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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1976-11-10 - Orange Coast Pilot,f •• ' I Clerk Foreed to Strip Slemons Slt•r 'Threats' Made Sparks Call Against Patty; For Laws1•it Transfer Made - ... __ ongress WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, NOVEMBER 10, 1976 llOl •'·NO JU, 4 SECTIONS. 41 PAOES Storied \' essel You've heard the song, .. The Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald" by Gordon Lightfoot. This is the ship. Just one year ago today, the Edmund Fitzgerald sank in a st0rm on Lake Superior, taking its crew of 29 to a watery grave 530 feet below the surface. It was known for its ore cargo record -30,000 tons of taconite pellets in 1968. ArIDed 'Mutt 'n Jeff' Roh Lagund'Store A "Mutt and J efr'' team of pistol·packing robbers hit a small Laguna Beach gift shop Monday ta king $6.1 and neeing after forcing the lone female clerk to disrobe in a back room. The two m en, one well over six feet tall and with a heny midsec- tion. t.he other short and slight, entered the Forever Fancy shop at 276 S. Coast Highway just. before closing. After browsing about. the big man pulled out o concealed re- volver and turning to the young woman clerk, ordered her lo give him allthestore's cub. ., After grabbing the money, the men, botb of whom now bran- dished guns, told the clerk to go into the store's back room where she was ordered to strip. The woman removed her clothing and she was told to stay in the room. The men fled. The clerk quickly clothed herself and called police. First police units arrived on the scene less than a minute af\er the call, Capt. Neil Purcell said. Additional police units and off· duty detectives were thrown into the search , but the bandits eluded authorities. Both men were or latin ap- pearance and bad dark collar· lenctb ha.ir. ver Tax Sle1nons Mailing Suit Eyed Saddleback Valley taxpayers' advocate Ed McKean has pro- posed that the County Board of Supervisors institute a suit for damages against the parties respons ible for one of Jim Slemons' political mailings. In a letter sent to Supervisor Thomas Riley, McKean contends that grounds for the suit would in- clude "defamatory acts against the people" and "willful mis- management of public monies." He also has asked the county postal inspector to determine if the mailings were a violation of the U.S. Postal Regulations. The mailing McKean has taken exception to was sent to voters in the 74th Assembly District where Slemons was the Republican nominee. The leaflet said that Democrat Ron Cordova -who was elected to the assembly seat the next day -"has recenUy been charged with misconduct in a SlO m illion lawsuit involving massage parlors.·• The lawsuit apparently never has been fil ed and was related to a case Cordova handled whilie working as u deputy District At· tomey. If the action has not been filed, McKean said, the letter is a falsehood and "a blatant attempt lo defame the character of Ron Cordova.'' · McKean. chairman of Sad- dleback Homeowners Outraged Over Taxes, contends the tax· payers subsidize both the Postal Service and voter mailing lists. He said taxpayers have a "vest· ed interest" in the mail but have no right to stop getting such mail. "I feel the people have been CSee SLEMONS, Page A2) HER MICROWAVE A H<YI' SELLER ''The second person who called bought it. I'm really tickled with my Instant success!·• Here's the classified ad that sparked the sale for tbls Cost& Mesa woman: AMANA MICROWAVE OVEN . 6 mos. old. 1'ransforablc wnrr. S325. XXlc-JCXX~ tr you'd like to convert an ap· pllance to cash, or anything else, call the Dally Pilot at 642-56 78 . The people's marktlplace. Mynah Error Luck May Be a Cune ERIE, Pa. (AP) -Rajah the psychic mynah bird has some explaining to do. Rajah and his master, Colin Kerr. are trying to drum up guests for their SS-a-head "Luck Ball" at an Erie hotel Nov . Zl. But they're frequently reminded that the bird bombed on his last prediction -that President Ford would win the election. "They must have taken it out of context," Kerr argued when shown a news story quoting the bird as squawking "Ford wins" afewdays before the election. In addition to the problem with the prediction, another deterrent to sale of tickets may be the reward promised to one participant. Kerr said Rajah will be set free to fly through the audience, landing on someone's head and leaving his droppings. "This will bring good luck to the patron,'' Kerr said. Threats Reported Patty's Tantrums Told by Inmates By the Associated Press The San Diego Union quoted an unnamed source in Northern California today as stating that threats had been made to Patty Hearst while the she was at a federal correctional institution at Pleasanton. The Union a lso quoted Dr. Owen Kennedy, assistant r e· gional director for the Federal Bureau of Prisons in San Fran· cisco, as saying the swtlch was at Miss Hearst 's request "for security purposes." The New York Times also re· ported today that inmates at t.he Pleasanton prison said Miss Hearst had "a number of tan· trums," in which she went to her room and beat her fists again s t the wall until the knuckles were scraped and red. Last week, the Times' ac· count said, Miss Heant refused to report to her job of helping clean a dormitory unit. When told by authorities she would be put in isolation as punishment. she reportedly said that was what she wanted. Cadets AJter Code WEST POINT, N.Y. (AP) - West Point cadets have voted to abolish a review board or officers and Instead try alleged violators of the honor code themselves. The chairman of the cadet honor committee today called the change "a kind of new becin· nine.'' Miss Hearst had been at the campus·like Pleasanton facility since Sept. 24, when she was sentenced by U.S. District Court Judge William Orrick. She will become eligible for parole in 16 months. She was moved from the spacious federal prison in Northern California to a 12· story facility in San Diego at her own request for security re· as005, officials say. Concern for Miss Hearst's safety was believed to stem from reports that she has agreed to testify for the pro- secution at two upcoming trials <See PA'M'Y, PageA2) Wooden Leg Bares Heroin SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A veteran who lost a limb in the Vietnam war wu arrested by airport customs officials who said they found $1 JmlWon worth of heroin inside bis artificial leg. Ronald Odom Carter, 29, of San Francisco, was jailed Tuesday on $50,000 bond after appearing before a federal mqbtrate on charges of smuggling 2.2 paunds of heroin into the country. The federal complaint says Carter was aearcbed upon aniv· lng at San Francisco lnterna· Uonal Airport OD a flight trom Hong Kong. _uts • • Wait, See Says Key Democrat WASHINGTON (AP) -As President-elect Jimmy Carter considers whether to propose a new tax cul in January, key con· gre.ssional Democrats say it's too early to tell lf one will be needed and warn they will approach any proposal cautiously. Carter said last weekt.hati!tbe economy does not begin improv- ing by January, there is a "strong possibility" that be would a s k for a tax cut to stimulate it. But Congress' chief taxwriter. House Ways and Means Chairman Al Ullman, said Tues- day that Congress should ap- proach any such proposal "witb great caution." "We would be deceiving the American people if they were led to believe they would be getting major tax deduction," Ullman said at a news conference in Colorado Springs, Colo. In more detailed remarks re. leased through bis Washington office, the Oregon Democrat said It is too e arly to determine whether an additional lax cut on top of the $19 billion tax cut CSeeTAX CUT, Page A%) Coast Weather Night and morning fog, otherwise fair with higb clouds Thursday. Days to cool with highs in low 70s, lows to near SO. INSIDE TODA V Thrte Son ~in imnaU• U¥re caught in.a tn-/o« tuft· ."'nel, JO feet VftdergroUftd, end· mg a month-long . ottempC. at eacope. When ccphmid. IMy were onlJI 35 Jut. alOOfl from freedom. StM11 P.age A5. I I . AZ DAILY PILOT s Wednesday. November 10 197e Driver Facing Court A Weal Covina man who was booked on manslaughter charges Aug. l3 alter a Laguna Canyon Road collision that claimed the life or the woman passenger in the oncoming car bas been or - dered to face arraignment Nov. 26 in Orange County Superior Court. Judge J ames H. Walsworth set the court appearance for Morris Lynn West, 28, who is additional· ly charged with being under the inlluence of drugs and drink while operating a vehicle. Reports riled by Irvine police indicate that West was driving on the wrong side of a double yellow line when his auto smashed into a pickup truck occupied by Morton Solberg, 40, and his wife, Linda Suzanne, 26, of R unning Springs, Calif. Mrs. Solberg d ied in the wreckage of the truck. Her husband has recovered after treatment at Saddleback Com· munity Hospital. A probation officer who com· piled a pre-court r eport after in· tervie wing West and his woman passenger asserts that she told him she and West drank wine and s moke d ma rijuana shortly before the accident. GoldRmh Hikes Cost LONDON <AP) -A sud· den rush or buyers sent gold prices in London up by more than $4.50 an ounce today to $136, its highest level since ear ly this year. Dealers reported buying by the Far East. speculators and industrial and jewelry users or gold. Fro.P~AJ !TAX CUT ••. already approved by Congress would be appropriate. Ullm an said a nti-recession job programs and incentives for in· vestments in high unemployment areas "would be more effective in dealing with the problem." In a related development, Dr. Gary Fromm of the Stanford Research Institute told a con· gressional panel today that the only question about a tax cut is how large 1l should be. A tax cut or some other means of stimulating the economy 1s CARTER GETTING ORGANIZED-PAGE A4 needtd m the near future not only for Amencan consumers but also fo r stability of the free "llt Orld economy. he said "'The state or demand still is weak and the free-world system might easily be plun~ed into another downturn by mpderate shocks from large Arab nation oil pnce increases. an mternallonal monetary crisis or widespread harvest failurc~s. he told a House- Sen ate econom iC' committee hearing on the fu ture or the economy. "The pnnc1pal issue currently confronting e c on o mic policymakers an the t:n1led States 1s the size of a tax cut needt'd to put the economy back on its growth path,.. t-'romm added Prof Jay W. 1-·orrcster of the Mas sac husetts Ins titute of Technology testified that long- term c ycles may have more beanng on the present economy than recent problems and said that depressions and recessions have been occurring about every· !iOyears. "We believe it Is urgent to ex amine the possibility that the 1980s could r epeat behavior like that experienced in the 1930s,' · he said. OR ANOE COAST DAILY PILOT ,,..()er t,..,...(ft.11\f 0ti'\" •1lof Wltf'IW"!•l"I ~ bol"lfil ttwo ... .,., Pt•U ''pubt1Vleel h<; '""'°'~ (_IM\f Puftl•\"'t,,.,(OMO.&ll'ly \t~Att1>"ft ,...,.., hi> f'iWbh ,PYld M l'\nf:tjll\I H\rtN~ '''°"'~ fM ( ''' • ~~ N•#OOf'f f\,..wf'I "4v"f~Qlll't 9-Mf\ J"~ '•jn ve11.,., '""'"'" ~•cto1.o. ' vetih •rvt \MWft•ft.-arl'I ~ulh(~ .. \f A\t~.;~~i..tlr'1 •·on ., Dti'bt·'"""··J S.•tvrdan ""° ~ .. .,. r .. ,. O' fl< O .. ' i>utth Pl•"Q C'te"t 1\ 414 lJO ~\l 8•t ~''""'' (Oo\t• Me'• C•lltor""••.,.,._ .... " ...... Pr• '°"""'A"I P~· IW>f" u·o:• c..,....., V•ce Pte\1ctirfltlt .,.._CA• .. MilN7'f T"eftlt.t\lt•h•I tonor , .. .,,.,. ,._.,.......,.. M"""~W"t l «f'IGr 0-lf'1ttN '-"' IUt!Urdll" H,j,11 AUt\l•t\f ~""O•f'llQ lcJ•lon. OflleH Cett'"~" J)l'tWntR•v\tr••t l~CIVf\• &ttt Pl tttfl Gtt-NW••• \l•Hl HVf'lt•"OIOI" k•t"" t rt rt &-~f'I f'ovtt1vi1111(f ~ttd~ttJet 'i V1t1•y 7)101 l" l".n flttMrt "' \.\fll OIPOI' r,,,.,.,. .. v Telephone (714)6424321 CIHtlfled Advertlalng 642·5e7'8 ~ctl•btO ValltY fliffM Of'fl.<t 511 .. :110 ,,.,.. '-" c .. ,,..,,., 416-0tJO ''°"' Nof1" °''"" c~, ~nit~ l40•12IO ~HJl'll m~ Or•-Co.t\I 11\ .. 11"'4,.. C-.... ~' No ,,..1 uor1t \ "'"'''•'"IM ... ,., .. , "'-•1ltr er ff••rtf-.ie"'•fllt\ IWttlf\ 1n1v e. '90'•dw<•d wlt~wt \OtU•I P•'f'n4\\lt~ •f <eovr~tewMr \H:ef\ct < ,.,, "''••-o••• ,., c.111 -.Wu C••••or"lf lvbur~tion t)y t •"I~' \I '9 "'-fll1ftl'I •Y ""•I t 4 \0 ~f\llltly r•Hltflr, Mt~l*""U SO~t"t' AP Wirepfioto PHILADELPHIA HOTEL WILL CLOSE ITS DOORS SOON Bellevue-Stratford Done In by Legionnaire's Disease Hotel Joins Legion As Disease Victim PHILADELPHIA <AP> Thf· 72-year·old Bcllevuc-Stratfo rcJ Hotel will close its doors Nov 18, a victim of ruir.ous busmcs:-. declines stemming from' last summer's still unsolved lt!g10n· naire's disease. "The Bellevue-Stratford has found it impossible any longer to withstand the economic im· pact of the worldwide adverse publi city which has been as sociated with the 'legionnaire's disease' even though no in vestigative agency found any link whatsoever t o hotel opera· tions." William Chadwick, hotel vice president, said. .. Despite the lack of credible evidence that any caus al fal"tor existed. the continuous public reports linking the hotel to re· ports or the illness t-as been ruinous to i t s bu:-.1nes:.. · · Chadwick said. .. The average cash los'> fnr the last 90 days has been $10,000 per day. adding up to a~gr~g~t t• losses in the order of SI million for the perio d of adver :-.c publicity." the statement satd The hotel was the head quarters for the 1ll·fatcd state Amer ican Legion convention July 21 ·24 following v.hirh 29 persons died and 151 others became ill from a mysteri ous disease. The Bellevue rccPnlly has hosted a number of pubhc1l> onented events aimed al rcstor· mg bus iness Special arra ni:cmcnb an• lw ing made to rl'locatc J>t:rmanent hotel residents. :-.•11d Gustave Am s terdam , c hairm a n of Bankers Serunt1cs Corp Yth1rh owns a controllmg intt'rcst in the hotel. .. We will make cvef) effort 10 assist in reloca tm~ al l our hvll I p('rsonnel in other po:.1L1vn:. lo the maximum extent poss1bh.•,'' he said. AP Wi'""-10 Making It' a t~e• Former U.S. Ambassador to Moscow Walter J . Stoessel Jr. s a ys the Soviet Union is continuing to eavesdrop on the Ame ri can Embassy ·with its micr owave born· bardment. Stoessel. now amba ss ad or to West ~rmany , says the process does not present a health hazard but ·'we would like to see it stopped." llcallh off1c1als included in their dl'f1n 1t10n of the illness that a person had to have v1s1t· ed the Bellevue between JuJy I and Aug 18 T he hotel. which has 750 rooms. has ha d an occupancy rate of R Pl'rcent since lhe out· hreak or legionnaire's djsease, the Philadelphia Daily News ~aid today. The paper said that eve ry 10 days, t he Bc llevuc's parent company, Ba nkers Security Corp., has transferred Sl00,000 or its own assets to the hotel to ke<>p it anoat The Daily Ne ws said the city intends to try lo buy the hotel with hopes or immediately sell· mg the property to a developer for construction of a hotel with complete con vtntion facilities. From Pa9e A J PATTY ... involving her former under· ground companions. One trial at wh ich Miss Hearst is expected lo be a gov· emment witness is that of Sym· b1onese Liberation Army mem· bers William and Emily Harris on C'harges of kidnap111g Miss Hearst in February 1974. The other is the weapons and ex· p lo s 1vcs tria l o r Wendy Yoshimura . with whom Miss Hea rst was li\'ing when she was captured last year. Miss He arst. 22. who is s erv- ing a sevt'n-ycar sentence for a rmed bank robbe ry, was dnvcn to the Metropolitan C'or· r<'ct1onal Center in San Diego Tul'sdav n 111 ·Garrison. warden a t Ple as anton. s aid Miss Hcar~t fi led a written request for lht• tr.insfrr IJst wrck. "The rlecis ion to move her was made Monday with her at- torney's approval," Garrison said. "l don't know if her fami· ly had any say in this act ion.'' He s aid the bureau·s head- quarters in Washington and the U.S. attorney general were in· volved in the decision. Dut Asst. U.S. Atty. F . Steele La ngford, in San Francisco, srud he was surprised to l~arn of the sudden transfer. He said he had been schedu leq to participate Friday m <0iea'J:jng in the Hearst cas e. <-- She had spent several months at the San Diego facility Hus year undergoing a diagnostic study ordered by the court. The Pleasanton facilit y. which opened in 1974, houses 250 inmates. mostly under the a e of 26. The San Diego prison about 500 inma • most 'OIAmr:10m arc in for sh terms t sentenced. SLEMONS. • damu~ed and I think it's time the people act." he said. "l think lhe people are biitger than this." McKean said he is aslnnf{ the supervisors lo get an opinion on the possibility of a swt from the county counsel. He said h.,• will also talk to en attorney to s~ 1f 1l's possible for peopl\! to sue on their own. 'No Dignit~ Left' Second Wife Angry, in Need SIOUX FALLS.S D CA Pl .. , don'thave a shred of dignity left,·· says Patricia Ma rtan. who learned after Bob Martm·s death three weeks ago her husblUld had a second wife and family 200 miles away. .. I've been reduc•ed l<l havm~ to beg for ADC (Aid to Uependt•nt Children) and food stamps,•· Mr::.. Martin told a reporter. "But I'm protecting my children. 1 can go through a nything , but those children have to eat. All they know is that their daddy 1s dead and that they loved their daddy dearly." Martin, South Dakota's direc- tor or economic development. died of a heart attac-k at 52 It \lo as learned then he had a wife a nd five children here. a wife and four children in P ierre. .. I'm very angry that I have been put in this po5lllon, · said Patr icia Martin. 33, "M> thoughts are 'How dare you do this to me: and re me mber. 1 ·m not just some s weetie stashc"C.I in the corner.' 'Tm a vt'ry s1mph.• person. 1·m a mother first . and I was of the opinion that Bob was marned, had three C'hildren and was divorced ... State Atty. Ge n. William J anklow confirmed r c po .c.s Martin li ved a dual hfe. Jauklo~ said travel and motel voucht•rs will be exam med by a grand JUry to check "somC' questions in· volvedin the use of state funds.'' · J a c k A 11 m o n . l h c st a t c· • ~ secretary of ~c onom1c· a nd t ouris m d evclopmeut a nd Martin's boss in Pi<.'rre. said ht' never suspl'<:tcd the "'Tally llo" listed on Marlin 's travel vouche rs was the name of the apartment complex in which his Sioux F arts family hved The state agency has offices in bolh Pierre and Sioux Falls. Allmon said Martin ~<'ncr·d ly listed the Tall y-Ho for lodgml,l on travel vouchers turned in for Sioux Falls lte said he assumed 1t was a motel The family in Pierre, which has refused to co mme nt on tbe mat- ter, lives ma single fdnuly house Allmon said Mart in usually asked $11 .50 per day, the state m ax imum. for lodgmg m Sioux FaUs . Patricia Marlin said she mar· rfod Ma rtin in 1968 but has been unable to find a marriage license "I reme mber si~ning a docu m ent,that's all. Hctookcareof1t They have tried to check it out Twiee in Day legally. but obvioWJly I waa duped, and l don't know why. "I believe thls other wile was just as much In the dar1t 'as I was. She had to go t1'rou1h the ahoclt of this also. 1 feel very sorry for bet. Her children must be old enough to underst and all this. Mine aren't, fortunately." The Lyon County clerk in Em· poria. Kan., confirmed that Mary Lou Martin w.as married to Bob Martin in May 1948. Mesa Gas Station Target of Gunmen Two youths, ~imulating a weapon, escaped with $15 Tues· day night in the second robbery or Costa Mesa s ervice stations that day. In an earlier robbery Tuesday. two Los Angeles county men werl' arrested by police as they allegedly n ed the scene of a rob· bery with an undisclosed amount of cash. Today police arc seeking two men in the robbery of the CRASH CAUSED BY OUTHOUSE V I STA (AP) -Edward Edwards swerved lo Jl.V®.hil· tmg an outhouse and three people wer e hurt s lightly when his car and theirs collided. The outhouse. which had fallen off a truck onto California 78, escaped unscathed. Economy Self-Scrv s tation at 1740 Newport Blvd. Attendant Edward Handley told police two men approached tum on foot at about 10 p.m. He sajd one of the bandits simulated a gun in his pocket, telling Handley to "Do it right or you're a dead man." The p a ir then fled dow.n Newport Boulevard. The attendant described one suspect as being fi ve feet five in· ches tall. or medium build and with light blond hair. The second bandit was described as being five feel eight inches tall, with a thin build, dark blond hair and wearing a watch cap., P oltce arrestecr-two Los Angeles men in an earlier rob· bery Tuesday at the Chevron sta- tion at 3190 Harbor Blvd. That pair a re being held in Costa Mesa jail with bail set at $25.000. _ ... Delicious money-saving secrets of slow crock pot cooking! \l;il ilv l lnll111:111 "-. 1:111 11111 ( 0101 /,, 11/ ('1u1/;1•11/C'<111l•lu111l .. 111;d,1''-' t h1· 111\ ~.1 1 ·ri1··~ 111' '101\ cm k11·~~ IT\ ... 1.;I clc·;1:·. Alld 1l \\·011't 1·11 ... t ·' n11 :t 111·n11\ 111i\( ... r11 \1•r 1(-; d<·li1·i11lb l't"l't•I ~11\\' ll11~ t•11•;1t l111PI\ i•. ~11111"'-­ I n·1· :1l I ·.t11111r111 ,1 l '1•d1 r.il . Ea l better and save money. 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I ltu•1L11 l(llll\ 1'1ntll lil-41 ~;.3;;;;;;, Wedno:ioay No11ember 10 1376 DAIL v PILOT A3 County OKs $200,000 Parks Study By KA THY CLANCY 0t1-.o.11,r11.e~ Orange County recre,aUon of· ficiala .,-en 't sure resJdents still need the 28 regional parks planned more than 10 years aao. · They don 'l know what facilities .t1hould be included in (uture parks, how much they might cost ,taxpayers or how great a dollar contribution state and federal of- ficials would make for park de- velopment. Pay Suit Delayed In Court By TOM BARLEY OfllM D•oly ru.is!MI An Orange County Superior Court bearing into a local lawsuit that challenges the state's new minimum wage and work rules law was delayed late Tuesday until Dec. 1. But Presiding Judge Claude M. Owens m ade it clear in rescheduling the hearing that an earlier order setting aside many provisions or the new measure will remain in effect unless he rules otherwise. The restraining order earlier signed by Judge Walter Smith does not include the $2.50 an hour minimum wage, it was stressed Tuesday. State lawyers confirmed that the $2.50 minimum went into ef· feet Oct. 17 and is still m effect throughout California. They said a number or work rc- l--~f1tt;· ons-that-were ""Spelted -mrt by Judge Smith m his order arc set aside and will re main so pending lhe hearing Dec. J Judge Owens derued a bid by lawyers for the State Industrial Welfare Commission lo have the bearing moved to San F'tancisco or, possibly, Sacramento. • And be also rejected a move by •the state to consolidate the :Orange County action filed by the .California Manufadurers ·As - '.lsociation with eight ide ntical ;lawsuits filed in eight other coun· lies. ~ State lawye r s pointed out -without success that transfer or the bearing lo San Francisco and .consolidation of the laws uits would be in the best interests or the commission wh.ich has its 'headquarters in the bay city. Judge Owens appeared to ·•gree with CMA lawyers that .state attorneys were "forum shopping" and hoping to improve their chances for suc~ess b.> hold ing the heanng in a more Cavora· ble environment I CMA lawyers argue that lhe $2.50 an hour m1n1mum wage •~ unfair to employers be<'ause 11 is higher than the federaJ nummum of $2.30. They also argue that the new work rules illegally interfcn• with labor contracts that include similar rules negotiated between employers and unions. 