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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1976-01-30 - Orange Coast Pilot. .
rove
DAILY PILOT
* * * 10' * * *
FRI DAY AFTERNOON, JANUARY 30, 1976
VOL ... NO. .. 4 sam~. 42 PAOU
.
II II
-·
•
I •
attm 0
!
· Clemente Man Relates
.
Close '"Look at Death'
-,
• • •
·.ACLU Asks , _Patty Secrecy Airing
FAA Hears Jet
Flight Dangers
WASHINGTON <UPI> -U.S.
airline passengers face a cons-
tant, frightening and needless
potential for catastrophe because
of sloppy or dangerous practices
and unrealistic safety pro-
cedures, six veteran pilots said
today ..
Reporting on a safety study
Battin ToM
To Support
HisC~g~
By GARY GRANVILLE
Of tlM 0.! Ir Pl let S\lff
Indicted Orange County
Supervisor Robert Battin has
been given until Mondy to file
sworn affidavits he says will help
prove he is a victim of selective
prosecution.
In response to the deadline im-
posed Thursday by Superior
Court J,ldge Kertneth Lae, Bat-
tin 's attornd, Matthew Kurilicb,
.said he planl to file 15 to 20 addi-
tional swon< statements with the
court. •
Those statements will be in-
tended to bolster Kurilich's con-
tention that his client is being
prosecuted (or crimes common
a111ong elected officeholders.
Last August, the county Grand
Jury banded down an indictment
ch11rging Battin with se~en
felony crimes related to alleged
• JISe of county supplies and
personnel in a 1974 political cam-
paign.
And to def end his client against
those charges, Kurilich wants to
delve into Oranfe County district
attorney investigations and pro·
secutions of public officials.
So far, according tq Kurilich,
•be's been denied access to in·
vestigation records and
'. testimony that he believes will
~·help prove bis point.
~ Thursday, for example, dis·
t trict attorney's investigator Ray t Miller was called to testify.
J • Kurilicb expected Miller to
··verify tbe earlier testimony ol a
; former undercover agent who
Hid he was paid to seek out ? financial information .on three
~ county supervisors.
; <See BATrlN, Pa&e AJ)
" t
: Jet Close Call I
1 FRANKFuRT, WestGermmy
' (UPI) -A Boelna 7C11 of tM
· J>aklatan lntematlonal Airlines
Ul'rYinl a-pa11enpn 011Qed
tbe amokettact of an oU refinery
.., only eo fiitt today dunng a
Jendln& approach to Frankf\art's
Jlhla•llala all'p9rt, a lederal
1pokeaman uid.
~
conducted for the Feieral Avia-
tion Administration, the pilots
said the blame for the hpards
they found must be sl)ared by
airttne crews, air traffic con-
trollers, airline mana,ers, FAA
rule makers, air:craft builders
and airport operators.
"The accident records show tbat the airlines of the United
• States are one or the safest
means of travel in the world,"
the report said .. ''However, air
travel is not as safe.as it could be.
·"The potential for a
catastrophic accident is always
present and is often avoided by
slim and, at times , nervous
margins."
The pilots made dozens of re-
commendations ranging from
tighter cockpit discipline and a
complete overhaul of the air traf·
fie control system to the outlaw-
ing of a dangerously hard·to-read
type of altimeter a nd the installa-
tion of better runway approach
lights.
In releasing the 93-page report,
prepared after observations of
600 flights on 27 airlines,. the FAA
added a 32-page reply accepting
many of the pilots' criticisms and
·recommendations.
But the agency rejected flatly
the harshest criticism of its air
traffic controllers and the ·way
their control rooms are operated.
The pilots said the control
system "is a jumble of people,
radar scopes, communication
lines and stacks of paper strips,
people communicating by voice,
by radio to impersonal aircraft
out in space, while in the control 1
room people are milling about,
talking and creating distrac·
lions." ·
They said tempers often
become short in air-to-ground
communications and controllers
"often show disdain for pilots''
(See DANGERS, Paae AZ)
Lending Rate
Cuta~er
NEW YORK (AP). -
First National City Bank
said today it is reducing lts
prime lending rate a·
quarter point to 61;!a per·
cent, the lowest the key
rate ha• been since the spr-
lng of 1978. .
Citibank said the change tn the rate it ~barges on
loans to its most credit·
worthy commercial bor·
rowen la effective Moo·
day. j
The prime tate does not
dlrecUy a.ff ect consumer
or mortaaae lendlnl rates .
but can often provtde a
clue to where those other
rates are headed.
Apartment in Flames
1 Diiiy l'ljoc f'llfto by fUtl\anl K..itlff
Flames explode from single-story apart-
ment at 2220 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa.
Firemen soon extinguished the Thur~day
night blaze, preventing it from spreading
to other units. No one was injured in 'the.
fire, which destroyed the apartment. Te-
nant Thomas Trapp, 25, was n't home
when the fire broke out. Fire investigators
tentatively attributed the blaze to a faulty
gas heater.
Clemente Man Tel&
Of 'Look at Death'
By JACK CHAPPELL
Of u.e 0.11, Pl tot M.wtf
Tow ttuck driver Jack Hagerty
looked death in the face Thurs-
day in what was to become the
prelude to the dramatic South
Laguna bank robbery shootout.
"I tried to remain as calm as I
could. I knew if I made a
nuisance of myself, I was a dead-
man," Hagerty said in his San
Clemente home. ·
"I tried to be as helpful as I
could. I tried to keep talking, but
never yell or struggle and I think
that's the only' reason I'm still
alive.
barbells are hurting;'' Hagerty
recalled. He said the barbells were re-
moved and he was "hog tied"
with his feet and bands behind
him.
"I asked him, if he was going to
shoot me and he said, .. no, the on-
ly one who should get shot is
me'," Hagerty said. .
Hagerty said he Jas told "the
only thing I'm gonna take is your
truck.''
He said.the man told him, "I'm
gonna tu'rn the radio on before I
leave and maybe I could bear
what was going on, on the radio.
"He said if I get loose, the
(See SHOOTOUT, Page AZ)
.George Bush
Sworn In as
CIA Director
W~SHINGTON (UPI> -
George .Bush was sworn in today
as director of the CIA and Presi-
dent Ford joined him in vowing
to keep the agency strong .while
also ending past abuses.
b. "The abuses of the past have
been more than adequately
described and I am concerned
about them, but one thing is very,
very certain -we cannot im-
prove this agency by destroying
it,•• Ford told a crowd of applaud-
ing CIA employes at the agency
headquarters in suburban
Virginia.
"Let me assure you all I have
no intention of seeing the in·
telligence community dis-
mantled, its operations
paralyzed or its effectiveness un-
dermined."
Public's
Rights
Violated? .
.
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The
American Civil Liberties Union
petitioned Patricia Hearst's·
judge today for an immediate
hearing on whether tbe secret
selection of a jury in the heiress '
trial is a violation of freedom or
press and the public's right to
know. "We believe that important
public rights ar e at stake and
that the public -those who
would receive information re-
lative to this trial -has not
been heard from on this issue,
the ACLU said in a petition.
It was filed l13S the doors of
U.S. District Judge Oliver J.
Carter's court. opened this morn-
ing.
The petition asked not only for
a b e arin g but al s o for
permission to file a brief on
behalf of the press and the in·
terested public in support of a
modification of Carter's order
excluding press and public from
jury selection proceedings.
"We filed this motion with
great r eluctance," the ACIU
said, noting that Carter pre-
viously has given "attention to
the rights of the press" and re-
fused to impose a gag order on
part icipants in the celebrated
bank robbery trial.
However, the group s aid it
took the action "because fun·
damental First Amendment
rights are at issue here and
because we believe that the
(See HEARST, Page A!)
Coast·
Weather
Some high clouds at
times otherwise sunny
through Saturday. A litUe .
warmer with beach highs
in tlte upper 60s rising to .
the 70s inland. Lows most-
ly in the 40s. ,
·INSIDE TODJ\ Y
Hagerty, an employe of Ray
Carey Chevron in Laguna Beach
was dispatched at about s:ao·
a.m. to the home of Richard
Castillo, 24, of 1104 Miramar
Drive, Laguna Beach. ·
A caller complained of a dis·
abled car there.
Woman Hurt
·Jn 118 Fall
,;
1 =:e::':i.~°3~~e8!'!cf't!: A young lady who bad alleg~-
still had a couple things left to do ly imbibed a bit too much was in-
and could I come in and wait,'' jured Tbunday when 1he toppled
Ford, lavishing praise on Bush
and the CIA generally~ concluded
by saying, "I believe we can
make this agency an instrument
of peace and an object of pride · ,
for all of our people. That is my
goal."
Dance in America baa tm·
dergone JOme radical changes •
· in the l&t Jew 111ar!, includ·
ing a phenommal {lf'O&Oth in·
.audience1.and a trend toward
mixing clauical bollft with •
modem.and ;au dance. ~. \
dory on P.age Cl of the ,
Wttkl'nder.
Hagerty said. from a restaurant balcony near
"As t came in, ht teached the Huntington Beach Pier. land·
behind tbe door, picke3 -..p a rifle ing on the paveCi beach road
and lowered it at my head. He below, police Hid.
aid • tJ tb b '-d u • The victim, 18, 'is listed in sta-down~~. 0 e ab room an e ble condition with bead iQjurles
Thore, Hagerty was bound at Pacifica Hospital In Hunt·
With taC a~und the ankles, a set ~C':es8J;::'ara a aid she plunged or bar Ila was placed on bis from tba balconv about 3:30 back and hla hands Ued to tt. -v ~..,, "I told him, I know this doesn't a.m., falllng about 20 feet to the
mean much lo you, but tho ground.
\
Satellite Firing
CAPE CAN A VERAL, Fla.
(\JPl) -An Intelsat IV·A
satellite desieoed to. improve
eommunications throuchout the
world 11 orbiting the earth today
u It awaits flrlng into a sta-
tionary position above tbe AUan-
tic Ocean.
•••ex
AJ ..... AH ...._.I...._
Al =CiMMY '" 01·14 ---Cl ffhte..._ Cl ..,_ .. , ..........
M T1llMw'I cw .... ..., ..,.. ..... ......... , ••
2 DAILY PILOT s Friday, January 30, 1979
S. Lapna S ... tOllt
Police Ponder
Bandit's Motive
The tw isted reasoning which
led to Thursday's South Laguna
bank robbery, shooting of the
bank manager and the gunning
down of the suspected bandit by
lawmen is today continuing to
puzzle authorities probing the
case. ·
"Frankly. we don't know why
the guy did what be did, unless
be was just ... ,'' Sberifrs Lt.
Jerry Krans said, trailing off.
•·we don 't know,·' he said.
Robert Castillo, 24, of 1104
Miramar Drive, Laguna Beach.
clung to hfe by a thread today at
South Coas t Community
Hospital after being shot by
sheriff's investigators, dressed
as ambulance attendants.
Castillo was "technically" de·
ad on arrival at the hospital,
Krans said.
In fact, lawmen at the hospital
reported to superiors that the
robbery sus pect was dead. Doc·
tors revived the man once. While
in surgery to remove la~men's
* * * E'ro. Page AJ
SHOOTOUT
phone was ln tbe cor •r. LO
ahead and call the poliew·
"I asked him if he wa. ... ~-oming
back and he said, 'oh, 1 won't be
coming back.'"
Hagerty said he scraped the
tape from his mouth by rubbing
his face along the carpet, and he
inched along the floor to reach
the telephone.
"I fou nd it's nearly impossible
to dial ze ro or 911 (an emergency
number in San Clemente) with
your tongue," Hagerty said.
He said he tried to dial 411 to
get an operator, but kept getting
a recording.
Frustrated with the telephone,
Hagerty said he squirmed across
the floor to a sliding glass door.
"I got it unlocked with my
nose, but couldn't get it open."
He banged on the glass to attract
attention, but again, was unsuc-
cessful.
Then he made his way down
the hallway to some louvered
windows and yelled for help. His
screams w e re h eard by
neighbors who called police.
Aside from a swollen face from
the scuffing across the carpet,
and some sore bones because of
the bindings, Hagerty suffered a
small gash on his hand when the
tape was cut off. He was taken lo
South Coast Community Hospital
for minor t reatment.
In the same hospital, doctors
labored to save the lives of
Castillo, shot by police and
Security Pacific bank manager
Gerald Guess shot in the holdup.
"I'd just finished reading
'Helter Stelter' (a book about the
Manson murders> a week ago,
and I don't think that helped mat-
ters," Hagerty said.
"Some pretty frightening
things go through your mind.'' he
said.
CMASuing
Over Low Fee
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI> -
The California Medical Associa-
tion today sued the state and
federal governments, charging
the fees for Medi-Cal· services
were too low and. sabotaging the
program itself.
Named as defendants were
U .S. Health i;ducation and
Welfare Secretary David Mat·
thews, Gov. Edmund G. Brown
Jr., California Health &od
Welfare Secretary Mario Obledo
and Dr. Jerome Lackner, direc-
tor of the State Health Depart-
ment.
ORANGE COAST
DAILY PILOT
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Pr-I and Pllbllille<
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VK• PrnlO.!'I .,,., o.n.r .. Mtl'lll9"f
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EOllor
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M<ll\a<ll"I Editor
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MMMaln ~11991"9 ~
Offict1
()MU ... ! *'O W.tl Bay !.tr'fft a..-9"<11, 1 , .. G••-Yf• sirwt Hllf'ff,...... .. <Kh 11115 e..11 ........ ,.,d
~It V•lle,: UJ01 u PN "-•t "9t1 Di.go fr_..,
beullets, Castlllo again slipped
away from life but was revived,
Krans said.
Castillo remained under guard
in the hospital's intensive care
unit. Hospital authorities said be
was in critical condition.
Bank m anager Gerald Guess
remained in critical condition
also. Guess, of .Mission Viejo,
was shot with a 30/06 rifle when
a man posing as a tow truck
driver attempted to gain entry
to the bank: at about 9 a.m.
Thursday.
Krans recalled some of the
events of the day:
During some of the time the
man was in the bank, he talked
with sheriff's deputies on the
telephone.
"He said things like people
were messing over him, that
we're going to have to kill him,
that people have been bugging
him too long," Krans said.
In a telephone conversation
from inside the b'ank. Castillo
talked with Vern: Perry, a re-
porter for the Santa An a
Register. Perry said he was
told: "They're alJ outside wait·
ing for me. I'm going to make a
run for it. I hope the (obscenity)
get me. I don't want to live
anymore."
By some accounts, Castillo's
mother blamed the Vietnam
war's influence on her son's
mental cond ition.
Mrs. Diane Castillo, a city of
Laguna Beach finance depart-
ment employe, said her son was
a Vietnam veteran and had been
deeply affected by his participa·
lion in the war.
Castillo was a registered stu·
dent at Saddleback Community
College . Origi nally he had
signed up for a heavy class load,
22 units, but it was revised
downward to the average study
load of 16 units.
Castillo's course of study in-
cluded a private pilots class,
several math classes and guitar,
a college spokesman said.
As pleced together by the
She riff's Department and
Laguna Beach police this is the
sequence of events:
At about 8:30, tow truck driver
Jack Hogarty was called to a
disabled car at 1104 Miramar.
He was accosted as he entered
the house and left bound and
gagged. His tow truck is stolen.
Just before 9 a.m., Castillo
posing as a tow truck driver ap-
proached the side entrance of
the Security Pacific Bank, 30812
Coast Highway, South Laguna.
He contacted an employe and
said he was there to repossess a
bank employe's car in the park-
ing lot. The employe, Nancy
Letcher, assistant manager, left
the bank enroute to her car with
Castillo.
He went to the tow truck, and
pulled the high -powered rifle
from the truck and he and Mrs.
Letcher returned to the bank.
Inside the bank, other
employes saw the gunman com-
ing toward the locked door.
The gunman fired a round
through the door, near where
Guess was standing.
The g u nman saw the
manager, thought be was "up to
something" and fired through
the glass, bitting the manager in
the upper torso, Krans said.
The 'gunman broke in the glass
door with the butt of his rifle and
went in, gouging his arm on a
hanging shard of glass.
Once inside, h e collect ed
money (the amount is unknown >
and tried to flee. However, an
alarm had notified Laguna
Beach police and two police cars
arrived on the scene just as the
bandit left the bank.
He ran toward Mrs. LetcheT's
car, got in, couldn't start the
vehicle and got out. Laguna
Beach officer Larry Galat ar-
rived and was the target of two
shots fired by the gunman. Galat
returned the fire with h is
shotgun. The bandit made it into
the bank, dropping $500 about 10
f eetoutaide the bank door.
Inside again, the gunman re-
leased all the bank employes ex·
cept the manager and a teller.
He allowed the a utboriUes to br·
ing up an ambulance to take tbe
manager away.
,..._P-AJ
DANGERS. •
and order them to perform
dangerous maneuvers or d.lstract
thern during critical takeoff and
Jand.lng operations.
But the FAA said socb state·
ments are "inaccurate and mis-
Jeadine."
l
U.S •. E~es
Soviet I
Pressure
WASHIN GTON CUPJ) -
Secretary of State Henry K.9s·
tnger Indicated today the ~d·
mlnlatration . ta pressurine ~e
Soviet Union for peace in Anl~.la
b y d elaying p lan• t o ask
Coafreu to ease trade rest;c-
tions against Moscow. •
"We had originally intended to
move more actively at thls time
on credit and trade (ratrtc-
PRO-WESTERN FORCES
RETREAT IN ANGOLA, A4
tions)," Kissinger said in answer
to a question by Sen. Harry F.
Byrd Jr. CD-Va.).
· • UPI T•lep!Mt• EDWARD MULGREW (RIGHT) POINTS OUT HIS SENTIMENTS ON PATIY HEARST TRIAL
"I think in view of the situation
in Angola, this is not an ap-
propriate time (to ask for re-
visions in the 1974 Trade Act)
. . . not un less the political
climate changes," Kissinger
added in testimony before the
Judge Oliver Carter Presiding at Bank Robbery Trtal of Newspaper Heiress · Senate Finance Committee on
U.S. foreign policy.
E'ro.PageAJ
HEARST •••
right to a p ublic trial applies to
the public as well as the def en-
dant ... "
The question of prospective
jurors in the Hearst case has
been closed since Wednesday
when defense attorneys asked
that press and public be ex·
eluded.
The action was highly uncom-
mon in this federal district,
where a secret jury selection is
believed to have been held only
twice in the court's history.
Attornefs in the case said they
were seeking to prevent potential
j urors from reading in the
newspaper what others had said
in the questioning about their at-
titudes toward the 21-year-old
Miss Hearst.
"We accept these considera-
tions as important," the ACLU ·said in its yetition. "We believe,
however, that there are other
means to achieve them, means
which do not gag the press corps
and muffle the ears of the public ...
.State LU.ts
9 Democrau
For PrinuuY ·
SACR AMENTO (UPI)
Secretary of State March Fong
Eu today placed the names of
nine Dem ocrats on her initial list
for the importa nt California pre-
sidential prim ary ballot June 8,
but refused to include Gov. Ed-
mund G. Brown J r .
For bis part, Brown, who in-
sists be is not a candidate but
leaves the door open on accepting
the Democratic nomination if it
is offered, said he hadn't made
up his mind on r unning in the
California primary.
Ms. Eu announced her pre-
liminary selections« candidates
under California's newly activat·
ed "open primary" Jaws which
for the first time empower the
secretary of state to place the
names of generally recognized
candidates on the ballot.
There were no surprises.
In the crowded Democratic
field, s he picked : Sens. Birch
Bayb of Indiana, Lloyd Bentsen
of Texas and Henry M . Jackson
of Washington, Govs. George
Wallace of Alabama and Milton
Shapp of Pennsylvania, Rep.
Morris Udall of Ariwna, Fred
Harris of OklahOma, ·Sargent
Shriver, the 1972 vice presiden-
tial nominee, and former Gov.
Jimmy Carter of Georgia.
. She did not include Sen. Robert
Byrd (D·W. Va.), who recently
announced h imself as a can-
didate.
Predictably,• s Jae chose Presi-
dent Ford and Ronald Reagan on
the Republican side and
Margaret Wright of Los Angeles
for the Peace and Freedom
ballot. The American lndepen·
d ent Party candidate will be
selected d uring the weekend in
Bakersfield . ·
Ma. Eu said U Brown "tells me
he want.a to be a favorite IOO can-
didate, I will put him on the
ballot. Jf tbe eovernor iD.f orms
me h e wan ts to e xercise
California's political clout at the
.national convention. I will add
hlm to tbe lilt."
In tbe absence or a "definite in·
dication or commJtment" Lrom
Brown; 1be said, it would be un-
fair to ''serious candidates" to
include bJm on tbe ballot.
A.Lio mlntn1 from her list of
De mocratic contenden were
Sena. Hubert H. Humpbre1 and
Edward II. Kenned.J, both ot
whom told her IA rapcme to an
l.nQ.uiry that the-1 were not c~ dJdates. •
Her choices wUJ Nmaln on the
ballot unleH tbe indnidual files a
st atement of noncandtdacy
W«e April a. She a11o can add
namea to tbe ballot before the do-
FrnePageAJ
BATTIN TRIAL· ••• . .
But Miller dido 't make it to the
witnets box as Depucy Dist. Atty.
J ack Ryan pointed out there bad
been no testimony contradicting
the informant's tale.
Kurilich did succeed in filing a
sworn affidavit from former
Santa Ana policeman Gary Newmeyer.
ENOUGH GIFT
TO BURGI.ARS
Newmeyer said he was as-
signed the taak in 1975 of delving
into the affairs of a Santa Ana ci-
ty council candidate, Supervisor
Laurence Schmit, former county
planning commissioner Woodrow
Butterfield and former Garden
Grove Mayor John Dean.
It is through such affidavits that
Kurilich said he hopes to convince
Judge Lae Monday that he is en.:
titled to investigative reports cov-
ering inquiries into countY'
political figures.
Minuteman Fired
Kissinger said in an earlier
statement that the strict trade
act in some cases "closed the
door " on better relations with
Communist countries. But he
later reiterated U.S. opposition
to Cuban and Soviet intervention
in Angola. ,.
"We cannot permit, and are
determined to resist the ex-
pansion of Soviet sphere by
military power,'' he said.
And then with a dig at the con-
gressional ban on covert aid to
pro-Western factions in Angola,
he added: "The United States
has resisted and with great de-
termination, and if I can be can-
did, not always with the full sup-.
. port of Congress."
GREENSBORO, N.C. CAP) -
Bob Upchurch, whose grocery
has been burglarized several
times recently, has put a sign on
the front door.
VANDENBERG AFB <UPI)_.
An Air Force Minuteman II
ICBM was launched successfully
at 8:30 p.m. Thursday, officials
said.
On Thursday, Kissinger
testified on Angola before a
Senate subcommittee and said
Congress has dangerously un-
dermined U.S. foreign policy and
world security through what he
considers unjustified in·
t erference in presidential de-
cisions.
It says, "Attention Burglars.
We Already Gave."
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23149 HAWTHORN& BLVD.
COptn f'ri.~~hl''· lH.30l
WIBDAYS I UTUUAYS t:OO e.1:30
The pilots who prepared the re-
port were Art Albworth, C.E.
Basset, Robert N. Buck, Don Mc-
Bain, WaJter P. Moran and Paul
Soderland, all retired airltne cap-
tains who have lQCCed a com.
bt.ned toUl of nearly 180,000 hours
ln the air. Their report ltnaed
they were "beholden to DO one" aod ~t.nated ~ ln 1afeQ'. . ._.
•
i
er F.
n-
to
a,
es
e-
. &~ Y/@(Y] [F
I @@((\YJO©® I · The column appean
dally except
Saturd1y1 aod Mondays.
-Ca"fllat bfl Ti~
DEAR PAT: Last Marchlsent
a renewal order with payment to
Time magazine for 40 weeks at
$10. I received my first issue
later in March bul found my sub-
scription had-been back-dated to
October 1974 . My subscription·
ended this October, eight weeks
too early. I wrote to Time. and
the reply said that my payment
was used to service my unpaid
account. I feel that a correction is
in order.
F J ., Fountain Valley
E. Shane of Time's subscrlp·
tJon service division, (eports that
in October 1974, the subscriptio~
servlce received a 40-week re·
newal order from you but "when
payment did not arrive within
the time a llotted, service w11s
suspended." A porlion of your
March check was used to pay for
those issues and your subscrip-
tl on expiration date was
• shortened by eight weeks. Your
subscription ended in October
because you did not renew it.
Shane has added your name to a
special mailing list in order to
gJve you a n opportunity to renew
your subscription without miss-
ing any issues.
CB Shortage
DEAR PAT : I ordered a
Midl a nd 23-channcl Citizens
Band radio with antenna from
Bennett Brothers of Mahwah,
N.J .. in May. l sent full payment
of $161 with the order, but r ha·
ven't received it yet. I've written
several letters. b'ut received only
l)ne notice that s tated. "Out of
f stock. will make shipment in
. about two weeks "I'm s till wait·
' mg. f · J 11., Huntington Beach i The radio and antenna now
have been shipped to you. Ben-
! nett Brothers explained that the
• Midland radio you ordered is an
i imported model and has been in
; extremely short supply. Citizen
: Band radio manuracturers and
: suppliers have been experienc-~ ing severe supply shortages, up
; to six months' ractory delay
' because or the huge increase in
~ Citizen Band operators. The
~Federal Communications Com-
! mission proccs·sed 475,000 new
: Citizen Ba nd applications during
: 1974. Applications this year
·totaled l.8 million throhgh Oc -
tober.
Clwrchill Hits
U.S. 'Circus'
, BRUSSELS, Belgium (UPl) -
Winston S. Churchill today ac-
cused the United Stales or indulg-
ing in the "endless circus" or the
. bicentennial and a "grotesque or-
. gy" of self-criticism while the
Soviets penetrate Africa and the
Middle East.
"Detente is a disaster ... just
another word for appeasement,"
• said Churchill, a Conservative
party member or Britain's
Parliament and grandson of the
wartime prime minister,
"Sinister, totalitarian forces are
on the march.
"Yet, the democracies of the
' West go wantonly on their way
toward a cataclysm, while their
politicians are more concerned
with economic problems, un-
employment and party bickering
; and our people are diverted ...
by endless circuses such as the
· American bicentennial this
• year," he said in a speech here.
~
.. Friday. January 30. 1976 DAILY PILOT A 3
Drug Rap Case Schw,i.
NewOC .
Judge
Santa Ana municipal court
Judge Philip E . Schwab was ap-
Pointed to the Orange County
Superior Court bench Thursday
by California Governor Edmund
G. Brown Jr.
Bar Squelches
Chula Request
Judge Schwab's elevation
came almost exactly 10 years
after he was appointed to the
mwiicipal court bench by Gov.
Brown's father, former governor
Edmund G. "Pal" Brown.
Judge Schwab, 46, takes over
one o( the two judicial posts re-
cent I y created by th e
Legislature. A spokesman for the
governor's office said late Thurs-
day that no decision has yet been
reached on the remaining
Orange County Superior Court
appointment.
Judge Schwab, a Democrat,
lives in Santa Ana with bis wiCe.
Joanne, son, Eric, 18. and
daughters Sara, 15 and Anne, 6. A
graduate of the University of
Minnesota, he was in private
practice in Orange County prior
to his first judicial appointment
in 1966.
Just Like Grandpa
Fidel Castro, prime minister of Cuba, bounces Michel.
youngest son of Canada's Prime Minister P ierre
Trudeau as mother Margaret looks on. The Trudeaus
visited Cuba for four days this week.
Lawyers representing the
State Bar o( California have suc-
cessrully oppposed a move by
Costa Mesa trial lawyer George
Chula for destrllction or Orange
County Superior Court records
Supe rvisors
Can't Block
'Vector' U se
Orange County supervisors
can't legally block the county
Mosquito Abatement District's
plans to change its name to Vec-
tor Control District. according to
the president of that agency's
board of trustees.
Orange County's 32nd Superior oc H al h T •
Thursday that his appointment Court judge jokingly noted e t es~1ng
Three weeks ago, supervisors
took some swats at the suggested
new name, claiming most people
don't know what a vector is. They
said the primary dictionary de-
futition of the word is "a line
signifying direction." restores a partnership that once
existed in private practice-that
of attorneys Philip Schwab, um·t Fm· dings Told Samuel Dreizen and Robert L.
Corfman of Newport Beach.
All three former lawyers· are t
now Superior Cqurt judges .
But the district chose to use the
secondary definition meaning
"an organism, usually an insect,
that has a potential for transmit·
ting disease bacteria."
HB Attorney
Gets Juve nile
·Referee Post
Orange County Deputy District
Attorney Luis Cardenas of Hunt-
ington Beach was appointed
Thursday to the post of Orange
County Juvenile Court referee.
Confirmed by the full Superior
Court roster after being recom-
mended by a three-judge com-
mittee, Cardenas, 33, takes over
the post vacated when referee
Marvin Weeks or Laguna Niguel
was appointed to the West
Orange County m unicipaJ court
by Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr.
Married with two ch.ildren. re-
feree Cardenas joined the district
attorney's office as a trial deputy
in 1970.
Cardenas was assistant to the
chief of the district attorney's
Juvenile Court division al the
time of his appointment as re-
feree.
Johnny Mercer
Said Im p roving
PASADENA (AP)
Songwriter Johnny Mercer, re-
covering from Oct. 22 surgery to
remove a nonmalignant brain
tumor, was r eported improving
at Huntington Memorial Hospital
here.
A spokesman said Mercer, 67,
was moved Thursday from the
hospital's mtermediate unit to
the rehabilitation room where his
condition was listed as fair.
Wrong Grave
For DecetuJed?
SAN DIEGO <AP) -The
family of a man who died
last year says a local
cemetery buried him in the
wrong grave.
That charge was made
Thursday in a $210,000
damage s uit fil ed in
Superior Court against
Green wood Me morial
Park.
The suit was filed by
seven survivors of Marcial
Acosta of San Diego.
By WI LLIAM SCHREIBER
Ol U.. D•lly Pilot SUff
The controversial Orange
County Health Testing Institute
<OCHTI), hired by county gov-
ernment to perform pre -
employment physical exams, is
doing "no better or worse" in its
task than any other similar
operation.
That conclusion was reached in
a report for the County Ad -
ministrative Office (CAO) by Dr.
Edward Tomsovic of the county
Medical Center.
His findings, and a recommen-
dation from the CAO to continue
using OCHTI, will be considered
Tuesday by the county Board of
Supervisors.
Tomsovic's analysis of
OCHTI's work was sought by the
CAO after th e firm 's
performance was sharply
criticized by Dr. John Philp,
county health officer. ·
The $280,000 county pact with
OCHTI also has been criticized
because the medical operation
was founded by Dr. Louis Cella,
political benefactor to three
supervisors.
Cella is currently unde r
federal and local indictments al-
leging he defrauded two county
hos pitals he once controlled.
It was reported earlier this
week that OCHTI will be ousted
from its quarters at Mercy
General Hospital, one of the two
facilities in which Cella has an in-
terest.
Jn his supporting analysis of
Tomsovic's findings, CAO
Robert Thomas said that there is
a wide disparity between the "er-
ror dates" discovered by Philp
and those ca lculate d b y
Tomsovic.
P-hilp contended that dunng
the first few months of opera-
tions, errors were noted in 37 per-
cent of 683 examinations
performed. But using a different
formula, Tomsovic determined
the error rate is only six-tenths of
one percent.
Tomsovic agreed with Philp's
findings that a number of errors
Thugs Disrupt
Rome Station
ROME (U PI > -Four
gangsters, discovered trying to
rob a train at Rome's main
railroad station today, fled in a
getaway car. hurling hand
grenades, shoot\ng pistols and
spraying submachinegun bursts
to cover their escape.
were committed by OCHTI that
had to be corrected by county
Health Department personnel.
But he said only five were
serious enough to consider in the
final f4nalys is.
"Many of the errors were
start-up errors and could have
been quicklv corrected had there
been closer communication.
between the health department
and OCHTI," Thomas said .
Thomas and Tomsovic sug-
ges ted that closer liaison
between the two agencies could
aJleviate most of the potential for
error.
"The OCHTI appears to do its
work neither better or worse than
other similar multi -phas ic
screening operations," Tomsov1c
said.
Supervisors were told lhat the
analysis did not reveal enough of
a problem to warrant cancella-
tion of the pact.
In his report. Thomas noted
that any analysis of operations
Like OCHTI are difficult because
there are no established stan-
dards for them
In a letter to supervisors,
abatement board President War-
ren G. Hall said the state Hea lth
and Safety Code strictly limits
the actions of the board of
supervisors.
Hall's letter and additional
legal opinions from County
Counsel Adrian Kuyper will
come before supervisors for con-
sideration Tuesday.
The abatement chief said the
state code requires supervisors
to concur in any resolutions pre-
sented by the Mosquito Abate·
ment District. including those re-
questing a name change.
Hall also noted that sugges-
tions by several s upervisors to
change the name to Pest Control
District are invalid because dis-
tricts with that title are operating
in various parts of the state un
der dirferent code sections
''The district shares the Board
of Supervisors' concern over
public recognition of the word
vector. but we feel the word is
gaining public recognition and
the district will do all that it can
to educate the public," HaJI said.
PRIMROSE
lrilliaftf
Assorted
Colon
Rfli 79c 49~.
******************* ~ .
\ il While Supply Lasts ..
related to his relony drug conv1c
Uoo. •
Judge Kenneth Williams set
aside the arplication by Chula.
50, of 1138 E Camino Dnv•. after
State Bar representatives poinied
out that their inquiries into 'tht-
conviction could be hampered 1r
U\.ose records are not available.
if Chula 's application had been
granted. he would have become
the first drug offender convicted
in Superior Court to take adv an
tage of the new marijuana laws
that went into errect Jan.1.
Any person found guilty of
possessing a small amounL of
marijuana prior to Jan. 1 can ap·
ply for destruction of all court re-
c;ords related to that of(ense pro
vided the offender pays a $.50
fee. ,.
Superior Court Judge James
Turner sentenced Chula to 60
days in the county jail and placed
him on three years probation last
year after the lawyer pleaded
guilty to one or 13 felony ~oll:"ts
contained in a Grand Jury indict
ment.
Those charges were filed after
the Grand Jury listened to
testimony from the paramour of
imprisoned LSD guru Timothy
Leary. that Chula supplied her
with cocaine and marijuana dur-
ing h~r stay in Orange County.
It was stipulated in rmat court
action that Chula was in
possession of less than one ounce
of marijuana on the occasion
that led to the felony charge.
He now faces investigation by
. the State Bar on disciplinary
grounds and faces censure or
possible suspension of bis license
to practice law.
2 Jets Crash
In S. Korea
SEOUL, South Korea <AP> -
Two U.S. Air Force F4D Phan-
tom II fighter-bombers collided
in the air and crashed today near
Taejon. 85 miles southeast of
Seoul, an Air Force spokesman
said.
H~ said the fate of the four
cr ew members was not 1m ·
mediately known. but that a
rescue team was being sent to the
remote crash site.
[Fonda, 'Cityless' Police wounded and arrested
one would-be robber but lost the
other three in a footrace in a park.
Police said the gangs ters
planned to rob the mail coach or a
train standing ready to leave the
station, but two plainclothes
policemen stopped them as they
approached it.
/J : MEXICAN !
! POTTERY !
JAPANESE •ecJ. 99c BOXWOOD 2.29
ALLEPO PINE ~Cities Star Sunday
~ Here are the edi7' nominees for "Sunday's Best · the Dally
, Pilot. Watch for:
~ LAWLESS •LAW' -In cityless
"cities" who makes the rules?
Two Dally Pilot starters, t.aurie
Kuper and Hilary Kaye, lobk Ln-
to what's right and wrong about
homeowner association s in
articles scheduled to lead off the
YOU Section.
JANE FONDA -She hasn't
been 1een in films much recent-
ly, but1be·1 certainly been heard
: from on pollUcal wucs. Now
•he'• m•klna another picture
·and bu plans for more, fncludlng
• one wltb f atber Henry and
~brother e er. Vernon ~l, Unit·
•«t Preaa lnt.enaat10llal'1 top man \t Hollywood, interviews Mrs.
TomHayd n.
(SUN D A Y'S BEST) Ma M crame an,
COURSES BY NEWSPAP ER
-Second semester in this
"study-at-home" program geLq
under way with publication of the
first of 18 "lectures" that can
lead to college credits for readers
who want lo enroll at Orange
Coast College.
OVER T HE HILL -A world
completely removed from the
busUe of Laguna Canyon Road
Uta just over the ridge !or those
on hol"$d capable of scrambling
lo the top. Tom Mccann is Hon lo• Around on the trail with
some fr1ends who show him
Laguna's nlp aide
Aide Killed
WEST COVINA <UPI) -A
macramc dc•l~r an d hi s
sttretary were found dead, both
with their throats slashed, at the
man's combination home-office.
Eljeane Schock found her
husband Arnold, 60, and his
secretary ,1 Mary Quinoes, 36.
when she returned home, police
said Thursday night. Schock 's
body was lying in a small fish pool
~hind lbe home and the woman's
bodywaslnsldothobouse.
The office had been ranaacked.
officensaid
!% Price Sale! • • *******************
WORM CASTINGS
OOOltLISS
For gardens,
potted plants.
t'ranglng
bakets. etc.
REG.
2.99
PLANTER MIX
2123 NEYIPORT Bl VD.
COSTA MESA • 646-3925
All lletni Umltd To Stoc::IC On Hand
199
RecJ. 149 l.tt
·~ ... .~'1s BRAZILIAN
PEPPER TREE
STAR PINE RecJ.
2.4t 149 .....
EXTRA NICE 1999 MRGREEN
ASH•-..,,_,,
CLOSEOUT SPECIAL
SCOTTS I/..
GRASS SEED Y2 PRICE .
FREE ,.c... ra.r he
copy of Ortt.o Law. I _. ....
look.
rt .f DAILY PILOT frrld!y. Januery 30. 197&
..
No Campaign Spend LiDJi.t-Bigh CoU1·t
WA SHINGTON (AP) -The
Supreme Court today struck down
campaagn spending bmits but upheld
presidential campaign subsidies and
otheT major provisions of the Federal
Election Campaign Act.
IT RULED THAT limits on eon-
tributlons. and requirements that
they be disclosed, are permissible
means to combat improper influence
or the appearance of such influence.
and other !inanclog disclosures,
would serve the government's ln·
t.ttat 1n informing tbe electorate and
avoiding political corruption.
aented from the portions of the de·
t>ls1on upholding requirements for dia·
closure of small contrlbutiooa,
upholding the limits on contributions
and providing for presidential cam-
paJgn subsidies.
JUSTICE THURGOOD Marshall
concurred with the bulk of the opinion
but said he would have upheld a aec-
tJon limiting the amounts that a can-
didate can s pend from hi8 personal
funds or family funds under his ~on
t.rol. lo a 22'7-page opinion. the court held
that the limitations on campaign
spending viola te the guarantees of
freedom of expression in the First
Amendment lo the Constitution.
As to the spending limits, the court
said in its unsigned opinion that they
''impose direct and substantial
restraints on the quantity of political
.speech."
The court said the requirements for
public identification of contributors,
THE COURT ALSO curbed the en-
forcement powers of the Federal
Election Commission, saying it could
exercise only the klnd of investigatory
authority which might otherwise be
delegated to a congressional commit-
tee.
Justice William H. Rehnquist con·
curred in most of the decision but con-
tended that provisions for general-
election financing discriminated
against minor parties and indepen-
dents.
Juatice Henry A. Blackmundissent·
ed from part or the decision upholding
a $1,000 limitation on contributions tsy
individuals and groups to candidates
and campaign com mitt~. Chief Justice Warren E. Burger dis·
Entertainer Murdered
UPI T•lepllolO
ENTERTAINER KI LLE().
James Edmondson
Ban on Cure d
Meat P rocess
Given Push
WASHI NGTON (U PI) -A
coalition of consumer groups
wants a complete ban on the use
of sodium nitrate and nitrite in
bacon and other meats, and
called the government's pro-
p osed regulations o f the
chemicals totally unacceptable.
The groups, in comments filed
with the Agriculture Depart·
ment, said the proposal to cut
back use of the preservatives in
some products and ban them in
others does not go far enough to
answer questions raised about
the potential cancer problem in-
volved.
The department's proposal
would eliminate nitrate from
everything but dry-cured meats
and fermented sausages, and al-
low nitrite in bacon, cooked
sausa2e. canned cured products,
dry-c ure meat and fermented
sausage.
The groups said current efforts
in industry a nd government con·
centrate on finding ways to pre-
vent the form a ti o n of
nitrosamines -the cancer caus·
ing agents -instead of on ways
to make-meat products which do
not contain the preservatives.
"If the indus try were forced to
develop alternative processing
methods because of a proposal to
ban nitrite. then great strides
would likely be made in this
area," they said.
3 Nabbed in 'Pror s' Death
ATLANTA <AP) -Three young Atlanta men were charged to-
day with murder and robbery in the slaying of James E . Ed·
mondson, the "Professor Backwards" familiar to many television·
viewers.
Police·identified the three as Roy Anthony Brown, 20; Michael
Gantt, 22, and Willie Bell, 17.
All three lived within a mile of the northwest Allant~ area where
Edmpndson's body was found Thursday, Detective Douglas Young
said.
ATLANTA POLICE charged the three with murder and rob·
bery. Police in College Park, the suburb where Edmondson lived
with a housekeeper , said additional charges were pend!ftg.
"We'll issue warrants today charging a ll three with kidnaping
and two of them with rape -Bell and Brown," said Sgt. Marvin
Parrott.
According to police reports, three men appeared at Ed·
mondson's modest suburban home Wednesday night and asked to
use the telephone.
Before the three fled about 9 a.m . Thursday in the entertainer's
Cadillac, Edmondson's 25-year-old housekeeper was raped, police
said.
Edmondson's body was found about l p.m. on an isolated road
on Atlanta's northwest side by city workers. Police said he had been
shot in the head at close range and that his wallet was missing.
E DMONDSON, 65, WAS once featured in Ripley's Believe It or
Not for his knack of rapid!ire backward-talking, which he parlayed
into a 40·year career in Wtudeville and nightclubs and on television.
His agent. Monk Arnold, said he appeared on Sullivan's popular
variety show 24 times, more than any other performer. He was also
a frequent guest on the Tonight Show.
Police Lt. W. K. Perry said Edmondson was fully cl~hed, with
pajamas beneath his trousers. A bloods pattered tweed hat lay near
the body.
He said Edmondson was identified by a blank check found in a
trouser pocket. There were reports the abductors might have taken
Edmondson to his bank, but Perry said police were unable to de-
termine immediately whether any withdrawals were made.
Edmondson claimed he could spell rapidly any word in the
English language backwards. To prove it, he challenged audiences
to try to stump him.
HE CLAIM ED HE never had been stumped. The word that
came closest, he said, was phthisic.
"l bad to think about that one," he said.
Edmondson, who performed at the White House and hobnobbed
with politicians and other VIPs, retained a quick, unpr~ict~~le ~it.
Pro-Western Allies
·Reti-eat in Angola
By UnJted Press latem atlonaJ
Pro-Western allies in Angola, retreating before advancing Soviet-
backed forces, battled each other in their capital of Huambo and the
pro-western radio in the central Angola city has gone off the air, the
Soviet news agency Tass reported today. (Related story, A7 .)
The Soviet agency said the fighting ~bowed •'the end of the puppets'
alliance is near.''
Tass reported from Lusaka,
the pro-Communist held capital.
that a spokesman for the pro-
Western National Union for thE
Total Independence of AngolE
confirmed armed skirmisheE
between National Union force~
and its ally in defense aJ?ainst
Soviet-backed troops, the Na·
tional Front for the Liberation of
Angola.
TASS QUOTED the National
Union representative as accus·
ing the National Front of
"marauding and cowardice."
In another report from Luan·
da. Zambia, Tass said broad·
casts by Huambo radio "were
terminated because or the chaos
and disorders that came in the
wake of these skirmishes."
In Lusaka a UNITA
spokesman said pro-Western
forces def ending Angola's
southern battle fronts, have sent
guerrilla units behind enemy
lines to mount h.it-and·run opera-
tions.
HE SAID THE army holding.
positions about 100 miles north of
Huambo had blocked further ad-
vances by the Marxistforces dur·
ing the past 24 hours.
The M PLA, backed by about
11 ,000 Cuban troops and
sophisticated Russian weaponry
has detached a force from the
army's main body north of
Huambo, to bead west towards
the Atlantic ports. Lobito and
Benguela, reports from Lusaka
said.
The two towns. railheads for
the copper export routes or
neighboring Zambia and Zaire,
are important strategic targets
for the MPLA.
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•
CIA Rej>ort on
'Under Wraps'·
In Dlltc la? UPI T•lepfleto
Gen. George S. Brown,
c hairm an o f the J o int
Chiefs of Staff, told Senate
panel he opposes efforts to
form a military union say-
ing Netherlands military
soldiers 'don't cut their hair
or shine their shoes.'
WASHINGTON <UPO -The
House Intelligence Committee's
controversial final report was in
a deep freeze today with doubts it
will ever be published -except
perhaps through more press
leaks.
The House voted 246 to 124
Thursday to ban publication of
the 338-page document "until the
report has been certified by the
President as not containing in-
formation which wouJd adverse·
ly affect the intelligence ac·
tivities of the CIA" or other
federal agencies in foreign coun·
tries.
Sl .... F-4
WASHINGTON (AP) -Rep.
James R. Jones. a former ap-
pointments secretary lo Presi·
dent Lyndon Johnson, bas
become the first sitting con·
gressman convicted in connec-
NY Dorm Features
'Public' Water Bed
STONY BROOK, N.Y. (AP) -In the basement of a dormitory
at the State University of New York, there is a room for playing
games, a room for cracking books and a room for making rafts.
There is also a room for making love.
On a water bed.
"IT WORKS OUT very well." says Rob Gross, a 19-year-old
junior from Pelham who helped install it. "People sign up in ad-
vance, so there's no confusion. There's only one key to the room."
He says there is now a two-week wait -longer for weekend
nights -among the dormitory's 200 residents for a tum at the room.
There is no charge, and the students bring their own linen. Checkout
lime is 24 hours after the 9 p.m . occupancy time.
Gross says the dormitory legislature voted last September to
use about $40 of its $1,000 in student activity fees for a particular ac-
tivity.
( I N SH O R T J
tion with Gulf Oil Corp. 's
political slush fund.
Jones pleaded gwlty. Thursday
to failing to report a $1,000 to
$2,000 campaign. contribution.
The misdemeanor charge car-
ries a maxim\Jm penalty of one
year in prison and a $1,000 fine.
~trie Claa f r .
NORTH PLATTE, Neb. (UPI)
-Erwin Charles Simants, who
was convicted of kilting six mem-
bers of a Nebraska farm ramily,
has been sentenced to die in the
electric chair.
Simants, flanked by his at"
torneys. s hifted bis feet and
answered "no" Thursday when
Lincoln County District Court
Judge High Stuart asked if there
was any reason Simants thought
his sentence on six counts of fir~
degree murder should be de-
layed. • .
.JofM \'eto Seen
WASHINGTON '(UPI)
Congress has voted $6.2 billion lO
provide an estimated 800,000 jobs
for Americans through public
works projects and aid to r e-
cession-suffering local govern-
ments, and is gearing for a veto
battle.
Hours before the House took
final action on the meas ure
Thursday, President Ford an-
nounced through a s pokesman he
will veto it on grounds it exceeds
his budget and would be ineffec-
tive.
But the final 321-~ House vote
indicated it may be possible to
enact the bill over his objections.
·Courses by Newspaper
Registration Form
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SEE AMERICA
Without
Leaving Home
All you have to do is
open your mind -and your
newspaper. We'll put
America at your fingertips
every Sunday in the Daily
Pilot.
In our pages, you'll find
thought-provoking views of
America at Its bicentennial.
These weekly perspectives
are drawn by well-known
scholar-writers In a series
of articles for American
Issues Forum, the special
bicentennial program of
Courses by Ne wspaper.
The topics are those on the
minds of every concerned
American -topics like
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human rights.
So relax in your easy
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exploring ou r country's ·
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5.
The course text-reader
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Campus coordinator for
Courses by Newspaper is
Tom Wert, a member of the
Orange Coast College
social science staff since
1965. He will conduct the
two on-campus diSCU$sion
and exam sessions and
arrange voluntary seminar·
sessions . He may be
co ntacted by pho ne,
556-5759, or, d uring his
campus office hours, room
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COURSES BY NEWSPAPER is offered by the Daily Pilot
as a public service. Class credit may be earned by
enrolling at Orange Coast College.
COURSES BY NEWSPAPER REGtSTRATION FORM
THE MOLDING OF AMERICAN VALUES
I wlstt to ha Vt my
credits ,..corCSN at
(cl'ledton.)
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If you plan to reglsttr f0t courses other than
Cour9es by Newspaper pleaae disregard thta
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college. •
College Studer1I No.
I 1 · I I
Mddletnlllel
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DAILY PILOT
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Farm Land Protected
SACRAMENTO <UPI> -A con·
troverslal bill designed to protect
Callrornia's 12 million acres of prime
asricultural land from urban de-
velopment and save it for food produc·
tion has passed the Assembly wlth no
votes to spare.
The meaaur~ by Assemblyman
Charles Warren, CD·Los Angeles),
wu sent to the Senate Tbunday on a
bare·majority 41·36 vote, all the
''aye" votes were caat by Democrats.
Under the legislation, a new state
agricultural res urce council would
be given final v o power over local
zoning agencies i the development of
prime agricultura and. However, 90
percent of Callfor ties are ex·
empted -those with les . 1,600
prime agricultural acres within eir
boundaries.
A LRB Biii De ad
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -The near·
ly broke Agricultural Labor Relations
Board today declared itself all but out
of business and prepared to accept
final petitions for secret·ballot farm
worker elections, at least for awhile.
The five.month-old board delivered
the gloomy outlook after Gov. Ed·
mund G. Brown Jr.'s emergency $3.8
million appropriation bill for the
agency died on the Senate floor
without being brought to a vote.
Crueltfl Ban l'oted
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -The
Senate bas voted to ban from theaters
films in which animals were de·
liberately killed or abused.
The measure by Sen. David
Eoberti, CD-Los Angeles), was passed
Thursday on a 26·4 vote and sent to the
Assembly.
F ei.,. Biii Btac!lu!d
SACRAMENTO CAP> -A bill that
would discourage late abortions by re·
( STATE J
quiring doctors to take "all reuona·
ble atepe" to save a aurvivlng fetus
won overwbelmlDI AHembly ap~
prov al Thursd ay.
A 60·11 vote sent lhe measure by M ·
semblyma.n Mike Antonovich, <R· Glen~ale), to the Senate.
r.,. •~• W'n•er
LOS ANGELES <UPI> -Two men
arrested ln a porno theater the same
night as Deputy Mayor Maurice
Weiner say the prosecutor offered to
reduce charges against them if they
would support police testimony at
Weiner's lewd conduct trial. Both
men aay they refused.
Homer Shephard, a music instruc-
tor from Santa Ana, who testified for
the deferfsj! Thursday said he was told
the lewd conduct charge against him
would be reduced to trespassing ''if I
said what was supposed to have hap.
pened accordina to what the officers
said."
Trinidad Carrasco, a Lockheed
Aircraft aasem bly line worker arrest·
ed the same night, tolCi reporters out·
side the courtroom that he received a
similar off er on Jan. 12, three days
before the start of Weiner's trial.
Ntdce F..el A rrlees
SAN LUIS OBISPO (AP) -The
first truckload of nuclear ruel has ar-
rived at the unfinished Diablo Canyon
power plant, which a local group con-
tends is a potential safety hazard.
Di c k Davin, a spokesman for
Pacific Gas & Electric Co .. said
trucks bringing 192 more shipments
are expected within the next few
months, he said.
CARPET WAREHOUSE
SA
NYLON PLUSHES Reg. s7ts NOW s3 99J"I.
Full Rolls & Remnants
Saturday only -I 0-4 p;m.
CARPET WAREHOUSE ·
I 575 PLAcemA-MEWPOIT llACH
642-221 0 646-8665
JC Penney
NEWPORT. CENTER
FASHION ISLAND ONLY
GARDEN CENTER
HANGING
BASKETS
WHILE
THEY
LAST 2''
Many good varieites. Boston fern,
Ruffly ferns. Wandering Jew. 6'' Pot.
DORMANT SPR~Y COMBINATION
CONTROL OVER·WIMTERING
INSECTS AHO DISEASES
Both For $2.79
A $3.67 VALUE
ORTHO Vitamin B·1
UP-START
Plant Starter 3·10-3
• Help for new plantlngs.
•Stimulates early, stronger
root development.
• Reduces transplant shock.
*ORTHD
"' ...... '' UP-START "-t Stuter
LA.WM & GAAOEH
SPRAYER COMIO
PINT 79'!-· "sn<:fAL s 1 ()49
Shop ~ay 12 to 5 p.m.
Fashion Island, Newport Beach
17149 644·2313
• . i
Fr1d~y. J.i1 1uar1 :? I 'J." DAILY PILOT AS
Seand8 I Wide~ing Aeroso l
Product More Arresu in CHP Thefu?
Ban S SACRAMENTO (UPl> een -The highway patrol
commiss1oner Thursday
SACRAMENTO (UPI) said be "cannot honestly
-A blll prohibiting the say" whether more ar·
sale or manufacture of rests will be made in con·
cert ain aerosol spray nection ~ith a So';1ther:n
producte in California Californa a theft ring m
after July 1, 1977 has won which one patrolman has
narrow approval from been charged
ASSE MBLYMAN
J erry Lew1 s <ft
Highland >, said he got
the "implication or all
this was that there were
more officers involved
and there was a chance
as well of some people on
the b e nc h being af.
feC'ted."
Arrested with Zuniga.
an officer since 1969,
were David B . Giles. 29,
a Riverside furniture
store owne.r, and Ruben Ayala, 55, a tow service
operator.
All were freed on bail.
theAssembly Comm issioner Glen li
UPI Tel~ • . "d th t f e e d Silie Conftc!tecf The b i 11 b y As . Craig sat e arres o qtn c one .//s em b I y man J 0 h n officer Jimmy J . Zuniga,
Actor Thomas Rec.-Vasconcellos (0-San 28, assigned to th e
tig, s hown at age 10 Jose) was sent to the Riverside office, "is a Outlawing• Backed whe n h e p 1 aye d Senate Thursday on a scand~l. but whether it,'s
La ssie's yo un g minimum 41·28 vote It the biggest scandal m
m aster on 1950s would affe c t th~se the patrol's hi~to.~ we SACRAMENTO (AP) -One male legislator
television series, was a e r o s o l s u s i n g wont know .. until its all complained. "What have you got against big
found guilty Thurs-flour o c a r b on . Pro · cleaned up. breasts?" but the state Assembly voted anyway to
day of smuggling CO· Pe 11 ants . c h 1 e f I Y TWO LE<?ISL~TORS outlaw liquid silicone injections for Califorqia
caine from Peru. personal p~oducts such from the R1vers1de-San women. ---------as some hatrsprays and Bernardino area , Assemblyman Bill McVittie, (D-UpJand),.
deodorants. however. said they were author of the silicone bill, said some topless dancers
briefed by the patrol and and other women who have had silicone injections Term ~Lean'
Proof Seen
SACRAMENTO (AP)
-Stores would have to
pro~ide proof before
labeling ham burger
"l ean " und er a
m eas ure approved
Thursday by the state
Assembly.
The bill by As ·
s emblyman Joseph
M o nt oy a , (D -La
Puente), would require
any hamburge .. r whose
f a t co nt e n t was
described by terms like
"lean" to also list the
fat content on the label.
VASCONCELLOS not· received the · · implica-to artificially enlarge their breasts have suffered .
ed that recent University lion" that more a.rrests. serious ailments. and that many have later had
of Michigan s tudies in· possibly including police their breasts removed surgically.
dicated a current rate of or judges, were ex· .A 42-30 vote Thursday sen~ the proposed
aerosol products would pected. silicone ban to the Senate after· a lengthy and
deplete the earth's pro-In an interview, Craig sometimes leering debate.
tective ozone layer by said that notion "may "Small is beautifuJ," McVitlie said.
15·20 percent with a re-not be supported in fact. ASSEMBLYMAN John Miller, CD-Berkeley),
sulting increase in skin l cannot honestly say at who raised the big breast question. also speculated
cancer. He said the con· this time whether there about how males might use silicone injections.
tinued sale and manufac -will be m.ore a.rrests, And when San Jose Democrat Leona Ege nd,
ture of such aerosol. pro-even the investigators .one of onl y three women in the 80-mem As· due~. would result tn an can't tell you ." sembly, endorsed the bill, Asse an Bob ·
additional 4,000 cases of Sen. Robert B. Presley Badham, CR-Newport Beach) ed her feminist
skin cancer. <D·Ri verside). said ''in· sentiments on issues such as the right to choose an
The l:iwm aker said the dications wer e that there abortion and asked:
bill was designed to was a muc h wider pro· "Do you think a woman should have control of
"b egin to protect blem. Indications are herbodywiththeexceptionofherbreasts?" .
ourselves fro~ the t~at some s upervisory Mrs. Egeland said the issue was whether doc-
spread .. of cancer lJl the hig_hway patrolmen may tors should be able to continue giving unsafe injec·
fu ture. be involved. lions.
Thursday January 29 thru Saturday January 31 ' . -Find out about the m.qny free services
our community offers.
MILE OF DIMES ·r,~\~ ~~~~~ ~~c:, / ~\\..~~ ~ r/ t ~ I . .
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~( ~ ·~ 4cr ~ , ~~ ~ ~~ ~ ~~(~ ... '\
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Westminster Mall
I
Robinson's, Buffums , Sears. May Co.,
and 151 ot her fine stores.
The Best ot ~verythlng Pt~/ San Diego fwy. at Boiaa Ave .
-r 8
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DAIL PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
It's Spending Time
You don't need a calendar to know it ·s an election
year.Justwatch e inCongress.
For s tarters, t~ ge emen on Capitol Hill have
roundly overridden Prest ent Ford's veto of a S45
billion health, welfare and labor bill. The President,
noting that the measure exceeded his budget recom-
mendation by $1 billion, called it a classic example of
"unchecked spending."
Earlier. the Congressmen had shown the greatest
possible reluctance to make even a weak concession
to Mr. Ford's demand that a commitment to cut
federal spending accompany extensaon ot tax cuts .
After all, it was pointed out, it would be pretty hard
to cut spending in an election year.
Commenting on the veto override. Congressional
leaders agreed that the pending election had in-
fluenced the vote, acknowledging that election years
seem to e ncourage some members lo support pro-
grams they normally might have doubts about
And of course health and welfare bills, ho\vever
cos tly, touch so many citizens it's a brave
Congressman who'll vote against one when his
name's coming up on that ballot.
An Ugly Story
One of the more disheartening and ugly news
stories of recent days has been the incredible state-
ment by lawyer William Kunstler endorsing political
assassinations.
Kunstl~r became something of a folk hero on col-
lege campllses in the mid-60s by the tactics he used in
the defense of the Chicago Seven, tactics by which he
and the defendants turned the courtroom into a guer-
rilla warfare theater. ·
Now Kunstler has proclaimed in a news con-
ference that he was "not entirely upset by the Kennedy
assassinations•· or other political assassinations.
His disclaimer. "although I couldn't puU the trig· ·
ger myself . . . " ls hkely to be equated by many
of his former fans with such tarnished bromides as : "ot
course, I am not racially prejudiced but ... "
Coming at a time when Political t~rrorlsm is a
global threat of consequence, Kunstler's remarks are
particularly reprehensible.
Kunstler, currently the defense counsel for Sym-
bionese Liberation Army members Bill and Emily
Harris, also announced that he turned down defense of
Patty Hearst because he "wouldn't work for pigs."
presumably referring to the Hearstf amily. .
Compared with the ugliness of mind and spirit
manifest in the lawyer's remarks, a pig measures up
as a pretty admirable creature.
Jury Put-down
in· those 60s it was fashionable to try to discredit
the judicial system bY. raising a ruckus in the
courtroom.
These days the vogue for convicted defendants
and their lawyers is to drop dark hints, or even make
open charges about the prosecution's "unfair tac-
tics,'' and to grumble about "unfair" press coverage.
It's their privilege to complain of course. But
where does all this leave the 12 good and true of the
jury, who have listened to th~ witnesses, pored over
the documentation, discussed the pros and cons of
prosecution and d~f ense, and arrived at their
verdict?
It's not the prosecutor, or the press, or even the
jud~e who decides on guilt or innocence in a jury trial.
It's the jury itself.
And any s uggestion that "unfair" tac:lics have
brought about the verdict, whatever it may be, is
really an ur:iwarranted put-down of a jury system that
. in fact still seems to be working very well.
'I tell you it's terrible the way the United StateQ is
trying to wreck our country!1
A Precaution That
Can Avert Tragedy
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
Pesticides and Early Death
To the Editor:
On Dec. 13 of last year. Andy
Hodges, age 8, was electrocuted
in his home in Huntington Beach
because he tried lo use an electn c
hairdryer in the bathtub. More re-
cently in Chicago, two brothers
were electrocuted while handling
an electric hairdryer in the
bathlu b. These fatal accidents
are but example-, of tragedies
that ha\ e occurred mam limes
because of the use of hairdrvers.
hair curlers. radios. ele.ctric
heaters, shavers . or other elec·
tncal appltances m bathrooms.
These appliances were all ap·
proved b y U nderwriters
Laboratories and yet. in my pro·
f"essional opinion, the) represent
a r eal ever present danger to both
children and adults
Most building codes in the Unit-
ed States require that electrical
outlets in bathrooms, kitchens.
laundry rooms and so forth be of
the three wire groundin~ variety.
Despite this I know of no s mall ap
pliances that are likely to be used
in bathrooms or k 1tchens that pro-
vide a three-wire cord which
would eliminate most of the
hazard
OSHA and CAL /OSHA <Oc
cupat1onal Safet ''and Health Act >
ha vc: recognized the need forthree
wire grounding cords and require
that all electrical equipment used
in industrial establishments be
equippe d with three wire
grounded plugs . This rule extends
even to such s mall tools as elec·
tnc erasers in drafting rooms
used by people with dry hands
working nowhere near any water
lines or faucets .
This letter 1s written with the
hope of obtaining your support in
a campaign to pass laws either at
( MAILBOX . J
ing pet shop and kennel owners, a
veterinarian, hobby breeders, a
ho r se e xpe rt a nd humane
workers. ha s devoted many
many hours to bringing this or-
dinance as c lose to pleasing
everyone as 1s perhaps possible.
Still at issue. however. is the
selling to research laboratone:-,
of unclaimed pets from the
Orange County Shelter. This
practice continues despite the
advances in technology which
make much repel1t1ous research
unnecessary.
H UMANE workers feel that by
adhering to this practice. Orange
County Animal Control is defeat-
ing its own e nds Rather than
risk an animal being sold into re-
search. people re fu se to take
c1t hor stravs or their own un-
wanted pets to the public sheller,
preferring to turn them loose to
starve. die terrifying deaths ln
traffic accidents and. bv breed-
ing before they meet the;r end, to
add significantly to the animal
C'Ontrol proble m and the r esult-
ing cost to the taxpayer Our
Orange County Shelter should be
JUSl that a ~helt er for unwanted
anima ls. whNe lhev will be
humanely deslrO) ed (f no home
can be found for them not to
add terror to loneliness and pain
by ending their days io the mis-
ery of a resear ch lab.
I hope your animal-loving re
aders will let thei r supervisors
know how they feel about our
Or ange County pets being sold tn·
lo research.
PATGUIVER
No Aholutn
To the Editor :
Extremes ar:e ~asy lo defend.
Thanks to Judge Raymond
Vincent, OC Juvenile
Judge, for factually stat·
ing that the juveniles· in
Juvenile Hall are there on
their own merits. Finally a
judge who is not a social
worker!
EX-JUVIE OFF1CER
O!Mmy Gws COfftme1111 are'*""""' 1rt n-.n .,.,, de not MCHUlrlly reftect ..
Ylews of Ill• ... ,. ... .,.,. S..... ,_-lllt _..,. t. Gloom' Gws, O•lly Pilot.
greed or in the commission of a
crime.
I believe that the same can be
s aid in the case of an abortion. A
young girl who is the victim of a
rape would have more justifica-
tion for abortion than a married
lady who just didn't want to be
bothered. While it is easy to be a
fanatic and deal o nl y in
absolutes, it makes much more
sense to deal with all questions
with reason, taking each issue on
its own merits.
JAMES W. BOLDING
Be Tlaa11lcf ul
To the Editor·
We Americans seem to be los-
ing that delicately precious abili-
ty to deal gracefully with set-
backs The Rams lose: we boo.
The Lakers fall behind Golden
State: attendance at the Forum
wanes. A personal tragedy in our
life occurs. we collapse into
cynicism and des pair A political
leader succumbs to temptation,
voter turn-out fails to turn out.
We have come to expect Santa to
come but somehow know that we
will be disappointed with his
gifts
Field Workers' Plight
WASHINGTON -The field
workers, who helped make
America the best fed nation in
history are themselves often un-
dernourished. Now there is
evidence that they are also being
poisoned by pesticides.
From California to F1orida,
crop sprays are bringing sick-·
ness and death to stoop laborers .
This had led Dr. Joseph Swartz. a
biophysicist
doing re -
search for the
Environmen-
tal Protection
A g e n c y
(EPA> in
California, to
call field work
''one of the
m o s t
hazardous oc-
cupations." His conclusion 1s
based on "time lost to occupa-
tional illnesses."
(JACK ANDE~SON)
this vital health s urvey to 125 mi-
grant health clinics.
-Under pressure from the
growers, EPA also quashed an
earlier NFIC project, the
pesticide hotline, which would
have provided a toll-free
telephone number for field hands
to report poisoning incidents.
particularly its 76-year-old vice
chairman, Rep. W.R. Poage. The
old man grew up on a ranch In
Throckmorton County. Tex .. and
he is more simpatico with big
ranchers than small s toop
laborers.
The e((ect can be measured in
stark human terms. Cons ider
these reports, for example, from
F1orida.
-Last November ten field
hands, three of them women.
were hospitalized with severe
nausea. skin rashes and dizziness
after going into a sprayed tomato
field. I
-EPA bas made only a token
effort to enforce EPA regula-
tions on the farm . Many farmers
disregard the regulations and
spray their crops with reckless
abandon. Yet EPA has anigned -A (arm worker at Del Ray.
only an average of one inspector F1a., entered a tom<ilo fi eld after
pet state to protect the public it had been sprayed with four dif
from poisoned fields. Even those fer e n t to x i c pesticides
farmers caugbt violating EPA's Thereafter, he d eveloped a s kin
pesticide regulations rjsk no rash resembling leprosy and has
more than a warning for a first beenunabletoreturntowork.
oCfense. -Jn 1973, a woman stOQp Poor living conditions and
health hazards have combined to
give the farm worker an average ·
life span of only 49 years -21
years less than the national
average.
-For that matter, the EPJ\ laborer left ·a field which had
doesn't have adequate facilities just been sprayed. She com-
to ~~tern:iine ~helher the .Plained of nausea and shortness
.. pest1~1des at certifies for com-of breath. Thirty minutes later.
merc1al use are actually sare._ she died
Instead, the agency relies almost ·
VET THE EPA, which is sup-
posed t-0 be the nation's environ-
mental watchdog, has failed to
protect workers from the menace
entirely on the dubious data pro-FOOT NOT E : An E p A
vided by the pesticide manufac-spokesman told us his agency
turers . lacked facilities to doublecheck
of sprayed fields Here are the ONE REASON for EPA 's adequately the pesticide in -
dustry's data. The EPA, he said,
may release the NFIC survey in
the future. The spokesnan con-
ceded that the pesticide hoUine
had been cancelled and that les
than one inspector per stale was
assigned lo check farm poison-
ings.
shocking facts · failure lo control pesticides is the
-The National Farmworkers power of the agribusiness lobby,
Iniorm a lion Clearing House which is more interested in pro-
<NFIC) has prepared a survey to tecling crops than workers.
determinethenumberofdeaths _ The lobby has an ex -
and illnesses from exposure to • traordinary influence over the
pesticides Yet EPA has not sent House Agriculture Committee,
The Votingest City
EARL WATERS In 1974, with a million out of
a national or state level to require
the manufacture r s o f a ll
bathroom and kitchen appliances
to provide safe three wire ground
ing cords. The additional cost per =·-appliance y,iould be minimal and
·-.._ yet could prevent many tragic ac-:~ ~!dents. s uc·h as that of Andy
If we say that the government is
wrong in levying any lax at all,
this is an extreme position and
easy to de(end. But when we ad
mil that government has the
right to tax. to support the fire
department, we bring the ques-
tion of tax into the field of reason.
If perhaps it is right to support
the fire department , then
perhaps it is right to support a
police department, etc.
Our Bicentennial as a nation
arrives like Santa bearing its uni-
que gifts, yet we are dispirited.
Flag-waving doesn't seem to
make up for tbe disappointments
m foreign policy. in the White
Hou se, in our daily personal
lives.
As a mere footnote to the many
and var ied suggestions for
celebrating the Bi centennial, al-
low me a simple thought
What must be by far the most
inspired of all forms conceived to
commemorate America's Bicen-
tennial has been spawned in the
City of Alameda.
This island community of
75,000, nestled on the eastshores
of San Francisco Bay, has exist-
ed in the minds of most as the
bedroom of "The City.··
( . J elections.
jobs and soaring in()ation
threatening the security of most ,
a total of 3.5 million Californians tum out the gr~atest _vote next failed to cast a ballot in the
November. While notices have_ general election. :. ... .: Hod ge~ ..... CllARLESW JOBBI1'S . . '~.... President, DECC
Professional Electrical Engineer
A11f•al lle•ear~lt
To the Editor
I was pleased to sec that you
have so many pet-lovers among
your readers. Judging from the
response lo the recent Rollins
corresponde nce (Jan 11 and 18
Mailbox ). Pleased. bul not sur·
prised , since your news paper has
always been exl remely fair and
object 1 ve when discussing the
animal welfare problems that
abound in our burgeoning
county
I hope. therefor e. that you will
(1nd the space lo inform your t e·
nden that on Feb. 3 the Board o(
Supervisors will be rev1cw1n1 the
revised animal control ordinance
on which an ad hoc committee
hU ~en working for the past
·year. Thi.! committee. compris
The Bible says that we must
not kill. We could lake this to
mean that we· should not kill any
animal if we isol~ted this verse of
scripture, but the same book
gave instruction for preparing
animals as food and sacrifice
WE NEED lo rekindle and
cultivate the profound ability to
utte r and feel a single word .
thanks. Gratitude is an attitude,
a stance toward the universe,
that somehow has fallen into dis·
use.
How many miracles daily pass
us by without even a nod of
thanksgiving on our part? We
open our eyes in the morning:
thanks! We move our limbs:
thanks ! We take a breath:
thanks! We are privileged lo ex-
WE CANNOT even take an ex-perience the poetry o( pro·
treme position on the killing of fessional athletes: thanks! We
human beings for the man who Jive within a political system that
accidently kills a person in an often works: thanks!
auto accident can't be compared Our lives are filled will} mo·
to the person who premeditates a ments that require n mullltude of
murder thanks. thanks, than.ks, tbanks.
Each murder case, on the Yet by our failure to take notice
other hand. must stand on Its own of the "th&nk you moments" we
merit. The man who kill!'! out of fixate oul"$elves upon the •·no
passion is judged to be less guilty thank you" intrusions.
than the one who kills out of Thus this footnoted suggest.i9n
, for our BlcentennJal ye-ar: A A·
r ... ,.---.. -,.----------------------, solve by each of us individually
... and all of us collectively to try
more often to say "thank you".
W~ might then be in a much
MaJlbler position to deal more
constructivl'ly with those "no
thank you" setbacks wllboul re·
sort to booing, dC$"Pa1rlnR. or
dropping oul.
RABBI BERNARD P. KING
It has in fact a large commuter
population. Other than possess-
ing a n aval
air station it
has had little
claim to
fame. It has
suHered
through most
of its ex
istence as a
conve nient
butt for the
jokes o(
traveling comedians since the
days of the Orpheum clr~wt
down through radio and
tl'levision. "Nobody ever goes to
Alameda" was always a
"roll' em in the aisles" gag.
But, with a 1inttle idea
Alameda has rlJen to nation.al
staturt as the All·American City.
Whet Alamedn'1 civic or·
ganlutlona, headed by the
Junior Chamber of Commerce,
League of Women Votera and the
P.arent Teachers A&sociation,
· han done la cbaltence eveey city
In tbe n•tlon to c<>mpete with it tor the dlJUnct ion of beln& the
"Votln ... t City. I ln t.be land.
THllOVGH thclr eCforts cities
t.hroulhout tho 50 atates are invit-
ed to putlclpat4 to 1 wbJcb can
been ~ent t~ onl~ those cities over It is as the Th:nes Herald ob-
2500 m ~pulallon the spons~rs served, a sad commentary on our
say any city can enter ~ wtn· society when less than half or the n~rs w~l be Judged according to voters bother to ballot on who
siz~~ will count wtll be the ~e!~ad them through perilous
h!gbest percentage oC re-Regardless of the measure of g1stra~ions pe~ voling age success which Alameda's effort population, the highest turnouts . . . at the polls and the greatest may achieve. the asl~ city ~e·
percentage increases. ~rves grand recognition for at.s
It seems a marvelous means of tdea.
bringing home the rich hetitage ,,.------------.
won (or the American people by ORANGE COAST
our forefathers when they revolt-
ed 200 years 8'10 because of tax-
ation without N!presentatioo.
As the Times Herald,
published i1' Vallejo, which ts
among the cities 8cooptin1 the
cball@ngc,obsttvtd,
"JT lS A way to get everyone
involved in one or the basic
principles of the American way
ol life. It will create a sense of
conununity purpose and pride
which lronscend1 social and
political dlff eren fOUIMi ln all
communities. It i9 the bealnnins
of a procen of education tn the
value of voting ln every election
which can reacb far beyond the
obsMvance of the BJcentrinlal
Year."
That aometbln• h .. a t>een
needed to 1pur clUum Into ex-
erdsinc their right. to vote hu
~M moat eYldent la recent
DAILY PILOT
Robert 'N. Weed, P1.1bl111lltr
Thqmo1 Keevll. Ed1tJJr
Barbara Kr~bich.
E:dltonal Pog~ Editor
The editorial page or th(' Daily
Pilot seek~ to Inform and
atlmuJate readers by Pl'C9tnlin&
on this page diverse commentary
on toplcii ()( lnttrut by ayndicat·
ed columnist.s and cartoonist.~. by
providing a forum tor ree<trn·
views an4 by present1n1 thla
newtpaper·s opinions and lde-.s
on c"rrcnt topics. The editorial
opjnlons ot tbe Dally Pilot •wetar only In \tie edllori •I column at the
lop ol the page. Opmlona •x· ~ by the columnlat.s •nd
cart.oonlsta aod letter writ are
their own and no endorsemmt cl
tht6r ~l b)' lhA? .t>aUy Pilot tbouJd be tnrerred.
Friday, Jan. 30, 1976
f '
...
1,
Friday. Janu1ry 30. 1978 DAIL y PILOT A 7 ,
Russians Now Have QUEENIE By Phil lnterfandi· WAC Reinstated
;;
Africa Ports, Fields
WASHINGTON (AP) ...:.. Russia bas
naval and air access to 16 ports and
airfields around the rim ot Africa, the
Pentagon says.
Most of these sites are strategically
located in relation to shipping laneS'
between the United States and the
Persian Gult oil lands. as well as
those running through the Mediterra-
nean.
NEWSANALYSI ·.
million in Soviet military aid, the Pen-
tagon map showed. This is less than
'lhe $200 mtuion figure used recently
by Secretary of State Henry A. Kiss-
inger. However, Kissinger could have
been counting in $70 million in
military aasutance which the Pen-
tagon credlts to Cuba.
Other countries listed as Soviet aid
reciph!nts are Algeria, Libya, Sudan,
Somalia, Guinea, Mall , Nigeria,
Uganda and Mozambique.
. Feminist Activities Discounted
WASHINGTON CAP) -The Army
bu relnstated Lt. Col. Grace L . King,
who was fired last August from her
post as commander of the only WAC
battalion in the Army Rese,rve after
her male superior said he11 feminist
activities interfered with her duties.
When reinstating the woman, Gen.
Jeffrey Smith, commander of the 1st
Army which has control over the WAC
reservist battalion, removed Mrs
King's unit from the control of Col
William Rumsey, who fired her.
SMITH ALSO SENT a letter to all
reserve commanders instructing
them to "properly utilize" women
soldiers.
Her dismissal touched off a con
troversy within the military between
those who w anl members of the
Women·s Army Corps to perform only
clerical. health and administrative
jobs, and those who want to expand
opportunities for women in the
service.
RUMSEY SAID THAT the dts
missal was proper and her reinstat
ment was due to a poor presentation
of bis case by his staff. Rumsey re
cently was named director of the D C
Recreation Department.
Mrs . King, off.duty, is a free-lance
artist and mother who li ve~ tn
Carlisle, Pa.
THESE l.OCATIONS IN nine coun-
tries. including Angola, appear on a
map distributed after Defense
Secretary Donald Rumsfeld dis-
played it to the House Armed Services
Committee. The map did not identifl
those Ports and airfields that the Uni -
ed,States and other NATO members
.have access to. •
The Pentagon map also showed
nearly2,900Sovietmilitaryadvisersin "You'rejustnot:evith it.today. However. I don 't mean
the ~l countries. Included were 170 in • to imply you'!'e without it... ''
Mrs. King, the only woman to apply
for and complete advanced armor
school, is the National Organization
for Women's chief military adviser.
Women reached at her battalion
headquarters in Alexandria, Va .. satd
they are ··overjoyed" by the decision In testimony a day earlier,
Rumsfeld expressed concern about
Soviet activities in Africa and sug-
gested that victory by Russian-
backed forces ln the Angola civil war
Angola and 200 still in Egypt, despite miiiiiiiiiiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijiii-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiij the Cairow-Moscow split. .1
. would encourage the Soviets to widen
their efforts on that continent.
THE P ENTAGON DID not claim
the Russians have actual military
bases at all 16 locations on its map. It
called them ''Sovi e t access
facilities," meaning Russian naval
vessels and aircraft can use them. 'fHE PENTAGON ALSO listed
nearly $3 billion in Soviet military and
economic aid the past five years to 11
African countries, four of them usual-
ly identified with the Arao bloc and
seven 6outh of the Sahara. About two-
thirds was in military assistance.
The biggest single recipient was
Egypt which, according to the Pen-
tagon. got nearly $1. 7 billion in arms
and economic help from the Soviet
Union in the 1971-1975 period. Much of
that was provided during and soon
after Egypt's 1973 war with Israel.
Unlike U.S. practice, the Russians
rarely establish formal Soviet bases
in other countries. Instead. according
to U.S. intelligence analysts. the pre-
fer to gain landing and port rights
without bruising local nationalist
sensitivities.
Since then, Soviet arms shipments
lo Egypt have been cut to a trickle
because of policy diCCerences between
Cairo and Moscow.
SOMALIA APPEARS to be an ex-
ception to this Soviet practice, U.S.
experts say. There, the Russians are
said to have built complexes to sup-
port their naval units in the sensitive
Indian Ocean-Persian Gulf region.
But they have refrained from running
up the Russian flag.
The Pentagon claims the Russians
have access to three ports and
airfields in Somalia. ANGOLA HAS RECEIVED $108
Complaint
Of Nudity
Contested
OCEANSIDE CAP> -
Carol Suzanne Kurtz was
arrested on a citizen's
complaint that she was
sunbathing in the nude
on Leucadia Beach.
The charge is based on
San Diego County's an-
ti -nudity ordinance which
Miss Kurtz says she will
test. It's unlawful, she
contends, because or
state law and the U.S.
Constitution.
The 24 -year-old Del
Mar woman, if convict·
ed. might be sentenced
to six months in jail and
fined $500. The ordinance
applies only lo persons
aged 10 or over and those
not engaging in live
theatrical performances
or acts not specifically
outlawed.
In a court appearance
Dec . 5. Miss Kurtz
pleaded innocent. A pre-
trial hearing is set Feb.
17 before Mun\cipal
Court Judge Charles F.
Stevens in Oceanside.
Gags-a-plenty
Danny Thomas
Funny Doctor
NEW YORK (UPI) -"The Practice" presents
Danny Thomas as New York's answer lo Marc us
Welby -with gag writers.
NBC's new Friday night comedy, to bow in
tonight at 8: 30 on Channel 4, contains few surprises
but plenty or laughs.
DANNY PLA YSDR. JULESBEDFORD,gray and
grizzled, gruff and growling to hide his soft heart.
He insists on continuing his practice on New York's
West Side, which is a long way, economically. Crom
Park Avenue, where bis [ J son practices higher T\' REV I E W priced medicine. . Danny's nurse. with
whom he is close but not
that close, is played by
Dena Dietrich -you may recognize her as Mother
Nature in the margarine commercial in which she
purrs. ''It's not nice to fool Mother Nature'' and
zaps the world. She plays with verve and warmth
and has a quick way with a funny line.
DAVID SPIELBERG PLAYS THE SON, strug-
gling for bis father's approval, with Shelley
Fabares as the son's wife, and Didi Conn as Dan-
ny 's nitwit receptionist.
The supporting cast is good, but the show is
Danny Thomas combining gag lines with schmaltz.
When his son demands lo know why he wasn't
consulted about a patient, Danny says in exaspera-
tion, "David, the man is sick.''. Wheo his son com-
plains that money is tight, Danny sug~ests. "Wh>
don't you run a special on asthma?"
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COSTA MESA
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EL TORO -I Davis-Brown
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HUNTINGTON BEACH
f ABC Color
19046 lrookhurst
• r ces optional with part c patlng A dealers.
./ Direct Discount Dealers
LAGUNA BEACH
./ Hillen's
Coast TV
21 3 3 La9una Canyon Rd.
SAN CLEMENTE
./ Dewey's -TV
218 Det'Mcr
OAJLYPILOT
LM.Boyd
Miami Beach
No Cemetery
The word "besokun" in Japanese means
.. to hide in the navel." Hesokuri is what the
Japanese girls call that same sort of cash re-
ferred to by American women as pin money.
Was once the custom of those Oriental ladies
to conceal s uch funds in the front of their waist
sashes, that's why.
Client asks the populatfon of Miami
Beach. About 85,000 year-round with maybe a
million in the winter. It's widely known that
Miami Beach attracts numerous retired
citi%ens. But please note, they go there to play,
not to die. Miami Beachhasnocemetery.
SOLAR HEATING
Q. "How many states will give you a tax
writeoff if you put m a home solar heating
system?"
WASHING TON (AP)
-The Postal Service
says it has encountered
little difficulty ln getting
Americans to pay the ex·
• tra three cents in postage
required on letters since
Dec. 31.
After the increase
from 10 cents to 13 cents
•~,..._ for a first-class letter, a Beads C'aucus recent three-day test at
The Congressional 57 major post offices
Black Caucus has un-showed few people are
animously chosen failing to pay the higher rates, a spokesman said.
A. Eight. Montana, Maryland, North
Dakota, New Hampshire. Colorado, South
Dakota. Illinois and OregorL
Rep. Yvonne B. Burke The test covered
(0-Calif) to head the 639,799 pieces of mail, of
caucus during the which only two-tenths of
second session of the 1 percent got through
94th Congress. w i t h i n s u ff i c i e n t
----------postage, he said.
Q. "What•s comic Woody Allen's real
name?"
A. He was born Allen
Stewart Konigsberg. Just
40 years ago. His dad en·
graved jewelry in
Brooklyn.
Q. "With what kind of
animal is the male known
as a boomer and the
female a flier?"
A. They're
synonymous with buck and
doe for kangaroos.
A musician has to be capable of blowing
breath at hurricane velocity to play the flute,
realize that?
SQUIRRELS
Why squirrels like the taste of lead·
covered cable I don't know. But they do. A lot
of them get electrocuted when they gnaw
through same. A lot or telephones are knocked
out, too, because of that.
A.ddreu maiL to L.M. &yd, "P.O. Box 1560,
Co8ta Mesa 92626.
PEHMY
'Long-hair'
United Press
International
In 1949. the hair or
Swami Pandarasan ·
nadhi of India was re·
ported to be 26 fe et long
-the longest human
hair on record.
There is always an in·
crease in underpaid mail
after every rate in·
crease, the spokesman
said. Postal officials ex-
pected more underpaid
mail than usual after the
latest increase because
the higher rates took ef-
fect with only two days
!lOtice.
OPEN DAILY EXCEPT TUESDAY
Dining Rooms I l • l O•Lounge 11 ·2
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Dresses, 1 or 2.piece styles.
Prints or soltds. Acetete/ny·
Ion; polyester end blends. •3, •5, •7
FASHION CLEARANCE
Choice of essorted styles and
fabrics in misses' sizes. Some
half sizes available. Ore11 Dept.
WOMEN~LEATHERJACKETS ORIG. $75
Genuine leather 1ackets are
fully-ltned. Misses· s1z1n.
Coat Oepenment
JUNIOR MAXI COATS
t /2 off 111 maxi coanl Available
1n 1unior s1 zes.
Coat Department
39.98
ORIG. $40 & $42
19.98
WOMEN'S ROBE CLEARANCE ORIG. $9
Short, quilt robe1 with button. 1 /3 ff zip or gripper fronts. Brkn. sizes, o
styles. Loungewear Dept.
qauNGEWEAR CLEARANCE 0R1G. s1 s. s12
C~1ce of hostess longs, floats, 1 I 3 ff caftans and assorted duster o
styles. Broken s1z11. .
INFANTS' WEAR CLEARANCE ORIG.1446
1 /3 off this large ISKHtmtnt of 2 58 3 98
ctreues, diaper sets, crteptra and • -•
crawlers. Eesy-cart, no-iron fabrici.
TODDLERS' SCREEN PRINT TEES ORIG.2.29
1.48 Short Jleevt 100% cotton tees
whh COIOfful .. PNnuts.. charae-
ttr print fronts. Sizes 2-4.
TODDLER GIRL PILE COATS ORIO. S16
Girls' polyesttr/ecrylic pile 1
coat . Ooublt brtasttd, quilt·
lined. Mechlnt wash. 2.J-4. . /2 .off
TODDLER ROBES
U.y-care robes of fl1me-f9Si1wnt
cottone and ecryllcs. Solids tnd
ptttern1. Boys', glrl1' 111n 2-~.
TODDLER BOY SLEEPWEAR
ORIO.S8aS7
4.98
ORIO.M-t&
Fl1me-r1111tent slffp-r in t0llck2 98 3 98
and pettarn1. Medlin• washable, • • •
polyater tnd 8Clyllc blanch. 2·~.
GIRLS' NYLON JACKETS ORIG. $13 & S15
Zip-front styles with hid· 6 48 & 7 48
den hood. 100% polyester • •
fill . Broken sizes and colors:
GIRLS' P.V.C. SHIRT-JACS ORIG. $13 & $18
Snap front stvl1ng with
100% nylon 1tn1ng; w1pei·
clean. Broken sizes.
8.58 & 10.48
GIRLS' CARDIGANS
Clearance! Choose from 100%
acrylic, bulky cardigans.
Broken sizes and colors.
GIRLS' SL"EEPWEAR
ORIG. $5
2.98·
ORIG.$4-$8
Sell!CtlOn includn blushed ny·
Ions an~ flannels. Prints or
solids. Broken sizes.
2.98-3.98 .
BOYS' SWEATER CLEARANCE ORIG. 7.99
Assorted pullovers in solids. prints.
Most ere machine -shable. 8-18.
Not all sizes 1n all styles.
MEN'S CASUAL SHIRTS
Cho<>te from long sleeve west·
ern and printed leisure shiru
for casual wear. Broken sizes.
MEN'S JEAN CLEARANCE
Includes cotton, polyester/cotton,
solids. Western style with 41>0ckets.
flare legs. Some irregulars included.
MEN'S LEISURE SETS
Entire stock pre-washed, brushed
denim patchwork sets. Jacket,
S·M·L, 1ean.wa1sts. 30·36.
MEN'S SWEATERS
Clearance! Includes assorted lab·
rics and styles. Solid colors, pat·
terned fronts. Br kn. SIZI!$, colop.
MEN'S VINYL JACKETS
2·pocket C.P.O. style with snap
front and cuffs. Wipe-clean poly·
vinyl. Broken sizes and colors.
3.98:·
ORIG. 9.99-12.99
6.98
4.99
ORIG. 27.98
19.98
ORIG. 11.99-16.99
6.98
ORIG. 15.99
9.98:
NEEDLEPOINT KITS ORIG.$2 '
Assorted kits; 8xl O", full color 1 I 2 ff design on 10,.12" canvas; wllh o
all 11tms needed for compleuon.
WOVEN BEDSPREADS
Choose from broken assortment
and color selectton. All
v.mhablt.
OUIL TED BEDSPREADS
ORI0.4.97
2.98
Wide assortment of petterns and colors. Some washable.
Twi" end full, orig. 9 .97 . . • • 6.88
Que.n Ind k'"ll• Orig. 14.97 , • • • • • , , 9.~
AREA RUGS IN ASSORTED COLORS
21x34", orig. 4.99 • 3.68
26•45", orig. 6.99 • IS.88
34x64", orig. 12.99 9.88
ORANGE PEEL SKATEBOARD ORIG. 24.99
Offtr1 24'' length, wide urethane
wheels, doublt•ction ld)ualablt
trucks and fiberglass board. 14.98
3 ways to chargel .. ·'-··-!•l ~~°"""' ._... ::-.::-..-, ............ .
lhop Friday, 9:30-9:30 ... SaturdlV 9:»8
HUNTINGTON BEACH
1111 Adami Avenue-983·9731
FULLERTON
Crouroed• Centet, 3204 E••t Yorba Unde-998-8800 . .
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Friday. January 30. 1976 DA.IL Y PILOT A9
Decorator to Face Paranaedif! Test
/ Deaths
1
EueuJhere
" Grand Theft Charge c ·ategories Told
NEW YORK CAP> -Ray Nance, 62, a ByA&TlltJRR. VINSEL venaWe star of Duke El· oe-.o.i1y ,...,.s .... ·Ungton's Jazi band for 23 A hearing bas been set
years died Wednesday for a Buena Park de. Nanc~ played trumpet: corator charged wlth
comet and violin. skimming about. $10,000 __ ln drapery deposits from
COLUMBUS, Ohio cllents in Huntington
(AP) -Johnny Weber,
in prison since 1926 for ·
murdering his daughter,
died Thursday at the age
of 100. He was Ohio's
most celebrated convict
and hia life sentence was
commuted in 1972, but he
had no known relatives
and stayed at the Correc·
tional Medical Center for
health reasons.
Japanese
Class Set
The Japan Cultural As·
soclation or Orange
County plans a new
course in conversational
J apanese starting Feb.
12.
The class for begin·
ners will meet every
Thursday from 7:30 p.m.
to 9 :30 p.m . until April 8
at association head-
quarters, 1615 N. Bush
St., Santa Ana.
Beach who police say
never saw ao much as a
curtain rod after their
money was Pocketed.
Ray Bennett, of Buena
Park, operator of In-
teriors by Ray, must ap-
pear Feb. 20 ln West
Orange County Judicial
District Court for a dis·
position hearing.
He was taken into
custody again Jan. 20 at
the court when he ap·
peared for arraignment
on more than 20 pre\'ious
uµsdemeanor counts in·
volving alleged business
misrepresentation.
Huntington Beach
fraud detail Detective
Randy Toburen said ad-
ditional complaints by
drapery cus tomers
whose alleged losses sur-
passed $200 each led him
to file an amen<le<1 com·
plaint.
The new one includes
10 felony counts of grand
theft, he said.
He alleges Bennett,
who is listed in the
telephone directory. but
shows no business ad·
dress, preyed on persons
moving into new west
county developments
and who would need
draperies.
The defendant alleged·
ly would make a sales
pitch to the new tenants,
persuade them to sign
for his services and
make a deposit, but after
that neither drapes nor
refund were forthcom·
ing.
Bennett is free on his
own recognizance pend·
ing the Feb. 20 hearing at
which time the court will
decide what steps to take
next in prosecuting him.
By WILLIAM SCHREIBER ot .. o.itr ,,. ... SIMf
ORANGE COUNTY Orange County government's
·Emergency Medical Care Committee
has propos ed creation of four
categories or people who would be
eligible to take a special challenge ex -
am to become paramedics. Parker
To Siteak
Registered nurses, doctors' assis·
tant.s, former ·military medics and
graduates of other California
pdramedic programs would be al-
"From Hede to Maturi· lowed to take the test and be certified
ty," will be psychologist as paramedics without the formal
William R. Parker's training process.
topic . Feb. 14 when he speaks at a dinner meet· A firth category. titled "excep·
ing of the Retired Of. lions", would also be designated for
ricers Association of qualified people who don't fall in the
Orange County. other four classes.
Reservations for the The eligibility list and other parts of
meetine in the El Toro the challenge exam procedure will M~ne Corps Air Station come before the county Board of
Officers Club are re· Supervisors Tuesday for approval. quired. Call Donald E.
Bailey, 538-6509, for de· Candidates in the challenge pro·
tails. cess. which would include a max·
lmum or 240 hours of fi eld evaluation
by certifi ed paramedics. would pay
$50 under the comm1ttee's recommen·
dations.
The committee set the fee to dis·
courage people not really interested
in becoming paramedics from taking
the test and field evaluation.
The examination itself would con
sist of both written and practical tests
and an oral evaluation.
The four categories of eligible can-
didates have been dearly defined by
thecomm1ttee.
The registered nurses must be
licensed in California, doctors' assis-
tants must be approved by the
California Board of Medical Quality
Assurance and ex·med.Jcs must be re·
gistered with the California State
Department of Health.
Paramedics who worked in other
counties would have to show their
certification to be admitted to the
challenge process.
SAN FRANCISCO
(AP) -Patricia Tobin
Cooper, 64. philan-
thropist and grand·
da u ghter of M .H.
De Young, cofounder of
the San Francisco
Chronicle, died Wednes· day after a long battler---------------------------------------------------------------------
against cancer.
SARATOGA (UPI>
Private services will be
held for Martin Ray, 71,
former owner of Paul
Masson vineyards. Ray,
who died Mon day at
Stanford Hospital,
owned the winery from
1936 to 1943, then built
new vineyards and pro-
duced wine under bis
own label.
CASTINE, Maine
(UPI> -Marjorie
Barstow Greenble, 84,
author, playwright and
outspoken supPorler of
women's rights, died
Wednesday in a nursing
home. Her books in·
eluded the 1930s best
seller "The American
Saga." She co-authored
many plays with her
husband, including "The
General Was a Lady"
and ••Devil Take the
Dream Girl."
SMITH VALLEY,
Nev. <UPI) -Frederick
Meagher, 63, syndicate
artist and illus trator,
died Monday at his
home. Meagher created
the character, "Straight
Arrow," and was the
author of a comic strip
about Buffalo Bill. . .
llAWUUOH
SUSAN LOUISE RAWLAIGH PasMd
ewey Jllf'IUAfY 2', 1'76. Relidlnt of ... woort 8HC:h, C.llfOfl'lt . SuNIWdby
twr ""1btlld, Tedd Rtwltlllh end two
dauOflteri IMllSSt Wlltrton end Lindt Wtltrton. Services wl 11 l>e held 81
Ptcllk View Ch•pel, S.turdey, 3:00
PM. a.1u.a.roeron, Coron• dtl ""'-'·
cllrKtlln.
RO• CHARLES l . ROE Resident of Hunt·
!nQton &etcll, C•ltlornl•. PHsecl •w•y ~uery 29, 1916. Survlwd by Ills wife
RllH; -cs.uollter, P•trkl• Br.ty Of
HYflllnvton e .. cll; 2 t rtndclllldnlfl; 2
tr.•t-9rtndchlldren; 1 sister, Mo.
~rles R. Ntwtonot Tustin, C.llfomlt. StrYICtl Wiii be lleld •t
11:00 AM, S.turd•Y, •I Ptclfk View Clltpel. Interment, Ptclflc View
Mtmorltl Ptrk, Newport lkttll.
Ptclflc Vltw Mortutry, dlrteton.
8110WN
FORREST G. BROWN Resident of
Stn Clem.nit, C•llfornl•. Ptued
-y. J•nutry 2', "76. S..nllwel by
tw0 dtu9hten. Mtureen 8ro-Of
Glplstrano Be•cll •nd Gltnd• Hllbur9 °' Stn ClerNnte; '"'"sisters, Cl~ Ruyle of SHiii•. WHlllnvton. Otlw
T'llomH of Se•ttle, Wnlllft91on, MWI 8urdtll Frtnctsch l of Eurekt,
Cellfornlt; s trtndsons; l 9f'
cs.uglrten. StrvkH wlll be Nld l :
PM MondtY •t Peclflc View c:Npel. Of.
.f1cl9'1ng Is tflt ,_.v, 8ruct A. Kurrie.
Interment, Ptclflc View MttllOfl•I
Ptr11, Newport Beech. P•cHk Vlt
Mortvllry, directors.
JUENGST
CHARLES E. JUENGST. of 8eltio.
tsltnd, ..-n•d •••Y Jan. 11. ""· .W ls wrvlwd by Ills wife Mary Juengst,
-. Randolph C. ol S.n Fr•nclsco, CA.
tnd Oouv•ts E. ol 1rvlne.Ontdt11Qht1W,
~rltne M. Frtnke ol Costa Mtw, C..
Motlltr, Elslt Juen9st ol Lo
An911ts; sisters, G4rtrud• Higbie of
LM Aftttles. Cerl" P•I• Ot Pl:>moN,
Ct. Sarvlce will be lltld Mond•Y.
FebNtry 2, 1•76 •t 1 :00 PM, at P•<lll
v1-Owtptl. Ptelflc Vltw Mof'luM
direc:ton.
BAL TZrBERGERON
FUNERAL HOME
Corona del Mar 673-9450
Costa Mesa 646-2424
BELL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
110 Broadway
Costa Mesa
642·9150
McCORMICK
MORTUARY
Laguna Beach
494--9415
S.n Juan C8pistrano
495-1776
PACIFIC VIEW
MEMORIAL PARK
Cem9tery Mortuary
Chapel
3500 PeclfJc View Drive
Newport Beech.
C1hloml1
&M-2700
,...,AMILY
COLONIAL flUN!ftAL
HOMS
7801 Bolta Av..
w.etmlnater
8934625
...,,.., MOlllT\IA"Y
827 Main St.
Hunttngton Be8Ch
~539
Ri'IH JANUARY 31ST ...
n
ONE FANTASTIC DAY TO SHOP AND SAVE! BUT. HURRY, S
Clean up ~n washday helpers.
"START TO SEW" KIT AND TRAY
Eleven most-needed sewin~
aids for the student or begin-
ning seamstress. Needles,
scissors, more, handy tray.
FASHION FARRICS
SAVE39%
54~
REG. 7.50
12x12'' PLAIN MIRROR TILE
Enhance and enlarge a set· 48 C ting with a clear tile. Easy to
lnstallyourself.12percarton . EACll
12.96 mirror 11cene11 ••..• 8.~ REG. 79c TILE
RVILDINC MATERIALS ->
SAVE$2
WARDS 17-VENT STEAM/DRY IRON
Work-saving iron re-·
moves deep wrinkles.
Fingertip fa bric dia l,
wide funnel for water.
19.99 "burst of steam" iron .•.•..•...•..... 15.99
SAVE $4
EASY-TO.HANDLE IRONING TABLE
10~?. .... Solid-steel construe·
tion. Acijustsso you can sit or stand. Vented top
Jets stearn out. Save!
23.99 delu:re ironing table •••••..••••••••• 16.99
4.49 ironing pad and cover set ••••.•••••••• 3.99
SAVE 20%
WARDS 10-LB. BOX DETERGENT
399 Save now on a JO.lb.
box of Wards regular or
EACH non-polluting no.phos-
REG. 4.99 phate detergent.
2.99 I h·bushel laundry basket .•.•.....•••• 1.99
MEN 'S DRESS MONK STRAP SHOE
Rich leather dress shoe! Ad·
jui,;table buckle. elastic gore.
Man·made role, rubber heel.
D7~-ll. 12. Good looking.
SPECIAL
14ss
REG.$20
AM/FM HEADPHONE RADIO
Lets you listen without dis· 29ss
tractions. Adjustable and
comfortable. Great value for
sports fans. Hurry in today!
RADIO~. STEREOS
1/3 OFF
. ' .
• 1 / ,, .
Elegant lounging in our caftan or f I oat.
Experience the gracious luxury of lounging in
a sumptuously full, floor length caftan or noal
Bright, luscious prints are lightweight acetate/
nylon blend. Rich solids are 100' < nylon bouclc.
so nice next to your skin. Washable. S-M-L
9~~
Apron. reg. 6.29 ... 5.29
Oven mitt, rejl. 1.89, 1.59
Potholder, rt'g. 1.09, 99c
KITCHEN COTTON TERRY TOWEL
NPture motir on cotton kit· }49 chen towel and matching
helpers. Machine wash 'n'
dry. In popular neutral tones. REG. 1.79
llMllllSt, ANO 1.IN•:N
Model 1~0
RUGGED 2-HP EDGER/TRIMMER
Briggs & Stratton engine.}0988 SwitcheseaAily from edger to
trimmer. Sliding front hall·
bearing wheel for curb riding. REG. 129.99
GARDt.:N SHOI'
BOYS' STRETCH CREW SOCKS
fort.fit. acryl1c/strt•tch nvlun C Popular crew SOC'kS arc rom· 44
Choose from a great array of PAIR
colors ht•'ll low S11.es S.L REG. 59c
HllY._ I l H" t11'1 :~
USE CHARG-ALL FOR FAST. CONVENIENT SHOPPING-NO DOWN PAYMENT REQUIRED
What's new? See us.
• CANOOA PARt< toJ»na• plu.a. 883 1000
• COSTA Mf:.8A brlatol at . ti .. n d1t"a11 fwy , 714 f14!l 9400
•COVINA ti.rnnca al un btmardll\O fwy, !ltitl i411
• £AGLP. ROCK col~ el hmlldway. :l6'4 ~:l61
• f lJLt.F.R'l'ON harbor et oran~thorpt. 'TJ4.819 2t.OO
• llUNTINC;TON OEACH t<l•npt et boch. 714 8q2 ~ll
• 1.AKRWOOO ltkc,..~ blvd et <'llndlC'wnod, 6.'J!I 7600
• t.YNWUOD impu••I hlvd .. At It.Ille. 6J7 6000
•MONTCLAIR montcla1t pleu. 714-67130$4
•NORWALK 1mJWrt•I "' norw1lk blvd . t!6fl.O'JlJ
•PANORAMA CITY tob111• at ro~. l\94·R:lll
•RO EMttAO 3600 mM>mffd blvd . 673-:1110
•SAN HERNAROTNO ~ntl'lll r11\' ml\ll i14 AA4 !l:?:lt
•SANTA AN f\ l\rt•llll el *'"1•nt.M1111h, i U S4 ~ b/111
• TORRANCF. dt'I amo (1•h1on "'luil,.,., 'I.I b'l7l
• WEST U>S ANGELES It c1rM1t• at 18th •t , R.it>-i1>22
SHOP MONDAY THROUGH SATURDAY 9:30 AM TO 9:30 PM ••. SUNDAY 10:00 AM TO 6:00 PM ••. JUST SAY "CHARGE IT!'•
•
•
I
Fflday.January 30, 18715
oosaQaits Mem9ry
Air Force Loses T•aining
Moon Pioneer
• F'rom Witt Sto:nic:es
Astronaut Stu•.rt A. Roosa} a member or the
Apollo 14 moon mlssioo crew, will retire from the
Air Force .and leave the space agency on Sunday,
olficials said ..
Roosa, an Air Foree colonel with 22 years in the
~rvice, did not announce his plans for the future.
Roosa, 42 , was commatnd module pilot on
Apollo 14 in 1971. I-le remained in lunar orbit while
erewmates Alan 8 . Shepard Jr. and Edgar D.
Mitchell made the third manned landing on the
moon. l!e later served as backup command module
pilot for Apollo 16 and 11 . •
Actor Paul Newman announced the creation of
;i citizens' action lobby to counter petroleum in -
dustry influence on U.S. energy poliC'y decisions
and to support legislation to break up giant oil com-
panies into small competing
firms.
Newman, a founder or the
Energy Action Committee Lob-
by Group, said big oil and gas
firms are ''de\·oid of
patriotism" and impossible to
control. He said some com-
panies may be involved in a
natural gas scandal dwarfing
Watergate.
NEWM4N Sen . Philip llart, (0·1\1ich.l ,
said in a staten1ent Issued by tne 1ooby group thal
breaking up lht• oi l ('01npanies will be a priority ef-
fort ror Congress ond ror ~nergy action this year. • President F'ord. y,•hosc y,•ife has attended func -
.t1ons reealling her days as a Martha Graham
"daneer. has been ask~d to join in a tribute to the
time he was a male fashion model.
Carole Conovt'r said she in\·ited the President
and Mrs. t,ord to a charity benefit gathering of
former Co nO\'Cr eovergirls Feb. 1<1 in a tribute to
her late father. llarry Conover.
"Harry and J erry modeled together for John
Robert Powers," she said.
r~ord '~ modeling career y,'as brief, and strictly
part-time
• Rhod e Is land G O\'. Philip \\'. r\oel an-.
nounced he y,·ould seek the U.S. Senate seal of relir-
ing Sen. John 0. Pastore, the
man v.·ho. Noel says, started him
out in politics.
Noel. 44. chairman of the
Democratic Governors· Con-
ference and head of the
1'emocratic Platform Commit-
tee for the 1976 National Con\'Cn·
lion, began his political career
·as an intern in Pastore·s offit'e
Noel said he "'aS not ruling
out consideration of a possible
\'ice presidential offer
•
HO(t,.
The Geor~1a Board of Pardons and Parole de-
nied parole for Gary Steven Krist, 29, convicted in
the 1968 k1dnaping of F1oridu land heiress Barbara
Jant> Mackle.
Kris t was sentenced to life imprisonment 1n
1969 ror the bizarre kidnaping tn whieh Miss &lack le
was buried in a coffin -hkc box for nearly four days
in a pine forest near 1\Uanta.
Also convicted in the kidnaping was Ruth
Eisemann-St'hier, 32. "'ho v.•as released from prison
and deported to her native Honduras in 1972 . •
Rep. Augustus F. llawkirls, (D·CaHf.), said he
nominated President Lw"1; Echever'ria Alvarez of
Mexico for the 1976 Nobel Peace prize
l·lawkins, c hairman of· a I-louse equal op-
portunities s ubcon1mit-
_.tee, sai d he rec.·om -
'mended Eeh eve rria ( )
because of the Mexican l'E011 1.,E
president 's '"record of -· --------~·
fighting for the eeonomic
and human rights of the world 's poor and un-
derprivileged."
Hawkins is a member of the congressional
black eaueus. •
Country music v.•ritcr and singer David Allan
Coe has been fined $250 in 1-louston after pleading no
contest to a misdemeanor charge of assaulting a
member of his audience. '
Coe, 36. of Dallas. was accused of assaulting a
patron or a club where he was performing Nov. 29.
Police alleged that Coe became antagonized by
the audience and jumped from the stage and at-
tacked Larry Monk, 29, of 1-louston. Monk has filed a
St million lawsuit against Coe and alleges his right
a:rist was perm anenlly injured in the incident. •
Sweden's 29-year-o\d bachelor King Carl XVI
Gustav will make a 26-day unofricial visit to the
United States in April, the
Swedish embassy announced.
He will meet President Ford
at the White House on April 5.
The king is visiting the Unit·
ed States at the invitation of
numerous Swedish-American
organizations and plans to stop
in 12 states. • The Univers ity of' Tennessee
announced receipt or $.16,000 1C1HGC4111..
from Holly wood director Clarence Brown to help
support UT's Clarence Brown Thf:ater Company
this year.
The company, headed by British actor Anthony
Quayle, has a four-week engagement or "Rip Van
Winkle" at th(" John F . Kennedy Center for the .
Performing Arts in Washington, D.C.
Brown, a 1910 UT alumnus and longtime
Hollywood motion picture director. has been a un-
i-O-ersity benefactor for many years. • Bambi Udall. the 21 -year-old daughter of
Democratic representative and presidential
upirant Morris Udall, doesn't want to live in the
White House. Tltf Vassar College SeJlior. who took a year off
to campaign for her father. said "Nobody relis hes
living in a fish bowl. I really do enjoy my privacy.·• • E"ln Stanley or Fresno bu to rest every so
_... •• _n during hi,s: twice-weekly evenings of whirling arowtd the dance noor. lle's 95 yean okl..
"I generally dance one or two dances and then J
nit a while." Stanley 1aid. ''lt hurts n'ly kneu after fi~h)ll:. If the noor ts slick, 1 can get around pretty
•
U lt'1sticky., J get awfW Ured f.Qt.''
Hit p•rtner1 at lhe Gay 90I Club on Wed·
.,ys and at the Friendship Club on Saturdays
Stante..y ts a good da.Mer, spry fOf' b.is aa:e. ••• ,. Tbe 5tb District Court of Appea.1 refused to
atrfke down a 110,000 awacd Lo f"resoo State
ProfePOr Dr. lee Da•kl ToMy '°" emoUonal d~,..
trftl be suffered followtn1 a 1970 campu1 dis·
tutbanc•.
•
Class Due
You've been wanting
lo do something about
that m emor31 o( yours
but you keep forgetting,
right?
Well, jot this down
before you forget it.
Arthur Bornstein, an
authority on memory
training methods, will
l'onduct a four -part
memory training lecture
series al Orange Coast
College beginning Feb. 7.
The series will meet on
successive Saturdays
from 9 a .m . to noon in
OCC's Fine Arts Hall 119.
Tickets for the series
are pri<'ed at $35 and are
-available in the Orange
Coast Evening College
Office-
PUBLIC N011CE
P'ICTITIOUS•us.tN .. SS
N4MIE ST4TE.M •NT nw lollo•lr>O IW•M>f'I• ••• aol"ll-•· ...,.,.,.,
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Ns.,,,ort 114..:fl, C4'2WJ
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i'ffWJl(Wl 114..:fl, CA'2W
Tfll• b .. ,l n••• I• (Ond11tll<I b'f •
°'""'II P¥1Ae•U\lp
OlllOE1""'•·Sr.
Tiii• •l1t1,....n1 w•• !lied ..,.," tr. Co""'' Cl••k ot Or•nQ1 c....,,.,., on J..,..,.., n. 1•1t •
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Pvl>!!Sllld Or•n9' Co•ll 0.11, Piiot J.,.. ,,, 1], JO and Feb. I, ltll
PUBUC ~OTICE
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Hlllot,.,_, C-•I Mer, c..IM,IMIS
l1Uclo11I O•vld 1!11111, •It
Hiiiei,._, ClofeMMJ Mllr, Callf. tM.1$
ll:Yln Sfl1rwooo. Oo11rl1y, •t• Vhlo Gr11'111,•N1w"r1 ilffcfl. ~lt.nMO
Tlllt ""'9iflft1 l1 c..-...CIH itYl ll.,..1·
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"' ... ,. , "-dtc. ...... i• .. s..,,~ 546-0724
1'410 POLITICAL ADVERTISEME:<n'
* * * RE-
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• * •
DOM RACITI
DOM
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COSTA MESA CITY COUNCIL
AUCTION
FRIDAY. SAT\JRDAY. SUNDAY •I 8 P.M.
Bargains on Fine Crystal. S terlin g Silver, Porcelains, Oriental
Objects d'Art. Paintings. J e welry. 'Antiques, Bronzes.
Furniture, Select Indian Turquoi.,e ...
SJ ,000.000 INVENTORY
From £states, Courts. 0111-of.Pa-..'n, 8a11kri1p1tit• . .-
VISITORS I
Come and •ee
what fun an
A!JCTJON
can bf!f
FREE ADMISSION!
... across the streerfrom
seven of the Southland's
mosr elegant waterfront
1 restaurants!
' HOURS
Inspection & Private Sale$
10·5 DAfLY t.2-5 SATURDAY 2·5 SUNDAY
Ck>Md Wednesd11y &. Tl1u~ay
AUCTIONS HELD EVERY
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USE YOUR BANKAMERICARO.
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W~ 81/V FOii CA•H 011 9ELL ON CO#Wr9810N
WHOU UJ'ATl!ll 011 SINOU-
ART L£f!li'YE AIKTIUNEE/t.
'"
·~
•
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Pl It
Cl w
K
F1
Cl
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p. s.
d1
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in
VI
b<
in
. 7Weaeport BarfJor Entries . .
M •
Yachts Vie· in Florida
Two Newport Harbor yachts
will be amone the neet ot glamor
~ketl maklnl tbe:lr debut in
the Southern Ocean Racine
Circuit <SORC> which aets under
way Saturday wlt.b the Anclote
Key race out ol St. Petersburg,
F1a.
The two local entries are Dave
Cuckler's 48-foot twin-bilgeboard
sloop H~wkeye. and Bill Pax-
ooe'a 41-foot Sau.dade, both Oylng
~ colors of Newport Harbor Yacht Club.
Hawkeye. a Bruce King de-aten, was Class A winner of last
year's Paclfic Ocean Racing
Conference. a series of races held
off the Southern California coast,
and the St. Francis Perpetual in
St. Francis Yacht Club's big boat
series last September.
Boat Show Opening
Today at LA Center
The 20th annual Southern
California Boat Show opened its
doors at the Los Angeles Conve n-
tion Center at 2 p.m . today and is
scbedu.led for a 10-day run.
all sizes, shapes and price tags.
There are over 170 booth ex·
hi bits.
Show hours are from 2 to 10
p.m. weekdays; 12 to 10:30 p.m.
· Saturdays, and 12 to 7 p.m. Sun-days.
The sponsoring Southern
California Marine Association is
emphasizing trailerable boats,
both powet" and sail, in response
to public demand.
'
More than 240,000 square feel
ol the Convention Center is devot-
ed exclusively to boats and boat-
ing accessories. All the latest de·
velopments in the industry will
be on display for the first time,
including more than 600 boats of
But there ar e also so-called
luxury craft on display from such
big boat builders as Uni.flite.
Pacemaker, Bertram,
Tolleycraft, Viking, J e rsey.
Carver. Land 'N Sea, Albin,
Calkins and Harstad.
Element
resistive cedar.
2"x3"x8"
RAILS
&1·
31/• "x31/• "x7'
POSTS
97•
22"
DELUXE •.••• 99oo
20" BESt.11900
CUT ALONG
DOTTED UNE AND
THROW VERY HARD
• Saudade. a German-built yacht
was the winner of tbe City of San
Francisco Trophy last Sep-
tember. and the overall winber of
Los Angeles Yacht Club's
Whitney Serles.
Another Southern California
skipper and crew will be Dennis
Conner of San Diego, with a pre-
dominantly San Diego crew. sail-
ing the 54-foot Charisma, owned
by Jesse Phillips of Chicago.
Conner was the overall SORC
winner in 1975 with his one-ton
yacht Stinger, designed by Doug
"Peterson, San Diego.
The Anclote Key race is · a
100-miler and is used primarily
as a tuneup for the rest of the six-
race series. It will be followed
Feh. 4 by th e rugged St.
Petersburg to Ft. Lauderdale
race, longest in the series; the
Ocean Triangle race out of
Miami, F eb. 13; the Lipton Cup
race, also out of Miami, Feb. 21 ;
the Miami to Nassau race, Feb.
23, and the finale, a day race out
of Nassau for the Nassau Cup.
The SORC attracts some of the
fastest and most glamorous sail-
ing yachts in the world and is
considered a s howcase for new
yachts from the design boards of
the world's top naval architects.
Chums up
the soil like a
wild Kansas
Tornado (like
a mild Calif.
breeze?)
149°0
•
/ Friday. January 30, 1978
HAWKEYE COMPETING IN FLORIDA RACE
One of Two Newport Harbor Entries
OAIL Y PILOT A l I
Manzanitl
Race Se t
Saturday
>
Major yachting interest will be
centered in San Diego this
weekend wher e 39 crack sailing
yachts wUI set sail on the in·
a ugural l , 140-mile race t.o
Manzanillo, Mexico.
Six yachts from the Orange
· County area entered in the race
will attract a host of well-wishers
from this ·area to witness th~
start off Point Loma noon Satur-
day. San Diego Yacht Club will
be providing spectator boats for
frie nds a nd relatives of the
sailors.
On the local front, the Balboa
Yacht Cl ub will wind up its
Sunk1st Series with racing for
small boats on inside courses on
Saturday and for the larger boats
on outside course~ Sunday.
In other Southland yachting
areas. Seal Beach Yacht Club is
stag mg a Midwinter Tuneup race
for all classes Saturday and Su n
day in the Alamitos Bay area of
Long Beach. Long Beach Yacht
Club will be host to Laser and
Sabot sailors Saturday for its
Ground Hog Invitational.
YOU GOT
THE
Comple te k it. you
supply th• elb ow
grease and save ·---
a b undle. SUd-
ing and lock-
able doors.
Push button e ase,
Chain or worm gear drive.
89~~ 129~404
149~50
DARTS?
WE'LL
BRING
THE
BOARD
GENIE
GARAGE DOOR
OPENERS
•
You get the
item prices
aa the score.
•
A 12 DAIL v PILOT Friday, January 30. 1978
Vitamin E-Cur~ for Smoggy Air?
· LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Vitamin E may not
help your sex life or banish body odor as some
have claimed , but a Duke University
pharmacologist believes it can gi~e significant pro·
tection against the damaging effects of some kinds
of air pollution.
Dr. Daniel Menzel, director of pharmacology at
Dake, told a conference.on energy produced toxi·
cants at the University or California that laboratory
U PI T •lePl!olo
Atearded
Historian Barbara
Tuchman was given
an award for peace
from Gov. Ella T .
Grasso in a salute to
110 outstanding Con-
necticut women this
week.
Past Sex
Questions
Assailed
PHILADELPHIA
(UPI) -An official of a
women's rape crisis
group charges that a
rape victim required to
answer a defense at·
torney's question about
her virginity is being
treated as a defendant
herself.
Patricia Nicholson.
legal coordinator for
Women Organized
Against Rape, said the
question "epitomizes the
way women who testify
about rape cases are
mistreated, wit h
character slander.
"'IF WE TAKE this as
a model," Ms. Nicholson
said, "Then, hey, we are
in trouble."
Common Pleas Judge
Richard B. Klein, over-
ruling the objections of
the prosecution, allowed
a defense attorney to ask
a 21-year-old college stu-
dent if she was a virgin
at the time of an alleged
rape Sept. 2.
WILLIE DILLARD,
26, of Philadelphia, sub-
sequently was convicted
of raping the Temple
University drama stu-
dent.
After deciding to allow
the question, Klein
cleared the courtroom of
spectator s and court
aides and the victim
answered the question
before the jurors.
"OUR POINT is that
the victims are being
treated as defendants
and they should be able
to confront a man who
has committed other of-
fenses in the past," Ms.
Nicholson said, adding
that Klein did not permit
mention of Dillard's past
record.
Klein, questioned later
about permitting the
question, said: "As far
as I know, it's done fre.
quently.
A BILL IS pending in
the Pennsylvania
legislature to make ques-
tions about rape victims'
past sexual history inad·
missible.
OUTHOUSE
FOR SA.LE
WINNEMUCCA, Nev.
(AP> -The Humboldt
County School District is
auctioning a privy at the
Paradise Valley School.
A legal notice or the
sale says the privy "con·
tains many unique in-
sc ri pti on s" and no
minimum bid is re-
quired.
IUY-LEASI
eiperiments showed Vitamin E actually wui pre·
vent lung damage to some extent from smog.
IT HAS BEEN KNOWN FOB some thne that
Vitamin E serves as a protector of body cells
against damage from chemicals known as oxi-
dants. Oxygen from such substances can ~nter
molecules and change their structure and function.
