish that gets a school into the CJ F playoffs 19 of the past 20 years. Lewis Gabbard, a 6·5 senior. had 20 rebounds and blocked two shots as he totally dominated the scene. The one bright spot for the Sailors was the play of Brian Freem an. who was credited with nine steals as he led a Newport rally that resulted in a respecta- ble score. Costa Mesa, now 3·3, was cold at the outset, missing its first nine shots from the field as Servile jumped to a 9.0 lead. THE MUSTANGS could net only 24 of 66 s hots from the fi eld (36.4 percent). yet were within reach with 6:30 remaining, trail· ing the constantly pressing Friars. 55-52. But Servile got rich al the free throw Hne. hitting 13 of 16 in the fina l stanza. to puJJ away. Pro Scores HatleMI a.talttMll AU1t All•nt• iot. c1.,,.1 .. w,.1 MESAN GOES HIGH -Cost a Me sa High 's Rill Lux gr a bs the ball away from Servite·s Tim Wiseman in Orange Tourney play Saturday. S.l"#iie '"' ,, ". 8..e< ... I• 1 S " u-.......... 1 • ' Kunlr • 0 8 s .. deH• o o o J Sonek 10 • 14 S StMk 4 1 10 W•lch I 0 1 Wl""m •" J 4 10 Toi.tis JO t• l"I G•,l a Mew 1641 S.,Hlo Sutlerf1-ld Oomln1c H•rrt!. S Lua 8 lu• B•wr lott l~•tv ,, " l.o I S n t 0 1 0 , 2 ' 0 1 ' 0 1 1 1 II • l 10 • 0 ,, ' 0 1 24 ,. ,... Tol•I• Sc .... 1tyO...rte" Servtlt IS 18 11 ~ ,. ~te Mtw 10 U II 77 6' lot•• tou11. Serv1tt 11. Cost• Mfw 21. Foul#(! out· t<unll CSen11ttl; Oomtntc, S t.u• ICo.t• Mtwl "''"''° O&w\On H•llon HoltnC!$ Ne!l\On 01\0n Sc>lvev Tleui Tot•h Newport H.t.-(J41 G•d<I" Fr-Hm•n l •nskv s .. tt- C•1ow111 Doody Strttt Total• '• It tp I 0 2 ~ 5 2l 0 0 0 I • ti 7 7 ' 1 ' s 0 0 0 ,, I)~ £1 ModeM CWI ,, " "' I 6 10 ' 0 1 1 1 6 3 I I • J ll ' 0 1 • I 13 ,. IJ w ~ .. 1., .... "'' Sh119hrou P•tle<IO" Cv•1•nov1ch Sert< M l Penra c:;.-ro trio.<• Ceven•Ql'I e.dNr B••vnev Tol•IS 19 It IP 1 0 • 0 1 1 1 I S 0 1 1 O I I) s 1 " 1 10 1 l • 1 ,. I 0 7 71 13 ., S<~• "' ow.trten Ne*PO•I ... .,,.,, t 10 16 11-S4 S.nt• Ct•r• 19 11 11 ,._., Tol•l louls ~ "'"'oor " S...I• Cl•r• '•' Fo"'*d out f=rMm•" C,.ewooru T•c.ttntcal tot.ii\ N f'wpof1 ~•rbof' {pt•y•r not ••~eel 1n ')(Ortbookl lrlb«• IS..n1a Cl•r.,1 G•rey 1411 Sm•th Wtfnrtr '"""' B•rbf:r T11s..,or1n B•n•s H•rrf\ T dlt Kllf•n Wllll•rrl\ Jonr~ TOI.ti\ ,, ". 0 0 0 ) J • 0 1 1 • 11 •• ' ' ) 0 0 0 1 0 • 0 0 0 I 0 1 0 0 0 ) 0 10 11 6 .ca E\IMl<W 1 .. 1 Auf '" C•mp G••e>e• Keup Kro11n1e101 M•OO<'n M<lddO<• Pr•Cfl V1;n Horn Yt1mttm• Tot•" 19 If"' 0 1 1 ) I I J 0 " 0 0 0 • 0 4 0 0 0 .. . ,, 1 0 ' 10 J /J o o a 16 " •• Sc..,. lly O..•rttrl Gar~v 10 16 ,. s-... E\lene1e 14 11 ~ ~ Tot•l louts G.r~v 10, E'Lln<•• IJ, Foutfl!out JOMS IG•rty>, c:;.~, u:: ... nc •• 1 Feuntaon V•ll•Y IS41 Atul•rld 0 co .... ,. E-ll>e•l1V'r Fo.id, tiarlow A.tm1re1 HuDO.fro Pou''*"\ rot•I' 19 It Ip s 7 ,, 0 ... J t I I J \ ~ 1 •• I) 0 0 I •• a o o •8 18 ~ Cenleft"'•' (U I Muldraw WaOIJn\ Glll'l<>fl B•uchem Oendr•~ Stallworth Gr~ .... n John\Of'I Tot.tih. 19 fl Ip • 1 tO 1 • A 0 0 0 1 0 • 1 s ~ 0 0 0 1 0 • ' 0 1 1 1 • IS 13 d Scwt •Y Oola~I F04,mf•1n V•tl•v •o IJ 11 ,._ s.t Centtnn111 • ts • ll>-4J Tot•I '°"'' Founld•n V•llev tt Ce:'Uenn•ll U Fouled out S.UCnam K thlenn•••I San Antonoo IJO, Detroit 126 lrldlan• 127. New Orluns ICIJ U ft\&I Oty !22. Mll .. lukee "' IOT> Hou,ton 12', HtW Yort 10, Ponlend 11•. W•"•lnQton 10' Insulate your windows. NetleMl lfee:ltty u-. ... V1ncouver 1. ICI"'' o Boston 6, lkllfelo • Minn.sot• s. PllUl>Uroh 3 Wolllnotonl, Detroit, MOl)lrul l . Color-1 Ht "' Yon 1s1anc1e" •. He"' York ~· Cllk "° S. PlllJICWll>lll• 1 T\l'O<lto •• SI Louil I ......, Ht<Jtty AUit. Ht • Eno4-•. 81rmlftllll•m 3 Cln<lnnell 6, OueWc 1 all'llllWtlM,.._.,. Cenedl•., Otymplc t••m •. Cietl'loi1ovo Motor Colle BIHi•· IO'tke M!Wcl • 3M Scotchtlnt · Sun Control Fiim Saves You Money. lnwlotlng you1 ..,,., WJ . dows with JM Scotch· tint Sun Control Fiim II I Nvn monty m.ny I different w•)s: tl-.. • Reflect• 76"" or t!M · -_ 1u.,•1 llut-)'C)Uf llr COlldltlontt runs lus. to be the most eKpe1lenced Installers ol 3M Scotchtlnt mm. wleh fec:tory trelned eppllcotors •nd ., five year guarantu lM Scotchtlnl film comes In • verlety ol colors. 1tflec1lve ond non°refle<11ve h I• the leosl UjXm· tlve end mosc efrecti"'e way to wve ~u m0ttey 1nd dMI with the hlrall effecUI of the 'un. ClllMOW•• ............. • ..... H,,.-_,_ .......... _ ...... ......,..tl% 0 EVEllYBODY WAS in the stands and it was such a happy moment. He was in the new Judges' stand waiting ror the first jumper to come off," sald Laura Viscome, a reporter for the Lake Placid News. "People just turned around and walked away," said Mrs. Viscome. ·'Then• wre a Jot of people crytnc." The std Jumps went off later in the a f ternoon at the ina l s tence of MacKenzie's widow, Anna. who was at the bottom of the slope when ber husband collapsed. Dick Miller Motors • Repels 99~ of IM 1un'1 utu1 vlolct 11y1- co1lfy 1un ttctlno of drapes end fllmlture Is rc~ed. • Sun 9t1re la o;t 12"-• S.11c 40"-on winter llut lo.u. -· About 150 local raldent.s were on hand tor the christening of the re- cently constructed 70-meter jump on lntervale Mountain when MacKeule collapsed on the plat· form. "He had climbed up lbe hill rrom .. ,._ ~ft-• ....._ . ..__ ............ MacKENZIE, AN O UTDOO& winter •ports enthusiast and avid skier even Jn teCfU!l years wu a certified aid jumpln1 Judie . . ... .. fllAT•ACTGaY AUT'HOll'" • 0...... OIMory Sun Corilrot COl!I- ..., ........ ~ao ............ , 120w.w...,..,s......_._..._ • 57-2132• • . .. I l .,. ' ---··· ___ _... __ -----.__,. r b > r a .... .. . .. -. fl'I DAILY PILOT Wll.ege Btuketball Fullerton Falls To Utah, 83-76 LONG B AC ll t AP) -Ctnter Micbarl WU y •t'o.red 22 polnla to lud u.beatm Lona Buch Stale to a com · h'Om·beblnd 15 vktory o~ Kauu State In roll•I ba1ketb1U Saturday alaht. 1'ralllna 42.33 at h•lltlm • Loni 8e1Ch ltrpt \la l"ffOrd JW>rfKt ln Nttn 1•mt Outl<'Unna lh Wllduu 11·2 tn ,._. lin t • :.o of the •ttood h.tlf, th •tera wll)t'd out tho patttnll1·bullr, K1n111 Slat.o lead Gua rd Donni" Martin tlf'\"d • I f\1\11 0( lb t'Ourt p~ to forward ranni4 Wl• for a layup that llf'd tM ''°"" t '4·•11 with 1$' 10 )1 n In the 1aro • --! Kan1iu Sl&alo, fl·3, wu It'd by I focwt I ophomon1 11u1trd RoJanJo f\lark~a"'ll 22 Point.a. Guurd Ol..rm Marahall hl!C1 •• for the Wild<'lll&, who 1ta~f'd lll u lhrouahout the hall' •H•ao emd tr all"'' j u t Gl 80 ~llh ~ 4-0 rc-maln1n1 Lons Bcarh 1th.-n Yt\lnl Into • t11\1r ~orn r oll nH 1.1nd fr 1hman 1u rd C ra l tt Hoda.is qulr kly •·fin,, rtt1d • threti-poanl l'lay when foul«td oo ~ drlv ln1 layup The 4~1'1 didn't le the 1am Willi ~1 H tlOnd1 remalr1t.+d Stinlor Ou.ird EUr kciy Wllllam.s, with 20 point• tor thu aam"· made a lay up 1.1nd a foul Wlil u llod, HI• free throw made> tho 1coro Tl Cl6 Wllllams added a nother point on • *hn1e&J foul ca lled on Wild,'ala' Coac•h Jack Hartman. proteislln1 lh4> foul called on Wlllhams' ba11ket (ltalt..83·76 SALT LAKE CITY -Sophomores Tom Chambe rs und Danny Vranes 1parked a strong Inside game that gave Ut1h an 83-76 victory over Cal State Fullerton Saturday night Cha mbers m uscled ln 2A points and pulled down 18 rebounds , while Vranes added 22 points and 12 rebounds. Fullerton (7·2> was led by Junior forwa rd Calvin Roberts who scored 21 .points before fouling out with three m inutes tor go. Roberts scored 15 stra ight points dur- ing a seven-minute stretch in the second half when the Titans were struggling to com e back from a 13-point deficit. 1 Utah was a ble to fight off the rally. however, and pulled back in front after Roberts managed to knot the score at '70 with four minutes remaining. Mike Niles and Kevin Heenan added 15 apiece for Fullerton. San Dirgo Statr., 81·89 SAN DI EGO -For ward Presnell Gilbert scored 23 points and had 10 re- bounds to lead San Diego State to an 81·69 victory over 7th-ranked Kansas al San Diego Sports Arena Saturday night. Kansas, 5-3. also ll)st in overtime at Southern Cal 89·8.1 Thursday night to begin its West Coast trip. San Diego State. 6 2, posted another upset victory over another nationally-ranked team earlier this month, beating No. 20-rated USI-"', 77-75, at San Francisco. Center Steve Malovic scored 18 points a nd had 12 rebounds for the Azte<:s. Mike Dodd had 11 assists for the win· ners, who pulled a way from a 39.39 tie ear ly i~econd half to lead 61·44 with 10 remaining. • Mb«onxin, 6.>-.:>2 MADISON. Wis. --Wisconsin ended nearly a decade of frustration at the hands of Narquclle Saturday, upsetting the I 3th-ranked a nd pre viously un· defeated Warriors, 65·52, m a foul· marred game. Center Larry Petty scored 15 points for the Badgers and played a bruising game under the boards, effectively l>hu l ting off Marquette's Odell Ball much of the game. Ball, averaging 14.9 going Into the game, was held to seven points Maryland., 128· I O:J COLLEGE P/\RK. Md . -Albert King scored 24 points and Larry Gibson 23 as Maryland rolled to a 128·103 victory over Canisius in a J?<tme devoid of de· r cnse Saturday night. The Terps, 7-2, also got an 18-point ef· fort from E rnie Graham, while Buck Williams, Greg Manning and Reggie J ackson scored 16 apiece. Canlsius, 5-6, led twice early in the game and was trailing at 10.9 before G ibson paced a 15-2 Maryland streak which gave the Terps a 25·11 lead. llllnob, 7 J ·57 LEXINGTON, Ky. -Derek Holcomb 1cored 17 points as 15th-ranked Illinois captured the University of Kentucky In· vitatlonal Tournament with a 71-57 vie· tory over cold-shooting Texas A&M. ~ Unbeaten Illinois, 9·0, jonlned West VirginJa as the only team other than host Kentucky to win more than one UKIT tlUe. Oljnois won here In 1964 over Kentucky. In the consolation game, 11th-ranked Kentucky, beaten by A&M Friday night, blew most of a 24·point lead before hoJd- 1 ng off No. 8 Syracuse 94-87. Chuck Aleksinas Jed the Wildcats with 20 points . Lottbdl~, ... 70 LOUlSVILLE, Ky. -Forwar~ Bob· by Turner scored 18 points and team- mate Larry WIJlJams added 16 S.turd•Y n1gbt as 12th-ranked LoulsvllJe rolled to an 88-70 victory over Providence. U>uisvUle, 7·2, was never ln trouble In buUdlng a 38·30 halnlme lead and the? Cardinals pulled away tq a ~-point lead midway thtou1b the aecond half. Turner, WiWamt and freshman Scott.er McCray each scored eight polnta ln the first half, and 1uard Ourell Grlttlth la· nit• the ~ half aurae with three 1tral1bt buketa. • Cot .... '"" I.IC:'-• ftJ ...... f ....... . , ... ....,,. ... ,, ··-· ····~ •• .. .. 11 .. I• , ..... ~tMlll•I t•I \i.t• HAI •I tat 'Uh ... , ....... ....................... 1.1\t .. '"' .. ,,.. , ... •1 ,.,.,,,.,._ • t ir .. 1~ ,..lht u ................ • ,.,._I He-11111 I ........ ., 0.11 ,. • .,.. tiill• ,,.. ... h ,_tit 1 .... " ... l•"'t·•->• •!!!••" 1111''•· ...... 01 --..""" ... ,, "'"I ..... ui.1l .. ,_ I• 11 t ....... , .......... ._6'1111 II l\el'•·~ •........ .... 11rw .. , ....... '"' 1.11 .. 1 .. ~, .. \1_1 ... 11• •~•H a l'L·•-11 llNI 1 ""'"'"• •• J11 •••11•111 1 II t ltt lft--1• ''"''"·-•\ ~ ........ . .... ....... . .. , ..... ,. .. iltt•ft "'"' I Ii ¥Mt1•0 •t II ...... " .......... . , ....... " 1111 • tl~IM 1• l •ti•"'• lliJ ,,. ...... ~ .. , ........... 1..,.1,11• ''-foll-·Mll<I 'ii • 9,.,..,. \I ....... ., ...... • Hll o ,_. 1 ...... ~ ...... . .11 .. ..... _. ... \lo\t ll>loll•-•• .\1u,.. .. \C A '4I flt 1.110 •• ., ~~ ..... I ........ 11"1' ll I Ii\ llf 11 lt\1441' 1 111-t IW-..• I I I.II.Ml ~I .. "°"'' .. * " ' ....... 14 ............ !( ... " fOUIOIAMa•u• " ..... , ........... . 1111_, 11. h ••• At.M \I llh \II ...... 11(0 .... ,, ........ , 111111111 o..-.... ~. O•'flll<l t) fut-61 111•\ll P.IM \I ~ J.t00• SI '1 (ltllrOI llllMl•M. --.y , ...... 1 1111"'1•• $1 1•, MIHl\\11)111 n lltf\11 l OVolt ICN<.tOel ... N ltllnol1 U ll111t411 .......... ......._ He vtd• U. VI If, N•llrt llle 6J "'"" Mldclle TellM\~ 71. UC Senla 8er11<1ra U (tlMrCll C.W.~CYUI< T-••. StlonHt ll IO tFl"t I S.nla Clere lOJ, S... Jos. 51 IS lllWOI ll'w1IMo4I SUI• Clot1U911 «1. Pot11-$1. 1' <Finl I IO•llO 10, Wli.·Mllw11Uk" s.11n1ro1 e.WHlll ....... P.c. '-1111\trt n 14, E. Wasll. 5• <F'lnll Werner·Ptclfl< 91. C•I B•l>Clll 8A ltlllrOI . Juntor Colfege "-LM9lot Fullerton9t, ~1en18J Fooc11111 n. Grou..-1 10 S-Meollc•T--~-1111, El~t3.Pl.,ces1 ~~ c err110-. 116, s..M• Monie• 87 c ... ........,~.-. Compton 101. v-.,,•ll tftgh School ~ ..... T~ Fou11l•ln \l•li.y S4. centtnftl•I 43 LO<tr• SS. FocKlllll 49 E\lancl• 1>4. c;.,., 48 ~nl• Clar• •1. Nl'WDO'l ~••Dar ~· M•rtn• ".El-~ Servi I~ 19, (OSI• -W 44 Maqnolla '-l. Or•"O<' u 'i•••Ma ,.. (Miter o$ Alamitos Champion Crowned From AP Dlspakltn M lss Thermolark won the $125.000 Champion of C h a mpio ns quarte r horse race Saturday at L os Ala m itos Race Course, finishing a head in front of fast-closing longshot Native Creek. T he victory by the three-year-old was her 14th in 20 career starts. a nd the $63.750 winner s' s h a r e brought h e r ca r eer earni ngs to $441,828. Th e eve n -mo n ey favor ite. All-American Derby winner Medley Glass, broke poorly In the 4'40.yard event and finished sixth. The win· ning lime was 21.65 seconds, third fastest in the seven-year history of the r ace. Miss Thermolark, rid- den by Kenneth Hart, was the ~d choice in betting and pa.Jd $7.40, $4.20 and $3.80. Native Creek, a fJve- year·old off at 27·11 made up a Jot of 1rouna near lbe finJ&h, and paid $22.40 and $10.40. Bar R o ulo wa s third, another three-quarters or a length back, and re· turned $7. Flashy Go Moore was a head back In fourth. Bobick Wins By Knockout SPARTANBURG. S .C. (AP) -Duane Bobick, the World Boxing As· soclaUon'a sixth-ranked heavyweight contender, knoc ke d out Henry .. Bulldog" Patterson or Lenoir, N.C., ln the sec o nd round of u acheduJed 10.round right Saturday night. Boblck, a 28-year·old forme r Oly mplan who lives In New York. used a right hand ahot to the midsection and followed C... with a left uppercut to the c hin to drop the 193-pqund Patterson for a lO·COunt. - .. BASKETBALL I FOOTBALL I HORSE RACING AOY, SAY CHl!l!Z -Ml d1l~urn Coach Bo Sc he mbcchler 1tlrw t" t he pluy<'r s into position fo r u tenm group portrait 1 11 u photo Ncss 1on ut UC I rvlnc J<"riday. Tile Wolve rines APWI,_... are holding closed practice sessions at UCI in J>repara -tion for their New Year 's Da y game against USC in the Rose Bowl. f'...-PageBI UCLA Key: Motivation - LEACH ••• ling (.473) last s pring, his second as the school's MVP. Donaluw Rates Arkansas in Top Three The only thi~ he doesn't do is throw the ball n ght. He 's a left· handed quarterback for an option team, not exactly in the mold of thepro5. T E MP E, Ariz. (AP> - Arkansas and UCLA , headed in oppos ite directions as the 1978 regula r football season ended, complete preparations today for the eighth Fiest a Bowl game al Sun Devil Stadium Christmas Day . The eighth-r anked Razorbacks r>layed like the national cham pionship contender most experts thought they would be late in the season as they won their final five games. The 15lh-ral~d Bruins, meanwhile , lost their las t two games and weren't im- pre ssive Jn their two previous gam es. Kickoff lime Monday is 12:45 p . m . · PST. The game , fir st between Arkansas and UC LA , will be nationally televised by NBC-TV. "ARKANSAS IS ONE or the n a tion 's two or three bes t teams," said UCLA Coach Terry Donahue. ''I'm sure UCLA 1s go ing to approach this game with a great deal or motivation ... The Bruins fi gure to need a great deal of motivation. The Razorbacks won their first four gam es handily before losing to Texas 28-21 and Houston 20·9, then recovered with their five straight victories. Arkansas completed Its season with a s hocking ly easy 49·7 t rouncing of Texas Te ch. UCLA WAS ROLLING with a 4·0 Paci!ic·lO Conference record a nd a 6-1 overall mark unlit its eighth game. The Bruins held a 24·0 halftime lead over Arizona, before falling on hard times that continued through lhe end of the regula r season. The Bruins finished with a 24· 14 victory over Arizona. then ba r e ly beat visitring Oregon 23·21. Next came a 15-13 loss to Oregon State and a 17· 10 setback against Southern California . "I ha"'.e a great deal of respect for Terry and the UC LA football team ." s aid Arkansas Coach Lou Holtz. "You can't be sur- prised at anything that happens at a bowl game. Our motto Is to hong loose." OFFENSIVELY, th e Razorbacks are led by ruM\ng ba ck Ben Cowlns. who has Alamitos Race Results Pws.twMy l 14tltel ..... ,, ....... _,,.., °"" rtff'llerta• Fl"I r•u Fly e.i1ttrlly llr .. 1u'9l 10.00. • 00. > 00. E\lacoipy ~ 10 eo. 1 00. Blue wtollt 4 IO It !lat< I• lUI 114110 \107 .0 !>@<und rec;" Jol\Mv Youno 1Aouo111 9 00. 4.40. J •O: CltOul>O IAO.tlrl t 00, 4 00. Oolto Doll ICl••l•MI . 10 Tlllro rK e CArots SM Kitty CMlltlltlll s.40. loo. 1 .O; Mr Allon Buo 1we1son1 u o. J .O; Say L.•c:ty 1•ca.1r1 t 40 » e .. u . ll·ll peJc:t ,., IO FCMlrlll r-Al.,,.lle ITt .. Wftl 61 00, 11.40, t 40; l •O. Ao-.y Anne CAo•lfl 14.00, I .O. Mone•llte ccre~'' • eo FIHll •¥-Roel< H Fire IC«4'0HI 4 40, J 60, l 40; ,,,,_,, Kiity IW.,Cll 10 .0. I 40, Sht h My "''",,. tH..-il s '°· t.s Euc:t• , .. ,, pela i 1S1.oo. 5111111 rec,-Ol.lptl<.ell (Ille IMlttllelll 11..0, • 40, S.20; c.,, "UIQI CSllMPltrl a.oo. S.IO; Ar•N IO IUrdoul • eo. '9w ntll 111t..-MI" TNttMOllflt 04•rt> t.<IO, • 10. I IO; N.i1w '"*" (810111 n .40, 10 40: 8¥ llou11 IS11m11ttrl 1 00. 0 •uct1 II 61 H id $.)t)JO EIQlllll rfl<I Wl"Q90 Wla.llei IMll<Mlll JOO. J IO, 1.40, JoOY\ (;IOtY ICtH91rl 4.10, 4 10. EHy Fllp IMVlfll 110 "4111111 rec l•l'Oll loovi. IWerCll 11 20. 6 <IO, i 00, g,,111•1 DI-(C«dOt•I 1' 10, I 00, "°"' IM JOM <A<Mlfl ~ 40. U l utta ().JI ,,_,. '301 tO. ""· 10.- rushed for more than 1.000 yards i n each of the pas t three seasons, and quarterback Ron Calcagni, an outstanding runner who doesn't throw much but has completed nearly 60 percent of his p ss attempts. Arkansas h as averaged 29.6 points per game while a llowing only 12.5. UCLA, which has a veraged nearly 23 points per g ame while allowing nearly IS, is led or- f e n s i vely by running back T heolis Brown, who gained 1,1.99 yards this year. THE BRUINS HAVE a pair of All·America defensive players, linebacker J erry Robinson and ~afety Kenny Easley. "l don't know when I've seen a better linebacker in college football be tte r than J e rry Robinson." said Holtz. Arkansas will play without three players who contributed to their success -running back Micheal Forrest and wide re- <'eivers Donny Bobo and Bobby Duckworth. Forrest and Bobo we r e suspended from school following a dorrriU.ory incident las t week and have been charged with rape, while Duckworth was dropped from the squad for other dormitory violations. "KeM y Stabler changed that philosophy,'' Leach says ln de· fense. "There lsn't that m any but two lefties will be playing in the Rose Bowl.·• Al least one or them will be hoping that the third time is the charm. Rams Get Okay The Magnolia School District in Anaheim has s igned a lease pe rm lttlng the Los Angeles Ra m s the use of the Juliette Low School site as a corporate head· quarters and training camp. Alrunitos Racing Entries TIDAT'I CllSSIDID PUllLI MMNr't ~MlMnew f'lncfl'eA: 1:u, ..... l'llllST 111.ac• -Bl rarck. 7 rur 0101. For m•loen$. P11rs<t U,•oo. Clllmlno Prl<.• v "°°· Sllero l<lo <Pwr11erl: Roetl'ltr k -o..rt1; M116M1l111 o.ui c~ .. 1: WNC-IWaltOtll ; Trlurnollent oMIUdor IMflcMlll; Mr CovMry .Jet (81'*ll; Ml" Gel• Cllk ll IU.Vlll; Sweet Sllfl Otncff <TretW<el; HeH Jolln IRou9lll ; Go For win.um l~tdOHI. SECOND lllACe -~so yaras. 3 vur olds & up. Pul'\a '1, 100. Cl•lm · t "IJ prlo Sl.000 Gltd1bou1 ICre•o•rl; Second CllOtll\ C8rooll\I; Double Otn I Aouo111; Tr11•1C111Snlo lll.irdl; "'"' Sant•n• IC•rOote); L•O"\ Belly (H•rll. Ooo ~ CCler"sel. THllllO ltACI: -400 r•reli. > ye•r old•. P11rw '3,200. Ctelmlno swkn SI0.000 Lolu Salu IA0110111 ; M onjt IWlfCll! How L11c1<y 18anksl ; Te111on1< <C1trlntl : Fern• Jtl I Per11er). LllCliy Louis. 11Cftl9'\tl; Rutt David Aun !Haro . Low S<-< Ad•lr I; Thal Tl!19'1r IC•rOOH I. Eesy J•st..-CSumpWr). l'OUlll'tM lllACE -l10 y .. os. J yur oldl & up. ~ $3,IOO. Cl•fm• Ing or Ice '6.IOO Gu.ro 154HYlcilf'rl ; 0upe·, Pellern ftre•o~rl. Some l(onde Horn\ I H.,11, Dell"\ SNtOow !Ward). ZIP"\ Son IC<1rdo11l1; S-11 (Mylnl. Sil· 1., T111no Cl orn\I 511,..tlleen Svnlt1°n llCnlohll "' "'" ltACll -3!0 Y••Ol J n•r Olds .. up PllrW IJ,IOO, Cl1lm1119 Pfl<t '6, IOO. J•I Cllaroer , IW•l•OM; Lo11• I( l11l1>1>tr (Mylul; Coln Juse IT••••ure l. 8 1Q Tl"'• llloCll•1 IPeo,..,I. ~ tAcUlrl; Peu •em Gelo lllplleml; Or•110 9 ., l8•11U); Fut P9rtomwr IHartl; Coor llllQlll llC111911C1, IMevwlrw• <B•ra t. \IXTM RACa -400 yarot.. J JtM Okll .. up. 111\twMCe. ""'" '1.jOO, Prln<MS TICIY Too (Moolrl; P'eltllf J IM I Llf!ll•ml; 8 111err Wiii IBroolu l; 8uu Tt l c:.r.111; NlltO Melll•nol IMylftl; l.llleny Jtl LIN IB•rdl. Ctll Ma Golie (f f'HWf't l , Beno 01 Ature IH•rll. SIVINTH lllACI! 400 Y41f0\ ) YI•• Old \ °'llOW-t P\HV ... '°9 Im• 0••" a.1 IS..mPlt•ll '-l"'ll ClltrQer t8roohl; J•I Tltovallt CTre•w ••I. lllff!O(IWl lo,,. CW•r(f/ Sno•ll•t1k ((;•••Ott I Ho•u f u IACl•lrt; l(lllCIQl)m Kev C ~IOll•mt, Mld11l91tl M~-· ICMOO••I. POlnl 10 HOlll<t IKef'tl. l lOHTH lllACI! -300 Ytllh All ·~· Purtl ~),000.~ Tiit St. NICllol•s E•ll'tt\ .. '°"41tttP l!e•y Mov• (Trtouwrtl , Town Polley IH•r11; Tiie CrM CWMl<Hll/ HOid 011 """ Com I no 1 Ptrner I. PtlU~ Gotd 0C99ff IAd•l!lj ·~ AOOl"9 C&.rdl Pe...-... ~-­l~umplttl,i,.l)ttle 81u• $11 .. p ILIDl\Mtll; -Gll<ll tMll<Mllll 8"0141 ltW\ IC«CIOt•I NINTH lllACa -"° H•41•• I Yt•r OIOt. Cletmf,,. "" .. ~.200. , .. Im• 1119,rlo .,,ooo C.l<lla Go llil9nwrl; GrlKM Ap. frl•oM ITt'HW•tl: -111 C-try IAO<lff); a... lttlllr 18roolttl; Llltle ~ulfillo II• ICruttrl, 1r11 OOOd \lllHtllOll• c~el; C-flltl C11te Uum•l•rl 1 ho•rt C1j!rlu1n l'-l pl\1111 1; Mr Du• St•''' ICltrlUt l, ~llt l .. tl ACROSS 80 Al no time 162 Zola novel l8 Sulk 1~ Ra1nb0w 1 Assume 8< Cavl'y 163 Auslerit~ 40 Sp1111 106 Persuaded M Shoal 165 Man's nick· 41 Nut 107 01Jehng 6 Fru11 43 f'•Sh S'lPclr 12 Mrs! 86 Teeters name sword~ 17 Grate 118 Networks 166 Assyrian 44 Always 108 Coarse g rass 21 Toma10 90 Ae<.omp11ce de11y 46 Lowe• I 1 l Sta•r par I ~aste 92 Abound Ul8 A11 47 Jog 113 Eng111e par1 22 ablluales !M Marllime 170 Wteked •8 Encourage: 117 Washes 23 Unattended 96Great ~e . t 71 Corpulenl 2 words 119 Demon 24 Ax1llart 97 tnsecf1 trap: t n 1ndlvldual 50 Large b<>Olls 121 More recent 25 Garnrs 2 words t 74 Prophets 52 Floor layers '24 Sc;ale note 26 Foundation 27 Wire serv. t02 German pis-175 Oenomma· S3 Flower 125 Western alli· 28 Icy rain IOI hC)n exlraclS Var. a nee 29 Tiny bt1 104 Lures 176 Onlled 54 Bristles 127 Govern 30 Cerium sym-109 Stupor 1n APPfehend 56 Diner 129 Al\C•ent bOI I :o Car style 118 f:lendezvous ~ Brown color Gaul a 31 Skyward 112 Anxious 60 Con11nen1 132 French arh· 32 D11ec1 1 Iii Continent DOWN Abbr Cle 34 TOddler 115 Whlle 1 Quickly 61 Bury 35 Caplures 116 Tille: .Abbr IJA Tasler J6 Plural ending 2 Foos 6.1 Black brrds 136 Most reek· 118 Hurrteo J Spanish qold M Nurrl>cr 37 T3sta 120 Gallery 4 Flead bl Prom less 39 Slumber 42 Jungle c.at 122 Longed for 5 Bowling 69 flaynt 139 Ouoils throw 45 Curve 123 Stay game 11 Growrn11 out 1<11 C-01e sound 46 lnd1cace 126 Reduce 6 -ano 13 Iron.cg 1~3 More tidy 49 Cay 128 ._.eerie unit tuckers 75 Prolil 14' Grrl's name 51 Aasse 130 C1.11 Seot11sh 7 01Usoed 19 Pitchers 145 Yearn for SJ Ibsen char-13t Outslanolng II Some oils 81 Musical 148 Bracer act er 133 Birthmark 9 Me1rrc meas· ShOW t48 Lariat loop 55 Billow 135Cltadel ure 83 F1sti trap 150 Clamor 57 Mexican 137 Compass pl. 10 CIO!lesl 85 Daybreak 162 Mimics sandwiches t38 Stearfn II Viper Comb. torm 153 Olres1 511 Zochac: s:lf n "'0 Lavenoor 11 lmmenst• t55 Seasoning 62 Arabian s· 142 Ofder l>aek •J R.lfl()fl 31 T.etlor 157 Engendered lllCI 14~ Perlorm ••Odie 119 t .elt•' 159 Paid athletes &e Roman robes 147 Dye 1~ S.nglfl !II An•noemo,,t 163 Purloin 66 ldenltlred 149 Fruit 16 $<1•V• 1•.n 4~ V,tlC'I (tW,trrl 10A African na· 68 Man·s name 151 Oct up 11 H•n11u n1"'' ... l o<'•I 10 EK.gr:te t•ve 12 Tr t sym· 152 oisouat ward 111 ~m1l.t1 It ( ... "'r" lb5 8raz1han bOI 15' COarS\• IP l>.~lt"hfll t3 f>rt<tflnt.f'S river 74 Aalall<: lllng· t56 Cnbbagn l'O :r;.,\1.-..: .. 911 111,'I Prt!h) dom 1e1m .u R1Nt..~.,, I"' tntuf ff t67 Plsmrre 19 Concerning 158 Ship'& dK~ ~ .. 1111 C..n"'1111n -169 hctamatlon 77 -deum teo Der1s1~ c1y ~ ... ~ .. 1\l.1 ... tnJltld 17'.l ~1lroad 78 Loose fabric 161 Italian rl~r thnll ene• !abbr.) I 1 J ' ' 11 It ' .. II .• I.: II II h " II II " ;,. ·"' ' n 17 f}.~ JI vi• n ,. llfl'r ...:'f ~ f~} " ,. ~II ll JI , ..... . .. " ,,\ . ~ ""' 1• r ~11 • ~ :~' ' I" I• ,, 1'1 It) .. ~ .. ., .. ... .. \t -\I I•! 'r ..-Ml •• \J )I I» ... ,, ... p.;i._/ ' .. ··. , ->--ll • b ',:.~ .. " u " w --~ ., -,.,, --,_ r ~ 'Tr ,__ -IJ ,,--~ ,, /(j f II It I• " "' Ill •• b . " • .. ~e.."• " .. ·~ M ~;1 .. tl ~-'~ r1· • '~ ~ . "'" IQI IVI ~ llut ...., ~ IOC ~ I"'" IOI •• 1111 iii ... Ill ra. t Ill II> "' It) ·~ ,,. "' ~ II• "' ~fl! "" ,. .n m 12• 111 Ill [<tt '" ,,, -· I» ... I IJ1 IQ ll4 ID II• . ,,, , .. Ill ~ l.t\ . v 10 R 1• ,. f~ •• l•I IQ k· ~<I Ill l,i;;•: ,., Ill "" Ill Ill IU 1 .. Ill 1 ... 1)0 I~ ~ t~ "' "' ·-~' tt. 11'11 .... -· ... l•I tM I" I"" ,., .~ .. "' 16' 161 ... Find your dream boat In the Boating classlf led ads of th• •• In 1= Ill "' jJJ , ... Ill •'" DAILY PILOT 642-5671 .. .. • 811 CLAllt'11D llC1JON fPR ANSW!AS •• ' . . ------ ... • ~ • • .. .., .. I .. , .. • .. • • ~I ... ~I . i ~ Fashion An lee cream kaleidoscope of rolor is the best description. for Mary McFadden's spring-summer collection. A blueberry beret sits atop poisonous pistachio jacket that works with violet and pomegranate separates. Legs might be colored in sweet nothing pink and shoes are indigo. A narrow bolero of line.quilted pongee. with a Queen Elizabeth I sleeve. is the favorite da>1ime separate. A quilted vest has broadened Samurai shoulders. Chiffon and linen separates combine with hand loomed cotton jackets dyed in candy cane tee colors. The suit has returned. Togas. shawls, are cut m lotenges and half moons; tied and wrapped on the body. Fauve images and cut-outs are the melody of the hand-painted gauzes. Blocks of jumbled up mosaics create • new engineered color washes, not confined re- peats. Ivory on parchment texture is worked into subtle evening separates. Hand loomed cotton nubbly. flaxen linen, jigsaw macrame. ricepaper voiles, mix and tell new stories. The silhouette is wide across the shoulder , yet soft. falling into narrow body angles, belted and wrapped below the waist. Skirts are short and perky; longer skirts have high thigh slits. A handpainted challis skirt with shawl in sall proportions From left. chiffon evening gown. pongee tunic over silk blouse and narrow-ankled pant, linen evening suit with bolero jacket. Kuhn-Somers Mr. and Mrs. William C. Kuhn or Costa Mesa have announced the engagement oC their daughter, Heathe r Ewing Kuhn, lo William Robert Somers. The future bridegroom's parents 1are Dr. and Mrs. Maclyn 8 . Somen of Newport Beach. Mi.as Kuhn ls a graduate ol Qista Mesa High School and Orange Cout College. She at· tends Cal State Univenity, Long Beach. Mr. Somers graduated from Newport Harbor High School, Ocddental CoJJeae and ls attending Loma Linda University Medical School. They plan an August wedding. Baskin-Salyer William Baskin or Newport Beach has an· nounced the engagement or bis daughter, Penelope Nicki Baskin, to Chr istopher Montgomery Salyer, son of Mr. and Mrs. B.M. Salyer Jr. of Oklahoma City. The blide-eleet attended Corona del Mar Hith School and graduated from Mc Kinley Hith Scbool la HODOlu.Ju. She •tteoded tbe Unlven.lty ol HawaU. The future bridegroom sractuated from Northwest Clauen Hiab Sebool ln Olrlaboma Cl· ty and received a bachelor's, cS.1ree from Southern Methodiat University ln Dallu and a muter's degree from Bablon CoUece ln Bolton. A Cbrtstmu Eve weddinl 11 planned in Oklahoma., Kent-Peterson Randy Yee Keftt and Janice Kay Peterson were married 1t Laguna Presbyterian Church lo La1una Beach. The bride ls the dauahtet of Doaald and Kay Petenon of San JON and the bridesroom'a pareatt are u.orae and M1n1 Kent ot Newport Beach. ' TM new Mrt. Kent ~t.d from Camden Bl1b School in San JOH and Btola Collese. Sbe .....__, ___ _ r. ~""t"',.,,~ .. · .. · .. · ........... ~.ndly .... Oectm ... b91.~ ••• "." ......... 0.A.IL.YP.IL·O·T .. ·.3 .J I . ' combines with painted silk top. hip wrapped. "Pretty Baby" dresses in pristine linen and Celtic interlace macrame are garden party delights. Lilies of the Valley cascade down full cheeks. For disco lime. ivory pleating is tied in s h ort slings, baring midriff. Golde n macrame triangles decorate white spruce backs. Panels of lurex float lo motion as legs are lightly shirred and draped. Chif. fon pajamas, handpainted in Portuguese tiles, are worn with pants, narrow as body stockings. Macrame tunics of flax resembl· Ing ancient Egyptian plaiting, are appli- qued with celadon ceramic discs. Chiffon evening robes are soft bias body columns, wi th low cowled and draped backs, railroaded with pleated hlpwraps in bolder color patterns. Sheaths of pleating, bound in gold cord, criss·crossing body, create new roping eff ecls. Tri-color pleated gowns are based on Hellenistic idealism and proportion. Baro- que pearl tassels whisper glamour. A scat- terin g of snow white "Botticelli'' dresses evoke the Primavera. Linen ropes as belts are lied on hips for day wear. Sexangular pouches of whip snake and s uede are s lung across body. Macrame berets in electric colors accent classical suits. Swirling over-tunic hides a harem skirt and chiffon blouse. Weddings/Engagements Miss Kuhn, Mr. Somers is an elementary school teacher in Costa Mesa. Mr. Kent is a graduate of Corona del Mar High School and received a bachelor of science de1rtt from UC Irvine and a mute.r's de1ree from Cal State Fullerton. He ls a chemistry tucber and the science departmeat chair at El Toro Hi(bScbool. Morin-Bridges Mr. and Mn. DeVauJ W. Br1dees of Santa Ana Hei&htt announce the marria1e of their daughter. Peggy DeNlece Bridles, to Philip Louts Edward Morin Jr. The couple were married in Las Vegas, Nev . Tbe bridegroom is the son or Betty and Edward Morin of Metuchen, N.J. A reception was slven at the home of Mr. and 'J:'· Brid1es. Tbe newlyweds will U\le in Corona ljlar. ... . ~.. Kalsched·Flanagan Michael Kalached and Kerry naD.Wan have Miss Baskin, Mr. Salyer exchanged wedding vows . The bride Ls the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Scott Flanagan or Huntington Beach. She ls a 1raduate ol HuntlnJtoo Beach High SchOol and the Univentty of Arizona. Sbe is a teacher in the Ocean View School Dlatrlct. Mr. Kalacbed 1raduated from Sall Clemente HJgh School and Southern <>rep State College and is employed by MunchUlettl Llfe. His parents are Mr. and Mn. Edward Kalached of San Clemente. The couple will live in Coeta Mesa. Malakoff-Sher Mr. and Mrs. J ames L. Malakoff of Palos Verdes announce the engagement of their daughter Randi Ellen, to Lawrence David Sher, son' of Mr. and Mrs. Edwin H. Sher of Huntincton Beach. Ml11 Malakoff graduated from PaJoa v erdea Hlah School and ls a tenlor at the University of Callfornla, Irvine, maJonni in " biology and Jewtsh f'tudies. She ls a charter Mr. and Mrs. Kent member of the Irvine Chapter of Alpha Chi Omega and is president of the group. Sher is a graduate or Marina High School and is a student at UC Irvine. majoring ln biology and chemistry. A June weddlnl ii planned. Brent hel-Robbins Stepb~e Robbins and Darwin Breothel ex· changed wedding vows ln Calvary Chapel. The bride, daughter or Mr. and Mrs. Freeman Robbins of San Juan Capistrano. gr aduated from Pasadena Hi&b School and at- tended Paaadena City and Orange Coast col· leges. She Is employed by Hoa1 Memorial Hospital Presbyterian. The bridegroom. son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Brenthel of Yonkers, N.Y., graduated from Gorton High School and atLended . Westchester Community Colleae and New York University. The ~ouple will Uve ln NyPC>rt Beach 1fter a wedding trip to Carmel. ~. .,,,,,.,... ~, ....................................... ~ -. .. . . -··· -------- 77 2 ·220 an SSC'.,. " r II •• t t • .. ~ OAA. y Pll.Ol M'*aKroglus Krogius-Mason Mr. and Mn. Tttllaa E 0 Kl'oclut al South Lacuna announC'e the enc-i•mmt ot lbt!lr da\&Jhter. Karin 't'M . to D Scott MM<lft. son of Mra. Katt'ft Muon ot Ne"1)CM't 8eatb and tht late Mr. John Dennis MUOI\ M K.roeius la a 1raduat.-of Dana tull1 Hilb School and ls • senior at Un!vtrslty of Callfonua, lrvtM, maiori"I ln et'OftOmlC'I Sh ls on the ~an·s Lbt and lJ a '""'bttr ot Delta GammL Muon la a 1raduate ot Corona del Mar Hl&b School and ls • ~ ln flMnce at th Unlverslty of Southem Callfom•a He l• a member ol &,ma Alpha Ep1Uon and ll on th• vanll)' 5AiliAI team and the Dean'• Uat. A July 14 ~ ls planned. ' _-_ ~-"' Mr. & Mrs. Eckes Eckes-Knowlton Tht• AMuncl1llon Church In Minne.poll" ••• th" a4'ttinl for the w~dJn• of Lorraln A Knowltunancl Mlch•cl l. EckOll Th~ btidll'1 parent• ire M.. and Mr~ Gf'Orac-ll Knowlton JI' or Fountain VaJlt1y Hht• 11 .~<X.lnla n Velll!y Hitch ~hoot (lr•duott1 11nd attend Oolck'n We-st ('ollt'lle Tht" br1dt'groom'ia pertmLA Arc Mr. ·ond Mr11 Lawr nc-e D Erkfl or Mlnntta~lls end he aradualf'd trom Southwt8t tllah School In lhl't t'l t y and alt~ndcd Normundttlo Colle.i<1 In Bloomtnaton. Mini\. Tht' t"OUJ>lc wUI make thdr homt' 1n llunt &n((lon flclarh. Tell Child The Facts D E A R A N N soap opera but these are LA N DE RS · 0 u r thefactl.) daugbter became preg· Our grandaon thinks nant when sbe was 17. we are his parents. He 1be boy wouJdn•t maJT)' calla us "Momma" and bet' but sbe wanted lo "Dad" and we adore him. bave the baby uyw.,, SomeOmes people refer Her dad and l talked lt to us as "Grandma" and over and decided to stand .. Grandpa" but we cor· byber.SowesaklOK. rect tbem and explain Wheo .. Marge"' was in privately. her seveotb month she So lar t.be boy hasn't started dating another caugbtoo. Butbe'll be 10- fel&ow. Two months after log lo school soon and her litUe boy was born then we're afraid he'll she got pregnant again learn the truth. How can I andbadanabortion explain this mess to this PLEASE -SMALL TOWN IN lNDIANA D£ARSMALLTOWN: Tell lite dalJd at once tbat bis "Comla Marge" ls bls motlter and tbat yoa and "Dad" are HER mommy ud daddy. Let lalm bow you raUed blm from tbe day lie was born became bl• own mama ~·t do It. Sa)' Ille wu DOt well -wbldl la DO lie. (Tbe 1trl wu ttrtaialy mea- talty dlatarbed. > After giving blm the facts, watcb for bla reactk>ll - and If yoo feel It comforts him to keep calling you "Mom" and "Dad," by all means eacoarage blm to do so wall. ID fad, It wUI ~ worse became someone wUJ aarely beat you to It. DEAR ANN LANDERS: If I am wroog. please tell me. A woman I work with can talk an arm and a leg off a person about h er grandchildren. To listen to her you would think no one else in the world ever had any. ,. • • • 19 ....... . . . . . . . . . . ' . . . Mr. & Mrs. Downs Oowns·Gongwer J onct \ornell Oon.cwur un., J<~ lJl• OowM wf'r<" morrlro In rf'rcrnonlf's condurted 111 Com mun It y Prt•l\tJyll•ri11n C'hurdl In Thret• HI v1•r" Tht' brldl' llS t ht• dbu.ihtiir of Mr 1rnrl M r11 .J &ml'll C' GorlJ(Wf'r or Nf'wport llN1<'h hlw 111 a 1o1rodunlc-of NPw1x1rt llurbor Ill.ch ~·h<>f1I und 11llc•ndc'<.l Orunuti Cou111 ( 'olh•l(Cl Hlw 111 omvl ovrcJ by 'rhrf'<! tuvrra JC11t1lt y Th(• hrlch1M1 oom IA llw Aon or KulhlN•n Oowna of l'omon11 flf1 urodu1l<'<l frorn .John Swf't t llluh ~·hool tir11l North ~11-t M ,,,,..,.,,, ~tnlf' (.'oll••JC•• II•• In C'l't1ployNI t1v I' •rturrnnm·•· ('orp Thry wlllllv<•lnThrr• llivn" MONDAY, DEC. %lJ By YONEY OMA RR . . . . . . . . . .. . .... HOROSCOPE 11 tnt('natrifd. You geln "rare ln.slchts." Older Individual pays mean. A a 1 ES <March 21 Jnsful compliment. V ou April 19>. You a ot are flattered -and an1wers conccrnlntc c•on-loved. What had be n tractunl oblltc•llon1. hidden 11 revuled You a•ln MJdt'd n ·co1n1 and ll h111plcndld 1 lion. find that on • who CAPRICORN (Dec n\d('d In pa.'\l cun h Ip 22·J on. 19> Ace ·nt on yet uaaln. Llbr~ fll(urC'11 cont ntmtinl, surptlau. prominently and '"' gltt11. w,.hr11 fulliQed dot>• the• number 9 /\<' fHlf'll , Libra fl~re c en l on L h l' oc cu I l , prominent!~. OM y<JQ ll(J. mon<'y of purtnur or mlrfl conlldt-s dJlemma mall', realliaUon of roll' Key I• to look ah ad. to love plny11 In your life por('rlvf' potential, to TAURUK (April 20 ('OUnH I oi(81Mt rHtt lH'• Mny 20). SpotlilJht on lions. pr matur mo.tf'A. rt'unlon, re1 Ulrmatlon AQUAIUlJH (tn . of ol(rttemen\, 11pcdol ZO Prb UU Marv 001 r ~ I u t I o n s h l p bre&kthrough, nc lt1i Pnrtnertthlp u"'t mar t ont•rlfl and ~Umul 1n.c riua&t-fif(ur prom1n nt C'hall~nlCH .. ,.,. oo .. M ly Leo. A<1unrlu" in da I~ playa key folr dlvld11ah1 codld ploy rn ~If Psteem ..,.,,, 'Y uu Jo r r o It., You • e t acet to ™°"rt ot matftlr~ «hone tP.torre<·\ a h·.c11I PIAC£1' 'f'eh .~ 1·~- dO<'Umf'flt M'arch lJ~J Attl'nt. on ~fl!MINI IMtrv 2J }Ourn,.y•. klnCd •• ,,,,~ ,funt• 21>> <fo 1tl11w t,._ r1t ll4', t1t1f'rflP•• t1tr1 thorough kt••" dtPl. mun1t1tt1r1n. ,, If "'" un· h~alth rf'solull,,,,11 &n tfl!rfltarw.t1nc t,f fl fltT,.ljllJ JUY lht-holld•y wlttw1t.1t a1f11r~ fffMCb , ' t1:1• leurlnl( d'1wn your ttwn nd , flN~ ,.,,. i>hytlrtl <.'(Jf1\Ulutl"" '" .,,., ' "' ~11 ,,. Ii "''"'" tuition workll ttvffl"tlm,. j==iiiiiiiiiir= P1tmlly mt mt'"'' <NIH rnak<• yQu proutJ .vnd hu PVY l#'MOLITB y ('AN(:Y.a IJut1"' 21 .July 22J · Ji;rn11lttmt1I ........::..•- r•·•pon~. 1mpuliw, 11f fulr o f heitrl and ttn......,.,.4. c h I Id r c n JC rf• b .__e.-. __ ..... __ -..._ ...... __ .. _ .. _~ llJ>Otlll(ht. Spiral of fun -1r-;.~-;.Ti~SUJm!~--­;ind reOectlon Ill much In 1>vldenct . Gt<mln1, Scorpio and Saf(ltlariUs ind1vldual1 Cigure In tCMt .. ~yD-,llld.ir., your personal scenario. ll2l'/J ......,_......, LEO <July 23 -Aug. c .... ..._ 22>: Attend to details. '4'>1>01 me a copy or a three-page lette r she had written to her granddaughter on her first birthday. the "small maUers" -~=~========~ away mad. She has not - spoken to me since. Whal the big things will take ••••• ... ,.'!!'!~" do you think? -STILL c are of thems el ves. HURTING You'll have excellent op. DEAR HURTING: I portunity to piece think the woman ls an in· together bits of informa- sensltlveclod. Forgetit. lion and come up with CONFIDENTIAL to co mp I el e s tory . Talented But Can't Get a Aquar1an figures prom- Break: You wrote five 1 n e n ti Y • You' II be solid pages about how more secure. on a more good you are -but not a solid structure . When the boy was five little kid? His real months old. Marge ran mother lives about a mile off with the guy who got down the street and her p.g. They bummed treats him as lf be were a around for a year and little cousin. I know this .,. ·then came home -sounds weird but this ls n.e sooaer yoa get It over wttb tbe bet.ter. It woa't be aay easier If you Yesterday she shoved a couple dozen snapshots in my face. They wereterri· ble prints or the grandchildren, blurry and out of focus. I tried to be polite and said, .. My. they are attractive." <Actually, they're just average.). I lost my teen-age daughter only a week before. It was my first day back at work. The last thing I needed was a letter like that. I started to read it and my eyes filled with tears . I pre- tended tocontinue. Final· ly. I just handed the letter back without a word. The woman turned ber back on m e. mutter e d something about "un· gracious" and walked line mentioned what you VIRGO <Aug. 23-Sept. are doing to utilize your 22). Visits. rel ali ves, talents. A thousand-watt special messages, gifts bulb is useless Wlless ltis -thes e dominate . plaggedln. Tbere'splen· Gemini. Sagittarius ty of room at die top. It's persons figure prom -thebottomtbatcrowded. mently. You're asked broke. (Sorry this is how ll ls and we need beginning to sound like a · be l p . -N 0 NA M E She's Sad When I finished with the snapshots she handed The Educational Place to '·do a favor" for one wh o is on a s ho rt journey. Acquiesce without neglecting your own hosts or guests. LIBRA <Sept. 23-0ct Officf' Ovt>rloarl Salutl"o .. MARGARET HOUSTOH , To Grow Up BURLINGTON, Wi s. Kenosha counties, the 1AP > -Turn Judith center on the second Schulz loose in a clul· floor o( an old frame 22): Make special effort directors, made up or to develop a program... to provide comfort for teachers and local of· she said. older family member . Jf ficials. are seekang diplomatic. you win. If .\n Offtt·~ Owrlnacl ~1rl .,,O rt' l!l7G M urirnr t>l fmcb tht· van l'lv of manv 1nh., Joli nl'W rarl"' a n ·ul 11 I 11 ., w 1 t h "' o r k 1 n J! ll•mporurv Sht· .... i.lhl\1111 1· o m h 1 n f' r h " r<> ... pon.,1l11ht11•., nr a hnnw and r.tmalv \\llh ht•r o"'n c1 l' ~ 1 r 1• I '' m a 1 11 t a 1 n c· 0 11 I a <' I W I I h I Ji t' I' ro f p., .,1nn;a I wn~ d . T"mporury work· ••llOw~ h<'r In\'<' of tr.1ve!o. t o r-.'ma1n an 1mp11rtent . ~ I , When I was a child I tered attic and she can building now depends on didn't know that s now turn it into a house of donations, some rental coolaloed restdue from educational tools fees and volunteers. =~~l~c testing . . so I The Teacher Place It gets thousands of Wben I was a ch.lid 1 which she has run for visitors a month from didn 't know the red nearly three years on a northern llllnols to cherries in frujl cake financial shoestring and Mllwau.kee. They rent . contained red dye No. 2 a spirit of dedication Is borrow and donate . so I stuffed myself. E..... piled wlth a steadily material.I and ideas that When J was a child I growing assortment of might not otherwise be didn't know live trees B~lc boxes, art materials, available lo classroom were a fire hazard, so I hammers, drills and haodbooU or from pro· covered thtm with other ntlscellany. fesslonahupply houses. b r i g bl Ii g ht s a o d believed. "ll 's an environment, watched them for hours . When I was a child I To the uninformed. It an atmosphere... Miss When I was a child J ctidn't know apples from looks like three rooms of Sch 1 ·'d J l didn'tknowlbadtopost .rees contained insec-a junk collector 's u z s .. ·"not ua a my letter three weeks in ticides that could harm dream. To educators, ~~~Y?, .~Ith books on the advance to insure de· me, so I plucked them scout leaders, 4·H In· livery before Christmas, irom tbe limbs and sunk slructors and the like, it Miu Schulz, 29, Is H so I just addressed it to my teeth into them provides materials with rormer art teacher who Santa Cla u s on while the juices ran which to in s pire alsousetthccenlerfor Christmas Eve and down my chin. youngsters to learn. an educational lechnl· dropped il into a When I was a child, I quea courae arrlllated matlbox with no didn't know lbe word ••PEOPLE '"'ltE with the Unlvertlty of postage "God" in school was a n Wl1consln·Whltewatcr. She emphasizes that o d d Id similar public support to Y u r e ge u P o the facility is free. Users d I Th help Teacher Place woun s. you ose. c are asked only to iden-c h · meet routine expenses 01ce is your own . like the $250 monthly llfy themselves and Taurus. Scorpio persons rent, theelectric bill and maybe the purpos . of figure in s cenario. perhaps a decent salary their acquisition. It Money question can be for her. helps her keep a log of resolved. what at first glance ap-SCORPIO <Oct. 23 · "I've invested 2 1f.I pears to be Jilter but Nov. 21): You see. in years in this place. and which actually is a crystal-clear m anne r . I'm below the poverty catalogued collection. the way things are. io- level." she said. "Our She and her staff of c I u d i n g you r own biggest problem is we're about 25. most of them shortcomings and g reat not business people. We volunteers and a few potential. Inner voice started out being availa· teen-agers from a youth should be heeded. Lunar ble to 45 school districts. jobs program. have cycle is high -you gaan and lbey are getting the hunted through garages, pOpularity and bask in service free." attics and a lleys in warmth or love. Don't She said she had been sear ch of di scarded lose this day! pa rt of her Ir ft• •• LO~ office • ~OJ overload 557-0061 l72 l tlrch Stffet H•wporf fHch 7ll-077l 1440 H H.t>or II s.H. 127 ,,....,,c..,."' ~ F.riual Oppt~ Emplo.vl'r Inspired by 8 visit lo one articles which some· SAGITl'AJUUS <Nov . of the Chicago centers. a on c ' s i magi nation 22-Dec. 21): Whal had "reference point with might ras h ion into been doubtful will be ~rs,•• where teacbers~tn_o_w~led~g_e·~~~~~~-so_l_ld_i_f_ied~·-R~el_a_tt_o_n_s_h~lp~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~· would gather Informal· ly, pooling Ideas on how lo aet atubbom or han· dlcapped youngsters to respond to Instruction. When I was a child I vlolat.ior of an Amend· always scrounging for She modeled the pro· didn't know .......... te were meat, so we read the things to help them 1ram alter 1lmllar cen· afraid lo :;p;; their p a s sage o I the teach," sbe said. "It. is a t~n ln Cbicqo. There V I S ITO R S TO doors at night to ..nyone, Christmas story from treasury of Ideas, • ore about 100 like It no Teacher Place recycle so I went caroling ln the St. Lu.ke and everyone market. Some Ubrari&n1 Uonally. Ideas and materials. CAMEO SHOES SOUTH COAST Pl.Ali, COSTA MESA snow and got cookies listened even lf they sayltisaspeclalkindor T hey poke through and thanks for my ef. didn't believe. research library." MILWAUKEE • 8 mounds of matter. pick· fort. When I was young I Ori&inally opened with public 1ehooll recently ln1 Items that "supple- Wbeo I was a chUd I d l d n 't know my a six-month federal qualllled for funding for ment aomethlng they're dldn'.t know you bad to broomstick hone was a grant to serve such a cent er. Mi u teachlng, or to motivate have a license for your hazard, or my dolly bad Walworth, Racine and Schulz and ber board of a younaater to team, or new bic)'de aod coWcln't inflammable hair, or my ---------------------------leave it on the lawn for a top contained toxic minute wtt.bout having It paint, so I rode them ripped olf, so I rode it rocked them, and spwi around tbe neiObol1M>od them and was filled with and left it in the middle joy. of tbe sidewalk when I I never knew when J visited mY friends. w a s y o u n 1 t h a t When I wu a child I Cbrlatmaa could be didn't know Sula Claus hazardous lo your WU a blrbarous appari· health, so I basked In lion that demorallted the exdtement and won· cblldreo witb dl.s1llusion-derment ot It all. ing prophesy . . . so I How ~ to grow up. YOUR DAILY PILOT CAN BE RECYCLED. Orange Coast College ~ . operates the offlcial recycling center for Costa Mesa. 556-5981 ."INtaia1 ••• " J\ Keeps you on top of the local scene. . ··- .. I everyday in the .. Put a little magic in your holidays DAILY PILOT • 2 L9WW Le..t M•• M.., Co. SEMI-ANNUAL SALE! Step lively for terrific savings on super styles by the top names in fashion shoes: Red Cross Shoes•, Soc1ahties and Cobbies. You'll find a collection that runs the gamut from daytime casual to evening glitter. Oon·t let anything keep you away from this spectacular women's shoe event -it only happens once a season! V~to $31.00 518.90 ~~1 lt1 1~~ •r"'' p1 oe11c• "'' "Cl ~10<1--""'11r ... ,._ ... NllllONI .... 0- ................. _,,_ ..... . ........... -· ·······-···· ...... . . . . . . . .. ,. AdorR/p Tom plays Richard "'"°" Jn 'Blind Ambition,· an eight-hour film for television airing in May. Script's author JolJ7 Dean found Tan's acting 'vety Nixonian.' .~ STARTS CHRISTMAS DAY 1 • "I JUST LOVED THIS MOVIE!" ' .. j ~ ~ • • ' : ' • "BEST FOREIGN FILM OF THE YEAR!,, -A•c"'e' W1,,s1en N v l'l>sl -Judith Crist Storring Nino Manfredi and Anno Korino. A World Nontl'll Fil.:n. HOLLYWOOD (AP> -Thrff buae cryatal cbandeUen hant from~ omaltl, curved ceUlna. Roman ch&rtou race acrOttt a far wall, and on tbe noor hwwiredtof people celebrate. Bann ol t•(evlalon •eta 1c1lttlred about the hotel baJJroom br1n1 th lateal vlctorloUJ elec· Uon l'tturna C lebrant.s 1lp champacine and cc>cklaU., Md 10m •Port atraw hata that read, "Now Mo.re Than ~v•r" The men wear red, whlte and bhM "N" emblems In their lapell. Ctaarlot Collon, auckina on an unlit pipe, hll w re by hJ• 1lde, beiun1 wrth aaUllacuon. John and M 11.uwn Dean push lhtou&h the crowd to Join the Col.ION to celebraUnc the electioa oC JUcbard M. Nixon u pretldent. P&ODVCE&·DlltECTOR George Schiefer watches thi action utop a ha"h stepladder at the ectse ot the crowd. then calls, "Cut .. The 150 c>draa put down lhPlr gJu1i1;es of ainger a!e and co lored water We tre at the Ambassador Hot.el, doma duty a Wastungton's Shoreham Hotel. "Blind umb Uon" 1a an cagbt·hour re· count ol the White House years or John Dean and hlt wi!e thot end<.td an Watergat.e. It will air nuxt May tn four two hour t>plsodes on CBS. M art1n Sheen und Theresa Russell star as John and "MO" Oeun. wath Michael Callan as Co lson, Graham Jarvis as John EhrUchman. Laurence Pr-essman as Robert Haldeman, and Rip Tom as Nixon. Stanley Greenberg <"The Mtasiles 'O( October" and "Pueblo") wrote the script Crom Dean's book, "Blind Ambition." and Mra. Dean's book, •·Mo." ~'j" ~~ ~ ~llWliL( ;--;:auw there's going \4;I be nothing straigh1 1 abput a CHEECH It CHONG film. Everv generation has had a heir own comedy duo: the 30's had Laurel and Hardy. Abbott & Costello brolce up lhe 40's and Martin and Lewis really fracrured th<' SO's. CHEECH &: CHONG haw helped mak~ the 70's go "UP IN SMOKE.• CHEECH It CHONG are the comedy team that gave birth lo rock comedy and in the process o( turning on a whole generation. solJ len million albums, picked up numerous awardi, including Ca$h Box a.nd Billboard's best comedy duo, and a Grammy for their album. "Los Cochlnos:' Now 11'1 time for a CHEECH &: CHONG movie. C II C'e "'VP IN SMOKE" wtU make you feel wry funny. -· ......... . . . . . .......... . . . . &undty, December 2A. 1978 DAILY PILOf 87· .. .,. ' I IOD ·· Preaident'• Men Weren't- fri~ Just Flawed f "Blind Ambluon•· l• 1 1tory-WRJi 1Seittm'- vill1tu nor Mto8I -except a flawed one. ~·1 DON'T TBJN& anybody Involved In wa ... r.