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1976-01-14 - Orange Coast Pilot
: r . . : . . . .. ---· . . . GOP Leader Asks I i • • ' j ' \ t t l Elderly Couple ; . . . _Cory S~pension ' ,. ~· In CeHa Probe ' . W.ith Dart Gun .. WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, JANUARY 14, 1976 YOL .. ,MO. 14,UECTIONS,J6PAGES J{en C·Ql!y ·= ~rged To Leave From Wire Services The state chairman of the Republican Party urged Gov. ~mund G .. Brown Jr. to ask COatroller Kenneth Cory to take Cleave of absence because he is ip"rounded by ... glOWing cloud 4t11uapicion." • ' ... tbairman Paul Haerksaid the · eoilt.roller should step down until ltlar1ea against Dr-Louis Cella, 'tfbo contributed more than SS0.009 to Cory's campaign last ~. are disposed of. • A spokesmaJl for Brown said lfaerle should take up the matter direetlJ with Cory. Cory bim1elf will remain JJlblicly silent on the demand. ~try Durham, a spOkesman for the ~ontl'Oller, said, "There Wft1 be "'° r:espoale and no com-iru•t~,iaerle's statement." -Cella and three associates ~ach wtre' indicted by tbe Orange C6unty .Grand Jury ~ a federal Grand Jury in llos l\ftge~es.Mon· day on felony counts rel4tmg.to the alleged embezzlement of $2 million from two Orange County liQspitals. A probe reportedly continues ii.lo an insurance company in which Cory, Cella, and SQuthetn California Democratic Chairman ·1'ichard O'Neill' own interests. F~al invesdgat.ors have 'Con· (lrmed that Cory's appointment of inheritance tax referees also is under investigation: "The revelations of the mysterious Cella-O'Neill empire lfkl Ken Cory's relationship. and rple in that empire have raised IQIDe serious questioos about the ocmtroller'a independence and ablllty to conUnue serving as ""• controller," Haerle said in ~newt release. • •'The governor mast be aware· " ·"the growing cloud ol suspicion t,m>UDcllnl state Controllei-Ken QOrJ," HaerJe aald. "I therefore .-Governor .Brown to ask Mr. Q1r1 to take a leave ol absence." • J1ut a 1poknman for Brown, J>rid Jensen, sald he k:n(>ws of =••Y an ei.eted state officer b u centroller c.'OUld take a •Of ablenee. · ' ·.JAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -A ..maet r~ • .,_ M.5 per- Glnt ater tw• 1ean,,. belll ap-~ed b)' • ....,..,. reprtHDtina .... Bay ..\.rea nun•• at 15 ltb!eltal1,. •~(ordlna to the ~omla Aunet Aaloclltton. . . Uf'IT ........ C'olld11etre•• Beverly Sills gives a con .. gratulatory kiss tq Sarah C a·l d w e 11 a ft er M i s s Caldwell ·became the fir.st. woman ever to conduct at the Metropolitan Opera, leading a performance Qt' "La Traviata" with Miss ~ Sills singing ViQletta. ! Bandit Robs Li<iuor Store In Clemente A lone gunman who.wore a knit ski cap robbed a San Clemente Ii· · quor store of $175 Tuesday after· noon. Police said the man displayed a .45 caliber automatic pistol and motioned clerk Richard Crouley aside as he scooped the day's re- ceipts from the cash register at Dad's Liquor, 2421 S. El Camino Real. Neither Crouley nor a customer in tbe store was l..njured durin& the 4: 44 p. m. robbery. Tbe clerk uid the gunman wore a blue ski cap, a plaid wool iblrt, brown pants. and gold· rimmed glasses. He was said to beinbd20S. Witnesses said the man ran toward the municipal golf course after the robbery. Police were unable to locate a suspect, however. • ms aw .wo tereo Darts Scare Couple BLUE BELL, Pa: (AP) -The Taser electric dart gun, ~old for protection against crime. was an instrument of terror for a Montgomery County couple in the hands of four masked ban· di ts. "The assailants used this dart gun to force the man and his wife to say where they had more money or valuable belongings," police Sgt. Joseph Stemple said Tuesday . He refused to name the man and his wife. Stemple said a man appeared at the door of the couple's 'home at suppertime and identified Unruh Arrested Dnmk Rap Hits 'Big Jess' SACRAMENTO (AP) -State Treasurer Jesse Unruh was arrested on a drunk driving charge early to- day, the state Highway Patrol reported. Patrolman J . E . Weir said he saw Unruh driving erratically on In· terstate 80 in Yolo County just across the Sacramento River from the state Capitol at2: 15 a.m. Weir said he stopped the car and Unruh failed a sobriety test. Unruh, 53, once considered the most powerful-Democrat in the state when he was speaker of the state Assembly, was taken to the Yolo County Jail in Woodland where he was fingerprinted, photo- graphed and signed a promise to appear in Washington Justice Court in West Sacramento. uN1tuH Lt. Tom Dinsdale, shift commander at the jail, described Unruh as cooperative. Dinsdale said Unruh was taken to his home in West Sacramento by a friend he phoned from jail. himself as a police .offiatlc. '1Je ~ . _ said the oogus cop rushed in ~th , · A-r·a· -p· 0. t. ro.lle ... d. three other men, all wearing;ski .::-; masks. f._ The men carried the Taser -•, designed by a space technofogy 1' engineer in s pired by \he weaponry of Buck Rogers and James Bond. C·IA Scuttles Plan. To Raise Red . s·ub "The couple were tied up with clothing, handcuffs and telephone wires," Stemple .~aid .. ''Apparently, the suspects tpiew there was money in the houst. j WASHlNGTON (AP) -Plans disclo5ed early last year in press "While the people were tiel up,' for another CIA attempt to raise accounts which CIA Director one of these guys shot them~ith a sunken Soviet submarine from William E . Colby sought to sti· this dart gun. They were ooth.-the floor of the Pacific Ocean fie. It remains unclear whether shot twice in the stomach,' have been thwarted by a Russian the Soviets already were aware Stemple said. ·'The darts stuck ii\ ship patrolling the wreckage site, of the American salvage project their flesh. It's like a needl • ex ~telligence sources said today. or if they learned of it through cept it gives you a shock:'· ~· , The v.r.esepce of the Soviet news accounts. He added, "It's calle Ut *ssel :p'tevebt~d the-Ahl~rtCim · "':'It «lso1,~ps 'u~ar .bow T~er Public Defender ~ i ' Sltlp Glomar Explorer from re-much intelligence Was -gaine<l <.SeeTASER, PaJ~~ 1 tuminglastsummertothewreck from the government's $2!\0 ... '' ·• c ' ..;. !Sit~._. ob.~~~_.,~ne 1 milllon.investment in the project. '11lEY IIBSPOND , l4t TO PILOT ADS . ~ "I sold the car to a Daily Pil<ft reader. In fact, the ad in~ Pilqt got much mo.re response~ the one I ran in the paper in~San_ta Ana.'' That's the advertising succe$ experienced by the Costa. Mesa man who placed this claisifiett s<>urcesaid. -· ....... '~~toll~lt Page AZ) Top CIA officials are now "85 percent sure'' that the $250 i'nillion salvage project will have ~-... ---n L.;ved ~be abandoned altogether, be ~ ., t1.dded. "The project is over, at least for the present ti.me,'' another '°urce saicJ. • . The Glomar Explorer, a sophisticated recovery vessel built by blllionaire Howard 'ftugbes, raised the forward third -Of the Soviet submarine in 1974. Maintenance costs fol the I~.P.og HpWJe J'A'l:KSONVILLE~-Fia. (AP) - An. ~aped prisoner. has been captured alter eluding the law for low ~eeks by s~nding his · days in.llis prl!riend's dog house and eating from dogy baas. ad : • 618-foot Glomar Explorer baTe · caused a steady drain on the CIA budget, and there bas been no ln· dlcalion when "the Soviet patrol ship would • end' its •vigil of tbe . WJ1Ckage site, one source said. • Police said Heney Pittman. 20. fiustied out of his dog house hideout, ts scheduled to be re- turned to the state pr;,on system, from wbich be escaped four weeks qt>, of'fic,~llliL v - '61 Galaxie, alr & pwr, gd tlrea, 52,000 mi,, $500 XP·XXUaftt9 Af4 If you have a cu· you want to sell. call &U-5618. It only takes a few words in the right place to attract a buyer. Along the Oranae Coast, the right place is the Daily Pilot. • , .. • . . _\ A new American salvage at· tempt while the Soviets patrol the area would run the risk of a naval confrontation. The CIA 's first attempt to re· cover the .Soviet submarine was ( ... The dog house, "Wlt'bout a caniee occupant, i1 near the home o( Pittman'• Sirllrlend. She would bring h\m bags of food during the day and take J:Um to her place at ntaht, police said. l: Buxton ·~ 'Refused? i Payment By TOM BARLEY Of tlle O•llr Piiot ~ Co ngre ss man Andrew Hinshaw admitted from the wit- ness stand late Tuesday that he accepted two stereo units:as.gjfts while he was serving as Orange County's assessor. Hins haw tes tified a s his Superior Court bribery trial neared its end that one of the un'- its, the Tandy Corporation's most expensive model, was givep to him by Tand~ Vice President James Buxton during a visit ro the c9mpany's Garden Grove warehouse. • Turning to the jury, Hinshaw s t r e s s e d t h a t h e h ad b i.s checkbook out at the time and had every intention of paying for the stereo unit that was brougl'\t into Buxton's office by Tandy employes. But Buxton, be testified. wa.5 adamant and refused to accept payment of any kind. "I didn't want to offend him," Hinshaw explained. .. I ''And it was nola very pleasant experience," the Newport Beach Republican added. Hinshaw, 53, is being tried on three felony counts of bribery , contained in a grand jury indict- (See WNSHAW ,.Page A2) . . t Coast I ,, f • _, Weather Sunny Thursday and 1 slightly· w'armer· sa)ts the weather service, with highs along the beaches•at 74 rising to 78 inlan~. Lows tonight 42 to 48. INSID~ TOD" 'Y A Mi3sissip/n banker's wife may have been kiUed before. a $25,()()(J ransom 1lXU paid to~ lddnape1'. police aay. Rer body -and a wspect in fM ~ I ~ I I . wtT't found Tuesday. StOf']I A4. I lad ex MY-llntee AJ ......... • 11 t. ...... .., lllllnk... , L.M....,. ............. OMlnll• AS.At•............. ...... l =r.=-r D~;: -....~ .. 9' ' (lllMks C't4 ..... t!, \ a-u.-c~._,..,.._, 0..-~ .... --I ,t I -~ ....... ~ Mo.. ......... II '• .....,._... ... , ............ .... ............ ~ -.... CA-16,........ .... *"IC.. Q -...r 1' ,_......_ C1 ...,...._ ~ --M J OAJl Y PILOT s Ford Proposes Fµn'ds to States PreSldent Ford will propo6e r~ linquilhJ.n& control ol $10 bUUon in federally funded health care programs. including Medicaid, to the states, the New York DaHy N~s reported today. In a di spa tch from Washington, the newspaper quot· ed unnamed federal officials as saying the proposal was tailored lo counter former California Gov. Ronald Reagan's challenge to Ford for the Republican pre· sidential nomination. (CAMPAIGN '76) ''It doesn't matter if Congress will ever approve the plan, and undoubtedly it won't," a source described as a veteran official ol the Department of Health, Education and WeUarewas quot- ed as saying. · "They just want to have something down on paper to rounter Reagan, and this is it," the official reportedly said. "'<. \ '\ '' \I < •~ \ \ \ \\'r \\\ \KD"' \. • ~I.II • 4 ..L:::...L • .\ '' « 'J.f/, • l· '' \t 1 •fl 1 ' Grann11 Nominees The· Captai~ and Tennille (she's former Orange Coast actress Toni Shearer> announce the names of nominees for the 18th annu al Grammy awards of the National Academy of Recor~ng Arts an~ Sciences. Thirty eight popular a nd 10 class1cal categones were announced. See .;tory, Page Al2. Masked Man Rapes L Huntington Girl ) A slender youn~ mask~d features and a knitted Navy ~ur~lar fragrant with a dis· watch cap on bis head. tmchve brand of men's cologne is sought today for the rape of ~ Huntington Beach girl, 17, as - saulted in her bed Tuesday night as he held a knife to her throat. The victim ran from her home on a residential street off Beach Boulevard near Warner Avenue to a business where the assistant manager called police for her after the assault. Officer Brian Lindley said she told of being surprised about 10 p.m . by the intruaer, who gained entry to her family home and confronted her with a knife. Police said the victim also not· ed the short, slender rapist wore men's cologne. The intruder also spoke to his victim with what she said was an obviously phony Spanish accent throughout the ordeal, according to investigators. She was taken to ~ta Mesa Memorial Hospital, apparently at her request rather than a closer facility. and treated and examined there following the sex assault. She ~escribed him as being E'roat Page Al about five feet. seven inches tall and said he w~re a nylon stocking HINSHAW. mask to distort his facial • R uss Air D isaster · MOSCO W (AP) -Wes tern aviation sources say a Soviet TU134 airliner with 86 passengers c r ashed near Moscow Jan. 3, killing all on board. The sources said the crash occutred as the plane was taking off on a flight to another point in the Soviet Union. The plane re· portedly crashed into some houses near Moscow's Vnukovo airport, but it was not known if there were any casualties in the houses. ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT Tr.t O••n~ Co.>•1 0.1ly r 11o1 ,.;1t> ...,Ith ,. <orTb•Mft tM ftf'W\ lfr~\\, ll °"'°''"""" by '"" 0••"0" CW\I PullllJ!lln4 (-~· ~r.alt '°''"''" ,., llhlb•·-Mol\d*f llwa..Qt> rrkMy '°' CO'lt• N'4'W, ...__, &.•~. 111111t1r>Qlon R~.un r•..,.l•1n V•llO, ,,.,.,., ~lelM<l \/alifoy Ind uo.-lleMlll~h (.._I A \lflOI• fOQ>ONI .-dll-6' ,...,.,,. a S.IUtdeH -SU'\ .,., T,,. p<IMIP'lf 1Nbl1~•ntl p .. nl 1~ •l J.)C) .,.,., S.y Slru1. '°''• Meu. C4t•lorn.• 92•.r.. Robert N. Weed Prt~I -PutWl- JaCk R. Curley V.u ..... ,_ •fW ~-., Mit_. Thomas Keevit Edllor Thomas A. Murphine _,..._ COltor O'klrles H. Loos Richard P. Nall OffkH r..,.. _.., J» w...-e.... Sl...-T l_.. •.ell,,, .. ~·~·..., f4-·-e.e<ll 171Jj _ .. ~ •• ., ~· .,.,.,., U"1 Le Pel -••Safi o,... rr- Tet.,..._.. (714) M2..a?1 0.Silfled Adwr1fsMt 642-5671 ~v..-,-°" .... M1.f.J1' ,,.,,'-,_ ttS • .,. ,,_..,.0r ... c-.c:-~ Mt-1220 C.,.141M.,.,. °' .... c...-...,,."""" '- Mf\y He ""'-"' ........ ---· .......... ..,..,., 9# .. o•llMW•t1lt IW••• -· k ,......, ..... •JllW<H -1•1 _ .... _ 91 ~ ... -. '"*'' c••u _..._ "4 • c.iaa •w. ~· ~,....,. lft <•,.,,,,,.,.,,_ .. ,; .. -iM.n_,,_,...,, r u.n-,. ment. It is alleged that he accepted stereo equipment without pay· ment while serving as county as· sessor and that he solicited a bribe from a lawyer during the hearing of an assessment appeal. Hinshaw is also accused of ac· cepting a Sl,000 campaign con· tribution from Buxton in return for his favorable action on as- sessment matters affecting the Tandy Corporation. Hinshaw. further stated under questioning by one of his two de· fense lawyers Tuesday that he accepted another costly stereo unit from former auditor· appraiser George Upton while be was a guest at Upton's home. The former assessor said Up. ton made the offer to him after he <Hinshaw> noticed a pile of Radio Shack stereo cartons in the home. Hinshaw said Upton told him that be had been given a number of stereo sets which were to be raffled off as prizes at a Coast Guard function and that Buxton h ad included one for Hinshaw in the consignment. · Hinshaw testified that he told Upton to keep it at the Upton home with the explanation that he would soon be moving to Washington, D.C .• as a con· gressman from Orange Co\Ulty and his moving pl am were not yet complete. Upton has testif ed as a pro- secution witness that be de- Ii ve red the stereo unit to Hi.nsbaw•s Newport Beach apart· ment and that it was accepted there by Mn. Thais Hinshaw. the CClllettssman •s wile. Upton was sentenced to stx months lJ1 the county Jail after pleading guilty to bribery charges. Re was rdeued a'lter MrVlnl 87 days of that aentence. Mrs. Hlnsbaw, wbo bas since sued the conireaaman for dlyorce. baa also tHllfied · ap1oat him u a proMCUUon wtt.. nesa. Reaian has proposed lhlftln, federal programs to states and local aovernment. He bas estimated that $90 billion might be cut, althouih he-Sa.vs the-. figure was not something that eould be cut immediately and was being used only as an exanu>Je. The News safcl Ford waa ex· pected to annouoee hiS block- irant proposal in his State of ttie Union message on Monday. The still incomplete plan would give the states complete control over spending for almost all heatµi pr~grams that provide se~1c~ directly to the public, begmrung at the start of the next fiscal year, on Oct. 1, and phased to be completed over several years. The programs inclu de Medicaid, community mental health programs, ~hild im- munization, family planning, emergency care and programs that deal with venereal disease the News said. • Money proposed for these pro· grams could total $10 billion, ac- cording to the newspaper. Reagan, declaring bis highly publicized plan for reducing federal spending has been misin- terpreted , launched his Wisconsin presidential primary cam paign with a blast at bureaucracy. During a one-day visit en route from Illinois to Florida, he said bureaucracy "bas become a pro- miMnt branch of the govern- ment that you can't turn out at the polls." He addressed about 450 persons at a rally in a downtown hotel while an estimated 200 members of a group a called the People's Bicentennial Com- mission marched outside. Reagan also was greeted in Oshkosh by hecklers, and by two or three eggs thrown in his direc- tion without bitting him. A spokesma n (or the Milwaukee demonstrators said they were "building a new move· ment to challenge big business." Reagan left the Milwaukee hotel through a rear entrance avoiding them. ' Fro.a Pllfle Al TASER ••• gives you a bell of a shock. They say it immobilizes you. I know it hurts, but it doesn't kill. Both the man and the woman were treat· ed at a local hospital and re· leased.'' The four fled with $7,000 cash $4,000 in jewels, the man ·~ Mercedes-Benz and two .22· caliber rifles. Taser Systems, Inc., manufac· lures the $199 weapon, which it calls "the a lternative to the gun." It looks like a flashlight, though in California it is official- ly termed a "gun" and must be registered and bear a serial number. Canada announced Monday that it will ban the Taser eff ec- tive Feb. 1. New York City has already made it a crime to carry a Taser. a decision the manufac- turer is protesting. The Montgomery County inci· dent is not the first in which the Taser was used to commit a crime. Last September, a Taser was used to bold up a gas station attendant in Miami. Alvin Simon, president of Taser Systems, said: "All of our information, re· search and data indicate that it's nonlet~al. We've been working on it since .1968 and everything bears out the fact that it's not lethal." Simon said that although the gun bas a rating or 50.000 volts at the source. it bas such low am- perage and wattage that its shock is r elatively hannless. He said it has· only three watts or power, less than in a Christmas tree bulb or an electric heart pacemaker. Taser Systems has admitted that the weapon might cause serious injury to victims with heart or respiratory problems. A dart is fired from the gun with a fine-w ire attached. Once the dart sticks in the target a ~l· ton is pushed to emit the charge. Angola Aid Curo// Lilooly WAS H I NGT O N (AP) -Coaarwa appears likely to reject a new ap"al from President Ford and to vote to cut off U.S. aid to Aqola this month. House aourca p redict. A House source said Tuesday no bead count bu been tak.-i but that the House appean to have the votn to a pprove a Senate-- paued m easure cuttina off Aniol• aid. A State Department offfd.al alto conceded the ad· m.lnlltration f aca an .. upblll bat· Ue'' to win H oUM approval for co11U1uaed aid to AAc'ol&. J \ SECOND SOVIET SUBMARINE RAISING MISSION THWARTED FOR G LOMAR EXPLORr. Hughe• Spy Ship Has Second Thoughts After Encountering Ru ssian Patrol Ship -... : ~~~~~~~~-=-~~---~_::..:.:.~~~' Fro• Pa,,e A J -. : Despite Angola r1 GLOMAR ••• According to press reports, the Soviet submarine went down 750 miles northwest of Hawaii in 1968. After the Russians failed to find the wreck, the Glomar Ex- plorer reportedly succeeded in raising a portion or the sub- marine in the summer of 1974. The submarine reportedly br_oke apart as it was being raised from the depths. Various press reports have said the CIA s.ucceeded in recovering nuclear- hpped torpedos, training loJ?s and the bodies of the Soviet crew. Armstrong Nominated WASHJNGTON CAP) - President Ford today nominated former White House counselor Anne Armstrong of Texas to be the first woman to serve as U.S. ambassador to Great Britain, and said he ex- pected her to do ''a superb job.'' Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger and Mrs. Ford stood alongside as the President named Mrs. Armstrong to her new job and promised to continue to name women to govern· ment posts. The British Foreign Of· fice gave approval Tues- day to Mrs. Armstrong's appointment, finishing in one week diplomatic formalities that normally take four to six weeks. • Kissinger to Seek Soviet Arms Pact ~· -.. WASHINGTON CAP)" - Secretary of State Henry A. Kiss- inger said today he will go to Moscow next week to seek a nuclear arms agreement in spite of continued Soviet intervention in Angola. . Kissinger told a news con· ference the im portance or a strategic arms limitation treaty is so vital to American interests and world peace that it over- comes at present the dispute in the for mer African colony. Nevertheless, Kissinger made one of his strongest st1ltements concerning the Russian rolA in Angola and warned that the over- all U.S. ·Russian interest will be affected sooner or later if Moscow does not change its African policy. The essence of detente, Kiss- inger said, calls for ''neither side to seek unilateral advantage. "This is not a matter of abstract goodwill," Kissinger said. "It is at the very h~art of our relationship.'' Continued Russian involve- ment in Angola is boWld to bring even stronger Americap reac- tion, the secretary indic~ed. This chain of events "~~r pr later will lead to open confronta- tion," he said. But Kissinger returned to his main point when he said that the effort to negotiate a limitation on nuclear arms is at this point o.verridingly more important than the day-to-day problems such as exist in Angola. "SALT is a· permanent pro- blem." he said. If there is no agreement, the · Russians will be free to increase their nuclear arsenal and to de-· velop new and more sophistical·· ed we~pons systems. ,. Victini Finds 1Jis Camera; st1s1»ect Held ; . , • 1 . ~ '·. t' ••• When l{enneth Zion saw the"· camera in the window of a.· Hollywood camera s hop, he'-"~ouldn 't believe his eyes, .. · Newport Beach police said. ' The camera had been stolen ' more than a year before from · Photo' Corp. of America 4000 • Birch St., Newport Beach, 'where· Zion is a manager. ·. Alerted by Zion, Newport'~ Beach detective Mike Hietal~· traced the camera to a Chula Vis· • ~a residen~ who said he bought . it from,a fnend who lived in Santa Ana. , · Tuesday Hietala arrested·• Doyle Culpepper, 24. at his home" at 3011 Bradford Place. Polic~ allege Culpepper was . responsible for the 1974 break· · in at Photo Corp. in which': a typewriter, a calculator and Zion's camer a were stolen. ' Lynn Hart HART'S John Hart, SPORTING GOODS 538 CENTER ST. • COST A MESA • 646-1919 BICYCLE PARTS-TIRES-ACCESSORIES Shuffleboard Sets Bocceball Sets Table Tennis Sets Frisbees Boomerangs Racquetball Racquets Handball Gloves & Balls Tennis Rackets Wil.otlllap-Davis Bancroft-Yonex Racket Stringing soo to 2100 T erllis Sllees Tennis Slirts & Shorts Tellis 'hses Tennis WHIP Slits 531 c.m 646-1111 I Basketballs · Backboards & Goals· Footballs Soccerballs Playground Balls Volleyballs ~ tretS Baseball Mitts & Gloves ~seball Undei'slli~ & Caps Baseball .sblis Soccer Shoes . Track Shoes Cross Cmi~ Shoes Wrestinj Shoes Basketball Slloes Bike Repaiin1-Patts •. Tires-Tubes~ ' ., ., .. . . ' . '• C• • Orange County aupervlsora aareed Tuesday to hire a private law firm to·u1ea county aovsn- ment'a relations with Its u.ooo employes and thelr designated bar&alnina agents. County offf clats hlnled lhat the l'l)OY& ts linked to conttnaeney wanntna in the ev~t ot a strike d~I wqe talks this >'.ear. £\5 \'?@(ill (( ®®rrwa ©® The column appears dally extept 81tarda,y1 and Mondays. 6t a problem·• Tllen 1cr1te Pal Dunn. Par 14·111 cut rt>d tof)('. get IM <:utsu:ers and ac· I ion you need to liolre mequr ties m aot•ernment and huR1ru.>ss. Moll your questions lo I' Cl I lJ UJl n A I Your Sert'ice . O ru 11ge Coo Rt f)a 1/11 /J1/ot 1.,.0 /fo.r 15ti0. Costa M C'.~<1. ('A Y2fl 21J. I 11cl uric your tl'/('p/1()rl<' 111m1ht!r: · Radio Fold•p DEAR PAT: ·1·m a ham radio operator. I ordered a James Miller Transmatch device from Trigger Electronics in Chicago last January. I have paid $90.30 to Trigger, but my order appears to have been lost. The only com- munjcation I have had from the company is a notice saying, "We will look for your order." A. M.,Costa Mesa Trigger bas repeatedly pro· m lsed d e l ive r y of you r transmatcb, but you report that no sblpment has reached you. The Better Business Bureau of Chicago reports Trigger Elec· tronl cs "has not responded to bureau requests for Information regarding lts management and current operations." All the com· plaints received by the BBB against Trigger were similar to yours Involving nondelivery or merchandise. P. Krebs, BBB as· slstant manager, reports Trigger asked for detailed information about each order, but "after forwarding such Information. no settlement Is reached." The BBB !luggests complainants obtain legal assistance to gain delivery of prepaid merchandise. Dryer Repair DEAR PAT: I returned my daughter's Remington hair dryer to Remington's service center last August. The heating element had burned out. We received .a letter stating we would have to pay $8.95 for repairs. The hair :tryer was purchased in December 1974. and was guaran- :eed for one year, I wrote to Remington explaining this, but Ne have not received the hair lryer or an explanation. A.M., Huntington Beach Your daughter now has re· eeived a replacemen' for her :1.U dryer. John ~ con· tamer service manager for Rem· .ngtoo in Bridgeport, Coan., ex- plained that Re mi.agton'a war· ranty covers "all mechanical ;»arts within the unit." He said Y" did not provide the s ales re· ~pt or warranty stub to prove :be dryer was still covered by warranty. Medi DeU.,ert1 • DEAR PAT: What provisions are included in the new Federal Trade Commission rule regard· ing the amount of time allowed for mail order firms to make de· livery? L. G., Newport Beach Effective Feb. 2, mall order companies will be required by tbe FTC to s hip merchandise within 30 days after receiving an order. If the merchandJse cannot be sblpped, tbe company mmt notify the consumer of a later s~pplag date and ·give the Gptloo to cancel the order and get a re· land. For orders involving cash, the refand most be mailed in seven days. The "Strite preparedness" plannin1 effort was revealed lu week. · At the Ume, County-Penonnel Officer R.A. Scott claimed the hi.ring of a lesal conaultant was routine and only "remotely relat- ed"tolbestrike plan. .Aul. Tuesda1-. ScoU told supervisors it would be the f1m time Jn county history an outside · law flrm bas been asked to analyse the ~ounly's employe re· lations. Scott's lnltial request for the consul\ant included a maximum cost flture of $75,000. That was trlmmed to $1~.ooo by 1uperviaon, who aalW'cd Scott he could have more U he could DR. FRANCOIS HARAVEY WATCHES OVER JORGE MARQUEZ Surgery Prevents BUndneas, Premature Death Surgery New Hope For Mexican Youth By LAURIE KASPER Of Ille Dally ~Mt SU" Jorge Marquez has a special reason for enjoying his 22nd birthday today. Although confined to a bed in the intensive care ward of Mis· sion Community Hospital, he has been gjven the hope that he will live a longer, more normal life than would have been predicted be!ore Monday. The Mexican medical stu<;lent had a tumor in the pituitary gland which had c~used him headaches and abnormal growth of bis hands and face and added 100 pounds to his normal weight. It probably would have led to blindness and premature death. But on Monday, the tumor and gland were destroyed through "stereotaxic surgery," a pro· cedure which involves sending a probe to destroy the tumor through a small opening rather than cutting into the head to operate. The six-hour operation was performed by Dr. Francois Harave y, a Mission Viejo neurosurgeon, and a team of doc· tors and technicians. Although the surgery, tests and required care would normally cost about $10,000. Marquez will not be billed. It was all done "gratis" by the doctors and hospital through Project Involvement. a program through which medical pro- fessionals in the south county area are helping to improve an Ensenada hospital. Most of the group's efforts are directed toward getting equip· ment for the hospital which, said Michael Warren, program direc- tor, is about 20 to 25 years behind American hospitals. The "more serious cases," which can't be handled in Mexico because of lack of specialists and equipment , are taken care of here. In the past four years, he s§lid, about 15 patients have been brought into the county from Mexico for care . About half of the patients have be~n operated on by Dr . Haravey. He had also previously operated on Marquez. Arrangements were made to bring the young man to Mission Community for the closed sur· glcal procedure about a year ago. But during one of the tests before the surgery, Dr. Haravey explained, Marquez Jost control of his right eye. He performed a craniotomy, which involves opening the skull, immediately to decompress the nerves around the tumor. But he was unable to remove the entire tumor. he said, so the student was sent to Orange County Medical Center for r adiation treatment. Although he went home and successfully completed a quarter at the National Uni versity of Mexico, his headaches and growth continued. He shoe size had gone from a seven to a 12 and he gained more weight. Since his school has no depart· ment of neurosurgery, the stu· dent was again referred to Pro· ject Jnvolvement. "It was ap· pa rent to me he was out of control," Dr. Haraveysaid. Dr. Haravey is optimistic that the latest s urgery was successful in destroying the entire tumor but, he said, more tests are needed and followup will con- tinue for several years. Although without the surgery. Marquez "didn't have a chance," Dr. Haravey said, the operation was a "trade-off. He doesn't come off scot free. "His life will certainly be modilied, .. he said. Primarily the function of Marquez' other glands, which were controlled by the pituitary gland, wi ll now have to be controlled with medication. And. any improvement of the disfigurement which has aJready occurred would be a "a bonus." he said. But M arquez, with Dr. Haravey interpreting his Spanish, said he is feeling "fine,·· better than he had fell after the first surgery. He has another year and a half in medical school, he said. He should have fin ished by now and this, he admitted, depresses him . But h is friends have en· couraged him and told him he will finish. However, he won't be t he . gynecologist he had originally in· tended to become. Because of the size of his hands, that would be difficult. NOx· 'Autograms' Prompt Fine OrtleT So, he has chosen a new specialty, one which doesn't re· quire so much of his hands and about which be hu first-band knowledge. }fe's going to specialize in en- docrinology. Malnutrition Caused Death LOS ANGELES (AP) -An Orange County firm that mailed out notices to South em Calif omia automobile owners implying they needed eml11lon control de· · vices fitted to their vehicles has aareed to pay a penalty or $'11,500. A spokesman for the F\Jllerton city attomey's om~ said Tues· day the penalty to be paid by Reuben H. Donnelley Corp. II one of the targeet levied tn a con· tumer protection tult. The spoke1m•11 ••Id the Fullerton firm m ade no ad· mltslon of wron1dotna ln .ine- lnc to pay the penalty and to refrain ln future 1dverU1tni from lmplyln1 the emilslon con· tn>l devices.,.. mandatory. Deputy City Atty. Joeepb A: .McCarthy said Donnelley mailed notices -called "autograms" - lalt summer to customers of car dealers participating in an ad· vertisins campaign stating they had to flt their vehicles under state regulations with NOx d~ vices. McCarthy said attached to the · autotrams, which f alled to list exemptions provided by the California Air Resources Board to tM N~ replatton. were ad· visortes explalnlng the devices ea.t S3S apiece. Tbe JlO(leea were malled short- ly alter a controversial state law requiring NOx smog devices on 1966·70 mbdel automobils in six Southern California counties went Into eff ~ct. The state Le&illature later repealed the law. HAVERSTRAW, N.Y. (AP) - A medical examiner's r eport that an elderly, former mental patient died of ''severe malnutri- tion'' has sparked probes of the northern Rockland County home for adults where be lived. "He was all skin and bones there was no fat on his body and his heart had shrunk," county medical examiner Dr. Frederick Zubtle said Tuesday. "Jt was severe malnutrition. The worst 1 have ever seen." · William Maltzman, 65, was found dead Monday in his room at the Ill Tbr Manor for Adults here. • Wectneeday. January 141 1978 DAILY PILOT A :I justlly a need for it. In his letter to SUJ>ervison, Scott sald the cooaultant is needed because .. the area of public sector employe relatiol).s has become Increasingly more complex and sensitive." He said , "lt would be ap· proprlate to obtain an outside perspective." CoWlty Coun1el Adrian Kuyper told supervisors he was at n~t concerned when Scott pw;sed up the "in house" lea:al services in favor of an outside firm. But he said Scott assured him that the decision was made simf)· ly because Kuyper's staff of al· torneys didn't have particular expertise in such matters. Aid 1 'Kuyper's office has been work- mg c;,losely with the County Ad· ministrative Office on the st.rlke plan. A confidential memorandum from the CAO's office to K\.C.Yper atked for an opinion on the power of CAO Robert Thom8.5 to make rapid ioter·dep.arlmc.nlal transfers in the event of a istrlke. As~essor Shakeup Supervisors Okay Agency Changes Orange County supervisors have approved a department re· organization plan proposed by new county Assessor Bradley Jacobs. In so doing, s upe rvisors shouldered aside a proposed ta· ble of organization suggested by the County Administrative Office for the scandal·ridden county agency. The only challenge to Jacobs pl an ca me Tuesday from Supervisor Ralph Diedrich, who said some of the assessor's job titles might have to be changed to fit existing employe classifica· lions. The pri mary change sought by Jacobs was elimination of the post of assistant assessor and creation of five "operational managers" who will report directly to the assessor. Jacobs' plan was drafted with the aid of an outside consulting firm hired for $6,500. Supervisors delayed action on the CAO's plan last month and told Jacobs he could have 30 days to come up wtth an organization of his own. drawing from his ex· It Took Him 3 Tellers to Get Service PROVIDENCE. R.I. <AP > -A gunman entered a branch office of the Old Stone Bank, pointed a revolver at a teller and de- manded money. police said. However, the teller ignored the gunman Tuesday. as did a second teller. It wasn't unttl the gunman got to a third teller that he finally started getting money. Three other tellers also dropped cash into his bag. As he turned to leave, the gun - man dropped $328 of the loot. He stooped to pick up the stray bills but then changed his mind. "To hell with it." he reportedly said. "Leave it for the sweeper." Police said the man then fl ed on foot with about S9. 700 in cash. No Freeway For Nixon? SACRAMENTO <UPI ) -The Richard M. Nixon Freeway would be renamed the Marina Freeway under a measure ap- proved Tuesday by the Senate Transportation Committee. Highway 90, which runs from Marina Del Rey to Anaheim, was named after the former presi · dent in 1971. On a 6·0 vote , the Senate Transpartation Committee sent the resolution (SCR59) by Sen. Nate Holden (D·Culver City), to the finance committee. G em T alk UyJ C 1/U.\IPllHll':S TIIE GREAT MUSEUM ROBBERY perience in private business. The new assessor's office also will include a "management services manager," who will fit between Jacobs and the fi ve operational managers to handle administration. Jacobs said the goal of his plan is to provide the method for plan· rung and administering the t asks required to produce the county assessment roll. The five managers under his KnocluRock UPI Tei.photo Adam Knics tc. a choir· master, organist and music therapist who has studied the effect of rock music for the past 10 years, says it is "more deadly than heroin" in its damage to the ears. See story. Page AS . Jury Hears Man's Taped Confession NORTH P LATTE. Neb. (AP> -Erwin Char les Simants con· fessed an hour after his arrest that he killed six members of a Sutherland, Neb .. family, a jury has been told. In a taped confession pl.ayed Tuesday for the jury in Simants' trial for murder. the 30·year-old accused man admitted shooting six members of the Henry Kellie fami ly Oct. 18 and sexuaJly as· saulting a JO-year-old girl and her grandmother. the latter alter her death. News reporters learned of the recorded statement prior to the trial but were barred from men- tiorung its existence, or severaJ other facets of the triaJ, by a con· troversial "gag" order issued by presiding J udge Hugh Stuart. The issue of the gag order has gone to the U.S. Supreme Court. On October 30 , 1864, 22 gems were stolen from the American Museum of Natural History after f. thieves removed the m from a smashed s howcase. Among these gems was the 100 carat De Long Star Ruby : All the gems were recovered, some found in a bus depot's 25¢ • luggage locker; others in a waterproof bag hidde.n in a water 1 closet. The De Long Ruby was used by the thieves as security for a loan, then retrieved and re· turned to the museum by a millionaire's ransom payment of many thou.sands or dollars. control will handle the unsecured assessment roll, secured assess- ment roll. roll s upport, main· tenance of state-mandated stan- dards and computer systems. The latter management posi· tion was added by the assessor because, he told s upervisors. more emphasis must be placed on the USP of computer technology in the department. J acobs said, he created the management services slot so there would be a designated in· dividual to fi ll in when be is absent Dis1nissal Of Drilling Suits Asked WASHINGTON !AP) -The government has asked a federal court to either dismiss five sui ts opposed to offshore oil explora- tion off the Southern California coast or move the suits to Los Angeles. Arter filing the motions Tues· day, a J us tice Depa rtment spokesman said , "We are trying to get these things over with once and for all. .. The State of California; the Southern California Association of Governments and 11 locaJ gov- ernments; Los Angeles County: eight environmental groups and the American Littoral Society of New J ersey filed the five suits pending in Wa shington, D.C .. before U .S. District Judge Aubrey Robinson. The Littoral Society is concerned with the condition of sea coasts. The environmental lawsuits are considered one reason why the bids received by the Interior Department in its Dec. 11 sale of leases to 1.26 million acres on the outer conti nental s helf off Southern California were disap· pointing. The government, which plans lo sell leases to 20 million to 30 million offshore acres in the Atlantic a nd Pacific oceans, had said it anticipated bids totaling about $2 billion. However. the ac- tual bids amount<"d to only S438 million . Some observers said potential bidders were concerned about t h e e n vi r onme ntal lawsuits. Although they did not halt the sale of the leases. the environ- mental and governmental groups are pressing their suits. Postmen D r afted MADRID. Spain <A P> -The gov<"rnment today drafted an estimated 5,000 Madrid postmen and mail handlers into the army temporarily to force them to end a mail strike after one day. No. AJOOM-HJ Sell·wlnd. Sl•I~ less""'· mid· nlgl\I blue dl1I wllhd~~tlw bezel. ee.2 It. w1ter·tested. We can only imaiine the chain of events in this case, but are pretty sure of one thing: any good TV script writer could have a field day with this scenario. ~ 823 NEWPORT BLVD .. COSTA MESA OPEN EVENINGS TtLLt:30 TILL CH RISTMAS EXCEPT SATURDAY . CONVENIENT TEAMS BankArnerlcard-Ma* Chaf9e 27 YEAAS INTHE~E LOCATION PHONE ~1 \ • .. , # . A4 DAILYPILOT Just · c,.. ~ ·.1,· I la .. ~~~. w c .. l. T "i:·-; ·-arplala e PUNCU-OUT DEPT. -Up in Saeramento, one Bob Turley has now clearly opened the floodgates for hundreds of California women to apply for lieenses as prize fighters. Maybe he didn't intend it that way. But that ·s what he did. Turley. in event you are un· familiar with the name, is ex· ttutive secretary of this state bureaucratic outfit known as the California Athletic Commission. One of the commission's prin- cipal chores is administration and regulation of boxing in our state. Wedneeday. January 14. ums GUif Oil Chairman Resigns Pl'M'SBURGH (AP) -Bob R. Dorsey. under fire because of an illegal company slush fund that doled out more than $12 million to politicians at home and abroad, resigned today as chairman and duet executive of the Gulf Oll Corp. The resignation of Dorsey and three other top officers climaxed a dramatic and extraordinary meeting of Gulf's board of direc- tors. The two-day meeting ended at about 1 a.m. today after a 16· hour session that had directors :;ending out for meals. l:S :MAKING the changes, the board accepted the so-called ''MeCloy Report." a 300-page study of Gulfs legal and illegal political contributions. That re· port found that Dorsey "perhap.s ehose lo shut his eyes to what was going on" with the political slush fund. Uf'IT ........ John T. Dunlop has re- s igned as secretary of labor, despite plea by Presi- dent Ford to stay. He said his position with organized labor was weakened by Ford veto of common-site· picketing bill . - I Christiaru S~y Attack "tlepubed I BEIRUT, Lebanon CAP) - Lef'U.tt Moslem street fiabten punched into Beirut's port area today in an attempt to cut oil tbe last CtlristJan bastrona ln the hotel diatrict. The Moslem advance came as plans wer, reported for an Arab mln1·1ummlt in Damascus to ~ toepcSLebanon's nine'monthcivil Wat. POLICE SAID squads of Moslem mllltlamen and Palesti· nlan guerrillas overran a J>olice cordon and captured Christian pmltloa.s on tbe westem edge of the port. The Cbrl1Uan Phalangist militia claimed the Moslem at- tack wu repulsed. But the gov- ernment radio said righting was still raging in the port area at 11).idmoming. A Moslem spokesman said the attack was designed to cut off 500 Christian gunmen in the hotel area ball a mile to the west. Firina alao. w a1 rePorted in the hotel area, and several rockets hit the VaUcan Embaasy n.xt to the Holiday Inn. Army armored cars evacuated the papal nundo, Magr. Alfredo Bruniera, and hls etalf. ANOTHER aOCKET landed ln the brothel compound near the port. A JN>llce said several pro· sUtutes were killed or wounded, while "others fled ln panic to shelter in an adjacent police sta.· tiOC1. •• The police said at least 48 peo- ple were kllled and 87 wounded in tbe Moslem assault on the port and In mortar and rocket duels Tuesday night between Moslem and Christian suburban neighborhoods. Another 15 dead and 51 wounded were reported in Zahlah, 3S miles east of Beirut, and n eighboring Moslem villages, and in Moslem Tripoli and Christian Zagarta, in north Lebanon. 'nt.ls broutht the cu"'8lty toll in tbe war to more than &ISO d• , ad and more than 28,200, WC)Wlded, accordlna to 1overn-,l. ment figUl18 . , ; The Ctuiatlans kept up their , J l·day-old food. blockade ol 32,000 Palestinian refusees in thre~ ,_ camps on the northeast side or: Def rut. Moslems-and Palestinian 1 guerrillu retoUated by blockad- ing aeveral Christian villqa in, 1 northern and southern Lebanon with a total population of 30,000. · : WITH ALL highways into the 11 city closed for five days, the gov. · ernment said it was negotiating an airlift of flour from Syria to ease a bread shortage in Beirut. 1 "But nothing can be done to ease ... ~ the fuel shortage as long as the highways remain closed," a , spokesman said. , .. For decades now, the squared circle has been clearly con- sidered the sole domain of males. Women were expressly forbid- den against participating in prize fights. You have to suspect that somehow the state must have figured fighting for pay is un- ladylike. The report was prepared by a three-man committee headed by New York attorney John J . MeCloy and was turned over to Gulf directors and the Securities and Exchange Commission last Dec. 30. Kidnap Victim Kiiied Government sources said President Suleiman Franjieh ~ would visit Damascus this"' weekend for !alks with Syrian "1 President Hafez Assad on a 1 Syrian-sponsored formula to end• the Lebanese war. The sources ' said if they come to an agree-' ment, the heads of state of Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Iraq, Algeria, -.. Libya and Kuwait and guerrilla.:· chieftain Yasir Arafat of the Palestine Liberation Organiza. ·tion would join Franjieh and A3·,, sadtobelpsealtheaccord. , , The slush fund came to light in 1973 when Gulf admitted it had ii· legally given $100,000 to Richard Nixon's 1972 presidential cam- paign. Banker's Wife Died Before Ramom Paid? l:SEXPLICABLY. h ow- ever, the California Athletic Commission gathered only last week to repeal the ban. In this day and age of equality between the sexes, perhaps the athletic board was just trying to update itself and come apace with the times. All of this probably would have hummed along with much public notiee. You could anticipate few females would immediately start roadwork every morning, begin skipping rope as they did in grade school or indulge in shadow boxing around the gym- nasium. But then along comes the aforementioned Mr. Turley. Pon- dering the faet that his com- mission would now allow females to apply for boxing licenses, Turley told the press only yester- day that he didn't expect very many applicants. AS TURLEY CONTINUED talking, you got the notion that he didn't really think very much of females as prize fighters. Alas, then he kept on sticking his pedal e xtremity in his mouth to assure that he'd get a whole ar- ray of potential women boxers. Consider this little gem from Turley: "A woman can compete in almost any other sport but box· ing is the hardest way in the world to make a dollar." Right away. he's issued the c halleng e to combative California women from Eureka to. San Diego. CAN'T FIGHT, HUH? They'll show Turley. One of the early ap- plicants may just barge right in-· to his office, punch him on the nose with a right cross. and de- mand a license .right there on the spot. If Turley is trying to suggest women cannot handl e themselves in (!ombat, this pro· bably means he's never· been married. But he kept right on talking. Next he said "no way" would the eommission ever sanction a prize •fight between a female and a male because s uch a match "~~>Uld be dangerous and an ab· vic'ms mismatch. . . " . Q.b boy. Now Turley has guaranteed that one of the early applicants will be some babe who wants to battle Muhammad Ali. Mr. Turley may know a lot about boxing. But he sure doesn't know beans about women. THE McCLOY report quoted one intermediary as saying he made secret cash payments to Senate Republican Leader Hugh Scott of Pennsylvania of $10,000 a year for about 13 years. Seolt has not denied receiving Gulf payments but has said he only received political donations. He has denied knowing such donations came from corporate funds. Scott has since said he will not seek re-election. Other Gulf donations included SJ million to the ruling political party in South Korea, $627,000 to ltalian political parties and a 5108,000 helicopter to the late Bolivian dietator Rene Barien- tos, who was killed when the aircraft crashed. Fines Paid For Geritol, FemJron Ads NEW YORK (AP) -The maker of Geritol and Femlron, accused by the Federal Trade Commission of providing mis· leading television commercials, have agreed to settle with the government by paying a $125,000 civil penalty. The J.B. Williams Co. was or- dered earlier to pay $177,005 in fines and interest by U.S. District Judge Lawrence Pierce. He ruled that advertising for Femlron between June and ·Oc- tober 1969 violated the FTC's 1967 ban on misleading commercials. The firm agreed to the $125,000 settlement Tuesday without ad· mitting any violation or a 1967 FTC cease and desist order. The case had been due for a jury trial. The FTC order had prohibited advertising which Implied that Geritol or Femlron would al· leviate fatigue , weakness, nervousness or irritability, un- less the advertisements pointed out that most such symptoms do not result from iron deficiency or anemia and that most people would not benefit from the pre· parations. GULFPORT, Miss. (AP) - When banker Charles W. Marter paid $25,000 in a desperate at- tempt to win freed om for his kid· naped wife, the woman may alr~ady have been dead. ·'She had been dead several hours," Coroner Edgar Little said Tuesday after authorities were led to the crumpled body of the · 36-year-old mother of two. She had been shot in the back of the head. "THE P ICKUP was made this morning," Little said of the ransom paid by Marter, "and the arrest at about 3:30 this after· noon, so that's quite a time span." Little said only an autopsy will tell for sure when the woman died. He said he will conduct the examination today. An unemployed shipyard worker was held without bail to- day, charged with murder in the kidnaping and death of Edwina Marter. The FBI said Marter, vice pre· sident of Gulf National Bank here, paid $25,000 in a futile at- tempt to buy his wife's life. Dist. Atty. Albert Necaise re- fused to say whether the ransom was recovered. He did say that t he man arrested, Richard Gerald 'Jordan, 29, of Hat- tiesburg, Miss., led police to the victim's body. But Necaise said no weapon was found. THE BODY was found in a thicket in a wooded area north or here. Jordan, a stocky man wearing a red jump suit, appeared in Har- rison County Court Tuesday evening and Judge Gaston H. Hewes appointed Gulfport at- torney Rhett Russell to represent him. Necaise read the charges to Jordan and advised him ·he did not have to enter a plea in the absence of an attorney. The case is to be brought before a grand jury. which will be empaneled on the first Monday in March. Conviction carries an automatic death penalty in Mis· sissippi. Police said Jordan had worked at a ·shipyard at Morgan City, La., returned to Hattiesburg last week, then left again, saying he wanted to land a job on an of- fshore oil rig. ' Jordan was taken from a tax· icab in Gulfport by police who were checking all cars after los· Snowstonns Hit Illinois Travel DangeroUJI in Michigan, Ohio Areas • 02 IOWIU TOIPUAhltlS ~] .... JS Uf1 wtAf"'I fOtOCA\t. ,. • " PltbM'lfl 0 • ... 0 ......... Ore. 0 " ... ---------.... ~Ot'r M 10 .... ,... . ...., .......... :. ~'~" __ ,..._ --... & 1011"' Ull Wteo• , .... --....,,_ ...... -~-1\wftd.., II __ .._ "W--=-"' ........... ,., ,.,, •• ,,. ~ Ull .......•• .... __ <..,,_ .. _ ,_,.. .. 17 SK,_.... Sf n ........... • 2J .. Sel1 L.ette City .. U •• 1111 ltr-'-~ • s..t9t 0 • .sr '"*-' ,. ,, .1) ...._.,.... iJ o m IJJI.•• ....... . .....,.,,_.._ __ _.. .... ln<.l'le• -, ....... , 419Wll .. Ille wtMnt -.... ,. "' ......... .,....... .. .,. ,.... ...... "' • !Mterill .... .,....~ ..... ,,.., .. _ _, "•"• •••II wtetlltr ·r•l•t••· Mll.Mrlllh U44. k ..... 1 ..... de9d \ ' .. ttaHlc -by <M -• .,,... -_, ..... ,...y •• .,~. n.-tormme.,...._..._.. Mkflleell Ttlffeoy llllflt, -1lfle tr.tftc ........ ~lllt -~ a.. el INnY oct""1tlu. A"W • .... P9fY Niil lllwr ........ ~.,.. ...... .. .......,.,, .... _. ........ ...... flt,....,,..,,~" <~ts Oetf'Ofl .. lb~tem!IWwM. .,..,..,....,. Miit_.....,.. ........... ._. ""' ~•flt fer ....,...*" ~ _, ... "' C>Me, _,. -"-~ .. Md -t ...... \l9f1I. .... v._.. e.i11 ..... 1. A..,.,,,,., • .,,,. ... II _.,... 11M ~ Ctlitwlll• '"9y """-y ........ temper .. .,....,.., ....... " "'•lley WMS and In ll'le lllOfl 10s 9t t11t lllMc .. s. TM w.rm -•tfler -. ••· peeled ,. utel\d ., IHSI tfwOUOll 'TlMlrMlty. A lllth pr.swr• system to IN ""'111 .W Mst llttlt st~nt olr lrlPPOd _.....Md ... 1slbllltlff rostrlctecl lo '-"'9n '-' "'""· Llgtll $1"°9 wes fln<ast ~ut tM Los Allfe!H eMlfl. Tecllty's lllth ot 1119 l.OS ........ CM<~ reoc'*f 1t, two...,_ '""* "*' TUMdly's r•Mlft9. !l9nlt locol 1usty WIMI • .. to ,,,. ... Ill lloul' WhlptMld "'"""" ... ...., ~~ .,... tlld lflt ~ ,..... ...,._,lywfftdsfr.m tSto•m.~" .. M tflreugll IN _1 .. 11 - -..i111 Mfftpetoturws cllflly W •• 91ftfrtfly cteor. Retort ltwl hllM ,.,..... '""'. to6S. ., ... wllllll llk Md •dirt Mt .... lfthflttlllrtoroot.TMIW ...... .... "''''"Y llltf\ff -'"' ~ *-' ..,....._,e"lffllfr0rftto•'1. c. .. i.ilt'e.tller ..... ........... ,., _,_ TillP-. •y. Lltflt "'et>IMlte wlftfa 111.,.-w _,.. ....._ Hlflflt .,.._..., 1• .. l't.. (Mital ~.._. .... , .... --..... u •• ,., l111aM ~ ............. , ... ~·"' Tiie--~---" .... s.., • ....,,,.. .. ..... ., -...... t:........ u ~~ •:••·"'-,,, TtUl .. MY il\nt leW I :W e.m. U ff!,.. 7:2 ... lft. ... ~-t :M.._f'ft. -0.f ,......",... •:02p.m. u hflrl••:"•·"'·· wt• s:os..m. -.n rlMOJf.)p,m., MU '•»..m. • ing their quarry in a hot pursuit following the ransom drop. MRS. MARTER was kidnaped from her home In suburban Mis- sissippi City Monday afternoon. Necaise said one of her children, a 3-year-old, was left in the house unharme<i. The FBI said Marter then re- ceived telephone calls demand- ing ransom a nd giving directions for dropping it off. The first two delivery efforts were aborted, of- ficers said, and may have been simply ploys by the kidnaper to make sure police were not watching. Marter dropped off the package o( money at a prear· ranged spot on Interstate JO Tuesday morning and Necaise said officers saw the money picked up, gave chase but lost sight or the speeding auto, which was later found abandoned in Gulfport. THE HOURS dragged after the ransom drop. An extensive police dragnet was clamped around Gulfport. Highways were choked with roadblocks, with police peering into each vehicle before lettln1 it pass. There had been reports early in the day that police were searching for at least two UrtT...,_.. BANK WIFE SLAIN Mrs. Edwina Marter persons, but Necaise refused to say Tuesday nlfht whether addi- tional suspects wer~ being sou-t. "I don't want to go Into anything involving evidence,•• he said. \ Prostitution Okay Urged By City Aide ... .•· •I ATLANTA (AP) -Legalizing' prostitution in Atlanta would "' "save us all a lot of headaches." . says the city's public safety com-•' missioner. ' 'I;'he commissioner, Reginald Eaves, surprised the City Coun~ , cil's Public Safety Committee ,' with the suggestion Tuesday. · "It's one of the oldest pro· fessions in the world, and we • need to control it,•· he reasoned. Eaves' proposal didn't go over well with several of the coun-r cilmen. One, Nick Lambros, told,: Eaves to enforce laws already on.· the books instead of proposing · new ones. .......,. "It puts us on the spot when so-: meon-11• ua what laws ought to I be enforced and enacted," Lam· ~ bros ta.id. "J'm concerned by ~ sta~nts by the commissioner thcl ct!ttain crimes ought not to be crimes anymore.·' .. We'll tell you wh·eretogo Whether It'• a tip on a fine restaurant, a clue to lead you to a painting you've waited a lifetime to see or a mlnl..,evlew of a movie or play, Weekender helps you plan more fun In your weekend. Weekender1brings you complete news, features and Hatlngs of the art• and entertainment events scheduled ••ch weekend along tfte Orange Coaat. And, you'll find helpful advice on fi ne area ~ reatauranta penned by Norman.Stanley In his Out 'n' About column. Dally Piiot 1taff writers regularly contribute reviews of films and performing arta attr•c· tlons to help you make your beat entertain- ment choice. You'll find the most complete •rray of the.ater •dvertlalng of In· tereat to Or• nge Co•st relklenta In the pages of Weekendfr • Fln•llY, • complete events calendar guides you to are• atlrac- tlona ottartng low or no<e>stfun • To pl1n more fun In your weekend, every Friday re1d ( WEEKINDI R J In the DAILY P!LOT • " : . .. . . 1 • . ~ . ' '· ' "1 .: Doetors' Slowdown State F tl.ces 1 1 ·Care Crisis ... LOS ANGELES (AP) -A spokesman for a physician's group has warned that the doctors• slowdown in tbe Los Angeles area could spread throuabout the state when Travelers Insurance Co. raises malpractice insurance 1ates in Northern C~fomia Feb. 1. · At the sarne time, a Los Ankeles County official ·said Tuesday, plans have bee[l prepared to call a state of emeraency as a possible means of combat-ing the slowdown, Officials drew up the plans in case no solution is found to tbe malpractice situation . The state has ad- vanced a plan callin~ for a stat&-financed insurance company in return for a medical "Peace Corps" which would have doctors donate 20 days a year to caring for tbe poor. THE LOS ANGELES County Medical Associa- tion criticized tbe proposal Tuesday and protested . wb;lt it said were statements by Gov. Edmund G. Bi:own Jr. that doctors "do no~ act in •a socially responsible manner to the needs of their com-munities." . Brown also said through a spokesman, "I UD· derstand the doctors' feelings aQd look forward to their assistance in resolving wb~t is turning out to be a· very difficult social problem," Southern CalifQrnia physicians. mostly in the ~Angeles area, began the wor~ slowdown J an. 1· to protest an increase of 3Z'1 percent in their malpractice insurance premium~. BY TUESDAY, the 13th day·of the slowdoWtt. 98 of the 234 member hospitals in t}1e Hospital Coun- cil of Southern California had tlxperienced some degree or difficulty due to the protest. Nearly 26,000 workers have been affected - more than 4,300 of them laid off -while hospitals are losing $700,000 a day from decreased patient loads, a hospital council spokesman said. SPEAKS FOR ANIMALS Actress Betty Whtte Druggist Killed In Heist ~ Ani111als Protected Wedneeday. January 14, 1978 DAILY PILOT A 5 Dr. Gerald Glantz of the Uqited Physicians of California told a news conference in Sacramento that Travelers -the insurance carrier for tt\e 9,500 doctors in Southern California.-would raise its rates for physicians in the nortbern portion of the state Feb. 1 . POLICE SAID the .-------------------------------.-.----------------------------~--------------, three young men entered \ . "IT'S GOISG to bea statew¢e movement very rapidly," Glantz said, adding that Travelers in- sures 65 percent of the physicia.ns in the San Jose- Sacramento area . Doctors in the northern part of the state staged their own slowdown last year to protest soaring malpractice insurance rates. Out of 3, 761 beds at Los Angeles county hospitals, 121 remained available at midnight ~on· day compared with 184 beds 24 hours earher. Another 1,000 beds are available if extra employes can be hired, and application~ for new employes were being processed Tuesday. DESPITE THE slowdown, officials said emergency room servic~ around the county r e· mained available Tuesday, with no reports of any life-e ndangering s ituations caus ed by the sl6wdown. Willow Pharmacy about 3 p.m. and wandered around f o r several minutes before leaving. Several m inutes later the men reentered the store and went to the counter with several items. The cashier noticed one of the men had a gµn and she fell to the. floor sho utin g to the pharmacist. Dearth grabbed a gun and seven shots were exchanged between the drug store owner and the fleeing suspects. CHILDRENS I .. "' ' .. .. SALE STARTS THURS., JAN. 15 DOORS OPIH AT IOA.M. JI PASHIOM 111 Me • MIWPOIT llACH No Exohanget 01 ~on Siii• MttehlndlM Sears Where Thrift Is Always In Style Misses' Nylon · Bib Knit Tops Low Priced Misses' Easy-Care Pants Were 54 99 2 9 9 to s799 each This Ad Effective through Sat., Jan. 17 • 0 Locat~d on the Low er level • Pants •Tops • Dresses • Coats Sears Former Low Priees • Sweaters • Robes • Hostesswear QUANTITIES LIMITED Use Sears Revolving Charge Sheer Nylon Knee Highs low Priced 299 STottE HOURS: Mondoy thfv ,.,icfoy I Sears I So. Coast Plaza 3333 Bristol St. Phone 540.3333 Buena Park Oran2e 2100 N. Tustfn Ave. 10 AM t•' PM Sotvrdoy 1150 La Palma Ave. """"" .oeeuo; ~·(0. Phon•l~OO ''). . . ,; Phone 637·2100 I 9!30 AM to 9 PM Svndoy 12 N.-n to S PM A8 DA.IL¥ PILOT EDITORIAL PA.GE· .. hiV~StlgBt~on ·a Mu~t The f at ul shooting this past week of a young Hunt- ington Beach mushroom ~wer demands a most thorough a nd conscientious mvesUgation. Twcnty-thrce·year·old Nicholas DlStefano was cut down by police shotgun blasts after a fight with his older brother in wllich several snots were fired. Police were s ummoned for help by frantic.\women members of the· family. The officers , thinking their U\fes were in danger, say they opened fire when they reportedly heard gunshots and s aw a figure running out a door. The question is: could the death have been a voided? The ~ns wer is not easy. A fa mily loses its favorite son in the prime of his manhood. · And pCJJi ce put the mselves on the firing line each ti me they respond to such calls for help. Police Chief Earle Robitaille s hould be com- mended fo r his prompt r equest in calling for an in· \·estigation by the district attorney. Any inq uir y which hints of partiality or lacks thoroughness would not be appropriate. Election Decision The Fountain Valley City Council faces some tough de cisions in coming weeks over whether to hold a recreation bond election in June, and, if so, how much to ask voters to s pend. The council already held one public hearing on · the matter a nd wisely continued it until Tuesday to hear mor e views. make their opinions' known before the council decides · on making it a ballot issue. It is somewhat surprising that up to now, relative- ly liWe opposition bas been express ed on a speJlding pro~al that falls in the midst of an uncertain economy. · The council made a judicious move when it asked a lO·rtlember citizen group for recommendations in the matter. But it err~ in having the city staff form the group privately rather than announce its forma- tion publicly so all interested parties could apply for membership before meetings started. Protection·from Fire A fire which recently took the life of a young Hun- tington Beach housewife should make every family pause and consider action to save lives and property. . There are safety measures available that lessen the chance of such a horror being repeated. Mrs. Suzanne Miranda burned to death when a smoldering fire in a couch she thought was ex· tinguished rekindled and engulfed her home. Fire Chie f Raymond Picard says it needn't have happened, that t,he fire department should be called to double check fires believed extinguished. He also s.ays that an escape route s hould be worked out. He pointed out that Mrs. Miranda could have been saved if she and her husband had exited through a window near their bed rather then trying to fight their way through flames. Picard also saicl that a s moke detector alarm should be installed as an extra margin of s afety for a cost of from $30 to 560. Only 15 persons spoke a t the last hearing -all but three of them in s upport of bonds and their accompa- nying higher t axes. Those with strong views either \\'ay ought to turn out for Tuesday 's hearing and There is evidence they work. Just recently a smoke alarm saved a Newport Beach family. The extra time and money spent is perhaps the ''t't> LOVE TO PLAY ~ITH YOU, ANOKEI, guT 1HEY wo~l'T LET ME OUT.11 .best investment a family can make. H /F College ~thletics Financing Debated This 1s a bout the time of yea r that the mog uls of the mega. million !or i:' it billion?> dollar profes siona l foo tba ll · world gather to ha rvest tht> yields of the nation ·s t'Olleges. And, how sweet It IS' Time was when the highly com peti t ive p urveyor s of gridiron com · bat bar ga ined with the all· American s. offering huge bonus es, to get th e i r signatures on dotted li nes Rut, in a m o· ment or in s pir at i o n , they cam e up with a system whic h ingen iou!)ly flouts t he Sherma n Act . In complete disr egard for the laws against s lavery and in- voluntary servitude they devised the draft. Henceforth. college nt.hlete::. with cl yen for pro· fessional foot ball would submit to round robin selection. '.'lo longer would free enterprise be permitted ~o longer could they shop for the hest offers. Either a pl a~•er became the property of the cluh which drew rum or he could s it it out. THIS. s port-. fan were told. \\OUl ct be ra1r . It would· prevent rich clubs from gr a bbing up the best tale nt thus wiping out the> chance!.' of winning of the lesser clutls. In fact. teams with the poorest win r ecords would have first choice in the draft. Well, m ay be it is fair for ( EARL WATERS ) everyone excepting the players and the s chools that spawn them . Still. with the salaries gained by the players through their union ef· forts, perhaps one needn't worry too much about them. But what about the col leg es of the nation? Regardless of whether they are tax supported or private colleges they are a ll struggling for dollars . While coltege athletics may be most desirable as e xtra curricular activities they aren't the primary purpose of the m· st1tutions. SoPle of the smaller ones never ha~e gotten into it wh.ile others have had to give it up. THE COLLEGE athletic pro· gram is a cos tly one. Most or the athletes, if not all, are attending under scholarships u·sually financed with tuitions paid by less physically gifted or by the t axpa y ers . Y e t , with t h e tremendous revenues taken by professional s ports organizations· it does see m unfair that the col· leges should bear the full burden of p_roducing crops. C omm e nting on thi s pheno menon the distinguished Washingt on columnist Ernes t Cuneo recently s aid. "For all practical purposes the owners of professional sports teams have :-:ucceedect in turning the entire l".S. educational system into minor leag ue farms for the pro- duction of super athletes." A COUPLE of years ago As· Dear Gloorny Gus With so many people lining up for t he new stamps it"s too ba d the P ost Office didn't kee p t he s tamp booth that was in the pa rking lot d l1 r ing the · Christmas rush. L.H. G*my Gvs ,_.,.,, ••• suomitt.C by ...-rs aM .. 11« M CHUrlly rettecl.,,. VMws of tlM MW~per. Sfl\0 -i-1 ,..,.. te Gloenn Gus, D•ilY Piiot. s embly man Willie Brow n became intrigued with the idea of devising some rneans whereby colleges could ol'ganize a nd de- mand compens ation from the professional . world for the athletes they rais ed, in the same manner one club buys a player Crom another. Constitutional questions have plagued efforts to develop a legislative way to achieve this. Cuneo advances the idea of a federal gate tax dedicated to education. While this would be a direct and easy way to collect funds it leaves s ome questions unanswered . What about the re· venues from TV which appear to be the major souhe of football receipts and s ome other sports?. And how would the money be dis · t ributed to assure the schools which produce the talent of re· ceiving their fair s hare? However it is done it seems time to sight in on this untapped source. As Cuneo says, "It is doubtful if any other business re· ceives the s ubsidies and tax benefits comparable to pro· fessional sports corporations." What Is a '·Useful' Life? I worry a bout people who wor ry about people. especially themselves, bemg useful. I also worr y about people being useless and worrying a bout it. for that matter. Maybe r·m JUSt against worry- ing. by m yself o r by anyone else. a b o u · t a n y th i n ~ wha tsoev e r . In which case perh a p s i t w o uld b e m e ~t to abandon this morning's ef· fort before ~t is pro perly commenced. (Worry. incidentally, is an in· teresting word. Its root meaning is to strangle or to injure. Worry- ing, properly. is wh nt the fox. does to t he hound in hunting, or what the dog does with an old shoe. Remember this the ne:ict time you find yourself worrying). Let us star' with a consum· mate worrier, John Wesley, wbo founded Met~lsm . and had a great deal to do with what we now tall. with ~ trace of con· dest'ension, the Puritan Ethic Wtsley'a abysmal prayer sounds down the centuries: "O Lord, -Lel us not hv~ to be useless. for Chris t 's s ake. Amen." There seems to me a p:.i!lsion o( guilt ln this utterance. The Wesl~ans rar too readily came to equate usefulnaa with the pil ( CHARLES McCABE ) ing up of the earth's treasure in little heaps owned by good Wesleyans. Perhaps the guilt was a result or the piling up. or the piling up was the result of the guilt, which may have been original sin. Who knows? IN THE Wesleyan sense, being useful meant having practical utility . By this standard the Trout Quintet or Schubert, the poetry of Swinburne, the wall paintings of those caves in the Sahara, and the clowns of Picasso and Fellini, are totally useless. Santayana said it more succinctly. "Music is essentially useless, as life Is." Pragmatis m. that uniquely American way of looking at things , i s th e s on or Wesleyanism. Although t he philosophy is A merlcan, lts tocsin was sounded by a Britisher. John stuart Mill, in his Ess•y on Liberty. "J re1ard uttlity as the ul· tlmate appeal on all ethical questions : but It mu.$t be utllity in the largest sense, grounded on the permanent interests ol man as a progressive belog." LA&GE·MINDED American . statesmen and poUUdans have bttn thinklnlC alon' these Unts CoT 1t lea•t half lbe Uto ol the \ -Republic. We cannot say that we have inched a great deal toward either domestic felicity or the purs uit of happiness through Collowing this earnest course. bn the other side, there are the poets of the useles~. the people we call artist s, people who believe that one lJeethoven is worth at least one Henry Ford. and that m aybe all Henry Fords should be killed abQrning so that we could genetically concentrate on the production of Beethovens. A great deal has been s aid on both sides of the question or liv- ing the useful or the useless life, but precioi:s little of · it has percolated down into the com- mon sense. THE ARCHETYPAL man of common sense in our ~ociety is the frugal New ~ngland Congregationalist. He went to church on Swday, and he meant it. He spent the rest of the week screwln.g the Boston Irish and his own sibling in a Jaw office, and he meant it. The consummate example of this type w'as the late Justice O.W. Holmes Jr. Like Dr. Johnson, Holmes bad a talent for clearing his head. and the heads of others, of rubbish. I leave you with a rew of his words: "It would be well if tht in- telliaent classes could forget the word'•ln and think less of beini iooct. We learn how to behave 8b lawyus, soldiers. merchants or what not by being them. Uf e, not the parson. teaches conduct." The Right to Participate Poor Should Pay Taxes To the Editor: The poor have rights too. Governor Brown's plan to eliminate taxes for poor people is wPong. The poor have just as much right to pay taxes as the non·poor. Because we all pay taxes we all have the right to demanct better government and bett er people running tha t government. To pay nothing. for your government. means you have nu right to condemn, cajole, or de mand political or social change. The poor would. be tabled non-contributors by virtue· o( their temporary financial status. Instantly you will produce a two class social structure: the givers and getters. Reduce taxes ' . substantially for the poor Yes. But eliminate them? NEVER. WALT BLANKENSHIP Drtea• De~oured To the Editor: llf 'm sure many of your readers have read about and have pro- . bably seen the s hip that is being built on Santa Ana Ave. in Costa Mesa by Dennis Holland. Dennis has had a dream of being a part of the bicentennial; however, it looks as though he may not be able to participate as planned because or finances. He has bad to stop work on the ship and work on other jobs in order to make · more money before ,be can pro ceed. , Dennis '. project has been endorsed by the NeWpe>rt-Mesa Unified School District, the City . of Costa Mesa, Orange County. and the State of California. These endorsements are great except that it unfortunately involves no dollar contribution to the project. I think U~ere a re several peo- ple who might be interested in donating to this worthwhile pro- ject if they knew he was not get· ting any other assistance. We are very fortunate lo have California's r epresentative com- ing from our own area and feel Dennis and bis wife, Betty. de- serve all the help we can possibly give. Also, since it has been endorsed, all donations can be used 8B a tax deduction. MRS. ALICE DUVALL Tl' Pain To the Editor: Thank you for the UPI story in defense of Douglas MacArthur. 1 watched "Collis ion Course"' and found it very painful. Henry Fonda gave the worst performance I h ave evet: seen and/or heard. He slurred some Punch ( MAILBOX ) Letters from readers are welcome. The right to condense letters to fit space or eliminate libel i3 resenied. Letter$ of 300 words or less will 6e given preference. All letters must in· elude ngnature and mailing address but names may be wUhheld on re- quest if su/ /icient reason is apparent . Poetry will not be published. s entences badly. I think , however, that the mos t i ncongruous thing was the choice of Mr. Fonda to ~ the part of MacArthur. Mr. Fonda's daughter has openly es poused the cause of the North \Vietnamese, a nd MacArthur would certainl y not h ave · favored Hanoi. Mr. Fonda has not said that he was in di s agreem e nt with hi s daughter's views , but felt that she had a right to speak them. This televis ion m ovie Jett some very bad impressions, and I say that I am glad to read somet hin g good about MacArthur. I ·hope t h at eventually they will stop jumping on Kenltedy, Hoover and Nixon, although J hold no brier for any of these men. We in America have much more important things to do than to continue beating on men who can't fight back. So, let's get on with it -doing something constructive! 'RAYMONDJ. HEALY J1tar,,.edle Prabe .. To the Editor: May I use your newspaper to publicly thank· the Newport Beach paramedics? I would like the public to know that for themselves , as well as for me, that in time of crises there is hope and help. New Year's Day I lost con· sciousness while s taying with a relative on Balboa Island. I was bleeding through tbe mouth and nose and had gone into a con- vulsion. At night on a holiday where does ont! tum? The only thing they could think of was the paramedics. I was later told that as they hung up the phone the siren started and that within three to four minutes 1 was re· ceiving oxyfen and the paramedics were working quick· ly and efficiently with the hospital. ·MY sister-ln·law was under a doctor's cal"e just prior to t.be 0 Cl) • .J .. " ..• I come here mainly tor I.JI• almoephore ... " & ' new year and almost went into shock with fright. Instead of ig noring her and having another emergency they were very tender and com passionate and were able to avoid a possible <tl tack. These young men are hot only keen, intelligent and well trained, .but their kindness ancl gentleness with m y worried fatnily could never be surpassed What a great loss any city b . s uffering who does not s upport and maintain the paramedics. DOROTHY McCOMRS Solid Perlo,..er• To tb.e Editor: · I "*' vel°y pleased to read your January 6 editor ial noting that the auditor-controller won a dean bill of health from the Grand JWY-t contract auditor. You in dicated that county taxpayers can start the new year with tl1 l' assurance o f g etting ,s oJ 1d p('rformance from "at least on!• section of toe al government '· Hopefully you will not consid<'r me presumptuous to commend for your reading any Grand JQrY report of the past eight yc>ars to discovet that the vast majority of county departme nts are sohrl performers. Though storms 11r pear to· swirl around us. ye>ur · county departments an · doin~ their jobs. Ry every !-tatil{tic available. inducting reports I rpm Cal Tax and the state DcpeJrt ment of Finance. Orange County departments arc the most "'f fectiveolall in the state R.E .THOMAS County Administrative Offih•r Old Glory To the Editor : At the time when we shoold s ee Old Glor y fl y i h g highest-and p'roudcstr why 're so many replacing her with the Bennington flag ~a one family, one battle fla ~? Ttl e Bicentennial of America. Jhe country whose ideals and history are in the billowing folds of ~Id Glory-why is s he being put ·aside? • , People who want to fly the l1ag with the "76 in its canton. why not beneath Old Glory wher4 it belongs-in its proper place" I.et Old Glor y fl y as Ch~ al..,ays has, on high, the syrrO>ol or Creedom and justice• KATHRYN FISHB ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT Rob,rl N, Wttd. 1'11bhirh11r Th<>m4~ Ktt'Vll . 1-:dstor Borboro Kri>11'>1rl1. ,. Edtlorlol Pogf' Editor The. editorial pa~e or the Dal Pilot set~!'l to tn rorm and 11timulnte readers by pre cnl~· on this page diverse comment ' Ol'I topics of fntcr<'sl by ~yndlc oo columnists and cortooms~. · provldl.ng a forum for reade · views •nd by presenhn~ ~ newipaper's opinions ond rd on current topics. The edit 1 opiruom of the Daily PilM np~r only ln the editoria l column al top of the PU<'· Opin ion .. pre111td by the columnt\IA urtooni1ts 1nd lett<>r ~ntl'l'I their own and no (•ndor!\c'mcn the.lr views b~· th<' l>nlly Pl . should be 1nrl'lr~t>d. Wednesday. Jan.14.1 ' \ I . II 'id g • • I F~t • I Furor: Fact or Fad? ' I l I I Polyunsaturates Evick n ee R esearched ' . • I I By AL ROSSITER IR. u,.11c..._ • ...,, WASHINGTON -Food manufacturers are making it easy for Americans to heed warning11 about the hazards ot cholesterol and enjoy breakfast without eggs, butter and bacon. Supermarkets offer imitation . l eggs, margarines low in saturat- 1 ed fat, artificial bacon actually ' made of vegetable protein. There are special cookbooks with re- cipes for eating well while avoid· ing high-cholesterol dishes. The menu in the House of Repr~n tati ves restaurant promotes a low-cholesterol luncheon. ADVERTISEMENTS tN newspapers, magazines, medical journals and on television and radio tout the benefits of polyunsaturated .(ata and otlter products for·" sensible diets." <The saturated fats warned against usually come from animals and tend to increase the amount of cholesterol in (tie blood. The opposite effect ·is round in polyunsaturated fab which generally are vegetaSl~ oils.> · One full-page ad that appea~ recently in two leading medieal journals cited "the facts" by scur- ing corn oil lowers cholesterol in the blood and "may h e lp decrease the risk of coronary heart disease .'' THAT PHRASE IS a key to the cholesterol controversy. There is overwhelming evidence linking high blood levels of cholesterol to atherosclerosis, the artery- narrowing disease that sets up heart attacks. And there are sug- gestions -but no proof -that lowering cholesterol will help prevent heart disease "This is the tightrope that is walked," said Dr Robert I. Levy, director of the govern- ment's National Heart and Lung Institute. "I believe we'd like to en- courage these companies to de· velop products that are tasty and . are economically competitive. permissible ads promoting cholesterol·f ree roods and saying that reduced cholesterol in the blood may help decrease the risk of heart disease. The egg industry is vitally con· ctmed with the anti-cholesterol advertising campaign. Per-capita egg ·consumption in the United States has been fall- ing. The average American ate 314 eggs in 1971. In 1974, the total was 286. A recent Gallup Poll conducted for the egg industry showed the cholesterol con- troversy was a big reason. THE INDUSTRY SFARTED fighting back in 1973 in defense of "the incredible edible egg." A group called the National Commission on Egg Nutrition put out booklets and newspaper ads claiming : "There is absolutely no scientific evidence whatsoever that eating eggs in any way increases the risk of heart attack." One "informational booklet" denied the risk of coronary heart 'One seldo111 hcu t he final an •acer in 111edfclne. Tlae lln al proof f s oft.en dllflcalt , ff not. l •po ss ffll e, t o ofJtafn.' ~ disease was linked to blood C'bolesterol levels. The denial was eliminated in a later version sent to news media. THE INDUSTRY CAMPAIGN raised the ire of the American Heart Association and s ome other groups which filed com- plaints with the Federal Trade Commission charging some of the ads were false and mislead- ing. - In a December ruling that is expected to be appealed, FTC Judge Ernest G. Barnes agreed. prudent judgments 6a the exist- ing evidence.·· SIX MONTHS BEFORE the ruling, tbe egg industry gave a breaktast tor reporters, com- plete with sliver bowls of scrambled eggs arid iced butter, and accused the Heart Assocla· tioo and "powerf.ul-commercial. interests" of duping.the public in· to believing eggs cause heart at- tacks. '11te trade journal "Egg ln- dust.cy'' complained that egg pro- mote rs were accused of belonging to "the heart disease Mafia." "The familiar techniques of scare tactics, misrepresentation, quotations taken from out of COD· text, exaggerations, half tntths and emotionalism have been practiced by both sides of the controversy," said Dr. John F. Mueller, professor of medicine at the University of Colorado and a former C'hairman of American Heart Association's nutrition committee. "People want answers we can- not give, and this creates a situa- tion fraught with emotionalism where those with self-interest thrive," Mueller said in an arti· cle in Nutrition Today magazine. THE AVERAGE EGG yolk C'Ontains 280 milligrams of cholesterol, almost half the average daily cholesterol intake of Americans. By contrast, a six· ounce serving of meat bas 120 mg of cholesterol and an eight-ounce glass of milk has 25 mg. The egg also contributes significantly to the saturated fat content of the American diet, ac- rording to research gathered by the FTC to support its cfaims against the Egg Commission. A commission representing 29 medical organizations recom- mended in 1972 that Americans cut their cholesterol intake in half, but make sure they continue to get adequate protein. NUMEROUS STUDIES have Separ ated Ul'I Ttl.,.._. Atheis t Madalyn Murray O'Hair and her husband Richard have separated after 10 years of marriage. News rele ase a nnouncing the event was signed, "Society of Separ a tioni s t s , In c., Madalyn O'Hair , Ametican Atheist." M~Shark Deat h Battle De1rounced DENVER CU P J) -The American Humane Association has denounced a planned fight to the death between a 3,000-pound great white s h a rk a nd a n Australian s kin d iver as a "cheap promotion to make money.'' Milton C. Searle, head of the AHA, said the fight, scheduled for March in an underwater ring offshore in the Samoan Islands in the South Pacific, was being pro· moted by persons hoping to show the fight on a closed circuit telecast in theaters around the world. Wec!nelday. Januaty u . 1978 DAILY PILOT AT. Eye Openers 'Marriage' a Good Lesson CHICAGO (UPI) -The "marriages•· of 21 teen-age couples will be annulled in two weeks. The marriages were short, but they were eye· openers. For one semester, Hersey High School juniors and seniors in northwest suburban Arlington Heights chose a spouse and pretended they were married. They went 11rroogh the brtdat l'eftstry, picked out furniture, planned a budget and acted out real-life problems of a marriage . "BEFORE I WENT in (the class), marriage seemed like it was just all roses -you 'd just go off with a guy and you'd be really happy," said Sue Springston, 17, one of the "wives" in the class. "But we're learning a lot about costs of marriage and the pro- blems you run into, like in-laws. It just really opened my eyes and made me want to put it off longer,·· she said. Her "hus band," Rick Dewar, 18, s aid the class "made mar- riage more realistic. "YOU REALLY DON'T know what you're getting into until you see what you're going through, like budgeting,.and picking out a house and things that you both like," he said. Sue and Rick researched the cost of a wedding and were sur- prised to find it cost $4.000. When they went to pick out furniture, they spent $7 ,000 whiC'h was way over their budget. ··we just couldn't afford it," Sue said. "We didn't know. We just went out and found what we liked ... RICK SAID, "THE thing that hit me the most was money - how much it would affect you . Uke the furniture -we spent way over the a mount we could al- lot for. Once you spend more, then you're in debt. You really have to watch it before you spend it. .. The teachers of the sociology course, entitled •'Marriage and the Family," assigned each cou- ple typical marriage problems. Sue and Rick had to work out pro- biems suC'h as an extra-marital affair. Then he wanted to h1tve another child and she didn't, her mother-in-law moved in, and he thought their sex life was getting boring. I AND THERE WERE extra- rredit activities for the students such as going to their spouse'll · home fo r dinner to meet the parents. Both Sue and Rick "Were glad they took the course and didn't think it ruined their image of marriage -it only made it more realistic. ''I'm looking forward to gel· ting married, when 1 find the right per son," Rick said. "l thought it helped me out a lot. "l'M NOT GOING lo run out and get married. It's just that I understand what it's all about." ht-said . Pet Ban Ortkred WASHINGTON (UPI) - Passen ger complain ts have led to the banning of pets from Amtrak trains except for the baggage are a , the Nat ion a l R ai lroa d Pa s s e ng e r Corporation announced. Under the poliC'y, effeC'· tive Fe b. 14, all dogs, cats and o ther d o m es tic animals will not be aJlowed in parlor cars , s leeping r ars and coaches. The only exception will be guide dogs accompanying blind persons. Current Amtrak policy allows pets to accompany passengers in fi rst-class sertions. However, we cannot allow·.them to imply what isn't proven " He acknowl e d ged tha t evidence supporting the diel- he art hypothes is was in· conclusive, but added· "On e seldom has the final answer in medicine The final proof or answer is very often diffi cult, if not impossible, to obtain shown that changing to a low-.. --------------------------------------~ <'holesterol, low-saturated fat diet can lower blood cholesterol by perhaps 10 to 15 percent. TWO YEARS AGO, the Federal Trade Commission ruled the m akers of Fleischmann's Margarine could not claim that foods stressing polyunsaturated fats will prevent or mitigate heart and artery disease But the FTC accepted a s "The fact that the final answer on coronary heart disease is not yet established does not mean• that medical science cannot base Furthermore, the FrC cited evidence showing that addition or cholesterol-containing foods to the diet increases blood <'holesterol levels . (Next, searching for 011.$UJeTS) HEY GUYS 'n GALS TIME AT Reductions of and more ON OUR COLLECTION OF FALL • HOLIDAY • EARLY SPRING fashion clothing and accessories · SALE ST ARTS THURS., JAM. 15 I Tbe WE'RE HAYING A WHALE OF A JOHNSON & MURPHY SHOES -NOW ~~ Y2 OFF SLACKS -GREAR Y REDUCED All Gf NO PAOLI KNITS MOW Y2 PRICE ~tva1i4s ~"' Gentlatncut · 3439 VIA OPORTO NEWPORT BEACH 675-1717 SPORT SHIRTS UPTO Y2 PRICE IN LIDO VII.I.AM JUST OVER THE I RIDGE OH THE IA Y • ; I .. .. A• DAILYPILOT UPIT• ...... WedneSday, January 1<4, 1976 It Worked I Judo Shut Up Hubby LO:"JDON CAP) -If your husband is a wife bt>ater, learn judo and hit back, a British family doctor says. Dr. John Abels, writing in the family doctors' newspaper. Medical News. said Tuesday that's the advice he gave one young wife who came to him after her husband beat her. HE SUGGESTED SHE JOf:'IJ his own daughter ~t j uoocJ.as™-aAd he-Oidn't see her again for two years. ..• • When she did return to his office, Abels s aid, he assumed it was the old problem again -but he was wrong. She told him she had taken his advice and tben, To R e l f r e six months after she started the class, her husband came home drunk and went for her. lli ram F o n g· U.S. SHE SAID SHE THREW him ov«.>r her shoulder sena tor from Ha wa ii and he landed with bis feet sticking out of the front s ince t h e is lands room window. a c hieved s t a t e hood "He got up, looked at me in bewilderment. but in 1959, says he will he has never touched me since," !)he told the doctor . r e tire this year a t "I had to get the ambulance that night a nd he re· the e nd of_h_i_~_t_<.>1-::·m=.====ce=iv=e=d=H=s=ti=tc=h=es=.= .. ==========:-;:~:-=======::::;-Dancers' Delight (,Rf \I NI W 71G·Zi\G WllH BL'll I l"IHLINDSTl l UI \ 0 1<10 IHI R )LW LASY 11 \I URI) I CLUDIN(, •I \dth1H h J\·,1i.:1wJ I runt tl11•r 111 bobh111. • ',1mpl1 d1.1l u1n11ok • 'in,1p <111 JH•'""' l\\'I, mwc1 l.irq 111i; lJ\l' ur l.1b111L't C\11.1. There's No Place Like SINGER I II 'ol .q /.1 ,_, I "i .t ~ Professional color portraits of your child. Choose a large 5 " x ?:'or 4 wallet size. • No appoint ment necessary • Age l1m1t, 12 years • Choose from several poses • Two children logclher 2.98 Photographer will be at Santa Ana store only. Hrs: 10-1 : 2-6 January 15· 16-17, Thursday, Friday and Saturday. • 'SANTA ANA: 3110 So. Bristol • Na. Soutb Coast Pim Marguerite Warren and John Riggs, members of Laguna Beach High School Dance Department, rehearse in prepara- tion for fifth annual Choreographers' Con- cert at 8 p . m . Friday at high school auditorium. More than 200 dancers from nine area high s c hools will perform . Tickets are available at school activity of- fice or at door. Rock Worse Than Heroin?· SAN RAFAEL <UPI) -As if you didn't know it, many people over 40 think that rock music is terri~ ble -just plain noise, too loud for human eardrums and too raucous to be caJled music. A new champion for these parents is Adam• Knieste. who says he believes rock mus ic is "more deadly than heroin ... Knieste, 58, is a choirmaster, organist and music therapist. He has studied the effects of rock music for 10 years. HE SAID THE PROBLEM IS that rock music is mostly noise, a nd noise can cause hostility, fatigue, narcissism, panic, indigestion, high blood pressure, hypertension and other problems. "Rock is not a harmless pastime but a dangerous drug on which our children are hooked," he said. "Rock is more deadly than heroin be cause it is • generally thought to be harm- less and therefore does its damage unchallenged." He said Elvis Presley and the late Jimi Hendrix are purveyors of "the gospel of the wrong note." Knieste has treated psychotics by playing soothing uv1s music for them . "IF CERTAIN MUSI~ CAN BRING emotional stability, then it is possible that other music can create mental h avoc among those whose minds are not disturbed," he said . Knieste got into researching rock because his own sons listened to it and ·'it was driving me out of theho~e." He said he administered an emotional stability test to O high schoolers while they listened to rock music. The results suggested all were sick, he said. HE ALSO GAVE A DRIVING simulation test to a group of youngsters whiJe they listened to the "top 40." Thirty-one percent did worse on it than they had done on the same test earlier. He said he and an audio technician evaluated a Hendri:t record and found that it contained three times as much noise as Tschaikowsky's "1812 Overture." the l"udest piece they could find in classical music. HB Basketball Rematch Slated Marina High School's Valkyrie Drill Team has challenged the Huntington Beach High School Drill Team to a remat ch donkey basketball game. The game will be at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in the . Marina gymnasium. Tickets are $1 in advance from . drill team members or $1.50 at the doQr . Proceeds will be used The two teams com· for the small precision peted on donkeyback in drill team tour o( ItaJy November when Hunt· this spring, officials ington Beach won. noted. THE FIRST IN THE WEST! THE 1976 w~:~ JAN.'16-20 'ANAHEIM CONVfl(OON CENTER WEEKDAYS: Spm TO 11pm SAT.&SUN.:NoonT011pm SEE THEM ALLI Domestics, Vans, Imports, Claulca and Exot1c1I Ad,111,s,; ,r, , \',•··•·( · ·· ·.s1~t1\11•1,t•·1. r••f f • -.., BEEFEATER'S BEE. F Best darn beef you'll ever put a fork : to -that's Ivey Ranch Beef! It's con1-f ed, aged to perfection, no hormones . or harmful chemicals, neither. Whether it's stew or steak, I vcy Ranch Beef makes a meal to remember. It's beefeatcr's bccf..Wc guarantee it! RANCH PAK Tender, juicy, con1-fcd, aged beef SO POUNDS ONLY$59.00 18 Different Assortments from $5.95 •Sides, Hind and Forequarters Available at: The Produce Mart Placentia at Victoria Costa Mesa 645-1365 Ivey Beef Company 133 E. Alton Santa Ana 546-9330 Vermeulen Ranch 32382 .Del Obispo San Juan Capistrano 496-0431 Bank.Amcricard Master Ch:irgc Food Stamps HARBOR CENTER STORE ONLY 2300 HARBOR HARBORCENIB O pen 7 Oays :l w __ c.:_'c_k ____ _ . I . I l ) l. J I ' . I I • I t ~ I . I f t ' l I f I I I i . . I o I I ' I . ~ I . . • I I I l • I I I I-· I I ~ Wednesday. January 14, 1976 DAILY PILOT A 9 . l il11EI' I SA VE s6°0 To 5 1 5°0 OM MAMY SB.ECTED STYLES · FOR MEH ii WOMEN SUPER CLOTHING SALE Ya to Y2 Girts ••• Infant to 6x 0 ff Boys ••• Infant to 4 SELECTED TOY SALE Of OFF ,EVERYTHING PRE-IMVENTORY CLEARANCE TREASUR~SOF THE ORIENT • JADE • POl(CB.AIM • IVORY • ST A TUES • BASKETS • ETC. Diamond Head Garrery 1714) 557-3031 COLORFUL BEAN PLAQUES. AND MANVOTHER ATIRACTIVE GIFT ITEMS. TOUCH OF WHIMSEY . · · PHOME: 556-1692 ~ 2001 r~r 1'• _,. /0 OFF OUR EXTENSIVE SELECTION OF ANTIQUE ANO OONTEMPORARY TELEPHONES '1 1.,, ... ~·'11"· ~" WHILE HERE LOOK AT OUR REISSUE FURNITURE OF YESTERYEAR .BILLO CllTllL 557-1371 . 111 lllage S op "'o~rs Monday -Friday 10:00 a.m ... 9:00 p.m. Saturday -10:00 a.m. • 6:00 p .m. Sunday .: '11:00 a.m. • 5:00 p.m. -Thursday, Friday, Saturday ·&Sunday only. Jan. 15, 16, 17, 18. GAMESMANSHIP ss1-2441 -------------------- Tennis Balls $1.79 per can Tennis Clothes, Shoes and Rackets 40 to 60°/o OFF I eee•e e •BARE TRAPS e •CARESSA e •IMPORTS e • HUARACHE,S e ! HUNDREDS OF ! • 'PAIRS AT ., ! REDUCTIONS : ., OF : 30°/o TO 500/o : 1.9 & 2.5 lite• vacuum • OFF • bottles for coffee, tea, ftdLES ..,.,. etc. • "J'I • -==:.::~ ! FOOfW_ ORKS ! MOW $36.00 W W • 979·9252 • COFFEE TRADER • ......... •• FREE PATTERN SALE PATTERN FREE WITH PURCHASE OF TOTAL MATERIALS ON ANY RUG SA VE OVER 20°/o IUD CllFTllS OHL Y AT SOUTH COAST VILLAGE Fealwing .WISHDN-HHRREbb STDNEWllRE POTS & PLANTERS, all st\aPes & sizes. Earth tones, blues & greens. cinnamon and blacks, bumt orange$. lavender-blues. Small selection of lamps i shades (sold separately), wine carafes, candle cages plus goodie odds & ends. E\lefy Item Thrown On The Potter's Wheel! . lnAIUMe MOW HAHDLm IT Hally·banders 20% Cl more off L~CAl>EMIE 557-3611 G=DB&@JGUARTERS SOUTH COAST VILLAGE/556-8276 ' Collection of spring tops in air.cotton and '~~~~~~~~~~~' cotton blends. 1419-S 15.·SZO. MOW $10.00 Other items reduced to clear. 20% OFF &AM'NCA HANGING PlANTERS )OUTH COAST I flncludiftCJ Plant!) VILLAGE Sunflower & Bear Santo Ano PA cl A FLOWERS 556-6722 PRE-INVENTORY SALE PnW..a.ed 1/ DENIM JACKETS •• : • 3 OFF ,..._W..a.ed 1/ JEANS • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 3 OFF AICdon 1/ NUVO FLARES • • • • • • 2 OFF I 0% Off hery ,_. .. Stocll C~. Je.ts. .tc.) 'Die©. Hdqtrs. t;jl.1971 These values are available only • at participating South. Coast Village Stores. Plus 20% to 4 0% discounts on select cu l inar y items throughout the store. CuJin~ry. Etc. Pholle: 557-2223 15°/0 OFF SALE! ... THE SUPER-STURDY SIDELINE SERIES A TWIN SIZE CLIMB AND PLAY BED AVAILABLE IN SINGLE, BUNK, OR TRUNDLE STYLES IN CHOICE OF BRIGHT COLORS. SINGLES ....•....•.. Reg. from s129.95 I " U D D LE • . UNDER THE VILLAGE FLAGS ' SOUTH COAST VILLAGE Sant• Ana • • • • • (71'4) 556-7770 Sunflower and Bear Street, Santa Ana See map at left. ) . 1 ,4}0 DAILY PILOT W.ctne~y. January 1'. 1978 • 'raxes Impounded One Week GSA Ba Parking Solution Deadline Countians Dispute Some Rates Orange County General Services Agency Direc· tor R.I. "Cuba" Morris bu until next week to tell the board of supervisors what be plans to do to im· prove parking around the Santa Ana Civic Center. serve the lots louted more than one-half mile from the main county buildings. Oran~l' County Supervisors Tuesday routinely impounded nearly $1.l million Lil dis- puted property taxes, br- inging the total now tn county impound ac- counts to $16 .6 million. The taxes are held in impound until the dis- putes between the tax· payers and the county are resolved through legal act ion or negotia· tions, according to the county Tax Collector- Treasurer's office. taxpuyer wins his case, he gets his money b~ck with interest. The latest addition to the impound account in. vol ved taxes paid-by-oH companies or the owners of oil-producing land, ac· cording to V.A. Heim, county auditor - controller. Most of the tax money still in county impoWld accounts came from dis- putes over oil land as- sessments, Heim noted. exempt land should be excluded from the as· sessed value of lease. hold estates. Tbe other half of the money is undet" d~pttt~ by companies and in- dividuals who contend that the assessor incor- rectly valued oil land, Heim said. ORANGE COUNTY Baker Quits Waste Panel SACRAMENTO (UPI) Both Morris and the various supervisorial of- fices have been deluged with complaints in recent weeks, primarily &om county employes who will be displaced from parking stalls on the site of the new county administration building. THE $8 MILLION facility will be located at the comer of Santa Ana Avenue and Broadway on a lot that now serves as a parking area for more than 300 cars. The Orange County Employes Association said county workers displaced froln the lot will have to walk farther to lots at the fringes of. the Civic Morris' original propo.;ai for such service w.as rejected by supervisors. · Morris said he witt be able to tell supervisors next week what different methods might be used to ewse the parking crunch. THE MON EY current- ly m impound accounts represents about 27 cents per $100 of assessed valuation on the countv tax rate, a tax collector's office spokesman noted. WJDJ.E THE money is -Former Orange Coun· in the impound account, ty Supervisor David L. the county may invest it Baker of Garden Grove to earn additional re· has resigned as a venues -a practice member of the Solid OF THE new funds, followed with all general Waste Management Heim said about half arc fund tax money not im· Board, it was announced taxes paid under protest mediately needed for Tuesday. by four oil companies on operations. Appointed to the board Center. r Morris said his agency is doing all that can be done to accommodate the employes forced to give up their prime parking spaces -including dis- placement of other employes' spaces to make rcom for them. NYLON PLUSH CLOSEOUTS RecJ. $7.95 MOW $4.75 R~ SI 0.95 HOW $7.50 Fii• olls-P.t l~e •mis royalties or other rights in 1973 by then-Gov: to s hare in production -----------Ronald Reagan, Baker "°rl\,e Sftores 11\,terior'S If the disputes are de· cided in favor of the county, the taxes go into the general fund, If the from tax-exempt proper-More County said he resigned effec. ty owned by the state. tive Saturday to become Heim said the com· News 011 B3 a private consultant. BUT HE SAID there is only so much room for parking in the civic center and most of it is spoken for. . CARPET WAREHOUSE Currently there are panies C'laim the value of two vacancies on the such interests on tax· seven-member board. Supervisors s uggested that the GSA chief resur- rect a proposal for a special parking lot tram to 1575 PlacentiQ, M.wpart leach 642·2210 0,.. ..._'Ill 5 p.a. • 64MH5 Deaths Elsewhere CHICHESTER , England (AP) -British actre ss Mar gar et Leighton, 53, whose award-winning career in films and on the stage spanned 35 years, <lied Tuesday night, a hospital spokesman said. She was married to actor Michael Wild i n g, her third husband. Her films in- cluded: ''The Winslow Boy .·· ·'The Cons tant Husband." "The Sound and the Fury.·' ·'The Go- Bet ween," and "Lady Caroline Lamb.". LO~DON (A P > -Tun Abdul Razak, 53, prime minister of Malaysia and known to his people as the ''father of dev'elop· ment.'' died today in a London clinic. the Malaysian hi gh com· mi ssion here said. Act- ing Prim e Minis ter Hussein Onn, Razak's brother-in -law a nd named by government officials as his probable s uccessor. wept QpenJy as he announced the prime minister's death. SAN FRANCISCO <UPI) -Services will be held Thursday for John W. Abott, 64, execoti\"e secretary of California Tomorrow a nd editor of its quarterly journal, Cry California. He died Monday night after a brief illness. AFSPlay Tickets Sell Tickets for "How the Pulmonary Other ~al! Loves .. at the Huntington B eac h Playhouse are now being F • l A•d sold by the Edison High 1rs I School Chapter of the American Field Service. CI S The organization \\iJl ass et hold its annual "theater A cardio pulmonary resuscitation class, as well as standard arid ad- vanced first aid courses, is being offered by the Adult School of the Hunt· ington Beach Union Hi gh School Distrirt and the Fountain Valley Fire Department. District officials said the cardio class, offered in three section s st arting Feb. 3, May 4 and May 24, is beneficial for busi· ness and industria l leaders and others who s upervise adults a nd children. The first aid class will be offered for eight Tuesdays s tarti n g Marr h 2 at Fountain Valley High School and the advanced course will be on Mondays and Wed- nesdays starting Feb. 2 at Fountain Valley High. night" at 8:30 p.m. Jan. 23. The playhouse is at 2110 Main St., Hunt- ington Beach. Tickets are $3 and those wishing tickets s hould call 962-5008. For .. the Record _.....__ J: Db•olutfon• OIMa~rfage Fil.cl Du•mber 17 Kincaid • .Alberta F. and Robert L B•c ktord, Mar y F. and Charle\ w. Tyrell, Edwar d Thomas dnd S.,rtNra Onl'lld Stewart. EW>er L. and P!!ltr E. Clark, ~hnda and Robert S. Criner. Linda Svt! and Ricky Lyno Fills. c;.rhard and Kalle Covell. Oav1d Brooks and ~ryl Ann ~osser. Phyllis Ann and David Ttmolhy Cl tlford, Me!l<ln and David Georve Guzman, Elena R. and Anth<>fly Galaviz SllUkl'n, HOPI! 0. arid Ronald L. Orytle, l<athlHn P. lmd Rlchan!A, SOUTH A9ullar, Joyce A. and Stephen 0. ROBERT P. SOUTH, JR. resident of Cooley, Bttverly G and We\terS. 7•0 South Lyon, Santa Ana. c.. Tuni\on, ~borah J. and Richan! Survi..-d by his wll•, Janet South; one Warren soo, David South, mother, PatrlclaAlln Hawkins, James Leroy a'>d Merion South; thrH brotr.rs. Gene. O&vidand Jean Kel!l: thrH \lsters, Stierlle. Lynn and WrlQfll, S.lly I. and John H. Sandra ~r111ces wlll be hl'IO Friday Johnson, Henry Franklin <Ind 2 00 PM, BalU·kf"geron Chapel, tnter-Rebecca Evflvn ment. Falm.-nn Memorial Park Baltz· De Jon11, Lo-II and Wf'ndy F. Bergeron, Cost.II Mew Mol'"tU¥Y,direc· Hiiiyard, Lynd• J . ano George W., ton. Jr. BAL T2-BERGERON FUNERAL HOME c.orona del Mar 6 73-9450 Costa Mesa 646-2424 BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 110 Broadway Costa Mesa 6'2·9150 McCORMICK MORTUARY Laguna Beach "494--941 5 San Juan Capistrano "495-1776 PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemetery Mortuary Chapel 3500 PaciflC View Dn"9 Newport Beach, California 6'4-2700 PUJC FAMILY COLONIAL fllN!RA.L HOM! 7801 Botta Ave. Westm1ntttr 893-3~25 IMmfS' MORTUARY 827 Main SI. Huntlng1on Beech 636-ea39 Rivard, Barry Allen and ~r-r·ly 8•k~. S.ndra Kay and W1lho1m DP1n 0 19QS, NancyM and Wf ldon P.,Jr. 1(1119. Sandr.i M and Geor~ L o.111a<1o. Carl and Constance F. Griffin. J oye" Christine and Lawrence Paul G<on, Wilhe T end Marjorie L Homan. laura M. and John M Caban, Calhertne A. end St•nley S, Jr. Rowbof"o. John, J r. and Gfraldlnf!' E. Ramw,n, Russell Vaugh.an and Plltrlc •a Jean . Wiebe, O;Jnlrl and Adele Ray Oe V•nne, Joseph Howard and Ptlrlcla S. O'Brien, Michael Lrl9h Md CMolyn Ann ~9•n. Cornelius J. Ill andJuliflt Ctlnel, Bur,,.tta S. and PeulAllison: · Brito Antoni.a M. and Boirnardo N<-lson. Maryann Elizabeth and Rlch.trdJamtt P1ck,,.no. Donald ~ne ancl Mll rtM ~ J1m,.nez. Luoe M!tdtno& and .Anton•o FowlO!r. Thoma\ RO\\ and Shaunne Ad IP Clarlt. L•n<I• Carol and Chamo 0.nt•I Root. Roiranne Collttn anc1 Ke,.....th PttM•d Bla ir, fOf'ICY Lou and Michael Edw•rO eow11. Oevld 8roolts and Oleryt AM ll\ompllOll, lltoide LI RH and l.Arry ,,. ...... Olokt, Me'91,., ~ OoNl4J. .. 111,C«ll I.. Md'"-""· "ot•INln. J-C. ert4 Mtrlan I.. 'Mlli."'5, .. .,.,,.,'·and ttuth E'left Mltt!Wfl, ~IYn M. ~ Gllber1 E. . Neptune Society :JIEMATION lv•tAL AT SEA 646·7431 y __ ... _,..,y tlffttl ....... , _., C--UM.iet• Mnka C:.11 .. ''" ""1 ..... . ,. W-. Cam /!Mrr. ,, Ring in the new. Fresh coral mixers in now-look knits. 88 88 to Sa'''Y new coo rdi-knils. Jn rich <Oral lwt~e plaid and "weet !'olid , ~·or.ii. Crl!at-frttini.r J3Ckets, detnil- r1.1 ... h1·cl p.mts, handsome i:.htrls. The l.1 ... h1un ,1ml q u.1l1tv you w;int. At pr111•"' '11u ''on l \\ant to miss. Polv- c:-tcr doubl<:kntt. ~l1sses' 10 to 1·1'. Plaid blaur, pocket.I •••••••••• 15.88 Coral shirt classic •••••• , ••••• , • 8.88 Coral pants, tab waist •••••••••• 8.88 Coral shirtjac, pocketa •• , ••••• 13.88 Print shirt plzzazz •• , ••••••••••• 9.88 I' laid pants, pull-on •••••• , •••• , 9.88 ~~ \~'if'°~ SPECIAL ANY 15.99 WIG WITH TRADE-IN QUALITY SCISSORS, STOCK UP Wunl tn fl" plurt'•"' Cnmt' 10 Ward.i. tnr complete lra\l.>I \l..td--~::::::::,... ,;erv•C'\! for hu-.nc.-"" nr "'' ca Lion.~ u~ bt-lol"t' yuu 1:11. IAMi k new in our v. ii:-.. 11',, l."L and easy! S7 olT .tn\ v.1i,: pricc."<i ut SHJ-:!;.t.;,11 "-Ith Lrade-in. SIO ull my wig prn:;cd at $;.!.J.:;.:10 with trade-in. Special buy. All-season polyester knits. Big news at our low price. gss If y"u'no a m1~i.or 6 half-size, you're in luck. Pick richly detatl«I, economy-priced dresi1· e~ ond pant11u it.s -in new11y, t.exturi7.ed polyt i<tcr knit!\ also polyester/silk and lnok·ahead·t.o-s pr1ng colors. Washnulc. Shown: punt11uit , 10-18. DreH, 14~·22~. Get the ni:ht SCl&'<Or for nny job. See 499 many fine precision hCl5."Qrs for a vu- riely of uses. Cutlery-hurdened st.eel. EACH Save 2.12. BIG BAGS ARE S IC FASHION JN BOLO SHAPES 5ss RECULARL Y $8 Big look, amull price. Stylrd to hold <'Very· thing in rich urethane. Top hand I~ or conven.. Ible ahouldrrstrap1. Super spring shades. Special buy. 7-14 GIRLS' SUPER JEANS JAMBOREE 299 lt'11 round-up time for girls' jean buy1. Scoop up pattern•. 11olid1: polyee~r/cottont, cot.- toAA:~ma.N-details. I'll! wUb. FOR F'AST SHOPPING, SAY "CHARGE ITl" warn A WARDS CHAR~ALL ACCOUNT . Let's get together often. • ' Call Wards Covina, • Rosemead, Lakewood or Huntington Beach 35% off.· OUR LONG COWNS ARE TRIMMED TO PERFECTION REGULARLY $6 An exceptional value. Glamorous gowns with pretty trims. In luxury-rich nylon lri· cot. Machine wash; pastcla.. Miaecs' S,M,l. Fabric buys. GINGHAM CHECKS 88~AJlD RECULARLY9!k Dacron• po1ye11ter/ cotton In '4" or 1 .. checks. For homo decor, fuhion. 44.45•, POLYESTER SOLIDS 222 YARD REGULARLY 2.99 Lusdou1 new popltn it ~t for pant teU. druau, top1. Mn· china wHh. 44·45#. Save 24'-26% SOFT OR PADDED DOUBLEKNIT BRA 333 Smooth nylon for com• fort-fit. Padded.polyes- ter fill. White. ABC. HI-WAIST BRIEF TRIMS TUMMY 4ss R.ECULARLY 6.SO S limming nylon/ spandex. S. M. L, XL. A slimmer look pow: SAVE31% MISSES' CABLE KNEE-HIGHS 68c RECULARLYtk Sof\ Orlon' acrylic/ ~Ion. Super colol'9. achlM w.Whle. 1 11ite fl\11 81.