Menzel bas shown in tests with rats exposed to
ozone and nitrogen dioxide -two engine exhaust
byproducts -the vttamin prevents oxidation of un·
saturated fatty acids in the lungs. ·
•'The main function of E in the body is to pre-
vent oxidation of unsaturated fats and these are es·
sen ti al for the function of red blood cells in the
bod:x," he sai~. "Vitamin E prevents their decom·
position in much the same way that commercial an-
. t.ioxldants prevent deterioration of tires in heavy
smog areas."
f a·mous maker
jeans, shirts, sweaters
_any-piece for
I
comp. val.16.00 to 22.00
We can't say the name of this very ..
innovative famous maker, but
they're th~ one-step-ahead people
who bring you your favorite jeans,
shirts and sweaters. Choose from:
·cotton cords with fancy
braided waists
• cotton knit shirts with yokes and
fancy detailed stitching
·lively patterned acrylic sweaters
•assorted colors and sizes
·any piece you pick is only 7.991
·pace shop 130, mach ten 83-
-·
@
SHOP DAILY lO A.M. TO 9:30; SATl:JROAY, 10 T() '7; SUNDAY, NOON TO 6; EXCEPT DOWNTOWN L.A., OXNARO,SAN BERNARDINO,MONTCLAIR,RIVERSIOE ANO CERRtTOSAS NOT~O BELOW
Herb Friedl ander South Coast Plaza-Costa Mesa. 3333 · Bristol St., 546--9321 • • JO' A k""' O•ol
; 1'>0 l#och """"''"''"''"' Sll-7777 898·6117 Westminster Malt-Golden West at San Diego Fwy .t 898-252~
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·Reality . Balqnces 'For a long time we tried to shelter
children. I think they should see a
more balanced view of life.'
Child I ren s Books
By DENNIS McLEUA.N
Of tll9 o.ur "' .. SUtt .
Writer-philosopher C.S. Lewis
once said adults cannot keep
from a child's mind "the
knowledge that he's born into a
world of death, violence, wounds,
adventure, heroism and cow·
ard.ice, good and evil."
Golden West College librarian
Mcµilyn Clapp, who often quotes
Lewis, agrees.
"For. a long time I think we
tried tcf shelter children," said
Ms. Clapp, 1vho is teaching a spr-
ing semester course called Books
for Children. "I think they should
see a more balanced view of life.
"The positive things are still
very important, but I think we
should be honest with them." ·
That point of view, often re·
ferred to as the "new realism" in
children's literature has become
increasingly more popular
among writers s ince the
mid-1960s.
PAST VIEW
Children's books in the past
generally were about white, mid·
die class families who never had
major problems, said Ms. Clapp.
Parents were all-knowing and
benevolent and children were
respectful.
Previously taboo topics like
divorce, drugs, death, violence;·
illegitimacy, parental drinking
and ghetto life are surf acing to-
day, she said.
The new realism, however, has
caused deba'e among some
parents who feel it may be
harmful.
One controversial pre-school
book, "In the Night's Kitchen,"
is about a small boy:s adventur~
in a bakery. Along the way he
ends up naked in a batch of
dough.
Ms. Clapp said, however, that
one woman read it to her son,
who didn't react to the pictures of
the naked boy. 'She asked him
what he thonght of the boy not
wearing any clothes.
The boy replied matter-of.
factly that if he did, his clothes
would get all dirty in the dough.
Another popular book deals
with a 12-year-old girl whose
parents are getting a divorce. By
book's end the girl realizes she is
not responsible for the break-up
and is able to accept it.
Ms. Clapp explained if a child
from a broken home reads only of
homes where there are two
parents, for example, he may
think there's something wrong
with him and wonder why he's'
different.
Children see through books
that are sugar-coated, believes
Ms. Clapp. "They are more
sophisticated today and general·
ly pref er books that present a
more balanced view.''
She said television may have
contributed to the acceptance of
realism but added that society in
general is more permissive and
open to these subjects.
' Despite their subject matter,
Ms. Clapp emphasized these
books are not depressing. There
is a lot of humor and optimism in
them, she said, adding the age
and maturity of the child is im-
portant in determining when to
introduce a book.
ONE FACET
And although it is a growing
trend, Ms. Clapp pointed out,
the new realism has nOtcomplete-
1 y taken over children's
literature. It's just another facet,
she said.
Children still are enjoying
fairy tales, fantasies and animal
stories, she reports.
Her class includes a look'
at criteria in selecting books and
ways to stimulate reading.
She recommends that parents ·
read aloud to their children even
after they learn to read. By conti·
nuing to read to th.em, she said,
the children can continue to
come in contact with books they.
are interested in, but that are
beyond their reading level.
Other reading stimulators Ms:
Clapp suggests are story-telling
records and movies a nd
television shows based on books.
She said "Little House on the
Prairie" has prompted many
children to read the series of
books on which it is based.
Child-free by Choice
Never Papa
By PATRICIA McCORMACK
u.ltMPnul~
The new president of the National Organization for Non·
Parents will never be a father.
That's precisely what the Chattanooga, Tenn., native had in
mind when be bad a vasectomy at the age of 28 -five years ago.
N aturaHy. Stephen A. Keese isn't suggesting the surgery for all
men.
But he wants men and women to understand that a child-free
lifestyle is perfectly respectable.
Rather than hating children, the organization's members
believe in responsible parenthood. During a workshop with a
psychiatrist leader, married couples openly searched their souls
and sought guidance on the question -"Am I ;>arent material?"
Carole Goldman, the group's executive director at national
headquarters in Baltimore, is the mother of two.
"We want people to know they can choose parenthood or non.
parenthood,'' Keese said. ·
''We advocate freedom of reproductive choice, within a
framework of personal, social and environmental consciousness.
'Vfbis cannot truly exist in a prejudiced cultural context, where
parenthood is glorified and non-parenthood too little un-
derstood."
Keese, Harvard graduate and Peace Corps veteran, made the
decision to go through life the non-parent way a couple of years
before he had the operation.
"I decided"! didn't want to have any children," he said. "The
things I wanted to accomplish in my lifetime couldn't be done while
being a goodparent.
"My standards for parenting are so high I don't think I could
measure up to them. I also had this feeling that the world was
already overpopulated and I'd better practice what I preach.·'
&' ---, --~ --~-
---~-·-=:-=-~-~.:..:::li::;...c:::::~
"It's important to expose
children to a ll types of
literature," she said. "But let the
child decide. If it's a chore, it can
·lead to a dislike of reading. It's
important to let them go where
their interest lies."
'INTEREST
She said it's not necessary for a
child to spend hours reading each
day. "It's not reasonable
.anymore because there are so
many demands on their time.".
·nut, she added, 15 minutes a day
can make a difference.
High on Ms. Clapp's list of
criteria for book evaluation is
adequate theme ("So they don't
have a feeling of, 'Why bother
with this?• '') and characters that
are real, alive a nd memorable.
· "I'd like to see more parents
and adults going to the library
and sampling children's books. It
will give them an awareness of
the variety and really good
literature that can be found."
The spring semester at Golden
West begins Monday, Feb. 2.
Registration without an appoint-
ment on a walk-in basis is, today,
Feb. 2·6, 9·11and 13.
BEA ANDERSON, Editor
Friday,January30, 1976 81
The National Organization for Non-Parents came into being
four years ago. Some of its 2,000 members across the nation had
taken the step that Keese took. But they are in the minority.
Bearded and handsome, Keese now makes his living at the As~
sociation for Voluntary Sterilization.
Dr. Robert Gould, Professor of Psychiatry, New York Medical
College, spoke out on "parent material" at the Non·Parents' an·
nual meeting.
''Once you get into this (parenting) you can't get out of it,''
Gould said. "It's worse than marriage if it's not for you. At least
if it doesn't work you can get out of a bad m arriage ..
"With babies, with children you are really stuck if it doesn't
work. Some parents have to fake it.
"I cannot tell you how many lives have been absolutely ruined.
Children become neurotic. And it costs a lot. Psychiatrists cost a
lot.
"I've seen lives turned inside out and backwards." .
Gould said it all boils down to deciding -"What is right for
me."
The psychiatrist said change is an ingredient in lire and it could
be perfectly valid for a couple to follow a lifestyle of non·
parenting now and some years later have children.
Commencement: Get
1
With Living
By ALLJSON.DEERR ,
Of Ule Delly Pll .. SQff
Marge Anderson believes that
.every day should be a commen·
cement, a beginning of
something new, a getting on with
life and living. ·
An instructor of psychology at
Orange Coast College, she has
made many new starts, some en·
joyable, some painful.
Most recently Mrs. Anderson
weathered the break-up of her
' marriage and the death of a son.
"It was the first time I ever
had to be myself, not someone's
daughter, or wife or mother. I
dJdn 't know how to do it.'•
Mrs. Anderson told an OCC class on the changing roles of
women that she was the first
child in a family that wanted a
boy.
"It was a handicap t.bat took
me to adulthood to overcome... ·
When she was accepted a~
Stanford in 1932, her father said
•he had to give up the opportunl·
ty 10 they would be able to send
her youneer brother there.
DECSION MADE
"I accepted that, which ls pro-
bably hard for today's young
women Co undentarMI. because
.lhat •s the waY. th ings
were. 0 Sht attended UCLA ln00
stead and dropped out half way
through.
"Like many girls of that time
who had had any privileges, I
knew nothing about the working
world. So, instead of getting a
job, I sat and waited until my
future husband could afford to
support me."
She had three children ln four
years and "when my Children no
longer needed me physjcaUy, I
got restless and rilled my time
will\, community activities,
worked in nonpartisan elections
and helped start the Hoag
Hospital Auxiliary."
When her youngest child left
home, she decided to go back to
school. "I was an older woman,
yet I did not see myself as a
separate person at all."
She was a student at UCI when
her marriage faltered and her
studies suffered.
"For the first time 1n my life 1
was alone and I was afraid to bf!
alone, afraid to be responalble
for myself." So, she went back to
OCC, ''which w•s l~ home to
me. I had taken 'cl..-here for
so lone.'\
SACK TO SCHOOi,
Eventually, wltb ,.,d11atric
help and the support ot a sym·
pathetic OCC counaelor, she te·
turned to UCLA and earn~ her
.deg~ee at 59.
One thing that spurred her was
a desire to do something about
the negative aspects of retire·
ment. She heard that Leisure
Woa:ld area has a higher.
alcohol consumption per capita
than any other region1n Southern
California.
'Mental health is most important.
Your self-image changes, your family
picture, your finances. Almost no one
retires with the same income as when
''When you lose your mate and
your roots are Br away from
your· family and your needs
aren't met by all the activities,
games and clubs, what else is
there to do?''
they were working. That takes adjustment.·
"'The real time to prepare for
retirement is when you get your
first job, but you don't because it
seems so far away.•• She added, •'There ta a need to
be a creaUve, involved, part ol:
.life.'' • START-r@DAY
This led her to begin to thlitk of So, sbe advises, start today,
retirement ln term1 ol preven· whatever your age. Uon. She begins the class with a dis-
Last fal!J sbe taulht her first cusston of Social Security ... It ~lonof l'Ti!PIU'atiolltorReUre-won't take care of you and was
l*Mnt. Students ranted 1n ap never meant to. but there are
ftom48throqlllheb. things lt does do.
This sprin;, there will be ·four-"Next. you try to figure out
1ectiona of ttie course, at Corona what you're aolng to need and• ~et Mar and Cotta Mesa bllh bow to Cet lt. ••
schools, Goldu Wes&Cdleaeand · She talks about h ealth ln·
Fullerton Savini• and L,an, 1uraoee, *•uae "few people re-Huottoiton B9ub. · Ure wUh anr. health plan. It.
•·My ~ear-oW ltDd61lt had • ltoplwhentheyneeditmost. ..
been retired for 1'1 years: He toot .' Ailboqh only 5 percent of re-
·t:M coune beeaute be wanted to • tired persons will have seriou
make aote Ile hadn't missed • medical problems, c03ts for
~. I learned more trom . these un easily run into tens of
blm \.ban lie did from me," lfrt. thoµ1and1 of dollars, s he
·Andenoo nld. 1treued.
•
Since most women far outlive
their spouses, they must be ready
to assume responsibility for
themselves. And, women should
begin to think of this while they
are young.
A happy retirement requires
enough money to live the way
·you want to, physical health to
enjoy it and mental health, she
stressed ..
••Mental health is most impor·
tant. Your self·iinage changes,
your family p icture, your
finances: Almost no one retires
with the same income as when
they were working. That takes
adjustment ...
Plans don't have to be perma-'
nen~1 she added. Where you setUe
·for tne first year may not be what
you want or need five years later.
Mrs. Anderson believes people
should be aware of all resourees
available before they retire.
"Then, lf becauso of health or
other problems, your lifestyle
changes, you know what's ·in
store."
She does not advise convales-
cent or nursing homes .. if any
other arrangement is possible.
You need to live with someone
else for emotional as well as
financial support:" ·
Women especially need to de.
velop relationships that can bo.
sustained in ute later years.
"Loneliness is not the problem
of the older person; continuous·
loneliness ls."
M'rs. Anderson also deals With
death ln her classes. .. Death and
dying have t.)ecome acceptable
topics. Those most reluctant are
those in. \be middle years.
Yoongerpeoptedon'\seemtofear
tbeaubject as much. •
"Now people are IMl'lllitt O..t ·
It b okQ to have reellnp ahou&·
death and &o be&lla to deal •1Ul &hem.•• •
DAILY PILOT
: Media Magic ..
: Costs Cut
. • . . .. ..
By Al.USON DE ERR
Of\Mo.ll'f"'• ....
There are two kmds of museums -ones that
present things and those that present ideas.
Norman Bilderback is director of exhibits
for the California Museum of Science and In-
dustry. Los Ange les, which deaJs with the latter.
The science and technology centers, as such
~ : museums are beginning lo call themselves, are
: : long on concepts and s hort on artifacts, he said.
In the past 25 years, with public and private
backmg, the museum has spent $10 million on ex-
lub1ts which depict new discoveries and concepts
in science.
With the cost of a single 20,000.square-fool
exh1b1t costing upwards of $500,000, Bilderback
• said. alte rnatives are being sought.
One viable option is the multi-projector;
multi-screen slide-tape presentation, such as
, lhose used extensively for the Expo '74 , in
~ pokane.
r Bilderback doesn't s~ these as replacing ex-
; hibits that can be waJked through or manipulat-
Several concepts could be presented quickly
and simply and ooe theater could be used as a
center for exploring the entire museum.
Bilderback noted that more traditional ways
ot displaying information use a small percentage
of the visual field. ed, but as ways of giving basic information to
. comple m ent or supplement other demonstra-
• t10ns, and at far Jess c~l.
There are many advantages, he said. Ex-~ hibit hardware could be standardized so that
: software, the program itself, could be shared
wilh other museums, thus cutting costs for each
· center.
The movie screen, for example, utilizes only ~(10of1 percent. A double spread in a magaSne. ,
20 ~rcent ; a TV screen, 9/lOof1 ~rcent.
On the other hand, a multi-screen presenta·
tion bombards the visual field and much more is absorbed.
Change: Reality
By DENNISMcLELLAN "Change at this m~
Of tN °•11' Piiot 5'•" ment seems to be the big
Ho w ca n we find question they are ask·
;tability m the midst of mg." said Painter. ex-
changes? Can "'e take plaining why he chose
th e negative out of thesubjectforaJecture
change and keep only U1e series. "There is uncer-
pos1t1ve? Does 1t move tainty about everybody
us toward hfe or death? and everything.''
Can we c hoose which? FACE CHANGE
These are the kinds of People either face it or
questions Dr Alfred dose themselves off he
Pa.inter, p rofessor of said. "They hide behmd
philosophy at Orange a fence and don't venture
Coast College, will deal into Life ."
with in his Evening In the four-session
College lecture series. series Painter will dis· r h e C h a I I e n g e o f cuss resources for cop-
Change ing with it from religious
The sessions are from and scientific viewpoints
7 : 3 0 · 9 3 0 p . m . on and the "Now" scene.
Fridays begi,nning Feb. 6 "The big wave is
through r eb . 27 in meditation because it
scien ce lecture room calms. People also are
two. trying to find security in
Developments ha".e nationalis m. party af •.
occurred at sue h a rapid filiations and churches. ra~e in ~he last 20 years. "Some are finding it in
said P ainter. and society education. which is help-
has become so complex ing them grasp the
''that this uncertainty changes and flow with
leaves people confused them. When we clutter
astowh1chwaytogo. our lives with dogmas
we're creating un-
ecessary resistance. We
must soften them and in-
crease our wiJJingoess to
venture into the uncer-
tain."
Painter also will dis·
cuss societal transitions.
Some are, he said, the
way production con-
stantly bombards people
with new choices; moral
and social standards that
are being challenged,
and the changing view
that the nation is not
always right.
Dr. Painter
,UNDERSTAND which many people are
"It really becomes an embracing .• is an at·
evening of mental dis-lemJ?l. to disregard the
Ssion .. he said. "It's reablles around them. cu • "What we're forced to suppos~d to be mental learn is how to apply recreat~on for those who what energ we have in a are cunous and are try· . Y
ing to understand life." construchve way·
Although change is "If you're swimming
more pressing now, he i n the middle of a
said, it doesn't mean it's stream, it's better to let
going to defeat us. ''It's the current take you. If
just a reality we're going you try to fight it, you run
lo have to accept.•• out of energy and you
Painter said nostaJgia, don'tsurvive."
Her Loss a Blessing
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am
in agreement with your ''Atlanta
Reader'' who is in his 60s. He
criticized you for printing too
many lette rs about sex and re·
!erred lo him self as "one who
had been neute red by time." He
asked that you print fewer letters
in your column dealing with pro.
blems of frigidity. impotence, in·
cest, homosexuals. truc k drivers
.who wear pantyhose, and Funny
Uncles.
You told him tJme doesn't
necessarily ha ve lo "neuter"
anybody that 1t was mostly in
his head, etc. Although you are
probably correct I would like to
"Cool it, honey." -BAST A
AMOUR
DEAR BASTA: If you consider
it a blesstng that you no longer
need sex because It ls not avaUa-
bJe to you through respectable
and moral channea., I have no
argument with that. Bat to re·
quest that I no longer print let-
ters dealing with sex because it
has no interest to YOU ls grossly
unfair. This column deals with
human problems and a. read by a
wide variety of people, many o(
whom a re stUI interested In sex.
in-laws lately. I hope he has
because they are lovely people -
too nice not to keep in touch with.
I realize my son and his wife
have many friends they enjoy
spending time with, and that's as
it should be. But parents ap-
preciate a call now and then.
Please, Ann, tell my son I'd love
to hear from him, even if it's only
lo say "Hello." -HIS MOTHER
' tell you that I'm a woman, and I
agree with HIM. I'm glad to be
free of "that old feeling " I'd
have a real problem if the fires
were still burning. I'm a widow
(also in my 60s) and although I'm
still hale and hearty I no longer
need sex.
DEAR ANN: Have you seen
my son? He was that beautiful
little baby I loved to rock and
cuddle. He was a fine student and
grew up lo be a handsome man
and married one of the loveliest
girls in town.
I haven't seen or heard from
them in quite a while. I feel pushy
always being the one~call.
DEAR MOTHER: I don't know
whether I've seen your son or not
-but HE knows, and I hope a
great many phones will ring to-
day.
DEAR ANN: What does "Lace
curtain Irish" mean? I 'm not
putting you on. I really need an
answer. Someone told me they
once read the definition in your
.column. Will you hunt it up for
me? -FROM TIP O'NEILL'S
DISTRICT
' • . . • • ~ ;
There are so many or us. Ann
(some m arried to men who can't
perform ). We consider ourselves
fortunate that Mother Nature has
dealt with us m this manner. H's
like losin ~ your appetite for
caviar when you can no longer
afford it. So. as the kids say,
If you see him, Ann, please tell
him how much I love him and his
wife and that I miss laughing and
chatting with them over a cup of
coffee and listening tot.heir plans
or problems.
And ask him if he has seen his
DEAR CAM BRIDGE: Lace
Curtain Irish are people of Irish
deacent who have fruit In the
bouse wben nobody ls sick.
A
Free Income Tax
• Preparation
(If ,11 ,) moot"'' ( O\I IO mo,f Arltltwim (,\Vl'f~
save substantial fees w11h ~Ill(
O\\ n ilppomrn){'nl 10 h.wt' Orl<' of our Tr,linfd T,lic Proft"'""n.il ..
prrp.ire your Clltfom1,l ,ind Ff'der<il ~·came ~ r1•1urn'
service since · 1971 ." IW('f 'I.Sill
ANAHEIM SAVINGS
A"D LOAN ASSOCIATION
AMllflM 1117 W. liocoln Ave. 'WlOl(T,~: 77.l-l'i l.l
RRfA 714 ( lmperl~I Hwy. 92621 Ttl· S29-4'l71
Hll""TINl.TON BEACH 411 M.\in SL •JJMK(T,·I· '>tS.f1'i1ll
• ~
~ ~
·-
\•
•
' .
The multi-screen approach
can be effective
I because you can control the
environment in which the
material is presented, thus
· proving the scale
impact. .
I
LIFEINSURANCETO HELPPAY
BURIAL EXPENSE
$500 to $5000*
EVERYONE ACCEPTED
BETWEEN AGES46...a7
•DfpendinQOO ~
NO SALESMAN Will CALL
Write end give ua your dete of birth
LIFE OF AMERICA INSURANCE CORP of 80STON ~o Broad St .. Boston, Mass. 02109, Dept. G4·N B
Also, he said, the m\Uti-screen approach can be effective because you can control the en-
vironment in which the material is presented,
thus improving the scale of impact.
The Los Angeles museum now has plans for
a theater which would seat 130, and use rear-
screen projection on a 20-foot-by-30-foot screen .
Or Call Toll Free: 800-225-1780
S:C~'s
YES
"It would offer a variety of assembly pat-
terns for projectors and a UmiUess combination
of possibilities."
1 IUDDY FOUIS. FOl.MlllLY
OF RICHAID OUEU.ETn"S & f'UYIOY......OW AT
But, he emphasized, sitting and wakhing
would never replace the ability to work out why
something happens, for yourself. l:ne~ISO)t
tWncuT.C'mc S;..i..on
369 E. 17th Street. Costa Mesa
.. Wntport S.--642-6470
llOW Ill FOUNT Alll VALLEY
17200 BROOKHURST ·PHONE 968-8541 • 556-1464
llMSIDI LJM.11001 H.UDW AHi
HOURS: OPEN SAT. Ir SU~. 9 to 6 PM· DAILY 9 to 9 P.M.
I 00°10 NYLON
HIGH
LOW
SHAG
RecJ. $I 0.95
EXTRA HEAVY
THICK
PLUSH
RecJ. $12.95
I 00°10 NYLON
SHAGS
AND
HI-LOW
Reg. $9.95
99
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SPECIAL! Mill PURCHASE!
. CARPET ·S ROOMS
LIVING ROOM, DINrNG AOOM;
HAU AND BEDROOMS
CMOtCIO.-COl.OIS s34r tllpMOMTMI ttYLOM
Up .. H~Y .. ' 1! I I IAYI
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IMITALUI
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MOHAWK
ARMSTRONG
HOLLYTEX
ROYAL WEAVE
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IARWICIC
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LEES
FOUNTAIN VALCEY
I 7200 BROOKHURST
PHONE 968-8541
IMSIOI
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-------------·---· -·---
Calendar: Fund-raising Stirred ANNOUNCING
..l<at~'l.Jlll,
,
FRENCH COOKING: Chef Philip Brown
wU1 be featured at a two-day cooking school
Tuadaya, Feb. 3 and 10, at Park Newport Spa,
from9:30 a .m. ton()(>lland lto3p.m .
A fund-raislnc effort of the UC Irvine
Medical Faculty Wives, it will offer those attend· ini either two momina or afternoon sessions
leasons in menUf from Normandy, Brittany,
.Provence and another reatoo In France.
Further information ls available by calling
&13-3833. Tickets are $20 for two sessiorui.
t"
CELEBRITY BOOK REVIEW: Walter
Wagner, author of "You Mu.st Remember This,"
will speak Friday, Feb. 6, at 10:30 a .m. at the
South Cout Alumnae, Pi Beta Phi lecture series.
Wagner has written many television scripts,
done newspaper and maguine writing and done
public relations for Radio Free Europe. His
latest book includes interviews with 24 celebrities.
Chef Philip Brown
Sagittarius
Start Anew
l SATURDAY,JANUARYn t By SYDNEY OMARR ARIES (March 21-April 19): Accent on new
experiences, sensations, hopes and desires. You
are able to perceive what is authentic as con-
trasted to wishful thinking.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20): New Moon ac-
cents a mbition, communication with pro-
fessional superior. You're invited to social affair
which can be considered prestigious.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): You may do
some tearing down for ultimate purpose of re-
construction. Emphasis on long-range project,
language, spiritual awareness. ·
CANCER (June 21-July 22): Be ready for
questions, answers and a "special relationship."
Money, as it relates to partner or mate, could be
spotlighted. What bad been hidden will be re-
vealed.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Accent on ties,
cooperative efforts, commitments, legal
clarifications. If single, marriage could be a ma-
jor s ubject. Home, domestic situation
dominates.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Perceive poten-
tial. Lunar accent is on employment, health-
and relatives in transit. See situations, persons
as they .are.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): New Moon accent
on creativity, change, communication with
children -and ''failing in love.''
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21>: You close deal,
finilb tran~ction, complete assignment related
to building, home, basic security. You've been
responsible for another's mistakes.
SAGJTr ARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Accent on
short trips, ideas, relatives and close neighbors.
Pioneer -take a chance on your own
capabilities. New atarts in new directions are
favored.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): You could
get new financial deal. You are able to put
together puzzle pieces -and stiow a profit. One
you aided in recent past will return the favor.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Lunar cycle
at peak -take initiative. Judgment, intuition
are on target. Lead rather than follow. Wear
bright colon. Let others know where you stand.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Areas that bad
been fear·ridden receive benefit of greater light.
You gain access to privileged information.
·PR~sH·
CUT
FLOWERS
aUMllAGE SALE: Laguna Beach Junior
Woman'aClub will aponaor asaleotdonated items
Saturday, Feb. 7, from 9 a.m. to' p.m. in the
women '1clubhouse.
Proceeds will go toward club projects which
include Girls Club, March of Dimes and the
Marine Studies Institute.
WOMEN'S OVERSEAS SERVICE
LEAGUE: At 1:30 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 7.0range
County members will meet in the Great Western
Savings, El Toro.
Speaker will be Army Maj. (rel.) Katherine
Stull of Santa Monica, a member who persuaded
the group to adopt the Hospitalized Veterans
Writing Project as a national service.
SPECIAL SEWING O.MS: Clothing for.
People with Physical Problems will be presented
in four lecture-workshops at Orange Coast
College.
The sessions will be offered at 9 a.m. on con-
secutive Saturdays, beginning Feb. 7, in OCC's
home economics room 3. It is free lo the public
and registration will be taken at the first class.
fQ merty It
Eaatbluff Q:Htfuree • ~
now at the
1fi{;?111k1 _//1//
~~~.}.tis
1107 Jamboree Rd .. Newport Beach
640-4740
This Saturday. This Sunday.
Special Buy
4" House Plants
99¢
It's o plant lover's delight. Pick the ones that ore just
ri<jit for you. They're fun to f?C1'H and odd a perfect
1ouch to any room. H"'Y row while the price is right. A
variety to choose from. Llmited quantities.
Pothos
Custom Order
Wallpaper
Don't get hung up on
the high cost of
decorating! 'Cause
our 25% off sale on
custom order wallpaper
will ring up a pocketful
of savings for you .
Lots of colors to choose
from in mod, flowery
and traditional styles
So cover 'em up while
our 25% off sale 1s
haniln' on.
I
Cor•t ...
Aorida Beauty
Sernlted Arelia
SAVE $4
48'' Workshop Light
10.88
Rec, 14.88. Includes two
40 watt fluorescent bulbs,
chain. UL listed.
Home
Decorators
Special
Buy
GREAT BUY
Plant Stand
2.88
24" high wrought iron plant
stand. Pick up a couple while
the price is right. limited
quantities.
BIG BUY
Baker's Rack
18.88
3 shelf baker's rack is
19"x48"xl2". Colors
available. Limited quantities.
BIG VALUE
Baker's Rack
22.88
4 shelf baker's rack is
19"x60"'x l2". Colors to-
choose from. Limited
quantities.
BIG BUYS
For Little Leaguers
GREAT BUY
Wilson Baseball
1.99
Little League Dura-Loni))
cover baseball.
SAVE OVER 25%
Hardwood Bats
1.88
Reg. 2.55. Approved Little
League size. Selected
hardwoods.
SPECIAL BUY
Leather Gloves
For the little beginners.
Gloves have a deep grip
pocket. Top grain steer hide.
Limited quantities.
203 OFF
Athletic Shoes
3.99
Reg. 4 .99. The all purpose
shoes are designed with the
athlete in mind. Available in
white or black. Sizes 1·12.
OVER $4 OFF
Sleeping Bag
SAVE $3
Racquetball Racquet
13.88 11.99
Rec. 17.99. Sleeping Bae.
Full size. Washable nylon
shell. Oacronot 88 polyester
filled lining. Assorted
colors.
Rec. 14.99. The Eagle by
Leach. Lightweight with extra
strength aluminum frame
which insures maximum ban
control and long life. 99• ea. Racquet Balls.
Sale priced items effective Sat., Jan. 31st and Sunday, Feb. 1st, 1976.
e.tch.i0ranvethQn>e·Open~&ys ORANGE: ~-:~:~~~1().7
9:30 to 9:30. Sundaya 10 to&. 3900 So. Btistot-No. of So. ODllt PIUI • °'*" Wffkdava SUndav 11 :30-6
,
BUENA PARK:
SANT A A NA: 9:30 to 9. Saturday 9:30 to 9. Sund&YI 10 toe. ,· _,._
•
•
•• • •
IH !WI. y PILOT Frld!J, Janu.!IY !t, 1971
' PUBUC NonCll
PUBLIC NOTICE •
MOTict TOC•IDITOM """••t0a oou•T o" n.1 lTATt"OJI CAl.1 l'Oll NIA l'Oll
Tltl: OOUNTY Of'OllANGI! ....... ..,'1.
E1t•te If S"MUEL GEO•GE
&ENN Y, •kl SAM UEL G. BENNY, o..:-...,.
NOTICE IS HEAEBY GIVEN .. -
c:..oltor' ol , ... lllO ... "'"'"' ....... ... I 111 pt~ fWWint <lel ... .......,.
Woe w kl de<: ..... I 1r1 ,..,i...i .. H•
""""' 'Miii In. ... CllArt' MIKfttn,, lfl
""' ollkt of lhe clfft. M -......
.-lllltoO cou.,,"" lo CINMftl ~ wi•
llW MCnwr, ""'"' ... "'· I• tN -•n.i9MG •t , ... Mlle• el JIAUL A..
KANNA, Al!Ot.,.y 11 LMw, ., 0........
PUBUC Nll'OCE
•Knnou1au11111au
NAMI STA1'•MIWT
f "t> 1•11••1"1 ._ .. * 11 •l"f ----: THI ""~ T•a e OAHU,. ... llMSU-, c. .. ~ CAftUP
.... ~ D. ... net 111, WI tar.. Sltwt. C-.., llM$.t, CA-2J
Tl>lt llullolllfu It ~-.. "' .-i ' .... _
............... kaD.l'lfftll'llll ™' '""""--I fllMI 'fllfVI H'll c-.ty C: .. 111 .. Or ..... C-y °" >-'Jt, It,.
'"'""' "'* ...... 0..,.. C-l ~" l'llat,
""· t, "n. .. ""
PICTITIOUS aus1••u
lllAM•STATSM•NT ltw folia.i"tl ,..,,_ I• doi .. ...i. -••: OU\IALL BUILDERS. INC., l1»
Glbr•lt.r ....... Cos.I.I ~ CA m»
LtU•• TllOm•• Ow~•ll. JI,.
Glbt .. I., """" Cosll """"·CA~ nu, ~. 11 <-.;tH by .,. 1 ... . .......
IASMrT.Dv•ell
™··~ ............ _ CWMr Cl•rl ot Or ..... C-y on .,.,_,.., tt, H76.
""'' Pwllll~ 0r""9f C:..11 °"""" ll'llOL JM. tt ». -Feil ... u. ,,,. .. ,..
PUBLIC N011CE
D"••. Suite ll, Nlw ... r t .. K"·l ·-------------1 Olltorftl1, '"'"!ell I\ ll'le pl.u., -.;.
l'HI of lhot -l19ned 11'1 l tl ~
Ptn•lttlnO 10 '"' Kl•t• ., M6d ---llMI, wlll'lln lour _. .. _..., !'-lln.t
1"'Dlk 1IM>n of 111l1 IOOtlc1.
Dool ... OK1mt.r ll, 1t1S.
l.AUAA LINNELL C:0RD£L.L
E•KulrlxofttM ..,.ill
oltr..-"9MIMO~
"AULA.MANNA
A_,.yMUw
1110...rDrlw
SooiMD -~ ... a<ll, U IU•r!>11
l•I: {114l MJ4741: M1·1Ho0
_,1.,E••<.,..rl•
Pu1>1!\lllt0 Or•nve C09~1 O.hv PilOf,
J ....... , •. 1•. ?l, >O, 191• ... , •.
PUBl~IC NOTICE
l"ICTITIOUS IUSINllU
NAMIE STATEMIE NT
T"' lol~r>O ...,...,. •• OOing OUM·
M>>e\'
511E E N TEll Pll lS ES, JtJI
-CA,,_. 81..t., NewPo,, Be«I\ CA ""' s1-•1y A. Ethrl<tQe. i•n1 euenc ••
Miu59f!V11jo, CAffllS
Tllll bu.llft111 h <onO..C:t~ tty ... 1,..
do~•-1
Sltn..., A, Etht1C19e
This 11•1-nl WI> l1lld wtlh IN
County Cler~ ol Orin.,. C-y on
~''"· "'' ... ,, ...
PvblllfWd Or..,911 C-'1 0.Uy Pllol,
J.., U, JD-l"eo.•. ll, t•1•
PUBLIC NOTICE
SANTA MA.llGAlllTA
WAT•tt DtlTlllCT
2SS71 Ml,.._..lte "••-My
Mluilfl \llllt, c1ur.r1111 m 1s
MOTICll IN\llTING BIDS
l"or 1111 Co11strvct!on 01 S..•le1 C
Wilt• Bond Prol•CI Aut<ten1<1mp
ConneCllon Trtn1,.,!1•lon Ml•n. Miio<'
Ae1cll•• Numb••• I. 1 1n.:1 l ·~
•nc!U(ll"Q PY-ooou.h 1. 11 1n<1111 -
comblN>l•on lliO •moun11 !Of'1\1, V, VI,
-VII.
A·I NOT IC E IS NEll EflV GIVE"I
11\11 .. 1t_.i 1;11(11 wll! boo ,.c1IYe(l lty the
S...19 M1r09rl11 w1t1r Dlttrkt tor
turnbhinQ 111 pl1nt, I•-, .....,k K ,
,.,..1•1111, 10011, e(lulpm..,1, ,._ile$,
lr-lll1on. ulilllle1, 1n<1 ltll ot,,...
1te1•,. 1n(I l1C ll!H 1 s n1<e111ry
Iller.tor, I\ pro.-llle<I !11 , ... CanltKl
Oocwnenl\, ~o• th• conllrv<llon of -It• lr1Mm1>•lon pi111llM 1 "'90f1Wf
>Miii •II 1poun1n1n~11 u~reio, In
•t •ICI 1 ccor<11nc1 w ith'"•
1oP1Clflc1!1°"" 1110 Or1wl"'lll ..., lile 11
tl'e dltlce of R1ull. 8'ln, "'"ti -
A!.1oOC:Mllel, HOI Quid SlfNI, """""'°,,
BeKh, Ctlltorn11.
A·I DATE OF OPENING OF !1105
-Bid> woll be •t<t•""O It I ... ofllce of
R1u0. Bein. Frost •n.:I A•,...,ltle>, 1401
Qui ll Sire•!, Ntwporl B11ch,
C1l1lornl1, untll 10 •.m, on Fttln.•~"Y
II, tt1', 11 which ti"'• 1nd Ill«• the
t>IOl wll! bol pUbllcly 0111ned ...0 rt.Id
llO<ld. !1101 thlll w 1u1:>mlltfd In
•••led 1n•t1ope• "'1rO.ed on 1111
oulliOt, "8 1.:1 tor Sefl11 C Wal., llonCI
Prolrct A"ldtnk1m1> Connecuon
Tro1111ml11lo" M.1 1". ''
A·J LOCATION OF Tl-!£ WOAK -
trw -•k 10 1;111 <Dft>lrvcl•.:I -
h 10c•led In the CommUflllles ol
LAIW'\I Hiii• 1nO ot M111lon V1tjo,
Ol'<l!IOt County, C.lilornl1.
A·• OESCRlftTION 01" WOAK -
T,. -·• comprlw' ,.,. <otr11lrwdlorl
ol -t•r tr•n,ml1110n p1pellMS ....0
~t.n•nl -•I<.
~ .
l'ICT1TIOUIBUSIN•U
NAM•ITATllMllNT
TN '9119Wi"" I*'-11 OOlnl taal·
llHSIH~
NATIONAL INVESTMENTS, 11'2
S.. Hlll..,,.r s.lt'MI, SIMI Mt, CA ftJOS
.-,,._ M. \11 .. 1.1, 121'1 OrtllllM,
~Anl.CAft'9t
Thh Minn• h <onOllctld ~ on l1>-
dll~ldtHI
N1hl,tr M. \11r111
This ll;tl-nl ••• flied with 1n.
OM.intr Citrk ol Or•n111 County OI•
J-'YS. "'' 1"511U
P!Jbllv...d Or..,9" C09'1 0.111 Pl!Ot,
......... , •• "· 13, ]Ill. "''
P URLIC NOTICE
PICTITIOUS BUSIN!"SS
NAM• STA.Tl: ME NT
T,_ h>llO'lri"!il Ptrt0n is doing bull· nns•s:
E!..ECTllONtCS BV MA IL, t7H
""'"'~ O<'., Hunllnvton Be;och. CA -B•rtNor• 11. ~1110.1, •1n Pett•-
Dr .. tt ... 11no1on Be;och.0'2-
Thh bui.lnHS II condu<led Oy tn I~
dllY\OU1I
81•twr• A Gehlke
Tiiis sl•te,.,enl w•s !lied wlilt> 1i.
Couftly Cl••• ot O•..," c-oty Ofl
JMllll•Y 1•, ltl6 • "" ... P1JbU:111-.:1 0r1noe Collst O.Jly Pilot,
Jtn. ll, JD-Feo. 6, IJ, 191'
PURI .IC NOTICE
of tlw s..,..ral lleto1• of work .,. v.......
on Ille BIO Sc,.ou .. 1. Only 1...:11 114-.
1.ptd lk•tlon1, •nd lt.,ms ol *"'"' n "* _._1111i.111111pp1r '°I ........
~~.
A·I SITE CONDI TIONS -l!tt h
bl-• •"•II c•relutty ••1fftln1 IN
Ol'•Wl"'ll. rN.:I IM ~OoKll kltl..,... -
"-"'""'"' ott>e• con1r«I ooc....-1. -"'111 v11.lt 1 ... 1111 of 1111 pr---•11. to fvlly lntor"' ~l mi..11 •s to 111
••lsllnv concllllo<\1 1nd 11,.,i11tlotlo!. t"'t
m.1y 1!11cl the •••<utlon DI work
unCN• lhe <ontr1cL 1 ".:1 M 111111
lrocl-lt1 the prlct> ttlO tM COSI ol 1!1
ln<iORA!ell •"" appurt•"'"""'· T!>e
191hrt or om111\on of •nY ~ to
r1 c e lv1 o• •••,.,int •nr IDrm,
l11strum1n1, •O••nd um , Dr ollllf
CID!;,,.,..,.., or hh tau..,,. to •lwt -
.c:..,..nl hlmw tf with condlllonl • ""'
<-lrvthon $111, $1\fll In no ~
••II•~• hi"' lro"' 1ny obll91t10"
l"'PQM'tl by hil l:liCI or tly , ... (-fl<I.
Tiw 1utwnllt1l of • Did WI! t. \.tt.tf\
I> IJf'!mt !Kie 1vldtn<e of <~l....:e
wilh 1!1 ln1tno<Uon1 <onl•lt>td ,_..In.
A·' CERTI FIED CHECK ANO
flONOS -E1c n 1:110 mu1t Oe
•j<o"'p1nied by I ce r1 ltleO or
c U1ltr'1 check. or by 1 corixw1te
..... ,y bond ""' '"" 10 ............ ......, by
tM Own•r, 1• • 9u1r1n1r tt>al '""
bldOer will, It 1n 1w1rO 11 ,.,_ 10 "'"'
In 1ccordlnc1 with 11\e ttrms DI 1111
bl(!, promp tly l •Cu•I workm-n'1
compenwllDft in•urtnct i ncl !191>1Uly
1n .... ..,,,, 1•1ci.tle 1 contr«I In IM
r e qulr•O fo rm , an d lur11!1h
1•llsl1<lory ttond1 tor \ht l•llhlul
_.ior.....,.ncr of I"" conlr«I -!or
tlw 119y,,,.n1 of C11lms of m11or11t1.....,
-lt bo••,,.. ,,,.,_. S..icl ch«I<
or ~·1 bOnd Wll boo In tn ......,""'
not lft• tMn l1n perct nt 110'%! of IN! '"'°""' o f I lle re l1tlvt bid Tt>e l"l!lhful Pertor..,.nc1 llo"" ...._n t.
not 11i.s lhtn OM•h.,!W r•O percent
!llXl'!C.I of ,.,. 1011 1 '""'""t ol '""
,,111ed blO pri<• namaO In tne
conlr1<L The P1yflllnt Bond INll oe
not '''' th•n on•·hun(lred Pf'rcent
(llJD'!C.I ol '"" 1ol•I amount ol the
rtl•t ed bid prlc1 n•mr.:I In Ill•
contrK I. T"" 0-.-"""'""' ll'cr~t 110 reJot<I ... y -II, In IM ae>'niof1 of
!ht Et1tlne1r, Ill• Sur•ty ''
ac;.-11001m11rrt I• not in the "°""'
lroc1-In -COft\f'tel Qocumenh or
In 1no111er form sul:lst1ntl•!!r 1•
preterl-by 1-. 1Ste P1r19'1P11 11
-lnltructlonl lo llldcl9••1
A·lO WAGll!: lltATES -A• ._ireo
b'I' Cllltor"ll La-Codf:, not..., tMn t"' 11ne••l prwvalll"9 •tie ol Pt• diem
Wl9ft ....., l'>Ot IMS thin 1111 v-M<ll
prev1 lllnQ r111 lo• 110H01y 1 nO
o-11me wort, In lhe 1oc11lty ol which
I,_ -111 Ii lo bt Pt•lorme<I, tor ekh
<•111 or ly1>9 ol workm.., --lo ••e<ute the work contetrlPIM.O W'>dlt"
the conlr•cl. '' p ublhhed In '"" Southern C•lllornl1 Ma$l•r Labor
AQ rtemtnh, 111111 bf' paid to 111 _,,,..._ rmplon.:I On 1110 -r• Oy
Thi ConlrKto• or by 1n1 subconl•.c:lor
p1'1orml"9 1ny 119rt DI 11!.:1 -•·
.... 11 CONT RACT DOCUMENT!. -
(1\ The (ont•«1 Oo<:um..,h 11'111!
cont!st o1 111e "lotlc1111.111,.,. BIOi. tM
lnllrvellon1 ID 81ddorl, Ull IC~
Propo•1I, lhr Bi d Sh1e ts, Ille
c.onlr.c:tor•1 !..lc•nW'IQ St11.....,.., the
LISI of Subcontr1ctor1, tr.. Bld
S«vrltv Form tor cl\ec ~ or bGncll. '"' .......... "'.Ille F11!htul "-~•
l!lond , lht P1 ym1nt llo nd, 1111
'-<.oll111lon .Ulldlvilt, ,,. !icllel ..
'°'°"'!MGM, -Ille Or1w1,... lltted ti.AIPI, lllf1•!nlt!Q IO lhe llN)or Retell QI""''°'" llJd by tM Conlr«lor 111 ol
whkh OK-n11 ar1 on tile In the
oflla ol lllof Cfllll Env!-r o1 the
5-\U M.,91rll1 W•ltf' Otstrk l --...,lb, '"*"'.., 10 aftCI midi: • ,.,, o1 th!\ NOii<• lft~lllllf Blclt.
UJl A lull set ol •r•wlnt111 encl
1p•t 111c1t1on1 11 •~a ll6Dla fer
'""'9<11on wf"'°"" e11.,,. 11 111e o111c1 •
ol Ille Cltl1t E119ln1a r , Sa,.ta
Ml'99'11• Wti.t" OtstriCt.
ICI eom.iltl Mii ff "1(11 Ctlf'llratt o.c-tt ...... , tit l)Urt ... Md .. $25.00 w wt end.,. D&l.llnlbtl '"'"' llluti, lfl.ll. l''"I anll A.ssoc:ll1t1, 1«11 O...U
St'"t, N1wpart ll••<h, C.H1or1111 ~. NO r.fun(I wUI tit !Nell ol _,y
<"'9r9R tor <-Plllt V II of Cantl'.ct
DIK-IS.
A.·11 AOOftESS ANO MA II KING Of'
BIOS -Ttla •""t-t nc!Otol"9 Ir.
pr_...i w11111 wa1.o •ncl ..,..,.....
lo S-1 Mlro-f'ltl Wt1tf' 0!'51rk 1 Mill
*11¥1rM QI" fNlllN '• R•• i!ltll'I.
l'rt111 •"f Al..C:lafH , 1•01 Qvlll
SrrHI, N1wpoort .. .ch, c.1w.rftl1
~7t. T ..... ...i ....... II bt ....... , _..."", ....................... __
wtlll , ... -..., all61'H• ., .. ......, ........ .., ........ _
l•t A11lf1111ll•"'P C•t111111•ct11111
T••1111Ml1tlo111 M1l111, ttoocJtett.I ............ w ........ ..................................
.. I ... • MtJ•r •••C:liltl ., lfflr
-Lb 1111111 """Ill tlltW iii lfll ,. ........ 1 .... Tiit c:1r u1..-.,
Cl""9f'°I CJloKfl, ~ 't ... , W ....,.. ....... " .. _ ....... ..
!Mw ....... tllltll OllllW. IY MIDI• llf .._ IMt• ,...,,_... ----t. ,.,,,,,.,., .... ,.
Jv: ~ H. SMlft\.
Qilltf llllO•-· 1Mt1Ml,_IUIW ..... Oltt~IC.I U PI ~ltt ,..,__,
Mitt .... Vll)t, Cal...,,.. tWJ
"""''"'"' Or ..... C:Mlt Otlty P'lllt. ~y 21. XI, 1116 m ·1'
' . --·~··-· .......... .. . .. .. .. .
Utilities 1903-04 Worse
To Share' State Driest
....... AWHa has opened an automotive tin•
up center in Costa Me1a at '14' West 19th St. Tbe
luta·Tue franchise provides electronic testin1 of
engine performance.
Supplies In 72 Years •
• John CarlsOn or Carlloa'• La.ad.Kap .. , c.. ln
(',osta Mua, has been installed as president-elect or
the CalJrornla Landscape and IrrigaUon Council,
Inc., which operates in 13 Southern Cattrornla coun·
Ues.
• Mary Davis is branch manager at the new Flr1t
Federal Savings and Lou br11nch In Costa Mesa.
The new branch is located at 14.S.S Baker St., across
from the FedcoService Center.
• Mission Viejo resident Alley IACJ' bas been
named chairman or the board or the California
Motel Assoeialion for1976.
He was also recently elected
first vice president of the Best
Western Motels .
He and bis wlfe head the
Anaheim-based firm of RUey
Lacy aad tA11oclat.es, motel
broken and counselors.
•
manager for
Airport.
llobert F. Schafer has been
appointed cu1tomer service
Air CaWomla al Orange County
The Ma rine Corps veteran lives in Mission Vie·
jo with his wife and two children.
• Arthur E. Fretwell, vice president and general
manager of Steelcaae, IM., in the Irvine Industrial
Complex. has been elected president or the Greater
lrvlne Industrial League (GllL) for 1976.
New officers include ~aul F. Hoff, MSI Data,
vice pres ident; Dale E. Boyer, Smith Tool,
secr etary: and John Hollenbeck, Coopers 6
Lybrand treas urer.
Newly elected directors include : L.4, Reed,
Fluor Corp.; Richard C. FUiier, Royal Industries;
Donald W. Fulle r, Mi crodata Corp.; and Fred M.
Unton, Delta Group, lac.
• Frederick M . Llnton will also serve as presi-·
dent of the UC Irvine lndutrial Asaoctates for 1976.
The president and chairman of Delta GrMP,
Inc., a manage ment consulting firm, Lir,ton sue·
ceeds Shelly Dobkins ot' Misaion
Viejo.
Ttie association faoters com-
munication between the in·
dustrial community and the un-
iv ersity and encourages support
or UCI by the industrial.
economy with which it interacts.
LINTON • Raymond C. Wt.at.er of NewPort Beach haS been
named a vice president of Bateman Eichler, HJll
Bicbards, Inc.
• James W. Sbea of Mission Viejo has been pro-
moted to northeast regional sal6 Iha.pager for the
R.T. French Co. of Rochester, N.Y.
The new retail food division manager joined
French's in 1964 as a salesman.
• Huntington Beach resident Don Bonebrake has
been elected president of the Fresh Produce Coun·
cil of Southern California.
Bonebrake is floral
merchandizer and buyer for
BalpU Market's 94 stores in
California. He begao his food
store career as a produce clerk
with Alp~a Beta in 1956.
• Two Orange Coast men have
been elected to positions in the
.0N1:B11A11:1: Merchantl and Manufacturers
A5spciation in Southern California.
Newport Beach resident Dakea•K. Broadbead,
president of Allied &ecord. Co., has been named to
the executive committee and Huntington Beach re-
sident R.uasell G. Ad.a-, staff vice president of
personnel for McDonnell Doagla• Corp., has been
elected to the board of directors of the 2,000·
member organizatioo.
Long-distance
AT&T Files Rate
Requests to FCC
WASHINGTON (AP) -American Telephone &
Telegraph Co. has filed with the Federal Com ·
munications Commission new rates that would In·
crease charges for about two.thirds of out-of-state
tong distance calls.
· Rates for other ln·
terstate calls would
either remain the same
or decrease Feb. 12, if
approved by the FCC,
AT&T said.
It eslfmated the
changes will increase an
average resident
SP Revenues
Dip for Year
SAN FRANCISCO
!UPI> -The Southem
Pacl.Oc Company bu re-
"""""" ·-·· of '14.t ....._ for m~. with • .,_ return or $36.V
8llllloa In the foartb
41uart•r followln& a
"deprwHd" CODdllloa la
·111e rall lndtll"1 lh• nnt Jaalf, • . •
SI' bad -·llas ... vmun of $1 .8 billion for
the , •••• sUrhUy below
1'74. 11>e prom le< the
fourth quarter com~red
with 121.1 mtlllon a year
earUer.
cutomer's bill by about
10 cents a month, while
the average business
costomer's bill will 10 up
about 12 a month. . .
-:ras EXACT amount
of the increa1'e or
decrea1e would. of
course, depend upon the
number and type of ln·
teratate calls made,
their distance and dura-
t.loo and the ti m 6 of day
placed.
Tbe bt11e1t increases,
•in recent yean, would
be for mott operated at·
aisled eall1 such •• penon*penlon, orodlt
card, coin ond collect IG
FINANCE
SAN FRANCISCO
(UPI) -An agreement
to share new llquifled
natural 1as suppllea to
Callfornla from Jn.
donesia and Ala1ka has
been announced by '--------.J Pacific Gas & Eledlic
Co. and Pacific LlghUng Catamaran' Co., parent company ol
Southern California Gas •
CoTbe onnouncementStock Bid
wu made at a special
hearlna of tbe state E l d d Public Ulllitle1 Com-X ell e
mission. Tbe companies '
s-alddeliveriesoft:henew The Coleman Com·
1as are tentatively paay of Wichita, Kansas
scheduled to be1ln ln announced It bas ac·
LOS ANGELES !AP> -It's the "rainy ieHon .!n
Ca!Uomlo, but the atote t.s drier lhoil It bu been In '12
yean. And weather for11euten can't say when rain
will come to relieve the pare bing drought. .
Barely half •a inch ol. rain -.59 inches -bas
rallen ln Los Angeles ----------
since last Jul)' 31, mnk· becu~back40percent.
inc it the second worst In Californi•'s rich
drouJht on r ecord. Only fertile Central Valley:
lil03-0t was worse, .57 in· ll e r c e d · C o u 'n t y
chem. supervisors have asked
mE PICTURE Isn't Gov. Edmund G. Brown
any brighter elsewheN Jr. to declare the eounty in. Callfornla, where a disaster area. Madera '
farmers and s kJ resorts County aild other valley
are hurting from rainfall counties are .also con.
and snowfall le vels sidering seeking such re.
severely below normal. lief if the drought con-
T hr e e Northern Unues.
California counties. 1979. quired ownership and as-
T B E ·TWO tlllll sumed manaiementcon-Glenn, Colusa and Yolo. u es t:rOt tJ( Co t c t have asked or are con· said the venture would u a amaran, · deri kl tb state be shared equally bJ'-otJnine, manufacturers !'!It d "1' utb ag de ht
AND IN THE Napa
and Sonoma wine coun-
try, crape growers who
usually start· prunLnr
this time of )'ear are
finding the warm sprin&·
like weather baa prompt.
ed some vines to begin
them and that their olHobieCatamarana. le_> ec are em roug
agreement arose from disaster areu.
the critical mutual need . This i1 the result d. a Yolo County .offic.lals
to obtain future 1a11 previously announced say, that if condlt1ons
plies for Califor:r. cash tender offer to dlhi~n t Improve, ilta~er ~ customers. • putcbue up to all of the s summer w ave budding. .
"It combines the finan· outstanding common
cial strength of stock of Coast
California's two largest catamaran by Coleman,
gas utility companies to the announcement said.
expedite both the ap-proval and development As of the close of busi-
ol. vitally needed \leW 1as· neu Jan. 20 there bad
supply projects," said been · approximately
Harvey A. Proctor, 295,000 shares tendered
board chairman of lo Coleman. These
Southern California Gas.· shares, together with the
He hinted however, at 468,221 shares which the
a possible ~ate increase t w o P r i n c I p a I
reque1t by urging the shareholders of Coast
commission to allow the Catamaran have agreed
utility a rate of return to sell to. Coleman, ac-
that would attract in· count for approxlmately
vest.on. · . 91 percent of · l~e out-
sUmding common stock ..
INITIAL deliveries of Coleman is extending its
the gas from South offer to purchase unW s
Alaska's Cook Inlet p .o1. (PST) Feb. 6.
would be a bout 200 Coleman's first offer ex·
million cubic feet a day, p1red: Jati. 18.
Two Steel Finm
Report Declines
PITTSBURGH (AP)-Two more major steel
producers, Bethlehem and Wheeling-Pittsburgh, re·
ports~p declines in earnings for 1975.
~thlehem Steel Co., the nation's second-largest
produrer, said it earned $242 million, or $5.54 per
share, on sales or SS billion in 1975. 'I:hat compar~
with 1974 profits or $342 million, or $7 .85 per share, on
salesof SS.4 billion .
Shipments were orr Z1 percent, from 16.3 million
tom to 11.9 million tons, the firm said.
Ninth-ranked Wheeling, which earned a record
·$74.4 milllori, or $19.23 per share in 1974, plunged to
$5631000 last year, the company reported. After pro.
viding for $3.1 million in dividends, Wheeling said,
that works out to• lossof.68 cents a share.
Over The Counter
. t!ASO U"""'
MUTUAL FUNDS
-
I
I
I
• ' . •
• I
I
. ' •• .....
' . 't:> '
• •
(
T Frid!)', J.,,uary 30. 1971 DAILY PILOT 85 :
, , Friday'• .
' Aftemooa Pr!-NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE ~aetlon Up 7.6"'
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=:;,1,11 4 tM t!F~ =~ :·1 J ~+I: "9mf t.Jt t Iii 21~+ ..... #9<APA011S I 1~+ YI ~.tit • IO'll+""'
-... '·I g.,ai 0-°'1-
PNIVH All )f tv.+ "" 1.15 .. 11'111+ lot Plil1"911 •• $ ~ ,..,._ -''" •• '" ...
PICl\WClll .JI: I t7_, • , , 1.4111 II tOJ\li +I For Tire Buyers -=i=::r.-:~ ~ 7ft "v..,,,.. l':t ~ ~ rm: ~ PNlllCll .He I" It .,.._ \4 1 • ~ 11'4-1'
l'MidNOlA611"'-"'° .•t >+lot ~t'"~~11i ~ J..!t a.n~·~'t °':l ~·.~ Bc:YLVIAPORTER ......... (1,IOIO , .. ~ .... ~ .4111 "' !>!iii+... .. of ill d I t to b'I P1tnt-,1 ,.o 1 "' nMi+ -w-·C'' 1M ~· v. .ore us w new an rep acemen au mo 1 e :::= :=: ; ,,:; :;::: :? itll ?,• Jl llS!. t' t1ret tn 1978 lban In any previous year in history. And more
PluMtt .au 1u 21 -,... . • 11 '' • "" ol us will make ex-•lve mistakes when we buy our tlres PltJI "-di t 1"" 4 -loll LUii I H +t.... _..._ ~ . ..,.•1 .,. "•• >"'1-.,.. 1:io r io n•-...., than before. too •
1f'lt-Ii. '' "' ' o1 io • _., Tb •• I I too ode'· d PN .IOlllO .. 6W.+" e"""I fl l·---e reason: w.ere ares mp)' many m IO an Pol~.UP)t.7J. -:i.. lltlt .l'f • l):W.+ \Ii f-.-of Ur .. lO CL.~-from -with thousands or ChOiCeS ,,.,,..rvMS50 l:» 11" ... Wlr.i t Ut •S,.+1 ... v..-. 1~
"°'"nb.P01s 11 ,...,. "' SWOoW rs .. 1 n available, detplte the best efforts of such rubber clant.s as ::::'~1"',t.J: .~ .l~ :J =,VII ~"'V: "i :~ i;11 •!ji" Ftrestone, Goodyear and Uniroyal to get the situation under
PQor!G 1.• 9 ,. ,.,.._ 1to C-~ t ' » 11w. + tr I (0 U I al
A:tlloct.1V.11 11:1 n'lill+r.. °"" ..... n 11"• 14 executive oavc the tire· PGf 11.SO •• U10 ll»\lo+ ... §I·* s ... ,....... COfl 0 • ne D f'OY
PlllEIPl.1•11 JU IJ Oil U JI .. IO'MI+ '!I J•
l'lll4£1oisy, .• rno SM11i ••• 1•1"'·· '' >s •WI buyln1publlcilinroran l'llCEIOIS.• .• dl71116 +1 ~ I IS 11J 14 • -Po1£•1Jt•.Oo1 .. 1100 """' ,., Sunlltrnd .to 1 414 '' +"' epidemic of ''poly· ~1!:1111?.4'1 .• I >6V.-'-'t $o.instrpfJ\o\,. I~ .. "'° Ill I \' ·1• ") Money's
Worth PPG1nc11.11111 ... '°"" ... $o.lr'lllllllt .,.1, •• """•,,.. ·mu p e · 1.re -11s. Pl"•m1nc1 .lt 1 11 111.io+.,., Sup011 1.1D10 irt01u -1in A conservative Pr+m pt .tO •• IS lJ'MI+ 'lilt s..iorGll .20 It SI S'lti ,.,
Proc1 l.Gottt 1a .,....,.,.,.. ~ 10 w '°"'• .,,.. estimate is that overall ' "'"'°"''·'°I) Jll 10 + \Ill s..iw\1•(1.1'0 • " .,.._.... I . ________ ,
,.,.. ... r 11 . .a 1 •z ~ ..... v. s..tniM1e1v .1 11 4"' ... passenger t re produc· ·
P s... •nc: ·· 71 1 • "" ,_,.., .MMi 1 t•S 1'"'• "" 11·on this year w;11 be up 7.6 percent. This translates into on. PuS Col l.30 I 50 1•"'°+ i. $........,.. ,IM 10 IOS tt1 • 'Ml
PSEa.o 1.l'll ' !01 1•"' ... 5'tllml!f1 . .o .. J ltVll .•• increase or 10 million ln the number o f tires turned out in the ... E •.JO .. lJO 41\lo+ "' Srlir'Oll Doi\ I '' ..... ·-· PSli J.21 .. 1100 HVll+"" -TT-U.S., with a major part of the rise going to replacement PSE 6.1(1 •. 1..0 71116-\Iii Toftlc:lt.1110 41 M .. -'1'11 H-PSE<iiclll . ..O .. r!OO 11 +I T+lcotl N+t •• !St Jlll-°" w.a~. • PSEOf)Jl1.JO .. dlO ll~ ··· T•ll•yl11 .M' 191 tl't! •·· h PS.EG111t.'2 .. 1no1ow. ... T•1i.-, pf 1 .. ts 111"' ... OTHER ESTIMATES are igher. The Rubber ~~~1i;; :: r£ 1~~""'!. ~ l:E~ ~~ J~ a~! : Manufacturers Association itself predicts that original Pus lnd2.1111 .. 1 42" .. ,.,., T~,., u 1n 20fll-11. eqwpment tire production will exceed 46 million in 1976 and PStllOpl9 ....... IS:UOI07 ..... ,. T_.c .n .. SI ~ ,,,
PS1ndol'1 .0o1 .. 1120012"" .. "' T.cn1c .... 1011 1•1 ,,,.._,,.. replacement tires will reach 139 million -a total of 185 PS NH41.IO 1 14 1th+ \Ill Toc:flncotor .. n • .. ...
PSNHpf2v. .. 16XI ..... \41 T.c11n1con 1s 1ta ~-.. .. v. mllllon tires. Add h eavy service tires, farm tires and off. ~~,1·:: ,: ~; 1t:!.: T:-:i: 1: 'ff ~~ .. ~~ the-road tires -and the total is almost 225 million. ~~~: :: 1~ =-.:". l=pf~.~ "; J:Vll !',,. Jt has been hoped that by Jan. 1 the National Highway
PllatSP 2.:Mo • 1"' m;.+ ...., T•i+PtOmP .. m ,,.._..... Traffic Safety Adminislration would have established some PllOmn 1.20 9 ltl J1\lo-\lo Ttl9• Corp 7 IOIO J .. """ d b d · · unil tin t f · B rur.""' ·" • 1~ 1~ .. ,,... T-• '·'' 1 m tt'h ... or er y ev1s1ng a orm ra g sys em or tires. ut ::::'i:' ~-: :: tl 2!Wl=
1
.... ·r::oit.~~ ·4 ~ ,~.,., .. ·"' none is on the books and none is even in lhe blueprint stage. Purl.tr 1.0li lJ 21 41\li• 14 TtsorPn.16 .. 112 n-.. \II --o c.---T•uc:o t • u .. 2•11o ... YOU -ON YOUR own -must determine which tires t:::&:!Jt.~~ s-t~ ~-·;.,; l::~'i':J 1~ 2~ ~~~!1l:: offer the performance you want and which are the best for Q.19o pf•.56 .. 11.0 '°'""' · · · T•ET Of 2,.. , . :n """ . . . your car. O.kSOl .n 12 HS ltVI+ ,.., TllGITr 1.• • 41 u-.-IMI ~11or .011 .. , ~ ··· T11G1TP1 ,.,., .• 1 u .. !,(, Basically, the re are three types of tires on the market-_.. ·-T••Wlf 1.20 ' 106 JIVll• VI I i.e1s1o11 P 1 1• 250 "' ••. T•11t•lftd 'l '' 1 14 ... bias, bias-belted and radial. The radia s are the most ex-lt...:"':°r'11!~1.~ ~ :~ ... :". T::.~7~'eo~ ~~11i.,,,-.~ pensive, but they offer you better road-handling cbarac-
R.-pldAn1tr · 19 '"" ··· T•• 011 .011 1 2•9 lSVt-""' teristics, ;mproved traction, longer life, lDwer cost per tire Rtpldpl'11J... I 11 ··· Tt11UIU I.I 11 KJ 21 ..... Iii ~,~ 1\IJ s 1J lO'l'I• " T•ii111m1111 .. » ,.... "" mile and higher gas mileage. A general forecast among ma-~v111n11 ·"' 1 S2 1nr.-""' T•>dr'Oll 1 10 10 to 24\11 • " •~!~ l~ 1b3f im!1~ r:~(: :: ;J ~.\lo~~ jor tire producers is that within five years -by 1980 -one
..... cv,... ,..... ... 70 1 is 1, .. ..., of every two tires used in the U .S . will be a radial. :~~co :: ~ ~~-;~ .~8j'11ttJ:\~ 3~ ~== -In an attempt to ease the tire selection process, one
q!'-q '"''" 1 1h+""' T11om.1w'.10s1 10 ,.,.. ... company <Uniroyal) has adopted a radial "performance-i:::r 2pt .. 2 ,~ ...... TI1f111-,o .401s J,f 1 •.. d hi• h r ·is r d ' 1 M&&t .•• za1 1111.-\oo T1~111111 '" n¥>-v. rated'' program, un er w c eac o 1 own our ra 1a ~.;:= i6 1g 1!t:: ... ·~ :ri:,,111r_1: ,~ ,~~ tt:::-:_: tires ls labeled according to its mileage capabilities. Before
:t.'t.:.d1:: : 2!: l~~: ~ l/::, ~~J :: 1:; n .. ;:: .buying, you can thus compare the tire performance ~hara~
Rt1sior •. w 9 2• • • "'° TltnlU'ltJU 1 ,,, '6111-v. terislics of Uniroyal's radiaJs: mileage, construction. re-
!'-n.nc: El 1 t 212 12"-•'"" n-,; RI .. 1 1111o-111i I · · b'J' t ts d I t' t "91£"°' nl .. U '3"' .. 5\li TobllPl<.l!oll •• u •"II-lo\ alive stopping a I 1ty OD we pavemen an re a Ive S eer· =::~::: 1~ ·~:'~ l:::'f.:1f.'\1 ·.: 2~ 2r1o ~~ ingresponse. tt
RtlntG pf8 ,, 6 16"'+ V. TonUCP ·.eo 11 99 l•lti+ "" · ' .
Rlllnc.GkP'C ·; 1 12-r:, TootiR1 .-. ,, 1 ,~ .. v. BUT THAT'S ONE company. Overall, you'll still be in =:.s ~ 1 1~ 1; + ... l~::'~ ·~ ~~ ~~ ~~· -~ ' an.utterly bewildering market when you're buying tires. this
:::Ti1'.':·1 ,;~ ~~ l'°"'"'m·· 1: ~.,..•1"" year. To help you with replacement tires. therefore, the •,.-'°'oe,'-1!1', n• .! -," T:·.toii 101 10 ::: Tire Industry Safety Council in cooperation with the Na~ vc ·-n•.,.. • TmKt..111 4Jl1 10s tlli-~ ti aim h T ffi d · · t · t "-...... Cop .• •1 ll't!+ v. TrllnllflF .'20, 124 ,...., .. 11o on n..ig way ra 1cA m1n1s rat1on,sugges : :!".::'"''·-~': J: ,U: ... ~ l~~:·=1' ~! r.~=: -Never choose as a replacement a smaller·size lirE
R•J<Nd i.20 • i.. uv. .. '"' Tron• w .t.Jr .. 110 •1111+ """ lhan those the car came with. Rlt1111 pl 2,3'.. 10 Jr • · · Tron•WA pf . , 1 IJ"'+ \ti . · II f ._, lndJ.oe ' 211 ~· 2z: Trov1r, 1 011s 111 2•~• ,... -Use tares of the same type or construction on a our t:::d~rtio s2~ ,f,,...!"" l~E1'~L ·:. ,~ 3:..,-.~ wheels unless the tires are designed for special
,,_,Mir •v:i . . 1, " .. v. rr1 eon Md 1.u to:w.. 1o1o rf c h 1· J ~ylf'll . .eo. 1 n nl't!+ ,,,, Trtai .,;1.,., ·· 1 31 .. ... pe ormance s ue as snow ires . =~~°r.! ,3 ,n llw.!1* 7•rr1!·"'° ·s 12 1~1o1ot ""' -Pair a single new tire on the rear axle with the tire
Rctimnd .to 11 1~ ~:!• ~ l::...,,.,:~ ·; 21~ Z:"° .. i~ having the most tread depth of the other three. ~=1 1~~~ ~ ~ ,~= 1111 ~~r.i~::2; 1: :;~: : -Limit your speed for the first so miles to under 55 :::r...t; :~ii ~ :::+ .'.""' ~=: ::.~: :. ; !~ ! 1~ miles.per hour to give your tire a "b~eak-in '_' period ~nd to
" ...... '"-··",,',', 1 ~ ~ r~ ... 1 111 u -""" permit the many complex elements 1n the tire to adJust to
. M T..CFo• .40 • ln Ulti+""" h df ct' . le I '( Rotirtin 1..., 1 _,.is ....... 11o r~1..ot1 .20, 10. 12t1o ... oneanot er an un ionasonem gra uni. Roi:>!'(? 1-t. 1J 1: ll~t l.!o Tyler Cp .i.o 5 1U 21\lo t 1\ti . . ~Tti .1012 :rt :;,,,, .. ·~ uAt..inc: ~ ~1"221"'°. ,,., -PERIODICALLY ROTATE your tires and check the :t:'l"1,;~ 't 2t: W'....:.:;: UALl'oA"" .. 2 21 • r: inflation levels to maintain them at top efficiency and ex-~:::,~·· • ~= .. ~ ~rc,il:.o t :: ~~r; ..... tend their usefulness -sometimes well beyond their ~H 1.11.:ili Jl " Z1"" uUMo,1 pn.rs, ·,,· 11050,, ", •• • ~ guaranteed mileage. Roll t Ja. :MJ J\o\+ J1o fflll'll ....... ,
Ronlr'll'in .lOiii 111 2•v.+ VII ~~ ;:!,: ~ ,:i..r. As for prices, they'll be up this year-but there also = P-21~ :: 1:~ ~ 1.1111Nv2:m 10 • 41 .. ,,., will be a proportionate gain in tire lire. An average tire will -.~'j!· . .,. 11 112 11~,.. ~ 8"~112:: 1; l;: 1;~.: ~ cost $39 and will go for approximately 30,000 miles. ROMr .... II 14 1•,.--"' u..c...-b24012 YO 7J • ~ Ro..+n . 4 JO :16 -.... Un c.o...nirt.. ,, 1\lo .. ~
RO'f'•ICC .n u « 11-\Ill Union c.oto 1l 165 '"' .. "" Ro,10 J.hb 4 Ill 4'1lo'o+ ~ Un l!IK 1111 I 1U 14,,,,-\lo
Roy•• • . 1St1 10 ,., •¥t! · · • un£• _.,:n . . n 21"" .. .,. RTE "' .1(> · tl •V.+ Ill UnEI pl 7.44 .. 11200 ID • S Ru-.a 21 2S 21'1> · •• Un EIK pf I I 11 • 1'h R ... urc .10 1 :1t1 11-1111 Un FlditlUy iO " 1-.-""' RuuTav .1• n lJ.O 14\11 + v. UnOC.11 1" 1 4S1 •s -" Rya.r s~~11'M1 .. \\ ~Cfll'i'h .. 10 51 -1.!o
Sat11111 R .60 10 Ulf 354+ VII Un ""' I.to 12 107 n-.-Ill .
Sot .. rd llld ,. 2J 2"-,,,, =:. !IO ·; ~ ~"' •• i!; -~~r~ ; ~J ~::: Unlro-,•1P..• .. lSJO ., .. I •• 1 Uld lr+ll!tl , , IU 6\lt--\It Mnt1 .2010 tt7 •1 .. +"" utdllrndllf n 1Vt+ 1o11 Sl..loLIP I. It I 1 12"-l.!o 1'b "
SU...S..FM' 31 mi.+¥< ~J'Yi:1i .10 'j, ~ :"": t: St"-11IS ..... .. 1J ll'h .. . UGnPt.. n r !SJ 1•'4 st"'91~ 1s.1 • •n ._ .. " Uld ~nw 11 •1 ..... + · vt SolionlC .J"'81J lil I ..... + \II 1.lftiUU112l2 6 12 14"+"""
S..OGs 1.10 lJ 113 11 + l'o UnlllllC ~· , ' 11:v.-v. Sen.Jn R '°" 1 n "" . . . , ~o-~ , 0 , •• , •• Sondor ""'° 17 5'I '"" . . • "'' .... ... . • ' •• •• Sol'IF 1111.IO I 249 U 'h +-. UtdMM ,to ,, ,. 11"+ l'I SFeln pf so 10 -Un Nuc:IHrP m 12~+1\lil So"-1roi:1 "30 ·; JJJ n"""-ii.I; Unlltfne.41 ' •2 11"'+ 'Ml
t'J-... t •• ''"' USFldtfl.•12 111 JI,.+ .. . '"'" "' USFoSc Md 11 1 ...... "" BFR1£., 41 J'llo ••• US,..-i.Mlii 3'1 "" .. i. S...EPw . .0 6 44 tVt ... ,,.,p ~ ... ·-" 5o•Elpfl.2t .. 16 12lli+ Vt U~ .. ·..-.-Sov" Stop n • -"" USll!dus . .. m •VII+ \lo Sov1n8 Mc:ll ,Cj 161 ll't!+ " ~ .21 7 1t1 10\lo-Ill SovOnOr 211 IJ .. I--.... u s Aooltr . . , 2\11-..... So--. llldi.s t 501 5\li-'4 US 9-.'tS 11 lff U-+1\lo SCA Strvltt M 2~ VII US$"" 1.IO I Wlt6 1:1'<' .. :W. ~trc,i '.'. s ,_,,,, USTobeco111 127 JOl'J+ 'Ml
5c"'rl"I .• 22 S1t 55 • Vt utdTICl'm! 2 1 .WO S3f't '" 5cfllltlll 6123 SJ 22""+ \'II UWT+cl'lofl .. 4SUIV.-\ll s.:111..,.,., · .. 21 m n,_-1•1o U111Te1 1.1210 w ,,...._ *-
SCM c:1t10, n 1 '"" .. ,,.. Ur!ITol wt• .... 1~""" SCOAllld 0,7(\ 7 II 11\lo ,,.· UlllTplA lVll .. 1 20fll ... .__ .. , • • .... ,,. Ullllrod .llSd ,. 1• • ' .. ......,...., ---''' i...11,,....111• UJJl,t. .. "' ScottFI l.Ol 10 45 21-'lllo UlllvLT 1'11 7 :U 21Vll .. Ill StotlFor .74 7 lM 11'1<+"11UOl'lnc0rp111•11 --
SaltlPap.6111 411 10 ''" = "" Jl3 41\lo .. 1 ..... Sc.ottrs l . TO 1t 311 8*-"" • ScovlllMlg I 31 11 1:1¥.-VII IFE ..J2 • ,,_ U + l'lo
ScovtllllZ"" 11 ~ UllW.Fd ... 11 24 I°" •·• ScllddtrOV " m 614+'~ \ISMC.ltl.20 1 17 21\lo+ lli s.:ua pt 11t1 " 16 1-""' USM '11 '"" •• zua :II"' .. 11. SbdCt..11i.a "i 461 2S USMr::t.10 .. 2 J1-\ll s..contr"JO' '° 11'111+·~ utM m11a12 4n U\lo+1"' S.W Alrt' SI I '1: I + 111 UIMPL t...O 10 SJ 1':r.+ \.\ 5Hgr.., .IOlS ,. SIW.+ 'Ml ut ~1.11 .. '2 JI ... Sooar•vw 11 u J""+ v. uv1,,....19 f 1J1 2•Vt+" SHl"Pow .IO 11 ll """+ \Ii UV111 Jiii l."Ho ., 1 211111+ ¥> S.!1GO U 10 11'7 1$.\li .. lo\ -¥ Y-SNrs 16o. 21 su 69!\+1111 V•lllytll .ID j 47 11'11• "' " ·~ 2'°" V•IMI .20 1 Jl7 ISi. .. VII Sottr .. 11 1..111 .. 1.., · · · Vtodil1' t .ea I 2 111/t-i. SEDCO • II ' 3ol7 Hll't-lli I ... Stnlt.C u s 1J J-\Ill ....... c.o " 1 ··-s..--· .. t JS,..,_+ 1o1o \l'tl'llul11 .2llJ U •-\lo Sl\llli:Olp ·ie ,, 12 1 _ .,. ....._ 1.m .. n tlVt ... ~If 0 1010 2" 1•\11+ 'h WleO Off'ltl I 1JO ,._,+VII 5Nl1002:MI 1 U2 J2 +I VFQlnl,1011 27 21\t ••• si.tlorG .S.' 's 1114+ .... Vltcom lntt• 120 11\o\ ...
St-9Urpl I .0 2 1• + ¥> Vlc:lr °""'4 , . ll S + .... sr.urp11'JS '' t 21--w. V•Eltcl,\11 • $11 ,.,.._.,.. ~r1~•112'.20i• SJ Jl1olo+ 'Ill V•l!""t., .. tt 1tftl .. \If SlorroPt .tJ t 114 1!>111+ \Iii VolEJ.tc: pl ,, 140 st -~
51.,,.1c .toe , 201 1•,..,_ ...., ~.~'#"'• '! ,~:=z " ~ICopll .. I 1~ ... •'" ....,,. O •> -I SI~ 2.20 . . • JJ\11-2 V\lkllM ~ W ..
si.-Co 1 IS 21' 31 + ,. --~·¥> II,..-..
Sime>nn .12 • t• '"" ... Wiich 76 'i 21 n.,. .. r · si .... 1c ... '' • u...,-.,. '• 1 ,..... J'h ·Slmol'tt .40 11 7'6 11 + " .,..,., t. • · • Slnvtr C.O .. lJt tl14-\oo ~ <; ii ~ l~ = ·-:iitftv. .. 21 :tlYI+ 'h =:r.ri-.11 1S »""'+in Sii ... 11 .. Joi"-\t .,,.II auii to JO 10 11 .. + VII Slit y 1.100 I • 70 + 'h w.t!Mr .... • .. U 5111M Qlrp11 M U ,...,_'It 1MW1 lall 11 I* .. ·~ Sll-,tlnCD .?470 J11 XI~-.... Will 1.11 :1111 M IW.+ ..
SmlltlAO.Ml14 JI 11\li -\oo =Fd1S1 1S JI '"""* '<' Smlllllllt .• to U1 :m.-1'MI w • 10 1~
Stamlard,.Pacific
Earnings a Record
Strong demand for the com-The company ~lso posted"
pany's medium-priced homes record fourth quarter results
boosted Standard-Pacific as net income rose to $822,117.
Corp.'s 1975 revenues and or 46 cents per share, on re-
earnings to record highs foi venues $17,312,039, as com-
thethirdconsecutiveyear. pared to net income or
Arthur E . Svendsen, $345,822, or 17 cents, on re-
cbairman or the Costa Mesa· venues of $10,703,361 for the
yearend results. fourth quarter of 1974.
Net income 1975 rose to Fully diluted earnings for
$1,776,080, equal to 98 cents ·1975 rose to 81 cents penhare
per share, on revenues ot . as compared to 69 cents in
$46,195,122, as compared to 1974. Fully diluted fourth
net incoine of $1,718,636, or 79 quarter earnings per share
cents, on revenues ot were 36 cenls in 1975 and 15
5'2,624,439 for the prior year.·. ·cents in 1974.
Union Federal S&L
Planned for Viejo
Union Federal Savings and
Loan Association haa broken
ground for its newest office
located at Marguerite
Parkway and La Paz Road in
Mission Viejo.
WEEKENDER
Oet1 It ALL
The Mission Viejo faCility
will be Union Federal Sav-.
ings' thirteenth branch. ll
becomes the third Union
.Federal facility in Orange
County. Designed in early
California architectural
motll, the new 5,000.square.
foot facility will feature re-
aawn redwood and rustic
Spanish tile on the exterior.
SmltllltllrM21• ,, •l + "'~'50 "i "2 21:wi .. i~ SmltM T .50 t tt' 14\oo+ "'-•w. 4 1S +IVll Smuc:kor ... I t 17Vt ·;r 1\li ·· 1J '' +1 ._ ____ ...;. ____ _
Soil Bol .10 1 14 1Jllio+ .. """""I 51 "i to I"+ \lo !<m -• ,,... Sotlt'll• lnll I IJ J'!ll ... W.Lolft "9217 Ul :miii .. \to P-t flOll Clim ,.._ I" , I .. + n Wt. .... , .. liW. + l"' ...,_ ltd 't M ,.,. .. ,lollKClw!ld I JS nti + 1111 ~ ·• I 22 11'11+ \.lo
lM" .. , 1•"' ... '""".. ,. ,, .... " .. ,,..,.. ... E \oil .-cto .•• 20 Jiit-\.lo ;;;;:rJ;t.·j : f:Vll .. -~ •, •.11 •• 111t .. Vt+~. 1r11i2 J'IS~loti""'1111-*te 1 •"' MKm111 .n•1" ,,.,,_ .... ,.., • .-.1 111 ss2,.,. .. ._. i..t.:,1· ..:11; .. ·~ ~~! 41: n~:~ =£1-!!'t m l!'il. ~ =' •'•l! ~? ,m :~:. ~ ·=~~~,~ 2~ ~t=: ~
SonvCD .at. 41 1024 1ow. • , , w..S 1'.JO a u 2:1*-14 ~.,,. Sool.llt.:IOll I J llltlio ,,, ...,..;,o.1•1 29 19"'+ \to :...._w w-. SOSCll~ . .o 7 lt 10\.'lo+ lti w.flHll IQ 1 S tl'h-1". """""C:p1CJ ., 2 J6 ···
Architects for the Union
Federal Savings and Loan
building expected to be com-
pleted in the mid spring is
SGPA of San Diego and
Mackel and Associates of Los
Aqeles. General contractor
for the facility is Klein eon-.
tractors of Anaheim. -
-11;:• II ~ -:.:. , .... n .-. "1411 . ;'li1111S 1 ....... --ff 111 IOtlt-.... ~•to • l0\41 t ... tt 14 +ln •AU Z1 ,.._,"' ...-t~tJ11 f! + Ned • Sftl "' i2t1I! ti 11-·i-\
• ·~' 11 '?' :."'. .tl11 14 ""'•" =:fA-, • ~"'·: -j .:"'!;: c;..1r .. -1!1 , ..... "' ,.., "111s~ .... " ,,,,,. ... e ..... ~ .. ,, .,. .!Mt,., lN-"" 1.1tllJD0$4i. .. n • "'~·+ t it ... +;44 •.~ii J;J:U:!1l: . us -.. "" Me11111C1.0S... t-.+""' ~:fl'l t J~ :::
I. , .... 17·-~ :I IM I.._~ •• f • 1 +Wt MeNIM' Ml• 1 U\o'o ··· !:l!!",.:l110 d4Ql20 I'' 14 •, " .., u~ ,,.. •• 1 st I ... -~.ea 1 M~+ "" ~ 11.oo :: .-. 11ow. .. ·~ •. !1 "lt•;i · .~t !'!t fr'•!~ '4~·1 II'"~!:::~ =.. ·:1: SI 1: ... ~ =~!!t:·· ill :....,_j\\ ==ju "' ~· \; C. » 1-.+ "" $E . .. M + "' #llt oi11a 11 JJ •" + 'Ill ,..'N[',.. 1 ·• 110 "' + "" t4,'°' t l: Ii I • •'•'•·l• . ...~ tt; ~:,:. 3( ~ ~'. m ''""• v. , ~-• '° .. m 50 ' ft w Vt. 14 =• = 5:1'..oii tll SSl4 ::: ' -11-il •-·-11 i;t:•1 511c, ··-~ : ,,..: ... ""' 11: ~ 1,..-;.. 111111 ..... 19 ,, ...... ~tl +"'° ill ;1o1i-·(.li.,_. . 10 n.-" §ii' '°11 It'll'-• 1,,.,,=-~= .. "!4 • • ..... .. "' .... l! ... . .. .. •• '" i:::::'bl" ... 1.. .. • ••• l::·; :i l U ·~" II -;f ,-~ • ~:~ J;:'+'" ,,. .. 1.c.1 ~lli ft: r.:I.. :ff ~If '': !.I ll 11! t'• ~J:illj'' ·1 il• • :". =~l:l:Ji '!I i:::;-;:
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11 t!._ --t i; 't 4 II + ~ !t = . +1 ~rn II lj R " ..... di ltM-... :r .!.: :::•h"'~.~ !!!!!..'!1'~~:1 :i1 ~:: ~'~-:~, .. ri::;::i~ii::,;su~:~~
II •a.tit .~UHW! .. ~Ji*.J11 ..... · ... Mc:Owq1 "1"'-"'iNisl .• , "t=.v. ,._, " . , •...
• •
I
sewe11.,11 1s2 11"' .. " w_,.511·1, 9 J 1s ,,, WNttM0191' .... 1t11 .. ,,,,
S0trlpf2V... 1 M +.,.. WllW~-56 1 >IN+ 16 Wlllt\+lllrQJ"' m 4 -""' ~ .IJI S 1' tllli ,., "'"" 9 ,, 1'4 ,,. ::::..:~ t 111 11,. •.. 5r-1::11 1H t::=:," = ... \~,1R ~~ ·=u=t!'t.:: !F-;;,; sc.~:f.Ut ,,: 1f:::: ~'i::·s J 'r'!~ 1wil:'.O:·•-' ... ;"" SW!flC.01 . ..0 1 110 IJ\li+ i. _,., ,.0 I 20 ,.._..,. W111110.14'11S 4J ..0 ·;. Soil11GE1 . ..011 U 31 + 'IJ Wlbb0t1C.,1.n •~ , .. ~ ·· '11 .-... Sofol,_s 1,'3 t 14) 5"I +S Wll!Mct.. M 12 t -\la Wlll!P f.tt 11 1116 2't •••
$oNEniiTI I It 9 ~-Mi ""9llMlll '71 ti 1111a , • Wlsllpf l.tO ., OIO 1D2 -'<'
Sol"M.lft.2411 uo •.. •HJftt-:t. .. Ill-"+ E i=t•ll '"'·· ot,. l° .. ~ 5olt•U1.ll1t 1•1 9'•1~ '#lflMl:CM , 51 1'111t 1.10 I t ..... +
Soll1llpf ,JO ., 24 ~ ••• ~""·'°' ,, IJ\111+ l ~f-UiO~ ~-·VII =~:t1:·; 1~ =16!t~ =.r;.1.:.
11 ll!I li~ VIit ::. 1)o11 71' ...... • ... i" ,..,.lllrllll ,..O IJ Im H + .. .,.,. fliWI ,,.,_ 1.u ·-... ..
5o'lnll't ,,. ti 197 11111+ "" ......, Al 1 " ,._ '1 -.. ~. • ,~-:-~ ~ t\o'tl • • 1 '"" + " """-'IA 11t mt+ " "":::M -~i!:tl , I,..._. .. \o'I •11Hlt'.!: f Ill lttit-'4 I •• t n 1:~:: s;;,;;.,u.11~ "11:=t =-~·:1•, n ,1:1tt 1 .......... ,. .s,, .. ,, .... ~
,,...,...,. ... ,, in,,._.,. WUllWllA •, ,..., " ~uo .1 •" s.~., •• ,,'°" ........ 1 .. "'"*""llf'·· .... , . """' '°• "4ftlt \la
W "II 4~ tlt• '4 •-...rLtl .. P.=:". Wl'ltlYt.•ll oil "" ... Dll:~!O tfll §~t:a""' ~~·1~-. ·~ r·=UT~~yj» 116-'tit lib .tollH '4+ ~1 I tS t... -..; -
yMt,• SIM • ,,_,_.1 , I + \.t ~O 11tll M' -.• "• llrMl.1411 11S \ti+ \Iii....,,_, 1t M 01"+ W. lQ,. ll'IOOf,. O +
•;r1"'·'litJn ::c:'-1' tt ~ ~:· .. mtl~': t ,:=:.t ,,.'i!'.lfi ' "' ..,.. ~ ,,. "" . , T~ ... ' ,... .. . '°" 1:1 1CI ,,, .,,.._,. ti ... ,,_ ::. ~--· ' "r.:-.. . 1 •., ll l1lli+ '4 .• 1!60 J1 -1 i• .. 1 IOI 1 ••· Pr~ ... • 11il ~" •. II .. •1 ••• Oll'i'dK ..,1" \to+ 14 Sid Prlld .M It It ....... '81' W1111 tt l7• ,... , Ill,_. I 1'v. ••· ~.AO I It Ulil.t M WJllt •• ' 11 tl\lt 19' lllll.J:l12 2'1 lllli+."
• l
Anaheim Firm
Income Climbs
An'a.he.im -based Executive
Industries Inc., a rDotomome
m111ufad.urer, reported salei
for the nrat quarter ended
Dec. st of $8,0U,000 and net
lntome of ts67 ,000, oreo cents per1hare.
TblJ ~ompare1 to alls ot
$4,017;000 and net income of
SU0,000, or 8 cenu, a year
aao. Thomas E. Frank. pres(.
dent. said these results
represent the best first
quarter ln the company's hia·
tory,
•
" DAIL V PILOT
Patience .
Pays Off
For Curl
HONOLULU (AP) -Patience
)>aid off for Rod Curl.
•'I'd been playing good. If
you're playing good, it's just a
matter of time until the putting
comes around. It came around
today," the happy little guy said
·after his brilliant eight-under·
par 64 had set the pace in the first
round of the $230,000 Hawaiian
Open golf tourna ment.
"It could have been better, but
how do you complain about a
64?" Curl asked.
"I touched the cup on five putts
that dido 't fall. It might have
been a 60."
He paused and grinned
broadly.
"But I more than made up for
it on those long ones. You can't
figure to make those."
He scored three times from
30·35 feet, didn't make a bogey
and didn 't miss a green, but
keyed his round by the surprising
power that he packed in his 5.
foot-5 frame. He reached one
par-five in two and two-putted for
birdie and scored two others
when his massive drives let him
use a nine iron for approaches on
par four holes measuring 411 and
447 yards.
"The course is made for the big
hitter," Curl said. "It really
helps to have the power.
"It was the most perfect day
you could have." Curl said. The
temperature was in the 80s. The
tropic sun was bright and warm.
The trade winds were but gentle
breezes. swirling through the
palms and banyan trees.
And it set up some of the lowest
scocing of the year on the pro
. tour. There were 16 scores of 67
·or better. There were 71 scores -
almost half the field -al 70. two
under par on the 7,219-yard
Waialae Country Club course.
Big John Jacobs, Like Curl one
of the game's long hitters. was
alone in second at 65. Former
Newport Beach resident Alan
Tapie. now li vi ng in Laguna
Beach, shot a 70.
First roU<ld le<tders tn the' 1230.000 Hawa11an
ClPenQOll tourn•ment
Rod Curt
JomJIKobs
Halelrwon
Ed Sf'lff(I
BoOMuri>hy
Al Gelbuoer
Barry Jeeckel
Lou Graham
Eddle~arce
TomSNw
Tommy McGon"''
George lklrM
FISU'f Zoeller
Howard Two tty
GO Mor-aan
8otJ«rf W .o k Ins
John MIN Hey
Dick R11yan
UnnyWadklns
Bob Wynn
V1c~o-1aoo
Rick RlcMrds
Olaries CoOdy
8illyCnoer
Arnold Palmer
Lon Hinkle
33·31~
Jl.31-6S
J.j 31-64
J.131-'6
31·3~
J.j 31-64
JJ-ll-64
)1-l0-67
1'33-67 J.l ll-47
3S-l2-47
ll-1'-47
J.1-33-47
lS-l?-67
34 33-67
3).J.l-67
34·3"1-68
JS-33-64
lS-33-68
JJ.-3~
34-34-68
J.1.34-68
:M·lol-68
333S-68
• J.j 34-68
33-3S-.S
Frld!Y, January 30, 1979
GEORGE HARTMAN
~allchos' Hart1nan Quits
By CRAIG SHEFF the pastfour years isa9-2-l mart Hieb ln Anaheim, EJ Serwtdo Desert Conference and won the °' 111• o.u, """..... In 1972 when the Gaochol were High and San Clemente. title. Saddleback was switched to
Saddleback Colleee football Milslon Conference co-champs. · Hartman wa1 a star athlete at the M lssion Conference the
coach and athletic director Hartman's Saddleback teainJ Cleburne Htsh in Texas, earning following season, but .Wl won
Georee Hartm~n h11:5 submitt~ have never been abut out. , all·stat~ honors. He attended the crown with ail 8-1-1 ~.
his letter of resignation, the D81-'lbe East Texas State Universi-Paris ... Tex. JC and w~ selected After a 7•3 season tn '71 wblch ly Pilot has learned. . to the Little All•Arnencan team 1 d rd Hartman, who guided the ty graduate was fired as athletic aa a defensive lineman for East Hartman cal e 8 ~1 ~o9-i
Gauchos to five conference director two years ago, but pre-Texas State in 1953 He also the Gauchos posted 9
h · bi · · h ssure by booster club members . · . marks the next two years, win-e amptons ps m e1g t years,. forced the Saddleback College played in the Tan1erine Bowl m ning Mission tiUes. His last two was unavailable for comment. '53. · d ds': A former San Clemente High board of trust~ea to reco~d,r. He ls a form~r Marine Corps teams have notcbe 8-1 recor .
coach, Hartman started the foot· their action. . V platoon leader. Hartman, in his letter of re-
ball program at Saddleback and Before comin1 to Saddleback Hartman's first Saddleback signation, expressed a desire to
imn;tediately built it into a power. Hartman complied a ~28-3 re· team, composed of all freshmen, remain at Saddle~ack as a full
His elght·year record is 62-16-4 cord ~n 10 years of high school posted a 4.5 record against most-time instructor. His resUtnati«?n
and his Saddleback teams have coaching. ly four-year JV teams. He has as football coach and athletic
never lost over .. ftve games in His previous coaching assign-not had a losin~ campaign since. director is effective the end of the
one season. The worst record in ments have been at Savanna His '69 unit was 9·2 in the school year.
Schenk Rebuilding Li/ e Pac-8 Race
Tragedy, Failure
ffit Ex-Olympian
AMSTERDAM (AP) -Ard
Schenk, the lanky Dutch speed
skater who won three gold
medals to become the dominant
figure of the 1972 Sapporo Winter
Olympics, will be on the sidelines
at next week's Innsbruck Games
as a television commentator.
Now 31, Schenk quit skating in
1974 after two abortive years as a
professional to concentrate on
work as a physiotherapist and
part-time reporter for Dutch
television.
.. But I have an empty feeling
insi.Oe knowing I won't be taking
part at Innsbruck." he said in an
interview. "The Olympics were
after all part of my life for about
10 years.··
Schenk has fond memories of
Innsbruck, where in 1964 he first
tasted Olympic competition. Un-
d au n t e d b y me a g e.r
performances then. he set his
sights on the 1968 Grenoble
Games and won a silver medal.
Then came Sapporo, where he
impressively won gold medals at
1,500, 5,000 and 10,000 meters to
earn recognition as perhaps the
greatest speed skater in history.
In between, he set a string of
world records, six of which still
stand.
Much has happened since then
to the tall, blond Schenk, who on·
ce was voted Holland's most
handsome man. An attempt at
professional speed skating
failed, and his marriage ended in
tragedy after two months with
the death of his wife.
Soon after the 1972 Games.
Schenk joined a newly-formed
professional speed skating
circuit which folded in two years
when the American·backed ven-
ture failed to attract enough
spectators.
"The trouble was the people in
charge of the organization didn't
understand speed skating," he
said. "It was simply a failure."
Disillusioned and unable im·
mediately to regain his amateur
s tatus, Schenk set up a
physiotherapy practice to work
rehabilitating injured people. He
qualified for the profession in
1973 after a four-year course.
When Schenk announced his
retire ment . he received
numerous offers from Dutch and
foreign television, radio stations
and newspapers. He refused
most but accepted a contract
from Dutch television to-report
skating meets and agreed to
write a column for an
Amsterdam paper.
He secretly married last Sep-
tember. But barely two months
later, his wife, Christine. died
from a mystery heart condition.
They had been due to move into a
specially renovated cottage just
outside Amsterdam only a few
days later.
The couple had known each
other for years, but decided not
to marry until Schenk had quit
skating and was eslablished'as a
physiotherapist. Few people
knew his wife, who preferred to
stay out of the limelight of her
husband's fame.
Schenk, who prefers not to dis-
cuss his recent personal tragedy,
now lives alone in an apartment
in an Amsterdam suburb. Close
friends say he is tackling life as
before.
•
To Tighten
This Week?
LOS ANGELES -There's just
enough Pacific-8 basketball
scheduled this weekend to create
a three-way tie for the con-
ference lead.
First place could become
crowded in the Pacific Coast
Athletic Association and West
Coast Athletic Conference races,
too.
The Oregon State Beavers cur·
rently lead the Pac-8 with a 4·1
record and their league record
was unaffected by a 76-74 loss to
Oregon in overtime at Portland
Thursday night.
It was the teams' annual extra
game of the season which does
not count in the Pac-8 standings.
Last weekend in a game that did
count, Oregon beat the Beavers
83-68.
The winner of Saturday's re-
gionally televised game between
Washington State and
Washington in Seattle will match
OSU's 4-1 conference mark, and
defending champion UCLA will
be seeking its share of the lead when it faces Southern Cal Satur-
day night at Pauley Pavilion,
where the Uclans have won 94
straight home games.
Stanford, whose 6-10 is the only
losing overall record among
Pac-8 teams, plays tonight and
Saturday at Hawaii.
RefJeb Ra•flk!
LAS VEGAS -Unbeaten,
third-ranked Nevada Las Vegas
got 29 points from 6-7 junior
forward Eddie Owens and buried
Seattle's Chieftans 107-77 Thurs-
day night in a noncon!erence
basketball game.
The Rebels, winning their 22nd
game of the season -15 of them
at home -jumped into a
halftime lead of 53-30 and coasted
to the easy victory.
Antt•Roll
SAN DIEGO -Guards Ray
Leary and Mark Delsman hit
successive baskets to break a tie
and San Diego State ripped Cal
State (Long Beach), 79-52 Thurs-
day night in a battle of the
Pacific Coast Athletic Associa·
lion's two leading basketball
teams.
Leary's 23-foot jump shot gave
the Aztecs a two·point edge at
41·39 with 16'h minutes to play
and seconds later Delsman hit a
layin for a four point edge.
Ftdlertoa tt'f••
Forwards Greg Bunch and Tim
Dwyer each scored 18 points
Thursday night as host Cal State
(Fullerton) edged Fresno State,
68-60, in a Pacific Coast Athletic
Association basketball game.
UYER GAINS
QUAKl'ERFINALS
PHILADELPHIA-COrona del
Mar's Rod Laver toppled Brian
Gottfried, 7 -6, 7 ·6, but Bob Lutz of
San Cl emente fell to Dick
Stockton. 4-6, 64, 6·4, Thursday in
the $115,000 U.S. pro indoor tennis
championships here.
U ... T....,._.
WAL TON RETURNS-Former UCLA star Bill Walton of
the Portland Trail Blazers, nursing a nose injury in
Wednesday 's NBA battle with Seattle, returns to
Southern California tonight in a rematch with the
Lakers and Kareem Abdul-Jabbar at the Forum, begin-
ning at 8.
Sports ia Brief
LA, Portlaml Vie;
Kings Tie Detroit
INGLEWOOD -Last week
when the Los Angeles La.leers and
Portland Trail Blazers squared
oCf in Oregon, Bill Walton
emerged the victor in the battle
of giants against Kareem Abdul·
Jabbar in a 119-96 Portland vie·
tory.
The Lakers are hoping a home
court advantage will pay off
tonight when the two teams meet
again.
Los Angeles leads the season
series with Portland 3-2, with all
three Lakers victories coming at
home -116-109, 104·95 and
110-101.
Walton and Jabbar both seem
to play their best basketball in
the matchup. The Lakers center
has averaged 35.2 points a game
against Portland with 13.8 re-
bounds and has shot .584 from the
field.
Walton in the series bas
averaged 17.3 points per contest
with 15.5 rebounds.
KlapRallfl
tournament Thursday.
Wade lost little time in dispos-
ing of Cynthia Doerner, 6-4, 6-2;
Navratilova defeated Natasha
Chmyreva, 6-0, 4-6, 6-3 ;
Navratilova won over Wendy
Overton, 1-6, 6-3, 6-1; and Nancy
Gunter halted Olga Morozova.
Panet1Ma• llft•"'•
CHICAGO -Former Notre
Dame football Coach Ara
Parseghian will return to the
college coaching ranks -but
only for one game.
Parseghian, 52, will coach the
1976 College All-Stars against
the National Football League
champion Pittsburgh Steelers.
U.S., Aussies
Meet in Rugby
For the first time .since 1924.
the United States will field a na-
s~outs Turned AIDG!I UPITe~e
In other matches Thursday,
Jimmy Connors advanced to the
quarterfinals with a 4-6, 6-1, 6-3
win over Stan Smith; Bjorn Borg
toppled Mark.Cox, 6-3, 6-3; Tom
Okker overpowered Allan Stone,
6-4, 6·4' Jan Kodes eliminated
John Alex and er, 7 -6, 6-3; and Tom
Gorman handed Arthur Ashe his
firstloss of the season, 6-3, 3-616-3.
INGLEWOOD -Mike Murphy
and Butch Goring fired in goals
16 seconds apart late in the third
period Thursday night lilting the
Los Angeles Kings into a 3-3 Na-
tional Hockey League tie with the
Detroit Red Wings.
tional rugby team when it m~ts
Australia in an international
match at Anaheim's La Palma
Park at2 Saturday afternoon.
Among the 21 players on the
U.S. team is NewJJ()rt Beach's
David Stepberuion. Pittsburgh goa lie Gary fnness· makes a
nice save against Robin Burns' shot on
goal to help protect a 6-2 National Hockey
League victory for the Penguins over
Kansas CHy . It was the 14th straight loss
for the hapless Scouts as Ron Shock, Vic
Hadfield and Ed Gilbert each scored a
goal and had an assist in leading the win-
ners.
Hunter on· Open Market A.gain?
NEW YORK (AP)-Believeit
or not, Catf11h Hunter may be a
free agent aialn.
Hunter, whose free agency 13
mool.b:s ago brought him a rive·
. year, $3.75 million contract with
the New Yodt Yankees, may be on
tbe open market once again if the owners t•r:rf oat their no-play
tbreaUor aprlo' training.
traininl camps if the plnyers and
owners don't reach agreement on
a labor contract by then.
"U the ownen delay the open
ine of spring traiflina, it would
constJtute a breach or every
players' contract similar to what
happened in the Catlish Hunter
case, .. MUJersald.
Hunter was not paid in the man·
ner stipulated by hls contract, ~
was a free agent
Instead of one free agent roam·
tna the hills of North Carolin•,
there 1000 couJd be hundreds all
over the country if the playen
don't 1.i pald !or the sps;i.ngtrain-
lngperiod. .
Be1ldea the owners• Ulreat&,
Comrnl.11iooer Bowle Kuhn has
said that the training camps may
stay quiet untU a new labor con·
tract between the players a..n.d
owners la •lined. Thelutooeea·
pired Dec. 31.
The Kines came to' lite with
1:41 left to play when Murphy
drilled his 18th goal of the season
to pull the Kings within ~2. Then
Goring sent a lO·{ooter past
Detroit goalie Jim Rutherford
for bis second goal of the evening
and 22nd of the season with 1:25
left.
K..,, ie VN£¥
LAS VEGAS -Tony Knap,
bead football coach at Boise
State University for the past
eight years .. la the new head
coacb at the . University of
Nevada, Las Vegas.
Knap, 80, Thuraday was
named to succeed ROii Meyer •
who resianed to become head
coach at Southern :Methodist
Unlvenlty. +·
p..,.r.fta Aile.w
This will be the United States•
first international game and it
will be Australia's only match in
America. Coached by Dennls
·Storer, UCLA's head man ln
rugby{ the Americ1m1 are
bopef u of gaining the same klnd
o( respectabllty they bad earlier
this century. .
In 1908, 1920 and WM, the U.S.
entered ru1b1 teams at the
Olympic Oamft and woo two
'old medals. a feat no other country hat acbleved t:n ru&by ..
Auatralla, meaawhile, hu one
ol the mott 1ucceuful lnterna ..
tiona.l nJSbY tourins team; and lf
the Uni~ St•tes can win, tt
would areat11 enhance tbe
Am.rtcana' li~Uona.l 1tatU1.
Tbat'I t1M opinion or Marvin
MUler, eaecu.Uv•. director of the
m-.Jor le.,ue baseball playeTS as-
aocJatloo, wbo r e"ponded on
Ttiurad•Y to tbe owners'
threatened 1bilt down of spring
Hunter, who led ~ Oakland
A's to three wotld cbam-
pion1blp1. left them In 197'
because Cbarlea O. P'lnley
breached hlJ 1tar pl~ber'1 con·
tract. Arbitrator Peter Seitz ruled
tn December of 1974 ~t becau e
··u tbe ownen close down tlle
camps, the players would de-
mand to be pald," Miller said. "U
they were not paid, then their con-
tracta would be breached. It'•
tbat1lmple."
KUbn w •• not aY,Uabte for
comment ao4 ldt acllom over the
tut two days are a mystery. to
Boston on Wedne1day for
'lbunday'• baeball writers' dln·
ner, Kuhn excuted blmaelf, aay· m, ht bad to leave beeau.se of a
matter "of arave lmJJOrtance."
CHICAQO-Vlr1llila :Wade,
Evonne Goolaaona md M.nm. NavratJloYa advanced to the
aemift.n•ll of tbe m.oeo Chi~
profeulonal women's tennl1
-.. Wattlm, prelldmt ol tbe
s.tJMril California Rust>Y Foot.-
WI umon, ba1 been quotect u 1.,m1, .. Ulla la a landmark op.
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CdM, Mesa,
Estancia
In Action
Unbeaten Corona del Mar is
seeking Its 19th straight victory
tonlabt when the Sea Kings of
coach Tandy Gillis invade El
Modena High tn Century League
basketball play.
Tipoff ls at 8 as are two other
key circuit tesl.1--COSta Mesa at
Santa Ana and Estancia at
Tustin. Villa Park hO..'Jts winless
Magnolia in the other Joop test.
For rampaging Corona de l
Mar, which has already won at
Est.a.ncla, Villa Park and Costa
Mesa, it's a chance to add addi-
tional fuel to the Sea Kings' No. l
ranking in Orange County and
No. 2 Cli' •·A rating behind un-
beaten IA>oa ~ acb Poly.
Glllb' c rew handled El
Modena by 18 in their first con-
trontaUon and the &-9, 6-7 front
line of El Modena stayed with
CdM for onJy one quarter.
Alex Black leads Corona del
Mar With an 18.5 average while
any munber of combinations in
tbe CcSf stable are capable of
producin1 double figures .
Bla~k's lowest output in 16 starts
is 10 points.
Coach Larry Sunderman's
Cceta Mesa Mustangs are locked
in a three-way tle for second
place wltb Estancia and Villa
Park and are favored to win at
Santa Ana, although the Saints
are vastly improved and possess
a big advantage with the home
court.
Dan Byers leads Mesa with a
15.0 average and Gary Spink is
deadly from outside with a 10.3
average.
Estancia will be trying to re-
bound from two straight losses
which knocked coach Dave
Carlisle's Eagles two games off
the pace. Jim Mccloskey has
been limited to 25 points in bis
last two appearances and figures
to be bard pressed against
Tustin 's height advantage in the
front line.
Rustlers Host
LA Southwest
Golden West College, virtually
eliminated flt'om the Southern
California Conference basketball
race, bids to run its circuit ma rk
to 3-3 tonight when the Rustlers
host LA Southwest at 8 o'clock.
LA Southwest, a run-and-gun
ouUit, came into conference play
with a 11·3 record, but has
dropped four or five to circuit
foes. The Cougars are led by 6-5
Kevin Wolfe ~ho has a 17.8 scor-
ing average.
Golden West's Paul Schilleci is
the second leading scorer in the
confere nce with a 19.4 aver3ge.
LA Harbor's· Charles Evans
leads with a 22.4 mark.
Dally Piiot l'Mto
DOUBLE TROUBLE -El Toro High's one-two punch of
Mike (14) and Mark 05) Hill gives the Chargers a uni-
que approach to things as they continue their quest for
the South Coast League crown.
Twins Lead El Toro
It's Hard to Tell
The Hills Apart
By ROGER CARLSON
Of UM Dally Piiot 5gtf
The El Toro High Chargers
have already made it clear they
are bona fide threats to win the
South Coast League basketball
championship-surprising with a
5-2 record and a share or first
place-<lespite being picked to
finish fourth in the circuit.
The lowly prediction, however.
is j ustified. The Chargers of
coach Wendell Witt won only
three or eight pre-league. games
and bad no returning starters
from the 1975 qufotet which
earned a CIF 2-A playoffs berth.
Too. with an ultra balanced at-
tack there were no individuals
that stood out.
And if their scoring was a case
of look-alikes, consider Mike and
Mark Hill-identical twins in the
starting lineup.
Even Witt had a hard time
figuring out who's who and for
the opposition, it's double tough,
although the dominance of zones
in the league has ta.ken away a
litU,of the edge.
''There have been·times when
one or the other has shaken loose
when he shouldn't have," ·says
Witt. "but we run into so many
zones in our league."
Their value to the Chargers
squad is becoming ever increas-
ing, however. Three times Mark
has stolen the ball in a key situa-
tion and either scored the win-
ning basket or fed the ball oft to a
teammate (on ce it was Mike) for
the winning shot.
It's the Hills' style to run and
s hoot, contrary to Witt's pro·
gram at El Toro.
Friday, January 30, 1976 DAIL V PILOf 8 7
South Coast Fives Duel
Miaaioo Vlejo's Diablos and El
Toro's Chargers have more
breath~$ room atop the South
Coast Ceague standings than
they did a week ago, but both
teams face tough challenges in
basketball a ction tonight. '
Tied with El Toro at 5-2, Pat
Roberts • Di a blos host the
vastly improved Dana Hills
Dolphins (3-4) while Wendell
Will's Chargers are al home
against inconsiste nt but·
dangerous University (3-4).
In another league tilt, Laguna
Beach (3·4) hos ts last place San
Clemente (2-5). All three games
start at 8.
CIF Swint
Relays Set
Tonight
EAST LOS ANGELES-
Newport Harbor H.igh's Sailors
have a solid shot at capturing the
CIF swim relays championship
tonight in the watets of Eallt Los
Angeles College following a suc-
cessful prelims in which five
Sailors teams qualified ror the
varsity championshilp finals.
It begins at 7 and Newport
Harbor is in third place with 130
points, trailing Long Beach
Wilson (152) and Foothill (130 >.
Foothill and Wilson each have
six teams in the championship
finals and another in the consola·
Lion, where Newport has a pair of
entries.
Fountain Valley also m ade
noises, qualifying four teams for
the c hampions hip finals and
another two in consolation ac-
tion.
Here are the Orange Coast
area teams which qualified for
tonight's varsity championship
finals:
VAltSITY CHAMPIOHSHI PS
4 • too IM . m.cfley -3. Fount.in Valley J Sl.l>J (Andy Miiier, MllCI\ No mu re, BUI BabtShoff, Mike W.Kelly), · 6 • SO frH -2. Newp0rt Harbor 2·11 99 (Jell ,._o.Mott, Jeff Steven1, Mltcl\ Gtay, Tom Myers.
• · ~eq Fu1t1. T.OMcGlnley), 4 •SO ~eaat-4. Fount•lll Velley 2.00 311 (Ron L•d•, Mike Braman, Mllcl\ Nomur•, Andy Miiier i. 4 a .50 lly-3. Fountain ll•llty 1·40 )l ISl@v' Krlkl. S\tw Sv\llerlend, 8111 8abHl\olf, Mike Yr Kelly ) 5. N..,~port Herbor 1:'0 S6 (Ku•n
Robtrtson, Jolln Dobrott, Mltdl Guy. ~ndy
""role>.
4 II 50 IMKk-1. MIHIOll vi.1o I 4S n (Brien
L..onscMI•. lk'len Goodell, Jttte Vusello, Ma rcus VHtallO) 5 Newp0r1 .._rbor 1:47 t.t. (Frank An·
denon. Ted McGlnlty, Mike Velltumc>. John
Oob<'ott). 4 a 100 frff....,. Fountain Valley J·7061 <Sttw Krlkl, 8111 B•basl\oll, Andy Mii•. Mlkt W Ktlly )
S. Newp0rt Herbor l 21 1' IGrt9 Fulls, Jtfl
O.Mott, Jeff S\ewns, John Do-II
4 a 50 medlty....,. Newport Harbor I u '1 (Frank AnO.rson. George Newland, Kevon RoblrUDn. Jeff Ot Motl I
The Oolphina broke out of a
two-game losing streak Tuesd11y,
whipping San Clemente, 63 51
However, Mission V1tJo won't
have an easy lime against a
Dolphins team that has won
three of its last four and only lo!'lt
by three to the Oiablos earlier
Dana ·Hills bas been gettmg
sturdy play from center Henry
Mikiewiez (14.7 in league) who
can score Crom inside and out.
Center Steve Sawyer ( 14 9 >
leads the Diablos while guard
Kelly Cox (10.5) is the team's
best outside shooter.
El Toro continues to amaze
teams with its speed and hustle.
No Cba.rger is scoring in do~Jc figures but five player s r e
averagmg seven points or be r ,
led by M ark Hill 's 9 8 .
Sophomore Roger Pouier, a 6·5
forward, paces the Tro1ans wlth
a 17.7 average.
Laguna Beach's Artists will at-
tempt to s nap a two-game losing
streak in whic h they've lost both
games by seven points. A patient
team. Laguna Beach has a one-
two scoring punch in 6·5 Ben
Bacon (13 .6) and 6-2 Dusty
Dvorak (13 . 5). Sparking San
Clemente is guard Tim Dunham
(19.1 in league>
Vikes, Tars Clash
Edison Faces Griffs;
Barons Duel Lions
Marina High's 17·3 Vikings, un-
beaten in Sunset League basket-
ball action, can protect their two-
game lead with another victory
tonight against visiting Newport
Harbor.
But the larges t stakes in
tonight's resumption or circuit
warfare is at Los Alamitos where
the Griffins awa it surprising
Edison.
Tipoff is at 8 in each case,
along with Westminster's trek to
Fountain Valley and Western's
game at Loara.
The Chargers of Edison coach
Lionel Purcell were picked to
finish sixth in league after an un-
g I a mour o us 0 -5 s tart. But
they've come on strong behmd
the exploits of Bob Vogelsang,
Bob Herson and Ed Bell, the lat
ter pair juniors.
Vogelsang blistered the n ets
for 41 points Wednesday against
Newport Harbor and is averag-
ing 27.3 per league outing, easily
the best in the circuit.
Los Alamitos features a tall
front line, however , and if
Vogelsang's efforts from outside
are off target it could mean a
long night for the Chargers.
Marina's Rich Branning is the
leading scorer in the Orange
Coast area with a 27 .1 average
through 20 games and is clicking
at a 23.7 rate in league. With Matt
Cook, Dan Boldt. Mike Buhler
and Tom Ugland rounding out
the starting five, it gives coach
Steve Popovich's Vikings a solid
role as favorites over Newport.
Coac h Ken Ammann 's
Newport Harbor Sailors have
won three in a row before stumbl
ing against Edison and appear to
have found their offense with a
76.5 average the past four games
Kim Cooke is the most consistent
scorer for Newport. averaging
15.7 in lea~ue. Fountain Valley, picked to
finish second to Marina, has lost
four times in the first round and
will just about exit the race for a
ClF 4-A playoffs berth if it loses
tonight to Westminster, a team
whi ch limited coach Dave
Brown's Barons to 31 points in
the opening round.
Fountain Valley's biggest pro
blem has been shooting, seldom
hitting at the expected 50 percent
rate anticipated by many prior to
league play
SoCal Dealt
77-68 Defeat
NORTH RIDGE-The Southern
California College Vanguards of
Costa Mesa could not overcome a
disastrous first half and lost a
77·68 basketball decision to Cal
State Northridge here Thursday
night.
Shootin~ a cold 25 percent in
the first half, the Vanguards were
outscored by the Matadors 19-4 in
th e la s t f ou r minutes.
Futhermor e, Northridge won the
battle of the boards 24-10 in the
half
HB Hosts Saddleback
Down by 22 early in the second
half. coach Paul Peak'~ crew
turned to the rull court press and
forced 19 Northridge turnovers.
but the damage had been done.
Led by freshman guard Fred
Glasler and sophomore David
Barron, the Vanguards charged
back to within nine points .
Glaster was the leading scorer
for the losers with 17 points.
Th e loss brought th e
Vanguards record to 7·12.
Dahlia in Bow
"Both of them have done a
great job in adjus ting to what we
have to do to win games," says
Witt. "I think if we tried to run
we'd be having problems."
All three leaders figure to win
their Empire League basketba ll
games tonight. but Huntington
Beach's high-fl ying Oilers could
have the toughest task, hosting
the Saddleback Roadrunners at
8.
Elsewhere, Cypress (6-1) hosts
Anaheim ; Katella (6·1) is at
Foothill and Orange travels to
Kennedy.
Huntington Beach. ranked No.
10 in the CIF 4-A poll, is 6-1 in
league and 14·4 overall but is no
standout against a Saddleback
team that only lost 33-27 to the
Oilers earlier. The Roadrunners
are 3.4 in league but will face an
Oilers front line of Jim Spowart.
Perry Harbin and Clark Sims
that bas scored 805 points.
SCC(")
ft ft p1 '" GIHltr 6 S ' 11 Posey I I l : Jo-
INIS1Nd
Mciff•!
Thom•s Tot•ls
ft It ,. tp
3 0 I 6
2 5 l ' 2 2 \ •
I 0 t 2
Tru Tru's Debut· Picked
Dah lia, racing 's leading
money-winning active
thoroughbred with oareer earn-
ings of Sl,356,693, makes her San-
ta Anita debut Saturday in the
$50,000 Santa Maria. Handicap at
11/16 miles over the main track.
pounds with multi-stakes winner
Tima.
Tru Tru's Debut, recent run-
nerup to older horses in the Las
Dimas Stakes, is the expected
favorite in tonight's $12,000 Las
C h iquitas Stakes at Los
Alamitos.
"The Htlls are without a doubt
our bard est workers," s ays Witt.
"During the game or when it's
over. I've never had two kids who
were so intense and worked so
hard And they are both extreme· Women's Results
ly consistent. I. WOMEN'S TllNNIS Conrad (I) dtl POJOn 6-4, 6·3.
Th gh 15 games 148 Mark ucrrvl• 1uYt111\'JI P'•PPtrdi,,. Doublu rOU Sl~IH M1n1\\1an·Krause ILA) d~I P LlperlP has SCOred points for a 9.8 JHftNeclMlncl UldttT1naTsurnesArredonoo6·I H,6-4,Meffi21tyl'l-
average Ml.ke has 131 po1·nts for 4-4.W .. s N•<l'o•nd <11 ~• Fritz Hteb ~. 6-•
-. 1(1,,; W01\l\tmen ( p I del Jody Plllt,_.·Kre1tz (I) Oel GomH·HO•S an 8.7 norm. Peter!IOfl~-4 ... l.•·1. 6·1, 6·1, Swldler·Demol\ (I) del
Adams 3147 Watkins o l l l e.rron t. l J U H•lltlma: CSN, J7 n
i. 20 14 61
Diesel Fuel!
Now being sold to the public by
Missi on Viejo Imports. Come in and
fill your tank. (weekdays 8 am-5 pm) Carrying 126 pounds and world
champion jockey Bill
Shoemaker, Dahlia faces eight
other mares including two of the
best in America, Gay Style and
Tizna.
The Las Cbiquitas will be run
over 350 yards and is res tricted to
three-year-old fillies. Tru's Tru
Debut bas faced older horses in
her two local 9utings and finished
ahead of Ellsy Date, quarter
horse racing's all-time money
leader in her most local race.
Mark's high game has been 16 Lur Anna Arreoonoo 111 0tf C.tl\y Alv•rer·AndrHsoo 6-4. 6·2.
