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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1978-12-27 - Orange Coast Pilot• ' 17 ~ r. l l J t I I en m cam • DAILY PILOT Atnerieans Find Sunken * * * 10' * * * WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, DECEMBER 27, 1978 Treasure of '$401tlillion ! VCM. ,,, NO •1, f MICTlOlllt., 4t .....n II ' • • • • ort Reopens After Fog Lifts O..lly Pl ... St.ff,,_, Tlta1tldul Jo e D awso n r ece ntl y stopped by the Murdy Fire Station in Huntington Beach to thank paramedics for the best present he ever re- ceived -his life. Dawson was rescued by pa ramedics when he was near death fo llowing a car crash July 20, 1976. Story, photo on Page AlO. Man Sought In Horse Kill PORTLAND, Ore. <AP> Fede ral authorities are seeking a man charged with adopting 109 wild horses through a govern· ment program and then selling them for slaughter as animal and human food overseas. . Donald Hwdles. 37, ot Bums. Ore .. is the first person ac- cused of violating the 1972 Wild H&rse and Burro Act in a com· plaint signed by U.S. Magistrate George Juba. authorities said Tuesday. He got the horses through a U. S. Bureau of Land Management adopt-a-horse program designed to control horses on rangelands and to provide r ecreation animals. Newport I Men Held In Fraud Ne wport Beach police said to· day two men arrested for aJ- leeed involvement in a purchase order credit scam may be Unked to co mpanies throughout California, Arizona and several other Western states. Released on S25,000 bail today were James Lawrence Bartel. 37. o f 1420 Park Newport. Newport Beach, who allegedly used the alias of James Gentry, and Lonny Leroy Allison, 42, who allegedly used the name of Theodore Cramer. Allison listed a Coronado ad· dress but had an Arizona driver's license. police said. Detective Dave Scruggs said the men face charges of grand theft property and carrying a concealed weapon. He said the case began when Slavick's Jewelers in Fashion Island reported receiving a let· ter from Earth Industries. 2955 East Coast Highway. The letter reportedly said the company was a subsidiary of Wil-lax ln- .dustries, which was celebrating its 25th anniversary and wanted to purchase gifts for its officers. Wa tches valued al $8,000 were s ubsequently purchased through a purchase order. Scruggs said store officials became suspicious after they re- ceived a telephone call from a Santa Ana jeweler who had re· ceived a simµar letter . Subsequent investigation, Scruggs said, revealed that Earth Industries and WU -lax In- dustries did not appea r to have business licenses. He said they were operated from an office without files or records, and with a temporary employee answering the telephone. "On the envelope, they say they're celebrating their 25th year." Scruggs said. "The best I 've been able to discover, they've been in business a month and a half." The suspects were arrested without incident aft.er a brier in cident at the fi rm. Scruggs said. <See SCAM, P age AZ> Gruesome Toll Grows I The toll of bodies climbs Gec:y home 8213 W. Sunvnlrdlll A'*'UI . Bodies lound in nottheast oomer of e1aw1 space; search fOf more bodies continues. Al'WI ........ DIAGRAM OF GACY PROPERTY IN DES PLAINES WHERE REMAINS WERE FOUND One Body Found Under G•r•ge Floor, 12 More In Spece Under Houee Slaying Toll Hits 14 4More Bodies Found UnderSuspect's Home DES PLAINES, Ill. <AP> - Four more bodies were found lo· day beneath the house of a man suspected o( killing 32 youths. Today's discovery brought to 13 the number or bodies found at the home of John Wayne Gacy Jr. One of the 13 was unde r Oacy's garage. A 14th body. found ln a river, has also been linked to the investigation. An official described the mud· dy. foul ·smelling crawl s pace beneath Gacy's house. wbere- most or the bodies have been found, as "like a battle scene in there with all the trenches dug. Yo u 're working right In the graves." Dr. Robert Stein, Cook County med ical examiner, said Tuesday nl1ht that In his 20 years as a fo rensic patholog ist he has never come upon a more horri· fying case. "Before this is all over with, this could be one of the most heinous crimes of the century." said Stein. who has been crawl· ing on his stomach underneath the house . Searchers resumed tbelr dig- ging this morning In the crawl space where lhe skeletal re· mains or four bodies and parts of a fifth were round Tuesday. Gacy, 36, a construction con· tractor who once served a prison term In Iowa for sodomy. re· portedly told investigators he had sex with and then killed 32 boys and young men. burying 26 at his home and throwing six in the Des Plaines R\ver. He is being held without bond on a murde r charge a nd 1s scheduled to appear in court Fri· day. Ga cy, who w as twice divorced. lived in the house for six years. the last two alone. Stein s aid he is not close to Identifying any of the victims and some may never be iden· (~ l,M)DIES. P age AZ> Boy, 9, Nearly Saves Worker From Death $40 Million Treasure Fou.nd FRESNO CA P> -A (arm worker who fell Into a large bon- fire in a rural Tulare County vineyard died here today despite heroic efforts of a boy. Nolan J . Shenault. 49. died at Valley Medical Center of bums suffered over 90 percent of his bOdy when he fell into the fire Tuead ay, authorities said. SAN FRANCISCO <AP > -A treasure or gold, silver. jewels and arti(acts has ~n found and partly recovered from a legan- dary sunken Spanish galleon lost In a storm otr the Dominican Republic In 1641, tbe leader or an American recovery team re· Ports. American Burt D. Webber Jr., leader of Seaquest International Inc ., 19id Tuesday the trove was found Nov. 28, about 65 miles northeast or the Dominican Republic where the veaser. Our = Lhe Good and Pure Con-Mnk. \ ... But Webber declined comment on the worth or the treasure until all ot It haa been recovered ln five or six months. John Grtsslm, a writer who was at the scene when the trove was dl1Jcovered, said treasure burfa believe it could be worth S40 mMUon. "Sliver pieces of eight. silver candelabra, antique china transahJpped from 17th Century Manila galleons -poppln1 out o( sand pocket.I as we reached 1nto them, 11ke dl11ln1 Into a Chrlatmaa 1tockln1 ... " Hid Grl11lm. Webber said the vessel carried a considerable portion or the Spanish royal revenues (or the years 1640 and 1641. The ship wu first aalva1ed In 1687 by American s hipwright and adventurer William Phipe, who retrieved 32 tons or sliver and other~. Webber 1ald. But Phipe mlued moet or the treasure aboard the wreck and In 1688 returned wtlh a lecond recovery team only to a1aln have troublt penetrat1n1 the coral shield he believed beld the bulk or the ship's t.reaaure. Webber 11kt bit find retultl ; from the discovery by marine hl1torlan Goin E . "Jack" Huklna of the lotbook or the ship Henry which discovered the wreck 46 yean after It sank. The lo1book, found In tbe Marine Archlva in London, 1ave com· pass bearinp on the wreck. Amon1 the lte1n1 found were cannon balls, Porceleln cupe and plates from Mulco and China. olive Jan. candlesUck holders, a sllver candle snuffer in nearly perfect condition. and a "slplll- cant" quantity of silver coins. M.C>At wtttt olttes ol ell1ht mint· Che GALLEON, Pase Al> Nlne.year·old Ruben Rojas saw Sbenault ran into the blaze stoked by vine prunln1a at the Del Rey Vineyard near Wood· vllte and pulled bJm out. omcers said. The boy then ran to his nearby borne and returned with a bowl of water and a ru1 to ex· t1n1ul1h Shenault'a burning clothet. A fire dtpanment sPQkesman praised the boy. sayin1 he "abowed presence of mlnd a lot of adult1 would have been hard , put to dllplg under thole klnds or clrcumat.ancet ... Shutdown Diverts 1,000 Operations resumed at Orange County Airport today after four hou rs of morning rog that at one point cut visibility on passenger tramc runways to 800 feet. More than 1,000 passengers were diverted to and from On-' tar io Airport before Orange County controllers decided at 10 a.m . that it was safe to resume nights. Air Cali fornia communica- tions executive Bob Payton said his airline diverted six flighls and 600 passengers to and from Ontario. "But things a re looking good now." he said. "The fog 1s mov- ing out pretty rapidly and our operations are going back to normal" Officials of two other maJor carriers. Hughes Airwest and Golden West Airlines. said their services also were bac k t o normal. Airline personnel who have had to deal Wllh impatient and truculent passengers for three days in a row were cheered to· day by the National Weather prediction that the fog period is over. Forecasters said the persi's· tent fog will give way to a bank or cloudy weather that will bring rain in its wake They see a 50 percent chance of rain by late Thursday Orange County Airport had the dubious distsncUon today of being the only airport in the na- tion to be seriously afrected by <See FOG, Page A2> Co ast Weathe r Chance of rain increas- ing tonight with a 50 per- cent chance or rain on Thursday. Cloudy tonight and Thurs day. Lows tonight 43 to 50. Highs Thursday. 53 to 59. INSIDE TODAY Stoluly Carnuchoel. who a ckCGCU QQO S)lmbobttd Black Power rmUtancy in America, now relfdts in Africa, "being qui.et," working for rnolu- Oon. In orw o/ hit an/requent lnter&ri'109, Carmichael du· CUHt d has C®Se With The Al· .ociated Preu. Sn Page 87. •••• I l l .......... Bolidag DelJtd lock, n yttur old orunin1tun ot Sun Diego Zoo, proudly .... hows off nt•whorn oran~utun numt."d Sobuh Lock is n 't a relative but he uµpeur!') lo bt.' p 1oud a nyway Subah 1i, one week old . 2 Theft Suspects H e ld After Chase Two men wPre lfl custody to- duy on burglary charges after l~ading Costa Mesa police on an •arty morning auto chase that t.•nded 1n Newport Beach, police ~aid Two lele v1s1on sets c.ind a v1d<.'C> tape machine, ulle~edly s t o le n from Davis Brown 1\pphances :.at 411 E 17th St.. Costa Mesa . were recovered from the car driven by one of the SUSPC<'ls, police said. Mesa police Sr<t Sam Cordeiro ..,Jid the chas<.• began at 5·20 a m . when patrol officer Ed Dry1.mala spotted a car puUing :.iway from the rear of the ap- pliance store. Irvine and Newport Beach µoll ,•c units 'joined the pursuit th:.it e nded on Windward Lane in J>ov<•r Shores about l5 minutes l~1lt'r Pol1c·e said driver Richard (;a w, 20. of Sant.a Ana, eluded f'rOlll Page A J SCAM ••• He sa id pohce recovered two watches valued al $7,000 and a <.·on<'ealed handgun SC'rU#!gs s aid more than SJ0,000 in new office equipment, wh1<'h papers round on the sus peels indicated had been bought with purcha-se orders. was re· l'Ovcred from the office. In addataon. Scruggs saad, papers found on the two, includ· ing checkbooks and correspon· dence. linked Bartel with com- panies throughout California and Anrona Bartel allegedly is an officer in Philamert<'an Industries Inc . Pacifi<· Imports Inc., Integrated Med•<'al Management Inc. and Samar Industries Inc .. Scruggs said He s aid he is investigating to sec• af thcSl' firms are in t'Orpor att•d In .addition. he said. papers linked Bartel to Allergy Control Jnc. of Newport Beach, Auto· Jmmune Allergy Control Center Inc . Auto-Immune Allergy Con· trol C<•nter of Arizona, Inc .• Al- lergy Management, Inc., and Al· lt•rgy Control Medical Clinics. Scrug~s as ked that anyone who has n·cei ved correspon· dence or had any contact with ~arlh Industries or Wil-lax In· dustrat.'8 t'Ontllct him al 644·3784. Vacation Continues CAMP DAVID <AP) -Presi- dent C:-irter is continuing his holi· day va c ation at th e prt>s idential retreat here in the Maryland mountains following a fave -day visit to tus Hometown of Pl ams , Ga. OAANOE COAST DAILY PILOT ""'Or~Coit\4 O..ly PfHtt w1t,.wth1n1uom ot,...,,.,._ ..... , ·•-•-ooy1.,.o.- t OA\t Puot1Wt'IQ (Gmf>tlny lifp.it, •1• .Ott~ •o ,;.yt)4n h ... MGNJ•y ltw-6'.Mlfol I ri(t.Ay fOf (O\f .. .......... ,_,.........,.., &¥" HVftf"'OtOft 8Nc.h r~ t~•"V•llf'.,_ lt¥11M l-O~tk•ch So.J',h(M \i A ''"4'•'"'"~,....ttion1\~1~No\.ttw .. n..,.. \uftd•¥+-Trw prl"(tf)ilt OVlHl\1\1"'9 C>tMt1 I\ •i lJO W1>••8 4'1¥\I'""' CMl•*w C•hfOf'nl•t,.,. 11-ttN-p,.,._"t •l"O fllwof1\lllrr JeOll (--, 'liit• "'""'°'"'"l'Mf""""MMilfWltt• T-.. lt•MI (OlllO< "r-\AM .......... ,_.,,..,,,.r•• 0...~N~ 11-1'-AW\l _ _,~hler. Tel~rte (114)1G4nt ae1111tte<t Actve11111111142-M11 ,, ....... ft(l•- 41f.41100 police on foot after the car was h alted His companion, Raul Romero Ruiz, 30, of Sunta Ana, was urre8tcd on the spot, police said. Gaw wai. arrested about an hour later while hitchhiking along Pac1f1c Coast Highway. Both men were booked at Costa Mesa jail and held in lieu of $5,000 ba11 each. Fro.a Page A l GALLEON. • ed in Mexico and Pe ru, Webber said. The 140-foot vessel. the flagship of Spain's 17th Century New World fleet. wai. carrying 520 people when i.he s ank in the Caribbean storm. Grissim said Seaquest In- ternational wi ll share the loot equally with the Dominican Republi<' lie said a Dominican gunboat 1s guarding the treas ure while the salvage party is home for a Christmas break They will return to the site Jan 2. To locate the wreck, Webber's diver s, u s ing cesium magnetonometers, picked up magnetic bearings on iron hull pins und s hip f1tl1ngs aboard the wreck after five days of explora- tion ·'There have been countless other expeditions because it's a great legend in treasure hunt- ing." Webber said. He s aid one of the reasons the others failed was because the ship was broken up badly and 91Wead over a large area. Marines Held In Clemente Pot Sale Rap Two Camp Pendleton Mannes have been a rrested by San Clemente police on suspicion of selling marijuana and of possessing martJuana for :,ale, after police were told lhat a sale of narcotics was about to take place at the municipal pier. Confiscated al the time of the arrest on Tuesday night ~ere 26 Thai sticks. police suid, amount· Ing to 32.7 grams ( 1.2 ounces > of marijuana. An investigator in the police department's narcoti cs division placed the street value of the marijuana at about $780. Police arrested Raymond J . Costello Jr., 18, and Gary 0 . Crowe, 20, both of Camp Pendleton on suspicion of the drug related offenses. Both remained in custody to· day al the San Clemente Jail in lieu of $5,000 bail each. Meany-Carter Meeting Set WASHINGTON <AP) -Presi- dent Carter and AFL·CIO Presi- dent George Meany .will confer Jan. 12 at a meeting that could help patch up their rapidly de· terlorating relationship -or perhaps widen the rift. Admtnlatrallon sources have contlrmt.'d lbat Meany, acoom· panled by six other AFL·CIO leaders, will alt down with Carter for what will be their tlrat private meeUn1 since August. The meoUng was arranged b[ Labor Secretary Ray Marshal • acting In the role of peacemaker by aeeldn1 to halt tht' bitter an. ta1onl1m that has developed between the White Houaf" and the labor federation. Jeers Yankees • TAIPF.I, Talw n CAP) -Al le.out 10,000 prot"tera mnclna 111 •nd mud and 1houtln& "Carter la a ch at!" 1reeled o U 8. delt,atlon today H It ar , rlvt."d to bel(ln talk8 wl\h Ttuwltn official ulmed tat making the Sl'pualion of Lhc two nullon11 un mtcablt' one Vice Forell(f\ Mtn i a ter Frederick Ctucn sounded a stem note ln a wclcominl( spe ch ror the dlpk>mallc·mllltury d lcaa- tlon ut u mllllury u1r1>0rt, tellinl( l h u A m ,. ri c 11 n i. t h u t t h c economic and cuJtural tlett the C'ntl'r odmlrllstrutlo11 wunt..'l lo retam with Tauwun cun be con· tlnu d onJy on a govemment·lo- 1overnment bu11. Al the delegation and Na- t onallst Chinese omclala left the airport . accompanied b y carload¥ of reporters. dem onstratou wave d tbe No· tlonaliat (lag of Talwun and hmged at the automobiles. beat- ing on the side11, throwing eggs und mud and striking the cars wath flagpoles . One man rushed up to a re· porters' car and stutftld a mud- died, torn A merlcun fl\g in t h r o u g h a w 1 n d .. P w . Demonstrators splashed red paint on one limousine carrying American officials. Signs denounced President Carter's decision this month to sever d1plom1ttlc ties wi th Taiwan and establish them with communist China. "Mr Carter. you may sell out human nghti., freedom and dt• moC'racy. but t he ROC <Re1>ubllc of China) will never be sold," read onl'. Police were able to hold back many of the angry crowd . There were no immediate reports of m· juries. Another crowd of t ,000 to 2,000 d4:monstrators gathered m front of Taipei's Grand Hotel. where the Amencan delegation was to stay overnight before starting talk8 Thursday. The White House has said the task or the u s. delegation. headed by Deputy Secretary of State Warren Christopher, will be lo express U S. hopes that cu ltural , trade and other economic ties with Taiwan will be expanded despite the end of formal relations Ne w Year 's Day. The American group was expected to fucc sharp question- ing from the Nationalis t Chinese. Under Carter's decision. the United States will terminate the U.S .·Tniwanese mutual defense treaty at the end of 1979. E',....P ... A J BODIES ••. tified. "The teeth are excellent bul we still have to have the dental report lo match them ." he said. Edmund Dobbs. chief of Cook County sheriff's police. said that "based on my information they're all young boys " Dobbs said about 20 m en worked ins ide Gacy's home Tuesday. Some lore out flooring and dug through the crawl s pace. Technicians s pread buckets or mud on the ground behind the home, looking for re- mains. Stein said the excavation would proceed slowly because workers ris k becoming s ick from breathing methane, hydrogen s ulfide a nd other gases released during the de· compos1t1on of human flesh. Gacy has been charged with killing Robert Piest. 15. or Des Plaines. The youth was reported missing Dec. 11. Investigators said Gacy told them he threw Piest 's body and the bodies or five other youths into the Des Plaines River. Inves tigators dragged the rive r Tuesday with no success. Assistant State's Attorney Terry SulUvao said he hopes (o present evidence to a grund Jury this week. ) A spokes man for the Cook County state's attorney's offi ce tias said Gacy's attorneys a re expected to use an insanity de- fense. But Stein said "When I left Gacy's house tonight l said, 'Thi s guy's not crazy .· Eve rything he said Is just so Everything Is where he said it is ," said Stein. He said remain.a have been found where Gacy indicated they would be. Police were going through Gacy's papers lookin g for evidence that would prove his Aanlty. Papers taken rrom the home Include buslneas records, pornographic material and Democratic campaign literature, lnve&llgators for State's Att.omey Bernard Carey said. A spok•man for Carey's of· flee said pl'OHcutora will cite 'the OemocraUc c1nfpal1n work In tryln1 to show Gacy'1 ra· ltonallty. .... ,, ....... S tat S~ulpts S now The sun gets into tht• a<·t. helping t-0 create a geometric pattern of snow along a ~hain-unk f etice. Pretty to look,. at but cold lo tht> touch, the fencl' is at the 5.000·foot level on Highway 18 above San Bernardino Four Mourners Killed Iranian Troops Fire on Funeral Procession TEHRAN, Iran !AP> -Elite ranger troops opened fir<' on a funeral procei.s1on for an anli- sh ah professor today, and hospital officials said at least four or the thous and:. of ma rching mourners were killed The government. meanwhile, 1mpoi.ed fuel rat1on1ng on th1~ oil ra ch nation be<'ause or a cnp- phng petrolt'um workers ' strike Off1<'1als at Pahla v1 Hospital said 1t received four dead and 22 wounded from the procession al· tack A spokesman for the Na- tional Front. the <'hier opposition group. said at least six had been kill e d , and a gov e rnment spokl's man de111ed there were any deuths .. through he :.aid sev e ral persons had b een wounded Without hospital r e ports, casua lty figures iss ued by the two sides have been difficult to verify independently The Front s pokesman ~aid several persons were shot dead in other clashes today between security forces and d e m - onstrators in Tehran. At one point. mo bs of a nt1- shah demonstrators streamed toward the U .S Embassy, but rranian troops fired automatic weapons in the a ir lo chase them The proteste rs scattered but then regrouped and moved on to other areas. "Today was a very decb1ve day." the Front spokesman said "We think 1t 1:, going lo <'Ont1nue to an t•xtreme end." Soldiers allowed th<• funeral prO<'ession to take plaC'e on con dit1on then• bl' nQ :.inti-s hah violence Reporters who wit- nessed 1t su1d the march beS(<1n pe:.a c efully from Pahla v i Hospital but when 11 re<1<'hed thl' 24th of E.-;fand Square . about a quarter mile away. the rariger troops opem·d fan• The univt•rs11y professor. who had been Uikinl( µart in an anti shah s it in, was shot and k1llec1 Tuesday. reportedly as hl' leaned from a window to '>hout support to protesters during a demons tration A Front s pokes man said h<' did not know why the soldiers fired on the funeral procession. but believed soldiers along the s quare may have mis takenly thOught troopers accompanying the marchers de-;ertcd to the op- pos1tton . Heporter:, i.a1d i.omc soldiers escorted the marchers to e nsure that the µrocei.i.1on was peaceful Squads of the elite troopers we r e marc hing throu Kh Tehran's strt.•ets today. i.houlder to shouJder. their faces covered by gas masks. Armored cars with 50-caliber machine gun:. mounted on the turrets maneuvered 111 the area of the square The protests s wirled as anti- shah technical workers i.truck I ran Air, forcing the national C'arner to cancel all 21 fli ghts from Tehran. Anti shah strikes a lso were drying up 1mporlb of cons umer goods and sent Iran's 011 produc· tJOll to such cnt1cal levels that the government ordered fuel ra· t1onmg. Oil indus try i.our<'eS s aid petroleum production today ft>ll to 300,000 barrels -about 5 Pf'r- cent or normal output and about half of whal Iran consumes domestically each day and that all Iranian rt-fancnes had ~hut down. Amt'rit·an and C>lher foreig n expert:, have ~en tn·mg to he lp the stale 011 t•um1i:my keep up production. F ro•P-..AI FOG ••• fog . The control towe r at Los Angeles International Aarporl reported more than a mile of v1s1bility on a ll a ar carrier runways ttus morning. F'og that hampered operations during th<· ni g ht hours was r eceding rapidly. Fog that blanketed Orange County Airport in the early morning hours hampered traffl<.· in many areas of the county. Police reported no major traf· fie accidents. Late Preseat \. Armored Truck Loses Cointt CITY OF COMMERCE <AP> -Christmas came a day late for some eagle ·eyed motorists on In· terstate 5 when the back doors of an armored truck inl:'xplicc.1blv flew open and $.1,000 in quarters landed on the freeway. creating an instant gold rush and t raffic jam. '-IUlhoritie~ sa id today. Jn the mids t or the bedlam Tuesday night in the Citv of Commerce southeast of Los Angeles. three cc.1rs were involved in rear-end colhswns and several pcrson::i received min or tnJ u rics. the California Highway Patrol said. The clean-up took more than an hour to com - plct<• and some of those who stopped app1.•a red to have come equipped with a finders-keepers philosophy Bud Mowrig. a s upe r visor for Armored Trans port. Co .. said he believed about $2,500 of the $3.000 was eventually recovered in the dark.· Duck Feet c~urchill Water Baseball Football Soccer Tennis (vtfJthilf (weU nearly Everyt1Mnf) Fer ttie Atltltte •11>11 .. Wonder Spee do Volley Balls Soccer Balls Footballs Baseballs Softballs P11y1round Balls Boo1ey a.ds Welpt Sets Jump lopes Racket Strlnlinl "-*" a W~ite Star Rawlin1s Wilson Bancroft Jo1 Joy White Stat Wlpam Davis Victor Imp Y•11·PrinC1 Speedo-Adlllls Bllllint• bck1ts r ' • ~ ~ • ' ' ' 1 t \ t f { i f t i ~ f. r f. 'f J ' J l 1 l ( ' VOL. 71, NO. 361, ~SECTIONS, ~6 AGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 27, 1978 ·we • p '.it _.Sunken l'reasure Troee • I • • ' I' . I ,., :~ • .. \ • :t 1 Dlseoveredr SAN FRANC'lSCO (AP l -A treasure ot •old, s1lvt-r. J I and artilacts hu ~t"n round and partly recovt-red fN>m • ll'Rl'n aary 1unken Sp11nl h galleon ~t an a storm off tht-[)()m1n1can Rt-publlc In 164 l . lhl• ll'l1dt>r of an Ameraran reco\'t•ry t{•a m n · ports. American Hurt l> W1>bbf>r Jr leader of Seaqm•sl lnh'rnut1onul Jnr • 4 d Tuc.-sdny lh lNVl' wu!i . rouod Nov 28. ubout 6:1 milt•!. northeaAt Qf th Dominican R~public " re the v .-1. Our !Ad or thC' Good and Pure Con ccpt1on k. But Webbt!r d dined t'omml'nl on thr worth of ltw> tru&urf' until ••II ot 1t h bc>en rceov<'red in ft\<e or Ix monlhl John GnM1m, e wrlkr who was at tho •1tn wht-n lh trove wo dl&l'OV\~l'\'d. su1d I reatsurt• burra bth \fe 1t could oo' worth S40 m11hon. Bg Daw n 's E a rly Light. Closely watched by interested seagulls, the dorymen of Newport Beach secure their boats afte r an early morning fi shing expedition in chilly offshore waters. Winter and summer alike, the dory boats seek the harvest of the sea. Kulik Trial Jurors Hear Tes timon y By JOANNE REYNOLDS OI Ille o.fly Piiot Sc.ff Newport Beach's current police chief and its recenlly re· tired chief today were the focus of the heroin possession trial of Alexander Kulik. Kulik, also a CO·defendant in the a lleged cons piracy to murder Stephen John Bovan, is standing trial in Orange County Superior Court on charges s tem· ming from his arrest while al· Coast We a t h e r legedly in possess ion of 1.1 pounds of nearly pure heroin in October, 1977. He was arrested in a Mission Viejo parking lot about 12 hours after Bovan was gunned down o u tside a Newport Beac h res taurant. Defense attorney Philip De Massa is contending that the 85 percent pure China White heroin found in Kullk's borrowed lux· ury car was planted as part or a . police endorsed scheme "to get" relocated Mafia figures living on the Orange Coast . Today's testimony 1n the courtroom of act1ng Supenor Court Judge Paul Mast centered on Newport 's current chief, Charles Gross, who repeatedly denied the allegation that another figure in the Bovan slay· ing case. Rick Willis. had been (See KtJUK, Page AZ) "Silver piece or eight, silver cand labra. antique c hina trani;shtppt'd from 17th Century Munlla galleons popping out of sand pockeu as we reached Into them. like digging mto a Christmas stocking ... " said Grissam Webber smd the vessel carried a considerable portion or the Spamsh royal rev4:nues for the years 1640 and 1641 The stup w~ first s alvaged in 1887 by American 'shipwright and adventurer Willlapt Phips. who retneved 32 tons of silver and other goods, Webber said. But Phips missed most or the treasure aboard the wreck and in 1688 returned with a second recovery team only to again have trouble penetrating the coral shield he believed held the bulk or the ship's treasure. Webber said his find results from the discovery by marine hhtoria'n Goin E.·1'.'J ·ack" Haskins o( lbe logboott of the ship Heh.ey whit'h discovered the wreck 4&-years.after it sank, The logbook:. round in• the Marine Archives In London. gave com· pass bearings on the wrec~ Among the ltel1}~ roun<f were cannon balls. porcelein cups and plates from Mexico and China. olive jars. candlestick holders. a silver l'andle snuffer in nearly • perfect condition, and a "signifi· I • • ' • ' 1. cant". quantity of silver .. cot . Most.. were pieces of ei2ht mi · ed in Mexico and Peru, Web r said. ~ The 140·foot vessel, th'.e flagship of Spain's 17th Cent~ New World fleet, was carrying 520 people when she sank in the Caribbean storm. Grissim said Seaquest Jn. ternatlonal will share the loot equally with the Dominican Republic . ·es Count Up to 14 Gri,sly Scene Painted in Sex Killings DES PLAINES. Ill. <AP) - Four more bodies were found to· day beneath the house of a man suspected of killing 32 youths. Today's discovery brought to 13 the number or bodies found at the home of John Wayne Gacy Jr One of the 13 was under Gacy's garage. A 14th body, found in a river, has also been linked to the investigation. An official described the mud· dy. foul-sme lling crawl space beneath Gacy's house. where most or the bodies have been found. as "like a battle scene in there with all the trenches dug. You're working right an the graves." Dr. Robert Stem. Coolt County medical examiner. said Tuesday night that in his 20 years as a forensic pathologist he has never come upon a more borri· fying case. "Before this is all over with. this could be one of the most heinous crimes of the century." said Stem, who has been crawl· ing on his stomach underneath the ho~. Searchers resumed their dig· ging this morning in the crawl space where the skeletal re· mains of four bodies and parts of a Cifth were found Tuesday. Gacy. 36. a construction con· tractor who once served a prison term in rowa for sodomv. re· portedly told investigators Ile had sex Wlth and then killed 32 boys and young men. burying 26 at his home and throwing -;ix in the Des Plames River. Iran Rebels Battle On Protesters Fight Troops,. Strike Cuts Oil TEHRAN, Iran CAP> -Anti· government protesters, some of the m armed, fought bloody street battles with the shah's weary troops today in what the opposition called a "decisive" stage in Iran 's non·s t op violence. An oil workers' strike cut pro- duction to near zero and the gov· emment imposed fue l rationing on this oil·rich country. In the bloodiest incident. elite army rangers suddenly opened fire on a funeral procession for a slain dissident professor. and hospital officials reported at least four persons were killed and 22 wounded. One or the dead reportedly was an army colonel who was a friend of the pro· fessor's ramiJy. Spokesmen for the National Front. the major opposition group. said three more persons were killed m other violence in Tehran today , including a soldier . Authorities denied there were any milita r y deaths . Casualty reports by the two s ides have been difficult lo verify. A crowd of protesters marched toward the U.S. Em· bassy at one ooint today but Man Sought I n Horse Kill PORTLAND. Ore. (AP> Federal authorities are seeking a man charged with adopting 109 wild horses through a govern· ment program and then selling them for slaughter as animal and human food overseas. Donald Hullhes. 37. of Bums, Ore .. is the first person ac· cused of violating the 1972 Wild Horse and Burro Act in a com· plaint signed by US. Magistrate George Juba. authorilles said Tuesday. He got the horses through a U. S. Bureau or Land Management adopt-a·horse program designed to control horses on rangelands and to provide recreation animals. I were scattered by Iranian troops firing into the air. Anti · American hostility is running strong because of U.S. s upport for Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi. The state radio reported anti· shah demons trations in five other cities as well -Shiraz. Isfahan, Tabriz. Zanjan and Kerman. In Tehran. rifle and mach.lne.. gun fire echoed across the city as anti-gove rnm e nt d e m - onstrators pressed a guernlla· like war against police and troops. On one streel. witnesses said . rioters exchanged fire with army units and three troopers were wounded. "Today was a very decisive day." said a spokesman for tbe National Front. "We think it Is icolnl to contJnue to an extreme (See lRAN, Page A.Z> Tiro Held in Scam In Newport Beach Newport Beach police said to- day two men arrested ror al· leged involvement in a purchase order credit scam may be linked to compani es throu g hout Cal1forrua. Arizona and several other Western states. Released on $25,000 ball today were James Lawrence Bartel. 37, of 1420 Park Newport. Newport Beach, who allegedly used the alias of James Gentry, and Lonny Leroy Allison. 42. who allegedly used the name of Theodore Cramer Allison listed a Coronado ad· dress but had an Arizona driver's license. police said. Detective Dave Scruggs said the men fa ce charges of grand theft property and carrying a concealed weapon. He sajd the case began when Slavick's Jewelers an Fashion Island reported receiving a let· ter from Earth Industries, 2955 East Coast Highway. The letter re portedly said the company was a subsidiary or Wal-lax rn. dustries. which was celebrating its 25th anniversary and wanted to purchase gifts for 1ls officers. Watches valued at SS.000 were subsequently purchased through a purrhase order Scruggs said store offi cials became suspicious after they re· ce1ved a telephone call from a Santa Ana jeweler who had re· cc1ved a s1m1lar letter. S ubsequent investigation. Scruggs said , revealed that Earth lndustries and Wil-lax ln· <See SCAM, Page A2> He is being held without bond on a murder rharge and is scheduled to apoear in court F'n· day. Gacy. who wa s twi ce divorced. lived in the house for six years, the last two alone. Stein said he is not close to identifying any of the victims and some may never be iden- lified. "The teeth are excellent but we stall have to have the dental report to match them." he said. <See BODIES, Page A2> Fog Yie lds; OC Airport Opens AgaiIJ Operations resumed at Orange County Airport today after four hours of momjng fog that at one point cul visibility on passenger traffic runways to 800 feet. More than 1,000 passengers were diverted to and from On· tarlo Airport before Orange County controllers decided at 10 a .m . that it was safe to resume nights. Air California communica· lions executive Bob Payton said his airline diverted six nights and . 600 passengers to and from Ontario. .. But things are looking good now." he said. "The fog is mov· ing out pretty rapidly and our operations are going back to normal.'' Orftcials or two other major carriers. Hughes Airwest and Golden West Airlines. said their s ervices also were back lo normal. Airline personne l who have had to deal with impatient and <ruculent passengers for three days in a row were cheered to· day by the National Weather prediction that the fog period 1s over . Forecasters said the pers 1s. tent fog will ~ive wav lo a bank o( cloudy weather that will bnng rain in its wake. They see a 50 percent chance of rain by late Thursday. Orange County Airport had the dubious distinction today of (See FOG, Page AZ> Chance of rain lncreas· ing tonight with a 50 per. cent chance or rain on Thursday. Cloudy tonight and Thurs day . Lows tonight 43 to 50. Highs Thursday, 53 to 59. Lights La.ied IN81DE TODAY StoMlJI Camllchael, who a decode ago 1t1mbolized Black Pown mJWancy m Ammca, now relide• fn Africa. "bring quiet," working for revolu· tion. In one of hil infrequent alllerofews, Carmichoel dU· eu11ed ~ came with Th• A•· «H:foled Preu. SH PCJ{ll 87. .... Jl MY-..... A1 All!!'°"... Ctf L..M..... M MHM --.wttl IS ........ .... ............... . ~ Al -.IC9N .. ~ DW,_...I, .... 94 c.-tct .. ,._.._....... M =~ .. Ol'N9tc-MY Al4 -., ......., 114 ........ ,_ M Slee• MIK1Mtt II ·~I I -.u T....,ltlell llt ~ c;,..11 TllMWt , •t,IMI ,.._ a.t,IMJ .. ..., A4 ""''' 9"f Cit_..._ A4 Harbor Chamber Name8 Be8t Winners of the "Festival or Lights" Christmas boat parade In Newport Harbor were an· nounced today by the Newport Harbor Area Chamber of Com· merce. They are: Small Boat Class 00 to 30 feel) -first place, Stan Brand or Santa Ana for the Estro: second. Bob Klrkpatrlck for the Teddy·Tu: and third, the Mas-o. Menos, no other Information available. Medium Boat Class (30 to 45 feel) -first place, Geofr ey Wickett of Balboa Island for the Halo·Halo; second, Honey Too (no Information>; third, Bob Gregg ror El J efe . Large ooat \.lass \4:> reet 1tnu oven -first place, Dick and M arllyn Hausman of Newport Beach for Felicidad; se~nd. J . W. Mitchell for 4 Queens; third. Jubilee. Best Club or Organization (Commodores Cup> -Howard T. Beal of Costa Mesa for Elk.I Navy-Nemesis. Best Animation (Presidents Cup> -John Zlnsmeyer of Newport Beach for Jenelle. Best Overall -Thomas J . Burris of Corona for Lucia. Waterfront Homes -beat animation. 34 Linda 1ale; moet beaullful, 831 Via Lldo &oud. Airport Regtdatlons I '\. ........ --·--- The Federal Aviation Admlrustratlon re· leased this drawing ~ay to illustrate bow its "sweeping and comprehensive" air safety regulations would control air space around airports aod. in,rease cadar ··" ••••• :,... • • ...... " ,......_. j .. .j .... ._ I services. The program was prompted by the Sept. 25 collision between an airliner and a small private plane over San Diego. See story on Page A3. Shoe9Fintl ----Run To ugh SAN Dl£00 (AP) - Paul Gao.er. 31. ~ tile wf'nt throuih " paln ot tenn11 i.boea 1n 3.~ mllc! h1kt' from Bo:.lon to th Pacific Cout . Th hlk1ng boou he aur\ed 1th 't\('rt'toohtrdoohl f,- ' Cause Strains 8 J I RYMA Ol•llMI•• ...... ~ A1rlln ~ark n al Oran1e "ll wu.." my fu11l •ll~mpt on u r all) lonll htk<'," 1a1d Olov r . a lean, b• rdt'd r ·~•d ~nl or Ith c .NY. CoODt;J Ah"Pllft re tUU cairn· tn1 f raul d n n \Oday - tMtt &Ifft a..ct C"t•lt'lnpra' - ltf'r four clay• ol ro that e " r.l d holiday ntJhtt, ft•Y• o a lnpt"rt a"d furl.tier Jamm d the at•~f'OVfded aJrport Aland sald Alrwcal'a ex· ~rlmental 727 fU1hta, which carry 155 pa n& ra ln1telld ot U.• usual M. -ere belpf\&l In hnDdllnl delay•d pa11enaera bficaua~ of lt.8 tars capeclty. Th 727 , which bc1an teat nl1ht.a hen! Ulla month, bH been ot>Po!M!d by rctldenl.I whc> claJm u. la no ·~ UulO other Jell and wm lncttlM alrport conceaUon. fht• onh problrm1 umr in Pt•nn.-.yl\ a -.b "" b rowuS c1dt•r 1n1 ld ro1 :LS ct•nla u!l )OU c n ,111nk · und that nu1ct1• m ,tt•k .. ..nd OIH't' 1n Olc luhOm.& Vrtwf"4' ht umt' uu\ uf J 't\ tnd matn pu llul ., .:'ui on hlm .nd cuok htm lo J111l, brw0). Burglary Suspects Chased t \\oll 111cn Wl'l'C 10 cwstod) to- clu, un hor>tlary charJCS after h•;11hnl( <:usta Ml'i..t pohce 011 an t'J rh· morr11n~ uuto 1·ha1>l' that ,·ndcd 111 Ncwµorl Bcuch, police i..ud Tv.o t1·l~v 11>1on M.'l b and a vtdt•o tapt' mu<.'hlnl'. allegedly s toll'n fro m Ou' 1::. Brown Appliances at 411 E 17th St . Costa Mm.a. were recovered from the car driven by one of the suspects, pohce said. Mesa pobct• Sgt Sam Cord<'1ro st.11d the chase ~gan at 5 20 a m • when patrol officer Ed Dryzmala spotted a car pulbng away from the rear of the ap· pltance ::.lore I rvane and Newport Reach pohct? unit:-. JOtnt'd the pur..uJt thJl l'ndl«l on Wwdward Lane in Dover Shur~ Jboul 15 minutes later \101lce smd driver Richard Ga...-, 20. of Sanld Ana, e luded police on foot alter the car was halll'd. His t'Ompanion, Raul Homero Rui z, 30. of St.tnta Ana . was arn:sted on the spot, pohcc S<Jid Gaw was arrC'slcd about an hour la tC'r whtle hitchhik1nk along Pacific Coast Highway. Both men were booked al Costa Mesa Jrul and held in lieu or ss.ooo bail each ,..,.._ P tl§e A I BODIES .•. Edmund Dobbs, ch1er of Cook County -.henff'l'I police. i.a1d that .. bast•d on m y informatwn thl•y 're all young boy~." Dobb:-. said &bout 20 men worked ins ide Gacy ·~ home Tuesday. Some tore out flooring ..in d dug through the c rawl :-.pace 'ff."chn1cians s pread buck~t..-. of mud on the ground llt'hmd the home. look mg for re mains Stern said the excavation would pr~t..'Cd slowly because workers n i.k becoming sick from breathing m e tb ane . hydrogen sulfide and other ~<n.es relt-ased during · the de· l'Ompos1tton of human n esh. Gacy has bt.-en charged with k1lhn~ Robt>rt Ptesl, 15. or Des Plaine:-.. The youth was reported m1ssin~ De<' 11 Investigators 'ia1d Gacy told lhem he threw Pi1•st 's hody &.ind the bodies of r1 .. c other vouths into the ~ Plainc1:t Ri ver Investigators <l ra~ged the nver Tuesday with nu ~ucces1>. "ll '1 happened ev r y Cbrl lmH ror lh , •• , lhn·e )ears," l ~nnit PU1t11111. 5\lptrvttor at I r I "' lor Go\clirn W ' Alrlln H~ alid probl~m .,. t'Om pounded by •muo r ·I Uvt'~ •wa•un1 tra" I ,.., "TempPrt are bNt r o\I r lht• boUday but ~ 'a •t.1U M alf'Ulrl un tht-r.:'Ople wotklo& at lh..i i.crport.' h 118ld P1lartm aaid 11ome unu uul problem.& &J"Ok lhl year For one. the ba1111e claJm are• wa so con(ll'isted that "Fri· day nl&ht thOY h4id \o hav the beriff to k<'ep pt'Ople from chmb1n~ into the unuulhcm.t :d area and unlo~uhng their own luggage fro1n the cart " Jn addition, he said, <A numbt:r of cab driverl' 3pparPntly de · t'ided to take Chrislmab off. stranding travelers at aboul 9 o'clock Christmas night "Yellow Cab wouldn't dis patch any more cobs to Orange County Airport." Pilgrim saud "That was wiusual." He aireed with spokesmen from other airlines lhut passenger loads were unusuaJly b1gh for a Christmas Day, possibly because It fe ll on a Monday and the next day was u work day. Mike Aland. rumstant stat.Ion manager for Hughes Atrwest. said he found most passcngerb lo be cooperative. "When they can see 1t <the rog ). they understand ll... he said, but added . "They get very irritable." Aland said special problems have been lost baggage, po~s1bly from all the exlra Christmai. packages checked, and missed connections In addil.Jon. he said , not all passengers from earlier fUght..o; could IJt' immcdia l<'IY accom modated on diverted flights. Alrllne worlrnra al other 1drport.1 may bave alao fat'td problems, 1nld Robert Payton. d n-ct.or ul public aihalrs Cor Air Calttorn1a Since Ol\ly Loe Angeles and Orange Coun\.Y were foued In, M 1u1d, "tn other parta ot th~ atato wbere ~ sun 11 abiJUng nd lht> 1>1dt.~ art' blue. you have ome crtdib1hty problems when you tell them a flight 1s canceled becou e ol weather." Payton sa id passenae rs aometlmea see the fog and fltiure their fli ght Wiii be de· h1 yed How 'Ver , when nights are diverted to Ontario, the bu11es lt:ave on schedule. he said. And passengers can't check in nt Ontario. Payton said. The p:issengers go through security procedures at Orange County Airport and are bu.sed to planes at Ontario. * * * F,...P,..A J FOG .•• being the only airport ln the na· uon to be senously affected by fog The control tower al Los Angeles International Airport reported more than a mile of vis ibility on all air carrier runways ttus morning. Fog that hamperc..od operations during _the night ho urs was rece ding rapidly. Fog that blanketed Orange County Airport in the early morning hours hampered traffic in many areas of Ute county. Police reported no major traf. fie accidents. They said a slight increase in "fende r bender" mishaps could be attributed lo the foggy conditions. Sues Co s ta M esa Old,.car Buff Set To Try Own Case By JERRY CLAUSEN 01 ,,. 0~11• Piiot M•fl Sid So£fE'r, the restaurateur who is taking on the c11y of Costu Mesa in a fl ap over a collcct1on or old cars. is scheduled lo b<.' tested as his own attorney 1n federal court J an. 22. Soffer is expected lo defend his de m a nd for $100,000 in punitive damages sought for "m ental anguish " triggered when the <'ity towed three old Cadillacs from in front or hti. home at 900 Arbor St.. Costa Mesa. last fall. He also mus t appear to answer the city's request for a dismil:;sal of his suit or to at lea11t make a more dcf1nrte charge against those h<' rs sufog The action 1s over Sofft>r's <iutl agamst the city. City AUornc)' Robert Campagna, Assistant C1 ty Attomc>' Tom Wood and ion ing inspector Jim W(•Jr. side the deadline, however. A few days lat.er the cars went lo the city auto pound. ln enus mg publit' hearings. the city offered Soffer the $127 towing and impound fees he paid to get his cars back. He refused and filed a suit seeking a tot.al of $130,000 in damages. E'roaaPageAJ KULIK ••• give n the heroin "by lhe Newport police c.hief to plant on the Italians." Former c hief B. J a m es Glavas was expected to tesl1fy this afternoon . /\s:-.1s t a nl State's Attorney Terry Sullivan said he hopes to present e vidence to a grand jury this week. Last September, the t·rty mailed Sorfer a leltf."r claiming thal a neighbor had complained that his 1947 , 1960 and 1964 Cadillacs were a nuis ance . Under city law. lhe cars could be towed away if not m running condition. Grosi. denied knowing W1lhs and also not.ed there had never been that amount of heroin "in· d1v1dually or cumulatively over a period of years in the Newport Reac h Police De partment evidence lockers." Thal denial was further ex- panded by Newport Beach Detective Sam Amburgey who testified that the only time he heard the plant story was In con· versalloo with De Massa follow· Ing Kulik's arrest. A s pokesman for lhe Cook County stat.e's attorney's office has said Gacy's attorneys are expected to use an insanity de· fense ORANGE COAST ' DAILY PILOT fN>Or-.C.......o..ly"°' ... ._., .. _..tl(,.,.Ulift" ,,. ......... _..._ ... __ tt,rttw0.- ( .. \1 p __ ,_ ~ ........ -. .. . -·--.. '"'-,.,~, '°' r•i. IN .. -llo«n. -t-llo•~"­t•tnV•IHo'f lf'WW L_ .... ,.,_..,c_ .. ,.,,..,,.....,..._._,._,_w_ .. _ ._,. ,,,. ....... _ ....... ..,. .... -.... Jlt W..tll .. Stf'WI C..t.-.CM-1'1•m2'- ll-• -Pttt .................. _ , .. -•.c:.trr V«o P,nMtom-0.-.i,,,....... T-..11-Ullet ,_ ... ........... "°'4""9J ... ldillr ~M.~ ll ...... P1811 ....... ·-~-· ... ~ Soffer, who says the cars work fine, returned the letter with a request for a pubUc hearing al- lowed within 10 days after re· celving the missive. But the letter wus dellvered to city hall after the 10-day period. It bore a postmark that put it m· Amburgey also testified that he asked Glavas of the allega- tion about the department's chief supplying heroin to Willls and was told by Glavas lhere waa no tn.rth to the allegation. Late Preseat Armored TnU!k Lo1e1 Coiru CITY Of. COMMERCE CAP> -Christmas came a day late for some eagle-eyed mot.orlsts on ln· terstate 5 when the back doors of an armored truck inexplicably new open and $3,000 in quarters landed on the freeway , cr~ating an instant gold rush and traffic jam, outhorllles said today. In the midst of the bedlam Tuesday night tn the City of Commerce southeast of Los Anaeles, three cars were involved ln rear·end collisions and several persons received minor lnjurles, the Caltrornta Hi ghway Patrol said. Th > clcan·up took more than an hour to com· plete and som of those who stopped appeared to have co me equipped with a finders.keepers philosophy Bud Mowris a supervisor for Armored Transp0rt Co .. said he believed about 12.000 ot the 13.000 was eventually rcco" red ln the der1c. \ o.11, ~ .......... .., o ... , .. ,....,. TAIPEI. Taiwan <APl -Al least 10,000 protesters Ologing en• •nd mud and shouUng "Car\er is a cheat!" greeted a \J.S. delegation today as 1t ar· rived to beltn talks with Taiwan orrlelala aimed at making the 1epar•Uon of the two nations an amicable one. Vace Foreign Minis ter Frederick Chien sounded a stem note in a welcoming speech for the dlplomatic·military delega. Uon at a military airport. telling the Ameri ca ns that the economic and cultural ties the Carter administration wants to retain with Taiwan can be con- tinued only on a government·tO· government basis As the delegation and Na· lionalisl Chinese officials lefl the airport, accompanied b y carloads of reporters. dem - onstrators waved the Na· taonallst nag of Talwan and lunged at the a utomobiles. beat ing on the sides. throwing egg:. and rQud and striking the car.> with flagpoles. DRIVERS MUST DEAL WITH PATCHES ON 17TH STREET MeH Engineera Say Problem WUI Be Smoothed Out Later One man rushed up to a re porters' car and stuffed a mud died. torn American rtag 1n through a window Demons trators s plashed rcct paint on one limousine carry111g American officials. Signs denounced President Carter's decision this month to seve r diplomatic ties wi1 h Taiwan and establish them with communist Chma. F ... PageAJ IRAN ••• end." Economic disruption appeared to be reaching critical levels Strikes brought industries to near.paralysis and grounded lhe national airline Iran Air An airline spokesman said the military had taken over Iran Air and was offering to re hire employees only on a no-i;tnke basis Government broadcasts said a customs worker's strike left trucks lined up for up to 20 miles at border posts as they tried to bring goods Into the country. The most devastating blow has been the anti·shah strike by many or I ran 's 37 .ooo oil workers. Government sources said oil production has dwindled to 300.000 barrels a day -5 per· cent of normal output and only half the amount Iran consumes domeittically each day For the sttond day Iran. the work world's second·biggest 011 exporter. was unabJe to export any crude oil. All the nation's re- fineries were shut down. The government ordered ra· Honing -only 6.6 allons of gasoline and 5.2 gallons or kero sene per purchase Authorit.Jcs were counting on the hours-long waits at service sla· lions to discourage consumen. frol"(l r eturning too often. Ke rosene 1s wide ly used for cooking and healing. Tehran bus service was cut ofr because of the short fuel sup· plies. The opposition to the shah 1~ two-sided -orthodox Moslems who say his Wes tern-sty le modernization is corrupting traditional values in this Islamic nation. and leftist!>. students and other political di sside nts de· mandlng an end lo his autocrat.le rule. Traveling Rough on 17th Street Motorists using a stretch of 17th Street in Costa Mesa a re m for some rough going the next few weeks. The holiday season shutdown of an inromplet.ed storm dram project between Irvine and San· ta Ana avenues has left 17th Street rippled and pitted from a temporary patch job. Bob Brock. Costa Mesa's. as- sistant city engineer. expl~uned today that officials belie ved drivers would be better off with all lanes of traffic open on 17th Street during the holiday rush. Traffic flow had been nar- rowed at times to one lane 10 each dtrection before Gosh Construction of Los Angeles closed its s'torm dram u enches The firm will return to work about Jan. 15 to smoolh out divots and patches. said Brock. The firm also will tear up a fresh portion of 17th -between TlolStin and Santa Ana avenues - to complete the $320,000 storm drain proje ct som et1 m<' 1n February. Trash Collection Delayed in Me8a Trash pickups in CMta M~a will run a day later than usual after the thret--day New Year's holiday. Pickups regularly St'hcdoled for Monday wtll be on Tue::.day, and san1tallon worker-. ~111 maintain the day-late ~chedule until J an 6. Baseball FoatbaH Soccer Tennis Ev11yttlifte (wen nartJ EmyttMfttl f Of the Atttlete ·-.. -~ ·•Mr. Cart.er. you may sell out human nghts. 'freedom and d1• mocracy, but the ROC <Republic or Chmal will never be sold.'' read one. Police were able to hold back many of the angry crowd. There were no immediate reports of Ill· Junes Another crowd of 1.000 to 2.000 demonstrators gathered in front of Taipei's Grand Hotel, whl're the American delegation wa~ to stay ovem1ght before startrna.: talks Thursday. F,....PageAJ SCAM .•• dustr1es did not appear to hav1• business licenses. He said tht!y were operated from a n offlCI.' without files or records. and with a temporary employee answering the t.elephone. "On the envelope, they say they' re celebrating their 25th year," Scruggs said . "'.l'be besl l 've been able lo d iscover. they've been in business a month and a half." The suspects were arrest~d without incident after a bnef m· c1denl at the firm. ScruJrns :.aid Ile ~aid pohce recovered twn watches valued at S7 .000 and .1 concealed handgun Scru ggs sa1d. mor~ than Sl0.000 in new office equ1pmt"nl. which papers found on the su:-.· pects indicated had been bought with purchase ordc_rs. was n· covered from the office. In add1t1on. Scruggs sa1rl. papers found on the two, includ in~ checkbooks and correspon den<'e. lmked Hartel with com panics throui.?hour Cal1forn1a and Ariwna Duck Feet Churchill Water Wonder Speedo a Ill-........ .GJJ w r White Stag RawHn2s Wiison Bancroft Jo1 Joy Wllite St11 Wipam Davis Yictlr l11p Yon11.Prilce Spe1lll Millas llllllllt. lackets • V111ey Balls Slee er Balls F11tUlb BaseUlls Softballs Plly1rml Biiis Ba11eya.ds WelPt Sets .,. bcklt Sbtftllftl Center 5' U9M """· s DAI\. y PU.OT AS -p Jury to D~ide Pair's Relationship Diedl!ich Trial Delayed SAi.. M. On:. <AP) -I\ wu a m&rltal llfr punctuated by vloten~. ndma •hen the~ ldued and made lo\ e. saye John Rideout. ll wu rapt'. uya hlJ 23-ar- old wife. Gttta. The toUJ>"· in what la beUned lo be lbe fH'lt cnmlnal proeet"U Oon of a b bend on a th&.r«e ol raplns h wift'. testified Tues· day before a Marion County Clrtult Court jury. tellina of evenu al lh 1r Salem apartmmt Ott. 10 Closing ur ttument s wt re scbedulf'd today. l>efe11Je at· t.omey Chari~· Burt and Dbtrict Attorney Cary Gortmaker "'9t• t!d their e~ Tuftday. th f1fth day of the trial Rideout. 21. told th~ four-man. e1ghl·womlll\ Jury ht1 alappeoct bis wife aCter she kneed h1m lft lhl' aroin durtng a f1aht ovt<r money. ffX and the JOb M had quJt she days before ·'I stopped myself because I realized I was realty aglt.ated. l hadn't ever bit my wife lnten- tionally before:· be $aid dwinc his half.hour of testimony. "I said, 'Greta, I'm sorry. I love you. And r didn't mean to do it.'" Then. Rideout said. bis 23· year·old wife told ham it was all right. they made up, and had sexual mtercourse. But Greta Rideout. who has s10ce filed for divorce, testified her husband repeatedly bit her in the face, pulled off her jeans and put his hands on her throat -forcing her lo submit to in· ter<"ourse. "He slammed the door shut and locked it and he immediate· A .. #~ TRIAL NEARS END Greta Rideout Reped? ly gratlbed me and threw me on the floor." Mrs. Rideout said during her two hour s of testimony Tustin Man Dies In Mesa Accident A 39-year-old Tustin man was fatally injured when the Jeeµ he was driving overturned on the San Diego Freeway in Costa Mesa A coroner's report identified the victim as Christoph Pohl, of HBWoman Raped, Cut In Assault A man wielding a butcher knife broke into a downtoWl' Huntington Beach apartment and allegedly raped a 26-year· old woman early Tuesday mom· mg. The woman suffered a minor cut across the palm of one of her hands 1n the S a .m. attack, police said. She was treated and r~leased from Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital. Police Sgt. Luis Ochoa said the man entered the apartment through a window. The woman described her at· tacker as about 40 years old. He wore a white hooded sweatshirt. black rimmed glasses and gloves, she told police. Ochoa said the assault is not believed to be relatt>d to other attacks that have occurred in Huntington Beach during the past three months. Perry Resigns Airport Post For Mitboost A (ew days after losing his bid to become manager of Orange County Airport, airport chief or operations Gi!orge Perry has re· signed from his post. Perry. 42. wttl become aviation director of the airport In Des Moines. Iowa, he said Tuesday. He bas been the chief operat· mg officer at Orange CoWlty since mid-October. when former manager Robert Bresnahan re· signed to lake a similar post in Mesa, Ariz. lo the aftermath of Bresnaban's resignatioo, Perry waa coosidered a front runner in the bidding for the top spot at Orange County Airport. However, he was paued over b) the county hierarcby lul week when il was amaounted that Raul Regalado, mana1er or Fresno's airport.. was 1iven the No. l spat, UC Asb Ruling LOS ANGELES <AP) -The University of CaUfornta bas • asked a court to at.op the atate from letting UC prolesson see letters of recommendation in iheir penonnel mes. Current UC policy lets a teacher aee only a summary, made by the univeralty. of the &etten of recommendallon. 17554 Vandenberg St.. Apt. E3. Tustin. Arcording to a California Highway Patrol report, the vie· tim was driving his open.air vehicle north on l he freeway shortly after 10:30 a.m. Tuesday when be lost control of the auto and it overturned. Investigators believe the vie· tim may have been forced into the fatal driving maneuver by a passing auto that veered in front of bis Jeep near the Bristol St~l offramp. Investigators are seeking the driver of an auto described to them by witnesses who claimed it may have been responsible for th~ fatal accident. The victim died less than an hour art.er beiqg hurled from his auto as it rolled on the freeway. Investigators say the accident touched orr a Jess serious mishap on the freeway that in· jured one person and tied up northbound traCfac for more than an hour. 'Ihird Victim H11nted After Auto Crash RANCHO CUCAMONGA <AP> -The search for a third victim or a lo.day-old traffic ac~ident continued today after the frozen bodies of two Orange County teen·agers were found in a re· mote forest area above Rancho Cucamonga, authorities said. An unidentified hiker re · portedly found the bodies of Armando Cassas. 17. and Robert Roma. 18, late Tuesday above the 6,()()0.root level along eastern s lopes of Mount Baldy and notified police, California Highway Patrolman J . B. Mc Manus said. Missing is Sergio Bermudez, 19. Sao Bernardino County cor· oner's spokesman Leo Reyes uid aU three. were believed to be from Anaheim. McManus said it appears the youths' four.wheel drive pickup truck slid off a fire trail and plunged 900 feet down a 45· degree slope on Dec. 17, the day the three told their families they were going to drive Into the mountains. Gift Detector Couldn't Help ONTARIO <AP> -The Irony or a fire that kllled two small boy• the day before Christmas wu that one of the presedts UD· der the tree was a smoke delec· tor, firemen saJd today. The detectOr waa to have been a gift from lhe boys' grandmother. Kiiied ln the Ore were Jason Warren. 3, of Ontario and his 2·year·old brother, Eric. The bo)'•' rather. Ridiard. sulfered flrat and teeond-degree burns in the blaie. which fi re officials 11ld wu caused when a chair over a floor fUmace lfniled. SM II.Id 1he l'OUld hear \heir 1i,-,.ye1r·old d1'-l1btor crying "Mommy. Mommy.'' After !Mr hu•band bll her 11alD. Mn. Rideout aa d , l be waa alrakt ber law wa• broken. and "al that po nl I decided to submit to him. . . "I Jun lay IMre and he want· ed mt to respond to him and l wouldn't." lhe tetUfied halU.01· 11. wlJ>lQI her eyes. ". . . M.y um1 were al my aide and I wouldn't put lbem aroWld him." la earlier testhnony, a physl· clan who examined Mrs. Bldeout at a Salem hospital t.he olaht of Oct. 10 teaUlied there waa pbyslcaJ evidence of forced Intercourse. Dr. Lewis Sayres said hls dlacnosts was possible rape. • Rideout is free on ss.ooo bail. ti convicted, he races a max· lmum sentence or 20 years in prison ud a fine of $2,SOO. During his testimony, Rideoul said he quit bis job shortly before Oct. 10 because be needed more lime for his studies at a local college. He said he dropped out of school after Oct. 10 and is workintc as a cook. Mrs. Rideout told the jury that after rorclng the intercourse. her husband told her she should s how up as usual for her supermarket job that night. She said he told her to be around after work or "that will be the end of you." Under c ross·examination, Mrs. Rideout said s he had an ex· tra-marital affair during a separation from her husband last year. Rideout admitted dur· ing testimony to having an ex· tra·marital affair this fall while he and his wife were still living together. Detective Debra Cleveland testified that Rideoul told her dur1 ng interrogation that he didn't see how it could be rape if a couple was married. She said he told her. "I didn't beat her up during it: she finally gave up." 'Dlat's No BatlatufJ Eric Barnhart of Memphis. Tenn .. secures the sails on his 25·foot sailboat in the family's swimming pool. His father. who owns a crane company. put the boat in the pool to be used as a bar for a New Year's Eve party. Barnhart plans to return the s hip to the sea in time for a February trip from Fort Lauderdale to the Bahamas. Oran1e County Supervisor • Ralph Diedrich gained another delay in the opeolng of bia up. coming trial on bribery charges when his new aUorney, J imD'lY CantUlon, t.urned up Tuesday in San Diego Couhty Superior Court with a broken arm. Superior Court Judge F. V. Lopardo agreed to set Diedrich'll trial back from Jan. 8 to Feb. S arter a meeting In his jucllclal chambers in Vista. Consequently. Diedrich and co-defendant LeRoy Rose won't stand trial until a lmost 14 months after their Ulctictments on bribery charges related to a 1973 county board of supervisor:.. land use decision. Cantillon, a Newport Beach resident whose law office is in Beverly Hills. was what was thought to be a last ·m lnutc replacement for Diedrlch's lawyer of r ecord. Marshall Morgan. Morgan, who will remain Oiedrich's attorney through a hearing scheduled for J an. 8. withdrew from the case last week after citing a possible con met of interests. That conflict centered around his possible role as a witness in what is expected to be a six· to eight-week trial. The trial was transferred to San Diego County in October b~ Orange County Superior Court Judge John Flynn. Judge Flynn's ruling came after Diedrich's and Rose's al· torneys argued that massivl· publicity surrounding the cas(• had jeopardized their clients' chances of a fair trial in OranJ?l' County. ManSlwt lnHohlap, Bandit Flees Killing Called Isolated A Santa Ana man was listed m critical condition today at Mercy General Hospital after he wa'i shot in the chest by a would·bl· "bandit who invaded his homl' Tuesday According to pollce. the met· dent began shortly before 9 p.m at the home at 1000 S. Cypress St. that Augustine Soirio, 34. the wounded man, s hares with several family members. includ· ing his 18-year-old cousin, Sergio Sotrio. Marine Coed Quaners Not Faulted By 'J1tc Alsoclated Press The killing of a woman Marine in a Camp Pe1'(1leton barracks shared with men was an isolated thing and both sexes like the coed living quarters, an officer says. A base spokesman. Capt. Charles Owen. said no housing changes are planned. "The women would not necessarily be safer all living together," said Owen. "The men look after the women there," said Marine Cpl. Jann Smith. 23. "We enjoy being around each other." The barracks is one of 23 modern. motel-style buildings opened in the last five years to accommodate both m e n and women Marines at the nation's largest amphibious training base. Each room has carpeting and twin beds with a toilet and shower. The men and women live with others of their own sex in rooms interspersed throughout the building on various floors, each with a television set and game tables. Either sex ma)' visit an the other·s rooms until lights go out at 10 p.m. Police said the younger man was standing outside the houst> when he was approached by thrtt men. one of whom w~ armed. who demanded money Sergio Soirio fled into thl' home and was followed by the man with the gun. poliet.• said. 'Sweeping' Sa/ ety Program Set by FAA No suspect has been arrested in the fatal stabbing of Pfc. Suette Bluing. 19. of Nashville. Tenn .. whose body was found on the floor of her room Christmas morning. Although she shared her room with two other wome n. they were away on Christmas leave. A Marine since May. Bluing was an aviation supply clerk and wes nearing the end or a 30-day work assignment in the mess hall. They s aid the shooting O<' curred when the older Soario thought the gunman was dis· tractcd and tried to telephont• police. After the shootin g. the cousin.., jumped the armed man and got the gun away rrom him. off1cen. reported. WASHINGTON <AP> -The Federal Aviation Administration today announced a "sweeping and comprehensive" air sarety program intended to provide in· creased protection against in· flight collisions at airports that se rv e 97 percent of all scheduled airline travelers. Presently only 67 percent or the travelers receive such pro- tection. The program was prompted by a n FAA investigation or the Sept. 2S collision between an airliner and a s mall private plane at San Diego that killed 144 persons, the worst accident in U.S . aviation history. FAA Admih ls tr ator Langhorne Bond told a news conference the program is ex· peeled to reduce by 80 percent the number of near collisions in· volving airliners operating above 10.000feet. The plans call for increasing radar services at 80 air carr;er airports, establis hing m an· datory terminal control areas at 44 additional locations and put· Ung moat of the busies\ air routes above 10,000 feel under direct air traffic control. "Soo n . most airline lassengers will travel thelr en· ire trip Wlder positive air traf· fie control," Bond said. He said the FAA al.so will pro- pose rules requiring wider use of altitude reportJng traNponders by all aircraft operators, and in· stallation of colllslon·avoidance systems in moat airliners as soon as the equipment becomes available. He aaJd the changes wtll re· quire an additional 330 air traf· rte controllers at the nation's airports. Personnel costs associated with the improved service are estlmat.ed at about 111 million ror the first year. The equipment coal • are caUm aled at S43 mill Ion. Transportation Secreta ry Brock Mama t.o&d reporters the financing would be made availa· ble. Adams and Bond emphasized the primary pui-pose of the pro· gram is to increase the level or safety for the millions of people who Oy the nation's airlines. In 1978 a record 280 million persons have fl own on S<'heduled airlines. Navy investigators questioned most or the 264 occupants of the barracks after the killing, the eighth at Camp Pendleton this year, compared with two slay· ings in 1977 and none in 1976. The bandit Oed by jumping through a plate glass window a~ the younger Soino fired a shot at him Police said they scoured the neighborhood without finding any trace of the three men. Gem Talk · 811 J.C. HUMPHRIES CAmolog1st HAPPY NEW YEAR and some haPP11 •• Here's our list of some of the things we'd likt to see happen In 1979: -Good progress on the environmental Impact report for completion of Ole Costa Mesa Freeway. Let's hope the ~rt ls objective If It is, we are sure il will favor freeway completion. -A real beginning of th t redevelopment of downlown Costa Mesa. with selection of a developer, assembling of properly , and a start al pulling something in the ground. -Completion or the housing facility for unior cm~ on the edae of Uons Park. -Constntctlon underway for the ntw Coast Kighway bridge over Newport Bay. -A firm decision to connect 18th Street across Newport Boulevard. ff you'vt• noticed that many of these 11. lllhea concern traffic improvements. then you.hove our message ... traffic IS a major problem Durin1 tm. let's Insist that our aovemmtnl bodies do somethin1 to correct thls problem that conrroo1.1 our community evtrv day Wt at J C. ttumphritt Jewt'ltrs wislt )'OU and youl"I a llappy New Year. W1UI a betttr trafnc S)'ltcm. II un be a sitter year, too. ,. antique treasures ~ For a Romantic New Year J. c. JJumpfu."~ J.UHJ,,.j MfMBU AMUICAN GEM SOCIETY ~ 1823 NEWPORT DI.VO COSTA MESA (X)HVINll:NTTERMS ~--a._. II Y!AAS IN THE SAMl LOCATION PWOHE ~1 ] ] ' c • =~ ·. ' A4 OM. v PILOT . ,,,..,...... DEAOATAOE~ Houart 8oumedtenne Algerian President Succumbs ALGIERS. Algeria <AP> - Preosident Houan BoumedieMe. a faery pillar or Third World radicalism, dJed today ot a rare blood dJsease after 40 days m a coma, leaving a power vacuum an has vast North l\fncan coun· try. Wo rd of the 53.year·o ld Boumf'daenne's death brought hundreds of thousands of gr1ev· ing Algerians into this city'l> :Jlret>ls A cortege bore his bodv through throngs of mourners lo the Palace of the People. where 1t will he in slate. Jt was l'-;t1mated that by midday almo:.t 2 m1lhon peopl<.' sur· rourided the building 80lfMEDIENNE, Algeria's l<'ader for lhe past 13 yea• s, had be~n kept alive al Algiers· Mustafa H<Y.'lp1tal by life.support wstems tended by top physa· c1an" from lhe United States. t:urope. Cuba and the Soviet Union Algenan state radio swd ht> daed at 3.M a .m. "The nation 1s mourning.'' said thf' Algerlan announcer ··His state ot health was abruptly a~~r"'' ated during the lasl nt~bt · Algenans crowded into the st~U of tht> capat.a1 and slow- mo\lng. horn-honking cars sent up a dolorous cacophony and c~ used large tramc jams. ~ radio played funeral dirges In· tc rspen>t.'<i with chants from the Koran. the Moslem holy book , 11h•ff the announcement THE ALGERIAN flag flew al half 1'taff. and world leaders eulogtzed the dead leader. The Soviet news agency Tass called 8oume<UeMe "a great fMend of the Soviet Union." Boumedienne was not known lo have designated a successor. and the job of choosing the next president fell to an elght-man Council of the RcvoJuUon. the n<.'arest lhing to a cabinet In the uutocratic North African coun· try Observers said there appeared to be four dJfferent factions an the Council. and the most promi- nent candldate was Forelgn Minister Abdelazli Bouteruka. Boumed1enne's protege since they fought as guerrillas for Algerian independence from France Sailers-lixpeH laraeli Troops Clearing West Bank N&81 SAMUEL, Oc:e&aphtd W11t Bank CAP) -llratll troopt btlen tapelUn1 J•Wll n•Uoulltta wtio ~cup&.cl lwo blU. In Lhl Wt1t Bau ot U. JordH RlnT early lod1>1 lo chaUt11• th• 1ov.rnait1tt'1 poUcy of f,.._llnl HW Mu.le· meolLD\M~IOM Ina.a Radio NPOf"\ed that the 1oldten •ncO\&Dtered no ,... Jlst.&Dt'e M u.t1 l&attid AmoY• Int ~ ttUmat.ed 15 f amlU. rrom tht mak...Ull campa oon· 1t1Un1 of \Sta and comacaLtd tron hull aurrounded by barbed wtre . Boni tlNAUTHOaDID Mt• tltmenta were norlh of JeruHlem n ar Olvon, a re· named former Jordan4an anny baae where th aetUera wer. housed lemporarHy ror about ont 1ear. The Ne~ S.m~I I ttlem.nt la 400 feet from • Moslem mOIQ~ atandiq over the al~ beUeved to be the &omb of the Prophet lamMl. The land l• crowded wllh tne aapUnp, a alp of ao~· ernmtat owneral\lp. 11W1 art fulflllln1 prophftr, and rnaklM hlatory doln1 Wt.· 11ld Carolyn Duley. a 1ub· •aeblH 1un 1lua1 over her aboulder ud htr hair ln curSen under a blue 1carf. "DEnMTELY NO, we don't WIDl LO ~r pllt'e talka, •• lbe 11ld. "But I t.h1nk you can '" b)' lhe way th.int• are 1oln1 that I.hey (the Arabs) wlll set &o UM point .twre U...y 1et ua amaller and 1maller. and then they can walk ln and finllh t.11," tald Mra. Duley. wbo delcrtbet berteU u "• non.Jewtah llonlat" formerly of NatchtUvtlle, Md. The aetUen btlon1 to Gush Enaunlm -Hebrew for Bloc of th~ P'althlul. The movement. which bellevn the Wett Bank belonas &o larael b)' blbUcal blrthn.,,t. wants &o fore. the aovemmenl's hand and 1peed up plans for new S4LT Won't Trim Defense Spendi~ WASHINGTON <AP> -MiUtMy officials say anyone expect- ing a U.S.-SOviet nuclear arms aireement to halt the drtve tor ad· vanced "Weapons or Jead to defense budget cut.a ls In for a dllap· polntment. "We will have to increase the present spending rate to k.ep es· aentlal equivalence even with a Salt II \naty," sald Defense Seuetary Harold Brown. GEN. DAVID JONES, chairman of U\e Joint Chiefs of Staff, mm!e It clear recenUy that the naUon's top military leaders will aupport a SALT agreement only if "we can proffed wtth the pro· 1rams necessary to allow essenUal equivalence." By ·•essential equivalence." Brown and Jones mean that the U.S. nuclear striking force must be kept In approximate balance wtth that of the Soviet Union -not only In numbers but In effec· liveness. Only in this way, they believe. can the United Sta'-es remain certain that the Russians will be deterred rrom launclung a sur· prise knockout blow in the fut~. WIDLE BROWN INDICATED defense spending would have Lo Increase under SALT 11 . be says spendinc would have to rise even more -by perhaps $2 billion a year -in the absence of a new agreement. "Without a SALT treaty, they probably would do more and we would probably do more." Brown said, referring to the ac:Uon- reactlon aspect of the arma race. Advocates of a SALT 11 treaty hope It will temper that spiral. Pressure on President Carter from liberal interests not to cut social programs from the new rederal budget in favor of defense has been CO\mt.ered by p ressure from conservatives to increase de· fense outlays in view of Soviet weapons growth. SINCE A SALT TREATY would face a severe test in the Senate. where a two·thlrds vote ls r~ulred for ratification. analysts say Carter cannot risk alienating conservative senators on the defense b11dget issue. According Lo present lndicaUons, Carter will follow through on his public pledge to increase defense spending by about 3 percent beyond l.nllation in lhe budget he sends to Congress next month. Defense spending In the proposed budget is expected Lo total about $123 blllion in fiscal 1.980. That would represent a victory for Brown and the Joint Chiefs over opposlllg forces in the Office of Management and Budget and other agencies which fought Lo curb military spending in favor of domeatic prognms . BIUJONS OF DOLLARS in U.S. strategic weapons programs are certain to go forward even with a new SALT agreement. The vast bulk of the spending wlU come an future years. Although basic declslons have not been made, it ls an odds·on bet the Carter administration will develop and deploy an entirely new mobile Jong-range missile system that could cost l.f> to $30 blllion. Defense planners cont.end a mobile manlle system is essen· Ual by the mid· l980e when current Mlnutemen mlulles ln lhelr fixed, land·launched basett are expected lo become vulnerable Lo destrucUon by lncreaslngly accurate Sovlct m1111lcs. Work ls under way on construction of a fleet or aianl Trident submarines and development or a 4.SOO-mlle ranee missile to be launched from them. The estimated cost for 13 Trident aubmarines and their misallea la $24 btlUon. Backers say the Tridents would be virtually Invulnerable to Soviet submaMne huntera. Jewl1h outpoatl The settler1 Mrt HY the •lte w11 approved for nttletnent years •10. but the 1overn~nt bu Men atalUnc bec1u1e of the l1raell·Etyptlen peace talkl. IN 8EPTEM8Ea the 1roup made a number of attempt& to set up W•l Bank outpoet.a to protest the Camp Davtd •tree· ment.a. whlcb included a thret- moolh ''"M on Jewlah sett.le· mentl In laraeU-occupled ter· ri&orles. The army evicted the croup each Ume. The l1raell-El)'ptlan peace talk• haw come to an lmpuae mainly over the llsue or PaletUn· Ian autonomy In the Weal Bank and the occupied Gau Strtp, but there were lndlcatlons Tutlday of a breakthrough. Be1in aald Israel Is ready to hold talk.a wlth Egypt &o clarify snap blocking the treaty. A U.S. official In Waahlneton said the United States may try to set up another meeting, but he denied reporta that Israel and ECYPt have agreed to renew negotla· Uons. "We never dosed any doors and we never will," Begin aald ufler his Cabinet began a foreign policy review. "We are ready to conduct clarification talks" on Palestinian autonomy In the Weal Bank and Gaza Strip and Egyptian military deployment ln the Sinai peninsula. Bot he said Israel would not accept Egypt 's demand for an automatic review of the pact after five years. Wiater Slaadotes A rustin~ hay rake from a bygone era casts its spidery shadow on a snow.covered field in Hopkinton. N .H. Auto's Future Mulled Manufacturers Challenged to 'Re-invent Car' WASJUNGTON CAP> -Time is running out on the internal combustion engine and a joint government-industry eftort like that which sent men to the moon may be necessary Lo develop the a utomobile of the future. says Transportation Secretary Brock Adams. And because of the det.erloral· ing world petroleum situation, a replacement for conventional a uto engines must be found within the next decade. Adams said in an interview. "THE MOTOR VEWCLE as the prime mover or our society. and our mobility and much of our economy depend on a fragile alliance with tht> Organization of P etroleum Exporting Coun· tr\es." he said. "The recent OPEC pnce nse and events in Iran reinforce my bellef that we muat have a new type of pro- pulsion unit. •'The government ls going Lo have to be Involved very heavily in the basic and advanced re · search because the automotive companies say they just do not nave the resources or the in· clinalion to get into it." he said. IT O U GHT TO BE a cooperative effort. the secretary said. notang the automakers have 30.000 engineers and the departments of Transportat.aon and Energy t.ogether have an· ves~ $100 million in research on expeMmental vehlclff. "IT'S THE SAME klnd of thing we did when we said. 'okay. we'll put a man on tht: moon.• " he said. In a speech earlier thi!i month in Detroit, Adams challenged the industry to "re·invenl the car" in ~ next few years and invited auto company officials and engineers to a "summit" in Washington to hasten dt>velop- ment of an energy.stf'f!tchmg. safe and peopJe.pleasing autos Great Lakes Get Snow • Traveling Hazardous in W eatem NY State ..., .... ......, ........... ~"t'.!.O ~:.. ':;:1 .. "' -'°"' ooPV ... .,. Ml<.....O e.i ... 11.., -..,...., " -llO flOI ::::-'r':" ... t=.:. ~ "' .. /:: __ _, • MOl>lerey M .. HHOI.. tl - 0.•1...0 IO 41 .0. kt.totMffllO Jt :II Wfllt 8trwf• M 10 ftwrmel .. a. .. ,"_ t0 n ff ''""0 ., ,, Lk ArrowNN u ,, lont et.ell Ml d H•woort e.-11 .. o OlllHIO .. JI Pelm 1Pf1• .. ll cw "-" ......... llO .. • Stl!Jote .. U .......... ., .. ltfttt (fWI •7 '1 a...ttMt1I• t> 0 T.._Vel'41y 44 • IL&:lllmHlllR ... .,n. ........ ,,.. 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WI OftCIN Y SKOllCI tow t M p 111, .O.e le<Ol'd l'lltll • u p "" •• """'"°" y 11'1n1 1..,. lti•111. 11 ""' llltfl , h. "' • , le<CIM !.-, Up"'' ·I 2 l«OM flltfl e' JJ P II\, 4 t t.HI ,. ..... .,.,,... ,.. .. u,"' Motl''""• 11 .. m, Mb I ti• 111 .. ,,, ........ .._......, lit«" w_, -1t ........ , .... ; ......... , ..... , Ntllf Pffl lfftll WH .. 9ftlt IMt. CAfloil••.., ....................................................................... "!"'" ................................... . • ' & ' ' .. I • • CALIFORNIA SAN FftANClSCO <AP) -NI order to b\tepat.o <>••land'• nn! department by h•rlna two oilnori\1 membens for t•~h new "Phltt la unconatttutlonal ln view of the U.S. Supnm.- Court'a Bakk df'dalon. 11 ta appeala court hu ruled. The Court of A~al on ~ day reversed a rulln~ b" Alameda Count,y SuJ)('nor Court Judae Robert barber that t ratios for minority prom<>Oom and hiring and threw out promo- tion teat.5. • Wldneldly, DeotmWr ZT. 1978 DAIL. v PILOT A5 Art Tlaelt• Stupeel.----,_.._ I 'Ladder' Man Sought in SF SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -Police were searching today for a. sua~ct eeeo Christmas Eve with a laddel' In the parking lot of tbe clt.y museum where a Sl mllUon Rembrandt wu stolen Mond•Y· An all·points bulletin wu lssued TUesday for a man of 30 to 3( with a receding hairline who they said was slttlnl behind &be whee( of a Ugl'll blue 1966 or 1967 station wa100. Lt. Henry Eldler said a 24 by 30-foot extension ladder was re• partedly attached to a luggage rack on top oft.he wagon: MUSEUM OFFICIALS SAY they hope the thieves who made off with the masterpiece will return it unharmed. And they've put their hopes on the wall or the M. H. de Youn& Memorial Museum. In place of the Rembrandt and three other stolen pa.intmgs are small sips reading : "Temporarily removed." Museum director Ian While has denied a published report that an alarm that might have saved the uninsured Rembrandt was turned off when thieves struck this week. The three-jud e pat"'' grffd with Bar~r that t.her was n history of dbcnmJnatlon In th.- department. but ruled revtne dlscrtmination -bias aaalnst whites solely on the basis of their race -is not a proptr cure. <A recent dhi1crimmaUon suit by a Louisiana factory worker hu employers walking a Ugh trope. Page 84.) Suri Clari.st••• Season . A GUARD DISCOVERED the Rembrandt -"Portrait of Tbe Rabbi" -and three llUle·known works worth another $62,000 were missing from the museum Christmas momlng. The crooks got in through an wiprotected skylight, authorities said. Surfer~ along La Jolla's beaches decided to decorate this rock in the Christmas spirJl. They brought a store-bought tree to the location. The ocean splashes against the rock making fo r a Southern CalLCornia "greeting card." Four months ago, guards tried to stop a man who had stuffed the same Rembrandt and two other paintings into a plastic bag. They shot at the man as he fled, dropping his cache. IT NOTED lbe Supreme Court and the California Supreme Court have ruled the University of Calilomia at Davis violated the Constitution and civil rights laws by denying AJlan Bakke ad- m i ss Ion to medical scbool through a special program because he is while. Death Rides Colossus The other stolen paintings were a night river scene by Aert Van der Neer valued at $2,000; a harbor scene by Wlllem Van der Velde worth SS,000; and an interior of a Rotterdam church by An- thonle Delorme valued at $55,000. OfCiciats are considering the "worst " that could befall "Portrait of The Rabbi.•• Woman Killed in Fall From Roller Coaster THE MOST DEPRESSING fate for the Rembrandt, said White. i5 that the uninsured masterpiece "could go into some kind of private collection, and disappear." "The case is thus clear authority that a minority person quota provision having the errect of discriminating against fault- less Caucasians on the basis of race alone is unlawful," the Court of Appeal said. Barber ruled that "af- firmative relier• was necessary to make up for past discrimina· tio" In the fire department after blacks. including firemen, filed a cluss acUon suit. THEY argued tn the lawsuit that the percentage of minoritv members in the fire department was not in proportion lo the populaUoo. and that promotion tests w.ere not related to the job. Oakland officials said Tuesday about 13 percent of the city's 520 firefighters are minority mem- bers. Barber ordered the city for five years lo appoint firefighters at a 2·t.o-l ratio favoring minori- ty membel"S and also to promote minority members over a sl mllar period using a 5-lo· l ratio THE JUDGE found invalid the department's written examina- tions. physical agility tests. height and weight standards and "lime in grade requirements and seniority weighting." Cit> Attorney David Self said the appellate court ruling prob- ab I y will have little effect because there are few new hlr· tngs In the Oakland fire depart- ment. .. We don't anticipate any ~reat consequence from the de· cis1on ," he said. White firefighters and whites who had qualified for or wanted fire department jobs joined the d ty in the appeal, contending the court order would jeopardfae their opportunity for employ mentor promotion Each side in the dispute relied on the 14th Amendment's equal protection provisions and the 1964 ClvJI Rights Act, but argued different Interpretations. VALENCIA (AP) -A Los Angeles woman bas died art.er she accidentally tumbled more than 20 feet from the Colossus rollercoaster -one of the world's lar~st -at Magic Mountain amusement park, authorities say. Carol Flores, 20. was riding in the car wtlh her cousin Tuesday afternoon when she was sudden- ly flung from her seat. said Los Angeles County sheriff's Deputy Anthony Grace. "We don't know how she fell or what caused ht!r to fall " Grace said. ' AUTHORITI ES said Ms. Flores hit the huge wood struc- ture on the way down and suf- fered massive bead iujuries and broken bones. She was pre>- •nounced dead at the seene. . The woman was visiting the park with a group of seven peo- ple. Howner, Grace said Ms. Flores and heT cousin, Matilda Sanchez, 27, of East Los Angeles, ~re the only persons from that group on lhe ride at Poia3r Plants 'Skirt' Rules LOS ANGELES <AP> -A Len· taUve understanding reached by two state agencies will allow California air quality standards to be overridden In order lo ex· pedi te constrµctlon of new power plants. the Los Angeles Times reported today. Richard Maullin, chairman of t he state Energy Resources Conservation and Development Com mission. told the paper Tuesday that the agreement between his agency and the state Air Resources Board will be officially announced next week and Is expected to be ratified next month. Present Fatal to Tot CARLSBAD <AP> -A Uttle girl playing with a toy chest her parents gave her for Christmas accidently caught her head under the box lid and suffocated, a coroner's spokesman says. Deputy Coroner Robert Engel said 1-year.old KeWe Ann Scott or Carlsbad was pronounced dead on arrival Tuesday al Scripps Memorial Hospital in Encinitas. The haby's mother, Christie Jo Scott, apparently left the tod- dler playmg beside the toy chest for a few minutes and came back to find her piMed beneath Its lid, Engel said. the time of the accident. Ms. Sanchez was not injured. Gary ZahlJm, vice president or the amuse~nt park localed a bout 35 mlles north of Los Ange l es, discounted any mechanical malfunetion as a cause of the accident on the huge wood coaster. to a halt some 50 feet in the air, but none of the 30 riders was in· ju red. Last winter. another park at· traction -Eagle's Flight -was the scene of tragedy when a young bridegroom died after falling 50 feet rrom the sky ride gondola. His wife was seriously injared. The painting may be desUned for an unscrupulous collector satisfying his desi·-es through the black market, an authority on art theft conjectured. "There are rich and unscrupulous coUect.ors all over the world who are more interested In acquiring art than In inquiring about whether it was stolen," s aid AJan Baer, president or the Interna- tional Association of Art Security in New York "THER E WAS nothing that broke whatsoeve r -it was isolated," he said. adding that the safety lap bar had remained in Its proper posiUon. "There i s no apparent malfunction or the Colossus rtde or any of its component parts." said a written statement lat.er released by park ofUcials. "'Ille accident b presently under a thorough invesU.raUoo." IN JUL V, 10 persons were in· jured when the braking system of the park's Revol ution rollercoaster malfunctioned. al- lowing several passengers to hurtle backward before a backup safety brake could take hold. "ART m EFT IS A bil't business -usuaUy involving or- ganized crime -and its t.ransport often follows in the same in- ternational route as the drug traffic." Baer said Tuesday. ' White said anyone with Information on the thefts or about the paintJngs should call (415) 553-1396. The FBI is reported investigating whether the Rembrandt and three other Dutch Renaissance paintings stolen al the same time were t.aken across stale lines, a federal violation. Police said they round no fingerprints, tools or ropes at the scene. The painting was bought by the museum 30 years ago. Deputies closed the ride alt.er the tragedy, which was the first accident with injury for the Colossus. wt J uly, one of the coaster's safely brakes ap- parently stuck, bringing the ride The Colossus. which features two drops of more than 100 feet, opened last June and was touted as "the world's greatest roller coaster." It Is one or five rollereoasters at Magic Mountain. There ls also the Revolution, a steel coaster which features a 360- degree vertical loop; the Gold Rosher. the Mountain Express, and the Clown Coaster. TOE THEFT DRE W quesUons about securitv arrangements for the famed .. Treasures of Tutanbkamun" exhibit. which ls sebeduled to open at the de Young on June 1. The exhibit has drawn overflow crowds at museums ln Chlcago, Los Angeles, New Orleans, SeaWe, Washington, D.C., and New York. where it ls now open. Suspects Arraigned The 10,000..square-foot vlalUng exhibition gallery where the King T ut show will be housed is belng completely renovated ln preparation, said Thomas K. Seligman. exhibitions diredor "We already have such elaborate security preeautioos for the Tut exhibit that this won't make any difference," he said. S1ain CHP Officers Buried Natural Heat Urged for Home Pools WOODLAND (AP> -The two California Highway Patrol officers slain near Saeramento "laid down their lives rather than swerve from the path or duty, " said a chaplain at lhelr joint funeral. . Hundreds of uniformed law enforcement of- fice r s attended the services Tuesdav for patrolmen Roy Blecher, 50. and William Freeman, 35. A FEW HOURS EARLIER, Luis Rodriguez 23, and Margaret Klaess, 18, were arraigned i~ ~unlcipal Court on charges they shot the two of- ficers along Interstate 80 early trust Friday. The charges, for which neither entered a plea, carry a pot.enUaJ death sentence. Miss Klaess Is from Garden Grove. About 22S CHP officers and 200 other officers from all over Northern California heard CHP Chaplain Grady Windham reeount each officer's career. He cited Blecber's love of his work and Freeman's willingness lo help other orncers. . About 100 relallves and fri ends also crowded into. the Roman Catholic church or stood silently outside. St.ate police officers presented flags which had flown half staff over the Capitol to the widows Helen Blecher and Shelby Freeman. ' Municipal Court Judge Clarence Walden ap. pointed a public defender to represent Rodriguez. fro'!' Sacramento. A private attorney, Daniel Sullivan of Sacramento, represented Miss Klaess. The two were returned to Yolo County Jail un- til Thursday, when they are to return to court to enter pleas. The defendants. being held without bail, ap. peared In handcuffs and jail-issued clothing - Rodriguez barefoot In a white jumpsuit and leg irons. and Miss Klaess in blue denims. Neither spoke except when Rodriguez.clarified the spelling of his name. Mlss Klaess' father. Mark. watched from a front row, but refused to comment to reporters. Officers said the two officers were found in the predawn fog behind their patrol car less than a mile west of the Sacramento River. Their service revolvers and shotgun were missing. BLECBER'S BANDS WERE cuffed behind his back, and he had been sbot once ln the back of the head. Freeman, who apparently struggled with his assailants, was shot five limes. A small pistol he had concealed in an ankle bolster was found under his body. Rodriguez and Miss Klaess were arrested ear· ly Sunday In Richmond, near San Francisco Bay, on a description given by a hitchhiker who had been robbed near San Rafael late Thursday, of. ficers said. They had been staying Ln a West Sacramento motel. Police say an officer from whom they tried to reclaim an Impounded panel truck recognized them from a composite drawing made Crom the hitchbiker's description. SACRAMENTO (AP> Swimming pools should be heat- ed with sunshine, not natural gas, a group of solar and en- viron mental protection groups told the state Energy Com- m ission today. Their statement was released Tuesday before today's presen- tation at a meeting of the com- mission. The statement said natural gas heater hookups should be banned for swimming pools built after next June 30. BUT swimming pool builders contend this would discourage pool installation. The industry got the com- mission t.o ~onsider a rule it passed last December requiring that new pools use the least ex· pensive heating available. The commission staff is now proposing a modification that would require a contractor to provide a buyer with a bid from a solar heating installer so it could be compared to one for a gas system. -~~A.-~ Live Entertainment 3201 E. Q>ast Hwy. . . """ IOllY S1llCllMD DUO llntlLOUNGE Two Seatings For flEW YEAR'S EVE Corona del Mar LIONEL •SETS •ACCESSORIES •SERVICE LIONEL AUTHORIZED SERVICE STATION C11cept.,._ ............ ....... r,... """ · · ALL GAUGES z..GA-. M-GA.. HO-GA .. 0-GA.. HASS UON&-Tn •l»OUS STOCl-APX. TYCO aOADIACI SITI. PLASTIC MODas RC • PLANES • SHIPS • ROCKITS .. HOllYIST SUPPUIS Mlll·IRAllS 1011115 t 11b~:t~':!'·· PH. 549-1596 HOUU: MOMAJ. , .. , SAT. IN SUM. IN .. ,. .. . .. 011lyPOot Th 4 lo 3 state .., upreme Court declalon that 1trtkel down Ua "U e Gun. Go lo Pri.soo" law paued by lh l..el'I I ture 1n 197S 1 e emph l1 the apUt bet.weeq lhc Judlo1al and ll'g1slottve brand~ of at.ate covernmen Somo ol th (a.ilurcs of MW lawa lo bokt up under court t>hnlll'nat h ve been the result ot carel dnwlfta or p<>tentially controv~nt l measures. t fifbl ~lance lhls med lo be lh cue tn the de- c1s1on lhut r u.llt.'d lh law prohJblUna probation for 1><!rsoru t•o1w1ctcdo!a crim wbJch anttann wu used. Thn.-e ot thl'Justl<'CS ba•d the language of the law d1d not a.peicaf1c~lly eny JUdg lb rtaht to arant probaUoo m mdivaduul ru..s~ The fourth 'ot~ u1wnst the law came from Chief Justact.~ Rose Hird who used daffcrent, and more coo!us· 1ng, n•WiOllint; Justice B.lrd found the law unconsUtutJonal because It d nl<'d JUdl{e lhe nllht o( discrcUonary sentenctnl'. thus vfolutmg the sep ration of p0wcrs provtded by tho ·coni,Utuuon. 'fhe dai:;sentmg Justices found the intent of the law qu1tc spec1(1c and its wordina adequatel,y clear. More s1gnlf1cantly, Justice William P. Clark c41.led attention to the fact that Chief JusUce Bird. in lbe controversial Caudillo rape cas had used reverse rea- soning. Contending that s ince the Legislature had not categorized rape as "p,rcat bodily l.r\jury," she then sald the court h ad no cho1co but to follow the apparent inten- tion or the Legislature. The Chief Justace seems to be in a state o( some con· fusion as to the relalJonsh.ip of the courts and the Legislature. Assembly Speaker Leo McCarthy has Introduced a bill to restore the overturned law that mandates a prison sentence without probation for criminals who use guns. Gov. Brown. who signed the original law, says be will back it once more. This is as it should be. Ir Chief J ustice Bird or other members of the high court have any doubts as to the right of the elected lawmakers to impose mandatory sentenc· ing laws. a constitutional amendment could clear up the issue. It most certainly would win strong voter support. Identifying Cheaters In the coming year the government will be intensify. mg its efforts to recapture at least part of the estimated S5 billion to $6 billion lost annually as a result of waste. fraud or abuse of government aid programs. Already a computer program that checks out welfare payments to federal employees has turned up almost 4.000 recipients who were ineligible or overpaid. A similar computer search for dishonest doctors and drusgists who have cheated on Medicaid payments has brought about 25 indictments to date. And a warning that the government plans to extend its program to track down defaulters on student loans already has resulted in increased Joan payment collec- tions and a reduction In lhe backlog of defaulten. Now Healt h, Education and Welfare Secretary Joseph A. Califano is about to launch an identification program that will include all the nation's recipients of HE W's Ald to Families with Dependent Children. The centra lized National Recipent System will pro- vide ror exchange of indentification inf onnation. such as date of birth and Social Security number, t o determine if a recipient is receiving aid in more than one county or stale. It also will tell local authorities if an applicant for local benefits is receiving any federal aid. There is no doubt that computerized inf ormatlon pro- grams such as these tend to give one a sligbUy queasy feeling and are likely to generate controversy. Unfortunately they seem to be the only defense the taxpayer has against the inevitable minority or cheaters who add billions to the annual tax bill by milking govern· ment assistance programs. Holiday Safety Distressed by the loss an of an employee_ ln a holiday accident involvi ng a drunk driver a couple of years ago a Minnesota manufacturing firm has initiated a progr~m that might well be imitated. The "Take a Taxi On Us" program authorizes any of the company's 2,700 employees who feel uncertain about driving after a holiday party to take a taxi home and ob- tain reimbursement from the firm. Employees also are pe rmitted to collect for cab fare for others they feel :,hould not be driving -no questions asked. The company says the program provides protection un.d peace of mind for bot~ employer and e mployees at a rn1nimal cost. It merits consid eration by other employers. • Opinions expressed In the space aboYe are thoee of the Dally Piiot. Other views expressed on this page are those of their 1uthors and artists. Reader comment la Invited. Address The Dally Piiot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 926~6. Phone(714) &42~1 . Boyd / Beer BWlt By L.M. BOYD tbelr wat~s and got Jn Bydoszes, Poland. ls a beer. Unde there were brewer y. Somehow, one those who thought they'd morning in 1973, a major died and gone to heaven. va l ve in the place was In AlCb a river fed by damaged. ll diverted several ...-thousand gallons of beer Into two trt es. One of these the town's water main. Resl· streams coataim lron. The dents thereabouts turned on other, which drains from a peat swamp, contalna ~alllc acid. When they mlx a tbe fork, the cbemlcala tum the Dear w1ler utterly dark. They form a tnae bladt lnk. Gloomy Clalm II that the famous Buu BrummeJ kept three Gus bal~ on ~roll. when be had a , to do oot.b.ins .,.._ arraoce bl8 halr. Amerlces who have contributed to the l rlah Ha d you noticed lb.at all Retubllcan Arm y the lettera In th• word mlg t pOnder the fact "tyCwrlter" are oo one row that thcf helped the oft e keyboe.rd7 IR A ce e brate the holidays by bom~ln- nocent Cbrlltmu 1 p. In G~at Britain, "Dear pera ln £nslaod. Mr. Smith" la a more formal J.W.B. ,.Jutatioo for a letter than la rot.Ml ow <.....,....• ,,. -"My Dear Kr. Smlth." In ...... ., , .... ~ ...... ,.., thlt country, thouch. ft'• the ~ ........... other Wa)' around. Why tbla . ~'r:.t"' ....... difference? .... I -... 11MJ',OIOMlbelt1, 1m ~· K,...bkhli:dltotlel hot Editor Chinese Scenario for Taiwan WASHINGTON -White there doeln't teem to be aood rea10n for COmmunlat Ch.In• to extcute J mlUt.ary action atalnat Taiwan tn lhil new er1 of normaUzaUon. tbt pcieMbWty 1_lw_1)'8 remtlnJ. I wee r mlnded of thia ln rt• ~ an lnle?"Vlew I did lo 1"17 wlth tbe Communltl ~.,...~ ~i~~I: Talwao. col· lected •.ooo OUO Ctl of I o l d ll800,000, as re ward and betlan 1 new career of wamlne otlhe Communist ~rU. Ul.s uaettmcnt of Peking's ln· tentions was lntereslinf. a nd still ls, ln terms of a 'worst case" scenario. So I offer It again foryreaent doy mulling of die new Cblna·Taiwan 11ltuaUon: TAIPEI August 1977 -The WllY Fan Vuan·ycn. the Chinese Communist Pilot who recently defected to Taiwan. tells il , the PekiJ1g re4lme eventually will attemPt to 'liberate" Taiwan by f«ee. but only after the United St.ates establi shes diplomatic re· latlons with Peking. Fan, an a ir force squadron commander who became dis· Ulusloned with life in Red China. Paul Harvey Ulkl th1a corrapondent. throUAh an lni.rpreter, that Pektna'• stralel)' la to achieve dlplomotlc recopl!Jon by the U.S. and then harUa Taiwan until an invasion lafeu1b&e. 1bat moment will come. Pan sa!d, when the Communl•ta. atreniLbened by their U.S. ties, can deploy ll'OOpl from the Sov· let border to I.be coa t opposite Taiwan and pote a n Invasion threat. IF TAIWAN resis t s . F a n dedared ln the lntervlew. the U.S. would be powe rless to In· tttvene in the consequent war. "The U.S.," he said through the interpreter. "would have no say in the Internal affairs of the one Ounese <Peklngl government. II the U.S. disapproved of s uch an invasion. ~hat could It do? "If the U.S. protested. the Communist government would mob{lize Its. propaganda ap· para us and tell the world that the U.S. was interfering ln her internal affairs. Even the Soviet Union would be forced to con· demn the-0.S. ror thaL" Fan was based at Tslnkiang Airbase about 200 miles west of Tait>el. across the Taiwan Straits. He said there is only a small MIG·l9 force there now. and that the Comm u n ist military de ployment racing Taiwan 1s defensive. For 21 years. he said. the Peoole's Republic of Chtna hH c la(m ed lt would one d:ty liberate Taiwan by force. Out. be added. the Peking regime'$ military c1pabUity is overrated. Equlpment and facilities are JIODI', he aald, and morale low In tbe umed forces. 1D8 OWN mlUtary superiors told him that Taiwan's planes &>erformed far better than the MIG·lll and MIG-211, tbouah are f 11 outnumbered by the O>mmwmt. air force. SUll, Fan explained. Com· munlJt cround and air forces re· ~Jy enaage in Invasion ex· ercaaes. and fast year increased forces from battaUon to division ~h. Sloce hls defection to Taiwan. he has recommended that Its military increase a nti · air and 'lnt.i-aubmarine capablli· ty. 11le Chinese Communist sub· marine fleet which could blockade the Taiwan Straits numbers 65 and is expanding' Fanwd. ' 11le Chinese Communist gov· enunent has been preoccupied ~th internal political squabbl· ing, the Cultural Revolution and the elimination or the "Gang of Four," Fan said to the great detriment of building mititary strength. Even military officers such as he had lo spend ma ny hours ed ucating a nd r e· edueatin.; themselves on thl' lutest ideologklll twists. 1''1tn ex· plained. BUT HE cautions that once the P.R.C. gets "asettled down." and achieves diplomatic re· cognition from the U.nited States "lbc freedom and secur1· ty of TaJwan will go down the draih. '' Moreover} Fan Hid, lbc ~ regime w ll st.e~ up the rw.unber of agents it sends to the United States under the guise of cultural or scientific exchange. for ourposes of "mstla:atina peo· ple.'"' Fan said he w aa told by superiors that such t1ubverslon must be plotted over a loni: period o r time, and that Owrman Mao was often quoted to him as saying: "When ping· poog affair starts, even though ptng·pong is suc h a sma ll ball~ it c:an activate turrung of lne earth.'' 1be mat weaknesses or Com· mun.isl China, Fan declared, are its inability to supP.lY people suf · ficient food, the ' slackness" In factory productlo~i_ the necessity to frequently use ine military lo restore control in various areas and the poor treatment given re· lln!d mllita~ry ~rsonnel. He said hat Teng lls1ao·p'eng, at an ear ier time, plaoned lo pacify di grunlled m1 htary veterans ·th jobs and benefits. but was purged before the pro· ~am got started. Now. accord· mg to Fan. with Teng restored to a position of power. he might try to remedy the veterans· s1tua· lion which has grown quite senous. AT BEST, Fan said , the P .R .C . on l y ac h ieves "b1,1perficlal" order in Its society through political purges and ex· ecutiom. The basic problems of creat· ing a better life, he argues, are not being solved, and people arc dlscontented""There is the poten· tial of an uprising against the re· gime. he claims, but 1t must be organized, "8nd there a re no signs of this kind of organiza lion. It will only come. he ex plained. when people realm:' that the real fight Is not over which faction 1s correct, but aga.tnst a wrong system. 'nlough Fan stated that the P.R.C. military is overrated. hi• said the Peking rulers would have sent it into action against the Uruted States if Amen can forces had ever tned a la rge· scale Invasion of North Vi etnam during that war. Any such al· tempt. to capture Hanoi. he ex· plamed, would have been con· sidered a threat to the P.R.C. ~ause of its closeness to that capital. Utah Welfare Plan Saves Tax Dollars 1f any state ts looking ror a welfare plan that works. Utah's does. lo Utah anybody able to work baa to work or his welfare pay· menu are cut off. So -ln the whole state oC Utah there are now fewer than 13.000 people on welfare. In New York Ci· ty there are more than a mllllon! If our na· Uon ls ever going to do anyth i n g about Its ad· mittedly aelf. defeatlng welfare system it will have to be done between elec· lions. It Is too much to ask any elect.able or elected ofllclal to Charles McCabe tum his back on the welfare army c:A 13 million -plus their kin -plua their lobbyists. Three recent Presidents lo· eluding President Carter have proposed welfa re r eform. Congress Is planning to take another look al the subject next year -between elections. R EGIONALLY, certain welfare reform proposals have been tested. At federal government ex· pense, SeaWe and Denver have tried the "negative income tax" as an alternative. Those experi· ments, which began in 1971, have revealed that "people re· celving what a mounted to a guaranteed income worked less -and families receiving the as· slstance broke up more fre· quently." So that noble experi· ment aborted. President Carter realizes that any asaiatance system mu.st ln· elude ao incentive to work. ALSO, Sen. Dan Moynihan. conducting hearings oo wellare revision, hears from the Depart· ment or Housing and Urban Development that giving poor people money for housing didn't work either. Too frequently they spent the money oa things other than housing. or all the welfare options the simplest appears most s uc · cessful. It Is the "workfare" plan in the state or Utah. All it amounts to is this: Anybody able to work works - or his welfare money Is cutoff. It should be acknowledged that the work ethic never did go out or s tyle in Utah. The Mormon Church has a welfare system of its own where, in ac· cord with Scriptural admonition, citizens Jay aside production during the green years ror use in the lean years. The Utah public workfare pro- gram ls an adapt.ation of that. IN VTAH. iJ you are unable to find a job, you are supplied with a job in some state, local or charitable work project. This welfare progr am costs the taxpayers of Utah $380,000 a year; it saves them $1.S million a year. Ye t it took three years to secure HEW permission to try it in Utah -and HEW is still re· sisling testing the same system in Colorado. "Perhaps." says Sen. Moynihan, "because the bureaucrats see this system eventually putting them out of business." Vermont Deliver s Justice in Layinan's T enns Vt:onont, the Green Mou.ntahl and make crooked what should presiding Judge they do not have And the legally trained gents Slate, baa almost U bllDY milk be direct." to have bad letal training. be who must present the cases, as cow• u it. bu cttlzens -not a members of the ar, etc. prosecution and defense, would bad t.b.lnl· It bas bequeathed to IN THE DA VS before Ver· The idea of having the ac· surely be forced down from their the nation such figures as Cal mont entered tbe unJoo lo 1791, tlvilies of a cassocked lawyer empyrean of empty magnllo· Coolld1e. Chesl e r Arthur. its citlzen.s bad had lhelr bellyful scrutinized and regulated and quence by the p~nce or men Supben A. Douglas , Admiral of the l:f aleae practiced in the even overthrown by men whose on the bench who were not or Geor~ewey and ed'4cator courts New York and New qualifications a.re mere common their own fraternity. John y. Hampshire, which bad Jurisdic· sense aod experience of Ille ls to Vermont is also a state that tlon over the affain of Vermoot. me almost lrresisUble. TRIS TIUNG of lawyers run· likes to go its own way. I oace "Accordin~ly ," reports Van nlrlg ou.r lives to an unappeUzlng arent a Loon, "lo a l $uperlor courts THE PRESENCE of a lawyer degree is not merely a personal p easant each legally traJned judge, and on the three·man court also crotchet of mJne. It is a national winter there, who Is l.n charse of the court, commends itself, since the Job or l:oblem, and day by d1y is lo the lltll' haa slttlni with him two side· the courts ls to lnte~ret and en· comlng recognhed as sucb. town o Judges, as they are called. These force a body of exis=w· and Any profession which is based Barnard. It is need not have any l~al trainlne. a man with 1epl tr ls best the only atate They are Ul\la.lly el erly retired 1u.lted to that. on the deliberate corrupllOQ of in the unJon f1rmen or small town bull-Bu t the aflectlon f o r Jansuage, under the guise ot aiv· tb at could oe11men: men with years of ex-abracadabr• that Is epidemic in1 l1nguaee legallstlc pre· tempt me to perience In the way• of every amonf. lawyen, and la lJl fact tlsloni!'-9 something fundameo· 1 e a v e day Uf e and wbo can detect the tbe 1 most inevitable result of tally t matter with it. Northern odor of the bull~ or a rottlnc thelr tnininl, would be mltlaat· Slde·Judgee of the Vermont C1llforniL cheese if lt beg to seep Into ed areaUy by the mere PreHftCe type would constitute nothing The 1t1te 1lao bu, 11 I court." of Intelligent laymen on the leu than a m&Jor atep toward learned throuab the 11ency of bench. the r.._,ucaUoo of Judcea aod the Cood Henry Van tooa, a THESE SIDE J1JDOE8 •~ Quotes lawyen in enry courtroom of court •r= t.bat ta Wllque, IO elected. They are presented by the n1UGD. But the rest or us are far u a.ow. and which eould thelr part.lee in the prtmartes probably not. ready for flO com· profitably be copied by ua. otbar Ulce a ny ofnce seeker. selected ··No amount of sucar~ monseoalcal a reform. We an so 1tate1 ol lhe union. via tbe primary protedure like rhetoric by the pretldent can ob-accustomed to the ''Whereuea" Vin Looa tharel with me a any ornce aeeker and then voted 1cure the plain fact that he pro-of our Judges that we WO\lkl fMl concern about what he ealll on ln the ,..War elecUona. poses to tell Talwan down the 1 blt. lnsulted \t a laym1n •ltttna "that d....able oblU1CalJoD and If the two elde-Judfcea 1et river."-S.. Jeea Helm•. •· on 1 be nch were to aek a mumbo-Jumbo wltb wblcb our totether on any specif c cue, mouthpiece, "Juat. wbaddya N.C . OD the declaration of ..... ....., trJ to leNell tblt.r 0..y CID overrule the Prellidinc d l plomatl~ rel aUona with me1n by what ~ve been HY· tlMKllht.a from their fellow men Judce. And Lo repe1t: Unlike the mainland Chlna. lng ror the paat 7u • l ,~..,........-r- t ' . t , ~ : • . • • . • ' I , ~ l j NATION DAI\. V Pit.OT Hea~th Ins11rance Support Sought If you don't know di1monds. you ehould know SLAVICK'S · WASIU'NOTON (AP) -Two na~ tloftal cqaabaUou for rellred peo. pie are ukln1 member-a lo send •oplea ol lbetr medical btlla to Pr 1 dtnt Carter ln a 1ras1 roou cam p1l1n for national b alt.h huurance The eroupe. the Amer1un A.ssocll Uon ol ReUred Penons and National RtUnd Teacbets ANociaUon. which operate Wider' lbe .a.me a .. derllup, are IUPPQl'ttta of ~. Edward M Kennedy'• propoul lor a com . prebeoalve, federally run ayatem that would pay everyon ·a medlcaJ blll1. QUEENIE 1111'! ORGANIZATIONS allo are llhked to the c.olontaJ PtM lDlurance ('OmpanlN lbat Hll mem~ra health lnsur&Mt• poUrl . deslaned to pro. tl'<'l them uaoiMt..aomc of the poten. tlally t.-pmslv~ JCBPS In Medicare rovtrac .. for lh t•ldt>rly C•n~·r pledat'd dwint hl• pralden· Ual campalan that he would PC"OPOM a Ulllverul, comprehenalve and mandatory boalt.b plan for I.be oaUon. Out K('nnedy, 0 Mau .. and bls <'O•lltton of or1aol'ed labor and clUiena aroupe broke wtlb lbe pre.I· oo.e __ ..._ _ _...__ ·'The specialty with bankrupt sauce ... er, bearnaise sauce ... loob 1o0d." Women Seek Judge's Ouster SALT LAKE CITY (AP> -Women's groups have vowed to seek the removal of a Judge for freeing a man a jury convicted of rape. Last week. Judge Bryant Croft reversed a jury's unanlm9us v~rdicl that round Eugene Myers, 53, guilty of raping a 22-year-old woman in May. Croft saJd be thought Uie victim invited the sexual assault by her dress and her conduct. EILEEN HANSEN, REPRESENTING Women United, said Tuesday that Croft's remarks lo reversing the verdict were "sexist., egotistical and immoral." Myers, who wu on parole for a 1967 sex of· fense when the attack allegedly occured, is m the Utah State Prison awaitinl a parol\! violatton hearing because of lbe cue. Aft.er reversing lbe jury's verdict. Croft said of the victim, who was white: "She was sitting in a bar with a black man in a flimsy dress. taking his affection, eating his food, d.rloking his drinks - there's a whole lot to be said"bere about mutual con.sent.'' "l'M NOT A RACIST ; l'M not a sexist." Cron said Tuesday. "In this particular cue t did not think Justice would prevail If t.his man was sen· tenced to prison for a crime I don't think be com· milted." Ms. Hansen said Croft apparently th.inks men have the right lo rape women and that women want to be raped. She noted a Madison, WIS., judge lost his seat ,... on the beach over a similar case when he lost a re- call election in September 1977. Utah, however, has no provision for the recall of judges. The women's groups did not specify what steps they would take lo try to remove Croft from tho bench. CRIU8'ITNE WA'ITERS OF THE Salt Lake Rape Crisis Cent.er said Croft had set the progress of the center back years. She said bis r emarks made it even more unlikely that women would report sexual assaults. Shelia Washeba, a representative of the Na· tlonal Organization for Womell, said she was out· raged but oot. surprised al Croft's action. She called for Salt Lake City attorneys to boycott Crofl's court in rape cases. Beatrice Marchant of the Utah Equal Rights Coalllioo said the decision was indicative of "a general attitude towards women in Utah." HERB FRIEDLASDER ISMAXJNG GREAT DEALS BUY OR LEA ~E ' FREE . 50 "GALS OF GAS dent lut 1ummer when Carter re. fUled to commtt h.111\Mlf to a plan de· 1l1ned to take effect ruaardless ot economic condltiorus. AD•INJSTRATION OFFICIALS bavt! aald Carter might Incorporate "trt11ers" ln b1t long delayed pro- potal to poatpoae automatically some phllet of the atep.by·slep program until the ecooomy could tolerate the lnllaUooary Impact. not naUonal health Insurance -that la lnnaUonat)'. that precludes com· peUUon and that stifles economy and tffldency. "Wlm mE COST controls and in· cenUves for economy contained In Kennedy's latest propoul, national health lnaurance will be les1 coeUy in the lone run than the ~resent uncon-trolled syatem." SLAVICK'S Fine Jewelerl &nee 1817 Cyril F. Brtcklleld, c:Urect.or of the two retirees' organlzatiooa, said: "It 11 the present health care system - Brickfield predicted the White HoUJe would receive up to 20,000 let- ters enclosing medical bl11a and urg- ing support for Kennedy's legislation. Fashion Island, Newport Beach A great way to a great second Now thru Jan.13th. We're Glendale Federal Savin~. And we believe the second half of life really can be the better half ... prooickd you're prepared for it. That's why we want you to have a free copy of our Second Half Planning Workbook ••. so you can start preparing for it now. · It's a unique handbook created especially for Glendale Federal by experts in the field o( life plan. ning. And it will directly involve you-through cham, checlcliats, questionnaires, and other ex.e~­ in the step.by-step process of mapping out a sensible and succe91ful second hall. • Inside, you'll find special notes on the California laws which will affect you as a retiree, tables and logs for determining a comprehensive money management program. and sound advice on just about every aspect of retirement life-from health to housing to hobbies. Your free workbook is waiting for you right now. So come on by. When you do, we hope you'll abo take a minute to say hello ... find out about our many free servlc.es ••• and perhaps open an insured savings account .... Glendale Federal Savings •.. for a great second half! r----------------------------------------~ for your free copy of our Second Half Planning~, just bring this gift cmifteate to the offaa(s) lilted below. Bt.rr HURRY, SUPPLIES ARE LIMITED. Only one copy per family, plate. Name:----------------------------Addrat: _________________________ ~ Ci~=--------------------up·---------- CiLENMILE FEDERAL ~ ~ ftNCiS WITH OVER S3.5 BtUION IN ..... VI ASSETS AND MORE THAN 65 AND LQ\N ASSOCIATION OFFICES IN CALIFORNIA OC /27 ~----------------------------------------~ FULLERTON 1 320 N. Harbor Blvd. 526-8331 •SANTA ANAt St F•hion Square (acroN from Damond's) 541·3314 ·COSTA MF.SA• 2300 Harbor Blvd. (Harbor Ccnrer) 642-4711 •NEWPORT BEACH• 100 Newport Center Dr. (acroee from Roblruon's) 644·5300 •LAGUNA HILLS s 24221 Calle de la Louisa (aaoee from dw Bro.dway) 768·7771 • HUNTINGTON BEACHt 71+. Bcllnaer Ave. (Eat of Golden Wat ln the Gemco Cmttr) 84&-3882 1 t7t OL&NDALI FEDEIW. SAVINOI ' ~ .• ) . • . . .. :: .. Sale 2.99 twin Re;. 3 99. Fanciful flowert on oottC>fVpolvetter percel sheets. 8tlle a.H ~eg. 4 99 Full Sele 7.12 Reg. 8.A9 Queen .... 1.t1 Reg. 10.49 King Pltlowcues by the pair. a.a. 3.38 Reg. 3.99 Standard ~ 3.M Reg. 4.29 Queen Sale 4.07 Reg 4 79 King en Now Going On! Sale 13.50 twtn 116 . Re~. $18. L1ghtwe1ght. soft Vellux ~ blanket has sturdy nylon pile bonded to a polyfoam base. Resists pllling and matting, machine washes beautlf ully. Sele $1,7 Reg. $21 Fu II Sate S22 Reg. $27 Queen Sele 26.35 Reg. $31 King --4-~~:::::~-:: .. ;->-;-•. , __ _ . ( ,, Sale 1 . 99 twin ... • f . _, ,, ... ;I' • ~ ... ' , ' '\ • ,. •• ' t ~ .·~ Reg. 3.49. Delicate flowered vines on cotton/ poly muslin sheets. Sele 3.38 Reg. 4.49 Fu II Sale 8.79 Reg. 7.99 Queen Sele 8.49 Reg. 9.99 King \ . ' ( I• Sale 3.27 twin Flat and fitted sheets are the same price. Pillowcases by the pair. Sale 2.79 Reg. 3.49 Standard Sele 3.39 Reg. 3.99 Queen Cele 3.82 Reg. 4.49 King Reg. 4.29. Smooth white cotton/ polyester percale sheets. Sale 4.27 Reg. 5.29 Full Sele 7.84 Reg. 8.99 Queen sale 9.34 Reg. 10.99 King Pillowcases by the pair. Sale 2.98 Reg. 3.99 Standard Sele 3.73 Reg. 4.39 Queen Sele 4.07 Reg. 4.79 King ' Sale 7.19 twin 10E. Reg. 8.99. Fitted mattress pads in smooth white cottOf\/ polyester quilted to polyester f1berl1ll. Machine washable. dry able. Sale 9.59 Reg. 11 .99 Full Sele 11..99 Reg. 14.99 Queen Sale 14.39 Reg. 17.99 King Kodef.Jt is Eastman's trademark for •ts polyester fiber. AFTER · CHRISTMAS SALE SAVE 30% to ·503 50% off! COfM to our epectacuter·~" price NI• on bOxed grMtjnG card• end gift wr91» and aave for ne>o.t yearl Select your favorites that are normally higher priced and buy them at hall price now while they're on sale. You'll be glad you d1dl ~2Q .... c • 1/2 off Xmas Cards • 1/2 off Xmas Candy • 1/2 off Xmas Trim Store Hour• Mon.·Frl. 19 •.m. to I p.m. 81turd8y ,10 •.m. to I p.m. lund•I 12 Noon to p.m. j • Virgil Thraaer Pictures orig. S15 • Oval Mirrors orig. 63.99 • Small Decorator Mirrors orig. 1.65 • Burlwood Clocks ortg. SSS • Xmaa Kitchen Towels orig. S2 • Bowl and Pitcher Set 4ortg. $86 • Xmas Cookie Cutter orig. 69• • Crochet Antmal Kit• orig. $3 • Donut Maker orig. 19.99 • 2 In. Column Candi•• orig. 88• • Hallmark Lotion or Shanuaoo orig. 2.25 • SHkAoNa orig. 2.99 Nows& Now 25.60 Now 68• NowS22 NowS1 Now S18 Now 33• Now 1.50 Now 6.88 Now 22• NowS1 Now 1.44 Men's Weyenberg Dress Shoes ong. $38 to 49.95. Seleded tie and slip-on of discontinued styles to choose from. Now 30% off Men's Lightweight Dress Shoes Select from tie or slip-on styles. In brown or black. D & E widths. ong.$36 Now17.85 Women•• Shoe Sale ong. 12.99 to S27. Selected heels and sar(dals In patents. smooth or s~ leathers In assorted fall colors. • Harmony Comforter (twin size) ortg. $23 Now 11.50 Now 30°k to 50°'4 off • Detfeur Comforter (twin size) orig. $34 Now$17 Family • 40 Channel CB (Auto Center) orig. 49.99 Now22.99 !!~fg~~~9. A selection of • 4 pfy Double Steel Belted Tire E78·14 H78·14 • Twin Steel Belted Aadl1I Tire GR78·14 HA78·14 • Room Size Aug Aemn•nta e·>ce· 12'x16' 9'x12' orig. $52 NOW 31 .50 + FET .., orig. $65 NOW 138 + FET orig, 45.99 NOW 32.19 + FET orig. 46.99 NOW 32.19 + FET orig. $49 to $89 NOW '21.99 orig. $149 to $280 NOW 9'.tt orlg. $89 to $179 NOW 49.99 ir~CPenney •• fluffy. vinyl, and corduroy styles. Now 30°k off a.lldren'• Casual Sho es ortg. 8.99 to 17.99. Selecthct smooth or suede leather shoes In tie styles. Now 50% off FASHION ISLAND STORE O NLY 844-2313 , ' ~ ) • I ' I ~~ 1' . . . 300!0 to 50% off Misses 3nd Junior Sweaters Mohair pUlovers Pocketed :ardlgan Suede trln, hooded Designer collectlon Emb'°ldeed Shawl Collar Striped tUtlenecks Polntelle irawatrlng vest Ditto® buton neck orig. $40 orig. $20 orlg. $27 orig. $29 orig. $24 orig . $7 orig. $16 orig. $20 Now 18.99 Now 9.99 Now 13.88 Now 10.99 Now 10.99 Now 3.99 Now 7.99 Now 14.99 DAILY PfLOT A. ' Misses and Junior Blouses and Tops Ruffled neck blouse orig. s1s Now 10.88 Mock vested shirt orig. s13 Now 8.88 Brushed print shirt orig. s15 Now 10.88 Victorian challis smock orig. s18 Now 10.50 Cotton print blouse orig. 10.99 Now 6.88 Designer India blouse orig. s19 Now 12.88 Print Volle Kimona orig. s18 Now 9.99 Grandfather shirt tops orig. s18 Now 12.60 :chenille Blazer orig. S2s Now 9.99 FTER CHRISTMAS SALE . . . ? SAVE 30% to 50% ! ........................................................................................................................... .... . . 30% off Crinkle C ton Coordinates Side tie pants Pu Hover tops \ Vest Wrap skirt or nts orig. $14 orig. $12 orig . .$.11 orig. $14 • Shawls, hand ags, accessories • Women's cas al or dressy heels • Misses or juror disco dresses Misses anci Junior Skirts Peasant print ~klrt Apron front sktt Challis print s"rt Velveteen skirt Matching blaz~ Pollahed dama k skirt Crepe Dlrndle skirt 8 re Moura on.·Frl. 10 • to I p.m. turdaf 10 •m· to I p.m. Bund•I 12 Woon to p.m. j orig. $15 orig. $19 orig. $14 orig. $27 orig. $50 orig. $15 orig. $20 Now 9.80 Now 8.40 Now 7.70 Now 9 .80 300/o off 30%-50°/o off 50°/o off Now 10.50 Now 12.88 Now 9.80 Now 18.90 Now $35 Now 10.50 I Now 11.99 Misses and Junior Pants Pleated poplin trouser orig. $18 Now 5.99 Tunnel waist.denim pant ( orig. $18 Now 5.99 Poly elastic back slack orig. $16 Now 5.99 Belted designer pant orig. $24 Now 16.80 Crepe trouser orig. $16 Now 9.60 Brushed cord slack orig. $21 Now 14.70 30% to. 50% off • Bovs Varsity Tops Chesr32-36 orig. 8.50 to $11 Now 50% off • Glrls 7-14 Tops Stripes, designs. word T shirts orig. $4 to 4.50 Now 2.99 • • Boys Sunerwear Tops • Girls Co-ordinates Crewneck athle\lc look Fashion look pants and tops ortg. 5.50 to $7 orig. 4.50 to 12.99 Now 50°/o off Now 30% to 50o/o oft • Bovs 4-7 Tops swlaTers, shirts orig. 3.99 to 8.99 Now 50°k off • Assorted Separates Topa, 1eans. dresses ortg. S4 to $11 Now SOo/o oU -rs~CPenney FASHION ISLAND STORE ONLY -~~ 844-2313 • • ,,. . . ,. ' AJ• OM.'( PtLOT * IMllY '1i.t Ii.ti ..._.. FOUNTAIN VALLEY YOUTH THANKS PARAM!DtC RESCUERS FOR LIFE Chuck Reynolde, Craah Victim Joe Oawaon, Mfk• KMnan and Joe Mobney Thankful He's Alive Paramedics Gave Youth 'Best Present' By RA VMOND ESTRADA .JL OI U. ~ly l"tlel Sl.lft The other day Joe Dawson de- cided to drop by the Murdy Fire Station in Huntingtoo Beach to say than.Im to friends who gave him the best present he ever re- l'etved -his Ille. On July 20, 1976. paramedics C hul'k Rey nolds and J oe Mohnev rushed to the scene of a Huntinitton auto smashup to find the 16-year-old youth near death with severe bead injuries. THE BOY'S BEAD struck a metal irrigation pipe after he was thrown through the window of a car. Reynolds and Mohney ad- ministered life-saving aid to Dawson who needed more than 100 stitches to close h ead wounds. "It's Just been recently that he has fell 100 percent.'' said the boy's father. Roy Dawson, or 16215 Indian River Ave. The youth decided to visit the paramedics to show them he was well JUSl in lime for the holidays. "YOU R MOTHER AND I went homt> from the hospital ac- l'epting the fact that you were 1usl about gone and hoping lo be happ) with what God gave us back," the father told his SOf'.l. Young Dawson is nearly all the way back with a healthy s mile and determination to lead a normal life. He is still missing the use or a couple of fmgers. "My pare nts told me one whole s ide of my face was gone." said the youth as he s poke with Lhe two paramedics a nd fire engine driver Mike Keenan who ar:O:v.:d at the scene 0fftrs0Pf IOn.11., ,,.,,Id,_,,,,~ of the crash near Gothard Street and McFadde n Avenue 17 months ago. "All o f us rellows there thought he would be lucky to live let alone ever walk." Keenan said as be recalled the incident. REYNOLDS, NOW a paramedic captain. said it was the boy's weight-lifting and high school wrestling program that prevented more serious Injury. "The thing he bad going for him was his health and desire to live," Reynolds said. Even now, arter extensive therapy at Rancho Los Amigos Hospital in Downey. the Dawson youth continues lo lift weights. "I can curl 100 pounds," be said, a smile on bis race. But the boy has quit wrestling. THE TWO-PARAMEDICS who saved the boy's life dropped by each day to sec how he was raring during his 10-day stay in Huntington lnte rcommunily Hospital's intensive care unit. ''The doctors told me to j~t pray that my kid could walk," the elder DaWIOO said. He remembers his son's first day back from the hospital when it was all the boy could do Just to crawl across the living room floor. "It was like he was in a com- :>lele infancy stage," said bis nother. Jtme Dawson. "SON, YOU ARE a miracle." said the proud ralhe ... But a !ew days before his visit to the fire station. the Dawson youth who is now 18 kept asking, "How do I say thank you?" Paramedic Reynolds looked the FolDltain Valley High School senior in the eye and told him. "You say tha.nb just by letting us see you." • Correction Officer Stabbed by Inmate CHINO CA P> -CorrecUonal Officer Dennis Joiner, 26. was slabbed six times by a prisoner at the California Institution for Men here but s ubdued his assailant without assistance. authorities said today. J oiner, suffering wounds in the chest. arms and leg. was rushed to Chino General Hospital on Tuesday following the 2:40 p.m. Incident al the prison's reception center. Prison officials said Joiner was opening a jail cell door to take a prisoner to the shower room when the man attacked him with a ' l -by-10-inch piece or steel fashioned into a knife. Pr1son officials would nol identify the inmate. They said he is a parole violator and that charges of ass ault on a lawman will be brought against him. "Right now'a the Ume to re-equip your sewlng room or outllt a new ooe, and at bl1 aavincs, too. Juat stop in for the 1U1hUy uaed ••Sin1er• • machine ol your choice and a brand new lroo and sewing basket. Your machine ls covered by the same warranty u our new machines, and Ulat'a one more reuon why you ahould come lD and eee us today." South Coett Plea, Coet8 ... The CftJ lhopplng Center, Orange . . .... ~ ... -- MNll3 Ml-IMI • A T~k or TM Slftlll' COlllptllf • LOCAL/ NATION Mailings Remindet Holi W ASKINGTON (AP) -The Internal IUlvcnue Service haa moiled tax forms to 88 million Americans. providing a grim re· minder t.bal Christmas Is over. Tu booklet.a should arrive in some mailboxes today and about all of them should be delivered wlthln nve to seven days, said Larry Batdorf , an I RS spokesman. ••tF P EOPLE DON•T get them by that time they shouldn't panic." he said ... Arter o reasonable time they s hould call or go to an IRS office ror forms." Som e 8,000 o f the rorm packages actually got in the malls last week in the New York and Philadelphia areas because two printers inadvertently made deliveries to the post offices ear· ly. Batdorf said . Taxpayers cannot file a 1978 tax return before Jan. l anyway. They have unUI April 16 to file because the normal April 15 deadllndallaonaSunday. EMPLOYERS MV8T GIVE workers W2 withholding forms by Jan. 31. Some people who received the 1040A sbort form or the 1040 long form in the mail may flnd their mcome was a lot different this year and may want lo order dif- ferent forms from the IRS. A glance at the new forms s hows they are remarkably similar lo the ones filed the pre· v aous year. Mos t lax law changes passed by Congress this year will ool go into effect \Dllil tbe 1979 tax year. Party Slated To Benefit Slide Victims ( OONSVMER J "This time you can probably pull out last ·year's t.ax lorm and use it aa a aulde," eald WU.eon Fadely, an IRS apokoaman. NOT ONLY 18 the format tlmllar. but abo ao are the tax tables. That meat>s taxpayer• who 1ot a co1t-of·llvtn1 pay raise ln 1918 may be paylna a higher ~rcenwuc or their In· come ln taxes. About three out or every four t axpayeu wi ll .eel r ·fund• within about four wffka if Uwy file returns In Jnouary, f>r In about el;hl weclus If th~y m., In April. Several chong<.>A ln tu law• will go into effect In the new forms -notably a tax credit ror home Insulation and som • chances ln capital a•inl taxes. aas OFFICIALS SAJD thuy were uncertain whether mor•• people would have tbelr taxes done by professional tax prt'.- parers. In the last t.ax year , the percentage using profe ssional tax help declined from 47 to 42 percent becau.se more people used the 1040A sho{l form. As in past yead, the I RS wUl giv e l ax advice over lhe telephone. In J)ersoo al IRS of- lices aod at some apedal laJ< booths. During the last filing season, the IRS anawered more than 17 million phone inquiries, 38,000 le r1 and h lped more Ulan 6 m Ion peoplo whO walked Into I orncea. E 1&8 AL80 l• tralnlna persona to at.off boothl at rlt"I. 1ctM>ol1, fl re alatlons other publlc bulldlng1 to ~le wtlh 1peclal ne di. tte unpUd vol&aatffrt allio make v611t1 to nuralnl( °'• ttc.oit.ea. Md retlr•mcmt r munttlH from Janu11ry th uah Aprtl. anetarium inale' tat OCC • Ol'IUJl& HUit " • £H"'Jdu<1.)on tad fl> 00..rv•&.MJm IJt UM.! pl LI MM'~ MMJ VftllMi, WllJ ·ludt UM pt~rium &ect.ur~ tJl Orup Co..bt ~lqc ln t.a ~· r ~ by OCC ttooc>my c1IX't SCcve I At.Uao:do fUld ~VIM, ''llorn111g St.1;r" bf' otruad >n the <>cc nartum on J1&11 5, 6, 12, L1. 19 • 2llJ and TT at 7 30 p m i.nd 9 m . A maunie. ~ ~chedul~ lo p.m., Jan. -n . ltaozk> and LeVlne uid the p r ram will look •l some m and utty a.ll'onomical epUom ol the two planets a fOC\111 on the Mariner JO mls· of five yean ago and the d t.rammJtted back to Earth. It ill then view some result.a ol th recent PiooeeT-Venua mis· A New Year's Eve party for those who want to mix run wlth philanthropy will be held to benefit Laguna Beach landslide victims at the Quiet Woman restaurant in Dana Point. Sponsored by musicians and businessmen in Laguna Beach, the $25 a plate dinner and eve· ning of dance will be held from 8 p.m . to 2 a.m. at the restaurant, localed at 34130 Coast HJgbway Starts Wed., c. 27th 10 a.m. tci p.m. uptoSO~oFF m Dana Point. · Designer 18shions Festivities include dinner, en- tertainment provided by M icae l Mccastle a nd his band, acous tical dinner music. followed by violins, piano and saxophone. For reservaUons, call the Quiet Woman, or 499-5097. Sponsors say there are 250 seats for lbe benefit bash. 'lbo8e not wishin~ to eat dtn· ner can still participate in the music and dancing for a $10 donation, benefit sponsors said. anc 14K Je•elry CARii BORGHESE SPECIALS! Clear Skin s500 Picnic Basket $12.50 Val. Super Rich $650 Hand Cream & Body Lo,ion S19.SO Val. Herbal Blend $750 Shampoo & Conditioner $13 Val. Everything Discounted~ Fantastic Sa 1ings on Revlon. Pantene. Bonnie Bell. Charles of the Ri tz. \lo Cosmetics & more ~ Mariner's Ph rmacy .. y_. OWW ....... •pile UH' wllll 355 "-ACENTIA, 647-7200 ..................... f·6Mri I0·2W. . . . . . I o NATION Y.WI ... °"*""' v . 1978 DAILY PILOT A J J Teachers Live ·in Fear of A~sault Our U.S. Classroom Abuse lncreas Dramatically NEW YORK CAP> -Student.a bad lhrtatened Clare Kllna r before, but Vtbet\ \he 1U~k came. •he dld not "~J>eC\ 1t: /\ mqulne rolled •round som Mavy ObJttl and 1ecured Wlth a rubbft' band slammed full force lnto b r Mdt. It knocked h r clown. but the mlddi. .... N · medial readlna teachtt 1ot up and taupt ha' two rem alnJ.nc cl that day ln February t.m. Thea she went ho~. ne r returned acatn to her Brooklyn voc1Uonal h.lct> 1t'bool cluaroom. HE SAY SHI; HASN'T 10M beck because of her neck lnJury -the eltmal ~~1cbel, the dJ.azl. ness 8ut a!Jo, abe says. b 's afraid. •·J am oetrUafd WMn I 1ee more than two youngsters to1ether. U l want to {O out in the eve· rung, I havetoaird my lo6ns 1llday · Ms' Kling r. a 10.year teachlna veteran who .reeds only to complete her dl&st?rtaUon to earn a doctoral dearee. slides slowly, lnvoluntartly Into tens a.M she describes her h\jur1es and ber f eeUnas about the a-; aull. "I know I'm not handling this very well -I cry easily when I'm reminded about this. It's been two years and l'mgeUln& wone. l'mreallyverybltter." MS. KIJNGEJl'S EXPE&JENCE IS echoed through lhe nataon's schools: More than 60,900 teachers were attacked by students last year, ac· cording to the National Education Association. Smee 1972 classroom murders have increased 18 percent. rapes have increased 40 percent and as· saults are up 77 percent. She is not much surprised. nor much con.fort· ed. that Dr. Alfred Bloch would rind her reaction to the classroom assault fairly common. Bloch ts a psychoanalyst who concluded a five-year study of battered teachers. What Bloch found was that battered teachers react lhe same way as soldiers who've fought too· long on the front lines -with combat fatigue. They come dowr with ailments like migraine: headaches. ulcers and hypertension; they are depressed and unable to sleep. FURTHER, BLOCH FOUND THAT even teachers who weren't actually attacked suffer physical or emotional breakdowns. That's the pnce they pay for working in constant terror -or under threat -of being beaten, raped or murdered. Bloch. a Uruver.sity of California psychiatrist was interviewed during a meeting here in t.h~ Skate Stares Boss Wheels to Work DENVER <AP> -Hotel executive Howard Connor says he gets more than a few stares when he anives at work in downtown Denver. Ma.t mornings be roller skates the five mlles from bia Polo Club condominium. "It's a good way to keep in shape without Jos. mg time," said Connor, 51. "It enables me to look a round the town and I don't have to worry about parking the •kales ... But Connor is no ttcentric. He is an ex- Jlerienced hotel manager who came to Denver 10 months ago as executive director of the Fairmont Hotel, whlch is under constructloo and scheduled to open next September. Before arriving in Colorado, he was vice presi· dent and general manager of the Arizona Biltmore Hotel for two years. Prior to that he managed New Xork•s Ritz Tower for 12 years and the Carlyle for " SIX Hawaiian S&L Locks Its Doors HONOLULU (AP> -Thirteen banks or sav· ings and loan associations here have been robbed of more than $31,000 since Oct. Zl. It's gotten so bad that lhe Kalmukl branch of Hawaiian Federal Savings and Loan bas taken to locking all its doors. The branch bas been robbed three times since Thanksgiving, and five times this year Customers must press a buzzer and hope the tellers recognize their faces. ,.,.~ FRIGHTFUL DAY RECALLED BY TEACHER Cl•re Klinger Never Returned After Attack American Psychoanalytic Association. His study was published in October by the American Journal of Psychiatry. Generally. he says, "when teachers run into violence. they break down. They often suffer tremendous feelings of failure because t.hey feel they should be able to cope, to prevent the violence." Their problems are especially knotty, accord·• ing tp Bloch, because the sort of people who choose to teach are ill-equipped to cope wit.h violence: They are often passive, idealistic people who W&J?t 1tudenll to vtew them as lovtnc. pareetaJ niurea. • I TEACllE118 WHO G&EW 1JP IN volatile city nelahborftooda deal more eaaU,y with a combat zone atmolphere In schools because they've bten exposed to more violent behavior. Bloch IOUDd. Yet often the physical and emotJonal toll paid -even by teffhers who are never attacked -can be even more crippling than actually belna stabbed by a student. Bloch says. "When the teacher In claaaroom A la raped or UHUlted, tblnk what It does to the teecber ln clauroom 8 or C or D." Bloch 9a11. ••Sbe la Uvtu in conatant anxiety, always wonderinl 'Wben la l{ aoina to be my turn?'" HE 8EPO&TED THAT 1Z P&aCENT of UM ~teachers be studied bad not been pbyUe11ly at· tacked. These men and women aoupt belp, be 11ld. for breakdowns caused by llvtaa. alwa)'I. ln fear. . ReWYears Eve . lesoludons Bloch believes teachers abould be trained to defuse explosive confrontations and to deal with WE RESOLVE violent outbursts. If~ thl.nk:s It would belp if they to make your New shared their fears with each other ln dilcuaaioo Var'• celebration a groups. , hapPY one with deli· Bloch and other experts believe school acf. ck>Q food, wine and 1pirits . mlnlstrators should also undergo apeclal tr·'-'-""'-=' 'WE RESOLVE to outperform ourselves on • because too often they· react as lf t.be attack were tW.. the bu•ie•t night of the year. And, WE • the teacher's fault and too often the attacker ls DOl RESOLVE to have • good time right along disciplined. with you. It's been eleven years since we Edward Muir of New York's United Feder•· opened our first reetaurant in a aecluded • tloo of Teachers puts it tbia way: Cucamonga vineyard. And. like a bottle of good wine, we get better every year. Year in uq NEED TO GIVE THE principal tbe idea and year out. that his rll'!lt coocem should be giving emotioaal k SUpport to the ViCtim rather than With t.be paper r ' Is 'r'\ work the incident generates.·· ~ I I Ms. Klinger says she WIS told by other c~~~€R teachers that the student who injured her br1ued about it, reportedly saying, "I hit and I bit her bard and when she comes back. my mot.her and I are going to put her in a wheelchair." She never teamed what provoked the attack. The youth was never disciplined, Ms. Klinger says. She doesn't know why, but she has a theory: < The disciplinary dean coached the school's basket·: ball team. ''Maybe," Ms. Klinger says, "the boy played basketball." ' Hewpon &adl. 1660 Dove St .• Mac:Arthu1 to Blrcb • to Dow. N«xt to Marte Callender'•. 752·2S38 TAKING RESERVATIONS 4 • 7 P.M. NEW YEAR'S EVE I bmlnal'ldelllyr.dllal ... T.Qwtlkate. • AS 10.001rnln1mum earns you a high guaianteed rate-1/4% you cxm set aside uptd S l .SOOayoor-tax deferred. (U you open your I.RA now. Y'O'A can deter both Federal and state income taxes tor 1978.) FldeUty Federal will also talce any stock from a previous pension or prcd shartrg pkm and roll II over into a tax-sheltered I.RA And remembet yourCIOCOW'\t is 1nsUJed to S 100.001. And we don't charge the yearty truslee tee. higher than any bank pays. And your certttiCate matures in just 6 months. Call and ask us for the current rates. We think you11 be delighted wtth what you can earn. 2 llw..elnanyofndemyhdllar.Cli•t& ... of Depc!d • A mln1mwn of S 1.001wWearnyou6-1/Zfo interest u you invest tt for a year. Or 8% if you invest tt for 8 ~·Guaranteed. (And. a c::owse. you11wantaFidelity5-1/4% passbookaccount1or the money you want to keep readily amesslble.) 3 lnNll...,.oftlm'f9Gl'awww•aga1NoaftdlllrhdllCllUt.L • U you work tor a c:ompany that doelnl have a ret1rement plan. FE SAVINGS AND U)AN ASSOClATION Wlwngoul-e a II/tie wl#r. 4 lnNll•a11wa•s 111ofyoart1mecind'*-e.coapont..aow • toanramceoint•llrr.dllal. We11 gtveyou a Sl88 Ct:1f1(a "'Colol1ul CalJtomicr Just for coming tn. Ar1:J U you'd l1ks to~ an account )USt brtng us your J'Cl$b00k or any rnaturtngcelttbtxdes from where you're SavsriQ now We11 hand.le all the m•rdebils toryou.&.ue thing. T , f i . • .412 OM. Y PtLOT ' LOCAL I NATION Man Ends 28 ¥ears as Recluse ••• 0 -='" \', Ru''" " "''l rhod In .. tt:d•t'· UH' r,,nlt ltton 'Tu aday at .. " l.t .. mb llu pH al. pr<lbably • ,,._ (Jl\"'" f, ~ und r h1 belt th n '"' \ ha<t tn 't'•"· "th" n~alh bttn Hlln& lntti • 0 \\• had Nm "'"re, .. said Dr N l>•' Id fia tt>r. thl' man's J>h> lrlan Bntn ~ Rusln I tn "fairly 1ood hn.tth" d<-1pllt-• llfl' ot- lttplni In C'tutkC>n coops and the town dump. anvwht.'lr~ h could fmd u plaN.• to bt• down. "MAYlst; \'OU TOUGHEN up In an t•nv1roomcnt like lbitt," l:Jaxtcr 111ud Thou1i1h Husln apparently llvt.-d on mo..tly corree. Russian black bread and some oc· cas1onal Polish s ausage, authorities said he apparently stashed away a lady sum in the chlcken coops, including seven years worth of uncashed Social Security checks. The balding, toothless imml grant will not say how much money he has, but one police of. (icer described him as "loaded." A FEW YEARS ago he paid $6.000 cash for a cataract opera· t1on . Rusin. who s peaks little APW.,.._.. Uk£8 NEW LIFE htu Rualn £ngllsh. came to the attention of Vineland police scweral weeks ago when a local couple, dis· traught at the sight of open sores on the man's swollen right leg, called for help. Police declined to ldenUfy the couple. Police over the years had no complaints about the elderly va· grant, said police Sgt. Albert Barnabei BUT &USIN WAS arrested on a trespassing complaint and taken to the Cumberland County Jail in Bridgeton. There be sot some treatment for his leg ulcer, apparently the result of a bout with frostbite. He also got his first bath and shave in years. But Rusin, a fierc~ly indepen· d nt man, refused to give police ht• namt unlit they called in PoU1h·bom Alex Urban. a part· Um• pubUc relaUona director ror thl• •lriculturel community of 60,000. ''He wu petrHled and morttnfld '' said Urban, who ls rtuent in several Slavic tan1ua1ee. "He's very dl•· t.ruetful and a uspicious of authority." An£a COMMUNICATIONS were u tabllshod . charaes •1•lntt Rusin were dropped and lh• man wu taken t.o Newcomb He>1pllaJ here . After he Is disch&rled In the nut few days, Ru.sln. a lUelong bachelor, hopes to spend some of hi• aavinea to buy a mobile home and live on property neat friends, Urban said. Rusin HY• be came to the Unlted States after World Wat II. He spent the war tending cat· lle and horses in a Nazi workcamp, Urban said. "He's a free spirit.'' one of· flclal said. "But now that we got him shaved and washed, he's taken a great liking to these things. He loves the attention. and he's become a darling of the nurses." Brothel Sets Challenge Of New Law TONOPAH. Nev. <AP) -The Nye County Commission has outlawed prostitution in the rural county because county of· flclals had "lost control" of the brothels, says District Attorney Peter Knlght. H ontington Slaying But Leonard Smith, the Las Vesaa attorney representing Walter Plankinton, owner of the Chicken Ranch brothel near Pahrump, said he would challenge the new law in court . Former Barmaid Released in Probe .. WE HAD NO other way to go," Knllhl said Tuesday of the county commisaion's vote Fri· day. "We bad lost control of that activity ln this county. • Police have released former barmaid Mary Magallne Davia who was orrested for the second tlme last week on susricion of murder charges stemming from the Sept. 8 slabbing death o Gary Allen ''Mad Dog" Fero in a downtown Huntington Beach saloon Knight said the ordinance is scheduled to go into ~f(ect March 31, allowing time for operators of brothels near Lathrop Wells, Tonopah, Beatty and Pah.rump to clear up busi· ness affairs. Miss Davis. 25. for m erly employed at the Main Street SaJoon. was released again Fri· day afternoon due to insufficient evidence, according to police Lt. Bruce Young who said charges against her were dropped. Miss Davis was working at the saloon. 117 Main St., the night Fero, a motorcycllst, was stabbed in the back during a bar· room brawl. Young said. Three other bar patrons are being sought in connect.ion with the 41-year-old man's death. No other suspects have been taken into custody. Miss Davis was ln!tlally ar· rested several hours after Fero died at Huntlngto9 Intercom· rmmily Hospital after the stab- bing. "AS OF MARCH 31, prostitu- tion will be out. the window.·' Knight said. County officials previously tried to shut down the Chicken Ranch u a "simple nuisance," but the state hl&h court decision overturned the county's action. U.S. Planes Imperiled? New Soviet Radar System Sparks Fears WA SlfiNGTON CAP) -The P«'ntagon's research chief says the Soviets have successfully tes ted a "look-down, s hoot. down'• radar and mlssile system that could seriously threaten low-flying U.S. bombers and fighter planes • Dr. Willi am P e rry, un· dersecretary or defense for re- s earch a nd engineerin g. estimated Tuesday that the Sov· iets wiU be able to put such a system lnto operational use ln the ~arty 1980s. This, he said, will have "signifi cant Implica- tions" for the U.S. bombers and fighte r planes which might at· tempt to penetrate Soviel ter ritory HOWEVER, PERRY SAID the Soviets still are nearly a de· cade away from developing a system that could defend against. an attack by U.S. cruise missiles. which present a radar image onl y about one· lhousandUJ the size of a born· ber's Image. Perry told a briefing that the United States has teamed that. on at least one occasion. a Soviet Ml1·25-type fighter made a sue· cessful "look-down, shoot-down" attack which destroyed a ...,get drone the size ot a small flabter plane. He Hid that when the new Soviet system becomes~a~ Uonal. lt wUJ have "al cant 1m pllcatlon1" for t e aur. vlvablllty o( U.S. penetratlnC bomben and tactical fi1hten1 wblcb are believed c1pable or eludiDC Soviet radar by nytai cloee totbe sround. TBE llONlnCANCE of the "look-down. about-down" radar 11 that It la able to dleUnautah t1r11t1 1uch H low·flytng alrpluee from "1round clul· ter:• wblcb confUMa present· 1nerltlcJDndarl. Tba, tbe new •Y•tAlm effec· t1"1J tlhl)AM ... a pl&JM'I abW• tJ to elude detection by lbini doM to the tan.b. .. ·- ' ...... Perry, the Pentagon's top scientist. said the Soviets have ~n conducting many dozena of tests over a period of several years on an airborne radar and missile comblnallon with a "look -down. shoot-down" capability. The United Stales already has this capability In its F-14 and F·l5 fi ghter planes and in its new airborne warning and control aircraft. "WE HAVE EVERY reason to believe they have been suc- cessful," Perry said of the Sov· iet tests. He stressed, however, that none of the tests have been aeainst taraeta aa small u the U.S. crulae ml11Ue. Perry said be believes It would cost the Soviets approxlmetely $50 billion and take about 10 years to develop an effective de· fense againat ap uaault. by some 3,'000 -cruise miasUea launched from B-S2 bombers poaitJoned out.side the range of Soviet in· terceptor aircraft and anti· alrcraCt missiles. UNDER THE U.S. concept. cruise miullea would streak at high subsonic speed• and allltudes of as little as 100 feet toward taraets In the Soviet Union in the event of a war. In the current round o( U.S.· Soviet arms Lalks, the Russians have attempted lo include signifi cant limitations on the range of cruise mlssiles and on the number that can be carried by B·52s or other launching aircraft. But U.S. diplomats re- portedly have retained wide freedom for the United States to deploy such weaoons. Firlll Settles Honey Hassle SACRAMENTO <AP) -Honey containing non -honey sugar has been recalled and a $5,000 settlement has been reached with the distributor. says the Caliromia Department. of Food and Agriculture. The announcement Tuesday said the honey was distributed by Roger Pond of Campbell, In Santa Clara County. It said the Alameda County district attorney ls taklng legal action against the supplier, the H. W. Pilgrim Co. oC Mississippi. It's a Girl! Pen Ptil Gets Big s.,,,.,,..ue t:OERSUND. Norway CAP> -lvan Sealem and Klm Walt.lien. have been pen palt for • year, alnee tvan answered Kim's ad· vertiaement in a 1mall newa~per. For 12 monthl lvu has written to Kim In Perth, Australia, t.ellln1 about personal tnterate and activities as teen·••• boys do. Thi• month, theJ decided to meet, and Klm new from Au1tralla to apend Chrillmu ln NorwQ with Ivan. But It came u a aurpriae to Iv• wbla the Kim Wdbln be met tumed out to be a lMD·aae altl. "It wu quite • 1boclc. I must bave loc*ed UU a fool ..... I suddenly faced t.b1a nlc., 1m1Un1 ad U..t1 .~ strl '8 tnet ef me aaldnc lf 1 was Ivan. All the Ume I tboqM Kim wu a Australian boy," lvan, 11, told an Oslo newspaper .. • .... _. NOW YOU CAN· HAVE 2-HOUR EYEGLASS SERVICE -ALS0- 24 to 48 Hour Service ON MOST Bl-FOCAL PRESCRIPTIONS ALL INSURANCE PROGRAMS INCLUDING MEDI-CAL WELCOME a:... $10 00 REBATE ... o.::O ITOHS WILL GIVE • OF THE·COST OF AN EYE EXAMINATION RECEJVED WITHIN THE PAST 3 MONTHS• TO PURCHASERS OF PRESCRIPTION LENSES' FRAMES OR CONTACT LENSES AT ANY SAV·ON OPTICAL COOER. • AtlY OPT1CAl mSCM"TIOll CAllCCUO CN(a( GI •CIJ'T. 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PAITY ''NOISEMAKERS" ·:mo 99c ~~ hhU ~-~~0 A 1 ' Place To Shopl O>o 0 w1n8S&Uquors FOITHEPARTY Fluorigard (; J & B RARE SCOTCH . ..., 1.11 um 15.49 Sam Sykes BOURBON , . ... 1.75UT'U 8.59 Seagr..S 1 CROWN WHISKEY ..... 1.11 UTD 10.89 Ancient Age BOURBON .. P1tOOf 1.75 UTtl Cutty Sark SCOTCH 9.99 .. ,.., . 1.75 UTD 16.35 Early Times SCOTCH .,.. L75UTU 9.99 ANTI-CAVITY DENTAL RINSE. With Fluoride. Lip Quencher The Motatur1ztng Up1Uck. Tl\lt's Kind~ llpa . CUllOl ' 'Condition' ' SHAMPOO The beauty prescription for troubled hair ~ 11..1.29 Sllluel E. Webster WHISKEY '°'775UTD 6.79 BLOUSES . .. . ~?t . ':· , ',;--I\ ~ . ·: ~ An assortment of Canadian Reserve styles 1n all new ' 1 ' and exciting Spong colors . 1.75 uru • . u. _,rt 110 LIOUOtt ~T:. Im ............. ws. ...... mlf'*'-,.., .. DU-. 4111ewr...1r.. ....... --~ "*" 1 COLD" ''Mister'' New Year "•w Fabric Softener Q1sPOuaLe ruLe ENSEMBLE Cork Puller ~ sHeers • , .. _. • r wr ,.... ii!!=~~"!"!!:~~~~_, :-: 49~-: =-D C 1.49a ........ llldlll Am-PEllPllAIT PUMPIPIAY ·~-2.19 J . . .. . AJ -t OAllV PILOT _ORA~ COU_N_TY __ ,. ' t P&ra1nedics OK'd To · Test for Alcohol c,rUfifld peram ·~ ~·u petted clr\11\k n drl\'er u r Which become rf tl\.tt Jan I lord th4t limo required for a court appearance can DOW try the allernatJ\i of the wr1U.tn 1lal4tment. " OfONr1 11ld the defendant can 1eek 1 reaular court t.rlal tr he l• dl1111U.nec1 with the d clak>n reached ln a declaratJon pro-c~urt Otlwr Veblcle Code chan~ lDclude: -Pn>hlblUon from highway opetaUon or any vehicle ortitnal· ly manulactlU'~ ••a motorlled bicycle whlch has been modJlled ao th•l It no lont r conlorm1 to that deflnlUon. -A lion deaUn1 with lbe removal of vehJcles from private property waa amended to aut.hortze Police to have a vehicle re· 190V d from private property tr it hu been involved In and let\ at th 1cene of a trafnc accident Class Opens Doors O CC Offers Court R eporting Mudent.s ~•lhn1 to p )' u So!\ btoaJlh (("(' nd provid their o~ n machJ.nl' could be OJ>t!nimt the door to a ureer that 1tv lhtm tbc abtlJty Lo earn 135.000 a year, an Orunge Coa!ltt Colleae analysis lnd•cates Ofrit'utl.s sa.1d the gateway to sue cess could be through the college's M achlne Shorthand Court Report In& Program which begins 1U. spnng classes Feb 5 Reg1s trat1on for s pring classei. runs Jan. 10 through Feb 9 in the OCC Adrrusslons Building. AdmUtee~ pay SS a nd prov1 de their own stenotype machine. Offic•als said the first target of stu dents In lbe program lhal began last year Is to attain entry-level secretarial s kills or 80 words per minute. The next s tep in the machine shorthand course calls for a speed or 120 words per minute -the ex· ecutlve secretary level. OCC officials said three avenues or shorthand re porting are open to the determined student: -AN EXECUTIVE secretary position in the legal or medical field Salary range is $700 to St.JOO a month with shorthand speeds or 120 to 140 words a minute. -A managem ent position. "With a combin ation or ma· ch ine shorthand s kill and further management training, the individual will have taken the shortest route to becoming a manager," said Denny Louie, coordinator of the OCC pro. gram. -A court reporter position. A • statement report.er earns Sl,077 to : _ $1,343 a month with a shorthand I Transfer S tude nts STUDENTS GAIN SKILLS Court Reporting Cla11 Set speed of 130 to 150 words a minute. A deposition reporter earns $1 ,414 to $1,705 a month wiUl a speed of 150 to 180 words a minute. -A court reporter earns $22,180 a year plus transcript fees or $600 to $800 a month. Shorthand speed is in the ra nge of 200 to 225 words a minute. ·'Today the lield is wide open and it's open lo both women and men," Louie said. PHONE 968-3329 FOR LOW-LOW PRICES! , -A sectJon which ruled that vehicles auapect.ed ol Involve rnent ln a. hit-and· run accident could be Impounded ror 24 houn ha~ been amended to provide for a 48·hour hold. -A new aec:llon provides that no driver or a private vehkk 1ball operate any radio •Y•tem lntended to make sound audlblt' ouylde the vehide when It ia beinc operated on a highway f,Ul)esa the t )'•tem la beinl uted to req&ae1t auiatance or warn other traffic of a h11zard. YOUR DAILY PILOT CAN BE RECYCLED. Orange Coast College operates the official recycling center for Costa Mesa. 556-5981 "''"' .. ~ ........ T ..... e.w~ ·•fG• ....... ~ ,.,,.,.... UCI ColUUleling Slated Prospective transfe r students throughout California will receive priority OD·campus counseling al UC Irvine Tuesday, Jan. 16, and again on June 13 and Aug. 14. " Ing. financial aid. handicapped stu· dent services and the Educational Opportwlity Program ( EOP> may be obtained from om ces in the lobby or the AdministraUon Building. ~ I ·~·-... ··-- Unde r graduate academic counselors will be available on a walk-in basis from 9 a .m . to 3 p.m. at UCI's Schools of Biological Sciences. Engineering, Fine Arts, Humanities. Physical Sciences and Social Sciences; the Program in Social Ecology and the Department of In- formation and Computer Science. Counselors also will be available at the Graduate School of Admin.istra · lion a nd the Office of Teacher Edu- cation. Information on admissions. hous· In addition, counselors in UCl's Of· fice of RelaUons with Schools and Colleges will be available m the Ad· ministration Building lo provide in· formation on the transferability of comm unity college credits and t.o direct visitors to appropriate offices. Students are asked lo bM ng copies of transcripts from their high schools and colleg~ they attended. More information on UC l's on· campus counseling opportunity for transfer students may be obtained by contacting the Office of Relations with Schools and Colleges at 833·5518. OC Dimes Drive Opens Orange County's annua l March of Dimes Coin Can campaign Is under way Campaign volunteers, working with police Explorer Scouts, high school key clubbers and Keywanettes are distributing coin cans to theaters, shops. restaurants and markets in communitiet. throughout the county. f'unds raised by the campaign will be used to support birth defects pro- grams in Orange County. Campaign organizers said key pro- jects include prenatal nlgbt clinics at the\JC Irvine Medical Center. testing at the faclllty for the loss of heartng In the newborn and nutrition and health education In the primary and secondary sehool grades. Pocket Budget Books Available Orange County's public infonna· lion office now has available free of charge copies of the county's 1978·79 pocket budget. Prepared by the co unty's ad mlnlstratlve office, the document analyzes the county's $544.2 mJlllon budget and reflects on the impact or ProposlUoo 13. SAFARI! Mactlo men too old for motor radng? Try what may be the ulllmete thrill! The real thing In Africa from '4.000. Inc ludi ng ai r lntercont1non1a1 CALL 644-94 J 0 The largest budget a.Jlocatlon, $149.t million, goes to the Human Services Programs. Others include Envi ronmental Manage ment with Sl30.7 million and Community Safety with $97.5 million. Copies of the pocket budget can be obtained from the public information office. 