\ to ll. Stock up and ,_. •• I ' f ( Pilot Logbook J Hurry Up . And Wait By ROGER CARLSON OI tM o.llf "''"~ For several months, now, the arrival of the Freedom Train in Orange County was an item our family -had ~n planning to take in u put of oµrpersonil bicentenniaicele1n'a-tton. · "nd Laurie K~sper's r~ent account of the event in a Dally Pilot article added fuel to our · ambition-although her report that a two-hour wa.it was in store wasn't the happiest of news. BUT THAT COULD EASILY BE solved. My hours are somewhat flexible. I'll take the kids out of school during the middle of the day and skip up to Anahei• Stadium on a Mon- day-when surely no one else will be bright enough to figure that out. The rest of the masses can suffer in line.on the weekend. Not me. I spent my time in line during the Marine Corps-there'll be no more of that for me. As we approached Anaheim Stadium , however, the grim realiza- tion came into focus with the first of sev~ral school buses circling the "Big A." Skirting the parking area, it was evident the line was long-if you can call a mass of people seem- ingly 100 abreast, dwindl- CAltLSON ing to a ribbon of threes for . a quarter or a mile, a line. HAVI NG ALREADY DECI DED TO forego the agony of it, we opted to pay the $1.50 to park and em barked on the scene for nothing else than to simply walk toward the Freedom Train and perhaps purchase a souvenir for our troubles. They make it easy to buy your souvenir, wl'M>ther it be a n oil painting of the desert, a pair of tennis shoes or even a bona fide bicen· tenrual object such as a t-shirt with an iron.on patch of Godzilla. In the true spirt of the buy-centennial we weaved our way through the gateway, where barri(' a des made you criss-cross to each booth, fort'ing one and all a closer look at the material being hawked. We finally reached the engine where the nearby official souvenir stand was located. pur('hased a souvenir spoon, took another look at the crest or the line, and · began our trek ba('k. IT WAS HER E THAT ALL of this became somewhat worthwhile. As l scanned the folks standing in line-not moving at all-I noticed something they all had in common. They we re all looking at me .. .in envy! They thought I'd made it all the way through and had seen everything! And looking at the folks in line, who had obviously been there a long time, I recalled my venture to Pasadena in 1949 to see the Freedom Train. The only thing I can recall or that event was reaching the door to go in after. several hours in line. Nothing else, just reaching the door to enter. AS WE WERE LEAVING, a worn-out lady was <'Oming down the walk with several children. We greeted them and asked her how she liked the Freedom Train. "We didn't see it," she burst out. "We've been here since 8:30-five hours. But they came around to our point in line and told us it would be another four hours before we'd get in and I just couldn't keep the children out any longer." · H this is an example of bicentennial celebration, thank goodness it comes only on- ('e in a lifetime. Lead in Shotgun Shells Opposed WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Fish and Wildlife ·Service has proposed a ban on use of lead s hot for hunting ducks , geese, swans and coots in certain areas beginning in 1976. ln a final environmental impact statement sub- mitted to the Council on ---------- Environmental Quality, the agency Tuesday said studies show that more than 1.6 million ducks die each year after ingesting lead shot left at the bot· tom of m arshes a nd waterways. OPPONENTS TO the change say steel shot, the only alternative pre- sently available, i s lighter and would result in m ore birds being wounded instead or killed. But the agency said its test s s howed about 369,000 more d ucks pro- bably will be crippled ea('h year lt there is a conversion to steel shot. That loss would still be far under the number dy· ing from lead poisoning, it said. THE PROPOSAL calls for lead s hotgun shells to be banned for waterfowl hunting starting in 1976 in selected areas of the Atlantic Flyway, extend- ing in 1977 to are as of lhe Mississippi Flyway and in 1978 to parts of the Central and Pacific flyways. The Council on En- vironmental Quality has 30 days to review the en- vironmenta l statement , then Interior Secretary Thomas S. Kleppe will decide whether to imple- ment the proposal. LIFE INSURANCETOHELP PAY BURIAL EXPENSE $500 to $5000* 41 EVERYONE~CCEPTED BETWEEN AGES4'6-87 ·~_,.491.,. NO $AL.llMAle WILL CALL Wrtte •nd five ut your Ale of blrt" LI,. CW AMIRICAINIUM.~~ of BOSTON 40 8roed St., Boston, Mast:-02109, Dept. °'4·NB Or Call Toll FrM: 800-22s.1780 Seniors Elect HBChief Warren Mullen bas been elected president of the Huntington Beach Senior Citizens Club. whkh meets Mondays and Wednesdays in the 5eh1or Citizens Recrea- tion Hall, 17th Street and Orange Avenue. Other officers are Esther Rivelli, vice pre-s i d e n t ; E s t h e r _,,....r:o·l'Z':""-· Augsburg, secretary; Sarah Lauer, treasurer; Tom Cliff, tour guide, and Caroline Cliff, tour trea5urer. The organization also ' ,. T...__ has 14 teams on its I u 1 ..._,,,,_ Thursday noon bowling 11dla l'fslt or league and singe rs may Queen Sophi a of join the "Singing Good-Sp a in and three timers"whomeetat9:30 chi ldren flew to a.m. W~dnesdays at the Madras . Ind is, to rttreahon ha.ll. . . visit her mother T hose w1.:>hing in-f G k ' formation about club ormer . ree que~n outings may ('al l ~r.ederica, who is 847-4016. . ailing. Wednndey. January 14. 1978 DAILY PILOT A l I 3 S ites M tdled Board Eye s School Closings The future or at least two e lementary campuses in the Westminster School District is being debated by district trustees . Tbe board set a Jan. 20 public hearing on the possible closing next fall of Gill, Finley or Cook School. A final decision is expected Jan. 29. DISTRICT OFFICIAI.S EXPLAINED that a special committe. of district -parents, studying recent enrollment drops, has suggested the clos- ing or F inley School . 13521 Edwards St., Westminster, next fall, along with the partial clos- ing of Gill School, 152.52 Victoria Lane, Huntington Beach. The ('Ommittee however, nas r ecommended leaving kindergarten through third grades at Gill . In addition, the group suggested closing Cook School, 14401 Willow Lane, Westminster, in Sep· tember 1977. · But the district's administrative staff is mak- ing a different r ecommendation. Officials said the staff suggested the complete closing of Gill and Cook Schools next fall. AND THE STAFF RECOMMENDED closing either Finley, Schmitt, Sequoia or Goldenwest in 1977. . In addition, both committees asked that the board carefully review the attendance area east of Beach Boulevard in the southern part of the dis- trict. · 1r enrollment dips below 1,900 students, the groups have asked that either Midway City or· MeaJnScbools be shutdown • OFFICIALS NOTED ENROLLMENT HAS dropped to 10,300 this year and is expected to go to· 10,000 next year. The peak enrollment was 13,500 in 1910 and student populationjs expecled to fall to 9, 190 by 1983. . The district closed Seventeenth Street School, the oldest facility in the district, two years ago, but held off additional closings until the parent commit- tee had a chance to study the maUer and make re- commendations. SALE! GLASS TUB ENCLOSURE $89.95 IMSTAWD Mirror W• 4'obe Doan As Low As $95.00 1mt•1.d CALIFORNIA SHOWER DOOR CO. 631-0S+o SAVINGS CARNIVAL I SALE ENDS SATURDAY .. J,\NL'AKY 17Tll . llURRY, SO.Mt: QUANTITl r:s AKl,o; LIMln:o! 1\ .. ...:-~ <....~ '-Q~ ~\ BUDGET PRICED SLEEPER Good looking 11lceper in 2}988 colorful plaid uphol~tery 11pen11 U> ll full 1>1ze foam mallTet.ll Lhat hleeptl two. REC. 249.95 EVERY KITCHEN CLOCK IN STOCK C'hl>l•••' from our wule hl'-20~ ll'Cltt>nofdl'COrHlt\l'~lvl1•• 0 off . ind .1llr.1Cll\ t• l't1lnr~ to • lllCt'nl .my k1tchrn SAVE 'S WARDS MIST CURLING IRON Cur1~ ,hort or g s& l1>njl h1ur fn•I. II.•~ ~ttfl'l' 1t11. REC.14.99 COUD~r -111nrt Pl'rfrct for fa11t bJ.,w drv- 1111( Mulllplf' he~t con trol nnd 1r conNntr:itor. ·~ ••• ,..,.,.,,..,,,.,..,, •• .,.,.. R£CULAJlLY24.tt SAVE $50 NAUGAHYDE· VINYL RECLI NER Lea.ne. 10011 .. µnot sler) lte.1ns \111Lh damp cloth .1 .... uy lounl{ms: mecnon1~m Save 17% to 30% . Chair clearance~ 15%-35% OFF. 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KinJ?. queen, lull nnd ''"n s1zc11 in mu~hn and J'll'n·nlr 111 ,• h1£! a•o;ortml•nt of pattern~. color,. < 'ntton polvi••lt•r blt>nd for lnn11 Wl'nr. ~lnchrnt• wa"lh nnd dry, need no irvn- inir Pillow ca~!' lo malth aJ,o ~1lt' µrict!d Rrpleni!'h your linl•n, n11w und l'l\JOY l\llVIOI(~ OUR MEMORY CALCULATOR S·di111t blue· }888 iireen di1ploy. f lnatin11 dee•· REC.2295 mal. m~mory. SAVE *3 SLIDE-RULE WITH MEMORY x•.'Vxort.<:f 21ss key. rom•Ulnts. Lorge, blue• green dlftplo.y. ll£C. 2.•.96 SAVE'lO WARDS ELECTRIC HOME ADDER Pri nts up to 49sa 99,999.99. Re- ptu ltey for llEC.59.M mulllphc111.ton. BRING YOUR WARDS CHARG-ALL CARD-ITS mE CONVE.NIENT WAY TO SHOP AT WARDS * spirit of value to yourself. Be : 8AN BlllNARDINO -....i tit.Y 1n11l. 'n...._11231 • AANTA ANA brl•IOI tt lll~l'tl'-t!th. 1'4-M1~\ • TOllt RA.NCI 6.1 •-CW.loo tqutN, MM!rn .._ • W'EWT LOI ANOELU la ei-.. •l l8lh at, 113$.11122 • MO!'n'Cl.AIR mc!fltelair pllWI. 71111/l·~'M • NOltWALI< 11'11"91'111 at llM'"'•lk t.l..t 1<4•" 091l • 1•A?-IORA.MA CITY ~ •• Al m"""' io•u "m • ROSCMflAO :!4!00 "'"",,_d b!wl . .-,;.1 .11•1 • FUt.UilR"l'ON harbor ti f'l'Arwe4~. 7H l!i9 2000 • HUNTINGfO ftlACll M1nrr •I 'l>Nl.h. 714 ""~ Mii • LAKIV.000 laktwood blvd al t>1ndlr""'1f'll. IUI 'j\\)11 • t.YN'NOOO lmpou1al blvd • ti •Ill.I'. 31, 1111()() •CANOGA PARK Lc>pl>np p(ua. 1113 J000 •('(I, TA MESA btl•IOI tt, at """ ch"WQ r....,,, 'l•-M•·~ • ( CIVINA t.m1,..._ 111 "'" ....... rdlllO ('"'1• -..7'U • ~A(ll,f? ROCK rulMttdo 11 hf'OIMlway. :i3i ti~ SHOP MONDAY TftROUOH :f\TUROAY 9:30 AM TO {MO JlM ... SUNDAY 10:00 AM TO 6:00 P M ... JUST SAY "CHARGE tTr' I .. AJI CWLYPU.OT W!dn!!d!y.Januwy14. 1179 Bummi n g Mu i e Wide Ranging 'Grammy Picks Valley Firemen H~t Cap/ncil LOS ANGELES (AP) -Records ranging from rock music to show hmes have been nominated for the 18th arnnupl Granuny awards -selections which were d esc.ribecLa.s the most variedln.l'~ent years. The nominations ror s<>Ag of the year ranged Tuesday from the catchy "Love Will Keep Us Together" to the sophisticated composition "Send in the Clowns" by Broadway songwriter Stephen Sondheim. THE NOMINATIONS FOR ALBUM of the year included several artists maldng big comebacks · after popularity in the 1960s. Named were Janis • "/: Ian. Linda Ronstadt, Paul Simon, Elton John and 'Oo•e llp ' UPI T•...,... the Eagles. Another popular name of the '60s, Neil Sedaka, Rep. Parren Mitchell was nominated in several categories. including best (0 -Md.) says elected · songwriter for his composition black officials should "Love Will Keep Us Together." close offices J a n. 15 The nomin~tions were an-to emphasize black ~ounced by officers of the Na-demand for r ecogru-· tao!"al Academy of Arts and tion of Martin Luther St'1en~es at the Hollywood King's birthday a s Pallad11Jm . . 1 h J"d nationa o 1 ay. By KATHY a.ANCY OflMo.llY ......... Officials of the Teamsters Union, representing Fountain Valley firemen. have accused city councilmen of using profanity in referring to firemen and with .. planting" stories in the press about contract negotiations. In an "open Jetter" to councilmen and citizens, Paul Barrett of the Teamsters ~aid-fil'em~n -would "ex~r-<!ise our personal rights of political activity" to resolve conflict s. CITY OFFICIALS DENIED using pro- fanity i~ublic or planting any stories. ln addfbon, they accused firemen off ail· ing U> abide by their own Teamsters by- laws because they have not held an elec- tion on tbe city's final contract offer. But Larry Drake, president of the firemen's association, said there still are about seven items that have not been dis- cussed in bargaining. City officials said all items have been discussed. He also said firemen have not widely circulated their open Jetter as yet, although it is available upon the request of citizens. DRAKE SAI D LE'ITERS have been mailed to city councilmen and city of- ficials. the police department and perhaps some cltiJens. He-sald ftttmen are trying to keep thetr contract battle private and can't afford a mass maW.oc anyway. Tbe city bas offered firemen a two-- year contract with a 4 percent raise thi• year and 6 percent next year. Firemen have asked for a 1 percent hike this yeu and 7 .5 percentnextyear. However. the cit y bas proposed eliminatmg an eaucitfun~ mcenff ve pay program which gave firemen a 2.5, s or 10 percent pay hike upon completion of college credits. FIREMEN HAVE ~KED that that program be continued, and said they op- pose a city offer to "pay off" the pro- gram with cash payments of $500 to $5,200. In their open letter. Barrett also com· plained about "employe awareness bulletins" put out by the city to let employes know about negotiation pro- gress. City officials said, however, firemen could make corrections in any of those bulletins if they wished. Drake said firemen never have been asked to review them. He said firemen don't want to be militant but feel they must stand up for their rights. ANDY WI LLIAMS. HENRY MANCISI and the new hit team of C'aptain and Tennille were on 1110NSTA0" hand and were schedule4 to S A.''INGS CARNl''A.L I SALEENDSSATURDAY .. JANUARY17TH .. ttV y~ HURRY,SOMEQUANTITIES ARELIMITl::D! 1 1 :: • ____________ ____. Mlla E'IT. IN IDS LETrEK. said, .. We tball help the c1tizem ol FouritaJn Valley elect representlUves who are rapomlve to. the needs o( both tho elec- torate and employes. · "And, genUMoeo -we will bo here loq alter you have gone,·• he concluded. Drake said that didn't mean the n ... men would actively ~ new couo- cUme.oJn the March 2 city races -only that the firemen and Teams ters were in Fountain Valley to stay. He aaid the fire association won't ac- tively work --i>n 11ny campaign.., but firemen may do so as individuals. He also said the association attorney is checking into the laws goYeming pubUc employes and political campaigns. 11..atoyau ttworlcs ... RllAl.llf US • participate in the 18th annual Grammy awards which will be presented on nationwide television Fe!). 28 from the Hollywood Palladium. Academy officials said they believed this year's mixed bag of nominations reflected the public's return lo "tunes that can be hummed by everybody.·· In the category of best pop vocal performance by 3 female singer, the nominees were Helen Red- Carpet sale. dy, Janis Ian, Olivia Newton- John. Linda Ronstadt and Judy Collins. Male nominees in that category were Neil Sedaka, F.lton John, Morris Albert, Glen Campbell and Paul Simon. CAM P BELL 'S RECORDING OF "RIDNESTONE Cowboy" was among the most nominated s1MoN songs of the year. The most nominations appeared to go to "Love Will Keep Us Together," a tune which had already been picked as the best by mo~t record magazines and disc jockeys. 1''ive Rroadway shows were nominated in the category of best cast show albums: 4'Chicago:' "A Chorus Line." "A Little Night Music,'' "Shenan-doah·· and ··The Wiz." Pre -school Plan Slate_d in Valley Morning activities classes for pre-school "tiny tots" after-school "Super School" for students and a variety of family-oriented arts and crafts courses are being offered this winter in the Fountain Valley School District's Community School Program. Registration will con- tinue through J an. 23 at ~strict offices, Newland ~treet and Talbert Avenue. District officials said a highlight this winter will be a bicentennial art and Topanga Bill music celebration the week of Feb. 24 at Hunt-1 ington Center. Student art work will be displayed and various district and s .cbool musical groups will perf?rm. Questions about classes may be ref erred to 842-6651, extension 217. Base Closed ~OVATO (AP l -The t ·nited States Air Force officially has closed down H amilton Air Force Base in Marin County. -.. FOR HOME DECORATOR SERVICE CALL YOUR NEAREST MONTGOMERY WARD OR ASK YOUR OPERATOR FOR TOLL.FREE Z Enith 7-1083 _,. I •'"' 1ft• I !/111'!'.11j: ·I 111··.· ~I:\, . , '!, I ·I·, ·:'•i I. . . I 1/3 off all sizes. Ready-made draperies you hang up today. Text ured cotton'polye~ll'r fabric i::. machine washable-needs no ironing. Acrylic fo.1m back insulates, helps save energy. f>Ox6.'J" pr., ref. 10.99 .....•. 7.3il l25x84" pr., ret· 41.99 ..•.• 28.00 .i-OJtM" pr .. "'"· 12.99 •.•.... 8.tl6 l!!Ox84• pr., rei. 6:l.99 ..••. 35.34 75x84' pr .• reg. 23.119 ..••.. t6.00 52x 14· pr., rec.· 7.99 •••••••. 5.33 L00x84' pr., r-eg. 32.00 ...•. 22.00 Save 1/3 on sheer polyester knit panels. J\lach1n1• w:i.,h. rlry-lillh,• ironing. Whit<.>, color-. }~!. 40x84-inch panel, regularly 2.99 each, now ..• 1.99 REC 2. lll CA SAVE33% .. •'.~~ 23-48"FANCY ~~--t~ tRAVERSE ROD .... ~.)-'< Hu space to 930 f ,.~ ... ·~' 1 add curtain rod .._ '°"" led In 3 tio1Ah.,. REC. 13.95 Unu..emb Ll.Jll(4tr slu1188le priced. 6-~~ . 20%-27% off 50 sq. yds. of completely installed carpet. Save $50. 7 99 INSTALLED REG. 9.99· 10.99 SQ. YD. • NYLON MULTI-LEVEL LOOP CARPETING fA Exc1l in1t "Sundance" w ith jute bockinit <.'Omt•s in t'IX deco· rnw r 11h11dcs lo brighten room,.,, EASY-CARE NYLON PILE FOAM-BACK SHAG • [!!/Versatile '"Villa" shag con i:o casual oreleganl -il's up t.o you 1 So easy t.o i nsta II. 4 coloration:. SOFT. DURABLE fl BER SHORT NYLON SHAG lf Plush "Chat.eau" has re11ili- ent, easy<are nylon pile in your choice ofhandsomecolor11. Save •100 to •tso on 50 sq. yds. of some of Wards best sellers . carpeting. ... " .... '" ......... ,. tW ' •tat wA.ttAHTT ,.,.,.,..._ ... "'.., ...................................... . ,...,.._._.._.,,, .... 'SACRAMENTO <UPI) -Urgency legislation appropriating $1 million to buy land to expand Topanga Canyon Slate F"ark in the Sa nta *nica Mountains has been signed by Gov. Ed- mund G. Brown Jr. The measure CAB701) by As - -;drnblyman Paul Pnolo t R-Pacif1c P alt sades 1. c()vers the purchasl' of 32 atres of Los Liones Ca. ny.on that Priolo said was under threat of develop- ment. Ma rin Count y and ~----------------, Save $35. Plow into spring with a rugged 5-HP tiller. ........................ -........ ~ .. ..., ................. , ........ ,_, _ _.. ...... ~. -· -.-... ..... -...... .. $15 off. ~ovato officials have ex- pressed the hope of tak- ing the land over to use a" a . possible county airport and industrial park. SALE ST ARTS THURSDAY JAN. ·1 sth I 0 A .M. 0000 TMTI WI.&. A&*'ft M • ft'YLL 17th & lrV1ne Ave. · \Nestclrff Pla1a Newport Beech · 645-0792 \ •"la,,.. "1•,.,tttf'IL M.-lo ('l'o\1·"4 @<9ndard. Save sso. WARDSS.HP OUTBOARD 12988 REGULARLY 189.88 Air-cooled out.board hat. "'•He r -cool ed lowe r unit. Easy 1okr--0fT cnver AulD· mat1c nowmd i>t.arter nod anti-pollution rtwl l'Vllll'm 1rucl tank no~ included>. Long life e namel finiah. ROOMY 9 ' X 12' NYLON CABIN TENT I Aluminum rnmlC'. Stn11~ht sgss w311~. 7' pruk ht-lllhl. Wt-1i;h11 only 18 J1"unll• RECULARl.Y 141.99 3112 -HP tiller i& light, compact. 199f.:l 234.99 3~-HP Briggs & Slr:il ton engine ha" a c.<"1. iron direct-drive i;eor case 16 11Ja11her llne1:1 tum ground over ra~l. WE STILL MAKE HOUSE CALLS.·· CALL TODAY FOR FREE HOME ESTIMATE. 24988 REGULARLY 299.95 lll'avv-clulv t illf•r. "1th' toug·h cal!l· I mn izear call(', 1!1 dl'Sll!ned for lu~l· in~ ~prv1c<'. lti powl'rful "h1~h<'r l1 n<''!orhPfl l · tn>alro "'l•'t'I ndJ•l't ti) width-. of 12. \12 or 2n inche!t. l'ow· • 1 ,ulcly n>ve~I'. Chain link fabric now 50% off*. Protect your privacy a8 you enhance the value of your property. Sturdy steel fence (&bric an o variety of helghi. end quallllea. Call today (or a free estimate. Expf'rt< In- stallation available (extra). WHY PAM UP A COOD IUY1 A.DO ITTO YOUR WARDS CHA.RC.ALL ACCOUNT-NO MONEY DOWN You can depend on us. ............. -... -··-........... -~ ..... ~, w- w.T11•'f't41 -~._.. , ... ~ ................ ... ,;_, • ....,,ttf"lt~ ~, ......... ...,., ,__.,.......__ ......... ,,,, ............................. _, ......... -"'o( .............. ~...--i.--4 _,,,.,. .. ,....._, .... ............ _..._ '""'~ w""""'"" ,.,.,. 0.,.., tO Hf•lt•• \JKO 10-.....o_r a. ,WO,_. U' U ilO(Ntl•I •Ut •Ol U •HD 00 H0t CoYt• t_,.u•o OUf ro AC.OOIH1' °' A.IU)t '°' ,.~. O• •t,t.t.{\llllllHI Of">t\ ..01 OHNO 1 .. 1 rt"""°'O' f .. )f W,O U ... IH\ 11,,ACf,..._HI "i..t.U~ t"tlM .. 0 f)H,,. tO ''.Cl Of O-IG1N.r.l (1111Mh (,{'l>H'•(t A ... f #()Ml r~••wuo tt•,.., t O• •.ft~f VNot• ,..,,.w ........ , ~ -~m Wards good 30. gallon gas water heater. 6488 REGULARLY 79.95 Rust.-resistant i;lass- 1 i ned lank. Thick fibor glass insulation keeps water ho~ inside lank. High tempera· lure l imit control. Sepernte relief valve opening. Save now! -18.95. l().gal.clee.,44.86 SAME DAY INSTALLATION SAVE •tS BETTER JO.GAL. GAS HEATER s4ss R£C.tt.9S Rue:t..reelstant glaNio lined t11nk. 46,000- BTU input tri~ 2l'lo more hot waicr lhun our~ model. Vatoe. * 1pirit of 'value 9111 iAOO , Mt>lllTCl.AIR mol'ltclalr plu.. 'Tl4"21.00~4 MM BERNA~ ~I t1t1mon,1H M l lr"ll • C~OOA PARK ~rt•••. AA.1 IOOO • f'UU.,Eln'ON hMtiot ., onn...U1Ut116. 714 • NORWAIJ( ll!lpttWI •I~·'" Nv4. --O'Jll •KANTA ANA., ..... II-·-\)\. il4-4•7 ~I • COllTA M A bruW IL, •l "'" i11..., ,..,, • 11•-M....-00 • HUN11N<Tl'ON O!ACll f'dlnllff •1 118rh. '7H ~~· • VAHOIAMA CM'Y lbblu II ~ ... nu • TOltlANCB .... ·-fa•hton ..... ,..., t4:J-«97l • ('bVll'IA herr•nca n •n htf11ard11ki fww, ll00-7411 •LAKEWOOD la~ bl~ It ul'MI~ &J3 , R08CMKAD :M1!Jo ro.mfild bhd, 673 :1110 • Wtan' L()8 ~CllLtUI la tll'Ma• 1118Lil1t, 83t.79U • IACUt ROCK aoi...4q 11 'bn4d,.~y. w.4-tlGl • U'NWOOO 1111.-rl•I blYd , 11 "'°"· SHOP MONDAY THROUOJI SATURDAY 9:30 AM TO 9:30 PM .•. SUNDAY 10:00 AM TO 6:00 PM ...• JUST SAY "CHARGE lTr' • • Liberated Inez Garda, freed last week after her second-degr ee murder conviction was overturned , said s he has become a "liber~ted woman" since her trial began and wtll try to keep helping other women. ~ar~ia c laimed that she killed Miguel Jrmmez because he held her down while another man raped her, and the case became a feminist cause celebre. Nudity Still Fun at 73 LOS GATOS (AP) -"Some people say we are immodest," says the 73-year-old woman manager of a nudist colony in the Santa Cruz hills. "I say the way some people dress is im· modest. "Ma ny girls and wom en wear clothes in public that are too skimpy and too tight," said Ethel Plant. "l wouldn't think of going downtown without wearing hose." MRS. P LANT, WHO'S BEEN MANAGING the ~upin Lodge nudist camp for 26 years, said she 1s ready for those who might consider her a prude because of her old-fashioned notions about how people s hould dress. ''I m ay be old-fashioned, but I don't think people should appear in -public in clothes designed . to attract att e ntion," s he said. "When ever- ybody's nude . everybody's the same and you can't very well be s howing off your body." Lupin Lodge is a private resort on 119 acres south of he re that caters to families who flock t.here for vacations and weekends . She s aid she and her late hus band, Ray, became supporter s of nudis m after reading about it during World War II. "WE· LIKE D THE FREEDOM O F being without clothes, especially in the water. There's nothing worse than a wet bathing suit. Did you ever notice. the swimming pool is the only place people will sit around in wet clothes?" Mrs . Pla nt and her husband became joint managers of Lupin Lodge in 1950. She said that after her husba nd died in 1963 she welcomed the chance to stay on. "I meet so many interesting people, many more than I would any other place," she said. "Some are the m ost far-out people I know and some are the most prudish people. "I become confidante to many of our mem- bers. People tell me things they say they wouldn't tell anyone else." MRS. PLANT RUNS THE RESOR'l' with a staff of six -all of them nude -who do the gardening and cooking, but of course don't have to bother muc h with laundry. Fate of Pupfish In Court's Hands WASHINGTON <UPI> -The future of a s pecies of pupfis h that already has survived 10,000 years in the desert may be in the hands of the U.S. Supreme Court. It heard arguments on a case involving a rancher's right to draw water Crom a national monllment even if lower ·water levels endanger the pupfish. Attorney Saftluel Lionel, arguing on behalf of Nevada rancher Francis L. Cappaert, told the court "this is factually a case between two en- dangered s pecies," the pupfish and independent ranchers. whose numbers have been declining in CAIL y PILOT " I 3 Distributor Silent .On Movie Slayings Cancer Industry Problem? TeRnfgn Roy Wilkins, 75, executive direc- tor of NationaJ Association for the Advan ce- ment of Colored People, says he wlll resig-n at end of year. INDIANAPOLIS <UPI) -Film distributor Allan Shackleton is ~unUng on getting people curious over whether slayings in the m ovie ''Snuff" are staged theatrics or ac- tua.1 events caugbt by the camera. SOrtre C5t the publlc1typ u out by his company, Monarch Releasing Corp. of Ne w York, indicates that at least some of the 18 murders in the film were the actual slaughter of un· suspecting actresses. real, si.nce the producer had made that a condition of his getting dis- tribution r ights . However, he 'te· f e rre d to the slayings as "theatrics.·' WASHINGTON (UPI> -Consum er advocate Ralph Nader says cancer should no longer be considered a strictly ~RE STORY OF mE movie, he medical dtsease 1rut 1n· said, concerned a South American stead should be called movie company that was making a "corporate cancer.'' film when the :star and producer Since many estimates -ere ktttect attribttt·e-H1e ¥Ht-ma He said the movie at firs t had no jorlty of cancer§ to en· - title, so he named it "Snuff." As a vironmental causes, it THAT BROUGHT HARSH state-generic term, "snulf movies" refers should b~ recognized ments from decency groups to underground films in which a pro· that cancer is caused editorial comment and inquiry rro~ ~ut~te-actress is k11led after engag. primarily by the pro-Add a bedroom & bath law enforcement officials conc·erned mg m sex, but Shackleton said there ducts of business and with determining whether the film is was "no explicit sex" in his movie. industry. Nader told a $ 4290 '""'""' "'-• ~ -'°"'*'IOnl • t ' l C • l lloot 11..CCO & 1111111• ....... eledtlCal Mleta to ma erta evidence of a crime or Shackleton said F'riday's so-called ap1to Hill conference. . •"'""""'•ster ~12·.1s -•"-bllll. whether t he publicity was skirting "world premiere" here or the South He said White House &AH1tF1HAHC1HGAVM.A8l£ consumer fraud. American-made film was be ing policies call for $60 Hne you priced adcllloas lllhly & Shac kleton denied responsibility jeopardized because of the local million a year in sub-thaMaht ffw pri too hidl? for the earlier statements and com-!Uedia's refusal to accept advertis-sidies for the tobacco roi...M-.~o<H>noOll...!!!-_ .. ~;..,._,,ou, • pared the "expllcit violence" in his mg. indu s try b ut o nly =i::o:c::.::~::.~:=,~;oc"...'..:'tt!:.:'~ film to that in other top box office Shackleton says he may make up $900,000 for the Depart-3 -~, .. ' 11ert • ~tOll e1o1. • movies. to $14 million if people start lin1·ng ment of Health, Educa-REEDER CONSTRUC CAU.tKHt Sh kl Id t . d TION co. FOA FR££ P\.ANS ac eton to a news conference up to see the s how -at $7.50 each ion a n Welfare t o REMOOEl.ING CENTER ~~"i~ he was "not at liberty" to say -compared with $500,000 if hardly educate people against 7,...,._2909 whether the slayings===in;,,.;;t~he~fi~l~m~a~r~e==~an~y~o~n~e;;c~om~e~s~.==================~s~m~o~k~i~ng:·~============~~~~~V£~A~R~s~o~P~ER~1E~N~c~eo~1~N~A~E~~oe~mi~A~t~CON~s~r!s!r !12!'~!~!!1!!~ ~~AUTOMOTIVE CENTER~ OPEN.7:00AM DAILY, SUNDAY 10:00 AM urr--- L~ -.......... __ -::~::::.,- POW R-KRAFT" 60.PC. TOOLSET- Standard or metric 1t1u• 3 gss Wtlh "ockelb, 1p1 nner SOLD SEP. hundlc. ext.emnon, more. 59.15-60.01 Orcat for homi> or shop WARDS ELECTR IC 295-AMP WELDER lncrea~d dut v cvclP for $149 up to uxn weidinit time. Choose from 20-295 .imp". Unduu rrlage •••.... 8.99 FIREPLACE ANO LIGHT FIXTURES Here'• your chance to get finoplace &ClCCMOries or llghi Oxlutff at fanWtic aaviop. We're over- atocked on mA ny itel1\ll and musl clear them out.. . l&le 1lema are not n~rily thOllC 11hown1 · • • ire avm Durable Highway Handler. WARDS NEW ELECTRONIC IGNITION S:imeo .. on mo•I newcara. Installs eu1ly. Jmprovet 11tart~. redurei> tune-up11. For ITl<>l!l car~ Save now. 4 9 ss REGULARLY 64.95 • tire when you buy 1st A 78-13 this. blk. at reg. price plus F.E.T. trade. DURABLE POLYESTER CORD HIGHWAY HANDLER 11101 ... , HtC.l'l..AH Mt.£ .... L." ttl \ifl\\l\ff ~Ml< I. !•RICI: f I T • .. l[I . ., ... 1'0 t • .,. t,At.lf /\ iM-l:J $25 $10 176 BiH-1'1 $27 $14 I 84 ('71-1· 1:1 S:JO $16 1.98 A7i-I I s:111 --$16 194 F7~ 11 S:J!I Sl7 2 27 f71'1 11 S35 SIS 2.40 Gih 14 S:J7 $19 2.56 Fi<l I"> -$36 !18 2.4!'1 {;iis 1:; i.18 $20 2.60 11;11.1;; $40 $20 2.83 ·w1m TltAOI:. I~ TlRtS w111n:WALl.S FOR ~IOSTSIZ£S$3 ~!ORE &ACll FREE MOUNTING 'TIRE SALE ENDS TUESDAY. ,JANUARY 27Tll __ ,,_ .-.....--, ......,, .................. .....-, ............. ~ -. ,_ .......................... , _ _. __ _....,,.,_ ........ , ... _..,....._,....,,._.._ • .,~, ...... i;nGo---;.t;u • ... ~ ~UllWf?tD _........,.,,., flt-<'O. ..... ,.,.........., ........ ., .. ....,,......, ....... ,,._" ..... ...,..._., ........................... n.,,... .... . ~ .......................... -:-.~ ....... -... _- ....... ....... f"'"'[ .... ......_ ......._.,-.111 ............................. ... .......... _... ........ .... ._......._, ... ..,.........,._._~ ................ .... __ ........ '-"-------............. ,.....,.. . .-._ ACCESSORIES SALE ENOS JANUARY 17TH ..• H UHltY. SOME ~UANTITIES ARE LIMITt:D! Br ake shoes or disc paas. N!'l'd t>rnkei.? Choose W11rds }388 ~uµremt.' drum brake shoes or our d1~c broke pod sets for ~~~s recent years. S A.'1£ •2 S A.'1£ *2 Both a federal district court and the 9th U.S. l"t.Y l"t.Y SAVE •11 ~ure. dept'ndobl~ stops \\hen TWO-WHU1.SET,E.XC you need thl'm. f or most cars. ll£G.15.91-ll.ltEX. Circuit Court of Appeals ordered the pumping ~:a:;~ WARDS Z.KEY WARDS ECONOMY stopped on grounds federal land legislation allows ENTRANCE LOCK GARACE CREEPER 60..MONTH WARRANTY BATI£RY the government to protect water supplies beneath Up to 4;.o cranking amps 3 4ss II 11 r d " " 0 ti 6 88 power for fa~t starts. And land it owns. f:i;~~r~:t:~·~ it comes with a 24-month EXCH. The pupflsb live in Devil's Hole Pool in Death .. ...,._..__ ered htad rut. Rte. 8.98 r.-replacement warr. RE~LARLY 45.95 Valley on the California-Nevada border. It was 1---__;;,-----------+----------------1 declared a natlooal monument by presidential proclamation in 1952 and is tlle only known habitat of the soecies of pupfish, an inch·long cretlu're 'wlth ·i' one-year ltf espat. that ba!t managed to survive in the desert environment. .. REWARD W£ WANT DIAMONDS GEM·STOl~S AND FINE )EWELRY t¥ttt prices paid for jtMlry htll •""•~I _. •ttL ''" 1xemlnetio• IM 9'Jpnhal W O,.,_ 9ltt 8tmototist. ,...,. can IJl.7541 tor ,,,.lftt. "*'L Ask for Mr. Teny. I TANGLEPROOF"' BOOSTERCABl.ES Fll••1htc, I" n .088 ti-irauce coppo.·r 0 w1rr 6V. ;:lV REC.l2.91 buttr1cs. LET YOUR WARDS CHARC.ALL ACCOUNT HELP SIMPLIFY YOUR MONTHLY BUOC£1'1NC Installation-labor only*. 4 drums 2 di1c1, 2 drum• $37 $43 • ln!itall •hoea, • Inspect hard· tor di~c amrl~l ware, lleals • llt·huild whe!f!I • Adjust parkinf c ~I.. ••ulipt'rs brake • l"h•·•·k 11111 ,tc1· • Tumdnlmsand \1,;hc-.•I t·~·I. rc<-lJa.cfl roton • Hftpnck front 'Allhrakeftuid • IX'orlnirs • Rone! tt'St ear PAATS AllO SEllVICE FOR MOST US CAd •• •-..qi ............ ,....._ apmt*:~6 value WARDS AUTO CENTERS OPEN DAILY 7:00 AM TO 9:30 PM ... SUNDAYS 10:00 AM TO 8:00 PM ..• JUST SAY uCtlARGE IT!'' , CANOOA l'AIUC ...... ,._ 1000 • 1'1JLll.ftT01'fh.,tlorat oro ..... th«-pe. 7H-1'71ML,OO • M<»tl'Ct..Ull-lt'l•lr pi ...... ii• t"ll 303-4 •RAN IU?RNARDINOttnt-1 att t11•ll. 714..18.4-t"L1\ ... UNIV ERSAL DIAMOND INDUSTRIES 412 Olive, Suit• 203 Hunti~ 8t1ch, C1lif. 92848 7'4/131· . .. , OfiT.\ Milt&\ llf•ttol •L.. •l 011111!Jeilo l'WJ , 1H M').IMOO .•HUNTINGTON ll&A H ..tin..,. 11 bel<h, 71• M..! 660 • NORWAUC 1~111 11 _....11o; hl-4, &.Ill •KANTA ANA brhlol al ..,..-nt._tll, i'l4·547~'41 • COVINA~m-alNll~rdlrierw,.966-1411 • t.Al(IWOOO\Ak......&blv4 atNlnd~.l!JJ 1!!00 • PANORAMACITYliob\ll.l1\m<t'M,8ll4-3lll •'l'OlltlANCldeltmof•.tlloft"'lu•N,fM:t.«m • IAOL8 ROCK colonidu1 bfoM.tw_,, 2-'-"·11+'61 • l.YN WO<>O IM!Mtlal b1Yd., Al'"'"" l\:t1 ~ • ROHt:MSAO MOO __..i &1'11., 1173.illO •"UT LOii ANG&LES lu ieMICIUl ll!th M~ ll3Q.~Jl TRUCK TIRE CENTERS • L08 ANOl<:LE • 213-722·6&34 •GA ROEN GROVE, 714-898-1320 •SAN BERNARDINO, 714·885-3288 ... I • I J r 14 OArL Y PILO t Wednffday. Jenuery 14, t 976 BUI Defeated Walk Set Brown AssailS Judge Pay Vote SACRAMENTO <UPI) -Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. Tuesday said judge-£ acted "unseemly" and "against the beat interests of the ]udici:\ry" in opp9sing a blll ttmittng their pny raises to the average wagl' hike granted oth(l'r state employes. The measure (SlH276) by Sen. Anthony Beilenson (0 -Los Angeles). was rejected Tuesday by the Senate Judiciary Committee ona2-5voteL with several Judges voicing&heieopposition to the biLL Th£> defeat of the bnl speTied trouble Tor a moretar-reaC'hingptarr ~•dvanced recently hy Brown ( J to give judges a nat $65-a-S month raise along with nearly tat e all other state workers. _ Tlareaf. Lett er• SAC RA~ ENT(.) <AP> A government attorney says charges of thrt>atening business and government officials will be pressed against two Charles Manson followers despite a federal decision not to prost>('ute Lyn<'ltc Fromme on a similar charge. Asst. US Atty. Bruce BabC'ock said Tuesday that charges will not be d1smiSSl'd against Sandra Good. 31, and Susan Murphy, 33. The two women are accused of consf>iring to mail 171 threatening letters to busin<'SS and government officials. The l<'tters are ·omewhat similar to one sent last week by Miss Fromml' lo Russt'll Tram. head of the Environmenta l Prot<'Ction Agency Lawyer Rate• Go IJp? LOS A='1GELES IAP l -The iosurance carri~r that has raised malprnctice premiums for physicians intends to increase malprac- tice coverage rates for attorneys by probably 356 percent, a State Rar consultant has told the Pasadena Star-News.· Raymond Schultz, head of the consultant firm lbar Inc., said Tuesday that Travelers Insurance Co. plans a legal malpractice rate increase effechve Mttrch 15. f'~I Poliry Hit LOS A:-.IGELES <AP} -Killer smog could claim up to8,000 pre- mature deaths an the Los Angeles bas in as the result of a federal ban against the use of clean-burnin~ natural gas by California utilities, the state's top environmental official says. ··This is an insane. inept policy." Tom Quinn declared of the federal Power Commission decision demanding that as a conserva taon move Cali forn1a utilities ::.top using natural gas and switch lo fuel oil Saf e&cafl Bo•Wng NOVATO c UPI> A bomb e xploded in the back room of a Safe\\ay store late Tuesday night, rattling windows of homes three miles awav None of the S IX night employes was hurt in the bombing, the fifth at a bay area Safeway store the past three months. Police said no one claimed responsibility for Tuesday night"s explosion and they received no warning. Garage Shooting SIERRA MADRF. (U PI> A 56-year-old stamp and coin dealer was sh0t four times and killed Tuesday after he drove his car into his garage PohC'e said R aymond Lungren drove into lhe garage with has \\1fe about 7 p. m. Lungren got out of the car and was approached by a man who s uddenly began shooting at him. Lungren died instantly. Hi s wife was not injured To Fu1ul .. Project The Junior Ebell Club of Irvine will spon sor a "Walk for Mankind.. Saturday to raise money !or Ute medical aid pro- gram~of Project Co11em. Walkers will hike a 20-mile route bt>ginning nt 7: 30 p. m. at Town CentC'r, •1201 C~ mpus Drive. WAI.KEKS ARE TO obtain :<ponsors who agree to pay a pre· de-termined amount for each mile-completed. The money will go to Projeet Concern. a n on-profit or- ganization that operates 24 hospitals in the United States, Mexico. Guatemala, Hong Kong, Vietnam. Rali and Ethiopia. ,, Walkers will include most of the members of the Irvine City Council and a number of council candidates. a<'cording to Mrs. William TitC'hcnal of the club. T HE f'J.ltR STILi. needs volunteers to man checkpoints along the route ns well as ad· ditional sponsors. Additional information may be obtained by contacting Dianne Lundquist at 551-4504, Rarbara Reyn olds at 559-1273 or Jeri Konopisos at 559·0873. Art Lecture Scheduled At Laguna "Diversity : An American Tradition", is the topic of le<'turer Don Lagerberg who will address the La guna Beach Museum of Art docents at 2 p.m. Monday at the museum, 307 Cliff Drive, Laguna Beach. He will compare older and re· cent work from colonial portraiture and folk art to body art e1nd west<'rn art, and a com- p re hen s iv e look at the t•mergence of subculture art. Guests are $1. For adctitionclJ information. contaC'l affiliate program Diret'tor Leah Vasquez at ·19-1-6531 . Agatha Left Fortune From Wire Services Agatha Christie amassed an "astronomical" fortune from her 85 books, 17 plays and various movie rights, the late mystery writer's publisher said, but the exact amount remained a mystery. "The amount s he bas left is a deep secret and wilJ remain so until her will is read," said a spokes man for ·her literary agent, Hughes Massie Ltd. A private funeral for Dame Agatha. who died Monday at 85. will be held Friday at Cholsey parish church near her country home in Wallingford, 55 miles west of London. a source close to the family said. • Singer Olivia Newton-John was resting al her home from injuries suffered when she was thrown from a horse. a spokesman said. Mi ss '.'Jewton-John was thrown from the horse <1t the Malibu Riding and Tennis Club. Her physician, Dr. Donald R. Taylee, said she suffered a t•ervical and lumbar sprain a nd hmises of the back. He said the full extent of her injunes will not he known for several days. money from his wrecked 1968 Buick. Salamites will put the car on display at the Hartford Civic Center auto show Jan. 23-25 and plans to be there with it. He s aid he hopes to sell the car as a collectors' item. but didn't say how much he hoped to get. The Salamites family received $670 from the firm which insured the presidential limousine leased from the Ford Motor Co. • The Rt. Rev. F. Donald Coggan, archbishop of Canterbury, checked into the Sheraton Is lander Hotel in Newport, R.I .. with his secretary a nd told a skeptical desk clerk their na mes were "Smith a nd Jones." Actually, there was nothing sinister in what the church leader was doing. He and his traveling companion, a male secr£>lary . just wanted to keep their whereabouts low key. "Just call us Smith and Jones." the archbishop told the desk clerk. Dr. Coggan, 66, is making his first United States visit since becoming spiritual leader of the .. He's fort of a legend to me Anglican church. and my father." says the great· • granddaughter of novelist Jack Former Watergate prosecutor Archibald Cox London, whose birth in San was appointed chairman of a special state com - Francisco 100 years ago was • HEWTON·JO"" mission to find ways of easing the congestion in marked in the San Francisco area. MassaC'husetts · court system. But Sandra Fle ming Barry, 16, of San Lorenzo. Cox, a Harvard law professor, will head a 20- confessed she had forgotten about the birthday of member select committee s elected by Gov. the famous story teller, who died in 1916. 43 years Michael s. Dukakls in coopera- before she was born. lion with the presiding officers London, a controversial author of his time who of the Massachusetts House and expressed Socialist views in his writing, has r e· Senate. tained a pe rennial audience in this country and Cox. 63. set up ihe abroad. Jn the Soviet Union, readers buy about Watergate special prosecution 500.000 of his books armually. forC'e in May 1973 and ran it until • October 1973. He was fired by . U.S. Sen. Lowell Weicker, saying he's "tired of President Nixon for r efusing to America sulking in a com er," announced he would obey White House demands thal seek a second term. he not seek court orders to ob· The Greenwich. Conn., Republican who took a t ain evidence concern in g cox leading role in criticizing former President Ntxon•s charges of criminal misconduct against Nixon handling of the Watergate scandal. told reporters at aides. a news conference he would run on his record and • on his belief that the na-Wolrgang Wick of Klagenfurt, Austria, was t1on must do m or e to ( J chos<'n by the Rotary International ndminating solve e nergy, transport.a-PEOPLE-. committee to be its president in 1977-78. hon and unemployment _ 1( no additional nominations are received from problems. ---------' any of the more than 16,600 Rotary clubs in 151 · · l 'm t· ir e d o f countries by March 15, Wick's election will be un- America saying it doesn't h<we th<' wherewithal to '1'imous at the annual convention June 13-17 in New ~Ive housing and other problems." Weicker said. Orleans. • Wirk is vicech;airman or the board of the Austro-American Magnesite Co. of Radenthein, Carinthia, Austria, and vice-president-Europe of General Refractories Co., of Pbll adelphia. • R. Reynolds Morse, owner or one o( the world's largest colJections of Salvador Dali paintings, says he decided not to set up a plann~ public museum ui Cleveland, partly because or rising crime rat~~ and ' downtown air pollutlon. Dr. Randolph T. Rlactwe11, executive director "We estimate it woald Ulke a bltlldi..ng as large as the museum filled with activated.charcoal to mt er out the corrosiv@S in the air coming from Cln~land ind Witry." he said. Morse's collc<'tion, valued al ibout S50 million, lnchldes aome 750 works by Dali. He homes It ln a private m~eum in bispla.stics company's building. • • J•mn alamltft, an unemployed teen-ager whose car coUlded wilh PrnWeat Fonl'1 hmouslne • • 1-. October in Hartford Conn.. hopes lo mote 0 I \ or Southern Rural Action Project lnc .• was named to receive the llluUa IAUler Kln& Jr. nonviolent pea~e prize. Bhickwell, 48, is lhe fourth r.clplent of lbe aw~rd. presented by Coren. Scott Klng, widow of the slain civil rights leader. Blackwell, a lawyer, profes!or and elvll rtaht.s W'Ol"kor for three d~ades. will receive the award ThursdaY. at Atlanta'• Ebenezer Baptist church durin' aervltes commemorating King's 47th birth· day anniversary. .~ -. , I Health ·Technieian Worker Deah With Envir()Ttmental Purity By JOYCE L. KENNED'V Dt-ar Joyce: Do you have in- r or mat ion co ncernin g environmental health techni- cians who prepare in two-year programs? -V.P ., Morgantown, N.C. Relatively new on the s cene, the environmental health lechni· C'ian assists the environmentalist lformerly called sanitarian ). Both levels or workers deal with environmental purity - food. drink, water, air, land and noise. Examples or interests : food manufacturing and process- ing, restaurants, water supply, air and water pollution, sewage and waste disposal, housing, r<>- dent and insect control, Hotu)rtc D11e Leon J aworski , Watergate prosecutor and former pre- sident of the American Bar Association. will be honored next month by the Marshall-Wythe School of Law at William and Marv College. ~ Disposal Site Weighed in Capistrano San Juan Capistrano city councilmen have asked to see a specific pJan of what will be done at the county's Prima Desheaha · recreation/disp_osal site before they say it complies with the C'ity's General Plan. The land. 945 acres which tbe county has purch ased from the O'Neill Ranch Company and another 600 acres within San Juan's city limits which the coun- ty intends to acquire, will be used temporarily as a solid waste sanitary landfill site. IT WILL LATER be developed into a county regional park. Before the county can purchase the remainjng land, however. the City Council must say it complies with the city's plan. Although a permanent disposal site would not agree with the city's plan. said David Smith, the city's former planning director. a temporary site generally does conform. COUNTY ENGINEERS have said their grading will not affect ridgelines, a resource the city is attempting to preserve. Councilmen, however, were still concerned. T hey asked re- cently to see plans of how the pro- ject will look before and after it is completed. "To m e this is not a big deal.·• said Councilman Douglas Nash. ''I don't see how they can conduct a project of that scope without it. .. He said their intent is not to put the project in jeopardy but to find out what they will be getting into. -' .. (Career Corrler J radiological cont.a.mlnaUon and occupational health. MOST F:NVl•ON · mentalists a nd lecbnlclans work for local, state or federal govern- ments, often tn pubUc health. • agriculture, or environmentally- related agencies. The technician handles such s upJ>Ortive work as collecting water and sewage samples tor lab analysis. investigating garbage and dead animal com- plaints, running tests for bac· terial contami.nation, and operat- Flood Plan. in.g technical equipment. Find- ings are reported lo an environmentalist. A s tudy by the National Environmental ,Health As- sociation (NEHA> s hows monthly &tarting pay foi' federal pu1ille health technidans ranges from $630 lo $815, or $800 to $1 105. depending on proficlency Md ex- perltnce. WHILE TlfERE ISN~ a nationwide study on bow new technician grads are faring, an NEH A spokesperson says the · market is ''difficult but poss1- ble." He expects the market to greatly improve as recognition or environme ntal n eeds grows. Moreover, there's a'feeling t hat man y profe ssio n a l environmentalists are being un- derutilized in jobs technicians could handle. As with a n y emerging oc cupation, be ~ure the two-year C d • environmental health program on ennnng·you choose is operated by educators who actively solicit Action Due Orange County spervisors have agreed to take con- de mnation action against the owners of 31 acres of Trabuco Creek flood plain near San Juan Capistrano. The board recently ordered <'OUnty Environmental Manage- ment AgenC'y Director H.G . "George" Osborne to take the necessary legal steps to obtain the property for use as a natural drainage C'hannel and g reenbelt. OSBORNE SAID the land is owned by Myron and Richard Smith, who have a lready r ejected an off er of nearly $150,000fortheir· land. ·The property s urrounds a bend in Trabuco Creek between Oso Road and t he Santa Fe Railroad tracks and inC'orporates the con- fluence of Oso a nd Trabuco · Creeks just north of San Juan Capistrano. . OSBORNE SAID IT would be in the county's best interests to ac- . quire the land to be sure it is de- veloped with a natural motif. He said there is a possibility the property might be demanded by San Juan Capistrano when ad - jacent land comes up for de- velopment. If that happens, Osborne said. the city may choose to install un- sightly concrete channels rather than !!reenbelts. Osborne said that in any case, additional flood control work is badly needed at the junction of the two creeks because of rapid upstream development in Mis- sion Viejo. Permits Rise In Laguna Building dollar volume jn Laguna Beach during 1975 was down 20 percent from that of the year before, figures released by the city municipal services de- partment s how. In 1975, 498 permits for a n estimated $8.9 m illion worth of construction were issued. Jn 1974. 607 permits for $11. I million were issued. The month of December found a turnaround, however, to the sliding building activity. In Decem her 1975, the city is- sued 47 perm its valued at $772,lSS. Jn the same month the year before, only permits worth $657 ,043 were issued. Lecture Slated ·'The Ch allenge of Staying Young" is the topic of a lecture by Sylvia Bogen scheduled to ad- dress the Laguna Beach Council on Aging at 1 p. m . Monday at the city hall annex, 570 Glenneyre St .• Laguna Beach . jobs for their grads. It's also wise to c hoose a program which permits your technician credits to be applied to a four-year degree s hould you later decide to go for a baccalaureate. AT FERRIS STATE College in Big Rapids, Mich .• for instance, 90 percent of technician grads get interested in the profession and continue study for a bachelor's degree in environmental health. • •• FOR MORE INFORMATION: The National Environmenta l Health Association will send you career literature and school lists. Specify whether you're interest- e d in profe ss ional envlronmentalist (four years) or environrnental health technician (two years). Enclose a stamped. self-addressed, long white en- velope and send your request to Joyce Lain Kennedy at this newspaper. Write "NEHA'' in the ~orner of your outside en- velope. Allow several weeks for deli\'ery . Accidents Up In Laguna; Injuries, Too Laguna Beach closed out 1975 with a seven percent increase in traffic accidents over the year before, but a 25 percent increase in the number of people injured by them. The figures are from a year. end report called "the Casualty Count" issued by the Laguna Beach Police Department traffic· bureau. Deaths due to traffic accident~ held at three for both years. The report s hows last year there were 872 accidents of which ·203 injured 280 people. In 1974 : there were 808 accidents of which 177 injured 223 people. During the month of December alone, 15 persons wer e injured in 57 accidents. During the same month the year before, JO persons were injured in 57 acci- dents. Tour of Tide Pools Slated The Marine Studies Institute al Dana Point will conduct a tide pool tour a t 3 p .m . Saturday, meeting at the Hickory Farms of Ohio shop, 25016 Del Prado in the Dana Point Marina. Ther e is no ~harge for the tour which includes on-location in- struction and a lecture at the Marine Studies Laboratory. Reservations may be made for individuals or groups by calling the Marine Studies Institute in Dana Pointat83J-2274. Student Stabbed in Film GODFREY, Ill. (AP> -••He was every· thing we bad hoped for. Perfect.'' says the · mother of a teen-ager who died from a stab wound in the heart received while rehearsing . a school film project. . Ned NilS'son, 16, was a member of the Na- tional Honor Society and starting center on the Alton High School junior varsity basketball team. • "He was just a topnotch kid.·• said the s cbool 's principal, Blaine Bonynge. THE YOUTH, HELPING FOUR friends make a film as an extra-credit project for a creative media course, was playing the role of a youth resisting the advances of a drug pusher when s tabbed Jan. 3. A y.roqden board, meani to protect hlm, broke as the knJCe wu plunted Into his chest. He bad been In a coma since hls heart wu sutured in emergency sur1ecy after the stab- bing. He was the son of Mr. and Mrs. Frlts Roll.Del NUaon of Godfrey. "We ju.at loved him very mucb/' said his mother, a 4it-year-oJd elementary school teacher. His fa th er is a technical analyst for an airplane manuf actur-er ~ll St. Louis. NED, WHO HAD TWO OLDER brothers. was 6 feet s. sandy-halted and fair-skinned. His 3.7 grade average ranked him In the top s percent of the 9,_member Jun.J.or class at the school. The creative mecµa course is taught by Ab. Pat Moore. Sbe had not set"D the script and was not aware it called for a atabblng scene School ofCiclalt said they WCR.\ld not bav~ pennJtted the use ol a real knile bad they bad any idea what the students were plannina. Ned wun•t even ln the creative media clau. He wa. Just belplng friends. whQ were working on thel r own dw1n1 Cbrbtmu vae!a- tion to earn extra credit. Five of them aatbaed in a part near Alton two days after New Year's to do the fUmina. The script. called for Ned lo resist the drug pµsher and be lltUbed by him as the hero -Captain Alton- came to the rucue. Egos (R&d ;·Folk Art , At UCI Seminars on ego states, management for women and European !olk arts are among the offerin1s of the t.Jc Irvine Extemion pro· gram this week. ~e schedule includes: W•DN•SDAY,JHINfYM ''Womenencl&llslM U : TMW.YT• 'Thil ToP,.'' Ann Hull ~"· a.s .. a . .-.A., ~lawntr. o-u..,. ~ ..... ( "91•t1Ms.. ~°'. UC Irvine Ellttf\Slon lecture~ 1. lO P.ln., ""'· IOI, l'tlWk•I ~ aldg .. UC lrvl11e u"'""' ~: tn _.Ulorwlltlo4lt credlt, ' ''Tlw Act1Mll1l119 ~ • Ewrett t.. S.-lrom. P".o., .iNCtor. Ille lnstlllM of ActMlltilll. ,,...,_., ... st.ff. Ptrt Of • UC 1""-·~ ""'9••m. 4 • 1 p,M., 1"91 .... el AC1ut ll1ln9 T"trtPy. HS W. TMfttletll SI., s..tlt Ant. Fff: Sf2. ' ( Piiot Logbook J 3 Brickbats Sent Forth By JACKIE HYMAN ot Wit o.lly ""' ~" Complaints and fn.tStrations, now that we·ve reached 1976: How come aj('t plane c.an whlslLY-ou rom Los Angeles to Dallas in a r t m e r e 2 \/z hours and ~ another plane can whis k you from there to Ten- nessee in a s cant l y, ' hours, but Dallas airport can't even whisk you into a restroom without requir· ing you to exit into a lobby and then go through ~ security check to get bacY- into the rue ht area? ('()me a substation i>ost office in Costa Mesa didn't have ~ new rate schedule to send a package to Europe almost a week later -Jan. 6? One mol'e com~laint and rm lflroygh. J must say I'm pleased about the rules requir· ing nonsmokers to be separated from smokers on airplanes -but since nobody puts a barrier in the middle, the smoke stlll drifts Into the nonsmo.~ctlon. ~the last couple of rows. BUT STILL and all, we Americans have one of the most efficient and convenient s ystems of tuaai.pess and transportatlon ~ound -you can pick your seat on an airplane from the front desk in the airport, you can get lunch in about five minutes at a short-order place and you can walk into a store and buy just about anything you want. The problem in 1976 is going to be not buying too much. . WedMtday.January 14, t978 Creighton Club Sets Festivity The Los Angeles· 0 r a n~g e C o u n t y Crei1hton Club will hold its annual party Friday at Mr. C's Restaurant ln Long Beach. The ieslivities will get under way with a social hour at 7 p .m. Dinner will be served at 8 p.m. at the restaunmt.. 5305 Pacific Coast Highway. Guests from the un· iversity in Omaha, Neb., will include Rev. Carl M. Reinert, S.J ., vice presi· dent for university re- lations. THE FAMILY CIRCUS OAIL y PILOT A J 4 By Bil Keane "~I A$peets of Dlvcwct : NW'tul· ment , Stp•r•llo n , Divorce, T~,_,., •nd PwmMntnt ~ Pl'otecllon °'°'"Md fnf~ ,.~,...~---.... --.-... ~-................. _. ........ _ ................ _-... .... .-................. _.-... .... .---.. .... -..... Clallldr,'' E. Rotltr1 LtfNlln, J.D •• .i- Alumni of Creighton, parents of Creighton stu· dents and parents of stu- dents interested in at· tending Creighton are in· vited. "Why does Som n..d o license? He doesn't go fishing Of hunting Of get married or drive o car or •.. " l I bntr •t l•w. P.,t of• UC ll'Ww f w. litflslon lt<lllrt Mrl.s, "(!Yklftl S.... of Divorce,'' 1 • 10 P·"'-• tbn. 111, Hwnt11lllff H•ll, UC lrvlne ~ Fet: Noft·Crtdlt, )4t; Credit. IMI Single tdml H lon •f Ille door If SfNKt oermlls, u. so. "Cunent Trends In 81of..obtck Rts .. f"Ch,'' Ptltr Wtl99fl, Ph.D., psycllo409lst, Otperlmtnt of MeM•I Hetl1", Newpon BtKh. First Oh UC lrvlne Eicl-ton course, 1 • 10 p.m., Rm. Ut, Socl•I Science IAb, UC lf"Vlne ttmpus. Fff: '64. TMUltSDAY, J•t1to1ry U "E..,.ryont Ctn 8t An Artis!" Jtrry Gronberg, M.F.A., •rtlst Md lnstruclO', Art, El C.mlno Collt9e; Jt<k Medoff. 8.F.A., .,, director, oe. sl9Mr 9lld llluslrttor, Young •nd RuCllunl. Los Angeles. Put of• UC Irvine EwttMlon WOfksllop coune. e. lo.JO P.m .• Rm. 1'l, Fine Arts Bldg., UC Irvine ttmpus. FH : '44. with Olf without crtdll. dOts not lnclUde s..o- plln. "Mncullnlly •nd Ftmlnlnlly • , . Tiit OewklpfMn1 ol G.ndff Identity •nd Role," Tyt Roy, 8 A., UC Rlverslm . A UC trvlne EllWMlon lecture t«lts, 1 • 10 p.m., Rm. '°'· Socl•I Science l.•11. UC tr vlnt c.mpus.. Fee: $64. ··~1e RePfodlKth• System tnd UrlMry System ; Dtvtl~tnt•I Alllltomy, PllnlolOQy •ncl AtllUd Olie-Pl'OC1$W1,'' D9fydr Kent, M.D .• uslsl•nl •dl~t ~-. Gynecoto9y •nd 01}.t~ttrlcs. C.lltornl• C.oll999 of MMJdM. UC Irvine. P9rl of • UC lrWIM lbJ'lnslon lec ture strles, "Re productive Mldlclne,'' 7 • 10 p.m., "'"""*' l.tcture Hill, Medic.I ~,.,.,.,, Ground Floor, Mtdlc•I lw9' 11 lldv., UC lrvtne ttmpus. F•: U7; sl119le tdmlulon •l the door U sptct ptfmlls. $7.2S. ~ltlDAY •IMISATU•OAY '91tt1try1'"'4lt1 "Pregn•nc y , 81 rtll tnd Ille Tr•nslllon to P•rentllood," N9ncy OonlldSOf\, R.N., 8.S .. urllfltdbytlle Olll«Mrtll Ed1K•tlon A-1.uon, Los Angetts. A UC lrvl .. Elltt Mlon -ktnd progrtm, Fri., J11n. '6, 7. 10 p.rn.; S.t., J•n. 17, t •.m. • S p.rn.. • Rm. 24', 5-<1•1 Scie nce LM, UC Irvine C•ffttlUS. FM: S;U, wllfl °"' wll!ICMll cr91t, does MC lftd• I~ f'ltlDAY, SATUltDAY M4I SUNDAY ,,.....,.., ... 11 N4 ,, "Tiit Clltn9ln9 Picture t>f ' ,t.dllpllon,'' Cyntlll• "'9rtln, Ph.D .• merrl999 ~ ltmlly counMIOlf. A UC lnllnt Ellttnslon -ktnd 18nl_., • Frl.,7· IOp.m.; S.l.,t•.m .·U.-, 1 • S p.m.; Sun •• t •.m. • 12 noon, 1 • J p.rn., Rm. 1~. Socltl Science IAb, UC Irvine c~s. FH: '44.50, with w without "tdlt, lnclud-. perking. "The l.urnl"9 G1me," Ch.tries Herbert, Ph.D., presldtnt, O.ESS tnd Assocl•lfl. Inc. A UC trvlne E•· •-Ion lhrH-d•y workShOp, Fri., 7 • 10 p.m.; Set. •nd Sun., 9: 30 •·"'-• S p.m., Mulllpurpoie Room, Al>f'tMnl Uncotn Sci-1. 3101 P•clllc View Or., c.or-(Ml M9r. FH: SS6, Includes -supplies •nd 119rkl119. Bring S.CklUllCll. SATU•DAY,J-ryt1 .. ..,_ .. MINi19"'9nt," Tll It. Oii ...... o., IHO<l•I• prof~ of M•ll•I•"''"'· Dtp•rtment of Mtntgemenl, School of lluslMu Admlnlstr•llon •nd Economics, Ctllfornl• St•tt un•verslly, FUiierton. A UC Irvine ExttMlon- d9y semlntr, t :JO .. m. • 4:30 p.rn., Rm. 1'S, Soci•I S<lenct 1..911, UC lrvlne Ulnpus. Fee: $4S, lflCludts ci.u met•n•ls, lunch llrld perk5"g. "W"•" l•11d when notl To tncorp0r•I• A Small 8uslM U," s.ntord llrlekn«, l.l..8 ., ttl~. A UC lrvln• E•l•nslon ont·d•y semlntr, t :OO •.m. • 4:00 p.m., Rm. 101, Phnl,•I Sciences llld9 .. UC Irvine c~ Fee: .... s. lflCtudH clan mtterl•ls, tuncll Mid perking. SATUltDAY 9MISUNDAY JNMry179Mlt• "DHll"IJ Wllll A09renlon In The Cl1u room," C•thtrln• M. Bond, M.A., dl,_tor, Actlotl SemlftM1 for PrOll"ffS. lt9ntho P•I05 Ver-. A UC lrvlne Eicte~lon -ttc•nd -11ShOC>. t :JO .. rn. • 12 M«I; l~:JO • 4:30 p.m .• Rm. 1 ... Socl•I Science I.Ab, UC Irvine~·· .... : "4.Je; Wllldff Pltf'kl119, 8"1119 o-tune II. • SATURDAY, ~y 11'; M. it: ~7~t• "THCllln9 C"lldttn Atlout Tiit Desert," Robert C. 1'111.,, M.S.. le•chtr •nd science cons11ll9fll, Fullerton Eltmtnltry ~llool Ols. trtct . A UC lrvlne Eict-lon flw Slt~yllf'09'wn. t•.m. ·12-; t • ' p.rn., ""'· ''°· Comput., Science 9ld0., I.JC IMM UlmPll4 .... I tM. ..... ..-..uteredM. TownHatl Forums To Begin uvolce of the P eot)le" will begin its 1976 series of Town Hall. f«Ums in Huntington B,&'ach on Jan. 21. ' . "The Futur~ qf Hor$es in Huntington Beach," Is the topic to t>e prese~ted for discussion. • Representatlies from • the Huntington Beach Planning Department, Planning Co~mtuion and City Coun 1 will be guest panelia 1 along with a teen·aae horseowner and a repneentatlve rrom the Tralltor1anlZltlon. The public is 1nvited to tbe dltcuulon which will berln at 1:30 p.m. at the Huntlniton Beach Police Tralnlnl Center at Civlc Center Complex. • OPEN SUNDAYS & EVENINGS INSTALLED CARPET SALE PRICE llCLUDES •· •• CARPET, PADDING & INSTALLATION PRICE INCLUDES ••• YOUR CHOICE-WAFFLE OR FOAM PADDl9G NYLON LEVEL LOOP 100% CONTINUOUS FILAMENT NYLON PILE. PERFECT FOR KITCHENS. DENS. PATIOS AND OTHER HIGH TRAFFIC AREAS. AVAILABLE IN MANY COLORS. 49 Cl.ELANESE l\,YLON HI-LOW 100 10 CELANESE NYLON PILE. POPULAR Hl·LOW TWEED PATTERN THAT COMBINES BEAUTY AND DURABILITY. llSTALLED PRICE ••• 49 SQ. YD. KODEL® Ill TIP SHEARED HI-LOW . KODEL • Ill POL VESTER PILE. vERY . 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Arrow Hlghw1y ...... n FOUNTAIN VALLEY 15Mf.ff.Wltvd. (114) -.1100 W. LOS ANGELES 10121 _, ... lhd. ...... I NO. CAL.,ORMIA LOCATIONI • CAM'81LL • SAN CAftLOI • MILL8UI • SAN FRANCISCO •MT. VllW • I • ,4 Jf CAA. Y PILOT ·Wednesday. January 14, 1918 Report from Philip Morris New 9 mg. tar MERITwith 'Enriched Flavot:'proves taste no longer depends on amount of tar. · Until now, cigarette flavor pretty much depended on the amount of tar that went along with it. Regardless of "low tar, good taste,, claims, regardless of fancy filters and "space .. age" filtering systems-· you couldn't ge t high taste without high tar. Nor low tar without low taste. That was the theory. Until now. This is another report on MERIT from Philip Morris. If you smoke, you'll be interested . LowTur, Good Tuste: Filters Fall Short At first , we tried designing special filters, too. 'Enriched Aavor~ It's extra flavor. Natural flavor. Flavor that can't burn out, can't drop out, can't do anything but come through for you. Read the taste .. test results for yourself. Tuste:fested By People Like You 9 mg. tar MERIT was taste-tested' against five curr~nt leading ·. low tar brands ranging from 11 mg. to 15. mg. tar. Thousands of filter smokers were involved, smokers like you~&elf, tested at home~ The results were conclusive. Like others, our results were generally disappointing. ~~--- These results confirmed a belief that if there ~-----~-~!111111 Even if the cigarette tested had 60% more tar than MERIT, a significant majority of all smokers tested reported new 'Enriched Flavor' MERIT delivered more taste. was any way to get flavor -real flavor-into a low tar cigarette, the answer had to lie somewhere in the tobacco itself. So we focused on the business end of smoking. The tobacco end. And decided if we wanted to get more flavor through to you, we'd just have to start with more. After a twelve year effort, our Richmond Research Center succeeded. They isolated the "key " flavor ingredients of tobacco as they ex ist in cigarette smoke. By adding only those natural ingredients of extreme high quality as flavor contributors, yet low tar producing as well, they were able to : pack MERIT with 'Enriched Flavor'-without the usual corresponding increase in tar. . . • ,,.. w.;. , .. rt7' ·--I \ MERff mt MERIT MENTin • Repeat:· delivered more taste. In simi~ar tests against 11 mg. to 15 mg. menthol brands, 9 mg. tar MERIT MENTHOL performed strongly too, delivering as much ' -or more-taste than the higher tar brands tested You've been smoking "low tar, good taste" claims long enough. Now y,ou,ve got the cigarette. MERIT. Incredible smoking pleasure at one . of the lowest tar levels in smoking today- . only 9 mg . tar .. From Philip Morris·. ·Amman~ olc.cnumcrapw.n. Study~--""*' 9 9 mg:·nr:· 0.7 mg. nicodnl w. per ci..... nc Mt1hod. ~ .. C\'7. Warning : The Surgeon General Has o,,ermined U I~ Thar Cigarette Smoting Is Dangerous to Your Heahh. \ I : I ! I ' ~ I Wednelday, January 14. 11176 DAIL V PILOT 81 ~ _,.~--·-. ~--·--- ~ College Grid R~es ·Shakeup Due HBFive . . Hits 126 I ST. LOUIS (AP) -The American Football Coaches As· soctatioo la ln favor ot a form of sudden-death overtime for all colleie football games. A source close to the AFCA told The Auociated Press the sud· ·den-death ]>rOJ>OSat wtU iwl>l'e- sented to the National Collegiate Athletic Association's Rules Committee, which meets later this month in Nashville, Tenn. The NCAA Rules Committee ' ______ cs ~!~,~:~%.~ ternational Olymptc O>mmittee today brushed aside reports that the Summer Olympics in Mon- treal are in danger of cancella· ti on. "They cannot be canceled," the president said in an interview from his Dublin home. "NW-can they be postponed. "I receive reports from Mon- treal almost daily, and these are much more optimistic than some recent news paper reports." But Killanin added that delays in construction of the stadium · Montreal Olympics are causing wof"&es over plans for the track and field events. Victor Gold6l<>Qm, the Quebec provincial g.overnment's minister fori" municipal affairs who has tak~o\ler ,r'5f9Sibili· ty for Olymp •c;.jtructmn, was quoted recen I)' as saying Mon· treat had only .an 80 percent chance or bfin~ ready by the scheduled op4$flil\B dale, July 17. has the final say in makln.g new regulations. Other rule·change recommen· dations would: • . -Reduce all 15-yard penalties to 10 yards except for personal fouls. -Adopt-lhe proresslona nile that any fourth-down off enslve fumble inside the defensive team's lO·yard line recovered by the offense be marked at the spot of the fumble. This would rule out jain1 near tbe goal line on forward fumbles. -Add 15 yards for fOUlhlnl the passer even if the pass is completed. -Permit the center to lift the ball befor~snapptn{.tt as lOllf as he-doesn't nn ll forwifd. -Extend halftime in - termissions lrom 15 to 20 minutes. Under the proposed sudden· death plan. each team will have an equal number of scoring op· portunltles. The winner of a special coin flip will have the op- tion of going on offense or de- fense. The offensive team would get the ball at the other team's 10-yard line in a first--and -10 s1fua- 1on an pf ay would proceed just as during the regular 60 minutes. After the offensiv~ team complet- ed Its turn, the other side would get the same opportunity from the 20. Diiiy l'I~ l'Mlo by ltiCMrcl Duke The swimnaJn g pool, in the main stadh1m t complex, has hardly been slatted. It was held up pending a ~inal decision to scrap the lea~-tower that was -~~ p~ o stand over KWanin sai& he ood ·Univer s ity High's Keith J ohnson (21 ), .Steve.Wood (SJ) apd Bill Halford (25) help apply~pressure 6h El 'Doro's Jl<?b ,Charle§ Tuesday night in South Coast League basketball action. For game details of El Toro's 75-6' win, see Page 82. ' • •• work on the pool ts now about to go ahead. He emphasized that or the 21 sports in the Olympic program. facilities for 19 have been com- pleted. "One more, swimming, looks $5 if it is going to be all right," the president said. Lynn Voted Top Athlete "The critical sport is track and field, which is scheduled for the main stadium. But the organiz· in& c;Q.m!l!ittee in l\lontreal is still conttdertt1t will betla(fy'. ... '. Clark Takes Over 49ers Football Post "We shall have full reports when.U~e lOC ~ee!lmlsJ>ruck ort th.e eve of ihe !er Games next month. The pr enta of the federations for track and field and swimming will be present." For the last year, ever since strikes first put the stadium buildin g program behind schedllte, ~6C has-.rged Montreal to make contingency plans for track 4n<t field. The Canadians have never done so, arg\llnt that tbe atadi.urn Will be ready a nd emergency plans are unnecessary. ' NEW YORK -Fred Lynn, who completed an unprecedent-ea baseball double play this season by winning the Most Valt.table .Player and Rookie of t~ Y.ear awards, Tuesday was '>. nanted -the male athlete of the year by The Associated Press. Lynn, the graceful outfielder who led the Boston Red Sox to within a bloop single of the world championship, received 88 votes from a national poll of sports writers and broadcasters. Fran Tarkenton, the scrambling quarterback of the Minnesota Vikings, finished second with 55 votes, and heavyweight cham- pion Muhammad Ali, last year's Cut by Ste~-ers ··iPe<tt!S<J.n Not Bitter I M\AMI' <A~)'-,, When be was free agent by tile Cowboys, who cut by Pittsburgh b~fore the,. start had some holes to fill in the of the season, Preston P~arson backfield. And he signed for felt little but shock and bitterness more than he'd made with the -and hoped for revenge. Steelers in 1974. ·B\J\ ~tµn, biPclt' ~ntQ the Super "We jw,t looked at the list of Bowl W'itti the' l>allas Co.-bbyS -who was available and what we and ,a.,.U~t b\s /oc.,-qer #am· needed and there he was," Jhates ,op. ill!~ $teelerst..!.... 'bas Dallas coach Tom Landry said. mellow~ hhil , , , "His 6ame almost jumped out "Nafurally was upse( when at us. What sold us on him was the Steelers let me go " the run-bis experience. Of course, we ning back said TuesdaY as he and never expected him to w~r~,into his teammates began thei,r pre· our ol'fenae as wtJJ as he did. parations for Su"r:~Bowl X and . their sh~Uletlli a-·sh . ~~~ ionf~,~~· t' · Be~ter ot "But dQJ}·t~aU.t~ aT_FYenge F R TV game fo~ nfe.'• ~e-ar.ton em-or ams ,._~ ·. 'Jt,.r fqst sJad to be • here: trhat's enpugh for me now. , SACRAMENTO (AP) -Pend· male athlete of the year, was third, collecting 42 votes. OarkNanaed SAN FRANCISCO -Monte Clark, an assistant coach of the Miami Dolphins for five years, was named head coach of the San Francisco 49ers Tuesday to r eplace the ousted Dick Nolan. At 38, Clark will be the youngest coach in the National Football League today. Klnp Tri••ph ATLANTA -The Atlanta F1ames had their 11-game home unbeaten streak snapped by the Los Angeles Kings and Atlanta coach Fred Creighten was thankful for little favors. ''I'm glad to see the last of Los Angeles," said Creighton after the Kings skated to a 3-0 Natiol'\al Hockey League triumph Tuesday night. The club's last meeting of the year also ended Atlanta's six· game unbeaten streak. It was the third victory in four games over the Flames this season for Los Angeles. Rogie Vachon, the Kings' goalie, who had a 3.27 goals against average entering the contest, was flawless in goal, stopping all 40 Atlanta shots. S-'tla tt'I ... INDIANAPOLIS -Stan Smith, trying to regain the win· ning touch that has eluded him since 1973, toppled Mark Cox 6·1, 4-6, 6-3, Tuesday to move into the second round of a trouble- plagued $64,000 World Cham· pionship Tennis tournament. Bob Hewitt put a damper on the rest of the evening's p}ey when he withdrew from bis match with Syd Ball after drop· ping the first set, 6·2. Olpe~ Problem MONTREAL -An Olympic in· stallations board official ad· milted Tuesday that ice had caused small cracks in several beams in the m ain 70,000-seat Olympic Stadium, but added the problem was not a serious one. "There will be no delays at all caused by this." said board of- ficial Richard Normand, adding ·a second problem unrelated to ice had caused cracking of other concrete pieces in the east-end stadium whose readiness for the July 17 opening of the Summer games is in question. Gralaa• Re•ign• NEW LONDON, Conn. -U.S. Coast Guard Academy football Coach Capt. Otto Graham, one of the outstanding quarterbacks of pro and college football, resigned Tuesday. Adler lOda LAS VEGAS-Costa Mesa 's Barry Asher is in 10th place after two rounds of the $100,000 Showboat Invitational •wliog tournament here. Following Tuesday's action, Asher bad rolled 3.411 for 16 games and trails leader Gary Mage by 96 pins. 11 .. •• a .... ,,.,, EUGENE, Ore. -Norm Van Brocklin, a former collegiate star at the Uni~rsity of Oregon who went on to pl'ay and coach in the National Football League, is one of three finalists for athletic director at Oregon, tbe Eugene Register-Guard reported. 1f adopted, the plan would create some intriguing situa · tions. For example, what would the first team to have the ball do on fourtb·and-one at the u ? Would it try a field go4L Jtnowtng the OP· position could come back and win with a touchdown? Or lf team No. l scored a touchdown, would it attempt a one-point or two-point ~on version? Star Back Acco111a11do TabsTCU By CRAIG SHEFF OftlileO.lly~ ....... Orange Coast College running back Tony Accomando ,will play football next season at Texas Christian University, the Daily Pilot has learned. Accomando, a 5·9, 170-pound AU-American who helped guide OCC to an 11·0 record this past season, is expeded to 5ign a let· ter of intent later this week. ''I'm excited about going to TCU. It's a big challenge to go back there and be successful ," says the ex-Westminster High star who obliterated most of the OCC rushing records the past two seasons . "I picked TCU because I want· ed to get away from home and I have an urge to travel. "Also TCU has an up and com· ing program. Last season they were 1-10, but it was a team dominated by freshmen and sophomores. I'm looking forward to it and hopefully playing in the Cotton Bowl game in the next two years," says Accomando. The Homed Frogs are coached by former San Francisco 49ers assistant Jim Shofner. Last year was his first season at TCU. "They run a pro offeQSe and they like to throw to their backs. That's the kind of offense that suits m e best, so I think l 'll fit in," Accomando says. "TCU played one of the toughest schedules in the nation l ast season, meeting six teams that went to bowl games -Ari zona State, Nebraska, Arkansas, Te x-es A&M, Alabama andTexas. "Next season they'll travel to Nebraska, Miami (F1a.) and Ten- nessee an·d the following year they'll meet USC out here.'' Accomando, who rus hed for 1,873 yards in two seasons and scored 35 touchdowns (29 in '75) says the TCU program relates a lot with OCC's. "Dick Tucker <OCC coach ) is not1°"be real hard-nosed type coach. He kind of leaves it up to you to get motivated. And that's the type of pla}'.er I am. I like to motivate myself." The Huntington Beach High junior varsity basketball team scored the m ost points ever by an Orange County sguad Tuesdu njght~ whil)- ping the-Kenned.y.~gbting Irish, 126-84. in an Empire · League game at Huntington Beach High. With seven players in dou· ble figures, Geor ge Clemens' Oilers broke the old mark of 119 which the Huntington Beaeh varsity set last year. All 12 Oilers scored and the reserves played close to one- third of the game. Sophomore Cary Rurt led the Oilers with 27 points. Huntington Beach rolled to a 37-16 lead after one quarter and scored 32 or more points in three quarters. Score by Quarters Kennedy 16 23 21 24 -84 Hunt. Beach 34 23 32 24 -126 HB scoring : Burt 27, Con- tre r as 17, Johnson 13, Steinhaus 12. D 'Alessandro 12, Capocciana 13, Pestolesi 12, Casement 8, Mitchell 4, Taylor 3, Amy 3, Dillon 2. UCI Travels To San Diego SAN DIEGO-UC Irvine's basketball team has had pro- blems against tall teams this season. thus figures to be in for a tough battle tonight when it faces the University of San Diego, here. · ·san Diego has a good club," says UCI coach Tim Tift. "They have a 6·10 center (Gary Ely> and forwards that are 6·6 and 6·7. Their leading scorer is 5·9 guard Eddie Davis ." UCI has a 7-5 record this season with all s even victories coming at home. The Anteaters are 0·5 on the road. Tif.t sars he'll start Nate Jones and Kevin Davis at guards with Sc ott J e nkin s a nd Steve Cleveland at forwards. Either Jeff Butler or Mike Fitzmorris will be in the post . OCC Star Clark Will Enter Cal Orange Coast College offensive tackle Jack Clark has s igned a letter of intent to attend UC Berkeley, the Daily Pilot has learned. Clark, a 6·5, 240·pounde r. earned All-South Coast Con- fer ence honors and was named to the second unit of the J C All· America team. He's a former Edison High standout. · Clark was sought by most of the major coJleges on the West Coast and had n arrowed the list to USC, Oregon State and Cal. Lakers Snap Streak A.bdul-]abbar's Slwt Wins It CIDCAGO -Kareem Abdul·. Jabbar does n't take a jump shot very often, but he's proved he can make it count when he does. "I didn't hesitate to take the shot I did," Abdul·Jabbar said. "I guess 1 tried to mimic Wilt Chamberlain's style. I used to practice that shot in high school a lot, but in the pros, the skyhook has obviously been my bread· and-butter shot." "That shot," a s it turned out, was a 25·foot jumper at the buzzer which lifted the Los Angeles Lakers to a 104·102 Na- tional Basketball Association win over the Chicago Bulls Tuesday night. It was only the Lakers' sixth victory in 23 road games this season. The win snapped a four- game losing streak. Abdul-Jabbar, who chipped in JO of his 35 points in the final •quarter, took a n inbound pass from Cornell Warner with three seconds left after Chicago muffed a chance to go ahead. The lead changed 14 times in the final quarter before Abdul- Jabbar's winning basket . Jerry Sloan put Chicago ahead 1()2..101 with 1: 21 remaining, but ' Abdul-Jabbar tied it on a free throw with 37 seconds left. With 21 seconds remaining, the Bulls regained possession of the ball after losing it on a charging foul to Mickey Johnson. But after using most of the remaining time on the scoreboard. Lov·e forced a shot which fell into the hands of Abdul·Jabbar. Los Angeles immediate ly called time out, setting the stage for the winning shot. LOS ANGELES 1100 -Ford 11, Wartrl!r 10, Al>- dlll·J ebb.lr 3S, Allen H , Untr 7. Russon 7, GOoclrlc.h 11, C.lhoun 2. CHICAGO (1021 -Johnson 13, Love 30, ~lnlcle n . ~nbow 15, Sloan s. Marin 8, uSkowskl •, Pellerson 2, Wilson t. Los An9eleS 73 31 2l 21-10. Ollc.~ 27 22 21 2S-IOZ Foulod out. Ford, Johl\Son. Tot111 fouls: Lo" AMfles2', Ollce9031.A: 6,634. Evert Victorious HOUSTON -First -seeded Chris Evert and second-seeded Martina Navratilova won first round matches Tuesday night on I the women's profes5ional tennis tour. Evert def eat£d Natasha Chmyreva of Russia, 6·4, 1·5, and Navratilova eliminated Glynis Coles of England, 6-3, 6-3. Getting c.iltJU ttielll@elt11 .• was a ing ~ioo by Concress, a bill now decision l" piss the eoaches just on the Assembly floor would litt lid tam.-..~ '" 1 :. the home television blackout of • "Sure1t didn't sit we11!Wlth me Los Angeles Rams games if Mrs. Staabaeh Is Steel-nerved at 't* llm.& SUr._ l wii hurt. 18~tlotets are sold. Upset. Anfix. But~ that f eeUng ·u1e measure, approved Tues- dldn 't last10il¥. 1 vu !'ank!ul day by a 5-t vote. of the Assembly wlM!h Dallu picked me up and Committee on Governmental more tbarikful when 1 got to Oraanlzatlon, set 78,GOO ticltN play." as the .aellout mark for tbe Pearson will be tbe~~Jayer Coliseum. to be 1n three Super · wltb For tbe bill to take effect, ibr" ,cUUer~nt \e~s --:~ . conareu would have to ~xtend BaJWbcft.JI SUper JO.nn. Pit· the anti blackout law apptylQg to ~ t1bur1h .last year and now National Football Leaaue ~ , l~ '' r telloull, The law uplr«! Dec. 31. - Pl'tabutp' cClt tbe Mne-ye.ar Some seats in the Coliseum v~,. [r'm Purdu4"11• mply bHepoororobstruct~ views, so became I b\cl lo0m91\t'tunning the official capacity or the faclll- backs.. He IWJ>~-'Jeared ty as claimed by the Rams has wal\#en, perhapt because the ax been impractical for detumln· fell ao lat§. in the exhibition Jnr a aellout 1 18id Assemblyman aebcin..~Bwmen·wu ll,nid u a vrncentThomas, D·SanPedro. RJCHARDSON, Tex. (AP) - 'lbe pressure is thick now. On. every telephone call On every grocery stol'e run. OD a simple visit to the n~rest bambur&er stand. The telephone jangles at 2311 Prairie Creek u.nt.lf Marianne Staub•ch would like to yank lt out of the wall. "We've bed ten jUUon calls," ahe says. "I bad to take it olf the hoot after the Los Anseles game 10 the kids could 1et aome sleep." The blonde wife of Da.llu quarterback Roger Staubach .scramble_s through arooelY stortl • .-Qllly to be met by well- mewoi Delfhbors. "Oh, I'm Ju1t •o nervous about Sun- day ••• aren1t. you nervous? .. un a netttabor. Marianne replies. "I don't get that nenoua. I wonder why peo- ple don't relax. It's Ju.st a aame. . .l wonder why people become 110 Involved that It doHl\'1 become run?" 1.ife has chanced drastically for the Roger Staubach family from a y~ar ago, when the Cowboys hlled to make the playoffs for the first time in eight seuons. •·we had a relaxed Christmas in 1974," said the energetic motlter of three girls and a boy. .. We bad a son (Jef(rey) born on December 28. Yeah, that was a good year to be out or the playoffs.'' Marianne ls a mirror ol her steel·nerved husband. "Roger rutty doesn't have much of a chanae tn temperament, even on the day of a game. l SUHS that ·s why I don't rattle vtry easily. Of course, lf he did 1 might." But it has been tOURh for her family even to go to a drive-in hambur1er place ... You can't re .• ally relax. . . it geta to be too much or a h assle.'' Understandably proud of her husband, she says, "I feel we are real fortunate that he can sup· port us dolni something be en· joya. ~oo many men are unhappy at what they do and they are trapped with a f amlly to support. We're real fortunate. "I sometimes wonder bow our life would have been lf be bad been in another profession. We ll\lnk a lot about the day he ~ tires. We definitely have a dlf. ferent style of livin~. It's football· foe six months ••. a week to week" thins." llZ DAILY PILOT C,entur)r Fives Battle C'..ocsta Mesa High's Mustangs can st mp themselves as valid contenders for the Century League basketball crown tonight-but it's a tough task. Coach Larry Sunderman's Mustangs must trek to Villa Park where the Spartans (12-3) ar doubly tough at home. Both teams are unbeaten after two circuit starts, as are Corona del Mar and Estancia, two quin- tets favored to make it three in a row tonight ln road games at Fists Fly, HBWins Ry GI.E~N WWTE Of IM O•llV f'llol 5(.eff Huntington Beach High "s race horse Oilers scorc>d virtually un- molestect on lay-ups and shots from under the basket to outlast Kennedy High·s Fighting Irish. 9-l·82, Tuesday night in a battle of Empire League basketball un- beatens. The Oilers broke even in a fight that erupted with 6:49 left in the third quarter, but they lost out overall when both combatants were ejected from the game. The HB player ousted was a far greater factor t han his Ken- nedy counterpart who got the boot. At that juncture roach Elmer Combs' hosts were handling the Irish about as they pleased, roll· ing to a 50 ·28 halftime bulge and still on top, 51-30, when the fracas broke loose. Kennedy was able to reduce the dcfirit to 89-80 with 59 seconds left to play but at that point there was little hope the Irish would pull it out. Santa Ana and El Modena. T\potr is at 7 for each of th~ games, including Magnolia'$ test at 1\1stin. The Mesa-Villa Park confron· tation pits two contrasting styles of play with the Mustangs employing a tou~h inside game around Stan Miller and Dan Byers as opposed to a generally speedier Villa Park crew. Byers is Mesa's leading scorer with a 13.8 average. Coach Tandy Gillis takes his unbeaten £13 -0l Cornna del Mar Sea Kings to Santa Ana and the latter is a heavy underdog to cope with the 1·2 inside P\U\Cb of M Alex Black a rut M Jacque Tut, a pair of juniors. Eltancia's 10.1 Eagles, under coach Dave Carlisle, wW match 6-6 Jlm Mccloskey~ the Oranee Cout area's No. 2 s~ <26.Zl • against 6-6 Richard Ruiz of El Modena. El Modena is at a dis· tinct disadvantage, however, with EBtancia 's KyJe Bischoff and Gary Confer dominatine the back court. University Falls El Toro's Defense Too Toug"' 75-64 By ROGER CARLSON oi u..0.11., Pl ... Staff South Coast League co-leader El Toro. using a suffocating press and effective zone, stifled the taller University Trojans Tuesday night, 75-64, as the Chargers posted their biggest margin of victory this basketball season. Coach Wendell Witt's El Toro High quintet broke it loose at the outset of the fourth quarter after Mark Hill. who seems to thrive on last-second shots, connected from 22 feet with one second len in the third stanza. That gave El Toro a 49-45 margin, equaling the largest lead by either team to that point. El Toro made 26 of 54 from the field with a more disciplined of- fense and got double figure scor- ing from five players, led by Bob Charles' 19. •IT-(7SI ,, "'"' (Ml UlllvtrMt't """ ... 1 0 • 2 Olenes 7 5 l 1t JoMson 'Miile 2 1 2 11 .... lord Slll!lll I l I 5 Polrlet' Mike Hiii o o 2 o McCtr'ds Ml 111 H 111 S 6 2 1' \illlbod Fr•_, 0 2 0 2 EytillOlt Ricker o o 2 o Gntn Helm S 0 4 10 P•teell GretfltllOOd 6 0 s 12 C.lub 3 4 0 10 712 426 3 0 • 6 4 1 4 • , 1 3 7 0 2 I 2 1 0 0 t 0 0 3 0 Toi.is 26 23 21 7S Toi.ls 22 20 23 ... El Toro unlwnlty S<_.,o...,..... 12 ,, 12 19 SC Stops Foe, 53-48 By ED BURGART Of "" 0.11., Pl .. SCllff Racing· Entries · P'Olt WIONllPA Y °'"'· TrllCll ...... ,.,.., ,... 710 .... ,,., a•ua.Plnllttce U CQCtal 6111. ltlt •Ml ttll ltKH PIRST •AC• -400 'l'•nh. 'n•r olds t. lllJ, C:lalmlno. Purae •1100. Cl•lml"9 Price $1600. s.gc,Trovble CT11omu1 121 SclHdY Six <lroottsl 122 Ale.-nltos New• (Nl~O<ktmutl If/ "Tllff Son CMrln 1 11• 0.lldV'S -'-1 ICl~IHtl 119 NO !>ad $on91 (Hartl 121 V.rouenn (Morris) 119 HIQ11Tlde.IP•9tl 119 AosevJ•d'( Richard$! 119 E..S'i' Rockel 18•nhl 119 $U:OND ltAC:E -ISO \'llrdl. 3 .,.., oldmelelens. Purst$1700. HpAToslt (M'(les) 11' Utlle F•ncy Row (Hull I H Mluhnduccl (Trff<el 111 Klc.pu Oofl I Cieri Ht I 111 8UI Goff On lltl<h•rOsl 111 BuuToo IKnlglltl 111 G'fP'Y L.-dy B•r I Brooks! 117 MhtvCMr99r (W•tsonl 117 MollltrMklutr IC•rdoa) 117 Flnallst IMorrisl 1n THIRD RACE -400 'fillrds. l year olOs. ClaimlnQ. Pune $1000. O•lmlng PrlcHSOOO. . Asurlly (Hilr1) 117 SINmCll•reer <Call> 119 Super11ne ITrH surel 119 Kr!IQlll Fllle IC•rdora I 119 IC•rry K•y !Morrison) 111 VouBetSpudlCHHQer) 117 Jus· O.ndy IClerlnel 121 IW>ofl lnllleWesl ILlphaml 117 Thr~e Policn (Adalrl 127 Charger Go ear (Banks) 119 FOURTH RACE -970y•rds.3ye•r Olds & up. Cl.imlng. Purse '1900. Cl•im1ng prl<t $2000. Ml. Tiger Rocket IC•lll 119 Say. Prayer IB•nkSI I" Oi•I Ci.ell IPe911 It? Aw•ySheGoes !Hull 111 Amildlvl <Rich•rdsl 111 .. ~onOecll IMylesl 119 0.11, ~111• ''"°'e " m<h•nl Dr•k• c;,teft VP (Knight l liq Gilll.ehd•d's 8ov I Cruger I 111 FIFTH RACE -810 y•rds. 3 ~·r olds & up. Cle lming. Purse '2900. Cl•1m11>9 Price '4000. Tne l~r•llY employed women -Mission Or anco Bu1119 IC..11) 111 Joe Frar•fr (Tre.cel 11q l'floeb6Gol1m11 IRlchards l 110 Koo4 Pappa ILlp.ehaml 11q Silent Trutment IC:rugul 117 San<Juine's Jet (Clerln e I 119 Knlgl\I ol Glory INl<Odemusl 11q Jucty'sM.ln 1eanksl 111 SIXTH RACE -JSO yard5. l year olds & up. Cla iming. Purse Sl.500. Cl•lmlngprlc• USOO. Owge Tiny I Adair I 111 Night 5'>ftd (W•rd I 110 IN. TOP Tex ILlpllarnl 110 The Oilers shot 61.1 percent from the field for the game. can· ning a searing 82.7 percent of their bas ket attempts in the second quarter. However, Kennedy's inside de- fense looked like something perhaps borrowed from the one our Navy was employing in Pearl Harbor on a December Sunday in ~1. But that was the last gasp for coach John Driscoll's University crew. With 1 :07 spent in the final segment Hill canned a pair of Cree throws, then University mis- cues, combined with baskets by Bob Charles (twice), Hill and Tom Greenwood; quickly upped the count to 60-49 and the Chargers were home free. The win keeps El Toro tied with Mission Viejo with a 3-0 re- cord and sets up a confrontation between the co-leaders Friday night at Mission Viejo. Looking like easy winners in the third quarter. the favored San Clemente High Tritons had to survive ·a Laguna Beach fourth quarter rally before J)osting a 53-48 South Coast League basket- ball win Tuesday night. EL TORO'S 808 CHARLES (10) PUTS ONE UP AGAINST THE TROJANS. Rockel Ml<k IH•rtl 119 SUrf•r SilndV ( Pilge l 11q Huntington, exploiting the fine passmg of Kevin Karkut and the $<'ormg of P e rry Harbin. buzz. bombed the J rish. Seventeen of Huntington's 2.2 first half buckets were on lay.ups or on shots from Under the bucket. Overall. 28 of 41 HB field goals were scored that way. Harbin srored 16 in the rirst lialf and 30 for the game while Spowart tanked 23 and had 12 re- bounds before fouling out with 5: 29 to go in the tilt. Karkut had a dozen assists, Barbin was credited with seven. Ke-4y 1'21 IMI H1111ll"9fCM1 BH<ll ft ti pf Ip .,.rs.en 9 O O 18 Sc>ow•r1 •hn10n I O 3 2 Herbin Ttuckey S S 2 IS ~!ms Dlu 10 9 2 29 l(.,kul lg ti pf IP 10 3 s n 14 2530 s 0 2 10 ""Y l 2 4 8 F1nch•mp 3 3 2 9 S 1 I 12 3 I 2 ' I 0 I 2 0 I 0 I 0 0 I 0 41 12 19 94 (i.ell>f'•IU1 2 0 2 4 Weir ll•stiford 1 o 2 2 Owen TJIOmP son O O 1 O TllornlOll Slhtrer I 2 2 4 L VM Tol•I~ 32 II 18 82 Tol•IS Score by Ou•rwn 10 18 )I) 24-32 20 30 21 2J-94 El Toro 's de(ense was the story of University's defeat as the smaller Char,ers used their press and aggr essive zone to nullify the effectiveness of 6-5 sophomore Roger Poirier and &-6 Virginia transfer Steve Wood. Poirier scored 26 in defeat, but overall Uni hit only 22 of 54 from the field, missing several open shots with haste against El Toro's quick defense. Halos Get Sharon Outfielder Dick Sharon, who never played a game in the St. Louis organization, was traded Tuesday by the Cardinals to the California Angels for a minor league pitcher. T he 25-year-old Sharon played for the San Diego Padres in 91 games last year, then was sent to the Cardinals' Tulsa team in the trade which brought Willie Davis to the Padres . Diahlos Hold On MV Outlasts Dolphins, 31-28 By CRAIG SHEFF OI tM 0.1ly •ttet SUff Steve Sawyer hit a pair of free throws with just four seconds left, insuring Mission Viejo High a 31 ·28 South Coast League basketball win over host Dana Hills Tuesday night. The Diablos. now 3-0 in league pl ay, nearly blew it in the last two minutes. The Diablos held a 29-23 lead with 4: 22 to go, and elected to go into a s tall in the hope of drawing Dolphins fouls. the ball until O: 10 remained, called a time out to set up a play, then got off a shot four seconds later that wasn't even close. Sawyer rebounded and was fouled, setting up the insurance points. MisUMYle.lo U11 ft ti"' tp 4 2 I 10 2 0 1 4 5 2 1 17 1 0 3 1 ' 1 2 3 (21) 0.M Hiiis PlulM>n S.rreno Mllllewlu HoffmM Ct•po Hein .. " "' .. 2 0 l 4 TOUI\ ll 5 I 31 Tot•li 2 3 0 1 4 , l 10 1 0 4 2 2 0 0 4 0 1 0 I 11 ' 10 ,, Mission Viejo 0.....Hllls S<.,.. 1-'t OMrttn • ' 11 '-31 1 • 10 7-2' Stan DeMaggio's host Tritons, leading 42-27 with 2:34 left in the third period, saw Dusty Dvorak and the fighting Artists trim the margin to 49-46 with 32 seconds left to play. But John Witherell sank two free throws with 29 seconds re- maining and Mike Horvatb added one with 10 seconds left, extending the Tritons lead to 53-46. Dvorak, a 6-2 guard who is averaging 15.9 points, almost singlehandedly rallied the Artists. Attempting only seven shots in the fi rst three quarters, Dvorak hit five of nine jumpers in the final period and it was his 18- footer with 32 seconds left that cut San Clemente's lead to three. Turning the ball over five times in the ~nal quarter , the Tritons almost gave away a game they appeared to have well in hand in the third quarter when they hit on eight of their first nine shots. Sharp-shooting Tim Dunham connected on three long range shots in that _span and his 20- footer with 4: 13 remaining sent the Tri tons ahead, 38-26. Having trouble wiU. the Tritons' 2·2·1 zone press Alli hit- ting on only five of 12 shots, the Artists trailed 44-31 entering the final period. Laguna Beach shot 36.2 per- cent (21 of 58) while San Clemente was 23 of 48 for 47 .1 percent. U..-hKll( .. ) .. "" .... &Kon 6 O O 12 Lll)4Klrom 1 2 1 4 OV'or•ll 7 0 I 1• B. Smtih 3 2 2 • Piiie o o 1 o T•ylor 1 I 1 3 R. Smltll O O 1 0 Even' l 1 a 7 Tot.is 21 6 10 4* (53) '"a.-.... """' ... 2 2 1 6 ~lherell SMrrr H•llin.rk ~ Horn th HWlll"OS Tot.ts 4 0 1 8 l 0 3 6 • 0 • " 6 4 0 16 0 1 0 I 2l 7 •SJ S<_,.,o..,... 10 10 11 17-41 13 12 " 9-U But coach Pat Roberts' Diablos turned the ball over with J · 52 left a nd 40 seconds later Dolphin Car los Serrano hit a hook shot. Then a ft er a missed MV free throw Dana Hills' Steve Crapo scored from outside. Sunset Cagers Duel That made it 29-27 with two minutes to go. And when Dolphin Henry Mikiewicz intercepted a pass and was fouled driving for a layup with l :27 left, the gym became bedlam. Mikiewicz, injured slightly on the play. was forced out of the game. Stu Hein, mooting for Mikiewicz, hit the second of two free throws. That m ade it 29-28 -and when Mission Viejo i mmediately turned it over after a poor pass - the Dolphins had a chance to win it with 1: JS left. Coach Art Jenkins' club rnne Los Alamitos High's combina- tion of 6-8 Tom Beckerle and 6-7 Alan Jenkins loom as the big ob- stacle tonight for Marina High's Vikings, in a pivotal Sunset League basketball tiff in the Yikes' gym. It's a 7 o'clock start, as are the other loop games-Edison at Western, Newport Harbor at Fountain Valley and West- minster at Loara. And although the Grifrms have the height advantage, the Yikes oC coach Steve Popovich are con- sJdered favorites due lo their speedier tempo and the deadl.r shooting capabilities. Pacing Orange County's No. 6 ranked squad is tw<>-time All-CIF guard Rich Branning and his 27.3 average. Marina is 12·3 on the year and Los Alamitoe is 8-6. Newport Harbor's last realistic shot at getting Into the race for the title or the playoffs is tonight as the 0-2 Sailors test Fountain Valley's Barons (1-1), the puzzle team of the Sunset League. Western has yet to win in nine starts, b11t could give coadl Uonel Purcell's Ed.lsonChar,ers . a tou1h time in the eonfiDes o the Ploneen gym. Bob Vogelsang leads the Edison attack with a 21.9 average frora hll turd post. Rustlers Battle Harbor Golden West CoUege faces ~ cnlJral Southern California Con· f en.nce t~st tonlcht when the Rustlers host defendina •tate t'bampion LA Harbor at 8 o'clOt'k. . Admission is free. Golden West. a loser to Santa Monica ln ltt first ~erence game. ean get bac:t ln the tJU race with a victory 098 the Seahawk.s (2-0) tonight. Harbor shares the lead with aurprblng Rio Hondo while (;ypras la 1.0 and Santa Monica l·l. The Rus tlers have defeated HarboT (60-$8) in the rmall ol the Chaffey toumey. In that iame the Seahawkl' two bli roeo_..,. C>arlet·Evana and S-'7 Ka lklr· rell-ran Into foul trouble. Golden West la •Parted by S-t frfthman center Paul Schlllecl who comes lnto ~e same with a ~.o scorlna average. He's aho averaging 13 r~bou.nds a game. The Ru1Uer1 will abo start Jack Fletcba and Jay Johnson at the 1uard spoil anc1 Llnn Willon a.Dd Scott Ctart at the rorward1. Harbor Jiu a 16-3 MUOO mark whlle CioldNl West lilM. Terry Gin (WatSOlll 119 O>lc Gold ear (Knlgfll) I 11 Basketball Santa Anita C.lrer•s 0.ndy (Treece) 119 Ouflst T e1r90 IC..rdozai 119 Time and Again ITreuure l 119 Standings SOUTH COAST LEAGUE W.L .• Pl' .. PA EITOnl ) 0 11' 141 Mlulon Viejo l 0 1!1 US ug-Bt.ec:11 2 140 1l6 S.nO-nte 2 1'3 1'3 UnlvenUy 2 111 116 0.M Hiiis 0 l 121 ISi TlltMilr'1S<.,.1 Sen Clefl'ltnlt 5.1. LA9UM Btec:ll 411 Mlulon V,.Jo 31. O•M Hiiis 21 El Toro 75, Unlwr\lly 64 irrl4•r'•G•"'" El TOfO el Minion Vl•Jo LAguM 89•<11 •I Vnlverslly 0.n• Hiiis •• S•n Cl11ment11 EMPIRE LEAGUE Huntington Beach K•lella CyPf'e\5 K•-dy FOOi hi ii Seddlebilck AMhelm Or~ W.L. •l' .• f'A 3070t>ln 3 o m 193 2 I 191 11• 2 I 235 7.16 1 2 lSO 151 I 1 127 14' 0 3 1S5 189 03203139 Tllffd•r'' Scores Foothlll SJ, AMllelm 36 Huntington 89•<11 94, K•nnecfy 82 CyprHS 69, S..ddl11b.cll S6 KA .. 11• ... Or•noe •3 Frluy•1 G•mft Anilhelm •I K•lt ll• Huntington Bt.ec:h •t CrprH~ s.ddlebkk •I Or•n9t Footlllll •1 l(eflMdy FREEWAY LEAGUE W.&.. .. •F .• •A Fullenon 3 o 17' 1S3 l.e H.c>ril 2 I 190 1n l,.owltll 2 1 1'3 112 S.Y.tnM 2 1 235 234 8utN Pilrtl 2 1.. l&S SA Y•llty 2 103 2CW Troy 2 I .. 1S1 Sunnr Hiiis o > 1n 210 TllH4•r'1 S<Wtt SA Velley U, Buen• P•rll S6 '--11 54. Troy •7 S.vMWY 71, Sunny Hiiis 70 Futlwton 61, LA H•br• s. Pr!My'• 0.lftft 8utM Perk et LO-II Fullerton .. S..v•nM LA "-bfeet Sunny Hiiis SA V•llty •l Troy SCC Rolls Southern California .College's Vanguards came from behind with a tough second-hall press to capture a 63-51 basket- ball tiff against visiting Point Lorn a College Tuesday night. Freddie Glaster and Charles Johnson led the Vanguards, now 5·9, with 12each. S.. C.llf. C.I .... (6J) '• .. " . Mllstted 1 I I S ~ • I 2 t ..,..,,,, , , 5 • w.tklns 1 4 ' 6 Glest« 6 0 1 1t ~ 6 0 0 12 Mc:NNI J 0 J 6 ...,..., 2 0 1 • T4Mall 26 1l 1S 63 Halnlme: P,, Lome, »U. Race Entries SEVENTH ltACE -300 yards. 3 yNrolds& up. Claiming. Pur!teS4000 Claimlng price 17SOO. Tne Los Alami!os Chamber ot Com l"wTllwtd•'t SIXTH RACE -Oftfl mlle ~O'd Clear& l'HI lllllu. Allowences Purse 113,000.. l'lrst ll'MI U :>O•.M. Le.gut of C.lllornl• Cll1n. U Delly OoutMt Ofl 111 & 2'"' lbClH Now Ptndlng (Pfet'(t I UEnctHottSUl,7tll&tttlit.<ts Glrllnl..ow (Toro) l'lllST RACE _,.,.., furlongs.' Yffr R•CJllme Glrl IHawlerl olds & 119. Cl•lming. Purse S6000. Slr.enge Royallr 11..•mbertl O•lmlnQ price $I000-$1000. A.A.R.P. H•PPY F•wn (Plncey Jr ) ..... 116 lit merce f.Nsttr ~rge ITrenure I l...edclie Fec:e (Hlcodt'musl CioC.1 King IC..rooial JUil Jim D•ndy IC•ll I Lou'sJel terooksl Mr. Hy.enml9h1Y 11..ll>haml EontoB.,s 1wud1 I Men llCnlQhl) (Adair) 119 119 111 11' 11q 118 119 110 110 ot Rlw nlde. M'I' Escon IOllv•rHI Old Footef' ISemlllnl 111 "' "' 116 '1Gt4TH RACE -400yards. 3ve•r :>!Os. Claiming. Purse '2000. C••lmlng SpuCI P•tcll I Rowles I 116 HY•NTH RACE -6 lurlonQs. 4 Movlmi.nto I Hawley) IOI YMf olds & up. Allow•ncu. Purw Jet Port (Noguezl 114 $11,000 WHletn Tr•v•IClub. PtrM>Nlil'I' Knlghl IPlnuy Jr.I 1 IS Fly Amerlc.en (Cenol FlnlTIOtl IMen•l 116 Prine.Harold (Ar•gonl SnHltY Jeck (Valdel) llS Scie<l•I Dul ISlloem•ktrl T.rronw IC.sped6) 11s Newr Short (Oiarl f'r.nc;ll Rival IMor•lesl !IS ~llOPlng Pine (Plerc111 C.rmeslll ITorol 116 5uc>ef' Tobin IH•wley I American Seoul ICampul 119 GualN !Ollv•rnl Prince Pllaros I Pierce I 11S CMniUI Conti Plncay Jr. I DlelAL•d IMorelul prluSSOOO. S..Qd River Rullah !Cruger) Jftpon (Hartl Luctiy Mick IPilge I Lucky L MIU (Cl•rlsse) Tur Sun INlcOdemusl Lady u Cre!Tlll IB•nilsl Moon Esca1)41de IL1pllaml Mr. 8 Bar (Watson I Looh Lile It <Treasure I Frosty Isle (Rich•rdsl 119 121 119 111 \27 117 122 121 117 11Q SECOND RACE -6 furlongs. 3 ye;ir Slrllle Mt Lucky l'toro) old meiden coils & geldings. O •lmlng Truly Luclly (Howard) price US,000-$20,000. Wes• V•ll•Y &old Wllneu IH.,rlsl lOI 112 113 117 113 I 13 114 117 113 113 117 117 NINTH AACE -100 yards. 3 y11ar •Ids & \IP. Cl•lmlng. Purse $1100. Cl•lmlng Price S1600. Senior Center. Counl of Honor I Ward I Roy•I Armor I Pincer Jr.I Constitution ISl\oemalle<I O\udlelgh (Vtli15<1UH) PittrOitar I Lopez I Ill elOMTH RAC• -IV. mllttOllturl. 118 FHllH & m•re\, 4 ye•r olds & 119. 111 Clnsllltd •llow.encu. Puri.e $1t,OOO. fM• Trax 18.,,ksl Cilorlt Bound ICl•rlsse I King R•pld IH u t) O.wr Adllocale <Y•lderl Cof'Mn NObls IL..embertl l<AJUl'•I (MeMl lzutiorwcorz (Ollv.,es) WllllerWIUI (OIH) Fergus !Mor•lasl Otfktr SI evens <C.mPilsl 8ilM Mt (H•wttr> 114 Otleney's Stock Ferm. 118 Wllllng Milld IShOtnHkef'l 118 CutOHS IPinceyJ r.) 1 It Flekl GI rl (Loper) 111 Sllnk ISmllhl 114 SotltrilN II (C.SCledts.I 111 Joli Ven (Toro) lit ulenl u,.cy lt.embe~I) 114 Af91• (Ar il90ft) 113 113 113 114 118 116 113 IOI lnmen·, \Ao Two ILll>ham I Frencl\Mille (BrookU Thrte M.lrtlnls IC.rdora I Jot Moon Too IAdelr I Ka eoon. (Nicodemus) P•lleen's Dandy <Cre•ger) AJwElltlblt Olu<k Pill ILooezl s.tln Prke IOllv.,esl Soltir Rule< <Men•> IS9Y (Plnc•y Jr.) Ill NI NTH RACE -6'h furlongs. 4 114 .,.ar olds & up tired In C.111. Cl aiming, 114 Purse UOOO. Cl•lmlng price 111 11.~1.000. Pro Scores N.tleul~llAH«liltlte Boston 106, Portl~ 9• L~AngelH 104, O\lc•qo f02 .,,..,,..~O.rlno IRemlrul TMIRD RACE -6 furlongs. J Yffr Quekef' Mfftlno (Hewley l old in.ldtn flllltt. O•lmlng. PUtw Febulous Peppe IOllv•rl'!) $6$00. Cl•imlng price $20,000-t1S,OOO. Elem.I Elnnef'"IDIH I Tllt Lln<Httr. Double Sur1ect (Pln<ilY Jr.) MleAmlc• IPinc•y Jr.) 117 Flwl N•,,.nl 11..0Ptll f>9pemlento IMen.el 117 Peel Box (Ar•gonl Little Hlglll Music ISmllll l 111 Come C.lch Ma !Slloem•kerl Pitm-ne IOverslrffll 114 SaUn Pusage <V•lclell HerSeren.oe (Sellers> 111 Weyt•I• (Pltrcel 8rlgll1 Prism (Olivares I II 1 • s-t 8ubOIH 1Ar•90fll 112 116 Mllw~" I 14, Sea Ille IOI 116 Ciol«Mn St•te 121, Buffalo 101 113 Amerl<MI .. slletbelf Auadiltloft 114 Denver 137. New York 113 115 N•lltftill Hoclltr t.e11que 116 NY lst~tts I, OetroitO 1 U LOi Ange In 3, A tl•nl• 0 116 Montrul 3, WaShlngion 2 116 8oston6, Pltlsburgll 2 116 St. t..ouls 7, Buff•lo3 ' 177 110 '" 117 119 "' 119 119 121 119 Los Al Results Pr~• Court (Howard) 117 BllofS-ts IOIH) 117 Rend's Polley IRowlesl 117 Ms. Al-IH•mlllonl 11• Showtm Righi (Velder) 114 AIM Ell911Mt SMOnlon weeon> Divine Bernice (Mor•ltsl S.V. A t.tme IH•wley I Our Trvd'f IV•l<lerl hJT11Hdty, C1Nf, TrKll f'Ht 1uo 1.00 uo 4.00 3.00 uo uo uo uo Sc retched -Oupe B Sl•rr, P9ppa's u u, W•t• Cl\arg Silent •ACE -350 .,.,,~ l year olds. C•llf·bred, Cla lmlng. Pur" moo. Meet.r's Joy <'Thomas! 39.20 t7.40 14.60 4.20 4.00 10.00 T\lff Ro (~Isl Our~loll CRl<Nnls) Tlme-11.10 Al• ren -Swl119lft0 Sllm, °"9 Sel-, Dtwrt Oevll, Rosr Jo'fous. Oerlln's O.mon, Fl<kle Count. 8uchhNIOlarltV S<r .. <lled -CbluOo LAul«, S...S River RllllM, Jus' 0.ncty, FSS!est Jtl Yet $S IJIK'U -f.Ml~•J'I ,_., & 1~ ,.., ... ...-1411 .. laYINTM aACE -3SO ytrds. J \IHf' olds & .,.,_ Allowance. """9 uooo. Mr, caort O.cll <l•k llel'lbl 31.20 1UO UO w.,.., W•rrlor (CIM'Ooa) 4.00 2.60 Ed 0.. (Ward) UO TIMt-17.90 Alto r.an -Jac:ll Oelcle, "'1ftlle Str-, Bl11<k Tllou9M. lmPftlllwlY. Men F«Now No1<rMCNI Basketball Scores .. " ... . ' ' .. t t 0 ' 0 t , t 2 0 • .. ' ' t • 2 ' .. • • t • t .. ' . ' 1S t 11 .. • . l f -. I J 1 i ' J 1 Saadade Entry . / Newport Clu"IJ Vies in South . Newport ~arbor Yacht Club wtll be represent- ed in thls year s Southern Ocean Racine Conrerence <SORC) in Fldrida by one of the bot campaigner& of the past sea;son. ----- Among the early entries in the fa med Florida ocean racing series is Bill Pascoe's Saudade, the 47·foot Sparkman and Stephens-designed and German-built yacht that won the San Francisco Perpetual and1he Califortlta Coastal race from San Francisco to Newport near the end ottbe year. Saudade also scored high in the 1975 Midwinters and the Pacific Ocean Racing Conference (PORC) .. ANO~HER SO~ SKIPPER who will be retummg to the SORC with hopes ot duplicating his 1975 overaJJ victory will be Dennis Conner of San Diego .Ya<.'ht Club. Conner is listed in this year's SORC as the skipper of Charisma, the famed 54. footer owned by J esse Phillips. Charisma, under the helmsmanship of Conner was the line honors winner in most of the Admiral's Cup races off England last summer. Conner won the 1975 SORC at lhe helm of bis own one-ton sloop Stinger~ designed by Doug Peterson of San Diego and built by Carl Eichenlaub. The SORC victory was the major teat which won Conner the Martini-Rossi Trophy for Yachtsman or the Year. Another was his overall win in the C'..ongressional Cup match racing series off Long Beach. ON CHARISMA CONNER WILL be joined by fellow dub members Tom Tobin, Nick Frazee, J ohn EdgcQmb and John Wright, plus Steve Van Dyck of New York who was the navigator for Bill Ficker in the 1970 America's Cup defense. First race or the SORC is the St. Petersburg to Anclole Key. a 103-miler that is a warmup for the 370-mile St. Petersburg to Ft. Lauderdale race, the longest and most rugged in the series. The St Pete to Lauderdale race is schedu~ Feb. 4. On Feb. 13 the yachts move to Miami for the 176-mile Ocean Triangle race, followed by the Lip· ton Cup race Feb. 20 and the 176-mile Miami· Nassau race Feb. 23. Final race of the series is a short day-race out of Nassau for the Nassau Cup. THE SORC ANNUALLY draws some of the fastest and most famous yachts in the country. It is known as the "world's greatest outdoor tank test" for new yachts as some of the top designers feature their <.'reations for the first time in the series. Also back this year for a second try at the over- all title will be Ted Turner, the young Georgia millionaire who recently purchased t he Atlanta Braves. Turner was the winner in 1974. Last year he sailed his 49-foot Frers-designed sloop Tenacious to first in Class R a nd seventh overall. He also sailed Tenacious on the American teams in the Admiral's Cup and Australia's Southern Cross Circuit. Aussie Yacht Leading Race SYDNEY, Aus tralia (AP> -Australia's six-meter yacht Prince Alfred led Sweden's May Be X two victories to one with after Tuesday's third heat in t h e American Aus tralian Challenge Trophy race. The win by Prince Alfred skippered by David Forbes makes Patric Fredell 's task with the May Be X more fiddi cult in the seven-race series to decide the challenger to meet the U.S. d efender St. Francis on Jan. 22. Initially, Tuesday's race was called orf by the organizers of the Royal Prince Alfred Yacht Club because of heavy seas. But it was held after a protest by Swedish skipper Fredell. May Be X led by 26 second s at the first windward mark. The Swedes got into trouble on the tight spinn aker reach . which enabled the Australian yacht to round the wind mark in front of it. Prince Alfred won the race by one minute, 20 seconds. Wedneeday,January 14, 1978 DAILY PIL.OT 8 3 'Gnats' to Veetor Pest Title? 1.1 atLLSCRBEIBEJl .......... .., .......... Orange County Supervisors Tuesday took a swat at the cowtty Mosquito Abatement District's proposal to chan1e its name to Vee· tor Control District. The urimary definiUon --OV.'vector.:• -is ",a qua.nu. ty of direction usually represented by a straight line." But the secondary definition is "an oraaolsm that transmits a pathogen." The word Itself ls from the Latin for "carrier" SUPERV I ORS waded into the semantic battle with the argument that the average citizen i.&n't loo familiar with the. primary definition of "vector" let alone its secondary meaning. The district was or· dered to reconsider its request witb an eye toward several alternative names pro- posed by supervisors. District Manager GU Challet argued that the state law only permits use or the names "mos- quito abatement" or "vector control" in con- nection with ~uc-b dis-. trlcts. HE CONTENDED that health officials in the county have used the word vector for 10 years to mean any kind of pest that can carry disease. Sup~rvisor Thomas Riley sald he thinks the people would be "better served by the title 'Pest Abatement District."' But Challet said the l a w 4 o e~n · t.. a l 1-0w supervisors to complete- ly eliminate either the word .. mosquito" or "vector" from the title. Supervuor Ralph Clark intervened with the suggestion that the h tie could be changed to the "Mosquito and Pest Abatement Dis trict.· thus retaining the re quired name artd adding anew one. T II-Jo;. A-NA fl E-1*- supervisor contended that the law, in his in terpretation, permitted ~uC'h additions lo the name. Orange Freeway Neighbors County Counsel Adrian Kuyper agreed with Clark's interpretation. but noted that other sec· tions or the law seem lo permit the title to be anything supervisors de- sire. Deity 1"11.tlUlt ...... MORE EXOTIC? Supe rvisor Clark OC Seeking Noise Solution Kennedy Honors To USC A USC sailing team h eaded by Benny Mitchell beat Stanford Monday in a special match race to determine which would be nominated as a Kennedy Cup <.'Ontender in this Orange County government may join the City of Anaheim in legal action against the state over its failure to reduce the noise impact or the Orange Freeway on nearby r:esidential areas. THE COUNTY BOARD or Supervisors Tuesday ordered County Counsel Adrian Kuyper to begin talks with city officials "to see if there is anything the county can do to help." City officials have ~n up in arms since 1974 County Pair Get TerTn,S in Bilking year's Naval Academy . LOS ANGELES (UPI) at Annapolis. Md. . -Terming him "an out. The Trojan sailors Jawwhohaslittlerespect beat Stanford two forthiscourtorhisfellow straight in a pair of citizens a federal judge wi~dward·leeward ra~es Mon d ~ y sentenced sailed over a 12-mile James Oondich to four course. Skippering for yea rs in prison for St~nford was Peter ma stermindin g a Skinner. scheme which bilked in· said to have had virtually no finan<.'ial backing and operated out of a New York apartment and a San Francis<.'o answering service. Crary sentenced Zuber to 18 months in prison. Guthrie will be sentenced next week. over the failure or the state Division of Highways to install any kind of sound attenuation on the new freeway, which currently extends from Katella avenue to Pomona. -s The issue heated up again early this year when city officials and residents protested the lack of sound deading measures on a new stretch of the frf'(>way between Katella and the Santa Ana. Tuesday, Supervisor Ralph Clark, whose dis- trict includes Anaheim, said, "We really have a very serious problem here due to the unbearable noise." "THE STATE IS laying a concrete ribbon in people's backyards without any kind of protection of their life and health," Clark added. Clark noted that supervisors sent a resolution to the state in 1974 urging that sound attenuation on theOr~nge Freeway be made a top priority item. He said the state put it at the top of the list but when money got tight last year dropped it altogether and proceeded with construction or the new link without any sound attenuation. BESIDES THE order to Kuyper to investigate the possibility of a joint lawsuit against the state. Clark asked that the county Environmental Management Agency talk to the state to see what steps, if any. can be taken to ease the noise. Clark said the name <.'hange request r e· minded him of a boys· camp employe assigned to clean toilets who <.'ailed him s elf a "<.'hemical engineer." "I GUESS they figur€' vector control sounds more exotic," Clark quipped. Lease Mark IV < ? --J:;:() -0 ~ 3 Only Exec. Cars WWleTheyLaat Santa .\na lint-ola ~ltart·ury :i17-4):il I C R E WIN G ON tbeTrojan boat were Don Jesberg, Kevin Kearns, curt Olson, Bruce D'Eliscue, Rick Martin and Scott Birnbirg. vestors and financial in· ~--------------------------------------stitutions of nearly $1 Orange Coast College is the No. 1 nominee for this year's Kennedy Cup. USC and Stanford were battling for tsecond spot. THE KENNEDY Cup is a big boat regatta sailed annually in Naval Academy yarls. The top prize is a trophy dedicated on behalf of the late President John F . Kennedy , an avid yachting fan. Monday's special race was sailed in Cal-40 sloops off Long Beach. Race <.'ommittee for the event was com posed of Ted Roelfs ma, Los Angeles Yacht Club; Charles Kober, Long Beach Yacht Club, and Charles Merrill , Alamitos Bay Yacht Club. million. Dondich, 42, Santa Ana, was convicted last month along with two other men of conspiracy a n d i n t .e r s t a t e transportation of stolen securities. They were ac· cused of forming sham companies attempting to sell sugar and other com· modities not owned by them. U.S. District Judge E. Avery Crary also fined Dondicb $70,000. He was allowed to remain free on bail pending appeal of hi s conviction. Also convicted were Edward Zuber, 34, Costa Mesa, and Sy Guthrie, 45, New York. The men were Wriggling Critters At Meet Bay City SANTA ANA -You're invited to com e and meet Bag D • a snake personally at 8 Irl next Tuesday night's meeting of the Sea and SAN FRANCISCO Sage Chapter of the Na· CUPI> -The tras)l and tionalAudubonSociety. debris gathered by San The 7:45 p.m. meeting Francis<.'o's $17,000-a -will be held in the year street sweepers no Spurgeon Room of the longer will be blown to Santa Ana Library, Civic the wind. Center Drive and Ross A persistent problem St. For More Good Years In Your Car Steel Belt Radi als for fo reign Cars ''G IJO(~ + .C, """1.00fJ ,\Ii If lirr SJ.., l4~SR!? I ;sR!4 ii. IS~~Rll I\~ R, •• lb~SRIJ l!)' Rll '1 1m.1111 I• 1•111~ ('.'38 ..... ... ..... .. ~ ••• , ,It,, u ll ' .. ' J.., n •• r, ' J J ,,,, "(uV!ioo Bell Pol~gl:,i, .. "Polyglas" Radial \\'hitewalls \(Jtt in .cwm lo fit \ '"'' f'u" s35 s55 ARI-I· 6Rl8 ll OR'S l~ CRIS U FRI~~-r.R1e !