. ts d M'k . best · l3 d cui1en1-4.6-0.6-l WOMfN'18ASKET8ALL M Vi • I po1n an 1 e S lS -an De~ Miiier (I I spl1\ will\ Liw UC lr¥1,,. (41) (Ml AtWN P'•cffk lsslon &10 mpotts both have b een in double figures FarrM,H. '' ., "' t, ~ seven times. $Miia Laptrlt Ill Cltf PrlKlll• O.monle ... rde J O 2 6
Gay Style, winner of the recent
seven.furlong Santa Monica Han·
dicap a fter a seven·month layoff,
will share top weight of 127
Gultllam .. 1,6-0 Baker o o 1 o There is a basic difference, fMll Go•oenbtrQ o > oer ctnesy wer i<.r11es 1 1 o 6 M•rcecles. a.m & Fiat
however, according to Witt, who ren,..:-,;~· Kreltt 1,1 oer Tina Ha"' ::=:~°.." ~ ~ ~ : San Di~o Fwy. A•ety Exit. 83l·1740 or 49S·1700
says Mark is the more ag-..i....o. Fo11. l 1 , 1 ...:.:::===::===========================::::::::~
~D, Servite Clash
Mater Dei High's Monarchs
travel to Servile tonJght in a key
Angelus League basketball
1ame. Tipoff is at 7:30 and coach
Jerry Tardie's Monarchs are a
game behind Bishop Amat and
St. Anthony in the race for the
crown.
Mater Dei carries a 14-3 ove~
all record into the game and ~s
paced by Jim .Elenz, who is
averaging 19.5 points per game.
Tru Tru's Debut will carry 126
pounds and her top rival appears
to be Miss Bux An Bo who is com-
ing off a 20.09 win over 400
yards.
On Saturday, The Good Thief,
Mi.ke's Jet and Wheatland will
tangle in the $15,000 49er Stakes
at Los Alamitos. The Good Th.ief
has been racing at 350 and 400
yards while Mike's Jet is coming
oU two 549 -y ard scores .
Wheatland is one of the country's
premier 870-yard horses.
gressive, Mike the better fun-Robin Mtrtdlth (I) cltl Kam Mall· Froyd 3 7 , 8 lnotr .. 0,6-0 TOlals 1a 6 1 '2 damentalist-a thinker. Jan Schmidt 111 def C•rolyn Wlc.hs Helttlme: vc1,21.11.
"Both of them seem to have an H6-J.
uncanny sense of reacting to T•ecv Conrad 0 ' dtt Ttre .. WrlQht 6-0, 6-0. something that is going to hap-Doublet Pro Scores pen, which he lps them do a pret-V:i:~ .... ~:;:~~ (II ~· tsunws
ty adequate job on the press.•• Pllttrson·Arrt<londo 111 det c11111n-
Witt admits he's befn a little . F~~.t.'r.~redltl\ (I) dtf Warren· A~~~~~~~==~1:k•l1;<1111""' mixed up himself at times with 0u1111em•.1.i.-o tc.n1as o1y 11t,Hou110t1 " the two Hills on the floor. "I Krtlll·GoldenbtrQ (I) clel Hasl\ Mllwaukff IOS, P~nh<9' Metzln9u .. o. 6-0 Golder1 St•tt 123. Pl\lltdelpllla 114 couldn't tell them apart for quite uc 1,.,1,,. 1,u 111 c.•51•1, LA Am«lur1 a.s11ttba11 Auoc:1.u... a while, .. says Witt. "I had to Sl~ltl Vlr9lnl• IOI, KentuOy 104
) I I 6 ~ ., '7 Sen Ar1tonlo 13', tno1ana 112 look for Certain signs. They part "8\erwn II del M nhs •" • .,.,.,. Arr-ndo (I 1 dtl Frltt 6 o 6-4. Miiier N•fl4tMI Hooey Lett• their hair On tl18 Opposite Side, (I) Clef Krau« .,..., 7 •, l•perl~ (I) ~I Los Aft9ele5 l, Oetroot J ltiel
b t I th ghl for awhile I never Hub .. 1, 6·0. Goldenberg Ill ~f Plthbu1"9'16,K•nsuC1lyl U OU Alv•ret 6-J,6-1, K re1tr fl I dtl Kevu Pllll.O.lllfll• I, Buffalo I rtltl would be able to tell the dif· •·1 ... 1. Mered•th def Gomer .. ,. 6-1 ao.1°" 5,011ca90J ference." S<l\midt 111 def Andruson .. l. '"°· NYAaft9erS6,St Lou11J
D b • ,.,., G ho Tritons Lauded 0 f,S J.. op altC TomAronswasnamed'
most valuable player at 1
~--------~iiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiii~~~I Final week-Sale Ends Sat., Jan. 31
JAN VA.RY SA.LE
Savings from
50% to 70% or more'.
Sophomore running eluded: outstanding of· San Clement e Hi gh's
back·linebacker Mark tensive back-Larry sports awards banquet
J)obis was selected Jordan; outstanding of· honorinJ? the South Coast
'Gaucho of the Year at f e n sive end -Tom Leaguefootball champe.
' Thursday night's ban-Haigh: outstanding de· Most Valuable: Tom
quet honoring the Sad· ten sive back-George Arons ; Most Improved :
dlebact College footbaJl Gay: most imprond T im Vleis ides; Most team. player-Paul Moberg; Inspirational: De nnis
The most valuable outstanding freshman-Engstrom; Most VaJua-
team phlyer award went Chuck Van Liew; t~p~at ble. )uniors : Pon.do
to Kevin McOarry with award-Gay: t ramrng Vle1s1des and Glenn 011J ;
J erry Wight, Mark room award -Hugh Captains: Ron Wade and
Maure r and Bill ffenry Roberts. Tom Arons.
' pickinc up trophies as
.captalns.
, Wl&ht was also select-
IUY·LEASE
TR-7
Domestic & lmporhd
LlthtlnCJ Fixtures & Lamp1
Al.._ ... 1tl1d-4,,...,....... .......... l ...... ~..._, ................... ..
.tellW.T•..._. .. _..,.WNt1cH•9f
.. .._. It .. ~ ........... _. ... ,... ti,... ...... aM'I '1 ra
THE BIG . BOAT SHOW
2<lth ANNUAL l'.1/1>
I
6-00BOATS
\\.L.i_., 180 BOOTH EXHIBITS
" ~ 240 000 SO FT OF
-.;_ _-::.:::-i-L:CJ:l MAAINE DISPLAYS
• i~-
\ '
NOW IS THE TIME TO BUY
ATTHEWE$T'S
LARGEST SHOW
JAN. 30 thru FEB. 8
WEEKDAY S 2 lo 10 30 p m
SATURDAYS. 12 noon to 10 30 p m
SUNDAYS. 12 noon lo 7 pm
L.A. CONVENTION CENTER
Pico and Figueroa
ed tbe oul.ltandinl de·
feD$lve llnem1n, Hemy
4 attared the out.standln• ' oaen1lve lineman award
.' ,wU.b Jim Corycr and
,! Miurer wa1 picked u
;, tbe most inaplrational
pl~er.
Herb Friedlander
Jnr A "'"~ 0'°11 I i ~~0 1.-e• h w.,1..,,r,lr1
ADULl s $;> !>O e CHIL onE.N lJ NOFR 1:1 $1 2~
UNDER SIX FREE
• ...
• Other awards ln· 537.7777 8'18·6717
•
•
I
88 DAIL V PILOT Fr1d1y. January 30, 1976 .,,
anta Anita
Race Results
,.~, c ......... .
ltllUT •AC• I Ill• M iit\ Fiii~
& !NIA\, • '1'9Ar Old\ & 110 ClalMlng
Pline \1000
e.unl (Vtr~r•I II 00
MorntnQ 0.ncer IAO\•l•\I
._.Cly Flu t01arl
Tl,... I •11 \
Als o ran Wt Como•nlon,
Rt•ls,.1119 , Cttary Rutellell,
Olel•oe•. Cap, SWHlllHi Or••~OI
For\une, Glorilt.<I, 801<1 PrOCIU(tr
StrtltlM<I Mlrre9lo, NtvtlO
MIU, Quite HOiiey, Cl\OrH
SICOND8'ACI 61urlonQ\ 3yeer
ol<l lllllH Cle lm1n9. Pur\t "lOO.
Tutor IM 8u<le
IOllveres) 10.40
Twitt Tol<I Telt (Torol
1..0v<t T t It I Ar •Vonl
Tt,... I 111 S
• :IO 510
tOO •40
1 40
AIM> ren Soano\h Blonde. My Lit
tit Mtr91e, One Joy C11D Of Flowers,
Or•ll One
No "''"""'
0.llf Dov-11· .. t•nt & 1 T"'9r
Me ....... lt•ld llJO 10
TMl•D llACE • lur•onvs l -· Ol<I ma1<1e11 1111o.s Cla1m1nv Pvrw
\6j00
V" OI\ IMA'1tn< I
Our Tru<ly !Toro I IS •O 2• IO IJ OO
S IO •80
12 00 Frosty Halo IVa lt'ntUt'lal
Ttme 112 7 S
AIM> raft LU<°'Y Prt1tn<ltr PrOll<I
F•o-r All Martt, Candy's ~I. Sand
~. P•ss Tilt Chtrr1u Mt• Amit•
H•mo• Moon, Arco In\
Scr•lcn•d M•kt M~ A SI••.
OuHn Mod.H, Pr~ller, Roy•I M<Jr.
,,.~.
l'OURTH RACE 6 lurlOOQS J
Y••r Old m•1<1tn f11t1PS Cld1m1n9 Pllrw M>.SOO
Trumpet Blut\
(P1ncay Jr I
Scl'IOn I Pttrlt >
Paoam1ento !Aragon>
Tl~ I 12 3 S
Q •O \ 10 4 10
)20 4 00
6 60
AIM> ran -urve To Splur~. Btlly's
Port, Real ~atocoous l rol)hy Cue>.
Candy Sl\ar, CH ltnQ Coven k.n19nt1y
Serenadt, ln cenl••l' To Won,
Wlllmsicel We•lth
S<retche<I Cht'fl Meri, 8uU11l11I
Prtnceu, ll•nlsh•llQ Pronceu, M\
Alane.
P:IFTH ltAC£ At>out 6'> furlongs
on turf FtlltP\ & mart's • ye.tr oldl &
uP Allowan<•s. Pur\• '13,000
JCAlte's Proof
(Hewl•yl 9 20
C.mPOL•dv IOl••••t'I
OUr Merkel IPlnc.:tv J r ) .
Pieewr• 0o .. t11. O•n•y, Maul Prt~
<H•, fh• Ledy StrHktr, SpKlal
Lo,..
NO .cratct>ts
" •U<t• -1-10.1i." ~ a .. ~ur,.~aid,11' M.
SIXTN llACIE -6 furlongs 2 .-er
old m•laen colts a. Q91dlnin tw.cl In Ca1U Clalmt"9. Purw VOOO.
S..roGiolman
(TOl'o) 4.IO UO J 80
icines.wstlan (Cemoas> 12.10 HO
Royel Armor (Hawley I ),60
Time -1.11 3tS.
Also ran -A·Princt's Honor, A·
S.lln Prlnct. BIQ Wadoy, V•Mal Boy,
Ottocemp, JuUlct J , A., Motogot 'i
Bob. Sh•mrock Bay.
A -R McA.n•lly tral11edttntry.
Scratchtd -OIUpP<ferlnQ l'<t,
Proper Res .. ns. Mister O•n. Or.
SchotnhOllJ
SEVENTH llACIE 61> furl~. 4 YNr olds & 11p. Allowances Pline
\11,000,
C:..lloe>lnQ Pi""
tOtazl 11 00 7 00 S40
00.Son•c Sl!ullle IMtna > 110 4 IO
Never Short IHawl•Yl 310
00 -O•squaltlled from hi & pieced 2'1d
Ttnw 1 16 1 S
AIM> ran Pancho Sequra. Co<'ntsh
Co.ass. Bol<I Wo lnen. Amer 1can Seoul,
Prt11ce Harold, Slivers 0 1 Glass. Truly
lucky Clow s Faceor. Ta1<e A 8"1de
Scr•tchtd -Holst A Win. Chief's Holt~y. S•I"*' Star. Nacho
U E•act• -._Oallopln9 Pil'tt &
ll·O~S...lc Slt11ttl•. Paid »St.SO.
EIGHTH RACE IV. m oles on turf.
Folltes & mares, 4 ytar ol<ls & uo.
Clessllled allowances. Purse U0,000.
IYmedOra
I Lopez)
Joli Vert IOtivares)
Admlrabtllty IM11na I
Time 1 48 3/S
24 20 1110 ~.I()
880 680
610
Al\O ran O•OP<'"'· Lt 's Joy, Fast
Couroer, w1111n9 Maid, Soberana II,
Am~alero
Scratched -Sl•nk
HIHTH llACE 1'• m iles. 4 year
olds & up St ... lers allowances Pllrw
'1000
Clank fTorol S20 360 280
10 60 610
3 60
uni al (Bacon I
Une•oectedly f Poercel r,,.,.. -2 032 s
Also ran Maste Runllt'r. Ballet 111.
Avent Provoc ateur, Ca•,,..St II,
Sanveven, Test Run, Pawn
Scratched -Jet Port, Roman lltlla,
01sturbmg
:·~,:~•Is Rtn~Q•d•, Bold '5 Eucu -S-Cl•nlt: & l~CMttal, "'1<11191.0I.
Los Alamitos
Race Entries
For Friday
Clear, Track F•"
FIMI PO\I 7 45 p m
1J Eucta First A•ce
Pam~l'<I Lady (Trl'awre)
Moss B11-An 80 I Or eyer)
Bon"•t' Boone 1Watwn)
I m A Sure Th1n9 (Morns l
110
17• 110
112
SS Euct.u 4111, llh .tnd •111 R•oi A Donis or Elsie A9uayo & W.I.
FIRST RACE •00 yard\ 3 yf.'.1ro1<1s
& UP Claiming Pursr \1 /00 c1.11m1nq
PrlCP Sl600
M i Inc . entry
EIGHTH llACE--440 yards. J year
ol<IS c1atm1n9 Callt·b•ed. Purse
'3000 Cla1m1nv pnce \ISOO. Mr Shady IP<!~)
On Ltm1t\ IRtt,,••<l\I
That Trio•• Haw• <CrtaQl r I
Glon e Bound IC•ll I
Ca1trnemoon rAaaor I
Truly A Otamon<I rCardoal
Str 0.t k.t Clf'rtsstl
(Hau L•no IL•Dn•ml
J~t Account ITrHt. ..
Requt\t Lottie B•r cwara t
1 lQ I lQ l op'N Go IK.nlQhl I
11~ Dl'wri Ot'vtl IC•r<loza)
1~ Ovralton IClerisse 1
11q CharQt'r Go Bar <Banks I
11q Bar ROCkt'lt fHarll
"q M1dn1t~ Soec••• CMorrtSI
127 Mecoy·sJoy IT,,omnl
Tiny Ferocious IR1cf'lar<1sl
Aullot s Bt1 ICr•aO"' 1
ol<I\. Cla1m•r>Q Pur\e \JOOO. Cl•1m1uq Mee sLols•lea IAdaorl
119
112
117
119
119
llQ
112
119
llQ
111
or1ct \1SOO
H1 ~rformance !CardoaJ
S-•I Ctty IAdalrl
Go111<aroo t 1 ILtPh•ml
Asun lv (H.ir11
Tucson Jel IMylPS I
Mr Aloof ICIPfl\WI
Mr Baytown IW•l\onl
ApacPw ChMQt' ITrt'asurt l
111 llQ
11'1
!IQ
177
117
172
171
HI NTH A ACE -400 yards. 3 ye,ar olds
& up. O a1m1n9 Purse \1700 Cla1m1ng
prtt• s lltOO.
vuqutnH !R1cnardsl
CharQlllQ Clown CClerissel
Al•m•tos Ne .. , (Nicodemus)
O•al Czech (Wal~n I
THIRD RACE •OO yard\, 3 ..,..ar
TI me To Reason ILIOflam I
Ou\ty L•nt B.trs fCardoza l
Strodema\ln Strop ITretcel
119
119
119
121
111
119
119
119
112
old\ Allowance Pur\r U SOO.
H19hMoonSllOI IBank\J
TravrllnQWoman CNocoCltmu\I
Carmel Baby tcirrt\st I
Poppa John rCar<101a I
For Florrnct" fWMO I
Fleet CO<\voy (Lipham I
OwveCanvon (Treuurt1
FOURTH llACE 3SO yard\
ol~ & up Cl a 1m1n9. Purse
Cl•lm•nv DrtCl' SlSOO
A Oantf' Miln IMorrh)
T1nyWe1Ch Boun<I (Cleriuf'I
Mr ToP Tee CLophaml
04..,. s He1ro1n IOrtytr)
MoC>;1, Oustr r !Ward>
A Honlllnv Bug IE rook\)
5netkess B•r Go IAdetr I
R°""'o StrtP fCardote > TllAeOl\'s Mc Cut (RtchUdS
A Maloney & Mo~lloenlr y
119 Z•oaQO l~ar l-' I
'11 RMy Joy (Hare I
117
172
111
II~
122 Prep Soccer
vu·slt'I'
Santa Ana l . Edison o.
Follntetn Valley 2. Weslttn t.
Fii scorlnv L•n<IQuye 2.
Westminster J, Mertn• o.
110 Jllfllor VUMly
1'1 Edison 1, Santi Ana 1.
119 Edison KOl'1nv· Blake
111 Fountain ll•lley 9, Western l.
1 '' Fii KOl'•nv WOOdford 4, Venv 3, , .. Newton 1, Fish I
Westminster• Menna 0
...... tltN4'y a..-.....
fllnt li"MI U :•Jll·"'•
Pl•ST •Ac• -1111• mlles, 4 .....
olds •nd Ill>· Clalmlft9. P11ne i 1000.
Cl•lml119 IWk• MOOl).11000 llun_..
Re<fHtloft Cllltl
Pr«lclent CGf'entl 111
Metr•l• CVerver.:> tu ~ K'nlll\t <Pier<• I 116 Mttr11 .. Clow IOllv•rea) I It
Gflllff IH41wlty l 111 Neer°"°'* (0111191" I 111
C..011 (H-rd) 117
GoloettTrlo (Olti) 111
lA'1 PrllCllctl IOonH ltZ) lit
"-rkenHero IC•mou> 116
MClOND ltAC• -"url0ft9S 3,,..,
old l'Nllden COiii •n<I Otld1119$. Purw S~. H•tionel Co11nc II 0 1 He9ro
Wllmtn.
!I Por1"9W1 (Olarl Ill
Della Jllft<llOft (Grant) t 11
F ... IHUC Richard (Ha rris I Ill
FlylngKans11 ICu~a.s l 111
OUIM Warrto< ll'orol 111
Fow111 l!\lete (LtOfter<l I 111
Prine• Precious ICol•n~IO) I II
Samii•"" (MeMI 111
TIMICet<IHlmsell IP lncayJrJ 111
Prince Of S.ron I Pierce I 111
Progress Report ISl\oemek•r I 111
Prince wd IH••l•'I' I 111
THl8'D ltACll • 6 furlonvs Fllll.s and mMH, 4 .., • ., olcn end up. O elm-
ln9 P11rst \tOOO. Clalmlng prlc•
U0,000 116,oeo. U.C. Rlwr~de
Faculty Clull.
A·MttdemGo CPlnca yJrl 111
Dtvll Old It !Hawley I 111
Susan Sulltilt CAraQOn) 112
MS Bold OM IOllvarH) 116 "-PC>e• 110<1'• CS.mkln I 107
Bellet Pltasur• !Sh.,.meller I 116
A Windy's Woneltr (Mena I 120
A.·G JonH t,.lntd tntry.
FOUllTH llAC• -11/16 mll.s. J
,.., Old mtlO•n lllllH. Purw SI0,000.
Monte,..y P•rll Bl<tntennlal Commit·
tee.
FIHI Fool (MeM) 116
Thtt's Tiie MelNl'S <Hawley I 11'
Ge'f•Hn 151\o.makerl 116
Grfffl ln<ll•n f Plnc•y Jr I 116
si.ow.m RIQlll (V•ltnrWll) 11•
Rea Sonnet IPwacel 111>
Bid Boldly !Oliwarttl 116
?ulla Aolld IL•mberl) 116
lleyC.tcller !Toro) 116
OoUC>lt Ascent IGon1alei I 111
l'lnM 8'AC• -One mlle. J .,..r old colts end geldings bred In
Calllorn•• A.llowancH. Purw Sll,000.
Aerojel Employeu Welfare and
Recreallon.
Got My Suck !Sr.oemeker I 1 u
Mystic Me9lclan (Hawley) 114
Flr\t Atlurn !Gon1alu) 109
Montesj).ln (Plfrcel 117
O.ncty CarMr (Harris I 114
AtOUNSWtGolValderl 114
This Tl,... (Toro I 120
Tt.oloQlen IL•mber1 I 114
FIMt 8"ckmaker (Mena) 114
Prep-Wrestling Sull_!marie~
" ...... . .._..Vl ... y (4U U1Ullle11M
'1-flloullt ffll plf1M41 Aewlln•
>;14.
IQS-4MMy IF ) ,illfted S.JMVO i . S1 ti._.,_ IMI dtC £111011 M .
lltt-T•loy• CF> plfU~ff hl•noe• S:S7.
1~W (Ill CliNMOl',..)o 1:5'.
t~o CltllleltOetenol>t
140--WIM0t (M) GK Merq\ltl S 1 w__._,..to '" 1 GK Cort s..o. 1~11 IMl Ot< Pttu t-S.
167-ff!KO (f')-bydel1111t.
tn-VICll IMI dee Frr s.3.
193-Mtek• <Ml dt< Wen•r IJ-4.
Hwt·Bllrlte IF) won b'l'Ott•ult.
..... v ....... , (1)S.11ci-te
-Spe .. nu IM> plnned Aow0:47.
to.s-MltCMll (M) ltihned 8-Ultf'
O:ff.
114-MtftdoH (S) Otc Roeen 1·2.
122-<iertstyn (Ml «Mc Crowe 4-0.
12'-<:olff (Ml dee Glulr 4-0.
Ill-Morrow (Ml plnned lm,...1,:30.
140-Merwln IM I Otc Cllttord s-4.
141-Dr4tPtf IMI plnn.cl Sllepen:IS:IS.
IS6-0<lloa IMI dee IMnenmllll...,_
t61-Etle11te lt.\l pinned 0 111):56. 117~ CSI dee Htl-17-6.
1911--0Wselk• (Ml pinned Ollleltn
2 IS.
Hwt·GNwr (M) won 11'1' lorlelt.
""""'1 Ma..-W ISS) (U) W.8*enl
'7-wtlll• (WI dee Hanson 3-0. ~uuer (Ml wonbyforf•lt.
114-61mpson (WI won by 0tfa1111
I~ ICI de< .. rrett IN 161-J. lie<>ftl9ie11 ~ lrl<ll s II
tn-«trnllte {CIOe<. ... M lll .. 21 t.
t911-lw1ofl Cl! I o.( WIJltoltd 24
Hwt•OIJY IC)OK Al"*ld 10-0
1-a.rvarn••
"-1llHI V•llty I") Ctl ~f'llla
'1-h ylcw IF I olnntd W•Ult:t I to
1os-oon .. 1u II' I plMt<I f'unicll
1·a .
11•-t.umpklns IF I oec Wood 7~
1tt~ ..... t CF) pinned SPM• j ;J6
12'-0vncen (P' I o.c Stelev ...
1~-wltt (It) won "Y forfttl
141>-+timlltOil <P'I pinned Plwlfoeti
3:•.
141-()rffl•Y ll'ldtcOlm1tt6dK-0. U• 9\ldotn CF I plnntld Lujan 4: 17
,.,~flay (,..) -n by torlell
111-«lltort (M) pinned Ptr•rson i :a.
1'3-MdtNOn (It) dtc Cen•bellH
HwMt\ll'tns IFI <lee Charr'I' 11~
MJ•Mll Vie .. (4') (tO U11 Clemtntt t1~pel•nlt:a (N\ I Ot< Cfrll!Ornt M.
10S-Phclttlll (M) Otc F•rrtll H
114-<irotlll•n <Ml pinned &tla.my
1: ....
122--flouelfo IMI dee Gerel• 12~
12'-Vlrt IMI wot1 b'I' lorttlt.
l~letl !Ml llt<I Weller 0.0
,.._T9"or9lt CMI won by lorwlt
M1-Trll911 !Ml Ot< 8yr<I J.0
15'-CAll.l CM> O.c Wet-. 1.q
141-wtllte IMIO.~GermonJ~.
171-Mclttlroy (SI d9c SPOllsta>O
ttt-ortevt CSI won"' torltlt ~-... 1~ 11\111 won by forltll .......,. Me,,_, 1 .. 1 1e) W9'Mnl •>~111Wrty (NI won "v 1orte11
IOS-W•'1dl"IKlt.e <NI won by tortett
t 14--0\arleton IN ) won by lorte<I
tft-tlewchamp IN I won by lortt1t
11t-e111n INI plt1ned Galarzt S 02
l~IK INI won llY forf•1t
140-0alll IN I won by deleult ,.,_olsom IN I dee Leon .. ,
116-tlroclt:mtyer IN) dee H•Ull 1.0
167~rac4f IN) won by forfeit.
1n-Nom•t<ll.
19'-No m1tcn
Hwt·Wrl91\t IN I wo11 by rorfell.
1!1la11cla 122) (19) llnta Ml
91~ouno IS> won by forltil
1os-M1tc11e11 !Sl plnntd M<C.rtlly
2 40.
114-&.yes ISi pinned Oehl O 4S.
122--Rtley IE l dee Pedrote .. 0
12'-RoelrlQUH IE I dee Mc~steM
11)..4
us-Moroen IE I d•c S•IQOdo •2
140-MthOnty CSJ dee Vargas 4-1. 147~mcet (SI pinned Pierce I S2
1s.--erown ISi pinnecs ?lmmer!Nln
1 ,.
For Coast Area
161 .. <lltoHSl o.c C•n<l\01• t-l
177~111 .. r II! IOtc ArOUlque .. J
19' -Goll•no <SI plnnt<I HHtll 1:1'
HW1 S161n Ill plnnedOonrelt6110
M .... I ....... 8HCll 1$4) UI UNIU
'7-.'Wltnlne IHI won bYforl•il
IOS-Yto IHI tied Andtr\On H
114 ~unt (I( I dee A. HUH 2 0
122 " TllOrntOll IHI dee l(u\4'ft0 1~2
12'-M Huu (HI plnnt<I l<n•PCJ
I 04
IU-0. Thornton (M) pinned Garris.I .s ,.
140-JonH IH I de< Mick\ 2 0
147-Rosslter (M) dtc Morrow._,
156-WOrll\ylOe IH I dee Moon M .
1•1-t<eni>tdY CH I d•c w ooayaro 7.0
117-t.uppen\ (HI won by lonelt.
1t:l-Wl lMWI (HI wOtl l>y lorlett.
HWl·MUrC)l'ly (M) won by lorltll
c~ 1461 1u1 l!I Mod•t11
91-<:roucll <Cl won by forfeit
10S _..•111•w•kl ICI dee Knauer2.0
ti• -01bof'n (EI dtc L•11•r 4 3
121-Tl'l•yer ICJ plnllt'd Schill I 21.
1,.,-Elles (CI <It< Chen • 1
n ,s-Jonmon 1c1 a.c Pyle s 2
uo-&1 ... s IC> pinned Oono•.wi 1 JI,
U7-ll•rberg IEJ p1nnfd O.~n
4 S2
1S6-8oll•r IEI dee Evan\ 13-4.
167-K Hacn1v1•n IC> won 1>ytorfe1t
122-61t:llfl (W) dee J•mtt 1.0.
I,,_.,_ (NI dee 5umrell 1-4
l~evy IHI pinned DHlrosa4·31
140-AQ\lllar IWI dee B. Pluluo. 14-2.
... ,~_,(WI <Me Ra1>9er ~s.
1S6-Voborll lrO pinned Mendota Basketball Results
4:SS.
161~thrnann IN Idec Chasse 3-0.
171-41•rlltr IN I Otc Torrtt 6-0.
19'-Wetson IWI won by fonelt.
Hwt·Bl'uno INJ won by forlelt. Rstancl1 IMI Cot I 14tl C•st• Meu
• ,.._le ()21 (J7 I S.lltl Ma Corbell (7 J F IS) MulliQtn
I
NH s<ortng subs· S1tvcovt 6, Brown
4.
Edison scorrnv subs Hy<l~r 2,
Lencer 1, Campbell•
Halttl,,..: Edison, l2·28 • Camp (16) F (10) Snow '7-<l!aw1 ($)pinned Pentel 1!4.2. Jardine 171 c U•l P•rrlno S ._ __
111S-Mt1ce11 <E> dec Morven 9-2. ~ • ..,....,re 114-H u c kenp•lll e r !El dee KrOllnltldl(41 G 10181ss.ttt -r
Bomlnkofl S-0. Heys 00) C. (7) Younv l!steiula U6> 1401 Costa Mitt.a
l22-4.•l"\HTI IS) dee Zuniga U-4. Estancia scoring sub. Adams 10. Utrimer (t8l F 13) Willi.ms
1-__,.,, <Sl 1 .......... _ Cost• Mesa scorlnv sub Cook 3. Cooper 18) F 1171 Falk• .. -....1wr PM,.... vwt'Q$trom Halltl~·. E•tanela, 31·1S " t:Ot. A "-1 • ... ararnenos (41 C 12) l(ribbs
13)-Wllton (E l dee Hartson 6-<l. evulat on •7·•11 Cernoo IUI G <•> WtlllnQNlm
140-JonH CE) pinned Snlith 3:40. Fo11nteln V•ll•y (40) 1421 Loar• C:..rllth 14) G 14) Daw•
1•7--flou (E) dee S.lclcto i·2. Mick O•> F (111 Beadl• Estancia scoring subs: Roescn •.
1S6-Vev• (SI pinned Rl<k•rd l .SO. WllklnlOn (Ill F (0) Mdrt1n<1a1~ C:..relner 2, Braunsdorf 2.
161-4!1onMll ($)dee Wllll•mt•.O. SulSllld (7) c (")Volte CM KOrlllQ sub O'Neal 10.
177-lln IEJ pinned HU9MS l:Ot.. lsrMhky (2) G (6) Bal<twtn Hallltme· Est•nc1a, IS 10
19l-MOf99n !El olnned KulpS:30. Rorer (2) G (4) p1.,1mer M"nl. lleacl't (121 (0) Anal'tttm
Hw1·Tro•I IEI tied Area 3·3. FV SCOf'inQ sub Mdrverum 2 P19nenell1 1121 F 101 Pru
........... -..ell (JI) 071 ltlt.cla Halltlm!! lo.,e, 22 21 Gottor<I 1211 F 121 Horlon
W-8. Lin (Ml pinned uvo 1:31. Mllrlna IH I (Ml) Wtsltm Slf'•nhaus 1111 C 1371 Slowe
IOS-E. Lin (M)dt< Rlchard~4·2 Torres Ull F 1101 Soares Can IU G 10) Pone•
Ntwport M.,ber lt t> 071 Ellson
Lyons 131 F 111 > Poletoek
111\erhlcll '" F !ISi w 111111ms
P•quln Ill C 127) eo.tman
V•ncllk (S) G (1)) ICanemaru
Stelt:OI (U) G 161 Gut le
NH 1corln9 subs. Gllb«rt 2, Altmtn
S, Louvier 4, H0°'1fr 2 Baker •. Tut· men4,
Edl\On scoring sub: Garrity 4.
Htllltlme Ec!IM>ll, 40·37,
Merine 177 l (47 J Wu tern
8ollm 181 F 1121 P•lmer
Coopman ( 13 l F 191 Barraie
Heidenr•ich I 14 > C f2l Brtwer
Sot w y 1221 G 0 41 Sorenson
M1e111e (6> G (l>I e.wn
Marina scorlnQ \ull\ SPrtllQl!r 4,
Eskew 4. Zorn 2, Nl<kell l, Wal\eline 2, l.Amblcln 1
H1lll1me Men na, 36.\6
114-lppollto (t<) pinned Messina &rue• 131 F UI Sawao. l<nlQht W G 1101 Hfr,..,_,
2:4.S, G<Obs l71 C 1181 Mtller H8 H or lng subs Sprow II N•wportH•rborl7711•11Edlson
122-lppollto (I() Cle< McCown IS.I. H•w-tns !•I G (" Phollti>i Townse'1d 6, Shute2, Moorh0u~6 Sullivan (2) F (2) O.vls
12'-Ulcllhar1 (Hl <le<Mattllews7.0. WOlle (lll G llO Johnwin Hallltme·H83822 S~tk (2U F (ll)Cudmore
lu--Ovffy IHI dt< Knowles •t. Marin• scor1 n9 sub> Spe<lf I Mtwpor1 (46) (41) Wutm1nster Boyd (4) c 191 Harker
1~y flt) <lee Kello096-4. 8oQ<len2, Graham 8. k.o•ller 1 Lyons (61 F 1241 Siemens 0.nl•I 1111 G (6J Hele
147-ltoss IHI d9c Clark 6·2. Hal II I me Merin•, lll H Meravlch ISi F fll Blum FrMman 1181 G fSi Ryan
1n-<illr ... u 1c1 11ec1 Lt• "' 19' floll ICl dt< Mt ttlle•• tt.•
Hwt·Ooe9ttl (Cl won "Y fo(i•ll
E'........So1*
Mllftllllfl• .. Mll lat) Ctlltl ... le
•1 ~°'""-" (H l won "., fontl\, IOS-Wlll CHI pinned MeltntW1 l II.
114-C.rlno CKl dt< Hemuy• 2
1n-Ectwerds !Kl Otc Mli'l'9r.,.I
12'-VlgnaroH IM I Cle< Hick\ M .
1J.J.-6rweo IM I p(nn.cl Burnt 2:4'.
l~•t• fH> pinned Meryet 1.ll.
147-McC.11ltV CH) sHl\lleel 1Cr1M1W1
): 11.
ISt-51\ltlds IHI O.c H•v~rd3·1
l'1-Rl99el IHl dt< Klltvts 10.S. 111~orrl' OC I dee Plou9ll U , 1t.J-Qtoscost (M) wo11 b'I' forltlt.
HWl·E•wi IHI Otc lllei>er1W.
l!UaftCll 11*1 lat) S.11t1 Ml!
91-<aby•I !Slwonbyforl•lt.
1os-oueoer (El Otc S..lltar s.o.
114-ett1vor CEl dtt Amty• 1-S.
112-<:Mlyle (SI olnned varves3:S4
12t-W•119 IE) Cite S.ldHr 4 .• J.
tis-<ote ISi pinned Molsoo·u
140--4l.Clt IEIO-CManhell ICHI
10--flou 1Elde<8•kfwln1·1.
1S6-Wlnters (SI de< HllC'll~lef' ..a.
161-<t~r IE) tied Laney 2·2
117--NH ISldecLOAnloN
lt:l-KUIP ISi plnnedHOff"l•nO•J1
Hwt.Reyu tsl 111mtc1 R11tm1n o St
.... ~ ... ~ (JJ) (21) ~
t7~1rkpatrkk {NI dK 111111 J.1
IOS-Mulsc•I CWI dt( T. RogersH.
IU-61Mtlord (W)cMC AHl'llnol-1.
1tt-«11yktn0an1 IN) plnMd K.amst·
lng1•42.
129--0rroll IWl dt< s. Ro..,.rsM
lli-Rllev IN I pinned Voddtn 2 11
140-6mlth INl pinned McGormt<lt
l ':IO.
141-COr""' (NJ dee Golden 6-4.
156-<>r•llam (NI ctec ltrauH•·1.
1"7-f'rownct (NJ won by forteil.
1n-Hutcn1nson (WI ginned Aslltn
I. IS.
19l-Nometell.
~l·GIMb IWI won by lorftlt.
uuy-Lea~e
Jaguar
Herb Friedlander
For Jt. l~Hu d~ol
I 1750 l~ach. W~stmin\ttt
537-7777 898-6777
Lease
Mark IV 1S6~9$l•H IHI O.c 8uttrlll\lllfl C41M (4SI (621 VIII• P.rtt Paquin (IO c (10) Crouch NH SC()(lnQ subs WUI 7, Cernal\an
S.l. Ralnsl141 F tlJIG<llon Venchk l7> G ll)Pllcke11 l>.Reec:t2,0oodv2.Eub.ink\t < § --167-~ttfl9ws (K) dec Shafer 1·1. Flamson <•> F 121 C•rrol Giibert 10) G f• I Mereno Edison sconno sub\ BoWfn ' .I,::.~ ~ ~
177-hnc:ll (HI pinned F•r-O:S9. Esposllo CUI c 11•> Garvin NH scorlnv subs Slekol 12, Louv1tr lolnl•nl, Hirst 7, O<IQl'•S i ~ .-.., -
1'3--Rotll IHI dee Wetlwrbff n.o. OeYIS (0) G 116) Goodfriend H•illome NH .• , 14 3 0 I
Hwl·Bl'own IHI pinned Sharp4:S7. l'teeson (61 G (0 U t htr Htlllome· Westminster, 2S·19 Hllf'lt ... lt<ll (t1) (:H) An•l't9'm n Y
CAm <•lltSI 111 Mt4MtN COM scoring sut>s Fari.r •. Le l'ownteln Valley 15tl 101 Loare D•emona 1111 F 181Chf'tStoph Exec. Cars
t7-Ue(Elplnnecl8.0rr1:21. vrand1, Simonf91 F f2•JFelt• Tev1or1n1 F 121Tuqanden WhiMTheyl.e•t
SIXTH ltACll _ AbOllt 4y, lurlonQs 111S-4tlnes IE) dt< Mis.Jon IC>-7, Hllltlm•: VP, 21·11 Espinosa 021 F (7) Rlchil' WOOIHI 1121 C (Bl Cosner<>!>
114-Lonv !El dK Sci..91..0. "••pert HarMr t6t> 1se1 E1hen Gr.en1ea1 co> c f1l G.lrc1e Thompson·101 G 16> Mt't't!rs . San•a Ana on turl. 4 yur olds ano up. Cl•Ulfled ttt-5. ()fr IC) pinned Collett 3:2.S. 8r9dburnt w F (0) Schroeder Shit>ala 141 G (8) l ln<lfflmeyer Eldridge (ISi G IOI E\O•no Li I 'I.I
allowa nces. Puru i t 7,00G. LH 119--0'oswn ICI pinned 8akef'4:S1. Keys (IS) F 110) FlctonP Tobias Ill>> G (1) Walker li8 scorln9 subs Norrts 2, Funk 9 ft4"0 ft •• f'rt-Ur,V Mtrmenas Guild. Us-Richmond ICI dee Jullano6-1. FV I C I I Sir Jason f Plncty Jrl 121 Geronlml 1101 C (91 Her,.,.n scor ng subs K.sufman 8, Rt'•ff 1u e •. N~n 6, Jol'tnson 6, Glt!nn 8, ~ • 7 ") !'!!!. I J
Bensadrtem (Mena I 11• 140-&chleber IC> dt< R•119•port4"-0. Mowy (ISi G (ISi Graharn 2, Sickman 6, Wessa i Paonanelll J, Vonesl\ J, GalltnJ. .-,. ·~ ...
AlseHlgh CH•wley) 117 ~••_1_-Gr~-"~'Y_<_c_1_oe~c_G_r_•_en~S--•-·~~~~T_1_mm~o_n_s_1_1_6_>~-G~~~-"-'-l_T_u_t1_on~~-H-•_11_t_•m~e_._F_v_._29_._2e~~~~~~~~-H_a_11_11_m_e_·_H~B,s1 1~1~~~~~~~.::::::::::::::::::::::::::::__
Wlllmtr (Pltrct) 117
IM<llcal Men !St>oem•ker I 1?1 S.'w1ootl't CGontalttl 109 .... ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
SEVIENTM llACI -Ont mile 4
ynr Olds anct "P· Cle lmlng Pune
SU,000. Cle lmln9 price '40,000 -
W ,000. El Ptto Ranch.
A·Ocela 8o'I' IVeldtl)
A-Round N .. mlltrs (LOPtll
Palladium IOllver.sl
House Of Lords ISmltll 1
Mller1 (Pincey Jr)
Han:! At It (Hawley)
114
117
111
111
ttl
Piiot Pac• !Skinner)
Trtweiro (Torol
A 8 C Littrell •nd
trained entry.
114
111
T H Herd Jr
EIGHTH ltACll -11 /16 miles.
Flllltt end m"es. 4 y••r "'ds ...ct U9o
Henctk tP Purw Sl0,000 • ldt<I Gr-U7 ,tOG. To winner JJS.100, MC.ond
'10,000, tlllrd \7SOO, lour111 U 750, llltfl
S12SO. S...11 Merl• Handicap,
Gey Style (Pltr<tl 127
R•IM Vwr Sltlrli (Men•I 130
Sister FIHI ILoe>e1I 111
0.hllt CShOemakerl 12'
Time (Alverul 111
8old8eby CPlncayJrl 112
Our First OtllQtll !Olivares I 112
PrlncnsPa pulff (Mawltyl 113
O\aroer's Star !Lambert I 1 IS
NINTH ltACE -11116 miles. 4 '(ffr
olds •rid uP. Ct•lmln9. Purw ,11,000.
Clelm ln9 price Sl0,000 $16,000.
ParlN'ftOUf\t J •Y<HS.
IC Inv W1y1t:o IPlnc•y Jrl 11t
Mr.Miii., IOllvertt) lU
J11tery (MeMI 111
EFA (Harris) 116
~y Viking fLlmbertl 111
Fats 151\o.mellerl 111>
HewAlllltlal ISmltll) 111
Autocracy (H1wley) 111
Cosmic Soy 11 (Skl,.,..r) 111
SllwrStar CGonraleil 111
Tutt4o (Toro) 111
Mystlc.IM•n fl.ol)91I 111
Pahn Spri11gs' M{)St Sc11sational New Country Club Commu11ity
THE BEST VALU.E
UNDER THE SUN!
FIFTH AACE 870 v••d\ l ~d•old•
& UP c1a1m1nv Puru MOOO Cla1m•l\Q
p rt(P \HOO The M•<••Y MoU'f'
Rrtrt"<llton Club
8arrono I Gar,.>
Roan Mem t>o !Broo~\l
W•a1thM10C.lory IR1cnaras1
Grande O~d fClerlsse I
121 Los Al Results
Black Bro11·11•r (Hartl
\18
119
11'1
119
.... ~ ... rMay,J-ry2', "" O.ar, Trtcll P:ast
Un Cl\erge I Bank\
R119Qe<1 8omb<'r IL1P11am)
Tonto Oro INoCOdPmU\)
119 Fl llST ltACE -400 yards l ,..,
119 Oldl Miltdens ClaiminQ. P"rse Sl100
Arm-lie
SIJCTH A ACE -3SO yards 3 yP/lr olds
& uo c1a1m1ng. Purse ~000 c1a1m111Q
proce \7SOO
Roman O.vtl l llpham l
Ho•sl Boom IMolchf'll 1
Go Cal 1(1119 tCardota >
Ml<ln1gnt Se>erd (Wal•on)
Smoolh II o ... , (H1r11
Grand Bar IB•n~s I
Ou•tk Grf't'n IMorrownJ
Boonf'dO<k I Adair I
e>upeBSlarr IW•rd l
119
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121
119
122
11'1
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SEVENTH A ACE lSO .,;1rct' l '1"'1•
Ol<I lot11•s ourSt" Sl2.000 added t,,.
U\Cn1qu•I••
'" 111
(Car<lore l 11 60 8.IO S 20
Gypsy I.Ady Bar <Broo-sl 12.20 13.10
Oualot ICltrouel • ?O
Tll'l'W! 20 61
Scr•tche<I Battle Him, Motogo,
Allie's Sar. Gimme Soi'M Change.
U llocta -7-ArmMette & l ·OYPIY
u•r .. r,1teld'4t1 ....
SECOHDllACE -400yarm lVN•
Oki\ & uP C1eim1n9. Pur'>4f \2300
8id'Who 18rooksl • 40 • 10 160
Thl' Count (Watson ) S 60 l.00
Aun BloOby Run (Treasure I 2 20
Time -20.ll s-1 Ff'e\I IAdatrl
Hayt MO•• Fun !INar<11
Fll'tl Anne IWPICh )
Tr11 Tru s ~but cMylt'SI Ill THlllO •ACE -400 y••<ls l .,.., i~ OIOS Ma•dtn\ Cl•imtnQ PurseS1100 A l.otsot 01emon<1s IR1ct>erdsl
A FlytllQ ChtCkeltl' ICar<lotel 110 Mery'\ Teddy B•r
!Ontver I 11 20 soo l •
3'0 2 80
3 60
Basketball
0..QIOfl 71>, 0•'90" St 14 IOTI
S... Jow SI 81 C.190
S... Oie<»O SI 7', C•I Stelt llBl S1
Cal Sl•l• c F ulletton I Ml, F rttn0 St.
60
Oavictson 74, UC S.nt1Barbera67
PrHldlo M, Humt>oldl St. n
N•veO. (LV) 107, SHiii« 71
Ch•PfTWln 100, Hiio •7
Air Force n , So. Colorado '6
lAV•rne 71, Atusa Pac ific 60
Utel\ SI 100, O.nver 90
!>I LOutt 11, Tut~ 67
WldlltMSt U ,W T•utSI SS
Geor9I• TKh '1, Prn11yterlen 6l
I.Amir 71, SW Loultl•na •7 s MIHIHIPIH 61. Tula ... S'I
Mtnnetttn 74, C•n1sl11t '6
Seton Hiil 90. Ftorfltld 14
1Clot,,-1e 1Broo .. s•
Goddy's Roe-el IR1tn••<1sl
Tlme-20 Sl
Sc•ttched -Snuv·s Goldm•"«". Toro
Sea, FU11ny Funny Face. Z1p'N Go
l'OUllTH llACE -oOOyerds l'fffr
olcts. Altowanu. PurH ~soo
Jet Accordenl
1"4Ulrl IS.to S IO • 00
Rov•llY An11red fClerlsw I ~ 10 3.60
Con .. deralt Jel CLlpl\am> 3.10
Time -20.lO.
Also ,.n -Roman O!X'5\. Due ti
HOw, Atur• Bar 2
NOK,.tel'tu
p1nH 8'A.Cll S4• yards. 3 vear
olds £ up Slerttr allowance. Puna
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<Hlcoo.rnut I
12.20 1 20 3 90
11.40 uo
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3 00
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SIXTH ltACll -170 yards. 3 yHr
olds & up. Cl•lmlno. P11rse ~·200.
ICltlltrQ'\ lnt•nt
IC:..rial 12.00 •.40 3.20
Royal PIH IC1rdou I •.60 2.80
Glory Phantom INltodem11s> 2.60
Tl,... •S.2J.
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J.11.•yal l"IH, ltale,14S.tol.
Scr•l<Md -Ut Olntro, Dupe 8
Slerr. L•t 's Ott Goln9, Nulhtr
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SEV•NTM 8'ACll -3SO ytrds. J
.,.., olcts & uP Clusllltd •11-enc.e.
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ll 60 S.20
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ll IGMTM •AC:ll -1711 Y•ros l ......
olds & up c1elm l1111. Purse Sl700.
Plllm Gold
(Mofrlsonl S 20
c:..11-.0•1 Boy CCreeoerl
N1tiw Tw ist INlcodtm .. sl
Tl .... -.... >6.
420 300
7.40 s 00
3.60
Scr•t<htd -Olvlne 1tl9hl, Swill Bo,
O'Olel, Sandy Vann1n. u RHct• -t-~•IM o. .. a I·
GlllMM'l .. ,,, ... ,11 •••
NINTH •AC• -.00 Yffdl , Y'N1'
okls. Cl•lmlnv. Pvne 11100.
Moon In ,,,.West
IClerl1wl
GlllQtf' Aoeln IW.,dl
Thrte Pollcys (Afalr)
Tlme-20.SO.
•.oo uo uo
S.40 UO •••
Scret.<Md -C.llfonlle S.Wfl, 9W'!'d
Brtln, Go Miu £1• ... H••Y c.t. .
U Ructe -1-MMll I• Tiie Wllll &
~ .... 1 ... , ... $1 ....
Al~-6.104.
SEVlll.1.E ...
-ehe sp~rH: of 76
obtain the be~t price and the lowest lease rates
Nabers Cadillac
2600 Harbor Blvd .• Costa Mesa 540·9100
'
For over two years Su nris<' Countr~ C'luh ha:;
outsold all other condominium communitieH in Uw
desert. Perhaps more than all others combined.
This unprecedented success is no accidcnL Ncv(•r
before have lavish de8Crt Ji,·inK and mrrwhclmin~
value been so perfectly combined in a tot.al
resort community.
Sunrise Country Club offers ownc•rship of a
single story fairway condomi nium in a 24-hour
gate-guarded private .community nlus all the
advantages of belongrng to the most degant.
pri vate golf and tennis 'cJub for the
price of condominium ownership alone.
Proprietary membership righL'I in both
the tennis and golf clubs are included
in the price of your condominium.
There are no initiation fe~!i.
Playing ~rivilcgcs arc activated
I •
hv the paymt•nt of nominal annual dues only.
Aml to ma kl•\ c1u r ln\'Cl'ltmc•nt more valuable. there
arc on Iv ahout four fa1t'\\ a y homes to the acre -
on land that \ml O\\ n . '
The final phases of Sunrise Country Club
are now under develo pme nt. T his will be the
last season tha t you will have an opportunity
to become a part of the Sunrise Country Club.
We urge you to visit as soon as possible.
From Palm SprinkR, take Hwy. 111 south, left at.
Country Club Drive. From Los Angeles, take Hwy.
· 10 to Ramon Road (Rancho Mirage exit),
14.!ft on Bob Hope• Drh·e to Country Club
Drh·e. then turn ri ght.
Telephone: (714) 328-3191.
Two and three bedroomA from
$49,995 to $73,996.
''
\
\ .
• .... :.Mt ....
'Keeping Up With the
Jones's '
by Cynthia A. Osborne
(above
left) and "Man in Jaws
of Machine" by
James Toralkson (above
right)
are in G WC exhibit.
Printmaker
Carol Law (right) will
speak at Feb. 4 reception.
Ballet Paeifiea
Dance Styles Combined
By JACKIE HYMAN
Of tlle D•llr l"llOC ftllff
David P a naierf and Lila Zali
Jtave dance backgrounds firmly
rooted in tradition. But both also
approve recent trends toward
combining classical ballet with
modern jazz dancing.
"There is an intermarnage to-
day r" said Miss ZaJi, artistic
director of Laguna Beach's
Ballet Pacifica. "I think it's
marvelous that it's happened.
Dance is dance.
"But I think it's important to
keep the traditional. It would be
MOLLY LYNCH ANO DAVID PANAIEFF
Wiii Perform In 'Swan Lake'
""
like t hrowi n g Bach out of
music," she said.
As if to prove her point, Ballet
Pacifica will stage the tradi-
tion al "Swan Lake," with
choreography by Ivanov. Feb. 9
and 10 at the Laguna Moulton
Playhouse in Laguna Beach.
ALSO ON THE program will
be Miss Zali 's original choreo-
graphy for "Carmina Burana."
Tickets at $4 for adults and $3 for
children and students may be re-
served by calling 494-7271 or writ-
ing Sally Reeve, P.O. Box 241,
Laguna Beach, CA 92652.
David Panaieff, who will dance
the prince in "Swan Lake" on
Tuesday (Victor Moreno will
dance the part Monday), con-
trasted the c~allenges of modern
work with the traditiona1 part he
will dance in Laguna.
"You've got to be fl exible (to
dance in all styles>," he said.
"I've schooled some in jazz.
I've worked under one or the
principal dancers of Martha
Graham. I appreciate their
ideas.''
But a work like "Swan Lake"
is "very difficult to do in terms of
technique and the simplicity.''
Panaieff noted. "It looks simple
but it's very difficult. It's a
challenge. It takes years of
study."
FOR PANAIEFF, who has.
been aa.ncing for 15 years, that
study began in his father
Michel's studio in Los Angeles.
Midway through college. young
Panaieff decided to take his
dancing seriously.
He has no regrets, he said.
"The more.I learn in it and grow
in it technically, I respect it more
and am pleased that I am a ballet
dancer. It's starting to bloom all
over America,'• he said.
Both agreed that dance com-
bines movement with music and,
very importantly, acting.
"You measure your work not
in how many turns you make or
how high you leap but ln the
quality of the presen\ation of the
character," Panaieffsaid.
"Drama is very important,"
M\ss Zall added. "There has to
be a lot of acting."
Scenery, however, traditional-
~
~ ~
Arts I Dining Out "i
" .
"' ~ :1 ~
Entertainment·
Friday, January 30, 1976 DAILY PILOT Cl
~ _...
Prints Presented
California Works Slwwn at GWC
I
The latest techniques in the art
of printmaking will be shown in a
major exhibit, the California
Printmakers InvitationaJ, in the
Golden Wes t College Gallery.
15744 Golden West St., Hunt-
ington Beach, Feb. 2-27 .
Thirty-two n ationally and in-
ternationally recognized artists
from throughout the state will
show etchings, lithographs, and
silkscreens, including several
prize-winning pieces.
Show curator Brian Conley. art
ln5tructor at the college, said
more than 50 pieces will be
shown.
Carol Law of Berkeley, one of
the exhibitors and a member of
the board of the California Soc1e·
ty of Printmakers. will talk on
the growth of printmaking in
California al an opening recep·
tion on Wednesda), Feb 4, from
7to9p.m
She will speak in the theater at
7 p.m There is no admission
charge, and the pubhc 1s anv1tcd.
An artist who has traveled and
studied art history an Europe for
several years, Ms Law worked
in 1973 to produce a series of
prints at the Grafi sch Atelier in
Amsterdam, Holland.
She also has taught pnntmak-
ing at California State Universi-
ty, Fresno; California College of
Arts and Crafts in Oakland; and
San Francisco State Uruvers1ty.
In Oakland she co-founded an
unusual print facility for pro-
fessional artists to pursue their
work while sharing equipment.
This studio has grown into a suc-
cessful print center which main-
tains a permane nt collection and
organized exhibitions for its
members.
·'CARMINA BURANA' DANCERS INCLUDE RANDY BARNETT (FRONT)
Al10 Featured Are Louise Frazer, Caroll Stasney and Molly Lynch (From Left)
ly an important element in ballet
staging. is declining in im -
portance, Jhe said. "The tenden-
cy today Is to get away from
overpowering scenery. They 're
doing a great deal more today in
the use of light to create il-
lusions."
T HE MAIN problem with
dance of all sorU today is not
lack of talent -young dancers
are studyln• in record numbers
-and not audience size -au-
diences have arown rrom an
estimated one million annually in·
1965 to 11 million in 1975 -but
money. Ticket prices never cov-
er all the costs or a production,
Panaieff pointed out.
''Everything is so. expensive.
'You measure your work
not in how many tums
you make or how high
you leap but In the
quality of the presentation
of the chsracter'-Da'lid
Panaieff
Just starting rrom material ror
costumes it's prohibitive,"
Miss Zali said She and Panaieff
)
both teach to help support their
artistic careers, as do many of
the other dancers who appear
with the Ballet P acifica.
Dancing the queen of the swans
in "Swan Lake" will be Molly
Lync h at the M onday
performance and Louise Frazer
on Tuesday.
Featured in "Carmina
Burana" both nights will be
Kristi Stephens and Paul M.aUl'e
with Randy Barnett, Louas
Carver, Jennifer Engle, Roger
Faubel. Carrie Kneubuhl, Glenn
Smith, Benjamin Sperber, Caroll
Stasney and Cynthia Tosh.
Scenery is by Tatiana Barton.
•
/
(;2 DAILY PILOT
Date Festival
Tht-1976· N ut1o nal Dale
F estl\ ~11 "111 take place Feb. 13
through 22 at lnd10 m Rivers1dl"
Cou n ty, \\tt h t ree c \en1n g
perfor mann•-; o f the Arabian
Nighb P agt·~rnl at Ii -t5 p m dai ly
with add at 1onal shows at s· 20
JJ m .on Satu rda\s
The Arabian Nights form
the them e of the fair The Na-
tional Horse Show. "ith camel
and ostrich races. will also be
a mong the act1v1t1 cs. A brochure
1s a\aila bl e lrom lk tty Howard.
Tou,r Director. National Oat~
Festival. P 0 Dra\\er NNNN,
lndo, CA 92201 1 347-3487, ext
247.
A_,,,..•ador Prf~~•
T he Ambassador International
Foundation, which sponsors con-
certs a t Amb<1ssador Aud1tonum
in Pasadena, h as announced that
1t 1s dropping its ticket prices,
'' h1c h form erly ranged from
S8 i5 to S25. to prices ranging
lrom SJ to Si
The prC'\ IOUS high tic ke t
pnces. mo::.l of "h1ch wenl to
charitable donations. had been
severe !~ cr1t 1c11cd. Artists
scbeduled under the new ticket
prices include bantonc Robert
Merrill (F e b. 31 and pianis t
Jeanne·Ma,ric Darre \Feb. 5l.
Also slated to appear soon a rc
violinist Vi ktor T ret yakov,
meizo·soprano Manlyn Horne,
pianis ts J or ge Bolet and Mona
Golabek a nd the Philha rmonia
\'irtuos1 of Ne\\ Yl•ar Tickets
may be re5crvcd by calling \213J
577·536-0.
Mak Audition•
Audit1onc; for a ne\\ J>('rcussion
en::.cm bll' " ti I ht• held I rom 5 Lo 7
p m. Fl•b :! and ..J ;.it Sanla .\na
College• mu ... I\· room :'\ 11..J . !Ith
al Bn!>tol Strl'l'l Santa .\na The
Santa Ana Colll-ge Con<.'crt B.rncl
• rnd Jazz Ensemble w ill abo
aucl1t1on tho~c> C\ening-.. In ·
formation 1s a\ ailablt• from 1\l r .
Glo,er. 835·3000. t'\.l 21:$.
Season Ticket•
Th e H unti n g t on H nrtfo rd
T he il t c r . 1 ti 1 5 \' 1 n <.• St .
Holl ~" noel . is offering SC'ason
ti{'kels on ;.i b1c·t.·nll•nn1..il 'l'l'll'S
Productions will 1nC'luclc J amc"
Wh itmore in "The Magnaf1C'cnl
Y;.i nkee" < F c•b 26 March 211.
"Ken nedy's Chtldrcn" 1 !\l arch
31-April 251 and "Winner Take
All." the world premier of a
musical about fe minist Victon a
Woodhull <May 18·June 13 >.
Subscription informa t ion 1s
available from (213 > 462-6666.
s...., TrJIOUI•
Golden West College will hold
auditions for G l'orµe Bernard
Sha" ·s "The Ot•\lrs D1sc1pl<'" at
7.30 pm Fcb 2 and:! in th<.• .\c
lor'::. P ia) box. 15i ~ l Golden Wc!:>t
S t . ll unt1ngton B<.•at·h .
P erform a nces \\ 111 lw !\>'l art'h
19·28.
Original M1Ulcal
The Scheherazade Players will
have o~n tryouts for an original
.mus ical' play based on Ma rk
Twain's "Huckleberry Finn "
Auditions for the work, "River
Boy," will be from 2 to 5 pm.
Feb 1 at Arthur's Barn, Heritage
Park. 12174 Euclid St . Garden
Grove. Smgers should bnng their
own mus ic or be prepared to
6ight r ead. Instrumentalists a re
also needed. Fo r mformat1on,
call Don Hayes. 534·2611
Wllld En•e.fJle
Audi t ions f o r Chapm a n
College·s wind e nsemble will be
he ld from 8 a m to 5 p.m . Feb 1
and 2 in the college music build -
ing, .Palm at Grand. in Orange .
The ensem ble. open to the public,
rehearses at 7 p .m . Wed -
nesdays. Appointments to audi-
tion may be arranged by calling
633·8821 , ext. 291, weekday morn-
ings.
Perlo,.,.er• Needed
Performe r s a r e sought by
Fullerton College for a presenta-
tion of Thornton Wilder's "Our
T own." whic h w ill be staged
Ma r ch 18-26 in the Campus
Theater . Tryouts will be held al 7
p m . Feb 4. 5 a nd 6 in the
theater. Cha p m an Avenue at
Le mon S treet. Fullerton In·
formation is a\ a 1lable by calling
,811·8000. ext 77
Frld1y, January 30, 197&
The I rvi ne Co mm u nity
Theater and Golden West College
have Joined together in a n am·
b1 t1ous u ndertaking: the non-
professional Orange County pre-
miere of Jason Miller's Pulitzer
Pri ze-winn ing play, "That
Cha mpions hip S eason." at the
GWC Community Theater now
through Feb. 1.
It would be unfa ir to compare
the production to the play's pro-
fessional county premiere a little
O\'er a year ago at South Coast
Repertory. "Cha mp Season" is a
decepti\'ely s1 mplc, s ingle-set
pla} \\-h1 ch ca lls for sensitive , in·
tense per fo rmances difficult for
even the most experienced ac-
tors .
t:~DER THE direction of Tom
Titus. the ICT·G WC production is
uneven but certainly presents
some of the better community
thea te r performances or the
'ear
· The best comes from Randv
Keene as Phil. Keene grasps the
contra dictions in this character
and pre<>ents him as a real.
believable person caught in the
gulf between ideals and reality.
Jack Byron gives a strong
portrayal of the coach, tb~
FROM Fash ion Island
Newport Beach
------------~--~-
.\
pivotal character in the story .
Byron understates his lines effec-
tively, although an u nwise
technical decision to use offstage
mus ic unde rcuts one of bis most
tellin g s peeches. ·
IN THE PART of the ineffec-
tual James, Alan Levy s hows
sens itivity . Clark Burs on is
believable as the mayor but
needs to work more against the
I mes -he com es across just a lit·
tie too bumbling to be quite credi-
ble.
Onofre Gutierrez. unfqrtunate·
ly displays little understanding
of the pa rt of the alcoholic Tom.
This character should be played
as a bitter man. a character of·
almost tragic proportions . In
Gutterrez' portrayal he comes
a c ross a s a s tandard drunk,
depriving the pla y of m~h of its
bite.
Despite the production's weak
points. ICT and G WC have taken
a worthwhile step toward inte-
grating the college and com-
munity theater performers and
audiences. and have done the .
community a service by giving it
another look a t this difficult but
rewarding play.
Morie Return•
Olivia Hussey' stars in Fran-
co Zeff erelti 's film "Romeo
and Juliet," which· has re-
cently been re-released. The
Shakespeare story is now
playing at coast theaters.
WaiercOlors
In Lagum,,
' TWO·'"'~ SHOW .....;. Watercolon by J acquie Mofret~d G eorg~ Post. Jan. 31-Feb. 22 at
Challis Galleries, 13~ S. Coast Highway. Laguna
Beach. 11 a .m . to s p.m. Wednesday-Sunday.
WATER COLORS BY ST EVEN STAVAST -At
Petrleks/Collector's Choice Art Gallery, 666 N.
Coast Highway, Laguna Beach, Feb. 1·28. 10
a.m . to5 p.m . Wednesday-Sunday.
PRINTMAKERS INVITATIONAL -At Golden
West College Art Gallery, 15744 Golden West St.,
Huntington Beach Feb. 2·27. Guest _s_peaker
Carol Law. 7 p . m . feb. 4. Noon to 4 p.m . Monday-
Friday, 7 to 9 p.m . Wednesdays. See Page Cl. ·
"Old M ining Town st Madrid,
. N.M., "by George Post (above left),
and "In a Sea of Sand Dunes,"
by Jacquie Moffett (left), are
in a show of works by the two
artists at Challis Galleries
in Laguna Beach Jan. 31-Feb. 22
Galleries I Exhibits
•SCRATCH BOARD A•T• -Works by Rudy
Droguette. now at Tho Foundry Gallery, 2234
Newport Blvd., bie)Vport Beach (behind the Crab
Cooker ). Noon to 9 p. m. Wednesday-Sunday.
CIONESE RITUAL BRONZES -Ceremonial
vessels on view, Feb. 3-April 25, first level of the
Ahmanson Gallery, Los Angeles County Museum
of Art, 5905 Wilshire Blvd .. Los Angeles. Free.
WESTERN LANOSCAPES -Oits by Don Miles,
Feb. 3·29 at the t>eMUle Gallery, 1432 S. Coast
JUghway, Laguna Beach. 11 a.m . to S p.m.
Tuesday-Thursday and Saturday-Sunday.
PORTRAIT AND ~E~ ART -Palntlngs
by Laguna Beach artists, now through Marc h 31
at Colst Federal Savings, 530 E . First St., Tustin.
PHOTOGRAPHS BY TOM CAMPOS -Feb. 1·29 at Mariner's Savings, Westcliff at Dover Drive,
Newport Beach.
PAINTINGS BY LEONORA PJERO'M'I -Feb.
1-29 at Hunt Library Galleries, 201 S. Basque
Ave., Fullerton .
. ORIENTAL R\JGS SPEECH -By Orange Coast
College instructor Tom Klobe, noon on Feb. s at
OCC Fine Arts Hall 116, 2701 Fairview Road
Costa Mesa. Free. '
'THE FL\JTE AND THE BR\JSH' :?':. Fifty
miniature paintings from India, with pamtings by
Michael Wingo, now through Feb. 20 at the
Newport Harbor Art Museum, 2211 W. Balboa
Blvd., Newport Beach. Noon to 4 p.m . Tuesday-
SUnday, 6 to 9 p.m . Friday. Admission by dona-
tion.
'
STERE.O SOUNDS Q.F THE HARBOR
•
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~._ -·--------.-..... ---~ ... .--..-..-.~ .. ~. ~ ,
Fr!daY. Januaty 30, 1978 DAILY PILOT
. J .-----------------------· ·Sinatra Headlines Benefit Tonight Ti mes/Places
TONIGHT, JANUARY 3t
FRANK SINATRA AND MO.TON BERLE -
Heading variety show, 8:30 o'clookA.onlgbt at the
Long Beach Arena, to raise money for the Long
Beach Police Officers' Memorial Fund. $10,
tickets at Tlcketron, Mutual, Liberty or box of.
fice (213 > 437 ·2255.
'THE ADOLF HITLER SHOW' -Multi-media
experiment funded by the Rockefeller Founda-
tion, 8 o'clock tonight and Saturday at the
Odyssey Theater Ensemble, 12111 Ohio Ave., Los
.Angeles. $4 .50 ge netal, $3 .50 students and
seniors. (213) 826-1626.
0'.NElLL DRAMA -"Long Day's Journey Into
Night," 8 o'clock tonight and Saturday in the Cal
State Fullerton Little Theater. 870·33'71.
'ALTARS OF THE WORLD' -Story of the
world's 12 major faiths, narrated by Lew Ayres,
8:30 o'clock tonight, 2:30 p.m. Saturday, 7:30
p.m. Sunday at the Los Angeles Music Center
Pavilion, $3.50·$6.50. Tickets at Wallichs and
Liberty agencies.
NEW HUNGARIAN QUARTET -Presented by
the Laguna Beach Chamber Music Society, 8:30
·o'clock tonight in the Laguna Beach High School
Auditorium, 625 Park Ave. $5 general, $3 stu·
dents, tickets at door as available.
4TllE HAPPIEST MIWONAiaE' -Comedy at
the Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse, Community
Recreation Cenu,r, Orange County Fairgrounds,
8:30 o'clock Fridays and Saturdays tonight
throuah Feb. 7. $56·5391.
'GYPSY' -Musical at Sebastian's West Dlnner
Playhouse, 140 A venida Pico, San Clemente, now
through Feb. 15. 492-9950.
ONE·ACf COMEDIES -"Yoa Know I Can't •
Hear You When the Water's Running" by' Robert
Anderson, presented by the San Clemente Com-
munity Theater, 202 Avenida Cabrlllo, San
Clemente, 8:30 o'clock tonight, Saturday, and
Feb. 5·7. 492-0465.
•aow THE OTHER HALF LOVES' -Comedy
at the Huntington Beach Playhouse, 2110 Main
St., Hu"ntington Beach. 8:30 o'clock Fridays and
Saturdays tonight through Feb. 14. 842-5421.
4THE NATIONAL HEALm• -Satiric comedy
at South Coast Repertory Theater, 1827 Newport
Blvd., Costa Mesa. Now thfough Feb. 21, 8 p.m .
Tuesday-Saturday and3p.m. Sunday. 646-1363.
CONTINUI NG IN LOS ANGELES -"The
Duchess of Malfi," through March 7 at the Mark
Taper Forum; "Night of the Iguana," through
Saturday at the Ahmanson Theater; "The
Heiress," through Feb. 15 at the Westwood
Playhouse; "Raisin," .through Feb. 29 at the CHINESE NEW YEAR -Celebrations Shubert.
throughout the weekend in Chinatown, Los
Angeles. FESTIVAL OF WHALES -At Dana Point
·Harbor, Jan. 30-Feb. 15, includes races an<;t com·
'IN THE JUNGLE OF OTIES' -By Bertolt .. petitions. Jnformalion496-3004or496·6677. Brecht, 8 o'clock tonight and Saturday in the UC
Irvine Fine Arts Little Theater (Humanities Hall SATURDAY, J ANUARY 31
Room 161). 75 cents.
SUGARLOAF -At Knoll's Berry Farm, Buena
'A STREETCAR NAMED DESIRE' -Ten-Park; 6, 7:30 and 9 p.m. Saturday. $3 adults, $1.50
nessee Williams drama, 8 o'clock tonight and children.
Saturday and Feb. 5, 6 and 7 in the UCI Fine Arts
Village Theater. $3 ; 8.13-66,17. MERLE HAGGARD -8 p.m . Saturday at the .
Anaheim Con~ention Center. Tickets at agencies.
•THAT CHAMPIONSIOP SEASON' -Joint
production by Irvine Community Theater and
Golden West College at GWC Theater, Hunt·
ington Beach. 8:30 o'clock tonight and Saturday,
5p.m. Sunday. $2 ; 892-7711, ext. 545.
'THE PETRIFIED FOREST' -Drama at the
Laguna Moulton Playhouse, 606 Laguna Canyon
Road, Laguna Beach. 8:30 p.m. Tuesdays.
Saturdays, now through Feb. 7. 494-0743.
'GYPSY' -Musical at the Westminster Com-
munity Theater, 7~2 Maple Ave., Westminster,
8:30 o'clock Fridays and Saturdays tonight
through Feb. 14. 893-8626.
GENUINE CHINESE MANDARIN DISHES
Specializing In Chinese A La C.orte Dishes
LUNCH•C>l"lNER DAILY
· Food tO Take Out
11 :30 AM. to 10 P.M.
112J ..........
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COCKTAILS•DINING•DANCING
ENTERTAINMENT
Daily Breakfast•Lunch•Dinner
•
LONG BEACH SYMPHONY -Music by Charles
Ives and Dvorak, with violinist Zina Schiff, 8:30
p.m. Saturday at the Long Beach City College
Auditorium. (213) 436-7953.
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 1
EFREM ZIMBALIST J R. -With the California
Chamber Symphony, a tribute to European com·
posers who emigrated to America; 8 p.m. Sun-
day at Royce Hall, UC Los Angeles. $5-$8, tickets
at Mutual, Wallichs, Liberty agencies.
'DANCE IN ACTION'-Dance seminar, 9 a.m ..
I
BEAUTIFUL DINING ON THE BAY
COCKTAILS UNDER THE STARS
co.-
U YOU ...
CHAMPAGNE SUNDAY BRUNOt I
10 A.M. to 3 P.M. _
ENTERTAI~&
DANCING 6 NIGHTS
Now Appearing
PENNY DAY ......
HARRIS BROS ,.
rollowed by student revue, 4 p.m ., Sunday at the
Anaheim cultural Arts Center, 931 N. Harbor
Blvd., Anaheim: Information (213 ) 4'1·1738.
TUESDAY,FEBRUARY3
'DEAR UAR' -Valerie Harper and Antbooy
lerbe, Feb. 3·15 at the Huntington Hartford
Valerie Harper, star
of TV's ·"Rhoda, " will
appear with Anthony
Zerbe in "Dear Liar,"
a comedy about
George B ernard
Shaw's love
affair with an
actress, Feb. 3-15
at the Huntington
Hartford Theater
in Hollywood.
Theater , 1615 Vine St., Hollywood. Tickets at
agencies .
'SAME TIME, NEXT YEAR' -Comedy with
Jo¥ce Van Patten and Conrad Janis; preview
Feb. 3·5, 8:30 p.m. at the Los Angeles Music
Center Ahmanson Theater ($2.75-$10),,run F eb.
6-March 27 , $3. 75-$11. Tickets at agencies.
ROBER T MERRILL -At Ambassado r
Auditorium, 300 W. Green St., Pas adena, 8:30
p.m. Feb. 3. $3·$7. (213) 577·5360.
WEDNESDAV,FEBRUARY4
MICHAEL CRI CHTON -A talk b y the
author/screenwriter, UC Irvine Science Lecture
Hall17:30p.m . Feb. 4. $1.50. •
HORTENSE CALISHER -Novelist and s hort
story writer, giving informal reading and dis.'
cussion, 7 :30 p .m . Feb. 4 in the Saddleback
College Science/Mathematics Building, 28000
Marguerite Parkway, Mission Viejo. Free.
LUNCHEON and DINNER
RESERVA T IONS HONOR ED
Phone l714) 644-1700
<~?~Pn1
NOW APPEARING IN OUR
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THE SENSATIONAL
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THE PLATTEltS
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The TONY MORALES TWO
Pcaibty the finest entertainer ever to appear In lhia
........ and you may have seen BOB WHITE on. TV
~rnent of Police StOfY, °' in the m:>vies. including nMt Snows of KillmanJso. °' on national commercials. Now~tr:idgea the gen«atton gap, delighting ~ng
and With his great 90Und. bacKed by the TONY.
MORAL S TWO . . . as the group leans toward the
llOllalgiC. listen ONCE. we KNOW you will be back
IQ9in &1Qain .
. TUESDAY thru SATURDAY
9 PM tp2 AM
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. 2699 Hwtw, Costa Mesa 545-1112 .
CLAMS • OYSTERS • SHRIMP • SWORDFISH • BASS
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HALIBUT • ABALONE • LOBSTER • STEAKS
•
TBUBSDAV,FEBRUABY5
MIME SHOW -At the Orange Coast College '
Drhma Lab, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mes a . el
p.m . Feb. 5, 6, 7. Free.
PIANIST JEANNE-MARIE DARRE -At A~
.bassador Audito rium, 300 W. Gree n St.
Pasadena, 8:30 p.m . Feb. 5. $3·$7 ; (213) 577-5360. ·
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY&
RIGHTEOUS BROTHERS -In the Anaheim
Room of the Anaheim Convention Center , 8 and
11 'p. m. Feb. 6 and 7. $10, tickets at box office
(635·5000 ). .
'THURBER' -St arring William Windom, 8p.m.
Feb. 6 and 7 at the Cal State Fulle rton Littl~
Theater . 800 N. State College Blvd .. Fuller ton. $4
· ($1 discount for students, seniors). 870-3371.
i
FLUTE CONCERT -Cal State Long Beach stu-
dent Pamela Hayes Conde. 8 p.m. F eb. 6 in the
music building , room 127 ·Cal State Long Beach.
Free.
'ICELAND' -Travel film, 7:30 p.m . Feb. 6 In
Phillips Hall, Santa Ana College, 17th at Bris tol
Street, Santa Ana. Free.
ORIGINAL COMPOSmONS -UC Irvine music
composition students in a recital of recent works.
8 p.m. Feb. 6 and 7 at UCI 's Fine Arts Concel't
Hall. Free.
DANCE CONCERT -Gloria Newman Dance
Theater in av ariety of works, 8: 30 p. m . Feb. 6 and'
7 atthe Fullerton College campus Theater, 321 E.
Chapman Ave ., Fullerton. $3 adults, $1.50 stu.
dents. 871-8493.
SATURDAV,FEBRUARY7
'SOUNDS OF FREEDOM BICENTENNIAt.·
BALL' -With "The Society for the Preservation
of Big Bands,'' 9 p.m. tol a.m. Feb. 7 at the Com·
munity Meeting Center, 11300 Stanford Ave .•
Garden Grove. $3.50, tickets available at Ga rden
Grove City Hall, 11391 Aca cia Parkway, 638-6711.
JOHNNY RIVERS -At Knott's Berry Farm,
Buena Park, F eb. 7. 827-1776.
CIDLDREN'S THEATER -"The Celebrated
Jumping Frog of Calavaras County," adapted •
fro.m Mark Twain Story. Golden West Colleg~
students at the Loara Playhouse, Loara Elemen-
tary School, 1601 W. Broadway, Anaheim. 2 p.m .
Feb. 7·8, 14·15. $2. 533-5278.
TAKE
THE FAMILY·
TO FOODPARK!
The kids want burgers, your mate's got a ven tor sometnlng Chinese. and you could go tor a
beer and a hearty sandwich. Hustle everyone
off to FOOdpark tor an Indisputably fine dinner.
Foodpark's seven dining establiShments
with over 240 menu items will, hopefully,
provide something for everyone's taste-and
a little rest for tne cook.
Foodpark Is a great dinner spot. convenlenttv ..
located Just north of the San Diego Freeway on
MacArthur Boulevard in Irvine. Now, about
those busy business lunches ...
. -··
Foodpark
. ':,'.;. .. . ..... .. . . : ... · : ...
SPIRE"S
Hearty meals 24 hours
THE SUNSHINE
FOOD COMPANY
Chicken and
fish & chips,
BLOCKBUSTER'S
Italian Restaurant
RICKY RIOCSHAWS
CHINESE GALLEY
Autt'lenttc
Chinese cuisine
TMI LOG INN Beer, wine and
sandwiches
THI FafHuNta
ortnklno1 Dancing,
Dfnlng
CMl.'S JR.
The burger place
SAN DtEGO FFNIV.
'
'
•
!if DAILYPILOT Friday, Jal'IU!')' 30, 197&
Coast Tryouts Abound
tr you're looking to get tn.
volved in ~ a community or col·
legiate theater production,
•there's no better time than right now .
With the January rush or open.
ings n6w behind us , there comes
a rush of another sort. -audi·
lions for the l)ew productions. In
the next couple of weeks, no
fewer · th an five community
playhouses and college drama
departments will be issuing cast-
ing ca Its.
Normally", audition notices are
relayed in the Callboard section
of the column, but with so many
coming up, we've con verted
today's column into one big
Callboard. The casting calls, in
order or their chronological ap·
pearance:
TllE WESTMINSTER Com-
munit y Theater, on Sunday at 2
p.m. and l\1 onday at 7 p.m., for
the romantic comedy "Jan us."
Ron Filian is directing the show,
v.·hich call s for a cast of three
men and two .women in the 30 to
55 age range.
. ··Janus." il lighthearted story
of literary licentiousness, will
open March 12 for four weekends
a t the Westminster theater, 7272
!'11aple Ave. f·'urther infor mation
can be obt ained by calling the
director at 547-4079.
GOLDEN WEST Co llege, on
l\.1onday and Tuesday at 7:30
p.m. for George Bernard Shaw 's
drama "The Devil's Disciple."
Dir ected by G WC instructor
Charles l\1itchell, the play re-
quires three strong actresses, six
m a le roles and numerous
tov.'nspeople and soldiers.
Set in the Revolutionary War,
"Devil 's Disciple" tells of a re-
bellious young American who
nsks his life for his country. 1"he
shO"-' v.'il l open March 19 for two
\l;eekends in the college theater.
TllE FOUNTAIN Valley Co m-
munity Theater, also on Mond ay
and Tuesday at 7 :30, for the hi s-
lorical play ''Daniel Boone."
Director Jay Conklin wi ll be
seeking a cast of 25 young people
and adults for the adventure tale.
Readings will be conduc ted in
t he theater building, 18280 Mt.
Baldy Circle. Fountain V<Jllcy ,
\\'here the production "-'iii be pre-
sented at a later date.
THE IRVINE Community
'Theater, on Monday, fo~eb. 9. at
7 -30 for the new comedy 0 'Begin-
ner·s Luck." A cast of three men
and l"-'O women in the 20 to 45 age
range is needed for the play, to be
directed by Tom Titus.
· ] CuUns lo not limited to OCC -,, tr1letmission students, but is also open to _ .,om Titus membe" or the community. Tlfe
1i l1N7 drama. of ethical confiicts· .,.:_ _______ ~ ,will be presented March 17·20 in
"Beginner's Luck'' is a light
comedy centering on a divorced
man's attempts to regain the ar-
fections of his elt-wife. Auditions
vdll be held al the Youth Services
.i\Ss9(.'iation building at Bristol
Street and Red Hill Avenu·e ln
Costa Mesa, where the show will
open M ar·ch 26 for three
weekends.
ORANGE COAST College, also
on Monday, Feb. 9, at 6:30, for
Arthur J\.1iller 's award-winning
drama ''All My Sons." OCC
drama instructor John Ferzacca
,will direct the play, which calls
for a cast of five men and four
women.
Nureyev
The Am e rican Ballet
Theater's season at the Los
Angeles 'Music Center
Pavilion will include a
performance by Rudolf
Nureyev in the full -length
ballet ''Raymonda." The
ballet will be in Los Angeles
Feb. 16 through March 7. •
the college auditorium.
Dana Point
Hosts 3-week ~
Whalefest
Saturday ls the beginning of
Dana Point's annual Festival ot
the Whale, which will last three
weekends and is sponsored by the
Dana Point Harbor Merchants
Association and the Dana Point
Chamber of Commerce.
Activities scheduled for every !' I
Saturday "nd Sunday include·
whale-watching cruises hourly
between 10 a.m . to 4 p.m. Crom
Dana Point Sportfishing. Cost is
t.1 for adults and S2 for children. 1•111 Marine movie matinees will
also be held at 1 and 4 p.m. each
Saturday, while at 2 p.m. Joe and
Robin Val encic will discuss and
show their whale display.
This Saturday, lectures on
whales will begin at 10 a.m. ·at
Dana Wharf when Tom Miller,
author of a book on gray whales,
will speak. He will return al 10
a.m. F eb. 14 to talk. Larry
Layman, an oceanographer, will
be featured al 10 a.m. Feb. 7 with
a video tape on "conversations"
with hunchback whales.
At 2 p .m . this Saturday,
paleontologist Carol Stadum will
elthibit and describe marine
fossils found at the harbor. Also
scheduled is a parade of children
with their pets at 10:30 a.m. Feb.
7. Later the same day, Miss Dana
Point will be crowned by enter-
tainer Joey Bishop, who will sail
inonhisyacht.
Songwriter
To Be on TV
Singer.com poser·gui tar is t
Jon Lucien will be featured on·
"lMer Vision" Feb. 5 at 7:30
p.m.,onKCET, Channel28.
Lucien performs some of his
own compositions, such as "Song
For My Lad'' (the title of his latest
Co lumbia album) and "Lady
Love.'' He also does "Adoration,"
"Esparanza" anct "Images of
Bali."
Cartoon /flan
William Windom portrays the humorist
James Thurber, who was also known for
his fanciful drawings, in a one·man show,
"Thurber," which will be performed at 8
p .m . Fe b. 6 and 7 at the Cal State
Fullerton Little Theater. Tickets are $4
with a $1 discount for students and senior
citizens. Information is available from
870·3371.
Guinness Set
As TV Caesar
Sir Alec Guinness bristled visibly 'when he
was asked what he thought about the title "Man
of a Thousand Faces" that was applied to him
when he played many varied parts in films for
Britain's Rank Organization. "It was cooked up
by the publicity department,'' he said, "and
what happens when you become known as a dis·
guise artist is that you eventually have no face at
all."
His own face, embellished by nothing more
than a garland of oak leaves, will be seen in the
Hallmark Hall or Fame production of George
Bernard Sh aw ' s ''Caesar and Cleopatra'• Sunday
at 5 p.m. on Channel 4. He portrays a sophisticat-
ed Caesar who inspires . a naive, kittenish'
Cleopatra (Genevieve Bujold ) to grow up and as-
sume the ruler.ship of Egypt.
'Raisin' Laeks Vigor
A few minutes before his opening monologue
was to be filmed, Guinness, fully costumed, ap-
peared before the producer with a half-wig in his
hand. ''In spite of personal vanity," he said with
the trace of a smile, "I think the wig, with this
robe I'm wearing, looks loo dressed up. And
besides, it also makes me look like a parson." He
didn't wear it. •
THE FAMOUS actor, who has only been on
American television once "10 dr 12 y.ears ago,''
By DENNIS McLELLAN
OltMD•!lyPUGt$ta"
Anyone who ha s seen ''A
Raisin in th e Suri," Lorraine
Hansberry's eloquent portrait of
a black ghetto family, can't help
but compare it with the current
musical version.
But any comparison between somewhat stiff and strained. He has never played Caesar be(ore in any m edium.
the two seems unjust. A drt.ma es peciall y suffer s with the "0( the Shaw roles," he said, "the only two I
obviously is bound to lose so me of Shu be rt 's in adequate sound wanted to play were this (Caesar), although I
l·ls impact when ,·ts emol1'onal system which at ti.mes I b I never had any great ambition about it, and 5 are Y Shotover in 'Heartbreak House.' ~· Until the high pl{nts are transferred to audibleovertheorchestra. 'I' Hallmark production gave him the opportunity song. Things warm up, however, to play Caesai-, he hadn't achieved either ambi-
Ho"·ever. the Los An geles pro-especiall y with the appearance tion. Instead, he appeared in Shaw's "The Doc· duction seems to have lost muCh f th · f t ' bo A ti
Although "Raisin .. (at the
'Shubert Theater through March
7 J, is entertaining and boasts
several enjoyable performances,
it lacks the s ubsta nce that made
the 1959 dra ma so poWerfully
poignant.
o e 1n ec 1ous, uncy rne a tor's Dilemma'' and ''Saint Joan.''
of its vitality and excitement in· Walker as Beneatha, the "in· "~~~~~~~~~~~~::O;:c:;;::;;:;;::<;;::<;;;;c,,.. the cross-country trek from tellectual" Younger. · Broadway, where it won the 197.5 Grammy and Tony awards ror The family's strength, and in·
best musical. deed the play's, belongs. to
"Raisin:" directed and chorea-Virginia Capers, the fam,ily
graphed by Donald McKayle, is matriarch whose dream it is to
an uneven production. It opens use her late husband's life in-
The story of a black family re-
fusing to give in to the racist de-
mands of a white society, "A
Raisin in the Sun·• "-'as a for erun-
ner to the black consciousness
and li beration of the '60s .
vigorously with a jazz ballet of surance money to move her
street people on the abstract, children ·04t.of the ghetto. It is
bare·bones set. her love and quiet dignity that
But the first song by Autris carry the play's mess~e.
Paige as Walter Lee inside the Although nawed, "Raisin" has
Young er· s apart .m;;ee::":.:':..· .:.'o::m=es"-"o';f f'-_m_u_c_h-'g'-o_in-"g_f o_r_i_t.,. ::c,--,,.--,--;
• •
(call 642 ·567~
Put • l•w words
lo work for you
In the
MONDAY
TALENT
NIGHT
AT THE
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9 PM·CLOSIMG
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ALL NU,,...,.S -.COi• TO TIT ou:r.
14 np ... ••af' .. .
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TEMPLE (fARD£N$ l.. . ;
~wese a ...... r••' ·~5
LUNCHEON AND DINNER DAILY
Special .......... Mfel Sl.85
Monday thru Friday 11 :30 to 1:30
RICKSHA COCICT AIL LOUNGE
Fealunng Exolic Trapk:.81 Drinks
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• •
. . ' ' .. " .
Weekender Deadlines
O,adll"• for nbrninfon of mote:riol for a"tt
Wttkeftdn ii noon TwdzV of Uw Wffk of pubUcotion.
lftm.1 about midoUJCtk ewntl ahould be sulmU!ted hi
timt for the W11kftdtr tuue prior to the ftJolnt. ~
quell• to """' pltol~ I-or /Of .a po.,;blo /IOWrt dory 1"°"'4 be tMbrnUtcd two IOffb orWr to ~. Matmal,,_fl<.,,,.IOIM wui....i.r.
0rcmo< Coa1t Doil~ PiJol. /!oz llfO, ea.ta Aluo, CA nm.
TV DAl~UOG
Friday
Eveni ng
JAHUMY 30
-J ..;!:C;t.t
Saturday
Morning
JANUARY Sl
KOCE Televi8ion
•
100~ •k=
fODM!~.
116 GO '
P!.Alll j ee Ao
TUMI
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TUMBLEWEEDS
RJMKY WIMKERIEAN .
. NANCY
NANCY. PLEASE TRY
TO FIND ME AN
EMPTY COAT
HANGER
I'LL LOOt-< IN
THE ATTIC
CLOSET
TODAY'S CROSSIOID PUZZLE
I
• I
ACROSS
1 Med.
institution
5 Unf8YOl'ab4e
destiny
9 Sand blnlc
1' One in
opc>Otition
15 Minor
prophet
16 Private
instructor
17 Futile
18 10 mills
19 love: Italian
20 Infuriating
22 Intoxicated:
Slang
23 Doting
24 Cooltin
cream:V¥.
25 Robust
28 lVVIP1
32 Au paint
of tctlon
33 Undulate
34 Quantky of
butw
35 Tennil'• -·
LaCott• 38 HfUM•nd ..
J7 Half: Comb.
form
38 R IYer illlnd:
Dial.
39 8ridgff
40 Ounce
41 Debar 43 DiAVOW an
I 2 I
••
17
I T UTIR . ~ $ . ~
I g l " 1[111 v l g ~ '
Ol)in4on
44 TortoiM'I
~t 46 Ft11y'1 brother
46 Italian city
fdidentl
49 Brings bK\
tO UM
,,. u N '":Ii IP' '
Ii 5 '"
IW 1' .V l ll n ta : ..
A .I g
I; I U Ill 5
'II
IL "" ~
'II' 53 Swedish
island
54 Deer ..
55 P&,ntdilMM
56 Flag officer's
boat
l ~
A II R
L o -'I TS
~ES " J ~ , <;
l l'" 0 It I C
57 In add111on
58 Within:
Comb.form
p u ~
5 E T $
59 Come Into 13 Bov'•
60 Cervlne nlckn1m1
1nlmal 21 Exhausted
81 Profound 22 G~
DOWN 24 Whltte
T
TA
1 Hold by 25 Beat with a ,
entiti.ment bell
2Sonof leP~ Judlh word
3 Oiltu~ • '17 French
4 Garmtnt ennufty
5 o~ lly9f 21 GfMdV
I C"'"OI P«'O" 7 C1\lnele 21 Stage • fl'tttrnltY , ••
• Advanct 30 ~ .
colt Info. """'' nl!M. t o.cllrin9 31 8• frugal .
10 Gon alOn9 33 Scteeil from
with light
1t Shelr(s 38 Climbing
a1m1 maw lfOM
12 Kww"doe J7 Tampered
II I [ .
I II s 1 A I
wlCt\
39 Maticlout
r990rt '
40 LiQuefy
42 r-,..monn
43 Nominal nll
46 Stop
46 Judge'•
gannent
47 ''The Good
~ ..
hefoine
• Trldtng
CieftC•
•I.MOY 50 M.tgic
51 !Ulan 52;::.:r
lion •
S4 Gtve
nouriehrMnt
to
.PEANUTS
by Tom K. Ry•
by Tom Batiuk
by Dale Hale
by Eritie 'BuluniDer
t------' NO···BUT f::~=1~~ · IT WLLL.
B.E
SOON
_,.-----.r--.
I
•
IF WE DO SOOO, CHUCK,
MAl.fSE WE'LL 6ET A
CDU.f6€ SCHOL.ARSf.llP. ..
JUDGE PARKER
Ml5S SPENCER
$AID lO TELL YOU SHE'S AT THE
GAAAGES WORKING ON
AltAANGEMENTS FOR THE IMZAAR. MR. DRIVER!
I
. .
DOOLErs WORLD
·DR. SMOCK
GORDO
MOON MULLINS
.ANIMAL CRACKERS
~~. ~!· •• ~!FUPf
.• Fl.AP.'
by Charles M. Schulz ---------.
DO 'l'oiJ 'THINK we·o MAKE
IT IN THE IW LEA6UE?
IF '{OU AAD AN'{ I
T!ZOIJ8LE, CHVCK, I 0
HELP '(()(} OIJf !
Frtdg, JinU!Y 30, 1978
1"H Is IS oNe OF=
1"HOSe 1"1Ml!S WHe"" ME! l,,IKES 1"0 HAve
A a...ow P~OFI i..e .'
,
DAILY PILOT Ct;
by Gus Arriola
~ITO ~y
PA~~~
AtlDA~ MOYlf:.f ' .
by Ferd Johnson:
"I can certainly understand the feeling of insecurity our anct<>tor' __ ......__...11 had to face-I've been down to my last good pair of pantyh~c
--
many times."
DEMNIS THE MENACE
~~---1·3<>
· .. '
• cars m llllD A Ll~S£ •..• IF lMEY
WMTA m SC1e\£nUt( ,TtlY JlST DO rr. •
J •
• .
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• !
• ~ • I • ' t • • • • i ~
. ~
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1
C8 DAILY PILOT Friday. January 30, 1978
For Marisa, Glamor Wasn't Eno_ugh
By BOB THOMAS
A~soclaled Prus Writer
LOS ANGELES -Marisa Berenson had JUSl
come from a mass interview with the Hollywood
foreign press corps, an ordeal that can terrify the
Ca.mt-hearted.
''It wasn't bad at all," said the actress. not
the least bit shaken by the experience. ··Rather
easy, in fact. Interviewers always ask the same
questions." ·
FR0~1 HER willowy, limp-eyed appearance
on magazme covers and in ·the current film
"'Barry Lyndon," one might think or .Marisa
Berenson as being fragile as a Chinese fi gurine.
Not so. In con\'ersation she reveals herself as
" (. f . \~I A.
.~-~
_I I ~ A . I
(.THE WORD IS OUT ALL,
OVER THE COUNTRY
THIS IS THE
MOVIE TO SEE!
"LET'S DO IT AGAIN" IS THE KIND
OF MOVIE THAT SENDS YOU OUT
OF THE THEATER FEELING
ESPECIALLY GOOD. • .CHECK IT
OUTt
strong-wflled young woman ambitious to succeed·
m her profession as an actress.
She has been making two months of ap-
pearances on behalf of "Barry Lyndon," Stanley
Kubrick's expensive drama which started slowly
after mixed reviews but has been picking up box-
office strength. Miss Berenson, 28, agreed to the
duty partly because Kubrick and her costar
Ryan O'Neal are unavailable. She also sees the
experience as an exerclse in self-help.
"It's good for me to meet a lot or people in all
parts or the country," she said. "I'm not very
well known, and this kind of exposure is good for
my career. I thought it would be difficult, but I
·find I am enjoying it. Except for the TV talk
shows -they can be tough."
Warner Brothers couldn't have found a lov-
elier nor more articulate spokesperson for
"'Barry Lyndon." For those who complain taat
the movie is too s low, she replies: "Stanley made
it that way deliberately. That was the pace of life
m the 18th century, and he wanted to take the au-
dience back m time to that period.
••PEOPLE ARE accustomed to fast enter-
tainment nowadays; everything has to be slam·
bang action. 'Barry Lyndon' may seem s low to
some critics, but I think it is a work of art. I don't
care how long it is. If I like a picture, I don't want
ittoend." .
Born in New York. Marisa grew up in Paris,
where her father was a businessman and a
diplomat. "My first language was French," she
said. "That alarmed my father, so he sent me off
to boarding school in England for five years. I hal-
ed it ; I would never send a child of mine to board·
ing school.''
She also studied in Switzerland and Italy. but
at 17 she became a fashion model and soon
became one of the busiest in international
fashion. The granddaughter of fashion czarina
Elsa Schiaparelli and great-great-niece or art
historian Bernard Berenson, she became a lead-
ing figure of the jet set.
Thal wasn't enough for Marisa. Through ac·
tor Helmut Berger she met the famed Italian
director Luchmo Vi sconti, and he cast her as the
composer·s wife in flas hback scenes of "Death in
\'<.•nice." The producer of ''Cabaret'' saw her
photograph on the cover of Vogue and asked her
to test for the role of the Jewish heiress.
Kubrick saw "Cabaret" and asked to see
Hustle is in a class by itself -a superb tribute to
the thrillers of the 40's. . .Steve Shagan'a
screen play delivers c~aracter development and
story-telling techniques that are classical."
Gene Sisker, Chicago Tribune
her. He was surprised to learn that she was
American, not German. 1 "Stanley told me with bis ~al secrecy that
he had a role of an English.Fountess, but he
couldn't tell me what th~ book was or anything
about it,•' she recalled. "The whole thing was top
secret until be sent me a copy of the Thackeray
book."
She spent eight mon~ filming "Barry Lyn·
don" in some of the coldest manors of England
and Ireland. .
"I was frozen most of the time," she re·
called. ''l wore thermal underwear under those
gowns. The only time l warmed up was for the
bathtub scene, which lasted for a day. At leasi they kept thew ater warm."
Performance Classes.
The Christian Develop-
men t Center for the
Performing A r ts in
Garden Grove bas an-
nounced a variety of
classes open to the public
for a fee of $15 per
month. The ceitter is
located on the campus of
the Garden Grove Com-
munity Church at the
corner of Lewis and
Chapman Avenue.
Classes include
children's theater.
modern dance, begin·
ning guitar, voice,
various instruments, a
senior citizen's study
program and r eader's
theater. Information is
available from 750-7000.
.PtUS.
TELLY SAVALAS
PETER FONDA 0. J. SIMPSON
IN "THE KILLER
FORCE"
HUNTINGTON CINEMA ~
IUat AT EU.IS. H.I.
'"147-f60I 147-6017,
LA MIAADA WAUC·tN IARGAIM PIUCI!: S1 50
MONDAY t11n1 SATUADAY (E.IU11I HoliU,tl 12:30-5;00
• '
Former model
Marisa
·Berenson found ~[
the jet-set .,.,
life wasn't
enough, so she
became an ~
scUess :i!
SOUTH COAST PLAZA THEATRES
~ DIEOO FWY, AT BRISTOl..
SO.COAST
PWA
5'6-2711
SO.COAST
PLAZA
Mt-JU!
NAJOI STWIO ... Tu. .....W Of All IMPOIT ANT '9C1WI TOtelMn • lllt P•
,... "HINDENBURG'
6:MP.N.&UTll ....
fREE PAAKtNG
"ONE ruw om
THE CUCKOO'S NEST" (I)
OAll. T ?:Jt 6 t:41
SAT~·...,...,,.~·~·'
a1E1AWD THI& :ft,
"GONE IN 60 SECONDS" (PG)
OAl.Y t:41 SAT/S*M-l:l~l:H4:41
"ROOSTER COGBURN"
llAll.f 6:4~10:10 SAT~S.. I-
"DOG DAY AFTBtMOOH''
IAIU 6,.._19:115ATJalN .,..,_II
"DROWMIMG POOL"
DAILY I 10. SATJSON. ~:20
FR E PARKING
"STORY OF O" (XJ
6:45-1:30.10-.ZS
SAT/SUM-1:30.l:IS-~-45-8:30.10-..ZI
PUYllW-SAT. OM.T~ P.M.
....,,.,,. • 63$-7601
========;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;==;-:~
The mastupiw:e of biTJJrre ,
love that slunnd Fronce.
A portrait of
love and submission
to disorder the S8nse.r.
A" A/Jltd Artists Rl'-st G)
® llO ()ti( -AOMITT1ll
I I I
l
I
I
__ -.I HOUDAY'l 12:»·z.==::===---ft ... -----------------·:a Al~
Walter Matthau, best actor in a musical
or comedy. Richard Benjamin, best
supporting actor.'
Walter Matthau & George Burns
"'Neil Simon's "The Sunsh ine Boys"
co std"'r'ICJ Richard Benjamin ?dnav.sor· M'!trCYOlo!
s ,,., · r.. rv bt Neil Simon ~rOdve;z'.l 0-y Ray Stark
L •• "'dt>v Herbert Ross A ~""'arr ea• ,•e
l~~-~~~w:l
edwards BRISTOL CINEMA
,.,,_,,,,,,_"IC""ft..........,
BURT AeYrtOl.DS
CA1HeAle DfrEWE._ -~-(R)
" .•• Rich In character, tough, cynical and yet
strangely romantic-'Hustle' is the kind of
multi-layered, complex crime thriller that used to
be Hollywood's specialty -a film to relish."
PLUS Roger Ehert. Chicago Sun· Times
"NO WAY OUT" .. s:~:!..
e~~},~~ J!~~' ~.1.NJ~A
'71·1150
CINEMA WEST
_..ST-~lB AT GQUl&IWU T
WfSTMIH.CENTfll Hl-401
#(\ ~ ~lfta {~~t't~ ~vA,'~[ ·VMS£roll0 OffS~ ro~l~Wflt~libllt
S09'tllrllr ~!"«'ID< M:1AG ~ M11111118'M ..o .,_ ... WolHl ()Qt ~S>(il""1
f t'11(tlb IJ(( ~II lli)ll(JlJJll f(JllWlll(fl9m0AWIAt-~~
" ... Peclno, Lumet ·~the fllm lt••lf .. wlll
deflnltely be up for Academy Awards.
Robert Q. Lewis, KFI
•
c!l•·=-1 ~~-.................. ,
1
... CAMI
11U11 wn .. """. 10 unu INDIANS "' Cll'llll21a•--'
flUMI CMl ftllA• .. ....,.,_
ONNltlMe•,,_.MAT . -· J MTS Of THI CONDOI " MGI _..._.I Mn..,...._,
OINATOWN •
ONMl .. e• ..... MAY
----r----9\1-C. ICMY e .-.. • ,..-. 1111 a· 1 . .:=:: ·
MNClllO
IOI MY »H91100N"
""'fl&YMM
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llMft .... fOI .....,Ml
WINTllMAWK ,. """. S1UfOID WMS ,.
WllliT~~
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.MCI NICHOLSON
•RIWMll ·--•CUC..IWt ---------~~--~~--~---·-__ ,_ -. _.., .. . . . _,,,_ ... ________ ,_
'1Vnt;:f!'f111J
A \tllJl:lklll~CANftlM JUNll./U.SCIN•'ONE FUWCMR nll<.tOVCJSHCST' . ....,. u l(.ll\f run llCR-' 'IJIUWI MJ)ffUD
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l'NJ,,UJ";rlll..11./,AJ'ffl ..J ,lflf. IW.LIXXGl.4.\ O-..J? Ml~ ff..IR/tWI --Ututff APttlls
6 Golden
WINNER Of· Globe Awards
IMCWDIMG
BEST DRAMATIC FILM
BEST DRAMATIC ACTOR
, BEST DRAMATIC ACTRESS
BEST DIRECTOR
. • I
' •
.. -.
t
, ----Friday, January 30 1976 OAIL y PILOT C1
Qpera Planned .
SAN FRANCISCO CUPI>-,,...San Fr~n
dieo <>Pera 'a aprtns open 1971 HMOO, •tart· • Ina Feb. 10, wlll include Offenbacb'a ''La
Pfl'tchole," Masca~·· "L' Amico Fr\tzt" Bach'• "St. Matthew Pualon" and the wor d
premiere of Richard DuFallo'a "Meetlng Mr.
Ives," which he co·nuthored wlth New Yorker
LA Project Takes Theater to People
Aff ain Section of the be rebuilt for the dif·
Parks and and Recre•· ferent plays. It's a very
enormously wide and
vaned public, the lYJ>f' of
thing we use to volunteer
for and now il's better or·
aanized. ·· drama critic Brendan GUI.
LOS ANGELES
(UPl ) -A federal
employment program
and interested city of-
ticiala have put pro-
fessional entertainment
before thousands of de·
lighted youngsters and
oldsters and given a
needed boost to the
depressed show business
industry.
lion Department an-limited budget."
nounced that auditions But the actors, in a
would be held. More than field with high chroruc
l ,SOO professional enter-u n em p Io y men t , are
tainers applied. working. They started at
"I think it's work· I marvelous." he said.
lng," she said. "because "It's been fraught with
now people who never challenges because the
got to see theater are theater and city govern·
seeing it for the first ment are something of
time and really enjoying an oil and water mix. But----------
1:1~1:10
7:31-t:U
W SAVAGE"
... ,.,.,,._ ...... ?IW
"GllDL.Y
ADAMS .. CG)
J:l .. 3:SM:41
7:3 .. t:JO
"lllACICBEARD'S
GHOST' (G)
"JOURNEY BACK
TO OZ" (G)
"ROMEO
A.ND
JULIET ..
T he The a t er Arts
Program Los Angeles
(TA PLA > has put on
. 1,100 performances
before a total o r a
"'R.15" eoRDOM-quarter of a million peo-
"Q •t1AD11S•w ple during the past eight ,.. _______ ..;..-1i months.
."11.ACHIAID'S•HOST-: · The shows range
.. , from Moliere's one-act
.IOUIMIT uc:a TO or · plays to puppet shows in ••t two languages, musicals
and good old-fashioned
, melodramas where you •liil• 11111· can hiss the villain.
I.A. fRWY IMANCHHTEA 1x .1 CITY officials were
G.O. l'RWY (CITY DA. EX.I . . looking for a way to find
"W N R jobs for hundreds of un-
H .1.wu •• . (GJ employed entertainers. ..., __ ....,A....,...,."..__ .... ..,. With federal funds from
""R.l5H eolDOM" Ill . the Comp re he nsi ve
""THI CHmLHDIRS• Employment and Trajn.
~ud!Uoos were held a salary of about $625 a tO.. 400. Now there are month, and now it's a ht·
three acting companies, tle over $900 monthly.
il " by the mae1c of people
Mark Roberts, who making an effort on both
was in the Broadway sides, the mix ~s ecrec-
company of "Stalag 17" lave.
and the Chicago com·
pany or "Dial· M for
Murder," is a director of
the TAPLA company
that bears his name.
."I think it's
''THE FEELING we
have had from the begin-
ning is that it's what we
can make of it. It's very
rewardjng. There's an
a dance company and a The caa(a are from
puppet company. They the best of Broadway
perform at any nonprofit and Hollywoc;>d. Gigi Per·
community agency r eau, a c.hald star ~5
within the boundaries of, years ago, 1s a regular an
the city, any weekday for an acting company .
an audience of at least 50 ------------------------------!
and any weekend for 500
or more.
They hav e
performed at 1i braries
and schools, seni or
citizens• homes and
public buildings and out-
doors in parks , not
always with stages or
proper lighting.
All the federal f~
went to salaries. so the
companies had to come
up with nonroy a lly plays
or use new or improvisa-
tional material, TAPLA
s upervi sor Clara
Louvier said.
BEST PICTURE and BEST DIRECTOR
-NATIONAL BOARD OF REVIEW
"MAGNIFICENT ENTERTAINMENT,
SUMPTUOUS, LUSH, GORGEOUS,
THRILLING, HAUNTING ••• TRANS-
PORTING THE VIEWERS INTO A
WORLD OF LONG AGO, AND .
ing Act, the city last year
"LIT'SDOffAeilir hlred7lspecialistsinthe "COST UM ES and
,_ __ "DOC __ SA_•_A_..-__ .,.--11 lively arts to form the sets were contributed,"
CREATJNG THE KIND OF MAGIC
FEW MOVIES ACCOMPLISH AND
FEW DIRECTORS ATTEMPT IN A
Clos Ing
Stocks,
same day fresh
1n th• l1Mlij@mll
program. The Cultural• she said. "They have to
.. SUNSHINE IOYS .. f PGJ
'"TAD THE MOMIY
AHDIUM'"
JACI[ MICMOUoN
'"OMI R.IW ona TH£ cucsoo-s MIST' ,.,
LIFE TIME." ~ex Reed. SYNDICATED COLUMNIST
Wnuen ror lhe ween a.nd directed by STA~EY J\YBRICK 1::t~;:C:10
starnnq
ADVENTURE IN ALL ITS GLORY ~AN O'N!AL a.nd'MARJ.s>A 'BE~NSOW
'"3 DAYS Oii THI COM>Or 111
"CHINATOWN'' CIJ
EDWARDS
fmllM•
'1UUER ELITE" IPGJ
"CAfl>ME" IRJ
s1u·C1111q.m1c,111 ca1n1
C'IlltlJ,II PIBllBI
k ltMl~•• 11 Ill Ma llDlt le Ull
~ Alllf*<illlbl ...... Al ... Mllllilt
.
#
. .
CAUFOR
SHOW TIMES
r
Co.HIT AT
c••t.A.WUTOMLY
DtAHA IOSS IH
"MAHO~AMY-
CINEMAW(Sf
WUTMIMSTB AT GOU>EMWIST
'-WHTMIH.CfHTEI 192-4493
....
"'FANTASTIC ru....-
SPECIAL REDUCED PRICES FOR THIS GREAT
FAMILY PROGRAM -GENERAL ADMISSION $2.50
CHILDREN UNDER 12 $1 :00
The Lile and Tones of I Gf~:,·;~··1
'GRIZZLY
ADAMS
Color by Deluxe®
The True story of a man
exiled In the wlldemeas
and how he learns
MON • .fAI. DOORS OPEN 6:30
GRIZZLY: 1:00-10:35
RoomR:8:40
SAT.-IUN. DOPRSOP£N 1:15
ROOST!R: 1 :30-5:0N:40
GRIZZLY: 3:25-7:00.10:35 .
'
RYAN O'NEAL • MARISA
BERENSON
-lllAGlllflCINT U<nllTAINllUOT,
IUMl'TUOUS, LUSH, oo•GIOUI, TH•ILLING, HAUNTING ..
TllAHIPOi!TllfO lid ~ INTO A WO•LD 0' LONG AOO. AllD ~TlllO T'Hf IUMO ~ lllAQIC -lldvir• ACCOMl'U~H AllD nw
Dl•ICTO•I ATTIJ,.l'T Ill A L"f mi._-. ~ • ..._ s·u•°'<AflO(DI.~ '1
STARTS
FRIDAY, JAN. 30
RW ~ .. fWI tovlng..
llllrllllln ~
~xis PlESHEm
l'\.U6: .»UllNU' 8'0I T'O Ot
3 DAYS OF
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edwards LIDO CINEMA ... ,on a-o •' .-, .. l.90
HIWf'OU IUCH '7J.tJS
__ _...... __
.
~
I'
... ..
I' , ..
fl
' ..
;
r •
• , I
DAILV PllOT Friday, Janu!Y 30, 197&
•
ALL
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..
OAl1.Y PILOT DJ .
.Patti df 'Tlie Two'
I
UFO Tidings Spread Quietly
By United P ress IDtenatJoaal
.. The Two'• sold thoee who dlspused
oC their worldly goods and, in some
case.s, their children, would be picked
up by a. UFO, changed into another
form and taken to another planet.
They spread the tidings quleUy,
mostl>: by word of mouth. They got
r~ru1ts -and may still be getting
some.
AS FAR AS ,\UTBORITIES have
learned. 4omewher e on the West
Coast -Pl''Obably in Oregon -a
group of their followers gathered late
last )leal', meandered eastward in
automobiles, reached at least as far
as Illinois and then seemed lo vanish.
One group got to Chain O'Lakes
State Park, near Fox Lake, Ill. They
seemed lo tse s hort of funds, and bor-
rowed or begged money to pay for
park permits. A ranger reported they
both~red nobody and were quiet,
albeit somewhat ~tant. They wan·
dered away after a day or two.
They were among those who had
listened to the teachings of "The
Two," identified as Marshall Herff
Strcdght·•hooter
Spanish King Juan Carlos
has taken up darts, playing
with friends at the Zarzuela
Palace. Carlos. second
cousin to Britain's Queen
Elizabeth II, played his first
g ame while visiting
England five years ago.
Api>lewhJte Jr .. '4, and Bonnie Lu
Trusdale Neltlea, 48, both from lt~ton, Tex.
DISCIPLES WEBE TOLD they
would move to the ~·next level or ex·
istence, which is totally beyond the at·
mosphere or ruling rorces that control
the earth.''
DisUlusion came early to some
followers.
Joan Culpepper of Los Angeles,
once a follower, said recently she was
operating a "halfway house'' Cor
persons le.aving or trying to decide
whether lo leave the cult and its
teachings.
uwe try t o discuss the philosophy.
and convinc e them they are not cut off
from God by leaving,'~ she said.
"They need a point of reference, to
talk to someone who has gone through
what they have gone through."
IN TEXAS, AUTHORITIES
familiar with .. The Two" had little in·
formation on them or their
whereabouts.
Police Chief Guy Anderson or Harl·
lngen, Tex .• said ''The Two" are not
wanted in Texas on any charge he
knows of. He said Applewhite s erved
a three-month term in St. Louis on an
unspecified charge and the woman
once was moved to Houston to answer
a cr edit card charge but never came
to trial.
A NATIONWIDE OIECK for in-
formation turned up no charges
against "The Two'' or any followers.
For all the elusive quality of the
group and its leaders, word from as
far distant from the source point as
F1orida indicates the movement -
the idea of transformation for another
plane-is far from dead even if it rare-
:ly surfaces.
Four young men, saying they were
followers of "The Two," recently re·
cited the teachings to a gathering of
100 to 150 persons at Clearwater, Fla.
Howt;ver, they said they would be
transferred in an "IFO," an identified
flying object, rather than a "UFO,"
or unidentified object.
THE FOUR REFUSED lo answer
questions a s to who they wer e. Page
Bryant, a commentator for Tampa
radio-station WDAE, said they railed
to collect any sizable donations at the
meeting.
The Florida followers said "The
Two'' are going lo be killed sometime
in the next three or four months and
then will rise from the dead.
Fairview ~ove Story.
Consultant A.we-struck .
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
OftM Dallr Plltlt $Utt
Allen Douglas is 27 and a rather s uc·
cessful management consultant who
wears a crisp, conservative English
suit to work at his fashionable east
Santa Ana office.
The people be dealt with in his most
recent consultant assignment don't
match that image, as Douglas just
learned.
HJS NEWEST assignment is to
make recommendations and offer
s uggestions on improved manage·
menl of the therapeutic s tare at
Fairview State Hospital in Costa
Mesa.
He found the job an education in
itself.
A crippled and retarded gtrl, aged
13, taught Douglas the lesson he and
many others cannot comprehend
without such a person's help.
"I was drawn to this one little girl
lying in a crib,'• Douglas said of his
'Slee .. 11ed. And It ptlt
•e fa a state ol atee. •• '
first tour or the huge hospital, con-
ducted by aide Tammy Mcinnes.
THE NVRSE IN charge ot'theward
said the youngster had not expressed
any noticeable emotional r esponse or
reaction In her 13 years.
"I stepped up to the ~ and looked
into her eyes,'' says Douglas. "She.
smiled. And it put me in a state or
awe ... "
Douglas, a natlve oC Orange and
operator of Commtecb Inc., 2030 E .
Fourth St., Santa Ana, says he will
never again feel tbe same toward the
h a ndicapped such as those at
Fairview.
"It tugged at my heart," he said.
•'These kids need nelp."
THE FAIRVIEW STATE Hospital
Advisory Bo.ard.....recenlly r elained
Douglas to s urvey the way the system
headed by Medical Di~tor Anthony
N. Toto ls man aced. In hls capacity at
.a consultant, the board warned him
the 1tate.paid Job wouldn't make him
rich.. ••rm wQTkJng r ight now for about 10
~rcent. of my regular rate.'' aaya
l>OUgiu. "l thought it might be ns ln·
teresJlnc for me as it rniaht be helpful
to them."
Ho says the personal feeUngs and
·IUtrillments from working to help the
1,134 t\andlcapped people at tf\e big
• 1urte •pttll are makina at loost a
110 percent prom on his investment. ••The most hnportant thin& I bad to
orr~ the hoepltal:" a.4l an outside view·
pOint ," utd Doustu, who admits he
could ~\)me up wltb no dramatic or lri·
novaUvf! sugaeauorui to Improve tt..s
f\lnctlon lo th6 field ol aiding the de·
velopmentaJly disabled.
• "EVERY CONSULTANT would
like to come up with that great
original, innovative idea," Douglas
explains. "The great thoughts have
already been thought," he adds.
He notes his management consul·
t ant role bas always involved in·
surance companies, banks,
publishing houses and other such
private enterpris e firms, never a
state hospital run for the afflicted and
financed by taxpayers' dollars.
Douglas says he will sugges t
several things in his report, compiled
on the basis or 90 days' observation o(
the largest accredited hos pital for the
mentally retarded and phys ically
handicapped in America.
They include:
-U'rWZING PERSONNEL with
special skills to apply them to more
clients' needs in special programs,
more than is now being done.
-seeking out more individuals with
special abilities that might improve
hospital clients' care and education.
-Initiating newer methods and
theories or education for the retarded
in addition t o more sophisticated
ways of teaching hospital personnel in
areas of management and human re·
lations .
-INCREASING EVEN more the
humanization of the mentally re·
larded and physically handicapped,
based on the recognition of them as
equal, although afflicted, human be·
ings as the Costa Mesa hospital has
almost always done.
"I believe we are all spiritual be-
ings, even though we are not as great
physically as we would like to be,"
says Douglas. who literally went
home and bugged his own three non·
handicapped children after his first
Fairview visit.
, Douglas tells of a eirl with a speech
impediment who r ecently approached
him at Fairview lo show off a
certificate declaring she had complet·
ed one whole year of dlligent school
studlei.
TH.£ SMALL, PLAIN piece of paper
didn't proclaim that she learned and
coa.ld remember a lot ; only that she
definitely did s tudy bard for that
whole past year l o ques t ot'
knowledge.
"Despite her farbled worWI, I got
the impression tbat lt was most lm·
portant to her tt-at her mother would
be proud,'' Dou1ta11aid.
••1 looked at her cetlflcate ror a
lona Ume and tben I looked her In tha
eye for a Joos Ume, .. he explained. "l
tald: 'Your Mother will be VERY
l!'f'O"d,I and the kld 'a faco lit up like a auutmu trff."
urr WOULD BE ao nice lf God
would reach down and touch them all
nnd mike them a ll rlaht," Douglas
mused.
"But that'it not very practlcnl."
Folk Class
OOered
•Folk danc«11 of v rious
orlgln.a wUl bte aludled in
a pm of evening folk
dance classes at Orange
Coast College this spr·
int.Beginning Folk
Dance" meets Mond~
from ~8 p.m . in the OCC
gym. ~·Intermediate
PUBLIC NOTICE
fl1CTI 'rious au11 NIH eeAMlaTATaMI~ n. ......,..,.. ...,_ .. •ne .._. ..... :
C04STAI. P l.UMa l N G
llMIN'TINANCE, 1M Monie VltUI, -.c. CotU Mua. CA 92621
"'_. $ Arev•• & ~tjotl9 L
Aaw4i1. -Monie Villa, ,__ C., o.te MIN, CA. '1.i1
This Mlllneu Is conclll.Kleel ~"' i.
·~-,.,MltS. Anwdo
nil• ste"""9ftt _, filed wltll lN
~W Q erlt Of Orenoe eeuntr on
"-l'19,1'7 .. ,,,...
Plllllll'IMd 0ra11 .. eoa11 0.11, Piiot, Jlmn.D,lQ,end ,. .... ,,, ,.,. 212>7'
Folk Dance" meets Mon· PU~LIC NOTICE
days at the same loca-•----------• tion from S.10 p.m. ll'IC'flT10UUUSINUS NAM• nATIMINT Spring classes begin .,,.tcit..,.."'"''°"ur•dolftOllW-
feb. 2. B~gistration on a ,... .. ,: "drop-in" bas1·s w1'll be GOOOTIM1!$ PARTY SERV ICE, .. c.r.inet A• .. Wfftml"'"', CA. conducted through Feb. ftla; a1t Soue" street, LM19 ... .,_,
6 in the OCC Admissions CA. MIC'-! A. K.-O£nterpr19ts,9'30 Office. c.dlMI Aw., ~mlmter, CA....,
'Ttll1 IM&lness 11 <tlfldu<leel 11Y ., -.
PUBLIC NOTICE lllcorponitH HJOdalklll O~ VIM a
pertnenlllp.