10 Civtc Center P laza. Santa Ana. [,_L_M_. eo __ v_n_.,,) IN,ORMI In Ill• DAILY PILOT . f . , . • .... 7 DAY ra<>GllJ.MAIU 1-YEAR PARTS AND HOME SERV\CE tt, I t l ... t • r f t' - J i "'· .. • . • . . :L=O=C:A:L:/:C~ONS-:::~U=M==E=R:::=:=:::::::::=::::::-------------------------------------------------~w.ctr1:.::.:_.,:::;Y~·o=*=oe1=m=~~,~~·~1111:.:. __ -:;.imiP~o~AM.~vN..oT AJ• 'l'w&tit Memories tatisties Ag Book Cost Up Gift of Cake A uthor'• Kin Shares Anecdotes Pope Greets Workers ly Aantra L YINISI.. ............. He alt.a wttb bAI tw..d ~ ht, cup or , .. ••d tn1 TollhouH tookiH, rldla1 a merry lllulaalppl Rher or II ark Twaln IMCDOtabtlia Utat '8 IOmtSO~-· Cynl c.iem.., '-·\I•""*': a m11u::io9 editor and pub&ber and • llJ.l9CIUriaa too BUT P'llt8T ANO toremon, he la Mark Twaln'1 U\lrd coualn. tw c~ l"t'moved. • man wbo bu rtddl'n tho coauaua of tbe creator of Tom Sawyer and Huck Finn lo batf a ttnlut'J ol comfort and l\m. And be I.a tM suidil\I Uebt behind the lntefnaUonal Man Twain Sodety, •man wbo kwea to delve into hil ramoua ,... lative's hljlnk1, humor and bumani\,y. "He atwaya d.reued la ..Ute, aa you know," Clemens u.ld at a press cooterence at Hunttnitoa Beach's central library whll• visiting h1I IOD Sam and h1I wife, ol ms El T\alipao Ave., Founlaill Valley. , CLEMENS WASSPaEADING the goepeJ of Mark Twain u spoken by Samuel La~fnborne Clemens (AKA Mart Tw ) "He bad that e ...... like DOM and magnlfioent mane of halr." The anecdotes gleaned over the decades of swapping Twain stories with bundreda around the globe who knew Tbe Great Man are filed away preclaely la h1a mind. Clemens wu about knee-hilb, at 9 yean old, to Twain's wtilte suit pantalei when be first met the author in the Jut year of Twain's life "BE DIDN'T PLAY down to children. He treated them as adults," says Clemens. presld· 1ng at tea In a library con· ference room. · "He was so humar .he had land, Water Swap OK'd ! For U tility SAN DIEGO CAP> -The Department of lhe Inte rior has approved a land-for-water swap that will supply Colorado River water to the San Diego Gas & Electric Co. Sundesert site near Blythe for future power plant cooling. The water plan will provide SDG&E up to 34,000.acre feel of water per year, enough to cool a two-unit nuclear power plant similar to lhe Sundesert Nuclear fa cllity suspended last May. "The exchange will preserve • the proposed Sundesert site for :' future power plant use in trade for wilderness land the govern· ment desires to own," Frank OeVore, the uUlily's vice presi· dent ror government.al affairs, said Tuesday Interior Department endorse· ment of the water plan was re· quired to complete the land ex· change agreement between the utility and the government. San Diego Gas & Electric purchased 6.400 acres near Blythe and holds another 10,000 acres for water rights. DeVore sald subslllutlon of other desert areas for protection by the federal government will preserve the Sundesert site for future use. W ASHJNGTON (AP) -Tbe A1rlcullure DAILY PllDI' a ASSIFIED ADS M2•M78 Departmmt put It.a ID· Eacb of tbe cakel, filled wttb r...._ ud nual book ol atatlltlct on ctlrul fruit, wu accompanied by a Cllriltmu card aale lw 91. a price well from tbe pope. wltbln Presldent_:::;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;~ Carter'• wap ud price formula. La1t year'1 venlon of "Agricultural St.atiltia" cost $5. 75 for lbe paperback volume. The price for the 1978 edlUoo la up about 4.3 percent. BUT OVER the longer haul, the price or the 605·page volume has risen almost as dramatically u many other items on lhe market. The 1972 edi· Uoa, for example, coet $3.25, meaning that the book's price bas risen about 85 percent ln six. years. • Splral allced fOf HIY MfVlng • Honey 'n Spice Glaze • Cooked 30 hours t'-""ln[ /1 • Natlonwkie ahlPiMng Mf'Vtce H rte vr'~ 11Ch:: • • • • Full aefVlee Delicatessen ~ey . old Wof1d cheese shop • 54 •Sondwichosoogo. ~ g!!v«!\~"'M~~~S ORDER YOUR NEW YEAR HAM ••• NOWI l7M L COAST HWY., C..... .. ..._.PHOMI 61MMI J4'01 IA YM<*P WAY .. a TOIO ID., & TCMIO, flHOt9 t J7.J112 1906' llACH •YD ............. HUNnM6TOM llACH. '**I MMl11 AllO~ 0.-..."*'e.n... ........... '*"°' Mol9I ~ Published annually' 1lnce 1938, the book ln· eludes ''Up·lo·date in· rormalion on acriculturu production, ~ ............................................ ~ prices, supplies, con·-:;.;=:::=:=:=:=::;::;;:::;;:::;;:::;;:::;;:::;;=:=::;::;;:::;;:::;;:;::;;:;::;;:;::;;:;:::;;====; sumption, costs and in· D.ily "'9t ..... Piiie. HIS TALES CENT£A ON MARK TWAIN'S LIFE Author'• eou.ln, Cyrtl Clemen•, 78 such great understanding," the elderly desceodant said, indicat· ing that Twain's cynical side was probably a dour spoof spoken and written ln jest. "He inherited that from hl5 mother. She often had the task of drowning litiers of kitt.eos. She wouldn't put it off on the menfolk, but she drowned them in warm milk. raised ripples on both sides of the Atlantic Ocean. "He fell lnt.o bad company." says Clemens. Twain's chronicler tells of three little girls who accoeted the author. .. Are you Mark Twain. the famous humorist?." they asked as Twain lounged in a chair crossing the Atlantic on a ship. "He nodded," says Clemens. come," the department said in announcing ita latest publication. THE tJSVAL produc- tion figures for crops, from apples to wheat, are included. Some or the more olf·beat bits of information, ln cue you are preHed for New Years' conversation toplct, include: -A crate of asparagus weighs ap· proximately 30 pounds. -IT TAKES about 21.1 pounds of milk to make one pound of but~ ter. -Albania produced 17,000 metric tons of oata in 1977. A metric ton is 2,204.6 pounds. -Sugar output in Mauritius dropped to 715,000 metric tons tn - Dr. Flanzer likes to keep everything straiqht. 'Mlk:h is the only way you'd like your dentist's pitch. And since Or. Flanzer betieves in playing the percentages. there's a good chance you'll score big; a compktte cour1e of dental treatment for a lot lesa. Want to find out the score? Act T.., C4 ,_ .. A.p, ....... 642-0112 Dr. Arnold H. Flanzer, DDS 370 L 17tlt Street Costa Mesa ''MANY PEOLPLE THINK he was an athiest. But I doo't 1bold with that," Clements lectured. "THEN BE FUNNY for us," lhe girls said. For tbe first time ln bis life Twain reportedly was stumped fManaaswer. 1977 from 731,000 lo 1976 • .._ ___________ ....., ____________ _ "He w .. buried. after all, right out of a handsome red brick Presbyterian Church." The old man who has hob- nobbed with every president since Teddy aoo.e.ell due to u poeiUon as head of the llarlt Twain cult say1 be liked them all. -TBE AVE&AGE-;:::::=::=:====================================:=:::::;::==~ number ol colonies of Includ e d lo Clemens' pouessioos is a set of Rmsian translations sent to bim by the late Soviet teader Anasta.- Mlkoyan. Indeed, Benito Mu ssolini, Italy's World War II dictator, was the first pretlfdent of the Mark Twain Society. which One of them, however, the late President Calvin Coolidge, COO· fessed lo never having read Twain's famous book "Tom Sawyer", Clemens recalled. Traffic Study Win.s Newport Approval A traffic study for a proposed 70,000-square.foot office complex near Orange County Airport bas won approval from the Newport Beach Planning Commission. The vote means the firm of Albert Auer and Associates can proceed with requesting building permits if no appeal to the de· clsion comes within 21 days. The proposed project consists of four two·atory buildings oo Orchard Drive adjacent to the Newport Beach Golf Coune. Planning commissioners Imposed one restriction on the pro. ject. They voted not to permit occupancy until the intersections of Bristol Street North and Campus Drive, and MacArthur Boulevard and Campus Drive, have been improved. Improvements are under way by slate and city agencies. honey bees lo lhe United States in 1977 was 4,318,000. No informa- Uon wu provided Qn bow maQY bees JJved in the colonies. -About 12.447,000 case of sauerkraut were prOduced in the Uniled States in 1977. -THE P RICE of milk sold by d a iry farmers in the Black Hills or South Dakota averaged $9.58 per 100 pounds jn 1!117. -Oregon produced 11,400 tons of filberts tn 1977. a cracking good crop compared to 1976, when ony 6 ,950 tons were produced. mOSE WHO want to order the new statistical yearbook can send $6 to: Superintendent of Docu· menls. U.S. Government Printing Ofrice , Washington, D.C. 20402. The department ad· vises to "please Include your zip code" wiUl your address and money. Great 'In' Pr•Stvled Wigs r,,_L ... '-•• All At Super Prices! :r.,.,-_,... Shown are just 3 of many styles to choose from ... All on sale today! Choose from "Wiidfiower" . .. a fluffy Disco Look. "The Lady'' di'liil~ ... short and versatile, .. Suzy". iiiMil~~ ..... ... with fluff up backl · Wigs so carefree and convenient you'll want more than onel Come In and try on on e of these exciting fashionable styles today! Sale ends Saturday P.M. If you bought a new suit without shopping the ads in the Daily Piiot, you lost both time and money. The very latest styles in clothing for the whole family are advertised regularly in '"-Daily Pilot. The best place to buy or sell along the Orange Coast, is the DAILY Pll.O T - ' A eeYearof Home Federal Suns e ne Plus: 4 easy-to-keep New Year's resolutions Start your year in the sun with a FREE 1979 planning calendar from Home Fed- eral. Beautiful 11" x 9" full-color photo- graphs of California in the sun with gener- ous spaces for each day's notes. There is a limited supply available through January 10th, so we ask that you visit us soon and only take one per family please. ) I will double my money in less than 9 years. You can. With Home Federal's 8% investment certificates. A $1,000 minimum balance is required, but there is no upper limit on how much money you can deposit. The chart below shows the attractive possibilities. I will start building my own retirement fund. If you're not covered by a pension plan, you really should start your own. It's easy, with Individual Retirement Accounts a nd Keogh plans. They allow you to accumulate funds for retirement while enjoying excellent tax advantages. Visit any Home Federal office for all the details. And, make sure you ask about the new Defined Benefit Keogh plans-where you can set aside up to $14,900 a year-with a minimum amount of paperwork. DOUBLE YOUR MONEY IN 8 YEARS 8 MONTIIS WITII OUR Mt INVESTMENT CERTIFICATF.s INITIAL BALANCE IN SW> 8 YEARS Annual Interest' DEPOSIT 8 MONTHS' 8.33% Annual Yield 1 $ 1,000 $ 2,001 S-10 year term $ 5,000 $10,006 $1,000 minimum balance $10,000 $20,013 'Federal regulations require a substantial interest rorf~- ture for earty withdrawal of term accounts. Interest la compounded daily and computed on a 365-day basis. 'Yearly earnings If Interest 11 left In account ror one year. 'This amount is ba.sed on leaving the principal and inte«st in the account for ahe fuU tmn. Your $3 Billion Family Fmancial Center I will figure out a way to earn some interest on those dollars in my checkirig account. A $1,000 balance in a 514% savings account at Home Federal entitles you to Money Mover service. With it, you can shift your checking dollars to your Home Federal savings account and back again with a phone call. While the dollars are at Home Federal, they earn 514% interest. / Money Mover-it's a real money maker. I will earn a lot of Interest-fast. Home Federal has a short-tenn investment that's Jong on profits. It's called the T-Certiflcate and it pays high interest and high yield in 26 short weeks. There's a $10,000 minimum deposit required to get started. Remember, the Home Federal T-Certiflcate earns 114% more tha n comparable bank certificates, and interest is paid from the date of deposit to date of with· drawal. Federal regulations require substantial interest penalty on early withdrawal of term accounts. Eom " lot of Interest-fast. Visit Home Federal for details on this guaranteed Investment today! Savina• deposited by the 11th of the month earn from the lat If held to quartr1 end. HOME FEDERAL S\.VINGS of San Die .. go ............... ....., . . ... Huntington Beech Office: 2111 Main St~ -938-8511 Westminster Office: 15091 Golden West Street-898-~ Irvine Office: 4543 Campus Drive -752·6161 San Juan Capistrano Office: 32039 Camino Capistrano -493-0601 Santa Ana Office: 17th and Main Street-835-4338 Seal Beach Office: 1350 Pactftc Coast Hwy-(714) 898-3481 (213) 596-5576 Home Federal Sevtngs and Loan Attodation of Sen Diego . ,._ . ... .. . .... .. . ----- - i l f. I f • 1 INSIDE; ·smc ·~le ~~~~--~------~------~------~-----I! rts •Movies •T,t levlslon a . ........ Oeoefftbt• r ~m OAll.Y PILOT • • 8J BRAD WILSON (RIGHT) GIVES TIPS TO GLEN CAMPBELL. Success Story Meson's Frustrotions Over? By DAVE ctJNNlNGBAM Of -o.llY """' ...., Fin month.I ago Brad Wilaoo was working for $3.30 an hour maJclna playeround balla on a die cutting machine 1n 'en.ta 1r1 .. Tnday he is the creator of his own line of ex· erctse produru, wUJa distributioD throu&hout .the '1ni\ed Stat.ea and Japan. It i1 the classic succe• story, beginning with an \Dl· employed ex-eoll pro sillin& in his earaee tinkerin& with ideas Suddenly, the man's eyes focus oa a simple extension cord. He cuts into ll, adds rope, attaches a pair of handles. and produces his first successful exercise invention, a weieht.ed skip rope SINCE 'DIEN WILSON has patented Cour products and has three other patents pending, each invention designed to help people keep fit. A Tustin-based firm Is manufactur- in& and distributing his producta. The Inventions include (a.) Run Mates. a set of weights held by jogeers. designed lo strengthen and tone the upper body while you run, (b.) Pro Squeeze, hand-held exer<'isen to strengthen the wrists and forearms, (c.) Power Pull. a tubular. spring-type exerciser for the arms and upper body. and (d.) Super Arc Skip Rope. a weighted rope deslened to make a traditional exercise easier and more fun. "It's been• lone dry spell. but it looks like we're gon· na start making some money now," says Wilson. whose royaltiee are just startin& to come in. "WHAT'S KIND OF IRONIC," the 39-year-old Texas native says, "is that the same place where r worked lo m.ake playeround balls eventually served as a &o-between for us to make the deal ln Japan." Wilson moved lo Costa Mesa five years ago, leaving a comfortable job at a San Diego golf course on the urging or a potential business partner. 'l'he partner said he would help Wilson manufacture an invenUon designed to lron out the kinks in a eolrer'• swlng. The device consisted of an elasUc band connected to a belt worn around the waist and lt produced a slingshot ef· feet. workin& on the lower body and getUng golfers to pro- duce more power from their hips and legs. BUT nm DEAL FELL TIIROUGH and Wilson found himself unemployed. It wasn't the first Ume. Since be left West Texas State College lo 1962, Wilson's career has been a series of roller coaster episodes. A competent colleclate golfer, Wilson headed for Phoenix after graduatln& ("The area Just sort of appealed to me"), and it took him only two weeks to land a job as assistant pro at the Sun City retirement community golf club. ButtheJobwaaa'taaclamorouauitsounda. "I was livinl In the cart shed and ln my spare lime I would dhe in the lakes lo retrieve balls for the head pro," Wilson remembers. "I was kind of llvinl( on a shoestring." TB.ROUGH A llUTUAL FRIEND, WU.son wu offered a job by La Jolla teaching pro Paul Runyan. His only duty was lo mainlaln the driving range, but it gave him an op- portunity to work on bis 1ame and get Ups from Gene Lil· See llESAN, Page BZ Dukich Proved His Point'. I Ex-Newport Star Made Most of Fiesta Start By t:aNIE CA.8TIUA> °' .... .,,.. ..... . It h11 beM two Cl')"t 1lnce UCLA's lorcetu.,. rao£b.n MdOft unk lDto the Arizona 11.111Ht but t1te Brul•' bot-to-area\ quarterbeek dtbatt 11 Juat now cetil~ lta ~cond wind. for the tyini touchdown and 42 yardl to set up a field goal. plays he said proved he belonced on a major collece football field nanker who was a teammate of Dukich at· Newport Harbor. was even more biased "I feel he should have been playin& all year." Escher said. ''I think he did a super .. , DON'T THIN& I had to re4eem Job. l thought he was rantastlc. myself." the Newport Harbor HJgh grad "ffe's been walling ror a long lime and1 told the Daily Pilot Tuesday. "I've shown I he used a good chance. Sure. I'm eoing to . BAD n NOT BEEN for hla now·famous "Aw xplet.lve" on nat onal ~levt.sioq and a 10-10 Ue with-Arkansas. Terry Dona6ue's silent switch at the Fiesta Bowl mllhl have been the coaching coup of t.be year. Now. It seems. hit decision to replace Rick Bashore with Steve Buldch has only re- k Ind I ed the controversy that has smoldered since Bashore beat out Bulllcb for the Startin& quarter~ack JOb two years ago. Dukich. a fiflh.year reserve who threw three passes all season. didn't exactly Jet the Fiesta Bowl on fire with his-passing (4·11·2, 61 yards). But he did run 15 yards can participate on this level. C•ubts? be partial to him because he's my team· None, whatsoever. After all the •racUce mate. But l thought he should have gotten experience I had, I knew l wu eoine to go player of the game. J think he proved a lot in and have a good game." or people wrone. those who said he ~ It also convinced him he should have couldn't do rt." , seen more action the past two seasons. Escher, while trying not to hurt his 1 "I never had anything against Rick chances for an extra year or eligibility · Bashore. l think he·s a gOQd quarterback.... next year. did hint at some dissatisfaction the aon of former USC and Chicago bear with the amount or playing time Bukie,h ( great Rudy BuJdch said. "But I felt we've .r~ceived , during the .reeular season. in ( been pretty even since we've been here.• t.'blch the BtUins.lolt three limes. For one reason or another. he was chosen ,. • · ; over me. I wu never told why becaUse our .. ~· ~r. r.,, TRiN«. lr£'SKOVLD have been play- abUIUes are pretty equal." • • ing atdile:inore."' Esl'her s aid ' • ~ / ~ 1 • 'Sometimes • the coaches . didn't use the ERIK ESCHER. a aecond-itrint lJCt;A " ·~ See BtJiClcH, Page BZ Lakers Blow Lead LA Loss Puts West in Shock INGLEWOOD CAP) -New Orl~ans Jan Coach Elgin Baylor could hardly believe it. Neither could Los Aneeles Lakers Coach Jerry West. The Jazz. who had won a grand total of one road game this National Basketball As· socialion seasori, doubled that total with a 125-123 victory over the Lakers Tuesday night. "It's always nice to win on the rQtd," Baylor said In gross un- derstatement. THEN HE ADDED, more re· alislically, "I didn't know if we'd ever win on the road again." Len Robinson's 31 points. in- cludlng a three-point play that gave the Jau a 124-123 lead with 20 seconds left. was the big dif. ference. J ames McElroy added a free throw 18 secoJlda later as New Orleans improved It.a road record to 2-16. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar had a season·high 37 points ror the Lakers. who continued a trend of last-minute losses. McHargue Closing In On Record ARCADIA CAP) -Jockey Darrel McHargue continued h1s charge toward the single.year earnings record by riding thtte winners at Tuesday's opening day of the Santa Anlta meeting. McHargue didn,t fare well in the reatured $59,600 Palos Verdes Handicap. however. finishing fifth aboard 0 Big Al in the race won by longshot UtUe Reb, ridden by Frank Olivares. "l 'VE NEVER SEEN anything like thls in my wbole life." said West. referring to the team's t.end~mcy to blow leads in the closing moments. "I just c&D't believe it. I'm constantly trying to find ways to play the last two minutes of the game. "We just don'l play with ~· fldence late in games. Pro basketball players should be able lo hold onto a bllsket.baU al the end or a garne1 but we · can't." . • Baylor said the victory Should V give the Jau some new lire. "IT'S VER'Y IMPORTAN't ror . our morale and should eive us a lift for the rest or our road trip." he said as his team heads for the fourth game of a five eame swingtoni&htinSeatUe. Los Angeles had led 123-119 with a minute remainlna. but after a Laker turnover. Pete Maravich drove for a layup to cut the difference to two points. Arter Abdul-Jabbar missed a hook shot. Robinson grabbed a missed Jazz shot and scored as Ron Boone fouled him. Then Robinson sank the Cree throw. THE GAME WAS tied at 106 with seven minutes remaining, but Los Angeles built a 121-114 lead with 2: 15 left. The Jazz. however. took cohlrol at that point as the Lakers bec1tme plagued by sloppy ball handling. New Orleans had won but one or tlS last 10 games coming into the cont.est and is now 12·23. Los Angeles. which dropped out or a three.way tie with Phoenix and Seattle for ,the Pacific J:?ivlslon lead. is 21 · 14. , M9W o..1-Cl2SI 1.MA ....... llbl ,, It '- ) ..... , 4 0.0 I ,Ord Aollt-11 I·• JI WllU~ l(tllO • l·I IJ J•-' M•rol<" I s.. It HUOM>fl Mclilroy I 1•J 11 Nl•on C-ro~" \ ~~ u e- hrr•ll 4 M I C•rr ,,_.,, ••• ,,,.. • • ·1 ll Aooucll Orlllln t ~ 0 Prlo Tot•ll U 71.,. IU Tot•ll Sc,.w9 "'Olli~ .. " .. 1 o.4 • I ._,.13 u •10 n • 1·1 ,. .... " 6 1·1 IJ \ , .. ,, > M I ' o.4 1 '1~l11U """"a.ff-71 » JO l'-11S L~....... n JI H ~-·n Tot•I IOu1\ ~ ~rt.tm 1'. Lot-~ ... 11. Foul.Oout Noni>, A-11.* ' .. . \ Barons in Cont rol A I Fountai~ V.all ey's Corey Hubba'rd (52> anc1 teammatt Mugsy Eppelheimer· control a rebound in second round • action of the Orange basketball tournament Tuesday. For swry. see Page 83. , • Little Reb carried 116 pounds and covered the six furlongs in 1 :08 3·5. ffe returned $20.60, $10.40 and $5.80, and finlsh'ed three lengths ahead of Crash Program. ridden by Francisco Mena. Carrying 112 pounds, Crash Program returned $37.40 and $10.20. The show payoff on Bad 'n Big, the favorite ridden by Bill Shoemaker. was$3.80. Will Rams End the.iinX?j McHargue's three winners helped boost his 1978 mounts' earnings to within $54 ,657 or Steve Cauthen's record of $6,150,750 set l ast year . McHargue added $34,365 to his total Tuesday, and has rour more racing days left this year In his attempt to top Caulhen's mark. McHargue won aboard Fan· tastic Girl. $7.40, in the second race: Bold West, SS.80 In the third: and Copper Mel. $13.40, In the fourth. A crowd or 48,000 attended openln& day of the 78-day meet. Malavasi ls Certain U Will Wm ·Sunday ~ • LONG BEACH <AP> -Ray Malavasl says he knows precise· ly how Los Angeles "could lose" to the Wlderdof Minnesota Vi - kings In Sunday s National Foot- ball League playoff game. But forget the possibility. the Rams coach adds. "We could go out and make a whole bunch of mistakes and not be ready to play." Malavasl replied Tuesday when asked how the Rams could lose to the Vikings. Then he said confidently, "lt won't happen." MALAVASI SEEMS certain the Rams will snap Minnesota's playoff jinx over them. and. refreshingly. said he believes his team deserves to be favored. It is -by M touchdown. "f think we are a better foot- ball team," he remarked. "How much I don't know." season that included a 34 17 vie tory over the Vlkin"s. But neither tha\ triumph nor past playoff meetings will llave an • bearing on the upcomins eamc.( he said. "I DON'T THINK whatever~ has happened in the past will moke any difference on Sun· day," he said. "This is another game," Minnesota managed the 1977 playoff upset of the Rams without the services of Injured quarterback Fran Tarkenton. as Bob Lee took over. USC SUrvives Scare by Cal Although he appears quite confident going into the game. the coach cauliQned that over· confidence has hurt the Rams against the Vikings In past playoff games. including last year's 14·7 Mloneoata triumph. LOS ANGELES, 1llll bidding for Its first Super Bowl ap. oearonce. Is 0·4 In playoff.games against the NFC Central's Vi· klngs. * * * 19,000 Tickets Remain Unsold BERKELEY CAP ) - Sophomore cente r Cllrr Robin&on scored 22 points and grabbed nine reboundl to help Southern Cal survive a scare and beat CaUlomla, ~-54, ln a Paelflc-10 buketball game Tuesday ... The Golden Bean, who have Iott aeven ln a row, dominated the ftnt hall.&.. ~_~!Id a 22· 1 l lead when HODllllOfl went to work. &OBINION, BELO IC:Ort1- for the ftnt 11 mtnutet, made three jump shots and paced a 10·0 spree which pulled USC to within 22-21 at the hatr. ll was 2J6.23 early Jn the sete>nd half when Robinson personally outscored Cal 12·2 to 1tve the TroJans the lead for food. use. 2.G in the conference and 6·2 overall, needed another 12·2 spurt midway throuth the hall after Cal climbed to wlthln one, 39·38. •we were able to 1et curr open more lD the Hcond half," aald USC Co1ch Bob Boyd, ·•becauae they played more man ·to-man defense and we were able to move hlm off the low post. ROBINSON, WHO missed h1s flr1t lt\ree shots. then hlt 11 of hi• laat 16. He wu helped by guard Dean Jonea, who did not play In the fint half. but handed out 10 ualsts In the second . ''1 thought Cal dld a very lood Job on u1," Robinson said. "They were aureulve and came atte.r wi. TlMy botbeNd ua but ll WU Ille> • CIM ol our ahota noc dropping." • •• "We played well for the most part." said Cal Coach Dick Kuchen. "I don't think they were nat: we Just played well." UKlftl " " . .,..._, t 04 IO MIPl•f 1 M t i.Ml!Mfl II 0.1 H lmlll't IM 2 (MflM 4 0.1 I .,...... '°'° 4 WllllMll 7 M • Wlftl•lfl I 0-0 1 Mtl'IWtlll • 0.2 0 J-t 1 0.1 ' Cell ...... llMI Gnr~t Sl""ttOft ffW , ..... 11 0.w1\ Sc,_lllfl ._.. __ rotell ft It 111 • , .. 14 ... , tt J 0-0 • 1 , ... 0 0.0 0 OM 0 I 0.t t ftt(t.ltM T61 .. t I' l ·I " "-ftlllM ~.fHI , ......... TOltl lo-11\1 USC ~. (411 IJ. "°"'" tvl Heftt, A ,200, \ Admlttlns that taking Min· neeota too lightly may have been the Rarrus· undoing In the last loss to the Vlk1n11. Malavasl said: "We let down. no doubl about It. Tl'lat'1 not going to happen this year." A lonitime Kama· 1111stanl, Melavaal WH elevated to the he'd coachln1 job when Georae AHen waa rtred In the preseuon. Malavul led the Rama to thetr 11ixth straight Western title in a LOS ANGELES <AP> -It Is ~ doubtful the Rams-Vikings Na-~ llonal Football Conference playoCt game in ~ Angeles wtll , be locally televised since almost , 19.000 Ucketa remalned Unt '1 today, a Rama' spokesm1n said. All 71,414 tickets In the Coliseum. •Ile ot Sunday'• came, would have to be told for th• NFL local tetevlston blackout to be lifted. The deadll• for aellina all the Uckets and Utung th9 ban is t p.m. Thursday. , i, r ,, I Jll DAl1.Y PILOT I --- r A C.O.Ule Aeport From the Wotld of Sport• Special Basketball Hui For Girl Roi d L gal .. rom AP Obpal(l!H W ASJONGTON -Th ft'dcral t:O\'t"mmt!nl m has madf! llJI dttllton U1t do nc>t tuave to make thfllr hl8b 1thool a•rls' bubtball lHma play un~r the '•mt' rul as the boya' tum• Hulth. Educat1on and Welfare S(·c·~tary Joseph A. Califano Jr Id~ d•> hla dep.&rtmt'nt 1 reJecUn1& com platnll lhat C'hool!4 dtscnmlnate agatn•l fe male stud nu ir th.-only bukt>lball proanm lht'y offorii. the 11x.pl1ycr, hoU l"OUrt V81'1l'l)' "Wheth r ~C'hool hu 1x Phl}N. hHlr court balkt'I ball 1-s t'ntil"t'ly up to 1t. LI 1u O\t>rtll .ithlt'tlc proa1am lli f'On d1,rnmm11tol')." th«" flt:W chlt'f :..i1d ·ax s;IJy,•r b.thketbull has been 1J popular womt:n' s port m t\t-Vl"rul statn 111nrc.-('tlrly 111 ltH.' c<·ntury. and lt1 iJtill pl1yed tn Mah chool1 In Tennf'!>s<••·. Iowa, Arluuuw. u11d Oki henna rn.:h srhools m other 11talt'i> htavo ahlltt.'<1 theu progJ"am In 1'1!<'t'nt yr rs lO lh1· trudlt1onully male. fu ll court v n1on with l tW' player"'! 1''t•n\m1i.l .irou~ .and other ha\c cllumed that IJmltlo(l high srhool nthletes to six player bu~k\'lbull 1s tllf'&:lll 1unct- 1t VIOlatl'ti th" MCC'hOD or the 11712 1-;ducaUon Act thul pro- hibits d1 Nimlnat1on oo th~ bas1s of e.cx in schools rcct·lv mg fedt'ral aid But Cahruno ltii!ld rt•dt>ral r('£Ulation • does not n-qu1n· that 1tt\) partJcuJnr sport be orfen.'<1 or that the s ame sport:, be offerod to boys and girls It does not requ1re !i.chools to om.·r Jd •nhcul vun11ons or \he ame sport .. ,..-----Qtte•~ ., ·~ ... ----- Detroit Pistons Coach Dick Vitale, after his team had lost lo Milwaukee. 143-84, srud : "There were ht· tie kids out there lOnaghl who would have played NBA basketb311 for a dollar . Too many guys In this league don't want to play. They play on past credentials. It's a disgra~. We should all take our checks for tonight and donate them to charity. To make those poor peo. pie sit through that, it totally rips you inside. What's wrong with the American way?" .O~ .. lrida. IJC~A Raalcftl 1·2-3 The top twenty teams in The Associated Press college basketball poll, with firsl·place votes in parentheses and season records through Sunday: t. Duke (•16) 6·0 11. Indiana St. 8-0 2. Notre Dame (4> 4-0 12. Texas A&M 9-2 3. UCLA 6·1 13. Kentucky 4·2 4. Michigan St 4·1 l4. Nevada-Las Vegas 8·1 s. North Carolina 6-1 15. GeoTeetown. D.C. 7-1 6 Jllinois 9--0 16. Marquette 6-1 7. Louisiana St. 7-0 17. Lone Beach St. 7-0 8. Michigan 4-1 18. Kansas 5.3 9. N. Carolina St. 7-2 19. Syracuse 6·2 10. Louisville 7·2 20. Arkansas 6-0 ,..., .. ., J43 .. 4 ~••• Callefl DU9resee Detroit Coach Dick Vllale called his team's m 143·84 loss to Milwaukee "a disgrace to basket· ball," aft.er the Bucks came within four points of the motSl lopsided resllll m the history or lbe National BaskP.tball Assn .... Walter Davi.a scored 31 points. including 15 in the fourth quarter, to spark lbe Phoenb Suns to a 106-102 come-from·behind victory over the Denver Nuggets . . . Lloyd Free scored 36 points to lead the San Oiego Clippers to a 115·109 triumph over the Chicago 'Hulls . . Larry Kenon led San Antonio on a 12· point unanswered scoring romp in the second half to power the Spurs to a t24·Jll win over Atlanta ... Moses Malone scored 32 points and grabbed 26 rebounds to lead the Houston Rockets to a 109-102 win over the Kansas City Kmgs . Wes Unseld came back arter missing three games with a rib injur y and delivered his best performance of the season as he led the WashinJ(ton Bullets to a llJl:f-104 victory over lndJana . Slz 1'fflllo• Dollar QB Houston quarterback Dan Pastorin! will be [il almost as well-equipped as the Six Million 4. • Dollar Man. with the exception of bionic vision when the Oilers play the New England Patriots m an AFC fierrufinal SunJay. There wlll be an impact soften- ing flak Jackel designed to protect broken ribs, a braca to guard a strained knee and a pad to soothe a sore elbow In Saturday's AFC tilt between the visiting Denver Broncos and Pittsburgh Steelers, re· serve quarterback Norris Weetie may see action for the lironcos. Hls scram· bling talents will be used to try to neutralize Pittsburgh's pass rush ... Dallas Cowboys Coach Tom Landry is worried about overconfidence as his team bas been tabbed a 14 -point favorite over the Atlanta Falcons an their NFC game Saturday in Dallas ... J•ck Patera, who guided the Seattle Scahawks to a 9-7 record, has been u-.011" named National Football League coach of the year . . Miami bufety Rick Volk is retiring after l2 seasons in the NFL. GllQ~•' TtDo Goal• Pote~r l•laaurs pair or power·play goals in the first per10d and , New York Islander C1ark Gillies scored a Iii Bryan Trot.tier set a tPam record for con- secutive games with points as the Islanders routed the Toronto Maple Leafs 5-1 Tuesday night ln Na- tional Hockey Lea~ue action. Elsewhere Nick FoUu end Pien-e Plante scored after two Atlanta tumoven and Mike ,JWcEwen beat a screened Daniel Boacbard with a is.root ,;lap shot lO give the Ne"' York Rangers a 5-3 triumph over the Atlanta Flames Te~lde~ Radio Following are the major sports events on television today. Ratings are: ./ .t ./ ./excellent; ./ .t .t worth watching; ./ ./ fair; I forget It. 7:30p.m.,Channel9 ./ ./ ./ NBA BASKETBALL: Lakers at Warriors. Announcers: Chick Hearn, Pat Riley. The Lakers have had their problems this season. But not llke the Warriors without Rick Barry. Los Anoeles Is battling Seattle and Phoenix for the Pacific Division lead but the Golden State warriors are well dOwn the ladder In fifth place. OTHER TV 10 p.m . (5) -COLLEGE BASKETBALL -The UCLA Bruln5 meet Stanford In a Paclflc-10 game. ' Taped. Mike Walden rcPorts. RADIO Hockey -Los Angeles Klnos at Pittsburgh, 5: so p.m • .c. KRLA (1110). Bo Miiier, Ptter Weber repart. Daskett)all -Lakers at Golden State In Oakland, 7:20 p.m., KLAC (570). Chick Heam, Pat Riiey repart. UCLA at Stanford, 8:05 p .m ., KMPC (710). Frid' Hessler, Bob Stlnbrlnck report. TENNIS I FOOTBALL I BASKETBALL =-_C_o_Uege, STEVE &UKICH RICK BASHORE F.._..P.,,eBJ DUKICH ••• personnel we had. We s urety had Rose Bowl potential and 1 ullnk we showed th al Monday.•· Bashore, the Edison High grad who has started all but two ' games in his sophomore and Junior years. round himself Wl- comfortable in Buklch's spot on the sidelines but rooted for his traveling roommate. ERIK ESCHER ,.,....p,..eaJ MESAN ••• lier and other touring pros who frequented the La Jolla course. Arter a year and a half he scraped together $6,000 and ven· tured into the PGA pro tour himself. He kept at 1t for six months. but the only money he earned was $600 for writine an article bought by Golf Digest entitled, "Down the Up Staircase. or Whal It Takes to Go Broke on the Pro Tour." Then it was back to San Diego. where he launched into Cree lance wrlUne whHe worktna at the Stardust Country Club. He did a series of articles ror Par Magazine about golfing with celebrities, and played roundc:; with Lawrence Welk. Billy Graham, Jack Lemmon. Glen Campbell andothers. BE GAVE ALL THAT UP to roncentratc on his inventions. none of which was really making much or a hit with the marketing world. When the Costa Mesa deal col- lapsed, Wilson was reduced to JOb bunting again, and took the position as a manual laborer making playground balls. The big break came when Divajex. which manufactures the Blqe Ice Chest products. s igned him to produce a line of Brad Wilson Exercise Products. This might be the place to say. "The rest is history.'' but the rest isn't hislOry. He isn't rich and famous yet, and it remains to be seen iC the Divajex deaJ will change bls U!e. "But it looks very promlslng.'' Wilson says. ''It's been a rough road at time, just trying to put bread on the table. but it's grati· fying to see theS<? things finally starting to take off." Vilas Nips Aiistralian MELBOURNE. Australia CA P> -Argentinian ace Guillermo Vilas s truggle d through hJs n rst·round match ln the Australian Open today. Vilas. the top seed, was kept on the center court for nearly three hours before beating little known Australian Terry Rocavert. 6-3, 6-7, 6-3, 7·6. "I wanted to play throughout the whole game but it's just one of those things." Bashore said. "Steve was playing well and I was JUSl glad for him. "I RAVE ALL next year to play. probably another bowl game and Steve deserved a chance to play." Bashore added. "Which is what bowl games are for. One or the main reaaons we decided oo comlng to the Fiesta Bowl was to give the seniors a chance to eo out with a win." Buklch was told he would start in the Fiesta Bowl the week after UCLA's loss to USC that cost the Bruins a shot at the Rose Bowl. Bashore said he was informed four days before the Christmas Day eame and though the t eam was to ld Christmas Eve, Escher said the players could see It coming. But all Buklch cared about was eetUng..one last chance. be it for benevolence or strategy. "Thal touchdown was the best reeling l've had in a long time. I'll tell you." Buldch said. "It re- minds me of my high school days. When lsawthegoalllneandnode· fenders in front or me. l just want- ed to aet there as quickly as I could. "It makes it all worthwhile. to tell you the truth." ADVENT 710- Soonen OK From AP Dltpatchft CO RAL GABLF.S, Fla. -A bus car- ryina the Oklahoma rootball team rrom a practJce field to their howl collided with an automobile Tuesday nlaht. but none of the athletes W85 hurt, poUce sald. The bus driver. Willlam Cra(ner. employed by American Sigbtaeeln1 Tours. was cited by polka for runnina a red light. Anna Novo. 53. the driver of the car. was reported in good condition at a hospital. Polite said her vehicle was totaled. The Soooers were en route from a Univenity of Mlaml practice field to their Mlaml hotel when the collision oc· curred, poUce aaid. The players were transferred to another bus and returned safely to the hotel, a Q>ral Gables pohce spokesman said . The Sooners will meet the Nebraska Cornhuskers in the annual Orange Bowl football classic on Jan. 1 OMeSa.Eunllp JACKSONVlLLE. Fla. -The days of long, bard·hittlng practices are over for Ohio State's football team, which is pre· paring for its seventh straight bowl ap- pearance. After the Big Ten Conference team's llrst workout in Florida Tuesday. Coach Woody Hayes sa1d t here would be no more heavy drills ror bis 20th·ranked Buckeyes. who face seventh rated Clemson In the Gator Bowl Friday nlgbt. "I don't lhlnk you can hammer. ham- mer, hammer now and get in shape ... said Hayes of the last three practices leading up to the Gator Bowl. "If you do. you'll leave your game rigbl out there." said Hayes, pointing toward the Sandalwood High School stadium. where bis team had just prac· ticed for more than two hours. That is a switch in Hayes' long- standing routine or working his teams long and hard before the 10 bowl ap· pearances they have made in his ?:1 pre vious Ohio St.ate coaching seasons. Pella Sf. Close• Prarflr~ NEW ORLEANS -Top.ranked Penn Slate moved its camp here and im- mediately resumed practices for its ~ugar Bowl meeting with Alabama. the No. 1 challenger for college football's throne. A little more than two hours after their flight arrived Tuesday. lhe Penn State players were on the field for a closed practice session. Alabama was scheduled to arrive Thursday and WlilS holding Its practices on campus. "We close practices not necessarily because we have anything to hide. but because we get a better sense of the at· mospherc without all of the peoplt• around." said Penn Stale Coach Joe Patf>mo Prep Basketball COiiege WHT UK~. C411totnit ,_. NtV.clt·""""J:u~ JoM Mete)/ JHkto<Wltle 14, Pm\llllf ... n flOtkU ... Mt--llUl Ml\\IUlllPI '1, ~t $1tle .. w ... 1'0<9'1 ti, U~wllle IC> Mo•V•" $l ... ti, l/lr91N .. tlgh lohOol ......,_,.... "'"' ..... MlnlOftVi.jOIS,E_,..,, ... c;.,..., O..w to. AMM!m .. ~tH 4t, \JftlwfWIY .. aru ... P«lftu .. ...i..v1 ... , _ _. "'"'" .... Me<I•" )1, l'ow•y U Mt<lhOfl t:I, MofllOO-'Y ICYI )J I< Uflll l\9fon 6ffc h II, CMISIMld .. Monie Vl'tt l!.01 11. ~ oi.o.-110 • • C••wl-». Cel>ill•-Y•lle\' 4t 8onll• VIII• ICY I 11. It•"'°"' ISOIO Am.OOr Yelle¥ U, S..-Oleoo SO ~ .... ,._........ """" ... " Founl•ln Ya11ey .. , lM•• o s ..... , .... •'· t!tlen<lt SJ M.,IM lot, S«vUt '1 !>e••M• .,, Mf9nollt 4l ~ ... Footllll1Sf,C',9ft ........ 1$1 "--'--"·~· O••ncJe S4, a..11-. Q El~ T4, C:OSIA WU .. ....... ,_........... "'"' ..... 81\"°ll Mofll~Y .,, L8 WlllM )4 Ole41• !JI. t'Ultenon U ""'941 , __ , l'lrllllt ... Well•tn •1. (tlltoml• ~ lOWtll n.GM<v\ .. Prep Soccer Newport Harbo r , Irvine. Fountain Valley a nd hos t Huntington Beach won consolation round games aft.er los· ing in the nrst round of the Huntington Beach soccer tournament T~­ day Involving 32 teams. "•......-IN<llT-•~• l'tm._...,. p,_ 3,S...C-1*2 Norw•I~ 3. ~ H•l'bo<' I ••ooe11.0c .... v1ewo IC•"""'1V CLPI 1. P•<•""""'I 0 Garden (;(o .. 2, I rvl,.. I s.ioa1.r, .. o 1. ~wtto ~ """"" I, Fount••" V•ll•v 0 Ml\\IC>fl Yl<oto J. l°"'• 0 l~nl••n v-J Ed91!WOOcl I L..u11nq11< 1, ~rTl\0 l• Ou•n•• I, AM~• O Nol•• O.me 1, l<unl"'OIOfl o..th o 8e11 Ci•r-l, Tonev p,,,.,, t ..... ,. -.. ), C...lllornl•, Le JollU, ~ 1411"2 ll•ll•t. ~" 1 S.C....ROWld P101>e., 3, Norw•I• 1 IC•n...Oy 7. 1(-11 ~lelMO 1. (;¥_.. c;n.,,~ l MIU011n YlelOJ. FoolllillO ....,,,"9t<l.Moln-Vie .. I Nol<tO•me1.L•OutnlaO 8•11Ci•<CllM1.s..l•Ma .... 0 L • ~II• J. ICOH• 0 ~ ... N•wPOrl Het1>0r 2, S... CH',,....I~ 0 ... ,._,.,. 7. Oc..an y..,,.. t "•tftr 1. 0.,...0 ~ ounla.n VAiiey l. l.o¥• 1 £~) ........ K1 Hv .. l1"91on BNUI ), ... ,,~,,,I {.olllorn"' I, Tonn 1'1ne-.O l •ouna H• Ill 1. &.\IC o American Tim Wilkison was upset in the first round by local favorite Allan Stone. Stone took only 85 minutes to defeat the North Carolina teenager, 6·3, 6·2, 6-3. VIDEOBEAM COLOR TELEVISION AT OUR SPECIAL NEW YEAR'S PRICE! Fourth-seeded American Tim Gullikson kept his hopes of qualifying for the Masters nnaJ a live when he disposed of Australian Paul McNa mee, 6·2. 6·2, 1·6. tr Gulllk:son qualifies for the final, it would guarantee him 210 poinl11, enough to move him lnto the top eitht players list and earn him a trlp to the Masters final in New York. lt was u bad day for the Brltish. Robin Dry dale and Jonathan Smith both loat In straight sets. AUlltraUan St.eve Docherty, now living In tho U.S .• dJsposed or Drysdale. 6 3. 6·2, 6·4 1od American Hank Pn11ter bell Smith, 6·3. 6·2. 6·2. Poland' Wojttk F1bok had a mere workout In beattna local youngst.tr David Whyte with I.ht loss or only aeven gamea. ' Catch the Rose Bowl this year on the Advent 710-5 VideoBeam-81 Color Television. At Henry Radio, we've set to task and lowered our price even more for a great Now Year's special. The 710·5 is a big, bnght, brilliant projection T.V. with a giant 5 foot screen (measured diagonally). With Henry Radio and Advent -the Rose Bowt becomes F0011AU IM ITS FtHIST fOlMl MO MOMIY DOWM OM AJIPIOYm c .. n. $68.13 per mont.h tor 4a IT'Onttit. BaM price ot 11996 plut tax. Finance charge te78.24 (14.~APR). Total deferred price '2190.94. Otter good thru ff•b. 28, 1979. .......... .-•--· .... 13 Pll MOMTH I r '" ,. .c_ I I j :· BASKETBALL / HORSE RACING w.dnelday, December 27. una DAILY PILOT •3 ROGER €Aa.£SON \Vinning R41mnerlock Vikes, Barons Move to Semis £8~nct• lit h Sl'hool has bad Its ups and downs ln thlelt inn.-lht• F.aAI optned shop ln I bul In on art-a Uwre bD bttn a consaunl wlMint proaram and thul ' CouC'h Jim W rr n and his wrettl n \Y jr"'o hu.t1 rut 1lut 1& top fb,-ht crtw year·ln and yUr· out In • Aport -,omchn1es rela~ to foott>.U ln term.a ol physical stn·n rth and endurance There ' a. dtfrt'rt•nc:t>, ~ever, and Wal'T'eo explains "'fhl'~ ls no huJdlt> and no blocltiol You're on your owo " I WAftRt· .. 13 VEAL" Vo>lth the £aal only once dJd E~tsnc1a fh11i.h •~ low third Ln lea.sue and lh Eacl re t"yt-1ng b dt to b~H k lealU(' champiOl\.lhlps wilh lhe St' View lA•itflU<' cumpal.:n approaching In January Watrn·n·-. pa .. t t·11.pt<rtt>nce lncludu action In th~ l26 13'1 pound C'I h .. ;tl Norlht-m Colorado Unlvensity ll wai. there that Warren was caught up an a sport which wus so poplllar that ~.400 tumf'd out lo view an tn- tru Aquad match to determine lhe 'll'hool' starling lineup "Wrc>stling Is a cold weather sport tn tM east and mldwest," says WarTen. "The school is the center of activity and everyone goes That's the thing to do and bcholarslups are of prime concern. Programs have been in existence for years with activity geared even to the first and second graders. WARREN "WE'RE BETTER KNOWN throughout the United States than we are al our own cam- ,pus as rar as respect Is concerned. When we were selected for a tour to Japan people at the NCAA rinals were coming up and advising us or thi'lgs to expect and really expressed admiration. But at Estancia and in Southern California, no one seemed too excited." While the Costa Mesa·based Eagles do not perform to sellout crowds, there are many gutifylng aspects to the 1ob for Warren. "One of the besl things is when one of my kids come back lo assist. such as Tom. Foss, Mark Miller, Bobby Morgan and Chuck Kehler They come back to work for a rouple of years and each has done so well. And when others, like Vince Klei!s or Kevin Sloan returns to the wrestling room, not especially lo visit with me, but just be· mg in the WTesWng room with the kids , talking, laug.hing." GRIPES? ONLY that post·season action is geared to in- dividuals and not lo team competition. "A lot of states have team championships and attendance is fantastic," ~ays Warren Warren's philosophy toward wresUing is to gel as much exposure as possible for his athletes, lo incorporate as much variety as possible into the Estancia system. One of the items thal makes the Eagles doubly tough this season is the exposure lo the Japan lour in the summeY· with training under Olympic and Pan-American medalists, such as Athletes in Action Coach Gene Davis, Cornell's Ron Russo, Bobby Anderson and for~er Fountain Valley star Bob Walker "WE TR\' TO SCHEDULE the best in wresUing," says Warren, "because you can su~eed if you really go after it. We could schedu1e things so we could go fi ve years without losing a match, but are you ever going to get better that way?" Prep wrestling in Southern California never has and perhaps never will be the attraction that basketball enjoys. But the caliber of competition appears to be at the same level as evidenced by the number of California products in the NCAA finals compellng for out-<>f-state schools. Estanc1a's wrestling program. considering the Eagles' success. would seem high-powered. But Warren does not share the view that one must concentrate year.round to succeed. On the contrary. "IN mE LAST THREE YEARS we have bad five champions. and each was a three-sport athlete. Kids de· velop a mental staleness lhat you can't overcome when you tum things into a year-long thing," says Warren. As for wrestlin~·s merits. Warren cites the lack of animosity between foes, a factor that sometimes surfaces in football. . '"Kids sit with each other six-to-eight hours a day at tournaments and fmd out a lot or things about each other," explains Warren. "And you'll seldom see a champion humiliate his oppo- nent. regardless of how much better he is. Wherever you go there 1s always someone better, and the champions know that too. "Kids who are winning now know exactly how it feels to crawl." ln most sports al Estancia, and anywhere else for that matter, good seasons and not·so-good seasons come and go. But at Estancia, Warren and his crew appear to have a hammerlock on the winning combination. 0.ily Pllol ~ llY 1..-P•Y.,. GOING UP -Chet Fields of Fountain Valley goes up to scor e against Loar a Tuesday night. Teammate Jon Ramirez (24) awaits a rebound in case of a miss Trojans Fall Oilers Wi"' 81-65 Huntington Beach Hig h's Oilers advanced lo the second round of the championship bracket in the Bonita Vista High Basketball Toumament in Chula Vista Tuesday following an 81-65 triumph over Carlsbad in the opener. Al the Brea-Olinda Tourney, however. University was dealt a 46-44 loss by Neff. thus was s hoved Into the consolation bracket today. Huntington Beach, by virtue of its victory. was to meet Mawson High today at 4.45. Curt Wooten and Pierre Ayala had a field day up front as the two combined to score 41 points over an out-manned Carlsbad crew. which fell behind by a 26-12 margin after the first quarter. Wooten added 14 rebounds and Ayala came up with 11 re- bounds. "_,,.. ... llNdl 110 C•11SMolll'41 EIClrlOV. IC••~ul Paon•n.111 Wooleft Aul• Glenn Thompton Con•w•y c;on,. ... , TOl•ts It n IP • 0 ., 0 I I I> 0 12 ' . ,. 8 I II 0 s s , z • I 0 7 I 0 Z HIO,.,.,n se..1-Robertsofl Tro...:t MllCMll Ptnnuw;aton lJ IS II T01•t\ S<on lly Ouoirte<'l •• "tp • u tl I 0 7 " 3 I\ 1 0 I• s 0 10 I 0 2 14 11 •S Hunltnqlon 8Ncit 16 IS ti 17_.I C•rlllhtCI 12 7l 11 1~5 Tottl louu· Uri~ 11. H11nti1'9ton 841«1110; Fouled OUI EIMICl9f (Hllf'linciton S.41<111. 5ef>. ltno. PtMlnQlon IC•rhO•dl; hcl'tn1c•I•. WOOien (HUllUOQlon 8Nc.hl. Neff 1 .. 1 u111wen1ty 1 .. 1 Brl"no" Ad•m• Po-·~ Ort~• Sn.IWIY ~•uOf'rt MuililW( Tot••• .. ft Ip 1 0 • SIOllA)H 0 l T l't0mp$0<1 o • Collmtn S 1 Sor•uk • U Alll"°" • 0 1 Brown J S 11 McL<!UQhlln 11> I•.. Tol•IS 5<-lly Outrten 111 ft IP 10 0 10 I 0 1 I 0 1 1 0 • 1 0 • s 0 10 I 0 1 21 0 .. UniversHy t• 17 10 .._... Nell 8 1l II> 9- Total IOUI\, Nett 1, UnlY<lr\lly 13, Fovled out; None By ROGER CARLSON Of Vie O.tty f'IMC $&aft Marina Hith's Vikings and the Fo~taln Valley Barons are in the championship semifinals of the 14th annual Optimlsl Invita· lion•! Basketball Tournament at Chapman College following vie· tori es Tuesday. The Vikings of Coach Steve Popovich s urvived Servite's High's pressing tactics in re· cording an 84.67 triumph. while Fountain Valley e~sed past Loara, 64-47. THUS MARINA MEETS Savanna H.igh's Rebels tonight at 8: 10, fo,llowing a 6:30 tiff between the Barons and Santa Clara, a 61-52 victor over Estan· cia. Estancia and Loara clash al 3: 10 with lhe winner advancing to Friday's fifth place game. Also in Tuesday's action was a 65·48 victory for Ne wport Harbor over Garey. while El Modena eliminated Costa Mesa, 74-64, in consolation play. The Marina-Servite tussle was a dogfight throughout the first ha ir with Servile's 19 -of-21 performance from the free throw lme and an antagonizing press keeping the Friars within range at 40-37. SERVITE TOOK the lead at 45-44 and 47-46 on a pair of St.eve Buechele baskets, but the Vik· ings then shook off the pesky Friars with i,hree clutch baskets by Trulett Halt.on. a 20-rooter by Keith Dawson, two free throws from Dave Tiezzi and baskets by Matt Holmes and Sam Aiello to gr ab a nine-point lead al the end of three quarters. Serv1te could not cut the lead to less than eight points the rest of the way as the Vikings, deep in ta lent on the bench and tough on the boards. overcame the Servile press, which at times had the Vikings scrambling to even get the ball in play. Marina bad five players scor· ing in double figures. Area Girls' Basketball l!Sl'ANCIA TOUllNAMENT Flrwtll...i E~M.EI_.... E\1.,,C•-F•<lftCY t•. ~,.,_ I, Pendl.., S, Fr•nlwn 10, J-It, Hy-• 1. Mc Na,,_• Et ~ 1, De Arcllcel •, W•llau S. LOft9 10, Bry...,,4. Muno••. He9Wf12. Score.,., QlwtWn 1 ......... " I• t:ei-... u. ......... ,. 13 -$4 Ecll!o0t1-S...OUIMln I, \1..-tMllMI 12, ,.......,, W>. tffnderson s. Me-1. 51•uu 1. Los Amlgos-H•ll II, t40-r1ot1 6, Out\' 1, T•ran90 1, Harrlnvton 6. Hetu •. Sc.anlly~ Los Aml9CB • t 10 ._lfl Ecllr.on I 11 U 1)-44 Mlllltit1910ft BNcfl•. ~tr» HullllllQ1on 8N<ll-H.,,\lf1 l, Krom 10, Oov1e I R-r>On 1. T~ I. Or1@<)<1 I, WotNr U • s.dcll-k-C..MY •. Wltlt 1. JoN>iOft l. T. Cllllllt"bHrd >. C Chnl<~b .. rd 11. k-tyOuM1en 0 II I 1...._,S " 16 12 a-~ Also sconng a dozen points each for the Oilers were Jim Eldridge and Chris Pagnanelli. Horse Racing Results University was down by a 43·40 cowtt and had the ball in the late stages of its game with Neff. but the Trojans lost their chance with a turnover. whi ch Neff converted into free throw to virtually ice the issue . Russ Stolzoff, hilting 10 of 17 from the field, led the University scoring column with 20 points. Los Alamltoa ~or TllffNy CIM!lol st-IOOtM -18'1 Fir\I ••<~ W••• UP Amtrlca IR01191\I is.to. 'to. 4 20; Cat llol-IFrHIOI>) 6~60. J,60; JOIW90 IC•rcloitl UO, U eucw , .. SI P<lid Ul.20. ~ ond r «e-OIMir1e< Bender I Ward I 11 to, I 60, S.60. a.ti .. MOUfttlll IL.,.•sl S 40, 410; ltl Sur LOVd tKn101111 10.ao. Third •«-Too 3 IFr .... 1 31>«>. 1110. 100. J•I"\ u c ICreAQefl 10 •O, 1.10; B•••ro.y 1w•1son1 u iio. u utcta 11 JI !Mid na.oo. Santa Antta Fw'l"'"4ty ,,, ... ,.....,~-· Flrsl ·~"'"Artist IC.SI-•) u 00,. '°· S 00; OrOP and Wlgole 1"4-·lfcll tl.10. 20.10, Gentle Sll'Oll• !~Iler I ~ tO Secono ·~•nlutlc Glr• IM<Haro-1 '"°· l -to.? to, V~ Scio!< tat LaCIY tPletCtl ) 00, 2 ltC); Island Mom 10t1v..-n1 J.40 u CS.Hy_.., 11 SI p.tlcl UI 20. Third r«-8old ~1 tM<H•rvue1 s to. J 10. 1 • .0, T-Tomorrows I Plnc•y I J.20, 1 .0. Egotnl tRemlrHI S 20 Fov•tl't <«•-<-M<!I IM<Har-1 IJ "'1. Los Alamitos Race Entries Fourtll r.ict'-Top Solution IC.troo111•60, J 40. ] 00 Gt1ile<>ICl\fr91! IMllCMlll l 10. l 60, Tthllllte tt<noqnll) «> Fiith r•<e-#ol"\ Ahbl IMYl~SI J1 to. 1110. 6 CIO, cnthO•P ICMaota> 9 oo, • 80. 0••• tt '~"''"' ) 80 U "«l<I I) II P<t•O l40 00 S 60, 3 .0, Un1lorm1ty t 8allat•r I 10 00. S 40, C•Pll•I ldff ISl-o.m.u-ri 3 !JO F•ltn r.oc:e-Tntn Suet IM<Carronl l.I •II. IS to. • 10, El Mu\IM!Mm IOl1v•r .... 1 ?J 20. t• CIO. Proud Rul•r t 8•il•1•rl • •O. O uact• II U 1><910 U.51• 00 THUIUOAV'SQUAttTl!RMOltSE ENTltlES FIRST ll'OST . 7.4Sp.m . Flll$T RACE -.00 yerdS l yfft Oki llllles PurM UIOO Cl111mlnQ or•U $.l,SOO 8unnn K1p ICardoa l. J ols lilll• Reel ISroohl, Brown Hue 1ttn1QMI, C"4rge" Wey 1 Pernerl, 'lllktns G•t IAcld"I; V1~1nsoolllr ISanll\}; Repll<• ReflKUon ICltrtS\#1 . l.a<IY Et·· la Sa• IH•rtl. Su!T>mer ~HIOfl CRo..Qlll. M•M RockelOOtM IW•lsonl. SECOND ltACe -•DO yerds 1 yHt old maidens Pun. u.200. Sir Poppy Go ll.10Mml I C.,, low IW•t10'll. Sen11•1 CAI t S.,nk&l, Mono Ille ICr••ll"•I. B-1, Gin (Hartl, /AcYouotr• IClertSMI; Plun· CM" Fl••ll 18.-sl. Pluno.rs Luca11e11Kn•Ql\ll. THlllD ltACll -lSO yaros l 1ur •tcb Pu•w u 100 CIAlmtnQ price $.]j()O Mr Oe<k 5ft<l<f't' ICM!nswl. C•tclla Oo O••nl; .. o rtl't Country tAcl~"l. Coror M• Cuti' tSumoterl; Bold R•Ply C8rooHI, Suau' C•f\"''""" tl•P"•ml. tm Good V•br•t1on• IC•rd01•I, Ltttlt' PueOIO 8.w tPernerl. 0.- AOfflkO.e ITr-•I; Mr TH Oum IAOU91\I FOU llTM ltACE -810 y..-cb 3 ye•r Old$ & UC>. PurM U , 100 <la11ntnQ prke U,000. Auogt'd Bomber IL•W•SI; Top Ao.tn Men llu<kte l, 8errlno IROUOhl ; Tiny Clll<k•n ICterlu•I: Mo Joe IBroollsl; Eevte l.ancltng tKnlQflll: RUlll Co!IY ILllll>eml. FtnH llACS -400 ya~. J .,_ Olds & UCI. Purse '2.tGO. Cla"""'O PflCA U.000. Big Royet Boo IMelrl; Oat 8onl F19Meo- (Rult1; VMty (Treuu<•I: Hetull IC..ooul; SHwer Bon Bon ISumcll.,.l; CNllen For ~ IClerl\i.el: TIMe AllO AO<tln (LlpMf'nl; Oldie IM Goodie IMylHI; T~I IAOUQlll; Ol.IPtl Lo M•smcu 1'9fner 1. SllCTH ltACa -170 y...OS. l YN• OIOi & \Ill Purw ~.SOO<lalmillQ prke v,soo, Two Copltoi CClenHel; 8'19M Poll<Y IPemerl. Sia Blank (a.ntl; Een JI ... ILll>fttml, Hlll.CllflQ ...,.,.,. IWMdl; J.i Captain ICarootel, SEVENTH llACI[ -lSO ytrCI\ 1 ye•r Old'-Al· iowatw:•. Purw ~.soo. 5'>•uy .HI O«k IClerlnel, Twtsl A Flttl ILlplWml. Con Prom•\O •H•yol, Fly.no v CA>ll 1Barc11; Smooll't AnQel IMy1u1; Oo1n My Number ,,....,..," MIM ,,. .. ,.....,. IH•rtl. Top Oeck Bunny ITr•nur•I. Soclely Sl\ter IWMPle<I; TN WIM•l\9 THm (Adair I. EIOHTM ltAC• -lSO yercls. , yur Olc!S. Al· IOw4lflC.e. Pwse ~.soo. PiKlllc Miu OIK IC¥d0t•I; s-1 F~ ... 1warc11; Mia 5Pt•MI Cfr'ff>ure1; Mr AllOOI Buo tW•tsont. Jet Ou<k CHertl; Foav Anoe• !Sumpter>. OiQll•I ,,..,,,.,1, Tl\rH T-v ..... H I Nl<oclemusl; MIO S•tllt Wiii CL•*'"· Outroyer l~r>. NINTH ltAC£ -.00 yards. l YH• OICll. PurW U,200 <l••mlnQPfke ~.000 Rocael 8oy Roy ICreaoert: 01-t TllOUQlll IBrook\I. Atamllo\ tm.ove tPtrnerl, Siar\ AbO"' Parr ll.IPl\aml; Waywaro 8us tC .. rtswl. Husllln Beot<h IC•rOOt•I; Cindy Roc:a1tm1t\ IMyte\I. s.tves Pinll Pentlwr ITonesl. llttQf'tl Pao IWa«JI: He\ Sc>eeo IAO .. rl . Sl•lll race-Wllf Fancy IHt1rtl S 10, 3 <IO, l 40. Bob V1Jn ""°°" IWarcll J 40. l to. Fl<kte L...tncer IC•rcloHI • 10 Sevencn R«e-LI•• Me Too lluckle l 100.4,00, 180, New• "'-"11 tCardot•I S 00. J 10. """ Ann Go IKntQlltl S 10. lS uac I• IH I paocl 100 SO EIQflln rtc•-Truly T~rlti< ICArdollJI U,I(), S 60, ) 40. S.r Oltce Mor IHt<ll 6 00. J.10, R .. • Me HtQfl lllpNml J 00. Nlntll rtc-RellKllOn\ IC•rdoHI U 40, I 00. S 00, TlllSI .. Jcl9Wtf' !HOH) 10 20, •.60. Lovlno .,.., G•vl"9 1w..-c11 1 60; lS uacta 11~1 IMod JIUO. All~ence-S,i~. SIWll't •«f--Orend Alll•r>e~ ICorCHrol • 40. 4 to. J 60. B19 Greg IC•SlaMOal 6 60, • .0. Good T•m901M<H..-9'fl ) 20 Sev•ntl't re« Marine LIM I Plncayl •CO.Joo. i .O. E111r.-._.,. IC«de<ol 5 00. l .10. uiena ISl\oema~ ... , J 00. lS .. KW IJ.11P<ltd"600 El9l'tll\ rtc-Uttle Reb IOttvarH} 10 60. 10 40, SAO. Creill ProQr..,. CMeNI Jl.40, 1010. &all "N BIQ15110emetlerll ... Nlntll race--Otl to MonW IPl.rtel 1100.II10, 6 •O. Euty Cotton IMcC•rronl 11 20. 1 60; ~IKrlpl CMcHarguel •.20 lS uact• 11~l1 pe1d W• SO. Pro Cage, Hockey Scores Ntl._t BatllftlNll Au ll. New OrlHM US ~en 173 W41\l\1"910ft 108. lllCllene 10. S•n Anlot'IO 124, Att•nt• 111 MllWtuk .. 143. a.troll .. t40U\IOll IO'I. ICtnW\ CllY tOt PP!Oent• 10., Denver tot S•n 0~ llS, CNU(IO IOt ... ,,_ _..,. u...,. Pl'tllactetpN• 2. 0.1ron 7 111e1 NV R ""91f'\S. At ..,,ta l NV ISlandln 5, TOf'onlo I MlnneSO(• •• Sf. Louis • _,........,. __ 81rmlfl9N"' •. ctnclnNtt 2 WIMIS199 s. f:clmonton 3 H ... Enotancl 4, MoKOW l)yNmo 1 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Evert No. 1 NEW YORK CAP) - Chris Evert is the flrst woman sinCe Alice Mar· ble to tM>ld the top rank· utg by the United States Tennis Association for five consecutive years. Marble reigned as the nation's top female ten· nis star during 193640. Billie Jean King is second this year, ahead or teen·age sens ation Ttacy Austin. Rosie Casals is rourth , foll owed by Pam Shriver, Marita Redon· do, Kathy May, Anoe Smllb, .Joanne Russell Hd Jeanne 0uvau. .... • TIMMIS WEAR 1-'l ~ ~ OFF ·;:;~ 2 ........ ALL RACKETBALL RACKETS 15 °/oO FF B1'1l°"/UACH A&.DtLA Wed... M.n{W..-la ATHLETIC SHOIS • 30CYo to IOOlo OfP JOHNr1llGFOOT C..-rl ... & ...... ........ wn a t1ew114w1 17141 fl7·2'tl -~P\.&' M-.MI0.7 .!~ s.t. I Nf'S-. I J:J0.1 . ''• -E•E LEAS•'' 1979 OLDSMOBILE . CUTLASS SUPREME Automatic ~. pOw9f lltelrino. Power br1k-. •51. 3 conditioning. tilt wheel, AM l"lldk>~== l 2eOV8. ....... ,. ....,. ...... c:. ...... ,. l' ..... !IQ.,_al..-ic..,......._ ... , .. _...,.4*.k .. _ ............... _.... .... ( .. ""'41!17Wl(lt• ....... . . . HONDA CAIS ••MC 11UCIS • ALL MAID A MODILS 8liN/ -MERCEDES BE.NZ -MARk IV -POMCHE - OE VlLLE -9EVu.£ -DIESEL -CMS l TRUCKS LEASE 7 DAYS A WEEK UNIVERSITY Sales & Service Hit MA809&'9. •COSTA .mA 714 540.9640 • .. LOAllA TltlED TO take l''oun· tain Valley out of lts zone at the outset With a stall. but four straight baskets by the Barons made it 8-2 and that was the last time the game was close. Chet Fields and Mupy EP· pelheimer each had a dozen points as Coach Dave Brown's Barons clicked on 29 of SS from the field (52.7 percent). Loara made 50 percent of its shots from the field. but could manage .only 32 shots as tht! Barons kept Loara off the boards. ESTANCIA and Santa Clara were locked up in a 4.5-45 s\nJg· gle midway through the fin al period before the Saints pulled a way behind the play of Russ Blayney and Tim Bednar. Santa Clara's defense held the usually high.scoring 6·4 Steve Van Hom to seven points, drop· ping Van Horn's s coring average to 22.3 for nine games. Santa Clara's Lewis Gabbard, an impressive 6-S center who figures to give Fountain Valley a test tonight, missed 14:52 of ac· Uon due to foul problems. Tony Camp and Mike Price chipped in with 12 points apiece, but Santa Cla ra's s hooting percentage from the field pro- ved too much. The Saints made 25 of 47 (53.2 percent), while Estancia shooters made 19 of 45 C42.2 percent). NEWPORT HARBOR escaped elimination in the consolation bracket in a bn:eze as Jon Sweek, Brian Freeman and Bruce Caldwell chipped in with 19. 18 and 16 cqunters. lo the de· ('ISive seeond hflf Caldwell and Freeman each ~~ored 10 points a nd Caldwell grabbed 11 rl'- bounds. MerN!MI s.""ee 1u1 A1itllo OawiOft "-""" "°'~ NeliOft OliOtl Solwey Tleul .. ft ... 1 I IS S I 11 • 0 11 • s 13 , 0 • J 0 • 1 3 1 I 8 10 e..c~·· FullrmcJn lledemelmer ICUftU Se< dell• J .S.-s.sr ..... Uretl WelCI\ 30 2A M TOC•ls Sc.-• ., OllNtws It ft tp tO 8 21 0 0 0 2 0 • 0 z 'l 0 0 0 4 II 19 s , It ' 0 1 0 0 0 n 23 ., M.trm. 11 22 20 2._.. Servile II> ti U ,..,_., T.,..I 101o1t.: MtnM 19, S..-Vile 14; FOUied OU\" -· ll~lUI Sa•t.t C&er.C611 C•mp c..'"' ICNP ICromtelot -.. Pr•ut V•n Hor11 Tot•ts ..". l • 12 Cvll.lnOVldl 0 I S..W:Ml 0 1 ~, .. 1 • oa-d 0 1 lrlD«I< 6 11 O.Orwr J 1 1 Blayney 1' 1• S? Touit~ Sc-.., 0Wer1clrs .. It tp 3 • 10 l ' 1 l 4 IO l 0 ' I 0 l 1 l .. s 0 10 ~II 61 Es1a...:1• 11 11 1& 1•-S7 S.n•• c•..-• 14 a " 2011 Tol•l IOUI.: E\f811(1a 14, Senta Cl.lr• 16; Foui..d out Bto ... ., IS.llLI Cl•••I. Camp IEstancl•I; Tectwu,•I foul. »n<Mz ls.Me Clara I.. · "-tal• va1..-, <Ml L-•1411 CGPPOm A•m~rer Rt'Ul•llCI F•elOS Stoll Fry .... ,.to# O.Cow•n PolikrtllS EPPt11-.1,.,... LeVelle Hubb.trd To1••s ,, tt Ill 0 1 1 3 0 • I 0 , • 0 12 1 I S 0 0 0 • 0 fl I 1 4 0 0 0 • 0 fl 0 • I ) Beall! Collrnat1 Cot Ir er Falk Hochstelle<- Mc FarlMIO 1't 6 ~ Toi••• 5<-lly Olw11•n .. ft. 2 2 • 1 J I 0 I I 3 1 11 ,. ' , I I 13 I\ 11 ., FOUM•ln \l•lley lb 12 18 18-l.,.•• • 10 • 11-41 Total lovls: Fov1110111 Valley 21. lo••" IJ, FOU1"4 OU1 Col~.,. 11..0ar•I. EIMO<NN (141 c .. ~~1 .. 1 Allen Br...,to f:.r•KO H•nry Kerc,..1$111 Rey• S<l't•llff•• wrrt~v ToltlS .. ft Ill 9 J 11 1 0 l 4 I • J I 1 t 0 II I 0 2 1 1 s J • 10 Sauer Beesley Oom1n1c Lo-. a lu• 5 l ... S..uerfteld Total\ 31 IO 7• Sc_,.,~ fq lHJt , 1 .. II 6 78 , 1 6 j 0 I> I J S • , 9 2 c • ?S 1' M Et Modena 16 20 " 19-/4 Cost• MeS<I 20 IS ,. 1s-+1 Tot•• touts· CO\la ~ 19, Iii Meclen• 11. FoultO OUI B lu• ICO\ta Mesal. Te< .... t<al\. 9 Lua tCost.H-'l'sal. G•rey 1411 .. "tP s , 11 ... W1IOl't Ha~ 16)1 frons JoM$0ft H•rr•s Sanks Killen Smll" Toi.is s 0 10 J 0 6 1 1 I> J 0 6 · 0 I I 0 1 0 1 1 J Swee a Calclwt>ll LlllSkY Freem•11 Doody Varclley GM!Ols TOl•ts " 6 ... k-.llyO--S ... " "' 6 1 IY a o '" I 0 ' 1 • 19 I • 6 I 1 3 0 I I ~ 11 &S G•r.., 11 IS IS 7- HewPOrl Hat1Jor 10 11 16 22~ Tot•I louts· Ge,..., 17. ,.._, H•rbcf' ,. Fouled ovt· - I I I J, -~ , . . 11-j DAILY PILOT Business ............ DILEMMA'S ROOT WOftcet' Brien Weber !Jias Case · Strings Employers' Tightrope W Sflf NG TON \ \I' 1 Thi• c· lit' of Bra.an Wub r h 11.11 < mplo)'trt wolk1na o u .ihtropc uver how to rom "t't rac111l .and 1n tmbol•nct> on th<' JOb SCJ u h d n I 1t-n )' hu Lhtown up ..- a af~ty net 1n ~of le pl.n.C w flrm•U~ •tUon aUvt• W~bfor la• white l1ctory v.or~ r r an Loublt.na who auC'd hi .. mplo "' af'tcor brln1 f'\'Jetloo from 1 <'raft ttatnlng pro1r0tna thiat rt'tM"Vtd half n11 placH for mln'OnU FED•;a L ~pJX•Lllt <•ourt ruli na In Wf'ber' fovur . twirl thot roc'l8.I quotua ur •lmll r "Jl rirmalivto ucUon'I" or· 11lt>l(JI "1lhout proof or uclml ion of p 'It d1scrmun11tlon hy o t'Oni pany T hr CU<>. pmd1nsi bc•fore lht· ll S Supr<'m~ Court, cruate. w &ht> mind of M>m t•m1>loyen; J "damned If I do. da m n •d I don't" lri lu1Uon Ir tbciy lnlUatt-1 JOb pl'tlfcttnct1 plans to head otr dlacrlmtnallon s uit.a by minority workera. they may bttome vulnt'rable lO "re vt-rat-di.scriminMUon" s uits by whllt WOrkfn. BUT .... TUEY llrst admit p1 I t Job bl • to head off a WetM>r·typc suJt, they are lnvll· 1 ng mlnorttle1 l o sue for doma1 Btcauso o r th as dile mma, some employunl may decide to do nothing until t he Supntmc Court iasues a ddinmve ruling on th~ matter, which may mean u lonfC wau Th at's what worri~ the Equal F.mploymcnt Opportunity Com· mlsaton. which furs that lS years ot progrHS ln eliminating JUb du cr1mJnallon may come lo "' a hull becouse of lh~ unccr ~inly MOST LARGE compan1el'i a lrt ady have amrmaUve acuon programJ, largely because lbey are rtqulrtd u n coodJtlon or doing buslnes1 with the U.S. gov. ernment. Whot concerns the com· mlaslon are the millions of small buslo~ that may spurn al· r1rma tlve action. To counteract the "chilling ef· rect" of cases like Weber's. the KEOC has Issued guidelines dt" signed to encourage e mployers to a dopt voluntary am rm alive action plans. E SSENT I ALLY , T H E guide lines are a n opinion by EEOC legal experts. They state t ha t e mploye rs will not be violating the law if they anaJy~ ( ON 11lE JOB ) thclr employment p r a ctices. have "a reasonable basis" for concluding that affirmative ac· lion is appropriate and take "re· asonabkl'' correct.Ive acttons. T hese acUons m ay Include quotas and Umetables for glvlng women and mlnoriUes increased job opponunlties. The Guidelines provide a w11y fo r a company to recognize - and correct -imbala nces on the JOb without having to admit to discriminatory practices from d3m3ge claims To most companies, thol'~ the kind of prot_,cuon that counts. The guidelines arc bused on 11 sl'ctlon or the Ci vil Rights Act thul protects employers from punlshmtnt if they were found guUty ot job bins as a result of "'ood faith" efforts to comply • w ith the law. Adherence to lhe guideUnes meets the ''good folth" teist, says the EEOC, which adds Uint the courts traditionally ha ve re· hed heavily on the commisslon'i> lagal Interpretations of the law. "E MPLOY E R S SEE the misc:lves as being whipsawed. a nd we appreciate that," ob· serves Daniel E. Leach, vice chairman of the EEOC. Late Yule Sales S u rge THE GUIDELINES are bw.ed on the belief that, the Weber case notwithstanding. the Civil Rights Act or 1964 requires com· pan ies to initiate efforts to end discriminatory hiring and pro- motion practices. It's not enough to wait for an employee or the gove rnment lo s ue first. But, retorts a company. what about the risk of costly damages 1t may have to pay if It loses a reverse discrimination s uit to dlsgnmtled white males passed up for promotion? "But we come back a nd say, 'This is what we thlnk the law Is. If yo u don't a gree, beware. We're prepared lo come back at you.··· Leach sa ys sympathetically that employers will h ave lo wade in murky legal wate rs un· tit the issue is decided. Jn the meantime, he says. a company's best bet is to go ahead with af· rirmative action. By ~ .b80<'lakd ~ The nttllon's retn1len heard plenty ol ringmg m the past rou l>IC of weeb, not so much from Christmas bells as fro m cash n· g1ste rs t.ot.aling up u surgt~ of late sales that m ade this year·-. holiday season a recor d lor many st.ores. "The month started sloWl.> . but the last two weeks cl~cd with a r ush," s aid William Detwiler, the p~1dent of lhf.' Washlngton·based Garfinckel's seven·st.ore department chain THE SALES increase perccn tage over last year "could ap proach a double·dlgil fi gure." ht• :,aid. F .A.O. Schwa r z. the Nt·w York·based toy retailer, report ed sales climbed 20 percert in lls mnm New York :,tore und pro bnbly went up almost 11s much in its 23 stores across the coun l rv "It was re11lly a bU~r year," 11aid Ron Reekston. n Schwurz :.pokesman. "It was a hltle soft a fter Thn.nksgiving, bul IL went w1ld In the lost week." ELECTRONIC GAM ES were the hit or the season. for boU1 adults und children, but there was no smg1e fad that swept the country, retailers said Tuesday. "This wns not a year with a Pet Rock or anything like that," s aid Bud P a m e ra n z . a spokesman for Bamberger's, a New Jersey chain with 20 de · pa rtment stores He said <J <·a l c ula t o r t h a t t r a n s la tes languages was a hot late item ( __ ca_N_s_v_M_E_R_J The surge of saJes confoWlded many analysts, who bad expect· ed consumers would begin to re- duce thelr purcba&es in the face of record levels of consumer debt and predictJons or a weak economy next year. "TOE RECESSION will be de· layed," said Monroe H. Greens· t eln, a retail analyst at the Wall Street firm of Bear, Stearns & Co. ..The consumer l.s s till de- term ined to lead the good life and go deeper into debt." G reeostein, who had expeell'd a dccUne in retail sales m the CASH FAST Better Mouse Built H o m eo w n e r s : Loans arranged for any reason. Credit. no p r o bl e m . Borrow on y our eQuity. Call now for c o u r t eous. f ast information. (7 I 4J 547-715 1 AMERICAN Mortgage Co. SEATTLE CAP> -Sever al part time inventors have decided to ex pand on an old theme. They've built a bet ter mouse. He's mecharu cal -a robot rodent -w ith a computer brain concealed unde r a fiberglass bod y complete with biJ?, floppy ears. lie moves at JO inches a second und is capable of m aking 33 decisions The m ouse wa s d ubbed "Thl' Moonlight Special" by ils inventor.. because they developed It on their own t1mt• Arth ur Uola n d . one of ~1x employees of Battelle·Northwcst lnc m Richland who part icipa ted in building the robot. said it runs around a 20-fool square three Umes. each time al a faster pa ce, using in· formation "learned" the pre vious time. The final pass. following the shortest route it can find. takes about one minute. For q uick ,-.suits, set r.our salts for the Boat· ng classlf19d ads of the Dally Pilot. 642-5678 HOWTOEARN $105,699 WITHOUT UFTING A FING ER. Here's a sure thing. Republic's "$83.33 Per Month Plan." A safe, sound investment with a surprising pay-out. Start with the $1,000 minimum in our 8-year 8% Certificate account Then add $83.33 every m onth. In thirty years you'll have a lump sum of $ t36,699. (Your investment of $31 ,000 earns $105,699 in compound interest!) Dally compound Interest works its miracle for shorter term s too . For example, In fifteen years you'd accumu- late $33,414. In eight years, $13,138. Look how your money grows Minimum Initial depo9tt •1,000 and adding t~.33 per month. . 8-Year 15-Year 20-Year 30-Year Total Total Total Total 1J .1Ja 33,414. 54.522. 136,699. Project.Iona baed on 111ta1lablltty ol lhts lypf! of oe<:ount for entire period. Penalty fOf early wtthclrawel on certJOrote occounu Drop bJ or phone for more lnfonnatlon about t.hl9 Republc ....,_Perfonl'MllK9 flllon«J KCount. Every tlme the rooster crows your money grows * * • • * • m li 11111111 REPUBLIC FEDERAL SAVINGS l1td l0411 '"°''" .. " 8NR'A MA 17th St. Wett ol l'lewpolt FtMW8Y (714) ~ 1·~286 ~202 Anehelm Plau, 500 N t:uclld St. (714) 9'6-8290 l.AG<lr'IA NIOCl!L 30232 Crown V11tey P•rtcwoy (714) 4~~ WDTllUPlata 134 Westminster Mall/BolM & San Oh-go Fwy. (7 14) 894·~:M7 HcM Offlcel ADM>El'IA 2246 N. Ltll<t' Ave. (21'\) 791-1281 / 681 ·6611 hl•WH. t flMWH WWI ~IA:/ J>&i •~wt t>f In• tlrnlll'd ""°'" (,.,.~ '""'"" ,- ror y61Jt tOfllltn>enu .ii offkt• t>l>f'n ~lllUlll•> "'"'''""V 6111 fSIX'z ""'Ye i..utJ.H AUAOf l"IA • Nl<Ul{.l.14 •~A• lltlltllANI< • Cl.Allt.Ml>"T • fl...C!(MDfo llfK.t4n. • l.J\0...l'!A l"tt<l(J{ I • 10\ ~,Lf..!I MS/IOl !'IA• 111(0 ltM 1111 • "./INTI\ MIA M S 111'1'"' Tl II • final three months of this year. said he thinks consumers may keep increaslng their purchases through next Jwte. But Michael K. E vans, the p r es id e nt o f C h a s e E conometrics, a n economic forecasting firm. said: .. T HE CHRISTMAS shopping s plurge r epresents the last splurge of the American COD· sumer. He is already seriously overextended and simply does not have e nough pu rchasing powe r left lo keep the ecooomy growing." Some of the strongest retail gains we re in Califo rnia. the land of Proposition 13. cauror· naans apparently took what they expect to save on property taxes as a resuH. of the measure and went shopping. May Co., a large Los Angeles-based department sto r e chain. r e ported a n 1n· crease of l5 percent in sales. The E EOC acknowledges that its gwdellnes can't stop a com· paoy rrom belng sued. Nor can ll guarantee that a ffirmative ac· lion plans ultimately will sur- vive Supreme Court review. "WE HAVE NOT talked to one company lawyer who Is not ad- vising the employer to adopt our guidelines," Leach added. "The y may cr iticize the guidelines substantive ly, but when It comes down to the ques· lion of whether lo go for af· firmatlve a ction or not , the lawye rs are advising their clients: 'You'd better do it.' " BUT 11IE AGENCY s ays tls guideli.oes will shield companies 'Force' Readied for 1979 C INCINNAT I <AP) -The demand for "Star Wars" toys lh1~ Christ mas has prompted om c1als at Kenner Products Co. to set ur1 production lines now to fill the bill for next year 's presents. In February, Kenner will lake its 1979 toys to Ne w Yor k for an industry toy s how. Company officials said the original 1978 prodU(' tion project.ion was increased tenfold . But by September. Uwy said , the dem and started outpacing the sUpply . Ove r The Counte r MASDUttillgs t>. I 1~16 y ... ~ ..... .,~ .. \liit ..... I• IS 11Jo l " ··~· ,, ,, ~ 1v. n ,n.,,, 76VJ 19 16 11 ,~ 11<1 " IJ , .... U I• )J , 1• 7l', , .. 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SiOlne uo • ,., ;u-.-"" WlllttMI • a.a Sf9-... ~In ,JU • 1 tVt, ~~y :·~ ! "f': ~··· · SIOOOn .. U ., • .,~-°" Whlt!Mt ·~ S ti• ltllo-YI Ml~ Jlli • t Q._;·w; P•PI. pf •A 1110 '5 •··• SOOll of a~.4 110 SI"'"'" w= A 4 1'7 11~ 1111 :!;.'fM 1:1 11 ~ Jt:: ::: ::=t iM ~ ;: ~ -~: r.::.~ AO ' f: !~~ ~ :lllltm• t 1l el: ,/•:_ 1: ~ .. o 1.31. 144 u-.-"' P•PL= II ··al.Jllf&;, .... 51.,,w I Oll 116 n-.., Wltl/11\ pf,"°1 ,. !lflf -2 Ma,.mt I • ,,. 11'-PaPL p1 1i' t7.IO 111~ ._, $1Mll\lnv 4 U ,..,_ w WUs/lfO 4 19 ID 1 --MarMld Ml • 12 IS :;·i.it .. _II t 20 'f ' »tt> SI~,. UIS ·; 41 10\lo .... Wln·C>· l,M • II " -\\ Mef~I. .6410 "° m't-"' ~w,. 1.tO , m ....... StauKll t IS .......... WIMllft " lti J ..... .... MefllCll .-II ff 10V.-"" "-Mlill t '4 tU ~·"• SllfClll • .)61 4 $ t ..... Wl,,._•J 1 It 41 IO .. .. w.ar11111 1 29 t U~• \., ~ )f 1 t 1o-."··· Slorllk o .6' t '1 1 .... Witr, t~ t 12 ts-" ~~Y 1 i i. t1 -" , t M 1 IO »~ ""' l'•''~ 1111 '°'' I Wl•Gn 1.~ • 14 '"'• "" .MtHIOI .10 ! '°I 11'6-'It Ptcltl l II SU UV. ,,.,,.,_ .Ull IO l: •• ...... Wl•O,.r US • t t~ .. =:~r rn ,, sn ~~"'-=-~ =· .u ~ 2~ iSt',,.~ ~ sl:~',·~ ·s 'rt + \t t:~Pk Ut ' a:o :.:: ~ MlflM 1,. 6 1°' ,.__ "'° 1>9trOllfl 1 04 i lff!Wf t t0 t Ill-WI~ I !f ~ '9\'t-~ Me'll( ... t .. t\'I• '" "9flh Hf• I ;..,···· 1111111~ IJ7 • I ~I.\ Wlllrll JO 4 'f'-··"• $1C~ :tt t n r.~~ =ri~:P1\·~i, ,' y\l. ·~ 1411111wr...:·,• ~ ... :-~=~Ao: u I>:;:~ •" IQ 1 101 1"• .,.. l"lleloO .oi. ,R iO \t 'i 69 Yi II'-..... WOOdPf '* 'l u1 ''"· "" lM I.Mt • ,, ' -.. ·t· ~··•1 , ; • ttf IS...,_ h '-I tO 4 N 1• .. I. Wolwlll '40 .. lt14-.. M4tu1F ., "'4 ,._,_ .,.. Phlll! pl i l90 u -..-. for 11 ._ ?!~ .. WOIW tPf 2 ao. S lfll't "!.. ==~.e. ;:1 :: ft !~~ · i • Pll:lt :f 1 :: :JV.-I' ;~~II I~ : ,: tGi: It. ::::r .0. I ff ~· '4 M111Mil .I'll • I• itllt + 1,. ~;II DT ,ft " 1 '*""" IMWOf "'H > ~ ~ • WutlUr j J 3 -'-="" IS.'. w ,,.._."" '""" :. •. ·w ::~ ~·: •vSM ' u -"' W¥l•l11 . ' 1 II "" Itel •t .. ~ 4°"-"" Piii! tPf 1M 1 • l I '\, . WVltl.8 t 1• I ... , ,os I.JI • H n•-. ltlill.Su• " ; .._:·\\ I AO s ,~.,_ " ...,.,,, .. '41 ' .. . Mllre<O t 19 11 \0 !'fll!NI' U$1J 11-1 I to 14 'l'tlo, .. ~~,~~ • .O. ; )1 ~~·~ :tll~ 1'1' ' 1! ,1"'-~ 0 of lft .~ ~ ::YI• II. ra~ -ff!"::f' ~I~ M< ""\ ' • ,_ " " ~"" '.eo ~ ,... • " j • Jt .,._.... '"" 'o. i I "'• 141 = 'i::.. " ~-w ~~ 1t '• . .:~ ~ Ir • ,, i tl .:.. ~ ::t. ., • ~ = = !.\ iii m •t -,.~ ' i J 1 ~ •I · I ,J.._ II. ~ .a " I '°"-14 ~ 111. I 1 ff = : ~ ,..,., l ' .~ f.._. "' ~' , ~.~ 1~~1 u! aao L "" ~ * I I e • U ., ., "'°"' I tie I 1 17~•'"' • •1 -f;il11141 M • IS .. ~. w •• ~.-day. 0.0.mbtr 27, 1978 DAILY PILOT St.~laTfp Mergers Push Value Higher .. By MILroNMOSKOwm It 'a tou1h to make money these days ln t.he stock marbt. but one formula seema to work: Find companies t.hat are about ~beJobbledupby otbercompanies. We reJustemerglna fromone oflbe most me.r1er-eraay years ln our blJtory. Companies are bein1 gobbled up r1pt and left. And when a company let.a its algbta on anothe r com· pany. prtce ia no object. It will certainly pay more Ulan the prevailing price, and irthe targeted company ls the least bit squeamish about the deal, the acquiring company wm qulek· ly raise the ante. SO ALL YOU RA VE TO DO ls locate these promlain8 candidates for extinction as independent entJUes buy lbeu sbarea-andsit tight until a marauder comes along. How profitable this exercise can be is clear from an analysis done by T. Rowe Price, a Balti more mutual fund manager. One of Its funds, New Horizons, specialties in ta.k· ing positions in "newer. s maller growth companies." Over the past two years, it bas been lucky enough to have 17 of its companies captured by other com- panies. THE PURCHASE prtce offered by the Money Tree acq uiring company was, on the average, 58 percent higher than the price the acquired company was selling for before itbecame theappleorsomeoneelse'seye. Examples: -Pillsbury offered $22.50 for Steak & Ale Restaurants. which had been selling for $16.50. -Pepsico orrered $20 for Lee Way Motor Freight ; its stock had been selling for $9.25. -~ral E lectric offered $69 for Cox Broadcasting, whose shares bad been selling in the $50 range -Time Inc. offered $49 for Amen can Television and Commwlications. a cable TV operator whose stock had been selling for$32. AND SO IT GOES. YOU CAN eas ily see the enormous profit potential in these situations. The trick is to determine which companies will be savaged next. You might start with the rest or the New Horizons Fund list. As of Sept 30, the following were its 10 largest holdings. Wal-Mart Stores, American International Group, Millipore, Service Merchandjs1ng. Leaseway Transportation, Tandy, Data General. Denny's. ServiceMaster and Payless Cashway. How difficult it is to work this formula you might ap· preciate from the recent experien~ or E.F. Hutt.on, the na· tion's tturd largest brokerage house. A YEAR AGO IT recommended to its customers 20 com- panies which it had identified as "acquisilion candidat.es: •• Allis Chalmers, Alpha Portland. American Building Maintenance, Allied Digital Data, Arvin, Beech Aircraft, Fair Lanes. Financial Corp. of Santa Barbara, Friendly Ice Cream, Haniee's, Jonathan Ligan, Kelly Servi~. Parker Pen. Pinkerton's, Purolator, A.H. Robins, Trans Ohio, Unit· ed Financial. Victoria Station and Wackenhut . How many or these companies were actually acquired in 1978? None. Happy hunting! First American To Pay Dividend . Direct.ors of the First Amen can Financial Corp., San- ta Ana. have declared a fourth quarter dividend of 12~ cents a share, payable Jan. 15 to share holders of record as or Friday. Shareholders recently received a 3-for·Z stock split. Par value remained at $1. The company's principal subsidiary, First American Title Jnsurance Co .