-came out very well," ••YI tbe real Deao In a liter telephone lntervlew. "I don't think l came out very weU ln m1 own book. I t.blnk t.be ooly w1y to tell lt was Juat the way it ...... TMl'e are no vUlainl, be 1~11 there were in the ABC mJnilertea "W : 8eblnd ClOMd Doon," ioogely baled oo Uebman'a aovel "Tbe Company." Hua't the public tired ol the aame o&d stult about W=te? Dean amwera. "I don't think we'll be any1hlq ••aln· I th.l.nk a lot of thlt wU1 be very new. A Jot of people aaw the heart.Do ad were aware ol that ebd. Thia shows &ow it got ther-e." M188 RUSSELL'S brown hair is dyed a bright yellow and is severely pulled back lo make her an amazing lookalike or Maureen Dean. She wears a red gown and a jeweled pen· dant. · "She is kept in the dark lo a certain extent because John wants to protect her. She feels alienated to a certain extent, but there's nothing she can do about it," Miu Russell says. Later, as the extras troop downstairs for lunch , co.producer Renee Valente says, "Everybody aslca why we're doing it, Is anybody going to watch? I say It's our ~Utica! holocaust. We should see it every lOyean. • Across the they warped Destruction thr energy of Rock ~ graphic Galaxy · escape Laser the Timeless ON· .. T More than a Laser Show ... A Laser Adventure lsslon $3.50 ho s-nder 1a-s2.so • .H. Newport Blvd. Info: (714) 673-8350 or534-FREE " • Be.lot~ ottlln~ down for montb• .-f •hootlnc in Loi Anje es, lht compuy went to Wub...,._ for two Wffka ot loc:auon tumlna. She says u..r sot little cooperatioa rrom the fedet-1 IOVtll'ftlMDt. The ftlmma.ken were de· a.led ~ to tbe Executive Office Bwldln& RMklns lot, the Department ol J•Ue.. and tbe Senate eorridon. · IUu V ...... MY• the rum tekee tu 'PO!nt of •lew from tM tWo books and h'om additional In· tervtewa and roearch by Gteenber•. "We acreeMd buddredl of pieces ol mm on every Waterpte Jliure,'0 she says. "Tben we aave eacb actor-a video canett.e ol all the rum we touid ftDd on bla character." She says cuttna the role of Nixon wu tbe mott dlftlcuJt. She originally thollght of Larry Luckinbill. ''He loots just lite Nixon," abe says. "He w~ted to do it. bot he couldn't leave New York: "THEN WE ASKED Rip Tom and he lovld the idea. Talk about a man dolng research: He 4 wanted to learn every nuance of the man's speech. 'Tm hoping that people will sense UUs as a tragedy," says Schaefer. "These were. not a bunch of criminals. They wer-e a bunch of brilliant people who took advantage of a altua. lion because they were so determined not t.o lose the 1972 election. ·'The structure or our-play could almost come out ol old Greek or ~lizabethan drama - the flllWed hero. We're not trying to male any com~t." MM MM "-Id AU SfM C&Sn CAUfOIHIA IUftl CN1 ._.,_,., ........ w, •• QMfl.ASTWOOe "IYaY WHICH WAY IUT LOOM°' . ... ~ ............ •14n9 __ ..... ___ , · "WATIHHIP DOwtf""fNI 1. • .. , ..... _....f\JMlll "Superb performances ••• Gregory Peck and Laurence Olivier seem assured of Oscar nominations." Rona Barrett. ABC-TV .$250 MILLION IN GOLD . ·i I I f • • NOW AT A THl:AJU NIAi YOU llATIMUI AT MOIT THIATilU UA CINEMA Costa Mesa 5-40·0594 SOUTH COAST Llouna~c:h 494·1~14 • PUTT CITY CENTE" Orang• 634-9282 FOUNTAIN VALLEY CINEMA FOX F1111trton 525·4147 Founliln V111ty839·1500 4 . The Germans hid it. The Russians want it. The Americans stole it. General George S. Patton ~Y die for it. -n- •• "NJN9 AU I co.Mii Yoi. CAMr' MIOHIOHT laNIU I" ""' IYll Of LAUIA MAH 111 ·-~~ol Hut 011Ul e CAHlltQ lllOIN OLNU'S STOH' !Hl ""' DAMNATIOH AUIY'll'OI .. ;;T.~} mn;:~~:''~ .. U1. Y ~N e IOtlN TIA\'Olf 11 MOMINf IY MOMINT 111 ""' OOODIYI N0aMA .IPN MM MM •Ull Ml ITM '"' CAUIOIHIA 1Uf111POI "'" -----.1 JOMllOOT llU8 • llUIUHICNI HAN O'MAl e UHOIC .. llllOfN OlMl'S ll'OllY C"I '"'' MAIATMOH MAH1•1 -*IOtt THI Wfleot ".,. THI DlfVl·fH (NI .. ____ _ . . . . .. . ... ... .. .... .._ .. .,. .... -··· ····-·'······· ................... PETER O'TOOL! HAS PLA'ffO A NAZI O!NERAL, KINO HIN"Y II , LAWRENCE OF ARABIA, MR. CHIPS, AND LORD JIM lri.shman Still Smoldering WASHINGTON <API Pt'lf'r O'Toole disnusscs his fiery lnsh 1m age "I now havt' quiet pleasures too." says the eminent statte·rtlm lltur. who once declared hfo nevt>r should be tranquil "But then. soe1al mores have been changing, SQ perhaps they've cauah\ up with me, or I've caught up w1lh them Or whatever " Walh a rogwsh smile, he takes a sip of lea This is matinee day, and the between·performance interlude often induces contemplative calm an a player B UT THERE'S som ething more. Al age 46, O'Toole as making his first in pc•rson tour on this s ide of the Atlantic -a time for a good im· pressaon. The husky blond from Galway has arrived as actor.manager of a Cana· dian troupe to whi<'h he has made an "ongoing co mmitment" in partnership with Ed Mirvis h, a theater owner in Toronto AN INVITATION TO Broadway next ''is under consideration." O'Toole has been invited the re before but has an abiding aversion "to commt>rclttl theater because of the <'Ommitment you havf' to make "The Pl'OSJ>t'l't of slanlng to do one play tor u year ab olutely terrifies mt' In that lime, I'll do fi ve -that's •he way I was broueht up " HIS REPlJTATION on these shores was earned by a formidable movie array including "Lawrence of Arabia," "tlecket," "The Lion In Winter" and others in which he enacted widely varied roles. ranging from J ehovah to a Nazi general. "I do films for money and theater fo r pleasure.·' he s ays, making careful d1sl1ncl1on. Looking ahead, O'Toole would like to continue his Canadian alliance by "going out every year or 18 months with a group and open wherever we want." AS FOR CAREER goals, "there are none in an arranged, graph sense. Acting Is very important, but in the frame or m y life, it is Just a part. I'm a very private man." Be tween p erformance stints, O'Toole "usu a lly goes back to Ireland where I scribble," and may 'The prospect of signing to do one play for a year absolutely terrifies me. In that time, I 'II do five -that's the way I was brought up. " NOW 'PlA YING CllOMIMl UA Cl•MA lOWAllDI' IWllOR 011nge 634-2553 Wntminslef 893·0546 Cos1' MIU 64&-0573 A -.dy '°!" ~ M-. M Wo1fV VMll06 • N/114 N1floWI MOOUC'TION NAllC:lfW ~ ~ /loHWo4. HCXJ5( -OiH onWt IM~ JOHN\iWj()N ~ ll.OQt.4 ~ IUQ and OOHALO ~.-PtocM9d bl' WllrY ~ _, fll/1#4 ~ Ml.ecblfQM(AO(MSl'[lf ....,.., bl' HNIOl.DA.WG ~ llL'4NlY c. OiM MlUA °"90ld bl' 04N IJoH06 ... -IQM ~----14'M!0-.0 -~ ..._ _, ---".!!'9-....... ,u. ...._ -c--°'• ..,... 1ru1.....,... m..-cm1m ,.., 111•1.....,.,. ··- write a play. He's written several and as convinced ·'drama is the h.ardest thing an the world or literature." O'Toole over the years bas made several films in Hollywood, the latest, due for release soon, being ·'The StWltman. ·' OUT OF ONE of those trips came pronouncement that "in America everything is in a plastic bag.'' Has his opinion changed? "I've recently lea ·ned that you have to be literate in order to have a cup or coffee. You have to be able to r ead what's on those amazing little packages that contain milk that isn't milk and sugar that really isn 't s ugar." AS FOR THE gener al state or theatrical creativity, O'Toole regrets "there's a great deal of conservatism everywhere, both in the types or . plays produced and the use of t echnical advances. A lot of It is downright dinosaur." The fiery Irishman continues. at leas t, tosmolder. ' • ' ' ... OTOOLE ~;.;;....--.....:..·_9t.e man c• a nger ng of awe and wonder, of Magical Innocence ovettoml~g evla. ofslmplec~ conquering rear ..J he gave us the legend that wll" llve forever In our mtn4- J.R.R. Tolkien triumph with the perception thai a slngle drum Is more powerful than a thousand rullUea. Come to Mlddle-urth, a world beyond the furthest reaches of your Imagination • ... , . ,, From deep space ... .. ~·' . ~· , ..... , ... lmesion ot.--BoctY Soatcbas The seed is planted ... terror grows. A Robert H. Solo Production of A Philip Kaufman Film "Invasion of tl)e Body Snatchers" Donald Sutherland ·Brooke ~ · Leonard Nimoy Jeff Ooldblum • Veronica Cartwright Screenplay by W.D. Richter, BMed on the novel "The Body Snatchers" by Jack Finney Produced by Robert H. Solo• DirecUd by Philip K•ufman CJllocuw !!J!!!) , .. ,_I'«_.._, ~~~ T !l!!!t.AI!!!! """"' ......... ~--~--- " •• . . . - 'Star' Walts In Wlags f. •NtibodyJJlanu-You Until very_bod Does' ------+----' .. • ' .. ;· .. I ' . NEW YORK (AP) -Dana Smith work• .. a receptioallt. But that 'a J\alt to pay the reol. Her pr'Glaaloo la acUnc. · ·•1t•1 aucb a cUche; tverybody In N41• York la an aet.r.1. lt'1 amwnc -llnce J've come to New Yon, three out ot fow women I meet, every caahler. every reeeptloalat, every waltreaa, everyone want.a to be u actnaa." ahe 1ald. "MAN\' Of' TR'Df are dllfttant , they all couldn't poealbly be scnoua. ud yet they are taklnc up room 1tnd sp.a~ for t.boee of us who are "Tbey, too, can ret loten1ews and cet late> eertaln audlUooa. whet.her t.bftr taltnl m.rll.l lt or oot, ud It make. It bani to Qaht throuCh U.O crowd to set UK-opport\ll:U\1 and~~ that )'OU '*Id." MlH Smltb, 24. 11 a member of Lb American FedefaUoG o( Ractio and Televt.Jion Art11\I (AF'TRA). Sbc has appeared tn tbe CBS ~I vision soap opera, ··~arch for Tomorrow''. sbe wu "Lady Macbeth" al lbe Barter Theater ln Vlralnla: and • bas appeared In \be off. Broadway productJoo of "Once In a Ufetlme " SHE HASN'T GOTl'EN that "tqpart" y.C, but she's work.in, on lt. Sh• t.akel .ctlq leMOM and would like to take voice and alncing lessons, when she can afford It. "I ruUy look forward to the moment when I am earn1Da eooqh mooey from my cboeen profeuloo to 1W'Vive became it would ju.at be so significant to eo many th.l.ncs. "Finl. ll would mean that moat of my time would be dedic.ted to aomethlnc that t' a> in- teTested ln. and, sec:ood, it would mean tbal there is tru1Y a place for me in this bus1ness and that I'm able to carve out a life for myself ln th.is very difficult pl'Ofeulon," she said. c~""" a.Saith AM .. _.lt MATINEES DAILY "KING OF THE GYPSIES" <R> .. MAGIC .. (R) "PARADISE ALLEY .. (PG) "SAME TIME NEXT YEAR" <PG> "INVASI N OF THE BODY SNATCHERS" (PG) OOLBV STEREO "FORCE TEN FROM NAVARONE"cPG> 1 ~--1 .. 1 • "MOMENT BY MOMENT" <PG> "PINOCCHIO" CG) .. SINBAD-EYE OF THE TIGER" .. THE GROOVE TUBE" "HALLOWEEN" (R) .. MAGIC"(R) .. CORVETTE SUMMER" .. MAGIC" "EMBRYO" (R) .. UP IN SMOKE" .. BLACK SUNDAY" CR) ALL DltlVl:·INS OHN 6:lOP.M.MMMff'LY C"llcl Un~ '2 .,,.. U•lel• • l<._.le fl\an•o".i "fAllULOUS. -WORD FOR 'llllWd.' A colotMI ..,,_.,,.,.....,,, VIMlly, 'n.. Wis' Otlfdoes .............. he SW Oft .... ICNeft lit ""°'•'-..... yone is""',...,,.,.. .. ;.~.:--·ir· .. end en«gellC end tun. Great momenta end • lot °' llte, tenNllonel special ettec:1S end ~.· -~{Deft. CNcago $4"1 ,_ MRoat it tuplWb In 'TM Wlz': Nlf pei1ofmance ,.... wtlh lhat of Batbr1I S1relMnd In 'funny Giff end Uza Mlnnelli In 'Cebaret. •• -a.-$iJloel, ~,,,,,_, ........................... ...,..._ .. _.. ............. ................... ~-· ...... ··~ ......... ~tllCltill'I.·~ l-·oe+.-1 •:=':" I~Jb:i" .... -1 .... ----. ... ~-......... _..... '\.U\\ l'l "I'-<, c:mllA WllT lm ...... (714) 192~ Newport .... (714) 81W350 ......... , .... (114)161-1022 MlH Smith can't remember a tlme vben the WND't lnt4rwted ln acUna. Ju t )'(HlDI chlld. lhe would lma&lne alps Lbat read. · -.tarrlna Dua Smith." Sb• loot pert tn playt durtac hl&h tchool and 1raduated from Syracuae Unlvenlt.y ln New York wtth a bachelor of a.rt.a de1ree from tM ;cbool ol ViauaJ and Ptrformlnl AN. ~he alto atudled briefly at the Loadon Academy of Mu1lc1 and Dramatic Art in ltn1tll0d &Dd at the Clrele lo the Square tbeawr In Ne• York ••a'11'1NO HA.I always a med Ulce the perfect thln1 to do," ab• aald. "aad m~ ruw•• about •ctlna bave llveo way to a real dt'dlcalloll, and a rea.1 Tove rorO..c:raftot ad.LDC· .. MLM Smith 1Ud OM ot Uae problems w\Yl the f"°'...., ol 1CUD1 la that DO one want.a you untl everytlody want.a you. • ·u they haven't beard ol you, ll you are an unltnown quanUty. they auume that you are of no vahae, that you're lnc:onaequeotlal, and it's Ulle •Catch 21.' UnW you 1et the chance to prove otherwtae. It'• v ry, very dlmcult," sbe said. Mill Smith aald •he l n't worried about not K«Una "that b I part" yet because she reels that ihe hast~ quaUty of a more mature woman and that things wlll atart happening for ber in lhe years ahead. ANO, SHE SAID, "there is someth~:J about me lbat prQjecta serious dedicaUon talent and people tend w thlnk1 'sbe will ac· compliabWbatabe'atryingtodo'.' M las Smith said that when she works, she works to be the best. Andsbela ootlmistlc about the future. "You see, l am an extremety demanding woman," she said. 'Tm demanding a lot ot my life, and I demand a lot from the people around me. J want it all. I'm as greedy as l can be." A funny. warm and wondetfully romantlC film -lie.•,...., NOW PLAYING . \ . . • Pg I .... .-... THUT'RES-OAANG! co SENIOR CJTllENS $2.00 SO COAST PLAZA ,. ........... .,,,,,. ..... .,. .. SMOtCr llJ • SO COAST PLAZA Mltlrlltlllt.MNnl• ..... • nMI~ c..-. ..... "OUVlrS STOltY .. IPGI OAll.'l'-l~M ..,...,.,,_ -ntAMC 600 rrs NIDAY"' 1--.111~••11 -CINEMALANO MIUt .. lllW ..... altll ........ '"THE .. AX" ·~ "HOUSI CAUS" i:...-1.- CINE MALAND -·-··· ,_.,.,..., ... ,. 0.-.... ..,_ IJHl\t.l.I ...,l\t l L C-,f' ~ a.-.... --~ ,......,...,"""-........ DAILY PILOT 89 o~ICI of ANMtAnOH-. olCMSJolPVH oncl AOVIMUll U.A.C11J~ c-•• -°'·"' ~~ U.A.M9WMU .. .... TIME. NEXT YEAR': SAME IAUGHS, ANY YEARI a 11mp • 1111111ng •llliltall11at1. ... I ... m' IWD lultllilg )Ult •rand .......... -Charles Champlin. L.A. Times Tht li'llriKtl Col'poflllb\ P'aenc$ Ellen Burstyn Alan Alda ~ BORST1tl .rid NNt AlDA ln"SoYIE TJIE..l"t£X'T YfN<'" AW-. lllrt9dl/Robert ~ ~ Saw.., bJlllERrWa> SlAM • Baed on tnt..,. J*y by BERrWtDSlADE ,.,._.,°".._ ... by"°""'°" OOTTUEB •"""'*ii, AAJMl't HNllLl8C>1 Prodilc::ed bJ WAl.TfJt lllfCISai Md fl'IORTOrt OOTTlEB • Oftcted by ROBERT~ A <JMa'MI Acbn • Tedliitk:okw .. Now a DEU. Book ... _.._ ..... ...._ ..................... l~t•WIU M11~Cfl I 'c 11IME<nnge634-2553 a RH'IEWNllT Newport Beacn 644-0~ THE POWER, THE SWEEP, THE SftCTACl.E cl JAMES MICHENER.'$ Epic Desert Adventure! ANTHONY QUINN • JENNIFER O'N8ll • MICHAEL SARRAZIN BEHROOZ \OSOUGHI ''" ·cARAVANSH ~,·~111C.cHR1sroPHER LEE BARRY SUUIVAN • JEREMY KEMP,., JOSEPH COTTEN , .. -. .. "'". liwd on 1M bod\ by lt\MlS MICHENEl • Sc~ by NANCY VOYLES ClAWFC>aD et THOMAS A. McMAHON ~ lC>aR.AINE WllllAM~ • 1foductd bv ELMO WIUJAMS DitKltd ~ !AMES FAJGO • Music ~ Miit( IATI Mw• II\' ffCINCOloa• A UNl\IUSAl ltll.Ml [oo. ......... n~··,..... ~~I rPO[,,..,.•.a~J edwards HUNTINGTON llACM AT &US. tu. 141-0Jll ------J t--·~·.,._,-.....-1 DAILY 1 :15, 3:30, 1:00, 1:30, 10:45 -. -.. .. __ I TV SPECIALS utcm.cker--' -1--• • irs Dary hnikov Cr ates Glorious 'Dream' r~~ .. ~ A!U!NniSS "'"IUIA IN 'Lii MtllfltAILll ' Anthony Perkin• Start H lntpeCtor Jave" Petty Thief Refomu Victor Hugo's c l1u.s1c adventure 11tory. LES MISERABLES. starring Rich1trd Jordun 1111 Jean VaJjean and Anthony Pertdns UI" his rtlent less pursuer. lnspector Javert, will bo pr enl· ed by IBM on Wednesday, Dec. '27, 8 OO·JJ 00 p.m.onCBS. The drama, filmed on location an Franco and England. reatures an Ulternational cast. Cyril Cusack , Claude Dauphin, Sir John Gielgud, Ian Holm. Celia Johnson, Joyce Red· man, Dame Flora Robson. Christppher Guard, Caroline Langrishe and Angela Pleasence. . LES MISERABLES ls Hugo's timeless story or the triumph or good over evil which begins in the French town of Faverolles in 1796 when Jean Valjean (Richard J ordan), a handsome young woodcutter, runs afoul of the law when he steals a loaf of bread for hJs family and is sentenced to five years in prison. I nspector Javert <Anthony Perkins) visits the prisoners and takes note of one who stares at him unflinchingly. When tol~ the prisoner's name is Valjean, the Inspector makes a grim mental note to remember it. THE STORY follows Valjean -essentially a good and simple man -through a lifetime of persecution at the hands of .Javert who becomes his implacable enemy. Les Miserables is directed by Glenn Jordan Allyn Ferguson composed and conducted the music for the screenplay by John Gay. The pro- duction will be released as a theatrical film in Europe. NOW PLAYING EDWARDS' HUNTINGTON ClllDOMl Hunt1ngron Beach 848·0388 Orange 634·2553 It takes someone very special to help you forget someone very special NOW PLAYING MWTI CUIT MM'Mlll INllft·ll ta TWIW "I" UOUftl lelcfl .... \514 8utN Park 821 4070 WMl!NllSlel 993·1306 ,,,_ ..... ti La lf#a 891-oell .. In thia wtt·t Union." HYlt Mlkh1ll 81ry1hnlknv , "Chr61tm•• I• no IM••r th treat holiday ll onr• WH In fl(l , "'°"6,1 think u( ll 1 a qualnl hol nor fn>m lht,1 "'"'· · ftyl OM ( rlahn• tnOIUun ht ftu•••• wuuld mall IU'Y Ameritan I l al home All ovf'r th U llR, I> <' .. lflh r I th month' •ht-ft t111IM Nm1L11nlr dante "The Nukrar lu r " R.r)'ahntk~v flrat chmrNJ 10 ''Th• Nuttntllflr" "' IC• ,,. 'n h I tllUY• tlty of it1.c11. '" .... via II lat r d1tn <'MI I( with Ch Klruv llatl~ 1l111m•I 11 nnu1lly -..hll atud ln with lh1•111 In l.-.·11 '""""' IT WA Nf>T 1111 q 1tl•tn•, thf,..fcno. that h1~ 11huultl h•va 1t1lf'tt~ th w111 lit r1u11111111 bullc I hi• fl"t m•Jm d\111rnJ&r1111hlt• t•rfort 'l'ht lt'h•\ll•lon v111111t111 ur 111111 "llflW" Nuh11H1•lu 1 11 111111111 H•ry111 hnlko\ u111I U11 l1 1•v t<1rka.nd, wlll t111·11n < l11 l11l th• t:~1, l'Unda , I iMI U Kl 11 111 1111 ('H 11\M I• 1mh• •IH!ll 111 or 0111 pr tfnli.tlt1h\ whld1 11101 11111~ 1111 rom rrwrrlul 11h•111111ll11u A• 1wmuh1r a. ·1 h•1 N11h •111 '" 1 11 '"th•~,, ll . II I" l1rob11bly rvN\ 111111 11 lo I 11• JSA M II 111111" h "'.. IJ11\1tltl ll<'kcht lO lil'I' lht• "'111 ,)1 or 11 lhl (;l•ru. twr my111t•11111111 Unclrttl l41r und tho N11t 1·111c•k1•1' l'l'l11N1 naryshnlk ov h••"" ""Ill\ dcrstunds lht-b11ll(l1'1i ll111ltl11"" uppcul "IT IS MORR thun th" 11plnl of Christmas." tw Noy11 It hus, r thJnk, the most "lorloua ballet music ever written.:· For television. Baryshnikov made some rev111lons an his stage choreography to take full advantage of the s pecial OP· MARLON BRANDO CEHE HACKMAN 0 ~· CHRISTOPHER REEVE QUNNFORO MARGOT KJDOEA VALERIE PERRINE SUSANNAH YORK TERENCE STAMP DAILY 12:30, 3:15, 6:00, 1:45, '1 :00 CINEMA WEST 'Wl)T-lTHAJ~wtlT WUTMIM.CIHTY Hl ... O J ............... _ .. .._.. -··-· • t tffff MUOtAIL IARYIHNIKOV DANCl!8 'NUTCRACKER'S' PRINCE Tuea.' Dee. 21 . ~·•.... . •• I PM W•d. Dec 27 ."_,MfM: ........ IM• Thura. Dec. 21 •.•••..• 2 PM• & t PM• f;rl. D•c. 29 .......... 2 PM' & t PM• Sal. Dec. 30 .......... 2 PM' & I PM Sun. Dec. 31 .......... 1 ,M & 5 PM• I# ..... ..,, ... 1111rl 1111llll'll orft•rl'll b y th · t11NU11111. I Ill wu11 fo11c1nolcd wlth tlw cl ~mondit und J>Olcntlula or the lllNllum. 00<1 h<' eventually wound up u full purticipant in the J)O ll t ·producllon c dll1n g 11rocrss .. u slow, gr1ndang, R<'C'mlngly endless t•hore which has proved futal to the early enthusiasm of ma ny televis ion neophytes. For Baryshnikov. however. It ull represented the same kind of challenge which is so apparent in his s pectacular leaps. When ll was over, and he had l'lcreened the 90 mmutes of dance und music. he gave his final ap- proval. ··1 am pleased ." And when The Nutcracker premiered during the Christmas season or 1977. most cntics ugreed All SEATS RESERYED--47, $8, $5 /nm§lon of the ~ ......,..,.n !PGI FRI. 6:00. 8:15, 10:30 SAT.-THURS. 1:30, 3:45, 6:00, l :l5, 10:30 E ie.t.ICOAi'IWWl &WAC41'1-•-0 C'ltll'nCll 644.07'0 -·- • • • JRS. 14 &!UNDER YJ PRICE TICKETS AVAILABLE AT: CONV£NTION CENTER BOX OFFICE, All TICKETAON & MUTUAL OUTLETS. Vlaa •nd M•lt•r Ch•rge •ccepted Many of the m echoed the sentiment of the New York Post's cratic. who wrote. "Like The Nutcracker it s elf,' thi s production and this performance are the tlungs dreams a rc made of. .• FOR SA. CITIZEN, SCOUT• GROUP DISCOUNTS CALL (7'1') 135-5000 l'IML\IMO'll"i CAll~IA C UITE ~ DAIL V 1 :00, 3:00, 5:00, 7:00, t :OO, ll:OO AT EDWARDS CINEMA WAbt.A1,1'4D4WS COSTAMfM ~O.JIOZ DAILY 2:15, 4:15, 6:15, 6:15, 10:15 AT Cl AYIEJO UI NRWOTOl.A,Al MfUIOM 'lllJO tl0.6HO IOH . .f'RI 12·11, 2 JO, 4 4J, 1 oo.t u 9"T. 1''11, 2~. 4 41. 1 00 ... u. 11 JO AT CINEMA WEST wt)fMtHSnc .. r•Ol.ODlwt)r IU·44U D~ILY 2:30, 5:00, 7:30, 10:00 AT . .. . . .. . . . .,, . They couldn't ~ Ceid>rated MPr>tt• dnnMrMOC5 tf they were ITidrried to c.teh other. Ellen Alan Burstyn AJda ~mcilmc. '·Xt.."Xt '"Lr·· STAAAINQ IOPHtA LOREN JOHN CASSAVETES GEORGE l(ENNEOY ROBfAT VAUGHAN MAX VON SYDOW DAIL V 12:45, 3:00, 5:30, 1:00, 10:15 ------- t 7 2 DAILY 1:15, 3:45, 6:00, ·1:15, 10:30 CINEMA CEKTER HAil-AT ..O .... \.CO)t• '"6• llllS• VOOICEHTU '7•·4 I 41 WESTBROOK JQO t o lk1en's "Ch~Jq~ c~Rings" DAILY 12:45, 3:15, 6:00, 1:45, 11:15 ·a== =re· e I INSIDE: •Stocks •Consumer Closeup •Business •Real Estate -~-guxmw • &Jverly. Vernon Ditmore enjoy the product they make In Costa Mesa. Concrete fire logs 816 sold In U.S., Canada, Australis. • Resin casting forms exact duplicate of real log, creating basis for rubber mold for company's gas-fired cement fireplace logs. Couple, Firm, Wrapped • in Warm Glow 8) THOM LECOQ Of llw O•lly l't..C SIMI A cozy fire glows in a hreplace in one cor- ner of the room Vern and Beverly Ditmore share during most dayhght hours. Yellow flames find their nervous way through twisted. bark·covered logs, sending out warmth that comforts cold feet, hands or hearts. AND, IT KINDLES A qwet atmosphere whi ch seems to suit the Ditmore's low-key personalities Just right. Romantic scene. huh ? Actually, it's not quite what it seems. The room is Hamilton-Ditmore. loc.'s. main office ~ at 2941 Randolph Ave., Costa Mesa . The com· pany makes artificial gas logs. The comer firepla{'e is for show -mainly. I ' t Beverly Ditmore explains that gas-fired f1repla<'es are included in more and more new homes because you get all the warmth needed Flying Soon? Take Ciire in Pack i ng Bags # , ., .. -• " • '-'"ORANGE cour\fTY .. -. . -. BUSINESS . . .... . , . Of :fh~ ,Week._ for a small area with the bonus of visual appeal. What you don't get Is smoke, soot, shoveling out ashes. the problem of finding a chimney sweep and the current going price of about $150 per cord of wood. · VERN ADDS THAT ARTJflCIAL logs now have changed from the "concrete slabs you used to see 40-years ago when the first models came out." And. there are other differences. The Oltmores and their sales represen· By PAT DUNN ofllW O.llp ~llet Sutt If your trip to grandmother's house is over the river and above the woods via airplane, take a few precautions to help assure sale baggage arrivaJ and to protect its contents. Norman Phillips. field representative for the Western Regional Office of the Civil Aeronautics Board, has a few tips. "C AB REGULATIONS r equire passengers to put a name and address label on every piece of checked baggage," Phillips reports. "Be extra safe by putting labels inside too, and include an itinerary for extended trips. Be sure to lock your luggage and secure older suitcases with straps .. "People should not sit on suitcases to close them. If you have lo do this, the lug- gage is overpacked and that's asking for problems should a claim arise," he says. "It's also a good idea to put a few strips of brightly colored tape on sull~ases for easy identification at pick-up time." Phillips notes that ''bag tag collectors" may show others they've traveled far and wide, but this only confuses baggage handlers and increas es the risk or it's be· ing «ent to the wrong destination. "The on· tatives are always on the lookout for Interesting pieces of wood that can be used to mold realistic duplicates the firm sells in the U.S .. Australia and Canada. "We're continuously looking for new logs because we're always changing models-every. time we run· across a good one. we make a new set,'' explains Vern. But a good log is hard to find. adds Beverly. since limbs al>Out the right size seldom have bark, something that customers clearly prefer. Once found, the branch is lrimmed. a cast is made of plastic. the bark cleaned out. then a new plastic mold -a duplicate of the original is cast. A RlJBBERV MOLD IS made of that to hold the aggregates <gravel) and special English ce· ment that go into production models. Vern explains that standard concrete cracks when it reaches 350 degrees, but the special material holds up to 2,200 degrees. about the melting point of glass. ly label on your baggage should be the one tor the current trip." he says. ALTHOUGH LESS than 1 percent of all baggage handled by airlines is lost or damaged, Phillips urges passengers to make sure they understand the carrier's .. consumer CLOSE-UP . . . -. UabH1ly a111.I their CJwn res ponsibility in case a problem does occur. He explains that ever y air carrier certificated by the CAB must file a "tariff' with the board. "Tariff. simply put, means aJl the rules, rales and fares that apply to air transport.at.ion and the responsibilities the carrier assumes for its passengers. their baggage. and the limits of the ca r rier's liability. Carner employ ees are required to as sist CSee LUGGAGE, Page CZ> i ,\..-~-------------------------------------- ~Health Takes Strong Dose-of Advice t Al 38. Mike Web.Yler '" .Yeen as o comer. That mythical profile Is probably enough to ~ His day opens with an alarm·clock slwck at 6.3() make Paclrlc Mutual executives wince. The f and Jrom then Wiid near midnight, he's bu.sy. Newport Beach-based insurance company gets No 111114! }or break/cul becawe early Jw,urs give to pay the inevitable bills when Mike Webster's uninterrupted lime for report readtng. A donut or two body stam protesting all that abuse. and coffee get him going. But the company thinks there Is a way to For lunch. U'1 a few drlnkl with a client. then a meal amotMt-ed in buttery 1auce1 -evm a 8U{IQry dt· aert if the waatreu in the lote>- cut 1lumpie1 a.skJr 1wt right The afternoon u /1lled tmth peOJ)U. ~ bnng trcnJ. bit to bt' resolved, others carry in work, more than enough to Mer> him busy /or a Jew houri whtn he get• home. When homework'• done. dinner'• ready, mostly quick· fir 1tulf becmue hf1 wife abo worlci. Salt helps perk up the drab tQ3te. Too tired to go play catch with h&a kfd• the way he uaed to, its hme for a few 100Uri11g drlnkl and a ht· Ile televilion. l Punctuating haa routtne ~ ore pu//• on clgorette1 - -p .... about 50 thU particular day No wonder that Weblter ha.a goiMd quUe a /no ertra poundl, enough 10 he'• hod to ,,.,.. lldt1 a n. or two laroer titan he uted to tOfOT. Oh well, hil HCtftO'll IOJll hU J)QUftCh U Cutt. • • • Mike Webeter Is ficUonal, but his lifestyle isn't. Unfortunately, lt wUJ probably shorten bis life dr..Uc~ and bla lllt years may be OJled wlth health lema. ·. chanae all this -by spreadln& ba1lc health and dlet lnlonnaUon. The company recently reviewed a Harris aurve)' of 1,517 peopl~ across the U.S .. asking after their health and knowledae of keeplna m . The flndlnca; -MOtl people thlnk preventlnf problems is better than trying lo cure them at.er ( Paclfic Mutual qrees>. -MOit people have unbe.althy babill rang- ' Ing from lack of exercise to eating too much of the wrong foods. -Three of five adults are overweight. especially those in the mid-Income range or $8.000 to $25,000. -Only 37 percent of the population exercise regularly. -Two thirds say they need to eat better. especially fruit. fish. whole grain bread and vitamins. - -Most admit eatmg too many fried foods. sugar. salt and potato chips, even though they think they'd feel better If they cut down. -A third of all asked had a family member who needed he lp with emotional p rob· lems ... mostsougbtltout. -Smoking remains a habit for 57 million people. even though nearly aJl admil the risk of cancer and lung-related problems Is drastkally Increased. -Drlnklng remains a covered·UP taboo for most individuals and families, especially among older people surveyed. Al . least 12 million households contend wtth a drinker. These are the problem s that shorten life. In· crease premiums for health insurance, and lhat helped push total medical costs to a st.aggertng $163 bill.Ion lasl year. What klnd or cure does the lMurer suegest? • For starters. get doctors and employers more lnvolved In warning aaaJnst and helping chan1e destructive ureslyles. More than hair those surveyed tl\lnk a doc· tor's recommendation of chanie would carry some weight in their actions. But doctors seldom suaaeet atoppln1 amok· Ina. aetlin& more exercise or l0ftln1 welcht, the study found. Even more rare wa.s the doctor <See HEALTH, Pace CZ> . -- •••• ~---··· I:;? 2 'Die Conapang ••• Hamilton-Ditmore. Inc.. is a producer of gas fire logs made of concrete. fireplaces and hearth- side equipment. Main offices and a factory at 2941 Randolph Ave .. Costa Mesa. with a second facili- ty in Oklahoma City. Sales last year not available. About 20 employees in both its plants. The company is a privately held corporation. A-former civil engineer, he came up with special formulas that speed curing -about four hours. _ That means the small crew can pour two logs from each mold each day. As the concrete cures, workmen move to the metal shop where gas jets, grates and other accessories are made What separates Hamilton-Ditmore from the six competitors. Vern says, ls the special paint he's developed that resists heat and provides the rea~Uc coloring and patterns of wood. COMMERCIAL SU PPLIERS DON'T want to bother with their s mall paint orders, so the Oitmores mix their own. Another change in the industry 1s elimina· lion oC asbestos. The material provides the glowing ember appearance that makes fires more convincing, but cancer risks ended its use. There's a substitute, Vern says, "but it's not as good, l don't think." The couple have to contend with other reg· ula tions and r estrictions. mostly local, in designing their produ<'ts and the gas burners. Most of their market lies In the Midwest and Southeast, and there's another plant in Oklahoma City that's being expanded by 40 per· cent to take care of those regions. Vern says they don't have to bother with warehousing; everything they produce is sold immediately. SOMETIMES THERE ARE oddities con· nected with regional business. he adds. One model called Cork Oak didn't sell in the Farm Belt. . not until 1976 when the bicentennial <See WGS, Page CZ> --- . . --- t> ran ·x=nm·oct'' . • DAil V PILOT Rubber mold hold3 ~al blond QI ~.Eng/qh Olmlt1t that curos in 4 hoots and resists temperatures ol lf' to 2.200 F Mold peols away altar p1oco sots ..... v.hch allowtt pattom d barlc to romatn Od-style Jogs W8f0 smoo/f>. With spare decor11tlon nnrl llttfe cOlor LOG FROM CONCRETE GROW ••• n:rom Paar U spirit moved the coupll" \o rename It the "American Ht>r1taae " Sud<renly, ah: boomfd an lhf' M1d.,eat Th • new name hJt ll l't'!fpoosive chord The-rompa.ny 1ot I~ atart ai. a ftl't'plact fix· lures ston• m Corona dt'I Mar where Beverly nnd her firs\ huaband. WllUum Hamilton. de t•1d\>d they 11hould try mukmg l111it!'t Rv I~. th\'y'll movt'd mto lht• ('1)sta M e~11 pl ant und sold the ortl(lnal ~tore Then. her husband wall lulled m .. collt ion tha t left lkverly fa cing a year of mechcal tn·11t· ment and l>l'Oblems with the• busU\~ The parlnl'rahlp tl("(!ml lo ~ worktnac wull Beverly CC>nl"entr tH on tront offrru rhorci• Vern on tec-h.nicru problPma. THEat:•s NOT MUCH TAU' ubout hUi l neas at home In NPwport Otiorh lie! •1Hind• spare tlm ut f'ulust Guard uuxlllury wori.. teaching boat ufl'ty in Tu!\tln Beverly turni-un Art lntt.•rn1t to complAny circulars and rutuloJt Mht•cts . l&l hom . 11hc.'11 s witched from w11tor color:s to oil 1utlnti111&11. several of which add a hom y tourh tu th .. of rice. Very says a good part of tht• rcallOn fC>r thtt quiet. happy atmospher<• 111 that each ot them wind& up doing som('thlng different every day "People who do thut are r<-fl.lly happy." Of course. a cheerful fire blazing away m the corner d<>esn'l hurl either. BUSINESS I REAL ESTATE MAILBAG Real FMtate Mallbag ••• •1 &OBERT J . eauss OfJAR 808: We arei consldertnc re· modtlll\I lh ltttchen 1&nd baLbroom.t of our home It allO ~ new ca~ and a new roof. One coot.raet« haa oauma.ct \Otal coeta of about. Sl4,000. We've heard a bome im· provtmc-nt loan would be tht belt way \o pay tor thl1 wurk What la tho bolt source of auch A loin and I• thJ• 1 aOOd Ume ol year to do lht' work? Carlol A. lt Aa CAaLOfh Tltl• la ae eattlltet tin•• IO ,. .... )'Mr bomfl. :::r..~HC• tor1 •114 u.tr workm11e .,. for la· ... , wot\ UMI u..tr rat.et cu be very n•· ........ t .c)f ,..,.., t..fore YM uc•pt Uta& •••, ... MG, 1-' 1>64• ''°"' at l•Hl two ot~r r•f Oa. tMCrtrSOra lktfor• awaJ'dlDI lb_, Job, t1"'4'1& tfNt bldd11r•1 reft1n>ftte1 from pre. wluH ,,..,_ca Co u11 If tbey would lllre lbat t•u•lrttlM •••••• A• le;r ""••fllll•, yoa llHe aeverat ttll•r••Uw ... *•rt •Ult , ... ,_., wlwt Mlda ~IHU' llnt ,fMJt111lfl, .A•k abou& Hele of re. ll•H i11 1•11 loH &o lllfll_. UNI ~• of tlM IM8'rnW•""""• TltH fftl'ftPlf9 U.0.. tota. wlfla tfht 1-. IM l•l•nt•l ,. .. OD a ..-llomt ... ,, .. v ............... . ••t M•w• Y" •II• ur. with roar p'""9t ,.,.,., tff rfMHttfl ••" mprovNnee&a, oe •U*'•r • ,,.,.,..,.o or • new lmPtovemnt •••••• ..,,,, ...... , CWfl ...... , blab or Hvl•I• Hl4"\,11._., 'r .... r "'CHMY ll JMt a11 lrM• ••.. U•• ,....,., ... raa. .,.d ffJH m11 be let1 thu l•n *-rrowt•a from yotar ctlrrnt feeder. Ap I A•ll • TtUt £.sew.pt .. • na-;Mc 1ton My rt1alt.or H)'ll It 1 sell my h11tr1ff, wl1'"'' I ht1v1· lived for IH~ven yN1rR my 1m1fll I uhout S72,000J Is c>xempt rrom s1ror1111u1 'Olloou.nd• too good to be true. IR It? Stirllih G n•:All RAaAH : lt'ir trw lt you meet Ute "ov11r IWJ "™"" rf'qulremen&M. To qualify for thf' nt>w SI00,000 hom~ aale tax exemption, yo• aaal& (l) bnt U•ed 18 aM ..... )'Mr prlaclfal ...a111-.ce a& leatt *-ti Ute ftwe yean Wore hi n1e. ud CZ) '" •• IMt II or oklft • &lie UUit ..,..., ... dale. y..,. tu advtter ... hill detalll. ~e•••• a.ie .._.., 0 EAR 808: Our town ls conaiderlq an antl·apeculaUoo ordlnance requh1.nc bome buyers to occupy t.belr home at leut aix months a.fttr pw-ehue. I tbJ.nk th.La wiU bW't values. II W. JecaJ? Cynthia Meo. DEA& CYNT11JA: I doe't a... SeftnJ cltlt1 a.ave Mdll .....uaa.ce., bid I aauw•t lieH H.Y eoart t.na. of diem yet. I ....... tlaeir l~all&y. It mtp& Mt be wlM .. _, a. a IOWD wtda Mdl a rntJ'kUve law U It mllltt dlacouace IMayen from pvdaaalq &Mn. 81u11W 014 B..w •e S _,,,1 0£AR ROB· We wlU be ttolna overseas next aumO\C!r ror three years. But we a~ un· decided whether to sell or• rent our home. If Wt' 1ell. we would put the money into certltlcalclJ of deposit. Wh.lch la beat! James E . DEA& JAMES: If~ old bome. yoa ao.e )'MU' lalla Put· tta1 moeey la&o anlap ce ....., al best, elrDI a1*d tt pereetlt maxlm•m lll&er'ett. Rven U &M laflaUoe rate C'OtDel dowa to 'I 1N1rceat. by die time lMome &ax a. pUd, you're 19C.ky to Uep ap wttb lllll•Uoa. Bat U yoa mt >'"' e.o.e, yoe'U aWl hawP >'°"-' a.nauo. llecll•· llolM ftfl·loe•&.ed bomea ... rttla&e la H flle at feut U faat II lite tan.U. rate. A loeal reaJty a1et1t cu probably be foud to •aaace die !tome whlle you are •••Y· You woo't make muell profit whilf' rftltln«. af~r payl•• the mH•lemt'nl fe~. but at leHt you'll keep your l.nRatlOD prottc&loe. Send real eatatt q~1tiona fo· RoOert J . Bruu. P 0 Bor 6710. S4n Franciteo. Calif '4101 "THE SALES REPS 1mmed1ately. lefl ." she says with a trace of pain m her smile Being a woman caused lK>me problems ,;mce s alespeo pie weren't used to de.ahng with females in those days Later, she met Vern -or rather met him again. Vern had known her when she was 15. and had lived across the street from Wilham Hamilton in Pasadena during his youth. Time Cures Lush Seas on LUGGAGE TAKES BIT OF CARE. • • They soon incorporated a s Hamilton· Ditmore -"She's Hamilton, I'm Ditmore," - then married a year later. Male Order Note Carries · Sad T idings Neiman· Marcus, explained executive Walter Bergquist last week. is noted for its ability to anticipate and fill its unique customer demands. However. he told a gathering of Newport Center Association members, there are times when even the most resourceful of stores Just can't come through. Reaching into the pocket of his suit, he pulled out a letter from Stanley Marcus to a woman who had positively stumped him: "Dear Mrs. <Blank) "UNTIL I RECEIVED your letter. I thought we had performed virtuaJly every service imaginable. We have delivered live ducks a hundred miles away from a fond grandparent to his grandson: we have climbed the rocks on the coast or the Pacific to sjt a mink coat on a leading star of the screen : we have researched the world for a 40·carat emerald: we have dressed the living and even the dead. but never, no never, have we had the request to locate a male com· pan1on ror a lonely woman. . "NOT THAT WE shrink from a c halle nging tas k, but since a ll Neiman:Marcus services carry a satisfaction guarantee. l am afraid the ris k for us is too great. Particularly when you specify you are loolung for a ·companion between 70 and 75 who is completely and absolutely finished with sex.· Frank· ly, J wouldn't know where or how to search for such a man nor do I think I would believe him 1f I found him: nor would I recommend you put too much faith in any man who claims to answer your quaUfications. "GET INTERESTED in a hobby and JOtn a local club devoted to your hobby and an all likelihood you will meet a mnn who wlll share your in· le rest "MRS. <BLANK>, we do a large mail order business but we have never filled a male order." "Sincerely, Stanley Marcus'' When the laughter died, the department store execuUve concluded his speech by s aying the chaln con centrat es on furnishing merchandi11e appreciated by the most diKrimlnatlng s percent of Its customers. All the others seem to find that merchandise satisfac t ory as well Lean Ad s Droppe d The Creamettes Company has agreed to make 10me changes In its advertlslrur. request· ed by the Council of Better Buslnets 8ureaua. Advertising for the CN?amettes macaroni product spoke of "lean" wheat and saJd It "never tastes gluey or starchy." The BBS said uae of the word lean lmpUea fewer calorics. Creamettet uJd "lean•• waa meant to descrl~ th.-type of wheat, but agreed to drop the word. It also old It would drop the word ·•never" and a'ddtd' that abeence of .. starchy or atuey" tote depends on followln1 dlrec:tlona ........... *"-.,._ .. ,_.. WAS HlNGTON <AP > -Parties are among the highUghts of the holiday season. but it's easy to overindulge and too much fire water ran lead to real problems. Joseph Muzyka or the Fairfax County, Va., health department has som e suggestions which allow the fun to con· tinue. while minimizing the hazards. FOR ONE THING, Muzyka s ays, when you're making drinks don't double up on the alcohol. Many people count their drinks, and if you serve doubles they'll be drinking twice ns much as lhey ran ha ndle. And don't rush refills. he says, wail until the glass is e mpty before offering another drink. Keeping food available for nibbling is a good idea. too, while your guests are drinking. Food slows down the rate at which alcohol is absorbed into the bloodstream and also tends to slow down the drinking. And offer your guests a choice or drinks. Muzyka noted lhan many people c~ not to drink alroholic beverages and others, who do drink socially, sometimes prefer not to. When someone says .. no thanks." don't push It. Offer coffee or soft drinks as an alternaUve. IF YOU'RE GOING to serve dinner. do it before It's too late. If the cocktail hour laat.s too long, no one will know what they had for d>n ner. If one of your guests does overindulge. Muzyka says, remember. black coffee and cold showers won't sober anyone up. Only time will do that. And, he adds. there are only two cures for a hangover. tame and not overindulging in the first place. Finally, Muzyka points out, as the host. you're responsible for your guests. See that they get home safely and if necessary arrange transportation or let them !'lleep It ofr before leaving HEALTH SURVEY ••• (From Pal• Cl) who suggested seeking help tor alcohol prob· lems. What about employers? A company supported health maintenance program -especially IC partlclpaUon reduces pr~mium costs -would encourage taklna bel· ter care ol health. About 20 percent sold a voluntary excrclso program and CacillUes at won would encouraac a shape·up. Many others In the survey said company s ponsored talks by doctors aod other experts would help, and that confidenUal emotJonal and alcohol COWl8eJ1n1 would be accepted 1ladly. Pacific Mutual execuUves Walter Gerken and Harry Bubb, In' a teller accompanytna the study. think preventative actions -taktna bet· ter care of yourself -ls the aoawer to lowertn1 health care coeta. They put their money where t.helr mouths are too. offering Health Maintenance Oraanl11· lion coveraae that encouracea checkupe and ln· omce procedures that caleb problems be(ore they become more serioua. Business, they su11tst, 1hould emph.,lze prevention becaose ll makes for heaJtbJerj more producUve-employeff as it lowen hea th ln· 11urance premiums. Since many comp1nle1t spend up \o 10 per· ~ent of thelr payroll for health lnaurance, the promise of cull may mot.lvate 10me firm• to try P1c11tc Mutual'• prescrtpUon. ~ . . <From Page CU passengers in understanding any tariff pro· vlalon, LI they are asked." Airline tariffs limit liability for checked baggage to_ a f!18Xlmum of $750 per passenger for domestic flights and $9.07 per pound on in· ternatiooal flights. Only the depreciated value or damaged or lost items is covt:red, not the original value or replacement cost. P~PS STRESSES THAT some items s hould never be put in ch ecked baggage because the airline may deny all liability or even excess valuation insurance coverage on them. "Don 't ever pa ck mqney, jewe lry , silverware. manuscripts, business documents or equipment, securities, musicaJ instruments and fragile or breakable items." he says, ad· ding that airlines aren't liable for ··rragUe" or "perishable" luggage either, even if it's damaged by their own rough handling. "We have had reports where soft·sided luegage has been damaged and claims were refused." Phillips also o ffers thlti udvl~lor the holiday traveler. "Arrive at the •irport well ahead of departure lime U you get there at the last minute. you may make it to the filght bul your baggage may not. "When you get to your destination, don't stop and celebrate a safe arrival. Go right to the baggage pickup area"' he adds. "There are two good reasons for this. First, some airports don't have adequate security near baggage carousels. and your suitcases may be stolen or taken an er. ror by another passenger. Also. bein~ there a11 soon as the luggage is will let you know if your suitcases are missing or damaged so Y<XI can file a report right aw~y. · · ONE f1NA.L TIP is that airlines should be asked for funds to pay for emergency purchases if baggage is delayed. "About S50 is the usual amount allowed." Phillips says. "But, I heard of one case where an airline had to pay for a man's bus iness s uit. The reason for the passenger's trip was to deliver a speech, and he had to have a suit immediately to make his speaking engagement on Ume." Ir vour ba«iJtage contents still t.otals more than $750 in value. you may want to purchase -------------------- "excess value" coverage at the rate ol 10 cents per $100 of coverage. This does not guarantee the airline wUJ pay the fuJI declared value. however. ANOTHER WAY O•' handling extra m surance. agent Thomas R. Flynn, public affairs manager for Allstate Insurance Co .• says is for coverage for luggage and jts contents to be Listed irt the personal property section of a homeowner's or renter's policy. "Check with your insurance agent if you plan to take valuables along when you travel." he advises. "The amount of proteetion depends on the type of policy you have. Deductibles vary and you should make sure you have worldwide coverage if you travel to a foreign country." Flynn adds that certam kinds of property may not be covered at all, and a "scheduled personal property endorsement." would be re- quired .. "This endorsement covers various types of personal property and requires that items be hated with their description." he explains. "In certain cases. an appraisal and blll or sale is re· quired before scheduled insurance will be is sued. so allow enough time before your trip to check on this." HE ADDS THAT personal insurance also ex· eludes some items from· air travel coverage. Flynn sees the baggage identification rule as a significant factor in lowering baggage loss claims "The labeling rcqulremf'nt has been a tremendous help to both consumer a nd Jn. suranct companleft. •'In addition to care!ully packed and secured auJtca.~cs. I advise the airline traveler to keep Mn inventory at home of all the valuab~ taken on a trip, Including the serial numbers of camerns and lenses. Hand carry volu3blea, pas11ports and medications. and ntver put your wallet in your luggage." Out, whot hnppcns If your luggage ls lost or ittolen' Norm•n Phillips ,;ays the most Important thing to do l1t file Hn Immediate report with the cnrrlC'r at thr "lrpor1 . "TAl\U't"S REQUIRE any clnlm to be innde In wrttlna within 45 days, but you should flll out n "bauaae lrngularlty report" Im· medlnt~ly to llllAure your claim will be honored. Keep n copy for your records and get the name or thf' nlrUnc employee who ~lps you. Also re- tain your ba111gc cbeck and a copy of your alrUnt ticket to prove that the baa waa checlctd." '- After a report ls med, lhe carrier pub a tracer on lhe bal••••· JI It iJ not located. a cl1lm rorm should be malled to the passenger wlthln two weeks. When It Is completed, re· turned \o the carrier and evaluated. Lhe clalm u1u1lly I• aettled within rour to alx weekJ. PblUlps say1 that moat etn1era pay a .. compromJae" 1etUtmtnt on claims. "'rhe r.111en1er muat hive proof ol what was packed n b11 1uJtc..e and be able \o eatabUlh value. After au, there ant • lot of people out there try· ln1 to rlp olf the carrier. The q_uJcker the patltnpr reports the IOla wtlh adequate In· formation lhe better off be will be when a MtUementb made." 1 ORDER .YOURS NOW • • • 1000 BEAUTIFUL STICK-ON LABELS STYLISH TYPE ON GOOD QUALITY WHITE GUMMED PAPER • PERSONALIZED • EASY TO USE. • FOR YOU OR A FRIEND r---------------------, r M1 II\ lhll COUP<>f\ c;ltp tno ITle•l Wllh SI TS t ~ ~.900 10 Pilot Printing. Label Div.-.-& •• Post Office Box 1 &eo • ~w. Bay St Costa Mesa. Callfomla 92628 Be Sure to use Your Z•l)QC)de PILOT PRINTING ~---------------------~ ... -.. ---·-- . .. ' . \ .. t '• .. ,,. "" •• .. ,. .. r NEW YORK Week" TOCKE DAit. 'f PILOT _g ~::: ..... uo-~" Of 111•1;" r . . . • •••••.,••••••••••••••••• .. •r•••••• • .,.••••••"" g_ Local lpMfS. I 'Our team tells : i you everything 2 " you want to ' 'know •bout ~your team. 1hlry -,. j In the r ...... ----.... ·-.. . ' ---------,_ I I ... ..----• 7 a · f, s a =r--ez·acsno· . REAL ESTATE Real l!atate •w Randatl llcCardle, Ph.D. "••ltor Th ~ 1ttnu. to m e lo ht m&A) unknown& ln bu)in1 real t'11&atf'. Thia Ul'ft "'"· I ttall1f' lbf'N' Uf' tnan) futon govtrnlng N"al ""'•'" Hd mao> f att't6 to t'Uh faC'tor. Am I loo onr·C'OltC'entf'd! I don 'l ••1" lo llt't '">~•If ln&o tw>metlalac and IHo ~orr). Your comm.-D&'i -~d bf> appl'f'ClatH. L.M.R., N4'1wpot1 Seub \Yhen1•\·~1 \ou t'ont"molatt> buvma rt'al t>~late• \OU UUlOOlUh(' lh lif\' r,.n•f'(j ll'llh .i bundl'° Of f'l>O d\\1oni., nlJhb, l«'~•l r~11tnct.10N ... ,.., m flfllA •nd It•,., tan~tbh· f&l'lW"> UHtt m11hl '<'arv , ou 1f tht•\ 1H't I' t1ue h1111trd.s In f.H·t ntlt kno~m~· hnw t·~ I t'fl'I \ t' tht') .tre• l'OUhl IOdt·\,>d ">( ttrt• \(}\I ltw un II nu .... 11 '" """a>., ht• n.h•'l \11 ful't t-'urtunul\•h , in <:11lt(11r111.1 .i ~hole • oq,:~r1111'tf '' 'lvm ol '""' 1h''l'lnt·d to r1t·oC1"<"t the· rl'nl l'!\t.111• bu~,., from unkn<1""' h•' h•·t·n 1J1•\l·lc'fH'<1 Whtlt• I h1·v l'.lllllot 1.1rotc-e·t btul iud r: m1·nt t ht•\ rlo :it It'•''' 'l'I forth it prtX-l''tlur't• th1At must bt.• follo"l'd to t r.m'I"' htlt' lt•.:ulh ( 11hlon110 S f1r\t t•omprt•hl'f1&1H' n·AI t!&Ul\(' lot" "a~ d1""11 up "1mt• ~ 't•ar'" ••KO b\ mtmbf'n ••f lht• C1\H WOI kin.: \\llh rn1•mbeh or the !\\Mk lt·.:aslu~uH·. to pl'·\)\ 1dt· 'UC'h prottclJon It bf'<'&nlt' tht• modl'I fo1 mun-' otht>r 'wtt·~ Tiit; l WS 10: TIO:Rt' to prott-~t \OU Your 1 t•ulto1• and tus ,1ttor11e-' wurtong toi:tther. (';m flt'ndnih• t'H'n lh1· mu'l dirhcult and tanRled 'llUlll 1(10 Tht• n·ultor'I "t'rt' 111tl'l l''lt'(I 1n mu.long lht- proce:-.s sufrr Jnd tht•rdurl' more w1desprt'ad Self tnlt're,t" Yes. but l'nll~htt·nt'd wlf interest 1s one of tht• fon•1•-. that k1•1.·1.>i. out frt'(! t:nll'rpnsc S) stem funt·11onin~ One rt>sult of the nt.'" Ja .... "ai. thJt real t:state .1~e nt' bet•ame ht't'nsed b\ tht-\tatt', Ji'ltvmg the r>ro"iJt'l'ttH• bU_\'t'r Or st'llt•r .i!>!\uranCt' that the :i~t·nt 1:-. at•quainled with the bal>IC law:. relating to n·al e'itatt• This began a process that has ~ome 1ncreasm~ly mon.• demanding ..s candidates tsdce t•xam1nations for a n•;1l l"o,talC' broker 1>r real t•statt• !.aJesman hc<'nsc IN ADDITION, THE CAR, Lo wh1C'h the re· a ltor belongs, 1s continually sponsoring f'duca· ltonal c-ourses held throuJ,?hout the state. These go into the practical aspects of real estat e invest· ment. taxes. market analysis, and other factors that net>d lO be understood. The state colleges. 1unior colle~es. Un1vers1ty or California a nd many of the private universities <ind t.•ollef(es arc adding courses designed to make real C'State licensees more expert and more UP· Iodate in their methods . I low dO<'s all or this effect you when you think Of buying real estate? T he laws and regulations "h1ch have evolved have made it easy and safe to buy real estate. within reason. The buyer and M'ller must know or quickly learn that there are such lhin~s as J.?r.ant deeds, title insurance policies. t•ac;e ments. zoning restrictions. t'Ovenants. mortgage cond1t1onc; a nd otht•r tools used in the o" nership and tra nsfer of property B UT TUE BIGGEST EFFECT this has had on buyers and :wllcrs is to offer them a whole body or trained people, to advise them. ~uide them. and :t!'