30-year-old Wreck Found HEM ET (AP > A hiker In the isolated Bautls ta Ca nyon east of here ha5 round the wreckage of a PT-22 Army Air Corps lrauung airplane that crashoo more than JO years ago Rivennde County she riWs de- puties said there were apparent· ly no fataht1es in the wrttk The PT-22 earned a two man crew. Deputies say 1l apparently took off from Ryan 1o·1eld in RJvers1de County. It was discovered by Manon Philippi of San J acmt.o. County supe r v isors hove agreed to hire a consultant for up to $200,000 to study those ques- tioos. They have given county En- vironmental Management Agen· cy <EMA> officials up to 18 months lo come up with the answers . Larry Leaman. manager of public facilJties operations for the EMA, explained the existing ' maste r plan of regional parks was completed in 1965. It was re· vamped seven years later The county has bwlt nine of the 28proposed parks :.ofar but wants to redesign the pl an for the future Leaman noted that three of the proposed park s ates listed· are partially contained in the new Caspers Regional Park in south Orange County. Other partb of the plan also are out of date. he explained. "A lot of philosophical issues will be looked at in detail and a PRESIDENT PLAYS IN PALM SPRINGS Ford Follows Through In Gott Swing Ford Stays Mum On Call to Ni~on PALM SPRINGS, Calif (APJ President Ford appears n·- 1 url ant to d isc uss the post election pho ne c;.ill he made to former President Richa rd M Nt'<On . \\'hlle Jiouse staffers belated I~ acknowle0dged Tuesday that Ford phoned his r~igned pre· . Smog Device Firm Suing Over Repeal Dam ages totaling Sl!> millio n were demanded from the slate Tuesday by an Orange firm that m a nufactured the now unnecessary NOx smog control device. Lawyers for Air Quality Producls, Inc., claim in their Orange County Supenor Court lawsuit that the firm was un- fairly encouraged by the ~tale> to design and manufact ure an e mission control de\'1ce that its makers still believe to be effec- tive Th ey con t e nd t hat the Legislature wrongly repealed the NO x ins t allation law in Apnl 1975 after the fi rm had bttn assured that all California rars produced between 1966 and 1970 would reqwrc installauon or the device It is alleged that the firm has s ulfe red heavy losses through the dumping of m1lhom, of de· vices that will not now be used decessor Thursday and talked for several minutes. When reporters tned to ques lion the vacationing Ford about the phone call before he began a round or golf Tuesday, the President's only comment waf'. "We are n 'l having any press conference. I called him, said hello to him .. Whi te House Press Secretary Ron Ne5sen then told reporters be would telk •lt Ford artd as k why th e call was made and what topics were discussed. But Ncss<'n 's office later put out a bn ef statement that reporters· questions had been "answered b~ the President .. earlier in the d.iv Ford v. as gotr1nf! at the Thun- derbird Country Club. wher e he and mt'mbers of his familv are occupying a ho me owned by LeCln arri Fir est one, U.S. am- bassador to Belgium, alongside the 13th fairway. The President looked a bit d rawn 'to m any reporters and s howed little e vidence of having soaked up any of the wa rm de- sert sun s ince arriving here Sunday on an e1ght·day holiday. Ford play<'d 18 holes of golf Tuesday and planned another round today at the Thunderbird Club It has been his pattern he r e t o get up early fo r breakfast and a swim. then do some routine paper work before heading for the links Mrs f ord a nd da ughter Susan a re with him a l the> Fir<>stone home Sons Steve and Jack ha\1e left P alm Spnngs for St eve's ho m e i n Newport Beach. And It Comes Out Here. • • Arr()Ws show where three ~an Quentin State Prison inmates hoped to find freedom\ through a tunnel from a !'Ub- basement or the north cellblock housin~ death row. Prison offirinls said the con· victs had completed 77 feet of the tunnel tX'forE> the> "ere t .. ui1,ht <Story, related photo. A5) t l dolJar sign pul on them." Leaman said. The board said Tuesday a citizens committee should work with the consullant. &aperviaors also asked staff members to try to find" a pitrk site in the Garden Grove, Cypress or Stanton area. A proposal to build a regional park in Garden Grove on what bad been Marine Corps land died early this fall after supervisors deadlocked on the plan. Supervisor Laurence Sebm.it. who, along with board Chairman Ralph Diedrich. favored the park development, s aid Tuesday be wanted to be certain park plans for that area are studied. Leaman said the study will ad· dress whether county funds should be spent for l~acre re· gional parks br for a larger number of small parks. In addition, the consultant will determine whether clUien needs are best served by providing parks in populated areas where land is costly or in unPopulated re. gions where land is cheaper. County officials also booe to df'. velop a park flnanclna procram and pno(ity list, learn whet.her ball dJamonds, motorcycle parks or other facilities are most needed and what residents' Jong.range park de.nands will be. GSA Budget Short County Neeth $500,000 U.S. Grant Forty.seven buildings oc· cupied by Orange County govern· ment offices need $16S8, l 10 worth of renovating to make them fully accessible to the handicapped, county supervisors learned Tues· day. parking stalls. ramps, handrails, lowered drinking fountains and telephone booths, restroom equipment. elevators. sjgns and wider doorways to accommodate wheelchairs. · In addition to county ad· m1nis trat1ve offices, s uch facilities are needed at library branches, county-operated com- munity centers and court build· ings, the report said. The board appointed Anthony and Langford Architects, a con· suiting firm which bas been sur- veying handicapped facilities in rounty offices, to begin designs for the wheelchair ramps, ban· drails and other amenities. To the Rescue But, officials of the county General Services Agency <GSA) said in a repQrt to supervisors. there is only $250,000 in the budget to complete construction. Spiderman Battles Pregnancy. County offic ials s aid the federal govel'nment has been asked to chip in another $500,000 under te rms of the Federal Public Works Employment Act of 1976. If those funds aren't granted, they sugges ted s upervisors might look elsewhere for the con- struct1on money. State law requires that. the 47 county leased and. owned b'uitd- ings have some fac1liltes for the handicapped. And the consultant said all of the buildings s urveyed were lacking in some areas. But GSA officials said not all of the amenities listed·by the con· sultant may be needed to meet requirements of the law. In addition to the 47 buildings, the consultant is still studying another 42 buildings which have high public use. the GSA report · said. Handicapped faciUliPs include LOS ANGELES CAP> -The diabolical alien, The Prodigy, is seconds away from his na- tionwide telecast that wiU draw millions of innocent teen·agers into bis seamy plot for a popula· lion explosion on earth. "When I 'm in front of that television tonight, I 'II bit the beardless, mindless crow~ with everything I've got," snarls the sinister visitor from outer space. The plan is to tell adolescents that pregnancy is good for them, that il will balance their hor mones and control acne. "Whal jive stuff this turkey hands out!" muses that peren- nial good guy. Spider Man. In the nick of time he breaks in· to the studio, rips off the Prodigy's human mask and foils the plot with super spider webs. "Ne ver again will you mes m e r ize kids with your destructive propaganda ," a triumphant Spider Man chides the demon. This comic book scene of good El Toro Legal Staff Studies Pot Charge Twenty.two of tbe 176 mi!Jtary policemen stationed at El Toro Marine Corps Air Station have been relieved or their duties for all e ged unlawful us e o r possession of mariju~a. Formal charges may be brouizht uainst the men by the end of the week, a Marine Corps spokesman said. The base legal staff currently is studying the evidence obtained during an intens ive internal in· ves Ugation which had been con- ducted by •the base Criminal In· vesligative Division , the spokesman said. He said the alleged violations occurred while the Marines were off duty and off the base . However, he said he could not re- veal the circums tances of the in· vestigation or violations other than that they did occur in Orange County. Although the men were re· lieved of their duties as military policemen Monday, none have been confined or restricted to the base. he said. The spokesman said the men are subject to the Uniform Code of Military Justice. Under this federal law. tie said. use or possession of marijuana is a felony offense. · IC charges are lodged against the men, he said, if Is doubtful that they will involve a general co\.D"t martial. About 60 of the base·s MPs were investigated for use M possession of manjuana in 1973. Although 32 men were suspended from d uty during that probe, the S.Pokesman said, only two Marines, eventually were charged. versus evil i~ Planned Paren-- thood's newest approach to the teen.age pregnancy problem ...:. the plight of an estimated millioa American teen·agers a year, ac. cording to Dr. Hugh AnW)'I. ex. ecutive director of lhe organiza, lion's office here. ' The 2S·cent comic book bi Marvel Comics is d:istrt bated by Planned Parenthood clinics na.~ ltonw1de. It deals wilb pregnancy and contraception, homosel(U~~ ty. masturbation and venere..., disease. . It s kirts morality entirely; focusing mainly on the value ot good sense and knowing the facts, Anwyl said. "There's a lot of material the bad guy can propagate," he said. "What we are trying to show ki~ through Spider Man is that yqu don't have to be trapped. "It's a far cry from anything moralistic. I think it Points toooe significant thing-that lbere is an option, that you have a choice. It's not pushing anything or say- ing it's wrong to be pregnant." Spider Man, you may recall, ls the alter ego of a high school stu- dent who was bitten by a radioac- tive spider in 1962. The bite supercharged him, turning him into a bumble, r ather reluctant. crusader for good and justice. Planned Parenthood r e - cognized his appeal to children and teens . "The kids like it and that's about as much as we can ex· peel." said J ohanna Pugnl of Planned Parent hood In New York. who developed lbe cam· pa1gn . Bar Burglars Get $1,185 in Coins Burgla rs who kicked in the re- ar window to gain entry to a Trabuco Canyon bar took $1,185 in cash from pinball and cigarette machines. the jukeboic and the pool table. Orange County sheriff's of. ficers said the theft was dis-- covered when operators O{ Cook's Comer Bar, 19122 El Toro Road, returned next day to open the business. They said the in- truders ransacked the premises. SURPRISE HER WITH PEARLS! Gem Talk J;,, .I<' /II \/1'11/W-•. ' IS THE SPARKLE FOR REAL? Nothing s parkles quite like a - diamond. But, ther:e a r e some synthetics and some tricks that. unfortunately, can cause people to pay for something they'r e not getting.· A professional jeweler, who sees a lot of diamonds over the years. is not going to be fooled by one of the imitations or tricks. He will subject each stone lo proper light and • trained eye. Some of the less·important stones that can be confused wlth the diamond include the whlte zircon, synthetic strontium Titanate. rutile, white sapphire, while s pinet , and the new "Yag" stone. There are also mounting trlckft that can fool the un·proCessional eye, or even a more experienced eye If the lighting isn't just right. Ir you have a stone you're not sure of, it's best to go lo a professional to have it checked out. And, of course, when you 're buying anything a s Important as a diamond, the same kind of advice ts ever more impor- tant Be sure you 're buymJi more than just a pretty ghtter. ,, \ i . "1til ~ ' t'~. ' "".°• \l_ . ..,.. ; ' \:.': \ . ::\·d::; l . . . ( / ' . I ,., . : / ~,, OdCJ-a-f'tead l...tt r.. enoov ,.,.. or""'Ot ot .,..,,no •ut-tlf ,...,..,,., P"~rh lom "CIO A ~•rl '"'" t•\htOf'llt>lt" q1tt tnr Chr•\lm.t' wm tW'I c hilttt\.twwf b• ~t tor v•1tn to t0"11f' Th,.,, r•cn, ''''''~ look "'" .•tt~nt "'"' •Ol'<••I ote,.\i!W\ Alltr •II ""'"'~ qi) ""lh evt ryllllnQ 11nytlmtil YllMt.,'" \IW' w"•" '""m •• • C1,t11'11y cl\A"' 0< •\ • CUl/11110 II"••• nM:-1~•. their wermlll ~no h1\f., wlll 111' ~ t ontonual >OUr<~ uf "''°" •nd Duuty lo Mr IOt•rl\ ... tllt ld,.~I llQ1 !Or any OCCa\I,.. ~ mok• ""' l'l•OOY l)V 11111111110 on Ille Oflgl11a1 Ad/d-lt, i>.e rl, Avollnblt onty 1111111• f4tWtllln. J. C. .J.lumphrkd Jewelerd 1823 NEWPORl BLVD COSTA MESA CONVENIENT TERMS 8JnkAmf'rr('ard-Maslet Charg{' 1 30 YEARS.IN THE ~AMc LOCATION PHONE ~·3401 .l . I t A4 DAIL v PILOT Wednesday. November 10, 1970 C.arter Structuring ST. SIMONS ISLAND. Ga. (AP) -Jimmy Carter is COD· siderint a new plan for appoint- ing Cabinet members,.and senior White House stafr and has ruled • ou~ naming a single, all-powerful chief or s taff. "It is not his intention to have a single person who would function u a chief of staff and exercise authority over all other start members," Jody Powell , Carter's press secretary, bas said. ALTHOUGH PRESIDENT Ford uses a staff chief, the best· known recent staff chief was H.R. Haldeman, Nixon's right- band man. Even Cabinet officers had to go through Haldeman when they sought access to Nixon. 'Spokes of Wheel' Eyed Powell said that is not Carter's style and is not the way be ran for office when be was governor or Georgia or his campaign for pre- sident. He said Carter l.s likely to opt for a "sPokes of the wheel" ap- proach, similar to that used by President John F. Kennedy, who allowed six or seven top aides equal access to the Preaident. POWELL SAID that will in· crease the information and points of view Carter receives and will result in "increased competition among staff mem- bers which keeps us all on our toes ... Powell told rePorters that Carter received a "sub!ltantiaJ" memo on the staff selection pro-cesa for Cabinet and White House stall selections from Hamilton Jordan, Carter's campaign manager. Powell said Jordan's proposal amounts to a screening process that involves touching bases with members of Congress and other interested persons around the country. JACK WATSON, who is direct- ing the transition effort for Carter, says the White House staff in the new administration will be smaller, perhaps by as Staff much u 20 percent. than the slaffs for the Nboo aod Ford ad· ministration. Wataoo says the atatf will ad vise and support Carter ln bis ex· ecutive functions but will not try to direct tbe Cabinet depart- ments. Powell said Carter currenUy is aludyine briefing papers relating to defense and foreign Policy wblcb represents the input of about 175 experts arowid the country. nu: PBESIDENT·ELEt. .. r ia wlndln1 up his vacation at a 1,383-acre estate ot woods and salt-water marshes, the Mus- grove Plantation. Record cold temperatures have been set every day that Carter has been in the area. Life Cradled • m Dead Womb DENVER CAP) -Doctors must decide whether to keep a woman whose brain has died at- tached to lire-support equipment for at least five weeks in hope or saving her unborn child. Linda Irene Culbertson, 29, _who is carrying a l~week-old fetus, would die if she were re- moved from the equipment to which she has been attached since a n a utomobile accident Monday, a cco rdin g to a s pokes woman at Colorado General Hospital. A HEART BEAT from the fetus has been detected, she said, but the fetus could not survive on its own before it is 20 weeks old and weighs at least 500 grams, or a just more than one pound. "No one seems to have any idea· whether it bas been done before," said the spokeswoman, Barbara Springer, of the possibility of keeping the mother a1i ve artificially. TED WRENN, director of in- formation services at Colorado General, said s tate law gives doctors the authority to de- termine when death has oc- curred. Consequently, they could decide to remove Mrs. Culbertson's life-support equip· ment since they have judged her neurologically dead. The News That Fits Gets Printed Here NEWS NOSES: It's almost a wtiversal truth that when you scan through school newspapers from various colleges or un- iversities, they have one trait in common. T hat is, they have blamed little news in them. .Just turn the pages of these publications and you see. You will be entertained by a feature story. with three semi-lighted photographs of some obscure jazz musician who once played in the Dirty Spoon Saloon three towns down the line. Deeper inside the university periodical you find an editorial cartoon about Cesar Chavez. The editorial will address itself forthrightly lo the alleged StnS of the FBI. You are usually back to the sports pages before you learn what campus this paper was ac- tually pubhshed on. WHAT YOU CANNOT learn, no matter how carefully you scan the college columns. is how things are going at the school. Or what ·s new ? My mind was boggled by all this school news. "J UST A F R EAK RUN,'' I mumbled to myself. "They put everything they had on Page 1. Won't be anything inside." I turned the page. And lo, inside this school paper, there was actually more news. The music teacher had wed Mr. DeBoute. There was another photo. this time or the happy cou- ple. Other stories told about a seriously ill teacher, the school election, the model home win- ners. news from t he school nurse and coming events. My eyes almost popped when I read the headline on Page 3: ''Matthew Siler's Grandma Shot At.·· The story was by Matthew Siler (as told to a Line-Up re- porter). IT BEGAN, "My grandma, Mrs. Leona McCleery, who lives in Denver, Colo., was almost killed by a .357 magnum bullet Before doctors make a de- cision, Wrenn said they want to learn more about the condition of the fetus and monitor the support the moth.er's body is giving it. MRS. CULBERTSON, who suf- fered head, neck, and internal in- juries in the accident, was taker\ to St. Anthony Hospital, where doctors said they found she bad no neurological activity. They said an organ transplant team from Colorado General came in, and an organ donor perm.it was obtained from relatives. But when Mrs. Culbertson was taken by helicopter to Colorado General, physicians there dis- covered she. was carrying the Just ~ Coasting,~ J ·•··.·. ~ .. ~_-..... "~>'1'l'~\' . .. ,,. i la ··:~~~-w t . ·· Tom arpbine ~·,,..~,.-...... ~ from one of the m0st powerful handguns in the world." Boy, Matthew had me hooked. I read on. The story explained it was an accident. wherein a youngster discharged the weapon and the bullet punctured lucky Mrs. McCleary's trailer, crashing through her rocking chair. "It was a narrow escape!" Matthew Siler concluded. Whew. I agree . Well, this newspaper, the Line- Up, is published by the students at Lathrop Junior High &hoot, up in Santa Ana. I congratulate them on actually putting news in a school newspaper. I sure hope they don't go on to college and learn how to write long essays on jazz musicians. All this ('Ons1dered. 1t was like a fresh breeze the other day when a S('hool newspaper called the Lme-Up fl oated a('ross my desk. I l>Canned the front page in dis- behef. First, there was a lead story reporting that Mrs. Poggi ti.ad been appointed the pew vice prin- cipal. Her picture was there. too. Second lead story told you that Mr. Ben Dustamanle was the new campus secunty guard. Has photo was also there, just so everybody would know who the law and order 1s on this campus. His Penalty's Paid CELINA, Ohio (AP) -"We bad nothing to gain because all our kids are dead," Irene Som· mer said. "The poor guy has to bve with it for the rest of his life." having to "live with" the acci- dent. He had pleaded no contest to one count of vehicular homicide during a half-hour trial in Municipal Court. Further down the page. we had a princ1pal's welcome from Mr. Salcedo (v.1lh photo> who said things are gomg well so far this year, anothl'r story on back-to school night and a couple or two ~o lu mn photo graphs o f Am erican Legion award win- ners. Mrs. Sommer was responding to the punishment banded down in court Tuesday to John Kremer. driver or a car that plowed into a group or teen-agers last spring. killing eight or them. Her son. Kenneth, was one or the victims. Kremer. a 21-year-old meat cutter, was spared a prison term by a judge who felt Kremer would be punished enough by JUDGE JAMES MYERS SUS· pended Kremer's driver 's license for one year and fined him S300 for court costs. He'll be able to drive to and from work for 30days. "I don't thinic anything can be galned from time in jail,·• Myers said. "You have created your own Jail, one you will have to li ve with the rest of your life. I think that is an adequate penalty." Cold, Wind Head South Canadian Air Sends Snow Over Lakes 11.s. S11••arv "''" .._ ~~ Al~U"''1tff'I •• ~ A"< f'W;ft1Q-' JJ ,, .n Atl~nt~ 62 ... ... "''''"•d " ,. 8;\mMC~ •t " lie><. Ion ,. JS 8ro-tf"'"'"'f' '° " a ... , • .., •O XI .~ Ollc•QG ,. Jt Cln<l...,.,11 ,. 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In tl'tt l'llld 10\. -"'"" Ul>tCttd to droo mo•t n.uodav. "-KMIHI Ctlltd I~ all -Cell ''"r-1119"er winds. Tlltla-•h•r-e1wtrtc-lntt1t lllQf>er •'-"•!Ions. drooolno to 111~ Of U to U In 1"-mountain trtas. '-- ttn!Qllt OI u -rt •r•dlcttd. Coutal W~•thtt Lo. clouctt 11\d foO nto11t and morn. Inv llO<lr, wllll llerv tllntllhw In tllt et• i.r-T11ur,aay, Llflll varltlllt wind• nlthl •'Ill _,nl119110ur1, Hlel\1T11urwi.1111 tM IO't . Cotsltl ltmjleftluru wlll '""' btlWftll $8 tnd 10. lnltnel ltnl• 11ffllllf'tlWlllr1""11etw•11S4111f1t.. 1"'t wtttr ltmoar1t11rewlll bt u . Stan, Hoon, Tides WIONllOAY A wtlld drl .. n \ttf'fft from~ ~ allOul •11 ln<ll ol llftOW on,,. Ortat 1.•Ut ,..IOn ov.-nlflllt -----------\«O!'d'"' S.74p.lft. l.l Oillt Wlf"lllt\01 W.rt up lot IA'M Mltllloan. Supultt •M at1e •nd ,,.,..1,,, _,. werntd or f\aztonlelln tMd t-11-Ill -111HUtNI Ml,,_ "'talt tnd _., Ml<lllttll, $Ulltrtd r 1111 ftll O!?, ti .. Ol\lt Cell 6~2 -5171. Pul • few worda lo work for ou. TI4111tlo.\Y "'"''°"' ,,. ,,. .... u l'l,,tf\IQ!I • . ........ ,. 5«tnclltw tO U11.m. S.1 '--111911 t · U11"" 0 4 S<Jnrlsas• 211 m .. tttU:stl'.M. MM11r1Mt1;,.p 11'1 •• Mllt:tU.ll'lo. \ fetus and canceled transplant plans. l I At Mrs. Culbertson's home ln suburban Broomfield, her husband Vaughn and other fami- ly members refused to discuss Pea~ekeiPnerS Move In the case. -... r l A,.WI,..,.... Mrs. Culbertson's 6-month-old daughter Shannon, who suffered a fractured skull in the accident, waa in stable condition at St. An· thony Hospital. Syrian tanks and troops moved between warring Chris- tian, Moslem and Palestinian forces in Lebanon as Arab peacekeeping effort gets under way amid scattered, but light guntl"re in Lebanon. Africans Plan UN Drive I UNITED NATIONS (AP) - Africa's black nations plan another drive to get Security Council sanctions against South Africa following the Geoerll As- sembly's adoption ol 10 resolu· lions denouncing the whlte- m i norit y regime and its apartheid racial policy. The demands for economic and military sanctions will probably be blocked by Western vetoes. as previous ones have been. But the council debate will put the spotlight once more on the Unit- ed States, Britain, France and other Western nations that sup- port and trade with South Africa's white-minority regime. In addition to the demand for a mandatory arms embargo that has been vetoed frequently, there will be a proposal by Sweden for a ban on new investments in South Africa. The General As- sembly has already endorsed the proposal. \'let 'J'alb Opet1 Soon WASHINGTON CAP) -The 'NEW ( BRIEFS ) United States and Vietnam are opening talks on the prospects for friendly relations and informa- tion on missing U.S. servicemen, but U.S. officials say substantive progress is doubtful before the Carter administration takes of- fice. The talks will begin Friday at an undisclosed site in Paris. The American s.ide will be headed by the deputy chief of mission or the U.S. embassy in France, Samuel R. Gammon. "We're going to be bard-nosed but not belligerent," one official said. "It's not going to be a friendly meeting." Def en•e Spendlt1g Set WASHINGTON CAP)-The Pentagon could not spend $11 .6 billion that Congress bad ap. propriated for new weapons in the year ending June 30. Defense officials say. however, that they plan to spend the money before Jimmy Carter takes office. Mos t of tbe unspent $11.6 billlon 1s account or y a . billion anticipated foreign arms sale for which orders came in late, and by unanticipated de~ laya in s bipbuiJding and weapons procurement . /tl0ttar~lt'• 50tla Not.ftl TOKYO CAP) -The 50tb an- niversary of Emperor Hirohito's reign was observed today with a simple official ceremony, small- scale hostile leftist rallies and a 30,000·man police alert against violence. Government employes and schools had a half holiday. Ten thousand police guarded the Martial Arts Hall in downtown, TokYo where the world's longest-· reigning monarch and his wife. Empress Nagako, appeared before more lban 7,000 invited guests. I ~ 'Great E scape' Foiled ~ 3 San Quentin Inmates Caught in Tunnel SAN QUENTIN (AP) -ll W&ll a scene right out or ''The Great Escape.'' Ten feet under the ground or San Quentin State Prison, there 1t was -a 87-foot -long tunnel, com- plete with wood-braced sides, electric lights, ventilation ran and a sophis ticated communica- tions syste m using speakers, wjres and tubes from stolen radios and telephones. "It was real J immy Cagney Continental Strike Ends LOS ANG ELES (AP) - A tentative agreement bas been announced in a pilots' strike against Continental Airlines, but there was no word o n whe n fligh t service will resume. The agreem ent, ham- mered out late Tuesday, ended a strike by the 1.086 members of the Air Linc Pilots Association that had s hut down Continental flights sinc.e pilots walked off the job Oct. 23. The airline had canceled flights through Friday. It n ormally serves 21,000 persons daily in 31 cities , mostly in southwestern· and central states. It was estimated the airline was losing $1.6 million daHy. stuff.