• operates through more than l.000 of- fices throughout the United Stales and on Gua m. lndusf rial Finan<-lng A rrart~d The income property loan division of Western Pacific Financial Corp., Newport Beach, has reported arranging permanent financing or $1 million for an industrial build- ing complex in San Diego. Located in the Sor rento·Rosell Industria l P a ~k . 15 mil es n o r th o f downtown San Diego at interstates 5 and 805, the multl·lenant, industrial- office·warehouse complex conlains 51,450 square feet or C TAKING ) ___ S_TO_CK __ ren ta ble s pace w ith landscaped parking for 131 automobiles. The l oa n was placed with Prudential Life Insurance Co. with construction funds pro- ·vided by Lloyd's Bank: The owner is Edward G. Wong, a San Otego de veloper, who built the complex as a speculative project. Leasing agent is Business Properties Broker11ge Co Bank to Paff 28"0 Dlmd~•d Directors or Pacific City Bank, HunUngton Beach. have declared a 20 percent stock dividend to be paid Thursday. with a record date or Dec. 20 and a dividend date of Dec. 15. Cash will be issued in lieu ot fractional shares at $15 a share. This is lhe fourth consecutive stock dividend paid by the bank. which was five years old in April. The bank has two offices in Huntington Beach. Offices are scheduled to open in West Garden Grove in January and in Mission Viejo by July . An application for a saota Ana branch has been filed with the state superintendent of banks . Stock Market Hit By Selling Wave NEW YORK CAP> -Tbe stock market dHltned broadlY today, set back by sellinl after a week of steady adVIACe$. THe Dow JoDet averace or 30 loduslrlals, whlch climbed mo.re lban 28 polnLs al.Dee early lut week, dropped bade 8.t<>t.o 807.61 after four hours of trading. Gold Spurts 84 to 85 .. , ne A.Moelat.M Pr.- Se-lec!'led world 1old prices today : Leedoll: momin1 fl1ln1 l220.7$; afternoon filllna SZ2C).50. Par111: aftAtmooa fl.xi.DI '222.85; up $4.67. halitmt: cloee $2J0.7S. Z""": IZ20.25: 1221.00 u ked. New Yen: H.and.1 • Hurpn base prtce. SU0.50. up $5..7$. Nw Yon: En1•lhltd ae1Un1 prtee. SDOAO. New Yon: Enielbard fabricated eo&d, IUS.SS. • ' l ' r I ' f • , ... • DAil V '9LOT w~. DtcMOet 11. 1t11 MARMADUKE "AHA I So you DO practice those forlorn ond famished dinnertime ~xpress1ons 1 · SU PERHEROES SHOE MOON MULLINS GERIATRIX • 2 COU51N ~ SA~ .J.Atc:E 15 NEW WIFE HA$A 49 ~~ .... ' ---- o~ ...by.. Tom Bath* MISS PEACH by M1U --POLICE D&ART~&JT H!.U..0, l'M ~FIC121C M'C.A&e, Hiile TO COU.l!CT O\.~ 8iOICIN ~. r=~J --- by Pasaco, Tusaca & Colletta by.,.,, MacNtlly GORDO JUDGE PARKER TUMBLEWEEDS AGATHA CRUMM DA.SMOCK HeY. GANG, GOOD News FOR !Hose OF YOO HAVING Alt..MeNIS RE:QCJIRING SIX S1"tlcHes oR 1..ess.' ouR exPRess SORGeRY L.ANe IS NOW OPeN.1 Hee Hee .' MOTLEY'S CREW OHmJU5i 1lONKIN' ASOUT 'MEN 1 WAS ~IV~ )'EAR~ O\.D .,. 'I ~~NT ~A aAU? A i,emR A?KIN' FOR A PON)' ... --- by Gus Arriola by Harold Le Doux by Tom K. Ryan 1WO iO 601 Pl.eASE. NANCY ROLLO, l GOT LOTS OF CHRISTMAS CrlFTS YOU'RE A LUCKY KIO··· I NEVER OET CHRISTMAS GIFTS .-.~~~~~~-..- . . . MY PARENTS HATE' TO GO SHOPPING ··· I•• I' by Emle BushmHler 1 JUST GET CREDIT CARPS . .. ;! PEANUTS iHEiE'51ME HOOSE~ THAT UTTLf RW-AAIREO GIRL LIVES ... COMICS /CROSSWORD by Charles M. Schutz MAl(Bf. BllllE JEAN KIN6 WILL CALL ME 'WHl(MT;ANO ltMTE ME OUT TO PINNER by Biii Hoest by George Lemont ;'SIGH:. ~·Al\. ON N\Y WAY, CHleF TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS 50 Scot 1slc1no 1 Data 5t SplencJ01 6 Animal lood !12 School sub1 10 01c~ens gtrl 55 Rf'pulscd 1 14 German words prP!>•denl ~Mans mcl\· 15 Dorsal name bOl'les 60 Oua111y 16 High noies Sutf1t 11 Calm 61 S Amer In· 18 Kind of COi· d1an lcQe 62 A1ght·hc1nd 20 Sandptper P<lQC 11 Miserly 63 Ogle 23 -Slarr 64 Fe..,.er 24 ScOI Child 65 Tcughen 26 Foolballer DOWN 28 Mans name 1 Fr1gh1 JO Meat dish 1 Compe1en1 )1 Wa1ers l Anoa 1 down words l2 food •-la 1a 36 Ear Prelu 5 Foils 37 Compcsure 6 Where La 38 Ooze Scala is 39 Data 7 Mans name sources 8 Sloth, e g 2 words 9 Owned f2 Trite tO Scotfcr 44 Singer Lena 11 Swedish 1S· ta no 45 Fame 12 Scope 46 Freedom 13 John Jacob 49 Opera eatra UNITED Fea1UTe Syn01cate r ueso1y s Puzzkl Solved ,, , l• l• •• l • 5 H I o .... ,;Jott:I• •• ( . I r I •IO I I 0 • ,., l (. Ci . l • I • . , ( 1.1.~1 •• In Ir •• l•ln ., .... "'' .. -· •• $I s l . ' l .. 5 0 I I II I I o•• I 0 ·-• c 11 I (. •• I • f -HfOl•I l 0 A I I • •• 5 ( I 5 I .. , ... c I I l l ( ' I • 0 •l•f" ---,., ... ... [[If I 1111( I c . s ' l ( s I l • s•-. .. I f 0 • •11-111 ' I ICll IS 0 I • l I • 0"'1r •ci "l'l'l"I CiiO 1• ( I T •111u-• 1v1•1• 1r I ( • D 115 nns-s •111r 101 19 Complain Informal 12 S<?a bird 25 SI 26 Vulgar 27 Cereal g1ass ?8-put 29 Carry 30 Three- wheeier 32 Alt:>atro~s 33 Protection ~-Inches JS Graf - German t:>al· t1esh1p 37 Wine 40 Playhouse 41 Cameo 42 Condiment-; 43 S1m1an 45 liquor 46 Classify 47 Peace gOd- dess 48 Maxe rigid •9 Couches 51 l Cpls .• 1n canada 53 Stone. Suffix 54 Coll. sub1 56 Naught 57 Ullcltv1ded ~Soak I \ ' I I~ AT YOUA SERVICE I WORLD I OBITUARIES • Polluu Doctm•9 be c.-c,~ DEAR PAT 11 tht~ It.Ill o polka club In Oranae County" Someoo told me the whole aroup hnd movt'd Ila aC'\.lvlUes to Bae Bear l love danc· Ina a nd woulll llke to d.o lhe polka 1galn Can you ftn d uut U lb~ rounty club really has reloca~! T.T .. Cost.a MtH IC'• tJU bett aocl &olDI ...,..,, TH Orao1e Cotm&y Polo Club meeta &M .eeoocl Suday of tatb month from Z &o • p.m. at Phtmben Hall, 3* W. ••tnt SL <Bolaa ud Harbor), Sula A.Ila. Due· lAI followa &k m~tlllfl utll t p.m. aocl moelhly Saturday f'Vt'olal ducet lnl Hhedu.led loo. The C'lob abo plana trips and boldl a larce annual Pk· nlc. "Tho.sie aren't unmenti°"ablts, Grandma. Whe~ Mello•• 110 .. c O...t ••• They're bto and pantift." 0 EAR P T I received o box o! cbestnuts ror Chrh.tmas. Since I don't have a fireplace for "roasting by an open ti.re," I plan on doing the roastina In the oven. I've heard wine can be added ro c bestnuts. but l don't know the method. Can you r1od out" They are supposed to be very good fixed Lhl!~ way DftlrleNod~ Vi •¥tLLIOtf ll [ANOR M VLAMILLION ""' °""' ot Hunt11-e100 IM«n (• P••"""' .,.., °" DK-• 2• ,.,,. "' ,,,. - "f w '"'._,..,...,~ ,,.,, ""'~(.twtkoi\ t. V•t "'Hll1VIA. !Muyt,tJt" (')ginf\t 6t•O\ p,. Otet•.1 (,.,,,,"'l l f(\lP\t• O llllWt\ •IW t .. u,•I 0.""'' .. · ,,,,.,.., lt•rn• t•H '"·'· •na I 01~ht•dt~ F"""'r•1 •#n;1(t' Wllf bf' "'~ t,jt\ ~Wi'f' •I 10 lO AM •• ~nfl\r\10~ Mtt'l"totl•I "'"""' l-Cw••h '"' ~IH'ro Mottu•rv d1~tM' HUOHU E (llH A I HU(,ul '> °"'"°"~-••on t;.,, t "'°' r U t~Jt 1n Nf''#lfUUft ~4l't. <.• 11. ,.~. 04 cor ...... 11~1 -· C"• 'u' v1v-d by "'' wtfai Ean... tn .. or•n < ""' '" •• HUIJh•" ol '>4n -rino. C• ~l\d NAn< y H Owt•n of P•WO..W, t Qt•f\ch h1ldr .. n f.ttuttwr of C•rOtyf\ ( ruMtnf'v o l S•n Jon, C• •na f ,.,,,.,., M HUqnto\ of inGl•l\-11\, lnfli•n~ ~·~t 14:fVI<" ~f· f\0.0 on WM,.....,..y, Oto<•mc>er '1, 1919 ol I 00 PM on 1'11' C,,.00'1 .-P41<lfo( VH>,. Mf'MO .. •I Par~ '~ P.c.111( Vtf'W Or1v~. Nt WOOf1 S.cKn. C• fAm11., O't''•'" 1n llN Of flowet\ tntrr'\Uflel cootr•Dullons bt ,.,_to lhe N"Pon C•n••• Ulltlf<I Metl'OCl"n Cllur<h 8ull0 lnQ F"~ or your t•vo,.•t• cn.rov P.te. t•t<. VteW Mo<tu.ary d1te<:lort. EMEllSOH J ACK EMERSON r•\tO•nt ol N,-woort ~n. CA Pd\Wd d•Ay on °"' .. m °"' 1•. 1'11 '" 11\e ·~ ol 18 U•lo~•d lftt,.., ot Jew Etn••r\On ot N•wO<"I f!o...t<h, Cit ..,.., 81111• 8oo f'AC • "' M11waukt-i" Wt\.C°"'J•O lovmg n roltHH ot H.n,eu Em~11.on ot <J'-•6h0tn .. C1tv. 0• •unom•, •lw '"'· v1veo b't l or•ncknitor~n Fun~r•I ,,.,..,.,,,,. #HI bf' ""Vld on T"ur\d•v. O.com~• 71 1q19 •• 10 00 AM~• ,,.,. E1l\twooct B•lPt•\I Churcn in fulY. O~•ahOm• ••'" ~t!v. Tom EUIU ot- t1uahr"Q •ntit-rtnel'lt wHI ~at O•• Hlli CtJmf'lf't't' 1n Mc.All\tPr O lilltlftOm• '>"l•lh luthfll l<l'l'O -•ludry Otr~· tnr~. •11 E tllh St, Coll• Me••· ..... 4888 SCHECHTI• WOLF SCHECHTER. Pi1H411 tway t)tl Do<emo.r ?• 1t1a. bo<f' Jf'l,..'Y 11 l"O) 111 A..,,.I,.._ Stuvt..., 1>y hi~ wot~ Bell~, 'IOI\ Jo\4'C>ll ot !>cotUd•I•. A,.,.,..., oauQMIL'r\ Sonct<a 01 Hunt· •l>Qlon Be.ocn. Ct -1...0.1 of New Y.,,k C11v. 3 QT.andelli'~*" And<••. •••t!n •nd E"''~ Gr•W'ltdit ietvM:~ w•r~ l'lf'IO tO(J.#y ttt 11 00 PM •t P.c,1fl( ltoew M<lmorlal P••-. N""'Po<t 8e.cn. '" PM.•f~ Vff!'WNtotluarydttK•O'' COY PLANO C'I ARA S. COUPl.ANO, ~ M, •nd .t \8 Ytr-•r r~\tOl'f"t of .-.unun9•on B"•<h . C•. Pan~a aw•y on O~um~r 1~ 1•18 ~t Iha Hunllnolon e .. ch Con• ,,..,f"'\(f'nt ~ The wife of tne .,le ( ,.,._ Couotancl. Mn Couot•.nd wn d ,,....,,....,, OI lllf' i:.,,, ClvishM> Church ..,, ,..vf"tHWa1on Be•cn, O•mascu\ wn1t~ <,nriM 11 13 ot S...tMtd An•. C111 ano " Sia y .. ,.,. m .. m 0tr cM 1 M ~a\10f Ch•e>t•r .:: ?S~ OtOf'r ol £;u1er11 Siar Mr\ Cou1>t•no '',,_.••st s.ut"V1¥1nq rn.mbfr o• ,,,.,, 1m""'°''-"'~ tAm•I• r r•t"nd'\ mav ••II trom t 00 PM 10 ~ 00 PM IOdOy <ti "''"'<' BrotMr\ Smltn,· MOrh.1ar~ -Nh.,.,• •uner•I Sit'r¥•t9'\ w"t bt '°""'"" OUCl"<I •• 10 00 AM on Frt<Uy With "Tom Ow ... rton PA\ll'lf ot 'hf' r.,~, (nrnt1on Cn.urtn utfi<.1dflf'tQ lnfpr. m ... n1 w 111 be 1n A~ HHls C.me"rv p,,..,,~ hrotn'''' \m10"I\" MOrlu•ry OlftttlOf''l~ WA\' l ttfOOORE WA'Y , .-H, '*"cl@nt ot Huullnqton Of>tKh, CA P.,\\t'G '"'•• tin 0 ,.1.11tntwr 1b, 1Y/8 41 Pb(.111<• tiO\P''"' Fun.•rfil 1trrd~mtnt\ Of'nd "''' di P1rr',. 8rotn•''' Sm11n, Mott v "., ).)o..o\J"t> HULETT [ n wMlO M l<UL[ IT. '""cwn1 Ot C"n\1111 Mt'41 Ca P4'\"ioe"d awtty on t>"" """'°r l~. 1q19 W"''~ Dy hi> ""''" HH1n nt Co\I~ Mtw Ca . w.,, '•''"""n H•f'iCklll .lnd Gr~OQ Muk!tt allot f r••tnnnt. (J . '''U~r~ Estntr Ccrt..en • 1no fl'lly fur""' ot lnal .. M, mothf'r M r' 'ntv1~ Hulett .JISO 04 l,_,fana dnd 41 qr1tnct<n1•Clrf'n S.rvtc~ •1H oe M id <1n Wl'GnhOdy <ll 1 00 PM •I In~ H11r(>Or l .twn Motlmorl<1I CNP<'I with l>n Wtn\lon Gould, Pll\lor, Chur<h ot Ill~ Foolhtlf\ Cf)n0r~ot1on.I (hufUI ol f,,,,,n, u•tt<.1•1tno ~,.,,,.,~ vndt-r '"'" d•"'"' ''""' of H"roor Ldwn Mount 011Ye- Mur1 ;dry, (O\IA ~\IJ ~H~ WA ROLE EOMONO J WARDLE, rtitd~nl ot l••ouna 8ft«h. C• Pa\Wd •'-"•• Ol'I (>t•<tttn~r 14 .. 1~11 ~ '" w rvt¥.0 OV ""' "'".,. VtrQ1n1... wn Edmond ot liu1hAnk1 C.a . " ~'''"' fMI Goroon ot GlrOdrtl~, C.t ano 2 or•n<ktuldnH1 •• , .... ,.~ Wl'Ctr• MkJ on WP<:SM\.Oofy dt •~• Cll•IK'' .-McConnrO MOr1uMv De.at• Notk-n · L •twl'• ti••<". Ca "'''" (enon l••nn<.a" ,..,_ ott1<1.i1no In 11.v OI , ___ " ~-llotl\ mav De ""'a. IO ,,,. ~~ A•-••1-lnt .. "*11 .... •• 1 ........ 1...-C-i.<v c;t-o.>a t.4 MCC-orm1ck MOrUi1•1y L.•0""" li..c1t 01lt<IOn NILSON JU\llN (LAROCNEL~N ... ~Y••• lattlMtll Otl _, lk•h , ••• "' llNCI U S Ail ~Of<• ""'°I<" ~•••< ... ""'" IW IWl<I •t 1 00 PM"" I hur "°"'•I ron Mvtr•C'-• AlllllQlon N•tlOIWI M llttA f 'i' ''"'•l•rv, Art1ng1on \'1ro1n1• •4Mnot U W"n MOunt 01av.- M0'1Utt' V ot tO\t• ~w t\)fwJ,01n~ d1te<1or' Deaths Elsewhere NEW YORK (AP) - Claudius Charles Philippe, 68. executive vice president and ~eneral manager of the Wa ldorf.Astoria Hotel from 1954 to 1959 and former executi ve vice president of the Zecken. dorf Hotels and Loew'll . Hotels. died Monday of he art failure LONG GROVE, 111. tAP) -Norris C. Flan· n agin, 74, form e r chairmnan and chief ex· ecutive of the Kemper Ins urance Companies, d ied Tuesday in Naples. Fla .. the f irm a n . nounced. PHILADELPHIA (AP) -Archbis hop John Scbmoodl u k , spiritual leader of the nation's Ukrainian Catholics, is dead al age 66. the victim of a heart attack suffered Monday night at his home PALO ALTO <AP) - Juliette Perrin Weston, wido w of William Weston. wno was a prom· inent rancher and or· chardist. died Dec. 17. at the age of 91. She was a forme r president and a director or the Home of Benovolcncc. now <'tilled Eastrield ARBUCKLE CA P l - A Catholic priest from Vallejo. the Rev Jean Carrigy, 40. was killed Sunday whe n his car was hit by a wrong· way driver on Interstate 5. the Colusa County cot-. oner's office reported. D.T .. Fountain Valley Sam J. ~bastJanJ of SebuUan.1 VlDeyards uys hl8 mother recommeod.I placing the roasted cbHlno.ts lo a pa11 wblle they're aWJ bot. Cover the nuta wtl.b a doth soaked ln dry red wt.De ud let them steam for about 20 minutes. Mrs. Sebastian) says adding wine helps m ake chestnuts easier to peel and more navorflll. Mg B ottW. Worllt S oaee tldng? DEAR PAT: Who buys Avon bottles? I have several which l understand are quite valuable, but I don't know where to sell them or even have them appraised. 0 .8.. Costa Mesa A voo's Los l\.ogeles headquarters advises you to check two books to determlDe vaJoe: "Avon Bot· ties Encyclopaedia by Bud RaallD, Box 9868, Kansas City, Mo. 64134, and "West.em World," Sll Harrison St., San F rancisco, Calif. 9Ut5. Your best bet ror selling the bottles ls to contact lbe An· Uque Trader, P.O. Box 1050, Dubuque, Iowa 52001. A.T. orrers a weekly sales pubUutioo, along with a llstlng of bottle club dealers throughout the coun· try. Tbe Avon spokesman emphasizes that the worth or bottles depends on whether Mley are fulJ a.nd Ir the carton ls available. To1tr Book IHdn't Arri~ DEAR PAT: I ordered the Ted Nugent Beyon- do club members hip and tour book from Wherehouse in Waltham. Mass .. on Sept. 13. It's the usual story of my check being cashed and no merchandise received. Can you help? L.S., Corona del Mar A VS contacted Wberehoale, and your order ls being malled with no further delay. In Pf~kle o,,~ Sa~ Acb DEAR PAT: What's happened to the spaghetti sauce TV commercial that clalmed Hunt's Prima Salsa sauce was "lhlcker and zestier" than re· gular Ragu sauce? All of a sudden it just stopped, and I've wondered if someone decided that was un- fair advertising. J .T .. Huntington Beach The National Advertising Division or tbe Coun· cil or BeUer Business Bureaus got Into the act. The NAO found out that Ragu had introduced Extra Thick & 7.esty Spaghetti Sauce, and decided that Hunt's strainer test showing Runt's sauce stJcldng there, while Ragu drained oat, was mlsleadlng in view of the new Ragu producL While disagreeing, Hunt's dropped the commercial. L un~h Bag Sear~lt Lawadeftf DEAR PAT: I've been looking for months for paper school lunch bags. Apparently. there's a paper strike or some kind and it's getting ex· pensive to use plastic bags. Do you know or any stores with a backlog of stock? C.T .. Newport Beach No. All the markets A YS contacted are out. If aoyont> knows where these lunch bags can sllU be bought, drop a line to let au or U8 know. In the meantime, some markets are willing to "donate" a few small.size bags to pleading mothers at the checkout stand <I know). Fast food sacks also serve the purpose. Hote l Class Set Six courses will be offered by Orange Coast College's Hotel Management Department in the. spring. Spring semester classes begin Feb. 5 . The classes are titled "Field Experience in ----------Hotel Operation." "Front Office Procedures," "Accounting and Night Audit." "Hotel Market· Newport Oasse s Scheduled Salling, d og obe· dieoce, gymnastics, ice skating .and modem Jan dance are among tbe courses that will begin the week ol Jan. 8 under the sponsorship of the Newport Beach Parks, Beaches and Recreation Department. f'IB( fA.MtLY COLOMIAL~L HOMI 7801 Borsa Ave Westm1nster 893-3525 PACIFIC YllW MIMOalALPAH Cemetery Mortuary Chaoet 3500 Pacific View Drive Newport Beach 64+2700 McCOttMtCK MOttTUARllS Laguna Beach 494-9415 Laguna Hells 768-()g33 San Juan Capistrano 495-1776 IAl.l'UIBGBC* IU•.UHOMI 646-2424 Costa Mesa 67~9450 mg," "Hotel· Motel Operation," and "Independent Study ." For information about the program, phone 556·5835. Registration for spring classes runs Jan. 10 through Fe b. 9 in the OCC Admissions Building. Registration information is available by calling 556·5735. PUBLIC NOTICE ~ltTITIOUS 8USINUS NAMa STATEMINT ,,,. foltow1119 pertons ••• 0011'19 l>UWMSS •s; PACIFIC ZAP, 117'1 MonMClt Aven~. O.relen Gni"9. CelllOfnle "Ml .Joli.It M. Mlle&, 20370 M410ft0li., Hunllngton llH<ll. G.iifoml• ~ 1111av lemerlpe , 3UI West ()ranqe, Al\aMIM, Calllof'llll f2tot Tiii\ t>usl,..u " condut ltd 11'1' • 0-Mrtl p.trt"'l"\hlp JONI M. Mllft Thi• st•l-1 was Ill.., wllll t"9 Co1111ty Cler-of Oranoe County on Ot«moer n. m~ · PI01ttt Pvt>toi'*I 0rlfl0t C.oul Ooallv Pltot, Ot<tmo.r 11 ..-o Jtnu.rv 3, 10, It, "" PUBLIC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE PICTlnOYS aUSINHS NAME STATSMINT TM 101tow1no Ptf'IOfll ere doln9 butlnentt· RHINESMITH S P O RT CHARTERS OF HEWPORT 8EACH, U04 Mlr(VI ,.,..., Hflopor1 8eeclt. CA ~ Jolln Wllll•m A1>IM1mlth 5'., 2SIOI NavalO Of' •• El Toro. CA .,._ JOltft WlllleM Rlllntsmlllt Jr., J~ Mlf<lll Ave., HtWllOr1 llet<lt, CA .,.., Tiiis bu1lne•t '' condu<IM o., • .... ,., PlrtMnllltl. JolWI W RlllMtl'lllllt Jr. T'llll ll .. .ment ., .. t1i. wltfl 1M COVll,tv (111111 of Of'Mltt c-tv °" O.Cemw 4, 1m. p....,, "'*lllMCI Oi' ... (Mii Delly Piiot DK. a, IJ, lO, 27, 1t11 ,,..._,. PVBUC NOTICE PICTITIOUI eUJINIH NIIMI tTATCMINT Registration is availa· ble by mail only through the department in City Hall, with information obtainable by calling 640·2271. Recreation brochu res a r e also available at that loca- tion. Meeting Postponed T he Newport-Irvine W1ste-Ma n a1em e o t Planning Agency's re1'- ul1r meetlna scheduled for Thursday bat been postPoMcl until Jan 4. Tbe change was made to accommodate several members of the board, who have a conlllcUna meeting ol another com· mlttee on 'lbunday. The meetlnf will bealn at 3 p.m. tn lhe second floor conference room al Newport Beach City Hall. • ~. Oeoember77, 1978 DAILY P1LOT 87 lacks to Revolt? Carmichael Plans To Resurface 8)' MO&T ROSENBLUM CONAKRY. Guinea (~Pl Stokely Carmichael. just finishing his 10th year of lying low In th14 West African socialist backwater, saya he will surface again in o worldwide black re· volullon. The 1truggle or the 1960s was misguided and corrupt, says Carmlcbael, who preached up- heaval and Black Power as a leading American black activist in that turbulent decade. This time be wants blacks to over· throw capitalist impe ralisl systems everywhere. "THE 11ME IS perfect," he said in a rare lnterview.. "The old leaders have. either been overwhelmed or killed by the FBI. Like they says in baseball, the field is wi·i·i·ide open." Carmichael. now 37. laughed eastty as he curled his lanky frame into a wicker chair and chatted over wine in his gov· ernment ·owned seasid e bungalow. But he seems deadly serious. . "It's all in he re." he ex· plaipe d . br a ndi s h ing the "Handbook of Revolutionary Warfare" by the late Kwame Nkrumah, independence leader of Ghana. IT OUTLINES A MIX or education and violence to unite blacks in the All ·Afri can People's Revolutionary Party. Carmichael s aid branches have been established in the United States. the Caribbean and Europe. with leadership ut Africa. But he would not discuss the strength or the organization of the party. "Let's just call il a s mall par· t)'." he said. chuckling. -p Wl,..,iw.to LYING LOW Stokely Carmichael "THIS IS NOT yet th~ moment for mass membership. We want people who are not going to run in the heal of the battle. We need people who are serious. who re. alize it is not a lO·minute hot fight but a s truggle in one's lifetime. Once pe-0ple realize how they are being exploited. we will have more foot soldiers than we need." Carmichael moved here in January 1969 after he was ex· pelled from tbe Student Non· violent Coordinating Committee 1n the United States. As chairman of SNCC. he was a leading advocate of Black Power. "I came to stay because Guinea was the vanguard of the African revolution. and I wanted Death Rate Down; Average Life 73 WASHINGTON CAP> -The death rate in the United States fell to an all·time low last year. and life expectancy for the general population reached 73.2 years, the highest ever. the government reports. The tentative vital statistics for im, which are the latest figures available from the National Center for Health Statistics. also show a significant decline in infant mortality. Increases were noted in the number or births, marriages and divorces. "THE ABSENCE OF AN INFLUENZA epidemic during 1977 m ay in part be responsible for the record low total death rate.'' the report said . Public health officials anticipated a major swine nu epidemic last year, but it never materia.lued, and there were only scattered outbreaks of the A· Victoria nu strain. As a result. the death rate from Influenza and pneumonia. which together rank as the fi!t.h lead1ng cause of death in the Unit· ed States. £ell more than 20 percent. T HE DROP HELPED BRING THE total provisional death rate to 8.8 deaths per 1,000 population, which the statistics center. an arm of the Department of Health, Education and Welfa re. termed ··the lowest annual rate ever recorded in this country.·' . The death rate was 8.9 per 1,000 population in 1976. While the 1977 figures will remain tentative unt1 I final st atistics are published next year. the numbers are not expected to change sub· stanllally in most categories. T HE RECOR D LOW DEATH RATE was refl ected in the latest life expectancy tables, which show a typical baby born in 19'77 could be expected to live for 73.2 years, almost fi ve months longer than the previous year and three full years longer than a baby born in l.968 . Record high life expectancies were registered for each sex and racial group as well as for the general population, the center said. White females bom last year could be expected to live 77.7 years, the longest of any group, followed by non.white females. 73.8 years: whitemales,69.9years ; andnon·whitemales,65years. revolution." he said. "Thal was the correct decision. Each Ume I re·analyie'iny t.hlnJdng, r realize bow con:ec:t it was. Atrica is my home. I'm staying." HE SPENDS HALF his time In th.is tumbledown capitai city and half traveling around the world . He occasionally vi.sits the United Stat.es but keeps a low profile while there. "I'm just bemg quiet. 1 used to work for SNCC in Mississippi and there you had to be quiet. l re&lized lhls was a time to be Quiet -so I went and got quiet." Carmichael has c learly mellowed since the late 19606, when he once thundered: "If we don't get justice, we're going to tear this COWltry apart." AFTER LEAVING TUE Unit· ed Slates, he said, "l realized how stupid and arrogant I was. l actually thought we could change things overnight. That ia one thing Africa teaches you: patience." He has kept the American citizenshlp he acquired when he m o ve d t o Ne w Yo rk rrom Trinidad as a youlh. but he also has a Guinean p assport and belongs t o the Guinean Democratic Party. which con· trots the 5 mill.Jon people in this one·party state with ironclad or· der. For Carmichael. life is simple in this socialist society. where e ven basic food staples are scarce. He is separated from his wife. South African folksinger Miriam Make ba, who lives nearby across a palm·fringed cove. He parties with friends and plays soecer and basketball. but most of his time is devoted to the cause. HE ANSWERS HIS phone with the phrase that punctuates a lmos t e ve ry conversation among Guineans : "Ready for the revolution." He reads con· s taotly and listens to radio newscas ts from London, Washington, Moscow and Pek· ing. Carmichael's government ra · l ions are augmented by All· African People's Revolutionary Party's fWJds that allow him to travel and to maintain an aging Volvo sedan. The U.S. Internal Revenue Service has a lien again.st him for $55,000 in back taxes, but th•~ does not keep him awake night.o; a ny more than the s teamy weather or the mosquitos . T H E CA R MIC H AEL · Nkrumah doctrine says blacks must realize they are Africans Orst, wherever they are, and must work to make Africa strong, Wlder socialist govern· ments that reject the economic ex ploitatio n of "neo - colonialtsm.'' To ach.leve this, it holds , they must overthrow unjust systems -like the American govern. ment -lhat stand in their way Afterward. they can determine whether to stay where they arc or return to Africa The first ste p. Carmichael says. is to point out the system's injustices. His party is small now, he said. "but we will eventually triumph. There is one thing l can tell you about revolution and one thing I can't. Victory is in· ev1lable. When. I can't tell you." Money, Humanities -Mix Ex,.UCI Teacher Points to Shakespeare Success GAINE.5VILLE, Fla. CAP)- ' 'Th e antipathy between humanities and business goes back as far as you can go in his· lOry, but they really have a lot In common," says a classics professor from lhe University of Florida who's assumed the role of mediator between the two sides. "Festival plays in ancient Rome and Egypt poked f wi at businessmen for peony.pinching ways," says Dr. Lewis Sussman. "And on the other side of the coin. ancient Greek comedies por trayed int ellectuals like Socrates as impractical Ivory· towered dreamers with their heads literally ln the clouds." S U SS MAN , F OltM E ll chairman of the classics depart· ment at UC Irvine, is trying to break down suspicions between the warring groups as part of a program sponsored by the Na- tt on a I En dowment for the Humanities. "The businessman looks at the humanities professor with auspl clon, t.h.in.kini. •If he's so In· t.elUf ent. has something on the bal , why lsn't h e rich ?' M eanwhlle. the pe rson in humanlUes may think lhe busl· neasman ls too career or1Mted and refuses to deal with truth. beauty. Justice. I.he Important thln11 tn Ure." But Sussman tells student& in his .. tfumanltJes aod Business" counc that buatn65 Is an en· deavor of human beings with the -P W ....... PROFESSOR MEDIATOR Dr. Lewi• Suaamen purpose of serving humo.n be· lngs and ''hum'11" Is the root word of humanities. ''BOTH B USINESS AN D bumahlttes arc baslcolly In· qulrlos into human desires and goals, Into what people want o.nd think they want In order to bt hippy. Underlying both fields ts lhc ba&lc question, 'What 11 vaJue'!'." says Sussman. who In· vita b\Dinessmcn and busl.ness proressors to vbit hls tlas~. "And a businessman, to be any good, has to be inventive and creative, the same things ·we try to teach in humanities. The humanistic bent helps you look at the balance sheet 10, 20, 30 years ahead. too." he says. Sussman points out that ooe of the reasons f or the "Humaoitised PerspecUves on the Professions" proaram is that the tecbn.lcal aspecta of a business. engineering, medical or legal education are quickly out.dated. "~CC O UNT I NG TECHNIQUES change every 10 years or so,·' he notes as an ex· ample. But what a s tudent learns about the role of business aa e basic insiUlution of culture. an4 what lbe student learns about human nature -whether in a hu maolUes or a management course -will last a lifetime, says Susaman. "Some people say there is no human arts content 1n the bus!· ness school," Sussma.n says. "But a business coune can be an e xcellent h umanistic tx· perle nce and a humanities course that doesn't awaken .tu. dents' minds can be stlnlna. "For all the evidence you rtal· ly need lhat there's no ccmfllct between the humanities and bu si n ess. Jutt l ook at Shokts pcare. H e wu t he 1reatest playwrl1ht In t.be Engliah language and an enormous commercial succea." • ,1 I , . ' -DAILY PILOT Wednffday, December 27. 1978 •No Ollwr' Jolle Kavner w111 star with Richard Thomas 1n "No Otht'r Love" for "BS Jl is bnsed on u trul! lncld nt ln· vol vlng mental· ly retarded peo p l \' w h (> ~ ~· famlllh tl'y to cparutc them __ ,......., NOW PLAYI NG -..i WI~ _, -~ n--"'-'"•• ""'°"""--ca...... C)-w-,,,,,_, ,,._ ,, ........ , ,, ... ~ "THl eon f'IOM UAZIL• lxe<.ulhiot rrodtK.a ROBlRT FIMa Mink by IUJlY GOl.DSMnH Suttnp&Ay by HCYWOOO GOULD from the-' by llA LNIN ProdlKecl by MAJmN llCHAllDS ....ct STANLlY O'TOOU Dlttded by f'RANKUN I· SCIWfNUl )t"~-:!:-, '-" ,,~-------;;;--ltt. .... ~ .._ ............ "--.,.aw-r ... ;.t~ NOW AT A lHlATU NIA• YOU MATINEES AT MOST THEATRES UA CINEMA SOUTH COAST Costa Mesa 540-0594 Laguna Beat ll 494· 151 4 PLITT CITY CENTER FOUNTAIN VALLEY CINEMA Orange634 9282 Foonta1n V;atley 839·1500 FOX Funonon 525-470 8th Smash Week in Los Angeles •ISTOlC~ Costa MMe 640-7444 CMDOMI Orange 634-2563 ... _____ . IUDIUM Darn.t .. OrangA 639-8770 UA CIHIMA we11m1nater Mall 893-0648 POUHT AJH YAWY O.l Fountain Valley 962·2481 olilics By TOM JORY NEW YOHK (AP) Posma t'I a pncst. ABC Ntw' ('Orrnpond nl WllUam Sherman amuulcd nmcro and • tape recorder into a maximum 1ecur1ty prt.on In tht> Ph1Uppln to d()(umen1 ev1d n ot mlatreotmenl or poUUcal prtsonen. Mor than II duien or the 110 pr11onert Shtorman aaw told of torture by electric shock. wat r and beoUna ••'l'lfE A<a:NTS f.t~F.CT1l0CtJTED ME, .. one lnmoto <1ecl1rt'd. "Tht-y appUcd Uahted clr1relles lo my toenail• ond my bru111t1;• aald another. Sherman, producer Tom By waters and the ABC cttw also v alt~ Chile and Iran in quest or similar dale. and their report 11 t.he focus of "ABC New a Cloeeup Thl' Politics or Torture." to be broadcast al 10 o'clock tonl&ht on Channel 7. T HE HOUR-LONG documentary contrasts PrHIMl\t c~u'ter·1 otten·alaOOd commitment to ~()\\ Pl ·\\ l ~C. C ... A WllT LIDO Westminster (71 4) 892"'4493 Newport Beach (71'*1673·8350 Ila.I lllllHI Orange ( 714) 568-7022 NOW PLAYING "I JUST LOVED THIS MOVIE!" -Judith Crist Fronto Brusoti's "BEST FOREIGN FILM OF THE YEAR!" -,.,, f\tt W1n\ll"' NY J,lt '~t Starring N•no Manfredi ond Anno Korlno. A Wo<ld NortMI Film. 11\tl~t I ''"'I ' •••'ti•' .. ""'• '*' ""'• ....... human n&hU with the administraUon'a continued support of what ABC ducribea as dictatorial or suppressive regime&. Carter ls the fant president since John F. Ken- nedy to press for human righu throughout the world. says ABC's John Martin. lhe host cor· retponden\, but the admlnlatratlon's actions in that area have been lnconslatenl and confilct.ing. The prosram cites. specifically, "aid to a die· tator :· the Philippines' President Marcos: con- gressional pressure on Chile's government with few positive results, and Carter's continued public support or the Shah ot Iran, whose country, ABC says, has perba1>1 the worst record of the three in protecting human rights. CAllTER RAS, INDEED, raised the world's consciousness regarding human rights. Martin says, but the government's policies continue to be moderaled by political and other concerns. The "ABC News Closeup" avoids exploration or the internal conditions that led to suppression or human rights In t.he three countries. An interview with Carter was sought in con· nection with the news special. Martin says, but the ---..... : '" l\\ l'I ·\\I'<, CIMIOllf UA~ EIWMDI' UllOll Orange 634-2!'>53 Wtalmlnsltf 893-«>4& CoN Mm 646·0573 IMA PLAZA 8111 !'>29·!>339 M1nlefl Orl .. ·fft tn.4MS o .......... tJ1.0)60 c ...... , 11 ,.,,_, c..._.w ... "2 ... tl ,_ ... v-, °""" ... _, ... o MASffltPIECE of ANIMA110N ••• o 8UltST of FUN and ADVINTUllE ii I U A CltyC- C•rt•"'•Vteito 11 .... M"' ()o In CW..ma C•fthtf u.A.Mtvln• IU.:lt11 ·-,,..,_ ,,...,., ,..._JI "RALPH BAKSHI HAS MASTERMINDED A TRJCJMPHANT VISUAUZATION OF ONE OF THE EPIC FANTASIES OF OUR LITERARY AGE:' -c.. ... ,,.. -oc "'•'·-~· ENTERTAINMENT I TELEVISION president declined. In lus place, key government officials are asked about continued aid to the three countries despite Carter's declaration in January 1m. "Our commitment to human rights must be absolute." OF U.S. AID TO THE Philippines totaling $133 million this year. Warren Christopher, a deputy secretary or state, t.ella ABC News: "ll ls very important to the security, not only of those islands but of the other countries in the Far East, and so we have to keep in balance, keep in harmony. our commitment to human rights but also our security commitment." "Iran is the clearest example of the Carter ad· ministration putting politics ahead of human rights." Martin says. and Carter. al one point. is shown saying the shah "has moved aggressively to establish democratic principles." ,....... ..... wllll IM11htlr la wlllt .... Tl•, Next Ylll" Is flllld With." -Gene Shah!. KNBC· TV Ellen Burstyn Alan Alda A On~rwt Plctur~ T «hnk:o4o<fl> '-----------J ~ .... \#'14.-...Ctt• •·~ -c: •u ....,.,, •••~• NOW PLAYING QmJIOlll fDWUDS' NEWPORT Orange 634·2553 Newpon Beach 644-0760 "KING OF THE GYPSIES" lRl "MAGIC"(R) 'PARADISE ALLEY" 10G) "SAME TIME NEXT YEAR" CPGl "INVASION OF THE BODY SNATCHERS"(PG) DOLBY STEREO "FORCE TEN FROM NAVARONE"cPG > ''MOMENT BY MOMENT" (PGJ STAn1um 5scAeen 6 3 9 78 60 DAIVE·tn ~ .......... . St1Cloum O•ll 0 PFllC'LS "PINOCCHIO" (GI "SINBAD-EYE OF THE. TIGER ' "THE GROOVE TUBE" "HALLOWEEN" (R) "MAGIC"(R) "CORVETTE SUMMER " "MAGIC" "EMBRYO" (A) "UP IN SMOKE" "BLACK SUNDAY" (RJ ALL DAIVl·INSOl"C:N 6:)0P.M.NfGHn.Y Cll1ICI UnCler I 2 F r .. Unleu e KICIC11e Pl1y.round Across the they warped to Destruction thr energy of Rock M Galaxy escape Laser the Timeless lsslon $3.50 Matinee ho s -nder 18 -$2.50 Newport Blvd . Info: (714) 673-8350 or534-FREE .. • • \• 8 .. e e \ ,. / ENTERTAINMENT I MUSIC BOX NOW f'L ~\~I NG ... h CIUT IUlU P'AM ....... M TWWI 'T ' UellN 9'«11 6'4 '''' ........,, ~ t•t 4011) W.M aw nJ llO'l ....... t09&M •I lJ HM., Ill °"'3 Nea1 Vear'• Eve. Dance your way from the 40;; to the SO$ for$49.50* Spend New Year's Eve recalling the nostalgic 40's decade at The Foxtrot, The Inn At The Park's new ballroom disco. Enjoy live and disco big band dancing. comedian, and a delicious 5 course dinner. If you remember Glenn Miller. VJ Day and Truman ... The Foxtrot is your pl"ce for New Year's Eve. • LIVE Im IANO DAMCllffi TO THE KOTH WIWAMS OllCMUTllA • Hi UNO-SOUH DllCG • POflUlM c:GmlMAI llU IUCKETT • Dtt•Ell FU,,_ CllDICE Of llEf AllD SlAfGlm 001&& • COQ{TAIU. CMAm'AGMt. PARTY FAVORS • AU.nlCLUSlft PIUCE. FRO: YAUDATm PM1llNG • SP'£CIAl f'MCE AVAll.AIU FOii ADYMCE IOOIOMG OM TAILD OF ID •Price of $49.50 per couple Includes: complete dinners. one cocktail per person, bottle of champagne, all entertainment, party favors, taxes. gJatuJUes and parking. (Single price $27.50) Advance reservations requested ... prices higher at the door. Phone today ... (714) 750-1811, Ext. 7194 AT THE INN AT THE PARK 1855 South Harbor Bl\/d. (~t Anatwlm Conwti11on Cmtul Wldl!Mdey, December 27, 1978 · DAILY PILOT 89 Christmas Baby Actress Tippi lledren holds a 2112-pound ligon, born on her ranch at Acton on Christmas day. The baby cub. tentatively named Noel. has the face of her m~er. Debbie. an African lioness, and the striped legs , tail and s tomach of her father. Nicholas, a Siberian tiger. The birth was filmed for the movie "Roar." About 150 large cats live on the ranch. Tigons are rare. but Noel is not the first of her kind. Lavish Opera Planned 'Die F'letkrmaus' Promises Comedy, Romance Wbeo Carole Boelter launched Orange Coast College's Five Penny Opera Company five years ago, the key word for the premiere production of Puccini's "Gianni Schicchi" was "small.'' OCC's versatile professor of music recalls that the pioneer production was ID a "small, intimate theater." AND, WHATEVER THEIR vocal stature. it TOM BARLEY 'i Music Box · "" was still a small cast. The accompaniment was fine casting job. Allen Johnson is making his first equally small but appropriate -a single piano appearance with FPOC as the handsome and that nobly kept pace with the Puccini score. roguish Baron von Eisenstein. But ffiat was five years ago. Today, with her Jill Goodsell, of Jullliard School of Music and air of "providing opera for the community of Chicago Conservatory of Music reputation. will Orange CoWlty" unchanged, Carole Boelter can play Rosalinda. JUI, of course, is an FPOC veteran. look around her at the kind of staging that wasn't Melissa Tosb is the maid. Adele Mike possible five seasons ago. l Her offering this year is a lavish, exciting McCormack plaY.s Dr. Falke and Nlcco lino "Die F1edermaus," which will have a ~member Furticellais Alfred, cast, a 40-piece orchestra and sumptuous costum· The column predicts that this particular ing and decor as it sets about telling Johann "Fledermaus" will be talked about on our Orange Strauss' hilarious account of the rich Baron von Coast for a loog time to come. Eisensteinandbisescapadewithfidelity. JT WILC BE OFFERED IN the OCC ••IT RAS SOMETHING FOR everyone." Ms. auditorium al 8 p.m. on Jan. 12. 13. 19 and 20. See Boelter explains. "It contains comedy."'romance you there. and Strauss' beautiful Viennese waltz music. The column's hat ls raised to all readers as we which needs no mtroduction to anyone." wish one and all a healthy and happy New Year. Thal fine creative designer. Bradley Elsberry. Aftd a bumble word of thanks to those many re· is doing the sets and eo&lumes ror "Flerdermaus." aders who extended the same greetine via letter Three full-stage sets wiU be used. including the _an_d_t_el_epbon.;......_e_. ------------- elaborate and mammoth interior that will depict Prince Orlofslcy's summer palace. Ms. Boelter appears, on paper. t.o have done a Phone Tapped At Sinatra Office? NEW YORK (AP) -Investigators wiretapped the phone of Frank Sinatra's secretary because they believed she knew about profit skimming at the bankrupt Westchester Premier Theater. the Daily News reported in Wednesday's editions. The newspaper said it had obtained documents showing that federal investigators suspected Sinatra's secretary. identified only as Dorothy. knew about the alleged profit skimming at the theater. Several reputed organized crime figures are on trial in connect.ion with fraud charges arising from the theater's bankrupt~y. 'The wiretap was part of the investigation that led to the trial, the Dally News said. Neither Sinatra nor bis secretary is charged with any wrongdoing in connection with the bankrupt theater. NOW PLAYING EDWAROS'IMITillGTOI Huntington Beach 848·0388 CllEDOM( Orange 634·2553 -~ flttETTY IAIY 1:20 THE TQtANT 1:00 • 10:11 ~~~-ID~~!UWU.I .,. __ .. _ .............. .--.c-.•OIC*G- ............ ...,. c.acM • (JtCMll&-..- c a c. v • .-....r-... ......, ......... _ ...... ("" __ L_. _M_._e_o_Y_o _ _,;) INFORMS In tho DAILY PILOT • NOW THRU SUNDAY ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER ALL NEW 1979 Edition. featuring *A Galaxy of Skating Stars •A Perfect Holiday Treat • ~un for the Whole Family Tues. Dec. 28 . , .............. I Pfl Wed. Dec 27 . ,...:;-..;-. ........ IM• Thurs. Dec. 28 .•..•••. 2 PM•• I PM• Fri. Dec. 29 .......... 2 PM• • I PM• S•t. Dec. 30 .......... 2 PM" • I PM Sun. Dec. 31 .......... 1 PM a 5 PM• ALL SEATS RESERVED--$7LS8' $5 • JRS. 14 & UNDER Vt PRIC1;. TICKETS AVAILABLE AT: CONVENTION CENTER BOX oma. ALL TICKETRON & MUTUAL OUTLETS. Visa end M .. tef Cherge .c:cepeed FOR SR. cmzEN, SCOUT• GROUP DtSCOUNTS CALL (114) 136-5000 ................ -... " ~.r.n;ra. .. .... ........... .- KtNO Of THI OYPSlllS•I QOSSID IWOllDI _....,.,.... __ CAUf<MINIA IUITI INt • llAne ON TMI _, C&M~ "'P9Y WNICM WAY MIT LOOSF' ................. •LL ?Ml WOILD-'-•-.-.Y "'WAl8.SH9' DOWN'" CPGI .... ................... .. ••••••••••••••• , ••••••••••• _ t •• ' ••• .. •-'9'" • lft. 1o1 •1• .-. ._,, • UI IMPORTANT llOTICll Cltll.DRO UllOO 12 FRHI , ............... .,. ...... ~ ............ ,.,., ..... ......,,... .. __ ," d]IJll.~I ~ OlMl'I STOIY IH I KUS T.O.U . •• tl • \• a 8Je DAILY PILOT Tele1'ision TONIGHT'S LATEST LISTINGS \\ 1· l>'\l."l>A 'I EVt.NIHG .. I a • NlWt OHIJ Hoec>itfllll'ld I Illa rM<ll\ of an ~ldelot, Pfll~ naoe Clf-• c.1111wt pa\111111 0 JOtW''t WILD G) TIC MADY~ C.,OI •Mdl M1U a hOto W.()f.MI ·~· • •11•1"'9 woma11 """° wlli rMWi tmn .... ~·· lherl the .,. .... ""'' -of I tGll'IWI"" lie m (Abllfllwwil'lll•"""' • .,,...,.. ""&AH ,~ A ,......lllOCNIO O<'lj •oa. tuma 11111 to ti. more '"'-' ~· • 08Clof•l-i--. • OVl"IAtY OllMI _ .. , John ......... 111 lolll»••lh • ,...,.," ll'()RTIWT Oolllra And-.... I ) CelHIWI AaCNCWS I 30 0 TIC TAC DOUGH • 1 lOVI ~UC\' R~'t' lw· ,,, ,.,,,._"~,Wt "41111• ~ ,..1~ th" 11 ... ..,,,.,. th W\lt6(0 "" --~t.kt9Mll th If ~MltnMHtl tD WICHAf_L JACIC.t()H M"'Y HH .. 111'-I •llotn.ty p.y<.l>ulog•al ..,.., IJ•vOHA '<JUnMIOI '11) ~T UNIVERSE ~-i.H~ < t J CAOU-wrra tfOJ MERVO~ c.""-'* Bu~J<Jr """ kvtt Maritn Mull 7:00 I) C88 HEWS 0 N9C NEW8 0 NEWLYWED GAME 0 A8CfltEW8 0 LYNH SHACULFORD I.AKERS ~.QAME 0) 80( MILLION DOU.AR MAH l he 1ynOICatO detldn 10 butlO 41 1u11m ol b•on•c \ P11rs1wd,. Pursuer H1d\.1rd Jor<fon. t •rt. 1s an cscapt.>d t·on· \ l<'l .ind Anthony Pt•rkans ls the poli ct' lll!>JH'l'lor \\oho µur~u<•s him m "Les Ma~ .. r ..ihlc:.." a ~Pl'l't:Jl ha1>~ on thl' novel ot the ~liflll' nJmc by victor Hugo It .11r'> tonight .11 Kon CBS. Channel i •OOOI• to •Ob '"" g<Hd 10 7 ao . ~AA II: G.I. ~°'' l(rtO• DfAlf'( CD IAHFORO AHO IOH IWO Jlmt EIQht Square I •mt>lll 111111 IOf "" otdur ' Mllel OI ~elt ' worru1n 0 SHA NA NA fD ~Ell I LEHREA REPORT '11) INTRODUCING BIOC.OOY lhtt Nftf"voutt Syalt-m (f J .IOKER'S WILO 1.20 0 NBA BASKETBALL t.ot<Jtt<• St&tll Wa111(1(1 v1 LOil Angtiltls LUktHS Ouoet ltlnl LoptU 0 DA TINO GAME f) S 100,000 NAME THAT TUNE Cl) AOAM-12 R..o 1eatn1 thal n1a PMI· ner. Melloy. h&t t>Mf'I kid· nllOPOd by • r610CllOnllry S:,.°":1 TOHIOHT i) COHSUMEA SUfMl/Al l(IT • "Homa E ntertalnment C'ha1111.-I Lbr 1119• 1J KN)(T (CBS) Los An9e1es Unrll" ()) 80HKEA8I 0-1 Fk>r9"1C9 Hender· son 0 KNBC CNBC) Loi> Angolo~ e KTLA (Ind I Los Angeles U KABC·TV(ABC) Lo<o Angelo'> (f) KFMB (CBS) San Diego 8 KHJ TV (Ind I Los An<JEJIO<t (\Ql KCST (ABC) San D•l•()O Q) KTrV (lnO) Los Angolt•'> Cl) KCOP TV (lno I Lo'> An901t•\ fD KCET TV 1PBSt LO'> Angeh:i~ '11) KOCE TV 1PBSI Huntington Beacn tlll , .... ll y Fa.ID .. ~. ()) LE8 MtlEAA81.E8 Richard Jorden and Anthony Per1tlna l)Or1ray Jeon V•lloan end lnspvc. IOI JevOl1 •n lh11 adapt&· hon ol Vietor Hugo's 19th oentuty cl11saic abovl a 1ug111~e t ry1n9 to oo stralQht and l>ra ~ l)IMS091 D DOt CUM'e LNI wtoNUOAY &nadlllld OeVld I rye Cofll PrOCIOI. 0161 R(lbltl 9(>fl, Ille Marq\111 (.lltmpe. er>CI ltl\ ltll~ With Pell °"' • MOVtl • • • C1W11tlfl1 t 1{1111 6atnata Patllln• Peter ,,..,... An unemp!Oy9d mllf' m11r... kif money, afl<I 1111 wife tOOt1 dlUO· pew1 I~ 11tt I -~' IJOHTll f.NOUOH ~ 18111 hMd ov. lleele In love with .,., lowttl"Ofllde teeC1* IAI e nCAWT~TO ... A -·girl llllowt llfw. NII 10 08 llCI Into Ille d41111 rwlm Of olcOhOllMn ., MOvtl , • o • "YClungblood Hawll1" I tllG•I JamH fr 1nc.11cut, Su11nna PIMhelta A young -11eo •• 0811>1Y allected. P•~ 'oOOCllliy and lllftOllOnlllly. ~y Ille ~ of 1111 11111 novel 12 hr!I ) fS ... PERFOAMANCE ATWOU:TRAP Oa11n11 And V11ary Panov' The klfmor 1tar1 ot Au ... e • l<ltov 8111111 danc11 live 1alec1ton1 HlciudUlO lhe pat oe ow.o ITom "H.,lflqu"*'8" and thl eoagio from ''TM Nutcracur" ~ 0000 MOAHIN' Bl.U£8 U B KlnO nerratea a look lit tl>e bluet from the furn of the C6nlUl)I to jU\I fllll'r World Wlf II With pereon111 ac>oNt llnCft by leger>dary blue1men In lnllmato 1urroun<11ngs 8:30 CD THE 000 COUPU: felta re0tgan12es 1111 COi· tege band In hO(>M of 8Pf)ellrlng on I lutoVlllOn allow ~U MOVIE * ·~ "C81 Wash" (197111 Rk;llard Pryo1, George C•rlln Radio con1111t religion 80d revolu1100 m1~ with polttlcl end P<otll· tutM In • typlcill day al '"" Deluxe Car Wash 1n LO!I AngelM ~RI 0 lllJ CHARLIE'S ANGELS ltwl Angele Stlt out ,., !Ind o lruck Ort•l!f wllo 1\ unknowingly c.a1ry1no a lorlune in atoien gema IR) TUBE TOPPERS KOCJ'~ U 8 :00 -"Good Momin' ntuc~." D Il King lraCt'8 blues mus ic from the turn or lhl' century t.o Just after World War II. K'ITV 0> 8 00 -''It Can't Happen to Mc." A teen-age girl f aces alcoholism . KCET ~ and KOCE ~ 10:00 - "Willa Cather's America." The hfe and work of this prolific author, whose works Include ''My Antonia," "Death Comes to the Archbis hop" and "The Professor's House" • • MfJWOAlmN ~ta. Buddy H&cketl. Maron Mull, M111llu t oto. A LRowllfl fD OAEAT PEAFOAMAHCU .. Moutnltlg EMK.°"'" E lee· ,,. An ACI Of Ju•IKA Allet the M1nnon cl>ild1en adm<t they mur06r"<I ,,,.., moth&I • '°"1'1. Cl\11\tll\O klllt llerM!lf Time resulti In th& Ol'llldrtin 111aumlno lhtri• deed parentt' pett0nnee tPart •or !II m DAVID 8U88KIHO "Telle SllOw HOlll Sc)eeii Our Dtell Cavell Phil Donahue And Stanley Soegol" t:llO O NEWS 10..'00 0 COt.LEOE BASKETBALL ~t~nlord •\ UC! A"•"""" loYJ U Q9l ABC NEWS CLOSEUP PrttS>dttnl Cothlf I human rognt1 policy • 111 SUCC8H Hand IRllur'M c.ontradte. tions. and e1tACl1 on U S alhes • will be ourm•nfl<I Q) NIOHT OALI.EAV A dlscreO•tod pl>ytie•en, now on •k•d row. l1no1 a medlG81 bag that was m11· tskenry trantlerre<l trom Ille 2 111 Cflnt\.11)' fD m> INTO THE MOANING ·w ma Ca111er·, Amenca" Tiie ltle 1n0 "'°'k 01 11>t1 BUlllOI ol "My Antonie .• "Oeolh Comfls To The Arch1>1nhop" and Ille r•rolessm \ HOull<l .. (RI 10-30 m m NEWS 11:000 0 0 ll, (10) NEWS Q MOVIE • •' 1 rwn J-~f}llJ V/( .... I 119!>01 l 1ndo1 Darnell. JOMl)h Cotttn A gtoup ol ao+dNlt'I l1om Ille South joint Ille Union Army lo 1.!Qhl lndl81>1 (2 hf• I Q) THEOOO~ fella lurn• to Olclir lor help 11161 c.ompleinlng "" c.n no tonoer · eomrnvn<· c.111 wllhhladeuQnter CD FEAHWOOO 2HIOKl Gue111 8artll 1 Aunt fdlth, daleclo• Sorge NllbokOY &;) DICK CAV£T'T G~ll polllleal certoon• 1111 BUI M1uldln. Pat Oliphant. Ed'#atd Sorel IPflf't I of 21 11;a() 8 (I) C81 I.A TE M0\118 eeee 'IN Cry T-· r ow" t 195111 Suun Heywerd, Ricnerd Conte The etory ot actreas Liiiian Rotll • decline into BICOhOl11m and het SUl>W- QUl'rll recovery •• ctuon<- c...a 0 TONIGHT Ouell hOlt John David· M>l'I Guest ICtp Addolla 0 (Ill ~ WOMAH Pepper 11 as~ne<l to guard 8 pollUC•I llC1Mll whOS4I lrfe 11 belllQ threat· tined Q) THI! OONO ~ Cl) OET 8MAAT E.en 99 11U p<Qblema tell· •no Illa l<ing fll>O M&a ~I (Par121 fllJ CAPTIONED ABC NEW8 11:46 0 TWIUOH'T ZONE A 1111111 boy w1snea 3 pr11a hghlOf QOOO IU<;k tfl ht• comebeci. light MORNING 12'00 Q) Al.ffiED HfTCHCOCIC PAESE.HTS A1tllemanhm1~ to 11'1811• 1111 bfll.I inter•· a HOHIVMOONIM Rall)h llkff Ed on a bu._ ,_, trip, end ditlCo\ltWI that ~ Illa btOlher • keepat le not Ill 11 I c;r1chd up 10 be 11.118 MOV1e • • *'A •· &o Proudly We HaH" I t943l Ct11Udal1e Cotb1•t. Pauletta Oodd11d World Wfll II """" 11\K-rllk 11\flif 1"'911 whllt -vino on a.1.-n I t 111., 2& min I 12:t0m MOWE • • • • "Ouno• Din" ( t939) Cwy Clfant. OouglM Ffllft>-• Jr BMfld on ~d ICIOflnO • claMOC • en tnd••n w111r,boy ~ 1nvo111.a wrth (lftlttll ""lllfoly ll(!l!Ofl In t!Wt moun1e1n• Of noitll4Hn lr'<f•• C' "'' I Cl) MOVIE • • ''• f\a<I fiundown · C 10!161 Rory C. lt>Oun Mflf ti\¥ 11yllt A 111\flflfl it""''° in "'' logtll -o-• a ruth 1Mt l,ndOWnN Mnd I i..1ltet ll'f 8 rttfO<rnwl QurUollfl90' 11 1W , 30 m111 I 12:37 G a:J) l .W,A,T Hondo Ind 1 Chi-· Ames ICM\ pollCAmln ,..,., up 10 c;rfl(.11 • t1ogmy oro• nu.a druo w lO ptot...,11Ufl rtt-O CAI 11IO 0 T()M()MOW Gu"' U.Ubl'ltl ICu~ Ao.-. p1yr.l1t•lllll 111111 11Ull\Ollly on dt111m '""' Bing m1 LOVE~R'T8 UO WAHTE.I> DlAO OR ALIVE One Moti-loo Man~ 1460 NEWS 2'00 8 NEWS • MOVIE • • • t><tt•b•n<I 11?•1!1 Stewart Gr&ng41'. Jo"" Greonwooo lllot 1rao1c love •"•" bttlw!Wlf'I 1on unll•pptly·m11<1ftd pllf\· c.eaa and • l<>tdlttr •• recounted I' hll l Q) OCTSMART TIUI Cl>181 ;and M•• 111..,.Pi to reGOYer a boa* contlltl'llng !he n1me ol CONTAOl 8Q6f'lll from'"" pUbli<: llbr Bry 2 Ult) NEWS 2.30 Q) MOVlE • • • 1 ht• Bleck Knight f •9!>41 Aldn l.idd l>al•i<:•.t MU<IH'la K•no Arthu< finds .. n ""Y 1n en un~nown ~noght WhO help• thwfll1 .in llt~ 10 CMW11WOW the king ( 1 lw • 30 rnltl I 1-..eol = 1-M MOVia • • "E \191Yt)Od'(t Oeoeifl' .. ( t950) Ole* ~. Sc>ede COOlty A bellfOOfn ownet 11 tlWMteNd wlttl benll· r~cy (1 IW • 10 min ) 2: .... MOYll • *'-' "Whitt Feat'*" ( IHS) Ro1HH1 w-o,,_., Jotln l.Ul\d A 1)10.l*:IOI It "'9t•u<Mnlel In bringing s-lot"-terr110<y (2 hf•. &min) HI. NIWS 4:00 MOYie * • 1" ' Alway• On Sun<11y ' ( 1862) Eddie 8••Cllan, J11n·Pl1"* Aumont A WMken<S "Oii· d1y in Aome turn• Into 1 Mttltlfl ol c;ontu11ng m111 •i.e• (' lltt ) 0 MOVIE • • '• ·Tllo PromlH" f •9691 Jonn C.li!ltle, l1n Mr l'•l"'n lwo ..ol<Jlon •r>d • Y'>V"O grrl ""' """"' •aoe•...., dv<•no ,,,.. llol01t •• '>t•Uno•itd 12 hf1t I G) MOVIE • • "CatQO To CIQ<ttown" ( 10501 Etklf• 0.trN, Bro<le,. ock Cu1wl0tcJ Thursday•• Boyt 1111~ Mo.,1.-• AFTERNOON 1~ 0 *fl • "0<9QO<l Trait'' ( 19'1tll Frud Mi.cMurray, fo1Q11& Ta boll A N-YOik , .. ..,111>8!14'1 •9(>0r161 •• ..,, ,,., UWtff the a11uatt0n In (1rur~or1 &lier many !IOlltets t1•·1" b•t"n meaa11cre<1 ...,,..,.,,fll by lnOllM f I Ill . l(Jm1n l Q) • fl ''• "Ct1moi In Tiie '1ttt1CJll (195&) Sal Mineo J11l1n CIU8Vflhla Tllo Utlidftf OI II 1-oge QllnQ or1volve1 1110 youngeat ....,,..,bur In I mutd&r C I ht !>O min l 3:00 QJJ * fl '" 'Han0f0td I PC.OM ( 19flel Rot>et1 Stay. &cH>t111 G1aiw1ue two men t>'OCk lhe crMtlOO of a 1~1111dfl rect&HllOnai ate• I I ht 30m1n I 3:30 0 • • •1, · Tne far Out W11\t ' ( 1%11 Ann Sheri· 011n Hutn Mc06111tt fl hoottor lrtm•ly ~truggloe t•i •o<10u•11 lhti hardYl•PS ol "'""0~1,...0ong t I hr • 30 min) Once IJpon a Classic: Tl' Makes Tri1'ia NEW YORK CAP) -Victor Hugo's adventure. "Les Mas· 1·rables,'' 1s undeniably a classic. It has been made into <! movie 10 limes, and now, "Les -M1serabl~" has been adapted for telev1Mon. R1rh1:1rd J ordC1n ;.ind Anthony Perkins star an tht• l BM prest•nt<.1t1on, which :11rc; tona~hl from 8 to 11 un CD!->, Ch<inncl 2 Hefore you watch it. let's see wha t you can rl'mem ber about !'tOmt> otht'r classics that have made the trans1t1on from th· prmt~d page to the telev1s1on st·reen : I. LEADING MAN Robert Taylor s tarred In the movie version of Sir Walter Scott's tale of chivalry that became a TV !'!encs in 1957. The book, movie and ~enes share the same t1Ue. For two points, name thP <'lassie, and for two more points. what "swnlly" actor hcid the ~tarring role? A,.'111,.......... CHAYEVSKY ROLE Ernest Borgnlne Stage Actors Back Strike NE W YORK <AP ) Performe rs on the legallmate stage have pledged to s upport fellow performers in a str1ke against the television and radio commercials Industry. Theodore Blkel, president of Actors Eqwty Association, an· nounced the decision at a rally Tuesday as a strike by 70.000 members of the Screen Actors Guild ond the Amencun fedcra· taon of Television and Radio Artist.a entered its serond week. "Manogt>mrnt cannot huvc AFTRA or SAG mcmtwrs work· inliC for them, und they will not have any t<;qulty m1•mbers." Bikel saJd. Memtx•rs found to be workina for advertisers will face charaes before the Equity Coun· ell, he H ad. Z. AN OSCAR·wlnnlng movie, which starred Ernest Borgnine. bt:gan as a TV play by Paddy Chayevsky. Jn both cases, the ll· lie was the same as the leading character's name. For one point. name the classic. For two points. name the actor who originated the part on TV. And for a bonus pornt. whul "Lou Grant" co-star i;hared the i;poth~ht in the 1953 television production ? 3. Ll1TLE WRI Martin had a tough act to follow when i.he played the lead in a 1960 TV series that was based on a classic children's book. For two points, what much· married actress starred in the 1944 movie ve rsion. a nd for an easy one point, what title did all three share? 4. J .M. BARRIE wrote a children's i:.tory; has has bci!n put to music not once, but twtce, to the delight o r TV audiences. For one point. what were the p roductions called? For two points, name the "leading lady" ID the 1955 version. and for two more, who played the title role an the 1976 TV special? 5. WHEN "LES Miserables" debuts as a television production tonight. keen eyed viewers wHI be reminded of a popular TV ad· venture scn es that was actually a "modernilalion" of this classic For two points, who starred in it as th<> innocent man-on·the· run. and for two more points, name the long-running series. 6. IN 1950, JAMES Stewart was "seemg thlngs" in a filmed version of a hit Broadway com- edy. For one point, name the mov· le. For three extra point.a, what vene rable funnyman played Stewa rt's role of Elwood P. Dowd ln the 1958telecast1 '49 REMAKE STAR June Altyeon 7. FOR TWO points. what TV doctor traded his scalpel for a sword in the 1975 tele vision pre· sentation of Alexander Dumus' immortal dra m a? Name the c lassic and get another point 8. KATHERINE llEPBURN was in the 1933 movie June J\I lyson wa.'\ featurf'd m the not .... o 5.uccessful 19'19 n,makt-And 1n 1978, this Lou1!>a May i\lcott saga came to TV Name it. for two points For two more points. what actrel>s took time orr from he r "family" duties to star as Meg? 9. WHEN ROBBY Benson and Glynnis O'Connor starred in a recent TV presentation of a classic Thornton Wilder plav. cit least they didn't have to learn any songs . For one point. name 1h1<; classic. F'or three points, who crooned his way through thl' 1955 musical tele·v('rs1on? 10. ITS NO SECRET that Yul OFTEN A KING Slam'• Yul Brynner 1933 Alcon SAOA t<ethertne Hepburn Brynner has starrl.'d in "The Kang a nd I" once or twice, yet hi s l eading l ad i es var y. Gt>rtrude Lawrence starred on Broadway, Debor;ih Kerr i.tarrcd an th~ movie For thrr'1' points, "hat British actress pla\ "d nppo4'1te llrynnn (who els<•" I 1n the 1972 tclcv1s1on DIDN'T LEARN SONGS Glynnis O'Connor series based on the very s ame dass1c? 11. PINOCCHIO was n't the on ly one with noi.t• problems. For two points. who starred in the 19-l8 Philco Playhouse pro- durt1on or Edmund Hostand''> l'l<•i.1>1c ~ For .1noth1·r potnl. ni:lme at 1 2. I N 1 96 0 . one o f Shukesp<'ar<."s pla\s wa!> pro ducc•d for telt•v1s1on and actually beat "Ozzw a nd Harriet" In tht• ratings race. The lltle suggests a s torm. For t wo points. what is it? For another two points. name the Welsh star whose stormy mar riages weren't <inyth1ng like Oz. lt<' a nd Harrit>t ''>. ANSWErtS: t "Ivanhoe," R(}Q('r Moore :! "Morfr/" Hod SletQt'r, Nancq MarC'hand .I Elizabeth Tn11lor, ·· ~at1onal VelvPt .. 4 "P1•ter Pan." Marr1 Marlin, Mro f'arrow. 5 Ixw1d Jan.,sen. "The ,..ug111ve" 6 "l/aniey." Art Camey 7 R 1chard Chamberlain . "The Count o/ Monte Cnsto " 8 "/,11/le \.-\ omcn." Men'CJ1th Reuter BITTIR'I/ 9 "Our Toum." /o'rank Smatra. JO Samantha E:gqar I I Jose Ferrer, "Cyrano de 8t•rf1er(J{' " 12. "The Tempe~t ... Richard Hurton. If you scored 39 45 point~. you're in a class 1c bv yourself If you scored 30 3k po1nL<;, you'n• a whiz kid. bu t you're not rl'ady ror prim~·tlffi('. fr )'OU SC'Ort•d Jjj.2!J points, you're prt>lly 1>h<.11p, hut kl-.•p readan~s. If) ou srort•d below I 7. thl' book was ~ttcr 'SEEING THINGS' James Stewart County Task HAPPY HOLIDAY SAV INGS Pipeline · Eyes Women's Unit ·•voters' Pipeline" will focus on the Orange County Commission on the Status of Women on Jan 5 at 7:30 p.m. on KOCE. Channel 50. The program wall be rl'pcalt'fl Jan. 9 a t 10 JO Pm. • SINCE THE ESTABLISHMENT of the com· mission In 197!5, It has been c hampioned by ~ome, but bitterly criticized by others. The commission was organized by the county's Board of Supervisors to advise the board on establishing an environment in the county In which wom en could pursue their personal goals without dlscriminatJon based on sex. Host J im Cooper 's guests Include Greta tfa m bsch, chairperson of the commission ; Sadie Reid, vice cha1rpenion ; and Carole Bielefeld, a commission member. COOPER WILL COVER area! of job. housing ind finnncllll dlscrlm1nalion With his auestA. "VoterB' Pipclim"' as undt'rwr1llf'n by grant.11 from the Huntington Beach-Fountain Vollt>y Board or Rultorti ond lh6 Cor poration for Public Broad· roslln11. Jim Cooper 11 producer and Call Khasawneh 11 11111tant producer SAVE $40 SALE $319 11ot9- WHITE'S LA·Z·BOY ' SAVE ON EVERY CHAIR IN STOCK FREE LOCAL DELIVERY BANKCARDS ACCEPTED SAVE MO SALE $279 11 .. Ult I Al.E ENDS 12/30l'18 _ .... "t.'"" ... -• -- • ,_ • ·. e I \ I II - r ENTERTAINMENT I MOVIES ( I w.doeeday. December 27. 1978 DAILY PILOT 8 J J Anton Sprints to Stardom SERJllCES SVGGIS{ED By 808 THOMAl HOLLYWOOD (A P 1 Th •• clunina of un Olympic gam champion 1 tho aub)ccl or • no~ fllm, "Goldcn11rl." which atat'tl lho l0werin1 be•u ty. Suaan Anton Blonde Wants to Battl.e 'Dumb' Image WASHINGTON ((AP> The Federal Trade CommissiOQa'>ays broad· cast stationK should air public service announce · ments throughout the day to complement the "large volume or in· tensive advertis ing ... designed to sell goods .,.., ....... ·1 HATED IT' Suaan Anton Thf' movtt nppeora to bf' mulodr.am with u daah of St'1cnce fld1on und u duKn.·c ''' sorual cum m nta_ry CURT JURGENS IS THE myUertoU5 pro ftHOr who ndopt.~ Su8un ul an flu rly ogc und condl tton1 her mentallY and phy11colly all th · tast~'!it ~om:an ah\>t' Jamt-s Coburn 111 thl1 promoter who Joln:s 11 con 110rtlum d . llP\t'd to profit S2C> rnlllwn ln endorse menta after tht' 111rl wans lhn-e aold mN11tl!i ot lhl· llMIO MOlrow Olymp•t'" "Goldtng1rl" thw. toucho!i uJ>Qn lht' roru mcrt'1ahu1uon or the OlympH·-. und th1• art1f1c111l <'tmd1llon of tithkll''-· wh1<'h rc>f)()rtl'dl\ 1(1)('" on tw h1nct the Iron Curta10 Jnd ""bo know~ wherl' eln THE CASTING OF mE uue r<>lt' was crucial for producers Elliot Kutnt•r ~od Danny 0 ' OonO\'M Fortunate I)', 0' Dono\ an happened to lll'C a stotuesque blonde perfomung at lhe Tokyo Mu111lc F'e11Uval. At 5-feet·ll. the 28·year-old Suaan Anton could oully pass for the 8·feet·2. 19-year-old Goldenglrt. And she 1s athletic. "I have three brothers, all taller lhan six feet," she remark». "IN ORDER TO SURVIVE, my sister and 1 had to~how to play sports. I Uved in the coun· try c Yue a. Calif.) and rode a horse to school. l was queen the tetherball. "l stay In condition. mostly with tennis and 11w1mmmg. l really don't like to run. Two months tx-fore the picture started , I began training with Trary Sunland, who had coached a couple of Olympic teams. " 'You run like a girl,' he told me. It was his JOb to teach me how to run like a runner. I hated ll .. ·From deep space ... BVT SHE MAKES A convincing Go1dengirl as she sprints along lhe traclcs of Lo6 Angeles area colleges. where Joseph Sargent has been directing tbe racing scenes. Her compeUtors are top flight athletes who "more or less have to run in stow mo· lion so I can win." • Susan Anton has been an achiever from an early age. She made her public debut in the Miss Redlands Talent Pageant and went on to become Miss CalUornia and runner·up in the 1970 Miss America contest. "I decided to try Hollywood. and I got as Car as Pasadena," she said. "I STARVED FOR FIVE years. trying to get Jobs as a performer while I cleaned offices after hours and worked as a car hop. I appeared in 18 national commercials, and the turning point came when I was chosen spokeswoman for Muriel Cigars." She appeared on 30 Merv Griffin shows. dis· playing unexpected talent as a singer . Fred Silverman. then program chief at ABC·TV. saw her on a Johnny Carson show and combined her with Mel Tullis in a sbort·lived series. "Mel and Susan Together." Now Silverman heads NBC-TV. and Susan will be one of the stars in a new Sf'ries. "Cliffhanger." which begins Feb. Z7. Margaret Trudeau . Movie's Boos ' 'For the Best' MONTREAL <AP> -A French rarce featur· li'.. Ing Margaret Trudeau opened to a chorus of boos. but the producer of her first film -the as yet un· released "Kings and Desperate Men" -says it's all for the best. T __ -t-_ Alexis Kanner said he suggested Mrs. Trudeau ~ take the role in "L'Ange Gardien <The Guardian of..._ "JI~, Angel)." ....-,. ..l.J'.R.IJ' "And t don't feel guilty for recommending ct~.&;~ it. ... "he said. "It seemed a kind of ha1mless ~......,.-...;::::, farce which couldn't hurt her, and could help In • giving her experience.·· • The seed is planted ... t er ror grows. The estranged wife of Prime Minister Pierre •• A .,._,__ H. Solo Prod··--L' A Ptu!Jp Kaufman Film .. Invasion of the Body Snatchers" Elliott Trudeau filmed "Kings and Desperate . · '· . . . ·. ~ ..... ....,.. <JI Men" first. but the French film was released Donald Sutherland· Brooke Adams· Leonard Nimoy earlier . Jeff Go&dblum ·Veronica Cartwright. Kanner said the earlier release of the French Screenplay by wn Richter, Blllled on the novel"'The Body Snatchers" by Jack Finney film was a plus for "Kings," which he said will de· Rohen H. Solo · Direct.ed by Philip Kaufman IPCI-..-lllliiiii_ctj but in March. He said viewers and crtUcs would E=:-------=~ take Mrs. Trudeau's role in "Kings" more seriously T~~ becauseitwouldnotbeherfirstscreenappearance. Soundtllldl llbum .wt ... ~ from Ell6dr. AKarda F9etur1ng Eddie Rllbbitt, Chawtie Rich. Mel Tillil. A MAl~SO COMPANY FILM Co·starnnsloltDULocKI GEOFFREY LEWI VERLY D'ANGELO ond RUTH GORDON as Ma"Mitten t>y JEREMY JOE KRONSBER Produced by ROBERT DALEY· Otrected t>y JM'IES FARGO · ColOr by DELUXE~ G' '""*•rd\ """''1 11-l k ... 414. ,.,_ .. _... 1~·-"'"* Meanwhile. Mrs. Trudeau is taking a stab at writing with next spring's release of a book. In her autobiography. "Beyond Reason." Mrs. Trudeau, 29, reportedly reveals the story of her lll- fated romance . "IT ALREADY LOOKS like the book ... is going to be in the world best-seller category." sa1d Michael Baxendale. a n official of Optimum Publishing Co. Ltd. of Montreal. The firm announced it has bought French· language rights to the book from the London·based publishers, Paddington. No money figure was an· nounced. The paperback rights in North America were sold to Pocket Books for a reported $250,000. Audience-dollar link Supported WASHINGTON <AP) -A broadcasting in· dustry group has told the Federal Communications Commission that its study supports "the assump· lion that as the number of viewers decline. so does a television station's revenue." The National Association of Broadcasters made the assertion to the regulatory agency in an effort to refute the National Cable Television As· soclatioo's contentioo that there is no direct au· dlence·revenue relationship. The dispute revolves around efforts by the ca· ble television industry to expand the markets for its out-of.town programming services . . ---·-------------. <Ch r )_>i l l41 gr 3\ 1111 IC \ I. II O \ I ' I \ ' U HEAR YE!! HEAR YE!!. GIANT NEW YEAR'S EYE CELEIRA TION · DIMMER • DANCING HORNS • HA TS • MOISIMAIBS Dlwr Price lllcWn Al The Alloff FEATURING SPICW. MENU :'T.,':.:-.~~.~· ............ •10.ts :::=t:::= ............. '13.95 MAJ1 YOUI USBYATIOMS IAlLY 127 MAM41 Aft. '7MIOO • THE FORMAT WILL combine three sen es within one hour, each one ending with suspense . Anton will play an investigative ~porter ln the segment entitled "Stop Susan Williams." Susan. who is married to talent manager Jack Stein, hopes to bury the ancient prejudice that tall blondes are dumb. "I'd like to be respected as a recording artis t. then as an actress in movies." she said. "IT ALWAYS UPSETS ME when people re· mark, 'Gee. you really can sing!' or, 'What a sur· prise lhat you can act!· "If a Jirl looks half.way decent. people have a pre·conceaved idea that she must not have any ta lent or brains. That frustrates me. I know there are millions of girls who are pretti~r than me. but I have to believe in my talent." and services." , Along with ads for your fa vorite deodorant, the commission sug. gests messages about nutrition. health. safety and legal rights. The FTC comments were sent to the Federal Communications Com- m1ss1on Bring in the ne w year with a 'BANG! NEW YEAR'S EVE DINNER PARTY Make plans today to attend the Sheraton Newport's super New Year's Eve Dinner Party Celebration m our brand new Braziha Ballroom' The fesbv1hes begin at 7PM on December 31st. with reservations accepted on a hrst comr. first served basis. Tuts great evening includes • Complete Prime Rib Dinner • Dancing & Live Entertainment • Unlimited Cocktails le"'ed Throughout the Evening • Champagne & Party hvors at Midnight • Coffee at the Evening's End $39.50 per person Party without dinner -$19.75 per person Don't miss the fun make reservahons today • A..,k for ou1 "New Year's Eve Party Reservation Desk'" "' ... ~ ifs .... ~ i 833-0570 ext. 383 ~ ~ :l~ Newport 4545 MacArthur Blvd (South of Orange County Airport) Newport Beach. CA 92660 833·0570 THE POWER, TH£ SWEEP, THE SPECTACU of JAMES MICHtNER'S Epic Desert Advenwref . ANTHONYQUNN • JENNIFERO'NEILL • MICHAELSARRAZIN BEHROOZ \OSOUGHI ... .,CARAVANS" ~tN(;OiRlSTOPHER LEE BARRY SllUVAN • JEREMY KEMP# IOSEPH COTTEN • "' - S.lfd Oii tllt book by !AMES MICK[N[R • Sc""1!11Y ti., NANCY vonrs CRAWfOIO . THOMAS A. McMAHON and lOHAIN( WllllAM~ • Ptoductd by ELMO WIWAMS Oirtcttd l1y IAMES FAK.0 •Minic by MIK( t.An "'"''"'TtONC.OUll• A UNIVUW l '!_Wl _...:•::su;;;:=;:-:==:~'"~-~·~· ... ~.a~ .. ~°"~';°'-~:;:w:=om::::.) ~ !PCT_.. _ _,@ ~ ~--~-:....----------· edwards HUNTINGTON IUCMATB.Ul.H.I. 148-0311 DAILY 1:15, 3:30, •:OO, 1:30, 10:45 \ l If lf • e- •· I~ • ,_ ~ .. e c •• ' . 8J2 DAI V PILOT Caadldat•f A a mbly Spe ker Loo T. McCarthy haa b egun hlnUn1 he may nan for stutewldt offic an 1982. possibly ror the a ov· croorahlp. SUPERMAN MARLON BRANDO GENE HACKMAN o m CHRISTOPHER REEVE GLENN FORD MARGOT KIDDER VALERIE PERRINE SUSANNAH YORK TERENCE STAMP DAILY 12:30, 3:15, 6:00, 8:45, 11 :00 CINEMA WEST WfSTM1t4STH A TGOl.Dr..WtsT WESTMIH. CINTU H2-44tl PLUS .. MIDNIGHT EXPRESS" (A) HUNTINGTON CINEMA l lACHAflUA,M.1. 141-0JH PLUS (A) .. THE CHOIR BOYS" CALIFORNIA Eternal LUe Ideas Called F rightening SAN MARCOS (AP> nutnen11 aom<' ~leorr " fl So t Is yt!ar h<· formed hf' "Com ml)' 10me!d1y live forever, bul the Rev. A. Stuart Otto tblnka lhat ron . mlttee for lln Extended Ute.pan" npt la toot arrw tor mOtt peopl to and already lt1 worldwide mcm acrtpt. Jo re,War bWIC"tlna to m mbttl of hl• "CommJlt ror lh EllmlnaUon ol. D ath... h clwa the lit l IUC (' fut It Pl by ICIMCI to proloot tare. BVT IN ntE rova yura •tnee Otto a t up lhe aroup In 1074, he hH been able to wln only 200 mtmbt'ra "Tht name of that committee 1hockl ~e:· he HYI "Whiles;:.; cle don t mind lhe ld a a( exten n1 ,.,, .......... ra. lhe ldtaotcooqu rlnadeathtwu berahlp excttdl 300.000. Otto aald ANNOAL M£MBERSHIP feoa ranae from 13 to $1.000 and p6t the, co.ta of f.rtlllinp and malllnic. to'a mall m nlatry la an aald to his Church ol lhe Trinity. "Immortality 11 • revoluntary Idea." claimed Otto. 63. ln an In· tervlew Tuead1y. "There has never been a phlJo.opher. pJaywricht or poet who hun'l extolled dealh. death which 11 ure~poslte. But sin~ I am created by . then everythanl t.rue The best tlW>-houl vacation in town! NEIL SIMON'S CALl~IA SlJl'JlE A ~ FRI. 8:00, 8:15, 10:30 SAT.·THURS. 1:30, 3:45, 6:00, 8:15, 10:30 NEWPORT CINEMAS MlAl COAST HWY. & MACAUHu. ~T0CEarTmt 644·0761 •' ~ . ' .. -·- .DAILY 1 :00, 3:00, 5:00, 7:00, 9:00, 11 :00 AT I ED!~~~~T~t~!~A I COSTA MESA 546·1102 D•ILY 2:15, 4:15, 8:15, -8:15, 10:15 AT CINEMA VIEJO .., ., .... a1111111.1•P1N1111t••~o '"--SUN.·FAI. 12:15. 2:30, 4:45, 7:00. 9:15 of Cod 13 true about me I tnust be l•lcrnol. "HOW CAN YOU overcome death" Throuro medltouon. a 1crles or ar. tlrmal OOJJ. It It 15 God's will. and his will Is lift. then we have no bullne dying." The Job of the human being, said Otto. "Is to divest himself of the er- roneou1 conviction that he wu born to die." Aa tor himself. he said. "I hope to live lndefln1tely. the longer the bet· ter. but 1 won't predict becaute I have no way of knowln1. And m the event that I don't make It. I don't want other people In th11 movement They couldn't have ceJebrated happict anniversaries if they were married to each other. Bien AJan Burstyn Alda • ~amcilmc:. to bt d1st'our gf'd .. Death, If 1t comes. soid Otto. "wUI be due to 1hertc.•in11 w1lhtn ae " IUJN PlJSHES ROOF REPAIR MERCED <AP> -Council mern- bera here quJck•r, awarded a s:uoo contract to repa r the city hall root after becom1n1 dramatacally coa. vlnced ot Lhe need. Puddle. ot water from a rainatornt had LO be mo~ off the noor In the council cham ra befoTe the meet1n1 could bq1a. 0 ~ -4 'IVllY WNICH WAY BvrLoo11' DAILY 1:15, 3:45, 6:00, 8:15, 10:30 CINEMA CENTER '·~-xt '·&·· '~-··~ ~ .... '· .... ... C'Jlrl)I() HAHO• AT A.DAMS. COST A MISA MIS.A YHDECEHTD t79·4141 FRI. 6:80, 8:46, 11 :00 SAT.·THURS. 2:00, 4:15, 1:30, 1:45, 11 :00 WESTBROOK 'WUTM ... STOIATH OOICHU.ST CiARDEH GIOYE 530-440 I j fl.fl. t olkien 's SAT. 12:11, 2:30, 4:41, 7:00, 9:15. 11:IO AT CINEMA WEST STARRING SOPHIA LOREN JOHN CASSAVETES OEOROE KENNEDY ROBERT VAlfOHAN "t:h~JqR! c?fe Rings " CINEMA CENTER HAHO• AT AOA"41.COSTAMISA SA VllDI CINTIR '7f·4 I 4 I WIST"4"4STWIATOOlOIHWIST lt2°44tl DAILY 2:30, 5:00, 7:30, 10:00 AT CINEMA CENTER HAllO• AT f.DAMI. COi TA "41SA SA VHMCIM\'9 t1t·4 I 41 CINEMA WEST WllTMIMITlll AT •°""'4Wll T lt2·44fJ • • • • ... , ..... .-i. .. MAX VON SYDOW OAfL Y 12:45, 3:00, 5:30, 8:00, 10:15 edwards BRISTOL CINEMA DAILY 12:45, 3:15, 8:1JO, 8:45, 11 :1~ •~LAUllNCl PIO OlNU ~ 1HEIOVS FROMllAZIL'1 PLUS CHEECH• CHONG'8 UPIN SMOKE \• I .. e e I I \ ' FOOD INSIDE: •Ann L anders •Ho roscope •Sllm Gourmet •Special Diots u;ttppy New Year "Of au aoonds or oil brila," aar: Charles Lamb, "most solemn ond touchlnl s the peal which rtngs out the old year " Most of us enjoy to obat>rve the occulon with frlenda, either on New Year's Eve or New Year's Day Thia year. we 10 nostalgic wltb a festive return to ele1ance. Star ot lbe t>veot 11 an absolutely gorgeous champagne cup accompanied by dalo· ty crescent cookies. The champagne cup Is most unusual, for the festive bubbly combines with a-fluffy orange sherbet. The sherbet recipe tS based on orange Juice and grated rind for maximum citrus flavor. Spoon the sherbet mixture mto c~ampagne glasses or punch cups and simply add cham· p agne. If you are celebrating with t he youngsters, ginger ale can substitute for the champagne. Serve the Orange Sherbet Champagne Cups with Festive Or a nge Crescents. The little cookies are delecta e and a snap to make - there ls no baldng. J me melted butter and orange juice with sug a nd g r aham cracker crumbs, shape into crescents, and roll in coconut. If you choose, ginger snaps and chopped pecans can substitute for graham crackers and coconut. Sip, nibble, and have a happy' ORANGE SHERBET CHAMPAGNE CUP ''• cup sugar 2 tablespoons waler 3 egg whites 2 cups Orange Sherbet, slightly softened 2 quarts chilled champa~e or ginger ale Orange s lices In small saucepan combine sugar and water. Bring mixture to boiling over medium heat. Wash crystals clinging to sides of"1k1Uet with a brush dlpPed 1·n cold waler. Boil syrup, und•sturbed, for s minutes. In large mixing bowl, beat egg whites until soft peaks form. Pour syrup into egg whltes in a slow thin 1Lream Continue beating until gloaay peaks rorm . Fold In Orange Sherbet. Spoon Into glaaaes and nu with champagne or gtnaer ale. GarniJh with orange slices. Serve lmmedlately. Yield : 8 servings. ORANGE SHERBET 1 envelope unflavored gelatin lh cup sugar VJ teaspoon grated orange rind 1 cup orange Juice cup milk 11. teaspoon vanilla 2 egg whites In m edium saucepan. mix unflavored gelatm and sugar ; star an orange rand, Jui ce. mill<. and vanilla. Place over tow heat; stir con· stanUy until gelatin dissolves. a bout 5 minutes . Cool slightly. Pour into loaf pan a nd freeze until firm. In large chilled bowl, beat gelatin m ix· l ure and egg whites al high speed unW amooth and nurry. Turn into pan, return to freezer and freeze. Yield: About 2 cups. FESTIVE ORANGECRESCENTS lh cup butter or margarine 1 can (6 ounces> frozen concentrated orange juice. thawed. undiluted 1 box (1 pound) confectioners' sugar 21h cups prepar ed graham c rac ker crumbs 2 cans (3'h ounces each> fl aked coconut Melt butter in la rge saucepan: add und11ut· ed orange juice concentrate. Stir in sugar and crumbs. Cool. Dust palms or hands with conlec· tioners' sugar. Shape teaspoonfuls or dough Into crescents; roll in coconut. Store in covered con· tainer overnight. Yield: Abouts dozen cookies. Citron Chartreuse Souffle for New Year 's Eve. Citron· Souffle I Why not resolve to make 1978 the year you dispense with loud music and throngs of strangers on New Year's Eve and usher ln 1979 with an lnUmate gathering at home? An elegant midnight dessert buff et is a pleasant chan1e from the hecUc holiday parties people have ruahed to ln weeks past. And when you entertaln a small group of specl1l frienda, all you need Is one luacloua dessert, a beautiful bowl of fresh fruit, cookies, coffee, and a sele<:· lion of ftne Uqueura to welcome ln the New Year wlt.b quiet dlaUncUon . Sumptuous "Citron Chartreuse Soufne" provides • breathtaking rocat point for the buf· fet table. Thla cold European dessert talce. It.a name from two of the ravorite navors of France: piquant mon <citron in Fnmcb) and t he warmth or een hartreuse, an unusual liqueur made b>: aslan monks who re· lllde In the French vlnce of D1uphlne. CITRON RTREUSE sou•·•·L F. 2 envelopes unllavored aelaUn i.AJ cup cold water 8 eUJ '.tcup auiar Pinch salt l ubl•poon 1rated lemon peel % cup lemon Juice· 3 tablespoons Green Chartreuse 2 cups heavy cream 14 cup coarsely chopped pistachio nuts Lemon pinwheel Prepare 1 'h quart souffle dish with 4-lnch foll collar. Jn small saucepan. aprinkle 1elatin over water ; let stand 10 minutes to soften. Place saucepan over low heat until gelatin dissolves. Remove from heat : coot. Io a large mixing bowl, beat e11s; su1ar and s alt uoW lhJck and U1ht (about 8 minutes). To cooled getalln mixture add lemon peel, lemon Juice and Oreen Chart.reuse. Pour into eg g mixture ; fold until well·blended. Refrigerate ~10 minutes unW mixture be1lna to m ound. Beat 1~ cups cream unUl atJft pew rorm. Fold Into lemon mixture until no whJte 1t.te1kl are left. Pour mixture Into prepared soutne dish. Refriger ate at teaat 3 hours. When ready to serve, carefully remove foll tollar. Beat re main.int cream. Decorate top ot soufne with additional wblpped croam and le mon pinwheel. Ll1btly preu chopped platachio null U'OUDd aides. Mak• 8 Mll"Vtll ... '' • IAll. Y I'll.OT CJ Sip, nibble and have a happy orange-y New Year. Meatball Party Buffet "It's too simple to be this delicious." There are no exotic ingredients or wdl·kept se<:reta to the preparation of Tangy Buffet Meatballs - '>nly kitchen "ease" and a wonderful eatine ex· perlence Involved in each tasty meatball. · You'll love these tangy sweet 'n sour meat· balls. Although they include an unusu1J blend of ingredients. you probably have everything you need in your kitchen now. The moist meatballs are prepared with ground beef, eggs, chili sauce and quick or old fashioned oats. Oats hold in the delicious jui ces of the m eat balls as they cook for a tender . tasty appetizer The very simple sauce features grape jelly and chili sauce. With a range in jelly measure· ment. you can make the meatballs a little sweeter or tangier. And best of all, Tann Buf· ret Meatballs are economical Can meatballs so easy and so economical be this delicious? -Why not try them next time you entertain for a pleasant surprise! TANGY BUFFET MEATBALLS Meatbalb: 2 lb. ground beef ~ cup quick or old fashioned oats, un· cooked 2 eggs 'h cup chill sauce H~ teaspoon sail S1uce: 1 cup chill sauce '-':! to ~ cup grape jelly For meatballs. combine all lnaredients ; m ix well. Shape to form l·inch balls. Bake on rack in shallow baking pan at 40Ct F for 15 to 17 minutea or until desired doneness For sauce, combine ingredients ln 4\.AJ·qt. Dutch oven ; cook over medium heat, stirring occasionally, until mixture Is well blended. Add meatballs; continue cooking 3 to 5 minutes or until heated through. Transfer to chafing dish to serve. Makes about 5 dozen appeliier meal· balls. Tangy meatballs for blAfet. Minted pears. chocolate sauce. Miated Pears When it comes to holiday desserts. giv1 your New Year's Eve classics a new twist tbi year by offering this irresistible idea. If you are look.Ing for a light and elegan· rlna le to your New Year's Eve dmn~r o. something special for a nightca p dessert, the: offer your guests this delectable dessP.rt of mint ed pears with chocolate sauce. The Minted Pears with Chocolate Sauce ar• a wonde rful way to toast the coming year an<' r e m embe ring that one or the frie ndlies· gestures we can m ake is to s hare the g<>Ot things from our kitchen with dJI who come to en joy. MINTED PEARS WITH CHOCOLATE SAUCE 8 pears I 1t'l cups water t cup white crem e de menthe t cup sugar CHOCOLATE SAtJCE: :1,1. cup sweetened condensed milk V• cup water t measuring tables poon butte r V• measuring teaspoon salt One 6·01. Cl cup) seml·s weet real chocolate moraels 1 meuwing teaspoon vanUla extract Core peara rrom bottom, lf poulble leavt .... stem In. Remove peel from top halt of peat rormlng a decorative scalloped bottom with re- maining peel. In a 4 quart l>utch oven or lar1 11ucepot, combine water, creme de menthe and 1u11r; brtnl to boll. Add pears, cover and alm· mer 5 to 10 minutes. Remove from heat and cool at room temperature (about 30 minutes). CbUI in refrt1erator (about 1 hour). CHOCOLATE SAUCE : Jn large saucepan, combloe sweetened condensed m.ll.k, water, but· ter and saJt; bring to full boll over moderatt heat. Boll 1 minute, stlrrinc coutaoUy ovtt moderate beat. Remove from hHt. Add Semi· Sweet ReaJ Chocolate Morsell and vanllla eJ1 tract; at•r unUl morsel• melt and mtxtun II smooth. Spoon about 3 meuurlnc t.ablespooni 11uce ovw each pear. Mak•: I aen·•ap. J •. e I (2 DAILY Ptt..Of FOOD Mix Grapes, Appl~s for C11rried. Ham Salad Whal &OM with h•ft · room•.alicedt.hln tunaover thet.'JU(S Cov-2 cups raw broccoli on top. Add carrots ll'nn . rut trammed. o v t r h a rn' I ( you 1 teaapoon bull r nr ,.r and cook over low fl orets Sprlnklt on ~prouls and ground a n1wol't'd .. choeac," mll'aartne heat 10 to~ minutes, l carrot. peeled or s unflo wer ~eed~ 1'01> l dove flOrllc. yoor outlook 11 not only l ttH(>OOD while II• until egg la act. Sprinkle ICrDSled, 3Jlrf'd thin l'i.lch acrvlntc w ith :t mam·od corn pinrh or in· boritUI but fatt"nlnJ' ¥1-ln or water with parsley. Cul In four l rup raw sprout~. tableapooM low0 calorae titant gurhc> Wlth fruit an ebun 8 1111. ll1hlly Go· Mr.et wed1&e1 and serve from mun~ ~an or alfalfa. drc1111ing. Each acrvin..i 2 table poons soy dance. ""eUunk hem aoea Mil n the aklUt.'t. Makt.'1S rour rin.sed about lSS calorie8 l'l•Ch iwuce 1ito'lth appl and eurry ~teaapoooaalt 1erv1n1s. ubout 25S 4 tnblespoons suo. with Italian dreai.ang , t cuptomutoJulce eurry.,p1k..cl ham aalad Pinch of peppur By Barbera Qlbbon1 talorleas tuch. fiower seeds 195 ulories each with '·• pound fr es b 1 the adN•I lunchllmt· e ~ can tuna. SPINACH W SHROOM ~ cup any favonte French d.ressl.na. mushrooms. aUced thin • hum .and chct>~.