.sure them thut they are J,?elting the facts they need to make a proper judgment. You can be sure tha t the legal facts or the -transfer ar(' not bein~ overlooked. It lets you focus on the intangibles when you buy. ls the location ~ood" ls the zoning likely to change? What are population trends. school plans. pncm~ curves a nd other fat'tors affecting the future of the property? Rl'aJ t>State use. development and manage- ment 1s rapidly becoming a mature science. and like most sciences. or benefit lo all or us m ~om et1mes s urprising ways. f<:DITUl<:S NCYflo: Randall McCardle u pres'ldent of thf' Heal F:s101en he 1.~ abo an author. leclurer and m· !llructor Send yoor comments and questions to Randy .\/cCardle. cto 011' Daily f'1Lot. Post OJJ1ce Bor 156-0. Costa Mesa, CA 92626 Top Realtor .J ack Kis tler , a me mber of t he Newport I larbor-Costa Mesa Board of Realtors, has won first place in the 1978 California As· sociation of Realtors contest for most out- standing exchange. FROM Fash ion Isla nd Newport B each W J\SJllNC:1'0N A l!lt r oo .: 'll nl(ll' f11m1h h u m " I 1H1 n m u r Iii 1· 1 favorabll' mti•rt''it rah•N .ind 1ncre1tM'<i 01H·rut1n~ f"fft t'lenry mad4' urn I.I y••ur of m1>d~r11h· but u•t•t1ned r''<'Ov••ry for mortaa~e b nktr a t• t•Ord IOU lo lht' latt• t In· duUr) 11urv1•y by th<' Mortf!U~t' BanlH•t K As· ... 0<'1at1on or Anwrlco Tht' avcra1e morttcai.w lumklr•a flrm \hov. t•<f ·' net rror1l or S..17~.000 vn lolll lncomll ot S3 88 m1lllon This markt!'d thr third sue C't'HI Vt year of r<'covery from thf' low point in 1974. when tht> a.veragt> t'om pany reported u loM of Sl66,000 on S2 37 m1lllon m rev('nues Prf1,ate Landing Th<' originul residents make use of the ir private dock at Wood bridge Arborla ke Townbomes. The dock is part of the packa~e ut th(' Irvine develop{Jlent where prices range from $116,545 to $195,950. "THE AMOUNT of net profits, profit margin and rate of <'l' turn on t.'QUlt) tor 1977 were all approx1mall•ly three times the lev<'I~ recorded m the previous year Furthermore. we expet't lo ftnd that this upward trend has t'On l1nucd into 1978." said D r Thomas Harter. MBA 's chief economist New Dana Firm Opens Com m ercial S pecialists of Cahfornja, a new real estate firm specializing in the acquisition. sale and leasing of commercial pro- perties, has opened offices in Dana Point at 34207 Coast Highway. market. serving as leasing agents for a three·acre medical orfice complex in Mission VieJO, a six-acre shopping center in Fountain Valley. and two retail shopping centers in Montclair. The firm is also acting as agent 1n s ite acqws1tions ror six locations for Mc Donald's Restaurants. and 1s serving as the exclusive agent in finding several Orange County loca· lions for an Oregon-based fast food chain. ··Taco Time." ·'However. 1t 1s 1mp<.>r· \ant to note that the pro· ht margin for 1977 was only 9.7 percent, well be low the 13. 7 percent average for 1970·73. Return on equity was 12.2 percent. again. well below the 15.6 percent averag_e for tflat same period," Harter said. The new company will be headed by President Walt Winkelma n , formerly with Ashwill·Burke and Com pany. Ass~iates are Tom Dye, also formerly with As hwill-Burke. and J1mi Caffrey, formerly of Niguel Investments. The group 1s also repr esenhng a ,. number of individual commercial de· velopers and restaurants in acqu1r· ing property in ·Mission V1e10 from the Mission ViCJO Company. Although newly opened . Com- mercial Specialis ts of California already is achve m the r eal estate ( __ M_o_v_in_g_U_p_l_n_R_e_a_I _E_st_a_te __ J MARNA MILLER, manager of escrow opera· tions for American Stale Bank in Newport Beach. has been elected to serve on the 1979 Executive Committee of the California Escrow Association <C EA> Mille r has been a n escrow officer for more than 25 years in both Los Angeles and Orange Counties. Durio~ that time, in addition to the general manage· ment of a multi-office indepen· dent escrow company. she has managed escrow departments in a bank, a savings and loan. association and a m aJOr title in· surance company. A past prl'Sident or the Orange County Escrow Assoc1a· lion. Miller has ser ved as state M1uu secreta ry and as co·chrurman of the Legislative Committee and has held mem· bt>rs hip on var ious committees including Professional Designations and Bylaws. DONALD SMlTH, formerly manager or ad· vance planning for the Irvine Company. has been named Director of Urban Design for P hillips Brandt Reddick Prior to 101ning PBR, Smith served a s manager of advance planning for The Irvine Com- pany and was responsible for the . day-lo-day ad· ministration and planning related to Irvine Ranch Master Plan. .. He also worked on the firm's planning of the Irvine Industrial Center and Newport Center, a'nd oversaw the firm's Urba n des1 ~n programs for the City of Irvine in 1976. ROBERT F. WATSON of Irvine has been Swanson has been wi th Broadmoor Homes three years. During that time he headed the m arketing of 17 projects throughout the sta te which include some 3.664 homes. DONALD J . CLARKE is the latest addition to the real estate finance equit y department or Coldwell Banker Managem ent Corporation <CBMC> in its Newport Beach office. Clarke will be a rranging real estate purchases by a variety of institutional clients throughout the country. The new Coldwe ll Banker associate attended the Un1vers1· ty or California at Berkeley where he earned a bachelor of science dt>~re(" in economics. He spent more than nine years with the formt>r Dean Witter or ~anization as securities account executivl' and most r ecentl} was vice president for cor- porat e dl'velopment with C1.A1ttcE Newport Pharmaceuticals. Clarke and his wife. residents of Corona del Ma r. have three children. SARA MELVILLE, real estate agent for Donald M. Bird Associates. has been promoted to the position of sales counselor. according to an an· nouncement by Richard Fentiman. vice president or resales for the Tustin·based realty firm. Melville, who will retain her position as sales agent. will take on the additional respons1biht1es of training new sales personnel. DAIL. V PILOT (7~ Aid to Young Varying Loans w ASIUNCTON The det'ISIOn by the savings and loan regulator to permit federall y chartered S&Ls to offer innovative forms of mo rtgages has been praised by the National Assoc1at1on or Realtors. The Federal Home l,oa n Bank Board authorized the thrirt institutions 1t oveNlees to is· sue graduated payment mortgage11 (G PM ), re· verse an nuity mortgages (RAM) and . 1n Califorrua, van able rate mortgage~ I VRM > Tom Grant Jr , president of the 670,000 member association . said. "The dec1s1on by th(• Bank Board to authorize these alternative mortgage instruments 1s a welcome one. For years. the National Association of Realtors has supported the ust• or these options to the h xed-rate. ro,ed·payment. f1xed·term loan. which has bet>n the mstrument for supplying home purchase credit ror 40 years. <"THE GRi\.DUATED PAYMENT mortgagt' will be parttcularly beneficial to young families and first-lime buyers, a nd the reverse annuity will be a boon to older families on fixed incomes. They have watt'hed their profits grow on paper, but until now. it has been difficult for them to realiie those profits." The GPM features a lower monthly payment in the early years of the mortgage term than under a traditional loan, rising annually over a fi ve or JO-year per iod. to a level amount. somewhat higher than would otherwise be the case. The RAM is designed to let older homeowners draw on th(' equity theY, have accumulated Under the VRM . the interest rate is allowed to rise or fall, as the cost or funds to the lender chan~es. I Grant observed that the state-chartered S&Ls and both state and national banks have been offer· mg VRMs tor years, particularly in California. where such mortga~es totaling an estimated $15 billion have been closed. "THE VARIABLE RATE mortgage is an idcu whose ti me has come." Grant said. "When a homebuyer borrows money at a tlme of high in· teres t rates. it 1s inequit able for him to have to live with that rate for 30 years, when the t'OSt of money may drop substantia lly. Si milarly, the VRM offers the lender some protection against unseen rises in his cost of money over t he Life of a long-term loan." Grant cited safeguards built into the Bank Board regulation. such as the limited amount and frequency with which the rate may be raised. as ample consumer protection. and the California ex- per ience to date as evidence of consumer accep lance. Lou;.interest Loans Announced in SF SAN F RANCISCO <AP> -Mayor Dianne Femstem announc<.>d a program of nine percent m· terest loans lO low and moderate income San Franc1st'an homeowners lo improve and repair prope rty. Loans of up to $15.000 for 15 years are ava1la· ble on smgle·family homes. Owners of up to four- un1t bUJldings may borrow up to $5,000 per unit for 12 years. The progra m was initiated by slain Mayor George Moscone ly Rffftor IUD MIUER HA S..«tM RHfty Tax Update For Homeowners na med sales manager or the Crestview Realty of---------------------- llomrowne~. :lJ!\' ~ or OH•r. mav l''l:<.'ludl• from th1•1r la'l:;:iblC' anC'omt· :111 (' ,t p I I a I c a I n u p I h SIOO 000 lrom lhC' ... ::ih• Ill thr1r prmr1plC' rl>s1dC'n<·1• Tll(lv mu!-1 h:"·r laved 111 tht• honw at h•:i!-.I thrrt• of th1• favC' "''If"' l>t•fnrc the•' ""'' II :10d lh1• PIWmpllfln ma v hl' t'I :u m<'d on f\ om·1• i11 a llf<'l1mf'. Thl• la'< bn•:1k ,., rt>lro3cll\C> 10 .lulv 2«. 19ifl ll"t'c1 hv I he• own1•r for mon· 1h.111 1"11 "''t'k' •··•l'h vcar. ur 111•: of th1• 1 Pnt a I ""'· tl1•rl 11c11nn' '""' l1mllt'<l lo lh1· tnt.11 of It'll I a I llH'ttm,•. It'"' j•rO(lt•rt \' I ,n1•-. .llH1 1n t1•rt:'sl II hnm1· 1 ... rl'nt l'd for ll''" than 15 Ila''· nn dc>durllon-. 11th1•r than 1n11•n-..,t .11111 ta'l:1'' -hut r1·n1.d anromt• ,., not tax:1hl1• fi ce in Orange. Watson. associated with Hayward-Wat.son Real Estate pMor to its recent merger by Crestview, as- sumes his new position m the of-- fiee immediately. Watson has managed a number of real estate opera· lions in California and Hawaii, as well as enterprises outside the U.S., i.n countries such as Australia, New Zealand, F'iJi, T a hiti and Swit zerland. A graduat e o f the Realtor Institute and of Orange Coast College. Watson is currently a w•noH director of the East Orange County Board of Realtors. STEVE SWANSON, 32. corporate director of marketing for Broad moor Homes, was a recent re· cipient of lhe "marketing person of lbe year" award presented by the Sales and Marketing Coun· cit at Its fifth annual MAM E (Major Achievement in Merchandising Excellence) awards program. NEWPORT IEACH Last of the new homes on the water For lease only ... live and entertain 11) elegance in your new custom home with designer interiors Convenience oroenled 10 include 3 car qaraqes with automallc ooeners. k•tchens with microwave ranges sell-<:leanrng ovens. trash compactors. and BBQ range toP'i. wel·bars in all models, lirel)laces rn hv1ng rooms 4 bedrooms indoor laundry areas. guest suite. family room ana much more Oock available to all 1enan1s ~ IMw pric. o•ailabW. Call LMda HClllft (714) l:fl-J 150 Ct to 5 wfflcdaysl. Drdur taon.c; tor mnv1111.: I''< IH'll"l''I ha\'t' h('l'll mt•rr:i,l'<1 to "3 000 ln•.11 co; I a 1 t' 1·om m 1""""' mnrlcagt• c-O">t'i. 1•1r ' 1r v o u a r 1• f or r 1• 11 I 11 purrha'I' :i horn£• duf' lo 11 job rh:mcl' (l\'<'r :15 mil"" <rn :1y. 1'11 '"one· h;ilf th" total ISl.!1001 mav ht' drdurlt'<1 ll1r pn· mn\ 1· hou,ehunllnl! ""fl''n'l'' and I t•mpor:1rv h v 1n l! expl'n'lt~ !up lo JO d;:1y ... 1 31 vou nrw l0<•a1111n For varat1on hom1·o; Whal<'vrr vour rC"al l'Sl<1tr nee<ts.' call us. W<' ha vf' all the tools a nd t•xperlrS<' to handle your rc·al <'Stall• transactions lo<'3llv. Plus we offer the un1qur advnntagcs of the n3l1on -w1dl' F.RA network ... advanlaj?es thal rosl you nothing l'Xlr:l . Give us a rall lodav . We'r e ht•rt' tn help ' fo:rrt Shon'C'l"C'Sl Realty 1714' 846 5573 12131 592·Z747 STEREO SOUNDS OF THE HARBOR •• .... ------ ,. ii I , l I l ~ .. r I . l r I l l : • [ I I } t ' ' ~ f • .. ·=· , . . · -. DAILY P1LOT Sunc:say. 0.0.mbet 24. 1878 ' ~-~- ~he season is in the air at Ailaheim Hills. Crisp starry nights, the bright glitter of holiday lights along the slopes, a green wreath on a stable door at the Saddle Club, the chatter of a bunch of youngsters at the drugstore C~stmas card stand. Christmas ... and another year.1\n appropriate moment to send greetings from the eight thousand of us who live and play here in Anaheim Hills. And to extend the warm wishes and thanks of the many home builders who have, over the years, graced our New Land with such a splendid array of fine residences. From all of us ... the developers, Anaheim Hills, Inc., the staffs at the Racquet and Saddle Clubs, the Golf Course folk, our merchants and business people: Merry Christmas, Happy Hanukkah, and our very best wishes for a Joyous New Year. Tonight is the Eve and we can already hear the voices of the caroleers ... and smell the fragrance of the Wassail Bowl, and sense the impending arrival of eight tiny reindeer. 'Tis the Night before Christmas. HOM.ES C URR.ENTL Y OFFERED IN ANAHEIM HILLS HJJ><;E Vll:W 111r llJl1lwu1 ( ~ l'C >IN I t· <)lll\\IT l W It ( •r.1' ,. l'mpatw,, l11c . l!!!!!=U!!l..~~,....__,,<:,_.,.. NY. tf < l\l<ltll\(,F 1 llLL..\ I hr W.11111111w11 11 C.11111p • H~TI IH~ 11111 f1J11fil ( -'>J~t H111ld1·r~. 1111 . 11 UN'J Ell'~ JI( )INTI· ll H W .1rn1111141011 ( 'o . ANAIJF.!M IUDC.E COLLECTION ( ;.L U 'WI\ ( :o. ANAi 11:1M I llLLI\ l!Sl'AT I!.\ .....,.......,._._ \II<~ C:oll\trt1t111111 Co STONf:<;ATI: ~.tl.111d < A"'l'· !'IUNSl:.I Hll><i E Oakrrrt• Dcvcloprncnr Co. W INDOW I flLL Pacific Co:m Buudcrs, tur. RIDGECk E.\T Equal Hou1lng OpportunltlH Pacer !kvdopment C-,orp. '---'----------------' Visit Anaheim Hi!Js during the Holidays ... A great time to view the many fine homes now being offered by some the West's Best Builders! , eimhills 4,200 acres of master-planned community on the slopes of Santa Ana Canyon ' ... . . . • -· -... --.. -- I .. . ' ·- .· I ' . .. . . \ Sunde)', December 2A, 1978 DAIL v PILOT DI I I I I :1 ·' . ' I E L ~I '79 FLEETWOODS & SEDANS '79 DE VILLES '79 SEVILLES -------------..... ----'79 ELDORADO~--- EXCELLENT FINANCING AVAILABLE THE FINEST GIFT ){)U CAN GIVE IMMEDIATE DELIVERY ON DIESELS ON APPROVED CREDIT SALES •LEASING• SERVICE -• FINE, PAMPERED, PRE-OWNED AUTOMOBILES '76 SAAB '78 FORD "GL LTD 5-speed. air cond1t 1on1ng. 50/50 power spltt seats. AM /FM ster eo with tape stereo 1ape player l11 709SL T) player and only 6.646 m11es. (l!534VNll 53995 55695 '75 SEDAN '76 SEDAN DI Ytt.U DIYl1U Full power. 40/60 POWer seats. Full vinyl too. leather intenor. cruise control. AM/FM stereo 8 track tape player & cruise (ll587MVG) control. (•181915) 56195 56895 '76 COUPE '78 PONTIAC GUMD,.IXSJ Bucket seats. oower windows. trlt wheel. cruise control. AM Cabnolet too. crv1se control. radio and B track tape player. tape player (l!368NRS) :w838UJWl. 56895 56995 DfYILU '7 6 VOLVO 265 '7 6 EL DORADO STATlotf WAGOH COUf'I Auto ma tic transmission. Leather interior. 50/50 Power factor/ rur · cond111<>ning. root seals. My1/FM with stereo tape reek. taPA player 111707PKDl player l#262UNH) 178 T·BIRD '77 COUPE Landau top. 50/50 power DfYIW seats. cruise control. tape Leather interior. full power. player. rallye wheels. and only cruise control. stereo radro. 6.295 miles (J792VFG). (#068SVUJ . '77 COUPE '76 SEVILLE • DIYIUf ) 50150 oower seats. feather Leather covered seating area. interior. stereo radio. cruise cruise control. tape player. and control & LOW MILES low mileage (#173PWUJ ' 1•153928) 57595 57995 57995 58995 59595 59795 '77 SEVILLE '77 ELDORADO coun Full power leather covered A STA O ROOF. Leat her sealing area and 8 track taoe interior. 50/50 POWer seats. olayer (11485RKUl cruise control. tape player. 1#0125327). •77 MARK V '77 FLEETWOOD DUeGMB UOUGHAM Leather 1ntenor. full oower. 50/50 oower seats. cruise Quad stereo and tape player. control & 8 track tape player :#196SOH). (1t933AVI) '78 CORVETTE '78 SEVILLE T·TOP Leather intpr1or and AM/FM Like New. Only 4.070 miles. stereo w/8 track taoe player (#122UZU). (#675TZSl 510,495 510,595 510,995 SJ0,995 ,s12,900 513,300 ALL CARS PLUS TAX & UCEMSE •ALL CARS SUIJECT TO PRIOR SALE •OFFER GOOD THRU 12-26-71 r . . , .. ....... .............. ........... . " .......................................... ......,.,.. ,_........_ ............. . .. • 19' ,. ,. ,. ·-·· ---..._.. a [ ' = 0 0 trst:JF:ft5 PM X s J , ~ . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . .. ... . .... ·~ .......................... ,,.,_..,.. ............................ ·"'---" ... . . .. -· J ,._y .._, 81-.il...,_ el ..... _ .......... ,._ .. ••I• Cllrbt••" It• -.i...-H•po•y ... Huntington Beach Merry Chnatmas .M Happmeu In the New Yt..ir Ivan's Foreip c. Service U.Harbor Blvcl ~ .... '41-ttlZ Sund.!Y. December 2-4. 1978 DAILY PILOT 83" ·--~~ ........ .._ .... "' .................. ~--------.... -::::::::--....... ~ ............. ~~-··~:::,..,,.. ......... :e ........ ~ .......... ;"· .. ---...... ~~---.. -·..,,.·-Cbr1stmasi;i· • .,. '°"th.re ( : " (41 ..)._ f-We with yew ond J . HAPPY HOLIDAYS! • WISllNG YOU THE HAPPIEST HCllDAYS EYER! l(,.,,v r"1l•" J\ lti-\ '"~'t Ill I •7'< \11 1111•U• • 111 , .._.. .. rn ~'"vM ~'" .'\ ~·I\ v,,, ,,, .. ~ 111\ hl' •ll't"" h\'IO<>•\ , .. , •• ,~ ~ •• ,,,, ·~·~., ••••• ' .0,1.,. l t f'<' .. ~c.!h ~)It• k II .,. '"-'f'l'-•~tl MERRY CHRISTMAS! To All Our Customers. Past-Present·f'uturc Wt! care about you NEWPORT IEACH FIREFtGHTEllS Wi.tl you 0 A... SClft ChristMas All of w; at Turner Associates. Realtors, ext.end our warmest wishes for a happy holiday We hopeyour holiday will be the jotltest ever. WASHINGTON CLEANERS & Christmas Greetings from BALBOA ISLAND FERRY All of~ at Lido Really eictend our warmest wishes for a joyous holi· day season & a new year filled with good health. happiness & prosperity. FOREST E OLSON ..,,, ......... .. OLD-FASHIONED GREETINGS AT CHRISTMAS FOUNTAIN BOWL 17110 Brookhursl Fount.aln VaJley "J.7111 All great good wishes tor the best of the season! / t ·· ~ COMPANY j " 7 60 W. I 6Ht St. I "'---'-:_,.:_on..., ~~~ Co.to~ 4 TSL MANAGEMENT 7U W. 17th St. 548-9662 ~ MIRACLE MAZOA /RENAUL T 21~0 HARBOR8l 645 5700 COSTA MESA - A bright Christmas to our many friends! this Christmos! THE BAY DEPT. STORE 34t4e COAST ~. OANA POINT, C-"UF. C714) 496 ·9486 Ste. 812 Costa Mesa 642-'603 ~-·-ica• .... -•--a9'l~-.~~ Season's Cheer Wishing you the mer- riest Christmas ever! WAl»l>Y "OLJt>AY "11'.> ALLI Wlshlnr you the btst of •• everythln1 at ChristmH· time and atwap! DON JOSE'S RESTAURANT 9003Adam.tt Ave. Hunungton Beach = HANCH ~ HfALTY ~ 55 1 2000 14427CuJver Dr. lrvine Merry Christmas TAD May the lig~t or the • •• world shine into your heart & bnng a bnght & Happy New Vear. MERRY CHRISTMAS! May it be bright and beautiful, Siled with cheer. Christmas ever to all our friends. Happy hofidaysf REIMING GWS CRAFT 51029th Coeta M $8 ' ~~t..J~l;l:cli!!~I!~:!!~!!~~ 675-1680 -~~ -~-------.. .................... ~-.. JfOIJ. from our I houstt to yours... the seeson·1 t>.11 w1shH . r.errtmy Model 1111111 Furniture 2740 "0 " Harbor Bl. SMtaA.na 549.3077 AU ~ us at Mission Realty extend our wvmest wtshea ror a joyflllt'd holiday season & a new year bringing you happiness. aood health & toad fortune. MISSIOM RIAL TY 985 So. Co.st Highway Lql.ma Beach • ----- :·=a rs = ·:r······ rt . . .. .......... .. associated 8110KfllS llFl'l c TO il JU.'' ~ 8uJbQ<J • •' 16 at CHRISTMAS An old-fa:ahioned CJT••tin9 from RecJ9ftCY Motor H_.Retttal1 925 M. Hwbcw ll•d. S....AM. 531·2503 ~··-·---·~ ................. ~~--~ .. ,_ unt• u1 o Ch6ld It betn ... " Let us remember that It Is the celebration of His birth. SUIT YOURSELF l81l6Broothur1t l'ountatn Valley 961-UI -------.... -··. ..•. -.... SCIU4&.IT'I Ul••• .. O ma 11 1100 HAPPY HOLIDAYS Frocn AJI °' Ua Al 'llVltl FLORIST tlWPORT RORIST . SOUTH CO~T A.OllST . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. WClfrio..tHo.Ms Coast Hwy, Ml to our tMnV fine friendt at thle ~..-onl v~ Printin lOID u-.. Rlverl Fountain V1Uey '6J.4406 . --~-"- . -. 5 I f 3 a • •••••• .I • • • ............... . red hill .- 552-1500 MAGIC TOUCH IEAUTY SWPUIS lHEMAD HACICa llAUTY SAi.OM 180l7 BeKh Blvd. HLmlingt0n Beacb 147-1181 fO AU out YllY • mPICTID CUSTC>Mml. '*"' YOU '°' YOta PAftOMA•L lulfll-0'1 2231 ... ,1ew ICMMI c .... w... ------··--···· - T ••e t'# ... I We would Uke to thank you for your patronage & look forward to serving you in the Spring. GREEN HAVEN NURSERY Ii GARDENS 2123 Newport 81\lcf Costa Mesa 646-1921 18420 Brookhurst Fountain Volloy '6U771 ------ • -•I -----• Season's Greetings & Happy Hanukkah • THE FLOWER FACTORY • 959'l Hamilton Hwiungton Beach 962-6688 900 So. Cocat Hwy. ~·ach 494-1 l l I Wishiftq YOU The Very Best For A M«ry Christmas &~Best of ~w Yeors LLOYD'S PEST CONTROL VERY HAPPY HOUOAY SEASON Chris tmas Joy May the 1oys of this holiday season f ill • •• your homes. -.. #>. £§351 • to our many friend)! ! Best Wishes For The Holiday Seasons The Biggest Marketplace on the Orange Coast 28402 Marguenle Pkwy Mission VieJO 831'·2040 495-4949 May the joys of this boU • day i;eason fill your homes. THE MUSIC MARKET Z701 Harbor Blvd (in Mesa Verde Sboppmg Center CosWl Mesa 546-0038 DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS You Can Sell It, Find It, Trade It With a Want Ad (642-5678) .. One Call Service Fast Credit Approval EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY ~'s Notice: AU real estate advertised m tlua newapaper 1s sub Jcet lo the Federal Fai !lousing Act of 196 which makes it illegal l advertise "any pre Cerence. Ii mitat1on. o dlscriminat1on based o race. oolor. religion. sex. or national on1un, or a · intention to make an such preference. Umita tJon. or dlscriminauon " nus newspaper will no knowlnf ly accept a ny advert sing for real estate whlch is ln viola tJonollhe law. EUORS: AdYertl ._..chKkthelrod cWly cM nport er "°" ...... .....,. DAILY PILOT en...,. .... ty fw .... first c:omtd ......... Mly. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ..... ,.. 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• MEGUCTED GIAMT Abando ned 2·story ! 2e 16x32' swimming ! Quiel cul de sac• ~· work! Owner's desperate!! Millry, call 645-0303 FORE5T E OLSON IEACHCOnAel Newly remode led • bllOtl.Y uparaded w/Par· quet lloorfnc, top quality crpta •color coordlna\ed drps. Walk to private be ach . Etc lus lve Nwport area. e.8-7111 - Ha.et for $Gile Homes for S. ..... for S-. Hatnes Fo,. S• Houses For Sak Hous~s f()r Sak Ho.us For 5* Ho.HI For Sc* ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Gcs•r4 1002 G-rd . 1002 GtMrel 1002 GeMral 1002 G.Mral 1002 GtMral 1002 GeMf'OI 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Wl·:st.t·:Y N TAYLOR CO. Ht-:A LT<>l~S ~,111et! UHH QUI' enlire ~ta/I wiJ~6 lo exlenJ 6incere 'l"eeling6 fo,. a ~app'J /w/;Ja'I 6ea6on lo our man'! /r~ruh aru/ c/i4nl~ JASMIHI C .. -VllW-SZlt,000 Best buy in area! Brand new s plit-level "Sea Breeze" model on lovely quiet street. 3 Bdrms. f a mity rm, fo rmal dining rm & 2""2 baths. Highly upgraded with air·cond .. auto . sprinklers, luxury cptng plus-plus . Tennis cts. pools, Jacuzzis & security of 24·hour guarded entrance. SIAYlllW"S AMIST -sna,ooo NIW IXCWSIYI OfflllHG FantasUc panoramic view of city lights, ocean. Catalina & P a los Verdes. Absolute perf ectlon thruout this professionally decorated & prof. landscaped "Nant ucket" model ! Better than most model homes . Hi g hly improved with luxurious custom cptng & draperies, automatic s prinklers & outdoor lighting & expenalve wall coverings. Soft cofors. Call today to see this 2 bedroom & convertible den beauty. Security area offers pool and tennis courts. Office closed December 24 and 25 Open Tuesday, December 26 WllUY M. TA n.oa CO. Ziii S..JH•I" ... .._. Ml-WP01--1T-CIMTll. M.I . 644-4t I 0 lf!!Stt.iJ;t~r1 4SO NEW P O RT CENTER DRIVE 7S9-0811 HAPPY HOLIDAYS! . .al C'hnslmlls lime when love 111 expresi1e<I 111 !.O m<tny wuys. It 1s prohahly lw.,t exprc!.Sl'<l 111 the> as!'embly or the t.'nl1re fom1lv In lhl' ram1ly home Slm·e lh<' llOM E ls lhl' heart und the hOp<' Of the people, WC' find a j!fC8l dl'ltl o( sot1sfnrtlon with th<> thou(lhli< thnl our husiness is pri1m1rll\' Involved In findin.I! homes ror nur rlll'nt-; It 1s wilh TRUE slncrnt.v th11t we wl~h l'Vl•ryone ... A VF.RY MERRY CHRISTMAS' 1€1!$1! :tfi!;(I 4SO NE WPORT CE NTER ORIVE 7S9·0811 LIDO REALTY PRESENTS LIDO ISLE Fresh. Country French home with cha rming garden patlo entry: brick frplc., large family rm., 2 bdrms .. 2 baths. LIVE AT THE IEACH .. a nd enjoy privacy, too. Walk to nearby beach & clubhouse where Hf e on Newport Bay no a ts before you ; spacious. comfortable 4 bdrm., 3 bath family home. West patio for sunning. Extra large dbl. garage. All th is near excltinl-{ Lldo shops. SPECT ACUL.All CdM VIEW PRICE RIDUCTIOH Owner will finance on installment sale, 91/.i 'k interest; 3 Bdrms ., 3 baths, l·level. Lge . comer lot. Bay & ocean vi e w . with s un sets supreme! New price $215,000 -on fee land. LIDO REALlY 673-7300 A Dlv/alon ol R•tl Hiii RBlllty 4 BDRMS. CDM, HEAR s200.ooo .and south of the highway too! 4 bedrooms, impressive exterior. heavy sh ake roof. s wimming pool. 85' frontage, famiJy r oom, parquet flooring and a realistic price of $207,500 ... and this is fee land. Phone up. drive by, drop in! U"" I VU l:....tif)M l:S REAL TORS', 675 6000 2443 East Coast H 1ghway, Corona del Mar .1lso tn M1is.1 Vt!•<le • .,, !>11G '>990 NEXT TO NATURE $110,000 Yow beck ywd It M:lt to CJ"....., 1-.d so yoe1 c• tftfoy the ...._, of c....try 1f.,fn9 In a rHl•11fl•I H•frOtMMflf. l'Mre'• ........ """"' ..... 2 ........ hoist. with ............... ~··--.... ,., .. bar ........ ,...... '-r:•· ...,. • qeraqe .-d IOAT STO A•I ..... Acce11 to prf•• ..._ ... , WATERFRONT HOMES 2t33 W. C'oul Hl•h"a.' N•wport Buth 17141 e:ll · l tOO SECLUDED HIGH DRIVE -Approx. 112 ocre Wldiftc) slh In Horftt LCICJ'l"CI IHch with coestal & city •i•ws. This Olfhtm'ICllM) property hm two .. 1stlag hOfl'lff for iflcCNM Of' lMllld ,... OWft ctre.. """· $239,000. EMERALD BA Y-OCEAH VIEW -Catalina JMMeh fl"OM tNt.l bedrooM hOtM -channiftq paffo etstry ..... ~ fCllftlty room kitcrt.ft cCMftbaslCltkM. Loc.atecl In a prl•ate qat• q uorded patrof•d com...-ty. Pri•crt. beoc:h, 6 ....... cowh. pools & parics.. $325,000. 644-7020 2 1 2 3 SAN JOAQUIN HILLS ROAD NEWPORT IE.ACH Merry Christmas from f'i•/t' & Mnrlha /10r11·11 \1nr It H1•rt1t• /\rtna11 l.1.: /11·11~/1•11 I '11ul llt'/1111.~ M1J..1• /l/ak,• Oren Brcxt/nrd J11n .< I.ml Hnrlq1•;, S1t 1•t' llnctu'-'• C>oro1h11 Hurton Elam1• DnrlMlrl E:1ltrn Vinu•dltlt' Margarl't Dut/r11 Annr Gallon GtNJI L11nn Gerland Maria G1011nrn1 1J1ll & l/rlrt1 Gold Tom llnll(l'll Curl lftrl>f'r1~ Nffl l(nlql'll Pal LAii" Jim Mar1>t-im Dirk MeDrrmnrt 0 ltnnu McGn¥111 Gall Mr lmn8 Sh1rlt11 Mlrllelmore Jud11 Mttchrll Jtrr11 O'Bdm t.111da Oeth /lrlly l'Ol/'11' Ann P11ttr• (.orry Pllawr Carl R1nnhart Jran R11trr • Kfll ffoH IJnda S/C1UJ1hlrr Dont Tomin Rarbara Von Jlrll V1/ler1 -, _. w • ............ e ..... t ........ 19 •••••• e ......... I .•. I ••••••• I 19 ...... ,. . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . .............. . I Sunday. O.C.mber 24', 1978 QAILY PILOT DZ ~M Girl Uses Talent to Find Fantasy A Costa Mesa girl used artistic talent to ft.nd fantasy land Saturday. Witwer of the Daily PiJot Uncle Len greeting card conte:.t Janine Amoid, 13, treated her family lo her first prize -a day at Disneyland. "I've been here six limes and It's better every lime because lhere's somelh.ing new every time," she said. Ja nine and her ramily rode her favorite ride Space Mountain twice in the mornlng and saved tickets ror a third ride in the after· noon. "I felt tAy stomach gp out on lhat ride ," sbc said An eighth grader at Ensign Mid· dle School. J anine plans three OC · cupatioos -art, piano playing and running. He r father and mother, Fred and Karen, and two 1>11>ters, Kris tina. 11. and Anastasia, 8. join her in run· ning three times per week a nd in six and 13 mile races. The family also shares in collect-ing stamps and coins. Janine and Kristina took first a nd second places in a clown-coloring contest in August. and Anastasia Joine d t hem in winning a bike par ade contest . "Anastasia just screamed and jumped up and down when she heard Janine won the Uncle Len rontest," Mrs. Arnold said Janine Arnold . left . tr eated her sister s Knstina and Anastasia to a day at Disneyland. Visitor s from all over the wor ld watch the Disneyland parade during the holidays Winner Janine Arno~ of the Uncle Len holida.Jt greeting card contest takes a Tide at Disneyland. . 'W rI;;-I I I I l I ,. I (' I J ~ -•-...""""'4···~, ........ _ ....... 67S-5626 } Dally 1 ·4 SC1'1MLITSA11••1 .. a •••n 1100 Janine Arnold receives a little holzday remedy from Doc at. the Magic K ingdom . # JD.nine Arnold takes it easy after rushing on her favor:tte ride -Space Mountaft in TOmorrowland . .. ,,.-...... , ~~· .... ,.,., .......... 7U·1414 I . . . . .. DAil. Y PILOT • Sul'ld!y, 0.0.mbef 24, 1171 'C'runcla Co•ing' Real Prop. 13 Battle Begins By ntOMA.S D. U ' While Howard J•rvta t.tawls \bf' work! spread· lnJt hu lb retK-llion m sace. poUUd"n.s l>Klt hnnlt' an Ca.LJfomaa only now att beaknnlnc to face th~ reaJ tt-3'8 ot coptna wtth Pn>oollUon 13 Thf" ijrns of lmJW'Odi Lrouble are many The state's larti t nood c.-ontroJ dlAtricl runs out of money JUJt u t.be r alny seuon beglna . Teat'hen nope>rt lltt>' are f<lttfd lo awtep •tassrooms and clean bat.hroom Instead or plan· nt OR les.soo A report from SW1ta Barbara lndit'ates turnOV\'f ¥mong county emplo>ta tht-rf' has doublt>d 1111\Ce pas~11ae oiC lhf' Juvts G•nn lllt lim1tallon lrutu1Uv(• Counl,y off1cials aay tht flnan c1al 1nsl'<'unty brouaht on by t.bt law has destroytd many int'entaves ke ping proml&1na young ~rsonA 1n government JVST AS TRES£ REPORTS come 10, so does nn assertion rrom s tute As cmbly Speaker Leo McCarthy that "we must make a buslc decision to termma te (statu bu1lout > money <for cities, coun ties and specaaJ districts). We may aJlow It for one more year." And at the same tam e oomes a report from the stale Government Reform Commission set up by Gov. Brown to recommend ways of coping with Proposition 13. It says Brown and the Legislat...-e s hould t ake over l the full C()-Sts of courts. welfare and M~al . thus eliminating . much of tfte burden carried by . city and oounty governments. All these developments sug- gest a rac9caJ change m percep- tions of Proposition 13 the last JA1tv1s couple of months. For several months after the initiative's June passage, it appeared that things could continue nearly as before in areas of California life affected by government. NOW THAT ILLUSION IS fast being destroyed. For it was the large stale budget sur- plus, caJled "obscene" during the faJl campaign by even the mosl liberal politicians, that aJlowed continuation of programs at oeer pre-13 levels. The surplus was based o• outmoded income tax regulations. These have already been partially updated and legislators promise to lop more from the average worker's income tax bill next spring. That means the state may have a budget sur· plus to dole out again next year. but it mi1tht not be as large as this year's and the following year's will be much lower SO A CRUNCH 18 INEVITABLE. It will begin in early 1979, when interest groups begin to com· pete for lhe fewer and fewer dollars that will be available. Already, heads of both the University of California and the state Collette and University system threaten to close several campuses if their budgets are severely cut. The ripple effects of closures could be dis----------~---.... astrous for nearby com· SOUTHERN munities and they have CALIFORNIA begun to rally around the FOCUS higher education system. ·'--------If they avoid c ut· backs, other agencies will ha~ to absorb heavier ones. Schools say they may cut all counseling pro- grams. Cities have already ended most arts ac- tivities and libranes in California offer the worst service in the country, a national librarians' as- sociation reports. FOR THE STATE TO BACK OFF completely from aiding local programs. as McCarthy !'IUg· gests, seems somewhat unfair since state orricials pushed hard for Propositim 8, an alternative to Jarvis-Gann that would have-shlfled to the state most of lhe same costs now singled out by Brown's blue-ribbon commission. But the exact amount of the state's fair share of the burden is hard lo assess and the battle to ar- rive at a figure will likely preoccupy state govern· ment for al least ~he next two years. Small Bos iaesses GeUf .. E~ Country and western singer W1Jlle Nelson ha~ sent checks to the I RS to pay O(( $71.999. 75 in liens fil ed las t m onth against property he owns In Evergreen, Colo. TWA Tops 'On Time' Schedule WASHINGTON <AP) -Trans World Airlines showed its mettle in Sep- tember, turning in four of the five best on-time performance reports among major scheduled airlines. Nationally, 81 percent or all nights were on time during the month, according to the Civil Ae ronautics Board. TWA TOPPED the list with a 98.3 percent performaQce between Las Vegas and New York. Tied for second at 96.7 perc e nt were TWA between Las Vegas and Los Angeles and United on the Detroit-New York run. The CAB considers ar· rival within 15 minutes of lhe schedule as being on time. TRANS WORLD also took fourth and filth rat· ings with a 96.6 percent on-time performance between Chicago and Hartford and 96.S per· cent between Los Angeles and Phoenix. At the other end of lhe scale , Pan American was on time 33.3 percent of the time between Houston and New York. Rounding out the bot· tom five on-time records were Northwest, 35.6 percent on lime between Hon olul u and Los Angeles; Pan Am, 40.4 perc e n t between Portland and Seattle; Pan Am, 46.9 percent be tween Honolulu and Los Angeles. and Na· tion al. 47.4 percent between Miami and San f'rancisco. 'How To' Tips Told By JOYCE L. KENNEDY Dear Joyce: I •ould like lnfonna· Uo11 on opening a Oorlst bulnesa. ( C4REERS ) -S.S., New Havea, Conn. To talk flowers, write: Retailer Division , Society of American Florists, 901 N. Washington St., Alex- andria, Va. 22314. Ask for literature and referr al to local or state associa· lions. A recent book is "How To Run A Successful Florist and Plant Store,·• available for $7.IE postpaid from John Wiley & Soos, 1 Wiley Dr., Somerset, N.J . (188q3, • Dear Joyce: I need lnformatloa on startlJlg a needlecralta.sbop. -S.E., Hoal&oa. Tei . Try the National Needlework As- sociation, 230 Fifth Ave., New York, N.Y. 10001. * Dear Joyce: How caa I flnd oat wbere to get a francllJae la the guard dog field? -A.a., Col11111bl•1 S.C. Balon Rouge offers a well-regar~ course, as does the Stained Glass As· soc iation of Ame rica School at Hoos uck. Windsor Mill, North Adams, Mass. 01247. • Dear Joyce: I am very mada ln· tereeted ln opening a IJqaor store. Where do Mallen caJJ for •tock? Do you have 10meoae who could guide me? -A.R., Chicago, ru. Write to John Burcham, Jr., Ex· ecutlve Director, National Liquor Stores Association, 1025 Vermont Ave. NW, Washington, D.C. 20005. Additionally. ·'Independent Uquor Stores" is a 16-page brief available for $2 from : Sm a ll Business Reporter, Box 37000, San Francisco, CaUI. 94137. READER SERVICE: For o eopt; of ''Home Typing ButlneH," 0 two-pagt reprint Jrom Income Opportunftlea magatfM, tncloH a .tom~. Hlf· oddrt•M1 mvtl()J>t wUh v.our reqwlt to Joye• Lain K~ at thia ~. Articlt giVt• how-to tips for ltartmg o amoll tflPlng bumlfu. A beginning: see the U.S. Com· merce Department's '·Franchise Op- P<>rtunities Handbook," updated an· nually. ff not available at a library, the 1978 editicm costs $5.50 h'om lhe Superintendent of Documents, • Wuhlngton, D .C . .20402. Include • stock number 003-009-00-256-7. -: •. • Dear .Joyce~ Wbere can I lea.,. &h atalaed glUI artT I wpt to do I.Ills •• a moaey·ll'lakiq eralt at bome. -.J.E., Deaver, Colo. -. Public 1cboola,"museums, art c:en· Jere, YWCA-. private ltudloe and col· 'teget leach fc.. Loulalaaa Slate Unlveralty in •••• • 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 D A I L . . . . I lliiii ... ,..,._.~-,..._.__ Houab fOI ~ Hottwt FM S4* Hout•• For S. ........................................................................................ ~···· ......... -... ..... ~········ ., .. ,.. 1002 G111110• 1002 G.-,... 1002 G...,.ol 1002 G"*of 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• LOW DOWN Lari;te Duplex •n excellent condition on quiet str~t. Just aero s the street Crom channel. Asking $190,000. Seller wiU carry it all with a small down. JACOBS REALTY 671-6670 2919 NEWPORT ll•d. c.....-lottt GLANTZ REALTY Dl'lteS WAltMIST WISHIS FOlt THI HOUDA Y SEASON & THI MEW YE.Al DOMGUNn: ALCAIHUT MIMI PIUJHS DOMIUU NOLA BULL PHILHUG .. S 1670 M..,..KW, Costa Mesa 54M219 HAPPY HOLIDAYS to•U FltOM All OF US!! SEASONS GREETINGS! 41EDROOM $94,500 Lvly Grant-Warmington built fmJy home. 2 yrs old. Desirable East.Bide. Call ror appointment lo preview, today! 646-7711 ................ Surrounds entertain· menl home! Large pvt master s uite! Deluxe paneling thruout, Party sized deck overlooks sparkling jacuu1. Sur- rounded by mountain pines! Excellent area! Better hurry! Call 645-0303 BAY& BEACH CHRISTM~ GIFT ... could be a nice duplex as an Investment start.er. This duplex is located to EASTSIDE Costa Mes11 Within easy walkUlg dts· tance to Post OU1ce, Banks an d s upe r markets. There are 2 un· its, each with 2 bdrms and 1 bath and an encloeed garage, A buy at$162,SOO BAY& BEACH 450 NEWPORT CTR. OR. 7M11 ORIGINAL BLUFFS Cozy 2 bdrm. Angelit.a Plan on best greenbelt location. Corner unit with beamed ce1Ltngs & all on one level. $144,750 67J-.4400 HARBOR Lake Sc:wl Marcos ZlllOtq_f\, 2BR 2~b11. den an golf couni.e. Im mac. 1190.000. Owner/Bkr & 7141756-1982 540-3666 macnab I Irvine realty MO STEPS! y ;,sf;b#9. .FO~ESTE OLSON ~~( ........ .., .. , A 1>1 v1~1nn of llJrhor lnn•,lml'nt C:o HIEWPORT HEIGHTS Go VA. 4 bdrm 2 bath. large yard . Close to elementary school 2 BRs -2 baths -den -lg. entertainment a r ea -sunny kitchen w/bay window in brkfst area -2 beautiful patios. $225,000 fee. Carol Tatum 644-6200. CJ-41> WOULD YOU IELIEYE? 3 lg. BR;; -3 full baths -family rm -lg. utility /storage rm -new appliances & roof PLUS a peek at the ocean -Old CdM -R· l -All for S229.500! Martha Macnab 642-8235. (J-42) p I L 0 T c L A s s I F I E D 6 4 2 • OCEAMRlOMT HO!HOI HO! Merry YuleUde Greet· ings from old St. Nick Donner · Blilzen & Rudolph & Harry! So "harry" on over for your special holiday treat to yourself! Your cboace of 2 &t l ·bdrm. duplex , $375.0001 Or, 2 & 2 bdrm. duplex, $395,000! Or, 2 bdrm. house, $375,000! lalaoahyProp. Realtors * 67S.7060 . FABULOUS MEW CONDO TIMTLHOCK, IRV Brand new 2 br & den, 2 ba, dining rm at highest elevation w/impressive view. Every available option upgrade iocld cen· tra1 air cood, microwave & self cleaning ovens, frplc1 plush crpl , mlr- roreo closet doors. at· t.ached 2 car garg, pool. Cl\ange lo plans has can· celled owner's move In. Avail now at $126.900. Call owner, days (714) 556-3937 or art Spm & wknds (714) 644-4772. MERRY CHRISTMAS FroM tht "jhborhood pro· fevOMfa: Dorothy Ludovl.se, Theo & Bob Whitehead, Worn Smith-Meye r , l>al Morgan, Olive &t Victor Rwnbellow. Dee Lam· boume, Tom Gottier. Elaine Moyed, Eileen Artukovich. Sam & Mary Bush. Ver a Sharp , Esther Reed, Mickey Heere~J Sharon Vaill, Tom Mesereau, Cindy ~ullar. Chris Capps, Ruth Slater, Tom & Ben Roll. ~. c.n.Al MEWrC>ltT DUPLEX Xl.ot location in 100 blk.; rented summertwioter. with xlnl m>tal history. 2 Bclnns. down ; 1:bdrm. up. Dbl. garage & you own the land. tor ooly $1.W.000 67N883 675-CT77 Eves 400llr' FOR All C.M. AIW WIWAMSHIRE 9-2°/o INTEREST English Tudor style spacious 3 bdrm, 3 ba 2 story adult condo. Pool- J a cu z z 1 -s auna -clubhouse & rec rm. Take over subje<:l to ex· isling loan $75,000 at 9..2%. 646-7711 file~.!~~ BALIOA OCEANFRONT Very best Peninsula Point location. Large f am.ily home. 4 ~rooms .. 3 baths. maid's room, fireplace m extra large dining room. 3 car garage. Enclosed yard -but best of all -the ocean view is superb! SSS0.000. r A COLDWB.L UNI& CO. 644·9060 2111 SAN JOAQUIN HILLS AO. IN NEWPORT CtNnfl . ~'-------------..... !'!ll!!!!!--111!!!1,,,,~ ... c:;:; SELECT I PROPERTIES HAPPY HOLIDAYS FROM YOUR FRIENDS AT SELECT PROPERTIES Jim Ferryman Prte Vlotto Pat Blair Mina Avis Len Bradv Hrrkv Brook!! Pat Brady Al'lty ChapfK'I F.lsa G aJ{etta I.aura Connollv Carl GlasROW [Dottie Evans Oon lacobom Ed Glassiow l.yn JenmnJ{s Flo Grey Marv AM Masraro F:d Guam<'ra Les Miiier M nrilvn H11${hl'i; Bill Oesterreich Anne }.tr Caslond Bob Parker Sally Rout Jerry Smith Brenda Wheeler Dick White Nt>wport Beach Costa Ml'Sa 2232 S. E. Bristol 3130 Harbor c:;:; SELECT . I PROPERTIES IEACH "A" FRAME Invest today! 3 BR, 2 bath w/sun deck & 2-car garage. Bring paint. paper , cpl & drps & turn this into a "dream" hom e! Located near comm. pool. t e nnis & beach . 5107.000 -submit! Vee Stinson 642-8235. (J-43) "A RARE FtHD" Spacious New Bedford model in Seaview situated on a.point w/full view. privacy & lots of yard. Single level 4 BR. family rm home w/21h baths, 2 fplcs & encl. atriums. Fast escrow possible. $245,000 incl. land. Belle Chase Lee 644·6200. <J·44> BUILDERS A TTM! Here is that hard-to-find buiJdable R-2 lot in Old CdM . Great area for income property -close to shops & schools. $141.500. Donna Godshall 644-6200. (J-45) ST ART THE MEW YEAR IN NEWPORT HACH Give your family the luxury of living in this charming 3 BR. 3 bath home w/sep. family rm & walk-in wet bar. Yard has prof. landscaping inc l. gazebo & enclosed spa. A "super" buy at $205.000! Sharon Smith 644-6200. <J -46> LIDO ISLE Great location, near club & tennis courts. 4 BR. formal dining rm home completely redone incl. new kitchen. Parking space for boat or trailer . Don 't miss seeing thjs one! $389.500. Cathryn Tennille 644·6200. (J-47) llG CANYON Exquisite wood & ceramic tile entry leads into this e legant 5 BR customized home w /oversized game rm. formal dining & country kitchen. Pool -spa -covered patio w/outdoor BBQ. Perfect for the busy family. $680.000. Lynne Valentine 644-6200. (J-48) HEW YEAR IN THE BLUffS Start it right, in an easy-care 3 BR. 21/2 bath condominium - completely & beautifully decorated using Italian tile & European touches. Perfect location, on the park w/view of m t ns. Format dining -lg. wrap-around patio - very private -security system. $179,000. Jean Dales 642-8235. (J-49> A SPECIAL "SOMBSET" 5 BR family home in prime location of Harbor View Homes. Priced right for a fast sale & escrow at $215.000. Customized inter iors fi nished w/solid oak features. Lg . jacuzzi -prof. landscaping -wood decking. Helen Wood 644·6200. (J-50) WISTCUfF CONDOMINIUM Great location -walk to smart shops or Westcliff Plaza. Lovely 2 BR. 2 bath w1nearly new cpl & drps. wood burning fplc + dining rm. Comm. pool. A rare Clnd at $86.500. Harriet Perry 642·8235 . (J ·Sl) ........................... ~ ........................................ . . . . . . . . ·······~······ ••··•··••·····••··•• . . . ~.~!:'!'!'. .... ,,. ~.~.~'"""' ~!.~~'"""" ~.~.~"""' ~.~~~"""" ~!.~.~"'""" ......,,.,__,., 1171 OAILTPILOT .. -1 ~, .. ,.. IOOJ CH.w.i too awnt1 IOOJ .... ,.. tOOJ ~........ lOOZ ~~ ••••••• !~.~~ ~~.~.~ ....... ~:.~~ ................ ':'!.~ ..... .. •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ....................... ••••••••••••••••••••••• $8000 DOWN ...._ '044 a....-11.ca. , '041 ...,_...... aoso REAL .. , .................... ·················•····· ······················· .. blQgO A CHIMHIY FOi YOU AND SAMTA TOO! Y•c• ..................... _., s' '1.000. • 2 ~...... • .. ,_.... ... ... ~ ..... ,..w ... c ..... or Ar• r-• ..._.. .... w1 TWt ) IN•• 11• ..... .... .... ..,.t.ct c...... . .... 1to1t• ffr.pf•c• .,.4 ••t4o0f' fouu l. Sllt,IOO or Do yo. ._., • f....Uy7 1"-9 .,._ ...... tr_,. lo "'"' te.11 4 ~• o• a.... wttti ptHty of prhaey •d .-y toe.ti .... Sll9,750 n11 tpOCkMil 1 .,...""'-.....,. •'-•• at.oat • for aa ttt. •Y• c• .... Ceder ederior, w.._. ck>Mh, QltoM c....._ Oltd old f..WOMd chcrwL $ 2 I J,000. 497·3331 OlD COltOMA DB. Mil C harming Old Coron a del Mar location wflh income . Beautifully maintained corner proptirty. large patio for privacy. A pride of ownership, dose to shopping and tH'a c h. Properly priC'l'd at $209,500 UNl()Ul lif)M S HEAL TORS', 67& 0000 ~1443 (a\t Coa~t I t•qllwJy, Cl)rona tM M.ir t1IY1 111 M1•c,,, V••1il11 .11 •,I\() !.1'1'10 caE: 110181 ILllRS CD. OVfH :,O Yf AR S OF SE:RVICf DON,. MISS THIS Hctit Buy In Mes a Vt·rd~. :t Rdrm. + Fam. Hoom. In Gr<>al Location N<•:tr SthMls. /\ Lillie Rt•drtorating Wtll Makt• Thts /\ Supt•r llou1-w. $7!1,!JOO NEWPORT BLUFFS C'h111cc.· Offt·rins:t Spltl Lt•vt•I F:ncl lJn1l. Pr1mt• Prtvah' I .<1c·u11on On /\ L n v ,. I y C r <' <' n b P 1 t • C u s t o m Oc·roratrd In Warm Earth Tones. Two Hl-.lroorns With /\ Convertible f)<•n ''Or1urn:il Bluff~" $174,500 I\ "Joy Of N<'wriort ·• Ltsltni.! CAPISTRANO IEACH O('lt~htful Dupl('x On The ncautiful Sanely Bc.·at·h. E;H'h Unit I Im, J UR And Family Hcmrn W t Jo'in·pluc·c. Wint<.or Summ.-r H••nttils. Price, $6!)0,000 DANA POINT F<>r<'vt·r Vl«·w Ovt•rlookin g The M urlna. F'ohulous 4 BR ffo m e. Livinit Room, Olnlnit Room & Klld'll'n llovt• (;oq~cous Vlt!w & /\IJio The Mt1stc•r Hedrm. Suite. Call ft'or /\poointmcnt. SOOO.ooo 631-1800 •• 1 oova D11v• scc"\\.oti ~-a £~s· Tltof ln"1911in9 Word Go'"• wfflt a Clt11dle -"" CJ.A• .. POWltl -----•=-:-t:-~ ·.::::-: .. oople -d• ,,... ...,.., .. _ ........ ._ ... _ .. I fCACROO :11r1r I TAAMUE I' I I I I l L l!OHE8 I I' I I I r_M._A..._P .... R_H..,.;..E .._., b4e~Y~•~t6! ~l"'I~ ..... -'l_..._l _l.__..I_' .... I _,_ ~~ 10 o11 &lrut 1-,-t-A-" -,-, -G-, ~~t.i.1 .... ....I _._I .... 1...ili....a..1 _,_ on '"' , . I· C A R I l A I' I" I ......... MllDS SOMI nc 1 h1111 two 1tory. 4 bNiroom 3 both homl! '" onll bl<><'k from the COuntry Club oo u J>l'\.'tlllJie tr ct ln Me:su Vc•rdP Lath & pluMcr c.·c.tnstructlon 1-'umaly room. th·n and laundry room Sl.20.750 Ask for Clc•n llcllwarth ,631 1200 PICTUaE PallTY F•·nt ured ln L /\ Times Home St>ruon, this 4 tx•droom. 21f.i buth home in U.k<• ft'orttttl has deck with twnch M'ating b<'outifu t. Sl00.500 Ask for Craig Batley. 631·1200 EASTSIDE DUPLEX Duplex with room for two mor.- un1t:,. Close to tH•hools. shops and hu~ line• In Costu Mesa.· S149.000. As k for J\(>b Milliken. 631 · l.266 LIDO ISLE Bea utifulty d •t·o rated c u Rtom llol.stein home. 3 bedroom~. z baths on lot and half. Spacious living room with bnC'k fireplace. formal dmmg room. pnvate patio oH sun room /\sk for Curt llcrbcrts for ap- pointment to view thi!) fine hom e . 631-1200 IUSINESS OPPORTUNITY O<! your own boss. Owner will carry with m inimum ca!ih down for auto pi.trls ~tore. Ask for Roy Sie mens. 631 ·1260 LOWEST rRICED COHDO In Newport Beach. 2 bedroom. 2 bath. end unit offers privacy and oversized patio. Like-new condition Newport !leach condo . $76.500. Ask tor John Ma rshall. G31·1266 MESA VERDE SINGLE LEVB. Witlk to Country C lub from thi~ '1 bedroom custom rcmodell.'<i home. Jo~amily room and cozy den with fireplace. Scparnle master suilC! includ<.-s sauna. Onl y $129,900. Ask for Glen Jlcllwarth 631·1266 of coat• meH, Irv In•, newport beach, Inc. 234 E. 17th Street, Coate MeH 631-1266 'lnllonwlth· !llt•twork of lndh'llfu•ll> Ov.-ned ul\<J O(M'ratcd Rcrnl Estate Ortlus LIDO ISLE Hay view from 2 patio rlt•1·ks enhances tustom spacious 5 bdrm .. 4 bath tradilionnl home; like new. Ideal ror entertaining. $500.000 OCEAHFROMT Quality crartsmanshlp in m ahog. trim & ouk noon' sets off this landmark: 4 BR. 3 ba. home in finest location. f:s l:.iblishcd tree~ & lawns. $475.000. IACk IAY Fine 4 bdrm .• 21h bath family home on quiet cul de' sac. Oversized pool. p layhouse, stonige $169,000. Terms. IAYFROMT Scv<.'ral rinc bayfront homeK with pier & slip AVALON Well constructed, 3 BR. 1 ba. oak rtoor , parUol hasemcnt. concrete foundation. Flats area. S120.000-Fec. BILL GRUNDY , REALTOR J • I "'I I y ·, I I• l j j #I t ' ~\ I' I 'I t I I I J l ...... ....., .... .., ...... ,.. ............. .. ,..,. ••• 1 ........................... .... ... ..U.•• ............... .., ··:=: .. ..._,._....,.,DAILY N.OT WANf. , ,....... ....... ~ .................. ... -"'4 ..... _.... .................. ..... .............. -4 .... . HOUSES FOR SALi 2 • ~ 'AM IM Of' DIN 219 Via San Rem o <Lido Isle} N 8 67>~ Dally 1·4 J lmlOOM 4MlSlcrraTrecLn <U n. Pk> Irv. 552.0143 $144,500 Sol/SUn 10·5 2804C1Ht0r. Newport Beach 646-7171 $292,000 Sot/Sun 12·4 J R ~ 'AM IM er D .. 22J VJaSan Remo <Lldolal~> NB 675-5626 Oallv 1~4 4525 Camden <Cameo Shores> CdM 675-7040 '488,000 Sat/SUn 12·5 4 R , .. 'AM aM er D• 213 Via San Remo <Lido l1le> NB 675-GaS ~ Dally 1·4 Auume ltalanee or SACRlrlCf!' D••.-ul • 'r a10.ooo iat ll310 mo WoodbriOeo a Dr 2148' It•~~' 2 sp;. 'br. e M•a Verde. ' Br, 2 8•. PLUS ele1u1l 2 Br cond1 fbannl n ·1. 1ra ~·e~Vt •I ESTATE IJOOI, Jacuul. no qu11llfy prtrcd below mtirkel • u.,_rd'• aalora. tn Ina. vacant. 764..aao Doth "' lake 473 ,311 var, ur opn r. brick • ---· · patio, prof lnd11cp. All Owner/A.I\. thl1 ' more for only THE BEST Sltl,000 MOYltMllFOll ~.:~· Rulty World. 