~ <..Rial HR/8 IS JRIS.l > LR'o !~ Plu• J:' :1 r~ ~11 Lt. r Cf .. tkpen.~"' 1 \1/f'~ll'!I WIUT('flAllS 1•11 '-I .,.,. Big Po~r Boats Popular at Show in this breezy <.'ity has The program will in- been solved by a decision elude a presentation on The trend in outboard motors is back to power to supply plastic bags to snakes , their habits, andspeed. ·contain the sweepings their markings and WW PRICES ON POLYESTER hPo"er Scrcak"78 For Large Ca~ I irl"I for Small C:i1" But according to the Big Four in the trade _ until they are picked up, which are harmful and Mercury, Johnson, Chrysler and Evinrude _ effi· instt>ad of leaving Little which are not. Some live ciency still is the keyword. l heaps along the street ~:i~~. also will be ex- Their exhibits at the 20th annual Boat .Show at ,_;;:g~u_tt_e_rs_. ________________ _ the l..os Angeles Convention Center indicate strong- ly that the energy crisis has eased .. MERCU RY, FOR INSTANCE, reveals that the higher horsepower engines actually use lower r .p.m .. thus cutting down on operating costs. Johnson lists a full line of 43 models in 16 power <.'lasses at the show which runs from Jan. 30 through Feb. 8. Included are 200,135, 85, 75, 55, 40, 35, 25, 15, 9.9 6, 4 and 2 horsepower models and 12 and 24-volt electric fishing motors. THE USE OF alternators and electronic igni· tions is another step forward, according to Chrysler, which is also featuring lighter weight models. Evinrude follows along with a V ·6 powerplant that weighs half as much per horsepower and de· velops nearly twice as much horsepower per cubic inch as the V .4 of 18 years ago. The Boat Show also has the latest in every other phase of Marine life. Davis Connnodore Peter Davis, a staff commodore of Newport Harbor Yacht Club, has been nominated as com· modore of the Transpacific Yacht Club, sponsor of the biennial Honolulu and Tahiti races. Formal eJection and installation of officers will be Wednesday night, Jan. 14 at Long Beach Yacht Club. Other flag officers nominated are Walter Hof· fman, NHYC, vke commodore, and Hugh Rocers, Los Angeles V achl Club, rear commodore. Mercedes-Benz loWer leasing costs ••• SALE STARTS THURSDAY JAN. 15th 10 A.M. llDODTMTIM.&.A&Mft •• nYU. 17th & Irvine Alie. • Westcliff Plaza Newport Beach · 645·07C2 . . ~2'5 f1814 r7815 " GIA 14 (,18 IS Hl8 l4 ttlS.lS blac~wall Plw,t.J4ilf0\1t)flT. ;t'Of"d"t;"'" ih •~Old""" W"lftWAll 11.1 '>! mo:.1t SJJ ,.h11ew~ll plu Ill fl I J"dOidt•rr Al8 lJ BIB ll c;i 14 \\idr'ln•ad' for Cam!K'" • hC1•1knl tor l.il!hl lruclo,\, IOO "('""""I h· \IUu" S6010lb5,8PR S65 121•~ &I'll s70 rm~ tn S65 101~' SPR s70 I' I&\ An s75 111&~. lOPR r1u U 4• IO I":",,._ r ( r rrv Nl•ft& " "'• •l'lf0'114 '"" ~~s f lO!I rJOl~ f~114 "'Ii r.;o II Gl{).I) GtoO 14 .i .. \.'(io)f ,, .. ,, t 1 "°'"°,., "' .... Jfllf •··· Auto Senice •.. for more good years in your car Lube, Oil & Filter Front-End Alignment s9ss ""t~ \Qtl N ~•'°' br'IM 11nwh1 "''°" oit • t 't11111•1d•· 1 hb .,\ lt1bt 11 _.11o.n ml I ..... ,,~:r Afttf 1 lh I • It• ltt\ t n 1Urt• lon)l "'°''·'""• 11Aft\ A mom", q1'" I 1~• 1j11tm.11\1 ~ • l'I• ""'' 11h0r1,. lo• ,.,, rotnlm•n• • lntl•det lipt truck• SIJ88 .. ,11\~,.,,a, ,..,.,,,,,, ··-ft(..,·~~, .... ,,*'"«•·· GOODfYEAR • f 1m1il1 Ir• 14n '" \h, tt'ff 1'htr1l"'t·rt 1 1 r '' .,, '"''''A"' tirn m1lf,.Jt~ 1n1t •n•t 11 I•• .n~ i1l1,h• • ltit11uo1~ 'tf1111 ni1•f1 th•''' ti, •·'\jlNh n1 rd 11n1f,. .. 111, .ti• ~''"' • ri mr., 11r1 t1\t110 ..th111,• m1111 7 Easy mos to Baj • Cash • Our Own Cuatomer Credit Plan • Master Charge • American Express Money Card • Diners Club • Carte Blanche • 8ankAmericard GOODYEAR TIRE CENTER NEWPORT TIRE CENTER COSTAMISA.flt~ITllACH I 596 Hewpon ll•cl. .t 16fll St. .. . 548-9383 ttew.:w....M ... 1 • W .M 1000 I. eo.t Hwy. COllOMA DIL MAI 644-1022 • • 8 ;j DAIL V ,t\.OT QUEENIE EVERY KNOCK tS A BOOST ly Phil lnterlancH o ..... __ ._., •• .._ __ _ "All except for the colftt!'. Airline Offering Bagels? MIAMI <UPI) -Na- tional Alrllnes, nearly back in full operation Jtter a strike wlllcb idled. it$ 55 jets tor mose than four months, is trying to ·lure passengers back by turning its aircraft into flying delicatessans. NaUonal cooked up ane'tf food scheme called "deliservice," which ol- f er s t o first -class passengers on certain fllgbts a cart loaded witb bagels, whipped cream c hee se, sala mi sandwiches and special breads. In addition, the passengers' menu will be • • ~6Predietl0a -. . .. . EirlDs 'Slow' · On· Expansion W ~HING TON CAP> -For the second straight year~ businesses expect to buy fewer goods in 1976 ln expanding their production anamat1reUng f acWttes, the gov.ernment-annou . - The Commerce Department said its latest 1ur· vey of spending plans shows businesses expect to spend $119.P blllion for plant and equipment tbls year, an Increase of '6.19 billion. BUT BUSINESS leaders also expect th~ price of capital goods to increase by 10 percent this year because of infiatlon, and this erosion in the buying power of the dollar means the actual volume of machinery and other equipment purchased wut be doWD 4 percent. the department said. ~.._........,,.._,,.._,....,,..-.,.._.....,,..~_,....,,,.~....,......,......,~.._..-.. shaped like a bagel, com- plete wtth hole. The expected trend is a maje>r reason economists expect slow progress in reducing un- employment. New production facilities generally mean new jobs. E conomists also consider business spending a key factor in sustaining recovery from recession. The res urgence so far bas been powered primarily by consumer spending. LM.Boyd Guy~' Gripes Ahotit Gals What girls most frequently find wrong with their gentlemen friends has been reported here. Now comes research on what men object most to about girls. No. 1 on that list or handicaps, they say, is 4. unpleasant disposition. No. 2, moral standards lower than the man's. No. 3, in- ability to have children. No. 4, something other than good fooks. No. 5, a r e- ligious faith not the same as the man's. Batches of men queried also objected to girls who had been divorced, who bad experienced premarital sex, who had come from families the men con- sidered inferior, and who seemed less in· telligent, less educated and less well-to-do. Our Love and War man says he fails to see how this list differs all that much from tbe women's complaints. QUERIES FROM CLIENTS Q. "What was the first building owned by the " United States govermnment? A. The U.S. Mint in Philadelphia. It went up in 1782. Q. "What "How long can a pack camel un- der a heavy load tra .. ·el in the desert without food or water?" _A. Three, maybe four days. Q. "Don't the female patients out- l\Umberthe male patients in hospitals? A. Over age 15, they do. Ry three lo two. Address mail to L.M. Boyd. P.O. Box 1560, Costa Meso92626 ·Order Yours NOW •' • • • •sTYUSH EASY TO USE 1000 • ORDER FOR YOURSELF OR A FRIEND SH,E ANO SIZE 0, LAall. Mt•. John Doe 1ll Mein Sir••• Anrlown, Anr•t•I• 123•5 •• Llltelt Do Not Han A ftrlnlef hrder. Stylilh Vogue typ• ~" fi"• qu•lity whlfa 9vmmecf pepor. -~-~-~~~----~---~---~ flll I"""~. dip etMI aW ... S1.50te: rMet ,,.,.. .... L*' Dt.., ..... Offk.e ... 1 Uo C..t1 Mew. C.lffwnJa '262' ~ . . .. . . . . --~.----~~~--. - THE MIAMl·based carrier also will sell hot dogs, pi zza, beer sandwiches and potato chips to its "no frills" passengers. However, a National spokesman con· ceded the service is in response to similar treats offered by Con- tinental Airlines, a com- Just Book It On U"IT ......... Margo Law exhibits bicycle powered by a new gasoline powered Tas bicycle engine, which is on di splay through Sunday at the 34th annual Sports and Boat Show at the Cow Palace in San Francisco. The Tas engine can be installed on any bicycle in minutes and gets 200 miles per gallon. In its report. the Commerce Department said plant and equipment spending for 1975 is expected to show a $1.09 billion advance to $113.49 billion when totals are finally t~bulated. But an inflation rate of 12 percent for 1976 in the capital goods sector means the volume of purchases will be down 10 per- cent. petitor in the Miama-to------------------------------ THE LATEST COMMERCE survey of spend· ing plans was taken in November and December, . about when most bwiinesses put finishing touches on their budgets for the year ahead. The survey was the first covering the full year. Houston market. • National returned to the air last week after a 1Z7-day flight attendants strike. Getty Oil Suffers Fine In a s urvey taken in October and November, Commerce had asked b~inesses for spending plans in the first six months of 1976, and the replies showed anticipated spending at an annual rate of· $119.5 billion. "Deli-service" is not the first time National has been involved with offering its passengers something diHerent. In 1974, it offered free cocktails t o its passengers, forcing com· petitor Eastern Airlines to follow.. The so-called "booze war " e nded within a few months. For Honoring Boycott Commer ce said the t;>iggest anticipated spend- ing increase for this year was registered by public utiHties. where spending plans call for an 18 percent increase. That jump follows a one percent decline in NOW THE three major airlines on the Miami· to-New York run-Na- tional, Eastern and Delta -all off er free cham pagne to thei r passengers. Competitors indicated, however, they were not going to rus h out and match National's bagel· and -c r eam c h eese service. PSA Gets Rate .. Hike . Approval SAN FRANCISCO (AP > -Pacific Southwest Airlines has been gr anted a $10 million rate increase and was ordered to establish a discount fare between Los Angeles and the San Francisco Bay a rea. The regular commute fare for the Los Angeles- San Francisco Bay area route will be $25.SO com- pared with the current $22.50. The PUC set the discount fare rate at $20 for reserved space and $17 on a standby basis. The State Public Utilities Commission also authorized in· ereasa to bring the Cares for United and West em Air Lines up to PSA's rates on competitive routes. Western was granted the same rares as Air California on. the same routes. Air California fares will be raised 50 cents per passenger, in- cluding tax, on an in- terim basis. Hughes Air West rates will re- main unchanged since the commission action fi nalized increases which had been granted earlier. WASHINGTON <UPI) -The Co mmerce De partment said. the Getty Oil Co. has been fined a maximum $1 ,000 for honoring the Arab boycott against Israel. The department said in order to sell oil field equipment to Kuwait, Getty signed ll document stating, "We certify that the goods listed are not of Israeli origin nor do they contain any I sraeli materials." THE LOS Angeles- based oil firm is the fifth U.S. company to be fined the m a ximum civil penalty of $1,000 for failure to repor~ a re· quest from an Arab country to participate in the boycott. The Department re- quires U.S. companies to report any attempt by a nation to boycott another. The regulation ·Mercury S&L Tells Of Growth Huntington Beach· based Mercury Savings & Loan Association re- gistered a 1975 asset growth of 32 percent to $245,784,420 at yearend, while all other growth in· dicators also reached re- cord levels. Earnings r esults for 1975 showed a total ·a!ter- tax income for the calen· dar year of J 975 of $939,865. up 597 percent from 1974. Fourth quarter 1975 earnings were $399,562 compared with a loss of $90,383 for the like quarter of 1974. This represents 34 cents per share for 1975, com· pared with 5 cents for calendar 1974. Mercury registered a new record savings total at yearend o f $179,938,958, a growth of 40 percent compared withyearend 1974. Anaheim Company Gets Rocket Bid The Data Systems Division of Datum, Inc., ln Anahei m, bas been awarded a contract ln excess of $1.3 mUUon by the Air Force Rocket Propulsion Laboratory at Edwards Air Force ... Ne~FJr111 Tells Accord Newport Pbarmaceptlcall In· ter••Uo••l lne. and Oel-1mite S. A .• P-11, ia•e •naoanced tbe GOmplttiaa ol au~ a1reement for Newport•• Anthlral o6111pow'<l, laoprlnoaint. Oetalande wUI develop lild market iaoDrhMilme In Ftance and ~ ot1'er t'OOfttrles. The aareement covers a computer-controlled data acquisition and communication system for seven test sites and a central site. Deliveries begin this month. The new Datum systems provide si'Jl1al condJtJonin1 and h11b· accuracy1 .hl1b-speed data acqwssUoa from a •arlety of lowlevel transducers , The system,a also provide automatic se lf- calibntion and correc· UoD throcaab aopblsticat· ed harawar e an• IOftware t~b..nlquff. Datum abo provtdet the operalin1 system, acqultltlon, qulck·look and eommuntcationa llOftware !or the lmtalla~ Uon. was not writte n specifically for the Arab boycott of Israel, but it has been most widely en- forced in this context. Getty did not contest the allegations in con- senting to the order and fine by the Commerce Department's export ad· ministration office. A COMME RC E spokesman said fines are imposed only after a company has been a re- peated violator of the re- porting require m ent. money spent last year. · OTHER INDUSTRIES reporting .relatively sizable expected increases in dollar spending were textiles, 16 percent; paper, 15 percent: rubber, 14 percent, and the food-beverage industry, 11 per- cent. Anticipated increases from 5 percent to 10 per- cent were reported by the motor vehicle, chemical and petroleum industries. Over The Counter NASO Ustiftc)5 TMMI qUOlellons Boo411 Np 26'h UV. Ee5tmt 1S'h 1"A llltrst Cp 6~ 6'• NII CnvS. 8 8'\lo Wp Tots 33 34 Univ Fds 17'1> II sUC>Plled by 1M N•· Brenco 1 20 1t Econ Lab 28'h 29 le So Ulll 2J 13111 ~1 1.lbty JV• l~ So C.I W\ 11v. 11¥. Vence Sn J 71W •lli 110<\el Assocl•llon of Bf'lnlP.s In 111t t EDS NU< 10 11 IVAC CP 12'1> 1l NllMn Sv 1'I 30 So CnnGs 19'"1 2011• Ven Oyk 6'1• 6~• Se<urltlfl Outers, BrMOv f •'lot •'19 El P•so I~ 11 Jacob Str 6 1 ~II Ullfl 12\-\ 12 Sine! 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U Y, SuCltr El 4'14 S'At hr Co 111/J l2Yt skin; end do not c..m Ta9 JS"4 l61h Fa,.,.,., Br 17 17YJ l(el'n Tk •"• S'4 Nws NtG IV. IV. Tally 0-p 1 4Ya •Yt lgt Wt ••.i. 6V. rt!M'ewnt actv•f c:.non Mr , ... IS~ Farm Gr StV. 60"4 Kelly Ser 14 u~ Nolltll Co 12 12'1> Tempel! la 31 1r"9 M 7 ,..., tr4111W<tlons. Certlo Co ltV• 20 Flft9rllt 311> >~ IC.e~r 19"'4 20Yi Ocean Or 30 >0"4 Teyl« W u>; 14~ lest Pt 4 41' INDUSTIUAL.S Carp Pap 10Yt ll'h Fsl Bostn t7V, 11\lo l(ey Oii• 2:14 ,.~ Ocean Oii 111'-12 Tttll\Mt 24th 26'h KyGs 13'4 1w • AND UTI 1.ITI •s Cn.ltf Bk 101/. 10~ Isl Ta Fin ·~ 10\lt IC«yH l"b JA~ u-~~~ . E~x 1'2~ ,10,~ TT1effll'lel!!_ In 1,2 ·~ 1,3..... tt r FCld .,_ 43'1J Tuelodey CnMl9 RI •Ya •'-Isl Untnc; JS JS"° l(eyst Int ""' ,, ..,......., .. "" n .. , .., .. r I~ 1614 January 1J,, 1'16 C.n VIPS 12" 13'" Food Tw ASYJ 47 KMS Ind 2'~ l '4 011.llvy 19 1~ Towle Ml 9•.r. 101/• II t I 2S 25'h a id Ask Cent Tele S~ S:V. 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Peul Rev 13 13\4 UnArt Th ~ 10 Wright W J" 4 Alllll\ Phr 16tt. 17 ,,.,,., t42'h c;.1..., Tr S'h 6\4 L.ewsn Pr ~ 20'1) Pytu CAls 241/• 25 US Suger S4V. ~·1t Ytllo Fri 38 Jl:V. Afltd enc 19\\ 19'• Chubb Cp 361/o 3~ Gelco Co llV. ll:V. Lewter c 12'1> 1J Pay N -Sv 2S"' 2Sll'I us Tri! I. """ 131/t ZIOM Uth 18:V. 19¥4 Allltd Tel p l't 11'/o OI FrChk 71'h 'llll'I Gn Autm 6'.l• 6~• uiv Boy IS-" 16\.\ Pe Enlrp 14 14'h OTC JU Oil Active Am Aprsl 3"'4 • ..._ Cltz ~ 6~ •~ Gn AutoP 2"'h 21"'1 t,.ttwy Fr 14'4 IS Peflz Off llt't 12•,.. S.ocll vetlllftt 8111 AsMd a.. Am E•pr 40V. '°'\lo Olin~ Ut 291/• 2':V. Gen Bind ll:V. 12'1> L..eo!ltl Pl IV. 81/o Ptl tta.H 11¥. l2V. Am Ex.,.-ess tSS 700 40V• 40¥.--11; Am Ffnc:I 6.... 7 Clll UtA 29" 30'1' G Energy l2t/a 12'111 LW Olmp S•h 6 Pltlroltt d7'h 69 PtM Ofhh GH 8S'300 11'/o 12\lo-1/o Am Fltlh 1S 1S>oi. 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Godfrey II~ 12'h Lynden T 10 11 ~ '"" '"' Mervyns 1>4'900 32 33 AmOlkl 18 20 Comm Ct IS'Aa 16 Gold SFd 17'1'> 1l'h I.yon Mtt ·~ I~ l'SN C.r 10"'° IOfll Oolll Emp Ins 1>4'400 9 t'h-.. ~ Anheusr lS.,. 36\lt Cml SMo 1•'h 21 Gould Pu 28:\lo 30'1• MOtrml 6111 7\1) Putn C.p .,. S _._ Ape.co 11 19 Cwt NtOS I~ 16"4 G<hm Mt I V. 91/• Mad Gas UV. 13:W. OU.kr Ch 23 U N'"SD y I Tod 7 ""S 700 ... T1 P 2 ~. Ta• ts• .. ts... I Rlty "'-en CA 21Y. 22¥1 " 0 lll'fte ay • · • • • • • • • • •"" • A•dll M., 2V. 2'h Cmw •'"' 74.,. ~·~ .,.. .. .,. 1'16 I 1·16 r...,m Ad'tenc:es . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. .. .• 471 Arvfde s SVJ "'4• Avto 12\-\ ll" Grey Adv 7'\ '"" ,.. ..... ~ D.<11 s •SS Auo C~fa UY, 1'Y. Clllrvls SV• µi. ~rd Pk SYa ~ Meltlckl 4S:W. 44Y. 20S 210 ,.. •••.•• ' •• ' •••• ' •".' •• ~ 3~ 3~ Conn F 1 :\lo JY, WI 9"' 9'19 #Mntwc 221.'t 14 lte'flftO 101/) ll'h UM/\aft9td ... • • .. .. .. • • .. . •• ms ~ll s1J1' loir. l1"' Conn Ge':. J VJ l, t4Ktl '"g.' t v. 10•1. Me.rlne c 2S'h 21 !UtM Pee ti'» • Totel ......... ............ 2509 A1wc1 ou 7'h 1'4 ens P•rw ..,.,, so"' Htlln EW •~-. ~ M1rl1 Frt :1v. >:Y. -.C09 EQ • 614 Gainer. and Lo1ers . Baird Alo 3'4 3:\lo Q)nj Wet 11 It\.'» Hemil Bf' IOY, 1114 Mary Ky UV. IS,. Rffkn Lb 24\.'t 2S GAINEAS S.ord wr 61h 7 Cordis Co 20 22 Heme Br 13 14 NIK. Ctncll 3S'llt l6'h Re9' Belo 11Y, 12'h 1 Jones l..l\19h W1 S-16+ 1·16 Uo 2S.O Balutr Br 2" 3 Go\lslns I'" 2v. Harper R l 'h 9 McOwl E • 6'h Rito Elec 21:\lo 22V• 1 PropTrust Am l 'h+ 'h Up u.o Bak.-Fe 11'1• 19v. Cross Co 1Jt/• 14 Hamm 7-l41 1'11 McQu•Y 12 12~ ~II Univ xt:\lo 91/J 3 NU ConwnSlr a + 111> Up n .1 Ba~ I. Wh IS Cur1 Noll 14:\4 IS'lt Hewtll Fl 7llli ~ MlftlW U"'° ISV1 RepUb Tll 27-2tV• • Sltv kn9Mn Sk 2 + '\\ Up 23 I Bel Pelnl tlV. 14'~ Otnl lnll 19V• 20 t4tnnd F \9 It~ Med<m 2 2Vl "9• PIH 6 ·~ S lntBkW• A .2.S 3'h+ ~ Up 21.7 8en90f' H """ 13'1· Otrt Org 11Yt 11'41 HHCtl c 14 14:\lo Medtrn u v. 27 Rt• p Pr 9V. 10 • fltllllps Geo ,,.,,. + Ho Up 20.0 Bkam Rlt 6V. 6:\lo Otle 100 7 7V. Hlobe Co 14~ 154 Mtrchnt 1S'h 1'V. "9yn &R 1S'h 6'h 7 Unkepllel Co 3't. + VJ Up 11.2 &.ln1 Geo 9:\lo 1ov. OaY1n Ml 2''h 31 Hffyw Pk 12\4 13 Mervyn 32 ll flllvll Ml 221h 23'1• I lnlBnk W• .2S 3 +7-16 Uo 11.1 &emel Fl tlllil 12~ Ot•n Fd1 23'1< 14V. Hon lndu 1JV. 14\Co Mt'f9r F r 17,. llV. ROid Ell 441/• 47 9 PowrRtgul .70 9'h+ IVo Vp 1S2 Bauetl F 19 19¥. Otcls Oa 3"" J,,.. Hool! Or9 12 12'\I. Mlfi.t' HS •on S'h Robrt Ois 21 22 10 Ttltsc:ltnees ..... + "" Up H .7 Beyless ,,,.. '" DtKtb AR 31¥. ~ Hoo...r 1214 t?:W. tiAllllCIC>r cs n Rolllns 8 22 23 11 SCI Systtmsln 3 + ~ Up lC.3 8tollty 0 7'h 11/t Otlhl Intl 2'4 3YI ~r Cp IS'h 1'11• ~Silf• A 41 44 fllllellr Ptl 10 11 12 "-'d'Mtk~ Co 314+ • Up u.o Be~ln Cp 6'h 7 Otlu .. C 26't. 27 Hunt Ml9 ll'h 1214 Minn Feb 1\41 '11\ fllvsl Slov 14~ ts'h • l.OSIRS Betllly l.s U'llt 14'/t Otem Cta 13'11 14\lo Hyett C •"' Wt NIOolll Cp 19 20 het'er 7YJ l 'I• 1 ()ptel Corp IV.-1 Off .0.0 e.u ub 4011. 4 t Df•m Hd 2~ 3lli H~tw C 121't 1l Moru In 20\lt 22y, llOll In lllh 12V. 2 Rom Am Piiar I -1'h Off IS.I 8'YQ Can 6!111 7 OQll Cn1S1 l 'h 2\!i IMS lntnl 7~ 1fli Moore Sa 16 17 otl Inn 'lie l't. J 01911 CmpC11t1 l'h-V• Off 14.J Bibb Co 714 1~ Oocut•I 7'1• n" Inda W•I 20* 20~ Moren 8r 21/t 314 o«sL. G ti.\ 2\-\ • ~tlOele Corp 4\le-" Off 1U Biiiy Kid s sv. Oollr Gtn 9'1• 9~ lndS Nucl 3f'o Clio Mtn'lsn 23" 2W1 rlpps H 20'1> 2111; s Fartd•y Libs l:V•-'I• Off 12.S Bini Sons 17 90 l)oMtdS 17'h 1e14 lnfOl't• 3lh 3~ Mo\ttc Co 10 1Ml • Wrld 1''41 13\4 • LterPttrl 10k 3V.-Y, Off 11.1 BlkHI Pw 37'h ll'h Oofch Gs 9•h t~ Instr Leb N 6'4 Motion In 1•'111 UVa ::rrch 10lt4 ""' 1 .._r11SMl9 .10b 2 -V• Off 11.1 Block Do 9YI! 1~ Oow Jolls ,,.,., 30•4 Int.re En 91/• 10V. Motor Cl 3 31/t sir 27 27!\4 • Ffrs~r11SI Pd 2\le-'A Off 10.S BlutOI s 1 7'14 Doyle 08 10'"' 10" Intel Crp 71 nv. Mt. Smllll 12-. ta\111 tlP Mio\ 35\4 9 1steomRI .Ob • •on-II) OH 10.0 8MA Cp 9\41 101,._ Duc.omn 7"4 l'h lntmt OS 12¥1 UV. MSI Dela 2:\11 31/o -314 3'11.o 10 \llctrl1 St1lf0<1 19~-2 Off 9.2 Bob l!vns 1''1• 27V. Dunkin O 4lli 4fti In BkW A l'h n't Mv!tlme 141h U'll lll'NI Al 2W. 21,. II APolbm Food 211>-\4 Off 9.1 BoN!ma 131..-13"'° Earth SCI S S~ IMersll 3¥. 414 NtlBy Pd t•Yt I• mpson 1'1.t. 1714 12 Huof\H ~UCllY 71/J-~ Off 9.1 MUTUAL FUNDS . . 14. t876 s DAIL. Y PtlOT DI Wednesday's Afternoon Pricee NEW YORK S'EOCK EXCHANGE · A.re . lE -edit Atls Half the Story? By SYLVIA PORTER , (Tltfrd in a Sttlt.1 .._ • A dream come true ... This ~uti(uJ ColoniaL Homatead, easyto l)uy, down payments are low, as low as s percent! ... Seven spectacular models, from an unbeard- of $21,995 to $38,995, $475 down on contract. only 5 percent t«al down payment." Or· ~ . - "Just Wnk, your oWh custom-bullt and malntenaTice free lakeside vacation retreat ... Just $125 a month and ~~·down. The full prke $16,499.. •• Includes house and THEY SOUND DMILIAR -yet these are h7potbeticaJ ads prepared by the Better Business Bureau of Money's Worth Metropolitan New York ' to highlight !or you how ...__.~'------~ !he ads violate the disclosUlle rules or the 1969 Federal Truth tn Lend1ng Act and its subsequent amendments. Among other things, flus Jaw requires that lf an ad· vertiset' mentions one feature of credit ln an ad -such as t~e down payment total ...!... the ad must ·disclose all other vital terms, such as the number, amount and period of pay-ments that follow. Ii:t the first ad, for ~lance, the down payment was mentioned as a percentage and the cash price. The ad also should have revealed number of payments (lB 24 36 etc.) amount due each period, period of payments (~eektY. moo: thly. etc.), and annual percentage rate expressed as a "per- cent " and labeled ••annual percentage rate.'' · In the se~ond ad, the same disclosures stiould have been !11ade. Also, it used the plir'ase "full price" -but that was in fact, the cash price. "F\rll price" would include interesi payments and would be nearly double I "UNFO~TUNATELY, SOME ~dvertisers are not aware o_f their obligation to disclose credit terms under tt)e la~. _while others simply do not believe the consumer needs this information," says Woodrow Wirsig president of the New_Y~rk BBB .. "But an intelligent consu:Oer does need the credit i~ormahon and businesses advertising credit must supply ~t. Check all ads fof full disclosure, as one means of evaluating the company.)• · Don't take anything for granted. You cannot expect the media to check out each ad completely. They haven't the tJme, personnel or expen knowledge. The best way to pro· tect yourself is to' be sure you understand the terms of any deal you are considering. In the automobile financing field in particular, and in· installment buying in general, credit double.talk is a real threat to the innocent consumer. · "Instant credit.'' "credit: guaranteed," "ne credit ap-plica_ti~ refused" or "qp money down" -all these should be dismissed as come-ons. The advertiser who lures you with "no money down" may in fact require you to obtain a separate loan for part or all o! the down payment in order to qualify for this "no money down" offer. IN THE AVTOMOBQ..E leasing field, ads will multiply this year. A sample: "A luxurious 1976 automobile, $217 a month, equity lease, minimum maintenance included, 'addi- tional maintenance optional.·• Basically, there are two types of aoto leases: "closed· end'' and "open-end." The open-end tease is also known as an "equity" lease. Under this open-end or equity lea_5e, the lessee may be required tq pay an additional expense at the end of the lease period based on the price at which the vehi· cle may be sold at the end of the lease agreement. Accord· ing to BBB standards. when a specific rate is advertised, this obligation, if it exists must be advertised. . But frequently, '>it is not -even though the obligation may run into hundreds of dollars. Watch but for this pitfall. ' # Be wary when leasing a car of such phrases in ads as "full insurance," "adequate insurance," "fully protected." These phrases are nearly always meaningless. As for such pledges as "full maintenance" or "Maintenance by us," these should mean that you, the customer, are not obligated to pay for any type of maintenance. • FINALLY, BE ON guard against claims that there is no· cost for credit -often made by stores in low-income areas which sell furniture. The charge is there, probably hidden in the purchase price. Under a 1975 amendment to the Truth in Lending Act; ads for extension of credit repayable in more than four in- stallments must,,unless a finance charge is impqsed, state that "the cost of credit is included in the price quoted for the goods and services." By no means do all businessmen obey the law. Ugly Fish Looking ·Better to ·consumer NARRAGANSETI', R.I. (UPI ) -An ugly buttasty fish thrown overboard by North Atlantic fishermen may hold the answer to the area fishing industry's problems of dwindling income and depletion of well-known catches. University of Rhode Island marine bioJogists are trying to develop a market for the firm, white fillets that come from fish known as ocean pout, mutton fish or yellow eel. THE SCIENTISTS said New Englanders with a yen for fish cb.owder and baked fish may have to switch to the underused but plentiful species lik~ ocean pout becaus~ cod!· haddock and noundea: are rieart,y depleted. sirable species, especially at a time when traditional fl.sh stocks are low. rt is readily caught during winter months on neanbore. erounds," said resource specialist Stephen Olsen. ORI said several restaurants, a New York flab broker and regionally located stores or a major supermarket chain have com· mJtted themselves to market-tna the nn. Tells Loss .. IW YOlllt( IUl"I) - ,.. ........ ~,,. -tht ..... 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Yt ... l"rW<t 17 t1 1~+ Yt ~l~JMJ6Yt+~ 91-'llld . to II 6S -Yt ll*kt.O, ti ff9 »141 + .... atelr.MWI .II t u .-+ Yo l.91 S IO t.C~+ "' "" 11 tf7 ,,..~. v. ltU , t M ,,..,._"" I ., so: ,J ...... .. ti 430 ~·-. 10 .. •'Yt• lo\ YI 1J a. 1.$ +1 • 31 t i.At-" 4 IM 10 1& ,,.__ Yt ' t~,c•• i .. 1l000 IS +1¥1 .tostf:Df 1.11 ~ r• ""' + "' tic :I: r 11: ,;~ +° \4 t ,~-.~y, ~ ~~!1~ URI prof e1$ors used tasting panels l() colftl)are ocean pout with traditloqal species. Dr. Sollman Sbepouda srud lhe 1>81'llclpant1 could not dist· Jnaw1b bet~een pout and nOl.tkler. Sixty famltles asked to sample th'e fl.Jh considered itdellclous •• I 1.:1J:14 ,,;; It~ ~ For QUarter =~ ! a n:1 ! I OfW 1.JID 11 M 1"" .. . . F11let1 experimentally · placed on sale ln local market. ldld well at a p,rlce bet.., St:'ff and $1 .89 per pound. I ( ~.ft' ' .,, .. . Irvine-baaed VTN Corp. re-':lfl J: ,~! ~ ported a lOt5 f Or the second fil~ 1 WA I H tJ\li + "- caJ qua.rte.r ended N~ .~. rm·~;4 ~ ,:t ::: R ..a J•" -it Ct II 1'1 11'~+ I evenues were -· ~.-r •.·.· 111~ ,, +." .. com--red to $8,628,412 !or t... ,. · ,~ peri~.~aded Noy. 29. 1974. .ii:·· 1 t "·.~ 'rh• company reported an ~ :: n tt"' + ·~ after tu loN of '407,653 or 3' 1:: '' ,;:~ --'· nal'l.1barecompa~toa 1 n Mt,, • ~lut _.. ln IJ IJC »•+ proflt of $1.886 and zero • . . . ,. ~ ... come per 'Mare for the llk.e ~ r-ST~!'-quarter~flscal 1974. I~ ;o-,\,+ Fiacal ·lt70 fiaures •re c.-... • • 11'6+ ~ baled ont .199,303..,._~ ·~;t l J:: i standil"I. 'J'lhere were l.2ll ,900 I'm 1:• ', ,~~ "' &har~ O\l~tandlnJ during the ~ ·r! 12 11 mo. ,,. aatneilertodlnftsc•U97S. .• '-·*'~ J t~~ :.: ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ P.{ lflaal ClCM 0.0 ' t 11GJ Clow (1>9 ' f l!Wltl t.. ("O I' t (r.&J C'-~ ' ( 1•d ) 0-~ c.n. si.• n ..s ,..,. °""" 111 41.\ 1 .011t .. v. 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WI= .JI t 4 ~l' • Wll' ... s 144 Jltll+ ~ .a.. 2 .. -..a Tni""'9 A$d • 10 Sf'lt + =~:~~,. !:~. •:ra.•.. too • Wll ",_ •J, • --- WIK ii • "" , . ~.l'f· ii r,:•: .;;c ,, ... ,.~. 'MtcllfJU .. 1 .. 4 w.evWl.aM I • ~.At I SI t4"• • n s t ,. u ... J ~If": --All"W " ,.._ .. ~,-.... .,,..., c:.r, fl '4 ·-•• n -l=i¥'T j~:' ... ·i n": ..,. 1 9t 'f .... ~ns,n •t: \ 88 CWLY PILOT Wednesday. January 14. 1971 Tonight's TV Highlights Quintet Bailed in. Laguna Concert KHJ fJ 8:00 -"Destry." A later (1955) version of the western classic with Audie Murphy in the role created by James Stewart. KCET @ 9:00 -"Beyo.nd the Hoz:iwn.' · G-O raldine Fitzgerald and-John Houseman head the cast of this Eugene O'Neill play focusing on the struggle of a man and his nature, and the tragedy befalling anyone who opposes his destiny. · CBS 8 11 : 30 -"Twilight of Honor.'' Richard Chamberlain and Nick Adams are featured in this 1963 movie. r TV DAILY LOG \.. pendinc a111nsl his land·dtvelop· Wednesday ment employer. O ~ @ m Doctus Hosp ital Evening .. Lullabye"' A policewoman "#1th a b1 a1n tumor reluses lo believe that JANUARY 14 i.he needs suraery until a dedrcated neurosureeon s~ his personal 6:00 €1 8 ~()\ W El:) Ci) News concern lor her. { 3 1 (I 111 l.3JJ.'ll (6 1 Ntws (!.)Wild WUd Wut 0 Bona nu 0 (~ ) (1) G) Biretta "Mur· ( 6 Fam~y Alf111 der lor Me" Baretta Ines lo trm O Ironside down a conlused youne man who, 0) P1rtnd1e h mdJ alter sl1y1n1 a doctor he belte11es m Ad1m·12 responsible for his son's death, ill Soledad sttms btnl on lurther vengeance in "26 ('9 a ) Star Trek 1 surcll for sell punfation. tD Ht1maey Eruption (R) '12; Mow: (C) "Tiit Cllllk ~nlen" ED little lluuls (dra) "64 -Deborah Kerr. Hayley Molls 6 30 6, 0) AllCIJ linlhlll Show (!) The. Bold Ones 10 Merv G11ffitlt Sllow fl) Vmua 17 3 Hoaan's HtrClfl ::i6 Mowie: (C) (lllr) "Piranhl. ,,. ID E.lt<111t Comp1ny ( 19 a ) lm Alllenua Style rulll" (ldv) ·72 -Wiiham Smrtll, El:) l"op liots tl1t C.Unby Mna Caprt. ED li1llOP1ftl li•urmet m T11t1trt tn Amtna '"Beyond the Honzon" £u1rnt O"Neill"s play con- 7:00 U 0 0 l~ m CD Nnri cerns the st1ucate of a man and hrs l lronstdt nature. and portrays lhe 1nev1table O Bowline tor Dollars lraeedy that befalls 1n)'OM who OlJ·· 6 Bonanza pol4?S lltS destony. Geraldme f111. 8 To Tell the Truth &erald and .IOhn Houseman star w1lh I Concentration the Mc:Carter Thut1e 1n Pnnceton, I Lon lucJ New Jeney. Tbt FBI rrf Q) Gunsmokt !:lO W D CIMfu Ell LI lobl 10:00 ~ii' Love Americu SIJlt U GEORGE KENNEDY IS ED woman Alive! •• •· *THE BLUE KNIGHT!! ! (;l9 a ) 8onanu ED Dramatic Series •• U J1i Cil (§) Tiit Blue Knight A ED The Add1m1 f1mily deraneed u ·convicl. blaming Bump. er Morein lor putt1n& him behind 7:30 bm. methodic.ally hires a profes· U BOBBY VINTON WITH s10111I killer to urry out his rmnce. *ARTE JOHNSON & OOO~@ El:)Petrocelli '"Jub1· TANYA TUCKER lee Jones" § Bobby Vllltta Show ~ ~ IDMI~ News 1 m Nuat Tlllt Tune 0 NEW TIME FOR love Arntncan Style 8 let's Ma•e A Oat * THE ROOKIES The Protectors O Tilt llootits '"Sudden Death'" A 10 Tiit !"rice ls RICht onetome prrSOMr of.war beheves m B11dy Bulldt tlllt Mike. I former rt$(ue pilot in '23 6 J list of tllt W~d Vietnam, left him to suffer at the ID C1tywatdms hands of the Viet COil& and plans CD Don Rutl1n Sllow 1 b1m re rndhod of punishing the 8:00 U 17 (I) To111 Orlando and rookie. Dan The cnt of the popular Hee «l) W'lldlife Advtlrture Haw show cuest. (Q!) ) (}) ED Stusty l Hukh Q 13 6 NJ El:) little House on 10:30 fl) Trn PatiMs t-e Prairie .. The hlkmc "4ach1ne'" W Ntwi lauris lnc1nat1011 walh a new fangled tape recorder turns to em· 11:00 I @O @I) m CD News barraumenl when 1t broadtuts her · ~~I ~ :l~ Nnrs love tor lhe ne"# boy 1n town. vn• o •IOU< .. o O Movie: (C) (2hr) "lhe ln.intlble I f1le HoneymooMrs SI•" (dral '/O -Stuart Whitman. • Dart Sllacfows me Sommer, Curt Jurgens. Mary Hartman, Mary Kartman 16 Mod Squad Thm S1001es 0 (~ 'BJ) rn CD l'llEMIERE Bi· (rij (}) S.rvival onK Woman Surgery and b1on1( or @ Ct•bat . gans and limbs have saved Jaome ID Rtbtrt MKNtil ~eport (Lindsay Wacner) alter a nm l1tal (~ ) IAvt Alltrl(.ln Style s~y d'V1n1 ilteldent. and now she m Cillt .. 34 fm~rks on a neY1 but double hie ll:JO t)@ (}) C8S lite Movie: (C) Y.~r~rnf as a schoollu cher. !Jle alSJ "T.wpt of Hono(' (dra) "63 - ta~es on top secret missions for the Ricllard aiamberlain. Nrck Adams. nme iovernmenl agency. OSI. I Q)@®l m Jollnny Canon w~.c~ wpemsts Steve Auston. the Tiit Httlty-11tn '· • M•ll•on Dollar Man This eprsode 6 Mo¥it: "Mai from Cocody" • pan II 9f ·wekome Home Jaime" (dra) '65 -Jun Muaos. Pan I •n seen on The S11 M1llK>n O<llP CJ ) Cil Widt World Movie: Onllar Man ~Dead Man on the Run" (R) An in· 0 M~lion $ MO¥ie: (C) (21w) •oa. vest1111Jon into the murder of ii tr(" c .oes) 'SS -Audie Murpl!y. ~al aatnt uRCOYtrs 1 plot lo Jt was just as well that the Secolo Barocco quintet agreed readilY and amiably Monday night to offer an encore or two to th@ir Laguna Beach Cbamber Music Society audience. For there is little doubt that these flawless Frenchmen, had they m ade any other d echiion, would have been detained in the Art Colony under lock and key until they bad made some further at· tempt to satisfy the Lnsattable desires of a delighted audience. They gave us magriificent chamber muSic from the firs{ encha nting notes oT the "Jacques Tuem et quintet to the rousing Vivaldi that so splendidly con· eluded the official program. IT WAS NATURAL, OF course, for the group- drawn from the Cront desks of the Orchestre de P aris -to stress the French contribution to t he ehamber music repertoire. The Loeillet quintet, as we have noted, is an ad· mirable work, rich in melody and constantly re· minding us or the noble role accorded to the harpsichord in seventeenth ;century chamber music. ·· No less delightful was the Trio in G minor by Francois Oevienne, another French composer who tends to be sadly neglected in today's cham ber mus ic repertoire. Heaven alone knows why in the light of a vivacious, exquisitely scored work that ·Reward Offered .For 'O z' Costumes . BANNER ELK, N.C. (UPI> -A $500 "no ques· tions asked'" reward has been offered for the safe return of eostumes worn in the filming of the origina l "Wizard of Oz" movie. The items were stolen from the Land of Oz Museum Dee. 28. The State Bureau of Investigation and local authorities are investigating the possibili· ty that fires, which destroyed two buildings at the adjoining Land of Oz amusement park on the same date, were related to the theft. A dress worn by the late Judy Garland in the movie, plus some ")funchkln" cos tumes and a coat worn by the movie's "Emerald City gatekeeper" were among the missing items. Producers Pull Out Of Oscar Telecast HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -Richard Zanuck and David Brown have bowed out as producers of the annual Academy Awards show March 29. Zanuck, son of movie mogul Daryl Zanuck, and Brown, husband of writer and magazine editor Helen Gurley Brown, are two of the most successful film produeers. Their recent hits include "J aws" and "The Sting." They said they were "terribly disappointed and have told the academy we'd like to do the show next year:· but "a major production for Universal Studios will occupy us full time during the period the Os('ar show is in production." Academy President Walter Miris('h named Howard V. Koch, who produced three of the last four Acade my Awa rd shows, to replace them. .. * * * * JACK NICHOLSON'S PERFECT TRIUMPH!" ~ar~ €/~;'.~; ,.! 0 Exciting New Series! eoom up a politiul assassinalion 1 * "THE BIONIC WOMAN" Peter Crans. K1thenne JustaGe and PREMIERES TONIGHT! c:~;! ~~rts star. m Cron Wlb (:J Mftie: (C) "It's a Do(s Lile" (E) Mod Squid (ci>m) 'SS-Dan Jauer. Jett R1th· E!) Hews ard1. 7o Gunsmokt m'llost l Mrs. Muir ffi mrn:ID Mort Mu51< from As· (!) ~ Slllart • pen 12:00 0 Twill1llt z-U1 Cl\1111pionsh1p Wmthn& 0) Mo¥it: "'Caslllh" (mus) "48 -ED J1p1ntst un1u1ee Proa11m Tony Martin, Marta To<en. 1:30 ID Mtvie: "Orden to Kill" (dra) ID For Music and Comedy '59 -Paul "'nsle. Eddie Albert. * J B M ·1 12:30 0 M.,timy llFO orn arry an1 ow, CU Mtvle: "A Sirt NIMll TallllM" and Stiller & Meara. (dri) "63 _ Laurence Harwy, m .. "" Gr1tt1n Show 1:00 B til (i) ~try m TOMOffOW @ W1ldhle Adventu1t ~Au 9:oo 1:1s e Mtwit: "fla111hlp fllM" (d111 U CANNON HOMES IN ON '49 -Join CrlWlord, Zachary Scott. * GIANT LANO FRAUD!! 1:30 'rr, (}) ....ir. "hid ii r.r (d11) U 11 3 ·a c.n-'"House of ·so -R~ Cumm1n1s. (.uds Pernell Rot>ens gue11S u 2;00 ID All.fl!pt sai..: "last Days ti iln m ountant whose d1~ppu11nce Po11111tli," "TIM SMtllene(' I\ t111nc1dent1I with the mulh·I 3:00 e Movie: "SMMll Yldiml" (d11) m1llton.lfolla1 fr1ud 1nvtsll1al1011 ·43 -llim Huntu, Tom Conway. Thursday DAYTIME MOVIES 9:30 0 "Modof ,., ~,.. (mys) ·~ -Ha1el Court, Kt1tll Andn (C) "Otlt Sunday Alte,_" (mui) '48-0tn nas Mor11n, Janis Paree. 10:00 00 ''h kt C.rt of MJ Utt1t lilfl" (d11) 'SI -}tanne Cu1n. 12:00 ID "Tht Clt<i" (rom) '45 -ludy Gartand, Robert Walker, I :00 0 "Oclry .. I HIP Sdleel "'* .. (dra) 'S9-A1ut1 Sand1, Ronald f0$· ter ~~ "Slit's lact .. .,..._.,.. (mus) 'S3-Y1111nia Mayo, Gene Nel· son 3:00 0 (C) "Sasbtdlewall" (adv) 'S4 -Alan Ladd. Slltlley W111ters. 6QI (C) "T...., ' .. MitlllMltt" (rom) "67 -Debbie Watson. 3:30 0 (C) "T\t ~ ., CMll'1 Jatllt(' Cond. (com) '63 -Gleftn f0<d, Shirley .lone$. Ronny Howard. 4:00 ClJ (t) "Mdlale'1 NnJ" (com) '84 ::Crntst Bo11n1ne, T1111 Conwly, KOCE Television (50) l I ' .• ti TPte1tre tot tlmul ~llTltutre lortlmH I "WclY L•DY" IPGJ .,.__OCll HOU..lS' SMA.ITH MOnm-' IP'Gt "SUMSHIME IOYS"' CPGJ '"f All THI MOMIY AMD IUM" "MAMO.AMY" .... "'OMCI II MOT ..,.,.... llJ -, DA TS OP THI CeteCMl Ill "'CtfllMA TOWW" taJ TOM BARLEY Music Box was particular ly well r eceived by .a capacity au· dience. TIDS WRITER 'S PERSONAL preference - and it is hard indeed to accord preceden~e over some magnificent Bach and Haydn -was for Jean· Philiepe Ram eau's Cinquieme Concert, a glittering work of subtle nuances that can often escape the less accomplished group. Nothing esca ped the Secolo Barocco. Their "llOTHH. CAH YOU SPAii A DIMlr .... NTl.Y1•41 "1IOYAl k.f. SN" .,.., ...-+m.Yt:H =--o~- TllAVll Fly us. Anywhere In the DAILY PILOT AnetMim • 635-7801 MEN WANTED l'ltr11t ~ tlftll laltt t.Ll CMllX1 !«ls l'llM1'•~"CIOMUff f'Mecl~Ctftlot!UI [qiefotnet .. rh Wl(!OIVJ lllCtlldiMtf\. KJ<llt/ Mio HoD11tt1t1 llo~nts CollilinldM It' U1s UIHI Wtftl. c~ For hcl htllln &SMwfilHs UA S.... c..t 544Mlt4 PWt C1tJ C:..-6J4.t2U Hwy. H DI-I._ la 5J4.4m The masterpiece of bizarre love that stunnd France. A portrait of love and submission to disortkr the senseJ. Att ... ll~J A.rtlSl.s TU/east -® NO Otl( UltOVI tOllllTllO LA MIRAO.A WALll·IN 8ARCAIH PRICE 11 SO MOHOAY lllru $.ATUllOAY lht •PI Hohdar•l 12 30.5 00 lf -•1 -.. ,. lolN .... l .... ""'"' ...,. l•-· ., ..... ,... _,_ . ...._ IOI MY Al1'BMOC* • ......... llOWI•• .. ,. 1/1• _, ... -.. , ..,..._.. llUl1'1 • -----COIMllATION,. -~-··-· .. -IOUlf ltOfdle • IHI -WAY J IAYI Of M COt•OI • IAOI NICHOl..ION • fAYI DUHAWlY OINATOWN 111 .. ._ .. "...-' .. 5"ClACUlAI • TMlllLUNG THI ASTIOlOGH 111 PLUS • SUUGHTtl HOUSI 5 111 -·,..·---· •N ,.,. flo" .... I tl • fro h i , ho I •· ""' 111'1 II I 0 19'tlllAll IOffCft tMllll(I 1.afl 11 flH1 • IC::."7 WWCilAL -...... 911.0W•CMUlllmM .. 11~ t - 1 u..• ---""'"' ..... IOI MY AnBNOOll • ,..._ llOW11HI NOl "' .._..._._ UIC'nun .. IACI wmt THI DMlt11 ·--·---· 9"(!.c\IUI. ~. 1MI ~•. ,LUS e JOllACllWI• Rameau was u tter perlection. an eloquent and splendidly delivered rendition of a work that, in the right bands, ls incomparable. LADI ES AND GENTLE MEN, the Secolo Barocco: Michel Oebost, nute; Jacques Chambon, oboe; Alain Mobrler, violin ; Amaury Wallei, bassoon and Joel Fernand Pontet, harpsiehord. But let them share the s potlight ror a moment with the organizers of the Laguna Beach Chamber Mustc Society, lt you wilt. We are fortunate indeed -to have such purveyors of rnagnificentmusie-in our mid.st. "MaROER ON rnE lllDIT EXPRESS" IPG) J:S0.7::15 "THE PARALLAX VIEW" (R) ""THE KIUH EUn" IPGI "SHAKOUT .. 2:00-6:05-10:10 "TM ASTROLOGER" (R) "f\,ESH GOIDOM" "CHWLEADUS• Ill Z:l0.4:1 S..6:00- 7:4S..t:l 0 "tCILUI JOICE" "PRIME cur Ill ''kttlER FORCE" (R) Z:J0.6:00.t:JO COMTIMUOUS R OM I Z:lO SAT. THIU JAM. 4 "RHURN TO MACON COUNTY LINE" THE CIW SHOPPING CENTRE ORANGE •532.5721 . 0.7:50 ~ CITY CENTRE CINEMAS S.A. FRWV ~MANCHESTER EX.) G.G. FRWV (CITY OR. EX.I "KttlER FORCE" . .. THE ASTROLOGER" l :OS "RmlRN TO MACON COUNTY LINE" 6:1S.t:40 "ff.ESH GORDON" IRI "THE CHEERLEADBS" "\.ETS DO rT 4G.AIN'' "DOC SAVAGE" '-rHE ASTROLOGER" CR) 6:00.7:50.t:JO ''KILLER FORCE" "STRAW DOGS• (RI e n SOUTH COAST PLAZA THEATRES SAH DIEGO FWY. AT BRISTOL SO.COAST PLAZA ~1111 SO.COAST PLAZA •aoa .. c. SCOTT. -IAIOCllOn "HINDENBURG" (PG) DAil Y MO I. 9tJO 5A 1 /SU-I :>O..l.40.~t45·1:SO.t:U FREE PAR><ING JAC• ICHOUOf' "ONE FLEW OVER THE CUCKOO'S HESf' IR) DAtlY 1 >O I. .-o 5A T ~U-1 ·IO.N S.9cJ0.7:4S.10:1 S CllEllAWD THIEE ~:·~~, GEORGE SEGAL '"THE BLACKBIRD" OAllY 1.0 SAT~~I 11-5:00...45 "ROOSTER COGBU~N" DAl\Y •·41-tO:JO SAT/\Ul"-l-"4S.. 10:)0 "DOG DAY AFTERNOON" DAILY 1:00·10:1$, SAT./Sl)fj. 1·3S-1:00.tO.U "DROWNING POOL" DAIL V 1:20. SAT.ISUH. l :50<i::IO "STORY OF 0 11 CXJ 6:45-l:JO..I 0-.25 SAT /SUM-I :J0-3: I 5-S:OCM:4M :l 0. I 0-.U ~~SAT.OMLY--l:lOP.M. HOW FAR DOES A GIRL HAVE 1000 l'OUMTANGl.E HERTINGl.E?? SEE T1I •UT, UICEISORED -35 .. Piil$! © ADULTS ONLY COlOR ..... -PLUS THE SECOM> MOST FAMous.· ...... AOUl.T FU OF OUR TIM£' ... OM.Y oiMGE COUNTY SHOWING! Wednesday, January 14. 197'6 DAILY PILOT 87 'BioniC Woman' Flexes Limbs 'Returns' By VERNON SCOTT HOLLYWOOD (UPI ) ·Barbara liersbey, the tender. s~~t·faced ~ct.re.s.s..wb~o~chwa~n~g;cu~_._ her name to Seagull and lived for seven years with David Car· radine;. has resurrected bdrself andbei:.career by dFoppingi)oth. At aie.21.Barbara has returned to the main stream, wiser, more beautiful and with a J-ye~-old son.Free. · She is even starring in an establishment movie, "The Last Hard Man ·· with Charlt~n Hes ton and J a m e s Cobu r n for 20th Century. Fox. + T h1 e transformpti- . on in Bar1ara is elect ic. HUSHEv She has os t weight. Th,e earth mother !Well has evaporated. No longer aoes she wear tattered denims and ragged y blouses. S hd i s posse ssed of a newfound serenity. i THE OLD IMAGE l.J~GtRS on, however. in the minds of pro- ducers and ca~ting direct<?rs. many of whom don 't even waht to interview the former Barbara Seagull. "All of that is behind me now ," she said softly. ''I took the name Seagull after a very personal and profound ex- perience. And I destroyed it by telling the s tory so many times it lost its meaning for me. "We gave the impression we weren't serious about our acting. If attracted attention but not the kind I wanted. I want to attract attention as an actress ... BARBARA AND DAVID shared a fly -blown, ramshackle house in the Hollywood Hills, liv- ing close to nature. It was easy to associate them both with social dropouts and the drug culture. ENIERIALNMENT ,-- Until s he fell under Car - radine's spell, Barbara's career was on the ascent. But she put her work in the background, ap- peared in a tiny role in "You and Me,·· a Carradine picture which was never released. He became the star, Barbara the spear car- rier. ''I've been frightened al l my life," she said. "I still am, but now I can face it. "WH EN I DID ·mE Baby Maker' I was asked to present an Osrar at the Academy Aw ards show. I was scared and turned it down. "I wouldn't do P\lblicity for my movies. I thought they should speak for th~mselves. I did many ridiculous things because I was fri ghtened. · "It's beP:1 a year smce David and I oroke up our relationship. Now I feel as if I've come home." "I 'M DRESSING UP IN feminine clothes again." she said. ''I take care of myself. I 'm much more linked to other people now. With David I was insulated. "My career suffered for the pas t five years. Producers wouldn't see me because I had a reputation for using drugs and for being undependable. I never used drugs at all and I've always been serious about my acting. But I can·~ blame anyone else. "The joy of knowing I wanted to act has come rushing back to me. I'd forgotten about th at hap- piness for many years." ,. NOMINATED FOR 5 GOLDEN GLOBE AWARDS By JAY S HARBU'IT .NEW YORK (AP) -"The Bionic Woman,.. a spinort or "The Six Million Dollar Man," premieres on ABC-TV tonight at 8 on channel 7. It stars Lindsay Wagner, a very appealing ac- tres.s, as Jamie Sommers-. a bionic woman. --- Jamie bas one super-strong arm and super-strong legs. She didn't enter this world with them. They·re sophisticated, realistic- looking ele ctr o-mec1ranicat replacements ·tor limbs she lost in a sky diving mishap. She's a former tennis pro who grew up in Ojai with Col. Steve Austin, the ''Six·Million-Dollar Man" who also has bionic limbs which stem from injuries he suf- fered while t es t -fl ying a space<'raft. IN ONE SCENE in tonight's show, Jamie, newly hired as a teacher at a s chool for t he children of Air Force personnel, is a ssigned a rowdy class of youngsters other teachers call "The Dirty Dozen." . They really give her a rough time. And while watching this show at an advance screening, I am worrying that she'll get mad, forget the power of her super. arm and belt a kid through a wall. This might cause serious in- jury and le ad to yet another spinoff r a iled "The Bionic Urchin." Thankfully, it doesn't happen. Tonight's show, devoted to Jamie's r ecove ry from the emo- tional trauma of her sky diving acc ident, is precede d by flashback shots of her and Steve bounding about in a mission as- signed them by the Office of Scientific Investigation, a sort of CIA operation for whom he works. OSl'S DEDICATED scientists, who gave each of them their new limbs (Steve als o got a super- powerful eye, while Miss Jcµnie got a supe r -powerful ear>, are helping her return to normal life. ~ "A winner and a treat for the entire family.'' WEEKENDER Gets It All together Fridays In the DAILY PILOT -ST(WART l(((IN WN(W rv She can recall that her parents beriog the plot of tonight's show. were killed in an auto accident,· ~ut I think s he gratefully pro· that Steve's parents raised her, mises to work for OSI if it needs that she has a degree in educa· her. Then she sets out for Ojai to lion and that she once beat Billy attempt a normal life and live at Jean King in a championship the ranch owned by Steve 's match. parents. But the closer her memories They gently tell her she once -eome to the sky diving accident was engaged to Steve. She tells -St~ve was withlter_'1t.Uie ~_hi§ motti~ "l ca.re...an~w(ul lot -the harder itis for her to recall about Steve. But I don't know what happened. She doesn't even where my heart is." If you think remember they were to be mar-J'll touch that bioni~ line, you're ried. nuts. __ _Amid all this is som e skulldug- 1 KNOW BER problem in a gery by villains who secretly way. I'm having trouble remem-videotape a car crash they've ar- ranged. She sees it and yanks the door off a blazing car to save a man trapped inside. HEAVEN KNOWS what evil things they have an mind for her. but the s h ow e nds wit h a mysterious white-haired man riding in a Ii mousme near OJa1. 1'hen.J.here '_s. a sign flashed that says: TO BE CONTINU ED. But I'm not going to call this show bad . Steve and J amie might massage my neck with their s uper -strong hands and cause yet another spinoff called "The Bionic Critic." It's the same two dudes from "Uptown Saturday Nigh[. WINNER 7GOLDEN GLOBE AWARD NOMINATIONS INCLUDING BEST ACTOR OlRECTOR SCREENPLAY ~ ~ ... ~ ir;,,~r .. 4 ,f"'U> t1 ·' Ot'!t)'I (R) 1 •', ,·, ·,. ~.'1 f.I~••\ r ·C1~1', NviN lf'J .re :<A·:· ,1r',',,,1.tJ,,. -~C1trt\ 1•A"f• ~.., .. •1t. ·' •1•J'I'·~~ \l'tt. H:,\ o~w,,·,.,.1;·c. \..,~~, Of"llM f 1.1-.h111!la l(.J\ 't~tJ.1•1eyr.,.,,,.....,>t<bQu~, a~1•.i:1~ 1~~1111 but this time they're back with kid dyn-o-m1te! 811119 NmlB ·BILL 0188'1 Llnll 11•111 THIS IS THE MOVIE TO SEE! YOU 'LL LAUGH TIL YOU CRY! Orange •637·0340 -CITY CENTRE W CINEMA! Tlw'C•!V Shf'l'l>"'Q Cenl•e Or .. ntw •532 li771 VALLEYVIEW CINEMA YAU.fY YIA ' CHA,MAll OAllOl ll OllOY( IM-5338 "If there are not at least four Academy Award nominations for this movie, · I'll be much surprised." BIG NEW SHOWS AT EDWARDS CINEMAS "filled with loving .c -PAT COLLINS. wees TV =~E!~Y~~~rlect ~;@!-Efr. (h holidayentertainment." SIJ ---"IJ of his form. 1_rr r-J6 _, , ~ ~::t:~:: ::·:h:·~~P jlE~ ~ c-1'1 ·ro°"''" Burns ... keenly tunny." f SH.A ' ~, ~ -1i .-~~~,,1. 'J.l -YlNCfNTCAN8Y. I l l '\ I "j ,r ' . . N~ York T•mu • /~} _ • "A couple of shining 110~E OF THE ~rf, };~I \ ~j --J hours. ~atthau and YEAR'S FUNNIEST" ·,~-~ · . , Burn~ g1_ve the perlormances LEVIN THOMAS, LA TIMES \ I of their hves. ** • •;, *" , -KATHI f[N CARROLL. M('tro Goldwyn Mayer '., ., I O•t1y Ntw\ R:1y':>:aru-., .. .J .Herbert Ross• ... Walter Matthau & George Bums 'o"""' .. Neil Simon's "The Sunshine Boys" Richard Benjamin s. ............ Ne11s.moo •·n<co,~RdVSlark·r. ... ,.., .. Herbefl ~os5 "'""'" .. ~~-"'*''" '" PG PARElllM. GUIOAllCE SUllES1tD MGMI:\ Rtl•••.-d r"'v i=-=:.i.;.;.;.;=;,;;;.,;;.,;= ... '-", ... .;.;; .. -..,= .. ..,""" .. ...,o~ V Umted Artists ' edwards BRISTOL CINEMA BRl'HOL AT "'ACAllTMUR 540-744-1 0 CINEDOME 20 . Chapman Avenue at S.A. Frwv. Orange • 532·3328 BEST PICTURE and BEST DIRECTOR . -NATIONAL BOARD OF REVIEW . "BRILLIANT ••• UNIQUE ••• WITIY ••• ELEGANT ••• SO GLORIOUS TO LOOK AT, SO INTELLIGENT IN ITS CONCEPTION AND EXECUTION ••• THE SCALE ·OF THE FILM IS IMMENSE ••• STUNNING BATILE SE'QUENCES ••• UNLIKE ANY OTHER PERIOD FILM I CAN REMEMBER SEEING." -VINCENT CANBY, NijW YQRK TIMES "ONE OF THE MOST QIJEATHTAKINGLY BEAUTIFUL FILMS OF ALL. TIME ••• A Ll\(EL Y SAGA ••• POIGNANT ••• WILDLY ROMANTIC." l 1 • ftl/11 by TANbEY K.!JBRICK RYAN O'NEAL • MARISA BERENSON WINNER GOLDEN GLOBE AWARD NOMINATIONS FOR BEST PICTURE end BEST OIRECTOR EDWARDS CINEMA HAU04t • T 404M$ COSTAMHA S46-JIOZ ( I ,. WINNER 7 GOLDEN GL08E AWARD NOMINATIONS CINEMA ENTI MAllOI ATAOAMI CO\fAMf\A MESA 'l'UDt ClMTEll 97'·4 I 4 I WALTER MATTHAU GEORGE BURNS RICHARD BENJAMIN WINNERS GOLDEN GLOBE NOMINATIONS 3 DAYS OF THE CONDOR ROBERT REDFORD FAYE DUNAWAY SPECTACULAR! THRILLING! DIFFERENT! PLUS DIANA ROSS ANO BILLY OH WILLIAMS "MAHOGANY" U..t fll,_ Sun ConnBJ11 .. ffitchau1 Caln ''-A VIGOROUS. FlAM80 UNTlY £W'Tf.llTAININ0 ADVINTIJ!'I[ ONE 0' THf Yf.ltll'S Ta. llCST lllB man Wllo Would Be King I ..... o~M.B~Q~}Yt,1,~ ...... '] 60-0S13 &4'·~ CIN£MA WEST · Wl\TMl,..STt• At C'..04.DlHWlJT 'WISTMIH,Clt'Tfl nz.u n ~l'LUS SAR RY N£WMA~ ,UR IS T'* Ott• AT CINEMA W!.ST ·-t-,. ... The Ufe and Times of GRIZZLY AOAMS<Gl 1N ft'W •to-y Q4: •Met' ••'Nd i.. ll'IO wlt-U t rod '-' ho ...,n• to 8'H'Vtv• . \\ ... DAILYPtLOT Wedneeday, January 14, 197$ .... w .. , .......... .. &.lll .............. u.. ........ lt'lelcs .. ' 'Haiti Who goes tht1Te7 Cuban, Russian, Mercenary, South Afrit:Jln, Am•riC8n or Popular Movement?' Allergf Causing Eczeina? By DR. STEINCROHN Dear Dr . Steincrohn : My c hild has d eveloped eczema. Otherwise he seems to be healthy. Rut the red patches are get · ting rough and infl a med -especiaJly when the baby scratches a nd scratches. I am just giving the bab y warm w ater bicarbonate of soda baths. Also an oi11tment the doctor prescribed. Rut after months of this treatment. there is no improve m e n t. Isn·t there something else to do for this stubborn con- dition? -Mrs. S . COMMENT: Chronic skin problems such as your baby's explain why I refer to the MD after a a doctor 's name as "Medical Detective." The doctor has to set out on a trail o f clues. Ec ze m a is u s uall y DOCTOR IN THE HOUSE caused by an allergic re· action. Often there is a family history or hay fever. asthma. eczema, or hives. Applying ointments and taking bicarbonate of soda baths without know· ing the actual reason for the skin outbreak is shooting at a target in the dark. Though you m ay hit. odds are against it. I R ECALL ONE child who had all kinds of tests and all kinds of treat· ments without success. One day it occ urred a lmost simultaneously to both mother and doctor: ··1 wonder whether it's something in ·the new powder being used after the baby·s bath?" The child's s k in became as smooth as a baby's w it h in weeks after the new powder was d iscontinued. lt seems he was a llergic to the orrisroot in powder. A~OTH ER CHILD got over a severely stubborn eczema attack after his wool suit was discarded. The most common form of detective work is try- ing to discover whether there is anything in the diet that is responsible for the rash. Wh at is he allergic to, if anything'? Cow's milk? Sometimes cow's milk is less likely to bother if first thoroughly cooked. A complete s hift m ay be necess ary: to goat's milk, or soybean milk. with various foods. Although bicarbonate of soda baths and oint- ments may occasionally solve th e pro blem, what's most important is discovenng the cause. M F.DJCAJ.ETTF~ ~ar Dr . Steincrohn: Choose liquid foundation. lip slicks. pressed powder, blushers, eye & lip crayons .all 1n the 1a1es1 tash1on snades. w11n delightful "W•qgle .. eyes. Animals with moving eyes' .. ......... . . . ~s'; 16!. Save 25% on these decorator style Hi-Lo Pile scalier rugs. Each is sk•d resistant with rubber watlle backing, easy care machine washable & dryable. matching lid covers to coordinate! ........... • 33 '7.33 •l'· . 96 aoi Of ft NA SONIC 79?~.99.95 TAPE RECORDER WITH AM-FM RADIO Panasonic's portable tape recorder with AM/FM radio, built-in con· denser microphone, continuous lone & volume controls, AC/DC operation, d1g11a1 tape counter and many more leatures! I rt Ol .. REG. 1.79 20 EXPOSURE KODACOLOR 126 FILM 126. 20·exposure fllm of lop qualt· ly. Sieck up now & save a1 Thrifly! :~:::.i,1. 3so .E,~391 119 • w•"'-4.91 Mr. Paul . REG. 6.47 &ALVANIZED METAL TRASH CAN Sturdy galvanized metal !rash can wilh nbbed sides for added strenglh, side handles. Locking lid with convenient handle. ,. I BIC BALLPOINT POINTS SUPER B·U4 6 ( SOUND CO 8-TRACKS 8·Track cartridge tapes tor high· fidelity recording needs. Stock up FABERGE COLOGNE REJUVIA E OIL HOME PERMANENT Repeal of the once-a-year special. Geritol Choose all three tor a fragrance Sllin beauty 011 in pure ltquid form. Includes every1h1ng you'll need tor a high potency iron &. vitamin tonic table1s 1n a wardrobe. 1 85-0z. in each spray. 28.000 l.U. per fluid ounce. salon-look perm Try 111 reusable apothecary bottle. Hurry in! 1-~~~~~~~~~-t-~~~~--~.-~---'-------.,-~~--__;_;.. ..... .....,.i...~--------~---..----~~""'-=;;:..:_~~.;.__.:, ________ +-~ The tasting hard 11p pens available in as~orico er IJrs. Save al Tnr 11y• ~ IAWAllAll PlllCI CIACIEI JACI ~ VICl'S FOIMllA 44 lt· ,@ VICl'I llTtlll -•n C.PfllAM ~~..:,:•f~IW;.:,;UHt lllS , . I In a few months I plan to enter the hospital for a n operation. Could you tell JUST WHAT me why the patient has to be awake when taken to the operating room? YOUR ::-49c §'. 29c :::: 1 •• .;.... 1 •• --: .. 111 CHOOSE ANYoFTHESE EXCITllG DELUXE FLAVORS , 1 Sure, you're given a 1 i g h t s e d a t i v e DOCTOR Iilfil_ beforehand, but I could BE iv;gll do a jig in the hospital r' Nm corridor on that. It cer-ORDERED' ~ tainly would help if they • ·-~"'4 put you asleep (one way we ftll your pmcriptions exactly as '40TOR OIL CllftY VAllflU • fl(AI PUUll • or another) while still in your doctor ordered. prompdy and Ct<OIUT ,..,,U • .. It 'I•• your room . This. and not courleousty We 1nv1te you to come "'••• ...... ~ IAIW SMIT • IUCI WA&llT • the surgery itseJr, is in&comparetneprices 1nour new ~ ~ QJ il! UO<OLATI UIP • PISTAnlO most on my mind _Mrs. Prescr1poon Pree Book. we think ~ ~ CASllW • IO<IY IOAt • (IO(. A. you" be money ahead. To translef a IOAS'fll AUIM • STIAWIBIT COMM ENT: Why not ~~r!°"c!~'.ne~1~9 au~~~ IAlllllE um• Pf.. lYlllPIAY llfCI IAYfl ~·~·~AaUIMMQ talk it over with your the ot1g1nal prescnpton & our pnat· lllfalft CAif Alllf PTI .... • ..fCTUJ ..... ,.... • 'naVOI • Tll doctor and surgeon? mac1Sts w~I do the rest. ,......_ MOl'f1I) ' ;::~~b~y ath:l~~n~ree; = 1 ~4 -· 111 41 ::.-r-111 £ .. ~:lie. .. ... 111 @.l' ICE CIEAM . sedativesoyouwillnotbe --•-:,:, C •• •• c..c .. .,s., .... ,,,._. HAU 99e GALLOI ea. t--.................. 'i 1·1 sufficlenUy awake to do 6 ......., ,~ ........... nc .. tutJi1ln ~·corridor. ,._.-.-... ............... ,.,. ...... ~~~_.. ...... ...,,...--::i-~~~~--.-.11,-...... --:El~T~or~o-------,--~~~~-=~~..,,...~~~----..... -4: tn~ic1enta111. there are Costa Mesa Santa Ana Foll'lfain Valley Huntington leach Huntinaton Beach tJme:s when a patient is l ll l 17 .... St. Jl2S lrittol at MocArltlur MllJIOio If TllNrt ... Et Toro of loctrfietd tH I ~at..._..... 21131 ltocl·aa,d. If aM_.., ·•put under·• berore he or l-..:.:~-"'----.... ----------t--:--:-~~-:----r---:-::-:-:--:----r-:-;:~~:--:"....,""':"'-1f------..;;.;.:";.::-::.J ahereachet~eos>er•ting F nt i Vall . W•s"-:nst-Hunti~ leach . H room -whouah what you Costa Mesa Santa Ana ou an ey ... """ '"' untinaton leach d~rlbe 11 the uaual pro-l l OO HtrtMw at Wei.-1406 W. EdiMJer Ir lristot 1614 1 H~ at Edm9tr W HfmiMhf Gt GoWtft WHt H • C...... Sllf°w..._ .:edun. i .. j ~ t , . ( • ~ I I r ~ '.I r i. d 1' c ii a p 1 J)E'J Bt1 COi rec 1 ro• Ra Ne Ch· Me An Her s qui for ex1 Pnl s the ym tie1 mo ks'Wi h a Twist or Two he Y Pass Bar Exam ByQENNJSMcLEUAN • betweery2Jaod60,saytheysimp· another matter .'' A good .... e>.u.,,.1e1SC1tt ly wa?1t to learn how to mix bartender in the right club can Walki'nl in, it looks like any drinks fqr their own parties. take home $5 or more an hour in other ~Jd,ail lounge. Liquor bot· Othe~ hqRffig to_ t>egfu a new gratuities. -tles:of~!f~brands line the shelves C&reer. . -Aside from a flair for the --~aped-bar . ...Bar.tan,"-~~=··1-t=s-ama~ing,..!.!-said-R-alph-theatrtcat;-studentrantt1>art~ deri'6Ustli mjx drinks in front.or Dillaha, director of the American ders agree the ability to mix easi· men and, women perched on Bartenders School in Santa.Ana. ly with customers is a primary stools. "Every week we get people that attribute. Looking, closer you realize this have been in other professions "I enjoy talkin[_ and listening is no ordinary bar. A drink is many years." to people and becoming a part or mixed.J n ingredient is forgot. Dillaha. who spent 14 years their life~·· said Dillaha. "A ten, and it ls quickly dumped out. tending bars throughout the bartender is basically a fiee·life There also.are six bartenders for country. has nine diplomas in person. It's not like the average an eq\lal number of custome mixology and claims to know dayintheof!ice." andnoonebdrinklng. J,000 drinks by mi;mory. He ex· GOOD R.o\.PPORT Of course they wouldn't waqt plained why people decide to step "Personality is at least 70 per· to. .. t behind the bar. cent of it,'' sai d J ohn The coc',ktails look thirst-"Most of the reasons are Christensen, a student at one of quenching tnough, but their ift· glamor," he said. "Most people . the schools. ''You have to make gredients Wpn 't be found in any relate to the bartender, not the good drinks, but the main con- mixology bOoklet. The mai-tais club. The spotlight is alY:ays on cern is having good rapport with slings and wallbangers ar~ him." yourcustomers." mixed with water, food dye, Frank Cr®k. an instructor at Christensen. 24, received a BA paint and dish soap to give th Orange County Professional in art, but when he found appearance of the real thing.· Bartenders School in Santa Ana. teaching jobs were scarce, he The people on both sides or the agrees. "Many of them go into it s witched go a Is, .a t I east non-alco\lolic bar are students because a lot of us are actors or temporarily. who, if they complete the course, would like to be. "At parties I always round will have mastered 75 drinks by SHOWM.4.NSHJP myself being the bartender," he memory and'.will be ready to step "I've seen quiet people on this said. "l 0m single, so for right into a job as professlonal barten· side of the bar, but the minute now it's great. I wanted a job ders. i they're on the other side, they're · where I could work ni ghts. I also NEW CA R EER on stage. You've got so many dif· like to travel. 1 fi gured th.is is a The "cocktail lounge .. is the ferent personalities you have to good trade because bartenders !'lassroom for one oC two s!'hools come across to everybod y.·· are needed everywhere." in Orange County that teach meii Pay is also an incentive. Mike Callas. 21, a re!'ent and women the business or 4is· Professionals, according to ·graduateofoneoftheschools, is pensing drinks. Dillaha, can average SJ0-$40 a working part-time. lie said he Some students, r anging in age day. But, he added, "Tips are became interested when he •• ·~ ... • INSTRUCTOR RALPH!DILLAHA SHOWS HOPE PRITCHARD MEASURING METHODS talked to a bartender and saw '·he was having a good time talk- ing to people. "I got to thinking this didn't seem like work," he u.i.d. •· ik ii-you get to meet a Joi of peo· pie." MYTH DISPEi.LED ..\lthough he has a c-aptive-au- dience, Dillaha diapelled.l.he age..._ old myth tt~t a b_a.rte.nder is a re· sident psychiatrist, dispensing advice to customers. "He should keep his eyes and ears open and his mouth shut," recommended Dillaba. "I never give customers advice. It might be OK for me, but not tor the eustomer. ·• Politics and religion also are taboo. "Two of you may agree, but the person next to you may not and yo u'll lose a customer. The bartender should feel like he's in his OY:n front room and the customers are his guests. Make them feel at home and treat each one equally.'' Dillaha said most people go to bars or lounges to talk and be with people. If they just wanted to get drunk, he said, they would buy a bottle and sit at hOme and watch TV . "Something is missing in their life and they are looking for it," h(" said. "Every bartender s hould take this into con- sideration ... It is against the law to serve an inebriated person. •'\'ou have to know when and how to cut them off," said Dillaha. Students are taught to do this politely, wi th a smile. MORE WOMEN The-demand fo r wo me n bart("nders has increased in re· rent years, according to Crook. ;\bout 40 percent or his students are-women. Geniece Reinsvold was work- ing in a Riverside aircraft plant when she decided to become a bartender. She was asked what her husband thought of her new line of work . ··He didn 't think l 'd like it at first.'' she admitted. "But he saw I enjoyed it and now he th inks it ·s great. 1 'm really looking forv .. ard to getting out there." l'i1r s. Reinsvold. who recently turned 21. said she didn"t know anything about m ixing drinks be.fore attending the school. ~ler mastery was put to the test 1n an impromptu examination. "Give me one water, two Scot· ties (one is tall), three men (two are up),'' ordered Crook, who ex· ·plained that was bartender·s language for a bourbon, two S<-otches. and three Manhattans. Mrs. Reinsvold Went to work as Crook. keeping an eye on the clock. explained students must pass an oral exam in at ion at the end of the course in which they rail out the ingredients of at least SO drinks. Students must know how to make the various hi ghballs, cocktails, cream drinks, cxfdball drinks. eoffees (Irish, Venetian, Mexican ). esoteric drinks (zombies, slings. sunrises) and flips, fizzes and Bloody Marys (for hangovers). The sweep hand on the clock hit t.he 55·second mark as l\1rs. Reinsvold set the last drink on the bar top. ··Not too shabby." said Crook, announcing the time. "That's your record." Copying p I Exotic liqueurs are"·brten aJ ex· pensive as they aN\tintriguing. But over the years. people have !'oncocted imitatiom that they reeommend to friends. These recipes wer(l taken from eookbooks published by the Balboa Yacht Club, Ebell Club or Newport Reach, South Coast Child Guidance Clinic of Costa !\tt>sa and Irvine's Mano Con Amor auxiliary of Children 's Home Soci(>ty. Some of the ing\-edicnts re· quire extra sleuthirtg. \Vhen the formulas call ror liquor. the least expensive brandy and highest Proof of vodka 'i\'Orf:il. Selling or bever es brewed ip the home is illegal.._ these for your own enjoym . And be pa· tient : some "liquM1rs" need a. month to mature their fla\'or. Ki\llf.UA JVi cups sugar 1 1 quart water l 2 teaspoons insq&nt coffee J teaspoons vanilla 1 21'. cups vodk~, / Bring 111gar. waler and cof ee to a boil and simmer 110 2 hours. Cool and add vanilla and vodka. Poui Into two bottles. C.p tightly and hide ror 30 de yo . CHERllV llOOZE 1 Pottnd big, perfect Bing cherries t pou.nd fine granulated ...... . . I fiftb brandy, vodktt or gin CllO proor.11 posoi~I• > Waah and stem the cherrie!I \·ery gently so as not to bruise them. Dry on a towel. Place them in clean 2·quart jar. · Pour the sugar over the cher· ries. DO NOT STIR OR Sl-IAKE. Pour the liquor over the sugar and cherries. DO NOT STIR. Cover with a lid. Put the jar on high. safe s h e lf and let it and three months until only its r("main. Strain into t\l.'O l · quart bottles. ORANGE OR f,EMON BRANDY · ,1/5 quart brandy (about 3 cups> 1 cup sugar J large orange or lemon Pour brandy into large jar or !'ontainer with a tight.fitting lid. .i\dd s ugar; stir until dissolved . \Vash orange or lemon anct thoroughly dry . \Vi th \'Cgettlble parer, remove peel in one long, continuous s pirnl : add to brtlncty mixture. Ti ghtly cover.jar and set aside. n~'ay rrom li ght. for·i.1 hours to allo\v flavor todevelflp. Remove peel. Pour brandy Into container: !'Over. Do nflt place in bottle with screw lid. !\-takes 3 ~ cups. ··· MOCK CHAMPAG:-IE· l rupsugar 1 cup water • 'A cuJ) ton ~entrated grape juice J cup grapef'n.\ltjidcc i.t.cup orange juice 4 bottles 7·U P lloit sugar and water together. Add grapt-juice. Stir until dill· solvf'd, Add citrus juiC(..'8 . Ch\11. .o\dct earbonated be\'eragc' just before S("r vinj!. S1\NGRI.\ 2 rt1ps rresh Cor canned > fruit: apples, peach, lemon. pineapp!e 1 ~ cups sugar (or more de· pending on wine> 2 fifths w ine (Chablis, Sherry, Burgundy or Port -use one or mix several) 2 qua rts c111 r.bonated bevera1~e (glnger,1e, le-mon· lime, soda ) ' 14 cup brandy (optional' , Chop fn1it and add ~'ine, sugar and brandy. Chill. Just before ser\•lng, add C'hilled carbonated Patience is the main ingredient of fake liqueurs. Several weeks are required to develop flavor. beverage. Ser\·e Crom pitcher. Makes a little more th~n a , gallon. IMITATION GAl.l.IANO J quart vodka 1 vanilla bean l.o\ to full bottle corn syrup <depending on taste I ~-ounc e bottle imitation 'vanilla liqueur :v. ·dun ce bottle imitation Reve-rendene liqOeur ~ ounce artificinl Revondo. optionnl .!\-fix: pour in a lass container and store for two "'feks to meld navor .... -- OSCAR AGUIRRE CONCENTRATES ON POURING BEA ANDERSON, Editor CAROL MOORE, Food Editor Wednesday. January 14. 1976 Chore a la Carts? C 1 Substitute Shoppers take over wh er e the Iceman and milkman left off. ··w e don·t know why the idea has n·t ca ught on befor e before," admit Ellen K.reigman and Sh elby Barry. about their home delivery service (or people who don "t have time to stand in grocery lines or can't get to superinarkcts. The Huntington Beach pair started the_ business because while they loved to shop, they realized other custome1rs categorized the chore as imrcr.sonal. drudgery. Their proposal was accepted readily 1n off1_ces .by wor~r ing wives and mothers who had to cram shopping into their free times and lunch hours. • . COMPARISON SHOPPERS "After all, women are best at buying food . We're the ones who go to market no matter what.·• l\.trs. Barry said. ''1\.1en usually go only (or short errands.·· Even though demand is such that several orders cmild be colle!'ted at one time, the l\.1mes. Krefgman and Barry expand their staff of ··substitutes·· instead. "We insist on personalized service. Our shopper picks up a customer·s list, goes to market and return's dirt:;ctly with the food s,·· she said . The procedure starts \Vith an interview to deterfnine brand preferences, diet needs, special quantities, available coupans and refundable bottles. The client selects the most l."onveroient market. day or week a nd delivery time. Thereafter, only a list is ne!'essary. JlUF. OS DELIVf:R\' "'.'lo money is paid un til the delivery." Mrs. Kreigman noted. Then the fee is ~ or 10 percent of the total bill, "'hi!'hever is higher. "F.ven so the customer saves money -no impulse purchases, no transportation costs and no time lost. . . ''Response or store managers has been mo~t grat1fy1ng. We notify them in advance to ac!'cpt our pre·s1gned checks and they appreciate-the steady business.'' So rar the most unusual order has been 14 turkeys: for a woman who had to provide them as a holiday bonus tor employes. i. Resides members or the I I-late to Shop Club. btne.r service subscribers are bachelors, convalescents, wee:.k~nd tenants. retir("es and ,,. .. omen who recently have gi ven birth. Another benefit. l\-trs. Barry noted, is that people make • healthier c hoic<'~ when they plan menus for a week rather than grab a TV dinner on the way home rrom work . Group Method Proves Suc ctessf\;1 1 I Tai K. Oh explains how Japanese group dynamics mesh with U.S. lly DENNIS Mel.EU.AN °' .. Deltw ""' ..... A.ii As;uerican businessman sending a iet- terto a Japanese company should be patient ii be doel not get a reply ln three months. That's simply the Japanese way. "When they receive .the letter," $8)'8 Dr, Tal K . Oh, associate professor of manage- ment at California State University, F\allerton, ''they have to reach an internal consensus. ''lt takes a long time toevenreach·a simo. pie conclusjgn...-Once they do, the entire group wtlr work for and support the pro- ject." The group method of conducting business · Is one of the major differences between Japanese a nd American managerial systems of which tew Americans are aware. "There is a growing concern amO~ us on bow to deal with them," said Oh, ex- plaining that they have more than 400 cor- porations in Southern California alone with more than 20,000 J apanese employes. UCISEMINAR Businessmen taking Oh 's UCI seminar, Japanese Management: How and Why It Works, will gain an insight into the social and business custom of the world's third largest economie power. Nuptial Dates Chosen Thomas·McFarren Mr. and lrfrs. Robert J . Thomas of San Marino have announced the engagement or their daughter, Terri Thomas and Timothy C. Mc Farren, son of the Walter Schneiders, Costa ~tesa. They plan to marry Aug. 21 in the First Congregational Church, San ft1arino . ~1iss Thomas s tudied at the University of the Pacific, the Institute o! European Studies in Vienna and earned a BS degree in occupational therapy at USC where she af. f iliated with Kappa Alpha Theta. Mc Farren graduated cum laude with a BS degree in biology at USC. He is a member of Signma Alpha Epsilon, Trojan Squires and Trojan Knights . Currently he is attending USC's School of l\1edicine in the department of pathology. Stalons-Sutton Mrs. Toni Sta Ions of Westminster has an- nounced the engagement of her daughter, De bi Stalons of Costa Mesa and Mike Sut- ton, Garden Grove . They are planning to marry May 29 in the Colonial Bible Church, Santa Ana. Miss Stalons is a graduate of Estancia High School and attended Golden West and • Santa Ana colleges. Her fiance, son of the William Suttons of Eastview, Ky., is 'a graduate of Louisville Male High School and attended the University of Kentucky. ••• Ramsey·Perino Mrs. Mildred R. Corbett of Downey has announced the e ngagement of h er daughter, Kathleen Annette Ramsey and Kim David Perino, a tennis pro at the John Wayne Tennis Club, Newport Beach. Miss Ramsey, a student at California State University Long Beach, is a graduate· of Warren High School, Downey, where she was selected Girl-of-the-year in 1974. A Delta Zeta, she was listed in "Who's Who of American High School Students.'' Her fiance, son of the Louis J . Perinos of Newport Beach, is a graduate of CSULB where he earned a bachelor of science degree in business administration. A graduate of Newport Harbor Hig h School, he played on the CIF championship tennis team and is a . past president of Sigma Chi. ••• Stoltz-Henderson A March 6 wedding in St. Joachim's . "I feel strona:ly that Americans should be aware of this foreia:n management l)"ltem. We can't overlook it We have to recogniae bow they behave and why they're so suc-c~sfuJ." The session··is from9:30a.m. to·4:30 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 17, in room 14S, Social Science Lab on the campus. Call 833·S4l4 for further information. Oh, who has taught this course at. Cal State Fullerton and has published wi4_ely on internafioiial management, said many Americans have misconceptions about Japanese conduct of business. PERMANENT EMPLOYMENT A common vjew is the.t their DlJlDage. ment is superior to ours. One aspeet,' Oh said, is the system which gives employes job security, corporate loyalty, blgb motivation and group effectiveness. Known as permanent employment, it is applicable to only one-third of the labor force, Oh pointed out. "People don't know this. They meet·only th.is group and base opinions on it. They don't see the other two- thirds." To enter the elite group, Oh explained, a person must go to a university. Everyone has the opportunity to taJce the entrance ex- am, and young people oft.en study 10 hours a Catholic Church, Costa Mesa is being planned by Mary B. Stoltz 3.nd Richard H. Henderson, both of Costa Mesa. News of their engagement and forthcom- ing event has been announced by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. K. H. Stoltz, Costa Mesa. Miss Stoltz is a graduate of Costa Mesa High School and her fiance, son of the Harvey Hendersons of Indian Wells, is a graduate of Huntington Beach High School. Both studied at Orange Coast College. Can't Split Heirs Ann Landers r ' ~ DEAR ANN LANDERS: At the time of my divorce our only child was four years old. Now she is eight Her father has moved out of the state and sends the •support checks regularly. But be never bothers lo go out of his way lo phone or see her. Last year he saw the child only once. He phoned her twice. 1 remarried and now have other children. My problem is my ex-husband's parents. 1bey are still determined to keep in close touch with their son's daughter. What is your opinl"on of ex-in-laws in a situation like this? My daughter seems to be very happy with her own little family. Am I being selfish in not wanting her to • see her ex-grandparenb? -A MESS WITH THEEX'ES DEAR MESS: You certainly are. Tbne grandparents have every right to keep in close touch with your child. Just bttause you are no longer married to their son and have other cblldttn ls no justifica- tion for denying them a place in this little gtrt's life. She Is the Oesboltbeir fiesb and I hope you will never forget it. DEAR ANN LANDERS: I always sus· pected it was true but now I have evidence produced by a research team at the Unive rsity of California. Please print it, Ann. Maybe -just maybe -a few people will recognize themselves, 'CLEARAl'llCE ISALE I Final 3 Days IJan.15, 16,'17 Thu,... thru Sat. I • the ·~<t '~d ~;~ Lido Village All Fall Merchandise from~OFF to below cost FINAL MARKDOWN 3411 Vt. o,.no {sq; 11••> 175-4321 I ..VO!ldclal Utn ~ 10:00 'UI S:lt ,.,.., n ;OO ·111 ,.:oo - I . • My theory -now proven: Booze makes most people bores. It plays hell with their judgment. It turns them into repetitive, non-stop blabbermouths and gets them to tell secrets. They forget what they are talking about in mid-sentence. Polite folks become clods when they drink -interrupting others as they drone on and on. One of the researchers, Dr. Robert C. Smith, a psychiatrist (now at the Universi- ty of Chicago), said he didn·t want to make a moral judgment -but if a person goes to a party and someone who might play a significant role in his future should show up, lay off the s auce. -NO NEWS TO ME DEAR NO NEWS: I didn't need to read ...,.,.. tbe research to learn the f•cts st•ted lo your letter. After writing this column for 29 years I have plenty of "research" of my own. But t hank you very much for writing. DEAR ANN LANDERS: J don't have a problem I want solved, nor do I want an opi- SUPER BOWL SPECIAL FREE J ... .1cr of Sw1 .. I lcA a.islw d wfftli pa hme of WHOLE IEEF STICK 20c OFF o; ---· BELLE FLEUR , .. --a. ... 2oc OFF,..~ .. -::.. WESTCLIFF PLAZA. 11" & • •lw Ns p I t .......... J.etn 1t1 M'11tW."fl6t..'Tll MAlllMB'S YRU.Gf, DAMA POIHT ..• I nion of anything. I just want to extend a ·note of thanks to all the wonderful s tep- fathers out there. I am writing this letter because I was lucky and got a neat one. It's kind of rare to really get a perfect stepfather. One that never gets mad at you, drops everything to help you with any problem and most important of all, loves you like his very own. · Please print this letter as a thanks to all the great stepfathers there are, and a special thanks to mine -GOOD FORTUNE COOKIE CLEARANCE SALE JANUARY 15 THRU 24 We have the largest selection of Adida s 1n Southern California . Style change & diKontinued models by Ad;do•: Um;ted ,;,., ~ rm and quanl!hes. tr; • • • • MONTE CARLO ....•.•... Reg . $26.95 NOW ADVANTAGE .....•••••. Reg. $28.50 BIUTJEANKIMS ...... Reg.$25.95 s1995 OL TllPIA .............. Reg. $28.95 STOCIUIOLll .••••.•••.. Reg. $25.95 SPOllTY .............. Reg. $27.95 AU. ~ ... us FINAL IAl'LATA ............ Rei. $24.95 TounillUT WHITE ... Reg. $25.95 ROD LAVER ............ Reg. $20.95 llOW $16.50 llOWSl&.50 WllllLEDOll ........ tleg. $35.95 Child re ns Cade! Shoes Reg $14 95 NOW $10.95 Lev rs Hang Ten Striped Shirt5, Crew Neck & Coflars ~~ 50% OFF Limited Styles & Sizes BRUSHED DENIM $899 JEANS .... 1••.so llOW Lnl Ctn J ... eb .... 11uo .................. M 112" Q ""'' 11a11ra1a.111 Jcdiii• .... ,_ ... sr Q • .,, ....... ,,. ...... , ............ sr -' 1.nt•n111ACCUIGllU ......... llOW 50% OFF -Ol'fll .... llwv Sot: 9:30-6:00, Friday 9:30-9:00 .. ·1 , , I day to pnp1re for It. -•-u-If "That'• wl/)< oo many CO-.·--· th01 fall that. .. am. tbelr fiii.uri II de· tennined. It's IMriOUlthint•., • Graduates mut get a job as 500ft as lbey leave schooJ, be waid. Because of -the wage atrueture, whlcb ts based~ on l~a:tb of servicf: emplo1es can't aff~ to ·iranster to anotber company. They '{OUldt have to stai:t 11 the IJoltom. Re~ ,at SS Is mandatory. --~ GROUP MEMBERS ...i;,j' Unlike Amerlcans, Japaq.~ ~fate as1l! a group memt*r4n public ~ I?n\Ulte e. '"l'hei~ aystem d eplGre' any,on, ~ wan ta • toberecognbedfndividuali1."~· .•. ~1 Group '!1~!11-ber~ia!J~hours_ to1ether and 1~w . ,if_~ other'• prlva!~!)~eo '. t,. ffe<I Ob. the group also prO!lfl;ea "·~pecunty._ . '"Ii) Japan ilia •<>'1>\>r~pons1bility. It you h•ve e onal ~ or stress you can consult I ~~fS· In the U. S. you gojlome a,1 ·Yoi.t'ro itolated." Toi>I~ to ~ eluded 1~ The Structure and Dytu~mics ' Japanes~:Society, ~roup Dynamics iD the Japanese Bus1ness Organization,' and The Applicability of Ja'panese Mailagement Principles to U.S. Manl:gemeDt Qperatiop.s. ·• . " I ~ ; f' I . I " I , .... I.: • Kathleen Ramsey (letf). and Terri Thomas are among Orange Coast fiancees announcing upcoming wedding da tes. ,,_.:ff.'t~:~;?::r%;-;.;··Au~n·~ ~ .. ~···~ ... , .. , .... "'.~~!!~~ _:fYi''' -. --)~REN IT.Y · <·~ 'i'. Skin Care Center 'i i·.:.~. ~ .. ,. ~ JANUARY SPECIAL , ~-·~:~Pl'~ .. ~ FACl~LS -10% OFF . j <. ·'. '. :,· · The ihopping and super buay ·! •• '• • 1 season is over, anif'i9n't it time· ~ 10 do· something for yau? An i hour and a half of ~ng : and relaxing. A facial deslgned ; for you-to hetp a problem ski n or to maintain a kMHy complexion: the European way. Call for your Serenity appointment. Gift Certificates S20 ----' \ ~ In Lido ~ill age l ·. 3400 Via Oporto, .Suite 6 ~ J on'n..~_... ·::. · . . Newport Beach :':"i· w .. :~:~ • ..; __ , __ :~~:~7..~:~1~! .. ~,..-4 I January Cosmetic Specials Coty Vitamin A·D Complex Cream (2 oz.)S2 Vitamin Moisture Balancer (2 oz.I '2 Quantllfes Umlted1on spec al merchandise. I \ Frorq ~onne Bell ~ix prodUcts tor your skin, •5 Ten·O-Six Skin ~leansing Lotion Good Nature Lip Gloss Good Nature Molsttirtzer iGood Na'1re-C6eanser Good Nature Cream Good Nature Glo l 1111M ' nney I ' AllCADIA·SANTA ANITA CANOGA PARK CARSON DOWNEY _ FOX HILLS FULLERTON HUNTUIQTON ,llL\CH LAGUNA HILLS~ llEWOOO MONTCLAIR NEWPORT BEAC ~NORTHRll>QI! ORANGE 'THE C . UEHTt: HILLS RIVEMIDI!, . SAN)BliRNAR VENTURA WEIT COVINA ' • -WHITTWOOD ,. • I ' t I I ' i I l j I !, ... ,, i I l ,,,.. . \ Libra Start Over THURSDAY, JANUARY 15 By SYDNEY OM ARR e ARI ES (March 21· • •April 19): Accent on pro- •perty, basic issues, tools of trade, environment, relationship with authority fig ure, comple- tion of transaction. TAURUS (April 20- May 20): Accent on trips, ideas, relatives, questions and answers. Movement is featured - change, travel, variety. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Highlight domestic relations. Means .be aware of family. home requirements. CANCER (June 21- July 22): Lunar cycle ap- proaches peak - circumstances turn in your favor. Timing im- proves. l .t.:o <July 23-Aug. 22): Secrets, intrigue, roman- tic interludes could be featured. Nothing will be halfway ~ hot or cold, all or nothing. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Accent on special advantage through con- tacts, friends hips. Don't be shy about requesting favors. LIBRA <Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Make new starts in new directions: get to Fun Launched PHILADELPHIA CUPI ) Constance Wolf. 70, who donned a red jump s ult during the weekend to make a com memorative flight in a pumpkin colored balloon, say::, she will make the trip again ~hen she 1s 87. Mrs. Wolf made her balloon flight as a tribute to the nation's Bicentennial and t o com memorate the 183rd anniversary -of a-+light &y-Jettn Pieri"~ Blanchard. · She said she would be around for the 200th anniversary or Blanchard's flight and make the balloon trip again. Despite 20 -degree t e rn · peratures, her flight went smoothly. About 90 minutes after taking off from Independence Mall, s he landed safely in a plowed fi e ld in Jackson Township, N . J ., near where Blanchard landed. Constance Wolf waves to crowd before ascent. Mrs Wolf, however. fared bet ter than Blanch ard, o f'rench man who spoke no Englis h . When he landed at Deptford, N .J .. the farmer::, thought the falling balloon was a demon and attacked it with pitchforkis. Luckily, his cargo included a bottle of vintage champagne. which placated the farmers. Mrs. Wolf was greeted by a friendly crowd and-at~he-in-vit-a· tion of an area rY5ident went down the road for some hot cof fee. She said the flight was cold but pleasant and was a good way to "to try to launc h a little fun for the Bicentennial." "I agreed to pay for the thing and I even agreed to use helium instead of hydrogen," said Mr~ Woll of Blue Bell, Pa. "With hydrogen, I could have taken a couple of people along. "Helium is not good enoug h, so I have to go alone. That's hard on a poor old lady." Bla nchard used the highly flammable hydroge·n for hi~ flight. Mrs. Wolf. who has been pilot ing balloons and airplanes for 45 years. had feared that random drafts caused by skysC'rapers. might <'a use her landing to be off target. heart of matters. Em- phasis on ultimate goals, relationships with pro· fessional s uperiors. declarations. people notice and respond. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Changes in· dicat~d in work. recrea- tion areas. Keep diet, health resolutions PI SCF.S (Feb 19 :\-l arch 20) · Praise. nat IC Jan. JS is your birth· day you can teach. ii· lustrate. dra matize your voice is com pelhnJ? and you might ha\'e a DAIL'( PILOT C3 ·January CLEARANCE SALE : 30-50°/o OFF t (TheOrnerStoreJ I CANNERY VILLAGE STORE ONLY t 3009 VILLA WAY -CANNERY VILLAGE-676-1101 NEWPORT BEACH ANNOUNCING _/<atfi'J_)(ef t,, Formerly at Eastbluff Colttures now at the fi1~_pollt'? fat/I Uf,~~~.}.~cis 1107 Jamboree Rd . Newport Beach 640-4740 BRUSH and BLOWER SCISSOR STYLES HOW TO DO THEM STEP BY STEP . Anyone can care lor a Brush & Blower hair style. or our Olher curl co1oling. fuss-free. lull functional • SCISSOR STYLES which are as easy to do as 1ust sham· poo1 Our lamp cuts linger lumble cuts. curling iron cuts wash towel dry brush n fluff cuts or sunple wash and wear cuts ar~ SCISSORED. all take-care-of-yourself styles Good lor any age any tia1r No teasing. no rollers no DIM no POLLUTING HAIR SPRAYS ALSO NO SIT rUMANlNI wnu TOU MAT P4l•UI WAin TO sn TOUI HAii ACOAIN. OPEH JOSEPH 'S SCISSOR STYLING 8 am • I 0 pm SAT. & SUH. 9.5 356 S Tus11r Avf: Or.:inqr> 9564 H.1m1lton Ave Hunt ngton Beach JU:> N Harbor Blvd Fullerton l(i AHC,A"' 1"1t. A ·,A • •. , AOlL ... 997.1193 968·353!. 879-3863 t SCORPIO (Oct. 23 · Nov. 21): Good lunar aspect coincides now with journey. higher education. Trust hunch. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Money of partner , mate i s spotlighted. Be aware of budgetary require - ments, leases, taxes. tery and affection could ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ be featured. Your stvlc. "sweet tooth.·· CAPRICOR N (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Accent on public relations, con- tracts. marriage. You're asked to decide based on recent statements, views surge to foref;ont I lj J U lGV!.U tD l l I Npirtd Sli<·ed Whale or Half HAMS "So Good ... It Will 'Haunt' You 'ti! It's Gone". Jcnay Special SA VE 20c ,.., ,a.ct HOMEY BAKED HAMS Pill for Him Studied ._,.'""°"!"."" • IMdy to Serl•"~ HOMy 'Ill s,k• Glau• Spiral Siie.cf Fro. Top to~ ! 1 ~ • W• Pecli..,e ..ct Sllip "'-CMSt ta Coast • ...... ed Chffwt .ct Wilft ! Harbor General Hospital, Torrance, is in need of 45 men between the ages of 21 and 39 who would like to participate in a study pro- gram aimed at developing a contraceptive "pill" for men. Preliminary studies by a number or scientists have indicated that injections or a Inventory Reduction SALE 25% to S0%0ff0h Prints and Serigraph~ Up 10 ssoo orr On Selected Contempor:uy :and Tr:adilional Oils ~ POULSEN GALLERIES 250 Newport Center Dr. Design Plan, Ne\llpOft (7 14) 640-889it. Closed. Sunday & Monday IJiJ A ', \rcmon'S SPORTsWEAR Wl~fatff Pl.ALA '8Al80A ISlAM:l New;>o.'t Beath 216Monne Ave 548-4121 675-1904 (can 642·5678) Put a few words to work for you in the DAILY PILOT Tl E ~uu;t~ . m ·' 3424Vla Udo UdoShops . Newport Beach OPEN SUM>AY$-11-4 \ pharmaceutical compound cal led testosterone enenthate can suppress the process or sperm formation in a male without producing side effects or affecting his virility or sexuality. But more data is needed, so the process will be studied over an 18-month period un- der a grant from the National Institutes of Health. The project will be headed by Ronald S. Swerdloff, MD, an associate professor of medicine at UCLA and chief of Harbor General's division or endocrinology and metabolis m . The 45 volunteers will be divided into two groups selected at random. One group will receive injections weekly ·for the first four months, and the other will receive injections every other week for the same period or time. Following the initial period, all partici- pants will receive injections every three or four weeks for six months. · Uuring the study, all subjects will participate in blood tests and semen analysis twice a month, and each man will be monitored on an ongoing basis to be cer- tain no problems are developing. Thole :p#ticipating in the study will re- ceive a modest compensation, but, accord- ing to Dr. Swerdloff, men are wanted "who will participate because they are personal- ly interested in the importance of the pro-. jeet. We want people who will stick with the pro,tam the entire 18 months." Volunteers may call the Harbor General Hospital Male Re productive Study Center at (213) 328-2380, ext. 1422. Men currently receivin·g hormonal or tranquilizer treatment are not eligible. WHITE'S SHOWCASE SU fH( LARGl ST SHfCTION IN SO O RANGE COUN TY ' . ' . . . . 'anuarJ INCLUDES EVERY LA·Z·BOY .CHAIR IM OUR SHOWIOOM AND W ARIEHOUSE OVER I 30 CHAIRS ON DISPLAY ,..._.._ St...+IMJ as low• 5169 EWtY LA·Z·BOY has a - LIFETIME warranty on 111 parts of the patented reclining mechanism. We ...... WW w.w ,,.. w..,., •• . . ·-" NEW CLASSES STARTING NOW CLASSES TAUGHT BY ACCREOITEO PROFESSOR OF DANCE ALL AGES • BEGINNERS THROUGH ADVANCED. THE DANCE STUDIO ICE CAPADE S CHALET COSTA MESA Harbor Blvd al Adarn; Tel: 979-8880 Amusing observations of I ife along the Orange Coast, penned by a native son, in the DAILY PILOT 3700 E. Coast Highway, Corona del Mor -673-9000 ,_ ...... \c.--.- 1222 S. lroallllllnt, at W ld., AllClllMi111 US-2461 71550H.....,#11 1•19'CM ~Im 1-M>MlrtJ 71~346-1194 , WHOLESALERS OPEN-TO-THE PUBLIC OFFERING THE LATEST FABRICS FROM NEW YORK CLOTHING MANUFACTURERS! SALE STARTS TODAY ANAHEIM & COSTA MESA LOCATIONS -NOW OPEN WEll<DAY MnS UNTil 9 P .M. ENTIRE SELECTION! 60" GABARDINE ASST. FABRICS & SPORT FAUICS 9 6 *SO COlORS c * POlY/CTM. BUNO *BOC.TS & IOlTS RETAIL VALUE SA YO YO. WE GO TO "GREAT LENGTHS" FOR WOW! DENIM 49 ~.~~!i!~!. ~ 1ft Uf TO 1 fO. NCU • If ON IOL.TS-$3 R!TAll. VALUE JERSEY PRINT RIOT!! THOUSANDS OF PAmRNS! EVERY YARD-ALL STORES! fAMOUS PANOS * lOOMS«ll * COUUUI * lAURARX •GAWRY I lflll IUtlf Ult .. SA l'a. ll(UIL •v.uu a~nn -.UCV ... MCC 1st Ill c YD. BOLTED, NOT REMNANTS! UNBELIEVABLE~ SWEATER *"u~!tTS 88C * tons. •ot llll41AWTs YD • m u•a r011 ss ro.111 lOCU o n FAIAIC STOllU BOLTS Of POLYESTER! DOUBLEKNIT POLYESTER * F H CIU I $DUDS * IUUTIFUl SlUCTIOtl *VALUES TO H YD. II LOCAL STOfl£$ 87~ * DOWNTOWN l.A. 9SO SANT££ Corner of OIJfllpic (213) 627-4471 HRS Ma.. Sat. t 30 S· 30 * COSTA MESA : 11tt1 a PWHTIA (714) 646-4040 HOURS MC*. TitRU Flt. 10 MlO 9 PM SundaJ 11 lM.·S PM * ANAHEIM : 509.c £. uruu Hl"l lloolO-'•',..' (714) 772-4471 SAT. 10 AM-I PM SUN U·S PM .. • C'.f DAIL V PILOT -Wlldne~y. Jtnuary 14, 1171 ... Hot Entree Lets the ·Hostess Keep Her G:ool • Do you have guests who are then it finishes cooking in a thick I teaspoon ginger perpetually late when you invite curry sauce . l,.f, cup salad oil the m to d inner ? Thi~ can be Kttp the heat low and you 'll be 3 medium size apples harassing for the conscientious rewarded with tender, moist, 4m.edium sizeonions rook. The solution is to collect a velvety-textured meat. Sour 2tablespoonscurrypowder few reeipes that hold up for such <'ream is added just befor e serv-I tablesj)oon salt OCC'asions. ing to prevent curdling. 1 cup chicken broth This reC"i pe for chicken breats It isn't necessary to serve the 1~ cup sour cream waits well and is even better usual curry condiments as this Split <"hicken breasts. Mix nour after reheating. dish ts·nor as hotas the autlfentic anCl"jinger in a paper bag. Add a \Jnl ike the c lassic curried curry. few pieces of chicken to the bag Remove browned chicken from Stir in sour cream but do oot let lt t:Up honey J' skillet and cook curry powder,· boiJ. M the butter in a large TY · apples, onions and salt in the ing n. Add the onions nd drippi ngs unt il onions are APPLE REUSH celer)'. Cover. a nd c.ook ve translucent. This takes about 15 l tablespoon butter or mlnutei> until 1oft bulot minutes. margarine . brown.ed. Add the can ed Transfer onion-apple mi )(ture 4 medium onions, peeleci and ginger. raisins and f•1 1 , to blender. Add I cup chicken sliced · Sti'r in the lem.oa. oe li broth. CQ..v~r .An.d ble.n.d..JmtiL _ _.1 cup c e le ry_,__~r.u.lY cue__pone).'.. Mix w · c:Qot: un· smooth. Return s auce to skillet chopped Covered ·until app • ?>iil .__~~· ---'chicken-where cur..r-y.....pow~ii----======cco=----"D<i--Shake-to.-co.ai--8itch-piccc.. · cooked first in oil or butter and CHICKEN BRE1\STS Preheat salad oil in a skillet. and'heat until it bubbles. 2 tables poons candled soft~"'l>ut are still rum -1UJW.1t R educe-h oa t~dd-browned-ginget.,..finelµhop~-~~~-Jl.l!!!A'*1m.i!~~-==,..0;:!1::=.-+- chickC'n breasts, basting well 3 medium apples, peeled and . chicken pieces are browned in JN CU RRY S.4.UCE Brown the coated chicken on a ll the seasoned fat. this chicken is 3 pounds chicken breats sides . browned first in unseasoned fat, 1'2 cup all-purpose flour Peel , core and chop apples. Be Subtle Energy Spored Su ccul ent spa reribs "i ll be welcomed by· all in the famil y, and guests too. The secret to a subt ly spicy sa uce is the pi· quant fla\'Or of sweet 'n t art cra n be rry j uice cocktail. The sauce is mixed in a j i ffy even while the spa reribs are in the first stage of being coo ked. To round out this de- lectable dish, serve a s a lad bowl of crisp greens and a basket of toasty, butter ed French bread. ;\pitcher of cranberry juice cOt"ktail mixed half and half with ginger ale "·o uld be a bubbly , tasteful thirst quencher. For colorful edible garnish, place a slice of orange in each glass. For dessert. a bowl of fresh fruits. and a mild cheese "·ould be pleasin g. C RAN BERRY SPAR E RIBS J 1 ~ cups cranberry juice cocktail 1 3 cup tomato catsup 3 tablespoons cider vinegar 2 tablespoons olive oil 7-ou nce pa ckage garlic sa lad dressing mix 6 p o un d s l ea n spareribs Combin e c ranbe rry juice, cats up, vinegar, olive oil and salad dress· ing mfx. Stir until well mixed. Place spareribs on a rack in a large Oat pan; cook in a 450 degree F'. oven 20 minutes. Reduce heat to 350 degrees F . Remove s parer ibs . from oven and pour off any ,fat in pan. Brush generously with cran- berry mixture. Return to oven : con- tinue cooking for I hour . or until ribs are brown and cris p. Ba ste with cranberry mi xture 5 times. Serve hot . Makes 5 servings; 2 cups sauce. Finale's Festive Here's a refreshing f i nale fo r c a lor ie counters who appreciate fresh seasonal fruit.· TANGERINES IN SNOW l envelope dessert topping mix I cup s mall curd cot· tage cheese 1/, teaspoon ginger non-caloric liquid sweetener 2 c up s fr es h t angeri n e sect ion s, seeded Fresh mint leaves • with · the curry :sa.ucL..Reduc. · · trip:·---c"c------; heat to low and cook JO to 45 1h cup golden raisins minutes until chicken is tender. Y.i cup lemon juice •I • 'I , I jt "t ' '• I • ,, • , .... I ' . ' • .~ . -Prepare topping. mix according to package dir ect ions . Thoroughly blend in cottage cheese, ginger and a few drops non-caloric sweetener to tastf'. Reserve JS tangerine . sections. Cut remaining sections in half ; fold Into whipped topping mix- ture. We've lowered prices on all ~hese ite~s. Spoon into 6 serving dishes; top each serving w i t h 3 r e served . tangerine sections. Chill thoroughly ; garnish with fresh m int before serv· ing. Note: This may also be p:repared wi t h low calorie topping mix, if available. For an excellent navor variat ion, s ubs titute eit her i,~ te•spoon rum extract or V. teaspoon almond exlr•ct for the &inser. What you see above are some of the Items on which Alpha Beta ha1 lowered the price tags. We ju1t didn't have room to show you all the thousands with newly reduced prices. But they're all there waiting for you, anytime you 11)op Alpha Beta. Notice we 1ald anytime you 1hop Alpha Beta, becau1e that's Important. Thase great new l0w_prlce1 are not "one-week spe- cial•" th•t will go up ·again next week. They •re Alph• Beta's everyday low prices. You'll see them Just about everywhere yow look ... all throughout the store. This means llterally more food for your dollar at Alpha 8-ta ... substantial savings in your food budget. (NO NEED TO BUY A MEMBERSHIP CARD, EITHER!) Prove it to yo~1elf. Shop Alpha Beta. Compare our new price reduction• with any other market. You'll soon dl1cover why we proudly say: • • ·1 I • ~· l {'' I Call 142 .. 5171. Put • , .. words lo work for ou. Alph8 Beta. The last wo19d In •··prices. tt'' POUNTNMYjL(n __ W_. HUffTH\IGTONKACH tfMIMtims ttUNTINOTOHaUct+-41411.,...._ MUpfTIMCITONllACtl .... N.Melnk *>UT'H• ....... ·1111tL.ciMll .... ww1J . COITA •~ ttarttc' •l'ld. COSTA MESA-44t E.171h St. LAGUNA ttlLLt aM1 ~,.d91A LUIM IRVltrfl-'fltMCUtver, Un'"'9tr.'•rk ., ·. , ' i ' • • l I I I ' ' l I l l I ' I I [ 0 1 gar' graJ the ver~ A: tak( refr Gia witt H sect plu ginf and mer G par; the met .'.\ sl <Ul cont Tl side mer sect " . Dish Saucy Once considered only a G LA Z E D L E G O F garden curiosity, fresh LAMB WITH ·n.r....-11 ..... WM..~21 Olly WW.. s.,,les '-I! grapefruit is now one of GRAPEF&UITSAUCE the creative cook's most I fl versatile foods. • ti alf leg of lamb eoMPARE OUR PRICES~ ieiiii~ ... --(about 31 2 pounds> Anexcitingnewwayto I c up plum pre- take advantage of this serves refreshing citrus is in 2 teaspoons fresh Glazed Leg Of Lamb grated grapefruit peel with Grapefruit Sauce. 2 tablespoons fresh s queezed grapefruit• juice '-'l teaspoon ground ginger IASTBM STUFFED CRABS Here, peel, juice, and sections combine with plum preserves and ginger to serve as glaze and sauce to comple- ment am b. 2 grapefruit, peeled, 1 CHOPPED . sectioned • Place lamb fat-side-up 'QAM MEAT on rack in open roasting G r a p e ! r u it pr c . pan. Roast at 325 degrees paration is simple . Use F. for 1 hour. the 'round and 'rouna· Meanwhile, combine HOUH: MOMDAT ntau NI. l~S:JO method for'J>eeling. With prf!serves, grapefruit SAT. I l:lM:lO CLOSID SUM. a slight ,aw1ng motion, 'Jl!~l. juice and ginger;.,_......_ _____________ _. cut the peel away in a '(four % c up over Th FISH MARKET . continuing spiral. grapefruit sections; re-e sides of each dividing 'ning sauce. Roast 45 145 E. BROADWAY, COSTA MESA Then cut along bothf ee a~te lamb with re-Jim and Scmtdy c._r membrane and lift out' utes longer, basting sections from center. .! , ~er al times. ._ ______ '4_...._2_23 ______ -"' ·~DELANO'S "~FOOD MARKET I IAT THE WATER'S EDGEJ ~ ' ' 2800 LAFAYETTE ST. 675-9450 . , MMPORT BEACH LARGEST SELECTION OF SEAFOODS IN I : . . ORANGE COUNTY tAL WAYS AY AILAILll I •t SHRIMP • SPANISH iB> COLoSSAL SHRIMP MALA Ysi6" JUMIO TIGll SHllMP MEXICAN JUMIO SHRJMP .. COOlp MEDIUM »I> SMAU SHRIMP OlllNT'A IAIADID StmMP . ,. I !41 • ~ . -~· :!It"' KIMG CUI MEAT • M KIM8. CIAI LEG MEAT · ALASiAM KIMG CUI LEGS &. CLAWS .ALA ... cu• COCXTAU. CLAWS WHOU'UMIODUMGBtlSSCIAIS DAMl»"1CIAI~ ';I '.. ~ . ' lUifiUWAM LOISTa TAILS LOISTBMIAT PACIAC W'HOLE COOlll) LOISTB ! "I ' .. .( . 1, SHEU.ASH AIALOMI · MOYA SCOTIA JU..-0 SCALLOPS IASTllM LITTLIMICIC a.AMS MSTRM CHlllYITOMI CLAMS IASTRM CLAM MIAT IASTIRM 11.U.OIMI' Sia&. OYSTllS IASTllM OYS,..S. SHUClm IASTBM llEADtp onnas lt SERVING THE ULTIMATE IN SEAFOODS .. . " ASH ALLEYS IOCK COD FILLET RED SHAPPEI FILLET EHGUSH SOLE FILLET PITROU SOLE FILLET SEA IASS FILLET HAl.llUT FILLET TUUOT FILLET MAHJ.MAHI FILLET SWORDFISH FILLET SAMDAIS IDAHO TROUT IOMB.ESS IDAHO TaOUr tw.llUT STEAKS SALMON STIAKS FltOQLIGS 5qUID SMELTS ncaLED AHD SMOKED asu SMOIB> FISH SMOllm FIMMAM HADDIE ...... HBllMG . SMCMrm SAi.MOM LOX 18_.. IM SOUR CUAM tBUtGIMWIHl~E 5'1CICUTHllllH6 MOITID aau•• CAVIAl DOMISTIC 11.ACI CAYIA.I FOR THE PAST ~O YEARS r ··AT THE SAME LOCATION I Wedntlday, Jenuery 14, 1978 DAILY PILOT C5 . Brunch Exactly Right For a very special CRANBERRY brunch consider Cran-RMPBEMlnOMELET 12 slices Canadian bacon In a saucepan, com- bine cornst,arcb and sug- ar. Stir in cranberry sauce and raspberries. Stir over low beat until s auce bubbl es and thickens slightly. Sim· mer 5 m inutes; keep sauce warm. cooked portion to run un- derneath, until top of omelet is moist but firm. berry Raspberry Omelet CANADIAN BACON with Canadian Bacon. 2 tablespoons cor- nstarch The filling for your ~cup sugar omelet mixes whole I-pound can whole berry cranberry sauce berry cranberry sa~e IO-ounce package and frozen raspbenies. frozen rasplferries, Serve along with slices of thawed Canadian bacon. 8 eggs. 1 teaspoon salt To round out this menu ~ teaspoon pepper prepare a salad of crisp 1(3 cup rtlilk greens with a light dress-~ cup c bopped ing, corn or bran muffins parsley and a carafe of rose I/, cup butter or wine. margarine In a bowl, beat eggs with salt, pepper, milk and parsley. Heat butter in a 10-incb skillet. Pour in egg mixture. Cook without st1mng, lifting edges of omelet with spatula to allow UD· Spoon some of the sauce over the omelet and with a wide spatula lift omelet at one edge and fold over. Slide omelet onto a serving platter. flace ~ ~lices into skillet and brown quickly on both sides . Serve bacon around omelet. Each serving of omelet should be topped with some of remaining cran- berry sauce. Serves 6. PRODUCE SAYINGS 1854 NEWPORT BLVD. rco:::~~:~~tv00~•T OPEN 6 DAYS 9 to 6 PHONE 642-6025 ..., JUMBO ''C EGGS1um1t 3 Doz.I DOZ. ~ . TANIARINES 17~ ..... RUBY RED IRAPEFRUETE 10~. CLOSED TOMAYTOES 25~ SUNDAY .. HOWTO . KNOC:KA COLD AND :CURB A COUGH ALL IN ONE CAPSULE • It's called Dimacol.00 And it goes one step further than ordinary cold capsules -it controls the cough, too. Dimacol. relieves your cough while if f; treats your cold. Dim.a col has ingredients that help clear your stofped- ~p nasa and smus passages, loosen phlegm and bronchial secretions, and suppress coughs for · 6 to 8 hours. During that time, Dimacol · has been prescribed or recom- mended by physicians well over half a million times. · Available without prescri~::. ~k your p c1st. ·~ You'll find , · , .. Dimacol in better drugstores ~nd pharmacies. Look for it in the cold and cough remedy section. Or ask your pharmacist for assistance. ,. . . .. ...-. . .... .... . .. . ..... ........ , ... ~ ............... -. . . . . .. . . . .. . .. • .. '· . ,. Mrs. Wrlghfs, 30 Slice. Sandwich and Regular. 11/z-lb. loaf So'! *'*' ~Js~ ~,...:;;;.;, ... 'i Towels Truly Fine Quality. GET SAFEWAY ON THE EXPRESS I we welcome FOOD STAMP SHOPPERS Soft and Absorbent ill S1t1w1r Stores Nl't N l1pres1 Cllectl1IMll Ope11 lftfJ "'-IM S!Ofl tS 0per1 1or Slloppw1 w11t1 I ••s or less. • Roll IFs •••••••·-----I r. ------~ Sav1bp , , 1 .1 r.i':I SaweUp , . 1 ·1 "J,. To 7&' .... ~9&' .... 'i;;. Good For (4) Four 8-0z. Pkgs. g;.1 ~;; Good For (6) ~ix Quarts :J1 l~;: Manor House c{I li>~i Havol1ne ;,1 ·\·IQMeat Pies rb . MOTOR OIL ~;:: ~""" l Q" with :;, ~~~ou-Jo-weight 39c w1111 ~=;i .•. ''. 8-oz. ., This b.. .. MO~ o•• ouarf This c-;jl ·~-. Pkg. 11. Coupon c.; ,;-:;<O Can 11• C:on :::J I IP;~ W1lh Thts CCKJpon And A SS.00 Purchase ~< .~ With This Coupon ~nd A e .OO l"ur t s..:~, l:>:·: .f1clud1n; Fluid Mllk Pl'oducls. " p:~ ,' Exclud1n; Fluid M~ Pl'Oducts, ft>:: I~:} Tob1tc o & AlcGtlolk: Beverages. ,D::'.a "".' T~b~co I AltOIMlliC kW•lflS. 1>::£1 Ir,, f~ . Limit t Coupon Per Fam~1l\ll ~-..,,.. Limit 1 c._ l'er Family. JJ..,I \'·~!Coupon Good Jan. 15·18. t97&;~.. ~~!Coupon GoodJ111.15-18, 1976~'\;lt 1\/ore Grca/ Safell'a}' Valui' Buys' Grapefruit Jui~~~~ $.._49o ARfJl~aUCeHighw•1. creamy smooth1~~~· 25° Cut Asparagus s:~·1.~;~· · 1 ~:.·· 39c · Sweetheart LimeO•tergem · ~~·49° Detergent White Mag~. laundry Produd 4~'.· 99° L. t · . @s101 IS er1ne GargleandMoulhwash . ~~: Eflerdent Tablets ~:o s1 11 Large Size, Texas Ruby lb. f[tS~ Carrots . 3 ,~~A9' ~nJ~~,!?!!:,... "· 29' · !:iPJ~~"~P~1e_~ ...... 4:, 59• ~~!1S~~~'~"H~~rts . ,.59' Broccoli Fmlland Tllllllr. Sim Wllh Holllndllse Sllllll. • ,. Bakery Shop Buys! ·) Crushed Wheat . };.r . BREAD . · zeskylark A 9 C )f ~ 24-oz.Loarlif @~~~3.r."~'"' 79c @~-~~ ....... &gc / 1,11111r 11111/ ll'ine Rut 1' Q MacNair's llilll lmpot1ed 86-Prool Monutlry Vlnoylnl Pr-.. Wino I oriel I /lef'lll'/111 <'111 V. k' F I 44 "" '1" IC S OfmU 3 Cough Mixture Bo111e V. k' N a ·1 '"' '1" IC S y UI For Night1imeRe11er Bollie . . C Bottle ,1., V1t am1n Sareway.25-0 Mg 01100 In Our Dairy Ca.<e ... ORANGE JUICE ~\ Tropicana i.aii!.«!' Pure ....... i ;;, ~ . ~.~I . '<\i ~ 32-oz. -~» Certon ~' c . ~~!.!~!t.69C Y Atgulor Alld Lu.cerne ogurt ~··'tt"" Lucerne Potato Salad Mrs. Wright's Biscuits Lucerne Dips ::,:, ' • 1 • I U.S.D.A. Choice Gl'llde Be_e_f ~---. uck--Roas~t~ Small Sizes . CUI From Eastern Porll. These Are Tender. Fine-Grained Pork Spartribs. lb. Breaded Perch Fillets age Frozen and Defrosted ................... lb. Young Turkeys Grade "A'' 69C Manor House Fryer-Roaster, 5·9-lbs .. 111. Breaded Fishslicks,. . .,$149 • Capl~in's Cl'tOlcl frozen ............. Pltg. !~~~t .~!!.~~.~.. . " s 1 o 9 PORK SAUSAGE Farmer John Regular or Hot Sl1ceo Bacon Sliced Bologna ,, ... "' ~'"' ;~: 99' l't1111am s or Corned Rounds M''''' s .. 1 ... ' • Slt1w1y Pol Roll~ ,........., l!*J. - 1,., ton-..,. 1111 1111 r1c1t lllvor J'l'I get onty In ;u.S.O.A. -111111 Alll uc11 rout II trJmtMd ol UClll --··-·--1 7-BoneHoasts gge USDA Choice at.I Chucit ............... lb. ~.~~~!~I!!~~ . , .. 69e Lamb S"8ulder Chops $179 . USDA Choice Sltoulder llMI Cut ... lb. Boneles~ Roasts $159 USDA CholCt ~Cross lllb CbUCk 111. ' Fresh Beef Brisket $149 ;~:;;r~;: .. ~~~ s 119 U.S. Go"'*t" ~ .......... "- Ma)ltf·Sl<ITT!ess 1·1b 51 16 Wieners Meat or llet1 Pkg. Smok-A·Roma s1g8 Boneless Ham wai• """ "· uu~uque Chopped Ham '""' '""' J.1b s4" ''" Check These Super Savers! 0 O••rt890. • Jar . ' 16·01 @ Busy Baker Grahams '"' 49' ~ Plus Oepos11 S 16·0l. 99, lilil Pepsi Cola ''''"1¥1 '"'· @Spaghetti Sauce "''" 'i;;~ 59' al 5-lb 89 • Pooch Dog Food ~. "' ' @Sandwich Bags """"'""" @Oven Cleaner "'· """" @Fabric Softener """- @Peanut Butter '"'""'1 FROZEN FOODS "'· 39' 0180 16:0t. '1 " ... "·"·99• Bo!11e . J·lb. '1 " J¥ FRENCH FRIED POTATOES . .-"· --~'C' .:;._. ·:..:.· ···~· ,, .. ~ ,;_,: .. ~_ .. _ .. ··· . .;..,.-c.-r -' Scotch Treat . A Companion For H11111burgers and Slel,s. c · ·•i•c.......:1s..c.._... · -· • .._ .. , .......... n , • .._. . •14•11.c..1r ... w .... ....... ' • I . ....... - I . ' • t '.' ' r t t. I ~ -• t ! ' , f' I • l • l ii Wednesday.Janu!ty 14, 1~8 OAILYPllOT €7 ·PIO ·J1l Old Custard 'Figures • 1n New Dessert \ Oft.n the greatest d~ are the simplest ones and the perfect ex~le ls a baited cust~ ii pie?, .. yes, but v~ .. very eleg t, too, when u,ntoolded with butnlshed coaUntot bumt • ., ~u1ar and served with d~~ figs in a syrup flavored with the.tame t bumtsugar. i Y,.ol_ltcan make the 9uftaltt}e t claisit wa)': with egtf,• ilk. cret~and ~ugar, or Y°'M• use ~ -a-m1x. Made the tradittCllA ay. the custard is baked ln a <. car•m~Jized-sugar-lin~ {UOld, then chilled before unmolding. nie custard mix' need~ pnly to be cboked with milk a nd tream • then poured into the sugar-lined mold Ud chilled. · • Pl mp, 11\0ist dried fi m ake the erf~ct f 9il for t oft, ere~ cust~d.j ·t FIGS AND CRBME CARAMEL l ('Up firmly packed dried fies (8 ounces> l 'A cups boiling water 1 '4 «."ups sugar Dash salt 6eggs 6egg yolks ~ teaspoon salt 34 cup sugar -1 t~b~n vanilla 2 cupsOpmt> half and half, or light cream 2cups milk Remove stems from figs and cut in half. if desired. Pour boil- ing water over figs and let stand while melting sugar. Place 1 \4 cups s ugar in heavy saucepan and stir over low heat until sugar melts and turns a golden brown. Remove Crom heat Carmelized sugar flavors fig syrup anal custard 's coating. I r ! i ' ... Homework's Elegant Taste Tested • PHILADELPHIA (AP > - Friedemann P . Erhardt, a master chef who funs one of the biggest hote l kitchens in Alnerica, makes house calls to teach gourmet cooking. For S50 an hour he'll cook up a cuisine storm in your kitchen. "I have a selfish reason tor do- ing it -it's fun,'' says Erh4rdl, a 31-year·old bachelor who emi· grated irom West Germany in 1973. to supervise tht: cooking and baking of a bout 4 500 meals daily. • It's also profita ble, since teaching a group of gourmets usually takes two o;threebours. "Generally four or five couples participate, and the men are more enthusiastic than the women," be says. Erhardt doesn't grab every re- quest. He insists on a house in· spection -"I must know if they have only a double burner and a !ryipg PaJ}" -but ad~ that IUD)' 9f 'th• kllt~ns he's coolted in have ga~t utensils and ~ tje't1'at ly seen. After tbe/ersonal codiulta-tiob. Erb;r m'aps the menu, I prepares the fancy recipes and hands over a shopping list. The host.pupils pay for the food, roughly $30 for four persons. "I like to cook every style, from French, Italian, German Swiss, Chinese, to the Far East .. : he says. "The only distinction I make is between good food and bad food." Erhardt, who has been work- ing professionally in the kitchen for more than half his life, s ays he is the youngest person ever to earn the master chef Litle in Germany. What upsets Erh ardt sometimes is the wors hip of French cuisine over all other cooking, especially in the United States. "You'd never know there was anything else in this world besides French cooking," he says. "But the old type is rich and fattening and too often dulls the appetite." Now be C"laims the French are promoting the kind of cooking he's been pushing for nearly a de- cade -•'it is healthier cooking. not so much butter. much more nut.ri tious .' • ·FROM Fash ion Jsland l'fewport ~each • and spoon 2 to 3 tablespoons melt- ed sugar into 1 h quart charJotte · mold or metal bowl. Tip mold so that syrup covers bottom; set aside. Carefully add water drained from figs to melt~ugar re· maining in saucepan (mixture will s team a nd s ugar will harden). Add a dash of salt; stir mixture over low heat until sugar dis- solves and mixfure becomes a clear, thin syrup. Add drained figs and chill thoroughly. Beat eggs, egg yolks, 1·, teaspoon salt, '• cup sugar and the vanilla until well mixed in a large bowl. Scald half and half and milk in saucepan over medium beat ; stir into egg mix· ture. Pour into mo"' with caramelized sugat on the bot- tom. Set m old in p an ot hol water nnd bake on lower rack in 350 degree F. oven 65 minutes <see below> or until knife inserted in center com es out clean. Remove from pan o( hot water and cool. Chill at least ei~ht hours <'r overnight. -•An•n AFIWOf OU. ·--·~ ·--· ~- SNAii POITIOI SMOKED HAM ll&CMKI 7-BONE ROAST ~\:.97* ' ~~.89* CAMPBELL'S TOMATO SOUP I l~l~L18* To serve. loosen top edge of custard with knife and i.ihake mold gently. Invert serving dtsh over mold. then reverse both mold and servin~ dbh Pour a little of c·;.1ramel syrup qver custard and garnish with some of the figs. Sl•rve custard w1fh r emaining saun• and fi gs. 5\erves 10 to 12. QUICK l<'IGSAND CRE M E ('ARA.MEL Blend 2 packages (.JI ·· ounces each) egg custard mix. l tup heavy C'ream and 1 quart milk in lar_ge sauc<'pan. Hring to a boi l ,., .. u n116(,_ "".,,. __ ...... __ •• l"fr\. .... --··~---~ .... ::-::-.:.