•' c o n el ud~d pr ison spokesman Bill Merkle. HE SAID a guard discovered three escape pr one convicts Tuesday in a basement room, filled with dirt. the fruit of an estimated month-long attempt to twmel under the prison wall to freedom. Three other convicts were ac- cused of taking par t in the s cheme, and officials said as many as a dozen might have been involved. "Maybe two more weeks and they would have m ade it," said Merkle. "It would have been easy. If they had m ade it to the bay, t h ey wou Id have been beyond the security perimeters. All they would have bad to do would be tippy-toe around and they would have been gone." . THE TUNN EL already had taken them past the wall of this grim structure on the edge or San Francisco Bay. They still were wider a paved road, Merkle s ajd, and another 30.35 feet remained to be covered to the water's.edge. But Lt. J erry Copus was mak· mg his rounds and happened to hear voices behind i metal door in th e basem ent of North Cl'llblock, a Ii ve -lier building whic h also houses Death Row and the lethal gas chamber. The three tunnelers behind the door ga ve up without a struggle. THEY W ERE identified as Norman Lucas, 26, serving a life term fo r kidnap; Richard Lee, 27, five years to life for assault Killer of Dog Jailed with intent to romnut murder, and L arence Sarfeb . 29, fi ve years to lift: for armed robbery. All t hree had made previous escape attempts, Merkle said. "There were several working on it and taking shifts, that 's our assu mption," he said. "Once down there. t hey were out of sight.'' H E DECU NED to identify the three others already accused, and he said the Mann County dis- t rict attorney would decide whether to lodge charges. Merkle said 1t appeared that the men had done the diggmg with hoes and shovels purloined while on maintenance duty. The ceUblock outside Death Row is medium security. he said. so the men could labor for hours at a time -chan ging into clean clothes later -without being m1ssed. ALTHOUGH THE lhree-foot- wide passageway could have ac- commodated dozens or the 400 prisoners in the cellblock, of- fitials said they doubted that was the plan. "Inmates us ually don't bring too many people mto an escape plan " Merkle said. ''When they do they usu a fly get found out." Me rkle said that other inmates were tr ying to imply the diggers hadn 't really intended to escape. "One guy in the cellblock sru d they were Just trying to build a BART station." Merkle srud, re- fcrri ng to Bay Area Rapid Transit system. APWtro-to SAN QUENTIN GUARDS INSPECT ESCAPE TUNNEL Three Inmates Were Caught Tuesday Ending Attempt DAIL y l''l OT A li Kool-Aid Criticized For Offer SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Kool-Aid m akers are exploiting children and encouraging them to consume too much sugar by offer- ing money to 51:hools for eJDply packages of the powdered beverage .mix, two nooprorit groups say. Cons umers Unton and the Com- mittee on Children's Television asked the s tate Board of Educa- tion and the state schools s uperin· tendent Tuesday to ban the Kool- Aid campaign sponsor ed by General Foods Corp. fro m ~aliforma classrooms. TIIE REQUEST was a supple- ment to a petition from the two groups last month criticizing Post Cereals, a subsidiary or General Foods, for a n offer to trade sports eqwpment for cereal boxtops. The groups asked the board of education to keep the program out ofpubLic schools. Afte r r eceiving t he Post Cereals petition. s tate schools Supt. Wilson Riles issued non- binding guidelines including con- siderations such as benefits to a school, comparative expe nse, school objectives and school in- fluence in favor of one company to the exclusion of others. The state school board is s cheduled to con- siderthe ma tte r Thursday. GENERAL FOODS in a stat~ m e nt Tu esday call ed the criticism of Kool-Ai d "non- sensical and distorted.'' ---~-----~--------~--, SAN J OSE ""P) -A 21-year-old man was sen· tenced to one year in jail and five years on proba- tion T uesd ay for shoot- ing bis neighbor 's pet beagle with a .22-caJjber rifle. Roy Hightower , con- victed on a charge or cruelty to anim als, said he kjlled the dog afte r it k n oc k e d o v e r h is garbage can and tned to b1tehim . Sant a Clar a County Su perior Court Judge Bruce F. Allen said he agreed with a probation r e port which recom - mended Jail time and conclud e d th at Hightower was a "ge- nwne threat to society ... We all out forourbo ss. Starts Wednesday, November 10. Photo f i nis hing special to celebrate the grand openin g of our Glen d ale s tor e~ s1 off on deluxe studio prints and developing of any color film. Prices effective through Sunday, November 14. C110·12 expoeure Kod.color pocket c•mera film Now 1.29 C110·20 exposure Kod.color pocket camer• film Now 1.69 126-12 exposure Kodacolor pocket camera film Now 1.29 126-20 exposure Kodacolor pocket camera film Now 1.69 JCPenney · ARCADIA-SANTA ANITA CANOGA PARK CARSON CULVER CITY 'FOX HILLS' DOWNEY FULLERTON GLENDALE HUNTINGTON BEACH LAGUNA HILLS LAKEWOOD MONTCLAIR NEWPORT BEACH NORTHRIDQE ORANG,~ 'THE CITY' PUENTE HILLS RIVERSIDE SAN BERNARDINO VENTURA WEIT COVIHA WHITTWOOD ( With the most wideb odie to the East. In plain business tern1s, bu~iness people are a big part of otu-bread and butter at Uni ted Airlmes. So we better treat you li ke what you are: Our Boss. That's why we do everythi ng we can to make you happ y. One w<..y Uni ted keeps the boss happy is by giving hi m the most \\idebody non stop s to the East. With plenty of room to ~tretch out and relax. And there are no detours or plane changes along the way. For entertain- ment. we gi ve the boss fi rst· run movies ($2.00 in Coach) and stereo music. And for his appetit e , we give I.1im gr~at . meals \vi th his chmce of en tree. Extra comfort and fri endl y Uni ted service. It's our way of ple?sing yo~. Because at Umted, you re · t~ the boss. ~()\Sl-"' S ~e~ I \'la ,,~­ \ Don't leave home without the American Express card.)\) Use it for your Uni ted tickets, hotels. meals, and rental cars. If you don't have an American Express card, call 800-528-8000 fo r an applica tion. For reservations, call your Travel Agent , or United at 537-7S2 1. Partners in Travel with Western International Hotels. In Chic-1go, the O:mtinental Pla7Ai. Friendship Serviec to oucago Nonstop Lean · FTom /·4:, ,1 I --/\niVl' Flt. No. --Los Angclett lntemallonal n. •!::_ii~ _I .1:, pm. 100 n. WC 1111 '1. IO p.m )()4 111 OX: ICll 7 IOJ>.m 108 --- . 10 :w.11 I l ~y •ll t I>( IOI I0/.1pm ___ l_I~ -4 1:. JI I:! :!II ;1 I JI t"i li l fl 110 ;1111 118 -JITom Ontario -- I. ••I Ill. 1 :lll1~m 7114 10~:1.1. Ill 1 ()~ r> Ill 211 Flythe end]y skies of United. Ill U nlTED AIRLlnes r A6 * DAILY PILO T ED ITORIAL P GE ProbleDl for Council Huntington Beach residents s~ke loudly and clearly in last week's election. voting by a.q pver· whelmlng majority to put strict limits on the taxing authoMty or the city council. Voters passed a city charter amendment that re~ quires a majority ofsix of the seven city councU mem· be rs to raise taxes or to impose charges and fees. Voters made it plan bow they stand on money matters. They took advantage of a voting opportunity to express themselves about rising costs of govern· menl. What isn 'l so clear, however. is the effect the city charter amendment will have on the operation of the city council. lt doesn't seem in the best interests of city gov- ernment to have a balance of power thrust in the hands or two council members who can kill any needed revenue-raising measure. It also is true that the amendment change wasn't brought on by the action of a council which has acted responsibly on fiscal matters in the past. There is serious doubt that the city council can continue to function smoothly with its hands tied in this manner . The people have spoken, however. and now it is up to city leaders to do the best they can. Invisible Campaign Was the Huntington Beach Union High School DistMct trustee election last week a lesson in political strategy or just luck? Winne r Doris Allen said she made no major public appearance and spent almost nothing in her successful campaign which won her a five-month term on the school board. Her opponents say she was fortunate to have her name placed first on the ballot in a lack.luster election. Mrs. Allen suggests her victory came about due to her lingering "name recognition" from an unsuccessful board bid in 1974. Whetever the case, she topped her closest rival by over 4,000 votes without attending any candidate forums or mak1.ng the usual public appearances. As it is, the public generally ls unaware or how Mrs. Allen stands on issues. The efforts put forth by t>lher candidates seem to have been w<1sted. Mrs. Allen has pledged lo have a "more visible" campaign when she runs tor elect.Ion to a full term in March. No election is of such little consequence that it should be decided by the happenstance of name re- cognition or location on the ballot, rather than by performance record and public discussion of views and issues. Novel Safety Aid . A unique program credited with preventing the loss of s eme precious young lives among those of thousands or youngsters attending more than 50 public and parochial schools in the Huntington Beach- Fountain Valley region is under way again this year. Utilizing talents of Huntington Beach Police Department personnel Elaine Covey and Ivor Gitsham, the police and Schools are distributing 2X>,OOO copies of a combination comic and coloring book. The attractive, whimsical and instructional publication explains traffic safety in both common sense and California street and highway laws. Each autumn for the past five years, M s. Covey and Officer Gitsham have come up with new ideas for the booklet's illustrations and charmingly informationaJ text, often donating their own time. Traffic safety statisticians say the Huntington Beach traffic fatality rate involving school kids on bikes and cars-zero for the past three of those rive years-is a mark of how effective it has been. H/F 'l'out la WiD Bold U11e Campaign Setbacks Hurt Brown's hnage lkar Gloomy Gus We're in Good Hands With the campaigning behind them. legislators are turning their attention to the matters ahead. While the elections left party control pretty much as it was in the haods or the Democrats, the foibles of Gov· ernor Jerry Brown throughout the political year are certain to result in ma terial changes in his relation s h ips w ith the lawmakers. For Brown ·s politicaJ failures were monumental and were climaxed by colossal er- rors in the campaign just con eluded. Start- ing the year w i t h a popularity gamed by his pseudo pose as a non · politician. Brown threw away has pnst.me image 10 a frenetic at- tempt lo grab the brass ring In I.he presidential hust.a.ngs. Failing lhat, he then attempted to establish himself as the pied piper of California by leading everyone to the s upport or Cesar Chavez and his Prop. 14. HE NOT only was embarrass· ingly exposed as a false prophet but look U S Senator John V. Tun- ney down with him and very nearly did the same lo Jimmy Carter and a ho~t ol legislators. As a Democratic leader, or any other kind for that matter. his name is ulch with the President- elect Tht s1gnUlcance ~ Brown's defeats is not lost upoo the ( EARL WATERS ) legislators. No longer viewing him as the anointed party hero, tbe solons are scurrying about re- organizing their thinking. In the Senate this means a reorganiza. tion of its own leadership. Presi· dent Pro Tem James Mills momentarily appears secure. He has not stuck his neck out sup- porting Brown nearly as far as Speaker Leo McCarthy. So the Senate is concentrating at the moment in selecting re place- ments for its inner house govern· ing committee. the Rules Com- mittee. Three or the five mem· bers of that group have retired. Other retirements and defeats have opened up committee chairmanships which will affect the selections for the Rules Com· mittee. IN THE Assembly McCarthy's unswerving support of Brown for the past two years bas already been the subject or criticism among the troops . True. McCarthy did split with Brown oo Prop. 14. Since San Francisco was one or the two counties in the state wbicb voted for it, he could have joined Brown in its endorse- ment without harming himself in bis home district. But supporting it would have hurt him as the As- sembly leader. And it is clear that he will have to break even more with Brown if he wants to retain that leadershjp. What is axiomatic in the game of politics is that those in office don't want to be shackled with losers. Brown st.ands now as Do you know how I could get introduced Lo Jimmy Carter? It's been a loog time-seems like a Wetime-sioce a man bas looked on ME with lust. V.J. Gloomy Gu• comments ., • .-"eci by r•.tdtrt •"d do not nectn•rlly refl«t thO W'tt'Wt. of the n1wlpiper Send your pe1 peeve to GICJOmy Gu~. O•oly Po lot. a loser. Even slate legislators want to believe they have some influence with the national ad· ministration. The Democrats know that neither Brown nor anyone too closely identified with him will be able to get a phone call through to the White House janitor. let alone the President. They, like Carter and the host of party workers within the state, are painfully aware that Brown fooled nobody with his pretended support or Carter. Appearing on television to the point of re- pulsion in support of Prop. 14 , Brown did practically nothing in Carter's behalf other than ap- pear on a few campuses. So. at t he very least, tbe Democrats within the state are now Irreparably split between the Carter and Brown camps. TIIE SITUATION omens tough sledding ahead for the governoc. No longer will the legislators fe&T him or think it necessary to cater to him. He wiJl find them much more resistant to his proposals and indeed m ay find them unwill- ing to submit to his arrogant ve- toing of their legislation. He will find how transitory is popularity and the power that goes with it. Booze Bribes Pay Off WASHINGTON The end of Prohibition hasn 't stopped the booze barons from trying to buy off the politicians. The evidence can be round an the secret files or the Jim Beam Company, one of the nation's l argest liquor manufacturers . The company's activities have attracted the attention or the Treasury Department. which i s s ecretly in- vestigatin g Beam for • possible federal liquor law viola· lion s . W e have also con· ducted our .. . own probe. Here are the deUl.ls: ln a number of ~tales, the Ii· quor Industry is regulated by st.ate liquor commissions. Uquor manufa,cturers sell tbelr pro- ducts directly to the slate, which stores the booze in state-owned warehouses and then resell$ it to retailers. ~ A UQUOR company'• proms ~ ln these states, t.berefore, ls de- ':·pendent upon the good aracet of :· the liquor commlssioocn. Tbe ~ Jlm Stam Compat\Y, according : to lit own contldenllaJ reccM"de. • bas undertaken to keep these of. ; ficlala happy. • Jim Beam executives treated ~ ' (JACK ANDERSON ) employes or the Michigan Liquor Commission, for example, to a weekend on the town in Chicago. According to one internal memo, the company shelled out $383.63 for cocktails. dinner, entertain· ment and miscellaneous "gratuities" at the posh Drake Hotel. not to mention the hotel expenses. Tbe weekend was writ· ten off as a sales expense . ONE CAUTIOUS Beam ex- ecutive. Robert Weise.nberger, was fearful that someone might rind out about the partylng. "I would appreciate It if you wou..ld not attach this memo to the permanent file," wrote Weisen- berger. "Please read and datroy.'' On another occasion, free booze was dellvercd to the home of a member of the Pennsylvania Uquor Board. Beam officials also wlned and dined regulatory offlclal!l rrom Iowa, Maine, New Hampehlre and North Carolina at a national brewers convention ln San Juan. Puerto Rico. Accordin& to one company memo 1ummariling the conven· tloo. a cue or Jim Beam was uaed "for lbe da,y to day toter· talnment of the Commissioners." :,. ..... ~--------~~~~~~ .. This was supplemented by lavish dinner parties for the com- missioners, costing hundreds of dollars. The Beam executives, it seems. touched every base. Al one dinner party. the "gratuity" was. in the words or one company omcial, "slightly higher than normal." "Because of' this slight- ly higher lip," the official stated in an internal memo. "the cap- ta1n had the restaurant manage- ment place an order for eight casesot Jim Beam." BEAM r e presentatives planned other moves to in- gratiate themselves with those who could help their business. In another "con!idential" memo. Weisenberger suggested that the company transfer a special ac- count to :a Salt Lake City bank, because it would please a member or the Utah Uquor Com· mission whose relative was a director of the bank. "Thi$ commissioner bas un· Umlted. lnnuence and leverage in Utah," the memo states. "She has and wm conUnue to be of tp'eat se.rvtce to the Beam Com- pany. • .recently abe was in· atnamental lo h~lpinl us secure four new U!1lings in the State of Utah. Believe me, sba carries a lot ol weight." the COmmlssloner wat1 later indicted, but not con· victed, for acc~~Ung r-ree sup- pUea of Beam whiskey. To the Editor: The voice of demohacy. Americanism, patriotism and youth activities were the order or the day on Nov. 2, 197'6. After casting my ballot. I pro- ceeded to donate my services and my car. From 7 a .m. to 5 p.m .• I observed the national elections by working as a volunteer. driv· ing senior citizens and han· dicapped to and from the polls. l also worked on the phones. I WAS very impressed by the young men and women who were participating with eagerness and enthusiasm. About ~ percent were in their twenties and some still younger. They were in· dustrious, well organized and go- ing about their ta!iks very seriously. They were very courteous to the volunteers. workers, and ex- tremely knowledgeable as well as polite on the phones. I have no worries about the youth or America. The extremists we see and hear about on the media are a .small minority. Our country is in good and capable hands as it always has been. Being over SO years old, I came home very tired but with a great feeling of gratification. The youth of this country have re· lieved us on tbe battle Jines and they are doing an excellent job. they will hold, and the tines will not.bend. HEDLEY E. LeBLANC ,...•irT~S••re Tolhe Editor: My dictionary defines ··proper- ty .. as "wealth" and "things owned .. Arllcle XIII of the California Constitution under Section l says that ··all property is taxa- ble'" and Sec. 2 authorizes a tax not exceeding l percent on "in- teresC debentures. share!'! or capital s tock. bonds. solve nt credits. deed s or trust, or mortgages:· With the public suffcrinj( under excessively heavy truces on reaJ property. appealing so far In vain, to our elected politicians. for some redress or alleviation of the onerous burdens of tax on reaJ property. that authorized alternate taxation has been ig- nored. The reason we understand is the difficulty o r administering and the ease of concealment of the above intangible forms or property subject to taxation. Is that a "good" fair reason? Thus. it seem s that our civil ( MAILBOX ) servants aad our paid politicians ar e failing to do their job. because it is too difficult, and because some people might con· ceaJ their "property" subject to taxation. And they place the burden o n the homeowner because his real property is readily known and recorded. TIIE INVESTOR who decides to place his money in savings, bonds or s tocks. gold, silver. pork bellie~. and other "in- tangibles " pays no property tax, although the la w provides for tt. apparenUy. Stockholders can argue that they are sµbject to double truca- t1on already. but any farm own· mg and producing corporation for foodstuffs. is also subject to those taxes on income plus the heavy real property taxes, which we commonly caJl property tax. The real estate leasing corpora· lion is similarly triple tued. Since our paid and elected politicians and so-caJled servants or the people are unlikely to act on our requests, it seems logical to s tart a taxpayers r evolt against payment-or real property taxes until the tax is fairly dis- tributed over the whole spectrum or all property 1 real, personal and intangible, evenifitinvolves a r eal day ·s work ror the politicos. The idea ls neither tevolo- tionary nor novel. North carolina raises $27 million on intangible taxes. Other states like Florida do this t axation on a state level. sharing with the counties. H the taxpayers revolt strong- ly, maybe our supervisors will take lime from their own pay ralse considerations, to arrange a fair and equitable tax on ALL property and give the homeowner only his fair share or t.be burden. This country started on revolt· Ing from unfair taxes. Lets start · anew! LAOISLAW REDAY AHeas ¥1e&'-Uetl To the Editor: I am very fond of Mexican peo- ple and believe that we s hould have a high migration from Mex· 1co as compared lo other coun- tries, but it should be a legaJ mi· gration. A legal migrant can become a legal citizen wilb full protection of the l aw including the minimum wage law. The illegal alien community in our coWitry ts a jungle. They dare not call on the police depart· menlfor anything. SUcb an alien bf.red by 3 local business bas no fair labor protec· Quotes "It takes a long time to wort out a rdaUonship." -+ Cbarfes ~T, U.S. executive dlrector to the World Baolt, on the possi- ble mem busbip of Vlctnam. \ tioo. He can be worked overtime with no pay. Withholding tax can be held out, but not sent in since the person obviously can't have a social security number without. exposing himself to deportation. So we have in our midst an out- law community. totally at the mercy or outlaw forces. JAMESW.BOLDING o.,erpreteeteft To the Editor: Re: FDA 's Efficacy Require- m.ent, HR 12573. Please stop be- ing protective. lt is costly! Simply label medications "Not FDA Approved ... and let the COO• sumer decide. We do not need nor want government interference when drugs are "Harmless or Ineffective.'• We did this with cigarettes. We did not do this with booze. Let us devote valuable time to more constructive issues. JIM DONART r .aeec .. t rek To the Editor: Keeping police forces indepen- dent of federal control is vital to keeping America free. For years, knowledgeable Americans have warned of the sinister nature of federal funding for police departments. A nation with 40,000 independent police forces can never be converted in- to a police-state tyranny. But a central government that gains control over them through pro- grams such as L.E.A.A. has that power. We must oppose any and all programs by the federal goYem- ment to subsidize and thereby control police forces. DONNA L. BOGART An k i s'•r e • To the Editor: In your article of Thursday, Nov. 4 titled "Street Art Sale Sparks Laguna Tifr," you quoted my opening statement to the Laguna Beach City Council, and I would like to properly credit its source. The sentence is from page 239 of the book "Science of Survival-Prediction ol Human Behavior." copyright 1951 by L. Ron Hubbard, the founder ol Scientology. It reads: A culture la only as great aa lta dreams, and ita dreams are dreamed by art.is la. IRENE SUESS ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT nobfn N WC'td. P:ubWltirr Thnmaa Kuvil. E:ditor Borboro Krelbtch, f:d1tonaJ Pogr E:lblQf' The cd1ton11l page ot ~ DaJly Pilot !