Mk llffl A. Kel*o
ll'ICTITIOUS8USINaU
NAMaSTAThHNT n. fllllOWlne ~.,. OOif"9 taai.-
Tiiis 1tetem.nt wei fll.ct wlttl IN
County Clerk ol Oran91 c;..n., on "-rt 10, 197 ..
""" MtSas: STAi.t.ITE TRAii.ER Yiu.AG~ l'llllllltMd Orante eoeu o.llr PllO(, 2llMI *"'POrt a1wcs.. c:.1a ~ CA. JM. n. '°· 9ftd ....,. '· "· 1m uu• mu Sara JMe ScMe!W, 2060 Hlwport
91w .• Costa Mesa, CA. <nm PUBLIC NOTICE
Pob9rt Do119las LonQCIOn. 2060 ,.ICTITIOUS 8USINeSS ~Bl'fd.,CosteMeaa,CA.'26%7 NAMaSTATIEM•NT
Mule t.owlH t.on9don, to.II 'T"9 follqwilMJ ~non Is dOlng Ml· ~ e1w.,&ste Mesa, CA. 92121 nouas·
Tiiis t>v.slMH Is condwcted llY • INSTANT JUNGLE. 2100 C..yon
911'Ual par1nersfl!P. Dr1w, Coste Mesa, CA 91'27
S.ra.i-SchMldef' l11'1Mlt Jwn9'• lntffnalloNI, Inc.,
Tiiis u atemont wu Ill.cl with U. a Gallllonila corporation, 2100 Canyon
County .Clerk of Orange CAKlntY on Orlw , Cotta Mesa, CallfomlU2t.V
JatllWY 12. 197' Thl1 bw11ness 11 concNcteo by o e«· '1140 ~llon
Publls!Md Orange CO.st Deity PllOt, lnstent J wn9lt .IMI. 1',23,30,alld ~b.6, 1'76 '11·1• lnt•rnatl-1, Inc.
.. rtram I.. Tewn•n,
Pnsld9!11 PUBLIC NOTICE • Thi' st•t•ment was flltd wfth the
•-------------Co\lmy Clerk of Oran'" Gowntr on '1CTITIOUS aUSINUS Janli9ryU, 1'7'
MAMESTATEMaNT PS11t1
Thefoltow1119porwnsare.inoDW-Putlll"*I Ofonoe Cont D•llr Piiot. -as: Jwl.lOMCtF•b .• , 13,20, tt7• JIC>.76
THE SUB SHOP. no E .
Dr8notwooO,AnaMlm,CA PUBLIC NOTICE
Jenlcl F. Rou. 11111 GD4dl,_SI t-----------·~S.Hl.fttltlglon8eech.CA91MJ l'ICTITIOUSaUSINESS ~ L Ross, 11111 ~· NAMRSTATeMENT •~.S.Hwntltlglon Beech. CA '2to47
Carrick w. H"""'h••Y."" 0.-y :.s~lowino persons are dolfl9""51·
CW .. Ganten ~ow, CA '2M1 Hot.I. Y CERAMICS 1216 Dunning ll'ftW L H_h,.y, nt1 O.W.y Dr •~~ .. ~h ,. ,;.u1 CW G«den~ow CA'1'41 .,_,,__ -•'-"·u~ TI.is b1nlnns is conclwct.o by • TOO Wllllam CM•r. 1216 Ounnlftl glMf'al partMntolp Of., 1.a911na .. ech, CA '2651
Jeretd F Ross Hollr Golloa, '* Dwnnlnv Dr., ' l.oOWrWI 8uch, CA. •1'st Tllls stet•mtnl was fllod wl1" the Thi' tH.oslnus Is co!Mfwcteo br a
County Clerk of Orange County on o-neral partnerslllp.
.i-ry It,,,,. Too Wllllam CeAy ,.st .. P\ltlllsNO Orange Coast 0.lly PllOt. This stewment was fllecl wtlfl l'-
.Mn.13.lO,•nO Feb.6, 13, 1'76 .,..,. ~~~I~:~. of Orange C--4y mi
• l'TI176
PUBLIC NOTICE Publllhod Or•n119 CO.II Dellf Pilot, J-ryt, 1',U.JO, 197' 0.76
PICTITIOUS aUSINUS
MAMe STATEMeNT PUBLIC NOTICE
The foltowl119 P9rsons are doing bl$-PICTITIOUS aUSINISS
nes.us: NAMI STATIMIEMT DEAN·SCOTT INTERIORS, 23710 n. fOllOWlt-9 fMNOflt. areclOlnQbusl·
El Toro Road, El Toro, Callfo,.,,,•92630 Ml4H'
Joe Oean Brower, 2*1 a.rmt HUSSONG'S CANTINA IU•S
Orlw, El Toro, Calltomla'76311 . PKlfk CO.t\ Hlgllwey, swnset' 8Nc11. am Scott Gregorr. 2*1 ...,rett CA. ..nu
Orf.,., £1 Toro, CA. '2630 RYSsell Pewl Kall9n11ell, 21' conon Thlt. tH.ot.lnKI Is COIMllKtod by a Sl, fMwpor1Beach.CA.926'3
119Mfll partnerslllp AwtH.orn John Kat1en11e11, 1602'
Joe O.en 8•-• • Hyaclntll F-tatn Vann CA. GeMrat PannM ...... , ~:.. I ..... ' .... llmlt
Thi t t 1 fl ..... wlltl ..... •mt. ...... rwss 't ...... ucted vr • • s ,._ WH ....... --~slllp
C-ly Cl••• of Orange County on RUU9tl Ka"-'oell ~ S, 1'76 Tiiis stat•ment wH llled wlltl th9
Pwlll!Shed Or Coest DeAty~= County Clerk of Orange eowntr on
-'-'"''· 16,13~1'76. 0.1' Janulrf "· 1'1~ f'SMaS , _______ ....,.___ PwblhNd Oranoo ~.st 0et1y Pilot.
Jen. 1', 23, JO, and Ffla. 6, 1t7' 171-7•
PUBLIC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE
NOTIC•Toc••DITOltS
SU"11t0•c:ou•TOllTN• 141-,.,••10.coa•TOll'TN• ..
fTATaOPCAl.lflOi.MIAflO• IT~TIE 0 .. CALI flOi.NIA fllO•
TMaCOUNTYO,.ORANGE nteC:OUNTYO,.ORANGE
.... A.-StlS N•. A-1'1tt
Et.Uh of MARGA RET A . NOTICIEOftHIARINGOPPETITIOff
PEARCY,OKeased. FOR PROUTI OP Wll.L ANO ,-Oft
NOTICE IS HEREBY GI VEN lo Ille Ll!n.i.S TESTAMENTARY c"9Clt~t. of IN abov• na!Nd dKedent Eslat• of HAROLD G. Wit.SON . .U
that ell persons having clelms agalMt COLONEi. HAROLD G. WILSON.
IN said decedenl are reqwlred lo fife DKNMd. ·
them. with the neuswrr WOUCNB. Ill NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that
""offlc. of lM clerlt of the MIDW -HAROLD o. WILSON. JR. hits !Ilea
tltled court. or to Pf•Mnt them, with the Ntreln • petlton for Probate of Wiii end
llKHSM'Y vouchers, to th•~ for lssuence of t.euors T est•rnentary to
etttleofflteofTHOMASW.ALLEN,At· th9 11911ll<Hlor reference to ""'k h Is
IOrMf •t LAw. 1 U1 Dow St.-t, Swl.. made for further parllcwt.,s, encl that too. NeW11CW1 Beech, Callfonlla, 92660, Ille time and place of hearlf\9 u. wnw
wtllch Is 1'le plec• of INSIMSS of tlw I.ft· llH -WI for February 10. 1976, at
dlrUgMO In •II matters per19inlng to 10:00 a.m ., In tM courtroom of Depart· u. esuitWot said dececM!lt, wllllln lour l'Nflt Ho. J of said court, at 700 Ovlc
,,_Uls aflOf Ille first publlcallon of Ulls Center Drive wot, In t11e Clly of SM!t•
notice. Ma.Celllornta
0.ted January 21, 197' O.lecl Jan ... ry ?1, 1976.
Catherine V•llandlgh.tm Wit.LIAM S . St JOHN,
Eucutrl•oftMWlllof County Cle.-
tMallo ... namedci.c..-.t C:OU)ftlELHl!RRINGS. FRANKi.iN
T'MOMAS W. ALLEN A.twnltr .t LAw
MllFMfftUW J240Hfld~I,
1\SlO. ... StrMt ......... .-.CA. ttM! Siii•• Ttl: C7MI *'111t ........... acll,CA'2MI ~ytw: PollllHor
T .. : C7l4l7'2·1161 Pub11"'9CI Ore119t Coast O.lly Piiot,
........, .. l[ft<11tri• Jan 23. , •• )0, "" 297.74
f'latlll5Nd Oun99 Cou1 Dally PllOt, -----------Jan.30ancl Feb.6, 13, 20, 197' PUBLIC N011CE
•
The 14&P•t ~on tht OrlfWI Cout
DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS
You c.. Sell It, Rnct tt. [ 642-5878 ) One c.11 ~ n9d9 It With a Wint M . . r-t Creclt Appcwal
t"J' ............ 1000.2'tt lMt ' ,...... . ~·... ~ ... ~ .......... IOOMOtt • ••..•.•.•. ~-... s.mtea 1.-,:.·· ..... ~ .... fOOO.tQft
...... .,__._.. & ~.-...' Aait .. 1••11 ..... ~ ........ :-5000-*9 ...... 1000-11tt r,. ~ .... t100-9"t
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
IRlORS: AdYerliHn Ge wnil 1002 GeMrd
MlillMr's Motic•: AU THIS FOil OHL Y $14,500
All ~al estate advertised Perfect home for little ones. Great
in this newspaper is sub· storage. 5, 6 of 7 bdrms. Fun bonus rm. ject to \he Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 Lge yd, space for boat. Really sharp.
which makes it illegal to 21 I I S• Ja ;a& NII lood
advertise "any pre· MEWPOaT CENnll. M.L 644-4910
ference, limitation. or~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ discrimination based on -
race, color, religion, sex, Gl'fteral I 002
or national origin, or an ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
intention to make any ---------such preference, lim1ta· HOHL RANCH UDO ISLAND
tioo,ordiscrimination." OPEN HOUSE Huge sunny patio sur-
This newspaper will not Sat/Sun 12.6 rounded by a de!Jghtful
knowMigly accept any ~Meadow Grove Rd. J.bedroom home close to
advertising for r eal Presti gious Lusk Home t e nn is and b e a c h .
estate which ls in viola· in one of So. Calif's most $134.500.
lion of the law. intnguing hillside com· 1 Yr warranty inc.
Houses for Sal• munities. Cu stom de· Call 675-7225
••••••••••••••••••••••• corated 4 BR & Rec rm., General I 002 3 ba, 3 car gar, A/C, xtra
••••••••••••••••••••••• large lot. many many ex.·
.. AIAHDOHED ..
ENGLISH ESTATE
2STY-VIEW
$43,500
Winding roadway leads
to secluded driveway
amidst towering pines &
eucalyptus trees. Spiral· ing staircase leads to
pri vale 2nd story en·
trance! Lavish living
room overlooks s ur·
rounding oc ean and
valley ! European
gourmet kitchen! Dining
entertainment. Sweeping
master bdrm retreat!
Separate mom-in·law
tras ! ! $89,000 .
HARBOUR SALES
(7141 846-4408
SPRING GREEN
Truly a Lido Isle classic;
ga rde n home with custom carpets, drapes
& w a ll c overin gs.
Children's wing with
playroom, has 2 bdrms.
& bath; mstr. suite has
sep. den. MINT CON-
DITION! $129.000
OPEN SAT /SUH. I ·5
215 Via Meatone
quarters or guest or COR"LTREES maid room with bath! "' w o r k s b o p ! p r i c e and ST AR PINES
slashed! This hilltop .. add to the charm or
estate can be yours for bea utiful . exclusive
$4300 total down or take Shoreclirrs & the big plus
over existing loan at $215 · private beach access.
per month. I SAY! Call Custom bit. home on lge .•
for quick t our ! Call well landscaped lot. 3
847 6010 Bdrms .. 3 baths. formal ~"" 1119·. 11 s ruN ro er Niu·· dining rm1, family rm. &
l'tliil:" ! g"den studio. can ror a•
. ~: ~ app't.
COROHA DB. MAR
TRIPLEX
PROPERTY
MuJUpfe unit in the heart
of Corona del Mar. Just a
block from the beach.
One of the most unusual prope rties on th e
market On an R3, over·
UDO ISLE
TWO
BAYFRONT
HOMES
3 BR. Via Lado Soud
$249,000
sized lot Has an excep-* • * *
tionally good income. 5 BR Via Lido Nord and we believe it can be $292,500
improved. We're excited LAWSON REALTY
about this listing. Call us * 675-4562 * and let us give you more, ________ _
information c a111---------·
Uncommon
Values
****** * 3·BR, fam rm, 2'r'l-ba, garden entry to gracious
living in Unive rs ity
Park. $55,SOO.
*** * 4-BR, fam rm, dining
rm, heated pool. Lots or
space in Uus beautifuJ
home and a must·sell
price or $68,800.
*** • Spanish tile accents a lovely :J.BR, dining rm,
den home, set on an ex·
tra-size lot. Professional-ly decorated. $64,500.
~CALLNOW
(T/-4 752· 7315
OONAl'O M. BIRD
Auociotff, a .. llon
SMALL HOME
LRG. WAREHOUSE
PLUS OFFICES
.. all on one huge lot, cen·
trally localed in C.M. for
only $125,000. CALL
67S.ro60
2 STORY..FAMILY
POOL-$26, 950!
Two story bargain! Just
$26,950 full price! Large living room. VERY large
family-dining room com·
bo! Bnght & spacious
tiled kitchen-step·in pan-
try ! Wrou ght ir on
stairway lo king size
bedrooms. Secluded master w/built-in vanity.
Redwood fenced patio 67J.8550.
QPfN 111 9 • I" l !JN 7081 Nl(fr.
~~ Bay Wl.ndows overlooking wrought iron enclos ed s upe r·pool.
and a tree lined street in Enclosed garage + extra
thi s cozy 3 bedroom parking. Take advan·
home. Huge livin g room ta.ge-call qow 752-UOO .. with hardwood Cloors. oPl"""19.,1H tJNrOA1t•• 1' •
Large yard with fruit [ ~ I trees. VA TERMS AT . : I
$34.950. Call now to see! ,
~~ POOLPLUS
.. ANYTIME One of College Park's ---------•I fine s t ho m e s . 3 ---------1 Bedrooms. + H20 condi·
GREAT LOCA TIOH
NEWPORT IEACH
Ex(:eptionally fine home
In BA YCREST area of
Newport Beach. four bedrooms, new drapes,
wall to wall cac-peting.
Recently red ecorated. terrific location, priced
at $79,500. Ca II 673..SSSO
for !)'lore details. _
Of'IN Ill 9 •II S IUN 108( N•(t•
THE REAL
ESTATE RS
tioner. elec garage door
ope ner , d ecorative
landscaping. Walk to
schools & shopping.
$54,000.
.546·4141
~
COATS& WALLACE
REAL ESTATE , INC.
UDO ISLE
New listing. 3 Bedrooms,
1---------12 baths and family
is,a good day
to advertise in the
Daily Pilot
Classified Section.
$55,900
Lovely 3 yr old Mesa
Verde home. 3 BR. 2 BA
w/cathedral ceilings,
palto k1l & corner lot.
Low mamt. yard w /lge
patio & fruit trees. Call
us for compl details.
546-5880
·~HERITAGE . • REALTORS
kitchen all on extra wide
lot. Lovely enclosed
patio-on the strada.
Super location, near ten·
nis courts and park. Call
for details.
PETE BARRETT
-REALTY-
642·5200 675·4060 .
, _____ · Luxury Duplex
Loguna leach I 048 Logurta leach I 048 Spacious, immaculate
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• and located South or Highway in Corona del
NEW HOME JUST FINISHED
Compare this quality craftmanship
combining cedar & glass into an
elegant home. Compare lhe open
houses to see for yourself.
1635 lt.1blrcl Cmyott Dr.
1675 , ......... e~ Dr.
Sat & Sun Noon t1l SP M
Stop by for coffee.
MAYOCK
CORPORATION
LAGUNA BEACH
494-2146
Mar. Upper unit la l
bedroom with form•l dining room. Lower unll
is 2 and a den. Both have
a fireplace and private '
patio. Low maloteoance
yard with concrete deck
and fire pit. New Ustin1.
640.6161
~
COATS & WALLACE
REAL ESTATE . INC.
M .... 11Leag•odl
8 Rm. l Story. home,
Xlnt location. A rew
steps from canat •
Alamitos Bay. BJ
Owner. (213)433-1566
...
LIDO. ISLE
Ute newt Lldo Soud 4 BR., 4 ba. 1-
0wner. Custom bayfroot. Lawn, patio,
jacuui; pier&: float. $325,000
Waterfront, Lido Nord. 6 BR. or 4 BR.
&2 BR. apt. On sandy beach. $285,000
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
J-11 ll11r1..J1· (),,,..,. NB bl'J 6161
IJa'J6fwretJ
newPo;t lleacl
Y f l\R
BAY AND BEACH
6 7 5-3000
.••ltJ' f '· O/•t~t ~•\.'\.'., LlJ,l l.lf\11• t'lLl MAR
READY TO SB.L ?
WE .HAYE BUYERS!!
Charming 3 bedroom, 2 bath custom bome. l block to your private beach and If you 're ready to sen· your property,
marina. Call for appointment with our large staff of professional realtors owner. $92,SOO. is ready, willing&: extremely able to as·
1 HonnForW. . "-'"'-We ......... Wt ...................... . ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• • &we.. 1002 ._,.. 1002 C.-.. Mer. IOU .............................................. ······················· ~ l)upltJ(. Pri~ reduced to I sit.eoo. C«oo• det Mar.
f'or sale by O'lfDtl'. E•· ·1 cdlenl cond. o.oer
ai 420~ Larbpur. Cdll
or caU 6"-1328.
Yourplex. Price red~ed ·J
to tl.81,300. Corona det
Mar. For Hle by owner. i
Eacetleat cood. S•e owner at 4201,\ tartaspw-,
CdM « ca.116'4--7328.
URI
41RDUPLEI
SO. OF IA YSIDI 646-0115 er 64o.8325 sist you. We have the know how con· ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ceming a variety of different, proven financing methods. .
A WAY TO .... YOUlt TllMA&R
This Bluffs C plan bas the perfect
room!. .. Down.stairs, next to the front
d oor for late sleeping and fast
get·aways ! This 4 bedrooD" unit also
has 3 baths, beautiful Italian marble
flooring, new carpeting aqd is owned by ·
a very meticulous homemaker. You'll
love it! At $89,500. .
with a a BR. 2 Ba rentll.
Only 1 If.a years old.
Featuring beam ceillnaa,
natural wood and brick
textures and perrect J
locaUOo. 9"l" 644-72.11 J EX!CUTIVE EST A TE
2·STORY 4 ID VIEW
POOL + IEACH WITH INCOME
Formalraisedtlleent.ry. Want l o live at the
Elegant lJving room \ul beach! Live in the 3
floor to ceil.mg r1replace bdrm .• 2 balh unit & real
Banquet sized formal lhe 2 bdrm., 2 bath unit ;
duuog room 1:. eloquent what more could you uk
served frorn huge garde for"
view lutchen. Enormous 613-3663 833-0523 Eves
family room overlook
sparklmg pool & J8CUU
& lush terraces. Spiral
~ta1 rs to massi\e 24'
master swte & retreat.
associated
llRO KERS -RE Al TO RS
202' W Bolbon h' 1 H6 l
Spacio1,1s c h1ldrens _________ 1 quarters. Ball room p 1uT & W"TER :.1Led family recreation A " "' .
room. Hurry-EZ term~ j · needed to . match pn~e CaJI 963 7881. or ownership homes in "'f~,,,,~ .. \•t1•1101·1;., ,, area: bas 3 bdrms .. l o/.&
~· 1111 I :
I ~ii.' 1 ·
1: · 1 ~ 1:1:1.:
baths ; overlooking
beaut, park. Hdwd. flrs.,
blt·tns, dbl. garage. Ask·
ing $42,000 for fast sale!
EVERYTHING ---------1 ,.you've ever wanted in a * EXCLUSIVE *
Balboa Island
Bayfront
home• 4 Bdrms. + den
+dining rm . + lge
recreation rm . with
tUStom pool t able, 3
baths, 3 frplcs.; htd &
ftlt 'd. pool : ai r ·
cond1t1oned. See for
yourseU, Sun. 1·5. 1839
P1tca1rn. Costa Mesa.
PYRAMID
EXCHANflfJRS
REALTORS • 833-t1'>8
Sales have been great, but have also
1002 depleted our inventory, consequently
•••••••••••••••••••••• your property wW receive the max·
Bnathtaklnc) Yu MESA VERDE imum personal attention &: advertising. Spectacular home with Our · f unobstructed view of J t Listed estimate or value 0 your property
Emerald Bay & Entire US will be given without any obligation on
eoast. POOL HOME your part. Spacious foyer, sunken
hving room, elegant $591950
view dining r oom Beautlful 18x36 pool.
+separate dinette. 3 lge boat and trailer access,
Br, 4 Ba, huge F&m. Rm, two fireplaces, pa ti
2 mass 1 v e s tone doors from bedrooms,
BAY-& BEACH REALTY
OUR 27tt. Ylil 67S-l0001
fireplctces. Additional masonry fen~e, and lots Gt•ral IOOZ G••ral IOOJ
m a id s or g e n e r a 1 more 1n lh1s lovely •••••••. ••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• purpose rooms. By bedroom, family hor_ne. 4 IDRM IEAUTY
Owner. $250,000. Please call for appoml-OCEAN Lge fam home 00 quiet
Coast Hwy to 1st left ment street with 2 ba, comfy turn. s . of Emerald Bay e· I . Y.a Block . best rental (Ledro1t St. l to 456 !lit Quall ~ area. Deluxe duplex; 3 frplc., huge kit. & lge
Panorama Dr. Laeuna Place . BR., 2 baths + 2 BR .. l 'f.a YP~~ ~'::.,e.~~ :J'~~ ~~
8 h. p t • halhs. Frplc. each unit. ..-eac rap... ••• . ' I CIUSiVe lis ting, 646-7711, 3 Blks up hill, see signs. 752-1920 $11J,OOO. Ope E Now under construction J400 OUAllST. NlWl'OIT HAO. Balboa lay Prop. 0 ves. '::°:s~~:::~::M ~£~1!!.·p~?te * 6~~0 * ~
4+LARGE --F ... MILY ROOM beaches plus s parkling MES• VERDE ~ swim pool. Iron gate en· A
Reduced to sell, private try leads t.o s pacious ex-WITH
rear yard on cul-de-sac ec. home in prestigious
street. 1 Mile to beach. a r e a . 4 . BR, 4. b a . CAMPER SPACE
Close to all schools, gourmet kitchen witb and then some. A well
parks, tenms & shopping. breakfst rm. fam rm has main ta i o e d 3 BR
For more 1nformat1on cozy frplc. Gracious liv· pacesetter on a corner
call 963·6767. 1ng & dining rm .bas with2BOATGATESand '"'•'· ";. '"'Oflti·,.· massive frplc . Many a 19x50 +parking slab I ~ 1111! ill ameruties ... Just· listed. for camper, boat, motor ~;ald11f 1 $ABSOLUTEL y =-·~r~~a ;.~~~r:~~~
ELDUMPO
POOL· $43,500
U~IVUI: t1()Ml:S /Jn NIGEL
GAILE.Y F.
A55UCI Ar E5
REAL TORS~ 675-6000
2443 East Coast Highway. Corona del Mar
NEW ORLEANS d"ign,
4·BR & bonus rm ., Ge•ral I 002 GeMral . I OOZ Spyglass ho.me. Pool-u
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• lot, cul-de-sac st .• fee
BACK
BAY
4-Bedroom, gig.antic
master bedroom suite,
family room. stone
fireplace, and eat-in
kitchen . Newport
Riveria pool, huge patio.
Sharp! $57 ,000. 10%
down. CALL 962· 1788
• K€Y .. ~ P.€Al TOP.5 A
MESA
WOODS
OWME:R DESPE:RATE! land. $159,000.
5 IEDROOM + POOL La, tf"'et4/ ~· l
Wba~ ! ~~ !D~!!r miss REAL ESTATE 644-6397
it! Abandoned 2 story. 5 Colta Meta I 024
Huge bedrooms with •••••••••••••••••••••••
massive master suite. 4 le*°°"9 Every woman's dream
kitchen. + +.+, lm· $38;500
mediate possession +. Country n' Treff
Assume low interest Joan Unbelievable value! Lots
or new VA with no down, of trees for added charm
price below market al . & privacy. Plenty of.
$61,000. Call ioday. room for parking your
646-7171.. . . .. boat or trailer. Kentucky. . OPfN 111 tJ•t1s 1uNfoetN1Cf•, s tyling . Lot.s of
.! ® U!HI ~:£~~.J,·~~:~·.~:
su~~~~·1-s TARIEU.-
• *BAY & OCEAN steps "'1 1 in Ca&ifonia•• away. Newly remodeled---------
l ·BR /den . $82,500.
TERMS/TRADE.
• 1722 MIRAMAR
(Newport Peninsula Pt.)
MEARO.C.C.
Lar~e duplex '4 Ith 6
bdrms & 5 baths Excep-
t1onall)' des1~ned ' Quall·
ty bwlt. 3 Car garage
Near new. 2 Frplcs. Just
reduced S2t>.OOO for 1m 1
mediate sale!
Furn1s hl'd, per In\ en·
tory. Shown by app l
only
COLLEGE PARK GORGEOUS l:f.~1i1n addition. Call
_________ 1 3 Br + large paneled plus swimmer's pool.
Family Rm. 2 wood Customized with de-etm
Its low down and dirty!
Looks like a house where
the buffalo roamed! A
handyman's paradise!
Paint and profit I Wind-
ing cottage walkway
thru ·overgrown brush
past deserted fountain!
Huge corner lot with
winding block wall fence.
Looks hke the desert but
what potential! Dumpy
livmg room. But ceiling
to floor Spa ni sh
Belter than new 4
bedroom, 2 bath with
huge family room and a
central atrium court.
Located on a quiet cul-
de-s ac, a short walk from
lhe oew city park. Priced
right at $59,900. with a
1Y•% ass umable loan.
HALPIHCHIH
REALTORS
675--'392 CALLSS6-2600 ----------1
ONE·OF-A-KINQ 3BR,
2BA, large H/F pool. cor-
ner lot with boat gate,
gas bltns, fireplace, lrg.
added family room. Only
$.56,900. Call PRESTIGE
HOM ES, 64>6646 * * * * * IPLEX $95,000
Sales & property mgmt.
same Joe for 22 yrs.
Fee land and next t o
oceanfront. J-furn1shed
units near schools, shop·
ping a nd tennis courts.
Beautiful oc. vu from
sundeck
• I. I\ l<I . •
B \l.110 \ l'ol. \\I>
• 673·6900 •
JACOBS REALTY
675-6670
Gftte.ral I 002 GeMt"al 1002
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
macnab I Irvine
realty
FtNYHOMES
FIOM $34.495 TO $850,000
"OWNER'S LEAVING ..
Priced to sell ! Charm.mg 3 bedroom
+ maid 's, 3 bath home w /finest
VIEW of Ha rbor. Secluded pool in
front courtyard. On front row in
Irvine Terrace. NOW only $182,500.
Larry Dyer 642-8235. (Tll)
TRIPLEX -LAGUNA BEACH
Three 2 bedroom unit s (2
w /fireplace). 2 112 blocks to beach &
near shops & business. 3-car garage + extra ara fo r boat. 55' frontage.
$123.500. Mary Lou Marion 642-8235.
(Tl2)
0
HARIOR -VIEW -IROADMOOR
Elegantly tasteful 4 bedroom, 21h
bath in Phase I l. Lg. family room
w /fireplace & beams, formal dining
& a s uperlative view of night lights,
harbor & Catalina. $132,500. Martha
Macnab 642-8235. CT13)
'WOW!"
3 bedrooms, 2 baths. community
pool -near So. Coast Plaza. In
super condition! for only $34,495.
Candi Grant 642-8235. <T14)
IEAUTIFUL BLUFFS
Lovely spacious sunHt 3 bedroom
home. Marvelous custom draperies!
Pool just a few steps away! $92 ,500.
Barbara Aune 642-8235. (Tl5)
VISIT IA YSHORES! YOUU LOVE fTI
Private beach -pretty house (2
bedrooms + guest room). $75,500.
Jack Custer 642-8235. (Tl6)
THE HIGHLAHDS-$89,500
Beautiful 4 bedroom, Vh bath home
w JJg .• living room, family room &
exotic pool in tropical setting. Walk
to private beach. Elaine Svedeen
642-8235. (Tl 7)
IEST MAUO. VIEW
HOMES LOCATION
Upgraded Portofino located next to
pal"k. 3 bedrooms, 21h baths +
delightful yard! $99,000. Betty Kerr
64-M)200. (Tl8)
''YIEW"
Beach & Bay! 2 units in new
condition w /2 bedrooms, ramily
room -vaulted ceilings. $117,000 for
both. Rosemary Sietz 644-0200. (T19)
MAUO. VIEW
Lovely • bedroom, family room
home in Corona del Mar
w /spectacular view of Newport
Harbor. $137 .soo fee. Jeanne
Newman 642·8235. CT20>
HUJJI 644-6100 '°' 0.-~ ..... .....,,,.,
,,....,,.,, -...m, c.ldllnM ~
-.
burning fireplaces, co rator 's t ouch. l
separate Dining Rm. Beaut.1Jul . 4·BR, 2~·ba, .~ fireplace. European kit! .SELECT COSTA MESA
Rare hardwood floors, CHARMER ONLY Eastside 4Br, 2ba. frplc,
New copper plumbing & Van Luit wallpapers, de-~
water heater. Owner luxe carpets, drapes.
transferred, must sell Beam ceiling living &1---------dining entertainment. PROPERTIES $42,500 lg gar, fncd yd. Nice
Shovel'em out, paint'em 1 OWEST PRICB> 3 Massive bedrooms. quiet neiihbrhd. $58,500
fast. Open Sat. & Sun. dining rms, paneled faro EaStSl.de Jewel 1-5PM. 229 Tulane rm. 2 logbuming frplcs.
up and you've got ~ Supercleanfamilybome byown.642-5299 yourself an estate! Skin· SINGLELEVB. with l a r f.'(e country ..,_;. _______ _..._
ny-d.ipplng pool, covered CONDO kitchen. Huge double · EASTSIDE
DREAM HOME
ROGERS REALTY A must.to see. $124 ,950. Intriguing 2 bedroom + patio. Priced dirt cheap Hard t.o find, easy to buy garage. Assumable low
dining rm. built like which seems only right! Bluffs Anita model. End interest loan. Priced Gi~raltar! ! For young or GI ngdown. 847·6010. • unit,' covered pri vale below market at $42,500. 675·2311 Call 640-6600
A-FRAME retired. For al)pt. call oPfN 1119 · 11 ""tno111 Nl(f • patio, quiet area. Newly Call 646·7171 today. ;,::.:~;~:~~ ~~err1·e i~E.lrda. FORJM [tS" l!a!;IUI ~:~~~pl~~~~c':~t~ ·1eOl'fN 11°11 •11 \I LNIO IJil.J'l(T•.
YO\J BE THE JUDGE or
this Old Fashioned, large
4-bdrm home, 2 full
baths. Today only
$49,000. Has Country
kitchen with garden
atrium. Excluaive-
Pleasecall
By·the-sea Towering A· {j ;4~ ~ _!?~!~i~ own_erwillcons1derl.ease •Wi~~liil
frame chalet nestled in CO. -...11_.. _;. '. • ·iwm ~t~°sf: terms. Priced 1·=~ ~·1~~~~~~~
the trees Courtyard en· OCEANA SOUTII ' . ..::
try. 3 Bedrooms include 359 San Miguel Drin •---------IN C.F. Colesworthy 7 l/•% VA LOAN
separate master wu\g N•wport Cetlt«. OCEANSlDE Redtat s 640-0020 This decorator 's delight
Family room . Rocki---...:..-------1 .$27 500 COMPLETELY canbepurcbasedsubj.to .540-3666
fireplace. Island kitchen A-FRAME HOUSE ' furnished, professionally ri..-:_.. S__._... 7~% VA loan. Choice
Sweeping staircase to 30 DUPLEX decorated model! ($4,000 ---.m .. 'll r---1 foot loft studio with beam OF GLASS inventory ) 2BR, l'f.aBA Styte Home C.M. ocation. 3 Lrg. bd,
ceilings. It's unique. No ASSUME $35,500 Older home converted t.o alncle story coJldo. Enter through the ~?~~::~.m~a3u;~
qual1fy1ng. Assume 7~% Atrium entry to artistic 3 BR & 1 BR units. Enclosed garage. Patio wrought iron gates into ld
loan at $327 per month in· beach chalet. Tile entry Professionally zoned lot with wrought fence & the ceramic tJle entry. 0 · S45-M9l.
eluding taxes. Call now ! to entertaining sized liv· 50xl.59 in the heart of gate. Adult (over 40) The decor is in warm -
"We're Here To Help''
842-2535. ing room with cozy County activity. Needs community,pool, earth tones. New paint.
""11' '" »" • 1 "11 •' '• 1' fireplace & commanding some fix'in but look at jacuzii, clubhouse. Nr. new carpets, wallpaper. . . $39 999.
[
view or lus h grounds. the price-$27,500. Call El Camino Plaza shop-4 Bedrooms, extra lge '
Europe an gourmet 962-7771. ping center. Walk lo bus family nn, 15x30covered 1---------
k itc h en with island • line. 30 min. t o San patio. Fruit trees. A OWNER
breakfast bar. Famil~ II Diego. $ 3 2, 5 0 o home with love. Offered TRANSFERRED ~ I : ' : : : ~ ~ ~· I · I l : ~·
Roomy 4-bdrm. + 2-bath
home w /2-car garage.
Choice corner localion-
Veterans welcome. Low
down & Low monthly.
Exclusive-Will ool last.
Please call... ROMAMTIC
You couldn 'l pick a more
romanlJc location for a
view home. Al night. the
lig hts shi ne like
d iamonds on a velvet
pillow. Has 4 BR. J ba.
Vacant. $159,500 Or offer.
room. Hideaway master I I I I CO M P L E T E . BY at a low $64,900.
ret_reat with adjoining ~ OWNER. 548-3036 ~ STEPS TO GOLF
atnum & wall of glass. -:::::::::::::::::::::: :: OMtlPEERSll TAIEADYAMTAGE Separate wing for •0AIANDONB>" Custom home on cul·de-
childrens & guest suites. PROFESSIONAL sac street. Around the
Dramatic stairs to ESTATE 1sssW.8ok•r.C.M . comer from Mesa Verde
magnificent 30' studiol•--------•I Next toMorltet8osltet Country Club. lm -
540-3666
loft with breathtaking "BIRD STREET"· WAU<TO BEACH 549-8655 maculate condition
open beamed vaulted Formal entry way lead· --------• through-out. Enjoy huge ..,..._.lilil•liil"'
ce1lmgs Take over 71(4% 3 Bedrooms, 2 bath, neat, lng to gigantic dl~viog ·--------separate parlor. '-A "House-sold" name VA loan. No new loao clean, sharp home on room. Formal ming Enormous family room ---------
costs $327.33 pays all. CraneCircle.Fullpnce room. Country sized PCOofOlegeLHPOartcME wtthfireplace.&wetbar. Mesa Verde Pacesetter
Call now. 963-7881. $45,500. kitchen. 4 Bedrooms plus Gourme ts kitc h e n. of home. By owner. Lrg 4
[ ~ ~ 22646-811 Ne·-~_tnl Wllh wall lo wall brick h Co 1 • h s 1 d d d fireplace. Located corner ome. mp wit e c u e .croun s + appliances. uniquely up·
across from golf course. large family room. loads of pnvacy. Owner graded, btfl covered
Owner motivated. Call fireplace , oversized transferred & musl go! patio, fruit trees, ANYTIME kitchen and very private Take advantage. Call 549.1704. 2846 Corvo Pl.
()Pf1<l1t?•l''IU'llOPorf>lt((• a -separate family room Beautiful 3 bedrm, 2 ba lomorrow+formaJd10e. br, fam rm, dlX k1'tchen
. • 963~67. pool area. Vacant, ready 546·2313. Ope h s l /Su 1 s 1---------1----~~---•1 . .:===------oPrt>11110 ·11siu"N1oa7NICf' for your inspection. Just Cil>£Nrrto.irpUN'lOBlNrfi.-n ouse a n .. PR~~E~~~~~T Young· Singles N&~u:s~~~\%~ [,9 lfi~IJil ~ls~~.~;~· Pg~~~ [, ~. . ISIJMI m:LLEGE ,.,. ..
COMPANY
lU:ALTOH~
Sl~CF. l!JI I
673·4400
UMDER $70,000! $32,500 * ------··-.. ~~ Nice 3 bdrm., 2 balb Prestige approach. Huge Invest for future ap· 3 Br, 2 Ba , corner lot f ·1 h lot.
trees Secluded e ntry. preciation and present Miller Dr .. Tualin NEWPORT SO IAYFIOMT ~nu Y ome: corner
Cozy living room with tax write-offs. Lovely 2 $59,950. HEIGHTS 8.LIOA ISL fer~!4290(,
rustic brick fireplace. bedroom Condo, pool, • 4BR 3 BA din. rm, pier.
sweep in g c i r c u I a r rec Eastside CM Open 3 Br. 1 Ba. remodeled kit, ~ bl ....,.,. 000 1.202 So B y(ront J ccrmww ·a Al~!!!@
staircase leads up to loft Sati Sun 1·4, 2Aoo Elden, on Moran/Weslm $39.900 ASSuma e SUPER BUY m-0281'ownr a ~~· w
library with overview or No 14. * Lo OHL Y $25,500 u
living room. CO M MAN-2Br, l Ba, lg. t,ii acre an Low, low down to Vets or BolboaPettilttula 10071----------
DING STAND UP VIEW HORSES, ElliottS.A. $49 ,500 others. Great area of ••••••••••••••••••••••• REPOSSESSION
0 F 0 C E A N & $42,999 Nearly ~ acre on a cul-H.B. This fantastic 2 bd, BOAT SLIP-VIEW 4 Br, $45,000. Lo dn. Agt. CATALINA ISLAND! * b wnh Id 646-3013· S461739
Unbehevably charming. 1 !========~ 3 Br, 2 J;Ja, Sharpest de-sac, lhls 4 bedroom 2 l'n a to ouse cou $69,900. I ldnn. • · One time opportunity. t. home on S le l I a, bath family home has a be your·starter or retire· $89,950. 2 ldnft. VA/FtfA OK
Anah · SS3 900 lovely orchard, room for mentbome. 54>9491. Available Immediate oc-~958 c-•..1--Call 546-2313. eim, • · a pool or two and lots left •. 2 Se t c 6 rvn-839·1710 over. Walk to shopping cu~ncy. para e OD· 3 BR, added family rm,
[ ~ MORE FOR SS and schools fresh pa1'nt do s. Owners will con-patio, 2 baths, compl re· , ... ORANGE • sider lease option or con-" and in clean. move·in , tract of sale. Call Bob furbished in and out.
3 Br. a/con.d, pool oo 'nrd S A L E S M E N o r concn1on Call f ran ap Elec gar opener. $42,000. acre. Quack possess. BROKERS share office . J • o . __ ;;..;;....._ Meridith or Jack Alex-Prine. only. Call pomtment now· and e r . 5 44 • 14 4 o or
., .... 5678 smOr ,900g. 1633~7H471c9koorywneLnr· ' & receiv.e '12o/,-80"'0·90% 1£erc ii ~ 2 OFFERED eves -544~ & 830-7611 MB·7711; after6, 644-0072. _Cl_a_ss_i_ri_ed_A_d_s __ °"___ an e. . comm., it's lhe way lo a A •-r.A
General I 002 GeMral . I 002 ~k~~T EST~T~: Pt ap=:. . COST A MESA c=-' M• 1 ozz ~
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• S40-05SS 1s2-1•20 3-Bedroom ·······················~=======~ MOOQUAIUt.~llAOf' $39,900
~I (amino
~eal.tY
644-7270
SJl,000 DOWN
.... BUYS THIS LARGE U COLONIAL HOME in DOVER
SHORES for the big family that likes
to entertain. 7 Bedroo~. 6 baths,
family room, large biJliard room
with wet bar. Master suite has HIS
AND HER baths + a steam bath.
Gym. Private study.
• ,,. .. , '" "' 11u. Of rt~tf OfrUll ,. I/If l'nM
C.~ 'O ,5\ '-i f) -C ~Q. • Assumable loans, one p~ ~"tl ~). -~ J;;(/" v , available al 10%' down,
That ln#ri9uing Word Gome vyifh a Chudle ~fi~!f si~ee~. ~e
-----t<lte4 ~ C&AY 1. POUA" yards. boat or trailer ac-
0~:"";!'"~-~:: cess, euy terms. For ao
tow 10 •-'°"' ... -• ,. appointment t.o see these
I 1°ii8i6181 I
I LEEORl;
I I I' I I . ;
-• The eufolN>blle ho divided ~_R_O_.Prl_R..--tl .• I I r I INn~lnd lntO two ci ..... , 1~ who driw Wt end
I H ( B Y A G I those wl'io -them ''"' .... { ..... 1 __ 1_' ... , ...... , -I --t G ~1:: ~ .... ~' ~ _..._ ______ '°" ....... 11--...,., No 3 b.low
• ,.,I'll NUMIOfD UttU 5 IN tt1rn soy.ou
• UN$C.tAMtll AIOV( ll Tl(t' TO Gtl ~NSWfl
rrrr1'1
I I I I I I
and other newly Jlsled
properties call for an ap-
Poinlmeni now.
le~ 712•"20 MOO QUAil n He ltA04
RUSTIC
CHARMER
$38,750
Euc•1rptu• tree shaded cha et . U n tqut
Townhouae deai1n by
architect/owner. Aban·
doned·muai 11crUlce.
CaJJ 645-0303
5CIAM ..... ITS ... .,.,. ill Cltmfffcaffoe 1010 J-'°-•_u_:r_ot.._s_o __ N __ IM __ c_
CORONA HLDS. ESA VERDE 3·BR.
You can sUU see the cat· fam, 2-ba, 2-car aar.
tie grazing rrom this $47 ,9:SO Trades OK.
loved & lived in tiome. 3 •AND•
Bdrms., filled with &ood $-BR North Mesa, only
thlnga. Only $79,500 $58,7SO. A beauty. Trade
U.i•Wlffy Realty 0 K • P I L 0 T R E A 1..
8001 E. Ctl Hwy. 6'13·65101-~--A_T_E_. 54_0-0555 ___ _
•ORUXE MISA VBDI DUPLEX• By owner .,.. Pool.
Excellent 3 BR 2 Ba Cbeertul 4br, 2ba home.
cround Ooor owners unll Secluded m1tr bdrm
w/2 priv. paUoa " lux· suile, form. din. rm.,
urious masteuulte. etesant. huae llv. rm. ftLUS w/stone t rplc & blMn bookcua. Sunny brktat 2 BR Rental w /lar1e uu or ram. rm. over·
patio declc. lookJlll MC.haded. aparkJ· IOTH ma ..a• Pool w/Jacuul,
with wood bur~ pa BBQ. covered paUo.
nteplacet vawled Auto aar door Wlt
bum ceiiin,. and auper aonner. 1prlnkler •
So.-ot·Hwy location. much b>off.m.!00. CAU uu.ooo. ree. Call fonfPl,J41.20'Jl.
-...1211
/..Jn "ilf l'
i\i\i! I I ••
I\' '1l ll Ii\ I I ''
BAO( 8AY AIUtA
Van.M. 12' Jr. okl 18D 18.A, lam. rm., qllltt
area. Z4M None. .. .-.
IOllM'l•IGal.
I ,
1 ,.
I '
Hoaet hirtde Hot.Mi,_ S-. Honn For Sale Hou .. • For Sale Hovsn For S* frtday. Janu•ry JO f976 DAILY PILOT Di, .
•••••••··········-····· ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••• • • ••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Hou r--s~-ol•----.. ...... 2000 • .. .. a 0 Ho..tJH For Sale •ff rV'I" -lftc.ome Propnty 2 00 ---nopeny Cott..... I 024 °" leach I 040 lntne I 044 L..-• oc l 1 a 1 leacll I 041 •••••. ... .............. • ......... ••• .......... .. ............................... •• •••••• ... ..
••••••• • • ••••••• • • • • •• •••••••••••• ••••• • • • • • • •• • • • ••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• •• • • • • • • •••••• •• • • ••• • •••••• • •• •••••••-...,_-.... .. ocllt I 069 Hewpof'f leoch I 069 -------------------M~ VERDE West, for COHDOMIHIUM HEW USTIHG •••• :;:".~•••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,. we by own r.OpenttseRARE -r er 9eaul1 1.1t•RE Fl.._.D LIYIHG Owner mwt move trom1 _______ ... _______ 2 IEDROOM CUTIE-$27,916.61
Sat " Sun 1·$PM. 18tiS S«lud.ed 3~ yr. old. cul· ""' " AT ITS IHTl Uus beautJful 3 Br homt. Rbod Dr, CM. , Br. de·HC. $46,500. Owner ldetal homo for active re· CH~11 THES• PaUc>& Uvani room havo
Den, a Ba, 3 frplc'1, 581·2306. Ur«l or atarttor home for ii;v"' '" whitewater view. Pnced
tt•me room, + buJe )'Oun1 couple. One of RJVIBA to1>ell •\$'13,900.
You should buy them all day at this
price. We offer 6 such umts at $167,500,
~~t locall""· E.astside Costa Mesa,
on 2 big lot,. \ litUe work & a couple or
checks w1U make lhl!; a bargain'!
1''am. Rm. w/wet bar Irvine's finest com· EXCLUSIVES SADDLEIACK
WaJk to 1chool1. Prine. munltles. 2 Bed rm le 3 Bdrms .• 2 baths:' Xlnt & OCUH VllW
Only. $'95,000. Owner will family room. JS0 ,000. Location, close to shop·
help finance. 979-3859 Owner movioa out or plna: & beach. $59,500 Owner 1nxlou11 to move to bis new ranch. Come &
Big ocean view. Lge. 1· ii« this 4 Br home for
bdrm .• with many exlr»S super value ;al $77 .soo.
BAYFRONT $72,500
Public Notice
Go•....,..t
AalUfftlble Loans
Great opportunity .
Avalloble to everyone.
Low lnl.ercst available. 3
& 4 bedroom homes now
available. To see if you
qualify, call TARBELL,
REALTORS
540-1720
atate. Shows like a model hom~. With m•nY cxt.ns.
Ca11$40·11bl
~--HERITAGE met. elevator. $47,500 MAYQCK
Lovely way to live in secured building.
It's an odd couple that wouldn't love this
l ·bdrm. bayfront condominium .
Enlarged living rm. Immed. possession.
UNIVERSITY REAL TY
100 I E. Coast Highway
COf'Oftod.tMar 673-6SIP 20th CENTURY 2 Bdrma, 2 baths. Beaut. coRPORATI ON
.. FOX.. l~~~~~~~~I garden setting. Close to LAGUNA BE.bCH LIDO REALTY HouHs For ScM 10.0.xff/ ..
personified elegance in I -everything. $52,SOO 6 7 J. 7 300 • • •• • • • • • • • • •• ••• ••• • •• Units ~ 1100
t h e c losest tract to SIR-$61,900 494·2146 Jl77VlaUdo,H.I. SanClemenf• 1076 •••••••••••••••••••••••
beach, sides to Newport UHIV. PARK Large l·bdrm. on around -------------------••••••••••••••••••••••• ~
. • REALTORS
Beach. Xlnt. apprecia· Gorgeous S bedroom, 2 floor, with patio area. REDWOOD BEACH TOCLOSI': ESTA't'b: IHCOMEPLUS
lion factor. 4-BR, 3-ba, story! Prime cul-de-sac $36,900 ' HOUSE DUPLEX W /SLIP Beautiful Colonhal 3600 a<1. Cx:ean bluff v1t:w Lovely 3 bedrm home
all the xtras of an ex~. I . P I T 1 "'1 Bllt Crom beach, has B'1U Carroll 640·"'...,,.. ft. home on Golf Course 1806 Cal1e ' ···s Alamos AND 2 duplexes. Hom·· ho bl 1 ocat1on. 2 at os! lie Ocean view. 2 Bdrms., 1 all the ame t es you can __,., An H S82 ooo ...., ~ ----------t me. compara Y ow 011 Hastings&Co. Realtor. inSanta 8 ls • s:Jti-3447 $95,000 has family rm, elet• pnced.9G8·4-4S6 entry. Massive red bnck bath, with lge. view imagine. Also has 2 ren· ____ ByOwner.640.4082 li_....,ID& P"Hon••• .. u fireplace . gourmet deck. Priced right at tal units. 364 Calliope. F B C bltns, 2 ba's. All crpted .a•~ ,.. A _,..A kitchen with garden $42500 or ag anyon pro·---------• Panoramic view of ocean. over wood noors, nace 4 m.droom surrounded by loveliness view. Hideaway master • OpenSat.1·3 pert1es, Call Big Canyon NEWPORT SHORES B e a u l ' f u I J b d Pal 1 o & db I e g ;a r . Just painted lns1de & out. in a breezy development. d I I w d' Realty . 644 -1193 town home r-·orced to w opener. A pa 1 r of
" staircase t o 4 uge ~ 'IO),...""Il<'>~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• in move-m cond. 8~,.k Boat access. Full price 3-BR Condo nr. beach, on~roun eve . '"h mgm:b th'!lftBI?c:\ LogunoHilli 1050 Dramatic3 BR A-frame t.ell Callowner.498·2906 duplexes d1v1ded by
$46,900. 2-car gar! Pools ! bedrooms. Separate ~(.;....> ue.,1 • $5 000 . dosed garages·2bedrm FULUR REALTY J a cu z z i ! Sauna ! laundry room. Perfect 499·2800 Town ·home .. 3 bd, 2 ba, ' Financing. Only $62,850 G~ous--G:roc1ous each unit gas bllnl>, w/w
546-081 4 Clubhouse! Tennis big family home . Central air .& heat. REDUCTION CAYWOODREALTY 30drmR1dgefop Home ,cpts.fencedpatio~&se1> ~~~~~~~~~~ £e,u~~ Under $45,000. SELLER ANXIOUS ! FABULOUS ocean view $39,900. Pr in only * S48-1290 * W/110 degree fantastic entrance from rear All ~ h . · 64S-2957orS86-9865appts Ownerboughtnewhome.,._ _________ Ocean Harbor View. thi·s seclud"d by blck Hurry, call now. 752·1700. ome; ammac., spacious will help finance. See•· .. 31RS-$37,950 l'lllfNl•19••1\IL•"''oJ•"·'' 3 BR, 2i.2 ba., touch of _o_nl_y_. ________ 1 •--------$127,350 'walls. $169.500. Barrett.
LGEYARD ·9600AK <4Br 3 Ba.3 cargar,3000 I~ ~New Orleans charm; 1 f anytime BeautiJuUyup-UDOISLE POIMTREALTY Realty642-5200.
Bkr.646·1008 sq ft, huge lol, boat lt~~:!~·~1 mirrored frpl. formal A ot or your money. graded, Ba ycrest pool Ultra s harp 3BR. 2ba. 496·5600&493·0208 _ -_ _ _ ---------t storage. A beaut. house :~ ; ' dining rm., gou.rmet ~t. Large_ 2650 s q.ft. pool home. 3 bdrms .. formal w/a sauna. Shows like a S-"' L· -S t.• C U R E I ---, _... 2000
CONDO-By0wner,2BR by owner . $82•500· l.~~~~~~-~-~-~~!!!•!!!•!!!i·!!~~-Lrg. wrought iron trim homemLagunaHllls.4 dinin~. Jacuzzi , modelhome.A greator At' c. •••• u •• ncome ror··Y
w/court & pool. Assuma-968-7444 ..:: decks; great storage. BR + den or 5th ~r + EVERYTHING! fering-$98,SOO. · CYPIU:SS s.HORES 3 Br •••••••••••••••••••••••
ble.$35,000.979-7463 BIG OLE BEACH By owner, Deerfield. 2· Storybook. secluded FR.& DR.Beautaruty LE RAISOR 675-0123 cust. 2 frplc ~ F:.im. Rm, Multi tenant industrial&:
sty, 3 Br, 2'h ba, fam.rm. brick patio & garden I a n ~ s c a P e d Y d ll , . . h )~ 2 Pat 1 Os . Pvt B dl · omce bldg, Orange Co. POOL & JACUZZI Hodme. 4d8edrm,h2 bhath, 1800 sq. rt. Comm pool. w/fountain . $127,SOO w/spnnkler~. Very lge REALTY pntung am \.Ult9 guarded gate . .Best VICW, Airport Location. Prm.
N.CostaMesa,3Br2Ba, ad ed en wit uge Unique patio/sundck. PANORAMIC o cean covered patio ?verl~k-privary.$125,000.0wner only 549·1480.
byowner.979-9607 fJ?IC, lge kitchen & big Prine. only. $61,950. view, 3 BR. 2 Ba., frpl., Ing pool & rolling haUs. 4523Campus Dr.,Jrvme l <tALTClrJ', ~-4238 ___ _
din. rm. Bltns,Ocpts. 552-4027. patio. deck. Close in $73,500.581-7156. CampusValleyShopCtr. 0c1:.• ... VIEW CYPRUSSHORE LIOHSESTATES $34 500. Lowest priced 2 br ·Deep lof on alley. cean North d s125 000 CALL 833..a6oo 119A" Builder/ Broker selliog
private home 60xl27 lot view from ups tair s. PERFECT en · · · Loguna Miguel I 052 Newport Hei9hts San Clemente's finest property. 3 To ul units in E 'd CM All z d C 5 "t 7 ER 'IOME CHARMER, Big ocean ••••••••••••••••••••••·•----------• ""' h I "' on asts1 e . . ey one or uni s. START ..-, view. Privte area. ocean Rustic 2 Sty Collage, 2 u<ac t·o ony. r~xernll\'e prim e areas in HUDl access. Yard for lge Blocks to ocean. $49,SOO. Must sell this lovely 3 Br, R b 1 • BR. Fam·rm, open beam 3B R. 3 ba res1denl'e ington Beach. New &
dogs. Century 21 , Duhan· BkrS36-8836 home m popular Green· !~~ep~~fu'.2o~e·:f :·ki~d: Laguna Niguel & knotty pine lhru-oul. 2 Finest quality appoint near new. ,
/Doyle Investments, BY 0 p k Str t 2 tree development. close $1.25,000 the choice community 1'"'rplc's & boat access men t s . oull'>lan<l111g 536-2579 592-5010
548·1168 wner, ar C ee to shopping & schls. To PEG ALLEN _ * 3 . BE 0 R 0 0 M Very re as, terms ocean view, Ju st steps toi--------------------1 blksfromCivic enter.3 seeistobuy ~ ~.,,.<MU\ surf Can't bt' replac.·ed A.E.S"'rS By owner, quiet cul·de· BR, den, 2 Frplc's, REALTOR 494·7578 TOWNHOUSE an SEA ...... ~. A.,.;
sacstreet.Close to shop, SOxl50 lot. $68,000. Only$47·950 1096N.Coast.Laguna TERRACE. Highly up· SUMR.E.631-2222 for $lS2~492.4121 STARTTHE
s chools, Ii brary & 842·9970or5364729 OPE .... HOUSf graded, imported Mex· **VIEW** BERTHA HENRY MEW YEAR churches, J. extra lge ---------"" 1can tile atnum, walk to E TO S
bdrms, lge lam rm, cov· LAGOON SAT & SUN 121.c recreational fac1hlles. Newport Heights. im· R ~AL R RIGHT!
ered patio. 2 baths, 2 TOWNHOUSE 795 OAK ST. \1ust see to apprec1aie mac. 4 BR .. 2 ba home, FAMIL y DREAM Sell Homes
frplcs. Parking space for Harbour Area EMERY REALTY New 2600 sq. rt. custom $72,500. den, family rm. Gourmet JW.l steps to beauurul L I ntmfttts
truck or camper. Newly home. w/superb ocean Laguna Niguel Realty kitchen, 2 frplcs .. shake "T"·Stre.,t Beach from . earn \'v Tbe best or both lives-846-~JOl. ___ r •· b · k t o .... 500 .. Eom M0tt redecorated kitchen & -city view Crom every 830-5050 496-4040 roo °' n c pa 1 · ...-.. this lovely two-story
llv. rm . 3025 Samoa 35 ft. dock+ best loca-h 1048 room. This quality bwlt {Al.L '-' U6·HU custom home w;nex1ble Our res1denl1al d1v1sion
Place, C .M . (Mesa tiononSeagateLagoon.l.acJunaleac home isonaqwet cul·de· .:---====-:::::: ::::::: :::::. ~~ n l <23 4BR> lists and sells moreln· Custom decorated 4·BR, ........ ••••••••••••••• ~ A~ oor Pan · or · · vestment pro""rties then Verde). $57,900. Owner sacnext to park,3 blks lo ~~~~~~~~~~I ......., 2'2 ba + lrg. fam rm. ....~ willshowbyappt.Pbone 3·ba.A.sking$S2,500. Controctor'sHome beach, stores & Laguna.: ---------REA LTY island kitch w/panry, most investment offices.
549.0922 S Years young; th1~ one Beach High School. All LOVI! .._.EST PRIME PROPERTY Nur Nn·port Pua OHier 14xl9 mbr w/huge walk Persona l Tra1n1ng, i ~ m bd d d · d ~ 1 Prestige Offices, Full has it all! 4 Lge. rms .. re woo exterior an ... for two. Privacy 4 BR, 3 Ba. lge ram-rm, OPEN SUH. 12•4 in wardrobe plus poo -sz.. Facilities. Properly
FOR DIHI G L~ 3 full baths: s uper coppertrimcomplemenl galore-beautifully main· &lgeUv-rm,2 frplc,plus 20839thStreet ya rd . Asking only Purchase Plan. 1'·rm e MAL H _ master suite orr pool a unique livable design tained 2.sR, l 'h·ba bltn BBQ in din-rm. $78,000. B f"t Su · C Beautirul large.pool & REALTY INC. area ·. kitchen loaded which inclds 4 Bdrms, 2 Corner lot w/lge swim. DUPLEX Call 492·412 1 ene 1 s. penor f ·1 tat f ·1 lf b h 4 home, wro ught·iron I m1ss1on, Dynarn c am1 yroom ·Ce n r 714/846 1371 with goodies; am1 y rm. full & 2 ha at es, enclosed patio for your pool. Back Bay area. Best buy on Pemnsu a' BERTHA HENRY nt.i
Mesa Verde. Near coun------------1 has huge Crplc. & wood deck. Cam -rm, wetbar, $119,000. Write P .O.Box Good for summer rentall> REALTORS ~~~.~~~~~~~~: ~l~rt~~
try club. 3 Spacious DOU· HOUSE paneling. Sunken li ving hv. rm. din. rm. 3 t•ar gar petsi~H5:REA.LTY 1632 Newport Beach. Ca. or owner/occupant. Lge -licensees who will work bedrooms. 2 bath and rm. with bt'amed ce11. & & m o r·e . $14 9,500 . 92663 units with bit-ins & Mobile Homes completely appointed New paint. carpeting, 3 tile entry. Lge'. htd. & (714 )536-6962 83l·9'll frpks. l·Blk. to ocean. For Sale 1100 for earning~ in excess or
kitc hen. Outstanding Br. P• ba. frplc, dbl filtered pool. Ocean view ---HARBOR VIEW $97,000 ••••••••••••••••••••••• $25,000 ped rt yearlar1 en·
noor plan. Our exclusive garage, fncd yd w /patio. gazebo. Lots of pri vale WHY RENT? 1 ·guna N·aguol. HOMES .... EWPORT BEACH $3.500 Costa M('!>J locJl1on courage 0 app Y °" a $7 C 11 540 c. Near EI e m en tu r Y LO ~ " position w1lh our lnve!lt· at 1·500· a ·ll.,l schools & bch. $12,500 for deck & patio area. Sep. 3 SPYGLASS REALTY (at S75 mo ). Lot~ of ex-ments or Res1dent1al
equity & lake over gov't cargarage for st-0rageor ~~~Y ~o-:_nd;~u~~ 3b~~ the choice community CARMEL~OD~ 675-1642 545-3261 l~~! ~~1.f1S:1akc orfer D1v1s 1ons. Call 1>011
loan of $34,000. P~1 ply. h ohb bhyod ~In l home on Bluebird Ca· ** LOVEY 2-BDRM. Ocean&n1ghthghlv1ew, . -_(_> Berm an , Pres1den1 .
898-4714 . • neig bor o . c ose lo nyonRoad.494-0769 TOWNHOME. pnvale Superbly d ecorated Harbor View 3Br 2Ba nu 5Slar Family Park.SJ QUA 1 L p LAC t::
7 BLOCKS TO BEACH
4 BR +huge fam rm,
schools. Priced right at area.closetobeachwith w /exquisite c olor decor countryk1tch. fee. Cap 07324x602 BR.2 Ba PROPERTIES. l~<.:.
Sl25,000 ocean view .... $56,900. coordmallon, tile entry. land 640-0403 eve $19500 Pn ply. 496 2038 752·1920 Dano Point 1026 •••••••••••••••••••••••
-Enjoy carefree luxury hv· ___ B_r_ok_e_r_968_·_54_0_J __ 1 ~Il~}/ 1900 sq.ft. S56.000 m\'!lftBIP~
ing 1n Marina bluff con· POOL & SPA 499·2800 do. Pool. jacuu1 & many -
extras. $89,900. plus a beautiful 3 br FASTASTIC VIEW home. Reqwres $8000. ANCHORAGE dn. CaJI Bob Dickinson, NEW carpets & drapes &
INVESTMENTS Agt Spanish Lile. New paint. · 9794533 Must see lo believe lh1s
•714) 496-7711 3Brs plus unfinis hed
BToro 1032 •••••••••••••••••••••••
49,000 JBr 2Ba. Assum VA
highly upgraded, great
area, mst see to apprec
586·0608
Fountain Valley I 034 •••••••••••••••••••••••
BIKE TO BEA.CH room could be gym .
Near Huntington pla y room or ictra bedroom . Harbor. 2 br, 2 story CENTURY 21 556-6901 townhouse with patio & __ _
garage. Poot. jacuzzi. ARTIST'S REFUGE
lemnis els .. putting Enclosed 6·ft. wall
green & rec. rm. $37,900. secludes s mall home
546-l7S4 or 9G8·33'71. with lovely rose garden,
JACKIE O. Will trade. 494--8611 1111 patio and yard. $54,000.
Would envy your btn 4 ; ZAGRODZKY Realtor
bdrm home. Your __________
1
BY OWNER·l /Br cottage
superior neighborhood & apt. Walk to town &
where your children <K l"ine I 044 beach. Pnncipals only.
thru 8th) have a s hort & •••••• ••••• • • • • •• • • •••• $79,500. 494. 7473 safe walk to their school.•--------~_:.__ _______ _
As you enjoy your VIEW OF Top Of The World
privacy, you will be THE HILLS BY OWNER. 3Br. 2Ba. secure in knowing you · Fam. rm, Ocean View d · Lovely interior w1\h m1r· have an oulslan ang m· Home. New cpt . re vestment. rors, wallpapers. custom modeled insi d e / out
$49•900 draperies and much, 497.1332 much more. 2 Large ---------18709 San Antonio St. bdr 2 b lhs wet bar ms.. a , , By owner, Call for appt. garden entry and cov
642-8584 or 968·5319 ered patio. $57 ,500 Open House Sat/Sun 1·5
Huntiftc)ton leach I 040 •••••••••••••••••••••••
.AfJlan
REAL ESTATE
900 Gl.-nn"r"· !.t
494 94 'l ~49 (IJl6
INVESTORS!
* * 'J1WO ·STO RY 4· ---------
BDRM. 2 'Lba home. patio cover along side & *BY OW ... ER * Ad 1 k " back or house. Owner " 4 yrs. new u t par pool. jacuzzi, ocean & agent Res. 6"4·6869, Bus. Beautiful view corner Newport lle1ght.s. 2 bd.
mtn. views .... $129,950. 752.().521 Condo w /pvt. bay front all skirting & awnings.
Laguna Niguel Realty Open house Sat & Sun.1-5 patio & balcony, wet bar $10.000 646·5779.
830-5050 496-4040 w/ icemaker. Boat slap -----
EXEC HOMES avail. 2·BR, 2' :r·ba, 2·car
• gar. $99.950. Best buy on 1974 MODEL
Y C>UnCJ lnvedors
Beach jrea , J KH
Town home ! NeJt and
clean as a pin' S2f.5')(1
w1lh very low do~o '
Perfect f1ri.t lll\e!>l m••ul.
Bkr 962·551 l
4 Low mamt. units are a -------
landlord's dream! Ea. is By owner. Northview 3
a 2 BR. 1'2 ba. on 2 BR, 2'h Ba , spectacular
I e v e 1 s . w I be a m s . mountain view. $12,500.
*** * * * Lido. No c hi ldren/no 2 Bedroom, 2 bath, up
A Rulon Hodges custom· pets. Principal~ only graded and double in TRl-PLEX
built delight. Massive (714 ) 673·2263 s ulal1on. Storage shed Neat, clean 2 BR D1.11Jll•x
master suite and 4-guest .. forest Gardens.. PLUS 2 BH. I '~ Ba bornt· bdrms. All the xtras for H A R B 0 R V I E W adult park. Clubhouse on large lot. Well main
gracious living and en· Portof1no. new decor .. Pool. Sauna. jacuzzi & taincd Jn xlnl rentJl
terta1mng. The lowest crpts, parquet floors, tennis courts. Sl9.995. are a. Ow n t"T m ay
pnced 5-bdrm. home in shutters, etc. Unique Barrett Realty, 642-5200. finance. Asking $59,0110
$185.000 495-0426 ---------180 DEG. VIEW
& Seclusion too!
3 Br, 2 Ba. $47,900.
831·0873
Big Canyon. local ion. $98,500. 644·2839 ---_-.---.., SOUTH COAST
••• ~-----ST!\1EN'r Also in Big Canyon, a J . •GENUINE S PANISH Business Property 1400 lNV~9·oS12
bdrm pool home w ith style HOM E with RED ••••••••••••••••••••••• ------
EXEC/DOCTORS jac uzzi. waterfall . !~t~~VU INCOME OWNER countered at ELEGANT
Live in clean air , blue lrop1cal gardens. an~ UNIT $72,000 cash. Listed al AJways rented f1\.e·unit~.
skys w/prevailing ocean walls of glass lo view 1t ONTHE PENINSULA $90,000 Reduced t o H.B .. 5 blocks to beadi.;: br""'~es on 10th fairway all from practically * ' . $79.995 t' ~ Acres, C I r s '-Oun" $145 ooo
or "£j Niguel Golf Course every room Priced to •All for S93.500. Open Sat Zone In s hoppmg center. ti · o'' w ... A R. 1)
<Private) in the heart of sellat$195,000. &Sun012H-SNPMKOMER ~dJoms main Post Office ZAGRODZKY, Rltr. J in Westminster As Laguna Niguel. 2 ...... :=-;:--;-;-;;:--;;;;:;;;-;i REALTOR .sessed MV siog,ooo 494-8~1 1 Westgree n C u s tom 646 3723 THIS2BR,h1·ceilings,in Homesremaming<new ). -----· Realtor . 31 s t }ear. 5 liNlTS-Good C o ~I •
a "wood sy .. setting Buy direct from bwlder. Newport Island 642 2991. p S We sell Mesa location AU.
w'peekattheocean.w1ll 831·215Sor495·4542 Wate rfron t homes homes for 3'o com · bedrm w/encld gar. \II go fast.. ...... $52.500 ---------DONALDM.BIRD n 3 bd 2 m1ss1on. pri v vards. YJ::AGE-..lt i ..... _Good L.f I Ml . v· . I 067 w1pier & oats. • J En oy ~ I e . tsaon 1e10 Auo<iotH.11.oltors ba. r educed down t o C-m.m'*" ci_. REALTY 556-6171 32325 So. Coast Hwy •••• ••• • • ••••• • • ••••••• .... .... u.
4584 493 2513 s ECT"CULAR" Lido Exe"" Home s137.soo. Property 1600 499• " " P A -••••••••••••••••••••••• Top or the worl<l view. 4 Imagine 70' lot, 4-BR, Just reblt 2600 sq ft CPA wishc:. lo purchase
OCEAN VIEW bedroom. pool size yard, 312·ba. library/fam rm . home. Xlnt, 1ew. approximaldy Great North end loca· country kitchen & UP· 3.frplcs. 2 s pacious ssoo.ooo
tion ! Charming 2800 sq. graded carpets. Only 7 gardens, ·~ block to pvt. Open house Sat. & Sun of good
ft. redwood. French months old. $52.900 sandy beach. $174,500. 11-4 512 & 514 38lh St. Commercial Propcrt.Y doors. decking & leaded "POOL & VIEW" OPEN SUN 2·5pm: 209 B k 833 3125 ro er. · in Laguna Beach, for
S45,000
Sma l l trailer p .. r k
Oeserl Hot Spnn~s l 1
spalcs + J lraslen; ,
owner s :.spl + 2 sw1r11
ming pool.; Su bm 11
do"n Ualancc w ..
642·2657
552-7500
red hill
real t:y
g I a ss. We 11 known 4 bonus bedrooms. wet Via Dijon AGT. 675-7900 1 t .
1 h l t h . t Waterfront home w/"ock own ong crm inves . ' arc 1 ec · as JUS re· bar in family room, cen· ·---------u t p o l • """ CLE•·1 l'NTE 4 <!Br designed & redecorated & bch. 4 br, gianl patio, men · nn n Y ~,.... " ,
this home. Back yard has ~~~~z~{<;;vehr~~ki~l lh~ NEWPORT HEIGHTS $123.000. 675·4246. <213 > 392·28~ ~;~s·::· i~~~;e~lof.~~ 1
"# I In CaUfemla"
IUILDHS
,Rl-COHSTR. SALi
32-4 Bedroom homes In
Huntington. Beach. 2
Block• to ocean. Now
taking homesi\e reserva·
lions.
UOHS ESTATES
~·2579 (213) S92·5010
HURRY!!
LMM ODffolt or
'ASSUME, ·J bedroom,
bus• Jl•lnt room with
brlek rpte. Country
kltcben. Beat area of ·~a.ack.Watk
I ...i.....:•~f f.
d'ctgP RJJ,11 Estate
. .,W"Y'f"' ~I .• ... -t'c
completely encl. patio: Saddleba ck Valley CHARME~ SUPERB' NwptHts<IBr VACAHTCOMMERC. 1114\ 492-8743 or (213 >
room for pool. A very $94,500. Excellen.t location on 2 ba. beam ceil. liv. rm: Good location. Hunt 832-4239 ~pcc1al buy at $137,500 MISSION VIEJO large lot. 2 Bedroom plan f I 11 of aJ• ss 2 ington Beach l30x290 Sq ----NIGUEL SHORES with upper leve l family rp ~· wa s ,, a. • yo c . HA y E . To. 8 F.
Privacy Plus in this im· REALTY room. All in super neat patios. boat/camper ft. KIDDl~G · An 18 un1 1. . d t. N area. Trade ? • $87 .500 ;nav~te ~~;:~ ~ ~~;~s.'. ~ 837-9500 58_1_-_l_O_OO :;:.o~h~n m~~~e~.10~ sue;: _Myers/Rea~lor 673·6756_ ,rrJ 'Hm~U' ~~~l~l1 ~~~:i~1;·~~~n11l11
baths. totally up~raded Newportleoch 1069 and see 1l Call540 1151. San Clemente 1076 _llJ ~ii\i;rf .... a 1Jvc~1reowner 1nw.1k1•
inside & out $56.000 ••• ••••••• • •• • • • • •• •• •• ••••••••••••• •••••• •••• up this sleeper. Cenl ur-
LIDO SANDS ~HERITAGE ·~· REALTORS Well kept 3+ Den home
w/beaut1ful covered
Lanai nnged with co1-1---------•
orful flowers & greenery.
Only 144 paces from a
s andy beach & short
waJk to pool & proposed
park.
Now Reduced To
Ccnlft'V Viii~ 21. DuhanrDo) le lnHi.l
' ments. 548· 1168 Corner lot, pn me oca· __ -------
lion, attractive bwld1ng. DUPLEX fixer-upper on
All rented Good income R·2 Jot with room for <.1d-
C a I I M E R R E L L dillonal umt~. Easb1dl:
REALTY, 675-7900 Costa Mesa. $43,500
C~ial
250 llwy. fronla~e cor·
ner, Lal(una Beach.
ocean s ide or hwy ..
<North S1dcl Has some
income Rape for de
velopmenl' $532,000
• 494-7551 '*
Pnn. only please. /\t~r
FAST ' Centu ry 2
Special' Duhan /Do~ Ii
Investments 5-18 1168
' I
\
• OAILVP1LOT Friday Januaty301978 ...... u.twWlhld HonetU ........ d ...... u........ A41aluoHh,.,....cl ~atwahu.tln. ., ..... .....,. •• ~ ..........•............ •...............•.••.•• ....................... ....................... ...................... . .............•........
t1 =Dnerf, NoeMIUa......_d lluuMtUwfwWdMld Hi U ..... ecai 3J4 .._.. JZ41 Wnt I 1hr 3HI Me..,...t .. Klt l7" CiitiMIM a1)41 ... Hll_• ..... JP0 . • 2400 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••.••••••••• • ···i:·.::.·············· ,.._ ... __ •L.--..a-1-1 .. Mcr llll Costa MHo 3214 Al.Ktogvadl~cllcot· UMTALS Nke3BR.t~~lb.cpl, l&MoblleHocnonT
• S.Criflc:•I ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••-••••• ta~. util pd. $1~. LA.uMA llACH drpa, DW. R/0 , PlO/ruo. float 11.oep, $1U mo •
... ~3~ 8inhP'!'J~ $315. yrly. L&e. mod. 3 br, P•rk·hke i urroundlnp: %8 condo. h'J)lc tz20 Spraw).lq 4 BDRM. Ir 90S 4:i8t 113·17M. no ren Ava.II. 3/1,IU-1747 ~area. Crpta. drps, z ba, dbJ frplc'. gar .• lBR w/w carpet.a. dJ'lll, 3BR <'Ondo, fncd yd, FAii. Ril. home. Le•· ~lta~ee, VU1a1e Real s..tcaAM J7IO
bl SS4900. 640-7914 patio, laundry. M2 991.S bltrus O/R, lndry, •alll1 ~~i ~. bltns sundeck W /OCEAN e •••••••••••••••••••••••
--------. ---3 Br 2 Ba , stove, rcrn1. bus & shops $1~. Quiet stereo.$275. gar, • VIEW. Built·in ldtcben,
New C.bln, lutchc~etle, dshwsbr. frplc. gar $395 adult$. S48 1098, no pell HOME FINDERS dbl. garaae · ttOO mo Ho.Id ,.,..IMd ot' AMIASSAOOl IMNS
Bath, wtr tank. Compl GBe1oni11 67S-79Z7 64.2·9800 2R!D. Rblllo:... "e. RBUuMllpt·UISn u..fwllbhed 3300 O,AMBJCA
!1n1sbed. Jae 30775 ---· E. Side 3 Br 1 Ha. cpta,1----------1 -''"' lll.M\os Aires, Lucerne "WANTED" home tor drps, "ar, fncd yd. Fam.l· per 2 bedrm, DW, R/0, kitchen, dbl. 1ara1e. ••••••••••••••••••••••• TWO LOCATIONS
Vidley. $7500. Sun LEASE in EASTBLUFF ly. $285. S31·27U cpt.s, drps, paUo, $28S. Quiet reaidenUal acdion. $300,000 Palm Sprinus ~~i::~~
THE
FRIENDLY
Pl.ACE -area LUSK or MACCO be' mo. 963-45G9 963·1786 N S38S Mo, • ~ Mou.a&.aln hm. for sate built 3 or 4 bedrm single 3 t, 2 ba Condo •. pool, rental ree. Village Real In So. La~uu. l Bdrm. Eltate ror leuc. 2Z77 Ha.rbor. C.M.
Running Sprangs 3Ud. story residence. Pool ac· $275 •. mo. C?lean1n1 & Eal•te. apt. Located 1 blk. above $1700. per mo. uurum. 2909Briltol,S A. Enjoy Ute good lire! Uve
l1argalnPrlce494-604S eeptable. Annual leaae secunty reqd. Call aft Coa.stHwy.Walktoahop· S2AOQ.perrno.1''urn ~•54o.DOO amoo1 maanHicent
-prer. Call 644.7438 or 5.30 pm 556-7175. Beautiful Villa Pacific. 2 ping and beach. All util. Incl gardener & pool atreama 4' waf4!rfalls in a R__... ~ 54.5.s427. St ory Beacti t>ouse . 2 pd. by owner. $200llrto. scrvlce. Call Hui W. Apailaa• u.tw. quiet, mountain-like set. Gn.•;_ ' 2700 eos· ta M•ao Dcma Poild 3226 Brs, 11,A, ba, frplc, thru· MISSION REALTY Heers 714·687-0760 days ••••••••••••••••••••••• ting.
3 224 ••••••••••••• .. •••••••• oul ept/drps. 2'r\ car gar, 985 s. Cat Hwy, uaruna or 714·689·9669 an 5 •.-11...... 1.a-..a 3I06 ,_ .. ..L.L.-~-..v --._
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• pools tennis sauna · -• ---· '" ·-· • Close to Dana Point • • ' rt...494-0731 I t bl lal Level allalCa land, wall Sharp, new decor 3 BR 2 M . b b jacuizt. $325. 968·4254 ••••••••-.••••••••••••• poo a ••• s oc
lease or sell, best or Bu , pool. No pets. $395. anoa, 3 r, 2 a, $28S. lmmed. Avail. Uofurn 2 1.JOO ISL£ 2 Br 2 Ba, Oceanfront 2 story luxUJ')' e"' en t •, S t1 n day
te!'dUorconsidertrade First, last & cleaning mo.lease.(714}493.a879 3br,2ba,Fr.nue/d,blt Br, close to Hi St'hool. 0 /W. W/D, nr beach. lbrapt.$5.50.yrlylse,io· bn.chH & ,..tte&. 2
MIUlY ranches an area dep. s.is.5797 B Toro 1232 ln R/O, patio, fncd, total· Secluded. $300. "97-1970 $475 lae. 67~1'4!$ wknds; cl. utll. 675-3823 l wl_.. pools. 1
Plenty or water. Call ••••••••••••••••••••••• IYredcor,boat/RVarea, Collectl-882·3789days. •.-n...--p-t-107 tg _...
ao)'time. Bkr, 546 5710. Lux. Oplx 3 Br 2\.~ Ba, Din Waterfront 3 BR f m·rm nr. all, 2 min. to bcb. Laguna Charmer 3 Br, 1 --~o 3 lac uni , 2 saunas, • Rm frplc pvt yd dbl · • • ' $3S5 8392 Malloy Dr. Ba 2~ blks lo beh •-c ••••••••••••••••••••••• Y--~ llft1 • , · · d1o·rm, 3y, ba, Lake ' • • -Condominiums L B lbo -' .,.. • ll.t.ls gar.$42S.63'J.7091aft6 Forest. Club House, ten· Lge quiet 3Br. 2b .mo . 5S7·1989 or (1} Unfwnlshed 3 425 uxury Apt on a a Quall(L.adull apu rrom
••••••••••••••••••••••• 4BR, Jba, F/R, frplc, ten-Dis, sailin&, $525. lease. Duplex. W/D, frplc. 688-7538 ~•••••••••••••••••••••• r..3fi·e~~a~S:it~1%~i: $220. tomdecoratedl
SIOOIONUS
EUiclency fJ'Om $1"
2 Bt, 1"2 Ba from uu.
.summer " Wi.Gltt al · beach i.I beaut,,ll-ul
*Views of ocean. Catalb)a 4'.Pak»
Verde8 •Lariepiivllttd.ecb • * Reaied Pool-S.Wl&t * A.aaJgrted covtted
paflijnl
•Additional frff ~ •.
•Mald servic-e avail
•fUroitun:avail
NOPE'TS
H•tincJlon
Pacific
711 Ocean Ave
(714 )536-1487 Housft FumislMd ru:., pool, gardener, $400. 540-3828 or S46·23l3 or bltns cpl/drps Coed ~d Mission Viejo 2 Br, equipt ltit, laundry, 900 Bdr,n, l Bdrm It den, l'r\
••••••••••••••••••••••• 640-0008 586-7184. Nr. Ocean. $.300/$325: WHY RENT?. l 2 bild -'-E ~!~i 2
&drl mts.
2
•. b:llh . ...,c garage, poo . c . ""• . Balboa, boat space .,...c ou.s e oae ex cup· M' ed b ~llland 3106 Back Bay Condo 4 Br 3 Fountain Valley 3 2 34 ~ ....... 1 $1200. down could buy no pets. $2'0. mo. avail. Call for viewing. boards. Furniture & Willia:1;falt~Co.
•••••••••••:••••••••••• Ba. new cpts'. drps, ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 block beach. 3 br, 2 ba, lovely 2 + den ~r 3 br 8:1).8T40 549-2988; eves642-4463 maid service available. ---------4~ house E~lklokbay paml.$425mo.545·2241 4Br2Ba,fncdbkyd,\'ery den. Crplc, patio. Compl. homeRoodBlueb1rd Ca· For lse quiet 2 Br Adlt Bchapt 2br gar. Unique s.ma.µpetsaceepted Walktobeb$180&up.No
, P mo par mg., . clean. Children & pets rncd. 9442 Tiki Circle. nyon oa .494-0769 Condo. Frplc, healed &nice.f35o'+util.Jones Of'llcebo~rs9lo6 Summerincreases.Poot,
ti'TS-1200 110-41 Executive wanted. 2 hr OK. $375. 581-4852 $425. mo. (213)530-3109 . I d pool, Nr shops, ref's, Sec. Realty 673-6210 2300 Fairview, C.M. rec rm. drps, crpt. Adlts,
, . bungalow. Security, Spacious new Y ec?r 2 'Fee 1-495-6917 /645·8053 ' ' 545-2300 no pets. 220 12th St. C~2 BH,frplc,patio. lake, clubhouse, by So. 2 Story, 4br, 3ba, FR,4 Br lfome fully crpt Br, Den, oeeanview, · PENPOlNTBeaut2J>d 1 536·9505. 219 15th St, ~~~P-~0$220J ~~~2l~;7 est. Plaza. No pets. Crpk, wet bar, 2400 sq ft. xlnt location. Bltns, n Adlts. Ref's $425 mo. + CONDO, 3 Br 2 Ba. patio. ba sun deck garag'e Lrg quiet 2br triplex. l lh 536-7031.
Y=> .:._ ·--979-0493 $575 mo in c l !rig, schools.963·5985 dep.499·2901/494·5167 gar, dshw, A/C, Sad· ad~lts, no pets, yearly ba . Nr everything.---------B~aP..-insula 3 107 -----gardener.646-2260. B r I b k dleback Vu . pool, cpts, $295.mo.,673·9169. $200 /mo . 645 ·3554, EX lg~. 2 br, 2 ba, dlit
• ..-. .. ••••••••••••••••2BR.fncd.yd,gar.$225 4 r. rp c, s uper ae. LogunoHiC)Uel 3 252 drps, nr schl. $325 mo. 9·5.(Al) poolside apl nr. bch.
---------•I 2BR duplx, fncd yd, 3 bd, 2 ~a. enclosed back yard. Cul·de·sae. Avail••••••••••••••••••••••• 586-8068 Mission Viejo. Corona de-IM• l822 . Adil, no pets. $195 . .. frpk, garage. $235. yd. bltms, frplc. crpt's. 2/15. May sell Aug. $4 p t' . E l ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 bd, 1 ba home. Crps, 536-8362
2BR condo,yd,gar$295 drp'd. nice area, $360. mo.962·9811 {es3i~ao~b:reT.Y :O:X: Spac. Exec. Condo, adj. drps . basem e nt &1----------
3BR yd, children ok $27S Chi Id r e n I pets o k N 1 ed led 3 b ~e ( • be • ~ ~ rsh · Mesa Verde CC. 3 Br 2lh .., garage. 595 W. Wilson. llKE TO llEACH ~acnab-lrvine
HEAi.TY l'0\11' \ ~\' ~ ba. den. Loads of extras, ping. Avail. now $450. gar beaut grounds lge '(} I LIONS ESTATES 3BR. fncd yd, frplc. pool 548·4471. ew Yr ecora r. c .ose 0 . ac op· Ba. frplc, patio, 2 ear n;S -"' $290. 831·0873. 1·2·3 Bedroom Apt$
OCEAHFROMT HOMEFINDERS Huntinclon l e och 3240 I bl~ck from beac h. C213} 243.9003 pooi. Avaii 2/10/76. '$450 ,, i~r_l_s..., 2 bd apt. Refrig, stove, 536-2579 592.5010
Pminsula Point 642-9900 ••••••••••••••••••••••• A2v3
8
2
1I.900n3o w • $4 O O • Mission Yieift 326 7 mo. No children under carpels & drps, laundry · VACANT ( 1 > 48· •-18 No pe'M cA5 ·uo" 0 facil. 1 child ok. no pets, 3 Br, $259, 2 Br. $175 Encl
Only $8001 mo co_mp Me~a Verde 4br. 2ba, 2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• · ........ 'o>'IOV r CORONA DEL..,..AR Loe ed d f . " 3 BR huge corner lot all 556-7874 · 1u al at west en o gar, patio, bltos, Child fu rn tal 7 t 1 /76. 3 car gar patio. $490 mo. • • Beautiful .t Br den lgeSuper redecorated 3 br 2 · 2 Br Townhouse, frplc. Wil&on.$175.642-3697. OK.842-0389/894-lOll Bedroom!> +guest room !>40 4734 · bl_tns. ne wly paint.ed Fam. Rm, 2 sly. Fo~mal ba, eul·de·sae, $360. ,.,.;o. Pool, tennis, continental ------------------
ti(f On sand. 5 Car park iside/out. Cov patio, Din &Liv Rm, with frplc. 586-1195 n..-a.. U ..___ 3600 breakfast. Some ""'ean & •Elm Gardens*
J 1 sharp $350 /mo Ask for $49 A 1 31 16 ..,.....xe1 n•.-n ~ ini:: u Y 2200. /\ug 2600 East Side 3 Br. l Ba. din K . h · F · s6o 5 mo. vaa 1/ •Newport a. h 3269 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Catalina views. Close to 1 Br uofurn $180 mo. MOWlEMTIHG
Meadowlark Golf Course
DELUXE IT?l) rm. frplc. huge yd. S395. 952ei~_.7°1rBakye, ·250lor 963-4S8lor 751·6461 oc: 2Bed 2bath wh'1te stov shopp1·ng •-fine ... Aach Adults, no pets. 177 E . L.vnne Rothell 644 6200 af ...... r r •••••••••••••• • • •• •• • •• · · . • u.: . . t 6. 646·1514 l"iM 3244 Harbor View Homes. 2br & refrig. Pvt gar. N 644-26U 22ndSt. 642·364.S HUGE 2b ert d ' p e t s Ocean v1e w .1---------• OCEAN VIEW . ••••••••••••••••••••••• a, corv en, crnr NEW BREED APTS 4 Br, 2 Ba . 2 car garage, Prestige 2_story 4 bedrm, BEA UT S J . lot, immac, prof lndscpd. 496-3177 2 & 3 B T bS A Baeb. $180. util pd. Pool.
One, two , three
bedrooms available, all
have bltns & dis-
hwashers. Located in
prestigious area. 3 BR,
!plc, 211.2 ba, $375. 2 BR,
encld yard, $290. 1 BR,
')>riv balcony $210 .. wm
consider childr en. See al
intersection Graham &
Heil,H . .8.
3 124 bltns. cpts. drps. $395. fboartmhsal danlndedg rlhm, 2~t Twnhm~ L:r:~e 2 °;rq~I~ $475/mo. 673-8761 days, New Dana Poanl Dix 3 Br. Encl paUo ";~tnse r/p~~: jacl1%Ji. gar. 645-4411
•••• •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 548 0259 548 9882 ' upgra ruou · Ba V~ r ' If 644-2696 eves For appt 2 Ba ct b l 673-7 ' ' I Bd furn, clean IJach cot or . 2 Yrs old. Walk to ocean . 2 sty. iew o go . . : en . gar, a coo 183 4Br Condo & Unit. $325
Costa Mesa
ta&e. Cree ul1hties. Very I---------• S 4 5 O I m o. i n c l d s ~7~f~ & Jake. s55o. 36' Dock 3 br condo Tustin, 838-4949 JETTY VIEW, 8 lge tux· mo. Pool avail. Days
pn & clO:.l' in No pels COLLEGE PARK gardener. As~ for Keith 2\.'l ba. Double gar. $675. 3 Br 2 Ba. frplc, Nr. Lid urious 2 BR ground floor 497·2260. eves494·9819
S210.!H8·0522 3 Bedroom . 2 baths . or Faye 960·2501 o runivParkTerrace2 Br2 545-7645after5. Shops,ava11.2/l /76,$325. unito!Duplexw/jetty& EASTSIDE2 YRSOLD
H.tinC)ton Be ach
3 140
t' a r pet s , drapes , 962-4471 Bkr. Ba Twnbse. frplc, $360. 4 B 3 Ba C d F 675-4727 ocean view. SINGLES 2 Br2 Ba, bltns, d.shwshr,
fireplace, double car Super 4 br ., ba cpls 552·7896&586·8955 R r 1 t 00 .0 • am. PREFERRED. $550. cpts, aar. Ad"lts/nopels.
•• •••• •• • • • • • ••• • • • • • • • • • a $315 th . &. • ' m, poo • eon as, many . p I mo Ca 11 A a e n t • .._ ·tBrHousetoshare.Swam· gara ... e, ·per mon · drps, R /O, $345'/mo. Turtlerock 3 BR, 2 Ba, l xtras.$475.631-0797 . Apcatments Fumeshed . · · • • l blk lo Ralphs Market. K..t IOCJlf'S Rfflty
M0-2601 or 848-8300 mang pool. outdoor BBQ W;iler & gardener 963-4569963·1786 blk lo pool $440 mo ••••••••••••••••••••••• 6447211 Nigel S300mo.S57-6462aft4PM
Sl25 mo.Call675787Jaft furnis hed for these NorentaHee lease646-loSs . ·4BR,3ba,F/R,frplc,ten· Balboalsland 3706 3 BR old CdM Priv 5PM or673·0792 beautiful grounds. Village Real Estate . nis, pool, g.ardener. $400. ••••••••••••••••••••••• deck. gar. j u'st re: B/\ql,Apt. bltns, laundry I~~~~~~~~~~
Roy Mc Cardle ---* RENT A.LS * 64Q-0008 Comp refurbished luxury modeled $400 640 8007 facil. Nr · OC College. $265 LGE Vacant 2 br 2
LOCJlllla Miquel 3152 Realtor 1810 Newport Frplc, 3 br, 2 ba. enclosed UN IVERSITY PARK Bluffs Condos . leases apt. 2 Br, no children/· · · . ~-Sl~5 mo. 751•5561 afl5PM ba: D/W, R&O, cpts,
••••••••••........ •• •• • Costa Mesa 548· i729 ~; 4t ~ ~ ~ ~ _r P9li 3'. ~ ~ ~: i 4 BR. 21tt ba. furn ... ssoo from $390 to SS9S pels Ref's req 'd. $350 mo 2 Part. fur:n. ~AC~ Unu.s. QUIET garden type adult d rps . A 11 · u t ii pd .
Condo. West nine 2RR 963.1786 3 BR. fam rm. 2 ba .. $450 Agent644_1133 yrly 673·5099. No pets, 10cl d ut1J. $165/ . baeb, 2&.3 bdrm npls Brookbursl & Hamilton.
2HADblgar.lmmcd o<: Sharp 3 BR. 2 BA Mesa NoRentalFee THETERRACE --CostaMesa 3724 $180mo.675-6737 1&2 baths. P.vt patio, Agt. No fee. 846·1311 ;
l'Upancy. $325 5527736. Verde Qui et s treet. Village Real Estate 3BR.2Ba ...... $420/435 •BLUFFS, 4 Br 2Y:i Ba, ,. __ 1 M 3824 some w /frplcs pool _846_-'9_38 ______ _ 493-2192 TURTLE ROCK TERR F· m Rm Pvt pat ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ a esa -11.:-d' ' h ' -----CI o s e t o :. ch o o Is . · a · · 10 • S37 50 WEEv & UP ••••••••••••••••••••••• W1UA.U•8 15tanee to 5 op· Spac 3 Bt 2'r\ ba frplc 2 ~~leach 3 169 s375 mo Call Larry 2 Story. fplc. 4 B~. 2 BA. 4 BR . 4 Ba. ~ool mainl & $475. 644-1480/ 830·5050 X. •. g\ CASA VICTORIA ping, beaut. landscaped. dosed dbl ar's Xrnt 1~ -,_.. • 546 5880 · OW. $395/ mo. 963 l\569 gardener pa ad . . . . $1000 22. •Studio & 1 BR Apls Attractive r'ent H lt,b • N · ••••••••••••••••••••••• 96.1-1786. No rental fee. DEERFIELD •TV&Maid ServAva1l ·1,2&3br,DeluxeUnfur. M..ti • · AAt.r. nr uot. r. ew & ·i:i1 June 15 2b~ 503 J8th 3 BR Bradford Condo. Village Real Estate 2 BR. 2' 2 Ba ........ $350 Harbor View 3-BR, 2·ba *Phone Serv, Htd pool or Furn. gas/wlr pd. ntque r •• vac. $375 mo. 846-4296. aft.
SL. No pets $275 Open Pool. encl dbl gar. $325. --3 BR. 2 Ba .......... $425 $5.50. mo. No lease req 'd. •Children Section Adults-No pets Sec. gate 64&-5542 or 631·3003 1_6..:..p_m_. ______ _
Rouse 28. 29th Call col mo.549.3598 . 540.1722 3 Br, fam rm. 2 ba, frplc, WALNUTSQUARE Select Properties, •Low monthly rates Pool,recrm.elevators . NEW & SpaciotH 2.3
lea, 213·377-4640 bltns. 2 car gar, med yd. 2 BR. 2 Ba ........... $325 556-2660 •SS OFF week's rent 525 Victoria, 64U970 Easts1de ~ br, new cpts & Bdrms. Frplc, dsbwsbr, ~----COt:NTR Y ATMOS-Kids ok.Noree.S325.mo. GR~ENTREE Z-Sty.A-frame.3 BR,2 ba~ w/ad drps,patio&garatge.Nr. large patios, encl-
LOCJUfta 3186 PHERE:Spaceloplay & lstPioneer.842·4421 2 BR,1Ba .......... $340 Dlb ga Pools tenn·s 2376NewportBlvd.CM Offleetenrath Sho ps . Adul s, no garages 1 Dli f rom
••••••••••••••••••••••• g ard e n ' 3 I a r g e Rancho San Joaquin · r . • 1 c~o ....,cc 645 """7 1. 2. & 3 Br. Adults, n child/pets. $225. 642·6035 · " 2 BRCotta~c.ocean \'lew bedrooms. hardwood v:cant 2 :t<1·l ~a, newly 2BR,2Ba ........... $550 $425.Agt.548·1290 __,.,.,...,or ._.. pets, dsb.wsbrs, sb·ag ocean.$260/Up.~
SJ00 mo noonng. double garage. ecorale · b garage, 2 BR. 2 ba. den $460/500 NEWPORT HEIGHTS 203 5 Fullerton, CM cpts, closed gar age, Super lrg & clean 2 br, 2 Br. l ba in 4·plex. Next _2~~7 3048 S_!i5 mo. Phone
1
Rod , ~=n ~ 7s:2°88 · mo., Call RACQUET CLUB Lg 2 Br, l Ba, yd, gar, 1 BR Furn, 2 lrg closets, fpdrp_lpc.00B1B_ Q. Gas & water patio, pool, children ok. to shop ctr. D/W, gar.
fer g u so n Re a tors. · · 3 BR. 2 Ba . Pool .... $450 $310. aft 6, 646-1514 queensize bed. pri". N $225 848 lZJO
833 382 NE PORT BE ........... CH• •pys ~lo. o pets. 126 Monte . · .
Houses Unfumished -. 1___ •4 BR. 2 BA. pool, w/pool W ACH dressing rm. xtra lge -'"""'" "'"' Vista Ave. 548-6885. ard
•••••••••••••••••••••••Newport Hts townhouse,3 ma1!1t. Walk to b~h. 3BR,2Ba ........... $3753 BR. 2 Ba, lge alfy r oo m s. encl. gar. 778ScoltPlace CM LgeG enApt.2Br,2ba. ~cal 3202 br.
2
,:i ba. dinin~ rm. Avaal. now. $350. Call 4BR,21'2 Ba ......... $500 kitchen, frplc in Harbor w/storage . Adults only, 642-5073 ' NICE E·Side 1 br furn or Pvt patio, frplc. W/D •
•••••••••••••••••••••••Quiet, nr. sehools, shop· Ralphat~7-6010. __ CULVERDALE View area . In cl . nopets. unfum.Utilpd.SHIO.mo. hookup , & all extras. T.USTI N L I d 4 BR. 2 Ba .......... $375 gardener & comm. pool ----MESA VERDE area. Nopets.645-4411 963-2056.
patio ho~e. a3u~~. ~o~a . ~~~.~·78~4 0;2~~55~~ l~: Sl.lper 3 BR. 2 Bl\, Cpts, facil. $500. Call Sam El Puerto Mesa Home atmosphere 2 & 3 P oo l. tenni s c rt .
751
.
9683
· drps. R 10 $295/mo. 552_7500 751-4952,noans.759-0666 llEDROOM brdeluxeapts.546-1034 DECIDETODAY Il+denw/frplc,$300mo. ~ardener & water in 963·4569 963;1786. Noren· LEASE OPTION· s BR, 4 . No children, no~ts. C •5"' HERMOS"' •••to move into a spac. 3 2Br, lba, $240 mo. Sml
d uded S425 mo tst &4 Br, 2 Ba. family rm, tat fee , ~11lage Real red h'1ll Ba,homeooGolCCourse Pool&Reereallon """" "" br, 2 ba !!pt w/frple, petOK.840-2813.
last + $100. 832 2838 or formal din. rm. all bllns. Esta~ in Santa Ana Hts. $575. 1959 Maple A•e, CM 148 W. Wiiton, CM patio, pantry & pool. Huntington Harbour area
s.t3-0504 $525. 545·7645 4 Br beauty. cul-de-sac, ~.~ ',?,!.; BY 0 woe r . $210. Furn. 2 Br. Garaoes. l...tlful Adults. $300. ~3381 .t plex, 2 Ber 2 Ba, & owner
......... _ lge lot & trlr gate frplc realty ~ • T h Apt E. Side Lux. 2 Br uru·t, unit. pts. drp s , -a Island 3206 College Park 3 Br 2 Ba · • green lawns, purified OWlldMIH dsbwsbr 213.-926-8242 ....................... home. Fam Rm. frpk, cpts. drps. $375. 962·0678 ~ 4 BR, ram. rm. & den or water. Adults, no pets. Just Coftlpleted pool , frplc, close to ----·------
"BR house. 1 :? Blk lo bay $315 mo 751-1555 Nice 3 Br. 1112 Ba, H. Cont. ~ 5th BR. 1 Yr. lease. 2020 Fullerton Ave. 1 AcceptChHd & P•t ~hops. $250. eas & wtr 2 Br, 3 blocks Huntington
$345 P mo l::Zparkang Cond o . $270. Brad, RENTALS ~stcliff area . $650 blockE.ofNewportAve • anc.~ Ceoter.$210.mo.Adults.
ti73 1200 <10·4_1 _ Want ad resul t!> 642-567 645-3147 or 549·9511 2 BR, 1 Ba .......... $375 Month. Agt. 548·552'7 & 1 block So. of Bay. All Amenffees 2 Br l Ba. bllns,--;;; 7942Holt. 847·3373
l111t ~i,,e lier
BMge
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642-8690 2BR S335 crpts, drps , & paint. B 2 BR, 2,Jia .......... $375 OPEN HOUSE Sat 1·5. 230 2BR w/frplc S34S Very clean. S180 mo. No 2 r, 111.z ba townbse, pool.
2BR.2Ba.(furo) .. $400 62ndSt,NewportShores. E.Sidepvt,neallBr,pool 3BR . $395 pets. 786 shalhnar, CM. Near bea c h le H .
2BR,den.2ba ...... SS2$ 3Br,2bahouse.Clean, pnv.&clstoshops.Ulil lnq~renextdoor: 675-089Sor&42..&907 Harbour. $255. mo.
3BR,2Ba ....... S4S0/500 s hag cptg, d s hwhr. inc.$190.645-6697 Hac1endaDeMesa 84&-5230
3BR,2'r\ Ba ... S42S/1100 washer /dryer. Nr . 160W. Wilsoo,ApUl 1 BT, refrig & stove, pvt ---------
4 BR, 211.2 Ba ........ $500 ocean. $375. No dogs.I STUDIO An:. Deeoralor Costa Mesa patio, garage, $150 mo. lrYfne 3144
LE RAISOR
REALTY
673·2654 fum. Pvt pa tao, wtr & gas I MO FREE RENT nr Fair & Wilson 549·3638 •••••••••••• • • • •• •• •• ••
pd. SJ80 mo. 646-5330 eves.
Lease: H.V. Homes. 5 BR. Furn or partly ru.rn bach. 2 BT, 1 Ba, Pool, Bllns, ----------Turtle Rodt
3 baths. fam. rm., 2 fplcs. $160 U l ' l d Drapes. $190 mo. 2 Br, ept.s, drp6, eocloaed Vista Apts
4523 c ampusDr.,lrvme $675Mo.644-8853 Empio:Cd0 ·0 r s:ud:nt. 642·9367Aft.SPM garage,nopets$210mo. You'U enjoy a relaxed · 644-1103 llrestyle in the exclusive
Campus Valley Shop Ctr BLUFFS CONDO 548·63SS $325. Near new 3 br, 2 ba, ---------1 Village or Turtle Rck.
CALL 833-8600 3 Br, 211'.I Ba. Back Bay L --t h frplc, gar, no pets. E. Adult deluxe, 1 Br, D/W, Cho' or 1to3 Bdr i ----------1 view. bltins, $575 mo. uxurious gues se. C.M.642·1603 refrig, frplc, &ar, pool. I ice ms n· University Park new 2 bd, 644-8877, 673·8379. ME~p. gent. No smkrs. No pets. 1975 Pomona. c . 2 story• 2 Bdr m 2 ba, frplc, fncd yd.. aid service. 548-7197 2 Br 111.2 Ba, brand new 642·4435. townhomes. ~lo $430.
erpt:J. drps, pool, tennis. ''WANT ~D" home for Huntinclon leach 37 40 Twnhse. style. Frple, Lge ~~~~kview Dr.,
Avaal. 3/1/76. $495. mo., LEASE m EASTBLUFF ••••••••••••••••••••••• pvt patio, gar, $275. 2447 ADULTS2 Br, l Ba, Bllns. ---------
714-640-0476 before 9am. ar~a LUSK or MJ\CCO BEAUTIFUL 1 br furn EJden 979-1658 $180. mo. 578 J oann Loguna a.ach 3848
or 551-1012. bwlt 3 or 4 bedrm single ts $l70 & Sl80 S . h , Street. Costa Mesa • ••••••••••••••••••••••• story residence. Poot ac ap · panlS $225. 2 Br, drps, erpt.s, 1----------1 Executive wanted. Beaut. ceptable. Annual tease style bldg, pvt encl gar , frplc, pvt patio, adj. 2 BR, l Ba single story. DOcrop a pebble into the
2 br & den, dbl gar., lge pref. Call 644·7438 or pool, sauna. lndry, adlts. shopping. 213.592.5227 Shag erpls, drpa, patio, eao from your Apt.
yd. No pets. 979.0493 545-8427 17301 Keelson Ln. 1 blk beam cell fprle gar Lease. Luxury, security. ----· W.ofBeachoffSlater. New 2 br. 1 ba. bllns. Adults. S2is. 2544 "E '; Matureadults.31755Cst.
Uruv. Pk. garden home. Townhouse 3 Br, 2"'2 ba, 842·7848 adults, no pets. $250. 191 Elden s.3'7·3125 Hwy. 499-283S.
Br, 2\.'l ba, tennis, pool bltns , D /W, 2 ear WalnutSt.613-6041 --5 jacuzzi. $425. 644-4157 carport. Pool. 537 5. STUDIO 2 BR, Crpls, Drpts, Gar, pectacular View, nearly
---------1 Adul H H NEW 2 BR, l'A ba, paUo. acrou from Wilson Sehl. new apart.a. 2 Br 2 Ba . ~rst time lo rent, super Rltr ~.~ oag osp $49 WEEl<L Y garden , adlts, no peu. $165. mo. 546-4484 blk to beach. $280/SZSO.
nice 4 br, 2 ba, cpt, drps, Full Ktlcbeo & TV $235. 642·1603 4!M-3383 or 494.2339
$365./mo 963-4569 NEW BO RT CREST Linens&Utillties 2BRAdlts#19S. Bltnsnu 963-1786. No rental fee. Twobm, 3 BR, 3 Ba, MILE TO OCEAN MESA VERDE VILL:.3 dee. Sm pet? 120 E. 21st. Br 2 Ba delm.e, Ocean·
V11Ja1e Real Estate. Fam·rm. rent $525. or &ecutiH Suites Large l&l bdmi apta, Apt B 646-4M9 view, N. Eod. No pet.t. 1 lease opt ss 727 y ont II d. beaut. interiors open to blk Divers Cove.. 4!M-4060 3 b rm . 2 b a • h u g e ion. 2·5347 oww " lush water land.scapin1. 3 Br 2 Ba lower. nr S. Evea.
Cam .rm .• · 2 r p I c •a . San Cl.......te 327 6 Beach Blvd •t Yorktown Evel'.)' conceivable xtra. Coul PlaH, J'amll.y. No 1----------
+ .. S430. 540·8365 or ••••••••••••••••••••••• 536-0411 Mustseetoappree.$275 pet.s .. $220.545-4991 2Br,2Ba,frpk ,dbl gar.
645-1383. Qualllu 3 br. 2 ba. 2 to $465. 1555 Mesa Verde -t-..a. laundry. deck, $310. , SMALLBEACHHOTEL Dr l v e E a 1 t . o .. p_. 3826 ~lOOor67:t.nOO
BE AU T .. Terr ace Frplc's, xlnt bch Joe. S400 Rooms $23.50 week. (714)540-8871 . Just. W. of ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~.:.. ...
Townhome,lge2Br28a, mo.714i 492·847Seves. Apts$110.mo.53tM056 Mesa Verde Ctr. 0rtVE~Y lr& 2·Bft. 2--b&.._......,....-~ 31'9
lie kit/den C.th. cell NU dl /t t <i •••••••••••••••••••••••· • · x condo 2+2+den, Lge Studio apt acrosa St Harbor • Blvd, acij. to w errace, upa r;p, no frplc, cpts. drp1, $350 11 bale, pool/Jez. Nr. fr heh. Bltns. ·frplc. pool: C.:.f. GoU &C. Club. pets. $225. 675·5205, 2 Br duplex, newly dee.,
mo. MZ-3016 beach/thPC. $390. Furn jacu.u.1 59'l 5813 675-3824 frplc, map fieent view . . $475. 2u-Ho-2024 · · · 28r2Ba,epta &drps, ol h arbo r, boau.
4b8ar' Tf aumrtrlmc r' od!'"k og rm. 2 714492-8260 • L •• a.ec.h 37 41 bltm, dshwsbr' $245 mo. Freshly palot.ed J br • 2 ba, Mariner'• Miit . $39$. mo. .. home. • .... 838 °""1 $22.S incl. ulil. 496-7914 <'fr •u5,•392 days aak for
A f k l tit-... _ ••••••••••••••••••••••• "6·· ........ .... v cross rom par ,c OH --___;:;._____ 960·ll42 Ted orll2·1686eves to pool "tennis cts. 6 mo. Capistrano 3278 S175. Furn. <'harmln 1 Quiet 2 br. l \IJ b• studio. _...;...• ..__....;.-__ _
lie. $500. mo. 1st, Jut. ••••••••••••••••••••••• bach. Nr. beach: UUl pd. Dog ok. Patio. Cpla only. Unique apt/orrtce aulte Spacloaa s br, den, 2 ba. 2
$JSO.aee.dep.&40-8J49 0 ._na 8lurta, Plush 3Br. Resp. empl'd adults. S200.610JoannS48·9573 deluxe t aturH. ocean s/deeks. frplc,"gar. '365
2 ba T ho • CM-4.200 vu, adlla $:MO. 875-5805 yrly A4lta M6-1'7Z 324 "°' own . use. hn· ·Walk to 17th St. sbopplng ..;;..~·-....------tas~l c Whitewater Oceanfront 2 Br 2 Ba, 1ru from these newly Uofutn. Oc Vu lTf d.lx.1---------
lm d
.. Manna View. $4.$0. (21.3} decb, lrplc, mod. kllcb. mu.rblshed 2 Br apu. 2BR 2ba, frptc, balcony,
mac. ecoralol'au.arp2 377-0606 Gar.USO.w/3rd Br,1375. S225mo.548U1l lndry, tdulta-oo pell. bed. 2 bath, de~ charm· TU June 4~5792 $295/mo. 4911·3'4'7 lnl elevat« brick frplc, 4 Br 2 Ba hOmc or beach• Large 3 br, 2 ba, lower -....;..---,,.,..----&
pvt paUo. iantaetlc ot. Dana Pt. Marina $4SO Me...,.ri leec8' 37'9 level. No petJ. AvalJ Hw:l•s .... ..._ 3141
vu .. Victoria ~acb . mo.49!)..3059 ..... ••••••••••••••••• 2 /1/71 Call a l ter G ......... ••••••••••••••
OPEN bse. Sat/Sun 12-S. s-t. AH l ZIO 1 or 2 Br. aduita, no peta .........., orM04980 8pacJOUI new trlplu J Br :.s(~i?~uVlctorua ••••••••••••••••••••••• '170/1190. ~21 E.16lh St 2 BR unrum, Wntaide. " 2 Br unl&4. Start 1t
Fireplace. su.per cl an 4 N ma. 648 l80l 5200. p,o, Seip.~ w/IOdry
NEW I Br 3 Ba Oc ao· br, 2 ba, bhn.t, e rpu, $40 WK UP t&r2 Bdr AStn l'JS...SSOO ~· 54$. wkadl Of
view, 2 ur gar, fncd yd, d r p 1 . S 3 4 5 I m o . Bub. Color TV, mal
$450 mo. lmmed. Occuo. 96.1·._/983-1716 serv. pool THE MF.SA 2 BR. nlce area. WaUc l JU,, new. J19(t mo
Poa1lblt leaae opUon. No Reotal Fee 4U N. Ne•port Bl, N shopptns. Avail. Feb. 1. Adult.a, nopeta.
49'1·10CUor993-2334 vmaie Real Estate a..&. l szoo. mo.•M·1J38 657-3838or~,.
dSS('~.iaf1)d
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.,_., I
.. . .. . . ... .· .· . frld1y. Jan~ary 30, 1976_ DAILY PILOT
~dd lt...Bulld it ... Olaperlt ... Hammerlt. .. Carpet SERVICE DIRECJORY Plumb 1t. •• Patc 1t. •. P1pe 1 ... emo e 1 •• ·.'··-..·-·-!t ... Cement It... Wire rt ... Hoe Jt...Clean IL.Move Roof it... Landscape it.. Tile 1t. .. Trim it...Sew 1t. •• , ...,.1~t.-.. ~P~r·e~ss~1t ••. ~.P~a~1.,n~t~lt-•. ~.N~a~l~l ~it~ .. ~.P~l~a~s~te~r~l~t.~ .. ~F~ix~lt~ .... ._..:=;;...;;:;:~...;;:;.;..::...=-..;;::...;:;:;;:.-__ .::=-=..::...;:.;=::....:=:......::.....;=:..:;.,;:...;::....-!.H~a~u~l~it~ .. ~.=A~d~d-•~·t~ .. ~.P~la~n~t-•~·t~ .. ~.A~lt~e~r ~1~t .~ .. ~L~e~a~r~n~1~t~.:~··~ ~ .
.,..mu ltpGlr . C.,.Bht C.,.t S4tnlc. lledrle41t Ci.,..ral SerflHs IHouMc.._ttg Masonry alntfncJ/P•ri11g PlumblncJ # • ........................• _, ••••••.•.......•..•.•.••...........•.. , ......................................... , .•............•...........................•..........••..................... ···················~,·-.
APPUANCE REPAIR EJCpr Colleao Student Carpet lnstaJlationa & r• ELECTRJCIAN-Small HANDYMAN Homes & •HOUSECLEANING• MASONRY-Tile. brick. HOUSE COATS Plumber. repulr. repllk', , ..
110 ServiceC'aU Carptnlar~ Odd Job•. pal .... Yno est. cun Jobs, maint/repalra. 22 Aph. Conscientious By reliable couple Good block. concrele, ston~. e I n_, 17l4 548 474" M!rvlec line~ " !nil 1111· ·~.
(714) s.49·2422 Ceol borne improvement labor. 645-327( & 64241618. yrs cxpr #233108 5o48 S203 craltsmllJl. 64~·&58. rererences. S3fF1111 uc'd. 968 2SOC Y ...... • r > ~ lion. G. GtdJe)' 642 931.S. .,. &7$-9363 -----,., ~ WeCareCarpelCleaners RreAIWtMS59 9 S BIGCANYONAREA WILLJAMS &SONS WALLPAPERlNG·All ,,_ ...
•••••••••••••••••••••••REMODEL. Com.mer<:l~l Steamcleamorshampoo •••••••••••••••••••••••Installed 67S-9363 Xlntwork-Xlntrefa Masonry/Brick/Block Kinds. Work, Guarun RooflllCJ •
Uc. BabyeltUog in my ,. ResldenUal. Lio, Free AllCI Upbol. All work, Slrlpping, refinishing, 673·22S7 & Stone. Call 581·7829 teed. Free Estimates. •••••••••:••••··~··11• !: ·~
homo during tbe day, est. 645-3'39 auar. Refs. Free Est's. KJTCHENS, Olo rm aw. O L D c; O U N T R Y , Call Norm. 835·3705 or REPAIRS·ALL 1 Yl'Q •
Monthru·l-'tt 631·1929 DRYW•U. 5.. Reas. rat~. 64S-3'716 Chem Clean. 892·6389. CltAl'"TSMAN. General XJnt housecleaning dont Brick. Block, Slone, Tale 675-7412 Reas, rr~ t'~b. he !;it
"' 110A. work. 493 7497 by lady w /t"xperiencc Work expertly done by . ~ W1iill 830-5020 anytJ!b+ =· C.,illltMdt.g Spr_ayed acouslic ,C.••t/Coecrete Gmdlnlng --· Depenttable.Owntransp hc.contractor 962·6712 WALLPAPERHANGER ---.-·•
••••••••••••••••••••••• wallbrd 1ns tal, t&pe & ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••Masonry, concret e, 847-3637 20Yrsexp.Call8ob, Tll•
Kitch cabinets, astm wall wa ll lex. 636-4833/ Custom Brick Work. RdJable expert garden crpntry, pntg, gen han· • MovifMJ 673·8042 •••••••••••••••••••••••
amita, tatUce·patios, boat 636-5037 Pat!o• & wall~ _our &ng. Mo'~amt, sprklrs, & dyman. Pat McNally Nc~;A~E~., ~~llu Jo\. ···~·~~;·•••••••••••• Q u AL 1 Ty PAP 1-; n . CERAMJC TILE . Nejw.& ._,,
nndlg.646-S2.19. specialty. Fast-emcuiot. lndscp g . Plants at 645-8085 645-4538 · MO I . Let 2 expr. HANGING & INTERIOR rmdl Free est. Sml «)tit --=--------1K I T C H E N 64.'i-3512 wholesale pri ces . men move you Reas. PAJNTlNC.i ,u7_1888 welcome536-2426 J C.pe..t11 R E M 0 D E LIN G 646-l072 Exp'd F11gbt lnst'r refs. S45-8583or83J.-J944 ,... --· 1e
••••••••••••••••••••••• Cabinets, Appli's, etc. Free Estimates! Pb1llips Org. Cty. Arpt. Call DAYS WORK WANTED. Pamtin & Pa erhan . Tree Servic~ 1 llEMODB.IMA Plumbing (repairs ok) Cement Co. Patios, Lawn maintenance mow· 979-6324,askforDon Ownlransportallon. Pan.tiftg/Poperin9 ang B~h roll:r spr~~ •••••••••••••••••••••••,
Alt ti •1 Bud.~ drivew~s. Lie., Bonded. ing, edging, trimming, H 0 M E R E PA 1 R Ph. ~·5191 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lie. Bst reis 642.ias6 · Removals, limbing, l.oP-, era ons. re pa rs, 751-5657 a!ler6 free est 962 3408 . Csl Fi I Pl t PETERS PAINTING . ' p I n g ,, r u n I n i .• st~. addlllons, ~aths & c..,.t S..vlce · Plumbing, c_arpcntry. m. rep aces-an .ers Int/Ext-Reas Rates Plaster/R~lr f''fREWOOl> $75 cord.I~
lutcbeoa. Cfl b 1oets, ••••••••••••••••••••••• BRICK & BLOCK MIKE. Clean up.s & lawn electncal, painting All Bl~kc~~l~~cret~~Qt~ts Call Gene at 552·04S8 ••••••••••••••••••••••• de I , t 1 c /bond 11 n :..
patios, cement work. Shampoo & steam clean· Patios, Curb& Gutter care. Free est Call alter· phase s · ~s ts· Bud R r E.sts 640 0464 . VERY NEAT PATCH 642-2624.
Contractor does own Ing. Color brighteners: Wayne642-8673 noon548-2049 64S-G532SmlJobsOK es, · · Pror. Painter. Int & Ext JOBS & RESTUCCO . --•
work. Palombo Const, wht carpt s _ 10 mi.n _ Haull LandscoplftCJ Qual work & reas. f'ree Freeest.893 1439_ · Ge~eral Tree sc,n•10.:.e~ Member B.B.B. All work bleach. Clean hv rm, dm C~MENTWORK GttWral S...vices llCJ ....................... est. 751.(l684 /S48·2759. Hauling. Reasonable' guar 962-8314 & h II $l5 A P a t 1 o s w a l k s •• •••••••• • • • ••••••••• ••••••••••• •••••• • ••• •• . DoL-a..· 646-5848 or 646·252aA~ -{4 · . nn a . . vg rm d.ri • ' H r h' Rototilhng-S2S. Landscap· p "'l....rrl ... G S 15/R .. __,,llCJ ---• . . $7.50, couch $10. chair $S. veways. 646-8120 I DO IT ALL! au ang anyt '·~g, garag_e ing, SOd-Bluegras:. 16h• """' " m ••••••••••••••••••••••• .J..J ._ •• ROOM Add1t1ons , Guarellmpctodor. Crpl "'-t _. Electrical, Plumbing cleanup. Reliable, rast .Sq"" T 9602 70 Lic·Xlntwork837·6824 MARV'S PLUMBING l,t,.. .... s .... , ·~ garages, pauo cover & · -r-.,or service. 963·6452 ·,. •· om · 1 ••• ••••••••••• •• • •• • • • cabinets. Mr. K ero repair. 15 yrs expr. Do ••••••••••••••••••••••• etc. Reasrates.642-4957 ---lst class Ext/Int. Paint· •646·9807 • lill's U.J.-Jst-.