·:·:~ . ------·--........... -·-·-·---...... ..., .. _ ·----··-.... --------·--- .. over medium heat, stirring con- :>tantly (mixture will be thm>. Remove from heat and stir tn 2 te3spoons vanilla Pour mto J 1 ~ quart charlottt' mold or metal bowl hoed with caramelized sug- ar as directed in above recipe. Cool, then chill at least 4 hou s or overni1?ht. To serve, loosen top edge with knife ;ind shake mold )!ently . Invert serving dish over mold, then reverse both mold ~nd st-rvinl! dish. . Pour a !Jttlc of caramel syrup over ('USt:irct and garnish with some of the figs . Serves 10 · AIJOU PEARS FIOZEI WHOLE SUll ORANGE JUICE ~~19* LI. LAIGI IAICY \ TANGERINES ~~.19* ; ~ WESSON Oil ~ ~(!».,A ;. t ;i '::':' ,., y . \\~~19" · ~ l·OZ. y \. •,: CAI t(!PEPSI COLA !Z~s~8P\n-.SIT9* :ej ______ _ MAIKn BASKn MEL •O•SOn BREAD :fa~ * ~(!27 LOAF STEREO SOUNDS OF THE HARBOR ·--.. DAil Y PILOT Wedneed•y.J.nuary 14, 1176 -. Today•s smart shopper knows how important a freeier can be ln getting the most tor your food dollar. . . sklmmttl M'o&zareila cheese 12-ounce container pot. <lle<se 2 packages (9-ounces each) frozen choopped spinach, cooked Combine remaining Mozzarella with pot cheese, spinach, tuna, and sauteed onioft. .. , noodles an.d. Marinara Swee. Sprinikle reserved m Moziarella chffllie over,cHSerol,es. Put a Freeze It allows you to b'-'Y meat and other itt-ms on speC'iaJ, helps you preserve produce from your own garden and aids in avoiding . Jeftovers by packaging roods to fit your famjly 's needs. and drained . 2 c11ns (7-ounces.each) tuna, drained and flaked ~cup unsifted nour J '4 teaspoons salt Melt remainin' 4 t&1blespoons margarine in same saucepan. Blend in flour, aalt and pepper. Gradually aur in skim milk. Cook over medium heat, stirring, until mixture comes to a boil. Remove from heat. Bai-e•at 375 degre'es' F . 25'to 30 minutes, until bot and bubbling. !ttakes 2 casseroles, 6 1crvlb1s each. Freezing Instructions 'To rreeze one casserole. line pan with roil leaving ends ex· tended over sides. Flll pan and wrap well. Freeie until .solid. Remove lasagne from. Pan. Return to freezer for up tq 3 \ii teaspoons salt white pep.. On Food Buys The freezer can al.so be a big timesaver. lnstead of cooking one meal at a time, rook two a,nd put one in your freezer. Most casseroles freeze very well if they are wrappeO propirJYt per • 3 cups skim mllk .2 Jars (l~lf.I ounces each) Marinara Sauce f pOu na-1asagne noodles, cooked and drained Spread a s mall amount or Marinara Sauce jn the bottom of each or two 13 ;oe 9 x 2-lnch bnklng pans. Place a layer of lasagne noodles over sauc e. -Top v .. ith 116 or the tUii.a mix- ture, i t6 of the white 9auce and about IAJ of th e remaining Marinara Sauce. Beginning \l.'ith lasagne noodles repeat layers to two more times. mo.nth>-_ __--== _ To serve, peel off roil anu place lasagne in baking pan. Thaw in refrigerator overnight. Bake covered at 375 degrees F. 30 minutes: remove cover and bake :K> minutes longer• or until bot 3nd bubbling. Innovative Chicken 'N' Rice Not all casseroles are meant to be scooped up for serving . 1'1ere's one that can be cut into squares ... certainly an unusual touch that adds a bit of elegance. lt 's the eggs in thf' casserole that make it firm enough to cut. These plus rice and seasonings make 3 cups of leftover chicken into a brand new entree. SCALLOPED CIUCKEN SQUARES WITH MUSHROOM SAUCE 4 eggs. beaten IO-o unce can con- densed cream of chicken soup 1'2 cup milk or chicken broth l cup finely chopped ·onions 3 cups cooked rice 3 cups cooked chicken; leave in large pieces J cup .so ft bread cn1mbs tos 1.: rup d iced pimien-. l teaspoon salt 1 ~teaspoon pepper Mu.s hroom Sauce lsee belO\I.') Mix all ingredients together. Turn into a greased shallow 2 112- quart casserole. Bake at 350 degrees for 30 minutes or until knife in- serted near center com· es out clean. Cut into squares and top with mushroom sauce. Makes 6 servings. MUSHROOM SAUCE IO-ounce can con- den se d . cream of mushroom soup 4-ounce can sliced mushrooms, drained 1"2 cup milk ~ teaspoon celery salt Dash of red pepper Blend a ll ingredients and heat until hot and bubbly, Curls Cut Easily Curls are very stylish these days. Chocolate rurls are elegant, too - a prE'tty garnish for ice cre;im desserts, cakes and pies. The Chocolate ~l anuf;icturers /\s- ~ociation offers these in- s tructions for m;iking curls: A semi-sweet or s"'CC't C'hoC'ol;ite b;ir is best for flavor and handling ease. You can make curls u sin g a milk ch(){'olate bar, but it is likely to melt in your hand and become messy to h;ind\e. Rnking chocolate is a firmer pro- duct ;:ind easier to \\."Ork with. hut bitter -unless you like the taste. lJse a ve)!etablc peeler \\'ith a lon g narrow blade. Warm the chocolate slightly before you start by holding it ln the palm of your hand for several minult>s. or sct- tl n g it i n a su nn y window. For lar ge, thick chocolate curl~: ~1elt 2 dark , sweet or semisweet chocolate bars in the top of a dou· hie boll~r over hot, not boiling, water. Spread thinly on the baet of a 9-inch square baiktng pan. Chill JO minute. or Just until set. (Jf chocol11te ii too firm, lf't stand at room tern· perature a few minut es t.OIOCl.en .) Score into 1 ~-11 x l·inch plecn. Roll .earh piece lenathwise Into a curl with• metal spntula. 81•d• Ciit-Beet TUNA LASAGNA 6 t8:blespoons lOOo/u corn oil -margttr1ne l cup chopped onion 8 ounces shredded partially • Meat Master Meats Fresh Frozen -Detrosled Chuck Medium Melt 2 tablespoons" margarine in saucepan. Add onion and saute Wltil lightl}'. browned. Measure out l-cup shredded MozzareJla cheese and set aside. If you just found out the total really wasn't better, compare prices and you'll find the place you can roll back your food budget is Ralphs, where low prices come first! Top with remaining lasagene Light Chunk Chlck8n of the sea ' Tuna 5lt, OZ. wit/I Coupon •nd SS.to minimum pun:::ll••• • can ........ --..... . -·-...-~ Limit One Item and One Coupon Per Customer Coupon Effective Jan.1~ through Jan. 21. SUPER CQUPON Save an addltlonal .15 with the Chicken of the Sea Coupon In most food sedions. Super Bakery ~Steak lb .77 ~Spareribs lb .88 WM ... wh ... Super Produce ii~~; Bone l~~key -''"'"" All star ~Beef Roast lbl.09 ~Drumsticks ,, .39 c Bread Golden Delicious ~Apples lb. .19 ""· 29 loaf • D Ralpl'15-flCIU5i~e SGuper FreshdPack-3 lb. pkg. ec"'1'~rwlR•bS -_Wtlole l C<J'-Thign Super Bread roun a I orn1a :YI 1'<tiOll~-Maple Pecan -Oanist\ ~~~~h~~.lb,.,'"lb 1.15 65 ~fm~.V,~.~ .. ~~.~~s ·~88 ~ ~·;:j~~oa1 " ... 39 loaf • .... 55 pkg .• each ,83 D l:5rl~:;d0 Tangelos ~ E•01,F1ncr AH·P11rpo1e l'LJ D' Anjou Pears D crisp Cucumbers ~~Com lb. .19 lb .• 25 e1ch .19 udo .15 l'LJ Ground Beef lb . l-11 Butterbasted Turkeys lb .69 .1 ! j, !§ j j f,{!'J.tj 7. ~ ~~:s Stewing Beef lb 1.49 ~ 1Ga~~ H~~~pkg.-Ty_!on Corn~:ch 1.39 First F~~er1 0•1 s~r1i::-9 - -• ••-• - ~ ~·v~~ '5t;i«S'"" lb. 2.49 [;z o~hn9~~ess crabs lb .. 99 c8r1ocus 1 77 o ~~·~~rpose Whtte Rose lb, .19 ~ ~~~ess Ribeye Steak lb 2.88 Q; C~k~ Shrimp lb 2.19 ~ ossoms '"" I ~ s;f'Tip Steak tb. 1. 78 ~ f:;;~t;;'&;i; Fillets tb. 1.89 ~ C~;;;bination Plants . '"" 3.97 lb. .10 "" .05 ~~~~op ~ Frei/I, Juicy, Thin Skin l'LJ Limes ~ r-'!k;~·5;;.k· " 2.09 •'!li"!'!11.tll!§"l~1:11:"·'111{11114111;"'1• 0 ~o''p-•R"o'''u"n"d"'s'mtea" k 1.68 c(j .. 1.11.1"'" Pe11r P1n ~ I' R,11phs -Aged 6 f>~on1hs ~ ~;;i;;;;·B:t Roast :: 1.58 Sharp Tomato 13 Peanut "~· 85 1ar • ~ c;;~'l(;~9 eacon lb. t 49 ~Cheddar ,,,,, 1. 69 D ~~~~.~ ',:~ • 1 ~ ~.~-~!~ .... ~ e;~·H~r;;"•c00•·• lb 2.09 D sii~eci'H~m ,,, 1.75 Kraft Golden Premimn 115 ~s~ok;;p;,rkchops lb. t99 ~'E;t~a'sti·~~-Eh;jciar lb •• 1.69 ~Dinners '~:~.22 ~lceCream ::~:~ • 0 M;t'F'ranks , lb •• 93 ~ l.';~bShoulder Chops lb 1.88 D cK"o"s"h'.e' -rwo'0i1 1'1 'p' "i'c11klcs L".JI USDA Clloice Rib or 2 69 l'LJ Lamb Loin Chops lb. • [A Aim -Shoulder or l 69 rA K~s"henac;w~f 'F~'nks l'LJ Veal Rib Chops '" • l'LJ D "c''h,;igp-pedBeef. HMeats<1m or Turke1 ~ P(;~n(;RhopsibCul-CenterCul ["Ji! Buttermilk 01 Country Style ~ ~h1PO::k0Rri;;st lb .• 99 l'LJ Pillsbury Biscuits ~ Pt;:k'~ks lb. 1.58 D R;;ii)h';'i=n':it'orink D o;;;ng; J~iCe lb. 1.79 '"" .95 ""· 1.49 '" .49 ,~, •• 14 ~··'· 39 c1rton • hot! 87 t•lton • Super Spirits Health a Beauty Frozen Food .~"': '[ ·'1'! "t?'§"it"· '"'b,,r"ll'l@ll. l'lj•j'[llJ~) . Sterlli11-Laundry B11k1l1, P1il1, lake1/li11 Gin or ~ L1rg1 Size 011/lp1ns or W1111 B11k1lt Sandra . ~ Hawaiian Punch Household ~ Sti~'FrY~~ o Plastics .. ,, • 77 ~ !!~ .. ! .... 00, ,. .. ~~ 3. 79 ~ p;.:;k~ .. ~··~'" ~ 1En00 '!'!f:' or SO cl L.;11 5111 ~ Straight Bourbon fifth 3.99 [A PCom1et1.we.tOn-l1rg1CobSlu rY:J ~ pkg .49 [""]! Ju1n Vlldll ~ D 'Pla''°"stic".c"'Ha" ngers 25 l'LJ Imported Tequila ""' 3.99 ~ "Fried'"!''"'-c''~h·ick·-wen""' ." '".'' 1 ' 69 o GSpa1lloWnadaln1 ~ 0 Si~'COntainers ,,, . 9.r.:~ 2.09 ~ St;;;1Vegetables Prices effective January 15 through January 21 "'" 99 bottl• • 1"0L 67 J•r ' 5'ol 85 pkg •• •••. 89 of 5 • 3 oz. bollle I 01. bottle 1.35 1.49 ""· 59 pkg •• "'" 49 c1rWn • •••. 75 ol 4 • 21b. 2 09 pkg. • 2tb. 79 pkg, • Pantry Fillers ~ ;;;;k Sauce SOL 39 bottle • JPopcooltr Time -mUnpopped 2tb. 65 pkg. I ~ i~;;t;nto~~ 1~:~ .79 ~ Chii~· Weenees 1~c~~ .34 ~Golden Gr1in 84 l'LJ Long Spaghetti '~:~ • ~ striiwbeny Preserves "/:; 1.29 ~ ~h;ttid ~~~ S2 j:; .95 ~ ~0&:rea( ~=~ ,84 U For S1l1d1 or Cooking l'LJ Crisco Oil :!~~ ,89 ~ ~1D~11Cotree 'j:; 2.82 ["""A And•r11n'1-Po1110 or l'LJ Split Pea Soup * ",'::; .32 ~ L1ur1 Scudd•r l'LJ Mayonnaise* •••• 93 ' .. , I ~ a•·~',y;7·· Ot 32 ~~ .99 O_o_ ..... _ ,., 127 o--·..... O"·--·-II o ......... c-I n-... ··-e-r-...-............ 11 O'"""' ...... _" H11d & Should111 -· • S/lrtmp Slk:k1 ~:~ .99 Stltlne Cr1ck1r1 .::: .60 lll1ck P1pp11 .!'~ .73 ~ Shellle Be1n1 Kc":;, .34 ~Aoquelort Or111lng .:=_ .71 Tl.lrkey Hint .... i.11 0 ....... -c-.... "'.. o--w""·-··· ... ,.L o-···-· .. -·ori ,,... o.u--•... o-· ..... ~ .. v.c...... o-.. ,.,..... o---s•1nC•n1lollon :,: .88 FltetolSol• ..... 1.09 llgh1C/111nk,Tun1 .: 1.03 Yllb1nGro11ndColl•• 1.41 GroundCollH , ....... 4.4e l1elfr1nk1 11t. 1.0I V.rietr'PMl&i> "• t.17 O ..... r ·-o-··~.,.,, .. .,. .. O '""-·-• n•• ... -l .. C•---·....... 0111·----.. -· ...... -o-111., .... o1.. oc....-....... -A91c~ndi1iolt9f ,:.:; 1.73 Gorton P1rc/I ,0: 1.23 ln1t1ntCOfttt :!; 2.17 ~S.l1dDre11lrtg "',: .43 GrourtdCotlee ,.__ 4.21 Me1t8ol09ne u ... 1,02 ftlllll11....a-·-• ..... Tf OM•,..--""'"''" 0 11--r..... ,.. n·•-Y .... lioo .... 0 ... ..,........ ..... 0 .. .-Noou .. -""9.............. D""'-·-0---11-....-~ ErebrowP1ncll• ,..,. .54 Sc1llopCrl1p1 ,..: 1.31 1Y..J l o111e1te1Cro11ton1 , ... .15 llsqulck , .... 93 Ground Coffee 111 .... 1.41 8'u1Ch1111• •-,79 .MIMbolwrltN, ._. .. O_....... O '"""'°"*"·'-,. O°""''"'·-,. O""ll<•·•MloMiOOll ,.. n ............. -. o-··.. o---" ... ""'"I"' I • VOS H1l1 Sp11r• .!.: .II Gorton fltt1!1 .!:: f,31 B11n-Nol1 Brt•d ,:!; .II lolld Alb1cor1 Tllne• .. ~ .71 ~ S1uett1r1111• ... : ,37 ~J1ck C/111M' , ... 1.ot.. ~Tim-.. -t.ot O~--0 -1•-l«...... " 0 ....................... ,,.. nu-.... n-c-·· 0 ........... -o-··T" PropiPH' .!.: 'f.45 Or1ng1Pt111 ~ .71 SolldW/llt1Tun1• ,_.; 1.17 ~CutOtffnl11n1 ,..; .25 ~B11nMWt1n11• ',':; ,33 Wll1onl0togn• u ... .II luliLlf* ....... I • f.St 't t II bl --Bl·-... _"'''\""-.... _ .... ,.._ .... _'"1''~ .. --·•-WI•"""--O.O~•UI_... e-.. 101i:.---.... ------'-W1o-·Asttri1ked rems no 1v1 a e _..,,__ ._.._,.,. ...... ......,.._ ···-1to:•1•" .... --·-""-'IOI''"·-_," .... -.... --'*'"'-" -··--·:--...... '"""o' I t _..,,,..,..... --<$.• ... _"""' , .. _1 .... -..... ··-•1,. .. _ --t.))'----··••i..-.k --....,.,_, l'tfuMU'9ttecommerci.1 lnthefollowngsorea: _ ...... _ _,, .. Go....... • ... ..-~..,---·•t-•-(1.oo --. . .., . ...., .... -. ..... _..,. ~.,...._.,. _ _.~., ... ,... .. ~, .. ,_,,,,.__ _ ... ,.,o..r.,,. l __ .,mtl..,..., _......,..,'°'...,...., -""-cm<-c....,..,.. -..-m•-flll -• .,.. .. re~ 1m 1y fllat,fl• Gtoc...,. c-,...., ,.......,..~ r--·~•·--, r·-·®>·--, 11le i.trna ... wllh S..tr&m1prlc11 I ,..,. ..... ~ '"~ I I ......... ,r ..... ~c..... ,.:n I .......... """""'"'" ............ llllflt I Pll~ll'Y 5B I I CIDle-Up '!: I 1 floll' :: • 1 1 Too ..... 89 1 I UMIOM ........ o...c...,.,. .. c-I I L.1111110..119111 • .. 0...C......~C ...... I ,~,_...""" 11 .......... ft C...,.,. lllKIM.i-." ........ JM. ti L---=~--~ L ........ J '1901 ADAMS BLVD .• HUNTINGTON MACH 15471 S. llROOKHURST.<WfSTMINSTBt 401 N. LOARA, ANAHEIM 6942 WARNER, HUNTINGTON BEACH STORE HOURS: 9-1~ Dally', 9·? Sundoy -STORES'AllE LOCAnD AT: 380 E. 17th ST., COSTA MESA HARBOR & WILSON , ~4167 PASEO DE VALENCIA, LAGUNA HlllS 17261 17th ST .• TUSTIN COSTA MESA I • .. __ , i. 'I l sa1 pet 501 ha w' m1 bot l r .. ric ac'. er> .- ye thl of SU wi le IX! in ne Ho ge ne in pr H pu m dr l • (' • h • • ~ ~ 1 E ~ .~ .;: :;. ,c I IN •• I 'le L .. .. -·-,. --·-- Wednesday.J1nu1rx 14, 1976 DAJLYPl.OT gt Cheese Elevated to New Nutritional Stat.us Just 20 years ago when a man sat down to his cheese salad sup- per, be was pitied for his lac1t or sophistication or bis poverty. Today, nutritional experts have established that this man was, in fact, to be envied, fot his meal actually consisted of a bounty of health. · Modern au[riffonal science has recogniz~ that cheese provides rich protein, essential amino. acids, vitamins and minerals and energy stiUlulating milk fats. 'Knead ' a Lift? Complemented with fruits and a variety of raw vegetables and eaten with bread, it is a complete and well-balanced meal. Have run. Serve your cheese salad in your most unus ual dish -maybe an old soup bowl, a fondue pot or rarely used glassware. For a pleasant plus,. try a dash of c urry with your cheese salad, especially if it in- cludes tomatoes. These recipes make four main dish servings. This dressing is re- BOke Some BreOd . commended for cheese and fruit salads: CREAM SALAD DRESSING ~cup mayonnaise 2 teaspoons lemon juice ~ teaspoon prepared mustard 2 tablespoons light cream Combine all ingredients and stir until well blended and · smooth. CHEESE SALAD HAWAII 12 ounces Swiss cheese 2 eggs size. 40 to 60 minutes. , I cup raisins Divide dough in half; ,.. '" ~ Cream Salad Dressing 2 cups pineapple, cubed 'h cup coarsely chopped walnuts Cut cheese into small pencil- like strips. Toss cheese with pineapple and dressing. Place in- to serving dishes and garnish with walnuts. / CHICK EN AND CHEESE 8 ounces Swiss cheese, diced 1 cup pineapple, cubed 2 cups cooked chicken, diced , "'--· . ""· ... "' . ' " Cream Salad Dressing Iceberg lettuce leaves Maraschino cherries Combine cheese, pineapple, chicken and dressing ; toss untii well coated. Line a salad bowl with lettuce and add salad. Garnish with cherries. DELICATE CHEESESLALAD 12 ounces Swiss cheese, diced 11 -ou nce can Mandarin oranges, drained Burnished glow of pewter enhances buffet tier of fruit and Swiss cheese that also may be combined in substantial salad recipes. ·" < 2 firm bananas, cut into slices . 12 grapefruit, cut into sections .. Cream Salad Dressing Combine all salad ingredients and toss until well blended. Serve in Individual salad bowls. E MMENTHALER CHEESE· SALAD 12 ounces Swiss cheese 2 carrots 1 bunch radishes 1 green pepper 2 cups sliced red cabbage Desired salad dressing Greens 2tomatoes J hard cooked egg Cut cheese into strips. Slice carrots, radishes, green pepper, cabbage and mix with cheese. greens and dressing. Garnish with tomato wedges and egg slices. GREYERZERCHEESESALAD 1 pound na tural Gruyere cheese 2 large celery stalks Desired salad dressing Lettuce leaves 1 tomato 1 dill pickle Cut cheese and celery into small pieces and marinate in dressing for at least half an hour. Place in salad bowl lined with let- tuce. Garnish with tomato and pickle slices. .. ........ ,: ... , Mixing and kneading yeast breads and filling the house with the arom a of fresh baked bread is a sure cure for the mid· winter blabs. Combine 11.h cups of divide each half into 3 the flour, potato flakes, pieces . Let rest 10 yeflst, and salt in large minutes. Roll each piece / ..... • • • t \ ' Cooks or old added leftov er ma s hed potatoes to their dough, insuring added moist- ness to the finished loaf. Honey Orange Braids get the same moist good- ness from the addition of instant mashed potato products. HONEY ORANGE BRAIDS s to 6 cups all- purpose flour 1 cup country style mashed potato flakes 2 envelopes active dry yeast 1 tablespoon salt l 'h cups water 'h cup orange juice 'h cup honey ¥,, cup shortening 1 to 2 teaspoons grat· 1 ed orange peel mfiiter bowl. of dough to an JS.inch Co m b in e w ate r , long "rope." orange juice, honey, Braid three ropes shOrtening, and orange together, tuck ends un· J)tel in saucepan: heat der, a nd place each loaf until very warm. Add to on a well-greased baking flour mixture. sheet. Let rise again un- Blend at low speed, til light and double in then beat at medium size, 40 to60 minutes. speed or electric mixer Bake at 350 degrees' for for 2 minutes. 35 to 40 minutes, until de- Slightly beat eggs; re-ep golden brown. Makes move 2 tablespoons and 2 loaves. set aside. Add by hand, ----------1 eggs and 1 cup flour to Entertainment . dough: b eat at high Happenings ••• • speed for 2 minutes by hand. Stir in raisins and eI19ugh of the remaining flqur to make a stiff doUgh. Knead on floured s urface for 8 to 10 minutes, until smooth and satiny. Let rise in warm place until light and double in IJTlllllHOO Films Theater Dance Television Jn the Best Idea Since Shopping Carts _;~~.. . J · ":'x;:Now you can do a week's shopping ~ without forgetting a single item! Use pre-printed shopping lists prepared for you by PILOT PRINTING. .. 140 Hp1rete printed ltem1, plu1 additional 1p1cH you cen flll In yourHlf. 34 St1plH 21 Veget1blH 14 Fruit• e Bakery Item• 5 Beverege1 19 Me1t and fish entrle • 11 O.lry Items 20 Ml1eell1neou1 DAILY PILOT Great flavor mode Nescof~ the world's largest-selling brand of instant coffees. And 30C off makes this a deal that's too good to poss up! on Nescafe• tnstant Coffee in the 6 or 10 oz. jar-$. ' . . ' . ' ' . ~ . . ' . . . CJO DAll.YPil.OT Try . ABCookies A very good way to a delicious letter: Not all thought is on learn the alphabet is to AJpha~t Cook.Jes food in the large Cormet, I eatit. Hea t ove n to 400 96-page, fun-filled yet -. Now decorate lhcm. Jtaisim nm kc ~oc1d hair antl c)'tl'. Jellylw.'8n make VEJ{Y tai.l"J notie. Herea a-e~nwol my COOKIE f'RIENDS .•. ' So says the Cookie degrees. Put cloth on ta-educational soft-cover Monster, whose recipe ble. Sprinkle with flour. book , which sells for ror .i\lphabet Cookies aµ-Roll out dough about v.,,. $3.9S. pears in "Rig Rird's inch thick. Cut dough in· The Busy Rook ls Busy Rook ,·' j u s t tostrip. divided into d ifferent •• A~ published by Random Use strips of dough to stttions, each one close-ERNI r~ ~lonse in cooperation make your F AVORITE ly related to educational _4 GROVER "''ith the producers of letters. Put cookie let-goals or the TV program Retl "Sesa me Street." ters on ungreased rookie such a!: the alphabet, jelly.l>ean BERT Pink The book is a potential sheet. shapes , nature, color$, nose: jellyl>can nose. rainy day lifesaver fo r 0 .K. Now C'Omes the p e op I e in You r Orange Anc l spl'inkll'S ' SUSAN and GORDON both m ot her s and HARDESTpartofall ... neighborhood , feeling!, jellybean c·hild r en. I t contains Put in oven and WAIT numbers. body parts and 111akc him look ~ 'J>canltt ~ make gc)()(} n()S(.'S for people. I ., sC'ores of projeC'ts, in-si."toeight minutes. opposites. nose. fu zzy. 1 l 1 t·luding son1c si mple.----------=~--,,.---:---.,.--:--=--~---,.------~-~-----------~---------<~~~gr:~'.f:s r or the There's a lot of shouting about low food prices, but ••• .alphab('t C'ookies is ··cookie r.l onster 's Famous Cookie Dough,·· the first reripe in the book . The 12 easy steps are: I. Put :i~ cup of butter or margarine (that's a stirk :.tnd a half) into your mixing bowl. 2. !\.1 ('a sure I rup of sugar. 3. Pour sugar O\'er but ter. ·I. \\'it h n fork . squash butter nnd sugar togt•t her until they ure blendC"d. 5. Cr<lrk shells of 2 eggs and pour eggs over mixture in bowl. 6. Measure I teaspoon vanill a and pour over I ! I , ' I ~ • ) J mixturf>. 7 . \Vith fork . blE>nd everything in the bowl together. No supermarket can consistently promise prices lower than Lucky's everyday low prices throughout our entire store. Our pricing policy has always been to keep food prices as low as possible to insure our customers true value for their food dollar. Lucky was FIRST to take action against high food pric 1 over 13 years ago. when we eliminated stamps, games and glmml . Instead we gave our customers everyday low d iscount prices. l 8. !\olE>asure 21 : cups of all -purpos e flour and pour OVE>r mixture in We promise to continue with everyday LOWER PRICES OVERALL. bo"'·I. 9. !\o1easure I teaspoon baking powd e r and sprinkle over flour. • JO. Measure 1 teaspoon salt and sprinkle over flour and baking powder. tl. Mix everything together either with the fork or with your hands. 12. Pu't dough in icebox to chill (at least one hour). '" Boneless Round Steak BEEF ..... . 7 -BOlle Roast Bf£• CHUCM Top Round Steak BON~1.(SSa>l• Rib Roast-Small End Once a youngster has 11Et• . mi•ed up• ba1ch. he can Porterhouse Steak LB prOC'eed to make not only et:£flOON ihe alphabet cookies but Ext11 Lean Ground Beef a variety of others (from number a nd butterfly AKY Sllt P~G rookies to rookie faces and colored candy rookies -all of \vhirh are included in the book!. Just in case someone might not know all thl' letters. Ri g Rird is on hand to tell of an easy way to learn thl' alphabet. The truth is, -., On you 've got to learn it .,·"'=~~ before you ran eat it. \ -~E~ Here are the 7 steps to It ., 1as ... 98c '" 168 " 168 .. 20• .. 121 For Adults Sweet's Fireside Supreme Graham Cra.~~~~~49c If you'd like to s url>rise guests with an easy.to- serve-and-eat sweet to top off an informal buffet dinner . pass a tray or these tan1a11z1 ng confec- tions. Midw ay b e tw een cooki e end candy, these rich tidbits are crunchy with roasted almonds. Lady Lee Tomato Sauce ~ 23C , ·~·Ol CAN Harvest Day Tomatoes Large End Rib Roast BEEF . Sliced lletf liver SMINl l SS ANO 0£YUNU) Pork Loin Roast ~,.,,°'"cu• Country Style Ribs l'Ofll';l.~N Pork Loin C-ops CUHEAC:UT Pork Chops l OU•CUt •. ........ ' ··---·-· , •. 1as .. 78c !.LB A~C 131 " 131 "1" ......... _._ " 191 Blade Cut Chuck Roast ~JEE£ •••••....••....•.•.•••......••••••.... LB. T-Belle Steak 8lf.J lOIN. !lff l <On• Split Top . ........ l B 198 "1" ~~!.~d , .. 0~44c Green Fresca or Tab Beans ~ 2oc Beverages ggc HARVEST DAY.CUT ·-··· 16·0Z.CAN 6112-oz. CANS ......... '······~ Harvest Day Peas Harvest Day Golden Corn CREA ... S TYi.£ QA"""°°'-( o;EflNEl Ham ~ 25c . Patties 11-o.! CAN SWIFT"S .. King Size ~ 25C Cigarettes '6-01 CA.fol AU <oll(A(IAAN~ Beech-Nut Strained 12 C Baby Food •\l YAfllt.Hl.S • <·Ol JA,. Harvest Day Wines , YAA.ll llLS 21-0Z CAN 1s9 395 ,~ 1sg ALM<:;~i;.-~~~~1.AT" Lady Lee Sauerkraut ·~:C.. 27c Kern's Strawberry Pr''!!"!~!.-119 bak;!.J.·~~~aH,:~::~ ~~!!P,.\~GoodCookies .....•• ,~ 49c Anthony Spaghe~i .. u=~ 79c alm~dsc~~as~-.;tuer or !!..~W!~~!~"!';!!'!!,c~.">C, 75C ~~~.!hl~i~U~~ ~!~ : ..... '::: 20C Lady Lee Cheese Spread .,... 155 • ..... .., 3~·0l.CIN, lady Lee Cottage Cheese 129 •... ···c ••. ,JO.Ql CTN ~!~.~Jic _Sandwich Bags ~" :C 39c Glad Plastic Bags ..-125 ~·lt1' ... L.-, .............. --··--·-·----..-.............. l.o ........ ~ ...... Frying Cross Rib ast 1•• 60t<~~UISBEU C .• . .... ,..,.. ········-·-···--·-"'"".'LB. Rump Roi ;Boneless · 1 •a ~~]r.e;~~~l:::~~t :~~; Bl(~ ···-··· ·-···· .. ·-·...fl· ··-·······-·-· ... . . UI. Wilson_~li~d Bacon "" ~' 11• , Delicatessen . · · Produce_ Ripe !~.~~~~--_ .. 16C ....,.~·" Pippin ~eP!!!s __ c·", "29 ~. maraeanne,so11ene<1 Hamburger Helper .,... 59C Lady Ln Coffee Cre1mer .,.. 97C 1 11.z cup s sifted t1lHYCAOC11.EJ1.•11•· ··········-··········· ..... 1.ozeo• ................... -'~',.,,. I pow~~~": ;0~far Swiss Miss Cocoa Mix .. ,,=<C, 97 C ~!~ral Mills 'f'.'h~~~ ,...t.:, 82C ~·:::".:;,,~0\~:.':;;, S~~~h~~i ~~kin_s . ___ n,,,-::_ 69C ~~~!.~1y Apri~ot~ ~,,"::. 45C I :;;:.~;';on orange Hunt's KetchUI!_ •«-:;L 75c Lady L~~~yo~n~ise -~ 93c HC,.....,wc!G"'···· .................. -.... .. .a.c1 PKG. Tryst Liquid Detergent .,.. 45c MighiJbiiu oiilFood -,,.,; 24c 6 YAJlof.Tll.S ··-· ,. ·-·-8 •·Ol.CAH Loose Turnips f-AHPC"'1SP •. _ .. toe., Loose lr1 , :~r~:;:·:l:.:I:: !;:.!0~::~i~:~7.-M1t ::~ :~!~;~-0'~!;;;,~·~-; 31 c Meanwhile. C'oarsely ·s ···, Cl Ch ........... d .... 2"1-0L.90lt J'~111'"a":'s-Piu'. ·an···a····"'p .. ··,··m··--.. ·--,M>l.CAH 77C, chop almonds; cream . n~~ s .. am ow er ·~-::45c ·~~ ......... ________ ..... 'Co. 1• Gaines Prime Variety .,.. 211 OOG 1000 .••• -.. ··········-· .............. -········· 1;i.QL PMG. Blick & White Scotch .,.. 3•• .. '1IOOf •. -····-··'"· •• .... GT Bll. Lucky Bourbon 3" --~ .. -... --... -...... ······--···-............ -...... .51" ITl. l~ !l("'S AYAll .. Blf ONlY IH STOA.fS WITH yl)llOA bl:Pf, Carrots QC · 1oPS IN lllTAMIN A ·--·--l8. ' .·. ,. . 6" Fem Pl1nts 2l8 ASSTD . ., .••.• -•• --...... _(A. \ ~ ..... ""' •. -• ......._-•»•.~ 01.l.WNn .... 1ll$Cll.-~ 'J J> -l . . butter with sugar 1mtil . ~:!:~~~uf~~~:d~:r., . .,. tlll) iJrrcga:~ore:~~~~\~I \ml~ " Combine wate r and _ ' col.fee; stir into creamed U""TAILET \ l .'/ ".,.. " . .,._, MAlllW FILE - 111.~l\I·\ 111 t1111 11~ "&~ FtLM DEVB.OPll& KOOACOLOR-OAl'-FOTOlllAT FOJI COtOR P91HT FILMS Dfttloped 1r1i1 Prtnttd ' mixture along with melt-•--••MU•E T'i ..._ and all but 2 table!lpoons :~• 4 J ~ A JNr'M! • .,... COFFEE FILTERS ed C'hocolate, flavorings -"""'"' "' 0 : fQM 'iWl •~·._,,~.._ "'II, COFFEE"' almoads. Placeinpu11y ••--· ' ~ .. ~, .. 860 lllll:l!l1. ' 53C ,.,,.,._,w, • ~ MlllllOll PUQUES 12 exposu1e rn~s; Sfa ' expo$ure ron! 1 • 13jll , b•I with large plain ~ o1 col'tee e_,. t"':ipe mi•IUTe Into • CUIP ~· , 5"-7· "c•· ..... e•lld'J cups. sr,rtall:le 1~,_7,~~ . wtlh ,._.,.., t meads. ,... ·-IO ruf.,_ poper + Elftl~ . ~:-.: &~' Cblll tborou1 ty and , -315 CAlll •n••ot•• l'lAITIC M i1C ' =·:~·JI=:: 34c ~:-29c ~' 66c =·· 5 c Ucim:. Pttta ,,_ 1,.. ,..,.. • I L [~AM,..,.....,~,-=c::,.=i~P'~...., -'t A • • • It__. c.-, -:.~,it; n., : ::=.~ -"" ,., ~ ~ .. "'....... ... ......... C9119 ._.......... .;; ......... ~.,.. -_,...,,_ -f ._.,_ • .. L ...... , .. ... • •• •n ll ,_4 AW • WWUIOi -.... Mlft'A ... ' ......... , ..... ......... ... ........ ..... ,,..... 11 • .._..... ...._.._. .... DAILY Pllul • ' I SIUJllUS ' Slllyltyl~ Ol'L dl-W•blot WOOd turlaeL 77c AllOrled lllflng, tram9d w!lh WOOd. 266 ·-·-· ., -~~I :i-nc •••--a'1~i:..o-··-··-77c :;=.-=~······-·--·-·--1" n-,.,. UTllU A'tt. ··-, ... _,.-• . .. .., .. _ ....... _. ·-. ...L.__.. ... "• . .Li·fa.lc •I-Miii~ M•' JICOWll ........... ,.. .... :::.-..n:w/.""'·1""' ii Hf"''' 8 ·'""' l,.S lTt-.U. • I ' Wednesday. January 1<1, 1976 DAIL'( PILOT Cl I • Apples· Abundant Appeal: Versatility Apples have abun atlllty, that naturally o any method of cooking. ... ~ cup ··blanched slivered almonds \ 'h cup pac.kaged diced dates 14 cup su1ar almonds, dates, su1ar and lemon peel. Chop apples; add; mix well. APPLE ALASKA Pastry ror I-crust pie 6 medium apples ::\<t cup sugar cream minutes or until apples are tender. Remove frqm oven, let cool thoroughly. A,fPLE PUDDING SOUFft.E 2 .. .,. hread cubes ' Grated peel of t 1emon 20-ounce can pie.sliced @- , QeJll egg yo)ks sUghUy; add with milk and bread cubes; add vanilla. Beat egg whites sli!(; fol!;{ in. Spoon into l ~quart bak- ing dist). Sprinkle with riutmeg. l ~ teaspoons flour V.. teaspoon nutmeg llz teaspoon cinnamon Line 9·inch pie pan w ith pastry ; trim edge; press edge down with tines of fork. Core, pare and slice apples. Combine ¥.. cup sugar, nour and spices; press a little of this mixture into pastry, then make alternate layers of apple slices and spice mixture · dot with bul -rer or margarin e. --- Beat egg whites s tiff but not dry ; and ~ cup s ugar 1 tablespoon at a time, beating well after each addition, Spoon ice cream e venly on top of pie to wlthin "2 inch of rim. 3; tablespoons butter o r margartae 1 ~•m111t.scalded ·GJ ~--u'p-Hllely chopped candied orange peel pies . · 3 eggs, separated lh teaspoon vanilla Saute bread cubes in butter or margaiine un ii golden ·browU- add milk. Combine orange peel: Set baking dish in shallow pan 01..bot wate.r.;_bak_e at 350 degrees (or 4S minutes. Makes 6 to 8 serv- ings. 1 'h tablespoons butter or margarine 3 egg whites 1i2-cup sugar 1 quart butte r pecan ice Bake at 425 degrees for 30 GP ver entir.tsurfaceol pie w12'·th~-...-, meringue. Bake at 500 degrees for 2 minutes. Serves 6 to8. Naturally Delicious This b read 1 .a ''natural lo se.rve with baked beans a d cole slaw for 1-.icb. i:LAINE DOTY'S BANANA BREAD. 1 cup stoneground coarse wholewheat nour V.. cup wheat germ • 1 teaapaon baking soda ~teaspoon salt Y.11 cup butter or margarine Y.t cup sugar legg 114 c ups finely mashed or pureed bananas Y• cup plain yogurt 1h cup raisins On wax pape r stir together the nour, wheat germ, baking soda and saJt. In a m edium mixing bowl cream butter and s ugar; beat in egg. Stir in the dry ingre. dients in several addi· ~ lions alternately with the banana mixed with the yogurt, just until dry in· gredients are moistened. Stir in raisins. Turn into a buttered 8 by 4 by 3 inch loaf pan .and bake in a 350·degree oven until well browned a nd loaf shrinks from sides.of pan -about sci minutes. Turn out on rack; tum right-side up and cool. Corny Combo ·II -;1 ' "' com, the "grain of ine .Gi>ds," was so impof'\ai,i that .. prospective lndi*t wars were postpone4 U£1 · til'after planting sea.S<il . Highly prized, ..,it wp.s used as curreney bY lbe Colonists. 1, ' Tod~y , corn ranks third as a world rood sta. pie. Team with conve· nience foods for a sure· -to-become favorite re· cipe in your ho mi. CALICO CORS 4 slices bacon ~4 cup green pepper (strips · . I ll-0unce can Ched- dar cheese soup 3 cups cooked whole kernel corn 112 cup drained cho pp ed canned tomatoes In saucepan, cook bacon until crisp; re· move and crumble. Pour off all but 2 tablespoons , drippings. Cook pepper in drippings until tender. Add soup, corn, and tomatoes. Heat ; 'llir OC· casiooally. Garni!h with bacon. • · Makes about j cups, ~enough for 6 tq 8 serv· ings. • DIET RITE ~SWEET sWEET' WHITE DELMONTE GREEN BEANS CAKE MIXES FRUIT DRINKS FRENCH OR CUT ASSORTED FLAVORS ASSORTED FLAVORS ' . FRESH DAILY TASTY BEEF ROUND BONE IN NAVEL GR·APE ORANG~S F.-UIT . ~:.,79' ~ ~.,·9~ GROUND BEEF 65~ Thrift·T·P•k 41bl. or more Fresh Daily EJCtra Lian tluif·T -Pa RUMP ROAST 80!1~89 ROUND STEAK beg nS:• GROUND BEEF $1t? TENDE R BONELESS 1 llOlli CHUCK IOAST .............. 91' lb. BEEF CHUCK $J5I IOlllWS CLOD ROAST · ....... lb BEEF LOIN ~ T IONE STEAK .............................. lb. POITEINOUSE STEAK ........... ~19 1b. BEEF BLADE . c CHUCK ROAST .................. 85 'lb. EX.LEAN l $J41 .BONELESS IEEFSTEW ............... lb. '$139 SLICED BACON ............ 1b DUBUQUE ROYAL BUFFET $ l9 SLICED BACON ................. 1 1b .• COOK'S PORK $ 09 SAUSAGE ROll ,.. ...... . 1 lb McCOYS BEEF . . BREAKFAST LINKS • •• 53' .. .. .......... . ALL PURPOSE PIPPIN APPLES ................ . · ciuNCHY CARROm 2 = ~ 294 GOLDEN 164 RIPE BANANNAS ........... . . . . ' LB CREAMY , 444 SMO.OTH AVOCADOS ·'············· EA. FARMER JOHN BAR-M SMOKEO ·$198 POil lOIN CHOPS . FRESH PORK LOIN ............ $ 49 lb. COUNTIY mlE RIBS . 1 lb FRESH VEAL , . OUlDER BLADE ROAST 73' FRESH VEAL $149 RIBSTIAI lb FRESH SLICED% % center $1 S9 PORK lOIN.... ~ b1 ... ,.... ... ,. PANTRY FILLERS CANNED FOODS PET FOODS HOUSEHOLD NEEDS . SMUCKERS FLAVORED LIBBY 28 OZ. CAN _, SYRUP$1;;:.~1~R~~ 694 W SAUERKRAUT ....... 454 • ANDERSON'S · SPLITPEADR BEAN ' F'$) -CONTADINAITALIAN _,SOUPS ... !.5.~.~,~~~~ 3~ TOMATOESz.~.~~:.c~!-:55 4 • Kai Kin lg. or Sml. Crunchy Bits 10 lb.bat -CHEER INCLUDING IOc OFF$ DRY DOG FOOD .. $259 DmRGEN To oz. aox 120 KAL KAN WHEEL 14 DZ. CAN •. PERFORM 32 OZ. REFILL BOTILE lllllpuPDOGFOOD 324 GWSCLEANER .474 LOG CABIN $ 69 . MARY KITCHEN CORNED 4 •. SY_RUP .. ~~.0~,.~~~~.E -1 W . BEEF HASH..1.~0.~:~.A~. 73 •Moi51MDC>GT;0c>~13 ·• F•111c: SOmNER69~ DELICATESSEN FRUITS & JUICES CEREALS FROZEN FOODS I ' \ (;J2 °"ILY PILO~ Wednesday,'January 1•. 1979 I By PAUi.iNF. RONOONNO "' C._.tfl N••• l«vkl about 35 percent fat. Facts SACRA~1ENTO -Mmt peoph.· are a'A'ttre that polyunsatur~tod fat$ nri: brttt·r for them than s~1tu r:1t ed fat ~. hut they don't know \\'hy, nnd for good reason ... nelt ht·r du the experts who ha\•ereseart·hcd the subject. Whu.t diisti nguishes these two r ~~ts? It Is the molecular for mation of fa~ty acids whic h make up the rat. A saturated fat is <'Omp lete ly s urrounded by hydrogen, while a polyunsaturat- t>d fat is not completely s ur· rou nded -or bound -b y hydrogen. "If you're concerned about Jowerintg the risk· of heart dis· t'll.!!c, polyunsaturated fal is are the best," says lielen Cert.a:. u n11tritiona l consultant for the C.'.llifornia Oep:.1rt1ncnt of llc-ulth. "The trick is to cut down on the total amount of fat you eat and replace some of the saturated Ca t s in your diet w i th polyunsaturated fats ... By c_h003lng leaner cuts or meat or low-fat cheese you can significantly lower the amount or fat in the is21gd\\.·l<'h. A high meat diet generally cor- relates with a high f:it diet. !\t s. Gerig suggests eating leiS meat or choosing leaner cuts tha t arc not marbled. Meat Is graded "prime" or '"choice'' according to the amount or rat marbied through the meal. duct <'ontains polyunsaturated OP ~atu rat ed fat . "Look for kCJt" •"'·ords," says l\f s. Gerig. "If lht lal;tl ~a:ys vegetable oil o• veg;'11.1bl<•,i hortening, it probabl1 is saturated oil. ''The 1n1anufacturer will generally disclose if the product is pc>Jyunsaturated. If the label rn1n tio 11 ~ h y d rogenati o n , hydrOgE"n has been added to the 1 fat to m~e it more saturated.." • On \\'h ilt• they do know that sat~1rated fats increase the cholt-sterol le \'c l, "'hiC'h is linkl"-d to hE>art dist>ases. there is little undt'.'rsta nding or how this takes pla('e in the body. The more bonds without hydrogen there are in the fat the more unsaturated the rat is. Saf· fl('lwer oil is the most unsaturated fat: following it is corn oil. Surprisingly , the average .4.mf'rican diet is '15 percent fat. !\lany of these fats 1'1s. Gerig terms "hidden fats," that is, "-'C don't sE"e the fa t in the food. · Fats They ct0 know th:i.t as saturatE'd fats <'ll~vate ('hOlesterol le vels. pol.vunsatur<ilt'd fnts tend to low er tht•S(' lev e l s . Polyuus;ttura!t·d fu ts include saf. !lowt'r oil, ('Orn oil. sunflower oil, and soybean oil . If the fat has only one bond not linked to hydrogen, it is called ··m o no sat uratcd'' fat . Monosaturated fats, which in· elude olive oil and peanut oil, h ~tv e a n e utral effect on C'holesterol levels .. o\..11 other fats are saturated. l\ cheese and saramI sandwiCtl is :1 good example. When you count the mayonnaise on the s.'.lndwich and the animal fat in both the salami und the cheese, you come up with a snack that is Packaged convenience foods are anothE"r source of hidden fal. ~any preI?ared foods,.including most canned or dried soups, cake mixe~. frostin gs, potato chips, crackers , breaded frozen food s, canned macaroni, chili con carnc aJJ<!.§pag_h.etti,_alJ cont~n !at. Jn r e,•ipes which call fo r ~ vegt>l.'.lble s hortening -a ~ .saturat ed fat -s ubs titute po lyun s .'.ltur<1ted oi l o r rnargarin('. Jn place of whip1>ed cream, substitute \\'hipped non- r~1t dried milk. Jn pl.'.l<'C Of 6QUr cream, su bstitute lo\v fat yogllrt, buttermilk, or sour rniik. In Austria Variety Spices \\lhat 1n ~1kt>s .~ustri ~1n food difft•r t•nt from th>1t of otht~r C't'ntral F.uro· Jl('.'.\n t·ciu ntries is it ~ \'<l!'ii.'t\'. The· t'tli~1n e has been in f!!ll'!l('l~tl o\'er the .\'l'.'.\rs by tha t o f neighboring count rit•s. :'11 .:iny :\us trians C'un· sunl(' fl\'(' mt':-i!s a eta\', arising to a hrc~1kf<1st Or C'Offee and roll s; then a miclmorning goulash : a hig midday meat and potatoe~ lunch : coffee :ind scimC' of thO~i.' rich pastries in the late af· !ernnon. and at ni~htfall ~1 d i nner of s ausage, ~:1lad and cheese. :\1JSTRJ A;\I Rf.:F.f' ~\~O S.o\UF.RK R.<\.UT 5 pounds short ribs tlt'('f cut into cubes 2 pounds s;1uerkraut. :-trainE"d and d rl'li ned 11.:;i teaspoons salt ·I large onions s iil·t.>d I cup diced celery Reer {a bout 1 quart) 1·:: cup shortening ·~cup flour In large pan C'ombine mE'.'.ll C'ubes. sauerkraut. ~.'.lit, I sliC'ed onion and ('elE"ry. .<\dcl t""nough beer to m.'.lkt~ ~1bout I inch of it in p:1n. Co,·cr and simmer 2 hour!' ~!el! !'horte nin,e: i n .~;JU C't~p;1 n and li J,!hll y hro1,1,'n rcmainin;! :-o]Jt·('<l onion~ .. ;\dd flo ur ~ind hrown "'e ll O\'er low heat. Dra in liquid from meat. SI0\\'1}' s tir liqui d into f!ot1r mixtur{·. C011k. !'tirring O\'er lo"' heat tlll th!rk ;inti ~moo!h. ,.\dd !':H1l'l' t o nlt"".'.\t :1nd sauerkrau!. Rlcnd \\'£'11 .'.lnd cook 30 minutes slLr· ring OC<'.'.lsiona!!~ to pre· vent from srnrching. Serve \v ith noodles and chilled beer. Serves 8. Feast On Soup Jan uary i~ a good month to hC' lazy after !he holidays . J\leal plan· ning can be kept to a minimum. A .. dinner that can be cooked a head and s imply rehE"ated is ideal. This soup, laden with <'.:trrots, potatoes, celery, onions, and bacon, is brC'1,1,·ed Vo'ith a hit of beer \\'hi<'h e nhanc es it s n.:1vor.·. POT.<\TO SOUi' 6 cup s 5 liced rotatocs (approximately 5 large) 2 cups sli ced carrots 6 s lice!' bacon I <'UP chopped onion I cup !']iced C'elC'ry I L2 teaspoon !'alt 1 ~ teaspoon pepper 1 cup milk l cup bE'er 2 cups li ght cream F in e ly s hre dded f'hrddar cheese Parslt'y s prigs Cook potatoes and car· rots in boilin g salted u·ater unt il tcndt>r. Drain. Saut e bacon until C'risp. dr<1in and cn1m· hie. Saute onion anrl celery in 2 tabl('s poons of f<tt fro m bacon till onions are transparent. Combine potatoes. car· rots, On ion. cele ry , baC'on, salt, pepper, milk and beer. Simmer ap. proximately 30 m inutes (()onot boil. I When ready to serve garnish with s hredded Cheddar ~h eese arid parsley. ~takes 2 quarts. Contrasting Core and thinly slice 2 fres h ' pears. Combine with J bunch washed and torn s pinach , '-" cup croutons and .S ~Ii,._ c.rumbled crisp b~!=~:.. I -A• _.. • • • " • • STATE•••os. MONI Y BACK CiUAaANfll ONOUAllf Y MEATS IVI•• "1(1 O• ,,_I•! II VOOCOHPlllOHAU' ~UAO•Hlll !> 10"'1"'si•ou or•ou•""°"'' WIU. •I (HIHIUUf Jll.,..01!> OKA.I M•YO • 1 l.I. "IG. SLICED BACON ... ~WIO•T•1l.l .... G. SLICED BACON .......... . • • Some labels list whether a pro- • • • • • YOU ALWAYS SAVEi WlfH srArlR BROS. 10W•10W p ICIS 1 PRICES EFFEC. 7·FULL DAYS ·GRO.UND CHUCK ROAST OUND STEAK . Faf\M o FIOlfN 49' WHITING ........ : .... _ ................. -.. u . 11~ • PIQltN 98' TURBOT FILLET .......... -• OQ\00 • NOllfl s 1 " COOKED SHRIMP .................. u . .... ':BEEF FRESH• ANY SIZE PACKAGE c BEEF BLADE-CUT 73~ RIB ROAST BEEF SMALL END ••• LB. $1 .69 .... NILESS •• ~LB. $1:39 .,~1~7 FAYING RABBITS FRESH • FROZEN CUf-UP :s1!~ -IOIN•n1Ar\ t $199 MU·--·-.... s 127 RUMP ROAST .. --~ iiiOUi.Dii' STEAL~' 1 49 -'189 CUaED STEAK.-... --~ PORTEIJlfOUSE._.~ -·-$195 T·aONl'"STEAK .. --.. • -·uuu.-.• .. l •. f!.H $149 • •• STEAK ...... lAIOflNOta ···-<~!i 89' -··la..l•C9f!•tllf•-• 1 •9 PORK CHOPS ... _ ......... . -·-·~· 98' ARM ROAST-·-·-..... ~ -·-Hl•WltOUOfl-,(\/f • 1 :19 aEEF aRISKR ........... ~ -·-'1 o:a 7 ·•ONE ROAST ......... . CHUCK nEAK_ . ,. -•90NLIH '1 "9 STEW MEAT ............ _. __ .. . CHUcK'ROAst ta s 1 •• Mff•l(Wt•l~H $209 TOP SIRliOIN ... _. • .,._,MJl'IHYU•-.U•-.0 •159 SAUSAGE.·---·-" iiio"i'om .. ' 1 69 ltU•t<Mm •~ $169 TIP STl~K-----_,. • CHOCOLATE TOPPING ::..,,_"""· 33' PIE FILLING ~'==.'. .................................... _ .. ,,o• .. 81' GRAPE JUICE= ...... -...... oL '1 05 CRISCO SHORTENING ..................... u. '1" • • BEEF STEW=. .. !9 ... _ .... , .. ,,, 89' OVEN READY BISCUITS ...... , ,,.., 15• MORTEREY JACK C!l.EESE ~~~. 80' KRAFT SPREADfilt,~ ......... -.... L 95' rt :.~::tMllL UOLs 1~ ~:rcrp~~i:~~~.;.~ ..•.. $1 10 CORN BEEF HASH=.t ____ ,..., 72' CHEEZ·WHIZ • IC!tjp:f. __ , ... L 11• POPCORN =.aan ............ -··->><>L 79' LASSCO SHRIMP~COC~TAIL ··""' 45' HAMBURGER BOOSTER :\~.:.:... ....... 59' IMPERIAL MAR,ARln.E ~, 't:: 56' FISHER'S WHEAT GERM ·---"'>L 53' CARESS BAR S AP :-g1~~ •... ~;-33' ::~:~A~:-·~ "-0186• • •• .. , . " • • • , . .. INSTANT YUBANo~_$2 19 Mi0NU0TE RICE '-HG.PIG. 3 5 c * CHUN KING • ASSO«TED DINNHS $1 35 CHOW MEIN ___ ,z~L GOODWIN'S AMMONIA ..... f.'~! 36' PAMPER'S TODDLERS .. f _,,"' '1" ' TOILET BOWL CLEANER ~~ 44' CHEDDAR CHEESE ~·'"~ ,. .. , '2" ' JERGEN'$ 19 ii"oiiy ____ ,.1.1. $213 :::Hs~1~: c BATH .. TISSUE ,..44c Val\ deJ<ampa. SPECIALS '?£'· dutd\bot.uy ' . ,_ ...... -.. ., -·.· I =.. •• ,. c... , .......... ·--=s9e ....... I ....... ~a-79, e. _ ... .. GRAT<D $131 . -L-.&. ~ 1oo<t P~ KUFT PARMESAN~...,L ·.~ ~<!?1ck~~J , ·~· • • • .. BROCCOLI SPEARS ................... 42c MARGARINE TUBS!_1.1.1.63 C U.NOUfl•J~•WHOU , $219 =~~-~H-l~~N~~:~iili=· '1" co·FFEE -11-0Z~ 1 9.2 iiiQU£i'DiNNE'R'0 ' . __ 45• ONiOM'li!MiS '~'-___ 39• .. ----·------· .... ~ .... lt-O\,NOI 83' -. ....c:10. .. , ....... 10.01 42' EGG BEATERS .. _ ------_ VAN DE UMP ... ·-· .. ~·,..ovNO $132 DUTCH APPLE PIE ............................ . OIP!tNf••,.HS•l'lf9lllC>eDflJ>l.OtlO.OCOl~-·1J..OZ. $I 02 CHUN KING DINNERS ............ . GRAPEFRUIT a~·-·-- ~eaaJ!,& g'eat4~ ~ SUAVE CHAM PRUM CRUM • POUND BAG RINSE ANO SHAMPOO -NT APPLES EXntA fANcT • SMAU • ••D D1uc1ous· ...-59c c A RN NAIR SPUY .i $159 .. ·-D-•UND Y IJI-. PUSY1C llTRIH MAUL _..y .. 1-..... 69c 1~86c •s -..................... -.3 SWIUHURT 6~151CH-NUT 12C LIMI • UQUID INID DITIRGlllT...... aAaY.POOD =: WI RIStll\tl THI llOHf TO UMIT 0. lllfUM MUSTO (QMMllCIAl DfAUl:S CMI WNOUSALDI I ' I •• r ---k" .. .; .•• . . . ______ ,. . . .. . • • .. lJfli w~R-m ,_,,_"' . .o•A• =>·~·· " I. ~• • .) -" ~ . ' • i ) ' I I , • ! •' • •' 1 ~I • > ~ I l be le i th po II> "t th •• sk I st! tei .. , wl ty th ·su di "' - B s -A. I s -0 4 ' 51 4 ~ SI ' I SI 11 -SI c . . ·, Wednnday. January 14. 1976 DAILY PILOT Cl 3 SCored Steak Helps Diet Tally THE 1SLI M GOURMET f By BARBARA GIBBONS With hardly any fat to speak .or, beef flank steak is one of the. leanest and least fattening steaks there ls . . . only 650 calories per pound, compared with l,~ or more!or boneless rib. Our 'first recipe is an oven "barbecue'' dish. Just right for~ the indoor time of year. The second s uggestion is a quick· skillet dish . In both cases -to keep the steak flat as it cooks and to aid tenderness -our first step is to "score" the steak on both sides with shallow criss-cross cuts. Be carer ul not to cut too deep· ly; you don't want to cut through the meat, just ''decorate" the surf ace on both sides with a diamond-shaped pattern, as you might with t~ Cat on a ham. OVEN-BARBECUED FLANK STEAK 1 large flank steak (about 11 :i pounds> 1 cup unsweetened pineapple juice 3 tablespoons lemon Juice 6-ounce can tomato paste trastrof Mt sauce 1 bay leaf Y• teaspoon coarsely ground pepper I onion, chopped ~ cup sliced stwf ed Spanish olives 1 teas poon liquid smoke . seasoning 1 pound sliced f r es h mus brooms \4 cup cold water 1 tablespoon arrowroot Place the steak on a cutting board and score both sides. Combine all ingredients except mUfhrooms, cold water and ar· rowroot in a shallow nonmetallic baking dish. Cover with foil and refrigerate overnight. Next morning, turn the steak over in its marinating sauce; cover and refri'gerate until cook· ingtime. About two hours before dtnner, add the mushrooms. Put the foil· covered baking dish in a 350· degree oven and bake, covered. until the meat is very tender. Remove the steak to a platter and keep warm. Use a bulb-type baster to skim fat from the liquid in the pan. Pour the liquid into a sauce pan and heat to boiling. Combine ar· rowroot and water and stir into the s immering sauce until thickened. If too thick, thin with a little boiling water. Slice the steak thinly and pour on the sauce. Serves six, 242 calories each. KOREAN SKILLET STEAK 1 large flank steak (l •'l pounds) Instant earlic Monos odium glutamate (optional) Meat tenderizer 5tablespoonssoysauce 3 tablespoons dry white wine 2 teas p oon s s u gar (or equivalent sugar substitute) l tablespoon sesame seeds 4 teaspoons safflower oil 4 scallions. sliced Lay the flank steak on a cutting board and m ake s hallow diagonal criss-cross slices on both sides. Then sprinkle both sides of the steak with instant garlic, monosodjum glutamate and meat tenderizer. TO THE BONE Put the steak in a shallow dish Combine the soy sauce, wine and sugar and pour over the flank steak. Set aside for 30 minutes. Meanwhile, in a shallow non· sti<'k fryin e pan. brown the sesame seeds over high heat, shaking. constantly 50 they 11on 't burn. Remove from the skillet and set asid e. Lift up the flank steak with a fork and hold over the marinated dish so thaf most of the liquid drains orr. Quick-cook the steak over moderate heat. using 2 teaspoons of oil for each side . Make a shallow cul in the meat to check "doneness;" steak is best if served r are. Remove the s teak to a platter and slice thinly against the grain Add scallions to reserved marinade and heat quickly in skillet over high heat and pour over steak s lices. Sprinkie with browned sesame seeds. Serves six, 209 calones each. a>STA MESA 19th and PLACENTIA Store Hours: 9 to 9 Daily -Sunday 9 to 7 flricHlffNtl•• Thurs., Jan. I 5 Thru Wed., Jan. 21 P'ric" Wijeci to St.di °" ..__. We Gtodly Accept Food St-.ps r~ ~ ZACKY FARMS or FOSTER FARMS ONtY 1.-::~:;) CALIFORNIA GROWN /ft:~ FitYlllG i BEEF CHUCIC-lEAN CENTER CUTS ~=c CHUCK ----FRESH PRODUCE ~ CHICKENS iiiiilONEl.1 t . c u. STEAKS LB. BARM BONELESS BONE·H·ROLLED HAM%'!. U.S. No. I RUSSETT ~POTATOES ·~ ~~1oc:~0 69c BULK SMOKED BARM 1 4t BACON • ~. BEEF CHUCK-aLADE CUT CHUCK ROAST 7,c ,r LB. SWEET 'N JUICY FRESH ·GROUND HORMEL HORMEL FRESH BEEF TRIPE 25C FRESH BEEF LI. HEARTS HORMEL 49~. REX WEINmS WRANGLERS BACON PURE LARD 89~. l.39LI. 12 oz. l.39EA. 49~. OLDE FARM HOTCAKE SYRUP SPRINGFIELD BREAD . I Lb. Loaf SWEETHEART 2 PAK SOAP Bath Size SPRINGFIELD LARGE or SMALL WHITE BEA•S T AILE ~AID -S'f'.ICK • ...... 1. ~SPREAD SPllMePI RICE ....... c 15 oz. Can • CHICK!H STIW • STIW • HORSE MIA T 14 OL Can Mix or Match Jim's Rcmch FRESH GRADE AA LARGE 9! CHUNG KING CHl~~s 9c~LES 6 01. Box TOILET C TISSUE SUNSHINE HI-HO 4 ROLL PACK CRACKERS I U.IOX SPRIN&FllLD c 39~ 49c TOMATO SAUCE TANGERINES 15~. SWEET 'N JUICY NAVEL ORANGES 17~. LONG GREEM CUCUMBERS 2~25c NEW CROP PINTO BEANS KHHS 100 Lb. Seidl Sii.SO 19~. STRAWBERRY 59c HALVES 160L .... ltlDSEYE REG. CUT :OL 3~s1 GREEN BEANS ..... . llRDS EYE ·:.~3~5 1 IROCCOLI SPEARS C.C. VINIYARD SPllNeFIELD CllLi BEANS 300 C• 8 01. c .. 2~25c WINES .. I If • ' •• • ,, ·I {If °"'1.YP .. or • JOO MER by Wm. F. Brown mid Mel CasSOll 6of l i:tlrl'f llA!lf AtJV' CoNF1~.ice IN ~IM,i<'.i!l.lY. ~ l CA"1 rl!AD fl~ UAIJ17W11111NG . TUMBLEWEEDS by Tom K. Ryan O.K.,I APMlr PAJAMAS IS LAZY, ~ur H~'S SMART! H~ CAN ro 11\ICKS! ro A IRICK1 PAJAMAS! ... PAJAMAS!PO A 1l!ICK! FUNKY WINKERBEAH by Tom Batiuk THE GUYS AND THE 61Rl$ ARE IN lUJO LDN6 LINES GETTl>lG REA()<,l FOR THE &RAND mARCH I IF I'VE COUNTED RIGHI, WHEN IT'6 MY TLJRN , MAR') 6UE SWEET•JJATE R WILL BE M<.' PARTNER I ' I COUNTED WRO~ ! FIGMENTS by Dale Hale NANCY TH IS BOOK IS W ILL .YOU GIVE HEAVY--- M'= A HAND ? ~==--"":'. r-: LIBRARY --i SURE I GOT THE PICTURE IN ........ by &nie iushmiller IDE A FROM A THE BOOK PEANUTS TODAY'S CIDSSWDID PUZZLE AS LON6 A5 UJE'~E ~ITTING AT THE 5AME DESK, WE Ml6HT A5 WELL ilE A TEAM ... ACROSS 46 S11tion1ry. 1 Iowa lndi~ns Informal 5 Buddhist <17 Comp;1ss monk DOiot 9 511111 -·-. 49 Common Cal. 1rlmen1$ 14 Woodwind 51 Jazrcompo- 15 Continuovs~ siuon 1 6 ContJ1n1ng 54 P~nsin "'" genftal 17 \/euel 5a Do some- 18 lmmedi.ie lhlllg 1ucceuor:J 60 S"'{lular per- words "" 10 P1efix witt'I 61 l0¥1!Dl!he whlll Enghsh 21 Oneoltloe 63 BruT•Sh "f "s .. on person '"TNT" 64 'ihehl11ol . 21 V1ndor .. 23 lnr~!O 65 Army ran~s: you "'" Abbr. Abb•! ~ PrKTM:al 15 RevHe jokes 21 ~f 67 Thoughts 29 -··· 68 lnfOfmll 111r's product •ooms 30 AtlttCI 69 Chemoetl 3' Banff sutl1•· Pt. Sp.,ngs, tor DOWN '"' 1 No11n1ou 36 foodartocle Citied 38 Urbane 2 '"Don"! he .l9 Gra•n her· , .. ve~t· J words J Cascadn" ~2 f el!'hngot neoghbof 2 host<l•!Y wo•ds jJ Wes1ern 4 Small !.01.J U S. t•!Y 5 M&dl!'loans 44 (,1n.prov. 6 Atf11msc:on- <15 Nume<w;al lidenlly su!I" 7 No. Amer. lolkce•e- monv· J word$ 8 Crate 9 Thf1shed 10 Cause1ores1 11 Seed out•• covering 12 Fora! Russian hemp IJ Maple 6enus 19 ----of Wight 24 Lilt111g dev11:e 26 ··--··· 1h•n Methu~ah-- 28 Evergreen JO Frl!'fich nobleman 31 Cook Islands nit•<¥e 32 Enghsh "ve• 3J Shed •e~rs 3' Ouick blow 35 Cone produce< 37 Very bid 38 Greek porti- '~ " x 41 --·ot conu:nt 46 Word SllUC· IUl!I 48 Puppe! 49 Glull 50 Descendent 52 Come 1ogethc• SJ Urge on 54 Eau1I. Pref•~ !15 Femin1t111 n1me ~ Wanton loo~ 51 Appe1I 59 Rus~. oews '""'" 6J 81!-SodeS JUDGE PARKER 1 CAN'T WAIT TO MEET $MELBY $HORE! I'VE 5EEN HIM JN SO MANY EXCITING PLAYS ON BROADWAY! )QN'5 THE TICKET ~LE GOI NG FOR TOMORROW NIGHT? MISS PEACH .c •c ! la 1 . DICK TRACY S cai.e.: THE FIHD WHERE 3 DISCARDED NURSES' UNIJ!O!™S WE~ FOUND. ~ DOOLEY'S WORLD DR. SMOCK f! GORDO e>OY. YOO KNOW l"'T"'S NOT" <SON NA BIS YOUR PAY .•. ANIMAL CRACKERS 11\JEET-i'<!EET ~ 11\-ilUEEEET-TI>. r. !tY·WJir 'racffielcf 17---..:::-1i DID YOjJ lllT _lj!M SACK? WHSN YOU POUR IN "f'HS SOAP F&..AKSS, CL.IMe IN'T'O -r1-1e sue ... IYHV OON'T YOU ~u1r SH1LLtN'2o ,.---./ FOR }//~1 1 0027! .. by Georqe Lemont byGus~a CY<jf}., FOLLOW A DOG-A<.T t • ' ' j ! I ! ' ' by Ferd Johnson 1 ""'"--=::-7 711£3./I WE ' 1 FOU ND OUT I WHAi <;R.A IN COSTS NOWADAYS· IT ,A IN'T C~ICKoN Feeo ... ,,, ... _ .......... ..... ,... __ by Rodger Bollen " {, I lt>,•o,c-"'-r-• ' ... , r,.. .. ' l r by Charles M. Schulx .-------'-. THE GIRLS '<OUR HIP 15 IOOCHIN6 M~ HIP, CHUCK! ".'; ,, ;~ .. ,, ,, it i~ ~'i '• by Herold Le Doux by Mell • ' • "Well, so much for THAT New Year resolution." ; ,, DENNIS THE MENACE ~ Ht ' • I 'C'NDH O'tEA.~IS! I THINK I ~ICflll!M FUDGE'.' . · • . ' • f f I ' --... -. -. ,' . , _ .... _ .. ----__ ... , .... _ ...... ,. .. ; •• ..... • j ................. ~ ....... ~ --·--,,. -.. , • I I • I I 1 I ! I J - FU YOUR BASKET WITH T1ISE VALUES - GET SERVICE •• .' QUAUTY ••• SAVIGS! • Kleenex FACIAL nssuE ••••••••.•. 49c Peac ·hes GL011ma FREESTONE 59c It's the season for snettiin'! Stock up t his week on the 200 count package -colors or white ... and save! Luscious Elbertas that set the standard of quality by which to judge peaches! Sliced or halves -No. 2'h can Cat sup on MONTE ••••• ~ ••••••••••. 3 9c Crackers •1sco PREMluM ••.•• 5 5c T~e crisp saltine wafers that go so well with soup or salad! 1 lb. box Salted or unsalted Nobody else makes cat.sup quite like Del Monte ••• thick, rich, with a saucy goodness! 14 oz s ize Prune Juice oaMoNTE .• 59c Crisco Oil 24oLBOTTLt •••• 79c Would you believe that anything that tastes so good would be so good for you? ... quart bottle Jt has all the qualities you expect from so versatile a product ••• light, no oily taste, and priced to save Un-Cola SIX PACK • • • • s l 29 Reg. or Sugar free 7-Up! 12 oz calli Soups AllOSOM$. • • • • .33c Beef-Bean, Potato, Tomato, Split Pea GALA 49 TOWELS c Big roll in assorted colors or white Soup Mix cooo GUii • 39c Your choice of flavors .•• box of 2 Coffee Mate ••• s l 19 Non-dairy coffee creamer! 16 oz lmperia.1 5 9 c Margarine With real butter taste! 1 lb ctn. Frozen Food! BEEF STEW Stouffer's for finer quality! 10 oz Orange Juice. • • 39c C & W -from Valencias! 8 oz can Petite Peas • • • • 79c Salad Dressing. ggc Seven Seas Green Goddess -16 oz Dessert Cups • • &9c Del Monte - all varieties! ctn of 4 Gold Medal 7 9~ FLOUR Gives you a white thumb! 5 lb bag Trash Bags •••• s1o9 Glad -33 gallon size! pkg of 8 Rice-a-Roni •••••. 39c Spanish, Risotto or Chinese style Del Monte 33c CORN ... 3 Cream style or Whole Kernel! Cheese to please! Special sale! C & W ••• tiny, tender, sweet! 20 oz Sale on El Rancho's own brands! Green Beans ••• 79c C & W -cut French Style! 18 oz Straight Whiskey sru86PROOF •• s5•• Sharp Cheddar .. s1 •• Lake to Lake's Wisconsin Cheese! 9 oz. package A sour mash bourbon -6 years old -and still 86 proofl Quart Waffles • • • • • • • • 49c Downyflake flavor treat! 12 oz Canadian ~~EJ~~' s 4 99 Jack Cheese MONTEREY s 14! El Rancho'• own· 1mooth, creamy• eo many ueea! By the piece Grapefruit Juice 25c Bot!led for El Rancho ••• and 86 proof! Compare the value and save! Quart Cream Cheese • 45c Parmesan Cl ROIAllO •• ggc Treesweet -from Florida! 6 oz can Scotch n...., .... s74a Ginn..., ••••••• s411 · Creamy Springfield in 8 oz pkg. Stella's -fresh ••. in 5 oz wedges lmerican Slices~l" Ricotta. • • . . • • • . ggc Springfield -Wisconsin made! 12 oz Precious 1 lb. (Mm.nil 12 tz. ••• l.19) ShreddedCheddar89c Springfield A oz pkg. (4 oz ••• 4k) Spiced Cheese • &gc Alouette -41/2 oz! for steaks, burgers Chipped $119 BEEF · Stouffer's -heat and serve! 11 oz Bottled in Scotland to be sure! Quart Wh.sk s411 I ey.., .... El Rancho's own -and 86 proof! Quart Vodka or Gin •• s399 Our own Holiday Times label! Quart Butcher Shop Meats! "°""..•""'~'°'·"''Vlf'\.,V!"'';r.· --------------------.. ·;~ '\ Fryer BreaslsK1NGs1ZE 99~ More Meat .Values! r:;; CHUCK Se.; ,. c ,.-J-;:Jli STEAK • Center Cut! U.S.O.A. Clloice beef Ground Beef ~ •• st••. Extra lean .•• bulk or patties ' Chili Grind •• ~. • W. T ender beef for a hearty dish! Sirloin Tip s 191 STEAK ·• Round cut of U.S.D.A. Choice beef Beef Rib B•s &9c. U .S.D.A. Choice -to bake or b-b-qt Sliced Bacon ••• s 139• El Rancho'• own thicker ranch st}'te! ska Kielbasa 111~ entic flavotl Hfitahlre Fanm .. ,.., ................• 8$hlllin1'1 fin• If~ la 4 ounce can Fresh Grade "A'' .•. plump and meaty -from big birds! (with rib cage) Legs & Thighs~ .. 89·~ Hand cut -not sawn -from big plump fresh Grade "A" fryers! Fryer Wings ••• 59c, Chicken Livers • age. Hand cut! Meaty! Grade "A"! Fresh Frei;hne.~ makes the difference! ,,,, lrisklli FRESH!. ••••••••••••• 1l5 ll For a delightful meal that will make for a welcome change! U.S.D.A. Choice beef ... whole or half Pork lnall BONELESS ••••••••••••••• 1l 5/l Fresh Iowa com-fed pork for superior flavor! Boneless Boston Butt for greater value! CAiii· nOWER 29~ Super Fresh Produce! IPIBIBI ~vO:-6•1/ Easy to ~ makes them eaaler to enjoy! Sweet .•. juicy ... tempting and aatisfyingl Grapefruit Juice &9c El Rancho's ... fresh .... no additiveA! Quart PIPPI APPLES ,, I Bunch Carrots 2 .... 39c Garden fresh, with the tope still on! White Rose 2•29c Potatoes 1 ..._. Clbes .•............. 12C Sttero -Beef, Chicken, Veget•blt. 5 tl. Chi & .................... $1.39 Great for winw dl.natr) l<old Kl•t 28 01. Compare Value -90 proofl Quart Rum nUICllO'S •••••• s499 Choose Light or Dark! Quart Champagne •••• s 179 Extra Ory Holiday Times! Fifth save 20¢ Seafood Sale! CRAB CLAWS Meaty! ... from Alaskan King crabs! Snapper Pale .... s 15~ Fresh fillets of truly fresh fish! Stuffed Clams s1s1 Matlaw's ••• net weight 2 oz each. Cooked Shrimp s 111• They'd welcome shrimp cocktail Mahi-Mahi ••••• s 11~ The real thing, from HawaHan waters! Fillet of Sole • • s21t Fresh! .•. mild flavor .•. English sole Pricer: in ef{cct Thur. Jan. IS through Wed. Jan. 21 Open daily 9 to 9 Sunday IO to 7 No sales to dealers Sirloit 'flits ..••..•.•.••••••• St• Tender beer, t.aaty aaucel Kold KilU8°' ' • I•' Loafing Comp eted Sweet Carolina yams IA cup I ~o e I y are available in r:reatest ~ freeb IHeD pep- volume ftqm now per IJm>uih April. The h!olt I tomato, peeled and are chunky, medium .... chopped sized ones which taper J ece. slightly beaten tow•rd the ends, with 2Y.a teaspoons salt smooth, unscarred skins ¥.. teaspoon ground and a firm texture. pepper _ Ylm3...u.nJlln.4-a.odn.: _Shred..)'a.m•~on-coar.&e· ----tend m eat; in Carolina grater, place in a bfwJ. Yam Meatloaf, they also rover wilb' bpiling water liven up a weekly classic and let stand 10 minutes, tor the budget-conscious until soft . Drain well. family. For a fancier version, try the Carolina Yam Pinwheel Meatloaf. Combine with remain· ing ingredients in bowl ; mix well . Pat mixture in· to 8 x 4·inch loaf pan or shape into loaf in shallow baiting pan. Bake at 350 degrees F. 45 minutes. Let stand 5 minutes before serving in6to8slices. ' ' Cooked mashed yams are s pread over a ground beef mixture shaped into a rectangle. The com· bination is rolled a nd baked; when the loa! is cut, the yams circle in colorful pinwheel con· trast. As a vegetable high in vitamins A a nd C and with a good a inount or oth e r vitamin s and minerals, yams are said to be one of the most complete.foods known. CAROLINA\' AM PINWHEEL 1_4 teaspoon pepper add ground ,beef and mix MEATLOAF I pound ground beef well. Pat m eat mixture CAROLINA \'i\M MEATLOAF 2 c ups m a!.h ed Was h yams and place into a JO x 8-lnch rec· cooked yams (2 large · in saucepan. Add water tangle on waxed paper. yams) to cover and simmer 25 Spread yam mixture 2 tablespoons butter to 30 minutes, until over meat, leaving Ith· ormargarine tender. Drain, peel and inch margin around l small fresh onion, mash. . . edges. Roll up, jelly-roll C'hopped • Melt ~utter lR ~k1Uet; · fashion, beginning with J clove ga rlic, add .onion, garlic and narrow side. crushed mar1oram, and cook un· 1 teaspoon dried leaf ti! onion is tender. Add Place roll seam side Good Things Blended 3 c ups shredded, pared yams (about 2 medium yams) llf.t pounds ground bee! '".z c up finely chopped fresh onion marjoram mashed yam s, lh: teas-down in an 8 x 4-inch loa! 1 lf.t teaspoons salt, poon salt and mix well. pan. Bake at 3SO degrees divided Combine egg, milk, F. 50 minutes . Let sl:an<f 1 egg, slightly beaten pepper and r e maining 1 5 minutes before cutting 1;" cup milk teaspoon salt in bowl; into6 servings. Creole cookinJ! is perhaps the mos t disting uished cuisine in . .\merica. T1orn in Southt'rn l.ouisiana, its mother is l-"'rcn<'h and it s fathc:-r Spanish, \\'ith C'x · otiC' influenCl'S from the Indians and the Africans. Creole cooking is not the highly seasoned food t hat often develops in hot climate. Rather. it's 11 magical blend of herhs and seasonings artfully con1binN1 i'o that even the most ordinary food s taste like something fit for t he gods. The n:i mc jambalaya probably received its name from the French \\'Orel "jan1bon·· ffi('aning .. ham .. :-in~I "bal~yez" meaning •·blend g"ood things together." The secret here is to use tlam hroth. It imparts a \'Cry special !lavor to this dish. Though not a troidltional ingre· (l !('nt, frozen ba~y Ji mas add sub· ~lance. a unique nul\y flavor. J.IMA AND SQUASH J .'\M BAL.<\ Y :\ ''strips bacon, diced 2 medium onions, finely chopped 1.:.? cup chopped green pepper 2 e!o,·es garlic, crushed ;'\cups clam or chicken broth JG .ounce (';:1n tomatoes 1 cup ham rubes l cup rice 1 ~bay leaf, <·rushed 2 tahlc>s poons chopped ;1:1r:;!cy 11 '.!teas poons chili po"·der 1 teaspoon s alt I !easpoon oregano 1 ~teas poon !hyme Few dashes hot µepper sauce IO ·ouncc> package frozen baby lim.:1s 2 cups diced, yc>\low squash In a IJutch oven or !;1r ge s:i u r t~p ;:~n rook haeon for ·I rn inu!C'S . J\dd onion. ~rec>n 11ep :wr :ind garlic. Cook until soft bu' not brO'A'ned. .<-\dd broth. tomatoes, ham r1r<' nnd sc>:i:;onings. bringing to a hoil. HC'duct' hc~t and simmer 20 minutes .. •\dd haby limas ancl squash :ind continu e !'immering until \lC'}!.et<ibles are t ender, ;;1bout 10·12 minutes. If mixture becomes too thick add a li l!!l• more broth. Serve in soup bo,~·\s. 1\l:1kes 6 to 8 serv· ings. Sears THIS WEEK ONLY NEW! 8x10color photograph BOTH $ 99 We take Ute portr1il. You choose 1our ltt10 lrom fini1hecl portr11i11 nol proot1. We d'loost ti.II butl pose lor charm. AddiliOMI port.-.ils •I reuon•ble prtcn. No oblig•tion '° ttu, Mdllionat prints. on., llmlled: one pet 1ubie<:I, two per t8ftlity. S1.25 charge tor ellCh 1ddtd pertott In groupt. Charm Hmited kl lndi.+dUlllt •ltd group1 of up to J pertOM. No •pPOinllMfll neceiury. Addilion1I MfKtl photl> t.::::.-=:=~ ftlP'-d lndiwiduaUr at S2.H e1ch. NOAGE. LIMm AdUts, famiy groups welcome! I Searsj l'HOTOMAPHaS HOUIS: ,,.. ............. _ .... ,., ....... ... _, 12-1o4,_-.. ,.11 ··--2,... ~L•b, l (IOl\il;f:. ~~ I)/, ' tol,.......,tSt I;. A•• 'I ... f1l1w1i9S...Sla•. JIJ _,..,, 12-. J ErJ II ' C,.....l1nwnd ..... ,,.d ....... . Lfng looch °""'" sn.. "' Spring• I f ¢ • ; on 01ce. Regular or Decaffeinated (8-oz. size only). Start the year off right by saving soc on your next pur- chase of 1'astcr's Choice'" 100o/o Freeze· Dried Coffee. Our freeze-dry process gives you the fresh-perked flavor of good ground roast coffee in every cup. Taste r's Choice Regular. And Taster's Choice Decaffein· ated. Both taste fresh·perked. Because both start fresh· perked. •· ..... ·'· ·-------------------------------------~ I I I I I I ! I i i , _I I L------------------------------------~ t I \ \ ' ' .. ' ' - . - '" ' ol l~ .. ~I ·- • I I I ' ' f ' 1 c c ! ' ' F ' • ' ' ' t ~ ~ l n ~ R '!\ "' ASSUME 70/o LOA.H 1, PllME RACH A.REA _$240 PEll/_!40. Ptestlge aoe>roacl'i. Cozv oarlor. Rustic brick hear1h fireiMIC'9..._GQUrmet'a kitchen. Fonrelly dine, family area. Fast Possession possible. Owner very anxious - he bought 1nother -take O\f&r his loan -no new loan costs. Hurry for this rare bargain. can 5~2313 . l'llCE IEDUCID-GIEAT VIEW CORONA DEL"M.U .,. Want an immacul'ate 3 bedroom.3 bath home wilh AnthOny pool? Call .now! Floor-to-celling atone fireplace. Views of catallna from living room, dining roo1n and rN.ster bedroom suite. Private comer locaUon. This has ll 8'11 And best price In the neighborhood. Reduced to 1117,500.Cell 67U550. 4 IEDROOMS -THE RANCH REDUCBl -$53,900 ;('The fabul<;MI Ranch in lrvinet stiake roof. Sweeping :i:ru::ement dnve to por1kxl entry. Hoge living room hosts • -' ~ing. white Prick.. ll(_eplacef Gorgeous patio kitchen. • King SfZe be<!r<>OfTls 1nch•des secluded master suite. , H6iivY covered patio. JUST LISTED--HUAAY! Call now -•1752-1700. Open House 12-4 pm. · .. ~~I" DOU HOUSE ASSUME 71/10/o LQA.H ¥' lmmeculat~ 1 story home on tree lined street. 3 bedrooms including king mastei suite. 2 lull. baths ... Family dining room, Complet'e wllh built-ins i. )·,~I~~· Highly upgraded with new carpets, drapes, .~' paint inside & out. NeW ceramic tile in kitchen & baths. · Large ccwered patio. No QUalifyii'lg. 1269 month pays ~I all. Asking $43,SQO. Call 842-253,. •.:, IESTIUY IH TURru ROCll HIUS ~s 4, bedroom"'6f'ltertainn'19nt home wtlh-valtey l and night light view, IT'eny unique custom features. • 5"ecfe tennis and swim dub plus your own pool. Price just $117,000 -which includes land. CaU 673-8550. PARADISE MANOR 3 BR · 2 STORY P.OOL -135,000 -BEACH. Formal entl)> to dramatic living room. Huge garden view kitchen. Artistic open stai~ sweep to separate master suite plus chlldren's wing. Secluded 22 ft . ballroom sized party room that overlooks walled courtyard, Hurry !or this call 963-7881. ' ' TRW.E ASSUME$ 00 3 bdrm plus large bonus r cathedral ceiling in living room, spacious kitchen ertOOking therapeutic spa set in private secluded ard. extra large king size master suite with sunken roman tub. Hurry! 963-6767. 3 llDROOM & FAMILY ROOM "This t)ome *It •II. Upgraded t~t. prime Huntington Beach location. Fk'epl-=e tf1 f41Til)' room. just listed only •*'!'~It ~·1 Jast -tlM ~antage -be first to call for~ 10-:-. 9:6J-6767 .. ~ • I • ·. 5.. 'GOLF I • 2 slory. House .Of ,QISIS$, at· betK:h. Wtuk to golf course. 4 bedroom. family room. lormg;I di-:ing + balcony den. Vaulted ceilings. Floor to ceiling fireplace. Newly decorated. Large patio. Circular drive to 3 car garage. No qualifying. No new loan costs. As:>ume 7% k>an. S266 month pays all. Take advantage. Call today. 842-2535. EH GUSH ESTA Tt $44,950 2 STORY -VIEW Winding roadway leads to secluded driveway amidst towering pines &. eucalyptus trees. Spiraling staircase leads to private 2nd story entrance! Lav1sn living room· overlooks surrounding area! European gourmet kitchen! Dining entertainment. Sweeping master bdrm retreat! Separate.molher·in·law quarters or guest or maid room with bath! Workshop! This hilltop estate can be yours for $4500 total down or take over eXlsting loan at $215 per month for quick appt. to see call 647!6010. . I - MIHI llAHClt S36.50d 3 IR -·51 HO.DOWN Tree lined approach. Massive 23' living room. Formal dining room. Large country kitchen. Huge grounds with covered dance pavitlon to entertain or Just roam. Separate wing for hideaway rn'!lster & chlldrens suites. First to call gets tf\ls SACRIFICE BARGAIN! Call 963-7881. . 3 llDROOM IEAUTT 2 story -earpeted.'throughout with country kitchen. Step down liylng ·room with fireolace. Located across from febulou• Mile $Q. park Priced at only $42,500. Wonl ·last -call today Q63.676V. 2 i>TORV +FA.MIL Y ~OL-$26,9501 Two story berolir\I ·ausfl 26.950 tyu price! Large living room. VERtl8rge lltrriily-dlning epom combo! Bright & apec~s bul/tjrwt•ln•pantryl Wrought iron·stairway to king Size bedrOoms.\:S.Cluded mmster wlbullt-in vanity. Redwood fenced patio overlooking wrought Iron enclosed su~, ~enc10M<t farege +.extra parking. Take (idv1t1 ' CJ:llnow752-1700 . • I I I I I ' IEA«;:H OFFIC! 1700l"••r81Vd. !Meli 171 "COSTA MESA mlO Hatbc)f Blvd. t &4&-:l':l13 • - ----------- C A.RIB OPPORTllHITV ••• • OWNER ANXIOUS . 4 + 2 +FAMILY-DIME Immediate possession! Move in now! Extensive used brick accentuates this country style home. Every woman·s dream kitchen with all the wile saver conveniences. Mammoth brick fireplace. Four king-sized bedrooms with masslve master suite. Entertainers covered patio. Assume low interest VA loan. Seller's loss -yaur gain at 149,950. Full price! Call today 646-7171. "PA.RK HUNTIHGTOH" 5 BDRM + BONUS + POOL Sunken living room, formal dining. kitchen with party room with conversation pit and fireplace. Guest sui te, stairs to master and children's suites. Access for boat or camper. Try SB.700 down. FOf quick appt. to see call Q63..6767. IA YSHORE BU.UTT 5 bedrooms, 5 baths. Brand new kitchen with every modem convenience. 300) sq. ft. ol pure luxury. 3-car garage. Master bath has lover's jacuui. Owner's very anxious to sell at $175,000. Call now 646-7171. EXECUTIVE CUSTOM ESTA. Tt OH THE HIU Prestige area. Massive 32' parlor with sunk8n conversation pit. Kitchen, elegant IOfmal banquet room. Enormous family room with wet bar ... Music-game room·· + hobby dark room with double sinks, cabinets, elc. Huge private master suite with dressing room + sewing room -separate children's wing + much to much lo mention here -see now 546-2313. EXECUTIVE ESTA.Tl 2-STORY 4 ID -POOL + IU.CH FonNI raised tile entry. Elegant living room with floor to ceiling fireplace. Banquet sized formal dining room is eloquently served from huge garden view kitchen. Enormous family room overlook$ sparkling pool & jacuul & lush terraces. Sptral stairs to massive 24' master suite & retreat. Spacious childrens quarters. Ball room sized family recreation room. Hurry -EZ terms. Call ~7881 . ··SEASIDE CHALET" Summertime beach retreat. Few steps to ocean. Total privacy with high walls. A·frame styling, House ot glass . Indoor garden atrium loaded with tropical plants & IMns. Rugged beam ceilings in all rooms. Log burninQ fireplace. Winding staircase to loft landing. Private sundeck llWTace off massive master suite + 2 more bedrooms. One t>e:droom downstairs could be a den. Formal dining oft bri~ ~ecorated kitchen. Courtyard patio + Olympic SWllTlmlng pool & tennis courts. 842-2535 CONTEMPORARY ESTA.Tl Green Valley's 11nesl! From the immaculate grass landscaped Iron! to lhe low rnaintainence rear yard nothing but excellence! Secluded raised entry to ~nken living room! ForrT1!1 dine! Sunshine gourmet kitchen! Family room! Spiraling staircase soars thru innovative shingle decor! 3 kid sized bdrms! For more details on this splendid property call 847--6010. =:--t'71 .. ABAHDOHED CASTLE .. 2 STORY 'I• ACRE Enter secluded driv e to enonrous 3 car storage! Raised 1Terble entry leads lo living room with stone hearth! European kitchen! Huge rrestElf bdrm with lode stone fireplace and sunken Rormn tub! Soaring staircase to 2nd level with 8 foot wet bar! 2 private bdrms! Pool table! Sun terrace! Vacant and ready to move 1nlo • $72,000. Call Quick for guided tour1 847--601 0. EXECUTIVE IEACH RETREAT 4 IDRM - 2 STORY Formal entry to step down living room. formal dining room. OverlOOking patio gourmet kitchen with breakfast area Separate family room with et&ekhng fireplace. 3 car garage plus access for boat or camper. Located near the beach and across from golf course. For appl.. toseecall 963-6767. A.IA.HDOHBI -4 IR 2 STV IEACH -$54. 900 Fomel entry to spacious living room. Format dining room is conveniently served lrom huge garden view kitchen. SLIDING WALL OF GLASS leads to covered terrace and rambling grounds. Dramatic stairs to hideaway masler suite & children's Quarters. Owner anxious. Must sacrifice! Hurry! Call 963-7881. CORONA DEL MAR SELECTIONS A TIEHTIOH INVESTORS Multiple unit in the heart of Corona del Mar. Just a block from• the beach. One of the most unusual properties on !he market. On an R3 45 loot lot -has an exceptionally good iooome, and we believe it can be lmqroved -we're excl!ed about this llsting -call us tor more information. Call 673-8550. PROIA.Tl SALE Hrd to find "F" plan in Ear1y Blufls. Located on a Quiet cukte-'8llC with a beautiful private green bell. Priced at MB,500 but open to a bid. Huny and call -the heirs want to settle the estate QUiekly. Can 673-8550. *******TOP PRODUCERS*******· DAILY PILOT 0 J OPEN 'TIL 9 VIEW -GOU'-FOIMAL DIHE $75,500 Gorgeous San Joaquin rrodel -Rancho San Joaquin. Golf courw view. Step down riving room & family room. Wet bar. ForrNll d1n1ng. All tile cheery kitchen. Tiered master suite. Elegant bath. All dosets mirrored. G•eue operier. IMMEDI ATE OCCUPANCY! NEVER LIVED IN!t Hurry call 752· 1700. COUNTRY SETTING 4 +DIHE i-DEH +POOL Beautiful setting with oated courtyard. Formal entry. WHe saver kitchen with walk·in pantry. Pass thru tiled counters to warm cozy den wilh parquet flooring. Massive brick fireplace. Glows with old world charm. King master w ing adjoins c ust o m pool. Patio ·entertaining. Few minutes to beach. Ne!r major Shopping. This home is 1mrreculate. Brand new o n market. ca11 for a special showing. Dial 842·2535. • . IEA.CHCOTIA.GE Beautiful 3 bedroom hotre. targe living room. gourmel kitchen with adjoining family area OVE!f'looking covered patio. New ca rpeting throughout. All this and more lor only s36.soo. cau 963-6767. CHA.RMIHG IAYSHORE con AGE ONLY $64.900!! Mingle with the movie stars only steps from the prestige ol Newporl waterlront Ru stic cottage with huge trees provides once 1n a litet1me bargain. Homa IS loaded with personalt ty + ,.. You musl see to belle'o'e for Jhis price -hurry -owner must go -take advantage -call now! 546-2313. WALK TO THE COUNTRY CLUB From this beautiful . Calllorn1a ranch style home situated in the .. custom homes section" of Mesa Verde. Features: spacious 3 BR + den + family room and exceptional pool & jacum. Truly designed for CQlilornia living in the best style. Nothing like it available Please phone for more info. and appeinlment, but bett9r hurry! 546-2313. WA.Lt< TO IEACH 2-STORY $67,900 Magnificent 2 story beach home with charm aod personality. Private sun deck complete with wet-bar. Super luxury in downstairs rrestElf wing & 2 additional bedrooms upstairs. 2 full bairn>. Massive fireplace and· an enclosed glass atrium with orchids add to ~omance, Wile-saver country kitchen + + +. Flexible financing. Dool miss this beauty! Call 646-7171 . IEA.CH LOVER'S DELIGHT Bayshore bombshell' 3 bedroom 2 bath beauty. Massive· fireplace -huge bedrooms -large garage. Perteet tor' enter'laining or just comfy living. What more can you ask for. s 124.95.o. ca11now64f?-7171. IEA.UTY AHi> THE IEACH Perteet tor week·ends. rental, or permanent residence. · 3 bedrooms. 2 bath. 2 story. Very modern kilchen with Jots of charm. + + + large protected sundeck complete wilh wet bar. Great lor parties or private sun bathing. Don't miss this one lor just S67,900! Cati now 646-71 7 1. SIX UNITS CORONA DEL MAR PAINTED & RIDUCED SI 1,000! True! Six freshly painted pieluresoue units. Just reduced by $11 .000! Prime Corona del Mar location . Bedroom enclosed garages. Laundry room. Hard to beat investment bargain. Fu ll price 1us1 $199,000! Call tOday 752·1700. CEHTEHHIAL SPECIAL Your dreams come true. Two bedroom seaside cottage with ROOM TO GROW. Located in BAYSHORES. A great community with private beaches. The price is only $65,500. CQll 673..S550. f "A.IAHDOHBI" IEACH CLASSIC Owners have packed-up and moved out! They tlave vacated this 4 year yaung beauty and have put a "sell·il-Quick" price on ii! Child-sale cul-de-sact Executive entry to soanng cathedral ceilings -lush ankle deep carpet -soueaky clean paint -sunshine kitchen wilh walls ol glass! Party-patio and expansive rear yard! Toast-your-toes fireplace! Sweeping master bdrm retreat with separate dressing area! children's rumpus sized bdrm! Bail him out at a conservative $51.950 or assume exisling loan at $251 per month! Act last. we need HEL~ Call 847~10. "AIAHDOHED" BEACH RETREAT $36,000 Steps out the door leads to The lranouil waten of the bay! Cross P.C.H. and the PQUnchng Pacific! Winding walkway, secluded entry! Comm. pool and steq_ming jacuui! Owner has left and is begging for an offer!lake advantage o f this gourmet kitehen and sweeping master bdrm! Are you beach people? 847..eQ1 0. SUBURllA ESTA Tt - WA.Lt< TO IEACH Trff lined street. Secluded entry. Spacious living room. Gourmets kitchen serves formal banquet area. RUMPUS ROOM. 4 family sized bdrms. includes secluded master suite. Q.JSTOM POOL & JACUUI. OWNER MUST GO -MIGHT HELP FINANCE. 546-2313. ·'HEGLECTtD" IEACH GIA.HT Price slashed! Owner bought another heme! Oesperatel Priced below market! Take advantage of this soaring 2 story! Sectuded entry to huge living room -dining entertainment. rumpus sized family room! EuroPe•n kitchen! 3 children's suites! Sp iriling staircase to master bdrm retreat! Vaulted ceilings -executive office -Romeo & Juliet balOOf'lyl Paint & savet Help this seller -try any offer -2400 SQ. ft. 2 1tory bargain at $53.9001 Help!! 847-6010. Also: Madeline Grant Jack Thaxton Solon Young HUNTINGTON BEA.CH FOUNT AIH VALLEY CORONA DB. MAR llYIMI ·1m1 Blach e1Yd. 21000 Brookhutst eo14JWamtir "f"'~~ ' . 936-S7'87 &1~0 . . I 18109 Btootlhurtt ~18811 332 Mwvuerit• &1'Wl060 1-M-711t-1100 Dr K:1nl' 1:1 sec-king \l~lunlt'l'!'S !o hvlp in the \l :tr('h of Dimt>s f\tnd· r .11:-t:lJ' r :imp.uµn Tho~c 1\~:-~1!ng to hl•lp 111ay ron· .tl't !!l(· l)r.111 ~c ('ounty ~·h,q1\t•r uf tht• :'ot arrh of JJ 1mt't', ~79 2170. PUBLIC NOTICE fl CTI TIOUS 11U51HES5 HA,,.E STATEf>IEHT 1 "' •01 •o .. , no e>e• i.on~ a1 e Goong bu'.I• ... ~, PRO ':iC.~1 0E , 10911 Clle•ry St, O">Al•m•IO\. CA 90110 "1011•• Ruin WlltOK, "''' ~f'llon, •o•en, CA <lOloJO Sn.Ito" M.&"• G•usli11, lOiJI C..t· OIWOOd S111H011, CA T!'us o""""''' '' condutled Ot d '"'''l1>•orl"'!'•~n•1> "IOllif R WllC1)~ Tn" \1111tmon1 ,..,, '''"" witn '"' oun" Cl•r• or 0••n9'! Counly Cln li'<ernC..• l'i. 191~ """I PUl>l •\llo!'d O•iltl\lf Co"'I O"•l~ P>lot, *C 11, 191 S.i.naJ111. 1, t4, J1, 1tl• "'31 IS P UBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE FICTt TtOUS BUSINESS NAMESTITEMEHT Ir... 1ono .. 1n9 pt•\011 " ooonc;i """'' -... PURI.IC :"<riOTICE FICTITIOUS •USINl!SS foll.Ml! STAlEMlfolT l'N lollawj119 per..on " llO<llO l)o.ftl. nr!h •• PIECES OF GOLD, •)D E.'1'-SI . CA>!.t• Nw.w , CA. 9'1621 UAor H. Gr1nnl\ & Ma r91re1 G. (;.rMOnos, SO<l1 Clll~elu, lrv1nt, CA. tllOS Thl1 busine'\1 ii cond...:l•d oy an Jn· d!vlllu•I. LeRoyH.Gr•nllll nus st.elt m•"' "''~ ti1..i \olth ti,. County Cl••• ol Or•ngc Counly on .MflU11ry 1, 1'1,. PUfU P\11111~ Ofilll<)e c ... M O.Uy Pllol, JMIW ry I, U ,21, 7t, 197S U.16 P U BLIC NOTICE P UBLIC NOTICE l"ICTITIOUS •U51NES5 NAME STATEMENT T~e lollowlnq perwn ;, doi"'IJ O<.ISI· --. ~ ... ne'\S .n: STAGE WEST REAL ESTATE, ,.,, w. B•ler 5trt•l. Cost• Mew, CA ""' Wllli•m A, Hll""'llOrM, 211l IM1111' 0<1-.. 5'1'11• An•. CA ,,.16 '"'' bu\IM'' 11 <onOUClftl br.,, 1 ... olv!C11>11I W!Ulllm A. HIWl'-orrie T"I' '1•1emt11t w•I llltd wllll lhf County C•••• ol Orlll9f' Coi.mtr on O.t1mr.r11, 191S PUBLIC NOTICE fllCTITIOUS aUSINllSS HAMii STATEMl!NT 1lw lol_I..., PffMKI Is CIOl119 busl· Aobff1 L.. Citron. IS T•• C.Ollt<lor ot Ille Cou111y ol Or•nqot, Sl•1e DI Clllla•nit 0.1e ot S.le· J1nwry H, 1•1&. P\lbllUlftl Orlll<;Joe CDISI Dilly PilOI, December 31, 197S 1nd J'""''' 1, u , 19'6 '73·1S NOTIC« 1'0 CRIDITO•S OP •U&.lt T•ANSPllll 45.Kl. •1t1 .. 1tt U.'-C.1 Nolle• 11 Fl•rtby' 9 !vt" to '""' 0 M llot1. of OANleL. •nd CAMIL.Le PETER$, Tr ... ~t•rorl, wl'>OM lliNAK> eddrnl 1111•» a.1cl\ eo .. 11¥1f'O Mr:I '°"Ademl Aven .... H"nllnQICN08No:". Courtly of Or•~. Slltlll ol C..UfOfllla, IN.I e bu!• Ir"'''~" ii ,lb<H,ll IO ri. !T\eClll' IO FReo 1nd ALICE DIPPONG • ,,.,.,'"',...'· ... hose bus!MSI """HS lS ..... ~Awn .... Hu11tl119ICNO 8'1t". Coulltl' OI' Or 1110t, $1111• of C..llfornl1. TNI p...-n, 11 dncrl-lft ..,..,.1 111o: All 1'-• 111 trlldlll, ll•turH, tQulp. ,...llt lllld good ,,.Ill of IFllll dlDtlul llusl• -llltlowllll'I ADAMS AVE. OOHUT5, Md '-eled 111 17')6 8&'11Ch BouillvMd r Md tOl9 Adlms ""'"""'· H.....t"'910t'I 8"'.cll, Cou"IY of 0.-1111~. 5Ute ot QIHhK·11l11, The bulll tran,itt ... tu be COllsunwnal• Mon or 111 .. ,.,. 10111 d•t of J.,....ry, 1'1•, 11t •=oa A.M. 111 t.,. ''"' ottice1 of GEO RGE L. ROGERS, 1111' 8"iK" e.utnanl, Hllflt~on ~Kii, C-11' of 0rt>ll09, St1t•of c.1110..11111 So 1., _.. kno...n to Ille Tf-'el'ft1, 11U buSlllHS 11-s. •n<I llddres-......., by the Tr..-islff'Of~ tor I ... '""" YM•S l.nl!lll'l,1re:s ...... O.tl'd: DKeml>lllr 1, 1t75. Fre<i 0 1Pll0"9. TrAn"••H Allt• Olppo119, TrMtllerH OllOllGll L. "OGE ll:S ........... .iu-... 1nn .. ec11 t.t.oi.v11rd -------------j M11M1..-.. ac11,CA'2M1 Publfllled Or•nQe C~it 01l1y Piiot. PUBLIC NOTICE J..-i.l•,1•1• t)t-16 PUBUCNOTICE - •• • d • c II c - "' A " {! • a " d • • ;, ' ti ~ a 0 ti . G •• - ' II ' II " ,, 1 ti A - 'l1 c L ~ II " ,, s " c -- Ji a1 p. fi. w " M I - 5 r; s c " c c -~ G •• , . • • • ' • ' v ~ • •• ... ' •• Rtol fatote ......•. 1000.2999 Rental• • • . . . . . • • 30()()..4699 lu•lntu, lnvestmtftf I Rltanclol ..•.••.... 5000-5049 Emc>lovment & Preporotlon .....• 7000 7199 MRORSi AdTerffMn **'d c"-ck tMlr och dally and report ~ ron 1-.ciahly. The DAILY ftlLOT as-..s liaWllty for the fl"t ht- corNCt hieHrilOlt Oftly. Announ<t"'9f'fS. Petsonols, lost & Found ..•.•. 5050-~ Sttvicts & Repoln 6()()()..6099 You Can S~ll ·lt, Find It, • [ 6 42 •5678 J Trade It With a Wont Ad M.rchand1s. ••••.. 8000-8099 Boots & Manne Equipment ........ 900().9099 Automobiles & other Transportation .... 91()0.9999 Ho.MS For S• Honn for Sale Publlsher•s Noticr. •• ••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• All rcul estate advert 1sed GeMrol I 002 t 002 in this newspaper Is sub· •••• • ••••• • • ••••••••••• ject to the Federal Pair ------------------Housing Act of 1968 PRIVATE ROAD nur-1 V l.AR BAY ANO BEACH 675-3000 c'407 l C'OA S T t-tWV CORONA DEL M AR which makes it Ulegal lo ad vertise "any pre· ference, limila tlon, or discrimination based 0 11 race, color, religion. sex, or national origin, or an intention to m ake any such preference, limit-. t1on, or discriminallon." This newspaper will not knowingly a ccept any advertising for r eal estate which is in viola· Lion or the law. Charming 4 BR, family rm. Park-like setting. Sunny patio. Community pool & putting green. $94,950 81 1.LCRUNDY , REALTOR UHIVEISfTY ftAIUt -VILUGI TWO Bette.r hurry for this one! Exciting rare 4 BR LaSalle model. Newly dee. New elec. blt-ins. 2 F.P .. 21h ba. $87,950 4541 SANDBURG WAY Open daily 1·5 2111 S•Jn~HilsRoad Investment Duplexes 13 J All just a year old & available at last year's prices. Each apt. 3 bdrms ., 2 baths; 4 car spaces & some with frplcs. & family r ooms. Best Corona del Mar rental area. $119,000To $121,500 341 Roy'>1dP Orivt-N 8 675 6161 IT'S A "REFURI WITH A llG REAR" Refurbished oJd Corona del Mar cot- tage with a back yard big enough for a 2nd unit. In the trade, it's a "refurb with a big rear." It also has a new kitchen, a large fireplace. beamed ceil- ing, ne w carpets and located half a jog from two public tennis courts. At only $67,000. HEWPOllt cana. H.1. 644-491 o General · I 002 I ••••••••••. •• ••••• •• ••• GtoMral I 002 GetMral I 002 Gftleral I 002 General I 002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ------BAY & BEACH REAL TY OUR 26th YEAR 675-3000 JUST LISTED MESA NORT H 4 Bedroom, 2 baths, fplc, complete carpe ting thruout. Drapes. Bltns. Obie gar . Covered patio. AJI in very good cond1· I lion. Reduced to $44,500. Roy Mc Cardle Realtor 181 0 Newport Costa Mesa 548.7729 Bargain ... unter's A TTEHTIOM!! J ust listed. 3 bedroom and family, rustic beam pgt,io, brick R·B·Q and fire ring. Super sharp with lots of extras. Neur new. As kin g S57,00U. Must sell. Call 540· 115 l. ~HERITAGE • REALTORS BALBOA ISLAND MINI VIEW Great Spanish Duplex S/3 bedrooms, bri ck · fireplace, ankle deep s h ag ca r pe ti nJ.!. Cathedral beamed cc1I· ing, 20 foot patio balcony. Owner will help finance CALL 962·7788 • KEY Big Corona Beach .. 1s only 2-blks. from this nice duplex-a great place to live. $88,950 a nd Its yours. 675-6060 PROMONTORY BAY Hall an t1 le entry . This exquisite home is pro· fessionally decorated. 4·BR, formal dinin g room, family room and den . o n the water . $285,000. fee. l Yr warranty inc. Call 675-7225 !..Alt U'\ H)Q •'Of,_ •\9• ... 6T( )f. ilALUf \·_,\IJ J ~:\· HE:\Ll'l A BERG ENTERPRISES CO ~ "UAI ~ & ftALLA\lt '-£://REAL ESTATE, INC. A LOCALLY OWNED COMPANY SERVING THE SOUT COAST AREA SINCE 1963 HARBOR VIEW HOME Popular 4 bedroom Palermo model with beautiful s wimming pool This home was former ly the sales model and is highly upgraded with air conditioni n g, professional landscaping a nd interior decorating Hurry. new listing. Call 640-6161. • HIGH A TOP SPYGLASS Beautiful 3 bedroom Spyglass Hill hom e. T h is popular Portsmouth model features ma ny decorator upgrades. A MAGNI FICENT OCEAN VIEW. You own the land. $159,500. Call 640·6161. VA TERMS WITH POOL . CENTURY SHORES CHARMER. Has 4 bedroom, 2 bath, only 21/2 years o ld . N e w a dd e d o n fa mily /play room. Full price only $52,900 . Ca ll now for full information. 962-4454 VIEW SUNSET sitting by the crackling fire in living room and watch the sunset. Gracious 5 bedroom in exclusive Mesa Verde. Large lot has mini-farm and orchard. Absentee owner says SELL! ! $69,900. Call 962-4454 BUYERS A rrENTION!! It 's b$rgain Ume -:-this 4 bedroom + family room + formal dining· room tri-icvel home is back on the market and t)Wncr is very anxious. Price is reduced to move fast !! See Mesa Verde at Its best. .. Pooi . too! Only $75,950. Call 54&4141. JUST USTED A delighlf ul 2 bedroom, + den and family room, exclusive home area, • Just 2yn oJd , has professional decor thruout . Lower bedroom has 0":11 bath same as master bedroom. Th.is was 'a model with wet bar and bltn desk . H u ge closet i n mast.er bedroom. ONL y $68,900. Hurry I ! Call 5"-4141 REDUCED Lido Is le com er. Formal dining, family room. 2· fireplaces. Now Sl22,500. 0\\'.ner helps finance. HALPIMCHIN REALTOH.S 2727 E. Coast Hwy 675-4392 MESA VERDE POOLSIDE VIEWS HARBOR & OCEAN In prestige area, unique, like new 3 BR . plus fam1· ly, plus pool. Asking $167,000. BEYERL Y CREEDON REAL TORS 645-2411 VIEW-VIEW!! You couldn't pick a more romantic location for a view home. At night, the lights s h i n e lik e diamonds on a velvet pillow. Has 4 BR .. 3 BA., vacant. $159,500 Or offer. This beautifu l and COM,.ANV dramatic entertainment RF.AL TOHS home is just waiting for a Sl1'CE 19-\4 large family. 4 or 5 673-4400 bedrooms a nd 3 bathsi---------1 too. Stunning warm and1----------1 inviting architecture. Near the golf course. Ow n er h as be e n transferred and property is priced for quick sale at S79,500 U:l~i:.~~l Praperti••· 752-1920 1"00 QUAILST. Nl WPORT llACH 3 UNITS EASTSIDE House plus two units idea l for inco m e or owner ot·cupancy Two bdrm, 2 bath house. 3 TAX SHELTER OCEANA SOUTH IN OCEANSIDE CO MPLETELY furnished, professionally decorated model! ($4,000 inventory} 2BR. l lfz BA s ingle s t ory condo. Enclosed garage. Patio with wrought fence & gate. Adult (over'40) co mmunity , p oo l , jacuzti, clubhouse. Nr . 1-:I Camino Plaza shop· ping center. Walk to bus line . 30 min. lo San Di ego. Avail. now. $32,500 COMPLETE. BY OWNER. 548·3036 Real Estate Sales ...........•......••••. Getteral 1002 Getteral t 002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• GALAXY REALTY Presti gious location . Strong sales support High commissions. Call Vic Stuart, 901 Dover Dr, S ui t e 130 , Newporl Beach. UNl()U t: ti()Mt:§ EASTSIDE COSTA MESA· LOWEST PRICED SING LE LEVEL REALTORS', 675·6000 Try t r;.i1lt• nr low down 1 :J BH . house, nt'w p:.11nt l'V. curix•ts, 0 11 l~c. R 2 lot Seller anxious. S4·~.tl50'. CONDO 2443 East Coast Highway, Corona del Mar llard w find, l'asy to bu~ Bluffs Anita model. l::m. unit, l'O\'l'red privati patio. qua•L area. Newb dl'corated. :i bedrpom, : b;.ith fireplace. Vacant owner w1ll cons1der leas1 645-3111 *** Rustic upsldedown cot· R E B tage on large corner lot · • • aum beautiful ocean• view-I 06 Collins Av~. steps to bes t beach. Balboa Island Don't miss this a t You arc the winner or S 8 2 , S 0 0 . C o a s l two free dinners <Sl4 50 Properties, 673-5410 value) selected from _ _.:_ _______ , Skinny Mike's menu al REPLACE HOLIDAY INN CARPET 313 I Bristol St •• SAVE SSS Costa Mesa Huge single story-4 br, Plea~e call 642·5678, ext. 2 ba, forml DR. l .. R, hvy 33Jlocla1m your tickets shk roof. All this & can be * * * purchased subj. to 6' ( . VA loan. Must sell. Call SALES Associates. share 545-9491. office expense . .get !l!J',. - comm., learn cqu1ly REAL ESTATE ·Coldwell Banker purchase, t ax s helter and t~x defn. exchange. Will give you 5 to 10 of· fers every duy lo pre· sent. Sam & Cenc. Pl LOT Heal Estate, 540·0555 AT THE BEACH THE 1002 Balboa Bay Prop. Realtors * 675-7060 . 1---------•I option terms.· Pri<:e l S64.750. Public Notice C.F. Colesworthy ~-~-__ Govemab ment Realtors ~~~·002t •THESE ARE • Assum le Loan Balboa Island I 00~ SERIOUSSELLERS Great oppor lun1ty 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• PLEASE CALL OUH Available lo evcryom•! NORTH BA y P"Ho:--;·1 · OFFICE Low 1nLL'rL•!-.t & rl'nl hk w UOCK FOR DETAILS payments a\'a1lublL'. J & lk uul ..i Br + dl'n. ~ Ha J 4 bedroom homes a\ a1la·1 home or 2 c·ompl 2 Hr I.li e. To :.et'_ how.~ ou L'an units.' Plea st> l'all owm• ~ qRuLailR1fy, t•all J arbt.'11.1 fo r showmi::: Pnn onl~ -:;;.-/_~_·_ . a ' 540 1720 S255,00!J, 675·4-tlU o ...:.. ---6'73-7610 • 4714 CORTLAND OR. --------~Balboa Peninsula I 00" Choice Cameo Highlands FORMAL DINING •• ••• ••• • • • • ••• •• • • • • • 4-bedroom home or 3 & Beautiful 'large pool & Ouplex·Bay Ave-Neal den with private beach. fa mily room Cl!ntral Conve nient·Custm . bit In beautiful condition· Mesa Verde. M ar toun· 12 yr. old ·Priced to sell a ready for quick movc-m. tr y clup. 3 Spacwus. s 9 7, 5 o o. Co a :; O.PEN UAlLY l 5 bedrooms. 2 l>ath and Properties, 673-5410 iJ --_.._ completely appo 1nted1 ----- kitchen. Ouls tanchn ~ 1975 PRICES lloor pl;.in. Our exclusive' Cottage. Balboa SS5.00<1 al S71,500. Call 540·1151 Oupll'x Newport $87,65(1 Duplex Balboa SJ05,()()() Duplex l\ e" p 't S 113 ,411<1 • 701 ROCKFOHD HD. Tnplex Newp'tS129,00ll Cameo Highl;.i nds ca· Marshall Rily 675·-100 ~HERITAGE REALTORS nyon and ocean view 4· ---------1 bedroom or 3 & den. Capistrano Beach I 0 I• L·A-R-G·E covered patio Waterlrc:H.t Dplx ••••••••••••••••••••••· on canyon s ide. !loom for Pier. Ir~ dock. Both unib Sel· to believe 3 yl'ar pool al the front. Pnvale completely rl'dec & loads n I! w 1 n Cap is Lr an beach. In Cine cond1t1on of bltns + frpks. Huge Puh:.ades. Jbr. 2ha. al decks. firep1t etc. Creal rooms open beams, btfl. ' loc.Sl37.500 lndscpd . s prinklin /') 675-6670 xtras ins ide & out. 34~ ----Via Velez. 496-6323. :;./!)--- /IJ._.:.' JACOBS REALTY system, fncd y rd. 1\1;.in DO YOUR c~a del M-ar 102; OWN THING COTT AGE • Ui06 ANTIQUA. DO\'l'r Over 1 1 acre Newport Shores, form a l, hi gh . Heights. Separ ate in· style eleg ance lluge On this 1a at-re lot w1Lh a come unil. Sacrifice forma1dining room,two· C"7.y28r home.roomfor S53.500. 645·0303 story 4-bedroom, rharm· anything ask111g $42,999 FOREST OLSON IMC. mg study, J.firepl:JcL•s. 839·1710 beautiful view. REX L. llOUC l':S MESA HEAL'l'Y COLE OF NEWPORT WOODS REALTORS RIVERSIDI·: 251:; E Coast llwy 38r. 2ba, cenl "<Hr, lue cl Beller than n e w 4 " · • · "' bedroom 2 bath with ____ 6_7_5_·5_5_11 patio. 2 <·ar gur. dual frplc, bltns. drp~ W1W ••••••••••••••••••••••• RARE 4 BR DUPLEX SO. OF BAYSIDE with a 3 BH, 2 UA rent.ii Only 112 year s ulcl Featuring bl'am l'cihng~ natural wood and brt<'• t extures and perl ct' location. Call 644·i2ll. bdrm. 2 bath unit with 1---------1 -....:..:.---'---'---1 . TO c p . . . r. on y . central atnu m court. WALK 1-689-7902 huge family room a nd a t S32 500 J> I ~ sundeck only 4 years old, plus 2. bdrm. 2 bath unit. The 3 bdrm. 2 bath is con· vertible into a mother.in· law unit Spendable with 20<;( down l"Quail l liilPlace · Pra erti•• p 7Sl •1920 t•OO QUAIL ST. NlW~T HACH For Big Canyon pro· perties, Call Big Canyon Realty, 644·1193 GOLF COURSE HOME Exquisite custom view home, 5 brs. 5 ba. 3 frplcs. lgc FH & huge rumpus rm, oversized pool with jacuzzi & re· gulation handball court One of a kind. Call 545-9491. -. . Classified Ads seH big items, s mall items or any ite m. 642·5678. VIEW WITH INCOME Want t o Ii ve at the be ach'! Li ve in the 3 bdrm .. 2 bath unit & re nt the 2 bdrm., 2 balh unit; what more could you ask for? Sl7S,OOO 673·3663 833-0523 Eves associated BROKERS--AEAl TOPS lOl' 'W 8alboo ~II lbbl SHADOW RUN PLAN #4 THE ONLY ONE ON THE MARKET Gracious hving in 4 Br, 3 Ba, J car garage, family room. luscious landsca p· mg, s pecial locat ion. /\s king $85,500. Bk r 839-1710 MOW IS THE TIME for job seekers to check the Daily Pilot He lp Wanted classification. If the job you want is not lhere you might consider orfcring your services with an ad in the Job Wanted category. Phone 642-5678 Rt~ALTttRH 644-7270 • IALlo.\ ISLAM) D\ftlX Want to trade? We want more units -for this charming DUPLEX. Front house has 2 bedrooms .+ cozy fi rep lace. P lu s l bedroom apart m ent. Both h ave been remodeled and are onl)& one short block to the North Bay. See it, you'll ' love tt at $115,000. • 2121 f . Coast Hte1' llNtov Localed on a quiet cul· ------1 t s ' . J 36' de-sac,a shorlwalkfrom SHOPPING ~ EN OY the new city park Priced This lovely 2 bedroom Ramblin9 Ranch right at S59.900. with a home 15 only 1 2 block lo 4 POOL Duplex. Price reduced t• BOAJ SLIP 71Ark assumable loan. lilh Street, Costa ~1 csa , + S79.800. Corona dcl Mar CALL556·2660 shoppmgandiszoncdC.:I· Ter niced brick entry. For!.aleh\ owner. E\ + LARGE 3 BR !p S E L ECT CP for an investme nt new master, st ep down celler1t cond. Sec> owm· ideal for a r etired couple family center w/mas!'.1ve al 420' ~ Larks pur, Cd~ Close to beach, 4 years PROPE R T IES who want Lo build an raist.-d hc•arth fireplace, or call6-14·7326. new Qui et, secluded, yet ---formal dine. brl'akfast --- easy access tn Coast1 Try a Dai I Y P 11 o.t l'slulc bar. piped·in m usic. low Fourplex. P rin"! r edur<·< Highway and Newport' Classified Ad to buy, sell care grounds. sparkling Lo Sl61,300. Corona dl' Freeway $96,950 or rent something. IE~Quail ~ pool, party su~ed patio. Mar. l'~or sale by owner Classified ads sell big items, small items or any item. Ju.st call 642·5678. N••d ••ort• •4ulp111cnt r For Clusif~ Ad ACTION Call A IJAllY PtlOT AD-YfSOl '42·1671 n M Pl towe ring trees. llurry Excellent cond. Sl'I th.e. fA"11lY AvA••1S ace · mu!.t sec for the fussy owner at 42012 Larkspur Prapltrties buyl'r CdM or call 644-7326. ~E l..CY.>T .... Wt 752-1920 ROBERTS RE ... LTY T~ r ·i~E.Y 1400 OUAILST. NlWPOtn HACH . A •DELUXE WERE PUSMOVE:.Q!;> I FAMIL y HOME 848· I 688 DUPLEX* A 0 ll lL 'Y WEKE. .. ---------i E II t 3 BR 2 H -3 Bedrm. 2 ba. POOL. ____ xee en , · a PLJSMEO ~ F 1 D' ground floor owners vn11 R rt4E F1t:1..D~. l=:astgate are:i. P c. m w/2 pri\'. patioi:: & tux ~-rm. bllns. $52,000. ' .536·8836 . SHOWCASE unous ma:t~~Ullt'. f ~ii H'OME :? BR Rental w/la rgc \ - I 1. 1 .' _' patio dcckB .. OTH __ _ A "one nf a kind" on a la r~c. irregulJr lot. 4 with woo d burninp Bedrm + honu:. room + f1replact.>s. vaulted wooo family room + lormal beam ceilings and supc1 dmm~ arc~1. 2400Sq ft. of So .. 0 f.Hwy local1 on luxury living 2 Wood Sll5.000. rec. Call bumin~ f1rcplaCl's. one 644.7211 DAILY PILOT 642-5678 SSS.?OO Lo\·ely 3 yr old Mesa Verde home. 3 BR. 2 UA w/cathedral l'Cil1ngs, patio kit & rorncr lot Low maint. yard w/lge patio & fruit trees. Ca ll us for comp! details 546.5880 ~HERITAGE .... REALTORS in master swte J cur ""'""' w•th 5 off •"< .. t .._ parking ~ $7:,·:;_t II. f ~ 1 , ' ~Sil :~!~.~~~~ ....... !?.~~ ANYTIME Ca.try ,.. T rees 4bedroom LOW, LOW 1002 GtMt'OI 1002 HARBOR VIEW Lusk Home DOWN $38,500 Unbelieva hi e value • Needs a little work · wha' savings. K~ntucky style charm. lots of trees fo1 added t>f'auty & privacy . Room for your boat u1 trailer Owner wants <•C· lion, BKH, call 540-1720 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• macnab I Irvine realtg 3 lmlOOM-S79 ... 50! Family room, lovely patios, peg & groove kitchen floor, rosewood bar, pecky cedar pfneling + 45' pool w /pool sweep. ~ynne Rothell 644·6200. (Q83) Charmin g 3 bedroom with m agnificent view from rear yard and patio. MUST SELL TO SE'M'LE EST/\TE. S94,000 ~ A ~rand new year awaits the family that gets this 3 bdrm, 2 bath ho me w/bright. nrw s unny in· lerior. Owner anxious, will rent or trode for ••a anything. Call now. Ptapaull .. LEI~:::·!~ 7S'J-1t10 ---------1400 QUAil St. Ntwt'OeT lfACM VACANT WESTSIDE Don't miss this ooe-(/BR home wjtb huge ramlb room w/opeo bt~m ceil· 1ng and brick lrpl~. NOTICE Needs some TLC·All how Dally Pilot Claa!l· ForClass1f1ed Ail t erms. $38,900. CALL ifaed ad!l d isplay their ACTlON ' Prestige Hom,s. ~6 messages with leglbiUty C.ll• M<.'lla Verde NO(th, 4 Bd, ~ "" and impact? Our ads, we oaUy .Pllot ba. ram.r m.i din rm., Off1cr\ locatrd in Cettto Mno Hwttinqfon B~ach -N~wpori 9f'a<h --- "°,~::.;.o• .. u• .. 1, '" .. , rlil ., ,.,., ate pl"Ql.ld lo say. really AO-VISOR 2t00 sq.n. eh<> CCI comet '*""'' m""'"''"'"l)f# NewpofthKf\,C.l•IOf"'-mta gel r es ults. Phone 642.5618 location . $8'7,~oo. BJ 11~~~~~,.~~~~~~~~~~ll~~~~~~~!!i~~~~~~~~~.,:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:__l~M2~·567~8~.:=:=:=:=:::=1=:::==:~~~====!l:~o~wn~e~r~.~~~4~48~4~.~~~ ,.~ -. . .. ... ' ... • • • l • It 4 • f' • • • ... tto.sw1 llor 591 Hwte1 ,,W S. , Plf DAILY PILOT * W9dnndlly,January14. ;970 HllillH,... s... ........ ,.,. 591-........ Fors. •••••••••,.••••••*•••••• •• ~;l;f•••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• .................................................. L••M• leoch I 041 L-.......... I 052 ······•················ ;.;~~;···-··········· c~~al t600:~11 trclal N11:111tu.fwllll1Md ~U...:..alllilll ,. -1 ?-W c-• ~,..,...,.. • 600 .............. .,.. ~··· ······················1 ••••••••••ti •••••••••••• ... ~·-·-t -·••••••• ....e 111m1t • 3JO 1 .._.. 11i40, . . C:..hM... 1024 .. 1 I' ll•loordl 1040 lnloe 1044 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••·•••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••·············· EL MOR.RO IA Y ' Rare 2 Br B eauty+·--------1 MOllUHOME IA5T51DE Sc:<"l\Kled,,"4.yrold,tul OWHllAMXtOUS Top or l.be"1Te'fra<"e. . UIJ~ ················ ,... ,. .................... ~. • , • '' " S BR. 3 ba. ll•'llrd. OUR CHOICE tramecL n.IU/ll'U I GIUI Ollldr<Q/ .... olc. ,IO)O' (lee. CONDO> Br l".=o ~ -, --ii_ -be•ch.UJl.f1S-T144 ~· dbl r:· ... DUPLEX d·SflC. $4&,SOO, Ml-JS ~rp 3 bedroom hom" FOR EVE I\ VIEW , (2) 3 Bedrm 1.1nltJ. <:;:lote 1;;0;;""';:·;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ wUb fplc & upgraded Spacious 2 ~bed rm, 2 to 1ch(](Ms and •hoPJHna.I' <"rpia-on onu or the N lh, l•m. rm, djn room. VILLA WAY; & 31st S11££T _, ... d• "° ? .. 1c1,1C/,~5 ~.~. 'bit."'~ ••• .. ••••••••••• ••••••• bch. $32:5, 10311 children Full price $.58,$00, CM.II , LOUI(! laJ'ler lots in lrvlnl.'. You Privat beach. £1l5)' now for details. owo it to oorself to ael' fin111ncla1. A.sftl_ng OR.I)' 2 BR, 1 ~ b1, f1mllY';'I Cir 0Kt68-0Z1Sf$36-7159 , ·1•ra1e. VrlY .... ~! ~ ..1.~~ •~..t , ' FULLEI llALTY Execut t ve hbn\e, lhlsboi;ne. Only $$4,SOO. S30.250. taUMS-1221. 546-0114 bedtoom, bu.Jc: II vln room with br lc l! mo..673-7197 t r 2 Br. newly _,.,,vsar.vu, Ill' C--. .. Mw Jl~J =~~=cner, adul~ Al'IEWLIFli! ........................ . MESA del MAR! Im· f1rtJpl<Al't1, nil'ely deC'Ol'at· maculate 3·DH w/fnn-fit, near new carpets. t111tic llilund kltch. greatbi.t\!ky;ard.Closetc $49J900. or submit offer. ev11r~thin1. Atilaumabll! Fast eecrow. CALL Glfe11 IOan or -tea-se option. BeautiflJI upiraded 4 bedroom1 si'l&le story home. 8 !\t onths new. Air cobd. Ideal corner loca- t ion, c--lose to pool, clubhouse. park a nd lun· nis. stu ,900. TIUS 2DH. hi-ceillngs, In a "woodsy'' .s etting w/peek at the oce11n, will go fast .... W .500 W•1tcHff RHltv F:idov the G-ood Llf•! 3br. 2ba; 1t.ove, rt1fri1, 3 Br, t B<t, for lease rt:Ol cbhw1br. Nr bch. $425. $285 mo. kid& &-pets OK, 438 Be&onia. 67S·..,. 968-4523 Kavan•u11:h, ReiAl tor , ~ 1733-Westcliff OnlllB-~So. Co1t~t Hwy 499 458• 4tJ ZS 13 • -.. IMllne Terrace 4·Bt, -).l)a, 2--BR;-)'ardr pallo.-gar;p THE OLDE · .. · .. ......,._s., IM1r11'81.1rtr 2000 pool. Expan11lveTtew of c.hlldf~$2~. r ~·~ ....... ~'-----1 lu '" I'' ' B B 1 111••••••,••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••.••••• b•• " ocea n. 87S·8060 CLbS.t to beach, 2 br G n •y MARE Tywnohwsen,r . '"" . n¥ ~ ·-· 1069 ' ~I t d ~ 38r, 2i,i,,, Ba, """~ " SHARP 44'LU CARRIAGE REAli.'fV X, 1a r, CP a, r1>1 , Pacesetter-By Ow ner 962'"'47'1. Very .special M·Verde 1~~~~~~~~~ ..... 1 Jlome, Worth Your Vl:sit I 4Br 2Ba, DR , m<1i11y tr~.s 2810Ser1:tn(C Pl. 5S7-UWl:I ()ptn Weekends; 12·-IPM ROOM FOii l'OOL Sl-J E AIN'T WJ-IAT Sil£ comp. & expensively UP· •••••• •••••••••••••••• XWC.M L c ildrenok$225. USED TO HE ! Neither is gradeCI. Air cond .. micro .,.___ -1 ·· ' .oc. Cotto M•so J.Z24 LARG.E b~,!r_Dtry, t bi s DA N ,\ p T . oven. f'/P, 2 patios. Pool DOVU SHOllS Bui t·ins., s p_rinklers, ••••••••••••••••••••••• fpcd )'d gar,tp, ~. & jncuizi avail. $49,000 BREATJITA.KJNG copper r.lumbing •. com· Exceptional J· hr, 2 ba, H0.MEF1NDERS lmmacl Calir. Classic horn~ on a cul-de-Sal·. JBR, l"":oba, assumabl~ 7~'J VA loan. 11101 Erw111 . DUPLEX. Just a short VIEW! pletely enced, privacy. xlntloc. $315 mo. Reta re· 642·9900 .; distance to the l\1arina. 495.4237 BR 3 1 Very maintained, Mgr's 'd 01542 5469460 + Da y:s; JtoS :JOP~I One unit 1s spacious 2 I 4 • Ba, pr vale Unit. q ·54 · ' · Qlarming3Br,hi"hlyup· UDR~t .. \\'lTll OCEAN Miss on Viejo 1067 m.-ister. suite w /view. • VIE\\'. HWlt·in kitchen ••••••••••••••••••••••• Pool, jacuzzi. Lowes t Mustsel! Back Bay Condo. 48r, grad!!d,primeJl'.B.area. E-Side, large H-2 lot, 2 Br + den, frplc, hard,,.·d fklor5, new cpl & paint in.side. $46,SOO. By Owner 167 Broad~·ay. 833-0495 "EXCLUSIVE" pclce on Galaxy Dr . $87,000.l R Oown. 3b~. ne w t:p.t11 drp1, $375 mo. Avail 2·1·78, with ref rig., opens to din· Shown by owner, wkday.s "'"ent 549.0812 paint. $425 mo. 49:·2798 968-9Sl8or962·7788 l nil arc a . OE CK A rare Monterey Master "'6 W f O C E A N V I E W . near 1\1 . V .'s famous golf ~!5 aPf!z~'C~ ~:! & ~: 3 BR House· 1 8R Apt. Jn. 3br, and family. fn Mes• Putthased for our bome. ~~:~~~~;~~/ Lower l·bdrm. apt. has course. 1'hra• bedroom , ~!lr8orG4Z-6630Y · come $430. mo. Lge R-2 Verde. $375/mo. Ask for must lease, brand n~w,,3 REAL TY INC. liv. rm. & b1lt-i n kitchen large paneled ramily · lot. $45,000. 5484774 Larry,$46-5880. Br, 2 Ba •. yd, tennis ct, 71 , 1 8 ••• 1371 with ref rig. Property has room & O\'l'r 2300 .sq. fl. of R-2 Lot, Home w/alley ac· • d'n rec. luxunous, l ml from -a separate laundry room living s pal'C Only WANTED FOR LEASE 3£¥" 2 BA. ocean.S36-8749aft 6PM. Cozy 2-Bdrm home on University Park Villagt! II & :itorage cabinets for rn,ooo. c es'· S4 6 • ooo · D e 1 By private party, 10 to 2:i lrg. fncd. yard . .$425/mo,l-'"-=="'---'--""'--'- large lot ,,.·ith 2-car t~OR S.\LE : 5 liedrm i\1arciul!tte 3 Br. 2'" Da. h Mangels, SUNSET 6311830 VACAMT ~ eac apt. Low main· "CREAM PUFF" REALEST ATE, 96J·S9'Jl Pride or Ownersh'ip .c.c~·="'-------1 $24,000 garilt;t'. rus~1C', 2 years. winding formal <hn rm, Jg fam rn1 ~enancc lot. needs weed This 3 bdrm doll house Units:642·4116 Beautiful 3-BR, !-ha Con-3 BR, huge corner lot, all $651000. staircase, family rm , & nla:-.ter suite. 2 rrplcs 1ng & landscape care. has all the comforts of SanCl•nMnte t076 do 1 1 b bltns , newly painted l::asl.sidc Triplex. Homl' fplc. 3 baths, 3 car gar, byov.nt•r 567,500. 551-673-1 1'he I-bdrm. unit need::. home. Air l'Onditioning & ••••••••••••••••••••••• Duplex. 7 941, 7 9S l · All xtrs. poo' cu · iside/out , Cov ·pati1;t, t-income. llurry! Loads of .sq . Coot;q.!l'. ------curpt't, d.ecorating, c.•tc. co\•ered i><llio vu 101 Lar,e ocean & canyon Cypress St. H.B. 2 BR, l h.se. $325/mo. 645·3777 sharp. $350./mo. Ask for 11 las:s & rustic wood·.·. liyOv.·ni>r ·RackettClub. N Ba ea $40000 s~·1z1 K ·1h F ~·0~1 540 3666 ., ·· O major repair s with much more' Only view lot. Buildablt! & in Bkr · • · ._..... · Sharp,newdecor.JBR.2 e1 or aye,.-v·_, or • · De.signer floors & "-'in-3 l:lr. 3 Ha . study fam rm. w·th l. 1 962-4471 Brkr d I r I d. necessary 1 a ill c $47 900 prime area. Watch the · Ba, pool. No pets. $395., -~==~'----- ow l realm e n t s. ,, J\' rrn . ormu Lil rm, effo/'t this income pro· M'1ss10N v1~ '0 sailboats• $28,500. FIRST ow~ER Fir.st, last & eleaning1 -bargain for beach lo\·ers prof de(·o r. 3 yrs old i>erly t•ould be :1 real ~ f"I dep. 548-G797 HUGE at $63,000. Bkr 962-5:;11 S00.000, S59·0507 :showplace. Offered for REALTY ~ •~cHo• • ~1 $77,900 -===="-----I P.restige 2 story 4 bedrm, ------,...... -• Duplex -Dana Point E.Side 1 Br, just dee. lge f I d " · 21h W lk t B h OWN EH L\lOV ING $6s~~.SEOTOO.,.DAllYP~ce-581·1000 837·9500 IMYISTMEMTS SJCREALTY 493-1137 lot wtr&gardener pd. bi:~·. up11~!~~d ~l!!.~out. Q 0 eaC Savt• money on beaut .:. S Vnbelie\lable4bedrm.2-1andscp d Uni\' Pk GONETOl\.10RR0W't Hewportleach t069 171414t6-7711 .._trial/ $350.642-~/642-5280 2.Vrsold .Walkloocean JUST LI TED bath, .scp;&rate din rm & Garden llome J Br. 2•,~ .MISSION REALTY ••••••••••••••••••••••• • Pr1p1rty 2100 Beaut. J Br. 2Y.i Ba. Sep. s.~~eOnlerm. Aso .k r1 0", cKle~I h' l\lesaVcrdcNorth fam rm, cozy fplc, new Ba, din rm . y,·atl'rfall, 9115So Cst,Laguna Newporfhoch Mobile Homes ••••••••••••••••••••••• Din. Rm. Twnhse. W/D w-u ·It '.\lost popular !\lode\. 4 ,,.·all lo v.·all crptg, bltns, fire ring w/grill. S55,500. Phone 494·0731 $17,000 For Serie 1100 For sale or lease 5600 .sq ft Incl'd, dbl gar, pool, $340 ~_!7'1Y8ekr~60'2501 or Br . I story. sparkhng y,•it h 1800 sq .ft . of lux-0J)('nhou.seSat&Sun 1·5, Your 0 ..,,.n hom e -one ••••••••••••••••••••••• zoned M-1. 8So/a A IC &: •m~o.~55~7·~.0865~i_~";_ __ .I;;;:;;;=;~:=;';;:-;;:::::;~:;;:; fountain Lil gorgeous urious living. 1\ll this for 00\\'illow Tree Lant.•. Ir\'. block lO beach. com-FOR~SALE! improved 400 amp. By ~ NEW3 Br2 Ba Condo, dbl pri\'ale atriuni. l:arden only $5<1,900. Hurry. this 552·7946 CONDOMINIUM S S •2 Br twnh.sc... Mes a \'tCw from t>\•er~· roo m. "-'ill not last ~! ---------LIVING munitypool, tlt>lightfully SPARTAN-MANSION, t ovmer. 883 · Ea.st l., Verd G W JD 1 gar, pvt patio, nr lint& Super sharp 566.500. Bi EDINBURG AT ITS BEST! decorated, 2 bedrms, BR, 1 Ba, 19th' & llarbor, Anaheim. 9S6·9630 ISZS,~>':.e!'.P~vt~",,,i·~·~,,:g:"·!!'/:"~4-·I ;:H~b::r-;:$350=-:· ... '-:::.-';-'°'::;::E"v;;•.c•·:;-G ILLl::SPt~; " II dining, fpl c. priv patio. CM. Adult park, work 1 . .....: · pa IO-::rr::: R~:,." ... ·,T 9011 Hs ' 7 1 1. , I _' . PLAN CHECK THESE F'ine:s l ;1dull living in shop, awning. See to ap-200 s q fl : office & 3BrJBa f'am. llm frplc 2 Br house nr Lake PaJk ...,.. ln Village l . 3 BH . 2'i RIVIERA beautiful Bayside prec.644-1816or493-61S3 warehouse in CM. $210 dbl ' $385 A '1 ' $22S per mo. 962·3533 &-v1·11age >tobole l)··~k mo.675-3391 T. Tgar.C d. ,,~!·,-37mm . 536-0321 ba , fam rrn . offering EXCLUSIVES ... · 2 BR Dbl r d T~1~p-~o~p~o~n~.~~~·~·!!..-I[~=:=-:~:---;;-~-:::::-: OpenHse4Br +D~ 842 5541 youalltheaml'llLILl'::.Ofil 3 Bdrm.s, 2 baths Xln Ce ntral t o all that ' um, new rps Lohforsale 2200 -Su 4 b 2 b t 3027 Hoyce Lanl'. C~I • single fam home !KOO location, close to shop ··Ne,,.·port" 1neans Cn ll & crp~M64 adult park. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 Br 2 Ba, frplc. cpts, d~~. R/iJ, $J:s,c::: i l • Ua, liltns. Nice yard . sq ft de.sign l'd for ping & beach SS9.500 S40-99'l2 poo · · 6·S478 Land wnt'd. House, com -drp;, bltns, fenced yard, 963-4569 963-1786 Lou Iannelli Hltr. IUILDERS (•arcfrce Iivini,: Offt•rcd Ce1u1tery lots/ mercial, & indus tri al f'amily SJSOmo. 831 -2711 No rental fee PRE·COHSTR. SALE to you for only $5'1,000, Big m·can vicy,· Lge l Cry_..., 1500 lots, or acreage. Will pay Eastside 3 Br 1 n .. , Nu Village Real Estate _ J BR house for .S iilC by 32-4 Bedroom homes 1n with central A/C bd · h ,..,. h O I 04 ov.Tier. Call 54S·J9;l8 for Huntington Bt!ach 2 rm., "-'It many extra ••••••••••••••••••••••• ca.s . wn e r s on y . crpts, drps, re mod . appointment. Blocks to ocean Now LE RAISOR incl elevator S-17 ,500 Leaving State. 2 plots 644-0916. kitch. fenced yd. Family. Harbor Rest Memorial * * * $285. 631-2711 Wking home:site re:serva· 2 Bdrms, 2 baths Beaut. 1 __ Park. $300. 778·1144 R. Easlrickje 337 3 I 119 Sur o ... roiot f'rplc, 3 br, 2 ba, enclosed patio, crpts /dr p s. $345f mo. 963 ·4 ~6!1 tions REALTY garden selling Close t Lu x Duplex J Br, 21/z Ba. 963-1786 Fountain Valley 1034 •••••1••••············· LIONS EST A TES 4523 Cain pus Dr., Irvine everything $52,500 S58 000',, ComnMrclol 536-257!! !213) 592-5010 Campus Valley Shop Ctr. 3 BR : 2 Baths Property din rm, sunken )iv rm. . No Rental Fee w/frplc, dbl car lf'lrr, rncd Village Real &late 1600 SINGLE STORY TIBURON f ormt>r model 2 Ur & formal dining rm. gre;.it patio. try\.",\ terms. ilsk· ing 543.500. Bkr 645 ·7•140 6BEDROOMS 3BATHS Dig house on huge lot~ Bike lo beath. shopping & .schools Ready to en- joy' Bargain price at $61 . .500 962-7771 CALL 833-8600 Large I-bdrm on grou nd Agcnt640-5560 ••••••••••••••••••••••• floor. v.·it h patio areal.--===::..:==-- You are the winner of BAYFR T two free dinners ($14.50 EXECUTIVE'S OM valoe) "leeted from STAl'ID ERECT... a s you enter this University !'ark loll'IV y,•ith 1\s cathedral ccd- ings. 3 bdrms, <1nd 2 baths There's a tovcred pMt10. sprinklers and a price of SS!l,900 536,WO Ocean vit•Y.' 2 Rd rms . I bath, "-'ith lge view deck Pr1 C('d risht at $42,500 OrCice building, .spec-Skinny Mike's menu :.t * VILLA * tacular vi ew, luxurjous HOLIDAY IMH -executive offices ~ 313 I lri lol SI Periert for entertaining. ed ed '-·• R uc Lo $600,000,. C I ••·- yd, children sm 'PCt OK l"hM 3244 $400 mo. 637 ·7191 art ••••••••••••••••••••••• 6PM. • ' BEAUT. San Joaquin Eastside 4 br' Io/. 6.ii. $3'S Twnhme Large 2 Br, 2~• per mo. l st.'laal + 0$100. ~. 2 sty. View or &~ Bkr546-0814 course & lake. ss~. 547-7044 Huge master .suite opens llll G-RUMDY~ OS a ~a (o spa rkling poo·l , , Plea.secall642·S678.ext. S.A.Hghts3BR,1'%ba. Owtter SacrificeJ Large 5 br. 212 ba. L~ Fam. Rm . gas bbq . brick frplc. lrg lot. Great loc:.i - tion. Reduced to $59.900. 963-188.2. ... 1 .... -,-,,.•aterfall and jacu7.ii. Re-affor 675·6161 333toclaimyourlickets. fplc, $350. mo. 1st. la.st *RENTALS• mfi"i:::Zfic:Bl:f>l!l Elegant ty surrounded l----------1 ---~*'._:'*'._:'*'..._ ___ 1 ~+~S~IOO:";. ~B=k~r ~54~6~-081:0.0<~-:-I UNIVERSITY PARK tRl@Bil'G~ with gracefully terraced I-Br 4 BR 2Y.i Ba, furn. $500 499.2000 gardens. ~1ajestic brick BALBOA Mo.t•. Desert, 4biuir~ ~~ ::0~an vi~"¥ on TIIE TERRACE ====------1 fireplace in living area, Rnor.t 2400 979_5436 ··-2BR.2 Ba. $365/$385 · · JACKIEO. 