<eeks to inform ind 11llmulntc readers by presentin~ on th111 p111tc dlve~c comm(-ntary on topics or Interest by syndlc8l· ed columnists und cartnonis~. by prov1d1n11 3 forum ror readers· views 11nd by presenting this n('w~pnper'!I opinions and ideas or1 t·urrcnt tt>plcs. The editorial opinion!! or the Daily Pll~ appear only In the editorial column attlle top ol thr paae. Opinms c~­ prt.•H<'d by th<! columnisu and c11rtoonl11ts Bnd lett•r wnters aN their own and no endol"3<'mmt ol thC!tr vi~• by the Oai1y Ptklt should be inferred Wednesday, Nov.10, tm J Tension 'lies Hiin In Knots By DR.STEINCROllN Dear Dr. Steincrohn: I nstead of being as n ·· Jaxed a s a doughnut with a hole in the middlt', 1 foci as lt>nse as a pretzel all t wisted physically and rnentallv I r caliZl' moi.t of It IS my raull. J gut's"> it's rnv nature to be• knsc <md anxious. l'rn <1 pt>rfl'C' t ionist. Lat1·ly , J have been blowing up wlll'n t alking lo peoplC' who work under me 111 lht• of. fi cc. And, of cours<.', all tl11 -; tl'nsion extend .... 111t11 ua\ home. !\1\• ~1f1· an d children a r~ also \' 1C'l 1111s of the· ill \\ mcls that lilow in the office l don't knov: how lo relax. Al IN 1hl , 1 don't takc tam c to do <,o As I ''m onlv ·12 .ind have many ~·cars ahPJd, l would appn·c·1.111• ·'°' <1d\·1cc you c·.i n gl\ l' Mr. I-'. COM MENT :\1:111\ n · adcrs may n ·c:.ill t hal when writing ~1hout <•b· n o rm a l t e n s ion l '"e t·alled 1t the· · h1 g T " llealthwisc. at is a largl' factor in our 11\'l''- . tension tu an 1nd1\·idu:1I who sm ok<'s. drinks and eats loo muc h .• ind h.ts high chok st1•rol .ind h1i?h blood prt•ss11 n• and \OU han• rnu-.t of thl' fJC'lor..., an l.1) 1ng tht· gr11u111h\111 k for c.·u ron.1n d1-.l aM· So your alll'lll(lh 111 h1• lt>ss tcnsl'. :\I r F v.11l ll< I 1 k e I y t o k l' c• p ) o 11 hl'alt h 1er and prolong ~nur li ft• l k n· Jrt' "onw s uggl' ... tanns on cutt ing the• ropl· 1>f tens ion I. STO P WlllPPI~(; ynur"<'lf with l•I<> rn.1n\ rorfet• hrr:.i ks 2. Don't Ju rn p lo an s \\ t• r 111 t' phone t'Vt•ry ll llll' 1t rang-; C'n ll ert \•H.1 1 phOnt• rll t''i'iJ).!('-; •• 11111 a no;wrr J I lt'l"ll r<' :1 t Ju1 l ...rnokani.: 1f \011 1· 111 1 Dnnk tr ... ._ · .'.i Ill'\ dnp ho t h .in indoor ,1 n.d 1111t door hn bt1\ It I ul tlo\\ 11 o n :i ctuJ I n'u111h• 1 of \\Orking hnua 1, Hrt'.1k the habit of '' 1•rk 111g on weckt'nd'I I T.1k1• 111· ras1on.il lonJ.! '" • i..t•ncl vacations 8 :\l111h•r.1t<• cx e rc1~· oft <'n 11 , "' tension t \\1th1n \\('(•k-. your b1~ T \\ ii I h<' r1· duced to :i I 1tt It· t ~I F.DICAl.F.TTES Dt'ar Dr . Str inr rohn : Is it poso;1hll• (11r ,t wom:m or 5fi to ht•comt• pregnant if ~he has not had her pNiod for al least two yc•41rs'' -Mr~. v. Com m<.'nt A 11 my gynecologist fricndc; say No. Mc ? 1 h<'dgc I say not impossibl <'. hu t highly improbablt•. Most improbable. Rcsl easy ••• Dear Dr. Steincrohn: Are hot flashes durin~ menopause dangerous for the heart" -Mr ... M. CO MMENT: No. But 1l should remind women they a re e nte ring the• age-scale or life in wh.iclt some begin to become vulnerable to coronary h eart di sease . Therefore. take the same prl'caulions that WP ad - vise for men · proper weight. no s moking, care or hypertension. et c . ••• Of nll the ene mies or the 'home, I cons ider t ension the greatest, says Dr. Stelncrohn in ··his booklet . "How To Live With Less Tension At Home." F or a copy or this Informative booklet, write to him in care or lhls paper, enclosing so ·cents and a stamped. sell-addressed envelope OPEN ALL DY VETER AN'S AY , .. t .. ,-4 n.,. hu4e,, ... ,., WW. Mi.\• .... •••-••._ I ............... , HG. 1.69 GILLETTE Costa Mesa 2300 Hart>or ot Wilsott • JUS 1 'U\11 IUTTOI IOI SHVll' OVER 2-QT. VACUUM THERM AL SERVER 'I. I ·. u • • "" ' :' P!'I'·"': v. '" f!"h;:C"1 ( <.A.• t '°•'' " J • • • t1 "' Ct , • I·-~=§; ;,~I \~~~1 4 ···19' --~ ~~ FOi ,, PA CK OF ENGLISH CRYSTAL STEMWARf f I ft ... .. Santa Ana 3 3 2 S lri1tol ot Moc4t'HM.tr Sonta Ana 1406 W. Ed;., & lrist°' , I I • ' ~ • " • [ \ , f J I I ~I f ' ,, . ,,. .. , 6. 99 BUY NOW & . SAVE THRU TUES lARGE 20xl0" SIZE ! .;:----- ... :;~_.,~ d-,.~, .. ~ I ,//'/ / • J I I. •I i I • . Z/~ ·r -~J ~ I 'O'? ,Qi I _V I I ALL NEW! .· 99 each IHOLIDAY B.EGANCE CHRISTMAS CARDS j ~~~~~ _ '! _ GRAPHICS Will BE 14.961 LARGE MIRRORED REFLECTIONS Bo• • :?O C'ards Cho0cP of colo1c; arid oe~ "' You II l 1r.j \Oml"lh•ll9 IOI e;e ody' Shop earty• f.' 1• •,.. '• 1' r:.11 t ,rh ·~ J QrJ;>t .(..S, l l" ti f!AC•h.fl\l r ew Sull1CCt5 no\ c..ct I\ .JfOUhd 1 ""' (' ~ , , tr ' l' ::~ ,;,t'<'n h~ u.~t D·~monds & Sauaies & m()f(\ 1n most • ,,,._ • K.0 ~·I'."\\. • I "l ' ' '1 1,. At;, f l r i·r~f O W'1~ t1J\ r . .., f4 ftt; • IK 21.H s11m <0•110l fUll SIU IS.II • "'· H •• DUAl COITtUl fUll Sill U.11 )t .· ~ REG. 20.99 ~/SINGU ~.CONTIOl TWIN SIZE 14ss POLYESTER & ACRYLIC ELECTRIC BLAllKETS rJ t" ',.., f '''''" 11 f.. 1._' f t• 0 / t Id U•l•JI ( ,._ J 11 ti I 1 f • ,j I .,,, fHr • "' J, s. ··. 1;,,-I f"" I, r 't f10 "l ::' \' 1• t101,. ? T 'l'\I fl l.jl J:"\!u Westminster Wotminst..-at Goldtn Wot Huntington Beach 9 861 Adams ot lrootih..d Huntingfoft Beach 9 5 Huritinqton Cfftt"' 2-LI. JJ9 IOI DEIAl'S CHOCOLATES ( nynH I C.t,,1,)Qf"• mill( (hoc Jh.._ .t'"-.•.f)r'm"nt nt ,,t.tc; "" 1' t " trr>' t· ucarn~. 11u .. 9a:s ~~.£) l D11rlt.m j MICKEY MAGICIAll MAGIC SHOW KIT ™""' 13 99 . PllCE H. ... I.' ••YI •t <"•('2 J.fl('1t·1 1tr (~.I I ;_) ,.; '"-"" 2~' llFAITS ' & TODDLERS' CORDUROY CIAWLEIS t ""'I"'' ·11 "l 100 (llton CCi•Ou•O•" 't (> lpUl.11 '• ~'1 ~ ,l(o , .f '1"' W•lh • ll•htt><l•·•y I ~I 1.ul '.l 24 t. 2 41 n•o· Huntinaton Btach 211 l I 1toci llvd. at 4Hallta Huntinaton lfach . sea1w.,. . ,. .48 DAILY PILOT Wednesd1y. Novem~r 10, 1976 Plwne Man's if Millionaire From AP Dlspakbes A $11 ,000-a-year telephone installer who became a millionaire by buying a New York lottery ticket plans to celebrate by buying a new Cadillac and vacationing in Bermuda. When Job.a SartordtJ, 26, heard his name called by comedian Jerry Lewis at Roseland Dance City in Manhatten, the chubby, bearded Queens man leapt outofrusseat and boundedont.othestage. He is the second jackpot winner in the Empire Stakes Instant Lottery, which carries a prize of $),000-a-week for life with a guarantee of at least $1 Sllillion. * New Y ork Ally. Gen. Louis J. Lefkowitz and ~levisio~ personality Dick Cavett settled an argu- ent over Indian artifacts that avett says was never more t.Jlan a "tempest in a te~" anyway. The hassle started when Cavett was given two buffalo robes, a shield, and a Plains In- dian war shirt by the Museum of the American Indian in ex- cltange for his gift of 53 other artifacts. Lefkowitz, claiming the CAVETT eoods were worth $12,000. said Cavett w as receivmg an illegal gift from the former director of the museum. He filed suit against Cavett to for ce their return. Lefkowitz later announced that he was drop- ping the suit after Cavett said he would return the items. Cavett said legal fees were costing him more than the items were worth -which he estimated was $2 ,000. * Libby Thomas, 5-6 and 120 pounds, whet her ap· petite for a hamburger-eating contest in Austin, Tex. by consuming 13 tuna sandwiches and two cakes. She defeated seven men by downing 13 ham- burgers in 11i'.r hours. And then she said she ( ft'tt like dancing to build up an appetite for at least anoU1er "good 10 ham· - PEOPLE J burgers.·· "I just love to eat. It's as simple as that," says the 23-year-old. -She says her weekly food bill runs as high as $200. , • West Germany's U.N. ambassador gave a luncheon for 80 guests and then told them that if they had taken advantage of all the food and drink offered, they h ad just con silmed 1,323 calories. B aron Ruediger von Wecbmar recalled an earlier public complaint by Secretary. General Kurt Waldheim -a guest of honor at the luncheon - that too many such affairs were taking up too much or the de· legates' lime. WAl.DHEIM The baron offered a mock resolution that would have the General Assembly set up a committee representing "the pnncipal cuUnary systems of the world." The com mittee would draft an agreement embodying .. measures concerning the limitation of social events, ·1 he srud. IJeal h \'of iee11 ~OHO ER MA<lr,AR( T ' PON DE q ,. •do"I ""Mt ... "" v .. ,,, C• p_.,~ .. ,, .... ., N"y t, 1•1• Jt HV· A,_ or H Sor•t'l'IO Dt' t\iltr ,_,, b.tt\O &Qbt)y P.i)ndfr ,,_,,. ""°"' Ttrnh""" w Pnno,., ""f' o.'1~,..,., Lti'1""4 P~nd•r \0'1! (,r.•q M 1f\ol'1r MO~'W'I M f\ F m1lv Trout ,.._rf'W)t',,.,I 'lll'f'l/11 •' #tll hit" n.ld '" C)<Ofh.t>4~·ff t.f'tb'"''"' l"'•' arr•"~"""'"" by M(Oouqdll Fdlfl•l1 MMruory ~)~\I Kll.aY EDNA <'L8Y ,.,.o,.n• o• N~W\J6'' g.,.vt'I (J p,a,\•n A #A'f N l\'I' 1 '"" ~if'YhlP" bV r'\!J'tt} t rHJ H<1tr t t( b't' dAUIJM•' \,,,An L +•01t nf ("°'''' IN~ CA 'wo 'Ot'I' \tu•rt IC.llOY "' Vlilf' f0UYfilr W~\\f'ltnQtt)n , ("''' 1(1tbv Of N~#OO 't 81>;t f n c ... tnur 9r--t11dr "1112""'I br >tf\"' Normt1t"I Sf\ylM 11f t n• A"~I"'\ ( t CifAV'•\•~ ,,., ,., .. , #fl''"' "' .. f 't on ,... -.nn ~\ GI• tt P•t tu Vi•w ~'""'••t P•''· N,.""P"'' 81 t "" r,. ,,..,.. A•.; En"WW'V C 'mnb#ll •;•,1c. tt•nQ D''"''"" by P.c1t1 V1"'• Mi"'U"''• O\IRIHK •1.rREO HE"'""'J 0\81t•NK ,. """''"Of M,,,,t."lt)I~ 8"'"'" (• p_.,\#0 .... -.l' At,,_. ... ,,.. ,,tel ._.,. ., \vt'Vl~OY ""'1' WW\\ A A Ouv "1111 tJf Lo' A"')ltl~ f'J,,_n l)\Dtid'\\ n t 0""""'"' 0-•uU O\bf'•t\t (tf ~·" J • P t\11 °"'1'U\IL Of Dt"alh l~ot iee~ \."' D•f''10 C• Aho ~un,;w-o bV ~ b'ot~r Hd"Y 01bt•n" of los 4nQl"ttt~ Mr ()\.Or1nt. d l'\O ·~·V~'\ '"""" .._._._.,\ J••n ~PUI,., ot H unt1n9ton S-.C:h ""°',,,. ~,,,,.' o4 C.o'\ta ~\A el~ttn Qr•noth1tOr•·n Of\• qr•at~9r..tndift\1td Funt"'r11t \er-¥'C•\ wlft be S..turday ~• I )I) PM •t \moll\"' Mo'1u•r• Old~• Prtw'1tt iftt•rmitnt '11 Good ~ (t,....ltry S>n•l"'\Morlu•rydor«I"" llEl.I. O&HLIA (\POONH AUERI BEl.l., .. .,.. ~ ~· LO\ Ar>q•••• C• Res.dent of M1qhl.tr'l<1 Perllr. Ca Pan eo '1W•Y fn B.-\low c. .. Su--oay Nov~m-1. 1976. ~ w~\ bOrf"I "' Hvnt1ngton 8*.tetti, C. °" Nov,.mbPr 1S. 1'17 Stw 1\ wrv1W'd bit ""°' l'lu"'b~n.d. Amil 8•11, bf-other F r1110 SP004''"'~' of 8•rslow Ca Stir w~\ .,, 4nform•t1on df!\9' c••f'tc tor the u~c M~dlUI C•nl ... Lo• An()elO Cnuntv Gen,.rat Ho~it•t '°" S vP•rs L•.,.,d 1tlf nor liff' ,.,_ California F~at \#"'''"'' ¥e Friday Hov•mbPr 11. ttl 1 O'l PM at TP\• Wttv•''tY Church, ~ •• ,,.._...,~" ~Mo,.al Partt Santa An.a (..a tOllO#" bY mttrm.nt 01re<:ted t:w 0 ~II f:utWrAI HO'""'· 8•r\tow, Cot VIH~ll AOOlF C VIS~EA A~••denl ot San }ftv C.tlitOrr\1'1 Date of ~lh Nov -r 1 1'76 "4tlov~d '°" "' w & M "' Rl")na•d H•r-tf'ft•n Ka• of \Mt Jovo -----------'""" M• Kl•" Vo\'4!f l•IMf" .. C.0-.l• ._...,.,.. lov1nq t>fOtMr Of Htl"' V1\~r ULn-HIOllON FUMHAL HOME C<l<ona del Mar 673·9"*50 Coc;ra Me5c1 646·2424 .. HUllOADWAT MO ITU AU 110 Broadway Co'lta Mesa 642-9150 McCOIMICIC MOUUAlllS Laguna Beach 494-9415 Laguna Hills 768-0933 San Juan Capistrano <495-1776 ,ACIFtC VllW MIMOllAL , ... Cemelery Mor1vary Chapel 3500 Paci lie View Drive Newport. Cahlorn1a 644-2700 l'llK 'AMllT COLOHIAL fUHHAI. HOMI 7601 Bolsa Ave Westminster 693-3525 SMITHS' MOltTUART 627 Main St Huntington Beach 63&-6539 SMITH lUTHIU I.AMI o• WUTCLl .. CttANL Mortuary • • 64t-..eae 427 E. 170• 9t .. Costa Mesa Neptune So~lety C'-IMATI°" •UfllAI. Al MA ~6-7431 ... __ ... ......., ........ _,, __ ~:tc"*" CMIW.,_ ........ Cit«.,.,. •""1 r,,..,,tO•\ vii.__, both of ~ Joi\.11 •"-" 41• c"'noe' Vt\Wr of CO'\t• Nltii>"" tl)w·t'W') Q'•""~"" ot M r & Mr\ A C \J,\ .,, 17f f'h~ Nfll.,.,..l•.ndl" 1tnd IM 14't"' Ml' AMr\ J (h ~f•tlt• ._.,..,<H.~0~ Of , ......... ~, .. ,,.~, ~net .... ,, #Kl"t •• , 2t Fri,.r,c'h 11re 1nv1l~ to•ltendt""' t~al vrv1rt\ f'hur\i«UY" N'twembfr 11 1"7• ••t ft')PM tromlllel.lm•F•'"'lyS,..t& (tArA MOrtu•ry * W Wi"'heS:lf-f' 9,,,,, \•nt• C••r• C• P"O"f' ~ N ,.,, .,.,.,,.,,.,., ~ 1. .... m """'°"'•' P•r"' r:r•mont~C.ht MASON !RENE COTTE<I MASON .,.I_ molhl'r ot Sft4,rof' Lfl'f l(nOwlf'-., \.t.Wrtt l •'C" l(r1oo1tt U\t"' of Atta MMi Cottftr, "" qrar"Ktc,.ndr•n Prec,.CS.O ln W•th bv ""°" f'\u\°'f'\d\ t-fttm41n Co"er • .no Rov M•'IO" S•rvlt .. 1 JO Friday Nov· ~mfler n •• ,,,. Cllur<ll o! Our F•ll•~. Fw .. t l""'"· Cvortn. For~t Ywn Memorl•I P••-FuMrol Homo di•K· IO<\ all.LUCI MAAY ANN BELi.UC.i. r..sldlonl .. C~I• """°""· C• P•• .. <I •way l>l&v •. tt76 Survl.,.d by ll11sb&nd .,..,., J lletluc:I ot Co••• M•~ Ca., one ""' ,..,., J Bellue•. Jr ot C~t.!I Mt ... c.. P•r•""· O.or9• •nd Fr'"" IClmr of An•M1m, C..; ,_ brol,,.,. Cieof'Qe F K~er of (;.lrO.n Grott, C:.; F.w .. r Wllllam Kiefer ol C•IMdr•I Otv; -'"'w IC•ll•y Colt ol ~den Grow. C. """" OI Ille (f1rl•h•n bwlal °" T""'"'· on'"""'"" No""m.,.r I 1. 1'76 •I I 00 PM 51 Jof\l'I TIW 8•Pll\t Cll~ll, Costa ~~. C• F•lll•r W1lll•m K~r of flclaltnq 84111 Bro.tdw•y Mortu••Y dlrt<IO<\ THE f'lUMI .... HIATtMa AllCOHD. IT.__ .. ,__, ~In 'tt>ur AtH-Qll 1th~1g_5= tE"*'"•"" t~ )') .... ,.,. ... " .. ,..,,,., 95-0401 COST"MESA l~H•w~ 81\ld 642-1753 KITCHIH & 14TH RIMODEllHG Fltff ISTIMA TIS '"°"' IM.,i.,• et AN~ .... AIN~~ tUJW l~"'n ""',., ,., ., $• ~ 772•J470 •M• Course To Probe Learning The Un i versity of California Irvine Ex- tension is ollering a two- weekend course in NQV· ember examining possi· ble causes and solutioa.S to the problems of leam- i n g disabilities of youngsters. "Kids Who Don't Learn" is a credit course consisting of lectures by UCI medical faculty and other health specialists. The course will be given Nov. 12, 13, 19 and 20 in the auditorium of Children's Hospital in Orange. Thefeeis$53. Further information may be obtained by call- ing the UCI Extension at (714) 833-S414. Parents Sharing Problem Parents of children suffering cancer will meet for a problem- sharing conference Nov. 15 at the Holiday IM in Costa Mesa. The meeting , ~nsored by the Orange County Unit of the American Cancer Socie- ty, will explore how parenls can meet finan- cial questions, utilize community r esources. and d eal with other children in the family. ORANGE COU OC Scouts To Come Knocking Prize for Winners March to Ail Walkers Too The first countywide "Super 81.ke/Walkat.hn." ;r.nsored by the MJU'Ch ol Dimes will be held fov. Bi.ken arid hikers will have a choice of l.fee routes of 20 miles eacb. Bikers will ride the 1'1\&le twice. First aid and refreshments will be provided. nllST PRIZE 18 A day at Disneyland, a da}at Knott's Berry Farm and an overnight accommcxa- tion at lbe QuaUty lnn, Anaheim, for a family >f four .. Second and Third prizes ate 10-speed bicyclei.. Sponsor/entry forms may be obtained from 7-1. stores, local schools1 and the March of Dimes orrice 111 W. D_yer Rd., Suite 10-G, Santa Ana 92707, (714) 979-2270. Hen • cv_. of corlet 6" -..• •ftd '°"' ... •Ill p•OllAlllJ lie oee4y ltelore JO.. llM•~ Photocopl•• Av1ll1bl• NEWPORT BEACH 240 Newport Center Dr Design Plaza, Suite 120 (714) 640-9053 OVl!R 300 PIP1 NATIONWIDE Thousands of Cub Scouts and Boy fcout.s will be knocking ondoors throughout Orange County. Nov. 13, ~g tickets for the Sc.ut-0 - Rama to be held Die, 11 at the Anaheim COlven- tion Center. PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE TOCR•DtTOllS 3 DlY SALE! THURS.-FRl.-SAT. The tickets, priad at $1.00, will admit anadult to the event that indudes a Pinewood Derby race, a stage show, Co.k-0- Rama, Indian vil.iges and displays or ScOlling skills and activities. O~ aULIC TllANVEll ISeu.•lOt -•IOI u.c.c.1 Cr~,::;: O:\.:'r::~H8~~~~i:tT' Tr~\-t•ror. w·l\O~ bU\ln•H ~H\ t~ ·~ s.n Ml9.,.1 Orin , Newoort Beac11. COUnty ot OtanQe. St•t« ot C.lllor..ie ,,,., • bulk tr•n•l•r I• •bout to ti. -lo ROBERT H WllSON, JUOITH A Wll.SON. Wll.1.IAM E Wll.l(INSOH. ANO CA<IOl. 5 Wll.KINSON. Tr.nJttrff\, w"°\e bu\tlli!\\ '1ddr'H\ '' 7310 "°'' Al>er<lffn Pl•(e . ...._, Beac11. Cou,.ty ot Or•noe. State or C.lllornl• TM oror>erty to bt '"•"'''"e<S '' IOCAled •I IMI $•n MlljUtl 0.l•t. Newpo<t 8ucfl. C", County 010..-, Sl•le ol C.l1tornl•. Seid property I' O..crllMd ln-•I ••· All \tock In trad•. fl•tu"''· oqu11>-men1 ""d 9(>0d will ot that ~intt\ kr.own a\ l'RINGE BENEFIT .tnd Japanese ioored al •••• San Mlouel Orlvt, Newe>0rt 8eact1. Counlv ot Or•no.. StctlP of Calftornid. The bUllJC tran\ftr wot be con~nm14t~ An t<I °" or ellor lfle 7q111 01ty ol Nov Yone?. tml>o!r. 1~76. at 10.00 AM di BMlk 01 Amerl(•, NT & SA ~ Newoort Ctnter Or . Newoort S..acll. County ot OT-. St•te-ot Catlforn1•. Courses in Convfla-So ,., .. -now" 10 t"«' rr""'"'n.o'. tional Japanese wi be •11 ""11~• ""me' eno aoor .. 1e•1M<1 f b'f' Trati\ftro,. •or '"• three v••r\ f•'' 0 fered by the J ctan ...-1.ar• wrne Cultural Associati°'J in °"'"' 0c100.• n. ,.,. S AOO.rl H WI hon anta Ana, begin ng J..01111A w11son Nov. J.8. wil!Wm Ii. w11u- The 10-week cours, in ~~~~.~~''"'°" elementary and n-uNico,.AMER1cA •tno termediate J aparese =·~~~~~;"4 POSTAL [1UJfaJ: PRESS will be held Thursays EK,,,.No.10?0-1m from 7 · 30 a 30 t PubU..,,.d Or•n9" Coo•• 0.111 P1101. · -,..: p.m.1a Novto.m• the cultural associaU.n, .----------_...:..:,•.:..• :..:••~• _.., .... FAMCY PLANTS • 1615 No. Bush St. 1 _ Sell things fa:.t with Daily Enrollment is li~ Ptlot Want Ads. 17300 IEl{CH ILVD., HUMTIMGTOM HACH PHOME 842-2000 The meeting is free to the public. For further information, c all the society at 752-8600. tolOstudents percl~·Tliiiiiliiiliiiliiiliiiliiiliiiliiiliiiliiiliiiliiiliiiliiiliiiliiiliiilliiiliiiliiiliiiililiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil More information nay Teachers Exam Due be obtained by callag 547-7733. PUBLIC NOTICE llH "ICTITIOUS IUSIHESS NAME STATEMENT T,,,. 11111~'""'" person• are Mo11Q1•· National Teacher Ex· ~'"' · t' ·11 b · <108EAT HALF PERSON 1. amma ions WI e given AGE .. C1ES OF O<IANGE. Oll. Nov. 13 at the Chapman S..M ~r North Tow.r. U"ICI• nk College test center, 333 :;::::i. soo s Main s1 . orancr. "' N Glassell St .. Orange. <1otwrt Hdll """o""•r "'~· Of 01'•~ Counlv /t C.a11•orn1• <t'~ Registration forms ••on.Su•••SO.Nor1nTn ..... vn1"B ~ may be obtained from !';= · soo s M••n si Or•n<i. Cb a pm an 's Education r ... , ""''..e'' 1• co..ou(l•d 1>111 t:•r· Office Or from itS direC· OOf"tll°" Jlo.,.rt H•H Pt"OM•I tor of testing. Aq•n<•••ofOra"q•eo.,,.+ Harry G•l~rt Pr~,1oen( lht\ \lil"Mtnt Wf\\ f1lfld Wtfli ttt, CC Student Countv (tf'rk of Oran~ Covnl'; is.t ... '""'""r 111 .. ,. ~ llUCHAl.TEll. HEMElll, FIELDS S"VITCH. Atty, In 'Who' Bo k 100 Soutll ~lowu 51rfft. SuUe 100 0 l..o\A,,..lt\.C.llforni•-17 Publl•llf'd Or.1nq• Co.\! D.tlly ~lol Nowmt>er ). 10. 11 14. t •16 ol6ll lo Jennifer Shelly of Fountain Valley is one of __ P_U_B_L_l_C_N_O_Tl_C_E __ , 13 students at Chapman College selected to be listed in "Who's Who Among Stud en ts in American Universities and Colleges·'. This listing f eatures b i ographies or ac- complishments achieved by the students selected. PUBLIC NOTICE "ICTITIOUS aUSllU!SS NAMI STAT~MUfT TM totlowll)<I "'"'°"' are d0if19 bu\f tW\\M CB ICING PlllODUCTS. -W (•l•ll•No "·0r•"9t.CAit'H'7 U-..rdSl•ln. t:rtn W-..YOY . o-.,. , • ., ... O•n••• Jolln Oood'"•n. 31•1 Faltl•rid C1r , Huntl1>9lon !leach. CAi ., ... 0-.ld Jolln Novak. Ul• Fem\lck '" 0r-.c"., .. s Tllo\ bu•lnen I\ (Onducttd by • -r•IO.IMnlllD ~•dS1t1n r,,,, •••l•rne"t ... , 111..r *''" t¥ County C.•erk of Or•n99 County°" Nov 1.1•1• FUf1t l'ybjl....., O•tn9e Co.St 0..1ly Piiot, Nov 10, IT H. •rid°"' I, 1'7& S-107•• SU~l!RIOll COU RTOFTHE STATE DFCAl.l ,.OllNIA FOR THE COUNTY OFOllANGE N0."·''4°' NOTICE OF HEAlllNG DF PITITIDN FOR PllDa"TE OF WI.I. AND ,011 1.(TTlllS TESTAMIN· TAllY ANOAUTHORIJ:ATIDNTOliO-MIN I S TE 11 UNDER TeE tNDIPINDENT ADMINISTllAl"ON O~ESTATESACT. E\l•le OI GEOFIGE HVM~~s FRAKES AKA GEORGE H FllA ~ Al(" GEO<IGE FRAICES, e>ec ... NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN I GEO<IGE ANN FllAKE5 TVTHlll. i-... lilt<l flere1" • r>etllion tor Prolla14of Will •nd tor h \u•nc• o• L•H•' Tut•-~t•rv arid Autflorlt•ll°" to..., mlrtl\fer unct-r th~ lndeOf'ndl>nt Al ~"•\lratl°" of E•t•te• Atl rel~erc~o Wf\1(1\ t\ m~~ tor '"''"""' oart1cut•"· .. "" trwtt Ille lime •nd Pl•ce"' """'19 IM w-,. .. bttn ~·for HO-> 1'76, el 10 00 a m • In Ill• courtroom• Otoart-nt No l or •••d <""'1 di 1ti Clv•c C..nter Or Ive West, tn IM Coty fl '""'•AM. (Alllornla. 0.lt<I Nov S, lt7' Wll.l.IAM E SIJOHN ltOH R<f°j'."~g'C~ llltS "atleM• alvd Sllit•lff Hac1 ..... Htl•ltt•. CA •n o AtlorMyf°': "'llleMr PubllV>f" Oran94' Coa•t Oally, Pllnt.• Nov 10, ti, 17. 1'16 Schock Boats, Sails & Cannery Village Fashions cordially invites you to an ®JPJEN IBI®1IJSJE ••"J "'tlot.d•Y w.1~·· 111•0<J9h th•"'"'" on C.•n-y'VollfOe Thursday, No\>ember I I !> OOuntU 7 OOo m. 1900 Ul•Vtll" Alt tho(\\ OO('n-' diflll1y;nq -.i..:1•t Xmn gift Mlt:f Rtlrtthment' N<•'\.I ''Sometimes the little reasons to stop srnohing seern more important than the big ones. 'l'hanlis to Schich, little Stacy will never see us stnohing again.'' I \ \ The true story of Jim and Barbara de Boom "The big numbers are cancer, emphy· sema and heart disease. We all know that. But sometimes it's the little ones who give us the emotional impetus to take that first serious step towards giv- ing up smoking. For us, the little one ·~as our 2% year old daughter, Stacy. We both smoked heavily and in spite of repeated attempts to quit cold turkey, we were still smoking when our little girl 1had her first birthday. Then we went to \ Schick Center and broke the habit com- pletely in just five days. It was easy and it was comfortable. We even got. the pecial discount for married couples. e always had good reasons to quit but tacy added the emotional push we eded to call Schic k Center and get me help." ' Barbara: "I thought we could never break the habit. We both smoked quite heavy and ciga rettes were a part of our life. l couldn't imagine how I could survive without my cigarettes. But then I thought about how impressionable and ~·nnocent our young daughter was and ow she soon would be old enough to sociate cigarettes with being GROWN UP. We had read about how smoke can harm children physically even as in- fants. Thank God Schick made it possi- ble to quit smoking. We may have done it for Stacy but we feel so much better now t11at we can truthfully say it's the best thing we ever did for ourselves." In Orange, call 55.8·8404 • I -. ., . ' t . I ' t Wecjnesday, Novemt>er 10. 1976 DAILY PILOT A 9 Federal Ban Sought For Weight-aid Drugs WASHIN GTON CAP) -Five phys1-Harvard Medical School added: ciaos have recommended that tlle "'There ls no question that there is far government ban the use or am-more harmfulness from the use of phetamines and similar drugs as amphetamines than benefits." we.igbl -loss aids on erounds they are Dr. Thomas E. Prout, associate unsafe and ineffective. professor or medicine at Johns Three or the five told a Senate panel Hopkins University, agreed that am· Tuesday that abuse or amphetamines pbetamines s hould be banned for -generally known as uppers or pep weight loss but said all-out efforts to pills -is so widespread that the drug control the drugs should be made should be prohibited altogether, even before they are removed from the though they are used to treat overac-market. live cbildren and narcolepsy. The physicians testified before the Senate small business subcommittee THE DOCTORS CITED research on monopoly, whose chairman, Seo. OWi...,..... indicating amphetamines also may be Gaylord Ndson <D-Wis.), advocates Bkut.• 'Peare' responsible for birth defects. ~outright ban on amphetamines. I r is b R ad i ca I Dr. J~es J . Non, professor or Bernadette Devlin pediat at tbe University of TWO DOCTORS, ALL EN S. M Ali k th Colorado edlcal Center, compared Goldman and Sumner J . Yasse, both c s ey says e questions about amphetamtnes with or the Children 's Hospital or Women's Peace Mov- lhose raised about birth control pills. Philadelphia, said the drugs should be ement s pells s ubser· ''The point is." he said, "the world banned for treatment of obesity: vience for Ireland. needs 'tbepill'or someagentthalcan Yasse said under questioning they She adds that s he perform its function equally well. I should be banned for all uses, if finds it "impassible to am unable to identify a similar need necessary. be anything but a re- Cot a problem'! Then wnte to Pat Dunn Pat will cut red tape . getting the ansu;ers and action you need to soltJe mequit1es rn got•ernment and bus1· ness. Mail your questwns to Pat Dunn At Your Serviee. Orange Coast Daily Pilot. P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. lr1clude your telephone number. 