5 SINO Lt rAMl l. Y CHllSTMAS ,....._,, HOUSES One 3 Bdrm-t.t~ --------row 2 bdrm•. all with ,_.., Woodbl1dlf' ~lalat --ro .... I Ql6do. Cape Cod 11tyle r---- GI n =--~ llrAlft Call Adami Plan, 4 bfid, 2...., ~ Why .,.,. more for thitl ba., 1123,000. Call Oeorcc roomy JBr condo. home. o r .R o • • n n u a t & Many, many amenltle.. <7W552·3'700. Macnab· /'""_._-;;Ju·~u S7UIOO OF ALL JrvlMRltyCo ~1.;~ILY v-;~ ~~~ ~-----------New Wood.bridae fAt•tt-• CH.....,L CLOSE AAMDMIW Wuhll\llQC\ Plan ready COTI~I TOWMHOMIS for move lo. 3 bed" den, On quaet Soutb Laauoa "Mtt.~woodl" 2.,., ba. nee.000; S~c1al 1treet With beamed rl'1I IN 1979 up&nde packa1e in ll\CI. b1f( kllclten, eaay CFAlttldf et• M 4!H) eluded. Call Gt'Orae or can yard, ~''" view R o 1 a n n e • t "3.SOO En1ll1h Tudor 2&3 Br <11•1SS2·3700 Macnab • • aplii level. 2&3 r.r lrvtneRltyC-0 ~a J""CU1.,' AVOID 11ara3.i, f rplca . ~ "' ... rnlcroloVavH, gr~nhou•l' BY OWNER. hard to f1ad. SWnnlntt woocj I& llHll wlndowa. pool, 1pa Unlveulty model In apl.il·level con~orntnlum, T~NIScourta Villaf(e lll. 3 Br 2 Ba, high bram cellln1<1. big M6-0061or9S510'l0 fr1)k,c•ll" .. 'drl.tlclp,tlle d en, d1nln« room. YA -ftfA. T•MS are aV11tlable on th1• attal ' bedroom, family room home whlcn 1lla on a premiom fee lot lh•t provkSes priv•c)' lltld oft ·~ _pa.rtlln1. ....... c .. 644-'21 I rJn Nllil l Hl\ll l Y & /\C,«;,U[ I/II£'!> HIGH f'rom189,950 formal dlnln11. living , ocean view, 2 bedr0c1ma, Ot!veloped by mtry, fully lund1t't1JM-d . S149$0 INTEREST Woodtree~v Co. s uperb location ucro1111 •, ~ ....... from Univ. Pk. Warm W""• 11yo ll""CH ••••••••••,,••••••••••• Meea Verde• bdrm. 2 bu. family home. Open -"' L NI I new crpt1, RV. parklnl(. lloole lO-S Sal/Sun 4601 From lhla c h armtn11 8QUn8 QU8 RATE 2pallod. large yard, Nlcu SlerraTreeLn. Mi·OHl wood panelled3 bedroom • 10$2 1area. l'~inuncc flex . &11ueet unlt.,Tall tr ~11. Realty 7Sl-8683 by Appl. LUXURY 2BR 2 ba Wood· ~at ocean. & ull rent brldae ArborL11ke ecUts7,lOO . IASYUVIMG By Ow .... ER townhowle. ,Nr lake. Lo • New lecl•latlon. new " down. 1uPt!r deal. $1 lOK 4 ff!W •leE to communl· flnanclna t«hnlque11 and SAYE S$S Wiil conadr lse/opllon IMMACULA Tl tY pool Ii acuul. Cl<Mle to new court decl1lon1. Deal dlret't w/ownr agnl By owner 893· 1370 or CH41tM P6rit w/f hinl lake. Len· makea it eaaler than ewr Mwit tell uniqut> 4 br, 2.,.. 569-l833or 4~5906. Dr•maUc wood " glaas nla (,U, etc. 3 bdrm home topurchueoraellapro· ba.baclcbaycondo Wet --------horn on 3ilolll, l(reat wrt.h many fine appl'•· pertyli c~ee1crow lna bar,it»lnedl(lu1J.lotior Irvine twnhl 2br. 2ba 2 pnvucyonqwetatrttt 3 Pleau rai l today . matter o( days. f'or the wood OI\ walls & flrli. atry, ba in eu br. 2 car bedrooma. 2 b1Hh a Sll7,Q50 flJ"Sl time, Bank•. Sav· Huece pullo. tennis, pool, gurg. frplc. polio Up $ta).SOO CHotCIUPPH inpliLoanl can provide Jae. uuna. Uur6Coln graded ViH·ant. <:all PM 1 CONDOMINIUM 'wrap around' !inanclna. 188,900 Open Sul/Sun t144.741s 113.~oo Dy WOODS COYE PronUng on t:I N1gu •I that toeether w1lh seller 12·4. 631 2497. 3~6 Owner. CC, 3 bdrm end unit financing can beat high Lourdes Ln UMYHSITY PARK AIU vlewlnll icolf course & interest rateJI Our staff -Charmin4 1pac 1 ou~ oommunlty park Nicely of experleneed pro CHRISTMAS ~BT. fam rm .. Kint toc, by htmto wllh high bC!nmed eke:. &t well malnt.alned. fe11ional1 help their SPECIAL ovmer $1117,000 ~2-11160 ceWna. rock fireplace. Alrcond. SlOS,000. clients buy, sell. or ex· ., b ..,... •-.. 3 .__... 9 .. rr.5220 chan'*e $63 ml lllo n 4 Br, 4 a. lilt' t'Orner lol. SPANISH AYES """an v .... -. u.:vrooms, 4tl-494 .,.9_ dollar~ worth of real f1th pond Minutes to You 'll uy 11 11 1 to ~.~~t~'ep~ar'::~ :~::: 4t6-241l 110..5050 estate In the put 12 beBch. S'ID,9SO. &OC"&eou.!l 2 br Sparuah de monlhs. Ca ll now 41 aak 1111n tn gracious patio quarters. SUO.OOO IY OWNER about our 11U1ny homeil. home living. Sponlsh tile • ~!lRL 2bath P.ast Nine & inve1tment h1llng1 . .._~111• floors. truck llghta & WISTBN \A>ncJo on t;I Nlicuel Golf C.U7SZ.l920. -;..,.._'ml!'~ much mo(f:' Call u11 • ll"a CAN COD Courae. Furnlahed. J_ '-'UAIL exQUUllte! 11M' most lbteret1tln11 m•w ~/down e>t lea1Je al T home on the market All ~/mo. 496-7796 PLACE the charm of the old ln --WH--,.-T-,.-G-1-FT--lhl.t h1r~e 3 bedrwm. ~ ~ -NONITllS"' CHRISTMAS fumUy room homfl with Thia ocean view home ~rl'ut oceun und moun would mi.kc. Open Sun lO,-TII l :JO P'.M.I SPECIAL lain vlcw1. $367,500 12-4:30. 32719 Su l•lund SURF REALTY • Or. 1006 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 979·1050 tl<MSo <.:oaal Htw11y • duplx, tncl\ldlna bay front t.o be exch. down In a pk&. 213/68'·3200 Super lirookv1ew w/pluah carpet, ulr con d.lUonUl,rc, encl. olrium. l&e muter bdrrn w/mir· n'lred wardrobe doors Can you beUeve It alao In· eludes refrtg, wa11her & dryer. All for $85,500 Hurry. C.11 fYlfl 1060. in Vilh1~c 1-'alrt• COLONY BEAUTY LAG~~~~ACll Hig 2 story 4 tx.'droom 1~~~~~~~­homc 1dt'Atly loc»ted r: ltta•LDST. Oup&ex with owner's un· It. good location, dbl prage, 2 frplct. Clear. llelJer will carry Jal 'f. 0 ~IUCH llALTY 67S. t 642 642-07 62 SUIFRIALTY l\ear community pool Mnd teruus. v .. canl and ready. Eaay terms will move you n.iht In. Call oqw, don't wail! :-:. H/\NCH ~ HfALTY ~ ~!11 :woo eor.. .. w.. l022 __ &> ____ _ ....................... l......,.•hoch 1040 --"=-======-- LOOK HERE! ________ ......•.....•.•.•••.... BUY nRADE 2~~:~ ~t~~:n cA*-SHottlS brick frplc. nr ocn & Your smaller home for 1hopptna. refrla. A•· WI dramalic 3 bdrm.. sumable loan, SS7 ,500. •balhs. panoramic ocean 063-12t2 view estate with poo1.1·1-..1....--------,-04-4 IUmodeled, like new 1 .....--Xlnt llnanclna avail ••••••••••••••••••••••• Owner will <'.llrry TD Hurry, only view hom'' avaU. in thi.9 pn-8li"lous. pnvate beuch communl ty Beat buy in LOwn al Mll!:OOO, land included• IT DIDM1' SIU? YOU DIDN'T CALL Ge. c.e.v A.9. CENTURt 21 569-6800 SS9 7 400 The pttf ect starter home for you. Only l year old. Thh 2 bedroom townhomc l.i! sllllog on quiet gre(.'1lbell Lind !llCl)il rrom pool spa 11nd lcn nl.8 Beauilfully dc111gn1..'<1 ll'l.'l1de and out. Call to llt."C. e~ HJ\NCH HI /\L TY ~>b 1 ;woo OCIA.M VllW- . in • rural sclunc; the ......... .._.. 1069 charm o( ~ Top ot Th,. •••• ••• • • ••• • • • • • • • • • • • World. 2 bdrm• . 2 b•tha & a hi.lie family rm add to the en)Oyment of thl' t1ettln1. •1~1.~ 4UHITS North end . wallc l o beaich. •hoe» .. bu.a : .110<>d a.Mual lltOIJJJ, in pnm~ demand area. ?.ont..'<l ll·3. Xlnt pottnt.111. 1215,000 UMOISTRUCT AILI ... .. ~an " canyon v1cw1, freahly palnled, wllh new clll1)et & 111u>Uance•. this tow malntAiftance 3 bdrm. home Is In Up lop aha pc & reltdy to move Cn Own~r will COMid« <'Ontra(1 o( 11al •. $149,500, EXECUTIVE SPECIAL 11'1 a nel&hborhood of tm posln1 homei;. Th111 3 bdrm Sturd~vunt WC'lltc llff horne 111 a bar1ain, priced for you at Sl.59,000. There's old fulUoM<l quality in this modern home. Start th~ new yeu right In lht! Newport High School ~IJict. To see thls It•· 8U&J1lly appeallnl( home call Ull at 540-J 151 ~HERITAGE • • REALTORS H.V. HIUS IEAUTY 4~2S CA.MDIM Dlt. <>Dee s.t/S-I 2·5 FINER HOMES MIRRY CHRISTMAS uo•, ,., , ,, .. ,, .. '!/""" ., MOVE IHTODAY ~;'.~~".~.~~~~7 (A 'Ul"'' Wood b r I d tt c S & S 11"" 1 ,, • ., '~""' ·~ ONL V $24S,OOO Choice Broadmoor 11 home In 11reat location FROM S2S9,900 IUchlttty 671-7040 Redwood mo<M i•1u11h ;~;~',".\;.~~~. A ' 1 "" • lite bdrm.a, frml <Im, fmJy rm, 2 atone frplc~ Located on hi" itrN•nbo•ll w/pnvah' J>Ool Nl'wly offered lll $24:0,000. 756-~I cpu, A IC, f1repl1t'l" ----- '"60!> down, take over Ai~ & Light loan SI 11 .900 OwnN CAMIOSHOttES muatull USA H\!ully 3 Udr home with J>'rom •11 Of UI lo aJI of you ' red hill ~··. 552·7500 LOWISTPllCI Mll·Sllll or 581.59tJ6 or coabthnt• view. o~•·n ft..Jwc"' 3 bdrm • ., bu'.. 646-050'1 ' beam ce1hng1. apa(· ou11 uo:I ... 4 u• lutrht•n & dbl f Of'ltRI' A canyon home juat atcpsl~~~~~~~~~I borgtun ut 1411,000 lo the beat•h Luah ...,.. .. odt 1041 OlOISDI' landlraplng! Room for TULANE ••••••••••••••••••••••• Oc•anfronf SACfUfl'ICE pnol & ocean view deck , .,.. central atr-cond. ! MODEL • DUPLEX • 2 Bl\ own your own 11pt with pnvlltc dt•t'k over· looltln~ pool and Pitdflc Aeaut •BR, pool, spu. l,::1• yard. Xlnt arc{I $142,5-0o. 67:H:lll Alt. LLke a model, 1259.900 W Id <kc11n 111di' or hwy. lt•vrl ••-'-...._ 67~7040 In Park l llomu11. ou IOl easy acco11 \A.I l>4!11ch -=z r you hclltiVl' 3 bdrm!\. Nrec:l.A paint. mil\or rf' looklna onto private Pllin: ideal for home & auiums 11 pallOli & o col· Income. Hurry . only DUPLIX orl'w f11m. rm /kit. over SI~ 000 So. of H'_..w_ '*1nlC o 1perklln« pool, Mission lleolty •tM 0731 .,,.. -, on t~E~ I.ANO, for only -on love ly Avocadti SIM,500. We hive: It' V./\. l..OAN Avenue. a ch11rmln11 2 can l>f> •Pumc:d ut w;.:, In· bdrm. 21ly, upalde down •· 1 h 3 bd 2 houle with cedar 1hmalc ... 'f'USt on t 11 r/ cinerlor a nd •undeck ~·a~~~-·~r~.~me in PLUS • lu1Curlou1 2 bedroom, 3 balh o t Coverod patio and 3 ror pra&e. $210,000 644-7211 1024 ••••••••••••••••••••••• SICWDID IASTSIDI Owner t.ran1fernld. mu•t NU his lovely newly r.- moclefed •nd rt!CMcor•t· ed 4 bdrm 2 btth home. Spartrllna new ulto ~ count.I)' kllchen. RliMd M•rOI flrept1ce l.MUllUll1 done ln natural ~. Q\a&ITY Ule entry and walk . Front eo11rtyard. 8rl 1hl. IPldoul and c:llannln1. You'd bttW hu"'7 and .. OU. OM al flOl,000. CallMO-U.ll " .. HERITAGE HI 1\1 Hms ------- l"or Sale bf OwnrtAI\. 4 Ir 2 81, n•wly re• mollll., llom• ln prim• Hiil ...... area All .... e • • eupelln1 ~ ........ bl• AllM .... .... NEUJE\..L ' '' ' ... t l'i"' I ft, 1' t, \'ti I ','t\ 1044 tf523 CAM"1S Dt·IRV,,.E .,.. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~II. macnab I lrvtne ~ realty SI ...... uva TOWMHOMI Oulslondlni< In every way! 2 BRs. 2 boths, formal dlnlnfl rm, IR. kltch n, cozy (pie + view or pork & mtn s. Univ. Park Peter's Deve lopment. $117,000. Jean Dales «M2·8235. (J·52) &NV.SfTY , ••• 4 BR Deane homo w /spa & many custom reatur s lnct. ook noortns. new cpt. blt-ln book1he lvea & prlvat yard w 1 b ea utlfu1 1andacaplnl(. ll89,000. Appt. only. Julie Van Wlcrcn 752·14J4. CJ·53> 2 ft:nclo•rd part"na1--------11p11r1•8. Oood t~rrn11 S22S.OOO. 80190P Gorqeous . Garden OPEHHOUSE Daity 1·4 219VfaSMleMD F°'"'ul111 lov..,ly 3 Ud rm Wooda Cove ore& hom\l. L•d I I O\lrtt qtr"I. with bdrm • I 0 s e balh Ii 1ltlln11m.i1t. Walk to beach. $230,000 umS:worshlo =~s f'rom unlimited dlirk 675-5626 1pece ol 1paclou1. aolarot-------- bdrm. home Deet1nt'r - lntdlor at~ntuated by On 1lMI Wat.er. Nt>Wport 1mpoc14KS wall cuvtrinK•· Sl7~.ooo AK«inl ~.000 C021SOP 968>9922 __ _ L1191-........ IOU ••••••••••••••••••••••• 'lac~~ MOMUCH IA.Y Raise your family where their play•round l.1 the beech. Thls wood s hingled home on a lerae comer lot hoa 4 B<lrms, den, ramlly room and room for a pool. Oate guarded prlvut<' community -$245.000. • COUWtaf. ,.,.. eo. 496-7222 831 ·0836 • 1. / 8Je DAil Y PILOT Sunday. D.c•mbe1 a. 1971 1--T.tt.-.,..,.,.s. .._,nfwhl1 -Oh• l nflt...._ ••········••··········· ••..•..........•.•••.••.....•......•...••••••• ..... ,,.... IHcti IO" S-. AM I 010 --. '1toprtif 2000 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• HOMI +A". Sl6t PH MO. 28R house+Apt OVN jJli)ll •II ~ht•fl \IHI II 1ar R2 81• rorn r lot ~unw 1~.· .. 1111111 I Jiii Hew 0 1 R L f< dt•n 111.io( & frvk I fc t .-.. 1 l'lt'lt, Siill mo < on1ri11 t ('/ 'llr :J llOIJ t· il7 ()IMI l·.,11 M"ru I 110 l.!71 f .llll !1( h ~.000 Appt uni)' ll&~t kllUnt' lntHT~ ~WI lid A1tl Olllr'a...lla.... OWNER •••••• •• •• •• ••• ••• • •• • • ~1U rry ~ I I I r11 l C dupiicic, U)(ll.l(tin1 be) ....... ,._., IJt<t.'IJ UeiUU at.a 1111>h \ 1troot to bl! .. cb•nllt d ,_..,. 1100 i HR '•· wt ai•r•IC"' d o wn I n 1 p '-11 ••••••••••••••••• • ••• •• •1X>.OUO Jll6t II lt-0, '1111 ........ I ••••••••••••••••••••••• k.wt U....,_,.awd Howt.1 U•fwtil~ , 4f a tw.tt "'""'died .............................................. ••••••·······•········· --ltir.r "'"''*of..... n"t" ,.,. .._.._JUI ~· ~· 7 -.r.. ...... ~ .. .. , ..•....•..•........ #•••···················· •······················ N w Hil bd rn1. rrplr. bllNI. a rar 1•r•tcet JOU NEWPORT BEACH Oa chclor Co1y br:i m uil'11 S turt.•1 . bu' O<'Un U30 84$ 122J ~~ l28tl .......... .ch 1740 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •Rarh t.on1 Rearh Prlv11cy, Uttl 11<1 SIM ~l. M pellt. 8U-f111?4 13U ;i br . l'• llu. patio. i Ur ·r wnhae. 2 cur lndry ml. Jdulb, no i>t'la far•se. frplc. den pvt yd, TSI. M1ml fi42 lflOJ yr old blda $415 mo LAMAMCHAAnS ~ l,ur111• l.~&J twdrount I bdnn ncw • rpt & p111nt 11urllrn upt11 Arlult• u raae U l& per mo U!lhwhr. bllna, t-nrl 8i•r , ll»De ICU bbQ Poul Gull I'd ttt'zwd---.. ---h-,,.,.0 mstcd r 1 o.t2 WJ:i -...,,. - -... ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2bdnn.Oe•ch Condo.te n M~A Vt-:Ro .. : hom t· ut SJIARP,beachl,2 &J JJK, nJ1, pool. R~t rm & mo11phe r1· :.>&3 hr d l11 ffl,>lc, dlahwshr. gan11(t: u un 11 $4!10 Pt' r m o optll. no J>C!-1 S46-_I034 __ "patlol. 980-2358_ 21:1 lf'lH lMJJ -%13/ .. m> 1 _________ 1 oow' ti4:.t 72:11 A11umable 1.-.0IWATION MC>M.IHOMI ~ & uv :.ff:f1 k'M> 3 lit. J ha , nf!a r n~w. V. •lch yard. W /V huoll•-s> a or ... nrl ~111r La4't or tht· '"'"' horn''" on Ow "'ulf•r for h•u'lr onl v L 1 H ' :uuJ c•nlt•rtt11n in 1.-h:gapl·c in your n•·w cu11tom horn~ with dc~iunrr 1ntcr1or". Convr:i1encc orlonU'tl lo lnr ludt• 3 cor 1u..1raj(e14 with :iuro mntH· "P<'nl't!'o. k1tc h c n R with 111 icr o -wuve rnn i:<•!->. Ht')( cl('onlni;: OV\'""· troi.h c·urn1rnc·torc... ond BBQ t'MlJ!t~ rc1pN . w••t h:1 I'~ Ill :tll mod<•lf4, r i r t' p I a r t•:.. 1 11 I 1 v I n u r o o m h & h<'d rooms. 1ndo11r luund rv ort.>011 . J!ut•st i-uitc·. f:trn1l v roo m .ind muC'h inort• Uot·k :1va1l:1hh· to nil l<'nonts Shown by :.ip1n11nl mrnt. Ca ll l.mdo Haun (714> H;t;l 3150 <H to 5 W<'<'kdoys> 2 lit , I bli, oil elel' tJrand ~ .. _.. 17 q nc-w un F. lllth St '37~ • ••• • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • mo. A~ :At :ic>ll: __ ownhow\e, love I)', 11p nc•. & ~ Uko. 2 br with pvt, p ted entrance + 2 P11ll08. Some with all ~rll)(t' SwimminJJ pool Jacuul Tenn~ court.'! 1 blX to lluntm~on 1iho11 ptnJC c~nttr m11ll. Adult"' No pe t• From S43~ ~a wind VIII a Ile. 15~!;~ llunUnl(ton Vill:cl(c L11nc . II H 1714 ID 9961 81/JO/o llar bor Vlt'W Mon•"" ~Ill Gtt'at \tr• J or. J ba Ry ll*nt•r \ U'I uwn!Jwlud DU Pon l.Arh•I• (.)pm 811\ M j <IHJf7 SISt.tOO $5000 On Ht'f\l ~ tu hu!ll info 21 l'W'IJO·• ltwn 1uumi1t11111 ____:i-JY th l'.iu~ f1n11n 1 11 \ l .u::J:.l_ I ~ thJhc• nklff A .. atty ...... H-.Ston w Ana.tx-im ,,,, lH ? ,.,...,. Aueop AnaANm 11111 1,.1 ar•"~· Slt,oOO 111 ~· M.a ~ 11/W ill'll O•nn t111..r1c 111•• t . Anahrlm tM t »1 ,,.;a1l11blt• ?:> do,,,.11 ~·f°'ll1\Jnat..r Mii M 't.1 .A._~ €\ T IG( /l= _HOM€~ ~to llo""" rum ,., 1111 t rum A~rouatttf't •l'um ~14 t~11t ll\lo y NII ~" ~ Sfl.)IJIJ 111 "' U J.046 n:.o ~ 4T"' ~ • bdnn. 2 ba. hom•· ........... 11 1 ; .• Lotlfor s.M 2200 w poo • ac , am nl -~• i.. I ...... ,( I \ t I •• • ••• •• •• • • • • ••• •• • • • • I i ' r ,...,...,t UfTlt' UM•~ 11v or eomplftt' y l\!nlodC'IC'~ wuUlt\la•"" -II • n o• IC 81ic lot. muc h mor1 l•A .. llltn '"'~ ~711 'AM ".AM Ownt-1-will finan<'t' N" ;uu;!, Hr , n., OCUH Vl!W rrt'd.Jt nt"'"Cit"d Sl55000 am~)'hne '4l.~•llO Fu ll u111· 11 ,11 1 .11 r 1· b•l•nre i\a k I or t d !IW ~ N•·~1 .. 1rt U1•111 h lol 1n lht• (.~ 004 )t55 t''tlw.IV\' l(UIJfflt'd .:.at.-~for s• 120 0 l'otnmun1ly ul 11 11111111 2 &NTS/ .. aelt View •••• ••••••• ••• •• ••• • •• • I( 111.i •· w 111 1H 1 o 111 lHR,2 b•PJ.IJS<!JIJt, lh., .OAt·rn w n•tUu1himntc 11lUC.IJ1h' 11 knn1-. <ourt & retttal. 1 door I ro111 & 11tN'11lfl 111 Nu t:~!!lt•rn l 11 II J ;11· k C.: U'l lt• 1 u t beach. 1254..500 l'A fk-1tut rnln lwk~tl, 1714)1>40 hl7fi Mu1•1111b So. C.af leolty 1>mall twn & Modtx N.1l I lrvllltd Uly Cu 54 ... 5605 t:i't~1 ~t,.rby $.35.000 Will 1 r11d1• 3 NUU dlvld<•cJ ---Ji>t..,, t.ui. V1·.111u .. for <'11,,h, CUSTOM HOMI C:.....rclal ~"'a"111t, t·11r, d1amund11, l..AST Of.'7 4 Br. J lb, mu~r bdrm '-...,.ty 1 l>OO l'lt' •ii'-WWI mreat, 2 ll"l>IC!i , rornwl ••••••••••••••••··~···· W1ll l1Jdl· 21,., n·i.ort ar rt'\ duWac, 3 ea.r 11arar(t>, ap Nl';W SllOf'l'IN<, on l11ke 111 1"ho N1·vull11 prox 3000 sq. fl 2297 I.a ('t;NTJ-:lt for ,.._,h .,~1li,;1al, 1·.1r, Lmda Court $1Hi.~OO Newport Urnr h /\rt·:• 01.1mo ncl ' .:olll. \•l1• Owner/A•ent. 5S2 4H~. Tnplc net h.•J M"'• l'•r'>t 1':1!>700 " yt'an. rent ~u:ir Jnlt·ccJ 642-2164 or673 00112_. _ Pnme h1Kh traffic i·ounl lttmchH. fanM, Po r Sele by 0 111 1f1•r 11.000 Sq IN.>l rcntubh' Gro•~i 2700 Beaut1ru1 6 m os ol'd apace $780,000 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Newport Terrace condo Geon,e EldM Co. 100 a <'Tes 4 l>ffd11 l.:J'*!> pn 't l. M.i1n1 M2 Jtl().1 1-:A..'t'fSll>t' 3 br I bD (fl)lt t.'nrl bark y. ro Nr ahc1pvlnH & 11c·hc>0I'> M!'t() $40 M~ Mg «11 l'\lt'll So.12!'1 ftt-di·r le Ur t. lld(•. .car ford P•llo Marrwd l tACVlt-, nu j>t'lll Mll tOOK llt••r 2 Ok w l yard. no &>.ts. ~ 'tuldr\·n OK 1m l.toomon• Av4: Uon'l dia lurb fronl l~nanl ~ 11111 :!IJ 7V1 UIUI tlYl"ir. .-Ht ot 3~ dt-n. 2 U.a, nu 1·rpt, frµk din rrn. b: w r v ix>rrh \lo 1w11hr & <1J )'I , blliu.11, bk Y HJ, $:.<JO b4'.1 4:,aa 1t1•k for Al1rn (~Ullt'I 1134 !iJ93 foA"i'~IUJo:, 3 Ur I Ua homt>, $450 mo. Ask ror fHty, 1~9161 : 64.f 22'70 J bdrm t 1·'t ha Condo l(aruii •,pool, r>ot10 Ntoar S t'Ottlll l'l a.tu $410 ti40 07~ I Br . E side t\.'le for 1 qWet JWrson $22S/mo. Call M.S-~ Npt Ill:. 2 Ur duplex h'flet'd yard. adlts. NO l'i':l'S SJ:lS li11~1wtr pd fj/J~ Lovely J l:Ut. 2 ba. rdnR. <hhwsr. t:.i.1de Avail 11 I, $450 759 1914 ----o-roint 3226 Prune loul1on. r;gl sly 6JJ-3400or acre lor l<anc•h1•' ur _ e nd unit, 2 Dr 2 Ila , 644-8751 Farms nellr olfolfo l1C'ld-. ••••••••••••••••••••••• w /g•rage. 548 -8038 oy Ownel'll Term!. f''or Wr. 2Ba ocn view condo. Priced be low mkl :1l ---------•I 1nru <'•II 531·736:i or On cliffs above mannn $83.000. OfffCEIUILDIHG l·2S3-S2<» Pnn only $485. m o 499-4663 LIDO ISLE 4 small suiles, $89,900 -anytime ___ _ JUST LISTED Near Bnat.ol & Baker. Refttals tt.wtbclon l.ach 3240 T ot a I w a r m t h a n d 1.c.·M_A.gt._.548_· 1.7•29 ___ •1 •• •• ••• • •• •.. • • • • • • • • • • • •••••••••••••••••••••• e legance. All n e w HoMMIFuntlthed 4 OR, 211'1 ba, w:1lk lo thruout. Single story on 133' OCEAN FRONT •••••••••••••••••• • •••• n<'t'lln. ~ mo. Ask for extra wide IOl al qult>l D c· au t 1 f u I CO M W,00 liland 3 I 06 Keith, 962 4471 end o( .Island. Gorgeous. Ml!:RC1AL LOT. No San ••• .. ••••••••••••••••••• ---- Irv._ )244 Udo l11le J Ul t. 3 ba, Z300 ••••••••••••••••••••••• MJ ft . drp11, bltnt. 4 yrs Luxury 28r 2ba W H old i900 fl31 )237 Arborlallc twntu.e 2 t·ar l:Ull <;onyon Hnrdeux 3 br , -""'"· lrpk . laund rm, n r 3 ba. }o'r't nr h rtry kit 'liakt!' VIACanl $:100/mo or St:K>O mo D•Y• 7~ ll31. l11l•IOpllo n . H93 1370. K37-0668eves $ Ul33 or «-S900 ftwiche> S..n Joaqwn :-,an Lias Rey Mdl Unu\uul d~corutor upR rade~. view. pool. spa Nr lennii. & l(Olf roursc. (Ju1t'l $625/m o . 5 44 -20!'>4 , M6924G J BR. 2 ba Turtlerod 3BR 2ba Lido Isle, NH Call Beruwn 586-2384 LUXURIOUS! Ss>m·10U.'\ 3rd noor tondo on th4! bayfronl on Lido Penuu ulu. 2 Udrms + dt-n, cxpensl'le carp.-l 1n1i. mirrored bar. d11 luxe lutt hcn. 2 sundeck1 $1000 Per month. HHOKl-:lt 673-4400 or Wells . 645-9950 J Br condo, nr school. •-hach 3248 ahopptng, I V. Ru S475 --r-mo Owne r 640-0192 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 S T O R Y SUN N Y SPANISH 2 br .. H~ bt1. w a lk / be ach I t own ~/mo. Adults Av:.111 rrud-J an 494·2764 ----------Spectacular view 2 br. studio. 3 ba. bltm .. frpk. deck. pati o. pr1 vac), m any x l ra s . $650 4.94-734 1 ------- MOBILE H OM E 24x6-0. comer lot, adlts. no pct~. ocn view. &t2-657 l llarl>or View Home 3 Br, 2 Bu. gardening int i Avail Jan 6 MIOO 640·0l71f. ~10or546-847 1 NF:WflOHTSllOJlt:l-> J bdrm, 2 balh. n1•wly de l'f>rat.ed. r1replate Va· cant. S62S mo Barrett ruty. 642 5200 ON WATt:R with boat slip 2UR. nt•w t'Pl/puint S750 per month. l.olJ-toHlls 3250 OCEANFRONT 38Jt ••••••••••••••••••••••• NEW4Br.J8a. lg ram rm . home. S h orl te r m nr schls, s hoJ>6 & fwy. m>imo. SIX)() mo. owner 1162 0925 2RR near beach $375/mo or892·7530afl 6PM LJ\OUNA llP.AC:JI MTR INN $76/wk & up Maul M'1'V • C'Olof' TV. ht-11ted pool Ulll (7141 4~ ~294 eN Coaalllwy ... ..,....... 371>9 ••••••••••••••••••••••• !>¥J'EPS TO a•;ACll 2 br 1:u Adlts, 110 prtir Avail lo June 26. S325 613«AO ltaht frOflt S27S (;JU:AT rn:nH.A110'1 ~w1mrnwl( 'uvn.... l ht-.11lh duh•. h1ll1.ircl .. n 1 .i h I I 11: ht 1• 11 t 1· n n 1, rourt.. l'ro &. 111 o 'hop i:oll 1lrt\1r1i: r .1111!1•. p.irn room l''UN l\C1'1V IT l l-:S fl1U11mt• tltrt>t•t1ir frc·•· SUnllay hr unrh. II Ill) " ((II'\. l'•HI 11''· 'llf•rl twtnJm1•nt' & mori·' 111-:i\lrrt l''IJI. /\ l"T !.. ~nl(ll',, l&l lw'<iruum' f"urn ~ unfurn Mc11lc•I' "IJt•11 IJ.11ly IO 111 1 ll11om 111.111· '"n 11 1· ·" .111 '\11 l1•i1'1' (l'QUI f1•cl <.,1111 \ .. cJulh only. no iwt .. Oakwood Garden ApArtfl\(·nts M•...,..,.. INcll/Monto KK() lrv1n1· 1.11 Iii h • 6't5~ ... .....,, e..11/S-"i 17(.(J t&h St 1 llov1·r ol 16th 1 642 11170 2BR t:orona dcl Ma r --------- WntWte VIiiage lk11ut1ful IJruncJ 1ww lildult apta No pets Pool, j11C'\W.1. Opt•n wr('kdays 2 6. Wttk~nd11JO 5 OM w 19LhSt (l.ti('h ~) $;11'5 I Br S2'.-, S.'!05 :t llr SJJ.'1 ~I TSL Ml(mt 842 t003 2 Br. duldrt!'n welcom1'. · no pct.I StartJng at S27o UAMONIW 2 la 3 IK. 2 hll , 1111 ~lt·ctnc· <.A,vert.'d p1nkin.: 137~ lo 1 4 7:.. mu t.UU W lla m1lton 831S 29 17 or f"2-Wl4 ' ll't'>UJt Sf.:ASONS AM'S Spite. i br l4lwnh1>u11t, l "'1 IH1. pvt IJJl lll, pool l\clult"' $;J(IO 7~ Jnunn St 1,146 fl4k3 f'VI'~ l l)(lrm I Im tur Por1 . l'Jl)t dr&J>("b, lndry fut·. good IOC Nu ~Lo; 1280 mo 271 E llllh P l 644-002 3 Br. 2 ha townhousr 4 u 11· t & d u II I 1 v 111 I( t:11dot~1 l(llr Ai JlllllO No f)(1.8 $4(.(/ M5 3;Ai t 1>r 8'7S.5949 mo~ -----·- 2 UR. 2 ba. dlshwa•ht'r. encl a•r. 2 blka from bt-ach ~ AdulL'I, no ""~ !)(J)~ Vila rac.fflco Hett MeorOce• Junior I BR . l BR & 2 lllt, i llA Serurt ty pro v1(Jo>(I by pvt kt•y t•1mi 1·n l r y ll I t n k 1 l t· h w/lumJrl<>Ull l'IJ(4 Plu111l carpet, lge pvt p&tlO or b 1d conlf!'8 w /x 1r a storage. Poot, spa, lillht t-d tenn11 court. lndry facll Limited preview rentall Jo'rom $290 pt•r mo Modelll open d aily IOA M In d u s k 21~ W ac h 1l a A ve lal Yorklown I Ste 409M. MiSA PINES 714·5.16-4455 ------1 Bit $JJj 2 BH S.'1110 C!f~ Spat· 2 txtrm :ipl 2 Pool, J»l'Wll. ~<1r avail KiiiA (J K Avail now Adult!-., n•> pets 2650 A!Ur<I :io r>11l K47 0967 Jlarla A Vl'. s.49 2447 Neur new townhsc. 2 Ur, llACHWOOD APTS l 'n ba. g.-r. fncd pal . l9l.32 Magnohc. I.gt' I hr, ~ mo. 64~ P M & avail now $285 2 Br. 2 ha $33S I lia , 1 & from wknds _______ 1 $260 S2K~. uva1I J an . $375 2 br. I 'tz b1t1 twnhse Gar. (pk, puUo, Jeood loc Bllnli . pool & J<ICUl.l.1, 962-!Jm to:-side TSL Mgmt 642 IOOJ New 28r, fri>I. patios. M'<' galA!, adlt.s t702 t1on da IJeaut 2 BR. 2 ba, Me!\a atAdarm5J6..4729 Dnve. nr S A Cnlry --Club. Pvt fncd yard. 2 Near ~ach, 2 br, 2 ba up· carport w/slOragc•. S435 per, encl 1 i;:a ragc . Nu mo 673-81.19 t>Jl 1106 w1t1Ler beds. Adull'I only -___ _:__ No P l'l S 2170 2 l a r ge brick pa tio. 3 Utl.'l(O Cly $280,000 llAYF'RONT 2BJI, 2 lw, N1•w-ele1tanl·2 bt.'<.lroom ~rms +small ofrici· Owner /Agt. S uho11l 123 F.. lluylronl S(i9!J $5SO,or.2 bedroom .+den l.arge master w/loads of lenm. 7141434-1735 llkr Herb21J/478 JS77day1o. $575 Ct'dar & window 3 Or, 2 ba, $450 ~ utll Avail Feb. lsl i'':un1 ly, no pet.~. 768-4 l l 6. 54.'IOlmo WahrirCMtt Holftt1 Ul-1400 2 BR roll aJ(e. ,l(ar agc. B rookh u r s l. $32~ 962 077fl IAYFtlOKT washer /dryer hookup, Condo. 2 DH. 2 ba .. year· $400 5.52 12f~ __ 2 bdr . 2 ba ., frpk , ..::ar . l'io6rtsparn. Lovl'iy f1oor ----home'. 1''1vv blocks tn plan allows for totally lncaDProperty 2000 Hwtlitwjona.ach 3140 but•h l'ri\lale 2-rar N<.-w 2br 1 ba on lakl'. frplc, A /C. rec fil cll ly,~~ElfflOHT I Ur. t'r p l i., d rupt•<;. lndry rm' S:lGO ~ rNlH private guest suite or ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• lt~l' Fully ma1n - mrud's. S399,000. Call CK· 3 OM A LOT 2hdrm Rt•arh C.:011do. ten ta yard Adults. Nu dustve Auent for appt. lo nis. rvv.I, Rt·•· r m & pets lnqwre at 525 llflh "' F.a.sts 1de CIX la M <'Sa 3 ,. ~~ Street I 71 o 960-6331 see. Beth 96-4 2'43l <Jr :.eparate houses on rnr s ;iuna $450 t>t>r mo · · _ _ _ _im-02 __ 1_1_P_a..;g;...c_r _lf_96_l_5_. __ 1 ll(~ loL Super loc·ullon ,213-874-00~---2 llr w/gar. S295. Crpt, SW ,000 HlwpcMtt.och 3169 ~~yd, water pd. 2710 IUYDIRECT ROMOWMH SAYES8,000 ••••••••••• •••••••• •••• I> l>eluware 636-4120 Magn1r1ceot beachfront 1 ~ ----- $400 67a...i634 ---4 Br 2'"1 Ba pool home, l.olJ-toM~ 3252 nice residential a re 11. ••••• • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • S700 mo 1115-2607 4 Bdrm, 2 ba. Fa m rm Atrium, all blllns. Oceun view, pvt bH cb. Niguel Shores S800. 79-1465 EaslbluH 3 UH. 2 ha. dt-n, fn<'rl yard . Avail now. $ID) '159-l9 I 4. 2 8 R b I u .. ,. carport. kids OK. $240 ~bi~Oa~t _ . I a,yriy.~ OCEAHNOMT mo Nodo)(s 11711 OIJG SUPER I br, pool, i.tllr. 2 BR, I ba • wnl.r. $500 2 HR 2 ba all cf('{· n1>w (ri>lc. lrees S27!'> Adulll;, STEPS TO IEACH Cov'd paMung. 310 Vic· 842·~. 64.2-5251. ----3 8R,2ba,wntr $425 ';On a O~~r/ARI. S375 l MO ,.'R EY.llENT JBR,2ba . yr ly S675 642·2164. 552 4894 3 br, 2 ba. frplc, all. gur. ~ ::: ~ e:. ;~~;. = :: Br I Ba. crrls· draJ>(.'5. sm ~ <kean/ronl 3Hr yrly S450 PAU UDO fm t yrd. !\m itar Avail $4W S425 Sp_a_c_w_us_n-ew 2 llarbor View Knoll, Jbr. i'n-levtJ, cape (;od ('on do-Open s p arl· view every room . Tennis POOi. VIR ass umable loan. P06s. lease opl1on sm .ooo 640-4848 /(" r €HIG€ HOM€~ :m:J W Coast flwy, N H 645-6646 76UNITS West Newport homto 5 4 Bdrm .. 2"'2 ba , twn~e I Bdrm , 2 baths +dor m blk.tobcach.Ocn .v1ew. loll. SllOO/mo.lo Ju11e frp , 2 ca r j!ar S650. Yrly lse possible 9~5871 536 1 !156 or i\ n n a at N IGU EL SH ORE S Spacious• bdrm. 21.-.i ba, ram rm, beach . tenn1:. $635/m o. 493·62U3 or 831-1453 Nlct' 3Br 2bath Lido 2 IJR, 2 ba, frpl. Pool. i:1~ Afl 7,S7~2ff __ br.2•,hat.ownhome apts Sands home $625 Adult.& 1395 &SIDfo: 2br. Iba. sndck. wtluxury features Small 2 Bachelors ava1labl(' garg Adults. S2S5 pet ok. Call for movl• info 16021.sl S48 2127 Genunl Really 839.f'JllZ.1 OHWATER s11:•cou..-ay JOM671J..RJl>ty21'ohtc. ~IREB> •ns Lovely Townhouse Apt 2Br home wnh BOAT 3 HR Z UA Nt:W (;RP'l'S -"'" "~"" "" . ' 1 Bdrm & 1uft S320 f>ool. 3DR 1 . 2b~. ~1 k1<> n•""' SLIP . S6SO/ m o 1st-U fl I'S , W AL K T 0 t 'orleaseopUon. Elt'ganl ---------• Jac"'", d··~·-' "ar""C'> _S44c.I mo I h964 sm_ 967 ~I Mmn Christmas ··~ MlcJd '""° -~. ~~-· Marhta Rulty 642·8850 lyOWNER Low rent. Take over \l'h'k loan No vacanr1~·i; Propeny located al 10411 West 2nd St , Rialto. CALL 54~3676 for mlo. Bknt welcome 4 B.I. duplexes 101'1 bayfrout to be ext'h. ll11w n 10 u p.kg . 213/&14·3200 f'unushedorunfurn rH :AC ll . $490 M O . 3 8r,2 & condo. Moun ----------........ '"'"" .. v" WoterlrOftt Homu 1213)431 3125 tain Views. Walk to ten s-a....nte 3276 Oceanfront dlx 2 Br, 2 Ba, Ga::. & wt.r pd Adult.,, no Spar1ou .. 3 R R . full', 00 -'"~ .,_,. courses •· 3 ., ••••••••••••••••••••••• avail from Feb. to June. ~ J93 llam1lton, l' M dshwi.r. 4-plex. SJ50. 631-l 4 I' I u ~.· h 2 b r • 1 ,,, b a '""'• .,uu "' • .. -------Tow~house. lR Y;.~ or miles t.o beach. $.550. mo. Ocean Halls Condo. 3 7~~. _64S-44_ _1_1 _ IM7·7846 LI----•t....L.-;-'--.... older. <.:fits, drps. dish 1._8•y•o•wne-r •.• 77•0••08_11 ___ bdrm 2'h ba frplc • ..iolr OCEANFRONT lgl' de 3Dr, 2 1-)fla, f rpl c, New 't l Br. ti blh w ~~n~ h > • Ii• course,pool,O<'ean v1cw, l .. vaJbr.dshwhr.W/U,2 t /d f b l I •••••••••••••••••••••••wu.'l t'r vt pat10,poo . No peL'l •• 75 per mo ......... c p s r p,.r e r1 ~. eac.cs m ccrnr , l • .... .!> e!!'ac i.auna Walk Mguel '"·-r..., 4 br 2 b" · ... · car prkg, adlt.-;. no pe L" wshr/dryr, vrly lse, $500 refn "'. all bit in!>, g.1r . 6-neral l202 c ..... ' ' · ..,.,., ~.. ' '" _842·393.'ior 661 ·001_ IJ7___ AvuJI. J an Ii w June 13. 1 " ••••••••••••••••••••••• t.obch. · 11 962·:>339. Sea Terrace. Plan J on mo 6423443 fr•'\' lndry & more. s:ioo Uke new, big 4 DH condo NlCF. 3Rr. l l\41la, Ii: fn<'d ~· lot. Newly patnled So.cfacuklr View s:n_5_67_3_-664_o____ llcaut. l(roun<b. nice & mo 960-5742--- & encl gar. Rec "'ar1I yet, frplc. 1M82 Tha mes ~l~· j!~::"!zr~ ~~~1h' 21l n ~ Jba, pool. golf .Af.!a huwftfs qwl't Adult.s. no J.H'l~ 3 .,...,._ 3844 ScoltRealty,536-7533 l.n.S475mo.548·12511 c o u r 8 c . UlifurMllMPd Br bun~alow l'•lO I. ••••••••••••••••••••••• W END LJt fom honw 3 • Plus2on R200' hwld:thh· lot. S285M 7101 St•ui.hon>, owner Wiii t•on-.1dn Condotrade 645-MlO IEACHFOCER SI 15,000. San Clemcnlt• Tn l'lf'x, µnc'f'd to sell Well locat<'d 2 I I BERTHA II fo:N HY REAJ.TOHS -.............. -_ ·:._..,.--3206 ---675-4i892 : 551'2338· Yrl y ht' $450. Ph ••••••••••••••••••••••• Jacuzzi & bbq area i\lso *DDILIO NEW* -1 .. -,.., MIJ.F, l''llO M B EACll Pauo home near the Sl'il 673 2031. 640 5777 ....,_ r1•...ea 3807 2 br townhou11e. lnq 171 DftftR ••••••••••••••••••••••• Xlnt l'Ond 4 br. 2 b11, on Monarch Summit. :! ~__... -3280 ••••••••••••••••••••••• t: 22nd St , 1110 645 249H nay t'ronl upper unit Jbr, frpl<'. ~atlo. on <'Ul·de Br. 2 ba. all adull hvm" _.a AM • .. _ b yfronl V''d; IP 2 '"··· r I "-,,.... lk f ""I " •••••••••••••••••••••• • LA.&A. u .: ~ """ rµ l'. oµcn .,._-am. sac ·~ rom r. emen· ... »<_ Mo to mo or leabto Bdrm Oa bo lof • .,, .. L h I N t _. .,. __ .. , d h 8 . 2 . eon o. ltt sm t -.'>O hrst, a:.l lary sc oo . o pe s Q).8815. ouuior twn m, 4 r. !\lip avai l. Ye:ar l y &deposit 67s.4434 $575 Call af\er4, 968 3636 -------t!OC gar. f vt pa 110 . S750l mo. 67s-6775 CLEAN. qwt>l 2 llr. I 1111 no pets, 19tl l Mar11e S275 p er mo . liJ l 12611 RF.IMAX IRVIME'S NEWEST Al'T COMMUHITY Delightful Hedecor aled humr 1n Newport Heights flt·Bdy for the d1srnm1nulrn1>: farruly to mov1· int•> 2 Bdrms .2ba 215 Del Mar 4\12 412t 7 UHITS.C.M. rk•aut new bu1ld1n1t. fo"IN"places. xlnt location 'T'Sl. lnvmt.s 642 1603 IREAJ< EVEN 15%DOWH 4-Plex & Sngl Family Ai:.ume. Sellt>r will carry pa per. Mngml nvall Agenl. Gary U lbiler 96CM3811 or 536-24 911 Pnnclpals only --- ---Mtwport lffdl 3269 U)5/mo. Cal 752 0260 ------lalM>a r~ 3207 4 Br. 2•n ba. nu S & S ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ _...._ 1 _,.. 3286 l200 utJI pd. 1 Rr 11"plex. ••••••••••••••••••••••• G<>lden West fo:.'ltat es. $1SOO. Modem 3300 sq rt .-n __,..... stove & refng, no pel.S I bdrm. cottu.il' Clol>l' Gour met kitche n. h m cu stm 2 s t y. 4 RR . ••••••••••••••••••••••• 547-1155,6'736243 wlllk t.o lM!ach, s hopping rm w/wet ba r, for dm'g. w/pool. l.rg Back Ua)' 381'. lBa. maturc adlts, -- & park. S375 mo indd 3-car gar. S135/mo Incl lot.645-71&3 eves. re{,$(2::1mo nopcts.ocn Luxury bayfront :I br, z util 223 32nd St. IS75-7367 Ra.rd Call 968-4fi02 '11ew. uUI pd 499-2170 ba, dock incl. $1000 mo 968-651111 • HARBOR VIEW HOM ES --------1 673--4928 Corona del Mar 3222 ~ Carmel Model 3 bdr m 2 WaJk to beach. cozy adobe.> --------3242 ba. fa m, r m . dbl. gar 1 lU< hse Pvt cov'd I IR, YHl"'fy ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• gardener incl $675 J>('r pallo. fplc. beam re1I S2!Kl mo • 646-2030eves Open beams & sprw111us, :1 S<ucUo condo, with view mo. Call 644-7691 1nwi. C99-174J. br, 2 ba & frpk Yt•1trly l'ool & Jae, across from HouNi Funtf-llMPd----11 Br, lower apt wlcarport. Olli 557 ~ u:.k for Mr beach S375 IM?-4525 UDO ISU S ldnn Uurfwftithed °llOO 67 no., ~ $200 mo. Call Collins 1,...,t..=-324,. 138 Via Trieste Sfac1ous .......,.,, inc' "' horoe w lg e Iv Ing ••••••••••••••••••••••• - 2 RR. 1"7 balh home . 2 car ••••••••••••••••••••••• r m + de 0 . 1 mm a l' ---------• Cclfhtn.o ..... 3118 Large Eas t:.1d1•. llrund Nt•w' 2 bdrm 2 b.i L>uplex, Crpt!>. dra~·' r:NI . Close Lo everythmg ad.Its. no pets S.l.lS per mo. 645-6043 or 646 6429 Brand ne w 2 UH. I 1:1 ba Tnwnhomc. pvt pJl10. fplr. <'nc l gar. UH 612 5T.!'.! :I Br 2 Ba. cpti.. drps. <'Ull)Ort. patiu. chlldn•n OK , $350 mo Avl Jan 5 Aft 1·:.>. 7,51·2636 l!arage & deck. S450tmo. SPACIOUS $1250/molse. MOllLIHOME ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~:'.~~rrun t ll o m t-3 fam ily ho me. 2.050 Wat.erfroot l lomcs INFORMATION Townhouse 3br. 2'1'.!ba , Newly redccoraWd3 br,2 11qua re fool lla rnpton 1 ____ 63_J_._1400 ____ Rent,.optlonlobuy ln.fo, ~h~:~reSn3,7 ~0m;~t : ba , crptsl drp11 w/bltn HERITAGE POINT l\n apl rommun1Ly lie signed w1lh you in mind relllunng 8 3poc1ous floor plans Fum1sht.'d o r un furn ish e d I 2 & 3 b~d room apt i. l m - roodrnle ()c('upant'y FEATURING •Park hke selling. •Li ghtOO tennlS courts •RecreaUonal fac11Jlles •Pool &Jacuzz.1 •Gas RBQ •Sparkling clean laun· dry ••••••••••••••••••••••• $18,500 PY UNIT 2 HR hse w/yard, 110. uf ll1way $450. No pets 675-5000. 640 ~I model m Gn,.'t!ntrce. 4 'or 3 1 2 b 1 1 1 repo 1• loan assumption 1 t ••""' ""k7 .stove. enc . 14arau£' SJ50 5 bedroom. 3 hat h. :! Jr, a. l(C enc pat 0 · titC. E&Ay rinunce 0 .1\.C ~ !>.'l7 42.3)1 h .. .,.,,. h Gardener Incl. No pets. •Garoen pul10k1tchen ·~n beum ceilings CATALINA SUNSETS SSS,500PER IUILOtHG AVEttAGE Two tn -plexes & one 4· plex with 6 two bNlroom & 4 one bedroom apls in e xce llanl a r e 11 o f Ri veraid e . WHI 1•x. change! $185,000 Tolal. 752-1920. 2 Br homl.', 11duJts. no J)t'ls, g;.iral(e gardener 1425 mo.67~7258 3 Br, 3 ba. frpk, blt.os. ut1I room. Agt 675-5930 ----Costa Mesa 3224 ••••••••••••••••••••••• story orr1e -. ... ,; monr · $525 M6-~S8 9ofnces. C....d9t M• 3822 <~el Mesa V1•rdt• ~ hd rm Mobl'4t "°"9 Store .. ••••••••••••••••• • •• • $300 b t. & 111.~t lt..t r('q QUIET Walk tu bl•uch rondo. 2 or. Anaheim 956-\0ll 2 Br upitalrs, frplc, snrm, 498-1936 aft !'> 1.~00 i1quare fool 3 2'h ba, WID. gar. Pool. SantaAna ~7070 lg sndk, beam Ct>tl, l(ar . bedroom. 1114 huth. foml · 559-8182 EutAnahe1m 956-4500 nr ocean. 5425. 752-7811 . ly room . country kitchen, w. Anaheim 701·1442 eves 875-9115 O~rge or a ir condltl()ned hor,w 4 RR, very m ce are •. 1859 Wealm.lnater , Ml·889S 8'75-31177 Bob. $500/mont h. Ai.k ror Port Taggart Pl Incl. --------- TWNHSE, 21lR, l 'hlla , fplc, pvt pat .. gar, nl•W paint. A.dJt.a, no pets. '300 mo. 541.5479 • K10JC~1ie bedrooms •I .arae walk-In closeb • Pnvule dressing area:. •Al'ccnted walls. Near comer or Walnul &- Jeffery off S. /\. fo'rwy. (71415$9·7000. sorry no t.'raii BaUel.631·1266 aardener . wate r $700 ---------2 bdrm. l ba. Walk to RE/MAX mo. Ava ilable n ow . 2 br. 2 ba. duplex by beech.Closelo11hoppm11. I.GE Bachelor Unit, pvl pets. ~tal center open REALTORS r.i&-1152. 644·5789 wet.er. NR $42:1. Man na 673-9U4 ReautlfuJly upl(rucJ1•d :> BR. 2~ bath Townhome with magnificent ocean view. E xtras 1ncludc Coming lop ranae. sic oven. rire plocc, extra closets & Uor a1tc. p allo+2 ba lcon ies . 2 pools, 9 bole pitch & putt Rolrroursc. Move in con dluon Only S79.950 J_ 9UAIL PLACE ---------•I Wal.nut Square r ondo , VII· 4 IDRM N>OL HOME cant; 2 BR, WIHar. Only T78 Alleahe ny ~.<Ml~ Ne wport S hor c11 . 3hr , RealtyS42-88.'50 A •ailable ___ J_•_2 __ atri um, jaru u l. nr. Cs11h n•A-J,ovely ZR R uppe r beach. Peta ok. S550. U.Mwl•d 3425 w lflr t>platc, privale pat lo, bllna, e le n o _dal_l_Y_9_a_m_lo_6_P_m_. -- cluldren or peu, 12.sO mo. •New 1 br, pool. te nnii;. U IO Vict oria 646 3197, Ould ok, $335. No pets. 8334J105 m.897•. A"'HULTHY" OPPOITUMITY PlorHTlfS"' 10,-TM l :JO '..M.I TAX llHlffTS: 4 Bdrm 2 both, f1replare. lJmv Park Tt>rr 2 bdrm 2 h•nc:cd y11rd , <'Ov~n·<l bu pool, j111·un.1, HU llJC<' p11t10 SS7S mo Nr Soulh opener S4n 551.111112 Coa.'it r1uw 648-7980 eve. ••••••••••••••••••••••• JMltlO, encl ll•r North of 3 Br. l \.IJ ba, dbl iar . Im Oout HJ1hway No pel.$, med. p0s1 294 1 Br•d· no childre n. S42S/mo. llACH $650/MO Yrly ut11tin Paid Large 2 111.ot')' hom1" blf 3 Rr Twnhome wtrrplr. rooma. vaulted/beams. 2 ford $.185 mo. Call Pat ~1167~231\ 90H lll lOor9fl30!J61 ROOERSREALTY 2 Br. 2 ba & stove & rf'ln~ Brand new 2 BR Condo, New crpt.a & drp.. No pool, j11ruuJ, tt•nnl~ ell:., r hllflren or pets 646·43M2 ni> pets, $465. 833· HIU3. CodaMna 3824 ............. 3141 Ideal bustnee1 opportunl ty for hlflhly mot.1vAted Jnd p r o1t r c1111lv t• .W..pl'rle>n Interested In health & nulrtUon !>lOrt• with Shaklee wholesale Four Plex. Od rt'ntnl <.:lose to •h<>Jll' & b'"' MULHIAIH Rffftyletittfto 754-1100 ~ '1 t .., t.. II I< I \I I) 7~1\ I '0111 H•1 fv•on1 dt' ltl11 and r~tall dh1trl bulor ---------located In Lucky Shop-IMMID CLOSING Brand new 3br, 2'~ba, frplc. Dbl aarA. pool & plni; t•<mtcr with fnn Mobile Hotne ,... j,.cuiil. 5 ml.n to bch Yr·, lMtic wal.k·ln traffic. All Seller lo carry Trual Ty lease No pell!. $525 equipment & Inventory Deed. 334 sptm.'IJ. Purl Ml\·915'7183$-11643. l.P<'ludc'<I In prlco. Call KOA, 1% <'u11h retu rn. -------nowforalldcUlllJ, ~llGla Aaent. 3 bd.rm. lrg. fenced yard. V11W RIAi.TY Or1ve by 2030 N•tlonal -L7722 77"0555 FA.st C-Olt.e Meaa, 4 re-U U p er. m o Ill. Unlvcr1>1ty l'urk . $~25 h~f' bt"drooms. 2ba, Af hwt..tt Furwlst..d - mo. Dr Tapper 64:>-1920 I , deck. 2 pall08. J!a• ... ! ................. . 8 , O/W, refng. Encl ........___ 1_.__. 1706 • ....,.. "'LS pr. work apace. l11und - -IN',_. hlllq>. 1 child. no pcta. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 28 R,2ba ...... 1525 Oreathouse.96().58« 4 RR, 2 b8. O/W, Crplc 2 IJR, 2"" bu . . . ~1475 ---------Oar. year round IMO 3 BR. l't. bo ........ $47S 6'15·b:IOO 3 BR. 2 ba ....... '47M550 THI ILUFf$ ..... ,, ..... -.-.,7-0-7 3BR.21,.,b1 .. 1625/MO , Bdrm 2'-'· ba • 3 BR "b" .,,.... . • .,.,, .•••••••••••••••••••••••• •" "· · · · · · · · · _, fam/klt. + formal din• 4Blli,.2.,...ba ... ~1 1095 In~,· freahJv palnled. S2:iO yrly. S rnal.l 1tudlo. 1 3 BR, I h11. SMO/Tu11tln " adull •lrt ~k It ul ll pd 4 BR. 2\'6 be *1000/Npl. c l> fl clean. Move In n.... • • • nowetMOO mo. r•.t>e~ &·3063 - •••••••••••••••••• i •••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• .. ----------------I BEDROOM. 1., BLOCK MediterraneanVillag •Bear1'fld ceilings, wood paneling •Grasscloth waUcovering •F ireplaces, wet bars •Dlshwash.ers, walk·ln cla&ets •Balconies patios •Park·llke \and3caping •Swimming pool&, JjCUW •Lighted tennis courts TO BF.ACJI. $350 Pl.;tt MO. 494-:rlSJ. 20CEANFRONT AM'S 1 nr. '385. Bach '22!1. Util Inc. 538·0321. 494 ()687 , 99J·21M r---~----~-Mt.,.. .. och 3169 ••••••••••••••••••••••• N'1$. 3 br, 2 ba, balrony, encl. 1ar•1e. All blt.ns . bllllobeech. Yrly. TSL M1mt 642-U'..03 e,entMO-~ ?.::~~ ....... ??.~~ ..-rr ,.,.. ~lf'Ct houu11 on lot. lu t-tflOO Children J>Cl3 -------fo'or Sale by o wner OKCallW·9305 •Minutes to freew ays & beaches 3 Bdrm. 2 ba, quJet a ru . ~ ..._~ 071 96.3-6383 3 OR. wall-wa ll r-J>tA-. -rn-<'d 1 w I llG 4 Pl.IX rear yd $380 ~ t~ ~•n ••••• ••••••••••••••••• 381'2 Ba, I.M n • dlnln& It A.akin• ooly SI 12.~0 -~o Av~ 7141249 5236 . .. fang. M..-l MU faal. Prtnc. on fa.mil¥ rm . poolalae yard. J.)'.8cOU ReaHy63G·?"3 3 bdrm 2 ba. 1.nl"ll.-ynrd new c~ Ct paint. t.\ No pett Avall Jnn 10 mi to beach. lmmecl, oc· Maki you r a ho pplna Call alt 4 WA 06ll :M\36 ~ney. J97..IOO, Prtn euierbyuslng the Dally 2199 M eyer N •ur _,, -Z211$ I?" PUC1' CIU110t-d Ada Harbor Vlrtona t I - 3 8r, 2"' IMI. brand new. SUS CASIT AS l&IO. mo. Nwi>t T•rrac•. lArl• • s mall I bdrm . 2 mllee lo beach 12U ) encT 1ar $245 at up ~ Adult1. no peu 2110 ~· Boal dock 3 bf'. 2"' ba Newport Bl ~ .... -~. s story, ff1>k. blLn 1..&r1• 2 bdrm. AduJtA. No lilllch en. Yr l1 flOO . pell. lnqul r • n oi.. ~5 RocMIUr n1ar - I •aooM t ... OOM & DIH 2 •-I II TOWMHOUSI Adi.lilt Only omco Open Dalty 9to6 'fit. f7141 .. , ... 20 Harber Blvd., Cott• M• eaur. Upper <Seek. yrly. $)()(). ~Aaent Garden •lYI• 2 br. 2 b41, -41lll 11¥101. Sorry no p«a.SWJ.mo,,....m6 snJ.. tdJe ltetm Willi II Dlail1 rue. Cllulllt'd Ad. MNl78. I . . . .. ,... ...~ ..... ,. ............. . , ,. Aas .... "..... Cal ... , ... ...... H ... , ... ,., ~-.. 'V ,,~....... " at I TNtSertke ............................ ..-., ••.••...........••.......•........... ·~····················· .........•...••••.•••......••. : ..••••..••..........• , ............................................................. . 0..wan,~~lll. ,."'-'TIMU?L K •I Wood rtnr 1n1 IOOCStuclent l Ton t.rurk • ROBlN'S llOUS f. Brickwork Small Joba CuatomW1llpapcnnf PERRY'SPLUMBING S~Jc ~~~ln~~~vi:e" llWllA'a W '-UU1 ---""'9•ferirer.p1lr Ttaah, ll'ff tnm Ron C.'1.EANINO SF.RVIC E. N4!wport. ColfLB Metta .. AUWorkGuar. Free ~t. Complete plumbing movab 61,.. ln COHll•I ,._,.,NI Ml •a Ptot 11cmab avallabJe ...,_.., 144~ e.&z $103. M2 mt for u thon>uahly t•lc:an lrvUMt. 875-311~ eve11. 673 4168 services. Draln " sewer area Li lna N2 261A '••f•ce•--'-fara1Jaff1J,. -•• -houu.~? u-&... c leaning . Fre e · c. · · ---• ......-Ba'1mden Seorven ... «LI WlU h.llJ ur rln anyth1na. -.._ • .., Intl Ext. Reuona ble e.Umat.ca. 24 hr sen-ice. wi.dow ,......__'-- ·-•••••••••••-••••••• n up \,;n"WI Coolta ••••••••••••••••••••••• b(J/amaJI oomm'i ur r• TilECLEANING LADY ••••••••••••••••••••••• rates Free Eal Call 673-3181 ___, BAJ AppbanttS.rv CONTAl,. CIHn•UPt . lhullna 11aenu11: rut r•tet tl(klent hlle<-ln'a. reU•· Prol acrv1ce with Alias Rob.Se·28l7 · _________ ,••••••••••••••••••••••• T'RJJ>C'HARC 110 ..aditr Laadacaplnt tmm•d Oall1.A11Jm• 1168-1948 ble acrvlce , re.an rate1. vanunescoetanomore' •-• n.--t-i-Plumbing repair. S~. ln ~~=d ~:.'::: aoas Main. S A fblllL&Utf RrtOU~e' ..-.•C'ln&· MJ.91J0'7 CH"" :S lnlured. M2-3304. Free etl. for loca 11, ..-• _... ...--.. ~lln& & copper re· "'-'. """" ~ IKl101• wfWettrlltf u-209 -ic.APF. T haullo1 in . 11tora1e. & long dist. ••••••••••••••••••••••• pipe. Good price1. Top bleratet ... r ua.64%._..., -NrN Deerh 81 •tf S..k•• cowu l"'rcw ~thnatca W4nt a R1EALLY CLEAN move.a . Stole LI c Pl4JlO tuning & repair. 25 HatPlumblna. 537..JUM Ted's Window Care Prof .... IM I••*' -· -o port 1•• "t t•• ••••••••••••••••••••••• M1-2986. ~ l3llO --HOUSE. C1ll Glngham TlUOIJ. 53'7·3160 yrs exp. Ma.ster'd deg. In ..• ...._. .. 1e~-•-.a at· -as· ••••••••••••••••••••••• _._, -• "' Olrl. fi"reeellt &4~5123 mus ic Thia coupon RoofiftilJ ... ~~ ....... ·~ Sa~• Moo~· •...a. FllfT• l.1t.-haull~·mo111u l( ,.....,,,.,.rilMJ wcrtbSS 8611433 ....................... raie.. ~a.GU-,_, onv .. a)a•Parklo• lot C t lid• Carpenter, pi1nt1nic Gareae·Yll r l ... n1n1 Miyako ltousccleanin~ ....................... · · REPAJR& REROOF. All ;:::=;=======t •Repatn • .s. .. 1.·oatto1• .... •••••••••••••••••• Ree.a reta u >n •n Rauratotll420'70IS &ats.partles.,house3 PETERSPAJNTING ....._.,..,_. tyees -1b1n11~s· ~rSO-' •Lie NB. C"M ~&l'>tt.mod•I repair, •~n area~lm ~c...,s.,..~ ~:~~~11~~ah~w~o Expr'd . Rea1 Rates ............... , ........ rocshakes·compo·tar. ·-~ WMT'! AIJlh&Jte.&-471 <'lrPf'ntr y , old llmt' IDOfTAU. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ · · • Free Eat. Call Gene ~_pakhai4c&exturea Freeest.541·5930 ...., HlW c-_,1 t.. rnaftamamh.lp l 1)'nc In 5e-.c909 Wiii hCluaull bc lwet•n yr1exp.MOAM.8'7M233 M2"°'58 R&IST. ltl-1439 Whitney Roofing. Asphalt TH ....................... .,... U C''d Mr PaJom l212il-ll20 Refa. EitJ)llr l •c...... Pa.lntJ.ng. E.xtr/lnll'. Ex· PA:...,..H Py •"TERINC ahlngle1_ wood sbake$ • 1 ~.o bo GI• • 1JL1 5'2 304), 645-58:i0 ..... _................ 'd hones• t '" Wn..;> guar Yree eat Cal I 1• ~~ '""' .J OlrpeDter Prff f~t Any ............... _ _.. •••••••1••••••••••••••• 1.. M S R S d pr . .. oea • reu. A 11 types F r e e PM. Bob _ c... llb!r Joi» call Allan or ..........._ H~a 1ltl I d • d Ha.. C~ . . .-oto . o or Lic'dSM-lOODave estimat.ea CaU~ HO . . u15-l .... l -..., .... ~ ..._u ~ •-•••••••••••••••••••• ,_,_ . o• tir umkv ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sc e d e d L a w n s . T If~'--. 1 '-Y' t u-. Ill& ltft• wr Sprinklers. Pla ntln~. Prol palnUng. Ext & Int. •1 +1110 ,..._....,..,_ 1 ,..~ •-1 a •• •4 .__._.c . • ....... _~ft •Ht 1'"'7 . LOW C""""' TO YOU Lo R f "'-..... lll•R7 •••••••••••••••••••••• _,...... _.....,., • • -.n ._ ....... ..., "" . .....,. C.:OOtr. Lie. #364419. Ex· w rates. e 5 ... ee ••••••••••••••••••••••• • ~ •••••••••••••~~ •• ,..... Ll4"S'ITUCMS~• M • -8&mple1deascanmake eelli-ntRefs.675·7633 est.536-4780,536.4383 Any pl umbln~. water Landscape ,Creations Ex· .._0 "' • n& ,... your h o me be au t pert sh.ap g thlrminJ Shampoo fl 1team d ll'a n l-.l..tX:'l'RlCl.\N P11t"ed ••••••••••••••••••••••• 67"'881XJ European Landscaper. Fine EKter Painting by serv, leaks. bal rm encl. m · ' ~ ~J Colcw' bnlbt~nen . whl n abt.fret-r1Umale on Small Jobi. l5 Y" exp Top work. Fair price. R. Sinor st ti lna T ceramic \lie. Reas. st.ump removal. 675-2821. .-.. 10mlo bleach. Cleen 1a-•or1maU......., P1wnbl.n.I , •loc, etc C.ill f · ·24ch.. · ry 832-:M68 Ins. .ii ) ...... _,. ,.,_ PtNCl.ill 631 264 Hal.Prodllch Maint. Re s. 646·4871 me.~ssss rs. ---------t llv.d.lnrm,h.allSlS Ava Utftllfld 4173~ lPA ___ 4 ••••••••••••••••••••••• dys/eves • °"'YtMOllllr....,....., .... rm S'7 ~. roucb 110, t•hr EXCELLENT PAINT· Claulfled Ada are the You don't need a gun to '°".._._,_ll'IJOUl'loGel ~. Ouat eUm fl9\ odor &Uma an)'lhlng with a AMWAY C oamotlcs. INC. Reasonable rates. answer to a aucceuful "draw fu t" when you ~-'ty ... ~-. QI( repair, 15 yr.. upr Jt.H' sometl\.ln« yt)Y ":int Dllill' Pilot Cla.u1f1<'d Ad N\lttltion, Hou1ew:-ir1·1. 'Ille fastest draw in the Free estimates. 548·2706 garage or yard sale! It's place an ad In the Daily Do work myseU. Refl to ~ll!Cla.ul/1echdsdo "aahnpJ., maue r . Hon"IC Cue & Comm·1 West ... a Dally Pilot abetterwaytotellmore PUotWantAdslCaUoow $31..0101 It M'll 642·56111 Jl.llt call 642-56'78 642-lS:W Clas.sified Ad. 642·5678. Oas.tWed Ads 642-5678 people! -6'2-5618. •·J.iiiigi&tl -- ........... Ullfwta. ......... &Ww.. ...... to saw-. 000 ..••.•....••........... .•...........•....... ' ..•.•.••••.•..•....•..• Office...... 4400 ·---·-•! ••••••••••••••••••••••• P~/ .... _ •• , SlSO HelpW..tecl 7100 HetpW..ted 7100HalpW_.... 7100 ............................................................................................ ... .,..,.... 31" s.a...... ,.,.s ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Buyfruot home. pvt suite, <Xfiet!ti 750 & 500 sq rt. ex· cellent location 1801 Newport 1145-211 t NOW YOJ CAN .Af FORD NEWPORT BE.'\CH Park Newport F.XCl.USIV E OCt:AN FRONT 1 & 2 bdrm apt'1 avail Secutll.Y 1y1t.em, .elev.tor. dish w.sher, dbl. ovens. Pen· thouse with frplc & prv. aundeck from $325 up. 492-4929or~t123 pr .. resp. adull. Non· s moke r . $400. mo 673-Wl before lOpm Plcaa &ec:""•• Huge condo Bluffs, view, Siuitft Crp&c, pool. Female. S245· Privau suite with recep-_m __ i_4_i9_Ren __ ee_. ---· • t 1 o I\ & secret a r i a I N.B. exec. condo. ocean service, conreren ce vu. pvt, pool, tennis $300. room. all CacWties. 2082 2 BR apt, S27S mo. Close to 548-78l3am: 64G-S3:>7 M1 r helson. l r v 1 n e . beach. 752-0234 U1XURYAPTLIVJNG 4~ M/F . Non smoker.--------- Overlook.ing The Water $140+ i,; util. Costa Mesa ....., R...tat 4450 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~a1-YI home. Jmmed occupan· Enjoy $750,000 spec ~ eW cy. f;4S.8434 --------tacular 1pa, 1 swlmmln1i1 2 . ba, pool. golC --'---------• s..applAg Cetthr pools. 8 lighted courts. COW'lle. Yrly Jaeo J'SO. Pu EASTBLUFF Spoc. for l.ecne miles al bike trails, put 67J.2UJL 64G-5777 Beautiful area. $225. Call C._. Pwriah Ung, shulOeboarda. Bechelor apt tor single 640-S296 or 963-0926 2 I J..277·6118 coll adults. $135. No pets Mature smoker. 2 Bri·--------Bacbs from $349.SO/mo Also 1&2 bdrm plans 2 story townhouses 492-2134. alt 5. COM apt. $200. .Af-lwllh ,..,,..shed 640-_9509 _____ _ RETAIL SPACE or.....,..IMd 3900 Roommate Wante d : Elec. k1tch. priv, patiOli ••••••••••••••••••••••• <Fem) to share home. 700Sq. Ft & balconies. crpts Pool & Jacuzn Sharon Lado Marana Vill:ii::e draper1es. pa rJo n g MOllLI HOME 7 6 8. 14 8 4 . Ta m m y SpeciaJly Center elevators. IHFORMATION S8l-604l. 10nthc water> Al Fashion Island, Jam boree & San Joaauir Hills Rd For rental inlormallon: Rent, option to buy info. Newport 675-8662 repo's loan assumption . ~ TOPLOCATIOHt r~n~.y flnanceD.A.C. for._ 4350 17ftlAN.wportlfvd. Mob119 H0R9 Store ••••••••••••••••••••••• Succesalul retail shop Westminster 548-8895 Double g:irage, 2oth & approx 9SOsq. ft. w. Anaheun 781-1442 ~live, HB. $60. Also ~Permo. Bkr67~00 ___ 7_14_/_644-__ 1_900 __ -t Anaheim 956-1011 smgle. same area S3S. 2 Vacancies downtown Becbelor unit .,.,. block Santa Ana 554-7070 9m-oS2160 Huntington Beach. 210 from beach All util pd E.Anabeim ~soo Main St. Mini mall. No lods, no pets. 201 E-t----------Office l...W 4400 _~_1558 ______ _ Balboa Blvd. S2SO pe1 nfE EXCJTING ••••••••••••••••••••••• lldlsfrial lewtal 4500 mo. + secunty dep. Cal PALM MISA Ans SINGLE USIR ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lost & FcMtd ••••••••••••••••••••••• AnnQ..cl•ftfs 5100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• PENNY PINCHER ADS ONLYR Sell any uem or com· bmat1on or items for S7S or less 1111lh a Penny Pincher Ad. J lines for 2 l"On.~utivl! duys. Each add1t1oruil li.nt-IS 00-for I.be 2 days. Charge rt ' Nocommerr1al ads For more Information and to place your ad call 642-5678 SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS Candor -Mature - Beheld -llamper - Gratis-Racial - CHARGE CARD 13,000SQ. FT. Sue 556·17_07 ____ _. MINUTES TO NPT BCH New Baylront 3 BR. 2 ba Bach. 1&2 BR My wife is kind of gulll· ble. She bought what is aupJ)06ed lo be a true ~oduction of the great da Vinci masterpiece . 'The Last &ipper. lt has an American CHARGE Loguna leodl lndws. CARD showihg on lhe la· 4 6 5 · I 8 3 0 s q f t • ble. SpifiNalReodft' IB15So. EJ Camino Real San Clemente; Fully he. 3 advertising salesmen for Orange Country area . Xlnt commission. The Real Estate Trading Post. 364S Saviers Rd .. Oxnard 93030. 