5C7·7334 work myseH • Refs AJteratiotts, rm add'ns. Sunny.J er, 2vels. Fenres CUSTOM D~IGNS ing, Papering. airle:.s NOJOCTOOSMALL ..... ._. -·' -::----------1..:Sl~l--O::,:lO~l:.:_· ______ patios cement wrk. Lie. . . . bldgs. trees removed, So~ lawns, sprklrs, spray 2Syrsexp979·S294 Serving Orange Co ov~
Carpen•r' e ment •· ., .. o ,.,,,86• .... .,9203 Machme & Weldang tame cle,.nup, free pi'ckup patios, covers, remdl'g • llOMESAVERS 20 yrs. Recovering/ ~ . ~ • c . °'United Carp"t Steam .reo-v• .....,.. ·1 bl f · b h M Pl b. &H · / t 1 N brick wor special 0 " ' ava1 a e or JO s op furn/appliances 557-2005 older yards. tree re um ang eating pamng res y int:. ei · n r !" Cleaners. All phases of GERWICK&SON work or limited produc-moval, pruning. Lic'd LOTSA PRIDE & Fair Free estimates. honest& Job too small. gt>l our
adds-remdhng. Pallc house clean\ng. Reas. ADDITIONS-uon work. Contact Lido Fast Delivery. Hauling, contractor. 13 yrs in HB. Prices. Lie/ins. Calico reliable service. Sl0.00 pnce before you dt!c1de
covers, low rates, free Serve all Orange Co REMODELLicBl·3l00.2 Shipyard. !K>O Ljdo Park moving & cleanups . FORD Landsca ping, Pa 1nt1 n g . XI n t . hr, 847·0383 BoCA & Wm. G Ciyko~k1,ow!M!r ~e 631·3575IS3l·9S07 675-9024. . MS-2170 673-6041 Dr. 673·7272 S7up. Free est. 842 4597 962-7817 References 979·333S Mastercharge 646-5910/645·6105. .z.
Apa luu"•t1....,.... Apa; lnrtflts furnished Apcrime11ts f'ournished R...tals to share 4300 Offlce Rental 4400 Rentals Wonted 4600 Los(& Found 5 300 ••••••••••••••••~•••••• or Unfumishe.cl 390 or Unfurnished 3900 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
Newport .. ac.h 3169 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Plush tri-level. coly con-150 I We~tcUff Dr. Nmdo.BUactihl. pda.ptWrsk~g/Ssll2Su· Found: Gray _Male Poo·
••••••••••••••••••••••• do. Pool. tennis, $155. in· N rt F I Ctr di K C I 95 l2 BOYS ANO GIRLS HUNTINGTON BEACH'S ANEST ewp<> m!lnc1a dent NB/C.M 546.8044 e. em o .. 1c. 4 ·4 1
PARll< NEWPORT cl. util. 644·4473. L.aslllCJ Office Space or 831·2640. M1!'.s. V1eJo. 1f you a re 12 to 16 years old and wouJd
APARTMENTS SP h Call on Site Manager "WAN TED" home Cor d ANISH COUKTRY ESTATE LIVING Fe m . roommate s are (7l4) 642.3111 ext 246 LEASI-; '" EAST BLUFF F o u n d ~ o u n g like to earn $20 to $.50 an more pee
0.thebay 2 acres of beautiful park·like JBR oeanfrnt bse N.B. area LUSK or MACCO dog.medium size male. week, with a chance to win a trip to Luxury apartment living w/2 firemen. $166 + utl. B ·1d· Sul 1 Black & beige Needs overlooking the waler . surroundings. Sunken pool. Sparkling 675.6237 1213.634.181 w mg 1 e avai · built 3 or 4 bedrm single · Philade lphia , Cape Kennedy or
Enjoy $7SO,ooo health Spanish fountains. Spacious rooms. ChuckorDan story residence. Pool ac· home.675·ZSJ3. Washington, D.C. and cash awards,
Se t d . · Walk · l ts 480sq.ft. Crpt'd ceptable Annual lease FOUND · 1/21 Cat stn'ped · bf sna, 7 swhnming pools, 1 para e mmg area -m c ose · · bl·k·s and other prizes, I have a JO or llghted tennis courts plus · · Female to share lge new pref. Call 644· 7438 or female. 2 collars. Vic. .,. miles of bicycle trails. Home-li ke kitchen & cabinets. 1 Br apart. $l2S ea. ,2 utal. drp'd., 2yrs. old. 545.8427 . Geneva/Delaware, H.B. ·you. If you are willing to wor k hard.
putting, shuffleboard, Bedroom unfurnished $220. F\lrnished No smoke 847 -3376 o Call S56-82'15ors92 3405. Miscellaneous 960-1233 learn respons ibility and the value _.,. ... #
croquet. J unior l 's frp, $240. 2 Bedroom unfurnished $250. &tH908 Rentals 46SO Lost: Fem Queensland money, ca 11 Mr. Scott, 549 -8956 .
$229.50 monthly; also 11 Furnished $275. RM mate wanted to shar :KJ0.1100 SQ FT deluxe of ••••••••••••••••••••••• Heeler. Blk/grey. Tan Transportation will be furnished. Thi&. ":•
and 2 bedroom plans and AU UTIUT1ES REE 2 sly house w /view in hce. No. Costa Mesa. TRAILER space up to 36'. points. Sml, short hair. is not a paper route. 2 st.ory lownhouses. Elec-Walk to Huntington Center Mission V. SSl -8839 !>40·2200 -S75. + uul Costa Me:.a. San Juan Cap area. Equal Opportunity Employer tric kitchens, private d &
patios or balconies, ADULTS MO PETS Luxury Bayfronl 2bd, Hwpt Bch/Ai~rt 548"6173 Rewar · 839·7071
carpeting, drape ries. LA QUINTA HERMOSA 2ba. rum. sub gar. Pool. 25c P~'ll SQ F . Business/Invest/ 1213)375.1627
1 ::ttt~~=:~. g~U~~a, 16211 Parbide Laae 1714) 147-5441 NB. Sl60.
642
.
6742
. ~~~~::;~~a~ha~~d i.~aa~~ •• ~.~ •• ••••••••••• ~C::::: ie!.~ ~~c1. ~f c~:.~: ~~~~:'.~'~.~ ••••• !!~~ ~~!~~·~:! ..... ~· .'
maid service. Just north 1 blk. S. of Edinger ·, l blk W. of Beach Share NB 2 Br house. l incl d recepl. arc.t. 2 pvt Businns San Clemente. 492-7988 0 ELIVERY .... of Fashion Is land at Blk to beach. $110 + 'h offices, 2 lge open area~. Opporiwlity 5005 --.
Jamboree and San Joa-util. 675-2091 3 pvt restrooms. ha · •••••••••••••••••••••••FOUND: Gray kitten,
qui n Hi 11 s R 0 3 d . Fu • L-...1 Room ate wanted 48r intensity lighting. 780sqft Fem. Manners Pk. area. ROUTE Telephone (714)644·1900 Apoi tn.enh Unfum. Apa; lute11ts rn•1~ Hill .d h L ' B h of warehouse or storage. *LIGHTING * NB. 714·646-8651 Eves.
forrentalinformaUon. ••••••••••••••••••••••• or Unfurnished 3900 s11:1 e s!. u~~· C~li 644-2672or548-3159 Custom lamps &shades_: FOUND: Lab puppy 2-3
Me-wport leach 3869 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 494~0 1 · · repairs & re-styling anti-mos . old. Male. Beach & UTILmES PAID ••••••••••••••••••••••• IN COSTA MESA Share deluxe orhce. nlin que lamps Same loca BLOCK TO OCEAN y r 1 t h new bldg, or frwy, o Y . . • • Or a n g e, An a h e 1 m .
3 BR 2 B 1 td & near Irvine & Newp0rt oung ema e o s are $65 mo 835•3660 lion m Newpo~ ~ach 1.995.4706 Ev.es.
Motor Route delivery route for Daiio(· .J
Pilot in Newport Beach, afternoons 3: 3e ·
to 5: 30 and Saturday and Sunday
mornings. For details phone 642·4321.
ask for Mr. Salatti. U :OOto 12:00
Deluxe Private 2Br, 2ba. . • a, new Y crp ' with male 2 br beach · for 18 years. Pnce 10cl. Lge walk-in closets, tiled. 4 Ors from the C f . I $20 000 ---------bltns, garage, cable TV, beach. $375. mo. yrly house $65. mo. 675·3431 4200 Sq l at 42c sq t. m11entory : on y , FO u ND : y n g Fem.
Adujts/no pets. $350 mo. lease. 1194sth St. 838-7405 R 1 h h Newport Bch airport Graham Rily. 646-204 Calico cat, Spnngdale &
239 esp. ga to 5 are c arm-area, across from new -Warner, HB. 847·0671
oo yearly lease. See l or673-7 1ng Bal. l sld home golf course. A/cond &1---------•l----
apprec1ale. Call for appt NEW 2 Br 2 Ba, 100 yds lo w /same. 673 2383 or jarutor mclud . Suitable BALBOA ISLAND Found; blk short haired
Equal Opportunity
Employer . -.
SS1-6042after6PM. bch, patio frplc, bllns, 675-8139 for arch1tect orengmeer. Well es tablis he d Lab mix male dog, v1r.
$350. yrly 646·6102 DISTINCTIVE Garages for Re-nt 4350 Courtesy to brokers. women's specialt¥ s~op Eu c 1 id & H au rd. Penonais 5350 Help WClftffd 7 t ~ LASBRISAS
Easy Living For
D~riminating Adults
Wbo love the beach
. to appreciate our
-OCeanview
4 bd, 2 ba, upper, ocean
view , steps to Bch.,
balcony, frplc, garage,
new paint, crpls & <I.rps,
$500 mo. 548-1300 eves.
AdilttAporttnents ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mullen R ealty, 3400 forsaJe.Xlntlocat1on . GardenGrove.554-0546 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
Beaulifol new develop· Garage for rent . 1959 Ma· lrvme, N.B. !>40·2960 SOMERS REALTY F~d: Collie/Shepherd, Lose your cool with your
ment with all amenities, pie Ave, Costa Mesa. $25. lusinns Retdal 44 50 * 615-4000 * m 1 x. ma I e. Young. children? Help is avail&·
clubhouse, pool, tennis, mo. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Garden Grove VJC, ble24brs.S49-8939 gym. Great floor plans, f 8Z7-6062
AVON
•Beacbwithin sleps 2 B r 2 ba upper .
•Security e1dg westcurr. $290.
private patios/decks, 600 SQ FT store or o fice DR!JSS shopforsale. Top . WHAT SIGN ARE YOU?
beamed ceiUngs. Avail front. $155. 646-2130 or C.M locat!on . Paul, FOUND; red Doberman. Work s hop forming.
furn or unfurn. 679·3709 831-1400 or 645·5000 apt remale, about l '1'z yrs old· Available to 12 peopl~. l
ST ART SA VIMG
AGAIN
•Private patio or balcony 645-6764 ff'Offt $2 30. month LAGUNA BEACH 218 b Y S a ° C I e m e n t e from each sign or l.odiac. Sell quality products~· •
555 Paularino,CM ;/, .~ r~'-'--c.a.--or Offi'c es LAUNDROMAT Hospital. 498·l585 Discussions on creativi· nearby Terntory. No e.~ . •Pool & Sundeck
•Large parking area
•1 BEDROOM•
Lse req 'd-Sorry, no pets
5515 River A venue
<al Seashore & 55th)
For appt. call 642·2566
EASTBLUFF-2Br,2Ba. v.-....---... ........,... Bl d t I t 'o h . & per neces:> Xlnt earl\ view, pool, adults, no (714)549-1302 ,,1;::-....-w InSurf&Sand Shopping On busy Beach v ·Found Tri·color collie. Y, re a 1 ns ips ings, p /t.ime. C1tJ ·
pets $350. 644.4767 Npt Fry south to Baker ./' a.t•to< Village. Ample parking, Grosses over ~.000 per maJe abl l '12 yrs, vie. Pers 0 n a I e 0 e r g Y • 540-7041 or Zenit h 7_ 1359.
right at Paularino. ./'Fut• .+.w ~ popular hotel on the mo. Owner relanng. Call Bushard & Indianapolis _644-:-~2223r.;~· :;-;;;;:;:::;-:--!~~~~~~~~~
SPAC. 2 Br, 2 Ba, duplex, Sales orrice open from ./ x.roa -..ic. beach. 175 rooms & 2 Century 21 H.B. 962-3082 •Grand Opening•
or bch. ref req'd, adlts, 9AM to6 PM ~::;..-.,.::,:1111 r estaurants provide Emery Realty846-330l A-PARK MASSAGE BABYSITTER. my home.
$29S mo. 496· 1S63 pedestrian traffic. No u~ w t-...1 5030 Lost, 1?0 g hair gray tom-$5.00 off massage w /ad own transp Cor 5 yr old _:_--~------t S. Laguna 2 Br-I Br·Bach. ~Y an ru cat, vie Palisades. Cap1s. d 833-0893 LlvENearTheBeach' common area expense Mon-Sat llam·7pm chil . · San Jue111 Oceanfront pvt bch, Annual leases avail. Con~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Bch Reward. 493·1306 • 1---------Casa dei Sol c-i_.___ 3178 • f *225 499 2"'A 3 188S-B Park Ave, Costa B b t t Mat ..,...>~ gars rom • . . un tact : H .W. Cronralh 100 RETURN FOUND : ''C harlie''. Mesa a ys1 er. ure BeauFrli:!_ ASdlu9ltOApts ••••••••••••••••••••••• aft 7PM & w~nds. $140 up store-offices cpts (714)494-6574 o Blk / ht I h . d r II • 646·9944 person, to watch 2 boys., ..... N 2 BR 2 B C d URGENT ! Partner w ong aire • u 11 :30-5:30, 5 days Wier
21661 Brookhurst. HB ew • a 00 o. Rooms 4000 drps air bath. 17301 STO RE-O FFICE-SHOP needed with $10,000. Cor grv·owHn mabolercaBtl.v97d9·23
5
7DO. Hopelessly ill? In trouble? Own trans. HB 968'°886
6651 Crpts, drps, bltns. S275. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Beach Bl, H.B. 842·2834 ,..-1c ar 962· mo. 496-2123 or631·1821 Newport& Bay \.;Cnler prime R. E. Investment. Fwy • · · Walch Channel 40 night· _E_v_e_s_. -----"-T'-, ----------• R oom s $25 wk up . FtlEERENT 2052NewportBlvd.C.M. 6 Months_ p_ayo rr. · ly,9pmW signofr.
YRLY 3 br, 2 ba, by 1 Br, w/deck, $250 m o: w/kitchen. Apts $37 .50 Offices as low as 35< per 64b-1252 644-2228 Secured! Pnnc1pals on· FOUND . Male Afghan. Bank.mg
beach.Nearnew,bltns& Br. $225 mo; Bach. $17 wk up . 548·9755 or sq rt. Mission Viejo & IDEAL SHOPS ly.968-0888or968-0337 Vic o f Warner & MASSAGE NE~~~~~r:JNTS
garige.$390.548·4063 mo.utilincl. View. Yea 645-3967 Laguna Niguel. 200 to . . W t S2000 $lOOOO Busha rd , F.V. Call HOTEL·OFFICE-HOME E S . ·&L .
round , easy ~alk t o.... t/K . CM $25/ :1000sqn.831.1400 avail m the mall al the an . , on · 968.1376 BY APPOINTMENT xpe~ avmgs oanor 3Br,2Ba.yrly2blks lo beach. 332 Encmo Ln ...... en .pnv. Fact ory , Cannery sec';lredT.F.Shortterm, · 6:00PMto4:ooAM banking employee.for
beacb$350mo.' Call547-8017 wk&$60/mo.up. FREE RENT! Newport Village, N.B. 673·9606; lopmterest.Quahhedpr· FOUND Shepherd/Collie 540-GIRL head tell~r . new a c-
642·3188 • S48-5954or55G-0058 Beach at airPorl. Uhl & 673-9393 I ty . can contact V l.P al mix, 6 mos, male near counts PoS1llon, w/~av-
3 BR, 2 ba, gar. patio, Af::!~~1~~shedl900 Now renting. Singles, jan it or inc l Garden , UCB. P.P. before 9, aft 7. Estancia C.M. 557--0079. Personal P rob le ms., mgs & Loan Full time
-"'"1Wlll-TV suitesfrom$4S. 979·6666. SMALL COMMERClAL 673-6506 Want to talk? Tra10ed San Juan Cap ar.ea. Xlnt block to beach. No pets. •••• .. •••••••••••••••••• kitchenettes. Pools, · SPACES for Shops & Of. Lost gray male poodle, Tele. couns. free. ABC <•o mpany benefits. call
Yrly. W. Nwpt 642·l603 THE EXCITING Daily, wkly, monthly. •1 MO FREE RENT• fices. $65. mo. 548-7249 Mort~s. Trust 5035 red he. #11162. Ir found . HELPLJNE645·2222 for appt 496·7202
P•LMMES• APTS. ~~~l1t7s0 only, no pets 1·2·3 Rm. oHices from (aft.Fri.) Dffdi call 963-2296 BRENTWOOD 2BRor3BRPartlyfum. ,.. ,.. .....,... $135 pe r mo. Near . . ....................... mpoymeftt& SAVINGS&LO,\:--.
1 House to Ocean MINUTES TO NPT Room for rent in very lge airport. No lease req. For lease. pnme location· QANS , 800/ Large white fe~~le Gre~t Preparation An Equal Oppty Emplov Call 673-7180 BCH. 833-3223 9 Til noon retail store. Sun Juan L up to /O Pyrenees dog IOJUr~ V!C ••••••••••••••••••••••• •
Bayfront 2 Bd, 2 Ba. Pvt Bach, 1&2 BR. & sunny all new house, in Capistrano, 1200 sq.Ct. 1 t TD L s-&>/, o;. or Brookhurst & Ellis 1s Jobs Wanted. 7075 DAR.MAID, Beer &. W1.nc
u..a. •-. *"CJ\ yrly from$180. CdM, kitch & bath ExecutiveSuit~s 493-7139eves. s dToDonL 4 0 losl.968-5475. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Rehef.Attracl.only.Call ..,._., • pier. ~· · Adults, No Pets priv'gs college student 1 . t 2n oans M 1 11 f 646-5544 Dorothy 979-1935&644.·4510 1561 Mesa Dr. pref'd. Nd Ref's. 64-0-867S Ful. se~v i ~e s ui es Industrial Retd.. 4500 Fairest Termssinre 1949 Lost: Calico cat "Moki" a. e nurse ava · or --·--·
DUPL""XONTHE (5 Blks East of Newport available m _airport area ••••••••••••••••••••••• 5-.a.&1-Mt C from 603 Kings Rd, NB. pnvate duty. Rers. Call IEAUTICIAMS
W.,.ATER Blvd.) CLEAN room w/kitchen <N. B.) Startmg $200. Call untC"r' CJ. O. Call 645-3602. Jack 496-7635
546-9860 privgs. Employed pre · 83J.3640 AIRPORT 642·2171 545.0011 Mgrs w/f ror top ,., NB
3Br,28a,frplc,wetbar, ferred.Nr.OCC.545~107 ... -~--_..._/ LOST: Reward·3 Yr old Salons.540-8582.644--0661 pati<>, boat dock, partly 60~ PER sq FT 3200Square Peet ~..wtenn fem. cat, blk & wht.
f urn. No kids/pets. $475 ES 0 RT Furn Room for re nt 1617 WESTCLIFF-NB 19'1'z• Per Sq. Ft. Pen«toJs/ Dana Pt area. 496·6799. -Selective Household, Beautician, some clien-
yrly. 675-4421 Cost~ Mesa. N~ce quiet AGT. 541·5032 2 Air·conditloned offi ces, Lost & FoUnd Nursing & Family Care tele for new salon adj't
home for worktng man. ample parking. •••••••••••••••••••••••Lost Weim/Pointer, F. Personnel cent to Gate 2. Lagun.
Westclifr 2 br, l ~ ba 64Z--4794 MARIHERSMILE Hcrborlnvest.Co. Anncutcements 5 100 answer s to Theres a EmployerPays Fee Hills Leisu re World.
townhse. Adults onJy • no R-& lo_... 4050 S(f)UARE Realtors 6 7 3-~00 •••••••••• • ••• ••••••••• chocolate brn w /spots on 4500 Campus Dn ve N. B. 1_830--064-0 _____ _
. pets. $300 m o. 1728 Bed-_.. u.-u 2700 W. COAST HWY. Wanted. 40·60 yr. old chest. vie Newland/ Call 546·1505 Beauty Operator.
ford Ln. 548•7533 Avail LIVING ;;:·;;~·;~::.;;::::~Now leaslng _g round 2000 Sq. fl. of~. & men,_tenn1s play.ers AdamsTue.SJS-8221 Chauffeur ·C_o_m_p_an-io_n_,· Hairstylistw/followtn~.
March l . changeforcareof elder-floor commercial sp~ce warehouse space direct-w/ava1l. ta me mornangs Persoftals 5350 light cook . Bonded. Top pay.642·6164.N.tl ..
2Br,2blkstobch. ly woman. No cooking. 1000'-4500' and ,upst~1~s ly ac ross from OC 552-1293 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Helen.548·7197 1ir ... UTY OPR l $280 orfice space 300 ·2800 m Airport. 549-1480. D . Jc' bl ., -----1 ..,.. yry, . Callbefore9am/aft.6pm th be 'fl b 'Id STOP supporting tall nn mgpro em . Combination d r iver, F /lime. No followiol! 642·3188 II!-.--S 170 49&-32.:JS • e . ~ulifu nehw wh · New bldg 2500 sq. ft.. M·\ bw.ldinas Reduce your Call Alcohol Helpline C / t
OCEAMVIEW
rnnn mg nsmg rom l e as es f L d l7< . ,.. • 24 hrs. d 835-3830 house boy, body guard & oec. omm guaran eo.
3Brspaclousduplex$425 Oakwood offers the
mo. 64M964 rmest tn resort living al a
...;__;_ ________ 1 price you can afford.
For congen\al elderly of the old. We offer the wtn ° c. ge rear r. . insurance costs SO% to a ay cook, will travel. Chns 645-lOSO
female.CostaMesa.$225 best exposure, trafric sq.ft Days 540·57 lO, 75'7o54 l-557o SPIRJTUALREAOER tianman45.reL963·4707.liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii9.,.
mo. 545·695%, s.49-1079, rirculation and parking eves. 646·0681 L _t & found 5300 Open JO AM·lO PM B & G• I
WCH R d r oc iliOS d · II lfousecleanlng, cleanups. 0~ Ir S
2+ Den, 2 Ba. frplc, Walk
to beach. Yrly $375 mo.
'752--0644 an. 6.
Huge 2 br, 2 ba, Nwpt
Shores. Sharp! Garage.
· $300. 548·1869 or 642--0282 ·
WATHFIONT
2 Br/28a
2 Br/den/2 Ba
Lovely vlow & charming
•1rde a . Boat stlpa
avaUable aoon. &73-&414
BALBOA BAY CLUlJ
Stlper dehax 48.R bomc
0Ytdooltin1 Bay. All nu
crpt.a, dlniDI rm, 30' llv·
lnl rm. ' patios. 48A. central 1lr con. y rly
; ltue. $1.IOO mo. Eves
m..'1030
675-0334. on · ea Y or · Office/ Indus trial space. •••••••••••••••••••••• A vice on a matters, ----------•cupan cy July 4.Call LagNiguelarea400/3000U>STBlack&tanremale 312N.ElCaminoReat, trans. Rehable. 5 yrs. lOtol yearsofage.D;sl
There's $1 million in Gufft Home 4150 544-2111 s. F. Nr Frwy 831· 1082 ltoodhound Ans to Cleo. San Clemente. For appt. Rel. 645-3750 _____ 1 ly Pilot delivery rout~ t' f ciliUes .. ••••••••••••••••••••• 4929034 49291.36 maybeavnilablcm yoir ~~~.;,: ~~8~ED TEN: Loving care for elderly OFFlCEsui\eapprox.. 1200 Sq. Ft. M-1 space ClllLlndy,fi.45·77ss. · · Nc~!~ere&mcfe1ri!aFe!n~. area. Earn profit for dt·
NIS COURTS. A full time male or tem. Bal. diet.a, sq. ft. w /encl. pa1laoi wt front office, lge rear Lo~ male blk Cocker FOXY GIRLS Christian woman ~2· liveries & cash, trips qr
activities director who homey, paUo. S44-3833 Com~tely furn.. re door. $189.50 mo. 629 Sp~lel vie Placenlia & OUTCALL·MASSAGE 8311962 ' . merchandise for .nJl
plans parllea, BBQ's, YCICGltcNt l...tds 4250 :raft g ~ab~ w ~~P~ Terminal Way. 540·5710 Wll*>n Reward. 645-1834 MODELING --·--·------new subscriptions. 'ck
trips & more! t'ree Sun· ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mee.it.ere~~ Ideal to; ~ays, 646-0681 eves. LOS1 1/""'/76 Siamese Home-Of'flce Stud o. HMp Want~ 7100 Information pleas~ call day brunch. • 1 665 Pl ti • -· !)42 3l69 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 642 4321. From Sap PALM SPRINGS 2 BR. 2 contractor. Burg_ ar FOR lease 1 acen a Cat, male. longer hair, · Accounts Receh•able Clk Clemenl e -San Juan
Pl beautiful sto1lei1 Ba• house. Sips 6. Ayall. alarm. Ample pa rkma Ave, C.M. 2400 sq fl $275 Vic. '°Iden West & Ed· PREGNANT? must bave general office Capistrano area, •call
l&u: b ed r oom apta: ror Bob Hope Classic & $325. mo. 23111 Nwpt 646·1164 ingerHB. 847·3986 Eves. caring confidentia l skills. $450 mo to st.art 49.5-0630 and Ml"slon Vit·
furnished II unt urniabcd. Date FesUval. By week. Blvd, C. M. ~·2616· Costa Mesa Newport REWARD! counseling & referral. WilJ train. Airport area. Jo-11:1 Toro rea. call
Rcntafrom$170. reasonable. 1·639-4938 DECUTIVE SUITl urea. 17~ Pomona 900 FOUND Irish Setler. Abortion, adoption & Call f)oank 833-0123 SSl-6310 . ._....lo._. 4100 The ultlmale 10 u -sqf~bldg +fenced yard. Fem 6 mosold Adams keeping. EqualOppor.Employer
Model• open 10 to 7. •••• ....... •••••••••••• c c u t i v e s u 1 t e • Call &U-3940 __ & Mago lia HB. 96S-09l.? APCAR E ~7 ·2563 ~mnoJ'!~eOl'•c:~~c'; WANTTOAVOIDTHE. Prestialous Newport Sto.Ogt 4550 Found· t 1 Af h MASSAC'iE
avattable. Month to llP.OFF AITIST fk~~~r v'fe!~ua~e~J!~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• beige. w\~~~=d c:11!~: FICiJURI MODB.S
JDOOlh occupancy. CA.1.LHOUSE-MATES under•round par kine. Storagul>ace for rent. Son ta (>.u Hts area. •ecORTS
andfindsomeonewbola Full quality services. S25~:r:n· 54S-S807 ~ Oakwood
Garden
Apartments ............
860 trvlno
trvino at 1 &th
&45-0550 •
. Deoenclable eau 644-llllO FO-UN-0-sm_.U_ lb_ro_w_o_p_up-· Ou~co~~~~t~'1iuctlo Pe~5=.~~~rin1e
TvSblreHousln1SWllh o Pl unusual orfico ....., Wmhd 4600 PY Near \<illybrook 631 •• 11 benefits. Mu"t speak ac m"4114Askfor1im .~~. d~luxe features,••••••••••••••••••••••• School C411 uft 6 •. , _____ ·-~----1 underst1nd Eo1Jl11b.
oc:ttn vu,$340. 675 SOOS MaJe 29, wants to sbar~ 5'57 0659. TM G...tt. T e. 631-<1700 Selling af\Y\hln1 with a rtnl with Male, Female -ouc 1---------
0all)' Pilo.ti Cl111itled Ad Slnale Office located In Rm m 1& t e w I o P •rt · Found Black ~male caL tn~\h:~n~.~~~':!':. AUTO MACHtMIST
'-• gfmpl matler • mod m center. Utll rum. Prerer CM areo. 979-8661 Vic Warner & Uoch, c 1183$ 4.Sl9 .. SU-1123
just c.all 6'2·5178 mo. $4().$206 all 4PM. II 8 848 0731
1
Boat Ma nut act uri na •CaltiMtA.aH--~ •M•••• ' ........ c_,. .... , '
Experienced (
• Tt tic HI I s.-. i
Apply In Person
EIJCSOH Y ACH1'S
1931 0Mre Ave,
Santa An•
_ _.
I
DC DAILY PILOT Friday, January 30. 1978
~~~~·~:? ..... ?!.~~HMpWa11ted 7100HelpWanted 7100
~~~ ..... ?!~,~~::'!:! ..... ?!.~~ ~'!.~~~ ..... ?~!~~~~ .. :.1~~ ~~ .......... !~!. ~ ............. !~.~~ .
1 ladles ' 1pd bike sas. J a mootb Jrl.sb Setter •
'~··············································
M~id wuted, SeulUf
Molel 1661 So Cout
Hwy L.B 494-4892
SALES MANAGER TRAINING TELEPHONE SALES = rr•::~~r b~it.~i5 ~725. ~ Newsp~per promotion company ·has MEN WOMEN Call u..ws alt' pm. ~
JUNIOR SALESMAN
10 To 15 Years Old
operungs for people with vans or station on weekenda. MERLE Great Dane. '50.
aaons E · $1.SO to $300 . 0V9 20 • s b I s b AKC, Cemalt. 1 yr old. Ma 1 e u r 1'' em a I e w ,. . armngs or more • c .,, on urbur a H., shota. 831.(IO'fS eva. 1
WarehouH trainee per week . Good chance for Have run selling Orange County's BUrH, Id toad. Many or 919-5811 days." ask
Clun working cond advancement. Must be able to work leading newspaper along with an xtru. Free bike rack. ror uz 1
Quality control, sh1ppin(! Wlth teenager~. nus IS not a paper important charity drive. 912.0llO to.You & receiving. Call Cor UCEU~ .......... u.11!!.S C • 1041 •
Earn $2()..$40 per week working after
school & Saturdays. Huntington Beach
& Fountain Valley areas only. Leave
name. address & phone number on tape
recorder. Call 536-4298.
Http Wcwtted 7100 Htofp Wanted 7 100 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
lookkfffM" fTypst DENTAL ASSISTANT
Lal.ly over 40. refined C ha.1.r s 1de . exper
w / per~ 0 11 3 1 1 t y . ~ecessary. N B. 644-9211.
Knowledge of bookkeep-DENTAL ASSISTANT
rng. & typmg. Steady Cha1rs1de (/time. At
pos1t1on w , one of the least 6 mo's expt:r. Some
finest decorator studios Sal. HB. 846-3540.
1n N B. Good Sal & ---------
future Give refs Wnte DEMTAL
Cla:.s1fled ad no. 634 , r c Enthus1asuc person wiU·
Daily Pilot, PO Box l~ ing to undertake front &
Coe.ta Me~a. G.l 92626. lx:k ofc dutJes for enjoy&·
Doy:. 14_17 lo s tuff & lit: ble dental prac. 552-7800
Los Angeles Time:. Sat & .!:..'_l_ne_. ______ _
Sun. 546-4481. 979·2198 Dental Cha1rside Asst.
Busmess man looking tor
part tame a:.sor1ate
Earn $5000. yr 645 1182 -----
Cafeteria Worke-r
Exper'd. 1-1111 or part·
llme. Call 642·1050.
DENTAL ASSISTANT
P/Ume. Sal open. 3·5 yrs
expcr . Accept
respons1bihly. show en
lhusiasm. 752·6733 for
Appl. Concept Media. route. me ~~-r• •
C Two three hour shifts. ......... 101 540 4606. a 11 Mr. Scott at 549 8956 (or ...... :-.~.;•••••••••••• Mual find home ror a
Managemc-nt--appointment. I 0:30-1 :30 S:lo-1:30 Vlvitar 200mm lens. ha.rd ~:s-"~U black cat.
PEOPLE PERSON E O FULL 01 PART TIM! case polarizlna& tilter. .
Exec looking for part· qual pportunity Employer Come in pref erred, or call Mike $75. 968·29t.2 art. 5:30 Germ. Shep/Husky male.
t 1 me us soc i ate 1 n Johnson. 250 E. 17th Street, Suite O, ftA.-1040 needs lge yard Ir compa-
wholesale supplies. 1''ully · -646-4100 Costa M.noa Ca --r nionship 549-3558 eves capitahied. 673-2223. Help WCMt~ 7100 Help Wante.d 7 I 00 , ' _,. • · ••••••••••••••••••••••• . . --••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •PET WORLD• o gd home, 2 yr otd
MAHA.GER Rii:ALESTATESAL~ R K INDUSTRIAL Help Wanted 7100 Yaa...W..teci 7100 Pll Bulla, Pekes. spayed/shots fem. Lab
RESIDE .... T A""fL'NTlON •• • ·~ Cht.buahua , Poodles, mix loves klds afCec· ~ A "' Newport Beach Realtor ••• ••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• u ., • ., .... o LICENSED Shlb-tzu, Ma ltese, G. onateoou.·l.JVO
We reqwre a well pre·
sented Hu. .. band & Wife
team to manage our Llnk
Storage Units. Costa
Mesa. Capable or meet
ing people, handling cash
receipts, able to do han-
dy man work Possibly
Military or other retiree
Residence supplied. $450
plus. Call Linda, Mondliy
for appt 640·4630
Ll
. has dev~loped a new ~Young lady barber to Sh b d p 100
1----------
UN CENSED, comput~nzed system & Secy/sh/Magll tosa25 work w /same in pro. ep er • oms. Free Afghan adult
GETTHERED marketing pro~ram for llookkeeper to$736 greulveshopin Laguna. mixed puppies. Stud ava temale,gOOdw/klds. TRCEtA~TR!:~TNT•. leas111Jl mdu~tnal build-Secretary/sh $675 Bar. lie. req'd. Pam, :OC~:i~~-~~Ope· 171!: 892-6431
... "' ings. More h~tings than P/tGen'I Ofc $2.75hr 494-7075 We tr:un you to sell any reallor in Orange Jrvine Personnel Agency ----------1 eves. S31·5021. l lonr & I , ....
home:. with an accelerat County! For confidential 488E17th Costa Mesa .. _...__ IOOS Yorlde. Female, 4m~ M2·97l7.
ed l·ourse that starts im· mterv1ew call R. Henry, Suite224 s.2·1470 --·~· mediately H you are m· Pres Worldwide Real· ~ ----••••••••••••••••••••••• very small. Springer Spaniel, rem.
teresled 1n earning big ty. 979.6666. R. E. he. re -.w:w--.v PUILlC AUCTION 962·8717· Good family dog. Free to
money from the :.tart. quired. Service Station Allen-MANY ITEMS OF FlNE ALASKAN Mala mule good home. 842-8344.
get 1nd1V1duahzed free dant, exper'd. Day & JEWELRY , ART Pups. AKC champion Fumif..-. 8050
trainmgonlheJob1none R.E.SALES Eves.Joull&p/time.Ap· ~~iCTS, ANTIQUES, stock. M /Fem. Pb .••••••••••••••••••••••• tt~~/e~~·r~~~~ ~ ~r%~~Po~f!~c:: g>::~. ST ART THE r:~~~~~~ :.tation, 17th & PHONE FiVtt mfo~~ 751 0956 Shop & Sav~. new & used
& beverage & ban
4
uets. ty, call for further de· HEW YEAR BROCHURE.64S2200 , GOODNEWS C ~rn •• gifts •. misc.
Oceanfront hotel in tails. Arlene. (714) RIGHT' Service Sta. Attendant, A diet scientifically W1lson s Bargain Noolt. Laguna Beach. Reply to 848-8742 • Cull or p/lime. Sal SACRIFICE Marine Anti· balanced tor your dog. SCSW.19thSt.C.M.
Classified ad no. 633 c/o SeU Homes +comm. 673·3320, CdM. ques. Telegraph, old No supplements, les
Daily Pilot. PO Box !560. REAL ESTATE SALES Learn lnvestmHts Shipping Room help sbhrasips b~beell wC/hheinavy waste. Free·delivery. **I BUY**
Costa Mesa, Ca ll2_6_2G__ Join # 1 Eam More. . . needed. Call 540·8878 For junks m::i~~c ;;. of s~~ Scienc~~~fo~uct:s Good Used Furniture le
MA ...... ICURIST T~I R alt -Our res1dent1al d1V1s1on appointment. marine running lit.es & Appliances-OR I will " • e ~ hsls and sells more in· th b & Min D h d /\KC SellforYou. Needed. Merrell 's Hair •Free 15 day traming vestment pro""rties thun STATISTICAL TYPIST 0 er rass copper · ac sun s • .. ~ .. lites. P .P.642-1527 blk /tan, 8 wks. o ld MASTERS AUCTIOM
CAR WASH Dental Secretary Assist. Design, 2912 E. Cst llwy. course most investment offices. RECEPTIONIST 830-304S an. 6pm HELP WANTED El Toro· Lag. Hills area. _C_d_M_64_4_·_77_27 •Cad11l~c car prograr:n Personal Training, Video For busy N cw port Beaut Antique Kok en 6464686 & lll-t625
F lime only 20+ Exper'd only 4 Day wk. -----•Hawau, Acapuko lnps Training, Prestige Of· C~nter C~A firm. Atlrac-Barber chair, round Afghan pups, AKC blue-Aft 6·Call 142 .. I 542
appt.
5 hrs daily. Mon thru Fri
Starting pay S3.05hr. Call
Mon thru Friday 493· 7555
METROCARWASH Salopen,830-1130 Marine-Me-chanic •1s t place-sales in fices. Full Facilities, t1ve girl w /good back & seat. $350. blk·cream show or pet, .
---1 Immediate employment Orange Count~ Property Purchase Plan, t ele phone manner & 54().5589. beautiful pedigree For Sale· Dbl bed $30, cnb
2950 Harbor lil. C M. DENTAL ASSISTANT for ri ght pt>rson Com •lsl place-IJsllngs taken Fr 1 n g e Bene f 1 t s. good typing skills. will 642·5885or64S.2235 ' $30, dresser $1S. Call
CASH IER Carwa:.h, Cha1rs1de, part·time. ex· pany benefit:. Steady in Orange County Superior Commission, train good typist on 17th Century Chinese en· 548-2030. Newport Bch area. ap per preferred. ideal work. Expr. only need •lst place listings sold io Dynamic Organization, stat;istica!. Call 644-8244 graved sm bronze urn AKC male Dobie 51h mo
1
----------
prox.
35
hrs per "k in working cond. 645-7580 or apply. Apply 111 person Orange County . Learmng Environment. for 1nlerv1ew. from Ming Toombs, sac ears cropped. wormed. Select Used f'Um. d udes Sun
644
.
4460
551·.5033 Anchor Manne Co 1171 •1st place advertising 1n Full time licensees who S T hn. $350. PP 551·3360 shots. Champ bloodline This Week's Specials: Back Bay Dr.NB Gahf Cahforrua will work for earnings in lereo ec 1c1an, exper 496-S171 Oak Pedestal Tbl $350.
Church Nursery Attend DINNER COOK •1st place-adq~rl1S1ng in excess or $25,000 per in home & auto u.ruls. 42" RD OAK TAILE ----------• Oak China, $425.
Sun AM 9 15 noon. PM Masseuse-Up to $10 per lhe US A. year are encouraged to 556-0421. 3721 S. Bnstol, $310 646·3652 6 French Oak Cb.rs $85 ea
7-8:30. Wed 7 8 30PM EXPERIENCED hour We tram. •lsl place winner RELO apply for a pos1t1on with SanlaAna.Applyl2·3. ~~~ raU1IYA~Ms 1635SuperiorUnil4
673-1018 LouisanaPvrchase ___ c_a_l_l556·67l6 HomeBuyer'sContest our In vestment s CH GIGANTIC \!'~fJ\"I L! IV'/'\"'I CostaMesa 5411-7951
Dana Pt. 493-8811 MAT URE WOMAN , If unlicensed. lel us as· Residential D1v1sions Telephone Sales CLEARAMCESALE r OpeoMonthruSat
CLERICAL ~~~~~~~~~~I p / t Im e t 0 we 1c 0 me s1st you in obtaining your Call Don Berman Prest· AM I I ~EEP Typing, 10 ke> adder b> W t s~-ad newcomers & contact Real El.late license. C<tll dent. QUA IL PLACE . & PM shifts, part· UPT060% OFF DREAMING ATTENTION· Do you
touch, & phone s. 0 you an ° '"c-Y merchants. 1'1c'<ible hrs. LEE COLLINS PROPk:RTIES INC . time. Hourly wages & THE BIZARRE 1'M AW/'«.E... have quality usell ... 1 Pert TI-Job ., comm. avail. For details furniture you would like
• e e Prom Pl e r o I Pl """' · Need car, lite typing 962-5566 752·1920 "lewportBeach 6423260 eas ant work fro.m 547·3095. ---------call,540-0301 ANTl~UES tosell,butdon'twantthe
ho f
RETAIL Los Angeles Times bothersome phone calls
me representmg me -------375 Su 11 2500 Newpo Blvd, CM
• ~
1
1
]
I
CLERK are a f 1 rm . Good Mechanic, lite duty Class OPENINGS FOR· 1 n ower, CM CALL6'6-03S6 or traffic thru your
Filing. Ille typing, inven· telephone personality A Req'd. Apply, Brown·s ASST. MAHA.GERS home? Let us sell it for tory control. Growth needed. NO SELLING! Shell, 990 E. Coast'Hwy, With expanding Nat'I Jr. 2 Chinese Vases, T'Ung ! you
00
consignment. Call 1
position. Hrly rate. Guar. salary. Will train. NwptBch. Specialty Shop. Advan· The Reuben Chih era. Coral w /gold I forinformation.548-7951
Phone Frank 546-7172. Call collect. (714)822·4046 M h . f 11 . REAL ESTATE SALES cement opportunities, design. 16" high. $1000. 1'wio beds $30 each; tble,
----(wkdays 8-5) ec amc, u or p/timc. RESOLVE generous benefits. Apply E. Lee 67~18 & chairs $20·, refrig. $20.
Clerk Typist/Gen ore Exper. necess. Top pay. in person, PETRI ES, 147
Send resume to Box 4.SJS, DRIVERS WANTED Frlnge benefits. Apply, To make '76 your most west minster Ma 11 , Applianc.ff 80 I 0 536-2029.
lrvioe,Ca.92716 Men orWomen Shell Stal1on. 17th & successful year. Ask us Westm. NowTaking •••••••••••••••••••••••
Cocktail WaitrHS Mu.<1t be 25 or over Irvine, N. B. ____ to help you plan it and br· ----------Applications For: Small but cln older apt.·
Apply In Person M-..ai,al Offa·, .. Assist. ing 1l to exciting reality! R.N. with surgery & RR. size refrig. gd. cond. $JS.
Bowling Lanes. Mission Yellow Cab C'U.. ..~ Call Hal Cox, 540-9922 exp. Moo-Fri days only. DAY Eves673·3181
Viejo. Full P tT Ex pr, RN or LVN w/mteresl & P/time. 842·1426. apply in per:.on. Contact 112SlSlaterA\'enue exp . 1n pacemaker For sale: Gas range w/
Mr. H 1 ck s 0 r Mr
1
___ F_oun~.~u~Va~e_:.__ follow-up. front & back Sail maker Looking for BOOKKEEPER dble oven. Gd cond. $100.
Powers. 586 5300. 25402 DRIVERS office 997-2224_.____ bandworker. Exper'd on Call552·1298
_ Marguente Parkway__ (Cross.-Country) MODEL OPPORTUNITY ly. Call 548·3464. F /Lime, lnclud. Wl<nds Frigidaire Washer &
Dryer, white. $125 .
Refrig. 16 cu. fl. West·
ingbouse, $150. 646-6794
Comparuoo Needed, Live-No special he req'd. Girls, be a centerfold in SALES/CANVI~
10. care for elderly lady. MacGregor Yacht Corp major magazine No exp "'1 Apply ln person only
• Lite coolung, HB . 1631Placentia.C.M. nee. Top pay. For m·i---------•I Hourly wage against Mon&Tues3PM·SPM 963-3541. terview wnte Ad #640, REAL ESTATE comm. Selling quality 151 E. Coost Hwy ---------Exper Fry Cook only. Top Daily Pilot P .O. Box product w/good reput.a· Newport leach Westoghse re frig, lg
COOK, exper·d. Bayview pay, xlnt benefits. Swing 1560• Costa Mesa, Ca . OPPORTUNITY ti 0 n. Li 0 k 1 el t er capacity w /ice maker
Manor,JSO W.Bay,C.M. &graveyard shifts. App· 92626 Well localed RE office. Firebrand Foods, Eq IOp book-up, late model like
Ca.11642·3505. ly in person. Denny's Jr. ----------Opening for 2 licensed t640-87~~l~O~------r-~~u~a~~po~r~E~m~p~lo~y~er~ nu,645-8941 1600 So. Coast Hw y, MODELS-MASSEUSES salespeople. Your own -_..;..... ________ •
Cook needed for new Pre Laguna Beach. No phone Figure Models, Escorts desk and phone.18 Years SALESCLERK Tooling CarTM>nter, Mi'll l O Cycle Wh irlpool, school in Irvine call II 1 0 -..,,.ed T N · 1 8 k ·r-washer&gasdryer,cop. ca spease. """' . op money. ew msame ocat1on. ro er For photo store in C.M. Men, Boat carpenters, per $250. Kenmore
552.7331 i--Food..;...._P_r_o_cklc __ t_io_n __ Studio. 631-3811 ~dvertisfes your dlistin~s Ideal for homemaker. Hardware Installation Washer $65, Hotpoint
COOK -Raleigh Hills Helpwanled. Processing Need t~spon. babysitter . ;ab5~yo~~~ vert1s· Work while the kids art men . Exper. only . ElecDryer$50.Guar/del
Hosp., 1501 E. 16th St, & packaging. Langlois wk_. n.ites. Avocado & n1 · . w~ ·IDS. call in school. P /time, flexi· Willard Boat Co. 11200 546-8672
NewportBeach.645·5707. Frozen Foo ds. 2975 Fairview area 631.2922 for interview. W.E . blehrs.646-2364. Condor,FntnValley Lachenmyer, Realtor, Tappan bltn Dbl Oven &
COOKS/KITCHEN HELP Laguna Canyon Rd, Lag. eves. 1860 Newport Blvd .• SALES TYPIST 60 wpm ac· Surface Unit both work
Now hiring full/pl·time, Bch497·1741. Nurse·Charge, RN, full Costa Mesa, 646-3928: STUDENTS WAMTED! curate. 8:30-5pm. 1595 great. $85. 64l-7282
days or eves, no experGeneral Dentist looking time. 3·11. Hunt Sch., eves,673-4577. P /lime inside work. Monrovia Ave, N.B.
nee. Apply Mon-Wed fopasstwhoalsoenJ·oys Conv.Hosp.847-3515 1---------•l Eves'&Sat.2llh brsptr 548·2888. Auction 8015 2 5PM wk. $2 per hr. Apply In •••••••••••••••••••••••
TbeGrlnderRestaurant desk duties. Exper with Nurses Aides 3·1lPM. ex-ReaJEstateCareer 1027 N C •UndetwriterTrne* •PUil.iC*
<Formerly0d1esl insurance & collect1ons per. Country Club Conv. ATIENTION person, o. oast $800. Must have 2·3 yrs
l400W.CoastHwyNB hn!!espfsualr .. X ·,!l3 Y cert Home,549-3061. Hwy, Ste G, Lag. Belt exp & knowledge in the *FURNITURE* ~ y 84..-0638 -------3·7pm. terminology of real
CreatJve person needed Installer' Tra inee Nursmg Attendant, ex-LJC'D·UNLIC'O SALES estate. mortgage or sav· *AUCTION* 2nd 1nco mc Part/full perienced. Bayview ClassesStartlmmed. ings & loan. F1exjb11ity •TOftite7:lOPM*
ll me Sh U l In S Ok Female. Over 21. Depen· Conv. Hosp1'lal, 2055 Un'1que Secur1t S t• nee lmmed h1're1 C II DEALERS WELCOME
497-3400 Weekd~ys . dable. $2.50 per hr. 1615 Thurin Ave, CM 642-3505 Complete Course/2 wks Home, Apt, sJs. ~~1i1m& Con.trot Career E~plo~-AJabama, H B. 9·5pm. •Special, personal & • LARGE A d 1· d h I 1magmation determine menl Agency, 556-8505.
CR&DIT·New Accounts.1-------"'-----Part-Time eves & Sat AM mvivi ua ize e p. income. Hrs. nex. (714) f'tlrw. Dispersal
Af1f,ec .• Gen'l Ofc. Part· JANITOR Perfect for students •OnlheJobtrainmg 452·1000.Call aft6pm 1---------•I Repot/laMruptcln
'IUne. S3 per hr. 540-1500, Pvt country club. Day Inside work. Guarantf>ed *FREE• UTOTEM & Consi t 9-4Mon·Fr1. work. 40 Hrs per wk. In· wage. Call Al, aft 4pm. •ManagementOp· SALESWOu.&u * *. gnnM•
1
---------• rt t '""""" Beautiful sofas, lov tervw lOam·ll : 30am S.A. 542·9013 or G. G. po uru ies Sal + comm. u1n 3 yrs EMPLOYMEMT t o h •Ch II ~ C t u• esea s, cc c airs Mon. 644-5404. 530-8460. a en mg urren exper. Chic appear. tD OPPORTUNITIES rockers, recliners, corf ----------1 expansion program. 11 Janitorial Maintenance Phone Order Desk. Gen •To80"!c commission se contemporary Euro· 1''111 or Part-Time & end tables. Pier & Gun DAY COOKS&
PAYIUSBOYS person~ needed. office skills, gd typist. 1 •License preparation pean fashioos. Apply, No Exper. Necessary cabinets, tables, man
Call 673-2700 girl office. No smokers. Day or night classes. Apropos. 28 Fashion Age 21·65 Eligible style chairs, dinettes
---3121 Redhill, CM. Apply *Free 10 day training Island, NB. 644 ·2652 Ask Go To The Nearest barstools, lge China, pie Apply Jn Person
Mon thru Fri 3-5pm
COCO'S
Laguna Hiiis
24001 Ave de La Car Iota
Equal Oppor Employer
Laundry worker wanted afternoon only. •Top office locations for Joann. TIC TOC MARKET tures & tamps. Color CdM ,\rea, over 18 only. -------=------N L For Applications & Info Bl.k/Wht TV• . o 1cense necess. Secretary-7 yping so. sh ,,. exper prer. Hrs, 7 :30 to PRl ... TER t 1 OR CALL (714) 642-7702 Lov.av I""'-~-. " oapp Y· 90. F/lime. 11 Mo's year. ••r unn _.. hfis!:i~f~i, $2.50 hr, Expr. ltek/ABD1ck. A/C Fordetails,please Apply ~guna Beachi-•T•ic•T-oc•S•y•s•t•e•m•s•,l•n•c•.• Dressers, chests,
facil. Lag Hills . 830-0890 Call Unda 558-7555 School Iistrict, Person· ----------• annoires, mirrors, bunk
LEGAL SECRETARY . nel Ofrict. 494-8546. VAITERS•/WAJTRESS~ beds, waterbed, new &
Deliverymen over 21. Exper., gd skills req. Pubhc Helat1ons RECEPTIONIST/ ,_ Now hiring Cull/pl·tlme, u s e d s t o v e s •
perm. p/t. Early mo Salar) commensurate p bl• GENERAL OFC. SECRET ARY EXEC. days or eves, no exper refrigerators & washers,
LA Times dehv. to C.M w/exp. 496-0411 U IC Needed immediately-San Ju•n Capistrano. re· nee. Apply Mon· Wed dryers, dishwashers,
homes. $2SO mo. Call Newport Harbor Yacht searcti & development 2·5PM. chesttypefreezers PLUS
541-1740. LEGAL SECRET ARY Relatl•OnS Cl ub. Good telephone firm w /large govern· The Grinder Restaurant LOTS MORE MISC. ----------t Exper in tax, general voice w/accurate typing me nt c 0 n tract & (Formerly Odles) DOM"T MISS OUT
IFYOU
bus, & probate, salary req'd. 40 Hr wk, Wed dyntmic potential is l400W.CoastHwyNB SAVESAVESAVE
ope 752 1211 JI d lhru Sun Contact Mrs. haveaservicetoolferor __ n_, -·------• ea Ackerman,673·7730. see _ing top level ~x· Waitress, exper. f/time. lt.emsSubjectloPretale
goods to sell, place an ad M A I D S r or Sm a 11 ~ve secretary· Desire Sid's Blue Beet. 107 21st We honor BolA "MC
in the Daily Pilot EXCLUSIVE Motel. California 's largest Recepl.Jomst. Cull lime & shi:<1 ~rsoo w/xlnt Pl.NBafter4pm. MASTBSAUCTIOM
• Cla.55ilied Section •· •. Hours can be arranged. L•w school, HeklnCJ part lime. Richard 0 ~nhzalion_al :kllls. 2075V2HwptlLCM
Pbooe642-5678. 494-8521 -.....ui-..a 1-..11 .. 1..a.. • ....a to Ouellette Salons, 20 ave mm 0 5 yrs Sell idle items 642-567 lll-9625 646-1616 -;========::L=========·l ..,.._ .. wv -· -Newport Center Dr. fXP in . lop l~vel fillr:sltloncnHeoclof NpBch. ~ecretarial pos1llon. Altction 80 15 .a.-.-.&.1.....,. IOI SEEK & FINlt HUMAN ·soUNOS
A S E N M B E I G B A W S H E E Z E C>
W A T A I L T A N R E P S I H W 0 N E
E H S N K S H R I E K L A U G 0 S M U
R E P C H U A G B R E A T H E H A 0 P
PHU YAP M HAT N·E LS 0 NY 0 W•
0 H T G S T E L T S I H W U W I S Z B
C B T A N C R Y E L P 0 T S H A W S 0
Y L E S I R G R 0 W L N G 0 I P A N T
BOR HFFINSULOK
U W A S 0 S 0 G l G G I B L R R
DAB UR ATLEGIRAOf,A
S U P E R J MP 0 L 0 H SW A s·
N I H R 0 G B I L N E S M A C K l
A S N A R L G J Q U A H G U A L 0 U
D MR G E·P AT HUG RY 8 Al LU l ......... _,,..., ..... __ ._......, ..... ~ ......... ( -.ti .............. ., .... _.Jy ......... ,. ...... ... ..... " .. -................. ," :
Chuckle Laugh Sn1ff •
,Gup Shout Snore
G499l1 S1gh Whisper
Gulp S1ng Whhtle
TOlllOrrow: Hodge Podg "HA"
P II R I ti Someknowledgeoflegal, .--.nvu u c • 0 ons. RECEPTIONIST 1 scientific & real estate •••••••••••••••••••••••'••••••••••••••••••••••
Sho8ld be experincH Needed for Newport Be helpful. Good memory &
In pnparin9 press r.,. blllled company Typin accuracy for detail are
leoset & features, edit· & 10 key pref era bl . requisite. 70 wpm typing
I bll ti 646-5076. Ask for Ster · g & 100 wpm sh min. re· 11 9 pu ca ons-Ball quisite. Xlnt benefits, catalcMJ & bl-monthly pay commensurate Mews bull.tin. Dlr.ds RECEPT /GIRL FRI w /ability & ex per. Posl·
MatlOftal Ad•erll1lng Type 50WPM, appl in tion avail. immcd. Call
Protr••· pl•ns & cus~:-.:~EAj John, Wheels. Jnc. for
c.oordhtate1 MW st. CARPETS :fi~~'.U/493·1153 or
deftt ori ... .tlon pro-18480 Pacific
9raM, Ualaonl with Fount.ala Valley!Ca . Secretary/Receptionist .,. General office work.
A.huanl A11oclotloa, Rental Center needs DuUes include. typln1t.
Mper•lsH CJr•d.,ote young marr~e man. fllins. etc. Appointment.a ~::;••nt s taff. Neat appe r 4' Moo lhru Fri. 8 ·5. ht•olv.....t In handwriting .r d App· 8W7·7S23 H.B.
Cowfty r.tatlo.-. ~e-N~~'ktt" Y. 1930 --s.c..t--· _ty_G_llCS-d ___ 1
n.t be•fth & tt.xlble _ _...:. __ ,;__-' ___ .,. lmne co. nffds f/Ume
....... ......_ S...... Security Guard. Must
la9 r••9• $665 to · have stale l.D. card "
SIOO -mo. SM ,... own weapon. Call Dave ..---OPPO UNrTY RouM, 979·2880.
-to J. L Callfts, knocks on wheo you
W • s t • r n S t • t • ~e result ctt.1n1 Daily Secy, &ec/&A99f
u.lvtnlty. P.O . lox Pilot Clor-. ified Ad~ to Ful Chg lookkffper
4 l I o, F• 11ert0 n, reach the ran Ac Coi.st I 000/o Fff Paid market. 1J R I d A 92634. Mo pa.on. calls Ph e 642 ".,..,8 i ,. n er• aency ""'-a. >N• 4020 Birch SL. Ste 10.
...--· NeWlJC>Tl Beach 833-8190 LO.I. Call for appl/ F.atab '05
l
JAN 29th Thru FEB 1st
CALENDAR SHOWS
PRESENTS THE PASADENA
INTERNATIONAL
ANTIQUE SHOW Ir SALE
Now in its Z7th Year
SEE..cllUY
Brass & Nautical, Mass-Phoenix
Galleries of New York, Authentic B.C.
Antiquities, Angel's Flight Tiffany
LampS, Bronze Clocks & Art Glass
from Chicago, Maine's Collector's
Items. • SY Assoc. Dealers from
North/South/East/West & Canada •
~ l·IOPM.S adq IJ.WM.
THE PASAD'ENA CENTER
lOOhtf.._SfrMt
Ad Admits One or Group. $1.SO each
Seniors & Students, $1.25 each
Couch, mtchg. Jove seat
$350, coCfee & end tble.
$125, lamp $45. 962·2235.
Ho Waist Seam!
Tht lump's 1 arut WWI for little I rla to hop1 llllp llld 10 on aunny sprln1 mysl Whip uP this one In ureftet p0lyuter
knit or cotton blend -chtclts print, solidi '
Printed Pattern 92161 Chll· dren'a Sins 2, 4, 8, 8. 10.
Silt 6 lakes t % r•tds ·~neh.
Send $1.00 tor '"" 1Ntttm. Add 35' for Nd! P'tt•m fOf flrat>clau 1lrrnall, h1ndllna. s.Mtlt ..........
.............. 1 ........ m w ... ••a....., Twll. N1' IHI I. hW
MM& Al I Ht. D', Siii
... IT'ftaf&' •
DI ru btw ..... II l'll a
'8t.twl ""' s.... .... "'. .., ... r.......,,....
CtWer-df• .... luh1e fw '"' ..... .. ,.. ........ .... .,. .... 1
s.w + lllt '"' -1'~ I hutn't . C I -1M
l1Jlltlt r::~. = -, .. ............ _ , ..
4 pc King Size Bdrm
set. $175.
675-9577.
Medit. Dining Rm. Table.
w/lvs & 6 chairs. $800.
Game Table w /4 chrs,
$200.551-6247
His favorite
7049
tx,A6aB~
FvrNN... 105 ,....... 8050 G•OCJt Sale aoss MJ.ullwoo IOIO"MlsctOCIMOQt 1 080 Offlct f'Undtur. & I Friday January 30 1976 CAil v PILOT IJ7 .
• ••• • • •• ••• • • • • • • •• ••• • •••• • • ••• • • • • • • • • • •• • • • •••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• •• •• • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • •• • •• • • • •• • • • • •• •• • • • • • !qiulprnent 8015
M•pl.e dretstr & mlrrw, Walnut burl Fr. Prov Childs de k I drcucra, ....................... loGh. rower 9040 loots. Sail 9060 Trollet"t, Tra•el '110
ctdu cheat. XloL cond. dttsaer $200. Full •ne Mlle item•. 1710 Iowa <.;ompletc-Stl•norcltc Em ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• -:I
'J'Sa.8IS20a1\.Spm 1pool bed, nu spr. Ca St..,CM.Sa.t ... S U.._.CLAIMED ba..:iy & 1"1Cord 303 Die. l8' South Coul Bay Boat, Coronado 23, loaded, U"l'ravelTraUtt. • •
ll&tt. '15. Le• toll t.bJ. " ti.1t&n1 /Tranac:r b1nc xlnt cood, oew cov~l'll. radio, NB ahp, 1133 c&&e Slee , -u,
llorin1J. mutt h1l bo\dt $40. L1e potted Se10 SUper Sa.Jo. :5 Fam. AnU· PllSOHAL PIOPIR1 f SALE System, 8 yr1 old, &d $2COO, SC0-3440 dll)'#. wlld)'I, 4~17• wk.ods, ss:;o Pl ·89C·216l9
fbull of ha.m, malc:hln1 dbJ palm $100. $40-3171 ques, et ot chairs, dock, cond .• $4~. OLi vettl Ad· Olarlea Thomas · ·
ed, nt1hl stand 6 neutral drapes 101x20e, SAT. THiii WED. ~Machine. Syn. old, LIOO 14, xlnl cond railer, Tandem. a•
dreaaer, S uni\ combo YOVINO · Cu.atom dl41J>.1 baby ilems, a· sofa, ad cond , UO. Call $14.500. w/traaler. Fully loaded . Camper attuched. Sips 4.
bookshelves & cabtueta, set. cu.atom bunk bed• chair, nereo atutr, used ALLSPACE "49104 J2'Chri.aCraflConnl~ Ask111~ $99~. 833 0204 ~ial wtr, 1c.-box/stov~. din tbl & chra, lamps dr•nr w/desk bookcue brick$, clolhe:J, bike, Twn v.S's, bait l<•nk . ev~:s & wkncb. Use for bikes or Dunc
ete.S.-1774 ' combo, other household dishet, mlac. Sat. 1/31, Exec. Desk w/cbr, $95. VIII" radio, sounder, --Buggy.~ormakeofr.
Ki . lt.ma6'2-2766 M . li372 Sierra Perla, lMINl-SB.F STOUGI WAl.EHOUSlSt Seely Dei.k w/chr, $85. D/F. b:.~·~:rdwr:u:~ iu~: Moviog, must sell bedrm Irv., Turtlerock Check Protector, $4S. Afl cover. full covt'1 :l 9' Doi.ton Whaler 1970 Terry Trailer 20•
oew$J25.Mc·l'132 • set, 2 malcbina niSht Saw tbll' .. 8 /W TV, Coll 8564 HAMILTON ST. Postal Ma c h . $100. ~~:'r!~·~inled,~~~ $75<1 Llkeoew675 3S56 ~Cl~~: 759
---------islands & c hest ot c:lubs&car,&mltc.Sat. (CornerHamilton&Newland) 642·~evc_s _________ _
Uke new, Gametableset. drawers. 3 unit combo 10: 30·• p . m. 1G732 Wl!EICDAYS 1-7 ~S .. , IBM Electric 'l'ypewriter. $2,850. IJdo 14. XJnt cond. New Auto Se.nice &
COil over MOO., S.U $300. bookshelves & cablneu, Edge waler Lo. H . s:tlS 2515 Margaret 28' Rostrop Cruu;er Ullm;,in ~ulls, trlr, com· Parts 9400
8 pc: din.rm. set, cost dinette sot & chra, Harbour DrNB 548·1316an)'time. Chrys.6cyl,ba1llank, plete$1200.Callwkndsor •••••••••••••••••••••••
$700., aell for $•U . larnps.548-177• MhctllOMC*s 808 Mlsc.Uaneoua 80,0 Pets 8087 nupaint,eug. tuoect. 111.tGprnwkdyll,846·6240. u.s. Magi. and t.lres ~
842·°'87. ,,._._Sale 8055 B)lu vet f!Ofa $50, Rattan •••••••••••••••••••••• ;t••••••••••••••••••••• AndersOn's 646 -!IOOO Udo 14 'wttrlr •· "Over, Dodge. Call 548·41hi'f-w -.,,-oveseat $25 26 gal aquar •• •• ••• •• • •• • • • • • • • •• •• .,. ~ Sora, Uke new, s:;oo. ••••••••••••••••••••••• $10, bathin~tte $8, other WANTED ew a•ra~e ~upt>Q#r~. ~onkey, Macque altered 26' .Bayliner Victoria. ~eg '76, ~050. Call aft alter6 PM. Greg. •
value,Sac$250. PUIUCAUCTIOM misc. VW .Bug (eng.. TOP CASH DOLLA waJlhanglfl.lbunkbtid•& ln·ltl. new cage, easy Twin ~olvos, dual <.'On· 5 lOpm,$56-7175. Marquette Dina Vision
s.8-395?. MANYITEMSOFFINE trans, parts) 19161 PAID FOR YOU mlsc.'93-4625 rnalnl. $500 lo gd hm. trola,t.rimtabs,fullF.B .. 14' Fiberglass Sail Boat Electronic Eogini
U'-o .. w,4S"round••bl•, EST ATE JEWELRY, Delaware Apl SB llB JEWELRY WATCHES ... c-. bo "I ..546-0743. blmlni, camper back, /t I & h analyser .. Model 1000 -" .. ., ART OBJECTS AN 898-701.9 • ' • • ~·· at w/traa er, ~.9 full cover. trailer, extna w r .r ol er ac· Sell d t Pi k Fonnka top. Combo din· TIQUES FINE Fu · · ART OBJECTS, GOL outboard motOl' $10C), 75 AKC apricot toy poodle tanks VHF depth ces&0n es. lYr old. Bst or tra e or c op.
Ing & game lbl. w/4 vinyl ETC. PHONE FOR~~: Apt owner. Everything S I LV E ~ SERVICE Sears Dryer $90, '75 male, 8 wks. old. papen:'. . finder 'fully cq~pped to o(r. ~l--0347 1_642_-G_l09_. ------
chairs on casters. Mov-FO. & BROCHURE. goes. Furn, tools, F I NE FUR~ & AN ~ota_ryLawnM?wcrSlS, shols.Sl50.536·9686 go Pvtparty.9689028 Boats.Slips/ U S. Mags w/Parnelb
Ing, must sell. Call aft 4 64S-2200 clothes, wsa~hers/dryers, TIQUES.645·2200 !..~.=rs Air Cond. $50 Pianos &O ons 8090 -Docks 9070 Jone~ tires. 13 "x'1 "
orwkends. &W-0751. refrig, Sunday only, 1~. PUILIC •ucr101o.1 .,., •••••••••••':!•••••••••• 1965 Owens CablD crw::.er, ••••••••••••••••••••••• s lotted mk ofr. 551-0544
N i bb d G lO'>Cp c M A " 25 l't. Must sell or trade . JANUARY e I orhoo arage ~ omona, . . MANY ITEMS OF FIN Metal Detector. Wlute's Fl ELD'S Warehouse tor auto or small boat Seed s1~e ~1e ::.lip or eon Jeep Engine
$125 or bei.l orrcr
645·8388
CLEARANCE SALE ~rr~~·nJ.ukrt• i•~~~; ESTATE SALE, Anti· ESTATE JEWELRY Coinmaster IV G E .8 . Sale. 400 pianos & or· Fully canvassed, IMll for 5~ S.Jll bo Jt IJ'
loo's STYLES/SIZES , ques. Aus trian baby ART OBJECTS, AN hip mount, carrying gans, new/used. Spinets, tank, i.wim ~le ", FM 2 28176 No 11.HalJoar<l items, women s clothes QUES ~ R h d b · " Des ate 675 3693 From Famous sz 10 12·16, shoes sz 8·8""' grand piano, renewed, Tl . FINE FU N. ca:· sii~.J.a one, never Grands, Players. Gomg ste~eo & tape, i.on:ir b2 per· . --
Manufacturer Samples med. & much more. $1650. Ladiell dsk, re· ETC. PHONE FOR IN us . . out for business. Rent ndio. Call~ 79~ On)} SAIL, sid e lie dork s pal'C
New sofas & loveseats 10122·10152 Signet Circle newed, $245. Din. rm. FO. & BROCHURE TV PRIZES·All new. w /opt to buy. Kawai, $2995. 27' max. $110 :103 t: Antiqu~s/
from $169. Bdrm sets H B 968-4742 9625950 set,5',round.heavyclaw 645-2200 AMF "lb t I Steinway. Baldwin, Ed ·tc 11nn~ Clossi~s 9520 from $149. Dinette •els 8 · Fr. • s &Suor · legs 6 chrs 6' sidebrd b k satf oad, ca1mef Chickering Yamaha, 18' Antique 1890 stylc bay gcwa r. ' ••••••••••••••••••••••• .. ·5 a, at n. bev~led glwis renewed' Firewood Org, Euc. ac _so a, rop ea Kim ball.' Wrltzr . launch o f m o dtirn Boats Sn.ed & •. .. . . from $79. Mattresses & ..,'Kl, A . • A trl . cord, del. Oak. Coas roeklatllbl. 637 ·9l28 (714 )638·2770. 12072 fiberglass & teak. D1ci.cl Sk.• r -9080 bO l numph J J{.J. chtSS\C box springs full $39. Gar age Sale , 15~02 __,.,. ntique us an Fi r ewood s 1 . . I rdslr. Gd t·ood. $800. Queen or king $89. Hanover Ln, Huot. Bch. baby gr and piano, re· 581.1122 .UPP Y White naug. corner love Brookhurst. GG. eng., c:;ushaons; c~'.c~ ... ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• c 0 11ec L0 r · s i le iu.
A11drasUcally reduced (Near McFadden & newed c l assic $6000. · seal $100. Packard Bell HAMMOND ORGAN u.nbelaevablc dass,H Ski Boat t'or Sale. W71i &10 91811
Sell a llorparl Edwards).Sat&Sun. Lamp st.and,solidbrass, King size bed new xtra am/fm stereo, separate model L·100. Top cond. 11.nes. s5 .5 oo . l'.d Day crwser Southw111d ---------
Cash B of A, Master Chg. 6' high, $250. Artist easel, firm $195 incl' del. Usual· speaker, walnut console. $700. or offer. 556·7280 Richardson Yacht Salci. 20'. 7 hrs on eng, 94J7 422{; '66_ Alf a Romeo _2600
REPO CENTER MISC, queen s z bed. heavy brass, adjustable, ly home 835·2263. . record collection $150. 675-0072. onginal. Sell as is or
619 E. 4th St. S./\. drums. camera , sofa. Sat $200. Wall clock $125. Men's 10 spd bike $40. Wurlitzer Spinet Piano T .-..at· parts. Bt!st offer . 1435 N.
Daily 9·6 547•5721 &Sun. 212 Del Mar, C.M. Mantel clock w /f1 gurine Cancelled Contr act. 2 Vacuum Eurek<.1 Upright /\ntique white $550 Xlnl. CAN YOU AFFORD ran.,..,.• 1°" Coast Hwy. Laguna Bch.
2 s ide urns. $600. 2 yds carpeti(\g, below $15.642·7351 cond979·9051 TO BUY ANEW ••••••••••••••••••••••• -. -.- . .
Dinette s e l , 5 p c s Yard Sale. Park the kids Chinese silks in frames, cost. 547-8729 . BOAT ?? Camp«rs, Sole/ 59 <.:DV gd tires , pamt.
Formita s6o. Walnut at L~ke Park! Lots_ or $250 each. 8. davenport Electnc dryer. $50. Couch BEAUT. Carved Upnght 30 . Owens 1972 1" /G Reftt 9 I 20 90% restored. Runs xlnl
bookcase s15 496.3548 goodies .. Photo _equ1p.. custom made, new, $650: Fender !t' u s 1 cm aste $35, desk $5. Piano, $300. Circa l890. F/B, #S20 S30.000. • · ••••••••••.••••••••••••• SS.SO. 67S.7942
------1Clothes, mteresting old Oldpriolsinframes$30 Bass.~u1tar. Excellent Call842·5373.__ 642·398Sevt's_. __ 2?'Scotty Craftl96S,T/SFa<:tory Direct Campers,48 DeSoto 2 dr delu e c I 0 t h es , b 0 0 ks . bottles & knick·knacks, up. Glass top <:oHee tbl, condahon. Make .offer. . So!Jd Mahogany Upn~hl 1*S29Sl6,ooo. ssg5, up, Shells $179.50, • -~
lypewri ter. weights, {:;.~~~r~/~~~i~. ~~:. 42" diam., $145. Din. tbl, ;:!:k~:.33 after ti pm & ~~~;:~ ~i~~erSJ~~d4 S;fj Piano. Bwlt 1892. Must 27• Bayhner 1973, T /S Slceperi.. 858 W. 18H1 CM ~~"'ti~: ~'::~· d~~e~
misc. Sat & Sun 10·5. 8131 books, handmade pot· blk o~al Chinese w /4 Chevy $395. Electrolux see to believe. $1500. #531 $16,900 642 8471 gd paint & int. 645 2954 ~:~h~l~~~~'i HB. (off tery & other unusual chrs, hke nu, $250 .. Tape Illness forces sale. Compl tank vac$35. 645·4166 673 5836 JO' Columbia 1964, T IS 68 Dodge Van Camper 101..::::._...:.. __ • _____ _
items. Sat/Sun 9·4. 1015 recorder, 2 spkrs hke nu 8 rooms of furniture & -S.winq Machines 8093 .::533S9,!MXJ mi good cond ' Rec:reatiOftal
FOR QUICK SALE·l 8• l2thSt H t 8 h $90. Decoder & amp. for nusc items. Example. 8 Hoosier Cab, 4 P c Queen ••••••••••••••••••••••• 41' Canoe <.:ovt! 1973, Dsl ' 557 lSss Vehicles 9530
sofa w /matching love . un . c . quad stereo, new $70. Herc ulon sofa & lov-Bdrm set. Couch. Shelled S NGER TOUCH &SEW 1:537 $87,500 •••••••••••••••••••••••
seal, good cond., both for t & Sun 10·5, 147 E. 18th Grundesen rhythm mate eseat. $325. Just pd $1200. Pecans. Plants, Misc. 317 Jetuxe strai ht stitch. ~ Oweno Bng 1967, T1S. '13, 8' Wildwood camper DUNE Buggy, everylhm&
$200. 1 dinette set w/leaf St. Costa Mesa. Tools, for organ, hke nu. $225. Set Encyclopedias dtS· E. 22nd CM (10-dusk > W 1 t b g t Top S G, #539 S29,000. s hell $285. Excellent! new. Must Sell! $800\ + 4 chairs, J(d' cond., furniture, like new Organ, Gilbranson hes Hide-a-bed ' Oc Fr f adn~75 cC ,:~ml 30' Jeffries Spts(shr, cond 646-3117 847-2460 Jim. II bed lolbing Rialto w /s pkrs, $5000. h • r K. eezer or restaurant or ron . . a _ :. _._ ;;5J5$ll 000 ---·------~~~-ust sell by Sat., ~~~ay , c . Grundic Trans·world ~~·s!r iq~::~ ~gaJ! home. $200; prof. 2 Industrial s ewing 46'Alaskan.$94,000. •75 er Cabover Amencan '72Scout VS. PS/PH. air. i~~:;:;=:;::=;:;;;:;=::;:;~;;:;;;~;;:~;;ij radio $1 25. ~bortwa_ve velvet 'tivin g room lawnmower,$50.640·0403 machs, 1 leather, l 48'GrandBanks.Offers. S ports man, s ips 6 Rf rack, air sho<:ks. T~
S he.avy galvaruzed aenal ensemble, 6' cocktail ta· Orig oil paintings. water suede. 675-7030/631·0700 DAVID L. PARJ5.ER w/duette & boot. $1500 htc~. 8ply. 4 spd, 1de
18 . $125. Glass lop for ble. 2 end commodes. colors & Lithos by John J ~· G d 8094 YACHT SALES 642·4596. t~Wlng urut. $2950 firm.
,.
Promise lier
anything,
h11t ~ive her
SMge
T his Valentine's Day send
your love a greeting all the
world can share. Express
your love in a Daily Pilot
Valentine.
It's easy . Compose your
personal ized greeting -a
love poem, pretty prose or
words your love will f i nd
special. We can set your
message in type to f it the size
border you select, or your
handwritten thoughts may ap-
pear in the border of your
choice.
Your personalized Valentine
greeting can be "sent" in any
of the borders shown here.
Ads come in three sizes: $8,
$15 and $2 for the special
child's size card. <You musr
be under 12 to qualify for the
littlest greeting).
..
For help w ith your ad,
j ust ca II 642-5678. A
friendly Daily Pilot
ad-viser wi II be happy
to assist you.
And, If you like, you
ca n charge your
Valentine a d . Your
credit Is good with~, or you may use your
Master Charge or
BankAmerkard.
DAILY PILOT
842-5678
Mail to Dally Pilot Classified
Department, Box 1560. Costa
Mesa 92626
coffee table, 42" diam. 551.3732 . , · "r"" •'"9 oo s 631 1811 Eves 673-4712 SSO 2 s hip latterns · Stancin. Queen s1. box •••••··~··••.••••••••••• !4' Cabover. Jal•ks. refng, ---------hea~y brass $7Sea. waii F IREWOOD spnngs &malt,hkent:W. New ~k1 cqwp. 1 yr old . 25' Revel Craft Cabin radao, sips 4, llke new. '72 Sta. Wgn. & 1717'
bracket ii", 25c ea. Euc. $7S. Oak, $89. Cord. 675·7597 _ N10or12d1ca :1~~ 58~~lll, sz Cru~s er vs Chrys ler ~275. 646-5983. 1m'raacv.elcTorma1lbe.r IL109~) ~"!~
Glass for dsk top $25. Del. 830-9740. SCRAM LETS . reas. . Manne enlo!. ready lo go '67 GMC w/101.1..• Calif. ·t d I t I be t r~ Self-cont. Xtras . Xlnt Much more. 303 Kings • Browning 243 Cal. Boltac· wi an e m JX e r r, s camper. $2,650. cond. New Lie's incld.
Rd, NB,,above th~ Bay ColorTV $69.95guar ANSWERS lion. Leupold 3X scope, ~fer, (71411177·0095 544·3417 962·2984
Club. 646·4656, Frt, Sat. e~~u~s fi::~~~~!~ lil>yl case, mint cond. Fa1rhner ?:7, xlnt cond, 111 ---------
Sun. Kirby Vac S69.95 guar Bedbug -Elder 552-4483. hrs on eng /\ nyt1 me Mo5t~~H/ 91 SO Corva1r Sand Rail. Turbo
JAKE'S 64 642 Prior -Bigamy Sk . . Ii d 894-4842 or 846-8568 coo 140 hp. Light & fast. S900 Su-r Sal• . 5· l DODGE I equip. sac.. ea ••••••••••••••••••••••• k ff CCQC ""AS ,.-N N Bl NB Do h·n k. 210 ed or ma eo er "°"'""'' Sun. Feb.l, 9:30 a m . 460 ewport • · · The automobile ha s ~ 1 s 16 • us 13' Boston Whaler. w/20 '73 GT 5SO Suzuki. Xlnl ·
Velvet bedspr ead, desk, EVESCALL642·5666 divided mankind into two JX s w/Marker to~; HP Mere, cover, nu bot cond. St. bike Fanng &4WheelDriYH 9550
corner bed set . other classes: those who dnve heel bindings, w /po e · tom paint, $1295. 642· 7282 sissy bar. $695. See at •••••••••••••••••••••••
furn. washing machine WATERBEDS car s and those who Ski boots, Les Trapeur ----2860 Harbor M 1ke '74 T t L de ·
motor,clothes,tools,etc. Complete$129.95delived DODGElhem . s1Ze l 2,leather&buckles21· Dorset Farallon 540-0170.540-704G. . oyoa ~ n11ser
232122ndSt.N.B.(upper E ERUNDERSOL & boot tree used a rew cruis er. Sips 4, encl New tires. pin stnpped,
Bay) ~u~Heaven 830-7~ Ski bools·lad1es 8'.7 nar limes Days 673·3360 he ad . .i kohol Sl OVC Honda CL360. 1975. lo m t. lowmtles.069LPE.
row. Worn once 837-0<UO Eves646-8376 160HP Gray manne V8, super cond, ~. 551·48lti $4288
UGH! We're Moving Lots l wib buy your juke box or eves. . Scuba Equip. Never used fresh waler cooled. Mere an 6 PM .
or good odds. & ends + pin ball machine. Work· . 1975. Mk 11 alum. US crui:.er OD. 4 props ---------II
loads of clothm~. Sat On· mg or oot . 839·1946 or Hiboy, Kmg hdbrd & s prd. Dtvers cylinder. Pack, Amencan trier w14 whl '72 Yamaha 250 MX. Good ljm'i•:,;i~~l~L •
ty 11-4. 2506 L1ghlhouse 638.2162. Wi~ker chrs, rug, plg, belt®.Sl50.6-12.3297. elec.brakes 5Xlntlirt!s. c ondition. $350. <.;all -·--·-·-"-Lane, CdM. CASH antlque rocker. Feoder Easy Hitc h . $3500 . .675-9363. 18711 ac v ·
ONLY! Girl's Schwinn 2·apd bike, euitar. aft 6. 548·1431 TY, R,,dio, 673-1032. •72 360 Yam,. h 3 M x 1 lwit. Reh 842 44~
$25. Walnut cot table · HJA, Steno 1098 ----. -----.. * .72 ~~ .. t.: Fri /Sat /Sun. 518 w/formica wood grain Mower. e lec. Black&••••••••••••••••••••••• Satf 90&0 e ngine. B&S fr ame , ~-..
Jasmine, CdM. Clothes, top no·mar $25. Small D ecker twn blades CB Radio Trans ceiver,••••••••••••••••••••••• super bike. 4 Wheet Drive
household goods. furn, Ma.pie cof 'table, $10. w /many xtras. $90. Regency CR-186. never DOLPHIN 24' sloop, S&S 642·48_72 ____ 1 4 Speed, roll bar. canvas
plants, macrame, bed· Metal bookcase $l0. gd 642-8479 used. $100. 494·9504 design. Manufadurer ~ .75 Yamaha DT4008 lo mi lop. Less lha n 6,000
ding & Ii n ens • cond. 1 Twin hdboard $6 Fantastic Screen pnnted, 25" ZENITH $188 2Yr. dlsp!ay boa~. Brand new! Xlnt cond w/'76 lag~ Bst miles. wke new & pnced
washer/dryer. camping ca 11 art er 6 pm linen framed wall hang· Warr . Free del. TV l_ncl_s 2 sails, w1nche!>. 0rr 645.74551548.5920 to sell' UZ4JSG ).
gear. Ne1ghbo.rhood sale. weekdays. 645·7857. mgs.' Home or office, JOHNS . 645-4276 lifeline~. galley. head, :ill $1 7 88
Sc Good --p · 979 ()596 leak int. ~leeps 5, Bultaco250Pursang,g1rl· ruRN. & Ml tes. Custom lampshades : n .pty. · __ AM·FM stereo console wi. tra1·1erable. Lar<>e c1·1s· k E ll ., 1ng gas shoe s . ~trall•lf•fl~,..lll!,.•111111,.!plf•• Sat/Sun. 2909 esmere, need t o r~eplace t h at AM/FM .sitreo record turntble &8·track player count. Pacific Dolphin, tank. MR 175 Honda •• jj[t]·~~!j·~41!
CM 540·4962 lampshade : Call 530·9884 player.-14S. HO Train & $100aft. 6 p.m . 536-3325. Inc. 996·0241 days or almost new. Hodaka 100. -· ... •. ~-t --=-
DOVER StiORES or 894-8206 after 5 P.M. Layout $45. 556·3148. He a th k i t S i g n a I 499·2685 Eves. 642-3872 anytime. R -!![.. JEEP
MOVING sale.Sat&Sun Fireplace, free standing RCAlS"ColorTV&stand Generator. <New) Model 12'KiteSailboat '73 Honda 450. 6200 mi, 16111 .._. .. ._.__
9 to 4. 1415 Santiago Dr, 30", black metal $75 SlOO. 6 h~ht Chandelier IG 28. S95. firm. 548·7 147. 2Sails. #814 xlnt cond. $600. 499-2805 UIUMtu
. N.B. Furniture, crpt.s, 494·2Al7afler 5pm $75.551-1540. S500 673·5759 AMooJy. ski equip., pots & pans, tr Curtis Mathis Slerec -------------"------1 1972 Landcruiser
: lots of misc. 646-0147 TREES WAN1:E.D! Pool Table. 4 x 8 sso. Ra b Re c I tape r eco r d 12' Koralle w/trailer. Blue Honda i4 250 XL .. 450 mi.. Hardtop
By Pvt. Pty. Willing to bit cage, ss. chJnger a m /fm rad1c & wlute. Main/Jib. $450. mint cond. Aluminum Al· Winrh. extra f!.1S tank,
Sat. 9·12, Sun. 10·1. dig up. Free or reas Call979-0621 $1505111 ·0872 P.P 493·5505aft6 toy Trlr., never used. offroad tires,air i.hocks.
RecLiner, walnu~ frame please. 842·3998 Sony Video tape recorder Kite #6ll. 552 5583. l498ESI).
Pachinco, Craig auto . . DAN I S H M 0 DERN monitor ramera tapes cassette, Conn Trumpet, U.S. Mags and tires, fit TE AK.Db I dresser $500 co~ lcte IHG-9381 Good cond. · w /Lrlr. '71 HONDA WMettd Special
Classic Guitar w/case, Dodge. Call Greg after 6 &d6~' long, 8 lg drwrs>. . P. ' • SSSO. 846·1535· 450cc. dual OHC. xlnt
aluminum ladder out· PM at 548-4987.• King sz headbrd Wht Sherwood S·2300 i\M r M • 1 d 0 B cond Lo mi's. Xtras.
door vacuum no '1·unk formica pedestal 'tbl 4 stereo tunt'r, S60. Chppel r 30• x n&t con · ti $1u. Pvt Pt <Ao 5579 . is92 K 1 ' JUMIOR h 0586 ' 645-4567 w e ec. s t re mo e ""· y . .,..... ·
Link Storage, e v1n GIRL SCOUT metalc rs. 644· RDF i.afety eqwp. hot 110,"'D/\ -,c ... xlnt c·ond.
BILL MAXEY
TOYOTA
Av en I r'vine. Locker . Boats & M __:n• t SI " •r I ,, "" L·388552·4483 UNIFORM Conn Capnce organ. 5 pc 111n .. tom pain ps "\\ s JP i-:xtra dean. Winter
11111lrecll11•4'. 147.USS
HUHTIHGTOfl ll&CH
Ant ique furniture,
glassware, & misc. 8846
El Pre s id e nte off
Magnolia. F. V. 847·5656
Horus 8060
•••••••••••••••••••••••
Reg. TB. 17 h, Bay. 10 yrs.
Trn'd, hunt/jum p. $3600.
Pr pty. 646·2668
For sale. "'11 Arab,
'h Purebred. Gelding.
twin bdrm set dbl bed & Equipment S8995. 714 840 1151 bargain Call 531-7745.
Includes complete set for hdbd lamp end tbl 40 ••••••••••••••••••••••• -------Bronco '6'i, V8. Looks &
only$20.00/offer.846·8Si9 d ' I h• cpl ch~tr Gtonttal 901 Coro 32 Mark ll Many •74 JIONDA Elllmorc 250 runshkenew,46,000m1'
aft6PM. Y s, pus • '•••••••••••••••••••••• xtras. ped steering, Exlnl cond. $695. Aft 833-3-lll.
645-33S4 t2) 15' Kayaks, fibergl VHF·radio. Jusl a few 3PM. 546-1656 ---------Firewood-Stock Up Miscellaneous w/car carrier & all ac f'!lOnlhs to fimsh up this '72 JEEP 1 2 ton pickup +
$75 Cord/Del 642-2624 Wanted 8081 cess. 1 Yr old. Sac a ft.rte ~acht. Yacht space Harley Davidson Baskets campe r. XlnL. Lo:ided.
•• ••• • ••••• • • • • • • • • • • • • fraction of co~l. 494·6372. av at I. Sac $ 13 · 5 0 0 • f I c' 11 J h Low mtlt's 1;:11.:J'.3>\1! •30YEAR• WANTED: Plumbers 846·5102or842·6782 or sa e. a on. ------
•EST.A TE SALE• Pipe machine and dies 12 fool fiber glass boat. bi3·5744 or 675-5462 '56 Hover. pwr wind1. ele-c
Shoe box full of silver ~ .. thru 2 ... Call 534-3682. licensed. includes oars & CAN YOU AFFORD , H FP. nu plu~ wires. mul-d o l l a rs , 6 i v or y seals, with trailer and TO BUY A MEW 72 ond a 350 • beaut. ner hdlghts 642 0168
Scrimshaw whale teeth, WANTED : Po tl c r • s 3HP motor $350 Phone BOAT?? custom bike. New parts 1--·--=-------
1954 Chrysler Newport Wheel. good cond , & re 548 1395 & access. 963-2767. Trvcks 9560
C I fl 5 46' Ericson, 1973 #502, ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2·dr, V-8 eng., all orig. asonable al a er Boatin g Sa f et y & nowS74.900. '70BSA650cc,nds.rewir·•65 t S . :\ l 6
d set of 4 ship d esign pm, 1·737 ti449. Seamans hip. Classes. 26' Folk Boat, 1972 #505 ing, $500 or bst/ofr. lntr., tep,an,d· • on, Western Saddle, goo books dated 1846 Old 842 ~7 cy ., x nt. con .. new cond. $125 firm . 250E wood' u h. · dJ SSCASH$$FOR starting Tue Feb. 3, al Sl4.500. · tlres. low miles. windows
Call 549-1554.
enc pper s ip m Tustin HS. Rm 332, 7PM 35' Albl•rg F /G #508 H n Lighthouse Lane. CdM. In glass case, 18K gold Good used rum/refrigs 526 666 Motor omes, & oor perfect. Previous
Jew.a-. 8070 oyster·date Roi ex, frzrs/stoves546·0768 838·2499 30: W;llard Mlrsallor Sale/Rtnt 9160 ly used for storage, con·
..... , matching gold band, WA NTED · Pr1'nt1ng 8oats,Ma1"nt-anc9{ "512$32.500. ••••••••••••••••••••••• vert to camper, tak& ••••••••••••••••••••••• h b of old lead · S ...,, 0 20 ~ carpet with you for m-
WA ..... TED ssolod~ oxC""'H only All equipment. offset, let ft'Yice 34 ' Lap"orlh, 1967 #515 Rent 25' 197S Open Road, tenor Cinis hmg SlOOO
" iei:s. """ . lerpress & bindry equip ••••••••••••••••••••••• S23,500 fully self·cont sips 6-8. Call 645 3269.
TOP CASH DOLL/\R sales final. 675-0074 ment. Working or not Bo at Pa Inti n g & 26' Columhia 1970 #518 Winter Rates fi44·R385 -----
PA I D FOR YOUR Xlntcond. melaldetector 524·6773betweenl0AM& Refinis_hlng Painting. Sl0.000. F/G RENTTitan2S'Slps 8,all '7~Chc,v 1 ,tonPU
JEWELRY. WATCHES, w/head phones. SlOO. 2PM. Varnishing, & Cleanup 40" Manner 1970 xtrus. By day or week 6 cyl,3sp<l .
ART OBJECTS, GOLD, CallS45.3712. Also mast work. Free 11519S58.000 Mustsell642·7288 S lLVE R SERVICE, Wan led : Ge rman. estimates. 675·3175 34· Columbia 1974 #522 645 3370aft6 -------
FINE FURN & AN· Pool Table, Brunswick J apanese War Relics. . S31,500 -·74 Datsun PU. AM/F&t TlQUES.64~2200 · Heritage, 4x8', used 1"'11 swords, daggers, un. Boat Buald~rs, Cstm 45• <.;ustom Mtrsailor HALLMOTORHOME tape, Cusl int . Cust
yrs. $750. Light. $50. if 0 r m s, he Im el s . ~lgn, repair. restora· 115270ffcrs. Wanted to buy 963 13~ paint Many xtrus, mllM
Man's ring. sz 10, Eye ot a G7S.2?S3 752.0990 646-5226. t 1 on . W ood I a I u m /· 27' <.:ataLinn 1975, #528 1975 Toyota Chinook. Mini sell. 552 9524.
Malachite stone. custom · k (7 l) fiberetass. 6C5·2417 & $15.000. M f f ------made, 10 ois gold. Wanted·Juke Box or Pin· WANTED Yor in 646·5602. DAVID L. PA RKER otor Home, or in °· '7 4 Datsun ,lckup
drlrtwood casting, ball Mach. Working o Workoutllcnch. YACHTSALES phone 714492.9688• afl 12,<ttt!J Milc~ Re;iubful
votued/$299.50 asking not, also serv. 638-2162. ~l-I07S Boat Carpentry-Exper'd. 6.11·1811 srM PP _____ conchtion. Not a scratch .,en 645 8088 8391946 f Deck Join~ry, tlttings, ---------1 0 "UY on bed, ne ver uii ed . • ....,. · • I Buy Surplus Items or surface maint. 532 4611 Sa1lboul . kit Mast rud M' WANTtT h : Yel11,N with hlac·k In
Diamond Pierced ear · Antique Steamer T runks, Ca.sh. 1"· Kim bull, eves. der. sail s pooking'. Nu 101 mo or ome or l"nor 493 2198 small motor home. " rings 1 kt ea . cost $40ea.pvtpty · · $400.675-5405 u 4.3417 $2100/best ofr 675·~9. 64.2·4238 Musical --loah, Marin~ ,,..
•07• . lnstru.Mtth 1083 Equipment 9030 HOB lE 16. 1 yr old MU$l sell 68 Chevy Open M9chJMrf Fum1ture Salesman sell· ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• W/trailer & sallbox. R d s' 1r t'd n w
••••••••••••••••••••••• In a fine personal Univox Buss Guitar, Vox EVI NRUDE SPORTS· !!_700.1·7725038aft.5pm tl~~s : e~~n s'2ueo .
Qau.sln& £nglne L1tlhe, 13 furnJlu.re. Soru. tables, B A Who Wha WlN 91, HJ> Completely 640 0403 x 36, Bridgeport Miii. 42" dining rm, leather chair ~ss ...,.r:;1PS2ooss2 7388 overhaulMJ ·Runs ~ood. SLOOP 14 '. ··Su per ----------•
$2995
NEWPUHT
lfv1P0f{TS table.1·898·3007 & ottoman, color TV's, u.~ ' --new pro p: new s haft. Satellite" w/lrlr, both '74 GMC. Loaded w/ex·
d lamps, desks, reclincr.Offic•Fu~& Includes tank. Ph xlnt con . $850 <7 14 > tras. 38.000 m1. Canyon -.1
SearsbesllO"ra la\ Oriental ruf!, louvered m:.-.a..--t 8015 549-1325 6407093 __ 1.unds $20~500. sss-1771 3180".~sthy.U S armuw. Ukenew. ..~ •· ov ... n Sat/Su ....,...,......... l!!."-2 ftJl.ft.r:
UUUl • ... ~ • ~ ••• •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 8a m to Spm u.. ·""'"""' $150 64$-7836 1/31; 2/1/7610-3PM, 306I ,;tee typewr1lers . Sey al H. Johnsoo. X.ll)t run 14' Alcorl Sailfish. gd __ ......;:....__· ----1--~~_:...;..:....: __ ..._t
S'l'APLoR, powerlln , Capri La CM. chrs $8/up, uc svl ch,.. ninll cond • Must sell. C'ond. Hklna $200. T.......,_ T,...lt 9170 74 Ford Vi t .. V•
D $~/35. scy d•lt" Pierce 640-5258. 642 5264 ••••••••••••••••••••••• v.a. auto. tran&.. r
Mod. AMA 12-10, Fae Washer & Dryer $25 each, fJSf W 19th CM MS 7'11 -'73 Cardinal. Ice box, he t l S4636W
Ouar. Xlnl con. W /10700 a rt. dark finish Stereo. · ' V H F I FM R • d 1 o . LIDO u s tove & oven. port • 3ttr. • r:. • #6•tapl~. "'•''alrhose. slldlng closet doors. Executive de s k & Raytht"On46.S28S.Neve Goodcond Tr•ller potty. rmmac cond $3795
$180. (114) 640·7~ 5JS.OC06 credenza. !lolid walnul us t' d $ 4 1 0 v a I u e 962 3824 768 t22'1 Seta>..
R;kwell vartable spe~ seoo. C.ll 968-4405 M2 4483 --------I.Mc
wood lathe. w/bcn('h /\II The rastesl draw in th CON'FER ENCF. TARl.E WANTl-:t>' Outbrd motor, um MK 26 Flb.-,cl Clip Late Modt'I 20' Sanle Fe • Mwewy
tools & tlllach. $150 firm Wl'!!I. .. a Dally Pilot Desks. Credenza & l'hr:c lt'SS lhan 3hp & smull pt>r. priced to .;ell ltl loaded W/Xtra!I • s.3800 ~__._ ~:~· T5~7..or.a I
1152-7388 Cla ified Ad. &u-5678. pvt pty, 646 SM&· anchor 675-3384. $3850. 8rkr, 673·~70 968 ~or!.86-7719 Evu. --.. .,, ~~~~~~~~=-====-i=:::=====~~~=--=~~~--L::~~~~-======::i=====~-·
I
••
08 DAIL V PILOT * Friday. January 30, 1976
Pontiac's Economy Champ. Lots of
eQu1pment 1nclud m g tinted glass.
wsw tires. optio nal 140 engine. 5
yr -60.000 mile engine warranty.
lmmed1JJte De liv er y .
12C11B6U521604
53195
MONTE CARLO
1975 Monte Carlo. V-8. auto. trans .. factory air conditioning,
pawer steering, power
disc brakes. tinted glass.
Landau t op . AM/FM
stereo radio and 8 track
tape player Less than
10.000 mites. (785MMP)
HONDA CVCC
1975 HONDA C1111c. 4 cyl .. 4 speed, low mileage. xtra sharp.
(764MDXl 52995
An exceptional 1970 Ford Aanchero. V-8. automatic trans .•
factory air. full power.
fiberglass camper shell
lie 110515P
NEW '76
GRAND PRIX
Loaded with eQuipment including
factory air conditioning, rallye
wheels. and much more. Immediate
Delivery #2J57P6P199457
1975 Chervolet Monza. 4 cyl.. 4 speed. factory air
cond1t1on1ng, AM /FM
radio. rallye wheels. $3695 Less than 10,000 miles.
(607LWC)
1971 Pontiac Grand Prix. V-8. auto. trans .. factory air
~~~1o~;:'a~~:~11L~~~ s2395 top Ni ed. Nic e .
(.oaGDMl t
I ~
Southern California's largest
selection of new Firebirds.
Immediate Delivery of 6 cyls ..
Esprits, Formulas and Trans Am.
$AYE
CAMPER V.AN Conversion
NEW '76
SUN BIRD
Pontiac's hot new sport~no(Tly
car Lots of equipment. Immediate
Delivery. ID#2M2786C104272
53495
1969 Travceo Van Coversion. Dodge chassis. V-8, auto. trans.,
raised top . Ser .
11987078395
RANCH ERO
'70 Ford Aanchero. V-8. auto. trans .. factory air conditioning.
full pawer. radio. heater,
Low mileage. (16498Ul
48
G.M.A.C. & Bank .
Financing Available.
Trade-ins Accepted. WE I.EASE ALL
~
,·
Thele are some of the finest used
car values available. Loaded with
equipment including POwer steenng,
power brakes and factory air
conditioning. As low as $3495. Lie
t915LPO USED
53495 ·
OH
APPROVED
CREDIT
GRAND PRIX SJ
71 Pontiac Grand Pnx SJ. V-8. auto. trans . factory air
conditioning, power
steering. power (disc) $ 2995 brakes. power windows.
AM/FM stereo. Landau
top. wow. #121 .
WV PICK-UP TRUCK
1W5 Chevrolet LUV Pi~p. 4 cyl . 4 speed. mag wheels.
Nice. (92905R)
Several of these beautiful Venturas
available equipped with economical
6 cy1. engine. automatic transmission
and power steering. These low
mileage beauties start as low as
$2995. Lie. t816LPG
USED
52995
1973 Pontiac Catalina V-8. auto. trans .• factory air
conditioning. power
steering, radio. Landau
top. Nice. (924HFC)
FIREBIRD
1972 Pontiac Firebird Esprit. V-8. auto. trans.. full power,
~~~~~~N~~9o~Jha<p s 319 5
1972 Chevrolet Nova. V-8. automatic transmission. power
steering. factory air
condition. Nice. Lie.
J070FWK.
.
Friday, January 30, 1976 * DAILY PILOT D9 l
'
SAFARI WAGON
1973 Pontiac 9 pass Safari Wagon V-8. auto trans . factory
air conditioning. power
steering, power disc
brakes. power windows. s3495 power seats. AM /FM
radio. heater. whitewall
tires. tinted glass. Sharp
(963GMU)
CH BLVD. WESTMINSTER lleacti llvd. At Garden Grove Fwy.J
\
CALL 892-6651 OR 636-2500
I I
Dlo 0 .. y p .t. • ..l.~-w--L.....1 9590 .... -.. ,___._.... ........ I _........._. ... _.... I . ,/ Auto1, Imported ·~·,L .... 1L ILOT Frlday.January30 1978 ~ w:nwu Autos Want.cl 9 590 _.,v._ "T"""' ,WQ -01, "''""' .. _ -0 •· "'PO""° ....................... ~r ---------------_..:...;~:.i.:.::::..:.::..:.:.L.:::.::......:..:::.::: • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • D....._. 9 7J 0 • ., -
Alltoa, Mew tloGA.wtot, Mew · 910() Trucks 9560 "WANT TO SELL TOP auy•• G.Mral 970 I IMW 971 2 Dahun 9 720 •••••••••••••••••••••••'.
••••• • • • ••• •••• •••••• -.~··••••••• • ••••••••••••• ••••••••••••• •• • •• ••••• YOUR CAR?" See WJ first.. 6 i.';u Top ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••• ••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• . • . .,.
2 Dr.
MOOB. 1701 $3276
4 Dr. Pw'i:,,,ma"" • 011-..0 $3876 It O•I • e fr1m
MODEL 1781 11~l4r1on
o•us u.. ' h<:e•-
2 Dr. l>o!<lormol'IC.• q•OYO $3776 & '181,,,8 t11m
MODEL 1761 f IT!>l 16ti2~
PIUS l&J< 6 lo¢en5e
,lcbpSale
1972 to 19 75
Seven To Choose From
LUV's · Couner Datsun
AT's, •·spds, all :.ale
pnced ror the weekend.
SAVE
Bill MAXEY
TOYOTA
I UI' ••••• '"" 147·1\\\ H u,.! INC. ION If .t.Cli
1975 LUY With
Wntways C•mper
Equipped w1lh 1c:e box,
butane stove and all the
goodies. Less than 12,000
miles. (58764Y>.
WHkettd Special
BILL MAXEY
TOYOTA
11111 l••<-lhd. 10 I \\\
HUHTIHC. fOH 11 ACH
·;2 Ford "• Ton Camper
Special ~ V·8, dual bat
lenel> & 1-:as tJnk Many
xtras S2~0 675 545.5
Vans 9570 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Let us ell it tor you, dollar paid roe Import.I WEEK-END ' 7 z D a t s u n z 4 0 Z . '74 280Z. C.pd, Pl•CI. °*. CASH• w t k 1 tr d • Deeperate. New car ar· Micbel101, AM/F~;
11 0 y. : : t ! : r COSTAMUA rived. must sell tut! 28,000 ml. Red. ~--~
model...cars, trucks, DATSUN SPECIALS $4,000. M2·m2 497·29'18fi49l-i0l1 • ·~··!.
vans , re c r e atlonal 28'5HarborBlvd. 74Ml%450SEL ,74 Dats un 260Z 2+2. Eccon'72Dalluo1~;;:·
veblcles imports & Costa Mesa 540-t4JO Jl,OOOmllet.lwtwioualn LIASEPLAHS Silver/blue, upd., air, '1800/bstofr. ·~:: domestics. Must be in r -·-b Ot"'542 art 3PM • • running condition &meet ORANGE COUHTY'S :,ei;:i:~dedt:::m~ Flexible teue plans tape, $5800/or bst.X · •• •.
California safety code available from 3' to 48 cond. S48·5"9PM's '73 Dat sun 610·4 c&r;:
standards. HIGHEST (~~pha RCMMO monltb.sES.T COLOR '71 Datsun 240Z, perf. AM/FM,$2500, PP. :~.·
El Camino Auto Sales V.i cus tom body & p.unt. 493-0229
(98.1400 Dealer S t4oc• SELECTION IN Mechanics dream. Bit •73 ..... 0z MUST SELL 5 speed, stick, 8,000 ac· for show. Appl onb', con· -1 •
WE PAY TOP DOLLAR BUYER tual miles. Lease avaUa· THE SOUTHLAND tact Chris aft 5pm $5500. b.rowo, a r, maes, nu,_
FOR TOP USED CARS ble. (046401). oc bst ofr. 631•2275. ~~~e!;,.2$4595, 833·03~. • •.
FOREJGN, DOMESTIC S •74 Ml'l 240 Dletel ._,...,, ...
orCLASSICS OH IMPORT .c speed transmission , S8A3D1_D2L0~0~C9K5.~M9"f'9 '74 260Z, AM /FM, air, •74 610 Sta. Wgn. AutO. '1
Jf your car is extra clean 14,000 actual miles, fully .., "' "' "' Choe. brn, mags. $5200. 6 600 · rt'VWI aft G
see usfirst. equipped. L ease or Call Larry, 675·6670 1 • . mi. ~· ··.:~·;
IAUEA IUICK purchase. <026533>. ORANGE COUMTY 'S days, or 545-3786 eves. 548·l431 ••
2925 Harbor Blvd. '71 Fiat 124 Spycler .OLDEST Rat 972~ "'
Costa Mes a 979.2500 Roadster. Economy & & . • •74 Datsun BZ I 0 •••••••••••••••••••··~•
sportscarflalr.Pricedto AM/FM, 4 spe~d. air -·F ·u ... TOP DOLLAR u (03&050) cond .• 28,728 miles. A I . ·
PAID SELLING ~7 j MI z. 2 8 0 S EL Sales-Ser vice-Leasing f!~u~~~lnc~:~rior. Justa .
IMMEDIATELY YOUR CAR? Sedan Roy CcrYer, Inc. $2895 FOR ALL TOP PRICES PAID Le as e av a i 1 ab I e. Rolls h oyce BM.W Before you buy .......
FOREJG ... C •RS For Imports Beautifully maintained 234 E.17th St. M19al0n VlelO ." :·
" A Paid For Or Not Mercedes. Call now. Costa Mesa 548-4444
CALL OR COME iH <016086). lfnPOl1• NEWPORT
IMPORTS TO SEE us (1 -• J _ "/_ -'68 Porsche 912 c~. HAL GREENE
t,,Ci/J,le .,//Ze A very nice sports car. BMW Avery Exit. S.D. Fwy. 831 -17-40 . . •
NEWPOf\T
IMPORTS
3100 W.Cout Hwy. NA
642-9405
IMPORTS
You will like this one.
<S.WNDA). $ 3100 W.Cou t Hwy.NA '71 124 Sport, S spd;
SMALL CAR '74 TR-6 Rdstr. 642•9405 AM /FM. mags. avg mi, HEADnUARTERS Immaculate condition. __ ..:...;,.:;,_. _____ , Nustsell $2300. 846-5966
""' b t ded Sales & service 1966Harbor,C.M. Leaseor uyonex eo ''LA.Area's '74Dakun260Z '74Rat IZ8Wogoa ~6-9303 terms. (22303()). 6 Cyl., 4 "peed, factory AM /Fu radio, 12,000 .. ' "69 PorscL.-911 E H .. west Dealer!'" ... .1¥ ~ "" air cond .• power disc miles, luggage rack;
"65 lnlr Slcpv.in ·'•Ton, 6
c) I . i..lnl tond . ne w
l1res. low miles, windows
& floor perfect Previous·
ly used for storage, con·
verl lo campt.·r. take ---------r l BUY J UNK CARS
847 ·9637
540-5125
Gorgeous coupe. Priced 7707 Firestone Blv~ brakes, AM /FM radio, ~WCC.
t(o200036sell).tbis weekend. Downey C2l3>927· vinyl interior. heater, $2488 . carpet with you for in·
lerior ftn1:.h1n~. SIOOO
Call t>-15 321.>1:!
$400 -'64 Ford f::conohne 6
cyl. st1t·k. rum. good.
good lircs
552 9233
'55 Che\} 1 Ton. fully
equipped ('amper set up
673·523 1
TOP s
Paid
FOR
3 Miles West of 605 wh ee l cover!i. Lie.
Autos, Imported '72 MBZ l 50SL 72 3.0CS, xlnt cond. 233KBO. 11 ·· . ~;·~=··•••••••;; ~~w& S:~~l:9s~rt~~~r~ _S_I0_,_5_0_0_.5_4_4_-_9_6_3_8 $5395 'itj:;it:Jc'l@t
. 97 perfect·. Lease available. Santa Ana HWlt. &h. 842-4435 ~:s··~~:··~P·Y·~:;~·;;;:~ (002057). Lincoln Mercury •75 MBZ 450SE 1301 N. T uslm '.74 Fiat Sports Spyckr, . fuel·inJected. dual over· One owner & looks Uke low miles, extras. $41~. ·
head cams. 5-spd. lrans., new. Lease or purchase. & Santa Ana 547·0511 Karyn, 552·9218 .
PaidfororHot 4-wheel disc brakes, Fullyeqwpped.l0329'24).· •• 1ST&llOADWAY ...... 0 ., ...... w Pirelli tires, luggage s _.,. • """ 9800Autos, Mew. 9800 ~ k T •o er '75 MBZ 450SEL AHTA AHA ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
Used VW's
ljfm
1
•
1
1
1
b'alce'fvl't'll ~~t 'off~~n~~~r \2;00: Executive demo. Luxury 835·3171 ~ ~ 645-2342 after 5. 675 7360 sedan. Metallic finish, THEULT1MAft oA1v1NGMACH1NE Bf LL YATE. S ... lL-· .• :
llw1l l:kh 842-4435 at work (John). elect. roor. Clearanced '72 BMW Bavaria. Auto, .,, ;/RC
pnced. (040890). · l I t h 9800 Autos, Hew 9800 Autos, Mew 9800 •75 MBZ 280 Sedan air_., s ereo._ ca tn·
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••··~, Exec u t 1 v e demo. tenor , S6750· 644•5613"
Cl e arariced pri ced . Capri 97 15
L ease or purchas e .•••••••••••••••••••••••
(119087 >. '74 Ca . V6 t t '75 MBZ 450SLC pn ' au 0 rans, . . AC, sunroof, AM/FM., L1m1ted production deluxe int, very clean.
mode l. European de· $3900. Pvt ply. 631·2136
livery cancel. Only 450 --------
miles. Sunroof, cassette, '71 Capri
alloy wheels. leas~ or 4 Cy!., 4 speed, power
purc hase . E~te n<ie d d isc brakes, radio .
le rm s av a 1 l ab I e. heater, vinyl interior.
(101988). Lie. 4-0SKLC.
HOUSE $1495
OF Santa Ana
IMPORTS Uncoln Mfl'Cury
13-01 N. Tustin
523-7250. Santa Ana 547-0511
--------rCoff 9717 Audi 9707 •••••••••••••••••••••••
••••••••••••••••••••••• 74 Dodge Colt, xlnt cond.
'74 Audi Fox. Auto, S500 below llluc Book
air, $4495. _549_·_3895 ______ _
834·3918 or 559·1115. Dah4.9t 9720
9712 •••••••••••••••••••••••
••••••••••••••••••••••• WILL BUY YOUR
'74 Bavaria. Met blue, air, DATSUN, TOYOTA,
snrf, 4s pd, AM /FM tape. OR VOLKSWAGEN
Lease $218 mo. Purchase PAID FOR
* SPECIAL ORDER *
1976 PORSCHE 91 IS TARGA
Chocolate brown. 15 speed, F alloy wheels.
black tnm & leather steering wheel.
* NEW VW RABBITS *
4' door. 4 speed, rs:iio & leatherette, custom &
deluxe feature groupa.
5792·1896 s3 871 PlusTu6~
4 Door Automatic:, leatherette, rear defogger,
custom features, AM/FM. bump. guards &
coco mats.
5826-6031 $ 4 0 5 8 Plus Tu & ·~.. • -
. -"" ~----------------....... . * NEW VW SCIROCCO * .,.HE HOT ONE" '·
SAIES & SERVICE $8800 497 .1332 OR ~OT. TOP DOLLAR
CALL The fastest draw m the
West. . .a Daily Pilot
Classified Ad. 642-5678.
SAL BERNADENE
540.0442
Alloy whees, AM/FM & coco mats. .
5767-4850 $ 5 I 61 Plus Tu 6 ~ .. •
76's HERE
WE ARE PROUD OF OUR OUTSTANDING RECORD WITH THIS OUTSTANDING tAR!
Before YOU buy
COMPARE OUR SAVINGS AND INSPECT OUR COMPLETE HONDA SERVICE FACILITIES
BRAND MEW
1976
HONDA CIVICS
READY FOR
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
•· 1 In lhe Nation
~------------------------------_.,,. ~-°.~·.~:."! ....... !~~~ ~"!.°.~·-~:.v: ....... !~~~ ~"!.°.~·-~~.v: •••.... !!~~l~"!.°.~·.~:.v: ....... !~~~
'
'72
TOYOTA
CORONA Hn
Rid ' Auto . A• Vlfop
(304-BZM)
$2199
Plu• O.•,.f lnatalled Ophona, Tu & i.e.
$69 DOWN
$70 Per Mo.
&fend new '76 Toyota Model 1501. $69.00cash or tr1d• plu1
t•• & Ne. dwn. 4881nk pey..,.ntaol $70.42 full pnce·S2983.6&
Including 11•.'76 lie. IHI D•l•rr•d p1y1TWnt price-$3672.16
ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE-11.40.
'72
TOYOTA
COROLLA S/W
4spd • Aid l UQ Rick & MDII Au. Autn Rad . low M•.
(010.J,X) · (905·1JY)
$1699 $2899
'72
TOYOTA MK II 4-DR
4spd FM A'-1 S1t1eo Air V1lop 4 pd R•d A Mora
(13HWO) (311-n A)
$1799 $2599
'73
TOYOTA CEUCA HIT
Auto. All. lltd Y/lop
(173-lf()
Tty $2699
TRIPLE UFETIME SERVIC~
POLICY OH All USED CAR$.
SHAKE THESE
USED CAR SPECIALS
... off our tr~e. It takes
little effort to make a deal.
•, .. . •.
I ·~.
·'.
. ..
••
On Tiie Sul'!Clown Sid• or
'"• Hewpot1 , .. ••OY .. ·. i
l!!J!QJ[Y)!Q)OCl@IOF ORANGE I
-
I
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I • • '; • • t .: I J ••
•a.ported A.to1, l11111portect Auto1, l"'porhd Allto1 IMported A.tot, Import.ct Vollaw-9770 •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••• • -'7"'·· Fr'day. January 30. 197& DAIL y PILOT D' I
• • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
; • 9725 hftJ 9740 TOyoto 9765 T--' 976 Toyota 9765 Mtol, l•poriwd s H,tw 9100 Autos M 9800
•••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••• ••••• ••••••• •••••••••••••••••• ••••• -,-.. • •••••••••••••••••••••• ea vw -c·nt •nd ov•• ••••••••••• •••••••••••• ••••• • • ew •••••••••••••••••••••• . u.I • ·~ ~ ~ • ....... • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
ume lease at $t00.50 "71 Toyota St.allon Waaon. 11 Corona2dr HT'Ou Ura '70 Coro~• wgn, 4 apd, haul, $700. 839-4450 or Volbw09'ft 9770 per mo, 35 mo. remain· New radial tlrts, R/11, ena replc'd f; CClftd xlnt m1lea1e, •1050, MS-5613 Evea/Wllndl. ••••••••••••••••••••••• i:i or buy car, Signal xlntcond. Sl391S.61H038. susistolr fMsi.,,.,;; 631·33'71 •
Mercedes 4.50 SL, · ToyOia Corolla Dix ltlrlt 70 VW, aWU"OO(, oew et\I· •lt71 YW• 1'1~ * '72 Toyota C .. co cond. $2995. t60·3210 ~~F. !f.:.._rAa~i.!1..,~l~~ ... COMV191TllLI 4 Speed, air cond1lloning, MIW 197 6 •~ •1&.. n "u•~-... U'l '70280SL. Very rare, both rallye wheels. & much TOYOT• Eves.&Wknds. One owner. Orii1nal
tops. am /fm, new more wllh fabulous ~ 9767 '73Super8eeUe yellow paint with black
rlldiala. Xlnt cood. S82SO. mileage you've read OUR LOWEST $2300. top. (3808ZW). tl0-7194 bout H E 842·2979, call atter5p.m. DO ... IUl ... S · a · urry ! (806 PP). r.,....111 her! '62 TR_., very aood cond. ______ _...:; _ _., " "
==~ '62 MB 190SL. Complete $2388 ona 1976Model New brakes & clutcb. 'f»SQuareback,xJntcond. VOUCSWAGIN
en1 rebuild w /weber SIOOOft.-• Bestotfer.S41M294 Reb1t e ng. atilt under ,J7JIH_...... __ 11.,d _ _.......____ carbs I 1 H d -~ • IWll. warranty. Must sell! .---~~: !J~~~~~~ A~0~n~ .,j[tJ;j~•tfrn1• .. ~~~~Q r-:-.~:·d, M~!.~rt:':!'e5e.a "'1<00 /bestoller.$48-WS G~~~~oi::>YE . Rt!feW -~mJl syn chromesh trans., wheels. luua1e rack'. '71 VW clean, ena. n<la ----
71 280SL, Auto. 2 tops power front disc brakes, OS8LKG work. $1100. '71 VW Super Beetle 42,000 53M $9500 ' 1m1 ....., .. ~.._ .. A 645·9953 mi, xlnt cond, $16.50, Joe ,.D,l/T;W~ • (~14). 640·0236 C4•4M•U .. ~ater & now t.hru ven· $3688 e 6311192 ~.. UlaUon. (Undersea!). 48 '71 VW Orange Super Bee· ves ·
• A Classic 1960 Mercedes 1970 Corolla Mon lb f i n a n c in R • Ue, xlnt cond. 53,000 mi. '00 VW Beetle. New tire&,
'70Aetl50Spfdlr Benz 190 SL Xlnt cond New e ngine. Great Deferred payment $1600.646-2784 xlnt cond, $1300/ofr.
4 Speed, radio, heater wht/red intr, blk top: trans Port at lo n . ,A·n~lR. ~~x$:; ~eonsAe C& iTnEt. '72 4.11 Wagon, amtrm. lo 675-6651 eves 557-2520
754BQD. • new painl/tires./top. <365BUL >. .., · · · · HWll 8th 842443S ml' ,...,.00 .__ t Cf Days, Ken.
S 1799
67,000orig mi. $5900 firm $ 31103257. · · s. _.. or ue'S o er. _.;;.._;. _____ _
Call s75.2837 bef 5. I 499 f'I . J _ Ji' l . '71 Honny 750 just 548·9960 days. 675·8638 '73 VW Conv. Su~r Bee·
'72Fhlt850Spider Maureen.Afl5,67J.3579. ~~ /Ze, reblt. very firm, must eves. t!e. AM/FM. A/C. new
Radio, beater, mag seeS1800.call536·2l24 '66 VW BUG. Eng $150, ~=· S27UO 640·5497 art
wheels, roll bar . '73 Mercedes IMPORTS '73 TR 6. 27,000 ma., 'J!ans $40, Doors. bood,•-.-~---
762-FWY. 220D SMALL CAR radials, o. Drive, Choe nms, etc. 898-7019. __ 71 Squareback Au~o .
$25 99 Ht DQUARTUS brn., $4200. 499-3224 eves. '70 VW POPTOP Camper cle~. nu s ky bhae pamt, DIESEL H bo C M . ...... d I radials. $1650. 499-4456 I '73Fi.t150 Spider G re a l • Autos, M•w 9800 l ar r. . . . Allto$. M 9100 m ._ con . w near-new - -
4 speed,. radio, beater. AutomaUc et:a~:i~i!n'. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 646·9303 ••••••••~•"!•••••••••••• eng, $3,1.SO, 830-8564 ~·.~:."! ....... ?~.~~
70&HZK. air conditioning, radio, $2699 heater. <Ser.16476).