'l'he column appears daily except Saturdays. Excua Don't Adff IJp DEAR PAT: My son, who's a college student back east, bought a Melcor 635 Calculator in Nov- ember 1975, from Chafih Equipment Co . of Rockville, Maryland. After two weeks it quit work- ing and be retu.rned it to the retailer, who sent lt to the manufacturer. My son finally contacted Melcor l.ast May only to be told that work had not even started on bis calculator. Later, the company went out oC business, a nd the calculator was sent back to Chafitz for repair. He finally got the calculator back in September, but it still didn't work right. He went ah™ and bought another calculator, but I reel that 00 YOV .. ,..ow YOUR O••-OS VAi.UC llECl'.NTlY INC11£ASEO' w. .,.,._ '"'•' """'-'• l~f4"~• .oc>t•,_;• .,,. t•~.._ e dee• ... dlftcttOhOt~ (,t o,. ~ti all •"'DOf1•ol o•r•ic'ol!Lttty .n ,...,enot' .a~ ot ~ tN:tcal•ftO rni. ~ CJ\.wtcf.,1.<1ttC"~ Qt .......,.. "' 1 W1W At.._. NM "-..,~of Ml _,.,.-··.at 1 .. '"I ... i.. -"' ..... -11110 e"9c\ 1119 -.... ~or 10 ""''"' '"" Od•~f~y -.,. ot ~-ol tne -"' I~ eveM OI~ ~ PROFESSIONAL .JEWl!LERS INC. ..... Jt"lllllf'> -'°'lMOLO.l\IS -Ot'>JCiNtll'> 714/963-5625 20902 Brookhursl Street, Suite 201 Huntmgton Beach, CA 92646 for amphetamines and related Yasse headed a committee of the v o I u t i o n a r y drugs ." American Academy or Pediatrics socialist." She is tour-W.S .. Huntington Beach which recommended in 1973 that the · t h u s he is entitled to a refund. DR. LESTER GRINSPOON, as-drug be prohibited as a weight· mg e · · James C. Baker, manager of Cbantz, has given sociate proressor of psychiatry al reductiOQ treatment. ----------your soa the option of having the Melcor calculator -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=;;;;;;;;---... ...... -.-....-..,..-put In working order at no charge, ellChan,lng the • unit for a compuable model or recelvlDc a refund. m e!ltt V~nlr . L111uor LI• ght . Duty Baker, however, pointed out that hls company ls not legally responsible for service proble ms on calcuJators from a manufacturer no loaier ln busi- ness, once the calculator Is no lon1er under Chafltz' Ticket Groivs Costly warr;,:~~ms wJtb calculators and other electronic BAKER AT H A RBOR We pay 15¢ a lb. cash for aluminum cans & other, clean, household ah..minwn. ~ //11•1'""1 ' ~ Win\\<' I JCS.# \I~~\;,. lla~l111m -. CTGARITTEs ~- YOUR CHOICE OF 92 KINDS I 00 MM and LONGER ••• Io• MORE •fine wiMS • party plannilMJ Ll9UOR CASE DISCOUNTS llll'!Ht Vrnlr Li11u11 r I.UH ATHAUOR COSTAMESA 549-4044 f Majestic Lake Tahoe 1<. a year 'round playground like none other in the world. Here vou c.in "kYchalll'ng· .. inq slopes, !>tl'P into night... filled with gl11tering entert.l1nment. .. or :;imply breathe rhe mountain air and watch the seac;om change. lr'c; all within easy reach when vou tak~ off for Tahoe on Air Cahfom1a Co11\:<'nient ..;unret service avail able daily from Orang!! County Airport for WALDRON, Ark. (AP) -One year, three courtrooms and $200 in court fees later, attorney Ronald Killion still owes $25 for failing to'stop at the only traffic light in Scott County. -Killion, 39, -who lost an a-cqulttal b1d before Che state Supreme Court, says he might appeal to federal court as a matter o! principle. KU.I .ION CLAIMS THE LIGHT WAS amber when he drove past it in October 1975. A policeman sitting a block away saw it dmerenUy. "Everybody in the county knows the dam thing doesn't work right," Killion said. But Killion, who was elected a municipal judge in neighboring Booneville last week, said bis main dispute is with another municipal judge who re- fused to give him a jury trial after be pleaded inno· cent. HE LATER APPEALED THE CASE to state circuit court, where he got a trial that' ended in his conviction. In his appeal, Killion asserted that "the Waldron city court trial consisted or this statement by the city judge: 'The officer is going to say that you did run the light. you will s•y you did not. I wiH find you guilty. and I know that you will appeal. I do not wish to was te my time. I find you guilty; now me your appeal. ... OFF OE. only $32.00 (one way). And flying Air California means you'll spend less time travel· ing and more time enjoying the spectacular recreation and casual lifestyle that's so much a part of this scenic inland Seil in the Sierras. Money -saving discounts available for groups of ten or more, families and military personnel. Package tours, too. Don't you u.enl to go? It's easy ... on Air California. Cull Ar <"1 • ·• 1 I /•' '" 1 "' fft I> "'9i' Cc-1•11, 17141 7SZI~ Do~Of'\ ll131 924 .1113. La•iuno. (7141 496fHX1. Los ,"'s,.'•• l/JH1./7t~ll 11f~""''"1"1 1J4'Jl!>6<W;H•~c>f'KltSon&mort1m<J./71olJ6:!56Sl'.JO,or~ourl0<ol 1rooologent. Al-". ' CALIFORNIA. We're easy CG tal<e. I equipment that cannot be reaolved with the com- pany can be sent to the Electronic Industries A s- sociation, Box 19369, Washington, DC !0036. which includes aluminum 1011, P•I' pan~. lro:en toOd JnO d1nnnr 11ays <l•P. pudd1nq oin..i melll con1a1ners CN1 .. 1n othor clean, .. 11 olum•num 11ems ciln be re<Jeemi:o Call your Cenler lor <le1a1ls Bring It to Reynolds Aluminum Petition Agal••t Bozard• DEAR PAT: Can an individual citizen request the government to remove a hazardous product from the market? Ir so, how? Orange Recycllng Plant, 210 E. Meets Avenue Riverside Fwy, L.L , San Juan Capistrano Under federal law, you may petition tbe U.S. Meats Ave. • KalellaA.ve. -0 ~ ~ z Comwner Produc:t Safety Commission to Issue or amend a product safety ruJe you feel Is necessary to protect consumers. Your petition may 11ot necessarily lead ~ tbe creation of a new role, but ll will Inform the CPSC about poteatlally hazardous situations. In .ome cases, petitions filed by con· sumers have "encoura1ed" manufacturers to make the necessary safety changes. Petitions sbouJd be filed wlt.b t.be Secretary, Consumer Product Safety Comlllissloa, Washington, DC 20207. Include in your letter wbetber you think the product sbouJd be banned, relabeled or otherwise changed. Tbe commission must respond within 120 days. The CSPC bas a toll-free hot·Une to report hazardous products or to seek Information about poisons or other hazards. You also can use the hot-line to re- quest any of the commission's 80 free fact sheets on everyday hazards. The toll-free number is 800-638·2"6. Tuesday thru Saturday -9:00 a.m .. 4:30 p.m. Phone 998·4271 for information on Mobile Unit schedules in your area. ''Pssstl OCTDjust doubled bus service. Pass it on.'' People all over Orange County are telling each other about Orange CountyTransit District's new improved service. We've nearly doubled bus service county-wide. We've added more buses to almost every route. and streamlined the whole system. Many areas now have 15, 20 and 30 minute service. It's the biggest improvement we've ever made. No wonder everyone's talking about it. To find out for yourself what the good news is all about. call OCTD Information. Now is the t ime to discover how' easy and convenient riding the bus can be. 5473311 And by the way-pass it on. • Call 547"3311, Or toll-free " ZENITH 7 ... 3311, 6AM to 10PM weekdays, or 8AM to 5PM weekends. . -. ,..-. I Good news travels faSt. .. I A J 0 DAIL V PILOT Wcd'IP<1d.1v Novernber 10, 1976 JERRY SEEKS IADrSNAME 'Visions' Rekindle Woman's Hopes LOS ANGELES <AP) The sell-proclaimed transsexual who promoted the three-wheel Dale automobile has pet1t1oned lo have his name changed from Jerry Dean Michael to Gerald10e Elizabeth Carmichael. Michael and others who pro- moted the car arc on tnal for criminal fra ud . TEN SLEEP. Wyo. (AP)-Ef- fel Rae has only the visions of others now to guide her in the search for her Jost 4-year old son Ronnie Rae, who cannot talk and is legally bl.ind, vanished Oct. 11 from his paren~· ranch home near this norihem Wyom- ing town. Authorities spent a week combing the rugged ter!ain PRINGLE'S Newfangled POTATO CHIP.S 131/z OZ .• FAMILY SIZE. TRIPLE PAK. 1.00~ 1.99 from aircraft, on horseback, and wtth tracking dogs before aban· dorung the search. MRS. RAE SAID that because of nationwide publicity given the search, she had been getting let· lers fro m st:lf -proclaimed psychics who say they have located Ronnie (hrough visions. SWIFT "PREMIUM" CORNED BEEF 12 oz. 1.00 "BARBIE" Beauty Sets PYREX WARE 2 ouARr Baking· Dish Oblonr. •tvle I Jr ~tr'l1ng. L.i~ing and l11;1·:m~1 "ll seems like there's something in evt;rY day's mail," she said. "We '//e been getting mostly letters with pictures lhat they've seen in their minds. SHE SAID T OE pictures have led her to believe her son ls no longer in the nearby mOWlt&Jn area. "They're seeing something of this terrain," she said. "But we've checked them out and there's nothing. I don't think he's up there now .'' rrom a woman in Callfomia and another from one ln New Orleans· offenng ideas as to where the boy might be. "Most of them are really try· ing lo help. It's obviou.s lhey're getting something. They send let· ters with pict ures of the area." Ml's. Rae said she had a call VERN SEATON, Wash akie . County undersheriff, said bis of· fi ce has received dozens of tips and checlt'S each one on Ute slim chance that it lead somewhere. Blue body with floral hood (HOT ASSEMBLED) IRISH SPRING MODESS ::..1 :: SOAP for the FAMILY NEW! Space Saver Soft Pack 7 OZ. SHOWER SIZF ·;:; ... :11:::·:::·· :::' 'T'l:l:i :;:;1:s;1mmi;:mm~'i)[ BULBS i:i ~:: -·-....-1:1 '· -··,;~, StHOLDS . ~­ ANY STANDARD Light Bulbs • r.owm • JSWAH 159 • 100 wm PAK or 4 • PAK ONLY TOY ::('· ........ :O' .... .. ;:.J • NORTHERN "NORFIUO" SEE OUR HUGE TOY SELECTION ASST'D. DOLLS by ESSKAY Babies to teens .. to delight any hllle girl! Automatic Blankets si~~:~c~~:ot 16. 8 8 o::tu~~~::~ct .19 • 9 9 ~l ;~ ~10~~ "Autumn Festival': BLANKET j: ; ,;;::::..• ._·' 1.~ . BEACON 100% Acrylic. 72x90 7 88 (1 ":t.1~_ .... !._ .. ,«'""-:. -: .'.. size in handsome brown. ~; · ~~~;~ ... ::_:~~·!.~~Cotillion Blanket • !I .. ... 7 88 ~_:_d~ ~;~~:c~l~~~~2:~?~~ce!" • f~ DELUXE TRAVEL KIT JUMBO SIZE WITH CARRYING HANDLE Evel Knievel sruNT Bristle Blocks 'tr · · -. · ~. "fantasy" Blanket , . , .. ~(~··. ~~~~ Prevents sheddtng & rn L "Jttw gr aired , fl' in back t;ro.vn 4.19 EKCO FLINT 2. PC. Carving Set Magniltcent Pakkawood Handles , 't t' t I ... I.,, p I Li ' t • 1 • 1 • t • 1 J • r l ' l" "' " r ···I r iPL C.1111 ,, lt'P:I I~ f''•ll I 9" Roast Beef Slicer 2 Tine Pot Fork ONLY Redo J;IU• "110g cJ ds for tu ad to toe brJutyl CYCLE with FIGURE • BEAUTY SET • JEWEL BOX SET • BUBBLING BATH BEAOS. TOTE • BATH COLLECTION (PHOTO CUBE) 1 69 • FRAGRANCE BOUTIQUE YOUR CHOICE • EA. "Holly Hobbie" PLAvSEr llNICKERBOCKCR Ccr"P ~IP 8 9 9 two story hlt. ,. with rJg drills • i)-Battery Opera ted Cars PlAYSKOOl Round "PUZZLE" Design, build and create with d1f- l c rent shapes and colors' I UUUY-Colorf ul scenes WITH SOUND CSSllAY-Auth~nr1c de~1~n. 3 99 !:::-:4-~ ... with an tnlernaltonat flavorr 1.49 fir rt .11 J1 Ii< ,,1 CACH & ____ .,,..._ 500 Pieces. compleled 20 .. ~Ill' t Presto Magic Show -....•t1 ;~ r.·Cobbler's Bench PRCSSMAN -E ver yth1ng !or 7 9 9. _i'-:~ . PLAYSKOOL-Sturdy wooden 3 3 9 a home magic show. In r · bench lor the active eludes mstruclton manual • .. ~ toddler. • SOFT SIDED PEPSODENT TOOTHPASTE 6.5 oz. ~=! ~~~ : .• emoH-Decorator coto~. [ !~l ·~ ~~z~ble 5.88 ~:~: 9~88 :; .................................... ... ;:;. ·~~-~;..;~;;,.;;:,..:: .... :.~~;· : I •. Wednesday Novemt>.r 10. 1978 DAIL y PILOT A I I Slayer · Challenges Execution Law Status WASHJNGTON (AP) -The U.S. Supreme Court has agreed to review the case or a Florida man who says the stale cannot execute him for the torture killing or his 9-year·old daughter because its current death penallty law wasn't in effect at the timeoflhecrime. The justices agreed t.o consider the case of Ernest John Dobbert Jr., con· victed in 1974 of murdering bis daughter , Kelly Ann, in late 1971 or early 1972, a nd or second-degree murder in the death of a younger son. FLORIDA HAD " DEAm penalty law at the time of the crime but lhe state Supreme Court decided to •crap MYLANTA LAVORIS f:' ANTACID MOUTHWASH LIQUID 12 oz or 100 TABLETS & GARGLE 119 v 240Z 99c • EA. 6-FOOT Mountain King Outswept green, Bavarian. 6-FOOT SIZE 34.95 Scotch Pine .. , it after the nation's highest court ruled in June 1972 that states were un- coostitutionalJy applying the death penalty. Florida passed a new death penalty law in 1972, and the Supreme Court held it constitutional last July. Dob- bert was sentenced under that law, but bis appeal called the sentencing LIQUID "ex post facto application" of the stat~law. THe brutal story of Dobbert became public in early 1973 wbeo officials found a young Dobbert son, Ernest. UI, wandering the slreet.s of Jackson· ville. Obviously battered, the child told police his f ather had beaten him -and that similar beatinga killed his WOOLITE ~ sister and brother. At bis trial, testimony showed that the murdered daughter had iutfered beatings to the head, burnt bands, poked eyes. kicks, and batterin&s that sometimes lasted 4.Sminutes. He was convicted of fmally choking little Kelly Ann to death. placing ber body ln a plastic bas a6d burying it. CAT FOOD ASSfb. FLAVORS 61'2oz TUMA 6oz COLD WATER WASH . ti ~ris \L5~1.00 -'~ 16 01 119 SIZE • l DOlalltT ~lz:.;..t::llU~m:m:sn.:;:rn;:::rr.-: :;::~::?.-!::::!!.: :!:m::::r::r;::;!:: .• ,· "CONTACT" 11 f.: Oil of Olay LOTION Smooth beauty into your skin, "DYMO'' -~~~~-\ HOME rt·'"~'I; \ Decorative PAPER i!: f!; 3 YARDS · m covenng in 1 00 !;; various colors ; ! and designs. • , 1 &oz · 3.49 ······ ........... : .:·· ::",'.~~;'.;~'.";;~~,:: .. ~~:~~~~~~:"::~'.:~'.:~: SINEX tong-Acting ~ O " NASAL . ) UBERGE rgamcs _:. SPRAY ~ 9-t Wllut Gerin Oil 1 Honey H by VICKS ~ ~\ ~ ~;~~:1°10~~0R O . 1.19 Vz •z ~ • • • EA. ~ ALBERTO V05 : : \~,,; 'I \ HAI SPRAY ! 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I LACTONA Toothbrushes · ... -· · --~ Shape 'n Dry ~~;LEI~ , 1~-. . Powerful 900 watts 17 88 Nylon Natural • ::: ...•. _ .• dries even th ick, 3f $1 2r $1 long hair. II HB9800 • ~ ~ "Calendar" RADIO C1rcular AM tuning Dtal #1 ·77 12.95 PANAsoNK Cassette •£co101R "Th Abl1&du" Sleek model with bu1lt·1n COO · denser micro· phone. llRO • 309S 39.95 ~~·· APOLLO "AIR POT"12-CUP Vacuum Pitcher DISPENSER Glas' ltned for hot or cold beverages. Just press the cap and the l1qu1d 1s dispensed. f asc1nat1ng designs on white. ORCHIDS FACIAL TISSUE White or Colors BOX Of 150 3~1.00 H\JNT. 8EACH·AO•ms & Brookllurat-SprlnQd8lt & Eolnger FOUNTAI~ VALLEY-~hgnolla & W•rner N!"WPOAT BEArM-t 020 lrvlnt . WtllCllfl PIHt I .Ant-3t11 South Britto! St. ~t roro--24372 AOCllfltld Ao•d MAAOUEAIT! PKWAY-Mlulon Vlelo .l 1 I Tonight's 1V Highlights NBC 9 8:00 -•1be Great Waldo Pepper ... Robert Redford stars in this 1W7S adventure movie as a Conner World War 1 flyer bamstorming the Midwest md meeim, Germany's air ace ln a dogflgbt. KCET Qt 8:00 -"How Green Wu My Valley." The first ot six epi.lodes in UUs story of a stnagting Welab mlnlng f amfly at the turn ol the century on Masterpiece Tbeater. CBS 9 9 : 00 -"Death Wish ." Charles Bromoa declares war on New Y<>d muggers after his wile is killed and bis daughter assaulted in this 1974 movie drama with Vincent Gardenia and Hope Lange. 7:00 DU@([)m""' (~)MynntS- ( U ft Tll 1111 ffllll oc.. ........ ••'-laJ 8)Tilefm ..... .,,.. atWrGrlflll ED~m ~ (QI ())) ..... ..... Wies m~r,n11i, -7:30- 0 OOIM MISS Sl,000,000 * MME THAT TUW£!!!! 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Stlllt ........ --Ila wfft ... d11t•ttr 111 brul•lly ......, (reun1ne 111 lht d~1th of 1111 tlllf fftd 111$lilUllOlllliUllOf'I OI Illa •cfllt1>. 1 Ntw YOf\ City t1th1 '9ct lllllldla I Ofl+IMll WI/ 11111\sl tilt at)'s muue<s by SttWC llltm .... tOillll hlllllttfl IS I decoy llld- .... ltt.Kttd-lllootllll tbelll 10 ..... e (8 ())) C1JJ 1¥etta "Our tll(' lllrtlll hunts IOf Ille kllltr of 1 we> flld slowly 1ul11ts the Cit.Ml man was tlOI a ch1nct mllm but the '"'''of a uretuny planlltd 111U1dtf ~ Co!M1, Aon IUyes 111d W~I MacMRnt eues1 CD HM G.lr1eJ Iron • Jllb Dnid brmen's SeaMlity ToniPt ..... Gltlflll si.. ........ ...... Milewlcal Df1IU a..,. " 111e be• fD Tileltr't 111 .. ritl 'Tht h m111e ol Ille Slwtw" Tiit AmetlQR C.oflSef ...., llieatrt al San fnllCISCO l>lt- wllb t11e11 comedic tre1t111e11t of S..h.,re·s cl1ss1< w1tb fttd• Otstei • K1t11t11111 11d ,.,,, s.ncei • Ptttwe.1110 10:00 •a ()) <IJ m Q9at "Pm111 Wom.tn" Whtlt tra1l1ng 1n tse-oed CDIMd (iwsl h HMd111) '" lht hoPf lie '"" lud them lo lhe11 SISlet, I~ 8aud1ne brolh rs eAcounler • patM(ic -111 (&uni laia1nt SI~ -' llt1 lrwensll t!Mld- toro-c tM9 to mile ' lou&h detmoll JNI Davis. Paul Bt1nep1 ..s 1 om Reest 11so e ues1 . UDllM CJ) ..... 8 atMUl'S ANGUS * TllCl DOWN HIT-11£11 8 CB Cf)) 8 Qril's Allt'* ·10 IUI Ml Ancel" Kelly t>ecomn lllt ...ctlftl al a dlild's mtS/landhne of ' t.rurm IM is 1n dlneer ol dtalh The olllff Mftls 10 1n w1rdl ol tllt dllld wllo II.as run l •ilY ind abo hunt IOI Ille lllt,ll .,.ho d1opped lhe iUR Iller ~nell tlliier 1n 1 murder rMi C'llllmMt -10:30- • • m..., 11:00 ee•ca """ D ()) \UJ Cl) !I~ llwl a caw> a ~ A8trku ..,.. CU Sutlllllt a~a..u. GI MMn OICOUllKED * • HO UTEUltT PllSUITS TOIUCHT ... ..,, ........ ...., ...... ., ... ., .. Imm IHJ S., 111t Stan tD- -11:30-G 1.11> <D CD CIS Lite MOwlt: C..... "lo'ldy But Lttllll" a a ()) er• m...., r..w. (1)1'11"1.0. • ua ' CJfl flit .. o" .. ' ..,..., ....... ... ... ,.a. .... .,,...., 12:00 a 1a1 " Crwdlt • .... : ttl .,,.. f• ..., Hit OM._, .. Tmillilla ~r (C0111) 'M-Plt1'is Olk ......... .,... 114 £--.~ (""1) )') VIII IOlln)Oll V111 lilllu. -12:30-...... a..: ......... • .,.._..__ .. St. ... "'" .. ., ........ ttoW" CD lillllt: 1" nin..111 Utttf" (m~) :>I Cllwltl iloffr 1:00 e o ru 1101 ,_ m•rna. 2:00 a-.. (CJ '1u i. ,_.. (mllS) 'SO-Dins °"' C'.old<>n .. " .. . • Dllleillfll1t111 ........ "•ltty ,.,.. .. "1lllltf lltf1111" m......,.. sa--.,.. ",_, .,.,... "Tiit '9tty Qrt; -1:45- ·--.,.... (Q)lll) 31-l'Aty """'-C.Utec BmMn , I I Llll.B09d I I I j I P auc N011CE .. ,. ••CT•Trou• au11111as lllAM•STATl ¥UIT ,.,_ lol-"9 IM• 'IOft\ .,.. doll!O Ml . I l I Wild Dogs ' Don't Bark j ,...'.:'OSPITAi. 1..l "-'EH HO\P ITAI.. 1..INEN 1111..il"I.. M()SPITAI.. UNIN j \EltVICI MOSPlf4 1.. 1..INI .. AEN tAl SE•v•CE \PEC141.lt1EO Lt..il!N 1PICIAl..1?ED 1..1 .. EN ll(H I T AI. SPEC14ll l •O 1.INEN 1E•V•CE SPECI 111..l lED llMIN •ENTAI.. SEltVIC.E Ol!Nlbl.. 1..i OU\TlllAl UNIFORM lllHTAI.. iSlllVICI!, GINEltAl IHOUIT•l"I.. AE lol l"l SEltV I CI! . I I I I j I Maybe YoU'Ve read about the Jap&De1e undersea t.uQnel th8t ltrtlebel two and a quarter mUes between tho ia1aDdl ol Hoaabu and Kyo.abu. Overhead. there'• a alx·IAH 1\11· pension brtd1e Lbcn now, too. But do ~you know wby Lbe Japa:19e built the tw:l.Del fttlt lolt.e~ of Lbe bridp? Because back lD the JJ30I, the Imperial Navy rea.IUed the Em· pel"OC' might be aboard one or a.ootber of Lbe abips that moved tbroQab the puaqeway, and offtcen dedded tt would be umeemly for commoner~ to be permitted lo achieve attitude over the Emperor's bead. About Z1 yean aller World War ll reduced the Em· peror to human dimensiona, t.be brtdie was flnally built to relieve the traffic bott1eoeck that the tunnel bad become. I IN\TITUTIO..iAl 1..AUNDl lllHO ' LOHN SERVICI 01..0llE I.AU"' OlllV l!H VlllOlol M E HfA I..\ I SlltVICES I. SUPPl..llS 5N Vl"ONMI NT ALS CAlll PltOC>VCT\ '°' _,,, 1111< •>Cf ....... ,"' Gll•!Onll• I ..,, l!NVlllOlolMl!Nf lllS INC , e I C.llto•"'• Co•oo••lltf\. '°' Hot1h Euclid A11611elm. CA "'901 I Tl\1\ IN\JM \\ I• <-ll<ltd bY e.COr• j pew •I lofl I , I '"'"""'"'...,'~''· '"' JOSEPHS DOAl'MAN i 'Vk .. Pt"ldem • Tlli\ ''"'•-"' •H "'" Wllll ,,,. I °"'""' C•tt• o4 O.•nte ~ °" ()( -... .. "" l ~ I I I I I l I I I I I WBYDOGSMU Q. ·'How do you account for lbe fact that nobody baa ever explained wby tame dogs bark but w1Jddogs don't ?" A. What's ao mysterious about Lbal'! 1 Darting is a good way for a doc to attract attentioo to llleU. Tame dogs sort of ~ iL But wild dogs are afraid of It. Suspect the characteristic: bas been in· bred over the generations as a result ol that Lblng called genetic memory. Take the more recently domesticated dogs, for ln· stance. Uke the African ~~4~ ;~:J'C) ~~ baaenji and Australian dingo. They ati.U don't bark, even tbougb they could, if so lnc:lined. I I II you don't like the smell of mothballs, I try sprinkling whole cloves around wherever 1 ln storage you want to beat Lbe bags. They I work. too. j I j I I Up to about 300 years ago in China, ac:· c:ord1ng to the hisUlrical footnotes, marijuana bad beeo used only u a remedy for dyaent.ery. Addre .. moil to l.. M. a,,d. P.O. 8o% 156', I eo.taMe..nDS PUBUC NO'l1CE PUBUC N011CE ~tCTITIOUS au"N•U ••CTJTIOUS•U"llllSS NAME n ATl!MUfT lllAMaST•T•MllfT r .... 1011.,..1..q ""''°" ., OOt"O DIN· n. f'ol-"O .,.''°"' ••• OOtfl9 bul.I ,..__..,.,., ..ues: PWll..1..llM,CEME>fT CO.l1Ul>n• El. llAN(HITO PllOOUCT10tol$, COl"Wo CMI•-·· c• '1616 .... st ,_,,.,rt8H<ll,CA'2M3 0-.••~· E p"'"'°'· JI)) 1..•ntOln 4 '111•'• ti A•llCllUo HO • IM 1°' W•v eo-.1-Mtt<t. CA.,.,. '1\IS4.,...._,8 .. cll,CA"161>3 l"I\ bu••nen I• tOftduttl'CI t>Y -,.,. Thi•"""""' I\ c-ll'CI l>Y • c..or· ... ><1 ... 1 --Ion. C .. ..-~ E Pll•ll•D\ A•ll•'• El ••Milito Th•\ , ••• ~-· ''"" l>lf'CI ""'h It.. ~OIO Avlle. Pr"l(Jeflt C.oun•• C•.,• o4 0r•"9f! Countw °" ()(1 Tllk \IAl'11,.,....t wn 111..i ""'"' ,,. II It 11• COuloly Clt1'11 o4 0. 4"199 County °" Nov· H t n t -2, lt76 Pub4"""" 0Uft0<' COl \I °""' Ptlol Oc• 11 Nov l 10 11. 1•1& ..... 1~ PUBLIC NOTICE ... ., P\bltlled O.enoe Co•" o.t1v Pltot NowmotrtO, 11,tf,andOec.-1. ,.,, --7' .... "-tit._ ()U"Of' Coe1t 0.lly Piiot ,. ... mo.-) 10, "· l•. ,.,. ~'· PUBUC N011CE KOCE Television (50) PUBUC NOTICE PUBUC N011CE PVBUC NOTICE PUBUC N011CE ' Wednesday. November 10, 1978 DAILY PILOT A J 3 KOCE-T.50 Orange County Television Broadcast Muse11m Stores Sounds of Past RV Thefts Increase In State NEW YORK (AP) -The memora- ble faces and voices of more than SO years or radio and television broad- cuting are being collected here in· what is thoµght to be the nation's first museum for broadcasting. · Out of the past. at the push of a but- ton, come sights and sounds of the in- dustry from the earliest radio broad- casts through the Carter-Ford presidential debates. STORED ON BOOK·SIZED audio and video tape cassettes are Judy Garland's singing debut on radio at age 12, Winston Churchill's exhorta· lion to his countrymen during World War II, Huey Long's shrill denuncil\· lion of Franklin Roosevelt in the U.S. Senate and Roosevelt's fireside chats with the nation. These are part of the initial collec- tion of The Museum of Broadcasting, which formally C?pens its doors to scholars, students and the public next week. The museum was inspired and financed by William S. Paley, the 7S-year-old chairman of CBS Inc. "IT IS TIME THAT we take stock or our past, so that we can kn<?w and un- derstand the heritaee of the broadcast media in building our future," he said SACRAMENTO (AP> at a preview or the museum here -The~ of recreational Tuesday. · vebiclea·tn California in· "It ls imrerative that we do this creased 74 percent ln the now . for be precious body of first nine months of th.ls broadcasting history that is still year. the Hiehway ln eiiatence -discs, klnescopes, film Patrol reports. and audio and videotapes -must be There were 1,'173 thefts preserved. Otherwise, it will simply, of RVs from January by neglect, disintegrate or disap· through September, pear." compared to 1,019 last Paley will provide the more than $2 y e a r , C H p Com . million expected to be necessary to missioner Glen Craig run the museum for fi.ve years. It is said Tuesday. hoped grants from th~ in~ustry, fo~-Carryalls and pickups dations or government will be availa· with camper shella were ble after that. ~ the most popular targets 111E MUSEUM~ 718 radio and of thieves. TV programs and hopes to have 18,000 "In June alone 527 in five years. In addition, there are recreational vehicles books on the industry, program were stolen in California, scripts and a card catalogue of the a 204 percent climb over tapes. · last year," Craig said. The tapes can be viewed or heard on Leading th~ list of consoles that include a TV monitor stolen RVs are pre-1965 and a tape deck. The museum bas model Willys Carryalls, room for 20,000 programs, with which a year ago ranked special climate-controlled storage for only 16th on the most- "master tapes" of them. stolen RV list. ST ARTS TOMORROW MAY CO VETERANS' DAY . . ·---'....... .. . . . SpecicJ! purchase casual coots OnP oi al o llecl1on of grl'tlt f cll l coa tc; 1n ,1 variety oi f abrr c.