-aolld. water·packed. 'HEALTil'SALAD commercial Italian or OalENTAL S TIR · 1 lairge Span ish &ndW'ch dralnf'd and Raked pan wlt.b cookln(I epray. ovaporatee Do not allow l po und rreah French low·Cal salad FRIED onion, peeled, halved. How about • rruJl~ 1 tabletpoon Combine on•on to1tlck.Pouresa1over spin ach. wuehed and dressing HAMBURGERS AND slJcedthan <' lery slew wtth 1mokoy paral y, tf'9lh, chopped mu1brooma. bull r •od mu1hroom mlxturo and torn Line four salad bowltt M\1SffllOOMS l b., 11 pep p c r. cube• ot ham and frttn pny • noo -atlck wine. Cook and 1Ur over • 1100 with Hll aod 1.AJ p o und f resh with s pinach . arrange seeded, dJced anpe1~ The r ctp aklllet or larce omelt'l mcdlumbeatuoUlllquld pepper to lute. Flake mushrooma,sUcedtb.in muahroom.sandbroccoll l pound beef round. <SetiSUM.P•KeCO below ll t'U)' to make, -------------------------------------------------------------_;___;,;__ __ t•11pec11lly 1f you'rc lucky t_'nOUJh lo own a food proc~'ll'iOr, lhc sUc I Of: di"'-h\•l J>!\ lJUl H to1tt>ther fa.l\ll"r than you C' ll\ bUtl.ef' bi't'Md 1 ('U&lln.:o c•:LF.RV SLAW WITH llAM "-ND APPU &" J rlba calory, trlmml"d 2 red upplcs. un Pt'Olt,'Cl "• C'Up seed le&:. areen grapes 1 <'UP bukt'd ham, lean only. eubt>d Curry D~.ng Cr~ cipe below) Put ceh1ry lhrou~h tht~ hdng dt k of food proc 1·11~o r, or i>ll<-t• vt•ry 1 hlll. by hnnd C'ore ond quart<'r applt>S and put through slicing disk. or dace by hand wto small c ubes . Put grapelt through slicing disk or <'U l in ha ir Combine with diced h am and dressing and mound of lettuce leaves. Makes 2 m ea l-s12e se r vings, about ~ calones each CURRIED HAM AND M USHROOM SALAD Half a head Boston lettuce. tom J smaJJ onion J s mall n.>d bell pep per,s<'eded,diced l cup raw mushrooms, th 1nl) sliced l cup baked ham, lean, ctullt."1, d1cc'<1 C urry Oreisiung <rec ape given) 2 tabl espoo n s Parmesan c h eese, grated Cul vegetables in bate size pieces and combine with ha m an two in dividual salad or soup bowls. Pour on dressin~ -a n d sprink le w ith ('heese. Or: line two plates with lettuce and top with oruon and pep- 11 e r rin gs . A d d mushroom slices and cubed ham. Top with ctressing and cheese. Makes 2 m eal.size ser11- 1nli(s, about 265 calories ('lil'h . CREAM't CU RRY SALAD DRF..SSING <Good w ith an> i.alad! > 2 tablf'spoons low fat mayoona1se 2 tablcisvoons low fat pl:un yogurt 2 tablespoons low rat bottled Italian salad dress mg 3 tables poons apple Juice or cider. un ::.wt-elened •14 to ''"-' t<>aspoon <·urr> powder (or to l<.i~tt•) • 2 teasr>0on sugar, or a few drops llqui,. ~ug<ir substitute Sta r smooth Contains 12 caloric:,, per table · ~poon ('lJ KRIF.D HAM SA.LAI> SPREAD tSomcth1ng d1f ft'rent for ham Hndwich fans• I l cup cooked ham. ground l egg, hard-cooked, chopped 3 t ablP!lpoons bell pepper, minced 1,1,. cup celery, mmced 2 tublespoons low- f at m ayonnaise 1 tablespoon ap- plesauce, uruiweetened v. to 11:1 teaspoon curry powder (or more, lo taste) Combine ingredlenti; and chill. Serve on salad p l atter, spread on crackers, o r use as ~andwich filllng. Makes 3 one·half cup aervines. about 115 calories each • • • Am e ricans reall y have taken a funcy lo mushroom•:, Conaump. lion bu doubled in the put decade. That's good ne wa. Unllke lots of other foodl, mushrooms • wlll never make ).'OU rut. They have only 127 • cnlorla per pol.lnd! If yo u fan cy • mushroom•. hMe are aom e offbeat ways to u1c them , all lo w In ulorla. TUNA AND MUSHROOM FIUTATA (llallan omelet fie> 1 lar1e on on, minced 'A pound muab· Year with . e ow pnces m Ralphs .) Pf' II lb. Wlteon'a·Wltef A~ ~'-~ $2= Palty Tray •Ith coupon Minimum ordef ... rvlng for 12 llrntt One IWTI end OM Coupon Per Customer CCMIPOft Effective Oeo. 21, 1171 ttwu Jen. 3, 1t7t SUPER COUPON WllcoMln'e Fin.ti Ralphs =:"' llrge End 801. S*g. II Check yow local Aalpha for the ltofe open nearaat you. ,_ _.... A~ tin 1 ~ -.Cdon af hotkt1y tooda prepwed In All~ own lm.metlof* Appetite Shoppe. ChooM lrom 1n HIOfltMnt aiiiiiiimmC!D 1.-.. .11wltflC ...... ···fNHO 59 Onllge 12 oz. •with coupon Juice c1n LlmiC One Item end One Coupon P« Cuetomer Coupon EfllctM Dec. 21.. 1171 ltwu Jen. 3, lt7t SUPER COUPON I() 39 130L pkg. ol II~ me1t1 end cn.ete '''YI· lldbtt trey• or tiny 11ndwleh treyt. To ont.r. elmply tllephOne or wl1lt "'• ,..,.,.._ Appettt. Shoppe or order trom the cuetomw ...,-.~ dHll of 1ny Relpha t lOt'e. Clll Julie Qrepon II 1·I00-2t2-1t00 fof "'9 Aelc>N Appetlle Shoppe neer"t rou. All Irey• midi lo order. Muat bl order~ • mll\lmum of 24 hourt prlof to pidl up time ... IOf rour conwtnlence, JOU mer UH per II lb. rour 81nkAmlflc11d. ComDlg Booale11 Hmn 19 Beel Rib Roast 68 Stokely Tomato Juk:e p.f lb. ~p;rcrq;. ~i>-;ts.;.~ ~euttRo:.t ~ P0o.krp;;.;bs Golden Premium Meat• Super Deli per lb. ::~ .89 l\?liftd';d Swill Ch1111 ::: .95 ~Chei11NutB1ll ·~~, .25 ~ L.iitli'Smold. •,:: .59 ~Mi;... Baby Gouda :::· 2'' ~ICQii;'oiPlcldel Pantry Filler• ·~:.L .43 ~ xri;t·ro;tii ctipl '·::;·· .58 ~ ot.;;..~ Juice ·~. 77 ~ M.JT&i. ClloL II can 2401. II Iott Super Holiday Spirit• Super Produce ,:,: ,89 ~Andre Chlmplgne :: .49 ~ c-.; LambMco :· 1• -1•• Ill .. _ .... .,_... Almaden Chlblil eo, ...... ~._..... Seagrmn Seven ToL99 ..... 111 .. ,, ... ''"'""'" Scor8lby Scotch "' .. , ..... .__., Four Roe. Blend [A ........ ~ .59 l'LJ SmimoftVodka ... J. 83 ~Ml. Lie aw Cllll e , ... IMI ,.. ~ jUiCiO,angea 2• ~~ Tangeloe 3 :11 :· .29 /Mm! 2•• bll ·a .. 311 no...i.. 211 '" ""' 211 1111 I lflf. 2" 1111 ' "" 2'' ... ""' 2" "" 41, 8" 1111 qi 5•• "' ''°"" 4" 1111 17iltt 814 -ti ,.'.:.:.. , .. SuperS.kery -~e39 .-221 -3'' lttr 79 .... , . :~ .79 ...... 89 ..... . ........ -.. ........ .. ..-............. ...... MMe ... ~ ....... ~ .... -, !':O.::J.:; --- !! 8'' .._ .. ,.... ............... _ .... ...... tf attlllMtf'L ----H.ollday fllm proee11lng-----... Ralplll Half Price Sale Trtlt your hollday en1pettota to the """' ttlm proc•na et Relph• evtrydly low prlc ... All prfnta d1ted for your conv1ni.nc1. No charge for "goofed" plcturff. XI ''"°"'" 1000 o~ & Xl "'"'" 211 Kodlcolor Fiim l?t•-••lllll-CMO& 11j11"'1t Kodlcator FUm a•• nM su .-. ..,., ms Whllt 8upptr L .... .... , .. • t na ST. cam 111u PW ll VAU.llCIA, la& Ill.LS ,,.. lhlt(, tlSTll ...... , , ...... Cl1TAIW Ulll 111 Sf. JISlll • ,.¥_ .. ·-·- • • #t ' -' 1)471 s ••• ,. wtSnllttTI'I ~llllf llOUIS. 111 ....,, I I S..., . i ' ,. • •. e I ' ' ~I ,.I FOOD Wlldnesday December 27. 1978 DAILY PILOT (3 Faulty Gallhladder? Avoid Fats, Fried Food Most people don't recoJDU.e lbe s1 anala be· inc 1tven by 1 faulty Callbladd r, and don't aet to lhelr doctor e rly enouch to ward off the posalblUty or 1uraery The symptoms can ~ sharp m1dnff and /or back palns t>etwun the aboulder blad • naur.ea af\er ealin1 a ratty meal, unt"xplalned •ll ck1 or twlchln1. and somellma all ol lhHe at once The alllbladder's function Is to 1tore eoicre blle In a con~enll'ated form unUJ n~td by the liver. It can ~me tntlamed h'om a ba<'lfrlal lnfecUon or from gall5ton that tbruten to block the bile durt A faulty tallbladder hu dlffl<"ulty proeeu Ins • ratty ln &1, and alives on enough warntne5 lo Id the pahtnt to aHk medical h Ip UauaJly the probl m can be ('()nlrullf'd by avoldlnc a mur h rat s poaible CThts I not th4" same u a low rhot h.'rol di•'t where JWlt arumal tat 1:i. avoided and Vt~\·tublt' r t 1w1 matted ) M ~• pa twott. wtw follO't\ lht' It>~ fal dlt>t u.-amuf"d at tht• rch~f Uw v fttl. and man~ a~ ~1wt'd from t,hl: 0\1("r1&l1on lo rf•mO\ t• thf' 1tallbl•ddt>r. <'&llc'<i u r ho N') ~trt•lom> Re 1dt>S a\olthnii; .111 form!> o( r .. t. pallt>nls are u~h'tM-d lo 11\0ld all focxh lh11t are ea' produr1ng -.u('h e· ~II mt'mbfor-8 of the cab bage farruly These lnrlude ""tutc cabbage, rt'd cabbage, r.:i ultrtower. Brus!'lf'IS ~p roult., ko hl11 abl, und broccoli 1\1 o avoid turnips, ~-· Dlt-ts By June Roth C'urumbcrs. radiahos. dried bei.ns. and dried peas. Naturally you wlll have to avoid all fried food11. use ooly aldm milk product& rather than whole milk. realrkt the UH of rich Hlad dress· 1n1rs that "'" made from c•P and oU, and avoid r roamf'd aauces and creamed soups unless tbay .. re mtadt from skim milk ll'& best lo have fruit desserts and to\om1t rutr1t'tl. rkh cAkh. and ltema like hot buttered i;ullc bread Tht•re 11 a laric~ ranae or pennissable foods to rhoose from. and a wit ho all s pecial diets. il 's 1mp0rtaol lo h~l lhe foods you can have and to chooae mrnus from that hst lit-re are several delklou.'i recipes that the whole family wtU enjoy. never suspecting tha~ lhty are fal·free by design. JI you suspect a gallbladd r coodJUon, be sure to seek. proper medical evaluation and dlscl&SS the feasibility of Ole low.rat dJet ror your partlcuJar case. quid POITEOCHICKEN W1111 AllTICHOK£ HEARTS 3'-pound broiler chicken. cut up 1 can (lf>.ounce> whole tomatoe!I l onion. sUced 1 1reen pepper. r ul up l can ( 16-ouncc) artichoke hearts. with Ii· l tablespoon lemon juice I t.eupoon sugar 1,; teaspoon salt 2 leaspoons paprika Place cleaned chicken in a heavy skillet. Add tomatoes. onion. green pepper, and articbote heart.a and liquid. Add lemon Juice, sugar, and salt: mix well. Sprinkle paprika over chicken. Cover llghtly and simmer 45 minutes, or until tender. Makes4servings. BROILED FILLETS WITH YOGURT CUCUMBER SAUCE I pound fillet of flounder, 4 sli ces ~. cup skim milk yogurt l teaspoon lemon JUict: 12 teaspoon salt l,4z teaspoon sugar i..'J teaspoon papnka 14 te= Worcestershire sauce \.'l m um cucumber. peeled Arrange fillets in a flat baking pan. In a blender. combine yogurt. lemon juJce, salt. sug. ar. raprika, and Worcestershire sauce! blend unti smooth. Slice 8 thm slices of cucumber and reserve for garnis h ; cut up remaining cucumber and add to other l.ngredlenls in the blender. Blend until smooth. Spread mixture on fish. Broll in a preheated broiler for 15 minutes •. or unUl fish Oakes easily. Garrush with re·. served cucumber slices and serve. Makes 4 servings. APRICOT FLUFF' babies l jar (S·ounce) strained apricots for 1 lablespoon sugar l teaspoon vanilla I teaspoon lemon juice l teaspoon grated lemon rind t teaspoon unflavored gelatin I tablespoon cold water 2 egg whites Stir together strained apricots. s ugar. vanilla. and lemon JU1 ce and nnd . Soften gelatin m cold water. then dissolve over hot waler in a double broiler Beat egg whites until frothy : add gelatin and beat until very stiff. Fold into apncot nuxture and i.poon mto sherbet glasses. Chill. Makes 4 servings c...., •••. '"' J-.... Fresh Fruits Embellish Desserts There's ALWAYS time for Net>d a source of exr1t 1ng dessert ideas for wint e r entert111n1ng " Plan around the fruits so plen tiful and lu11e1ou:. r 1ghl now tnrough SP_!"ing. The sweet and lively flavor of oranges, for in· stance. is a natural for toothsome desserts. You might even say oran~es -sections, juice or nnd -have a thousand and 2~ cups flour v. cup orange juice 1 i,; teaspoons grated orange rind In large mixing bowl cream butter with sugar until light and fluffy. Beat in ~gs, one at a time, beating well after each addition . Add vanilla. In small bowl mix yogurt and baking soda. Add lo creamed mixture alternately with flour. Beal in orange juice and rind. Pour into well·buttered 10 .cup bundt pan. Bake 1n 350°F . oven 4S lo 50 minutes until cake tester i.nserted m cake comes out clean. Cool in pan on wire rack about 40 minutes. Remove lrom pan and cool com· plelely. Drizzle with Orange Glaze•. YIELD: 16 lo 18 serv- in gs. •Orange Glaze l tablespoon butter or margarine. softened I egg yolk 2 cups confec · lioners' sugar 1 teas poon grated orange rind . . ~ cup orange JUiee In s mall bowl. com· bine all ingredients. Blend until smooth . Spoon over Orange Yogurt Cake. Spaghettini & Clams Please wnte for "MEALS IN MINUTES" recipes. Globe A· 1. 8985 Venice Blvd .. Los Angeles. CA 90034 one enticing dessert uses min imum of effort. OrangE> juice and grated rind add piquancy to the n r h yogurt baller. W1lh its dense texture, re· min1 scenl o f ppund cake. lhls cake is de· h clous served with a simple orange ~laze as its sole embelhsbmenl. But its very simplirily provides the basis for fancier desserts as well. Top slices with am · brosia -fresh orange sec lions. s hredded coconut and a sprinkle of sugar -for a winter orange short.cake, if you like. tablespoon sugar. salt, and ef gs. Beat in flour unti co mpletel y blended Beat in orange ring and 4 tablespoons melted butter unt i l dough is shiny. Brush 3·ounce molds or 2'h· inc h muffin·pan cups with remaining 1 tables· poon butter . Fill each mold half full with dough. Cover with damp towel and let rise in warm plac e until doubled in bulk. about 45 r------------------------------'------------------- That figure is ap· propriate to any descrip· lion of babas a !'Orange Babas. little leaveneti cakes baked in fluted molds, were named by King Stanislaus of Poland, who loved them so much he endowed them with the name or his favorite fictional character. Our recipe features the spongelike texture for which babas are not· ed, but an orange juice syrup rather than the traditional rum suffuses the cake with its r e · dolence and savor. A stunn.iJlg dessert for any occaslon , it's an especially good choice when the guest list in· eludes childre n. For added color and spark ling flavor, garrush each baba with fresh orange sections and a creamy puff or whipped cream. Hut don't stop there Try your hand al a plate-rewarding Orange Yogurt Ca1<e, bak ed from scratch w1lh a A generously sized cake, 1t also keeps well. so the family can enjoy extra helpings long after the guests have said their good-byes BABAS a L'ORANGE "4 cup warm water < tos· to us F.) l package active dry yeast l tablespoon sugar IAI teaspoon salt 2 eggs, al room tem- perature, lightly beaten 1 ~ cupe flour 1 ~aspoon e raled orange nnd S tablespoons melt· ed butter or margarine, divided 4 cups orange juice 1 ¥. cups sugar 2 Florida oranges, peeled and sectioned llz cup heavy cream, whipped, if desired Measure warm water into medium, warm bowl : sprinkle in yeast; stir lo dissolve. Stir in 1 minutes. Bake in JSO'F. oven 12 to 15 minutes until lightly browned and cake tester inserted in center comes out clean . Meanwhile, 1n large skillet, combine orange juice and sugar; bring to boiling, reduce heat, simmer 5 minutes or until sugar is com· pletely dissolved . Remove babas from molds, prick a few times with toothpic k, and place in hot syrup in skillet. Baste babas with syrup. Let stand in syrup several hours. Garnish with orange sectiorus. Serve with ad· ditlonal sy rup and whipped cream. If de· sired ORANGE YOGURT CAKE l cup butte r or marganne J cups sugar S eggs l teaspoon vanilla 1 cup plain yogurt ~ teaspoon baking soda 1he piquant flavor of Florida oranges lends guest-appeal to entking company· desserts such as Babas a /'Orange and ()ange Yogurt Cake. ~--....... Nothing quite fills }Our cup like the great taste of Maxwell House G>ffee •• ... "" ... . l I 1 J J ; , I I I I • \• • e I • .• OI DAil. V PILOT WednMd•y. O.C.mDet 21 1971 FOOD ••• Slim Gourmet (From Pace Q) Spr11 • lar1e noo· sticll ~ or tleetric fry pan wHh cookloa spray ror no ral ff"Yllla Spread tho meat •n lht &kllltl Cook over modtratt-heat until un der1ide It brown. lb~n bruk up Into chunk~ Ora•n rat. tr any Stir In remauunit 1n ar~dl~nts Cover and 111mmer ~ m1nutn. n cov~r und cooUoue to t•ouk . 11Urrina fr~u nt ly, untU ~urly all tM Uq u1d t-vuporates M &kc four st>m~. about 1~ ulorlH eat'b. <Strvt with rice, If detlrtd Ea<'h h tr-cup cooked rlre udda ubout 1 JO calories) • • • It looks hl<c ccluy amells Uke Ucork~ and I! a ro~tn to parsley It tastch :1 lltll~ like all thn·•· but d1rt,•rent' Th .. "egt'toblt' 1i. renncl; a m ui.t try treat that's dthi;htful served raw. f''t.'nnl'l t!J a tradiUonal h u l1dJy trl'at In ltallan household~. so th1" 1s n .cood time of ye1u to try to find It on produ<'t.' counters. Fen· nt·I looks a bit like N•lt>ry. but has a fat, bulbous base and rcath e ry fern -like loh age instead of leaves. Sometimes it's called amse which it tastes' 1lke -or br Its Italian n ame . f noccblo (rhymes with "Pinoc· <'hto" ). Whatever you c<il l it, fenn1!l's low ca I ones count only 158 calories per pound com mends its ~weet flavor The tender bulb is the best of fennel To serve fennel raw. simply slice it and serve 1t like <'<'lcry, with salt and pepper or a splash of low-calories Italian· s tyle s alad dressin g. Use 1t instead of celery on raw vegetable plat- ters or in tos~ed green salads, or, ser ve 1t with dip for a different party lrl'al. Adele Bo wser of Canonsburg, Pa .• Is the -winne r or this month's Shm Gourmet Reader Recipe Contest for her Curried Cream Dip for raw vegetables. "Raw fennel is part of our lta han holiday tradi· lion ," Mrs . Bowser writes. "I would dutiful· ly try 1l ever) year, but fe nne l dipped in the following made me a believer•" CURRY DIP FOR RAW f "ENNEL Hur other vt>getables. too> I cup low.fat mayon· 031M' tor 1 z cup low.fat m ayonnaise plus "2 cup pl:.11n low-fat yogurt) I tablespoon onion, Flavors Tangy Tani;ty red cranberry JUIC .. used in unexpeeted ways adds a pleasant flavor surprise to family fovorit('S such as hearty vl'g l'ta b l e soup . CRANBERRY VEGETABLE SOUP 2 pounds s hin beef with bone 4 cans < 13~ ounces t.·arh 1 chicken broth I qua rt <4 cups) cranberry j uJce coc: kta II I p ac ka ge 114 ounces> soup greens, trimmed and diced 1 large onion, chopped 2 p ackages <10 ounces each l frozen mixed vegetables 12 c up s mall macaroni --s hells. stars. tiny bow Ues, et.c. Salt and pepper to taste Combine beef, chicken broth, cranberry JuJce, soup greens and onion. Cover and simmer ror 2 hours or until beef Is t Pnder. Remove beef. Remove fat and bone then dice beef, mixed vege table !! a n d macaroni to broth. Sim· mer U minutes or until m acaroni is t e nder. Season lo taate w1lh sail 1md pepper. Spoon Into bowls and serve with seede d brud atlcka. Soup may be 11pMnkled with 1rat.ed Parmesan cheese. If desiN!d. Note: lf meat •• very ratt y, l t may be necea11ry lo skim ex· ceaa fat from 110up after It has been cooked and berore aervtna. araled 1 teupoon prepart'd bornr9dbl\ 1 t easpoon cidtr vlne1ar 1 lo i teaapoona curr)' t>Owder (to tul4l> Sall and pepper to t ste Sllr all lntirtdieonl• toCtlht"r and N'lnaerate "fY«'ral hours Spoot\ Ill· to • amaU bo.,.,I 1n lhl• center ol a platter. aur ro1.1od with thllled ~llr<'11 ol raw I nnel bu1 b Sprinkle the dip with yo1utt) flo ly minced foll11e n ere'a another party from thu raw I nntt .e11on treat Lucl<'nnc •tall" Other raw Paradt1. of London· v•1tlablt1 may bo derry. N H .. al!Kl wln& dded lo the 1>lattr r or "The lntematlonal SUm ub a tltutfd ra"" Gourmt'l Cookbook" mu1hrooms. r d and <113 95, Har~r & Row) 1r~tn ptpper :.llcoi.. tor her wlnnin1 way11 r hf•rry toma\O('tl, celtry with low-cost . low · dlpp rs. c uhClowerct• ulorie chicken liver~ or broccoli bud•. ror .. " ht' tum them into a n amplf' Olp, under U CJlt-11nl delicacy lhal'l'I ralorl per l.abl poon tdul for the buJ(et ta f or 1~ calorlu per blc Lablnpoon ll made with "The aoucf' 15 "'hat makes this o apcclal dl1b." ahe llY8 "My hu1band doe11n care much ror liver. but when t prepare chlcken Uvcrs ttlls way. he really en· joys t h em ." M r11 Paradis l\U'tMr sutucesttt that bN"f Uver prepared with the u m c sauce makes a dtillclous ram1 ly meal that's low In ~ost and eaJorles CHAFING DISH CIDCKEN uvus 4 t"8bleapoons nour. qulck·blending. dJvld~ Onion ulL or garlic aalt aod pepptr. to taste I pound c hicken livens. halved 2 tablespoon bacon drippings. or margarine I cup cold waler 2 tabl~poon.s cal1>up l tellllpoon lemon JU tee l t eupoon Wor · cesterahlre sauce 14·CUPt freen ohves. s tutred. chopped H Stt r 3 tablespoons nour wtt.h ae110ftin11 on a ahallow plete. Roll halved thicken livers In the mtitturt-to coat Hahtly. Spr1y a non· stick sklllct. with cooking apuy to prevent stick· Ina. Add the bacon drlp· pings or margarine and livers. Saute llghtly 3bout 7 minutes. turning once. Drain and dh.cara rat from the sklllel. Combine rem aining tablespoon flour witb water. cataup. ltmon Juice and Worcuter· ah!re sauce, aad 1tar 1moot.h. SUr lnt~uJUlhtt. Cook and atlr over moderate heat t.1ntil mixture almmera. Slm· mer 5 ml.out.es , then stir In olives. Spoon into a charing dish and keer. w~rm. Makes four meu · s lie aerv logs, 255 calorte1 each. or 3bout 18 i ndividual h ors d'oeuvres at about SO calories each. I I '! Have a Dickens of a New Year! Start Lucky. Prosperity ls in your future by getting the most for the lea6t. At Lucky, you'll find quality, selecUon and savings ... and maybe even Scrooge looking for some of the same. We have lower prices overall on USDA Grade A poultry and quality bonded beef roasts for your holiday buffet ... succulent hams and blackeyed peas. if that's your style ... makings for chowders or stews. Cheers. Our 10% discount on all case liquor purchl.lses (except Key Buys) lets you crack open a bit of the bubbly . And for football fans. our New Year's line-up stars 150 varieties of cheese and snack items in the deli case. Including more than 50 Key Buys at greater savings. made pos&lble by manufacturers' temporary promotional allowances Fre~h Meats FULLY COOKED i "' & WHOLE HAMS ~ OOllL"I l)l&lll~ .lO CUDAHY OR DOLD OONEl.ESS HAM ~ 9 8 ) HD\. l\A.l.T~O. -. \/Allf'AOOCO'iMOl..l ... l.11 7 -~[CHUCK "OA.ST OO'«(IOlll -· ... -.l.b 1.09 T·DOHBTEAK O()NOfD Olll ~ TOP Sl"l.OIH STEAK 11(,o<t.j I) te>o(AD OUI ..0 ~ UTl\.£ SMOKIES <,Vlol\~t\JI OVI" 102 .28 .o 2.48 02 .78 Fresh Meats ~t~~PORTION 39 IUUY(()Ol((0 ....... l.11 1 HO™El. CURE 81 ~~:. ...... l.11 298 LA'-GE CHO "ID '-OA.ST 00-.0«> Olll • • • • . .. ' ".. • • l.b 1 . 68 Cl'OSS "ID "OA.ST OOHUUUOOl(l(DOlO()<UO( ..... lO 1.68 DO,.,fl.f.SS TIP "OA.ST lO 1.88 Canned&Pac kaged Make a clean sweep. / This week, Lucky features corn brooms and to ugh-bristled angled brooms that make clean sweeps of an the corners a nd le t you start out tidy for the New Year. You'll also find wet shag and sponge mops to ease the chore of after·party clean-up. They're all just $1.99 at Lucky. your store for holiday Key Buys! Time Is on your side. For the past 15 years. Lucky has brought you low, everyday discount prices on merchandise throughout the store. Thts year. we resolve to fight high food costs. So you can resolve to keep your diet well balanced and your family's health In check. everyday. at lower pnces overall. Remember, Lucky is your one·stop supermarke t. dedicated to bringing you the most for the least. 365 days of the year. Now. I hat's what discount is all about! Dairy & Frozen Liquor !LADYLEE ~~.~~~cm .69 Ol.AQ(M Pf.AS L .-..uro.av . .. . .... •eOl llKO. 73 l ~~.COOi. ~I~'"' .59 r CW.OOET CHICKIH A -o.t IMD -• OOOl "'6 :J. 89 Household & Pet BROOMS PA.STJll.AMI "' 00.....0 l <UI I() lO 2.38 !LADY LEE Delicatessen .; ANDMOPS ~~~ra" Ot\OOM~.19 9 Of\~(Of\~ OH~ ...... (A(H oun PO'-TIOH or HAM flA.IV<J»~ •• • . l.b 1.49 COOU CUT HAM SUClO OOWI IM IW•COOoJD • 1~ 2. 79 rTAUAH STYl[~[ ....... M()f(lll"'(,w.A ••• Ill 1.88 GUl.f Of MVOCO ~klMP "lllOll~tl\011H .... •'6 aM:.3, 79 HOAAa sucm 8ACOH (U.(). v«l. .. . ........... "'" 1 . 7 8 LADY Lil sucm DACOH .. ......... .... . lLI •G 1.29 GMO£ A YOUNG DUC~ J"()l(H ,,. )~ • • l6 , 98 GMO£ A YOUNG TURKEYS '""'°"~Ll 74\JI) lllOltH ..... , l..l) ,98 "~" OOHnru TURK£Y llOIUOI. n1D ) I~ tf'O/IN ... 1.0 1 . 58 SMOKm TURK£Y HALF t ....a.A( tllOruo • • •• U1 1 , ~8 FRESH "OA.STING CHICKENS l..cK'I > IUll •• tO ,8& CHUMK TUNA 11 5 UG~MCAf ........ l?'ltOl CN4 FUERTE ~!~5f.~~ .. ~.29 FRESH LIMES tOll • ~ '°"°' Ra> GMPU"UfT 1V'('tMll ... GOlDOf DANANA.S ~MOOl.ICOA .•• DlACU'tt Pf.AS ~o . v. .14 s :~.69 ". '19 "°' 1114 .49 o.. ..... __ "O'oc't __ _ -.ION __ ..,..._°"'-JP-._,,,....-. _,..., tOIO ,.~..,,. •t.ilft,. 4 .. ,~.~ .... "' ,._ .. , _, ",., ,. ....... ...., •• lfl<\r '" .. • •• • .... . • ., .. "•f "\'f\.-.• ,.,,"' -·---• "' ... , ... what discount is all about. So thot OUt ~con~ the ~WI~ rhelf fomfl4U DISCOUNT SUPERMARKETS -,-+-"....:. \ ~~ 'W •ore clos"'9 1,00 p.m. on N.w Y eor· 1 Eve ond wlll temoln cloMd .,... Yeot's Ooy. Monday. Jonuoty i . .......... .......... 'llW IAN&.-.~ ttl to ..... " oou.MI IOIA.l\f ... OOlta•M ., .... ICM.I¥ ... •llU.Ut'Olt -•• lllQ'9MllJMI LMllU""-LI ... " CMOfM)40 ,., I.A,., ••tnAllllA Ult t0.. MftTOI. ITllU f • .......... -,. . . 6 • OMIO«ll OllOW ,,.,,~~ ITORH OHH DAILY t A.M. llMITOtt ,.. ... '9..LA ... MUWT'IWOT'Olll •Mlll •••n.Mr•4WIMll 1'\leTIW ............. .,... WI I"""""' ..,, ... . .... ..,,..., """"'" ...... ..__,, ... I • ·. e I J '-'""\ FOOD r's Treat M a k e you r N e w each wi clove. Dru h Year's Day bNnch ex· w\th mort Clue. Bake tra spttlal by ' rvlna 20 mlnutu lonsor Rum Glued Ham Rln11 Bruah with Ila&\' oc an tht> n ·w wilh thl un· uslonally. Makes 10 to usual combination or 12 urvtngs m andaran orangf"S . •"£811VE ptn eap pl~. ham and OR.tNG£ t;GGNOG rum . Quick anrt de 4 ~·· separalAtd llc1ou11. th11' dish will '' rup tuaar leave you plt-nty of lime J cup light rum (80 for hanfing streamer proof) and maklng ~uuons "-cup oran1e II S e r v t' d w I t h queur s c r a m b I e d '" a & s '~ tu.spoon slivered 1un1sht'd with rrHh oran1t Pttl 1 rup h avy cream •, rup llahl rrtum freshly aratt>d nutmtfl ~.December 27, 1978 DAILY P1LOT cs 1 Make your New Year's Day brunch extra special by serving Rum Glazed Ham. '.·~ <-hopped p rsley. the I cup orange juice Ol~it~ flam will ~tht' ~~~-'-~...::..-=-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~=-=:.::::=:...::...::=:====::.:=:=:=:=:__.::::....:::.::.:.:..:::.:::::.._~~~~~~~~~~ In bowl. but t'llJ yolks and llUf(Mr until thick and I mon colored. Beat In rum and oranga liqueur Stir In orange peel. oranae Julee. heavy and llf(ht cream. Sot eatt whites until "tltf but not dry l''old In· to oranJt" m1xturt> Pour anto rhllled punch bowl Gftrnl1'h with nutmc" M okes 8 lo 10 St'rvinas star of )OUr brunt'h 1-'or udded Chffr and a rl.IM} ~Our gUl'Sts ~ 11 re mern bt.•r throughout thtt remaining wtnter da' . compliment the meal wit b Jo' ei. t 1 \' l' Or u n~l' ~g RUM GLAZED HAM 5 6 pound cooked ham ~:1 cup pineapplt> juke I tablespoon corn starch i,; cup hght rum 180 proof) 34 cup light brown sugar. firmly packt'd 2 teas Jloons dr~ mustard 12 teaspoon ground ganger J can (10 ounces ) mandarin oranges, well drained whole cloves Place ham on r ack in roasting pan. Bake at 325 degrees F . for 1 hour. Remove from oven and score fat. Meanwhile, in saucepan, combine pineapple juice. rum, cornstarch, s ugar, mustard and ginger. Cook, stirring, unl i I th ickened and s mooth. Brush glaze over ham. Bake ham at 425 degrees F. for 10 minutes. Remove from ove n a nd arrange oranges on ham. SecurP ConIDine Apples, Pork . Apples and pork have always been good com- panions in the t'\mencan cuisine Who would think or serving roast pig without an apple in als mouth? And slightly tart applesauce is one of the most appealing UC· companiments for roast po rk and the many cured pork cuts availa ble today. Now comes a recipe that s mothers pork cho ps in applesauce dur i ng cooking. This is a good way to insure moist. lender, flavorful chops that are lean. Ap· ples auce instead of fat keeps them moist. Use un s weetered ap plesauce, It's available in 15 or 16 ounce jars and 1 a ns. the exact amount for tMs recipe. After cooking, the chops are removed from the skillet and i.; c uo of sour cream is added t<> the delicious sauce. The result: a medium thick ~auce to pour over the chops giving them epicur e an s tatus. A generous s prinkling of minced parsley s parks up the presentation. PORK CHOPS IN APPLE CREAM SAUCE u 1arge pork cnops 1 cup chopped onion '-z cup water 2 cups unsweetened applesauct> l tablespoon lemon JU1ce •,2 teaspoon black pepper '2 cup sour cream 2 tablespoons minced parsley 1op lion all Brown pork chops in a lar ge frying pan. When brown. remove chops and trim off excess fat. Add the chopped onion to the rat in the pan and saute 3-4 minutes until soft. Add the water and deglaze the pan, stirring In all the brown bits. Remove from the heat and s tir In the ap. plesauce. le mon juice, salt a nd pepper Mix well. Return the chops to th~ pan coating them with the sauce mixture. Cover and cook slowly about 40 minutes until chops are tender and navors are well blended R emove chops to a serving dish, add ~ cup sour cream to the pan, mix well. heat and pour s auce over c h o p s. Sprinkle wllb minced parsley. Senes 6 I ~ NICIS ....... ~ ,,, '° ''' "' u•n IASln. PUii AllUO &1111 SAYI Oii.,... .. ""' ...... PlllCIWG. DOWT WAil nu Tiit LUT MOMOn AllOPU ,.....,. ..... NICJS ........ OI t1*YllMllCI nOIU. lYfll at"'°' DtAmtAUf llOIKD tlUIU fM IUY mu N TOff YIU OI IUSTll OIAKf UIO. 'SAVlllCS CAICUlAllO fR!IM llCU\,U POSllO PatClS P-IOR 10 IUNI I 1'18 P•tClS SU811 Cl 10 A~f lllltlAllOllS WMICH llAY 81 tlll'OSI 0 81 llCAl .ChON 11111'1)9110 I J0¥ '°411UC-AI 'llMlll QR 11)\1 lancers Wine .........nm.,a.uam-...-..i ... .,,~.,_..._~ ........................ .. \.-r .. we• ~ .,,.,.,. ~ "'"' .. -:iillUlrt -• "°' .. " .... ·~ ....... ..,.,... ......... .................. -.c....-----~·..-.... , .. ~ """"'~ •• •t-C-.C• ....... """" -.. """""""' ...,......,.... ................ <f ....... "' PRICIS 1ma1v1 WID .• DIC. 27 THIU TUIS .• JAN. 2, 197'. • \• .a •. e a .... • • • • fl! • • • • .. ... \ (II ONl. V PllOT W.SnMCSay. o.o.m"41t 27, Ul71 Delicious Tortes Simple to make. tasty toll. mark two 8 Inch 1ervln1 pl l«', wpu ~ a nd economJcaJ too. the circles on each. Plac wit h o ner four th uf th<>C.'ola~ <'h!P torte aa a ~Ill of douah on toll, wh ppcd cra•am m &itlur d tllclo u ly d lffennt press wtth tang rs 1.nto R<'~r.tl. u.slna rt'malmn'1 family or party d (Srl tn rke~ circles Uak • 11t thru rounda. t'ndlnM This n "<'llMi l JO eu)' 37~ •·. fOr 10 U mtnutM , w ith wh1ppt•d c r<1am tha t II l!I an exct'llrn. c.·ool on <'OOkte ahet't!I ml"t urt on top Chill woy to ~ct your chtldn •n Add rtmaln1n1 co<.-on t-H •r al houn. Cul In Involved In lctlrntna how m ixture to t'reasm , b«-11t wt' d 8c1 t o a tor v 1.• to t•rt•at t> fun di!" erh. until v ry Uuck. Plut'r CJ or n I ah w I l h MI n I that are pl1.•11 mn to tht• ont' paatr round on Chi )S, lt d.-all'l'd eye und a IJt•llMhl tu thll ,-....:;__..::..:;.;.;.;;.a:.....;..;.;;.;;.;.;.....:.:.:__;;;..;.;.:.L.::.:...;.;..;~~.;;..,.---_. pal alt U11tn1 Uw l'Ombinuuon o f l h l' c o n ,. t' n 1 .. n I r hot'ololt• l'hlp rookl~ mi x rind M>m1 ~'""''' n·al r h 0 l' o l Ut t' UHlr' t• I ' you'll find lht• d 1ot•oluh· <'hl l' t'ooitlt> tortt• u n•.al h11ntly tem ptt.'r whrn it , o m P • l l• r .i ' o r 1 t t' de••t•rb C'IUX'Ol..A TE cm p COOKI E TOKT t; r~o 12 01 11CH.1r h\'' Cho<·olatl' ('h 1" (.'ook ll' Mix 2 t·i.ig~ 2 ffil'UliUI tng lllbh• gpooni. bult.er. aoflcneJ One G·oi . pk& 1 l cup 1 Semi-Sweet Real Chocolate Morsels O n e 8 o z pk ~ <·ream cheese. soft ened 2 measuring lco spoons vanilla extract 3 measuring tablt• spoons chopped nuts Prt.heat oven to 350 F In large bowl. combine Chocolate Chip Cookie \tix. eJu:s a nd butter . m ix a c co r d 1n ~ t o pa c k age d1rec t1 o n~. Divide dough into ~•x equa l parts and drop on t o g r eased coo ki e sheets. Spread into 4'' (lat d rcles. BAKE at. 350" F. fo r l2·14 minutes Ca r e ful ly r e move from rookie s heets with 2 large spatula s. t m - med 1 atel:tt cover three "Ook1e layers with 11:1 , FOOD A delightful tastJng and 1.nJSUS/ dessert -a luscious Chocolate Chip Torte. • ~~~~.!.oasl -sac ~ aMI Juicy. 1We Cut. llt. ~u!!!!!n ~~ s22• ~!!P.,~tr!tt!! s111 !~..!!'!"Steak. •s221 U.S.D.A. ~ '"''-"'· lit. ~ Steeb • <=* s. .. 1t1 12 te 1,..... Check Out The Beef! ~:::!.':!.11.. ............... s11• ~~a:.·~! ................. $1•• ~~~!'~ ................ s1n Check out the~1teak1 ~~ ~::" OMb .............. s1• ~ ... lAM~=~~~.~ .. $J" ~:~·~~ ...................... s2s• More Great Meat Value• Sliced Thuringer 4-0L79c Of Hard Salami, Safeway .... Ptrg. CHECK OUT THE USDA CHOICE BHF lv9"f cut ef Sofewoy Met It ....-USDA Ch.Ice. then meont thet the eovemment hot in..,.cted Sofewoy beef and t.und II te ... pwe ond w,,..._.,. and that our beef hot lteen impar11atly traded by o USOA expert who iudfed It te IM USDA Cheice qvelity. This IOf> quoltty 9rade it awordod onty ta beef thot will deliv., t.ndor, juicy, ffavot'ful cull. At Saf-ay, every cut of beef It USDA Choke. Thot't not true in every tuf"rmorlcet. <'UP Semi-Sweet R<'al Chocolate Morsels Al· tow morsels to melt and -;prcad chot·olall' evenly over rookie layers with spatula . Cool complete· ly ln small bowl. com · bine cream cheese and vanilla extract : beat un- -·-··-._J.-.. Genoa Salami 4-01.7• Of SumrMr..S-'°99• SafewayPtrg. 7· THERE'S 10 EXCESS FlllGE OI SAFEWAY MEATS til fl uffy. Spread c heese mixture evenly over re· • maining three cookie l a ye r s. Spr i nkl e 1 measuring tablespoon nuts over each c heese layer. Alternately stack layers starting with a chocolate-layer and end· ing with a cheese layer. Cut into we dges and serve. Store unused por- tion m refrigerator. M EXJCAN COCOA CANDY TORTE <Makes one 8·lncb torte> 1-'l cup cocoa 111 c up vegeta ble shortening I cup su~ar ·~· eup strong <'Off Pf' ·~ l (·a s poon c tn· namnn l p a c ka g <' 111 ount'es 1 pie crust mix 2 c u ps ll p1nll hea\y cream Mini Ch i ps. fo r garnish 1opt1onal 1 Co mbin e t'Ot'o a. shortening. su~ar. coffee and c1M amon in a s mall s aucepan: stir over very tow heat unt il !.mooth and creamy . Cool lo room temperature . Pour pi e cr ust m ix into mix· ing bowl; stir 1n ~ t'UP or the cocoa mixture. Combine thoroughly ; !>hape into a s mooth ball and chill for t hour. Cut ba 11 into 4 pieces. Line two cookie she<"ts wit h Spoon Bread 1 quart milk J teaspoon salt 1 teaspoon sugar 1 cup yellow cor- nmeal 2 tablespoons butter cor m argarine> 3 eggs 3 teaspoons baking powder 2 tablespoons cold water Jn 2 quart saucepan, combine milk, salt and sugar. Heat unlll bub- bles form around edge of pan. Add cornmeal, atlrrtng oomtantly. Br- .. Ing to boll. Cook. stir-~ rlng bris kly , for 2 minutes Reduce heat. , . Simme r , covered, s mi n utes, stirring oc · casionally. Blend in bul· ler. In medium bowl, beat r emaining lngre- d I en t s . Stir s m a l l i amount of hot mush Into ~gg m ixture . Combine S with remaining mus h. Po ur I nto 2 qua rt 1reased casserole. Bake ln preheated 400"F. oven I0·35 minutes. or untH putted and ltgblly browned. Serves 8. Additional Bulk Beef Sale! Boneless Whole Shoulder U.S.O.A. Cholce Beef. Contain• $ 14] Roast and Stealu ................. lb. (Chuck Ctou Rib, 9 To 12-lbs. Boneless Whole Round Tip U.S.D.A. Choice kef $1,. Include• Steaks and 6 Roosh , 9 To 12-lbt ............. lb. Safeway Party Time Buys! !i~ ~!·~~ ................... 10,~;1·69' ~·i ~~~~!~ .. ~~~~~ ......... : ~:69( AVOCADO !i--i'~~!~~-~~~~~~ ...... ~:V~4 9c c.1crw DIPS %-ci Party Dips Lucem• 1-oL39c ....... 4 s1 (b cept Oom OM Ouocomol•) ..•. :::~ = c!;~. %-ci ~~Ya~~r~!~~~~~~ ..... 2 ~;:5 1 BUDWEISER Jarlsberg Cheese Toqultos BEER Safeway Norew9lonS3•t Proien hef, 99c Random Welthts .. lb. Mor·"-t .11 ~ -01. 00 6,, .. ,S149 Cheese'lalls Edam Cheese Con• ~~~.~~~~ 1K~~b-oz. $21' ru::~=~ .. 7 YJ -oz. 99c Safeway Variety Department Savings! ~Vitamin C 1o1t1.S 129 ~. Sofewoy 500.mt1. Vitamin C TaW.11 ~.t 100 -~'!'L'$~ .............. 300~nr 99c . ~~'!'.~~ .. ~~-~~~-~~ ... 1t-a. 1e1tt. 27C !:.'~~= 49c ~~~.!5299 ring Your Film To Safeway For ~~ DEVELOPllG AID PlllTllG C.110o"4126 C:.110ctrtd126 C.135-MM 12-hpotu,.. 20·hpotur" 24-bpowr" s221 s3n s3•s Safeway Money-Saving Buyal .......... _._ ~ Orange Juice M'~'::iii:a"' ~~ 59' :-e;~ Cragmont Mixers ·~:!0~.~~··' 4 ::~:.•1 ~ot D09 luns 3,..1,JI ~Fresh lnad , "·•.39c ~ .... Hom ........ , Mn. Wfleht'• flf I ~ ~ W ...... 1"1 )0.Slke .. loef ~:=~~.~~-~ ............... '~~~s2" ~~!~~~ .............. ~;:89< ~:,',!.~~ ...................... s1" FRIED CHICIEI Manor HouM frozen And Fully Cooked. 2~b.SJ9t lox BEEF PATI'Y MIX Textured V ... table 79( Porteln Added lb. DOVER SOLE FlllOS lb. 52" Frozen°' Frosen Defrosted All cvt• of Safeway beef, petk ond 19mlt CH• do ... trim"'ed of Hceu bone, fat and -••• before woighl"SI I• give you mo,. meat ...al11e. It'• your a11uron<l9 of mOfo toed ooli"SI moat on the labl• fOt your m-y. SAFEWAY'S llUTS All GUARAIRED Sofowoy hot a dMtice ef .ww 250 cwh .nd lriMI• of fyMh moat and .-iltry. And aU Sofeway moott COfTY a m~·bo<lr guarantH. No matter wt.ere you Mnr• Safeway meat•, at._,. Of away. Y°" are 100~ I"'~ of top eating enjoyment. lf·evOf o purchcne ef Safeway meah Wt to p&eo.o for any reotan, just tell us. We w iU give you your money bock iwomptfy ond <.aurteaully. KIOWLEDGEABU MEAT DEPARTMllT PERSOllEL At Safeway, lh• "'"' 4eportm•"' manove• ;, olways hoppy •• help you ;., °"'f way. He'U moire 111,. yeu W., juil the 1'19ht omov"t of the righl cul. And he'" help y.v with s-poruti«\ rips, ,_, Incidentally, oll our meal deportm•nt perwnnel are there to 1ervt you in lhe tome fri.ndly way FINE WINES 150 Z-i ~!~~~~ ................... 3 .. n:.~~.ss ~~!~=--~~-~.~ ............. 150.m1. 5199 ~Champagne SJ99 ~Andre .................................. 750-fonl. ~De Kuyper 2 24-o1.s700 ~Creme De ~nth•. 60-Ptoof .. lettl•• ~!!.i~..!'•Dry•SwHt ... 750-m~2·· SAFEWAY GOOD / SPIRITS CORIER ./ "" a way Fine Holiday Pro:~~e Buys! .. J/ Pria• !lffMtln In Lk--4 sw--y.. ( 1 ... ~'" ........ 20~.. \ Nt Sol ............ . Scoresby Scotch a.hoof ~ s41• Imported l!:::;::;:J Fifth %-<$~:'~~~~.~.SJ" :-e !::':.~..-~~ ....... Nths9u Potatoes u:~::; 1 ~Ancient A.. s4•1 ~~._......~.0-. ~Cutty Sark s721 .... Sc.ldl,......,... .......... ,~ ~Gia or Votllla S62' ~Win-'• C.,,.. ~.I 7S.tlfft Delldous Apples ~· 99c •eel Dofk*lt, Wathif11ton Stat• Yellow Onions 19c U.S.Ne. 1 ........................ lit • ~~·=~~~.~~~!nch 25C r ~~ 10 :~ 59c .... 1oc .y.g Juice , ... , 69• Sour Creom ,,... 69• c.dtt•M v.,., ..... ,"k• •.. c.... -W< .. n. ...... ... .. .... c...... All Saf eways* Open ~.v;.~-~';';;!-~·· ~!!e!.~~--='l":-e:~~.~'.12~'1" New Year's Day Jan. 1 *-.~~= ~~!!~.~~~~~:·2··-~~.~ ....... -:·59C •a.C911flltl.&.rit. 1•,L.-....... • 1000 •• ,.Ide Dr .• Newport BHCh •• ,. No. COHI Htth••Y· L•9un• leech • I01 '· Cemlno " .... ••n c:MtMnt• • 24 MoMf'cf\ •• , ,. ... , '°""' ut-• . ..,.,. An• ,r .... , ., Lii Pu, MftMoft Vlefo • 211 £.17th St , Co111 Mtll •Adema at M•9noll1. Huntington IHCh • 1'417 Cutwr Dr. •t Wafnvt, lrvfM • •1 lo. l '11tol, l•nta Ana ' I ' ~ ' 1n~ has or· arc ytn~ ' .....__ . ., ., FOOD Top .Fries With Sauce Nere's a new twist to keef inlereata hlah to tba family ravorlte, home fried pe>t.atoea Jt'a llerb Fncd ltome Fries, a taaty varlaUon with tattle extu work Peeled Potllto rounds are sautff'd In o uvory onion and butter mix ture Tb~ mild potato flavor lS a nolur I matt' wllb Uwly berbe. Aod robuat potatoM, In peak supply now, provide tbt' best texture and volume for this popuhar skUM dlab. BecuUH they have the hlehest solid cootent of any s pud oo tht' market never waxy or wate ry ld a bo potatoes fry up light and cris p When prepanng home fries, farsl pe el the potatoe s. rinse and place lD cold water unlit ready to sllcc. The water keeps the spuds from darkerung. Dry the slices lo lnau.re a eolden brown surface, then add to Lbe buhbllac betb but· ter. Setv~ lmmedlat ly &a& • •kle dlab fOf' baked ham, cblcken. cbopa or steak or mor• tradl· llonally, with breakfast 111. Jr the potatou mu.t stand, lt~p U.em uocoveud lo a UO dell'ff oven until ready to aarve. Another home fried potato vaiadon lt Z1ppy Balled Potato Sllcee Pff led rounds t.o1 .ct in melted butter and coat ed with a mlxtur6 of aeasonfd bread cnambe and Cheddar cheese. Thia euy to·aaaemble dlah, baked to cn ap perfection, wlll eu aly merit •spot on rompany menus When s torine potatoes. remember to pack a dry, dark spot that's cool (45 lo 50 decrees F > lo keep them at their freshest for 1evtta1 weeks. Ttm· peratures over so de1rtt1 F . will eo coura1e 1proutan1 and 1briveUna. H&aB Fall!D HOME F&l v. cup butt•r or martar1nl v. cup chopped onlou \\ tu1poon dried leaf or fan<>. crumbl~ V. teaapooo dried leaf aavory ~ &eaapooo aaJl ~ teupoon around pepper 4 potatoes. peelod, sliced '• inch W elt 2 tabl e poon ~ chopped fresh parsley In large aklllet, melt butte r over medium heut Add onions. saute 3 m inutes untal golden; •ttdd, oreg.rno. savory, ult. and pepper; max well. Add potato 11ices, tossing lightly to coat wtlh seasoned butter. Cover. Cook o ver m e dium h e al 15 minutes. Uncover. Add parsley, toss gently. Cook 15 minutes longer. lurnln1 potatoea o c culonally Lo brown all aides YIELD: 4 to 6 aerv· ln,1. Z PPY BAKED POTATOSUCES l ·~· (2 OUOCH) coal· Ina mtx for chicken "4' cup flnely shredded Cheddar Chffle 2 tablespoon s chopped fresh parsley ~. cup butte r or margarine 4 potatoes. peeled, sliced '4·lnch thick In plastic bag, com· blne seasoned coating mix, cheese a nd parsley ln large skillet. melt butter ; to ss potatoes in butter to coat. Drop potatoes. a few at a lime, into plastic bag: shake lo coal. Place slices on un· greased cookie sheet Bake in 375"F. oven. 30 minutes, until tender. Jazz up home fries with herb butter sauce. You Can't Clip Coupons -Out of the Six O'clock News / But you can save money with the Daily Pilot. You can redeem coupons for savings at most grocery stores. Ads help you select the supermarket offering the best values -before you shop. A printed ad assures you of receiving the promised price. Daily Pilot readers also benefit from money-saving recipes, menu helps and nutrition news. For money-saving values not offered on the six o'clock news, rely on the DAILY PILOT 642-4321 Wldl-.dlty. Decembef 27. 1978 DAIL y pt&.OT C7 Hearty breads for winter meals. A Variety of Breads Perk up your winter meals with unusually tasty variety breads such as Wheat·N·Wbile Twist. Garlic Pull-Apart Loaf, Wh eat·N·Whale Sandwich Loar. a Honey-Sesame Loaf. Easy to make using fro ze n bread dough, these breads can help you stretch your "'after hoHday budgets.'' Try one or all of these hearty wholesome breads to accent your favorite winter meals. WHEAT·N·WlUTE TWIST 1 <one pound> loaf frozen white bread dough 1 <one pound> loaf froze n honey wheat bread dough 2 tablespoons butter. melted Let loaves thaw to room temperature. Cut l oaves in ball lengthwise. Place l half whale and 1 half wheat dou g h together a nd twis t . Place loaf on lightly greased cookie sheet. Brush loaf with butter. Let rise until tripled in size. Bake in 375 degrees oven for 25·30 minutes. Tum out of pan immediately. cool on absorbent paper or on cooling rack. GARLIC PULLAPART LOAF 1 <one pound J loaf frozen bread dough 4 tablespoons butter. melted 2 teaspoons garlic salt 2 teaspoons Parmesan cheese. grated Let loaf thaw Lo room temperature. Cut into 8·10 pieces. Mix buuer with garlic salt. Dip each piece into butler mixture. Place pieces together in loaf pan <8~" x 4W' x 2W') to shape back Into loaf. Sprinkle Parmesa n cheese on Lop of loaf. Let rise in warm place un\11 dough rises ~" above pan s ide <tripled an size>. Bake in preheated 375 degrees oven for 25·30 minutes. Tum out of pan immediately. Cool on absorbent paper or on cooling rack. WREAT·N ·WHIT E SANDWICH LOAF l <one pound> loaf frozen white br e ad dough 1 <one pound > loaf frozen honey wheat bread dough 2 tablespoons butter , melted Let loaves thaw to room temperature. Cut each loaf into 4 pieces lengthwise. Alternate 2 pieces white and 2 pieces wheat to fonn loaf. Place loaf into lightly g~ased loaf pan. Brush with butter. Let rlse in warm place until dough Solid nutrition. Solid . rises in inch above pan s ides. Bakein375deirees oven for 25-30 minutes. Turn out of pan Im· mediately. Let cool on ·absorbent paper or cool· mg rack. Yield21oaves. HONEV·SESAME LOAF 1 Cone pound> loaf frozen bread dough 2 tablespoons butter. melted 1 tablespoon honey Sesame seeds Let loaf thaw to room temperature. Sh ape dough int.o ball. Place on lightly greased s heet pan. Brush with melted butter. Let rise in warm place until tripled in size . Bake in 375 degrees oven for 25.30 minutes. Turn out of pan im· mediately. Brush with honey and sprinkle with sesamE-seeds. Let cool on cooling rack or on absorbent paper. All Kellogg'Sfll cereals are developed around four of nature's basic grams. com. wheat. rice and oats. And allot our tortihed cereals contain eight essential vttomms a nd iron. to get you ott to a v ery smart start as part 0 1 your complete breakfast This sound nutnlion is always at ~ • a good price. But now It's even better ~o,Jf As Tony the Ttger'1P would say. .. G1rr111111eat1" -T~ A very sniJit starl: v~ STORE COUPON IOC Ot"f on your next purchase orlCellogo'll• Raisin Bran 09reol in- has Or· • --,, • t ' I t I l • I l ........ ,.,11. • .. (8 DAILY PILOT WednMday DecemtM!r 27 1971 FOOD :Tastyi. Cheese Spreads For New Yec's Eve parties, try '1hese two tasty spreads. They 're good for luncheon, too. lo lh daya of the determined dieter and dedlcat~ health food tan. It ta a thou1hlful holtt 1 ~ho apar s th ' c:anapes and put.a out a ll1ht reput ror fri nda who <'Om to IUMh and bradae. t • To atart thln1• orr. llieTe are two d eUcloua E·~e U ·baae ap roada . featurtni ulmon. • ot~r C"UCum~r. UM• a Pll AD 1 pound er.-med tt>tt11e c 1 pa c kllJt' 1 3 ounce > en! m <'hN'!U'. aoftened I Pickllj.tl' < ~8 obnce) &l"ffn on!on dip JSUx "-cup m1ncl'd (Ucumbfor t'J l'Up minced tih terc l'f'SS Bl~nd l'Oltage chtti.e Jnd cream rhee " tall s.horouahly combined t1tnd ln remauunt( m Jrtdlenls : chill. Serve ll" Goldfish Than l!'rackers. Makes about 2 ups spread SALMON SPRE AD 1 package (8 Qunces> cream checi.e, eortened "• pound s m oked lelmon. finel> chopped 12 cup c hopped 'reen oruon , 2 tablespoons dairy sour cream 1 tablespoon lemon jUice l,it teaspoon fres hly cracked black pepper 1':1 cup c h opped parsley Blend all ingredients ncept parsley until well lf\lxed. Refrigerate until kady to serve. Spread ()n Goldfi s h Thins Crackers and sprinkle ,..it h chopped parsley. tfakes about 112 cups 11pread PINEAPPLE·LlMF. CHICKEN MOLD 2 pac ka ge s (3 New Year's Menu Ring in the New Year ~Ith an old·fashioned Gold Rush breakfast. Whether it's a festive m eal al midnight o r bru11ch at mid-day, it's a great way lo entertain and a nice way to start the new year. Entertai n i ng a l breakfast Ls easy on the hostess when It's a self- ser vice buffe t. The menu should be hearty, but s imple, such as the favor ite of gold rush days, Creamed Chipped Btief. Offer a choice or toasted English muffins or squares of corn bread lo go with the creamy beef. The focal point of a New Year's breakfast is a s p a rkling festive punc h. Instead of the usual breakfast favorite, sweet a nd flavo rful grape juice, ser ve a bubbly grape punch. This one ts a m ixture or Concord.grape drink , apricot nectar. club soda and ginger ale. It's as simple as opening a few <'ans and bot~les --and mising. The fl avor com- bo s b l end Into a refreshingly tasty drink with just enough sparkle to wake up the morn in~. To add a ~ala touch to your New Y ea r 's breakfast punch, freeze maraschino cherries and pineapple chunks in ice. 'l'hls is not only de - corative. but It also keeps th e punch co ld thr o u gho u t t h e breakfast. SPAIUUJNG GRAPE BRE AKFAST PUNCH 6 we l l -drain e d maraschino chenies 2 cans ( 1 pound each) pineapple chunks 1 can (46 ounces) arapedrlnk 2 cans ( 12 ounces eac:b ) apricot nectar 1 can (18 ounces) pineapple juice 1 bottle ( 12 ounces) club soda, chilled 1 botUe (12 ounces) 1lngerale, cbl.lled Arrange che rries in tbe bottom of a one· quart r i ng m o ld . Carefully spe>on pineap - ple chunk&, undrained, over cherries. Freeze until firm . Wben ready to serve decorate punch bowi with laurel. Pour in julcH and IOda. Unmold rlnl by dippln1 in hot water. Float ln crape drink mixture, Makes about 3 quartets. OU OCH eac:h ) ltme aelatin 1 can ll paund. 4 OUn('tl) cru.s.l'led plnf'lf) pie Wattt 1 C'UJJ mayonnau1r 1 cup (\ii p nl) •our cr~Hm 2 C'UJJll diced cooked chlclr~ breut.I l l'Up Ch opped &elatln ii llllhll y l't'lt!ry And luvea thickened. Fold plneap IA>UIK't-I Mvet r.1 , chJck~ and celery Pour Ume 11~l1tln Into nto 1elaUn. Pour mix 1 bowl Drain cru htd lure rnto one large or 8 ~In apple and uve the Individual o ne cup JUl<'t Add enC>U&h water molds. Chill until firm. to the pJneapple juice to Unmold by dippln1 pan mako 2 cuJ*. llH t mlx· Into lukewarm water for lur to b0Uln1 and allr a rew teconds: Invert lnto ,.-latln to dluolve. onto plates Jlped with Beat n mayOMaile aod lettuce leaves. Makes 8 1our cream Chill until .ervln 1. 8'rA na MOa. MA••n I WIU. .. OHll ••O• 9100 •••• TO 7100 P.M. ... YIA•'• DAY. deli. STl>TOllAOS •&UOllTtO•ILICl ll 79 lUNCHEON MIA TS ::it I " c · ,. 79c i!ATClllllOS s 12• JUMBO WIENERS I ll ""0 t• lA s 12• BHF fRAtltS • 1• ""a u $14' OIC&ll U ltll • llOUNO. llOU&.111 Olll t(CJ s 11 • YARlm PAa ;~~l "' ·-. COIW:Ull. 1-IHO(ll. ()llt(UY.-. SAUSAGE CH UBS ~~~z OSCAllMAYOI SllCED BACON , 11 ••c. OIC-"' MAYDI • WAflfll fHtN SllCED BACON o 01 .. c. ><OfFV SLICED BACON , l l ••c; flllPH"llOnH COOKED SHRIMP 1 oz ·~o u 51'8 r• s 1 •• LA $1 '' l.s 1 •• W(llUlllYf THtllllOHITO L-1 Olll"f:J"Uk SAU$TO c~ OUUll$()11 WMOUSAUAS fttr • tUOf .CU I CllUCK •OAST "OR!t•IUI)( SHOel.DI• sru• IUJ • llOu.10 • IOOlflUS Tllt•OAST CmKICll'Armt ..... ' .... , y c•n••u ... , 8PKIAllf $139 aun..-noN ... La 1• 97c iiouiiDiio a sT .• t 1 1• ,, $I 4 9 7:.iiMa •OAST ,, s 1 2• l B s1•• KU • C1411CA • l()H(L_US $17• SllOULDlll MAST 1• S1'A11118•0S. THiii-SLiCED MIATS 5 V~RIETIES • 3-0Z. PKG. IAILEBRAND BACON M.19.PltG. fltl' • ILAO«.CUY ,,99c CHUCK SftAK fltlf •CHUC• • ~ll SS ,, 'I" lllOeLDlll STUii l(lf • L..,_Of: lHO ,. $1" ••••nAK OU9UOUJ D HAM tU u ft) .. no• 'IMAll t"'o $20• HU• W AU El<O l tt •22• CAI• ••••OAST ·-•18STIAK liOMATO sAUCE .... 17c NUTRmDN BARS ~~:~'ti •·OZ. Bl.ACKEYE PEAS 00-AN t LAAG~!~~JR~~jAICAN "iiiEiiifiGE"'iT ... •<>•Ot 52~2 ~=·fiffiHuP1 t ::::~: ; fi;" I CASCADE .. Ol s222 nao c':!::"' ~~~"~ f ·~3z54!c ¥. ... ! V.9;S,~P.~- 'ALL.fABRIC $ 07 SAUCE ocr~or:·· 29C CLOROX 11BLEACH 40-01 1 PANCAKE Mix ~;;~F'" 1 •M>L*°, e1c .· l• PARTY 111•A I'S POR"'• t1•WYURI RICH'S BONELESS TURKEY BREAST REAOV TO EAT• OY£N-fl0AS TEO. NA TUAAL HICll.OflV·SMOl(EO. OR 8Afl8£CUEO • 1 "-·7 LB AVERAGE $298LB 80NELESS 1/2 HAM MOAAllL • SltCE N EA I WATUIADOEO $289 LB WI WIU IUCa - MO OTllA CllA..., oi.c• •O•H• .... 1 •• s23• CMHSI SMOlllS ••t..•( ... .,.._.~-- IOASTING CHICllNS ,....,., .. lllf 111 IOAST -~· ···~ ROUND tOAST •.... , .. ,,. ROUND ROAST •.... """" SlllOIN TIP ROAST iOSfo"N ·iUnioisr .. 69C .. $17' .. s1 •• .. s 1 •• .. s 1 •• .• $1 39 ,,PLAMET£AA·s ·c11oc"'uTAll.TS s 107 LOG CABIN SYRUP 9U"(llf0 1~ s111 : APPLES·•••·•u .. 1• .. 27 c .. 19c PEARS t •,_Of • t • T•• f &M' t • 0 •lriilOU 33cl . ' KRAFT •WHfTEJET OR MIN•ATUR£ • • ,,.oz GQRAUIKPE JAM :~~l: I s2 49 'i '15r49. ~, ONIONS'°~-~ . .MARSHMALLOWS 53c ~~!.r 1J »~ • •M>l • 7 ?· ~ , • • ~ ~ . 16-0Z. QUIK ::~..... I ,,<>l Sl.99 ... Sl.08 -.,-CANA_DA_DR-Y -.. -SC-HWE-P-PE-S -.-.. -. -SH-AS-TA- I SKAAQFT ·uHICKE()flEY. 6HZAAP •• PAIMENT0.5. BAllCONA. OR JCALAPKENO 6·0Z 69c M1xERs 1;· M1xERs -eEvERA&Es STAilR BROS. 53c -.G.:--..c~::.~·.. ~~~ra~: .. ~::·.~.l-:,·~0~. l (ii('i'EiS'."~'"" "-0' 79c Fw~i:'t:~~:~;~~>2.15 ·:~t~: 25~ ·::~!39~· ' KERN'S ;. ' PHILADELPHIA PUREX OETIRGENT ~1111" I .. o, Sl.99 TOMATO JUICE !· CREAM CtlESE PUREX BLEACH I •-0"' ~c ....__ .. "°_,5_3_c _.... __ ·.·a_·:·64_c _.. =rc~iAGi: .. ~ •. ::~~ Health & Beauty A ids Specials · MACLEAN$ DI. SCHOOl 'S FLEECE Frozen Foods EGG ROLLS =~:&..-........ I ........ nz 73 c PEPPERONI PIZZA sroum .... ! . 111M>L $1 14 DELUXE PIZZA ITOll'f(ll ..• I . U\-OL $2 19 SNACK TRAY .oos .m-0z. $1 25 PIZZA JEHO'l •TH1C1t c:i.us1c:OM1H1ATIO!C011 I $l '' TWICll<f!UIT SAUIAOt 20-()L • Oii THIQl~l•fl'HllOHl"lH . '"°' DONUTS llllOllTOfl•IAVAlllANCMM« 11-0l • 49• CHOCOU ll Oii Ol.A.ll.Dt-01 • Oii ~ .llLl Y 11-0Z CAKES IAAALH •IAHAHA1J1M>l.• $ 29 ~OlAft. • • •••• , U 25-0l. 1 BIRDSEYE AWAKE ...... . ...... 12-0l. 55c 79• "••ft .... iv. •.. .,, ' .~. )l ••f-fl> • ... i-. ..... tali MRS. CUBBISON'S 59c ~~THPASTE 79c ~~SOLES SJ 49 ';;.DRESSING ~~";.:::o-~1°A ,,,,, fHll $1.09 Dip ti•n• .,.o, 39" '111.HC"OHIO" 111uc1!f1u n o• t ,. ooo .. co-o•o-•Ot CLAUSSEN PICKLES •1M>l 53.99 PICKLES ~~~~.-:, ..... AMERICAN CHEESE ~~~i Oh u•• ! • 01 ggc SWISS CHEESE ~,~, ! •1 01 Sl.47 ..... PIOmN VIDAl SASSOOH 4-0Z. nll .. PAIM RAZOR 111111 IUAID ! ~~!':NT s 121 ~:-; PllCIS IFHC. .. ;::;-;;;---~ ... " 7 FULL DAYS, ........ -. ......... -..... ._....... ....... ... ,_ ......... __ • · DEC 21 1971 ·:!-:.:..::t;;::=::s:--........ • , • ·~-·-·-,_ JAN. 3, 1979 111111 RAID SIKK MODNAlll 99c 2M>Z f .. '· t l t • ..... \ -,, CONS\JMER ..... • ), ....... Tr. t1'1"I Bargains Abound When You 'Take to aggling BY LO'UmE COO ,....,._ . ._ Hagallna over price may seem more u1ted to a Ml~ t bazaar than I() a Mid~~t bou liq UC. but fll Vt' tlnd tukt• bnr~-Umng can sav<' you Jus t n ~ much melllt:'Y at homt' as ll cnn 1bi·o d That 11' tht' adv1ct' from 3 group or t-conom1st s ti t <,ittbank. lhc notion·-. ~rood l:irl!c:.t com m<'rclal bam Expt>rts quoted 1n th <' b.rnk '!> l .atf>~l ncw'>lt•tlt•r ~nv thP tm·k 111:~ 111 kno" tng "ht•n.•. "ht•n .md how lo hugglt' "You don't bargain 1n a big store or about f'roceries in ) our supermarket · · WHAT ABOUT IN a bank" "You c an bu rgain with us." ~aid Apnl Klimley of the Citibank public uffairs department Ms Kllml ey COO · ceded. howevt'r, that most bank charge& are fixed "It would varv from service to s ervice ... s he said. "But there are cer- tain kinds of branch loans where people do bargain." Branch loans ar e paid back a ll at once rat he r than in installments . Th ey are often "secured" -backed by something like stocks or by large de- pos its. The Citi bank economists say that "for big-ticket items, a cerl:un a mount or haggllnR ts not only expected. lt 's the ac r<'pted way of life." Prices for appllanct:i. ttnd automobl J e ~ \'ary Wldcly. for ex ample .. ,, and dealers h :ivc a cerlaln amount of fre<.'<.k>m lo negotiate Bargain· Ing could get you a better serv1 ce con tract ot an. extra ac cessory at no extra r harge Isn 'l haggling an unusual subject for a big bank? No, said Sarah Wells. editor of the n ew s l e tt e r . Bargairung Is simply "a money-saving dc- v 1 c e . . It 's 'buymanship. · " she said. NOTE: YOU MAY not b e abl e to bargain in a bank. but you can compare t erms. Whe re you keep your money can be as important as where you spend it and financial institu- tions are n ot all a like. Commercial banks generaJly off er a greater variety of services , but t hey also pay Jess interest on savings accounts . It is important to read the fine print generaH1 h'ave • I low ortcn la interest prett.:1 iood ide11 of compounded? I s what u.c1r oocnpetl- "free checklna" real tioA iaoehorelsla. ly free or do you • H o g 1 J e 1 n have to m lntaln a prha<'f· Oon·l iput minimum balance., the seller 1T.l the post· Can you ket"p that - mtnlmum in an tn· t c resl·bearlng sav tngs ocrount or do ~ou hove to dc~it it. Ill your checking tit> rount? Wh t ls the ann\.W.ll rate of anlerest ~u will huvc to pay 1r you take advantage of so-called overdraft checking to write a r herk for more than ~ou have in your ac- count" FOR PLACES where you can haggle, th ere are s om e general guidelines to keep m mind. Among them . • Bargain with dignity. Don't an- tagonize the seJlcr or make disparaging re- ma rks about th e s tore or the goods. • Be s ure you deal with someone who has the power t o make concessions. If a clerk s ays. 'Tm so rry . but th e man ager set s the prices," ask lo see the manager. It is us u a l l y easy to bargain in a n in - dividual store tha n in a large chain where s tore per s onnel operate within rigid limits. • Don't exaggerate or make unrealistic cla ims . Automobile dealers. for example, Irene Gerosi menko , fashion model and Schiel~ graduate soys, 'This was me before I went to Schick .. Now I'm a profes.sionol model and I don't diet! FOP. A FP.EE NO-ODLIGATIOH ltmP.VIE\V CAU ... t r tr 558-8404 lm ~i.. • 520-a000 In Sao Diego . . . C7 14) 299· 7 800 C£NT[ll. HOU~ • 9 '4M 10 9 PM OAANGE Town and Counrry Center YOUR DAILY PILOT CAN BE RECYCLED! . Orange Coast College . operates the official recycling center for Coste Mesa. 556·5981 I tlon of havlnr other cntomers deman<i _..Y you are getting a better deal than t))(!y are. • 0 o n ' t l i CD 1 J. ba.r1 aininc to pince alone. The seller may mt lbe 'Wfllinl 'ti> cut ~ pttce. bttt he or she IBll)' t.e willing to PN> ride tking1 \i k e fllff .elheration1 or ~ry. 1e I E •LEI! .,..., •~ •utr-ia111•0 1e •c:• •• .,,, •O•"' to, 'n• ,,. n 1mo11on ot '"'' r~ We ,..., • ..,.. ""'" vo-i tor Ille tac. ! ,. • • •••ut °' rn1• rouoon .,11• ~ too n•ndl•r>Q ' J•oY•O•O you •~o the COftSu"'t< .. ... COMO~•O wotll , ... I0'10wtno • "Tty 10 negotiate ~iscmlD'lt9 tor buying m quantity or out of season. Be flexible. You may lbe able to get a Jilltter l>ri~ if you attept an item that is in stock in- stead of one tha1 hu to be -specially or· de red . • Ask if there •re dlaeouats tor pay,ne cash . • Off • t • I ,, • ' ' . . . CJ• ~LV PILOT ThlS UPIH!l nl\• \0 m uch I d~1ded to dill· cuas ttw probll'm with his mother She said, ''J ohn has suck~ hi~ thumb ever sinee Ile was 3 htlle boy I talked to . e veral profei.s1onal couoselon> about 1t and they all said ht-would outgrow It but up parent!) they wcrt' wrong " The other evening wt- were having dinner with friends John got into a heated political dis · cussion. The o pposition was so much better in· formed it was e mbar· rasslng. When I looked at John he was s ucking his thumb Will you please tell me what can be done about this humiliating habit? Don't suggest counsel· mg. he won't go. -A WIFE J N W ATER· RURY. CONN. DEAR W I FE IN WATER : John reverts to b is baby days when "worr~ bt>ad1'' or • 1••• IH·k pttce -... ~ ce CUT)' at all UaH ud fMdl •b • be fttll OM' DHCI. WbH lk-• • at ii.om" t'M'OGraa e lllm lo talk lO >" .,hn lte'a up.wt., Aad DON'T ,. ak.-aa lane of Ill• thumb ltlalC -C'Vt'r. U wlll only add to hi aham ... DEAR ANN LANOERS Ma y I respond to the Quebec mukootent who made some-snld~ rl'marks about the way w e F'londa citizens drive? A!ter yt>an of ob6erva· t1on I can truthfully say I don't know how those Queber drivers ever made it to Florida alive Their survival ts a tribute to the extra ordinary defensive driv· rng skills of persons from other places who see themcommg. There was o nce a popular s logan. "Keep Florida Greel\ -Bring Money." I have a better s logan for the Quebec drivers I see in Miami: "Keep Quebec Green. S ta y Hom e ." -A LUCKY SURVIVOR DEAR L UC KY : Canada and tbe U.S. have always been peaceful neighbors. Let's keep it t.bat way. We both have our share of lousy drivers. Wiil you settle for that? be betomes anxloDI, CONFIDENTIAL to rnutrac.ed. tiftd or an· P lease Come to the happy. U he rdaaes to Reacue or Call Yoor accept coanaella g R abbi: I don't have to perbapa you can help call anybody, I caa keep bis tbumb out of tranala&e that 'Yiddish bis atoudl (at leaal wlml pbraae without help: "A he's out ill compuy) by b lber emea ta a gutzer provldiaga abctiade. leege•" me ..... a ball G I v e h I m so m e tnatb ls a wbole Ue." • " • • • ' t ( Horos cope ) TllllltSDt\Y, OE • V' By Vl>N t.:V OMARR ARIES <March 21 April l9> Kuy la Oell 1blllty t-;xpoJW.t horitona Refuae to be "v1clim" of onl' who t'Hts • pall, 1o1nas th~ bluea Look bf'yond the 1mmcdutle Pere Iv potentl•I. Wrlle. adv4'rtiH, dill· trtbutt' and pubUa h Don 't allow )'~ Ir to b<> palntfd lnlo any cor nt>r TAURUS <April 20· Muy 20> Be Sptlclfl c. d1rert. dU& d p, rejet·t the 1uperf1C'lal Ml'mlwr or opJ>O•ltl' au plays promln~nt rolt You l'atn r•ach understand1n1 co n ct>rnlna money . ucurHy. _,m oUoni.I rommllm~l. Aquarius, Scorpio ptraona figure 1n scenario GE MINI <Ma y 21 June 20>. Spotlight on legalllies. public rela· uons. swlft changes. anal ys1s o f "special papers " You gain deeper romprehen&1on of those who hold views d1f· fenng from your own. One who cares for you. has your best interest..s al heart. will prove1t CANCER <J une 21· July 221 · Make change, adjustment in domestic area. Emphasis on de· pendents. work routine, diet, nulntion and care of pets. Taurus, Libra. Scorpio persons fi ~ure prominently -and so does the number 6. You win through diplomacy. LEO C Jul y 23·Aug. 22): Avoid se H · deception. Seek perfec· lion. but know when you have done your best and don 'l become fanatical. Means learn lesson of pacing. Pisces is In pie· l ur e. Accent on romance, creativity. swift changes, specula· lion -and children . VIRGO <Aug. 23·Sept. 22): Practical affairs dominate. Be aware or costs, structure, quallly or material, priorities. Capricorn figures pro- m inenUy. You ga1n as· suraocea of support. 1-·1n1nr 1al p&ctur~ bounda out of darkness Into Ught o( opUm11m. LIBRA (Sept. 23 Oct 22> Mnsap brlnas "areen llaht • Accent on ldeae. ahort trip. vlal\3, r l•tlvu and c lo11e nt>l1hbot'1. You will 11uc· cu111fuJ l.y tlnlah project. Aries flgun. promlnent· ly -and ao does "he number 9 You receive rredll whlcb s hould have bee n 1ranled weeka •Jto. SCORPIO <Oct. 23· Nov. 21) · Emphasis on new deal which could mtian more money tor you . Leo, Aquarius fieure prominently. You are a ble no w lo flt together puzzle pieces. Good 1en1e r eplaces ronlution. You will gel to heart of matters. SAGl1TARIUS CNov. 22 ·Dec . 2 1 >: S tudy Scorpio message. You bave right to be op· t1mlstic. Timing is on tar get. Highlight lo· dependence or lhougbl. action. Lead rather than follow -be a self. starter. Imprint your own style, Policy. CAPRICORN <Dec. 22 .J a n . 19): Pierce mystery -get thoughts, o pinions, ideas .out in open . K ey now Is greater degree or adapt· ability. Expand horizons. Gemini, Sagittarius fig ure promi nently. Whal you seek wlU soon become available. AQUAR IUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Friend who feels "trapfed" seeks your counae . Key Is to help s how the way, without taltlng on entire burden. Escape hatch is available -you'll aid in locating 1l. A personal wis h will be fulfilled. PISCES (Feb . 19· March 20): D e fine terms. You'll be asked to participate In civic project. Key is lo main· lain balance, sell· esteem and to receive credit for efforts. You are worthy of reward and plaudits. Know it and make sure others also are aware of it. .... Club Calendar NEWPORT HARBOR PANH ELLENIC: The iroup wlll meet at lO a m. Wedneeday. Jan. 3. at Gle ndale F edt'ra l Savl n u In Ntwporl Centtr. Iris Fuchr;, •~n lor s~creta r y ut t'luor Corp • wlll speak on Fluor's hlalory and com mun1ly involve· menl. NATIONAL O&GANIZATION f'OR WOMEN: The North Oranee County Chapter will aponaor a FemlnlSl New Year's Eve party on Dec. 31. The party ls a m i dn lg ht harbo r cruise on the Belle of Balboa. which will leave rrom the Pavilion on Balboa bland at 10 p m . and will cruJBe the bay untll lam Tickets. at SlO pe r ferson. are avalh•ble rom Gtorala Reed. 832 4229. YOU111 EXCllANG E SERVICE: YES. 1s aeek1ng hosl families to provide bed, board and mild s uper vision for teen.age foreign ex· r hange students ror a slx·monlh penod start· Ing immediately. Any couple or family Interested may conlact the Y. E.S International headquarters al P 0 . Box 4020. San Clemente. 92672. or 492.7907 WORKSHOP FOR WOMEN: A two-session workshop for women who are thinking aawt going back lo work '11 be held from 9 a .m . to noon on Saturday!!. Jan S3 and 20. at the Golden West College t'Ommun1- ty center Adm1ss1on of S7 Includes both sess ions. a nd pre· r egistration m ay bt• made by rai ling the C WC Wome n's Center between lO a.m. and 2 p m . weekdays before Monday. Jan.8. Focus of the workshop will be evaluating skills a nd goa ls, t he Job market. the re-iumc. in· terv1ew. reJC<"llon shock aand "aurvlvlne it all'' after employmenL Mar· riage and lamlly rounselor LaDonna Johnson will lead the workshop. . DISCOVERIE S UNLIMITED: Conslru~· live leisure for women will be discussed in the Wednesday , Jan. 10. program at the Golden West College communi· ty center . The frff Dis· coverles Unlimited pro- gram will be held from 9 a m. to noon It will be given by Patsy 8. FAwards, Los Ange les. owner of a private rounsellng firm on leisure acllvtlles. This week only Have your picture taken by a computer Ralphs Golden West•••··••• .. "., It's fun ... a videotape camera and computer take your "photo" in 60 seconds whlle you wait. It's free ... it's our way of saying thank you for helping make Ralphs Number One. Offer good Dec. 27-Dec. 31. 197~. r---rft#'A1___ -~~ I #515 ~ *' 0 Instant Image'' I Personalized I T•Shirt each with coupon . ',..:.. I 'IMt•nt lmeae" av81lsbl" on •h" followinl? da"" at Halph• (.old"" W~t ~ '\• Wed to Sun .. [)t'(' :.r;.[)tor. :II lrom HI H m tn 7 pm (\\ed .• p.m · ~· '' \Ii L 7 p .m onlyl L1m11 One Item Hnd OnP C'hupon l'n ('11•111mt'r .l 'i{·~ . ------•C OUPON _____ _ ----------.;..-'\, ,,. • •* ... \ Special Wooden Frame for your Instant Image Photo $299 •ecfl 1:".Q: =:::..,.._._,c_ .. _ .. ,..... ....... ., __ .. _........,.., •• I - .~----------------------------------------~======~====~==========================~======~~==~ Female Heart Health For many years, the American Hearl As · !'>Oc lalion and other health educators have thought about women primarily in relation to the heart health or their hu s bands and their families. But in the proc· t..>Ss, the Heart Assocla· t1on points out, we almost have lost sight of the f act that m o r e wom e n In the United S t a t es die o f cardiovascular diseases than from any other cause. R egardless o! the male vulnerability in this respect, diseases of the heart and blood vessels are the number one health problem of women, as well. Women are entering into lbe mainstream or a hfestyle which bas con· trlbuled to mal e vulner ability lo heart a t· tack. While women ap· pear t o have some a mount of protection from heart attack dur· ing pre ·meoopaus al years, lbe advantage rapidly is being dissipat· ed through a g rowing acquislUoo of traditional male risk fact.ors. As equal participants 10 a wly or life which produces unusual and unnecessary risks o! he a rt disease and s troke. the American He art Association urges women to look to their own heart health. EducaUonal programs lo beball of heart health are made Polllble by ef. forts such as the Orange County Chapter's cur· rent mall campaign, which replaces the chap. ~r·s traditional annual door·to-door campaign. I May!H!Wnt Com,.ny producer ot • tO!llplttt tint of co.metlce, bu tor ··'"'' m0<1tb• llecn l'\lftDIDK adv~U bouMg U.at It• nail polllll\ ,. "l<I touc~ II t.oliD~ beclt 11111.Nd ol l>fnlu~ • ti! prov~ t~ point, lbe 1d...,rlia era c .. tect • table lt'nois b•ll with the pollah and bad l W<> model• play ~ c•rM ror two h•J<1rs noa.vip. '"T'h• llffulllul eal'>r didn't C"lup. pttl or t'Nlrk." the mapllM ltdvrr· liliaMnt "'MIA "A buall·ln ba~ -ltH 1t bwtoct bid• 1n•ttad of btttlllnJ .. Thlt tlalm eounded a bot far- ft:tclted, eo .,, ~1ded 10 !'Ill th8 p!lllall to the lt'tll We would CIHlt our _., table ltMll ball and - rorourwtv,.. whethtr the nail ttilor ~"bowl«'*" 1n1lt'adot bruk· Inf" Robin M lftyK. I llOl'homott II 1ti. Un1ftnllY of Nor\JI Caroltna II Wllml11"1c.n. lneed lo pl1y t!M l!a1" Sh• lllld htr partntt t.lllll J>layln( at ti am ti 1hr Colkf• MallDr AIJllrtm•nU tlubhtlUM, at· tr1Vtlo1 a lot ol att.enllon with I.be , 11t11rl.t ta bit tl'llnla ball J 119' IA 111 IM l.flf\'lJIOO and-·· ulu a.d,..rtlM'!Mfl\a. ebt pla)'f'd f« two hou" atrai11h1, 11flnc nib-~ ~ u I.he model• dul Ewry 11'> mlnuln or llll.. Wt Wj)Uld JIU~ at the bell before N,.,,lnJ tw chl'ppm1. J!"'lln& or cndtln1. Noalin "'l rr.lly can'\ btl1rft uu-.~ .Id )Ci. Haya. 18. "I really UIOlll:ht It wowld tt.att lo chip." 11 did llOl. -Ill -hov1' ot .olld pla)'llll· Tiie bltlt .... .,_ hit l'lltO Iii. Cellioi-tJ..,....q;sltt by ~dttlt-ud lltlU IMWfld llO 11 ..... Dy 11 a.•. Ml• flayn wu ~· 11111 u...S ot cable 1un1e. .. pK1&J1y wtt.11 no mitklac ot the ,..u polilll. Th• labt. Lil.not• ball loohd n llnooOI a.ct llhln y t.fltr l wo houn u It l,.d ~.,...,the PIM bc'p;1n "'Thia muat rolly be' ~,..,.i n.t1l polldh," w ... Hay•a mlll"ffllod "A• ,,.11C"b 11 w• v• hit It arnund I would'w 1111rt.ly thouchl It w<luldr t lut. but you can'I ~•n lt'U ~ vc bffD pla)'lftl! wl\.h lhUI blllJ At Lil" n, °"" pollllh. ..-1i1rb ~ 1n 24 "'""' and fr?et colon. le park· aa!'d tn a 9-J2nd• of on a.HI<:~ boltlc and la ,,,Id 111 tln1,..1orn. v•~Y •D<I dl"C<"Uftl •IMNI And rttft ~ ~r~ry slon'<I Th• rollllh lnt'ludril " 1>:1111-ln ba..-rMl ~ poliah. the a4vtttl...-nl.I u y, "'" mallt'W II Auordinc 10 1bt adv.rUalnc cl~lma. tM poh1h "llandl 11p to m°" h!lld knOC'U than )'Ollr l'Mbl tY<:r C•l .. A• br 1U tAbk ttf\11 .. Ut •nft<'ffMd, tlull bt Ctrl111nly ~ JIJ>lt how lht ro(...JI wlll mu-t lo the hard knorU na.lbt ectually att la batd l<'"Y These two labte tennis balls were given two coats ol nail color each. The b~ll on thO left hes withslood two hours of play without a crnrk in the polish At right ia the un· used ball. the shine ol 1ts polish no greater than'"'',.., ll•e ball at tell. .... Maybelllne thanks Robin Hayes and the Wiimington Morning Star for this unsollctted letter and news story. ..... Dear Maybelllne, This ts just a note to tell yoo how much 1 llke your noll polish. rm nor very gullible. as the enclosed ortlcle points oor. bur stand behind a product rhot hos been fhorooghty tested, preferably by me. The article wtll rell yoo that I set out to prove • yoor advertisement wrong. I'm referring 10 rhe one thar says rwo models ployed ping pong with o pollsh-cooted ping pong ball. for two conrlriuous hours without Ir chipping, crocking, or breaking I didn't believe It, 11111 tried It It works! ' I om now o srounch believer in your produc1 and avid believer that It strengthens my nails Thonk you MOybellll')el Sincerely, Robin Hayes. ·- •••• NJ H•• I • • ,. t FOOD WldneldaY. December 1:7. 1978 DAIL y P1l..OT" CJ J Rice Dishes Stretch , Budget Wltb meat price.a on 1 cup ahredded car· the nse, more •lteaUon rots ancreasao1ly turns to l tea&poon 1rated Mound about ,,... cup r\ce mixture ln .-ach on on, top wlt.h pecan halvff. Spoon Oran1• Glue ov.-r tech onion. Bake uncovered at SSO'F. unUl hot, 10 to ts mlnutoa. M8kH 6 INVlDll (2 onion• e•<'bl 1,,... teaspoons ult 14 teupoon ground cloves minutes. Mound about l c up rlco mixture into each aquuh half Makes 6servlnp fine statiorery corona del mar ve.:etables theee daya. oran1epeel For dlMerUme Hc1t~ "'a tcMp00n tnece ment, pan up ubl· l21>tt1Anbalvee qu1tou1 peas a nd · Oranae Olaae (re· t'itrrot~1 thouah. and tlpefollo-.'ll) choose Ul mo.re hearty, Soak r&lJU\S ln bourbon· vi 1 u ally • ppe all n I at least 30 mlnut.a. Coot< ve1etablea aucb u onloru1 in bolHna salted 1qu11be1 and rraarant water Juat unUl tender, .onlona, plcmUl\.IJ at lh1I 10 to 12 mlnutn. Drain Ume of year. and cool •UabUy. Cut a The favorite 01vor1 ol allce from tbe top of India •land out ln Bom· tacb oaioo and remove b•y Rl~ Stuffed Onloos. all but ._.lncb of the 1be cooked on.loo cupa 1hell. Chop the pulp; are filled wlt.h a pilaf meuure ~ cup (ttserve llnored with aolden remalftlnl l)Ulp for aoup nl1&n1. ahredded car· or atew). Saute "" cup rots. oranae P l and pulp tn butter ln 10 in<'h mac8e.o-••v au-o sklOet unW goldt'n Add naUI'• ru~n rice; cook and sUr over TVli'FEDONJON low hut until n<'e Is Va cup £Olden raialn.s golden. about J mlnutes. 2 tablespoon s Add water and a~t. Br· bourbon lna to • boll. Cover tight· 12 mediumonlom l y and sim mer 20 2 t.blespooos butter minutes. Remove from or margarine beat. Stir ln raisins. car· l cup Rice rots, orange peel and :: 2~ cups water mace. Pla<'e onions in 1 teaapooosalt butlered baking dish. Oru1eGlut1 l <'UP orange Julee 3 tablU1poons bull~r or mar1urou•. aortened 1 table1poon nour 2 tabl•pc>on1 brown 1u1ar Heal oranae Jui~ tn small uucepan. Com· bine butter and nour: 1Ur Into oranae juice. Add brown auaar Bring to 1 boll, stirnog con· 1tantly. Reduce heat: cook and 1tlr until 1lifhtly thkkened ACOaN SQUASH WITH FRUITED RICE 3 medium acorn sq uash. cut In half crosswise, seeded 6 tablespooos butter or m argarine, I;\ cup packed brown sugar ~ C'Ul> bour bon '-" cup c h opped onion 1 cup rice 2'A cups water l medium apple. pared and chopped .,., cup chopped sort dried apricots ~ cup coarsely chopped pecans Place aquaab, cut side down. ln 9 x 13-lnch bak· Ina pan; pour ~-inch water into pan. Cover with foll and bake a t 400°F. ·for 30 minutes. R emove from oven ; turn aquash cut side up. Melt .t tablespoons of the butter and combine with brown sugar. 1r.t teas- poon of the salt, cloves a nd 1,4 cup ot tbe bourbon. Spoon mixture evenly into squash. Cov· er with foil and continue to bake at 400°F. until squash I• tender, about 30 minutes. While squash ls baking, saute onion in remaining 2 tablespoons butter in 10 -inch skillet until tende r. Add rice: cook and stir over low heat until rice is golden, about 3 minutes. Add water and the remaining 1{4 cup bourbon and 1 teaspoon salt. Bring to a boil. Cover tightly and simme r 20 minutes. Remove from heat. Add apple. apricots and pecans. Let stand cov· ered until all liquid is a b s orbed . about 5 """ STARTS WED., DEC. 27th 30% 8t 50% Reductions ELlIN CARTER LADIES HABERDASHER 131 FASHION ISLAND MAU• NEWPORT BEACH e (714) 759·1770 HOURS: MONDAY THRU SAT. 10 AM·5:30 e SUNDAY 12·5 PM ~--~ ~---..... Serve these rice pilaf-stuffed vegetables as a hearty ac- oompamment to a meat entree. , Club Calendar nmi each Wednesday in the Daily Pilot and cont ams Mtu:es of ioomerfs and sennce club meetmgs and ~ts for the followmg week -Thurs· day thrOtJgh Wednesday Send notices to Club Colen· dar. Daily Pilot. P.O. Box 1560. CO$fa Mesa. CA 92Q6. He $Ure to rnclude your name and phone number. Notu:es mu.st be an our hand.s two weeks in advance. To request a picture. wnte or call the Features DeJ)CJT1~. 642·4321 Pictures ore ltmated to fund· ra1.seu open to the publ!c Pony Rides Bring the kiddies for the tMll of a lifetime wtth a ride on a real love l)O(ly 35• Youth Fund donation. Today thru Sun at the Hunll~ton Center mall· from noon to 5. Beech Bhld. & San Diego Fwy STOREWIDE SALE UPT050%0FF Thurs., Dec. 28 THE COMPLETE SHOP FOR THE NEWPORT WOMAN 341 ~ Via Oporto • Newport Beach ·I d The great taste of Maxwell HouseeG>ffee. Without it, apple pie just wouldnt be the same. • MAIL·IN CERTIACATE How to start yoar Muwell H~ Coffee 1hnes CoDecdoa •Rm mnovc the lnntt seal from 1ny 6·, 10., or 14-oun~ ~r of Maxwdl Hou~ lnsian1 Cofftt This Is' your proof ol pu~ Thfll Fill In mt lnfonnadon on 1hc bonor. of this cmtftatc Now just rMil the completed ttmftatt and OM I~ SQ! for clCh boolr. ordtml to 1he add ms bc:low, al!d ~11 5Cnd you the hrst bookltt In°"' new Mir~I HnJt Coffer Trma smC\. h's padcd wllh useful cofftt kias 1nd cklici°'-!S ~lpn Mllil tol Cc6e ........ OS.. P.O.lla3166.K=bkw,ll."'81 Q~ N Z)p~~- • .u.., M ....... ,._ ....... G...i.lf II U.U: ~ ..... ~»?t. 'No...__......,...,... .. • -~ • .. ••••• 1001 ..... r , l t . t I t I • t ~ .. SOUR CREAM Goklen Creme for \.'alut!! Pini Fritos ........ 69 c ~l&r or KU\1-Si~•' 10 01 Potato Chips ••. age Scudder'• 8 01 Twin Pack-all lund.A Dressing ".. • • • 59c Wi&hbone ~ or Creamy . 8 01 TOMAT059c JUICE S.Cramento-it plopt! 46 01 Tomato Sauce. 17c Hunt.'1 rich and red ! 8 oz can Margarine. • • • • • age Vlei1ehmann'1-with com oil! 1 lb Pepsi Cola 111,. • s 149 ijq., Diet or Li&ht-12 oz cane ~ MAYOlllAISE _.._...."' ....... .., ........ 99c Buns ,....am .... 39C k~ingfield 'Bure• or Hot Dog Beer:= ..... 99c Cart.ca of m 12 ounce cana -Tuna :1 ti,.. . . . &9c Chooee oil or water pack ... 