552-7500 '80ltodee;hog>.wctba.. BAYfRONT •••••••••.,••••••••••••l----'==---13BR.ZBa . S4ZS \l,'ould en\·y your btfl 4 •OCEANFRONT Truly gracious living in Own your own Mobile QUIET OCEAN VIEW TURTLE ROCK -bdrm home , your Rocky Min.Dr.. red h1'll prestigious area. Sec it 120 feet waterfront pro-Home Lot in beautiful TERRACE · · hb h d LOCATION . ~OCATJON ed 4 br, 2 ba, 2-car tgor. 4 BR <Ba p l .superior ne1g or oo PARK HUNTINGTON. now. perty zon com"!. Suita· Palm Desert Greens, 53951 548 0259 • . oo $1000 where your children iK tn-le\•e\ ~·ith a shimmer· roal l::y LOOK NO FURTHER, ble for marine service close to new Eisenhower 548.~_0 · ·d'· '\... or DEERf'lELD tbru 8th ) ha\'C a short & ini,: custom pool Sunken THIS IS IT !!! ~ CALL NOW dock, sport fis hing land-Medical Center in Pal ml -'-"-'==----~--1 ZBR, 21h Ba $350 !Qfc "-'alk to their .sc hool. family rm has rraekling ~ Security 24 hr. guard ing. yacht .sa les, oceano-Desert. AU the amenities 2 BR, ya rd ,• 1&.a r , J BR,2Bn , $425 As you t'njoy your fireplace. Fabulous pallo --~~ .... ~~~~~~:[ .service Privacy, {1u1e-l 752 . 7315 graphy base._ restaurant including t<ugc .s wim· child/pcl.Sok.$11Kl~ WALNUT SQUAR E Prival·y, you will !Je kitl·hcn. all gourmet ~ a nd pl'a C'C'f ul . Ex -•r!ii~~~:.,_~~~ or s~ops . ~nee $650,000 ming pool, recreation 2 BR: fn,ca ya[d , 3 8R,2 Ba $J2S ~"ecure in knowin~ vou ~qu.ippcd~ .Pri\::.11e din· LC191nahach 1048 tra otdinary ,·ie ws DONALDM.BIRD orw11\con.s1derlea.se. center with adjoining Child/Pet.sok$24S. 2 BR,2 8a $325 h:.ive an oulsland1ng. in-1ni;. 4 BR s, 1nc\dg a ••••••••••••••••••••••• coastline. Own your O<,\'n A11oci ot•~.••olta.. 642·5200 ca rd room , billi a rd J BR, fn cd yard, gor., · ·GREENTREE vestment. TWO LEVEL !\lASTEH. •OCEANf'RONT• <1pt $99.500. Good financ-1--L-l-DO_S_A_N_D--S -P•h larrett Re-oity room, sauna, big lounge childfpeLo;ok, $285 2 BR, l Ba $31.0 $49, 90 0 Interior all cuslom de-R ins -Act now!! L~ l'fislor with. kitchen, 18-hole ex-HOM EFINDERS Rancho San JoaqWn l8709San i\ntonioSt. cor In the 70's. A Ii.sting arc a l si99.soo. By SWARTZ REALTY Well kept J+ Den home[·~~~-~"~~~~~~[ ecut1ve got( c;ourse and 642-9000 ,., 2 BR,2 Ba S5SO Of C''T'ly STANS. R~·• owner. 7S2-1 171t499-4384. . h · 2BR 0 Ba d•n ••001•~• Byowner.CallforappL '-"" (7 14)640-1127 w /beaut1£ul cover ed prosop,putllnggreen, .~ •"',.... """" 642.8584 or 968.5319 C arpet Re alto rs, HANDYMAN __ ....:.c:oe".:::..c:::__-j Lanai ringed with col-MUST SELL .shuffle board court,.tcn· 3 BR twnhse-Podl; patio, Open llous"S.·ii/So• I·> Hamilton at Du .s hard. orful flowers & greenery. ni.s court. Lot is in adult enc. dbl gar. $325. mot ... " SPECIAL 21 1·21362ndSl.N.B. 5493598 540-1722 ~~~~~~~~~~[.!"'~·~55~1~1:;;;;;;;;:;;;;~-:--DUPLEX AT Onl y 144 puces Crom a 2SOO Sq. ft., concrete blk .sect.ion, SS x 86 feet, with · or ~on Beach I 040 VICTORIA BEACll sandy beach & s hort bldg, reta il store or of-all_ utilities to lot line. Mesa Del Mar 3 BR, den, ••••••••••••••••••••••• -II ERE . S ,\ RI:: AL walk to pool & propo:sed lice, lot 60x90. Contact Will carry contra ct . ram.rm., 2 pati?.5• 2 ba, · -SLEEPER! Lol'a ted on park. ~1 gr. 642-8252 Owner, P~ne (213~ .944-00S9 or REFS.$400mo.f545-5il3 REAL ESTATE SALES the oceanside or the Mow Redwc:ed To (2l3 J2<17 -2120 wnle classified ad No. '-· 'Are you ready for a fan-hwy ., w11-u EASY AC-FIXER UPPER Only $63,950. #627, Daily Pilot, P .O. 3 BR, den, 2 ba, wfw epts, {aslic 1976? ~·cure-ReaJE.state CESS TO THE BEACH . wilhplenlyofpotential. Call644-7211quick! Box lS60, Costa Mesa, drps. Vacant. $350. Rltr wtt.h offices in Orange, Single story architec· for the young at heart. 2 2 BEDROOM COSTA CA.92626. 548·5527 /545-5643 552-7500 red hill ,.ealty Tus tin . H untington byMrl/AY 1 b ·1 1 1 blks toB h f\-t ESA HOM E . Convert· -. .... ofC a~•Ls ure, u1 t on eve lot. · c · ed. to C·l use. (about 1100 """"" o.dy 2 Super J and 4 bdrms. ....,.,..,. Beach, & Co:s ta !'ttesa. W /ALL SORTS 0 1-· LASTYEARSPRICE n> Lar e Ved d Property 2550 Crpt.s, drps, dshw.s hr. 2Br,lba $37~ Ooo"t settle forless-8.S'r IESTSELLER1 R t; !\I 0 D E L Won 'tlastlong. sql ·ed. g pa .han ••••••••••••••••••••••• $345/m o. 96 3 ·4 569~ 2Br+den,2ba S52! com mission p aid to .. by the sea ~ lnspirin,e! POSSIBILITIES. The 549,500 enc rear area_ wit ac-MORONGO VALLEY 20 963-17116 28r,2ba $38( .salespeople ror .sales & Capli\'ating ! Totally up. I a r Jl e r u n i t h a s 494.6525. IC-=o=n=d=o=,=,e=a=,=.=.=,=,=1=1 =0=,· ! cess. SuCpel r pnce only min's from Palm Spr· No Rental fo,ee 2 Br, 3 ba NB $120f listings. We're intercstL"<i graded : i\todel-perfect 1n SPACIOUS LIV. Rl\1 .. 1,---~_:_::::::::;_ __ I '4819.dSOOC. 11~~ ~~~ewport ing.s-A jewel of a house, Village Real Estate 3Br, 2 ba $430-$471 j n you ! Ca 11 Ph 1 I every ,,.·ay <I Bdrm. An W I 0 P EN DE A :\1 ED LGCJUfta Hills I 050 trade. 2 Bd, 2'h ba. boat v · a ....,......,.. be ff II r · h d 1 3 Br 2'h ba $384 Gl.b1·1,·scoal"9·9>1I II I H CEILINGS, l\1ASS IVE ••••••••••••••••••••••• slip, immed possession . au 1 u Y urnis e DOftCIPoiftt 3226 3B z ,,.. exec ent \'a ue. urry 675_S246 or SJJ-4708_ large bdrm, full bath, r 'h baNB $\SOI f"=-,¥• before it ':-sold out FIR E~LAC E Of" OLD LIKE HEW separate garage . l 'h ••••••••••••••••••••••• 48r,2lh ba $32! -~~~ 968-4456 ~f:~~·e ;r~.NC~~P[)l~ Relocati ng. JD_r. 2Ba. MEWPORT SHORES Acres, water, elect., all ~::N vif.w :11br '!!:!!· 4Br2'h ba $50I J'~R,.p.,,~~ "A-B·C 11 ~ENOVATI NG) & din· ~::;jown. Assum GI. Largest one story In l~io'ioiio'ioiio'ioiio'ioiio'ioiio'ioiio'ioi~I ror~~N REALTY 642.~2~~:.$293ns. ........ LE RAISOR ~~-~~~~~~~~~ A Beautiful Co ndo ! Att: ing area y,·/F'rcnch dooric:::::..:='-------1 move-in condition. J BR, I~ (714 )363 64891 93 4707 REALTY _ ~·oung investor or newly opening to secl uded LogunaNiguel 1052 2 BA. 2 patios. Prime Candontlnla11t1/Tawn-· 4 -FountoinVaHeJ 3234 535 900 weds; Sharp & inex-P<itio. \olniquc bath has ••••••••••••••••••••••• location. $55,000. hoU'ses for 1ole 1700 R..ctt.s, Fonns, ••••••••••••••••••••••• • 4523C8mpus Dr, Irvine ' pensive. l'loi;e to ocean. DBL . P ULLMAN & lflGH ·ON -A-HI LL CAYWOOD REALTY ••••••••••••••••••••••• Gro•n 2700 3Br 2 BaCond~.2carga_r. CampusValleyShopCtr ~!c.;,:! ~~y ~fi!7~c~~~1~~n rent. f\-1 A H, o G A N Y charming 2.01t, 2·Da +' • 548-1290 • NEWPORT CREST •••••••••••••••••••··~· =i::~tafi°~ 3J~~f~~ CALL 833-1600 I l d PANELED WALLS IN den adult condominium. v•c•~ 44 Acres near Perm 2 13 3 6 o 3 :2 Alive with warmth & nc u es I yr. Warranty NAUTICAL DECOH ,.. ,.. .... , · · · 1 1 9 o r Ctilverdale, 3 Br 2 pu freshness. Newly painted , · · Rec'L facil"s .. htd. pool. NEWPORT 3 Bedroom, 3 baths, LI akel , pathgoodor •,rowt&h 714-83l-064S Community """'I. .. afk ' ·ns·1de & out. on·ve lhru 1-1ne I 0 .. ,. This structurally sound, Clean air' S59 500 I . eve view arm ~ ' • • ~.. Id d 1 s · ' -custom ntenor, owner • • . tennis. $380 mO, 552.96() boat door. Carpets,••••••••••••••••••••••• ~E~~ 0u/ i~iN~IN~ *BOND REALTY * HEIGHTS will help with fin ancing. horse country, JU.St orr Nrly nu lrg 3 br, cror ~ot. Owner. drapes, 1:ountry y,•ood Univ . Park llome-4Brs YARD WORK &-MJNOli Bl 1·9411 J BR, 2 Ba, just like new. Asking $68 950 Generous Hwy 60• $2500 A, lO% dn, boat g a lu • pal 1 0 ··i-'=='------.- cabinets. f"orced-a ir FH, 38a, Prl\•ateyord REPAIRS 11 h $69 ooo p · I terms. ' · prinonly l714 >675·667S $440/mo. 847-3584 . agt. Univ Park Terrace 2 Br : . you avl' , . r1nc. o n y . Ba Twnhs r heatin ~. Built-ins for Lse/Sale 644-7770 des.i red a PL,\CE A1' 1 _ N. I. Agent. S49 -08 12 or Bkr839-1710 Reolhtcrte To placeyourmeasage e. rplc, $3'10 gourmet cookinJ?. Dining TI-IE BEACl-1 . Wt RJ-.:N -LdgUna 1gue 645-4200 W..tect 2900 before the »2-7B96&-Sll&-89SS room a rea. Cover ed Uy owner Turtle Rock he: hoic IM:wProperiy :ZOOO patio for outdoor fun. A Plan I. 3 Br. 2 b~. ~am · -::LY~~C~~iE~~~~~em~~ t C ecom~un;ty Duplex by owner, Beaut. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• reading public, Selling anything witb.o perfect firsl home, BKR. rm, d1n1ng rm, alnum. th . f • • • p R I v A T E . Bay view, comer lot, rm Multi tenant Industrial & Need properties ror my.in-phone Daily Pilot Clasaified /u call for details, S42-885<1. Corner lot surrounded by e pnce 0 p RIV ATE J -bedroom lo build. $l20,000. 546.0786 offi ce bid&, Orange . c o. ventory .. Broker opening Daily Pilot is a simple matter •• trees & open .space . $79,500. Ga rden lfpme. Walk to Airport Location. Prin. 0'!'1 .off1ce. Low Com-Clas1ified,£t2-5678 Jmtcall&U-5678 . ... -· ,. 563.900. Shown by appt A VACANT L 0 T rec. center and fa cil ities. NEWPORTl-IEIGllTS only. 549-1480. nuss1on. S48-64S7 . I a.L only.832-8743. NEARBY JUST SOLU Securearea.$72,SOO. Lg 4 Br. ocea n view, Rttltals f'OR S47.000. Owner "-'Ill Laguna N1·guel Really nnnJ. nu kitch $98,500 by LIOHS EST•-s ,_Selll I""' ,..,I:'. ••••••••••••••••••••••• "#I ill Califondo" Pil;~=~tr~~5~ilh Dail y orrerterms. 8)0.5050 496-4040 appt.. OWNER 548·SSS6 Builder /Broker ae,lli~g HCl•IH FwniHed s D R I B~ ftil ,0 S H 1 ~ E•I I B S A p --===;:~~=~=t=~~~~====-1 MISSlONREALTY -Duplex w/slip. Bill Ca r-property.3To l8un1ts1n ••••••••••••••••••••••• ST FI W~'S~D 'R t IMS N. 0 E GI p 985So.CtiastHwy,Lag. ~ roll'640·S560. }Ia.stings &: prime areas in Jlunt · .... l.a..d 3IO• S©\\al}lv\.-"~~S · 1 --__:4!9!4-07~~1~1_..:__l~~~~~~~~~l ~eo£. R~e;•~lt~o~r.~:::~ ~~rro~~ach. New & •••••••••••••••••••••••. ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ,:1~: ~ ~ -~:: ~ ~: Tltotlttlri911ing Woro' Gome with 0 Ch11c,le ZOMEDC·I Mewportleech 1069 twwport .. ach I06•i .5:.31:..6-:.::2~57:.t:..-.:S::tc:Z:.·5:.0:.:.:I0:11:~~n~':!~:::l~~~'. G WW NG R GK 0 ·s DK BK ORN a N Wl!oo4"'rCUtiT t .,OIUIH Laguna cottage, newly'•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• T•XSHIL-2 8r.$36Syrly673-7008 8 I 0 S t i:~ S 0 NS. U 0 R GUE A SlflC &: """ BIRD WJPS ~ • --~--~ roofed & shingled; this ,.. • -t T ~:::-'!.,~, t spot could be ideal for of· fil OCEANA SOUTH CoNM .. M• JI zz ' . 0 S S 8 ~ N~G S 1" , l U 8 '-1e ....... lour..,....~'· flee & home or rental. 3 IN ••-••••••••••••••••••t.. I\ ~ k N D I 01 0 E S 0 l'p T U R S H U A" I Q 0 MU S i' 1 Bdrms.,IV. bath•. !rple.. ColcfweU Banker C 0 :::tNEStTDEE LY 3Brl Ba •. pallo, 11• yard,· BU W o,o f N,R D SE * T,~ As Rt fenced yard with treea; r . hed r . II 314 l•1m1ne. Open Sat. 41: A U H SdC ' ;it C ~ " • T I R A ( )' j ) I needs so m e f ixing . RESIDENTIAi. BRO<ERAGECOMMNY umis , pro e1110na Y Sun.10.4PM 1.Q.8.o2'72or p t Q E 0 8 k D ~ K >. R • L U -_ _ _ _ _ sm.950 decorated model! ($4,000 l-62lloOIM7 ,.. D "" _ PAC NO _ u o:sN.Cst.Lae:un• ftAll' sing l e a tory condo. ColteMeM ll24 D MO ts" R Tsu' s a o AR" EA u I I r r l, .9 •• 1177 EnchMled aartge. PaUo ••••••••••••••••••••••• MUTT AS DR J • E SU 0 MT O .. .. Large, beautiful wocxted estate on with Wl'O,U,l bt fea.~e 4 Rua tie Studio 1 8~. R 0 u p s P:t Ru i. s TAD s ~ : ~ 1 1 , 1 TURl'IER ASSOC. FAMILY PA"• "ISE ;nvenlory) 2BR, l V.BAl-'-'==----1 S 0 N G W U R £,A I( T U S R G H R U s Corona d el M a-r hitiside, with view of sate. Adult Cover 40) Pri"acy &: quiet tie yd. I K H J " T I ! Ntw Yorkers •r• to Ml"JI" islands & harbor . 5 Bdrms., 7 baths, com ~un It)'. pool , Nr. NB Fwy. s110. ,_..._,Wli ~ I I I r ""'ntal. OM btr •~ ditdi-J•<"utZI, clubhou&e. Nr. SU.50'2 1 ~-"·• ft.: ...-,,-..: .. _ _.., ut.d • drkik ,0 thit c:lfV'• f;.. pool ; over 'h acre. $249,000. El Cimino Plau 1bop-IM;;:;;.-1;;;j;"""Jiijiil --• , ntrwMil lnlublft.. II'• , ,.,_,_ Jl'.in& center. Walk to t>ualMt•port•oclll 31" AA.Its Shorlbints I It 0 T R A M I "'".n -tht-. 1-1• line. 30 rflla. to Sa ••-••••••••••••••••••••• • P' I I I O c-i.i......, ~ Dleto. AvalJ. now. Fabulous waterrronl llu1tlrd1 Slngbtrds I" 1 ~ l;fflfoo "",.........,.. ~ $Sil,:KIO COMPLETE. a home. Av1U til .rub' t . Cranes ~ Swifts -j ' ... -•·-""'"""· ADAIZLER ACOUWIUl-CO. OWNER.548·-Rea1 . Beacoa 1BiJ. Hlwlts •llltl• W..pocbn l .. :w::..~ul'""' r r r r I'-r [' I Temple lllll• locallon, 644-1766 1'% Spendable. Trad•l-= ... =-='::::"::. .. =--=~--1 T-llCMt In-NIU • ----· -- . J,<reat rlr. plan, ofterioa fiour local proper\y r Harbol' View Homea. 4 ':-:---'-.._ __ ..;._..;....,;.:.;...., __ ... ·-~~'°'I I I '"'f I I I I I ~c~~%setif~,:.mth . ~~~~~cin~~f~o.4 :1m:.'°°A ::·,t;;:=..~=i;::..t.."7TS=~=.-rr:. ~Ml i.e ... cof.loo7100 --a.uct.1144....., = -~ ... Ill.-• -··-'· • • .. .... ,..,. ........... ,, •• J .. J I ) I. I t , , II I ' r 1 ·I ( 1 " · I ., • • ' .. , . " • ., .I •• 1 • I • I Al& twk u..tun.. Af*t1w"11 u.Nna.. Ape& r11•11m "'""•"" • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • •• • • • • • • • • .. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • u.fwi'911Md 390 0 •M111aMd .... tw11ts ,.;.,illed c..t.Mne UJ4L.,.aleeclt 3141 .. ,,,. ................... OfflceR ... al 4400 .... u Wont.d 5010 Lost&Found 5300 it'w' ... ., • • • JJwe.... ...................... .................. .... •• ....................... ••••••••••••••••••• •• •• •• ••••••••••••• •• • •••• • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •••h• i. "' :IMI 1 c .... w...-3724 • LUXURY dupl x 3 Or, 2 fltna Wanted coin op eratt'd LOST· ~htlr ,Cockapc>1>. I .......... ....... C•1t1 •ea JJ71 CASA HEIMOSA C?CEANFRONT yur ba, unturn yrty S34S mo. &ecuffn Suihs laundry "aoln& bust t;.in w/blk urs & taJI a&lverd11I• horn~ tor rent ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••• •••••••••••• 1 .. 1 W . Wil·-. CM round 2 br $3'7$, bacb Furn. 8 Br, 2 ba. thru c d ed r 11 ·• ~ 2 Br2 Ba, Im, m1c.rAl&0e. q 1 BR ba,.,i..-1"-trlr Small "' _.. 117~ Kid.I JJl'b. Utll pd June 30th. $375. Ste"" to ustom ecorat u ness 492 217 Weur1n1t brn C'olllir I " I -.•t'l:ut I ....... S.16--0321 .... si2e view orrice ---Name "Peppy". VIC.' ~~· l'lrl d U3S. 714 2'Ba·& 4kn. rft, facll. aduJl par~ o pe&a. $110 eOlr fW wtr. 209 41.:il St. NPB. Serv1<'es of Certified U~s, Trust NB 873·2319 .,.... .. 7~•ft..flPM , <11001.t.ChlldreQ ok. S2:90. mo. S48..fil73• " To-..0_. !f ll'9 <2t3) 800·5985owner Profe11s1onaJ Secrtt~ry; Dffdi 5035 L-a.-1.. 3241 mo 831-2395 J t c-i•t N.wpon le~h reception & ""'Wpmenl l • .. •••••••••••••••••••• LOST 12·27, LG MAL~ -y-no _. • ws ..... .,.... ••• ••••••••• • • • • • •• • •• • RoontS 4000 -... ••••••••••••••••••••••• C:-.&.-... ~ 31110 ' ... u ........ 37 40 ... _,,_. ci..11..a & ,.. Bau( () l 2 Bd 2 8 p t blk Alrportel'. Inn 2082 LOANS up to 80% I R J s H s E TT E R • " .. EG _.._ & • ~_,.. "'"" ~ r n ' a. ,. ••••••••••••••••••••••• M' h I D l I REWAR0633o""" !WM A.NT LIVING ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••-•••••••• ••e •-~tt.i.. nAh •. . 1c e son r. rv ne .,......., MONARC ""A-..... ....., ... pier. $550. yrly. lloum 11 S25 wk up CaJIE,•eMoore.752·0234 ---------JI BAY VILLA 3 br 2 ba blt.oa cpt.'j BEAVTtf'VL l br rurn 20 R $33S 979-19~&644-4510 wikitcben. Apts $J7.SO ht TD Loont-1>/40/o FOUND · Lrl' mah~ doft New2Br82~HJa,0ce<en ~·gar 'Nr Wi.rn .. r/' apts$170&$J&o.Spanlah 2.BR /( 1 ~')A• k NB Executive off 2-dTDLoans Blk w/wht mrkngs. tlir vlew,balcorue11.Z fr"lc1, Fai~lew.· ... 50:,.u2 ....... ~ stylebldg,pvt"f'CIQar, nRw rpc _..,, w up . 548 9755 or .,. · ice F'airestTermsi.mcel949 Hazard & Bch pot>I, aau.na, i ucurlty, -.,.. ...,_, pooi, suuna. lnd,,Y, adlls. 3u $395 UTILITIES PAID 645 3967 17 xl4. well decorated, . lease owner 644 JS19 Firepl14ce, super c:lean 17301 Keelson t ... 11. 1 blk Inquire next door: ULOCK TO OCl'.:AN R 0 () ,.,1 w / k 1 l ,. h .. n sunny• w /view recept. Sollhw Mtg. Co. Wiitrnnstr. 897 · 0188 br, 2 ba, bllnt;, crpt.s, W.of&.achottSlolt.:r ,lfacl(lnduOeMctia Oelwu:Prlvutc20r,21>a '' " "' rm. 141·'2'xl1' Wl't bar, 642-2171 545·0611 FOUND: While frm:.1k P ( drpa . $345/mo-: °'842·'7848 lOOW.Wiliion . .AptU Lge w•lk-ln c lo!tet s, fe~r"~962· em7l20loyed.pre· $250 mo. ALSO, l5'xl:f, T-0y Poodlo,.Wc.r Warot!r ro csslonal Lady wants 963-45$l/963·l7S6 Costa Mesa blln.,, gar::ige. cable TV, v choc orn crpt. f216 mu. 2nd TD Loans Wanted & Lark Ln., HB. 846-4292 Proc. per11on lo ihur e NoUentul Foe • STUDIO ' Adults/no~ts.$300mo. Now renting. Singles, Dotbnrbeach&bay BuyT.D.'s forcn~h. ------- Spectaculor Ocounrrunt Vt\i..gc Real Estate Mesa Del Mar 3 Br 2 Ba till Junt! IS. S37S mo. un kitchenette~. 1 bd apts. Jacobs Re.ally, 675·6670 Louns on 2nd T.D. 's FOUND: Fem dog, blk w/ hollse. P vt . ent. Will $49WHKLY 4Plex,11opets yeurly lt.iw;e. See to ap. l'ool!I, TV. Oally, wkly, 2 law offices in Fashion NewLoaru1·2ndT.0 .'s tan mrkngs. Vic J\drian housekeep tor purt ex-SGMtlt L_,..a 3ll6 ~~I Klt~U~ ~ fV $220 645·l208 prcC'iate. Call for appl mo n l h I y . Ad u It 11 . Island Suite. Preath tak· $3000. • $.'}(),()()(). Wy, S.A. 557-7757. penses IC needed. 494·7561 •••••--••••••••••••••• e ns tlht ~s 551·0042 after 6 PM. 5J6·4170. ing view overlooking pre J::<lulty lnvi;mt. Div ~~~~~~~~~l·Br, l·ba. Walk. to beach. MILETOOCJ;';AN Newly dee. 2 br, bllrns, P"'RKMEW•ORT stigfous Big canyon. Np BARNETT MTG.CO. FOUND· Fem kill~n. 6 -Carport. No dogs. Ph.: ExecutinSultes patio, gar. Mature udlts. ~ ..-Room. ple&sant, pvt ent. Bch . Panorama of 20YrsinOrgCty. wks. Vic or Adams tn RENTALS 646446() 727 Yorktown ll•d. No child/pet Nr. s hop-APARTMENTS cooking. Working male. Orange County from 16lb ti45 2134 anythne CM 557-0719. LACiUMA IEACH HcM.tset FurnlsMd Beach Blvd at Yorktown ping. $225. 642-6035 Bachelor 1or2 S9S mo. 497.2014 floor. Call 714·640·6440. For Sale 2nd TU ut a dis f''OUND: German Shep. ~;~wli~J(M 4hUORM 1 • & UnfuntllMod 4r100 536·041 I 2 Br. 1 na .. f>ool, Bllns. ~:~':h':~s~~d Room for rent 1n nice Encuti•e Suites count improved proper Male. Newland & 1n i '\ 'w o'8e. "'ge. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mewport .. ach 3769 Drapes.$l90 mo. Fr.S2J9SO qwethome. !-~or Working Full service ~ulles ty,gdsecurily dtanapohs.JIB.960 1381 V~~~ e cBw'lt J k~ EhA N Bch. hse 2UR 2BA bltns ••••••••••••••••••••••• 642-9367 Evenings Orw•n 9·6 Dail" mun 642·479-i CM Area available in airport area Sl3.ooo. IO'~ Sl8S mo. FOUND: Male Col he blk . ·Ill 1tc en, r 1 · Q . ·$ · $40 WK -... ~ J • Av:ul a\ lG,500 dbl.garage.S400mo. rp c. u1et. 400. lJP 1&2 Bdr ·" 5175 Clean 2 br, pool. Spa-Pools·Tenn1s GuestHome 4150 (N.B.)Starting$200.Call $S.OOOIO'l~S55 mo. & Tan. Brookhuri,l & 2 BDRM. & RUMPUS 673"4765,541·9534 .Bach. Color TV. maid senior citizens ok. No Across from Fas hion ••••••••••••••••••••••• 833-3640 A 1 $4 !JO() Garl1eldHB.962 l3W RM . ho me. Built-in Coftdo....,WM sen', pool. THE MESA. pets. n o chi ldren. Island at Jamboree on Lo~mg care for elderly Costa Mesa office space Above~~~=~P.r?x~·yrs. FOU:'-ID Be:rnl male blk kitchen, dbl. garaj!c UafunlsMcl 3425 415 N. Newport DI . NB 646-2738 San Joaquin Hills Road. mah.! or fem. Oal. diets. S40. mo. incl. util. Xlnt R.E. Bkr. 642·4603 German Shl'ph('rd in Quiel residential 11ection: ••••••••••••••••••••••• 646-96Bl . l714J 644-1900 homey, patio. ~4·3833 __ for Real Estate. Jns .. In· &-~--.~. ts Dearf1eld area. lle's at $385 Mo. New Deluxe 2 Br, S22Smo. ----~ ...... , / 1 B DR M . & 0 EN Newport Beach .. All new OCEANFRONT Winter. bltns, cpts. drps. gar, 121 Newport Isle. 2Ur, 2ba. Vocation Rentals 4250 come Tax. etc:. 548-0452.__ Pert0nals/ OC Animal Shelter. OLDER HOUSE. Loe. 2br, 2b~ w/pal10 &. ex· Neal 2 Br, ga.r, adlts, no Lisa Ln. CM G44·1869 Upp~r deluxe duplex ••••••••••••••••••••••• OFFICE SPACE for rent Loit & FoUnd d I b near Potte1·y Shack. 2 tras. Super locat ion. pets. S250. 213 795-3018 S350 y rly. l213) 791-4348, Palm Springs for rent on Coast Hwy Cdl\1 . 545 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~f~: ~1:~1lc a slr;~5k ~~· ~LKS 1''ROM Bt-;ACH. S395/mo. 673.2749· Winter• 1628 W. Ol·ean· 2 !~d ~~a , cSh~tg5&.P~t2~~ <213> 681·5315· Feb May 1 Bd. 1 ba upt. Sq. Ft. Sl50. m~. 673-2990 AnnOW'tcern.nts 5100 ch('sl Silver chum i:ol vlosetoeverylhing.fl25$287.50Tastefullydecor.3 fro~t 1 Br :S 190 . Rulgens.' · LJVENearThe lleach! furnt!tht'd. Xlnt area. •••••••••••••••••••••••Jar. \'ic. K Wils on & Mo. Br 2 st.y Condo, patio in· Studto·SlSS, Ultl Free. Casadei Sol Pool. te nnis courts, Business Rental 4450 • * * OranJ;!c. CM . 646·5373 afl STU.010. APT. Lo<'alcd cl'd gar. N-r. S. Csl. 963·4888 12x60 Mobile Home, t BR. s:iima, S325 mo., <714 l ••••••••••••••••••••••• 5 on wktlays. JC you'rt• al Viclona Beach. ONLY Plaza. 835·7101ait6pm S Ext. Liv.rm. inc Id. patio. Ueautiful Adult Apls 53h -~l7!JO aft 6 pm. IDEAL shop located in the Charles Prowten not going lo rclurn tl. 2000 YDS. TO BEACH. -teps lo beach, modern 2 Gars & wate r free . From$190 11 tth L' l r•.. 26231 Via Roble t :J kc 1t t o tht! Vt:t:., Partly furn. J\11 utilities 2 BR condo, close to BR, frplc, $250. yearly. Adults only. s155 mo. 21661 Brookhurst, llB CABIN ma a er ac ory, vlirt· Mission Yiei'o please It's sick. ~.byowner.SlTSMo. schools & shopping. 642·3490 962-6653 **•BIGBEAR••• nery Villag_~. N.B. Sl10. You are the w1·nner of ---~ So L H t u h $225 642·2728 or 645·3974 3 1 b d SI mo. 673-9606 , 673·9393 y h' 1 . aguna. 1 Bdrm un . .uc area. . , BR . . arge e rooms. eeps two free dinners <Sl4 .50 as 1ca camt'ra ost <.1t apt. Located 1 blk. abbv~ From 9 :30 to 3 call 2 .• furn w/~til. Qwet 1 BR EASTSIDE, l'pls. YRLY 3 br; 2 ba. by 12. Separatl! game room Harbor Blvd. Frontage value) sell!cted from Untvl!rs1t~· High School. 'Coast Hwy. Walk to shop· 893·6571, eves & wknds ~insula Point. Now drps, bltns, dshwhr. $195. beach. Near new, bltns·& with color TV and pool store or office. 1000 sq ft. Skinny Mike's menu·at Irvine. Hewur<l . 552·7552 ping and beach. All utll. 897-47594 645_7;0~~e 15th. S32S. mo. 642-6243 garage. $390. 548·4063 table Huge sundeck. By S300 mo. 548·269K HOLIDA y IMM F 0 U N 0 : b 1 a c k pd.byowner.$200Mo To~i..~---w eek or week -e nd . 31311 • olS MISSION R E"'LTY ""'nnvw>e B d . • • * 3 Br. 2 Ba. yrly 2 blks to 494 8611 Laguna nAach Lease. Bay Loe. 302 Main, nst t., Chihuahua. fcmalc. VJ c. • aoA Unfurnished 3525 1 o~02 r, a ults, no. pe~s. beach S365 mo. . , IX" Balboa Penin. Walk by Costa Mesa Hamilton & Brookhu~t. 985 S Cst Hwy. Laguna ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sl /$190. 2421 E. 16th St. Curtis Miller 642·3188 4300 lraICic Gift shop, art, or? Please call 642 5678. ext 11.R. 646-8198 Photte494-0731 Nl':WPORT on water. N.Hts.646'1801 2200So.CoastHwy Rent~s toshare 962·6009 33Jloclaim~'our t1ckets. ---------LOCJU11aleach • 2 BR. 112 Ba condo styl(' ••••••••••••••••••••••• ., FOUND; childs 2 whl MissionVieio 3267 view bay, mountai~s.WaterfrontlBr,Adult,no You are the winner of Bltns. cpts, drps. l'n<:I Roommale·CdM . 3Br,lndustrialR•ntal 4500 *** Hike. Vic. Gothard & ••••••••••••••••••••••• Beaul.l&e lbr,w/w,a1r, pel.Yrly S275 mo.Day~ f d p atio. heated pool part.furn.Mature adult.•••••••••••••••••••••••carPool 5150 <..:or:..ican Dr. 11.U . BEAUT II A B 2 B bltn R&O, patio, pvt 556.Ql65 Eves. 673·3531 two ree inner!. (Sl4.50 Adults, no pets. S2 l5. S 25 I 8"2·352~ . . ome .. r a. prkg, ~levator. pool. ---value) selected from 1 + 1.1 ut1 . eves. Lease 1.000 sqfl w/office ••••••••••••••••••••••• ___ ......,.... __ Din: Rm, bltns, frplc. lo SJ9S. mo. Or will lease. Oceanfront-Dix 2 Br. $350 Skinny Mike's menu at 548-2682 6i5 4697. 11.0-220 V, heat. hot Save gas Car Pool, Jl.8 .· FOU~D new book in sal·k ma1nt yard Nr school &1 537.4943 mo. Winter. Yearly HOLIDAY INN Female seeks same to water, new bwldmg. gd Downlo wn L.A. Hrs.I on Mariners Well o(f lop shops. $395. 541J.7672 Avail. 645-2016 3131 Bristol St., OCE"' .._.FRO.._.T locale. 645-2244. flexible. 968·7202 I of m<J\ in" l'ar 1 ~·0754. ----Duplexes Unfum 3600 Costa Mes a llOAl""'I ..... share ~autiful 3 br apt. ____ ..!:_ ---- N•wport Beach 3269 •••••••••••••••••••••••Oceanfront w/Vu nr pier 2 Please call 642-5678, ext. l·Bdrm. Yearly S32S Sl50. ~·7200 t & Fowtd 5300 FOU:'llD in Top Of The ····~··•••••••••••••••• COM. 3 Br. 2 ba, ocean vu. Br, furn or unfurn. 333 to claim your tickets. STEPS TO BEACH Career ~:xcc Fe m. de-AIRPORT ••••••••••••••••••••••• World area, Lag. Bch .• a 1 Untv P~rk ll~~e-4Hrs, deck, r rp I c, b eam 540-20.18 536-3624 * * * 2 BR, 2 ba. yrly, furn S375 s ires person to share 3200Square 1''eet F OUN D : A J J w ht blk & tan young male dog fR.3ba.Pnvateyard ceil'ng cul·de·sac 2 car 3BR,2baWntrS35 Lux Condo, i::. Uluff .1912r t:>-:rSq.1''t-. Samoyed dog. So. Cst or puppy"~a bout 2' tall, LeaseS575. 644-7770 gar P~t bch r '• $450 St75. t Br. 1/1S to6/15. 118 2 Br 1 Ba range & retrig 3BR,H2bahouse$375 64Hl991 2A1r-eond1L1oned offices, Plaza Hotel. 1 ·8·76. w 1 bad eve 497·1044. • -----675_J:io3. prv g · 36t_h St. Few yds. to bch. patio, n~ pool. Cpts & LIDO ISLE · ample parking. 213·43!H089. __:.· __ _ 3-4 Br, 31.2 Ba, lionus Rm, Util pd. 1adult01 couple , Drps l child OK 645·4832 3 BR. 3 ba, unf, yrly S650 Fem roommate to share Harbo I t C found ~m. Shaggy M dog cpts & drp s, l ge nopets. ' · SEA WINO apt in Cd M. 1 child OK. R al r n•6es • 4°·00 FOUND: boys Jacket al possibly P e ke. 'vh :Pal!oJOver hang, auto sFumished QuietTriplex2BR.frplc, 556·3l06,6<10·8034cves. e tors 7l· 4 __ Mesa Theater, cal l lo Magno li a & Garfield µ;prmklcrs. pool/tennis ••••••••••••••••••••••• San Clemente ... 3776 bltns. $215. Oa\'e S Cfondoy, 2 B1RS4.00 2 Ba. \Jn -, ---2000 Sq . ft of" & identify.!439·7350 H.B.962-998.t .ptiv. $600 mo .. 640-1327/ Batboelsland 3706 ••••••••••••••--••••••• 644·72llor645-ti85 l um. ear Y He!>p . Gal to ~hare •areh . . d~· ct --------~·1500ext 1465 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 Rm Bachelor/ettc great <.:har ming Bal lsld. home "' ouse ~pare 1t e ·Found 2 Keeshounds vie 1''.oundskateboard, · 2b • t Ji · . b· localion$100mo. DancfPoint 3826 w s ame . 675·8139 or 1>'. across from OC 91 frwy Valley Vtew & Npt lll'ighls arca Newport Shores 230 62nd, r ap ,· alto, near ay. 493-1598 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 673 2383 Au·port. 549·l4SO. Knott But•na Pk 826· I t91 G46 2626 '~Br. 2ba. near ocean. ,\va l l able Jan 15 · Ocean View 2 Br 2 Ba, - 001 t . lbS375 673·3458. •-t=ttts Newbldg2500 sq.fl..M·lL'QUNU ·. L'ull ••row11 . ennts, cu . ~ """' lage Dix. Bltns. S239 50 MOVl .... G? f f i ,. r " 6"'3 '>Cc:• N d •l-L-=shed .., w/ to c. Lge rt'ar' r. 17• F"m. lllondt> ''olll". " . .....,... ' o ogs. Year Iv, immac. luxurious vnTI1nW 493-9577 or 830-3215 • ft D 540 571 o " '" " --furn ,~ BR h'ld I ••••••••••••••••••••••• I , • A .d D it sq. . ays . , Wilson & llarbor C:\l. 1-'nd skatelxwrd Fu~hwn I s le pk lul. be hi nd Robinsons . must idont1ry 640·i325aft6 30 HARBOR VIEW 2 BR, pet .Rf , no~ ren CoronadelMar 3822 Ocean View Twnhme. 2 S365 'srly 0cl'an t-ronl 2 YOI epos S , eves.646-0681 63H709 Den. 2 Ba . nr park, 673~.:~ s. req. . mo. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Br 2 Ba. M/Br Balcony. Br. 1 Ba. bllms. deck. Ccbl Hous.-Mat•s Off1ce/Industnal space -------·~c~ool & pool. New crpts, ;.,.r.r.1 L~ .. dlx.. bltns, si95.50 garage 645-36~ GJtn comfortable rent & . ' FOUND · ~1 cni; bifocals Found II? Redish brn T~·r P. int etc Garden a compaltble roommate Lag Niguel area 400/3000 Vi c. Goldenrod, Cc.1~1 ner, ,·ic ~igu el Go, If ~d •A " 1 . er ldn· lalboaPeftinsula 3707 493-9577or830·32l5 forlease.Terraceapl 60' RJ24134 A!>k for Jtm · S.F.NrFrwyB.11-1082 673-8804 Course495-llii .~73.i148 v a• , 'm me . ••••••••••••••••••••••• (Sf '"'" HuntiftCjton leach 3840 bay view. 2nd floor 4br. ---_________ 12br, winter. 114A Balboa '(1 • · ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4ba, 30' ltv rm. din rm, Roommak ">'anted. fem. 1200f Sq. ~~: M-l s pace CA.'lAL Front, 4 BR. 3 lia, B\J'Kk .1·879·;5991. ~50/ '' J,.C!':!..5-1 Block to Ocean brkfs t rm . air l'all Mo1.c an Jan 15 or t-'eh I. wi ront 0 ice. lgc rear •din. rm. m s l T :s uHe mo. Pet. OK w/depos1t. Br 675-7030. Home· M IS:.. Viejo. 5200 Tdoe~:mr ·,·nSal189W.5aO"· "!~o· :567.21~0 C 1 with View, refrig ---m 831 H>Slie •· J "" "' frplc & balcony. Walk C~ona del Mar 3722 ORONA DEL MAR stove. sml pct OK. f'rom Lido Isle 2 llr Utt I mC'I o. '~s days, 646.(l681 eves. I .t.o ocean. pools. & tennis. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2p a,r lTow!'houset, rrpttc., Sl75. Mgr 214 A, 14th St. 213-281-8400, Eve~, wknd:. 1-'t:malt! Rm mate wanted • ·$495 mo. 645·0836 . oo enms con 1nen a * COSTA MESA * -Urnque 2 br glass apt. · : 536-8400orG45-8107 675-2342 to s hare Co~t:i ~l esa 36' Dock 3 br condo • W/vie'IN, walk/bch. frplc, breakfast. Some ocean & -----home L~c nl & gar Call 2500Sq. Ft., 3.000SQ. 1"l . ,21 ~ ba. Uouble gar. ~~75. lease $375. a73·86l7 Catalina views. Close lo 1 Day Free Rent 3 BR. 2 ba, gar. patio, <.:hn!' · 64G·8·17g · 10.000 Sq. Ft .. near S D . .,... shopping & fine beach. 1·2·3 Bedroom Apts. block to beaeh. No pcb. -Frwy. Nattress Heally, 545-7645 after 5. ~S. Sep. Qtrs . 30+ Mal 644-2611 Walk To Bcat'h Yrly. W. Nwpt 642 1603 Resp female. extra ll!e 4 979·6571 tu ffs c: d lcasclS or Fem. Vu, frplc, quiet. LIONS 1-;STATES bd. duplex. 12blk to beh. ---------u on os; Ref~_..67~.5033 536·2579 592·5010 Exec. BayfronlApt. Lido. Sl30. mu. In c l ulil. 600. SqFt or Mfi? Shop . CromSJ90To$595 View. 3Bd. 2ba, frplc, Sec. bldg. Adlts. Yrly. 645·4G65. Space, Nice area. $100 .\genl644·1133 CostaMesa 3724 gar age, New. Owner,Walklobch$180&up.No S475.675·346'1 permo.548-8300 NEWPORT c · t c d 3 ••••••••••••••••••••••• $495. 675·4868or 631·2333. Summer increases. Pool, 4 HH house. female r m· res on ° $37 SO WE£11 & U rec rm drps crpl Adlts UMIOESCO male ne eded . Balboa Br, 3 Ba, Tennis & Pool. •. . ~ P l Br, 2 blks to beach. view. no pets. 220 12.th st: free r•ntal ser•ice Is I and. A Ct Sp m or M·l. 90 x 125 corner w/bldg. 991 W. 19th St. CM. $275. 642-3490 S42Smo.lsc.645·8781 •Stud1o &~BRApls . S200.tno. 536-9505. 219 15th St. 991.8000 wkends 3090nyx. •TV&Ma1dServAvall 675·4174 536-703! ' I ----2·Sty. A·frame ; 3 BR. 2 •PhoneServ, Htd pool · Oup ex 2 br. 1 ba. newly GarGCJ9S for R•nt 4350 Stor~ 4550 ba. Dbl. gar. Pools. ten· •CbUdren Section Spac. 2 Br upper w/view decorated , all ut1I pd.••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• nis. S425..:..Agt.~· l290_. _ *Low monthly rates. Close to ocean. S265 Mo J t c -..a t d $350. mo. _ Gara~e for rent . 1959 Ma. l{i ACRE. Fenced storage •HOF.,w;-week's rent NowavailAg:t.675·3000 us o .. ,.....e e · s A 4 Br 3 Ba Condo, Fam -w/ad~ Deluxe Triplex. Lrg 2·3 Steps to Sand 2 Br 2 Ba. pie Ave, Costa Mesa. S25. a rea in ant a n a R I l I B D. h h bl f I d k bit SJOO mo Heights. Tax deductible m . poo . enn s. many 2376 Newport Blvd. C"" Costa Mesa 3824 rs. 1s was er. tns. rp c. er . ns. . · S S <'A1 .,.., 0797 '" f 1 l. I 548 3869 & 642 0282 through ea couts. Call xtras ....... 5. U..l· 548·9755 or 645-3967 ••••••••••••••••••••••• rp c • pvt pa '0 • enc · · · Office R.ntal 4400 642·4798 or963·2688 * CASA VICTORIA gar. No pets. S250 & $340. 2BR. Partly furn. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---------* * 20l5Fullerton..CM l ,2&Jbr.OeluxeUnfur. 18482 Huntington St. lHousetoOcean Rent~sWanted 4600 P. J. SnUth 1 BR FUrn, 2 lrg closets or FUrn. gas/wtr pd. 557·4608&530-5775 Call673-7180 150 I Westcliff Dr. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2769 Solona Way queensize bed, pri v Adults-No pets Sec. gate For Rent 1 Bdrm Apt. •-rt Fu • h d Newport Financial Ctr CARPENTER & wife will LCICJUfla Beach dressing rm, xtra lg Pool, rec rm, elevators Sl80 per mo. ..-+=" tntftts n11s e LeasiftCJ Office Space (i~. up·clean up house- " You arc the winner of rooms , enc l . gar. S25Victoria,642·8970 5157th,St.HB. orUnfurnished 3900 CaJlonSiteManager ~xchange lower r ent. : two free dinners (Sl4.SO w/storage. Adults onlyJ ~iiiiiiijjjjl;iiiiiiiiliiiiiliiiiiliiiiiliiiiiliiiiiml------'------1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• (714)642·3111ext246 494-5247 ,'value) selected from _n_o-'pe'-ts-·-------1 2 Br 1 v, Ba Twnhse THE EXCITING -R-e-ti-red_L_a_d_y_w_a_n-ls_r_oo_m_ 1 .,Skinny Mike's menu al w/dshwr, range & patio. PALM MESA APTS. in priv. home w/kitchen HOLIDA y lt4M S1 BR FUrn. $18.5. ~~~~arby 536·5006 or MINUTES TO NPT privl'gs in CM or Balboa. 313 I Bristol St., Lots of bltns, pool, walk BCH. By 2/l /76 673·0866 eves. CostaMeia to s h';&ping. 1,"'2 Mi. 3 Br 1 1 ~ Ba Twnhse Bach,l&2 BR. ~~=·::;::;:1•1 w/dshwr, range. yd & from Sl80. ./Mvtle Busineu/lnnst/ I Please call 642·5678. ext. beach. t W. 19th St. Adults No Pets .,, Financ• ~ patio , pool nearby. · • ..,.u ••• 10. ... 1333 to claim your tickets. 648-0492 1561 Mesa or ./ Fu11.,.,.1>.tlOOflle• ••••••••••••••••••••••• '* * * 1---------•I PIMECREEK 536·5006 or 536· 7542 · 15 Blks East of Newport ./ 11910• .. ,.,,. •-·-in•ss ----.I secy .... 1c. ave~. -"' LIVES UP SPACIOUS NEW TRI· Blvd.> -"Ample i>e•~'"' Opportunity 5005 • .$Gr? Cltmente. 327 6 .r······················ .213 Pela.yo. 2br. Nu crpts. Blk from b e ach . $225/mo: Mr. Polley, 496·5789. Juaa Capistrano 3278 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 1kl. 2 ba. crpta. drp1, fenced yd .. dbl g~rage. very clean. $315. 586·W18 1&2 BR apts furn. No children or pets. Adults only. Gd. Joe. 645-0632 STUDIO WEBCL Y RA TES FUii Kitchen & TV Linens & Utilities CLOSE TO OCEAN heutin Suites . 2080 Newport Blvd Cbsta Mesa 642-2611 TO ITS MAME PLEX l mile to ocean 546-9860 ••••••••••••••••••••• •• Over 500 lull lrt'l'!I and $330 3 Br. 2 Ba bltns. lg DRESS shop for sale. Top 1 o s t r cam s w 1 I h frplc, sep gar w/lndry Costa Mesa location. Call ~l;:~ex~~,a~ll ~ei'(1~~t t>1 0: :ltn~. 546-5633 wknds or RES 0 RT S~~Op~P as1t~r~~~f~~e~7cf~ :;~~1:31·1400 or 645·5000 your spal'ious Ol'" I or S2<15 LGE 2 br. 2 ba. D/W, ~ach 81.11.B. 842·2834 2· bedroom apartment leer & Wine Tanm 1''rom $220. Furn1tun· R&O , c pts, d~p s. FREERENT H.tpRun availnblc . S mall pl'ls Brookhurst & Hamilton: Offices as.low as 35' per This very attractive bar OK Aclull ~ only Ofl1l·1· Alt. No fee. 846·1311 · LI VIN G sq ft. M1ss1on VieJo & seats40. open 9 00 lo 1: 00. 2:1m 8464938 Laguna Niguel. 200 lo Low rent oi S200 a mo Fai n ll'">' Hd . t'o ... t.1 EX lge 2 br 2 ba dlx 2000 sq ft. 831·1400 Owner has priced thi~ Ml!~u. Phone 5 15 23011 poolside a pt nr 0bch busin~ss to sell with Ofrices. 2 I#!<'. 2 sm S75 & C:ostaMeso 3724,~MHG 3724 2 BR 1 B pool 2 d It Adil. no pets. $195 FromS170 SlSO per mo. New M·l EasyTerms ••••••••••••••••••••••• ··•••••--••••••••••••• . ...:~ • a632u Bs 536-3362 co m p I e :< • 1 7 th & UBI, Agt, 531 ·4460 -----.~-----~~---~~----, max. _..,,,. mo. 1 Oakwood offers the W 1 0 eel The Door Iowa, 549-4338 Lg. 2 Br.den, wshr/dry r finest in resort living al a Pomona. CM. Corner loc. CO~E SHOP I eve P•.ll .. s H~ Ba. pvt yd. many price you can afford. Can be us ed for lite $140,000 Yr. Gross LRG 1 Br. pool, nr. shops, xtras $300,536·2651 There's Sl million in comm/ mfg. 646-4296 ; On A New Concept adlts/no pets. Util. pd. ' recreation facilities. evescal1551·4289. Loc ated in a fflu e n t Sun-fun Trio , • • r In 18ll4 MOl'lrovla, 548·0336 l BR, 1 BA, $200. per mo. 2 NIGHT LJGHTED TE. N-FREE RE-NT. NpBch at beach town. BR 2 BA $260 3 Free standing bldg. seats RESl ~NTtAlM"'TEL 3Br.2 ba,1600sq.ft.wnlk BR,2BA s:JiA>permo. Nl~C'.~URT~.Afullttme airport. Utilities & 78. Bros. agree to dis· Pt.AYIT9MARTandS1>0rtY UC \JI toshop'ng, 2cur gar, pal. Be~ut ne~. 1 u!tb:d:: activtlles d.ire<'tor w~~ j3n1tor inc l. Garde n agree forcin~ sale. for resort, slin. tennis, i.ailin& llvlNG i NO P ETS631·201R. Close to beach , fpl<'. plans partie s. ne9 s. suites from $RS. 979·6666. Terms. or what you willl Whip Ill> HSY trips & more I f'ree Sun--UBI. Agt , 531-4460 hat. fecket end overblouse in Off t.ohtt p th bltns. encl gar. Bkr. No day brunch 1----------1 crisp cottons, knits. AMBASSADOR a ree.Cal11'om893-t351 Plus beautiful Ringles, CP_A Wanted to shore FLOWERS&GIFTS P11nted Path!rn 9150 H•ll 1, 2, & 3 Br. Adults, no -------1&2 bedroom :.i pts, ~wte 13xl4 ofc. $200 mo Sim IO~l. 12Vi, 14Vi.16~l· pets. d11hw:shrl4, s huf.? l"ine 3844 furnished & unfurnished melds recc1)t & phone. Nets $40,000 Yr. Orig. l8V11. Misses' Sizes 8. 10. 12 . 200 Years Young! Oehiiht a child with a ward robe for the Wash1ngton1. THCh a child h1sto1y w11h crochtted Geofl!e and Mirtha Wasllingfon outfits for II W' and 12" dolls. Use bed~pread cotton. Pattern 7129; direc· lions lor all pieces shown, 11.00 for each pattern. Add 35c each pattern for flrst<lass 1i"'11il ind handling. Seid tt: Mc. ..... Mu .. tf'llft o.,it. I OI ..., ... ... 161. ow cw... 5'ta. MllwY .... MY Itta1 • ..-. ............ ~, ...... ...... 1 h'plc. 8 BQ. G 08 & water $210, 2 Br 2 Sa, stove & open 10 to 1. Sorry no pets Ne w p 0 rt C t r , ~ 3 o 3 from ooe of the best. Al I Send S l .00 tor tech pattern. MORE than ever be lord! 200 ' INN <'Pts. closed ao nugl', ••••••••••••••••••••••• H('nts from $170. Models Ac ct ng s Cl' Y a " a 11. Owner of 10 yrs, rellnn...: 14 16. 18. rr -:; pd. Pool. )rr refl1g, patio, C'rpt.~. drps. or children n oomm"'t" Av 0 c ad 0 • st e 2 4 s. wire svcs 2000 accounts Add 3SC for each pattern for desl111s plus J free printed'"' • "' M "'NCH"' "' S R r· 7 4 ...... """" 0 " ,,.,. oCIW\ Afnuenl area Terms first<lau air1111il, handling side NEW 1976 NEFOlECRAFT ~· ' -~ "'"' e 5· 1 .,,_ . ...,.,., service available. Month _O'IV_......,., __ . ------1 · · Sttll te1 CATALOCI HJ' nerytlrin1. 7Sc . 718~~~~e. CM &.opRa leecll 3148 to month occupancy. Exec & Business Suites Agt. S37-4200 ...,._..,.. Crodlet Witt! s.tam ...:..Stoa ----------1••••••••••••••••••••••• new! Prime t-l,p. toe. fltllAlrCHICICIH ,.....,...,. 441 Crec••t• wim11t _s1.oo Newly decorat ed 1°e Drop a ~bbte Into the many xtras963-7202 OPEN 36HRS WEEK All ..,,... · ::~n~~ltt · st'90oo ~ ... .... .... . ...._ ..,. .............. ---. studio. Patio.1 llldult. ""'t Ocean rom your Apt. Oakwood •l MO FREE RENT• takt-out. Owner not am· a.a •1~ --Se•+ Klllt Iott · SUS ofr, AppU&f\Cd. Utll pd, ~ase. t..uxury. securtty, d 1.2.3 Rm. offices f"'om biUous •1t1ll nets $200 a !~ ~!...!!~' !;. PMttlll Mtt4t1"'9t letlt -H• $180. ISSO w. l9lh. 942.3452 Mature adults. 31755 Cst. Gar en .. week. Ide.-1 fOC' Mom & --.. -· f'lewer Cndlet .... -1.0I L( ..... ,_u Sl3S per mo . Near Pop ,.,_,,,_ ... T A"' _.IT'fUMVf II Ma1,,i11 Ctedlet IMt _ .ot ""'"'""' .... I .. wy ... -. Apartm.ftnts . I . uvuu er~. &•· Dt • ....._ ..... t I t t..at. ...... ~..,uy .... e new year n 11 ~ airport. No ease req. '37-4200 "' 111• ...... •• p • 1iit111 .... "'t -SI.GI 1pacious 3 be. 2 ba apt Very chrmlnjt,north endl K..':JO_. IHct. 833-3223 9Tll noon ----------• patt1n1 tm? St..i "" ,., l11t11rt ~ IMll _S1.00 wl p•tlo. frplc & pool. br apt. All wood. many Irvine •Mfg. 8' •'lbals Sabot Ht MW ral.t.Wltter '11tttr11 lutut "'61t'f .... -$1.00 Ad l I $2 7 5 For Lease Prime Loe on g · • Catatt1-e.11, tt•• mllle for' Ct111,itte Sitt l..t 1.00 u U on y . . tree~. Pvt pAtlo , lrvlneat 16th •. atlboals. Ex. profits! free patt11• •f ,,., clltke. C.""'8t• AffltMt 114 1,0I ' &45..Ql S2~0/mo . No k1d1' or a•S-0550 Coast llw)' In CdM . Sl800allinv.751·686i St•Oh llO•I 12PriaAtpllls r l2 _ soc pcls. ,., blk to bu ch, l400sqft newly rcnovat· Stw + lalt a... SIJS lltl 1f 11 l tllls ~1 -'°' • St30. a br d\lplrx. rrct. 494.2791 Cd . r r f e <' t (or Tax Shclle.r 13,SOO sq n tastllt MeHY Cr1fta il.IO Mest• hflt tHl 12 So, married c pl, No pets -ShowTOom. ncal Es tote prime bldg. City or In 111sta11t fl ultt 1eo11 • 1 oo 15 hilt• rer Tellty n . Mic Non amolle,.. only. Re.Cs Ocean view spac. I br. Bach. Lido. Sl~ mo. ft\tm Of'c, Ooullquc. or !'tore dus1r)'. R-0nted w/r,row-l~•ta•t Stwl"I hell 1..00 W • t11tff) hlJ .ate req'd. 9$4 W, 17th • t. Adults. 2607 Solona W~. or Unfurn. Ult I pc.I Call Eves. 493·27l8 or Ing concern. 213/336-34$1,1 ............... _.. .. 11111 .................. .. 548--03S8 $225. 494-1419 673-3302 675· 14:W ask tor Chuck or ~..5515. t• ; , ............... -..... + ........ ! 11 ..... ,~,. • •JI ' ., Add it ... ulld it. .. Dlaper it ... Hammer It... Carpet SERVICE lt...Cement it ... Wire lt...Hoe 11 ... Clean it ... Move , DIRECTORY l um ... at e ... pe •.• 1 emo e ... Roof !!...Landscape lt...Til•lt .•• Trlm lt ... Sewlt. .. Hau l II .. Add It ... Plant It . A lter It... Learn It. .. IL.Press it...Paint it. .. Na il it...Pla ster l t. .. Fix it. .. ~e;tlmc•lepoir •••••••••••••••••••••• C:-oltr C-/C-rtt. GtotrCll S.n l<H H-.. -lt•lna Mo'<"'9 ri..ter/Rtpolr Roof"'9 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• APPLIANCE REPAIR REMODELING Brick & Bloc:k I DO IT ALL! •flAULING• HOUSt:CUSANJNG Movln&l llaullna. student VERY Nt:AT PA'ICU I Types. Complel\l roor SJO -SerYlt't!C.11 Alleratlons. repairs. ratlos,curb&gutter. YARD CLEANUP Lot•I area preferred. w/la rs• truc k. Reul . JOBS &. RESTUCCO, « repaini. t'ree est. All ---'-"~'~"~"='"~"'~"=---sturt.'i.4'dd1tlons, bat.hiia.:,1: _ _.'.W~o~yn~e~6'~2~·~867~3~-l ~~!'t~~~]~~·;~~~~!~~~~,,.~P~·'64~"~T~:~i.~"!7•_·ll --~·~•~"6~-034l~~·~·~-l _:C~a~ll'.:647:>-~7:48:7::;-;-::;:::;::-:-l::"':;;"';;::;:S48;:::·97;:::20~/=1139-::'.::0""::""=l_:.Fl"~C<::.;'•=":::.:·89=3~·'~'="'=·----j work guar. C•ll Dave•\. &ab ~ kltchcn5 , c .. bincta ,t . b>-849'or893-0335. ys ... _,. patioi1 ce ment work Custoni Brick Work . CARPENTRY, Paintina. liaullng anythint1. ••rage •1-IOU'SECLEANINC• MOVING? Let 2 exp men •••••••••••••••••••••• Contrac tor does owft P.16tios & wall s ou r Minor repairs. Free clean. up. l1.cllable, rast By reliable couple, Good move you. Reas. Rers. PATCH PLASTERING Ttle ;hild Clre in my pleasant work. Palombo Const. specialty. F'ust«:Cflcic::nt . ·ea~·~lim~•~l~c~>~'4~S~-l~<~llff'!._ __ 1 -!"~'~'~"~~~·~963~·64~>Z!._ ___ 1 c'=el~•='~'="~''='=·~S36:::_·~77=1=1--·l:833o'7~394:""4~&::"67=5~-7=5~72=.---j ••ALL TYPES-.• ••••••••••••••••••••••• home. &1 eal!J.-& loving Member U.8 .B. All work,_6'5_·05"-12'-------,........_ p--i f'ree Est M0.G325 CERAMIC TILE. New &: co.-e. fncd yd. 64Z·$299 9ti2 IS3 1 J-IANOYM AN ·llomes &,; Sunny-J er. 2 vets. fences, IMUf'GftC• _, .. ..,/ .....-··"9 F s I .-:-::---~-;-----1 1•~·~·~'·~·~·:!::'.t~•~·----IFTee Estimates! 1~hillips Apt s . Consclentlou bldgs. trees removed,••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1-IOlL'les, additions. ro1tuc· rmdl. ~ee est. m job$ \dull care my hom-0 any CUSTQMCARf.&N.T_RX__ Ce ment Co. Patios, craftsman. 645.~ cleanup , free pickup Pt:T£RSPAINTING co. pulchlug, plastering welcome536·2425 hou rs, ParkYlOOd, 1 rv. Putios, re mode-I & driveways-. t:;lc.,--UO nded. -~-futn/apptlances. SST~ r [ i h lnr/EXt:'Reas Rate& (over b lock walla) • Trff-Str•lct Cu ll Kim. 5S2·3AAS additions. 549·4159 751·5657 uftcr6 TASK·MASTER Hous.clecwUn9 Lo OJ Cal.~l~G~e~n~e~n~l~552~·~·~04~58!".__l ·~""'::::·~48~9~2------~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• '-!l>~:~1tlln~ in my home,ltOOJl.t i\ddilion s. Eleetricof Jlouse, yurd. boat. re·••••••••••••••••••••••• PAl'"'Tl'"'G ftturmtiltCJ R 1 )' bi E.lloro. garages, patio cover & ••••••••••••••••••••••• p>1irs. painLiug, pruning, Exch.isivcHO!'i1ECARF: Low rates wit h Alltron. * " " * ••••••••••••••••••••••• per'/iv:.s. p1r:1u ~gi nW:: ____ "30~·795:1 t:ilbine t i . l'ilr . K~rn ELE._c_TRJCJA.N-S mall eh:. lt l'as,675-3175 /\m.b.itious female seek-£xample : Single meo lictirut979·3335Trymc MARV "SPLUMBJNG FIREW.OOD S80 c.ord /. :ablnet Mokin9 547·7334 jobs, maint/repairs. 22 Lge furniture inoving van in g . ser~er11I homes to can save 50-:i · -642-3800 Prof. Puinter Int & E t • 646-9607 • de I . Ii c /bond /in 5 . •••••••••••••••••••••• Cab1netis for C011noisseur l -"'~"~·'~"'~"~'-'~23~3~1=08=·""'=~"~203~·0 1 lt!H\'CS for Dallus. Texus ma1n ta1n wkly, r e fs. Landscopin9 Qual work & reas. F"r~C NO JOBTOOSJ\1ALL 642-2624 . .ttC'hen l'abinets. <'S tn1 European Trained EL t: CT R I c 1 A N . or \•ic 1118. \partial ship-675·3075 ••••••••••••••••••••••• est. 751·0684/548·2159 , '1-~~'.::'.:~~~:!!:~:'.-1-'==.::...------ "'"ll units. la tltl"l' & St!a n&lnfield 548_1914 Rt.·nlodc ls, additions. mcntOK>Owner.driver . Rot.olilling·$25.Lundsrap-OIV\IN CLt;ANEDfrom Don't give up the ship! pa tios, boa t rnitll~. , 220V. Reason:thle rates. Hy rsei.:pr.898·2.357. \\o'untaREALCLEAN ing Sod-Bluegrass 16\fJr Attn : Apt. Owners & $4.SOEvea,wknds sanlC '"List" it in c:lassified. tWO SlHi Carpet SerYIC~ ~5-l731 ---HOUSt~? Call Gingham Sq.ft. Tom 960-2170 ?.tngrs. Apt. p<1inting $15'1 --'p~ri~c~e~. c,,,,u~"'~·~""=-·~7380=:c._1 Ship to shore results ~ •••••••••••••••••••••••I-'"-'-'-'-----__ N1c-e So. Aml'rican couple Girl l"r~ ests 645_5123 a room. 636·7085 Ted. 642·5678. :arpentei" Sh1t nipoo & steam c lea FunNture wants to <·are for your Masonry Plumber. repair, rcpipe,1;:::::======::;-•••••••••••••••••••••• • · n-home Ll\'t.• 1n. Co mplete ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1st class Ext/Int. Paint-service lines & installa-1ni;. Color brighteners, ···~··~·······~·~··•••• Gd r 642 5299 ing, Pape ring. airle11s -'~;°"=~64~2:=.93~1~>'------I RE:"ltOOt:L-HUll.D ~ht ca rpts 10 min Stripping, ref1n1 s h1ng , care. r<'s · · 1100USE8'CL_EANINGC~ i1•1 lt!_AS1 o,NRY-1'ile. brick, spray,2Syrscxp979.5294 · · ' SPECIAL on lns ulatc Oh:ach.Cleanlivrm.din KITC.'llt:NS,01nrm scls. ~lake )'Our horn u~ . us 1ness . a u.oc. con~rete, stone. Hl-:FS,LIC.645-J.IJU rn1 & hall $15 . Avg rm ChemClean.892-6389 SECURE. Lt·t us install Jan1~es Raggedy Anns Licenscd.968-2504 Custorn paint/wallpa~r-Hous•ofPlumbU., --------S7 .50, couc-h Sl O. chair $5. G .J __ • C)'ltndcr dead lKllls o 675-655.1 8 ,1., pa ··o·ng. le''"'ed ing. Paint intr $20rm. ext Plumbing & l l eat1ng .1,\S1'1-.:H C r aft s man ~ G I od c arun11n9 d r-11 • • 12•9 Jb 96874"' Repa ir S ervice . uar t' Jm µCl or. rpl your o_ulsid e oor!' ....... Xlnt housel'leaning by front walks w/brick & " a\'g r. · .-~~:~a~.~~k ll~:!':~ci~~~~ repair 15 yrs expr. Oo •··~···•••••••••••••••• for es~,r:n~tc 9".'"!1to5pm lady w /expcri t.>nce . concrete combin~. Tile ~:ep;'p"ii~1.·~efo!~e~a:s~.w:{:th~ work m Y s ('Ir. Re Cs ~eliable, expert i::arden-~l on-t r:: b-15-1822. Dependable. Own trans cntrys. Slumpstone walls HOUSE COATS l"St__._fUll.!:._~Ork 4!t'J-3105 5.1l-Ol01. 1ng. l\l o ma1nt. !'prklrs, & ,. ... .,.. & 1 L' 27 30 -·~~.':L~a~,-~-·~7~14~)~>48"""·~464~5'1;''::•::'~'~;'~"~· C~"~';;'~'"=·~7'4~=·~· -I l11d sc p ·~. l'lant s a l IFYOU t1.:11.,_,1 p anters. 1c. 2 4 . ·~ \dd1l s. Ht·modc lln g,Call Un 1tcd-Prole~s1onal ~·holc ~J l e pri c e s. have :1sl'r\'ice loorreror Ph :531·'1973 R•model&Repair p;1\u)I,, Ci.1b1nets, panel-C;1r1)l'\, uphlstry, win · 646-1072 goods lo sell, place an ad The fastest dr:1w in the . . Don't drop the ball! Get a ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 .~ ~-·' ~· o ll ~· r c l e . dov.• & f~oor cleanin g. -----! i n l h l' Dai J y pi I ot West. . .a llaily Pilot SELL Idle items with a job with a low·cost Daily Rm Ad~ $8 sq ft . Remod. -l.J2·91~/j 50·9-Jtitl J ;1ck or Hl'ilS prll't'S. Balboa Find what you want in Classifit..>d Section Classified Ad . Phone Daily Pilot Classified Ad. Pilol Class ified Ad. Jo'resi,t)ainling$15/rm .John. Island. 675-002-1 . Daily Pilot Cl assifll•ds. Phonc&12·5671l. 642-5678. 642-5678. Phone 642-5678. Lie, Xlnt work 837 -61124 USE THE DAILY PILOT "FAST,. RESULT" SERVICE DIRECTORY For Result Service Call 642-5678 ht. 122 .ost & Found 5300 Help Wonted 71 OOHelp Wanted 7 100 •••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• HolpW .. tod 7100 HolpWaoted 7100 HelpWanlod 7100 HelpWanl•d 7100 Waolod 7100 HelpW...ted 7100 ..............................................................•...... ······················· ···.················!'···· ..............•........ .IJS'r Iris h .~l·ttcr. 1nule, 11l' Alabam;.1 A darns \Vh1tlle r lags. Call aft ~. ·16(.1·1772. BOYS AND GIRLS General Offi ce Perf•d WANTl-:D-GOOD GIRL. Work" .., .. --DRIVER ""'"'°· 0 ' not'"· Sta" JUNIOR SALESMAN MtCJ SJ hr Flexible schedule. Hours ·-..OST female cat. bl:1ck & "'h1te nr \'irg11ua Way & \I th , Su. La guna . \ns"·ers to Pyv.•atkl•tt. lh.•v.ard. l:ves, -1!19·4686 Uays. 533-5384. tUll or p/t. Good pbones. 3:30-9PM Som e books Kee p Earn $4 hr putting your customers happy. 1977 10 TO 15 Years Old personality lo work . All Place!'llla Ave, C.M. 11.·ork done from our new Jrvine ore. You mu~L posssess a pleaisant clear voice & a confident m an- ner. Perfect for students A~l ~I dog 'l Samoyed "ht v.•1 lloney lipped l'ars1 &ta1l 53ti·8721 'ersonols S3 SO ••••••••••••••••••••••• If you are 12 to 16 years old and would like to earn $20 to S.SO and more per week. with a chance to win a trip to Philadelphia , Cape Kenn edy or Washington, D .C. and cash awards, bikes and other prizes, l have a job for you. If you a re willing to work hard, learn respons ibility and the value of money. c all Mr. Scott. 549-8956. Transportation will be furnished. This is not a paper route. Equal Opportunity Employer Daily Pilot has opening for driver in Laguna <So Laguna areal to deliver papers to carriers Approximately 20 hrs. pe r wk 5 afternoons 2:45 to 4: 15 and 8 hr~ on Sun. Must have large Station \V agon or Van. Call 642-4321 a nd ask for l·la rry Seeley for details and appointment . Gen 'I ore, 1 pe r son . Construction exp pref'd. Pl casanl teleph manner. Qw ck thinker T yping & some bkkpng. Neat ap- pearance. C;d\ wkdys bctwn 8:30 & IOam & S<i.t bet\•1n 9:30 &"noon . 540 7454 . Earn $20-$40 per week working after schoo l & Saturdays. Huntingt on Beach & Founta in Valley a reas only. Leave na me. address & phone number on tape r&order . Call 536--4298. ' & housewives. No actual selling in vol\·cd. 1''or more info. 833·8098 bctwrr" _. !ll)fTl ·S pm . Uri11k1ng proble m"' t';1ll Aleohol lll·l1ll1nc 2-1 hrs a day H:IS :IM3U Sl'IHITl.i:\L Ht:AL>1':H Opcn JIJ ,\M -10 l':\1 ,\d1·1cl'nn all n1;1lh•rs. 312 N. El Camino Real. Sao Clen1enll'. For ap1>t. ·l~:.!·0034 492 ·9136 ..ose your eool "'ilh your l'hildren ? l-lc lp 1s a\'aila- ble 24 hrs. 549·8939 •Grand Openin9* A-PARK MASSAGE :>.., Off HeJ.(u lar i\l assa(;l' "''Ith lh1s ad. Lie. Technicians Hrs 12:noon ·10 l'i\1 !'.ton- Sal Jij85-ll Park ,\ve. Cost41. i\fcsa. 646-9944 --- FOXYGIRLS OUTCALL-1\IASSAGE MODELING I lom e-Ofri t:e·Stud io. s.12 311>9 H~pWanted 7100 H~pWant•d 7100 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ..,,...,,...,..,.,. ... ,_.-IB abysitter / lite 1 Acctn1.:Clerkimfg SGOO+ housekl·e1ii ng my hume Sales/Inside $550+ for 4 yr_ old. Ov.·n trans Steno. sh S600 Cd :\-1, 644-1680 I.E. Jl.1fg/l-lydrau SISK Irvine Personnel Agency 488 E . 17th Costa l\-lesa Suite 2z.& 642-1470 Ba bysilter /1-l ousckc~pt'.'r , live· in . 2 Boys (2 & 7) Good pay . O-.·n rm v.• TV. Spanish. ok . Con Paquito Ingles. 644-1537. Al Pay Clerk to $6900 --- F-•··I Cl·-L.I Babys itter. aftrnoons 3 to -OUS ...... 5:30 . :\-Ion thru Fri. 2 Srtks bn ,l!hl 1nrlt\'. for in-gi rls, 7 & 10. 551·0635 aft terell t i n g po s ition 6. Beautiful atmosphere & xlnt be nefi t s . Call lla bysittcr,J\lon-1''r1., !\.tanon l\lann. 833·2700. n1y home, uwn trans. Dennis & De nnis Person· Crll\l . 1H0·7S32 ncl Ser\'ice of lr\·ine, 2082 ~ J\1ichelson l>r . Bakery Sales. afternoons. Ball>ou Js land. C all A/PAY CLERK 67J.1<61l6 Irvi ne Boal l\lanuf. dl'·l -~~~------1 sires expcr'd A/P Clerk to handlt.> hC'a\·y work load. 979-2880. BANKS S &L BRANCH MANAGER ~hanks lo the person who•1oo--------~ turned 1n my k•·y a t Blc\r 's Empo r iu m C R.K . A/P CLERK 10 Kl')' adder. El Toro NCR OPERATOR · * * * Tus lin.A/R&A/P. LaVonne Melson MB>ICAL RECEPT. 1610 Iowa Perm p/t. El Toro ,. Costa Mesa GENERAL OFC )'ou are the v.·inner of Lite acctng/credtl exp two frt.'C dinners {$14.fiO Goodlyptsl San Juan \'a lue/ selected frnm NIGUEL Skinny JI.tike's menu a t Personnel Agency HOLIDAY IMH 2ili01 Forbes Rd . Ste 49 31 l I Bristol St., (3 Fl ags Centcr l Costa Mesa 83 1•1477 Please call 642-5678. ext Laguna Niguel J3J to claim your t 1ckets.1~~~ .... ~~ .... ~~~ * *. ASPHALT & SEAL COATING A fede ral s avings as- sociation is seeking :1 n1anager for its Newport office. Indi viduals s hould ha ve financial or busi- ness expcr. which can er. fectively stimulate new business development, a ssis t cu s t o m~r s. & motivate personnel. Xlnl wo r kin~ con d s & bcncfils. R~plylo: !\1r. Ke rr. 714/522.()t)IQ Equal Oppor. Employer ~~-~~t:.~ ..... !!.~~1 ~~~ ~~::! ..... ! ! !!~ Bookk<'C'fl('r . full timC", DENTAL !hru lr!;tl balanc1,_•. Exp. Chair s ide as:o.i:-.l. payroll. pll•as;i nt. abll• \o for bu~y JIB o!c. !'art mct!I p11b lll', l!O nd l1mt'.!.163·4Sl!l telephone l'XPl'r .. :,1 ..1 rl· 1ng Sal ary $1,l.IOll pt.•r mo. 01:::-.JT,\L A."iSISTAN T i\lso health. 1n::.uranl't' & Ort ho praclire. t:xp prer. vacation pa y. l"H ,\rt•;1, Call640·0121. Sl•nd rl·sume lu Ad No • 576.Dally Pllot.PO.Box DE NTAL Ofc n ee d s 1560. t:osta l\lcsa Ca. em plo yee~ f o r ex -92626 pa ns1o n. t nl Ofc & • --------Chairs1de, bot h min. 1 yr BOOKKEEPING ei.:per. Ple asant group G£111'I Ofc-. t~rl·d1t. ,\/Rel', pract. lncld 's alternate l'll".5-10-150\J Sat. AJ\1 "s. NEWPORT (...l'R Dl-:NTA l.640-1122 CASHIER/ CREDIT CLERK Ot'ntal Assistant. I girl ofl'. Matu re. capable non -s moke r. La.i:. Bc-h.· Lag. Hills ;1rea. 81 1 ·97 llt -----------1 (~1~syt~;~~:: ~~f~r:w~~t Help Wonted 7100 Hf.Ip Wanted '7100 freeway. 835·3926. ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••!!••••••• Phone Solicitors Easy plcasa nl evening v.·ork 4-9pm. Need 4 peo- ple. S2.75 per hr ~Ion thru Fti. Call betwn 12 & 5prn, Girl t'r iday nd s l'.T. Janitor/Supervisor MA.INTENANCEMAM.,_>40~·~54~64_.:._ ____ _ helper with invoicing & Expe r . o n ly . Write General main\. work fo.J in\'enlory control exp. qualificationslol'.O.liolli loca l church. 1''/l.m t! Pizza man wanted full Each Fn & vac<1lion re-176, Costa Mesa, 92627 548-3631. 1 • • lime, 30242 Crown Valll'y' lief late t"eb. Irvine. Callll ~=-===-==""='"--I -'-"-"='--------> Park Way Lag una ' Laurelat$-19·9272. JANITOR I AL -Super· Management Niguel ~ -• \'isor, musl ha\·e exper. PEOPLf~ Pt:RSON Glamorous! $500 4-5 hrs e\'e. 5 Days wk. Exec. looking for Par Practical Nurse, '"Fronl O ffi ce '' ap-Good job for right man. time business ussociat LIVt:IN COJl.1PANION pcaran<:e? Ver)' creative 752·7292. in wholesale supplies Wilh nursing exper. to ad\•er1J s1n l! ;ilmosphere. . . Bu s in cs s f u I I)' drive & care for elderly Will learn all lhl' ropes of Jan1tonal Svs needed. ap: capit alized. lnlervie" uentleman. Shopping. this IJu si n css. Siron prox Afln 3 hrs da)'.. 6 673_2223 cooking , errands & hie 'f yping' C all t:ontrol days "'ee k . S t a rlin g -'-~='--------! hnu sekeeping . Non Car ee r Employ m e nt salary $3.00 per hr. Ca ll MASSAGE TECH. smoker. C<l ll Mrs. Da\•1s Agency. 556 8505. afl. 6P M. 67S· 1214 al 642-1626 bt "'ll 9-5 for in- TRAINEE lerview. Refs required. ..! GUARDS Janitor for Bldg maint Young ) dy (18 -> S ser\". P /ti1n e eves . I g·1· la f 111··"'° o_r REALESTATF.SALl-:S Full & Part time in l' 1 1m11 e u 1me pus1-549·87771eave message. ,,·00. No c•p. ne<. we ATTENTION For f1nl' j('"''(•Jry store. P('rm po:o.1t1un. Phone l\lr Hi!(g:-., 11~17-0327 for iljlpl. 1----------1 Cypress ar(•a: $2.50 hrl)'. J ob s tart s 1 119 /76 . send to school. earn Ll<.:f:NSED. Uni(orms & equip pro· * * * while you learn. Apply in UN LICl-.:NSED. CHEMICAL SALES DISHWASHERS Apply In Person ?.lon thru f-'ri 3·Spm coco·s LQC)la'la Hills Z.1001 i\1·t.· de La Carlota Equal Oppor t;mploycr \\l"c ha1·e ;1 tc•rr\tory ope n for a salesperson dl'Slr· 1ng lo earn uµ to the1 r fu ll potential. We arc a -llJ yr old rnanufaclurl'r or pro-\'£1n spcr1a!ty chemicals Dishv.·ashcr ~·anted. Full for sale lo 1ndustna l, in -& part time. Qil l or app- stitutional ,'!,: c-ommcrcial ly in person. 2633 W. Csl accounts. We ha \·e a lfwy.642-1147 5 . complete step by step 0. h Se . trainini:: pro.eram that ispatc er r\'ICe cnabl£>S a man to earn in ADAM 12 direct proportion to e f-Important & exciting fort. 'r"ou c•an build a tcr· spot fQr real Go-Getler nlory that :.assures future seeking cxciling pos1-~ccunl)'. lion. Call Cheryl Small . 848-1288. De nnis & Dl'n nis Personnel Servire of Huntington Beach, 16168 Beac-h 8/\•d, Su ite 121. \•ided. !'ilust be o\'er 21 or Mrs. E. H. Kirkwood person any afternoon or GET T l-I E RED older. !'\lost ha ve car & IOYistalell Ponto e\'e. 29.10 W. Coast llwy, CARPF~T hornc phone. lie alert & SonCle,....te cNc.::w~p~l.~B~c~h~·-----I TREATMENT! t.lt:,·ie ndabll' You are the winner of We t rain you lo sell homes with an accelerat-GARDSl\IAHK JNC. two free dinners ($14.50 MECHANICAL cd course t hat starts ini · !19'.I N. Sepulveda. Ste. value) selected fro m 1 DRAFTSMAN mediately . If rou are in · 500, El Segundo 90245 Skinny Mike's menu at 1-~or rapidly grow Jn~ boa t tereste<l in earning big 213·640-0195 Equal Oppor HOLIDAY IMM manur. co. Self starter , money from the slart, Ernplr 3 131 Bristol St., good producer. fl~xible, get individualized free J-lclp Wanted full & p/time Costa Mesa w I k now I <' d g c o f training on the job tn one morns & nights. Good Please caJI 642-5678. ext. doCumentation conlrol. of many top offices lo<"al· p ay . F' a s t rood & 333to claim your tickets. & engineering change or-cd lhruout OranJ!c Coun· 1cec ream.Call545-0353. * * • ders.S850permo. ty, call for further de- 1 ;.;;~,;;~~~~,;;~1 --;-::;::;:~====--Apply ln Person tails . A r l enc , ( 714) I• Lady's Companion Westsoil Corporation l-"848=·'~":.:'=------- Newport Villa Retire· 275 McCormil'k Ave; Cl\t REAL ESTATE SALt:S HOSTESSES Apply Jn Person i\1on thru F'ri 3-5pm coco·. LOCJUllG Hills z.&001 Ave de La Carlota C:qual Oppor. Employer menl home res ident . . needs companion 7-10 am ?.tcd1eal Assistant Join -H-1 & 5-Spm daily. Sun. o[f. KIDDIE FAIR Tt Dinners incl. 6-15-1011 bet Busy pediatrician seeks TartM>tl, Realtors 8 & 4 r.lon-Fri. $2.25 per back ofc indiv. w/a flair •F~ree 15 day t ra ining hr. for children. Cati Pattie course Preston, K48·1288. Dennis •Cadillac <"a r program LEGAL OFFICE MGlt / & Oeonis Personnel •Hawaii,A.:apulcotrips For d£1tails conccrninJ: our program call l·nllect, .\Ir Olcnil'k a l 213 283-192 1. After 5pn1 call. 71-l/493-5W5. DOCTORSASSIST. RECEPTIONIST. Busy Service or Huntington •1st p l ac e-sa les in Young ladies (lS·28J to Housekeeper. Live in , trial firm desires one Beach, 16168 lleach Blvd, Orange County ••••••••••••••••••••••• )ehools &' Instruction Exper. Seal Coat Ap-Barber -Lad y lo wo r k plicalors needed for im· w/same in very good Laguna Bch shop. Ca11 l----------mcd. cmploymenl. Mu st Pam, 494_7075 c L E R K ·r yr J s T v.·ork· with leg imatc wknds off. r.t ature whocan serve dual fonc-Suilcl21. •lsl plal'e·lislings taken massage in tleallh Spa . person who likes kids. lion as office m.e:r & re-----------' in Orange County 700S ••••••••••••••••••••••• BEA TRAVEL AGENT CLA5SESSTA RT !\.10NTJ.ILY Earn commission white yQu learn PACIFIC TRAVEL SCHOOL 610 E 17lh St, S. Ana S43-66SS Accredited by NATTS Establis hed 1963 Financial Aid Program!! .;ourmet cooking class & foreian foods. Wed. 4.7 P .M. 52.5 . for II wk s . 494.1774 JobsWaoted, 7075 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Exec. Secretary a\•allabh.• lur pltime work eve~ & weekend&. 67S·239'i. ha ve relia. transp. Al so .. 1 -'-="-'"--~:_ ____ General Office s kills, "·1lhn1.: to travel necas. BARl\IA ID-Must be reha-AOUCI w/numbers. ·ru:-.lin out of state. Xlnl oppor. blc & dependable. no ex-Arl'a Call J\tr . Shaner No exp. req., we train. $3S wk . 536·1003 ceptionist. Typing skills ~ e d ~-c ~ .1 t S2~~ Y lo •1st place·listings sold in Apply noon . 8 pm, 2112 are required. 833-9031 . syc 1a n s rs per Orange County 1-lsekpr /Cook, II ve in (Irvine) · week. Must type & know •1st place-advertising in for ad\·ancement. Call per.nec.847·541 1. 8:12·0133 Larry, 71 11/549 -1167 ------- Harbor Blvd , Costa -~•m;a~ll~llo~a]'d~&~C~a~'~e~h~m:•J· ~~;;;;~·~~;:;===! Medi -Cal & Insurance California 1\-tesa. Lady over 35. 751-8028. bi 11 in g, 6 7 5 -0430 or •l.St place-advertising in h1.·t "'n Aa m--lpm for in- tcr\'cw ;1ppt. t:qual Op- r,or. io:mployer. ~~-----1 ASST. MANAGER Ll•;101n;! Junior Specialt\' Stor l' ncl'dS eo x per·. •1ualif1cd p~rson . Send re:<U ml' or call for Appl. l1 '~c 1lkoys, 241 42 La~una ll ills l\1all L ;1~uni.1 llills. 92653. ~-IW·I ATTEMTION! l -6 Mo's Work 18 & 0 Yer BEAUTICIANS Mgrs wJf for top r',., NB Salons. 5-10-11582 . 644 -0661 REA UTY .JJ a i r styl is t wlfollow. Nl'cded im · med . 6-14·117li2 or &14·0398 BEAUTY OPERATOR Earn more by re nting s pace. Leali1ng C d~! s alon J1rn . 64~-7321 , SS2·0'J43 COJ\IMISS ION SALES- ?.-lAN. Manage ment Op- portunity avail. for pro- d u c~r . l\10DERN l\IEDI A Tt;CllNIQUl-:S. 5'19·9286 COOKS Apply In Person l'il on thru Fri 3-~pm coco·s Loguno Hills 24001 l\\'e de L:.i. Ca rlota Equal Oppor t;mployer DRIVERS WANTED liuntington Beach's finest PROLCOEASMSORS c84="'~'""'=·------1 th1e,u.s, .,\. . i\1cn or Women heallh spa needs young. NURSING H s P ~ce winner RELO Must be 25orovcr attractive massuescs, in· RM ome uyer 's Co ntest ,\pply In P.''on & I Do..,,.y Sav'--If unli censed. Jet us a:o.· s tructor s sa c s ~· For wknd .supervisory Yellow Cab persons. Call Town & & Loan relief. 7-3:30. ~r~:~t~~~~!~~nc~ l~li' 1 IZ>I Slater Ave nue Country Spa, 963-7723 llas immediate o penings RM Supervisor LEE COLLI MS Founta in Valley between l Oam & lOpm in Orange Counly for t'/limc. 7-3:30 for interview. conventional loan pro-LY... 962-5566 Electronic T Khnican 1 ,~~;:;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I -5 u 1 h ~ .. ....., ors. , .. us a\•e ex· F/time 7-3:30 & 3-11 :30 ln~ol\•es final lest. trou-•"'r ,·n P'-e'''"' f,om ..-· ..,.._ · · for medi<"alion & treat-Lile shooting & repair of INSPECTORS documents through fund-1ndUstrial, elel1ron1c & in)!:. ments. LYN; ultrasonic equipme nt. Contact Personnel Dept Orthodyne J::leclronics. 5'19·0902 F/time 3-11 :JO c har~(' 1599 Superior Ave. 9 .2. We arc a growing elec-1-:qu&I Oppor Employer duties. Full benefits & Costa Mesa. 646-1616 tronics company located paid heallh insurance. near the Orange County Park LidoConv. Center Airport. Openings cur MACHINE Ol'ERATOI 466 Fl a,esWp Road EXEC. SECRETARY TARBEl~ 19 26.1976 Beeline Fashions needs 3 stylists 1n area. LO\'(' clothes. ha\·e car, no de· livering or c-ollecting . fo'reesamples, 963-7470. We will tr11 in you in our·t;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=I hus1ness. No strikes orl• lliyoffg . plenty or work. If you 'r e amh1li ous & would like a po11it1on (lut of the ordinary . C:.dl betwn 9:30 & 3 p.m . COOKS (2) Wanted, exper. Apply in Major corp. located near I bl & 0 . C. Airport. Xlnt com-per!lon on y, wn 12 3, . be r· T renlly e x isl ror ex· For lite assembly work. Nwpt Bch 642·8044 perienced electronic In· Noe c l xper.necess. or ec, p rtti 0 J b l h Real Estate Career Attn. Lic•Ml!'d &Unlicftlsed •Classes star t lm · mtdi•tely S39-1183 Bo'!,S & Girls ~lario's 3201 E. Coas ve";Sat1on ne 1~s. op llw CdM typu1g & sh rcq d. Ca ll IOlo _1 year~ of' a.:c. Dal -y, · -1 Cecilia Lawson, 540-7311. ly Pilot d<'l_1very . routes Coun ler Girls, l'\'l'nings.I may Ix>. ava1lah!c 1n your· Aiipl y in person, Ken-EXEC. SECRETARY urea: fo.urn profit f?r de· t ucky t•ril•d Chirken Challenging position rc- l11·en es &_cush. tr1ps or 2920 t:.Csl llwy,l.:d M 'quinn~ top skills & or spectors. &12-1877 a me ream o w t · United Way Agency. If DuliC!I involve ln-proces MAIDS you have 1 or 2 children. inspection of electronic F ull time, app ly i n over 6. we'll even a r· and elcctromecha nlc 3s-person . SA~t lo 31,ri.1. range ror their care. Ap- scmblle s a n d sub -Lf'gu nw J-lilis 1-lilton , prox. 22 hrs per week at :l:·"scmblles.-These posi· 25205 La Paz Rd . Ltiguno new mini mom wage. •Complete course in 2 weeks •Special. Per~onal & Individualized help. 11-0N i,tieJobtraining lionesl reliable l:uty to. 1 _________ _ c l ean your h o m e . l\ali!lf11ct1on Jtuar. ref. mcrchand1!<e for sclllni;: ----ganiza t1on. tw1arkclin )!; new sub:'!'<'riplions t'or COUMTER GIRLS exper prcf"d. bu{ not 111tormallon ple ase c11 ll F/time. Expcr: prcf'd or mandatory. Attractive· t1ons r equire al least J.lills Must be 1>aLil!nt, -In- years previou s e lec-· novutlvl" talented and lronlc ins pect ion ex MA IDS ror 5mull ex -like working in varied FllH •Ma n u1em e nt OP· portunitlu. AVON 642-432 1, F r1.1 m SMn will tr;iin.644·lll!J3 sal & benefits. Apply in perience. elusive motel. llours can situations. P.tobUe DlrCc· "30-1291 Clemeonte-Sa n Ju u n ----person,8am·4pm , CONTACT be arranged. 494-852 1. torl46-71AI. o\ltr. personable young ldy. &eeks pl. t i me cocktail wallr•ss posl· lioo. Kalhy $38-6948. Wiiy G.t S..wed Undorly Cllrls- lils?hrw Ca pi 11truno arl':t , cs.i ll COUPLE for murtuoiry LMCt>XCOMJ'ANY PERSONN£LDEPT 4~ and M1!11lon Vie-work. Salary plWi apt. 150S E Wamer SA jo-EI Toro area, call San Cle mente area . ' 581-6.llO. ({M.J5JS "RY COOK -exper'd 12 MSI i ITU.ATION WANTED. Semi-retired painter nds wk. Wk hi ladder642-IJ5lli Equal Oppor. Employor DELIVERY ~~Pt.1, some wknd.s DATA C:OllPORA TIOM Housekeeper . L•d y wJdaughter. 9 vs. lo Jive in, Gd. refs. 547-1159 money to pay lhem as an AVON R£PRESEN · TATIVE. I'll show you bow. C•ll ~40-7041 o r Zenith 7·1359. IOATCOMPAMY Need.Ji Boat Carpenlert. Mill Men 4' Toueh Up. Exper"d only. Apply 11200 Condor A\·e. F. Vly, Plttaa•nt reapon11ible . BOATS yaunt11 woman w tc•r 8 • b Y s 1 ~ t er · 111 e OQi.l mftc firm nteds •v•flsblc as d1y comp•· ~lH~keep1ng. Mon thru toolt:ira. molde r11. r:a rpen- nJon. usls't w/correspon· Fri. 7 :'4~4. My home w. ter11. clectrl r i;1n s. dente &. da.ily bu1inea11 sldeC.M.1)46.6706 mechani<'!i & helpcr11 . detaU.s. ~1111 <"are fnr Call $40·1S81 or Apply at lhe rljtht Individual. Rive aomethin& 1·0 seU? The Willard Company Ret11 .. 4f19"3'1P, 1n 8 pm. Cl••slfled 1d11do It well. 1306 Loa:an A Ye. C.M. l MOVIMOMI Snappy insureble lndiv, General Ofc M50 for phones & publlc con· hWlc ltklffoMI 340Atc ..... A•• Cotto Mesa. Co 17141549-6125 tart position w1rricndly Most important to this firm. Call Cris Stew•rt, firm that •eeka we l 841-1288. DenniA & Oen• groomed indlv. w/•ood nis PP.rSQnnel Service or phone per101'ali ty. l luntin~on De•1·h, IGl Bt1tutiru1 loc. Call Lorin. F.qual Opport.unll)' Beach Blvd, Suit 121. da Blotk 833·2700. Ocnnis t mployer MI F & Oennl11 J>ersonn el l,~~~~~~~~~ Deliveryme n over 21, Service or lrv1n4.t. 20821 J)('rm . ptt Early morn Michdaon Or. I \oesomethlnc you wan LA Times de:llv. to C.M. to seli! Cla11tf'led ad• d home•. $250 mo. Call SELL Idle items with a It well -Cal.I NOW, 645·4920. Daily Pilot 0•1slfled Ad, 842-.5678.. \ Maids . The In n a l Part·Timeeve11&.Sat AM... Lagun•. 21 1 No. Coast Perfect lor •tudents. llwy ., L••una Beach. luide work, a:uaranteed Ask for Mn. Goblet wa1e. Call Al, ~r1· cpm, . S.A. M2·9013 Or G.G . Maid wntd. full time. $2. 51).8.MO, per bour. Apply i-.;i.=:.:::='--------1 person. Exp perfetted. Pan Ume help, C'Ollftler 3llO Newport Ave. C.M. Mlp &:try cook . Ap,I)' 2·5 Executive SUltet Motcil. Mon ·Frl Del Taco 1155 · Biiker C.M. 1· To Place your "Fa&t R esul~'' SerYlce Dlrcrctory- ad ••• 1-C.111 Now 641·1•7• ht.HI ' -•CNtillenglng current <1x· pan.sion proeram '*1'080% Commission. •Lie, prep day or ni1ht claues. . •Fr•lOdulralnln1 , ~ . ,, •'1"'ol11ee loc1ttons. • I •I .. ~--·---·· ·-·-.. ----. . . -~ .... __,,, -· . -c !L- -4eipVl ••••••• 11ecpt/1 r.1edic1 tinl tw 10-15 h SBl·alT -ILE. SA S' H L.J Our rJ usu •1 ,,estmf n1ost ir 1'ers0t1 Train I fices, propel fr in Supcri Dynan l_.carni FU ii ti v.·11! W( ~·xres! year e upply t (lu r I Ul'sidi l "all Ot Uc nl. !'ROE 'i:..2·192 - ::: Year 2 yrs e, ICU&· rare. \n1nrc ,\!c m( !~12·273 -- Fu ll & shift . Jensen i\lemo1 \'1l"lorl ---, - lied Si t:x pc1 hospitf henefii Jensen l\I e s i llos pil C.l\f. t: RC Aggre: route l Sa I e f1b er1 he lpful Santa 11 lil'a l1 ~am-2t --'I Sales -E 3 Pub Ii: Book I equal has j m e n/ sales t R:JOar. sale!I E' pays$ sales < wkly Vlrgi1 per S( $57-104 SALES <:in SJ a ppea transp h\•lng for ap( e OALVP1LOT Wldn!!C!ay.J!nu!ry 14.1978 W...... 7100C n•& .......... w..,.. 1100 .w.;.w ~ ·,1,..... 1010 ........ ".-Y. ..e.41 7100 w~ 11-.......................... c••· ·-· aoao Mllcel • u• 1010 ....... w 906 ,..,_.... 9560 ······················· .............. --., .......... ....................... mnJJ lnstruclOr, Tues A..N"TED: Pe.nla& IXT ........................................................................................... . l{ecpt/Clel'k. E•per. I Thur• •C'S: ~al AM ltDH•A Pr•ruabl)' u Sol Cat 11, f 'ly raet Reali) rle.an ~~ rh1''' t&!Jn~l~~,Jp~u •• cblab ... ~ ~-~··ES MHllHB , ..... ..,. S2 nr,rh!;_..!"5" for Ru• w1de-:aiae •• tdepliaio&o equap'd, CJhf HtCtOn:a.I trut k Sot otra Uf • nc • .. ~""" -~..... ~ ,....g llNnl"" ~« van_ .. ,,,-02.Jl. ~(Private Party) UNCLAIMED Champte>n Trlr, SZ,000 trade ~~3 . .tlll'r 5 w1 1~15 hrs wk, more later Newspaper Promotion company has XAS ou. COMPANY 1040 / Tcny,sc1.mu___ wk days ~ood d~al · ~13374 openings fo.r pe,oplewith vans or station· necdldcpeud.ablapcnoa_..................... PBSOMAL PIOfB1Y SALE Ill' Sloop LlS. llalf·1nl p· ll.f. SAW wugons. Earnings $1SO to $300 or more M I' wbo n n work •PET WORLD• SAT. THIU WID. Slip in Newport Jlrbr ICkUP.S ST ...... THE per week . Good chance for without auper,,,, 1011 l h 'b b s1100 551~ AIU d be3c b a re • Contact Cockeu, C 1 ua ua • ALL SPACE --·-----'1 S Lo•9 •d•. S MIWYIAJl a _vancement. Must be able to work cu tomera. Ace u111 m Poo dles, Sb i b ·hu. 20· Viking, sloop. l\wpt ~~ 114 ...,..1 Wllh teenagers. This is not a pape,r portant, bul matunlY is Malleset G. Shepherd, slip. Make oter. 6'2·6347 -r ·~· route. We tu1n. Write T.S. ~yea, Jap. Spal'\l ls. ~.~S734e\·es. SAVE WHa•H Call .Mr. Scott at 11:49 .8956 for o I c It Pres m.mJ&boau.a.cr. Po1n1 U...SILF STOIUAaWAl&tOUSISI 751-led L Ill .... t .1 s o u t h• w e s t e r ~ 100 auxed puppL • Stud 1564 H ... ~ ~ ST. 24' Dolpbln. Bnstol ~nd _...., ~'-'w·..e,.~11 I appointment. Petroleum, FL Worth. S\'S mo6t btftds. 2S.2S W. __....,""'" •75 4.5 Mere. Xtras + 4 Speed. deluxe p.unl ~ Tx E.O.E 17tb at Falrview. SA (Corner Hamilton & Newland) gear1sails. s.51·6338 tlti&MU • our resldea llal dlvlaion Equal OPPo ........... Employer ~eves. S31·502'7. -•ys 1-7 ·umtB«S a.s $3799 lists and serts more lo· L~ 1l1e Red Balloon b look "-~ " ~ USCG Aux. Basic Sail vestment properties than ing ror eucplioo•l DogOBEDlENCECtass Class Sta rt s J / 15 /76 •7 3 H iLan: most invest ment offlcc11. HefpW..tH 7100 M..A..Wl-....L......a career oriented sale toStartTbW"SJan22 Tustin Jli School. 7PM re~>· 4 Speed, radw. ('ersonalTralninf· Video......... ....,. --7 JOO person to train in sales. 7:~PM.Ne:wport/ Honet 1060 Mhcel•1•1 1010 Rm . 224, f'amlla es a ~r. Training, Prest f!C Of-•••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••-••••••• m er c h a o d 1 s in g & lrvme area. 546-4928 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Welcome. $2899 fi e-es. •·uu Facalilie8. Sis ~Sundries lo l3K SecNt9'Y $700 man• I • m 6 n l ~ Irish Setter re male. 8 Reg. T.B., l1h. JO yrs. Rheem furnace used 3 For Sale Best Offer, Avon '73 Chevy '"· Ton. Property Pu:hasetlan. + Ccr + lonus t'ee Paid cluldrens It YoUng ~r s. l'OOIS needs gd family Prof1trn, hunt/jump. wks' works great. lOO.OOO Redcresl & SllP Bntish 3 Speed. A!\t!l"M ritd111, fr Ing e e n e, at s . exp + "tab. terr Unique employer seelc5 Please contact Linda S6S "93-9577 $3900. pr1ply. 646-21668. BTU'sS150. 551-0124 af\5 Seagull OU. both an xlnt camper shell <i~t.MN l. superi~r Commasslon. Leading co. is offenng we ll g r oome d indlv Resos at 19 f'ashio • SAVE L>ynam1c <?rg~nh:oUon. this full package ror capable or independent _Js_l_and_.:...644-80. Lhasa Apso pups. Cb.am· ~~~~~~~~tl5~!na~~ Fender ~1usic maste r ~':~· 979 6161 a sk for '72 COW'ier Lcarn!ng ~nvaronment, ener getic sales tiger. work & free lo travel TOW TRUCK DRIVER pion sired. Shots & k .• ff Bass Guitar. Excellent ---------:Full t1me ticense~s who Call J ohn Lake, 848·1288. Call Barbara M ac. 'd G & WT wonned. Many colors ~e:.1m~ny r eas o er. condition. Make offer. loah. Sllpa/ 4 Speed. radio, ~tl'I• "111 work for.earnings In J)enrus & Dennis Person· 833-2700. Also Fee Jobs: ~~[r,~e. NB su~~g. 734-0222. Call S46-9933 after 6 pm & Docks 907 0 bumpt>r.52<8232 7 9 4 9 111· excess or $25.000. per ncl Service of Huntington Dennis & Dennis Person· AKC affectionate. Hal 1i TB. h qrtr-hunter, weekeods. ••••••••••••••••••••••• year are e ncouraged to Beach.16188 lieaeh Blvd, nelServiceof Irvine 2082 TRAVEL AGENT G bound ., b.i b Dressage prospect mare. . Need slip for 35' pwr boat '72 Mcnda apply for a position with Swte 121. Michelson Dr. ' ROlmd n.. Wottd! ~iu9 aft i yr, 12 g eves, 846-2so./ 846-3576. ESTATE SALE. BR s~te, Will pay $70/mo. (2t3) 4 Speed, AM rn<im . ~1,.11 f<~~iJenn~ias1t'Bfv~!fon~~ S~ES~EP $800 Ta lented person sttking · d a venp.ort, chairs , 84.J..QLS. bumper Reduct>dtu~ell' Call Don Berman. Presi· MaJor industrial paper Secr e tary w t s tock great s alary potential All AKC. Irish Setters. 5 .hwttry 1070 ~m"l. ~shes. redwd la· . <S44&9S) dent. QUAIL PLACL· P.roducer seeks can· brokerage firm. Prefer needed by gem agency. M, 1 F. 7wks. SJlkies, l ••••••••••••••••••••••• The "'-.enc hes. Mi sc. 40_ Boat Slap SI 799 "' Call Ceclla Will 848·1288. M. l F . 2 mos o ld WA ..... TED ui:s-.n~ onJy. 494·3053. Pnvatehome PROPERTIES INC. d1datew1~uccesspaltem some cashier or ware Denms &DennisPerson· 64&-0142&645-280leves. " 2381'.a1rv1ew.LB. Reasonable 67S·9048. J) l . 'i:.2-1920 for estab I terr. Major room exp. Xlnl wor~1ng ne1 Scrvaceorlfanllngton . TOP CAS H DOLLAR Misc..__ (VJ ftlUI Ul1t.b -~ ho~'d!1~~ .. e~~~·1 v:~c~ ~~Contact Ilea di, Beach 16168 Beach Blvd 2 Golden Retne\fer ''l p A ID F 0 R y 0 UR w:t:d_. 1011 Tr• poriattOft ~ ""' L Sw.t ... 1'21 • Black Lab. 8 wits, 2 Fem. JEWELRY, WATCHES, ••••••••••••••••••••••• • 'J ) TOYOTA R • t anzer, 833-2700. Dennis " · $20. 646-4744 ART OBJECTS, GOLD. ••••••••••••••••••••••• C ,_ s-a., ~ J. esplra Ory & Dennis P e r s onnel SECR~ARY . SILVER SEuVICE Gd ed b d --••• .-~/ Le d bo t l r Two children ages sand 6 "' , us name ran sun -R:!:. 9120 Service of Irvine, 2082 a mg a mg 1!'ft\ need respo~sibile Hiah frfftoYou 1045 1'~1NE t'UHN & AN · lamp, on stand, not tbl an 1906H~bo• C '.I 11~·n Therapl.St Mictrelson Dr needs Secretary with . .. ••••••••••••••••••••••• TIQUES c-•s 2200 mod I 67c ,.c,,.. ••••••••••••••••••••••• '0<r E I .... _,, · xlnt s ... 'lls s H l · •-School girl l o care for . . · ~ -e . ~. ,..,. er xp1rt•s -v '" --S -L -AJ • • •• ypaog °' l)lem whale mother con· 3 male lab/mix puppies. . • Factory Direct vumpers --: Year graduate or mm. A ES TRAINEE heavy phones. exciting finues with school. Abo All black . 6 wks old, 2 diamonds 35 pt. ~~ch. Musical S89S. up. Shells Sl 7!1.50. GMC !\~TON, I!' l'ICKl I'. ~J[,5 :x;:~ :1B:~pi~:l~ersy· • ShPe~n~elCounsclor challenging position for a for occassional weekend w eaned , part 1a11 y Gold selling. Sacnf1ce. lastnncnts 8013 Sleepers. 858 W. uslh C~t T W E N T Y S E V E :--. arpand1v.w/dynamic self·starter looking ror ev"na'n os. Prefer so-ho.usebroken.Very a trec· $275.675-4174 ••••••••••.••••••••••••.• 542.3471 THOUSAND MI LE:-.. t·a r e. Con l a cl Mrs. personality sou~ht to potential growth an a fun ... .. li b 1 h E s M -Sl 655 1c-9 PLA(' L'' \ C t M t · · 1 meone la vi·n.,, in th" area . onate & eat y. ven· u-.,;_.._. 1071 ong writers... us 1· 101 • . . ~·1 •·• ~ . moroso, os a csa r a m rn ;,a I a reas of bus iness. Salary com· .. 1 ... t ... d lh mgs6"6-0l6J ..._._.., clans ... Bands THE '2 CalaC o rn1 an ·TIA. COSTA MES.\. Mcmori a l llospitul, personnel place ment. We mensurate with exper. near •• arguen e an 4 ••••••••••••••••••••••• LYON RECORD I NG Monomallc. Floor heater ~.3414. ti.-12·2734. E.O. E. offer ~roup medical. Call 557-1733 or Apply at Corona dcl Mar. Phone Free. Seven week black Drill Press. Hvy duly, 4 STUDIO WORKS FOR w/thermostal. Sl ,395. ------ -paid vacation & profit The Willard Company, 640-747Safters1x. kitten. Playful. spindle. 4 spd, "'2 H.P. YOU ! $30. br. +tape, in· 544·3417 _ '71 Ford 3-t.000 m1. J1r , ---------•I sharing. Qill Pat Beran. ll200Condor A\'e. F.V. 751-1768 $1050.S4!H95S. cl engineer & producer. 8. cmpr shell w c ~btn<'ls pwr, IBeoadtedf. l 'o!lti~·~~:..!m IL'lJ..2700. D0 nn1·s & Den· I 8 h .. m"''" s o r .. 11 •1 ... UTOTEM ......i el 8080 2212 Np B vd. Np c . & dbl bed. ~·oo. c"l-'"""1 -.. , --. -nis Personnel Service or SECRETARY * * Springe r Spaniel. fem. 10 -sc GIMCMIS ... .,,, <nO<J lrvmc, 2082 Michelson Top Notch. Xlnt typist EMPLOYMENT mo. Ll\'er & wbt. AKC ••••••••••••••••••••••• 675-4790. or546-2336. 166 Che\'y Pan<'I. otf Hd CCU/ICU Dr Sh. Use transcr ibing C hamp. All Shots. WAllo.JTED Wilson Classical beaut Mot le / I tares &nms.super cle~n. Full & p/t1me. 11·7:30 machine. Xlnl benefits OPPORTUNITIES 6iS-1266. " Guitar,caseincl.$75.or Sc~s 9150 mustsa-.SIWIJ~·:JiJ s hift. Contact Mrs. Saleswomen·G1ft shops in Full or Part-Time TOP CAS H DOLLAR bstofr 644-4343 RN Jensen, 642·2734, Costa Costa Mesa & Nwpt. Equal Opp Emplo)cr. No Exper. Necessary Packing cases. good for PA I D FOR YOU R · · •••••••••••••••••••••••112 lntmt'l P U lrock, \'8, Memorial Hospital, 301 P/timc, mostly eves & Salary SSSO.S600 mo. Dill Age21-65 Ehg1ble fire wood. Basket Bazaar JEWELRY. WATCHES. Office f'vrnitwe & '73 360M X Ya m aha . Al cond. radi~. htr. Al' \'ictoria, C.M. E.O.E. 1 wknds lntcn ·ws Thurs Mrs. Baker. 833·9550· Go To The Nearest 2159 Harbor Blvd. CM . ART OBJECTS. GOLD EquipiMftt 1015 engine & lransm. O\'er-1 auto trans, P!-> l'H. IW\4 Jan 15th , 3:30-S:JOPM S TICTOCMARKET S ILVER S ERVIC E .••••••••••••••••••••••• hauled Nov 'i5. Desert tJres .. unden:u..il: :! nt•\4 -Galleon Gins·, So. Coast FuEllCt1UmRefTYor GpaUrtARt1Dme. ForApphcataons&Jnfo 3 yr old Golden Rtvr. FINE FURN & AN-Elec t'-'pewriters Sey tank & xtra:.. SS95 aux luel tnk~ :!t).500 m1 ---------Pl C OR CALL 7 )6427702 Male. Pure bred, lo\'eS TIQUES 6452200 ~ . 556·3818 hcµdto J i7 6iJ;!JU:! RN 'S __ az_a .. M. Swing & g ra\ eyard . . < H . , . kids, to gd home only. . . chrs S8fup, exc svl. cbrs . -- SCRAM-LETS Over 21 lr\'ine area. Cap· Tic Toe Systems. Inc 968-8907 Firewood Org Euc $80 Sl5/3S, scy dsks. Pierce. '73 Yamaha TXSOO Ex '69 F-100 1-z Tun. saddll· lain Carpenter, 551·4054 __ ------cord. del. Oak . Coast 867W.19lh,CM64S-7411. rond. Must sell. Best ofr. tanks . h vy dty rt'ar ~ted~':;.~._!ii~~sh1rt ANSWERS or 5S1-1881. WAITERS,EXPER'D Fr~togood home,male Firewood S uppl y,JBMTYPEWRlTER 20" P.P .960·1US b~m~~~950.!">-45·-l~ t-: x per . a cut t• c· a r e •SECYS SEVERAL MULDOOM'S ~7~~J:.tter, l 'r.t yrs old. 581-1122 C ARR I AGE · Li KE 1971 KAW ASAKl JSO. '70 CHEV PU 1/~ TON hospital only. i-:xccllent Mosque -Capon 100%FeePaid , IRISHPUI Queen Size Bed. com· NEW . S295 · 16 7 mi. $450 incl hl'lmct. 6Cyl.,stick s hift ,radw, benefits. Contact Mrs Think -Mortar .f ash1on bland, N.B. Bassett. Hound, m ale. 3 plele lk new 4 sheets PLACENTIA. 54&·3414. 493-0771. heater. I0271SP ). Jensen. 642.2734, Costa ON the ROCKS Liz Reinders Agency -----yrs. Tri·color . Shots. he. · • ----------t Mesa Mem o rial NewYorkt>rs aresoscn-4020Birc-hSt,Stet°" Wa itress, exper. f/limc Gd w ,chldrn. 979·2880 Hdbrd & frame. s3oo. JMCopier -107 '74BultacoPursanR.USed $1599 Hospital, 301 Victoria timental. One bar even Newport Beach 833·8190 Sid's Blue Beet. 107 21st X226 548-3966 $150. 3 times. S69S. 675·0970, c M EOE dedicated a drink to the ECs talalbfliorsheAdpp1965t L~~~-:.:-.. 4pm. ---. * * WATERBEDS 494·2'117 ask for Bill before7pm. Dunton Ford -·· 1 ··--·· _____ 1 city's financial troubles. ~ .,... ----------• lt"s aManhalta nON the--------Mrs.LWbanH Completes12995 delivedOFF1CE DESK S &Sell or trade '67 Honda ROUTE SALES Aggressive per son for route truck. Delivery & Sa l es. Exp e r in fiberglass indus try helpful. 1055 E. 4th St. Santa Ana. TuklDJ.! ap plic-ations I 114 only. 9am-2pm. ------- Sales-Educational 3 DAYS-HO Publis he rs or World Rook Encyclopedia, an equal oppor employer has 3 op e n in~s for men/ women lo g i ve sales demos 3 days wk 8:30am-4 :30pm. Prev. sales exp not req 'd. Pos pays $60 wk guarn for 6 sales demos w/polential wkly inc of $130. Call Virginia Calkins for person al inte r vw . 557·1041 SALESLADY·For Small Gift Shop. Mature, neat appearing. Mu::.t have transportation. llelpful 1f li\'ing in HB area. Call for appt. 673·2634 ROCKS. SECY /TYPIST ••••••••••••••••••••••• 8679 Et Costa Cir. ALL IT~MS DJSCOUNT CHAIRS. Like new. Must "Superha wk''. Muc h Xlnt typing & tra nscrlb· Antiques 8005 Fountaill Valley AquaHeavt.!n 830•7062 sell. 640-8180 chrome. run s go.od. 2 240 5 '1ain "' Wa•nt't. S A 546-7070 ing skills. Newport Ctr ••••••••••••••••••••••• You are the winner of . . Cheap tra~sportat1on . a rea. Sal SSOO ·S~OO RUTH'S AHTl(i>UES two free dinners (514.50 King s1ie bed. new., xtra PimtOS & °"Jons 8090 $325. s.i-1·3-tli •--------- Benefits. Equal Oppor. January Clearance val14.e) selected from firm Sl9S an~I ?el. Usual· ••••••••••••••••••••••• '71 Yamaha MX. '74 GMC I 500 Builder. Must be self· Employer. Please call 10 to 20.-; OFF Skinny Mike's menu al _!!horn~ 835·22!i3 __ Wurlitzer, Leslie spkrs. Street li cense. $300. V-& . .auto. trans .• po"er starter, good organizer . for appt.640·44 33 0:-.IALLSTOCK HOLIDAYIMM Ca"lcell--' Contr.icl 2000 Wlnt, Prov. Xlnt cond. !°>-44·3417 steering. Lil.c n~v. Lactful .w boat owners & ------W--' ~ c-oCJ\ 962 af 6 (5J.l29W ). dealers. Ski lb should in· Service Slal 1on Alt\!n ~ lhru St.m Noon Spm 3131 lristol St. yds ('a rpe t1ng, bdow ~-·9564 l. pm 53 ctudct.vpma, d1ctaphone. dant, exper 'd. Day & 8504AL•B70SABalSyLfrA0NnLD Costa Mesa cost !">-47·81~ -OAK UPRIGHT PJANO ONE DOLLAR 69 5 ,. E Full & l \ '66 Honda 450. Very use of ca I c u I at o r . ves. P ame • P <Next to the Ferry) Please call 642-5678. e:o..t. Tennis Club ~lcmbership Reconditioned· Beautiful Dependable. New c-hain . Res pons ible for cor · ply, Shell Station, 17th&. 0.5·°"33 333loclaimyourtickets. Newport&al'h CallS36-8775 * $1 + $274 * re~pondence. c us tomer Jrvane. NB. * * * .onu. 640 527 J VlCTRO' .. -Larae (51 " ~ . ~ <--tine) Goods 1094 645·7159 All day & <'\ \!. inqui~ies . personnel Shaklee Distributor~ l.J' ., ..,,...... ftleli. insurance for~s. needed. Free traming hlgh, 2-1" wide, 25". de· Sm af~ectionate dog, good Wanted.Juke Box or Pin· ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1974 Kaw 90 Street Bike. Dunton Ford 12~0 S M•on •I W•rnPr. S A 546-7070 pur(·hase & production 548.2858 e p ) . Brun s w 1 c k w/ch1ldren housebroken ball Ma l·hml'. Working SURFBOA~D , • • like new less lhan 8 hrs orders. 4 Day week. <Bruns wi c k -Blak e · 979-8508 ornot.839·1946aft.4 Used Russel. 6-,_:_ · lime.$245,644·0975 1-=== Growin!! organization. If Shakl ee Dis tribulor s Collendar Co, rat. 1918> . . 6"2·0804 aner 6pm. $.17 '73 FORD 1/• TOM you qualify & love sail wanted. Training pro· dual head (diamond and Acttve young Terra e r CRISIS ALARM Firm '72 SuzuJci 6TSSO. J(d cond, PU Ca mper spe<'tal. V-8. boats. please call or vided. 631·3271 for Appl. i;teel stylus> windup spayed wishots loveable Single touc h of button on TY Radio Mus t sel I $475 /ofr. 4 spet.'<I. factory ;11r C'On write Bob Poole. at Down -model. Mahogany fmish. 8J3-5S86orS4S·004S tin y tran s mitt e r HiFi Shreo 1098 675-7572/s.52·8481. ditioning , full P"" t-r. East Yachts Inc .. 700 E. STATISTICAL Has storage are a bui ltm. Male Germ. Shep. mi.'<, 1 automat1cally ,Pho~es •••••• ; .... •••••••••••• •71100 y maha MX must power steenn ~. r adiu. Alton Ave, S.A. 92707 . TYPIST Plays excell e nt l y . yr old. gd w/kids. Nd pohce, paramedics. fire & MC 1 Off 11 C heater.tintedglas:-..L1kl· 979-6850 FOR CPA FIRM $25-0.00. Phone67S·99880r good home. 548-6840 ::ift. de Pt do cto r or BOSE 1801 AMP A sell. er. co a ter new condition !539-19P). SECRETARY Ne wp<>rt Beach in- surance co. needs ex· per'd sec-'y with good typing & hle sh. Operate 10 key & good w /figures. Salary to S600 & good co. benefits. Call 833-8450 R e port t y ping ex · 640-7475. 6. neighbors C RlSJS Mdl C24 P r e -amp . 6pm673·3487 $4199 perience & grammatical ALARM brings help in 631'2336 or 6'73-24.6S '74 Ya m-250 Enduro must knowl~dge desirable. Tbl. lamp Renaud, leaded f1lmiture 8050 any emergency. Cris is 23'' RCA color TV Works . sell 5400 ' glass shade . For more •••• •••• •••• ••••. •• •• •• 1 l e ti' on L'lectron1· ·s 1 f ' ~. Salary commensurate lnfo.646.1092 n erv n "' c $100 or bes t o er . 675·;>'116 w/exper. 979-4361 ----------Shop & Save · new & used 871-2310. 542.4758 -----Antique Claw & ball root furn. gi ft s. misc. . ----------1'74 Honda Elsmore 250 Teac her-Pre·School. shorty bath tub, Owner Wilson's Bargain Nook . Maple dresser & mirror , loah&M..-iM xlnt. cond. DC access. U pm.Mon·FTl.S2.40hr. 6i3-2S48eves. 545W.19lhSl.C.M. nu Yamaha Tru~pet , Equipment art.Js.6-1656 Exper'd. Call 640·~ Stereo maple cab10el. ••••••••••••••••••••••• AntJque glass show and I BUY * Eve. 496·7105 General 90 I 0 Motor Hws. sale -e\'erything from * * * 200 . M. t r ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sale/Rtftt 9160 t d , J 17 Good U ed Fu t •-items. 1n1a ure I· ••••••••••••••••••••••• art o epress1on. an . s m1 ure "' quor bottles old Rev Need lead for keels, etc.? . . SI 11 & 18th. Cosmi c Age Appliances-OR I will t E 545.7761 Call Key Metals SantaRENT·T1tan28 ps8,;i Lodge, 1717 So. Harbor. Sell for You. s amps. ve. -Ana !">-47-0081 ' xtras. By day or week Anaheim. Sat. 10-9, Sun MASTERS AUCTION 1 Hollywood twm bed $50. . • . b4S-3370 an. 6 12·6. SI 25 adm w ad. 646-8686 & 833-9625 1 Linens Xlnl t·ond '55 loah,, Mcrtt1e 9030 Trailers, Tran4 9170 T di . h •ft LCall 842 1542 V-M Hi/Fi 556-.6622 EquipMetlf ••••••••••••••••••••••• rea c sewing mac 1ne. "' v--•••••••••••••••• •• ••••. S7S. Call. Twn Wh' Bed b Alvin Silver. service for *AnEHTIOM• Har~top Apache Tent 642·50439am to lOpm ite • mall, x 12. xlras $500 Amethyst Trailer. Slps 6 Clean. --------sprgs. bdspread, (blue) Lamp, 45 .. hi~h. $40. 1968 SO Horsepower $850. Call AM 675·1635 * JOMATHANS Gd cond. SSO. 644·2514 Heating P ad , new, SS. Mercury outboard. C.D. Dunton Ford 7240 S M••" •I WernP•. S /II 546-7070 '66 FORD PU SHORT BED 6 Cyl.. stick s hift l0617K376). $1299 Dunton Ford i240 s Main •I Warnr•. S A 546-7070 • ""-'Tl"'UES * Tr a v e 1 ( r 0 n . s 4 . Ignition with mercontrol. Auto SerYice & "'" .,.. WA.'IJTED Clean h1de·a· New w a te T pump. Parts 9400 '65 Dodg(' 2 T. stC'd bd. is having their annual in· bed, reasonable S la rm at ' c ,.. I ash En•ine in excellent cond. ••••••••••••••••••••••• lock box. air ··omp, &. Grand Opening EAT AND BE THIN \fentory sale 638-8684 Camera, $10. 837·7338 ,, ' U 40"' rr11 ----------t ---~------1 SUPER CLEAN. S650 or 4 U .S . 1 n d y ma gs . l a n k . L o m 1 . pto 10 0 • Firewood bybundle'orall, best offer. Call 963-8738 lS"x lO". Fit Bronco. 548·7482,646·2022 422 31st St N 8 Maple Hutch, table. 2 cap· · · tains chairs. 2 Windsor reas, refrig w /bottom eves. AL.50 15 foot glass Jeep Seoul. $99. 893·6460 673'6001 chairs, 2 barstools 2 whl rreezer. $75, 2 couch cor· runabout new seats, aft. 6pm '67 Dodge 6 Cab·Ovr Pl Applimtees v· vi chairs. 1 braided ner group, Rattan tbl & carpeting, with good low m1 . tool box. $12()(1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• \Jf.·. 1 wing bar k uphol chrs, misc. 3117 Dublin trailer. Hull in excellent 40hp VW eng. complet<'IY 548-7482 or 646·2022 • f St. C.M,. back of t'cdco cond. $400 or best offer, overhauled. S250. 36 HP .--.----- - -Apt. size Maytag was chair. 968-2260 a t S. 979_3363 Will sell both for $9SO or parts. Blocks, head s. 72 Ford RanchE'ro. l'Xt'l'I' ) at the \(oe.&a>.\ S>~ 3131 Bristol Street, Costa Mesa with Mike Turin's P.O.P. (Pound• Off Permanently) and Complete meals from $1 .80 to $7 .25 Breakfast Lunch • Dinners and ·DESSERTS TOO! I •.m. to 10 p.m. 1 ct.p • week & dryer combo. Xln . -offer. CaJ I 963-8738 eves door & front f<>nder for uonally cll·:tn_ 52200. :.11 $100 963·8738/645·8913 r.~;~~~r ~a~~yeb;,t ~~~e:~: 8 pc Ludwig Drum Set, 061 vw. re ar glai.!., side Brown.1111 IMltll 1eve. _____ patiotbl.8Jl·9S40. S6.S,Boy's 10spdbike $45,loah,Power 9040 J!lass. mi s c. parts Vans 9570 Hi·lo oven/ran~e. barely --. -544·1226 ••.••··~••••••••••~··••• 544·34 17 ••••••••••••••••••••••• used $150 Like new 2 'fvo'm Beds. Bedspreads 40 Chns Craft Twm V·8. , . , 1 ref rig w icemaker SISO & mattress pads. S2S 2 new leather coats. cost A/P deplh finder & xtras ~s/ 74 Dod~e \an •l~n. • 675-0821 Each.673·5099 Sl5S ea. Sell $75 ea. s1ie for c ruis in g & live Classics 9520 m1 . ~tr l'Ond .. I'S ~·n --42.645·9215 aboard. S16,700. 962·2006, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Al\l~l-l\t , Ma gs_ s.1,511 APT. SIZE STOVE Gorgeous Coffee Table. 847-8166 1947 Packard V8. Lo mi, &W·i3SSor ~-l:I3tiO _ Almost new. $75./bsl ofr. hand ma de GsclulptuTred J::~~~g~!L~~SU . John Ru bout lSS runs. $1200. 494·4158 an '74 Ford Van Er onohll• 960-2738 base. Hvy a ss op. · · · · 16 son na 6PM hi C •-------· ----1 673-71BS ColorT.V. $69.95 V-6 1.0. w/llO hrs. Hvy · · 100, mag w s. ~ onn11 Like new Green Gas Vacuum's guar. $19.95 duly trlr $2695, 675·7687 It~ shocks. partly lan e<I m~ Range $140. 690 w. Pocific Kiftq Siae &45-6421 JAKE ·s. VtMctn 9 530 xJnl cond. $3495. 552· 72Sh 18lhSt.CostaMesa. Water led 460N.Newport81.N.B. '66, 27 ' Tally C r aft••••••••••••••••••••••• For sale: GE dishwasher. o n pedes tal . Shelf Chinese sclptr'd. b<'ige, ~~~ef~d~~o x~:;, c~· Dune buggy w /trn 11t~r. d h"t $100 hdbrd .. heater. relt l0x12 rugs. 1003 wool -""" 493.7056 . Turbo·Chargc. Corva1r. ~:1\·~~~ w 1 e · bdspread. Mus t selJ. plsh. pile. 551-4745 ..,._,. , $500/bs\ofr. 960-3440 $175. Call 673-3571. 50' Offshore Cruisler 4 MA.--• Dri..,.... 9550 I 8020 Porter Cable skil saw, $35. Twn dsls SK plan 1200 nn.n ... yces Studentsdesk 48x l8. Rockwell r outer $30, · ' ' ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••• •••••••••• Gd d • d m1. Aft. cab, 2 heads. Bicycle Old Ho ad con ·· ·• rawers. Mlllerfalls 3" l)ell s:indcr shower. J ~st hauled. sur· Landcru•ise s master sklp toolh chum 75L·1768. $30. 494.2417 after 5:30. veyed, pmnlcd. r $50. 67S-0970, a~k ror Bill Moving Must sell solid * * * Owner wUI fln3nce. ,75 ..... before 7pm. maple butcher blk. 32" Patricia Edw_. $26.500. 646-9000 <062NDM ~ Girl's 5-apd bike, $45/ ofr. sq. 675-1213/S58·1448 ll2l2 Mel4I Viste 36' Commercial Fish1ng $4199 517-A Selden Ln . S. G_..Sale 1055 O..PoMt Vessel, has all. fishing •74 w Onotre, 498-2140 ••••••••••••••••••••••• n ow , $4 .soo. Ca 11 (..,..-"K;r."R > Y•RDS"'L• You are the wlnner of 714-836-1205. S'7VYSltt Peugeot PX·lO ; 23" Sen· "' "" ~ lwo free dinners. ($14.50 tour Der•Hler . In fd Saturday,Jan.17 value) ulecled from 25' Marauder /Fty Brldao _.,._ -1s .... t B/W TV 's , stere.o. men's Skinny Mlle's menu at Lux., S--' • SUblU•u. 2 '71 H•dtop IN .. pe . .,.. . or ... or. ~ OJ ("-ll"W> 551·2300. 1uit.s,one9xl2hlghshag HOUDAYIHH l U H P 18108 Mere v ..., rug & more. 315 Jasmine. l 1 l I lristol st.. CruUC!"; Tand Trlr, fu.I· $3499 Jl aleigh Com pelltid'n CdM. 7am·noon "~te .._._._ lY CoQ\DP d. many xtras. l 23W' frame. Xlnl cond . T... -,_.. :dnl cond. 5" lo apprtt. Mlul ADH 1 szoo. 6'5-730? This is the big one .. urs. Please call 642·5678, ex Pvt P l y. 831·2801 or Ulf\ wna Fri., at Sat. Lol.5 or Anti· 333 lo claim your tlckeU. &'J3..14M X.374 IC4-1rt•& quf!S, lots of 1unk. Like * ** -------1 TOYOTA ..... ,.... 1010 new, dbl m »ttress & box 40· Matthews Sedan ••••••••••••••••••••••• springs,~-bed complete, Two V4fa·r•dar-3 radios 1966 tbbo' c M ~M. •~l OMEGA D:irlc Roetm urpet.s, blk(", 18 MM You doo'l need a gun to $16,500 646-9000 -- Equip. Comp, & Llkt sound projector, tool~. "dra w last'' when you new. All for $.l2S or beat. diahwsr bltln oven & place an od In the Daily Owms 28' A·l c.cnct, SS. Have aom th ni you want Call Patric k , Daya ran1e. Much more. 3274 PUot WanlAds!Callnow relri8. wlnch. D/F, alps loHll?Claa!'lfi~ada do 673-7272, Eves. 960-1215 Michigan. C.M. ~-5618. 4, f1000, 673-M20 It well.142·56i8. •73 VW 7 PASS IUS Stick shin, llf(•tory au condit1o n in1a. r adio heate r . tanted J!las~ wheel t•overs. L1kt' m•v. <7SOC0Vl $3666 Dunton Ford :.'·h' .... "•"· ., ""'''Uf'f •,A 546 -7070 USE THE DAILY PILOT "FAST ltESULT .. SEllYICE DIRECTORY For Result Service Call 642-5671 bt.l U \ 03 DAILY PILOT * Woonri .. t'111y • .:~nu.:iry 14, 1976 Aulos, l.,porlod A.lo., ,.,,......, "11100, l..,..W ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ....... UMCI Aaltot W.ted 9590 AMto.t, lMported AutcK, t...,.arted ~ 9750 ........ 9770 VetYo 9771 ...... UMd ~-~~••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ........................................................................ ··•••···••·••••••·••·•· •••••••••··.••••••···•·· ···········,············ c.:;:;.;;.·········;;20 Mevtricll 9947 rwo ''ll ·~~:~~!~L ~~ ............. !?.~~ ~ .............. !?!.~ ~!~:~~·~~:Xi. ~·:::1·:.~!r.:~:.·,~:: , 7&'S ;~"ci.:~~"i:.~~i~··;;;: ;;~·;;;:;·'.J·;~··::;:~: :;;·;;:=;-.::=~~-~~-·~ Let us aell il far you, $$500..511.7112 ..._, 1 owner. Iii.MO. YOl.YO'S 'r xlnt ~·· fLllJ ,P•r. io UouJJy clea . ltOSO, Mr, Cn&11o·ld'•tie. t CASJf! Wf!! take lo trade '7\ Fial 850 Spi~,.. Good .,._ev... ml., .l'lt'# tire•. Day, Brown, 831>0070. S..W.1048. · • n f m a k e o r 1976 BMW cond. Xlnl &•• ml. '74·911 T'• .... a Xlnt coad. __ E • ••·-model. .. cars, tr uc ks, $ Sl&X>lotr. $&6-881TEvet. Wbl, .~·.AM/FM, •e· 87 VW Bus, HERE -· "' .~.._,,, ~.,., 9950 Sell or trade "7• XJnt Coad. StlOO I l w-Good cond vanii:, r ec r e a\l o na l u __ _._ ,727 ceaa:S13,000/bst.848·101 5(16.56.SZ Must sell my mmacu ate ••••••••••••••••••••••• .... · veh il'le11 i mport s & ARE HERE ~ • . NOW "lOChevy Jmpala}fd\op 'M Mere . Col. Pk. Sln. lag ror Mini domestic$. a.lu st !)cl; in ••••••••••••••••••••••• iS, 914• 1.8. Atr, a(n/f '6SVW8ug.Ma1s,cleaa. Coupe, very clean W1n.$600. Home.5"•'4J'J. running condition & mt.~t '75 Ho.Oa Cl•lc stereo •. &-track. lOM ml. $7SO/b5tolt. •New Enaine throuchout 11100 or hit 54!1·5982 Cahforni11 s.11fety t•ode Auto. tran¥., AM radio, S'1,lOOfirm.w .s132. 8CS-921S =~=~~mltslon ofr.Evff.492-S30S. Mm; 9952 P'fr....... r ~tandards . gas saver. (664MBt"'). lore• 9756 •• F lb k Lo . Alf JS'S "72 Vega llatcbbaek. Xlnt ••••~••••••••~•••••• ••••••••••••••••: El CammoAutoSales Rtlducedto ••••••••••••••••••••••• u ac , au • •1r, 1 pp C 11 498·1"00 Dealer .,1 DEAUR IN' US A am/rm, orlt owner. cond. l:SSO. · · • '65 MUSTANG, 4 l pd, hot ATLAS ": &I '' a ••OADWAv $3199 · · · $1,296.546·2222. AND DIMO'S eve. 7S2·7i60 rod engine, new JnteJ1or WE PAY 1'0 1' l>Ol.LAR SANTA """ IOY , Ca . 1 & paint. mag whls. hke · t-"'ORTOP USED CARS <d l • 'Im VW Bug. xlnt cood,, MUSTCIQ 68 pnce .x nt new 11700 /best offer Chrnlw/Plv1 FOREIGN. oot.1 gsTJC I 835·31 71 e.Qll twi.4' CARVER oril own.,• new Radials, THIS MONT ~cond. Al~. Power, eie., _842.a183 d~t••~.6743 Oi>e~rltaU.y & SU~ Qr CL.ASSlt;L _ THI! UUlure 0111tv11o10 MAC"11t1 IOllS-ICWC -93t008 mi:;S850:-833•2021-;-BUY · S40=85'19 aft. 6 p).f -• Jr VOll r car is extra t•lean ~ ·. · ' !~~~ ... l~~:i .63 VW Bug, l500<:c·De&t .71 Monte Carlo auto, 2929Harbor8Jv'. s«-us fir$t. 1973 B~!W Ba varia. A/C, ~' VOLVO M•-•••• offerpverS800. OR p/b,p/s,V-8,a/c,'t1~wh1. •74 MUSJANG Costa Mesa · ..... IAUER BUICK Sunroof, AM /f't.I Stereo, l'16b Hruhor C t.\ 64f> ~303 Cl0Sf;D$UNDA't'S Call644·4717 . LEASE Rally whl1. new tires. "546--1934;~.; 29'.!5 !tarbor Bl \•tJ. l Owner . 46.000 1n1. $7000 O!rer Expires 1.2().76 _. 0 9765 Orig. ownr·. J.1 99'~_.. 11"---C 1 . . C05la Mes., ~7!.1·2500 t"'irm,833-2883 -r-· USED%;1.ALS 831·16.SS. y. 6 COUPE '74 Plym usl Sa Top DOLL ·R c.....,·· 9715 Kmuaw ... Ghia 9735 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Economy •7• v ,,. 'SS Che.r Wogo· n, '•bit pass wag. Xlnt c "" ••••••••••••••••••••••• MEW 1976 .. 0 .. Fullpower,bucketseal.S, mi 's, pis. p/b, air,. PAID ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1973 Ke1n11onn Ghio Aulomatlc, s u.nroor, 23S eng, new llres, sharp. low miles. (7JSHTY). sell. 498·1755 evea ~1 c••"· u "'"' crnup TOYOTA S"ecra· IS AM 1FM ... ,... i .... ., . ....,·"°'"""' . $3695 IMMEDI •TELY Su f f'"I d . Yellow exterior w/black . "" nroo ·Allot / " ra 10· inte ri or. lmmaculat('-, 1 VWI Luxuryatilsbest .#~. '74CHIVC.APRICE FOR ALL S1450. 96l·Hl..."-'7 r.tust sec! (75711TQ1 OUR LOWEST , $6395 Estate wagon. v.a. auto. Jim Slemons FOREIGN CARS '74 CAPRI 2 DR H.T. DOH IURNS O:iml ~ :=1:~a:.r74e6~·CJorect ,74 Volvo 142 trans., factory air condi· Imports CAU OR COME IM 6 Cyl., auto. trans .. fa c. VOUC:SWAGEN tioning , power steerine .. TO SEE US , tory air cond1tionlng. $10.00Da.& $1788 4 Speed, overdrive , powerdiscbrakes,radio, 1970Harbor8\vd. I r<1d10. hcatl'r. 1697Kf'R 1. 13731 Harbor llvd $80.00 Per Mo. leather. AM /FM stereo heater, whitewall tires, Costa Mesa NEWPORT IMPORTS 3100 W.Coasl Hwy. N.B. 642·9405 Or~ County's Hiqb~st S BlfYer on Imports Bill Max!'y Toyota l'all R<>~t·r or Bill &17 8.')55 SELLING YOUR CAR? TOP PRICES PAID Fur Im po rts P:.iuJ for nr Not Deon Lewis Imports l~i6 llar0or. C '.\I. ti4ti·!:l30:1 TOP $ Pa id FOH Used VW's Paid for or Hot TOP BUYER , $3495 GARDEN GROVE '69VW cassette, s unroo f. A tinted glaas, wheel cov· 631·1276 534•4 1 OO Radio, 4 speed, syn · Pop Top camper. A buy ! sports sedan. 7~LEQ. era, roof rack, like new 1---------- ---'--------I cromesh trans., power (ZVZ337), $5l9g condition. Lie. (168KJS). '74 Mu stang II . Xtras . 1969 Ghi front disc brakes, healer 53 39 5 Xlnt cond. Lo book. 428 Kormann • & flow thrn ventH•tion. $1288 ' · · · • Dunton Ford 2240 S M"n 01 Wo•n<'• S A C 0 U P. E • 0 w D l . E. 16th.645·8888. C!\t . · ... !Undersea!>. 48 month IJlllifl 1t11t1& m ilai:e ·62,l74. Bu rnt financing. Deferred pay. '68VWlug &""" UUW '68, pwr brks & steering, 1 orange exterior. ORI G· ment SJ920 incl tax & Metallic !>liver. rebuilt ~ sharp, mu.st' sell 997.1010 ! INAL EVERYTlllNG ! license & int. APR is engine. Guaranteed. ~ VOLVO days,846·3387eves. Dotwn 9720 IYNZ7S2I. $13.640.A.C. TElll03257 <WCA228 ). , 546·7070 DON IURNS l $1388 ·oo Mustang VB. auto. PS, ·68 Sat'elite 9 pir.a~. r ···-;,~~~;~~·~,~·c~···· VOLKSWAGEN 8:0f41t ewiA 1-'-'""-"-'"-•'-'-'-"-'-"-'-"'-'-r,,======="' ~~~~~~~re s , very ~~.~~~~~15rri JJA TSUN. TOYOTA , l3Jll Horbo II d ~ '64 VW PGMI 68Volvo144, as is ! Radial '72 Im pala Cu11t . Xlnt Ul{vo• "SWAG •',N r • .:·tf.· OYOTA Perlet1 beach car. Ex· tires. Fog Lamps . cond. Vinyl top, a /c, Mechanics Ideal Ford Pontiac PAliJFOR "' GARDEHGROVE ·~·: T ce ll ent c ondit io n . MSO/ofr494 ·27Bl am/fmradio.830·6089, Mu s tang, 1966. s5oo .••••••••••••••••••~ OR No1· 534-41 00 19bb Horbi;i•; ( M .64b.9JOJ (34213W). ... ...... -•• Used '73 MONTE CARLO LAN· 548·5233-Jlm '66 GTO. Good ·con~ TOP DOLLAR G h . Off . SAVE _...., . eng. S650 or bst ofr. CALL ·12 Karma n n ~ 1a . er exp1res1·20·76 •••••••••••••••••••••• DAU. PS. PB, air, 1 '67 Mustang, auto, smllil CorSoe 968.0958. SAL BEHNA OE'.'IE AM t F~1. a ir cond, et ir. GCM'rol 990 I owner, xlnt cond ., $2 ,950. VB. new puint & tires.1.:.:::.:=.::..::•c.c=::...--0~ .>4U-0-1<:2 S2,250,544·1226 Du.Tohtc~se ~ a •••••••••••••••••••••• 831-2787 . x lnt co n d ., $1200. '71 Pontiac Lel\fans, ----Mencia 9738 in N~w C.-Sales ljm'i•iM'lef'L * ., * .66 Impala, P /B, P /S, 552·4488. small VB, PS. PB. Cr '67 Dat'.>un 1600 Roadsler 2 We have become over· m'!.1 ~ou:i:"i ~ control. AM /FM . tops. nu t rans. tires.~··••••••••••:••••••••• stoc kl'd in excellent Hunt. Heh. 842·4435 Richard Jensen ~~~5000· A/T. SSOO. or offer . '74 FORD Mu s tang trans.644-4147 aft 6. b'ks. '•d>"lo,, me<·h :<In i3 Mazda HX 2 n otary . d 204 Via Ithaca .,.... 2+ 2 " M F'1 T O k Ira es. . . 1 '69 F, .• ,,,·,d. xlnt " S9!l5846·9518 A / "· ape cc · sur· ST RTING PRICE '73 VW BUG H --'I h 4 S d k h t ' ' fboa rd r acks. Ask For A l'W~·· !'OC '73SportsVan _pee · stic .s 1 ·plus new paint, tires .. i.i iffiOZ. Lo¥-·er~d. Konis. l:d_540.31719.5r !\1 Days $895 Radio, heater, 4 speed .. You are the wu ui.:r or S2600Call cvc ,l96 ·165 I r_<1d10. healer. wh1te~all l $ll50. 675 . 0970 ask n ht etc. Low miles & like lwo free dinners tSl 4.; tires, mag '4heels .• vinyl B"llbef e?pm' nc¥.' tires. cam. Y ...,. · ·73 RX2 Rot· · E A. .a.._.y new (541GOP ) value ) selected from al 9930 interior. (341KLE ). I 1 or · spoi le r . m ags. ai r , ~r) ng. 1r """ A'.\1 1-'i\1 . 2S.OOO mi Bes cond , r:-i d 10, ex tra s $2399 Skinny Mike's menu et! ••••••••••••••••••••••• $3299 '67 Firebird. Good c on rn;id. S6500ibst of;-, 31,000 m1. Nds a little REASOHAILE HOLID.4.YIMM '73 Mark IV. Xlnt cond . S9501bst. ofr. After- S8l·ii ll:l aft 5 ~~~ork . $1 500/bstofr. OFFER 3131 lristolSt., 39M mi. Full power Pvt 54H·ao22 '72 DATSUN PU Mrrcedf!!s Benz 9740 \\'1t h stake l>ody , ~s peed .••••••••••••••••••••••• :.tic k s hirt . ra.d10. heater. (IS2:821VJ. will bt' accepted during Costa Mesa Pty. 96.3·779'.!. '72 POMTIAC ;?1 thi.s week's liquidation Please call 642·5618, ext. orvett~ 9932 VENTURA !!~.< SALE 333 lo claim your tickets ••••••••••••••••••••••• I 2 Door hardtop, ' IOO'i;. Financing & * * * •TOP CAS ll ~ auto." trans., factory Extended 1'~inancing For Corvettes and other . AV~\ILABLEO.A .C. hick 9910 used cars & tr.uc ks ' Ohis.mobill' 9955 conditionin g, po Steering, radio, hea '74VWLOVEIUG ••••••••••••••••••••••• HOW ARD Chevrole t . ••••••••••••••••••••••• whitewall tires, vi 1· D L • 4 Speed, slt"k -.hift '66R1v1era A1r condillon· Dove & Quail Sis Nea r Sales and Service f h 1 , eM ~llhl ' ' -I Good B · I & roo . w cc cov e~• ~ Llc. (2S2LWGI condition 644-5932 MacArthur. Newport GMCTRUCKS ( ). : ~ TOY OT A $2799 '75 IUICK CENTURY Be"'"· '33·05$5 HONDA CARS $2199 :.· Sec us first. & last ! Top fiat dollar f)l.Ud for tmpQrts. 9725 LeaH Mew-Used OVER 100 MERCEDES OH DISPLAY House of Imports AUTHOHI ZJ.:o MERCEDES UEA LEH 6862 i\I anc.h~stcr. llul·na Pa rk • U.UW radio, healer Like riew ing ....,w mi eagc Jam·boree. r1s lo . OLDSMOBILE 92JESG "' 2 Door hardtop, v 8, Ford 9940 UniYersity Olds 19bb Harbo• CM 646 9303 auto trans . fat1.0ry air ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2850 llarbor Blvd conditioning. power '70 Ford Cortina gd, cond. Costa t.1esa ~0·9640 Dunton Ford COST A MESA ••••••••••.;•••••••••••• DATSUN Fiat 2845 Harl>o r Blvd Costa '.\tcsa 5-i0·641 0 Belore you buy seei -Autos, lmportrd ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mission Vle)o A.Ha Romeo 9705 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 523.7250 On th~ S;j_n~a An a Pw y. 74 Toy Hilux, i5 Gem TP 19g al . x lra g as 714·496·8884 2240 <. M<>101 ~1 W;t•~• < '> A 546· 7070 '69 llo1 e r t·c dcs 280S E . "EB Toy Corona.Im mac in ·1 --=~~=~=~~ SJ.700. Ca ll afternoons or side &out.Great2nd car, '68 Bug . No n-run cond . e,·cs 96..1·3139 Sl ,095. 673·4715. $600. 642·5043, 9am to steering, radio, heater, mag whls .gd . m1 nu. whitewall tires, vin)'I tires $82S.962·20~3. 19t!I Olds Della 88. Power roof. tinted glass. wheel . s t c t' r i n g . p o w e i:: covers ( Like ne w 72 LTD 4·door Power. brakes (nc ¥.·I . fa ctoryl"""""= (74950$13611) Air Like new !\fust sell. air, new tires, 63',000 '72 PONTIAC 1~"~2c.·7_2llll _______ I miles. Best offer . Call FtREBIRD •75 LTD Wagon Full pwr. between Sam & 5pm. V-8. auto. trans., fact 73, 450SE, 35.000 mi. l\1ich. '69 Toyota Corona 14 ,ooo mi , At.f t F !\f i -="'=-·"':::.:'~•·'-------I air conditioning, po lOpm $4199 Imports ti res. SI 0.900. Burgundy 2 Door transportation '67 Bug . Must see Nu stereo Sharp S4250 steering, radio. hea ...,. s addle br n in t . · 1 XP U2?) · hi & 1. 8'6·-~&ll ll l •4'·.(c"~. •73QldsCutlass Supreme. whitewall tires. t " Avery Ex11. S D Fwy 0 60 0 E SJ)e<'1a ~ (. 5 . paint, w s ires, nu ....,..... ...,... Power steering power ·oo Al fa Spyder. 1750cC'. 831 _1740 64 · 40 ays . ves. motor . Sl.350 firm glass. whe el co\f fuel ·injected, dua l O\Cr · 1 ----------I 675..8876 $888 83J.24W '69 FORD LTD brakes, power windows . (119EQU ). I 1· '-------· Like new. Full price head cams. 5-SJX . trans., ·59 '' t II Off 9772 WAGON ~""".Coll 979·4192. $2999 4·wh eel disc hrakes, · · us se · er . Vol•o '<==========1 ,~~====cc."'-"--- P1rell1 tires. !U /.!/.!aj.\c Aft.5.551_1087 ey•:.!.J.1Ja t ••••••••••••••••••••••• '73BUICKCEMTURY air conditioning. power '7fJ Old s 44 2 ·c onv l . Pnvatl' Parly. i\1Bi 90J . I:"""""' ~!~'· v.s, auto. trans. factory r rack. Tonnca u l'O \'t'r. ----·-----1 187 11 li:.:ac"'h'i":'' OR.AMGECOUMTY 2 Door hardtop, V·B. steering. radio. heater. AM /FM stero,a ir.Super Best orrer O\"l·r $2';00. ·57 . 250 St:, full pwr. llWlt. lk'h H42.4435 VOLVO auto. trans., ractory air tinted glass. wheel cov· cond .496·2017etft6Pt.1 . &15-2342 a fl £•r 5. G75·73'i() At.t /Fi\1 stereo cassl'tte. EXCLUSIVELY VOLVO conditionin g , radio , ers,.Lic (801FTA J. at work (John I dk grn. mu st i;ell lcaving '72TOYOTA WA.GOH heater, whitewall tires. $1499 Largest Vol vo Dealer f · d I coun1 ry $4200/bst ofr. Corona MK II , auto. vinyl roo, l1nte g ass. Audi Pinto 9957 • •••••••••••••••••••••• in Orange County! HD'') 673·0706 lrans., radio. heater. BUY o,'EASE wheel covers (175 ""· '7I FORD"IHTO h. II · h I ... .-•73 Pontiac Gran Prix, ••••••••••••••••••••••• MG 9742 w itewa tires, w ee DIRECT $AYE Au t o tr radio Vi I f '7 3 •ud' IOOSL covers. tinted glass . · a.na., . · pwr. top, am m A 1 -"==--==--=--!••••••••••••••••••••••• (174ETX ). ~···~· lf.~-,,~.·~ heater, whitewall tires, radials. lmmacula 4 Door. AM/ F!'o1 stereo '69 MG C -• -----_.._ --tinted glass. wheel cov -$3000. :HS ·0740. ; •: Dunton Ford B·lrack. auto . sunroof 4 Speed, AM t FM radio. $2599 e(220CJrs, As·',. condit ion. Lie ird . 9~.' 1283KFHJ. ~ ~·-' v.-ire wheels. A r eal YH; v=e 2025 S M hest $1499 ••••••••••••••••••••tt;-.. MILLER classic. {YCS086 J. . anc er 74 FORD RAMCHERO Must Sell •74 T· Bili. ;o~~O <; 1,1,,,,, ~I Wa•no' <; A 546·7070 $3888 MOTORS $2599 Anaheim 750-2011 V-8, auto. trans .. factory Am /fm stereo.load · 1.:..::..::::.:=:.:..._c::..=.....::::.:..:.1 ======,.,==""! air conditioning, power See it. Pvt pty. 494·158 ;• .:,....., -••lm"J~~·· l ·66 Le Sa bre cust. 4dr . d' h we,:,,•,:!.l~f,•,, '! t ~ .. 1';9 ... GJn.,,.tl ewiA 1========= '76'S hard top. Beaut. cond. ~~t~'!.g~llr~i:~~. ~.~\~ Vega 99,U &M ~ • i.. .. Lal.,. 1Ut.W\. $675 cash. Private party. glass. wheel covers ••••••••••••••••••••.;;..: Hunt Rt·t. >.4~ 4 ' 1 " FACTOR\' .j., '74 TOYOTA VOLVO'S 494·8956 (96237V). ·74 Vega Coupe, s .• J..usU.,.Hoaloy 9709 AUTHOHfZ CD .,.. VOLVO CORONA Cadlllac 9915 $3499 1-========i RIH. shup S2200 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sal!'s • S!'rvice !'o1K II wagon, 6 cyl.. HERE ••••••••••••••••••••••• '72 FORD PINTO 493-4725 ~ '66 Spri t~. Completely Ports• L~aSirMJ l~M Hur~11' ~ f,\ 646 930J auto. trans .. factory air Runabout. 4 Speed, stick1...:::..::..:::__ ____ -!lf.: Reblt. Gd cond 51000 or 120 W. Warner at Ma in Ot'fer F.xpires 1·20-76 Condit ion in g. radio , NOW ''CADILLAC'' shift, factory air condi-'74 CHEV VEG.A ,.•.: bst ofr.!\fike.!"J45-10i.i SantaAna 557·2132 ·68. Reb lt trans, ne"'· heater, whitewall tires, •NewEngine tioning , radio, heater. WAGON •, clutch starter brakes tinted glass. wh eel cov -•NewT•ansmi·,,,.00 Quacty & Pn·ce whitewall tires , tinted GT model, 4 speed . st '62 Aust1n·.Healy 3000. Isl L 69 Fiat 124 Spider va lves·. 644.4779'aft 4. · ers. Only 8,000 miles. N c' i n glass , wheel covers . shift, factory air co • $2000 t a k e s . 2053 ·0 ugga g c rack . n c w1,,::::c:=:..::c.c'-":..::.:.C'=-cc ' {SFJ297 ). ' ew oors 0•1'f'70 167•EHIJ. tioning, AM /FM ra ~ Wallace Ave.CM. paint. (ZK ll333 1. Cpd 9746 $3777 ALL 75•5 to Choose From heate r, tinted gla .,, BMW 9712 $1988· ••••••••••••••••••••••• A...,D DEMO'S For the best prices, the '74 FORD LTD $1899 vin y l interior , w •' ·74 Opel l\1anta 4 spd. Lo I"" lowest lease rat.,, & de· Brougham Y·B, auto. ovetl s , mog whcc.J.S: ·•••······•·····••····· ... ~· mi's. Real Clean! SJOOO. MUST GO pendable scrvi ce,-see trans .. factory air condi· (817JN0). · ~ Call96SJ4'6 THIS MONTH NABERS CADILLAC ~~~!~.gh:.:::.' ,;'~?:'.~a~i $2499 ~ ·73 G.T, Fl a me Red. Lo BUY 2600HarborBlvd tires. vinyl roof. tinted mi. Supe r clean . Hi COSTAMESA 540.9100 glass,wheel covers.Lllie SADDLEBACK BMW Dunton Ford • ]ii\'• "'·" • '' "'"'U' , ll --·-------pe rfo rmance. 4·s pd.1========== Ll (099KJA ) ·11 Red 124 Spider Con· Brand ne w steel bJt d ,6fTOYOT.A OR OPENSUNOAY new. c. · LEASE NOW ve rt. 5spd. mai,:s. radio, radials. Rill. 1-owner. Co rona de lu xe. z Dr. LEASE l·.-.. -E-1-Do-'-,-,d-o-.-G-d_c_o_nd-.1 $3695 197 6 2002 ai r. S2700 675·7903 673-5781. hardtop, auto trans., Black on black. $1,650. l\s low as $116.29 + tax .l~::.=======::::::--l iP~onc~~ho~----9977~5;Do radio. heater . whitewall VOLVO Call673-8588. Dunton Ford 546 7070 '74 FORD PINTO Auto. trans., radio, heater, whitewall tires, tinted gla&i, wheel cov- ers . Like new. Lie. 48 mo. O.E.L .. O.A.C. ::,,,,. ••••••••••••••••••••••• tires, tint~ qlass, wheel 1966 Cad. Convert. Silver Includes 4 speed. tinted 73 914 Air, loaded. silver. rovers. (ZDVlS9). s-cialS w/blal'k int. xlnt cond / g I as s. I o r s io n ba r xlnt cond. Must sell. Hes! $1 099 .-~ ds to $795 581 2107 stabilizers. radials & de· ofr. 833·9264 Mmyto chooH from n p. · · a ler pr e p . + d est . g: b:anipll': '74 Cadi ll a c CdV D·I========="' charges. '74 Por sc he 914 1.8. •75 ,64 Elegance, run pwr incl '72FOIDTORIMO IEST COLOR Q AM /FM B track. xlnt Auto. trans .. air condi· all vinyl w/sun rl, cruise Squire wagon, V-8, auto. '24 ' ..... .t ... '"" .. ,. 546 ·7070 1174KJW ). ... $2-199 Du nton Fo rd '74 CHEV VEGA -. Hatchback. Auto. tr~ radio, heater. white "I tires. tinted glass, wh { covers. Like new coriF lion. (81J11':PD). :;.;: Tio., lu cond. 55795. 962·8108. . . AM FM control, FM Stereo tape, t.rans., factory air condl· SELIC n n horung. / stereo, Steel Radial' tires . THE SOUTH' • "'D '71·914 Porsche. 55,000 mi. low miles.S691420 99 NPR). 557.2747. boning. power steering! .. . ,, ....... ' · ... . $2199 ;.;-: ~" must sac. Lie 17SNJP, radio, heater, whitewal 1010 l\1cArthur Bl vd S.A. 1========"' '74 142 1""_,,------,-,-, 7-I tires, tinted glass. whee111 ========= ZHtJ Mwpattw """"' Tri...... 976 covers. vinyl interior, '74 Pfnto. 