-. 6 to 16 34.99 special purchase budgl't ~tore' 828 Fieldc rest bath towels at savings Cotton/po lyester terry in white, sable, cognac, blue and canary. 3.49 were 4.49 Three P.iece p ntsuits · E a~yca re knit pJntc;uits made of gr<'at machine washable polyes.ter. 17. 99 special purchase boulevard dresses 95 Presto Burger iM Shapes and brorl'i a delicious hamburger in one to three minutes, and no-spatter! 12. 99 reg.16.99 small appliances 74 Famous maker polyester coordinates In rust, camel, or hunter green. Jacket, 10-18. Pant short and avg. 16.99 9.99 blazer was 28.00 pant was 16.00 blvd. sportswear 167 Famous make double kn its Washable polyes ter slacks in solid colors and patterns. 32-42, insea m 30-34. 12.99 comp. val. 16.00to18.00 men's slacks 18 "'-..... ' • • • • ,.,,,, 1 .. ,,, • .. , QUE~NIE By Phil lnterlandi "That giant step forward for mankind . . . I think 1 missed It." . MAVCO Fa lf sweaters for juniors One of a collection, this fall tunic sweJtcr is d ll acrylic 1n sizefS, M, L. 19 .. 99 was 30.00 jr. J...n1twear 138 Dressy sports separates Cotton sateen. Blazer 36-46, • pant 28-38. Vest also available. ... 14.99 ·9.99 r. blazer reg. 30.00 pant reg. 22.50 pace shop 130 South Coast Plaza-Costa Mesa. 3333 Bristoi St., 546-9321 Westminster Mall-Goldenwest. at San Diego Fwy., 898-2521 i I A J 4 DAILY PILOT Wednesday. November 10, 197& I Firms Report Earnings Smit•.,, ..... .......,,. Smith lnternaUonal, lnc .• Newport Beach, has announced net lncome tor the nJne months ended Sept. 30.1976, was $27,636,000, an increase of 10 per· • cent over net income ol $2S,097,000 during the same period in 187S, and sales tncreued S percent to $238,140,000 Crom $226,967,000. Ea.mi.ors per share for the nine months ended Sept. 30, 1918, were $3, compared wllh $2.97 for the same period or 1975. Got seven swans a swim- ming you'd like to sell before Christmas? Move them under our tree. On each Thursday from November 11th through December 16th, the Daily Pilot will publish special pages to make it easier for you to convert your saleable items to Christmas cash. Buy a box under our tree & sell your toys, sports equipment, luggage, appliances, furniture, antiques, handmade & unique gifts and no matter what your business -we have a box for you! Putting a box under our tree is easy and inexpensive. Rates are $4.00 for the smaller box to $22.50 for the largest box. BIG, BIG SAVINGS if you run more than one time. For more information and to place your ad just call 642-5678 and ask for your Christmas Atl· Viser for more lnformatfon. Your credit is good with us. We'll bill you or you can charge your ad to yo ur Master Charge or BankAmerica rd. DAILY PILOT 642-5678 Eamlngs per share ror 1976 were based on l ,083,850 11\Creased s hares outs\.anding as a result of the com· moo stock offering in March, 1976. For the third .guarter of 1976, net Income was $8,737,000 on aales..].>l rn,029,000, compared with net income or $8,916,000 on snJes or $77,SSS,OOO for the ·third quarter or 19:75. Earnings per share were 91 cents in the third quarter of 1976, compared .with $1.0S 1n the third auarter of 1975: the decrease is at· tributed to the Increased number of shares out· standing tn 1976. Graee A11110-~ £w W.R . Grace &: Company, New York, which operates the headquarters office of lhe Rinker Com- pany and the Kendall Development Company, Inc .• Newport Beach, has announced lower earnings for the third quarter principally due to lower profits from fertilizer operations and a non-operational ad· dition of nearly $8 million t.o 19'15 third quarter earn· ings. Compared with the period a year earlier, earn· ings for the quarte!:t~ded Sept. 30, 1976 declined 30.5 percent to $28.~.ooo or 79 cents per common and common equivalent share. In the 1975 third quarter, earnings were $41,501,000, or $1.30 per share. Earnings, adjusted lo exclude the effects of· lhe addition of third -quarter earnings and units divested, were $28,033,000 for the quarter compared with $30,308,000 in the same period of 1975, a decline of 7.S percent. Sales and operating revenues for the 1976 third quarter increased to $854,056,000 versus $841, 744,000 last year, which included $41,436,000 from units divested in 1975. Excluding sales of these divested units from 197S, third quarter 1976 sales were 6.7 percent above the 1975 quarter. Edis°" Reportf Eanthlfp G,...,t. Southern California Edison Company's earn· ings for the third quarter amount.ed to $1.13 per share up from 90 cents for the same period a year ago, a'ccording to_T.M .. McDanielJr., president. ., Earnings were adjusted downward by 33 cents per share to the $1.13 level, McDaniel 3aid, as a r e- sult or implementing the balancing account pro- vision of the California 'Public Utilities Com· mission's new energy cost adjustment clause. Cleek Selected fer .lofl Clock Construction Company. Irvin&, bas been selected to construct improvements to the existing A & E Plastic Pale building at 2400 Garnsey\ Santa Ana. General Tel llepon• l11erea.e General Telephone of California, wiOding u p one of its best years in telephone gains. says it placed an additional 48,259 phones in service during the third quarter. The company has gained 122,099 telephones through the first nine months of 1976. This pace puts the utility ahead of its total of 130.035 in 1975, General's bestyears.ince1968. Avco Ffle• lorOllft"f•g Avco Financial Services, Inc .. Newport Beach, says it has filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission a registration statement relating to the proposed public offerings of $75 million senior notes due Dec. l , 1986, and $50 million senior s ubordinated debentures due Dec. l , 1991. Cragar Selects Loclcma• Cr agar Industries, Inc., of Compton, a division of Wynn's International, has named Ric~ard Lockman & Associates, Newport Beach. lo direct its advertising efforts. Chamber ·sets Tax SeRJinar Harbor Area businessmen have an opportunity to learn about the 1976 Tax Reform Acl in a tax planning seminar sponsored by the Newport Harbor Area Chamber of Commerce. The seminar will be held from 7:30 a.m.-noon Thursday al the Newport. Sheraton Hotel. Tickets areSlO. THE SEMINAR. PLANNED by the chamber's Business Development Committee, will feature sessions conducted by attorney Alan Wiener and CPAs Earl Weitzman, Frank Swan and Ted Inouye-. Inouye, chairman of the business development committee, said the program can yield four hours of credit for accountants in the accountancy conti- nuing education program. The chamber h~s further information at 644-8211 Now Open in Newport ·Beach DYNAMIC CONDITIONING FOR MEN tr .. , , ,, GU YITY IDtCISI MA CHM $PICIAL IMTIOOUC;TORY OPRI (Now Tht'u SOI , Nov OJ IT'S A FACT The MAYO METHOD of physical conditioning fe>< men Is the first of its kind develooed exclusively for men. It combines the most effective ol isometric and eorobic NON.STRENUOUS exerci!le with nutritional guidance to build muscle tone. increase circulat100. eliminate on-wanted inches. Improve oosture and control weight. IT WORKS The MAYO METHOD ol C>hvs1cal oondltion1ng is personahzed reQuiring ONLY three 2().3() minute sessions per week. There !S oersonal lnstructton at each session, and lhe number of weeks 1s determined by Individual requlremonta. the MAYO METHOD has proven effectiveness It has been medically tested and clinically awroved. Full documentatton 1savailableuoon reauest. IT'S GUAR.AHTEB> The MAYO METHOD guarantees results! Goal!! are established ond achieved within the presonbed program 11me THI MA YO METHOD Requires no disrobing. shott. pills Of stntnuous e11erclae Md that's a melter of FACT! PHONE: 752-5155 UPI,,..._ Oppe•esPI•• Edgar B. Speer, chairman of the board of U .~. Steel Corp .. says he's concerned about Presid ent-e l ect Jimmy Carter's s uggestion that wage earners should pay fewer taxes and corporations more. He says the govern- ment has s hown "distressing · lack of understanding" about need for capital investment State Appetils Payment Case SACRAMENTO (AP) -The atate is appealing a court ruling. that approved unemploymenl. insurance benefits for a UCLA law student who said she would Tefuse work that interfered with .studies. 'lbe notice or appeal was filed with the 3rd District Court of Ap.- pe.al by Martin Glick. Employ- ment Development Department director. He is trying to reverse a Sept. 28 Sacr amento County Superior Court decision in the Enid Ballantyne case. PusltiagSales AMC Sets Rebate For Older Buyers DETROJT <AP> -Amerlcan Motors Corp., wblda trimmed prices ol its Gremlin models lasl week, made a.notber move tod.Q to attract nles by oflerini a rebate to 10 mlllion retired penoaa. The rebates, effective immediately, are be1nl ottered to members of the American AssoclaUon of Retired Penona ud the NaUonal Retired Teacbers A.saoelatloo · who buy AMC cars and Jeep c T1"'KJNG ) vehicles. ""- AMC said the reimbursements STOCK range from $2S for tbe aubcom-_ 'put Gremlin to $115 for the ln· termediate-shed Matador models plua an extra SSO foe cars equipped with tactor)'·lnatalled air conditi.oning._ Taz T•llc Sltdetl Frank Swan of Cooper-i and ~ybrand, Newport Beach, will ispeak at Thursday's meeting or the Financial Exec utives lnstitute. The meeti,pg will be held al 6 p.m . at the Saddleback lnn, Santa Ana. Swan's speech will cover Aspects of the 1976 Tax Reform Act. fi'uel Stapplff: ·~ 119h W ASlllNGTON (AP)' -~ Federal Energy Administration has reported that the nation in general should have enough fuel to make up for expected natural gas shortages this winter, pro- vided the weather and the economy are normal. But the agency said North Carolina may run into fuel shortages even in a normd winter, and unusually cold weather could result.in shortages of energy in that state and in Geor gia, Maryland, South Carolina, Tennessee, Virginia, Kentucky. West Virgini~ and Arizona. Car T~ F"~t•dftl SACRAMENTO (AP) -Next time you buy a car from a private party you may have to pay more in taxes when you register it. New regulations aimed at sav~ ing about $20 million a year in Over The Counter NASO ListiltC)S loel revenue from taxes on privately sold can bave been a. nounced by 1i.te oftlclals. Under tbe r eplations, t.be motoriat who buys a car from a private party must produce a bill o( sale or other acceptable doe• ment.. or certify tbe price paid Wt\eft regilterlni the vebide. Tbe price will determine the t.ax. Sell••••--See..U9 LONDON, Ky. (AP) -For Laurel County's scbool l}'Slem .. operating ln the black bas taken on new meaning. Wortman dig- ging the foundaUoo for a new junior blah struck a 10-iDc:b aeam '°'coal. "It's kind of a bonama.'' said William Hall, the counly's ~ tant schools superintendeaL "'We dhtn'tlmowit waa there!' OU Prellt• aep.rtetl SAN FRANCISCO CAP> -The nation's 25 largest oil companies earned a total or $3 bi1lioo in profits during the lhlrdquarter of tbe year, the Amertcara Petroleum Institute bu dia· closed. Institute president Frank N. tltard said the figure represent a 9 perceat increase OWi' tM-COl'- respoodlng period in 1975. He said the companiea at- tributed the higher earnings to increased prices for crude oil and natural gas and to improved pr<>- fit marging on refining, market· ing and chemicals. 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'• 111> •.. Conglomerate Tells Loss NE\\' YORK CAP> -Norton Simon Inc., the consumer goods con· glomerate. reported Tuesday its sales fell but profits gained by 8. 7 percent in the first quarter of fiscal 1977. Norton Simon srud profits in the quarter ended Sept. JO were $21.8 million. or 46 cents a share. compared with $20 million, or 42 cents a share, a year ago. Sales fell, however, from ~2.7 million to $432.&tnillion. The company makes foods and beverages under such labels as Hunt, Wesson, Canada Dry and ReddJ-Whlp. lt also bottles whisky, makes COS• metics a nd publishes Redhook magadne. AMC Tells Record Loss DETROIT (AP ) -Amerlcan Motors Corp., s tlll caught in a s mall· car aalet slump, reported today it lost a rec:ord $51.1 million in t.he July- Sep~mber quarter t.o flnlah lt.s fiscal yur wit~ a net loss of $46.3 mlllion. The auto maker's quarterly loss waa the steepest for any three-month period in its 21-year history, 1urpass· ln1 tbe $47.8 million of red ink report ed during the J anuary-March period ofWS. .. WednesdiJY. November 10, 1'78 s OAILV PiLOT Jl l5 Instant Ca•eras Polite Giants Face Sayonara? B)' 111111.TON MOSKOWITZ This was supposed to be t.he year in which Eastman Kodak and Poturoid nnauy squared otr against each othe~. However. up to now it has been mostly ishadow box In~ Kodak, formerly a supplier to Polaroid, introduced its ow9 instant cameras early in the year, setting the 1>tage for • dramatic showdown. Cnn the c!lam plon of photography from Rochester, N.Y., take the measure of the young upstart from Cambridge, Mass.? But it simply hasn't happened. There has been n o eyeball -lo· eyeball confrontation. Money Tree Maybe dramatic showdowns are a relic of the past, occur- ring only in western movies. Today's busine~s competitors are too polite. Look at ti'le ads that Kodak and Polaroid have been run-- ning. Neither mentions the other's product . Each talk~ about its own camera. It's as if there was no competing pro- duct. WHILE THE TWO COMPANIES MAY be hassbng each other in the courts, their public stance is to make believe th~ other doesn 't exist. That's no way lo conduct a fight. The fact is. there ar~ now two companies in the instant photography business. And either the market expands a lot or someone is going to be hurt. The crunch may come next year arter Kodak has solved its production problems and brings in its elaborate folding model from Germany. Surveying the battle to date, one would have to awar6 the early rounds to Polaroid. lt has managed to stave off the irutial assault from mighty Kodak. KODAK HAS DISCLOSED THAT it will ship aboul J million instant cameras in 1976. For ;1 new Kodak produc~. that's a wretched performance. Polaroid sold 5 million cameras las t year ai.d 1t expects to go over the 6 million mark in 1976. That's a sizeable lead for Polaroid. It's a lso important to keep m mind that this is not merely a race to se~I cameras. The object of the game is film sales. Since the Kodak and Polaroid film packs are not interchangeable, it 'f crucial for each company to have its own camera in th' hands of amateur photographers. No one knows that better than Kodak, which has made a (me art of selling ine~ pensive easy-to-use cameras that consume heaps of ex~ pensive Kodak color film. So Polaroid is erljoying a slightly helter year tha~ Kodak. In the first rune months of 19761 Polaroid boosted 1ti profits 26 percent to $47.8 million. Kodak's profits over thf same period were up only 5 percent to $429 million. • THE TRUTH MAY BE THAT this is a battle which has so far produced no winners. Both Polaroid and Kodak are • long way from the palmy days of 1968 and 1969 when eactl company boasted an operating margin of 33 percent: Polaroid is now down to 19 percent and.Kodak to 27 percent, which means that neither company can squeeze as muc& profit out of a sal~s dollar as it used to. • l Also, the real winner may be waiting in the wings -~· Japan Fuji Photo. the Japanese photographic giant, r cenlly beat Kodak to the punch with a new available lig color film. Now Fuj i tells us that 1t, too, has developed an in,. stant camera s ystem. The J apanese have decimated the U.S. televisioo manufacturing industry. They are making sharp inroads i9 the automobile market. Will in~tant photogra phy be next T Mint Condition 'Granite LOOy:' In Use Again SAN FRANCISCO (AP )-The U.S. Mint here was "The Granite Lady" to gold miners a century ago, and it withstooa the great earthquake of 1906. But decades of neglect followed, and by 1969 there were filth and mice where gold and silver had glinted. l Now, after a renovalion project that took fou r years an~ cost $4.5 million. the Mint Is as good as new. Work was just completed on the exterior and the redesigned interior was re- opened earlier as a showpiece that includes offices, con1'- puters and a m useum. THE MINT IS CELEBRATING -WITH a display ot gold worth as much as itcosttorenovatethe place. : Centerpiece of the display is a one-of-a-kind 1907 $20 gold piece insured for $1 million. There are also gold bars and nug. gests worth more than $3 5 million, along with other rem if\· ders of this city's namboyant days as a center for gol~­ hungry fortune bunters. The coin, on loan from the Amark Coin Company or Los Angeles, bears an Indian head double eagle design that was rejected by Presldent'Theodore Roosevelt in favor of a Libet - tydesign. AMONG THE OTHER ITEMS ARE a miner's cabin brought intact from the Mother Lode gold fields, a Wells Fargo stagecoach and minting machinery once used to make coins out of gold and ore. The Mint opened in 1874. It was designed by Treasury architect Alfred B. Mullett, who also designed the old E&· ecutive Office Bui I ding next to the White House. Until 1937 it was one of three mints in the country, and during that lime it stamped out one and one-third billion coins. When a larger Mint opened two miles away, the old granite structure was used for federal omces. • BY THE JMOS JT WM DETE RIORATING badly, anal proposals for its use ranged from a downtown annex for Sllfl Francisco State University to a west Coast branch of U'(e Smithsonian Institution. U.S. Mint Director Mary Brooks decided in 1969 that tilO building should be restored as an historic, functionink landmark. She said she was appalled the first time she lookee inside. , "When I walked into the front rooms where they used t9 re<:eive gold and silver bullion, 1 couldn't believe how dirty l was;· she recalled. "There were mice. Dirt was evenC- where.'' j Now the building houses the coin museum, compute rf that tum out m ost of the payrolls for Treaaury Departmert employes, and omce.s for processing special coins anf medalsorrers. l Offi.ce· Nears Completio~ Completion of Secunty Pacific Bank's $315,000 Moultoi Center Office at Moulton Parkway tmd Santa Marl a Avenu~ Laguna Hills, ls expectedln December. The office will offer Laguna Hills realdents dull rangeJ banking services plus u fe deposit boxes, niaht depositorY. )euer drop, note teller services and two drive up teller lanel featuring extended banking hours • •> .._A=J ..-8'-DA_l_L_Y_P_IL-"O_T ____ ~W:...;ed;.;;;.;..;.ne::..:.sd~y. November 10. 19'"6 ... r.. f J I . I ·' .. • all 35 stores join in celebrating the opening of Mervyn's new store in Pleasant Hill, California I these are only a few of the over one hundred , .. items now on sale in our stores prices· effective through Sunday, November 14th 'Baker's Dozen' knee-hi's A dozen plus one pair 1n each package• Sandal foot w11h wide band top. Beige Orn: size fits sizes 8Yr l 1. SPECIAL $3 13-pr. pkg. • women's all-weather coats Single breJsled, poly1'Stc1 I cotton pant COJt. SJll color. Sizes 10.16. Coat Department REG. sis 22.99 infants' and toddlers' tees 20% off sclL•cl1<J11 of lo11q ilnd short sleeve styles. lnf<1nts' sizes 12, l8. 24 mos. Tod dlers' s11es 2·3·4. REG. 2.49 1.99 16o/o off girls ' knee-hi's Cable stitch Orlon' acrylic/ nylon in white. rl'd, navy or flax . Sizes 6/7' '· 8/9'',, 911 l. REG. $1 PR. 6 PR.$5 89c PR. 1.01 off tops for girls Big tops, smocks, tunics in easy-care polyester cotton. Solids, patterns. Sizes 4 ·6X. rrq S5 • . 3.99 RE G. S6 4.99 Sizes 7-14 boys ' screen print knits Sho1 t slt•eve, crew neck tees of 1 QOG., cot ton m solids w1 th colorful p1ctur,.. fr on ts Avail· able in s11PS SM L·XL. REG. 2.99 EA 2 FOR $5 2.69 EA. boys' acrylic ski sweaters Crew nPck with 11bbed cufh and bottom for shJl'l'' 11•trn t1on Stnp1•s 111<1 \k 1 loolo. > S1zl's818.SM LXL REG. 9.99 8.99 men's Levi's" leisure suits Jackrt \I/I'S s ML XL nant Wd1St S /l'S 30 10 40. 1 /3 off Jacket, rt'q S28 .18 50 Pant, reg S20 .13.25 men's C.P.O. outer-shirts Selection of colorful plaids, in western style with full placl<et front and 2 flap chest pockets. S·M·L·XL. REG. 10.99 8.97 "Free 'n Easy'' tablecloths L111en·look solids of 50% poly· ester/50% cotton. No·1ron: 25010 off soil-release finish. Ava1labl•• l( in f 1ve s1 zes. Reg. 5.99· 17 .99 SALE 4 9-13.49 special! fluffy bath towels Polyester/cotton in a selection of florals. Minor imperfections won't affect wear or looks. IF PER F. 3.99-4.99 EA. 2 FOR •5 Malibu Barbie by Mattel' Has twist 'n turn waist, bend· REG. 2.99 special buys! sm\loth-~rained leather Jackets s9:,g·g You woul<.l 1•xpec1 to pay much mo11' fo1 these dll lrath er, bcJutifully tJ1lo11·d 1c1ck· t'tsl Styf,.d w11h 11p or lJutton liont, button througl'l or llap chPst poc.kl'tS Zip lront mod ..!, shown, hc1s hl'llows µleJL l'cl bt1ck Jnd SH.le belt D·r1119 d1•tdtl. S1L1•s S·M L XL. I special buy! sport shirts 7.99 VALUES 3.99 Spec1dl nurc.hJ~1· of ffidnllfdC(Ull'I '\ r.IO\I' nut Lnnq ~1o·,.v1• stylt•s 111 100"~ 11y· Ion nr 100"., polvr~· t<>r Print\, ~r:1'n1cs, flor "'' nr cr·onw to oc• M,11 htno' WJSh Sot•· S M L XL. 3 ways to charge! 'I¢, f #f;i'l~~;:1· ... " .... _ I M•'••,. • (1••1•"1•• BANKAMERICARD ' able legs. long blond hair and 1' ' a golden tan. 2.47 ' • Barbie fashions, reg. 99i •. 77c ' • -·s , girls' flannel sleepwear REG.$7 5.99 I Save on full length gowns and pajamas of 100% polyester fl annel. Choice of colorful prcnts in wes 4-14. Save 1.01! girls' quilted robes Full length, in pretty prints; lace and ribbon trims. 100"0 polyester shell, 100% polypropylene lining. 100% Vr.rel modacrylic batting. S11es 4 to 14. 8.99 REG. $11 save 2.02 on men's 'Roller Coaster' Sand color brushed leather uppers; comfortable wavy soles. Sizes 7· 12 Shoe Department 15.97 REG.17.99 Boys', 12'h·3, reg 14 99 .12.97 women's boot Pant boot has w1pe·clean soft up- pers, flexible soles, side zip. Black, white, camel. Sizes 5·9; 10M. Shoe Department ~EG. 11 .99 8.97 Shop Monday through Friday 9:30-9:30 ... Saturday 9:30-6 ... Sunday 10·6 special buysl . . corduroy Levi'se for Galsl $18·$22 VALUES 10.99 We were able to mak•a great spe<:ial putchase of the5e fa· mous maker corduroy jeans! Each pair with ~· Levi's• tag thatmeanstopquality and fit. Look for shlrred·back waist· 4ines. side tucking details, 2 pocket looks and others. all slightly flared. Redwood, spruce, brown, natural, navy, black and more. 84% cotton/ 16% polyester. Available in sizes 8·18; 5-13. student size sport shirts or corduroy Big Bells YOUR CHOICE 7.99 Belle, REG. 8.99 Shirts, REG. 9.99 Big Bells: western, 4·pocket style; extra wide bottoms, wide bolt loops: corduroy solids; waist sizes 26·30 . Sport shirts, long sleeves in stripes. plaids()( solids; yoke details or em· broidered fronts. Sizes 14-20. All in pol yester/cotton blend. famous maker I buys in knit tops Special Purchase 4.99 7P% acryhc/30% wool blend, long sleeve tunics. Includes crew, square or boat necks; some pockets, belts, cuffed sleeves. In colorful solids or stripes. Sizes S·M·L. famous maker panties 4 PR. $ 5 $2·$3 PR. VALUES 1.39 PR. With famous maker tags. l ace· trimmed' or tailored hiphugger or bikinis of 100% nylon satin or 100% cotton; all with dyed·to·match cotton shields. Pastels or brights. Available in sizes 4-7. 2.01 off organizer bags REG. $8 5.99 Multiple compart· ments and zippered pockets make 1t easy for you to keep everything neatly 1n. place. Shoulder and tote styles m tan, brown or black vinyl. :I CYPRESS FULLERTON HUNTINGTON BEACH 10201 Valley View Street-995-8003 Crossroads Center, 3204 East Yorba linda-996-8800 9811 Adams Avenue-983-9731 PLUS 32 MORE STORES TO SERVE YOU THROUGHOUT CALIFORNIA AND NEVADA ., • I DAVE MOLLICA, STARTING QUARTERBACK FOR COSTA MESA. Lakers Fight, Tui11ble 4 BUFFALO <AP) -Buffalo's .. John Shumate took a punch in the . jaw in the fourth quarter, then led 'his fired-up teammates from a · 19-point deficit to a 121-116 over- time basketball victory over Los Angeles. Following a fight with Kermit Washington, Shumate's de- fensive play paralyzed Kareem Abdul-Jabbar. The big Laker 1 scored only two points while Los I• Angele.s was being stomped 35-15 in the final period. Washington said he lost the game for the Lakers. ,Sports in Brief "l lost the game for us," the 6-8 forward said. "I lost control of myself and that's bad. What kind or an example is it for kids On T\' Tonlglu Chan nel 5 at 6 watchinr.? They're supposed to be seelrg basketball, not fights. "Shi.mate accidentally poked me a.1d l turned and hit him. l nevi•r should have done it," said \' · ashington. "Washington hit me, .. said • Lutz Eliminated; .. A.D., Coach i n Riff STOCKHOLM-Jimmy Con· nors and Bjorn Borg scored con- vtncir.g victories in their opening match '-~ of tbe SlS0.000 StockholIL open tewus tourna- • ment Tuesday. Connors crushed Jili Rrebec. ' 6-3, 6-1. while Borg wiped out · Robin Drysdale, 6-2. 