6 ~ oz can Meat SDreads:: &IC t)eviled Haa (4~ ., Chicken (.,.. trJ . CAIADA DRY ~: .s.:.. ": 39c :n••Wlt .Ill ......... ' 'aper Towels • • 45C ~prinifield-MeOrted colors-roll Ripe Olive$ • • • • &9c Lindaay· Large aise, pitted-6 oz can Bloody Mary • • age ~;;Pi;te;· ~~gc Diamond· pq of 15 ..• io v, inch ,eanuts llY.sf ••• ggc Jfaura Scudder'& snack favorite! 12 oz Jortila "STRIPS Poco·a .. for the party dips! 10 oz a • • ._ • • • t ' :1ns1s~ Bontl .... clOMly trimmed· and U S.0.A. Choi~! Av1 3 to 4 Iba .,UllEY 5 1 8~ Plump El Rancho hen• ... r•dy 1-0 11hce and aerve ... and enjoy! Beef Roast='• 527! Ground Beef r.amT 51'! Lotn rut rl U.SJ).A Choice bMf Leen· doea not e1ceed 221\ f,at WE Wll IE OPEii 9 to 1 SllmAY DEC. 31 CLOSED 0 YUl'S DAY New York SJ99 STEAK • llonel ... U.S.O.A. Choice beer herve aati11faction in thia loin cut. Beef at it's best! Rief Mignon SuP'fb Ntiolactloa In UU. $ 4 29 tenderloin cut oC U.S.D.A. Choice beef • lb&BBHbPiBRd :::a~'~ .......... ~llfl Start with El Rancho's U.S.D.A. Choice quality-add natural aginit-and you h11ve superb satisfaction! Beef Tenderloin cut Sliced Bacon ••• s1 59• Oysters • • • • • • • • s219 W• SJ09 1ngens amu•. . El Rancho'• thicker "ranch atyle" FRESH! ... Eastem-8ozjar(lmml ... Ut) Hora d'oeuvree. teriyaki sauce-to oz Sausage rruemu •• s1 5~ Crab Legs • • • • • s2•~ R k• SJ49 uma I a•U•··· Made tlie old world way-no nitritet Meaty! •.. from Alaakan crabs They'll be the bit d the party! 6~ <n Bratwurst a_... 515~ Cooked Shrinp s31~ Mushrooms SEii • 527~ Pork. veal, eeuoninr· no nitrites Delicious! ... for cocktails Cordon Bleu style 0-. ... , 6-8 per lb l1w York Strip ·• .iw 1l7l Loin cut Of U.S.D.A. Choice beer ... naturally aged, trimmed for value! Start the New Year with sheer delight ... the Better Way! Ham Slices a-.s s2'~ Thick or thin· Center cut! ( .... IMe4 Ham "",........ s1 5~ El Rancho's own tender treat! (-., MW) El Rancho $139 HAM=" • Selected and cured ee~ia~~r El Rancho ... lean!(.., FRESH WTBll LEGO' $169 PORK • A great roest! Whole or ahank half BCllLESS SrumD aaBI $279 BREAST • Cordon Bleu atyle-ham and cheese Super Fresh Produce Pork Leg MUSS ••• sr~ Freeh Eastern pork for a finer roest Steaks ::'° ... .-s1a~ Leanest grind-does not e1ceed 15'li fat CURE 81 s3st HAM Ila Boneleee Hormel's fine quality ... whole or hair for your plea11ure Avocados LARGE! •. I fir 1/ California'c; fine11t ... they'll be greal in your t1peciol Mlod ... nr. ~rve on avO<'edo dip CUCUMBERS :=-::··· 19 .. c ......... FRESH 39c LEMOllS • Lll11te . : . from California orchards PARTY PLATTERS ' Rein! ~tut do it for you! We'll ar- range a apread that will be a a.icht to behold -a treat to enjoy -and s ble•inc to your budget! For an in- timate party or a hunpy horde - count on El Rancho! PUTTERS TO SUIT YOllt EDS. .. YCllR 8mGET ••• YOllt PARTY! OIDDt MOW! Holiday Spirits CllAMPAGllE ......... $199 ... &tntry, "*• CIN W .•. fiftll Early Times •••• s499 Strai1ht whiskey in the fifth Canadian Club • '616 Smooth Canadian whiakey-fifth "' Bacardi Rum ••• s599 Ch00&e Silver <Yr Amber ... quart ~~·rs149t SCOTCH The one to pour with prid~ l. 75 ltr Beef eater . • • • • • sg29 The definitive gin! quart Wines ::ru . . . . . s299 Chenin .lilanc,Jo'tench Colombard-1.5 Ill Lord Calvert ••• se21 Enjoy Canadian thia time! quart The ubiquitous apirit8! 1.75 liter Frozen Food WE Wll II OPDI 9 to 7 SUDY DEIDIEI 31 Delicatessen 'ce Cream =rON ......... 99c f hooae t.be favored navore in Springfield-ertioy the Oavor and the value! Egg Rolls•• .. 69c Enchiladas~ •• s1 2• Shrimp, Chick.en or Meat &. Shrimp-6 oz Beer or Cheese-big 19 oz pkg ivocado Dip ••• 79c Orange Juice ••• 7gc ~vo Rec. or Hot 6 Spicy-6 oi Springfield concentrate-12 oz .APPLE $139 PIE :fA STClffER'S s 119 PIZZA Pepperoni (ll~ II) Seuae1• (IJ el) Pritn in ~{~ct Thur, D~c. 28 thf'OC'llt WH. Jan 3 ~!!99!11- IY~ •••••••••••••••••.•••• SIC f'or the pert.y tf'l)'• S.llOlled, Re1Ular-8 01 IM.Stm'I m:x ............ -. 7tc Ric. In 12 °' pits: Wh .. l in 1& 01 1l1t1 (l'a.MJdena Store 8 to 4) CLOSED llW YEAR'S DAY AllfT -tal.£S . . . . . . . . . . De Koehtr. Polillh or Plain lcebtra· 24 oz Jar ~CCII ..•...••.••.•• 99C Pan.y time tnll· Laura lkudder· 11 •1 01 tu • Polish Ham 2LBslZE ... s4 .. A party ham that will prove to be ao rewarding in lean goodne88! Krakus Ca111ed Ham u• 51099 ltali• Salami .. s111 Dubuque value! (Apr ..... Ut) ' . Gallo sliced-6 oz (IJ • M .•. ut) Buddig's Meats 7gc p· kle s1•• IC S a..as ••• Many varitiea-6 oz (J ti 11111 ••• Cte) K08her whole or halvee-32 01 jar Juices mwt•• ••• 69C Goudas or Edmns 19c • Orance a1 Grapefruit· 32 oz eize Wiapride party fevorit...:.. 7 01 AmeriC• ma •• S 1 JI Alouette Cheese UC From the cbeeee people-Krart. 12 oa Garlic,Pepper,newFtench Onion· •~oa • Open daily 10 to 7 ... closed New Year'1 Day No sales to cko~rs az SW11T P1C1US • • • • • • • nc s-t •nd enepplnf crlep-24 ounce jar MPllS1I cu GIP.$........ lk CGl.OI Fil LOC ••••••••• $1.09 a Paella .. or 100 ... 7 ounc• be practical ttmo burna prettily up to 3 hOlln (It) l •• J .. ! i .. 1 y l- s l· }r 'I ., ' I l ! ~ I I l • I I t ' ' c • • • , ' ., \ • \'\W....,, Dlcembet 'D. 1111 • DAA.VPILOT PJ • The Biggest Marketplace on the Orange Coast DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS You Can Sell It, Find It, Trade It With a Want Ad -· .... ••••••••••••••••••••••• (642-5678) One Call Service Fast Credit Approval ..•.••.. ~~ •....••. ~-":':'.~ •.....• ~-':':'.~ .•••.••• ~.':':'..~ ...•••• ~-~~ .••.•••• ~-~~ ••••••••••••••• ':':'.!:!': •••••••• WIS: ~Mn .... ,.. IOOJ GtMc.. IOOJ Ci"''"' IOOJ GaMr.. 1002 Ci1•r.. 1002 .... ,.. IOOJ e1aer• 1002 ..... ~ -..r .. •. •••••• ••••••.••• •• ••• •••••• ••• •••••••••••••. ••••••·•••• ••••••••••••• ··············-······· ••••••••••••••••••••••• ···············-····· .................... - EOUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY ~, ..... = ,· OM.YPILOT•-• _, ...... _ .. c.w..cti.. ....... ...,. ---••••••••••••••••••••••• ~·· •. --1001 ...................... SUK & flNlt klNQ A CONVl:MfNl SHOM'INC ,r.N0 SfWlNG GUI[)( '°" fti( cao. ON 'H( 00 Super Practical Sht'll ail! tltrs snu&lf)'! IT's 11e.t fa• school •nd wtelitndt. P~ Ind MIPft"prxtlCll lfOm COlJ hood la paldl packets Ind Srllllt sash Crocflel of 2 l!Jlncls knrtflnt worsted. Use 3 tolorl. P1ttern 72~. CPttld's Sues 6, B. 10. 12 indllOecl. SIJCI !of UCfl Pltftrn. Add (Ge tfcil pattern tor hrst<lus .,. 1!1111 llld llll'H71tni $M4ll II:: .... _ . Needlecraft Dept. 105 Oa\ll Pilot lol 1 ], °" Cfletta Sta.. ... YOI\. NY 10011. '"" ""'*· i\ddrm, ~. ''"-"'"'"'· N(W1ttQW! Our 1979 NEUlt.£ CRAn CAlALOG-OYtf 200 POPU· lar dt$11ft!>. J frte pa<t1efM printed 111S1dt Send 151 l~k.1£.asy TrlftSfen SI.SO Ill-ll<llM Q9ilh ..•. SI.SO 127~ '•' Ooilia ... Sl.50 l!«ri.:: ,_,,, ....... $1.SO "'' -........ !'·" 121-Gffb '1' 0r....u . I.SO IUSt11ct1'1''lk!IQ.itb SI.ZS 122·St.n '11' "'" O.ittt ... Sl.n 121., .. ~ ... "!'"' 120-CnKlltt •• .,.,., .. 1.00 11,.,_. Ctlcllet .... S1.00 11~ wiCt1 S..-.Sl.DI Ill-Nifty fifty 0Mb ...... $1M llS-1.,... Cf1cl_. ...... SI .• 11~-......... Sl.OG "'''"" -· ..... ·"' 111......,.. C.1111 ...... $1.00 107·1tllltMll Swi111e •••.•. Sl.00 IOS.llllU!lt CltdMt .. SI M !OJ.I~ Qlllb flt T..,, .. 7S, ::r:r-~· .. ·:t Dashing Trio \JUNCtl YOUl!SELr into a ltwtly "1nlt1 sr1S011 "1th a d1~1n1 wr111 coat oi )ltf.et that cawirs m1tch1n1 pints as well ai ,001 la¥0r1te sh11ts. df!l.s,rsl Printed P11tt1n 9339 M1ues Sun 8. 10. 12. I( 16. JS. 20 Sue 12 (b~11 l4J coa1 ~hn 317 Jilfcls 60-lflCh labl"IC s.4 1.50 ....... """11. ... 40C ,. ... """" "' fin1. ............ Selldl& ........... Pattern Dept. «2 Dally Pilot f·= ·~"-'St.,.=.': lllW. D>. SUI .. 1m£ ...... I.d's bf: P11ttlcll-J10V let mort for Im S •lltn J'Oll sew• Stnd IDI rift FAU:WINT[JI f~IOfllS,fO·SiWCATAl.OC ttn SI ~ ~pon IOI lret Ptl· tffn of fOlll cllolct. 1~ 117·._..S..-. .... SIM lll4111ta1tf ...... 1··· 1za..r....,. Q1111 .... 1.11 114-Cffb '11' ~ ... IJI -. - LIDO ISLE Bay view from 2 putio de<'ks enhances C'U sl on1 sp acious 5 bdrm .• 4 bath Lr1:1dil1on11I home; ll~e new. Ide1:1l for cnterta1n1ng. S,.,00,000 OCEANFRONT Quallt.y crar,sm11nship In mahog. trtm & oak noor!.i sets off this landmark: 4 BR , 3 ba . home in rlnesl location. t-:stabli.sht.-d trees & lawns. $475.000. IACK IAY F ine 4 bdrm .. 21r~ bath family home on quiet l'UI de s ac.·. Oversized pool . playhouse, l;torage $169.000. Terms. IAYFROMT Several fine bayfront homes with pier & slip AYALOH Well constructed. 3 BR . l ba . oak rJoor . partia l basement. concrete foundation. Flats area. $120,000-Fee. BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 141 Boy,,,J,. D''"' NB 67S 6161 JASMINE CREEK-VIEW-$239.000 Best b uy in area ! Bra nd n ew splil·lcvel ··sea Breeze" model ~n lovely quiet street . 3 Bdrms. family rm. formal dining rm & 2'h baths. Highly upgraded with air-cond., a uto. sprinklers, lux ury c ptng plus -plus . Tennis cts. pools, jacuzzis & security of 24-hou r guarded entrance . ~SUV H. TAYLOR CO., REALTORS 2111 S.. Jooqoilo Hilk Road HEWPORT CENTER, H.I . 644-4910 WATERFRONT DPLX S4SO.OOO Exceptiooal income pro- perty on the waler with boat dock. Perfect for the owner who waots to live in a spaC"ious home and have an income unit OR moth e r -in -law or teenager unit. Front house ls 3 bedroom, din· lna rm and the unit ha& I bdrm and lof\ unit has ~ceiling&. - WATERFROm HOMES REAL ESTATE 631-1400 CAPE COD STVLE 2br, 2b11. condo.-Pool. 11\aAY amenities. Close lo everyWog. Only S71 .500. 979-$370. ROOOOOMV sl!!!~ level :» bdrm . r home on a large kit In the WeslC'llrf area. Close lo Mariners Park, on a quiet street . Big family room with briC"k frplC'., freshly painted, new C"atpets, VaC'&Dl & ready to move in. Sl86,!ll0 Aod owner will finance! 67).4400 HARBOR HOW IS THE TIME f<r job seekers to C"heck _IK f\otfto9ir.dlp•f1411nltJ -Md and -·'"· HAVE c.45..-HD HOUSE We have a cash buyer for a C.O.M . home on R-2 lot w /room to build 2nd unit. No listing required. EASTll.Uff Huge 5 bdrm .. 3 ba., with brand new carpets & paint. Priced thousands Wlder ma rke t at $166.500 R.C. TAYLOR CO. 640·5112 G.ET .RUDY FOR THE HEW YEAR! A. spcrififtig view hOIM ovtrlooldftt tM ocean and Morino. Thrff ~. 2112 baths. community pool onc:I jocnzl. lf't special $107,500 493·8812 FAMILY FIXER <>vergrowri' with weeds & grass. 3 large bedrooms! Open patio! Big savings! Otn't last! Call: 645--0303 FORE5TE OLSON •• "• •w••~ ••c--- GIANT FIXER Abandoned ! Needs work? 16x32' swimming ~! Located on quiet cul-de-sac. VA term s ~ Hurry! Call: 645-0303 FORESTE OLSON .. ... . ··~ REHTERS!! la your reot going up out of site! We can help you out of renters rut ~ Affordable housing! Don't wait! Call: 645-0303 FORESTE. OLSON ·~ '". ' ... BAY& BEACH WATERFRONT ~a sil·down view of the boats & spectacular sunsets from the picture windows o( your living room in this lovely con· do: it has 2 bdrms .• lanai & 2 baths, 2 C"ar garage + parking. Pie r & slip avail. on C"on t ract . $300,000 U~l()U~ IN OUR MESA VERDE OFFICE PAIJCSIDI. MISA. VllDI -Here's a 3 bedr6om near the Mesa Verde Park and Adams School : plime location! Now vacant and featuring double fireplace. lanai patio, billiard room and close to everything location. Just $111.900. IONUS ROOM PLUS Ft.MILT ROOM - They're both in this Fountain Valley 4 bedroom. 2 s tory with 32 00 immaculate s quare feet of living. There is also two air conditioning wllts. a wet bar and location that is convenient to beaches. freeways, schools a nd s hoppin g. Proudly presented at $140.000. CUSTOM HOME SUIRO-IT GOLF '--Right in the middle of the Mesa Verde Golf Course sits this 5 bedroom. 3 bath fa mily home featuring a 3 car g ar age. Jack & J i ll bedrooms (making this a 6 bedroom home>. radiant heat. a separate play ya rd and a delightful sw1mminj$ pool. The price on this Unique Home 1s S300.000. S IBIROOMS. $96,000 -Sparkling ne w paint ins ide a nd out. a fine neighborhood c lose to the fabulous Mile Square Recreat ional Center a nd the home reatures 3 patios. a utility room. 5 bedrooms and a 7200 square foot lot ... a ll for only $96,000. Upi,jl()UI: 1-t{)MI:§ REAL TORS'. 546·5990 1525 Mesa Verde Drive, East. Costa Mesa also 111 Coron<1 do:I M<u, Jt 675 6000 WLc;ILY C< TAYLOR CO. !{},1\l'r<JJ \S •,tH• l'llli REAL ESTATE THE BEST GIFT OF ALL CLOSE · IN 1978 AVOID HIGH INTEREST RATE New legialalion . new fmancitll techniques and new courl decisions, make it eaaier Ulan evl'r to purchase .or sel I a pro- perty It C"be escrow in a milter ()( days. For ttw nrst. time, Banks, Sav· inp It LoMs can provkJe 'wrap around' finaDClnfl, that t.ocether with seller l'inanci:nC C"an beat high inlerat rat.es. Ov 11.ar' of experienced pro· fe11ional1 help their dienll buy. sell, •or e•· change 163 million ~Ian worth or real e&lale in the pail 12 monl.hl. Call now & ask about our many homes. &r inveatment liattngs. Call -r..2-1920 ' QUAIL SEAYIEW'S FtHEST-$271,000 PLACE HEW EXCLUSIVE OFFERIHOO l'llOl'fllTIIS• Fantastic panoramic vie w of city li ghts. ocean. Catalina & Palos 1 __ ,_c,. __ 11t:JOP.MJ Verdes. Absolute periection thruout this professionally decorated & prof. landscaped ''Nantuc ket"" model ! Be tte r than mos t model homes . Highly improved with lux urio us custom cptng & drapelies, automatic sprinkle rs· & outdoor lighting & expensive wall coverings. Soft colors. Call today to see this 2 bedroom & convertible den beauty. Seculity area offers pool and tennis courts. WHLEV H. TAYLOR CO. REALTORS 2111 S.. J-.n Hilk Road Whether )'OU re buying or sellinJ. Classified ad· 'lll!ftili.a& will get your IDf.Uale lo the rig:bt peo- p6e. Call Today! 642·567&. M..,'111lo4'~ mio,1· rliu,. I/lo•,, lftt~ h• l•·lt•11f'tHnl" 11 uuio m '"~ :•q• m Mond;n thru t•rid"' 11\onoonS..lurd;ov ' , ALLSTATE the Daily Pilot Help ••.---c-Wanted C"lassificalion. If I;;;,;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;; BAY& BEACH HEWPORT CENTER, H.I. 644-4'10 I ~ll'fA M t:"A Ofl-'ll't: :ou ,,,,,. ti .... !i-12 ~711 REALTORS Sell things fast with Dally Pikit.WantAda. lhe job you want is not 11 there you might consider olfering your serviC"es wtth an ad in the Job Wanted c11.tegory. Phone &12·5678 GOV.A. NEWPORT lfEIGHTS, 4 450 NEWPORT CTR. OR. 11•cTSIDE Bil, 2 balhs, large yard. '159411 ~ u . ""' ..u. 1 :-Large 3 bedroom owners IR'~'TI N40Tll'l: ltt:Al 'll l"/llj~lit·it••htll•d ~l:.!ZI> A unu OR A LOT Newport bayfront condo, affords bea utifu l year 'round enjoyment or tremendously conveni ent part-lime occupancy. Pie r /slip for 48 rt . boat. 3 Bdrms ., 2 baths + separate room & bath for c rew or maid. 400Schoolst•~'~'"",· S96.;'!"' !~~~~~~~ 1111-PlEX Loolting for a home of unit wilh fireplace & • •. • for sale In Ch1s1irie<I separate garages. Local· every day. ed near 20th&: Tustin. in Costa Mesa. Real pride ITSAIOIVUWAT Sanla's reached inlo hi• bag. lo puc. this huge 2 be droom 21-'.t balh . familyroom home under )'OW"lree. Offered at only $67.500. ~- LACUNA Bt.i\(11 1196 ca.-nnl')'fl' 1 .. 11un11 IW•1n·h 494.!Mf.6 SUHTll t "111 ":\T' 1halln~·)4(l l t;!I! ;~.M~ .. ~~<~;·~·~···!·!' -~·!--~~~-~I1;,.~0W"~ny~o~,;:::,.,,~'~y~,::;'~,~·~~lrt~~~i~~di I ~v:~=~y=i':s ~Ii~~ ol ownership. Full price CU.SSffttlD JACUZ%1 & LARGE l'OOL 2 Bclnns., 2 bath home with unique spiral staircase leadin g to bonus ~m that can easil y be converted into 2 bdrms. Formal dining rm., 2 custom frpl cs. & many other amenities. LIDO REALTY 673-7300 A Division°' Red Hill Reelry I ~ H 0 K R E S . I I I I 1-I ~r-A-1' ·~· 11~"-r-<I ! f~'-'~"~E_r ....... 11 My w111•1 molh« _. on ' I I I I :: IM llonlvmoon. ' 1~1'11 It •· ::·;:;:· ~·;:;:· ;:.· ~·~· would M'+'I !>Mn nlol 11 tM1 I•' ~C_E~E~T_l~I ~~1 woutd 118.,.. -mt 8lonO. ioo. I I I I' I o ;:-:::::; :-.. "::!.:. "=" ............. _._ ......... ~ -........ """' .., ""' , ....... l'tl'tl'I I I I I I I $207.~. C.11556-2660 DUDUHIES macnab /lrvlne !pSELEcT 1--'======:...11 :~t'~~·~~~":~:~!1; I Tnde yoUr o&d slurr for hM<••· 1111hhra11on ... ~ r88 ty PROPERTIES new goodies with a •'t"fll 1,.,. Sund .. ~" M<1n Clusiftedad.M2·5678 tta~· ~:d111"n ~ ,..h,·n CUSTOM IUILT & ELKAHT 2-story res. w/6 BRs. fami!Y rm, formal dining. kitchen w /brkfst r m . cozy family rm. lg . fplc & inviting bar. $364.500 fee . Appl . only . Barbara Aune 642·8235. (J ·59l HEWl'OIT SHORES CHARMElt "ft1ove-in ready., beach home close to comm. pool. tennis & ocean. 3 BRs, 2 baths. patio, atlium & lg. sun deek. $114,500. (back-up offers only ). Dona Chichester 642·8235. IJ-60) .. 2·123S 901 Dover Drive lrvlne a l Campus V•ller Cenler 7S2·1414 ~ii!=~iiijiiijiiijiiij.:.;;;,;,;,;;;;;;;;~11 tt.•;od\1n1· 1s ,;.,1urlt11r. 12 j ., ...... file~!~ MACONIFtCENT Sl'VOOU.SS HOME Largest Southport mode l complete with six bedrooms, bonus . and family room . You 'll love the dormer windows, wood floor and sracious patio with pool and Jacuzzi. Ideal location with super ocean/bay vie w. SSlS.000. A COLDW9L ....._CO. 644·9060 2111MN~..u.tfm. i.. ,.""°"" Ct:NTlllll cae: 110111 ILlllS CD. OVER 50 YEARS OF SERVICE DAMA l'OIMT Forever View OverlookinJ Marina. Fabulous 4 BR Home. Living Room. Dining Room. And Kitchen Have Gorgeous View & Also The Master Bedroom Sui t e . Call For ApPolntmont. $600.000. CLASSIHIO t:tl~~~~ """"Id rtw-rk 1ht•1r lffls d••h' &r rrpnrt t'r~r.. 1mm •·•halr l>· T l4 t: 111\11.'t' 1'11 ..llT 11~.•um""' l1111'tllth' lflf llw On<I 1n l•llTI'l1 '"""""'" onl.\' l 'AN''t:l.1.ATlllNS. W!lo-n k•1hn~ •" •fl ht- ,...... t<1 m•k" 11 r"""'"' n4 1h.-Kii.i. N11MHt'H '"""" .v.111 hr ruvr lt<I '"""'" 11~ r....,.,Pl •ol rout t'lll'ln'llMllfln Th1~ lo ll llUll'lhrr mU!li lw Jl'f"t'!l('n· 1~ h'o· tt>t· lldv•rti!OC'1' 11'1 f'_;,, .. d111f)lltf'. l'ANC't'.1.1.ATIO N OH l'UH Ht:l"T lflr.J Ot' N t:\I.' All Ht:t'OH t: Hl'Nr.llNG t:v..n· "4'1"'1 •~ mlHIP '" klli flf"~ II ftl•W 11(1 ltult ""'~ ._.. nfdt>rf'I'!. tlUI -1•11n!Wlt 11.1111r•n· 11'1' II> !Ir> !Oft urit1! tlw ltd ""'" 111Pllt'11rt'd lf'I lhf' -IJtMl\A IJ:"t~AOS· 1'w!wo .,.. .. ~,,. 11lrk-1b · r!O!ifl 1n 1Mtv11.-~· m11ll or 111 11nr -ol 11<Ur nf• '""°"·NO~~. ll•11d\1t1f' I p m t'hdll1•. l'<l:4t11 Mf'S• nl• IJOtt 6-11 '*WI 111 111 branf'l'I olfk'M T ttt: l•Al l.V 1'11,0T tfM'rYfll 1iwo rlrhl In f'laliNlv, f'dtt. t'f'ftilM or ft'fll~f' llf'I~ lldVf't h~. *"" .... ril•f'ltf' b rill"' 6 l'f'tllll•l"- Wllmut,.,,,,, Mllttt CL.U-M•IMADHISI ... o llmlMt. l.'ftlol11Mif'111 - • ' .. ' l· " ! I ' I •• .. 1.n " :: •• ... .. •• ... .. .. ... • 1'1JBUC NOTIC& P\JBUC NOTICE Test Set by Army ._ ____ --____ __. ,, Cuts Due in Enli tment Time W ASHINCTON (AJ"> -Tittt Army will bt11n at l nut )'•r to sel" "''bnher a CM' Y<'lt cut ln lht mln!mum ~nU.lm~t Um and lncr•••ed t dUl'll1oa1I bcnt fHI 11tract more bt1ti· quaiht)' malt-vol\Ult rt Officials, who dteUo~ to be 1dtnttft ~. MY th~ Army wtll ll")t to dt"tenn.IM the l'Ul" nf r t'rutl 1na a boUt ll.600 younJ mt-n for • 11hortv hllc'b, romp1u·t-d waLb Lb 1•urrent tbrft ) t'ttr t"nmmll mvnu TH~ T ~ "1lU. bl hmllt-d to oun male '"Olunt( ~C'aUM· 1.a on• olfict l put 11 . •• • .i ·t pl,•nt> of 'A,mwn" for' thrt>e and (uur )Ci.lf \'nlalm\•nl3 A key featun· ot thl• 1 t v.;ill be un on r ol IO('rt'ldf'<i IQ\t n\• m rnt aid 1n hnunt·m1 C"Ulk1 t.·duc&.Uon or other tn1n1n1 llA«'r tht! volWlt~rs h• v.. ~ntc~ The VNt-r111ns At.11111n1 lraUon now will pay $2 in t•Jul'&lltoo.tl l:M-nefit.a for ... Vl'n SI 1·011trihuh-«I by 8 lt'n-1~ mc.>mber who wiU.l· ed after Jan 1. urn >.¥. otru:hua ux111111nt:d It. tht men whn s1Kn 11p unJ r lht Arm)''• t t ""'"''""' for 11 l~o .-ar cwnll lme-nt will lll'l lh1 n•rlt of an 1dttlt1on1I un· lpeclfifd 'Oloummt'nl l'OOIJibU• Uoo lo h poet 14•T\'H' &)@u\:MUOO OMLI. IMPt!Nl>I NG ARM\' I r•t 1• the• out 1r uwth uf Ut'fenstt Dt"P•r1ml'nl etrd1:r tu 1.111 lbc-•nn«I aervirn lo •tudy Uw pcNl~•h•Ub' ot cutllnl mtn1mwn t'nli,.tmn:it Um to tmp1ovt Lbt· qu IJty ot volwit...-1'11. fill a pe ln ((lmb"I wul6 and l'lhurh·n CJ\1•1 ~·Jl:l loun. 1 he No\~ ~a" r1.•pt1rlC'd 'llll wurlllDI uo it P<l'llb.lt> two ~· ur • nh&lnH-nl phin ~nit th M.ann, ~··rr ..aid lo be 1otrre1ll.'tl m rollu*&Of' a sh111I r 1'0Uf'111t' • Sul ()dense omc:aai. uld UH• Air 1''o«'t' II not inltrc• It'd Ill lo"' r1n1 Its mu11mum rnh"'t m1·nu bet"at.1~..-''lh~ Air 1-·.,, ,." ttl·t~ J II the J)l>()plt> lt 'A unla " TIU' OEt't.:N t: Ucs>art mrnt·.., 1ntert-1l sn l'Ao year cnl1:.1m.,nt>. n•JHC:tl'ntll a n· II~ .......... REStDENT ENJOYS ctOAA WHI~ WATCHING PEOPLE In Ybor City's Heyday, 20.000 Artlaana Hand·rolled Smokes Ybor City Fights To Keep Heritage TAMPA, Fla <AP > -NesUed in a comer of Tampa ls a tiny Latin Quarter boasting the proud bl.story or 8 tobacco-bllscd I culture carved In sweat from palmetto scrub and palms. It's Vbor City, where a single commodity uniquely melded Im· migrant.a from Lbree countnes into a community with a purpose . And soon, those immigrants became industrialists, factory workers, enterpreneurs, reatauranteurs, revolutionaries, soldiers of fortune and gamblers. IT'S A CITY WJTHIN a city built before the t um of the century by people used lo struggle -exiles from despotism. Descendanl5, some or them ln their 70s today, are carrying on the fight in a different vein. For them it has been a long, quiet :struggle lo preserve their heritage. Within the past few years. there has hffn a concerted effort toward preservation and restoration or buildings, architectural forms and cultural traditions. There are those who :say a re- naissance or sorts lS possible : others doubt it. YBOR CITY BEARS THE name of Spao11h-bom Vincente Martmez Ybor, founder of a three-story factory in 1886. Cubans. Spaniards and ltalaans colonized Ybor City m the 1880s when Tam pa was UUle more than a tiny fishing village. As the community grew, bakenes. coffee mills, shops and hotels weie eitlabllahed. During the city's heyday, more than 50 factories and 20,000 artisans produced band-rolled s mokes from Havana-grown tobacco. The center of life out.side work was the social club, and each nationality h1td lts own The men played dominoes or worked out ln gyms, and ramllles congregated there for festivals, weekly dances and frequent theater or stage productions. THROUGH IT ALL, RESIDENTS did n ot forget their hom elandi or the special kind or courage that brought them lo the new land. In the 1890s, a man named Jose Martt stirred 3,500 Cubans with an Impassioned speech from the steps of a cigar raclory. They took up arms and gave 10 percent of their earnings to the revolu· t1on In Cuba. But oow. some residents are struggling to preserve Ybor City Al the same time. they r em ember how It used to be. "People made $50 or S60 a wttk then and It was like $300 lo· day." says Mario Puig, owner or Tampa Rico Cigars It's a buck eye shop -a s mall lndependent where only a few cr aftamen hand-roll cigars. THOE ARE AN ESTIMATED 700 workers len ID the in· du1tr)' today and only five or lb: factories. "Now machines do lbe work," aays Puig, who began work ln a cigar factory when he Wll3 14. "A machine can produce 7,000 claara a day. Three pc.t0ple doing the band work -two rollers and one buocher -can produce eoo." · Ybor Ctly h8-beeo neglected. Today, the houses are sone - bulldozed to makt room for urban renewal. Inhabitants scattered to Tampa. Moet of t.be f actodes a.re empty and tbe coffee mllla clotod. "'don't think Ybor City can ever be the same," says Jerome Sierra Jr., 49. BE WAS BORN THERE AND worked moel of h1a life in lbe cigar lndUIJU')' when the area wu kina In the trade. "ll'• a dream. It's 1one. We aUll have a Utt.le bit left -our cbicllren and yellow rice, our Cuban bread and cafe con leche, our cigars, and one mUl where you can sttll smell the aroma of Cuban coffee. "But I.be kids today don't even s peak the 1ansuagt.'' Sterr• says. "It \Wed to be when you walked down the str~LI on a Satur· day nllbt. )'OU met all your netibbon. Now the street.a are empty. There ars't 10 many fest.lv&ls anymore. It's the UlUe thinp nobody tlUnb are Important tbal are 1one. You would have to brln1 back a lot t.otebulld Ybor CU.y." ·. ·~ . ~t!rHl Imm IU. 11lllu<l • lhJ'i • \ l' ra u.io un®r lhl" ford ad· rt11ntatrollun At \ht lime, mlnimum cnllstm ut.s were let 111 th1 yt•1.u-w bec1wu• oHiclall It'll lh re was too btJih a lurnc>vtir riatt1 under lh., two '1 u onll11menl 011tflm ;,od becaua lralnln" co11b were hh&h r a.a a ult. Undl'I lh" Army test. defense omeu1t.. aid, l>Ome ot the 12.500 two )'e•r volunteers will be ••armarked for aervlce In Gtrm1my IN ntlH W V, Lht· ornclals •H•ld. It may be posslblt lo 1hortt"n C'Urn>nt wuns of duty In Kuroiw to tibout lM months ror ~unw •Ingle 1wrv1c('men Army commandt'~ 1n Europe h vt' rfporh-d Increasing dis· M• t u;fll<'t 100 with lonwt'r ._,"uro 1w.in tour... purt1cul1trly among 1tlngle enlisted mt!n, but also omonJC youn1t·marr1ed service pt'r~onn\•l who have had to st rul(gle with econormc con:se 111tl'Ot'l'b of th1.· dolJ:.ir's IQS~ 1n v.1lut• Sun Heat Benefits Rated W /\SlUNGTON (AP> -Cen· tral Washington and western New York are the areas where homeowners would get the least twnef1t from solar healing units, while the southern hp of Florida receivt•:t the most cn('rgy from the sun. a government study 1>hows. HOECKER'S STUDV of the solar heating potential acroes the country was released by the NOAA. a division of the Com· merce Department. tn the study, conducted at the Arr Resources Laboratory in Sliver Spring. Md . Hoecker compared the amount or solar energy an area receives with the heatang demand there for the month of JaniJary and for the winter heating seai.on of No- vemberthrough April. Besides the distance and angle or the sun, the climate of vanou.'I areas was also a malor factor m the study, Hoeckerexplatned. FOR EXAMPLE, HE said, some more southerly areas may not have as hfgh a solar energy rating as a place to the north. if the southern s pot t\js more cloudiness. "Efrective solar heating on the western Great Plains is up to twice that of the same latitudes in the Mississippi Valley," Hoecker explamed. "so that cen· tral Montana holds as much promise for !'lolar energy as southern lndJana, more than 500 miles further south." Hoet"ker also determined that a southward racing solar collec- tor in the northern stat.es re- ce1 ves more than twice as much solar radiation as falls on a horizontal surface there. THE WESTERN NEW York area around Lake Ontario Is the place where solar energy would s upply the !'lmallest proportion or needed heal, Hoecker said. Ht> assigned this region an erftM'· liveness value of one . A similar rating was given to the ceotrul part of the state of Washington. In contrast , tlle northern part of the Texas Panhandle was rat· ed 4. meaning that a solar col· lector there could supply four times as mueh needed energy as lbeone mButralo, N.V. Al the top of the scale. the Routhem tip of Florida wu r1tl· ed 60. Hoecker explained that the ratlns for a given area Is the ratio of the solar energy availa- ble to heating demand. This mea1uJ the rating is artected both by temperatures and cloudiness. BOECKF.R, WORKING from ta s haded map of the contiguous 48 states. provided the following typical January solar energy raUn,p ror 10 large clllcs. Loi Angeles, 7.0..i. Dallas, 4.0; Sl Louis, 2.0; umaha, 2.0. 801ton, 1.7: New York, 2.0; WHhlngton, 2 3: Miami, 80; AUuta, •.2; Detroit, 1.4. PlJBLIC NOTICE 'l('tlTlout IUllHlt" Nll#S ITllTlfMIHT floe l•t~ pt,_ I\ dell~ llUll ....... ~wlllt ""'".._ .... "'II.IP C.Clc:cotfl MOTM[•'\ NOOOl.tl, ... M M•rll«lt lt..i. '-"1• ...,,., C.. ti/IN 11n111ony'• Rttteuref'h tf\t • C:..lllotnle <_.,..,., ~ S. M.,bOt """'"¥~ ... , "" ...... , "'~ \eil4&-.C• "''°' Tnh -"'"'I\ t Oi>Ou<IH l>V •<II' ,_.. MeMc.a. CA.._ PO'••""' AffT}QjV' .. ttHTAU•ANft, INC. MW A(Jbetl\, p~ fl'I• U<1W.-.I .. ~ lli.G with ttw ,....... c .... Ill Ot-c:-w ... NOYtlflbtt 1, 1'111 .. ,.,... Putlll-Or-c~·· °""'• P•IOI De< ••• , JO 1t 1911 ~01 ,, 'ICTITIOU" euSIHISS NIIMI \TATIMIHT f i.. totlowlnc11>tnon I\ clOl"9 D•;>lno • ... MOR c.rN£11AL SCAVtCE COM PAHV, ISCl'lt Ptymoulll l-. Hllftl· lllQ10f' Bt<1<1t, ~ttroml• •~1 Thom•\ O.ratll R.,.,_'1\0fl t~I Plymouth t .,,.. tluntlnoton l!t.t<ll, Ctlllo•l'I• 911>'1 Thi•.,.,.,,.."" t onducll'd bv"" In ljtvlclU•I ,._.,.. llOt>et1\0fl Thi> •~temfflt ••• lltecl wltn , ... ( ou,.lv c •~•k ut Ota119t Coun1v on OttctmDt• ti, "7t .... ,., l'ul>ll\""" OfMQe COHI !)ally Piiot. O..:•mtwr 10, 11, 1'71 Mid J-y J. 10, "" P UBLIC NOTICE )/ll " PUBUC NOTICE •·fl• NOTICE TOCltlDITOtlS ..... •t'ml ~UPI ltlOtt COOltT 01' TMI SfllTI 01' CALll'O•NtA l'Olt TME COUNTY OP OltllNOI: tn tfte Matttr of tft• £\t•lt of f1.1Z.a8fftl ICRAU!>EA, Ot<••Md NOTICF IS HfPl'AV C·IVE'N 10 c..-rdltoo n,-.v1n.q c te1m\ AQ411'\t tht •••d d•<•a«>I 10 Ill• t<>ld c•••m• 1 .. ,,,.. ottke Of '"" I·~·· Of IM dlOrtHIO cwrl or to ptt'\<0111 llM!m IO l'-1' un· dM>19n•d al '"" olllo o! OAVIO L PARllv. Allor""~ •I l•w. S.nlor C1111~n\ L•9<1t Coun•ellno S~rvoc~. ,.,,. WP\lmlMl~r A~ ~It )00, P 0 Bo• 1111 !.rtl Buch. CA '0140. #NCI• l•tltr 0111<• I\ the ~.e<• Of l>u•IMh ol ltw under\1-In"" m.olltf\ ,,.,,~In· tno to woo esl.,t• Su<r. rt11m\ wllh Ille' ne<e\W<Y -.<""" ""1\I I><' Ill"° M ore\ente-d 4\ •tortow10 wllf'lfn tour mOt>tM •llet ,,... llr\I llUbll<•I-ol tht\ noUCP O•ted Oto<......,.., t 1•11 JOH,. C-11 PAU .. r" .,,., Wtllt.aMr .. UAUS(" ( •9Clllor\ Of I,,. wltl olw•o--"' UNIOlt CITIZ«NS Ll!OAL COUHSELtlfO Sl!iltVICl OAVID l PAltltV Attor,.., ... u .. ~ w"'""""" a.,.. PO 9o•JIJ1 Se•• Bou11. ca'°' .. PvDll\,_ Or-CAM\! 0•••~ PllO\ • O.r • tJ. 10. 21, .. ,. ~·'" PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING ._,..,.,_, OrM91 CMft o.ltv ~llot, Otulfttler 11 to. tl. "11 Pul>lt~ Or .... c. .. M Oeitv PtlOt OM •. U, 10.11.1'11 ~It PUBLIC NOTICE NATION Pt1BUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE , ICTITIOUt tUSINH\ 'IC1 I TIOU~ tU\IHa U NAMI tTATIMINT NAME •t.t.fl'MJNT Tiie tollewlfl9 IH-I\ dUlnt bu\I Ttw 1<>11-.ng ... 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PuOfl\lw<I Or-'°"'' Daily ltltot OM 10,,,,lt'll_J.., 1,10,lt" 1'1JBLIC NOTICE S..l IW PUBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICIE IN"ltTIMO 910~ n, ... rouflly ~Ml11Atlon 01\ttttt\ uf Ot•"O" (tKJtlt'f'. < .-.11to1n1• will " tt••r "'"''-tt u1th un111 MoritJ,,y J•nu.:t• w tt lfl/'f tU 14 00 ·• m H1fh tnu\I 0.-. tr-<11...-.. ft •• 1 lhf'I 01''"'" Ac.1 ff\tnnl,•UVf' tAlu •· In 'h' d••h l'lh1I -llffl• P\ffrt ln.ftAi .... t• .._. f l11t tn ;ti lNtW h ftn\1" ff\fy ""Ill.,_. P001W'I¥ ~O U'K1 ,.,.m1,_.,d4!tl UWOUfh-of ttWi 01 Crol" 1Gl44 Elli\/'<-. l'w<>t••ll V•lto, C••••Mn•tt. IOt ''°"" ff)fto.•no POI. VElCC TNOt '1'11= CHE:Mlt.l'I ~lOCCUl.E:NI ~PECtl'tCATIOH HO P~ 810• "'"'' Ot "'°"''""'on '"" •o• n \UPC)Uf'd O'y' tl'tP (')i\lrt' t\ In M(Ofd.-'1•(* ••th •It powt~ Of ,,_ ~1h<.t ,_, ~it•< 1 I•< •hOn\ bid hl•nk' -'"' hwttwr 1nfor,,..tH'.'lltt fl't••Y or , bH•'""'' itt tn• •t><IY.. 1d(Jr.,\ 11 ltl f•ll"' )>IQ ,.,0 or 'ltll•t1 J W tfttiit ~l'4""\l4't ~ ...... ' ,~ ... .,. Of D•rHf'>f\. ffll;nty '""9ntt.n10t• lJ1Mr1 t· NO• I I I. ) &, I •M I I OIO<""'• (nun•• C.•llf(Jffltd ""II'"....., Or-C.0.\t Daily l•,1t1I . (loo< /I. IY/11 ,, ... ,, PUBLIC NOTICE II I ' .,. I j f •t on en oc• ng wl ad nd re h1 .ht >IS, er h1• nd nd In etc• 'w 'L'> 11.' 111• he re 1d J, a ly ft ~ ll· er • • P BUC NOTICE l'UllUC ..OllC I"«<-• *I" C•l,1or"'• C1w11 Cod• 10• I C" • ""->' wr U' ...-r1 't' uf _. ....... , ..... \ ,.... .... ""'" .. """"'( ......... '--'"'• • ,,Wi',......,' l..n .... • .,,,-lull .. a.. ... °"'.,, .... , ~,. t lf1'iilPW>l Awl .... ,.,,,,_, .... c.,. ... 1_. ....... ~Or.,. (e•HI 0..df p, .... Do• 11 "" . ,,, .. ~U"l•IOlt(QIUllfOfl fHr UATI Of' CALll'OlllflA ~a• fHI COUlllTY 0' OllA.110 ,_(IWIC(lllllflll ~IY• 111lH UllllfAAl'tA. CALIN>llllll14. ,,,., f'IAINllU\ JAMI ~ MAltllllll llM MA•n·c-.A•C.. ll•'fN(IANI) IM..-1'11 COH NI " el"" u....,, •• I Ml I I 1 ~ 0 "' N l N, MA ... ltllj JVH N \11111 I ll ..... P BLIC f'ICTITIOUIMll1Na1s NAM& H4TaNNT , ... i.1 ........ ,.._, ., ........ llOl\llln' '" \AOOl ,•ACIC A l •lfM \l l'IVl(f ' 11 19'!1 Of< "'-"' .... , ....... "' "'..,,....... • - J l 0.M ,.._ 111 1 L ... (lf't ... .................... ,. C# ....... ta... o.-0 ,_, ... , ..... ,., '•• """"...,°"' ~" c..rn .... 1. .,... fl1" OWIW'l I\ c-.-.., • 9"W••· .. ·--l 0....1 ........ '"" •I II--we• liW _,.,. ... (_,, l .... " Or-,_,, ... o..-.. , a, •wt , ... ~·-°' .... "-•' .,..,,, ...... t»;.-llo• JI I -,_,, I ... II It~ PUBU UUI OU•IYITMf.10 °" till l(fA~ Hl.AJ..n. ~""'"" a. MA\" N JI I• l>MIT" C AIHl;"tHt I kl>tt 11 .. t N t••V•I' "'llllHNIM ''"'IHllo ,l lllUHlll OIJl) I I~ ~'1 H~C l \J'\f"' I AN U Al ' • 1 R\li .. \ .,.., .. , """I 0 " ("1 A•M ... , INlll'l'I , .. \)q I tN \;N t tt t ., ~ d .. I H ' '\ ._. 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Jtw I tn()A l 4'NWo> (1•11'.tll •lr\f" Wltf\J 'tUftli1 •llfl' 'tO\\ ( nn~pLwnl f)'1Ur\H I , rr;· • ., t ofllOl .. 1A.tOI fJt 1rn11 .• nt •n , HH)•'' ( tO\\ df ft<fldAnt 'UIQt.1l1tt In 1ydr\ ttw ulurttl • .ud rntt\tultnf" 1n .. 1 luOf'~ 1pm1rw~ .tnO ht"'Vlf'r A wrtttf\n plHd1nQ ... .,,. hfifiU'KI .. n ,,n,¥1',., C.WrnYr ,.,, • ,.I< mu~• Ot· in Int· tn; rn r1·Quir~o nv tf'IP < 11lltorn1A Ruh.., nt Court Ym.1r oru.1m•I Ol•~tH"U ,,UJ\I ht •1IHJ '" ""' 'oun wnn rt'fJfW., fihtVJ " ... , ""o ,.,,,..,, tMt "cuuY lht r..ut w"' 'ti•v• o on ... tttt'I Ofd11'1t1U '\ MfN'tw·~ "1"'4"11)1\ f' 1(h Ol•1n t.ff not ,.,Pf"~"f'itf'ld h-t ·•" .ttlorr••'f' f M limp '4lthf'>'n • wmnl(Jlf't'lt 1\ ,,. •• ,,~•·ti f'f'ffd on• pOt""ty ma'f' ._.,.,., CH'l)t'rw11nq un U•r nw•hOd ot •f'f"'•ll t-CH' t·•.un 111,., ,..,. CCP •tl 10 ,..,,.....,n "~ 40 OEOAGE M. STEPHENSON Anor,.., for· Pl.itll'tm• 41J WHt S.-St""" Sw1t• JU ~" Pe4nt, Calllonu• to7JI h(. IJIJI 111 ... I "'"°"'' ~ ... ,,_ -...... 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OISCOVEltED AFTElt "AOBATE OF WILL ANO FOl'I AUTNOAIZATION TO AOMINISTElt UNDER TII£ INDEPENDENT AO-MINISfltATION OI' ESTATES ACT. E•l•lto ol EOWI N EMERY HINCHMAN, OKe.tWd NOTICE 1$ HEREBY GIVEN 1"91 S£C Ulll fY PACIFIC NA TIO NA i... l<ANI(, M~ llit'd ,_,..In• c>ellllon IOI' '-•roo•te ot Coch<.tl <tK.covPrwd 4'fter l>rob~•-ot Wiii -tor •ulllOrtUlhon 10 11<1m1n1'"" unclt!< i... Independent Aam1nl\lr•loon ol E•l•IU Act, "" ,.,,~<tt to Wft•C" 1\ m.ot fOf r·urthe Pdrh<ule". And tf\at Ow ti~ ftnd Pl•<~ ot ~.tf>l>Q IM -IW\ -s.t tor J•nu••y 9, 191'1, .i IO 11 m , ifl 1,,., courlr_.,, ot Clrpa<'lmem No l Of silla tourl , al 100 CM< Ce<ltl!f Drlw -.1. on'"" Cilyot s.nt.o AN, C•lllornltt O•ltO Of><._,. 70, 1'78 WIU...IAM E SI ~N. (;.Ounl~ CIPf'll JAMES OUNOEASOH S•Lt...IE T. REYl'fOLOS UUI PH• .. Y-l.a•lt1 I.A ...... Hlllto. c.t~ f2t4J All•,,.n lor: ""'ltl9Mf l>uoh"""' o-_..,. Coest o.lly PllGll, De<eMller V •• -J _., l, t9N srn-11 PUBUC NOTICE Phnl·'~ O. • .nt,. r •. t I •• Pllr,I ·-------------NOTICE' Of' COM"l..ETION ORAFT SUl>PLEMENTAL Ell'I TO r ..... • ""°"'' 11 ,.,,, '""CJ J•nv.u , J. 10 ~Ill '8 THI. "FINAL AOOENDUM SU"· PUBLI(; NOTICE NOTICE INVITIHC BIOS 1110 ITl'M NO 411 NOTI CE IS HE RE HV C,I VEN '""I '''"' pr~h w!tl b"' ,,.,. .. ,,,,.0 tiy OW C11, OI CO'ol.t -.... IO w1I TM Ct •• Counu1, P 0 llo• 111JO "'In• City 01 co''" M.-~ on CH CJi. '°''" II\•· nvu1 ot I l W" m on f t1"41'1 I tnu.-ry IJ ,_,,, II ~All tw .,... ,,. •J,Jll.>'"'Utnlllv 01 It_.,. 'hO a~r to Ohllv,., n1. n1tf to ,.,,. C"1tv t lf'fk \ Otllrt Uy tht N UI'' .t11tw.x1'" rd hmf" B1ch w1U tK wt>t•c 1y CA')t r;. a •nd t .. dd •1000 1\1 1 t •ln .. tn Ot .. " \QOn tnt-,••tlrr "' ~-<•11 ·•0I• on f 11d.t'f', Jonudfy 12, t'llV, 1n tM (11un.-II Crwrn n...-s. City H.tll. If f o11r O rwt , CO\f-' Mt1~. l-1l•fl1tf111t. •or-tN-tu11\1•.n1no ot ll .. IFOllM~ fOI< (ll/M l'ClllCF I IAf l\Nll CO MMU .. 11 A r10N '; I'[ PS0 .. 11~1 Aod1hOft.ll \flf"Cftlffttl "'" ,, ... .,. l)tt ob f.t1rtf"d .tt Hw• Ut••t..-1.•f lfw J.-11t,O,t·1~ J\(J1•n1. II I .t1r 0f1Yft ('n ti' M4'\ft, ( "lltorni .. Uu.h .. , ... uld l,JI• rf'tUH'4"{\ ti'! t tw· •"'' nh1.••1 Vt lfWI-c 1ty (' tf'"f k 1n ,, .... "'""° •·n¥• i ,....,. ''*' nt•t1t rt Cfft ttli uut 1df• with lt11t U10 ltt.·t~ Numo.r •M '"' ~n.nqo.u .. E 4t " btd 'h1111 \Ut t •h t•t-h .flll'WI t very,,.,,.. 1ot· )1111 t,,nn •"tr .. 'Pl"'tl•ittt tH'U't\ An• ... ~ •H ···(, ""°''' to ,,, .. ,C>t'<•t•r •h~ mu.,I t•· t.h •tlw .. t.tlf'fJ '" thif 010 • ..tno l<t!lur,. tP •·t tor In onv 11 .. m 1n '""' \"'9 (1ff<..tt >n' \h•U bl QU)tlf\di to-rttJ(l'(t100(14 '"'" b1d f•<"' thd \.ft•ll '"' tnttn tnti tuH Mmf'\ itt\d ,..,....."""""'" tit t11f IJil r"t{Jt'I\ ,1nd CM•h~ tntf"n•\h'\J In ,,_.. r•rnoc,,...,I ,...,. pr1n<1.,.f\ In <•Wot 1.otpe>tdhon' ,nc tl..l'Ofl ,,,,. M............., o• tr'4· .,,,.. •<k·nt ~(f_., .. ,y Trt-... v,,., ·"'° M-\MQr'f ,,,. City Cowntll 01 ti~ C••v ul C:U'C" Mfi\d ,.,. ,.,ft~ w r•Qnt to'' ,l"t't """ "' dU b10'ii Oat•o Oo><..,,bo, 71 19/~ l'ubh1n..., 0t""90' (0.\1 lld•I• P1IOI Ot-c u 1911 PLEMLNTA.L El• FOlt Pt4ASE 11 ANO "ltASIE Ill 01' THE WASTEWATEa TREATMENT SYSTEM" -ALISO WA TElt MANAGIEMENTAOENCY RESPONS•Bt...E AGENCY: Mounoo NIQll•I w .... O.stri<I NAME OF PROJECT lNClUSIOH OF STAGE II WASTE WATER FACll...ITIES IN STAGE HPAOJECT lOCATION r .... la(dlll(\ •n w1Uun llW l'"OfO.,.""'"I OOtrlU No t.A pt1nt \I~ CONTA('T PEA~N Wllltem F Wnlf\On "'"'ONE 111'1 IJJ.7500 PAOJEC I OESCAIPTION OF NATURE. PURPOSE ANO Rl:N FF •CIAAI es l nr l"OIXN'<I pro1«t w•ll ,,,....,..,. UH• con.,tru<11on ot ~aster·ot•nnf'<I .... """' ( d~tty tf'w'ougih (Of't·\OhflafkW'! ol l'hdw' I..,,., II <ti tne lm1><cwem""I 01.,tr1ct No 1 A w•\tewa1er trf'•l~nt pl•nt Act01t1onat ~tt 1ncludtK one OIQf".,.ff'r tr'lr~ Of'1f'l\drv \edlfN"ntd'tton ianti\~ \I~ M-rll"tHOn t.ctn'c\, two sec: on dftr 'f w d1mentat1on ••nk\. and ap.- fJurtttnant 1.-Ctlll~ AH fkll•ll't\ Mf a r10rtHJn cA tr.e p1.,.. approved for ow »I• Oy llY'CO<H>lyotOr<tnQe. PROJEC f LOCATION ICIT'fl WtQUM N1!1U<'4 PROJEC1 LOCATION ICOUNTYI o ... ~ ADDRESS W"'E AE COPY OF OllAl'T EIR I~ AVAILABLE 11500 L<t Pat AOed ~ N1quel, CA ~71 PE AIOO OF AEVIEW. O ·-<l•n PuOhc ~•'•"'! 10 or """' on J_., II, 1918 81 I lOpm I * ···~··················· ···••·················• ...................... . Om 4 IOOZ Oa•r• 1002 Cotto..._ 1024 .._..•Fof'Sde HMMtForS. ................................................................................................... ~ •.............. 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 D A I - L y DWUX~clM l bdnnll and 2 bdrm• 4 l'ar pref p}WI l•undty and ~-r• l lUC AI~ Pr1vatt-pat1011 •nd ~ltlta $l!M,D) PETE R CIMTl.A.L NIWPORT DUPLIX Xlnt k)(aUoo ln 100 blk.: rt'nwd 1ummeT/wlnttr. wttb .a.1tU n-oi..J hiator)' 2 Dclrmll down. l bdrm 'AP ow a•raae & you own t.ht+ l1ncl, ror only 11!18.080 m 3663 87~ 4177 EVt'5 associated •"•'•I ll '. ~EA.l(1QS • • 11\i 1u1b •1 • t • SUSONS GUITIMGS! ~J~~~lly 673-8700 " 11.ACHCOnAGI Newly rrmodt'led & '""11Y upanadt'd w/ Por q\lll't flool1n1:. lOP QUllhly cfl)U & rotor cootd1n1tt'd dr'lll' Walk to pm:ate bt-. c h •: lC t I u . I v" Newport area 646-71 l l IUILDHS Jlouae plut1 ...QOOI, plus Bachelor on tOOOO 1quare foot R·2 tut 6 UnJt.1 O.K. Owner will carry and s ubordinate . At1klu~ Sl'l0,000. C.11 962·7188 • KE:Y ~1 RE:ALTOP..S R 41DRM31ATH Lvly fmly home locatC'd In htghly desirable Castille area of M 1u1on Viejo Invest now In one or Qra.,QJ:e Cou nt)' 's rutes l appret'1a l1ng a.reu. 646-71 l l IAYRtOMTDUPUX Spacious 3 bdrm. & 2 bdrm. units with frplc. & 4 t'ar gar. A superb ren· tal property w/clly, bay beac h amen1t1 es. $395.000! Ot'eanrr onts LIDO ISLE from $37S.OOO & up. Beautifully decorated lal»a Boy Prop. custom Holstein home Realtors P Three bedroom. two bath * 675-7060 * on a lot·and·a·half. ---------• Spacious living room ---------- with brick fireplace. W-0-W!! I formal dining r oom Private patio off sun· ONLY $58,900!! room. As k for Curt Sharp J bdrm condo. Herberts fo r appoint Almost new crpts. Shows L menl to view this fine tinly. Lge patio. Ideal bef'ore ilS sold!! 545·9491 Rhome~.,63Wll·l266 fl(-. rs-:t.art.er:-i..,hRo•mlf'me•o•r~g!'lood,.•i•n· ves tment. Phone now 0 of' Costa Mesa. Irvine Newport Beach. lnc. T 234E.17tbSt .. C.M. 631-1266 Nationwide Network of J.ndividually Owned and operated Real Dilate Ofhces 4-ft..EX UNDER TOTAL LOSS C:OMSTRUC:TIOH Deluxe townbome units with 3 bdrms, 3 batbs & fireplaces. First class buildulg with tile roofs, Wedding bells caused balconies. e nclosed owne r of this great garages w ith with bachelor pad to hav~ storage rooms, ceramic total 106s or interest in tile kit chen & baths. bachelorhood. Catch him Forced mr hent, blt·m before he comes back to kilchen. f"insl user tax earth . H e · s r e a II y benefits. For details call motivated 751-3191 C:::SEL ECT ()ntu" ,..AT WHATS"SNIW J•l ti.sled 3 bdnn, 2 bath home ID M tH Vttrde Qtmplth'I)' r,rnodC'ltd Lnalde and out and loaded With charm. Super loci .,._ I 044 .....,... ltodl I 069 W ....................... ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,,.,., 1600 SACfllfl'IC £! B~aul SACRIFICE ••••••••••••••••••••••• 'i WOod.bnd&o 3 Br 21411' Btaut 48R. pool, spa, lge _, PUJS ele1ant 2 Br condo yard. Xlnt ln!a. 1142-*· OflACI IUU.DI ... pnced b<'low m1rk~t. e73-43J.1 Alt 4 __ ,1 -· .. :.-;. ..... _,.. . Both nr take. 813..Ult ----=...-----...... --.-.. Owner/All. HOME+ A". Near Bristol Baku, Uon near school• and lrvtne twn.bs 2br. 2ba 2 lhoppl111 Call M6-SlllO stry. ba In H br. 2 car for mo« 1.nlormaUoo. pra. frplc patio Up eraded. Vacant. call PM 644 ·7415. '73,500 By Owner. 28R house+ Apt ovu jlCMiiiiiiiii' iiliiii' ~--T·n:t __ _ pr. fU. BIC cornCf' lot.-------- view DI R. L/R, den . Pr.,.11y ZOOO 1225,000. Appt ooly 215 St. "••••••••••••••••••••• "¥-~HERITAGE REALTORS Fixer! Lovely Halecrest Dest pnc:ed 3 bedroom home ln area! Dliung. ltcoe fireplace and patio. Call now ... $71.900. BKR. 54().1720 TMBf1l -· SECLUDED EASTS I DE Owner tnnsferred. must sell his lovely newly re· modeled and redecorat· ed 4 bdrm 2 bath home. Sparkling new ultra modem country kitchen: Raised hearth fireplace. t.aste!ull,y dooe in natural woods. Quarry tile entry and walk . F'r ont courtyard . Bri g ht. spacious and charming. You 'd better hurry and see this one ut $109.000. Call 54(). 11.51 ~HERITAGE REALTORS $65,500: Owner's Delinht Superbly deco":f;ted qwet end urut .. 2 bedroom con· do w1tb eaung area. cov- ered patio a nd t'Omm pool. Mo r e! BKR s.G-1720 TAA8B.L. -· F'or Sale by Ownr/ Agt 4 Br 2 Ba. newly r e>· modeled home m pn me Npt Hgts. area. All new kitchen & ca rpe t ing lhruout. 6~% assumable VA loan. $96,900. 548-8038 IRANDHEW TOWMHOMES ·-..ttmywoock" (East.side Cost.a M esa I LOOK HERE! The perfect starwr home for you. Only I year old. Th is 2 bedroom t.ownhome is silbng on «Net greenbelt and steps from pool, spa and ten- nis. Beaut.ifuUy designed inside and out. Call to see. e-HANCH REALT Y 5S 1 2000 MOVE IM TODAY Wo od,.bri dg e S &S Redwood m6del. Plush cpts, A/C, fireplace. S8600 down. take over loan. Slll.900. Owner mmt seU. U.S.A. Realty 552-51181 oc S8l·S986, or 646-0507 Andrews Rd. A il JOMALOT 54l)-Oll)8 Eutaide Costa .... 3 LOVB.YUDO home oa a 1~ciou.s SG' lot. A roomy 11ng1e etory 3Bdrm. fam rm home. eeparate houaee on cor· ner lot. Super &oca\ioo. Sl:il.llOO. charmlncly decorated -"'l['.....:._.LA€HI,.. L' with country French -~ kitchen. oak rloora, _..-.._.._HOM€\ fin.side. formal dinang. a:mw.CoastHwy.NB .iai.aed and leaded wtlh ..... 1r..1.646 glass windows aod warm 1-----------=ural wood tones thru· 7 6 UMR'S , PLUS ly OWMR A large pool ir.e south Low rent. Tale over patio. •ztS.OOO 9~ k>an. No vacancies " Ptopetty k)(ated at 104!.J far appt. to... West 2Dd St. Rialto. . C411'(4-721 I C:AU.54~3676 /Jn NIGEl UAILEY & A5S~l(I ATES ror i.nlo. Bkn welcome 4 8.1. dupln~ Incl. bayfrout to be exeh. down In • pkg 213/684-3200 -------IUC:HFIXB tr:ooo On s11s.ooo. -H San Clemente Tri·PlelL COLLEGE priced to sell. &g 4 bdrm. 2 ba. home Well located2-1·1. PARK wt pool, sac .. ram.rm . BERTHAHENRY completely re modeled. REALTORS Syracuse Model on quiet Big lot. muc h more. 21.S ne. Mar 492-412 1 street. 4 Bd.rms.. 2 ba. Owner will finance. No The living space is where c~l needed SLSS.000. 1 UNn'S-C.M. it's needed. The only de· balant'e. As k ror Ed Beaut. new bui lding velopment in Irvine with O>ernow 964·~ F\ftplaces. x.lnl location latbandplasterwalls. __ C:U_S_T_OM __ H_O_M_E_ TSLinvm\S 642-1603 LASTOF1 IUAIC EVEN UMIVERSITY PARK One of a kind • complete· ly remodeled Cornell Garden home. Custom spa · bnck fireplace · mirrors · wet bar · gas BBQ · covered patio · auto. spnnklers redwood pa.nelmg · a sure winner m a great community. call Loday for your ap· pou1tment. 4 Br. 3 Ba. master bdrm I S°lo DOWM retreat. 2 frplcs. form al 4-P1ex & Sngl Family . dining. 3 ur garage. ap· Assume . Seller wi ll prox. ~sq. It. 2291 La carry paper. Mngml Unda Court. $189.500 avail. Agent. Gary 0 . Owner / Agent. SS2"'894; &sk!r 642-2164 or 673-0782. 900-4388 or $36-2498 For S a I e by 0 w n e r . , ___ Pn __ n_ci..:.p_a_ls_on__;ly~- Be a ut 1 f u I 6 mos old $18,500 Newport Terrace condo. Pnme location. sgl sty PER UNIT end unit. 2 Br 2 Ha. w/gar age. ~48 ·8038 . Pnced below mkt at $83,000. UDO ISLE S55,500PER ~AVERAGE Two tri-plexes & one 4- plex with 6 lwo bedroom & 4 one bedroom apt.s. in excellanl area of Riverside . Will ex - change! SlSS,000 Total 752-1900. ' (i>UAIL PLACE ... PllOPHTIES• 10,. Tll:lOP.M.I red hill ~ .. :. 552-7500 English Tudor 2&3 Br s plit level. 2&3 car g ara ge. frplc s. ---------• microwaves. greenhouse1----------~ JUSTUSTB> Total w armth a nd e le1ita n ce. All n e w lhf'uout. Suigle story on extra wide lot al quiet end of' Island. Gorgeous. large brick patio . 3 Sednns + small office. Large muter w/loads or t'loset space. Lovely floor plan allows for totally pnvat.e guesl swle or maid's. $399.000. can ex- clusive Agent ror a ppt. Lo see. Beth 964-2431 or 8:J:S.Q211 Pager •9515. TAX llMEFITS: Four PleJt. Gd rental Oosetos~&bus. windows. pool, s pa . TENNIS courts. From S89.9SO 646-0061 or SSS-1920 Developed by Woodtree Dev. Co. Mesa Verde 4 bdrm 2 ba. new crpts. R V parking 2 patJ06. large yard Nice a rea . Finan<'e flex . m..e683by Appl. $68.500. FHA-YA 3 Bedroom. large yard. q1.1et cul·de-sac. 64S.9161 ..... '. , OPEN HOUSE REALTY K/ LCllJIMI •adl 1048 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •DUPLEX* Ocean side of hwy. level lot. easy access to bearh Needs pa.tJJl. minor re· pairs; ideal for home & income. H urry. only Sl59.900 Mission Realty 494-0731 "MOVE UP '' to Alta Vista, where the views art' spertacular. Four ex<'1t· mg new homes pnced from $219 .000 to S385.000. /'\JEUJE\..L . RS~OC 1n c tikr l agund B<' a ch 49,i.5594 Pacific Estate On 1'he Water. Newport. $175,000 Agent 968-9922 BUY DIRECT FROMOWNY SAYESl.000 MULHEARN RHltyR .. stw 754-7100 4-Plex. S60.000. Cootral.'1. of' saJe. 3 houses $47 .000 Call Marcel. 170· 7271. Lng Bt'h. ,. roofI Ac,.... 18 + acres. $14.000 pr M:re. Owner financing available. 253 down. Harbor View Knol I. 3br. Tri·level, Cape Cod Con· do·Open s paC'e view every room Tennis. pool. VIR assumitble loan. Poes. lease opt.ton. ---:11~.a..€HIG€ sm.ooo 640-4848. Ill"' _ _,__+-HOM€~ W. ENDLg famhome3 + Plus2on R290' bwldable lol. S28SM. 7101 Se11.11horc. owner . Will roni.1der Condo trade. 645 8410 3333W.CoastHwy. NB 645-6646 I PROPERTIES 21 jffi m " ~°" •ach I 040 Silual.ed on ~ ane for those who enjoy enter· tauung, pool. wet ba r. ja<'Uztl. 4 frpl . wine cellar, plush 3 bdrms. $475,000. DOIODP HIGH ANXIETY caused t.h1s pnre to drop. 3 Bdrm. rrml din mg. fplc. & lush rear yard. 2 blks to Harbor High. $1.23,000. &tS· 722 1 MO PAYMENTS After putthase we pay all ~"08ls for 6 mos. Close to ocean . $140,000 . (TI4)960-~4. ,.. ....... Dewrt. $2 $75 aR tt tabs 11 a t4ewport Cettter •••••• •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 640.5357 FIXER UPPER Duplex on buildable lot. 1~ blk to beach.. Frplc. 2 garages. plus xtra park 1ng off street. Asking on ly$159,500. JAC:OIS REAL TY 675-6670 Lake San Marcos 5-ken ROMan Tub LACUESTA RACQUET CLUB 2"'1 years nl'w 1100 +sq .ft Professionally carpeted and draped. 2"'2 bath Builun bookt'ases. mtJ(.'h m ort'. o rre r cd ror Sl~.soo iT -962-4471 r.::)546-8103 1044 ••••••••••••••••••••••• .Ko/an H 1·.1I E ,1,111: Int YOO Gle r111t ·v11.: Sl1ect 494 9473 549 0316 LCllJIMI Hill I 050 l __ w_es_tc_l _ff_R_•_aff't_;;y_ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Olhlt' .... Estat. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Retort 2400 • •••••••••••••••••••••• ldyUwild mountain cabin on "a acre. Needs han· dyman. SS0,000 Owner lbx S7l ldyllw1ld 92349 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3106 ••••••••••••••••••••••• BAYFRONT 2BR. 2 ba, 1.23 E . Bayfroot. $695. Herb 213/ 478-3577 days . II I ' I en l e og wl Jd nd 'e· f • ) m ,ht )S, ·e r hc> nd nd '10 he he he he re rid R. a HJ\ IH Tl>e IOU-tng °" 19'1> form " re QUlt'•O t o bf' \lfOmHff'O t o 1hf" R•sourcf'\ AQrnc v by PubH<. ke'IOUt(~ C:-S.Cto Ofl 711&1 '""In tornMhon ,., \l'W'O to ,_Ip C>Ut>tt<il«""" .tv•ole01l1ty ot 11-EI R IOt r>ul>4H: tip "'""" .. "11ur•·to ti1ottrwnoh<f'OU.\onot AllH I llMt V&lldfl, ol • 1"014'( I. f ... ,.,. to ..-M•ttOl"I '"" maint ained In the c a1uorn1a EIR Montt0t ""'°on Ultt tn It•• offtet ot tn" ~ec r .. t•rt •or Rtt°'°"''""'· lo116 Ninth Str-Ht1 ROOtYI Ill!, Sact"""lnlo, C..li10tt1"1 YSll•, l•l~pl'IOnt' 1916) ~~tll4 c L A s s I F I E D PENNY 2260sq ft. 2BR 2...,ba. den oo golf rourse. lmmac. $190.000. Owner/ Bkr & TI41756-l982 COLONY BEAUTY ·1 ·s G<>rgeous • 2 Sty. 4 br . fnnl din'g, lrg FR, 2"2 ba. upgrd's galore! Bltn vac. gar opnr. brirk pal.lo, prof lndst'p. All this & more for only l•---------$1.32,400. Realty World, MOllUHOME CodaMeso 3124 ·ly P UBLIC NOTICE CP I ... NOTICI: Of'. SALE OF AEAL PROPl!llTV AT PRtYAlC S4.1...E NO A·•ll/I IN THE SUPCAIOll COUAf 01' THE STATI! OF CAl...I FOMNI" FOR THE COUNTY OF OllANGE In tlle ""'llM Of 11\e i;,1.,I• al t:L l[N A8RAMS ROH1MAN, 0.H•~d Nohu " llr•f'b\' II"'' n '""' '"" un Oflf'S•QMd Will \iflt .,t PrhMtl' S..lr lo llW lltQM\I -Ill"" °'"'"" on UI •II•• '""' IOlll d.ly OI J.,,.,..,, 1~10 ~I 11\f OI• 11(• al 9 J Fe1tell . AUO<NY "' l"w uot 0o ... "'""''· Su••• &W, N"'"""'' H"•<h, C•l1fo-n<•Y7~ WOlf<I lotO~· ht•fl•lH)f\ n4 'lt•n ~ICW Court. •II t~ft HQht llllf'I ,tn(t tnt~•~l Of~~,..... , ··•WO ... ""' t1mr VI Otltln find All ttw p (Jiftt. HO.-fn'1 tnttH\t tP\•l lnit ~I'll• ot \•Id ch•<""\f"'G ht'' fl(Quir•d by OPM•llOll of 1,,,. tw OI-•"" OUW'I th.In cw In -1loc>n tu ltwl 01 U>IO M cu-..O •I IN ,,,.,. OI (IHtn, In -lo ••1 '"" ort11on ""'" e>rOIM'riY \llU<tltO 111 .... (lly ot c .... 1 .. -.... COUlltY o• Ot•-!Jl•t•OI C.llfOt"l\te. Pfl11<ul•• 'I o.~:'1~!'11 E. Tr.ti H4 -~ 111 800k 1• l•eQo U & h . Ml•· coll•"9911• ~. ,,...,,a, ot °'~ '°""ty, tnOt• tuon......,,ly 11.1\0WI'" no E 111n Str"9t, C.0014 Ml'~. C•Wornla. T11rm\ OI .... '"'"In t•WIYl -Y OI tM U~11..a !\1.111'\ oo •otlltrm•Oon ot ••It. o• P•fl <••" end b•l•n<• •vld•n<•d Oy not• ••<urtd 01 MOllOllO• 0. I 11111 0.. Q 1111 I~ P«llM'' 1¥ 'O 'M>ld Ttn fW'IUW QI I ... .,,,_I bid 10 1)1' OO'PO\llt'(I Wiii\ bid 9 1dt or otl"" io be 1n wrHlno enQ '!11111 bq fl'(tlV"' .fl II\< •ll)r•~ld Otfit• .. , ...,, """' .... .., "'" '"" P<Jl>ll<•tlon ... ,~, Al'IG ll01!>H O<llf OI U>I• 011.0 O.C""°"r 10. ttl• I\ J r•1r•11 AllO<'llfv 10<' E~t(UIOI ol '"" £\l<1I• n1 WIGDt<-1 I, J, l'A•ltl LL 1401 Deve Slrwt ........ ....._. IM<ll. Call~•,,... Ttl: 11141 W4ltl Alt«lltf Hlr l llMUI .. ...,...,"'" ()r119 C..\I Dellf f'llOC , o.t .. m~r 71, 19, 1'11 Mid J9t1U1t1\' J, .. ,. Big 2 story 4 bedroom home ideu lly located near com munity pool and tennis. Vucant und ••••••••••••••••••••••• '\.-; fi .. ClM~ "'(~...0 IOr llllnq J•nw"y t•, 191~ GM!.'•4• M.tnaotr Of' Ol·.i-PuOll•...., Ot-COd\I Oally Pltot, Oltt~mbe• 11, 78, 1918 PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE INVITING llOS 6 BIO ITEM NO. 41S PINCHER AD 1006 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4 duplx, including bay front to be exch. down m 3 pkg. 213/684·3200 EMERALbST. 768-8585_·~~~~~- lagiMa MkJwl 1052 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ready. Easy ler~s wjll Laguna Niguel move YoU right en. Call oow.don'twalt! Realty • . --- HA NCH' ~ HtALTY ~ 551 2000 NOl lCE IS HEREBY GIVEN, ... , ''")11'<1 r>toP0'"" WI M t.. ...U• ~ 1>y '""City o1 Colot• _..._to •It TM C•-4 Private 1nd1111dua1s can Duplex with owner's un 1t, good location. dbl garage. 2 frplcs. Clear. seller W\JI carry lsl T.D i----------$249,000 -MIGUEL HILLS fo'reshly decorated & t'arpeted 3 bdrm home w/v1ew o r the hills. Formal djn-rm. rrpk tn llv·rm. ram-rm & lndry rm. cov. patio & sprklns See today' S91.000. 49).9494 495-5220 496-2413 830.5050 I• covn<ot, P o Bo• uoo. ot 1t>e cnv now soll any item or ot (O,I• MIWI. C:.hlO-nlA, Oft or Of!tOI'• t"• "°"' ot 11 oo • m "" Frio... comb1natlOll ot 11ems JanuM' It. 191' 11 s11.w i.. '"" 101atm9 $75 01 less e>rOP<'' .,,nou••o<t """" BIO\ "''" l>t ronsocu1t¥0 days lor publlcl, ~ •M ruo •IOUCI .ti O n I V S 2 E a c 11 HEWPORT IUC:H REALTY 675-1642 642-07'2 1022 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~·;:;;: itv ";,.~~~":!1:; 2 with a 3 hne ad for 2 It 00 • m , or ., "-lh!Prffltff H 800thOna! hne 1$ 6()c lor pr<t(llUOle Ofl FrtcMty. J.,, ... ,., "· the 2 days 2 IDllM eon AGE '"'· In tlllt Coul\<11 ~n., Clly H•ll. 11 h lr O.-ive, Costtt Mtw. Charge your Penny PLUS INCOME C•hlomt•. tcw ti. tuml>Nnq of I Htll • Pincher Ad or UM your Pegged hardwood Ooors. II yoo're not readlnit lhe tiWe ads m Class1r1e<1. )'OU're mw mg a lot of newsy information as wt!ll as aome great buys. LAl9ftl Ml~ I 052 LGIJIMO NMpf IOU .............................................. • INFORMATION 3 BR, 2ba. rum Condo. Rent. option to buy 1nro. Garage. Vanguar d / repo's, loan assumption Newport Bl, CM. S47S etc.'. Easy finance O.A.C. mo. 168-4666. 9offices. ..,.,...Cid 3169 Mobit. HCMlll Stont ••••• •••••• ••• • •••••••• ww~~ahe· tcr 848761~1442 Macniflcent beachfront . "". 1m West Newport home. s Anaheim 956· lOl I Bdrm, 2 baths + dorm Santa Ana 554·1070 loft. $1100/mo.lo June E. Anaheim 956-4500 Yrly tse PoCSible 956-~ 1 Mobile Home rum or un· furn. Across street shop· ping & buses. $8500 r1rm. ~27~. 548--4158 1 block to the ocean. 3BR 2ba . dishwash er, s torage . Cable TV . S500/ mo. $650 for June/July & Au g. Mobile Home rumlshed or _21Jn48-___ 57?7 _____ _ lmfumished. $8500. Xlnl location. ~2510 tto.Mt U.fw wlsllad • •••••••••••••••••••••• ........... JZ86 ....................... POI.ICE f'YP£VEHICLE. Bankamer1caro or woOa beamed ceilings, 2 ~ ACl<llllon"' si.t' ot INt -ll1<•tl0<1\ .. ColdweU Ba Ice n.y ........_l '"',..r '"'l't. 3br. ''""' m .,,,,.,.._,"' '"" Offl<t of ttw m8Sltrcharge No CO"" brick fl.replaces. country n r .,. rnJD ..,...,. -· P11rc11u1119 A4efll •• n F.alr 0r1.... 5 merc1el lllds accep1eo ldtc:beo Ca rclal 2ba. frplc, open beam. 24~2Br2 Ba . 1978 Skyline. $42,500. geo..5022 Coll• ~WI. Q!llf-... 8IOs .i-111 be ra.us RfSIQ(NTIAl BQOK£RA(,.( C~PIWt rr.,.11y '600 am loft. J850, First, Last ,.., .. ,....., to n. a11111tloft ot tlle Clly C .. a-.&... •••••••••-•••••••••••• ·~· f'7~. c1•,., 1" • w..111 tflWIOc». t0e11Clfteo ·-r CMd w. 2 Bdrm. 2 bath Incom e ~~~~' ::,~:=~~:::,10 11"" yo•r od In prh•t unit w/p'Vt palio and N~~/JNO 4BR 3ba. deft. dlnin1 rm. Eecn Ol<I tllell _11., .. ,_11 •I'll 6 toMMTOW! yard.$190.000. I OuMOMAJtCH IAY THRACE VIEW Newport Beach Area paUO w/1u bbq, New tvm ltemnsetlortllonl ... _lfC'41 Ctl64 .. 72 I tstanding custom family home. 4 """pl• .... t leaees. Fi:...t Ule, very clean. $17~. llom. Any -... •JKeptiol>t IO.... n.. .. ms 3 °-ths I r 'I ... .. .... ... -1··" ,peclfl<•tlon\ "'"'' bt CIHtl C ... M...., ..... ~ oVUi • .lhl • arge amt Y room . )'e&n rent 1uaranteed.1_v_,.,._.._ _______ _ ,1 .. ~ '" '"" blCI, -, .. 1"'• •o ... t :OOAM .. s:JOrM fer Huge lot on quiet cul-de-sac road. Prime hip t.ramc count C•l•lr-•-.. 1• 11 to<•11 •11r '"'"" 111 •~ ~t1k.1111ont 7 11"" Y Id E 11 t f. . u ooo SQ-. r---• bl ""''' -n • .,, ... Ile or-'°' rejectlOfl oft .... ~·· ~ -HI ,..,, rs. 0 . xcc en 1nanc1ng . . s780 ...,, ren~• e ...................... . o1~"'" blCI -· .. , tonn iu11 -~~~~. =--~ tor $349.500. space~. ·:...Co Puoramlc vtew. 1ar0eri, .....,....... • ~ bll t.ownbouae few •ll<I resl-•l o• •II oe1M111t • 6J -1400 or ,,.A•-. ~ 2 bdrm, 2 ..... 114rtle• •nt"""t~ "' 11\t Pf-NI • _. .,. pr111e•P<t•'-111uwoit~•11oM.1 8 642-5678 ACOU1W .. ' , ... uwaco. 644-8711 _.,._,;._esi__;.. ~----u1111• ,,,. -• ot 111t Pret._..t Ultle ls Bill ' ' Classified -.... -~~·~:;~~.:;·;:~, adl ar e r cAll'4 small 496·7222 831-0836 C... .. ..._. lJJJ -Ml~ -1'19"1 •o rtltcl ... "people U> peop e" sales Look1n1 ror • home or __ .................. . *' .,1 "'°' calll with blg ttadcnhip ,,.... M1 n •.., ,._ your own? You'll rlnd Ol*l beramt tl .,.cklus. 3 OATfO o.c.-20.. "" and blJ re1uli.1 To platt • _ ...__. "*AY bocnel advcrUsed br, 2 be a ffl>lc. Yearly • 0e<.~,::::1r:;:,:-0Nt1 o.ttw,;:;t YfNt' cl ... llled ad, call ---............ for Hie In ClaulCled Call 55'1·ZllO uk fOf' Mr. '"' ~ 6'2·M78. ~-l!l!••••r!!ll!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!::..L~.,~vwy~~d&1~· ====:l=Ool== ... ==·=========== s,,..n--~~~__JL!:::==========::!...L:=~:=========L. -·· .. - IS tl· er : • ., ....... , PwWIMd .,... ....... ......... .,,.. ....... """"" ...................••••......• , •••.•••...••••................ , ..... . .._..u.twwl•1ll -tMliiMii11tedl l76t Ciih~ >*24 ttUl6i~•le• M40 ...._ 4000 ..... , • ......, 4450 Lott•fooMd SlOO ............... .__. ........................................................................................................................ •·······•·••·•········· ..........•••.......... ...................... t6'w,..1Mdt JUtMI a1rt.._. H" J8r B 1L frpl c. Ntiubea(h,2br.2b•up "'TOPLOCATto.t! lAll, monry. Thrifty -•••••••••••••••••••••••••'••••••"•••••••••• r ptal drp 1 . r~fr11 . '"''·encl a•ra•• No .~.-.,.._.. 17t9'&Hewporllt•cl. Druci. 17th St, CM • JM; I '111 blltll borre Zc'tr -----------------wlll\fld~yrly lie, ~ water bed.I' Adu~ only Lovely 1ardena Droob Suc~1ful rt't•1l 1bop Ouutm,. dli)' Reward ~ • dttll. M:iOlmo mo 842 No p, la ~l 7 o 2 •IOtch.-:Va:~~lavail. approx ~.q f\ _642_-0_11_6 _____ _ -~:~front lh1m u MnllPQIT BEACH l BR ' azeo Poo~,.•dulta Brookhur et. 132:1 •Jacuzu.~at.-ctpool ~Permo 8kr67~8700 1.Att: CoUhl, ublelwhlte rgn No Ptl• 423 w Uo ta-O'T71t •WklYOC"dllly maid 1rv 2 Vacanc1ea downtown m.tJe M11tMllo ti t;d. 11r-..1ehttt..nope~ W.9016 2 bdr. 2 ha . frplr. aar . •n'4sph()n4'1VAllable Huntlniton Beach 210 lnau Pluu t"itll Pl'• .. -1ardener N J) ..... .,.._ 127' 1J¥1tY rm. J iO 960 S318 A&lowos S6J Wk Main St Mani mall tm._2934-=-------.. m-n:. I.a'' o( the new h<lmt on tho w lt'r a.EAN. ,wtt 2 Br. l Ha , or'75M70airt 221'1 ll•rt>or 900-W&. tmt Llldt~• wht t°'ct l~be,t.,_I"· bltna. uUI ~.f~a':n •e fn''~o~;v~t•~n~u~:,~ .!!:~~ e!1~~.~~.C~!.;nr~!'°".:. ~;r:rx~l ~:rl•l :ai: ~~r~ld!~: ~Mella MH840 -WE HAVE ~~::i:r~ t r~n~ero f nlaO A1UY)., <AHh dt"l~n~r intc•ruw Con,·c-~•f'Ol'l~ h\•allh dub11. b1ll1¥rd' -M}9083·tumt Roomw/kltchenneu.e ._...._.•Hor• di•~· Vic. Fuh1on ---;;;.--_ J 1 d 3 th n1ah1 h1htl'd tt•nn " i..Met MW 2 OR. '"" ba · ,.,..11. k --.--JI ~ 1111 ~•rd 00-7820 U1Mt MW )8r Broedmoor orlt•nll"C IO In<: U l' l' ir l(Ullll ~1 rourh l'ru .. "w .. ttc111 Townbome. pvt pello. I MO FREE Rt:NT -~ &t up lnC.nnery Vllll_l(I' S.av1ew home Vie•, uutom tic' op n l'r .... kltcb nil ~Ith 1tnlldn"""' .. n11,. p•rl> fplc. encl aer. U15 3br.2ba,frpk.ett.1er "48'7~ SIVlaA.LOfftCES 1..o1t· l.2f24.Mna Verde . ettutlly • prlotv m lrro v.:a v~ ranj!t''· ~Ir cl anlna room 9424m, 1475 839~ Mat.r Bdrm. dreaa1n1 rm. 11'Ntwpol'\Buch 11 hr SlamtM llew•rd. ~Imo Ownttwrt~ oveni. tr !th c-ompucton.. and BBQ t l 11t Al TI\ I 1 1 .. "' &t ba Stoi>arat.t-et1tnn(tt 95181.37, 975·l6l3 b I II ....a I L11tl111"11 it1r•11111 I••• UU bU•• ln~lµded I br 1410 ·14.25Sp•clouenew 2 r...it\.,.,i.,NB 642·3538 ,,._,_ .. Y .... h S runflt" IOJ)1-. V.-c\• ar n 0 mvut' '-· r • • • .., PeUo AdultAl.qul~l. br,21.!tbat.ownhome•plAI -rvuuu oung 1,.1 ~t · ftr<•pl3CC1' In l1 vl nR rnom~ & ~uoo.iy brunt·h llliCJ~ 644~ w/h&aW')'fHtur•.Smell M suite w/balh Ideal lor fem a le. Main St. ~ Ma"r.nab '.·1iViita hl•droom ... •ndoor I undry IH\18fo: "II' 1' .. '11'"' '1'"' 1 Pit~ tor Prof ftm tA ckg. llunt Beach nr Poatof-1oum11rnl'nla., mo" Newty redec:onted 3 br. 2 ~ RHlty at~ rdi. CM 1160, 648-~ rice.~ Jltu \t 'u1tt·. romtly room and rrurh tttAVTlt L.LM"h be. (rp\I, drpe wl bltn AM. ._..W..ted 4600 mort• Oo<-k nvull11bl' to all tt-nontt. l:wnah... 1.su bt11mom' NO\'e. end 1ara1e ~ Lovely Townhouat Apt. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Found Chnstmu Day In • ShO'-'n h..._ onnntntmf"nl ('oil Llndlj •\un ., uf\furn ,11.cM" s.51~ 38R. 2ba. like new Qieu M"'11 C'>n Vlctona J ,,,... l440'mo.Ph9&4·L60T v ............. 4210 Re1pon1lble. worklna A Hand mad ~ baby VWWHOMI &auUful 3 BR • t'on" dee • temlly rm hvm" wh1ew CJI ue an. hA1tbot fl.tun 17ltlR333 l~UHo ~wt-e.,_d )'!>' •>Pl'"'t.a11y11111t1 He""" ~etMeHVt1nk2bdrm ••••••••••••• .. ••••••••write r ••tka unt blanJ<<'t963·~ m .. 11· to\'1\11\' .. , .. 11 ...... J;JOOtat &lut. R•f r~ New ta 1 Hr. e blk1 to La k e Arrowhtad bedroom COll •ti~ In 1r4,., ll'tiutr,d '"''' al938aft ) bt•(h, r•tm decor. laker ondo 1 8 Corooadel Mer or COit• Found Male Terrier. • "llr Llc.ba.. bA.l.oer • ......,. , ... ,.. • .._.. 12.._ j.c"U&& In pnv•I~ 1etun11 ~ )242 ...................... . •HJUlh ill'll) no 114""' rlirt=all bit 1na. aar . · ronl C' • 1 P9 · MCJH Qwetntu t••tn Ion& haired A bout i TWNHSE. 28R. I ._,Ba. free 4' more. $300 830 7<122 UaJ. Wrtt.e CIHtlf1~ Ad 3yra C-11 00 1!108 after 0..k•~ f~. pvt !)At., 1ar. H-w mo. te0-5 42 BIO BEAR C.hln, ilpe 14, tD.---0.aAly Pt~ P-0 noons or aves. G6rde-n A~rtm.enl• pel,ot. A.dJt.. no pet.a~ '300 ~tabll", rotor TV. 2 Bow. I*. Costa Meu • a, te:tr•N ., l•nrl'J • •••••••. ••••• •• ••••• ,. yvd SlOOOI Mo Ow ntr • l BR W'\f\arn1thl'd h<Mllt w wtll conawitt ahdrt~'n' ~cw IHH a br. 2'" ba sanae. avaJI Jan 15 leue Otlle Cha1r IA\• tuwnhou "· U2!1 I-toll QIO mo MJ 01:11 .....,_. ... "'...,... KHO It\ 1n,. "'' I 7lh I 600MO mo.541·5479 llACHWOOOAl'T$ frpb ~fllltl 838orcall67~3862 hnonala 5350 fl1J2 MalJM>lla. 2 Br, 2 O n h ••••••••••••••••••••••• &M IJ fl I alip a\'IUI Abo~ br + di;n •e~•JIU ta 1335. l Br.ls.~ Tahoe Studio, a lp1 4 Le. ... c :2 br In Coeta R'"'' .. "ING._. •"SAGE •1800 AvaJI 12J0to l·6 & Feb r.teu. Sant• Ana ur ~ ... ,,., --------1 011 lqoon .., twaz Nn'Jl(.llt <..'nott Condo 2, 3 -...._.___... --u4 4 111 4 bedroom• Avail am ............ 11/S.... 1700 Ir.th ~I 1()0\,•rJI il;lh l Ml ll170 Nt!w bnuUful 1arden apa.rtmenla BachckM 127 ~ ~ prr nl Sl7~ ptor wffk ffunt lkh Apt or cot BubJicrn~~ l,,k Ma11a.ur PAM Htu. Al'TS. 873-D20K · tqe In aafe a rea neJr ~call j.U. li-t·S~ HIW bul&tatMet f'or reiil)t!c PRF.GNANT? C aring. 1124 ~••••••••••••••••• med Attnl~ -••••••• •• • •• •• • •• • •• l.lruv Pal\ r,·rr 2 bdr nl 2 Lt • w/optlvtl w buy 3 UR. I ba, S A tit#, 1450 latllut + $100. Kida OK .,_••oc••...a • ............_toe. .. _ .. JOO Hiblt. h ud wurk1n1t confidenUalrounselln"& .__ 5AJ"'ll --. ___,, .. rnoc.htlr At small 3''t _yr ref 1 bo d" HUNT. llACH ••••••••••••••••••••••• chlld. well behnvL>d S?OO erra A rtion. a op I Br SllS 2Br '340 .--------•I bl. pool, ,11\'UUJ, 61.irlO·'I' Upt'net $41:, )~I HHl2 410aMPOOt.HOME n ~'" wtr pd 546 ~ AduJta, no pet.a. 22:IO Vangu1rd Wty cat~Blvd> Sdtct Crom spacious 1.2 C..t dowa or under. incl utll. Mu11t ~& ~ciping 547·2~3 & 3 8~ lownhouae unit. rnovt by Jal\ 10 CUii A --- m Alk-ah"">' llHTALS --------Seuhorc Or 2 bdrm t ba THI ILUffS ~;z~~7~ Yearly --------f'toml295~r month. Up LMMJ&pe..1ottl 1~1~ or wnt.-Tht COUNTRY GIRL to l200 movil'IC allowtnct Share• homt or aptment Dally Piiot. Hox 1560. CM 4 Bdrm 2 hath, f1r.ipla< t . rence<4 yard. COVl•rt!d pot.lo s.sn m~Nr South Q)utPlua 2 HH. 2 tw ~2."> 2 HR. 2•, bu ~ 17'> 3 Hdrma • tlntclt• lto vel. 2 2 Br duplex, far . back yrd. chJld-1m J>t!l OK. $:J:5Q mo. $4S-7443 roe lmmed. occupency ~t .(r)Aru lJHu.A.uTU> _'¥MJI>. Ad '400· *-..fSCQRTS * Plond• &i Vllc» Sta Uk~ 1J"VfV ~""• V\aiti.nt prof UC I, n~di. a. hrs !157·8474 J BR. l'• bu $41~ 3 UR. 2 b11 54751 ~ bc.it.hs. Very <'hotrtt t..'T\d OCEANFRONT IU de unit ln pn m\: ~i.rly aru lw..: l br. dahwhr, WI 0 . 2 Movt! ill Jan. 20\h. 157:1 car prkg, udlta, no pet.ti 848-23216 <A.• ••lAJ<;' IJ.A.4~ homf..: itpl Jun-Mar 30 UiE Bachelor Unit, pvt Delwie bea(h apta, frplc. 132-4134 Smee 1'71 Dave. 833 6:!02. 833-6800 Splrlhlal ae~ patio. bltn1, elc. flO f nc:I «•rage. patios ----l815So t.IC11mlno Real childttnor""ta S2SOmo I ....., New II 8 4 bt. 21"1 ba. to Ploae help' M1itturt' SanClemenle. P'u~I u1· Mo Av..U Jan 6 to Jun~ 13 Agent MO Meo $37$ f13.-&WO --u~n~ , I '._, • 11 I \I I \ . 3 8H, 2ly ba ~1 65Q 3 OR, J ba SG25 1110 Vl ... O,...li B 0""6·3197. "'t!ggy. 96().4""" f• ... •ly Ith 3 . I ,_. .. .... ahart w t re malc non ..... w mo gir Forappl 49'l·1 1133-ilO:I 11moker• S200 + utll necl(ta 2 Br apt under S375 ---- . . ~ ~ 1 (U~' "•• la•an1 tr ,.,, 4 8R.2t.t b111 ~/109~ 3 BR. l ba S:.:.0/Tu•lln '"9lw Jt44 9fB.0'18l ev~ & wknda 1 n N R' C D M a r e a XX DAHCI OF FUN XX ~e2Br11pt, garage in 15 •-•••••••••••••••••••• 67).():131 ___ &-3 uti(ul nu.le girls . 1 BR;>ool-blk to ocean. S-0.-llh 3276 sngl adlt. 1210 642 5002or 4 BR. 2"" b11 SlOOOI N pt Brand new 3br. 2 1'tba, frplc. Dbl ~arg, pool & ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~X2l6 Ocean Hiiia C<1ndo. 3 bdnn 2"'-ba frplc. golf CtJUtae. pool, oo an v It! w. No pet.a. $4T5 per mo. 842 :ms or 661-«W7 STEPS TO BEACH 2 br. g;ar. /\dlts. no pe Ls Avail to June U $325 873-6640 unit complex. Adults, no •New I br, pool .. tennla £ASTBLUf't' dance •l exhibition & rup peU. S290 mo. lit, last. O!.lld ok, ~ NO pcta BHutiful area. S22S .. ._../htvnt/ 1es11ons iAM to 4AM laC"\IU.1 S m tn to bch Yr y leue No pet.a S52S 548 91.571~9643 depoelt.875-6125eves. 83W9'74. __ _ 640-5.296or~-,..._. every d1y 201;0 So 2 Br. 2 ba &t it.ove & ref rig Brand new 2 BR Condo. MIP' Non·smoker. 1140 + :.::~:·•••••••••••••• Euclid, Anaheim. exc11 3 bdrm. lrg fenced yard ._,.__..._ Onve by 2039 National Santa AM 3210 ~shed New crpt.a & drpg. No pool,j111cuu1.tent11scrt.1. 1111uul.CostaMe11home - 5005 ing 24 hr r erord•na ctuJdrenorpeU.646-4382 nopeU,S4M 8331003 Ava.II now 64~ 0,,1........., 5Gl4Z2 __ _ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sura HICE Rancho San J oaquin 2 Bllyfront home . need Beauty Salon Hair atyhn11 MICHELLE'S •Lodtedi•r wllastor. bdrm condo w /vlew-. roommate owri room. & men &t women Sell or •Outcall• S39S per m o l 1tl ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• la.-n+SIOO Children pets Oradlord twnhm, 4 Br. lc6oo fteMttula 3807 OK~!IW.~ 1t523CAMPU5Dt·IRV1 .. t enc aar. fvt patio ••••••••••••••••••••••• •O/Wpatio.l11dryrm looded w1uxtraa Peggy. Bat.hSU01Mo 6758722 leale. Uyn Coela Me:ia llAM·2AM 83.'>3741J •Soecial cabinet apace ~~ 83l-44U or 751 1122 3 HH. w•ll wall rpb: fncd ~--.. -och --3248 l.W>/mo Cal 752 9'l60 _ S'.!00 utU pd, 1 Hr duplu. ~%,ydA~1~d~=~~; ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 bdrm house. new crpt. slOVe & refriJ(, no pelt. •Gu heat, gas cooking. Ltg rlnhsetoshr inCM fir •ESCORTS* ga:fhot waler all frt'e Mawport a.ec:h 3169 bc:-h App Sl65i mo 8111 Snwll garden1nt1 rouh· ror __ • _ _!:__ ---MOBILE lfOM 1-; 24x60. nicely decorated. lrg. 5C7 llM. 873 6243 3 bdrm 2 ba. LarJte yatd t'Qme1 lot. adlls. no pulb, (u('d yard. garage Good •Adults, no pets ••••••••••••••••••••••• 642 ~ sale Call aft 5 548 91:133 972-I 138 l Bdrm.S280 PARK HEWP'ORT Shr Oakwood 2BR 2 Ba or642·1314 No pet.a Avail Jan. 10 oc:n vlt-w 642 t;:;71 llUl8hborhood. Child & C.11 aft 4 S48S 9611 36J4J - -pc_•\ OK S450 per mo l Br. lower <1pl w/carport. no pols. S260 mo. Call 673-4007 Month to month l I b I ---ZJ23EldenAve C M Bachelora . l or 2 up w rt-s pons1 e MoMyWaftted 5030 LINDA & VICWI OutcCllllMau~ for Tite "'"of It~ 2'\ 9 9 Me y c r . N l· 11 1 I Br wuque qwel '~ a1· 7»-42.IM 1tar1>or1 Victona t"rplc. k1di.lpcl!i ok ......_ __ .;:.:.....:.~ .. _ _.. -$190 Nice bachelo r AvalJable 1mmed1ately Resp adult No pel.\l ut1I Jl(i. 106 t: B;ty Ave. Apt 9. 642 76«> Bedrooms & Townhoui.ei. ~~ No i.mkr ne»l. ••••••••••••••• •••• •• •• ___ From S349 $0 """""' lnvators want.ed for new ------Rough-$450 4VJ 22116 r-. "'""'-or New 2&3 bdrm. frple . ---lWwMshed 3300 hill\..,, i <·ar iiarage $4!)() LoiJi-a Hiib 3250 ••••••••••••••••••••••• & up. 645-5637 ••••••••• ••• • •• • • •• ••• • --------- l.tmlry To_. Apt. 2 bdr 2"'-ba. frplc. Jae pool. garage7Sl·9041 Spectacular spa. total f'em loo6ung for peraon to syndicate partnenh1p to recreation program. shrhllt'on Blllboa Island bey & sell nnrhei. & !IOClaJ program. 7 _pools. I! 1300 mo + ull I. Cull acreage 213...(24 1061 h.onnls courta Al Fashion laland, Jamboree & San _Mi_cite_>'_·673·..?_Z98 __ -MOll'tlllJH. Trvst Serv1nK all Orange Cu ~·1313 MASSAGE RGURE MODELS ESCOATS OUTCALL ONLY -----N'EW48r,3Ba,lgfamrm. MOllLEHOME ~ 3 br. 2 ba. near new, nr schb. i.h<>Pt> & fwy, INFORMATION t.·1>1 de. ya rd . W / 0 haN\ mo ,...,..er 962-Cl925 1122 I BEDROOM OR BA C HELOR . Cal l 525-3828 or 646-1115 Joaqwn ffills Road a..... Deidi 5015 l714164 ... 1900 ....... 4150 ••••••••••••••••••••••• hookup 2 car encl gar ;;;"'1192_7$30vari'sPM Rerl~ opUot lO buy Info. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1Sl..M1mt 642-lti03 -repo a, loan aaaumpt1on Available J• J, _________ 1New2br Iba on lake, ~.l!:uyhnanceO.A.C Lovely 21.iR upper Ltg 2 br. l ba garden apt w/food patJo. l pet ok $320 7$2 7150. 3 Rr, 2 ba, ramlly room. ~cm~~ r ec. facil 9c=.H ... ston ~~~~~~~f~~;.. ~~~h~~ frplc, covered p1tlio · _. -----Sant.a Ana ~ 7070 Coast Highway. No pell>. Lg 2 Br. lg k1tchl'n. Bachelor unit ~ block from beach All utll pd No klds. no peta. 201 E Balboa Blvd. 12$0 per mo. + aecunty dep. Call Sue~7707 ClObe to park. shoppin.g, • -.i&--.a 3•52 ~ahe1m 966 LOI I "° rhlldren $425/ mo. carpeted thruout. wood /\ 1 !d ssoo ......,.....,..,....--. & Eu he ~4500 "·· beam re1l1ng11 . No \it' var Imme ••••••••••••••••••••••• t Ana im · ....,H 875 2311 ctuldren or pets 645-m4 Lido lsle· Charming 2 br. ~ mo Call Tbc Keal NI G lJ EL S It 0 tt t; S W. Allabe1m 761 1442 ROGEKS REALTY __ _ imdeck I di~ ~taters,546--2313 'Spilt'10Ul>4bdrm.2t.A,ba, W*"'tmmner IW18896 CottaMffo 3824 S390 3 Br Easts1de. 2 :.,pet.ss4;5f.e~~·o';,~. ----------faro rm. beal'h, lt•11n1s ••••••••••••••••••••••• <'hlldren OK. 186 2lat Sl 1325 ~c. 2 hr E aldt-. S6351mo. 493 62!.13 or CIJlldo..WU1111 S3 2 b 1 b ~ On t'inley canal with "ar, fncd patio M11rnt'CJ 1131-1~ ~shed 3425 .~~ rmr .. •ld'4ul'· a, no' P.~~!?· dock. 2 Br t Ba. gar, nice ., ....... 1 .. ,....... 2 Br. 2 ba. Eastslde $395 yard $""'0 Call u 111 (()Uple.no~b 64G 107tt ---- --••••••••••••••••••••••• TSLMgmt "'•"·1603 "" " Niguel Short'$ 4 br. 2 ba. w 1 ~ C d '"" mo lat + laat + SJOO No IJn,3417 EASTSIOt.: clean . rult· St-a Terrace. Plan J un " nut .,..uare on ,,, ~. 548~ --------cottage I&~ bdrm -;ep l,l(c IOl. Newly pa1nkd lrvtne 2-atory. 2 bd, 2 ba. LA MANCHA A"S Dover Twuhae. dbl gar. ~ar fncd bac k y rd "-le, ram rm. tenni:-., POOi, S42S/n'lo 645 6253 Larae 1,2&3 bedroom 2 l:ldrm, I'"' ba. pal10, pet frpl, wash/dryer, pool .-. " lift 6PM or wk/Ids garden apts Adu Ill> <*. no chlldren $325 per Adults $42:5 mo. 645-9442 h1ld , pet OK. S4 00 pool. jacutti & beuch -----Oshwhr. blln.11, encl ~ar. mo ~9100or 549-0433 673-4406 .1 _tn~.:.. ~1·2338 gas bbq Pool. Gait f>d UDO VIEW 2br. frpk. 3 bdrm l \'J ba Condo Peuo home nur the 11ea T18ScotlP1 642·5073 Newlydeeorated3br.2 bt patio. sep D.R. Adlts. garage, pool, paUo Nur Of1 Monarch S ummit 2 lalllooP1utt• 1707 -----townhouse. Spacious, te00/mo.675-Q68 S .Coaat ulina $41 0 Br.2ba.11lladulthv1ng ••••••••••••••••••••••• 281".lba.allelec~Brand fireplace & pool. Quiet od ~JS ~ Mo to mo or leai..-~ 1 S II tudi 1 new. 187 E. l8th St 1375 area-Adults. no pets Stellll to bch. Lge m ern _ _ _ _ _ _...,yr y. ma a o. mo ~541·5032 l400~331H ; 67~SIM9 2 br upper. beam cell, Npl lfti 2 Br duplex ~5-___ ·-·· adul\. 1\rt prk 'g, uUI pd. · ----frplc. all bllna. 1425 f'enced yard. adlt.s. NO 3 BR t'ondo, 2 Ba. fronts _Pvtbeach.67~-3063___ W" .... Vlllop EASTSIDE 642·3'90. f't:'TS 1325. Gaslwtr pd on golf course Pool. S..cht!loraplbetwecn l2th BuutHul brand n e w N~ii't~~ P~emo. --UMF--.-.-Y_IA_R_L_Y ti?J-~----. Jlit'UUI s:iso 499-l52S ~~6 ~~ly $180. ~pll~~s::·k~~~ t'orappttoa~:Call 2BR.lba .. nr bch .. s.35 N~~1~ bd~, 2t:; '.:C:~. Htwport .. och 3269 Costa~ --l7i4 ~:ii~kendalG-:1 9~ A,!tt.Shatuttl•~2S9 ~::: ~~:·:t~: ·: .. !: V~1.a. CM 675·5464 Un ••••••••••••:••••••••:.• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 8a<'h $25.5-$265 --.. ~ 31,.6 fUIM.. YEARLY fumor pi.rt llARBORVJ.t;WHOMt:S SUSC"c.IT•~ 10r$290S305 _,._.. & Carmel Model 3 bdrm 2 --2 8r~S3.50 ... •••••••••••••••••••• I DH. l ba .. Bay Ave $395 New 3br or 2 & den :it So ba. (am rm dbl tiar l.ar~e & small I bdrm. lSLMemt CS42 l603 2 Br Twnhse. 2 C'ar SHOITTBM, FUaH. Coa!il Pina S49S Jan gardener incl Sti7~ J>t•r l'nd gar. S245 & up. aaraie. frplc. den pvt yd. 3 BR. 2"'1 ba, new home. lsl ~9 3280 mo Call 644 7687 Adulti.. no pets 2110 lllANO HEW l yr old bldg. 541~ mo <X'ellllCront. wk or mo. Xlnt t.: Side loc. cln 3 br, 2 UoO ISLE 5 ldnft Newport Bl. ~-4968. 2 &t 3 br, 2 ba. all electric T/0.8053 IALIOA-HEWr<>RT ba, bltns. S41!5/mo l.36V1aTne11teSfar 1ous Hwl1t40111eece. 3740 f'f:~~~~lo~~to lbdrm new crpt&paint R.W.TY 67$..1170 &t&lOlltl,540,6262 h o me w l ge 1v1ng ••••••••••••••••••••••• Hamilton. 8~·2917 or gar!!~· S275 per mo 1475. 3 br. 2 ba. baleony, 2 Br 1 ••1 Ba condo + rel' rm + den I m m a (· . •Bach Lon I Be• c h . 642·2164 a:.>--.. end .. garage All blt.ns. .,_ Coa S12SO/molsc Pr1 vary, UUI pd 116$. -----blktoboach. Yrly ~~&W, stl'luta S375 Waterfronlllomei. Adult.nopeli 8338974 f'OURSt:ASONSAPTS ,........._ ....... 3840 TSLMcmt 642·1603 ----631 1400 Spac. 2 br townhouae. 1 i., u••••••••••••• ••• •• • •• o-roW 3226 ----fo\anwthed room tor rent.. ba, pvt patio. pool SHARP. beach 1.2 & 3 BR. •••••••••••••• •• • •• •••. 3 br. 2 ba. lgt: encl patio Daily. weekly, moolhly. Adult&. S300 1~ Jo11nn frplc. dahwihr, garage Gankner rnd No ~U. 7~1 Center Dr '6 II 8. &.. ~eves & u 960 2358 3Br.2b1thome.xlntcond ~~6058 lm--7336 · _P_a_oe_. _____ _ llOISe t.o ITlilrina & be11ch --· 2 bdnn. 1 ba. car port. Varanl S4SO . m u Walktubt-111·hcondo 2br. l.ocJlllMl .. och 3741 crpt dupes, lndry lac. Seawind Ylllafi8 41112ii.53 • 2VJ ba, WIO, gar Pool, ••••••••••••••••••••••• aood loc. No pets $280 ·-------S475 '•GUNA B"'ACll MTR mo 271 E 18th l'I. New l~ bdrm I xury Mi.Mtlt4°" .. och 3240 ~ "' ... ._. iuc.. adult •pt.a in 14 plan• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ 8182. ~-4449 INN S7Slwk & up. Maid .,....,,.... from SJl). + /:°Ii. ten tlWV . color TV, heated n1 t rl 1 d • ' BR, 2"'1 ba . walk to llACH $650/lllO Yrly pool UUl. <7141 494·$294. MISA P1HIS a. wa e • a. pon a ::.~.~ri0• i\$k for UttllHnPcdd fl85N.CoaatHwy. t BR S3U. 2 BR $380. =N~~·~.~w~ ------Large 2 at.or)' home. big Pool J•cuul, gar. 1Vall McFadden t.hen Weat on New-ete11ant·~ bedroom nJOOU, vault.t.<d/beam1, 2 S2~ Ft") c~rm bach, or Aduit11, no pets 2650 McFadden to Scawlnd ~.Of 2bedroom +den hie bedroom•. 2bit, loy~I dlt4~C!$p KarlaAve,549·2447. Wlqe.<714)893-.5198 s.575 Ct!dar & window r . deck, 2 pttlloe.xas emp 8 --Near townha 2 e home t'lvci blocks to B l>IW refl18 Encl Pallor I N nd new el r , TownhouM lov•ly. spac beach. Private 2 r ur gar. 'work 'space. laund I BR 11~h,.~J~,: 4:S-~ ~.,be, a~ap~al& &t home·Uke. 2 b 0 r wllh garoge t'ully m11n · hklCp I duld, no pell.. -' ' -mo. pvt ltted entrance + 2 t.ainat yard Adulta, .No Oreat house 000.511-« 2 Br. 2 blO<'ks from ~1ch. wlmda pailoe. Some with ·au 3 Bdrm. 2 ba, qwl't area Upper deck. yrly ~ 67~0Agent Garden 1\~le 2 br. 2 ba. adult living Sorry n pets. $400 mo 644-8726 Jt76 ••••••••••••••••••••••• EXCLUSIVE OCEAN FRONT l & 2 bdr~. ep\ '1. avail Security syatem. elevator. dish washer. dbl ovens. Pen· UlOU8e wllh frplr & prv sundeck from S325 up 492-4929 or ~-1123 2 BR apt., S275 mo Close to pell lnqwre al 525 18ih 40• Boal dO<'k 3 br, ZVJ ba 8 moe. rcnllll. Avail Jun. 1375 2 br, 1"' ba twnh•e. !:age. Swlmmlne pool ~~ t!_l4 > 960_ 6331 rondo 2 aiory. Crpk. blln l $400. mo. 1131 11794 for Oar !pie. pa ti,,, good loe acuu.I TennhJ courts. t 498-6324 2 lit w/gar. ~ <'rpt. kitc hen. Yr ly SllOO •PPl E-llde ~ .. to HunlinlJlon top· be11ch. fn<'d yd. water pd 2110 87~"71~ <>:ean view, apacloua 1 br. TSL M1mt 642·1603 No16 ::r~r Fr~~ As~~= i:J~1~~~r s~~~. r~o ·~~~t' "0 " ~luwarc 636 •1120 H borV..--...-3 B a trplc, 1teP11·beach. $4:10. Beaut 2 BR, 2 ba. Mcu Seltwlnd Vlllaae. 15:155 8 ·21.34. aft:I I·~ ar ew ome r, ee-t-0480; 49'Mt>b5. Drive nr S.A. e ntry HuntJn,..on Village Lane, ----------· -ua. gardening Incl. Avail ... _.: "'' .&. I llh ,.,.llMcl ~MILEt'ROM DE/\C'll Jan. 6. IGOO. 640·0178, tte .... ltedt J7'9 Oub. YVt fncd yard, 2 H.8 <7t4>988-9961. 4flor~llted ltOO X1ot cond, 4 br. 2 ba, 546-Cl0or~71 ••••'••••••••H•••H••• ~~U::to/a~'1~1654M 2 er. children welcome. ••••••••••••••••••••••• frplc, patio, on cul-de· -· • · no pet.a &.rtlna at S270 --------uc ~ blk from Elemen ~ W"-TER .... II IAYMOMT 1 Br, crpt1, drapes, mo.IMM907 ~UHOMI tary tchool. No pet11 "'" " w/uuat 3 P ...__..._ kl .... OK ---------~ 1675. Call alter4, 968-3636 28R, new <'Pl / PD Int '-"'-• 2 BR. 2 ba .• year· CtflJC)rt, ... • sz40 v• Pectflc9 IMIOIMATIOM ------motmo l,y,"1_1mo. __ ---MT mo.Nodoca.m-Ol.3e. Hew ~t. ootJon to buy Info, fbr houh. 2ba, 11 den ~ 2 BR. 2 ba, all •lee. nc:w. HMrCX.. re,>o'1 fou ueum_J>llon, w!ftplc Nice yd. Near 28Rnrbeachl37Sl mo 2~"_._r&z0~ Qov'd parkina. 