15,000 mi, 546 . 7070 ....._ • .,... I • •• 4Speed,airconditioning, ••••••••••••••••••••••• roof k L" (588ECU ) xlnt cood. Must sell ! .:~-=-'1·= , ri :?.::.::.~=.:: .. ,,;;;;;;;;:;;;;;.. f.:···~ .. .. . . Ii.~~. :::u:::: .. , • ••• - Hordtop $5299 •642=-c'7583=--~~~-.59356 sun roof, 4Speed, AM radio. wi 1-J STAR ORANGE COUNTY'S $3000orbstoffer wheels . Nice! (538DSM). '72 142 a..'fl'O&et 9920 548·970 1/642-9007 $3299 4 Speed, AM radio. air••••••••••••••••••••••• _...., .. "!:.': H '-Oell)'MfMlr~ ,Jot OLDEST conditioning. l430FYBl. :A ..,,,i.,. ..,.. ••<w1111~,,."-•S1et1, -r Dunton Ford ii'\ ;:J '64·3'6 SC,Ma<hxlnt,(X. l $3199 CONNELL , • ......,._..,n.,...,,,,, "' Oiler, Cool, Elee fu ell. <dlJftlifl 1111~1 :;r'l"JLll'~~~to~ Reblt. eng., new clutch. t4UI. UllW "71164 '°""" u•-"'"'"" t:·c~~~ ,..;; 1-=~"'"'1'~""'=0--r,~:"'.~-~":_:._·_·_0_"_•_r.1 v0tvo ~l~:,~~Atr:~:':.c:;: fM1~¥!~~! ·~i:~!.~,~~1:.Jf;., i;~ tit=--·li~. RolJt'koyce: BMW '74 Pon che 914 2.0 Litre. ••21H~ ~d. -ui > 1 n.. · • 1 ,.. • / l , ~I 1 "' "'"'" • l 546 ·7070 234 E. 17th St. Custom rl ms, radial 1966 ttn1bor CM b.tlt 9)0J SA. YE _.,.... ....-'66 Fair1ane 6 Cyl. 2 dr. ~::" t~ ~::::, t:~ a.ta.Mesa $46-4444 11 ,es . orig owne r .1 _~0f_f=•c..'~E=•~•="=es"-'1~·20=-·7=6-< '6l IJJJDOOI COSTA MESA club cpe, xlnt coqdl ~<'~ 10 ,..,. '°°'-10u... AM /FM 8 track tape '69TW4 Automatic trans., AM • 12 0-0 •1 • ''°" HAL GREENE BMW $ S.les &: aerYlce "LA. A.reo's M.wut DHilft'fH 7107 to"lre.lQne Blvd °""""'' (2 \3111t'1·66ll> l MUes West oC605 • '• Is a good day to adVertise in the Daily Pilot Claaaified Section. I, 546 1200 thntout.S495.SS7·0321 ......,. ,.,,.._ ••\:". ""' dttll:, Appearance 1roup, Xlntcond. 581-0317 r • d lo . < v vs ss & ) .:l =:-:"'-7'-:7."':'~:--:-·11UU""'....... 9945 I~~ !?=' ~!::::-- custom pin sUrped, g-reat r--"'~=""~=---1 Reduced to '72 Impala, ful ly loaded, ••••••••••••••••••••••• ::t--!!~ ,::~ •· • mileage, 498·1244 or •74 Tris::+t: SpitfL e 51699 ln11perrec! .. c 0 ond. Lohw 1t72 Uocoln Mark IV, .ll I~~ ::~--~...,_. ,.-." 1..:.642.c:..:32:.;J>::.·'--------I Low , low mlles , ~ •••· .. o O. cas · xtr&a.41,000mi,xtralm· ,.~ .. .,.~ '64 Por1C'he C Coupe. No Show1'00ftli lreth, map, d l·•~I 8.'II·2tL1 mac. $5100. IT1·28J3 G_::..., n=· nt: 'rw;t. Good rond. $A850. lu•1•ce carri er. f.aft. UllLO "7SNova,4·dr.Showroom dtyt.67S·M1Sev". U""""' ~ ll-. call 493-9154 (oc.stJCQ >. corxt All xtraa. $4 ,CJ!OO/of. M9wrict. 9147 ii~"" ~~ :;~ ..:::::..:::c::.:.=------1 VOLVO rer.~ar1.s. ··•···················· Jt~ ;;::.,.. ~ ..... i3. 911T. Wht w/orange !!,,__ ,.i.-·~ stripe . t oa dt d, mint 1lMl ruteat dr•w In lh• ,.4 2 Dr, vln roof, •ulo ;'"' ~'"" .. t::::'- cond l Must see! &?l-4489 1.966 H<J•hor-CM &41\930J West ... A Oallf Pilot trans. $27$0. 673-1901 at\ .~IO\:.:()",{'\. aft 5. HURi. Bth, 84Z..4fa5 Olftt E11..plre11·20·71 ClauU'ltd Ad. 642;sl78. •m or wknd.I IJ90. I.el · I • r f -... ---· ---------J I c 10 ..,,, 0.11 ~ • WE HA VE PURCHASED THE ENTIRE STOCK OF A BANKRUPT NEW CAR DEALER. OUR VOLUME BUYING POWER HAS ENABLED US TO MAKE SOME OUTSTANDING BUYS AND WE ARE GOING TO : PASS THE SAVINGS ON TO OUR CUSTOMERS WHO "lo NEW 1976 PONTIACS EXAMPLE NEW 1976 POMTIACS 1976 ASTRE COUPE Manual transmission, 4 cylinder engine. • #2C11 86U517522 1976 PONTIAC DEMONSTR.ATOR EXAMPLE 197 6 FIRE BIRD Tinted glass, console. rear air spoiler. accent stripes, automatic transmission, rallye 111 wheels. Qnly 125 miles. #258706N515826 NEW 1975 PONTIAC$ 1975 EXAMPLE 1975 ASTRE SJ AM radio. automatic transmission. rallye gauges. rallye 111 wheels. cistern SJ interior. rallye sport mirrors. wsw radial tires. #2X7785U548617 EXAMPLE 1975 VENTURA CUSTOM HATCHBACK PON TIAC • Custom seat belts. tinted glass. factory air conditioning, . power front disc brakes, 350 V-8 engine. turbohydromat1c DEMONSTRATORS transmission . power steering. rallye II wheels. steel belted tires. AM radio. #22 17J5L 102786. 21,680 miles. USED CARS EXAMPLE 1969 DODGE TRA VCO CAMPER VAN V-8 engine. automatic transmission. raised top conversion. #1987078395. 1975 CHEVROLET $ LUV PICKUP 4 speed transmission 4 cylinder engine AM radio. #CLN1448215500 SALES OPEN DAILY 9 AM ~ I 0 PM SERVICE 7:30 AM • 9 PM MON. G.M.A .C . & BANK FINANCING AVAILABLE TRADE-IMS ACCEPTED TUES. THRU FRI. 7:30 AM • 6 PM MOST MODELS AVAILABLE FULL REMAINING FACTORY WARRANTY 13600 BEACH BLVD. WESTMINSTER (leach Blvd. At Garden Grove Fwy.J CALL 892-6651 OR 636-2500 .. ) [ • DI 0 DAIL y PILOT Wedne$dly,J1nuary 14, 1976 • I Off M..t.ctw.r'1 Sffdr:er P'rt~• V-8 automatic atr cruise control, p0wer seats power door locks, sunroof. AM/FM stereo w/ 8 tra<;Jl tape, vinyl rool with louvered \4 w1ndOw. wire wheel covers. ~~~r" .... ,~~3~~ ,g;~~oi'"·:~ \vV AND INTRODUCING THEALL NEW FOR 1976 AT TYPICAL ATUS SAVINGS. FULL SIZE COMFORT IN ANEW SMALL CAR IN YOUR CHOICE Of THE PREMIER COUPE, PREMIER WAGON, PREMIER FOUR DOOR SEDAN. WITH THE ISOLATED TRANSVEl!Sf SUSPENSION SYSTEM FOR GREATER COMFORT AND RIDING '72 VW BUG IUHAIOUT MOMT50MX ALL REMAINI NG '75's AT SUP ER SAVING S CH.4.IG U: V-8. auto. !rans, arr conditioning. 4 cy1 . 4 seed. radio heater. rregs 4 cyl . 4 speed. radio. heater. mags V·8 auto trans power steering. power steering. power brakes. v1nyt w/ralsed while 1e11ered tires w/ steel belted radials [860EOH) PClwef brakes, whitewall tires. vinyl roof, mags with raised white lettered (72•2195 s 1495 's2ii5 :~2,395· '73 CHEVY SUIFfl YAN '73 INTERHA TIONAL '74 VEGA '73 DODGE coun V-8. auto trans . power steering, ¥4 TOH f'tCllW 4 cyl . auto trans . radio. heater, V-8, auto lrans .. power steering. oower brakes. radio. blcket seats. V-8, auto trans .. air cond1tion1ng, wfitlewall tires. (116JSC) power brakes. radio. heater, vinyl custom intenor (2l596Nl power brakes. radio. heater roof. (877HRH) s3395 11 $2895 $1695 s1295 I AU. CAIS AIE SUIJICT TO PllOI SALL ALL NtClS All ft.US TAX A.MD UCB4Sl. AUPllCISAUYAUDUMTl.10 PJIL. SUNDAY, JA.-..AlY IM. You~ ~----11rnnore-with1-a new '76- lnternationa "HEAVY DUTY" SERVICE AVAILABLE FOR YOUI R.V. OHE OF THE FIMEST SERVICE FACILITIES IM ORAMGE COUMTY! OPEM SATURDAYS 8:00 A.M. TO 5:00 P.M . MOMDAY THRU RUDA Y: 7:30 A.M. TO 5:30 P.M. HAR:BOR BLvo . Art.ts 0 ~ ~ ::;: ~ " ., ., Q ~ ., 'j -..... --- -· .. -Laguna/So.11th Coast· 'EDITION + •* OL. 69, No.14,6 SECTIONS, 76 PAGES w Denies Bee Drive Right In ••• San Clemente Police Patrolman William Trudeau examines errant car that ended llP in the front of L. A. Jobbers clothing store, 144 Avenida Del Mar, San Clemente Tuesday a fternoon. Driver of the car, William Beardslee, 80, of 221 Monte Vista, was shaken up, but not injured. Police said Beardslee apparently hit the ac- celerator pedal instead of the brake while parking his car. ·Glomar Mission Stalled Russian Ship Thwarts Suf, R~ry flans . • .• • • • S40lf: ( WASHINGTON !APl -Plans for another CIA attempt to raise a sunken Soviet submarine from the floor of the Pacific Ocean. have been thwarted by a Russian ship patrolling the wreckage site, intelligence sources said today. The presence of the Soviet vessel prevented the American &hip Glomar Explorer Crom re- turning last s ummer to the wreck site northwest of Hawaii, one source said. Top CIA ofricials are now "85 percent sure'"" that the -~s_o million salvage project will have to be abandoned altogeUtef. he added. • "The project is over. at least ror the present time," another source said. The Glomar Explorer, a sophisticated recovery vessel built by billionaire Howard Hughes, raised the forward third . or the Soviet submarine in 1974. or ii Ibey learned" of ii lhroulh news accounts. · Jt also remains unclear bow moch 1nteW1ence wfd gained from the government's $250 million investment in the ptoject_ According to press reports, the Soviet subm artne went down 750 miles northwest of Hawaii in 1968. After the Russian$ failed to find·th~ wreck, the Glomar Ex- plorer reportedly succeeded in raising a portion of the sub- marine in the summer of 1974 . The aubma~·ine reportedly !SeeGLOMAR, Page AZ> Employ e Reports 'Offer' By TOM BABt.EY °'"" O.Uy l'llflll.""1 Congressman .Andrew Hinshaw repeatedly denied to- day allegation that he solicited a bribe from a lawyer· representing Beckman Ins.trurne nts of F\l.llerton during an assessment appeals hearing at which the de- fendant appeared as Orange County's assessor. Hinshaw, 53. told a Superior Court jury as his bribery trial moved into its final hours that he never s ugg'ested to attorney Ronald Steelman th at things might go Beckman's way if the firm bought 10 $100 tickets to Hinshaw's testimonial dinner. Steelman gave that testimony as a prosecution witness. He further claimed that Hinshaw called a recess in the appeaJs hearing to m ake the proposition to him. Steelman further testified that Hinshaw told him : "I don't know ·Why the large taxpayers in this count)' are not supporting me." Hinshaw today told defense at- torney Marshall Morgan that the opposite was always true while he served as county assessor prior to· his election to Congress in 1972. "Most o( my support came from the large property owners," the Newport Beach Republican said. And he t estified that he could not recall ever meeting Steelman at the as- sessor's office or talking with the lawnrOftl'lbet~e. Tbe denial follOWed Hinlhaw•s admitlion ·that lie accepted two .stereo units as gifts during his term as county assessor. He is being tried for three felony counts contained in. a grand jury indictment: accep- tance of stereo equipment and a $1,000 campaign contr~bution from the Tandy Corporation and the soliciting of a bribe during the Beckman hearing. Hinshaw admitted that he ac- cepted a stereo...unit, the most ex- pensive model manuf'actured by <See IUNSRA W, Page AZl Baiidit Rohs ' Maintenance costs for the .618-foot Glomar Explorer have caused a steady drain on the CIA . budget, and there has been no in- dication when the Soviet patrol ship would end its viall or the wreckage site, one source s&id. Others l;ndangered Today's Closing . -N.Y.St~s TEN CENTS -anB • e Unruh Arrested Dmnk Rap Hits 'Big Jess' SACRAMENTO (AP > -State Treasurer Jesse Unruh was arrested.on a drunk driving charge early to- day, the state Highway Patrol reparted. Patrolman J , E . Weir said he saw Unruh driving erratically on In- terstate 80 in Yolo County just across the Sacramento River from the stateCapiwl at 2: J.) a .m . Weir said he stopped the car and Unruh (a iled a sobriety test . Unruh, 53, once considered the most powerful Democrat in the state when he was speaker of the state Assembly, was taken to the Yolo County Jail in Woodland where he was fingerprinted, photo- graphed and s ig ned a promise to appear in Washington Justice Court in West Sacramento. uNJtu" Lt. Tom Dinsdale, shift commander at the jail, described Unruh as cooperative. Dinsdale said Unruh was taken to his home in West Sacramento by a friend he phoned from jail. Burglary Suspect, 14, Eludes Police A 14-year-old escapee from the Los Pinos Juvenile detention camp eluded Laguna Beach police Tuesday. Seven officers attempted lo capture the youngster believed responsible for many burglaries including that of his own parents' home in the city. The youth esca~do!ficers by running into the brushy canyon north of Top of the World Elementary School. Darkness settled on the area during lbe search . One officer described the lad as "running like a gazeJle" through the brambles and rocks of the steep undeveloped canyon. The juvenile has been sought for some time by police. He has escaped juve nile facilities pre- viously and always returns to l.aguna Beach. The boy was first spotted in the JOOO block of Mestall Road in Top o(the World . A citizen called police. The boy led officers on a chase several blocks before running into the ca· nyon. Police officers followed th.: boy into the undeveloped area, but lost him in the darkness. $8 ,000 Fire In Cle mente E xtinguished A fire touched off by hot cigarette ashes caused an estimated $8,000 damage at a Harbor Estates home in San Clemente Tuesday E:Vening. It took San Clemente firemen nearly an hour to eninguish the s moky fi r e i n an upstairs bedroom at the residence of An - thony Asaro. 4017 Via Manzana. Firemen said Asaro was alert- ed to the fire by a smoke detector located upstairs. ·- Liqnor Store In Cleniente A lone gunman who wore a knit ski c'p robbed a San Clemente Ii-. quor1store of $175 Tuesday after- noon. A new American saJWge at- tempt while the Soviets patrol the area would run the risk of a naval confrontation. The CJA's first attempt to re- cover the Soviet submarine was diselosed early last year in press accounts · which CIA Director Willfam E. Colby sought to sti- fle. Jt remains unclear whether the Soviets already were aware of the Americpn salvage project Fire Destroys LB Home Later Investigation de - termined that an ashtray of cigarette bulls that had been dumped into a waste basket i~· nited the bedroom fire. 1t caused about SS,000 d amage to the struc· ture and $3.000 damage to con- tents, firemen said. Fire men said they were de- layed about seven minutes in ·responding to the call. They said the ho meown er firs t called telephone information and the county (ire department. whirh instructed him to call the San Clemente Fire Department. Police said 'the man displayed a .~~caliber automatic pistol and motioned clerk Richard crouley aside as he scooped the day's re: cejpts from the cash register at Dad's Liquor, 2421 S. El Camino Real. . Neither Crouley nor a customer in the store was injured duringthe4 :44 p.m. robbery. The clerk said the gunman 'wore a blue ski cap, a plaid wool shirt, brown pants 8f1d· &:old· rimmed glasses. He was said to be in his 20s. Witnesses said the man ran toward the muoicipal golf.course after the robber¥ . .Police were unable to locate a s uspect, however. coast Weath er Sunny ·Thur,da)" af'd slightly warmer says-Ute weather service, with highs along the beaches at 74 rising to 78 inland. LOws tonight 42 to 48. ·• ~ I NSIDE TODAY· A Mi,,i1rippl J!!r'I-'! ""I• mo11 "'11'1 bttn '°'kd~a ' $1.5,ool ,.,,,.,m,... pajd lo 1l<r lddtloper, police ••ti· HCT'~· -.and .a 1u.sp1ct tn trlr'CGN tOtt't found Tuesdpw . .5ton1.Af .• 1 •••ex "· , .. y-~ .,......... ..., ...... ..., ......... .. ti.:":~ ...... ~ .. "'1.U ........... M,'4· ~ ... "-~ ..... Ctfi....... Ctll = Ctfi .,...,.....,... , •1 ~ ""--•.. , ...................... ~=-"'·"'·~·""" :: =:::.,... ·=: ,.... C4-tl............ ..., .., :sure C1 ...., ~" .~ ff .... ..,.. Afi.M San Clemente ' Skate board Ban O k a yed Sidewalk surfers had best stay of( the concrete strands in the Avenida Del Mar business dis- trict in San Clemente. City councilmen decided Tues- day night that skateboarding on ·sidewalks in the 100 and 200 blocks of Del Mar be prohibited because it poses 8i threat to the safety of pedestrians. The council established the "prohibition under a ~~ce ntly adopted --ordinance permitting imposition of skateboard restric-tions :-. The council asked that the police department study other areas in the city where· skateboarding should be banned. · Councilman Thomas O'Keefe cast the Ione vbte against the ac- . lion. He said the police depart- ment has better things to <lo1than. • worry aboutakateboardin~.' , r • I . 8icentennial Flag ' . S'tolen in Clem enie · ~ of 1 Bicentennial nag Crom a CaJle Empalme residence in San Clemente Is under in4 r vesllgatioo by San Clemente Police. . Do'nald Ly.nn Mitchell described the lar1e nag as red, wbite and blue. wlth 13 stars and a 78 'mbl .. oned in the tel\ hand t'Onter. lie valued the nas a' .r.:io. ·(· I Fire destroyed one Laguna Beach home and endangered a nearby residence Tuesday. The house at 401 Anita St. '!f.,BS listed a total 1.oss by fire authorities. Estimated cost Or replacement is $3(),000. The house was unoccupied at the time and there were no injuries. Fire Battalion Chief Forrest Johnson said today the interior of the home apparently had been burning for sometime before a neighbor called the department at 10 :49 p.m . . Tfte rirst fire unit on the scene was from the Agate Street sta- tion. Firemen found the house ' • engulfedinflame. The city's two adWtional fire units were called in. Ten on-duty firemen and eight volunteer firemen battled the blaze. Chief Johnson said the depart- ment's basic attack involved pro- tecting adjacent structures from the burning home, which was gutted by the time units arrived on the scene. The fire in the home itself was knocked down in about 10 Other Stories Other South County stories ap- peartoda'y on P age Al4. minutes, he said. The cause of the fire is under investigation. It is believed to have started in an enclosed patio. The hou se had recently been purchased by Arthur Cheroski of Long Beach and was being re- modeled. Quantities of paints and sol vents were in the house. Because of the work being done on the home, the new owner had not yet moved all hi s belongings into the home. . The house was of single-wa11. batten-board construction. which contributed to the ease with which it burned, Chief Johnson said. Hartx>r Estates is a portion or the <'ity that is surrounded on three sides by county territory. Right W inger Was Informer WASIUNGTON (UP!) -FBI Direct or Clarence Ke lley acknowledged that a leader or an all eged secret para-military group set up in California to bat- tle antiwar protestors was a paid FBI informer. The San Diego Uni on newspaper said Sunday in a copyright article that a San Diego fireman. Howard Berry Godfrey, co-founded the secret army organizati on ln 1971 on FBI orders after the Minutemen or- ganization was forced to disband. 11lEY RESPOND W PILOT ADS "I sold the car to a Daily Pilot reader. In fact, the ad in the Pilot got much more response than the one I ran in the paper ln Santa · Ana." That's the advertiSing success experienced by the Costa Mesa man who placed this classified ad: '61 Gal1irte, air•' Pwr, cd ·. tlres, ~.000 rfti., $500 :ux-mxaf\rtAK IC you hive a car you want to sell, call 1142-114'18. It caly talteo • lew words In the ript place to attract a buyer. Aloes th Orone• Cout, t~• riPt "-lo the Dally Pilot • (· \.. DAILY PILOT LISC Sycamore Specifics Studied The Laguna Beach Planning Commission d ecided Tuesday that if a specific plan was what the City Council wanted for Sycamore Hills, ,, specific plan was what it woul<!_,l_et. ....-_ The commission was roundly thumped by the council last week for failing to draft a plan for the 522-acre undeveloped parcel in Laguna Canyon and for coming back to the council with a re- quest for more time and money to study the project. The commission said Tuesday 1t "'OUJd get to work in a study session prior to its meeting Jan. Z7 and review the three proposed alternatives for treatment of the land. Tht> three options the council has directed the commission to fonsider are: 1) development as a resort-recreation area with limited low dens ity residential devt"lopment, hiking and riding tra ils a nd a ''village'' com- mercial development : 2) rezon- ing to agricultura l-recreation, an action which would permit very little housing; a nd 3) public ac- quisition of the land. Sycamore HjlJs lies at the end of a shoestring annexation in the Y formed by El Toro and Laguna Canyon Roads. It ·s present owner Rancho Palos Verdes, a subsidiary of Great Lakes Carbon, has s ued the city, past and present city of- ficials and private cit izens for $37 million over an a lleged plot to de· ny the owner a right to de\'elop the land. Greal Lakes is also seeking to force the rity to extend a sewer line out l,ag un .a C;inyon road to the property. Group Cites No Smoking Non-arrest s .'\n anti-smok ing organization took legal action today to compel Orange County's deputy sheriffs and marshals to arrest smokers who violate the county's no s moking ordinance in public buildings. Named as defendants in the Superior Court action filed by the Group Against Smoking Pollu- tion {GASP) are Sheriff Brad Gates, Marshal Don Rhea and Superior Court Admini strator 1..esliel •. McCartney. None of the three defendants has made any atte mpt to rigidly enforce t he no s moking or-, dinance enacted J\.1ay 20, 1975 by county supe rvi sors, the lawsuit claims. . "' . • - Allergies Cause · ]ekyll-Hytk Life MILAN, Tenn. {tip!) -Keith Johnson Is like mo.<t 1· year-olds -be loves hamburgers. But when he t akes a bite of one-'-'bis eyes get g)assy and llgtit up like a Christmas tree,'' his mother says. "Then he starts staggering. He acts like he's drunk or on drugs," says bis father. . Keith's doctor describes bis behavior as "Dr. Jekyll~ Mr. -Hyde!."-and attributes it to the boy's alJergtes. An"d th'l~ covers a lot of territory. KEITH IS ALLERGIC TO APPLES, ora.nges, yeast , sugar, chocolate, coffee, corn, milk, cheese, ice creaiµ. pork. beef and soy products, according to Dr. William Crook of the Children's Clinlc ln Jackson, Tenn. His parents, Mr. and Mrs. Eugene J ohnson of Milan, have asked hunters to donate wild game -one of the few things their son c~n eat. · . "[ like deer," said the second-grader. ''What I miss most is chocolate pie and I'd like to eat at school like the other le.ids and drink milk." --- • . AreMtect11ral Board • I i t. • ' .. Clemente· Gives ' :• - · Panel:New Duty . San Clemente city OOWl!=ilmen __.Approved calling for bids for voted Tuesday nlcht to give the replacement of 18 pilings under city's arctutectural review board the municipal pier, repair of a limited authority to judge de-pier area storm_ dra_!_n aq! &igns for new-slngle--fall\llr--tepliCiment of TDeiCli access homes . bridge across the Atchison, The gilt of the council's action Topeka and Santa Fe Railway is to allow the city &tall to send to Company tracks north ofTStreet the board for: review any designs Beach. The-work is estimated to that appear to conflict with the cost U3,500. character of the neiahborbood where thebome 15 to be built. The panel already is em- powered to review design for new commercla,l, industrial and multi-unit residential construc- tion within the city. . GOP Head Asks .Cory • .Arnqtry11g Nominated WASllJNGTON (AP) - Prealdent Fora today nominated former White H9u1e_ counaelor Anne Annatrong of Texu to be the firs~ woman to serve as U.S.-ambassador--to Great Britain, and 1ald he ex- pected her lo do "a· superb job." - · Se;cret~I")'. of State Henry -A. KissJnger--and· Mn. Ford stood alongside as the Pres ident named Mrs. ' Armstrong to her new job and promised to continue to name women to govern- ment posts . · The British Foreign Of. lice gave approval Tues- day t9 'Mrt. Armstrong's appointment, finishing in one Week diplomatic formalities that normally take four to six weeks. 1 1 1 l The Jobnsons said they realized only two years ago that allergies were responsible !or their child's dramatic behavior changes. "WE WERE HAVING TO SPANK mM from the time he got up in the morning until he went to bed at night,'' said his mother. •·we thought he was just mean." A two-man council subcommit- tee made up of Councilmen Charles Fox and Arthur Holmes recommended the board 's powersbeexpanded. Another element ol the recom· mendations approved by the council Is a reduction of the board from seven to five members. ThJs will be accomplished by attrition. One member already has re- signed and another has indicated he will resign shortly. Fro•Page A I Be Dumpe~ HINSHAW. Fr0m Wire Senlces - . ' She said the turning point came when they bought Keith and his 3·year--0ld brother , Marcus, bunk beds. "I was helping Keith with his prayers one night and he just reached up and tore the whole top of the bedding off.'.' . The parents said they took the boy to the Jackson cliruc after their family doctor told them all the boy needed was "a good belt." Tests showed limited allergies. More testing last July showed more extensive allergies. KEITH SA ID DEERBURGER IS ONE of his favorite foods. He also is allowed peanut butter but doesn't like it, and is not fond of the dietetic jellies. Buying groceries is expensive and time-consuming, Mrs. Johnson said. She has to read every label to make sure of the ingredients. The parents said they allow Keith to have a glass of milk about once a month and chocolate pie or cheesecake when his report card is good. "It's worth :~even if it niakes him meaner for a little while," Mrs .• ohnsonsaid. CROOK SAID THERE IS A CHANCE THE boy can overcome part of his allergies, but he could just as easily become allergic tot hefoodshe's eating now. "If thp'; happens," said fl.l rs. Johnson, "I don't know what "'<:'I~ Jo." Search for 'Polite Rapist' Continnes Laguna Beach police are seek- ·ing citizen aid in the investiga· tion of a series of rapes recently in the Art Colony. Specifically, police are asking citizens who may have seen a man meeting the description of the "polite rapist" to contact the department with the informa- tion. The rapist is believed responsi- ble for as many as 10 reported rapes in l.aguna Beach, South I.aguna and Newport Beach. His latest trademark is the courteous shOws his victims. The latest attack occurred Sun - day when a 40-year-0ld woman was lured from her home after the 1ights had been turned off at the fuse box, grabbed by a k:nife - wielding man, forced back into her residence and forced to · participate in a sex act. The night of the latest attack, the rapist was dressed in a pair of Levis, wore a white T-shirt, red nylon windbreaker and tennis shoes. In other action at Tuesday's adjourned meeting, the council: -Approved apoointment of Fox as the city's representative to the Orange County Mosquito Abatement District. -Voted to ''receive andftle'' a request from the San Clemente Homeowners Association for a management performance study that would isolate ways of mak· ing city government more effi. cientand leascostly. -Approved a 15-cent per month increase in the residential trash collection rate due to in- creased costs of the trash collec- tion contractor. One Doctor Sitting In SACRAMENTO CAP> - A doctor has left bis south J.os Angeles practice to set up a one-man malpractice insurance sit·in at Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. 's re- cept ion roo m at the Capitol. (Related story AS) Dr. William Hendricks of Watts arrived Monday wearing a white smpck and stethoscope. Hendricks said he makes $50,000 a year from his basically Medi-Cal pr ac- tice, but has joined other Southern California physi- cians in a boycott of routine services because he can't afford higher pre- miums. TQ;e state chairman of (be Republicatt Parj:y urged Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. to ask Controller Kenneth Cory to take a leave of absence because he is surrounded by ''a growing cloud of suspicion.·' Chairman Paul Haerle said the controller should step down until charges-against Dr. lA>uis Cella, who contributed more than $250,000 to Cory's campaign last year, are disposed of. A spokesman for Brown said Haerle should t ake up the matter directly with Cory. Cory himself will remain publicly silent on the demand. Gentry Durham, a spokesman for the ~ontroller, said, "There will be no response and no com~ ment on Haerle's statement." Cella and three associates each were indicted by the Orange CountyGrand Jury and a federal Grand Jury in Los Angeles Mon· day on felony counts relating to the alleged embezzlement of $2 million from two Orange County hospitals . A probe repor'tedly continues into an insura nce co mpany in which Cory, Cella, and Southern California Democr'atic Chairman Richa'rd O'Neill oWn interests. Federal investig'ators have con- firmed that Cory's appointment of inheritance ta:< referees also is under investigation. ''The revel a tions of the mysterious Cella-O'Neill empire and Ken Cory's relationship and role in that en1pire have raised some serious questions about the controller's independence and ability to continue serving as state controller," Haerle said in a news release. Tandy's Radio Shack group from · Tandy's Vice President James Buxton during a visit to the com- pany 's Garden Grov e warehouse. Turning to the jury, Hinshaw stressed that be had his checkbook and pen out and bad every intention of·paying for the stereo unit. But Bµxton, he testified, was adamant and refu sed to accept his check. ·"And I didn't want to offend him," Hinshaw explained. "lt was not a very pleasant ex- perience," Hinshaw t old the jury. Hinshaw further admitted that he accepted another costly stereo uni t from former a udit or - appraiser George Upton while he was a guest at Upton's bome. The former assessor said Up· ton made the offer after h e . {Hinshaw) noticed a pile or Radio Shack cartons in Upton's Santa Ana home. Hinshaw said Upton told him that he had been given a number of stereo sets which were to be raffled orr as prizes by the·Coast Guard and that Buxton had in- cluded one for Hinshaw in the consignment. Hinshaw testified that he told Upton to keep the unit at .the Up-, ton home with the · explanation " that he would soon be moving to Washington, D.C. as Orange County's 40th District represen· tative and his moving plans were not yet complete. Pilot Eje cts · deportment and helpfulness he The action further states that non-s m okers i n the county courthouse and other county buildings daily face serious. health problems from the fum es emitted by s mokers in both • smok ing and non-smokin g areas. He is described as being stocky, but not fat or overly musculaf build, about Sfeet 10 in- ches tafl, bas light brown hair and a close cropped mustache. He is in his early 20s. He has a round or oval face. Some of his victims have described him as "moon-faced." "The governor must be aware of the growing cloud of suspicion s urrounding state Controller Ken Cory,'' Haerle said. "I therefore ask Governor Brown to ask Mr. Cory to take a leave of absence." EL CEN:rRO <UPI> -A Navy pilot ejected safely Tuesday just before his aircraft crashed into the Salton Sea. A Navy helicopter picked up the unidentified pilot from the water and took him to Yuma Marine Corps Air Station for examination. It is claimed in the action filed by Santa Ana attorney Bill Shef- field that "side stream" smoke fro m an idling cigarette emits twice the amount of tar and four times the amount of carbon monoxi de as fumes emitted by a smoker. Superior Court o£fi cials have not .yet set a date for the hearing into the writ of' mandate de- manded by GASP. Repor t Denied WASHINGTON <U PI )" - Democratic National Committee Chai rman Robert S. Strauss said today the re was "no basis in fact '"' for a published report that some party leaders were explor· ing the possibility of moving the national convention out of New York. ·. • • • • ORANGE CO.AST DAILY PILOT RObert N. Weed f'f•"'"'•-f>Wl- Jaek R. Curley YoCrPr~n1 ..... (;f:...,.. .. lrM_ ThOmas KHVll (dtUtf' ThOmas A. MurPhlne ..... _1,..1.0 .... O\arl.s H. Loos Rkhard9. Hall .. ""''-_,...1"' li:ti'6n LMIMN .... Ch Offk:e -,. .... __,...~ ~'""9"""'"'''· l".O ......... 'MV OffkfS (.MM JM.M: UIWtt1 ....,,.._ """""""" .. "'"' lll!l ..... ............. ~-· v •• ..,,, JSJt'I .... ,.., ~ ., SoM Cli.vt ,,._ Tl ...... C7t41 '42:-4321 Cl•WMlllAntrtiMnlM2-5'71 ........ et.ell All DeperttMnts: T ... ,._.. .......... "•-$.tft(-lt .. ..... ~ "'l Or .... 0-•I ~ C:..... ,.., ............ -1". ''""''"-· .-.ii..··· """'1tf •• M •t fl\M-Oll\ "'"lfl -~ '" ..-~ff •ilH111 ,,.,1.i -1'11ttlefl ~ '-'•-·'" ' "-f"""·""''. ,. .. , ... ,., ... ,, C..,t• ...... ~a. Solilllilcf1911.-. ..,. (•...., u.n ,._ • -,. j ..,. ,,..., ... n """'1>1~; "lllM.,., _INll..,. a•-•· • Bad Weather Wear Blamed For Breaks Winter weather and antiquated <'ast iron pipe have been blamed for a rash of water main breaks in the South Laguna area. The area is served by the South Coast County Water District and crews have been busy since December repairing more than a dozen breaks which have flooded streets. ''All of the leaks have occurred in the old pipelin e system in- stalled many years ago in South Laguna and Three Arch Bay," D .J . Collins, water district opCrations a nd maintenance manager, said. "In every case, the break took place in old cast iron mains which are s ubject to severe strains when there is a sharp drop in temperatures," he said. Collins said the old pipe in many cases has crystallzed and when subjected to extremes of temperature variation, the flex.· ing causes the metal to fail. So far, repairmen have been able to avoid long service out- ages by repairing the breaks without shutting down the main or reducing pressure, he said. The systems involved are due for repla cement under t he $850,000 improvement plan ap.. proved when voten pauec1 the district's $2 .75 million bond il&ue in November. "We expect to get the replace- ment program under way by the first week in Februaey when our own crews will be&ln the replace- ment or old control valves l.D .n· tici •tioa ol lulall-a( -m::t:: In the 1treell," CoUlno said. r .... P ... .41 GIPMAR •• brolte . •P•rl H · It wu belQ nllod ,,_ Ula deptlw. Vlltloua -reporU b .. e aatd t11o CIA IW!C fa lk1 tn recovertnc nuclear· Uppod torpffol, trllinln1 lo«• mdlllellodl•oltheScwlotcNW • The rapist usually talks with his victims prior to raping them, and in the past has talked about experiences in Vietnam. He has been armed either with a knife or handgun. In the past, he has replaced screens he has forced open, and locked the doors of victims upon leaving. In the latest instance he turned the lights in his victim's house back on. Village Plan Wins Approval County planning com- missioners, on a split vote, BP· proved plans Tuesday for de- velopment of about 16 acres within Pacific Island Village in the South Laguna area. The developer, Presley of South.em California, intends to build 78 single family homes south of Starview Lane and between Pacific: Island Drive and 1'1y!ng Cloud Drive. Lynn Hart HART'S John Hart SPORTING GOODS 538 CENTER ST. • COST A MESA • 646-1919 BICYCLE PARTS-TIRES-ACCESSORIES Shuffleboard Sets Bocceball Sets Table Tennis Sets Frisbees Boomerangs Racquetball Racquets Handball Glaves & Balls Basketballs Backboards & Goals Faotballs Soccerballs Ptaygroood Balls . Volleyballs & Nets aaseball r.ttts & Gloves The plans were apposed by O>mmbsionen Shirley Grindle +-------------------! Baseball Undei'shirts &'Caps and "Jim Thorpe wbo felt the site wUlbeover bullt. The 11taff also nicommended disapproval. Candidates' Forum Slated The Temple Hiiis Communlt.y Aoooc!atlon will bold a public forum for Lafuna Beach City ColmcU candidates beclnainr at I p.m. SUDda,y at the -ol TCJll!a . ...i JIUea Hamiltca, 12118 Dmmlnr Drive. · Tennis Rackets Wil~s . Bancraft· Yenex lacl1t Sbi!Pll 500 ta 21 oo Tllis S.11s TlllAis Sllits & Sli11ts Tiiiis llnsSIS Ba-'IShies S• Shoes Tradl SllllS Cross C.1by Sboes Wresli11 SMes Basatlal ·Sllles Bike le,irint-hrts .. Tires· Tas-Accessories The cudld.-will appeor in· dlv!doally before the alldl..,..... None ol the candidates will know oltheq ... Uons bef°"'band. Tbi auocl•tloo hopes that by tha isolated queatlonlnf, tlearer vlew1 will be obtained tb•n 1----------....,.-------'"----.----'----~-----1 llilOlllb the tradJUonal forum Oil• 9 ti & Closed SlnUJ · dltcuoolon. Tbe...ionlspuhl!c. 531&m 646-1919 • •\\ ~ • , I \ • • • • ' l • • • • • . • . ' • • ' • t ' • . • • ' i I • • • I -.._ .. ' A8 DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE . t Tr11stee Should Quit l An air of confusion and possible bad faith sur-gested actions for individual families, would go far to rounds the Capistrano Unified School District school avert pamic, insure coordination and save lives. board position held by A. E . Westberg -ot San Recent events in Arch Beach Heights can provide Clemente _____ _,"'important lefl•on for all concerned. Wefltberg was re-elected to the board last March althou11h he had withdrawn from the race because of a pending move from Trustee Area 2 to Trustee Area ~ ---.iuoyeQliy ~be favorable vote, Westberg decided to stay on the board. A few weeks later he moved. That has left Area 3 with two board members and Area 2 with none. There are dllfering opinions on whether Westberg is holding office legally. The county counsel'says he Is, the state attorney general says he isn't. Le~al c~nsi?erations aside, .\vestberg's decision to s~ay in .office 1n a trustee area 1n which he no longer resides simply doesn't match the district's trustee area system. It is not fair to the electorate. He would best serve the district by resigning, thus permitting the board to appoint a resident of Trustee :<\rea 2 to the position. Lesson Evident A gas leak that caused a fire and explosions cut- ting off electrical pq,wer and fhen water service to . i\.rch Beach Heights clearly indicates the potential for disaster existing in the hilltop community. Virt.ually a ny man-made or natural disaster would have extremely serious consequences for the densely packed neighborhood, an isolated community served by only three narrow, inadequate roads. • Bureaucratic Trap The story of Ralph Marsden and his Dana Point view lot approaches nightmarish proportions. , Marsden 's been .trying for five years to do something with his lot that wi ll earn back some of the thousands of dollars he's paid in property taxes. His .. plans have been tied up in a bureaucratic web nobody appears anxious to help him untangle. . When he .sta:rted out, Marsden told county plan- ning comm1ss1oners he wanted to build con- dominiums on the lot. The planning commission gave an okay, but then retracted it when new environmen- tal impact report requirements went into effect. Marsde n consulted the district planning com- missioner representing the district, by then a dif- ferent man, worked up an EIR and proceeded to seek approval to build his condominiums. Then came a de- lay with the Coastal Zone Conservation Act. New consultations \Yith the planning com- missioner, another new man, revealed that a restaurant would be the favored project a nd Marsden was again back to ground zero . Late last year, the planning commission rejected his restaurant plan because, they said, the EIR was inadequate. Marsden appealed to the Board of Supervisors. As of last week, Marsden was facing a board ultimatum torevisetheplanorface its denial. A disaster plan needs to be drawn up to coordinate all municipal services and provide for all elements of a disaster, including evacuation. Enough is enough and fair is fair. Marsden was the victim of government circumstances beyond his control and should be given the benefit of the doubt next time his restaurant comes up for action. And no more bureaucratic buck-passing. "i'b LOVE ro PLAY WITH YOU, ANbRE I, guT THEY WON'T LET ME OUT." Wid e distribution of st1ch a plan, along with sug- College Athletics Financing Debated· This is about the time or year that the moguls of the mega. million (or is it billion?) dollar professional football world gather to harvest the yields of the nation's colleges .. o\nd. ho"'' sweet it is! Time was when t he highly competitiv e pUTVeyors Of gridiron com- bat bargained with the all- . o\meri cans, offering huge bonuses, to get their signatures on dotted lines. But. in a mo· ment or in- s pira tio n , the'y came up with' a system which ingeniously flouts the Sherman Act. In complete disregard for the laws against slavery a nd in· voluntary servitude they devised the draft. Hence forth, college athletes with a yen for pro- fessional football would submit to round robin selection. No longer would free enterprise be permitted. No longer could they shop for the best offers. Either a player became the property of the club which drew him or he could sit it out. THIS, sports fan were told, would be fair. It would prevent rich clubs from grabbing up the best talent thus wiping out the chances of winning of the lesser clubs. In fact. teams \\'ith the poorest win records would have first choice in the draft. Well, maybe it is fair for ( EARL WATERS ) everyone ex:cepting the players and the schools that spawn them . Still. with the salaries gained by the players through their union ef- forts, perhaps one needn't worry too much about them. But what about the colleges oft be nation? Regardless of whether they are tax supported or private col.leges they are all struggling for dollars. While college athletics may be most Aesira,ble as .extra curricular aCli,vilieti they: ar~n·t the primary putpose of the in · stitution.s. Some of ttie smaller ones never have gotten into it while others have bad to give it up. TllE COLLEGE athletic pro· gram is a costlY' one. ~1ost of the athletes. if not all, are atten'Ctiii.g under scholarshi.PS usually financed with tuitio"hs paid by less physically gifted or by the taxpayers . Yet , with the tremendous r evenues taken by professional sports organizations it does seem unfair that the col · leges should bear the full burden of producing crops. Commenting on this phenomenon the distinguished Washington columnist Ernest Cuneo recently said, "For all practical purposes the owners of professional sports teams have ~ucceeded in turning the entire lJ.S. educational system into minor league farms for the pro· duction of supe rathleles. · · • .\ COUPLE of years ago As· Dear Gloomy Gus \\'ith all the people going around nude . pretty soon they v.·ill change the la\I: of indecent exposure to de· cent exposure. O.Q. semblyman Willie ,Brov.•n beeafne intrigued with th81dea or devising some means whereby colleges could organize and de· mand compensation from the professional world for the athletes they raised, in the same manner one club buys a player from another. Constitutional q!!_~tions have plagued efforts to ' ~cteVelop a legislative way to achieve this. . Cuneo advances the idea of a federal gate tax dedicated to education. While this would be a direct and easy way to collect funds it leaves some questions unanswered. What about the re· venues from TV which appear to be the major source of football receipts and some other sports? . .o\nd how would the money be dis- tributed to assure the schools which produce the talent of re- ceiving their fair share? However it is done it seems -time to sight in on this untapped source. As Cuneo says , "It is doubtful if a ny other business re· ceives the subsidies and tax benefits comparable to pro- fessional sports C"orporations." I What ls a 'Useful' Life? I worry about people who , worry about people, especiall y themselves, being useful. I also • worry about people being useless : and worrying about it, for t hat • matter. Maybe I'm just against worry· ' ing, by myself or by anyone else, !a bout t a n yt h ing ~ In which case {t#'" ~ ( CHARLES McCABE ) Ing _up of the earth 's treasure in little heaps owned by good Wesleyans. Perhaps the guilt was a result of the piling up, or the piling up was the result of the guilt, which m ay have been orieinal sin . Who knows? • whatsoever. ,~ • perhaps it ~~ would be m e e t t 0 <tf. IN THE Wesleyan sense, being abandon 1hts useful meant having practical morning's er-utility. By this standard the : fort before it Trout Quintet o( Schubert, the is properl y poetry or sWinbume, the wall ~ commenced. paintings of those caves in the Sahara, aod the c lowns of <Worry, incidentally. is an in· Picasso and Fellini, are totally teresting word. Its root meaning useless. Santayana said it more ls to strangle or to tnlure. Worry· succinctly, ,,.Music is essentially ing, prope.rly. ti what the fox useless, as life Is." does to the hound in bUdllnS. or Pragmatism, that uniquely ::!t. t:::~~~~~U:n= American way or looking at tbtn11 . ts the son of timeyoufmdyou.raelrwotr)'ine:>-wesleyanlSm. Although the Let us start witb a consu'rn· pbUosophy is American, ll! mate worrier, John Wesley, wbo tot:sln was s ounde d by • founded Methodioln, ind hod a • .Jlritlsber, Jobn Sluart MJJJ. In his grtat deal to do with what ~e :r...a:ron Liberty. now call, with a tTace or coD· ' ''l "'regard utnlt.y as the ul· deseenslon, the Puritan Ethic. tlmate appeal on a.II ethical Wesley's abysmal prayer sounds QUlll!ltions; but It must be utility down the centuries: In the largest sense. gnnmded on ''0 Lord, Le.t us not live to be the permanent interests of man u1ele11, for Christ's sake. uaproaressivebeing." Amen.'' There seem> to me & pas1iOO of l\lllt In th!> ulluan.,., The Wetleyans far too r,ead.Uy came to equ,.te useruln~l• with the pU, .. LAMIE-M INDE D American st•tesmen and politidans httve been thlnklng along these lines for ai leul ha.II the ure of lhe ' I Republic. We cannot say that we have inched a great deal toward either domestic felicity or the pursuit of h appiness through following this earnest course. On the other s ide. there are the poets of the usel ess. the people we call artists, people who believe that one Beethoven is worth at least one l-lenry Ford. and that maybe all Henry Fords should be killed aborning so that we could genetically concentrate on the production or Becthovens. .t\ great deal has been said on both sides of the question of liv- ing the useful or the useless life, but precious little of it has percolated down into the com- mon sense. THE .\RCllETVPAL man of common sense in our society is the frugal New England Congregationalist. He went to church on SUnday, and he m·eant it. He spe.nt the rest of the week screwing the Boston Irish and his own sibliDIS in • law office, and he-nlll.~ The coasummate example of this type was the late" Justice O.W. Holmes Jr. Like Or. Johnson, Holmes had a talent for clearing his head. and the heads or others, of rubbish. l leave you with a few of hls words: "It would be well I( the In · telligent classes could forget lhe word sin •nd think less of being good. We learn how to behave as lawyers, soldiers. merchants or what not by being them. Life, not the par.on, teaches conduc.L·' ' --··-. L/SC The Right to Participate Poor Should Pay Taxes To the Editor: The poor have rights too. Governor Brown's plan to eliminate taxes for poor people is wrong. The poor have just as much right to pay taxes as the non·poor. Because we all pay taxes we all have the right to demand better government and better people running that government. To pay nothing for your government, means you have no right to condemn, cajole, or demand political or social change. The poor would be lab\ed non·contri bu tors by virtue of their temporary financial status. Instantly you will produce a t\l.'O class social structure; the givers and getters. Reduce taxes substantially for the poor Yes. Rut eliminate them? NEVER. W • .o\l,T Bl.A..t.'IJKENSHIP TV Pain To the Editor : Thank you for the UPI story i.n defense of Douglas MacArthur. I watched "Collision Course" and found it very painful. Henry Fonda gave the worst performance I have ever seen and/or heard. He slurred some s entences badl y. I think . however , that the mos t incongruous thing was the choice of Mr. Fonda to play the part of Mac:.o\rthur. Mr . Fonda's daughter has openly espoused the cause of the North Vietnamese, and MacArthur would certainly not h ave favored Hanoi. Mr. Fonda has not said that he was in disagreement with h i s daughter's views. but felt that she had a right to speak them. This television movie left some very bad impressions, and I say that I am glad to read so mething good about MacArthur . I hope that eventually they will s top jumping on Kennedy, Hoover and Nixon, although I hold no brier for any of these men. We in America have much more important things to do than to continue beating on men who can·t fight back. So, let's get on with it -doing something constructive! RAYMONDJ. HEALY StRIR-nln9 To the Editor: You may know by now that f have been disqualified ror the ci- ty council race het,e in San Juan Capistra no. A person has to have a minimum of 20 signatures on their nomination papers. who • ( MAILBOX ) Utters from readers ore welcome. The righl to condense lelters to fil space or eliminale libel is reserved. Letlers of 300 words or le.ts will be given preference. All letters mU&! in- clude signolure and mailing address but nome.t may be withheld on re- quest i/ $11//icient reason is opparenl. Poetry will not be published . are registered voters in the city. t had 21. but they found three were not qualified voters. So now they say I am disqualified. I believe this is very unrair in my case and I'll tell you why . First or all, I had my papers filed on Dec. 11 . The deadline was Dec. 30 at noon. That gave them almost three weeks to check the names on my list. but they v.:ait- ed until after the deadline and they never did notify me that I was disqualified. I read it in the paper. Now I ask you, is that fair polities? · Another thing, I am a country boy with a seventh grade education a nd I am for the farmers of this vaJley. I don't want the city to buy the land up from the farmers, for you never know what will happen to it within a couple of years after they have it. The farmers want to keep their land to farm on like they have been for the past 20 years or so. and this is what l am for . I'm not saying this had anythi ng to do with me being di s· qualified for the race. but I am going to see my attorney to see if anything can be done about get- ting me on the ballot. I A~1 a staunch believer in con- servation or the soil, and J think along with a lot of other people, that we already have too many housing tracts in this area. Whether 1 get back on the ballot or not , I intend to go ahead and C"ompaign vigorously o.t o write·in candidate. Some people don't seem to tokR me serious. but I om very 1eriOUJ about this f'lectfon. And if anyone happens to wonder how 1 can spell vigorous- ly wi th only a seventh grade education, I happen to have a dictionary. and I taught myself how to type.. RICHARD HAMILTON Poromedle P...Ue To the Editor: May I use your newspaper to publicly thank the NewPort Beach paramedics? I would lite the public to know that for themselves. as· well es for me, that in time or crises !there is hope and bolp: New Year's Day I lost con· scious11css w~Ue. stayin« with a relative on S.Jboa Island. J was bleeding through the mouth and nose and h•d gone into a eon- vulslon.. At nl&ht on a holiday where does one turn? The only thin• they ~Id think of WIS the ptrtmedict. J was lattt tqld that 81 they bung •P lhe phabe the 1iren started and that within three to four minutes I Wu re-- ce t vi n g oxygen and the paramedics were wortcing quiet- ly and efficiently with the hospital. MY sister·ln·law WM under a doctor's care just prior lo the I' new year and almost went Into shock with fright . Instead of ig- noring her antl having another emergen.cy they were very tender and compassionate and were able to avoid a possible at- laC'k . These young men are not only keen, intelligent and well trained, but their kindness and gentleness with my worried family could never be surpassed. What a great loss any city i~ suffering who does not support and maintain the paramedics. OOROTJ.IY ~trCO;\l l)S Solid Performer• To the Editor: I "•as very ple :~s<"d to read ~i)tn· January 6 <"ditorial notin g t h<it theauditor.eont roller won a clean bill of health from the Grand Jury contract auditor. )'011 in dicated that county taxpa y('r:-; can start !hf" ne\\· _year \\'ith lhe ass ura nc e of g e tt in~ solid f)E'rformanre from .. at least onl' :'eC"tion or local government .. Hopt>fully you "'iii not consider me presumptuous lo commend for your reading any Grand Jury report of the past eight ye ars lo discover that the vast ma1orit y or rounty department s are solid performers. Though storms <1p- Jl('ar to swirl around us. your rounty depart men!~ are doin g !heir johs . Ry e very sl ati~t ic availabl e . in cluding rt'J>Orts from Cal Tax and the stat<' Depar1 ment of Finance. Or;i nge l.ou nty departments are the most t•f. fectiveof all in the state. R. E . Tfl0i\.1AS County /\dm ini~trat ive C)ffict•r Old Glor11 To the Editor : A.t the time when "·e should see Old Glor y flyin g highest-and proudest-why are so many replacing her with the Bennington fla g-a one family. one battl e flag ? The Bicentennial of America, the country whose ideals and history are in the billowing folds of Old Glory-why is she being put aside? People who want to f1y the flag with the '76 in it s C'anton, why not beneath Old Glory where it belongs-in its proper place? Let Old Glory fly as she always has, on high, the symbol of freedom and justice! KATHRYN F1SHBACK ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT Rob-vt N. Wttd. Publilhf'r Thoma• Kcevil, Editor Barbara KrMb~h. Edilorial Page Editor The editorial page of the fhlily Pilot seeks lo inform and stimul•le ttaders by pc-~tlng on this pa.v;edlverse commentary on topics of Interest by syndie•t• ed rolumniSl$ and e·artoonisll, by proYidina: a forum ror rt.Ide"' ,·ie•·s and by presenting tflls nc••!lpaper's opinions and ldt!u on current 1oples. The editorial opinions ot lhe Daily Pllot.appe:IC'· only In lhe edilorial column atlht toi1 or the P•ae. Oplnlon1 tx· prHsed by the columnilU •adi ca.noonista: •nd letter •'rit.ft"I" •N their 0"'n and no end~M et their "lev.'t by the Daitt ~ ihcMlkt beinl•fted, ,WedJiesd ll.Y, Jan.11, 111g \ r Doetors' Slowdown 1 State Faces t ·Care Crisis LOS ANGELES (AP) -A spokesman for a physician's gl'OU!> has warned that the d~n· slowdown in the Los Angeles area could spread throughout the state when Travelers Insurance Co. raises malpractice insurance rates in Northern California Feb. 1. At the same time, a Los Angeles County official ·said Tues<tay, plans have been prepared to call a state ot emergency as a possible means of combat- ing the slowdown. Officials drew up the plans in case no solution is found to the malpractice situation. The state has ad- vanced a plan calling for a state-financed insurance company in return for a medical ''Peace Corps" which would hav«! doctors donate 20 days a year to caring for the poor. THE LOS ANGEL~ County Medical Associa· tion criticized the proposal Tuesday and protested . what it said were statements by Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. tbat doctors "do not act in •a socially responsible manner to the needs of their com- munities." Brown also said through a spokesman, "I un- derstand the doctors' feelings and look forward to their assistance in resolving what is turning out to be a· very difficult social problem." Southern Calif omia physicians, mostly in the Los Angeles area, began the work slowdown J an. 1 · to protest an increase of 327 percent in their malpractice insurance premiums. BY TUESDAY, the 13th day of the slowdown, 98 of the 234 member hospitals in the Hospital Coun- cil of Southern California had experienced some degree of difficulty due to the protest. Nearly 26,000 workers have been affected - more than 4,300 of them laid off -while hospitals are losing $700,000 a day from decreased patient loads, a hospital council spokesman said. Dr. Gerald Glantz of the United Physicians of California told a news conference in Sacramento that Travelers -the insurance carrier for the 9,500 doctors in Southern California -would raise its rates for physicians in the northern portion of the state Feb. 1. . . "IT'S GOING to be a statewide movement very rapidly," Glantz said, add ing that Travelers in- sures 65 percent of the physicians in the San Jose- Sacramento area. Doctors in the northern part of the state staged their own slowdown last year to protest soaring malpractice insurance rates. Out of 3, 761 beds at Los Angeles county hospitals, 121 remained available at midnight Mon- day, compared with 184 beds 24 hours earlier. Another 1,000 beds are available if extra employes can be hired, and applications for new employes were being processed Tuesday. DESPITE THE slowdown. officials said emergency room services around the county re- mained available Tuesday, with no reports or any life-endangeri ng situations caused by the slowdown. SPEAKS FOR ANIMALS Actress Betty Whtte Druggist Killed In Heist Anit11als Proteeted Panel Backs Ban . ~ On Cruelty Film SACRAMENTO (UPI) -The having to simulate it," testified Senate Judieiary Committee, Min White, who ts a member of after listening to pleas from the American Humane Associa· Hollywood celebrities, stuntmen -tion. and animal trainers, voted Tues· Poet and s ongwriter Rod day to ban the showing or movies McKuen threatened that if the in which a nimals wer-e de· legislation was defeated, his liberately killed or abused. foundation for animal concern The controversial bill by would mount a campaign to urge Senate Democratic F1oor Leader that films be made in other states David Roberti of Los Angeles rather than the movie capital of would establish a new govern-Hollywood. W!dn!!d!y,JtnU!IY 14, 1978 DAIL y PILOT Al Memoirs ()f JFK On Sale ~ I.OS ANGELES CAP) -Mystery woman Judith Campbell Exner, who said she had visited former President Ken· nedy many times at the White House as a close friend, is trying-to sell her memoirs for $2 million with no im-· mediate ·takers, it was reported today. The report was carried in the Los Angeles ;rimes. ment agency, the State Com-And McKuen, dressed in a blue mission for the Protection of blazerandmatcbingtennisshoes, Animals, to make sure such mov· said opposition legislators might ies are not distributed in suffer at the polls when they are MRS. EXNER, 41, San California. It was approved on a confronted by celebrities con-S2 MILLION MEMOIRS Diego, bad recently dis- 7-1 vote. cemed with humane treatment or Judith Campbell Exner closed a relationship animals. which s he called "of a ACTRESS BETTY WIDTE, of "We're going to watch careful· 'Close. personal nature" television's Mary Tyler Moore ly who votes for what bill," with Kennedy over a 13 Show. complained of increasing d eclared the gravel voiced S/w IJeat Him •moothor soperiodinthe violence against animals by film writer, who was one of 18 wit-early 1960s. The asserted makers and warned the commit-nesses to speak on behalf of the relationship came out tee. "we're building a blood lust measure. · TO tL -Dli.,.,.., when she was linked to in this country." i ~ lie ............, two a lleged Mafia Among the abuses of animals OPPONENTS WERE the Mo-SAN FRANCISCO (AP kingpins. mentioned were the filming or · > At a news conference tl·on Picture Association and the Once before Marc1·a Black actual cockfights, tripping man }a•t Dec. 17 she had s"''d Motion Picture and Television had been robbed at her soap and ...., -horses with wires and slaughter· the full facts of the rela-k Producers Association. scent shop, a nd it happened LONG BEACH (UPI) ing livestoc . Sen. Nicholas C. Petris <D· again. Exceptfor one thing. ti o o s bi P h ad been -A pharmacist was 1The 1measure, ~hi'IB w:~P· Oakland), voted for the bill but With her right band Monday tran scr ibed and shot in the head and P Y on Y to movies 1 m er complained he would like to see she handed $41 over to the gun. documented. killed during a brief gun this year, would not prohibit celebrities exhibit "the same man, and with her left she came THE REPORT SAID battle with three men sc~nes1 de pl icting thviolencte to kind of passion and zeal for the up shooting. The thief, a bullet in the woman 's literary who tried to rob his small di~dima s ufasf ondg a.s the crf~f ~regs human suffering in this state." ·his chest, died before be got to a agent and San Diego at-dnlg Store. not s er unng e 1 mm . hospi'tal. h d b It t t th fi IT Is ALREADY g,,.; .. .,t the tom ey a een unsuc-D 0 n a l d R 1. c h a rd was sen o e mance com· a --·~ h 1 · l t ·11 1 · c lif · t tre t · a1s cessful in several at-Dearth. 55• Was Shot in mittee w ere eg1s a ors wi con· aw in a om1a o a arum ·d th t f · th cruelly Robert1"s bill was aimed DAl'v PILOT tempts to place her pro-the eye during the ex-s1 er e cos o runrung e new . "' h f f. H animal cruelty commission. mostly at the entertainment mo-CLASSIFIED ADS Po s e d book with c ange 0 gun ire. e "The reason they cut a sheep's tion pictures made abroad or 642-5878 unnamed New York was dead on arrival at . h . , h h 1 h · h u 'tedSt t publishers. Pacific Hospital. _:thr~o::a:_t _::lS:....:_t:..:_:a::t:....1:.:t..::s:.....:.:c '..::e::a!'.pe~r~t :.:_:an:.:.:....~e::::s~ew::.:..::~:::..:r..:::e..::m:.:.t~e~n.:;.1.::=~· a::es.:::::.·---------------=--------- PO LICE SA ID the .---------------------------------------------------------------~~-------------, three young men entered Willow Pharmacy about 3 p.m. and wandered around for several minutes before leaving. Several minutes later the men reentered the store and went to the counter with several items. The cashier noticed one or the men had a gun and she fell to the floor shout in g to th e pharmacist. Dearth grabbed a gun and seven s hots were exchanged between the drug store owner and the fleeing suspects. Sears u 0 located on the lower level CHILDREllS • J SALE STARTS THURS., JAN. 15 DOORS orlM AT 10 A.M. Misses' Nylon · ·Bib Knit Tops Low Priced • • • • Pants • Tops • Sears Former Low Prices Sweaters Robes Dresses • Hostesswear Coats QUANTITIES LIMITED Use Sears Revolving Charge Roomy Handbags Low Priced 299 Misses' Easy-Care Pants Sheer Nylon Knee Highs Were '4'' Q 9 9 tos7" lfJiiil each This Ad Effective through Sat., Jan. 1,1 I Sears I So. Coast Plaza 3333 ar11to1 st. L----""!"'. -Phone 540-3333 """"'~ <0$(0. Buena Park 1150 LI Palma Av-. Phone 128-4400 Oran Ile 2100 N. Tu1tFn Ave. Phone 637-2100 , sron HOUISI M.ncloy thrv Friday 10 AM to t "" Satvrcloy 9130 AM to 9 PM Svn4oy 12 Neen .. 5 PM r ·' , , r . . .. ' ..... Wednnday,January 1<4, 197& L/SC DAILY PILOT 81 Wednesday' Closing Price STOCK EXCHANGE •turday NIW YOIUt IU"ll -5dltt 5*s ~ NII ....... ::\I::"'''°' Oii ""' pt 1..a1 <-. 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SS 17'4+"' NetlTMCo •. u '"' ... ~:f:°J;; I~ 1m+i~ Tr-C0.9'10 14 24 .... I 1 .... 6 2.. ,.,,., • .,,. Col Ge$ t.06 I .. ~ .. For Mck .t2 s " Ullo. 'h J HlllY 1.-.. 21 ""' . .• NetofM 1.20 • ,., 24 + v. Rtllhem 20 7 .. ..... Transem .62" 171 '"" + "' APS pl 10.70.. z10 104 • • . ColGt.,, ~.. 30 S7Yt-~ FrM pf t.IO.. 12 2SYt+ ~ JoflMW 1.20" .. , ,~ + y, NClt Cp .n I SOI ti~+ I-Re d ·~ 5 2 20.. • ~ T'rens pf 4Y,.. I 70 +I #ltltlt.lSf .• 17 • .,.. v. ColG pfS,•.. I SS'lt-"" FtObl'l 1.240 .... 14t'I+ ~ .Jonn£.J ... ttl m 91\'t--NfotW. .so 9 14 171,\+ .... At::'pf2.Ji •. t xiv.! "' Tmslnc .Del .. ,. 22'h+ v. A1111AG 1.70 9 St 2311\+1 Col Pldures • 10S s"+ v. FortH11!11d .56 13 7• 3l .. . JMn Q\ .IO I 42 12.,.-.... Ne\!~ 1.jO I S6 1'~+ ~ At llld3.0lt 9 314 '4'1/t '"' Trensco .IO 10 10) ..... °" Ar!MRllOY .• St-·~ COISOflt04• uu .... ~ Fos1rWl1.107 11~·-Jonl.oQll.A0221 .. ISV.+Y, HY~.a..ao .. z299022-•"' ~~" 2V. •. 1$15 ~ ..... TmscLl".•510 II 1~ .. .,. Armeo. 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ICWNt.~ • 16 1~+ 11' "':T'°·'°·· 1S20101 •r: Rockowr ... 14 11 nv.+ v. TuuonG .,. • 311 12~ •.• Altcll pf l:V. •• 1100 t$Vt-111i eonoim •• ,, 2'S lS\41 + " 0trn1111 c.p .. 12 IJYH " l<tnPLt I. I » II"' . • . HI 11~ .. 1200 t06'h-.., Rockwllln 2 6 102 ,s.,__ .... T'wCFox .40 • ta 11\lt + "' AtltcP'2.IO .. 211 ~-4 CoMMtl'Oll SJ Hiit+ '4i Olmlnlnte .. 2 13111+"' IC.tty Indus s 3S 3'At ... N4eel_-.•~•• .. 29 mi.-11. Rock pf 4v ... 10 "~"' TvcoL.-11.2010 so 13'At + "-AtlRcll orl 3 . • 2 156 -6~ OonEd I :iCJb 5 1162 ll> + ~ GMml .~ . . U IO:V. + V. ~ pf 1.'6 • . I 12V• + V. Nl lllCNll t 7 241 14Vt t "' Rock pf I.JS . . 21 22~ . . • Tyler Cp .60 S 70 2~ + 1 Miii Corpst 14' 3~ ... OlntEd .pfl> 1I Stlh+I GnA011 .-.a12 21> 38YH '11 Kaufm&8r •. 499 7ft .•. NLTOp.'O e >st 17t't+ Yt RollmHl.2829 32 t.t'llttllh ~ U-ATO Inc .24 6 24 e + "' OIMEd pf s .. 2J 4ll4 +I~ Gtn811CS •• 14 13 11/'1 + V\ l<euf&cif 1\li .. 11 1S + 'io HorlolkWs S 10 1'5 11 + ~ Rollr In .52h .. SI 4110+ \lo UAll!IC .60e 2• 455 2"4t + ~ AutO.t.1 .402' IO 60 +I'/• ConEDl4U •. 160 "3\IJ ~.n 7 ,,. " + -"-k .4071 • 81h+ \lo Nof'lllQll\lo. S4 Is~+"' Rolllnsln .3011> .. 1324-"" UARC01.JO s 2'" ... Aulllmln .10 1 243 s"'+"" CoMl"dt3sis,.. n¥.+·y; Oft~ uo • 9 u +Yo ic-c.20 s 21 ~."' Nwrls uo 1 23 ~+"" Ronson Crp .. 6 ,...., ... UGI epu2 1 41 U'At +""' Aw. Cofp .. 30t 6 + \4io ConFdpf~llJ l 59 + v, Gen M ,5' I 7t 2114+ ,.. !(ell~ In .10:Z.S 13 4~+ !Ai NA Goel.• 9 17 JSYI • .. RopetC t.20 12 S7 16h ... UGI l>f2.7S.. 11200 21 +I A-CpWU .• 5' '14• 1·16 Con Frat '°. is 61 1• • Gn o. ..... ' 11 '"' ..• ICellooO ·'° 1• '41 23'1>+ ~ HA Mt t.15" 10 39 714 +'" Rorer A ... ,, 211 21\li+ !h UMC rfldu 1 t 114 nv. + .... AIQGorppf •• 70 21"+1 ConsHGi.24 7 .. 2St\-·~ Gen~ s " '°"+ 'h kel-od ... ., 14 13V.+ ~ NAmPl\1.2012 116 2l'h+ 'Ito Alurlo 40Q12 .. ~ "' UMET T~n .• 13 114 -V. A~.3033 1S 2614+ ~ CHGPllO .. 1:130IOtV.+ 11'1 GflEle<l.'017 571 SI~+_. ICIMllrntU e U 21YI ... 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A-1'1' 1.'0 II t1S9 37¥t+ \ CollP pf in .. ~2SO 71 • I °"''" al' 2 2' -"" Ke=-,. . . 17\'l + ~ NllQ6pr '·'°.. • 2311'1 + "" Rubbmd ~ iS 33 25Vt + 'A Un Eltc 1.21 • 400 u..-. .. Adlc:OG .20I01U4 ti+ 'A COllPptJ'1'"rt60 7l'h+t ~~• .J01I 21 11 + ~ I< Weill$ 204 22'1'Hll't NolnPSU6 9 SS 17.\&-V. RuckerC'.20 S '87 t814!t~ UnEI 1Jf2.7t •• 115" 27 + V. --ea--COnPpf,. .... ztOO .,v, _...... .. , ... ., '35 31 +~I( Wpf4 .. 1 '3\lo• v. NoMOll.7' 1 110 37\f•+ v. AllJSTOQ..1621113 121/•+ 'lie UilElpflVt .• xr60 37 +lfa llell&Wll .80 7 t6a 22\lt+-¥. c.!PwrpU •• 10 11~.1~ ~2 .• 1'2277 62141+1~ l(~t.111 .. 9 •SY.•214 NoNC!PfS,IO .. "'° 80 +t Ryder S'f'll,s-709 ....... YI UnEtpf•Yt .. nl0044V.-~ BecMO .30b s .. 6\4. "' °"' p DUV... 0 •fl4 + -= N . . l so -\Ii l<I 1.60 to ?67 40"'• .. HON~ ....... tSO 74Y, ... U"EI pf 7.'4 8'br 111 .t• t 141 tllll+ V. OlntlA\. 10lt • ' 211 6\lo + \lo Nt DU·· 4 '71-\ • , • Klllll . .0 9 11' 9 + lit NoNGCIU.• .. 110 9' • , $Mlll'll A .6011 57 31 + t .• xtlOO 73 + 2'-~011 .. 11• 16l S0,_+1"' Cllt!CMlt•·i ,.. 11-+ 14 G-~tl!•~··.u ~+ V. ICll'tdlC.'IOti 2' 1411'1+ 14 !WSllllW1.'4 t 11 21:i. ••. ~lnd13 SS 2\lt Ull RdtlltylO 4S S\6-V. ....... " .60 6 33 "-+ v. OlllC:O.. so St2 • • ,..,_, ....... , 1eYt+ -I( ... M Alrl .. 3 30Vi-~ NoSPpf),60 .. '100 '2V.-I .,.st 210 m .. v.-'14 UllOCelt ... 1 221 U'h+ ,.. ... !Qlrp.70 9 1S 1914+,,. Cllftl!CCli¢1• m 41~-·v,; ~GftAefl-•• -~~;; IYt-\lo l(nkll!llLS411 tel 3214 ••• NoSPpf4.0I •• l20 47 +tYI Corotn 9 123 '"•"' UnOIQlf21h .. n S7'4+ v. E .02tl 11 97 t3'ilo + ¥1 OltlCp Df1V. 7 u v. I " • •• l<o9Wlng Co s tj) 9 + " =0.'6 .. i400 10t .. • Mnr1 t.20 t 97 <»t'H 1'41 Ull PK Uo 1S a IOI.lo+ 1 .... I S9 23'41+ -CCDDflt\<'f •. 11 S3 .. -V. ' •• ll\+ \Ii !Copprs 140' 241 4G'llt+" E•60 5 )\It ... SUoLt .. 1.12. ,. 114'e+ 141 ""'-m .... 1\lo+"' r•lh .• 1600 M +2 Qlllllioc;pu2 ·i 271 •v.-.,.. GTE tM1•.,. u~-v. Ko11PW1i• •• i100 51 + ~ c;p• 111 u"+"' stt..SenF 2..,..,. 69 ~+i•ir. Un1roye1.so 1 no 1~+ :i. IMCel UM 9 " ,.,,_ ... co llPi'" 32d 1S ., 10'1/t-;-.... GTE pf IY't .. 2 aa + "' l<Orkar' '" 2J I 31'-~ Htllt'DPf 1.4.S .. • 3SVt ... stPeutS .... . . 65 ''"' ••• UnlroyelDI •.• 1190 16YJ+ \It ......_ln<tl 151 30V.+1°" Ollll Rlty . ll tVt-~ GTFleplll4 .. 1100 14~-1 Krlftco .'210 142 43"1+14' Nwsf.Alr1 .4Sll IS2 2S:V.+Wt StRttllsl.52 9 •St 37Y•+Hll utll8'ends .• 12 6 +IA Pn :l 11 4 ... + ~ CloMtntlOllJt't SU ~•'"' GT"IP'UO .. dOO 14~-,_. l<rffOI 1?~» 111 ,.~+"' Nwlen 1.7010 1t ••~+ °" S.IMC 2AQt2 2" 6._+"' uto8rlldof .• 17 I •.• ,-pre .. 4 t2f'I-"" ~Ollpft 4 90'1'e+2V. 0Tlre1.IOQ 7 ttS ..... 14 Kroehler-.• 1 ,, ••• ,... ~ .. Illa 26Yt-'41 SenDGlt.2020 221 12 ......... u110>r11.7tb .. 82 ~· ~ y2.20 s 31 ~ ... I m .t. -•• ._ Genes<o lllC •. 76 S'l\+ v. !<roger 1.36 1 .... -"' l'fWEnll'ICU 4 S-4 2'"41+ "" IR"* ' 2 7Vt-\Iii utdFllCll .to • 71 '"• v. •.• s 17' 12 • ... II •11 .... ·~" . .• Gtnst.lr 1.20 s 1' 20"'+ "' Kvsar '" .20 .. 3 S¥+ "" Nwllllrt.7S I "' ~4'1V. Alto 16 .. , ..... ~ UGesPL .7t 6 121 , ..... 'At rust3 • 219 ~+VJ g:.1'1 Oet•tl '51 2' +" GtnulnP.Mtl 90 •~+"' --l.L-Nwltllldws •• 57 17 +t\4 111 1.10 1 210 34'4+ v. Uld Outr1yU 60 t'A+.,.. A2V. .. 602'~+Vt c::on:.·~··1·r.~·1~ GI"-' ... ,, .. , 41VI •!--L,k()esl.60 1 11 ""•"" Nw1tlnllfS.. 2710914+1" ... ,11111 .so .. 12 ·~ VnltlllU2.'2S ,., .......... 11,60 • • 11 2'\lo + loll CllOlt Vld.. 44 J ! \<\ GIPw Al~ • • " 2'11t-Wt ~mtn5" 111 <t 9 12\.'J . • . Nwsllllf 4.20 .. S4 II V. +JV. • f<el~I .30 t 1$0 UV.+ j '. UnlndC .q S 1 10 -1"' R .2:21S 210 11>\<\+~ ~'"'···· '5 52\\+" Gll'WPf7.72 •. 1tOO 71'h+ VJ Ullt8tv.n' lS 1..-+ v, Nwttl~CS .. "'09 +s ~-1.•1 • 11 + v. Uftlndpf.•2 •• , 6"• Yl 8elkl11<.60 s 20 ev. ... ~ Latt.,. 137 s-Gtrtiw 1.1010 '" t•llt+ ~ l.ffrslell .» • m 11.4+" N.wM111.011114 u u11o+ 14 ,.,.1E .. 31 ••.1»+ v. Uldtnns.10 1 n S\<\ .. ... Mf ·'° 4 n 24\lo+ " ~Tire • " ' 10\lt+'~ OrttyOLJld u 17 ll't + lit L.t«S pft\11 •• 10 ~+1V\ NwStl uoe 12 SI JOY>+ \\ y ,..., .60 5 7' 11'1 + "' UNsy81.CM I " IOvt-"' THEY SOUND FAMILIAR -yet these are nypothetical ads prepared by the Better Bµsiness Burea u of Metropolitan New York to highlight for you how Money's Worth ~he ads ~iolate th~ di~clooure rules or the 1969 Federal Truth m Lending Act and its su~equent amendments. · ~mong ot.her things, this law requires that if an ad· vert1ser ment1ons one feature of credit in an ad -such as l~e down payment total .,.. the ad must disclose all other Vltal terms. such as the number, amount and period of pay. menta that follow. · I~ the first ad, for in.stance, the down payment was mentioned as a percentage and the cash price. The ad also should have reveal~ num~r or payments (18,24,36, etc.), amount due each penod, penod of payments (weekly, mon· thly, etc.). and annual percentage rate expressed as a "per· cent" and labeled "annual percentage rate." • In the se~ond ad, the same disclosures should have been !"ade. Also, it used the phrase "Cull price" -but that was, m fact, the cash price. "f\all price" would include interest payments and would~ nearly double. "UNFORTUNATELY, SOME advertisers are not aware o.r their obli~ation to disclose credit terms under the la~. _while ot~ers simply do not believe the consumer needs this mformahon," says Woodrow Wirsig, president or the New_Y?rk BBB .. "But an inteJllgent consumer does need the credit t~formatton and businesses advertising credit must supply i_t. Check all ads for full disclosure, as one means of evaluating the company.'• ~on 't take anything for granted. You cannot expect the media to check out each ad completely. They haven't the time, personnel or expert knowledge. The best way to pro· tect yourself is to be sure you understand the terms of any deal you are considering. · In the automobile financing field in particular and in installment buying in general, credit double-talk i; a real threat to the innocent consumer . . "Instant· credit,·• ''credit guaranteed " "no credit ap· plica.tio~ refused'' or "no money down" ..:__all these should ~ dismissed as come-ons. The advertiser who lures you with "no money down" may in fact require you to obtain a separate loan for part or all of the down payment in order to qualify for this "no money down" offer. . JN THE AUTOMOBILE leasing field, ads will multiply this year. A sample: "A luxurious 1976 automobile $217 a n:;iontb , e'1uity lease. minimum maintena nce included addi· tiortal maintenance optional.'' ' Basically. there are two types of auto leases: "closed· end0 ' and "open·end." The open~nd lease is also known as ap ''equity" lease. Under this open-end or equity lease, the lessee may be required to pay an additional expense at tbe end of the lease period based on the price at which the vehi· ~le may be sold at the end of the lease agreement. Accord· mg to BBB standards, when a specific rate is advertised this obligation. if it exists must be advertised. ' But ~requently, it is not -even though the obligation may run into hundreds of dollars. Watch out for this pitfall. Be wary when leasing a car of such phrases in ads as "full insurance." "adequate insurance," "fully protected." These phrases are nearly always meaningless. As for such pledges as "full maintenance" or "Maintenance by us,•· these should mean that Y.ou, the customer, are not obligated to pay for any type of mamtenance. FINALLY, BE ON guard against claims that there is no cost for credit -often made by stores in low-income areas which sell f umiture. The charge is there, probably hidden in the purchase price. Under a 1~75 amend~ent to the Truth in Lending Act, ads for extension of cr~t repayable in more than four in· stallments must, unless a finance charge is imposed state that "the cost of credit is included in the price quoted ior the goods and services." By no means do all businessmen obey the law . Ugly Fish Looking ·Better to Consumer I '"·'° 1S tn u.+ " ~Tpf Iv. ;t 13~+ '4 Ge~.20 r 2 17141 • • ....:i .7,, 10 29 ,.,.,___ V> Nrtn fi? 1~ I Z2 1114-Vt ft.2'.. S-4 111 .... "' utd MM .80 .. 2.. IS'h + ..... 0\~l 2~i ~~ ~d'-:'•""c·':P'.:~ ~ u,~_! ~ ~=-~::·: :i ;~~:·~ ~~~c.s· ! ¥. n::. ~ =~·1i~~12!1 HE:.~ E~~i8~~ !l 1•13~ •. ~ .• ~dR:r~c"i~ ~? :!:-:~ iCtl ' c;:oro~ ...... "'ddL --" .,_ 1 ,, -~h• -~F1-24112 ts_,.._ , NARRAGANSETT,R.l.(UPl)-Anug.lybuttastyfi'sh l!llS·olO. 53 1•'14• ,,.. eomo112eU us 4111',+IY. ... ··-" s ...... Le V• I .. 19 1 •.• NV p 4 .. '"' ... Df .2013 83 ~· v. ... . _ ... lie ._ "*.,t7!.'~ ": 11~ ¥; [ri~"'r'J.·4 '} !~! ~ 2!r1e::!";j,~ ~ m~; ~· t!n,,., ·~ :; 2t ·1::Z!t"' o... i111t ~ 0 20 l'At+ ,4 ~·= .~ m 1:Z• .~ 8l&~;~ii ac~ l~~: ~ thrown overboard by North Atlantic fishermen may hold a.c111m1t .Jt 11 11 " ... 11 ;;; 14 ,, ''""+ " Ginos ~ 11 au u .. + "" Le110111" ,_1'111 u 211h " o .. 1111Pr .tt • • 12l'tt+ v. Sd!Mfer ep .. u 1~+ "' VSGYP' •·• .. 12 ,. -\.II the answer to the area fishing industry's problems or llK""Di",... "'"" ... .-c111u1410 w.. 4,..., ~ ·• 1 1~•"" Le119rt11 ~d •• 14 •"' ••• Occldll"'" stoet 15 • ~ ~.-22 •ss "-.-~ usHomecp •• 235 ·~·"' .. dwindlln°1·ncomeanddeplet1onofwell:knowncatcbes. 8"c~.1 • 1'0 U'11• " .. eoi. ' " ,,_.,~ 0..-. Mer 1 " ·~· v. LllYI Stft ... ' m <IO\.'J+ ~ Ocdd"' "'·. .• I• SO~+ " lti .61ZJ 171 22~+ -l,ISlndu .20b •• 21t •141+ ~ • I' ....... '" 3 $5' l6\lt+2 °"'. 1 P"l .14 IO 76 I~ Ofe«le Un le I = U~+I~ Levitz l"UNI •• S2' •"-+a Ocd'Ulf).~.. e •fV.+I .•22 no l11A+1 I.ISL.a-.a 7 ltl 914+ "" a.1ce"'. '' u tSVt+ 11i Crocker 1 " 1 ,,. 22..,.. ··" Oeldwlt l"ct • m U"• ~ LF£ C'M1l!I 1 ... • + OctPf~.50 .• tl 22~+ •• ep .10 s 11• 1~+ v. 8ss~·~ io ~ 1~~-·~ •1 University of Rhode Island --------------'·'°1l J •; ; :: "°''~'·· '1 ... ; " l1·71ii u, n"! t L~O ~~ll~·'t:IO~~ ~ lf"~ ~:'(ltlf:: ,.J 2~"'; ~ e'r:3:: ~ ~: 1f~-.~ USS.tt:l •12• n141+2Yt marine biologists arG trying ' t t~ t•=• "' ~ ' :t i::• ~ '· n •rt U•+ .., Nt" 2 114 .. • OQOtn OP, • 10> 17'h+ * Fz i.oe u s1 21 + -us Too .to,, " 20"'+ °" 1 ·to develop a market for the flounder. Sixty families aske ' • io:·~ · ,,,+\\ . 1m10'+" i>·'°' »1114-~1}"1.1'·· 211~+"' ...,,,,, .,1, • .,.VtcfTec11111211 .. s•"•'l4 tosampletbertshconsidere 10 " +I" •1. ,~ '"' 1 1 "2 21111+ ... ·Len .. 12 2• ... Id, ... '° 4S3 18~+ " Sc»tt.Peci ... 1014$4 1•~· YI UtdTKllpft.. 1 '""'• "' 1 firm. white fillets that come 1·t delicious. 'JI •• tO i.+1 t'#nlt·eot l4S 40 +'iii 1 •i M tU•+'1" yt\<\ I t04 M +... • .. a.to •• 140 43 •.. Scottvs 1.tOtt St e'A+ 14 UnlT'el 1.ltlO S56 IS\.\ ••• f f ' b k , ~ s t0'4+• .;10 1,,0 " 1~ ece ,, , • 11 4-v. S\lo •• 2 11 +stt. pt4.• .. rao 47 + 14 tow'"~'" 32 nv.-~ Un1T11 wts •. n "' ... rom is nown as ocean Fillets experimentall pf 10.16 ovtl pUYt •• 7 32V.-l/o UnlTpfA llli •. 14 19\t+ " po t m tt fj b 1) ~• ::11 l'!fl c:~·t.14 : 2~t\:: ~~;: 1; ~ ila1 ! U:.1·,~!o.l ~'. 'iil'ra! e °'""""'~::::::: ei~~:; .:l .. ~;;~ iS!?::1i l ':ll:':a eel.' U on S or ye OW ~:ri~. :.::/:~~ ~~ .1:~: •2 i+ OIMI •• !1 dOO .. ••. "6 ·; .. ,t~ -U-1 '.I. 2• 1.-•11 °"~'~ .... ,,. +2 r ''° s • 11..-~ "°" '-P 11 no 10f'I+ -. d • ... CINI .t, 1V ' ~"' ' : n + -Ulltlft t ., '70 ......... Oii •oe .. r100 ,. +• rl SI • 1S 4~+ " UOloM ... ,, S71 ·~·IV; between $1.19 an $1.89 IX •• • •• CUrrln ~ .. " ,,~ .. " , ' ' ,...~ ~ Ut!RCV,.2 .. " mh -c .to s • I~-\\ $Nllret11 .IOl4 10 2'11\+ .... USLIFE .):l. 176 Ul't+ "' THE SCIENTISTS said d. 8tlt " 1 1 + ~ o.rtlta .-1 uo n~ ••• 1 1 .. .,14+1" l""A.. • 10 -"' 1 .... 11 a~ Ulli+-"' ..... '.' 6 sl't+ ~ VMlfeFd.,.11 1 1~ • N E 1 d 'th poun ="'' , 111 t'" ewti.wA,.. s u • " H i. . • 1 ~ ••• 111Wttr •• • •H• • .. ff{l ''° .. aa10 10 -• ..-10 • m11+ "" ~ 11ao • .lll Jt + ~ ew ng an ers w1 a yen ., 1111.u.21 12 ;"• ~ eut1erH uo 1 • ""• " 111.4' • nt tSl4+-. J ,., '"• ~ ~ 1.t0 1 n ""'• ~ .» 'J ... :m• ~ ulM 1 1~ .. J5 H" •·· for ftsh chowder and baked FISHER-EN someUm,., 81«11&D.A>I 11'2 \\.+ \\ Cfe~l •• It 17* ... UJ.i I 1 21\l-.. I.JO AS UYl+I~ ...J.», 1, 1297• "2 ~!ll,._ ~lnt.~ll •• 1.t610' 1 ... •u. 11U.1'.1 • +I fi:-.. m""y have to Switch to the P11 " .... ,Jlln.i I JI + -C.,,,,,. I.AO 1 1S u-.+ * GrtWpft ••• 50 tt\6 ·u ~. 112 7\lt+" .... ~ 29-.wT.... " • T ~ utet1f11t11e11 "',, ..... iM1 ca I s , 1414+"' --o o-onioie1. T n ••111+ 2. 10 •1 ttYi ... 111 .aois t• 10 ••• .1 • u1211.+ w ute11Pu.•10 us n +"' d d b t 1 t 'f 1 fmd their oets contaln tWt ut. u ., .... "' De!MllC .io •. :ff t'H-.,. ~'-1 ao1 ,.... · . u 11 2,..., L ·"' s 10 -v. "'1c:ec.1a , ..o SY•+~ uUtvP1~.~·~80 .4• '%" ,•,~.·-.. un eruse u pen i u · • .._ . t i i.._ " O..Rlv .Otct tt ti.lo-i _.. . . » •~ .. . ...,_ s •• 1 • m 1M11+ "' i"'; 1 • •3'-• . • ,_ M 1 u tttA. 11o -~ .. ... 1pec1 5 like t thirws ocean pout and thro· irll•·· ... ~,.... ' t.t1o1i-..., l11C ., ii. J + 'llt ""'tu'~, m ,~."' .!.f, ," 11 _.,. k•sP .t1t7 • ''Ai ·:: uv111p11. .. t4-.+" e ocean pou most or it back. A sma. ~.~ ,.:1~ ~.:.:·~~~ § t .~~.\ t1 rat:~ tlteJ,,'~Jl ::'!:,~~~:~ ' t; ·1~~~:·.'" iJl1i:Z: ~ tt~=;: _.,..,U u -11t because cod. haddock and amounUsuaedilldustriaUy. ' ~ ( ( ( ' I \ • • 1.llO 10 +I~ Oltl• Gtflrti" +tYI • ,._.... ,, ·--~ UL pf02.'1 •• Jj U\lt-\ll 1.20 IO ,. ,. ..... ~TI.ta s , N -"' =~" :tg ,f 0 IJ-.+ "' flounder are nearl~leted .ts1! .. , Mtu,. 8:ycoe.1» s ff111 +-.. Ou1fL1te.1' 4 ,,. '"•"" LA1110f~eo21 ts nv.+ -.1s s » ,.~.YI '"'GI j 1; 11°'+ Yo ..._._. •·• • 11~+1• ~ • "Because pout is abundar •11 • t~"' V1'0llH M" MO ""-"" ._ '" •• ,. iv.-~ I.Mil J ' " "' ... .u • ,. ttYI + -uro; '· •• ,.,_. -.. ..,.._ C6 .. '• ,_ ... URJ prof.esson. WUng and can "'-cauaht _ _... pn .'4 I J1 .,.._" DltYPU 1 ... I .. I ~ \II Olrt..,. t 14'J tt"+ .... ~ .1 tO 40S U + "' f'll i! U U 20,_+ ft. ll'P( 1 •• )0 + .... ~II·~ .. 122 • + "' nMMllfS l t u.. _,., ,, ·• •• , .... +1111 Of'\.pf'2~ •• 1lett0,.SY>+~ ~.~.~ ~ ~ .... t~~ ~-·:':mi·.~ 11 t'.nff ~.1'"'!1:t ? a i.f-1~ :~:h. n~·4 ,;; l::;~ ~'."" O~~mp&rG0C4?aftpe>U CeSSed With CXlstJn 1 ::e!.fl~i,:·11 ·;,~".:'fit i , ::·1:'° ·: ,-= "! i:-tl :!i~ ll~i~~ •. ";1 l! lfel:·ii .1~.~i ,; W:;~ :r:;.: "! l!t·: :,,~:: -i! 'm! ~ ':.!:l'~d~h':..~~~~~ ::e ~~!~\~~~.~!!•h:~d< 'I. ., ft!~ '· + i: .... .. n ... -YI ,, ~ ·~· \41 ,_ ~. • 1 '' V• £lee '·'3 • MO , .... 11t• part.lei pan ts could not dist· a Ume wh@n ttacliUon.al th 1 fJ +Hit .. +1 rwt •• Oh· tt . .1 -•"' :! tt1 t·• .. .U n,. ... 1 1~ "$+"" v.fe'· ·· ,~1h "' ioguish betwe~n pout and .,•/#.;I, ll.•:: -·~~I t:I: !JC:~ ~=~t'11 -" 111l1 tt::i "•tl•HU~t: :..'!~~,! dt:~., .. r-2i ::: ~= stoc1csare1ow. ta .~ ~;~ ~J1~ -"~:.: . ,. ...... ~-... ~, nU.1:!.,. ,:: ~ m:-·~ iM~'~! . I~:~ r:e· l-~1i ::. , !l"u--~-~=----:"":::-tr-----T:C=---"'."."" .... ----~---c-l 1olt ~Mtllt "MICtiWl-41 *ti! M--1. 9112~+• ~" •""' JP.1' •• 1 ;_•t '~llldll Clolt("''' ... ...,, Ill t.1•t ... !.._ 7t \oio+ ~ Mellllfa•e .. +'~ r-· ll ! .... -'A 1 I~ U\\++" W + '-== ...... 11 + ·-. -,,-..0.. 0 J .-+ '°" • ••JS • ._ ... Hel1"'11J t 7 1 Yt+ ~ J H ~...-'U: ·~ ,,...,_. '°' 1 I '" 111( tt • '--·-' tt 1' .... ! 1 t !•-+ ._ ..... ...,, t .. , .. +N _. 1 12 •ft+.., 1 t + ~-' +"" c.r..-6 • '1"-lll ,40 n tN p• f.M •• ..~1'6 HMl!lte I \ta '"'• -. II ,ts J 129 S -lo\ 4 t 1 +\I. ts , • ._ WIOIM t.• 1 tt ts°"+t" .-4'·• ~ J ;." &t!~~u~M :·= 11· ·i if ,~I'. ~~~ i! ~~,~ :.~ ·1 i.s ·~.; "'.·~,.5\\ n: h~ .... "I!~ •1-r:t•. 11 >•• J •'" ,...I l • ... ii I' • . "llH • t ..... f~:" \tllTji 2 Ir':= ~1·4 ... ~ r-r,.......,·..:.-~ ... ,.. ·~ ""' ~·ra \ ., i' ti • • '· I u. lilt • .,.. ·" , • .. , .. • , •• + "" . ' ~· loll ' + ' 'lo\+ .. ~· • 13 -~ lZ... • ... • -" ,,__ •• ~· 1CI 164 "• .. I • a \ • · • t ... '1141 + "' 1.41 I 04 f1 • ~ , 0 11 Jt lt~ ., ! ~-t • M 4~+ \It I *'t"" 1 ... iai 1t ltVl-"' llfM. 4 it •n• 1• 1~ d:!" , H .. i6'•Unh7\lt n a "~t ~ nJttt,.. ... = . u '!..:•" 1nc11.st • 1g \$"+ .. ..,. •. eo . Joi t +" ir :~ ~ »..11 iiM:,~ ~ 't I~·:~ 1~· 'l i! u:f 511· ~'" te.;::'~ .,~1·· d ~~ :~ ~;e ;~ ·1 n~I,~ .... ·':I, I +"' ~~. t •• " ... "' ~·M 1 'tt' t ~ u1 i w ··~· w m .~; ' ." ... \-\ ~. N ~ , '"·· '-'-1 J +" 1 10 t'4r-~ .. ;Yot•• flCo j11g 1 • ~ ii tln '10 at"-+ -I M -" " = .... -~ · I i '1''H1~ 'hll.ft2J lff I~•'-J . •• ' •.. ,OU.2t ~ .._ U!O 7 41 ,._+1 ill • 'i ' ••" I 4f JI"+~ .IO 6 , + l'f 10. I -IV. fji1M I )I~+·::.. 11.111 14 !t, ... ·r.' U t • • • ~ I , t6 at +t 1.2' t '1 H \tl-~ ,-"'-JlfltO .'. •Yi+ _. t )4•. -.IO 1 tJ \).,. ..,. *"" •" .-. 1 ••• c-1 i • .,._~ ,.-. •·"·'.,,ti\\+" ,.PQ.wt .. u ti"* ... aa .. 1 64"• Vt .-. Dlw;. 1 • + • I .. DAILY PILOT W9dnelday. January 14, 1978 Tonight's TV Highlights Quintet Balled Laguna COneert • ID KHJ f) 8:00 -"Destry." A later (1955 ) version of the western classic with Audie Murphy in the role created by James Stewart. KCET @ 9:00 -"Beyond the Horizon." Geraldine Fitzgerald and John Hou~eman head the cast of lhis Eugene O'Neill play focusing on the struggle of a man and his nature , and the tragedy befalling anyone who opposes his destiny. · CBS 8 11 : 30 -"Twilight of Honor." Richard Chamberlain and Nick Adams are featured in this 1963 movie. TV DAILY LOG W ednesday Evening JANUARY 14 6:00 p 8 ~9) ED m a> News lJ . (l•J1 ll1 ~ ~Nfln O ll4na11Z1 6 Family Alf11r B troftSldt m l'artndce fam1'1 (!) Ad111-lZ El) Soledad '24 (19 e ) Sur Trta ID He1111HJ Eruption (RI El) little R11t1ls 6.30 ,.6) m Andy Grfffith Show 10 Merv G1itfrth Sllow '17 l3 ttoc111's Heroes t!) £1ect11c Co111puy ('9 , e ) love A111erica1t.Styte m hp '°'s tltt Country a> ~tio,1111 Goulllltt 7.00 0 0 0 ~ 00 EL) CD News 3 truslde O Bowhna for Ootlars l6J Bonanu (8 J To Tell the Truth I Conuntration I lovt Lucy The FBI Qt (lJ 'uns111oke w La lobl pend1n1 acaiMt his laod·develnp· ment employer. 0 Q;f ({) m Do elm Hospltll "lullabye" A pohcew0111an with a brain tumoi refuses to ~lieve that she needs suraery until a dediuted neutosuraeon shows his pe11011al COllClefll for her. (6) Wil4 Wild Wut 0 (~(I)) CV ED lardta "Mur· der for Me" ~retta Ines to !raci 00..A a conlused youn1 man who, aher sl111111 a doctor ht believes rtsPOns1ble lor his son's death, seems bent oo l11rther YeflCUnta 111 a seardt foi self purmahon. fig) Mevie: (C) "Tiit Chalk ~rdetl" (dra) '64 -Otbonh Kerr, Hayley Mills.. Q) The Bold OMS fl)Y-Ml111 ~ Movie: (C) (Zllr) "Piraalll, l'i- 1111111" (adv) '72 -Will~m Snull1, Anna Clpn. EID flleatre ia Mtria "Beyond the Horizoo" Eu&tne O'Hetll's play ton· cerns the struUle of a man and his nature, and portrays the 1nev1t1ble tra1edy that belalls anyooe who oo: poses his destiny. Geraldine Fitz. gerald and Jo/In Houseman star with the McCarter Theatre in Princeton. New Jersey. 9:30 @!) D Cbolu 10:00 U GEORGE KENNEDY IS CJ~ Lt.e A111erica11 Style ~ Woman Allw! (~ l8 ) Bonanza '#'-; * THE BLUE KNIGHT! ! ! ED Oramatk Strin El) Tiit Addams Family 7:30 0 BOBBY VINTON WITH * ARTE JOHNSON & I) (!:t CI) 00 The Blut Knl(lrt A dmnged ex-convict, blam1n1 Bump· e1 Moiean 101 putting him behind ba11. metllodalty hires a p1olts SIOllll killer to Qny oct bis rf'lenge. 0 00 ~ 00 EL) Petnalli "Jub1· let Jones" ~Bm fL>Ntw\ I ':1[:: ~ Tunt l'trTJ Masoa Lowe AIWtricu Styte 0 NEW TIME FOR let's Mau A Dul * THf ROOKIES The l'rottdon O Tilt R..US "Sudden Death" A 10 The l'rict h R11ht onettme pnsoner-of·Wlr believn m Brady Blllldl that MIU, a former rtlCUe pilot 1n U '6) last ot tht Wild Y1ttnam. ltft him to sutter at the ED C1tywltchtrs hands of the 'fttt Con& and plans (i) Dolt Rullln Show a binrre method of punislun1 the TANYA TUCKER I.DO O (i2 (f' T 0111 Ollafldo alld roo~ie. Dan Tht cast of the popular Hee CD WlWlift Advtlrtllrt Htw show 1uest. (/jj Cl)) m ED StarstJ .. Hutdl 0 ~CJ.) 0 EL) Uttlt House t11 10:30 fl) Tru htiaa the l'tairle "The Talkin& Machine" m Ntws LJura's ftscinatioo w11h a new fan11ed tape recorder turns to em· ll:OO I I]) Q ED~ f Nns barm sment when 11 bro16casts htr ' ~ ~ ~~ ews love tor t~ new boy 1n town. o r O Movie: (C) (2hr) "Tiit In, ifl<ible I Tilt ffoneylllOOntrs Six" (d11) '70 -Stuart Whitman, · Dirt Shadows [Ike Sommer. Curt Jurgens. Mary Hartman, Mary Hartlltan 00 Mod Sq111d Tbret ~es 0 co. (I)) ED m Mlm Ii-rn Smi¥al onic WoMu Sur1ery and b10nic or Cotlblt gans and limbs have saved Jaime ' RMttt Mldltil Reptrt (Lindsay Wa1ne1) after a nor fatal (~ ,.,_> ~ Alltrka1 SIJfe s~y d1Y1n1 accident, and now she ED ..,_., ~ t mba rlU On I new but double hie 11:30 fl@. CI) C1$ Litt Mftir. (C} Workonr n a sd1ooltr~r. she 1lsl "fwilictit If ltoMf" (dra) '63 - ta~ts on too sec:1e1 m1U1Dns for the RICllard Chambtriain, Nd Adams. lime eovernmtnt acfllCJ. OSI, 0 jJ@ ~EL) Jt11MJ Canon which supe1111~ Steve A11slln. the O The liMtylloo11ers Su M1thon Dollar Man. This eptSOde 00 Merit:: .,.." fr•• Coc.ody" IS part II Of "Wekomt Homt l11me" (dll) '65 -Jun Marais, Patt I wu sm on The Stl M1lhon O<Q! ) I]) Wide WOIW Movie: Ooll11, Man "Du d Man on the Run" (R) An in· B M~llOll $ Mo.le: (C) (Zllr) "Des-ves1111tion into the murder of a It was just as well that the Se<:olo Barocco quintet agreed readily and amiably Monday night to offer an encore or two to their Laguna Beach · Chamber Music Society audience. For there is UtUe doubt that these flawless Frenchmen, bad they m ade any other decision, would have been detained in the Art Colony under lock and key until they h•d made some turther at· tempt to satis fy the waUable desil'e$ of a delighted audience. They gave us magnificent chamber music from the fil'$t enchanting notes oLthe .I.a.cque.s_Loeille.t quintet to the rousing Vivaldi that so splendidly con- cluded the official program. IT WAS NATURAL, OF course, for the group- drawn from the front desks of the Orchestre de Paris -to s tress the French contribution to the chamber music repertoire. The Loeillet quintet, as we have noted, is an ad- mirable work, rich in melody and constantly re- minding us of the noble role accorded to the harpsichord in seventeenth ~entury chamber music. ·· No less delightful was the Trio in G minor by Francois Devienne, another French composer who tends to be sadly neglected in today's chamber music repertoire. Heaven alone knows why in the light or a vivacious, exquisitely scored work that ·Reward Offered .For 'Oz' Costumes . BANNER ELK, N .C. (UPI) -A $500 "no ques· tions asked" reward has been offered for the safe return of costumes worn in the filming of the original "Wizard of Oz" movie. The items were stolen from the Land of Oz Museum Dec. 28. The State Bureau of Investigation and local authorities are investigating the possibili- ty that fires, which destroyed two buildings at the adjoining Land of Oz amusement park on the s ame date, were related to the theft. A dress worn by the late Judy Garland in the movie, plus some "Munchkin" costumes and a coat worn by the m ovie's "Emerald City gatekeeper" were among the missing items. Producers Pull Out Of Oscar Telecast HOLLYWOOD (UPI> -Richard Zanuck and David Brown have bowed out as producers of the annual Academy Awards show March 29. Zanuck, son of movie mogul Daryl Zanuck, and Brown, husband of writer and magazine editor · Helen Gurley Brown, are two of the most successful film producers . Their recent hits include "Jaws" and "The Sting." They said they were "terribly disappointed and have told the academy we·d like to do the show next year." but "a major production for Universal Studios will occupy us full time during the period the Oscar show is in production." Academy President Walter Mirisch named Howard V. Koch, whoproducedthreeofthe lastfour Academy Award shows, toreplacethem. .. * * * * JACK NICHOLSON'S PERFECT TRIUMPH!". "~. ·; -rJ~·~:,' try" (wes) '55 -""die Mlllfllly. $ptC&ll 11ent uncovers a plot to ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii: O Exciting New Series! GCNtr up a pohtteal assass1nat1011. 1 .. *"THE BIONIC WOMAN" Peter G11ves, Katherine Jllst1Ct and PREMIERES TONIGHT! r:~n~ ~~rts star. m C111u Wits O M0tlt: (Cl "lrs a Oo(s life" Mod Squad (com) '55-Dean Jager, Jeff Rich· News ards. · ')6 Gunsmokf' m 'lltst & Mrs. Muir ED CmmD Mon Mlll)c frOlll As· Q) Get Slllart pen 1?:00 0 TwYlPt loM ED CM111plomhlp Wrtstlhlc m Movit: "CasNh" (mus) '48 - £f) .lapantst u ncua1e 'roar1111 Tony Martin, Merta Toren. l :JO Q) Movie: "Olden to ur (dra) m For Music and Comedy '59 -Paul Mnsie, Eddie Albert. * J . Ba M 'I lZ:JO 0 Mlybtny RFD 01n rry ant ow, (I) fllttit: .,, ~ llllMd Tllli\o• and Stiller & Meara. (dra) '63 -b urence Harwy, m Men Criff111 Slln 1:00 8 9Cil9 EL)Tt.mw m llf~dltft AdvtnllH• ..... Altij 9:00 1:15 0 Mtwie: -ri.il(• Roar (dll) 0 CANNON HOMES IN ON '49 -Join Crmoid, Zldllry Scott. *GIANT LAND FRAUD!! l:JO@(I)MMt: "hW II fd" (d11) I) rn (D ea-"Houw of '50 -Robtrt C11111m1nrs, C11ds" Pernell Robef1s cuestJ u Z:OO m M-lfilllt Sllw: "lilt Days tf an KCOUntant whose disappma«e ,. .. ,.a." "TM~ 1$ COll!Cldtntal with the multi· 3:GO 8 ~ "SMM\ Yidlll" (dra) m1lhon.c1o1111 llaud iMSt111tt011 '43 -Kim Hunter, Tom ~y. Thursday DAYTIME MOVIES t;:JO 0 "IWel ltf M11Mt" (11111) '59 -H•:tt Court, Meitll Andes. (C) "OM S41Hey """"°"" (mus) '4&-<M· 11is Mot1111. Jlllk Palft. 1:00 0 "llllJ tf I HIP ScllMI Bride" (dra) '59-AnlU Sa•ds. ROMld fos· ter. ~ ....... w • IMftty"' <mus> 'SJ-Virtinia Mayo, Cu• Ntl· son. J:OO 0 (C) -S.Jbtdle•.... (•dvl 'S4 -Alan Ladd, Sl*ley Wintm. @J (C) "f..., I Ille ........... (111111) ''7 -DHblt W11*. 3:)0 0 CC> ""' ~ .. EMii'• 10:CID (i') "f• C.. tf 111 Utllt 1111" ,..,.. Coftd. (COlll) '&3 -G1'1111 <*•> ·51 -JttnM Cflin. rOl'd, SllitleJ ,.,.., "°M1 "°"'"'· WIG e "Tiit Old" (~I '•5 -Jlldy 4:00 (J) IC) "lllctW• ....,.. (CDlll) '64 Carland. lloMtt Walker. ~ lortlllne, T1111 Clftwlf, KOCE Television (50) ~ II TflHtre ••• ti,,, •• , CaM"Ttlnlr• ,., ""'"' . "WclY .. LADY" IPG) "11F OCS HOLMH' SMADBIM>nm"INI " TOM BARLEY Music Box was particularly well received by a capacity au- dience. TWS WRITER'S PERSONAL pteference-- and it is hard indeed to accord preceden~e over some m agnificent Bach and Haydn -w~ for Jean· Philippe Rameau 's Cinquieme Concert, a glittering work of subtle nuances that can often escape the less accomplished group. Nothing escaped the Secolo Barocco. Their 'WOTHll. CAM YOU SPAllAl*m"' Mle+f'I\' ,, .. "IO' Al PV.Str IN I ~,.,,, ). l- -a&l' -;::--'~ '0-:;:t.'- TRIVll Fly us. Anywhere In the DAILY PILOT "-.. __ ....,. ,,,_ ....... , ... ..,. CGIForhd~ & SIMtwti-.s UA s.tll C.... S4Nlt4 ... a, c.-6l4-t212 Hwy. Jt Drift .. ll4"62t2 The masterpiece of bizarre knie that stunned France. A portrait of love and submission to disorder the senseJ. A.tt A.Uwi A.nuts RekAst m © NO ()ti( UllOEll AOMITTt:O IA.._ DOI DAY Al19NCIOM • .,.._ ............ _, ... ..._ .. , ... ~ IMftl• ---"" coer.wunoee" ...,_ .. ,._, .. _ ... "" ,.... ""'I 11 · f11 . 1111 .... I•• ..... llo<t fl l-41 1.,..IHf MllU• tlmt•r. ""'''ll !IH• ll'ICW. .... ,,.., ll&OW•~ ... ,, .. .,.,._ ..... Ill I --'-" IOI MY amlNOOM • "'-" ---w•• flOOl,.. .. I etoeet (. ICOft • toll\'. -, ..... _ .. ftellll•R••--_ .. -OOUSA flU,.. 1t1•1t ·-·----·· I ,,._, tNTll'TAIHIMNT 'I.?•· :-:::.. UfU TIMIS Of OllULYAO.Wh1 '_1_11!11111~-~ue~:-'~J. Ml. SU"t INVISllU • .oan. "° •usu ::::::.1 .,.-' ..._ . ..__._, WCIYUM,. UCI wmt THI DMl • .-. ... ._. ...r ...... •'*".,...' a DIYI Of M COHDDI • JA(I{ IOCHOUON e ~AYI DVNAWAV a.MYOWN._ Rameau was utter perfection, an eloquent and eplendJ4ly dellvered rendition ol a work that, in the rlaht hand.a. ls Incomparable. LADIES AND GENTLEMEN. the Secolo Barocco: Michel Oebost, fiute; Jacques Chambon, oboe; Alain Mobrierj violin; Arnau~ Wallez, oon and J oel Fernand Pontet, harps1clior d . But let them share the spotlight for a moment wtth the organizers of the Laguna Beach Chamber Music Society, if you wiU. We are fortunate indeed to have ou~h. purveyors of lll.lgnificent music · our midst. ._ .. OM THE OllOIT DPIESS" IPC) l:M-7:11 "THE PARALLAX VIEW" (R) 2:0CMl:OS-10:10 "TllE ASTIOLOGEI" (I) J:JM: I M:00- 7:41-t:JO '1Jtl.EI FOICE" (R) l:JCM:Oo.t:JO '1!TUIN TO MACON C~NTY LINE" -4:20.7:10 FOUNTAIN VALLEY HH••Ut•~\~:::r.::.1: .. II .,. IY)O '11t1EI FORCE" . 1:01 '1rTUIN TO MACON COUNTY LINE" 6:15-t:40 'THE ASROLOGER" ••• 6:00.7:10.t:JO · "'llUHFOlcr '"PllME cur oo. COMnHUOUS ROM I z:io SAT. THIU JAM. 4 S.A. FAWY !MANCHESTER EX.I G.G. FAWY !CITY DA. EXJ •• -.1u.uFOacr -STIAW DOGs•tl) SOUTH COAST PLAZA THEATRES SAM DIEGO F'ff'f, AT 8RISTOl SO.COAST PLAZA ~2111 SO.COAST. PLAZA ·~ C. 'COT'f, AM9 IAMCIOf'T "HINDENBURG ' (PG) DAii. T 7:)0 & t:>O SATfWK-l!) .. :1:*"'4 .. 7-9:SS FREE PllRKINCi Jot.Cl "ONE FUW OVER THE CUCKOO'S NEsr (R) DAii. T 7:.JO I f:U SA' /WK-I :00-l: I Mcl .. 7'4t-I 0: IS CHOIMSMAL "THE ILACKllRD" eAll.Y 1:41 S.U/SUl6-l:IM:00-1:41 "ROOSTER COGIU~' IAll.Y 614 .. IO:H SA,~"'41. 11'.JO ''DOG DAY AFTERNOON"' OAILY •:00.10:11. 8.t.TAUN. 1:H-t<00-10:15 .. DROWNING POOL" OAIL' 9:20. 1Af./9UN. >:llM:20 ------------..... ~fRmE~E~PA~R~K~IN~G....,_~----~ .... "STORY OF 0 11 CXJ 6:4M:l0.10-.25 SAT~ :10-l:I l-JcOCMc45-alO. I 0-.21 W-sAT. OM.Y~ P.M. t-'USSYC AT THEATRES PRESENTS THE EXCLUSIVE RETURN ENGAGEMENT OF - HOWfAIDOE$ A Gill HAVE 10GO lOUNTAHGlE tBTIMGl.E?? 7 I . . . .. .. ' r . V<l ' WO Vl• yea pw the <M I fiv ten I I 1 '1 1 Ad ag: ha1 In 1 ( Mc tol of I ~ Uot pnJ . ·1' J I 1 wh the Me die DO Co 1 me anc pre drc Be ( no1 Coe ~UI th• fiv 1 Mli Ne Cli fro Ha Be I Chi COi wb be lilt = ttr Je1 =~ = -.. . i ii ,. VOL. '9. NQ. 14, 6 SECTIONS, 76 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA Today' Cleslag N.Y.S•oeb WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 14, 1976 TEN CENTS ' -~-jear Botne Wa1Tall~y Plan Rejected_ A warranty proaram which would have provided Mission Viejo homeowners with a three. year guarantee on new home purchases bas been rejected by the Municipal Advis()ry Council (MAC>. It was the determination of the five-man councU that an ex- tended warranty program, such as the one just adopted by the San Juan Capistrano City Council, was not necessary ln Mission Viejo. Gary SU>ney, chairman of the MAC planning committee, told members of the council Monday night that the current one-year warranty in conjunction with warranties on individual ap· pliances and the builder'1 obliga- tion to repair structural detects provided "adequate" coverage for homeowner.s. The extended warranty bad been suggested by MAC Chairman Richard Lowcock who urged the planning committee to investigate its f ea1ibility shortly after the adoption of the San Juan homeowners . warranty or- dimnce. However," that hivestJgation did not disclose shabby construe· tion practices which would necessitate extended coverage to homeowners, Stoney reported. Although no widespread abuses were uncovered in San Juan either, that city's council determined future developers do· ing business in San Juan might not be as ethical. San Juan's warranty law, which requires builders to de- posit one percent of the construe· tion cost of each new dwelling un· it as security that warranty work will be carried out, was adopted primarily as a safeguard a~ainst outside de· velopers. Mission Viejo, on the other hand, has been and will continue to be developed by a single con- struction firm which maintains its headquarters in the com· .munity. shaw Denies Bee anB • e I UDruhA.rrested .Dnink R':'P Hits 'Big Jess' SACRAMENTO (AP) -State Treasurer Jesse Unruh was arrested on a drunk driving charge early to- day, the state Highway Patrol reported. Patrolman J . E. Weir said he saw Unruh driving erratically on In· terstate 80 in Yolo County just across the Sacramento River from the state Capitol at 2: 15 a .m. Weir said he stopped the car and Unruh failed a sobriety test. Unruh, 53, once considered the most powerful Democrat in the state when he was speaker of the state Assembly, wa$>taken to the Yolo County Jail in Woodland where he was fingerprinted, photo- graphed and signed a promise to appear in Washington Justice , Court in West Sacramento. uN1tuH Lt. Tom Dinsdale, shift commander at the jail, described Unruh as cooperative. Dinsdale said Unruh was taken to his home in West Sacramento by a friend he phoned from jail. 'lJn~palar' . ' MAC Opposing B'id On Animal Shelter The Mission Viejo Municipal Advisory Council (MAC) isn't against animals, just agains\ having a concentration of them 1n Mission Viejo. · Councilmen made that clear Monday when they adopted a re- solution against the construction of any animal shelter wi~ ooe mile of Mission Viejo. "It doesn't take much informa· Uon. to decide not to have an iuUmal shelter in our area. The . Mesa Pastor Joins Race For Congress The Rev. James 0 . Combs, 48, who recently resigned as pastor of the First Baptist Church of Costa Mesa has declared himself a can- didate for the Republican nomination in the 40th Congressional District. The district, which covers most of southern Orange County and· part of San Diego County, presently is represented by An· drew J. Hinshaw CR· Newport Beach>. Combs· entry into the race, an· nounced at a press conf er~ce. in Costa Mesa Tuesday, brought the number of candidates seeking the Republican nomination to five. The other candidates are As· eemblyman Robert Bedham of Newport Beach, Michael P. Clancey, a 29-year-old attom~y from El Toro, colleae professor Harry P . Jeffrey of Laauna Beach, and HlnshawlWnself. people donrt want it," said Coun- cilman Cal Neve who led the op· position to plans for a South Orange County shelter. Of the original four shelter sites, the only two-still being.con· sidered by the Board of Supervisors are in Mission Viejo. Asked to make a choice between the two, councilmen vot- ed S-0 that neither was accepta· ble becauie of the poise to which residents might be subjected. Monday•s vote reaffirmed an earlier stance taken against the animal shelter by MAC officials. 'Ibe San Juan Capistrano City Council also bas opposed a site within its city limits. • County officials . have been looking .for a suitable shelter site since 1972. The south county sheller would serve communities from Ir-vine south to San • Clemente. Present facilities in Orange are no longer considered ade- quate to serve the needs of south Orange County. 'Big Boy' Statue Stolen At Eatery Orange County sheriff's of. ficers are investigating the theft of a seven-foot statue that once adorned the sidewalk in front of Bob's Big Boy restaurant, 23592 Avenida de la Carlotta, Laguna Hills. Deputies said the statue, valued by its owner at$1,200, was carried off by thieves who used bolt cutters to remove it from its base. Funds Limited CIA Sub Plans I ' Scuttled WASHINGTON (AP) -Plans for another CIA attempt to raise a sunken Soviet 1s"bmarine from ttie floor of the Pacific .Ocean have been'th'warted J;>y ·a Russian ship patrolling the wreckage site, intelligence sources said today. The presence of the Soviet vessel prevented the American ship Glomar Explorer from re- turning last summ er to the wreck site northwest of Hawaii, one source said. \ ~, I Top CIA officials are now "85 percent sure1 ' that the $250 million salvage project will have to be abandoned altogether, he added. r "The project is over, at least for the present time," another ' source said. The Glomar Explorer, a sopbiaticated recovery vessel built by billionaire Howard Hughes, raised the forward tblrd oftheSovietsubmarinein1974. :&aintenance costs for the 618-foot Glomar Explorer have caused a steady drain on the CIA . budget, and there has been no in· dication when the Soviet patrol ship would end its vigil of the wreckage site, one source said. A new American salvage at· tempt while the Soviets patrol the area would run the risk ol a naval confront•tion. Tbe CIA 's first attempt to re· cover tbe Soviet submarilie.,was disclosed early last 'year in press accounts which ClA Director William E . Colb)' soagbt to sti· fie. It remains unclear whether the SQviets already were aware of the American salvage project or if they learned of it through news accounts. (See GLOMAR, Page A2) Driver Held In Assalllt Orange Cotlnty sheriff's of· ficers have filed charges of as- sault with a deadly weapon on a police officer against an El Toro man wbo allegedly drove bis vehicle 'against an off -duty Ne'YJ>Ort Beach policeman. Deputies jailed Donald Lee Fiddament, 41, of 24922 Muirlands Blvd., after he al· legedly attempted to avoid arrest by drivinc his car directly toward• Newport . Beach officer Scott Edwin Cade, 26. They said Cade, off duty at the time, was. attempting to arrest Fiddament tn the parking lot of the Saddle back Valley Plaza on charges of drunken driving. Cade suffered 11\inol' injuries when he was struck by fi'iddament's .car during the resulting fracas, of· fic~ assert. UPI TeleoplMlte Sus~n on Slopes President Ford's daughter Susan shows her skiing form on the slopes of Vail Mountain in Colorado during a two- month break from college. Susan will participate in her first ski race as a member of an employes team of the resort community. School Hot Lunch Bid Gets MAC Push The effort of a par~nts or· ganization to provid~ hot lun~hes for children attending Castille· North School has won the back· ing of the Mission Viejo Municipal Advisory Council (MAC>. MAC officials Monday voted unanimously to put pressure on the Capistrano Unified School District to provide hot meals for pupils housed in the portable classroom buildings. They did so after hearing an impassioned plea from Carol Morgan who said that Catille· North students bad gone without bot lunches for t wo-and·a·half years. Mrs. Morgan, chairman of the Educational Advisory. Council, told MAC Councilmen that her group had taken matters into their own hands by running ham· burgers up to the school every Wednesday. The hamburgers are obtained from a local eatery. Mrs. Morgan noted that 275 hamburgers were distributed during the first Wed· nesday noon food shuttle. School district officials have taken the position that hot lunches cannot be provided at Castille-North because or inade· quate utilities in the portable buildings. Hot lunches, however, are be· ing provided to students at nearby Castille SchOQl which coo.Dists of permanent buildings. "You mean that they can·t transport lunches for 200 yards from the regular Castille School to the portables?" inquired Coun- cilman Cal Neve. "I think that's rather asinine." 'l1lEY RESPOND TO PILOT ADS Hinshaw currently is fighting charges of bribery in Oraoge County Superior Cowt, eharJes which relate to the period wben he was Oranse County aseaor. Hinshaw · has nld all alons, however, that be P1-I to cam· pialp for a third ~l Serrano Park Delayed . . ·•1 sold the car to a Daily Pilot reader. In fact, the ad in the Pilot got much mor.e response than the one I ran in the paper in Santa Ana." . term. Even IO, lt appears his 81 ANNE COOPER le1al dlfflcutues .uve Mlped 0t .. o...,,. ....... draw a tarp number ol can· Planner Dick Ramella, project dtdat•tothera~. , ~ .... anol"I.....-.'-Park Jn he,,; a·-·• ... e__. Cotnbs m•aier 1or .;K:rr . ""'~ • ._...., .... " ........ ., in El Toro, said Monday, after an dettttbed himself • a llfelona m-tlte inspection with ~muni· Bepubllcau and • :tomtttutklnal ty and county reprwentatlves, OGC11ervative. Jo bis p~ared park construction may be set .tatement. he made a 1efwenc$ back tor some time beCause of • Hlftlbaw'1 1 .. al cSlfftculU., limlted funding. . ,,.._ be 1&14 tb• lint ol two • dilemmas facln1 dlltrict voters Ramella's statement wu con· was ''acbleYlDI retponala.le ftraecl by H.G. Osborne, director npreHDtaUon a(· a time when ol the county's Environment•! &be Incumbent conaresaman is Measement Asency <EMA>1 CllePAITO&, raieAI) ,tr. Wb.C>aaid developmtnt ol moet ~t I the part is in competition with the El TOro Community Park for count1 service area tunds. "Development of SerTano Creek Park 4epends on two eourcM for r.dlal," Osbome said. "Tbe community park akJn1 Serrano Creek must be de-wtoPecl out of County Service Area •• Melt. Th1I will put it ln com,ettUoe with El Tero C-· Jl'llllil.y Paz:k, located .aona Alie> CNN, bet~ Laa Alsoe Blw.t. and Tr..,._ Bold.•• Plana are further~ the El Toro Com~~Pd than for SerJ'ano Creek Park. be said. Tbe Heritaie Hill section of Serraoo Creek Park, said Osborne, bu bffn declared of Te-~ mt.,..t and wm therefore _.,. "'.~ed'"f av•Uable through the cMntyt Department of Harben; Beaobn and Parks. Herttqe Htll I• tbe location of the .blltorleal Serrano adobe, Wit ln 1980 by Don Joie Serrano. Two other biatoncll bulldlnas. the old El Ta,o -~ and .It Oeorle't Episcopal chapel, <lee PA., Pa&e ?-1> That's the advertisinl success experienced by the Costa Mesa man who ·placed this cluslfied 9<1: •SJ Gala.de, air• PWT, td · tlres. 52,000 ml., $500 XXX·XXXX1ftr8AM If you have a car YoU want to s~ll. call 642-5678. It only takes a I ew words in the rliht place to attract a buyer. Along the Or•nae Coast, the right place la the Daily Pilot. • Employe Reports 'Offer' By TOM BARLEY Of die 0.11., f'lloC StMf Cong r essman Andrew Hinshaw repeatedly · denied to- day allegation that he solicited a bribe from a lawyer representing Beckman Instruments of F\11lerton during an assessment appeals hearing at which the de· fendant appeared as Orange County's assessor. Hinshaw, 53, told a Superior Court jury as his bribery trial moved into its final hours that he never suggested to attorney Ronald Steelman that things might go Beckman's way if the firm bought 10 $100 tickets to Hinshaw's testimonial dinner. Steelman gave that testimony as a prosecution witness. He further claimed that Hinshaw called a recess in the appeals bearing to make the proposition to him. Steelman further testified that Hinshaw told him: "I don't know why the large taxpayers in this county are not supporting me." Hinshaw today told defense at- torney Marshall Morgan that the opposite ~as always true while he served as county assessor prior to his election to Congress in 1972. "Most of m y support came from the large property owners, .. the Newport Beach Republican said. And he testified that he could not recall ever meeting Steelman at the as- sessor's office or talking with the lawyer over the telephone. The deni'al followed Hinshaw's admission that he accepted two stereo units as gifts during his term as county assessor. He is being tried for three felony counts contained in a . grand jury indictment: accep- tance of stereo equipment and a $1 ,000 campaign contribution from the Tandy> Corporation and the soliciting of a bribe during the Beckman hearing. Hinshaw admitted that he ac- cepted a stereo unit. the most ex- pensive model manufactured by Tandy's Radio Shack group from Tandy's Vice President James Buxton during a visit to the com· p any's Garden Grove warehouse. · · Turning to the jury, Hinshaw stressed that he had his checkbook and pen out and had every intention of paying for the stereo unit. But Buxton, he testified, was adamant and ref used to accept his check ... And I didn't want to <See mNSHA W, Page A2) Coast Weather Sunny ~hursday and slightly warmer says the weather service, with highs along the beaches at 74 rising to 78 inland. Lows tonight 42 to 48. •INSIDE. TODAY A Mimntppl banMr'a wife f110J1 have bten ldu.ct ~or& Q 125 IJOO t"QftlOm 100I P°':I to leer ~ ..polict '°V· Her bodr -end 0 wqect "' Ute (!Ole 10l'P'e fowtd TwldaJI. St«J1 Af. ""ladex M.,_,tentee ~ ...... ...... .. ...... .. LM...,. ......... ~ M CllMWll4• AJ,At4 ........... M,M " ~ .e: ONlllll~ .... OMkt CM ....... C•.a 0--.'111 CM ...... ,,._ M ...._...._ ... """ •w ........................ ....... _ .. ...,= ....... ......... __ ... ~-. ..... "'4 JI a...., ,_"'""" a..,...._ ...... M l ' -,fl OAILVPILOT SB • [ P11ot i.09book J Mispronounc ed , --But Historical By MLUAM SCHREIBER Of .. Dlllf f"lleC Si.tt -1T-'S NOT USUAl.l.Y my inclination-to ettlogii:e street na me <'hanges. perhaps because J 'm a little like the rest of this new society ·or Oeet freeway commuters who fi gure "What's in a name?" But last week a name c hange approved by Orange County supervisors left a sour t aste in m y mouth. It struck pretty close to home -literally. Without ceremony, Canada Road in the Saddleback Valley becam e l.ake Forest Drive, reflecting the "identity" of that little clump or tract homes in whichJ happen to r t>Side. Except for t he lonely little stretch of farm road that first bore the name early in the county's history, Ca nada Road \Vil! soon join the growing list of old coun- ty place names t hat no longer appear on nlost maps. Taken purely at race value, I sup- pose the nam e change really isn't much of an issue. There are, after all, more than 600 miles or roads in county ter- ritory a!onf'. Rut th er(' is more to it than meets the eye. C:\N . .\D . .\ RO . .\D Cell victim to t\'-'O of hum anity's oldest vices -avarice and self-pride. The old name. rooted deep in the county's Spanish heritage. \\;.1:.