805/ 83557 aalc for Dave. Banking Bookkeeper 36 hr. per TIU.II F/T week. Nice clothln1: For appt. 492-'7296 Branch ofc seeks bonda-store. Exp. pref. but will t ie Frr Teller. Contact tn.ln.67:Ml960eves . XX DANCE OF FUN XX Beautiful nude girls, Ravenna Cash. or Rollie BOOKKEEPER Brous ard at (714) U secy work Live·in 644-725.5. C.M. area S4S-3'08 form- dance at exhibition & rap AM•f HocAital sesa1ons. 9AM to 4AM ...,. W~RN FEDERAL terviewappt. SAVINGS every day. 20ti0 So. Groomer. bather, Eucud. Anaheim. excit· cleaoer. F I T 1 n c I. 1ng 24 hr recording Sat/Sun. Z744 E. Coast Hwy Coronadel Mar SU-1422 644·5463 f:O.E. M/F APT MGR-CJ>le for new Banking MICHB.LE'S ~ amit H.B. Call 536-4729 EXPERl9'CB» •oUtcall• or536-4022 TB I EIS I 1AM·2AM 835--3749 -------•I SCllllll Coast A/PTRAIHH ...... _.._. *ESCORTS* 97~1131 AIE KAIAHUA or Purple. Danny wants lo see you. Please call 213-423-7526. Carole. UHOA&VICIU <Mca1Ma11ap Few TM,_ of It! Serving aJJ Orange Co 1135-7313 Stan the New Year R1ghl. SHERI LEE. Certified Masseuse. Byappt. 838-8838 MASSACiE RGURE MODELS ESCORTS OUTCAU. OHL Y Dap,_.H,lw ~50 wpm + 10 key by Ba k &oucb. We offer excep· An lndependent n tlonal benefits & a ll49Sunflower C.M. pleasant working at· 540-saoo. __ _ mosphere amidst the Banking scenic surroundings of TRA •a Newport Beacb. For ap. • ....., For our South Coast Plaza omce. Evenings, Mooday thru Friday & every Seturday. Ex· perience preferred Call Kat.by ~borgey or Mr. Kinolngs at 540-4066. poinunent call Lynn Stansfield (714) 759-1853 AVCO Rll•dal Set-vices 62X> Newport Center Dr Newport Beach Equal ()ppty Employer Celt. ,.., .. ~&Lo. 3333 Bristol St .. CM F.quaJ Oppor Employer ASSIMILEltS Banking SAJUOA T Santiago Bank Is opening We will train SS per hr & a new clfic~. Xlnt career up. MacGregor Vachts. opportunities ror bank 1631 Placentia. C. M. eJ(perienced personnel at l•--------•I our Tustin & Newport Beach offices. Currently interviewing for ASSIMIUIS CASHIR Six mootbs to 1 yr eirper Well groomed. pleuant personality. Good benefits. Aj>ply THI IRVIHE CO 1071 Camelback Newport Beach &M·tlllO F.quaJ Oppor Employer Cl.BJCAL CAll•ciaU .<Int opportunit y w/rapldly expanding securities brokeraic firm in Newport Beach. Must be will groo111ed. Open new accounts. light t yptng & filing. St.a rt.In~ salary comJnensuriate wlf!XfK. Paid bonu..s and benefit.a. Ca 11 7 59-1611 CLERICAL A~~~!~e fplr. lndry hook-up, db fromS2SS& up. encl g~ir. upcer unit Adult.a. No pets. 1561 Mesa Or Spectacular ay vie~ (5Blks East or Newport w/bch •rea. $800/mo yr Blvd) _l'-y._840-___ um ___ -·-9am·Spm 546-9860 Great Location Deluxe Space Recept., Con!., Ofr Commerce Park S2SO·S700/mo. Ans. Ph _Los_t_&_FCMMl ____ 5 _ 3 _ 0 -0 fl46.3.1.S7. 631 ·2140 GOLDEMGIRL Lost or Found a pet? Call ---------Anl m al Ass is tanc e II 0 la 110 Sq. Ft. Mini warehouse. Com· merce Park. Newport. SJJ.6813 ••••••••••••••••••••••• League. 537·2273. no fee. li(a•=•~"'-:;t..t.! PRECISION/MECH Positions avail w/fast growing Newport Beach co .• involved ln assembly of compass & camera un· il.!. Applicants should ex· per working w /small parts, good mech apt., & er\joy . Benefits include 2 week.I vac .• 1 week sick leave. & profit shanng to name a few . Call s.57-9051 . ask for Ray Gillman. TELLHS Must have pleasant persooality. be outgoing & be people oriented. fUO time & part timt' positions available. c:acnean,y beadquart.ered Ul Newport Beach has opportun1tles for ·n· dlvidua!s with skills and aeneral orflce ex· perlence in l or more of the rolloiwing areas: •Part T i me Typist/Librarian -Typists~ wpm Udo late-Charmlng 2 br ROOIM 4000 aundeck, elec. gar, adlts ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ ~ $475 Ille 675·0377 On F'1nley canal wilt dock 2 Br 1 Ba. gar. UC'« yard. S5~o. Call Bal * AMMnsodor I•• Lovely gardens-Brooks wtr fall 673"3417 ~ •Kllchen FacU avail. _Dov_er_Twnhs ___ e-. _d_b..:;:.l-~a-r--1, •Jacuzzi, heated pool ~I. wash/dryer. pool. •Wkly or dally maid srv. •TV & phone avllilable ults 1425 mo. 64r,.9442· As low cn SU Wk UOO VIEW 2br, frplc. 2277 Harbor =· aep. D.R. Adlts, Cost.a Mesa &45-4840 mo. 675-6359. -----_ ----- Rtntak Wanted 4600 REWARD!! for return of ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Newport 83J.88l3 Responsible. work1nR EXECUTIVE w r i l e r s e e k a o n e 'boys Black Ba I boa Cruiser. taken on 11/22178. Please call. c h i Id heartbroken . ~7857. sums • bedroom cottage 1n Luxurious offices. ex· Corona del Mar or Costa Reward. Loot 12/17 Jg wht Mesa. Quietness essen· d H k' eco\lve sec r etor y. tiaJ. Write Classified Ad M. Samoye . us 1e personal phone cov· type. CM areu. 54s..8877. erage. reeeptionlat. con· #206, DaHy Pilot. P.O. or631·~1 ference room. xerox. Box 1560, Costa Mesa notary. Lease or month _92626 __ or_ca_l_167_S-_3862 ___ Lost : etland Sheep to month. Near so. Coast Dog. <She It le· Min 1 Lg. Bach .. 2 br. m Costa Collie) 6 yrs old . 7005 ••••••••••••••••••••••• REAL ESTATE LICENSE SCHOOL OFFERS HOTI TS.URS Be ready for challenge of wide variety 0( note runc- LIOnS. NEW ACCOUMTS COUMS&ORS Good communJcaUon & 1•--------•I ael.ll.ng skills eaaential. CIM1'UL SRVICES Attendant tor morn . Trai.nee:'J:IUoo to start personaJ help. 5 days a wit in HB. Vic Beach & your g career. Ad a m s . C a r r e q · 5'nd.ago Bank offers an •Math Aptitude •Bookkeeping/ Account.lo We have immediate openings. U you qualify, we olrer a unique work· lngenvironment, lnadd1· Uon to excellent com· pa.ny benellls. Pleas e contact: ()('un front Newport Room w/kltchennetle Beach. Wmt~r rental. :i $60 week&. up. Plaza. 0 .C. airport & Mesa. Sa nta Ana or Sable/whl. $200 reward. rreeways. Call 979-2161. Hunt. Bch. Apt or col· 975-0471 •Craah Course available Auto Sunroof lnslaller _961)._3364 __ . ____ __,,t:_· outs ta nd Ing be n ems package & opportunity for advancement with a progressive organiza. tion. Apply at. tage In safe area near •Materials provided. Trainee. f\iU time. Good Pen awl D1palw.t PACIFIC MUTUAL bdrm 2 ba. HUJ!e sun· 548-97~ deck. Rlght on sand. On beat beach . Fu 11 y Mstr Bdrm. dressing rm. fumighed & ready to I><! & ba. Separate entrance. enjoyed. Days 752-741<1 Quiet area, NB. &42-3538. 523 SQ. ft. office space to sub·leaae in Laguna Hilla, $308 montl\. Avail. Dec.1st.~ bus&stores.For respec· LOST: Dec.20.goldnug-•Sma ll classes for mech'labilltyi%workre table. hard·worklntt get star shaped brooch. personalized instrucllon. cord. Catalina Sunroof mother & smaJI 31,; yr Kt w/7 diamonds. Lido ~ own taste-<lay 542-4040 EOE child. well behaved. $200 Vig area. Sentimental &nl&hlclasses. -----·---- Deluxe medical suite. or under. 111cl. util. Must value. Reward 875-2257 •Placement-up to 80% Babysrt.ter.EI Toro area. SAN'l1ACO BANK Norma Ferguson 700 Newport Center Drive ~ nr .. Corona del =7~ ~:n~~~e ~~ LOST: Mate Australian commission. Mature woman, starting &elJe to heh. Lgc modem ••••••••••••••••••••••• Re~~~cs Corp. )>ally Pilot, Box 1S60, CM Shep. Tri colored! Vic. Freel Week ~~~Ca~~· ~~r :nr~n~liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil 2 br upper, beam ceil. La kc Arrow h e a d ---------92626 Ad uoo CM. 631·5484. Sal Tr·•-•-Rel req 761Vi446 aa-w.. .. Eves. Wknda838-2189 Vocotioe Rewhlh 4250 535 E. lSt St .. Tustin 714.832-5200 714 /832·5200 MIF/H E.0 .E. Newport Beach. CA 92660 (714) 640-3528 F.quaJ Opportwuty Employe.r MI F frpk, all bltns. $425. laltefrontcondo,alps8. Downtown Huntington ' · es ~g. · · •-....o& 642-3490. 830·7022 Beach. 210~ Main St. 2 Visiting prof. UCJ. needs Lo6t: REWARD for Boy's CGI For.,..... FULL-TIME offices available. One home-apt. Jan-Mar 30. lOspdSchwinn Red Bike. lll·IOOl 493-0442 BANKING a..ERICAL Hopp~".:days UMF.• YIAll. y BJG BEAR Cabin. sips 14 , 2-rm $120, one 2-rm SllO, Dave o..., ,,UVI O'>'> L!ON\ Irvine High, no ques· Ka•alla TELLER 2 BR, l ba .. nr bch .. $435 pooltable. color TV. 2 goo.1558 ,...........,., .. , ~ uons. ~1-5658 "" 3 BR. 1 ba. nr b<:h • •~n frplcs. 545-6918 ~aJ &tale School ' 2BR.lba.,Lldo .... = •.......t..1·to•1.~ 4300 D&UXEOfftCE ~.ln•••t/ IJJ6l: Large, friendly. blk 3203SanlCaJ minCaoCalpt1strano ~ -~ Cockapoo dog. Vic: 20th uan p a rano 3BR.2ba., Lido .... S650 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2400Sq.Ft. ••••••••••••••••••••••• st. & Balboa Blvd JobtW..e.d. 7075 3 BR. l ba .• Lido .... $1~ Cut dowwt Central Oran Re ..._.. Reward offered Please ••••••••••••••••••• •••• ~H.• YEARLY UYlftg~! ~~R~a~~RK Opporlwlfty 5005 ~~es. 675-8213 or Comp. Cook lo lady or 1~TIA'-Af.U~5 Share a oomeor aptmen\. Costa Mesa 979.9997 ••••••••••••••••••••••• couple. Do smoke. Drive. R b ' ho • QuusE-O)Mts U~TrD Small gardening route for Found: Black with Brown merences. 631·2132. 3 B • 2~ a new me, ... u~ Towo & Country Shopping sale. Call af\ S. 548·9833 marklngs. Terncr mix ~W_._..... 71 OO oceanfront, wk or mo. v.AC ~~~~"' Clr.18582 Beach 81 .. HB. or642-1314. • --IAU04-HIWf'ORT w ~>:iv~·~ ~ male pup .. Vic. Mesa Dr. ••• ••••••••••••••••••• llALTY 67Ml70 832-4134Sincel971 PlCTURETHIS BeckBay.979-1478 ACCOUNTING DIC. SUITIS Become a Wholesaler of Found Poodle pure bred. Sellldlelt.ema 8'2·56'78 WaotAda Call642·56'78 p)tol700Sq. Fl. Kodak Film. Eveready. male wht. 64.5-1508 af· SWERVISOR ---------Carpets, drapes. Polaroid, Westinghouse. t/eves. Career opportunity for Afi9 lac.ta......_ ........ leocJI ll40 Udo MarflllCI Key• lo n e P h o n e experienced person In •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• v-... Products & Developing. Found: Bl.kiwi.ht spotted a«'OUnllng aupervlslon. Kennebunkport? Isn't that the boat that won The America's Cup in '7S? ~ro~ If you'rt! not sure Who (or what) Kennybunl<port was, delfl°t feel bad-you're not aione. «>ntbewater) Min. Purchaae of Genn. Shep mix. M, 6 Sal.11')'$1,214.-Sl.478. per Newport 67~ Product Only $5305. CJll mos. 962·9571 mootb with excellent Mr. CoUina. DepL R112 Found: 20., boy• bike, bentf1ts. Please call ..wrc>IT CIMTB toll-free at ~1-7725 owner identlly by color. Mn. Finnegan. 631-1200 lO,OOOaqft. Bua,,..... or xtra income. sz. & ser no . Allio bettweenOO PhounM c &:tOOMA,M L""Urlo"• pan .. led Of· vrr to.,; · · ·OS ,a eta ..,. -"' Call local Amway dis· dale/location loet. Call "-··-• w ter Dlatrtrt noes w/speclul extras. KBPD536-S622 """"'"Y a · C o o f e r e n c e trlbutor & llCt the whole 1966 Placentia Avenue, rm I ba th r oom story S48·l6". Lost: Greying elde rly Costa Mesa. shower/kitchen. Contuct REAL ~ATE Busioes1 lady Dachaund. Jn ad-•-------- Ululae Dahl. IOI' hie le office for lease. verientJy it.rolled away McounUnll OORPORATE REALTY 20 yn. same lO<'atlon. from home. In Newport SAVINGS REP F\deUty Federal. a lead· ing aavinp and loan. has an excellent opportunity for an mdlvidual with a stronJ Teller bar k· ~.to assist our Sov. 1ngs Manager in the supervlaloo ot savings representatives. ~lect­ ed appUcanl will train new and ex.laUng person· nel ID all phues of sav· Inc• operations . One year experience In a similar position, light new account.a experience aodk:nowledgeor all uv. ~ transactions are re . QLDred. Kennytiunl<pO!t Is one of 14 disUnctJvtly dttfet lllt aipanment floorpllns at Seawind VIiiage In HuntfngtOn Beach. Seiwlnd VIiiage IS a result of totally personalized professional planning. 975-0111 1860 Newport Blvd.. lights. Fri eve. We need Costa Mtwa. W.E. <Bill) her. REWARD! 842~ 4458q. ft. $245. 4001 Birch St, N.B. Lacbenmyer 8*-3lll'l8 In addition to an ex- cellent starting :;alt1ry and a congenJal work at· mosphere. Fldelhy of· fers an outstanding benefita package which lodudet profit sharing, deotaJ l111uranoo. and a .......... ....._.. paid career apperel Pl'()· accounniiiM. 1ram. P leaae call '"''~ Leonard Buter ror an Prow:Uy Announces Our ~appointment: TN kind of 1ttenUon you desefw. A P9'fect blend of l\atlJl'I and IMng- ndild In a for'5t wtth babbllng ~and quiet ponOs. cq>lld by natl.Ir.II OCNrt breezes. Add to tftlt tlnniS courts. swtmrning paols. ajlcuul and A&eol, Ml-5032 SMALL OFFICE FOR RENT, Sl65. ,\Cent 648-1'729 ~~-~-~--~ 613-4511 Mull;a111. Trwt Dlilti IOU ....................... LOWEST .............. letT.D.'s. .. Found: white min.11ture mile poodle at the Market Basket at Baker fcHarbor.Call~l. ..... ,..... 5350 ••••••••••••••••••••••• RELAXlNO MASSAGE &>l>Jamea·Llc Maaaeur Oukall 9-9. 496-5111 Move to Larter Offlce1 Vlalt Ua At Our New AD&ITY LocaUon. ,_llAL COLDWELL BANKER ~a B.LOO •~ •·-- SUJTE200 -- PosJUon as available 1n our Westminster and Uz. R.lto. Chris Huntington Be ach Jmty.C .. y.Ct.Kk branches for an in· ToAI d1vidual with previous 54().4055 t.eller or cashiering back· ,.-...-.......... P~••I ground. The person we _._ ..... seek should enjoy pubUc ACJIKY contact and detail. It you 2790 K..t.or, CM are seeking a career ALLJOBSFREE position, please call Mr.--------Biil Moore at (7 H >I-_______ _ 8»-0!500 cw Shella Har· rllon at (213) 476-2201 We provide Cree com · pany paid uniforms in addition to a aenel'O\la benefit.a packa1e. which list& medical and life ln· surance retirement plan, tuition relmburseme.nL stock purchase plan anct free parkJng. a.ERICAL SAFE DEPOSIT CLERK F\de,tlty Federal. • le.ad· l.ng savings and loan is seeking a cu stomer· ortent.ed clerk for its Newport Beach office. BRENTWOOD Tbls IUll lime poeiUon an S •v•.,..GS & vol vea ass 1st 1 n ~ II' t " cusiocnen wtth Hie de· Lo .._ ·.._. po1lt transactlOIU, and "'"" requ ire• o n e yea r 12001SaoVlncenteBlvd aeneral oCClce ex -~eJea, CA 900C9 peri~ a.od t,yplna of 3S Opportu.nh.y wpm. Some Saturday inf:Jo!er 11/F bounwtJJ benquired. l!Bea!!!!uty!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I 1n add.IUoa to an ex· = C. re Center cetlmt •t.al'tlnl Mlaey. e la aeeldn1 " olftr an kleal •ork COlmetiCA1u eovlronnMot and out· for: .... benefit& lnelud· I convtnlent IOcltlon1flelr shopping Ind tmpqment. Ind you've got a place anyone wouto proudly call heme. (E\ltn Ktnnybunl<portl) Ont Ind two bedroom. one and tw0 blth 500-1200 aq, It. Laauna Bch. Xlot hlway vlalbJll· l.Y. Oft crptl, paint, A/C, under lrnd park ·1. OcHn hlll view&. 54f.Ul8; 4"-3922 WT .D. "°911. 23l3N BROADWAY 17141642-4000 SANTA ANA l~~.Equal~· ~Oppl~~y~E~m~pJy~r ~I We have an lDcr .. alna 1- Faci.al'l'reaUMnta Ina dental lnturance1 Mani . Pedi·C1tre pri)tlt lbari.01 and • paia l~ Electrolo,Uta careor .. ppvel Protram. for: PluM call Leon•rd Bax· d em and tbrou1bout -~1:~ AIRPORT OFFrCES l to a room 11.llm. all Mt'Ylces. No leatt req'd. ~ Sl.50. mo. lmmed. otcupaocy. 2082 S. E. BrUtol, Suite 200, N.8 . (n4)UM010. P'alrett Ttnn11lnce 19'9 s.ttte.-Mt.J, Co. '42-2171 "41-061 I PREGNANT? Carini. confidential rounteUna le referral. Abort.Ion. adop-Uon & keepln8. APCARF. M7·2563 Oru,e County ror ex· perienced accounUoa 4t boollkeepln1 pert0nnel. QIU or viail ua t.oda1-we are 1ookJoi forward to =·you ID our new Facial Treatment& ta' far an intAlrvtew •P· U YourProfe11aton Hair Resnoval poin\JMnt. HOME REPAIRS? W• will train you on -- 15!555 Hllnangton Villegt l.atle Hunt~ Btad'I. CA (11 .. ) 898-0901 From u. 511'1 Diego r~ dl'M nonh on 8'ld1 to ~. bfl Wiit on Mcfaodln to 5uwlncS VUl.tgt. 1umllfllllgl .._ • ~ CSl!ly lP AM 'Cit CIUsM •UOO ISLUID* Wanted a100,ooo Znd, ex· latlng lit i• t:&sooo. =y value ,000. No. co.ta Meaa. 700 lq. f\. Secure Sl4,850 10% lit. tl80/mo. Ground noor. ThaaU>eedforl&le. Toln. a.o.i:aoo. • Ul~ COUMTIY GIRL *ESCORTS* :Mhn 95NM74 .. .. C714tHMIOJ FU&PAJUUNO ... Did 10Q mow you can Euroc>Mathinet. ..__.,' place a dM&lfled ad In CalJ Chmtloe C:O.metJca ,.llAL the o.l.ly Plklt Service 71•~1·5'G •-· • DlrtctoiY ror a whole ---------.~+• moatJa (or u llttJ~ a1 lldlpr P\IU or PT to WOl'k -AliliL $1.77 per day? For more In a D a cc ti o I c . C7t4164MOOO lalanNUCJn.c:all WutmlHUr aru . AD&luJODmtY&mobr IQ,fm i .... ' "'". ' . -. . .. -. . 012 o.t.ILV PILOT Sund1y. Oec•mber 24 1171 ~.!~ ..... ?~~ ~.!~ ..... ?!.. tt.-Wmhd 7100 ~~~·~·················· CL ICAL Earn Xtra mont')' I nPfSTS NX Od.I Q.UilDS W AMTIO leet11nl4IM•rl t.'uU or p llrn.> ~>'I>' FAm money whDr. olhl!,.. tl&.IMll A&iPIY 4 10 t.. 17l.b •I i> l.. A Ttmet h1 f'&,Sa.nta Anl upenln for u m ft'I on ttUI m1n•ntn• tOUlH 2 't to 3 lln c1a1ly l;arn lnll U:.O ~ mtanthly t 'al I r or 4tt.&Jli 4411 l GU AIDS 1-'\AIJ It pltlm• All atNH Un1hlrrn1 rur n1aht•1l A&n Zl 11r nvr r Jcttln '<I ACCT CLlllKS UYPUMCHOftH CUYtkS ur9'1't21M ~---Mu11t hav• ph1.1n" " r.-lla Wl'kum• NI) •'llpon t·nt't' bll"llana11 1.A:loi ~111bot1 l>tih'n"Y p Umt'! AM, LA llf'<' Apply Unlv<'t Ml kfm ualsnmroh lloU TimM d41h11 1100 111., l"l'Ulrrtiuo ~rvit••. l22U dny 11 vu 1&t1t1n Pu" • _ .,_ h W ~h~I h1oh• AJ11 If , w ..,. •una D't' r lnitt'Vlciw• ll()un G 12 Ir OIJHt lllltil t llln pl.in 4IM l •M1111Um1fn MVUtlahlr '~:::~~---------1 . .:.:~~~:.:~ .. --- VOLT I ..... I. •o 4 ft,• f • r u.-..,or~ <:UAJll>S PCI DESIGNER SECURITY M&n!JtartuA"f' "' t<lf' tro r>uP 11> our rt•l't<nl t•ll mt harural Jtrodul'la 1" ...,rw._.. vruiiram. W1•ll• •11.1 • pruH'n l"<'U l11y Yuracu (;uard ~1'1 vtn-i. I• liut s;.naon v.ho v.anb "" hlnnl 1.cu.rlly .cu.1r1h1 1>ppor1un1ty h> makt u for ,..-UM.& ~ •• 1•1u. bo· lnN/Hewporl lcait u\lun.tc-1~ lnvuhtd w1lh S-.~....,.IM ,_ pruJt ~h from t on IL I --~!~ ..... !~.~~ ~~~::! ..... ?!_~~ tw.W..ted 7100 Het,W•t•d 710 ~ClllCft IOIO fwu .. t.. 1050 ~~~"f •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• U ve in. Nuru Aldo . --------Sllbl 'TRAINEES 17 cut n. dbl door rernic. CHRISTMAS malu• W JM'r day Work ROO..~'TATESALES LOVE PEOPLE• rrut h'ee. harveJil aold. 2 5 d,.V" p .. r 11ot>t'lt In l.J<'ft\ffdorwe wllltr11n tta ve i om e ••lea or LARGE U"411M.lwS225 559 11.39 SHOPPIMG? ht utlful tiur h nr•• you for •late ei11m m .... 1 .. ,.1 b "Ck"round ' .. ., n" .. """'nd h'"rd_,, .. lvlmM f'rrvlouox(K"r& l.lmlled o U ttr Ca ll o;;;,~~sl r;lt' •r.ce & APTSlZE RANCa;, GAS, :.o1 .. "dlnt~a roo;'n t~bt; "''. DI'( ory C'all for Qiw.ey 4'Co 494 80$7 body INIHlll(er In p re NATIONAL 08¢"".,.g.f!. s~~F7.ca-J!AN Wldl two txtra ..... v :II " I JIP\ UpJuhn Jl callh .u,e dept •tores Com LI.. ,,_. ..... d\ilra PLUS one a•• log Car• S4.'t ¥1\'l'I, E 0 Y., - -I I ....... and II r m U o n po t e nt u l SUPPLIER Wl\ru J.o:D·Freezer, tomeawt to)'• or lll WW leclp..-1t 12000+by Chrl11t m u chattype preferred ChMtmu loryour kidll ' t onnYmru. 114"1,WIJ 11nml'<llately. full tune, Cleanup airrl tor hoM Apply In .,erson. 11'\'ll\ lloet Hotel, l'lt7 1-: Uyc-r, rtd ,S A MAl"tllNIS'r Auto par h nu('hlnc lllw. l'l Jl'U' d1•11lrtod Will nlOl>uJC"r 11 •h.11111> lr•tnt•e Phmw :>•~ 11 &08 for an w rvww 11p1H Milli wanlt'd. top Wdl(e" Y.•utJ ·nu• Inn 11t l.n.iun.i 2U N (.'111 llwy, L111(una M1un1,.n a nt<t• M•11. rull IJmt!, xper only Awly N\•WJ:>Urt Conv Cenlt'r, l~&l~no< Ave .N B MUST £1,1, rnd tbh1, T~t Start lmnatldlately. Call 547 3l82 QIU Oa wn.2l3t38t 3906 MOW HIRING C714177a.1076 P r1onab e, a u racllvt' for front. ortlce In our SALISLADY Mo hp. Mee. tM>out lful nt•w locallon for exclu.slve children's Good SterfltMJ Pay near 0 C At.rp0rt. store. So. Coast Plaza ...,. S200-SIOO wk Grtet vi4ltora'-d1rect In Pt"m\lllM!nt &c e:xpertence Paid vacaUon, hoUdays, co m1na ('t1l1 ~. t y pe. eueotlal. Le Ma a aaln. -. 1Nt'C!d5St60netl ~~ Typist, Gen orr. f1hng. HI· lllOOOood bt-IM!f1(8 -f'I'. Mfl(. S600 Exe. ful. <;all J im llay* SALIS LADIES 656-4lt93 al9S52732 P_.T,_ ------ S. &T. Western Inc Arrtutcct• & F.na1neer1 1.00N Bn•tolSte 150 Nt•wpurt Beach ~l660 C..11 on reta il1•r11, 16 hrs wk. Earn up w $1()0 wk comm. 955-227 4 WAtTRESS Ellpandin g restaura nt ofrs pleasant workinl( cond. Exper desired. Ap· lkydn 1020 Im p11 . r •• c I 1n ~r 11 ••••••••••••••••••••••• boolu::aae1, <>h" 0 l•en Mo d e l llorn 4' Yurn ~.!£~~! =inyl l11V~'llUl.1:AJ New & Old Och CruiHrA Call after 6 p m MXBIKt:m•up. ~·1719. New 10 •pd bikes S91 00 r---.__._ 1055 New ai wwd 3 s.10 apd.8 -..,,.. -Vlnl.tjte Sc:hwlnn b1lu:1, ••••••••••••••••••••••• p;aru and access "'9UC AUCTIOH a.70 Newport Blvd CM MANY FJNF. ITY.MS Of" 642-7910 f;ST ATI-: J KWELR Y. SALESMAN· Y /\CHTS Kone M1 ri nl'. Lido VUlage, 714167~1403 1l.t-<'epllonu;l w•nled for M1 ch •t-I Garr111on 's ll a1rc u tttng S alo n . SALES: Pl Umt:. fabric. 2 642-6470 wka. •:)ollg ~P&et'· Child 's Sc hwinn bike . AltT O HJF.CTS. A N Uledoolyonre S..-.0. TIQU~. FlNE l'\JRN , "°°'35'16 ETC. PHONt; FOR IN . ,. , , ----FO. It BROCH U R E . ply m pcr1100 646-4040 400 SCOaslflwy, Raleigh En&li ab IO-s pd, 645-Z!OO ____ _ n·pUun IJ..l r ... w Wit' Wt• rJ ·~ ...... "' ··-----v..ui& an tndl\nlual ... hu CotteMeM • teM 11 ·i. rt• :.1I *""I.a to aro"" .,. nn ,, WWtNer Area MAN A(iJo.:Jt lil• l I r l' tl c o u p I t• t o llUUUlt{I' 75 Ulill mub11t' borrw park M11rnt.•n3nce & ofht·e ul)('r rcq'd L 1 v 1 n g <I u i.t r t ,. r 11 & ~ry !:M:nd t'\.'1;Um"' lO ~PMC, 393 ll11m1lto n. C 2. Costa Mc"a ~7 R.LSALES Start the year r11thl , Sek-ct Properties orferl4, top progressive com mu.sion schedule. 11n oul standing t ra1n1nit pro l(r am with Tom my Hopkins f'asl Start. pro fesslonaJ omc~ on ma. jor 11treet.s and the best Stu.ff IO town. IL '~ your future. Call 751·3191 SM!es/Serv1ce Laguna R4:ach llght wit 26" fra me. Hones 1060 rAIT-TIME OHLY green. l75. 962-S207 after ••••••••••••••••••••••• . . in"-I ll'A.m t.qu11l Op I SPECIAL &Wrt unll f n1ploy t·r I M M E o 1 A T f Mi lo~~,~ I lllhrvJ.whMj -------1 O,IMIMGS for CENTER DulA Rldt• "''•rvlsory l•ul I MCWfty offken who ('lt•ru·.ll OJhW'I ... TOP PAY with a I l111f11-.1n .tl <>!W'r•k modern ('QWJl Nim In rn t•nl & door lu d oor ,...,.cfH c~y. I u 11~p l"1llr dnver. hr If 1111t111~tu11 rc-q 'd Nu pr1u1 1·xpt!r I Bt•.lt'h nt'\· liuud dn' mi: rl.'<' 11 I ntt·rvlt'\\., H :t mll'il No Sund.ty work I 11• 111.1 .. 1• 11 1 ,1,11•1 101 I <l11tn1tt' Cu1111l Yc·llow I \1•11 "' ... 1 ... 11111.., 1,. C'ub. 17300 Mt H t•r '1111r 111•whl1<•1 huo.t I rmill\lt, I'' Vly I Wh\ nnt t nk1• lh1-. DOCK M~'\Tl-:RS /\SST "fl I' .. i t u 111 I ' f ••I ,,. T & l'/T No ex p nee 1.1 1 .... •"•' 111 .... , .... ,I <'.•ll ti1;t :i..,15. ,111\ .111 1.I L't ' l'\1•11 \ I F1111of t1\l't'' I 1110\ I •DRIVER• \\ t t .111 11 T'1•11111 ~1q>nndml( t•o lookrn)( •""'" '"'"' "'" th.11 I lor 1><-op h• w 1ll1nJ: to m ,•,111, .1 ll•·\lh l1• wont Nt•1&tupl)t•11r <;ood 1""1 1. "lh'\luh• lh.11 1 dn\11\g rl'C Ovc·r tK Co 111 ... '"llr hie• .11lct .1 \1-lucle" $2 85 Pt'r hr + I I 1 • ,. •tu 111 I h .1 I I IO('t'nllve11 "all t-:ru:, '' ,,, l.1 11.· 111·11 111 1· GT.J 9283 I • hlom , 1111•' I ----- Apply 1n person Mond11y lo 1-'ruluy, 8AM to 51'M Ill WEU.SFARGO GUARD SERVICES 1532W. Connonw.atth Fuhrlott, c A Monday. Turi.duy, Wt'<I Ol'lll'l11y, Thu111duy. IOAM t.o 41'M Cl..0!'.f~O Jo'ruluy ut: 230 W .Womer Rm. 217 Santa Anet. Ca State Lac NoC·G036 F.qual Opp Emplyr MI F 1 Ca ll Kt·ll~· At I DRIVERS u17 •>1•"' Mt.'11 or women 25 yrs or Hotel I {>' ,,. 10 ohh·r Know lh<' t'oas l HOMlek~ Porl•r , ,, •• "' ,,.,, ,, .. r1 I I ltt-.11 hhr.uwh 111111•1, I ('llJt•s NetSHIO a week or 7::.> to 4, onday th ru more Orangt' Coast Fnday. Umon benefits R:l.1-1441' Yellow Cab, 17300 Ml. Call for appl. 64~5000. l lLL('-'·™ ... r.G' ... ~ lkrrmunn, Fountain .enen.s~~i~o~n~S20~~~~­f" .::J ~nl'l Valley. INo or Slate r _ 1. I~"" r . I ~.e llwldn Ne w hop ~ & Housekeeper FT & PT, r.UC ) .. d b . r t E 0 f ' I ,\1101t11·r \\';1\1 To ··--~~~~~~·I .,oo ent 1 s . • ll1·l p 1·,~11111• Bayview Convalescent I l'l111a ('wrl;ul I DRIVER Hosp. 2055 Thurin SI k!W/7 W,11111•1 1\\i• C M.642·3505 I al M;w1111ha I WANTED S111t1• :•1;, I 11 .... 111•~'"'1 11 ... IC'., I SUNDAY ONLY I': I I t·: l\1 F I '\'111 ;on ·•Cf'nn I Houst!keepert Babys1ttcr. 2 s chool age children Own trans Mon, Tues. Thur!l aft~moon. Bcl(m T o d e liver D A IL Y Jan 962-82AO PILOT bund les to ear· --------... .:,;; ~··~..I Mn. 1n Newport Beach •HOUSEKEEPER* Hrl!l.I Hequ1rcs van or La v i.' 1n . r e l 1a blt> CtERKS lar.:l• 11lalion waiton & a Newport area. $400 mo l5 J>t.'OJJlt• nt•t'<.li.'d lull & good d ri ving r e l·ord. 640-1751 l"T l.hru J 11n 13 .1l u Call ---- local rollCKl' book~lon• 642-4321 llOUSEM EN Soll'k' ol lllt•:ifl poo;1Ut>11), Alll few FUii &. part·llm<' open will bcromt· pt•rma nt•nl OOft WHffClfftl Of' mgs Apply in p!!n.on, No t' x pt' r 1 t• n ,. ,. lrvmeHO!ltllotcl, 1717 1'; ncn>S1111ry S:l oo hr 111 Herry S~y Oyer Rd . S A. ... 1arl (.;ul l KJJ fi227 ur Equal Opportunity 11--;;-s c-;;,-;-•. e & M:lJ 622k IH'lWel!ll 12 5, e-a.. n Wl'd-Fri K,'<.ll tryrn1: 1 .... ,.._y..-Hou.c;ecleaner'i Wt• haVl' buhy. we need you 1-• -_-;. _______ , work for you 645 21.0tl, t: O. E Elertron1c11 968-_28_lo _____ _ CLERKS UTOTEM Opemn~s Now Ava1labll• tor full or pit 1 m e l'lerks on 2nd & 3rd i;hafls No ~XpPr nvc e sh a r y -wr train Start SJ p!!r hr /\!. :-1 manu1:l·rs lo $3 60 hr Manai,:f'r:'i lo $5 so hr Ad vam·l!mt•nl opportunit1t•s I/) lhoi.e who qualify Fo information )(0 to ou nea~t mar kt·l ur c·on tact the p!!ri.onnel offat• al l2442 Lam µ!lon St Gan:lertGrove ~ .4M() Equ.rl Oppor F.mplo COOK. exper, for rt<sl home . Mu s t w ork weekends. Prefer lody 646-6716 COOKS Expanding reRtaurnnt C'hwn wtth over 50 units Fnmlly-0wned organlrn l ion offe rs plc a11 nnl workinl( co n ditio ns Good opportun1l1cs for advanremcnl. F.xcellenl company lwncf1ti1. 1-:x penenc·ed desired. Apply In peraon. fj ;,_ nt I 3333 W Coott Hwy MewpcN11eoch C,;ounter Help, P IT, hri. 11·3. Capt Mike 's Fish Fry. 64,S. 2875 ELECTRONICS TECHNICIAN Immediate openings and opportunities in an e11l8bhshed company in lhe Orange C ounty rurport urea. Apphcants Happy.Holidays to troubleshoot. repair, lrvme Personnel A11c·n t·y a nd t e s l e lectronic 481!E l7th,Costa Mt•11u systems. Recent analog &lilt• 224 642· 1470 and d1R1tal experience ~ preferred. Call 5S7·047!f, ------- ask for Busch. JANITOR Da ys . n o exp n ee G_o._s_S-la-t-1o_ns ____ , Newport Bcat'h. 7·30·4 F~xpenenced scr vu.·c sla· Unifor m s furn. Good lKlfl help, Jn:I :.htfl, full woriung cond. Must hnvc umc. Apply 990 E. PCll. own t r u n II P & Ph NB. 833-701.S GENERAL LABORERS TRAINEE ~SEMBLERS PACKERS Must hu ve reli able lrllJ\llp. & phone. Loni( & short term assignments. llohday & varntion pay. llospitoliza t ion 11lun uvailable. ac...-.Dn•• 546-4741 I A<'r08s Prom Orange Co. Airport> Equal Opport Employer KEY,UMCH O'ER.ATOR Several openings exist for exper'd operators. Un ivac 1900 expcr helpful, but w ill tru1n Swmg shift $100 1>hlft daf ferential. S11lury will de pend on your ba rkground & exper. and 1s t•om plemented by monr fi ne beoc>flts & our u.Jca N U locallon. For appt. ph<111e (Jynn Stans field (714) 759.71153 AVCO RneclClll S«vlce1 ~ Newport Center Or. N892660 Equal oppty Employer Kitchen Helpt>r, full-time, Mon-Fri. 1t ·30·8pm, $3.l S P.e r hr. Good benef i t s . E .O .E . Bayview Conv Hoap .• 205S Thurin, St. C M. 642-~ Counter flclp lOpm lo OIRLFRIDAV · &tm Wlnch1•1l's Do Nut:. V11ud ok work w/!lma ll 253 I'.: 17th Sl C M mfr of M alb tear h1nl( machl.nes 497 ·3600. LAIOIMS COUNTF.R MAN Autoparta Min 3 )'raJob OC' txper. Muat be well 1u·oorned & personable. Phone )4$·R408 for In· tervlew appl. DIUVlltY rHSON fOf' buay Irvine Trurl ,\fcency. Must have reUa· ble moto rcycle & In· 1urance. Approx 5 hourt daUy. Mon lhru Frt. Hrly w1gc " mlleaae p11id. 1167-2'700 OeUvery •:arty AM no w1poe routA!. '300 mo. 6 day wk. Sm all c a r require d . CMINB.802..QM G-R·E-A·T SALIS JOI MOW OHM Prr & .. 'IT work avail. N4'wport M nrt n 11. Good ~t3. A_pply THI IRVIMI CO 1071 C.mf'lback Newport Bear h 644·0010 t4U•I Oppty Employer GOOD PAY 0000 HOURS. OOOD CON· ---------------D I T l 0 N S . M /\NY FRINGE 8F.NKFITS. FAST OROWINO COM· PANY PROMOTES FROM WITHIN. TRAIN F 0 R T 0 P MANAGRMF.N T S TARTS "lM · MEDIA TE LY " K E YBOARD E XPERIE NCE HELPFUL. WE HAVE OUR OWN TRAINING PROGRAM PUT ON BY $1.77 per DAY Thtt'a AU.you pay fer a 30dayad lntht OF.LIVERY GIRL 1\U: COUNTRY'S TOP DAILY PILOT SEIVICE lllECTOIY DO IT NOW ' '41-1671 Mt.1.110nry he lper , HUit• or no «xp rr necessury . Pt•rm11 n<•nl 675·3175 . M l::l>l t:/\I. C o m · 1rn11111on11le. olcrt. oxp 1111• lllrt• J>••r'lon 1-'1·ont of· f 1 ,. t• r o r H u s Y Nt•urolo~ml. Top s olory W the n~hl J>t!tl1on. <.:1111 M2 1437 Ml',;Ull'AL Hecept1on111t. t·x111.'r only Cull 636 9881 bt'tW(.>cll 9 & lJ JO A M MF:DICAJ. Ass't . bar k of· fa re Wllh X·ray per m1l. Ca II GJG-9850 Models. fe m . S harp, figure only, Sl5 per h r 642 6282. 968-3520 Bob. MOVIE FIRM SESCS EXTRAS 1-:Xcepllonal career opp· ly for lhObe wlshmg lo brea k 1n lo the mov ie business. S20·S200 per d a y + res i dua l poss 1b 1li t 1es . C71 4 l 761 ·1244 . V I OF.O C AST I NG S E HVICE now In our 3rd year Nurlies A id es, 7 -3 , l-ertlfaed $3.2S·$4 hr. e x· pertenced S3·S3.50 h r . Mesa Verde Convales · rent llOflp • 661 Q!ntcr Sl ,C M 548·~ Nurslnl( LVM Prr J to 11 shaft. Xlnt lx.'flef llohday pay 1 m med. Bayview Convale1>· t'etll, 2055 T hunn, C.M 642 3505 <Xf1ec Manager-Sa les Good opporturuly fo r ad· vancemenl. Wall tramtno expcnencl' nec·ci,sary . Must bl-25 yn. old or older & be uva1l on Saturdays 557 0824 or 774 6090. 1525 Mesa Verde !f206. Co1;ta Mesa. ()pLo melnC' Asst/ Recep 1'yping. Non s moker ~per mo. 830 9108 PART TIME EVENINGS Adults witJl outsta nding, attractwc personollllcs who enjoy workln~ wi th kids. Start al SJ 5-0 per hour Phone 642·4321 F.xl. 250. BETWEEN 4 00-5.00 f'M AK few Jim Equal Opportunity 1'.:mployer P~TE-UP PERSON with al least 1 year ell per len re. pre ferably newspape r. Excelle nt company benefits . Apply between 91\M & tiP M, Monday thru Friday. t;::SELECT T'PROPERTIES RESEARCH ASSIST AMT Kr A. Researr h Grnnl wastewater reclamation. located in So. Or ange Cly. bio. & chem . bkgrnd µr eferred . I 1 m lte d manual labor involved. rnornm gs, JO hrs wk Needed 1mmed. Equal U pply Em p loyl!r 831-1515 ft~AURANT llOOTES'i 6 :.Ho 2:30 Mon-Fri Call for appl. 645·5000 l'Xt 520 llestaurant Must now be emplyd & Waitre ss. ex per ne e': lOAM. CHRISTMAS PONY ~rw to,wor 1 k '" my appl Lunches 21 yrs +.Apply Girls 10-s pd bike nds Palomino for only $100 us o o .r t reatment in person. Le 8 1arn t1. aome work, but cln 120 <.:ull fordetatl11 equip. M/fo . 6·10pm. or 414 N Newport Blvd . Jeunne848-0800 4116-6214 M/Tb 6-IU. Sut 9.JOurn · N.B ~00 ----2.30pm, $400 mo 811. o r Men'11 cruu1er 9 yr QT Gelding, xlnt rop profit 11banng proic u11 Wurehouse Clerk n eeded $75 1n1e. trail & show. HI pref'd.Noexp nec.Somr for m a rine hardware 675-711.3 twndll.640 51«>6eveti. mar oppty a v ml. For rn· rompany. FUJI lime 1m · te r . c 8 11 a rte r 1 p m mediate opening. F'u II C-rot & 1-1ashy Arab Qtr 1:eldrni: IJ 979-3800 t'Ompany benents . Call EqiitpMtftt 8030 yrs, lra11/11how. Xlnl ci1:s1> B a I bo a M a r 1 n c ••••••••••••••••••••••• &t-onf. T ack640·96l3. Secreta~ As:sist Hardware for appt & dt' Brand new. Never ust.'(J. Ham.tt;;id G~ 1065 Look in g o r t·arce r tMa111Fs11,~9·967l . F: 0 .1!:. V1v1tar Sen es 1 70·210 ••••••••••••••••••••••• person to a ssist in run· -. Mnc ra z.oom lellll Nikon Slivi• food. ruel. & money run!( sm ND ofc. Mus t be -mo t $295 Call J k accurate ~pist, Lake Sii WOODWORKERS un · ae 1!1 pc:. st.nJs . stl. ckwre. al 642-4040 . sJ)l-e. prit-e. aHk for Mr. & have lnl orgunita· $3 t.o S5 per hour. Expr 'd Sor llonaJ & decision ma km~ 111 pan router, lable s aw Keystone 'Gravit y l too ieen 557-3.167 ___ _ a bthl y. Send resu me and shaper. Heads Up s lide prOJector with 2 Cookware . beautiful 1•1 w/salary history to: Ad Lnc. Jl.23 West McArthur, trays. S75. 968-3793. llB pll.'ce waterless. Savt• $ Klng, 3001 Westerly P l Santa Ana . Dogs 1 o4 o before Chnstmas . l.1rt Su.ite ll2 NB.92660. W R 1 T ••••••••••••••••••••••• Umeguaranl~ 968-l l47 -.-.---I': R . ' -- -P HOT OG RA P H E R · German Shepherd pups. Jewttry 8070 PUBLICIST needed for Vert healthy, good qua h· ••••••••••••••••••••••• busy So. County Agency. t y. AKC r egis t e r e d . PARROTS. Sp ectac:le *Secretaries* H.n Hoildays clo8ed 'rill Ja n 2nd Employers Pay All t'ees Uz Reinders Agency 4000 Btrch St, Ste 104 Newport Beach , 833·8190 Call F'or Appt/ Es tub '64 Lots o f v a r 1 e t y & fi38.9:nJ Parrots. 1deul for JM'l" t'hallenge. Send Resume W> Yellow heads $27!'> & salary n e e d s t o . Shlh Tiu puppies AKC. Wrought 1ron cages soo: Classified Ad 1138, Daily Xlnt ba ckground, $150. PP~2l Pilot. PO Box 1560. Costa 493-8774 ---- Mesa. Ca. 92626 L Machinery 8078 a s l c han ce ror ••••••••••••••••••••••• Chn s tmas ln sh Setter Wanted 13 .. Pl •~" pups. 14 w ks. A KC. shaper. ancr. • Sftock lor Attendanb Take food on:lers, assist in preparation or food & ---------1 operate cash register. SF£RETARI ES FUii & part tame pos1· Merry Chri1hwa1 Young man wanted ais land surveyor's ass1s- tlllll. H.Jgh school grad. mathematic a lly 1n · l'lmed No cxpe r nee. Call 494-3388, or 831·6161. 962"5829 645 6043 A.KC Docllshuftd1 Blasting cabmct, 24x:Jli, 14 wks1 champion blood Kelro. near new, $1 250 uons available. Apply an & peTh~ Antique G uild H~:'dGys l~l E. Oyer Road. SantaAna £..0~ office • rte;t.aDi~tci...ch's ~01 overload 557-0061 Rntaurant 3723 llrch Street COOKS WAJTRE.5SES Newport leach BUSBOYS F.q..al ()ppor !:mplyr hnes. snots. 968-9332 ~5067 ~~•••••••••••Coll ie p ups. A K C. ~--,--8-080 A-Al 8005 a bs olullcy be autiful. ••••••••••••••••••••••• _.,.., perfect m a r ktn R11 . llM""-'!..AGET ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sable/White or Tri . ~"" A.GS PUIUC AUCTION 646-7591 best offer from your business card MANY ITEMS OF FINE . Send one card for each ESTATE JEWELRY. S ilk y Pups AK C . laR plus one spare . We /\RT OBJ ECTS, A N-Chris tma s love ye a r return pe rma n e nt ly T I Q U F.: s . I'' r N E 'round! $200557-2821 scaled attractive lal' & FUR NITURE. ETC . strap, me ellni: a 1r lint• PHONE FOR INFO & rET WORLD 1.0 . r~wrements. Pr!!· DISHWASHERS Mm or no exper nee. Full & part -ta me . 26911 N e wp o r t BROCHUR E. 645-2200 vent loss & theft! .. ·or :J SEC'Y/GIRL F'RIDAY Dos tons, Ch1huah ua11. penonuUied tag enr lOl.l' For Travel Co. Rood tyg · Cocl(ers. York1es, Shih· wall pa~er, fabri c or · _ .. · 11 Antique Music Boxes' T u p M 1ng, no s m.,..U1g. . . /. • o m s. 1 n · "Vuy Go" pa"'"r •· w1· ........ Slot Machines! Clocks• ., .... -a rs P •· tud ""' .,. area 848......,., .x.ruo. uze · ups.,. s will b1:1r k & tnm your R B HUGESELECTION sttVtce.11A/~t-5027 tall!> Or try two carrll> estaur afll,. rcwster 's Ser vice St a tion Allen .,._rkon bark to bal·k Blvd.C.M. Fa"'!1l y Restaur ant , danl , e xpe r 'd. Day & I t _..... . .-1 openmg111 J anuary.now Evet. Full &p/ume.Ap "G~ Keeshood,3yrs,AKC reg. PKICE.'i. accepting apphcat1ons ply,She11 Stalaon,l7lh & ..... S50 . Wtll h o ld t tl S2eaor3/S5 for a ll food ser v ac e lrv1ne. NB. Open Wed. thru Sal. Olnstmas 842-2321 4/~t.agi, St.60 ea. personnel. Wait resses. 1802 Ketten ng, Irv. 619 t.aRS Sl50ea. bu.1persons. cooks. hos ts 17141754-1777 Fneto You 1045 tOor morl'Sl.40ea & ho6tesses, d ishwasher. Service Station ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sales Tax Included service bartende rs. food Htgh.ly professional. ex-Free Dog. Name Boot'i. NOCARD? prep Apply an person. cellent pay, buy-out plan ANTIQUE CLOCKS I oo k 1 n R f o r h o m e Draw your own or t.end Mon-Sat. at 10830 Wa rner olforred. 673-3320 Close Out Sale Due To w/r b.Jldren & back yard mime, address. phone & A Fln VI ca E 0 f S •c k n e s s . J o e fo r C hris tmu . C all we'll make one card per ve, Y · · · · ~ ------___ Bloodworth l l2·8th SL., 83J..2900. tag. Add 25' eat•h. Restaurant sandwich SERVICE CASHIER H 8. Send t'h<'Ck or money M · maker. no exf.. Over 18. &PIX oretATOR Oak. Ma hog. Walnut Male Come, ch ampt1on derto: $2.75toslart. 'ull & PT. needed immediately ror funuture. Low prices. al 1 yr, to olde r couple '9LOTPRIMTING 59~W:~keort~~c. full lime work. full com· 642-7347. onJy. Needs love673·07t9 P.O. Box 1560 1m 846.4438 pany benefits & xln't pay . fw1lftwe SOSO _Co!rta Mesa. Ca . 9't62fi prol(ra m . Call Murl(Ol Rare collector s 1860 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ... IUC "'UCTIO ... Resl t JJ~ c k Painter at... 8e1Rian pocket gun. $90. ... . ,..u ""' ,.... auran ' p : oo s, BOBWlTIIAM VW 714/673-3543 MUST SACRJFICF.-Twan MANY ITt:MS Oto' 1-'INf Waitresses Busboys orfullmat&boxspnnits t:STATfo: JEWl':LHY, nooded lmmediat.ely.Ap 7600Wcst.mmster Slot Machines. Legal. $28. Ce n tury M od e l ART O RJl':CT S. AN· ~·C h a rl ey Don 's a:~r;;;;~~88o Prv. Pty. Arte r 6pm. Home Fum549·307_7 __ TIQUES. FINE FUHN . Dr tr:ant. N260221 Cape 673-4000 SOl''A&LOVESEAT 1-:rc . PHON~ FOR IN ·· ·guna igue . ServSta llelp neededim· .... men 1010 $178. Century Mode l ::g,i:l:, BROCllUR I';. Sales med. Full or p/t. Apply ••••••••••••••••••••••• Home fUm. 549-3077 FUUTIMErAY 990 E.CslHwy.N.B. FREIGHT DAMAGED ---,ARTTIMEWORK llCYrPOINT SALE. 330ft HJde·a-beds $179 Olsen Need sa les p eople . T E AC HER S -S u b . W. Warner nr Harbor. ~de l H o m e F urn F..nlarglng sales force. alitute. Kindergarte n SantaAna.979-2921 __ 307_7 _____ _ Easy sell guarantee plus. l.hrouah 8th J<rade . Con WASHER DRYER SALE Queen sz RB matt/box 673-6950 tact Westminster Sr hool d e luxe mulli-cycle spm gs $89, King $99. 0 1 s l r I c t : l 4 1 2 l mock-ls. Completely re· Century Model Jlome Ced ar w ood Ave , bait, refans he d , you r F\im549-3077 WANTED TOP CAStl DOLL AH P AID FO R YOUR JEWELRY. WATCHES , ART OBJECTS. GOLU. S I L V ER 5 fo: fl V I C E FIN~ FUflNITURt; & ANTIQUES. &f.S.2200 Weetnunster 894-7311 ext guarantee. Your cho1ce.1·--------212. E.0 .E . SJ:IJ each. OcUvery. Sale Pinballs Foofballs. Guar. eods 12/31178. So. Coast *•I BUY** & del. S32S & up. Family l•-------.-.-.---.1 Appliance.~-2542 Good used Furniture & Arcade.840-234 __ 1 __ _ SALES TRAINEE ORANGE COAST DAILY Pl T TEACHEllS DAIL y rlLOT LO SUISTITUTE 642 5682 $60 PH DAY BARGAINS U ed fri Appliance11-0R I will 217 SQ. yards of brand wsh.ra. dry~s~ gu!:. t!!i sell or SELL for You. O('W brown 2 tone carpet buys. we serv. a ppl. Best MASTMS AUCTION with pad. All for S4.00 per Appl 536-0911, 536-4330 646-1616 & 133-9625 yard. CiAll: 551-4435 330 w. Huy St. Wanted c1uallrted s ub. Costa Mesa This highly succe ssful slrtutc t.eachcni to tcuch Large Coldspot • alm<>11t --------Glasss l.'ollection. F.qual Opportunity local newspaper has an llS students In the evt>nl new. Refrigerator. $250. All Wood Bunk be d s P.P. By appt. Employer ooening In the c1rcula· or a work 11topal(e or 645-3576 wtmat & box 11prngs or 839·7207 tfon department. Job ln· emergency. Otiily pa y ---------chest bed S99. Olsen l p Bx AN s w ERIN G eludes sales, service. col· $60. Six high llrhools , To6hlba microwave oven, Model Homes. 549·3077 ~~~~8~1rrors. 9 pcs. service operator. Exper lect.lons and supervision grades 9·12. V11lid CA 700 series. xlnt cond. 3 pc curved se~llon1'1. 548--0079 orw/lraln. ~9·3015 of teenage carriers. credential req'd. Apply & Muatsell.$280. 631-4465 Rust color. Xlnl cond. ------;.__--·•Selected a ppUcant will aubml~ c red e ntial I~ Used Corning cook-lop $125.964-1144. P "ugeot b ike HO. PBX receive a liberal 1tartlng persoo, HB Union llS s tove + pans $l5o . •---------Gius/chrome dlnlna rm Ans w e ring service salary and reatula rly Dlsl... 5201 Bolaa Ave , 6'4-U95 Outgrown Huddle Toob tb1 & 4 chn;'$200. 2 Ii: operator full & P /T. call scheduled ral.aes, bonus H.B. or caJI l7l4>898-67JJ buokbeds. Sella new for overstuffed chnl SlOO t"ll ~~l opportunities and many for Info. Deadline Dec Re frlae rator $125 . over SlOOO. Taite aw1y S'IO(a $200.Classcolfee rax-.... TOR fringe benefits such a:s 29th, Refrigerator SlOO. Stove for$4GO. Incl. maU.reaaes. table S50. Lamp $25. Vt""""' paid vacallons. medical. m. 673-8970. 673-3592. S67..a22S. 114CM510 Ptr, mom1ng1. Moo-Prl, de ntal and life In · 1--------- Npl Brkg ofc. For appt surance. Position a lso Telephon~ Operator forl~~==~====~~~~~~~~~===~~~=~~~~~­ cull J ohn Sh1mburg , provides succasful tlP· a ns we ring service 640-1460 plJe&nl with late model F/Ume. graveyard s hift car or van with persona l 228 Forest Ave, Laguna Real Estate Salea use privileges. _ee_a_c_h ______ _ llt;.""Welcw Free3Wffks TRAINING .... c ...... .... ~ .. ,•nty •Ab1olulely no prior lrainlng or experience nece11ary. •PeraonaUiod lo1truc· lion •Proleealonal on \he Job ~~commlaalon. •Choice of top ofllce locat.lonl. Be )'()Ur own bot• with a top notch profea1looal or- auU.&aUon. ICat.aaRe~ ........ ul ...... ll1·7211 Applicant m1111t be 18 and have good driving re cord lloun are approximate· lY 11 AM to 9 PM da lly. Weeteoda oPt.lonal but at overtime ralefl. TB.EPHOME SOLICITORS F.xperteoced Only. &lll Dalfy Pll~. Hlgheat com m101on p aid . Yo ur phone at home . Over 21, l.D. Qlrd. Call 835-64'3. l·3P.M. If )'OU are quallned and Tow Truck Drtver• ex· Interested call t he per'd. Top pay. Apply CirculaUon Department O&W Towl o 1 , 7408 and uk for the Dl1t.rict Otunt Way, C.M. 642-1~2 Sal•• Manaaer'• In· TRAINEE terview, -L-OllA.NGI COAST Yuuu.w man to train for DAILY PILOT ~ r~aSt::"~:t~· 330W. Bay St. mrma. Mu.U bave Jood eo.ta Meta tn«'hafllcal aptitude " 642-4321 ldnl vltJolt w/wUUn1naa An F.Qual Opl)ortunity t.o learn Looi t.raln.lna l:mpk>yu perlod. Only HMC>\11 need apply. Call ror tnt.rvlew GA.RAGE SALE ad1 In app\ betwn 7-hm, u.:'Ptlotbriol bap· 1-~....;.;--. ______ 1 PY To plac. your Fer auto pana bualnn1 0 R G A N S A L E S l1Mt b9 over 18 w11ood PEOPLE CALL AT drlvlQI N(Ol'd 4r live In 0 N C E F 0 R c.a JI• &rt• Phone ·INTBRVIEW. ORGAN MS'40I for Interview f!XCHANOI!. STAN NUNN7l4/llll-730'l. :====== Have )'OU r .. d today'• a..lfted Adaf ., not. 7'0'l'N ....... the beat 1*la1m ln ton [ auwtn1 urd. pboae a..u'led Adi, 1Wt 00.-...,. ... ,, -~reaw. - Y-9170 Alfto1. t .. ort.d AA1to1. t"'eorhd &Jncsi.y, O.C.mber 24 1978 DAILY PILOT DI 3 ........................••••.•.. ~~······"'···· ....... ,., .•. --.~ ...... . '16 CHIVaOlrT .,..._ 9720 ~ 9750 4-to,, JMporied AMtot, UHd A.tot, Ult'd Siii.Fa V AM •••••••••••••••••••••• • ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••• ·••• ••••••••• •••••••••••••• Autom•tir. AM 1f'M *D ... TSU.,...S• 'CIX1r1t1een,lotalcar2 Vol&sw09" 97700...roe.t 9920 "50 .~ tap.-, pwr •l~'' "' •" t-Owrwn only SGOOO Call ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ina hi har k "l'»t ~. L..teS dHM ~ between 8&~ RAB81'IT 'Tr Xlnt rood ORANOECOUNTY'S t~.~ ........ !!'.'.~ 11~""tal &>lillll. rruht• mn Of Al~ Pnrt>d to adl S3.400 ~~ HEWIST tml rlOP lop rout. llUA SAL1':S·l.t:ASING '74 911 yellow, camel int ~7 I' • lJNl'OL.N MERCURY IU l•tlh, Tu•om11 PARTS ERVl<.:t: low m1 111r, el~c t nrl Yoko 9772. ~ DtJalenih1pu1nowOPE.N •hc.-cl111 & low mil..-111 l.Jc. 112.~ firm Call for ••••••••••••••••••••••• UY FLADllOE .............. , .. 18117~&-r 1'3Zt7 oppl between 8&5 VOLVO LI NCOLN MERCURY Si477 ~ _ tOO So. C..t Hwy. LS.18 Auto Oenur Dr Ja..cm C.l-C.talln11 S..MlltrYecM1 1'714) 14' 2?$4 THEODORE ~ llAABOR BLVD '°'Tara• 9lZ Rblt ens 5 SALES. SH VICE ~ ..... SDfWy. Lake Forest CXll 540..6410540..02.U sod. Alloys wh~l• Must ANDLE.UIMG. 494-1131 IRVINt; 8091 ~ ZiJl,-1...aH Tourh N ••••••••••••••••••••••• , in a.-.k. :.:Int tvnd I 1i1ullful 3'' .-.llor rv a SUO U1rt-h bit Jl'IU )r "'"'h trH d,.J IJ211 lC»"'1l r..46 I t 213) 681 »433 f11 1p11 ........ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ROBINS FORD 11>r.i I It A AB• •A Ill VO (c l\IA Ml ~A r .. 1·1 ('lflllJ MIDt M'llbar.Nuch&hw l'r11 11• bum~ 0 1..,.l'ltt' ~ 9110 ....._W.t.4 9590 '91Nil., 1lt'w \ 11t'uum dnr pl11)c>r" 1t'f'Otd1•r $\b ••••• •• •• •• •• ••• •• •• • •• •••••••• •••••••• •• ••••• llk1a " buOOI Of l 31»4 i.il) 2 compl M.°\JI ol k1 t.>quip, RSJt tum L1ibl1• AX hltr dee: Royal l)l>e"'ritrr M"' S40 1''ANC'Y FL\'J NG DISf'OUNT RAT 1';~ ldeAU 1·rop eoountry nl·•r ~w 4 plat'O C'~rd1n11I I 1-· It G4 hr wot It up Or Ct y A I tJ>O rt An: ~Ol~2203 lil4lt 0nt"tlt•I \ 1\ir li13-7t4i fi73 ~ QUOlff 1111' 1 "'•tchb1nd 3.119 VIOF.Ol'l l-;ARANl 1'. 11 pc t'\JOkWQh'. IUttorlt' • t 1111nlt•\!1 almo 'll1 hanu:'lru l.1fo t1mc- ~1~· SUV ~ It>« 4 "'*'n-t'd l'iC. to Ham .. Pl~ofb, Ot"C. :to ur 31 $100/hllt olft'r 640 CJ312 7 da~ "I' f.nd'I 1'1.-w YNr ~"t' f<t A ~ or San ) 1.1 . S 1 )0 r a ---------•! l'~c or Ma1n .. .,,ox Jll'UICr11m.;iblt.-.. SllSO ta C ~ 1ra. S•/ Tt<rnlh t al)t' 'lpf'C'1Dh.. ..., 9120 ·Ou tll Jhr l"fW' St7 ~' ••••••••••••••••••••••• All pn1 l'" ,,, l' )UllJt·11 to C>ki«r r omper t llJh• "' u •~a1Jublhh Unr dn\ d1· ttU<'k $150 Slo H· A h \el') rrl rt" (;40. Z700 P•ub Vld1'0& TV -2tAXI ~ C'oaat ltwy Motoriud IMIH 9140 l <JM 714 75!1 °'28 •••••• •••• ••• ••• •• • •• •• MIM' llt•m. for ... ..ilc.• VW Santa 11 IMpc.•r '' 'dhna C..mpt•r $1500. Arrordlu loti> of 111 l-'1 .:oocht.•b for u.>. +~ kt l>lurnond rinu """'' 642 41118 t-Vc.!> nu: MO..Pl!:DOLt-:H Nt•w ,. t.:UG t;oT M 0 1•1.;os Rl'.: S4Gl#, Now 1299. 631 3H30 ------ WE BUY CLE.AH CARS &TIUCkS · COHMl:LL CHEVROLET .,_,, 11 ... 1 •• , 111 •• : , • ,.., r , ,, ~~.., , 546-1200 •DRIVEA * * LlnLE ••• * AVE A LOT "We need lo buy clean Datsl.ID used cars·· S Will Pay Top Dollar$ COSTA MESA · OATSUM 2845 HARRO R RI.VD 540.64' 0 540.02' l Sell S7000.'96·2145. OVF.RSEAS O£LlV~rtY 830.7000 '75tl 1ST-.. I::XPF.RTS '76 Mont~ Carlo. new ·70 Bobcat. 1B/28 mpg, s Sll\ter Ann1vero ry, 5 ••RLI ll(E brakt'8. new radrnlb, whl new radlalll. vinyl lop, spd, aJloya. nOC!ds paint. -Jldc·wll.118, blue land11u, xJnt <'OOd. S2500 or best a vcrynlccear 112.000. VOLVO full power, l\M l fo'M ofter.7~·0234:9S8·1Ma PrtaHM 'onche 1966 Hlltbor Rlvd rudio. :jJlN' stripping, 536-7888 C:OSTJ\MESA Z6k m1 . m•nl rnnd. '70 W <1tio n , llOC)d 646-9303 S40-9467 7.5900>. He1itoffrr transPortollon. rt lint '75 Porsche 914. x lnt•--------body dumage, runs xlnt. cond , 3$.000 ml. new OltAHGE COUNTY '76 Chevy Impala 4·dr, S2SO/best offer . S48-9'Z78 ··-· ..,,.,,,, ccg l'"M VOLVO PIS. P/8, A/C, P llt!I, nu ua>s . ....,.,.,, -' ....., batt-t.1rcs·brakes. Pnc·l'<S 1975 Targa, 81~ on blk. loaded w/everythln~. dnven only 25.000 m1 with care. Just a beauty. ltlle new Must i1ell for SH.SOC> wtlh Sll,500 as· swnable bank loan. P.r . Days 549·7971, eves S4MM4 EXQ.USIVELY VOLVO tDaell.499-3129 ... t.g 9952 ~l Volvo Oe11lc.-r -••••••••••••••••••••••• C '65 c.onu. new enR. 4 brl. •ac M Con ""''bl ange ·ounty• amlfm MaFs b•.,.kuui ..... us&.ang ve, .. e. BUYor Ll'.'.~5~' c • .... "' • B V·8. auto, PIS, lac. DIRECT • t:_l50 Wnd 811 646-7016 air , Jui.I completed ~·• 'f.!!:.~,":.:!~:.~'1!~ C':!.:,;.:r::~.10:,· '~~J "!~ •J ~2 l.OOO mllu, '67 Must. V-ti, auto. xtr&i.: --clean. must see. $2300. 2025 s Manchester 77 NOVA COUPE bil-21~ Anahel_!Tl 750-2011 f\Jlly t.>qwpped 1neludmg a..,bia. 9955 2 s w ed 1 s h y 0 1 v 0 ralley whei>la C267KZLl ••••••••••••••••••••••• lt....tt 9755 M echanic s now al S3975 '73 Royale, 3,000 mi on ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ivan 's , 199S If arbor CORMIER Leas1·ng $orig. enR MblNT! co,,Nu Blvd CM 645·1982 4000 or eat o er TIST DRIVE OUR .• . At lrvme Auto C<-ntcr 731-0942 '68 Tal"ga 9l2. rebll eng, alloys, :>speed, mw.t sell SSlOO 496-2145 'U CAR AuhK. Used 23W:1 Rockheld Blvll ""'° ----9-,57 11000. 2 match1n1ot lumv~ f'('A "L" (' 1 XI 1 mr>r. World wide slam '. " ~ on:..' 1" n colJection old ancJ Jnll wnd & p1 r 111rt• SUS~ q~ cameras. Yomullu !>4112429ufl llum motorcycle & 2 b1kl•11 & I CR Reahsj1(' TRC 440 SSB frame. 540-3199 $140 <.:un Karen H6k<f793 ·n C1matt1 Moped, xlnt coodi tloo $JSO/ b<-11 t o rt" r li'7J.44W WE PAY TOP DOLLAR '76 280Z. xlnt cond. mags, FOR TOP USED CARS A/C, stereo. radio.Jape. F'OR.EIGN, DOMESTIC nu ball. Mulhollan sus· OFTHEYEAR" ;;;;:i; .......... ,9oi L;6~o261 ...................... . Good mventory In stock. ••••••••••••• ••••••.. •• '74 ftunabout, new pamt. Hurry wtule they last! WANTED: Used earl> that 1964 Corvair Monza clean. $l000 • MIRAClE run w ell. Camaro:s, rumi xlnt !J63.2119,962·7491l• B&tavu.'i Moped, 1400 m1, runs & looks like 1ww. UlS 544 3.'>44 S-01 ls over $500 or CLASSICS pension. S5900. Ask for lf yourcarisextraclean D1t'k . 549·4834 dn. see \llJ first. 642-5673evestwknds MA.IDA/RENAULT trucks (Chevy. Dat'lun or 540 !Jl<l4 ~ 9960 21.50 Harbor Blvd. Toyota). Call 646-7643. Co11tioental 9930 ...................... . Subaru mm1 brot < m1n1 _llB bike). Perfect Chm;tmus 8oah & Marin• gilt. Never used. ftet111I llf'pmut IAUER IUICIC . 2925 Harbor Blvd. 71 510 Sedan : brand Ot!W COSTA MESA AMC 9905 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '00 PLYMOUTH Satelhte 64S.5700 ••••••••••••••••••••••• .78 Mar k v Diamond 2 dr hrdtp. Low mile1gc, ~ $45011>1.t orr lukei. ••••••••••••••••••••••• um l'eUl(oot M oped. xlnt t'OOdlt1on. S3SO ,.._ ,, motor under Wrnt y ....... ta Mesa 979.2500 $1200 642·2434 Days .. -.. D-9756 '76GremlJ aut MC I Jub1k~ model. for sale reblt <'nJ.:in<'. radio. -. ..-1 ce n. u, · 0 heater. air <·ond.<nee:Us ••••••••••••••••••••••• m1 , 11.lc-e nt'w S:!Soo or assume. Fully loaded, 833-8227 G11teral 90 I 0 10 spd bicycle. like nr w ••.•••••• • •• • ••• • • • • • • • • $100 ts cu rt flotpoint 15 Runobout, 5.Shp moior. rerng, xlnl cond,s1:;0 boot t:ovn, t:ood c:ond 968-1295 WE BUY ~9502Eves LATE '7S 2)!0Z 2+2. whl USED CARS lmmac. t:vt•ry Jllr a . #1 DEALER IN U.S.A Moon roor. Diamond blue repairl, power steennJt ooror Low mi. Best offer & powt•r brakes. C d Small end table!> & m1sr. ~l:nl • make o((er Cuti aft 12 Sabot, sa1li., mm;. $250 noon. S59-4102 or !'>52·7218 673·0562 llonda Hobbit PASO, Yellow. Won m Contl!!lt uever US<.'<i $395 646·3302 C..'1m;itU.C1ty Rike 235 m1 Sac $300 X Int eond G40 7977 C:all aftl!r CAL.I.. PAPPY $6,000 67 Montecito. Used Car Mgr CdM. 644·7ti64 540·5630 '70 Datsun SIO SW Xlntcond S975torr. 673 1775 ROY CARVER ROLLS-ROYCE •MO J•mlM>tn i..wpon lluth \'----~ Couchs. coffee tbl. ch1lds 2 m;n Rubber ~1nghy. ~r. )(1rL'j bikes. bt>!>l l...ik new Cost s:JOO. sell Rat 9725 offer. f;40..0$96 forS7:>, 67J.9434 ~~~/ 2626 HARBOR BL VD ..................... .. lfNl'°SO'° & SOX • LINCOLN· MfRCURY Ouistmas. CLOU.IUll~PAYL_ 'S9SilverCloud I $19,000 9150 COSTA MESA Beaut.Jfu --I Bran~ AVON 12· and 9.8 hp ••••••••••••••••••••••• ----------• l2'9r.'11:2 Le3ther Coat. Size 42 Nev;r u~ed Mer{' Ota '78 Honda 750K, very low WEIUY .... lllil ... Paid $150 Best offer $IJ;:iO., 645 9950 l'\.t'b ml. f ull cruise l(e a r , USID CARS! 644-5095 _ITT_J.._SO_l~------Sl950. 556 72S!J We're the new Chevrolet -- -loah. Maintett01tCe/ dealership 1n the Jrvl.ne ROSE IOWL SerYiu f 02.0 Honda 175ccxr. Auto Center. We need Tickets for sale 644.7743 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Good cond. 4,900 m1 S375 your used car! MOVING SAL E -Mechanic/ F.lectric1an 673~ _ __ JOE 16622 Rhone Ln Reµairs New ml.tall&· 2 Honda Trail 70 8ik<.-s MAC PHERSON HWlUngton Bca{'h llork~ • Monthly St-rviC't> 20 Like new' ~ss than 100 Yl'llr!