3l0 Vic R •-d.C:. l!'.uy flllancc O.A.C Ooldnw .. t•Hetl. Blllo W•,..frwtHotMs OC..UR ,., t.orta Ownrl Aat. S375. Junior 1 BR. I B • 2 to«iC'ell. ~~ 848-93'7. '11·1400 2sT'•'19Towi'jA~ MZ-21&4.~9' ~b~,"·vtS::~~~J~~: ..... tc...Ston 3 Br 1-. S.. biC fenef'd 3 aa.zbe.wntr ... 2S HIWl•HDAns try. ltn kit c h ~=:r = ~· frplc, l6582 Tham•• 38R, Iba. yrly. $67:1 l Bdrm" Iott '320. Pool. w/lumJnout t'Jp. PIWlh W. Anaheim 76t·•442 '47&. S48-L2S8 CANAU'RONT 4 br, 3 ba, 2 BR. l ba, yrly. t-4~ Ja<'uul, cloaed garages. Cllfl)el, l&e pvt patio or Anaheim 956·1011 28t.n.impuumw/frplc, lmmac, w1lk to beach. SBR.t ba,yrly.$465 Ou4'wtrpd Adults.no b•l conplu1 w /xutt• s.nt.Ana 554.7070 bl& kltthen . 2 car NoworuyS750. P.UICUDO peta.a13Hamllwn,C M. :r::.:nl•~o:ft~·ln~~ atr•&•, U8·39113 btt Manna Realty 64245850 2 BR, 2 ba. frpl Pool ~4411 fecU. Umlltd preview ~~ -AduJta.$8 A!fltell. t'tom S290 per .......,.. <ktMl'l'Of\l 3Br yrly S4$0 Beaut. 1round1. nic ' mo. Mod•la open dally "'H.4lilr~ l242 Nice 3Br 2bath Lido q\iet. Adulta, no Pfl&. 3 lOAM to d u •k 21~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• So.ndlhom~$825 Br bUnl('!low. P ooL Wichita Ave (It Studto condo. with vltw 2 Bachtkitl available !a:'~el~q~:~ rior= Ste. 40UC · Pool ls Jae. ecro .. from Call for move Info £.22nd& .. ttO 145.a.99 _4_· ______ _ beed\.PTS.141....W JeMtMy, lllc. New ZB_rJ ff1)11 p1tk>I. ~ '7 J..U I 0 S•::LL Idle Item with a .,~1 aol&a. ,702 nonda Want Ad Resulll 142·:if'78 Want Ad Help? 642-5'18 DIUI)' PtJot CJ ... lfltd Ad at wma o.3M?_a_. __ . ' nt£UCITINO PM.MMISAAm MlN\.Tl'ES TON P1' BCll S.ch,lUH f'rom 12M., up. Adwta. No pc&a. tMIM•tDr. ,6 Bib Eut ol Newport Blvd) 9tm·5Pm 548·8880 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Double garage, 20th &t Olive, HB. S60 Ah10 1110.-Clt', u me area W !Jti0.$260 LOWEST .............. lat T.D.'•, abo 2nd T.D. Lo.s. Office R...tal 4400 •·aJl'\!6t Terms 111nct' 19411 ••• ••• •• •• • • • •• • • • • • • • • Sattler Mtg. Co. Days. ••••· hr 631-2140 GOLDEN GIRL 5Zl Sq rt om~ spact lO 64J..217 I S45-061 I ~nt & 'IUb luse 1n Li.ituni. --,.,..,.off°" ~*("ls,ts~830~~h. Avail AlaDlll'tCet19fftt/ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---r.. to#WIA1/ Schools & Dtluxe medica l suite. Lott & FcM.nd IMtrucHOft 7005 (U'OUlld fir .. Corona:t del ••••••••••••••• ••• ••• • • ••••••• •• •• •• ••• ••• • • • • Mar. Realonom1c1 Corp. ~••flh SI 00 REAL ESTATE 67~6700 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Downtown Huntington Aeoch. 2101"1 Mi.in St. 2 oHlces av1ulable On~ 2·nn S120. one 2·rm SllO 911().W8 HIWPORT CltfTIA 10,000 sq tt Luxurious paneled or flee& w1spec11I cxlraa C o n r .. r e n r e rm /bathroom · shower1k1tchen. Contact UM1e Oahl CORPORA'PE REALTY 97S.OIH ----------~Sq. rt. S24:1 4001 Birch St, N 8 . Agent. 54 l ·5032 SMALL OPFICE l''OH RDn'.SI~ Agent MS· n29 S00.1200 sq ft L11guna Och. Xlnt hlway v1111b1ll ty, new crplli. paint. /\IC, under grnd park ·~ Ocon & hill vle,ws ~ 11JJ6. 499-3922 Al RPO RT Of FICES I to 3 room suites. sll ll«Vtces. No lea&e rwq 'd. f'tom $150 mo lmmed. occupancy 20tl2 S E Bnttol. Suite 200. N.B m4>$SH010 PENNY PINCHER ADS ONLY S'2 ~II any 1lt'm cw com b1n1uon of 11~ms I« f7!1 or l~u w1lh ii p.,nn) Pln<'her Ad 3 llnh for i t'Of1MK'Ul1Yl' di~ t.10fh 4dd.l1tun1I bn., •~ Ii& ror Uw:lda)'to ChlHl(t' II ' Nu ('Omm,·rc-111l t1cl1< f'or morl' 1nlorm111111n and l-011l1tl't' your .. cs I llll 642-5678 SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS Ke>1htr -Brain - Empty -Excltf! - TAKEN LICENSE SCHOOL OFFERS •Cruh C()ul'!le 1tv111luhlt• • Mat.enals prov1rl1•d •Smllll rla1tsc:. fur pel"!iOf'la IJLed tn!> t r uc t 11111 •Choobc own lai.le d.1v & rughl rlass~ • Ph11·ement up lo 80': comm1:ss1on f'ree JWeek S11l1~ Trul111og Call For Detall• 131·I001 49 l-0442 Kate Ila Real Est1teSchool J:n'JI Camino Cap11ttrano San Juan <.:op111lran11 7075 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1be 11re11test resh1uranl mJ(r In the world Mel Hoot P 0 no it 281 , S.lem, Utah. 84653 Hefp Wanhd 7100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• My wife's mother went on the honeymoou I lhouKht 1t would hnv•· been ruce 1r t.hey would 1·--------have TAKEN me ulong too ACCOUNTING CLERIC No. Coet.a Mesa, 'JO() sq l'l. Lott Ir FOURd 5300 Excellent opportunlly ~Imo. Ground rtoor ••••••••••••••••••••••• for a reUable pcrimu 10 Tom.540-2200. tor Found a !>t!l'' Call toln our Account•nit A I I A ,--~. Typing & 1dd1n" n ma i.sis tance IJ\lldune &11 well as AI R ances 760 & 500 aq rt. U · League 537.2:173, no fee uv~pr"'f'd L•njoy xlnt cellent location lllOI --------"' "' Newport 64S-21lt Lost Shetland ShN•p co cf1t11n<'ludlng frc•c Ooa. cSheltll' M1n1 meal Apply Mon/l"rl. ~Ix~•• Co 11 1 e 1 6 y rs o Id 91m·Noon~~rsonnel S.ltet S.~etwht. 1200 reward MARRlu1 t HOTEL Pr1vale 1wte with re(ep· _m-<M __ 11______ 900 Newport Center Or lion & sec retarial LOST: Male Au:.tr1tllan "'Au~c~ppo~~c!plvr !l&rvlce. ronferel\ce G...... 1'n colored Vi c ..... mlf ' room. all fac1Utlea 2082 ... .....,. · M1 t hel3on , Ir vine. CM.831·5484 l•-------- ?52-0234 l.oet: Lar1c fncndly, blk I•-------· MIWPORT /IRVIMI Cock.tPoO dog. Vic 201.h Exetutlveoffkewlth St. " Belboa Blvd Acc:ounUnai .J. ~ant offered. Plean .,.. •nswenna. reetP· call eve1: 675·8213 or •1111••T ......... taon. ~ -conl. rm & more. 1125. ·---------accoun 968-678a FowMS : while miniature IXICUTIVI male poodle 111 the Proudly Announct1 Our Sums MM'Mt Baaket at Baker Move to ur1er O<llcc11 4'Marbor. C.11540-&401. Vl11t U1 At Our New LWtwioua pnveu office• ---------Loe u wilh ptt100al telephone LOST B!Jt 6 Bm German COL.OWon "'LI 0 "-NK •R •executJvuecrtlJlry Shep. Vic Adams & "' • " •· OOnfettnc.-tRoom Newland REWARD SU~~~200 X..roK·Ttlex 8D-05ll or 962· 1448 ""' Nr. So. Cout Plua, l()6T Our tiUlfy Or11n11e 2333:~~2'Z·\Y all'port& !reeweya. cat. Vic or 7th & Ol'oan We bave i.n lncreasinu ltAJ<ER CENTER yr o n t C h I I d r ~ 11 m-21e1 hHrtbroktn If loond ~=;:~[1°ur!rh·~~t ............... 4410 call 840·1900 duy•. ~cnced accounting & ••••••••••••••••••••••• m.10 aft Cl. bookketpin1 peraonnl'I. RITAIL SPACI "WHl!:Rt ARE YOtJ C.llorvttltu today v.e STEWART?" Rm lonu llT\l looking forw•rd to 700Sq. rt. ha1red while W'ricr dot IJ't'lllnt you In our n11w Lido Mu1n1 Vlll•I• w/brown patch over onl' loc•t.lon. Spec;aJtyCenter lldt ol rec.. Lmt 12·19, 17141 Ul-410J <Onthewaterl Lat Can yon eroa . YREEPARKINO Newport f'1M4162 _ .... __ ,_4f17_~_,_. --1-------- • I t : l ' i ll n n • ~ d d I I l t • I a. ' t - . ~ • f l t j: l ~ ) t f l 2' l , l , f 11 I I 1 I ' I I , • I \ . I ~. ' , 4' II , r ....... ln1fflil11 ... C.,..Senb C f _.., .... ~ ...... : .......••.......••...•......•.•..•..•...•..••..••.•...................•.......... ~m •'<W'k ~ dutans Shampoo 6 11team cleaa R.flnod•I, ~epair . ••n lt"o n up 11.;ulitli:. fdebua"s ' W Ooasl COlar brt&hlcn I'll. Whl r.trJ>rntr)', old hmf' L.aodl C•flln• lmnied ftwy NB ·~ll $ 10 min bleach Cltan rran.smansl\ v 14 yr lo ..rt'Yttittl ~DeOT __ . _ bv, dm rm. hall Sl5 Av1 Ut''d Mr Paklm Dill·ll l..andK•pe ..... , •• .,..,. rm S7 ~ "'®rb •10. cbr bo SSH NB l M lllH •••••••••••••••••••••• U Gu.ar elJm (lt'l odor 8 4'1 J Al>PbnnC"\' ~rv t)1' rep.Ur 15 yn. ex pr a.dftCAlll Ru. li4li TV70 11Ut>-CHARGESlO Do won m)'l'tU R.et1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• G.ler'Cll S k Yaln.S A Ml~lOl I' ID -~Btctric .......... ~ .. ~ ..... . am __ 9)7 01 uunmM) • •MIL FIXIT• .... ...... l'.l.ft.'TRICIA/'4 1•11t·t"t.I C11r1H ntt r l••IOUng -•••••••-••••••••••• .l•--------•1 ncbt fr ••ti malt' 011 R.·.i r uh. 1~ )'ra in <ieve Ill )'• CA.Ta... I r11malt )QI» 11.n·• .wa 17:12 0n~c·•u)11•JJulc1na lo ~ kin.Ila oetlablr U«'llll.'d m ~ 0,.-,.-g,------ •Rt1P••r1o •S •lc•oalln forau amun --•LIC' 1' 8 . CM Sic ~ S«>ntn ILICTIJCIAN ••••••• ••••••••••••••• "5pfualt ~l C.le.w upt.~ c tt._•.C'I mm I Ind Rubi 11111.tl, 1luplo1u.111r dultlp CO~T~l.,. zsl"n5K't uc37111.Ml lrk. '1aduttc th'\.' 1Hlc. Wt~ncbff CALL UM I H •kmioUlll.lnlo ttc Kll 12:)7 licaoll&bl) ttt"'41Uf"l't'\ -'l'r.il'tor & Uump <:1 ad ltll1 W ~i.-lUt. Mo 'l!I f Mt 1111t l'lwJrt I 1• llt<tnoval Pilf1 e ... l b •••••••••••••• • • •• ••.-•• (~hUtJC .. t'I<' ~ l~l 1s.3-~llll I\ It B Wood fi"•nrlnll. •·--------1~1or~-er~pa1r ....... &.A:M.ornt'llun-t; v.,l~bl ~ ti you w.tnt )'our .adH rtls • 6'<l O'M ••••••••••••••••••••••• Pt~"e an ad ln wr ~1 '"" n1t.• ... ,a11f' to n-ach t '-' Sl\llh Ill l Ton trn' k It a I ~ U 111 Y 4"Mv ....................... . .............•...•...........•.....••.•..••.•...•..•...........•.... W\111\alllUf"tln nyUuna. *ROBIN'S H OUSE Brickwork Small Jobs f1M t'xter P•intlnl by REPAJlt &KEROO,f.AJI blar1m1.tl, l·omm 'l °'re· Cl.EAN INO SERVICE. Newport, et.la Mna 6 R.Smor. St. Uc .. Ins. Tty t y p t 1 . 1 ll1 o 1 t ~ s iltlei\llll, r~n n tn for 41 thurO\Afhb clean ll'vule..6753l1S e v• me.~at bra.. rocl.sll.a.ke.s·comPO·W t~llait)'lltM -~ bollle $4008S BJ<>t:k walls. brickwork, EXCELLENT PAINT· F..._est.Ml·SllllO ('ltEAPEST baullnti In 11iECL£ANING LADY planters Pree et1t. Pat. ING. Reasonable rate:t. ,_Serria lO ... n. Jo'ree Etllmat'-'1· tlfldent haecln'K· rclH 631·9977. 542 '43Z Preeeal.imald. 541·2"106 MU991),M51390 :u;:r~·~n raLc11. ~ QDWmWallpaperin ~•Pl' CruUoru Ex I.it .. baull;J movtna ._......., AllWorkCuar f'tee ~l pert !itlapift3, thin.mg. .. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ..,. .otc• · ~. p rurnoval. 67s-a21 <l r•1e·Ya deamoa . MJyako HouHclunln& Prof :-.ervlce with AUaa .,,.,.......,. u- lteu r•lt'll. 6'2~ a>ats. P&rtiH If houaea. van Lm~ e0tsi. no more! ........ , • .,... Hmm C-"~ Decorating s~ctal (wk· Free est for locals ..... -............... .. ..., ty aervi~>. Mon l"rl. lC t ar t d i t ••••••••••••••••••••••• yrs exp '1·l1>AM. 615~ • ora1e. onll I! . ~~tchel It textures U>WCOSTTOYOU. moves · St ate L I c ... IST 193-14)9 Sunple wleu can make l~1piR1 TIUOlS. 537-3160 ----·-----1---------you r bom• beau t. ....................... PATCll PLASTEJUNG Wllldowctea•1 c m.flll03 L M S -Roto.. Sod or , .... IR;/ft•"-9 A I t t Y Pe s f" r e e -.. ................. ,.. ------Se e d e d L » w n ~ • .......... ............. fllbrnat.es. C.ll ~a2S 's Wlndow care Pref ~~!:........ Sprink~~crs·,.!l~l'J.tinE~· E~&rpr·~if~~~Pes ~ r~~~~~~~ ~ Cootr. .... . ........ 13, • ••••••••••••••••••••••• -· "'"'''" -·-· AMWA V Cosmtllcs. cellent Rels.675-763.1 !':,~«>Ell. Call Gen t P"' .... V'S PLUMBING I....;====-----== Nutrition. lfo115~warn. ......,... c.n.n lb~ Care & Comm'I. European Landscaper Complete plumbin& M2·1436 Top work. Fair price. Painting. Extr/lntr. E x· services. Ora~ & sewer Malnl. Rds. 646·4871 pr'd, honest. neat. reas c I ea n i n g . f r ee dyaleves. u c'd 964-100 Dave ~tes. a. hr k tvice ForClus1f1t'd Ad ~CTlON Catt ._ und Found l'Ulumoi. mt1rt' llt·11i•lr al fl)WN u .• rg111n r.hopper .. tc•Jd lruh. trt·~ tnm Hon 'lb.tt'' wh,•n • 1.1'--'0Vlt' IUl.lk C"Olll ~la••fl.-d 1i. th~ lht.> ldtk .adll Ln (,"l..l. tltMI t...&i510G. ~ 32'..M WMl a REALLY CLEAN '*~ lt1t.•y '~ found a1 *.Y w ito' Call Now ' n-.:uJarb' And th~)' h11d HOOSE" CaU Gingham 673-3181 Die-It Landscape. Reas. ProC pamUng. Ext & mt prices. Prol. landscape & Law rates. Refs. F'ref F\nd what you wanl in De.lb' Pilot AD-VlSOR MZ-S678 uem uholu.. ~ -.lull l.hey 'no look1n1 fut Want Adi Cltll 642 ~8 Gl1i l>'l'ee est. 645-5123 sprinklers. 646-7010 est. S3M780. 536-4383 na.&y Pilot Classifieds. - HelpW•hcl 1100 .... W..t.d 7100 HlfpWont.d 7100 HltpW.W 7100 Hetp W..ttd 11 00 HltpWmlhcl 7100 Hefp W.t.ct 7100 ...••.....• , .............................................................................................................................. ·········•···•··•······ ~W.ttct 1100 HelpW__, 7100 .............................................. -------· AlfNMOTlVE &o.luna tl.EHKS CMIARO " •&.OTPBSOMS! EXPEl184CED 1.5 people n~ed Ml & DRIYIRS Security Pa.trot . full Rmuturant * Che" dc!ak•r olh~rs tuJI TB.I B S Ptr l.bru Jan 13 at a Men or women 2S yrs or time, security back· tune. JM!rmanenl PG•• ----local L'Ullese book11Lore older. Know the coast iJ"O',Rld. 14. hr. Cootact * • PERRY'S PIZZA Now blrin• for part·tlme PIT-3 toll ahift. Xlnt opeainp. varyiJ1i~& LYM <X'OUNTI NO TEMPORARY ACCOUNTING POSITIONS Degree ~ PPears ex· pertl'n<'l" in gener al ledger 1tnalys1s, audit 1nji?. f1nanc1al slate nlents. selling up syslcm ('(15l and 1or budgeting. F /C BOOKKEEPERS IJOC\.\ lO aas1Jl N~w & So.ittt Coest Some ()( lliese pos1t1on.s citJes. Net SlBO a week or manager 494-8S71 .9· ll U5ed Cur M11nJttt!Ni 1n ....., .... la,. ~1u become permanent. more. Orange Coast am or l-4pm Mon-Fri. vaned. tnleresuna ta&k:o An todepeodenl Bank N o e x p e r 1 e n c e Yellow Cab. 17300 Mt. St>llll retired aulo mech IM9SunllowerC M necessary S3 00 hr 10 Herrmann, Fo untain GUARDS 1• benef. HoOday pay im· hrs. ideal supplemental med. Bayview COnva les· 1 o come. w-ll l wo r k cent. 2055 Thurio C.M. arOUDd schl schedule. ~ould bke Uu.6 ' OJ>p for 540-5300 :.lart. Call 833·6227 or Valley. <No of Slater advam·cmt nl, 11 d1.·:.1red 833-6228 beiween 12·5, belwn Ne w h ope & FUii & p/time. AU ureas. -"::&_.,.,._ Uniforms furnis hed Happy Holidays See Pierce llOWARD BOOKKEEPER Wro-Fr1. Keep trying ir t.'uctid ) ~et. Dove & Quail U t.ecy work L1ve·in busy. we nee d you. --------- Aaes 21 or over. Retired lrvme Personnel Agency St&.. Newport Beach C M urea S45-8a rur in I:: O.E. ----tervlew appl__ __ ------ Babysitter.El Toro area. ---Clerk-typlSt, part or full Mature woman. starting BUS BOYS-full·time. ex time, fmazmal business Jan 2nd. wk. days 7 am tc per'<!, apply in pel"6on deslres mature. cheerful 4:30 Care for infant. ~ Beach House (no. woman with good skills Rel req. 768·7~6 619 Sleepy Hollow Ln. for gen. office duties ; Lai\Ula Beach. Newport Beach. 752-8123 Bankul_A . --TB.LERF/T Branch ofc seeks bonda· ble Ftr Teller. Conl.\ct Ravenna Cash, or Rolhe Brous ard at f7 14 1 644-72.55. WFNrERN F EDERAL SAVINGS Z144 E. Coast llwy Corona del M 1tr Oerical ------Afternoon. ••MAIL CLERk * * Top co w/benut new ores needs pers w/lt typing & outgoing persona It ty. Very fn endly C'o-workers & xlnt benefits. Call S40-ro55. Coastal Person· nel Agency, 2790 Harbor. CM AIL JOBS FREE Compan1on/Hskpr Live in fem, sal. pvt rm/ba 1V. CdM, Ref. 644·9666, ~ ------· COOK. exper. tor rest home Mu st work weekend$. Prefer lady 6'$6-6716. welcome. No exi>:eneoce 488 E 17th. Cost.a Mesa nee. Apply Universal Su1te23il 642·1470 Proc.ectlon Serv1ce, 1226 ------W. 5tb Street. Santa Ana. ~ .... .n.-.---.-----DRIVER WANTED lnterviews hours 9·12 & HY PUMCH 1-4 Moo thru F'ri. OPaA TOA SUNDAY ONLY ---------1 Several openings exist To d elive r D AIL Y GUARDS Pum bundles to car· SECURITY ners m Newport Beach area. ~uires van or Due to our-tffent ex· large station wagon & a · :f w lls good driving record . ~ P ram, e · Call: Fargo Gu Services IS 64~4321 ~ng sttunly gua rds Ask fOf' lmne/ M.wport tch for uper'd operators. Uni vac 1900 expe r helpful. but will t rain. Swing shift s100 shift d1f· ferential. Salary will de· pend on your background & exper. and is com plement.ed by many fme benefits & our ideal N.8 location. For appt. phone Doft W._ or s.to A-./~"' Hcny 5..-y F•rto.v''-" rt. Lynn Stansfield SCZ.3505. ms be 18 & over Apply Clfice MaMger-SaJes 18 penon Mon-Fri. 2PM Good . f ad lolPM. opport~ly or · 2lCJtlf• W. Ocnfront. N. B v~. Will train/no 613-1366 expenence o~essary . M11St be 2S yrs old or ReR.aurant older & be avail. on s..dt._.AHu~ab Satur<lays. 557·0824 or Tatt food orders. a11fat 774·6090. 1525 Mesa in preparatJon o( food & Verde,_, CoUa Mesa. operate cHh register f\lU & Plll't timo pos1· ()pt.ometnc Asst/ Recep. tions available . .\pply m Typing. Non smoker per9M. se:so per mo. 830-9108 The Antique G w Id CowJter Help Part lime. d e pendable . C a pt. ~·s Fish Fry. 642·2875 1801 E. Dyer Road. Santa Ana Restaurant Dick ct.rct.•, PART TIME .... _ _. COOKS EVENINGS WA1TR&S.5E.S Adults wllh outstanding. BUSBOYS $6 Hour & U e.o.E. M IF s I Vurs exper1e ne l' Ba~g a.ERICAL Earn extra money! Equal OpportHlty Costa MflCI & tt.. 1714175&-1853 COOICS ~pr WWtffet-Ar'eo AVCO Expanding res laurant FIR•cial Servic•' cham W1lh over SO un1ts. Elderty man needs PT 620 Newport Cent.er Dr aUract1ve personalities DISHWA.SHERS , who enjoy working with Mlnorooexper nec. f ull lods. St.art at SJ.SO per & pa rt·t1 m e 2698 hour. Phone 642-4321 Ext N e w P o r t 2.50, BETWEEN 4:00.5:00 _Blvd. C.M. will> multi-books throu1th Sannago Bank 1s opening general ledier . trial a new olf1~. Xlnt caret-r balance. financial state oppo~unat1es for bank nwnls & JOUmal enlnl:!s. expenen~ personnel al our Tuslm & Newport Beach offices. Currently knternewing for ASST BOOK · KEEPERS TBJ.ERS ~e ~~~~p~I ~~ Must have p leasant persooality, be outgoing & be people oriented. F\ill bme & part time positions available. through general ledger, MOTE TB.LERS also Ar P, Al R & payroll Be ready for challenge of ACCTG CLERKS wtde variety of note func-tions. $4 25 H &I MEW ACCOUNTS . our COUMSB.OlltS Good communication & selling skills essential. 2 Vea.rs ex'!l!ence A/P, A R or payroll. 10 key b touch. CaQ Today For .. .,,,. ....... 547-7631 ACCOUNTANT OVERLOAD I 055 M Main S..,.... Suite 1016 Sena Ana We are not a pubti,. accountmg firm * * CENTRAL SERVICES Trainee position to start your banlung career. Santiago Bank ocrers an outstanding benefit s package & opportwiity for advancement with a progressive organlza- tx>o. Apply at. SANTIAGO BANK Norma Ferguson S3S E 1st St .. Tu.sun 714.832·5200 7141832-5200 MIFIH E .O.E. Need sharp, personable tellers. Savings & Loan experience preferable. ________ _. Fu ll-ti m e position s a vailable. Please call 152·2ro0. AMIDI Hospital G r oomer . bath e r . cleaner F1 T ancl. Sat/Sun 644·5463 A/P TRAIMEE 4().!JO wpm + 10 key by touch. We offer excep· t1onal benefits & a pleasant working at· mospbere amidst the scenic surroundings of Newport Beach. For a p· pobttment call Lynn St.ans held (TI4 ) 159·7853 AVCO Fiftmtcial S ft'YICH 620 Newport Cenler Or Newport Beach Equal Oppty Employer ASSEMILEttS ~ISIOH/MECH ~ilions avail w/fast growing Newport Bearh oo .. involved in assembly of compass & camera un- its Appbcanls should ex· per working w /s mall parts, good mech apt ., & ~ . BenefilJI include 2 weeks vac.. l week sick leave, & prolit shanng to na m e a f e w Call 5157-9051, ask for Ray Gillman. l!l~!.~~ !'tr a 30 day ad ln \be IRVINE SAVINGS&LOAN EOE M/F BRENTWOOD SAVINGS & LOAM I;mt San Vincente Blvd Lois Angeles, CA 90049 F..ciuaJ Opportunity EmployeJ' MIF 18 Your ProfCl'liuon HOME REPAIRS? Old 10U know you can place • clua1f1ed ad 1n 1.1.e Daily Pilot Service Directory for a whole TYPISTS PIX ACCT CLERKS KEYPUNCH OPER CLERKS Must have phone & reha ble transp. Long & short term assignments. Hoh day & vacation pay Hosp1tal11.at1on plan available VOLT T~ MPCJJ:IARY SEA'lt/'-.:AIW 3841 C-.us Ori•e 546-474 1 (Across Ftnm Orange Co. A1rport1 Equal Opport Employer DAILY PILOT SBYICI DlllCTOIY DO IT NOW I '4Z..H71 monlb for .. little •• ---------Sl.77 per day? For more Haft aomethlng you want information, call co .ell? Cla.salfiro ads do 64U618 It ~ll. 642,'678. 1''amily-0wned org11mza care. Days, eves or 24 hr. I M M E D I A T E NB 92660 t1on offers pleas ant 496-42261493-:!0:s. OPEMIMGS fo r EqualopptyEmployer work1n~ C'on d1t1ons _________ 1 Hper•h ory ••••I Good opportunities for Electronics ..arfty offk..-s who ~1-~~~~;{leC'05~~aJ:::a PM. !--...... _.._ .. ._ .......... Equal ()pportuntty Employ~r Restaurant advancement. Excl'llent WGwt TOP PAY with 0 n..... '-'Ahool . ., ..... ~/\LA company benefits Ex filCJRONICS .-.""""' -........, BOB'S perieoced desued. Apply 111ped:tdco ... ..y. L1ve·in. Nurse Aides. make S35 per day. Work 2·5 da ys per week in beautiful be ac h are?. homes. Previous exper Ji rers necessary. Call 'or appl .. Upjobo He;.lth Care Services. E.0 .E 752.oo82 HOMiOF1HE llGIOY Ul ~ TECHNICIAN Apply in person Monday to FTiday. BAM to .5PM at: P~JE-UP lmmed openings in our 3333 W C°'°'t Hwy M.wpori S.och COOK FOR DELI S4hour + 5491422 Immediate openings and opportunities 1n an established com pany in th e Orange County ai.rl>ort area. Applicants to troubleshoot. repair. and lest electron ic systems. Rtteot analog and d1g1tal expenence preferTed. Call 557-0479, ask foe Busch. WB.LSFARGO GUARD SEllVICES 1532 W. Ca:uwww..-... PERSON ramlly rest aura nt a t nearby locations. We re· with at te.lst 1 year ex· q1.1 re no previous exper. peraeoce, preferably JoUi our friendly team. newspaper . ExC'ellenl Co me se~ us t od ci y company benefits. Apply bet.ween 2-4pm. between 9A M & 6Plf, Waiters, Waitresses Mooday Lhru Friday. Cook Trainees & Cashiers OIAMGECOAST 9M2Ada msSt.,H.8 . 23952 A venlda de •a Cook. grtll only, days. --------- fttlee toA. CA Monday, Tuesday, Wed- nesday, Thursday, lOAM to 4PM. CLOSED Friday at· 230 W. W-.ef' IM.217 SantaA-. Co State Lie No C ·6036 F.quaJ Opp Emplyr MI F' LOBBY GIRL needed immediately. rull lime. Cleanup girl for hotel. Apply m person. lmne H06t Hotel. l717 E Oyer. Rd .. S.A. DAILY PILOT Carlotta. La~una Hilb 64.2·5682 4:i01 Campus Dr .. lrvme Good wa1tes for person wlcash regis ter exper. Prt>rer mature female 536-8866. COUNTERMAN Auto parts MID. 3 yrs job or exper. Mw.t be well groomed & peT~onable Phone 545-8408 for in· terview appt FILE CLERK -INSURANCE Beginners spot for right person, pleasant worklllg coods. oppt,y fOf' trajniog & advancement. 371-2 hr ---------wk. $500 mo. to start. Handyman1q1rdener . Call 549-4700 ask for An· Matlll!, reliable. tenrus ,.,_,_EOE club, ttB. Moo-Fri i -4. w~ ' . . S650 mo. SJS.8832 MACHINIST ~~ ~~~t. l!M E. l7th St., C.M. Auto parts mach ine EqualOpportunily CookT""'-es & shop, exper desired. Will Employer CGIWen C'OOSider a sharp trainee. 73ll FAin&er Ave , H.8 Phone 545-3408 for ID· PBX terviewappt Answe ri ng service Equal<>PPOr Emplyr Mai<b wanted, top wages :r= Cull & PIT. Call _____ M11_FF ___ _ paid. The Inn at Laguna. IM SUPlltVISOR 2UN. Cst Hwy, Laguna PIX OPHATOR 11·7, full or part-lime. MAIHTIHAMCE Ptr. morrungs. Mon-Fri, Mesa Verde Convales FOlltEMAM Npt Britg ofc For appl cent Hosp 661 Cenl.er St Florist driver trainee . - Counter Helper. Mo11 ·Fri. tmmed opening . Call ---------P·t1me. Call 2:00·5.30. btwol0&12.67J.8270. HIM! ~145 Hom1kHttMIJ Porter GasSt.atioos 7 30 to 4, Monday thru P riva te comm unity call John Shamburg. C.M_. _____ _ Knowled ge 10 pumps. 1-640-_l_460_. ------ electrical, road repair. Deltvery Expenenced service sta· Friday. Unioo benefits. Be a Moonff«Jh~ Uon help, 3rd shin, run Call for appt. 645·5000, sewer systems. pools . Pf l'7 I LOV E PEOPLE'.' Ha ve aome sales or medical background? De mons tra t e face & bod.)' massager m pre· sbge dept. st.ores. Com· m ission p o t enti a l S2000+by Chris t mas. Start immediately <.:all O.wn, 2131381·3906. Earn money while others llme. Apply 990 E. PCH. extension 520 sleep L A. Times has NB. ---------1 aµtomot1ve & general LLft openiogs for earners on early morning routes. 21,!i to 3 hrs d'-ilY. Earn- mgs $350-$400 monlhly . Call for det.ails 546·4481 or 919-2198 OEUVERYGlRL For auto parts busmess. must be over LB w ~ood dnvin~ record & ltVl' in Cost.a Me:m area Phone ~S-8408 for interview appt. U you want your advert•s· Ins mclllll\ilc LO r<'ach more people at lower co-t. Cluslfled 11 tbe way to &9 ' Call Now! 64Z·Sf78 ________ ,Hotel GENERAL u:!'~;!~ef LABORERS AIRPORT INN HOTEL. contact Mr Hannon. TRAINEE H=per FT & PT. ll'SEMBLERS good benefits EOE IW Bayview Convales<'eol PACKERS Hosp. 20S5 Tburin St. C. M. 642-3.'iQS Musl h ave r ell a ble ---------1 tramp. & phone. Long & Housekeeper /Babysitter short term assignmeolS. 2 school age child ren. Holiday & vacation pay. Own trans. Mon, Tues, Hosp1t a hulion plao Thurs afternoon. Begm av81lable. _J_an._962_-&M0 ______ 1 VOLT f£"-4'"'t»IAll\o •.t ''· '' l •., 3848C....,U.Drt .. 54M741 <Across From OranjeCo. Airport) Equal Opport Employer •HOUSEKEEPER* Live l o , r eliable. Newport area. $400 mo. 640-1751 HOUSEMEN f)all & part-Ume open· l.ngs. Apply io person. lrvlneffoetffotel. 17t7 E. D)'er Rd., S.A. matnt. Xlnt starting Help Wanted. Call today, salary. Conlact manager 5411.7863 49il-85'719-11 am or l-4 pm --------- Mon·Fri. ......Sce.oaa Mamteoance position . T~1tle .. d Dana Pt Harbor. ex· Immediately, PIT, 9-l. perieoce preferred. $3.50 Banbury Cr oss Pre · b r start + fringe School. Marilyn. 84'1·5284 benefits. Apply 24701 or84.2·2948. HBarea. Oana Or. REAL ESTATE LOAN MANAGER OFFICER-2nd Tr ust Ret I r ed c oup I e to Deed Co. requires highly manage 75 urut mobtle motivated person to home park. Maint.enaocc solicit & arrange loans. & office exper. req'd Oppty to &row & prosper Livin g quart e rs & according to ability +a salary. Send resume to lll)que chance to learn SPMC. 393 Hamilton. allrac:«sof tbebuslness . C·2. Cost.a Mesa 926267. Reports directly to the -----SALESMAN·YACHTS Ko oa Ma r i n e . Lido Villa~. 714/675-1403 SALES TRAINEE DAILY PILOT Vke· Pres. Fashion Isl M E 0-l-C AL · Com · loc. Loan exp + R.E . lie p&S41ooa te. alert. exp. req'd. Compensatio n This highly successful rmture peraoo. Front of flexible. REPUBLIC local ~paper has an f I c e r 0 r 8 u s v HOME LOAN, 759-1183. operung in the Ctrcula-~ogist. Top salary lion department. Job In· to the right person. Call --------•I ctudessales.servlce1 col· 642-1437 REAL~ATESAL~ lectlons and supervasion Ucensed or we will train of teenage carrie rs. GIRL FRIDAY : ME DICAL Receptionist . you tor at ate exa m . Selected applicant will exper.only .Call 636·988l Limited offer. C a l l receive allberal starting Hskpr for large family In betweeo9& 11 :30 A.M. ca &Co 494..&057 salary a nd re1ularly beautiful NB home. Pvt MEDICAL Ass't ., back of· usey · · scheduled raises. boo us Varied ofc work w/small mfr. of Math teaching machines. 4!n-3600. rm. batb. clr TV. $350 fice with X-ray permit. opportunities and many mo.644-1968. Call 6J6.9850 Recept.ioniat wanted for fMae benefits such as Michae l G arrlsop ·s pakf vacations, medical, HSKPR fo r evenings M d I l Sh H . l S I dental a nd IHe in· G-R·E-A·T 1\&stin retirement home. o es, e m . arp . air c u t an1 • on. sura~e. Position a lso SALIS JOI NOW Call838-3847. ~~~l:. hr. _642-647 __ o_. -----provides successful ap. ,,___. INSURANCE MOYIE Ff•u -------•I plicant with late model 0000 ~Y, GO 0 0 Typiat40-4.5 WPM. major """' R. E. Sales "Uc. Only" car or vao with personal HOURS, GOOD CON· selC-ins u r a n ce a.d · SlltCSIXTaAS THl.,_I.,._ meprivileges. 0 I T I ON S . M A N y ministrator. New office EicceptioclaJ career OPP· ()ts Ac..- F RINGE BE NE FITS in lrv. Roo_m for growth lY ror those wlshlng to .. llALISTAm Applicant must be l8and FAST GROWING COM· for a mbtt101&S p erson. break lnto the movie Frfft.nlninl have good d riving re· PANY PR OMOTES $525 mo. slart. FT. C~ll business. S'20·S200 per lfrnquUfy. cord. FROM WITHIN. TRAIN 5'M700 ask for Andrea d ay + r es id u o I ,. ... t I ... tt I 0660 F o R T o p _E_._o_.E. ______ pouibl lltles. (714 > •• ~ ___ .. __ • __ •!Houri •rt 1pproxim ate· 7 6 1 . 1 24 4 . VI D E 0 lY 11 AM to 9 PM d aily. '{tftfsE ~.~r:.~ lmurance CASTING SERVICE W~opllonalbut1tt M E D 1 ATE Ly ,. Costa Mesa Agency nowlnout3rdyear. lt.LSALIS OYeftlmera&es. K E y B O A R 0· oeeda experienced gal. ----------Start the year rig ht . Du&.6411 tnclode all phases MURSBYMAM Sdeet PrQPertles ofrert; It you are quaUfled a nd EX PE R I E NC E of property ·casualty f\all tJme. mature male. top proareasive com · ln lereate d call t h e HELPFUL. WE HAVE opwatioM. l~al work· t1Ver 21. e days includes a"'81on 1ebeduJe, an out• CIJ'Culatbl Department OUR OWN TRAINING lna conditions. Top par Sat & sun. Worttlna with standing tr •lnlnc pro-and llllk for the Dlljtrlct PROORAM PUTON BV for qualified 1.ncllvldua plants .• t ret!I A d•· t ram with Tomm y Sales Ma naao r '• IO· b'~ o~wr~v~sL T~~ 64U.Waor54&-~. · uvc~. ius •up. Exper JfopkiN P'~t Start. pro-ttn'lew. PEOPLE . CALL AT pref d. L.11uno Hiiis ~of~~ ::!t OltAHGICOAST 0 N C E F 0 R NW'llCI')' Inc. El Toro. .Wf ln town. It'• your DAILY PILOT INTERVIEW. ORGAN 'n>pll~)'OUTmC'llsace ~. haure.C&llTSl·lltl D>W BeySt E XC HANGE. STA N befo~t.he f d d ,.._.:.... . NUNN 714/"-......... U Yo ur rlen 9 ~n .SELECT ~~':._.1 -·-reading pub c, acdlbbon use Claa11nect . -u YoU're lootlil& for a btt· 0J~tot w h en th • Y h • v e PROPERTIES An !Qual Opportunity terjob. you won't want lo .r eomethint to Mil. They'll ~mploJW mJ11 th• cmple>ym enl Cl.usillecl.842-~71 tell you bow well It columN ln ClUllfied. worlted fOC' them! Wlnl Ad Help! IOMTI .. t t .. t Oraod Oanll• 32'.' '68. ~ toad . NB owner 11•tt1nj l11tji•r bo11t 87~J2M2, fWdy. ~rYIC~ Al'lo.l THEODORE ROBINS fORD JUC.U ttAlllOll ltlVU lu\IA Ml\A (>4J 0010 Mult aell "Ill fo'ord Ven LU.YJtn l200 hike over l*Yffirnt.11 iGli :n 115 '74 Ford r~t.om 100 vain AM/PM UN , At (', nuw p • I n t. I o o d t· o n d ~tb1l ofr Woll4rr TIC).-2922 wkdyi. 8 5 ·n Ford, ••nk, tt•el>ox. \OY.:, AMI Jo'M H trk, PS, PB. S2400 PP 673 7'160 IMW '712 Mtot, ...,orted ......_, UN4 UM4 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• i3rHaM':.~;.n;.w,u;e:." ~ ..... ., .... !!.~~~~!~! .......... !!.I.~ ~~~f.'!' ........... !!.~~ &t-nrlce M4 l~ ·• Tl.1'• 112 rebll ent1 '71 ~l Dorado rellrtd •.i eo-icar XR7, reblll . . . CREVIER a11oya s..-d muatMU' G M t.:ucuUvt1 Own•r 1ood cood. aut•l ael MliOC> •2~' driven ooJy Pnmei cood fllS7 Ml •v• l~CTllD '70COUOAJlXRT- ltiiiiM 9711 Blacl &m Seville Mdan. v:r, Clftn S~/060 & I ,, • ••GADWAY ···;;;;;·.;~~·~;.;~···· lellJwr. all eJCtra• 8500 Cal AM, 114 .-- SAMIA ANA 1rtual m1lea t'erf ct 8353 171 -UCAR cond 112.750 Cal l '-41 ,,40 IKl l/UlljlAlllllllVIHO .. l'Cl+lltt OPTHIYIA.I" ~:~3· ••k ror Mr .••••••••••••••••••••••• •USID IMW1• Uood inventory in •t.ock. •• I · u Ha v a r1 • s / R llWT)' whlll-IJM;y lul' CAO '84 Runt , needs ' PLl-f l l. c5'1'TIJJP> Mtl.ACLI work.~ ONG '74 ~11!;/R (14-0L(JP) MAZDA/llMAULT 6t6-220I___ . D '7~20CJ2 Aut.o. 11r (~I :t~ H.aroor Blvd. '74 tl 1Jot11dt1. Xlnt cond ''16:nr.llil lt (43?NYlr.I (.l()STA MESA l..ollth:d Movlna Mu111 "71~. 41PSI R <0l791 64 .. 5700 Sell' 11 146·~340 W '77 830cil 4 ap <TH~ I ail321 '78e.:i.:k'll 8/ll 100461 - <!._loMd SttlMNyt __ ~~ ....... !?.~~ ~:~ ........ !!!.~ t7ZO #l DEALER IN U.S.A ••••••••••••••••••••••• l .................. a..,..,, .... , .............. c...... , ..... •DATSUMS• •--s.e.ctt. °'~Models MJ.ES U !ASI NG ROY CARVEi ROU.S·ROYCl '""°'·"'-·· Nerwll0'1 ... ,., l'-----' ........ YL\REMD CLEARANCE '64 Ga1'1111e 500XL, lllnt All '78 O.:moc muat go lnllli6, no accld~ats, nu this mo nth' Su u• It.I bltd rMdlat. 5450/besl TODAY • dfer 4146-'759 or 64&-9780 f'AR'l'S SF.RV1Ci': COSTA ME4>A DATSUN 2*5 ltAIUiOR Kl.VO 54~6410 540-0213 __il9st0 SUNDAYS 59 SlJ vt!r Cloud I Toyote • S19.000 9&4H4 97'5 ········~·············· COMHEll C HEVROLET .,... "'11 ,, '• I I{ . d • I "'I \ .. H . \ 546-1200 9950 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ORANGE COUNTY'S MIWIST UNCOl.N M~RCUR Y Deale1"8h1p 111 now OPl'~N ""~~-RAY FLADllOE "II Jo'ord &t.nd ~rims. :l02 llD.i. aood cond Mu•t lM' ' 1m1y wt0ybr1d¥t!, & ~ S2000 Cull Mil 3279 •--....._ llfOUYOU SB.I. YOUR TOYOTA. Aut.omauc. pw ln&. factory •1 cond . tintlid &Ian, Wl!W lret., wheel cover• 4< t, W nvlei. l.u:. SSTHLU St Pa642. UN OLN MJo:Jt<;UHY 16 l8 Aut.o Ct·nW1 Or SD.,'wy L.ilku l''orest ex 1t IRV!Nfo: 11~7000 ~...-rv1<'e St1111on Atl~n d.a11t, ~xper d ()ay & ...... -. Jo\111 & 1>/ll11lc Ap JAY. Sti.•11 !>lulJon 17th & lrvuw NO "tt'nltr t' ~tar ion liAttGAJNS-Used refnl(&. tJ1r S880C> 6713298 WllALl!:lt 11' WllJloul muwr 6481)16il day• 25' Owens C11b10 Cr•r Many e:atrai.. ltblt ~nit In 11llp to D11nu Very rleAUI, prlcl'd btllow mkt &5493 IT' nu.tun Whaler, 70hp d\i. lo Ian, b111l titok. trlr. r.cho. 6"·7409 ---- T1 •IP artatbt ••••••••••••••••••••••• 9110 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 9590 ••••••••••••••••••••••• WIWIUIUY YOUR DATSUN PAIU YOH ore NO'f TOftOOLLAR FOii TOP CAiS WE BUY CLEAHCARS &TRUCKS · COHHRL • CHHIOUT · ~ llarhor Hh •I 1·ci:-.1 A M ... SA ttJIUllv prof~""''11111I , "" • .. Ut'flt p11y buy out pl11n ufl crrwt ll7 3 3320 Wl:Jln.. dryn;, guar, ~st buy1, we ~rv appl &i>t Appl 536-0911. ~-4330 Glasu collert1on PP By appt 839 7207 FANCY l''LY I NG l>lSCOUNT RATl':S Ideal crOllS l'ountry nu r new 4 place; Cardinal; 1 1'' R. S24 hr wet & up ____ _ S46.l 200 Or Cty Airport. At'C WE PAV TOP OOLLAH ~orS492203 FOR TOP USED 'AJlS SBIVIC E CASHIO Used Corning cook top Royal & Ol:;-p1a-: self & PIX Of'BATOR ~!~~!... + pus USO ~ ...... ......... l'Orrecling e lectri c C~ra. S./ ~ 1mm~h.attlly for typewnten, hktt ne w. lt.eM 9120 fullt1mt>work f 'ullt·om R e fn l(eralor $1 25 cost $6SO ea, will liike ••••••••••••••••••••••• IMh) bom~f1ti. & xln't p11y RA!lngeriit.or $100 Stove $275 e11 714/847-9360 Otder camrsr 4.1181 I progritm CMll M .. rj(ot $75 ~0,673 3592. --k $ S 'w 0 PamlA!rul -----Closet doors IJ4 "x30" true · SO. love & BOBWITIIAM VW 17 cut ft. dbl door r cfnl(. each, eggshell w/IJ&ckb refng 640 2700 __ _ 7600Wea.tm1llbl1tl fnll!llrt>e, hitrvt"l!l gold, IZpr 960·5006 8' C abo vl!r Ma r qull! W..stm1~11ler ~oew S22:> ~71.39 Garde n tooli . i n t i c:amperfuJlytiel/COnt'd, ICIJ 'l:i..')lft)!jg 7H80 APf SIZE RANGE, GAS, Crattsmun 3 whl lawn Incl& J11cks. & lie dn Sl'r\ Sl.l llelp f\l'.-dl'<l '"' nwd l'\111 or '''' Ap111y t<ANGE. SELJo' CLEAN mower + ho64:, rukei.. a.traps & bounce aways OVl!:N. ~ 559-7~ e«: & more.$& 644 6590 ~ QUI ~ 7101 Ask for Tom. ':I.Al 1-: t;a.1 llw), NU WANTED Pr~r. ROSI IOWL •ShNt Metall n-.,. dM!til lype preferred nctr.N for Hie&« 77-U Motorfud...... 9140 ""P"9" 547 3182 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •·ow~ brakll. punl'h P'• Sears Rerr111 Yreeier. 'l'U .. MO PEDDLER !>.l>. :.fJOI weld. ell!> l>'td If t G Id T I '""' but will tr1in lnfr1m't1 x1n1. cond Mu st sdl S4:> arvea 0 w n New PEUGEOT MO· J)ynam1Ct. llWJ W 17th lceaw)l.er. G~. 2 yn. old, beds Skt Boool. LadietB, PEDS Reg $4~. Now Sl C'M ~ 224!> & M.S 7673 evea IIWiC ~2 •fl 4 S2S8_63_1_·3830 _____ _ -------•I lkydet 4 ltotebowt T1d&eh im Peuaeot Moped. xlnt ••••••••••••••••••~?~~ <To1ether ) 67~ 3S87 or coodlUon. ~ SUPPLIES CLERK Con-K+IOMll FocilffH m.8297 968-1.29S HMJcl1&h Uraod Sport. J yr ------old l(),1pd Sl95 Tum al U11ed Carpel, pad In Motarcydn/ 67~~ duded. t;ood cond1llon. Scoohn 91 SO 0...,. 1040 ~.t n)'toa, 85 sq yrd$, ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• S200sqyd Evea~ '75 llu1quevarna 175 ss..> SJ.145 per month RDlaung bh1fu1. 5';4 nlJChl NT WOl.LD a.hlft d 1ff1•rc-n t1 .. 1 Sostnn1. Ch1huahu116 , Sup.:rv1i.e J1tll 1t1mUlt.'1> in 01d1.el'$, York11::s, Shih· ordt.>rint{ und :.Im 11~l' Tz u . p o m 8 • M 1 n :.u1>Phl':; 1111<2 u1>cru1rn.i Sctvuuu.ers Pups & &tud •'OITIIJll"H'llll i.11.t' luurulry bt!rYU'l' 714/!>:Jl !>O'l7 •·qu1pm<'nl A1111l y 1111 ---------• n.'<ila~ly No n•!'lumt.'~ l)toi#dllne Jan ~. 1\1'/!J COUNTTOF ORANGE Pf:RSOHNB. DEPT fi2:I N Ito.& St ltm G IHO ~la Anu, <.:A !1Z701 1714) g34 2M4 U)U.Jlo: l'Ui>S ~KC 8 wkb Perft.>ct murkings. 11\.lfJer ru~ Pcd111reed IJ.t !>hot USO ~ 7S91 r.w11.. 8050 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Role Bowl ticket &ood Mot.ocroiS Set up for en _lieJll~. 50t.4790 ' =~5·7085, m ech DepC St.ore f'lJChJrei $.50 , . -each. AJso wrought Iron 78 YZ 80 E with DG an room dlVlder JO'x7' 5150 ternwd1ale kit & Lult &'75·1622 shod< & ltes $700 or best Vaucan Commemora11vc stamp sets Also Urt.>t!k stamps 646--0818 Wantt.obuy UieC1 Dome Cumber 831 3878. Mouloo lamb Jacket S11•· 14 ~ 6'6--0818 Misal••CMll Olli Sum S48 8UJ '73 Ossa 250c c. dtrt only, s:t95 MV ar1:11 830 4727 X.Jl 75, Boge shock!., RNS GD. new knobby·S250 :)4() 1080 '72 Honda l50, 100 m1 , uke new 5000. 840~ .t'OREIGN. DQM 1':ST1C or CLASSICS If your car ll> tixtra elt'an :.~usf1rst IAUER IUICK 2925 Haroor Blvd Costa Mt:Sa 979 2500 WE BUY USED CARS CALL PAl'J>Y Used Cu r MKr 540-5630 IOll~SO~ & so~ • LINCOLN· MERCURY 2626 HARBOR BLVD COSTA MESA ---- WEIUY USB>CARS! We're the new Chevrolet dealenitup u1 the Irvine Auto Cent.er Wt· nPl'd your used l'ar ' JOE MACPHERSON CHEVROLET 21 AuU>Center Unv1~ lltVIN1'! 768-7222 WANT---.... - I •H HsiMlr 11•4. c ......... . "'-44'·'10J or S40·t4'7 An AH1rmal1 ve A111on 1-:mµloyer MlJ~T bt:LL·t•nd tbls, Imp•. recl1nt:r 11, bt11Jkt·B1te1>. et c Olsen Model H om 1: 1-'u rn ~:.m W.ted IOI I Mtos. liftpor+M ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~/HO/lffes,S"'-1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 11'.ACJll-;H l'vl !>lhl tn t ' M nt~li. P r J t•arht>r 1-'lb' illl b4{) 1444 M~T SACRIFICE·Twin or full miit & box spnnl(s $28 Century Mod1:I llUll'\t! fi\lm S49 3077 SOPA& LOV~t:AT Sl78 Ct-ntury Model ·r I'. Al' I• 1-. H !'l ~ u h Home •um :>49-3077 ~tttult' K1ndl'rl(.trt1·11 -thrOUflh Hlh J(Tlldt• ('on Ihde a beds $179 \)h1t:n l4rt Wl'6tin1ru;t1:1 SdlOol ~~ H ome I' urn Ul i.tf ll'l , 141 21 <.:l'd 11 r wood Av tit .~ az RB mall/box Wei.raunst.er IN4 7311 t:lll 11pm .i11 S89, Kang $99. 212 I': o Jo; Century Model Home fUm :>49·3077 felephone 0Pt'r11LOr for ---------• **I BUY•• 11n:a wt:r1ni1 l!1:1 vit'e 1''11Jme. ir11vt.>y1mi l!h1f1 .QJi Fore11t Ave, w1eun;, Ueach TB.ErHONI SOUCITOIS Good used l<'urnlture & Appliances -OR I will td.lcwSELLforYou MASTMS AUCTION 64U'86& 133->9625 E11~m·n1·1-d Only ~·II O;uly PllUf l11glll.'8l com All Woo d 8unkbed1 m111a1on p11d Your w1rrw1 a. boa 1prn11 or phorll" "' home Over 21, ch111t bt!d S99. Olu n I U Cud <.:a II 83H453 Model Homea 549-3077 I 3P M • WANTED "'• cello 1n 4'11 .~.~~ •••• !.~~ Mel 9707 <'t!lle nt c ond1t1on 19 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Rea.son.ably pnr ed 73 L..d. 1!173 Aud• 1001."i. tiunroof ___ 963_ 2187 Llmiry Mofortw>IM AM /FM radlo, lll'W brk11 Mlllkd fully selr c:oot1uoed 69,000 rn•. xlM c·o nd ....,_,... 1013 General.Or, 2 »Ir condl S1875/ofr 675 4~3 lJooen, root Lop a II', TV ••••••••••••••••••••••• antenna. C D radio, IMW 97 12 Wanted·~ rello In t!X AM/ FM •lereo tape, hke ••••••••••••••••••••••• c e 11 e n t con d 1llu11 ,_ Uret1 ac other extriu1 Re8SOl'lably pnced, too numerou11 lO m en ___ 963-_ 21.87. Uoo Very, very l'lt-an Look at 1.111.e one before you buy • C11ll Truman at ~ ............. , .. ~t.~!'! ...... ~~!~ Xlnt MW & uaed ofr furn , plan mes. wk benches C. E. SUR PLUS 63J.2'rT7 S.Peed·O·Prlnt Fluid DupUut.or, Model 2300. 1''or Sale "u 11", best of fel'. M2-<U21 e•t 297 Milt 8093 ••••••••••••••••••••••• THEODORE ROBINS FORD 'JOt10 llAli~.OIC Bl\10 (O)IA Mt'>A £>~1 0010 ••••••••••••••••••••••• WTCHAMCI FOR 1971 U Of'a SAVE! IUYOIUASI HOW! 7''1 MOW AJtRIVIM<i l •IMW• 1-:xtra lAri• 3 piece sec Tw-Truck Dnvt!n ex UOQ,11 a>eenl1h gold. ========~ per d Top pay Appl}' "50/blitofr &42"8358 GacW Towln1 7408 -------- 'lMlli Way.<.: M 642 1252 Sola fled. •lnl eoodiUoo 'S4 Tl\4 hrdtop only, e•- crll cond Sl80/ofr •2.839 MGAr ... •llSAUS• "'74200241J> C373l.Pt"I '76ma 11r c5GOMMl.l '742002 4ap C5ti9PQM I 'T1 320l 4 ap. (283$PJ l '766:n 41f <31~RKS> 'T7630CS 16WI' J El '787331• <6180Q) '787331411> <~WPJo'I It 1rwo color $76. , ..... ,...... 6'46$80 Swtlchboard O~ntor Twin .wt bed. XJnt coodl· Mu•t b• dependable, Lion. lncld't new cover available ror mott 1hlfi.. (l'hoc. brwn> ., ~Ura. • oiu ror a &U-7565 ~ ns. 6'4.a580 ~t Oen uff, f1,Lln1 Ill-Outcrown H uddle Toob f.1. k lj. $600 t;ac. fut. bw*bedt. Sella new for 06e-t1'3 _ <YV• 11000. Tue aw1y Wallre11 upvr nee'. for'400,lncl. mallrelaet. lAllM'MI. 21 yn t . Apply 1_56'1_.a:z:as_. __ _ lo ~1 IA Bt1rr1t1, 4 Brand n.w nvr Uled 414 N. Newport Blvd, mvel bei&e vinyl chn N B. 64H700 <dUl't /ldt) w/chrm baH. WllitNM, Jl+, 3+ )'rt ex· WW Mil $60 ea, act for . Lunctw App fdO PP 847 M30 evt. or penaoo IA Blamta 7$J.7554d11. New K2 Sabre skl1 w/nt-w SOiomon n1 bind1n11 (W/1111 bnkesl 190 l&th --~ Mf.9115 alt 4PM --- ••••••••••••••••••••••• TV~ ·=~ ...... :~ .... ~!~~ .................. !~!.~ VIJ)l'..OCLEARANCE ·a Cadillac, convertible 7 daf. aale. EIMla New SilVtr/jray. 0rt1 Ownr. Year 1 Eve. RCA 200 or Cood Xlnt MO-OLM Sa nyo , $750 ea . ' · Panaloolc or M11anavo11 T...,.. tHO Pl"Olramabl•. tit~ ea ....................... . Temflc tape 1peclal1, '71ToyotaSR5 4hr OJr aht llPflll, SlUO Lona Bed All Ptlc• an 1ubject lO .e..teia avallabWty. One day de· _ ,...__ T Uytry " '"'""v I Of1 P U w/lo Paula Vldeo•TV pr oflla utility body . ml&. CoutJfwy L01ded Very clean OOI 11•.n• 042lll moo. M0-M01 Also limited number of W18 m·. i. 1t111 111111111 b&e. Call U1 todtl I IJl-2040 .. ,, ... , .. 9 ~COUNTY'S °§ 8aJol Sarvh!e Lc!111n1 a.we.,..,.,-. Rdla Aor« BMW 1540 J • ml>Or fl Newpoft Be1ch 640-t444 tau rant 414 N ~ 1 Clastlfied •d I.a Newport Bl, NB MS 4'700 w nt)' u dlalln1 your ,,... f .. *4 dr•w In the '71 l'!lwwv t/J T. ·• B .._ ....Clli.n:L &o Mii? = Glva UI a Clll W•t. a Oallv PllOt dM c:md ~. JllO_:.-. V • IU'"' I' MW, 80..1,.000 Ml C2nd ft~~-~-It 11 Udo• .. -..,.,. ..-,... __ ,,. ' ... ..., car) One vwner. Mika .,___ we _•_ ... reat -·-·I ~1edAd 142-M7t bed,UOOO/ofr 88C)..2NI olrtt ta.alU2 *DRIVE A * * LITILE ••• * SAVE A LOT SllOP&COMl'AK~ BARWICK DATSUN ..... ,,, ,,,,,,, •• 1111-..{l.t l11 • 8ll-1l7S49l-ll7S "We need lO buy clean l>1tt.sWl wied cars" $Will Pay Top Dolhir S COSTA MESA DATSUN ~ltAIUl<Ht RI.VO 540.6410 54~021 l I.ATE '7!> 2.HOZ 2 • 2, wht lrnrnac ~v ery 1Ct ri1 $6,000 67 Montetllo. CdM, 644 7664 Ffat 9725 ••••••••••••••••••••••• a a DB t '&ntasl1(' C'loiwout Of\ lff78 McxM :. 19W Models nowum \llOK MIJSTSt-;LI. DICK Mu.u ;n MO'J'OllS l.20W W»mt.>r,S A 5.!>72132 ---'7!> P1al 1.31 2 Ur Xlnl t'ond l.o m1, :.unr ( AM /t'M StSOO !),Jll 47W SEE US!· MAllOUIS TOY OT A MlSslON VIEJO t31·2HO 495-1210 1.1170Toyota Corona. 4 spd, s hirt S7$0 or orr~r 75l«i29 ------ Tri .... ••••••••••••••••••••••• $4777 THEODOR I ROBINS FORD Hobcat, Ul/28 mpg , 5 new r~u.is. vinyl lop, xlnt cond l2500 or ~-st offer 152-0234; 968 7343 '70 w .. gon . good t111nsportallon, rl frnt body damage, run11 .dnt $2501 bt-tlt offtlr 548 9'l78 ·54 TRA hrdtop only. e;x .._,919 9t52 cell cond S190 /orfer ••••••••••••••••••••••• JUC.0 ltAllSO R Bl VO co~•• MHA t:.4J 0010 9602938 ---------•l·M MU11tang (;oove111ble Volcawogett 9770 2.llY V8, auU>, P1S, hH~1 ••-••••••••••••••••••• uar. iu•I complt.>ted ti round up re•ti lora n .c ·75 VW Beetle·Tawny beige exlcnor, ~luxe in t.t>n or . A MI FM Slet~o Map & radial urei. Ont owner Pn Pl $2000 CallW.2791 too s.. C:O.t Hwy. ~ ..... 494-11 31 Showroom cond S4!100 494-0167 ·~ Muslan~. good condJUOfl $1200 Ca II 642 84i4 7 '64 VW Bus. Must Sell Any relillOOublc ofr -------ow. .. ~ 9955 213~--0844 ·w VW convert. yellow Ong owner. w~ll m1unl $2200/mkofr 673·7032 ----- '66Bug Good condition ~-«Jiii n MOY A courE f\.alJy 6q_l.Dp~l 1nt'ludint{ ralley wheel• (2167Hl.L1 $3975 CORMIER Leasing At lrvtne Aut.o Center Z3663 R.ockf1eld Blvd '72 VW ramper van. rhlt, Lake Foretit runs xlnt, f11ll ll(lh rool 76M026 rack. rad1alt1, AM /l''M ----- ••••••••••••••••••••••• DllSB. 1'79 0LDS CUTI.ASSSlJPHt-:M 1-: BflOUGllAM FORLEASt Cull Mary llolwll'k for more mform1111011 SECURITIES AUTO LIASIMG 752-2526 Cli:ib 673 14711 '73 Nova gd cond 4 spd, ·73 Cutlas:. Suprt•rnt• ·n VW. S1lv1:r. AM /P'M new clutch, n,cw Ure• loodtld, •Int ronll M1111l t ape, mint t•ond1l1on S2lOO/b6fofrS4<! S4S4 let? $2800 K40 ~ 4.94 'H19 ·72 Monte Carlo Xlnt ,..,....,,... 9960 ,70 VW 8 N cond N..w 11111nt. 111lod11 •. ::?::: •••••••••••••••.• New brak°:s N;, ~~;:. tranio ~c 1;!49!> ~ 1740 66 l'LVMUlJTll Satt!ll1lt• Snrf s:IOOU/b11t ofr '73 Impala 4 dr C'o 1·a1 air hrdlµ l"'w 1111lc .. 11c ~. XJnt cue Aut•1. Al<.:. rebll enK•nt'. nid111 i'J. vw RUG. rebll ton" 1:s. Pt U 5.54> IU6U hea~. air cond t nt-<"<I::. " C rt-p!ilf I. powl'r 1>lt:t:n11g :;1nre June, gd cond C<1ll C1d .. Hlall 9930 & power brJkcb ud b4Cl-8183 ••••• ••••• •• •• •• • • • • • • • tra.nspon.auon ~ f's n HOftda 9727 RABBITI •77 Xlnt t·ond '78 M11rk V Vii.mood be i.een th~ weeke nd ••••••••••••••••••••••• Pnc~d to 11ell S3,400 Jubllt!t: modt.>I, t 'or 1>.th~ CltllMl-4435 -~ .._..,W '79 ,,,.,, ...., .. 7 Of aa&Umt.' f'u lly Wildl'<I , 9nlnU ""• ,_,._, Moon roof, Dutmond blue •74 ,.,.ry I HONDA Cars '67 8aJ1t, 72 t.>nl!. KYH. l'Oior' Low ml Rei.I offer 4 dr. new parnt. n••w MANY ~nith ~arb, Jackm11n 56Mi870or~ 7031 vinyl l.09, A/C, P tS l'IJI To ChooM Frotft! wb.lb. xlnt cond 847-7716 MartdV 72 Ong Owno·r. ~t.et R.utb xlm Will UNIVERSITY ·r;~u·\~~':',f~e~ly ;.eu~~ ~dic1~7';!t wp ~i': ;:,~ sms Cull l\M 0-.MDblle more $2800 640 0750 . Yf!S. Tilt wheel, AM /i''M ,,_,.-,.,.rd 9970 .. ..,.. """"oft 2 Ster~. lthr >nl 119SO HOftda Cari • GMC ~ pm Prv Pty 54-0 8100 cvei. ~··•••••••••••••••••••• Trucks 'bl vw Transport new only 67 T Bard, g1)()(f c•onrl «. -~J.Wl.ior Ulvd 1600 eng, nu bruke11 & transp A.a.kin.: ~7!> C'Jll Cor;ta Me1111 MO 91>40 lJr(~. :.cat covers Musi Clasl!1f1ed Ad11 642 5117K tW6 7204 1.__ 97 :.t.'11 1mmed stil.1(1/hst ofr ........ U d ~•••••••••••••••~~ 644-62811 or 979 !>5:15 A11k -.vi, •• Autos, UHd '73 JAG XJI~. Hlk wll>lk It-oth er 111 1 Full y e<iw11'd C'llroml! wtrt: whl:., M1t·ht-lln llrt'1>, am mac 1n & out 64~ 4743 for Mu.·huel •• •• •• • • ••• •••••••••••• •••••••• • ••••••••••••• • 64 VW Mu:.t ~di <iood 1..'flg Clt'11f\ l'111 N1t~h f':l('f1 f1 <•al work 1>42 411'9 k.'l(j 9735 VcafYO 9772 •••••••••••••••••••••• • •••••••••••••••••••••• ·70 Glua Ll((ht blul' Nl'w pwnl, rblt t.'OI(, gd cond S2fm Ph IHtl 9'.ll211fl b ·m Mu11L :.l'll New engine & llrt'11 $L800 ~llsg;) Mm.do 973 •••••••••••••••••••••• miracle mazda 21 SO Hwbor ll•d. Costa M ... 645-5700 '72 RX2 Mnda All ex lra8 Very .cood cond $8.50 rlrm 400 4226 Opel t74 •••••••••••••••••••••• '74 Opel ManUI Coupti lld trana .• auto tran3, vinyl U¥>. rt'a.IOO•ble, 5111 361 dya , 497 2362 evs . Pondle 9 75 VOLVO SAES. SU VIC E AHDLUSIM<i OVEH.St,AS DJo:LIVEHY Jo:XJ>!!;HTS IARLtUCE VOLVO 1006flarbor Hlvd C'<l6TA M 1'1SA 646-9303 540.9467 ORANGE COUNTY VOLVO J<:XCLUSIVELV VOLVO Large11t Volvo Dealer In Orange C-Ounty ! BUY orLl!:ASE OlREC'r ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 Swedish Volv o 1977roR5CHI Mechaot u now at 924 COUPI lvan 'a , 1995 Harbot Uu all the poca1ble ex Blvd • CM. 64$-l082 tr .. & low miles! <-.RSC> MMe. UN4 Otl. Y Sitts ••••••••••••••••••••••• W AMC 990I ttO AID Ce...rolet •• •• •• ••. •••. •• •••••••• Dove & Quall St.I NEWPOJlT 01.f.ACll IJJ.05H -----JI Super 90, 8'S% restored, red w/black lnl , CIHllC . Mt•1 ••Tara• tl2 Rblt cmg 5 1~. Alloyw wheela. Mu•t litjl fTOOO, * 2145. '70 fUlT Poncht Paru Reel. M11 wbNll X!nl l"OOd. 175-7257 evaa. ----00 Tara•. Blk on blk. loaded w/everyt hlna 1 driven onl)' 26,000 m wiUI rare Juat • be1ul)', a..... ..... like ntW Jlfu•t NII for --114,600 Wllh SJl.llOO a• ••••••••••••••••••••••• IUlftlbla bank lt>11n P P '11 Electra. 111 utraa, Daya 549 TflTl, evu IJ)Od, dtan coad M$OO 641464 Call Art '75·7080/873 1187 ALLEN RESALES 1'1) fOtD CHAH TC>lt..0 ........ '2799 " l>rl•~ .....aQ>" _..H l.,H iJlllH"' • f ...... ~•'t _, o,t-'10".rJIW"IQ l.t\1,r. "., •• .,.,.,. .. '""~ ' ... ,.. ..... j(i'} JN() I' 14 OLOSMOllLI CUTLASS COUH . ...... '3999 ,_ ~ ,., • .,.., """ """"''"'-• tn .,tff,-1 I •ndau 1•41' ,,.. ...,... et"d .. .. tl1tf1n ... y t•it'f •1,.0.lrf'• .. t tNt&•·ftl•Ul_,..t~l•JHt f ............ ~5799 •.1...-~ 1 •(t-v,........ "''' .,. .,.., ,,.. h .. , ,.,,, , , ,,.,.,,, • ., .. ng a , .. ...,,,.... Clnt11 JI! WO.,,.,. •N>l..,J ~~·.tu~~ ........ : ...... ~5999 .. • ..,.,.,. '"' fJ(#Mlf ......... "'"*'"' .,,._. tOttt 00--...... -"° I ow m-I' IN•Jl•lul o-<Q••"' I O~e1 u~~~~ ................. ~1999 liufl"Y .,._ ~ l ........ ""-11111 0... -• 8-~--A ..... llunl.,.tlo-faJIRJll ~:!r.£.~~~ .............. ' 12. 999 'f 1vty • eMw -Ooifl """ ~ & _,. _,,. WW-All "' '"' ,,.ii ...... Ol'J4~ .... ---..... -t \'-w ... ., •• , .,, n.,.,.,. 1t:l0tlf'MI O,.l""J-114 _, . ....... Hunt ington Beaeh Founta in Valley EDITION . 'VOL. 71 , NO 361 , 4 SECTIONS, 46 PAGES 'You .. Rome to•• Dal l y Ne•·sp •p ·" WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 27, 1978 TENC~ f •• >1'<• · ·:Grisly Count of Slain Bodie~ Now 141~'.i DES Pl..AJNES. Ill <AP> Vo.ar more bodu.-. were round to day bfneath lht> huuse of u miAn • autpetted ot kalling 32 ) outlb "roday'a di. covery brought to 13 the number of bodJcs found .it the home or John Waynl' Gan Jr. One or the 13 \i. u' under Gary's garage A 14th bod) l found in a riwr. has also t.M.~n f llnked to 0... tnvesug1n1on An 11fflr1.il ~"''~ th.-mud d)'. foul,mt•lhnJI rri."'I 11p re bt•ftt>Jth <iJcy'i. hCIU)•'. Whl'rt' m~l uf Lht• budtt !I h1:1 vt• !Jtot•n found . .Ab "like a batllt· 'itl'nP in thert> ~•lh all thtt trt·nc:hes dug Vou'n• 'Aork1nQ r1aht 1n tht• ttra' t'::it • J>r Robt·rt Stt•in Cook County m t·dtc.il Pxu1naner . au11'.1 'l'uebday 111ght that in h1i. 20 yf'art. llb J fort•11,1c puth olog1s t h e h u~ nt>Vl'r rome up()n 4 more horn- fylnil case "Befow thti. ti. all over with, this could Ix• ont-o( the most heinous rnm~ or the century," n ld Stem. who has been crawl- ing on ht:. stomach underneath the ho~e Searchers resumed their dig· 1t1ng this morning tn the crawl :,pace where the skeletal re- mains of four bodiei. and parts of Faces Suit r f. Coast Board Fights Beach Signs f: I r f. t t ( f ~ , . t f , f • ~ , \o O.lly Pl ... St.It -SIGN OF CONTENTION - Coas tal Commission has t aken Huntington Beach to task over these no-parking sij?ns at beach. City covered s igns at commission 's re quest but subsequently re- moved bags. setting stage for legal battle ;, Valley M a n i . ~ters Ple a 1. In Sex Rap A 40-year-old Garden Grove paramedic pleaded innocent in c:ourt today to 21 felony charges of child molesting and illicit sex with a 14-year-old girl. . Larry Howard Wheeler, a Fountain Valley resident. was ordered to face a Jan. 15 pre- 1 i min ary hearing in West Orange County Judicial District rourt to determine if he will stand trial. Fountain Valley police arrest- ed Wheeler on Dec. 13 in his home. Police officer Pat Coleman said that Wheeler had the lllkit sex with the teen-ager from May to December of this year. Wheeler ls free on $10,000 bail. A 10-year veteran of the Garden Grove Fire Department, Wheeler has been s u spended from his paramedic post pend· ing further investigation. Man Sought In Horse K ill PORTLAND, Ore. (AP> Federal aut.horiU~ are seeking a men charged with adopting 109 wild horses through a govern- ment program and then selling tbem ror slaughter as animal and human food oveneas. Donald Huahel. 37. of Bums. Ore., is the flrst person IC· cUMd of vtolaUng the 1972 Wild Horse and Burro Acl In a c:om- ptalnt sisned by U.S. Magistrate O.or1e Juba, authorities said TUuday. The California Coastal Com· mission has taken Huntington Beach to court over 16 no· parking signs the city posted a long a half-mile s tretch of Pacific Coast Highway. The s uit, riled Tuesday on beha If of the South Coas t Regional Commission by the s tate attorney general's office, claims that the city put up the metal signs without a required permit. City officials acceded to com- mission demands in October to cover the signs but last month removed the opaque bags and challenged the commission to do something about it. omcials say that the stretch of highway near the bluffs ad- joining Bolsa Chica State Beach has been the scene of a number of fatal accidents. Deputy City Attorney Robert Sangster said Superior Court Judge Philip Schwab agreed on Tuesday with city arguments and refused lo grant a tem- porary restraining order barring the signs. Sangster said Judge Schwab ruled that the Coastal Com- mission's demand for a permit did not outweigh the city's con- cern ror public safe ty. A hearing for a preliminary injunction against the city was scheduled Jan. 25. Coastal Commission reprellen· tatlves have also expressed belief that the signs prohibit public access to the beach. Mel Carpenter. executive director of the regional commission. was unavailable for comment on that view today. The state is asking $10,000 in civil fines. a $5,000 fine per day since the signs were ei:ected Oct. 16 a nd punitive damages. ac- <See SIGNS, Page A2) Airport Reopens Afte r Fog Delays Operations resumed at Orange County Airport today after four hours of morning fog that at one point cut visibility on passenger traffic runways to 800 feet. More than 1,000 passengers were diverted to a nd from On- tario Airport before Orange County controllers decided at 10 a.m. that it was safe to resume flights. Air California communica- tions executtve Bob Payton said his airline diverted six flights and 600 passengers to and from On ta no. "But things are looking good now." he said. "The fog is mov- ing out pretty rapidly and our operations are going back to normal." OHic1als of two other maJor carriers. Hughes Airwest and Goldl'n West Airlines. said their services also were back to normal. A1rlme personnel who have had to deal with impatient and truculent passengers for three days in a row were cheered to- day by the National Weather prediction that the fog period ls over. Forecasters said the persis- tent fog will i;?ive way lo a bank Tha•klMI Joe Dawso n recently stopped ~Y the Murdy Fire Station in Huntington Beach to thank paramedics tor the best present he ever re· ceived -his Ufe. Dawson was rescued by paramedics when he was near death following a car crash July 20, 1976 . Story, photo on Page AlO. or cloudy wea.lher that will bring rain in its wake. They see a 50 percent chance of rain by late Thursday. Orange County Airport had the dubious distinction today of being the only airport in the na- tion to be seriously affected by fog. The control tower at Los Ange les International Airport reported more than a mile of visibility on all air earner runways this morning. Fog that hampered operations during the night hours was r eceding rapidly. Fog that blanketed Orange County Airport in the early morning hours hampered traffic m many areas of the county. Police reported no major traf. fie accidents. They s aid a slight inc re ase in "fender bender" mishaps could be attributed to the foggy conditions. * * * Airport Woes Stmin Nerves For Holidays By JACKIE HYMAN OI Ille Diiiy ltllet $1MI Airlines workers at Orange County Airport were still calm· Ing frazzled nerves today - their own and passengers' - after four days of fog that can- celed holiday flights . frayed tempe " and further jammed the always-crowded airport. "It's happe ned every Christmas for the last three years." sighed Dennis Pilgrim. supervisor of passenger services for Golden West Airlines. He said problems are c:om- pounded by anxious relatives awaiting travelers. "Tempers are better over the holidays but there's still a strain on the people working at the airport," he said. Pilgrim said some unusual problems arose this year. For one, the baggage claim area was so congested that "Fri- day night they had to have the sheriff to keep people rrom climbing into the unauthorized area and unloading their owu luf gage from the cart." n addJUon, he said, a number or cab drivers ·apparently de· clded to take Christmas off, stranding travelers at about 9 o'clock Christmas n1ght. "Yellow Cab wouldn't dis- patch any more cabs to Orange County Airport," Pilfrlm said. "That WQ W'lt.LluaJ." He airffd wlth spokesmen (See 0 £U YS. Pate Ai) a fifth were round Tuesda·y Gacy. 36. a construction c:on- traclor who once served a prison term in Iowa for sodomy. tt· portedly tofd investlg.Mot$ he had sex with and lhen killed 32 boys and young men. burying 26 day. Gecy , who was twi ce divorced. lived in the house for six years. the last two alone. i County sheriff's police. said that "based on m y information they're all young boys ." . at his home and throwing six in ·the Des Plaines River, Stein said he is not close to Identifying any of the victims and some may never be iden· tified. \ "The teeth are excellent ~t 'We still have to have the dental report to match them." he said. Dobbs uid about 20 men worked inside Gacy's home Tuesday. Some tore out Oooring and dug through the crawl s pace. Technicians s pre ad buckets of mud on the ground behind the home, looking for re- •• He is beln~ held without bond on a murder charge and is scheduled to appear in court Fri· Edmund Dobbs, chief or Cook ~t~ular Crasla 01ains. ' (See BODIES, Page A?) Huntington Beach driver Rochelle Slein and her mother. Evelyn. reportedly were injured this morning when their car flipped over in Huntington Beact, at New land Street near the SouthMn California Edison Co. po"Yer plant. Of· ficers said the auto apparently became airborne and hit power pole <see arrow>. No other details we re immediately availa - ble. Iran Troops Kill Four At Funeral '$40 Million' Trove Found A.boa"rd Ship TEHRAN. Iran <AP> -Elite ranger troops opened fire on a funeral procession for an anti· s hah professor today . and hospital offi cials said al least four or the thous ands of marching mourners were killed The government. meanwhile, imposed fuel rationing on this oil·rtch nation because of a crip- pling petroleum workers' s trike. Officials at Pahlavi Hospital said it received four dead and 22 wounded rrom the procession at· tack. A spokesman for the Na- tional Front. the chief opposition group, said al least s ix had been k i I led. and a govern menl spokesman denied there were a ny deaths. through he said several persons had been wounded. Without hos pital reports. casually figures issued by the two sides have been difficult to verify independently. The Front spokesman said several persons were s hot dead in other clashes today. between security forces and dem · onstrators in Tehran. At one 1>9int. mobs of anti- shah demonstrators streamed toward the U.S. Embassy, but Iranian troops fired automatic w~pons in the air to chase <See TROOPS, Page A2> SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -A treas ure of gold, silver. jewels and artifacts has been found and partly rerovered from a legan- dary sunken Spanish galleon lost in a storm off the Dominican Republic in 1641. the leader of an American recovery team re· ports. American Burt 0 . We bber Jr .. leader of Seaquesl International Inc .. said Tuesday the trove was found Nov. 28. about 65 miles northeast of the Dominican Republic where the vessel. Our Lady of the Good and Pure Con· ception sank. But Webber declined comment on the worth of the treasure until all of it has been recovered in five or six months. John Grissim. a writer who was at the scene when the trove was discovered. said treasure buffs believe it could be worth S40 million. "Silver pieces of eight. silver candelabra. antique china transshipped from 17th Century Manila galleons -popping out of sand pockets as we reached into them. like digging Into a Christmas stocking ... " said Grissim. Webber said the vessel carried a considers ble portion of the Spanish royal revenues for the Late Present Armored Truck Loses Coim CITY OF COMMERCE (AP> -Christmas came a day late for some eagle·eyed motorists on In- terstate 5 when the back doors of an armored truck inexplicably fl ew open and $3,000 in quarters landed on the freeway. creating an Instant gold rush and traffic jam. authorities said today. Jn tbe midst of the bedlam Tuesday night In the City or ·Commerce southeast or Los Angeles, three cars were lnvolved in rear·end collisions and several persons received minor injuries. the California Highway Patrol said. The clean-up took more than an hour to com· plete and some of those who stopped appeared to have come equipped wlth a tinders· keepers philosophy. Bud Mowrig a supervisor tor Armored Transpon Co .• sard he believed about S2.SOO ol the $3,000 was eventually recovered In the dark. _ .u ··-4 ........ years 1640 and 1641. The ship was first salyaged m 1687 by American shipwright and adventurer William Phips. who retrieved 32 tons of silver and other goods. Webber s aid But Phip!> missed most of the treasure aboard the wreck and in 1688 returned with a second recovery team only to again have trouble penetrating the coral shield he believed held the bulk of the ship's treasure. Webber sajd his find res ults from the discovery by marine historian Goin E. "Jac k " Haskins of the logbook of the ship Henry which discovered the wreck 46 years after it sank. Among the items found were cannon balls. porcelein cups and plates from Mexico and China. olive jars. candlestick holders. a silver candle snuffer in nearly perfect conclilion, and a "sign1f1 - cant" quantity of s il ver coins Most were pieces of eiaht mint- ed in Mexico and Peru. Webber said. Co ast We athe r Chance or rain increas -I ing tonight with a 50 per- cent chance of rain on Thursday. Cloudy tonight and Thurs day . Lows tonight 43 to 50. Highs Thursday, S3 to 59. INSIDE TODAY Stoul11 Cormichael. who a decode ago '11mtJc>Uz.ed Black Power mituancy in Amenco, notO reftdet in Africa. "being q&IUt," IDOrldng for revolw· tion. In one of hit inf requnt interoinot, Comdchael dia-et11•" htt awN with TM Al· soctated Preu. See Poge ~7. ..... AtY_....,,_ At AlllO~ Cit L.M. .. ,. ,.. ..... ........ .. ....._, .............. ,1MI cat!Mnll• .. -.ic... .. ca...it... 01-6 ......_..,... .. C19111iU .. ............... M °""_,. .. ~ .... CieilMY AM ............. ., ...,.. ·•14 HllWMI..... M tletlll....... U • ...... 111111 ..... •u Tltfflti. lit ~........ ~11 t ............. ,,... ..... ~,,.,.~ ... ......... cww.... ........ ' Scain Llrik Feared Newport Copa ProbePurcluue Scheme 8enta Ana ~..,. who bad te• relved • Jm1Jar leU.r Subuqutnt lnvoat11atton, Scru11p ••Id. revealed that art" lnduelrlea and WU lax ln du trl• did nClll appur to have buelntM U llC! aatd they were oSN"r•tt<d from an omee wllhout. flt or rtt0rd1 a nd wtth u lt'lm J1c11 ary tomployee antw\'rlnll th'· tt'I t)honc "On th.-l'nvclOPl'. they ~ay tht>y 'rt-('(!lt!brallnic thetr ~h r" r, · &f'u&p aid "Tht! be5L 'v• !wtin able 10 dh1cover. the)''ve been In bu11nt111~ <t moolh and 11 half " Delay Seen in Cut Of Firi Service The a'-ltpecla wer~ arrett.f<i without ancldtnt aruir a bnef 01 dd nl al the farm. Scruu.s s&.id tle :.aid p0llc • recovered two watrh valued &at $7 .000 and J coneeuled bandgun Sc r uic.&• said more th u 11 St0.000 ID nt'W omc~ ~ulpment. wh1l·h l)apt'~ found on lhl' ~us ~els andkot.ed had been bought with purch~ order111, was re rovt!red Crom the off1«. t..ewa.s Moran. d.arwtor ot the s tate ~partment of t'orestry, today conceded that disaohruon of the councy.stat.e fire &<-rvi~ in Orange County a.s golng t.o take longe r than the •Ix months pre. du~ted by st.ate officials. Last week, Moran informl'd Count)' Admutistrahve Ort1cer Ro~rt Thomas that the state's $20 mllhon allocation for the county's fire protect.ion was be- ing cut from the state budget as of next July 1. Thomas said be doesn't object to the cut since the county pays the state $18.6 million of the S20 million s pent on a contract for the fire service annually. But the rounty administrator was. irked that the change over ,. ..... r-.e~i DELAYS .•• rro m oth e r a irlines that passenger loads were unusually high for a Christmas Da). possibly because it fell on a Monday and the next day was a work day. Mike Aland, a ssistant station m:magcr for Hughes A1rwei.l. !>a1d he found most passengers to be cooperative. "When they can see it <the fog>. th<>y understand it," he :.aid, but added, "They gel very irrttable " Aland :-.<ud special problems have been l~l baggage. possibly from all lhl• extra Christmas p~ckages t•hecked, and m1si.ed connecuoru.. In addition. he said. not all passengen. from carhcr nights could be immediately accom· modated on dtve rt.ed rlighlS Aland said Ai r wes t 's ex· pcrimental 727 nights. which c:arry 155 pa11sengers instead of the usual 96, were helpful in handling delayed passengers b<>cause of Its large capacity. The 727. which began test flights here thts month, has been opposed by residents who claim 1t 1:.1 noisier than other jets and will m~rease airport congestion. Airline worker~ at otht.'r airports may havf' also faet.'<I problems, s aid Robert Payton, director of public affairs for Air California Si nce only Los Angeles and Orange County were fog ged in, he :.aid. "in other parts of the s tate where th<> sun Is shmmg a nd the skies are blue. you have some cr~bihty problems wh<>n ~OU tell them a flaght is canceled because of weather." Pay ton s aid pas senge r s ~om ctimes see the fog and flJ(ure their night will be de- l~yed. Howe ver, when flights art' dive rted lo Onlarao. the buiws leavl' on schedule, he said. And pa.~ngers can'l cb~ek in at Ontario, Payton s aid. The 11a:.i.engcrs ftO through secunty procedures al Orange County Airport and are bused. to plant.-s .it Ontano ,.,, DAILY PILOT ' .. Cl•-C-Do<fy ............ _ .. " ·- -iow-.......... ---~ -°'-, ... ,,......,.,,.._.(_ '----·--· "'°''"'" ~ '"'"""" , , . .,,... .... c .... ....... --~ .... ( ... .........-. ... 11 .... ..,,_ ,_., .... , "-,l......,_<V_CM.C a '~•-t•~~Mlrt •'°""""'-'it~wo.,\lil'td ........... ""' ........... -·--_ .. ,"' uo -..... ~ ..... , .... _ ""'--"-._ .. _ .... _ ... __ , .. ' . """" ., ............... _o._ .. __, ._ ....... , _ __ _,.... ......... I. .. ca. ..... "-_ .. _ ........ ---·~ -...--~·o.-~--Hll":tf'::C~ .. o:-Mt•--· .. o ... ,..- ~--... ~:. ... WIOM ..... GMl•Mo,. MeW." llrt",_. dudllot> was ~ for sax month$. He note-cl It toot county and at.ate olt•C1als t~ years to MCotiaw the ch~ from county to Jtate ownenhlp al the UC I rvlne Mfdital ~t.er Moran said M sent a lett41r to Thomali today tnrormlnl( him that the forestry staff us working on 1 plan to meet 1SOme of the county 's obJe-<:tioM "Six monthA probably Isn't much Ume," Moran conceded. "I'm sure Wt' can sit down and work out 11 trans1Uon scheme that won't be impractical or In feasible "Certainly the citizens in Orange County won't 10 without fire proted.ion," Moran said. The joint fire Rrvice has been operated in Orange County since 1930 when the state agreed to take on structural fire protection an t he county's unincorporated areas a&oog with Its duties ot protecting wildlands. As the rowtly has urbanized, Moran said, most or the state fire force in Orange County is commitWd to structural fire pro- tection instead of wildlands. There are about 550 state fores try fireme n in Orange County Fifty or them are paid directly by the slate for working on wlldlands fire service. The other 500 employees an· paid on the county contract and s taff the fire stat ions and pardmed1 c units that serve c1 ties such a s S an J u an Capistrano and Irvine as we ll as unincorporated terntori~. Thomu IHt week said adop· tlon of nil 500 fire ri ghten. und related employees cou ld cost Lh(' county up to S4 million. Ht> e xplained that county personne l po licies ca II for employees t.o bt> paid co mpara bte to employees domg the same kind of work for cities in Orange County The $4 million Increase would bt> the cost of bringing the former state employeei. into lme with pay and fringe ben•fi~ of- fered by other IQ('al fire agen cies, he said Boy, 9, Nearly Saves Worker FromDealh FRESNO CAP> -A farm worker who fell into a large bon· fire in a rural Tulare CoWlty vineyard died here today despite he roic efforts of a boy . Nolan J. Sbenault. 49, died at Va lley Medical Center of burns s uffered over 90 percent of h1i. body when he fell into the fire Tuesday. authorities said. Nine-year-old Ruben Rojas s aw Shenault fall into the blaze s toked by vine prunjngs at the Del Rey Vineyard near Wood· ville and pulled him out, officers said. The boy then ran to h1~ nearby home and returned with a bowl of waler and a rug to ex llngu ish Shenault's burning clothes. A fare department spokesman praised the boy. uylng he "showed prtience or mind a lot of adults would have been ti.rd put to display under t.ho:.e kinds of circWD1t.ances." In addition. Scruggs said. pas>t!n found on the two, mclud ang checkboob and correspon dence. linked Bartel with com- pan 1es throughout Callfom1a and Arizionu. Bartel allegedly is an officer an Pbllamcrtcan Industries Inc . Pacific Imports Inc .. Integrated Medical MMaJemenl Inc. and Sama r Jo<!u.'itnes Inc .• Scru~gs said. lh: said he as investtgatmg to see 1f these firms are in rorporated. In addtlion, he s aid, papers linked Bartel to AJlergy Control Inc. of Newport Beach. Auto- immune Allergy Control Center Inc .• Auto-Immune Allergy Con - trol Center or Arir.ooa. Inc., Al· lergy Management., Inc., and Al - lergy Control Medical Clinics. Scruggs asked that anyone who bas received correspon· dence or had any contact with Earth Industries or Wll·lax ln· dustries cont.act him at 644·3784 l',...P_AJ TROOPS ..• them. The protesters scatt.ered but then regrouped and moved on to other areas. "Today was a very decisive day." the Front spokesman said. "We think it is going to continue to an extreme end." Soldiers allowed the funeral procession to take place on con dllion there be no anti·shah violence. Reµorters who wit· nessed it said the march began peacefully from P a hl avi lfoRpital but when it reachvd the 24th of Esfand Square. <ibout a quarter-mile uway. the ranger troops opened fi rt'. The uruversity professor, who h<1d bt-en laking part in a n anti shah s1t·in, was shot and killed Tuesday. reportedly as he leaned from a window to shout l>UPPort to protesters during ;1 demonstration A Front spokes man said he did not know why the bOldJen. fired on the funeral procession. but behevt'd soldiers along tht• square may have mistakenly thought troopers accompanyin~ the marchers deserted to the op position. Reporters said soml' S-Old1ers ~corted the marcher~ t.o ensure that the procession was peaceful. Squads of the eUte troopers were marc hing tbrou ~h Tehran's streets today. s houlder to shoulder. their faces covert'd by gas ma'5ks. Armored cars with .50-caliber machine gun11 mounte d on thf' turret -< ma neuvered in the area or th<' i.quarc. The prot.esL'I swi rled as anti· i.hah technical workers struC'k Iran Air. forcing the national <'llrrier to cancel all 27 OighL'i from Tehran. Anti.shah strikes also wen• drying up imports or cons umer ~oods and sent Iran's oil pf'Oftuc· hon to such crit1oal levuls that the government ordered fuel ra tloning Oll·lndustry . o urces s o1d petroleum production today fell to 300,000 barrels -about 5 per rerJl of normal output a nd about half of what Iran consumes domesUcaJly each day and that all lranion refineries h<td shut down 2 Theft Suspects Held After Chase Two men were ln custody Lo- day on burllatY chargea a.Iler leadln& Colta Kesa police oo an enrly momJng aut.o cba.se that ended ln Newport Beach, polJce said. Two televlaton aeti end 1 video tape machiM, allegedly atolt n lrom Davia Brown Appllancn al 411 E l7th St .. Cotta Mcu, we« recovered from the car dr1ven by one of the 1u.apect.a. police tald. M esa police Set. Sam Cordeiro Hid t.he chaa be1an at 5:20 a.m., when pa\rol ofn~r Ed l>Tyimala spot~ a cer pumn1 away from t.be rear or the ap. pUance aton. Irvine and Newport. Beach police unit.a joined Lbe lurswt lhat ended on Windward ane in Dover Shores about 15 minutes later. Police uld d rtver Rtchard Gaw, 20, ot Santa Ana, eluded police on foot aft.er the car wltJI halted . His companion, Raul Jlomero Ruiz, 30. of Santa Ana, waa &1'1'11ted on lhe apol, Police aald. Gaw waa arrested about an hour later whJle hltcbhlkln1 aJon1 Ptdllc Coaat Hiahwa1. Both men were booked at Cotta Meta JaJJ and held In lieu ot $1,000 beU •~b. ' The toll of bodies cllmba 8ocMtfound Oecyhofne l213W.•nuc•F '1 ~. In nofthHIC OOMef of t.rlwt apece . ...,en '°' mot• bodle9 conttnuM .. otAORAM OF OACY PAOP!RTY IN DU PlAINf'S WHERE REMAINS WERE FOuND-...... One Body Found Under Ouage Floor, 12 Mof'9 tn Space Under Houae Fro. Page Al BODIES ••. Stein s aid the excavation would proceed s lowly because workers ris k becom ing sick fro m breathing met h &M» hydrogen s ulfide and other gases released during tht: de- compos1t1on of human flei.h. Epidemic of Flu Still Going Strong Gacy has been charged with killing Robert Piest. 15, of Des Plaines 1be youth was reported missing Dec 11. Investigators ~a id Gacy told them he threw Pu.~st 's body and lhe bodies or five other youths into the Des Plaines River. Inves tigators dragged the rivtr Tuesday with no s uccess. As sistant State's Attorney Terry Sulli van said he hopes to present evidence to a grand jury this week. A s pokesman fo r the Cook County stale's attorney's office has said Gacy's attorneys are expected to use an ms an1ly <h?· fense. But Stan said "When I left G acy's house tonigh t I s aid. 'Thi s guy 's n ot c razy .· Everyth.mg he said is JUSl Ml Everythin~ is where he said 1t is.'' said Stein He said remains ha ve been found where Gacy Indicated they would be. Police we re going through Gacy's papers looking for evide nce that would prove his sanity . Pa~rs taken from the home include business records, po r nographic m a te r ial and Democr atic campaig n literature. investigators for Stat e's Attorney Bernard Carey SU Id. A spokei:.man for Carey's of- fice said prosecutors will c1lc th~ Democratic c<Ampaign work in trying to show Gaey's ra- honallty . Layoffs Hit Oeveland CLEVELAND (AP> -Pohce have re('t!1vcd lh<>1r notices and firemen get them today -J .325 layoff slips that could bring this city's money problems home to hundreds Safe~ Direct.or James Barrett distributed notices lute Tuesday to 875 of the city's l ,875·me mber police force . He s aid 450 firefighters on th<> I ,002·memht!r force would get the message LO· day. Orange County health official11 believe t.oduy that a nu ep1dem1c that c ut attendance at local schools by as much as one third before Christamtlb l8 st.JI! In full swtng. "Schools are out, of course. and we don't have attendanct· records on wh1eh we can base our findings," commented Dr L Rex Eh ling . d1 rector of pel'8onal health services "But th<-information that 1i:. <"om mg to us certainly md1 ratt'!'t that the flu is still with us at the level we reported when schools closed for the Chnstmas vaca- tion." Ehling said the flu s train respons1b4e for the wave of sick· ness has been pos1l1vely 1den· t1fied as an A· Russian virus "It's very similar to a strain that hit us here about 10 year.) ago," he said. "Thal ·s why so few adults are being hat by a bug that bcem!> to be going for young people they probably contnu:ted 1t JO years ago and are immune to 1l now ·· What.ever your age, Or. Eh- ling said, the formula for nu VIC · t1m:. re mains the s ame . "Plenty ShoesF~ Run Tough SAN DIEGO <AP> Paul Glover. 31. s ays he went through six pairs of tennis shoes 1n a 3,SOO·mlle hike from Bost.on t.o the Pacific Coast. The hilung boo ls he st a rte d with were tooh.ardon his feet. "It was my first attempt on a really long hake ... said Glover. a le an . bearded resident of Ithaca, N.Y. The only problems came in Pennsylvania where hC' found cider being sold for 2.5 cents -all you can drank "and that m ade me s ack" -and o nce in Oklahoma wht:re he came out of a woods a nd a ma n pulled a gun on ha m and took him toJrul, bnen y. Baseball Football Soccer Tennis (verytllilr , ... ...., £YlfJt*I) ftr IM AtMete Volley Balls Soccer Balls fMtbls Base Mils SoftUlls PtaypMd Balls ... ,., a..ds W1IPt Sib .,. bcklt StrlaPlr • or bed rest, nwds and aspirin "And stay away from others," he suggests. "H you have tho nu try to keep at all t.u yourself." f',.._P._..AJ SIGNS ••. cording U> officials Mayor Ron Pattinson said lo· day he is walling to fight tht> Coa s tal Comm1ss10n "all the way " "Proposition 20 was not de- signed to take away local control on such matters," he said. ·'They <the Coastal Com mission) are getting too big for their britches. They don't have a leg to stand on." According to papers filed with the court, city Traffic Engant: 'r Ralph Leyva declared the post. ed area had the highest rate of traffic accidenL~ an the city an September before the s igns Wt.'nt up. Leyva said parking along the ocean side of the highway J)06<'s safely hazards when cars bat•k 1nt.o the spaces or pull out int.o the stream of traffic. Deputy City Attorney Sangster said the city is granted aulhonty under the stale vehicle code to establish safety conditions oo at.ate highways. He said the parklng s igns had the approval of CalTrans and the state Department of Parks and Re<:reation. Newport Beach officials havt had a santilar run·in with the Coastal Commission over no- parking signs al Lido Isle and construction of volleyball pole::. oo the beach. Coastal authorities threatened but failed t.o take legal action against th<> city. Phones 'Out' SAN FRANCISCO CAP ) - Pac Hac Telephone Co. said ser vice 1s expected to be at about SO percent efficiency to day. Th<> <.'Ompany said Wedne:. d ay that restoration of full service was not expected befon· Friday The company said 70 percent of Mann County's long distance service was cul when a cable in San Francisco Bay Wal> snapped Swlday. Duck Feet Cbur~lll water w.-r Spe• White Star ••is Wiison lancreft Jet Jay ntte Star .... Davis Victlr lllip , .... ,, .. s,11~1 Al~ll 811fmt1• baits . .. • • .. Irvine VOL. 71 . NO 361 , .C SECTIONS, 46 PAGES SAN FRANCISCO <AP> A trea ure ot cold, isllver. jt"wel:s and artlfa<'~ h.• b(l('n found und partly rtt0vt~ from h•1ottn dary sunken Spanh\1l aAllt.'tln l<k\t in a etonn off lhe t>onun1crm Republic 1n 16U. in lcadt'r of ll1l A merlcan recovery tu um rt' Ports norlht'a .. 