-: thrust aside by developers who saw a way to ~td\"ertise :lnd homPowners "·ho thought the new name had a touch of "c);.1ss. ·· 1\t thii' name-change hearing, these special interests c!a~med t<1 represent the people or Lake Forest. But I was ne\·er askt·d for an opini on and my neighbors didn 't know :1bou1 it until they read it in the newspapers. Some of the arguments seemed fatuous and self· :-oerving. particularly the contention that people mis· pronounce the name Canada because they aren't sure if it is named for t he country or the Spanish word for ''canyon.'' BUT REASONABLY, I can't affix the blame for the name change on the special interests. They were doing what they know best. The m an who could have made the "tough decision" to retai n the old name was Fifth District Supervisor Thomas Riley. Hi s ·fellow board m embers from other districts couldn't have cared less one "'ay or the other. They followed his lead. It \\'as the first real sign since he was appointed to the se-at left vacant by the death of Ron Caspers that Riley not sho\~· signs of being susceptible to the pressures of develop· ment concerns. .\f.O~IZl~G O\'F:R the dec ision his boss would have to m3ke. one:> of Ri ley's aides told me t\110 weeks ago. "You can "t go agai nst them lthe special interests) all the time, <'Speci..illy .... 1ith a n election (and campaign coSts), coming up... . There was no question in Riley's mind that the Canada Road name was historically signifi cant. It dated fr om before lS.$0 when the Spanish land grant Rancho Canada de l..os Alisos was first being plotted out in the El Toro-1.ake l-~orest area. . .o\nd the new stretch of the road west of Trabuco Road was a logi cal extension of the old farm trp.ck that served the El Toro area since before the turn of the century. TO TOP IT . .\LL OFF. the Canada Road name will be retained on the ol d road. meaning another county street will have multiple names -a practice county pl anners have been working for years to eliminate. In light of R iley's a pparent \11illingness to give tracts and planned community developments "freeway identify," I envis ion the following series of changes for the Saddleback Valley in coming years: El Toro Road "'ill become t.eisure \\lorld Drive, .<\.li cia Park..,.·ay will become .<\.egean l·lills Drive, J,a Paz Road will become l\.1 ission Viejo Dri ve and Crown Valley Parkwa y wi ll bf>come J.aguna Niguel Drive. · Why not? It's as easy as the stroke of a pen. Fro• Page Al HINSHAW. . • Arabs Near Consen su s UNITED NATIONS, N .Y. offend him,'' Hinshaw explained. C<\.P ) -Arab delegates say they have agreed in principle on a re- solution to put before the Sec uri· ty Council calling ror Israeli withdrawa l from all occupied .<\.rab territory and recognition or the "in ali enable national ri ghts" of the Pales tinians as the basis for any Arab-Is raeli peace settle· ment . Hi gh-level sources said dif· ferences rem ain over what to stress and assessment of the U.S. position, but a d raft of the resolu· tion is expected by the end or the week. ORANGECOMT DAILY PILOT Tiit °'""""" COll•I O•••Y P1!.,I. """'"";'" !\ ,..,... -'"" ,.ewo-Prett, i• 1>111>!i"""'"" '"'°'~ ,,,.,, P"'11i""l"'I C1>mp•n• s..-ale ..aitlon!. ••t pu0"\he<l _...,., """""" r.m, 1 .. C..t• ,,.., .. , .... .._.i .. .,.., ttunll"lllon -111-. ,.,., v•ll••· ••w•...., s-t•D«-v., .. , 1nc1 ~&1..:111!.o<o1t1C..,.1.#l..i..,....,e<;1..,...le<1j- '""' " -'""'" i..,twd•YI -!".uncMy._ TM "'""'Pl' _,,.,.l"Q pl ... 1 i• .. ll:I WO" &.• S.0•-.(0\I• M•W. (•hlOf .... ~. R~rtN.Weed P••·-n• -p,,.,u_ J ack R. Curley Vo<f P•r•l<IOftl•nd~Mr•!MO-' Thomas Kee-vii EO•!O< ThOmas A. Murpttine """•""'"'""[.,;..,.. CNrlesH. Loos Ric.hard P. Nall ,. .. 1 .. .,,1M.o ... <1!"'1EOiforl SMWa.t.«:lc Y•ll.,-Offiet )UGI L• ...,, •-.i ,.., o...,.. F•-•Y Otlkes C•l.I Mew uo ""-•' .,,.., ltl-"""'"'91.., k«ll. ,,.,s -.. -.... d U.00-.. K~: l1'6C.ll,...y ... ~-I TetliphoM t714J M2-at1 . Qnsitifllll Ad¥trtiSi"9MH611 ..--•v11 .. ,NfW'I011 .... ,., .. ,,. ~._ ..... ,,. ...... 4ts..ol30 """' .... ,.,. Ot..,.. c...,.i P\llllltfll ... c-.. -·· M M~ tMrltt. Hlinl•l't-. ....... !ti ,...tt .... •~ ..i•••ll\t..,•M• ~ .. In "''" 1>9 t•~•d ••!Motl tllfl"I•• _.,.,,..,.,. •I ~lflll-· . ...... 'l•H ~I ... ••ltll l't (.nl• ,,,._.,., ""_,.._ ~·""'-..., ,..., .... u n -""'; ........... tt-111,, _.....,_llWll..._ ll.a-"tly. • "It was not a very pleasant ex· perience," Hins haw told the jury. Hinshaw further admitted that · he accepted another costly stereo uni t fro m former · auditor· a ppraiser George Upton while he was a guest at Upton's home. The former assessor said Up- ton made the offer after he <Hinshaw ) noticed a pile or Radio Shack cartons in Upton's Santa Ana home. Hinshaw said Upton to1d him that he had been given a number of stereo sets which were to be raffled off as prizes by the Coast Guard and that Buxton bad in- cluded one for Himhaw in the consignment. Hinshaw testified that he told Upton to keep the unit at the Up· ton home with the explanation that he would soon be moving to Washington, D .C. as Orange County's 40t.h District represen· tative and his moving plans were not yet complete. Ex,.con Lived In Dog House . ( JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP) - An escaped prisoner has been captured after eluding the law for four weeks by spending hl1 days in his glrlfriend"s do« house and eating from doggy hap. Police said Henry Pittman, 20, flushed out of his dog house hideout, iA scheduled to be re· · turned to the it.ate priloo 111tem, from which .he escaped four weeka: ago, officers said. The dos house, without • canine occupant, ii near the bome of Pittman's &lrlfr!end. She would bring him blp ol food dllrinl tbe day and laM blm to h<T place at nlcbt, police ulcL ' \ff'll ........ 'NO COMMENT' State Controller COty GOP Head Asks· Cory Be Dumped From Wire Sen.ices The state chairman of the Republican Party urged Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. to as k Controller Kenneth Cory to take a leave of absence because he is surrounded by "a growing cloud of suspicion " Cha'irman Paul Haerle s aid the controller should step down until c harges against Dr. Louis Cella, who contributed more than $250,000 to Cory's campaign last year, are disposed or. A spokesman for Brown said Haerle should take up the matter directly with Cory. Cory himse lf will remain publicly silent on the demand. Gentry Durham, a SJX>kesman for the controller, said, "There will be no response and no com- ment on Haerle's statement.'' Cella and t hree associates each were indicted by the OraJlge County Grand Jury and a federal Grand Jury in Los Angeles Mon- day on felony counts relating to the alleged embezzlement or S2 million from two Orange County hospitals. A probe reportedly continues into an insurance company in which Cory, Cella, and Southern California Democratic Chairman Richard O'Neill own interests. Federal investigators have con- firmed that Cory's appointment of inheritance tax referees also is under investigation. ''The revelations of the mysterious Cella-O'Neill empire and Ken Cory's relationship and role in that empire have raised some serious questions about the controller's independence and ability to continue serving as state controller," Haerle said in a news release. "'The governor must be aware of the growing cloud of suspicion surrounding state Controller Ken Cory," Haerle said. "I therefore ask Governor Brown to ask Mr. Cory to take a leave of ab.sence. '' F.--PageAl PARK .•• will be moved to the adObe site to create the regional historical park, Heritage Hill. Planner Ramella said his firm, the Center for Planning and Research, will have alternative plans for Serrano Creek Park, in- cluding Heritage Hill, ready to submit to the county within 10 days. Ramella described plans for the · 56 -acre park as ''more passive" than a typical com· mmtity park. "We took into consider8tion recreational deficiencies in the community as well.as the natural character of the park site," he said. ''The site doesn't lend Itself to bard surfacing. There will be "jogging and biking trails, pic- nicking and day camp areas more than surfaced ball fields or tennis courts." Ramella said he expects a de· cision from the county on a final park plan within tbe next fOur weeks. ''As to when con1truct ion might begin," he said, "that de- pends on the financial capability ofthecommunity." 1 Jeanne Gagnebin, who represents the Saddleback Area Historical Society on the commit- tee appointed by county supervisors to advise pJanoen'bn the serrano Creek Pah,,aald'lt will be up 10· the Ill Toro com· munlty to set \)l'lor!U.S. "They may not'be able to have both commwlity pvb at once without bondil!Jg tbe~elves," said Mn. Gapetffn. '"Tbe taue m01 be decided oo the .... Is of which site la more acceptable ln its natural state.'' • • . -.. • El ·To:r.o -MAC ' II I ' !'I°' ., ' . See:h This Year Encouraa:ed by the receot sue· mean theiboant·wtlt-automatical~ cess ol his petltion.drtve, DToro Iy call for an election.-~· • Homeowners AssociaUOI) Presl· Reanier pointed out that hJs deotAIRegnierbetievesbiscom-crew of JO door·~oor peti- munity ,will have a munteipal ad-tionen are tr>1n& to collect "as visory-Council C.MACl-this-eum·----many-signatUres as we can" to mer. persuade board members to take "I'm quite enthusiastic about affirmatl't!e'aclion. To date there it. The people are very, very re· areS:S01ignatureson..the~ition. ceptive. 'l'bey've all read about it 11We've· only covend a ' smaJ,1 inthenewspapen,''hesald. percentag(! of the ate•. 10 pes:· Regnier was talking about the cent I'd say. ·W~ coWcfget 2,000 current door-to·door campaign to sl1n•tures if we cOuld only get solicit signatures for a petition to more people to help us. We need the Board or Supervisors urging the doers," he said. them to set a MAC election. The problem of recruittng That elerlion would be held enough volunteers for the peti- June 8 in conjunction. with the tion drive prompted' Regnier's California primary, assuming predecessor, William· Monoson, that supervisors act favorably to resign in what he described as upon the petition. "disgust" over the cpm.munity's Canvassen have already col-apathy. . lected the 430 signatures re· However Regnier while ad· quired ~o bring the petition to the m,i.ijing that not ·enoGa:b. persons attention or the Board of have volunteered ~!Carty, peu- Supervisors; but that does not ttOns, aays the aPathY ts Only ap- Group Cites No Smoking Non-arrests An anti-smoking organization took legal action today to comPel Orange County's deputy sheriffs and marshals to arrest SDl()kers who violate the county's no s moking ordinance jn public buildings. ·~ Named as defendants in the Superior Court action fil~ by the Group Against Smoking Pollu- tion (GASP) are Sheriff Brad Gates, Marshal Don Rhea and Superior Court Administrator Leslie I,. McCartney. None of the three defendants has made any attempt to rigidly e!'force the no smoking or-, dmance enacted May 3>, 1975 by county supervisors, the lawsuit claims. The action further states that non.smokers in the county courthouse and other county buildings daily face serious health problems from the fumes emitted by smokers in both smoking and non-smoking areas. It is claim ed in the action filed by Santa Ana attorney Bill Shef· field that ''side stream" smoke from an idling cigarette emits twice the amount of tar and four times the amount of carbon monoxide as fumes emitted by a smoker. Superior Court officials have not yet set a date for the hearing into the writ of mandate de· manded by GASP. parent. , "The people w' have been talk- ing t-0 say they Waol'to~express their opinion at the polls," he said. "And the residents ot Lake Forest are just as eager to ex- press their opinions even thoujh their homeowners association isn't backing th'e MAC." Although Litke Forest is Within the community of "El Toro, homeowners association leadership la.st year refused to join the drive for an El Toro MAC. The basis for that refusal was the belief t hat.iii there were to be a MAC it should include all of the communities in the Sad· dleback Valley, with the excep- tion of Missiqn Viejo which . already has its own MAC. It was the success of the Mis- sion Viejo Municipal Advisory Council, a five.-m·ember panel which makes recommendations on issues of local importance to the Board Of Supervisors, which gave impetus to the El Toro MAC proposal. Those spearheading the MAC camp~ign maintain that liaison with county government has not been adequately maintained by the Saddleback Area Coordinat· ing Council (SACC>, a coalition of about 20 homeowners associa- tions . Because the members of municipal advisory councils are elected by the people, it is the belief of Regnier a.qd his col- leagues th at a MAO'Will ~arry more weight With counlY· 'of~ ficlals. That conclusion appears cor- rect because no recommendation made by the Mission Viejo MAC . has to date been overturned by the Board of Supervisors. This has not always been the case with recommendations made b y SACC. LEAPS ·INTO FRAY Candidate Combo • Fro•PegeAl • " PASTOR .•. Under indictment ~ tii8J. on , felony bribery charftS.'' Combs then tOOk""-Jl swj,pe at other candidates in.Jibe race bY. declaring that the "resultant vacuum has attracted only tradi- tional, practiced politicians who would not constitute a sufficient ; change to engender voter con- fidence.'' The caitdidate 'at that point' suggested. that his 24 years as a clergyman qua~fied him to give "effectiVe repres'entation to a district that sorely needs it ." According to Combs, th e second dilemma facing voters was the choice of whether to tolerate what he termed a decline in world leadership, the economy, and the family, or to rebuild those areas . Candidate Combs listed infla- tion , defense, crime and violence, education, integrity in ' government, and free enterprise as the issues in the campaign. Combs was pastor or the First Baptist Church of Costa Mesa for five years. He is married with one daughter. Frotfl Page A l I GLOMAR ••. ._ According to press reports, the Soviet submarine went down 750 miles northwes t of Hawaii in 1968. After the Russians failed to find the w.reck, the Glomar Ex- plorer reportedly succeeded in raising a portion of the sub- marine in the summer of 1974. It · also remains unclear how much· intelligence was gained ·fr'pm,' the government's $250 million investment in the project. The submarine reportedly broke apart as it was being raised from the depths. Various press repOrts have said the CIA succeed~d in recovering nuclear- tipped torpedos, training logs and the bodies of the Soviet crew. Lynn Hart HART'S John Hart SPORTING GOODS 538 CENTER ST.• COSTA MESA• 646-1919 BICYCLE PARTS-TIRES-ACCESSORIES Shuffleboard Sets Bocceball Sets Table Tennis Sets Frisbees Boomerangs Rae11,uetllall ·Racquets Handball Gloves & Balls T emis Rackets Wilson-lhillop-llavis Bancroft-Yonex . Racket Sbil&ing 500 to 2100 Temis Shoes· Tenals Slirts.& Shorts , . . telllis hse$ Mrs. Oa1nebln empbatilzed that the hl1thrical complex, Heritage HUI, Is not funded by Service Area Sl•1 but by the '-----.... ------------+----------.-------t county. No delay la -clpotod In· r . , preparln1 the hlltorlcal park for 531 C-t!11!1919 a bicentennial colebrall'"1 -· .,..,. rtr timethilyear,1be111d. 1.-------------------'!"-------------~-~.-.'!""-~~--• I A• D A ILY P I LOT ~DlTORIAL PAGE • Prohlelll Reinains Saddleback Valley Unified School District trustees last week called off the election on·their pro- posed 70·cent tax override. It \Yas a rather unusual i-but wlse -move. It's doubtful the. district's taxpayers, who are alread~ paying a h_!gher t!ll( !ouchools than a0y' -otherd1strlct iiilbe county, would have approved the override. Unfortunately, calling off the election does nothing to solve the district's financial problems. In . "'oming months, trustees will-have-to-ra·c a .$707,000 deficit projected for the 1976-77 fiscal year. . And the district's superintendent, Dr. Richard Welte, predicts an override will be needed by next year if state legislators don't come through with more money for local schools. Cancellation or the election should not erase the sc hool's financial problems from the minds of district residents. . Residents, especially parents, should be helping trustees find the needed cw. And they should be de- ciding the pros and cons of increasing taxes to meet the needs. j Road Study Premature Orange County supervisors were hasty las t week in giving the go-ahead to their planners to begin another intensive study of new arterial roads in the foothills above the Saddle back Valley. · The new study will cost about Sl0,000 ;tnd will in· valve exa.mination of possible routes from developed areas into the pristine areas s urrounding O'Neill Regional Park and Trabuco Canyon • • circulation. The only access to the area now is narrow, wind· ing Live Oak Canyon Road. Ttie road is already overused and developers are being forced to put construction plans on the shelf un· -til-alter-native-access routes are planned and built. The county is already in the niidst of its massive Southeast Orange County Circulation Study <S EOCCS ) that is supposed to provide the long-term answers to.!fillic.problems . To add this new study before SEOCCS is finished is bad timing. Parks Speeded The City of Irvine is preparing to offer for sale the remaining $9 million of an S18 million park and bike trail bond issue approved by voters'in June, 1974 . The sale has been speeded to take advantage of a favorable bond market and, as one official put it, "to get the jump on a ny oth~r city that offers bonds this year.'' Accordin"g to the city's figures, the sale will not mean an increase in t ax rates higher property value assessm e nts in the city. Behind the fiscal maneuvering, the sale also will mean speeding the park development by 18 m onths. On the firs t three parks, completion is expected in September for University Community Park. May for 1-larvard Avenue Park and May, 1977, for Heritage Park. Both University and Heritage Parks had been de· layed four months due to budget consideration s, although site clearing at the Heritage Park got more speed than it needed last wee kend by the free firewood offer that dre\v hordes of wood.gatherers . ' \ ~ . _, The motivation behind this action is clear Owners of land in the area -notably Escape Country, Dove Canyon, Coto de Casa and the gravel beds of Trabuco Creek -are being held back by poor traffic The cityis close eye on the bond market a nd fortunate financial circumstances will let residents e njoy the parks sooner than expected. ''1'1> LOVE TO 'PLAY WITH YOU, ANDREI, guT THfY WON'T LET ME OUT." College Athletics Financing Debated This is about the time of year that the moguls of the mega million (or is it billion?) dollar professional football world gather to harvest the yield<; or the nation·s colleges. And , how sweet it is~ Time was when the highly C'ompetitive purveyors of gridiron <'Om· bat bargained with the all· 1\mericans. offering huge bonuses, to get their signatures on dotted lines Rut. in a mo- ment or in- s pi ration . they came up with a system which ingeniously flouts the Sherman Act In complete disregard for the laws against slave ry and in ,·oluntary servitude they devised the draft Henceforth, college athletes with a yen for pro. fessional football would submit to round robin selection No longer would free enterpnse be permitted. No longer could they shop for the best offers Either a player became the property of the club which drew him or he C'Ould sit it out TlllS, s ports fan were told. "·ould be fair. It would prevent rich clubs from grabbing up the best talent thus wiping out the C'hances of winning or the lesser clubs. Jn faC't . teams with the poorest win records would have first <'hoice in the 4raft. Well. maybe it is fair for ( EARL WATERS ) everyone excepting the players and the schools that spawn them Still, with the salaries gained by the players th rough their union ef- forts , perhaps one needn't worry too much about them But what about the colleges of the nation" Rega.rdless of whether they are tax supported or private colleges t hey are a ll struggling for dollars While college athletics· may be most di:>.sirabl e as extra curricular .activities they aren't the primat1Y• pufp<>se of the in~ • stttutions._. $ome•oC\be 'sn'laller 4 ones never have gotten into it while others hitve had to give it up THE COLLEGE athletic pro- gram ts a , costly one Most of the athletes. if not all.t are attending und er scholarsn-1ps usually financed with tuitions paid by less physically gifted or by, the" taxpayers Yet , with the tremendous revenues taken by professional sports organizations it does seem unfair that the col l('ges should bear the rull burden of producing crops Co mm enting on thi s ph('nomenon the distinguished Washington columnist Ernest Cuneo recently said, "For all practical purposes the owners of professional sports teams have i<ucreeded in turning the entire tJ.S. educational system into minor league farms for the pro· ductionofsuperathletes. ·· .<\ COUPLE of years ago As· Dear Gloo my Gus The City of Irv ine has always had an opc>n door policy Try knocking IRVETTE semblyman Willie Brown btcame intrigued with the idea of d~vising some means whereby colleges could organize and de· mand C'ompensation rrom the professional world for the athletes they raised. in the same manner one club buys a player from another . Constitutional questions have plagued efforts to develop a legislative way lo achieve this Cuneo advances the idea of a federal gate taX dedicated to education While this would be a direct and easy way to collect runds it leaves some questions unanswered What about the re- venues from TV which appear to be the major source of football reC'e1pts and some other sports? And how would the money be dis - tributed to assure the schools which produce the talent of re- <'Civing their fair share1 However it is done it seems time lo sight in on this \lntapped source. As Cuneo says, "It is doubtful if any other business re- <'eives the subsidies and tax bE'nefits comparable to pro- fessional sports corporations." What ls a_ 'Useful' Life? I worry about people who worry about people, especially the mselves, being useful. I also '\.\'Ort"Y about,peopl& being useless and worrying about lt, for that. matte.r , Maybe 1·m just again$( "orry· ing, by myself or by anyone else, a b o u t anything Whatsoever . Jn which case perhaps it would b e m('et to abandon this morning's ef- fort before ii Is pro perly commenced. (Worry, incidentally, is an in - teresting word. Its root meaning is to strangle or to injure. Worry· ing, properly, ls what the fox · does to the hound•in huntlng, or what the dog does with an old shoe. Remember t his the next time you find yourseU' WOM'Yinl ). Let us starl with a consu.m· mate worrier, John Wesley, who founded Methodism, and had a great deal to do with what we now call, with a trace or con- desctnslon, the Puritan Ethic. Wesley's abysmal prayer sounds down the ce·nturies : '10 Lord, Lel us not live to be useless. for Christ's sake. Amen." There seem& to me a passion of 1uilt it\ this · utterance. The We1l~yan1 far too readily came to equate us.erulness wtth the pil· CHARLES McCABE ing up of the earth's treasure in little heaps owned by good Wesleyans. Perhaps the guilt was a result of the piling up, or the.piling up was lhe result of the guilt, which may have been ociginal sin. Who knows? IN THE Wesleyan sense, being useful meant having practical utility . By this standard the Trout Quintet or Schubert, the poetry of Swinburne, the wall paintings or those ('aves in the Sahara, and the clowns or Pi<"asso and Fellini, an' tOtally useless. Santsyana said It more succinctly, ''Music is ~eatially useless. as life is ." Pragmatism. that uniquely American way or lookJng at things. is the 'son or Wesleyanl s m . Although the philosophy is American, Its toctlfl was sounded by a Britllher. John Stuart Mlll;ln his Euay oo Liberty. "[ r-aard utility as the ul · tlmate appeal on all ethical qllMllons; but It ·must be utility In the largest sense, grounded on the permanent inte.rests of man as• profresslve belDi." LAKGE·MINDED Amerloon statnmeo and politicians have been thinking along these lln~s ror al least h•Ir the lire of ti>• I Republic. We C'annot say that we have in<'hed a great deal toward either domestic felicity or the pursuit or happiness through following this earnest course. On the other side, there are the poets or the useless, the people we call artists. people who believe that ·one Beethoven is worth at least one Henry Ford, and that maybe all Henry Fords should be killed aborning so that we C'ould genetically concentrate on lhe production or Beethovens. . .\ great deal has been said on both sides of the question or liv- ing the use£uf or the useless life, but precious little of it has percolated down into the com· mon s ense. T HE ARCHETYPAL man or common sense in our society is the frugal New England Congregationalist. He went to churC'h on Sunday, and he meant it. He spent the rest or the week sC'rewing the Boston Irish and h.is own siblin11 in a law office, and he meant It. • The consummate example of this type wa1 the late Justice O.W. Holmes Jr. Like Dr. Johnson, Holmes had a talent for clearint: his' he.ad, and the heads ol othen, or rubbish. t leave you wtthafewof hls words: +<11 would be well if the in· ~Jent classes could forget tt\,e sin and think lest of being good. We learn how to bthave as lawy;e.n. soldiers. merchants or whai not by being them. Life, not the parson, teacties ronduct." I I r SB The Right to Participate Poor Should Pay Taxes To the Editor: The poor have rights too. Governor Rrown's plan to eliminate taxes for poor people is wrong. The poor have just as much right to pay taxes as the non·poor. Because we aJl pay taxes we all have the right to demand better government and better people running that government. To pay nothing for your government, means you have no right to condemn, <'ajole. or demand political or social C'hange. The poor would be labled non-contributors by virtue or their temporary financial status. Instantly you will produce a two class social structure; the givers and getters. Reduce taxes substantially for the poor Yes. But eliminate them ? NEVER. WAl.T BI.ANKENSHIP Drr ant Det oure d To the Editor : I'm sure many of your readers have read about and have pro- bably seen the ship that is being built on Santa Ana Ave. in Costa l'o1esa by Dennis Holland. Dennis has had a dream of being a part of the bicentennial; however, it looks as though he may not be able to participate as planned because of finances. He has had to stop work on the ship and work on other jobs in order to make more money before he can pro- ceed. Dennis · project has been endorsed by the Newport-Mesa Unified School District, the City of Costa Mesa, Orange County. and the State of California. These endorsements are great except that it unfortunately involves no dollar contribution to the project. I think there are several peo· pie who might be interested in donating to this w6rthwhile pro- ject if they knew he was not get· ting any other assistance. We are very fortunate to h ave California"s representative com- ing from our own area and feel Dennis and his wife. Betty, de· serve all the help we C'an possibly give. AJso, sinC'e it has been endorsed, aU donations can be used as a lax deduction. MRS. ALICE DUVALL TV Pafn To the Editor: Thank you for the UPI story in defense o(Douglas MacArthur. I watched "Collision Course" and found it very painful. llenry Fonda gave the worst performance I have ever seen and/or heard. He slurred some Punch [ MA IL BOX ]· LeUers from readers are welcome. The right lo condense letfers to /ii SJX1Ce or eliminate libel is reserved. Lttlers oJ 300 words or less will be given prejerence. All letters must in- clude signature and mailing address but name.1 may be withheld on re· quest if 1uf ficient rea1on is awarent. Poetry wlll not be published. sentences badly. I think . however,_that the most .. i:i ncongruous tbi.ng-was the choice or Mr. Fonda to play the part of ~1acArthur . Mr. Fonda's daughter has openly espoused the. cause of the North ViE'tnamese, and MacArthur would .('ertainl y not have (avorE'd Hanoi. ~1r . Fonda has no! s riid that he was in disagreE'ment with hi s daughter's views. but felt that she had a right to s peak them. This television rilovie left some very bad impressions. and t say that I am glad to read so mething good about Mac . .o\rthur . I hope thal eventually they will stop jumping on Kennedy, Hoover and Nixon, although I hold no brief for any of these men. We in . .\merica have much more important things to do than to continue beating on men who 'can't fight back. So. let's get on with it -doing something constructive! RAYMONDJ. HEALY Para~fC' Prabe To the Editor: May J use your newspaper to publiC'ly thank the Newport Bea<'h paramedics? I ""·ould like the public to know that for themselves, as well as for me, that in time or crises thete is hope and help. New Year's Day I lost con- sciousness while staying with a relative on Balboa Island. I was bleeding through the mouth and nose and had gone into a C'On- vulsion. At night on a holiday where does one tum? The only thing th~y could think of was the paramedics. I was later told that as they hung up the phone the siren started and that withln three to four minutes I was re- ceiving oxygen and the paramedics were working quick· Jy and efficiently with the hospital. MY sister-in-Jaw was under a doctor·s car e just prior to the • '" ... t come here m&lnly for the atmosphere ..... new year and almost went into shock with fright. Instead of ig· noring her and having >1nother emergency they were very tender and <'Ompa ssionate and \\'ere able to avoid a possible at· tack. Thes(' yo ung men are not only keen, intelligent and well trained, but their kindness and gentleness with my worried family coul d ne ver be surpassed. What a great loss any city is suf(e.ring who does not support and maintain the paramedics. DOROTl-iYM c-C0~1BS Selfd Perto,.,,.er• 'l'o the "Editor: I was \'ery pleased to read your January 6 editorial notin~ that theauditor-controller \\'On a clean bill of health from the Grand Jury ('Ontraet auditor. You in- diC'ated that C'ounty taxpa:\"ers ('an start the ne"' year with !ht• assuranre of getting soli d performancE' from "at least ant• sertion or local go,·e rnment " Jiopefu!ly you will not con:-1der me presumptuous to commend for your rf'ading any Gr;ind Jury report of the past e12ht ycars to discover that the vast majority of county departnl('nts <1re soli d performers. Though storms ap- p<>ar to swirl around us , ~·our county departments arc doing their jobs. fly evt~ry :-:tati sti<' available. including repo11 s fron1 Cal Tax and the state Ocparl- ment of F'inanC'e, Orange Count y departments are the n1ost ef- fectiveof all in the state. R .E .THOMAS Count y /\dministrative {)fficer Ofd Glo r11 To the Editor : .<\t the time when "'C should see Old Glory flying highest -and proudest-why are so many replacing her with the Bennington flag-a one family, one bat! le f lag? The Bicentennial of .<\merica. the cou'ntry whose ideals and history are in the billowing folds or Old Glory -why is she bei ng put aside? People who \I.' ant to fly the fl ag with the '76 in its C'anton, wh y not beneath Old Glory where it belongs -in its proper place? I.et Old Glory fly a s she always has. on high, the symbol of rreedom and justice'. K . .o\THRYN F'ISllBACK ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT Ro/Hrt /\.'. Wttd . f'uf'oi1!fllf'T TllomaJ Kl!t>1J1/, F.::ditnr Barbaro Kre1b1ch. £dilonol Pog~ £d11'" nt editorial pagl' of lhc Daily Piiot seeks to inform and stimulate ~aders hr J)~enting on this page dlvcrst• c'ommcntary on tOpics of interest by syndic•t· ed columnists and carlooni$ts, b~· provldlng a forum for rl'ader!I' \'le•·a and by prl'sentlng this nc••&paper'1 opinions and Ideas : I Oft current topics. The rditorlal • opini0n11 ol the Dail)' Pilot ap1>C?ar only In thi rditorial t'olumn at the top of the page. Opinions ex· prtased by •the-eolumnl!ill and earioonlsta and lettrr "'rjlers art. their own and no cndorse.mrnl of tht.ir vie•·~ hy I.he Oallj' Pilat should bf lnf t.rl't(f. Wedn"8day;Jan.14, l9'lll • I Doctors' Slowdown State Faces ·Care Crisis LOS ANGELES (AP) -A sPokesman for a physician's group has warned that the doctors' slowdown in the Los Angeles area could spread throughout the stat.~ when 1ravekrs Insurance Co. raises malpractice insurance rates in Northern California Feb. 1. At t he same time, a Los Angeles County orficial said Tuesday, plans have been prepared to call a slate of e.mergency_as a possible means of combat- ing the slowdown. Officials drew up the plans in case no solution is found to the malpracti~esituation. The state has ad· vanced a plan calling for a state· financed insurance company in return for a medical "Peace Corps" which would have doctors donate 20 days a year to caring for the poor. THE LOS ANGELES County Medical Associa- tion criticized the proposal Tuesday and protested . what it said were statements by Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. that doctors "'do not act in •a socially responsible manner to the needs of their com· munities." · Brown also said through a spokesman, "I un- derstand the doctors' feelings and look forward to their assistance in resolving what is turning out to be a· very difficult social problem." Southern California physicians, mostly in the 1.os .o\ngeles area, began the work slowdown Jan. l · to protest an incfease of 327 percent in their malpractice ins urance premiums. BY TUESDAY, the 13th day of the slowdown, 98of the 234 m ember hospitals in the Hospital Coun- cil of Southern California had experienced some degree of diffic ulty due to the protest. Nearly 26,000 workers have been affected - morethan4,300ofthem laid off -while hospitals are losing $700.000 a day from decreased patient loads, a hospital coun ci 1 spokesman said. UP'ITtlepfletl SPEAKS FOR ANIMALS Actress Betty White Druggist Killed' In Heist DAILYPILOT AS Anintab Protected Dr. Gerald Glantz of the United Physicians of California told a news conference in Sacramento that Trave le rs -the insurance carrier £or the 9,500 doctors in Southern California -would raise its rates for physicians in the northern portion or the s tate Feb. 1. POLICE SA ID the ,_~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~., three young men e ntered Willow Pharmacy about 3 p .m . and wandered around for several minutes before leaving. Several minutes later the me n reentered the store and went to the counter with several items. "IT'S GOING to be a statewide movement very rapidly," Glantz said, adding that Travelers in· s ures 65 percent of the physicians in the San Jose. Sacramento area. Doctors in the northern part or the state staged their own s lowdown last year to protest soaring malpractice insurance rates. Out of 3,761 beds at Los Angeles county hospitals, 121 remained available at midnight rvt:on· day, compared with 184 beds 24 hours earlier. .J\nother 1,000 beds are available if extra employes ('an be hired, and applications for new employes were being pro('es_sed Tuesday. DESP ITE T HE s lowdown, officials s aid emergency room ser vices around the county re- mained available Tuesday, with no reports of any life-endangering situations caused by t he slowdown. The cashier noticed one or the me n had a gun and she £ell to the floor s houtin g t o the pharmacis t . D earth grabbed a gun and seven s hots were exchanged between the drug store owner and the fleeing suspects. CHILDRENS i ' ' . ~ • • ' ... _.._ - \ • ' . SALE STARTS THURS., JAN . 15 DOORS Ol'EH AT IOA.M. , Sears u 0 0 0 0 oo Misses' Nylon Bib Knit Tops Low Priced • ' " Misses' Easy-Care Pants Were 54 99 '» 99 to 57" -•ach Located on the Lower Level ,, I • Pants • Sweaters • Tops • Robes • Dresses • Hostesswear • Coats QUANTITIES LIMITED Use Sears Revolving Charge • Roomy Handbags ~= Sheer Nylon Knee Highs One 1ize fill 8 'h -11 Low Priced 2 99 4 pairs 88t .. in a .. :.;Y. pkg. Th is Ad Effective through Sal., Jan. 1.7 · I sears I ....... ~lfll·ico. . '" ... So. Coast Plaza 3333 Brt1tDI SI. Pllone 5*-3333 . • • Buena Park 1150 LI Pallftll AW. Pllone l:IJ.4400 Oran2e 2100 N. Tustlii AW. P'-• '37•2100 ) STOii HOU•S1 #Mmhy !hr" llt-i(fo' 10AM1ot~ $olutdoy f :30 AM to t "" Sunclo' 12""",. .s ~ • 7 • . • -' '• • . I VC ' "" ag cil ca. !;11 by I Alt th• fro I~ I :. S: (j s T, Rei Edn ' ~ i ,... , .. ' ' ' " ' i - 11 .Tr. "' • • -.J!: . .... • . • I, . -... ]••Vine --''-'. 'EDITION • - VOL. 69, NO. 14,6SECTIONS, 76 P.AGES • ..,. t • ORANGE COUl)ITY, CALIFORNIA Today's C:loslag N.\'.Stoeks TEN CENTS -Candidate ·s1a1e1ttents Now Bilingual Reacting to federal gO'Yem· m.ent threats .of letal action against the city, Irvine coUn· .cilmen decided Tuesdaj to print candidates' statements in both l!;nilish and Spanish as.required by a disputed regulaU~. But the council also told CitY Attorney James Erickson to sue the f~~al gove"rnment for relief fro~.the regulations in the future I I ·r • r and for damages. 1be damages are the cost of thei translations and additional printing that will be paid by the city. Ericbon was to contact other cities involved in the matter to- d·ay to determine whether sup· port could be garnered for a joint suit. The federal voting rights act requires ju~s~iclions to print I ~,. --StUan en Slopes ·• President Ford's daughter SUsan shows her skiing form on the slopes of Vail Mountain in Colorado during a two- month break from college. Susan will participate in her first ski race as a member of an employes team of the resort community. GOP Hea4 Urges Step-dotvn by Cory , From Wire -!.. COntroller .Kenneth COry to take The state c 1rma~'Tof the a:,leave of. absence because he is RepU~lican P ty urged Gov. surr~d.ed ~.Y "a growing cloud Edmund G. B wn Jr. to ask ofsuap1c19n. ' • .; ".;-Cha.irman Paul Haerle said the , controller sb_ould step down until . charges against Dr. Louis Cella, .who contributed more lha·n $250,000 tO'Cory's campaign last Y¥JT, arecljsposed of. ... A spokesman for Brown said Haerle should take up the matter directly with Cory. Cory himself will remain publicly silent on the demand. Gentry .Durham, a spokesman for the controller, said, .. There ' will be ,po response and no com· ment on Haerle 's statement." ~.$ Cella and three associates each ~ 1 were indicted by the Orange County Grand Jury and a fed eral . Grand Jury in Los Angeles Mon· day on felon'y counts relating to the alleged embezzlement of $2 · million from two Orange County hospitals. A probe reportedly continues .into .,.an insurance company in which Cory, Cella, and Southern California Democratic Chairman -'NO COMMENT" _,__ Richard O'Neill own interests. (SeeCORY, PageA2) State Con-Co<'i , voting materials in both English and a second language if five per· cent of the electorate speaks the second language exclusively. The jurisdiction was defined in a federal regulation as counties, according to City Attorne y Erickson. Jrv.fne has a tiny proportion of exclusively Spanish speaking re· sidents, city officials maintain. But Orange County bas about 14 percent Spanish surnamed population. Dec. 23, the city council de· cided to print the statements only in English and offer translations to those who ask. The decision was r eversed Tuesday. Last Friday, U.S. Jus tice Department attorneys said they ·would enforce the federal regula- lions. Thal could have included criminal action. against City Clerk Carol Flynn, the city's elections officer, and Civil action against the city that could throw out the election. Since first contact was made with the Justice Department last September, the federal position on the regulations has complete- l y r e ve rse d , accordin g t o Erickson . Erickson contends that the in · tent of the federal law was to ensure that non-English speak· ing citizens could be informed on the issue . The county population requirement , he said, should not appl y to the counci l election which affects only the city, not other areas of Orange County. Ilinshaw Denies Bribe Congressman Say s Offer N ot Ma de By TOM BARLEY OltN o.u, PllotSUtt Congressman Andre w Hinshaw repeatedly denied to-- day allegation that he solicited a bribe from a lawyer representing Beckman In s t r uments of F\illerton during an assessment appeals hearing at which the de- fendant appeared as Orange County's assessor. Hinshaw, 53, told a Superior Court jury as his bribery trial moved into its final hours that he never suggested to attorney Ronald Steelman that things might go Beckman's way if the firm bought IO $100 tickets to CIA P lans To Raise Suh Curbed WASHINGTON (AP) -Plans for another CIA attempt to raise . a sunken Soviet aµbmarine from the noor of the Pacific Ocean have been thwarted bY a Russian ship patrolling the wreckage site, intelligence sources said, today. The presence of the Soviet vessel prevented the American ship Glomar Explorer from re· turning last sum mer to the wreck site northwest of Hawaii, one source said. Top CIA officials are now "85 percent sure'' that the $250 million salvage project will have to be abandoned altogether, he added. "The project is over, at least. for the present time," another source said. - The Glomar Explorer, a sophisticated recovery vess el built by billionaire Howard llughes, raised the forward third of the Soviet submarine in 1974. Maintenance CO!-ts (or the 618-foot Glomar Explorer have caused a steady drain on the CIA ·budget, and there has been no in· dication when the Soviet patrol ship wouia eod its vigil of the wreckage site; one source said . A new Americaq salvage at· tempt while the Soviets patrol the area would run the risk of a naval confrontation. The CIA's first attempt to re· cover the Soviet submarine was di sclosed· early last year in press accounts which CIA Director William E. Colby sought to sti · ne. It remains unclear whether the Soviets already were aware of the American salvage project or if they learned of it through news accounts . · According to press reports, the Soviet subm~rine went down 750 miles nortfiWesl ot Hawaii in 1968. After the Russians failed to find the wreck, the Glomar Ex· plorer reportedly succeeded in raising a portion of the sub- marine in the summer of 1974. It also remains unclear how much intelligence was gained from the i,overnment's $250 <SeeGLOMAR, Page A2) Hinshaw's testimonial dinner. Steelman gave that testim·ony as a prosecution witness. He further claimed that Hinshaw· called a recess in the appeals hearing to make the proposition to him. Steelman further testified that Hinshaw told him : "I don't know why the large taxpayers in this county are not supporting me." Hinshaw today told defense at ... tomey Marshall Morgan that the opposite was always true while he served as county assessor prior to his election to Congress in 1972. "Most of my support came from the large prop e rt y owne rs." the Newport Be ach Republican said . And he testified that he could not recall ever meeting Steelman at the as- sessor's office or talking with the lawyer over the telephone. · The denial followed Hinshaw's admission that he accepted two stereo units as gifts duri.Qg his term as county assessor. He is being tried for three felony counts contained in a grand jucy indictment: acce p. tance of stereo equipment and a $1,000 campaign contribution from the Tandy Corporation and the soliciting of a bri be duri ng the Beckman hearing. Hinshaw admitted that he ac· cepted a stereo unit, the most ex - pensive model manufact ured by Tandy's Radio Shack group from Tandy's Vi ce President J ames Buxton during a vis it to the co m- p a n y 's G a rd e n Gr o v e warehouse. Turning to the jury, Hinshaw s tressed that he had hi s checkbook and pen out and had every inte ntion of paying for the stereo unit. (SeelUNSHAW. PageA2) UnruhArrested ·Two-level Drunk Rap Hits 'Big Jess' SACRAMENTO (AP) -State Treasurer J esse Unruh w.as arrested on a drunk driving charge early to· day, the state Highway Patrol reported, Patrolman J. ·, E . Weir Said he saw Unruh driving erratically on In- terstate 80 in Yolo County just across the Sacramento River from the state Capitol at 2: 15 a.m. / Weir said he stopped the car and Unruh failed a sobriety test. Unruh, 53, once considered the most powerful Democrat in the state when he was speaker of the state Assembly, was taken to the Yolo County Jail in Woodland where hew a s fingerprinted, photo- graphed and signed a promise to . appear in Washington Jus tice Court in West Sacramento. uN•uH Lt. Tom Dinsdale, shift commander at the jail, described Unruh as cooperative. Dinsdale said Unruh was taken to his home in West SacrAmento by a fri end he phoned from jail. . Mesa Clergyman Runs for Congress t'he Rev. J ames 0 . Combs, 48. who recently resigned as pastor of the First Baptist Church of Costa Mesa, has declared himself a can· didate for the. Re publican nomin a tion in the 40 th Congressional District. The district, which covers most of southern Orange County and part of San Diego County, presently is represented by An· drew J . Hinshaw <R·Newport Beach). Combs' entry into the race, an· nounced. al a press cOnterence in Costa Mesa TuesdaY. brought the number of candidates seeking the Republican nomination to five . The other candidates are As· semblyman Robert Badham of Newport Beach, Michael P. Clancey, a 29·year-old attorney from El Toro, college professor Harry P. Jeffrey of Laguna Beach, and Hinshaw himself. Hinshaw currently is righting charges of bribery in Orange ~i:mty 5_uperior Court, charges I which relate to the period when he was Orange County assessor . Hin shaw has said all along, however , that he plans to cam - paign for a third congression al term. Even so, it appears his legal diffic ulties have helped draw a large number of can. didates to the race. In his announcement, Combs described himself as a lifelong Republican and a constitutional conservative. In his prepared statement, he made a reference to HinshaW's legal difficulties when he said the fll'St of two dilemmas facing district voters was ''achie ving responsible representation at a time when the incumbent congressman is under indictment and trial on felony bribery charges." Combs then tobk a swipe at other candidates in the race by declaring that the "resultant vacuum has attracted only tradi· tional, practlc:ed politicians who would not constitute a sufficient (See PASTOR, Page A2) Government Discussed By DOUG FRITZSCHE Oltllle PellJ "'i.tSUf'I Citing the blgb cast of added bureaucracy, most of 16 can· didates for the Irvine City Coun- cil said Tuesday they opposed a suggested two·tier form of city government at this time. But the two-level government did have defenders at the can. didates' forum at Rancho San J oaquin School s ponsored by Irvine Tomorrow. About 100 resi· dents attended the rorum. Jn comments diverging from the two-tier government topic of the evening, the candidates in· formally agreed that campaign expenses should be kept under $3.000. But no action that would bind the candidates to the co m· ments was t aken . Also, most of the candidates said they would ban smoking in the council chambers. The re- maining six .candidates said they would set aside smoking areas rrom the rest of the chambers. The two·tier government has been discussed as a way to keep government close to the people when the city reaches its ul- timate population or a quarter to a halr million . The system as discussed would consist of a citywide city council to handle matters affecting the city as a wh ole and a substrata of village councils to handle more local issues. Candidate George F. Kossler, 3485 Eboe St., was the only out· ri ght defender of the system. ''I like to see local government. I like to see decentralized govern· ment. One of the problems in the United States today is that there is too much concentration of <See FORUM, PageA2) Coast Weath er 'IHEY RES_f!J!Vll[ ·'A.t 3 Hospitals TO PIIDI' 1DS '." · : "•001dth•c•rt0 •:DailJ"~ · OC Doctors SlowDown?. Irvine Thief Ge t s EJ!gines Sunny Thursday a nd slightly warmer s ays the ·we ather service, with highs along the beaches at 74 rising to 78 inland. Lows tonight 42 to 48. r;eader. In fact, the ad ta the Riot rot much more respcinse'lhariUe ~ L rao In \Ire pa!* In saida RKIN ·~,!·" . ,.~ .r, J • ' B~~~ ??~..,. ?. ~ 1 the advt~~ Pbyalclat11 uslnc Huntington i*Pe!ienced by lbe -c..ta .Jl!l~I . ID!ercommUllllY Hoopital, Hoag pan who ploced tllil duillled Memorial Hospital and Costa · ~: .. • 'Maa Memorial Hospital appear ' • -'IT Galule, alt• pwr) td ! ' ilr•, 52,000 ral .• $5Cll ~ t ux-uuattr:tAll . . .If yoll ha••~ .•• ,,... Wt.nt io . Mil, •aU 943--. Jt.111111 lUJI. • few -111 ·t11e r\&111 I• to ottracl ·a bater. Atf.:1 the Orqe COut. Ibo l'lllll·plaee 11 . tbeDellJ' Pilat. ••• .. ~ ... . . .. todaY to· be on the verge of a a1owdown to protett malpractice U.wance coeta. About 350 doctors from the three hotpilals met at Hoag 'IWoday nl1bt and reportedly 90 percent of tbote prest:ftl mdleat· ed tbi:1 would curtail the.tr ..n1 ... Tiie • percent estimate was ,,_"" Ltada Motttn, publh>re-• lations director at Hoag, who doctors at the meeting "indieat· st)d that the medical executive ed., by a show o1 bands that they staff at Hoag would meet today to would be forced to participate on consider the situation. an indivtdu•I basis 1n a curtail· · Tom Richards, administrator ment of physicians' services .of Costa, Mesa Memoriel beceuseofapinabilitytopaf.the llojJpital, aaid tod•Y that he did higher m~!J>ractlce Insurance not expect any effect.a to be fell a.t premiu!"'· . the hospital untll early next ,. "'She laid tlliat a "Written st.ate· Week . •• . • -of batpil•l -Dimw would be· •1wi·11 keep an .. ~ to see It •·ndlatile l•ter todq. the,.. ti a trend 'to"'ard'the .. boctq,.. I,o t.o.Allill<s c;o.u.i., te11entn1' of admpslons, •• he htte bMft· on a •19wdoWn ln pro- aclded iJ teot a11In11 "malw~ctlce Ill· Pu bite relaUons 'director Mot.~ su:fance costs si'ncl the berfh,nint Ua.aold aomo 90 perceal of II\• oltlleyear. <RelatedS!pryAS) .. •• 1 . Two automobile engines valued at $800 were taken from the Irvine garage of Rick F. An· denoo, 24, he told police Tuesday after retumine: ho.me (ollowing a three-week absence. A. 1949 Chevrolet six-cylinder ea1tne and a 1961 .high performance Corvette engine were taken from the home at IUl2110lltpeller Avenue, be said. Mid. • . Accordln1 t'c> officer Pat Rodaen. ·'Thi eogioee were or tuch bulk that It -Ud have • \Akelf a miolmurn of two men to inove the.m and a truck.to haul themaway,'I , • , '' INSIDE T ODA. V A Mis.ri1sippi banker's wife may hov. bf'en killed before a 125 .000 ront0m 100.I paid to her' ~.poUetlOJ/. HerbOOll -and • ~ In the c:G.le .,.,. found T .. odoy. Storv Af, ladex .....__ _____ _,,. --• Al DAILY PILOT ' I - • ,, • A llergi,es Cause J ekyll-H yde Life MILAN, Tenn. (UPJ) -Keith Johnson is like m0&t. 7· year-o lds -he loves hamburgers. But when he ta.kes a bite of one ''his eyes get glassy and Ugbt up like a Christmas tree "his mothe r says. ~'Then be starts staggering. He acts like he's drunk OT ondrogs ··says his father. . Keith's doctor describes his behavior as "Or. J ekyll. • ' -- ........... .r PASTOR ••• F rd S ., p,...p ... A.J . 0 .ets CAN'DIDATES' FORlJM. cban1e to q•Dder ~ con· ftdence. •• • The caadlUte al ~ poiD£ ........ eel that Illa lM yean ... cltr-qualllled -to Ii•• "effective repr"8onta_tloo! to a district thot sorely needs It." F11nd Aid Proposal Accordin'g to Combs, the second dilemma taclnt voters By tile AseoclUN Presa was tbe choice or whether to _ f'rei.ident-J'ord-wlll-propoeere--- tolerate what be:-rtrm1!"cr'ii IJnQ\iiabin& ~11"<>1 of,$10 blllloo • • powei:.... road or &ood intentions leads .•• DefendlnS Ille two-tier SY>tem Ceodldate Bruce ilasMNlold as provtdtn1 an lmpcrt.ant.forum that, while he was ~cemed for citizen cOncerns, he aald, ''It about the potentJaJ p:iets of a two- may cost a UtUe money, but so do tier government, ''J have no all improvements." philosophical difference wlth it.5 Candidate Mary Ann Galdo. atated objectives." He c•uU.Ofted 5071 Berean Lane, said the con· that, ''ln tt\ls age of municipal cept deserved more study con-default. greAter expenses may be tendmg,_"perbapa two-U41r..,cov~ -lncurr.ed .!!.. · ern~ent will revi~.a.llze Candidate George McCliire participatory _democracy. said such a fQtm 9£ government Mr. Hyde"' and attributes it to the boy's allergies. And that covers a lot o( territory. KEITH IS 1\LLERGIC TO APPLES, oranges, yeast, s ugar chocolate coffee, corn, milk, cheese, ice cream, pork, beer and soY l'.l~~ts. according to Dr. William Crook of the Children's Chn1c 1n JaC"kson . Tenn. decline In world leadership, ,the In fe<ledllr funded 1-Jlb care economy, and the family, ,or to pro1ram1. lftelucllne Medicaid, rebuild.those areas. . to the states. the Ne-York Daily Cand1dat~~o~bs lt~ted Inna-News.reported tod.,.-. ----tlon, a-erense, crime and ... violence, education, inte"erity in In a di a~ at ch l r om government, and free enterprise Wa.abinaton. tbe Dew&pa~quot· as the issues in the campaign. ed unnamed federal off1cl~1 as Combs was pastor of the First saytn1 ~proposal wu tailored Baptist Church of Costa Mesa for to counter forme r. California Wh~n the city growa to 100,000 would add a "fourth tier'' to ex· or more, .•he said! th~ idea should \sting fed~tll..na.te..and.l®ala:ov· ! ~ be exam~ned again... ~ resent"the ,miment. Hikes in taxes, he said, 1 patemalt1m of the City Council already are forcing people out of ~ feeling the citizens on the Irvine. He added that housing village 1 1ev~~ can look out tor subsidies from local t axes would I' themse .ves. drive even more people out ot the Candidates Pat Bonner. E. city , llis parents, l'i1.r. and Mrs. Eugene Johnson of Milan, have asked hunters to donate wild game -one of the few five years. He is married with Gov. Ronald Rea1an 11 ~lenge one daughter. ti;> F'or:<I for t&e J!.epubllcan pre· s1dent1al nomination. Ray Quigley, and Carol Morris · 1 agreed that the matter should be Candidate Robert Miller said I thiii.gs their son can eat. . "I like deer,"' said the second-grader. "What _I miss most is chocolate pie and I'd like to eat at school like the other kids and drink milk." T he J ohnsons said they realized onl y t .... ·o years ago th~t allergies v.•ere responsible for their c hild's dramatic behavior changes. "WE WERE H1\VING TO SPA NK HIM Crorya th~.till!e he got up in the morning until he_ went to~ at night, said his mother. •·we thought he v.·as 1ust mean. . She said the turning point came when they bought Keith and his 3-year-old brother, l\larc~s, bunk beds. . "I was he lp in g Keith \11ith his prayers one night and he just reach~d up and tore the whole top or the bedding orr. :· . The parents said they took the bQy to the Jackson chruc aftC'r thf'ir family doctor told them all the boy needed was ··agoodbelt ." . · 1 JI Tests showed 1imit£'d aJ lergies. 1\1.ore testing ast u y showed more extensive allergies. KEITll S.<\ID DJ-:ERBURG ER IS ONE of his, rayori.te foods. !-le also is allov.'ed peanut butter but doesn t hke 1t, and is not fond of the dietetic jellies. . . Buying groceries is expensive and time-consuming, ~f rs . Johnson said. She has to read every label to m ake sure of the ingredients. The parents said they allow Keith to. have a glass or milk about once a month and chocolate pie or cheesecake v.·hen his report card is good. . "It 's worth it even if it makes him meaner for a little v.·hile," Mrs. J ohnson said. CROOK S.o\ID m E RE IS A CJl.o\NCE THE boy C;9D overcome p ar~ of his allergie.s. bu~ he could just as easily become a llergic to the roods he s eating now. "If that happens." said l\1rs. John son, "I don·t know what we'll do." Group Cites No Smoking Non-arrests From P a ge Al GLOMAR •.. million investment in the project. Bandits Use Electric Dart Gun in H eist BLUE BELL, Pa." (AP) -The Taser electric dart gun, sold tor protection against crime, was an instrument of terror for a Montgomery County couple in the hands of four masked ban· di ts. "The assailants used this dart gun to Ca rce the man and his wife to say where they had more mOhey or valuable belongings," police Sgt. J oseph Stemple said Tuesday. He re fused to name the man and his wire. Stemple said a man appeared al the door of the couple's borne at suppertime and identified himself as a police officer. He said the bogus cop rushed in with three other men, all wearing ski masks. The men carried the Taser - designed by a s pace technology e n gi n eer in s pired by the weaponry of Buck Rogers and James Bond. "The couple were tied up with C"lo thin g, h a ndcurfs and telephone wires," Stemple said. "'Appare ntly, the suspects knew there was money in the house. ''While the people were tied up, one of these guys shot them with this dart gun. They were both shot twice in the stomach ,·· Stemple said. "The darts stuck in their flesh . It's like a needle, ex- cept it gives you a shock." "It doesn't matter if Congress will ever ap.erove the plan, and Wldoubtedly It won't," a source described as a veteran official of the Depar'tme nt of Health, EduCation and Welfare was quot- considered whe n the city grows the issues are growth and hous- larger, but that it WM too ex~ ing, not the form of government. pensive to be implemented now. He said the city has the rlg'ht to 1 · Candida tes Ro bert Martin, restrict .:rowth that ''will only • William Crisell, Robert Whitson, benefit you know who," referring 1 Maureen Spencer, John Adams to the Irvine Company. On hous· and Basil "Bill" Vardoulis op-ing, he said, '"I am opposed to posed the system, contending giving money to other people for community associations do the housing." ed .. ~·ylnfl. 4'They just wan.t to hav~. somethinJ down oa paper to counter Reagan,-and this is it," the official reportedly said. job at less cost. Vardoulis note d , ''There already is a city that has a two-- tier government and that is New Candidate Gary GI dden said, . "You are not electing ppen space I and pla nning , you are electing a man to do a job.'' He promised to I be a ''friend on the City Council.'' Reagan has prol)OSed shirting Cederal programs to s~ates and local government. He has estimated that $90 billion might be cut, altbou.llh he says the figure was not something that could be cut immediately and was being used Only as anexample. The News said Ford was ex- pected to announce his block- grant proposal in his State of the Union message on Monday. The still incomplete plan would give the states compJ:'ete control over spending for almost all health programs that provide services directly to the public, beginning at the start of the next York." On the need for such a govern- ment, Adams commented, "If a ·tree is too tall or whatever , why can't neighbors get together over a six pack of beer and solve their problems?'" Candidate David Sills opposed it outright. "I 'm sure that the people who thought it up had good intentions, but I'm afraid that these good intentions will lead the same place the other F ro• P a g e Al HINSHAW. • fiscal year, on Oct. 1, and pba&ed But Buxton, he testified, was to be completed over several adamant and r efused to accept years. his check. "And I didn't want to Th e pro gra m s in c lud e oCfendhim,"Hinshaw explained. Medicaid, community menta l "It was not a very pleasant ex· • Gladden added that he did not file a candidate's statement or qualifications because of the cost. "If I had the $200, the de- cision would have been harder," He said. The two-tier government topic was picked by the Irvine Tomor- row group. Marilyn Vassos, who introduced the evening, said Tuesday was one or two nights the group was able to reserve a school room. The meeting was held at the same time as a City Council meeting. Armstrong Nominate d health prog rams, child im· perience, •• Hins h aw told the munization, family planning, jury. WASl-IINGTON (AP) - emergency ca re and programs Hinsh aw fu rther admitted that Pres ident Ford today that deal with venereal disease, he ·accepted a nother costly stereo nominated fo r mer White theNewssaid. unit from former a uditor-House counselor Anne Money proposed for these pro-appraiser George Upton while he Armstrong of Texas to be grams could total $10 billion, ac-was a guest at Upton'shome. the first wom an to serve as cording to the newspaper. The former assessor said Up-U.S. a mbassador to Great Reagan, declaring his highly ton m ade the offe r after he Britain, and said he ex- publicized pla n for redu~i~g (Hins haw) noticed a pile of pected her to do "a superb federal spending has been m1s1n-Radio Shack cartons in Upton·s job."' t e rpreted, laun c h ed his SantaAnahome. SecretaryofState Henry Wisconsin presidential primary Hinsha w said Upton told him A. Kissinge r and Mrs. c ampaign with a blast at that be had been given a number Ford stood alongside as the bureaucracy. or stereo sets which were J.o be Presid e nt named Mrs. ,• An anti-smoking organization took legal action today to compel Orange County's deputy sheriffs and marshals to arrest s mokers '\\'ho violate the county's no s moking ordinance in public buildings. The s ubmarine r e portedl y b roke apart as it was bf7i ng raised from the depths. Vanous press reports have said the CIA suC'C"eeded in r ecovering nuclear- tipped torpedos, trai~ing logs and the bodies of the Soviet crew. Other news reports said that much more valilabl e i n - telligence. such as code books, still lay at the bottom of the Pacific . During a one-da y visit en route raffled off as prizes by the Coast Armstrong to her new job E--COll L;Ved from Illinois to F1orida, he said Guard and that Buxton had in-and promised to continue ..v-., bureaucracy "has become a pro-eluded one for Hinshaw in the to name women to govern· Named as defendants in the Superior Court act ion filed by the Group .4.gains t Smoking Pollu- tion CG ASP > are Sheriff Brad Gates. Marshal Don Rhea and Superior Court Adminis trator I. .. esliel •. McCartney. None of the three defendants has made any attempt to rigidly enforce the n o smoking or· dinance enact ed ri.tay 20, 1975 by county supervisors, the lawsuit claims. The action further states that non -s m ok ers in the county courthouse and other county buildings d aily face s e rious health problems from the fumes emitted by s mokers in both smoking and non-smoking areas. It is claimed in the action ri led by Santa Ana attorney Bill Shef- field that "side stream .. s moke from an idling cigarette emits t'>"·ice the am ount of tar and four times t he amount of carbon monoxide as fumes emitted by a s moker. Threat Probed MURFR EESBORO. Tenn. <U PI) -Secret Service agents are investigating a Louisville, Ky., woman who told local of- ficials she had come to "see a judge about the killing of Gerald Ford." .. ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT f,...()r_ Co.tJI D~u, Pot-M. '"'"" °"*" l~<bl""" I~ N~""" p,~ ... ••p..0•1-byt .... Or .... 90 C..0" l'ubll!ol'l>to~Co" '"""' 5e-"1~tt!•t"''"6•~ -··""'d "'oftd•y M •O"'lh f ,,.,,., '"" c ... M ""'""'· Nf'"'"°'' ll~•fll, ... Uftl<ngl<Sl llo!~h ,....,. I•<~ \l•llf'Y. ''""f'• ~•<tdlf'tlK& \1611•• 6"" '"-f\oo'>( .. /S.0..11\(N•l,A~t-tHI•· 11(1ft ., '''''"'""'" Sal"rd•VI -~·~ '"'" l"•'"C•P•• puGl1\ll•~ "'""' " ~• ~ -" II~• ">4<...,.(0\I• M•••. C..llftl"llla..,.2'. Robert N. Weed "••tl*ftl •"" ""bll- Jack R. Curl~v Vl<f' ..... -... -"--.. ""'- Thomas KMYll minent branch or the gove rn-consignment. ' ment posts. l D U ment that you can't turn out at Hinshaw testified that he told The Britis h Foreign Of· R OU UOUJJe the polls." Upton to keep the unit at the Up-fice gave approval Tues· 0 He addre ssed about 450 ton home with the explanation day to Mrs. Armstrong's JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP> -persons at a rally in a downtown that he would soon be moving to appointment, finishing in An escaped prisoner has been hotel while an estimated 200 Washington, D .C. as Or ange o ne week di plo m atic captured after eluding the law members of a group a called the Cotmty·s 40th District represen-formalities that normal1y The Glom ar was built under the C'over of being a deep sea min in g vessel for Hug hes .• ~lowever . the government has claimed ownership of the ship and a com panion vessel, a sub- mersible barge. for four weeks by spending his People's Bicentennial Com · tative and his moving pl ans were take four to six weeks. days in his girlfriend"s dog house _m~ts~s~io~n~m~a~r~c~h~ed~~o~u~ts~id~e~ ...... ~ ..... _."n~ott_:y".'e~t~c'llo'.llm~p~l~e:!'te::, __ :._ ____ ~==========:::'.'.. and e ating from doggy bags. - The CIA now is reportedly try- ing to find alternative uses Cor the Glomar Explorer , but it. could not be learned if any final decision has been m ade yet what to do v.·ith it. Police said Henry Pittman, 20, flushed out of his dog house hideout, is scheduled to be re- turned to the state prison system, from which he escaped four weeks ago, officers said. Front Pag e Al COR Y •.• The d og ho use, without a canine occup a nt. is near the home or Pittman's girlfriend. She would bring him bags of Cood during the day a nd take him to her place at night, police said. Federal investigators have con· firmed that Cory·s appointment of inheritance tax refer ees also is under investigation. Arabs Near Consen sus ''The revel ations o f th e mysterious Cell a-O'Neill e mpire and Ken Cory's relationship and role in that empire have raised some serious questions about the controller·s independence and ability to continue serving as state controller." Haerle said in a news r elease. "The governor must be aware of the growing cloud of suspicion surrounding state Controller Ken Cory,·· Haer le said. "I therefore ask Governor Brown to ask MT. Cory to take a leave oC absence." UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) -Arab delegates say they have agreed in principle on a re- solution to put before the Securi· ty Council calling for Israeli withdrawal from all O('Cupied Arab territory and recognition or the "inalienable naliooal rights" or the Palestinians as the basis (or any Arab·lsrae·u peace settle-ment. Coun cil Action ln capsule form, here are the key actions taken Tuesday by the lrvine City Council : PARK BONDS. The council approved the sale or the re- maining $9 million of an $18 million park and bike trail bond issue to Bank of America at 6.3646 ~rcent interest. The sale is expected to keep tax ra.tes within the\r initial proJ.ec- tions. Selling the bonds now 1s expected to s}>eed completion of the nine city parks by 18 months. YOUTH GRANT. The council approved a joint prop>sal seeking a $300,000 grant for juvenile justice programs. In partnership with Costa Mesa. Saddleback Valley._San Juan Capistrano. San Clemente and Laguna Beach, Ir.vine would receive part of the counseling and referral 1ervJces ot UC Irvine's youth services program and a system otresidenUal care shelters lf the funds are approved. HOUSING. The cooncll approved a second-year •P· plication for S80.000 In federol houslnfl funds. It shot down a s uggestion by Councilman John Bwton to hold public hear. ings on the matter and make low &n4, moderate housing measures a city councilelertion IS;Jue. • CABLE TV. T"" COW>cll continued to Feb. 10 consldtta· Uon ot a new fr1nchl.se for Community Cablevision, an trviJ'le Company aubsktiary. Stilt to be worked out ta a pro- posed cllhens advhlory committee ror the cablerislon com~ piny, rates for public acceta to the channef and penalties tor late lutallatlon ol cables to new homes. . COMTAL TllAFl'IC. The council approved "In "'°" ~" a plan for the atttet •ntem tn the Irvine Coftt~y·s 10.000 acre coastal area between Irvine~ Newport Beach and Lacuna Beach. · -- Lynn Hart HART'S John Hart SPORTING GOODS \ 538 CENTER ST.• COSTA MESA• 646-1919 BICYCLE PARTS-TIRES-ACCESSORIES Shuffleboard Sets Bocceball Sets Table tennis Sets Frisbees Boomerangs Racquetball Racquets Handball Gloves &. Balls Tennis Rackets Wilsoft.Dunlop-Davis Bancraft·Yonex Racket StrilEinl &00 to 21°0 TRis Shoes ' Tennis Slirts & Sllorts . .. Tais Dresses Tnais W°' Suits 538 'Centlr 646-1919 . ' Basketballs Backboards & Goals Footballs Soccerballs Playground Balls Volleyballs & ,Nets :Jaseball Mitts & Gloves Baseball ~rts & Caps Baseball Shoes Soccer Shoes Track Shoes Cross CUtry Shoes Wresting Shoes Basketllall -Slloes Bike Rlpairin1.Parts Tlres·Tubes-'Accesslries Ojle11 9 to 6 'Closed Sundly · • " - R E c a sr " H <I p' G rl ~ n h " ~ p n <i 7 Afternoon N.Y.Stoeks TEN CENTS 118 . Sch ool Smoking Decision Stalle d ByUTRYaANCY °' .. .,.... ......... Trulteea ot tbe Huntington Beacb Un.lop Wah Seboo1 Dis.. trict diacuued smokiJW on cam· put for 90 minutes Tuesday nl&bt, then voted 3·2 to put of! a dedlion. Despite the delay, it appears there won •t be smoking areas on tbe district's six campuses .un- less someone bas a change of tnind. Trustees' Hel~n Dltte and Ron Shenkman made it clear they are ' opposed to allowing smoking. Board President Ralph Bauer said today he also would pro· bably vote "no." · Trustees ~Bob Knox and Don MacAllister said the board should establish smoking areas, with MacAIUster suggesting they be experimental. Most of the so students-in tbe audience Tuesday niabt indicat- ed they don't smote bur.want "Both Shenlcman and. "Bauer wue for the board. suaested the voted 316-331 i!" opposruon and smoking areas to eliminate tbe favored voting on the con-delay because not all of the ~tudents voted m favor of smok· "yellow haze" in restrooms. troverslal iasue Tuesday night, anawers on a random smoking mg areas. "You know It is not a new pro-but they were outvoted. survey he took have been com-The smoki ng issue arose blem " said Mike Miller, a atu• Bauer said this morning that piled. because of a new state law which dent at Westminster J:Ggb School. trustees didn •t hear anything dur-But Bauer said today the most took effect this month, allowing Re drew some chuckles when ing Tue.day's discussion they germane question -whether school districts to establish he told trustees "It is Older than hadn't beard betore. and he • pareats, staff and students sup-smoking areas if they wish. They you are." ' dido 't think a delay was port smoking areas -was had been prohibited Crom doing Bill Matheny a student from necessary. tallied. so in the past. Marina High' School urged But Andrew Studdert, a stu-It showed parents didn't want Superintendent Jake Abbott re- trustees to at least (ey a Puot pro-dent at Golden West College who smoking area established in a commended against allowing gram. has been studying the smoking vote of 585-368, while the staff <See SMOKE, Page A2) inshaw Denies Bee allB • e Uf'ITeMpMllo 'NO COMMENT' State Controller Cory GOP H ead • 'A sks Cory Step Duwn From Wire Services The state chairman ·Of the Republican Party urged Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. to ask Controller Kenneth Cory to take a leave of absence because he is surrounded by "a growing cloud ofsuspicion." · Chairman Paul Haerle said the contrqller should ljtep down unW charges against Dr. lAuis Cella, who contributed mor .. lhan $250,000 to Cory's campaign last year, are disposed of. A spoJcesman for Brown said Haerle should take up the matter directly with Cory. · Cory himself will remain publicly silent on the demand. Gentry Durham, a spokesman for the controller, said, ''There will be no response and no com- ment on Haerle's s tatetnent. •• Cella and three associates each were indicted by the Orange County Grand Jory and a federal Grand Jury in Los Angel.es Mon- 4ay .on felony counts relating to 9,e"alleged embezzlement of $2 tjAlion from two Orange County .tes'pitals. A probe reportedly continues into an insurance company in which Cory, Cella, and Southern California Democratic Chairman Richard O'Neill own interests. Federal investigators have con- ftrmed that Cory's appointment of inheritance tax referees also is <See CORY, PageA2) Licenses For Dogs ... On Sale A 10-person soliciting force is expected to begin door-to-door collections for dog licenses in Huntington Beach next week. Darrel Cohoon, administrative analyst. said the canvassers are expected to start making their rounds next Wednesday after the City Council gives them the okay. He said that the normal $10 fee will be charged for regular licenses and $4 for altered animals. Senior citizens will con- tinue to get their licenses free, Cohoon said. Huntington Beach City Council members adopted a six-month in· terim contract with OrangeCoun· ty for animal control services Monday night aod the county ap- proved the accord Tuesday nighL The key provisions of the agreement include~ -The city will adopt the coun- " ty•• animal control ordinance ex· cept the dog licensing portion. with the city continuing to handle that phase. -City will pay $11,000 a month for the service, plus a fee of $2,450 for training purposes. _:_county will provide the city with three animal control of· ficers daily, seven days a week. Cohoon said the contract is for just six months because be said the county had urged against any long-term agreements pending the outcome of a study. "We also have not farmly com· mitted ourselves to a long.term arrangement since the potential cost to the city is not known," Cohoon said. Cohoon said that because of the uncertainty regarding a long. range contract, he bas been look- ing into a joint powers agree- <See ANIMAL, Page A2) Seniors' F und Drive Starte d The public is invited to the 4: 30 to 6 p.m . kickoff for the Hunt· ington Beach Union lilgh School District's "dollars for scholars" 'drive Thursday. District Trustee Ron Shenkman is chairman of this year's drive. The campaign goal is $20,000. The .money will be given to deserving high school seniors needing help with college expenses. The kick of r will be at district or. fices, 5201 Bolsa Ave., Huntington Beach. · · UnrllllArrested .. .· .. I Drunk.Rap Hits 'Big Jess' SACRAMENTO (AP) -State Treasurer Jesse Unruh was arrested on a dnmk driving charge early to- day; the si.te Highway Patrol ~eported. ~atrolman J. E . Weir .said he saw Unruh driving erratically on In· terstate 80 in Yolo O>unty just across the Sacramertto River from the state Capitol at 2: 15 a.m. Weir said he stopped the car and Unruh failed a sobriety test: Unruh, 53, once considered the most powerful Democrat in the state when he was aptaker of the state Assembly, wu taken to the Yo.=;unty J-1) In Woodland f wh bewas~,photo-.. • gr aod a pro~ to ~ apl*H' in Jmtke COurtin WestSacramento. . Lt. i'om l>lnedale, lhlft eommander at the jail, described Urirub as cooperative. Dinsdale said Unruh wu taken to hll bome ID West Sacrunenfo by a rrtend he phoned from jail. \ tlf'ITe....-. SECOND SOVIET SU8llARtNe RAISI._ M11810N THWARTED FOR GLOMAR EXPLORER Hughes Spy Ship Hu Second Thoughts After Encountering Russian Patrol Ship ( Glomar Missio_. Stalled Russian Ship Thu:arts Sub Recovery Plans WASHING TON <AP) -Plans site northwest of Hawaii, one for another CIA attempt to raise source said. · a sunken Soviet submarine from Top CIA officials are now "85 the floor of the Pllcific Ocean percent. sure" that the $250 have been thwarted by a Russian million salvage project will have ship patrolling the wreckage site, to be abandoned altogether. be intelligence sources laid today. • added. The presence. of the Soviet "The project is over, at least vessel prevented· the American for the present time," another ship Glomar Explorer from re-source said. tuminglastsummertothewreck The Glomar Explorer, a sophisticated recovery vessel Police Seek 'Fragrant' Rapist in BB ~ A slender young masked burglar fragrant with a dis· tinctive brand of men's cologne, is sought today for the rape of a Huntington Beach girl, 17, as· saulted in her bed Tuesday night as he held a knife to her throat. . The victim ran from her home on a residential street off Beach Boulevard near Warner Avenue to a business where the assistant manager called police for he~ after the assault. Officer Brian Lindley said she told of being surprised about 10 p.m. by the intruder, who gained entry to her family home and confronted ber with a kn.if e. She d¥cribed him as being about five feet, seven inches tall and said be wore a nylon stocking mask to distort bis facial features and a knitted Navy watch cap on his bead. Police said the victim also not- ed the abort,· slender rapist wore men•s cologne. • The intruder also s~e to his victJm with what she said was an obviously phony Spanish accent tbrou«bout the ordeal, according toinvesttiaton. She was taken to Costa Mesa Memorial Hotpltal, apparently a..t her request rather than a closer raclllty, and treated and examined there toUowing the sex usault. BELFAST, Nortlaem Ireland (UPI} -Police aikt mlUtlamen today f OUlht of!. a JS.miaute sub- machine f\llt attact on a rural polM poet. Ua lfhat ...-red & MW QPSUl'.'P f!A.iol .. ea. built by billionaire Howard Hughes. raised the forward third of the Soviet submarine in 1974. Maintenance costs for the 618-foot Glomar Explorer have caused a steady drain on the CIA budget, and there bas been no in- dication when the Soviet patrol ship would end its vigil of the Meeting Set With Firemen Fountain• Valley city officials and city ·nremen will hold another negotiation meeting Thursday, Mayor Bernie Svalstad said today. (Related story Page Al2) He said a final time is still be· ing ~uanged, but firemen. represented by the Teamsters Union, and city officials will at· tempt to work out some "word· ing" and other final matters. .. . Svalstad said the city hopes to work out a final contract package that will be taken back for a vote by firemen. TIIEY RESPOND TO PILOT ADS "I sold the car to a Dally Pilot reader. In fact, the ad in the Pilot iot much more respome than the one I ran in the paper in Santa Ana." '!bat's the advertisinl sueeeas aperlenced by the CQlta Mesa m.n wbo placed this classl.fted ad: wreckage site, one source said. A new American salvage at· tempt while the Soviets patrol the area would run the risk or· a naval confrontation. The CIA's first attempt to re· cover the Soviet submarine was disclosed early last year in press accounts which CIA Director William E. Colby sought to sti· fie. It remains unclear whether the Soviets already were aware of the American salvage project or if they learned of it through news accounts. It also remains unclear bow much intelligence was gained from the government's $250 million investment in the project. According to press reports, the Soviet submarine went down 750 miles northwest of Hawaii in 1968. After the Russians failed to find the wreck, the Glomar Ex· plorer reportedly succeeded in raising a portion of the sub· marine in the s ummer of 1974. The submarine reportedly broke apart as it was being raised from the depths. Various press reports have said the CIA succeeded in recovering nuclear· tipped torpedos, training loj?s and tbe bodies of the Soviet crew. Other news reports said that much more valuable in· telligence, such as code books, still lay at tbe bottom of the Pacific. The Glomar was built under the cover of being a deep sea mining vessel for Hughes. However, the government has claimed ownership of the ship and a companion vessel, a sub- mersible barge. Tbe·CtA now is reportedly try. lng to find alternative uses ror the Glomar Explorer, but il could not be learned if any final decision has been made yet what to do with it. F our B B Youths 'Held in l)urglaries Stolen property dating back as far u a burglary loss reported Dec. 6, un• bas bee\ recovered wl< tbe arreet ol four HW>dnlton a.ob t...,era onbufslary and drtllmar,...poueeNid. Tie four, all ti, weretakeninto caatod1 ln a •outbea.iero nelpbOrbood after wttneues apotted two or them ac>iPC over a wall • the JOOO block of Harbor tale Drlve Moaday, lqglin& a atereo~et. E m p l.o ye R e ports 'Offer' By TOM BARLEY Oftllle O•lly l"llots..tf Con gressman Andrew Hinshaw repeatedly denied to- day allegation that be solicited a bribe from a lawyer representing Heckman Instruments of Fullerton during an assessment appeals hearing at which the de- fendant appeared as Orange County's assessor. Hinshaw, 53, told a Superior Court jury as his bribery trial moved into its final hours that be never suggested to attorney Ronald Steelman that things might go Beckman's way if the firm bought 10 $100 tickets to Hinshaw's testimonial dinner. Steelman gave that testimony as a prosecution witness. He further claimed that Hinshaw called a recess in the appeals hearing to make the proposition tohlm .. Steelman further testlfied that Hinshaw told him: "I don't know why the large taxpayers in this county are not supporting me." Hinshaw today told defense at- torney Marshall Morgan that the opposite was always true while he served as county assessor • prior to his election to Congress in 1972. "Most of my support came from the large property owners;" the Newport Beach Republican said. And he testified that he could not recall ever meeting Steelman at the as- sessor's office or talking with the lawyer over the telephone. The denial followed Hinsbaw's admission that be accepted two stereo units as gifts during his term as county assessor. He is being tried for three felony counts contained in a grand jury indictment: accep· tance of stereo equipment and a <See WNSHA W, Page A2) Movie on Shark Slated Saturday A documentary movie on the great white s h ark will be screened at 7:30 p.m. Saturday at the Marina High School cafeteria, 15871 Springdale St., Huntington Beach. Admission to "Blue Water,· White Death," will be $1. A short mm, "Solo, .. also will be shown, school officials said. The public is invited. The s howing is.· sponsored by the Creative Arts Club. Coast Weather Sunny Tburs4ay and slightly warmer says the ·weather service" with highs along the beaches at 74 rising to 78 inland. Lows tonight 42 to 48. INSIDE T ODAY A Misli16ippi ~I wife mQ]I haoe "-en killc.d before. a $25 ,(X)(J rauom t.OCI poicf to her · lddnaptt', police IOJI. Her body -and. o nspect m tlw case ton"e found Tuelldat1. Stqry A4. •••ex MV..""*-Al ..._ ... , ' ...... . ......... .. \ ...... ...,. ............. .. ~ AJ,AM ........... M,M =,.,.or" D~= ~~ .. h ' ~ C14 •..... C14 0 t' CM 'tflWla..... al === A•...,_ eM "' llir.... .... • • ....... ..., _. ........ .... ..._. .ew ,..,... .. ...., °'" ~ ..., *' • aa-.. ,,. ~ ...... -M,M A2 DAii.it PILOT H/F _., I Wldntedl: .Jan 1•.1m FVHope~ C8ndidate Rusoff Wan t s 'Ne w Fac es' l:ditdr1 Note : Nine caididate1 ore vying for two &eats on tM Fountain Volley City Council . Thi• atory ia about ~ of the candidate.r. The , el~ k_._"farc112. Robert H. Ruso((, one of 'Dine eandidates in Fountain Valley's !\larch 2 city council elections, believes "it is time foc somebody f.'lse to have a chance at being a councilman ... Rusoff. a materials buyer for :\1C'Donnell Douglas Corporation, .said some of the newer residents of Fountain Valley like himself .should seek council seats. :\nd he s aid at a reeent press conference his work experience, his leadership role as an Air Force second lieutenant and his \villingness to carefully examine problems qualify him for a council post. "Basically we have a city we can be proud of." said the 37-year· old rather of l \\'O. ·'\Ve have some problems from time to time as any place s hould have. But I don't -....·ant to see a trivial problem get out of hand.·· Ru soff. of I 1436SandstoncAve .. ~aid he would hope to keep the city fiscally sotlnd and y.•ould hold periodic community meetings to 1£'t <."itizens openly discuss pro- blems. ;\t times now, he said, citizens and employes with problems may not always have an ample op- portunity to discuss them. He also would hope to work with the chamber of commerce and business co mmunit y to encourage commercial and in- dustrial growth. Rusoff, a m e mber of the city's Bicentennial Committee, also has been on recent ride-along pro- grams.with the fire and ix>lice de- partments bE"cause councilmen 1 ··ought to know "'hat they have to face on a daily basis." He also said he believes at times city staff members have made mistakes. and he would hope to in - \'E'Stigate errors. "I am not goi ng out to seek election IQ immediately chop somebody's head off," he con- O.lty Jllltit SUH l"MM 'NEW BLOOD NEEDED' Council Hopeful Rusotf tinued. ''Where someone is wrong he bas m ade a n honest mistake .and he owes an apology. Rusof( also called for a c lean campaign without "name calling or backbiting,'' saying he hopes all candidates emerge feeling respect for one another whether or not they agree. And he said campaign costs should be held to a minimum - below $1.500. He said be will not ask for donations but will accept them. . .\ta time when many people are "disillusioned with leaders" Fountain Valley should try to set a n example for th~ county and nation. he continued. In addition, Rusoff suggested a thorough st udy of a n y recreational bond issue for the city's Mile Square Park complex. "I think the recreation facility is good, but I don't want to see us go with this thing in a shoddy manners, ''hesaid Valleys ·Candidates Detail. Investments Four of nine candidates in Fountain Vall ey's ~1arch 2 city 1 council e lection list no invest- ment or r eal estate holdings other than their own homes, ac- cording to financial di sclosure forms filed with the city clerk. Candidate Sheila J\.1arcus lists equity in her home at 16215 Scotch Pine St.,· alo,ng with in - vestments in four other pro- pe!1ies outside Fountain Valley: Incumbent Mayor Bern ie Svalstad holds equity in his home, two rental properties in Fountain Valley and a vacation home in Canyon La ke. The disclosure forms are re- quired by sta'te law when can- didates file for election. The law does not require a listing of in- vestments of less than Sl.000, ac- rording to City Attorney Tom Woodruff. And the law does not require disclosure of investments located farther than two miles from Fountain Valley, he said, unless • they have some connection with t thecity. I The forms, in addition, do not r: require candidates to list specific dollar amounts of holdings, but to check boxes indicating if their in- vestment is less than $10,000, from $10,000 to $100,t.'OO or above SI00,000. ORANGE COAST . ,. DAILY PILOT TM 0.-C...U C•lly Pll{lll, ... It> -(II i• combl""' II• Newo;·"'••~. •l .,...,....., W "" Ot-tMll """''"'lf19 ~r. !>tPIO•_,• ~·~ ••e -1"'9<1 """""•• ttwwglo ~ .. .,., '°' eo.t• Me-... I<••-! _.._ .. """'""""' ae..:r.1FowH•I" velltr, H•I,.., ~·-• v.1 ... w •I'd u,_ e...:1111oeu111 c-.t. "" ""91• ......... I .o!llel! Ii ...iolkl'l<I S--" -5...,_ <Yyl. Tl'lt' j)"i•M:ip•! jtllOlo\lll"lj ~ 11 tot :&ail 'l'Oe1' B.ly51.wt,C.•leMeW,~•m1' Robert N. Weed flt"el_lll_P'*~ Jack R. Curtev Vi.:t .... ..--G9,.....M ~llt9f" Thomes Keevll '"* ThOmas A. Mur""IM --11o1r: .... CNrlH H. Loos Rk.hwd P, Nall IUlllUM _....,.,,. EMWI Rol>ert 9•rker w.11 °'""" c-w u• . H--IH<llOffke ilifJ ... ~ e. .... _., ... llllll ..._ ... ! p .o .... "'· ..... Offk• ......,... !Ml'( .. , 1, .. (j_..~· (IMYI M.ti.t: UI "'"t .. r !ol.-~l lfelMy: tllO'I U ""'' ._ .. ""0... ,,_ Tel .. hi RI O't4) 64Mn1 Cl• ...... ..,,.,.. .... 642411 ...... """"°' ... <-'Y~lla _, ... a..rtthf•"" 0r-. C..lt ~ °""" ....,., .. __ ...,..., ""*"....._.. ~ -n ..... """'tfW""'"• --¥ .. ~ltC.-wtM ... ,_.ct .. "'""' ...... M --· =lett -"' ... pelf mt CMfl ..... I ' """""'"'°"" ..., ,..,..... JI.ft ...... •i .......... ~,:""*··---... ..... -. Investm e nts by candidate show: -Manuel Alarcon, his home at 17220 Santa Barbara St. -Thomas Beall, his home at 17811 Magnolia St., with equity of between $10,000 and $100,000, as wel l as B ea ll and Beall Figerglass Works, a fiberglass manufacturing business in which he holds an investment of less than $10,000. -Sheila Marcus, her home with an equity of from $10,000 to $100,000, as well as partial in- terest. in real estate in . Pico Rivera, Reseda and Gardena, with investments of $10,000 to $100,000, and less than $10,000 in- terest in Hawaii property. -Robert Rusoff, an invest· ment of $10,000 to $100,000 in his home at 11436 Sandstone Ave. -Joseph Schloss, an invest· mentor less than $10,cm in stock o f Lincoln National Life Insurance Company, an interest of $10,000 to $100,000 in his law firm, as well as $10,000 to $100,000 in his home at 1117 Tilton Circle. -Svalstad, investments of $10,000 to $100,000 each in his home at 16515 SilktreeSt., as well as property at 10S83 El Este Ave. and 16400 Everest Circle, Foun. tain Valley, and a vacation home in Canyon Lake. -Fred Voss, his home at 18578 Cottonwood St . -Harry Vought, bis home at 16414 Myrtlewood St. -Incumbent Councilman Marvin Adler, investments of $10,000 to $100,000 each in his • home at 8957 La Dooa Court and in his optometrist firm, as well as holdlnes of less than $10,000 in Adler's Antiques and Asseuories and a lot in Hunlinil<>OBeocb. .. F.._P.,.eAI ANIMAL ••• ment with net1hbor!n1 cities or other alternatives for animal <Ontrol. The city alao bad yet to ·~ prove an ordinance dealint wtth th• asreement witb Or1n1e County. i'Tevtous atteftlPll have failed becauae the 1ction would ba•, left lbe city wlthoat-- 14 ..U pet Ile-11111 ~ •aid tbe ._told blm_ll _ not Nil lie-In Ibo ~ 1b11 fllcal :rear. AeUoe lo UDOCted Ian. :18 on tbo-aatoU.1t wlll .,.ble lbe city to enforce lll lleemlnc. Taxing Vote · Pending Huntin&ton Beach rtticB.ols may &et a chance to vote in June on certain measures that will in- crease their property taxes, city officials indicated this week. Tbe......mo.s.t exp_enslve or the items Includes a 9.9-cent tax rate increase for the hiring or 25 addi· ' tional police officers at a cost of $.S76,000. A 6.1-cenl incr.ease to provide $354,000 to finance the paramedic program also m ay appear as a ballot proposition in the June primary election. . Other issues that may go to vote is a $435,000 boo.st for the recreation and parks department and a $186,000 increase for the library. City Adminis trator Dave Rowlands, who has been issuing bleak statements on the city's financial position recently, s aid other revenue-raising items may be considered that may or may not be put on the ballot. They include a monthly charge for trash colle<'tion, an increase to the oil barrel tax and a sewer -service charge . · Rowlands informed City Coun- cil members this week that he has ordered a 5 percent cutback of all city departments effective Jan. 1 that would result ln a sav- ings of $670 .000. "Once again, capital outlay will be hardest hit, thereby eliminating equipment that was budgeted not only in the current year but in previous years," Rowlands said. He said that another area of substantial savings is personnel costs in which position.'i are not filled alter they've been vacated. Rowlands added that the cut- backs will result in a reduction of services. He pointed out that parks will be maintained on a more infre- quent basis, there will be a slowdown in the s hamel ash tree program, streets will be swept less often and there will be reduc- tions in rec reational activities and elimination of purchasing library books. Rowlands said that factors such as salary increases for city employes, the 100 percent in· crease in the liability insurance premium and increases in the utility rates and in inflation have all had a "tremendous impact" on the budget. CORY ••• under investigation. ''The reve l ations of t h e myste rious Cella-O'Neill empire and Ken Cory's relationship and role in that empire have raised some serious questions about the controller's independence and a bility to continue serving as state controller," Haerle said in a news release. "The governor must be aware of the growing cloud of suspicion surrounding state Controller Ken Cory," Haerle said. "I therefore ask Governor Brown to ask Mr. Cory to take a leave of absence." But a spokesman for Brown, David Jensen, said he knows of no way an elected state officer such as controller could take a leave of absence. FroaPage AJ HINSHAW. • $1,000 campaign contributiori from the Tandy Corporation and the soliciting of a bribe during the Beckman hearing. Hinshaw ad mitted that he ac- cepted a stereo unit, the most ex- pensive model manufactured by Tandy's Radio Shack group from Tandy's Vice President James Buxton during a v~it to the com - pany 's Garden Grove warehouse. Turning to t he jury, Hinshaw stressed that h e had his <'heckbook and pen out and had every intention of paying for the stereo unit. But Buxton , he testified, was adamant and refused to accept his check. "And I didn't want 14 offend him," Hinshaw explained . "It was not a very pleasant ex· pertence," Hinshaw told the jury. . H1111baw further ldml-lhat be accepted another costly stereo unit f rom former auditor· appraiser Georae Upton wb118 be Wlll1U01tatUptoo'1-.. Tbe former 111eucr aald Up- ton made tb• offer alter be (Hln1h1w) a otlced a pile of Radio Sb1<k cartol\J In Upton's SIDta Aal bome. · lllDlbaw 1ald Upton told blm. that ho hid beea Ii"" 1 numbel' or stereo lets wbJch were to be raffled off u prii .. by tbe Cout Guin! and that Buxt.n bad !no eluded one for Hinobaw In the conslpment. 111m1u1w 1e1une<1 th1t be told Uptoo to -the -11 Ibo Up· toD bo-with the npl~ tiiiit ... would -be -tna to Wulllatton, D.C. u Oranae CoomtJ'• -Dlatri<l ...... tlllve 1Dd his movhll piano were ~7oloompltte. • • ............. -. ~ ... t'~ • . l Ho~ Ti111e in Huntington Huntingtop Beach firemen douse fl~mes that broke out Tuesday in an old car at a junkyard when a cutting torch ignited _some gasoline 1eft in the old car's tank . Firemen said there was no monetacy loss at the A and Z Wrecking Yard, 17852 Gothard Sr .. and no one was injured. Froa Page A·l SMOKE .•. .s moking, while a district smok- ing committee voted to either al- low them or start an experimen- tal program. Bandits Scare Pair With Electric Gun Trustee Bob Knox told Abbott, "Frankly I am disappointed in your recommendation," saying smoking ts now a reality on cam· pus anyway. But Shenkman said he didn't think smoking areas would solve the smoking problem behind schools and in rest rooms, and parents, "who are paying the bills,'' don't seem to want it. But MacAllister argued the ex- perime nta l establishment of smoking areas should be accom- panied by tough rules against those who smoke elsewhere. Mrs. Ditte said s he didn't think smoking areas would set a good example for children. "I feel I m ight not be 1egally liable but I might be morally lia- ble," she said. And Bauer said just because students are violating rules by smoking now doesn't mean" the board should "condone it." Hearing Scheduled LOS ANGELES <UPI) -Rep. Barr y Goldwater Jr., (R - WoodJand .Hills), will conduct public hearings Thursday to de· termine what steps the U.S. gov· ern ment can take to assist citizens with legal problems in Mexico. BLUE BELL. Pa." (AP) -The Taser electric da rt gun, sold for proteC'tion against crime, was an instrume nt of t error for a Montgomery CoiJnty couple in the hands of four masked ban- dits. "Th~ assailants used this.dart gun to force the mari and his wife to say where they had m ore money or valuable belongings," police Sgt . Joseph Ste mple said Tuesday. He refu sed to n a me the man and his wire. Stemple said a man appeared at the doo r of the couple 's home at suppe rtime and identified himself as a police o£ficer. He said the bogus cop rushed in with three other men, all wearing ski masks. The men carried the TaSer - designed by a space technology engineer ins pired b y the weaponry of Buc k Rogers and James Bond. "The couple were tieq,µp with clot.bing , bandcuf(~ and tetephore wires," ~te~pl~ ~aid, '' ApparentlY, the iuspects knew there was money in the house. "While the peopJE! were tied up, one of these guys shot the m with this dart gWl. They were both shot twice in the s tomach," Stemple said. "The.darts stuclt in their flesh. It's like a needle, ex- C'ept it gives you a shock.'' He addeo. · · Jt ·s called the Taser Public Defender and it giv~$ you a hell of a shock. They say it immobilizes you. I know it , hurts, but it doesn't kill. Both the man and the· woman were treat- ed at a loc'al ·hospital and re- leased.'' · The four (led. with $7,000 cash, $4 ,000 in jewels, the man's Mercedes-Benz and two .22- caliber rifles". Taser Systems. Jnc., manufac- tures the $199 weapon, which it calls "the alternative to the gun ." It look& like a n ashli ght, , though in California it is official· ly termed a "gun" and must be registered and bear a serial number. Canada announced Monday that it will ban the Taser effec- t!ve Feb . 1. J'olew York City has already made it a crime to carry a Tas~r. a d."i!'io.n the manlJ(ac- turer ~ prp tffl1ng. · The Montg'Omery County inci dent is not t he first in which th< • Taser. was used to "commit c. crime .. Last16epte mber, a Tase1 was used to i,cld up a gas statior. attendant in Miami. Alvin Simon, president ol Taser Systems, said : "All of our information, re· search and data indicate that it ·~ non~eth.al. We've been working on 1t since .1968 and everything bears out the fact that it·s not lethal." Lyn n Hart HART'S Joh n Hart SPORTING GOODS • 538 CENTER ST.• COSTA MESA• 646-1 9 19 BICYCLE PARTS-TIRES-ACCESSORIES Shuffleboard Sets Bocceball Sets Table Tennis Sets 'Frisbees Boomerangs Racquetball Racquets Handball Gloves & Balls Tennis Rackets Wilson-lhlllop-llavis • lancraft·Yonex Racket Stringing '&oo to 2100 Tenlis Slloes TenniS Slirts & Shorts T enniS Dresses . T tnllls W• m" Saits 531 Cllltlr 6'1919 • Basketballs Backboards & Goals Footballs Socce1 balls .: Playground Balls Volleyballs &: N.ets Baseball Mitts & Gloves Baseball ~lrtt: & c~ BasebalSllOes ' . Soccer Siieas . Track $lioes Cress C.tiy Slioes ' " , W111lln1 SU~ lasbtllll! .511ees .. ' ,. . .. • ".... . .. I I • ' • ·' - I Today' Clo lag N.Y.Stoeu NTEN CENTS .. ·~ilM Homeowners_ Battle Over· Trees -~ By IDLA&Y KAYE °' .. °' .. , .......... Resldfµlta of a Newport Beach neighborhood who want thelr neighbors to trim trees in order to maintain their panoramic views remained rulers of the.bill this week. But, although the tree trimmer faction retained control of the homeowners association in the original Harbor View Hi.Us ~e- Susan en Slopes velopment above Corona del Mar, the trees remained un· trimmed. And it may take a lawsuit to settle what this week's homeowner's association elec· tion didn't. Association President James Blakemore, a pro tree-trimmer, says such a suit is "a possibility." The "leave our trees alone" faction includes George Rodd.a, President Ford's daughter Susan shows her skiing form on the slopes of Vail Mountain in Colorado during a two- month break from college. Susan will participate in her .1 first ski race as a member of an employes team of the resort community. . ,GOP Head Urges Step-down by Cory From Wire Services The state chairman of the Republican Party urged Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. to ask ""',....... 'NO COMMENT' St•t• Controffer Cory ... Controller Kenneth Cory to take a leave of absence because he is surrounded by "a growing cloud of suspicion." . Chairman Paul Haerle said the controller should step down until charges against Dr. Louis Cella, who contributed more than $250,000 to Cory's campaign last year, are disposed of. A spokesman for Brown said Haerle s hould take up the matter directly with Cory. Cory himself will remain publicly silent on the demand. Gentry Durham, a spokesman for the controller, a aid, "There will be no response and no com- ment on Haerle's statement." Cella and three associates each were indicted by the Orange County Grand Jury and a federal Grand Jury in Los Angeles Mon· day on felony counts relating to the alleged em beizlement of $2 million from two Orange County ho8pitals. · A probe reportedly continues into ad""1&surance company in which Cory, Cella, and Southern California Democratic Chairman (SeeCORY, PageA.2) an attorney and a trustee of the Coast Community College Dis- trict; Ivan Hinderaker, Chan- cellor of UC Riverside. and An- thony Kaielis, owner o! a scien· tiflc consulting firm. Tbey are considered memben "in bad standing" or the bomeown.ers • association because they ref use to cut back trees on their property to rooftop height. The pro-tree trimmer faetion contends assa&latlon rules de- mand this and point out that un- fettered ocean views from homes juat off MacArthur Boulevard above Coast Highway are in large part responsible for the area's high property values. But Rodda. Hinderaker and Kazelis maintain that, when they moved into their homes in the early 1960s, there were no such restrictions CG their pro- perty. Even the Irvine Company got into the fight at one point, threatening at the behest of the homeowners' association to foreclose unless the trees were trimmed. But Irvine Company official John Sands now admits the land firm has no intention of carrying out that threat. Instead, he said, the company hopes the residents will solve the problem themselves. But a J!Olution seemed distant at Monday night's noisy associa· tion meeting at Harbor View School, less than a block from the offending homes, all in the 900 block of Goldenrod A venue. Three seats on the board were up for election at the meetµ\g. A (See TREES, Page A2) Hinshaw Denies Bribe Congressman Says Offer Not Made By TOM BARLEY OIUM O.lly ..ii.es..tt Congressman Andrew Hinshaw repeatedly denied to- day allegation that he solicited a bribe from a lawyer representing Beckman Instruments of Fullerton during an assessment appeals hearing at which the de- fendant appeared as Orange County's assessor. Hinshaw, 53, told a Superior Court jury as his bribery trial moved into its final hours that he never s uggested to attorney Ronald Steelman that things might go Beckman's way if the firm bought 10 $100 tickets to CIA Plans To Raise Suh Curbed WASHINGTON CAP) -Plans for another CIA attempt to raile a stmken Soviet submarine from the floor of the Pacific Ocean have been thwarted by-a Russian sh.i? patrolling the wreckage site, intelligence sources said today. The ·presence of the Soviet vessel prevented the American ship Glomar Explorer from re- turning last s um mer to the wreck site northwest of liawail, one source said. Top CIA officials are now "8.S percent s ure" that the $250 million salvage project will have to be abandoned altogether. be added. . "The project is .over, at least for the present Ume." another source said. The Glomar E_xplorer, a SOJ?bistic?ated recovery vessel bwlt by billionaire Howard Hughes. raised the forward third of the Sovietsubmarinein 1974. Maintenance costs for the 618-foot Glomar Explorer have caused a steady drain on the CIA (See GLOMAR, Page A2) DOW INDEX UP ANUi'llER 16! NEW YORK (UPI) -Prices closed sharply higher in heavy trading on the New York Stock excban•e today, as investors, cheered by early January auto sales reports, resumed their new year bu)'ing spree. The Dow Jones industrial average, a 9.45-point loser Tues- day, added ahead 16.69 points to '929.63. The .Dow gained 69.98 points in seven sessions prior to Tuesday. Advances led declines by about an 11-to-three m argin. (Tables, BS> Prices were higher in active trading on the American Stock · Exchan1e. Hinshaw's testimonial dinner. Steelman gave that testimony as a prosecution witness. He further claimed that Hinshaw called a recess in the appeals hearing to make the proposition to him. Steelman further testified that Hinshaw told him: "I don't know why the large taxpayers in this county are not supporting me." Hinshaw today told defense at· tomey Marshall Morgan that the opposite was always true while he served as county assessor prior to bis election to Congress in1972. "Most of my support came from the large property owners," the Newport Beach Republican said. And he testified that be could not recall ever meeting Steelman at the as- sessor's office or talking with the lawyer over the telephone. The denial followed Hinsbaw's admission that he accepted two stereo units as gifts during his term as county assessor. He is being tried for three felony counts contained in a grand jury indictment: accep· lance of stereo equipment and a $1,000 campaign contribution Unruh Arrested Drunk Rap Hi~ 'Big Jess' SACRAMENTO (AP) -State Treasurer Jesse Unruh was arrestedonadrunkdriving charge early to· day, the state Highway Patrol reported. Patrolman J . E. Weir said he saw Unruh driving erratically on In- terstate 80 in Yolo County just across the Sacramento River from the state Capitol at 2: 15 a.m. Weir said he stopped the car and Unruh failed a sobriety test. Unruh ,-53, once considered the most pow~ul Democrat in the state when he was speaker of the state Assembly, was taken to the Yolo County Jail in Woodland where he was fingerprinted, photo- graphed and signed a promise to appear in Washington Justice Court in West Sacramento. uNRuH Lt. Tom Dinsdale, shift commander at the jail, described Unruh as cooperative. Dinsdale said Unruh was taken to his home in West Sacramento by a friend he phoned from jail. 'Demeaning, A rclaaie' Trustee Urges Ban On School Spanking Calling corporal punishment "demeaning, dehumanizing, dis· crimlnating and archaic," Newport-Mesa School Trustee Donald Smallwood urged his fellow board members Tuesday to drop the district's .. s panking policy!' Trustees were attempting to amend the district's current policy on corporal punishment to bring it into compliance with new state law. The new law requires written consent from parents prior to eori)oral punishment be· ing administered to a student. Smallwood argued that the en· tire policy should be dropped. "We don't use it, we don't need it and I'm som it's part or our policies," he said. Supt. Jobn Nicoll told the board there were only five or six in- stances of rporal punishment reported during the past year. Trustees Rod MacMillian, Orville Amburgey and Thomas Casey argued that the threat or corpor al punishment is a deter- rent and the policy should be kept on the books. "After all, capital punishment is not used often, but it's kept because it's a deterrent," Casey said. Smallwood asked Nicoll to br- ing to the next meeting, Jan. 27. information from school prin- cipals regarding how often they threaten students with spankings and how they reel about the policy. Trustees held ore until Jan. 27 a decision on whether to simply amend the policy or throw it out at Smallwood's request. from the Tandy Corporation and the soliciting of a bribe during the Beckman hearing. Hinshaw admitted that be ac- cepted a stereo unit, the most ex· pensive model manufactured by Tandy's Radio Shack group from Tandy's Vice President James Buxton during a visit to the com· pany's Gard en Grove warehouse. Turning to the jury, Hinshaw stressed that he bad h is checkbook and pen out and had every intention of' paying for the stereo unit. (See IDNSHAW, Page A.2) Dart Gun Terrorizes Pa. Couple BLUE BELL, Pa: CAP) -·The Taser electric dart gun, sold for protection against crime, was an instrument o( terror for a Montgomery County couple in the hands of four masked ban- dits. "The assailants used this dart gun to force the man and bis wife to say where they had more money or valuable belongings," police Sgt. Joseph Stemple said Tuesday. He refused to name the man and his wife. Stemple said a man appeared at the door of the couple's home at s uppertime and identified himself as a police officer. He said the bogus cop rushed in with three other men, all wearing ski masks. The men carried the Taser - designed by a space technology e ngineer in s pi red by the weaponry of Buck Rogers and James Bond. "The couple were tied up with clothing, handcuffs and telephone wires," Stemple said. "Apparently, the suspects knew there was money in the house. · "While the people were tied up, one of these guys shot them with this dart gun. They were both shot twice in the stomach," Stemple said. "The darts stuck in their nesh. It's like a needle, ex· cept it gives you a shock." Simon said that although the gun bas a rating of 50,000 volts at the source, it bas such low am- perage and wattage that its shock is relatively harmless. He said it has only three watts of power. less than in a Christmas tree bulb or an electric heart pacemaker. Coast Weather . 1HEY RESPOND TO PILOT ADS At 3 Hospitals . OC DociorS.Slow-Down? Mesa Pastor Joins Race For Congress Sunny T hursday and slightly warmer says the weather service, with highs along the beaches at 74 rising to 78 inland. Lows tonight 42 to 48. f "I sold the car to a Dally Pilot . reader. In fact, tbe ad in the Pilot got much naore N9)>0nH tban tile one I ran in the P•per In Santa . .Ana.