• exp Loc·al refs ml.SJ25c11ch499·4!4l6 CHEVROLET ~ 64f~ 21 Auto Center Drive W..ted 8081 lo~MariH Hond a ATC90. IRVINE ••••••••••••••••••••••• fqill nt 9030 Excellentcond1t1on 761-7222 SWORDS . DAGGERS ....... ~............. 673-4869 Art dealer will buy m· GRAY MARINE '75 llus q uevarna . 17S W.._ ...._.ED.I lereshng Items. ( 714 > Motocross Set up tor en· "" I 67J.3S43 1lletradit1onal heavy du· duros. 675.7085. mech Late m odel Toyot as, ly, IJ1thtwe1ght manne v~ os Pickups & V WANTED. ~cello 1n c·x cng111e To 350 HP. Ge· !IOUndSS9S Callus.today! uru1. cellent c'o'n d1t1on . nu1ne new p a rt s . '78VZ80 1':with 0Gln· Reasonably p187nc.ed. Alllhonted Oistr· Bnslol termed.late kit. & Luft 963-_2_1 ____ 1 Servlces, <7 t4 >892-8541 shock & Res.$700 or best. ~-21'"1' tandem tr-;-n;.; Cn11Sam548·8153 ....,,._.... 8083 rams llt tires. '1200. XR 7S Boa bock RNS 19'4...._lh4. ••••••••••••• ••• •• •• • •• 9fi2 ... 216:JC p "'e s s. c .... ......,. ~ . .... · _ ___ GD new knobby. $250. 1\rp uuyssey Synln1.!l>llCr lllL-...L. p 90•0 SUNonJy.S40-l080 ,,. '46-tlOl orS40.'467 + anvil case, xtnt cond ~. ower • $975 or best offer ••••••••••••••••••••••• htotortto...a.. SM/ 642-2914 or 548·0479 a..t/Storoge t t 60 AMtot.. 1Mpor1ed Grand Banks ••••••••••••••••••••••• • ••••••••••.••••••••••• ARP OMNI Synthei.1ler AMII 9707 Mint {'ond St 100 Don Bltn Wh aler-Seacraft 1973 ~ 968-5(111 ~tan Miller Yachts lAolwy Motorftoftw ---(213) S98-9433 Fully self contained. Ludwig 5·pc dr um Sl·t 1714) 846-2754 Generator. 2 air condi· wood f1n1sh . Ztlojian Uoners. roof top air, TV ....................... 1973 Audi 1001..S, sunroof. AM/FM radio. new brks, 68,000 m1, x lnt cood, Fantastic Closeout on 1978 Model!, 19'79 Models now arrl vinK MUST SELL DICK MILLER MOTORS t.20 W. Warner .S.A 557.2132 '75 Flat Spider 124. Xlnt cood. 5 spd. PP. $3850. 968-0858 98$-4144 cymbals.x~s 5450987 a ntenna, CB r a dio, ~'tric /.!Wtar am plWcr AM/FM stereo uape, like &cl.ll)(!, S60. SEA RAY 'S new tires & other extras 979-9879 too numerous to men· _sm_s_1_a1_r._67_5-4253 ____ 1 '73 JAG. XJ12. Olk Wlblk leather i nt. l"u lly '64 TR4 hrdtop only, ex· '78 El Dorado: retired equip'd . Chrome wire cell cond. Sl90t offe r . G.M. Executive. Owner '7S AudJ lOOLS. Xlnl cond. Nueng.13356. 751-7184. whls, MichelJn tires. 1m 900-2938 dnven only. Pnml' concJ. 17' tO 30' uon. Very. very clean. Wantcd·J·• cello in l'x Look :it this one before -ma_c_. _in_&_o_u_t_. &i_S-4_7_4_3_1 Volbw-9770 $12,500 493.7393 IMW 97 t 2 ~·· -----••••••••••••••••••••••• KanmtwtGhla 9735 ~··••••••••••••••••••••Black 1978 ~ville sedan. rel .I e n t co n d 1t 1 on HARRISON'S yOU buy! Call Truman ot Reasonahly pnccd 963·2187. SEA RAY BOATS ~•THEODORE ··ROBINS Office fvrnitutt & 3101 Coast Hwy, N R EqulpnHf 8085 611-2.547 .'. 'FORD. . ..••................... Xlnt new & used ofc fum. IOSTOH WHALER plan f1lei.. w k benrhes M r 1 · 20b0 HAABO~BlV D COSTA Ml~A 6'12 0010 CE SURl'LUS6JJ.2777 mt c·ond, 13 t, tr r, rov· er. new varnish, Mere 20, S21!J5 752 fll I l, 673 8256 Mille I' P ·75 Honda 360T, cxccll rond Sacrifice $500/ofr. 96()..~ Spet>d ·O Print ,..I u1d Duphcator, Model 2300 l"or Sale "its IS", best or fer. 642-4321 ext 297 UeaulJ ful l1ke·new offl<·c fum c m~Uy importer! leukl & ore cqwpment <'.oing outor busin<•ss $100,000 ong value, sell- ing for le ss than v.a Desk ~. r h a1rK, {'On rerence tbl & chra. files. shelves, typewriteni, art objects, & misc. Ca ll (714)1>79-4666 PIClllOI & 0rg9" 8090 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Hammond Regent Must sacrifice 645-2283 ----On~ of 11 Kind Antq Upril(ht Stained itless paneb. Perf cond. Beaut tone . Ai.ki n g $2200 648-2562 COHHORGAM C.pnece 1464. rhythm lied-loo. Make otrer. Call evfl8. 631-0367 ----Trailen, TroHI 9170 Christmas Sale 38' C:hns Sporlf1s her. twin d.sls, low hours, radar. HDI'', fathometer. t1.C, 1.•tc-, etc. $33,SOO by owner ~·7863 CHRIS CRAFT WE:LLCRAFT IVIHRUDE 15% OFF ••••••••••••••••••••••• '76 Al.rstream. Z7', loaded wlxtras, used very lJtUe. Sl2.500. 675-3521 -- -.AllfoSenk.,, .... la AcualOri•• 9400 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Tonneau cover Drand new tor '65 lo '67 Midget or Sprite. l60. 838-5834 '64 TRA hrdJ.oo only, ex· cell. cond. -$1 90/ofr. on ull 78's 900-2938 ... .,.._"_"PCN_r11oat cettter.._ ___ for_w. ___ _ 15.5.SNewport Bl"'d CM ••••••••••••••••••••••• 645·60 IS AMI.-•/ 13' Boston Whaler. 55hp •• ~~: •••••••• !~.~~ '16 Johnson. Ski·f·i11h· • Dive. Trlr , batter y, 6:1 Cadillac, c~vertJble. anchor, xtras. 5S2·8<Y77 Sdver/gray. On g Ownr. - - - -Cond Xlnl. 64().0159. 24' Sear ay w/flybridge, & T-ks 9560 trlr S9llOO ' -673-..3296 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---------Xlnl runruna work lruck. SELL Idle items "wtth a '65 Ford. Asking 1700. Dally Pilot Ctusified Ad. 673-s:lrl. 9100........ ..... 9800 '78Toyota SRS l.ong Bed 494-6918. •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• '73 Cluh Cab Dodge Pick UpS2500. 646-2540 WT CHAHCf FOR 1971 SJOl•s SAVE! IUYORLUSE MOW! 79'1 MOW ARRIVING! •IMW• •RESALES• '7420024sp. (313LPF> '75530ia air (560MML> '7620024 llp. (SOOPQM ) '71Dli4ap. <28J.5Pl > '76 530i 48f (315RKSl '77630CS (689T JE> '7873318 (511103081 '78 7331411p. 1505WPF J Also limited number of 1978 3:20i's 111 sUll uvullo· ble. Call ua today! 131·2040 495·4949 OIAHG£ COUNTY'S & Sales-Servlce-Lea.stng 1ovc ....... 11tc.. RollsAoyce BMW l~J1mboree Newport Beach ~44 "18 2002 f'jord blue, flaw. lell.io.ded. CARS IN STOCK- MORE ON THE WAY! TEST DRIVE THE RX7 '75 Cllffy 1/J T. 788-8502 xltlt cond, ~ v .a.auto-8' • 7 7 8 M w , 3 2 of • bed, $3000/olr. 980-2938 • Oranpl blk, 4 spd, 33,000 TODAY v-9570 mi, A<; stereo xJnt cond, ... •••••••••••••••••••• -.,, l'P. 494.0137 eve1 ''12 Ford Van, 11nk1 I~. t~e, AM /FM,• U'tt, PS, PB, S2fl00 PP. f113.~ Mutt aelJ '71 Pord Van Cuis\om $200 takt over • s-1menta. 1181-~15 '70 VW umper van, nu tnl1 ru.n. •ood, CIH n Betit offer.~ "74 Ford custom 100 van. AMJP'M c ..... A/C, nt w ~'· 1ood c ond. /bet ofr. Walter. ma&I wkdyl t.J. CREVIER $1 ll 6 HOAOWAY SAHfA AHA 8380171 T"I U\TlMoliTI CMllVINQ MACHlllfi •USIDIMW1• '13Bev SIR (5'1HJP> '74aoaza S/R (140L0 1''> '753002 Auto, air <22361 "Jtl.01"8/R <OZIRKM > '71 U0:41p8/R (01'79) 'T711Dcat 4/tpd (TlUIU) a..M ...... " ••••••••••••••••••••••• '69 M ust Sell bcrorc Chrtst.mas! New eng & Lares $1800 552·8583 '70 Ghia. Light blue. Nt>w paml. rbll eng. gd cond $26()() Ph 848·9912 an 6 Ma:ado 9731 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2. t 50 H..t»or lt•cl Costa M~sa 645-5700 '72 RX2 Mazda. All l!X tras Very Rood cood. $850 flrm. 499-4226 -------MlrcedH B.m 9740 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ··n 240D. Auto. 1ur , 1m· mac. Lo ml. Mu11t lic>ll. 640·5565 eves, 754·634J dayl>. __ _ 75 VW D~etl e Taw!'y leather. ;ill extrai.. li!>OO beh~e extcnor, deluxe in· act ual m iles . l'ctf c•c·t ten or , AM/F M Ste reo cond . $12,750. Cal l Mags & radial tires. One 645·6101 as k for Mr owner. Pr1. Pt S2900 Howard. Call 633-2791 ,__--___.--~-------..-.--in 9920 '64 VW Bus. Must Sell ••••••••••••••••'•••• •• Any rt'8!l008ble ofr. 213-633--0844 YEAR END CLEARANCE '7S ilabblt, stereo ca~ . A/C, S7K m1, xlnt cond $27001080. 842.5452 AU '78 DemOfi must i.to Christmas Cumper. '64 t h is month ' s e .. ui. VW, good body & f'ng , TODAY • sooo 964·3421 '72 VW Bus. 0nl(inol Owner Mt-4289 ---'668ug Good eond 1tion 494·6918 ·74 Dasher, 2 dr alt, Top cond. $2150 5411.3975 ·n vw, Sil ver. A M /f'M tape, mint conditio n 49'1·3979 COHMElL CHEVROLET .'X:')I ti arbor lih ti • <"I A '.\f fo:S.\ S46-l 200 1977 CHEVROLET IMPALA SEDAN Automatir. pwr. steer. mg, fact ory air cond , tinted glass. wsw Urei.. wheel 1•overs & LOW miles. Lie 857Rl.O SLk. P3642. $4777 1968 Me rcedc11 250St:. paint. int & l'n l( •Int, $8500. n6 5996 aft GP M '70 VW All.'I New paint. '67~E cpe, net.'Cis work. New brakes. New tires Best ofCe r over s1200 Snrr. S3000t bs t orr. THEODORE ROBINS 64G-597 J 640-029{) 9750 • •••••••••••••••••••••• 1977 POISCHI 924COUPI Has aU the poulble ex• tru le &ow mllu I (IN.RSC). OMl.YSlttl HOWAID Cltewolet Dove le Ouall Su. NEWPOR'r BEACH llJ.OHI 41tlaper80, 95'Xt ra t.ored, red w/bladt lnt .. Cluatc. 511-3181 '78 IUI SC r etro blue. loaded. 1tln cond., low ml. 7S8502 Late "18 T1r1a . wht wllh bUl trim. ~.ooo ml. 1lr. new Uret, 0rt1. Owner xln& cond. St _1.000 6"4422 <Wllt'e6M-l'lll7 Rel. FORD 1060 H ARBOR BlVD CO\TI\ M l~4 o4? 0010 9100 _,979 ~s21499 Lincoln ~:: VERSAILLES 5.'18-6670or 830-703l transportation. 8 5. Can ----be :;t't'n th1:; wt:ekend. Ford 9940 Call $51-44JS '16 Volan• rtoad Runner. AT.PS.f'B.Cl-1 AM/f~. cru1S\' l'Ontrol. s port wht"'t'b , xlnt l'Ond. $3950 957.9320 aft Si'M ALLEN RESALES 1973 FOaO G•AN TOltl"'° .................. '2799 ~. N,~ .. "OtW ,.....,.,, """''" •uo f'i<"""'"' • t • .o~ "' ,-fl"Otf~"Q -MOflo \ell•-kl"""' ... _ a OQl'.~t" 1()&!>.IRr11 t•7t CAOfUAC $2999 cou" Df VIW . . .. .. . • .. . . ftilf'tl'N'H1 """""'tr1.,,.-0f1'fMW"J111n 'tltlo r....o111• 111'i1~h•'IO nf ·~ •N! •·1t"')•M•1 01t,,... -1n t"''" ..,.,,_ ., o"'' nnro; fl' u1u '"' .. "' ., •• .,. al 11•t4fot t1t11A.}IP "~ ,..1,,., M it'"'"•' ,,l'I•• Ct114.,,11, 1974 CAC>f~C COUl'f CALAIS IV ,t .en 14 t •-.r ut • '• ''-""' ,., •'••,.. , I •I O• ,_-..~ -1• II l JI" I 1976 roMTt•c FfHllRO ... '4799 .. '5799 ,, .. fl() ,..,_. c;,,.... ..,..,,,,,..,,, ....,..., ••• Cfof\41 '" "'•'~ A '"" ~ flof•ly "lP\ tJ(JI " • 7tt'J'V' ~s~~VT~0.!.~G~M,.~~.1.. . . . • . . . . . .5 6 999 f ul'°' t04iOIO ~ CIUtM LOntrfll ~' w1ntt;""""' •••~.,.. ~or"'" ftlCtHl("oit ~ '\fM•t ~-·" •• , .1tW1 ,,.,. •ri Whit& otft\ flt n 0 111'11"1t1fMW fn.. t jf rn•f hwt1U,t1•1"11 f""41'1l,.1 ~~~~~c: .............. ~8499 , ......... ""°'"' -... -°""' 39tlf'I ·-c.¥•1\A ....... C"-~-..,ft-l<'C> ,..,,_,.,.....,.VICI~ r rw"Mt"• f"(WttW\ "'1t\dl"'1 •• tuJ'V ., cnnrt.1.,.,. oQ t w,.lf W~ CnMoe••-""' ('9~ t'-"l•''tft b~:v~~.~ .............. '8499 1 OAA ·~" ,_..." a.t '""""''~""-' ,,_,.. l•u 'i(W",._., <.~'#ff• "'-• ._ .,.__ .,...., """" eu•o ·-• "°""' -"° ... ... ,,lol~--,._~---""'°"'"""°"".--.~, .... -_ ... ,NMCel u:~~~ ................. ~8999 lllMY ~ llWOl'llflOwl ~ tnleflor. ""' ---.. "'9 lllCe OOI-A Oll'9lllll ~~ IS*l"J«ll o,......,.., 714 ........ ,,. 014 OAILV PtlOT Syndg, Ptetmbt! 24· 1111 NABERS AUTO CENTER ACROSS FROM FEDCO ON BAl<ER ST. . . TH£ I' SELECTION OF QUALITY SED CAliS IN ORANGE COUNTY. FINE, A---PERED, PR&OWNED AUTOMOBILES -OYER 100 CARS TO CHOOSE FROM '70 CADILLAC FLEETWOOD IROUGHAM ,..,.,.., IOI> lull -"""' -_, .. lact()f'f ... concl~IO'Ml'O CN•-AM/fM&till-lat42MJSI $199 '7] UMCOLN CONTINENTAL COUPE ~---..... -1.c:tQt'f ... _..,.,.... "" -&Nel/f'M-lndl-BESl 8UYlt•1"H80) 5 J 99 '76 BUICK RIVIERA ASTRO ROOF Plldcl9d tOp tuft -N>IH "°"'"' •~M•. lllC\Oty w oondllt0n40Q, tins 5999 -CfU!"" contml AM/FM ..,,~ 1t0<eo 1--,_,..,. _.... 1C1W ""'" l111?2Rl YI '16 CADILLAC COUPE DE VILLE 55999 :=:' =-= ~"'~ .=:1~~ conclll'-'9.1111 '77 IUICIC ELECTRA LIMITID PAlkLAMI 8B>Nf ,,_too."""..,... ... - -fmaory ... -_,,.... °" .. ~.1111-, ,. ... ,, ..... 111. ,,. ~ -56999 ....... -.-LOWMllES (1062TD8) 176 LINCOLM TOWN CAR SEDAM .._IOI).-'"'-·""'-·"'*--·,_..,.., s7399 1111 ,.._, ~ COf'lnll AM/FM .. ...., Wiii! I ~ -1119YW, Laq New "l'OPOV) 1 TO CHOOSE FROM, '11 LINCOLN TOWN CAR SEDAM P-.c! IWlll 100 -lt'lltlllOt. llAI -· IPI" -..... $899 t8':10<y al< ~ conlrol hK ,._ AMIFM 11"90 Wiii! 8 treck pltye<. Tl•,.<* .. True LU•UIV (1319WGN) '78 CADILLAC COUPE DE VILLE ~IOI). -""""°' lull -OOI" -s 1 0 900 -· ~ control lilt -AM/FM ....,, 11..-.0 I-~ ., ~ Yf AA/ti.000 "41lE WAAA1'HTY cn 1•vzt1 I '13 CHEVROLET CAPRICE 4-DOOR ODtion' ·~ l-100 ru• -'""°"' ... WEElllNO s 1799 SPCCtA~ 1•3bOHAHI '75 DODGE DART SPORT COUPE$ --·-... Slant • ~ "--tleM"O -.,._ -_,., _Ot!IY24000""'-'W<E NEW!(f 14 1NOO '76 TRIUMPH SPITFIRE ROADSTER .__ ........... ..ol0.,_.,.,.110.,,.._ 1ue1PICEI 534 99 •16 OLDSMOBILE DELTA ROY AL SEDAM ,..._'°"'lull -laaQt'f llM COM#-.,.,. .. OO'lf'O' •fld cr.399 '°""-(7"NAN) • 75 CHRYSLER TOWN & COUNTRY WAGON 0\09 contt01 ~ teci< I •te<eo 1-~' (IT4?AOOI . F\.41 -~ --.. llCIO<V .. , °"""~"""!IQ ''" _ .. er. 399 MCED UNOER WHOt.ESIU.Et '11 PLYMOUTH VOLARE SPORT COUPE P-IOC> """"'""" _ .. __ .,. ... IKOOtVW s3999 '""'° ,,.,.,. a.n1111<>oo-lof&IAWll '75 CHRYSLER CORDOBA $42.99 ~IOp.--""'-!IPll(--r.dOty II# oondn"'""'CI 1111 -~control AM/fM"""' -1---·---'°"'"",_ f1U 7NJICJ '77 CHEVROLET CAPRICE CUSTOM COUPE tl .. eo ""'1-flWRXPJ ,_,°" .....,_ ,llCt ...... .., ""-c:r .... oon1"" ""''~"'S56 ALL CAR S PLUS TAX & Ll9ENSE •ALL CAR S SUBJECT TO PRIOR SALE •OFFER GOOD THAU 12·26·78. ' f ~ I SUNDAY, DICIMlll 14,t•71 0 0 0 NANCY , FINAL SPORTS 0 0 DO '1'0U REALL't' 11-UNK IT COULD ee SANTA CLAUS AND 1115 REINDEER? ,I I THOUG"T I HEARD SOMETHING ON THE ROOF ... WH'f NOT? WHO ELSE COULD lT 0E? !"THINK 1 LEFT THE TV Of'J MY DOG LOVES TV---HE ALWAYS WATCHES IT ANO NOW ~FOLKS···· OUR . ' NATIONAL ANTHEM \ .~ EXCLUSIVE ORANGE COAST NEWS WHAT'S THE MATTER? I HATE 1b ADMrr IT, MEN , eur I THINK WE 'RE LOST A6AIN ! By Ernie Bushmiller HE'S SO S MART---HE SEEMS TO KNOW WHAT'S GOI NG ON () 1171 United Ft1lllft S,..,tt, Inc. ·' l~A , THI~ YEA ~ I'VE DECIDED THAT THE R'EGLALArt ·TYPE G I FT~ A~E INAPP~OP~1AiE . WHO NE.EO.S iOY,1 NEW CLOTHE5 0~ MONEY. THI, /\~ATEfrlAl-61 ~T vou JusT oAVE Me 14, WELL, ~O~T or: INSULilNGt .. DENNIS THE MENACE H~Y! '/o.J FORGOT TO MAIL MY LEITER 10 t:;l>.NTA CLAU9 ! • .. H~ MUc:rr HAVE ... HE r3ROLGHT Hf:f< 90ME. LOVELY GIFTS . . , ~ ~ . l AFTER RECEIVING A PHONE CALL FROM ANTHONY, MR. B'S HOOD, HUNTER M<; GAVIN HEAD S FOR ARTIE'S SUITE ON RIVER- SIDE DRIVE ! /!;'/l.!<O I P '!/ //'Ju "' ;.,I 12-:;4 MEANWHILE, ARRIVING AHEAD OF HUNTER, SAM TRIES TO FIGURE A WAY TO GET PAST THE DOORMAN IF HE PARK5 HER CAR, I MAY BE ABLE TO -_.y GET IN THE BUILDING ! "fHE ONl-Y IHING5 PeoPLE REAL.L'/ NEED A~E LOVE1 UNOEr(~IAN01N6 AND FELl.OW~HIP/ '-'1.JDGE HE'S GOING TO PARK THE CAR ! -I MY 61F"r. HOW NICE. THE~EFOflc, CON?IOE;! 'IOt.Alr?f L-F rHe l'(ECIP IENT o~ THE ol~T OF WARM1M! YE?,- MA~CIA. ME~ltY ~~l?TMA~! .. ~ b i • f .. ?PEAKIN~ OF WARMiH , THI~ BE.iTEJt ee l~AT IOO% ~ME~e ~WEATE~ I A?k'ED , FO~ .. ! LAH, OJD y0t;.(- 6ET ME ANYTHING., M.A~CIA r .. -... ~eASON~ r.,E!1i~&~.: "1 f~M -··: . ·~ By Hank Ketcham PARKER ' I < ) • 1 J ~ 1 WON DER WHAT ARTIE IT CAN ONLY MEAN ONE THING ... MEANT WHEN HE USED THE THAT HE'LL MAKE A DEAL! TERM \QUI D PRO ouo22 _ -.. HUNTER COULDN 'T HAYE GOTTEN HERE YET, DRIVING ALL THE WAY IN FROM HI S HOME! I'LL TAKE THE ELEVATOR TO THE 12~ FLOOR AND WAIT THERE ... AND HERE'S HOPING HE 5HOW5 UP ! '. .. - JJ 0 JINGLE. BELLS I J"'j;LE 8ELL5 ... 0 0 · 0 .r 0 0 SOMETHING REALLY ~oqD FOR SWIVEL-- SHE DESERVES NoTHIN7 BlJT TH' BEST. DOCTOR SMOCK R6/\AeMeeR WHe:EN IHe -rwo OF LJS we:RS Ct...ASSMA-res Al .M6P -:S C H O OL-, JASP5R ~ - -= -=-= I . . SO WHA-r WAS YOUR RSASON FOR QUllTING, KRIS~ 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 ------- OKA4 I A COUPLE OF <;cU GW.S RIDE I~ 1HE BACK HE.RE WITH lHE lKE.E ... AND MAK~ SORE NOTI11N& HAPPE.NS 10 IT. • byFerdJohnaon ... SOM~ P~ESENT /HAT'C> SHOW H~R How I REALLY FEEL ABOUT HER ... ... HOW I GoT HER. BE:ST INTERESTS AT HSAl<T ... IHE:;.N YOU c::>ec1DeP -ro DROP ou;-AN / PLJRSUS ANOIHSR l-INe OF WORK -.,' Sl<SH :-:!' M i"'HS SMAR"llES WHO WA.SN'.,-Aeou-r ,-o MAKS HOUSE: CAL-t.-.S / GOICHA .' eARISNPSR, -rwo .MORe c::>ou e L. es, Pt..eASe.' NAW ... IHOSE' IT£M5 WoLJLD "TAKE iWO t>IFFERENT PRcSE:NTS . Gear e Lemont YeAH , ::C FIGUR6P IH5R6 'WAS ON6 PHASE:: OF r;:::>oc-roRI N ' J: JUSI COUL-PN'I BUY ... MA RMADUKEcID ' .. Mf:RRV CHRISrMAS, SOCKS! LJMPIP L.lt ARV, YOLJ 1~1011 YOU ~LEW 0 0 R COVER! W£U.,Nou.J ~ KlJOW OJJ61'~1~ A60UI OUKE ! , ' MERRY CHRISfMAS, ONE ANP ALL! NO SWEI. SAY"TRICK f;R IREEf'.!__ TH E:Y'LL n-f lNK Wf:'RE LATE HOLLYWEENERS. ~ ~ By Brad Anderson • - CAN YOU TRUST YOUR EYES! Tlwtt att ac ~I sla dirrtt· ttttts i1 dra•iq dtlllls bttwtte top Hd bottom pHris. Ho• quidll)' CH y04I n1d flilul? CIMdi llUWfft with tho~ bdow. _I!_, tf I•-UOf -M 'f -tf J ~f llUHfi ' l"'°'~HIP \f ""'II•,..., > ~I-SI UO'IQllt £ 'OU!tlJW 'If ~I,.,.._ '( ~Sf l4Hld I -~"HIO ~ANT A fcx1h 1 lot of folk\ with 1h1' m c,t. &lld M> CJlll you. A\li \i)ll)C'Ont' to M't the hand!I of a clot'k any hour at random. And <it th<' 1oo11me 1jme to 1hink of • mother hour Alaka 1.am• f hc JlCrlo rmer om:over) the other hour Herc·~ how· l.ct ') ~Y the clock tJ. <.et at ) and the un· known hour Is 9. The performer adds 12 to J, for IS. He then asks his victim to subuaci the gi•·en hour (3) from IS. and to count back 12 Cthc fudged amount) from the number pre- ceding the unknown hour. e SA Y THF. WORD! Add and 1ub1rac:t ~llerr., and 11\e• unK ramb&t tlK ~ult, for a linwly holld•r won1: URGE plus Tl NY phas A£t:L mlnu~ U JRJ-: plu" ~A(;t: .. laus An;. e Santa muldplled ht~ wetghc by two . Ile added four, divided by two, subttacted his weight, and added 10. What wu the sum? eHtn'1 Howl How can 1 ~Ud bt bont on Christmas twfutY Ills f1lh«r and ban a blnbday In May? Tblnk tit!$ O'l'U 8 bit. A•W K' llWOW ~ UI 1..->d •-•I \Ill IUIM -\I ""Wl\!lll;) UO UJOCI t.u1.,q AQ e Riddlc-Mc-This! What will make a tall man short at Christm~? Spending all hi~ money What i~ Sama \ favorite potato? The Ida-ho-ho-ho . II • lb 17 20 ·'2.'i In back-tracking 12 on the clock face, the count will always end on the unknown hour. TOPPED OUT! What can you d,..w to compldt this curious ~•1 To fi•d out, add llntl> from 1 to l to 3, etc. THE WORLD'S GREATEST SUPERHEROES UP ANO AWAY! Add colon nrally: 1-Red. 2-ll. bklc. J -Yt llow. 4-U. brown. S-flrsh. 6-U. 1rttn. 7-0k. blur. . 8-Purple. 9-LI: gray. 10-Black. 11-0k. brown. 12-Maroon. SPELLBINDER SCORE IO points for using all 1~ letters in the word bdow to form two complete words: S PA.RILE S THEN SC.Ore 2 points each for all words or four letters or more round amona the letters. Try to 9COft 1t last 5t IMM•ts. 'Utt ~ IU•-.. Q~fOd 4. - by PASKO, TUSK~, COLLETTA lj61~ 6/LES MANN!Nt5 ~ .L.A0~A7CRIY, .THE BATMAN ANO !JLACK /./GHTNllV6 HAVE: BEEN DICK 15 ROB/N-- MY PAA7"'NER. / WHY WOUL. 0 HE TACK ME '?' hf~ANWH/l..£--1-4/GH OVE::R NIE7ROPOL/S ••• A5S.Al.IL TEO ~y PICI<. ( ~061/V) GRAYSON! SuT DICK /S NOT WHAT HE APPGAJX;. To ee ... IF ! Fl.J:W ~ 6AC~ TO )OUR 8A5E I MANN/NG WOULD SE:t:= I'M MOT YOUR. CAPTIV~ --HE'O KIVC>W )C)(J'Vf: e#:TRAYEO HIM ! HE NllGHT HARM HIS HOSTAGES-- A~ A REPRISAi... _I MOTLEY'S CREW Mlk~, YOU'VE Gor TO TAKE M5 10 00 SOME' L.-AST-MINUI('.; CHRISIMAS 5HOpP" 3! ; BUT 1'L.t... Ml5S !HE; Nf:L. Pl-A'/Of'.F 6AME.5 ! MAY ! HSt..P YOU 1 SIR'? ANO v,;;T--THI& 'S DICK ! WHAT'S GOING ON HE:Re '?' by Ben Templeton & Tom Forman OK.A'/, BUT Ii 88\IE:.R BE GOOD! Y6AH ., GOTA t...101-rr ? 1 .. '4ND 1 7H£R6S TH£ ;<!CK.OFF/ ~ ; ' AGATHA CRUMM \1 PR.BeRNHANG 15 ~ERe, M5. CRUMM . . GORDO 2>.E=-61~, TRAOIT'ION HAS A OCJ<::7 /}J T/.IE;. MAN€::ER1 .AJorACATI • SHOW .-llM IN, WINSOME: SHOE CQ.J'T YOV WCQJ<:( ~~A,~. WHAT'S THE' WMY ooes M'( LE:FT TROU0L:E, KNEe HURT, SiRN ... ANG? AGATHA ?~~..u ----.-.. c King F-""' ~yndlute. Int .• ma. warkl rlgntt ~. l'M AFRAlO OLO AGe" IT'~ OL.O AGE:, 1 AGATHA. ----- .. 8UT MY OT ... ER KNEE" l5THe 5AMI: AGE··· HMMM ANDIT OoesN·T HURT! By Gus Arriola 0 HOW IT, UNa.E. COSMO! 1-001<5 l-JKE A~'/6POI FO/Z..A NAP/ by MacNelly CLIMB IN AJ.JD.GWI T YAPPIN ',-• December 24, 1978 DAILY PILOT J ~ING: 16 mg. "tef. ll mg. nicoooe. BOX. 18 mg,., ... , 1.2 mg. ntCOlllle. IV. I* Clglllnt. FTC Report MAY '78. THEffi YOURSELF s.tld tllt quesllOll. • I ........ to "AJa." f-Mllly WMtcly. 6~1 lAJlnglGll "'', Mew ltlf\. II Y 10022 lflltl ~ U b' ~ QUISllOM. Sor~ wt CMl'I IM-Olhlr$ FOR ROBERT E. KENT, Asst Dir • Iden Uflcatlon Divlsi<>n • F. B .I. How many ftbgel'prfnta do you have oa Ille. and who ... the· ftnt taken? -BUJ HUI, hagcloa, N.D. • We have over 169,000,000 finger· print cards (we also keep footprints for Identification In a few Instances) The Identification Division of the F.B.I. was established July 1. 1924, by Congress. Some 800,000 fingerprint cards collected since the turn of the century by the Inter· national Association of Chiefs of Police and by Leavenworth PenHentiary were The F.B.I.: fingerprints at fingertips. combined to form the new F.B.I . file. Since we destroy fingerprint card1 when the person becomes 80 years old. I e11nnot say when the first were taken, or whose they were. Other than being used to furnish Information about arrests to police and courts, ow cards are used for humanitarian purposes, such as the Identification of disaster u;cttms and amnesia patients. FOR LORETT A LYNN, country singer Stace you were all .. poor H church mice when you were llttJc, did you evtr get any Ctut.tmu glfta? - P.D .• Trenton, N.J. • We sure did. On one unforgettable Christmas, Dad. who started at SO cents an hour In the cornfields. had pro· gressed to the rank of coal miner. How he man~ It 111 never know, but he saved up money to buy hls kids g\fts. Four·tnch dolls for the girls; tiny plastic cars for the boys. After his buying spree. all Dad had left was 36 cents FOR JOHN A. ZIEGLER, .Ir. President, Nntional Hockey League What'• yo•r opinion about pl•Y'!f• weartng helmete? I• It neceMary, and does It Interfere wtth the game? -R.l., &-cat Falla, Mont. • The wearing of a helmet on the Ice for a player In the National Hockey League Is a matter of personal option. The wearing of the helmet Itself does not lnterlere with the game. There are many players who believe, however. that It restricts or hinders their game. FOR STEU.A B. HACKEL, Director of the Mint What la the purpoee of mlntlnt a new mini-dollar coin? -Robert Bamey, San Antonio, t .... • Ptimarlly because of Its cumbert0me size and bulk, the traditional dollar coln has never gained acc~ance as a cir· culating medium. The Department submitted to Congress a proposal that would authorize the Secretary to Issue a more conveniently-sized coin. h will be made of a copper-nickel composll\on. ln 5lze. It Is ~ween the quarter and the half dollar. affording greater ease In handling. FOR THE ASK EDITOR Do you know how Chrt.atmu trea and cards got •tarted? -C.W .• Matcllan, M'-. • Oddly enough, Christmas decora· lions seem to date back to pre-Christian times Records show that the Romans prettied up their homes and temples with greenery and blo~ms for the Sarurnalla. beginning on Dec 17. their time for par· tying and exchanging presents. The tradi- tion was handed down through the ages Germany claims credit for the Christmas r---~-a..-.... l!:'!:rnnm~-...,."'1:"11:-=:~"""'l"~ tre.? When Prince Albert married Queen Victoria In 1840, one of the things he brought with him was the custom of the tree German Immigrants Introduced it to the U.S . As for the practice of sending cards, It began In the 1840s The first known Christmas card. o Londoner$ holiday -------------------~eting in J843. FOR PARKER STEVENSON. stat of ABC-TV's The Hardy Boys Why are you ao rude to your f.,..? Without them !fOU'd be a nobody. -O.C .• Bay City, Mich. , • I'm not rude 10 them, and I do value them. Please hear my side.. I'm tired of hearing my door bell buzz at 5:00 a.m .. and answering the phone In the early hows. I'm often followed home when I leave the studio. Point Is, as with everyone. there are times I aave privacy; and those are usua.lly the times when something happens to spoil ft . FOR VIKKI CARR, recording star l'M beard that !fOU my.steriouely go off Into Mduloa each ~mber. Why? -8 .1., Seaameato, CalJf. • No mystery. I just quit work. I'm on the road 11 months out of 12. and after almost 20 yurs of doing this, I decided enough Is enough I'm family-oriented and always resented being away from my parents, six brothen and slsten. seven nieces and nephews at Christmas time. As weU as spending time with them, I catch up on domestic odds and ends and loads of shopping FOR JOHNNY MATHIS, singer Plcue tell me your foolproof method of gl.tng your a.,.. family Chrlmnaa gtfta. -P.M., Eugene, Ore. • It's very simple. At the end of November. I teU each of my 18 nieces and nephews to write down the one thing they want for Christmas, with one second choice. stating brand name, size, color and the place where I \tn get It. This way 1 just ca11 the stores wen ahead of time and have them take care of everything. It also saves the kids the trouble of mak· Ing returns later on. PRO Or. H.-N....._., permanent rtpresentattue of the Hashcmlte Klngd'om of Jordan to the UN. PRO Ano con CON Prof. V«e...ct. Blam, permanent repruentatl\1$ o4 l1rael to the U N According to the Lausanne Protocol of 1949, the Anibs accep~d ln~ma· ttonallzatlon as part of Implementing the 1947 U.N Partition Plan for creating a separate Arab and Jewish ctate In Palestine. Israel refused to mtlfy the accord. while the concemed Arab states accepted lntematlonallm· tlon even though It would have denied. Arab ond Jewish Jerusakrmltes the rtght to sd· government Presently Israel wants oil of Jerutalem and Its environs for themselves, which neither the Christian. Arab or lslamlc worlds will ever accept. The solulk>n i. fOC' the Arabi to eitcrciM sowrelgnty over thtt NCtor and the lsraellt over their$. This ascuru 1elf-govemment for both and free occess to the holy placia. Should 'Jerusalem Become An Internationalized City? Jerusalem Is the eternal capital ol Israel, the heart and soul of the Jewish pe<>J)le. For the past 150 yean II also has had a Jewish majority without in· tel'T\lpdon. During the Jordanian oc· cup&tlon of the eastem pan of the city (1948-1967). Jews were den\ad ac- cess to the W~tem Wall and other places of wonhlp that~ desecrated by the Jooianlans. Becau1e Jerusalem allo Is NVered by Christianity and Islam. lmiel has propoted ever since 1949 that supervlslon over the holy shrines of the vaT1ous faiths be entrulted to the ttligkN1 communities that hold the.M shrines NICfed. Now that the city Is reunited, all rellg\oua communities art In complete control ol their own holy placec and en)oy free accew to them. C) How To Achieve Total Financial Freedom "Millionaires Are Not JOO Times Smarter Than You, They just Know Tb~ W~alth Formula'' Mark 0. Haroldsen Millionaire in 48 Months Millionaires 1m• not 100 or even 10 tinws smartc.!r than you , hut it is a fad that millionaires arc ma kinJ( 10 to 50 and even 100 times mor(' than you. Arc tht•s t• wealthy pcoplt• workin~ that muc:h lmrdn than you ? No way! If you art-workin~ o nly 20 hour.; H w<·ck, it would he phy.;ically impo,.;j. hi<» (The re an• only 16H hOlm in a week, no one ~els more .) The st· qucl.t ions 11~cd to r<·:\l ly -;tump me. Thut wa'I a few year\ ago. My wif,. and I then lived in Denver, Colorac.Jn, at 2545 South It igh Stn·ct. W<· paid $135 a month r<:nt for a c:ra in1w<l, tumble d down house. My wift· wus 1·xp<~ctinlo( our /IN:ond child and we we re..· Ont hroke . r fe lt dcsperatt~ an<l forced into a corner. I liRd to bor- row $150 from m y fat her and anothN $150 from my fathN-in-law ju st to buy tht· ~rocNit•s and pay the rent. If that was u't t.>nou sch , I was 'lt:vcrnl thou- sands do llars in dcht. TliinJ(s arc muc h difft.'rc nt now. Last yt•ar I could have: rc·tirt'd nnd livt·d o fT the inconw of m y one mlllion doJlars in real <-.'itot<.• hnldin~.11. (lrwi<lcntly, nl- mo~t all of the Income from the renl ''str1tc i'f-tux fn.·e). Sin<:e I hud worked 20 to 40 hours a w eek, I know that I didn't work even 10 timt~" lonJ(cr or hl\rdcr than you. And with m y C·nverage from Ames H itch School (lo<.·nted In Amc11, Iowa), J m q11i tc certain tha t J'm not uny smartt'r than you. If hour~. e ffort~. or bra ins art• n ot what separates the rich from th<: avcr- :lj.{t' J.(uy who is swamped with d ehb and very littlt· income, the n what is? I learne d the an swer to that questio n from an old f(•llow in De nver. This fel- low w orke d in a d ruu store stocking thl· she lves. Very few people kne w that he had $200,000 in the bank, all of whic h he had earne d start i11~ from nothing. Within a yc<1r aftn mt·eting him, J was told and shown tlic samc thing hy a younJ.{ ma11 who lrnd recently earne d over a millicin dollarl.. By this time, I he~an to rcali7.e tliat what r was being s hown wu-. truly a rt•markahll' and workable way to grow rich . I h egan to apply the principlt•11 and methods I had heen shown. The re- 'ult11 wcrt• amazing. I couldn't he licvf"· how easy it Wi111, in fad it 'cerne d too easy. But the n I met an <.•ldt·rly lady (83 years o ld) who, a ltho11J.th nut very smart, has made SJ 17,000 ll"ling the !.amt· form11li\, I ti.en figured m y heginnin~ wasn't 111<.:k. For thrl'C au<l one half year.-., l workec.J hurd to rl'fint• and improve on the formula thi1t I had been shown, so that it would he t·:t.'i)' to j(t'l quicker rcsu Its. As I did this, m y asseb multiplied Vt•ry rapidly (160 pe r cent p<•r year) to the point that I didn't have to work any lon~cr. I Jtt1t::s11 I am hmlo(ging now, hut I did !>il:trt spendin~ a lot of time in our back yard poo l, trave ling around thc t·oun- try, a nd <loin~ a lot of loa fin~. The n one day a frie nd asked me how he could do whttt I had done. So I he~on tu outline the formula thnt I hHd improved to s how him n•ally how l>implc it was, an d how h •could do the same thinK. Ry the next tirne lu.• 11pprouchecl mt.'. I lmd writte n nlmnst n complNc vol- ume on tht• easy way for him to l'OJ)y my n.·sults. . I wrote this in s impf,., strai~ht for- ward Jnni.<ua~t· ,1111 anyonc could under+ stnnd it. This timt• tray frie nd's que'lt ions Wt'rC very ~pecific. (I le hnc.J air ·ady h(•i;t11n buyinj( properties with the for- mulas t hod been i<ivinJ( him). Now he hl•d a property ht• wnntt'd to huy, hut was out of cash . How could he huy it? I n ot only showe d hirn h ow to lmy w ithout cash, hut hy the timP the dcitl was complete, ht• had $5,000 cu"l h In his pocket to hoot. I also showed him how to huy u $26,000 property for $75 down. You, or unyone, c1'n du cxnctly what I did, o r m y cluw friend, have <lone: in fact, you 111.iy well do it helter. (I hc~an doing th i~ i11 my 'Pare time onl y). ft d oe!>n't m~1t kr wht.·rt• you li ve oi the ~ize of your tuw11 o r <.:ity, my for- tnula will .,how you t•xactly how to: •Buy iul'Omf• propt•rtie' fo r as littlt· a~ $100 down. •Begin without any <:ash . • Put $10,00<) cash in your poc:kc•t l'<H:h timt· you h11 y (without sel l in).! propcrty). • Dm1hlc your as11t·l'> yearly. •Legally a void payin).! fl·<le ral or state inconw taxes. •Buy hari.cain~ at ~ tlit·ir m<1rket vahlt'. •Allow you to travel on1• week uut of t·vcry month. When you M:nd ml• a c heck ur 11wncy orde r for $10, I will 'end you a ll my formula~ and mt'thotJ,, a nd you an• free to uw them .mywht·rt· .rnd "' oh <·n "'you would like. . Now if you were a pt·r,ona l friend of mine•, I )wo w you would h<·lit.•Vl' mt• <1n<l 11o t nct'd an y kind of s.t11arantct·, but s int·c you don't know 111e 1wr11on· all y, J will guarantee that you will .he t.·ompldcly sut i-;fit·d and tliat my for- mufa will work for you if you apply it. I wi ll hack 11p that J.{narnnt<·t· hy not <:ash ing your check fi.11 :30 days, and if you for any n·ason drnn.I(\.' you r mind, lt:t mt• k11ow and I will .'it·nd your un- cusht•d dwl'k lm(·k. You may wcl l u!.k, why artl I willi11J.( to s har<.' my formula for wt•alth? We ll, hccau"c muny of you will prohahly seek furthe r cumultatio n and din:c- tion from m e a, your wt>alth rapidly grow s and m y c:on!l11ltation fot' adds to my fortun " But you shouldn't cart• if I profit a' long a~ you p rofit. And I )(uarantt•t• th11t you wi II. By the w<iy, if you fct•I a little unca,y about s ·ndlng a c ht•e k or m onl·y ord<>r for SJ0.00, ~i mply po~tdak it hy 30 d;tys w h ich will complt'tt•ly diminnt<> your ri!.k. I f you would likt• to c heck somt• of my re fere nces I havt' listc•d a few: Salt Lake C hamlwr of Cmnmcrct•, 19 El\St 200 South, Salt Lakt.· City, Utah 84 l J l; C hurlt•s F. H u h e r, Certifie d l'uhlic Aceounh111t, 1R50 Ben- efidal Lift> Towers, Salt l.a kt• City, Ut;th. 80t-5.1J-82H6. To order. s imply write o n ;\ny si7.c paper "Financ:inl Ccniu,", your name and addrt•ss indudlnJ( 7.ip code, pla 'l' it in an envelop •and ~end it to Murk 0 . H"rordsen, Inc., 2612 South 1030 West, Dept. G-461 , Snit Ltk(' Cf ty, Utah 841 J9. Be sure tc> t."ndose a check or money ordt•r for $10.00. • 101.(f:).\lorlc () lforuld1t'n, lnr 1979 .. ~ < ct .. .. • ct a ct p .. 0 nly some of the typewriters dick clack 111 11 zippy pace in the city room of the Los Angeles Tribune Most of them are but outer shells of ancient Underwoods and Royals and don't work at all They have no keys So confides Landa Kelsey, the pert, naturally curly, red-haired Billie Newman of the Lou Grant show. • "My typewriter works," she proclaims proudly "And I know how to type I sup· ported myself that way lots of umes, be- tween acting iobs. I worked for people like city planners and architects Once, back home In Minneapolis, I had to take a typing test 1 did 80 words 11 minute without a single m15take It never happen- ed before or since "But I could never be a real reponer because 1 can't write. I suppose I could do the interview. but someone else would have to write It." Linda's candor Is one of many ad- mirable things about her. Her beauty Is another She has an Infrequent day off and arrives for luncheon at an elegant French restaurant looking superstylish She's In a fashionably long silk skirt with matching blouson top and four-inch high heeled sandals. She walks comfortably In them, a woman of the 70s. Her only iewelry is a single slim. gold bracelet and a delicate cloisonne pendant on a skinny gold chain She Is very pleased that It elicits admiration Her makeup Is almost nonexistent· a touch of blusher on her checks She's that rarity , a natural beauty who doesn't need much improvement. She doesn't even wear nail polish. She Is more diminutive than she photogTaphs. at 5 '3" and bare ly 100 pounds. She Is very small-boned Her eyes are changeable. from sea-green to light gray The camera reaUy does not do 1ustlce to this young woman of whom Nancy Marchand (who plays Mrs Pynchon. the publisher) has said, "You just want to bite her. she's so adorable." It Is an unusual method of showing affection , but then the Pynchon characterluitlon Is anything but predictable Linda, on the other hand, Is. She has so Identified with the Biiiie Newman character, It's difficult to separate the two "I feel 1 know Btllle very well She lives In &!nta Monica, near the ocean, but not right on the beach because she can't af ford the rent. I think she makes about $500 a week, and I know she loves her Job She's developed a lot since last year, when she switched from being a feature wr1ter to coverfng cltyslde. "I just wish she'd have a love Interest or. at least. an oblique reference to one I had an affalt -(here she switches from Linda to Biiiie without changing gait) - with Donovan, the assistant city editor last year," she remembers. "I turned him down when he asked me to marry him because I didn't want to get married. My mother didn't approve of the affair at all " Now she's Linda again. Linda's mother 1.5, by her daughter's I~/ Slklfn Is a Lot Angel«• baud 111rlt11r who 1~dolll.e1 In tnU!rtalnmenr pvsonahtJes I • l"AMlt.'1' WEEKI Y, 0.CMIMI 1•, 1971 The chemistry between Kelsey and gruff editor Asner keeps ratings high. REDHEAD LINDA KELSEY IS LOU GRANT'S STAR IN THE CITY Room description, "a domestic engineer" for her about to-retire dentist-father in St Paul Unlike Billie, Linda bves In Studio City near CBS where the Lou Grant ser· les IS filmed Like Billie, she is single without Inclinations towards marriage In the foreseeable future She shares her spdce with Fred and Mr. Giiiam. rwo marmalade cats As a fellowship alumna of the Un1versl· ty of Minnesota's graduate drama depan ment, she joined the prestigious Guthrie Theatre Company In Minneapolis prior to coming to Hollywood seven years ago. "I came here because It's warm " She worked quite consistently In series TV, on such shows as Emergency. The Rookies, Horry 0. The Rockford Flies, Barnaby Jones. Doc. Marv Tyler Moore and Eleanor and Franklin She costarred In the special, Something for Joey She has appeared at the Ahmanson and Hun· tlngton Hartford theaters In Los Angeles and toured the country from coast to coast for 21 weeks In Summer and Smoke with Eva M11rle Saint "I got this pan when my agent sent me to read for a guest·starrln9 role. An hour l<')ter, they phoned and asked If I'd con· sider being a regular on the show. Up un til then, I'd been very cautious about a ser1es You have to sign the regulation seven-year contract. That's a long time " The decisive factor was the company she'd enjoy. The bond between Lind~ ond Ed Asner Is not an act There 1$ a genuine fondness between them, an understanding and an ease with one another which 1s apparent on screen and more so when they're 1n rehearsal "I admire her profess1onahsm," Asner says Immediately "She worked up a biography of Biiiie Newman. so she would know exactly who she Is and how she'd react in various situations " On the set Linda looks like B1lhe Newman In a navy, long-sleeved shin and tight, well·fltttng blue Jeans Clogs are on her bare feet. But no toenail polish She wears makeup on camera "It never occurred to me to be a news· paperwoman," she says, "and 11 still doesn't But I do visit newspapers In every city I go to I look to see which women have byline stories on page one, and next day I call them up and go vlslt with lhem. They really do doubletakes when I walk Into a city room, and they don't believe me when I say I want to watch them working They rhtnk I'm there for publlclty So they do Interviews. and we all get what we wanl " It's back lo work The scene Is berween Linda and Asner discussing his grand son's hearing problem There Is time to Inspect the Tribune's city room It Is truly authentic. as well It should be Photos were taken of newspapers around the area, from the richest to the nondescript An amagamatlon produced the results seen every Monday night, Including clutter After the take, talk resumes with Asner }olnlng In . Linda Is pleased wit~ the 9Cl"lpts' character development "It took ~while for us to know the peo· pie." Asner remlntb ''The writers are £ • u; ! 0 A tough·tender reporter, Lindo may well be TV's most liberated female those we had on the old Mary Tyler Moore show. but we know each other better " The results are stories with more relevance and more character develop- ment "For an example," Linda says, "there's one script where Biiiie gets friendly with. a hooker while covering a )tory. She has a conflict between liking the woman and trying to understand why she does what she does for a living." On the way to the parking lot Linda confides, "I like the recognition we get on location. 6!ven though we generally go to pretty tc'K'ky mner·clty places to shoot One show last year had us In the barrio. The day after It aired , we returned for another episode. It was great hearfng everyone greet us-'HI, Billle."HI, Lou."' Naturally. she en)Oys the recognition She IS also enjoying work on a serfes that has met with respect and success The Idea of seven years as Biiiie Newman Is not an unpleasant ooe. should the serfes run that long And after that? "I would like to moke wonderlul fea turc films, 1:1nd I will always want to do theater But for now, I'm happy with Billie, and I like her If I knew her. she'd be a friend of mine," Linda confesses as she drives off In h•r new sliver fi1W1 BMW IL.I Bmrul new hits arul okl favorites ... - ryl3tapes 286122• [R!mD --..... _n --_,,,_ . ..... _ .. -... ...... . d ¢ lr recori s for only OVER 100 SELECTIONS TO CHOOSE FROM ON THE FOU.~ FWaE If you toln the Columbia Recofd I Tape Club and -oree to buy 9 more -.ctions (at regu&s Club prices) in the next 3 years 275714 KJ88 Cram1 LOVE GUN 273151 r.==;:J JOHNNY CASH GONEGtRl 2e1oao • SWEET a!liliJ l..[Vll HEADED 266403*CHARLIE RICH'S ~ GREATEST HITS Yes1 Now you Clltl oet 1 l 1.,,_ Of reconts of ~ c:hojce ell •once! All you have to do 1s mail the application, with your chec~ or money order for $1 86 as payment (that's 1e for your first 13 selections, plus $1 85 to cover shipping and handling). Every four weeks ( 13 times a year) you'll receive the Ctub's music magazine, wtuch de9cribe8 the Selection of the Month for each musical interest plus hundreds of al- ternates from every fleld of music In addition. up to sue times a year you may receive offers of Special Selections. usually at a discount off the regular Ctub prices, for a total of 19 buying oPP<>rtunlties. If you wish to receive the Selection of the Month or the Sc>eclal Selection, you need do nothing-it will be shipped automatically. If yeu prefer an alternate selection, or nooe at all, simply fill In the responae card always provided and mall It by the date specified. You will always have at least 10 days in which to make your decision. If you ever reC:elve any Selection without having had at least 10 days In which to decide, you may re- turn it at our expense, for full credit You11 alao have an oPPQrtunlty to examine the Club's ce>mpl'ehensive annual-"The Year In Muslc"-filled with stories and photographs of the year's tOP tt8f11 and events. When it's ready, we'll ship it automatically, and you can read It and live with it for 15 days' FREE examination-with no obligation to buy. The tapes and records you order Wiii be malled and billed at regular Club prices. which currently are $7.98 or $8.98-plus lhipPlng and handling. (Multiple unit sets and Double Selections may be 90m8What higher.) After completing your enrOllment lgl'eement (by buying 9 telectiona within 3 )'981'1), you may canoef membe'1hlp at anytime. If you decide to continue. youll be eligible for our generous ~no bonus plan. ............... " ........ _ ..... "' ....... MY llMt flllU•CAL •rs.st •C-.. w) (IMIMI.,..,. ... ID~ '""'9 .... -.,ory) C lllr" •;':'t I 0 ,_. ... r 0Cllllallll1 00.., I no ......... ) 0,,_4(fto1911'-J o•. o ... 0-.................................................................... . .......... ,..... ... ....... . ~ ...................................... , ..................... . . .......................................................................... ................................................ ii ... ················ .. ......... ,, , ....... o• a 991 A/fl'" ........ ""--.. ,..~,,,...., ~-.... ...,,_ What'a more. if you ere not utisfied for eny reaton, Just return yoor lntroduCtory lhiprnent within 10 days fof a prompt and full refund. Your memberahlp will be ctincelled and you will owe nothing. So 100. rllk eblolutefy nothing by 9IGfC nalntJaQlllifW~"*10nt~ F L-,•···-----------------• .... • 0 ...... Seel" (ttl h) '77-llllit Chnsti&. rill Wtntf. .. ... , HELEN REDOY I AM WOMAN MTKMND&.DI ------___ .,. IT'S TlmE FOR CHAmPAGNE AND CAVIAR E veivone thinks that champagne and caviar are the most expensive food and drink one can buy And, of course. there Is some truth to it A vintage champagne may range all the way up to S40 a bottle. Precious Beluga caviar from the elusive sturgeon may sell as high as S 15 an ounce! Available across the country today, however. are good brands of real cham· pagne that range upward from $7 .00 a bottle and caviar from fish In more abun· dant supply, such as lumpflsh. sold in 2-oz. jars, and priced from about $1 .30 to $4.35 each. Champagne . the very name con· jures up thoughts of festive moments and good spirits. Champagne is the most ver· satile of wines. There Is no menu, no gathering, no occasion. no time of day or night when it cannot properly be served And especially now, during the holidays. and to ring In the new year, Champagne is the wine of the hour ABOUT CHAffiPAGNE In France, where more champagne Is consumed than anywhere else. it Is con· sidered correct to serve it. • As an aperitif before meals, often with hors d'cieuvres. • As the table wine with brunches, luncheons and dinners. • With other wines during a meal. • For sipping between meals. WHAT KIND TO BUY? Champagne Is available in several dif· ferent types, each named according to the amount of sugar present In the wine. Here is their order, starting with the driest or least-sweet champagne: BRUT (very dry). For general enter· tainlng. Perfect as an aperitif before meals and with any course EXTRA DRY (slightly less dry). This is a semisweet champagne to accom- pany desserts. and as a dlgestlf after meals. Also excellent with fruit DRY (least dry) This is for those who prefer a sweeter champagne for a~emoon and evening slipping or in· stead of cocktails HOW mucH TO 8UYl The standard 26-ounce champagne bottle contains 6 generous glassfuls. Large glasses filled two-thirds full Is the measure For a champagne toast, serve one glass per person As an aperitif, allow one glass of cham· pagne per person If luncheon or dinner follows shonly thereafter. two glasses per person fOf longer. predtnner socializing 8,y ma1ll,yn Hanaen With dessert, one glass per person. For an evening of entertaining, plan for one-third to one-half bottle of cham· pagne per person. about 2 to 3 glasses. CHAffiPAGNE GLASSWARE A Oute· or tuhp·shaped glass is recom· mended. It keeps the bubbles rising In a continuous stream, concentrates the aroma under the nose and thereby In- creases the pleasure. SERVING CHAffiPAGNE Champagne ls not a difficult wine to serve correctly. There are two Important things to remember: how to chill and how to remove the cork COOLING Champagne should be cooled. not frozen. If served loo warm, it will foam excessively and soon lose its sparkle. tf served too cold. lose Its fragrance. Champagne will be at the proper serv· ing temperature~ kept In a wine bucket fillecl with Ice for 30 minutes. Or plaee the bot· tie in the lecst·cold section of a refrlg· erator (not the freezing companment) for a couple of hours before serving. UNCORKING While part of the excitement of serving champagne is the popping of the cork, this sudden eruption is wasteful of wine. To produce a so~ "pop," with no loss of froth, follow these steps. 1. Handle the bottle gently, quietly. Shaking activates the bubbles. 2. Hold the bottle In one hand, with the other. unwind and remove the wire 3 . Hold the cork firmly with one hand: tilt the bottle slightly (up and away from you and other guests) at about 45-degrees. popular caviar is often used at catered events and is an excellent choice whenever any kind of caviar is called for In recipes. Alaskan Red Salmon Caviar has a large following among caviar enthusiasts. It has a rosy-orange hue and a large tender grain. Great Lalces Whitefish Caviar is black, small-grained and mild-flavored It can be used In any recipe calling for caviar. How much caviar to buy? Generally one-half to one ounce per person Is a good rule, depending on your budget. STORING CAVIAR Keep unopened jars of caviar In a dark. cool. dry place. Once you open It. either use it at once or refrigerate the remainder In the original jar. covered. _ ...... _ nutmeg and pepper Pour over cheese 5 . Place pie on cookie sheet and bake 40 to 50 minutes or until knife Inserted in center comes out clean; cool on rack 10 minutes 6. Garnish with spoonfuls of sour cream Top each spoonful with a little caviar, alternating red and black Place a sprig of dill in center Makes 12 appelizer servings TRI-COLOR CA VIAR 2 J•ra red lumpt11h cewler 2 J•ra red Hlmon cuter 2 J•ra bleck lumpfl1h cewler 3 herd-cooked eoo•. finely chopped t cup flnety chopp9d onion 8 lemon wedgee t cup '°"' cre1m t pkg. ahlb• crectun V. pkg. butt., thin creek.,. 1. ChUI three kinds of caviar, thoroughly Chlll serving plate and dishes. 2. Just before serving, spoon caviar into 4 . Twist the bottle slowly ln one direc- tion, not the cork, and pull the bottle down gently and gradually The main point is to keep control of the cork at all times and to slowly reduce Internal bottle pressure. Eventually. the cork will ease Itself out almost noiselessly Let them eat cauiar -In o dip, on a quiche or os topping on deuiled eggs. WHAT TO SERVE WITH -CHAffiPAGNE For a champagne toast. serve cham· pagne elegantly, alone. Before lunch or dinner, simply serve salted almonds or crisp, buttered roast fingers with II. Caviar, the traditional companion to champagne, Is an Interesting subject, so let's get acquainted with It. ABOUT CAVIAR There are a number of types of caviar on the market, the most expensive being Beluga Most of them can be found In gourmet departments of supermarkets and In spectalty food shops kelondlc Lumpflsh Caviar Is the beJt· seUlng caviar In the country, It Is available In both blade and red vat1etles. Its roe has a small firm grain and & mild flavor This AND STILL FURTHER A few recipes to te mpt for the holidays. CAVIAR QUICHE t nlM-or 1D-lncti unbeked pie ett.11 '/4 cup butt., or m•rg•r1n• 1 cup llnefy chopped onion 1 cup diced SwlH chMM • eoo• 2 cup• noht creem 1 teHpoon Hit v. tMapoon gn>und nutmee '/t ... apoon Oround white ~ YI cup eour creem I table•poon• lcel•ndlc bleck lump. ti.h c:aYler 0111 or pa,.ley •Pft9• 1. Place rack in canter of oven and preheat to 400°F 2 . In skillet, in hot buner, saute onion un· tll transparent 3 . Tum Into pie shell. sprinkle with cheae 4 . Beat eggs lightly. add cream. ,.,It, three separate dishes Spoon hard cooked egg, onion and sour cream Into separate bowls 3. Arrange all filled dishes on serving plate Garnish with lemon wedges 4. Arrange crackers In a simple serving dish. Makes 8 to 10 servings CAVIAR-STUFFED EGGS 12 eoo•. h•rd~ect end ett.llect Y1 cup meyonnelt• or ••l•d dre11lno 1 teetpoon prwpered yellow mutt•rd D11h pepp.r . 