'74£1.t 124 Spider $7895
S Speed, stereo radio,
maew$.ti"99QB. ~~}MM.\Y!tJ1
'69MGMldQM ,,. · ~~
4 Sneed. rudio, n eater. ,!!111!
wire:wheeJs. 65230. 111 \1-
$1799
172 MGI Rdstr
4 Speed, radio, heater.
l!JiO II arbor HI\ d
Co~ta .Mc•:.;i
631-1276
327NJN •---
$3299 280 C · '74, 16.000 m1, fac-
tory warranty. hke nu,
. '68 Triuwtplt sun roor. all xtras 76 he.
~ Must sell, $10,800,
S. -W-''".""' 644 7885 or 644-1591 4 peed, radio, heater. ----
XIID786 MG 9742
S 1499 •.•••........•....•....
. , o MG M 1de t. lo mi. · 74 Fiat X I /9 Starburst Blue i\M FM 4S~. air condationing. cassette. nds re.as work.
ra(lto, beater, 10,000 otherwise good cond.
miles. 23287. I S1200or best ofr. 644-4309
$4799 MGB 9744
, .''74 Fiat X I /9 •••••• •• • ••••••••••••••
4 Speed, radio. heater, 74 MGB, xlnt cond, all
mag wheels. 514KXA xtras, lo mi. Best OHer. $3999 saG-6797 art 6PM
FACTORY Porsche
AUTHORIZED •••••••••••••••••••••••
Sales •S..-vin '74, 914 , 1.8 litre. 5-spd.
: Parts•Leasinq AM/FM s tereo. Xlnt ~W. Warner at Main cond. 17M mi. $5 ,495.
Santa Ana 557·213 _4_97_·227_4_· ----~
--------1'73914. Blk/blk. App Grp., Mags, 5 spds, 35.000 mt.
For Classified Ad
ACTION
Call a
Daily Pilot
AD-VISOR
~5 581-7862
'72 914 blk w/blk. 53,
m1 . xlnt cond. $4 ,500.
51U·7862
642-5678 ·74 914/2 Mags. AM/FM, ============-===! App Grp. 23,000 ma. --Bm/tan. $6200. Catr aft 6,
. ..... 9727 _552_·098_7 ______ ,
••-'-••••••••••••••••••• 1968 912, yellow & black .
·~ Honda t'VCC.Many Porsche. xlnt cond. Must
xttas $2750. Ask ror Steve sell. $4,995. 673-3748 ~9100 ext 55. Bel 8&5. - ------• • '75 914 1.8 Appearance
• 'i2HORdaCp. group . Xlnt cond .
4 ~peed, radio. heater. Orange, $6800. 552-3898
low miles. like new. 914 1972 -blk . d' 1 41CIGWX . new ra 1a s,
$1288 34K rnl Very dean.
979·6788 $5000 .
Harbour V. W.
: : : .
'67 Porsche 912. xlnl con·
dition. New radials &
Konis. 963·2767.
Hunt. 8th · 842·4435 ·74.911 Salmon Targa, all
J
-_--. -----xtras but air. $12.300.
__._ 9730 PP. 675-3660 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ------1
'69 XKE Roadster.
Sharp. $3900 or bst.
637-9755 or 751·1323
Mada 9738 •••••••••••••••••••••••
·73 Mazda RX2, 4 spd, xlnl
cond, $1300 cash
549-8730
'72 2 Dr Hardtop, A/C,
rad1o, ma1 wbls. immac.
cond. $1950. 673·0528
RX2. lo miles on new eng.
$1200.
Mftoce•t .. M
• '73 Renault R-1 5
Hatchback Spt C~
4 Speed. AM /FM sler
radio, bucket seats.
rallye wheels. one or a
kind . Mu s t see!
(711KLB ).
$2888
. . . ... .. . .. . . . . . . . .. . . . ,.,., --.. _.,,.._ .. _ c ... 141.aou Lease
N•w·Used ova 100.
MHCEDES
OMDISrLAY
HoelM of ........
AtrnlORIZkD
MERCEDES DEALER
M62 M ancheater.
Buena Park
523-7250
On the Santa Ana Fwy.
Rolls Royce •••••••••••••••••••••••
•1 DEALER IN U.S.A.
ROY
CARVER
ROLLS·ROYCE
2>• f . 17th St.
COSTA MfSA
\"----' S46-U44
ClOSEO SUNDAYS ---
Toyota •••••••••••••••••••••••
''13, 4SOSE , 35,000 ml. '75 CELICA. Gd ~ileage,
$10,900. Burgund y airrond,automatic,vnyl
w / 1 add i e lu n 1 n t. roof, Bst ofr. 586·0386
FREEi FRl.-SAT.-SUN.
(JAN. 30-31 and FEB. 1)
COME IN AND TEST DRIVE ANY
1976 MODEL MAZDA AND WE WILL
GIVE YOU A NICE LlnL~ POCKET
TRANSISTOR RADIO TO REMEMBER
US BY.
MAZDA808
(5N3A156141 ~
WE HAVE MAZDA TRUCKS. SEE OUR
NEW 1975
B 1600 PICKUP
53382
TEST DRIVE
THE PICKUPS '~·
WITH .
PICKUP!
.
BIG
SELECTION!
(5BNA6173624)
TOYOTA CORONA '72 4 cylinder, auto. trans.. air s1799 conditioning. 48,652 miles!
Mint oondttlon. (304GGV).
ONLY $3795 r~~
Includes performance package. deluxe
interior. rear window defroster & AM/FM
radlO. (3452233)
SEVERAL TO CHOOSE FROM
MCM(MO, days. 675-8876, '72 Mark II Corona
eva. Stnwgn. Xlnt .• lo m i.,
'• 250 SE Sedan. New 29,000. Auto .• air, lug
en1, Michelina, shocks. rack, pwr brlts, muffler,
air, etc. 1 Owner, cmplte Ures & brks in gd cond ..
reoord1. S•900 FIRM. 21·22 MPG.', $2450.
14,2,.291'7. ..:833:::....:-2226:::..;iflf.------1
'74 ~~t~~r~s.~~~s>~k.$2999 custom intenor & extenor. only
12.285 m11eat (136LUZ)
-PINTO RUNABOUT , 74 4 IPHd. radio. custom interior s2399 I exterior. only 2 ... 718 miles!
(859KPG).
'7 4 r!.~,~~oleS1 (4<9KPO) 54299
--=-::t:,
-.
DJ 2 DAILV PILOT Friday, January 30, 1978
1976 ~PONTIAC
RILL Y FACTORY
EQUIPPED
GRAND PRIX
53976•
BILL BARRY PRESENTS
HIS NEW MANAGEMENT
TEAM TO BEITER
SERVE YOU .
FIND US FAST ••• Wl'l.I THI ht
DULllSHIP OFF THI SANTA. AMA
fUIWA Y OM I st S1UIT IM
SANTA. AHA.
ORDER YOURS TODAY {THESE SPECIALS
FROM OUR LEASING DEPT. 197 6 GMC 1SURFER 1 VAN
Economical 6 cylinder engine
with 3 speed trans. Complete
(:Ustom ·surfer· package.
We lease all makes and models: We offer flexible terms to me~t
your budget.
ONLY
ORDER YOURS TODAY 54376• ~ 1976
GMC
1/2 TOM
PICKUP
IMPORTS ·
1976 PONTIAC
SUN BIRD
Gas saver 6, 3 speed. G78x15
8 ply tires & spare. chrome
bumper. gauges & smog
· device. (36 mo. O.E.L.) cap
cost -$3776; Residual -
$2175.
$727!~
P.ONTIAC SUMBIRD
' 1972 OLDSMOllL!
lllOYALE
F1c1ory 1lr. vinyl top. 1u1ome11c. PJl'r.
1111ring. pwr. brekH. redoo l hHler.
(1131114)
5 1676
1975 GREMLIN
SPOIT Z DOOi
ECO<'Ol"'leel 8 4 speed. rlldoo. lleller & law
.,.!fl (2611LJT I
s2376
1974 LEMA.HS
ICHOICE OF l J
'"' cond va. •utometlc. pwr 518erln; ' J)Wf,
brlk9$ (llC!8JFE) Low 1s
1972 FORD
COUllB
c cylinder. " speed, radio & heller. t372GMH~
1970 GMC
ITOM Cam()e< spe(:lll W/9 toot bed. V8. IUtO<rellC rwr at~ng, '"''° & 2 tone pa1n1 A auper buVf (8183Xi)
$2176
1973 DA.TSUH
UL' HUSTUI P.U.
Cle1n wnll low moles. CAMPER SHELL
INClUDEO (8"8118$).
1972 VOLKSWAGEN
SUPHIU&
Fully llciory eq"'~· A shwo vehlc:lel (75eGJO~
s1776
1974 DA.TSUM
IZIMDOOI
Low mllH ge. On1 owner. fully t1ctory
equipped. A Cle.,. meclline. t2 t 8"!0U~ •
1974 CAPRI
4 Cyll~ 4 t1>41ed. llf COndlliQnl9{1. &
AM/FM ate<eo. (951 KLn
ORDER YOURS Hatchback Coupe. 5 speed, 140
cc. engine. bumper guards, radial 140 cc engine. bumper group, 0 N LY 4 speed (ZM 27B6C1 04031)
52776 52876 s3476
~A y ;;:::c:i. custom wheel covers.
~-.,,~~~!~:.~ ..
Cap cost -$3729. 72 ;
Residual value $1864.86: (36 $7916 * mo. O.E.L.)
1973 MUSTANG 1973 DODGE 1974 MGI
&liHDf 1-100 SUIFH YAM IOADSTH
V8, autom111c. pwr sllerong, laclOfY aor, pwr Sllowtoom condll!Otl with only 13,000 .,.In
Available on all new cars. vans & trucks.
mo.
•plus desl Ch1<9e1, tu. hc.n&e & deal., p-
ORDER YOURS TODAY
brat.es • AM/FM Slereo fldlO. LOW lflll8$. Cullom onte<ior. V8 & IVIOfl'lllllC. 112eMWP) (20728~
(06XiNP)
53376 s3476 s4476
t YEAR, 12,000 MILE
USED CAR WARRANTY AVAii.AiLE
L.IMITED 5 YEAR
50,000 MILE WARRANTY Bill Barry 2000 E. 1st. STREET-SANTA ANA LEASING AV AIL.AILE OH ALL ~ES & MODELS
OPEN DAILY -TILL 10 P.M. PONTIAC 558-1000 All prices plus tax & license.
All cars subject to prior sale.
Offer good thru 2-1-76
~~~!·. ~~:.~ ........... ~~°.!·. ~~::'. ........... ~ :'!~~:~?:." ....... ! ? !.~ ~'!*.°.!·.'.~~:>.~ ....... ~~~'!~·.'.~~~~.. .. ... . ~~~'!!·. ·.~~.~ ....... t~'!!·.'.~~~~ ....... 1 ~~°.!·. ~~~:t......... .. . ~°.!·. ~~~:t. ........•..
BUG . !:'!~!=:~~:." ....... !?!.~ VolkswGCJen 9770 Volvo 9772 Volvo 9772 Buick 9910 Cadillac 9915 USED CAR SPECIALS
USED GREMLINS
1971 thru 1974
MANY TO CHOOSE FROM
STARTl .. G AT $ I 6 9 5 1647E+4JI
1973 FORD PINTO
Factory air conditioning $1895 with low mileage. Top fuel
economy. (0WT39)
1975 AMC HORNET
Automatic. pwr steering.
air cond. & vinyl top. Less s3495 than 8000 mile s
(E190052l.
1972 MG ROADSTER
Mi.dget with only 37,000 $2695 miles. mag s & sharp
condition. (662EKXl
1972 VW CAMPER
Low mileage & super clean $3695 l cebo)( inc 1n full
equipment. (426EMN).
197 4 VW DASHER
4 spe~ with low. low miles. s3495 In m in t cond1l1on.
(496MVH).
Snec1·a1s 1970 VW BUG .,., ••••••••• • • •• • •• •• •• • ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••• •• ••• • •••••••••••••••••••••• • •••••••••••••••••••••••
t' Beige. Immac ulate 10_ '68VW9Pass Bus. '76&'75 Volvo ORAHCiECOUHTY '75 Buick Convert. Under '70 Seda n de Ville. '71 Panel Bus side & out. You must see Asking $1700. S VOLVO warr. A/cond. Joull pwr. Equipped. Orig owner
Hard to find mod el. thisone!l208N JN ). 646·698SaskforCarl. BuyorLease EXCLUSIVELYVOLVO A m /Fm s tereo rad Gd co nd Sl 650
pnced n ght. 88592~. BILL YATES -----w /tape. Wh1te, red inter. 556 .. 4472/675·3561. ' '72 VW Camper, Popup. Largest Volvo Dealer Many other ex tras .---------SAVE VW/PORSCHE xtras.S4100oroffer. We Leaseallmakes. inOrangeCounty ! 968-0317. 991-6146 aft '73 Coupe D e Ville.
'72 vw Bug San Juan Capistrano Call 675-9654 sui1°~kEF£ 6pm. l?aded$4, lo mi.,556ne'!!.,1!.dial
Low miles, r ed with 493-4511837-4800 '70VWBug.r eblteng, •64 BuickRiviera tares, 300· -o<roJ or
black leather. 264GOQ. A-l Cond. $1450. ~·,·~· ~.~~-,,~.·~ 645-0315 aft 6. $1888 VW BUSES Pri. pty. 673.6204 V-8. auto. trans .. factory d . air cond., powe r steer-63 Ca • $300 as as.
'S8VWC '58VWBUG ing, r adio. heater , 493-4789 amper 25 S M h whitewalls, tinted glass .. Rebuilt e ngane needs & CAMPERS $450 645-8437 20 . anc ester wheel covers, vinyl in· 73 El Dor~do, xlnt co!1,d. transmission. Good body Anaheim 750-2011 terior. Lie. POT<>46. Fully eqwp. 39,000 m as.
&interior.816LGA. '73 VW Super Beelle. PvtPty.499-2677
$788 '73 Bus 666GHM 20·000 m i. mags, xlnt New 1976 Volvo ~.°..~·.~!~~•••••••••••• $895 Camero 9917 7 P 0 I cond S2695 551-6358 2 D s.!~--Santo Ana '75 VW Sciroc:co assenger -ua • oor 11rUU11 AMC 9905 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Metallic s ilver, 4 speed, Tanks VW Bug. looks first class 1976 Volvo. 2 door sed an. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lincoln Merc.ury ·ss Camaro. vin top, new
AM/FM stereo, tape eng reblt 2 mos ago. 83 incl. AM/FM radio, fuel '67 Rambler, good cond. 130IN.T1,1stm paint, p /a. air. Xlnt
deck. under factory war· '69 lus 117 AFY MM. 29 MPG. l-S98-3007 i njection . 4 s pd , air, cond. $600. 962-8519 Santa Ana 547-05 t I cond. $1200. 673·6651.
ranty.414MCP. 7 Passenger-Ex t ra 'S9BUG syn chromesh trans. eves. , .
$4488 clean N . ' Rear window defogger, 4 62 Spe~aal VS. Nu motor. Che'¥1"0let 9920
ew engine, S950 wheel disc brakes & steel * '74 G~mlin mis pa mt, 2lmpg. 2190·20 •••••••••••••••••••••••
'68 VW Bug '71 Bus 001411 640·7550 belted whitewall radials, Radio, heater , fully fac· _Co_lle_g_e_. C_M ____ _
4 Speed. i mmac ulate 7Passenger -LoMiles '71 VWCamper reclining bucket seats, tory e qui pped, real P/S P/B A/C Le Sabre 2 CONNELL
CHEVROLET
engine & transmission. 6 Full factory equippe d fully carpe ted, tinted economy ~ the leader ' dr. Xlnt cond. Gd. tires
mo or 6,000 m ile warran· '72 Camper 8 36FYE 46,136 Miles & clean' glass & heater. from Amen can Motors. 54S-0805 l2 AM on
ty. WWS173. F1attop camper 52495 36 Mo. open end lease Like new! (710LWE).
$1388 l"irst mo rent plus pro· $2088 Cadillac 9915 SALES&SERVICE
2828 Harbor Blvd.
'71 Bus 048FUM r ate of partial mo. & •••••••••••••••••••••••
'70 VW Fastback 7 Passenger-Clean license fee. Cap. Amt. 169AKN $6435. Lease end residual NEWPORT
IMPORTS
"CADILLAC"
Quality & Price
COSTA MESA
$1388
'70 VW Bug
Sunroof. completely re·
conditioned. 907ADY.
$1688
'71 VW Bug
P in s triped, c u stom
wheel covers. low miles.
J650IM.
$1788
Harbour V.W.
'72 Camper 288JHU
F1 at top Safari camper
'69 Camper 9731 7
Pop Top -l'~UNCAR
'75 lus 674MOT
7 Pas:ienger·lo miles
GARDEN WEST VW
2 Bio< k~ W
o f H•."J"h Hl\tl
ifiOO Westni111sln Bhol
Wrstminsl1•r 11!1.I ;;,51
$3594 .25. Additiona l
c h a r ge for early 546-1200
t e r m i n a t i o n . S e r i a I l!!~!!:!:::!!!Jl!=::!:::!:!:!::=!I VC2A245E065168. Onr 70 '74 Chevy Imp ala 4dr .•
3100 W. Coast Hwy. NA
642-9405
'68 VW Fastback. fuel in
jection, am;fm, s unroof.
Clean. $1200. 536·5868 aft
6.
LEASE ME FOR
$138.54
MO.
taAle !Jke
'67 VW Camper. Rbll IMPORTS
engine. Nds minor trans SMALL CAR work. $500. 675·8859
16711 -... _...,... .. -c ....... .. to Choose from xla:it cond.. r.ull pwr. lo
For the best prices. the ma., new tires . Day,
.64 VB wgn. Xlnt run. lowest lease rates, & de· 830-0890. Eve, 644·2877'. cond. good tires. $450. 675-7942 pendable service,. see '67 Chev Wagon, Lo mi,
--IF YOU NABERS CADILLAC ~~·: ~~~-~tgd tires. $$50.
have a serv1tc to offer or 2600 Harbor Blvd
goods to :.ell, pl ace an ad COSTA MESA 540-9100 Corvair 1965 Convtrtible.
in l h e 0 a i I y P ii o t OPEN SUNDAY Top mechanical co)ld.
Classified Section . . . 320 22nd St. Costa M-:sa .
. ; . t • ~.~~·.~:.-. ......• !~~~I~'!*.°.!·.~:.-. ....... !~~~ • •unt_Bc_h ___ 84_2·_44_35_ ~!·.~~.-. .•...•• !~~~ ~.'!~·.~:.-. ....... !~~~ HEADQUARTERS
1966 Harbor. C.M.
646-9303
Phone 642·5678. ·12 Coupe de Ville, fully 642-1711 Sat. only.
equip, very fine cond.
Auto1, Mew 9800 Orig. owner. 631-1570 Autos, Hew 9100 .....•................. ····················~··
••••••
9915
•••••
ii I e .
wner.
,650
s.
cond
mi's.
9917 •••••
, new
Xlnt
1.
9920 •••••
rtible.
cond.
M~sa.
9100
..._,. Uted A.uto• Uaed .... ......_ ~ ........................... .' ................. -.... Uted AMtot. Uaed A.tot. UMd Autos. Us•d Friday. Janu.,y 30. 1978 DAILY PILOT D 13 ~,.....,... ttz ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••• •••• ,. •••••••• ••••••• •••••••••••••••• ••• , •••• ••••••••••••••• ~.................... Ford 9940 OW.••~11 tt55 ""'° tt57 PWo tt57 ,..,....... 9t60 Aados.. Used Alltot. Used A11tot. UMd :i4 l!1 loo. .............................................. •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• .......................................................................................... . ;"1nc ~m Ill ZUI au. LTD, n~ eng & body Sat• andSUvlce • 'P\Ato Squire wen, air, 72 PWo .... _. Ply....th 9960 Pantioc 9t65 n-•rb&rd 9970 •<$3.eoo.631-1105.aey xtru.. worll. Cheap! Anytime OLDSMOllLI 'apd, lo ml, •lnl cood. Auto. Super nice car. AJLAS ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••-.•• ••••••••••••••••••••••• !;1 J 1 5 .. ..Uor846-8568 ....C TIUCKS 645-1418 Hates aaa. (OOOEUR). 'H Sa te111 te W aaoo '72 Umans ooovt 4 spd. '6S T·BU"d, xlnt cond.
•!Orff. °!:a!r. ~7a ~';; '9 LTD. Contry .Squire a .~~~AIS i3 Ptnto. 21,000 mi, 4 spd. $ 1899 ~:~{"la~10 ~fo~~:64:.J~0:v~~r Hurst shift Huns &d . eau'=:l13$ :)tqulp, A/C. 1 uar n pua Waaon. Alf, rack, v.'f~.,.., 0.. XJnt cond. Orf& owner. PM mw.tsell.~02$9.
: ~ease, leu t.bao 51.000. ~· fwr ., new llrel, ~ Huboi' Blvd. $2000. 863-4807 · 2929 Harbor Blvd., Sat.el late Custom '73 ----------
: $100 over wbaJe low bl 1 arp. •109$. Pvt Pty. Costa Meaa 540-96'0 * 7z PWo ._ .. ,.. Cost Meaa Excepllonally nice car •73 ,ontfoc V4fCJC1 9974· •;bt.Evea.7~·97 Sf.t..3282. Nly factory equipped 546-1934 AM /f'M stereo, trulse Gra1tPrtx ..................... .. ~ 'CT Font St.a '73DeltaU. withdeluxeloterior•ex· conlrol, V8, power disc V-8, auto. trans .. factory '75 Veaa CT. Hatcb. •"1 COrvalr, .uto. R6ll Sell ._,. • Wag. Mu.al Goodcood. Muataell! brakes, 4 door, new Ures. uar cond , lull power, Maroon, upd radials, ::.sood cond. $2'1$. M&-1397 '<S;iJ IMl3-7367aft.~ t er l 0 r • F 0 rd' 1 32,000 miles. One owner. stereo radio, heater, etc. Xlnt,under warr. :«87~3840. 646-7662 economical ,little aalea Plymouth 9960 72 Ptymouttt Crick.t Must Sacnrtce! Make or-whalewalls, vinyl roof, Must sac. $3400. Make
•Qs3 Chevy. S!larp. •-'88 Cortina, runs good, ""'9 9t57 ~der. To~ condigon. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ' Cyl., • &peed, radjo, fer. 963·6897 & 963-2661. tinted glass, wheel cov-olr. 968-11186.
, _., t cedtose ! (!50Ui F). '67 2 Dr. Satellite, vnyl healer, vinyl anterior. Private party ers. vinyl antenor. Lie.
73
V GT W .-/H. Runs 1cl Ask fo grea gas mileage, $500 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1588 Se 84 .. ~ fir 67 top, Cully air, PS/PB. 318 r. no.4 1C2Rl8Sl69. Ponti-9965 073HJ IU. ega agoo, lop :.Dave.M.S-a58 m 5-0266afl4 "12 Pinto. 2dr gm aedan. g 72 000 · 1 1 $I 095 -Cond.-A trans, new
. 2000cc ena new eonwn,er.$800' /bostr.1g631m·2:27.8 ••••••••••••••••••••••• $3495 rad·aals, $2295. 496·""10 ~~Moote O.rlo. vynJ root, '7S F'lSOSuper Cab and/or new paint, ciean interl~~'. .... •:·very clean. Pvt. Pty, 9 Y.a S . C. Dreamer Bstotr C8ll 'u6_...,27 •==~•1'9•111 S SantG Ano '69 Ventura. 2 dr .• HT. Santa Ano Dana Pt. • • -11".no..·.•"""l-... Campermstsell830-2444 . '" .. , ,........... '69 talion Wagon, wht UncofnMffCury Auto, air. PB, PS, Vin Li of M
... ~ rn ....-"""" j.!-!!:!!!.!!:!: ... !!!:ll::!!!!:!!!!!U::::!!i!!!!!:::::~ w/brn int. 1 owner. P/S, roof, etc new llresXlnl nc n ff'Cury 71 Vega Hatchback, 1
'69 F d T rl w·h. '71 2 dr, 2000cc, 32M. Lux A IT. R I H. Cu s lo m l30l N ·Tustin cond., $850. 535.4435 aft 5 1301 N. Tust111 owner, xlnt cond. 4 spd. • ~5 JdALIB U Estat blor 0 no. ale decor grp Frt disc Xlnt · 1•"11·~':-=r-'"* Suburban. 673-4899 Santa Ana 547-05 I I or weekends. Santa Ana 547-0511 S1200. 494-3672 : 'Wqon, air, lug. rack. w/ k vinyl lop. A!r. cond. P~t pty. J1495. • ---
•.-etc. Warranty, low mi. auto, PS, PB, new radial SSZ-8079 9100 Alltos, Mew 9800 Autos, Mew 9800 Autos, Hew 9800 Auto1, Hew 9800 Autos. Mew 9100
: ~$5100. 642-4052 afl. 3 p. m. tires. 644-0111. · ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••• •••• •••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
~Uebevy 2dr.Run&good '73 Ford Country Sed. ! :interior bad. ' Power, air, cruise con·
$175.8912-6431. lrol. $2000. Pvt ply • 581-2288 :c:c--t 9927 -.70-T~.~~~~~-I . j.•••••••••••••••••••••• onno wgn, xlnt cond,
:meometGT.Autotrans. $1200 or best orrer ; ·'new tares, xtru. Really _962_·_0127 ______ _
: sharp ! $219S firm. Uncoln 9945
• '1$1-9549. • ••••••••••••••••••••••
;Cwtlwllllat 9930 '73 Mark IV, xlnt cond,
•••••••••••••••••••• ••. leather int, all xtras, will
:• 1971 Immaculate finance PP $549S, • 557-42.81 • tbruoul. 1-0wner Con· ---------
:•ti.Dental sedan, loaded. u~
.Lo mi's, non-s moker. ~urv 9950
.<Colden w/brown leather.•••••••••••••••••••••••
',673-6377 anytime. STEAL IT!
\ Super clean '72 Mer e ",-4 Gold Mark IV, assume Mar quis Brougham .
• ,.P~ments or S250. mo. Everything power. Gd
• ; Wall. lake s maller car for rubber. Xlnt runrung, lo • equ1 ty. Convert. l op, mi. Perfect luxury for \ j loaded w /xlras. 638-8270 s ma II price.. $169 s.
~ ~ Mark IV, showroom1_83_l _·99_5_7 _____ _
,:cond .. Sunroof, new '71 Capns, tape deck.
, .Michelin tires, stereo, radials red /black ~:power everything. $49!50. Sl,595. sai'.8418 eves. ' or best orrer,.494 ·4816
: Corntte 9932 '75 Monarch Ghia. 2 dr, , • Xlnt cond, fully equipt. : ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sacrihce $4250. 644-6893
•TOPCASH1
• For Corvettes and other fClnCJ 9952
•"used cars & trucks!•••••••••••••••••••••••
!;.HOWARD Chevrolet,1'75 Mustang Ghia, every
; •:Dove & Quail Sts. Near xtra. Sunroof, air, FM
: 'Jamboree, Bristol. & stereo tape, 4 spd. Classy
•i MacArthur, Newport car! Must sell.631·3388
: • Beach. 833-0555 . • : 65 Mustang V ·8. 4 speed, :~65 Vet, fstbk , A /C, new paint. Must see to
: · AM /FM, 327, auto. new apprec. $1250. 546·2455
•: pearl wht paint. mags ..
• • Sac. must scll 645·4242 67. Must. Fstbck. PS, Pwr ; Dase brks, am/fm 8 trk, • Cougor 9933 xlnl cond., 962-7930.
~······················ 4 : ~69 Cougar XR7. Good 1970 Mustang, A·l cond.
: : cond .. pwr. auto, leather Extras. $l650.
• : seats. $1395. 536·6614. 549-0433
. ford 9940 * '74 Musfc:wKJ 2+ 2
• .-•••••••••••••••••• •••• 4 Speed, factory air con· ~5 Elite. While on while, dUioning, radio, heater,
: loaded. S48SO p . p . rallye wheels, & more.
• 673-6631 F o r d ' s s p o r l y
• economical hot one!
• ~5 Ford LTD wagon, low (076KL8).
: mile s, all powe r . ~;.:!~ 0:~~~~4~~~ ! lll.-IJ~"l"[11111],.;"J111;11111• .. !•~lllilllll~~-· ~Elite. White on while, R·1!teM(L}E1'J
loaded. $4,800. Private 16111 ._. • .......,_.._
Party. 673-6631 C41 tCM•U • •
-~FORD, V-8, 3 speed, '66MUSTANG, A/T, P/S,
· runs great. $300 FIRM. $1100. Pvt ply. ·can 751·5143. 640-1029 art. 6 pm
'66 Falcon, 6 cyl, stick. '66 runs but nds work.
$150. S400/bst ofr. 919 Oak,
Call 631·0988 aft 6pm CM. 646-0464
Autos. Used Autos, Uaed
'•
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
(Owned by drivers particular enough
to ttade for a Mercedes Benz)
175 PINTO WAGON
V-6. factory air conditioning, radio, heater, less
than 16.000 miles. $3395. (238MIE)
173 VW CAMPER ·c speed. radio, heater, low miles. i.4495.
C5nJLWJ
·15vw
BEETLE DELUXE
2 door, low miles, $3495. (605CWB)
174 CHEVROLET.
MONTE CARLO
. . • Auto. trans., air conditioning, power steering,
beeutifut green with swivel bucket seats &
console. S4<495. (658KKE)
•'
:' ..
!lr
171 FIAT
SPYDER CONVERTIBLE
4 epeed, rldio. heater. one owner, red with,
•bfact< vinyl lnterior.12095. (180EKW)
174 OPEL
MANTA COUPE
4 epeed. rldlo, heater. less than 17,000 ectual
mllea. aale priced, $2795. (123ABC)
175 MERCEDES BENZ
4SOSL
COUPE ROADSTER
Auto. trans .. fllCIOfY air condlOonlng. power 1t..nno. radio. heater. beautiful red with
nwlehlng tnten«. ten thin 7000 adual m11-.
•41~. (297NOS) •• ...
••
OFF FORD'S WHOLESALE FACTORY INVOICE llQtl•JMtft11f+H!ll·lfi·lll;lttf 1Rtii(.]%11 ·c~·-.. ~~·~ .. ~-·-.. ~-··-~~
ALL 1975 FORDS
.~~=~t~~ IOWI
guatds.etc. 11<47895 ~~
\...•
..... '"C• ...... $3236.00 --~~~ • I IN IMVOICE ••••••.• '2724.42~ . .:t --.. rt4 ~
IHA Tl .......... $ 300.00 ~---
--------------------....... vou1P11c1 ....
52424 42 NEW'7S MAVERICK
STOCK
NEW '75 FORD LTD
My Factory Eqlipptd
6 cylinder engine, standard
transmission. AM radio. tinted glass,
etc. #106713
ltfaN '"c• ........ $3677.00
IMYOICI .......... $3194.91
IHA Tl ............ $ 300.00
YOUR ,.ICE .... 5289498
NEW 1976
GRANADA
2DOOR
Fully Factory Equip~
Economy 6 cylinder. automatic transmission. deluxe bumper
group. #171336
Your
Price 5396640 SAVE
NOW!
BRAND NEW COURIER BRAND NEW 1976 VAN BRAND NEW 1976 FlOO PICKUP
Fully Factory Equipped. #26859
Your
Price 53035 13 SAVE
NOW!
Your
Price SAVE
MOW!
Your
Price
'73 AAT I 21 73 AAT 150 SPORT
4 llC>ffd. redlo. heater. front wtl9l4 drive Nie.• 4 soeed. racjio, heater. 111nyt rool. wheel
(241.JOA) ~ (118HOF)
75 CHEVY MOHIA 2+Z
\41, llC1ory air con<111o0nong ~ sret<lng.
PoWt< disc btakM rldlO. hMIM. hn wheel.
rallyt Whitis. Sleel s3499 belled torn. lo m1111
(1188NBX)
•6f CHEVY CAMARO
350 V-6, 4 aoeed. rtdlO. hearer. rallye wheels _.c HMd to l1nd' IY08819)
5
1999
196' FORD F-1 00 ,,u. SHOST"'
II cyC • 11110. Irena.. power slee<•ng. redt0.
heeler, wneel covers. vlnyl lntenor
'75 FORD PIMTO
RuntbOut. 6 cyl . auto t11n1 . fldory '"
condillonlng. power lleenng, Po-d11<:
btakes, radio, heater.
whitewall tires. v1nyt$3666 root. hnted gr.ass.
Like new (4111LJT)
161 FOID COUMTIY SIDAM
Stllion WIQOft. V-11. IUIO t,..,._. lactory tit
c:onchlioning. power stMt1ng, powe< disc
twallea, rtd10, healer.
wtlttewlll llrtS, hnled s 1099 gl111. whttl c:ovtra.
('Mc..31)
•H MUSTANG COHYllTllU e cyt, auto. trans . rtdio. ~. wtllttwllf
"'-" A rttt find! (228JGE) $ave
'610NLIADm
4 llPMd. rlldlO. heater, ~ tir• wfl..i
OMn. Wlyl Interior. (YXSeC)7)
51099
WI
MS
SUNDAY
tNHT
'74 DATSUN 2601
' apeed, ladory Ill oond1hon1ng AM&FM
...i10. heller. hnted gllSS. '#!-' OOY9rS like
new. 13,000 miles s5999 (750MFX)
'74 MERCURY CAJ'ttl
Auto lrans . radio hearer hntea glass. w"9el covers (697KFRI
5
3395
•74 CHEVY 1/2 TON PU
()leyenne t O. V-8. 81110. lrtM . lldOIY air
co0d1!1on1ng. power steeroog, power disc
brakes. radio. heater.s3999 wtllle wall tires. Mted
gl11s. wheel covers,
It 74Et08t3 t I
'74 CHEVY CHEYEHHE
Super 10 PU , •• V-8, IUIO trans lldory air
oonditioning. power It-mg. power dot<:
bratces. radio, heater, s4444 wtutewalt tires. wheel
covers. vinyl interior
OS.
72 FOID COURl9 ,,U.
4 soeed. racho. lleater. wtieel oovt!f'S 111nyi interior, camper Shell. "90 ""-'• l05SFNNI
'66 FOID LTD v-e. 11110. ,,.,,.., flc:torv .,, c:ond1110111110.
oower altering. power braku, power
wfnctows. power Hats. $a
rlClio. hell.,. wnilewlll• YI llt9I. vinyl roof, tinted
glta (S8S55e)
•67 DODGI WAGOM
v-e. euto. tr1ns.. lldory air conditioning, "°"' ttffring, Power tlrlkes. rlldlo. hfflt•'.
wtlitewtll tlr... Unted s-=· wheel covera. YI Nlotl ( ... 5NDHJ ,
'73 POMTIAC LUXURY LEMANS
Au1o trans . ladory 11r oond1hoo1no. PCIW8f
lle.tng. redt0. heater. wtlltewall hres. vinyl
root. hilted ohm. • door $
2999
l\ltdlop, spoke wheels
(463.NZ)
'71 FORD PICKUP
V-8. 1uto rrans . air condotoomng power
9'et<lng radio heater (P800J
'73 DATSUN 2401 '74 CHEVY VEGA
6 CY1 auto trans . lldory ;sir c:ond1t100•no. H11chback Aulo trans. r1d10. heater, stereo redlO healt< "llQ wneela. toke new wtootewall lores lonled glass, wt'98I CX7Vtlr1.
:1~~ 29000 miles
54999
~~~KP~,.. cond1toon
52199
'73 ,LYMOUTH FURY
4 DOOi HAIDTOr
V-8 1ulo lrans tactory 11r cond1110n1ng,
POW9I' steenng radio heater wfulewell t11es.
lonled g lass wheel s2599 cover5 Super N .ce1
(7"4HMT
'73 IUICK CENTURY
2 Door hardtOP V-8 .iu10 rrans lad<><V '" c:ona11t0n1ny radio heatM wMt1W1I tore~
111nyi rool t1t11e<1 glass
wt1eer covers ( t 75HOE) $ 2666
'74 RANCHHO G.T:
Aulo. trans . power sieerong. power disc
brakes. radio. heater. seowate seats Extra
noce IP772)
5
3699
'74 FORD COURIER
P'ICIUP WITH CAWHA
4 soeed. fully laclOIY 8QU!pped Economy
P4us' (~87Y)
'74 FORD PINTO
Auto trans rac:10 h~atl!f wMIWlll tires 11nted glass, wheel covers Ltkt new
11741<.IWl
'73 CAPll
4 speed. radio, heater raltye wheels.
(33tHEW). s2999
172 AMlllCAH AMIASSADOR
Small V-8. auto tr1ns . l1ctory 1lr
cond1t1ooing, POwer steering. power disc
brakes. radio. heater. s1999 whit1w111 lirta, vinyl
rooC. tinted 91111. •1'1111
OOYerS. (r>lllFEOI
'74 CHIYY YIGA WAGON
GT model. 4 IOMd. -. lhifl, la!.fory llr
condohoning, AM/FM rldlO. llMttr. tinted
91-. vinyl Inferior, wide.
ov1la. m10 •httl• s2499 (817.JNO)
'66 OLDS VISTA cautsa W460M
Auto rraos factory air c:ondlllOntno. ~ steerong power brakes, radio. heater .
whitewall lores 11oted $
gllSS wheel covers 3 awe s ealer L•ke new'
!292KYBI
'74 FORD MUSTA.M<i 2+2
4 11189d. srock Sholl, tadl(). heater. wtut...a
hres mag wheels vinyl mtenor (341KLE)
5
3299
'72 DATSUN 510
Auto 1r1ns., lactory air oondrtlOllmg, rldoo,
healer, wMewall '"" lJke new. (0260VGJ
'74 FORD VAN COHVBSION
II CY1. shck shill. specaal Pllnl. n-o wheels,
side popes l39797U)
5
3777
'73 VW 7 PASS IUS
Stldt shtlt. factory aif oondrtt001ng, 'ldlO
heater Mred viass. wheel covers LJke new
(730C0Vl
'74 GMC SU,EI CUSTOM 1500
V-11. 1uto fr1n1.. fldory tir condltlonlno,
powtl' sleeting, POWW dilc: bnlla, ...iio.
r~a~~· Pickup .53399~
RENT-A-CAR
Pl~O •••••••••••••• $20
MAVERICK •• ~ ••••••• $22
MUSTANG •••••••••• US
GIAMADA ••••• , •••• US
150 FREE
MILES
.... -.
' •
...
. ...
' \
...
.
i
t \
UST •••••••••••••• $8589
loaded with air conditioning. tilt DISCOUNT • • • • • • S 1972
UST •••••••••••••• $4011
DISCOUNT • • • • • • S 583
SALE PRICE wheel, pawer seat. AM/FM stereo, S •LE PRICE pawer door locks, extended fuel A 6 cylinder. automatic trans., front disc
brakes, front & rear bumper guards, convenience group. steel belted
whitewall tires, power steering, radio,
tinted glass. (Stk. #1508, Serial
#51<921196316)
range tank, whitewall tires. dual $6617 facing rear seats, deluxe bumper
group, trailer towing package, deluxe
luggage rack. bumper group, power
vent. & more. (Stk. #841, Serial Ptus Tax & license
53498
#5J76A138383)
Power operated sunroof, V-8, air
conditioned. white wall tires, power seat, AM,FM stereo, landau luxury
group, tilt wheel, vinyl roof, heay duty
suspension, power door locks,
extended range fuel tank, speed control & more l (Stk. #5313, Serial
#5J64S125094)
Ptus Tax & license
Ptus Tax a license
91lAND N~W 175 THUNDERBIRD
,~0~~.~.~~~~~~$9386 ~ ~DISCOUNT ••••• $2250
Convenience group. leather trim. SALE PRICED
body side & hood paint stripes. dual $, 136 exhaust. steel belted radial whitewall
tires, tilt wheel, power drive, 6 way
seat, disc brakes, power lock group,
deluxe wheel covers, & morel (Stk.
#606, Serial #5J87A136236) Ptus Tax & license
LEASE DIRECT
ALL POPULAR MAKES AND MODELS
COMPETITIVE ~~f:i~~~~~~ L~1,!w&mfi•
LIST ••••••••••.•••• $4585
DISCOUNT • • • • • • S 789
SALE PRICE
53796
Ptus Tax & license
---_,(' .. --_ _J_r=~~ j ¢ ~; • jira~~f f.~~~~~~~.:02
· -. DISCOUNT • • • • • • S 1272
Custom Styleslde Pickup, 5500 S •LE PRICE GVW, knitted vinyl seat, gauges, fuel A
economy · light, automatic $
transmission, power steering, · 4232 chrome mirrors, reduced sound level
exhaust, increased cooling system.
tiedown hooks, spare tire a morel
(Stk. 11045, Serial tF10YRX00681) Ptus Tax & license
ALL SALE PRICES EFFECTIVE FOR 72 HOURS AFTER PUBLICATION. --
71 PLYMOUTH CRICKET
2 door, auto. trans .. s2333 Auto trans .. radio, s 1095 factory air conditioning· heater (066EHD) (421FNC)
Plus tu a license Plus tax a liC41n ..
71 FORD T-BIRD 73 PINTO STAT11JN WAGON
1 '
Sunroof, auto. trans ..
factory air, full power,$ 5595 pawer windows, power
seats, vinyl roof, tilt
wheel, AM,f=M stereo. •
(345LJU) "'"'tu a 11cente
72 FORD l TD BROUGHAM
73 FORD L m SQUIRE
Station wagon. Auto.
53095
trans .. factory air Auto: trans .. air, power $2655 conditioning, power . steering, power brakes.
steering, radio, heater, (240KU.)
roof rack. (146HZZ) """tu a ian. Plus,.,. a UC4111M
72 FORD WAGON 7 4 FORD SURFER VAN
Auto. trans.. factory air,
r~11 power, powers2111 wmdows, power seats,
vinyl roof, AM /FM
stereo. (137EOX) ·Pluatu&lan ..
Auto. trans .. factory air, . 9 passenger. auto.
52295
V..A auto. trans., facotry
54988
4 speed, factory air, s2411 full power. power s2495 trans .• factory air . ._, =EW· lu,ggage rack. windows, radio, vinyl conditioning. power air, power steering, ~· root, twin comfort steering, radio, roof . radio. rallye wheels.
Plus tu a"'*'" seats. (504ETC) Plue tu a llC4lnM rwck. (MOFFA) Plus tu a W-.. ' (t2390) PM tu a llcense
70 DODGE PICKUP CAMPER
Camper. s™tll, auto. s 1195 trans .. air conditioning,
radio, heater. (272800)
70 YW CAMPER
'68 BUICK SKYLARK
Auto . tran s .• air
conditioning, power
steering, radio, heater.
(VHH434)
5
895
'73 FORD F-350
75 FORD SURFER YAN 7 4 FORD PINTO 74FIAT128
4speed. (561KMB) s2666
"""w a 11cente
Auto. trans., factory air,
8
power steering. power s4 55 Auto. trans .• radio.$2666 brak~z radio, heater. (865KHR) .
(6659 ) Plus tu a JICenM
73 FORD PINTO 73 FORD LID 7 4 PINTO SQUIRE WAGON
$2195
Cab & chassis, V-8,
52
.
8
Pop -Top . Radio , auto . trans .. air 55 Auto. trans .. ·factory air s2666
heater. (866BTI) con.ditioning, power . conditioning, radio.
steering. (16994Z) (774HSU)
· "'"' tu a license Plus tu a llc:ense Plus tu a llcen9e
73 YW BUG 73 FORD F-100 PICKUP
4 speed, radio, heater .. $ 2395 V-8, auto. trans .. power s2999 special paint, mag steering. (105685)
whee4s. (356JU) .
Plus w a 11oense """ tu a llcenff
72 DODGE SCAMP 74 FORD F-100 PICKUP
2 Door. Auto. trans.. V-8, auto. trans .. power $3566
factc:>rY a ir .. power s2195 steeri ng & Nice! steenng, radio, vinyl (54231W)
roof. (937ESF)
"'"'tu & ll<:4lnM Plus tu a 11-
7 4 FORD COURIER 71 CAPRI
Plckup.4speed,AM/FM s2195 2 door, stereo, rallye wheels, (44SBMI) roll bar. (53216X) ·
• speed.$1895
71 DODGE SURFER VAN 74 FORD F-100 PICKUP
:.~~;radio, s2733 f,~ans .• radlo .. s3444
PIUI tu I lloente Ptut tax a tleenM
'7 4 FORD GRAND TORINO
74 FORD PINTO WAGON
Pl1a tu a tl<:ense
74 DATSUN 710
4 speed, factory air, 53666 ~ ~ vinyl roof ..
PIUI tu a Hoenw
72 FORD PINTO WAGON
Squire wagon. Auto.
23 7
trans., factory air, radio.$ 7 Real Gas Saverl
(417FKO) Plus tu a t'-"41
72 PINTO SQUIRE WAGON
72 TOYOTA CORONA MK n
Station wagon. Auto ..
5199
. .
9
trans., air conditioning,
radio, luggage rack.
(908GIN) 111ua tu a llcenM
73 COUGAR XR-7
73 CAPRI
4 speed, factory air s2995 conditioning, AM/FM
st.-.o radio. (040GNP) .
Plus w a 11cen ..
14 FORD GRAN TORINO
Auto. trans., factory alr ·
conditioning, power$3195 Auto. trans., factory air, s3444 1 1 power ate er Ing &. steer ng, v nyl roof, brakes, vinyl roof,
AM /FM stereo, tilt AM..=Mstereo. (403KEK)
whee4. (208.JEV) PIUI ... I llcenM Plus tu I llcenle
74 CHEVY CAMARO
Black on black. Factorys3195 air conditioning, power
steering, AM/FM stereo.
(308KHC) Plul i. & ~
72FIAT128
7 4 FORD LTD BROUGHAM
Auto: trans .• factory air,
power steer! n g & s3511 brakes, power
windows, vinyl roof.
(569.JSC) PIUltu lflcenM
. 72 FORD GRAN TORINO
condition ing, mag Sport Coupe, 4 speed. air conditioning, power 4 s p e e d a I r $ 2395 . s2555 V-8, auto. trans .. factory s27· 77
Wheets. (482KEM) (046GAH) steering, power brakes. (478ELW) PIUI ta a llC4lnM PIUI t111 a 11ce1-. "'"' tu a lk:9nM
'74 MUSTANG II 14 PINTO RUNABOUT 72 CHEVY Y2 TON PICKUP 72 PINTO SQUIRE WAGON
Auto. trans .. factory air $ 1495 conditioning, radio,
heetar. (686GJU)
Auto. trans .• factory air$
3895
conditioning, power Gas saver 4 cyl 4 s3222 st•• r I n g • p o w er · speed. radio. (6431.PO) windows, vinyl roof,
4 speed, factory air s2755 Auto. trans.. factory air ~°.::!EJltl)onlng, radio.. conditioning, power ~ .a-tng, radio, heater. PM29f()
5
2495 AM/FM stereo. (571 KEL) PIUI ... a..__
'
7
\
Eag11na/South Coast Today's £lo lag
N.Y.Stoe I I
EDITION
VO L. 69, NO. SO, 4 SECTIONS, ~2 PAGE S ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORN IA FRIDAY, JANUARY 30, 1976 TEN CENTS
SC TOm Truck Dri1'er Recalls Terror
, D.llly .-tlot SIMI Plloto
SHERIFF'S INVESTIGATOR FRED GELLER CHECKS WINDOW
a Guesa Victim of Gunshot In Aborted Bank Holdup
~
Officials 'Puzzled'
,·By Gunman's A~tion
.
The twisted reasoning which
Jed to Thursday's South Laguna
bank robbery, shooting of the
bank manager and the gunning
down of the suspected bandit by
lawmen is today continuing to
puzzle authorities probing the
case.
"Frankly, we don't know why
the guy did what he did, unless
be was just ... , " Sheriff's Lt.
Jerry Krans said, trailing off.
"We don't know," he said.
Robert Castillo, 24, of 1104
Miramar Drive, Laguna Beach,
clung to life by a thread today at
South Coast Community
Hospital afte r being shot by
· sheriCC's investigators, dressed
as ambulance attendants.
Castillo was "technically" de·
ad on arrival at the hospital,
Krans said.
In fact, lawmen at the hospital
reported to superiors that the
robbery suspect was dead. Doc-
tors revived the man once. While
In surgery to re move lawmen's
beullets, Castillo again slipped
. away from life but was revived,
Krans said.
Cutillo remained under guard
In the hospital's intensive care
unit. Hospital authorities said he
was in critical condition. ·
Bank manager Gerald Guess
remained in critical condition
. alJo. Guess, of Misslon Viejo,
was shot with a 30/06 rifle when a man posing as a tow truck
driver attempted to gain entry
Coas t
Weather
Some h l1h clouds a t
times otherwise sun ny
through Saturday. A little
warmer with beach highs
in the upper 60s rising to
the 70s llilaod. Lows most-·
ly in the 408.
·INSIDE TODAY
Done• in A m•rica bot un-
dergoM tome radkol c~•
in tM ltul /WI 11eor1. Includ-
ing . 0 pMnmlef'llOl gT'Ofdh in
.atdM'nce• and o trend tou:iord
mU:fnO cl4ulcal baUd ath "'*"".and Joa don«. s.
non1 on P.og• CJ of th•
w~.
latle"X
to the bank al about 9 a.m.
Thursday.
Krans recalled some of the
events of the day:
During some of the time the
man was in tbe bank, he talked
with sheriff's deputies on the
telephone.
"He said things like people
were messing over him, that
we're going to have to kill him,
that people have been bugging
him too long," Krans said.
In a telephone conversation
from inside the bank, Castillo
talked with Vern. P erry, a re-
porter for t h e Santa Ana
Register. Perry said be was
told: "They're all outside wait·
ing for me. I'm going to make a
run for it. I hope the (obscenity>
get me. I don't want to live
<See GUNMAN, Page A2)
Services Set
ForLagunan
Gladys Sayer
Funeral service for South
Lagunan Gladys Ann Sayer was
scheduled today at Sheffer
Laguna Beach Mortuary. Mrs .
Sayer, a resident of south Laguna
for 17 years died Saturday. She
was71.
Mrs. Sayer was a member of
the Laguna Beach Presbyterian
Church and a member or the
Veterans of World War I, Post573
auxiliary.
Officiating at the service were
Rev. Arthur Tankersley of the
·Laguna B each Presbyt~rlan
Church and R ev. Don W. Tinsley
of the Chapel ln the Valley
·Church, Sprina Valley. Mrs. Sayer ts survived by
dau1hters'-J ean Holman of San
Diego, ana Lillian Humphrey or
Westminster; sister, Dorothy
Ro9er1 of Tustin : six
grandchildren and one great
arandchlld. Burial is at Westm inster
Memorial Park.
Burgl8n RiOe
~ Lagana Home
Jewelry, ca.sh and a riOe with a
total value of Sl,300 have been
stolen by Intruders who broke In·
to a South Lacuna bome while
tbe family waa on vacation,
..-Orange County 1herift"1 officers rted. .
"l:putiea said burllan took tho
valuabln from the .Uvlna room
and muter bedroom at the bome Of aa.Jesman Donald Roll Gu.yer, :n, while be and bls family wen:
tnHawau. \
•"\ .,
By J ACK CHAPPELL
I OftMO.lly"l•UUH
Tow truck driver Jack Hagerty
looked death in the face Thurs·
day ln what was to become the
prelude to the dramatic South
Laguna bank robbery shootout.
''I tried to remain as calm as I
could. I knew if I made a
nuisance of myself, I was a dead·
man," Hagerty said in his San
Clemente home.
"I tried to be as helpful as I
could. I tried to keep talking, but
never yell or struggle and I think
that's the only reason I'm still
alive.
Hagerty, an employe or Ray
Carey Chevron in Laguna Beach
was dis patched at about 8 : 30
a .m. to the home of Richard
Castillo, 24, of 1104 Miramar
Drive, Laguna &each.
A caller complained or a dis·
a bled car there.
"I rang the door bell and this
guy answers the door. He said be
still had a couple things left to do
and could I come in and wait,"
Hagerty said.
"As I came in, be reached
behind the door, picked up a rine
and lowered it at my bead. He
said 'get in the back room and lie
down.'"
There, Hagerty was bound
t
with tape a round the ankles, a set
of barbells was placed on his
back and his hands tied to it.
"I told him, I know this doesn't
mean much lo you, but the
barbells are hurting," Hagerty
recalled.
He said the barbells were r e·
moved and he was· "bog tied"
with his feet and hands behind
him.
<See SHOOTOUT, Page t\2)
Irvine Company Coast
Plan Called MadnesS
Laguna Forum
Candidates Hit
Voting Records
Accusations of improprieties
and pointed references to past
voting records marked the
Village Laguna Corum Wednes-
day for candidates in the Laguna
Beach municipal election.
developer , was accused by ques·
tioner Marc Friedberg, a former
business a~soc iate, of lobbying
for special privileges for a bank
at a time Gumbine r was
negotiating for a loan from the
same bank.
The incident occurred while
Gumbiner was chairman of the
<See FORUM, Page A2)
Lending Rate
Cut a Quarter
NEW YORK (AP >
First National City Bank
said today it is reducing its
prime l ending rate a
quarter point to 61 2 per·
cent, the lowest tbe key
rate has been s in ce the spr·
ingof 1973.
Citibank said the change
in the rate it charges on
loans to its most credit-
worthy commercial bor·
rowers is effective Mon-
day.
The prime rate does not
directly affect consumer
or mortgage lendmg rates
but can often provide a
clue to wbere those other
rates are headed.
The at-times testy exchanges
were in marked contrast. to an
earlier candidates forum where
candidates had displayed a sur-
prising unity or thought on city is-
sues.
Tbe Village Laguna forum in·
eluded all seven candidates for
city council and contestants for
city clerk and city treasurer.
It was video taped for
television broadcast o'Ver the
Storer cable system. Time and
date for the broadcast have not
been decided. A standing room
only crowd of a bout 120 persons
attended the forum in the council
chambers.
San Clemente Eyes
Fire Damage Claim
Candidate Jack McDowell, a
city planning commissioner,
ended up on the receiving end of
most or the questions about vot·
ing record on the commission.
Questioners contrasted his
statements about preserving the
village atmosphere of the city
with votes in s upport or develop-
ment or 2,016 units in Sycamore
Hills and support for a housing
tract on Morningside Drive.
In response, McDowell said he
voted on the facts •· and the law"
in each case and be lamented
that the city had become ·the
target of a $37 million lawsuit
with the owners of Sycamore
Hills by turning down the de·
velopment.
McDowell was also the target
or a question by Lagunan Larry
Ulvestad over the candidate's
heavy investment in oil company
stocks and in a Fountain Valley
development company.
Ulvestad charged that there
was a "difference between what
you say and what you do.''
McDowell s aid he had divested
himself or the oil stocks and his
interest in the development con·
cem , when he became a can·
did ate.
Candidate Mar k Gumbiner, a
By F REDERICK SCHOEMEHL
Of tM D•lly l'tlot Staff
The possibility of filing a
damage claim against the
federal government over the San
Clemente fire was discussed in
executive <secret) session by city
councilmen late Thursday night,
. but there was no action on the
matter.
The closed-door session with
· Fire Chief Ron Coleman was re·
·quested by Councilman Thomas
O'Keefe. He said the matter
could properly be discussed in
private because potential legal
action is involved.
Mayor Anthony DiGiovanni
said today that any action by the
council probably will be withheld
until the Marine Corps completes
a form al investigation into the
cause of the disastrous fire.
Preliminary investigation by
· Camp Pendleton fire inspectors
showed that the fi re was caused
by electrical welding equipment
·in use the morning of Jan. 21 in
Cristianita Canyon at the north
end ofthe base.
Fanned by Santa Ana winds,
the fire moved off the base and
into the city. The fire destroyed
or damaged 83 homes before it
was brought under control by a
force or 500 firefighters from
throughout the county.
City Manager Kenneth Carr
·said today that a preliminary
estimate shows the city's cost of
fighting the fire was at least
$10,000.
Carr said Thursday that the ci-
ty should pursue the possibility or
making the federal government
pay the bill because the fire
originated on federal land.
The cost estimate breaks down
to $8.500 in overtime for police
and firemen; $1,000 for food and
beverages. and $500 for equip·
ment loss and damage.
Not included in the accounting,
Carr said, is the cost or gasotine
used in emergency vehicles or 3.5
<See CLAIM, Page A2)
Doctor Enters
Innocent Plea
In Rape Case
South Laguna physician Ross
Todd McClure entered a plea of
innocent Thursday during a r·
raignme nt in South County
Municipal court to charges of sex
perversion and rape of a patient
under the influence of drugs.
A preliminary hearing in the
case was scheduled for Feb. 23 in
the court or Judge Blair Barnett.
Dr. McClure, 54, 31542 S. Coast
Highway, was arrested by
sheriff's deputies after investiga·
tion or a patient's claim that she
was raped while under the in·
fluence or drugs and forced to
participate in an act or sexual
perversion. _ .
Point woman, had sought treat·
ment for a back injury. The al·
leged offense is reported to have
occurred Jan. 7.
Citizens
Oppose
Proposal
By HI LARY KAVE
Of tlM Dally Piiot St.ff
'•
Opponents of an Irvine Com·
pany plan to develop its remain-
ing coastal property called it
"madness" and "a blueprint for
destruction" at a county Plan-
ning Commission hearing Thurs·
day n ight al Orange Coast
College
Fewer t han 100 persons al·
tended the airing of the plan.
Those who spoke criticized the
proposed development and asked
' instead for open space.
Leading the opposition was the
Friends of the Irvine Coast, a
citizens group.
The site in question is the 10,000
acre parcel of Irv!ne Ranch land
that lies between Newport Beach
and Laguna Beach. The develop·
ment. referred to as the TICMAP
plan. would bring an estimated
80.000 new people into the area.
Al Thursday's hearing befQre
the Orange County Planning
Commission. the Irvine Com-
pany used slides, maps and a
series or coordinated speakers to
detail the plan
Additional hearings will con·
tinue during the next six months.
with the county Board or
Supervisors expected to act on
the plan on June 30.
According to Don Cameron.
Irvine Com pany director of
urban design. two-thirds or the
TICMAP development would be
in the coastal region adjacent to
the Newport Beach border.
That region would include a r e·
sort "triangle, .. with hotels.
shops and restaurants located at
Wishbone Hill, Crystal Cove and
Reef Pomt.
ln addition, the coastal region
would have four higher density
hilltop communities, according
tothe plan.
Lower density residential com·
munities would be in the "hin·
terland area."
According to Cameron, 34 per·
cent of the site would be de-
veloped, with the remaining 66
percent left for recreational and
open space uses. Several four
and s ix-lane r oads would be built.
Part of the 66 percent has
already been identified for state
parks and would be purchased by
the state . However, the Irvine
Company is s till looking for
buyers for the rest or the pro-
posed open space land.
(SeeTICMAP, Page AZ)
Clemente Man
Mr. Thompson
Deadat64
Thomas "Tommy'' Thompson,
a Laguna Beach city employe
and former ownet otQie Laguna
Beach transit ·company, died
Thursday Jn Sall Clemente. He
was64.
Road System Approved
Mr. Thompson was rushed to
San Clemente General Hospital
1bortly before midnight from his
residence al 105 E . Avenida Mar·
qulta. His w ife called the
authorities.
The Orange County C«oner·s
office reported the came of death
to be natur al and attributed it to
heart f allure.
Mr. Thompson wu the owneT
ol the but Uoe purchased by the
city in 1970. He atayed on with the
line becomins a cltyemploye.
Although hls official title was
"but driver" Thompson had
been aul1ned to desk work for
about the last year.
.f'uneral · arrangements are
pending. . .
•
San Clemente Backs Somh County System
By FREDE RICK SOIOEMEHL
• ot 111e o.11r ...... SWt
· A road system that would
serve a potential south Orange
County population or 1.3 million
. persons narrowly won support of·
the San Clemente City Council
Thursday nlght.
In a 3-to-2 decision. the council
.threw its support behind the
moet dense development option
ouWned in the Southeast Orange
County Circulation Study
.<SEOCCS>.
· The option back d by the
council recommend con.41truc·
: tlon or two ''tran1portatlon cor·
ridors" throuah the south county
to meet traffic demands or one
million new residents. The cur·
rent south county population is
about 200,000 persons.
A transportation corridor Uke·
ly would include a freeway aQd
•some form of rapid transit, ac-
. cording to county officials.
· Councilman Thomas O'Keere,
· a member of the committee that
assembled the SEOCCS report,
argued in favor or the high
. density option.
· O'Keef e said the city and
county "should plan today and
reserve corridors" as a kind oC
self ·protection against future de·
velopment In the south county.
Proper advance planntna
could prev e nt traffic
"quagmires" s uch as exist in
Laguna Beach and Newport
~ach, O'Keere said.
O'Keefe's position won back·
ing from Mayor Antho ny
DiGiovanni and Councilman
Arthur Holmes. Councilmen
Patrick Lane and Charles Fox
dissented.
The two dissenters indicated
they supported the low densi(y
option which envisioos 500,000
new residents when the south
county is ultimately developed.
Lane said he was concerned
that one of the transportaUoo
corridors would tie Into tbe Sao
Diego Frecw ay south of tbe city
limits and thus make San
Clemente an island between two
freeways. "That will c"ate
(See &OADS, P ... AI)
. .
• •
' .
.
' • •
•
2 DAILY PILOT L/SC
1 SC Lauds
I
Students
At Fire
San Clemente High School stu·
dents who hopped from roof to
roof in efforts to save homes in
the recent fire will be honored by
the San Clemente City Council.
Thursday night. the council un-
animou~ly approved a recom-
mendation of Mayor Anthony
DiGiovanni that a etaque be
struck commemorating t.he stu·
dents' work.
DiGiovanni. a resident ol the
ilre area in which 14 homes were
destToyed, said the students did
much to prevent further loss of
homes.
During the fire, the high school
students were seen jumping from
roof to roof with garden hoses.
dousing hot embers that rained
down from the sky.
In a related action, the council
authorized that a resolution be
drawn up to commend everyone
who assisted in the fire fight
"It is gratifying to me to see
such team work in our city," said
DiGiovanni.
* * * From Page Al
CLAIM •..
million gallons of water used to
douse the blaze.
Those costs are still being de-
termined. he said.
The prt v ate discussion of the
claim was among several fire-
related topi cs taken up by the
council at its first meetmg since
the fire.
Earlier in the meeting,
O'Keefe lashed out at what he
termed ··a super number of Mon-
day morning quarterbacks" who
criticized actions of firefighters.
To the charge that the fire de-
partment was inadequate to han-
dle the fire. O'Keefe declared.
"'No city in Orange County could
support a fire department of suf-
ficient strength to combat a fire
of that size."
O'Keefe said complaints that
the city does not requi r e
fireproofing of roofs also were
out of line. noting that fire
restrictive materials were re-
quired in new developments in
the city's south side.
He said it was "unfortunate"
the standards were not in force 10
years ago when the tract where
homes burned was built.
Councilman Arthur Holmes
asked the city staff to study the
feasibility of a "controlled bum"
. of areas not hit by the blaze.
DiGiovanni requested a
further report from city building
officials on requirements for fire
resistive roofs. That report will
be made Feb. 18.
Beauty Group
Names Panel
In San Juan
Mrs. Vinton Frost is the newly
elected president of the Board of
Directors for San Juan Beautiful.
Other n ew officers are:
William Fischer Jr., vice presi-
dent; Mrs. Claude John ,
treasurer; G.P. Durenberger, re-
cording secretary, and Mrs.
Archie Lovell , correspondin g
secretary.
Each year, the organization
sponsors an attic sale in May and
a home tour in December to sup-
port the city's tree planting and
beautification program.
San Juan Beautiful also
sponsors an annual Awards Din·
ner in June to note the architec·
ture. landscape, restoration and
maintenance of commercial and
industrial buildings in the city.
Persons interested in joining
the organization may write to
P.O. Box 301, San Juan
Capistrano. 92675.
ORANGE COAST
Ll!.C
DAILY PILOT
TH Or•llQI' Coa\I O••lv P•IOI w·lh-ich "com-buwd OW Nf•\ p, .. ,, l\OUC>l1~bYUWO<.nglf ~' Puoll\111119 Como•nv ~··•~~'''°"'.," .,..bll\ll•d Mond•Y lhrovqh FrMl•Y tor Co\I• ~w H•wport llu<ll. Hunllnoton Bucllff....,. 1aln V•lley, lrvor\e, Saddltbo><• V-ll•y •n<1 l..-g~ 6#6<n ~uth (O.)'.f A \1"G•f' '"O~MIHJ1
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!.ht't"I, (O'\l•M~~iilt ( .. llf6,lh1\'1~lb
Robert N. We@d
Pr .. ldonl .,.., Puhl'""''
Jack R. Curley Vlt• Pr•\ld•nl and Gtn<·ratM.tnootr
Thomas Keevil
Cd1tor
Thomas A. Murphine
M•Mlll~((lllOf
Charles H. Loos Richard P. Nall
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A.U-"llr.
f'rlday, January 30. 1978
KENNEWICK, Wash. (UPI) -Elsie Mccollum
fears for her daughter's welfare and opposes her mar-
riage to the man who crashed an auto eight months
-ago leaving the young woman paralyzed from the
neck down.
''The first I knew about it was when I read it in the
paper,,, said Mrs. McCollum· of plans by her
daughter, Jean, 18. to marry Robert Cox, 20.
Jean's neck was broken in three places when she
was thrown 145 feet out of a car that overturned four
times just south of Prosser.
The State Patrol said the vehicle was traveling at a
high rate of speed at the time, and Cox was later
:::harged with reckless driving and had his license sus-
pended for 30 days.
This month, Jean discharged herself from the
hospital and went to live with Cox's relatives in Paterson.
Fro.Page Al
GUNMAN'S ACT PROBED. • •
anymore.''
By some accounts, Castillo's
mother blamed the Vietnam
war's influence on her son's
mental condition.
Mrs. Diane Castillo, a city of
Laguna Beach finance depart-
ment employe, said her son was
a Vietnam veteran and had been
deeply affected by his participa-
tion in the war.
Castillo was a registered stu-
dent at Saddleback Community
College. Originally he had
signed up for a heavy class load.
22 units. but it was revised
downward to the average study
load of 16 units.
Castillo's course of study in-
cluded a private pilots class,
several math elasses and guitar,
a college spokesman said.
As pieced together by the
Sheriff's Department and
Laguna Beach police this is the
sequence of events:
At about 8:30 , tow truck driver
Jack Hogarty was called to a
disabled car at 1104 Miramar.
He was accosted as he entered
the house and left bound and
gagged. His tow truck is stolen.
Just before 9 a .m., Castillo
posing as a tow truck driver ap-
proached the side entrance of
the Security Pacific Bank, 30812
From Page Al
SHOOTOUT
"I asked him, if he was going to
shoot me and he said, 'no, the on-
ly one who should get shot is
me'," Hagerty said.
Hagerty said he was told ''the
only thing I'm gonn a take is your
truck."
He said the man told him, 'Tm
gonna turn the radio on before I
leave and maybe I could hear
what was going on, on the radio.
''He said if I get loose, the
phone was in the corner, go
ahead and call the police.
"I asked him if he was coming
back and he said, 'oh, 1 won't be
coming back."'
Hagerty said he scraped the
tape from his mouth by rubbing
his face along the carpet. and he
inched along the noor lo reach
the telephone.
··1 found it's nearly impossible
to dial zero or 911 <an emergency
number in San Clemente) \\1th
your tongue," Hagerty said.
He said he tried to dial 411 to
get an operator. bul kept getting
a recording.
Frustrated with the telephone.
Hagerty said he squirmed across
the floor to a sliding glass door.
"I got it unlocked with my
nose, but couldn 't get it open."
He banged on the glass to attract
attention, but again, was unsuc·
cessful.
Then he made his way down
the hallway to some louvered
windows and yelled for help. His
sc ream s wer e h ear d by
neighbors who called police.
Aside from a swollen face from
the scuffing across the carpet.
and some sore bones because of
the bindings, Hagerty suffered a
small gash on his hand when the
tape was cut off. He was taken to
South Coast Community Hospital
for minor treatment.
In the same hospital, doctors
labored to save the lives of
Castillo, shot by police and
Security Pacific bank manager
Gerald Guess shot in the holdup
''I'd just finis hed reading
'Helter Skelter' (a book about the
Manson murders) a week ego,
and I don't think that helped mat·
ters," Hagerty said.
"Some pretty fright~niog
thlnis go through your mJnd," he
said.
•
_San Juan Burglar
Takes Away Goods
Orange County sheriff's or-
flcers are investigating the theft
from a San Juan CaplAtrano
home of silver, cuh and pboto-
grapb.fc equJpment valued by the
victims at nearly $1 ,:.JO.
Deputies sald intn.tders who
pried open a sliding gla.sa door
took the valuables from t.he home
of rairee Laurie W. Taylor while
he was on V1catlon. They said the
bomewuranaacked.
Coast Highway, South Laguna.
He contacted an employe and
said he was there to repossess a
bank employe's car in the park-
ing lot. The employe, Nancy
Letcher, assistant manager, left
the bank enroute to her car with
Castillo.
He went to the tow truck, and
pulled the high-powered rifle
Crom the truck and he and Mr.s.
Letcher returned to the bank.
In side the bank , other
employes saw the gunman com-
ing toward the locked door.
The gunman fired a round
through the door, near where
Guess was standing.
The gunman saw the
manager, thought he was ''up to
something" and fired through
the glass, bitting the manager in
the upper torso, Krans said.
The gunman broke in the glass
door with the butt of his rifle and
went in, gouging his arm on a
hanging shard of glass.
Once ins ide, he collected
money (the amount is ~known)
and tried to flee. However, an
alarm had notified Laguna
Beach police and two police cars
arrived on the scene just as the
bandit left the bank.
He ran toward Mrs. Letcher's
car, got in, couldn't start the
vehicle and got out. Laguna
Beach officer Larry Galat ar-
rived and was the target of two
shots fired by the gunman. Galat
retµrned the fire with his
shotgun. The bandit made it into
the bank, dropping $500 about 10
feel outside the bank door.
Inside again, the gunman re-
leased all the bank employes ex-
cept the manager and a teller.
He allowed the authorities to br-
ing up an ambulance to take the
manager away.
From Page Al
TICMAP •••
Cameron said the entire pro-
ject would t ake between 25 and 30
years to realize, with develop-
ment begun .near the Newport
Beach border in about 10 years
and development at the south end
in about 20 years.
In explaining the reasons
behind the extensive develop.
ment, Cameron pointed out that,
the current use of the land, yields
only $3.30 per acre during a good
year.
Taxes on the land amount to
$750,000 per year. "To be
economicall y feasible, the land
requires development," he said.
''This is a plan the company
feels is do-able. It's a rationale
development that balances both
the public and private interests,''
Cameron maintained.
However, Friends of the Irvine
Coast scoffed at Cameron's
claim .
"The highest and best use of
the land should be based on
both 'return on investment' and
also the social costs involved,"
said Mitch ModeJeski, of the
Friends group.
He said the Friends opposes
the plan because it perpetuates
the domination of th e
automobile, degrades air and
water quality and would destroy
vegetation and wildlife.
"Our alternative is to provide
total open space, like Golden
Gate Park in San Francisco,"
Modeleski said.
He called for a joint acquisition
program by federal, state, coun-
ty and city governments to keep
the land for recreation and open
space.
Costa Mesa citizen Verlyn
Marth, who called the plan a
"blueprint for destruction," told
commissioners that approving
such a development would be
"3nother nall in the comn of
Orange County."
Marth sald he is already sick
~days a year from air pollution
and called on commissionere lo
stop this ''madness:•
t.asuna Beach City Coun-
cilman Jon Brandt also spoke,
a.skin1 commissioners to reject
the TJCMAP plan in Its present
form.
"Project. like TICMAP are an
Invitation to overwbelmJof
Oran1e County 'a open space. 'l'be
Los Anf elea meaatopolis la
enouab,' latd Brandl, a ieo-
grapby prof esapr at Oranse
Coul Colle1e. ·
•
,....,, ... Al
CANDIDATE FORUM • • •
city Parkins, ~ansport uon and CircuJaUon co r:nlttee and in-
volved tbe M riner's SaviDgs
and Loan Parkl g lot.
Gumblner 1 d he quesUoned
whether a loan constituted a
financial conlllct of lnter~t. and
sold the matter had been re-
&0lved at tbe time. CGumbiner
was prevented Crom further
representation.) He said Fried-
berg's question •'is only advanc·
ing further innuendo."
In brief, here ts a recounting of
candidate views delivered during
portions of the forum, in order of
appearance, they are:
-Mark Gumbiner: Voiced
support for creating a charter ci-
ty form ' of government for
Laguna Beach. Gumbiner said
he is a candidate of moderation
who can work with the factions in
Laguna.
-Robert Pruett: Maintained
he is "unsoiled" by entangling
politic al a I Ii ances. Pruett
charged the city council fails to
listen to staff and volunteer com-
mittee recommendations.
-McDowell: Stressed roncem
both for preserving Laguna
Beach as it is and eliminating
frustrations architects and
builders say they have in city
hall dealings. McDowell accused
a political machine of running
Laguna. "You can't quite put a
finger on what's going on but you
can see the results." he said.
-Arnold Hano: Listed 10 pro-
posals for maintaining the
village atmosphere of Laguna
8each. They include purchase of
open areas around the city, ac-
quisition of parks, opposition to
the Irvine coastal plan, growth
controls and fiscal belt tighten-
ing in city hall.
Judgeship Eyed
LOS ANGELES (AP)
Laughlin E. Waters, long active
in Republican politics and a
former U.S. attorney here, has
been nominated by the California
GOP congressional delegation
for a federal judgeship, the Los
Angeles Times reported today.
-Howard Daw1on: Cbarsed
the clly ii 1000 to outapend ib In-
come and that city staff is too
largo for a clty of 15,000 people.
"I Jove the Idea of a little village.
I doo 't love the idea oC a lovc.ly
lltUe bankrupt vWaae," be said.
-Buck. Sims: Urged further
participation by the community
in government and increased
consultaUon of iQVemment of the
community by the city council.
He said the community bas the
energy and talent to solve its own
problems, it city council will
listen.
-8alty Bellerue: Said that to
determine bow to preserve th~
Laguna villaee, llrst the "at-
mosphere" itself bad to be de·
fined. It la, she.aaJd. a collection
and contrast of peoples, struc-
tures and lifestyles. She said she
would fight to malotain these
things. "It is vital to Laguna to
elect candidates who will stand
up and speak out when the time is
right," she said.
F....,PageAJ
ROADS •••
more problems tor our city,
rather than relieve them," said
Lane.
Fox charged that planning of
1 major transportation systems
spawns development. He said,
for example, .that planning of the
Bay Area Rapid Transit.
(BART) system near San Fran-
. cisco led to "overdevelopment"
of many areas.
San Clemente's stand on the
SEOCCS repori will be
forwarded to the county Board
of Supervisors.
San Clemente's recommenda-
tion will join those of other
public agencies in the south
county.
The San Juan Capistrano City
·Council supported the low densi-
ty alternative, while the Mission
Viejo Municipal Advisory coun-
. cil supported the high density
system.
The Laguna Beach City Coun·
ell rejected all options.
Nudity
Surprise
Readied
By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI
Of .. O.lly Pl ... SUff The search of a Mission Viejo
couple f Ol' a young mGD to pop out
of a blrthday cake in tbe nude bas
ended.
Bombarded by telephone calls
.since their ad offering $25 to a
daring student appeared on the
Saddleback College bultetin
board, Bill and Pam Gross have
'settled on 27•yearfo1d David
Bingham.
"We took tbe first one who
called but we have tbe numbers
of about 12 or 15 more in case he
decides ·not to go tbroueb with
It," Mrs. Gross reported today.
Bingham, a Mission Viejo resi-
dent, says he not only intends to
keep bis commitment for Mrs.
Gross' 30th birthday party Feb. 7
but to make sure the guests get
their money's worth.
"I'm trying to work up a couple
of jokes to sort of break the ice
and entertain the people," he
said.
·"The script calls for Bingham to
make his entrance by breaking
out of a large carton decorated as
a birthday present. The idea of a
. cake was abandoned because of
, the expense.
! Phone calls from job can-
'. didates also lit up the college
switchboard and at the Daily
: Pilot shortly after a story ap-
: peared detailing the Gross's
. plight in failing to secure pro-
. spects.
"We bad about five or six calls
and after the paper came out we
really started getting them," not·
· ed Mrs. Jerry Kilfoy ~the cam-
pus employment service.
: One of the callers, who phoned
'both the Grosses and the Daily
:Pilot said he bad been a Playgirl
centerfold and said he wanted the
·job to further his career.
• Several young males were ob-
; served huddling around the col·
: lege bulletin board on Wednes-
. day looking for the notice after
·the unusual job offer bad been
. publicized.
ALL UPHOLSTERY
ON SALE NOW ...
SVCll POPVLAB
LINES A.S:
WOO OMA.BK
BENBEDON
l&ERITA.GE
SHERRIL
MARGE CARSON
PLUS ALL LEATHER ITEMS ••• 20o/o OFF
LAMPS -PICTURES-ACCESSORIES
Also Deduced!
.
WIBOAYS & SATUIOAY1t:tehl'.JO
NEWPORT BEACl-r•
1727 WESTCUt'F DR.. M2-20l50
LAGUNA 8EAQ4 • 34S NCIKTll \.'OA.\'T HWY .. •tt.ml
TORRANCE• 23Mt HAWTHORN1': 81..VD •
fOPf'll Fri. t It. &an. IH.'9>
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NE\l{ YORK STQGK .EXCHANGE
Y~ar·a HifJ~Low1 Ap~er E~ery ·a.turday
.:.:: YOIUC CUllU ' -w. ,... ~ ~ Ntt s.. ~ ~ 1,.. ~ 11111 ,..... ;':t ~~ ... ~ N llOJ Cbe 01t-M ~ Cbe M""' 0.. ~ PE (Ilda> 0... Cho PI llldol a.. O. Pt 11*1 a-Oo
c.lele.. Gf!MC tll ., ~ "' .,... I. ] if!§ ~~ : t'7 ~. " ~ M .... ,= .... . . ....~, 7 .., n-· Y.11 . . " ,,._ "' ~~Olet~ !a:l,t d ;m-.~ ~4~i; I~ nc.•1s n ,m_._ ~::· 211 :r+'. =i..'1.1JJi ttJ ~"!.: ~: g u~:.:
Fuday. January 30. 1976 L/SC OAtL Y PILOT 8
Prodaetion Up 7.8%
Lots of Clwices
For Tire Buyers = L ~ ., .• • 1•• "' '!It .. • • ~ ;T: • m 1J~ " ~ _,. lf "' n + " ,_ ~'!S~ ' 1 ~· i~ ~,. 1 ,. n"-"' ~=..:::1' rJ 1·~~ kttr1 i "'··~ l~., =:"' '""'~. u .c ,J:: ~ ~ , . ': ~~ ~ ~~. it ~,·"':," !'f ,t ~ ,~.!..:: :."l.. , .• t ,, + "' tt a ,, + "' .10 • • ts + \6 ......, ".• • J 21 + " MMnv 1 ·i '' 11\t • ~ ;;;r.. , • ~ •.,t • » '"" + " --"'~ '°' I 10 J -.... ~ .M I 1$V.+ WI ~··ii tt -Vt MeilYSw t.. i Mfll+ .. AWllY 1,1711 6.$ IOl'o+ ~ l'lt1f'Oille t M + ._. = ~ t t47 4Jfll+O'° ~N.~m ··•u\lt+v. ...... ,.,, .!"~ ... ~. ,,_,_, ....,. ... li 1•1•m•·1~~\w.1 1 ,ora,.._ .... ,,.tr1c2. • ~·"' w .• s11 -1 a•SYLVIAPORTER ==~' 1.•,.,: ._ .. " °''.Iii,;; G~.!..'.. i:~i> • !1r?!t"' =~:l 1:1~ l:~t'~ ~lf 1 1
: :=::-~ =.i;o·~',!'~ ~:.~ =~·· ~~ ~"'•1" More of us wUJbuy new and replacement automobile ....._ •IW "-Ji 1 · Ill¥•• » 1"' '" '" • ~ "°"""" Cp ·~ 'I t ••. =JW In 'L IS 3911 ... PNlll!l IM t it9 t._ ,.. 1 7 ~ 11\fl + 'il =!l.u'!i.°'''. ,.... -· ~ 1•10 • ii a~~ ·-~tlAf•• , ,ft ''"' ·-· I.JOI,., ,, M -" PNtlJplt\'t .. '"° .. lit--, .. , ... J '7 1-.. ~ tln. in me than in any previous year in b1Story. And more _,.,. Jlliit J -Obf • ~ er '~1 ,. SV.-1' ttllllttCD .241' i 2~"'· ~ .AOI • • 12"-""' PNIEJptW .. d20 ..... 1 .,._ OW..A n ""• " -I Ill ~ l KJUl,ft eosz 1-.1w. •• •H t• 1 '-• '1" ~11_1 ... ~: ., """'• -He&t 1 ... 11.>111"' """•" MCA fnt,611 1 dS 1s"+1~ Phlt•us .• ue 1•¥t ..• ;:;Ott tt"7 211 >Ofla+ --w us w ma~e expem ve mistakes wheo we buy our tires ~ •• lit • j 1 "• 1111 s .• i.o • . . 151.icoC• '° *'• '""' Houdli. ·* • u ·;~-11o Mc(Ec.1 • 21 ,,_. • .. '""'' p1 1.ao .. iJO ,. + 1 SunOllJlf '" • • ,. u • .. than .__'or~. too. l ... tnw IS 4~ M~ •• 11 • • " ~ .. I&) .... . . . ..,.,. M .>t 7 12 I -" Mt ., CD .. I• ""'-YI Pl\llltpf 7'111 .. 111 ''"" ... SunMtil'll ' IS ins ,, .... "' ~ A~ ... ,. m•-·" .,.._, • aq iJS ... Eat•~"·'° 1 43t ltlli+ "' HcMMl'•o .tA" -s 1"' ... * m1•' m .u •"' ""fi P'•.40 .. &S• f• ~ ~tr"""'• 1 ... 21 +... The re'"•on· tb-· .... e simply too -any models a"d ~' ...... Mil It '7tlll '!.l'f 1 .. » I \It++ ~ ~~I( 1.1~ _! 11U t\"'-IJ -"' ...._.,, 1.10 7 6;. ll:i6 ... Mc. ldQ!aG 2QS1 62\ltt 6't Pl\ pt J.to .. 1100 -.~ ._t,;i"ay, .• ~ ~+ ~ -" .... ., ..,. • •u •• ~'Jr~;o.! tl1 111~··~· Tt<':'°•' 'U 1••~+:: 1 .... g'•*· fti' ,U pj• :t HMMpft~ ·· n ••~-"" Mc:Dollo.«»' 100 """•" Ph 1 "'" .. ·· ao 4 -11t ~, .• »1106 s.l 1!!~·-.... types of Urea to choose from -with thousands of choices •"'-'-'.: ·~ ... si .... .. 1·• -"°"'"°''"' 'i n »11» •·• Ml:Of E 1·2013 82 u~ ·· PN sub ·'° 7 '' ,,_. "' SuPoo · • im .......... available de•plte •"' ...... __ t effo""· f h r b""-i t -·&M 21 ~ t\4 •• I 0 -~Ith i 11» ,.. e:1.5' us ""-" = HI ... " 1 ... , ..... \lo Pl\lllp MM I" .,, S7\fl + 1\11 ~ IO,. '1 SllH 3 . .. UJ'1 ~ l ~ 0 sue u u.:ir g an s as ~! o., '· • 14.,._ 14 -"•.. ""• " t."-• • °" 11 111 n'-+ '" 1p1 uo ·· ' 24'h .. .,., PN 1111' tnd.. ., s ·.. 1:.. .. 2 t'l4• Firatone. Goodvear and Uniroyal to dct the situation under Air ..,t. ·· ff +• i.M1' 17 UV.+ " kc ! SI ~+ "" J .2A 14 • 16 + " tnyr • .-• 111000 +214 Pl\ttl!Pf .Uc .. 2J t -\\ ..,. 11 ,.. ~. ., e :#!··~~. ·,· '~ ... W~tP· 'ft ~7\lt•.".. t'.w1 Hu f,"'::: -...d t.J:O .. M 12 .. " NICl(MA ,,. 6 » 2S • \It Pl\llPltl uo 14 705 S~l '·". ~ ffl6+ .... control. cone Uniroyal , ••u .,, H,.. ~ , = .... =A .• 6 4 ""• y, Mc'-"" ,II) ti .. 50 • ~ PNl'itLAOll 24 '2 t.I'.'• W r•lv •. 1 4.. ... 61 th ll ~.•111 .to,. • ,. + "' -• , a "" ... .we .. • + ... .40 n ,, s•At-"' Mclt11s 1.60 10 100 ui. + .... Pl<kwck .» • ..st 1,,,.. .... .... ,, "*• "' execu.uve aays e re--:= :l:"io 'I 1~. " 10~ • i...• •""'!. ~ .. 1r tr-*~~ 2fi 1m• ·u .40 .. "° 4714. " 11111c .... 11 .ao 1 ' '~ " P1tc1No 1.40 • o 'tr-11o s"""'" ... 10 1 , 20 • .., ....... ing public is in for an ... ~ .... ) n ... "' ~ I " .~, . " HlnMlwl .... ; as .,~-\'I == uo • m 2i1111. P!4r1 t"'9tt . . ,.. -. . . . $¥..,,,.,, t.• . _ 1 ""-. .. u'W.3 ~"' ..... •n ,, 2:1v.+ " ·. 1, ii w 56\lt+ 1 ...... c.. • •v ....,. °' .ao ,, 1•14. "' 2.ao .. » "~ • ...., Plt1&bllrvc' .. u1 .ov.-v. sYsttOn 00n • ,. • .,.., .. epidemic ot ••poly . ... aa .. tel ... s .. '"' + .... s . . 1 •'h-" HtU ,. 112 11 lill + IW Mllt10n E .60 ,,. n --. Mt 8 2.IO • • • .... PtontrC I.to 10 201 S>llt-.. -T T-~~ '-0.104 1~ HV.-\'I cc I °"'.. u Uh ""' £1 lllr '"' tA ,., ...,__"' HvyckCp 40 u IS• ''"-.... MllcMe 1.40 12 ., It¥.+ ft PIU.y 8 60 • •It 17V. + ''" T•llBUl.IO 10 41 2.... .... multiple·tire·ihs ... ) _.....,. ·* 1 1~ 11' ... oc:.1.1s s 10 n~+ 14 e11ue1.10 • "1R 1,_+"' Hyclromt.>611 1CM n -"ME 1 <:«p 1 102 4~ . Pltroro IOQ • 11 1vo.--. T11co11 N•t .. 1'4 J.'11-~ A conservative R Jd ,, ltw-i •11 IMM.2~ 17 Ge IS .+ W1 Ettt.C. UO I t:rt 67~ • -4 t-Mel ~ .6116 291 tt~ . Pltttton IOQ 1 IS01 Jl\lt , Talley tn .60 • 314 l \lt-YI
1.• • .-.+ ., """'• ~ 1 st + ,_. a-a1.11' ttt ~ ·rt 1c '"" uo • * ,..,.. "' ~ .:IOI 4 ,. u-...+ '" Plu.eH1 .030 " 14' 21 1 T•tle'I' pt 1 .. • ""• " estimate ;. tbal overall
Money's
Worth
N U ""'+ ~ IQ .. + _, f I .. 41. -ft IC 11111 pfA • .• llOCI It + ~ Stt .IO t4 17 tt -'" Plan AHtCll t 1• 4 -,,_ Te~ 10410 107 19't+ '-...
M ... , n ~ 1 " ,._ ••• ·• 1 ,,. 14 +1 1c 1n11 pfJY>.. n J1tt1t+ -Mef'C1I 1At• .., n\lt+ 1 .... Pl•YllO• 12 .. n i~"' rwy cOr.. u '°" .__ -pauenger tire produc -N •• .. 1'""+ I. Iii .. t1 41 11~ ...~ 1 IO 100 21•• ._ lgt Pherm • ,,t 4~ + I,') IWl9'9dltft .70 ' 14 14 . PIHMy .'60 I 1' 1z::-; "' Twlcfycr.. It 274 20 -1\\ ~ aita ..am•.-. I· .. 11M:rt ·u l.t '•Jfi ........ ..,_Pu'11 "21~-.... Miwrt1Ly .aottas1 n v.+1 ~&Mt 10021" ·~ TlllNftC .20 .. ,, 1"'1+"' tionthisyearwillbeup7.6percent.This trans latesintoan .,. M 1 61 11~~ , t .. MJll li'6+ ~ • ,, ..,.. ... t ... a.slcl 7 11' tS4+ llNM ..... OSll S60 ""•' Pol«Old l21•2tlS l1~--hcnlc.,.tOto J03 31 .. -1 .. i f10 'lli ln '"'-'-~ f · ed · h ~="2~ r.• l~! ~ " l;:,.: 1: litt.·~-· ti» l,t: t:I~,':·, 22! "av.!' ... =:!':~;~-; ~ m:•." ~r:-1~:1 1n l:~ ~ TT~~ 1~ _,.1s 1,1~~ ~ ncreaseo mt on ~num!A::ro tires turn outmt e
M '" .... • .. 1 + ~ .... "°" , s u " .,., ............. ~. • • -~ .. U.S., with a major part or the rise going to replacement .. ·1 • ·~·... , ' ti ...... ,· ~ 1• .... + E IPS "-•tty .... J'h ........ .,.toll t I JI -v. c. ~19 -T .. tnwul .2Atl 1SI S6"'•' ... Oie .AO m t4"• ~ 1.a '1"5 16 .... -"' ,.:.a;1.... 111 =.... tit f>wr 2 20,. '~ 16\fl-M G ... .uo 7 ia 1~-.... Porterpl sv. . • 110 ., -I T•ll<or .• • " .... • •• tira 16 1: 7""+ ll ~ 11 ft 11\ll + ._ o. ..,.. IHPw ... 2.04 .. t170 t• . . . Mlttwn .60 11 1n ttV. + ~ "°'1GE I.SI t " 11\lt • • . T•..._ -S .... -~ ·~ • = ,..:n1n 1 1~+" It. 10 11t 22.,.,_~ 11 Jtt t7'1t+1 111PwPi2.13 .noo 2S\'f+2 Mll!llfL12t .1100 71¥t+ Y> PGEllfll.SO .IM0109 + V. T-yn-pt4 •. "'1 70;;\; Uh~ a. ·~·'e . ,. m 21""-~ Ill( 1• • isw. ... 111r.iw.so1• •t mi.-Ya MG1c1n 10 . 1m 1'14~ Y> Pod.tc111v.b m n11t+1 ... T•llClf'omp .. 466 7v.-v. OTHER ESTIMATES are highe r . The Rubber
._,.' ,, asv.+ c1.-»t """• 11i J • '"'+" ,,...,.,c .:io 111CM l4i.+1 ~1.10 1 "1114-\.'o PotEtPi.i.11 * 13""'• "1t Tei .. Corp 1tm 1 +" Manufacturers Association itself predicts that original """"X l.U'' * Q + ,....eon 1» "~" f 6 '~. ¥t IN.\Col.101' 2Jt 39\4+114 MkJ'ISTwo l • llSt ~· ..... PolEl!llS\11 . 1170 56\'f+ .... TeMCO 1.16 1 670 29\lt . """"x.tt' ·i • 1tw.+Jf\ '1 u 1" i.v.+ "' ... u... 1,1 11• '°"'• •;.:, IMA 1v u•• .. s ,, + "' *"wp12".. t 4 ""• v. 1>ote1p1 s.. 1J110 s. +1 T-pf si;, .. 22 10t11t . _ equipment tire production will exceed 46 million in 1976 and
AlflllK "° * " + " tl11t11 1127!0 1'~• U bmer .. '·" ... + ... ftOlfM C.p .. 11 5911 • v. Mk:"*I 11 7 "" ,,,._ .,., Po(Etp1 •·04 · 1100 .. ,,. · ·· T"°"°,..1 1 4 .... 16"-• :-:tihacement tires will reach 139 million -a total or 185 ArncllN .• " 6-.. ~ ti jllf 1110 .. 1001 2414 + a.re .» 11 • Slit. .... l!KClnc .J2d . IS tV. .. . Mierow.... 11 ., " ... ,., PolElpf 1 .... . I :16\lt-\It T-pf2." . . -Jt-~ "
,.
Amtrec IJO ' t ,, -" ~ll~ •1 ltto 611 +t ... ..,,"' .II .,_ » ~"' lndl~J 110 ,, ,. ..... MldcGnt 1.0I' 102 .. __ .... PPGlnd l.IO" .... 40 -.... Teuc. t • , ... 21\4 ·-· on tires Add heavy servt"ce t1"res farm t1'res and orr
NltHe• ·lJ • • ,..__ c .o-. • t.. •-+ 16 YI 'L«l,.1 1 41 • "' •l'IOM p1 '·" •• 110 " + \la Mldld R 1.30 6 w J<Wo+ ~ Pn m Pl to .. n IS-• -Te11ETr 1.10 1 '" ii~+ ... tbe·road tires -and the total is almost 225 million. _ ... I ... , , • ........ • ... h ... ..... .. fi!:BJ I.AO •S 1t2 .-+ -lndMk pl 12 . , z400 tOt . . . MldSoU t.32 9 523 IV.. . • Prem Ind .:Mt I 1S 11\la + ~ THCBndl t 12 M tJ-. + -' • •
A"" .. ) • JJ so ... , NV I • 1rt 14111 .. , Prod ., -.,. .. • lnclPwL 1.12 ' " 2t ... Mllftll» 1.21 t 79 tl\lt-..... Proct A.Otl! t2 M7 ., + 1 TJClT pf 2'\ . . '° tt.... .... It h b h ped h b AmAJrl'l' 1; w ""• ~ •l'M .611 . " 1\lt ·1: 1';5 1 •• "" .•. 1~11.20 1 111 ..... .,., Mltlt\&r ·* • "' 13 • ~ PnxlAu 40 1J _, t'J\ ... T110tTr 1.• , ,, """-~. as een o t at y Jan. l the National Highway AmAlrt "U .. S6t ·~• " tM~.ao 11n 2t!4-..., • P •• ~ ,,1.__"' 1ne11ce ou .. 304 1•.i.-,.. MM&M us t7 1211 •2~+tt. Protu t 1 40 3 '4 """• .. rxo.Tp1 t\lt .. 1 33 + "• T atr1· Safet Ad · · t ti n:..a h t bl' h d
·. -· ;;~'ilO •: 'I ~~! = ;: ii :t ::t.: 1'\ 1.~ ,_, -"' '::f.""d '·:f,. •1• "~• MlmPL 1.s. 1 31 ""• ... P s • inc . " •~ .. v. ~:!rsl:iJ·f: 1: 'n ~~~: r c Y mtrus ra on wou u ave es a 1s e some Am"'i~::':)6S ~h+~~ Hn~ S :ttJ =··· r:r~.~l:~~~._ i~~.~;t 1li * ~~~ :::l'i i ~~ J~~tt a~~t~.~ ~ ll~:: i::.~1~\ro!•f m 11:~=l~ ~~~riab%n~h;i~:~Sa8!l~~~~~i::!~n;i~r~;e~u!~';;~i[:~~g~~t A <:en '?.'toe 1 1 l:-W t:lO I "t 41~+-ft rcl!ld .iO n a 7'1il ... lnfftllllt .« e ,S4 t&ll-v. Mo PK pf 1 . . S7 n-.+ ~ PSEGPI s.~s .. 1100 s:i -1 T•• Oii .019 1 2n 1~ .,. • c.n llf t~ •• s 2 lh .,.. uu1 " "* ·:1 ""'"" M • a. 12.,.. .. • 111111eo c .10 1 us •~-" MoPrtc 1·60 • io ~· v. PSEGof s.a ·• 1100 »Yt+ ~ Te11P1t1..A1 Tr o • 11~-"" YOU -ON YOUR own -must determine which tires Ameen MtQ " IYf 2.'9 • "' 37l\-,.. ~.AO IS 7 11~ \It INlk;vpf 114 .. 24 Ulli. ""' Mo PttS .14g 7 38 11\lt + .... "SEGpt 6.90 .. uo 70'4-\It TelCutll u•,, 310 t2 • -
AmCYM 1VJ 'i 67' '"'• ·~ 111 • ..s. 1 10 tlliH -.. ' ..... ~ •• " 611» ••• tl'ISOltlol' .•11 11 u v1-111o Mo1111otom ·· 40 4\lt+ v. PSEQOl 7 . .t0 •· 1.200 78 •1 THfl 1n11ust.. m ,.,. ... offer the performance you want and which are the best for Arn Ol•tlllo •• ,. ,.,._Vi MitwC:. •• ,, ~ ... r-•--· .. ~ '~·" ln1llt1111I tnv .. tl '"" ..... MDOllOt 3.40 7 669 S4~+ 'Ill PSEGd 7.70 .. l.SOO .,.,.. ·--T•lrtron 1.1010 116 2 ...... "" ADlltTel.5112 ., u ... 14 OIMllC,t1L. n, 10 ... ~co .,. '' .... LL tnteoon .S2 . 2S 1111 .. "' ~.602& tt• t9Yo-v. P$EGtiit.62 .. l220102'h ... TtJClrpCJ.OI .. 1S 2'"" ··-yourcar.
AmO\letv.i .. • s~+\t °'"""'"'t• nv.+v. A ...... -... 111tercou210•7'~+v.Motwn0t .. 11s •lll•v.. PSEOcll2.44 .• 4117 +14 T•m,.t.40 .. 2022'¥t-11o B · 11th th t rt· th kt
Am£tc~ 2 ·; Mt ttt'I+ 'iii " O•tt ... 112 sVJ+ " ·'° • "' 15-"'• .,.. lntlf't•ke 2 s 111 u-+ 1 Motycrp . .a • '15 1~• ,.,.. ·· 11"° 117"1t+• TI1m11ttt ·" 2v ,.... l614-tv. bias, bias· belted and radial. The radials are the most ex· AOulllf... 1 u""' !•••·· s· '"'.. ta 11 ''""•"' 1ntrcon1Dh1 J n W>•..,. Mot1w11Rb1su1eYt-11. PSEpftus Thk*ot .707 t7 ""'•~ as1ca y, ereare ree ypeso ireson emar e -
Afi'-.lly .21 I Sii 11 ... + YI ~~ 1 107 12 • . . ,...,,_I.to 6 35 :rt + _. 8M Cor~ tt IS9157~+1Yt MolYCof 2~ . . I JSV. +I~ P\IS lncl1.72 U 503 4214 + .._ Thomtn . .00 2' 4 M -\.1t
lilnfi'MSYt ., t\lt+ ~ .,.......,. .• fOJ Ul\+ * $1.20 .. •" +" tntA•v . ,. 3S7 2nh v. MoriMhuo' "11~""' PS1ndpft.4' .. 1.S2io101vt. .. Thom.JW .!611 42 '""+,.. pen.sjve, but they offer you better road·handling chai-ac·
A Gnld .tw'.: <42 ''" ... wt •• so .S.t• •.• .._. \-: 1s7 .H n~ ~ lntHerv I. 7 350 t7\lt+ "" MonQrm ·20 6 ... w. ... PStno.r. '·04 .. 11100 l2\la+ Vt ThrlflyO .• 13 57 • •-..:-tics, 1'mproved tract1'on, longer l1'fe, lower cost per t1're AOttlScl..J2 .. 22 U~+ -Ml•·• 20 l\fl ... ._ • lntlMlnQ\2 4 S11 M~-"' Monf'MA .202' 5'3 9*-~ PSH e t.IO 7 II 20 + 14 Tl(loroetnltl 300 1211'1-Yt l.Clut
A Oft'"' .60 • 1000 ""'• " -1 .-.. 1~1•.. t1 a.. ... """°ct.to t 14 2711t+ "-'"u MJn•nv 1 " • • Monwn uo" n3 92~+ 2v. PSNH pf tt1t · · 1730 2l'A •• • TldeMer .70 • '° .__ ~ mile and higher gas mileage. A general forecast among ma· AOn .. '-IO .. n UV.+~ n .. 11 .40. J 21\fl+ i. ~dC. •• tit I!~+~ lfttMullfl'lt 7 '7 JO +t MDnlpf 2V. .• '1CXI +3'1'> PSNMIC U t 9 C IN+ \It T19"'1tl .10d13 ,12 ttV. ... ""'°"".to .. 11 1..._+ "' o. ·",. a "" .. · fl'ldlki .Mi 6 .. ...... -1111H<• 1.• 10 Jii "" • MontDk LOI 7 9 29 + 'l• P\iblte11r ~" 94 s14-"' TllM inc t u tu 67"" • 1v. jor tire producers is that within five years -by 1980 -one Ml .... , •• s 11' I•~·" .ono110.a ., IJOIOS +1 ~8cl.A0 7 !! ICM+ \It IMIPeper11S 70'-•' MonPw1.tO. m 2~~ Pueblo Intl . 11$ '""_ .... TlmtsM .SOIS ICM 21Y, ... f . eel ' th us ·11 ""'"°"" 1 n '"' u!4+ "' ~f\Mlle 1.AO ' tt n~+ .......... 1c1ctM1 us -io.-"' 1nt1"'9<tt u 2 1 M\195 1.1e11 .. '1 22*-v. PR eamen1 . ' '" ... Tlfftkn uo. 1 m ...... _"' o every two tires us m e .. w1 be a radial.
A"°"" PU .. , 111 -"' T-1111.10 ' t• a. ... A11r11 ~ 5 B ~· "' 1"1T&T 16010 1"1 21~-·;;; MonvM ·'911 " 122 IRll+ v. ~SP :i.a. • '" ~· :v. Tl~ RI ·· 15 u-.-~ · In an attempt to ease the tire selection process, one AmHMjt .M 2S JOt M'-+ I '-11 •• '1 6"1 3216+ * =~·a ·t m :~:+ : I T&T pfE 4 .• 1110 IS + 11\lt Moor Mc .• S S21 37.._"' P\I mn 1 20 • 203 31 -1 TOW.Pt!. tSb.. 11 ,..,_ ~
1i1n 111wttn1 ·• n ~· " Otfto sit 1.10 .. u 1•+ "" .. .-...... 11011 --• ... 1 T&T pfF'.. 1 n ··· Mor9JP 1'°13 .s. "' • 'II. P\iruc:p ·" 9 174 " • ~ Todd SfllpYd ·· • IVI-" company (Uniroyal) has adopted a radial ''performance-• Mtclkl.12 •. ., • -.... Ot SitN 2.• • "' .. ,~ ... -~rTJ~--... 10 1m2 ~·. ::. I T&(ZH 4 4 S3'h + \II Mornnt<.n I • 2A 22'1'1+ ""' P\IAJ(pf I 3S • ' 22 _, TOie Ed L 12 • '5 2S • '"'
• MNl<or• s tu 1 -" g""te .ASb •• ,. n.+ "" ~~ -,. 1 • =.. ~ 1 TT 1 ..... • 20 u v.-v. MDrw e1"' •· 43 >\It+ v. PIH1ten F111 · · 4$ ,,._ "' Tonu~ .AO 11 116 u + "' rated" program, under which each of its own four radial Attt ,....,. .. "' Sfll-.... ty '"" ... " '°' N + "" or...1ec""'-,·10 11 -~ -:: I T.. plJ 4 : : " SO\'f. \It Mr>rwSll .ao 7 ts II . . . Purlatr 1.04,, 56 41~+ * TectUAI ·-16 • ..-• Vt • • 1 bel d din 1i1rtN02.f:S 1 1n 11""+ " ,., tm .u .. • .., ... :;:: .. ..!. · ... ,. :;: #>,,Yr--:: 1 T&T p11( 4 •• st 4'Yt+ .... Mio-Tr Am .. so J~+ "' ~ o-T,_Co ·" 10 a 2'14? v. tires 1s a e accor g to its mileage capabilities. Before
•----. • 17 10•~ ""-Qty 111'1 oft 1• IM+ * .--...._ ---"" I TTrN 2\fl • • 1'7 U"°+ Vt MortHor .• 11 WO 1' + "' QuekO.t M Ii 715 17"' + 14 TrM.-n .U 10 722 I~ bu · th h t' r( h Asi;1'11111I 14 ,~-.~ otYtflfUt .',: 2 20i.+1~ ~~~ 151g:-:1T& ptos .. ,. s.Yt ... Matorote .70'3 •.29 ~· °'" ~11.0.100 . t ~--Tr_pf,'h .. 1 ao +2\tt ymg,you can uscomparet e 1re pe ormancec arac· AITl~i t U) 2114• \It o.rt!W1.611 1• M +1V. _... • ll'llrpe< I to 1 .. ""'•\lo M1Fuelt.4l l4 20 ll -V> ~"".S6 •• l'.140ll»llt ... Tm1lnc:.1Jd •• IS 2?Vi .•. te ... "tics or Un1'royal's rad1'als · m1'leage constructi'on re ~-._.. u 62 + Y. 0at1i oi1 .so •• n 10t'I ••. ~ 1~.1212 ~ 1n:~'" '""'l'Mllf s .. ,, 1sy,. ,.,., MtStT•• u2 • » 20\\ • . Qloek$()4 .n 12 td '"-• ... TrlM(.O .-11 •n ·~-" •... · 1 • • Ml~ll .• 11 ios 1~ ••• CLc "'"' ..2A 10 ao • ... £.a,ur::•1.,• 1·2· 2 ,, '"""*Gr 1 1 ., 20 • \It Muntcwd ·'° 7 " t-..+ "• CNtttor .ou • 11 •• L • ~ Trn&<lln .AS" 1u l t'l-1 lative stopping ability on wet pavements and relative steer-
AmT .. TJ..0111001 ss ..... " el2.56' 100 ""'• -FttVBMAS ... 5441+"' llllttl"Wl40. ,. IStll+ .... MuranQt.•10 12 " . --«It-TrMUnUOll 120 ?9'1'>-~ ingresponse. Arnstn ,,to 4 ff 27"-~ i5 Olfffll 7t St~+l¥t ~ """· ... lnlltll+'d .IO S 12 IS + \\ Munfdpl.40 .. 22 •'4+ Vt CNtS10f'pf 2.. 1 •v,.-... TronollF .20 • 12S 9¥t+ v.
•1"T of 4 .. 414 Siio\ • .. II~ tt .. rtoO 11t + 1\fl ~ n: ' g ="' ·~" '"" IJnd :14 7 110 s"' . .. MurpCO 1.20 I 19 lt\l't-•,. Ralston P 1 1• 27' ~ + "' Trnswy 1.40 7 )4 """-~
ATillfA a.'4 .. 211 •1i.+ " • .u,. "' ,."' ... f'1"~11A4 ,, ..... , "" ,,.~ -'"'a..1 •n > 11 n~-1"-Murpfl()t .60 • " '""'-v. AAmede •n 11 ~ ',~ • .. Tre11s w At• .. * t ·•· BUT THAT'S ONE company. Overall. you'll sti'll be 1·n ATTIJf8 S.7• 11• ..... "' '*' 10 ltl '"' ... r---.... ·-Ell.JO ts 31 14"'• "' Mi;rry Oh I 7 19 IW> . •• Renc.o In .40 .. 2l + "' Tr-WA°' • •m+ "' wa ·· + i"'"' Pt 1 .. " 11~" A~ 20 1 • 12"• "" •-HG 112 1 as ,...._ MutOm u2 ·· " u~.,.. Rapid""-·· '° 6\lo+ ""' rrevt" 1.• i.i 290 26"'+ 14 · an utterly be wildering market when you'r e buying tires this = tr ·~ S 11 t YI • "' I c. · · us ti* "'1 l"leMf:lll 'az it 4ll 1~ "' '-l"WLi 2 7 20 u-. · · · ~n L .40 24 56 7~ + "' Rapid pf 2\lo · · I 21 --· TrevtrJ pf 2 • • 7 33 -'h
• ~ 1 •• a.JO 11 -"" ,,. ;.v 1 •• "' , + ~ """"""° ·.ao • " 1~+ v. •-PS 1 .a 1 " 1tl4 • ·~ -... N-AAvi.fo ,.,,, s 1.s JOilli+ ,,,, TRE ep SI • n1o year. To help you with replacement tires, therefore, the =Elii4·;-: ;=-.~ Allf~o :: SS m'a=Va ~ ... , ......... *!··.o5e111 1S 001•• 1~"' lpc0Hosci11111 " S\\+ Vt Nilbltcol.4011 • ~ •.. Ra'fdlnll .41 7 ~ 17~-\.1t Tri eon ..... :: -21~+i" Tir Id s r .,.,,.,~ .lOb • ,. , .. _.,.. CHA1n1.oa.u ,, ,,~,,.. ......... '11 ,.. ~"' ITl!.tl'llCI '°" n 2~+" Na1c.o01.nu m ,.,,.. ... AAY1M<>n 1 111ao st +1~ T•IC1tpt 2.,., .• 3 31 +" e n ustry a ety Council in cooperation with the Na·
,.,,,....k •n 1 • 1'3 t11'-" O..tpf 1.Gc .. t S\4 ••• Alfttll pf •Ya •• 12'1> 17 + ~ '"" c:Mi>rtn a m 12v.-"" Nerco Sc •60 ' 36 t7 • ·· RCA O>tlt 1 "1157 UYt+ v. Trenv•• .toe • ts 1w.+ "" tional Highway Traffic Administration, suggest: .,,.,. '" U<I,, 17• UV.+ " I' GM s 1"9 ""' + Y> ~~ntk pf 214 .. 2 ft14-.... ITl!.l CP 20 • 122 • NHhuaC .6017 211 m't+ ~ RCA CV pf 4 • n •1'11. • • • Tri Pacific. .. .. '"' • . . N ' N111~1nc 1 s 160 11 ... I"''·· u 11~+ ~ ,....,£c::o..ttt .s 1, •.,.. 1u '"'':es 4 292 1114 .·v; NMA1r1n .so 11 11 in.+~ qAtednQGo . s •v.+.,.. Tr1n11v1nc11 s m n +1~ -ever choose as a replacement a s maller·size tire AM, Inc ,1.,. 2! 12v. + 1141 . 'I·· 31 21~'+ Iii is,. Get ·'° • u1 ' • * __,, J-IW!Avn .11d • • .u im+ v. qRt.tdQ ioi . . 2 iv. . .. T~<.,.• .20 21 ,. ttv. + " than those the car came with. ...__ .... • I...._ ...._ 2 1S -. ...... , .. lllePwr 2 10 1 DI ..._ ~ •-"' 61 ti 17 1•"-,,, ~IC... .S7 S 171> 13 + V• q~ 2PI · 2 IV.+ 141 T W Int 20 7 126 2t AM'Pt0 '"'& • ill.!.~ 11.:.0" ra 'ii;;~ fl,tPwL ....... 21S 26""'• -~" .. '70 7 " 1114-~ Ht en pf 11/• •• • D-\4 . . . Rqd& t.40 • 22' llV.-.... TRW pf ..... • • , u +.;,.; -Use tires or the same tyno or construct1'on on all four • Anl,..;Cofp .... 2... k.AOll ISi , • ._ ... Ft•IMll\lt s a.J ,, ..... J-.>l'l'ld .ild .. 145 10"'• .... ~~L.32.-24 .. ~ '' .... +.•, ... ~J:'is 1ft ,~ ...... TRWpr4 . .0 .. 7 .. +11'4 .. ~ •-•ar1 . .0 ·6 ue,, +'~ tl'ldu .. s. a...-1-. "''*'c:i.;1~ '711t•2 .wttf'l1ot .nu 2" tt'lll ... ;;t~·!.2.;; s 2; 4~~. ~ Reevn 180 8 ,. 11""•" Twc~G ... •mu ....... wheels unless the tires are design ed for special N/lltf pl .... 1 S J._+ 141 .• 76 IS 161 IPllt-'h :MC''*°8::. t 'i .ti rs ... ~s.... JCP pf 13,SO .. LISO 11714 • ~ Hti&"rti I."" 7 -21..._+ ::_ Alk llOld ... 6 2t9 14 + -TwCF'o• AO 4 401 1314 + 14 -1 ( h · An11Mc11n•, ,. 11 +•~ t.Alk .Stll 1• ,.,._ ... ~.,,... , uv.-\4 JCPJ!!..11.oo .. L100 1os ... NOF .. i2.ci6 8 13 n~ .~ Rtis1«e ."' 9 211 '""'•II) Tv-toub .20 t 1n 121ill ... peuormance sue assnowt1res). z::',,J; :~ ~ 7U .t:.i~ g: =~~l J: 1:~. i~ ,_.~. ·'° :,: » ,!~ ... • ~ ~«;"a;U,;~ :: 1~~ U~-·;,.; Nu GYP 1.os 11 m 1J~+ ~ R•llanc. Et' • 11' uv.+ 1~ rv1er c:p ~ J~27"-•'14 -Pair a single new tire on the rear axle with the tire
Aftct1Hc uo lo u ;;~ Wi ..... ':J', '• ..1', !~~... ~ H,::, ,,n ••"· -Jewe• c 1.20 • 101 21 Yt-1\\ ~,Home•·· 11• 4-• .,.. :::~:~ f.'60 3 -·1 ~~ ~~ UAltnc ·'°' 22 .... 21,.. ~ having the mos t tread depth or the other three. ArdrsC11.JO• '440 +_., ,,.,.. -.... ....,.+ ... .._ k-ttt6•~ .._ Jewtkor0 ln 2S S..._\lt ndu .30l 11S '"'•"' · · 1.,+ UAl.OIA .40 .. 1127 +lh
.,_., 2 ...... lllfA 1 to • 2 .... ~ .,.. .. , ..---Jtn1wa11er 1 io JM " .. ~ Naunc111f.60 ·· 11 1°"'• v. Ret1.nc~ G< 32 -• "' UARCO 1 )0 • 21 n-+ " -Limit your speed for the first 50 miles to under 55 Anra 1 <• .l ' 1" ...... ~tin ... 4lfl .. It ~"' " fi'fM ... IM 3S 27\fl+ .... JlmW.llpf I 110 ll'U ...... fUt lpf& 1V. .• l IJ'4 . RelncG pt8 . II 16'1'> ••• UGI Cp 1:40 7 14 ISV. .. ,.,. • .,...,. • u 1 ··• n ... ,,.., " + f'tDtliil >td .. t•. uv.+ ~ Jll'nw ... 1..0" 4 •4Y>+ ,,. MtM.dc:ere11 '31 11•.i.+ v. Rt1ncG ptC .. u 13Yo+ ~ uGtptt.1s .. 11oso11 + v. miles per hour to give your tire a "break-in " period and to Anlvl CO 4k 4 U IOVI + \lo Gel • 2:Rlt-\\ FortHwd S6 i4 660 U""• "" '" ·..._ · 7., '• NaPtt 1.20t 6 30 JS\'.+ \'. Atputlllc Co 7 70 9 + ~ ApecMc .so 1 •t n"' • "' GJ llf 5!a · · IS 5' -kltW 1 10. 1 47 n.~ v. JHentn · 1"' · · .., 1 --14 Nll $emlclOn 37 •t swt-t:\lo AepFlnS .ao 1 114 t 1-¥.-v. UMC tndu 1 10 " 1~ · · -permit the many complex elements in the tire to adjust lo
Acleoott •1t .. "2~ • g:Cot~pts. ·; ~ 57~ ·"' FcMlaOf'O·.ID,l m •" ~·:~r 2~ ~~~· ~ NMS.rv 14 • •s 12 At9Mc11 1nY 11 1" •·• ~~~.l::t: t ~""!,v. oneanotherandfunct1"onasoneL·ntegraluru·t. "'-<•Gwp .. " ltll-\\ CIUl'ff ·-· ,.,.,.,.·so, ... av.-·~ . • HtStend09'9 37 11~.·;,.. At9Shl60.I n• ~ .. ~ UnlNV2.'2t>tO 4 ""-+ '" Al'LCorp1 6 171 IS... ISOflL04 1 314 24'16•" .c.... ...... ,·.,.11 m ..... ,.., JGN'IJ-~';f-·IOl>11 ~ "17~++lu ~c.-c11 .. I019 ""•• + ~ RltVYOll .1' 7 203 l~\11 .._ AP\.41fC 1.06.. 1 24 + 14 OSQctf 10.» .. rttO 107 • "' Fr:=:, 1'-ao 11 -~ .. ::. ·-· ..... IO ... --"'-.,. --un Bncp ... t ,.. 9"41+ ~ PE RIO AJ!olled Mo" It J~ + " co1 .. 11 Mte -· ll 2 .... .:=::-·,ndw 160 m 1\r.: ~ JfWICon flC 1.. • 33~+2 Hat Stl , ..... 1• lt7 4'~+ .,., ::vcoosc:20 2rs ~· -¥. uc.mp uo IS 14S • •.. -DICAU y ROTATE your tires and check the
AJt4SYt.Ol1' '2 SJ\'f+ .._ Olln*tg::bec,om90 11°0 "1167 ll~· !1 ....._ --o o--~~:.~22 16.l10 s'3S"-•.,-~~~·s ~ 1!~~ iu~= uo19 "m4+·v; ~~!,«><"12 ~ 727~.-i..'. inflation levels to maintain them at top efficiency and ex-.vcateN .44 I ti 12'-•• • · .. ..,. • " Er llldsl 10 6 ~..,C ..... , ... ..:.-.· zu •2 ... + •• NCll ,._ .72 I 1• 27'9-~ At11111m .20 I l22 sv.-I,\ ..... ""'" -.,. ... Arc.et ... c 2 • • 2 21W1-" rcn.•" "' >1W1-"-c:. •• -1· 1,. 12 ... _,-u. - -.... -... ..... ... .,_ u"-~ ""'1°" eorli 12 117 •~-\.\ tend their usefuln-s -somet1· mes well beyond the1· r ... ~--2 '' _, 31u. .,_ -• -.. ,_ •Inc ' • 10 ......... u. ..__ .60 • ti 11•.i.+ ...... ....11nrd 1.10 . -... -.... El~ I • , •• I'"-...... Arclltr ..... f\11S '" 2S +"' ....... · •• • ... +,. 'ft'·10 .. u , • ...__ ·~ .-. • .. _ "" . ....._ ___ ""1 9 "'" ... ,... t.., ""' ~ · -.... ·• d 'I ... --r:,.. •• ........ .....--" Jov~ft 11011 •· •• ,,. +2"" Nev ...... 1.... iJ 1 "' ••• .._1(11,.. ·-• •• .. · '""E• p12 12 ,. 21... guarantee m1 eage Arttk 1rMJ111" ,... .•• ~· dpr 2 ·• -1 Hn~ ·;,,: o.n t.AO • 111 '-'"'•" .... , • · '·2~ ~ """-Plt.ao .. z:no tA + •,. RevtndJ.oa t w '3""• ~ ..... · ·· • .. ··· ·
,.,,., .. trK .. • '" ··· x::.· ... ''° .. • 21;;• .. Gef'nblllfl~ .• 2 1> +1 J1at<• ~·ic..!_ .... -.. He vf'llf1.1L.d00" +• AtvJnpo>w · 10 7Jv.+2Yt ~'jl,=7rr.·~·:.-'Tfi~!~v. As for prices, they'll be up this year -but there also Art.I PS 1.» • 127 1.-.. . ....-... . .• . . o.tns.I I."".. IO 22"'. I .._,ii I "" ztOO 1714 ~ I 10 •H )1~. ~ un A .... '' II • • ...
APS" 10-10 .. uao 101v..-"' COmwEdW'I ·• 2 10"'-~ GeM«tt .Z022 111 ~. "' KelvA• 1 20 • 12' >C*+ 1~ ._.... ·-·· • ,. '711t-14 -'1 " • .,. ··• will be a proportionate gain in tire life. An average tire w1·11 Ark a.t .oa. . . 10 7~ + "' (.omwOll 411 · • HS '°" + V. GerdOtn .7' IS 31t 2t + t\lt ~: = ::: · · : :: ~:w. aeN~ 11.: : 2;: ~~ +. ~ :::::r= ·i IOS llfla+ '°" :==ti:. 'i~. ~ ·:~ ;: = ~ ,.,.LAG uo • .., " -14 CWOltpf 1.n · · u tn•-"" <i«'ftnkt ·" , ,,, uYt . . . 1 ct ... 21• • 1., , ... __ , .,. ,.,. . _ , Jtw.. II) 1Uc111,..,, , _, • 2151 + ~ ......... -• 12 115 77., _ ... cost $39 and will go for approximately 30,000 miles.