·· 1.bat•1 the advtrUatna nccess experienced by tbe Cotta lies' "'1'.lan who placed UU. caa.utecl ad: ti you b••• a car J'OQ want to MU, eall ~1171. t only takea a , .. wonll lD tile ,.._. place t.o attrad 1 bu1er. AIC!f'I tbe Orante Cout. U. l'tlbtPllce II U.Daily Pilot. By ALAN ouuaN OI .. DeltJ ... ._ .... Physicians using HunUngton Jntercommunity Hospital, Hoaa Memorial Hos pf tal and Costa •Mesa Memorial Hospital appear today to be on the veree of a alowdown to protest malpractJce tmurance co.ts. About 350 doctors from the three bo1pital1 met at Hoa1 , ~Y niaht and reDOrtedlY 90 percent of tllole ~ lnclfeat· ed they would curtail thelr ..me... <Related 9lory AS> Tbe 90 perceat estimate was midi bJ Linda Matttn. pUbUC nt-... ·. laUom ~r at Hoag, wbo said that the medical executive staff at Hoaa would meet today to comider tbe sltua~ioo. Tom Ric bards, administrator of Costa Mesa Memorial Holpltal, 1aJd today that be dld not expect any ef!ects to be felt at • the bo1plt1l vntll early next ..... "~'ll keep an .,.. to see t( ~ l1 a trend toward the l•senln1 or admlsalou," be lddld . ~bile ~lltlODI director Mot· tbl Htd IOme 9e perftnt of the docton at the meeting ''indlcat· ed by a 1bow of bands that they woulcl be forced to participate on an lndlvtdual basis in a curtail· . meat of physicians' services because of an lnablllty to pay the h11ber malpractice insurance premiums.'' a. 1alcl tbat a written state. m.t ol bolpltal,plam would be aftllable l~r Wday. boctore In Loi ~es County baYe been oa a 11~ ln pro-test a1atn1t malpractice in· tunece costs tiDH the be&inning ol~year. The Rev. James 0 . Combs, '8, who recently resigned u pastor of the Fint Baptist Church of Costa Mesa. has declared bjmself a can- didate for the Republican nomination in the 40th Congressional District. · The d istrict, which covers most of southern Orange County and part of San Dteeo County. preaently is represented by An· drew J . Hin.shaw (R-Newport Beach). Combs• entry into the race, an~ nouneoed at a press conference in C.0.ta Mesa Tuesday, brouaht the number bf candidates seeking <See PASTOJl. PaceAJ) -u INSIDE TODAY A Miui11ippf bmtka'• wife mClJI haoe ~m lcUlcd before a 125 ,<XJO rcwom um paid to #wt lddnaper, police IQJI. Her bodJI -and a IUIJ)fCt m the COM were found Twldog. Story M. •••ex M Yt1111 .._,,.. &a ........ IW ...... .,...... .. ..... ..-....... .._ ... t....Wa A&,Att ---~ M CW-CW911t AM --~ DMt--M,-.u CMlla CM ....... C..a o. .. , Ct4 _....,.._ U ......._.. Ate..... 8W • ........................... a1111 • IW .......... ... ........ ....,... ...... . ... .,... ,......... , ... IM JI 0 ...._ .. ,._..,_,.. a-..-M.M --M - Al DAILY PILOT ' N Wednt141y, Jll'IU!!)' 14, 197t • ' . New Hal~ Same Fores Ne""·port Beach City Council gets down to business in new council chambers. From Jeff dais are John Store, Paul Ryckoff, Milan Dostal, Don Mcinnis, Lucille Kuehn, Peter Barrett and Howard Rogers. New chambers were dedicated Monday night. More than 100 guests, including three former m:t.yors and several former coun · cilmen, were on hand for the festivities at city hall. S e a Scout Rebuild F rom Page A l TREES •.• Plan Considered slate backed by the pro-tree trimmers won. It includes housewife Ann Hansen, builder Michael Janes and attorney Joseph Walker. South Coast regional coastal commissioners "'ill wait until Feb. 2 to decide whether or not to allow the reconstruction or the waterfront Sea Scout site in '.\lewport Beach. While staff planner Bryce Caughey said he predicted "little problem" for the $776,000 pro- ject, commissioners decided to wait until then because only eight commissioners were present Monday a nd eight votes are needed for approval because the project involves dredging. The project, at 1931 W. Coast Highway. is being proposed by the Orange County Boy S('outs of A.merica. which sponsors the Sea Scout program. The scouts. "''hich lease the site from the county at no charge, have been at the same location for many years -prior to the multi·million dollar development surrounding the scout base. The application requests permission to demolish an e~ist ing one·story building, boat slips, pier and piling. They wish to replace it with a two-story build· ing, swi mmin g pool, n ew HINSHAW. • • But Buxton. he testified, was adamant and refused to accept his check. ".'\nd 1 didn't want to offend him,·· liins haw explained. "It was not a very pl easant ex- perience," Hinshaw told the jury. Hinshaw further admitted that he accepted another costly stereo unit from former auditor- appraiser George Upton while he was a g~est at Upton's home. The former assessor said tip. ton made the offer after he <Hinshaw) noticed a pile or Radio Shack cartons in Upton 's Santa Ana home. Hinshaw said Upton told him that he had been given a number of stereo sets which were to be raffled off as prizes by the Coast Guard and that Buxton had in- cluded one for Hinshaw in the consignment. Hinshaw testified that he told Upton to keep the unit at the Up - ton home with the explanation that he would soon be moving to Washington·, D .C. as Orange County's 40tb District represen- tative and his moving plans were not yet complete. ORAN GE COAST DAILY PILOT ThOmas Keevll Edll., " boatstips, piling and pier and a new bulkhead. Staff planners have expressed satisfactioa with the project plans, which would increase the public's view of the ocean front from a current 16 percent ratio to about 65 percent open view. However , planners recom- mend that complete public ac- cess to the water be allowed through the site, with a sign in- dicating the access posted on Coast Highway. Caughey said that while some commissioners appear reluctant to make such stringent condi- tions, starr planners would like to see all new ocean front public de- V('Jopments include such public a('CeSS. Driver Held In Assault Orange County sheriff's or- fi('ers have filed charges or as- sault with a deadly weapon on a police officer against an El Toro man who allegedly drove his vehicle against an off-duty Newport Beach policeman. Deputies jailed Donald Lee Fiddament, 41, of 24922 Muirlands Blvd., after he al- legedly attempted to avoid arrest by driving hi s car directly to"'·ards Newport Beach officer Scott Edwin Cade, 26. They said Cade, off duty at the time, was attempting to arrest F'iddament in the parking lot or the Saddleback Valley Plaza on charges of drunken driving. Cade suffered minor injuries when he was struck by Fiddament 's car during the resulting fracas, of- fic(>rs assert. Phil Twombly, a former Fullerton city councilman, and Robert Fitzgerald, an assistant Los Angeles district attorney, ran on a "Leave our trees a1one" plank, but were defeated. Association Pre side nt Blakemore, a retired military man, and Rodda engaged in a spirited proxy gathering cam- paign prior to the election. Blakemore amassed 55 proxies,' but Rodda could come up with only 16 after Blakemore and p a rliam e ntarian Dennis Harwood, an attorney and a re- tiring association board member, got through challeng- ing his proxies. Besides losing all three open- ings on the board, the "leave our trees alone" faction was unable to win consideration of bylaw changes it proposed. CORY ••• Richard O'Neill own interests. Federal investjgators have con- firmed that cOry's appointment of inhe ritance tax referees also is under investigation. ''The revelations of the mysterious Cella-O'Neill empire and K(>n Cory's relationship and role in that empire have raised some serious questions about the controller's independence and ability to continue serving as state controller," Haerle said in a news release. "The governor must be aware of the growing cloud of suspicion surrounding state Controller Ken Cory ," Haer le said. "I therefore ask Governor Brown to ask Mr. Cory to take a leave of absence.'' Cyclists Bit Toten . Indiana college students, members or the Wandering WheelJ bicycling club, rode Into Newport Beach Tues· day on their way from Carmel to Oceanside. The bicyclists are members of a Christian group headed by former UCLA football star Bob Davenport. The travelers spent Tuesday night at Mariners Cl)urch after dinner at Jolly Roger oh Balboa Island. They resum~ their c.oastal iOur today. • • • N et a ~ratiedfl" • Board Tackles •• • ~Eilrolhnent _Dip T.cu.stees began_grappling_wit.h. declining enrollment in tbe Newport-Mesa Unified School Di.strict Tuelday night and de- cided the situation should be view~ u -ao '.!educational op· portunit.y'' rather than a tragedy. Jba!J<ould allo.w-1he.1cbool! tO-t--.;. have several classrooms ot tbe The board learned there are presently 117 empty classrooms in the district -primarily in the smaller elementary 'schools in Costa Mesa. By 1980, the district's enroll- ment is expected to drop to about 20,000 -a decline or about 5,000 frOm the current enrollment. As a result, several small elementary schools may have to be closed or used for a1temative purposes. The seven schools in greale$t jeopardy are Bay View, Balearic, Lindber1h. Victoria, Whittier, Harper and Monte Vis· ta. Also, a middle school may be in trouble, too, in the next five years. Supt . John Nicoll urged trustees to keep their discussion on a ''positive note." He pointed out that numerous educational opportunities could be put into ef- fect aS a result of the shirinking student population. One possibility would be to use different schools to house only several grades, rather than the entire K-6 range now in opera- tion. F ro• Page A l GLOMAR ••• ·budget, and there has been no in- dication when the Soviet patrol ship would end its vigil of the wreckage s ite, one source said . .4. new American sa1vage at- tempt while the Soviets patrol the area would run the risk or a naval confrontation. The CIA 's first attempt to re· cover the Soviet submarine was disclosed early last year in press accounts which CIA Director William E . Colby sought to sti·· fle. It remains unclear whether the Soviets already were aware of the American salvage project or if they learned of it through news accounts. According to press reports, the Soviet submarine went down 750 miles northwest of Hawaii in 1968. After the Russians failed to ·find the wreck, the Glomar Ex- plorer reportedly succeeded in raising a portion of the sub- marine in the summer of 1974 . lt also remains unclear how much intelligence was gained from the government's $250 million investment in the project. same grade, rather than only one elNeroom for ea~h IJ'ade. That way, students could be grouped accor.din1 lo·a.bility.and need.-+~? NicOll plso said that some schools could be used for joint school/community uses in con- jWlction with the city. \ At the Jan . 27 meeting, trustees will again take up the matter. They will be provided with more information regarding the different educational options available, enrollment Implica- tions, and alternative uses possi- ble at the schools. Trustees said they then will go )into the community and talk with homeowners associations and PTA/PFO groups. Trustees also touched on a con- trasting problem now being relt at Lincoln Middle School in Corona del Mar -overcrowding, Nicoll told the board that a pilot program is being con- sidered for Lincoln students to ease the crowded situation. There are currently about 100 students too many at the middle school. Nicoll said the district is considering asking 100 volunteer eighth graders from Lincoln to attend classes at Corona del Mar High School. Eighth grade teachers would be transferred, too, to teach those students. · ' Nicoll said the proposa1 is still in the "talking stage" and that there will be more information, on the matter later. Victim Finds His Camera; ·Suspect Held When Kenneth Zion saw the camera in the window of a Hollywood camera shop, he "couldn't believe bis eyes," Newport Beach police said. The camera had been stolen more than a year before from Photo Corp. of America, 4000 Birch St., Newport Beach, where Zion is a manager. Alerted by Zion, Newport Beach detective Mike Hietala traced the camera to a Chula Vis- ta resident who said he bought it from a friend who lived in Santa Ana. Tuesday Hietala arrested Doyle Culpepper, 24, at his home at 3011 Bradford P lace. Police allege Culpepper was responsible for the 1974 break- in at Photo Corp. In which a typewriter. a calculator and Zion's camera were stolen. LEAPS INTO FRAY Candidate Comba Fl'Olll P.,,e A J PASTOR ••• the Republican nomlnaUon to. five. • The other candidates are As· semblyman Robert Badham or Newport Beach, Michael P. Clancey, a 29-year-old attorney (rom El Toro, college professor Harry P. Jeffrey of Laguna Beach, and Hinshaw himself. Hinshaw currently is fighting charges of bribery in Orange CoWlty Superior Court, charges whlch relate to the period when he was Orange County assessor. Hinshaw has said all along, however, that he plans to cam- paign for a third congressional term. Even so, it appears his legal difficulties have helped draw a large number or can- didates totbe race. In his announcement, Combs 1 described himself as a lifelong Republican and a constitutional conservative. In his p~· ed statement, he made a r ce to Hinshaw's legal di 1cultles when he said the first of two dilemmas racing district voters was ''achieving responsible representation at a time when the incumbent congressman is under indictment and trial on felony bribery charges." · Combs then took a swipe at other candidates in the race by declaring that the "resultant vacuum has attracted only tradi·, tional, practiced politicians who would not constitute a sufficient change to engender voter con· fidence." 1 The candidate at that point; I suggested that his 24 years as a clergyman qualified him to give ! "effective representation to a ' district that sorely needs it." According to Combs, the second dilemma racing voters was the choice of whether to tolerate w h at he termed a decline in world leadership, the economy. and the family, or to rebuild those areas. Shuffleboard Sets Bocceball Sets Table Tennis Sets Frisbees Boomerangs Racquetball Racquets Handball Gloves & Balls Basketballs Backboards & Goals Footballs Soccerballs PlayP,11111 Balls ., Volleyballs & Nets · Baseball Mitts & Gloves .. ' Tennis Rackets Wilson-Dunlop-Davis Bancroft-Yonex Racket Sbillailll soo to 2100 Tennis Shes • Tennis Slirts & Shorts T ennls i.esses T ennls W.n11111 Slits ; \ -easeball llnd!lfshirts & Caps Baseball . Shoes ' Soccer Shoes • Track Shoes ~ross Cid1by Slloes w•i~ BasUlllall ·SlloiS lie Repirin1.far1s Tlns·T~CISSllies ' < °"" 9 " & Cla .. S.Dd1f I • l I I \ I ,_ ..... _..,._........,, A8 DAIL PILOT EDITORIAL P A GE Council's ·New BoDle Monday night, the city of Newport Beach took another step away Crom its past as strictly a beach resort town and toward its role as a growiq suburban community. Perhaps it is indicative of the "new" Newport Beach that more than 100 people turned out for the de· dication of the new city councU chambers, a com· fortable room buUttnfront otthe old etty hall. The council's new home is a carpet~ and paneled room which seats an audience of 116 in padded chairs-a chamber more befitting a city of 62,000. The old chamber, a linoleum tile and brick ex- tension of city hall was built in 1948, tn the days when the resident population of the town was small. At the time, the 73 wooden seats were more than ample. But as time passed and the city grew, interest in council activities grew too, and the chamber often overflows with people who came to listen or participate. It was becoming obvious that the city had long outgrown the old facility. While we would like to have seen more seating capacity and a protected walkway to city hall, the new $200,000 structure was the reasonable minimum necessary to accommodate growing needs. • Upgrading the Image The Coast Community College District has published a 32-page annual report titled •'Ac- complishments•• and mailed 3,000 copies to citizen ad- visory groups and community colleges t hroughout the country. its title suuests, it is self-aggrandizing, concerned more with lmage'than substance. For starters. eight pages could have been delet· ed-at a substantial saving-without removing exist· ing content or crowding the booklet. The district reports the printing and postage costs were $6,500, a figµre which dQ:e.5 not include Ume spent on the report by the community relations staff. The district may indeed need an attractive, in· formative report to interested citizens, Potential benefactors or prospective employes on its many ex· cellent activities and accomplishments. But it is hard to justify this particular expen d1ture as accomplishing that goal. Risky Location It seems quite natural for the Marine Department of the city of Newport Beach to expand its office space. The department, which used to be strictly the lifeguards, now includes the people who administer tidelands, beaches and ocean front parking lots. Since all these people have been trying to work together in the space that used to house just the lifeguards, the proposed $53,000 expansion of the build- ing does not seem intheleastunreasonable. There is one obvious question, however. The building that will be department headquarters sits C'n the beach beside the Newport pier. Periodically, it has been inundated by high tides and s torm. generated surf. Is it a good investment of the taxpayers' money to be sinking $53,000 into a building in such a critical location? ' -~ _, ' .. \ It is a departure from previous annual reports, which contained much useful statistical information, but which perhaps were not widely read. Instead the report was split this year, with the statistical supple· ment kept apart from the magazine. The report is slick and glossy, designed for easy reading. It is rich in art work, but poor in cbntent. As City officials say that a rock wall and groins built between the building and the water will prevent any further damage from waves. We hope so. Otherwise the city might as well leave the money on the sand to be washed away rather than remodeling the building. 11l1t> LOVE TO PLAY WITH YOU, ANDREI, SLIT THEY WON1T LET ME OUT.u College Athletics Financing Debated This is a bout the time of year that the moguls of the mega. million (or is it billion?} dollar professional football world gather to harvest the yields of the nation's colleges. And, how sweet it is! Time was when the highly competitive purveyors ot gridiron com- bat bargained with the all- A m eri can s, offering huge bonuses. to get their signatures on dotted lines. But, in a mo· ment of in- spiration, they came up wlth a system which ingeniously flouts the Sherman Act. In complete dis regard for the laws against slavery and in· voluntary servitude they devised the draft. Henceforth, college athletes with a yen for pro- fessional football would submit to round robin selection. No longer would free enterprise be permitted. No longer could they shop for the best offers. Either a player became the property or the club which drew him or he cottld sit it out. THIS, sports fan were told, would be fair. It would prevent rich clubs from grabbing up the best talent thus wiping out the chances of winning of the lesser t'lubs. In fact, teams with the poorest win records would have first choice in the draft. WeH , maybe it is fair for ( EARL WATERS ) everyone excepting the players and the schools that spawn them. Still, with the salaries gained by the players through their union ef· forts. perhaps one needn't worry too much about them. But what about the colleges of the nation? Regardless of whether they are tax supported or private colleges they are all s truggling for dollars. While college athletics may be most desirable as extra C'urricular activities they aren't the primary purpose of the in· stitutions. Some of the smaller ones never ha\fe gotten into it while others ha~e had to give it up. THE CQLL EG E athletic pro· gram is a costly one. Most of the athletes, if not all, are attending under1 sc bo laTships usually financed with tuitions paid by less physically gifted or by the taxpayers. Yet, with the tremendous revenues taken by professional sports organizations it does seem unfair that the col· leges should bear the full burden of producing crops. Commenting on this phenomenon the distinguished Washington columnist Ernest Cuneo recently said, "For all practical purposes the owners of professional sports teams have ~ucceeded in turning the entire lJ.S. educational system into minor league farms for the pro- duction of supe r athletes." A COUP LE of years ago As · Dear Gloomy Gus I don't think the dog owners are getting the message. There are still just as many canines run· ning free and leaving their "c alling cards" o n sidewalks and in yards. Guess that ordinance is net>ded after all. T.Y.G. Gleemy G• comments er• sUDmlttH by ~I eM lie lltlt MCHUrily reil«t tM vlewt •1 tti. 11ew~per. Selld yow pet _..,. t. Gloemy Gld, Oellv Pilot. semblyman Willie Brown became intrigued with the idea of c1evising some means whereby colleges could organize and de- mand compensation from,the professional world for the athletes they raised, in the sam e manner one club buys a player from another. Constitutional questions have plagued efforts to develop a legislative way to achieve this. Cuneo advances the idea of a federal gate tax dedicated to education. While thi5 would be a direct and easy way to collect funds it leaves some questions unanswered. What about the re- venues from TV which appear to be the major source of football receipts and some other sports? And how would the money be dis· tributed to assure the schools which produce the talent of re- ceiving their fair share? However it is done it seems time to sight m on this untapped source. As Cuneo says, "It is doubtful if a ny other business re- ceives the s ubsidies and tax benefits comparable to pro- fessional sports corporations." What Is a 'Useful' Li/ e? I worry about people who worry about people, especially themselves, being useful. I also worry about people being useless and worrying about it, for that. matter. Maybe I'm just against worry- ing, by myself or by anyone else, a b o u t anything whatsoever. In which case perhaps it would b e m e e t t o abandon this morning's eC· fort before it is properly commenced. (Worry, incidentally, is an in- teresting word. Jts root meaning is to strangle or to lnJure. Worry. ing. properly I Is what the rox does to the bound ln hunUni, or what the dog does with an old shoe. Remember tb.l.s I.he next time you find younelt worrying). Let us start with a 'consum· mate worrier. John We.sl~y. who founded Methodism, and had a great de:il to do with what we now ult, with a trace of con· descension, the Puritan Ethic. Wnl~y·s abysmal pr-ayer sounds down the centuries: "O l..ord, Let us not Uve to be useless, for Christ's sake. Amen." There seem.a to me a puslon or ,um in this utterance. Tbe Wesleyan• ru too ttadlly came to equate u.serutnea with the pit- [ CHARLES ] _ McCABE _ ing up of the earth's treasure in little heaps own ed by good Wesleyans. Perhaps the guilt was a result of the piling up, or the piling up was the result of the guilt, which may have been original sin. Who knows? I N THE Wesleyan sense, being useful meant having practical utility. By this standard the Trout Quintet of Schubert, the poetry of Swinburne, the wall paintings of those caves in the Sah ara. and t h e clowns of Picasso and Fellini, aro totally useless. Santayana said it more succinctly, "Muslc ls essentially useless, as life is." Pragm atism, that uniquely Aroerican way of looking at things, ls the son of Wealeyanism. Althouah the philosophy is American. Its tocsin was sounded by •a Britisher. John Stu.art Mill, ln h1s Euayon Liberty. "I regard utility as the ul· tlmate appeal on all etbicaJ queaUons: but it must be uUUty in tbe largest sense. rirounded on lbe permanent interests or man u a pTO(re.asive being." LA.RGE·MINDED American stat~en ~pd poUUclans hav• been laking ,.1on1 the!se lines for at east half lhe Ule of the . . . Republic. We cannot say that we have inched a great deal toward either domestic felicity or the pursuit of happiness through following this earnest course. On the other side, there are the poets or the useless, the people we call artists, people who believe that one Beethoven is worth at least one Henry Ford, and that maybe all Henry Fords should be killed aborning so that we could genetically concentrate on the production of Beethovens. A great deal has been said on both sides of the question of liv· ing the useful or the useless life, but precious little of it has percolated down into the com· mon sense. · THE ARCHE TYPAL man of common sense in our society is the frugal New England Congregationalist. He went to church on Sund ay. and he meant it. He spent the rest of the week screwing the Boston Irish and his own slblln1s in a law office, and bem•ant it. The consummate example of this type was the late J~Uce O.W. Holmes Jr. Like Dr. Johnson, Holmes had a talent for cleartn1 his bead, and the heads of others, of rubbish. I leave you with a few or hls wor~: "It would be well lC the in- telligent classes could forget lhe word sin and think less of being good. We learn bow to behave as lawyers, soldiers, merchants or what not by ~Ing lbem. uto. not .the pars.on, le.aches conduct." . • N The Right to Partiripate I Poor Should Pay Taxes To the Editor: The poor have rights too. Governor Brown ·s plan to eliminate taxes for poor people is wrong. The poor have just as much right to pay taxes as the non-poor. Because we all pay taxes we all have the right to demand better government and better people running that government. To pay nothing for your government, means you have no ri ght to condemn. cajole, or c1emand political or SOC'ial change. The poor would be tabled non.contributors by virtue of thei r temporary financial status Instantly you will produce a two class social structure, the givers and getters. Reduce taxes substantially for the poor Yes Rut eliminate them? NEVER WALT BLANKENSHIP loll Well Done To the F:ditor. I wish to take this opportunity to cast a vote of confidence to the '.'lewport Reach F'ire Department for a job well done m handling an impossible situation early Jan I A-a city property owner. a veteran firefighter, and one who has qualified as an expert in Superior Courts m the State of California in cause, origin, and propagation of fire. I w-0uld like to make the following ob· servation. The F'ire Department arrived at the scene of a fire that in· volved three houses that were typical homes found in this state -not designec1 to withstand a great deal of fire. The one in the center -t 16 East Ocean -was involved to the extent that dip· ping it in the sea would have made no appreciable difference. UNFORTU~ATELY and tragically, the lives had been snuffed out by products or com· bustion before the fire was re· ported. Typically, the response and delay -if this is proper wording -is the thing firemen have to work around -blocked hydrants and hand lay of hose - which cons umes time and manpower, but to one watching and waiting, this evolution seems like eternity. Now we look at the proximity of the two adjacent exposures, approximately five feet away, and the involvement of the two dwellings. As an expert, I'd say the Newport Beach firemen did an outstanding job in stopping ' -. ..1 ...... 'Th9 iatH t poH• dtow Betty Ford In th• /Hd ... • ( MAILBOX J Letters from readers are welcome. TM right to condense tellers to /II space or eliminate libel is reserved. Letters of 300 words or Less will be given preference. ALL letters mU3t in· elude signature and mailing address but names may be withheld on re- quest if su/ ficient reason is apparent. Poetry will not be published. this fire in its tracks in spite of the typical conditions that pre· vail now, and will prevail tomor· row because it's hard to sell fire prevention the second day after a tragic fire. We in the Fire Service know that all fires cannot be prevent- ed, but we all agree that a simple dev1re like a sm oke detector that costs less than 550 can without a doubt give an early warning -in time to esrape and give our firemen the needed five precious minutes. PRESTO~ E. PYEA1TE. J fl. PlperPla...at To the Editor: After several years of saying, "Next Christmas in Newport," I finally made it to the parade of boats. I am distressed that all of that fun and beauty has been going on without me. I am writing this letter to thank the piper in the parade for his contribution. All of my life I shall remember the beauty of the lights reflected in the water and those plaintive notes floating across it. We are quite Anglophiles. having spent some time at Cambridge where my husband studied. There and in London we often went to hear piping groups -not the all -alike, let 's-have·a ·production groups, but those where each man wore the kilt of his own clan, and played the pipes because he loved them. Could you put a note in your paper to indicate to the piper that he brought much pleasure to some who visited the area for only .a few hours? Possibly someone will read this who knows him and will express our appreciation to him. GEORGE!VIA IRWT~ Para.-Hle Pr.U~ To the Editor: May I use your newspaper to publicly t h a n k the Newport Beach paramedics? I would like the public to know that for themselves, as well as for tne. that in time of crises there is hope and beJp. New Year 's Day I lost con- sciousness wbUe staying with a relative on Balboa Island. l was bleeding throuJh the mouth and nose and had gone into a con· vulsion. At night on a boUday where does one tum? The only thing they could think ot was the paramedics. I was later told that as they bung up the phone the siren started and that wlthln thrtt to four minutes I wa.s re- ceiving oxygen and the paramedics wen woridn1 quick· ty aQd efficiently wlth tho hospital. MY sister·in·law wu ucler a doctor's care Just prior to the new year and almost went into shock with fright. Instead of ig· noring her and having another emergency they wer e vcr:v tender and compassionate and were able to avoid a po~sible at tark. These young men are not onl y keen, intelligent and well trained. but their kindness and gentleness with my worried family could never be surpassed. Wh at a great loss any city is suffering who does not support and maintain the paramedics. DOROTHY MrCOMRS Solid Perfor•er• To the Editor: twas very pleased fo read your January 6 editorial noting that theauditor-eontroller won a clean bill of health from the Grand Jury contract auditor. You in· dicated that C'ounty taxpayer~ can start the ne w year with tt.t· assurance of getting solicl performanre from "at lea~t om· section of local j!overnment ·• Hopefully you will not consider me presumptuou~ to commenct for your reading any Grand Jury report of the past eight years to discover that the vast majority of C'ou nty departments are solid performers. Though storms ap· pear to s wirl around us, your C'ounty departments are doin!! their johs. Ry every ::;tatistic available. including reports from Cal Tax and the state Depart· ment of FinanC'e, Orange County ' departments are the most ef· fective of all in the state. RE.THOMAS rounty Administrative Officer Old Glorfl To the Editor: At the time when we should s ee Old Glory flyin g highest-and proudest-why are so many replacing her with the j Bennington flag-a one family, one battle flag ? Th e Bicentennial of America, the · country whose ideals and history are in the billowing folds of Old Glory-why is she being put aside? People who want to fly the flag with the '76 in its ranton. why not beneath Old Glory where it belongs-in its proper place? Let Old G Jory fly as ~he always has. on high. the symbol of freedom and Justice' KATHRYN rJ51lRACK ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT Rnbert N. Weed. Puhl1~ht>r Thomas Keevil, f:drtor Barbato Kretbtch. F:drtorial Page Edttor The editorial page of the Daily Piiot. seeks to inform and stimulate readers by presenting_ on this page diverse eommentary on topics of Interest by c;~11d1cat· ~ colurnnists and cartoonist~. by. providing a forum for reGders' vle"'s and by presenting this newspal)('r's opinions and idea$ on current topic!\. The echlonal opin1oas o( th<' Onaly Pilot ap~ar· only in the editorial column al the, top of the page. Op1n1ons u- pressed by the columnists and- car1~ists and letter writers are' t~r o"·n and no endOr.l<'menl ~ \heir v1ew11 b the Dllily Pt~ should be tnferrt'd. Wednesday, J an.14, 1976 •• ,_ --1-=.· ... _..__ r Doetors' Slowdown State Faces ··care Crisis LOS ANGELES CAP) - A SPokesman for a J>bysician's group has warned that the doctors• slowdown in the Los Angeles area could spread throughout the state when Travelers Insurance Co. raises milpractice iMurance rates in Northern California Feb. 1. At the same time, a Los Angeles County official 'said Tuesday, plans have been prepared to call a ~te or emei::gency as a possible in~ans gl__~mbM:-t -mg the sfowdoWn . Officiab drew up the plans in case no solution is found to the malpractice situation. The state has ad· vanced a plan calling for a state-financed insurance company in return for a medical "Peace Corps" which would have doctors donate 20 days a year to caring for the poor. THE LOS ANGELES County Medical Asso<ia-SPEAKS FOR ANIMALS Ani•"ls Protected Panel )Ja(fks· Ban On Cruelty Film SACRAMENTO (UPI) -The bavln1 to simulate It," testified Senate Judlclaty Committee, Miu White, who la a nlt;mber of after listening to pleas from the American Humane As.socia· Hol)llQ9d_c.elebl'lties,_st1mtmen _tloq. and animal trainers, vdted Tues· l'oet and songwriter Rod day to ban the showing of movies McKuen threatened. that if the in which animals were de. letialatlon was defeat9<1, bis liberately killed or abused. foundation for animal cOncern ____'l'he.___c_o.ntr.n_v..er-S.ial bill h1----would. mount. .. cam palp.to.ur-a:e Senate Democratic F1oor Leader that filma be made iDother states David Roberti of Lo.s Angeles rather than the movie capital of would establish a new govern'-Hollywood. W..ec!!rsJlnUWX 1•, 1111 OAILYPILOT .4S Memoirs OfJFK On Sale • LOS ANGELES (AP) • -M.ysterr woman .. Jlldlth Campbell Exner, who eald •he bad vblted ·former-President-Ken· .J. nedy many'tlmes at the White House as a cl~e friend, is trying to sell her memoirs for $2 ----,nt lt to·n-wlth-n-olm .· mediate takers, it was reported today. The report was carried in the Los Angeles .Times. ment agency, the State Com-And McKuen, dressed~ a blue mission for the Protection of blazerandmatcbingtennisshoes, Animals, to make sure such mov-said opposition legislators might ies are not distributed in suffer at the polls when they are MRS. EXNER., 41, San California. It was approved on a confronted by celebrities con· S2 MILLION MEMOIRS Diego, bad recenUy dis- 7·1 vote. · cemed with humane treatment of Judtth C1mpbelf Exner closed a relationship tion criticized the proposal Tuesday and protested Actress Betty Whhe . what it said were statements by Gov. Edmund G- Brown Jr. that doctors "do not act in ·a socially · als wrucb she called "ot a .'\CTRESS BETTY WJDTE, of ~W · · · t t b areful close, personal nature" television's Mary Tyler Moore ere going o wa c C . .: responsible manner to the needs of their com- munities." · Brown also s aid through a spokesman, "l un· derstand the doctors· feelings and look forward to their assistance in resolving what is turning out to be a· very difficult social problem." Southern California physicians, mostly in the Los Angeles area, began the work slowdown Jan. l· to protest an incl-ease of 327 percent in their malpractice insurance premiums. BY TUESDAY, the 13th day of the slowdown, 98 of the 234 member hospitals in the Hospital Coun· cil of Southern California had experienced some degree of difficulty due to the protest. Nearly 26,000 workers have been affected - more than 4,300of them laid off -while hospitals are losing $700,000 a day from decreased patient loads, a hospital council spokesman said. Dr. Gerald Glantz of the United Physicians of California told a ne"'S conference in Sacramento that Travelers -the insurance carrier for the 9,500 doctors in Southern California -would raise its rates for physicians in the northern portion of the state Feb. 1. "IT'S GOING to be a statewide movement very rapidly," Glantz said, adding that Travelers in- sures 65 percent of the physicians in tbe San Jose- Sacramento area . Doctors in the northern part of the state staged their own slowdown last year to protest soaring malpractice ins urance rates. Out of 3,761 beds at Los Angeles county hospitals . 121 remained available at midnight Mon· day. compared with 184 bt.>ds 24 hours earlier. .<\nother l ,000 beds are available if extra employes can be hired, and applications for new employes were being processed Tuesday. DESPITF. THE slowdown. officials s a id emergency room services around the county re- mained available Tuesday. with no reports or any life-endangering situations caused by the slowdown. Druggist Killed In Heist Show, complained of increasing ly who votes for what b.1U, S'he with Kennedy over a 13 violence against animals by film de~lared the gravel vo1c~d Betit Him month or so period in the makers and warned the commit-wnter, who was one of 18 wit-early 1960s. The asserted lee. "we're bw"ldtn" g a blood lust nesses to speak on ~alf of the relationship came out e '1'0 the D when she was linked to inthiscountry." measur . ..1 4 TQl,V two .alleged Mafia Among the abuses of animals OPPONENTS WERE the Mo-SAN FRANCISCO CAP ) kingpins. mentioned were the filming of tion Picture Association and the Once before Marcia Blackman At a news conference actual cockfights, tripping Motion Picture and Television had been robbed at her soap and last Dec. 17 she had said horses with wires and slaughter· Producers Assoclati"on. the full facts of the rela-. 1· t k scent s hop, and it happened LONG BEACH <UPl) ing ives oc · Sen. Nicholas C. Pettis (D· again.Exceptforonething. tionship had been -.'\ pharmacist was The measure, which wolild ap· Oakland), voted for t he bill but With her right hand Monday transcribed and shot in the head and ply only to movies filmed after complained he would like to see she handed $41 over to the gun-documented. killed during a brief gim this year, would not prohibit celebrities exhibit "the same man, and with her left she came THE R E PORT SAID battle with three men scenes depicting violence to kind of passion and zeal for the up shooting. The thief, a bullet in who tried to rob his small animals as long a s the creatures human suffering in this state... ·his chest, died before he got to a the woman 's I iterary drug store. did not s uffer during the filming. i agent and San Diego at· D 0 n a 1 d R 1· ch a rd lt was sent to the finance com-IT IS ALR EADY against the hosp tal. torney had been unsuc- "tt h I · I t ·11 I I C lif · t •-t · al cessful in several at-Dearth. 55, was shot in m1 ee w ere eg1s a ors wi con· aw n a orn1a o u~a arum s the eye during the ex.-sider the cost or running the new cruelly. Roberti's bill was aimed DAILY .PILOT tempts to place her pro- change of gunfire . lie animal cruelty commission. mostly at the entertainment mo-CLASSIFIED ADS ~~:aeC:edb ~oe~ ~~~~ was dead 00 arrival at "The reas on they cut a sheep's lion pictures made abroad or 642~5678 Pacific Hos pit a I. _:th:'.'.'..:ro::•::t .:_i::_s .:_l::_h:_•l:::i l:_:' s:_::c::_he:::a'..'.pe:::.r _:l::_han:::__,e:::lse:::_::w'-'h"=e.::re"-'i"'n'-'t"he"-"U-"n"it"ed"'St=•o:tes:e:..----------------'p"u"b"lis"h"e"rs'-.----- POLICE SAI D the r-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~..., three young men entered Willow Pharmacy about 3 p.m. and wandered around for several minutes before leaving. Several minutes later the men r eentered the store and went to the counter with s everal items. The cas hie r noticed one of the me n had a gun and s he fell to the floor s houting to the pharmacis t . De arth grabbed a gun and seven s hots were ex.changed between the drug store owner and the fleeing suspects. Sears u 0 Whe re Thrift Is Always In Style Located on the Lower Level ,(:~G:) ()[; Fashion CHILDRENS (~ J ,1,~~·:£~: / 21 • SALE STARTS THURS., JAN. 15 DOORS °"" AT ID A.M. JO FA-ISUMD • HIWl'OIT llACH No &cMntn er Alfundl on s.te MerchllndlM . 0 1 OFF ,,,~t-' --~ ' v._.._-t f ., 0 < . _,... . ,, . • Pants • Tops ' ' .. ., -~ J; • Dresses • • Coats I ' I • • Se ars Former Low Prices Sweaters Robes • Hostesswear QUANTITIES LIMITED Use Sea rs Revolv ing Charge Misses' Nylon Rib Knit Tops Low Priced Misses' Easy-Care Pants Were 54 .. 299 to s7 99 each This Ad Effective through Sal., Jan. 1_7 I Sears I So. Coast Plaza •u.aa. -.uc:• Ol'l;OO. .•.. . - I 1 II 3333 lrl1tol St. Phone 540-:IW • • • Sheer Nylon K n ee H ighs One si ze 4 pairs in a pkg. Orane:e 2100 Ni TustFn Ave. Phone 631·2100 Low Priced 299 STOii HOU•Si. Moincloy thu1 Frld.y 10 AM le 9 rM Sohttday f ;)Q AM te 9 rM Suft4.y 12 N-.n t. .I,._. • ' NIW VOltlC IUPI) -hllOwlno .,. Dt'·leff on the Ntw YOrtl Slock Cll~lltn .. ti CIOll. 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By SYLVIA PORTEil fThfrd itt a-Strin) "A drearp come true ... This beaullful Colonial Homnt,ad, easy to buy, down payments are low, as low as 5 percent! ... Seven s.J>edieular models, from an unheard· ol $21199S to S3S.•, $l7S down on contract, only S per-cent total aown paym~nt:'' Or:-- "Just think, your own custom·built a11d maintenance free lakeside vacation retreat. .. Just $125 a month and $1,750 down. Tbrt\ill price $l6,499 .. .Includes house a nd land." . THEY SOUND FAMJUAR -yet these are hypothetical ads prepared by the Better Business Bureau of Money's Worth Metropolitan New York ' to highlight for you how ~------' · the ads violate the discl0$ure rules of the 1969 Federal Truth in Lending Act and its subsequent amendments. ~mong ot.her things, th_is law requires that if an ad· vertiser mentions one feature of. credit in an ad -such as the down payment total -the ad must disclose all other vital terms, such as the number, amount and period of pay- ments that follow. In the !irst ad, for instance, the down payment was mentioned as a percentage and lhe cash price. The ad also should have revealed number of payments (18,24 ,36, etc.). amount due each period, period of payments <week ly, mon· thly, etc.), and annual percentage r ate expressed as a "per· cent" and labeled "annual percentage rate." In the se~ond ad, thesame disclosures should have been ~ade. Also, it used the phrase "full price" -but that was, m fact, the cash price. "Full price" would include interest payments and would~ nearly double. .. UNFORTUNATELY, SOME advertisers are not aware of their obligation to disclose credit terms under the la'.N, .while ot~ers simply do not believe the consumer needs this infort,nation," says Woodrow .Wirsig, president o! the New_Y~rk BBB .. "But an' intelligent consumer does need the credit J?formahon and businesses advertising credit must supply i.t. Check all ads for full disclosure, as ope means of evaluating the company.'·' .. Don't take anything for granted. You cannot expect the J:!ledia to check out each ad completely. They haven't the time. personne l or expert knowledge. The best way to pro· tect yourself is to be sure you understand the terms of any deal you are considering. · . In tbe automobile financing field in particular, and in installment buying in general, credit double-talk is a real threat to the innocent consumer. "Instant credit," "credit guaranteed," "no credit ap- plication refused" or "no money down .. -all these should be dismissed as coine-ons. Tbe advertiser who lures you with "no money down" may in !act require you to obtain a separate loan for part or all of the down payment jn order to quali(y for this "no money down" offer. . IN THE AUTOMOBILE leasing fi eld, ads will multiply this year. A sample: "A luxurious 1976 automobile, $217 a month, equity lease, minimum m aintenance included addi· tional maintenance optional." ' Basically, there are two types of auto leases: "closed- ehd" and "open-end." The open-end lease is also known as an "eguity" lease. Under this open-end or equity lease, the • 1ess_, may be required to pay an additional expense at the end of the lease period ba,sed on the price at which the vebi. ~le may be sold at the end of the lease agreement. Accord· Vlg to ~BB. sla!l~ar~. w~en a specifi~ ,rate is advertised, tb1s obligation, if it exists must be advertised. ' f J But ~requen11y , it is n.of -even though the obligation ,. may run mto hundreds of dollars. Watch out for this pitfall. · •Be wary when leasing a car of such phrases in ads as "full insurance," "adequate insurance," "fully protected." These phrases are nearly always meaningless. As for such· pledges as "full maintenance" or "14aintenance by us," 1 these should mean that you, the customer , are not obligated to pay for any type of maintenance. FINALLY, BE ON guard against claims that there is no cost for credit -often made by stores in low·income areas which sell furniture. 'lbe·~barge is there, J)robabb' hiaden in the purchase price. Under a 1~75 .~m.end~ent to the Truth in Lending Act. ads for extension.of credit r~payable in more than four in· stallments must, Unle$s a finance charge is imposed, state· that ''tt)e cost of credit is included in the price quoted for the gOQds and services:" By oo means do all businessmen obey the law. I f I. • Neav l!ork 15 Most A~tl.,e • t .. , • ., U11lttc1 Press lllttfllltloNf NYSE ln<IU 51.•• up • ASE lncltx •1.n up Dew.J-s Ind '29.1>3 up S & P SOO Stocks 97 11 up 0.83 1.23 16.69 u• Gal11na and °£oRrS NtW Yol'll IUPll -Tiit f0410wlng 11~1 9"6wl thl stock$ 111•1 have ... NCI most .nc1 IOlt I"-mct5t Nsad Oii WCltttt al c~ on the Nt°"" Y~ Stock E~ perctn1-c~ -1'le e betwffn Tht p.-.v1-closlno nd lilt currenl clOSlno Pf'lce. , OAIN51t$ \ --El Pf I,..+ .. Up 20.0 2 ~,..., Cp 6V. + 1 Up 19.0 I I ' NEW YORK IUPll -Tiie 15 mo't f tc:tlve \tock\ traded on 1ht New YMk Stock Exchange WRdnescs.y. I Salts o-a. Mid SO Utlls .... 6'6,IOO 16Yo + -~~ R c A Corllf! •.. 108,ZOO n ... "'\ Pl>l•rold Cp •..• 196,.00 36 + 1''1 Gt11 Pub Utls .... 1SS,100 ll'h + ~ l AU Rlchfld •..• 252,SOO ""' -4"4 I Oeflef'll MIB .: •• 23S,300 '2'1t + 1~ I Mtrc.k ......... 223,200 71'h -,,,.,,. ,.,,. Ttll. Ttl .... 201,000 SS~ + 1 I Ully Ell ....... 113,'°° «9111 --1'"' <Mv!IM Pl.L .... 113,SOO ~ + \.t Soutlltrn Co .... 111, 100 1S'41 + v. A-t Inc ....... 173,800 1.f"' + 1 f AltK Olli.Gs ... , 172,300 28 t ~ f Cllkorp .. • • • • • 1 '3.IOO J0!,11 ~ -8tltlSh Plitt ..... • 161,000 • 11.\ro I> I Je C.D 1"41+ V. Uo 16.7 4 m 1~+ V. 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' 2~ ,· '1' !:" .. =="' '1·•; .,. r.·' ...... 1 tt u--~ .... !n ~ '.... '.!. -a 1114+ -"' •• 11 ,.114+.. ......,. ·:-:D ... + ·-.. ~ 7'0 .. II " -1Yt •1, I -••• -..... .. ... ---.' •• ' Jn " +.a ,, ·~ ~ ' ' . '° • M'il+ 9' ,, , • ll +1 1,.,.12 1 ;t•w-... _. LM .. 11.» •~+ 14 l1 · ,_lh+'4>... + .... ·--._~ • 1 IO +t 1•• pft-.. + OW.M ._. --,. tot tt. ... CWt ) JI ·~ '°' Me M UO t 11i ll\h -Ill WI .. J ltl ti\\• ... MC a.9 •• 1 ..._. '°' WIM llf 1"'11 •• + -.......,_Ill , • tq h lip-14 Wit, et,_ .. a -, .. , tJ 1'•+- 1 \ ' fi DAILY PILOT Wednndly.J•nu'!'f 14, 1179 Tonight's TV Highlights Quintet Bailed .in Lag~na Con~ert KHJ 0 8 :00 -"Destry." A later (1955) version of the western classic with Audie Murphy in the role created by James Stewart. • lt was just as well that the Secolo Barocco quintet agreed readily and amiably Monday nl1ht to offer an encore or two to their Laguna Beach Chamber l\tusic Society audience. For there is little doubt that these Oawless Frenchmen, had they made any other decision, would have been detained In the Art Colony under lock and key until they had made some further at- tempt to satisfy the insatiable desires of a delighted audience. They gave us magnificent chamber music-from the first enchanting notes of the Jacques Loeillet quintet to the rousing Vivaldi that so splendidly con · eluded the official program. KCET @ 9: 00 -'"Beyond the Horizon.•• Geraldine Fitzgerald and John Houseman head the cast of this Eugene O'Neill play focusing on the struggle of a man a nd his nature, and the tragedy bef ailing anyone who opposes his destiny. CBS f) l I : 30 -"'Twilight of Honor.·· Richard Chamberlain and Nick Adams arc featured in this 1963 movie. IT W.'\S NATURAL. OF course. for the group- drawn from the front desks of the Orchestre de ~ Paris -to stress the French contribution to the ~ chamber music repertoire. ..,.1rmr£~ TV DAILY LOG The Loeillet quintet, as we have noted, is an ad· mirable work , rich in melody and cons tantly re- minding us or the noble role accorded to the harpsichord in seventeenth j::entury chamber music. .. No less delightful was the Trio in G minor by Francois Devienne. another French composer who tends to be sadly neglected in today's chamber music repertoire. Heaven alone knows why in the light of a vivacious, exquisitely scored work that ·Reward Offered Wednesday Evening JANUARY 14 Thurs day DAYTIME MOVIES •:JO O .. Model !tr Murffr" (mys) ·s9 -llutl Courl, l\tlth Andu. (C) "'Oee Sundl)' Ahn-~ (min) •48-Dtn- "'' Mc!l'11n, l•ftis P111t. ID:OD (l) "T•M C1rt ti Mr Utti. Cllt" (dl1) ·~1 -Jetnnt t nin. u:oo ID "Thi a.c'" 110111l ·cs -Jlldy ~lllld, llol>elf W1l~tf. 1:00 0 "Dilry fl 1 Mich StJroMI lride~ (dr1) 'S9-An1!1 S.nds, llOMld f os- tu. !2di "'JM'I lldi; Gii lmhly" (n\us) '5l-Vir111111 Maye, ~ Htl· -· l:OO 0 ft) '"Sasbldlew1~~ (1dv) ·~ -A11n liHld, Shtllly Winters. ®J (C) "Tllfflly I VIII Milfioft1W' (rom) '67 -Debbie Wilson. l:JO 0 IC) "fM C..lbllip ti EH It's F11Nf"' Cone:!. (tom) '63 -Glenn r11rd, ShitleJ JO!tes, 11111111)' 11ow.,d, 4:0Df11 IC) .......... """" (COfll) '64 =t'mest 8ortnine, Tim Conwl)', KOCE Television (50) For 'O z' Costumes BANNER ELK. N.C. (UPI ) -A $500 "no ques· tions asked'. reward has been offered for the safe return of costumes worn in the filming or the original .. Wizard of Oz" movie. The items were stolen from the Land of Oz Museum Dec. 28. The State Bureau of Investigation and local authorities are investigating the possibili- ty that fires. which destroyed two buildings at the adjoi ning Land of Oz amusement park on the same date. "'ere related to the theft. A dress worn by the late Judy Garland in the movie, plus some "Munchkin" costumes and a coat worn by the movie's "Emerald City gatekeeper" were among the missing items. Producers Pull Out Of Oscar Telecast HOLLYWOOD <UPI ) -Richard Zanuck and David Brown have bowed out as producers of the annual .>\cademy Awards show March 29. Zanuck, son of movie mogul Daryl Zanuck, and Rrown. husband of writer and magazine editor lle!en Gurley Brown, are two of the most successful film producers. Their recent hits include "Jaws" and "The Sting.·· They said they were ··terribly disappointed and have told the academy we 'd like to do:the show next year:· but "a major production for Universal Studios will occupy us full time during the period the Oscar s how is in production.·· A.cademy President Walter Mirisch named Howard V. Koch, who produced three of the last four Academy Award s hows, toreplacethem. M * * * * JACK NICHOLSON'S PERFECT TRIUMPH!" .. .,·;;", .. .... ,, .. ,,,. \ OTllN t•• , ... u ..... , C.11 T"••1,. IOt tlMelt "LUcKY LADT" IPGI "ll•'OCI NCH.MU' IMMTH aonmr•NI "'Wut0e4Mr ... "'OMCa II MOT IMOUI I f" CIJ • TOM BARLEY ' Music Box was particularly well received by a a«pacity au· dience. TIUS WRITER'S PERSONAL preference - and it ls hard indeed to accord precedent'!e over Rameau was utter perfttt.lon. an eloqu,ent and s2lend.ldly delivered rendition ol a work that, in the ri8ht hands, ta incomparable. .LADI ES AND GENTLEMEN, the Secolo Barocco: Michel Debost, Oute; Jacques Chambon, oboe; Alain Mobrier, violin; Amau.ry Wallez, bassoon and Joel Femand Pontet, harpsichord. But let them share the spotlight for a moment with the or1ani1ers of the Laguna Beach Chamber MuMe·Soeiety, if you willr-We·are-rortunate·indeed to have such purveyors of magnificent mu.sit: in our midst. some magnificent Bach and Haydn -was for Jean-.,,...... n 11 Philippe-R·ameau's-Cinquieme"Concert;a glittering-----• · -• ·-·--· work of subtle nuances that can often escape the less accomplished group. Nothing escaped the Secolo Barocco. Their mtt•"'""f '\\{A_ ~r. ... . . ... -Pl,". THE ,~... 11 GREATEST ; , >. CLASSIC • 1• '7'. OFALL I > "'.Ill IGI Ol\'IO 0 Sll/lllCl\S""' ... ~·· •""'" ~ ·-.. n: IJ•?f41ft!l~i Fly us. Anywhere In the DAILY PILOT 1he masterpiece of biwm Im.. tbal stunned Fronce. A portrait of lnveond submission to disorder the senses. LA MtfllOl Wllk.IH llflCAIH ,fllCf 11 SD MONOAV "''u Sl fUflOAV t(ot•PI Holidr,111~ 30·' 00 ·---·-.. --· ... ,. ·-'°' ... , Af1llNOOtil • --llOMll• IOOI. "' _, .... -.. , ---· --.. COllWWnoM"' .._ ... ,.-, ... - ·--... ,Am .... --... --....,, ••• "* "' Bl ·s.1:.::!~:·~;.~ --··---- --* -----=.=- ·-.. , "11111CN* --.llC 111111 ... "' I ,_,"'""'-NJ u•r & TIMIS Of GlllllT ADAMS 111 Ml. SUHl INVISSIU 111 JOllY. NO •.um --·-·~ LUCllT UIY "' UCI 'Nml THI DIVIL 111 ._. .. ._. 9"CUQIUI • ~ ~ 1111-• ....... --· ""'' .................. IJUll ICllCI • l'l.U5 • --~ ........... "..-.' ) Mft Of 1111 tc1•DI "'-· J~K HtCHCLtoN D fAYI OUfrtA~'I' --· "llHDEI OM IHI 0111111 WIESS" IPGI 3:10.7tll "'THE PARALLAX VIEW"' (R) 2:00-e:OS-10:10 "lllf ASllOllllill" Il l l:JM:IM:OO. 7:41-9:]0 . "lltlEI FDIC!"' ~I J:lM:OO-t:lO '1!fURN TO MACON COUNTY LINE"' 4:1 .. 7:10 FOUNTAIN VALLEY .. '"""" :,1::r.::..~.· .. II '"' »<"' "'Kltl!R FDIC!" . 1:01 "1!flJIN TO MACON COUNTY UNI"' 6:15-t:40 'THE ASTROLOGER"" IRI 6:00.7:50.t:JO w A ~ llLUI IUTl'" INI V "'llL\IOUT"' '"FUSH GOIDOH" '"CHf .. l E4DIU" W "llLUIFOlcr .,..IMI C&n-lll ,COMTIHUOU$ flOM f~ . SAT. THIU ,..,.., 4 THE CITV SHOf'PtNG CENTRE ORANGE •532-6721 ""CITY CEMTRE CIMEMAS -S.A. J'AWY !MANCHESTEA EXJ G.G. Jl'AWY tCITY DA. EX.I .,HE ASTIOLOGll .. "'R.fSH GOIDON'" 111 "'THE CHEEILEADBS00 SAN DtEGO FWY, AT BRISTOL SO.COAST PLAZA W.-1111 SO.COAST PLAZA St•-USJ MOHi C. icon. ,,.... a.u1C110n "'HIND£NBURC"' (PG) Dl.llV f :M & t\JI l&f~l:l0.M0.1<4i-1tW.f:il FREE PARKING . "ONE FLEW O'l!R IHI CUC!OO'S NESr Ill DAl.f l :JI & t:OS SAlf'~l-l:IM<)D.7:li-11<1$ CllEIWAllD THIEE :ft, "DOG DAY AFTERHOOH .. OAILf 1:00..ID!ll. SAT,4'.IN, 1:)5.t:00.10:1~ "DROWNING POOL"" DAILY l :XI. S ... T.ISIJN. ):».1:20 FREEP~~ "STORY OF O" IXI 6:41-&:JO.I 0-.15 SAT ~I ~O.J: 15-lcOCM:45-l:JO. I 0-.15 PltlYllW-SAT. ONLT~O PM. HOWIMDOES A GIRL HAVE 1000 lOUHIRMGU HERTIMGU?? _ 1H 11£ llCIT, •llllE I I 'l 15 • PllTS!. l'WS T1tt: SECOlll llllSf FAMOUS'-• AIM T Fl.II Of llllR TIME_. Tiie Ind In Miu Jone•. ...... 171 .. 109 f. ...., 11¥11 ....... llllch 111'!11 !IAJL Y AT 12 llOoll • J Ir ' I l ~ ' I ' . I ~ ! r ; ' ' ( '( d t ' ti ' , ' j ' l .. ' .... • ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA Today's C lo lag N.Y.Stoeks ' ~ I C TEN CENTS C~uple 'l'errori:ed by Electric Gun , BLUE BELL, Pa: (AP> -The Tuer electric dart·IW\, sold for protection against crime, was an instrument of terror for a Montgomery County couple in the bands or four masked ban· di ts. "The assailants used this dart gun to force the man and his wile to say where they had more mon~ or valuable belongings," police Sgt. Joseph Stemple said Tuesday. He refused to name the man and his wife. Stemple said a man appeared at the door of the couple's home. at suppertime and identified himself as a police officer. He said the bogus cop rushed in with three other men, all wearing ski masks. The men carried the Taser - designed by a space technblogy e ngineer inspired by the weaponry of Buck Rogers and James Bond. "The couple were tied up with clothing, h andcuffs and telephone wires," Stemple said. "ltpparently, the suspects knew there was money in the house. "While the people were tied up, one of these guys shot them with this dart gun. They were both s hot twice in the stomach," Stemple said. ''The darts stuck in their flesh. It's like a needle, ex- cept it gives you a s hock." He added, "It's called the Taser Public Defender and· it gives you a hell or a shock. They say it immobilizes you. I k,now it hurts. but it doesn't kill. Both the man arus the woman were treat- ed at a local hospital and re- leased." The four fled with $7,000 cash. $4,000 in jewels , the man 's Mercedes-Benz and two .22· caliber rifles. Taser Systems, Inc., manufac- tures the $199 weapon, which it calls "the alternative to the gun." It looks like a flashlight. though in California it is official· Jy termed a "gun" and must be registered and bear a serial number. Canada announced Monday that it will ban the Taser effec- tive Feb. 1. New York City bas already made it a crime to carry a Taser, a decision the manufac· lurer is protesting. <SeeTASER, PageA2> Hinshaw Denies Bribe Congressman Say s Off e r Noi-Made U"IT.._... Sus~n on Slopes By TOM BARLEY Of .... Delly ...... SI.rt Congressman Andrew Hinshaw repeatedly denied to- day allegation that be solicited a bribe from a lawyer representing Beckman Instruments of FUilerton during an assessment appeals hearing at which the de- fendant appeaTed as Orange County's assessor. Hinshaw. 53, told a Superior Court jury as his bribery trial moved into its final hours that be never suggested to attorney Ronald Steelman that things might go Beckman's way if the firm bought 10 $100 tickets to CIA Plans To Raise Suh Curbed WASJnNGTON CAP) -Plans for another CL\ ·~·to raile a 1dnken Soviet ll'iabmari.ne from the floor of the Pacific Ocean have been thwarted by a Russian sblp patrollin1 the wreclcaie site, intelligence iourc61 said today. President Ford's daughter Susan shows her skiipg form · on the slopes. of Vail Mounfain in Colorado during a two- . month break from college. Susan will participate in her first ski race as a member of an employes team of the resort community. The presence of the Soviet vessel prevented the American ship Glomar Explorer from. re· turning last summer to the wreck :1ite northwest of Hawaii, one source said. .. GOP Head Urges Top CIA officials are now • '85 percent s ure" that the $250 million salvage project will have to be abandoned altogether, Ile added. •iTbe proje~ is over. at Jedt for the preseilt time," another sourceaaid. Step-down by Cory The 1Glomar E~plorer. a sopbi1tic.ted rec:Overy vessel built by billionaire Howard Hughes, raised the forward third otthe Soviet submarinein 1974. From Wire Services The state chairman of the Republican Party urged Gov .. FAmund G. Brown,..~~·-to uk. Controller Kenneth U1Q' to take a leave of absence becau.e he is surrounded by ••a growing cloud ohmpic°i9n." · CbairJnan PauUlaerle saJd the controller should step down until charges against Dr. L<>uis Cella, who . contributed more than $250,000 to Cory's campaJgn last year, are disposed of. A spokesman for Brown said • Haerle should take up the matter directly with Cory. · Cory him,Sell wlll remain publicly silent on the demand. Gentry Durham, a spokesman for the controller, said, "There will be no response and no com· ment OD Haerle's statement." Cella and three auqcjates each were indicted by the Orange County Grand Jury ana a federal Grand Jury in Los AngeleS Mon· day OD felony counts.relatine to · the alleged emb,ezzlement of $2 million from two Oranie County hospitals. A probe reportedly continues U"1T ......... 'NO COMMENr State Controfler Cory into an insurance ~mpany in which Cory, Cella, and Southern California Democratic Chairman <SeeCORY, Page.U) Mainten·ance costs for the 618-foot Glomar Explorer have caused a steady drain on the CIA <SeeGLOMAR, PageAJ> DOW INDEX UP ANOFHER 16! NEW YORK (UPI) -Prices closed sharply higher in heavy trading on the New York Stock exchange today, as investors, cheered by early January auto sales reports, resumed their new year buying spree. The Dow Jones industrial average, a 9.45-point 106el" Tues- day, added ahead 16.619 points to "929.63. Tbe Dow gained 69.98 points in seven sessions prior to Tuesday. • Advances led declines by about an 11-to-three margin.· (Tables, BS) Prices were higher in active trading on the American Stock Exch•ge. Fire ·.Protection Eyed I :·Hydnail l~ment by Buil4er•.COnte.ted .. Colla Meta clty oaldala are :tryinf to establish a new Polley ·on provldinl fanda t• water maln uprradinl wbida ma1ntalm · ·fire protection. COuncUmen Jack Hammett 'aDcl Robert wn1oa haw called· •. fer chanses, cont.., tbat the · preHnt 111tem ii unfair to de· velos-en. 'ne quettJcn\ COlllll up wben dlYelGpen are asked to pay for 'new or improved ftre b)idrantl or wats U.. • a Collldlllm to..,.. proval of• project. • 0-ralJ~ de•Hl.,. bave qreed to fund on-site improve-~v• at next Monday's ment.s, but in recent months a council meetin1. trowtni number ot developen But both Hammett and W'llson has protested the cost <:l install-1ald recenUy that the money for tna new hydrants, or upgradlni water pre11ure Improvements olcl onet, off the site of the pro-abould be raiMd by the water Jed. ..-ctes--U..Dtt ~ott~esha Coun-Tbe developel'I have claimed tJ Water t.~a. """'c coven ·that such improvements benefit moat ol tbe c~. llld tbe Santa a net&hborhood and t.hoee coet.1 AU Hellbta WMw:::llll1· ... lhould be shared.. ••1 •=• ..., tbe v~ nre department otnclall, who Wlap11• '10 Doti .. a new water l:nlllt1hat the lmpnwemetsve nn.-tbe ~ OU~1111 met needed in ••ch case to ma1ntaln ......... r doa't do the city'• flre Insurance raUo1 •• •that." tnllo8 ll a recent are due to come up with <IMBYD&Altt,..,.AI) Hinshaw's testimonial dinner. Steelman gave that testimony as a prosecution witness. He further claimed that Hinshaw called a recess in the appeals hearing to make the proposition to him. Steelman further testified that Hinshaw told him: "I don't know why the large taxpayers in this county are not supporting me." Hinshaw today told defense al· torney Marshall Morgan that the opposite was always true while he served as county assessor prior to bis election to Congress in 1972. "Most of my support came from 't h e large prope rty owners," the Ne wport Beach Republican said. And he testified that he could not recall ever meeting Steelman at the as· sessor's office or t alking with the lawyer over the telephone. The denial followed Hinshaw's admission that he accepted two stereo units as gifts during his term as county assessor. He is being tried for three f elooy counts contained fn a grand jury indictment: accep· tance of stereo equipment and a $1,000 campaign contribution Unruh Arrested Dnmk R ap Hits 'Big J ess' SACRAMENTO (AP) -State Treasurer Jesse Unruh was arrested on a drunk driving charge early to· day, the state Highway Patrol reported. Patrolman J . E. Weir said he saw Unruh driving erratically on In· terstate 80 in Yolo County just across the Sacramento River from the state Capitol at 2: 15 a.m. Weir said he stopped the car and Unruh failed a sobriety test. Unruh. 53, once considered the most powerful Democrat in the state when he was speaker of the state Assembly, was taken to the Yolo County Jail in Woodland where he was fingerprinted, photo- graphed and signed a promise to appear in Washington Justice Court in West Sacramento. u•u1u" Lt. Tom Dinsdale, shift commander at the jail, described Unruh as cooperative. Dinsdale said Unruh was taken to his home in West Sacramento by a friend he phoned from jail. 'Demeani ng, A relaair' Trustee Urges Ban ·On Class Spanking Calling ·corporal· pUnis hment "demeaning, dehumanizing, dis- criminating and archaic , ... Newport-~esa School Trustee Donald Smallwood urged his fellow board members Tuesday to drop the district's "spanking policy." Trustees were attempting to amend the district's current policy on corporal punishment to bring it into compliance with new state law. The new Jaw requires written consent from parents prior to corporal punishment be· in& administered to a student. Smallwood argued that the en- tire policy should be dropped. "We don't use it, we don 't need it and I'm sorry it's part or our policies,'' he said. Supt. John Nicoll told the board there were only five or six in- stances of corporal punishment 7JIEY RESPOND TO PILOT ADS "I sold the car to a Dally Pilot reader. ID I act, the ad in the Pilot sat much more response than tbe one I ran in the paper in Santa .Ana.'' . Tbat't th• advertising success experienced by the Costa Mesa man who placed this clasalfied 9'1 · • reported during the past year. Trustees Rod MacMillian, Orville Amburgey and Thomas Casey argued that the threat or corporal punishment is a deter- rent and the policy should be kept on the books. "After all, capital punishment is not used often, but it's kept because it's a deterrent,'' Casey said. Smallwood asked Nicoll to br- ing to the next meeting, Jan. 27. information from school prin· cipals regarding bow often they threaten students with spankings and how they feel about the policy. Trustees held off until Jan. 27 a decision on whether to simply amend the policy or throw it out at Smallwood's request. Mesa Pastor Joins Race For Congress 11le Rev. James O. Combs, 48, who recently resigned as pastor or the Fint Baptiat Cburch or Costa Mesa, bas declared himself a can· didate for the Republican nomination ln the 40th Coagressional District. Tbe diatrict, which covers moll of southern Orange County md part of San Dier<> County, pnetntly la represented by An· drew" J . Hl.a1baw <R·Newport Be-). . Combs' entry Into tbe race, an- DOGDced at a press ~erence ln Costa Meta T\aelday. brouabt the nu1r11ber of eaadldatel Heting <See PASTO•, Pa&tAI> • from the Tandy Corporation and the soliciting of a bribe during · the Beckman hearing. Hinshaw admitted that he ac- cepted a stereo unit. the most ex· pensive model manufactured by Tandy's Radio Shack group from Tandy's Vice President James Buxton during a visit to the com- pany 's Garden Grove warehouse. Turning to the jury, Hinshaw stressed that h e bad his checkbook and pen out and had every intention of paying for the stereo unit. " . (See IDNSHA W • Page A2) ~Ospital Slowdown Loonijng By ALAN DJRKIN OllMDllly PlleC,.... Physicians using Huntington Intercommunity Hospital, Hoag Memorial Hospital and Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital appear today to be on the verge or a slowdown to protest malpractice insurance costs. About 350 doctors from the three hospitals met at Hoag , Tuesday night and reportedly 90 percent of those present indicat- ed they would curtail their services. (Related Story A5) The 90 ·percent estimate was made by Linda Mottin, public re- lations director at Hoag, who said that the medical executive staff at Hoag would meet today to consider the situation. Tom Richards, administrator of Costa Mes a Memo rial Hospital, said today that he did not expect any effects to be felt at t he hospital until early next week. "We'll keep an· eye to see if there is a trend toward the les sening or admissions, .. he . added. Public relations director Mot· . tin said som e 90 percent of the doctors at the m eeting "indicat· ed by a show of bands that they would be forced to participate on an individual basis in a curtail· ment of physicians' services because of an inability to pay the higher m alpractice insurance premiums.'' . She said that a written state- ment of hospital plans would be available later today. Doctors in Los Angeles County have been on a slowdown in pro- test against malpractice in- surance costs since the beginning of the year. Coast Weath er Sunny Thursday a nd slightly warmer says the weather service, with highs along the beaches at 74 risine to 78 inland. Lows tonight 42 to 48. INSIDE T ODAY A Milli•sippi ~· wif~ moat haw btm killed bqore o $%5,(J(J(J '°"'°'" um paid to her ~r.~ce.ar.H~bod!I -.and o IUIJ*f m t1w ~ ioer1 found TueldaJI. Story A4. ... •••ex · MV..,91Mm At...._ 9W ....... .. ....... .. ..... ..,_ ............... .. ,.....,.. 4M1t ............ M,M =..c.r.w .~;: o.....~,..aa OM1kt C1t ...... Cl4 = 11• CM .,.. .. ...., at ...... '"'..,.. at.i ................... , .... == .. ~~ ~ ,_. C-.M "'9Mlf'I ... 1 • 1 aw A• ~ ~ ...... 114.M ~ . • -· ·-• ,A: DAll.Y PILOT c N o t a 'Tragedg' ··Board Tackles Enrollment Dip • Tru.stees he-gt1n gr@Ppling willt declining enrollment in the Newport~l\of esa Unified School District Tuesday night and de- cided the situation should be viewed as an ·'educational op- portunity'' rather than a tragedy. The board learned there are presently 117 empty classrooms in the di5trict -primarily in the smaller elementary schools in Costa Mesa. By 1980, the district's enroll- m ent is e~pected to drop to about 20,000 -a deC'line of about 5,000 · from the current en'rollment. .4.s a result . s everal small elementary schools may have to be closed or used for alternative purposes. The seven schools in greatest j eopa rdy are Bay View, .Balearic, Lindbe rgh, Victoria, Whittier, llarper and Monte Vis- t~. 1\J:;o, a m iddle s chool may be From Page Al HINSHAW. • Rut Buxton, he-testified , was :1damant and refused to accept his check. ''And I didn't "''ant to offend him ,'' 1-linshawcxplained. .. It was not a very pleasant ex· perience, .. Hins haw told the j ury. Hinshaw further admitted that he accepted another costly stereo unit from fo rmer auditor- appraiser George Upton while he v•as a guest at Upton's home. The former assessor said Up- t on made the offer after he (Hins ha"'·) noticed a pile of Radio Shack cartons in Upton's Santa ,<\.na home. Hinshaw s aid Upton told him that he-had been given a number of stE'reo sets which "''ere to be raffled off as prizes by the Coast Guard and that Iluxton had in· eluded one for Jiinshaw in the. consignment . Hlnshay,· testified that he told Upton to keep the unit at the Up· ton home with the explanation that he would soon be moving to Washington. D.C. as Orange Count y's 40th District represen- tative and his moving plans were not yet complete. Upton has testified as a pro- secution witness that be de- livered the stereo to Hinshaw 's Newport Beach apartment and that it was accepted there by 1'1rs. Thais Hin shaw. Upton has since been sen- tenced to six months in the co un- ty jail after pleading guilty to bribery c harges. He was re- leased after 87 days of that sen- tence. in troubJe, 19<>. in the next five years. ~ Supt. John N icoll urged trustees to keep their discussion . on a "'positive note.'' He pointed -· out t_h"-t nurperQu.1. edl.!CQ.t:i..oo.al opportunities could be put lntoef. feet as a result of the l!lhirinki.ng student population. . One possibility would be to we different schools to house only several grades, rather than the entire K-6 range now in opera- tion. That v.·ould allow the schools to have several classrooms of the same grade, rather tl\an only one elassroom for each grade. Thal way, students could be grouped according to ability and need. Nicoll also said that some schools could be used for joint school/community uses in con- junction with the city . At the Jan . 27 meeting, trustees will again take up the matter. They will be provided with more information regarding the different educational options. available, enrollment implica- tions. and alternative uses possi- ble at the schools . Trustees said they then will go 1into the community and talk with homeowners associations and PTA/PFO groups . Tntstees also touched on a con- trasting problem now being felt at Lincoln l\i iddle School in Corona del Mar -overcrowding. Nicoll tOld the board that a pilot program is being con- sidered for Lincoln students to ease the crowded situation. There are currently about 100 students too many at the middle school. Nicoll said the district is considering asking 100 volunteer eighth graders from Lincoln to attend c.lasses at Corona del Mar High School . Eig hth grade teachers would be transferred, too, to teach those students. ' Nicoll said the proposal is still in the "talking stage" and that there will be more information on the matter later. F ro• Page Al GLOMAR •.• ·budget, and there has been no in- di~ation when the Soviet patrol ship would end its vigil of the wreckage site, one source said. A new American :ia.Jvlge at- tempt while the Soviets patrol the area would run the risk of a naval confrontation. . The CIA ·s first attempt to re· cover the Soviet submarine was disclosed early last year in press accounts which CIA Director William E . Colby sought to sti-- fle. I • TONIGR1' COAST COM MUNI TY COLLEGE BOARD -Recular meelin&.1370 Adams, 8p.m. CANDIDATES _FJ)RUM - Coata Mesa city council can· didates presented by C.Ommunity Progress Committee. Halecrest Club; 3107 Killybrooke Lane, 1: 30 p.m. ,_ OPEN HOUSE -YMCA crisis center, First Methodist Church, 420W.191hSt., 3·6p.m . BASKETBAJ,L -Costa Mesa at Villa Park, Estancia at El Modena, Newport Harbor at Fountain Valley, 7: 30 p.m. OCC DRAMA -"Endgame" by Samuel Beckett; Drama Lab Theater, 4 Jan. 14-16, 8 p.m. Free. _ '"THE NATIONAL HEALTH"" -South Coast Repertory Theater, through Sun. 8 p.m. THURSDAY, JAN. 15 CHART -Regular meetin2 Dr. Norman Watson, 1uesl ~peak.er, Glendale Federal Sav. mgs, Harbor and Wilson, 7:30 a.m. LIBRARY STORY HOUR - Costa Mesa Library, 10:30 a.m. UCI DRAMA -"Electra .. Fine Arts Village Concert Hall' 8 p.m. Tickets $2, students$!. ' Vic tim Finds His Camera; ·Suspect Held When Kenneth Zion saw the camera in the window oC a Hollywood camera shop, he "couldn't believe bis eyes," Newport Beach police said. The camera had been stolen more than a year before from Photo Corp. of America, 4000 Birch St., Newport Beach, where Zion is a manager. Alerted by Zion, Newport Be.ach detective Mike Hietala traced the camera to a Chula Vis- ta resident who said he bought it from a friend who lived in Santa Ana. Tuesday Hie tala arrested Doyle Culpepper, 24, at his home at 3011 Bradford Place. Police allege Culpepper was responsible for the 1974 break- in at Photo Corp. in which· a typewriter, a calculator and Zion's camera were stolen. Thre at Probed MURFREESBORO, Tenn. (U PI) -~ecr.~t Service agents are 1nvest1gat1ng a Louisville. Ky ., woman who told local of- ~cials she had come to "see a JUdge about the killing or Gerald Ford." Mrs. Hinshaw. who has since s ued the con gressman for divorce .: has also testified against him as a prosecution wit- ness. f'r m11 P age A 1 CORY ... Kissinger to Seek Soviet .Arms Pact Richard O'Neill O\lo'Tl interests. Federal investigators have con- firmed that Cory's appointment of inheritance tax referees also is under investigation . ''The reve lations of the mystericius Cella-O'Neill empire and Ken Cory's relationship and . role in that empire have raised some serious questions about the controller's independence and ability to continue serving as state controller," Haer le said in a news releas e. "The governor must be aware of the growing cloud or suspicion s urrounding state Controller Ken Cory." Haer le said. ··1 therefore ask Governor Brown to ask Mr. Cory to take a leave of absence.'' ORANGE COAST ' DAILY PILOT T"' 0.-l'..eoail O••lf Piiot, ,..;1~ -le~ Is ,.,,...,.,,,., •~ N•w•·P•e1', I> -1-~.,. O<-coau P~bll)l'llf'>Q c_,_ 5<-P.••lf f<lotoon• ••<' P<lbl•""'" M-v ''""''191'1 F•..S.v Ill' eo-1. Me~. N•wl'0'1 lle.otll. H....ilftQlon llot""'"Faun••"' V•ll•Y. lrvi ... \•CICll•llat• V•IH'o •no:! L•O""~ 8'-at'1r..oulll 0Ni1. A ~"9'• '"'""""' ,.,,,_ I\ P"b<l•,.<l i.tllw""s -~ .,.,, ,,.. p<ln<l!>ll Pt>blf"'INt ,._ Ii •I .llO W.,\\ tl•r !il•ffl, (.•\I•,,.... ... , c.!l!OO'll<O m l•. Robert N. Weed '"•"dt~t -PlllOI- Jack R. Curley V..-o Pto\idfftl • ..., C0._.111 MitlllQ>tf Thomas Keevil .!.•llor ThOf'rias A. Murphlnt #.1 .... l"O IElll!W OlilrLts H. Loos Richard P. Nall ...... 111 __ ......,.l_ Offlcft ~S.1Cll,11•~"9Sl<W'I 1'1-•""'°" llo'ec:ll: ,,.,, "'"•" ........,_.,. """"-· "''"''' ''"' '-" ........... ...... 0 .... 1'•- WASHINGTON (AP) - Secretary of State Henry A. Kiss- inger said today he will go to Moscow next week to seek a nuclear arnis agreement in spite of continued Soviet intervention in Angola. Kissinger told a news con· · ference the importance of a strategic arms limitation treaty is so vital to American interests and world peace that it over· comes at present the dispute in the former African colony. Nevertheless, Kissinger made one of his strongest statements concemin)? the Russian rnlP. in . .\ngola and warned that the over~ all U.S.·Russian interest will be affected sooner or later if Moscow does not change its African policy. . Students Ask Board Study Smoking Area Students from all Cour high schools in the Newport-Mesa Unified School District asked trust5!s Tuesday night to con· sider creating ''de•i•n ated smoking areas" on campus. Student representative Greg Dawson of Newport Harbor Hieb aaid he was apeaklnl for all the. high ~hoots w~en he uked that the item be placed ca Ibo school board's Jan. 27 a1enda. Trultees arreed to-the proposal and said theJ will uk staff members at tlult Uine to be1ln 1urveytn1 1(udent.1, panma and toachen "11anllnc their bellofa OD the lllbJed ol llu· dent.I 1moltin1 11 hlgt11ehool. The essence of detente, Kiss· inger said, calls for "neither side to seek unilateral advantage. "This is not a matter oC abstract goodwill," Kissinger said. "It is at the very heart of our relationship.'' Continued Russian involve· ment in Angola is bound to bring even stronger American reac-. tion, the secretary indicated. This chain of events "sooner or later will lead to open ·confronta· lion,'' be said. But Kissinger returned to his main point when be said that the effort to negotiate a limitation on nuclear arms is at this point overridingly m ore important than the day-to·day problems such as eiist in Ane:ola. "SALT is a permanent pro- blem," he said. If tb~e i5 no agreement, the Russians will be free to increase their nuclear arsenal and to de· velop new and more sopbisticat: ed. we~pans systems. F,.._PageAI TASER ••• 'Mle Montgomery County incl· dent ii not the lint in which the Tuer was used to commit a crime. Lut September, a Taser wu med to bold up a gas station · attedant 1n.J1.l1mL Alvin Simon, preolitent or TtMrS1Ste.m1,1aid : ' •1All of OW' lftformatlon, re- -and data lndlcote that 11'• -1otbal. We've -working on tt aince .1968 and everytb.lng bean out the fact that lt"s not lethal." --.... --... ---~-...... • • • • , ·A llergies Cause Jekyll-Hyde Life MILAN, Teon. CtiPJ> -Keith Johnson is like most T· yeu.olda -he loves hamburgers. But when be takes a bite of one "bls eyes get glassy and light up like a Christmas tree," hLs mother s ays. '~e~ '1• atarts .taggertoc; He acts-like be'• drunk" or ca drue•. ••Yll hi• rot.ber. . . Keith's doctor describes bis behavior as "Dr. Jekyll· ·Mr. Hyde" and attributes 11 to the boy's allerclea. And that covers a lot of ierritocy. KErrH IS ALLERGIC TO APPLES. oranges, yeast, sugar, c~late, coffee, com, milk, cheese, ice cream, pork, beet and soy products, according to Dr. WlWam croOt of the Children's Clinic in Jackson, TeM. Ilia parents, Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Johnson of Milan, have asked hunten to donate wild game -one of the few thinp their 100 can eat. "I like deer," said the second-grader. "What I miss most is chocolate pie and I'd like to eat at school like the other kids and drink milk." ~e Johnsons said tffl:Y reat.iied only two years ago that allergies were responsible for their child's dramatic behavior changes. "WE WERE HAVING TO SPANK HIM !rom the time be got up in the· morning until he went to bed at night," said bis mother. ''We thought he was just mean.•• She said the turning paint came when they bought Keith and h15 3-year-old brother, Marcus, bunk beds. "l was helping Keith with his prayers one night and be just reached up and tore the whole top or the bedding off_'' The parents said they took the boy to the Jackson cllr.ic after their family doctor told them all the boy needed was "a good belt." · Tests showed limited allergies. More testing last July showed more extensive allergies. • KEITH S.l\JD DEERBURGER IS ONE of bis favorite foods . He also is allowed peanut butter but doesn't like it, and is not fond of the dietetic jellies. Buying gro~eries is expensive and time-consuming, Mrs. Johnson said. She has to read every label to make sure of the ingredients. The parents said they allow Keith to have a glass oC milk about once a month and chocolate pie or cheesecake when his report card is good. · "It's worth it even if it makes him meaner for a little while," Mrs. Johnson said. CROOK SAID THERE IS A CHANCE THE boy can overcome part of his allergies, but be could just as easily become allergic to the foods he's eating now. "JC that happens," said Mrs. Johnson, "I don 't know what we'll do.'' f'ro• Page A l ~DRANT ••• meeting. "Why don't the water companies do that?" Hammett suggested that the water agencies should im- pose a one-cent property tax to spread the cc;>sts. The board of the Costa Mesa County Water District has op- posed imposing a property 'tax and has taken pride in levelling only user fees. The district draws its revenue from charges it im- poses on the use of water. City Manager Fred Sorsabal ri::ported meetings are being held with water district officials to re- solve the problem. E~conLived In Dog Howe JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP) - An escaped prisoner has been captured after eluding the law for (our weeks by spending his days in his girlfriend's dog house and eating from doggy bags. Police said Henry Pittman, 20, flushed out of his dog ' house hideOut, is scheduled to be re- turned to the state prison' system from which he escaped fou; weeks ago, officers said. The dog house, without a canine occupa nt, is near the home of Pittman's girlfriend. She. would bring him bags of food dunng the day and take him to her place at night, police said. L EAPS INTO FRAY Candidate Combs FroaPage A I PASTOR ••• the Republican nomination to five. · The other candidates are As- semblyman Robert Badham of · Newport Beach , Michael p _ Clancey, a 29-year<ild attorney from El TOr'o, college professor Harry p_ Jeffrey of Laguna Beach, and Hinshaw himself. Hinshaw curreqtly is fighting charges of bfi.bery in Orange Coun_ty Superior Court, charges which relate to the period when h«: was Orange County assessor. Hinshaw has said all along however, that be plans to cam: paign for a third congressional term. Even so, it appears his legal difficulties have helped draw a large number of can- dld:ates to the race. . In his announcement, Combs described himself as a lifelong Republican and a con&titutional conservative. In his prepared statement, he made a reference to Hinsh·aw's legal difficulties when he said the first of two dilemmas racing district voters was ••achieving responsible representation at a time when the incumbent congressman is under indictment and trial on felony bribery charges ... Combs then took a swipe at other candidates in the race by declaring that the ••resultant ".acuum bas attracted only !r;adi- _tional, practiced politicians who would not constitute a sUfficient change to engender voter con- fidence.'' The candidate at that point suggested that bis 24 years aa a clergyman qualified him to give "effective· representation to a district.that sorely needs it." • Accbrding to Combs, the second dilemma facing voters was .. ~e choice of whether to tolerate what he termed a decllne in world leadership, the economy, and the family, or to rebuild those areas. Lynn Hart HART'S John Hart SPORTING GOODS • 538 CENTER ST.• COSTA MESA• 646-1919 BICYCLE PARTS-TIRES-ACCESSORIES · Shuffleboard Sets Bocceball Sets Table Tennis Sets Frisbees Boomerangs Racquetball Racquets Handball Gloves & Balls Tennis Rackets Wilson-Dunlop-Davis Bancroft-Yonex Racket SbilPll &oo t~ 2100 • T emis S1111s T nnls S1iirts Ii Sherts T lllis Dresses T eanis W1"' Slits · , • ' • ' Bask~tballs '' . Backboards & Goals Footballs Soccerballs • PlaygnJ111d .Balls Volleyballs & Nets 3aseball r.ttts & Gloves Basebafl . llndfi"$llirts & caps' Baseball ·Shoes . . Soccer Sfloes Track Shaes · er~ Ctubt Sm Wres!IAI SMes ··' BasbU -Slloes • Blk.e 111pmirhts Tlres·TDl·Acc•ssns \ • ' . BecaU$e of a new state law that wentlntoelreet Jan. I, Individual ..-boai'dl m17 docldl If tlleJ wllh lo set up 1pedal -OD high 1chool eam,_ r.t - -.. Simon 1ald thlt" althouih the pn ha1 a rating of 50,000 voltl at Ibo source, It bu llM:h low •"'< per11• and wau.,. that Its lbo<k Ls relatlvel1 barmlell. He oak! ti bat caly thne waltt ol I-_____ .,_ ______ .;..!'""_+----------------~ -· Ml• than In a .Cbriltmu tree bcllb or an eleelri• boart Ina' . pac:emaer • 531 Cllltlr '146-1919 • ... , \ • - •, 1 • . • • Al DAIL PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Fund · Problent Solved Costa Mesa appears to have solved a delicate problem -how to disbW'Se revenue-aharing money to human service agencies~ taking a systematic ap- proach. It is an approach that seems to have satisfied both conservative and mo.re liberal influences on the COWl· ell. For a time, the council was allocating aid to com· munity organizations as each r~uest came up. There was no program to put the money to full use. The council abandoned this loose aP.proacb and asked for all interested agencies to subrrut requests so they ~ould be considered. together. Twelve 1lgenctes did so, asking for a total of $158.000. Criteria and prioriUes were established and $38, 700 was allocated to seven agencies. About $50,000 was left unallocated and likely will go into general projects, but there did not appear to be any feeling that the unsuccessful applicants bad been un· reasonably denied. In every case, the reason for approving or deny- ing the aid was clearly stated. It was a potentially troublemaking problem. well handled with maximum benefits. The Coas t Community College District has published a 32-page annual report titled "Ac- complishm ents·' and mailed 3,000 copies to citizen ad- visory groups and community colleges throughout the country. lts tlUe suggests, it is self-aggrandizing, concerned more With image than·subnance. · For starters, eight pages could have been delet- ed-et a substantial saving-without removing exist· ing content or crowding the booklet. The district reports the printing and p0stage costs were $6.500, a figure wbjcb does not include time spent on the report by the community relations staff. The district may indeed need an attractive, in - formative report t6 interested citizens, potential benefactors or prospective employes on its many ex· cellent activities and accomplisnments. · But It is hard to justi!y this particular expen- diture as acco'mplishing that goal. Paying for Safety A vexing problem has bothered Costa Mesa city officials for several months, but some moves are be- ing made to solve it. The problem is an old one: how to pay for the up- grading of fire hydrants and water lines. Developers "have been paying the costs, but recently they have started complaining, particularly when the improve· ments they finance obviously go beyond the needs of a project and in fact improve the fire protection of an entire neighborhood. Councilmen have tended to agree that this is unfair. The problem is complicated in Costa Mesa because the water' service is not provided by the city; in most of the city it is provided by the Costa Mesa County Water District. Some councilmen think an equitable way to raise money for new water lines would be for the district to levy a small property tax, but the district board has balked at this in the past. .. \ .\ \. \ -\ -\ It is a departure from previous annual reports, which contained much useful statistical information, but which perhaps were not widely read. Instead the report was s plit this year, with the statistical supple- ment kept apart from the magazine. The report is slick and glossy. designed for easy reading. It is rich in art work, but poor i,!l·COntent. As Now a joint city and district committee is con· ducting a s urvey to find out how water lin es are im- proved in other areas. A a cooperative approach should be worked out. 1'1't> LOVE ro PLAY ~ITH YOU, ANDREI, &UT THEY wo~'l LET ME OUT." . College Athletics Financing Debated This is about the lime of year that the moguls of the mega- million (or is it billion?} dollar professional football world gather to harvest the yields of the nation's colleges. And, how sweet it is! Time was when the highly competitive purveyors of gridiron com· bat bargained with the all· Americans. offering huge bonuses. t o get their signatores on dotted lines. Rut, in a mo· ment of in· s piration , they came up with a system which ingeniously flouts the Sherman Act. Jn complete disregard for the laws against s lavery and in- voluntary servitude they devised the draft. Henceforth, college athletes with a yen for pro- fessional foot ball would submit to round robin selection. No longer would free enterprise be permitted. No longer could they shop for the best offers. Either a player became the property of the club which drew him or he <'ould sit it out. THIS, sports fan were told, would be fair. It would prevent rirh clubs from grabbing up the ht-st talent thus wiping out the chances of winning of the lesser clubs. ln fact, teams with the poorest win records would have first choice in the draft. Well, maybe it is fair for ( EARL WATERS ) everyone excepting the players and the schools that spawn them. Still; with the salaries gained by the players through their union ef- forts, perhaps one needn't worry too much about them. But what about the col leg es of the nation? Regardless of whether they are tax supported or private colleges they are all strugglin g for dollars. WhHe college athletics may be most desirable as extra C'urricular activities they aren't the primary purpose of the in· stitutions. Some of the smaller ones never have gotten into it while others have had to give it up. TUE COLLEGE athletic pro- gram is a costly one. Most of the athletes, if not all, are atten,ding under scholars hips usually financed witb tuitions paid by less physically gifted or by the taxpayers. Yet, with the tremendous revenues taken by professional sports organizations it does seem unfair that the col· leges should bear the full burden of producing crops. Commenting on this phenomenon the distinguished Washington columnist Ernest Cuneo recently said, "For all practical purposes the owners of professional sports teams have rncceeded in turning the entire U.S. educational system into minor league farms for the pro- duction of super athletes." A COUPLE of years ago As· Dear Gloomy Gus Finally figured it out! Long Beach bought the Queen Mary. Arizona bought the London Bridge and Costa Mesa bought the Panama Canal (the big ditC'h ). M.M.R. G!OomY Gus comment• .re •11omitlaod by ~ .... Clo not Mcesurily mlKt IN vlewi Of Ille Mw~per. 5eftcl your,., _..,. .. GIMmY Gus, Dally Pillot. sem bl y man Willie Brown be<'ame intrigued with the idea of devisin& some means whereby colleges could organize and de- mand compensation from the professional world for the athletes they raised, in the same manner one club buys a player from another. Constitutional questions have plagued efforts lo <tevelop a legislative way to achieve this. Cuneo advances the idea of a federal gate tax dedicated to education. While this would be a direct and easy way to collect funds it leaves some questions unanswered. What about the re· venues from TV which appear to be the major source of football receipts and some other sports? And how would the money be dis- tributed to assure the schools which produce the talent of re- ceiving their fair share? · However it is done it seems time to sight in on this untapped source. As Cuneo says, "ft is doubtful if any other business re· ceives the subsidies and tax benefits comparable to pro· fessional sports corporations.·· What ls a 'Useful' Life? t worry about people who worry about people, especially themselves, being useful. I also worry about people being useless and worrying about it, for that matter. Maybe I'm just against worry- ing, by myselC or by anyone else, a b o u t a nything whatsoever. In which case perhaps it would be meet to abandon th is morning's er· fort before it is properly commenced. <Worry. incidentally, is an in· teresting word. Its root meaning is to strangle or to Injure. Worry. ing, properly, is what the fox does to the hound in huntlng, or what the do& does with an old shoe. Remember this the next time you find yourself worrylng). I.et u& start with a consum· mate worrier, John Wesley, wbo founded Methodism, and bad a g:reat deal to do with what we now call. with a trace or con- descension, the Puritan Ethic. Wesley's abY$mal pray~r sounds down the centurte · "0 Lord, Let us oot live to be useless. for Christ's satce . Amen." There ems to me a pa.Mlon of guilt in &ht. ullt'ranc The Wesleyan• far too readib' came to equate usef utness w\th the pil· [ CHARLES ] _ McCABE _ ing up of the earth's treasure m little heaps owned by good Wesleyans ... Perhaps the guilt was a result of the piling up. or the piling up was the result of the guilt, which may have been original sin. Who knows? IN THE Wesleyan sense, being useful meant having practical utility. By this standard the Trout Quintet of Schubert, the poetry of Swinburne, the wall paintings of those caves in the Sahara, and t he clowns of Picasso and FelUnl, ar~ totally useless. Santayana said it more succinctly, "Music is essentially useless, as life is." Pragmatism. that uniquely American way or looking at things, is the so n of Wesleyanism. Althou1h the pbllosopby is American, Us tocsin was sounded by a Britisher, John Stuart Mill, in his Euay on Libeny. ••t regard utility as the ul· tlmate appeal on nil cthl~nl questions: but lt must be utility in the laraest sense, grounded on the permanent intere3ts of man as a proartss\vt ~ina-" LAaGE·MINDBD Am rtun ata~mtn and polJUclana bavt been thinking aloof lh e liries for at least balf lhe life of th f Republic. We cannot say that we have inched a great deal toward either domestic felicity or the pursuit of happiness through following this earnest course. On the other side. there are the fK>els of the useless, the people we call artists, people who believe that one Beethoven is worth a't least one Henry F'ord. and that maybe all Henry Fords should be killed aborning so that we could genetically concentrate on the production of Beethovens. A ereat deal has been said on both sides or the question of liv- ing the useful or the useless life. but preciot.:s little of it ,has percolated down into the com- mon sense. THE ARCHETYPAL man of tommon sense in our society is the fruaal New Eng land Congregationalist. He went to churcb on Sunday. and he meant it. He spent the rest oC the week screwi11g the Boston Irish and his own siblings in a Jaw office. and hemtantit. The consummate example of thi~ type was the late J~tice O .W. Holmes Jr. Like Or. Johnson. Jlotmes had a talent for <'learinf his head. and the heads of others, of rubbish. I leave you with n f cw or his words: "ll would be well lf the ln telltgent rlas es could forget the ft'Ord sin and think less of bein.i good. We learn how to behave as lawyers, soldiers, merchants or what not by belna them. Life, not the parson, teaches conduct." c The Right to Parti~pate Poor Should Pay Taxes To the Editor· The poor have rights too. Governor Brown's plan to eliminatE.' taxes for poor people is wrong. The poor have just as much right to pay ta'<es as the non-poor Recause we all pay taxes we dll have the right to demand better government and better people running that government. To pay nothing for your government. means you have no right to condemn. cajole, or demand political or SO<'ial C'hange. The poor would be tabled non·contributors by virtue of their temporary financial status. Instantly you will produce a two class social structure.; the givers and getters. Reduce taxes substantially for the poor Yes. Hut eliminate them? NEVER. WALT BLANKENSHIP Dream Detoured To the Editor: I'm sure many of your readers have read about and have pro- bably seen the s hip that is being built on Santa Ana Ave. in Costa Mesa by Dennis Holland. Dennis has had a dream of being a part of the bicentennial : however, it looks as though he may not be able to participate as planned be<'attse of finances. He has had to stop work on the ship and work on other jobs in order to make more money before he can pro· ceed. Dennis· project has been endorsed by the Newport·Mesa Unified School District, the City of Costa Mesa, Orange County, and the State of California. These endorsements are great except that it unfortunately involves no dollar contribution to the project. l think there are several peo· pie who might be interested in donating to this worthwhile pro· je<'t if they knew he was not get· ting any other assistance. We are very fortunate to ha ve California's representative com- ing from our own area and feel Dennis and his wife, Betty, de - serve all the help we can possibly give. Al so, sin<'e it has been endorsed, all donations can be used as a tax deduction. MRS. ALICE DWALL Tl' Pain To the Editor: Thank you for the UPI story in defense oC Douglas MacArthur. r watched "Collision Course .. and found it very painful Henry Fo11da gave the worst performance I have ever seen and/or h{'ard. lie ..,\urred some Punch ( MAILBOX ) Letters /f"om readers are welcome The right to condense letters to f 1t space or eliminate libel is reserved. Letters of 300 words or less will be given pTe/erence. All letters mwt in· dude signature and mailing address bu1 names may be withheld on re- quest if suf /icient reason ts apparent. Poetry will not be published. sentences badly I think. however, that the most incongruous thing was the choice of Mr. Fonda to play the part of MacArthur Mr Fonda's daughter has openly espoused the cause of the No rth Vietnamese. a nd MacArthur would <'ertainly not have favored Hanoi. Mr. Fonda has not said that he was in disagreem e nt with hi s daughter's views, but felt that she had a right to speak them This televis ion movie left some very bad impressions, and 1 say that I am glad to read so mething good a bou t MacArthur . I hope that eventually they will s top jumping on Kennedy, Hoover and Nixon, although I hold no brief for any of these men. We in America have much more important things to do than to continue beating on men who can't fight back. So. let 's get on with it -doing something constructive! RAYMOND J HEALY Para~fr Prai•e To the Editor: May I use your newspaper to publicly thank the Newport Beach paramedics? I would like the public lo know that for themselves, as well as for me, that in time of crises there is hope and help. New Year·s Day I lost con· sciousness while staying with a relative on Balboa Island. I was bleeding through the mouth and nose and had gone into a con- vulsion. At night on a holiday where does one tum? The only thing they could think of was the paramedics. I was later told that as they hung up the phone the siren started and that within three to four minutes I was re· ceiving oxygen and the paramedics were working quick· ly and efficiently with the hospital. MY sister·in·law was under a doctor's care just prior to the 0 • ... I tom b.er maloly for tho atmotphtrt .. .'' new year and al most went into shock with fright. Instead of ig· noring her a nd having another emergency they were very tender an<I compassionate and were able to avoid a possible at- tack. These young men are not only keen, intelligent and well trained, but their kindness anct gentleness with my worried family could never be surpassed. What a great loss any city i:-; suffering who does not support and maintain the paramedics. DOROTHY McCOMHS SoUd Perf or91ers To the Editor: I was very pleased to read your January 6 editorial noting that theauditor-eontroller won a cle<m bill of health from the Grand Jury contract auditor. You in di<'ated that county taxpayers can start the new year with tl1t• assurance of gettinJ? solid performance from "at least one section of local government" Hopefully you will not consider me presumptuous to commend for your reading any Grand Jury report of the past eight years I o ctiscover that the vast majority of county depar tments are solicl performers. Though storms ap- pear to swirl around us, your county departments are doin~ !heir jobs. Ry every stat1st1c available, including reports from Cal Tax and the state Depart- ment of Finance. Orange County departments are the most ef- fectiveof all in the state. RE.THOMAS County Administrative Officer OldGfortl To the Editor: At the time when we should s ee Old Glory flyin~ highest-and proudest -why are so many replacing her with the Bennington flag-a one family. one battle flag ? The Ricentennial of America, the country whose ideals and history are in the billowing folds of Old Glory -why is s he being put aside? People who want to fly the flag with the '76 in its canton. why not beneath Old Glory where it belongs-in its proper place? Let Old Glory fly as she always has. on high. the symbol of freedom and justice! KATHRY~ FISHBACK ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT Robert N Weed . Publish<'r Thomas Keeml. Editor • Barbara Krrfb1ch . f.'d1tonol Pnge F:drtor The roitorial page of the 0311>• Pilot s eeks to i nform •nd stim~alate readers by present.in• on this page dh·e rse comment•O' on topics of Interest by syndical· ed columnli;t and t'artoonist . b)' prO\·idini:t o forum for rtade~· ne"s and b~· presenting this n~14spaper·s op1n1oni. and Id . on turrcn\ topic's. Tht editorial opiniOt10: of the 031ly Pilot appear only In the t'dllor1ol t'olurnn .it tht top or tht• JHllll' OptnlOTI'I c pre i.ro by the columnt ts hi ~artoona~t~ ond let H•r "'r1ters ''"" lheolr o" n 11nd no tndon.ttm('nt of th 1r 'U'V.S b~ the Drul> Pila 'lloold be 1nrtrred Wednesday. Jan. 14. 1978 r Doet o rs' Slow down State Faces ~·Care Crisis I.OS ANGELES (AP) -A spokesman for a physician's group has warned that the doctors' slowdown in the Los Angeles area could spread throughout the s tate when Travelers Insurance Co. raises malpractice insurance rates in Northern California Feb. J . At the same time, a Los Angeles County official said Tuesday. plans have been prepared to call a state of emergency as a possible means of combat· ing the slowdown. Officials drew up the plans in case no solution is found to the malpractice situation. The state has ad- vanced a plan calling for a state-financed insurance company in return for a medical "Peace Corps'' which would have doctors donate 20 days a year to caring for the poor. THE LOS ANGELES County hledical Associa- tion criticized the proposal Tuesday and protested . what it said were statements by Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. that doctors "do not act in •a socially responsible manner to the needs of their com- munities." Brown also said through a SIX>kes man. "I un- derstand the doctors' feelings and look forward to their assistance in resolving what is turning out to be a· very difficult social problem." Southern California physicians, mostly in the Los Angeles area, began the work slowdown Jan. l · to protest an increase of 327 percent in their malpractice ins urance premiums. BY TUESDAY, the 13th day of the slowdown, 98 of the 234 member hospitals in the Hospital Coun- cil of Southern California had experienced some degree of difficulty due to the protest. Nearly 26.000 workers have been affected - more than 4.300 or them lei id off -while hospitals are losing $700,000 a day from decreased patient loads , a hospital council s pokesman s aid. ~ Dr. Gerald Glantz of the United Physicians or California told a news conference in Sacramento that Traveler s -the insurance carrier for the 9,500 doctors in Southern Ca lifornia -would raise its r-at es for physicians in the northern portion of the state Feb. 1. "IT'S GOING to be a statewide movement very rapidly," Glantz said, adding that Travelers in- sures 65 percent or the physicians in the San Jose- Sacramento area. Doctors in the northern part of the state staged their own slowdown last year to protest soaring malpractice insurance rates. Out or 3, 761 beds at Los Angeles county hospitals, 121 remained available at midnight Mon- day, compared with 184 beds 24 hours earli e r. Another 1,000 beds are available i£ extra employes can be hired. and applications for new employes were being processed Tuesday. DESPITE TflE s lowdown, officials said emergency room services around the county re- mained availa ble Tuesday, with no reports of any life -end.angering situ ations c aused by the slowdown. SPEAKS FOR ANIMALS Actress Betty White Druggist Kille d In H e ist Anineals Protected Panel Backs Ban • On Cruelty Film SACRAMENTO (UPI) -The bavtnr to almulate It," 1 .. uned Senate Judiciary Committee, MW White, who ls a member of after listening to pleas from the American Humane Associa- Hollywood celebrities, stuntmen tion. and animaJ-trainers, voted Tues-Poet and songwriter Rod day to ban the showing of movies McKuen threatened. that if the in which animals were de-Jeaislatlon was defeated, his liberately killed or abused. foundation for animal concern The controversial bill by wouJd mount a campaign to urge Senate Democratic-Floor Leader that nlms·be made ID-other states David Roberti ol Los Angeles rather than the movie capital of would establish a new govern-Hollywood. DNLVPILDT AS Memoirs ,Of JFK On Sale ~ LOS ANGELES <AP> -Mystery woman Judith Campbell Exner. wbo said abe had Witted former President Ken· ned:y many times at the , White House as a close friend, is trying to sell her memoirs for $2 million with no im·· med.fate takers, "it was reparted today. The report was carried in the Los Angeles ;rimes. ment agency, the State Com-AndMcKuen,dressedinablue mission for the Protection of bluerandmatchingtennisshoes, Animals, to make sure such mov-said opposition legislators might tes are not distributed in suffer •t the polls when they are MRS. EXNER, 41, San California. It was apptoved on a ronfronted by celebrities con-S2 MILLION MEMOIRS Diego, bad recently dis- 7·1 vote. cerned with humane treatment of Judith CampbeH Exner closed a relationship animals. which she called "of a .4.CTRESS BE'ITY WJDTE, of "We're going to watch careful-"Close, personal nature" television's Mary Tyler Moore ly who votes for what bill," with Kennedy over a 13 Show, complained of increasing declared the gravel voiced She Beat H:m month or so period in the violence against animals by film writer, who was one of l8 wit-., early 1960s. The asserted makers and warned the commit· nesses to speak on beh. aH of the .relationship came out tee, "we're building a blood lust measure. TO the D•.-..., when she was linked to inthiscountry." i4 •'"""'" two alleged Mafia Among the abuses of animals OPPONENTS WERE the Mo-SAN FR kingpins. mentioned were J.!le filming of · and ANCISCO (AP) At a news conference kr. ht t · · lion Picture Association the Once before Marcia Blackman actual coe ig s, ripping Moti'on Picture and TeleVIS· 1'00 b d be d last Dec. 17 she had said · h · d J bt a en robbe at her soap and horses wit wires an s aug er· Producers Associ'ati'on. h the full facts of the rela-. ti t k scent s op, and it happened LONG BEACH (UPI) mg ves oc · Sen. Nichol as C. Petris CD-again.Exceptfor onething. tionship had been -.I\ pharmacist was 1Thenlmetasure, ~hi1~ w:1d f~p-Oakland), voted for the bill but With her right band Monday t ranscribed and shot in the head and Ph~ 0 Y 0 movlides 'tm ah'bert complained he would like to see she banded $41 over to the gun-documented. killed during a brief gun t is year, wou no pro 1 1 celebrities exhibit "the same man, and with her len she came THE R E PORT SAID battle with three men sc~nesl depl icting thviolenc,e to kind of passion and zeal for the up shooting. The thief, a bullet in the women's literary who tried to rob his small arum a s as ong as e crea ures human suffering in this state.'' hi b di d b f dmg store. did not suffer during the filming. ·h s c. esalt, e e ore be got to a agent and San Diego at4 D 0 n a Id RI. ch a rd It was sent to the finance com· IT IS ALREADY against the ospit · tomey had been unsuc- . h I · I t ·11 I · C lif · t t t · al cessful in several at-Dearth, 55, was shot in m1ttee "' ere eg1s a ors W1 con-aw 1n a om1a o rea an1m s the eye during the ex-sider the cost of running the new cruelly. Roberll's bill was aimed DAILY PILOT tempts to place her pro- h r f. H animal cruelty commission. mostly at the entertainment mo-CLASSIFIED ADS Posed book with c ange 0 gun ire. e "The reason they cut a sheep's tion pictures made abroad or 6 42•5878 unnamed New York was dead on arrival at · h · . · he h 1 h · th u 'tedSt t publishers. Pacific Hospital. ~t'..'hr'..'o ... a:_t_'.""...':t'..'a~t'....'.'1t:.:s~c~a'.!pe'.".'..r ..'.t'.'.an~-'e:"s~e~w~e~re:c1~n~e~'.'.n'.'.1 ~~"'-'"'"'-· --------------===='----- POLICE SA I D th•.-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-, three young men entered Willow Pharmacy atx>ut 3 p.m . a nd wandered around tor several minutes before leaving. Several minutes later the m en reentered the store and went to the counter with several items. The cashier noticed one of the men had a gun and she fell to the floor s houting to the pharmacist . Dearth grabbed a gun and seven shots were exchanged between the drug store owner and the fleeing suspects. Sears u Wh ere Thr ift Is Always In Style 0 located on the lower level CHILDRENS • SALE STARTS THURS., JAN . 15 DOORS Ol'IH AT I 0 A.M. Je PA-ISUMD • MIWPOIT llACH Ho Exd'l.noet or Ref\nll on Site Metct\lndlM ~I 00 •• '., '. "/' -"' . , v ;:'i . " . . ·~.·: -~-.:~' ~ ~~ Mi sses' Nylon ilib Knit Tops Low Pr iced Cut s2 .ss! Misses' Easy-Care Pants Were s4"299 to 5799 e ach • Pants • Sweaters • Tops • Robes • Dresses • Hostesswear • Coats QUANTITIES LIMITED Use Se a rs Revolving Charge Sheer Nylon Knee Highs One size fits 8 Yz -11 low Priced 2 99 This Ad Effective throug h Sat., Jan. 17 I Sears I ,......,.,.aica~rico. .. .. So. Coast Plaza l3» lrl1tol St. Phone 5*113l3 Buena Park 1158 La Palm• Aw . Phone 12'-4400 " Orane:e 2100. N. Tiiatlli Ave. Phone 6>7·2100 • I I ' STOQ HOUAS: Mendoy tht\I Frktey 10 AM t• t PM Sotwrdoy 9:30 AM I• 9 PM S"'"dtay 12 tfMl'l .. S PM ' , I • ' ] j j -J ~ Fo! Mo in i Pr• Fr: I ten a j, wh of I sid pol 1 by Col Mi: for ed Th1 fin Jol Da I sai1 tiOI anJ ... But ... too A to~ no. .. lilt! retl ... my :~ ., she Ing ~ :J :1 cisl po~ ..,.