4 tebl91poon1 (2-oi.. I•,, red ulmon caviar 1. Cut eggs In half, lengthwise Remove yolks and m.uh Snr In mayo nnaise mustard and pepper Fold In 2 table· spoons of the c.')vlar. 2 . With pastry bag or teaspoon. fill hollows In whites Garnish with remain Ing caviar. Refrigerate If not serving Im mediately Moira 24 ha/veJ 'AMILVW£[Kl'I'. ~t4, •ti•• ti Betty Ford Henry Fonda Phyllis Olller cosmETIC SURGERY: A MEW YOU 8,y Anita Summet H enry Fonda did It. Jackie 0 did it. Even the Queen of England and Bet· ty Ford did It. What they did was have their faces lifted, an act which not long ago was a secret as closely guarded as Queen Elizabeth's private life . But today even commoners are flocking to plastic surgeons to put their be.st fiiu forward Now that the veil of secrecy has been lifted on face lifts. mon? people are blab- bing about them -former First Udy Betty Ford for one ('Tm peppy and happy wtth a new face to match my new life ") - and more are having them. The face lift of 1978 has kept pace with o ur space-age process. It's a far cry from the mini-lifts of the early 1900s, mostly carried out in Europe (the U.S. now leads in the world of 5Urgical self-Improvement. Americans and foreigners flock to New YorK, Los Angeles. Miami, to get re· molded) AU the doctor did then was eli- minate a little skin without lifting the face, which did not worK and did not last. A pioneer of plastic surgery was Mme. le Docteur Suzanne Noel, a Partslenne der- matologist who, In 1926, decided that the art of face-lifting was lnflnltely more challenging and rewarding than concoct- ing lotions and unguents. T echnlques were then Improved to the point where the emphasis was on excess skin removal and bracing up what re- mained. Now surgeons probe more deeply, tightening up the sagging muscles and supporting tissues resting beneath the skin. It 's tantamount to a spring clean. The face is "taken off." the surgeon's "vacuum" disposes of what's accu- mulated undem~th (like dU$1 under the carpet), and the face ls redraped to a snug, not loose, fit. When Phyllis Diiier, prompted by the trauma of spotting herself on TV ("I had no idea I was that ugly"). had her famed facial overhaul in 1970, $4,000 bought her a nose bob and face-eye-chin llft. At that time, she claims, there was not one woman to whom she could go for advice "Just men, -Milton Berle and Jan Mur· ray, who'd been done years befo,.. Face lifts were on a par with abortions. treated as a bed secret." They're now out of the closet and here 10 stay. They're the newest status symbol. Joining the procession of the Queen. Jackie 0, Ford and Fonda In the lifts, tucks and nips depart~nt are MIT'lc Oberon, Princess Beatrix , Loretta Young, Wllllam Holden, Kirk Douglas, Jack Lemmon, Dean Martin. Zsa Zsa Gabor. Tony Curtis, Cher, Dons Liily. Burt Lancaster, Mane Windsor. John V 8 l<AMILY WEJ!J(LY, ~ 14, tt1t Lindsay, Mo rey Amsterdam, De.vi Sukamu, fugitive Abbie Hoffman. Hair stylist Vidal Sassoon volunteered, "Four years ago I declared war on the bags under my eyes. It's not a morale booster at 43 lo wake up and see a face decorated with pouches. "Luciana Avedon confided: "What nature skipped, I supplied. Try to get by on nature alone past 30, and you're finished Psychologist Dr. Joyce Brothers ex- plored the face-lift explosion: "Our cuhure Is youth-oriented (In others. wrinkles are esteemed) and compelltlve. Women, who devote time to studying their faults in the mirror, plan lifts from 30 on. Men, who fantaslz.e they're Mr America, arrange surgery after being ad- dressed as 'old man' or lose their jobs to junior rivals or want younger women to find them attractive." Said Dr Howard Bellln. Chief of Plastic Surgery at Cabrini Health Care Center, N.Y . "Most of the 4,000 opera- tions I do annually are on the man-and- woman next-door. who save money and decide a new face lasting a decade is worth more than a vacation that's over In three weeks." l ining up cosmetic surgery, however, takes more guts than planning a vacation. First there's the consultation when the doctor determines If the patient's enquiry is serious or frivolous. Prior sessions wtth FACE uns Jl,800 to J3.000 BODYWORKS THIGH ANO CALF REDUCTIONS '3.~ an analyst are recommended Some are refused. "Those who don't listen," said Bellin. "When I spell out why I can't duplicate a dream nose, bosom or but· tocks, and suggest alternatives. I reiect those tuning me out." Speaking from experience, Phyllis Diller said, "Some skin does not go the way It should. I adore my new face, but one side ls fatter than the other It's unrealistk to expect perfection. However brilliant, the surgeon Is worKlng on a human, not a wax-wotks dummy." PhyUls had a booster shot last year (although a lift's llfe span averages8 to 10 years, it could vanish in as many mon1hs. The fault Is not the doctor's: it lies with the elasticity and texture of the patient's skin) because "gravity doesn't stop pulling, and It's au directed at my face ." This time she had her eyelids trimmed and breasts reduced The positives of plastic repairs are ob- vious, but how about the negatives? "In- fections, always a ri.sk ln surgery." accord- ing to George Mlxter. M.D . Asst Dir of Health Education for the AMA. "could be horrible, producing facia l deformation. twlsllng. Severed nerves are a possibility. dependent on which nerve Is cut, and how many, controls the degee ~paralysis." An Amerk:an Society of Plastic and Reconstructive ·Surgeons' spokesman warned: ''There could be temporary hair loss. Rare problems with cin:ulation -lit- BROW LIFTS ~S2.000 EYELIDS S750 to Sl.650 ~NOSEJOBS S750 to Jl.800 BREAST AUGmENTATIONS S900 to Jl.800 " BREAST REDUCTIONS S2.500 to J'.000 tie areas won't heal Arresting the aging process doesn't worK on all. Patients must be psychologk:ally as well as anatomically suited They forget ii takes a month to become new. They go Into shock when they emerge from surgery battered and bruised, instead of visions of beauty " Bellin admitted that, "All doctors. no matter how skillful, have no control over natural phenomena, such as postopera- tive facial bleeding Unfortunately one blood vessel In every hundred opens after the patient has left the operallng room Although not life-threatening. unleM stemmed right away. It could cause skin loss and excess scarring " Some of the horror stories on file cite a woman who cannot close her eyes be· cause too much slJin was removed. Orbs can end up one above the other or be mtSmatched In size. or grotesque scar marks occur on the face instead of the rightful place -behind the ears. circling the hairline. A knife-happy surgeon could tum his patients Into z.ombies -their faces so taut, they cannot crease them m· to smiles or frowns A common sight is a shriveled neck under a wnnkle-lree face James 0 Stallings. plastic surgeon and co-author of A New You . How Plastic Surgery Con Change Your Life. whose practice is mainly confined 10 body con louring (a total body hft, Including flabby arms and unattractive hands. ls available for $10,000), said. "Graceful aging has been accepted In the Bible Belt ·· Another upbeat note: after the last of Jolie Gabor's three lifts, she was so ecstatic, she Introduced her new visage at a party. The guests? The1se she rated overdue candidates for surgery! Said Virginia Graham, "It's the best and most Important thing I ever did Why should viewers pay more attention to my baggy eyes and sagging chin than to what I say?" The wife of jockey Willie Shoe maker. grateful to her plastic surgeon. honored him with a big ba.sh Although most seeking to tum back the clock via beautification and rejuvenation no longer slink In and out of doctors' of· fices. trying not to be seen. there are still a few ~ho try to keep It darK. Bellln's fa· vorlte story is of two jetsetters who advls· ed their husbands they were off to a telephone·less Maine hunting lodge for a month. When they returned, one hus· band stared at his wUe In admiration: "You look teniflc: I don't know where you've been -but make sure you go back again next YQJ." Husband No. 2 was sceptical and more perceptive. "You look much too good, You've either had a lover or plastic surgery I hope It's raWI surgery " ..:.;, The war against roaches is fin ly over! Ne.ver again will you have to constaotly spray .. dust . 'bomb' your home with evil smelling chemicals only to walk into your kitchen. bathroom or bedroom a few weeks later ... snap on a light. or open a drawer ... and gag at the sight of a new colony crawling over walls. counters or sinks. Because here from California's leading uni- versity from U.S. Government research scientists . . comes dramatic proof of an amaz- ing 'DOOMSDAY FORMULA' that when used on this LIFETIME FREEDOM roach-kill program spells SURE . PERMANENT DEATH to every last creeping, crawling roach plaguing you today! - PLUS. completely protects against ants. silver- fish. palmettos and waterbugs. too . all starting with just a SINGLE BLITZKREIG TREATMENT that launches you on the way to making your entire home IMMUNE TO PERPETUAL ROACH INFESTATIONS FOREVER! - Even more startling, once you apply this amazing 'Doomsday Formula' and leave it in place. ITS KrLUNG POWER LASTS INDEFl- NITEL Y -NEVER FADES OR WEAKENS FROM AGE - in fact. is so utterly devastating ... from your first sprinkle-on treatment, you're on the way to protecting your home FOREVER with a chemical "death-shield" that no roach can pos- sibly come in contact with and survive! Yet it's sate to use around children and pets when ap- plied as directed. DRAMATIC PROOFl HOUSING OFFICIALS REPORT: NOT ONLY KILLED ALL ROACHES - BUT NOT A SINGLE ROACH COULD BE FOUND A FULL HALF-YEAR LATER! Yes. extensive test- re sults in San Francisco, Los Angeles and San Diego Munlclpal Housing Projects still have officials gasping In amazement as A SINGLE ONE-SHOT TREATMENT of this 'Doomsday Formula' completely roach-proofed scores of plagued apartments! In all dwellings tested NOT A SINGLE ROACH WAS EVER SEEN AGAIN! And mind you. this was after years of fallure by professional exterminators desperately trying a battery of so-called "high-kill" chemicals. .. Cl. • < .. •TESTS BY CALIFORNIA UNIVERSITY AND U.S. ~VERNMENT SCIENTISTS PROVE WONDER ~ EORMULA UP TO 37 TIMES MORE EFFECTIVE -:-T.MAN PROFESSIONAL EXTERMINATOR POI- • ONS. PROVES SUPERIOR IN ELIMINATING ALL .. ROACHES AND PREVENTING REINFESTATION IN EVERY TEST RUN . • LASTING ·DEATH-SHIELD' EFFECT KEEPS ITS KILL-POWER FOR YEARS AT A TIME -SO STARTING WITH A SINGLE ONE-SHOT TREAT- MENT YOU PROTECT YOUR HOME FOR LIFE! ... ~. REGIS'tERED BY THE UNITED STATES ENVI- RONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY FOR USE IN ALL BUILDINGS, COMPLETELY ODORLESS ..• GIVES OFF NO UNPLEASANT FUMES. ONCE APPLIED YOU'RE NOT EVEN AWARE IT'S THERE. MORE PR CAFETERIAS AND RESTAU· RANTS WIN ~OTAL FREEDOM FROM ROACHES AFTER JUST A SINGLE ONE-TIME TREATMENT! In test after test . location after location ... food establishments that were prime roach-targets . . tnat used to demand fwice- weekly spraying by professional exterminators .. DISCOVERED TOTAL FREEDOM FROM ROACHES . , for the first time ever! Even more significant -they've stayed roach-tree for MORE THAN A FULL YEAR AFTER JUST A SIN- GLE ONE-TIME TREATMENT! STILL MORE PROOF! HOTEL TESTS PROVE: JUST A Sll)IGLE, ONE-SHOT TREATMENT AND ROACHES VANISH FOREVER! It's a scientific fact! So effective is this miracl~killer .. even in dark elevator shaft s of commercial hotels. (normally a roach's playground paradise). not a single bug could be found in months and months after JUST A SI NGLE ONE-SHOT treatment! Yes. here 1s that lifelong dream of TOT AL VIC- TORY OVER ROACHES. ANTS. SILVERFISH AND WATERBUGS that science now offers you. and it's so easy for you to win in just 2 simple steps 1. Whf!rever you have a problem or suspect a problem may arise (as explained in the pro- gram). you simply sprinkle a tiny dusting of "PEAMA-KILL-100" wonder-formula, That's all there is to it 2. Since this LIFETIME FORMULA never wears out loses Its strength . . fades or weakens from age -you only reapply It if somehow it gets damp. wet or washed away -painted over or covered up -or, of course, if you move to a new dwelling. And since this entire anti-roach program not only kills all roaches plaguing you today -but CONTINUALLY KILLS OFF potential new Invasions .. YOU ARE PROTECTED FOREVER! PROVE IT YOURSELF ENTIRELY ATOUA RISK Send tor wondrous "PERMA-KILL-100" today on this no-risk trial offer When It arrives. simply sprinkle as directed. That's all there is to it. And remember -1f "PERMA-KILL-100" does not give your home the same TOT AL PROTEC,. TION against roaches as proven by California University Scientists and Public Housing Offi - cials . . If 3 months from now -6 months from now-even a full year from now you see a single roach in your home ... simply return the label for a full refund of your purchase price, (less post- age and handling. of course). You have tried it entirely at our expense . . It has cost you not a single cent! ACT NOW ON FULL MONEY-BACK GUARANTEE -NEVER USE ANOTHER SPRAY AGAIN FOR THE REST OF YOUR LIFE! • 111711 AIM<IC&tl Con.umer Inc . C.rOllne Rd . PtiML. PA 19176 ............. ••••• MAil MO-«tSK ~TODAY·-....... -... ! f'EMA-41:1U..1.. i i ........... a.. ..... Dept. JRP0.1• i t CarollM..._.,PMled1lph&a, .. A 1tt71 i f PteaM ,,,,.,., me ltoihot£OIATELY. ttle quantity of "PERMA-KILL· i • 100" cl'leeked below. on luM guarani• of money l>edl enytlme i i wtthln ~ tu• year (lea postage end handling) If I Ml -! i ~ by 1 llngle roach again ; • CHECK OfFER DESIRED i I• 0 ( # OOll) Regular SIM (tor Mla!Mf a.,_rtmenia & efllcieneles) : only 14 95 plus 75' pollege & handling : ! 0 {# 0111) Large Sile (tor target apenmenta end l'IOmee) only i = 17 95 ptu1 11 postage & handling : ! 0 (#024) Giant Slzt (tor 1atr1 larOt homes ......... 2 tamil'f l I hou-. 1111aff 1torff. rtttaurent1 end Nght commerclel •tablilt.-! i rnentt) only 114 95 plus II so postege & handling. 1 .. : Totll emount encloMCI PA rwidentt ldO S44 ..... I la.ti Check or monty ora.r. no COOi pie .... • CHA~ m (check one) Exp. D•I• -------11 I 0 Vlu/S.nltAIMfle•~ I O .,. .. .., Charge 81nlil Humbel'_ _ _ _ i I Credit Catd # I ~me ~~~~~~~~1 Adel-----------.-..,. # __ : ------.............. ~ .... -----"' " ... .. -• IS a .. ::s .. Our Christmas cover, "Merry Christ· mas,"' ls a recently painted 26• >< 30• oil by the contemporary artist Charles Wysocki Wysocki, who was born In De troll· and now lives in Cedar Glen, Calaf , Is fond of painting "pan -American" small town scenes like the one on the cover. Typical of his style is the intricate detail dnd attenllon lo architecture, as well as lhl! turn-of-the century feeling. Wysocki's pa1t1llngs. which range from $3.500 $9,500 in price, are owned by rrrany collectors. Thb one belongs 10 Hirschi & Adler Galleries, N. Y C .. Psychology Of Gift-Giving There's more 10 many presents than meets the eye Al least that's the opinion of Eugene Thorne, a psychology profes- c;or at Brigham Young Univ "People give g1hs for all kind~ of rea!>Dns, ranging from 1dedl to the banal," he says The least sausfymg gifts both to the giver and the rec1p1ent -are likely 10 be those given "because of social expecta· hons on date~ !>uch as birthdays "Thome )clys. "These gifts may give some plea- sure to the recipient. but they provide no real ~llsfaction 10 the donor, wl)o has given them 10 avoid social censure " A better situation exists when the gift is designed to bring pleasure into someone else's hie "In this case, nol only does the recipient ~t pleasure. but the donor 1s also gratified by being the source of someone else's happlness,'Thorne says When a gift designed to give someone else pleasure doesn't, a sticky situation Is likely to arise -there Is simply no way to let Aunt Agatha tactfully know that the chameuse ceramic candy dish she made doesn't flt In with your decor 'There are bound lo be hurt feelings If you react ln- approprlntely," Thorne says. "It's hard lo say that a gift doesn't measure up unless you have a pretty honest relationship with the other person " FAMID' WEfJUY Th• H•wt,,_,,., Al•pezln• 041 l111,.g1on AY•, H•• ¥ofk H \' 10Q2j ll'"lcMnt aM Pllbllthef Morton Frank E•ecvtt" V.P.4tle• D""1cw PalrlclC M Llnlkty EuattlM Editor, Arthur Cooe>er 14 • FAli41lY WU:Kl'I', o.e.mo.t 24. 1971 How Santa Does It Scientifically How does Santa Claus visit every body's house In one night' How doei. he know if you've been bad or good '> Now there are sclentahc explanataons 10 these questions, thanks to two graduate students al the Univ of Chicago The key to the puzzle concerning Santa Claus lies In his speed say Gary Horowitz and Bas1Jls X«-ithopoulos. both general relanv11y students In the university's Oepanment of Physics Santa, they say, moves almost as fas1 as hgh1 , and everything follows from 1hat fact In order 10 visit the approximately 2 billion households on the eanh's surface in the 24 hours of night he has because of the Earth's rotation, the pair say thal San· ta has one·half of one ten -thousandth of a second to spend at each house (No wonder the kids never see hlrn!) To do this, he travels at nearly 70,000 miles per second: though considerably beyond the average famlly car, this Is sllll only 40% of Christmas Is Her Business You probably don't know Nan Roloff, but chances are you've received at lenst one Christmas card from her. That's because, a& n writer for Hallmark Cards, Nan's business is making up holiday greetings for people she11 never meet M•N19lng Edll0«, Tim Mulllg1n, Alt Olf9Ct0< Rlch1rd Valdtll, hnlof ldlton, Rottlyn Abt• vaya, Htl LAnoon· Food ldlt«. Marilyn HtnNn, ANI. fdltO(, Pam Lambert; lllct-. Olorla Brier. Aovlng Editor. PMr Oo~nhelmer; COfllrtbutlftO Wtttttt, Shirley Sloan F.a.r. John OlbtOll. NOt- man L.ObMN. Anlla SumtMt Manuftetl#fne: VJ'.·Ok, Richard Miiian, .... IUWI Mel. ~a Co111n1; l'tocluctlon ....._ CM1tlne K,.emer. Ptamtne. Mlchael Montemuno 1he speed of tight and no challenge at all for Santa. Similarly Santa knows who's been bad and who's been good because through out the year he flies from house 10 house at speeds even closer to that of light, quantum mechanically "tunneling" through our homes 10 check up on us By now. you 're probably wondering how Santa generates the immense quan Illies of energy needed to achieve 1h1s ac- celeration The answer is that at the North Pole, Santa has a rotating black hole When he needs more energy. he can swing tn very close to the vortex without falhng In. and by a technique known to relat111 tsts as the "Penrose process," leave with more energy than he had ongmally If this explanation raises more que~ tlons than 11 answers. you can find more mformation In a science book -which S.snla may be thoughtful enough to leave fo1 you n\!XI year. Nan, who's been writing ca rds for S years, says a vivid imagination Is essential since a writer of Christmas verse Is iust as likely 10 be dreaming of sugar plums in sun-drenched July as in snowy Oecem ber ··1 like to lmagme a tree and all the other holiday things," Nan muses ''That's usually aD I need to get into the Chrislmas spirit to write a Chnstmas card " The type or card people select vanes depending on who they're sending II to. Nan has observed. ·•tn ~neral. people like lo send long. rhymed verse to their family and close friends. and they prefer shorter verse or prose for other friends," she says. Nan's }ob Is to play psychologist and try IP understand what different types of people will want to say. "It Isn't easy," she adds. "There's a real art to wnting greeting-card verse, some- where between literature and advertising It's poetry, but It's also a product." And If you haven't already received your card from her. Nan wishes you a very Merry Christmas V.P.·Ad Man~ Gerald S. Wroe: &1!9m M9f1 J1me1 8 Powera: A .. oc. Ea1i.m Mtt. Rlchtro K. Clllroll; V.P.-W•lern ...... Joe Fr&ZM. Jt, Mall Ol'Mf MoL. F190I• Paloquln, Detroit ..... Lawrence M. Finn: Calll,. Pertcln•i.StepNlle, von °'' U•lh Ind Heyward, V.P.·•llftletifto Ok, Stanley Roeenleld, Mat11elln9 Mtr., Kent D' Allesaandro, ftromotlon OW.Ctor. L.C-Wlndeor, MdlJrlt .... Margaret Alexandef Pldc "-'tt'one otrectot: Scou DtGarmo, Sporte. Forget vitamins, am· phetamanes and other drugs Accord- ing to the lateSt research, as reported In The Phys1c1an and Sportsmed1cme, athletes might do much t;letter 1f they got "high" on their own blood! Studies on blood boosting -the removal and subsequent remfu51on of the athlete's blood after the body has regenerated the blood supply -can improve exer c1se tame and performance by as much as 40% But there Is a catch - although effective, the procedure is ii · legal in Olympic competition, which forbids use of any substance taken by an "unnatural route" to improve per · formance Science. A vehicle that ··walks or runs" Instead of rolling on wheels may be In the works 1f University of Florida researchers have their way The researchers are Sludylng beetles' legs With a view toward adapung the "bee tie principle" 10 space, ocean and military vehicles Says one of thl! re~archers. "'There are no wheels in nature, but there are plenty of legs .. Televl•lon . Guy Lombardo's gone. but you can suit rrng in the New Year with beautaful music Join Arthur Fiedler and the Boston Pops on PBS. starting at 11 00 New Year's Eve "New Year's at Pops" will be broad· casl live from Boston Symphony Hall. Looking ahead, Katharine Hepburn wall make a rare television appearance Monday Jan 29 as the star of the CBS special. "The Corn Is Green." to be shown 9 00 11 00 p.m. EST BIRTH DA VS (all Capricorn) Sunday -Ava Gardner 50, Robert Joffrey 48. Monday Anwar Sadat 60. Tony Mar· tin 65. Cab Calloway. 71 Tuesct.y - Phil Spector 38. Steve Allen 57. Richard Widmark 64, Alan King 51. Henry Miller 87 Wednesday -Marlene DletTICh 74 Thursday -Sam Levenson 67, Lou Jacobi 65, Maggie Smith 44. Martin Milner 45, Lew Ayres 70 frtday - Mary 1 yler Moore 41 . Jon Voight 40, Gelsey Kirkland 26 Saturday -Sandy Koufax 43. Bert Parks 64. Bo Dtddley 50. Del Shannon 39 BIRTHDAY PEOPLE: Jon Voight, Marv Tyler Moore Newepaper "'41tloM: VP't, ROl>tn o. Carney. LM ll'.1111. Rober1 J Ctlrletlan: Nftppeper ...._ ....... J tmft 0. Baher, Robert H. Matrlolt, Joees>fl C w 11e; -....-. llilO&.. Tom Scherz.,, Olt trlbutlon Mtr.: Praylll• POltro: Promotion, ROl>tn Bank•r. c--a.me" Lind• Movnt; Admtn. Aat't., 81rb1r• Shapl10, V.ll.-Flnence: Alla(! Flat>lnowlll: Controller, Jamee Enright, Cllmft. l!Mftt..-. Leonard S Davldow ' KNIT .A SHAWL A soft tnangular shawl in easy knit keeps you cozy in any season. Craft No. 581 has full knit directions. To order Qaft No. 581, send $1.00, plus 25¢ For postage and handling for each copy. to· Family Weekly Magazine P.O. Box 438. Dept A 12 Midtown Station New York. N.Y 10018 Ek itHI! 10 lncludr !Jl(>Ur name. oddreu 11p cock and croft number (Nt'W York ~tort reMdent• odd toll'$ lo.x I Sixteen 581 Knit Blue Ribbon Quilts StXTff"' b J3lue J(ib on Quilt~ IF YOORE A QUILTING FAN, you will want a copy of this BLUE RIBBON QUILT book ... it contains pattern pieces and directions for 16 handsome designs. Q 116 is $175 plus 25c for postage and handling. Send to Family VkekJ y Magazine P.O. Box 438 Dept. A·3 MidtO\VTI Station Nev..i York. N.Y 10018 Be sure to indude your name. address and zip code. (New York residents add sales tax~ . -., QUIPS & QUOTES ARMOUR'S ARMOURY (SAME TO VOU) "Merry Chrrjlmos. "l~ey soy When I come into u1ew J reply, full of cheer. "Merry Christmas to you " "Merry Christmas." they greet me And coll me by name, Whereon I come bock wrth, .. , WI.sh }IOU the soml? .. There '.s one thing I chensh For thl1 much / thirst To soy 1ust /or otlce "Merry Chnstmos "fir;./ -Richard Armour There musl be some lrulh that money grows on trees· why else would banks haue so many brarl ches' -R~Sands M y son at college 1s a firm believer In free speech He must be; that's why he always calls home collect -Al Bolt Let's pray 1ha1 hens neuer find out what bricklayers gel /or lay 1ng bncks -LucJl/e Goodyear The woman was upset "My husband " she told the doctor "seems to be wandenng 1n h1S mind .. "Don 1 worTy about thdl." replied the doctor "I know your husband. and believe me, he can't go tar ' -Thomas J.aMance ls11 '1 ti o shame thar co/ones olwavs taste so much better rhon u11amrns? Edward Allen By F,.nk Baginski LITTLE EMILY "And arMerrv C hristmas to vou. Pop." PEOPLE QUIZ/19 John E. Glbaon WILL YOUR CHRISTffiAS BE BLUE? TRUE OR FALSE? l . If imbued with the Holiday Spirit you go out of your way to m&ke someone's Christmas happier by a carefully chosen present, 11 may or may not make him think more of you. but It will increase your liking for hr ff I 2. There IS one Christmas pre sent you can give your child that wlll make him happier and enhance his well·belng 3. The "Christmas Blues" which. for some. make the holt day sea50n less en,oyable. stem from a number of causes 4. The Christmas spirit of gift giving Is more prevalent among the nch than the poor because the former are more giving- minded and can bener afford it S. If there's someone you par ttcularly want 10 Impress et ChnSlmas time. enclose a note with your gtft that is flattenng to the ego The note Is llkely 10 cause an even more poslttve response than the g1ft 1164!11 ANSWERS 1. True. The Interesting and • r11ther surprtslng finding of a University of Nonh Carolin& study has ahown that when you show another person such con slderatlon II has the effect of In crea&lng your liking for him You feel good because y0u did something good. and tMI feel- ing Is linked dtrmly to th• nther person I . True Giving yourchlld a pet suitable to his age and ttmpera- ment can be more emotionally sausfying and bm1g him greater happiness than almost anylhlng else you can give him Psycho! og1St Borls Levinson who has made a special study of thl? potential role of pets In the Ille of a growing child finds. for ex ample. that "In many ways the relationship between a child and a dog can be more salutary than one between rwo human beings .. A fatthful dog. It IS pointed out can satisfy a child's deep psychological needs. tn duding the need for a feehng of complete trust. loyalty love and affection. And he notes 1n his book Pe" and Human ~ uelopmenr "For children who are uncemun of their relallon· ship with the grownups around them. the presence ol a pet whose constant companionship c.on be counted on IS absolutely prlc:ele&s " 3. True. Studies at the Un1ver slty of Callfomlll cite ll number of causes for what Is termed the Holiday Syndrome People who have a pess1mlsttc outlook and are mildly depressed much of the time. are likely to feel really depressed when Chrlstmos rolls around because of the contrast between their own mood and the spirit of festivity the holiday season brings It IS noted that "there are those cold. lntctllectual. bah humbug types who have f41w pleasant memone.s of childhood Chnst~ to begin with ' (fhey couldn't r.ally •nJOY Christmas without creating In • t .,,.. • r . I - ner confhcts ) Also, some peo pie expenence a let-down with .J the advent of Shnstmas be· cause they start celebrating. or at least anticipating. Chnstmas 100 soon -so that when 11 does come it Is something of an an 11chma,. 4. Folse Harvard University sl\Jdles conclude that members of the less-affluent classes tend to be more openheaned when It comes to giving presents than the more well-to-do and are more Inclined to give things • they feel the other person will particularly llke -even d they can sa>rcely afford to do so G1ft-g1vlng among people In the higher-Income brackelS was found to be more formahzed more inOuenced by the head thlln the heart. ("Let's see. they g1we us an expensive vase last year. so we'll have to come up with something equally good." etc , ~-True But this Is so only for some peop~ and not for 01hel'$ • In a study conducted by tWo universities (Callfomla and Har vard), 11 ls reported that person~ of high sett-esteem -who have a good opinion of themselv" and their abllllles -are most re4dlly lmpreSMd by an ego- Oanerlng communication. Not .so with low-esteem per&0ns or thow 11\Cklng In self-reliance , Such a compllmentory ~ Is likely to f11n flat with them, for • they simply ~n't believe they rllte It -and are thus Inclined 10 view your motives wtth Jiii wsplclon l&t.I ,AMlt.Y WECIU.'I', ~ 1•. 1171 • 16 SIZE NO. 126 OR 110 12 EXP. CARTRIDGE IMIT TWO ~ CARTRIDGES WITH THE COUPON BELOW 20 or 24 EXP. NO . 110-126-135 -$2.00 plus 25c postage per roll. .. KODAK BRAND ONLYI NEW BORDER LESS PRINTS WE USE KODAK PAPER FeNurM CrecMld Off er ends MAR. 31, 1979 SKRUDLAND PHOTO HEBRON, ILLINOIS 60034 ~ 8"Ndland Photo, Hebron, HI. 80034 © ~ ""°'°· 1978 0 Here l• my cartrtqe of 12-eipo.ure Kod8COlor ftlm. I ~~ · am eneloein• •1.00 plu• 26-potttage per roll with th1• ~ epeclal coupon. .,~ • .t . O Here le my cartrtclc• of j() or 24 espoeun KodacoloT We wie ftlm. I am encio.m, 92.00 phu 26' ~e per roll Kodalt .,..,... t undentand failure• will be credited. ~ ~ _____ _,..._ __________ ~ •. :;::. - ~~, ---~ -f Wt29 SADDUliCI IMW 28402 Marguerite Parkway Mission Viejo ll 1-2040 -494-4949 CIEVIEI MOTORS 208 W. 1st St. Santa Ana -135-1171 ROYCARVHIMW 1540 Jamboree Road Newpart Beach -640-6444 CADILLAC MAIERS CADILLAC 2600 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa -540-9100 CHEVROLET . COHMILL CHIVIOUT 2600 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa -546-1 200 SAIL tHIVROLET 900 So. Coast Hwy. Laguna Beach 494-1131 -546-99'7 DATSUN IARWICk DA TSUH 33375 Camino Capistrano San Juan Capistrano IJ 1-1375-493-3375 SUNSET FORD 5440 Garden Grove Blvd. Westminster -646-4010 ,HIL LOHG FORD 43 Auto Center Drive Irvine-761-SIH UNIVERSITY OLDSMOllLE 2850 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa -540-9'40 CO,ELAHD MOTO•S. IMC. 2001 E. 1st St. Sant::\ Ana-SSl·IOOO LINCOLN-MERCURY JOHHSOH & SON UHCOLH-MllCUIY 2626 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mes~ -140-5610 TV WEEK. DECEMBER 24. 11178 OLDSMOBILE UHIVHSITY OLDSMOllLE 2850 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa -540-9640 PORSCHE-AUDI CHICI IVERSOH. INC. 445 E. Coast Hwy Newpart Beach -67l-0900 R. V. 'S & SUBARU SEA & SUH 17555 Beach Blvd .. Huntington Beach - 142°0675 TOYOTA ltUMAXEY TOYOTA 18881 Beach Blvd. Hunt. Beach -147-1555 VOLKSWAGEN COMMONWEALTH MOTORS. LTD. 1442 South Bnstol Santa Ana-646-0ZJO SU•DAY, DCClllllU 24 9:-00 • <tJ) •Fl '''"'"" 9:30 9 CIJl rre fMl~1ll Hrt Wild C11d Playoll-Tums lo be IRflOllllCtd 12:30 a o l1IJ •n ·11 1:00 8 O QI) rro F""9• Aft Wild C.rd P1ayol1 -Tht Hou\lon Oilers vs lht M1am1 Oolphtn& l:JO • Cllallt!l11 C., TIMil Coma11e of lht H1vralllovatAusl1n malch fl) Jllllllf Dwlt C-.i Tllllllt Coverare ol the hnals competrtt0n MOtfDAY, DCCHllU 2S IO:GO 8 (Ul Cellett foetNll Peaclt Bowl-Purdue vs Geore1a le<:h 12:JO 8 QI! l1IJ Ctllett fOllW Fiesla Bowl-UCL.A vs Arkansas 1:00 a <m 'ro We!Mll Phll1delph11 '76ers at the New York Kn1cks 7:30 ()) rro lnlittMll The San D1tao Chppen 11 lht Seattle Supersonics TUESDAY, D£CElllU H 1:00 111 Colltp l,.ketblll ~hforn11 at USC. WEDNESDAY, D£CElllH 27 7:30 e ''° a.•etblll The Los Anitles Lakers al lhe Goldtn SI ale Wamors. 10:00 e Colltp llattblll UCLA at Slanlord hped l11UllSDAY, D£CElllU ZI 5.~ Ill ho Hockey Los Anaeles 11 Montrul Taped 10:00 e Colltc• &IMttMll UCLA at Cahlorn11 hped FRIDAY, D£Cl111U 29 11:00 (JJi Colttp FootMll Slue Gray 8owl-Nor1htSouth All Stars 5:00 • ®J IZIJ Collect FwtMll I/le Galor Bowl-Clemso" vs Ohio Stitt 1:00 11> Collett Fto!Mll Blue Cray 8o't1rl Japed SATUIOAY, D£CEllW lO t.00 . IIZI Nfl. ,,,.GJIM UO 8 11}1 rro FtGtNll NfC Pl1yoH rums ro bf announced IJ ID> IDl Nfl. • 71 10:00 IJ 12)) t.Hl rro f-.it AFC Playall-h ams lo be 1nnounud 1:00 8 llJl s,.i1s S,.Ctmllr 5:00 & Q"ll ~ WorW of S,Orts Covtrase ol the Mens Downhill World Cup Skunc compehllon from \111 G11den1 Italy, !he World Ac1ob1t1ts Ch1mp10nsh1ps from Soh1. Bul11111 and a report on IM N1tion1I ·500· St(l(k C.r Race SUllDAY, DCCllllCR 24 6:00 • "Mi11dta Stiff HIHtll" (dra) '76-Sustn Penh•hion, Paul Miller. •"file of 1111 GIWtfl Glole" (dra) '69 Yul Brynner, Charlu Gr1r m "GllOI" (dr•) '62-J1<:~1e Cluson. K1the11ne Kath 1:00 • .. ,. .. (dra) '69-Alan Aikin, Rita MOleno 9:00 • (J) Cf)) 121) "II H•'""d Oftt Cllriltr111s" (d11 ) '11 -Marlo Tllomu. W1yne Roeers. C1011s l t1chm1n. Orson Welles llOllDAY, 0£C(lllU 25 " 1:00 • ti) "CllrittNs !ft t.Mtdicwt" (com) ·4~ 811b1ra Stanwyc~. Oenn1s Mo11on G ''Oilwt1 fwltf' (dr•) "18-Robet1 Newton. John Ho.,,.110 01v11s 9:00 • (}D) (8) "Grtt11 Eyu " (d1a) '17 Paul W1nh,ld, Rita Tusl11nat11m. lem1. IOll•than l1ppe TUOOAY, D£COllU 1' a.• e "llarfiltt 111 Ille ..Ut" (COlll) '6~ r1ank S1n1tr1. Deborah Kerr • ''TM OM n.t Get Ady" (1dY) ·sa Hardy Ciu&er too a llf) "Ttfr11 Ovt tf die S*y" (•cM 18 £frem Z1mbahsl It , 01n .Hauerry. lcw•h ftldS/11111 1•e l1ttn1Nnn WlOleUOAT OCCUllO %1 1:00 a (If) "Les .,.;M;I· (adv) '78-Rleflard I01d1n. Antl\ony l'e1k111s. Cy11I Cus.ck, Claude D1uph1n, SH John G1tlrud 1111 Holm • "alrlltlu" (dra) '71 B1rbar1 P11k1ns, Ptttr Hnkel! • .,........., IWl't" (dra) '64 l•mes f11~1scus 9:00 8 <a ~f) "'-' w.-" (coin) '11 rran•fyn Af1ye, Ceorte Clrl1n, Ivan Ol•Oll. Allto111a hrru. R1ehfrd Pryot. f~t Po'"'" S1stcll TMUllWY, 11(.CUllO 21 l:Ol e "Twllls tf C.r (drl) '72-Peter Cusltrn&. Madtltnt Collin'IOn. rRtDAf, DECUIKR n 1:00 e ''nit Trvtll ~ 5tH"'1 a....111Ct" (rom) '6~ 111ylay Mills, Johll Mills. James MacArthur G 9f)"Akltr11 hit•" (dral 'SO Robtrl S11c~. 81uce Cordon, Ntvtllt B11nd MTillMY, DUl•a • .. , ..,.. '*' & ... ,...,. (di•) ,,_,,... S!Mtrt, Ca~~= * a ....... ....,. (Kl fl) '71-Jllit Clwist"' fritz 0 .. IN .. STOCI IC ........ 1,,-QUAIAI COLOR TV It" .......... $225 ,, ............ $215 IJ" .......... $265 ,, ............ $295 II" .......... $275 ZS" ...••..•.. $475 DISHWASHERS :~.:~~ CHOOSINOM :;~~us~~~.~~~ ...... s I 9 5 G.E. rOTSCRUllY s2 9 5 ,..._ . .,.__ ....... " ......... . KITCHINAID $ 3 4 5 ILA TtST MOOR.I ........•.•.•.•.•.. . ,..., ' Thi nlO'li111 sttKJ of a crippltd shepherd boy 11141 lri1 lllOtlllr wbo are wlsltt4 bJ tht tllrH Maal , "AMllll 11141 the lliatrt ~" Pftt11ltrts s.4ay at 7PM ot1 HC. A ' a1111plttlly MW ,....lldilft of tht ho4i4ay tlassk, tllis Is Its first alrillt 111 tweht J'lf'L TM oWtt wenioll, the first 01*1 Mf CM111isMM4 i., IM uutt4 ftf a ~ net.of\, oripally 11"4•Ht1111'51. "WIS~ until 19'6 wMll it• wttMrn11 It tM,...... tf tM cem,...r /writer, Giatl Carto lltMlti, wM •MS IS tM lfttllkal •irtdof ftf ttiisMWwtr'lioll. Mttt _...,,..,. tM,. tf ......... My, AMalll, ... ..._, lllindel .. -..., 1114 .._. Tema Stratas ...,. i.11 ,..,. ....... lllldllf, .... ....., ......,. tMt tMrt ii _.., IM 1tJ Ill tM .W. TM 1lwM lll•P art ,..,.. 1ty ""' ltll'I Na c.ttl .. llllc a.er, ..... ,. WNte a lil& lllttWIJ, IM Siefllt Teal d lla& lltkMlf· Tml, 111 ltrllll" '9 ...,...., Ml 1,,.art4 •well ... 11 TM I* ~ IM ltilk ,,.. f~uttltty ptrfonM Ill ..icll~ ....... I El ¥Mil ~ Em •!M i I u 141 f.J a• I'1 ffii u ~11 I MORNINQ I : ~J!r::i: mm ~~W'~ My T1111t s-llctpl Mon -r •r~ and fn 6:00 -10:30-3•00 U Ma() Tyler Mtole (1cept Mon U 8 D Q) futures U tI1> lMt ol Life U Collafttra~ JJ Mie Oou(las SM Mon CD Tiie PTl Cllib Empt Mon • 0 Wild Wll4 West D llnowlldt• D (2}J (I]) Wllffl Of FortuM D Mechul C.nter (mpl !'fon (!}) Tiie lloolies (J) Sullritl ~ester U Tiie lia Valley B ~ (8) Tiie Edae of "111!1 111> C11ol Burnett & friends G» Ul!Mnity of ll1t Air 8 Im '1tl UQ,000 P'yr1111id .Mle Douc\ls Show; AU 111 tht fD Villa Alttre , m Tlllt Gifl Family Mon ED ~ , -6.30-m "'""Y I the ,roltuo1 0 l;r~ Acfes Empl Mon C·30 II S41nnysidt CfOJ Mow11: Set Daytime Mow1n -• - D l2ll 111t lor w-n Ontr 11 :00 ({Z) 1.,tcll Ca111t '71; All in tht D ""' U Tiie lul !Jeoplt U ()J (ll) Touna I llnllm f1111ily Mon D Ill) Men Griffin Show 8 Dapru• U Empt Mon m Flilltstolla D Tiie M llewlllrt Sllow; M11'f (()TV Clnsfoom D 12]) QI) A111tr1t1 Ahvtl Q) Get S1111rt Tyler Moo!e Mon D (8J futllfes 8 Cll '2ll hmil) Felld 121) Card Slmu Eicept Mon TJ M•tcll Came '71 Empt Mon m .... z. lltwe ([01 Ml My ChilclrH m ,mtiempos tmJ Carol lurnett I frletlds ti) funly """tolll G» Ghost I Mrs. Muir (ljJ DIMll! [acept Mon-Be11ns 11 G» II> C.rtCIOllS f2t) ll0111per Room Q) Tiie Bowtry Boys 3 JOPM Mon only lor I ht fD Mlsttt •oeers fD Electric Company (RJ Villa Meare '2ll Em11cency Ont 7:00 u @ llm D 9 (8) TodaJ Show U 700 Club a ®l 121J Good Mttninc Merica Oav1d Hartman hosts D a> Cartoons m hp ' '°"'; Joyous Noel Mon liD Y ot• for Health -7:30- 0 BodJ lllcldies m Q) Cartoons fD Mister llottrs 8:00 u (Ill C.pt.ain 1(11111100 Cl) f.ll) a ftalures D Tiie m Cklb m hMtope P'itstop -8:30-• fD (IJ) Futures m a> ear1t1M 9:00 ti All In the Famlly: Tiie l'rkt Is ~Mon CD Tiie PTl Cid D Cini Shub; Cl11istm11 at WallilletOft C.thtdral Mon e "9i1 llOMIM SM 8 AM t.. Aftatles (I) 11••-S•H: ~la b llllllt Mon (Bl beryD-r. thfist111as Carol Mon. Ga 1 lM l»CJ lIJl All ill Ille falllilJ; l'tlil OWllllt S...Mon ., s.,.nMn 0 18) 1'1111 DIMl!ut; ChristllllS at W•~l~~alMon 0 ...... ....,. D S..-. Street 9 Mi.t llollells Sholr; • CltrlsllNS Ciro! Mon a...,..,, ... tMct Ml Collete FootNN ffl Blue Glay -3·30-'1JJ Hollywood Squares Bowl-North/South All Star teams U Let's Ma••;. Dul 5l Onr WJ -11 :30-ne l11dy Bunch; A rolish· 5:00 U Cl}) Surch 101 TOlllOfrOW· American tt1rist111n Mon Mm ti u fJ (() IJG) NfWS Empt Mon Gliffift Show Fri U The Bioftic Woman e Ewery011 D lkcllc.tl C.ntlf Mon onlt D ~ 8 (]) C21J Ryan's Hope G DNll! m Mic•ey Iii-. Ck* Ill Body luddies 8 Mowie: Stt Daytime Movies (!])The I.Jar's Club m Mews; Sletpinc lenty Mon (J) Mib Doucln Show Mon only Q) BatlMll fD ~ tawett SM Ill YOY Doft't S,, b cep1 Mon i8J Misttf lloetll aniRNOON 12:00 U Stm Edwards SM (acept Mon. D ill) Hollywood Squaru U flt) All My Chilcl1111 (Bl ()]) (8) llm I!) Movie$: Ste Daytime Movies m Movie: Set Daytime Movies 101 Tut$. Wed & lhurs lliDlt Btwl Lutlc!Moft rri lrve from Pasadena m lloom 222 illl Ullls, Yoea I Y1111 m ltidllt1 .1Kboll S11ow ID E.dtra ADii -12:30-u ()]) ~ the World Turas htePI Mon D 0 ID D1yt ol O.r Uwes; tolltae footb.111 The r 1es11 Bowl- Mon (Channel 39 1111 the Blue·Gray Bowl on Fri) e ltNftzl (JD)f'alllllyF• ., GolMr !')It flt Yoea for Hullll m CE C.rtoons fD Smmt Street \Ill Tiie .lohr's Wild llll Tiie BH Nnllart Show illJ Jeopardy; nt Mum of IG) lillcllell/lthrtr llePort tllristJUS Mon 111 r11a Meer• -5:30- CHl EwtfYDIJ U t1_ 8 (8) 0> lltn (f§J Hodetpodae Loda• m lewitched; A Calil01nl1 tllristl'lllS Mon 4:00 l1ll aJl lillry T1le1 Moole fJ Match Ga111t '71; AM in the 0> AIM•l2 fllllily Mon 'lil O..r WJ An attractive woman (Annazette Chase} under commission lrom an unecrupulous basketball scout, tries 10 persuade Coolidge (Byron Stewart) to drop out ol school and turn professional on CBS's The Wl'llte Shadow, Monday at 8PM PER BOYS AT THE SOPER DOME! RAl"tGE COOl"tTY'8 LEA811"tG SPECIALISTS SUNDAY DECEMBER 24 I MORNING * Indicates an Advertisement e:oo U ump Unto Mr FHt D Mar\ W~ton Mali< Show a Daybru\ LA. JJ Wo1\ina '~' O Y outfl & the lssuts m Ch1istophe11/Blblt Answers &> Rompe1 Room Jl Rtll1ious Procram -6:30- 0 looll Up & live 3 1 Sacred Hurt D Setendiprty U Music & the Spohn Word U Eyewitness Los An&eles e_ let There Be li&ht O Davey & Goliath 10' Directions m Elementary News 39 Marlo's Ma1ic Movie Machine 7:00 O Today's Reli&ion ~ Voice of Aancutture D That's Cat U Tht Better Way U It Is Written 8 TV I Loou al ltarn1n1 lO Public l'ulse m Day of Discowry Q) Er11a1 An1ley Hour ·n nus Is the Ult fD Yoaa tor Hulth 29 Surch for the Ancient Faith 39 A&riculture USA -7:30- 0 Days of Brother Sun 3 II Is W11tten O The Christophe11 0 Undtrdoc U family Portuit ( lnt11natlonal Hour D U Dl'Ytr & Goliath Jo: Practiul Christianity m World Tomorrow II Today's Churdl EID Mister Roem ff Town Hall Mettin1 3l Sunday Mus 8:00 0 12 Mr. Ma100 D Eternal l1&ltt U Popeye & Frttnds U Dimensions O Lloyd John 01itvtt 10 Jerry Falwell Show m 3 Jimmy Swauart Show &> Ru Humbard Show 23 Voice of A1riculturt ID Seume Street it Dar of Discovery €E) Domin10 A Domineo 39 Ch11stmu Is -8:30- 0 Clue Club 3 8 Oar of Oisconry D Octysw, U For You, BIKk Woman O Meetina Time al Calvary m Fred trick It. Pnte 12 Old Time Gospel Hour 23 It Is W111ten 29 Rea Humbard Show lt He11ld of T rulh Do11 lfoutr~V fl/ 1111d E./rtm l tmholffl Jr, 1tor In tlit 1w.tplnJ¥· jrllt>d mnvllf, ''Ttrrnr Out n{ '"" Slq~" ~ .... 9:00 0 re t1i NFL Pre.Game 3 Ru Humbard Show O Meet the Prus U Villa A1e1re O .U Oral Roberts 1-0, II Is Wrrtte11 m Don Stewar1 Enn1elts111 11 llnow Your Bible -9:30- 0 :I: II l'ro Football NFC Wild Card Play otl-1 ums to bt announced O lnsilhl U II Children s TV maewnt O 011 of Oiscomy Ia. Spectrum m Spidttman QI Oki Timt Gos911 Hour 13 Our Christmis Gift to You tt Jimmy Swauart Show €9 Futbol Soccer 19 Movie: a. "four Clowns" (r.om) 10 Stan laurel Ol1v" Hardy Charity Chast 10:00 3 Hour of Power 0 This Is the Lile O Family Film feshwal U Kids Are People Too O Herald of Truth 10 Words A Popp1n' m Burs Bunny/Torn & Jerry Hour l3 Movie: w "Miracle of the Bells" (dra) 48 fred MacMuuay Ahda Yalh fran~ Sinatra ID Sesamf Street 29 Sea1ch -10:30- 3 110 29 Kids Au People Too D KNBC Spet11t: Cnch l °" the Hearth IR) A mrullon of a 1938 TV WEEK. DECEMBER 24, 1978 radio broadcast ot Charles Dickens classic Mary r ran Whitman Mayo, Georee Fenneman Hal Peary, Bret Momson Art Gilmore Nicole Pierce r ran~ Cata and Alice Ptayten st~r O Rew. Leroy Jtnk1m &> Cal'fary Chapel 11 :00 D Jirnmr Swawrt Show m Movie: I! "Stand Up ud Chttr" (com) 'J•-Sh11ley lemplt Warner Biattr M1d1e Evans James Dunn John Boles Step~ Fetch11 ti) Church In tht Hornt fD Frffl1yle -11:30-0 Al Ont With D "'f, 10 ,a Animals AniNls O Amttiun Town Hall ID Rebop lt Met! the Prns AFTERNOON 12:00 3 101 The U.S. Coll Association ChamplOllships U Voy11t to the Bottom of the Su D P909le 7 O Starch m Tlrnn 2• Anyone for TtnnflOl11 fD Enn1nc at Symphony 2t ltttlt Rasuls €9 Bo11n1 Hi&hti1hh/Ntwt U Slood Swtal & Cheers -12:30-u World of Sumval 0 23 3t Nfl '71 u 3 10 l9 OirtdlOllS LOVE R OF C RTTfERS "Wel l. the) ·re lo.ind nl h11le hut the\ 're \llll part uf the an11nal kingdom." 'a)' Dan ll aggcrr~ .1h11u1 the milliun hone) hce' he \loorl.ed "1th "h1k ti I ming" lerrur Oul ol the ky." u nc" mouun p11:rurc·for-1clc\l\llln airing 1111 The CBS luc,da) Night Movie a l 91'M Anima l' have hecn ll uggcrl) \ for1c JI! h1\ life. He \l<1rtcd 11' un independent animal trainer. pawning h1~ furn iture tn hu y hi' fir~t lton rnh I le \upcrv1~cd aniriwl' fur Tarzan pmd\Jl'li!ln~ and the rca1urc "When the North Wind Blo"s" When he wu' gelling read) 10 ~upply the animals for the feature film "The Life Jnd Time' of Grilzly Adnms." he was cho~en 10 play the 111lc role and un acting career was born. This love for llnimJ1s su'1ained him when "Grilli) Adam~" wa\ made in11~ a relcv1s1on ~eric\ in "h1ch he starred " uture ha\ been good to me." he ~J)' "Animals put me "hen: I .1m hxlJ\ I love animal' lkl'au~e of them l\e lfJ\cllcd oil uvcr the \\orld. either ·" ,1 1r,11ncr or ,1c1or or ho1 h •· Vie" er'" 111 mitu:c thJ! I la~crt\ ha\ trimmed qu11e J fc" pound' nil"" 6' I" fmmc for ht' deliut "' ,1 n1mnnt1c figure in "Terrw Out of thr Sk) ··"When \uu'rc pht\ 1ng opp<1~1 1e a ~nlll) he:ir. \\ h1l\ Ill n1111ce nil tho\c C'<lr:t [X>Und ., .. Hnggeny '''~'· 1ulm1111nt: thJt he ~1H over the 200 pound mark while m~lktng h1' tclcv"1on \CrtC\. And. he lirml) 'tote,, he had Mthmg ro do w11h 1min in3 the bee-. rM 1hc fen1utt. ··1 hat I lc:ft up 10 the hce ~rccinli~ts." he 'll)'S. "I ca n face a hm1 or a bear on 11 nnc- to-ont ha'"· But 1ho'c little crmcn; come nt you 1n the hundred\ or the thou,Jnd\ And. they h11ve stinger\. "Re~idc~. with Jovuh I elchhuh around." (\\ hti pl•'Y' lluggcrty's romantic inrcrc~t in the film l "who w11n1, to 'pend time training the animal~~ .. ~..G)]J~.il.l ~Jb~~..ilJ.?Jlljp "IT HAPPENED ONE CHRISTMAS" Marlo Thomas Is called a television power house. having starred In and produced several of the most popular and enduring television shows aired on ABC. Her most recent contribution Is "II Happened One Christmas," adapted from the Frank Capra movie, "It's A Wonderful Life." It first aired last Christmas attracting the largest audience of any televlslon movie on the air last year and critics predicted it would become a holiday classic Because of this response. It has an encore showing as The ABC Sunday Night Movie, on Christmas Eve, at 9PM Cited by the American Women in Radio and Telev1s1on for its "positive. constructive portrayal or women," "It Happened One Chnstmas," 1s the story of a remarkable young woman, who, upon feeling despondent at the threat ol financial ruin. takes a S1artling look (with an angel's help) at what the world would be like without her Marlo Thomas co·produced "It Happened One Christmas," with Carole Hart, and stars as Mary Bailey Hatch. Orson Welles, Cloris Leachman and Wayne Rogers also star Donald Wrye directed and Lionel Chetwynd wrote the screenplay In the story. It 1s Christmas Eve Snow sparkles from the Bedford Falls church steeple as the royful townspeople bustle home with gifts for the holiday But Mary Balley Hatch. and her husband George (Rogers) have been threatened with financial ruin by a crusty, greedy banker, Mr. Potter (Welles). Despondent and fearlhg the demise or her town, Mary 1s visited by her guardian angel, Clara Oddbody, Angel Second Class (Ms. Leachman), who gives her a most precious gift: a startling look at what the world would be like without Mary Balley H'atch. Marlo Thom11 play& a tai.nted young woman whoH own df'Hm• are alwaya being deferred as ahe assume• more and more reaponslblllty for her family. Co•starrlng In "It Happened One Christmas," are Barney Martin as Uncle Wiiiie, Archie Hahn as Ernie, Chris Guest as Harry Balley and Lynn Woodlock as 12·year·old Mary. Mary Balley Hatch Is a woman with whom other women can Identify, an Important qualification for Marlo Thomas. Marlo first came to the attention of the television audience when her series, That Girl. was a smash hit She starred as Anne·Marle for live years, and says she created that role when "I realized there were no characters on television with whom I could 1dent1ly "Anne·Marle appealed directly to the single. career oriented woman who didn't think that being married was the end·all or female existence so I created a telev1s1on character who was single. career oriented. funny. feminine and appealing to both women and men ·· Apparently she was right. because more ttoan 1 OO.m1111on ~·ewers made That Girt. one of ABC's hottest series . until Marlo decided It was time for her to do something else That something else involved Intensive political campaigning. and a personal partic1pa11on 1n social issues She supported and worked for George McGovern. organized funding for day care centers tor working moth· ers, and her social activism continues today For the past year Marlo has been one ol the leaders in the light to have the Equal Rights Amendment ratified Marlo says she has been a fem1n1st since her youth and that personal philosophy shows 1n her work She wants to portray women as they really are .. strong, competent. equal. feminine. free to be what they really are, not what someone says girls or women are supposed to be, and In "It Happened One Christmas." Mary Balley Hatch Is that kind or woman Marlo Thomas, Wayne Rogers. Clo"-LHohman •ttdOrton ~Ilea star In "It Happened Ona Chr/atmaa," a holiday fantasy bHad on "It'• A Wonderful Life." , ... , BITTERSWEET MEMORIES FOR OPERA STAR For Metropolitan Opera star Teresa Stratas. stamng In the new production ot Gian-Carlo Meno111 ·s ever-popular Chrtstmas 0/)8ra, ··Amahl and the NIQht V1s1tors. ·· brought back bittersweet memofles of her youth Stratas portrays the troubled mother In the special- airfnQ Sunday at 7PM-the flfst new production of the NBC· commissioned OPBra to be broadcast since t 966 Ace/aimed /or her current starring role m the Met"s production of "The Bartered Bride.·· Stratas has been a memb8r of the Met since she was only 19 She says that as someone whose childhood was stalked by poverty. she can fully understand the des/)8rat1on which forces the mother to try steallng gold from the WIS& Men m the OPfJra Stratas 's ldent/11c11t1on with "A ma hi and the N1gfll Visitors·· goes back to her you/fl m a rundown section of Toronto. Canada. where she was born-the thlfd cfl1/d of poor Greek Immigrant parents. Said the PfJllte. dark-haired star "Do you know what the the first opera was I ever saw? "Amahl and the Night Visitors.· I saw II on TV al every Christmas when I was a youngster After a/I. what did my generation Qrow up on? 'Amahl and the Night Visitors ' and the fllm. 'M1racle on 34th Street' were the standards every Chflstmas. ··And do you know the flfSI opera I ever performed In? 'Amahl and the Night Visitors ·Honest' II was m Toronto and I was a student m the chorus at the Conservatory ot Music ·· Did she tell this to Menotti? ··oh, yes I told him wfll/e we were fl/ming the opera He flipped I don't even know 1f he believed me He 1ust looked amazed "You know. when I watched "Amahl end the Night Vrsltors as a child, I didn't particularly know II was an OPBr• My family didn't know anything about opera My parents were too poor and too worried about how tflay were going to put bread on the table for me and my sister and brother: She remembers vividly the impact the OPfJrB had on her, Stratas said "/sat In front of the TV set and cried Let me tell you-there Is 1ometh1ng about th1a opera that hes universal 1mpect I don't cere If people /Ive In Qhettos or mansions and I don't care where they come from-they don't turn oft /Ills opera " In the opera, the mother 11 very concerned about the welfare of the child wom&d that the cnppled boy cannot lake care of hlmHlf Said Stratas "II a/ao hllS a lot to do with poverty and what poverty drives you to do The mother tr/ea to steal Har poverty drives her Into cont11ot wlt11 her child, to nervous screaming el him about thlnQs other then their poverty ,.... SUNDAY (Condnued) rt i Movie: "'ufnsllll" (JUV) '/O lack Wild, Ma1tha Raye. Cm Ellrol II Movie: "••turn of Ille Tmn" (wt$) '52 Dalt Rober1~n Jo1nn' Dru Wall" 81tnn1n R1Chard Boont m Mow1t: i1lf "A Ch11st111u ~rof' ldra) J8-Re11nald Owen C,n, lot~h1rt Leo C C111oll 1:00 U Marlo's Mlp: Movie ~ult D 13 ,, ''° footNll MC Wild Clrd Pt1yolf 1 ht Houston 011t1s v'. thf M11m1 Dolphin$ 0 llle lit V1llty 12 Mow11: "Tht Girls of H1111ttnct011 Htust" (dr1I 13 Shulry Jono Slssy Space~. Pamtta Su, Martin Mercedes Mc!Amb11d1t m Ctt Smut 14 A Cl111stmn MUSIC fut1nl 0> Muic.o, M1111 y Entutnlto -1:30-u Dusty's TrHhous. 