1 of thf' Oom1n1can Rtpubllc v.hf'rt" thf' w• el. Our l •ch of ti\(' Good •nd Puf'f' Con t"f'ptlon s.ink Hut Wt•bl,.:r dt>dtm·d t•ommvnt on lht• worth or lht• trui<or until .&II of It hb bt.'t•n rf'COv<>red an flvt> 1\r SIX m()Oth.'\ J ohn c;ri ...... am u writer whc> Amencan Burt 0 Wt>bbt'r .lr . J. leader of ~11que.st lnteroauonul lnc .• said Tue:,day Lhe truv\' was found Nov 28. about ~ mat~ v. "'"' ut ttw '''cne wht•n th•· trovt- v. u~ d1!lro\'t·n'd, sJld treHure buCfo, bt>h1.•ve II COtlld be worth $.&O m al lton I [ .. ' -.. i ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 0..ly Plie. l'tloW tty Pa•rlO O' 0-11 By Dawn's Early Liglaf Closely watched by mterested seagulls. the dorymen of Newport Beach secure their boats after an early morning f1shmg expedition in chilly offshore waters. Winter and sum mer alike, the dory boaL'\ seek the harvest of the sea. Iran Troops Fire On Funeral; 4 Die TEHRAN, Iran (AP> -Elite ranger troops opened fire on a funeral procession for an anlJ· s hah professor today. a nd hospital offi cials said al least four of the thous ands o r marching mourners we re killed. The government. meanwhile, imposed fuel rationing on this oil-n ch nation because of a crip· piing petroleum workers' strike. Officials at Pahlavi Hospital said al rceeived four dead and 22 wounded from the procession a t- tack. A spokesman for the Na- tional Front, the chief opposition group, said at least six bad been k illed. and a government spokesman denied there were a ny deaths, through he said several person s had been wounded. Wit h out hospital reports, casualty figures issued by the two sides have been dirficult to verify independently. Faw-Sclwols To Be Built Four Irvin e elementary schools will be buJlt in the aext several years and will be partly financed with $9 million in build·· in.I hmd bonds recently issued. according to a school dis trict plan. The school board approved the aale of the bonds to low bidder Bank of America. The district will pay tan average annual In· teresl rate of 8.28 percent oo the bo.oda. The bonds st.art maturing In 1982. with the lut bond to be re- Ured by the dlstrlct In 1999. Two schools each are to be butll I n Woodbridge and Nerthwood. The Front s pokesman said several persons were shot dead in other clashes today between security forces and dem- onstrators in Tehran. At one point, mobs ·or anti- shah demonstrators streamed toward lhe U.S. Embassy, but Iranian troops fared automatic weapons in the air to chase them The protesters scattered but then regrouped and moved oo to other areas. "Today was a very decisive day.'· the Front spokesman said. "We think It is going to continue to an extreme end." Soldiers allowed the funeral procession to take place on con- d i lion there be no anti-shah violence. Reporters who wit· nessed it said the march began peacefully fro m Pahlavi Hospital but whe n it reached the 24th or Esfabd Square. about a quarter-mile away, the ranger troops opened fire. The university professor, who had been taking part in an anti- shah sit-ln, was shot and kiUed Tuesd ay, report e dly as he leaned from a window to shout support to protesters during a demonstration. A Front s pokesman said he did not know why the soldiers fired on the tuneral process1on, but believed soldiers along the square may have mistakenly thought troopers accompanying the marchers deserted to the op. position. Reporters said some soldiers escorted the marchers to e nsure that the procession was peaceful. Squad.$ or lhe elite troopers were marc h.I ng through Tehran's streets today. shoulder to shoulder. their races covered by aas maska. ............ Yo11r Hometown ] Dally Newspaper ,, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 27 , 1978 TEN CEN~ Dbeovered ·~:: OR.ANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA "Sliver p1 lte1I or elthl, salver t·nnd<"habrn, antique c hlnll tran1bhlppf'd from 17th Century M unUa 1alll'()t\.' popping out of 'iand pock~lll us we reached ln\O them. hke dattang 1n\O "' \hrlstmiti. :.tocking " s1ud GrlHlm Webber Bld thl' vessel carried a con1t1d4!rablc 110rt1on of the S1u1n1sh royal revenues ror the 'tl'<m• 1640 and 1641 Th\! shap was ra rsl salvaged an 1687 by American shipwright and adventurer William Phipcs, who retneved 32 tons of silver and other goods. Webber srud But Phips missed most or the treasure aboird the wreck and in 1688 returned with a second recovery team o nly to again ha ve trouble penetrating the coral shield he believed held the bulk of the ship's treasure. Webber said his rind results trom the discovery by marine historian Goin E . "J ack" Haskins or tbe logbook or the s hip Henry which discovered the wreck 46 years after It sank. The logbook, found in the Marine Archives in London. gave com- pass bearing8 on the wrecl<. Among the items found were cannon balls, porcelein cups and plates from Mexico and China. olive jan;, candlestick holders, a · silver candle snuffer in nearly perfect condition, and a "signifi- cant" quantity or silver coim. Most were pieces of eiizht mint· ed io Mexico and Peru, Webber said. The 140-foot vessel , the nagship of Spain's 17th Century New World Oeet. was carrying 520 people when she sank in the Caribbean storm. G rissim said Seaquest lo- ternationaJ will share lhe luol equ a lly with lhe Dominican Republic B ·es Count Up to 14 Grisly Scene Painted in Sex Killings DES PLAINES. Ill. <AP ) - Four more bodies were found to· day beneath the house or a man s uspected of killing 32 youths. Today's discovery brought to 13 the number or bodies found at the home of John Wayne Gacy Jr. O ne or t he 13 was under Gacy's garage. A 14th body, found in a river. has also been linked to the investigation. An official described the mud- dy. foul-smelling crawl space beneath Gacy's house. where Fire Aid Deadline Delay Seen By JOANNE llEVNOLDS O'tlle0.11, ...... , ... Lewis Moran. director of the st ate Department of toreslry. today conceded that dissolution of the county-state fire service in Orange County ls going to take longer than the six monlhs pre· dieted by state officials. Last week. Moran informed County Administrative Officer Robert 11lomas that the slate's 520 million a llocation for the county's fire protection was be· ing cut from the stale budget as or next July 1. most or the bodies have been found. as "like a battle scene in there with all the trenches dug. You're working right in the graves." Dr. Robert Stein. Cook CoWlty medical examiner. said Tuesday night that in his 20 years as a fore nsic pathologist he has never come upon a more horri- fying case. "Before this is aJI over with. this could be one or the most heinous crimes of lhe century," said Stein. who has been crawl· Skeleton Crew ing on his stomach underneath the house. Searchers resumed their dig- ging this morning in the crawl space where lbe s keletal re· mains of four bodies and parts of a firth were found Tuesday. Gacy. :,S. a construction con- tractor who once served a prison term m Iowa for sodomy. re- portedly told, Investigators he had sex with apd then killed 32 boys and young :men. buryin~ 26 at his home and lttrowing six in the Des Plaines River A,, ........ Thomas said he doesn't obJect to the cul since the county pays the state Sl8.6 million or the S20 million spent on a contract for the fire service annually. But the county administrator was irked that lhe change over deadline was set for six months. He noted it took county and state oflicaals two years to negotiate the change from county to state ownership at the UC Irvine MedicaJ Center. An employee for the Utah Department of Social Services took·it seriously when she read a memo saying her of· fice needed only a ske leton crew during holidays. The skeleton on this occasion is acting as a receptionist . Moran said he sent a letter to Thom as today informing him that the forestry staff Is working on a plan to meet some of the county's objections. "Six months probably isn't much time." Moran conceded. "I'm sure we can sit down and work out a transition scheme that won't be impractical or m· feasible. Ethnic Awareness Project Meet Set "Certainly the citize ns In Orange County won't go without fire protection." Moran said. A proposed ethnic a wareness pr ogram inl«,!Oded to bring children of differing b ack· grounds together in school v1a two-way television will be given public hearing in Irvine. The joint fire service has bt..>en operated in Orange County since 1930 when the state agreed to take on structural fire protection in the county's unincorperated areas along with its duties of protecting wild.lands. The hearing is scheduled at Irvine Unified School District headquarters. 2941 Alton Ave .• at 7:30 p.m .. J an. 4. As the county has urbanized. The program will be sub- mitted to lhe federal Depart- ment of Health, Education and Welfare for potential funding. Moran said. most or the state fire force in Orange County is committed to structural fire pro- Initial plans Include the de· velopment of an ethnic studies c urriculum for elemental'I)' school students <See flRE, Page A2) Using two-way television, Late Present Armored Truck Loses Coins CITY OF COMMERCE CAP> -Christmas came a day late for some eagle-eyed motorists on ln· terstate 5 when the back doors or an armored truek inexplicably new open and $3,000 in quarters landed on the freeway . creating an instant gold rush and traffi c jam, authorities said today . ln the midst or the bedlam Tuesday night in the City of Commerce southeast or Los Angeles. three cars were involved in rear-end collisions and several persons received minor injuries, the California Highway Patrol aald. • The clean.up took more than an hour to com· plete and some or those who stopped appeared to have come equ ipped with a finders-keepers philosophy. Bud Mowrig a su"pervisor fo r Armor~d T ransport Co., said he believed about $?~500 ol the $3,000 was eventually recovered ln the dark. .. Irvine students will share in· formation and exper ience an cross -cultural dialogues with s tudents an other school dis· tricls. One d.Jstricl proposed for in- clusion in the program 1s the Santa Ana Unified School Dis· trict. The public hearing wlll be televised locally over Channel 3. Viewers are encouraged to telephone in questions and com- ments. at 556·4902, duri ng the program. A copy of the proposal will be available for public review at the district orfices. be&inning next Wednesday. Man Sought In Hone Kill PORTLAND. Ore. (AP> Federal authorities a re seeking a man charged with adopting 109 wild hor3eS through a g,~ meot program and then sernng them ror slaughter as animal and human food overseas . Donald HuJZhes. 37. or Bums. Ore .• Is the first pers on ac- cused of viol1Ung the 1972 Wtld Horse aQd Burro Act in a com· plaint slped by U.S. Ma1Jstrat.e George Juba, authorities aald Tuesday. He sot the horses th"°"ih a U. S. Bureau or Land Manacement adot>t·a·ho[IO e>ro11am desi~ to tontrol ~r1es on rangelands and to provide· recr~1Uon , n l~lfl)l.ll .. / ~ ,ff,•' I I "'· /"4 ~ •fMAOM I.I ..... ~~( /l , • I ~·· He is being held w1lhoul bond on a murder charge and as scheduled to appear an court Fri· day. Gacy , who wa s twi ce divorced, lived in the house for six. years. the last two alone . St ein said he is not close to identifying any of the vicluns and some may never be iden- tified. "The teeth are excelle nt but we still have to have the dental report to match them," he said. <See BODIES, Page AZ> Fog Yields; OC Airport Opens Again Operations resumed at Orange County Airport today after four hours of morning fog that at one point cut visibllity on passenger traffic runways t.o 800 feet. More than 1,000 passengers were diverted to and from On- tario ~irport before Orange County controllers decided at 10 a.m . that it was safe to resume flights. Air California communica· tions executive Bob Payton said has airline diverted s ix flights and 600 passengers to and from Ontario. .. But things are looking good now." he said. "The fog is mov- ing out pretty rapidly and our operations are going back to normal." Ofhc1als of two other major carriers. Hughes Airwest and Golden West Airli nes. said lheir services also were back lo normal. Airline personnel who have had to deal with impatient and truculent passengers for three days in a row were cheered to· day by the National Wealher prediction lhal the fog period is over Forecasters said the persis- tent fog will give way to a bank of cloudy wealher that will bring rain m its wake. They see a 50 percent chance of rain by late Thursday. Ora nge County Airport had the dubiou.5 distinct.Jon today of being the only airport in the na- tion to be seriously a ffected by fog . Tbe control tower at Los Angeles International Airport reported more than a mile or visibility on all air carrier <See FOG, Page A2) Coast Weather Chance or rain increas- ing tonight with a 50 per- cent chance of rain on Thurs day. Cloudy tonight and Thurs day . Lows tonight 43 to so. Highs Thursday, 53 to 59. INSIDE TODA 't" Sto#Uly Carmidi(ul, who a dtcade ago 111mboUud B'4ck Pot.Der mUUoncy in America, now reftdta in Nnco . "being qvi•t," workino for revolu- Uon. In one o/ hil anf requent intervifWI, C.Onnich<ul du· C1aHd hit OOu.H wtth Tia. Ai· 1odaud PrtN. See Poge 87. •••• At Y-~ Al Allll LAMlen CM L.M....,. ,,. ,..._ .......... .. ..... '4iJ ...... ....., .... ~ ......... .. Ct........ OH ........ P .... .. cetllk• .................... Al C.....,_ N ~ .... ~ AM .... ~ ., '""' ., .. ................. ~ .......... I~ •nt..,i.-•• .......... c:.u ,..._. .......... ..... CW,t,.U lllft.... M ......... Ctt ...,..,,... j •• .. ~ I w •• ·! - ~ ·a·: be ~o If 1e 1 l ·r b ·• 0 ., •• ., ct! DAILY PILOT I WtOft!tdtx. O!ctmbtf 17, tflt . Airport Del&ys Cause Strains 8 J ntlF. IJVM\ OI U. Otit\' ...... ""°' t\1rllnct> ~or"-"'"' ..it Oran11•· t'ounl Airport ~t-n.• 11Ull ~.aim an.: rriiult•d nerve.-. today ltw 1 r own llnd pa,.~t-n lll'rl • .1fl1.'t 111111 1lu\·:-. ,11 lo..i &hill t'an ,·,·lt•tl hul1J.I\ fhtihl '. fr.l)l'J h •mp1•1., .111tl (urthc·r 1u mntl'd &ht· t1 l~o~., l'N"dt-d .iari.art • • I 1 · ., h •' 11 51 •• n 1· c1 t' ' c r ' n11 1:.tm1111 flH thl' la!<>\ \bn ''"ff"·" "ltchl"tl Dt•nnl:-1"tl1nm. .. u,wrvt1>1lr ol p.U\'\t'nlitf'r 'lt'n lt'\.-:o. fnr Gohk•n w,·~· AIMIO("ll. llt' '\lt HI 11n1hlPni .. •rt' C'C\m p11u11cfrd b' Jn'(1ou.. rttlotJ\' .. 1wJ1tan1: tr~•n·l,•n. ··11•1npen. ..art• bellt•r n\-t-r ~ hohdo\'~ but th,•n•., "till " tum 1111 lh1• f1t1111l1• 1o\t1rlo.lnl( Ill ttk• ,111 llt•l l hl· ,,llll f'tl~l lrll '>H id 'Olllt' UllUMla( pm I.Ill' m:-. .tn.illl' I hi' \l'1Jr F'or 1111\•, th1• h..t~~uK'' 1·lw111 .1rt•U "tJ'\ '() conli(t''ll'd lbal .. Fn day n1ttht ttw) h.1d to huw th· :.hl'ri ff to kt>t•p pc.>opli' from l'llmbrn~ into tht> un1.1uthontt'd an·•• aocl unlo:.idan~ their mm lui.a:..i~,. from thl' l'Jrt " In .11!<11tion, h1• MH l1. a numbt•r ol 1·ub dn~C'rs nppnrcnlly d« l'td•-<I to lakl' Christmas off. :-.1raoll1ng tr:.iwlt'r!> ..it about 9 o dta•k ('h11,tnrn:, nll:ht "Yt•llow ('ab wouldn'I d1 !> pJtch any mor\.' C'ab)l to Orangt> C"ounl\• Au·port." Ptlgnm said ThJt '4J!-unu:-,uul " llt-a~rt't:icl \\Ith !>pokes men f r 11 m o t h t> r J 1 r I 1 n e s t h a I pa '>sen~er loads were unusually high for a Christmas Day . possibly lx>cause 1t fe ll o n 8 Monday and the next day was a 1M>rk clu v l\t 1ke Aland assistant station m an.tger for Hughes Airwest. :,aid he found most passengers to ht' C'OOVl'rat1ve ·When lht'\ c:in !>l'l' at lthc l•l>O I hl') undC'rst and tl. '' he 'Jld. hut added, "Th1.•y gt:t very llrtlablt• I Valley Man Enters Plea ln Sex Rap I\ 40-year-old Garden Grovl' paramedu.· pleaded innocent in court today to 21 felony charges of t•h1ld molest.mg and ilhcit sex with a 14-)ear-old girl. Larrv Howard Wheeler. a F'ountam Valley resident. wa:, ordt•red to fact~ a J an 15 pre ll m 1n ury hl•arin& in W c:-,t Orange County Judicial District l'Ourt to dete rmine 1( he will ~l and trial f'ountain Valley police arrest- l''1 WhC't.'ll'r on Dec 13 in his home Poli ce o ffi cer Pat Coleman s aid that Wheeler bad tht• illicit sex with the teen-ager from May to December of this 'l'Jr Wheeler 11' fret! on $10,000 bail /\ 10 yea r veteran of the Garden Grove Pirc Department. Wht•c kr has been sus pe nded from tus paramedic post pt-nd· ing furthl'r investi gation. Aland '•lfJ f't't lal J'roblerM haH• bl .-n IO'L bl!'C•I•• poijlllbly from 111 lh • •lr. Chrl1tmn• pub chttkf'd. and m\~ rot\MtUons In add.tum ht' " 1111 not all p saeo"I''"' fn>m • orlwr fhRht.a could ht• 1n1m\:dtnlfll) c~om mod•t~ on dt\lt>rlt-d maht.a. Aland 1111d Atrwt11l'tt M . prrlm\-ntal 127 n11hta, ~·h1rh carry I~ pa OL •n In.ti •i.d or lbt U~u.JI , Y.t'H• helpful IO bandhDM d l•n•d pant•oa: ·r bcUlUt' of au luraw t•upa~1l Thi• 721 .. hlrh btt11an t1. .. t mahh t•·1t· lh1i. month. hu• ~·11 oppu t'd b., n.'11dcnlb *ho drum II LS Ont'>lt'I lhllll cllhN Jt•La unct \l.·111 mrrt".t'>t a1rpu1 t lontte11llon \I r I 1 n t ~ u r k 1· r" J t 11I h1• 1 u1ri>1.1rh ntJ\ lul\ l' ul.,o rJr l·d prol.11,•m.. ...1111 l{ol~rl l'•n ton d1rt·rtor of pubUr .. rru11 .. fo1 1\1r C1.1ll(urntu Sance onlv l.4l6 An~l'I~ und Orn.it• County "l're fogged in. he said. "1n othrr piirlll of t.ht• :>late wht>n.> tht' ~Wl Is shlntnR ;rnd trw :-.k11·~ un· blul'. vou huw :>ome cr1.>d1b1lal, 111obh·in:, wht•n you lt'IJ lh<'m u fhAChl lb rnnct.•led ~cuuse of weather.'' P a y t on :-. " 1 d ll a :1 :H' n ~ c r s so m etanH·~ i-N• tt1t' fo.i a11d f1gurtl th(•1r fl 1Jtht will bt.• de layttd . llowuvcr. wht•n flights <ire diverted to Ontnrlo, tilt· buses leuve on scht!dulc. he swd And passengers can't t·heck In ut Ontario. P ayton said. Thl' passenger.. go through security procedures at Orange County Airport and arc bused to planes atOntano * * * f',....P.,,.AJ FOG ••• runways Uub mom 1ng Fog that hampered operations during the night hours was r~ceding rapidly. Fog that blanketed Orange County Airport in the early morning hours hampe red traffic in many areas of lhe county. Police reported no major traf- fic accidents. They said a sHghl increase in "fende r bender " mishaps could be attnbuled to the foggy conditions. Loan of Funds Aids Church HARTFORD, Conn. <AP ) An archdiocesan ortlcia1 wants to give money away to m ake money for the church. The Rev Edmund Nadolny. director or the Office of Radio and Television for the Roman Catholic Archdjocese of Hartford, s aid Tuesday, he will offer $1,000 to anyone who agrei?s to give the money back. plus any profit made on it, altheendoftwo months "The easiest thing to do would be to put I.he money in a bank and return it to me at the end or two months with inter est," Nadolny said. "l'm hoping pea. pit> will find more imaginati ve things to do." ---2 Theft Suspects Held After Chase Two men were an custody Lo- day on burglary charges after leading Costa Mesa police on an .. a rly morning a uto cha!le that t•ndcd 1n Newport Beach. police :-aid Two television i.cts and a v1dt•o tape machine, allegedly :-.l o lcn from D av is Brown Appliances at 411 E . 17tb St , Costa Mesa . were recovered from the car driven by one of the suspects. police said. Mcl'>n police Sgt. Sam Cordeiro :.aid the ch ase begun al 5:20 u m . whe n patrol officer Ed OltANOE COAST DAILY PILOT IM~ ..... t~ C)ttt\' Pi .... *''" Wfttet\ ti (4)i"ll'I &t ..... tflo4' H..w\ ... f"\, 1\9'\AtllU.,..ltf' , .. Or#/ltO#' , .... ~..,,.,.,.,--s. ....... ec1o ...... ..,. Dryzmala spotted a car pull.mg away from the rear of the ap- pliance st.ore. Irvine and Newport Beach police units joint.'<i the pursuH that ended on Windward Lane in Dover Shores a bout JS minutes later. Police said driver Richard Ga w. 20, of Santa Ana. e luded police on foot after the car was halted. His compa nion, Raul Romero Ruiz, 30. of Santa Ana, was arrested on the spot, police said . Gaw was arrested about an hour later while h itchhiking along Pacific Coast Highway. Both men wer e booked at Costa Mesa jail and htJd lo lieu of $5,000 ball each. The toll of bodies climbs loclies found 1n northe.tel oomer of or•*' epaoe. search for more bodies conttnun ,,.,.~ OtAORAM OF GACY PROPERTY tN DES PLAINES WHERE REMAINS WERE FOUND One Body Found Under Oarage Floor, 12 MoN In Spaee Under HouH TUKJ Held in Scam In Newport Beach Nc•wport Bt.>urh police said to duy two men arrcsled for al- lt'.:Nt Involvement In a purchase order rrt-d.lt scam may be linked to companies througho ut California. Arizona and several olhl'r Weskm states. Released on $25,000 bail today Wl'rt· James Lawrence Bart.el. 37, or 1420 Pa rk Newport. Newport Beach. who all~gedly used the alias or J ames Gentry. and Lonny Leroy Alhson. 42. who allegedly used the name of Theodore Cramer. AlUson listed a Coronado ad· dress but had an Arizona drl ver's license. police said. Detective Dave Scruggs said the men face charges of grand theft property and carrying a concealed weapon. He said the case began when Slavick's Jewelers in Fashion Is land reported receiving a let · ter from Earth Industries, 2955 East Coast Highway. The letter reportedly s aid the company was a subsidiary of Wit-Jax In· dustries, which was celebratin~ !ls 25th anniversary and wanted to purchase gifts for its officers. Watches valued at $8.000 were subsequently purchased through a purchase order. Scruggs said store officials becam e suspicious after they re- ceived a .telephone call from a Santa Ana jeweler who had re· celved a similar letter. Subseque nt investigation. Scruggs said. revealed that Earth Industries and Wil-lax In- dustries did not appear to have business Hcen.ses. He s aid they were operated from an office without files or records, and with a temporary employe"' answering the telephone. "On the envelope, they say they're cele brating their 25th year," Scruggs said. "The best I've been able lo discover. they've been in bus iness a month and a half ... 3 Burglaries Net Tub, C<UJh, 1Ys in Irvine Irvine police are investigating the theft of SS.800 in goods re- ported Tuesday as stolen in the burglaries of two homes and a construction s ite. J ohn DeNis1. of 7 Mimosa, said someone broke a window to Jtet in and steal $3,000 worth of item s, including DeNisi 's Christmas gifts to his wife. A colo r t elevision set. wa tc hes. rings, money and a new coat were among the loss. he said. DeNis i said burglars a lso s truck in his area lasl Chris tmas and last Thanksgiv· ing. Ba rbara Musgrave, 3 Cashew. r epor t ed the loss of three television sets. a wedding band, three cockta il r in gs. neck chains, a watch and a pocket ca m e ra. which she valued together at $2,1Z7. Police found no signs of forced entry to her home. The suspects were arr ested without incident ufler a brief in· r 1dcnt at thr ft rm. Scruggs said. He said police recovered two watches valued al $7 ,000 and a conccall'd handgun Sc ruggs s a id more lhun $10,000 tn new oftict> equipment. whir h paper" found on lhe su:.· pects indicuted ha d been bought with purchase orders. was re- covered from the office ln add ition. Scruggs said. papers fowid on the two, includ- ing checkbooks and correspon· dence. ltnked Bartel with com· panics throughout California and Arizona. Bartel allegedly 1s an officer m Phalamencan Industries Inc .• Pac1 f1c Imports Inc .. Integrated Medical Management lnc. and Samar Industries Inc .. Scruggs said. lie said he is invest1galmg lo sec 1f thc:,c firms are tn· corporal.Cd. In addil1on. hl' :-aid. paper!> linked Ba11l1I t.o Allergy Control Inc . of Newport Beach, Auto· Immune Allergy Control Center Inc ., Auto·lmmunc Allergy Con- lrol Center of Arizona , Inc .. Al · lergy Management, Inc .. and Al · lergy Control Medical CHnios. Shoes Find Run Tough SAN DIEGO <AP l - Paul Glover. 31. says he went through six pairs of tennis shoes in a 3,500-mile hike from Boston to the Parific Coast. The hiking boots he s tarte d with were loo hard on his feet. "It was my first attempt on a really long hike ." s u1d Glover, a lean. b oard e d re s ident of Ithaca , N.Y. The only proble ms came in Pennsylvania where he foun~ cider being sold for 25 ccnt!I -a ll you can drink "and that made me s ick" -a nd on ce in Oklahoma where he came out or a woods and a m an pulled a gun on him and took him to jail. brie fly . • r ..... r~AI BODIES .•. Edm und Dobbs. chie f of Cook County sheriff's police. said that "based on my information they're all young boys." ~bbs nid about 20 men worked inside Gacy's ho m e Tuesday. Some tore out flooring a nd dug through the crawl s pace. Technician s s pread buckets of mud on the ground behind the home, looking for re· m~in.; Stein suid the excavation would proceed slowly because wo rke rs risk becoming sick from breathing m e thane . hy drogen s ulfide and other gases released during the de· composition of human flesh. Gacy has been c harged with killing Robert Pies t, 15, of Des Plaines. The youth was reported missing Dec. 11. Investigators said Gacy told them he threw Piest's body and the bodies of five other youths into the Des Plaines River. Investigators dragged the river Tuesday with no success. Assistant State's Attorney Terry Sullivan said he hopes to present evidence lo a grand Jury this week. A s pokesm an for the Cook County state's a ttorney's office ·has said Gacy's attorneys are expected to use an insanity de· rense. But Stein s aid •'When I left Gacy·s house tonight I said. 'This guy's n ot c r azy .• Everything he s aid is just so. Everything is where he said It is." said Stein. He said remains have been found whe re Gacy indicated they would be. Irvine Man Gets Post The board of directors o r Child rens Hospital o f Lob Angeles has e lected an Irvine man to be chairman of the board and chief executive officer. The action came alter the res- i g n at Ion o f t h e cu rre nt chairman. Paul Smith. who said he was quitting to pay more at· te-ntion to persona l business matters. R e plac 1ng him as J ames Leis ne r of Irvine. who was board vice president and has been a member o( the board since 1972. Leisner 1s president and owner of JL Co. His term will end June 30 . At a construction site at Irvine Boulevard a nd P a lolado. !!Om eone m a d e orr wt th a bathtub vaJued al S700. Baseball Foetball Soccer Tennis Evtt,.(111-'1 Evttft*I) Fw tlle AtMete pvf>ll~ NoftOA"I tN~ FflG•f fOf (9'\ta ~"" H""'l"lfl llo "" ~I .... °" &.o<ftlP- l•itt¥eUt•f' lr•~.l~-..Ct\ \eitttPt(M\t A '\•~""9~lf"C.tif,...l\ovlti'u.d~\lf'1My\..-icl '"""9•t f ... pl'WllC.IN-1 pubh\lllh'IO IMAl\t I\ At ,,,. wnia ... ,,_, ( .... ,....., (a111 ....... ~,. . ....,"_ Dr•\IWM _,.., ,._......,.. --•.CW1of Vl( ......... M-0.-elW- n.-tC-l .. , .. Epidemic of Flu Still G;oing Strong Volley Balls Soccer Balls '=:.~Ml'W::" CllwWl" ~ -r Mall .. , .. .,..,,MA ....... U,*' .,, I Orange County hca1lb officlaJs believe today Ut•t • nu cpl4emic that cut 1ttendance at local sehools by u much as one third before Chris tmas Is still In Ml swlna. •'Schools are out, of course, and we don't have attend1nce record.a on whJch we can base our flndlnp," commented Dr L . R ex Ehlln1, director o r personal health services. "But the lnlormaUon t.h1t ls comln1 to ua certainly Indicates tb1t the nu la 1UU wltb ua al the level we rePOrted when 1cbools cloaed for Ole Cbriatmu vaca. lion.'' Ehlln1 said Lhe flu 1traln retponslble for the wave of sick· neaa has been pogltivtly Iden· Ulied u an A· Russian virus. ''ll's very similar to a strain that htL us here about 10 years ago" bemd. "That's why so few adult.a are being hit by a bul that seems to be goln1 for young people - they probably contracted It 10 ye1n •to and are immwae to it now.'' What.Yer your qe, Dr. Eh· Una Hid, the formula for fiu vie· tlms remains tbe same. "Pleat)' of bed rett. ftuldl and uplrtn. "And stay •••Y from others " · he suaaests. "lf you have the nu try to Qep it all to )'OUrlelf. I' • fo1tballs Baseballs Softballs PllYlf-' Biiis B111eylms Welpt Sits .. , .... 1ac•1tSblllill Taiwan Jeers Yankees TAIPF:I. Taiwun tAP> -At leas t 10.000 prote ters Oingin t l(gs and mud and 1houtlng "Carter is a cheat!" greeted a U S. deleg"Uon today aR It ar nved to begin talks with Taiwan offlciul.11 aimed at making thl' separation or the two natioll5 an a micable one. Vice l'~oreigo Minis t er fo'rederick Chien sounded a stem note in a welcoming speech for the diplomatic·mllltary delega· tioo at a military airport, telling the Ame ricans that the economic and cultural ties tht- Carter administration wants tn r etain with Taiwan can ~ con unued only on a government-to· government basis. As the delegation and Na tionalist Chinese omciali. left lhl.· airport. a ccompanied b y carloads of reporte r s, dcm o n str a tcu:s \Wl,fed the Na t1onalist flag of Taiwan and lunged at the automobiles. beat· ing on the sides, throwing egg:, and mud and striking the cars with flafn>Oles. One man ru11hed up to a re- porters' car and stuffed a mud- die d , torn American flag in through a window . Demonstrators splashed red paint on one limousine carryin~ American officials. Signs denounced President Carter's decision lhts month to s ever diplo m atic ties with Taiwan and establis h them wtlh commurust China. "Mr. Carter. you may sell out human rights, freedom and de· mocral'9'. but the ROC tRepubltc of China> will never be sold," read one. Police were able to hold back many of the angry crowd. Theri• were no immediate reports or m Juries. Another crowd of I .000 to 2.000 de monstrators gathered m front of Taipei's Grand Hotel. whcr1• the American de legation was to stay overnight before s tarting ta lks Thursday. f',....PageAI FIRE .•• tection iru;tead of wildlands. The re are about 550 s tate fores try fire m en in Orang~ County. Fifty of them are paid directly by the state for working o n wildlands fire service. The other 500 employees an· paid on the county contract and staff the fire st a tio ns and para me dic units that serve c i t ies s u c h a s San Juan Capistra no and Irvine as well ~ unincorporated te rritories. Thomas last week said adop lion or all 500 fi re fi ghters and related employees could cost tht· county up to $4 million. He explained lhal county p e r sonnel policies call for employees to be paid compara- ble to employet'S doing the same kind of work for cities in Orangt• County. The $4 million increa:se would be the cost of bringing the forme r state e mployees into line with pay and fringe benefi ts of. rered by other local fire agen· cies. he said. Dack f•t Cllllrcllill Water Wonder Speedo White Stat lawinf S Wilsen Balcreft Jet Jly Wbite Stat ·-Davis Vlctar .. . , ..... .. S,.1flAl•as lallllkrtml bcDts VIN' t. 2.yea t he c workt ( the lelt e l\18 ' .rant • hovt' .,.. ) outll a ·le.at endf ~ I I t ~ ~· ( l La~a/South Coast .. EDITION Your Hom town ] Dally Newspaper ~ VOL. 71, NO. 361 , 4 SECTIONS,~ PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 27, 1918 TEN CE Sunken treasure Trove Diseovered "<~ SAN f•RANC'ISCO !AP> -A treasure ot Sold, &Jh r. Jt!'-' b and uuracts h bttn found and pntb rtteve~ from • lea n d ry sunken Spanl.llh aalJt'Oo tost m a storm oCf th• Domlrut'an Rtpublu: 1n L&U. l.bt' loader of an Amerll'u.n rMovery h •m no ports Amt!m:an 8urt 0 Wf'bbt•r Jr • leader of Se qui t lntem.;u~onal In~· . :.aid Tu'""bd1t.) lht• lro' e w.u, found Npv 28. 'tlbout tiS nul~ no rtheast of the Oomtn1nn ReopublJc wht>n.-th v~ "'· Our L.ld) of Ult' vood and Pun· Cot'! C'cpllon s.nnk But Webber dttbned comment nn tht' iA'Orth of lbc trcasur~ Wllll all of It hb bffn 1"(1covt'red an f1vt> or •Ix months. John Gn~ Im, a writer who wa~ ut the S<'f'nt' when the lrovc ~.ii. dl~l"O\ered. aid treas ure buU!. bt'hcvc 1t could bl! worth S4<I m 111100 By Dawn's Early Light Closely watched by interested seagulls, the dorymen of Newport Beach secure their boats after an early morning fi shing expedition m chilly offshore waters. Winter and summer alike. the dory boats seek the harvest of the sea. Iran Troops Fire On Funeral; 4 Die TEHRAN, Iran <AP> -Elite ranger troops opened fire on a funeral procession for an anU shah professor today , and hospital officials said at least four of the thousands of marching mourners were killed. The government, meanwhile, imposed fuel rationing on this oil-rich nation because of a crip- pling petroleum workers' strike. Officials at Pahlavi Hospital said it ~ived four dead and 22 wounded from the procession al· tack. A spokesman for the Na· lional Front. the chief opposition group, said at least six had been killed. and a government spokesman denied there were any deaths. through he said several pe r s ons bad been wounded. Without hos pital rep-orts, casualty figures issued by the two sides have been difficult to verify independently. The Front spokesman said several persons were shot dead in other clashes today between security forces and dem · onstrators in Tehran. At one 1>9int, mobs of anti· shah demonstrators streamed toward the U.S. Embassy, but Iranian troops fired automatic weapons in the air to chase them. The protesters scattered but then regrouped and moved on to other areas. "Today was a very decisive day," the Front spokesman said. •·we think il·1s going to continue to an extreme end." Soldiers allowed the funeral procession to take place on con· dition there be no anti-shah violence. Reporte rs who wit· nessed it said the march began peacefully from Pahlavi Hospital but when it reached the 24th of Esfand Square, about a quarter-mile away, the ranger troops opened fire. "Silver pi~ of eight. sliver cundelabra, antique china tramustupped from 17th Century Mantia l(ulll'On.'> popping out of aand pockc~ as we reached into them. like dJggmg into a C'hrlscmas stocking .. :· s aid Graastm. Wt>bber s1ud the vessel carried a cons iderable portion of the Spanish royal revenues for· the yeara J640and )641. The :ship was first salvaged in 1687 by American shipwright and adventurer William Phips. who retrieved 32 tons of sliver and other goods. Webber said . But PhiP6 missed most of tbe treasure aboard the wreck and in 1688 returned with a second recovery team only to again have trouble penetrating the coral shield be believed held the bulk of the ship's treasure. Webber said his !ind results from the discovery by marine historian Goin E "Jack" Haskins of the logbook of the ship Henry which discovered the wreck 46 years after it sank. The logbook. found in the Marine Archives in London. gave com· pass ~arings on the wreck. Among U~ it.ems found were cannon balls. porcelein cups and plates from Mexico and China. olive jars. candlestick holders, a silver candle snuffer in nearly perfect condition, and a "signifi· . cant" quantity or sliver coQi.si. Moat were pieces of ei~hl minl3 ed in Mexico and Peru. Webber1 said. The 140· foot vessel. the Oagshi_p of Spain's 17th Century New World fleet, was•carrying 520 people when she sank in the Caribbean storm. Grissim s aid Seaquest In· ternational will share the loot equally with the Dominican Republic 'Rent Gouge' Claimed Laguna Fights 450 Percent Lease Hike By Sl'EVE MITCHELL Of .... O.lly ~ ... Stlllt They're calling it "rent goug. ing" and several Laguna Beach leaders are drafting a letter to federal wage and price officials protesting a 450 percent increase imposed this month on a Forest Avenue shop. Behind the rent protest are Laguna Beach councilmen Howard Dawson a nd Kelly Boyd, as well as several prom.i· n e nt Laguna Beach busi· nessmen who fear a trend of higher rents will force downtown merchants out of business. What they're protesting is a Death Toll Reaches 14; Dig Goes On DES PLAINES, Ill. (AP) - Four more bodies were found to- day beneath the house of a man suspected of killing 32 youths. Today's discovery brought to 13 the number of bodies found at the borne of John Wayne Gacy Jr. One of the 13 was under Gacy 's garage. A 14th body, found in a river, has also been linked to the investigation. An official described the mud· dy. foul·smelling crawl space beneath Gacy's house, where most or the bodies have been found, as "like a battle scene in there with alt the trenches dug. You're working right in the graves." Dr. Robert Stein, Cook County medical examiner, said Tuesday night that in his 20 years as a forensic pathologist he has never come upon a more horri· fying case. .. Before this is all over with. this could be one or the most heinous crimes of the century." said Stein, who has been crawl· ing on his stomach underneath the house. Searchers resumed their dig· ging this morning in the crawl space where the skeletal re· mains or four bodies and parts of a fifth were found Tuesday. Gacy, 36, a construction con· tractor who once served a prison term in Iowa for sodomy. re- portedly told investigators he had sex with and then killed 32 boys and young men. burying 26 at bis home and throwing six in the Des Plaines River. He is being held without bond on a murder charge and is scheduled to appear in court Fn· dfY· Gacy, who was twice divorced. lived in the house for s ix years, the last two alone. Stein said he is not close to identifying any of the victims and some may never be iden· lified. -(See BODIES, Page A2> lease agreement that increases the rent on a Forest A venue beauty s upply shop from $500 a month to $2.250. But Abby Hall. of Seal Beach. who is attorney for Hossein Vabid·Tehrani and co-owner witJ Vahid-Tehrani of three businesses along Forest Avenue. defends the steep increase. say. ing it is on par with other busi· ness rentals in the area. He said operators or Ropage Beauty Supply Co. "had a bargain at 29 cents per square foot for the past five years Cun· der a contract negotiated with the former owner of the three· unit building> ... And. Hall says. the new $1.25 per square foot rent "is com· parable to lease agreements in other areas." The Seal Beach man cited Fashion Island in Newport Beach and South Coast Plau in Costa Mesa rents as examples. saying tenants in those two malls pay between $1.25 and $1.50 per square foot. ··And I think Laguna Beach is a better shopping area than those places." he said. But Councilman Kelly Boyd disagrees with Hall's research. He said a small group or busi· nessmen conducted informal surveys of Forest Avenue busi· Late Present Armored Tmck Loses Coim CITY OF COMMERCE <AP> -Christmas came a day late for some eagle-eyed motorists on In· terstate s when the back doors of an armored truck inexplicably new open and SS.000 in quarters landed on the freeway. creating an ~slant gold rush and traffic jam. authorities said today. In the midst of the bedlam Tiiesday night in the City of Commerce southeast of I:.os Angeles. three cars were involved in rear·end collisions and several persons received minor injuries, the California High way Patrol said. The clean-up took more than an hour to com· plete and some of those who stopped appeared to have come equipped with a finders-keepers philosophy. Bud Mowrig a supervisor for Armored Transport Co .. said he believed about $2.500 of the $3,000 was eventually recovered in the dark. Widow to Stay Put In Slide-area Hom·e R esidents of three San Clemente mobile homes en· dangered by a Dec. 18 landslide are making arrangements to re· locate, but Mary Weber. a widow. said today she will not leave her home. Mrs. Weber and the three couples. who live on Mira Adelante in the Southcliffs Coun· try Club Estates in north San Clemente. were served notice by the park's owners last Wednes· day that their homes are in lllls, Silver Taken From Home A San Clemente man told police he foWld $2.250 in cash missing when he returned home Tuesday. Police said 20 one-hundred dollar bills and 250 silver dollars were reported. stolen from the . Avenida Valencia home or· Thomas Jay. Entry was ap- parenUy made through a dog door at the back or the house. danger and should be moved im· mediately. Al and Ann Heimberg. of 93 Mira Adelante. are the only resi· dents so far to have made definite plans to relocate their $70.000home. The Heimbergs. whose coach was within 10 feet of the 60·foot deep crevasse created by the landslide, will move to a Carlsbad mobile home park as soo!L...a.S_arrangements can be made, said Shorecliffs park manager Ray Paine. Robert and Rita Larkin, in space 94, and Albert and MariaMe Bates, space 92, are planning to move, but haven't decided where. they said today. In the meantime, Larkin and his wife are staying at a Dana Point motel (as are the Heim· bergs). The Bates are remaining in their home. with a car packed and ready to go in case of an emergency evacuation. But Mrs. Weber, m space 95. said today that she does not feel her home its in dange r and has made no pl~ to move. (See SU.DE, Pa1e AU ' nesses. "and nobody's paymg $1.25 a square foot-in fact nobody's paying more than $1 a square foot." Boyd, whose wife's clothing store is adjacent to Ropage and owned by Abby and his as· sociate. S3!'\ his research shows the average· rent at the Lum· beryard mall on Forest Avenue is 85 cents per square foot. "There's a 2,800 square foot shop near here paying 55 cents and the landlord is eoine to raise it to 65 cenlc; a square foot next year." Boyd said. "That's not $1.25 and it's not out of line." Boyd also said Hall does not (See GOUGE, Page A2) Fog Yields; OC Airport Opens Again Operations resumed at Orange County Afrport today after four hours of morning fog that at one point cul risibility on passenger traffic nmways to 800 feet. More than 1,000 passengers were diverted to and from On· tario Airport before Orange County controUers decided at 10 a .m . that it was safe to resume flights. Air California communica· tions executive Bob Payton said his airline diverted six flights and 600 passengers lo and from Ontario. "But things are looking good now." he said . ''The fog is mov· ing out pretty rapidly and our operations are going back to normal." Officials of two other major carriers. Hughes Airwest and Golden West Airlines, said their s ervices also were bac k to normal. Airline personnel who have had to deal with impatient and truculent passengers for three days in a row were cheered to· day by the National Weather prediction that the fog period is over. Forecasters said the persis· tent fog will give way to a bank of cloudy weather that will bring rain in its wake. They see a 50 percent chance of rain by late Thursday. Orange County Airport had the dubious distinction today of being the only airport in the na-};~ to be seriowly affected by } <See FOG, Page A2> Coast Weather Ckmente Ekction to Decide Recal& Chance or rain increas-. ing tonight with a 50 per· cent chance o( rain on / Thursday. Cloudy tonight .\ a nd Thursday. Lows tonight 43 to SO. Highs ' Thursday. 53 to 59. INSIDE TODA W StoulJI Camtichatl. who a ckcade 0410 ']lmbolizied Black • Powtr mtlit01lq/ in America, now reftdt• in Africa. "being 1 qtdet," workin{I /or rnolu· tion. In°"' of hU anfreqwnt •ntervlNS, Cormichoel dU· CUiied ltU awae With TM A.t· aociated Prtu. SH Page 81. ' 8)' ANNE COOPER Of tllt o.llY l"lMt 5Lllft An interpretation ol the un· u sual -occasionally aatonlshin1 -events that muked the year 1978 in San Clemente can be considered only preliminary witil after the Jan. '3 special city election. That election will decide whether Mayor William Walker and City Council members Don· na Wlllltlnson and Howard Mushett will be recalltd from of· flee. But u.e election also la expect· ed lo provide an lndJc1tlon -lh nm llnce the March tm COtal· cil election -of whether San Clemente clti~ens are satisfied or d9ssatisfied with the direction of the city. Walker and Mrs. Wilkinson had each served two ,years on the five·mtmber city council, when Mushett, Myrtis Wagner and Roy Hamm were elected to first terms last March. The two senior councll mem· bers 1enerally agree th•t personality and philosophlcal dJ!ferences on the previoua City Council did riot tnterf~re with the conduct or city busil1eal. Since Mart'h, however, the council has been spUt Into two factions that come down on op· posite sides or nearly every con· troversy. Hamm, businessman and former Chamber of Com· • merce president, as ls Walker, 1 has sided consiat.ently with the mayor and Mrs. Wilkinson. Mrs. Wagner, who ran a cam- pa lgn limited baslca1ty to srowth issues, hu paired with Mushett. Except for rare ilsues requJr· lng a four-rtfths vote, most policies have ~ set by the three·member council majority. ' But not wit.bout a t11ht. Ctty Council meetln1s. which on~ put 1udlence1 to s)Mp, bave been dubbed "the Wednesday before he was elected to the night fights" by one observer. council in March. As president Debate bas arown so bea\ed o f t b e S a n C I e m e n t e that the m~or called in police Homeowners Association. during one meeting to keep or· Mushett had advocated last year der -not among members of a citywide vote on how tbe city's the audience. but among mem· pier-bowl area should be re· ben of the council. developed. Chief antaeonl~t.s In the eon· But Wiikinson rejected nJct appear to be Mushett and Muthett'1 propoeal, .saylng the Mrs. Wilkinson, with Walker llaue wu too complJcat.ed lo put and Mn. Wapr _playlna beck· on a: ballot. M~tt said be de· up ro.... AltJIOUtl'I Kamm baa clded lo run tor the couocU last slded consistently wltb Walker December. when councilmen and Ml'1. Wllklmon, be bu so voted lo "~lve and ftle'' (take (ar not beeo outaDQken. no action on) a pet.lUc>Jl ln I UP· Mulbett and ilra. W~, POrt ol a pler•boWl vote. llped • l•-'ex MY_......_ Al Mii~ Cit ._,,_,...,_ MW..~ IU ...._. ....... llM,1MI ...,... » MMk... .. Ot• MllllMIP-. .. .,......_.._ ~ ='=-::~.~~ ....,._,._. M .......... U liWt.al A •u T......_ •tt ~ a.11 "--' ... , .. 1t ..... CM,11-11 ---~ ..._... C1' ..,_ ..._ M -~- hid been cHt H opponen;-(lff U.ICl'I~, Pase~) -.., •,;J~_., -:~ro '', .. ..:i ... ~~ . -,. 1 • ' La~atoCut Foot Patrols L.a1u.na 8t' ch poUtt "UI cun l•nuc lheU' root P'lNb ln four .ar\'llS ol tbv c:ll..)'. but on • ml.M'h lt•isur eel dwint U> r"'1rl) ~" .on t'ounnlm n ha\ appro\"t'd a $4,000 ~UouU<>n tu CO\cr Ow• C"ommuruly P trol Plan thrauch tune 30. tmt"ad of an hmatect $13.000 COlt under ~ run acak 1.11 t>~r.am AC'l tng P oll.:t b td Nl'll Pur('"ll wk1 he cannot ~<'Om mf!tld flmdl~ the fu_U e~ntn n u\ lhe p t d~ to bocfJe\ coa 'tr • .11nu H1, rttom~cldauoa. •l'C't'pt t-d by lhl• COUl)t't I, ts to opt"rut.- tht' foot und CO<ltt'r p.1trob • on tO J 1 nt't'dt-d bou Ill. . 1 ht> h1.:h \ 1i.1b1llt> uniform patrols v.~~ uuu11 I at April tn foo.r ptttflt' i.~ of lh Alt COIM), ln<-lucbni M•tn 8ett'h Park. HNI« PU'lk, .. oanl.aln •nd C'tae beat and l ttntnl bmlntla dj tntt. Complaln&a from cilium In lbose four a uu:luded pttbllt' drunl&rnneu. alrohol on lhc bnt'b, pao,bandUn1 al Plntl Otl UM btk'tt, dru1 vamauooa and other public nua..&ntt vk>l•Uom ln UK-mon\ha bl>tWttn Ju1u 11nd Ottembtt tho Coot pall'OI ' prosnm rcsultod to J7 drunk n publ1t' arrest.a tn I.be four att . J8 pouf'&MOD ol marijuana ar rt"lta. and ~uty 3:W vra~" for m I Mr "1ol llUOM oat ol Lbe program bef~ the Sol 000 ~uocalfon "".t." $U 9J<& ,.,...,.~··· GOUGE CLAIMED. • • hJvc the overhead faced bv 1Jw nc1 ~ of Fa:shlon lslond. add 1ng h1~ luodlord paid $170,000 for all three bwldtngs nearly f1vt• years ago. "And he benefit l'd from Proposition 13 , you can ~·1 on that." Bo' d ~aid Uul Hall i.aad Boyd 1~ JUSl try ing to protect his wife's busin~ The Boyds' lease ruru, out.~xt August. and tlall said he intencb to adjust upwards from the cur rent SSOO a month rent. "They have known for the last four years they are paying un der the market pnce ... Hall said. "They should have come to me and said, 'Mr. Hall. we feel we've been unfair to you. We're going to pay you 60 cents a square foot in· stead of29 cents.' "'It works both ways My (new) price is .statistically comparable for the area " The rent hike at Ropage lt..'CI Councilmen Dawson and Boyd lo mct:'I with ~everal Laguna H<'ach bw,ines~mt•n l wo week!, al:(o to see what they could do to ('Om bat s uch increases. Attending the meeting were Laguna Federal Savings and Loan Association president Lo rna Mills. busin essman Rit'hard Jahraus. and Chamber of Commerce President Michael O'Steen. "We can't really <\O anything but muster public opinion," Dawson said following that -meeting. "I can think of no other legal i nle n.enlion besi de~ •jawboning· with federal officiab and let them know what's going on here .. He te rmed Hall's so-calltd ·take -it-or-leave-it' lease agree· m e nt with Ropage o wners "blo<'k·bust1ng," and said 1t wo uld lead .lo a n exodus or downtown merchants who WJll not be able to afford what he terms inflated leases. "It"s not a case of juat.Jfytng his price/' Dawson said. "They bought the place well before ProposiUon 13 and their taxe,, have gone down " He s aid increases such as that 1mpol'1..'<.f on the beauty supply "hop "will price our merchants out or town. and nothing this side of a massage parlor operator wlll he able to afford that kind of rtnt .. And I 'd hate to see our downtown shopping area lumt..-d into some kind of hurdy-gurdy," Dawson said. So he's drafted a letter to Alfred Kahn, the chairman of the Council on Wage and Pnce Sta bihty in Washington , D C . asking his assisUlnce "to help us deal with the most outrageous case of rent gouging that has ever been brought to our atten· h on ·· Tht• letter will be submitted to the Chamber or Commerce board for its cons ideration . Chambt.-r Manager F rank Buck said Meanwh.aic. the operators of Ropage are paying $2.250 a month rent for the next year and a half. After lbat, their contract calls for a renegotiation. "which DAILY PILOT 1 ... o •• .,..c-10.ii. Piiot wit~-~.,.-___ ,....,,··--... , ... °'~ (N'\f ~·"'"""~ .......... flOM1tl• pubi•~• Mnno., ..,_,.~ ,,~ .. •or c.r.ee """'-· _, -.-c: ........ ......,.. ~ .... ,,_ ... --..-.vn ,, • .,.,~.,..""'\ewit"'ee. .. ,. -·.....--·.--..... -...... -··· ~ ... ___ "''"'1114""' •••• UI W•_. I••~"-C .... Mow t ,...,°'"'" •lt1• ~--..... __ _ J.oi .. (4irlol VOC..P. .. lmf>f--ol ....... --...... ._ .. --.. .._... ........ ~·"-" _,,_ --......wi.. Te .. phone (11•)~ QauMM u ....... ~...,. U•TAM 08'11111•••• T • ......_ ........ ........... a.- 4IMIOO meanli he'll probably incre»e the price a)(a1n ·• co owner Louise Ht-ftt•r said Tht: Hec.t.ens und 1Jnothcr cou p i e . J ea n an d Mur ray Moi.cow1tz. have 01wralcd thl' ~<•Ut) ~uppw shop for LJ year~ 1n LagW1a ~ch . "We've built our business on a d1sc0W1t basis." Mrs. Hefler said. "So we really can't hike our prices to make the rent." Sbe says they'll try and s tack 1t oul until next year. "We'U have to see if we can do it." she shrugged. Meanwhile, two other tenants of the Seal Beach bus1ness man are coWlting the days unttl their leases nm out. ''Sure I'm concerned about m y wife's business." Coun· cilman Boyd admitted. "But l really think il 's exorbitant.·· And. hesa 1d, he hopes the letter to Wustungton wlll have some ef· feet Airport Woes Strain Nerves For HoliJays By JACKIE HYMAN Ol U. o.lty r11_. Slaff Airlines workers at Orange County Airport were still calm· ing frizzled ne rves today - their own and passe ngers' - after four days of fog t.hat can· celed holiday flights. frayed tempen. and further Jamm ed the alw•ys-crowded airport. "It's happe n e d ever y Christmas for the last three: years," sighed Dennis Pilgrim, supervisor of passenger serv1cet. for Golden West Airlines. He said problems a re com· pounded by anxious relativ~ awaiting travelers. "Tempers are better over the holidays but lhcre's still a stra in on the people working at the airport," he ~aid. Pilgrim said som e unusual problems arose this year . For one. the baggage claim area wa.s so congested that "Fn· day night they had to have the sheriff to keep people from climbing into the una uthorued area and unloading their own luf gage from the cart." n addition, he said, a number or cab driven; apparently de· cided to take Chris tmas off. stranding travelers at about 9 o'clock Christmas night. "Yellow Cab wouldn't dis patch any .more cabs t.o Orange County Airport," Pilgrim said. "That was unusual " He al(reed with s pokesm<:n fr o m other a irlines th a t passenger loads were unusually high for a Chrl11tmtHI Day. poss ibly because il fell on a Monday and the next day was a work day. Mike AJand, asalstanl station manager for Hughe. Alrwest. said he found most passengers to be coaperatlve. "When they can S()e It (the fo' >, lhey understand It;• he said, but added, ''They get very irritable.'' Aland said special problems have been lost baggage, possibly from all the extra Christmas packagea c~ked , and missed connections . * * * ,,.... Pflfle A J FOG ••• The con trol t-0wer •t Los An1ele1 International Airport reported more Ulan a mile or vtalblllty on all alr carrier runways uus momlna. Foa &hat hampered operations duriri& the nlaht hours wu rocedln1 rapidly. P'o1 that blanketed Oranae County Airport In tbe early mol"Dina boun haropered traffic la many are.. of the coun\1. Police ~ no major t.raf· nc accldenta. They aald a 1Ught lncreaH In .. fender bender'' mlahape could be atlributed to the (OllY eondldoDI. Th• tOll of bodle• climbs 8oOaM bind in~cometof Qecyhornl 82'3W .,_,., ,_,.. Otewf epece. Mereh '°' men bodies oomnues ,,,.....,... OfAORAM OF OACY PAOPEA'TY IN DES PLAINES WHERE REMAINS WERE FOUND One 8octy Found Under G•r•ge Floor, 12 Mont In Space Under HouM F,...PaeeAI BODIES ••. "The t.tot.'th are excellent bul we still huve to huvc the dental report to match the m ." he sa id Edmund Dobbs. chief or Cook County sherifrs police. said that .. based on my 1nformat1on they're all young boys." Dobbs said about 20 men worked inside Gacy's home Tu~dQ.~me toreo~floonq and dug throul!:h the crawl s pace Tee hn1 c1an!) s pread buckets of mud on the ground behind the home. looking for r\• mains . Ste in said the excavation would proceed slowly because worke rs risk becoming s ick from breathing meth ane . hydrogen sulfide and other gases released during the de· composition of human flesh. Gacy has been charged with killing Robert Piesl. 15, of Des Plaines. The youth was report.e<l m issing Dec. 11. Investigator.. said Gacy told them he threw Piest's body and the bodi~ of five other youth!. into the De~ Plaine!> River. Jnvestigutor~ dragged the raver Tuesday with no success Ass1slanl Stalt"s Attorney T erry Sullivan said he hopcs to present evidence to a grand Jury this week. A spokesman for the Cook County state's attorney's orcice has said Gacy's attorneys are expected to use an insa nity de· fense. But Stein said "When I left Gacy's house tonight I said. 'This g u y's not crazy .· Everything he said is just so. Everything is where he ~<.tid it is.'' said Stein. He said remain:-. have been found whe re Gacy ind1~a ted they would be. Police were going th rou~h Gacy's papers looking for evidence that would prove has sanity. Papers taken from the home include business recor~. pornographic m a t e r ial and D e m oc rati c campaign lite rature. investigators for St ate's Attorney Bernard Carey said. A spokesman for Carey'!. of. ftce said prosecutors will cite the Democratic campaign work in trying to show <racy's ra· tionality. Carmichael Fire Marshal In Clemente Capt. Gary Carmichael or the San Clemente Fire Department bas been named to succeed re· signing city Fire Marshal Don Hodgson, Ch.ief Ron Coleman an- nounced today. Hodgson resigned after 11 years with the Sao Clemente de· partment to assume the position of fire chief Ul California City, about 15 miles north of Mojave. Has resignation is effective Jan 8 Carmichael. 41, h as recently functioned as assistant chie f when Chief Coleman has been out of town. His responsibilities as fire marshal will Include arson and fire investigations. fire Inspections, planning checks and enforcement of city fire codes and ordinances and state flre codes. 11aid Coleman. Store Robbed In Clemente A young man brandishlnc a .45 ullber automatic handaun robbed • San Clemente liquor !ltore late Tuesday a fternoon and etcaped wtt.h 11bout $:;() ln c11b and a bolUe of vodka. PoUce nld a man In his early 20t held up a clerk at rtUl's lJquorStore, 1t18l.8N. El Camino Real, abouts: 30p.m. He waa tut seen running lhrough an alley adjacent to lhe at.ore. llo6day Mail Up WASHINGTON <AP> -A· t11t·mtnute surse boosted the total of Cbrlatmaa mall ahead of 1971 by t7 mJlllon pleHa, a Poltal 6entce ottlclat Hid 'fuee. day. • Fre• P.,,e A J ELUTION SLATED. • • by 1.908 San Clemente residents Before the March election. Mrs. Wilkinson did not endorse candidates. but she did say ~he d ido' t want to :.ec M usht.·U elected Within a month of thl' clectum. a conim1llcc of the homeowm.·r~· association. from which Mus ht>lt had i:ect>ntly rcs11itned as prt.-s1 dent. anJ\OUnl·ed 11~ {'ll lllPUIJ.ln to have Walker and Mn. W1lkin!>on recalled. Three 'wt•lu. later. on April 27. Walker and his wife and M~ Wilkinson and her husband rite-d a $4 million slander suit against Mushett and the recall commit· tee On JWle 9. Mushett and the comm1tt~ countersued for $16 million. (Their z;u1l wab dropped on Aug. 29.) On Aug 30 ll was Mushetl's turn to bl-served by s upporter.. of Walker and M~. Wilkinson with notlcl' of a recall campaign against him. W1th1n u week lhl· pct1laon ca rnpa1gn attain~t Walkt!r an<1 Mr!> Wilkinson qu;1ltf1t'<J for thl• ballot On Sept 25. lht· l'OUnt1I scl Jan 23 a~ the dull' for city vote rs to dl'l'1de whe ther the mayor and Mrs . Wtlkinson would remain in oHl l'l'. In the meantime . the 3·2 pre· cedent had been established by council action on a number of importanl city issues. including: -Whether the city should pick up the lab for wives and husbands accompanyi ng city of· £ic1a ls on out or town business trips. Mushett and Mrs. Wagner said they were unequivocally op· posed. T he council majority defended the praclll'e as n San Clemente tradition. but in th<.' end went a long with a nt•w ci ty policy forbidd1nu Uw cxpt·n~c.· char~l·~ Whether to cvn<kmn lhrct• Avcnida del Mar lots for walkway access to adjucent city parking lol.c; Th<' council mnJOn · ty called the <'Ondc·mnflt1on v1t ul to a $2 2 m illion downtown bl-nutification proJert. MuRhctt a nd Mrs. Wagner said they oppo~ed conde mnation on princiJ)lt', cspec1all y lacking what th1•y culled C'o nvlncang ev1dcn<'c that the condemnation was essential lo downtown 1m· provemcnl.b Whether to s upport a $4 2 million city sewer bond election for sewer system improvement.s and increased city capacity to pro<iuce reclaimed wa ter for 1r· rigatlon. Baseball Football Soccer Tennis Volley Balls Soccer Balls Foatbllls 81s1balls Saf"llls · Play,.t Balls 800111 S.ds Wtlllrt Sets ., llpa lac~ltSbll&MI Mushett and Mrs. Wagner o~ posed the e lection. charging mismanagement of the city !'lewcr fund and arguing that city taxpayers should not pa)' for Im· provements which would tMlncflt primarUy developers. The council majority barked the measure. whic h passed 1n November by 376 votes of 9,87ts votes cast. -Wheth(•r city park~ mam· tenance ·hould continue to Ix' done by c ity employees or ~hould be contracted out to a privute landscape firm MuRhett and Mrs. Wugner sided with city parks employees, who wanU.'<I to continue to maint1un the par ks. But the council majority pre· vailed. and the city s witched Sept. 1 to a private firm. -Whether the city should try to provide low· and mode rate· income housing 1n the coastal ione (roughly Inland t o El Camano Real). Mr~. Wilkinson. Wulker .and Hamm argued that high proper· ty values along the coast make moderately prtccd housing th~re impossible and opposed govern· me nt housing subsidies. Mushett and Mrs. Wagner sup· ported continued availnb11ily of housing in the zone for all an· come levels. But the single biggest issue dividing the City Council fac· Uons appears to be whether ex· isling city controls on develop- ment are adequate. Walker. Mrs. Wilkinson and Hamm have s aid San Clemente's existing regulations are sufficiently strict and re· quire merely judicious enforce· m~nl. protecting private proper- ly rights as well as the rights of future homeowners. Mrs . Wagner and Mushett dis· agree, faulting the city for re· cent landslides. traffic conges- tion and other urban Ills. which they predict WJll worsen unless th\' city adopts tighter restnc· Lions on growth. With nearly 5.000 acres -half the city -scheduled for de· vetopment from cattle pastures to housing tracts in the next decade. the Jan. 23 eleetion will carry far·reaching tmphrat1ons 1n the area or development alone . "The city 1s changing, there's no way to stop that." City Manager Gerald Weeks said re· cently. "The question 1s. which d1rectton ls that change going lo take." f ..... .. .. _. a Taiwan Jeers Yankees TAlPEl. Tu1wan CAP) -At least 10.000 prolN~n 01ngm eg1s and mud and shouhnt: "Curter Is .u rh ·at'" greeted a V s. det~aauon today as at ..- n vt.-d to bl!ein taJ with Talwun officials almed at m•k.ln& tbc separahon ol the two oauons an Umll'Ublt-01\t'. Vi ce Fo rui~n M l otsttr fredenck Cluen 80Wlded aa stem note in a welcomtna SJ)('e<'h for the dlplomatk-miUt.ary dtleatt tlon ut a milil.ary airport, ttlllng tbt! Americans lh 3l th tJ t..~nomlc and cultural tics lhl' Carter admln1i \tatlon wants to n·tain wtlh Tuiwan c'te be coo t10ucd only on a ~ove'1ment-to atovernmcnt ~lb. As the de~cgutlon and Nu t1ooall11t Chi~~ om c1als left thl• ~•ir µo rt . tl("l'Ofn panu•d by carloads or reporters, dl'm onstrutors wave d the Nat lionalist flag of Taiwan and lunged at the automobllus. beat. mg on ~ sidt..-s, throwing egg~ and mud und strllong the cars with flalCP()les. One man rushed up to a n.o portl'rs' car and stuffed a mud· d1l'd. torn Ame rican fl ag 1n th rou~h a wi nd ow Demoni;trutors s plashed red paint on one limousine carrym~ Amcncun off1cia ll> S igns denounced President Curler 's dem;ion lhts month lo llf'ver diplo matic lies with Taiwan and establish them wtth commwust China. "Mr. carter. you may sell out human rights. freedom and de mocracy. but the ROC (Republic of China> will never be sold.·• read one. Police were able to hold back many ol the angry crowd. Tbert: were no 1mm~ate reporu. ol in JUrll'S Anot~r crowd o( 1.000 to 2.000 demonstrato~ gathered m rmnt of Taipei's Grand Hotel. where the American delegauon "'as t.o stay ovenught before sta.ruo~ l31ks Thursday E',...P~AJ SLIDE ••. Although Mrs. Bates saJd ~ notice served on the ram1h~ last wee k le ft them no alternative but to relocate, MN Weber satd she did not interpn!l the not1ce as an order lo leave. The notice from the Del Prado Company, which owns the park said: ''The geologist whom we have employed to look into the failure of the golf course property adja- cent to our mobile home park advises that your mobile borne should be moved immediately. "If not moved immediately," the notice said. "your home is an dange r or being severely damaged by any extens ion of the goU course s!ope failure ... The four home!> are located a bove the 15th fairway or the Estrella golf course. The 800·foot long spht in the earth on Dec. ~ occurred just below the homes. c reating a canyon of what had formerly been a landscaped slope. DICk Feet Cnrclll Water w ... r Speedo White Sta1 lawfin1s Wilsen lane re ft J11 .. , nttl Stll Wlp• Davis Vlctlr lllp Y•1.Prllla S,.1111-Aills l1lllbtll bcUtl , U2 DAILY PILOT USC Wedn..Oey, O~mber 27, 1t71 NATION Out of Wdlng •• I Man Ends 28 Years as Recluse VINELAND. N J <AP> -A ·I· year-old recluse who 11 pt In be chkkf>n coops where he YOrkfit ia f1n1&lly comma an out it lhe cold. und with u M&•blt• · stega tvan Ru.sin. n Polish 1mm1 :rant wbo hu spent 28 yean1 hovellf\Q manurt· und 11atherlna ·us ln the poultry rarm:o1 or outhtm New Jers.-y. now h a ·lean bed. than.ks to a rouple of. ended at bis son . GRIZZLED AND KINNY, 'lu ln wu rt'portt'<l 1n HUS.lac· ory COf'dHaon Tuesday at -Jewcomb llo. pltal. prob&ibl> vith mon-food undu hts belt ban he's hud m yeaar"l "H~'s rt'alh bttn t•ullnii lnt't· we've had him httrtl," srul1 Ur \t Oa\f1d Uuxkr, the man·:. >hys1c1an. Baxter says Rus in I!<> 10 "hurly 'lood health" desplll' u life or 1leeping in duckcn coop:. 4lnd the town dump, unywhcre he . 'Ould find a place to lie down. .. MAYBE YOU TOUGHEN up 1n an env1rooment like that," Baxter said. Though Rusm apparently lived on m<>5Uy coffee, Russian black bread and some oc· caslonal Polis h sa u s age, dUthorities said he apparenUy itashed away a tidy sum in the chicken coops, Including seven ~ears worth of uncashed SocaaJ Security checks. The balding, toothless immi· grant will not say how much money he has, but one police of· ficer described him as "loaded." A FEW YEARS ago he paid ts.000 cub fo .. a catnract opera· lion. Rusan, who speaks llttle -~-,,...... UKES NEW LIFE Ivan Rualn Engli.,h. came to the attention of Vmeland police several weeks ago when a local couple, dis· traught at the sight or open sores on the man's swollen right leg, called for help. Police declined to identify the couple. Police over the years had no complaints about the elderly va· grant. said police Sgt. Albert Barnabe1. BUT RUSIN WAS arrested on a trespassing complaint and taken to the Cumberland County Jail in Bridgeton. There he got some treatment for his leg ulcer, apparently the result of a bout with frostbite. He also eot his first bath and shave in years. But Rusin, a fiercely indepen- H antlngton Slaying Former Barmaid Released ill·Probe Police have released former barmaid Mary Magaline Davis who was ctrrested for the second time last week on suspicion of murder charges stemming from the Sept 8 stabbing death of Gary Allen "M~ Dog" Fero in a downtown Huntington Beach saloon Miss Davis. 25. formerly empJoyed at the Main Street Saloon. was released again Fri· day afternoon due to insufficient evidence. according to poli ce Lt. Bruce Young who said charges against her were dropped. Miss Davis was working at th'e saloon. 117 Main St., the night Fero, a motorcycllst. wa s stabbed in the back during a bar room brawl. \'oungsa1d. 240 llOAIWAY LAMA IUCN 497-4403 Three other bar patrons are being sought in connection with the 41·year-0ld man's death. No other suspects have been taken into custody. Miss Davis was lnitially ar· rested several hours after Fero died at Huntingtoa Intercom· munity Hospital after the ~'tab· tUlg. dent man, r~UHd to give poll~ ht• namt' unlll th y called In Pollsh·born Alex Urban, a part· tame public relations director ror thl• aanculturul community or ~.()()(). "He was petrUled ;ind mortlfil'd." aald Urban, who ls flu ent In several Slavic l{ln11u•«c . "lle's very dis· trullful and susplctous of uuthority." An't:R COMMUNICATIONS were t'etablished. charges aea1Mt Ruain were ilropl)ed ~ lh" man was taken to Newcomb Hotpltal here. · After he is discharged in the nut few days, Rusio. a lifelong bachelor, hopes to spend some of his ~av1ngs to buy a mobile home and hve on property near friends. Urban said. Rusin says he came to the United States after World War II. He spent lhe war tending cat· lie and horses in a Nai1 workcamp, Urban said . ''He's a Cree s pirit." one of . fi clal said. ''But now that we got him shaved and washed, he's taken a great liking to these things. He loves the attenlion, and he's become a darling of the nurses." Brothel Sets Challenge Of New Law TONOPAH, Nev. <AP> -The Nye County Commission has outlawed prostitution in the rural county because county of. ficlals had "lost control" or the brothels. says District Attorney Peter Knight. But Leonard Smith, the Las Vegas attorney representing Waller Plankinton. owner of the Chicken Ranch brothel near Pahrump, said h e would challenge the new law in court. "WE HAD NO ottier way lo go," Knight said Tuesday or the county commission's vote Fri· day. "We had lost control or that activity in tbls county." Knight said the ordinance is scheduled to go lnto effect March 31, allowing time for operators or brothels near Lathrop Wells, Tonopah, Beatty and Pahrump to clear up busi· ness affairs. "AS OF MARCH 31, prostitu· lion will be out the window." Knight said. County officials previously tried to shut down the Chicken Ranch as n "simple nuisance." but the state high court decision overturned the county's action. OPll 7 DAYS ••• •• • · Christ·mas Closeout GOOD TfflU DEC. Jl, 1'11 D D ALL CHRISTMAS LIGHTS ACCESSORIES AND GIFTW ARE RIEKES • CRISA HAND BLOWN GLASSWARE % OJJIJ I WINE ., BRIQUE 5.99 • NOW YOU CAN HAVE 2-HOUR EYEGLASS SERVICE .. ~ ON MOST SINGLE VISION PRESCRIPTIONS -ALS0- 24 to 48 Hour Service ON MOST Bl-FOCAL PRESCRIPTIONS All INSURANCE PROGRAMS INCLUDING MIDI-CAL WELCOME Of THE COST OF AN EYE EXAMINATION RECEIVED WITHIN THE PAST 3 MONTHS• TO PURCHASERS OF PRESCRIPTION LENSES l FRAMES OR CONTACT LENSES AT AN~ SAV·ON OPTICAL CENTER. ........ • AllY Ol'TlCAl PRCSCRIPl'IOll CMC(!l(D at(CI OR KC(l'T. fOR (Y( ~ilOll OATtD WO* M PAST THAEE lllOlfOCS IS ACCm'lllE AS P9IOOf OF E~l1Cll DISTINCTIVE Fashion E yewear ALSO AVAILABLE AT A SAVINGS TO YOUl • Gloria V1ndnilt • Y•es St Laurent • Pitn't Cardin • Oscar Dt L1 Renta AllCI MlllY Others IN HUNTINGTON BEACH 19121 Beach Blvd. Phone: (7 14) 847-9833 :.r .NATION Teachers l;ive in Fear of Assault ., ' . ... . .. .. "' 1 .. U.S. Classroom Abuse NEW YORK <AP> Studentl had lbreatentd Cl•~ Kllnaer before, but when the attack came, she dad ~ expet"l 1l · A maaulM rolled around aome heiavy obJfft and ttUftd with a nibbu bind 1lam med fWJ force Into h r netk It knocked ht>r down. but the mlddle·ace ~ medial readlna teacher 1ot up and laueht btr twq rtmulnina cl lbat day ln .~ bruary tm. Tben she went home. Sho nev r returned •1•ln to her Brooklyn vonUooal hl&h achool elms.room. HE SA V RE I N'T 10M baek ~•UM <:A ber nttk tr\JUJ')' -th eternal headaches, lbG dial· neu But abo. be ays, s h 's afra.ld •·J •m ~lnned wht1n l sH man! than two younaaters toaceth r tr I want to 10 out In the eve· ntna.l bavcto1trdm~I060 &JJday " Mi:1 Khngcr. a 10 >N•r lt-ach1n1 v teran who nt'ed~ only to complete her dl!\St!rtation lo urn a d<>ctorol df'~r\6\·, lidt'~ ~tov.l). i.nvolunLarlly into tear~ ai. she dt-scrl~ h r lr\lw1 and her feeUnas about lhtt ¥~.a ult "I know I'm not handltna \ha very ~ll -1 cry easily when I'm remmded about Uui. lt'a been Lwo years and I'm getuna wors . I'm rullyvtt')' biU.er." MS. KUNGE.a·s EXPERIENCE IS echoed through lht> notaon•s schools· Mo.re than 80,900 teachers were attacked by students last year, ac· cording to the National Educauon Association. Since 1972 classroom murders have Increased 18 percent. rapes have increased 40 percent and 1us· saulls are up 77 percent. She is not much surprised. nor much contort· ed. that Or. Alfred Bloch would hnd her reaction lo the classroom assault fairly common. Bloch ls a psychoanalyst who concluded a f1ve·year study of battered teachers What Bloch found was that battered teachers react the same way as soldiers who've fought too long on the front lines -wtth combat fatigue. They come dowr with ailments hke migraine · headaches. ulcers and hypertension; they are depressed and unable to sleep. FURTHER. BLOCH FOUND THAT even teachers who weren't actually attacked suffer physical or e motional breakdowns. That's the price they pay for working in constant terror -or under threat -or being beaten, raped or murdered. Bloch. a University of California psychiatrist. was interviewed durmg a meeting here in the Skate Stares Boss Wheels to Work DENVER <AP> -Hotel executive Howard Connor says he gets more than a few stares when he a rrives at work in downtown Denver. Most mornings he roller skates the five miles from bis Polo Club condominium. "It's a good way to keep in shape without Jos. ing lime," said Connor, 51. "It enables me to look around lhe town and 1 don't have to WOJTY about parking the skates." But Connor is no eccentric. He is an ex· pen enced hotel manager who came to Denver 10 months ago as executive director of the Fairmont Hotel. whi ch 1s under construction and scheduled to open next September . Before arriving in Colorado, he was vice presi· dent and general manager of the Arizona Biltmore Hotel for two years. Prior to that he managed New York's Ritz Tower for 12 years and the Carlyle for six Hawaiian S&L Locks Its Doors HONOLULU (AP) -Thirteen banks or sav· ings and loan associations here have been robbed of more than s:u ,000 since Oct. 27. It's gotten so bad that the Kaimuki branch of Hawaiian Federal Savings and Loan has taken to locking all its doors. The branch has been robbed three times since Thanksgiving, and five times this year Customers must pr~ss a buzzer and hope the tellers recogn1ze their faces. 7262 ••• ,., ..._ ........... . ...,, ... 17141142-2779 ....... ........ ,.,.WI,..... FAIOtm=UL DAY RECALL.ED BY TEACHER Clere Klinger Never Returned After Attack American Psychoanalytic Association. His study was published in October by the American Journal of Psychiatry. Generally, he says. ''when teachers run into vlo~ence, they break down. They often suHer I tremendous feelings Of failure beeause they feel they should be able lo cope. to prevent the violence." Their problems are especially knotty. accord· ing to Bloch, beeause the sort of people who choose to teach are Ill-equipped to cope with violence: Tbey are often passive, idealistic people who w~t 1tudent1 to vtew them .. lovtq. parental nswea~ TEACREU WHO oan UP IN volalUe clt1 neiabborboodl ckal more eaailY with a combat zone atmoephere In eehool1 becaute they've been • expoted to more violent behavior, Bloch found. '- Vtt often the physical and emot1onal toll paid -even by teachers who are never attacked -can be even more crlpplina than actually being atabbed by a student, Bloch says. "When the teacher In classroom A Is r•ped or HHUI~. think what It does to the teacher ln claaaroom B or C or 0." Bloch says. ·.·She la Uviq in constant anxiety, alwaya wondering 'When la lt col~ to be my turn? ... HE &EPO&TED THAT 1Z PERCENT of the 253 teachers be atudJed had not been pbyaicaUy at· tacked. These men and women sought help. be said. for breakdowns caused by living, always, in fear. Bloch believes teachers should be trained to defuse explosive confrootations and to deal wllh violent outbursts. He thinks it would help lf they shared their fears with each other in discussion groups. Bloch and other experts believe school ad· ministrators should also undergo special training because too often they react as if the attack were the teacher's fault and loo often the attacker Is not disciplined. Edward Muir of New York's United Federa· lion of Teachers puts it this way: "WE NEED TO GIVE THE principal the Idea that his first concern should be giving emotional support to the victim rather than with the paper work the incident generates." Ms . Klinger says she was told by other teachers that the student who injured her bragged about it. reportedly saying, ·•1 rut and I hit her hard and when she comes back, my mother and I are going to put her in a wheelchair." WE RESOLVE tomake'~r~ Year'• celebration a happy OM with deli· cious food, wine and spirits. ' WE RE.SOL VE to outperform ounelves on • this, the bulie1t n.ight-ol the year. And, WE RESOLVE to have .a~ time right along with you. It's been ele~n year& since we opened our first restaurant i1'· a secluded • Cucamonga vineyard. And, like a bottle of good wine, we get better every year. Year in and year out. I cask ·n Cl€AV€R Newport B«ach. 1660 Dove SL. M.c:Anhur to Bllch • to O.We. Neat to M41ric C.tlender·•. 752-2538 She never learned what provoked the attack. The youth was never disciplined. Ms. Klinger • says. She doesn't know why, but she has a theory: \ The disciplinary dean coached the school's basket· : ' ball team. TAKING R ESERVATIONS 4 • 7 P .M. NEW YEAR•S EVE "Maybe," Ms. Klinger says, "I.he boy played basketball." . . . . . . . . . . . I JllNlltnal"ldellfFedllal~T.C.llfJade. • AS I O.CXX> rnln1mum eam.5 you a high guaianteed rate-1/4% you cxm set aside up to$ I s:JJa year-tax deferred. (U you open your I.RA now. yo.... can defer both Federal and state tncome taxes for 1978.) Fidelity Federal will a1'io take any stock trom a previous pension or profit sharing plan and roll tt c:Ner Into a tax-sheltered I.RA And remember. your account is insured to S 100,CXX>. And we don't charge the yearty truslee tee. higher than any bank p:rys. And your c:ertitio:lte matures ln Just 6 months. Call and ask us tor the current rates. VVe think you·u be delighted w11h what you can earn 2 lrw.t tnanyolnd9UlyhdliafsC.UlloJll9 olDep ed. • A mln1mum of SI .CXX> will earn yoo 6-1 /'2°4 lnterest It you invest It for a year: Or 8% It you invest tt for 8 year.;. Guaranteed. (And ot course. yoo'll want a Fldellty ~ 1/4% passbookaa:ount tor the money you want to keep readily accesstble.) 3 lllNll90nW ollds.,.afseam&ngslnloa1'1d9111rhd9rall.ILA. • 11 you work for a company that doesn't have a retirement pkm. I ' I 4 J....tjultat.wmlldl9ol!O'Stlmeandbrtnghcouponbelow • toanyol&DeolPldelllfhdllal. \Ne11 gtveyoua lreecopyof "Colortul CalUomia:· Just for coming in. And U you'd like to o~n an CJCXX>Unl JUSt brtng us your pa:s&x:>ok or any maturing certificates from where you're sav1n'1 now VVe'U handle all the transfer deta1ls toryou.SUre ~· r------------, I I • • J • ., .. , 4 a., D I nusbea\dul n.page book sUUed I \\'Uh men than 60tull c:dcr s:ihcto-1 graphs. AM n you.m newhlr\ ycu I I br1ng us thll COUJ)CC\. 1hll clll'll ltmnecstoadulll~ whd9'-&1Al11 I Jam. Oneccpvpar~---1 We're'°""~ nc~crrnau I ~canbil~ L------------J