Atltn RUO... S2 R--Y4o Comm S.t 1 • '147 2t •Ill) 0.. S'°' t,10 I 32 11\lh \\ l(el•r I ,·:: "4 ,,.::-...._ N tf'T 2.l6 II SO 271h-\lo Rlcll"'9r .64 IJ 119 ll'~ ++ :': u"p~~47 .. t u¥: . "".' AtflWde QI 1) 11 S .. + * f::::::P.'• 9 316 21.-+ Iii O.tewey ln 16 J2 ~ + Y, l(~e ... • · .,. + .. ........... 40 7 24 · 11~ Rchmnd .IO 11 Its "" .. t '" Armt~•.O.'"' 1314+ ~ ~rSclll 20'2 S~+ ~GATX 190 7 120" --tc "'"·24 s 7s 1"'-• ~ Nwmnt l'.6014 243 27 +i" R:ztTlV. 7 ~ r.~-·~ ~,::;.so .• 41~ ~~.·~
Armpf 2.10 •. t• at\lt+ll4 8:."'l'f;: ~ : m:-1" GATXpft'h .• 1100 JltYJ+ 'h ~~Pb~t·rl ~ r. m~!"' NHwmnYSE1pl24~ .• · , .. 3 213.-+ 0,., :loG~ln .:g 7 ;~I~+ 11' Unlroytlpfl .. r36011 +1 NrrMl'f/I 4~ · · z:220 4' · •• ,..,...,., ·.-. •• 190 1s~ --Ge.A c;orp 2S 1 S* · · · l(enCSou lb • I llV. C ·-.. • · · · · utd Brandl 111 6il'a + V. ArmsCk .•20 790 27 ... +I o;;,'X°,:·160tt 121 .. ~!1 .... GeMlnl(ao .• d m-.+ h l(C5olndOll .~ dO IOV. ·v; NV1E.pfl.I0 •. 11lO ts ... 2v. RlRI~ d -l~l~ ';; m:• ~ utd8rl'ldpf :: 12 l\lt+"'
AtrraR .:IOll I 17 16911 ..• 0tn C .70 I 1'9 201-a ~lnt.:ZO. .. J IJ"' •.. KenGEl.61 S 2S 1''h ·~ l'IY=E 'l.12 .-7 lJ~+ 'ii -·" 1714-'~ UnCofp.72b .. 71 t Yt+ 'ii AtoCorptn 1 I l IS-.+ Vt eone9J t to S 312 17~ ·~ GMllll Oki SO 1o:i-. .. KensN l.J29 I 2' " -~ NI 1.JA 1 207 tl'olt ... ~wl.\lt7023S '!! 2S"-7 ~ UldFncll .10 • tO t + ~ ANlnln .latt. 13 Ul'll+ \lo ,.__ • =· 6 tJ •S" -u. GnAOll Aoca ii 71 40 : · · I( PLI I S2 S 21 19'11 ~· J.60 · · 11040 3711• + '\lo ._..,sn -li;::_+T 11o"" UGuPL .n 1 17' 16\lt , .. A$A Ltd .IO . • M 31 + °" ._,s .. d .. ;" + if GlnBna Jll) 1' I t + "" en ' . ' 1'1le11,llph IS Z20 S2V. +I Aoellns 2111 II 3tl -GutrlY IS t1 t + :i-.
A.1¥CO • .01' 176 UV.+ 'h ConJl!d S .. II SOil.-'" GenCll>I n 7 173 11\lt + \It t<ety lndusl ' IS J:V. .. ' NleMpf in . • I.SO 80 RICll~t:~ 7 12' I -'I• •t..tttll112.J2 6 .... 24"-+· \It •·••-"" 1 70 • ... 2.,.._ .. ., C.onE pf• '5 rl70 471/'J+ 11(, ,.._ ~ ·20 ..., ll>\lt ,._ Katy of 1.4'.. 11 13~--\If Nl~10·.~ ·. •. 11.~ 1 .... , ... .,: "-h 11 . 11 •• "" .... .. .......... . -,_ T ... C.on fi"d ls ·; 7 2 "' " ..... I. . • ... + ... l(euf .. SJ 4'3 ..... "" -._, .,..,, .. ...... -,6 ..... ;;_ UnllldC ·'°' 6 7 11~-"' AaOryG I 40 ,, 131 ,,~.. .... s d '· 4 t 7 J .. Gen ne ~ 9 117 ,, .... + '4 t<Mlr I 11/) •• 27 "'"' ~ N~ tl\Co Z2JOO 112 -v. Rot.II-.... " " 21"'~ .. IJnllld pf .42 ·-• 7'11+ "' •At $prt t.'.tO 7 21 26 + Vt ~F'dpfrt4\la70 1·,· .!! _..,+I.._ Gn Otveliii> ' 121 S~ . • . P .H 9 + N 11 70d.' 101 U + ~ Aockwllln 2 7 2SO '" ..• Vld In 10 t 2• ~ V. AIN°"' .60 4 IOI t~. .. . ,_, · .._ ...,..,..-.,.. Oen OyMom • 112 '6 + -l(el(.::!.c~-·~ '"': !~ • ~ ++ ~ NL nctuSt 1 ·; llll> 17'1• • a.<. Rock pf 4~ . • 9 7014 + '4 M . + Alk.o M . no.. " 214-.... ~SN 2.1• 1 '°' 2171e .. . ,.~··-I."" 1• fl• .. -14 ~--...... • '" ... ,.. Nl.T Crp 60 • 22• 17V.+ :\It ~ I 3.S 2• 2~+ .... UnJty8 UM 7 • 10\o't-Vo AUCyltll.M • St ,~ .. '4 NO pfl0.9'.. t70 112 .. . o;;;o;.; 1 • .i 13 12a !;---" l(etter In .20,. • 1'AI •.... ~llWs s • ~ 71'4 +2 1.21 :ii ,.. .. +2\4 Uld MM ·'°.. 160 " + ~
AllCl!lllfW. .. 2 n +2V. """;"2 I 374 J1"'• '-' GenGro.13dll :rt tt ... ~::·:u ~ n~~ ~ PWlnC:OIV. 5 22 1•~+ \\ Aoh(ln .Un .. 241 26S~++ ~ ~d~~~~., 2f~+~:'.
AllAkftf2\ltU (JI ""•''la Ppl .'5 .• zl20 1\o't-V, GlnHott 60 I 110 12ft I( n16St>St .ff6 » .... , Nl!f"ris 1.40 ~ 11 31\1\+ '• AlllllMln.IOll llt s"-~ """''no .41' 47 12"'-"' AAcll pf 3:\lo .. 11JO 47 -~ COnP pl 7.n . . l30 77 + ..,, Gen Instr' 211 2• Ul ·~· i4 l(tncUtll ·, IO 7 ... ,, ..... , .. NA Coal 90 ' " ~ ADnlon O'p so ,, ,. + "-USl'lOet 2.4112 IJI 3'\lt. " AIRc pf 2.IO .• 75 .014+~ ConPpfJ.7' .. US07' ··· Geftlnstllf 3 .. 3JO'h •.. ,,! Gt·-,.~tlJ::_ ::'NAMtglldt 19 ·~ .; AoperCl.10 14 11 2•1,,,_ ...... USFoSc .Wd .. ISll'h+V. AllRch llfU .. 2 ISO +I CanP pf 7 ... ·• 140 '"'° · .. Oen Med .2011 61 17""+ VI ...,.rr s ·-... ... + .. HAml'fl j 1013 99 24'\lt + ~ Rorer A .'4 11 I" ,.
Alles Corpff 414 ........ ~"'-p fl!J_ .. •JS !i~+ ~ GenMltls .6111 m l1 -l'ilt :"t~G1! ';"~t ~:v.:l\4 NC.1'1Alr :10 t 143 J .. Ao1Arlo .'Oll11 9' 14\lt-\lt USG'rp l.6021 446 1'¥t+ .... ATO lnc.lA 7 t• 1"'-14 ,,_, r '" • · • ~ + -GftMOt2.40ll It 170t ~· t Yt l(~W•ll I S llt 22,.._ "' NoCnAlrt wt . . 9 IS.lt-1-16 RowM .20 4 J2 1• -'h USHDmt Cp.. 142 ~ Ye Aut0. ... 402t ... , ~ .... , .... ContlA Hlk •. U2 6-•"' GnMo&on-. I S1Y,+.,., l(fddtWpf4 .. 4 .. .,.,_,... HontUp.02 7 C20 10'1'>-~ :_.__,.,__ \ISi,.... .20 •. -,.,.,. Vt
A6Allmtn .10 • 11 J~ 14 g::~·~ : '3 2%:; " GtnMol pf s :: a .. . .. Klddeof 2.20 , 41 + "" QHo c.n Ry . • oo s~ . setllne R .60 to 111 » + .y, 8~.e::.il: 1 »; 'nt.: :
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~:JI• r. • • '• 1'ff 't..+~ ~:r.·• 'a it +c. E S 'ft n ·" ~~H • ··· ~i, " = ==1~ ~]1! : .~
Standard,.P acific
Earnings a Recor~
Strong demand for the com·
pany's medium·priced homes
boosted Stand ard·Pacific
Corp. 's 1975 revenues and
earnings to record highs for
the third consecutive year.
Arthur E . Svendsen,
chairman of the Costa Mesa·
yearend results.
Net income 1975 ros e to
$1,776,080, equal to 98 cents
per share, on revenues of
$46,195,122, as compared to
net income of $1 ,718,636, or 79
cents, on revenues or
$42,624 ,439 for the prior year. _
The company also posted
record fourth quarter results
as net income rose to $822.117.
or 46 cents per share, on re-
venues $17,312,039, as com·
pared to net income of
$345,822. or 17 cents, on re-
venues of $10, 703,361 for the
fourth quarter of 1974 .
Fully diluted earnings for
1975 rose to 81 cents pershare
as compared to 69 cents in
1974. Fully diluted fourth
quarter earnings per s hare .
were 36 cents in 1975 and 15
cents in 1974.
Union Federal S&L
Planned for Viejo
Union Fed.era! Savings and
Loan Association has broken
ground for its newest office
located al Marguerite
Parkway and La Paz Road in
Minion Viejo.
WEEK EN DEA
Qeta It All
together Friday.
In the it].11t1Qmll
Sain Hort P E Cl'dtl Clclt 0.0
--WW-.
'Ml!IC DfCJ.. t ~ .•. 'Ml!te Mol!I' • • 401 llll + ....
'Ml!ltellr Cp'I .... •~ .. . Wlckfl 2~1 t 13S 1114 .. . WllOoldl .• 10 11 s.... . .. 'Mtll_,,.C I S 9'Q 2,_ ... WlllCoof .• • • $ 0 _,
WHallnl .OSd 1 '2 ""'+ '°' WIMDX t..U IS IS 4014 + I' Win m "'•" WI~ , It 101 -~~ Wla ... • • dlO tot -VJ WbEl ,-. • tSI tO + 16
WIKGe 1.70 I 11 '"" + Vo WltG pf 2~S .. dOO ll + ¥t WIK"' 1. "' IJ 17" .. ==1. I) r H +I 2. 'i t4 +M Wttl., ,. "' =-. •"'-Vi .. J .. "' ... --lt1 u 14 -"' Wll!Wfl 1-lO , ... 2""• ... F.11JO ~ t1 --• v. Al,.. .. '"• "' ~ !l ~· ~
The Mission Viejo facility
will be Union Federal Sav-
ings' thirteenth branch. It
becomes the third Union
Federal facility in Orange
County. Designed in early
California architectural
motif, the new 5,000.square
foot facility will feature re-
sawn redwood and rustic
Spanish tile on the exterior.
Architects for the Union
Federal Savings and Loan
building expected to be com-
pleted in the mid spring is
SO PA of San Diego and
Mackel and Associates of Los
Angeles. General contractor
for the f acilily is Klein Con·
tractors of Anaheim.
Anaheim Firm
Income Climbs
;
ltr :: I= ~ ~~·~· i.. ...,._ '°' = Hr ,ti It .. *"' + y, ~-A.: 1100 41~ \It Orfll $ : ~-lo\ StefY M 1.fO 1 It + 2Yt Wiii ... ~ f In ~ 9' w~M Ji •... ·i ttf =:,-=~·j ~ =!.·~ = d J J 'it·: S::'::1~ l 13 ! .. :~: t~int: ~l1 !~!t &1.-1 ~ ~.,·~ It:; i ~·1 ~J t;: E-:il ~" ·ira :~ e ·, q n i:f..: ~:i~ ~ ~: .i~ ~.:~ 1~ ,~::.·~ er.:::, SJ :~~
,..;; ' J! + i Ii ~.::: =-~1.,.,; ' a' ! 4i ~l"(XJ ·i'' ~: """ L't•, m" • 'i.t. ~1:= 1, I"'••: ==:'1f1t·i~ Ir:;" ........ "'~! . ;u!.1t: ....... ..... ..:• -~igr,' 1• --.+1\li ~lf:l ::relJ~.: 1··· ... ..._,,,...... ..,. i~ lS JM!• ' J::+I ~ I w+t ;:;ta;1;;. ti 1 JI"+ ._ ~ t).!!t2 JI tJ 4 J I~ ==:.· .. t 1 + V.
tJt ft .~~=: ,.t ~ !.Jl =~~~,~!I : ~.· !bf: ~r.:ihll .. ~~ ·~\l" .d4=;· .. E'J: ! 11·:.~ ~e~~1• 1. "t,.::~ 11.. ~.1111 a ~J ~·· , SJ~... -w1' ~ '=· t mti ... r!,~ (119~u i .k iW ' t Off;" ~I· U. •" Tl~ "" iM .. ~IE .. , "°'' ., u-. .. ·14 l " =., c:p_ ... ' r!" • ' ':-; ." v.: ~ -~ I. 'Im!!"!~ i '•• t -~ "'!. ~ M-n• .ion est tlYt " • i.i ca IM-'" . it .... ~ .. :: .. _,.., .. . 1 ' +. . • I' 1. ' .. ii'AI -JIOI" • + "" St.WWII I... u tt'-• '"" . • !Uh"'
c.. Ji~'"-"
..... QI 1 IJ 1 """-1" Xtre l~U I 1M •.• v............ • +" Y~Dr.AO: tOYi+t'°' i ·1 • ~.:.: ~6"m ~,.. ~ "".a\~ t: n:: "
Anahdm·based Executive
1nduatrlu Inc., a motorhome
manufacturer. reported sales
for the nnt quarter ended
Dec. 31 of $8,011 ,000 and net
lncome or $587 .ooo. or eo cents
per sh~ .
Thia com pares to sales of
$&,011,000 and net income of
$110,000, or S cents, a year aco. Thomas E . Frank, prai-
dent, aald these results
represent the best fint...
quart.er ln the company's h\s-..
toey.
88 DAIL V PILOT
P atience
Pays Off
For Curl
HONOLULU CAP) -Patience
paJd off for Rod Curl.
.. I'd been playing good. If
you're playing good, it's just a
matter of time until the putting
comes around. It came around
today," the happy little guy said
·after bis brilliant eight-under-
par 64 bad set the pace in the first
round of the $230,000 Hawaiian
Open golf tournament.
"It could have been better, but
how do you complain about a
64? ·' Curl asked.
··1 touched the cup on five putts
that didn't fall. It might have
been a60."
He paused and grinned
broadly.
"But I more than made up for
it on those long ones. You can't
figure to make those."
He scored three times from
30-35 feet, didn't make a bogey
and didn't miss a green. but
keyed his round by the surprising
power that he packed in his 5·
foot-5 frame. He reached one
par-five in two and two-putted for
birdie and scored two others
when his massive drives let him
use a nine iron for approaches on
par four holes measuring 411 and
447 yards.
"The course is made for the big
hitter." Curl said. "Jt really
helps to have the power.
"It was the most perfect day
you could have." Curl said. The
temperature was in the~. The
tropic sun was bright and warm.
The trade winds were but gentle
breezes, swirling through the
palms and banyan trees .
And it set up some of the lowest
scoring of the year on the pro
. tour. There were 16 scores of 67
·or better. There were 71 scores -
almost half the field -at 70, two
under par on the 7,219·yard
Waialae Country Club course.
Big John Jacobs, like Curl one
of the game's Ion~ hitters. was
alone in second at 65. Former
Newport Beach resident Alan
Tapie, now living in Laguna
Beach, shot a 70
First roUl\d l••du\ on trie tJJ0.000 H•wa11an
~n golf lOl.lrnament
Rod Curt
John Jae obs
H•la ll'Wln
EdSnNd
Bob Murphy
Al O.lber99r
BilrryJMC~el
L~Grar..m
Eddie Poot~tc
Tom Sh-aw
Tommy McGonn.,
Geof'Oe 8u rM
F.uiyZoeller
HowardT..iny
GllMDrQMI
8otlb"( W~kln\
John MAhaffey
Dick Rll,an
UIWIY Wadlo:ln1
8oC>W'flWI
Vlc~lado
Rl<k Richards
0-.rlHCOodY
8111yC.scier
Amotd P•lmar
Lon Hinkle
lJ 31-+t
lJ.ll~S
:M·31-
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lJ.lJ-31 ,._.1
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i,t.33_.7
3~31_.7 :u-n-..1
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JAlA-68
lS.33-68
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34 .U-48
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Friday, January $0. tt78
GEORGE HARTMAN
.
~allchos' ·Ha:rt1nan Q ttits
By CRAIG SHEFF the putfour year1 la a 9-2-1 mark High ln Ana helm, El Sel\lDdO Detett Conference And woo the
0t .. 0a,..,......... tn 1972 when the Gauchos were High and San Clemente. UUe. Saddleback wa1 switched to
Saddleback College football MlnloaConferenceco-cbamps. Hartman was a star athlete at the Mlulon Confereo.ie the
coach and athletic director Hartman'• Saddleback teams Cleburne Hilb in Texas, earning following 1euon, but atlll won
George Hartman bas submitted have never been ihut out all-state honors. He attended the crown with an 8·1·1 reeord.
his letter of resign•tlon, the Dai-· . Paris, Tex. JC and was selected h1 h ly Pilot bas learned. The East Texaa State Unive.rsi· to the Little AU-American team After a 7·3 season in '7l w c
Hartman, who guided the ty graduate wai fired as athletic as a defensive lineman for East Hartman called a poor record, '
Gauchos to five conference ~or two years aio, but pre-Texas State In 1953. Ke also the Gauchos posted 9-2•1 and 9-l ssure by booster cl b mbers marks the next two yean, win· championships in eight years,· · u me played in the Tangerine Bowl in rung Mission titles. Ria tut two was unavailable for comment. forced the Saddleback Coll.ege •53. A former San Clemente High bo~rd of trustees to reconsider. He ls a former Marine Corps teams have notched 8-1 record.Y.
coach, Hartman started the foot-thell' action. platoon leader. Hartman. in bis letter of re-
ball program at Saddleback and Before coming to Saddleback Hartman's first Saddlebac~ signation, expressed a deslre to
immediately built it into a power. Hartman compiled a 68-28-3 re-team, composed of all freshmen, remain at Saddleback as a full
His eight-year record is 62-lM cord in 10 years of high school posted a 4-5 record against most· time instructor. His reslgnaUon
and his Saddleback teams have coacbine. ly four-year JV teams. He bas as football coach ·and athletic
never lost over five games in His previous coaching assign-not bad a losing campaign since. director ls effective the end of tho
one season. The worst record in menta have been at Savanna His '69 unit was 9-2 in the school year. __; ______________________________ ;;._ ________________ ~
Schenk Rebml,ding Li/ e P ac-8 Race
Tragedy, Failure
Hit Ex-Olympian
AMSTERDAM (AP) -Ard
Schenk, the lanky Dutch speed
skater who won three gold
medals to become the dominant ·
figure of the 1972 Sapporo Winter
Olympics, will be on the sidelines
at next week 's Innsbruck Games
as a television commentator.
Now 31, Schenk quit skating in
1974 after two abortive years as a
professional to concentrate on
work as a physiotherapist and
part-time reporter for Dutch
television.
"But I have an empty feeling
insiile knowing I won't be taking
part' at Innsbruck," he said in an
interview. "The Olympics were
after all part of m y life for about
10 years."
Schenk has fond memories of
Innsbruck. where in 1964 he first
tasted Olympic competition. Un-
d a u n t e d b y m ea g e.r
performances then. he set his
sights on the 1968 Grenoble
Games and won a silver medal.
Then came Sapporo. where he
impressively won gold medals al
1,500. 5,000 and 10,000 meters to
earn recognition as perhaps the
greatest speed s kater in history.
In between, he set a string of
world records, six of which still
stand.
Much has happened since then
to the tall, blond Schenk, who on-
ce was voted Holland's most
handsome man. An attempt at
professional s peed skating
failed, and his marriage ended in
tragedy after two months with
the death of his wife.
Soon after the 1972 Games,
Schenk joined a newly-formed
professional s peed skating
circuit which folded in two years
when the American·backed ven·
lure failed to attract enough
spectators.
"The trouble was the people in
charge of the organization didn't
understand speed skating," be
said. "It was simply a failure."
Disillusioned and unable im-
mediately to regain his amateur
s tatus, Schenk set up a
physiotherapy practice to work
rehabilitating injured people. He
qualified for the profession in
1973 after a four-year course.
When Schenk announced bis
retirement , he received
numerous offers from Dutch and
foreign television, radio stations
and newspapers. He refused
most but accept ed a contract
from Dutch television to report
skating meets and agreed to
write a column for an
Amsterdam paper.
He secretly married last Sep-
tember. But barely two months
later, his wife, Christine, died
from a mystery heart condition.
They had been due to move into a
specially renovated cottage just
outside Amsterdam only a few
days later .
The couple had known each
other for years, but decided not
to marry until Schenk had quit
skating and was established"as a
physiotherapist. Few people
kn ew bis wife, who preferred to
stay out of the limelight of her
husband's fame.
• Schenk, who prefers not to dis-
cuss his recent personal tragedy,
now lives alone in an apartment
in an Amsterdam suburb. Close
friends say he is tackling life as
before.
•
To Tighten
This W eek?
LOS ANGELES -There's just
enough Pacific-8 basketball
scheduled this weekend to create
a three-way tie for the con-
ference lead.
First place could become
crowded in the Pacific Coast
Athletic Association and West
Coast Athletic Conference races.
too.
The Oregon State Beavers cur-
rently lead the Pac-8 with a 4·1
record and their league record
was unaffected by a 76-74 loss to
Oregon in overtime at Portland
Thursday night.
It was the teams' annual extra
game of the season which does
not count in the Pac·8 standings.
Last weekend in a game that did
count, Oregon beat the Beavers
83-68.
The winner of Saturday's re-
gionally televised game between
Washington State and
Washington in Seattle will match
OSU's 4·1 conference mark, and
defending champion UCLA will
be seeking its share of the lead
when it faces Southern Cal Satur-
day night at Pauley Pavilion,
where the U clans have won 94
straight home games.
Stanford, whose 6-10 is the only
losing overall record among
Pac-8 teams, plays tonight and
Saturday at Hawaii.
RefH!b •••Ille
LAS VEGAS -Unbeaten,
third·ranked Nevada Las Vegas
got 29 points from 6-7 junior
forward Eddie Owens and buried
Seattle's Chieftans 107-77 Thurs-
day night in a nonconf erence
basketball game.
The Rebels, winning their 22nd
game of the season -15 of them
at home -jumped into a
halftime lead of 53-30 and coasted
tothe easy victory.
A.:tee•Roll
SAN DIEGO -Guards Ray
Leary and Mark Delsman hit
successive baskets to break a tie
and San Diego State ripped Cal
State (Long Beach), 79-52 Thurs-
day night in a battle of the
Pacific Coast Athletic Associa-
tion's two leading basketball
teams.
Leary's 23-foot jump shot gave
the Aztecs a two-point edge at
41·39 with 16~ minutes to play
and seconds later Delsman hit a
layin for a four point edge.
E'ullertoa lt'ftl•
Forwards Greg Bunch and Tim
Dwyer each scored 18 points
Thursday night as host Cal State
(Fullerton) edged Fresno State,
68-60, in a Pacific Coast Athletic
Association basketball game.
UVER GAINS
QUAKrERFINALS
PHILADELPHIA-Corona del
Mar's Rod Laver toppled Brian
Gottfried, 7-6, 7-6, butBobLutzof
San Clemente fetJ to Dick
Stockton, 4·6, 6·4, 6-4, Thursday in
the $115,000 U.S. pro indoor tennis
championships here.
UPl: ........ 1
WALTON RETURNS-Former UCLA star Bill Walton of
the Portland Trail Blazers, nursing a nose injury in
Wednesday's NBA battle with Seattle, returns to
Southern California tonight in a rematch with the
Lakers and Kareem Abdul-Jabbar at the Forum, begin-
ning at 8. ·
S ports in Brief
LA, Portl and Vie;
K ings Tie Detroit
INGLEWOOD -Last week
when the Los Angeles Lakers and
Portland Trail Blazers squared
off in Oregon, Bill Walton
emerged the victor in the battle
of giants against Kareem Abdul-
J abbar in a 119·96 Portland vic-
tory.
The Lakers are hoping a home
court advantage will pay off
tonight when the two teams meet
again.
Los Angeles leads the season
series with Portland 3-2, with all
three Lakers victories coming at
home -116-109, 104·95 and
110-101.
Walton and Jabbar both seem
to play their best basketball in
the matchup. The Lakers center
bas averaged 35.2 points a game
against Portland with 13.8 re-
bounds and has shot .584 from the
field.
Walton in the series bas
averaged 17 .3 points per contest
with 15.5 rebounds.
Khlp R •llfl
tournament Thursday.
Wade lost little time in dispos-
ing of Cynthia Doerner, 6-4, 6-2;
Navratilova defeated Natasha
Cbmyreva, 6-0, 4·6 , 6-3;
Navratilova won over Wendy
Overton, 1-6, 6-3, 6-1; and Nancy
Gunter halted Olga Morozova. ra,....•••• ~,.,....
CHICAGO --Former Notre
Dame football Coach Ara
Parsegbian will return to the
college coaching ranks -but
only for one game.
Parseghian, 52, will coach the
1976 College All-Stars against
the National Football League
champion Pittsburgh Steelers.
U.S., Aussies
Meet in Rugby
For the first time Bince 1924. the United States will field a na-
tional rugby team when it meets
Australia in an international
match at Anaheim's La Palma
Park at2Saturday afternoon.
~outs Turned Awag UPI Tai_...
In other matches Thursday,
Jimmy Connors adva.qced to the
quarterfinals with a 4-6, 6-1, 6-3 win over Stan Smltb; Bjorn Borg
toppled Mark. Cox, 6-3, 6-3; Tom
Okker overpowered Allan Stone,
6-4, 6·4' Jan Kodes eliminated
John Alexander, 7-6,6-3; and Tom
Gorman handed Arthur Ashe his
first loss of the season, 6·3, 3-6, 6-3.
INGLEWOOD -Mike Murphy
and Butch Goring fired in goals
16 seconds apart late in the third
period Thursday night lilting the
Los Angeles Kings into a 3·3 Na-
tional Hocke)' League tie with the
Detroit Red Wings. .
Among the 21 players on the
U.S. team ls Newport Beach's
David Stephenson. Pittsburgh goalie Gary Inness makes a
nice save against Robin Burns' shot on
goal to help protect a 6-2 National Hockey
League victory for the Penguins over
Kansas City. It was the 14th straight loss
for the hapless Scouts as Ron Shock, Vic
Hadfield and Ed Gilbert each scored a
goal and had an assist in leading the win-
ners.
Bunter On Open Market Ag11:in?
NEW YORK (AP) -Believe it
or not, Catfish Hunter may be a
free agent again.
Hunter. whose free agency 13
months aeo brought him a five-
year, $3.75 million contract with
the New York Yankees, maybe on
the open market once again if the
owners carry out their n~play
threat for 1prt n& training.
That'• the opinion of Marvin
Miller, executive. director of the
m_,or Jea1ue baseball players as-
aocla tlon, who rt~ponded on
Tburaday to the owners'
threatened 1hut down of sprlni
training camps lf the players and
owners don't reach agreement on
a labor contract by then.
.. If the owners delay the open-
ing of spring training, lt would
constitute a breach of every
players' contract similar to what
happened in the Calftab Hunter
case,·· Miller Hid.
Hunter, who led the Oakland
A 'a to three world cham·
plon1blp1, left them in 1974
because Cbarlea 0 . Finley
breached hl• 1tar pitcher'• con·
tract. Arbitrator Peter Seltz ruled
in December of 1974 that because
Hunter was not paid in the man-
ner stipulated by his contract, he
was a free agent
Instead of one free agent roam-
1.n.a the bills of North Carolina,
there soon could be buodredl au
over the country if the players
don't aet paid for the spring train·
m,perlod.
•·u the ownen close-down the
camps, the playera would de-
mand to be paid," MUltt sakt. *' U
they were not. p.td, tben.1tieli' con-
tracts wCMllcl be breached. U.'s
that•lmple."
•
Besides the owners' threats,
Commissioner Bowle Kuhn bu
said that tbe training camps may
stay quiet untU a new labor con-
tract betwen the players and
ownen ii 1laaed. The lut one ex-
plnd Dec. 81.
Kulm wu not available for
co«ament Qd litl adklN over the
Jut h!IO da11 are a mystery. ln
801to• on WedaesdaJ for ~·· INIMbaD writers' di.ft· _., ~ ncaHd JdmMlf, ..,.
lq' bl bad to lea.e becaUH ol a
maUAll' ••ot 1rave ~."
The Kin11 came to Ufe with
1:41 left to }>lay when Murphy
drilled his 18th goal ol the season
to pull the Kings within 3-2. Then
Goring Jent a 10-tooter past
Detroit goalie Jim Rutherford
for his second goal of the evening
and 22nd of the season with 1: 25
Jett.
"..,, ee IJN£V
LAS VEGAS -Tony Knap,
head football coach at Boise
State University for the past
el8ht years, ls the new bead
coach at the University of
Nevada, Lu Ve1a1.
Knap, eo, Thursday was
named to 1ucceed Ron Meyer,
wbo retlaned to become bead
coach at Southern lletbocU1t
thdvenity. ,.,....,_. ,4..,.w
CB1CAGO-Vlr1tnla Wade,
Evoane Goolacon1 and Martina
NanaUJova advanced to the
Mmlftnall of the $75,000 Chicaao
profN1lonal women'• tennlt
Tb.ls will be tbe United States•
first international game and u:
will be Australia's only match 1n
America. Coached by Dennis
·Storer, UCLA's bead man in
ruaby, the Americans are
hopeful of gaining the same kind
of reapectablity they had earlier
th1.s century.
In 1908, 1920and19:M. tho U.S.
entered rugby team• at the
Olympic Games and won two
gold medal a, a feat no other
country bu achieved in MllbJ.
Australia, meanwhile, baa one
ol th4i m01t aucceaaful lntemt"'
tlonat na•br tourtn1 teams ud It
the United Statea can wtn, it
would 1reatly enha.nce the
Ainericam' lntt11lational l\ldUI.
Bob Watktnl, prealdmt ~ tllle
8oUthern Callfornta RulbY J'~
ball Umon, bu been q\llMCI u
taylq, "thll It a landman OP'.'
l)Ort.UnltJ for tbe U .S. to •tablllb It.Mii bi tb• eyu of the lnt.erNr
tJonal ruaby commuolty. '' ·I
TickeU are $5 per peraon.
'
a
y
y
e
a e
e
Diiiy ,., .. Staff PMto
SHERIFF'S INVESTIGATOR FRED GELLER CHECKS WINDOW
Gerald Gue11 Victim of Gunshot In Aborted Bank Holdup
Evidenee Dae
Battin Gets Filing
Deadline by ]Uilge
By GARY GRANVILLE
ot 111e 0.11., l"li.t sun
Indicted Orange County
Supervisor Robert Battin has
been given until Mondy to file
sworn affidavits he says will help
prove he is a victim of selective
prosecution.
Jn response to the deadline im-
posed Thursday by Superior
Court Judge Kenn~th Lae, Bat-
tin's attorney, Matthew Kurilich,
said he plans to file 1S to 20 addi-
tional sworn statements with the
court.
Those statements will be in-
tended to bolster Kwilich's con-
tention that his client is being
prosecuted for crimes common
among elected officeholders.
Widow Asking
Damages in
Mate's D1eath
Damages to be ascertained in
tlie lrial court were demanded
Thursday by the widow and two
children of an El Toro man who
was knocked down and killed on
Feb. 5, 1975, while walking near q.e intersection of Trabuco Road
and Irvine Boulevard.
Named as defendants in the
Orange County Superior Court
lawsuit filed by Edna Joyce
Nash, 42, of 24922 Muirlands
JUvd., are the Irvine Company
Cd its employe, Floyd David
Holland. Mrs. Nash, who is joined in the
action by her children, Marvin
Wayde Nash, 19, andLinda Joyce
Hibbitt, 23, contends that
Holland's negllaence while driv-
pig the company's pickup truck Jed to hla striking and killing
Burgess JefCen<>n Nash, 44.
Last August, the county Grand
Jury handed down an indictment
charging Battin with seven
felony crimes related to alleged
use of county supplies and
. personnel in a 1974 political cam-
paign.
And to defend his client against
those charges, Kurilich wants to
delve into Orange County district
attorney investigations and pro-
secutions of public officials.
So far, according to Kurilich,
·he's been denied access to 1n·
vestigation records and
testimony that he believes will
help prove bis point.
Thursday, for example, dis-
trict attorney's investigator Ray
Miller was called to testify.
Kurilich expected Miller to
verify the earlier testimony of a
former undercover agent who
said he was paid to seek out
financial information on three
county supervisors.
But Miller didn't make it to the
witness box as Deputy Dist. Atty.
Jack Ryan pointed out there had
been no testimony contradicting
the informant's tale.
Kurilich did succeed in filing a
sworn affidavit from former
(See BA'M'IN, Page t\2)
Burglars Strike
Viejo Residence
Burglars who cut away a por-
tion of the screen door to gain en-
. try have stolen cash and jewelry
valued at $1,500 from a Mission
Viejo home, Orange County
sberiU's officers have reported.
Deputies said the theft oc-
curred at the borne of Eleanor
Hempel, 55, of 24695 Doria St.,
while stie was out shOpping. They
said the intruders took their loot
from her Jewelry box.
Today's Closing
N.Y.Stoeks
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, JANUARY 30, 1976 TEN CENTS .
By JACK CHAPPELL
Of tlleDlfl'I " ... Miit
Tow truck ~ver Jack Hagerty
looked death in the face Thurs-
day in what was to become the
prelude to the dramatic South
Laguna bank robbery shootout.
"I tried to remain as calm as I
could. I knew if I made a
nuisance of myself, I was a dead·
man," Hagerty said in his San
Clemente home.
"I tried to be as he!pf ul as I
could. I tried to keep talking, but
never yell or struggle and I think
that's the only reason I'm still
alive.
Hagerty, an employe or Ray
Carey Chevron ln Laguna Beach
was dispatched at about 8:30
a.m. to the home of Richard
Castillo, 24, of 1104 Miramar
Drive, Laguna Beach.
A caller complained of a dis-
abled car there.
"I rang the door bell and this
guy answers the aoor. He said be
still bad a couple things left to do
and could I come in and wait,"
Hagerty said.
"As I came In, he reached
behind the door, picked up a rifle
and lowered it at my head. He
said 'get in the back room and lie
down.'"
There. Hagerty was bound
Flying Hazards
Jet Pilots.Cite Dangers
WASHINGTON (UPI) -U.S.
airline passengers face a cons-
tant, frightening and needless
potential for catastrophe because
of s loppy or dangerous practices
and unrealistic safety pro-
cedures, six veteran pilots said
today.
Reporting on a safety study
conducted for the Federal A via-
tion Administration, the pilots
said the blame for the hazards ~e~ found must. be shared by
a1rlme cret.os, air traffic con-
trollers, airline managers, FAA
rule makers, aircraft builders
and airport operators.
"The accident records show th~t the airlines of the United
States are one of the safest
means of travel in the world,"
the report said. "However, air
travel is not as safe as it could be.
"Th e potential for a
catastrophic accident is always
present and is often avoided by
slim and, at times, nervous
margins."
The pilots made dozens of re-
commendations ranging from
School Open Lunch
'
Decision Monday
Saddleback Valley Unified
School District trustees are due
to take action Monday on pro·
posals to allow "open lunch" at
Mission Viejo and El Toro High
Schools.
If the proposal, which is sup-
ported by a majority of students
and opposed by most faculty
members •nd the principals, is
approved, students would be al-
lowed to leave campus during the
lunch period.
Mission Viejo students present·
ed their proposal to trustees in
December and asked that
trustees begin the program on
Jan. 26 for a trial period. Since
the r equest, district ' ad·
ministrators have studied the
proposal and obtained informa·
lion from other schools which
have tried the program.
Trustees have been given a list
of pro and con arguments on the
proposal. Most concerns deal
with students' activity in the
community and increased traffic
during the noon hour.
A recommendation will be
made by Supe.rlnterulE:nt Richard
Welte during the meeting.
In other action, trustees will be.
asked to approve the purchase of
a $7,641 film inspection machine.
During their last meeting,
trustees refused to approve
purchase of the machine until the
need for it is explairied.
The meeting begins at 8 p. m. in
Los Alisos Intermediate School,
25171 Moor Ave., Mission Viejo.
tighter cockpit discipline and a
complete overhaul of the air traf-
fic control system to the outlaw-
ing or a dangerously hard-to-read
type of altimeter and the instaJla·
tion of better runway approach
lights.
In releasing the 93·page report,
prepared after observations of
600 flights on 27 airlines, the FAA
added a 32·page reply accepting
many of the pilots' criticisms and
·recommendations .. ~
But the agency, r~ted flatly
the .harshest criticism of its air
traffic controllers and the way
their control rooms are operated.
The pilots said the control
system "is a jumble of people,
radar scopes, communication
lines and stacks or paper strips,
people communicating by voice,•
by radio to impersonal aircraft
out in space, while in the control
room people are milling about,'
talking and creating distrac-
tions."
They said tempers often
become short in air-to-ground
communications and controllers
"often show disdain for pilots"
and order them to perform
dangerous maneuvers or distract
them during critical takeoff and
landing operations.
But the FAA sitid such state-
ments are "inaccurate and mis-
leading."
The pilots who prepared the re-
port were Art Ashworth, C.E.
Basset, Robert N. Buck , Don Mc -
Bain, Walter P. Moran and Paui
Soderland, all retired airline cap-
tains who have logged a com-
bined total of nearly 160,000 hours
in the air. Their report stressed
they were "beholden to no one"
and interested only in safety
Road System Approved
San Clememe Backs South County' System
By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL
Of tM Diiiy Pilot Senf
A road system that would
serve a potential south Orange
County population of 1.3 million
persons narrowly won support of
the San Clemente City Council
Thursday night.
In a 3·to-2 decision, the council
reserve corridors" as a kind of
self-protection against future de-
velopment in the south county.
Proper advance planning
cou ld prevent traffic
"quagmires" such as exist in
Laguna Beach and Newport
Beach, O'Keere said.
O'Keefe's position won back-
ing from Mayor Anthony
Bay Area Rapid Transit
(BART) system near San Fran-
cisco Jed to "overdevelopment"
of many areas.
San Clemente·s stand on the
SEO C C S r e p o r t w i 11 be
forwarded to the county Board
of Supervisors.
San Clemente's recommenda-
tion will join those of other
(See ROADS, Page A2)
with tape around the ankles, a set
of barbells was placed on his
back and his hands tied to it.
"I told him, I know this doesn't
mean much to you, but the
barbells are hurting," Hagerty
recalled.
He said the barbells were re·
moved and he was "hog tied"
with his feet and hands behind
him.
(See SHOOTOUT. Page AZ)
Lending Rate
Cut a Quarter
NEW YORK (AP) -
First National City Bank
said today it is reducing its
prime lending rate a
quarter point to 61h per-
cent, the lowest the key
rate has been since the spr-
ing of 1973.
Citibank said the change
in the rate it charges on
loans to its most credit-
worthy commercial bor-
rowers is erfective Mon-
day.
The prime rate does not
directly affect consumer
or mortgage lending rates
but can often provide a
clue to where those other
rates are headed.
MacKenzie
Park Fete
Saturday
Fifth District Superv isor
Thomas Riley will be among
several local dignitaries to speak
at Saturday's dedication of
MacKenzie Park in South
Laguna Hills.
Residents of the area have
worked eight years for a park at
the MacKenzie St. and Ricken·
backer Road sile, according to
Mary .Hin.kJe, parks chairman for
the Soutb Laguna Hills
Homeowners' Association.
Three years ago homeowners
voted to 'double their county
service area taxes, from 25 to 50
cents per $100 assessed valua·
lion, in order to build parks, Mrs.
Hinkle said.
"In voting for the higher tax
rate, we specified that $15,000 a
year would go for parks," she
said ... Our goal is to build a park
every three years."
MacKenzie Park is the onJy
park in the area with two lighted
tennis courts. The three-acre
park also has a picnic area, a tot
lot and paved paths.
Saturday's dedication will
begin at 10 a .m . Larry Cossid,
president of the homeowners' as ·
sociation, will serve as master of
ceremonies. Loa You"ng, Sad-
dleback Valley school board
trustee, will speak on behalf of
the school district.
Rev. Donald Wise of Lake Hills
Community Church will give the
invocation, and the 00-member
Los Alisos Intermediate School
advanced band directed by Rick
Stroup will play popular
marching tunes.
. threw its support behind the
most dense development option
outlined in the Southeast Orange
County Circulation Study
<SEOCCS).
The option backed by the
council recommends construc-
tion of two "transportation cor-
ridors" through the south county
to meet traffic demands of one
million new residents. The cur-
rent south county population is
about 200,000 persons.
. DiGiovanni and Councilman
Arthur Holmes. Councilmen
Patrick Lane and Charles Fox
dissented.
· The two dissenters indicated
they supported the low density
option which envisions 500,000
new residents when the south
county is ultimately developed.
Doctor Enters Minuteman Fired
A transportation corridor like·
ly would include a freeway a nd
·some form of rapid transit, ac·
·cording to county officials.
Councilman Thomas O'Keefe,
a member of the committee that
assembled the SEOCCS report.
argued in lavor of the high
density option.
O'Keef e said the city and
county "should plan today and
· Lane said he was concerned
that one of the transportation
corridors would tie into the San
Diego Freeway south or the city
'limits and thus make San
·Clemente an island between two
freeways . "That will create
more problems for our city,
rather than relieve them," said
Lane.
Fox charged that planning of
•major transportation systems
spawns development. He said,
for example, that planning of the
Innocent Plea
In Rape Case
South Laguna physician Ross
Todd McClure entered a plea of
innocent Thursday during ar-
raignment in South County
Municipal court lo charges of sex
perversion and rape of a patient
under the influence of drugs.
I\ preliminary hearing in the
case was scheduled for Feb. 23 in
the court of Judge Blair Barnett.
VANDENBERG AFB (UPI)_..
An Air Force Minuteman II
)CBM was launched successfully
at 8:30 p.m. Thursday. officials
said.
Coast
Weather
:Nude Popout Popped· Up
Dr. McClure, 54, 31542 S. Coast
Highway. was arrested by·
sheriff's deputies after investiga-
tion of a patient's claim that she
was raped while under the in·
nuence of drugs and forced to
participate in an act of sexual
perversion.
Point woman, had sought treat~
ment for a back injury. The al·
leged offense is reported to have
occurred Jan. 7.
Some high clouds at
times otherwise sunny
through Saturday. A little
warmer with beach highs
in the upper 60s rising to
the 70s inland. Lows mast-
ly in the 40s.
INSIDE TODAY
Dance in America ba.I tm·
ckrgone some radical changti
in tM wt few yeari. includ-•
ing a phnunnenal grovth in l
audfenct1 and a trend toward I
mUing clo.tsicol bolld with .
modtm .and Jou dance. Sff
stot11 on Page C 1 o/ the
Wnktnd~.
BJ &UDI NIEDZIEl.SU
ot .. DlltJ ""'..., The -.rch of a Minion Viejo
~le for a 1oun1 man to PoP out
Ota blrtbda,y cake tn the nude hu IOdecl. •
• Bombarded by telepbone calls
since their ad offenn.I $25 to a darlal .U.c1ent a~ on the
Siddlebac' Colle•• bulletin l>Oafd, Btll ... Pam~ have
••ttJed o• 27·1ear::old David ...... ~.r,We tOOt ill flriit one wbO
eilled 1llit n han Ge nwnben et aboat 12 or 15 man bJ cue he cleddM 1IOt t.o 10 dlrouah wi1b
it," Mrs. Gross reported today.
Binlbam, a llisak>n Viejo re.\i·
dent, says he not only Intends to
keep his commJtment for Mrs. Gross' 30th birthday party Feb. 7
but to mllke aure the guests get
their money•• worth.
"I'm trylll1 to work up a couple
ol jokes to Sort of break the Ice
and entertain Ole people," he
uld.
The 1cript calls r~ Bingham to
make hll entrance by brcUfna
out of a large cartondecoraled as
a birthday pretent. The klea Of a
cake w11 abandoned because of,
the expeuo.
Phone calls from job can-
didates also lit up t.M colleie
switchboard and at tbe Daily
Pilot short,ly after a story •J>·
peared detailing the Gross's
pU,bt in fai1Jn1 to secure pro-
aped.s.
••we bad about five or 1ix calls
and after the paper came out we
really a tarted 1etUna them.'' not·
ed Mrs. Jerry Kllfoy ~the cam·
pus employment nrvl~.
One of the callen, wbo phoned
both the Grosaea and the Daib'
Pilot Hid be had been a Playgirl
centerfold and •a1d be wanted tbo
Job to f ur\her h1I career. '
Several young males were ob-
served huddling around the ~ol
lete bulletin board on Wednes·
day looking tor the notice after
the unuaual Job offer had been
publicised.
"Bill look It down afteT we Sol
the firet one," said Mn. Gross, 8'P1>UUtiY anxious to atop the
phone from rt.naini.
She added that no newsmen wm .,. lnvited lo record the
drama. "We want this to be a f&m
party and don't want to do
anythlng to commercialize it,"
lho11ld.
ENOUGH Gin'
.TO BURGURS
GREENSBORO, N.C. (AP> -
Bob Upchurch. whose grocery
has b4ten bur1l1ril4ld several
times recently. bas put a sip on
tbe fJ'ODt door.
It says, "Attention BuraJars.
We Already Gave."
•••ex
DAIL. Y PILOT SB Friday, January SO, 1970
Piiot
Logbook
General Riley
Pulls His Rank
By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI
Of IN O.lly l'f .. t Stlltl
FOR MOST ORANGE COUNTY RESIDENTS the visit
to San Juan Capistrano's "Freedom Train" involved an ex·
asperating thr ee-hour wait in line, sore feet, a nd equally
sore tempers Not for VIPs hke Fifth District Supervisor
Thomas F. Riley and aide Peter Herman though, who
marched ahead or the half-mile long queue and boldly
ducked mto u separate entrance. .
That might not be too unusual for a
retired Manne Corps general. but not
ternbly s mart for a polillc1an seekmg
re-elect ion
• • •
RETIRED LOS ANGELES times
Editor Nick Williams didn't have to ex·
plain to Saddleback Friends of lhe Mis-
sion VieJO Library why he chose a writ·
ing, rather than a speaking career. N•Eoz1nsic1
\\'1lh a m s opened tus remarks by telling them how hap·
PY he was to meet with supporters of "the Laguna Niguel
hbrarv "
Realizing his error, Williams Joshed, "I'd better stick to
my text. I only get myself in trouble when I try to ad Ii b. ·'
•••
THEY'RE ONLY KNOW N as "Him" a nd "Her" on
campus but the elderly couple has already attained celebri·
ty status at Saddleback College even though they were ad·
milted onl v a few months ago. "Him."' aged 70, and ''Iler," 81, are both cadavers and
have been loaned lo Sadd!C'back's biolog y department by
UC Irvine.
Ray Helser, staff wnter of the college news paper. la·
ments that they haven't been properly recognized and m a
recent story suggested they be hsted in the college
catalogue as faculty members ..
"They teach fauJtlessly. They benefit from no tenure.
They draw no s alary. They belong to no faction or any
political party. What more could any campus ask?" he in·
qwred. "Yet up to now there is no recognition whatever."
• • *
HAROLD BECK of Laguna Hills is both a ph ysician and
a retired Air Force colonel which proved to be quite a pro-
blem to Denis Horn of the Saddleback Area Coordinating
Council when he rose to introduce him as a new director at
the council's recent dinner meeting.
''I don't know whether I should introduce him as 'doc-
tor' or ·colonel· so l thought I would introduce him by his
Christian name,'' Horn said. "But then I learned he was a
member of Temple Judea.
***
FEW PEOPLE WOULD THINK of emblazoning their
callrng cards with a rooster or a fish , but then they probably
haven't met Laguna Hills' John S. Simons
Simons evidently thinks highly of both, although he
maintams neither are what they used to be. "In America we used to have a chicken in every yard
and now they're all gone. We used to have fish in all the rivers
and they'redisapperaingtoo," he says.
"Now we wind up with frozen chicken that isn't good
enough to eat. My wife bought two the other day. She roast-
ed one and 1t had a nat taste She made soup out of the other
and it tasted like dis hwater."
School Sets
OpenHo~e
Parents and residents of the
Saddleback Valley Unified
School Dis trict have been invited
to a week-long open house at the
new Serrano Intermediate
School.
Interested persons may tour
the school from 8 a m. to 8 p.m.
Monday through Friday, Feb. 2
to6.
There will be no discussion of
the school's curriculum. said
Ray Garubo. principal. "We're
just trying to show off our school.
The school, which just opened
after the first of the year, is locat-
ed at 24642 J eronimo Road, El
Toro.
Car Dealer Dead
WELLSON, Ariz. (UPI) -A
San Diego used car dealer, found
dead along Inter state 8 near here, may have been murdered
by two hitchhikers. according to
Yuma County Sheriff's deputies.
ORANGE COAST
SB
l ... •J"J"l111f111l ... Q111I t·,·1·1
Trw>Or•"4"C • .,, Dany Pilot ¥if•tP\wt11ch•'<~
bt'W"d thf' to tlfito Pt•\~~ I\ pubh~ ty ltw-O•«lf'Qt" C:O.-\t P\,bf1,.lhnq Como•ny $(~t4'4:' ft<l1hot•\ ,..,,..
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Robert N. Weed
Prt •l<Wnt ft\CI Put>ll""''
Thomas Keevll
ThOmas A. Murpt11ne
MONo•no Editor
Charles H . Loos Richard P. Nall
"''"''•"' MOneol"ll EOHon
Saddleback Valley Office 'UOI ~ • ~., Ro..:t 11wn01t90f•w••Y
Off I en
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M""hnqt"" llH<~ 11e1) 6'-<K" &ov•o.,d l,>9UN &.1<h 11 .. C.t • .,,...,rt Slr_.I
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~
Saddle back
Voters League
Slates Potluck
New and prospective members
of the Saddleback Valley II unit
of the Orange Coast League of
Women Voters are invited to a
potluck luncheon Feb. 10 in Mis·
sion Viejo.
The luncheon will be held at the
home of Vicki Birdsall, 25842
Jamon Lane, and will feature re-
cipes from the League's new
Bicentennial cookbook.
The luncheon will be preceded
by a 10 a .m . presentation by Mrs.
Birdsall on the subject of, "What
the League of Women Voters is
All About."
Ray Prothero, lifelong resident
.or the Saddleback yalley, will
also appear and give a talk on the
history a nd la nd use of the
Valley.
Women interested in attending
the session a re encouraged to
call Elsie Parry, LVW mem·
bership chairman, 830-9309.
From Page Al
BATTIN •••
Santa Ana policeman Gary
Newmeyer.
Newmeyer said he was as-
signed the task in 1975 of delving
into the affairs af a Santa Ana ci-
ty council candidate, Superv'isor
Laurence S<!hmit, former county
planning commissioner Woodrow
Butterfield and former Garden
Grove Mayor John Dean.
It is through sue h 'affidavits that
Kurilich said he hopes toconvlnce
Judge Lae Monday that he is en.1
titled to investigative reports cov-
ering inquiries into county
political figures.
Fro. PageAJ
ROADS •••
public agencies in the south
county.
The San Juan Captatra.no City
Council supported the low densi·
ty alternative, whlle tbe MJaslon
Viejo Municipal Advilory coun·
cll supported the hllh density
S)'ltem.
The Laguna Beach City Coun· cu rejected alJ opUom.
Police Ponder
Bandit's Motive
The twisted reasoning which
led to Thursday's South Laguna
bank robbery, shooting of the
bank manaeer and the gunning
down of the suspected bandit by
lawmen is today continuing to
puzzle authorities probing the
case. "Franlcly, we don't know why
the guy did what he did, unless
he was just ... , " Sheriff's Lt.
Jerry Krans said, trailing off.
"We don't know," he said.
Robert Cast illo, 24, of 1104
Miramar Drive, Laguna Beach,
clung to life by a thread today at
South Coast Community
Hospital after being shot by
sheriff's investigators, dressed
as ambulance attendants.
Castillo was "technicall y" de·
ad on arrival at the hospital,
Krans said.
In fact, lawmen at the hospital
r eported to superiors that the
robbery suspect was dead. Doc·
tors revived the man once. While
in surgery to r emove lawmen 's
beullets, Castillo again slipped
away from life but was revived,
Krans said.
Castillo remctined under guard
in the hospital's intensive care
unit. Hospital authorities said he
was in critical condition.
Bank manager Gerald Guess
remained in critical condition
also. Guess, or Mission Viejo,
was shot with a 30 /06 rifle when
a man posing as a tow truck
driver attempted to gain entry
to the bank at about 9 a.m .
Thursday.
Krans recalled some of the
events of the day:
During some of the time the
man was in the bank, he talked
with sheriff's deputies on the
telephone.
"He said things like people
were messing over him, that
we're going to have to kill him,
that people have been bugging
him too long," Krans said.
In a telephone conversation
from inside the bank, Castillo
talked with 'Vern. Perry, a re-
p o rter for the Santa Ana
Regis ter. P erry said he was
told: "They're all outside wail·
ing for me. I'm going to make a
run for it. I hope the (obscenity)
get me. I don't want to live
anymore."
By some accounts, Castillo's
mother blamed the Vietnam
war's influence on her son's
mental condition.
Mrs. Diane Castillo, a city of
Laguna Beach finance depart-
ment employe, said her son was
a Vietnam veteran and had been
deeply atf ected by his participa-
tion in the war.
Castillo was a registered stu-
dent at Saddleback Community
College. Originally he had
si~ned up for a heavy class load,
* * * E',....PageAI
SHOOTOUT
"I asked him, if he was going to
s hoot me and he seid, 'no, the on·
ly one who should get shot is
me'." Hagerty said.
Hagerty said he was told "the
only thing l 'm gonna take is your
truck."
He said the man told him, "I'm
gonna turn the radio on before I
leave and m-aybe I could hear
what was going on, on the radio.
"He said if I get loose, the
phone was in the corner, go
ahead and call the police.
"I asked him if he was coming
back and he said, 'oh, I won't be
coming back.'"
Hagerty said be scraped the
tape from his mouth by rubbing
his face along the carpet, and he
inched along the floor to reach
the telephone.
"I found it's nearly impossible
to dial zero or 911 (an emergency
number in San Clemente) with
your tongue," Hagerty said.
He said he tried to dial 411 to
get an operator, but kept getting
a recording.
Frustrated with the telephone,
Hagerty said he squirmed across
the floor to a sliding glass door.
"l got it unlocked with my
nose, but couldn't get it open."
He banged on the glass to attract
attention, but again, was unsuc-
cessful.
Then he made his way down
the hallway to some louvered
windows and yelled for help. His
screams were heard by
neighbors who called police.
Aside from a swollen face from
the scufflna across the carpet,
and some sore bones because of'
the bindings, Hagerty suffered a
small gash on his band when the
tape was cut off. He was taken to
South Cout Community Hospital
for minor treatment.
Jn the same hospital, docton
labored to save the lives or
Castillo, shot by police and
Security Pacific bank manaier
~raid Guess shot in the holdup.
"I'd Just flnl1bed reading
'Hetur Skelter' <a book about the
Manson murders) a week a10,
and I don't tht.ot that helped mat·
ten,'' Hqerty said.
••some prett1 frt1htenln1
thlnp 10 through your mind," be
1ald.
22 units, but lt was revised
downward to the average study
load of 16 units .
Castillo's course or study in-
cluded a private pilots class,
several math classes and guitar,
a college spokesman said.
.A As pieced together by the
Sheriff's De p artment and
Laguna Beach police this is the
sequence or events :
At about 8:30, tow truck driver
Jack Hogarty was called to a
disabled car at 1104 Miramar.
He was accosted as he entered
the house and left bound and
gagged. His tow truck is stolen.
Oillly ...... SQft ,.....
Just before 9 a.m ., Castillo
posing as a tow truck driver ap-
proached the side entrance of
the Security Pacific BanJc, 30812
Coast Highway, South Laguna.
He contacted an employe and
said he was there to repossess a
bank employe's car in the park·
ing lot. The e mploye, Nancy
Letcher, assistant manager, left
the bank enroule to her car with
Castillo.
LINDA VISTA YOUNGSTERS IN PATRIOTIC REGALIA
Saddleback Valley School Gets Bfcentennlal flag
•
He went to the tow truck, and
pulled the high-powered rifle
from the truck a nd he and Mrs.
Letcher returned to the bank.
Tnistee Presents
Flag at Ceremnny
Ins ide the bank , other
employes saw the gunman com·
ing toward the locked door.
The gunman fired a round
through the door , near where
Guess was standing.
The g unman saw th e
manager, thought he was "up to
something" and fired through
the glass, hitting the manager in
the upper torso, Krans said.
The gunman bMke in the glass
door with the butt of.his rifle and
went in, gouging his arm on a
hanging shard of glass.
Once inside, he collected
money (the amount is unknown)
and tried to fl ee. However, an
alarm had notified Laguna
Beach police and two police cars
arrived on the scene just as the
bandit left the bank.
''Wherever free men gather ,
there am I ." said Saddleback
Valley school trustee Bill Kohler,
speaking as the American flag
Thursday to Linda Vista Elemen-
tary School students and their
parents.
"Because I am on the side of
God," Kohler continued, "God
protects me though the godless
would destroy me."
The occasion was a bicenten-
nial program at the Mission Vie·
jo school. Kohler presented a
Bennington flag to Linda Vista on
behalf of the Saddleback school
district. He explained that the
Bennington flag was one of the ·
forerunners of our present-day
50-star flag ...
The school district will present
a historic flag t o each Sad·
dleback school, to be flown dur-
ing the bicentennial year.
"When the flag talks," Kohler
said, ".it tells us it was conceived
in dreams of liberty and was pre-
sent at all the great moments in
American history."
Viejo Kiwanians
Help Handicapped
Members of the Mission Viejo
Kiwanis Club have donated $500
to sustain the operation of Sad-
dle back Community En.·
terprises, a non-profit organiza-
tion aiding the handicapped.
Money for the donation was
raised by means of a Christmas
candy sale.
ALL UPHOLSTERY
ON SALE NOW ...
SVCH POPVLAB
LINES A..S:
WOODMA..RK
RENREDON
HERITAGE
SHERRIL
M .ARGE CARSON
PLUS ALL LEATHER ITEMS ••• 20o/l) OFF
LAMPS -PICTURES-ACCESSORIES
Also Bedu«!ed!
WHICOAfS & SATUUATS t:OOtot.JO
NEWPORT BEACH•
Im WESTCUt'F DR., 6'2·2050
LAGUNA BEACH • 3U NOftTU t'OA.\,. HWY.. 494·~1
TORRANCE•
2'141 HAW'l1fORN! BLVD.
COptn Fri, JJl 9. Sun, 12-S.~J
• '1•1211
r
\ I
Irvine
EDITION
VOL. 69, NO. 30, 4 SECTIONS, 42 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNI A
Today's (;losing
N.Y.Stoeks .
FRIDAY, JANUARY 30, 1976 TEN CENTS
Sf: !JJow Truck Driver Recalls Terror1
. ""' ~lly Piiot Staff PMto
SHERIFF'S INVESTIGATOR FRED GELLER CHECKS WINDOW
Gerald Guess Victim of Gunshot In Aborted Bank Holdup
Fail to C'onamuni~ate
Hopefuls Criticize
Irvine Incumbents
At a forum Thursday, most ci·
ty council candidates contended
that what Irvine city government
has is a failure to communicate.
Criticisms tanged from excess
government gobbledygook to in·
attention by officials, but the
solution was uniform.
In his or her own way, each
candidate said, "Vote for me, I'll
pay attention."
About 150 residents attended
the Irvine Tomorrow forum on
"How do you get them to listen
down at city h all." Of the 16 can·
didates , 14 attended. Fred
Whitley stood in for Candidate
Bruce Rasner, who was ill with
the flu and candidate Robert
Whitson did not attend.
Ca ndida te Wiiiiam
Crlsell. defended politicians,
saying, "They do listen. If you
want to talk, just go down there
and talk. And you '11 probably be
on TV too."
"If you can't talk, find so·
meone who can. If you can't
write, find someone who can help
you," he said. "If I'm elected, I
might even help you." But main·
)y, he said, "Don't just gripe,
ask."
Candidate Mary Ann
Galdo described governmen·
tese used around city hall as a
"technique to keep citizens unin·
formed." Seeking citizen com-
ments was a joke, she contended,
when "Citizens genuinely con-
cerned about the future of our ci·
ty were asked their true feelinas
on aquifer recharge areas and
about unusual geologic or topo-
graphic conditions .... Can
monolithic shell construction and
stressed.skin construction max·
imize material efficiency, etc.,
etc., etc." .
Mrs. Gaido promised "clean
language" in city hall so resi·
dents could understand what is
being discussed.
Candidate Carol Mor ·
ris, conceding a problem exists,
said "There are two sides to
every story. Whenever someone
loses. he feels he is not being
listened to."
In her role as transportation
commissioner, Mrs. Morris said.
she listened to the people and vot-
ed against a four-lane Michelson
Drive bridge for Fluor Corp. She
also proposed changes to the
council chambers. The elevated
council dais, she said, makes
those speaking to the council feel
awkward . S h e suggested
bringing the council down to eye
level.
(See IRVINE, Page A2)
ENOUGH GIFT
TO BURGURS
GREENSBORO, N.C. (AP) -
Bob Upchurch, whose grocery
bas been burglarized several
times recently, bas put a sign on
the front door.
It says, "Attention Burglars.
We Already Gave."
~Popper Pops Up
He'll Jump Nude From Box
By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI ·
.. °'""OeJtrfl'INitlUft · The search of a Mission Viejo
~upte for a young man to pop out
of a birthday cake in the nude bas
ended.
Bombarded by telephone calls
&Jnce their ad offering '25 to a
daring student appeared on the
Saddleback CoUeac bulletin
board, Bill and Pam Gross have
settled on 27-year-old David
Blngham. ••we i,ook the fi.rst one who
called but we hue the numbers
d about 12 or 15 mON ln case h~
decides not to 10 throuP with
lt," M.rt. Gro11 reported today.
Bln1bam, a Mlulon Viejo resl·
dent. saya be not~ tntends to kMI> bil comm1tmtnt for r.tn.
Otoe•' 30th birthday party Feb. 7
'bUt to make sure th• fuesll 1et
their money'• worth. •
'
"I'm trying to work up a couple
of jokes to sort of break the ice
and entertain lbe people,'' he
said.
The script calls for Bingham to
make bis entrance by breaking
out of a large carton decorated as
a birthday present. The idea or 8
cake was abandoned because of
tbe expeo.se.
Phone calls from Job can·
dldates also Ut up the colleae
switchboard and at the Daily
Pilot shortly after a story IP·
peared detamna the Grosa's
pupt in f allina to HCure pro-
apects.
"Wo had about five or~lx calls
and after the paper came out we
really started 1ettint them, .. not·
ed Mn . J erry Kllfoy of the cam·
pus employment service.
One of the caJlera, who phoned
<See NUDE, Pa1eAZ)
By JACK CBAIYPEIL
Of Ule O.Ur ttt ... iclff
Tow truck driver Jack Hagerty
looked death in the face Thurs-
day in what was to become the
prelude to the dramatic South
Laguna bank robbery shootout.
"I tried to remain as calm as I
could. I knew i!· 11 made a
nuisance of myself, I was a dead·
man," Hagerty said in bis San
Clemente home.
''l tried to be as helpful as I
could. I tried to keep talking, but
never yell 5 s truggle and I think
that's the nhly reason I'm still
alive.
Hagerty, an employe of Ray
Carey Chevron in Laguna Beach
was dispatched at about 8:30
a.m. to the home of Richard
Castillo, 24, of 1104 Miramar
Drive. Laguna Beach.
A caller complained of a dis.
abled car there.
"I rang the door bell and this
guy answers the door. He said be
still had a couple things left to do
and could I come in and wait,"
Hagerty said.
.. As I came in, be reached
behind the door, picked up a rifle
and lowered it at my head. He
said •get in the back room and lie
down."'
There, Hagerty was bound
with tape around the ankles, a set
or barbells was placed on his
back and bis bands tied to it.
•·1 told him, I know this doesn't
mean much to you, but the
barbells are hurting,'1 Hagerty
recalled.
He said the barbells were re-
moved and he was "hog tied"
with his feet and bands behind
him.
<See SHOOTOUT, Page AZ>
h·Vine Company Coast
\
Plan Called Madness
Grove Shooting
Cops Stymied
In Death Case
LentUngRate
CutaQuaner
· NEW YORK (AP) -
·First National City Bank
said today it is reducing its
prime lending rate a
quart.er point to 61h per.
cent, the lowest the key
rate has been since the spr-
ing of 1973.
ByDOUGLASFIUTlSCHE
Of tM Dolly ftll.C SUH
Irvine poli~e have abandoned
hope of extraditing a Mexican
citizen they believe shot a Santa
Fe Springs man to death in an
Irvine orange grove.
Irvine Detective Steve Nash
and Costa Mesa Detective Chano
Camarillo" r eturned from
Guadalajara, Mexi~o. this week
after attempts to extradite Raul
R. Figueroa of Los Angeles
failed.
"We've pretty much closed the
books on this one," Nash com-
mented this morning.
Police believe Figueroa shot
Eulogio R. Valenzuela of Santa
Fe Springs eight times in the
back, neck and face in a dispute
over Valenzuela's alleged in·
volvement with Figueroa's wife.
Although Mexican officials
described the legal process re-
quired before Figueroa could be
extradited, American embassy
and state department orficials
told us, "Forget it. Nobody gets
Widow Asking
Damages in
Mate's Death
Damages to be ascertained in
the trial court were demanded
Thursday by the widow and two
children of an El Toro man who
was knocked down and killed on
Feb. 5. 1975, while walking near
the intersection of Trabuco Road
and Irvine Boulevard.
Named as defendants in the
Orange County Superior Court
lawsuit filed by Edna Joyce
Nash, 42, of 24922 Muirlands
Blvd., are the Irvine Company
and its employe, Floyd David
Holland.
Mrs. Nash, who is joined in the
action by her children, Marvin
Wayde Nash, 19, and Linda Joyce
Hibbitt, 23, contends that
Holland's negligence while driv-
ing the company's pickup truck
led to bis striking and killing
Burgess Jefferson Nash, 44.
°"'"""' ............ FOR DISTRICT ELECTIONS
M•u .. ,..n ,.Moe" Spenc.r
extradited from Mexico," Nash
said.
Things might have been dif-
ferent had the victim also been a
Mexican citizen, Nash suggested.
· Coincidentally, Figueroa and·
Valenzuela both came to the U.S.
from Guadalajara, Nash said,
adding that they did not meet un-
(Sff SUSPECT, Page A2)
Evide•ee Dae
Citibank said the change
in the rate it charges on
loans to its most credit·
worthy commercial bor·
rowers is effective Mon·
day.
The prime rate does nc~
directly affect consumer
or mortgage lending rates
but can often provide a
clue to where those other
rates are beaded.
Battin Gets Filing
Deadlirw by Judge
By GARV GRANVILLE
Of IM Dilly ,llot S!Mf
Indicted Orange County
Supervisor Robert Battin has
been given until Mondy to file
sworn affidavits he says will help
prove he is a victim of selective
prosecution.
In response to the deadline im·
posed Thursday by Superior
Court Judge Kenneth Lae, Bat-
tin 's attorney, Matthew Kurilich.
said he plans to file 15 to 20 addi-
tional sworn statf!ments with the
court.
Those statements will be in-
tended to bolster Kurilich's con."
tention that his client is being
prosecuted for crimes common
among elected officeholders.
Last August. the county Grand
Jury handed down an indictment
charging Battin with seven
felony crimes related to alleged
use of county s upplies a nd
personnel in a 1974 political cam-
. paign.
And to defend his client against
those charges, Kurilich wants to
delve into Orange Col15tY district
attorney investigations and pro·
secutions or public officials.
So far, according to Kurilicb,
·he's been denied access to in·
vestigation records and
testimony that he believes wiJl
help prove bis point.
Thursday, for example, dis-
trict attorney's investigator Ray
Miller was called to testify.
Kurilich expected Miller to
verify the earlier testimony or a
former undercover agent who
said he was paid to seek out
financial information on three
county supervisors.
But Miller didn't make it to the
witness box as Deputy Dist. Atty.
Jack Ryan pointed out there had
been no testimony contradicting
the informant's tale.
Kurilich did succeed in filing a
sworn affidavit from former
Santa An a policeman Gary
Newmeyer.
Newmeyer said he was as·
signed the task in 1975 or delving
into the affairs of a Santa Ana ci·
ty council candidate, Supervisor
Laurence Schmit, former county
planning commissioner Woodrow
Butterfield and former Garden
Grove Mayor John Dean.
Itis through such affidavits th·at
Kurilich said he hopes to convince
Judge Lae Monday that he is en-'
titled to investigative reports cov-
ering inquiries into county
political figures.
Minuteman Fired
VANDENBERG AFB (UPI) -
An Air Force Minuteman II
ICBM was launched successfull y
at 8:30 p.m. Thursday, officials
said.
.Candidate Spencer
Urges Growth Limit
~ (Editor'• Note: This is one of a
amea o/ interview• with the can-
didotei for the Irvine Cit11 Council.
Si%Uen candidate. . are vying /or
three ~ •eat• to bt filled in March
2 balloting. No tncumbtnt• are seek-
ing rultcti01t.)
Thia is one of a series of in·
tuvlewa with candidates for the
Irvine City Council. Sixteen can·
didata are vying for three open
1e&t8 to be filled in March 2
balloting. No incumbents are
Htkina re-election.
Irvine needs city council elec-
tion• conducted on a district
buts rather than the present
system or candidates at larae,
contends candidate Maureen
"Moe" Spencer.
Mrs. Spencer, 28, is a political
science student at Cal State
Fullerton. She lives at 3028
Duchamp Drive with h er
husband and two children. A six·
year Irvine resident, she was ac·
live in the campaigns for city in·
corporation and school district
unification.
Regarding elections by dis·
trlct, she said, "A couple of can·
didates have supported the idea,
but one 1ald we should wait unlil
we are a city or 200,000 people.
That ls llke saylna wait until
there is a fatal accident before
putti.na up a stop slan at an ln·
tersectlon.
(See SP ENCEll, Page A.2) I
I
Citizens
Oppose
Proposal
ByIDLARYKAYE
Of tlM D•llY Pilot Stiff
Opponents of an Irvine Com-
pany plan to develop its remain·
ing coastal property called it
"madness" and •·a blueprint for
destruction•· at a county Plan-
ning Commission hearing Thurs-
day night at Orange Coast
College.
Fewer than 100 persons al·
tended the airing of the plan.
Those who spoke criticized the
proposed development and aslred
instead for open space.
Leading the opposition was the
Friends of the Irvine Coast, a
citizens group.
The site in g uestion is the 10,000
acre parcel of Irvine Ranch land
that lies between Newport Beach
and Laguna Beach. The develop·
ment, referred to as the TICM AP
plan. would bring an estimated
80,000 new people into the area:
At Thursday's hearing before
the Orange County Planning
Commission, the Irvine Com-
pany used slides, maps and a
series of coordinated speakers to
detail the plan.
Additional hearings will con·
tinue during the next six months,
with the county Board of
Supervisors expected to act on
the plan on June 30.
According to Don Cameron.
Irvine Company director of
urban design, two-thirds or the
TICMAP development would be
in the coastal region adjacent to
the Newport Beach border.
That region would include a re-
sort "triangle," with hotels,
shops and restaurants located at
Wishbone Hill, Crystal Cove and
Reef Point.
In addition, the coastal region
would have four higher density
hilltop communities. according
to the plan.
Lower density residential com·
munities would be in the "hin·
terland area."
According to Cameron, 34 per·
.cent of the site would be de-
veloped, with the remaining 66
(SeeTICMAP, PageA2)
Orange Coast
Weathe r
Some high clouds at
times otherwise sunny
through Saturday. A little
warmer with beach highs
in the upper 60s rising to
the 705 inland. Lows most·
ly in the 40s.
INSIDE· TODAY
Dance in America has un·
dergone some radical changes
in the l<ut few years, includ·
ing a phenomenal growCh in
.audiences and.a trend toward
miring cla.tsical balleC with
modern and jazz dance. See
dor11 on Page Cl of the
WnkencUT.
l•dex
.. ,.,;..;:.;;::.__;D~A~l~LY:....:...P~IL~O~T;._~~__:~~~...:.F~rl~da~y~,J~·~n~u~ary:I.::!30~.~·~97!.!e
S. L-a Sllooteld
Police POnder
>
Bandit's Motive
The '" 1sted reasorung which
led to Thursday's South Laguna
bank robb~ry, shooting of the
bank manager and the gunning
down of the suspected bandit. by
lawme11 1s today contmwng to
puzzle authorities probi ng the
case.
"Franklv. we don't know why
the guy did what he did, unless
he was Just . . , " Sheriff's Lt.
Jerry Krans said, trailing off.
··we don 't know," he said.
Robert Castillo, 24, of 1104
Miramar Drive, Laguna Beach.
<'lung to life by a thread today at
South Coast Community
llosptt :il after being s hot by
::.henff's investigators. dressed
as ambulance atte ndants.
Ca::.t11lo was .. technically" de-
ad on arrt\ al at the hospital,
f\ran~ said.
In fact, lawmen at the hospital
reported to superiors that the
robbery suspect was dead Doc-
tors re\'ived the man onct.• While
in surgery to n•move lawmen's
beullets. Castillo again slipped
away from life but \\as revived.
Krans said
Castillo remained under guard
m the hospital's intensive care
unit Hospital authorities said he
was in critical condition.
Bank man;,iger Gerald Guess
rl'm:Hned 1n crit1c<1l conci1tton
SPENCER. • •
· The next election or the one
four ) ear~ from now at the latest
shouldbeb) d1stnct,"she said
"ll 1s concel\ able that all the
councilmen will be from South
Irvine That would cause dis-
part1es and 1t \\Ould be unfair to
the people of No rth Irvine," she
said.
MaJor issues facing Irvine. she
saal. also include the pattern of
future development and the ques-
ti on of housing for families work-
ing tn the city and earning less
than $15,000 a year.
Her campaign liter1:tture une-
qwvocally states she supports
.. Option 3" of the city general
plan. That development scheme
calls for an ultimate population
of 195,000 in the city's 100-square
mile planning sphere, the lowest
population of the three options.
"l support it because it means
preservation of agncuJture and
open space and because it means
flexibility in the future," she
said One of the points of debate
on selecting a single land use
plan is that 1f the land is marked
for farming , 1l can be changed
and building allowed later.
Backers of thal viewpoint con-
tend if the.plan calls for develop-
ment, il cannot be revised back
to agriculture.
Hous ing is a tougher question,
she said. The present and former
city councils have wrestled the
question without resolution. for
years, she noted. "I don't have
any easy ans wers," she said.
At a candidates forum at UC
Jrvine she said seeking federal
and state housing subsidies by
joining the Orange County Hous-
ing Authority "seems like a good
idea, but I don't know."
In the past, she said, the city
council "has not communicated
enough with the people. The
council does not take enough ef·
fort to mform people of the
choices."
Citing the November referen-
dum on zoning for the Village of
Northwood. she said, "I talked to
five people who thought they
were voting North lrvine out of
the city ...
To counter the proble m, she
said she will organize a system of
"liaison officers" in each com
munity association who would
keep her in close contact with re-
sidents
ORANGE COAST
y.,., Qf-•('1'1' tf>•\t D•llY PtlOt W·lh .,,., (" ·~ (~
ti nt'd IM fife•' P'*''· ll OVO.hll\f'\J br '"' Ordlt"'Qll"'
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Mf>w t4f'•Pot t e.a." ._.u,,llnqton ft•\trt • '"'"'
t•1n "'•t•tt. lrvtl'\" S•OdltWt• V•ll~Y ttnd ~.=v~,• :'::.~~~S:"~:.~~:~'vt ~~::.:~' ;~:
Pfll"I< •P•I publt~f\lnq ,111nt •• at llO Wt'1 8t1r ~ltHI C.o•I<• M•••. (•l•forn•• '7•i.
Robe rt N . Weed
Pre\1~nt •nd Publlil~~,
Jack R. Curley
",, t Pr .,MJ• nl ""d C.ener•t Ml""'O-'
Thomas l<eevil
l01lor
Thom.is A. Murph1ne
M•n•t•"O l OllOr
Charles H. Loos Richard P. Nall
l'\.,tl•"I M•n•1lnQ lO•l<Hl
Offlcu C••••~•1 uo w.ue .. s" .. ' l•-fl•.,n llkC.l•IWWVfOSltwl '4wn11,..1.,. IHt ~ 111/1 lu<r> -••v•td ~-ltNt• V•I>•' 11101UI~'11-•I ~, 0••1141 I, ...... ,
Te~phone (7 14) M2--021
Cl~sslflN Advertlslnq MM'71
.f.ctdltb•< • V•Oey Me-""' Oft f'
5'1-6310 Ft_h,,C .. ,._ ..
491-46)0
Ca$>yr•t'll ,.,. °' ..... (401 ,.,.111 ..... ,.. c......
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~ """'"'~'1
also. Guess. of Mission Viejo
was shot with a 30/06 nne whe~
a man posing as a tow truck
driver attem pted to gain entry
to the bank ut a bout 9 1.m . Thursday.
Krans recalled some of the
events of the day:
During some of the time the
man was In the bank, he talked
with s heriff's deputies on the
telephone.
* * * f'ro.. PGfle AJ
SHOOTOUT
"I asked him , if he was going to
shoot me a nd he said, ·no, the on-
ly one who should get shot is
me·.·· Hagerty said.
Hagerty said he was told "the
only thing I'm gonna take is your
truck.''
He said the man told him, ''I'm
gonna turn the radio on before I
leave and maybe I could hear
what was going on, on the radio.
"He said if I get loose, t he
phone was in the corner , go
ahead and call the police.
"I asked him if he was coming
back and he said, 'oh, l won't be coming back ....
Hagerty said he scraped the
tape from his mouth by rubbing
his face along t he carpet, and he
inched along the Cloor to reach
the telephone .
··1 fou nd it's nearly impossible
to dial zero or 911 (an emergency
number in San Clemente) with
your tongue." H agerty said.
He said he tried to dial 411 to
get an operator, but kept getting
a recording.
Frustrated with the telephone,
Hagerty said he squirmed across
the floor to a sliding glass door.
"I got it unlocked with my
nose, but couldn't get it open."
. He banged on the glass to attract
a ttention, but again, was unsuc-
cessful.
Then he made his way down
the hallway to some louvered
windows and yelled for help. His
sc r eams were h eard by
neighbors who called police.·
Aside from a swollen face from
the scuffing across the carpel.
and some sor e bones because of
the bindings, Hagerty suffered a
s mall gash on his hand when the
tape was cut off. He was taken to
South Coast Community Hospital
for minor treatment.
In the s ame hospital, doctors
labored to s ave the lives of
Castillo, s hot by police and
Security P acific bank manager
Gerald Guess shot in the holdup.
"I'd just finished reading
'Helter Skelter' (a book about the
Manson murder s) a week ago,
and I don't thin k that helped mat-
ters," Hagerty said.
·'Som e p r etty frighteni ng
things go through your mind," he
said.
f'rO* Page Al
SUSPECT .••
til they arrived in this country.
Valentuela had becom e a n
American citizen and his Mex-
ican citizenship lapsed after fi ve
years in the U.S., Nash said.
Regarding the shooting, Nash
said Valenzuela died with eight
.22 caliber slugs in his back, neck
and face.
Nash believes the two m en
drove to Irvine from Los Angeles
in Valenzuela's car.
After s topping near an orange
grove at Culver Drive and the
Santa Ana Freeway, the men
walked into the grove to a spot a
hundred yards from the nearest
house, Nash said.
After the first shot. he said,
Valenzuela apparently fell to the
ground a nd tried to c rawl away
as his assailant pumped seven
more bullets from the nine-shot
revolver into his back and neck.
Nash contends Valenzuela's
car was then driven to City of
Commerce, where it was set
afire.
f'rom Page Al
NUDE •••
both the Grosses and the Daily
Pilot said he had been a Playgirl ·
centerfold and said he wanted lhe
job to further his career.
Several youne males were ob.
served huddling a round the col·
lege bullet in board on Wednes-
day looking for the not.tee after
the unus ual job offer had been
publicized.
Irvine's Mrs. Ellie
On Medical Board
Sharon Lee Ellls of Irvine has
been elect ed to the Western
World M e di c a I Foundation
Board of Directors.
Mn . E llis of the Ranch ls the
nlnth Irvine reaident to become a
member of the board. The foun-
dation 11 a ttemptinc to develop a
hospital ln Jrvtne to be~ COTe Of
a p-roposed 132-ac re med.Jcal am
complex.
r .... P ... AJ
IRVINE C~DIDATES. • •
Bicentennial Plug
Oally Pilot Staff PllOto
Irvine 's J unior Ebell Club is brushing up for t he bicen-
tennia l by producing a series of six star-spangled
fireplugs thr oug hout the city. Memb e rs (from left)
Sharon Kuhn , Terri Ferrari and Helen Cameron de-
corated this hydrant at Town Center on Campus Ori ve
Wednesday to star t the project. If the club gets a
favorable reaction to the first s ix decorated hydrants.
Mrs. Ferrari said, more of the red, white a nd blue paint
jobs \\-ill be applied to fire plugs.
9 Democrats On,
Brown Off Ballot
SACRA,M ENT O (UPI) -
Secretary of State March Fong
Eu today placed the names of
nine Democr ats on her initial list
for the important California pre-
sidential prima ry ballot June 8,
but refused to include Gov. Ed·
mund G. Brown Jr.
For his part, Brown, who in
slsts he is not a candidate but
leaves the door open on accepting
the Democratic nomination if it
is offered, said he hadn't made
up his m ind on running in the
Califo rnia primary.
Candi date Geor1• Mc ·
Clare, on •ettln• councilmen
to listen, qulppea. "You can
alwaya use money. Dr. Cella and
Andrew Hwbaw tried that. Or,
you can yell and scream at the
council meetings ." ln the latter
cu e, he aaid reaidenll would be
dragged out of the meeUngs .
McClure suggested a procedure
to a utomatically r••ce on council
a1end11 items o importance to
resident.I.
Sp ea king for c an -
did a t e Bruce Rainer,
Fred Whitley said, "The m&tjori·
ty of the city council hu dis -
played arroaance." He crtt1clzed
the councll on the Jack of public
heartna• before the city applied
for $90,000 ln hou1m, sublldiea.
He sald councilmen should be
stationed at schools once a month
to meet with residents.
Candidate Patrick Bon·
ner criticized cizen participa-
tion in the controversy over
Michelson bridge-"lt will cost a
lot when it is expanded." -,and
the zoning for the Village of
Northwood-"The referendum
cost money.'' He cited hia partic·
ipation in changing the density in
what is now Deerfield u "How to
get them to listen so it doesn't
cost a lot or money .''
"I've done a lot of listening
since I 've been in tbe city and I
will continue to do so," s aid Bon-
ner, citing his actions on the
transportation com mission.
Candid a te E . Ray
Quigley, the only candidate
with prior city council service,
cited a lopg list of votes he took
after listening to r esidenta' con-
c erns. Quigley cited the
Deerfield density reduction, in-
creasing the distance of homes
from Turtle Rock Drive and
other items as proof "I have
listened.''
C andidate Gary Glad -
den also criticized the lack of
hearings on the housing subsidy
request. "As it stands now, the
council does the talking and the
citizens do the listening," he
said. He promised to listen. .
C andidate Bull ;.Bill"
Vardoulls proposed a syst em
o( h1a repreaentatlve-3 in each
community astoeJatlan to keep
him ln contact with issues Impor-
tant to the people. He also said
notice of hearin1.s s hould be
made 30days In advance
Cand i date David 81Jh,
described his frustr ation in
speaking in the succession or
hearings leadina up to the
Northwood zoning referendum.
"It's easy to talk at city hall,'' he
aatd. "I spoke and 1poke and
spoke until I led the referendum.'·
The city •. be said, needs to p1:ty
more attention to residents and
. leas to~on1ultants .
Candidate Georse
Kolaler promised to "keep my
ear to the road and keep track of
what people are saying." He said
he would act on the de.ires or re-
lidenta.
Candidate Marueen
Spencer s aid the city needs
elections by district rather than
at large. Some groups, she said,
have had "great success in get-
ting the city council to listen."
But areaa like UCI and the North
Irvine "window areu" have less
political .pull, she said. District-
ing, she said, would mean more
adequate representation.
Candidate Robert
&lartln, stung by counc il
crlti$:ism of the bicentennia l
committee be chairs, described
the council's harsh words as dis-
couraging citizen involvement.
He also said he would push for
changes in the meetings so items
of interest to residents would be
high on the agenda. As things are
now, he said, "You've got to be
crazy to spe ak to the city coun-
cil ." ·
Candidate Robert
Miller s aid h e also w oul~
listen. But he s poke on the growta
of the city. The lowest population
density d escribed in three
general plan options, he said, is
equal to the density of Los
Angeles and far more dense than
India and Japan. "We're going to
be just Uke LA unless we do
sdmethlng now," he said.
f'r .. PageAJ
TICMAP •••
percent left fo r recreational and
open space uses. Several four
and six-lane roads would be built.
ALL UPHOLSTERY
ON SALE NOW ...
Part of t he 66 percent has
already been identified fo r state
parks and would be purchased by
the state. However, the Irvine
Compan y is still, looking for
buyers for the r est of the pro-
posed open space land.
Cameron said the entire pro-
ject would take between 25 and 30
years to realize, with develop-
ment begun near the Newport
Beach borde r in about 10 years
and development at the south end
in about 20 years.
In explaining t he r easons
behind the extensive develop-
ment, Camer on pointed out that
the current use of the land, yields
onl y $3.30 per acre during a good
year.
Taxes on the land a mount to
$750,000 p er year. "To be
economically feasible, the land
requires development.'· he said.
"This is a plan the company
feels is do-able. It's a ra tionale
development that balances both
the public a nd pri vale interests,"
Cameron maintained.
However , Friends of the Irvine
Coast scoffe d at Cameron 's
claim.
"The highest and best use of
the land should be based on
both 'return on investment' and
also the social costs involved ,"
s aid Mitc h Modeleski, of the
Friends group.
He said the Friends opposes
the plan because it perpetuates
the domin a t io n o r t h e
automobile, degrades air and
water quality and would destroy
veeetation and wildlife.
"Our alternative is to provide
total open s pace, like Golden
Gate Park in San Francisco,"
Modeleski said.
He called for a joint acquis ition
proiram by federal. 1tate, coun-
ty and city governmenu to keep
the land for r ecreation and open
space.
Costa Mesa citizen Verlyn
Marth, who called the ' plan a
"blueprint for destruction," told
commissioners that approving
such a development would be
"another nail in lhe coffin of
Oranie County.''
Marth uld he ls already sick
200 days a year from a1r pollution
and called on commis1ioner1 to
stop this "madneaa."
Laguna Be a ch Cit y Coun ·
cilman Jon Brandt also spoke,
uldn1 commissioners ~ r eject
the TICMAP plan in Ila present form.
"Projects Ute TICMAP are an
lnvltatlon to overwhelmlng
Orange County's open apace . The
Loa Anf elea megalopolls is
enou1h, · tald Brandt, a geo~
1raphy profe11or at. Orange
Cout Collese.
SIJCll POPIJLAll
LINES AS:
WOOD MA.BK
DENREDON
!HERITAGE
SHERRIL
MARGE CARSON
PLUS ALL LEATHER ITEMS .•• 20o/o OFF.
LAMPS -PICTURES -ACCESSORIES
Also Bedueed!
WIBDAYS I IATUIOAYS fi:OO to l:JO
NEWPORT BEACH•
112'7 W!STCUt'f QJ., 64%·2050
LAGUNA BEACH • l4S NOft1'11 \:OAS1' HW\'.. ~ Wt
TORRANCE•
23&41 HAwntORNf! BLVD <Open ,n, tll t. SW1. 12·S.301 17J12'7t
,
I
I
(
Buntinghtn Beaeh ·
Fo11ntaiit Valley
ED,TION
.
VOL. 69, NO. 30, 4 SECTIONS, 42 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY. CALIFORNIA
..
FRIDAY, JANUARY 30, 1976
Af&erllO.a
N.Y.Steeb
J"EN CENT$
SC Tow Truf!k Driver Kef!alls Terror
By IACK CHAPPELL
OflMO.lly"i.tSMIH
Tow truck driver Jack Hagerty
looked death in the face Thurs-
day in what was to become the
prelude to the dramatic South
Laguna bank robbety shootout.
"I tried to remain as calm as I
could. I knew if I made a
nuisance of myself, I was a dead·
man," Hagerty said in his San
Clemente home.
"I tried to be as he1pful as I
could. J tried to keep talking but
never yell or struggle and 1 thbik
that's the only reason I'm still I
alive.. •
Hagerty, an employe of Ray
Carey Chevron in Laguna Beach
was diJpatcbed at about 8:30
a.m . to the home of Richard
Castillo, 24, of 1104 Miramar
Drive, Laguna Beach. ·
A caller complained of a dis-
abled car there.
"I rang the door bell and this
guy answers the door. He said be
still bad a CO\lple things left to do
and could I come in and wait,"
Hagerty said.
"As I came in, he reached
behind the door. picked up a rifle
and lowered it at my bead. He
said •get in the back room and lie
down."'
There, Hagerty was bound
with tape around the antles, a set
of barbells was placed on b1s
back and bll bands Ued to it.
.. I told him, I know this doesn't
mean much to )COU, but the
barbells are hurting." Hagerty
recalled.
l:le said the barbells were re.
moved and he was "hog tied"
with bis feet and bands behind
him. .
•·1 asked him, if he was going to
1boot me and be said, 'no. the on· 1Y one wbo should iet. shot is
me'.'' Hagerty sald. .
Hagerty said he was told "the
only thing I'm gonna take is your
truck."
He said the man told him, "I'm
gonna turn the rad.io oo before I
leave and maybe I could bear
whatwasgoingon,ontberad.io.
.. He said if I get loose, tbe
phone was in the corner. go
ahead and'call the police.
"I asked him if he was coming
back and be said, 'oh. I won't be
coming back."'
Hagerty said be scraped the
tape from his mouth by rubbing
hil face along the carpet, and he
inched along the fioor to reach
the telephone.
"I found it's nearly impossible
to dial zero or 911 (an emergency
(See SHOOTOUT, Page AZ)
Flying Hazards'
Jet Pilots Cite Dange-rs
1
WASHINGTON (UPI) -U.S.
airline passengers face a cons-
tant, frightening and need.less
potential for catastrophe because
of sloppy or dangerous practices·
and unrealistic safety pro-
cedures, six veteran pilots said
today.
Reporting on a safety study
conducted for the Federal Avia·
tion Administration, the pilots
said the blame for the hazards
OC f)octors
Eye Action
By State
Orange County physicians and
hospital administrators cast l . Reegcled ¥ ard
The front yard '·of the Robert Bourland
home , 6042 Wintergreen Drive, Huntington
Beach, was transformed into Marina High
Sc hool 's campus reclamation center
Thursday nig ht, apparel_ltly by student
pranksters. Kevin Bourland, a Golden
West College s tudent, spotte d the
changeover when be returned home frmn
work. "They·did a'real neat job," he com-
mented.
. their eyes on Sacramento today
to learn the latest malpractice
developments before making
·surgery schedules for next week.
Area doctors were heartened
by action in the Senate Thursday
when the tnalpl'actlce reform bill
of Sen. Dennis Carpenter (R·
U.S. Pushes
Soviets for
Angola Peace
WA SHINGTON (UPI ) -
Secretary of State Henry Kiss-
inger indicated today the Ad·
ministration . is pressuring the
Soviet Union for peace in Angola
b y delaying plans to ask
Congress to ease trade restric·
tions against Moscow.
, "We had originally intended to
move more actively at this time
on credit a nd trade (restric·
PRO-WESTERN FORCES
RETREAT IN ANGOLA, A4,
~ t tions)," Kissinger said in answer
to a question by Sen. Harry F.
Byrd Jr. <D·Va.).
"I think in view of the situation
I' in An gola, this is not an ap·
propriate time (to ask for re·
visions in the 1974 Trade Act)
. . . not unless the political
climate changes," Kissinge r
added in testimony before the
Senate Finance Committee on
U.S. foreign policy.
Kissinger satd in an earlier
statement that the strict trade
act in some cases "closed the
door" on better relations with
Communist countries. But he
later reiterated U.S. opposition
to Cuban and Soviet intervention
in Angola.
"We cannot permit, and are
deterJ11ined to resist the ex-
pansion of Soviet sphere by
·military power," he said.
And then with a dig at the con·
gressional ban on covert aid to
pro-Western factions in Angola.
he added: •'The United States
. has resisted and with great de·
termination, and if I can be can-
did, not always with the full sup-
port of Congress.•·
BB Teacher Joins
Council Campaign
! William R. Tiizard, a teacher
jat Huntington Beach High
jSchool. ls the 13th candidate to
!take out nomlnatlon papen for , the April 13 Huntington Beach Cl-: [ft Council election. !, City Council cabdldate Ralph
.Bauer and City Clerk Alicia
:Wentworth. who ls seeking ~
ltlectlon, have completed the fil. '1-process alreacly and are hav·
:1n1 thelr statement ot qualiflca-
ctinnt tram lated Into Spanllb~
' .. -~
Council· Districts
Pushed by Hopeful
Newport Beach l cleared the up.
·per fiodae and was sent to the As-
. sembl,y.
The Orange County Medical
Association (OCMA) )las sup-
portelr this measure, which
would take medicaHawsuits out
of tbe courts and create a special •
panelto decide the cases.
By ROBERT BARKER
Of tlle D• llY Pl tot SQff
Huntington Beach City Council
candidate Ron Pattison came.
out today in favor of dividing this
sprawling city into five coun-
cilmanic districts .
He said this would be the only
way in which residents would
feel they bad proper representa·
tion and that· they would have
their own council official to re-
late to.
"The way it is now," Pattinson
said, "some areas are represent·
ed by more than one councilman
. and some are not represented at
all.
"Council members should be·
accountable to a specific area,"
he says.
Patt!nson pointed out that
Mayor ,Norma Gibbs and Mayor
. pro tem Harriett Wieder both
live in the Huntington Harbour.
.Absentee Ballots
~vailable Soon
Fountain Valley voters, who
may be away from the city for
the March 2 city council elec·
lions, may apply for absentee
ballots Feb. 2 through 24 at the ci·
ty clerk's office.
Ballots must be returned to ci·
'ty ball or any precinct board in
t,1'e city before 8 p .m. March 2.
But today the doctors were
area and that Councilmen Don awaiting details of an administra·
Shipley and Ted Bartlett reside tion·backed bill aimed at ending
in the downtown section. the doctor slowdown. This bill
P a t t i n s o n s a i d t h e would create a voluntary state·
southeastern sector of the city in operated doctor-financed in·
which he resides has had no surance pool to offer physicians
representation. . • an average $4,000 premium in the
}Je' said that some old timers firstyear.
b.aVe voiced fears that coun-John Rette, executiv e
. ~ilmanic districts will split up the 'secretary of the OMCA, said doc-
city. :tors were wary of the ad-.
•'What they don't realize is that ; ministration proposal because .
·some parts of the city are suffer-; their main interest was in reform
ing from benign neglect. i of the malpractice laws .. "I am amazed at the number of people who do not vote in Hunt-I Doctors at Hoag Memorial
ington Beach," Pattinson said ;Hospital , Newport Beach, ! scheduled a meeting for noon to-this morning. "Once they feel ; day to consider all the new de· closer to the people running from their neighborhood, 'they may ; velopments on the malpractice
become more prone to vote." '.front.
Pattinson said he is hoping that : A spokesman confirmed sur·
city authorities will assist him in r geries were still down 50 percent
putting the proposal on a future i at Hoag today.
ballot. "If they don't, then my Tom Richards, adminislrator
supporters will have to produce :or Costa Mesa Memorial
the necessary signatures." (See SURGERY, Page A2)
Pattinson, a former Hunt-
ington Beach police officer and
9ow a real estate salesman, says
· ~e is working on district boun-
daries at this time.
He said that be currently
favors five councilmanic districts
with the two other council mem·
bers being elected at large to
eliminate "the back scratching
for votes."
Pattinson previously called for
. the dismissal of City Ad·
ministrator Dave Rowlands .
ENOUGH GIFT
TO BURGURS
GREENSBORO, N.C. (AP> -
Bob Upchurch, whose grocery
has been burglarized several
times recently, has put a sign on
the front door.
It says, .. Attention Burglars.
We Already Gave.,.
Nude Popout Pops Up.
riejo Couple'• 'SurjlrUe SearCh! Ended
By RUDI NIEDZll1SKI
Of ltl!t Delly ...........
The ae&JCb of a Mission Viejo
couple for a youna man to pop out
of a birthday cake in the nude has
hded.
Bombarded by telephone calls
&Ince their ad offering $25 to a
daring student appearr.' on tbe
Saddlel>ack Colle~• bulJetln
board, Bill and Pam Gl"OU have
settled on 27-year-old David
Bingham.
. "We toolt the first ono wbo
called but we have the nuinMrs
of a~ut 12 or 15 more In cue be
decld.n not to go throulb with
it," Mrs. Oroe,s reported today. .
Blnsbam, a Mwlcn Viejo resi·
dent, says he not only intends to
keep his commitment for Mrs.
Gross' 30th birthday party Feb. 1
but to make sure the guests get
their money's worth.
"I'm trying to wort up a couple
of jokes to sort of break the ice
and entertain the people.'' he
'said.
The script calh for BtQgbam to
make hJs entrance by breaking
·out of a largt carton decorated as
• birtllday present. The idea of a
cake wa1 abandoned because of
the expe111e.
Phone calla from job can-
didates also lit up the collego
switchboard and at the Daily
Pilot shortly after a story a~
peared dei.Uing the Grou's
plight in failing to secure pro-
spects.
"We had about five or six calls
and after the paper came out we
really started getting them." not·
ed Mrs. Jerty Killoy of. the cam·
pus emploJ1Dent service.
One of the callers, who phoned
both the Grosses and the Dally
Pilot said he bad been a Playgirl
centerfold and aaid he wanted th.e
job to further hl1 career.
Several young males were ob-
served huddllnf around the col-
leae bulletin board en Wectnea·
day lookln1 tor the notice aft.el'
the unusual Job otter bad been
<See NUDE, Pa1e AZ>
they found must be shared by
airline crews, air traffic con-
trollers, airline managers, FAA
rule makers, aircraft builders
and airport operators.
"The accident records show
that th~ t1irlines of the United
States are one of the safest
means of travel in the world,"
the report said. "However, air
travel is not as safe as it could be.
"The potential for a
End of Year
catastrophic accident is always
present and is often avoided by
slim and, at times, nervous
margins."
The pilots made dozens or re·
commendations ranging from
tighter cockpit discipline and a
complete overhaul of the air traf-
fic control system to the outlaw-
ing of a dangerously hard·to-read
type of altimeter and the installa-
<See DANGERS, Page AZ)
Trustees to Close
Gill, Cook Schools
By KATHY CLANCY
Of .. Dally Pll•Uuff
Trustees of the Westminster
elementary school district de-
cided Thursday night to close two
of their five schools in Hunt·
ington Beach.
. Trustees voted unanimously to
close both Gill School, 15252 Vic·
, toria Lane, and Cook School,
14401 Willow Lane, at the end of
·this school year.
Gill students will betransferred
to Schroeder Sehool ln Huntington
Beach next fall Most of the Cook
students will go to Clegg School in
Huntington Beach, while the
others will be bused to Spr-
ingdale, Webber and Willmore
Schools.
Assistant Superintendent
Curtis Bluemke said trustees
took no action on other possible
school closings.
Evidenee Dae
He explained the board is ex-
pected to continue studying
declining enrollment in the dis-
trict to make future decisions as
necessary.
Bluemke said ab·out 250
parents attended the meeting, at
Stacey-Clegg School, Huntington
Beach.
Huntington Beach police said
school officials had alerted them
that a large -and possibly an·
gry crowd -would attend.
But Bluemke said there were
no disturbances and those in the
audiez:ice JtVere "absolutely
well behaved.''
A district committee, which In-
cluded parents, bad suggested the
closing next fall of Finley School,
13521 Edwards St., Westminster.
along with the part~al closing of
<See CLOSING, Page A2)
Battin Gets Filing
Deadline by Judge
By GARY GRANVILLE
Of 9'. Dallr f'llaUtlff
Indicted Orange County•
Supervisor Robert Battin has
been given until Mondy to file
sworn affidavits he says will help
prove be is a victim of selective
prosecution.
In response to the deadline im·
posed Thursday by Superior
Court Judge Kenneth Lae, Bat-
tin 's attorney, Matthew Kurilich,
said he plans to file 15 to 20 addi-
tional sworn statements with the
court.
Th0se statements will be in·
tended to bolster Kurilicb's con-
tention that bis client is being
proeecuted for crimes common
among elected officeholders.
Last August. the county Grand
Jury handed down an indictment
charging Battin with seven
felony crimes related to alleged use of county supplies and
personnel lD a 1974 political cam-
paign.
And to def end his client against
those charges, Kurillch WBl)ts to
delve into Orange County district
attorney lnvesUsations and pro-
secutions of public officials.
· So far, according to Kurillch,
he's been denied access to in-
Report Cards Doe
At Marina High
Officials at Marina High
School in Hun.tinatoa Beach said
1tudent1 may pick up tbelr
second quarter repart cards
Tuesday at.the school attendance
windows.
The handout procedure was
started last quarter to save the
COit of malllng Hport cards
home, school oftlclals Hid. Tb1s
·quarter it is jtxpec.Ud to save
$2,000 or 13 ceiat.a per student.
vestigation recor ds and
testimony that he believes will
help prove his point.
Thursday, for example, dis-
trict attorney's investigator Ray
Miller was called to testify.
Kurilich expected Miller to
· verify the earlier testimony of a
former undercover agent who
said be was paid to seek out
financial information on three
county supervisors.
(See BATTIN, Page A2)
Coast
Weather
Some high clouds at
times otherwise sunny
through Saturday. A little
warmer with beach highs
in the upper 60s rising to
the 70s inland. Lows most-
ly in the 40s.
INSIDE TODAY .
Dance in America bc.t u.
dergone some ·rodkal cbangu
· in Ute Jatt few yeon, fncluc.f.. mg .a pMnoninal growth fn
. aucfincei. Cl11d. a tr~ tolDord
m£zing cJattical ball« .mth
modem . cmd jazz dance. See
1tort1 on P.age Cl of the
WHlcendn.
•••ex MYtw._.. . Aa . ....._ C.1
....... Att..._. ...... AA ~ = Ec:i-cr .f~ ~' ........ ~ .... .:.. ~ CJ.... ~ . :s 35 ~ == ... ~..._ AA
• ' ~ Wt ' •u Ct• ...............
~
..
(
Jury Pick
Quer.ied
By ACLU
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The
American Civil Liberties Union
petitioned Pa tr le la Hearst ·a
juqe today for an immediate
hearing on whether tbe aecret
selection of a jury in the heiress'
trial is a violation of freedom of
press and the public's rlgbt to
know. but the judge declined to
act.
··we believe that important
public rt1hts are at stake and
that the public -those who
would receive information re·
1ative to this trial -has not
been heard from on this issue,
the ACLU said in a petition.
lt was filed as the doors of
U.S. District Judge Oliver J .
Carter's court opened this morn-
ing.
The petition asked not only for
a hearin g but also for
permission to file a brief on
behalf of the press and the In-
ter ested public in support of a
modification of Carter's order
excluding press and public from
jury selection proceedings.
"We filed this motion with
great reluctance," the ACIU
s aid, noting that Carter pre-
viously has given "attention to
the rights of the press" and re-
fused to impose a gag order on
participants in the celebrated
bank robbery trial.
However, the group said it
took the action "because fun-
damental First Amendment
rights are at issue here and
because we believe that the
right to a public trial applies to
the public as well as the defen-
dant ... "
The question of prospective
jurors in the Hearst case has
been closed since Wednesday
when defense attorneys asked
that press and public be ex-
cluded.
The action was highly uncom·
mon in this federal district,
where a secret jury selection is
believed to have been held only
twice in the court's history.
Attorneys in the case said they
were seeking to prevent potential
jurors from reading in the
newspaper what others had said
in the questioning about their at-
titudes toward the 21-year-old
Miss Hearst.
''We accept these considera-
tions as important," the ACLU
said in its ...Petition. "We believe,
however, that there are other
means to achieve them, means
which do not gag the press corps
and muffle the ears of the
public."
F ro.Page A l
BATTIN •••
But Miller didn't make it to the
witness box as Deputy Dist. Atty.
Jack Ryan pointed out there bad
been no testimony contradicting
the informant's tale.
Kurilich did succeed in filing a
sworn affidavit from former
Santa Ana policeman Gary
Newmeyer.
Newmeyer said he was as-
signed the task In 1975 of delving
int.a the affairs of a Santa Ana ci-
ty council candidate, Supervisor
Laurence Schmit, former county
planning commissioner Woodrow
Butterfield and former Garden
Grove Mayor John Dean.
It is through such affidavits that
Kurilich said he hopes to convince
Judge Lae Monday that he is en.:
titled to investigative reports cov-
ering inquiries into county
political figures.
Orie ntation Set
Parents of students who wil! be
Marina High School freshmen
next fall are Invited to an orienta-
tion night at 7:30 p.m. Feb. 10 in
the gymnasium.
ORANGE COAST(
DAILY PILOT
lr.e Or~ Coett Dall y Polo!, wtlh ""'k" I<
comOl...., Ille ...... ~""· I\ Pllb'•.,,.., by ""'
Or-CN•I ,....,.tttllno ~y S.--acllt-.,. ,.,oil-Mondn 1"'°"911 Frooev
,.,. Coile ~ ... ,..,wp0r1 llo.Cfl. Hunh"910I\
h11<lll l'•""lel11 Vetln, lrvt,,., Seodl•b•<k
Vell4ty erd LA911N .. 11<1\/'5oUth C.0..t A lll\91• , .. _, eo111.., '' ,..c.11.-~, ..... ~..a s ..... •v• n.. ,..1nctpet """'''"'"Cl t..W •• at llO Mtl .. , Strffi, Cotl.e Mew, Gllilorftle n.a.
Robert N. Weed f'<t•l*nl tM PUl>ll ......
Jack R. Curley Vke ~•lclent •ncl c;....,ai Mt_,
Thomas Ktevll ~ EOlltf
ThOmas A. Murphine
MAM1! llll 1:.iw
d.rtes H. Loos Richard P. Nall
A•t4•1ent liolWIMO!llt tcmon
Robert Bertter W.M OfMtt COYl'h &Cit~
" ............... dlOttk• tttll lt.:C11 ........ ,.
MIU\111 "*""'· l'.O llO• m, nMI
Offl<• w...... .. Cid!. ', .. o.._,. Strttt c.t• ~.. "° w ...... ~, ... S-lfte<• VOllH UJOI la ,.., lt6M
ot ~" Oi.90 ,.,......,
UPI T•lepllclte
Fingers R e store d
"I thought they were gone for sure," says Martha
Carpenter as she displays f9ur restored fingers on her
left hand at a San Francisco hospital. All four fingers
were severed when she tried to clear a jam in a plastic
cookie mold punch press. Surgeons spent 14 hours sew-
ing nerve and blood vessels together and suturing bones
and tendons.
Ward T akes
HB Cbainhe r
:H e lm Tonight
Darrel Ward, owner or Smith's
Mortuary, will be installed as the
72nd president of thE: Huntington
Beach Chamber of Commerce
tonight at the Huntington Beach
Inn.
A citizen of the year also will
be named during the festivities,
which get under way at 7 p.m.
Nominees include Elaine A.
Craft. William E. Foster, Walter
W. Johnson, Pete Peterson,
Robert C . Terry and Mrs .
Carolyn Wallace.
The speaker will be Ed
Hartsook, president of the Hunt-
ington Beach Company. The af.
fair is open to the public.
Artist Se t
For Workshop
From P age A l
SURGERY ••
Hospital, said elective surgeries
were down 40 percent today, but
added that scheduling for next
week indicated a return to
.normal.
Richard Grundy, ad -
ministrator of Huntington Jn.
tercommunity Hospital, said the
patient load had been down so
percent, but this week the load
had been increasing steadily and
added, "Things are looking
normal for early next week."
He said many doctors at the
hospital were disappointed
because other doctors in the area
had not joined the slowdown.
"They lost money and we lost
money," he said. "Quite a few
have told me this is the last time
they will ever go on a strike.''
Carpenter's bill, which cleared
the Senate on a 21-15 vote, the
bare margin needed, was op-
posed by trial lawyers and sup-
ported by medical associations.
The proposal would set up a pa-
tient compensation board to de-
termine awards in malpractice
cases.
The artist Flavia will conduct From Page A l
art workshops for children on
Feb. 7, 14 and 21 in Fountain DANGERS Valley's Recreation Center, 16400 • •
Brookhurst St.
Youngsters 6 to 9 years old will
meet from 10 to ll:30 a .m. and
those 10 to 12 years old wiU meet
from l to 2:30 p.m. The fee is $1 5
for three sessions.
The course is sponsored by the
Fountain Valley Recreation
Department. Registration may
be completed at city hall, 10200
Slater Ave.
F ro. Page Al
NUDE •••
publicized.
"Bill took it down aft.er we got
the first one," said Mrs. Gross,
apparently anxious to stop the
phone from ringing.
She added that no newsmen
will be invited to record the
drama. "We want this to be a fun
party and don't want to do
anything to commercialize it,"
she said.
tion or better runway approach
lights.
In releasing the 93-page report,
prepared after observations of
600 flights on 27 airlines, the FAA
added a 32-page reply accepting
many of the pilots· criticisms and
recommendations.
But the agency rejected flatly
the harshest criticism of its air
traffic controllers and the way
their control rooms are operated.
The pilots said the control
system "is a jumble or people,
radar scopes, communi cation
lines and stacks of paper strips,
people communicating by voice,
by radio to impersonal aircraft
out in space. while in the control
room people are milling about,'
talking and c reating distrac·
lions."
They said tempers often
become short in air-to-ground
communications and controllers
"often show disdain for pilots"
and order them to perform
dangerous maneuvers or distract
them during critical takeoff and
lantting operations.
·Mom's Angry
RetUl of Plam in Paper
KENNEWICK, Wash. (UPI) -Elsie McCollum
fears for her daughter's welfare and opposes her mar-
riage to the man who crashed an auto eight months
-ago leaving the young woman paralyzed from the
neck down.
"The first I knew about it was when I read it in the
paper," said Mrs. McCollum of plans by her
dauabter, J ean, 18, to marry Robert Cox, 20.
Jean's neck was broken in three places when she
wM thrown 145 feet out of a car that overturned four times j ust south of Prosser.
The State Patrol saJd the vehicle was travellnf ata
high rate of speed at the Ume, and Cox wu ater
charged with reckless chiving and had hls license sus-
pended for 30days.
Thi.I month, Jean discharged herself from the
boepital and ~cnt \() live with Cox's relatives in
e.twtlOn .
'
••
,,....P.,.a.4J
SH OOTOUT
number ln San Clemente) with
JOUr toque,., H11trty aald.
Ht uld ht tried to dial 411 to
1et an operator. but kept gettlng
arecordtn1.
Frustrated with the telephone.
Ha•erty aald he 1quirmed across
tho floor to a 1lldlng alas• door.
"I got it unlocked with my
note, but couldn't get lt open."
Ht bansed on the 1lass to attract
attention, but a1aln. was unauc·
ceasful.
Then be made his way down
the hallway to some louvered
windows and yelled for help. His
screams were heard by
nel&hbora who called police.
AJide from a swollen face from
the 1cufflng across the carpel,
and some sore bones because or
the blndlngs, Hagerty suffered a
small eaah on his hand when the
tape was cut off. He was taken to
South Coast Community Hospital
for minor treatment.
In the same hospital, doctors
l abored to save the lives of
Castillo, shot by police and
Security Pacific bank manager
Gerald Guess shot in the holdup.
"I'd just finished reading
'Helter Skelter' (a book about the
Manson murders) a week ago,
and I don't think that helped mat-
ters," Hagerty said.
"Some pretty frightening
things go through your mind," he
said.
Woman Hurt
In HB Fall
A youne lady who had alleged-
ly frribibed a bit too much was in-
Jured Thursday when she toppled
from a restaurant balcony near
the Huntington Beach Pier, land·
lng on the paved beach road
below, police said.
The victim, 18, is listed in sta·
ble condition with head injuries
at Paclflca Hospital in Hunt-.
ington Beach.
Investigators said she plunged
from the balcony about 3 :30
a.m., falling about 20 feet to the
ground. ·
..
Nine On
.Piimary;
Charts
SACRAMENTO (UPl) -
Secretary of State Man::h Fong
Eu today placed the names of
nine Democrats on htt initial 11.st
for the important Call!omJa pre-
1ldenUal primary ballot June 8,
but refused to Include Gov. Ed·
mund G. Brown ,Jr.
For hi• part, Brown, who In·
slat.a be la not a candidate but
leavee the door open on accepting
the Democratic nomination il tt
is offered, said he hadn't made
up his mind on running in the
California primary.
Ms. Eu announced her pre-
liminary selections of candidates
under California's newly activat-
ed "open primary" laws which
for the first time empower the
secretary of state to place the
names of generally recognized
candidates on the ballot.
There were no surprises.
· In the crowded Democratic
field, she picked: Sens. Birch
Bayb of Indiana, Lloyd Bentsen
of Texu and Henry M. Jackson
of Washln&ton, Govs. G~rge
Wallace of Alabama and Milton
Shapp of Pennsylvania, Rep.
Morris Udall of Arizona , Fred
Harris of Oklahoma,· Sargent
Shriver, the 1972 vice presiden-
tial nominee, and former Gov.
Jimmy Carter of Georgia.
. She did not include Sen. Robert
Byrd <D·W. Va.), who recently
announced himself as a can-
didate Predictably, she chose Presi-
dent Ford and Ronald Reagan on
the Republican side and
Margaret Wright of Los Angeles
!or the Peace and Freedom
ballot. The American Indepen-
dent Party candidate will be
selected during the weekend in
Bakersfield.
Ms. Eu said if Brown "tells me
be wants to be a favorite son can-
didate, I will put him on the
ballot. If the governor informs
m e he w ants to exercise
California's political clout at the
.national convention, I will add
him to the list.'·
........... .4J
' CLOSING • ~
Giil.
That commltiee Ud recouv
mended allowtn1 tlnde.reart•
through thJrd tr a des to stay ~
Gill. .
But school officials recom·
mended the Cook closlnc. as well
u the complete closing of GUI.
Both committees also had sug-
gested closing one additional
school by September 1m. bUt
Bluemke sald trustee1 took DO
action on those suggesUon.s.
Enrollment in the Westmlruster
district has dropped to 10,300 stu-
dents this year and is expected to
be 10,000 next fall. The peak
enrollment was 13,500lo 1970 and
ii expected to fall to a low of 9,190
by 1983.
Trustees closed Seventeenth
Street School, the oldest facility
in the district, tw<;> years ago.
Lending Rate
CutaQuaner
NEW YORK (AP) -
First National City Bank
said today it is reducing its
prime lending rate a
quarter point to 6'h per·
cent, the lowest the key
rate has been since the spr-lng of 1973.
Citibank said the change
in the rate it charges on
loans to its most credit·
worthy commercial bor-
. rowers is effective Mon· day.
The prime rate does not
directly affect consumer
or mortgage lending rates
but can often provide a
clue to where those other
rates are headed.
San Diego Probe
SAN DIEGO (AP) -In tbe
wake of reported "dirty tricks "
by the FBI, the City Council has
decided to launch a fullscale ln·
vest!gation Qf inteJUgence opera-
tions by San Diego police. 1
ALL UPHOLSTERY
ON SALE NOW ...
SIJCll POPIJLAB
LINES AS:
WOOD MARK
BENREDON
HERITAGE
SHERRIL
MARGE CARSON
PLUS ALL LEATHER ITEMS ••• 20o/() OFF .
LAMPS -PICTURES-ACCESSORIES
Also Redueed!
NEWPORT BEACH •
. •
1111 WES'fCLU'F OR., 6'2·2050'
WlllCDATS & SATUIOATS t:OO .. l;JO
.~
LAGUNA BEACH •
34S NOkTll l'OA~i' H~\'., ~·WI
TORRANCE•
33641 HAW'JlfORNr. BLVD.
<Open Fn lll 1. Sun IM.301
37»-1279
OJ I
be
s"
as
ln·
a·
I
VOL 69, NO. 30, ~ SECTIONS, •2 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
Today's Cle lag
N.Y.Steeks
N TEN CENTS
SE Tom Truck Driver fteca.lls Terror
...
~lly l"llot Slaff P!loto
SHERIFF'S INVESTIGATOR FRED GELLER·CHECKS WINDOW
Gerald Guess Victim of Gunshot In Aborted Bank Holdup
Evidenee Due
Battin Gets Filing
Deadline By ]iiilge ·
By GARY GRANVILLE
Of Ille 0.11., ...... SUfl
Indic ted Orange Co unty
Supervisor Robert Battin has
been given until Moody to lile.
sworn affidavits he says will help
prove he is a victim of selective
prosecution.
In response to the deadline im-
posed Thursday by Superior
Court Judge Kenneth Lae, Bat-
tin's attorney, Matthew Kurilich,
said he plans to file 15 to 20 addi·
tional sworn statements with the
court.
Those statements will be in·
tended to bolster Kurilicb's con-·
tention that his client is being
prosecuted for crimes common
Irvine Yacht
Auxiits Race
Challenger
Miss Nilex, a fixed wing Class
,C catamaran, defeated Quest II
in Australia Thursday to win the
defende r's role in the Little
America's Cup to be sailed in
Australia starting Feb. 7.
Miss Nilex, skippered by Bruce
Proctor with Graham Ainslee as
crew won three out or four races
to the eliminations to select the
defender.
among elected omceholders.
Last August, the county Grand
Jury banded down an indictment
charging Battin with seven
felony crimes related to alleged
use of county s upplies a nd
. personnel in a 1974 political cam·
paign.
And to defend his client against
those charges, Kurilich wants to
delve into Orange County district
attorney investigations and pro-
secutions of public officials.
So far, according to Kurilich,
·he's been denied access to in-
vestigati on records and
testimony that he believes will
help prove his point.
Thursday, for example, dis-
trict attorney's investigator Ray
Miller was called to testify.
Kurilicb expected Miller to
verify the earlier testimony of a
former undercover agent who
said he was paid to seek out
financial information on three
county supervisors.
But Miller didn't make it to the
witness box as Deputy Dist. Atty.
Jack Ryan pointed out there had
been no testimony contradicting
the informant's tale.