3 J ti Is Wrrtten 0 Comllly Sllop (OJ hlth Ch1pel Chrrstmu Speetal CE Mo.it: illlf "Mt 1nd P1 Keltlt 8'<k on lht rum" (com) ·~4 Ma11011t Mein, P!!Cy K1lbr1d, 1]41 Christmu Sftftl m Grul PtrfOlmlllCH lt· M1r11t: • "My '•I Cut" (com1 Sl Richard Widmar~ loann' Dru 2:00 U hlsworld 3 1 Chnstnw h II lounu 0 Dolly Kenny Roem eutsb liJ AMMltt ' Costello m Mo11t: "M1100 11 So·· Anrmaltd 24 ChnslJNS M1111< FH11wal ~ Fttlint Frtt -2:30- tJ fKt the llttloft 3 fCKUS 0 Cllllltfttt ~P Tt1111b Covt1 itt of tht match b'twun M1rt1n1 Namlilov1 and I racy Au11tn playfd 1n Lone Buch I 9) S.lllof ,rof\lt 101 Utt With llt1trwatlona (24) Tiit loll& Surth fD Junior Dnla Cup tennis Championships Coveratt ol lht l1nal' played 1n M11m1 fla CD Sie~ en Otlllln10 (ff r.mlly "'11111 TV WEEK. DECEMBER 24, 1978 112. Duldions '71 Q) Movie: "lltbel Wllt!out A C1111t" (d11) ·55 lamu Oun Natalr~ Wood 5.11 Mineo 2t lrOllSldt U Movie: "A Min C.lltd l'ttt1" (dra1 55 Ric:h11d lodd tu n Ptlrrs R1ch11d Button 'SO frH"'1nd Shtdun1 -4:30- fJ Mom: "How It Mmy A Millt0n111t" (com) ~3 L1urtn BK1ll M111lyn Monroe lletty Ct•ble Witham Powell 0 Greatest Sp«ts uatndi t It fxe the llahon 24 Ch11s1mas W1t11 M1Jt11 Roeen 2t 8onlnu O> Sltmpre en Oom1n10 5:00 ) Youns People's Spec11I The Am~11lan11a11on ol flras · U 18 St11 Trek D 10 llns 1iJ Mo•le "Mardi Gm" (mu\) 58 P~I Boone I om my Sands. 5h.ref N01th Ga1y Cm5by It This Is Your lliblt 2' Holicl1y for Horns W flrtn& Une 50 Hum1n1ttts Throufh the Atts -5:30- ) lourney to Adlenture Ullewi O M1r11t. ··Say Oft• !Of Mt" (mu\) ~~ Bine C101by Otbbtt R'ynol<h 10 "°"'"'' 11 2' 107 of Cllrrst11111 24 "In ' .. ,,., It 29 Clll4td C. 111411 av•NiNG 8:00 D D rt 12f Ot1 lltwl 3 W~d KifttdoM 1!1 Mov11: (21u) "Mtr1tl11 Still Happtn" (drl) /6 P1u1 M1lle1 Susan Penh1h1on m Movie: (2"r) "Fiie of the Colden Goott" (dra) "69 Yul 81ynner Charles Cray, [dl'lld Woodward. lohn R1111e J t A Christ NI Clllld Ill Movie: "Glaot" (com) "62 lack1e Gluson. Katherrnft Kalh !J4i Crockett's Vkltf'f Ci.lrdtn fm Christ-be 111 Satmt Slrttl (ft) f HI UIM lhltt CD Aun Hay Mas IJfl Cllflst1111t Httit•r• -6:30- • (l 1 OJ) ""' f}) fotlHll D ""' C-ftU!Kt {10 Ywtll I• C.,lst '1f lluff ... iJJJ HeMey .. """' ilf lulll CMW ' CM""Y 7 :00 • (I) ,fll '° llllMI• II Ci( Thttter: Mlfl0ttl11 • Optre ''AMAHl tlld the fllCllt Yblttrs II D O Cl tllMtet: All"1 • tilt lt11111 Vl•lt•n Gian Carlo Menollt'l lltlovtd oPtll r•tur111 1n • ntw producuon titer 12 ytau. Mttropomu Opm ''" Ttreu St11t11 slan as the mother and Robert Sepolsky portrays the ,rippled Atnahl, wllo is cured wlltn ht offers his crutt~ H • 1rft fOf tht Chmt Child Glor110 Joni, Nico Casie! and Willard Wh1I• co star a~ lhe Three Kings 10hO lake retuee with Amahl and his mother belore con hnu1ne the11 1ourney to Bethlehem to welcome the Christ Ct11td 0 SPECIAL Thi MuilC of Ch11stmas !he Mo1mon Tabernacle Chou and the Bri&ham Yoone Un1vers1fy Bras\ Ensemble perform holiday tavoril•~ ~ C11"ural Arts m 11• Siltnt Cluistmu 'H Soccer MMe In Ctrmany -7:30- fJ Sl'CCIAL The Nr1ht Before Cluistrnn An animated story of how Clement C Moore wrote 1\1) beloved poem The vo1<es of the Norman lubott Choir alf tealured O A Family ChnstmH :lt SKJNno's Carden fl!) Movie: ,_ (90m) "The Two of Us" (dra) 68 Michel Simon I u" Far1ole Alain Cohen Roget Carel 8 :00 0 /j 1t SPECIAL The Nutcracker (R) (90m) rn, American Ballet !healre presents Mikhail Baryshnikov, Celsey Kirkland and Atuander M1n1 in lcha1kovsky's annual holiday ballet ol a small girl s drum on Chnstmas Eve O ~1 11 Bia bent: Huckleberry r1nn (?hr) Jett Cut 1n lhe 1111• role stars with Paul W1nl1eld Harvey Korman ;ind David Wayne rn d musical adaplat1on of Mark !wains late ol a boy who !lees his home and has 11umerou~ advenrures u he travels atone the M1ssiss1pp1 River nn a homemade ralt g Wild lwl1dom fJ f~ (fl Tiit Balllutar CJIKtic.a (R) lost Planet of the Cod) Parl I ol hvo parts White lhP l1ghling men of Gala~l1ca battle lor theu lives against a mysterious disease a squadron ol lemal~ lhghl cadel~ dtsptralely defend the vulnmble space lteet against lhe dreaded Cylons O It Is Written (D Mo¥te: "Popi" {com) 69 Alan Atkin R111 Moreno Miguel Att1andro Ruben r rgueroa John Har~1ns m Sam Yorty l4 lhstupitte Theatre ED M llSIC /Sports so htnrn1 al Sympllony -8:30- " Wiid World of Animals O Vietnamese reluaees • tell of escapes. "Come Walk the World" with Stan Mooneyham. O Come Walk Ille Wo11d m 111ovre 9:00 O Hour ol Power U Matlo Thomas stars in * "IT HAPPENED ONE CHRISTMAS" ABC's Holiday Classic O r .f1 10 H Mo;ie: (2hr) "It tt.ppened Ont Ch111tnw" (R) (dra) 11 Marlo Thomas Wayne Rogers Cloris Leachman Orson Welles Ms lholT'aS sl;irs in lhr~ Chrislmas slory ol a rtmar~able voong woman and a lovable apprentice angel whn team up to make a m1mle OIMf House m Itta Humbird Sllow 2' Eftn1n1 I I Sympllofry m lllasttrpiect Thutre -9:30- 0 J 1i Alice !R) Alict and tommy soend a \em1 meuv Christmas [ve wilh Mel I lu and Vera ensconced on lhe cab of a haclor 1ra1lo1 rrg enroute lo Colorado 10 visit Allee \ cousin O Tht Kini tS Com1nc 10:00 fJ t. it Dallas Bobby 1h1nk\ hes hol the jKkDOI 1n Lu 'ltgH "'h~n he runs into hos m1u1ne brolher Cary and lucy s lalher 1 onv1nt1ng I hem to rel urn lo lhr ranch much to JR s dismay O '' )t SW01d of Justice Porl 01 £ nhy Wounded Jack Cole re11u on Hrclor lo ftnrsh lhe 1ob ol pro·11ne !Ml a cOlrupl oohc• rornm1rnone1 and tht mob Iha! ~wns him 10trt responsible fo1 lhe ~laying ot ~n hOnest cop who .vu probing therr narcotics smugef\1t.operatU1n O The Kint Is Comln1 O Ernest Antley Hour (D Hee Haw Honeys m Gospel Hour fl!) Cwenin1 at Symphony Col111 Davis l~ads lhe Boston Symphonv Orchesfr~ 1n Handers Mm 1ah w11h solo1~ts rtorentP Qu1var Neil Ros~nshein John Shirley Qwk and the I ~nglewood r t\l1val Chorus Srmultasl on KUSC 91 ~fM -10:30- " Jimmy Snu111 $/low (D News m The PTl Club 1 1:00 0 fJ ' 3t """ 0 '3 Hf 12) News g l'Kaetters 0 Oral floberts ID Movie: "Popi" !com) liC! Aljn r\r~1n Rita Moreno 12 700 Club m Da1ot D~ry 23 A Ch11slnm Card -11:30- 0 10 liloY1e: lit "Meet John Oot" ldro1) 41 Barbara Stanw1d Gary Cooper Waller Brennan 3 TM rn Club 0 11"9C 59«~1: Tiit Sounds of Chr1it111u A pio&1dm ol music hve lrom the ! irsl Untied Melhod1st Church 1n Glendale 0 700 Club 9 Movie: Ill' "Mt1Kft Oii 34th Street" !com) '7 Maureen 0 Hara lohn Payne Edmund G"'enn 0 SPECIAL The SnlOI C90m) A laClual porlrayal ot the first Ch11s1mu 1mformrd by r ''her Peyton\ family lhufe1 m Movie "Bus Stop" (com) ''.>Ii Marilin Monroe Don Murray 23 The Joy of Christmas 24 A Chrrstmu festival ol Harps E?:) Father Luis Balbuena )t Bob "ewhart Show 12:00 0 -,a 3t SPECIAL Chrlstmu Romt 1971 Pope John Paul II cete brales his lusl ChrislmH M1dnr11hl Mass as Ponltff of the Roman Calhohc Church with hlur&1tal mus1t by lhe S1sllne Choir from St Peter\ ~s1hu in Vatican City via ~telhte fJ Sl'£CJAL Cllristmu he at the Vatrun Po~e lohn Paul ll's hrst Ch11stmas Eve M1dn1thl Mau from Vatrun C•ly 11 Clmstrnu Spt(~I €D Chr rstmu Mm ABC's HOLIDAY CIASSICI It's time for a Christmas story ... as heartwarming as Christmas Itself. Starring MARLO THOMAS ORSON WEI IFS WAYNE ROGERS and Cl.OllW LEACHMAN asThe Angel ABC SUNDAY NIGHf MOVIE •9:00PM~ ~ .... MONDAY DEC018£R 2S For 11101n1n1 1114 1tt111100R h11m1s. plme m DAYTIME 'llOCllAMS. .... !Of JOlll tomtftltll(t, "' Ult dat' 1 lllO'llts ind Chr is1111ts Day spec ills. DAYTIME MOVIES 10:00 D "'rtplo I His An1et" (dra) '68-Brode11ck Cmtlord 12:00 CJ A "A Ch1istr111S Carol" (dra) ~l-K1thlnn Harrrson Alu1111 Sim. Jack Warner 3:00 ® "Camtlot" Pait I (muo 67-Vanrna Redeme. Ricllard Harns Rl(hard Burton l:JO G "Good Ntl&hbor Sim" Part I (tom) 64 lack Lemmon Dorothy Prov1nt Ron1y Schneider Michael Connors Edward C Robinson Christmu Day SpK11l1 7:00 m JOJOUI Noel 9:00 U (21 111 Chrlstmu 11 Walllinston Cathed111 10 12fJ A ChrlltmH Carol 9:30 <10 2t 'olish·Amerlr.an Christmas 10:00 U rt 12 Colltl• Ftolball Puch 8o111I Purdue vs Ceo111• T Kh hve 11om Allanla Ca ) Joyous Motl 11 :00 24 A Ch11s1mu MuSlt rntin l 11.30 m Site pin& 8tulf I ht AoYill Ballet perl01ms live v11 saltlhlt hom London .2~ Sina We Moel 12'30 u illl iJtl Colle&• rootball Fiesta Bowl-UCLA vs Arkanm ltve from TemPt. A111ona 1:00 D It 112. l'ro hshtbill· The Ph1ladtlpllia 76ers al the New YOik Knl(kS 1:10 CJ A Christ1111S Child 2:00 CJ The ''°"'IM 2:30 CJ Tht Snlor l :l08 Tiit Mutlc of Christmas S:lO m A C.IHornla CMtt11111 4:30 Tht Clly That fo11ot ANut Cllnltmat l!VaNING 8:00 U 9 U. \11 News u u 1101 ratJ Mtwi D EmtraentJ Ont Cil lat• Van lmpe Cllrlstmu m The 811dy Bunch Cl) Streets of San F11nciico 24 l'itadilly Circus fD Our [HJ Cu1lan1t Carlos Montoy• guests m El Chapulin Colorldo Jt Tl< Tat Oou1h so FamtlJ rorlralt -6:30- 0 ' tt ,,. ,...., e Crou Wm 1 o MtlY Cttlfln $llow m I Lon lllty fD llli(tlHI JK~ Show ,_ Tiit Johr's W1kl O> 'UIOll" EM1ndtdu SO' ''oitd Unlttrse LUGGAGE TAGS from your business card Send one card for each tag + one spare. We return permanently sealed attractive tag & strap, meeting airline 1.0. requirements. Prevent loss & theft! For a personalt~ed tag enclose wallpaper. fabric or "Day Glo" paper & we will back & trim your tags. Or try two cards back to back. $2 ea. or 31$5 4/5tags$1.60 ea. 6/9 tags $1 .50 ea. 10 or more $1.40 ea. Sales Tax included No C•rd? Ot•w yovr own or OM VOVt ,,.,._ 4dilrt" .,,<I Ol>OMI nuMDet Wt II rMk• ""' Urd per l~Q A00 n N<n 7 :00 u ~ m11tws IJ r.) 8 Ntwt a Tiit """"4 C..mt l'J f Tiit Jobr's \ll~d m D ll Sil lllMUon S Ma n Cl) Sanford & Son fD Mulftilll.elner llepon 'R lntrodudn1 lloloo -7:30- • Odco M111t ']J Clllco & Ille Mtn IJ ~rlvyiiM e Tht Datlll1 """ 8 Hollywood $4UarH ''o llsbtbell Tht San 01e&o Clippers it the Sulllt Supmon1<s O Tk Tac Oou1ll rm ln11pt Cl) Uam·IZ 1i A Chrlstmu C11ol 24 A Cl111st11111 MlnlC r ntr;al fD 21 Toni11't it Newi so lull• Child & Co. 8 :00 fJ COOLIDGE TO NBA? • "THE WHITE SHADOW" 0 The Wltlte Shadow 1 ht tow tr ona Coolid&e gels a b11 head 1fler he "'ns a tournament trophy and 1n unM:rupulous a1ent sends an 1llut1n1 11rl to persuade him lo turn p10 Ari Mttrano and AnnHellt Chase tuts! U ~ 3t liltlt Houu on the P11i111 !R) Chrntmas al l'lum Cm~ lht hohl!ay\ find lhe lnt;lls lam1ly busily 1a1he11n111f1$ lor u ch oilier deso1tP a shoi1ace of money anl! tonfus1on aboul family plan\ D McMt: rW (2111) "Clmslmu tn Co11ntctkut" (com) •S Batba•a Slan*Y(k Dennis Mo11~n Sydney Creenslreel U t rut Lant lluo (Ill A blunder P10ftt cret' of hand picked .tve112e Ame11unf' hits lh, rnad 1n a aur 1amm1n1. cross country .iuto race w1lh 1 " m111ton POI ol aold wa1tin2 101 lhe winner D Mowlt . • (Zhr') "Ollu 1 Twi1t" (dn) '48 Robert lhwton John Howard Oav10 (10J JollftftJ Call! aWin' tht llaib m Carol lurnttl ' frltlldJ ll}) Jtt• Van lmpe Crusadt a> Marcus Wtlby fl) ill> tltJ btni111 11 SympllonJ Ent Germen conductor Klaus Ttnnudl leads the Botton Symphony Orchutu 1n Mozart's Symphony No 3S ("The Hallner ') ;nd Bruckner's Symphony Ho 1 S1mulmt on KUSC 91 SrM 1111 1111. llleoo'a Cllrllt-Carol a> Hul!lilll4e J OtWWoa -8:30- ... T1lt '* c.v,lt a> [lib .. ,.. Olp 9 :00 8 l'fJl lll"A~·H (R) Col Poller $111k~ up 1 fn1ndsh1p w~h • vis1t1n1 l1&hth Almy htld nurse. a re1ula1 Almy type of 1111 0111n aae and interests But Radii rtKIS hulhlJ lh1n\lf1C lht ColoMI has lllOlt on hri mind than l11end~h1p • @ ~() "• bt11: hn.111•• Clw1'llllll (R) (2hl) Cltll OtYoun1 repr1H$ h1J role IS a J0Un1 widower Who m11st dttlde whttlltr to keep his dau4hle1 w1lh 111m end 11vt up llis music urttr or 1Uow he1 to bt ra1Std by hjl 1>111nl1 Bubara Heohty, [llHn Hecktrt l11rabtlh Clmhlrt. ind Pit H1n1le ca 1111 TV WEEK. DECEMBER 24 1978 U 1 31 10 (29 Mow11: (2hr) "Green lyes" (R) (dr~) 1l Paul Winfield R11a lush1ngham. l~m· lona1h1n l 1ppe V1C1011~ Rmmu Royct Wall~ce An ,, Cl whn t~el\ unneeded al home returns lo Vietnam searchina 101 the \On he lrll ~hind and hnd1 1 ~ew mean1n2 101 his hie 1n the demad children 01 ~11on s 01phin1&ts m Mtn Ciriffln $llow Ill Oral ll*rts Chnst111as Spttiil G) S.per MUllCl.I -9:30-• ll 09" D1y at A fHM A scrrn of d1upp01ntmtnl$ could end 1n the btsl Ch11stmu ner 101 Ann anl! lht girls 11 they c.n 1vo1d lrostb1le and starvation 1n the11 so called ..cent< holld•J cabin • Cljpptl RtWltW fD '14 ViMons ft) Un Ot1J1111I J 20 Copiu $0 Creal l'trtoi1111nc11 10:00 U 81 112 Lou Grant (R) lwo Ch11stmas 5lot1es bac~h" nn I ou ind the lr•b siatf whtn lhey d1S<om lhal lhe11 story on a llomelm family ~as a surpt1smg twist and lht other on a respetted p0l1ht14n unt•P«CI tdly bruks wide open llJ D News m Christian 111101111 Chutth tm Vt11 Con111110 -10:30-m O> Mtln 50 A111tnun Sllott SIOI} 11 :00 D 3 G lf 10 2t """ u l2 12i ilt """ D Tiit Uar'• Club 1J V1tnn1 loy1 Choir Chti$1111H CD Tht 04d (tuple Cl) ftrfl'llOCMI 2'11PI 1.t• Chrbt111t1 Htfitalt fm Dick Cmtt $llow 0) Los H-IMS Coralt -11:30- D c • (II' Mowlt: Tiit llocktord Flin/ 1111 "Tiit Spiral Stairu11" (d11) ''6 OorothJ McGu111 Georee 8rent. £ lhel Ba11ymoo1e U rlJJ Qt) JohnnJ Caf1'0ft 9 Twillpl lOM a m t101 a '°'kl Story D Mo•lt : "Mtd lttrr1nt1n MolW.y" '64-0ocumenlary n1111ted b_t Burl lvu ... Tht GOlll Show 111 Cilt SIMrt f!D In S..rdt of tM Rul ~111trlu 12:00 tD Alfred H!Wicld 'rlM!llJ =~--" -12:30- • ....., t-rturt ., lllttl•:--;riem" <com> !>O CNr1ti Coburn Ollna l J"n Rock HudlOll Charlu Ouke 1:00 D O tl f..,,... e M1tlt: "Wllllt Chritl•u" {lllUS) 'S4 81n1 CloSbJ. Danny K.rt Rosem1ry CloOnty, VM1 Ellen m....,• 2:00 G 111 .. i.: ''Ctltrt 4o Ttnlttfttt (wes) ·49 V1111n11 Miya, Joel 111,Ctea. Dorothy Malone m Ctt SIMl1 TUESDAY I D£CUllU 2' r., "*"1111 w e1t11110011 11stiftp, plmt Ht OUTIMC rlOGIAllfS. Below, ltt ,our '°"""'*·· .,. tlM dly's "'"*· DAmME MOYllS l2:00 e ''TIM AMl!t11rtn" (adv) ·~2-0tnn1s Price, Jack Hewk1ns Siobhan McKenne m "l.,.~ea" Part I (d11) 10-Authony Quinn, Sylvan• Manp no -!1hur Kennedy. lllty Ju11do Jack Palance 3:00 (Jal "C..111tlclt" Concl (1d11) '67 Vanessa Rtd(11vt. Richard Harris. R1thard Burton 3:30 G ''Good llel1~k1 Sam" Conti (com) '64 Jack Lemmon, Romy Schneider. Dorothy Provine, Michael Connors Edward C Robinson I IOININQ 8:00 ... (IJ)lltws Tiit Od41 Coulllt ., cm @ atJ ""' • E.111tr .. 11ey OM D lrwlde CD Tiii lra4J IUllCll Q) SI rem of Sell Francisco ID A11JOM fllf ftn11JIOlll fD Over Eaay Academy Award winn1na ac:I01 Martin Bal~m. ~9. is today's auest Or M11111el Ountsly talks 1bout cancer 1n older women e>Cnriqllell~ ~ ...... ,.,w ... ty !H) F rttflalld SMWll111 -6:30- • ()1 tUl OfJ lltw1 m c ..... w1ts (10) llltn "iffill si-• , LM lMcy flj) Midlltl JKUtn SMw (8) Tiii .leltt's Wild CD l'ltieM• EllCNittt (II) HllfMllitles Tllr111p lilt Arts 7:00 • m•11en II tHl CD lltn 8 Tiit MewtYMd '-IM • Cl) Tiit .i..,·. WlW • 9 a sa 1111111o11 s ..... • SMfer4 & Sell 9 ... c.tlltllll • MecW/\Alwtr """ -~ ...... iln -7:30- • TN M11p,.t1 Htltn Reddy auuls. CMct & tN ... -~c-a • Tiit °""" ""' .(JI ....,._~ )111tC-.Slll9 8 Tk Ttc 0...,. ..... u o aan..c..i Qt ..., Kitti. •21t-...i .... • 11lt ,.,...... f ltlltltl 8100 • (J) ttJl cas a.,n;.., "'-* 1111 lltft F0tmtr Correl(>Ondtnl Rill Mortt-111 1111 flltfl eppt11111ce Cit C8$-rtporta 011 the PllCht of mental Dtli~nts wflo 111 fit IOI dtSCllll(t but find lhtms,lves 1h1ust into com muni11es thal are unpiepartd lo rreat and mepl them II a',, Ot1 Crudpa Gou to Wlllllllct1111 An otraoaanl a•tt. a new Rolls Roytt delivered lo tht Kelly home by an unknown giver crutu a scandalous situation IOI the Sen1I01 and his M>n. the Cene1al Whtn the preU Jel wind of the &•ft a Mowlt: (211r) "Mtrrll1• Oii t11• Rocb" (com) '6~-Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin, Oebolah ken e (W Qt Him o..,. (R) "Rtthlt Almost Otts" foNtt spends a lonely v111I pr1yin1 tor his beS1 l11end to pull throu111 when R1th1t ciacks up hrs new motorcycle and hes 111 1 coma near deifh D Colltat a.tutblll USC T 101ans at Caltf01nia Bear\ L 1n CD Cerol Burnett l Frltttd1 a» Movie: *'1 (2~r) "The One Thi! Cot Awat" (adv) ')8 ll~1dy Cruce•, Colin Cordon 11~ Soundst•a• fJD faff of El&lts CD HumillaclOI J OfendlOol (Jfl s,lrlt of ,.unuubwn•r -8:30- • f 1l CJOi !BJ Lntrne l Shlrlty (R) "New Year's [ve 1960" Lavttnt snares a dale 101 Sll11fey's New Year's he parly, but then hnds lletstfl alone when his 111th1end shows up al the affair CD Tiit Odd Couplt 0> Ml lk*t Clllrltln 9:00 D t a lllo'flt: (Zllf) '1t rrllf Ovt Of !ht S•f' (adv) '18 (lrtm l1mb.1hst J1 Oan Hauert, lovah f tldshuh. r•e Eisenmann. R1th11d Httd Lonny Chapman. Joe £ hta. Steve f11nken. Bruce f1ench. Philip Bah• Htll, Ulen Blakt l1mbahst star~ u the d11tct01 ot th, National Bee Ctnl,,, whO allempts lo track down a s1t11n ot k1llei beu 1n the United Slatu bel01e they c.n b•etd. cause deaths and c1eate a n11ion wide panic II ~ll l>tJ lie E"nt: A Cllristmas Mirlclt 111 C.ulltld, USA (R) (?hr) Kurt Rumll, Mitchell Ryan , and Andrew Prine st11 as cwr m1nm trapptd underground by an eapfcnion In an unsafe mine Aller an ea1her uploslon nearly uuus a ma101 cave 1n, miners threaten a w1tdeet strike unltH dancerOUJ &am that have accumulated ire ehm1nated But C.ul1tld. the mine owner. who IS un1111H1n1 to soend tatra money to take safety Pl«tuhons. thrtttens to br1n1 1n non.union W01kt11 if tlte mint" strike Methew, the most rtSPf(ttd m1ne1. Ptl1Uld« h1' co worke11 to remain at WOik unhl e untOll orp 1111t1 1mvu to htlp Pllih lhlOll(ll lllf11 dt111ands e C GI Qf\ fllrtt'a '"''"' (R) ''lhree's CiWISlmas" Jack. Janet and Chrissy plot lo ucepe a boon& Ch1111mas pa1ty alone w1lh the Ro~m beuuse thl1 hn ken lnv1led to 1 btt bash lht samt n11ht ...... GflftilSlllw • R MIN: (2.llt) "~•" (dra) '15-Gtenda Jteuon a ......,,_. n.111 -t:JO- • CJ) (fl 9 Till (II) Tht suy YOltt °" the 1ns-tfln1 ter-ttt lr11 &tts Alu's romantic lnst1ntta. and htr 1llurln1 manner promph htm to 1mne1 • Ornner d•lt thlt h1rn1 1n10 one b11 su1p11se m Un Oriclnal 1 10 Copln 10:00 80lltn U Q J tltJ Stelllr l Hutcll (R) Partners" S111sky l wild dm1n1 1n a h1&h speed chase ends 1n a cofhsion that sends Hutch to tht hoso1tal with a memory blackout and Sta11ky be1ins a lonely v111I recountina the11 uplo1ls hop1n1 he c1n 101 his h1end's memory <Iii .. lkt: ~ Ot DlkmN Cit lllcllt '-fMIY m v ... eonm1ao '.BJ H1.-uh -10:30-m a> lltwt lOl Valet's P'tpellnt 11:00 u 1t 1u 1e 1112.1 12t ""' D I~ IU1 Otl New1 e Tiit Liar's Club D Movie: "Muter Strole" (adv) '68 Richa1d Hamson. Margaret let m The Odd Couple m fernwood 2lll1ht ~41 lntervltw With H11ah1ta fI!) Die• Cewttt Show fD lJs Htrm1nos Corajt -11:30-D l t l {IJi Mowlu : lambr lonu/ ~I "'ortrait ol J11111i11' (dra) '49 Joseph Collen. Jenniltr lones Ether 8arrymort D 1lf1 JI) Jollt111y ~rson D lwilipt Z- 8 ·3 tg) f2f Mt•lt' "Or llo" (adv) 67 Sean Conntty U1w1a And1es.s, l"k LOld CD Tiit c.na Sllow O> Gtt Sni1rt '241 Uliai. Y oCI £ T OU fD C.,tloM4 UC lltwl 12:00 m Allred Hitcllad l'rtttlllt a> Th• ~lllOOlltrl m 1111n1V11ittJ -12:30- " lllo'fi.t: World Salau, A Taste ol Honey," "Cun Smo~~· CD Mowi1: (llrl "On lorro1ted Time" (corn) '39 I 1onel Bmymoi~. Una Mr.1kel. Sir Ced11c Hardwteke O> Movie: tifJ "Spy Hunt" (dra) ·so Howard Dull 1:00 II Ql) tH TOlllOfrow e Tiit Low l'Ptm II) Movie -1:30- • W141ttd: OtM or Alltt 2 :00 G llHll : "A lll1M It l1111t•kr" (drt) ·sg Kenneth More. Ronald Allen at llewlt: "firt 0wtr Alrlu" (tdv) '54 lllaurun O'Hara Macdunatd Cater. Srnnie Baines Guy Mtddfeton Huch Mcl>timoll mu s ... tt 3:00 9 11ewit: "TIMI ........ (•ctwl ·~1-rrro1 r1y11n C11 Seara Pedro Atmtnc1•1•1 -3:30- .. ....,..: ""IQ ff OeN" (dra) '55-M11 lttltrlrna. Richtrd Wtdma1k, N1ce1 Patr1t• 4 l00 • MIVit: ~ "Mlr111•a" (tom) '48-M.t1p1tl ltulllttfOld (WEDNESDAYf DECEMIU 27 ror "'°'"'"I erMI .tten10011 llathtp. plme lH DUTIMC 1'10,IAMS. ...... tor ,..,, *"'lilll<t, .,, Ille ., .......... DAmMt MOVICS 12:00 e "Mf•lt llr (wts) •4- Joel McCrea Linda 011nell Maureen O'H111 m "lmllu" Concl (d11) '10-Anthony Quinn. Arthur Kennedy S1lv1na M1n11no Katy Jurado Jack P1lan<:e 3:00 lOi "fll(ltt of tllt Cou&ll" (aOv) '60 Lu51t Robert B11y Merry Ande1s L tt Brown Jt 3:30 8 • "Ha" Rocht, Will Ttavel" (tom) '59 The lhree Stooges Jerome Cowan, Anna Lisa B<lb Colbert BVBNING I ·e:oo o a 11_1tlfJ11ewa l l Tiit Odd Couple .. (101 (2}) Qf)""' e Cmtrpncy Ont Cl Tiit Jokt( s WiW CD Tiit Ir 14't Bundi O> Sir Mb " SH f llllCOCO 12~ c.sumtr Surmal llil m Over ~JY [conom1sl John ~enneth Calb111th cuuts m "°'" 0vic. "°"' ff rlc 1 IC 0.U&h 50 Fe111ily ~ratt -6:30- D i 1 ITl! fl fl !Ins t Crota-Wlta CJ Ht Tac Ooup lfO! Merv Grittlrt Sltow mt LM lllcy ~41 S11t8 l'rwitws ED MlthMI lt<·kMll S110w 1.ttl flit lo'tt's Wild m ,.,..., EllCHdl4n llfJ rrGjoct Uni"rw 1:00 9 1;1.""" D ~ ID IJI) lltn • Tiit lltwlyw4 ~""' CU Tiit .MMr'a Wiid D IJten' "-"'111t CD (flJ (II) Sh Mllllell $ MM • S.111ot• & Sell ~ lltillo c-ti. An interview with Ben F1111a11det, the thst MutCtnAflltrtt1n rntendrnc to r1111 lor Pr111dcnl tn 1980 • llMlltll /ltllltr llt"'1 A llll!Mut1111 1W1cJ -7:30- • srtCW. Tut of 1M ~ Btut M11s.bu11er loon at lllt b!C ~po1t1n1 uuts ol 13 1ncfud1n1 Muh1mmtd Ah lac~ Nttht111s Seattle Slew and the YanllttJ Tiie htllOIY llley madt Ind flow lhcJ made II lit'• " ,, tllt t.c.. G Ska .... Tnn1 lOl>tJ &utsts e 111e111t1111~ e .._TMlT11111 Cl) ""'°'11 e ,,. ........,. The Los Ancetts takers ti the Golden State Wmror1 l:l,!~r.- • 12 0 b•lllt ., ~ e n,...,.. • WEDNESDAY (Continued) (}ll lltws Cl) Mo¥1e: "Yovn1Mood (HJ ConsuMtr SllM•I Kit Hiwke" (dra) '64-James F11nmcus. 8:00 fJ IJ11 Movie: (l~r) ''LH Ml1t1abl11" (adv) '78-Rrchard Jo1d1n, Anthony Perkins. Cy11I CuSl<k, Claude 01uph1n, Su John Crel&ud. Ian Holm, Cella Johnson. Caroline lanrmht, Chr1stophei Guard, Joyce Redman. Flora Robson, Aneela Pleas.ance lhe clusic V1ct0f Hu10 tale ol Jun Val1ean (JOfdan) an escapee from prtson-where he has. bten StMne a sentence IOI s1tahn1 a loaf ol bread -and of M implacable pursue1 tnspecl01 Javerl (Perkins) Val1un builds a ne• hie 1n h1d1n1. but reveals h1mseH to save a f11end ol hrs ward 1J 1DJ ()IJ Dick Clat"5 l1H Wedntl4•J Scheduled 1uuts are comedians David r rye and Cort P1oct0f stuntman Oar Robinson. The Marquis Chimps. plus an 1nterv1ew wrlh Pete B~t (the Beatles' or111nal drumme1) and a sprec1al feature called ·'Muscteman11 .. II llovit: (Zllr) "Christina" (dra) 77-Barbara P11k1ns. Peter Has~tll James Mchch1n, Marlyn "'ason a m ctai a u1ht 1s Enou1h (R) • Milk and Sympathy' hlhn1 head over heels in puppy love wrlh his forth erade teache1. Nicholas 1s uu1ht up rn a d1saereement wrlh hrs Jam1ly over the value of allecltnn Andru Howard iuests CD Sl'ECIAI. Wllo Mt! An Alc.oholk 1 A sobe11n1 sludy ot whal can hap~n when a teenaeei t11es lo rehevt wc1al unease throuah use of alcohol l•U Cemtsen. Vrncenl Van Patten and 01tna Muldaur star ACROSS I AbtlOr 5 Centers 9 feather'\ parl'1e' 10 Ms Bahn 12 Burn1n1 15 Devol 18 Scarce 20 Went downw~rd quickly 21 Fresh 22 -colon 24 Typo of d1nco 25 - ' My Htatl 28 Till 31 LUvt OUI 32 Aoyet title 34 Typti or gun 36 Shew 37 Choney ~~ ~~~'!? or&&n 42 Pl~yth•na• AnSMf et end of the S1tu1d1~ log Suzanne Pleslleltt ID Ill l'trlonunce at Wolf Trap ID H11111111Mes 1 OftlldilMI (}§) Goo4 lllornin1 lliitl -8:30- CD Tiie Odd c.u,ie fl) Wmllill& 9:00 II 0 IUl Mowie: (2hr) "C1r Wull" (R) (com) 77 -fran~lyn A1ayt, Georee Carlin, Prof Irwin Coley Ivan 01~on. Anlonio hrps Richard Pryo1 A Los An&elts "r wash 011tratts ••th uncanny succeu despite the anttCS of an rm1>1obable colleclron ot employees, who interact w1U1 an equally diverse number of customers and community members On this particular summer day, a streetwalker hrdts Olli 1n the !,dies room while the owner's son lhu111 hrS lathtr's appeal to work 1n lhe office Proudly quo1in1 a handbook of Ch1nm t:ommunrst philosophy, lh'. son opts lo work aton1s1de his lather's employees As the day passes, the Reverend "Daddy" Rich and his entoura1e 111rvt 1n a eold Irmo accompanied by a quartet of srnrers. a customei's fierce iuard dog runs lree 1n thr wash, and a susptelOus lookin& client seems to bt a Nd bombt1 fJ (}) ®J taJ Charlie's Anc1t1 (R) An1e1S on the Run" Sab11n1, Kelly and Krrs set out to track 6own a philande11n1 trucker. who-unknown lO everyone tacepl some 1ewel tn1eves-has hauled around a fortune 1n stolen 2ems CD 111" Grifflll Sllow DOWN 2 CIO&hu J Edison's'"'' rwo name~ (Intl ) 4 Can11 or like 5 S.lch1n1 wunds 6 Negative prel&M ] S-lfmtlh (c:iv. to l)ljUlt 1n1wer) 8 Ce1.a11a1 body (ctu• lo puUlt entwtr) 11 Thiel 13 Elec:lrtc or lece t• Pe~d ~1n 16 Gol<I evelu1tor 17 Guaae 19 Four-1>1.se hit (slant) 23 Grook god (Clue to pu1 zte 1n1wu) 26 Austr ellan bird 27 Mti. lold dlUtt 29 Diner 30 Prefl• IOI thrH 33 Oppo'Mtt ot more 35 LtlH 36 AAJ11nd -38 Atop 40 ~11m lrlbt fD Clil Grut l'trforlNKtt: illkMlfllill& lec:emes Eled11 'An ~t of Justice" The Mannon children. Orin and Lavin~. admit lo then molhe1 that lhey murdered her lover to nence lheu lather's dulh and Cl111st1na takes hei own Irle !he loss of both parents hu a dramatic ellect on the children's pmonn (10) 01¥id S4dslli~ Show -9:30- 0> Un Orie inti J 20 eo,ias 10:00 Ill Colltp lasUtball UCLA B1u1ns at SlanlOfd Cardinals !aped • CD <IOJ IBJ All Alt llHS Closelip: Tiie l'tlitics of lor1111t An uam1nahon of Prts1denl Carter l human 11chts PollCY Its succmts and larlurts. its con1rad1<lions and 11s effects on alhes nl the US Cl llews a> llipt Gllltf'J fl!) (91 Into lht Morn1n1: Willa Cather's b1er1u Hal Holbrook narrates this prollle Ind Gena RO'#l•nds reads from the w()lks ol this 191hlurty ?Olh cenhny wi1tt1 fl) Vtn Con111ip -10:30- CD G>llews 11:00 fJ ((). lf1l 12t1 lttwJ D ®J IUl IHi flews Cl Mowlt: ~ ''Two flip Wut" (•ts) 50 Joseph Colten. l 1nd1 Darnell. Jeff Chandler CD Tiie Odd Couple CB Ftr11wed 2'1jpt Em Old C...tt Sllow m i.. HtflNMI eora1e TV WEEK. DECEMBER 24. 1978 -11:30- D I}) ()}l M0tit: (l!D "I'll Cry ToM011n " (d11) ·~6 Richard Conte. Susan Hayw•rd. [ddie Albtf1 .. <Ul lllJ Joh""' CallOll 11 T wilictll Zellt U ®) (21) ~lte Wom.n CD The Go111 Sllow .., Get Smart ® lilllt. l ot• l You ID CaptloMd UC "-1 12:00 CD Alft-4 Hlldlc.ecA l'r1101111 Cl)Tlle~ri m """1Y•rittJ -12:30- 1!1 Movie: ~ "So l'roudlJ Wt Hall" (dra) CJ Claudelle f.olbert Ve1onia like 8 !JI Ml l2ll S.W.A.T CD Movies: "Cunaa Orn,· 'lhe Black Kn1&hl. "Car10 to Capetown • a> Morie: "lff SurM!I" (wes) 56 RO!y Calhoun, Marlha tiyer. Ou n Jauer 1 :00 II fll Qt, TOMOrr .. m The Lo¥e [ipem fl) llovit -1:30- CI Wanted: Dud or AIW. 2:00 D MOYlts: 'Sir.band.. 'lhe Plom1se" Cl) WI SNrt -2:30- fJ 111o¥11: "Whitt Feather" (wts) 55-Rol>ert Wiener. Deborah P1ee1 B Mowles: "Evervbody's Oanc1ng," Always on Sunday · • I THURSDAY DlCEMW 11 fOf _ .. '" •lttf'llMll listillp. plt•M Mt DAYTlflll '•OGUlllS. lelow, lof ,.., ~.•rt !flt Uy's~ DAmM£ lllOWllS 12:00 .. "Or11011 Trail" (•IS) ·59 fred M1cMu111y Henry Hull, Clo111 hlboll. N1n1 Sh1pm1n. William Bishop GI tlfJ "Cti• Ill !flt StrMb" (dra) 'S6 S11 Mineo, John Cam wetu James )Wh1tmort, Mark Rydell, Denise ~ltundtr HO ®I "Hflldford's 'oitrt'' (dra) '60-Lasstt, Robert Brty. 8on1l1 Gr1nv1lle l:30 B ''TIM fer Out Wat" (wes) '67 -Ann She11dan. Rulh McDevitt, Ooualas V fowl~y. Carole Wells, Cary V1n$0n I •VINING 8:00 DB IUJ !h.n The OIW Cou,ie • <Ial 1.211 (2fJ "• 8 C..1rt11CJ OM D ,,. Hoc.by f~ Los Ana~les K1n11 11 the Montreal C.n•diertS l•Pt del1y CD Tiit lfl4y !Mell Ill Stteets " Sa• ,,~ Q~,..,.1,11 ll)Owf £Jty Cl)(IQM Qll Tic TIC Deua1I l9l fretlllM SWthl111 -6:30- D C '1Zl8 11tws C,_..lb CI1 flltn Ctifflrl S.. CD I l.Alw LllC'J l8l ll!tt IM Iller""'&: Wllll Cltlltr'a "'9tlu fD fllic.llMI JKboll $'- (21) The .. tf'I WiW Cl), ..... [llCfMW. A HU1N11ltltt T1110.p Ille Al11 7:00 • (I).,.... • tUl ..,._ e TM .....,_, G.11111t • 0 rJI) Sia Mlllell S M111 -~'* e TM MKN/lltlrtr ..,_,. a hllctlflll ,.... '"''""' -7:30- • Dia llltic CD WM w.nl ff AlllMels 8 YMllC '"'It's Spe:eltl (R) "Joshu1'1 Conlua1on" Joihua, •n Amish boy IKts I llUI clt(ISiOft *"ttlltf 10 1t11111n In tilt austere, lrad1tioMI woild ol "" lather °' fCN" tht mocltfn world or his Khoolmelts • 11le Ottilie "-• LIM ff die Free-HMt ff tile Ilea (R) DI. Cleoiae frschbt<• lotlOwa a l11111ly ol lour thtouah a day of lloust hunhnr to eum1nt lht problems rn llnd1n1 adequ1tt llouslns •I •n 1ff0tdabl1 coit. .... ....., .. ·a:t 0 .... c... .... • .._.IZ :=r ... ..... • llft .... ~s,.clll 8:00 D CTl d%l Tht Wellons Ben 1' delerm1ned to p1ove lo • dubt0us John thal he un be a succmlul bus1ness1111n 111llh his plan to b11n1 more ievenue to Wallon's Mounl11n from nu1by defense pl1nts B 'reject UFO "I Man lnc1denl" A hu&e uro llove1s OVtl I I 0 yur old e•rt 01'1 1 beach and emits a strance Mone code muuie. a faithful rtPIOduchOll GI t s1cn1I sent lrom unh I~ years 110 8 MoM: (2tlr) "Twills ti b il" (dra) '72 Peltt Cushrnr. Madeleine Colhn$011, Mery Collini.on e (f.OJ 121J Mor\ ' llliMJ (R) "Mork's Sedutllon" Mrndy's rival from h1&h school d•J$ sets her s1eh1s on M01k in a sp111t ot revenee and SlKteeds in mak1n1 Mindy creen eyed w1lh 1e1lou$y CD aJJ t8J A House DMdtd Nancy Dickerson eum1nes lhe U S House ol Rep1esenlal1Ves. Ill Rote l'•ractt ma fUl Mer• Rimell Col!ledy Specill fD f.Y.I. OJ H11mlllildos J Oltlldidos (fQJ Daniel fOfltt 1110 -8:30-u ! V ~ (BJ ""-1'1 H11"!nln1 CR) "Disco Ooll•r DjstSltr' Rttun raises the monty he needs lo tnler a disco conlts1 by sell1n1 ii percent11e of hrs 1111nn1n1s but tels cimed t•ay and sells too m1ny shares 1n himself QJ Tiie W1p1 tf Colltrm CD Mi Seer.Una (Sf) T IK"*4lt 9:00 D I I l 11 Hawlff fM-0 Part I of a two Pfrt tPllOde A 1111twe and piom1s1n1 youne sin1et's Polent11I lor slardom 1an1tes 1 lhret ••Y b1tlle amonc Five 0 Chref McC111e1t, lhe druded H1w11ian c11mt synd1 cite and an 0ra1n111d m11nl1nd West Coul a1n1land Yvonne Elftman. lames 01rren, Ross M1r1tn, Nehemiah Persofl, Rte:hlld D1m1trr and Antony Pon11n1 &uesl B OJ QI) Qtiincy (R) "last S11 Hours" Sim fu1ry1m1 fies nur death u Qurnty desperalely a11tmpts lo t10l1t1 an unknown pc:uson that " MPtcted ol bt1111 t11e cause 8 (J) (IQ) (JI) lattllJ Mlfltr (R) S.rno has pioblems when the 1111111 IO oul 1n lhe I 21h pieclll(I and 1 psych11lrtst t1~es a th1nr t~ him • ,_, s..a.n s,.dil CD flltn 5riffil sa.. OS.... ff~ CD ~ ra,.tils tHl f.Y.I. -9:30- • (Jt QI "LOT AIMMI Hu111 Aher dy1nc rn an auto KCldtnt. Om l1l1nd ii m111ed to • IHm ol 1n1tls tllal stalft th& Htnt11ly Ctisis ~11d ConK1ence Ctnter, where they work to 11tcwe lhtnu.lvts bt1ort be1nt adm11ttd 10 111rld1St Ev• C.bor, J1y Lena and £11t11 Rn11n 1111 e U11 Or• 7 21 c.,in 10:00 a llrna~/lltty lece!nea • Tarpt of ~ CeM • @ ..,.., .. 8ctty Jonea 1~1 tllt CO'ltf of • physleal eduulio11 inatructOf to lftflltutt • titlt ICldtfll1 IO tll¥tStitllt I Wta of UMaOlalllff "e«lcltnls." Q 0 9 Dawld Cmld1-M111 UllderCMr ··r11eslorm Qfticer Dan Shay l>OSt! 1s a produce A ck drtver to nab an arsonist h11ed by mObsters lo sel ove11nsu1ed bu1ld1nl' on hrt It Celltp llsbtNll UCLA 81u1ns al Cal1fo1n11 Burs hptd • CD Ol llf! flllliiy (R) ''friend of the ram1ly" A Chillm1n1 ytl devtOUs childhood Kqua1nt1nct ol W~flf, "cmhn " II the lalfltnee home, wins the hun ol Buddy then procttds lo slul money lrom Kalt and Ont loseph Boltoms aunts .,..., CD "lfM G.llllefy @ h~ Tr....,a " Drtt.Mll m .. _,. .. ""'' .. "" m v.,. c.1111ao Al $'-Oii the ltN4 -10:30- CD a> llewi IH> l1le H11psich1N'd llh•tr 11:00 fl ()) D CIJ <Ml (21) ""' a l1ll all Q.IJ ._ CJ fllowle: "UMC" (dra) '69 Richard Braotord, Mau11cc £vans Edward C Robinson. lames Daly lltwrn McCarthy, W1ll1am W111dom m Tiit Odd eou,.. Cl) fer"'900d 21llrf" l8l Turl\*vt fD Diel Cmtt s-. 0> LI& Htt 111111• tor •It -11:30-fJ tU !ill lllOYIU: 11•a•s•H1 "Rdtc.Q" (d1a) •O-lJurenct Ohv1tr. Joan f onlatnt • ~ l8l JoM,,, c,,. 8 Twllip(Z-. B C]) (lJl al Stmay & Huttll ••'-IS'- • "'Siurt ® U1iea. f ... ' Yw m c.,u,11114 A8C 11ewa 12:00 CD Alfr-4 HitcllcoQ ht1Hb .., flit ...... ,,.....*" CD 11tn1•1r1tty -12:30- • MoM: "lllatclllm" (com) '67 Ptlrtek O'Nul. Donald Pteu.anct- • (I) (lJl tal S.w..A. T, ID Mttlt: 9 "Anna ll11enln1" (dr1) '35-Creta Garbo. rredtrlc !Aarch, freddr BarlhOtomew • MoM: ''TIM Uttlt Sllt,...rd" ...,_ C.." (1dv) '6l -J1mm1e ROC11ers, Chill Wills 1 100 Q QJ) ral TIMnW e TIM t.. b,.,a -1:30-e w1111M: O.• • • 2:00 a .,..: •a a.iw 111111111q" (dfa) '63 Bllrt L•nusltr • hit: "let's D11ct" (lllUI) 'Sb-Beti. Hutlon, rred Nt•~• -2:30-... : ., "lit ........ It" (mys) '35-8111« C.bot • • .......,.. (mys)·~- ft'd MacMumy, Dorothy Matooe. . 4J00 ...... : "Ltftt\...:.Jlf U (rom) '56-Lorl M•rtli e "Cltll UH DNtll IW' ( ) ~W~h•m C.mpbtll. -4:30-...... : ....... Sarl" lMP) &7-Si1111111t Ulllt". TV WEEK, DECEMBER 24, 1978 FRIDAY I DlCEMIU 1' fDf lllOlllill& IM titer-llstinp , plt•M tet DAYTIME ,_OG•AMS. ltlow, fer ,.., tellfftlitllu, ere Ille ..,.s "*"''- DAmfllE M0¥1£S 12:00 .. ..,,,.,,. rltlllltta" (d,.) '61 -laurence Harvey Richard IOdd 3:00 <tll "c..tllow!I" (Jdv) '60 lasstt Robert Bray Peter Hn~tll. Jtd Allan l:JO a "ArUllllJ Tlllclr "'""*' on !flt w., lo the ftr11111" (com) 66 ltio Mostel, Phil St1te1&. Busler Keaton, lac~ G1llord Mteh.ael Cm•ford, Palrtea Jeuel iv•AiNCi 8:00 Ill B CiJ CUl tUJ lltwl 8 Cmtrpnc, Ont B (J) Cf OJ (21) llCAA f oot'-11 I he Gator Bowl-CltmM>n vs Ohio Slale, hve lrom Jac~nvillt. Fla Ill lroniWt CD Tiit ar.;y ll11ell Cl) Strttts of San fo11dsco QJl ,ric'tlnt T 111wrt1 of Dres4111 fD freatyle "CruSt Monkey" In IM lonal epMdt Chns 111e:s to PfOYt me can handel the chOtu al lhe gas stalion in lltt rural lown Cl) LI Cr!Ha QJ) TIC Tac Doup iKI fllllily ~lilt -6:30-D (12) (J( lltwa ll J Cr..W1b CD ILMl..llCJ S) fllichHI hchff Slltw Atlor !lilly Barty dt1Cuues dwarfism and lhe ltn1ncral, emo11on11 and arch1tec1ura1 b1r11ers laced by lhut htllt people m ,n1tne E11e~w.. (JO) "Dject U111wnt 7:00 UQIZ:IJCl)lltws a TM llnfrwecl G.11111t G (I) Tiii "*tf'• WM tD '1J) Six ...._ S M111 .., Sallfer4 ' -(l~ ......... c.My S,.Clll • MKM/Lellrer ~ !Bl f ""' °'Int -7:30- • Tiil llnt se., .._ a SUI ltllltY sa.. • 11le Detlfll '--. .,,... G Tk TIC Dtllcll ...... u o ....... s.w .. ~4) •• " ..... c.ci-• zt TMfcllt .... 8 r00 • W1114tr W..111 Arter 1 bll lion11te's s1111 fullCliOllHll brt111 Is ttlllOvtd upon llta d .. 111, 1111 lirrn- 1CC01d1n1 to *''' provisions ol 111$ irtff:tels Olll to l111d 1 Ptrftd ~· e 0 8 Dlff'rt11t St,.._ 'A Mn Yetf'a Remillis«Mll" A Sl*ill 0111 hour pro111m lot11r1111 hip litllt• ol prtvlout •9ltodes ...... : (l!W!.,.. ,,. .. ""'-...... (IOlll) '65-~ Mlllt,-Jollf\ Mills, l1111e1 MwMlitlt FRIDAY (Continued) m u1111 rro111e G .._.: "Mutraz Eapnss" (dr1) '60 Robert Stack. Bruct Goulon, Ntvllle Btand m HEE HAW WISHES YOU * A HAPPY NEW YEAR!! CDHttlttw <Ill S,W.11Mft II) Ctlle1e Foothll Blue C11y Bowl-Northern All Stars vs Southern All Stars from Montcomtry. Alabama hpe delay flD 0 tllJ WaslliitclOll Wttl ID HllllllllClol y OftlldMlot -1:30- ~ll'l P.,it fJl) (8J (HJ W•ll Strttl Wttl G) Edu11M II 9:00 fJ (() Clti Tht lncrtdible Hulll (R) David Banner aets a 1ob 11 a 100 and finds a lovely youn& scientist proceed1n1 with the 1enehc research he had started before hft wu lorled into become a homeleM wanderftr Banner's interest 1n lhe upe11men1s on ruearch anrmals ti the 1ou creates a susp1c1on whlCh 1s upla1ned when he learns he hu stumbled onto a smu1111n11 11nt D OJJ QJJ The Roc,lord fltu "The Deuce' Jury duty leads to dan1er wh'n RocklOld s1ubbornly refuses to behevt Iha! 1n atooholit 1s &urlty of Ktldenlally k1lltnt I le&al ~1etary Jim soon hnds himself try1n1 lo unmet 1 puule 1nvotvrn1 the dead 111l's b01us sister and a prominent at101ney who htrtt an unscrupulous p11nle eye 10 s.lence anyone who thrUltM to uncover !ht tawyen c11m1nal achv11tt\ M11111ll Blye and Mills W•lson tutSI • m 01 Hl OoMy ' , .. ,. £1not lU lhomu Ired Berry H1ywood Nelson and Betty While cuest with Donny & Ma11e Ill a ~kit show1nc what can hap1>«n •hell the 1nmat u ol a lu•ury m1n1mum \teuuty pi1son tel angry m """ "'""' SMw 9 " .. t P11for1111t1Cta flD Wt lflltrrupl This WHl IJfl Uvt r '"" Wolf Trap -9:30- f'li) Wilder WlWtr CD Un 0tfciNt r 10 Coplu 10:00 8 CAl'T. MARCH MOVES * IN WITH LISA/NM & MMCY /nYING HIGH 8 (JJ) n,Mc HIP Vrchm ot •n Kcident1I con-011 nit head. Capt March sufftn 1 ~ of wmon, b\lt ont th1n1 he un "' 1s tht wut pouibtlthes IOI lu.ury 111d hanky panky th.It lllS 111hrm1ty un open up a NMJ ~ s,.m1 D 8 !:BJ.~ (R) "lht Two Sides ol T rut II • Quincy '°'' 111111\t Ills rouchtst ldvtr~ry-111$ mtnlor ind tllt t~ patholocy e~pert 111 lht counlrJ tn I cue 1nwolwt111 llOm!Udt •nd 1niuran« fraud Bl!ry Sulhv1n Clltlb ..... • St111ef °'JlllPkt (R) lom Kennedy ea1mtnes the d1ftercnu betllfttn p1rt1etp1nts ill lhtM sptet1I Olympie& and the "'.,.,, otdtt Amtr1e111 CM1tu Schult and Bu1tt1 Cnbbt 1uul <DD s.. Dleee: Tiit ._ 11 ·n IHI C.-. ta CMMllt !WI ........ n.t,. ev.t...iat ft..-'4 -10:30- Q) II) Nt'lll 11:00 D m 8 tl• OQJ fa lllWl D (fJl IU QfJ Newt 8 The Lllr'• Chtb G Movie: IN "lmkout" (dra) S9 Rteha1d Todd, Rrcha1d Alttn b0rou111. M1ehael Wrld1n2 m T11e Odd Cot1p1t Q) F "llWOOCI 111iellt ~() ~ Ptr141fdM on the lltws m Dkl CMtt si.. m Los HtflMllOS Corajt ff llewslli(ltt ll1tlo111t -11:30- " ll 1 ti 11 lllowiH: The lie• ~111erV "' ''Spellbound" (dra) '46 CteiO!Y Pttk, 1ne11d Bergman II iUJ ()t, Jollnny C.f'IOll D Twitl(ltt Zone D lfJ IJ<ll IBJ la11tta m The Gon1 Show a> Get SNrt (f4J Ulla\, Yoa• ' You fD Captioned HC llewt 12:00 CD Juke 8o1 Q) Tiit HOltey-•n m Mowlt:""' "An tn~r Calls'' (dra) '54 Altita11 Sim m llni~erltty -12:30- ~ J SOlp f KIOIY Olloto D Mowlt: (fiti "Tiit Mir•" (d11) 61 Stuart Wh1tm1n Rod Sle1&er D Mowlt: •c.iu tor San Selin· 11111" (wes) '68 Anthony Quinn An1a~tt' Comrr Charles Br01110n JO Mowlt: ·a1n1 Ilona n. Godzilla" (Kl ft) 63 M!Cltael Kt1th CD Allrtd Hitchtock Prnt11b m Motil: I "My Man GodlrlJ" (com) '36 C.1ole I ombard Wilham Powell. ~hce BridY 1:00 8 Stew• ldwaids Show II ()SJ Oil lllclnl(ltt Special II Tiit LM (!perts m So.tp ratt01Y Oltc4 -1:30- 11 Wanttd: Oe.d or Alltt CD IAovit: IWJ "Tiit I.alt &t111J11r" (mys) '39 Eoward'G Rnb1nson, John CarrAd1nt lamu Ste•&rl 2:00 8 lle11$/lllowle: (W} "Arbo111" (wn) '•O W1lh•m llolden, lean Arthur, Wa11en W1ll1Jm • IAtwit: "Tiit 11141 Wllo ltatlltt4 HI,..."" (WSI>) 71 Rotu Moote Ole• Geoiees PICOI. H1ldep1d Nett' Alularr M1tll1n11t -2:30- • llilclN: "'-' tf lltt14a'' (wes) '61 -Cf!Ol&t M1rt111. Aud1tr Ambtr .., G4t S..11 3 :00 ID .... Ir. .WI "TM Ma11 Wini 11i1M llvt1" (mys) 40 8011s llartofl. Rott• Pl'YOI, Jo Ann SaytD 4:00 • -..: "c.141'911 tf IMll" ~) '68 Bo<is t\Jlloll, V1veu l 1ndfon, Jun Pierre AQmont -4:30- ..... : "HlllldlllllU .. Wit" (511'11) ·~1 Gunther Stoll • lltvlt: "Tiit rllt11tt111 S,.OU" (l!lyi) 40-Rld\lrd Atltn, St1n1ty R1dces. l y11ne Roberts TV WEEK. 0€CEMBER 24, 1976 I SATURDAY I OECEMIO JO MORNING 8:00 0 S4illflee SMftttl .. Tllat'l Cal 11J Coln11111nily FM4uu CD Unmnity of tM Air -6:30-u Callltf a TllrH II und of Ille Lost 8 OratMI CJ) TY CllsMoom 0 DMJ ' liollath 11.Ql lleal EJUte Aptlralsal CD Speak Out CD Infinity htlOIJ W C.plionecl A8C Nni l11J Starch 7:00 o rni '°Pl1' Hour II CU I ()tJ Gatuy Goof·Ups D Bia 111111 Ma,_te D CV 110) (2tl Scoobf Ooo m c.tna D Tht Hot fuel&• Sllow CD Elemt11t1ry llews m Woman ""' to llul fD Yoaa tor Htaltll -7:30- ll 12fJ ~ hnmtk four D Pacaotltn D J ®! flt fl11sft<• TY Premiere a TIM LOM a.11aer CD Th•t's~p Q) ll0111per llOOlll fD Alt lht Qutt11's HonnJWoul4 Wt "°' loll& fol the fltl 8:00 8 ()) fl Tht ..... luftllJ/11114 ltullner Sllow D IUl Oil To Be Al!llOlll!Ud • Mcrill: "LOJt TrtHUlt ol tflt Aztecs" (adv) '61 Alan Steil D m <10! Ml s.i,trl1ltnd• G Mowle: _, "lsl•nd llescue" {tom) '5? David NtYtn m Mowlt: IJlll) "Casa Tl111btrllne" (d1a) '48 -Spenc11 Tracy. lena Turner lacMry Scott, rom Dr1ke f1i) Starch tor Ille hal A1111riu -1:30- 11) S.llltrt CaNforllia m~Tllo•tt• 9:00 • llJ w ren '" '-111t u Q1J (ft) llrl '71 .., Al Wt Seo It -9:30- • ( ., lUJ ,,. fMtNll Nrc Playott l eams to be ennounced G lfll Prt fMtball AFC Playolf lt1ms to be 1n11011nctd ..... : "Tiit Sittrlt lJIMol" (d11) '59 LallltnU HviCJ, Olwll Addams, Mochaet Clare . e (fl <JI a SmeW• M·SUrt llJV..~ ml• 10:00 • Fllllfatt ....... : hM tf Mitt • Mttlt: "Tiit llll&lltJ l•1111t" (tdw) '64-Mt15"1ll Thomfl'b~ • OllCI U• A a.le -10:30- • <Im '31 Pin& Panther SlloW G "°"'°"a Cmldy m lllslwltlt IAuJic fD FrMStylt 11:00 • J TQ! raJ Wuhnd S11t<iat (R) "Trouble River" C4nGI A youna boy and hrs 111ndmothe1 tea11111 1tt8'k by 1eneaades escape by •Mimi ~ 1111ke sh1h rah down a dan tttous mer Moclllel Le Clau NOfi Otnney Hal lnatand 1nd l1y W Mctnl01ll st11 • , ..... /CarlltY fm To It AMovllCff ll)Fa11ttfa Fakon -11:30- • Ora1111t • ® lltl American 9'1141tlnd II) Ciel $11\art fJID 'rln 11141 lltl)lll ti ID Mllliu Colombian• 12:00 8 Vor•c to tht Bottom of tht Sta G Tht st Slff K Ids •Soul Tr1in Ill T1nat1 (2~ lf!Wtr, Wlffr fZJ Niia ChiW ' Co. ID Waltt1 llltrtHG -12:30- JJ u~UN e Mowit: "Tan 11141 Span" (mus) '46 Allred D1a~t J1net 81111 e Motlt: "Handfor41's 1'olt1I" (1dv) lau1e. Robert Br1, Bonita C11nv1lle Kart Swenson. Berbara Cr1h1m, John Atcher IJQ) Oba 10 IHI Movie: "H1dd1" (dra} 70 Glenda J1Cuon f'lil r.u. (ft) Sh MMtlOll $ Man lltl Allllo!llJ ol All All·Slll T Ulll 1:00 e CIJ fl}) s,orti $pect1C.ullr No Nelwoik 1nl0fm111on available VHta Altar• e Tllo lie V1lltr ~ flltolle: "Tht Man Hunter" (dra) '69 Sandra Dee. Roy lhinnu W1ll1Jm Smith, At Hirt ' • Tiit Out" U111ib e11are111W. .. u IAtwit: ;-i.l.Hy ,rM Loul sieM" !drtl '42 lohn wa,ne, On• MunSOll, Dotollly 01nd11d11 flD MIM: "TM Vlcleus Circle" (dra) '~7-lolln M1lb • WetN c., Stear llicMl&llb OJ! 1\is Is tM "'l -1:30- f Twit • Met! ' c.t• fl llf\ '"" .. tM .... 2:00 m,_., .. ..,..,. eTWsCM I ::a .... "~r•" <c.om> '63 le11y fhomu. Mo11e Rtdmond, (rK Sykes, Dennis Prtc• ....... , ....... ..... ..,... ca.la • 11ot1•: "St1111er •" lhl11tlttll" (1dv) '39-Spenur lrKr. RM;hard Cle'"'· fC1nq llelly == I -2:30- (J) Tiit lfady hich U Acrklllhtrt USA @..,le: "h1llu1 Caesar" (dra) '53-Marlon Brando. lames Mason, Sir John C1el&ud, Louis Calhern. Edmond O'Brien. Creer Carson, Deborah Kerr QJJ Sii* .. GfttM a ,...,. 3:00 D Tan. & t11t S.,., Se¥fll CD My Tllrtt SellJ .. 0. CllllM • ,..., t• festiwtl CD Mlwie: "Ont, Two, Tllrtt" {com) '61-Jamu C11ner. Arlene Francis. Billy Wiider Cl .... it: "A Min C.lltd lianno11" {wes) '69-Tony franciosa. Michael S.rm1n, Judi West, Susan Ohvei crm Mtwlt: "Tiit lOllc Outr' (ad~) '67-Yul Brynner, lrevor Howard, Harry Andrews, Charlotte Ramplinc GI Mnie: tM "Mutiny 011 tllt lountr'' (adv) '35-Clark Cable, Charles lauehton. Franchot Tone. Donald Crisp. Spuna Byington [2) Alttmoon llo¥it tD Guttll T11 (8) Utt of 1111 Wild -3:30- CD Mlm·lZ G Sat»ray D U.S. Nltitllat Ora& bdn& 181 ''icttn& Trlllllfts of Dr-*" m £'*"-1u11y S.-i111 8 Ellitr1t11CJ OM a Moirit: ..,. ........ (wes) '59- Richard Widmark, Henry r onda. Anthony Quinn, Dorothy "41tone A llle "9wiltc Yuri 4:00 CD SU•b""'""' 8) Mowlt: "Klstf• tor MJ ,.,........ {coin) ·~-Polly Berren. Fred MICMurrtJ. ., UtiM C..rtiM ., ... -4:30- B SNco~ Cl) lf1 liaMI .t tllo .... • Tlllt ,. !tit Nn a ..... 111o ... .,: • c..t11ot'• ArMtltt •T•lo~ <a Tllo Jobt's MW a .,..,.... """' 111tt11ora 5:00 8 lfl .... ff tlll ..... e sw Ti'M • CD a ww. ..., .. ff s,.ru Cover11e of the Mtn'a Oown~1ll Wofld Cup Skim& event trom Val Cardena. Italy. the Wofld Auobltici Clllmploftsll~ from Sofia, Bu"ria, and a r'POft on 1111 NatfONI 500' Stock C.1 Race. Cl> ......... e .._ "DW '• HMr ._ 0.. Ahlt "9 TratoN., S.INiMYr' (COlll) '61~Phyllli 011111. 8ob DtllVW, Jot f'lrllll = == (ar) """ ...,. ,.,,.,, .. ,~ (drl} '4S-Jolln W1ynt, "*" ~. Don111 ltffd, Jacl Hott, Ward 8on4 @rtw11d111 ........ ··--..... , .... (I~ -5:l0-• m.-. ..... ... •viiliQ e:oo UG CD @allNIWS • Mtrlt: "Tai GMlef )oe" {dra) '76-Peter Boyte, Burcm Meredith, Patn<11 Hui Clll llM Haw .., llllwie: (11K) "ltbM of ...... (com) '63-Tooy Randall @ Ma11·12 0""" f,D TurlllMlt 0) Curro JillltflU -6:30- D CD • oo a a """ 1J 1bfJ TJltr Moore illl NllM Tllat TUM @ fMlilll fr" m J111Mr C111w & eo. (BJ (COllOllllullJ Speakln1 7:00 U Tiit l'rkt Is Rlsllt CJ) EmttltflCY OM G Pltase Stllld ly 8 Eyewitlless ta An1tles D CD Tiit U""'"" War crm 1.os a.mo. • [2) a o Tiit llwt111et ... , .. @ Owce Upill A Qmlc m 1...aiilltSI leflllff$; Allol!ltr too• A proarus repcut on Vie1111mese stl11trs in Cahfornra tD luirlt f,.,,. Mtrlc:o 9 AllStill QtJ Ul!iib -7:30-U Zt11 theTOW11 D Fa111ily F.W e llltc.h '-"" PM @ It C.'t tlaH*! 11 Mt 0 c.crmillill O""-' ............. 8:00 U (]) Clll s,w. .... A widow-an erpert in psychic research-and a prwate zoo of wild 1nim1ts combine to confuse Peter in his attempt to help a trltnd'ol JameS011's. G 0 0 S'l'CIAL Tiie Kills °' .... Jlll!Mf" ,.,.. ()hr) Joe G1r11iol1 is on hand in Miami to report on the 4Stb annual edition ol this 1>11eant. Oran11 Outen 81rl>fr1 8owser rt1tns over this yt1r's tvent. • Olt S.. "Oown Memory Line" Pful Anka and Fran,ie V1nl perfOfm; e CD C11t Wttc.111 ltd lltft9' (R) "I WoHtr Wllo's KIS$lnc Gabe Now" Gibe Kotter !las 90l'llt e1pt1111rns to do at llOme alter he ii Mtn ~111 tht Pfttly 111 ltl(htf' Ill llG clatsroom ... : (Jllr).,..,,.. ...... ,..,..,. (dra) '57-Frank Sinatra, c.ry Grant. Soolua t..or~ • SrtCIM. C:.r•al !'atty r..-°"''"' J•• 11om-ft..._..,. CllMics =-~ ~lef A 11.tlerswttt ~Wlfta lht ~, .... °' • 1QUlll Jedi boJ •bout to celtllr1tt '"' 13th btl1hdt', 8f1 'I• -1:30- Tn. ~ti: cits c::.:r~&~ ~ -hlndtvfftd to a PflSOlltl•"ts lo$I "' • Mttlll Oft his "" to ~lalltl Mndltia 1111 Cli11lon Coffttn ~ Otpertllltllt out on • ,...._"' 9:00 • Cl) (U) ..... ; (211r) "0.- Stff" {sci.Ii) '77-Juhe Christle, Fritz Weaver. Geml Graham. Berry Krotcer, Lisa Lu. Larry J. Blake, 01n1 launta. Rol>trt Vaucltn fhe wile ol a scientist is held 1 temfted posoner by 1 computer that has chosen lier as rts m:ite G @ QI) lifth (R) l>f Judson Cratts Ranclolpll-sur1eon·111 chlff. Ctntdren's Hosp11JI, Hat1011al MeOrul Centet W1Sh1ncton. D C -IS shown with tlt!ee al lits patients 1n 1nlanl with a swallowinc tube piobtem, a I 5·yeJr·old 01abetrc with severe abdominal pains, and a 9 year old 1111 with 1 mass on her rrchl lune Ii CD ®' !&J Tiit LM loll (R) [plSOdes are "Julie's Aunt," •llh Red Buttons· "Where Is II Wollen,'' wrlh Hope Lanee and R1cl11rd Mulhean, and "The B1e Dtal.'' •Ith MacKenzie Pltillrps and £11~ Estrada ® SoulldsQ1• m 1o1H111Ntws <e Fort Wortll to Carntaie H•ll -9:30-m Wilder, Wilder ID Iris Cllac*I 10:00 1J Q]) (JI) ...... Weekly news m•razrne wrtlt co·reporters Lloyd Doby11s .1ind lin~ Olfrbee It Colltat W.11 The hn1ls of lht Rebel ClaSSIC rownamenl in las Veeas. Taped 8 (ID) QI) f llQsf hlllMI tll) In "Annive~ry." four women (Pamela Franklin. Hilary Tompson, "41e11tte lee and Sue lYoll) want lo return to a time wlien hie was fun and eames. and in "Reunion," 1 mamed couple (luae Ainu and Ronnie Col) wish to recreate tht m1tement of thelf flfst yurs torether m (]) Ctrt~ l'llsy Ttlttholl m CtMa,. 0 Man .... ~ 5"dil ., .... IHl ,.lictlns Trmwn tf OrtlHlt -10:30- @fllt Wllfl ol Coiltrau ID Mowit 11:00 •• (ill ..... e ([)B llM •s...cie, ID UVl! 20 HOURS Of * '°' ERTtlTAlllMtlT Hofiay Sbr Teftttloft fof Ctf*al Palsy • Cl) Sl'tCIAl Ctrt\ral , ... , TV WEEI<. DECEMBER 24, 1978 Ttlttllo11 Dennis James hosts Continued lo SAM on 1mv. Cll1nnel l l and 8AM on KEYT, Channel 3, Sunday, Det. 31st <IJ) MeN: "Mf11 Witll A '-Iden h " (d11) '56-frank Sinatra. Kim Novak. EltlllOf Pa.rker m FtnN814 2lfic*t @Me.IZ @ C..-t ti C1111111t Hal a -..it: ""°'" •• T•1t· 111,11 Hill" (d11) 'SI -Valentina CofttSI Ric~rd B1Sthar1. Wllh1m lundl&'n. ray Baku -11:30- • Moirie: "Tiit Galllnt tto.n" (dia) '60-James Carney. Dennis Weaver. Richard J1ecket D o ai r~u•a• lasht•111 ,.otre 01me at l(entucky Taped. a MoN: "Help" (com) '65-John Lennon, Geor&e Ham$on. R1n10 Strn. Paul McCartney, Ele1nor Bron. ()) ComedJ .. D llo¥1t: ''Tiit OllllpllS'' (SCl·fl) '68-Ke1th Larsen, Ingrid Pitt. (JI) M°'ie: "The Dnil at Fo.r O'Cloc•" (ad~) '61 -Spencer Tracy, rrank Sinatra, Kerwin Matthews. lean·Prerre Aumont G)Tllt .. its m Mowit: tllJ "lilly liar" (dra) '63-luhe Chr1st1e. Tom Cour1enay 12:00 II Twiticllt loM Mo.le: '-"' "F•tllc~t "' hra4tn (mus) '33-Jarnts C.cner. Joan Blondell, Dd Powell, Ruby Keeler, frank McHuch GI C«8rll l'alsy T....,_ -12:30- • Moiries; "Bluebeard," ··Room al lhe TOI>" m c.t s....11 1:00 ID 00 eer.11 l'llsy Ttlttflalt m llorit: "Va .. ....,,. .. (II«) '71 -A~elta ruenles. Ronat Remy -1:30- D 8k• Coltart ·Tiit~,.,, 2:00 8 TllllHlwt • ~ "Pinello Vrll1 R•turn$." "f(MI or 8t Kiiied" •CJ) IM*tl,.., r....._ -l:lO- •.... : "'nleWltlhT ... r" <•a) 'SO-Cltnn FOid, Claude Rains ..... ,. • TV WEEK. DECEMBER 2•. 1978 SYSTEM OF THE WEEK ATLANTIC'S System of the Wttk features YAMAHA'S newest AM-FM stereo receiver, the CR220. With YAMAHA'S famous ultra-low (0.0S%1 distortion and super tuner section, the CR220 will easily out perform anything in its power range and will sound great for years. The matching YAMAHA semi auto belt drive turntable with the GRADO Fl+ elliptical stylus has tracking performance and band width so good that you' 11 discover a whole new standard of record reproduction. JBL's newest speaker system, the L19, -was designed to meet the need for a small, highly accurate loudspeaker capable of dellvering substantial -• ~ 11 " '' n · • I \tsound output from a moderately powered amplifier. --------This system gives you a lot of sound without taking up a lot of space ... PLUS, this week only, a lot of savings as ATLANTIC'S System of the Week. NATIONALLY ADVERTISED PRICE, $759.50 t ....... mM"'Uii*""i.J:llt-...... 1 ... ~ maxell maxell LOW ..OCSI LMC46 CASSITTIS uoru Oii UDXUI Cto C.ASSITTIS T~eu lt "'Out •e "'•null -J c-..... !NI IOw coel -~ J to 00t11n ,,,. ..,.,..,,..,.. Of "'•••II Ou l ltly e t\41 ,t _..._,. 6 Utt Price suo ' J ............. "'"-XEll S ton11I C"'""' race• lo•••' dft COrhO" ••tended tt1on h•ouency rHpon" the •-kw t~• CrtUCl l h•lenet wf'O kf"O .. f ..... I no ""'81-\AI for .... Mii YOIH Cf'ooce ol UDJll I lor Hormel boat 0< UOXUI IO< CA02 l>lat Utt flrkt SUS l •mt 4---b-t 1130178 ,,, ,,, ,, • f .,,, 11J1•1 I h ' • ,., ... · . .. --~~ UltroRnear I OOC LOUOSl'IAIH So-Yo Off UST Ntcl Tl>e tOOCt ere e ~ ~ l wev .-,.!-The ti tow tr-111t1cy c1n-" poneo tor "'°'' blu ,_ Noce C<IW hlj)~t. foll ...... -Vt ordote!IOll Cl<Cullty ,,,.ko , .... 100C1 a e•w buy ~~ OfOOll" -"'' vn11e1 -6 'r9tt .. .,,..,,.,.~ ONM SUMDA Y IJ..I • CLOS9 MOM.. DIC. Jiit IXTIMDID PA YMIMT -tO DAY NO IMTlllST