6-2. Bob Lutz of San Clemente lost • to John Feaver. 6·3, 6·3, and Ray Moore bowed to Bob Hewitt 2·6, 6-3, 1·5. t In other matches. Raul Ramirez dumped Juan Gisbert. Hi, 6-4 ; Wo1tek Fibak ouUasted Matty , Riessen. 6·3, 3-6. 6·3: Guillermo Vilas beat Joel Ross. '7-6. 6-0; Harold Solomon defeated Heinz Guenthardt. 6-4, 4·6, 6-2 : Brian Gottfried whipped Jose Higueras. 6-4. 6-1, Tom Okker beat Jan Zabrosky. 6-2, 7-6 ; and , Balacz Tarociy outlasted John '.i ----16,928 Saw I\ I Edison,FV Edison High of Huntington Beach and tbe Fountain Valley High Baroos played before a paid crowd of 16,9'l8 al Anaheim Stadium Friday nl&bl-one of lbe largest re- 1ular season crowds in CIF Southern Section history. The eount does nol include lua wtio attended through the pan sate, special Edison "Superchar1er" cards or band members. James. 6-4. 5-7. 7·5. . Also. Douglas Palm upset Frew McMillan. 6-4, 7·5; Colin Dowdeswell downed Per Hjert- qwst. 6·3. 6-3; and Make Estep overcame Lilo Alvarez. 6-7. 6-2. 6°2. Dot•is i n Co 11f lict TORONTO -Bill Hodgson, owner of Toronto Argonauts. says a person a hty· conflict between hi s coac h. Russ Jackson. and mallion-dollar run- ning back Anthony Davis. had f'xisted since the Canadian Foot- ba 11 League club's training camp. The conruct resulted in Davis being ignored in the Argos of· fense and the failure to make use of Davis's talents has been blamed for much of the team's problems on the field which ended Sunday when they finished last in the Eastern Conference with a 23·14 loss to the Hamilton Tiger·Cats. Barto., S p eah• Gene Bartow. head basketball coach at UCLA. will be the guest speaker of the Orange County Bruins Booster Club at 7:30 Fri· da>' morning at Salvatore's Restaurant in Garden Grove. Bartow, wbo guided the Bruins to a 27·5 record and third place finish in the NCAA finals last year, will reflect on the prospects of the 1976-77 team. A film of the UCLA-Oregon football game (played last Saturday) wiU also be shown. Salvatore's is located at 8641 Garden Grove Blvd. Shumate. "I don't remember much els~. but I know this, I'm going to b'ilve a sore mouth for a few days." LAers coach Jerry West said the l!"akt:rs lost their poise. The Lakers play the Boston Celtics tonight . LOS AN GELES (1161 -Ru\\tll CISI. Ford (UI Ab<lul J•bbM flll. Ch81><'Y Ill Atltn 1171 Wf\h•nqlon l•I C•lv1n U I, Ulm.tr ("), KuP"C (41 T~l•I• SO 161•116 8UFl'ALO 1171) Mt AdOo (JA i, O•nll~v 1e1. Snu"'a" (11! Smith C71) Ooc;.-.._,o 1101 Proto '101 A~nll 1111. Fost~r (SI TOl•l\ .. 7l l l 111 L~ A"9CIU U JI )1 I\ 17 -I 16 811ft.io n ,. II ]\ II -121 Ra\ston's Qay Ahe ad, Sa~McKay T~PA, Fla. CAP) -"I think they just want to show me I'm just a college coach -a losing college coach," says John McKay, still sour after facing a bitter rival in Denver and suffer· ing another defeat. The Tampa Bay Buccaneers' boss stomped off the field after Sunday's 48·13 loss to Denver, re· fusing lo shake hands with Bron· cos coach John Ralston and severely criticizing the Denver coaching staff for allegedly run· ning up the score on his ex- pansion team. After many victories through most of his 16·year coaching tenure at USC, McKay has walked orr the field a loser in 13 of his last 14 games. That includes 0·9 in regular N alional Football League play and 1·5 in the Bucs' preseason. When McKay made the jump to the NFL this year, he scoffed al questions about the difference between coaching in college and pro ranks. There wasn't any dif· ference, he insisted. He asked for patience. saying it would take three or four years to build a contender. But now, McKay's misery and frustration is obvious. "I will not concede until the 14th game," he said. ''But win· ning one or two won't make me that happy. A 2· 12 record is re· pugnanl. An 0-14 is equally re- pugnant. I don't want to be a Denver or any of those jerks who've been in the league 11 years and never won anything. "I don 't like any part or him . <Ralston)," McKay said. ''His day is coming.'• I Wlfd1'esday November 10. 197& DAILY PILOT • f Molli~a, Merry Put l Friendship Aside .. Bf ED BURGART Ot 11•• O•llY Piiot ltaff Four years ago they were next door neighbors and at one time wer.e playing Junior All- American football on the aame team. But come Friday nlght at 8. they wUJ occupy opposite sides or the football field at Newport Harbor High in a game that will determine the South Coast League champion Cor cham- pions). Their names are Dave Mollica· and Scott Merry. Both are con- s idered invaluable to their teams. And both wear No. 10. Mollica. a 6-1 , 175-pound senior. is starting quarterback for Costa Mesa's Mustangs. who lead the league with a 5-1 record. Merry, a 5-8. 150-pound senior, is a starting cornerback fM Corona del Mar's Sea Kings, who are locked in a three-way tie for second place with a 4·2 mark. "We're still pretty good friends, but we don't really judge one another as friends on the field." says Merry. who was the Sea Kings' No. 1 signal caller for lhe first seven games. But Mollica. an All-Century League linebacker as a junior. reme mbe rs playing against Merry last year and says, "it fell !rind or strange .•• But more than fri endship is in-· volved Friday. Winning a league title and earning respectability seem foremost on Mollica 's and Merry's minds. .. - •·1 C9'Jld tell at the beginning of the season that Costa Mesa would be good," says Merry. 'Tm ghJd the game is at the end and matches two teams that have been put down so much In 2·A football." (Costa Mesa and Corona del Mar competed in the CIF 3·A Century League last year.) Says Mollica, "Earlier in the season. 1 said the league cham- pionship would come down to our rast game." While winning comes above comaraderte this week, Merry and Mollica still talk lo each other, although tbe relationship isn't as close as it was when the two were neighbors in Costa. Mesa from age4-14. Before joining the Junior All- A mera ca o team, Merry and Mollica played street football with other Costa Mesa kids. When they finally played on the same Junior All-American squad, Mollica recalls that he was a running back and that Merry som etimes played quarterback. The first time they opposed each other was as sophomores in t-Jgh school-that was two years after Merry's family moved to the East Bluff area in Corona del Mar. As for their football qualitie!;, both are talented. Mollica. who asked lo become. a varsity quarterback nt the end of his junior season, has complet- ~ li."V~J'>I .. ' f l • ._ ',t.• .. •,.• •.! ed 64 of 113 passes for '728 yarx!s and bas run for 335 yards on 97 catties. He also periodically plays ln the secondary. "Before I went to camp this summr, I didn't know bow to throw a football at all," saya Ul• 17-year-old Mollica, who ae&dom threw as a sophomore quarterback. "ll 's a great posi- tion and I wouldn't want to pla)' anything else." Mollica has blossomed in the last five games and says, "J was rushinc my throwing too much earlier. Dana Hills was my big turnaround, I'm more rele.xed now aQd it is coming more naturally." (Against Dana Hills, Mollica completed 12of15 passes for 172yards.) Merry has bad some big cje- fensi ve games, picking off .ht() passes against Corona del Mar ana one against Huntington Beach's Marina. As .a quarterback, he has completed 34 of94 passes for 4619 yards. Although being replaced al quarterback by sophomore Kuit Brockman last week, Merry says, "Right now, I like offense more but defense is probably my position. I 'm not set C~f quarterback as far as my beigbt is concerned.•' Whatever position he plax~ Friday. Merry figures to see a& much of Mollica as they did dWl- ing their days as next door neighbors. Only this time, thfl>' will be playing for dUferent causes-and different teams. I .. , .. ,. , . I I • •I , : • SCOTI MERRY. STARTING CORNERBACK FOft CORONA DEL MAR. Cy Young To P almer NEW YORK CAP > Baltimore's Jim Palmer, an AU- star game reject last July who reversed his field in the second half of the season, won the American League's Cy Young Award today for the third time. The Orioles' right-hander joined Sandy Koufax. formerly of the Los Angeles Dodgers, and Tom Seaver of the New York Mets as baseball's only triple winners or the coveted pitching award. Palmer, also named the American League's best pitcher in 19'73 and 1975, was an easy win· ner this lime over runner·up Mark Fidrycb, Detroit's flashy "Birdman" who took baseball by storm in his rookie season. California's Frank Tanana was a distant third. Rutgers Unranked?,~ .. Deservedly So ~ .. So. the Rutgers University football coach is upset because his team isn't ranked among the top 20 In the nation. When I first learned of hi s ire I presumed that he was referring to some high school rnnkangs that had been publis hed. Because high school is the caliber or much GLENN WHITE class in the NCAA playoffs, ~t showed its true colors, takipat 86-70 blistering from Big Ten r • nerup Michigan and then be splattered by UCLA. 106-S'l. If Bums REACLY thinlcs~e belongs among lbe top 20 co e football teams in the naU , maybe he ought to start play'4lg someorthem. .I And if he ever gets around~ going against t he Micbig~s. USCI, UCLAs, etc., be bettier have a fleet of ambulances staqci· ingby. OF SECOND·GUESSIN HH Rama coach Chuck for1ott e n tbat be bas quarterback named Pat Ha U not, wbere was Haden w Jama Barri• wa1 f1Jnlc••1 I • ''The ushers were estimat· inc the crowd al 25,000," says Ed1loG coach Bill Workman. ''But realistically it was more like 20,000. '' Zdison won, 13·3. Tbe lar1eat crowd ever al a Von Cramm Outlasted Bitler of the opposition his Scarlet Knight& have met this year. Frank Burns. coach of Rutgers' unbeaten. untested and unranked football team,'has sent hia forces against such nothings as Bucknel l , Lehigh, Massachusetts, Connecticut, Cornell and Columbia. tbe place Moaday lllgbt iD aaU! -.. OF CLASS~Wbere wa~J CIP Southern Section playoff game was 41,383 when Anaheim and Downey met in theCIF finaJa in 19S&atthe Los AqehaColiffu.m, In re1ular aeuoo play the Puadena·Blair game or 19'70 drew an estimated 22,000 at the Roee Bowl and Mater Dei a nd Servile played before 20,092 in 1"8 at Anaheim Sttldlum. Other lar1e crowds in re- plu seuon include St. Paul and Bilhop Amal before an. , atimated 20,000 ln 1970 and the Lakewood-LB Wilson ' 1ames ~ l9U and •es before 16,828and17,432. ·-. . , NEW YORK <AP)) -Baron Gottfried von Cramm-one of the world's great tennis players in the 1930s -died in Cairo, Egypt, Tuesday. One might say that be was one of the luckier victims or Adolf Hitler's relgn of terror. "He was crucified by HiUer and Nazi Germany," said Donald Budge, America's Grand Slam championoftheera. Budge and von Cramm were rivals before die outbreak of World War II. Budge defeated the German in the final roundof both Wimbledon and the United Slates championships at Forest Hills. They also met in a Davis Cup duel that some have called the greatest m atcb ever played. "Gottfried was superb on the court, beautiful strokes, every ineb a sportsman," said Budge, "yet he was one of the unluckiest menlllnow. "He as anti-Nazi," Budge re· called. "Yet he wu a German sports hero and a close tnend of Relcbsmarsbal Hermann Goer-tnc. The Nazis never were able to break down bis resistance. "Although be bad a reserve or- ficer'a commission, Gottfried wu aent to the R uaslan front as a buck private. On the Stalingrad alege, he personally bead off tbfti Russians with a machine aun while permitting 200 German .... • soldiers to escape. I "He was awarded the German Iron Cross on the spot by the, general, who was not aware'o£bis political persuasion. IC was reported that filler and Goering were livid.'· Budle said von Cramm should have won Wimbledon in 1939, but he was ordered to Jose to a pro- Nazi player in an earlier round. Before the U.S.·German Davis Cup inter.zone match at Wimbledon in 1931. Hitler phoned von Cumm m.tnutes before he took the court against Buc:l1e and said, "All Germany ts watching -win one (or the Fatherland." Budaewon a thrilling live-setter. And then on a slightly higher than nothing echelon. Rutgers baa faced Navy, Princeton and Louisvllle. Navy has two wins to Its credit, defeating such powers as William and Mary and Con- necticut while losing 70.14 to Michigan. Princeton bas one win this year wblle Louisville bu amassed three triumphs. I recall that Rutgers' unbeaten basketball team enjoyed hl&h na. llooaJ ranking Jast seuon. But when it finally playedaomeoneof McKay's In the altercation J\ Deaver Broncos coaches y when McKay's Tampa Bay football team was s<:uHb 48-137 :t McKay tried to impress e • ooe with his wit when be waa bictlm• wh>nln1 coUeae """"! USC. But since taking bl& lu al Tampa Bay it would seem wit ls beina converted to btti neas and fruslration. OF THE ROSE 80W'L--4MMe Mic~,.. prH e• lta feotball team II merel1 •onal, an we a1aln ,.._, .. be '91111d • ......... Olll .. se.a ........... lleeeBowl •laa.lf • • 1Jl,1 DAILY PILOT Wednetday. November 10. 1971 CdM Presents Obstacle With Its Defensive l,ine Ball control has been Clemente, Foothill and with Costa Mesa. an imPortant ingredient. Laguna Beach. I think The Sea Kings have to the success of the Corona del Mar has good more than a defensive Cost a M es a JI i g h quickness and is very nc-line. Mustangs football teMm tjve." • • 1 th in k t h c i r thts season, but the Mainly because of its Unebackers are as good Corona del Mar defense defensive line, Corona as we've seen," says figures to present del Mar is 4-2 in South French. ''They are very numerous obstacles. Coast League action and active, have good size .. 1 think their de-s-3 overall. And if :they (they weigh 185 po~) tensive line is as good as can defeat the Mustangs and are good hitters. any line in the league," in their 8 o'clock crucial .overall, they are a solid says Tom French, head. Friday night at Newport defensive team." football coach orthe&-1-1 Harbor High. the Sea · That defense had only Mustan gs . "They're Kingswouldgainalle:'lst given up an average ~f very comparable to San · a share ofthe league title 5 . 0 po I n t s u n t 1 1 Mission Vi«tio defeat- ed the Sea .Kings, 28-20. lastweek. ' . I t Edison l Reverses · Chore L The Ch11rgers o( llunt· , lngton Beach's Edison High have their obJec· otive completed with the conquest of No. 1 Foun· > taln Valley. ' Now it's a flip-flop , situation or beatlnc U\e ' CIF's No. 1 and unbeaten Barons lo ploying Hunt- ington Beach, a squad • which bas struggled lo ; an 0-8 record. l The two collide Friday t night at 8 at Huntington 1 Beach and a win would alleviate any sbarm, of the c r own by the ' Chargers. l Tritons' Calvert May llold the Key Every South Coast Calvert weighs 240 And that defense could present problems lo a Costa Mesa offense that doesn't rely on the big play. Thus far the Mustangs ,. have run 455 offensive plays to the opposition's ~.J~~~~_;i:!j§~~~~~~~~S~t!~~~~~~ ··we have eoncems." ~ says Edison coach Blll Workman. "First we're concerned about ourselves. We bdve a chance at being league champions and if we are League football coach Pounds while Dana Hills' whose team has played center Craig Win -s a n Cleme n te has ningboff scales 175. Win- agreed on one thing -ninghoff figures to go San Clemente has the one-on-one most or the best personnel in the night, although Cunerty circuit. says. "I'm sure we will Dana Hills head coach double team sometime Bill Cunert y. whose during the evening." Dolphins clash with San San Cle mente's de- Clemente at 8 Friday fense. which has held night at San Clemente three opponents score- High, concurs. less. isn't the only de· "Physically, they have fense that is drawing some super players," he raves. says. "On defense, it is Dana Hills has blanked really tough to rind a it!\ last l wo opponents weak spot. I think their arta Cunerty says, "I'm nose guard Corky just ecstatic. It has just Calvert is a major col-· been a case of our kids lege prospect-s izewise unders tanding the and because of his quick-nature of our defense. ness." Neither of our tackles Containing Calvert had played varsity foot- figures to be one of Dana ball before nor had one of mils' major objectives if our linebackers." 388 and only San Clemente. which ran 62 plays to Costa Mesa's 38, has had a significant edge in ball control. "If you look at San Clemente, they moved up and down the field," says French. "but our kids were playing with intensity. J 'm a big believer you have to play with intensity." (Costa Mesa nipped ~a n Clemente, 14-13 >. The Mustangs defense, which has recorded two . straight s hutouts, will need to be intense Fri- day. ~'• ,. .... l'tlOto 1>v ,..,,.,. O'o.n,..11 we have an obligation t.o 1 play like it. l GWC'S ABEL DORADO BOOTS BALL AS TEAMMATE KENNY PARKER WATCHES PLAY. "Our feet are still orf • the ground after beating Gw'1 Kickers Tmnhle, 2 • I i1~~n~~na~~?~e~ia~ "' tonight. • ByCRAIGSHE•'F Ol Ille 0 .. 1, fl'llotSt.111 Santa Monica College grabbed a 2·1 lead nine minutes into the second half, then held off G<>ldeo West with some rine defensive play to win a crucial Southern California Conference soccer game Tuesday on the loser's field. The victory virtually locked up the league title for the Corsairs. With one game to play Friday, Santa Monica has a 7-1·1 record while Golden West is now? ·2. All three goals in thegame wcrc scored in a seven-minute span early in the second half. The Corsairs drew first blood after a bad defensive play by a Rustler allowed a santa Monica player lo get an open shot al goal. Hedidn 't miss. Five m inutes later Golden West's Freddie Rios dropped- k:icked a ball in from five feel away after a nifty kick pass from Tony Nguyen. . But the Rustlers' momentum didn't last long as Santa Monica scored two minutes later on a lob kick. Golden West h ad three golden opportunities to tie it in the wan- ing minutes, bul a head shot by · "And although lhml· Juab Sandoval fe.11 short. another · ington Beach is 0-8, it ' Sandoval boot hit the goal post cerllnnly isn't a joke. and bounced away and lhe. third, The Huntington Beach by Kenny Pa~ker. barelr missed. defense has played very . Santa Momca, a physical tea.m, well and they have some ' ._ played a mucti more aggresslve good athletes · m some ., second half after the Rustlers bad areas." · co_ntroled tbe action in the first 45 The Huntington Beach mmutes. . passing game is a threat. And the Corsa.irs clogged !he aceordin(_to Workman. middle near their goal. fort"ing "Huntington Beach Sandoval and Abel Dorado. the has moved the football •· state's top two scorers, to shoot s a y s w 0 r k m a ~ . fromthe sides. "They've slowed down a Golde.n .West, ~S.3. concludes lot o! people, but or- play Fnday, hosting Los Angeles 'fensive mistakes have .. CCat2:30. put a lot of pressure on 1 their defense. the Dolpruns hope to im· The Dolphins changed prove their circuit re· to a SO defense after Jos- cord to 4-3. San Clemente ing to El Toro JO.. 7 in is 4·2 and a win will give it their third game. Since no worse than a tie for then, Dana Hills is 3·2. "Corona del M ar·s of- fense has been very con· sistenl and has scored 20 Points or more in three of tile past lour games." says F r ench. "Mike Sprailz is a fine running back and their ruuback Boes wm· Brad Stassel is an out· Line Is Lions' Forte "Huntington Beach has some excell ent . othletes in the skilled 1 positions ... especially r~· • ceivers Steve Samperi, f Steve Lasley and the quarterbacks-Marco • Pag_nanelli and .Mike D'Alessandro." secoqdinleague. "I always played a SO when 1 was at North Tor- rance," says Cunerty, "but I was a little wor- ried we didn't have any linebackers here." standing blocker. And Bob Hughes is as good a receiver as there is in the league.'' (:rucial Polo Game No One Runs Inside -Boswell Offense Sought By Uni The University High Trojans of Irvine have enjoyed few bright of- fensive m oments this season and unless the Trojans show roore of- fensive punch against the Lagun a Beach Artists. Univt rsity foot- ball coach Dick Roche doesn't envision victory. "U we can't move on offense any more than we have this year. we don't have a chance." says Roche. "We have killed ourselves with loo many mistakes during the year and have had difficulty moving against lesser defenses. "And I t hi_n k Laguna Beach and San Clemente are the two best de· fensivc teams m the league." When the Trojans and Artists collide at 8 Fri- day night in a South Coast League game al Laguna Beach High, the Troja n s. who arc averaging 6.6 points, will he f3c1ng a defense that has given up 5.2 points pcroulmg. "Laguna Beach 1s big but they are also very quick.;, says Roche. ··we'll just have to try to utlllze our speed and hope that Tony Fuller gets off a few runs." But offense has been Dana Hills· strength. Quarterback Steve Crapo has been the spark. completing :n of 81 passes for 529 yards. The Mustangs will re· taliate with their of· fensive s tars, led by quarterback Dave Mollica, whose statistics now read : 728 yards passing (64 of 113 and six interceptions) and 33:> yards rushing. Vik.es' V allerc3.111p Impresses Pizzica NewPort Harbor High closes out the Sunset League football season Friday night (8) with a lest against Huntington Beach's Marina High at Westminster and Newport coach Bill Pizzica calls it his team's pivotal game. "We 're either winners or losers depending on this game," says Pizzica, whose team is 44 overall with tosses lo Servile or Anaheim, Fountain Valley. Edison and Westminster. " "I thought we could have won a couple of those, .. says Pizzica. "Especially against Westminster if we had Craig Lyons at quarterback. "We 're the s mallest school in the league by over 1,000 s tudents and I reel we've stayed com- petitive. We don't anticipate backing out. .. we're right where we belong in the Sunset League." If there has been a consistent area where the Sailors of Pitzica have been burned it may lie in the overall offense. "The o!fense has put too much pressure on our defense,·• concedes Pizzica. It just hasn't given the defense a ra1r shake. although I was happy with our 95-yard drive against llunhni:ton Beach.·· Pizzica 's -concern with Marina is quarterback Ron Vallercamp and the wishbone offense which the Marina eleven has slowly evolved into. "Vallercamp looks good." says Pizz1ca "lle·s an excellent runner and the wishbone. although 1L takes away the wide passt.ng threat, is tougher to defense than the veer.·• One of the keys to the game, according to Piztlca, is in how h.is Sailors can contend with 6·3, 245-pound Carl Cherry, Murina's big lineman. "Cherrv will he blocking offensively on Tom Mockett and Jim Hanke. And defensively he'll pro· bably line up over our Rod Blanton, who is 6·2, 240. It should be interesting.·' Mockett Is back in the lineup for the Sailors after missing almost two complete games with an ankle injury. Jeff BiteUi, who took Mockett's place at deCensive end. returns to offensive tackle. Orange Coast College's Oscar Trout fired in an overtime penalty shot and t he Pirates defeated visitinJ!; Cerritos. 17-16, in South Coast Conference water polo action Tuesday af- ternoon. The win upped OCC's conference mark to 9-1. clinching a tie for first place with two games left. And in a Mission Con· ference match. Sad· dieback snapped a five- game losing streak, beating host San Bernardino, 13·9. Meanwhile, Golden West s wept by host LA Harbor. 22·9, lo capture ils 15th straight win and remain unbeaten (8-0) in Southern Cal play. OCC trailed 12·11 with 26 seconds lo play in the fourth p e riod. Trout tossed in a penally shot and 11 seconds later scored the go.ahead goal on a fast break after OCC stole lhe ball. With 10 seconds to play. Cerritos scored on a penalty throw to tie il allJ. Scoring 10 ~oats, Trout boosted hi s season total to 95. OCC got a good er- rort from Greg Scott who was tough on defense. Scott by OU<1r1tr~ c~roto\ • \ 1 , t 1 , .. O••nqo CoHI l l 4 1 ) t -11 OCC \CO,,nQ Trnul 10 SCOH l. El<ter 2. WdrO. 0 11v1d\On S<o•e bV Ou1nt,. 