Kurilicb did succeed in filin g a
sworn affidavit from former
Santa Ana policeman Gary
Newmeyer.
Newme1eli said he was as-
signed the task in 1975 or delving
into the affairs of a Santa A.Qa ci-
ty council candJdate, Supervisor
Laurence Schmit, former county
planning com atissioner Woodrow
Butterfield and former Garden
Grove Mayor John Dean.
Itis thrOugb·such affidavits thAt
Kurilich said be hopes to convince
Judge Lae Monday that he is en··
tiUed to investigative rePorts cov·
ering inquiries into countY'
political figures.
By JACK CHAPPELL
ot 111e 0.11, f'tletSUff
Tow truck driver Jack Hagerty
looked death in the face Thurs-
day in what was to become the
prelude to the dramatic South
Laguna bank robbery shootout.
"I tried to remain as calm as I
could. I knew if I made a
nuisance of myself, I was a dead-
man," Hagerty said in his San
Clemente home.
"I tried to be as heJpf uJ as I
could. I tried to keep talking, but
never yell or struggle and I think
that's the only reason I'm still alive.
Hagerty, an employe or Ray
Carey Chevron in Laguna Beach
was dispatched at about 8:30
a.m. to the home or Richard
Castillo, 24, of 1104 Miramar
Drive. Laguna Beach.
A caller complained of a dis·
abled car there.
"I rang the door bell and this
guy answers the door. He said be
still bad a couple things left to do
and could I come in and wait,"
Hagerty said.
"As I came in, he reached
behind the door, picked up a rifle
and lowered it at my head. He
said •get in the back room and lie
down.'"
There, Hagerty was bound
with tape around the ankles, a set
of barbells was placed on his
back and his h ands tied to it.
"I told hi m, I know this doesn't
mean much to you, but the
barbells are hurting," Hagerty
r ecalled.
He said the barbells were re-
moved and he was .. hog tied"
with his feet and hands behind
him. <See SHOOTOUT, Page AZ>
l1·vine Company Coast
Plan Called M~dnesS
ltledirallnsurall(!e
Brown's Plan
Reduces Cost
SACRAMENTO (UPI> -Gov .
Edmund G. Brown Jr. 's legisla·
tion to r e medy the painful
'medical malpractice dilemma
could reduce annual premiums
of high·risk doctors from $36,000
to $8,000, sponsors said today.
.. workable lans" in geographic
areas for a "reasona ble amount
of voluntary or below cost
service" by doctors in medically
underserved areas such as rural
communit ies or urban ghettoes.
Brown originally proposed a .
medical peace corps of physi-
cians who would donate 20 days a
year to serving the needy in r e-
(See PLAN, Page A%)
* * *
Lending Rate
Cm a Quarter
NEW YORK CAP) -
First National City Bank
said today it is reducing its
prime l e nding rate a
quarter point to 6¥2 per·
cent, the lowest the key
rate bas been since the spr·
ing of 1973.
Citibank said the change
in the rate it char ges on
loans to its mos t credit·
worthy commer cial bor-
rowers is effecti ve Mon·
day.
The prime rate does not
directly affect consumer
or mortgage lending rates
but can often provide a
clue to where those other
rates are headed.
The plan, put together after
weeks of negotiations between
Brown and ke y assem b ly
Democrats. promised to be fis·
cally sound and pose no burden to
taxpayers, they said.
At a news conference called to
unveil specifics or the com-
promise bill, Assembly man
Howard Berman (D·Los
Angeles), the lead author, said
the average premium for higb-
risk specialties could be $8,000 as
opposed to the $36,000 sought by
Travelers Insurance Company,
the state's chief m ed ic al
malpractice insurance carrier .
Sehedales Delayed
· DoctorS Eye State
Malpractice Plan
The proposal, as reported
earlier, envisioned an average
$4,000 a year premium charge to
doctors or one-third of that now
paid to private insurance car·
riers by Southern California doc·
tors. ,
The plan also ~ailed for 14 new-
ly established medical quality re-
view committees to develop
By ALAN DIRKIN
Of tlle Oall'J 1"11« Sq,ff
Orange County physicians and
hospital administrators cast
their eyes on Sacramento today
to learn the latest malpractice
developm ents before making
surgery schedules for next week.
Area doctors were heartened
Fridag the 13th
Newport-Mesa
Holiday Nixed
School will be in session on Fri-
day, f eb. 13, despite petitions
from :teachers reques ting a
school holiday, Newport.Mesa
Supt. John Nicoll s aid today.
According to Ni coll, petitions
have been r ecei ved from
teachers at four elementary
schools asking that Feb. 13 be
made a holiday.
The requests were made
because classes will not be in
session the previous day, Feb.12,
because of Lincoln's Birthday,
and also on the following Mon-
day, Feb. 16, because of Wash·
ington 's Birthday.
However, Nicoll said the dis·
trict could not afford to grant stu·
dents the extra holiday.
"If the district were to grant
this holiday, it would leave us no
margin for a possible natural dis·
aster or a mechanical malfunc·
tion, such .as a power failure,"
Nicoll said.
"If one or our schools should
have to be closed a day during
the spring, we'd have to keep that
school open next June, after all
the others have closed for the
summer. It's simply not prudent
manageme nt," the superinten·
dent explained.
According to Nicoll, the dis·
trict is concerned about student
absenteeism on Feb. 13. If one
student in three stays out on that
day, the district will lose about
$60,000 in state funds.
by action in the Senate Thursday
when the malpractice reform bill
of Sen. Dennis Carpenter <R·
Newport Beach ) cleared the up·
per house and was sent to the As·
sembly.
The Orange County Medical
Association <OCMA) has s up-
ported this m easure, which
would take medical lawsuits out
of the courts and create a special
panel to decide the cases.
But today the doctors were
awaiting details of an administra·
lion-backed bill aimed at ending
the doctor slowdown. This bill
would creat e a voluntary stale·
operated doctor .financed in·
surance pool to offer physicians
an average $4,000 premium in the
first year.
J o hn R e tte, exec uti ve
secretary of the OMCA, said doc-
tors were wa ry of the a d-
ministration proposal because
their main interest was in reform
of the malpractice laws.
Doctors a t Hoag Memorial
Hospital. Ne wport Beac h,
scheduled a meeting for noon to-
day to consider all the new de·
velopments on the malpractice
front.
A spokesman confirmed sur-
geries were still down 50 percent
at Hoag today.
Tom Richards, administrator
of Costa Mes a Memorial
Hospital, said elective surgeries·
were down 40 percent today, but
added that scheduling for next
week indicated a return to
n<'nnal.
Citizens
Oppose
Proposal
By HILARY KAYE
Of Ille Dally PllolSlatt
Opponents of an Irvine Com-
pany plan to develop its remain·
ing coastal property called it
"madness" and "a blueprint for
destruction·· at a county Plan~
ning Commission hearing Thurs-
day nigbt at Or ange Coast
College.
Fewer t ha n 100 persons at-
ten<ted the airing of the plan.
Those who spoke criticized the
proposed development and asked
instead for open space.
Leading the opposition was the
Friends of the Irvine Coast, a
citizens group.
The site in question is the 10,000
acre parcel of Irvine Ranch land
that lies between Newport Beach
and Laguna Beach. The develo~
ment, referred to as the TICMAP
plan, would bring an estimated
80,000 new people into the area.
At Thursday's hearing before
the Orange County Planning
Commission, t he Irvine Com-
pany used s lides. maps and a
series of coordinated speakers to
detail the plan.
Additional hearings will con-
tinue during the next six months.
w ith the county Board of
Supervisors expected lo act on
the plan on June 30.
According to Don Cameron,
Irvine Co m pany director of
urban design, two·thirds or the
TICMAP development would be
in tile coastal region adjacent lo
the Newport Be·ach border.
Thal region would include a re-
sort "triangle." with hotels,
(SeeTICMAP, PageA2)
ENOVGH GIFT
TO BVRGURS
GREENSBORO. N.C. CAP) -
Bob Upchurch, whose grocery
has been burglarized several
times recently, has put a sign on
the front door .
It says, "Attention Burglars.
We Already Gave."
Coast
Weather
The American challenger,
Aquarius V, is in Australia tun·
tng up for the final competition
which will be sailed on Port
Phillips Bay near Melbourne.
Aquarius V was designed and
built by Alex Kozloll of Irvine.
She is a soft wing C Cat and has
defeated every fixed wing craft
ahe has met in competition in this
country.
TIUDING SKIS
AIV,OTHER HIGH
.. Nude Popout Pops Up
Richard Grundy , ad ·
ministrator or Huntington In·
tercommunity Hospital, said the
patient load had been down 50
percent, but this week the load
had be~n increasing steadily and
added, "Things are looking
normal for early next week."
Some high clouds at
times otherwise s unny
through Saturday. A little
warmer with beach highs
in the upper 60s rising to
the 70s inland. Lows most-
ly in the 40s.
NEWYORK (UPl)-The1toc~
market closed hlghertoday in ex·
t.remely heavy trading°" the.New
York Stock Exchaqe u lnstltu·
tlonal lnveators, buoyed by lower
lDterett rates, Jumped on the new
year rally bandwagon. A trading
record w u 1et.
The Dow Jone.a lndustrlal
avera1e. a 17 .40·potnt winner
Thursday, added 8.5.1 points to
975.28.
Advances led declines by about
atwo-to-onomar1ln (Tables. 85).
Turnover a mounted to
s,uo,0001bare1, up11w1>1Yfrom
the %9,I00,000 traded Tbunday. ll'h• flnt·bour turnover of
u,100.000 1har.. eellpttd • re· cord 1et only Jan. l&. ,
Viejo Couple's 'Surprise Search' Ended
By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI
Of .. DeltY ptletlllft
'11te search of a Mission Viejo
couple for a youn1 man to pop out ot a blrthda1 cake In the nude bu
ended.
Bombarct.d by telephone calls
since their ad ofCeriha $25 to a
dartna student appeared on the
Saddleback Cotl.eae bulletin
boa.rd, BUL and Pam Grou have
settled on 27 -year~old David
Bingham.
"We toc)lt the flr1t one who
called but we have the nwnberl ot about 12 or 15 more in cue he
decides not to 10 tbroUJb wttb
it,"' Mn. Ort111 reported today.
Blnabam. a Ml11loo Viejo real·
'
dent. says be not only intends to
keep his commitment for Mrs.
Gross' 30th btrthday party Feb. 7
but to make sure the guests get
their money's worth.
"I'm tryrng to work up a couple
ol jokes to sort of break the ice
and entertain the people,•' he
said.
The script calls for Bingham to
make his entrance by breaking
out of 1 larae carton decorated as
a birthday present. The idea of a
cake wu abandoned because of
the expense.
Phone calls from job can·
d1dates also lit up the colleae
switchboard and at the Daily
Pilot shortly after a story ap-
t ·~
peared detailing the Gross 's
plight in railing to secure pro·
spects.
"We had about five or six calls
and after the paper came out we
really started gettina them," not·
ed Mrt. Jerry Kilfmof the cam-pua employments · .
One of the caller , phoned
both the Grosses the Daily
Pilot said be had been a Playgirl·
centerfold and said be wanted the
job to CUrthel' bls career.
Several young males were ob-
served buddlln1 around t.be col·
Jege bulletin board ob Wednes·
day lookln1 tor the notice after·
the unu1ual job offer had been
<SH NUDE, Page.U)
...
He said many doctors at the
hospital were disappointed
because other doctors in the area
had not joined the slowdown.
"They lost money and we lost
money," be said. "Quite a few
have told me this Is the last time
they will ever go on a strike."
<SeeSUllGEllY, Pase Al)
Boys Planning Trip
A five-day Colorado River
canoe trip ls Mini planned by the
Boys Club of the Karbor Atta.
The fee for the trip, s~hC!duled for
March 7·12, will be $70. Moro ln·
formation can b obtained by call.lni 642·8372.
INSIDE· TODAY
Dance in America ho.! un·
dergone some radical changes
fn IM wt few years, mclud·
Ing a phenomtnal grotah in
audience a and. a trend toward
mi.ring cla&lical ballet with
modern and jau dance. See
atory on Page Cl of the
WeekeftdeT'.
l•tlex
,A2 DAJL Y PILOT N Frla17 .,.nuary 30, 1978
Mom's Angry
Read of P lans in Paper
KENNEWICK, Wash. (UPI) -Elsie McCollum fear~ for her daughter's welfare and opposes her mar-
nagc to ~he man who crashed an auto eight months
-ago leaving the young woman paralyzed from the
neck down.
"T~e fJr~t I knew about it was when I read it in the
papl'r, ' said Mrs. McCollum of plans by her
daughter: J ean, 18. to marry ~obert Cox, 20 .
Jl'nn s ncrk '"as broken m three places when she
\\as thro\\ n 145 feet out of a car that overturned four
times Just south of Prosser.
The State Patrol said the vehicle was traveling at a
itgh rate _of speed at the time, and Cox was later
:-hargC'd with reckless dn ving and ha d his license sus-
Jended ror30uµ\:,
This month·. Jean discharged herself from the
~o:,p1t\1 I •md \\ t•nt to live with Cox 's relatives in
Paters on.
Coast Man
Indicted 011
Bilking Rap
Noel. D Land. 3G, of Santa Ana
lie1ghts ha:-been named in a
federal md1rtmt•nt as one of
three Southern California men
who allegedly bilked sever al ma-
jor r ecord companies out of
SS00.000 m s ales
Land, of 20332 Bay \'1ew Ave.,
and the two other defendants.
J ack Feinberg of Los Angeles
and Lawrence .\nthony of Santa
Moni ca. ha\ t• :-urn•ndercd to the
feder al district court in Los
.Angeles and have been released
,on bond.
They \\C'rc na med 111 a32 count
federal grand Jury indictment
charging mail fraud and c:on
.s1racy. A 11 \\ere associated w 11 h
the Land O'Mu..;1c and Audio
Marketrng Services Corp. of Lo:.
.Angeles.
The indictment charges the al-
leged scheme began in Sep-
tember. 1973 and continued until
the indictment was handed down
last week.-The susperts al~gedlv
obtained tapes and records on
credit from such compames
RCA. MCA . Capitol. Motown.
Warne r-Elektra-Atlantic and
Phonogram and then sold the
merchandise below cost
The indictment alleges the
group first did business as Land
O'Mus tc Token payments al-
legedly were made to keep credit
Jin'es open, but when credit to
Land O'Mus1c was closed the
s econd business, Audio Market-
jng, was created
The U.S. altorncv's office said
bribes were offered and in ?,Orne
instances paid to record com-
pany e mployes to enable the de·
fendants to continue to r eceive
merchandise on credit
The trio/ also allegedly sub·
milted false financial statements
to obtain credit and furmshed a
market an alyst with false in·
f01"mat1on
In other in st a nces, the indict-
ment said, checks were written
to pay for merchandise. but were
stopped when the records and
tapes were rece1 vcd.
Fro• Pflfle AJ
SURGERY. •
Carpenter's bill, which cleared
the Senate on a 21·15 vote. the
bare margin needed, was op·
p<>sed by trial lawyers and sup-
. p<>rted by m edical associations.
The proposal would set up a pa-
. tient compensation board to de-
termine awards in malpractice
·cases . rt would be similar to the
•existing state workmen's com-
pensation system .
ORANGE COAST
l rw or .. "'O' (o.ut o ••• ., F'•'V• .... 01 ..... ,, • ..
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Robert N . Weed
r'r,.• IOftt\t •M PutJll\l°"if,
Thomas Keevll
Thomas A. Murphine M•"Aq1r.o r d,,,,,
Charles H Loos Richard P. Nall A\w,t•nt M•,,qlnQ f d1t0t\
Of tic es
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T•ltpftone (1t4) 642~l21
CJustfMd Actverti,lng 642-5671
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FroneP~AJ •
TICMAP ...
shops and restaurant5 located at
Wish bone Hill, Cry5tal Cove and
Reef Point.
In addition. the coastal region
\\:ould have four higher density
hilltop communities. according
to the plan.
Lower density residential com-
munities would be m the "hm·
terland ar ea · ·
According lo Cameron, 34 per-
cent of the sjte would be de-
veloped. with the remaining 66
percent left for recreational and
open space uses. Several four
and s ix-lane roads would be burn.
Part of the 66 percent has
already been identified for state
parks and would be purchased by
the state. However, the Irvine
Co mpa ny is st1 II looking for
buyers for the rest of the pro-
posed open space land.
Cameron said the entire pro-
ject would take between 25 and :10
years to realize. with develop·
ment begun near the Newp<>rt
Beach border in about 10 years
and development at the soutlw!nd
in about 20 years. 7
In explaini ng the reasons
behind the extensive develop-
ment, Cameron pointed out that
the current use of the land, yields
only $3.30 per acre during a good
year.
Taxes on the land amount to
$750,000 per year. "To be
econom1cally feasible. the land
requires development," he s aid.
·'This is a plan the company
feels is do-able. It's a rationale
development that balances both
the public and private interests,"
Cameron maintained.
However. Friends of the Irvine
Coas t scoffed at Cameron's
claim.
'"The highest and best use of
the land should be based on
both 'return on investment' and
also the social costs involved,"
said Mitc h Modeleski , of the
Friends group.
He said the Friends opp<>ses
the plan because it perpetuates
the domination or th e
autom obile, degrades air and
water quality and would destroy
vegetation and wildlife.
"Our alternative is to provide
total open space, like Golden
Gate Park in San Francisco,"
Modeleski said.
He called for a joint acquisition
program by federal, state, coun-
ty and city governments to keep
the land for recreation and open
space.
Costa Mesa citizen Verlyn ~arth, .who called the plan a blue~ru~t for destruction, 11 told
comm1ss1oners that approving
such a development would be
"another nail io the coffin of ·
Orange County.••
Marth said he is already sick
200 days a year from air pollution
and called on commissioners to
stop this "madness."
Laguna Beach Cit y Coun-
cilman Jon Brandt also sp<>ke
asking commissioners to reject
the TICMAP plan in its present
form.
"Projects like TICMAP are an
invitation to overwhelming
Orange County's open space. The
Los Angeles m egalopolis js
enough," said Brandt, a geo-
graphy professor at Orange
Coast College.
F ...-PageAJ
PLAN •••
tum for the state to administer
an insurance pool which would
guarantee them stabllzled
medical maJpractace rates. Doc-
tors rejected the m&ndatory 20
days.
The rewrlttcn public
service plan would be developed
after "consultation'' with doc·
tors . Tbe Department o f
Consumer Affairs woukl be em·
powered to flle a la W'adt l! the re·
alonal medical quality review
committees failed to devise a
work.able plan.
PUl)JiC's
Rights
Violated?
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Tt\e
American Civil Liberties Union
petitioned Patricia Hearst's
judge today for an immediate
hearing on whether the secret
selection of a jury in the heiress'
trial is a violation of freedom of
press and the Pl.lblic's right to
know, but the judge declined to
act.
•·w e believe that important
public rights are at stake and
that the public -those who
would r eceive information re-
lative to this trial -has not
been heard from on this issue,
the ~CLU said in a petition.
It was filed as the doors of
U.S. District Judge Oliver J .
Carter's court opened this morn-
ing.
The petition asked not only for
a h ear in g but al s o for
permission to lite a brier on
behalf of the press and the in-
terested public in support of a
modification of Carter's order
excluding press and public from
jury selection proceedings.
"We filed this motion with
great reluctance," the ACIU
said, noting that Carter pre-
\i ously has given "attention to
the rights of the press" and re-
fused to impose a gag order on
participants in the celebrated
bank robbery trial.
However. the group said 1t
took the action "because fun -
d a mental First Amendment
rights are at issue here and
because we be lieve that the
right to a public trial applies to
the public as well as the defen-
dant. .. "
The question of prospective
jurors in the Hearst case has
been closed since Wednesday
when defense attorneys asked
that press and public be ex-
cluded.
FromPageAJ
SHOOTOUT
"I asked him, if he was going to
shoot me and he said, 'no, the on-
ly one who should get shot is
me', 11 Hagerty said.
Hagerty said he was told "the
only thing I 'm gonna take is your
truck."
He said the man told him, "J'm
gonna turn the radio on before I
leave and maybe l could hear
what was going on, on tberadio.
··He said if I get loose, the
phone was in the corner, go
ahead and call the p<>lice.
"I asked him i( he was coming
back and he said, 'oh, I won't be
coming back."•
Hagerty said he scraped the
tape from his mouth by rubbing
~is face along the carpet, and he
inched along the floor to reach
the telephone.
"I found it's nearly impossible
to dial zero or 911 (an emergency
number in San Clemente) with
your tongue,'• Hagerty said.
He said he tried to dial 411 to
get an operator, but kept getting
a recording .
Frustrat~d with the telephone,
Hagerty said he squirmed across
the fl oor to a sliding glass door.
"I got it unlocked with my
nose. but couldn't get it open."
He banged on the glass to attract
attention, but again, was unsuc·
cessful.
Then he made his way down
the hallway to some louvered
windows and yelled for help. His
scream s were heard by
neighbors who called police.
Aside from a swollen face from
the scuffing across the carpet,
and some sore bones because of
the bindings. Hagerty suffered a
small gash on his hand when the
tape was cut off. He was taken to
South Coast Community Hospital
for minor treatment.
In the same hospital, doctors
labored to save the lives of
Castillo, shot by police and
Security Pacific bank manager
Gerald Guess shot in the holdup.
...
Road System Approved
San Clemente Ba.ckB South County System
By F REDERICK SCHOEMEHL
• Of .. o.u, ,.. ... 5UN
A road system that would
serve a potential south Orange
County population of 1.3 million
penons narrowly won support of
the San Clemente City Council
Thursday night.
In a 3-to-2 decision, the council
. threw its support behind the
most dense development option
outlined in the Southeast Orange
County Circulation Study
(SEOCCS).
The option backed by the
council recommends construc-
tion of two "transportation cor-
rlders': through the south county
to meet traffic demands of one
million new residents. The cur-
Fro• Page Al
NUDE .••
publicized.
"Bill took it down after we got
the first one," said Mrs. Gross,
apparently anxious to stop the
phone from ringing.
She added that no newsmen
will be invited to record the
drama. "We want this to be a fun
party and don't want to do
anything to commercialize it ••
s he said. •
Judgeship E yed
LOS ANGELES (AP )
Laughlin E. Waters. long active
in Republican politics and a
former U.S. attorney here, has
been nominated by the California
GOP congressional delegation
for a federal judgeship, the Los
Angeles Times reported today.
reserve corridor~" as a kind of
self-protection agains& future de·
velopment in the south county.
Proper advance planning
could prevent t raffic
"quagmires" such as exist in
Laguna Beach and Newport
Beach, O'Keefe said.
O'Keele's position won back·
ing from Mayor Anthony
DiGiovanni and Councilman
Arthur Holmes. Councilmen
Patrick Lane and Charles Fox
dissented.
· The two dissenters indicated
they supported the low density
option which e11vislons 500,000
new residents when th~ south
county is ultimately developed.
· Lane said he was concerned
Cd.M Chamber
Banquet Set
For Saturday
The 19th annual installation
banquet of the Corona del Mar
Chamber of Commerce will be
held Saturday night at the Bahia
Corinthian Yacht Club.
Tickets will be available at the
door for the event, which will
t>egin with cocktails at 6:15 p.m.
and dinner at 7: 30 p.m . Tickets
are $8.50 per person.
Councilwoman Lucille Kuehn
will be the guest speaker, de-
livering a talk on "The state of
our City 1976. • •
Entertainment will include a
performance by Jonat han
Zaluski, cellist, accompanied by
Clyde Zulc h, and a magic show by
Dan Zaluski.
that one of the tranffportation
corridors would tie into th•san
Diego Freeway south of tho city
'limits and thus mako San
·Clemente an island between two
freeways. ..That will create
more pr oblems for our city,
rather than relieve them ... satd
Lane.
Fox charged that planning or
•major t ransportation systems
spawns development. He said,
for example, that planning of the
Bay Area Rapid Transit
<BART> system near San Fran-
cisco led to "overdevelopment"
of many areas.
San Clemente's stBnd on the
SEOCCS report will be
forwarded to the county Board
of Supervisors.
San Clemente's recommenda-
tion will . join those of other
publlc agencies in the south
county.
The San Juan Capistrano City
·Council supported the low densi-
ty alternative, while the Mission
. ~iejo Municipal Advisory coun-
cil supported the high density
system.
The Laguna Beach City Coun-
cil rejected all options.
Irvine's Mrs. Ellis
On Medical Board
Sharon Lee Ellis of Irvine has
been elected to the Western
World Medical Foundation
Board of Directors.
. Mrs. ~llis of the Ranch is the
runth Irvine resident to become a
member of the board. The foun-
dation is attempting to develop a
hospital in Irvine to be the core of
a proposed 132-acre medical arts
complex.
ALL U.PHOLSTERY
ON SALE NOW •..
SIJCB POPIJLAB
LINES A.S:
WOO OMA.BK
BENBEDON
!DERITA.GE
SHERRIL
MARGE CA.RSON
PLUS ALL LEATHER ITEMS .•• 20o/tJ OFF
"I'd just finished read ing
'Helter Skelter ' (a book about the
Manson murders) a week alo.
and I don't think that helped mat-
ters," Hagerty said.
•'Some pretty fr}stu.enltur
things go through your mind;;·he'-
said.
LAMPS -PICTURES-ACCESSORIES
AISo Deduced!
BOYS COMPEI'E
IN R4SKEI'R4U
The Costa Mesa ()pUmlst Club
"tri-star" basketbalf contest will
be held Saturday at each branch
of the Harbor Area Boys Club .
The competition -ln paulng,
aboot.lna or dribbllnl -ls open to
boys and Sirls af ed 8 to 13. The
wlnnera will compete in cJty
fl.na.lJ Feb. 7.
WEllDAYS & SATUIDATS t:OO to l:JO ,
•
....
NEWPORT BEACH •
1721 WEStcLlt'F DR.. 642·20$0
LAGUNA BEACH •
34$ NOttTll C..'OA.\T HWY.. 4~1
TORRANCE•
2lMt HAWTHOR Ni ILVD
(Open Fri. til 9. Sun. tz.j ·)Jt 37 .. 1.279 •
\
'
Friday. Janu1ry 30. 1976 N 0A1L v PILOT Ba
Friday's
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Int T&T 1.6010 1ua 27l\ •t.. MonyM .ltd II 122 &lli + "· I T&T p4E• .. illO as + ll'h Moor ~.80 S 521 J7'Mt-\lo I Tl.T OfF •.. I 71 .•. Morg.JP 1.80 13 U9 61 + :\4 I T&~IH 4 • • • S.J\IJ + ,..., MorrsnlCn I 6 2• 22~+ "" I TT .. ...., . 10 SJ\IJ-'It Mone El Pr .. ~ l Vt+' 111
I T& OfJ. • • II SO'h + .,., MoneSh ·'° 1 ts 11 .. IT .. TDfK• •. SI.,..,, ..... MtoeTrAm .. so WI ~~ I TT DfN 2111 ,. U7 33"-+ V. MortNor .a II MoO II> + " I T&"t pfO S.. 31> S6'h •.. MotorOle .70A3 629 JC>l4o+ l'o lntrp.k 1.20 1 96 26~+ 'lo Ml Futl 1 .... 14 20 il -\I) 111 .. rpocof S.. 11 7S .... + 2YJ MtStTel 1 S2 I S3 20111 •• lntput>t ~r 1 7 o 20 + 'h Mullford .40 1 "9 , ... + 11\o
l11tst &to 10 S 12 1l + "' Mllrlfd of . .0 . • 12 6V• t 11\ lntstPw I 40 t 73 ISi)\ + \.\ Munsn9 1.0I 20 12 It ... l111t Vnd .24 7 110 Sl'o . .. MurpGo 1.20 I 19 191.\-V. IOW08"1 In 3 71 26¥o-114t Mllrph()I .60 ii "9 19'111-V•
1-El 1.30 1S 31 "" + Vo Murry Oh I 1 19 IO'h ., • 1-llG 1.n 7 IS 19\o'o • .. Mu10m 1.31 • . II> IS~ ',\ lowoPw\.t 1 7 20 23" • Myers L . .a ,.., SI> 7'111 + V'o I-PS (to 1 U lt\!i + V. --ff N-
IOtO Hospltl II 16 S'I• + Vo Het>k<o 2 . .0 II • ~ • ITE tmo .IO II 7t u"" + "" NelCO 01 .n 22 211 lo& ... tlltk Gororln I) 17' 12'4-v. Nerto Sc .60 7 JI> 12 •
ITEL Cp .20 6 122 I •• NostiuoC .to It 218 12¥9 + '\\ IU Intl .IS • 2t2 llV•+'V• NolAlrln .SOll 8313'\\+V. --,1 J-NolAYn .37d . . ~ 13¥1+ 'II
"-F .6111 11 1•if·-v.. Hell C.. S7 S 176 13 + 'I• Jontnn .70 1 46 ltV.-:i.. NI Cn Of IV. , 6 23~ •. JooFlld .13d .. "S I~+ V. HO.mSll .J2 26 2.S4 41 +I .Jeff Pllol . n 13 2'1 29:\4 HI CllyL .90 . 22 """. Iii
JCP Of ll.SO • !ISO 1171,. + ~ ~~~ t~ ~ ~ m~: ~ ~cinf!.11i.~ ... '-~~ ir,,h : : : NU Fuel 2.0. I ta 13'11. .
.Jer CJLDf • •• 1130 39'h -V. NII Gyp 1.0S 11 13S 13"'+ '\\ Jewol c t.20 9 101 21'i'l-1'11 Nell Homu .. 111> '"• ,,,. JewolCOf' In . 2S S"-Y,, Net t""u .30 l I IS 7'Mt+ "° JIMWOlltr 1 10 314 41 + ~ ~I:= .60 • II I~+ \lo
JlmWetlpl I . 110 1114 + Vo H~ ~~-V• 11 .~ •113:~ ·1 JlmWot 1.60 . • 4•V. + 111 ~ ..... e -~ ~ ·• JHenln .12d 49 11\to-v. H•Pr' 1.Jk 6 )() 3~+ 'II. JHenlv A9d 21 21\1<+ v. HllS.rolcon;J7 8'2 Sl~l.\lo
JollnMv 1.20 14 239 21>•1o "' Net Serv 7• 9 9S 12 , .
Jolln&J .toe 31 l40 ....... + I :J!m :: 1; ~ ~\\; : Jrtsi;,n rif~ . ~ 2': m;: 2 ~ N.t Sii tlhe 14 197 ""' + VJ ~l.09fl 40 22 263 1514 t ~ Netl TN Co • 3 S~ + \lo :=-~1~·· ·~~ ~:v.:1"" ~re'-.~: re: mt=~ Joslensl11c 1 I 10 22~+ v. Neptune .60 t lS 11V.+ v. JoyMto 1.10 11 ,.s o v. • 2'41 Nev Pw 1.50 I IJ It'll . J1o1stite MIO . • I 2•h-11\ HvPwpf 2.30 •• J2IO :z,. + 'II --4( K -NtYPpf 1.14 .. .000 It +I
Kel.s<All.20 6 12' >em+'" Novfl!I UO •. 1100 17\11 ...
IUll S7of ·~ I 62 -1 ,.~El 1.71 t 213 20 + V. IUll ~ 4Wl • • 1 tJ + 2V. NEGsE I.ti I 29 llV. ,
KelMrC1 SO if IU •1111-lllo NEP of 2.76 .. I 2t'4 + .....
KO oref i-6 ""' + "" NEgT T 2:: II 50 11Vt-v.
KeneMll .2' · S 15 It.lie+ " =~I UO 1! 2!; W'' + 1 KontbS .90Q 7 sa 2H'i+ V. Nwmn~•'I• 3 13 '"' l<JICPLt 2.2t I 49 27"11 + \Ii NYSE 2 .., ·a 1_ 2, ... + Ke11CSou lb 6 8 1114 • • . ·-"' ...,. · • ICCSolndof I z20 101/J-y. NYsEpl l,IO . 1130 9S u •.-,
K•n GE .... 's 2S """ .,.,, HY=l .12 •. 1 llw.+ .,.,, KonsN 1 l2o e 29 " _ .-. Hi 11• 7 201 u:v. ·J• l<JlllPLt 01.S2 s 27 19'n NI 160 .. 11040 11•1 .. "" Koly llldUSI 6 1.5 3'(1 • H!oMc>t •AS ·· l20 S2V.+ I Kety 111 1 46 12 13..,.,,_ ,,.. H••Mc>t 1.n ·. r.so 80 •• K•ufm & 'er :: ... 3 l li't-,,.. NIMJ.!.10.60 .. 11060 1061/H I'"
Kalol!Bol l'h .. 27 It.IA+ "" Hl•;;s;, llV. . z2JOO 112 -14
K•-.t k . .oil ,, •v.• •n =~nc1us~01:-,; ,m ~~v.! ~ t<._Cp .20 S Jot s"' + "° ~ Kell., 111 2026 I 7'11i + Vt HLT Cro .60 I 211> 17~+ .. , · H(>rfol-Wss 9 2IM 771/•+2 ~l:.:C, :: : ~ U"": ~ HOf'lnCI> rn s n 161,\ + ,,_
KellCll 1.6Sb SI S9" "~•I Hr:>rrit 1.«I 7 71 31'1'1 + ~ Ky Ulll 1.IO 7 60 12\o\ + i,\ HA Coel 'O 9 II 31> ••.
Kerr Gts .olO I ,.., 17'-• y. NA Mtg 1Sd 9 " '" .. Ktrr McG I 1' 1116 75 + 3 HAmPt! I 20 13 99 2•'llo + ~
Keystone le S 21 19V. + 'lo NC:.11Alr . 10 I 1'3 l KlddeWelt I S 111 22'14 Vo HoCMlfl WI .. 9 IS-1....,_I 16 KlddeW Of• • 4 «•n-Vt NofttVt I 02 7 •20 IOV>-h
Kldcleof 1.20 ~ 41 • 'h qNo (.en Ry tlO S:V. 1<1mbC1 1:60 10 nn •3 -1'\la Hotl'WI Et .60 •• so l'lh + " KlngsOS «I t 111 tV.-v. No Ill G&J 2 1 38 2• t :" Klnc11c 'to2• 106 IS~·"" NllG~l.90 .• 11 23 ..... -v.
K L M Alrt •. t 35~+ Vo =~Gs\~ : m m:+;i,\
ICl110ht A .S.. II IOS :M"' + "'° NoNG pf S'h . z10 86 + I KoohrlllO Co • IO 9~ + ..... Ho5lPw I 94 9 .O 27'1o + '"" K~<S I.AO 9 310 •S:V.+•\li HoSF>i>f J.60 1260 ~2'h-l'• Kor.C:Of'll 111 JS 10 • + .... HoSF>i>f • 11 z20 .. ..,, • 1 v.
Krof1to l.t2 9 lOI> Oil\+ I NoSP!>f 9'90 Z;SO 101:\4 • '11,,
Krfl41' .2• 32 I.SOS Jl'". 11• HlllO•te E .. 70 31 •• ,.._ .... Kroehler Ml • . 30 IJ • .,, Nof"thfop Cp 6 1>7 UV.+ '" Krovtr 1.36 6 316 17'.'I-~ Nlhrppf 1.d I 39 +I
KylOf In~ l.~ 6 V. • • NWS\Alrt :.s 11> 11>11> 30111 + .V.
L.ocGes I.to 7 18 11"• . =~;.10 10 ~ ;~ ~
1.AmsnSn 11 • 2s u • • • • NWEllgy~~ 4 i. 27"•-•1 • l.AneBry ,n t •S 1•V. + V. HWlt In us • S40 '91t. • ·~
LeerSl99 .32 • 154 8'111 • Nwst llld w' 78 19 • :V. LHrS pf 214 •• '' 2814 + ...., Nw1t In pl s . 29 117 + 3 \.OOSW'l .70o 12 24 31 +I Hw1llof 4 20 ' ;}3 88 + 2 lffds N -~ 9 9" 1l + 1 HWttlnDIC S • • I lll'h + •Y1 l..HWllO .60 S 66 IS'h+ V. -M11.Udl.i 91> 11:\4+ .V. l.ehl PlC .to 9 71 11~ +I NWS(I t"20e 12 17' ~ + V,
I.eh Ve lllld .. lS , ••• 141 Hr'tn CAI 1.10 a so ]11 t + " I.eh Vel of . . l 12 NortnSI SOQ 12 1361 13"-
L.eflmll .71b • 117 12V. • v. ,..tSI ot "t.60 .. 2'7 51.,,. • "•
t..eMer Cl> • II ""' + '"' Nucorg. 28 6 1% :U • "'' IMIOll Ill .71 12 •2 23 NVF comp S 191 10 -'lo LeslloFy .40 10 ll • .,,.. . . --() 0--
1.eYOrge Fd • M ' + .... ()ell Ind .40 12 26 17't . L.ev Inc .7Se 12 11-"-"-O.klt•Pr .92 I • 11'1•-'II L.evl Sirs IO I .. 5 46'1.o-114 O«ldnfllll 1 s U7 1'
LAYIU F1o1rn •• 200t 61.\ • V. Ot:ddPt pf 4 1 S2'1, + '> tF~ ?:.~I' I~ ,;~-; ~ OtcPtot l .60 °.'. 29 521/• t ~ 'OF f: .,., 4 62.., ·~ OccF't on.so .. a1 23111 + v. '" ~ ... • • ... • " C)tcd F'.i wt . , 12S 7V• Va Llbtly CHI 9 9 71"-..... Ogden Cl1) I • 99 1'1/t 11'1
UbrtyCo .• 1 35 13 • · · =l: 1.11 . • 23 30 + "• Uberty \.Oii •• :n I,.,+ Vo d I .. t I .. 11•~ Ullei'1Y \. pf II S Vo • "' • • • uoo My 2V. .i 16 MY.! Vt g:l J'1~:~ .. 110 52 + ...., unreu 1.20 22 157 n~ • 11'> 1.io 110 + 2•"
LIMHll UO It '31 ,,,...._ V. OhPwpfl"" :: 1•20 122'h +IVJ
UllCHll Of, • • , SA _, OhPw pfl .... 1240 ·~ t II)
U11NF l.'1.0 .. S ITll't-Vo OKC Q> .IO S 37 10'19t V.
\.lonel Corp . • 109 I~ • • · OltJoGE I.Ao! 12 510 22V. Llt1on 2V.k t 131 l 'I• + v. Ole GEof 10 1210 10 -:v. u nn cv ot J •• t ll • .,.. o.ctoHO 1 "to 'i is 1•.-.-v.
Uttn cv Of 2 . •1 llV. • V• Olll'I Qo 1:Jl I 2n Jtl't• I .... Utlonl11 pf A •• • 10V. · • Otlllkreft I 10 639 30 + IY,
L.MI lnYOllr .. I• IV.• 1" OfMrl\ln to S 70 1~ Cocllllffd 1 111 1'4-~ OntldeL. ·16 6 1 1~ ....,;
t.oewco 1.10 • MO u,.,+ 1~ ()potlM M 1 1 11 1sv. ''• 1.0masFI .40 U'20 7"" + V'o Orai91Co . II 10 114 11V. ... "°'"Mq .M t 1 IS UV. • • Or lllckl 1 2t I tt 14\li-Vo l.ll«W\'I .IOd 12 49 261/t + -'4 Otis e.11:to I tt .-+ '• Glf~a UO • . I ti"+ .... ..._ S 11\d I t 116 16 .... -.... OwttJdM 20 17 JOO S3 +I GvrtStV 1.12 t ti u~ + v. L.onolllt llh 1 no 1114 • Yo Owclete ·u , :24 ,.._ v.
0 SU pf 4.40 •• Ziff SJ • .. \.I\. Of HU •• r120 Ill ..• OvfS11o ioa 4 21 131i't-"•
G SU 11'4~t . ~ I SJ + • UL Of I ~ . • & 76 · · · 014rTm .liO 11 S4 21'--'11 Olf&W. • > 111 24"' • " L.1 L pfO, .41 . • "' 2'Vii • .... 0wencr .• It 242 " • v. G!ol!l&wt w •. 1011 6 + Iii I.Orel Gorp I 1t1J 1~ + ._ Olowflll 1"12 11 17\ ,. + II• ~pfJll'a .. I '3~+l-. 1.ALMtdl.1237 Sit 2.J~t '141 °"'111of4 ..... S3 t1 +lit• Gl.W. pf S" . • • 71~+ '" LAl'llellc .20 1t S6l IS + 'h Oldord111 ... 1 U ~-V. Oulton 11\dSI l 21 4'h • L.euGes 1 • I 41 2•"-\6 ~ 11'-
Hkll Wt e M-1-., + \4 ~n '.40.. SI u -+ -. Poc:Aln 1.20 . • V n"A •••
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Horroh.Mo. .. Iii llMCODnl~-1· 2' Jaj"'!.l: ,,::::;;·; ~ r +" ~= ::i: '; "-; ~ =I• .2J t 17• \It-~ ;: ... 6 •1 II*+ ~ ~rtw.ir tO IJ 'D I ,,. ... lilllc#lll pf 1~.. ' .. • .. I v ,,_. Iii
twt Hll .'tS II IO~+ \"I = ~ ~ •= ~ : pr ~th 1: f:\6:_ : I.~~· a U:!. ~ MM .-•• ut 1A-" "" '·" I "° ~· ,.,.. .>.1t.1t • • ,.Yi ... =' ~·! ~ =•t ~~~11 13 ~m.-~ t1:~"·1'=1'"··~ ~~J~ ':t ~~\"I ;;;".bOr.i#::t ,ft= :·: aMn I t3 tbi ·.. ~!Nf 'i ., 27 7\"I "' ~ Ollllr . . !d IV. . llM . 1'·11\i ••• .....,_ t• 11 l•\"I ~ 1.1t2t S'2 Jo( +IVt
flt " "'' 11 U7 "" • • 1111111 ~ 1 1 ,.. ""'+ ,. "9n0f• ,,.. ti • S\11 It~~ n'f ~-.! t :,:.;ff'~ 'l: ":".!. ~ ~!\~1··• -~ ·1!;' ,'i' .. ~.'\% lifta'Ji' I j M16 + t MW Oii. t. 11 .. -" + ,,,. ~ ti. •. 11 t D~t ,,. . '"·" ~·~ ", .. c· -"""'"'" .. 1 ••
ftl Ill ~f J + ~ ~'""'!" ,:; ~1-~':At'~ :: I ~t~
d ;· ~·· tt ~ = ,H: E. . : ~~ li •• ~ I ' ;, __, M t9' +1 • Plllll•"U"'" 1 JJ\li+I ' u ... ,...,... A I .'7 " ...... pf '·:. " = .. ~."'I ; -;.~.B11ff ti • ! 5'bf.t1 1~ 'd ,_; ~
w.. Ntl ~ "'' Pl lhlal C1rM ~ P I !whl (lllM -0'0
~.J:. = ~-! ! ~111:: ~ ~ :::; ~ ~·:ans m '11o11 -l&Mwi.1• 1 ., '°"'• 1\lo ~~ I • tM\+ '"' $1rip&S 1.10 I U 11-.-Ila 111111;,~ ,, I 1..-+ I"' SWooeT Sil t JU •-+ ~
~~ t M ts •Iii. WU2 t 147 .J .. +n\
::.tr.St n ~ ~lit! IV. ~-t.~~ I I U l!~; loo
fllttrtt 2. • n 2111' + "' w., s .. s 11 -1 Bv SYLVl • °""RTL'R PflillW , M 1411 zt4'+ \'Ii pfl .0 , 10 ,.. .... 1 I nl .. V &:. PN•o o 1.2016 40,..,.. ,_ "' si-1 110 s . Mo.re of us will buy new and replacement automobile
PNi.EI 1.M • 1.-• ~ I 7 )2 ''"" + Vi PNIE...., tv.. .. ... _ ~ *"" ·• s •1 1-.+ v. tJJ'es lo 1976 than an My previous year in rust.ory. And more ~~1~ :· ~ rW; ·~ .. t:2lf' -~ 7 ,n ~~: = al U5 will make expensive mistakes when we btty our tires
""'' "'1.ao .. LiD n • 1 Wi'P, tw. " Js + "' than before. too. PNll.f!ll ~ •• 110 7W. . •. 5unlleMl 1 1, Htl Ull'a • loo od ) d ll!IE• Pf •AO •• LiD •v. + v. SuMtrnd ..ao 1 ..,. 21 • 111 The reason: lhere are simply too many m e s an =:ft~!;:::•= r=·~ =~~= i• ~ ~! : types of Ures to choose from -with thousands of choices ::1.!"",,~1l\' 1~ a'1 l~!1~ ~J,,1:20 : •?j ''t~-:1 .... available, despite the best efforts of such rubber giants as
PNH111t 1nc1 •• 13 s ~"' 1 30 • 2 1sv. • v. Firestone, Goody~ar and Uniroyal to get the situation under ""'"ncit .U( .. U t -1" ~ HI 2" ~+ " .I Q a) ""''""" 1.to0 M 1os su.-1 ~·' 1 11 • ts itY< + "' coutroJI. ( ne Uniroy
f'tlllVH ·•,. .i '"'• ~ w,. M•o•v •· 12 ... • • .... -..,tive sa\Mll th• tir' e· .St : t.Sf 0111+ ~ 5-1111 .toe n 266 1•"+ 11\ "',,._..,.,... 1-.,
1.40 11 """-14 sytiro11 ... 10 1u ao • * buying public is in for an lnfH't • • -$" • . . Sybfntol ?.40 . • s ..... Pl"llMYCH• m .014-.-.. syu1on0on 1 "' •~ epidemic of "poly ~re 1.20 10 101 ,,.__ \lo -T T-
Pllnty 9 .to 1 •tt 11v.+"' renec.1.ao10 41 ,." ..... multlple·tire·itls ")
PltForo .aoo 6 ta 19""-"" To1co11 H•t . 1M >"" v. A · P1ttston .1011 >1so1 •111 •• Tene., '" '° • 3,. ,.,, v. cons erv a t 1 vc
PiuoH1.03il1• Ht 21v..--1 Ten., of ' 11 11~ • 1" ""•timate ·s that overall Pion ,-..,di t 1.e • -\.\ Te~E I.CM 10 101 II~• " ,.... J Pl•vtiov 12 .. n 211t-111 Tandy eorco 11 um ,.~--.. passenger tire produc·
Money's
Worth
P~sey .Md I 1• IS-.-Iii Telldvcref 12 21• 20 -1\lo ::!.~o 1~ ~ ~~ 31':t.: ~ Teiicoe11c .20 . 31 ,.,., • '"" ti on this year will be up 7 .6 percent. This translates into an
Pl:lnOe•ow s .. 313 11--14 ~:~~~0 ~ ~ 'i~;'~ increase of 10 million in the number of ltres turned out in the ~T1b 101s 21 tt • 11t T.chnkon 1s 21s IJ'41 • 111 U.S., with a maJ·or part of the rise goi ng lo replacement Pon.c Inc~ s u 1t -v. TelllfOf'la .J• II 7SI S6Y. + 1 f:.!~WG"OfS-t' J"IO "11•~ -1 T61KOf' •• I 66 ..... • tiJ'eS. "'" £ 1.-.,, • • • Tetodyne :k S Ill J2~ -Vo ~~~1i~ii~1~v.!1~ +:1::~11•·:.,.: 1~~· ~ OTHER ESTIMATES are higher. The Rubber "°' E•P 1"11 J1S u11i+ .,.. T•lo• corp 1 1m J , v. Manufacturers Association itself predicts that origioaJ Po!EI Of SVt •• 1170 S6V. + Iii TIMCO 1.76 7 •10 1'11.\ • Po1E1ot s.o&t .. 13110 st + 1 Tene< 111 5...., •. 22 10tv. • eqwpment tire production will exceed 46 million in 1976 and
"P'Elot •.CM ·· '100 "'"-· · · TesoroPe1 1 • ..a 16 rieplacement tires will reach 139 million -a total of 185 PotEIOf t ..... I 3'Yt-\IJ Tt50r pf2. I• .. 306 2'" + V.
PPGtlld 1.eo 11 _. .o -111 ToM<O 2 • 1,.. u v. . . million tires. Add heavy service tires, farm tires and off· Premlnd .3' I ta ll'h + "-TexC8111t1 1 12 Jot 17~ + " Pf..,, fl .to .. u u..,+ ~ l:•ETr 1.70 1 , .. l•~ + "' the-road tires -and the total is almos t 225 million. =Re~J~ ~ i .. ·~ .. T.~1r?: ·; ~ n~~ ~ It has been hoped that by Jan 1 the National Highway ::'"~ 1 11~ -~ : ~! ~ +:~f'1 1: •9 .. ~ ~~"" + ~ Traffic Safety Administration would have established some Pl.ts Col' JO 1 ss 1"' .. "' Tuos1r1C1'10 10 13 u~.: •i. ·order by devising a uniform rating system for tires. But PSE .. G 1.72 t 24S ft'!lo •• • Tex lllllr I 43 S6I 11•11<-l"' l h k d · · .
PSEGcoU .:IO .. i.so 'sv.+ v. Tuos111t co 1 153 •~ -'" none s on t e boo s an none 1s even in the blueprint stage. PSEGpf s.os .. llOO SJ -1 Tex 011 .Oto I 212 ·~-v.
PSEG9f u 1 ··1100 ssv.+ "" TuPcL.d Tr 11 • 1aV>-"· YOU -ON YOUR own -must determine which tires PSEG91 '·'° · · r,40 70V.-'It TtxVlll 1.1• 11 370 22 + ~ ·
?SEG9f 1.40 .. r200 71 .. 1 Text• 1n111o1si . is2 '"' . offer the performance you want and which are the best for ~~= u~.: =I~~ : . +=~~:n: ~? I~ ~~ t . ~ your car. ~~<;:'1~:~ . 4l 27 + \lo th~~ 1-.~ ·; ~ u~~ ~ . Basically I there are thr ee types of tires on the markel-
P\IS 111d2•72 ii 1~ !l?,,.111:~ =~-~ ~~ 4: ~~=':! bias" bias-belted and radial. The radials are t~e most ex·
PS•nclof u.e .. 1n:ao 101"'... ThoMJw .so,, ., '"". v. pensive, but they offer you better road-handling charac·
PSlndDf I CM ,. 11100 12'h • Vo ThtlltyO 40 13 S7 I · t' · d tr t " 1 l f J t " PS H ... 1.eo 1 " 20 + '.Ii T1~1n 1 11 300 ,2...,_..., tens 1cs, improve ac ion. onger 1 e, ower cost per ire ~~:'.~: • 11: r~. ·.,,; ~:.111~i: ,i .~ ~~-~ !"ile. and higher ga~ mileag~. ~ g~neral forecast among ma-~~11·,~ ~~ ,:; ~= ~ ~:::. ~~sl a :~ ;~~+~'A JOfr tire ptrodut~ers ISedth~ttwh1thUIDSfiv~llybears -d~yl 1980 -one
PR C11rnen1 .. • '" .. • T1m1r.11 t.10e • n1 "'h-111 o every wo ires us m e . . w1 ea ra ta . ~~~~~: ~ r:~~.\ll r=~1:!:: n 1!~=: In an attempt to ease the lire selection process, one ~~;~,--~ -~ 111 ~ !.,• l::'~I~ ·9 ,; 2~14-; ~ company (Uniroyal) has adopted a ra~ial "performan~e·
~!:;~~·1; : .1:;~ t°"oot11eReo1 ~•16• 11~ •:\lo•:: rated" program, under which each of 1ts own four radial
--G 1>-Tr~co'.9' 10 u ""': 14 tires is labeled according to its mileage capabilities. Before ~~~-~ '.~ n~ ~.: ~ +~=•t: .1~ 72~ :gw. +i~ buying, you can thus compare the tire performance charac· ~ .s. ·· 1240 1°''4 ... Tm.,11e .lld .. 1s 22\lt •.• t.eristics of Uniroyal's radials : mileage, construction, re·
QIAlt .72 12 14.5 It~+ 11'1 Trensco .IO II 1n tl'o-" l . · bill" d 1 t " t o..stor .011 •• u 1 + 111 rr111<L111 .•s 11 m at1o-1 ahve stopping a ty on wet pavements an re a ive s eer· 0..Jlor pf t . • I 20\lo-\lo T.-F .20 6 125 91/'J + 11" • --« "-Trwiun 1.to 11 120 ,..,,,_ "-mg response.
Re1Acw1 P I 1' 279 """+ Iii Trnswy I «I 1 34 19"11-~ ·
Romeo. in" ~ :w. ·\.\ Trwis WAI• .. 206 t ·;· BUT THAT'S ONE company. Overall. you'll still be in
Ronc.oln.40 .. + TronsWApf .• 8 llh+ It lt I b 'ld · k h • b · · h" =A,,,..... ao '"" + .,., Tr•v••J 1.oa 14 290 2•'¥1 + I!. an u er y ewi enng mar et w en you re uymg tires t 1s Roytis::~·i 1l ~+y; +~E'~:4l1·:. ~ 3:---~ year. To help you with replacement tires, therefore, the ~ ~ 1{ 7~ n""';,~ Tri Con ·* •• 303 21"'•1 Tire Industry Safely Council in cooperation with the Na· RC.A Coro 1111157 151,.t, + Vt Tr IOI pf 2Vt •• J 31 + V. • } H• fi RC.A tv ..... 4 .. 32 62\Co •.. Treno1• . .o. • IS u~ + " ltona 1ghway Traf 1c Administration, suggest· ,.. • h ·~ Tri Petlllc •. • Sh . N h , I t 11 . t' qReednQ co .. .. 1 + .. Tr1n1ty1no 1 s 1•• 21 + '"' -ever c oose as a rep acemen a sma er-size ire i:E= ~~:: ~ ::.·~ +:r:~~t:2; 1~ ~:""·.~ thanthose tbe carcamewith. R~".!11'...~ .'. f'2, 1~ ~ TRW of • ..., ·· 1 ., + .,., -Use tires of the same type or construction on all four ....,,_, "" ,..--.,.. TRW pr• . .O.. 1 6t +t~ . . .
Ritoc• .1 .. 1s 21 u v..-,,.. Tuuono ... • 153 13v, . • wheels unless the tires a r e designed for special Reeves 1.IO I 3' 21~+ h T...CFox . .o • 407 13V. + 14 rf · RekhOld ... 6 m" +-. Tycoub.20 • m 12 ..... pe ormance (suchassnowhres). RelStore .... 9 26 tV'o + \'> T •-C 60 • I" •7 ... 1"· Rollwic e11 ' m t1!io• ,,,.. y ... r 11 ~ u-""'-' .... + .. -Pair a single new tire on the rear axle with the tire =:~l~ f.'to ~. ··, !~ '!':.! VAL111e .tou2 ... m h "4 having the most tread deoth of the other three
....... ,.~ -... 1,.. UAL OfA.40 11 27 + "' L " . peed f h f' ., d -•enc:•"' ..... -+ VA"CX>1.30 • it n"+ ~ -im1t yours or t e u st 50 m1 es to un er 55 RelncG llf8 .. II ....... • · VGI ~ I 40 1 1• ISYI Re111eG p1c •• n uv.+ "' u G 1 corirs . 11oso 21 +'iii. miles per hour to give your lire a "break-in" period and lo =~ti~~ ~ 1~~ '~~ ~ ~~10nc1~s:, '~ ': ·~~ • ;,..; permit the many complex elements in the tire to adjust lo :=T.11.~·1 J~ ~+'~ ~:~~d2:~::~ l !!\lo!'•t. oneanotherandfunction asone integralunit.
RollVOll .1' 7 2m 1'111-\II Un 8nc .. ·~ "" Amoos • .020 211 '°""+ ~ vCom9112:~ 1! lo .. • -PERIODICAU.Y ROTATE your tires and check the :::= f°..g ii i~ 1~. ·y; t:~~~~ .. .! "}~. ~ inflation levels lo maintain them at top efficiency and ex· :::; i:i8 : = J:Z:; ~ Vll•on C«p 12 m •"-v. tend their usefulness -sometimes well beyond their All pf 2 3t 9 37 I.In EIO< 1.2' I 154 UV. • • d "I Re~n03:°'·9 >t.s .,.h+;,i; t:~::~:n ::,,1~~-.s .. guarAant.ef e m_i eagteh. 'll b th' / b t th J Rey1npt2•.i. •• 10 n •.i.+2v. unE1ecpfl .• s 91:1W1 +2•1. s or pr1ces, ey e up 1s year -u ere a so ReyndMet I IO '6S ll~ + " flt ReyMtr. 4V. .• u •1v.-"' ~1~:l 1~ m .~y, -·i. will be a proportionate gain in tire life. An average tire will ~=-~ ~ 1
: ll"'! t ~ ... crl~ ii 1:~ ~\II= U cost $39 and wilJ go for approximately 30,000 miles. =~td .. ~ ~~ m ~h.. ! : U Poe pf.41 . • I 13'1" "
Riegel T 11/J 1 67 l'l't. · · · 8::l~v·:: .50 'a •1~ ~~ t ~ RIOGr In .to 1 41 161h-.\oli :i~~ :~ii .. ~ :=: : ~~"'l.~ :: zm •! ... : 1\4
Rivi-... 11 lS 21"'-~ Vld 811\d pf • • 12 ...... + flol)Sllew .70 2l 119 11v.-•;. UnCotp .nb.. 11 l \lt + '• RotlrtJn 1..., s 44 1S'M + .,_ UldFllCll .20 6 90 I t ~ "'-~ns .--II m ll'Mt+ V. UGosP\. .12 1 11• l•W. •. """' .._ utd Gueny IS t7 t + ~ RodlG 1.28o 7 IU 16 -14 Ul'litlll1o1 2.32 6 l3 141/o + 11'1 Rodi Tel.lillll .. ll ... UnllldC .400 • 7 11~-V• =:=.;~ 1t ~ =• .~ Unllld Of .d , . I 71h + V'o
Alie.I\ of •Y. .. ' 70V. + 14 Vld 111111 .10 9 26 6.\41 .. ""
Standard,.P acif ic
Earnings a Record
Roell of I.JS.. 26 25*+ 11\ ~~I~ ~ I: ::y,: ~
AofwnH 1.11 • 2"' 61 +114 Un Nuclffr 16 "" 221'> +II/) =:i.;s.~ ii ~~ 1:~: ~ utd "-C ,.,,. s "" ...
AolllOll Ctp50 11 SI/\-V. Ul'IRolng .48 4 •1 12\lo-''°" AoperC 1.20 1• 11 19 + 14 USFldel 2.48 12 138 3614 + '-
Aoror A .94 11 191 21'.4 •.• USFoSc .S4d •• IS ll'h + ....,
~lo.AOV ll 91 24Vt-V'o USGypl.6021 '46 ln'H Iii Rowell .20 4 32 26 -V. IJSHDIN Cp • 2•'l t*-.... _.... s--. '154ndlls .20 . . JOS • ..., + "'
Mtllnt It .to 10 Ill 36 • :\Ii ~~~ 1 ~ '~:1:: :
Solfgard I lid IS 2l l • • • US ShOe , ,J j j 71S is.,\ + 1
Saft:?tSC ~ ; ~~ ~r:+ "iii, USS1•12.IO 11097 12~ t 'll ~Mt!rl r.'2010 2'7 O'h+2~ U$ TobtCO 111 131 ~+ V1 SUOLIP 1,11 I I 12'1\-\lo l.Jtd'Todlnl t 1 SV 53-14-Vo stl.SeriF 2Y) t tel :l't~o+ ,,.. V'dl'ecll otl.. '5 I~+ :V. stPoulS .... .. 1• 11~ .... UlllT•I f.12 10 ~ I~ V•
stAeab 1 S2 • m ~. "' un1To1 ...i.t •• ., ·~"" Selemc .2Ao IS 18' 1111 + v. UnlTofA IV. • . 2 20~ •• s.nOGs 1.20 13 :m 1t¥o • • • Uni trod .OSd 10 o11 6'11 + 1"
Sotl.Jn R IOI! 1 1• l'l'o + Yt Ul'llvar 1.61 • 26 S7 + "" SenderAstolt 66 714-\'o Ul!lvL.T 1.12 1 2S 21'h+ YI
SMFl111.to I 331 3N+ V'o UOP1nai_r:~ m !:~;1111
$Fein Of .JO ,. 10 9~ •.. ~E .l2 6 141> l3'4+ ~
Ser=.11\tt .JO 9 S91 23""-" Ullff•Fd ... II 2l II + Iii
i::J'MI • .0 I .. ll'll •·· USMCp 120 7 2' 21V.+ °" SJlvl:W~';, ·;. ~ ~::: ~ USM pl jy, .• 1560 11 ...
SevEI pll.21 .. 2S 12'h+ V. = rn,N: ii ~ fi~:1~
SevA12 • -N °"_51~ VIMIPL.2.olOIO to 29~+ V. serv1ce<: 12 .s It . S'i't-Iii ut Pl.41f 2.to . . "6 31 ..• Senoml! 066 t 15 ,.....,+ v. VV llldlls Ill S U7 1•V.+ °" Sheusp . 2' 1t 1• 1 -y, VVI llOpf SVt • • 3 SI"'+ ._ Shepell :1010 92 t••h+ ,_.. UVl11pf 1.26 •• I 21~+ ...., She!IOll 2.60 • ISi SI~+ ,_.. -Y Y-1 SlwllerG ,SI; 6 111 llV. + v. Voltoyl11 .IO J t9 17 h + V.
SNllrpf 1 . .0 . • 3 I~+ Iii Verlell .20 tJ MO I•~-V.
Shtllfof US . • 10 22 , . v.edtr I .IO I 1 1~ V.
Slwf'Wll 2.20 16 S9 38~ .. " V.ndo Co .. 16 .,_ • "•
Strong demand for the com -
pany's medium-priced homes
boosted St andard-Pacific
Corp.'s 1975 r evenues and
earnings to record highs for
the third consecutive year.
Arthur E . Svends en.
chairman of the Costa Mesa-
yearend results.
Net income 1975 rose lo
$1.776.080, equal lo 98 cents
per s hare, on revenues of
$46.195,122, as compared to
net income of $1 ,718,636, or 79
cents, on r evenu es or
$42,624,439 for the prior year.
a y Ufttttd Pren 1111on1.tloolol
NYSE lndtA Sl SS 1o1C1
ASE llldeM '6 M 1o1C1
Dow Jones Ind •1s ?I up S & P 500 SICKkS 100.16 up
0..,
l.tt .S)
0.1S
SMrre Pot .'2 t 121 ICW. + .... Vonlcelll .20 IS 16 61.\-Vo
SIQnelC.toa 1 111 1~--V01Ur l.07b.. u ""' ' G f d • -SIQN1c.oot1 •• , 1'"" ••• ~~ ,~ ~ tt== ~ a ner• a11 aAI•~•
Slgtopf 2.20 .• • i7w-t Vlocorn int 14 1• fHh Iii New York IVPll -Th• fOltowlno;i llst ~="I~ 1: 211 '!~!. : Vlctr ~ • • •1 .S + \\ SlwlwS thlt stock• 11\ot heve 09lrwd most SlmnsC .... IS 1 22'4-.... V• El« 1.11 ... I ,....., • •• end IOSI th• most boMd on DttCM!t of Si"1'Pel .«121 lot\ 11111 + ~ VeEPpf 2.tO .. 43 ,. __ ~ <henOe on lfMt New Yortl Stock
Slngar Co .. .,. IJ.'Mt • • • ~·~ r.J .. ~ rM-;1"' E~~ 11erce11tooe ch.,.s ere "'9 ~~~JV.·· 33 31'\lo+ "' v:EpfJ1:12 :: l2SO 111 + "" dlffo,.nu btlwoen Thlt previous tlOilllQ s=IFri.~ 1
: ": f~ + • ~ ~~·~ 1t 4: ,::.-· -price end the 0~~~'nts clOslno;i l>flce.
Sllll Corpl'l 2' It t\11 -°" VllcnM 1.10 I 71 ~+J I l11ttll1111I lllY 1"6 + ,,._ Uo 40.0 SllyllnQ> .tOJ *9S 19\11 -1 --W W-2 A9'1lrre Co 11,!c + I"' Up 2'.t
The company also posted
record fourth quart.er results
as net income rose to$822,117.
or 46 cents per share, on re~
venues $17 .312,039, as com·
pared to net income of
$345,822. or 17 cents, on re·
venues of $10,703,361 for the
fourth quarter of 1974.
Fully diluted earnings for
1975 rose to 81 cents pershare
as compared to 69 cents in
1974. Fully diluted fourth
quarter earnings per share
were 36 cents in 1975 and 15
cents in 1974.
Nf!K' )'ork
JS ltlo•t A~dre
NEW YORK !UPI) -The 1$ mot! octl"° stocks lro<Md 011 Ille Hew YOflt
SIOtk l!XthOllQe FrlOey
Sties
Cltkor'o ........... 100 Pl>lerold CD .... 306.SOO Mt'IQhtoe Elc •••• m .ooo Comm S.t .... 261.SOO
Ryder Syltm •••• 10.100 Oler111lot1 11111 .... 23',SOO l.Avltr Furn ... , 112, 100 Am Ttl&T.. .. •• 710,600
MtOonellh Co ... 210 >00
X•ro• Coron .. • • 201.000 Bell! SMI ••• ., •• 203,000 Marrlll Lyn .... l00,100
A C A Coton .. .. l ... IOO Oenerel Ml rs .... llO,toO
SunbMm • .. • • • • ll0,300
.°'?.; --_,
+ IVt
-\II . ~ .. ,.,
• '!.41
-IV. -11.\o + 1~
• 1
+ V)
+Ill\ + ""4 Smltl\AO .60 I• S9 12 -'-' WeRRpt •Vt •• &IJO .. , , • J HemllP Cop 1-111 • 14 Up IU Smlthllll .• 10 .. I U'h-1.,, WKfl Cp .1• t 3:J tJYl+ '"' 4 lntrconl OIY s ..... + "" Up IS.I .,_ ____________ _
Smllhltllne 2 IS M tit\+ IV. Wodlpf 2.20 •• U .S0\11+2\4 SI T&T DIE • 15 + 1111> Up ::·i Smlthl T .SO • J7 t4\lo + V. watlW¥1e C • • 2' J\4 . . . 6 Stendn 60 12 ..... t 1'41 Up
Smutker .IO I 20 17\'o-~ Wotreen I 10 107 "*-"' 7 G;il!Mt90 RI 1 + v. UP u , SoloBos.70 7 t2 ""• "MlllHl.40ll ll 2' 33"'+ \It IAllrmon 20 11"'• 11/'t uo u s Sonesto 11111 2 20 3'111-Vo Woll 80 .60 10 13 2'l • ,,._ 9 Ant<llde 60 20h .. 2°" Uo 12 I SollyQ> .111-•1 IHI IOV. ... WlllMr .IOI 4 7S I•"'-14 10 AYCO Cp w1s 1'11i + VI Up 12.S Soo WI l.20d I 9 30¥1 ... WelMert.Ol 21 3S 13'-+ 14 11 Gn Slttl '"d 41h + Vt Up 12.S SOSOlsAO 1 n !Olio •.• 1N11l9U>.1017'm 1.5\lt•"' 121CN Phorm • ...,. \It Up us
s CorEJ I n I IS7 11"' + .... Word Fds SI IS 31 tlli .. .... " c.bOl C9 ,, 2S'-• 2\li Up II ,
SC..rEot 211t 2 '° + ..... w.rneco .• • •1 10"' . . . .. L.eh V•I lnO ''". .... Uo II I SoJ Ind 1 S6 9 > 16111-IA Wemc.of l\'J . I 11 + V. IS LMI lnwstr l\<lo + Iii Up II I ~ .1sr S 163 "" ... WomCm 50 I 110 21"+ '"' It Mtoe Tr Am 3\1< + \II . Up 11 1 SdM\ pf I IO .. lt 23111i + ... WIClnllf •V• , . S 7• + 41" 11 MIUt>EQ 11 .... + \'lo VP 10'
Soosl Bk .IO 12 Ut 1~ + IW. W.CIT't>f IV.,, U 41 +I 11 Gloeton Wk ·~ + ~ Ull 10 1
Soetst PS 11 I I S"\11 + 11\ wernrC.O ,50 I U I"+ 14 It Munford .o '"' • ._ Uo 109 0 SCOIEdl.611. 21~+ IA WerL.em .t217 7H J7~t V. 20Soelt 811 90 14'-+ 1'4 Up $
Nfti'Vorlc
Saln\'olta11e
AOJ)ror tnl,.t
Ptt ¥1ttU'llft,•f
W•·•k ~Cl" ~ntriflctn Yr•t 1tQd .J:° T~:~~,~.0~
1'7S lo d•te 1'74 to d•t11
lyUPI
SoulhCo 1.40 11~2 •~+ \lo wernrS 1.20 • 24 22~-1" SolnGE 2 . .0 II 14 '4V. ... WllSllGs 1.• 7 l2 1m. Iii
SoNA!tS US t 1'1 S..Yo +2Y. WWIP«I .IO 1 • 12Vt-Iii $0NEMTI I 10 21 »Iii-"" WtN1Of2\lt .. 2 ~+ Iii
I Trm<\.111 •S 2 GAF Co S1 .S CNA FlllOcl 4 Ole GEOf .IO S OoooTpf l \olt I> Oll!(O lndlol 1 HoQ!Alrl wt
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EPaclf2.2• 12 207 Jl , •• Wosfl Sii 1' 10 1 IS\.\+ V. Roll 2.12 12 261 60-"' +I WO Wot I.~ I •1 20" ·., Rollo# .SO • , U Sf't .. • Wt•• Mncn t 100 1'4 ... Solt.Ill pf S.. 1 60 + \l'i W1UcnJ .allb U ISO 3214 + Vt ~1:~ 1l 11'Z Hl4: '~ :C.,.: .~1 1J ,~-; ~ $0WS4~ .lt 10 2" I-+ " wtMUft IM S 2' S + IA rf/f \\"I .. 1e f9"+ -=Ut .. I I•~ ••• '5 ... 11 111 IJ .. . .40 I 14 ,..,_ ...
.240 4 I 7"-\Ii . ICo,, 4" ~ ... ~ 111 Al f2 -'h WllllMCL .a22 t7 l ilt-141 $otrry J , I U\4-\6 WltllMlrt .72 t 21 t1-... • , • a 1•1i11ss .. "'.,"' .,.."'"•·" 1 111 1f~•-.. 11 .u JO 1"-'l! Wll"Ma ;9'd •. •t ~+ ~ 1S n tJ 11'4o + "' Wllce"" .-,0 • 7J 1,_ + "' 1.10 It •7' 2716 + lit ~r. 1..tO I 1 U + ....,
SQull* •• II 270 t • l'41 ~.~ •\o\ 1110 S2'h-\It s..ty,,. , ... J 171 •""' Wltf't '"' t 152 »~"' Sl 9rllcl 1.14 11 U2 IA+ ~ .,,.,.,.,, ,4119 U 1st t~ V.
t : ~;:~&,,. ....
.. 10 TltM\clll f. 11 _.._.,.Et u
ll S.V ~StOP 1J fs,,. I.JI Ii !l:flMf' .so 1 Tel!dycref
1 01k o # ISb T7 $ lltoolty
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..
1 0 •• 6 s .. ) .. ,
6 I
60
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0.ClllW'I • • • • • • • .. .. • • • • .,$ 11't Ull(llllf'l9ed • • • • . • .. • • • "" ~ Toto• ................ mz ,...
AM8X MAflK&T T•CND Adv~ ••••••.•••• ~~· o.c11 ... , • • • • • • • • • • • . • •• 21t 111 • Unc~ .. • • .. • • • • •• ,., lOS
Towt •• ,. ... • • • ... • •• ~ toll IPrtltmlnery Collnt>
oi c.er2 11 ~'~ ... ._.._NA.AO a n ... • ........ I P•jllt.Jlot fl m ...... t W.~1.40 1 126 ~'41,._ 111
ll!ld LJO I 'J)'-" W11 Fllt< IN 11 46 + " • Stitt< Mt1 _... Ntl $olft "'1'
IOI\ UUO 400 ..--1,,. Witt,_ .• 1 .. 1 • • · , ( (hdtl 0... 0.0 P.t IMll ~ t"O '"'Mt Uta -. St tt"' . . . ~ t.e I 2tt ,._ + IA ~ w-I ---w w-
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MuNtl '" • • .... " ~ " HI + ~ ' k 1 s "' u. . " . 11· " --y... ... .. ,. I + .. *l~'t't Jl1~ ... :r~ ij iii 1;"': 'II =It .. 5 0 _; .. ~&· Cl I• Yi ~ .. • 11 1M+ lit .. , • 1 + " ~ 00 .,~ t a ••• ~ a ., ~ . . . ·• ~ n ,. • t/11 Pt-.·" .. sn ~· -. i1 • !! • '" ·, ... ~ ,ll 4m! ~ =~ .~ 1 ,: t-;-: I ·1 i.l ,fl-·1 ~SI' It •u u .. lltO .,, -1 .f.111 201 • ...._\\ WtolpfJJO . U ~+VI ~~·= ni!"· t!'" .fl ' t ~ ·• 1A10 ~·u· ..... ·.., .-,. -~ w.wr AJrw t " 4'• " • $l:=,:;·~ ~ ut';,~ ... ': 1: ii~~ I .1.:; &?! ,. ... ~ ~2.40a10 •• ,..,_." .DI '1 •
• •
.. DAILY PILOT
Patience ..
:fays Off
For Curl
HONOLULU <AP) -Patience
paid off for Rod Curl.
"I'd been playing good. If
you're playing good, it's just a
matter of time until the putting
comes around. It came around
today," the happy litUe guy said
·after his brilliant eight-under·
par 64 had set the pace in the first
round or the $230,000 Hawaiian
Open golf tournament.
.. It could have been better, but
how do you complain about a
64?" Curl asked
"I touched the cup on five putts
that dido 't fall It might have
been a60"
H e paused a nd g rin ned
broadly
.. But I more than made up for
it on those long ones. You can't
figure to make those."
He scored three times from
J0.35 reet. didn 't make a bogey
and didn't miss a green. but
keyed his round by the surpris ing
power that he packed in his 5-
f oot·5 fra me. lie reached one
par-five in two and two-putted for
birdie and scored t wo others
when his m assive drives let him
use a nine iron for approaches on
par four holes measunng 411 and
447 yards.
"The course is made for the big
hitter." Curl said "It really
helps to have the power
"It was the most perfect day
you could have." Cur l said. The
temperature was m the 80s. The
tropic s un was bright and warm.
The trade winds were but gentle
breezes. swirling through the
palms and banyan trees
And it set up some of the lowest
scoring of the yea r on the pro
tour. There wer e 16 scores of 67
or better. Ther e were 71 scores -
almost half the field a t 70, two
under p a r on t he 7,219-yard
Wafalae Country Club course.
Big John J acobs, like Curl one
of the game's long tutters. was
alone in second at 65. Former
Newport Beach resident Alan
Tapie, n ow livin g in Laguna
Beach, shot a 70.
Forst round lei<ltr\ 1n the SlJ0.000 Ha,.a11•n
<»en golf tourn•m•nt
ROdCurl
JonnJ~Ob\
Hale lrwtn
Ed Sneed
8oC> Murphy
Al Getber9<1r
Barry JHC1te1
LouGn lwlm
Eddie PH <C• TomWw
Tommy McG1nn1•
~B;irn\
FuuyZ~llU
Howerd Twitty
c;.1 Morgen
EloCOyW.OltoM
.JoM Mar..tto
Dick Rhyan
u nny WadlltM
8oC>Wynn
Vic ~99110o
Rick RICllard\
~ri.sCoOdv
81llyCasper
Arnold P1tmer
LOnHlnkle
J3J1~
JJ.J2 •S
34 31-.i.
34J2-
31J~
3432-66
l3l3-
J1 ~-67
34-33 67
lol-33-67
JS.l?-61
Jl-34-61
34 ll-.. 7
JS.l?-67
).I JJ-61
33--lol •1
34 lol-OI
lS.33-68 JS.ll-68
33-JS--..
'.Mlol-91
Joi-Joi ....
lol-34~
33-3~
34-34-68
ll-3~
Friday, J•nu!ty 30, 1976
~auchos' H .art1nan Quits
By CRAIG SHEFF the puUour yeara II a 9-2·1 mark fflah in "Anaheim, El Seaundo
oe .. o.1ry ,. ... ...,. ln 1972 when the Gaucboe were Hilb and San Clemente.
Saddleback Colleee football Miuion Conference co-champs. Hart.man waa a •tar athlete at
coach and athletic director Hartman'• Saddlebact teams Cleburne High ln Texas, eamina
Georee Hartman has submitted have never been ibut out all·1tate honors. He attended
his letter of reslenat.lon, the Dai· The "'ast Te u State u' nl 1 Paril, Tex. JC and wu 1elected ly Pilot bas learned. El x ven · to the Little AJl-Amerlcan team
Hartman, who guided the ty 1traduate waa fired u athletic as a defensive lloeman for East
Gauchos to five conference director two yean aio. but _pre· Texas State in 1953. He ala<>
championships in eight yea.rs,· asure by booater club members olayed in the Tangerine Bowl in
was abavailable for comment. forced the Saddleback College -r53•
Desert Con.ference and won the
tiUe. Saddleback wu awttched to
the Mi11lon Conference the
followlne, season, bllt sWl won
the crown with an 8-1-1 record.
After a 7·3 season in '71 wbicb
Hartman called a poor record,
the Gauchos posted 9-2-1 and 9·1
marki4 the next two years, win·
ning Mlsaion UUes. His last two
teams have notched 8-1 recorcig. A former San Clemente High board of truatees to recon.Uder He ia a former Marine Corps
coach, Hartman started the foot· their action. platoon leader. Hartman, in his letter of re-
ball program at Saddleback and Before comina to Saddleback Hartman's first Saddleback slgnatlon. expressed a desire to
immediately built it into a power. Hartman compiled a 68-28·3 re· team, com Posed of all freshmen, remain at Saddleback as a full
His etght·year record Ls 62·18·4 cord in 10 years of high school posted a 4.5 record again.st most· t.lme instructor. His resignaUon
and his Saddleback teams have coaching. ly four-year JV teams. He bas as football coach and athletic
GEORGE HARTMAN never lost over five games in His previous coaching assign-not had a losing campaien since. director is effective the end of tbe
one season. The worst record in ments have been at Savanna Hts '69 unit was 9·2 in the school year.
Schenk Rebuilding Li/ e
Tragedy, Failure
·fit Ex-Olympian
AMSTERDAM (AP> Ard
Schenk, the lanky Dutch speed
s ka ter who won three gold
medals to become the dominant
figure of the 1972 Sapporo Winter
Olympics, will be on the sidelines
at next week 's Innsbruck Games
as a television commentator.
Now 31, Schenk quit skating in
1974 after two abortive years as a
professional to concentra~ on
work as a physiotherapist and
part-time r e porter for Dutch
tele vision.
"But I have an empty feeling
insiile knowing I won't be taking
part' at Innsbruc k," be said in an
interview. "The Olympics were
after all part of my life for about
10 years.''
Schenk has fond memories of
Inns bruck. where in 1964 he first
tasted Olympic competition. Un·
d au n t e d b y me a g e .r
performances then. he set his
when the American-backed ven·
ture failed to a ttract enough
s pectators.
"The trouble was the people in
charge of the or ganization didn't
under stand s peed skating," he
said. "It was simply a failure."
Disillusioned and unable im-
mediately to regain his amateur
s tatus. S c henk s et up a
physiotherapy practice to work
reflabilitating injured people. He
qualified for the profession in
1973 after a four-year course.
When Sc henk announced his
retirem e nt, he received
numerous offers from Dutch and
foreign television, radio stations
and newspape rs. He refuses!
most but accepted a contract
from Dutch television to report
skating meets and a greed to
write a co lumn for an
Amsterdam paper.
sights on the 1968 Grenoble He sec retly married last Sep.
Games and won a silver medal. tember. But barely two months
Then came Sapporo, where he later. his wife. Christine. died
impress ively won gold medals at from a myste ry heart condition.
1,500, 5,000 and 10,000 meters to They had been due to move into a
earn recognition as perhaps the specially r enovated cottage just
greatest speed skater in history. outside Ams terdam only a few
In between. he set a string of days later.
world records, six of which still The couple had known each
stand. other for years, but decided not
Muc h has happened since then to marry until Schenk had quit
to the tall, blond Schenk, who on-s kating and was established' as a
ce was voted Holland's most physiothera pis t. Few people
handsome man. An attempt at knew his wife, who preferred to
profession a 1 s peed skating stay out of the limelight of her
failed. and his marriage ended in husband's fame .
tragedy after tw~ months with Schenk. who prefers not to dis·
the death of his wife. • cuss his recent personal tragedy,
Soon after the 1972 Games, now lives alone in an apartment
Schenk joined a newly-formed in an Amsterdam suburb. Close
profess ional speed skating friends say he is tackling life as
circuit which folded in two years be.fore.
Pac-8 Race
•
To Tighten
This Week?
LOS ANGELES -There's just
enough Pacific-8 basketball
scheduled this weekend to create
a three-way tie for the con·
ference lead.
First place could become
crowded in the Pacific Coast
Athletic As sociation and West
Coast Athletic Conference races.
too.
The Oregon State Beavers cur·
rently lead the Pac-8 with a 4-1
record and their league record
was unaffected by a 76-74 loss to
Oregon in overtime at Portland
Thursday night.
It was the teams' annual extra
game of the season which does
not count in the Pac-8 standings.
Last weekend in a game that did
count, Oregon beat the Beavers
83·68.
The winner of Saturday's re·
gionally televised game between
Washington State and
Washington in Seattle wiJI match
OSU's 4·1 conference mark, and
defending champion UCLA will
be seeking its share of the lead
when it faces Southern Cal Satur-
day night at Pauley Pavilion,
where the U clans have won 94
straight home games.
Stanford, whos e 6·10 is the only
losing overall record among
Pac-8 teams, plays tonight and
Saturday at Hawaii.
R.efJeb Ra•We
LAS VEGAS -Unbeaten,
third-ranked Nevada Las Vegas
got 29 points from 6·7 junior
forward Eddie Owens and buried
Seattle's Chieftans ro7·77 Thurs·
day night in a nonconference
basketball game.
The Rebels, winning their 22nd
game of the season -15 of them
at home -jumped into a
halftime lead of 53.30 and coasted
to the easy victol'y.
A.Utt•RoU
SAN DIEGO -Guards Ray
Leary and Mark Delsman hit
successive baskets to break a tie
and San Diego State ripped Cal
State (Long Beach), 79-52 Thurs-
day night in a battle of the
Pacific Coast Athletic Associa·
lion's two leading basketball
teams.
Leary's 23-foot jump shot gave
the Aztecs a two-point edge at
41·39 with 16'h minutes to play
and seconds later Delsman bit a
layin for a four point edge.
Ftdkrt .. W'f11•
Forwards Greg Bunch and Tim
Dwyer each scored 18 points
Thursday night as host Cal State
(Fullerton) edged Fresno State,
68-60, in a Pacific Coast Athletic
Association basketball game.
UYER GAJNS
QUAKI'ERFINALS
PHILADELPHIA-COrona del
Mar's Rod Laver toppled Brian
Gottfried, 7·6, 7-6, but Bob Lutz of
San Clemente fell to Dick
Stockton, 4-6, 6·4, 6-4, Thursday in
the $115,000 U.S. pro indoor tennis
championships here.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.:;__~~~~~~~~--
Uf'IT....,_
WALTON RETURNs-Former UCLA star Bill Walton of
the Portland Trail Blazers, nursing a nose injury in
Wednesday 's NBA battle with Seattle, returns to
Southern California tonight in a rematch with the
Lakers and Kareem Abdul-J abbar at the Forum, begin-
ning at 8. ..
Sports in Brief
.:J
LA, Portland ·Vie;
Kings Tie Detroit
INGLEWOOD -Last week
when the Los Angeles Lakers and
Port.land Trail Blazers squared
off in Oregon, Bill Walton
emerged the victor in the battle
"'°f giants against Kareem Abdul·
Jabbar in a 119·96 Portland vie·
tory.
The Lakers are hoping a home
court advantage will pay off
tonight when the two teams meet
again.
Los Angeles leads the season
series with Portland 3-2, with all
three Lakers victories coming at
home -116·109, 104-95 and
110-101. .
Walton and Jabbar both seem
to play their best basketball in
the matchup. The Lakers center
bas averaged 35.2 points a game
against Portland with 13.8 re-
bounds and has shot .584 from the
field.
Walton in the series has
averaged 17 .3 points per contest
with 15.5 rebounds. •
Khepllallfl
tournament Thursday.
Wade lost little time in dispos-
ing of Cynthia Doerner, 6-4, 6·2;
Navratilova defeated Natasha
Chmyreva , 6 ·0, 4 ·6, 6 -3;
Navratilova won over Wendy I
Overton, 1·6, 6·3, 6-1; and Nancy
Gunter halted Olga Morozova.
Parser1Jdaa~t•r11•
CHICAGO -Former Notre
Dame football Coach Ara
Parseghian will return to the
college coaching ranks -but
only for one game.
Parsegtllan, 52, will coach the
1976 College All-Stars against
the National Football League
champion Pittsburgh Steelers.
U.S., Aussies
Meet in Rugby
For the first time _since 1924. the United States will field a na-
tional rugby team when it meets
AustraUa in an international
match at Anaheim's La Palma
S~outs Turned A"'ag Uf'IT .........
In other matches Thursday,
Jimmy Connors advanced to the
quarterfinals with a 4-6, 6·1, 6-3
win over Stan Smith; Bjorn Borg
toppled Mark. Cox, 6-3, 6-3; Tom
Okker overpowered Allan Stone,
6-4, 6-"' Jan Kodes eliminated
John Alexander, 7·6,6-3; andTom
'Gorman handed Arthur Ashe his
first loss of the season, 6-3, 3-6, 6--3.
INGLEWOOD -Mike Murphy
and Butch Goring fired in goals
16 seconds apart late in the third
period Thursday night lifting the
Los Angeles Kings into a 3-3 Na-
tional Hockey League tie with the
Detroit Red Wings. .
Parkat2Saturday afternoon. I
Among the 21 players on the
U.S. tea" is Newport Beach's I David Stephenson. Pittsburgh goali e Gary Inness· makes a
nice save against Robin Burns' shot on
goal to help prot ect a 6·2 National Hockey
League victory for the Penguins over
Kansas Cit y. It was the 14l\l ~traight loss
for the hapless Scouts as Ron Shock, Vic
Hadfield and Ed Gilbert each scored a
goal and had an assist in leading the win-
ners.
Hunter· On Open Market Again?
NEW YORK (AP> -Believe it
·or not, Catfish Hunter may be a
free agent again. •
Hunter, whose free agency 13
months ago brought him a five·
,year, $3.75 million contract with
the New York Yankees, maybe on
the open market once again if the
owners carry out their no-play
threat forsprlngtralning.
That's the opinion of Marvin
Miller, executive. dJrector of the
mojor turue bHeball players as-
sociation, who responded on
Thursday to the o wne r s·
threatened abut down of spring
training camps if the players and
owners don't reach agreement on
a labor contract by then.
''If the owners delay the open-
ing of spring training, it would
constitute a breach of every
players' contract 1imUar to what
happened in the Cat.flab Hunter
case," Muter sald.
Hunter, who led the Oakland
A's to three world cham-
pionsbip1, left them In 1974
becauffe Chari•• 0. Finley
breached his star pitcher'• con·
tract. Arbitrator PeterSettlrulcd
in December of 1974 that because
Hunter wu not paid in the man·
ner 1tipulated by his contract, he
was a free agent
Instead o1 one free agent roam·
Ing the bills of North Carolina,
there soon could be hundreds all
over the country ii tbe players
don't get paid for the spring train·
lna period.
"U the owners clOH down the
camps, the playera would de-
mand to be paid." Miller 1atd. "U
they were not paJd, then thetr con·
tracts would be breached. It'•
tbat1lmple."
. .
Be1td~ tbe owners' threatl,
Commtnloner Bowie Kuhn bas
said that the tralnlna c~ may
1tay quiet until a new l~bor con·
tract between th• players and
owuera ll 1lped. The lut one ex·
plredDee. 81.
Kuhn was not available for
comment and hi• aetlonl over the tut two d•YI an a myitery. In ~olton on 1f edaesda1 for
Tbu.nda1'1 ba1eb.U wrlten' diD-
ner. Kuhn excaHd blmlelf, ••Y· lnl he bad to l•••• because ol a matter "of aravt import.a.Dee. tt
The Kings came to life with
1:41 left to play when Murphy
drilled his 18th goal of the season
to pull the Kings within 3-2. Then
Goring sent a 10-footer past
Detroit goalie Jim Rutherford
for his second goal of the evening
and 22nd of the seuoo with 1:25
left.
1'...,,iel!N£\'
LAS VEGAS -Tony Knap,
head football coach at Boise
State University for the past
eight years, la the new bead
coach at tbe Ualversity of
Nevada, Las Veaaa.
Knap, eo, Tburaday was
named to 1ucceed Ron Meyer,
wbo resigned to become bead
coach at Southern lletboclllt
Unlveralty.
P.-rlCe. A•~
CHICAGO-Vlrrtnla Wade,
Evonne Gool11on1 and M ai'Una
NaVTatllova advanced to the
MJnlt'lllall of tb• "5;000 Chlcaao
profeHtonal women'• tenn11
This will be the United States'
rant international game and lt
will be Australia's only match lo
America. Coached by Dennis
·Storer, UCLA's head man in
.ruaby, the Americans are
bope!ul of gaining tbe same kind
ot reapectabllty they bad earlier
thll century.
ln 1808, 1920 and 1924, the U.S.
eniered rugby teams at the
Olympic Gamel and won two
pld medal&, a (eat no other
country has achieved tn ruaby.
Australia, meanwhile, bu one ot tbe mQJt successful intern• ..
tion-1 ruatiy tourtn1 tu.ma ~ lt
the United Statet can wm, It
would 1reatl7 enhanc• the
AmmcJDS' international 1tatu1.
Bob W atkin1, president ot the
SoutMm CaUforiUa Jlu.lbJ Foot-,
ball Union, bu been quoted aa
aaJtae uu.11 I.a a laodmerk op-
Port1iAit1 (or th• U .s. to establlall
ttHlt in Ule eyes of the lnte.ma-
Uoa.al ru1by community." ·I
Ticket• are $& per poraon.J
I
\
{
* *
.\ Today~ Closlrlg
N.Y.Stoeks
VOL. 69, NO. 30, 5 SECTIONS, 50 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA c TEN CENTS
~C Tow Truck Driver Recalls Terror
By JACK CBAPPEU
Of .. Delly PU1e .....
Tow truck driver Jack Hagerty
looked death in the face Thurs-
day in what was to 1'ecome the
prelude tq the dramatic South
Laguna bank robbery shootout.
"I tried to remain as calm as I
could. I knew if I made a
nuisance of myself, I was a dead-
man," Hagerty said in his San
Clemente home.
••1 tried to be as helpful as I
could. I tried to keep talking, but
never yell or struggle and I think
that's the only reason I:m still
alive.
Hagerty, an employe of Ray
Carey Chevron in Laguna Beach
was dispatched at about 8:30
a.m. to the home of Richard
Castillo, 24, of 1104 Miramar
Drive, Laguna Beach. ·
A caller complained of a dis·
abled car there.
· "I rang the door bell and this
guy answers the door. He said be
still bad a couple things left to do
·and could I come in and wait,"
Hagerty said.
"As I came in, he reached
behind the door, picked up a nfle
and lowered it at my head. He
said 'get in the back room and he
down."'
The re , Hagerty was bound
with tape around the ankles, a set
of barbells was placed on his
back and his hands tied to it.
"I told him, I know this doesn't
mean much to you, but the
barbells are hurting," Hagerty.
recalled.
He said the barbells were re-
moved and be was "hog tied"
with his feet and bands bdtlnd
him.
(See SHOOTOUT, Page A!)
Brown's Malpracti~e
Premium Cuts Hailedl
~
Dally Pl194 SUff Piiato
Governor
'1 ..
Reveals
New Plan
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Gov.
SHERIFF'S INVESTIGATOR FRED GELLER CHECKS WINDOW
Gerald Guess Vk:tlm of Gunshot In Aborted Bank Holdup
Edmund G. Brown Jr.'s legisla-
tion to remedy the painful
medical malpractice dilemma
could reduce annual premiums
of high-risk doctors from $36,000
to $8,000, sponsors said today.
Evidenee Dae
Battin Gets Filing
Deadline by ]uJge
The plan, put together after
weeks of negotiations between
Brown and key a sse mbly
Democrats, promised lo be fis-
cally sound and pose no burden to
taxpayers, they said.
At a news conference called to
unveil specifics of the com-
promise bill, Assemblyman
How a'rd Berm an ( D · Los
Angeles), the lead author, said
the average premium for high-
risk specialties could be ss;ooo as
opposed to the $36,000 sought by
Travelers Insurance Company,
the s tate's chief medical
malpractice insurance carrier.
By GARY GRANVILLE
Of ltlo Dolly ...... Slllft
Indicted Orang e County
Supervisor Robert Battin bas
been given until Mondy to file
sworn affidavits he says will help
prove he is a victim of selective
prosecution.
In response to the deadline im-
posed Thursday by Superior
Court Judge Kenneth Lae, Bat-
tin's attorney, Matthew Kurilich,
said he plans to file 15 to 20 addi-
tional sworn statements with the
court.
Those statements will be in-
tended to bolster Kwilich's con-·
tention that bis client is being
prosecuted for crimes common
Irvine Yacht
'---A.units Race
Clwllenger
Miss Nilex, a fixed wing Class
C catamaran, defeated Quest II
in Australia Thursday to win the
defender's role in the Little
America's Cup to be sailed in
Australia starting Feb. 7.
Miss Nilex, skippered by Bruce
Proctor with Graham Ainslee as
crew won three out of four races
in the eliminations to select the
defender.
among elet:ted officeholders.
Last August, the county Grand
Jury handed down an indictment
charging Battin with seven
felony crimes .related to alleged
use of county s upplies and
personnel in a 1974 political cam-
paign.
And to defend his client against
those charg~. Kurilich wants to
delve into Orari"ge County district
attorney investigations and pro-
secutions of public officials.
So far, according to Kurilich,
•he's been denied access to in-
v es t1 g a t ion records a n d
testimony that he believes will
help prove his point.
Tburaday, for eumple, dis-
trict attorney's investigator Ray
Miller was called to testify.
Kurilich expected Miller to
verify the earlier testimony of a
former undercover agent who
said he was paid to seek out
financial information on three
county supervisors.
But Miller didn't make it to the
witness box as Deputy Dist. Atty.
Jack Ryan pointed out there bad
been no testimony contradicting
the informant's tale.
Kurilich did succeed in filing a
sworn affidavit from former
Santa Ana policeman Gary
Newmeyer.
Newmeyer said he was as-
signed the task in 1975 of delving
The proposal, as reported
earlier, envisioned an average
$4,000 a year premium charge to
doctors or one-third of that now
paid to private insurance car-
riers by Southern California doc-
tors.
The plan also called for 14 new-
ly established medical quality re-
view committees to develop
"workable lans" in geographic
areas for a "reasonable amount
of voluntary or below cost
service" by doctors in medically
underserved areas such as rural
communities or urban ghettoes.
Brown originally proposed a
medical peace corps of physi-
cians who would donate 20 days a
year to serving the needy in re-
turn for the state to administer
an insurance pool which would
guaraotee t h em stablizied
medical malpractice rates. Doc-
tors rejected the mandatory 20
days.
The r e written public
service plan would be developed
after "consultation" with doc-
tors. The Department of
Consumer Affairs would be em-
powered to file a lawsuit if the re-
(See PLAN, Page A2>
into the affairs of a Santa Ana ci-E'~OUGH c1rr ty.council candidate, Supervisor l ~' · r i
Laurence Schmit, former county TO BURG..-~ 0~ plannin.J commissioner Woodrow ~
Butterfield and former Garden ·Grove Mayor John Dean. GREENSBORO, N.C. (AP) -
Itisthroughsuch·anidavitsthat Bob Upchur ch, whose grocery
K ·u h id h ho t · has been burglarized several un c sa e pes oconvmce ' • times 1ecently, has put a sign on Judge Lae Monday that he is e n• tbe front door.
titled tomvestigativereport.scov-It says, ''Attention Burglars. ering inquiries into county We Already Gave ...
political figures .
Apartment Burned Out DIMiy ,. ... -II'( ltlCMnl l(Nfl .. r
Flames explode from single-story apart-
ment at 2220 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa .
Firemen soon extinguished the Thursday
night blaze, preventing it from spreading
to other units. No one was mjured in the
fire, which destroyed the apartment. Te-
nant Thom a~ Trapp, 25. wasn 't home
when the fire broke out. Fire investigators
tentatively attributed the blaze to a faulty
gas healer
County Physicians
Eye State Solution
By ALAN DIRKIN
OftN Dellf PlltitSl.tff
Orange County physicians and
. hospital administrators cast
their eyes on Sacramento today
to learn the latest malpractice
developments before making
surgery schedules for next week.
. Area doctors were heartened
by action in the Senate Thursday
when the malpractice reform bill
of Sen. Dennis Carpenter CR·
Newport Beach ) cleared the up-
per house and was sent to the As-
: sembly .
The Orange County Medical
Association <OCMA) has sup-
ported this m easure, which
would take medical lawsuits out
of the courts and create a special
panel to decide the cases.
But today the doctors were
awaiting details.of an adm inistra-
tion-backed bill aimed at ending
the doctor slowdown. This bill
would create a voluntary slate·
operated doctor-financed in-
surance pool to offer physicians
an average $4,000 premium in the
first year.
John R e tt e, executive
secretary of the OMCA, sajd doc-
tors were wary of the ad-
ministration proposal because
their main interest was in reform
of the malpractice laws
Doctors at Hoag Memorial
Hospital , Newport Beach.
scheduled a meeting for noon to-
day to consider all the new de·
velopments on the malpractice
front.
A spokesman confirmed sur·
<See SU RGERY. PageA2>
No Holiday
On the 13th
For Schools
School will be in session on Fri-
day, Feb. 13, despite petitions
from t eachers requesting a
school holiday. Newport-Mesa
Supt. John Nicoll said today.
According to Nicoll . petitions
have been receive d from
teachers a t four elementary
schools asking that Feb 13 be
made a holiday.
M~aMayor,
Fwrist Named
Top Citizens
Mayor Alvm L Pmkley and
florist De M url Tosh will be
honored as man and woman of
the year at a n awards luncheon
oponsored by the Costa Mesa
Chamber of Commerce
They w1il be honored at a noon
luncheon Feb. 11 at the Mesa
Verde Country Club. Municipal
Court Judge Donald Dungan and
chamber President Vaughn Red-
ding will make the presenta-
tions.
Reservations for the $6
luncheon can be made by con-
tacting the chamber at 583 W.
19th St.
Minuteman Fired
VANDENBERG AFB <UPI) -
An Air Force Minuteman II
ICBM was launched successfully
at 8 :30 p.m. Thursday.
Coast
Weathe r
The American ch allenger,
Aquarius V, is in Australia tun-iJlg up for the final competition
which will be sailed on Port
Phillips Bay near Melbourne.
Aquarius V was designed and bUilt by Alex Kozloff of Irvine.
She is a soft wing C Cat and bas
defeated every fixed wing craft
1be bas met ln competition in this country.
'l'IUDING SKIS Nude Popout Pops Up
The requests were made
because classes will not be in
session the previous day, Feb. 12.
because of Lincoln's Birthday,
and also on the following Mon-
day, Feb. 16, because of Wash-
ington's Birthday. ·
However, · Ni coll said the dis·
trict could not afford to grant stu-
dents the extra holiday.
Some high clouds at
times otherwise sunny
through Saturday. A little
warmer with beach highs
in the upper 60s rising to
the 70s inland. !_ows most-
ly in the 40s .
"ANOTHER HIGH
NEW YORK (UPl)-tbestock
ioarket closed hi&hertoday in ex-
tremely heavytradingootbeNew
York Stock Exchanae as inatitu-
UOnal Investors, buoyed by lower
jjilerat rate•,· jumped oo tbe new
~rally bandwa100. A trading
neord was set. ~The Dow Jones lndustrlal
a-.raae, a 17 .to.pohlt wlruler
'ftn,anday, added d.58 pointa to
"5.28. Advanc• led decllne1 by about
..,,o-to-one mar1ln (Tables, 85). 'l'urno•er amounted to
a.,a1~100C> 1ha,..1, up sharply from
ta.. n 800.000 traded 'lbunday.
IJ'bl flut-hour turnovu of
J!,100,000 1bara edlPled a N-
. Caird Ht0nl1 Jan. 15. -..;.;..---------------------. ;.
Yiejo Couple's 'Surpriae Search' Entkd
By RUDI NIEDZHJSKI
OUM Dlllly Pf ........
The search of a Mi.salon Viejo
couple for a young man to pop out
of a birthday cake in the nude bas
ended.
Bombarded by telephone -calls
since their ad offering $25 to a
darinf student apPeared on the
Saddleback College bulletin
board, 8Ul and Pam Gron ha.e
1ettled on 27-year-old David
Bingham.
"We took t be fint one who
called but we have the numbers
of about 12 or 15 more in cue he
decides not to 10 l.broucb with
it," Mn. Grot1 reported today.
BtnJbam. a Mlaston Viejo real·
dent, says he not only intends to
keep his commitment for Mrs.
Gross' 30th birthday party Feb. 7
but to make sure the guests get
their money's worth.
"I'm trying to work up a couple
of jokes to sort of break the ice
and entertain the people,•' be
Hid. · .
The script calls for Blqham to
make bis entrance by breaklnl
out of a larae carton decorated as
a birthday present. The idea of a
cake was abandoned because of
the expen1e.
Phone calla from job can-
didates also llt up tbe collqe
switchboard and at the Dail1
Pllot shortly after a atory ap-
peared detailing the Gross's
plight in failing to secure pro·
spects.
"We had about five or six calls
and after the paper came out we
really started getting them," n<'t·
ed Mrs. Jerry Kilfoy of the cam-
pus employment service.
One of the callers, who phoned
both the Grosses and the Daily
Pilot saiid he had been a Playgirl ·
centerfold and said he wanted the
job to further his career.
Several yount males were ob·
served huddling around the col-
le1e bulletin board on Wednes-
day lookln.g for the notice after
the unusual job offer had been <See NUDE, Page AZ)
"If the district were lo grant
this holiday, it would leave us no
margin for a possible natural dis-
aster or a mechanical malfunc-
tion, such as a power failure,"
Nicoll said.
"If one of our schools should
have to be closed a day during
the spring, we'd havetokeepthat
school open next June, after all
the others have closed for the
summer. It's simply not prudent
management,'' the superinten·
dent explained .
According to Ntcon, he dis·
trict is concerned about student
absenteeism on Feb. 13 . If one
student in three stays out on that
day, the district will lo,,e about
ta>,000 in statt; funds .
INSIDE TODA l'
Dance in America hos un-
derr70rw •ome radical changes
m the hut few years, includ-
ing a phenomena! growCh in
audiencu and. a trend toward
mizing clauical ballet with
modern and jazz dance. See
sto711 on Page Cl of the
Wee~.
Index
A2 DAIL 'i PILOT c
Hopeful
Praises
C·ouncil ,
• Editor's Note· Tht•u arc 17 can·
dadotts vymg for thrPt> seats on the
Costa Mesa C1t11 Counnl. 1'his story
u about one of them. The election t.t
March2.
Costa Mesa has bet>n a wdl run
city m the opinion of city council
candidate Elvin Hutchison who
said he is seeking Plection to
maintain progress and continue
stability.
"We are losing two fine people
on the C'ity ('Ou n d i," he said m re-
ference to Alvin L Plllkley and
Robert W11son , who are not seek-
ing re-election "I'm pleased
with the \\ ay the city has bt'en
o~rated and I'd uke to be of
service to keep it growing and do·
mg well
Hutchison. 62. 1~ marned and
the father of two daughters no
, longer 11\'lng at home He lives al
2281 Fordham Drive in Costa
Mesa. For 16 years he worked for
the Newport-Mesa Un1(1ed
School D1stnt'l until he retired in
1974 .
He was print'1pal of K.user
Middle Sc hool
Hutchison ret't.>tved a masler·s
de3ree and a general ad
ministrat1ve credential from
USC and cited his expenence as
an administrator. m supervising
personnel and ~pt>ndanl! w1lhm J
spec1f1ed budget. as quahfymg
him for lht• rah roum·d
He excelled. an Sl'veral sports
~ hile a youth and played pro-
fessional footba ll with the old Los
Angeles Bulldogs and the Hollvwood Bears. He became a
coach at the high school and
Junior college level and was an
umpire m the "-./FL and AFL for
19 years
He said hP belie\ es the city
s hould continue \\1th redevelop-
ment downtown. including the
condemnation of property if
necessary and said he liked the
city plan to build a new fire sta-
tion, expand the li brary. and put
a multi-use senior c1t1zc11s center
in the Lions Park area.
He would be m favor of Y.1den-
ing west 19th Street to clean it up
and "trying to get r<'Ople m the
area to assume more personal
pride."
Asked about a new citv
newsletter. Hutchison said it
might be expensive and ques-
• tioned whether citizens would re-
ad it "The city is very open
about anything being done," he
~aid.
He expressed his satisfaction
with the pres ent general Jaw
form of ~overnment in Costa
.Mesa and said he would support
a subsid1ted da) -care center.
Hutchison. who recently was
elected a director of the Costa
Mesa Sanitary District. said he
would be willing to resign from
that oos1tion if elected a coun·
c1lman and if the propriety of
holding two civic positions was
questioned.
He predicted that the citv
\l.Ould need another paramedic
unit and said he would hke to see
city support for hiring s enior
<'lllzens to act as crossing guards
1r the school district drops schl')OI
buses next year
GurunenRob
Bridge Club
LO S ANGELES (UPI) -
Patrons of a Wilshire area bridge
club were robbed of about $35,600
1n cash, Jewelry and other
valuables by four gwim<'n late
Thursday
Police said they even took
house keys.
Three of the robbers held their
victims at gunpoint while the
fourth sturfed valuables into a
pillow case.
ORANGE COAST
Ttw O'.tnar rt>1nt O•·•~ •,tot w th .-,h C',.. ,,
(ntrbtrw-d tt'w l'i•N\ J-•r , ''· •\ put AIVW'O t., 1~ ..
(')r~ (n,.\ f P11r,h\1'1~t, fr..nJa.'tl\t ,,,.,.,0 ,,
f'CJtff(,,\ ""'' f)Uh !1\rf n N ft#Wl.tf 11\f°'rJ' f I t.J""'t
ffW (n•.t• Ni"''loA, ,_,,,.'A",,,.,, •~.wn • .,.,,,,,.,'"'' &rt•<". 1v•·I•,,. VJI f. ,,..,.,.., 4'1tlhflrt••"
V,.}U•y Af'Vl l AQUtl ... ti.,.., h \l.r1tl'\ t n.ut A \tl't'~lt
lfiQ.c>Nl •01'1 .n •\ LtVblt\"4 1J ?Nft~·M't f4hd \1,,1tt
d•V' ,, .. o,.,,, •P .. t ~uh'""'"q ,,,,,,,, 1• ,.., .no
\fwt\t 8•v \ttr fl't C.o-..tA MC' t.• (,.!It rn1., t "if\
Robert N Wero
l ·r t \ICH n t MH1 #l1,nt1•J'W't
Jarle R CurlPy
V r I 1 '•<"'"' tHl<I r,•·n~ ••I M•,MQ'tr
T homai; Keev1I
( d•IOt
Thomas A Murphine
~f\.tQt1''0 l dlt(lof
Charles H. Loos Richard P. Nall Ao•·'•"' ~A•Q1.,q l d1ton.
Costa Mesa Ottlc• Hn Wt\t n•~ \tn..-t
"'•Ill~ AOO"h I' 0 flOI ,,_,., tl•J<o
Offices
~l\flAf'h 11 .. (,lf',,,....,t.~1'-H"I
HUf'!lltj"91fH' 1\1 •· t t I '' l""•..,;r~ t"Ntrv•tlt WcllJ-• V•1t•y 1110· u "••II~ •I S.r 0 ,.00 I ,,...... ••
~..,f, t•1' Of•~ Co•<t ""'""'""O r.o,.. ,..., Ho M w' ltOf'fl\. 1ftu\ltt1tf>nin\ ~•tr>f'••I
_....,._,, or •Cl'•'''•'~"'~"" "f'"'" ,,.. • ., ,... r~iMIUOf trll,.•vl \jlttlel P•'"""''"' "' ~.,,.!OM ... ,.., '
~.,.., tit\\ OHl•Q• P••ll At CO"• ~,.,
(all ... 1\1• Si*~tllll•OI' by '" •., ll U "f"
""":.., "' ..... u ,.._,,.,,. "'"''"'' ~"-·u ti-•Ny.
Ft1day, January 30. 1918
0.111 ll'llot S'-'1 """4•
'MESA WELL RUN'
Candidate Hutchison
Fro-.P~AJ
SHOOTOUT
"I asked him, 1f he was going to
shoot me and he said, ·no, the on·
ly one who shou Id get shot 1s
me'.'' Hagerty said.
Hagerty ~aid he was told "lht•
only thing l 'm gonna take 1s your
truck."
He said the man told him, "I'm
gonna turn the radio on before I
leave and maybe I could hear
what was going on. on the radio.
"He said 1f l get loose. the
µhone wa!> an thl' corner, go
ahead and call the police.
"I asked ham if he was coming
back and he said, 'oh, I won't be
coming back ....
Hagerty said he scraped the
tape from his mouth by rubbing
his face along the carpet, and he
inched along the floo r to reach
the telephone.
"I found it's nearly impossible
to di al zero or 911 (an emergency
number in San Clemente) with
your tongue,'' Hagerty said
He said he tried to dial 411 to
get an operator, but kept getting
a recording.
Frustrated with the telephone.
Hagerty said he squirmed across
the floor to a sliding glass door.
"C got it unlocked with my
nose, but couldn't get it open."
He ':>anged on the glass to attract
attention, but again. was unsuc-
cessful.
Then he made his way down
the hallway to some louvered
windows and yelled for help. ms
sc reams were heard by
neighbors who called police .
Aside from a swollen face from
the scuffing across the carpet,
and some sore bones because of
the bindings, Hagerty suffered a
small gash on his hand when the
tape was cut off. He was taken to
South Coast Comm uruty Hospital
for minor treatment.
In the same hospital, doctors
labored to save the lives of
Castillo, shot by pohce a nd
Security Pacific bank manager
Gerald Guess s hot in the holdup.
"I 'd just finished reading·
'Helter Skelter' (a book about the
Manson murders) a week ago,
and l don't think that helped mat-
ters." Hagerty said.
"Some pretty frightening
things go through your mind," he
said.
U.S. Pushes
Soviets for
Angola Peace
WASHINGTON (U PI > -
Secretary of State Henry Kiss-
inger indicated today the Ad-
. ministration . is pressuring the
Soviet Union for peace in Angola
by delayi n g plans to ask
Congress to ease trade restric-
tions against Moscow.
·'We had orit?inally intended to
move more actively at this time
on credit and trade (restric·
PRO-WESTERN FORCES
RETREAT IN ANGOLA, A4
lions)," Kissinger said in answer
to a question by Sen. Harry F.
Byrd Jr. <0-Va.).
"I think in view of the situation
in Angola, this is not an ap-
propriate time (to ask for re-
visions in the 1974 Trade Act)
... not unless t he political
climate changes," Kissinger
added in testimony before the
Senate Finance Committee on
U.S. foreign policy. ;
Kissinger said m an earHer
statement that the strict trade
act in some cases "closed the
door" on better relations with
Communist countries. But he
later reiterated tJ .S. opposition
to Cuban and Soviet intervention
in Angola.
BOYS COMPEl'E
IN R4SKETBALL
The Costa Mesa Optimist Club
"tri -star" basketball contest will
be held Saturday at each branch
of the Harbor Aru Bo~ Club.
The competltlon -In paulng,
shooting or dribbling -is open to
boys apd girls aged 8 to 13. The
winnef9 will compete in city
finals F~b. 7.
\
•
Jtmy Pick .
QU~ried
By ACLU
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The
American Civil Liberties Union
petitioned Patricia Hearst 's
Judge today for an Immediate
bearing on whether the secret
selection of a jury in the heiress'
trial is a violation of freedom of
press and the public's right to
know, but the judge declined to
act.
••we beHeve that important
public rights are at stake and
that the public -those who
would receive information r e-
lative to this trial -has not
been beard from on this issue,
the ACLU said in a petition.
lt was med as the doors of
U.S. District Judge Oliver J .
• Carter's court opened this morn-
ing.
The petition asked not only for
a h e arin g but a lso for
permission to file a brief on
behalf of the press and the in-
terested public in support of a
modification of Carttr's order
excluding press and public from
Jury selection proceedings.
"We filed this motion with
great reluctance," the ACIU
said, noting that Carter pre-
viously has given "attention to
the rights of the press" and re-
fused to impose a gag order on
participants in the celebrated
bank robbery trial.
However, the group said it
took the action "because fun-
damental F i r st Amendment
rights are at issue here and
because we believe that the
right to a public trial applies to
the public as weJl as the defen·
dant ... "
The question of prospective
jurors in the Hearst case has
been closed since Wednesday
when defense attorneys asked
that press and public be ex-
cluded.
The action was highly uncom-
mon in this federal district
where a secret jury selection i~
be~iev~d to have been held only
twice in the court's history.
Attorneys in the case said they
were seeking to prevent potential
jurors from r eading in the
newspaper what others had said
in the questioning about their at-
titudes toward the 21-year-old
Miss Hearst .
"We accept these considera-
ti~ns. ~ impo_~ant," the ACLU said m 1ts _pelttJon. "We believe,
however, that there are other
means tq.acbieve them means
which do not gag the pr~s corps
and muffle the ears of the public.''
From Page Al
PLAN •••
gional medical quality review
committees failed t.o devise a
workable plan.
As previously reported, the
plan would c r eat e a state-
operated, physician-financed in-
s urance pool from which
malpractice awards would be
paid. Unlike Brown's original
plan, membership of doctors
would be voluntary and the fund
would not be activated until at
least 18,000 of California's 35,000
doctors enrolled.
It would guarantee physicians
an average annual premium of
$4.000 with a mandatory increase
of 25 percent per year to keep the
fund financially solvent. If doc-
tors joined, membership would
be required for at least a decade
unless they died or "bought out"
their projected liability.
Under the plan, the maximum
single award would be $1 million,.
which is similar to coverage of-
fered now by private insurance
companies.
Other key points included
these:
. -A provision that doctors
would pay 25 percent of their pre-
mium as a deductable on each
settlement or judgment against
them.
-A majority of physicians on
an administrative board appoint-
ed by Brown would have control
of the fund.
-A requirement that the
board make annual reports to the
governor and Legislature on the
fiscal conditions of the fund and
be accompanied by recommen-
dations for reform of California
tort laws.
CMA S11ing
Over Low Fee
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -
Tbe California Medical Associa-
tion tOOay sued the state and
federal eovemmeots; charginl
the fees for Medi-Cal· services
were too low and..sabotaiini the
projram illel!.
Named aa defendants were
U.S. Health i;ducation and
Weltare Secretary David Mat-
thews, Gov. &dmund G. Brown
Jr .•. Calif ornla Health and
Wel!are SecretarY Marlo Obledo
aod Dr. Jerome Ladmer, d.lrec·
tor or Ute State Health Depa~
mmt.
•
1'0N1Gln'
•'THE HAP PIEST
MILLIONAIRE" -Costa Mesa
Civic Playhouse, Jan. 30, 31, Feb.
6 and 7, 8:lp p .m.; Feb. 1, 2;30
p.m.
KIWANIS TRAVEL SERIES
-Russ Potter presents .. East
Africa," OCC Auditorium, 8 p.m .
Adults $2.50, Students $1.
OCC LECTURE -"Medita-
tion." Barbara Bullard lecturer
Room 119 Fine Arts Bldg. 7:s0
p.m. '
BASKETBALL -Costa Mesa
• at Santa Ana, Estancia at Tustin,
Newport Harbor at Marina, 8
p.m.
"THE NATIONAL HEALTH"
-South Coast Repertory
Theater, through Sun. 8 p.m .
"A STREETCAR NAMED
DESIRE" -UCl Fine Arts
Village Theater, Jan. 30, 31, Feb.
5, 6 and 7, 8 p.m . Adm. $3.
SATURDA 'Y, JAN. 31
ESTANCIA ADOBE -StateHis-
toncal Landmark, Adams and
Mesa Verde Drive West, Sat. &
Sun. 1·5 p.m.
NEWPORT-MESA SCHOOL
BOARD -Special meeting,
Replace!'"ent of Estancia High
School air conditioning unit, Con-
. ference Room, 16·1 16th St.,
Newport Beach, 2 p.m.
BASKETBALL -OCC at
Grossmont, 7 :30 p.m.
Fr091PageAJ
NUDE •.•
publicized.
"Bill took it down after we got
the first one," said Mrs. Gross,
apparently anxious to stop the
phone from ringing.
She added that no newsmen
will be invited to record the
drama. "We want this t.o be a fun
party and don't want t o do
anything to commercialize it,"
s hesaid. ·
..
Pilot'•~t
FAA Hears Jet .
Flight Dangers
WASIDNOTON (UPI) -U.S.
airline panen1era face a CODS·
tant. fri1.btenine and nffdlesa
Potential for catastrophe ,because
of sloppy or dangerous practices
and unrealistic safety pro-·
cedures, alx veteran pllota said
today.
Reporting on a aalety study
conducted for the Federal Avi•·
tioo AdmlnlatraUon, the pilots
said the blame for the huards
they found must be shared by
airline crews, air traffic con-
trollers, airline managers, FAA
rule makers, aircraft builders
and airport operators.
"The accident record.1 show
th~t the airlines of the United
States are one of the safest
means of travel in the world,"
the report said. "However, air
travel is not as safe as it could be.
"The potential for a
F,....PageAJ
catastrophic accident is always
present and ta often avoided by
slim and, at times, nervous marldJ18 .''
The pilots made doz.ens or re··
commendations rangio• from
tighter cockpit discipline and a
complete overhaul ol the air traf-
tlc control system t.o the outlaw.
log of a dangerously bard-to-read
type of alUmeter a nd the in.stallst-t.lon of better runway approach
lights. . .. --·--
. In releasillg the 93-page report,
prepared after observations of
600 fii1hts OD 27 airlines, the FAA
added a 32-page reply accepting
many of the pilots• criticisms and
·recommendations.
· But the agency rejected flatly
the harshest criticism of its air
traffic controllers and the way
their control rooms are operated.
The pilots said the control
system "is a jumble of people,
radar scopes, communication
.lines and stacks of paper strips,
SURGERY • people communicating by voice.
• by radio to impersonal aircraft
geries were still down 50 percent out in space, while in the control
at Hoag today. room people are milling about;
Tom Richards, administrator talking and creating distrac-tions." of Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital, said elective surgeries They said t e mpers often d 40 t become short in air-to-ground were own percen today, but communications and controllers added that scheduling for next week indicated a return to "often show disdain for pilots" normal. • and ord er them to perform
Rich a rd Gr u 0 d y , ad. dangero~ man~~vers or distract
ministrator of Huntington In-• them dunng c~bcal takeoff and
tercommuoity Hospital, said the landing operaltons ..
patient load bad been down 50 But the FAA said such state-
percent, but this week the load men~ 8!',e "inaccurate and mis-
had been increasing steadily and leading:
added, •'Things are looking The pilots who prepared the re-
normal for early next week.'• port were Art Ashworth, C. E.
He said many doctors at the B~set, Robert N. Buck, Don Mc-
hospital were disappointed Bam, Walter P . ~oran. ~d Paul
because other doctors in the area So:cterland, all retired airline cap-
had not joined the slowdown. t~ who have logged a com-
"They lost money and we lost bmed total of nearly 160,000 hours-
money " he said. "Quite a few in the air. Their report stressed
have told me this is the last tiane they. were .. behold~n to no one"
they will ever go on a strike.•• and interested on~}'. m safety.
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TORRANCE•
met HAW'ntORNt BLVD.
(Open fd. Ill f . ~o. 12-5·31)) 37 .. Jm ·