5,~d••IM<I< 1, I 1 A-'1 S•n ll~rno•lllno ' 1 1 l ~ S.itJdloback \ f)r1nfl Buntinq, Mor,.,~,,,. 1 t-i1udv,.,.,.,. K~lch ') Mvroriv Ot. Vort> • P•ll"'f\00 P•~· qu.> Westmins ter High's Lions a rc girding for the Fountain Valley Barons Friday night (8) at Orange Coast College in the Sunset League finale and they have a problem on their hands. It's acknowledged that Fountain Valley is tougher against the in· side run than anything else. And that's where the Lions of Westminster coach Bill Boswell have excel l ed -it 's Westminster's bread and butter. Asked about that con· ruct, Boswell responds: "No one bas successfully run on Westminster . either. with the excep· ti on of• Long Beach Millikan (in non-league) when it went outside on us. "We haven 'l had the El Toro Defense Is M\7' s Problem Neither team has much of any place to go ex- cept to close out the season but Friday night's (8) South Coast League conrrontatiol\ between El Toro lligh's Chargers and Mission Viejo's Diablos is a natural football riv airy. El Toro started fast this season, winning its first three games. But since that time, the Chargers have been stopped five times while Mission Viejo is 2-6 overall and 2-4 in league play. The biggesl win came last week when the Diablos topped Corona del Mar, 28-20. Coach John Murio al Mission Viejo is wary of the El Toro defense and feels the orrense can ex- plode al any time against any team. "Their defense has done well agains l the tougher teams,'' Murio says of El Toro. ''They had a little lapse last week against Costa Mesa because they were looking forward to playing us. ''On offense, they have a very good fullback in Bill Fairbrother and a trulback, Hector Avella, who can break·it open at any time. They also have a cou- ple of quarterbacks who can throw well with some good receivers:""' The quarterbacks are Steve Key and Mike Sen- tak. Sentak is listed as a starter trus week with re- ceivers including Mark Donohoo, George Jacobo and Robin Charles. • The passing game was virtually non·existcnt last week against a stout Costa Mesa defense, com- pleting one of nine and having two intercepted. "There's no way for them to go but to improve on that performance,•' Murlo says. but bought my new car Fuller, a tailback. is Univer sity's leading rusher, having picked up 444 yards on 77 carries alter being converted to running back In the 'fro. jans' fourth gam e. But Un iversity has shown little punch other than Fuller' as renected in its 2·5-1 overall record and 1·5 mark in league. Prep Polo IMMEDIATE ln ~l@~from ,, OCCUPANCY JOHNSON&~N Defensively, the Tro- jans have recorded two shutouts and held San Cl e mente to 186 nel yards. Laguna Beach, '4·2 in league and 6-2 overall, doesn't have the of- VAllSITY $<tf• lly 0...rleH Fellbf"Oo\ 2 J 1 1-7 M•ulonVteto • 1 1 1-10 MV HO"l\9' Scolman '· Eby 2. ~Hotltl. WOOd\ 2. f>el&•\01\, l'llOSH·SO"H let•• ... Ov•rl•t• l'1llb<'OO\ 0 I 1 0-1 MIHIOl\V••ro J 1 1 ,_. MV s<ortnq £bY, 0.,r, H~r. $col.....,, HudJ,on, MtOo~. 8Mnt 2.8'- fensive weapons tbal San JUNtOt1t'utts1n Clemente has but Roche Fa•11>1001< s<-••Ou•rt•rs, 1 1-o i;ays, ''they run the op-MlniOftVi•lo 1 ' 1-s lion and that. always MVte0<1nci sn .. •>.Hn11.w2. 2. Gfmeull~IMUllUOl llOlll. hurts a t eam. Their -----------1 quarterback Bill Gompf ~--•••••-.. is an excellent runner and makes the option successful. · "Laguna Beach is a1 well·balanctd, physical, tearn." 1000 Ml/TANK ~~ Mwddett9enZ Ull vs -.,.,.., '-IO ~I °"!" 1000"" ,.~11 ol ..... ••I\ -i40. iOO Ot•••h C.111 loO•v tor ..,_ ....... Of lntpOl'tS tu ., .. , .. 11•1t1l>nH -....--·-.... 101,388 SQ. FT. NEW BUILDING PLUS RAIL SERVICE, DOCK·HIGH LOADING, EXPANSION LAND, PROTECTED ENVIRONMENT, EASY FREEWAY ACCESS& MORE. For information c.n lh1-; or r,thr>1 ht11l<11no .11• rn.1hv1'., CJll your bfol<er or Cr'lt{) Lyon. ManJgrr of Snlcs & Lcus•ng, at (213) 628-4204, (714) 833 .K)IO. AVAILABLE NOWAT IRVINE INDUSTRIA COMPLEX Low Price. a nd being treated hl~e a member of rhe Johnson Fom1ly. was worrh going our of my woy ror. lhors why I recommend you drive to Johnson & Son. Their Golden Touch service is the ONLY w ay to buy Give 'em o try. They moke you feel real Important. And. to me. that is Important Marian Moses MARINA DEL REY ORAi.GC COONfY S <l.OEST llNCOt N 1.'EACUllY DE:.Al.lRSHiP ~ YfARS OF fRIENOl.Y r A\111.Y SfRV~E 1 I *' •••@•llll!MI MMIEM!i ohnson&son 2928 HARDOf\8LVO COST.\ MESA !'.140-5030 ... . . . ... ....... ball rammed down out nose bee a use we have the ~st downlinemen in the league-our four return- ing starters ·· ' The four Boswell is re- ferring lo are tackles Ted Mccaslin (5-11. 100) and Curt Mitchell <6-1. 240). guard Mike Arent (6-0. 200) and end John Gill (5·8. 170) In analyzing the Foun· lain Valley running game. no~says the FV Barons have had a tendency to move heh.ind the block ing of Frank Christy ... They go to both sides,"· says Bos well, "and it's a well-balanced running gam e with Willie Gittens and Mike Musso." As for containing the vaunted Fountain Valley passmg game. Boswell notes: "Edison was able to rush the quarterback to force the early throw. And the Edison coverage in the secondary was very good." Westminster's big guns include r unning backs Doug Boswell and Duane Gerardi. Bos well, son of the Westminster coach and an all-lea gue candidate.· has averaged 5.3 yard'5 in 142 carries and has caught seven passes for 59 yards. He's scored seven touchdowns. Gerardi has averaged 5.1 yardc; per carry . .... Edison's I ineups will take on a few changes for , Huntington Beach with the key item the loss or • lin ebacke r Brian t Gloshen. Gloshen was lost with I a knee ligaments injury in the Fountain Valley game. Taking his place will be John Bogdan, a 6-0. 180-pound junior originally billed as a foll back. The other changes are in the secondary where W o rkman say s quarterback Steve Rakhshani will see little duty on defense. At the corners will be Tim Nichols and Jeff ' Hyder and al the safety ti spots it 'll be Brian Des rosiers and JefC Smith. Smith , along with linebacker Randy Schwartz, have been Edison's players of the we e k the past two starts. Pro Scores f11tlonal llnhtb.>ll AuoclatlM (l"llMO 111, L~ Anl)tlU !IS N•# York Kl\ttk• 106, W1'>1\l"Q10<t q1 N•wOrtrans 110. New York Ntb'4 "'" ""lon•o llll, Sulll• t 1• tfnu~.fon t1 •. Ctucaqo tt'l Cl•v•l •n<I lll.Mllw1ukr•'O C>·nv•• tn, c..>tden St•!• Ill Po•ll l"" 11~. Kan.a\ C•IY 10? HahOft•I Hoc~n LU•"" Nf'w Yor~ hllncJt-r· 8. D~•ro•• 1 • M.r,,ntt"ttl S# St l out\ 1 w •ti,h lnq1"W'l 4 "tnt-OIJljM 1 :Owls Hopes in a Bunn ·As They Await Gauc11:os ' AZUSA -Year an and year out the ·,M1ss1on Conference foott.aU cham· plonship usuially hoils down to the ~ Citrus-Saddleba<'k gam~ llnd Satur· day night's battle h4're 1s no excep· The Owl~' top offensive ~tars are quarterback Dale Hunn and runmnr back Obie Graves. lion. " ..- Saddlebuck 's Gauchos coine inlo the till with a ::.light edge. The Gauchos have a 5·0 M1ss1on Con- ference mark, including four &traigbl shutouts. while Citrus il> 4·0·1 after a )4·14 tie with Southwestern last week. Bunn is a 6·0, li.l pounder wh~ prepped al Monrovia High and playeJ at the University of Jlawa11 I~ season. He's rushed for 539 yards Ufs season and completed 51 of 117 passts for784 yards and six touchdowns. Bunn was the CIF 3·A player ofihe year in 1974. Graves (5-9, 170 ), who has pl-.yed with Bunn in Pop Warner footbalh nd also at Monrovia, is by far the letcHng rusher in.the Mission Conferenc•J He's gained 861 yards, has a 5.5 a~rage and has scored 11 TDs, one mo~ than Bunn. . ''It seems like every time we play it d~cides lhl• c·hampionship," says Citrus coach John StrycuJa. "It's been ~a very hard fought series. It's always a great game.'' Last year·s title decider was a good example of the senes. with Sad dleback rallying in the final mometts ,to pull out a 13-13 tie and share the ·crown" 1th the Owls Citrus has a 2 1 The Owls also have the top J¥nter in the conference in Gary Mql{enzie who is averaging 40. I yards ~r kick. ' Defensively, SlrycuJa sayshis three down linemen and a young ~condary have played well. "Henry Camarena (6·1, 200). Jim Escobedo <6-3. 230) and Gene Essline (6·0, 195 ) pave been very steady on the defensive line." edge in the series with three games ending in a lie Citrus, which dominated pla)° against Southwestern last week, but turned the ball over at critical times, h~ only lost one game-an 18·14 de- c1s1on to Fullerton. Citrus' secondary, sap; Strycula, has improved steadily. Tiie Owls have picked off 15 passes th.is season. ., Deceptive Record 1 At Tustin . The Tus tin Hig h Tillers ha ve a record similar to Estancia or Costa Mesa.in football as the season draws to a conclusion-<lecei ving. Coach Jert Jespersen's Tillers are l ·5·2 for the season as they gird ror E s tantia 's invas ion . Saturday night at 8 in • Century Leal!ue action. Despi~ the won loss tie record, th{' T1llC'r!> have tiec a Footh1ll leam that ripped Estancia and lost a 21·15 decision to Santa "'1a Valley after ; having lhe latter on the ropes. "We siould have won ·both of those," sa ys Jespers•n "We had three of our best de· fens ive btcks out when Santa Ana Valley hit the impossible play to beat : us. And ~· had two op- p o r t u n 1 t 1c s l 1> w i n ~ against Foo\hill." : Keying h e Tus tin ' arsenal is 6·1, 220-pound ·t h re e -yea · starter Richard Umthrey, who ? operates at tenter and • tack le on oflenst' and ; linebacker on tefcnse • Ump hr e} • a !o ,\ 11 : Or a nge Coun y as J Junior and 1s one 1f seven :rc>tur-n1nR dd•nSl\l' : starter~ "h1rh .bu 1n ! c I u ct e ~ I 1 n e o ar k e r s : ltll'h a r<l R rq~i.;s '150 J atid Roh Collie r t Ill) The T1ller!'> operac uut of a mult1plt> st'l ard the , backfield ancludc•1 rc )turning starters rom ~ B an k s < 6 3 . l 8c)i .tt • quartt>rba<.'k . ta1lbH·k $Mack Moser 15·11 , 1701 )and tullback Drew W.\rd • 16-1. 1901 Mnst>r mMes Ito tailbu(·k with SC\ •n : other back~ lo!it for o.1e reason or anoth1•r .• "Kirk Lan1:rtal1• tns ; be C n I m pr l' '> !> I \ t> ( lir E s t an('1.i " ~ay, ~Jespersen Wt•'re <'On )cerned with F.!>tanria'· ;opuon and sprintout <nil as for 6·4 M 1ke Cal'l'\&) Golden West Foe· Is Late Bloomer WHITTIER -A week, Since taking over t he ago todav this Saturdav head duties al Rio Hon- nigh t 's ·Golde n Wes·t do . lHac kston e has Coll ege-Rio Hondo foot· guided the Roadrunners ball game at Orange to (iye conference titles Coast didn 't figure to in six years. He has a take on m u ch i m . 36-~ circuit record in that portance al all. span and has never lost But it could turn out to toGolden West be th e So uthern California Conference ti· tie de<.'ider if unbeaten circ uit leader Santa Monica forfeits its wins over G wc ·s Rustlers and Rio Hondo A de<.'ision involving a Santa Monica playe'r that may be ineligible was lo be held today, but was postponed until oext Wedn esday at Los Angeles City College Rao fl ondo currently has a 3· l confereqce re cord while Golde~ We:o;t is 2·2 If Santa Monica forfeits and Golden West defeats Rio Hondo. GWC would advana to thP Avocado Bowl Nov 27 at Cerritos. "It may he a crucial game. or it may not be." says Rio 1:ondo coach Marty Bl~ck stonc . a Huntington Beach resi- dent "It aJI depends on what h.iflilens al that meetmg · Rut Rlac-kstone 1s used h> cru<.'1a/ j!ames and ha~ \\On mo~ or them Sports Calendar T~vnd.t• (No-. t n ,•, f I M ,.,, V 1' .I • I 1 1'A' pn,.,,, •\' \I • t .... , I) 1'll ~+ II •I I 1 J'I \• .. ,.. ( '' M• I lt I I t ''~ 111 O •r f1 ' r '"'', Mi"''""' \/ 1,, 11 r '""~ n 1 M.'' 111,.,., 1., '' ,,1 (.~"1,.t\I .. fJtt•l,t tt1ll\ •t1 LttQu111 ~ • " I I'"' 1 ti f 1,,1111 t' ti ' • • 1 " .,..,.., .. , l '41\i '' •"''' \,/1 •v I I Rio Hondo. 4-3 for the season. has always been a l a te -developing team and this year as no except10n Tht> Roadrunners have won three or their last four games a nd last week 1n a 31·18 vi<.'tory over LA Southwest , got a surpn se effort from Ut · tie-used running ba<.'k Bob Esparza /\ 5 ·9 , 165-pound fres hman , E s parza rushed for 294 yards <a school record). He pre· \'1ous ly had gained only 162 yards in four pre· vious outings Rio Hondo is primanly a running team !the Roadrunners passed nine limes last week), but Blackstone says his team will definitely have to throw more lo beat Golden West "We h aven 't been throwing very much. but we're going to have to th i'> w ee k ." s ay s BlaC'kslone The kc>y to winning, says the R 10 Hondo <.'oach. 1s to contain the Rustlers running game. "We have to stop their running attack and of- fensively we have lo ha vc a bat an ced at· la<.'k~" The Roadrunners have lost to Mt. SAC <14-7>. Citrus <26·6 l and Santa Monica (14·9) while de· ft>atm~ Santa Ana (38·0>. Cypress <2 1·14 1. LACC 1 41 19) and LA ut ' t • t (,, 'f n .,,,,. ,"vl\f A,N I It I ,, t · " Southwest. ~ttct•• IN QV t}I • •ll't" f •f '" •' H U'1' •1·Jt•1 ' ' I I ti! I I \I I ft ~ , N '"'·"hf•t1 U•t,,1•',_1•t ,. Y 1 r '-' .._p pl H """'" 1t W• t t•t (O\t t M t >1• 1 •tnt;1 I ~A '' ·~•lllWIJ"f~ ttp"'1 n1r; "4 •' ,.tl\f.1., •1•"'' 'It"' tf M . we'rc hoping to put somt <'Ontaanmt>nt on him al "c. ~thehneofc;crimma~e " JC Poll ,,, .. ,, I .... , ~., •• I HJ iO' ... , ... ·: Bakers field Colkl'!t' has retained thf' No l !s pot and Saddleback has moved up to the J'tlo S position 1n this week's Daily Pilot Southland J<' , football poll. ."1 •'•' I I Ht n V • 1t • '" 11 r>e1 ... ,, " ., '" "'-"' ~ ,,,,. 1t t t\ L A(( •t r14'Jlll ·ft w .. t I)+ '"'t 'o, • ( '"'1' " Mt ''"A "O"'•I) ('n• .. .,.. , n ,, ''""" • •t( ,_.t1l.t I\~',.,, t ti N t Wtlih,.t t'i ''""' 4 in •1 n ,., G ,, . .,. ,11 .. ..,,;.,, tJr tt, .... 11,. 11 'ly \.t~ I 11\ "l,.,, M j I t11 ~ '' T "~ \nut~ ,,,, t I.• ~, , .• ~~I• ti(. 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O W~Q""'' ~·rn I N I .-on6 J • 7 Edl\011 1111 ltt ) f'tn V•lley s1,..1~ ff ~ f~f IQ'\t 10 f).r"l•I \ P ln\t tl'I f•, l ,. 8•• '"' IF I lo .t .t ~ 7 f\ oY.rJv-~ fF~ lt)\I ff\ 1-tmll-0 ~ drt f OrT\htt ~ l Aq"'' r• t F I to\I 0 ' wn.n ~ l M.'Odcn fF t Of'f (f\,.t• I) ) d•f S<.IW>nff>lftl•' .. t l(h !l't _,, 6) "' ~·. IJ'I ,,.., S.Jrqto\\ t. 1 dt1t Godwin,.) Jottm.on ,,,,_,,~, "' Doub••• Mtrrtll Pnwf"r t J::, d ftf ~C"i•r F"ort\ftr 7 • lo\t tn WAncw ~tt~ 1 6 Fr•lldl T tum bull t F t won 1 ~. lt't't.t f) tJ C.-u"Nn Pluml,.~ ff:• •n\t to BtH<~' wrn •• ,,,, ) ,,, '"'' to Sll.OdOw \il..1 LN' t>' Loudi"nMrlil ~, .. ,., won It I b • Ea ICY\ l(~t\~ t F • cl~I Ju Co •rob 7 <!•! Ruvl• Wl\11"" & l Lo'1Q,Pllow Wrar fr) wo" & 7 & O Giltt1~1<1 M 1f11n lf"t ,.,,, tn ... t'l'1 Jurcn"'tt ) fl n,.1 Bu~"mt!tn L"rtl h 1 llon.1 A!utouit10 fF') "'1i)n'11. A I\ WOMl"l'S VOl.l.EYBALL AA Otv1,101'\ ~ld•l>n W P\I Qf\I f: 1Jll~·rton n ,s IS b IS 6 Solnl~ an~ q~t O•.\nq• Co.\'t 7 I\ I\~ IS 11 ~utdlf'bac• de•• P io Hondo ,,, t• I\ 10 A o,.,.;,1on 0, "'~ Co"'' Ck"t Sdntd An,1 IS n 1\ I S60dl"ltM(kdr tR.1ot101'(101\R IS8 GI RC.S VOLLEY llAC.l. VAltSITY ~t'' f)t>t 6-f RO'\~'"V 1' 1 t\ Hl H•1nt 8 "&<h dt-f M ttr1n<i' IS,. 3 t~ IS tt f'.lrt v .111,.vo,., Eo1,on '~.., ,,.. 11 NPw l)Ort t>i~rbor df'lf W,. hfH1 tf't IS 4 I\ 17 JUNIOlt VARSITY ~t1tr [)1-1 O•• qo, ... ,v 1 \ tQ f\ 1l Hunt 9,.a<h<t•rMv1n,11& u tSI ,-,,., V•llo o-• Edl\01\ IS.~ ~IS t\ 10 • Nt1woorl Hdr""'r d~t w ... rrn1n\tM" I~ S tS-1 "IEl.O MOCl(EY Gold9n W••I CU IOI Pu-... GWC ~cor tnQ Connor' J t-tr b!tl\. C,rlr>t>1t'I Ottv10 Baseball's seventh· inning s tretch began in 1910 wh<'n President I toward Taft stood up to s tretc h his legs at a game. t Top games this w~k t feature Bakersfield at El Cam ino <No. 101 in Metropolitan Conference • play and Saddlebark nL zCit rus (No. 7) in the Mis· {s ion Conference tllle s,,otbtH F \l t''H •" itl ft1 •,,, 1,. o.-. I ~''' 0 ' ._,, \, '"''" >ii I 1 ••m.t l\"'11: " " .,., ~ A1n ... onon .., G<a<t-t,, w,.. ' 1t UriifVtf'I (Qit\t r"""'to' t1 tu• fl'""'""" Co11·.t (nlt• .. 1· •ti Ml ~ .. t\nt.,n1tt roH"Q" 1' 111 c, ,,, d'"'l'' (')ltrQI' Al ( ,, .... t I •''I' t"'°"t:•·u+l'\lt'lf '-n111t11•,n l" Jht .. .,11 JI" ti Collr')· o• tt'I .. C ·'"""n1 f HI 4m1• UC Irv•"'" tf ~CAA. 0•¥1ton 11 -~. 1'tQf•~ld MfJ t 1n l()' m • BRING ALL YOUR SKI EQUIPMENT YOU NO LONGER NEED f how down. Po\ , Celle ... ltttord B•••r\tl•ld 11 I I SAftl• ""°"'C• I~ II Full•rlCYI 11 ~I ~·f'(t" '•, 1l c;.,1)!1,.1)..,' c' 1l 6 h it II 01 1 (lftU\ f~ 1 t t S. S.f'\ta 8>'\rrMf"1' t6 It ~ V•nlur ft ti 11 10 Et C."""' U 11 ..,, •• W...,.r PtJlo N•woorl H"rnor 111 lftt• ")•IV' Mir t ( •\t4 tf £1 Tora 1Mftlt 10 "'"'I !,/it ,tttr\ 'tt H1.r"'f '"~&• Hr~r" ''''* rn \,1-frj•1tnl\rlil 4' ( rt\ .. •t C";"\101'1'1 W1 I I,,_ 1 '" ' U\C" ;, ;~,:. rvhw •• N,.w nort M,.roor '1tQn 11 r ·''' T~n11 S?ufl'I (t)tO L~•.f!Otw 7& f·l"I t1\ ~(O\I• M,,\.it ~1•1h H '"··~11ot1•yn.11 uc ''•·-Al uc; lilt ''"''f\.'rb-.r t ' .., 11 r,.rf\ '""'""""'"'l ftill .[J'f ..,,,,..., .. , 11 -••L<ir ...... Mosl ::1<lm1nlstra11vt'. prOll'Ss•onal lions 1n Cahtorn1u nri• no• >1d11!'r1tse or hsled II you QuJl1ly lur a $15,000 lo $6!1.000 1nl>. send us your resume now 11n11 lnl us ht'lp dirrcl you 10 lh~'l\'ltssing ma1only Bttler s1111, rnll now '"' iln .1rino1nlmnrt Thl'lc s no cost or obll9nt1on. ~· ' bernard ,.,. i«;,';"~?UJ UMtll I-I ··1 l6l8nn :::!·~·~s;~·:,:~1• .. • ' ~6f~M N IH0t ~"llCtt l"' N•wpnll r11.Cahl R2f.60 h1ebh1'-l I q., lo. A~•ltt tu, "'·3311 Jb<J 1 Wll\l'\t fttvd • !tult~ 1 ~'OC ·Onlcu la lllUt 111 .. ClllU htl '••l'elMt (•11) H14HO N<1t • l~•ttll'it<ll •(le"' y Hn•lll n1e10 J'>trd aMl Mt1ktl ,..,, .. ,. .. ~, .. ,_, .......... ... --SP:ECIAL- ROUNO ROBIN RACQUETBALL TOURNAMENT Starting at Noon Between FRANK TANANA & BRUCE BOCHTE of the California Angels JOE FERGUSOll of tht St. Louis Cards & TOM PACIOREK of tflt Atl1nt1 Stans OPEN HOUSE: with continuous Racquetball & Ski Fitness Demonstrations. Tour our moder• facilities. •• I Wednesday. Novombor 10. 1976 DAILY PILOT Injuries Strike Rugged Servite The Maler De1 High Monarchs or Santa Ana are 1·3 in Angelus League football action and no longer in the running for a post-season playoff berth. But Ken Visser, head coach of Servite's Friars in Anaheim, expects a tough contest when the two teams collide at 5 Saturday evening at La Patna Park in Anaheim. "We're aware Mater Dei is not goina to the playoffs and the Servite game represents their whole season," says Visser , whose Friars are ranked No. 1 in Orange County and are 3· 1 in league. "They've got greot motivation going for them and anytime you face a quarterback like Mark Drazba, you can be in trouble. "Orazba ts intelligent, is a great runner and great thrower. The two things that worry me are their big play offense and Draz:ba's scrambling. We have a great deal or respect for their receivers.•' With Draz:ba hitting the long pass, Mater Del compiled a 3· l non-league record a nd came within six points of defeating Pius X of Downey and three points of beating Bishop Amat of La Puente. Servile doesn't usually rely on the big play but instead emphasizes defense, shutting out four oppo- nents en route to a 7-1 record. But one of the Friars' best defensive players, linebacker Chris Elias. may be sidelined due to an ankle injury Elias was an AH-County tighl end last season. Elias isn't the only key Friar injured. Starting defensive tackle Marty Fuentes, starting tight end Tony Seymour and part-time starting fullback Ron Stockdale als o have ankle injuries and are con- sidered doubtful. Fortunately for Servile, tailback Leona rd Altavilla, who has gained 860 yards is healthy as is quarterback Pat Carrion, who has rushed for 303 yards and thrown for 586. Orange Coast Foe Beefs Up Defense WALNUT-Coach Mal Eaton is shoring up the defensive unit at Mt. San Anton io College th is week while preparing for a South Coast Con· rerence football outing with Orange Coast College's Pirates Satur· day night {7: 30 ) here. 1n the pas t three games the Mounties have given up 85 potnts while scoring 60, winning one, tying one and losing the other. The 33· 7 loss to Fullerton was the first defeat of the season for Mt. SAC, which has an overall record of 5· 1·2. ''Our defense will have to play a lot better than it did in the last three ball games to stay in there against Orange Coast," Eaton says. "Ora nge Coast has a defense that could be the best we h ave played against this year and the I offei:ise is getting things together now.·· The Mounties are primarily a r unnin g team with quarterback Brian Bethke among the leaders in the conference in total offense. Bethke has rushed for 420 yards and is ninth in the circuit in this depart· ment. He is fourth in total offense with an average of 131 per game and his passfog stats show only one intercep· tion in eight games. He has completed 49 or 79 at- tempts for 628 yards and h as t h rown seven touchdown passes. The Mounties operate from the veer and the sophomore quarterback can pitchout to r unning backs Mike Hill or Dana Hutchin son. Hill has rushed for 580 yards on 129 attem pts and has sco red a pai r of touchdowns. Ttget Paw 4-Ply Wllllewall I Tubeless RecommelHled Size Price A78·1'3 $20 76 C713 14_ l 78-14 S27 95 F7A 14 ' G78 1<1 $33 95 G78 15 H78 1·1 H78 I 8=ii5 95 L781~ S3995 I tnti,.11 ~ pl~91 ~t,,h <O<'dt""'' $~1 Ow~lt 1 llm•nQ Al11utt Ch°"'' OAll N"fll t t11•0vt~f0t f tr•I e1twn,, cN,O•f\O com fW'~tt.IOf\ 1netu()a D•tton VW Tnyot• r 't .t •1A.;itt '''"1v 1s1 F.E T. Sl 74 S204 ,___ ,_,'52.25 :2 ~\9 '52 St> $?5d S2 ~5 $280 5308 . ' ,, .,~llJlid,.,..~llil"Jl~IP.!c~o~Ul'~o~w~ot'l!,..."'-ftlllllllll• , PRECISION WHEEL BALANCE $788 BETHtJNE TIRE 204' HAalOlt ILVD., COSTA MISA 646-4421 -540-4343 ... Custom Whe~ls & Tlrea Olstnbutors fOf , Ro~ot, Wutom, Bluo LI,,., Keystone & OunlOQ Wheels WIN PRIZES WORTH ~ $3,600 IN'76 Sponsored by * . I {o ubo n ·s :7ft( ~I ( )() :\ H .. \l(ER * . Weekly Pigskin Pick'eroo '76 winners will share prizes worth more than $330 by selecting their choices of the w in· ners of 30 week~nd football conteats. The Daily Pilot reader best predicting the outcomes of Pigskin Pickeroo '76 games will w in a one-year membership at the Nautilus Newport physical fitnesa center, 4220 Von Karman Avenue, Newport Beach. Second place winners will enjoy a din- ner for two at the Moonraker Restaurant in Irvine, Reuben's Newport Beach or Reuben's Costa Mesa. Third place w inners will be awarded free c ar washes by Metro Car Wash Systems at Harbor near Baker Street In Costa Mesa and Beach at Ellis Avenue in Huntington Beach. Ptq.Uun Ptcll(frff t\ • r equl•r tttlh1t• Of thf' 0"11, P1tot s .. r;h S.<!IClfteO<h MOMA,, Tut\O•y '"° WtclM\dly RULES l $..,Om11 '"e ~ntry blAnk bf-low or .a r••l\on•bt• ••ct1mH• ot u •o t"f\tw tM cont•\t • A•a,on•blf' 1,a(,1m.tt I\ Offtfttd .n An ••e•.atl Ovpt•(.itt [Mr••\ mu\t bfl ~nitcwm .,, ,,,. ~ \'1•oe 10 t•<•h\.-tt 1YdQ1nq Tf\O\t' whtC"dOft'' (Oftl~m ••II bt 01\QW•M••CI 7 S-0 ot 10 P!G'ilCIN PtCICEllOO, I•, ~PG<h 0.Hrt-M, P 0. lo• ls.II. Co\~ M<u CA tlli. J Only OM •ntry twr ,,.,,on Pf'rm1ttH ~.Uf\ .,,-.1111 C.o•Ut-\1.lnh 1rt ~•1\.H '"•' (Of'ttf\t Offl(1 .. ,\ m AV tnW\tlq•I,. mutt1pl• .,,..,.., from • \1nql• •ddret' or \1nQ1.-•n~fOOf' ,.nd ,.,,., d'•Qw•Utr •"• \U1."1'(1 tftlr•e\ UUtl'\ Cil1\Cov~rl!d O.c1\10f't of t~ Ol't f~\ t>O•ftt mu\t bt ~<<totf'<I .J-. f•"•' by ••tcon••\t~nh • Entr•t\ mu't bf' PO\lm•rtii,.O nat l..tittr '~" ~r•d•'f tr""''' a. ff· ''"''"' te tht-O.ail• Pilot C-•\t•ltiW\.i oitiu•v •PM S :!~!~:;11ot tmpfofe\ .Jl'td ttwtr •"""'"'••I• t•mthH •re ftot •4i9,•11 • ~~~:ltlAIClR Bl.A MI( MUST IE f'IC.l.EO IN OR E"ITRY IS ... . -.. .. .. ~ .• .. . ' ' ... I••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••: • ENTRY BLANK · ! Name ............ , ...............•••...•• Address ........•........................ City .•...•..•.•.•...•...•... Zip .•..•..•.. • • • • • • • • • : Phone . . • • . . . . . . . . . . .. . . •••.... .. . • . . . . • : : Circle teams you think will win this week's games ! · • • • • • . • • • • • • • • • • • • . • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • St. Louis vs Rams Denver vs San Diego Green Bay vs Chicago Houston vs Cincinnati Kansas City vs Oakland Miami vs Pittsburgh New England vs Baltimore Phlladelphla vs Cleveland San Francisco vs Atlanta Seattle vs Mlnnesota Tampa Bay vs NY Jets Washington vs NY Giants Stanford vs Oregon Washington vs USC UCLA vs Oregon State Kansas vs Colorado Texas vs TCU SMU vs Texas Tech Alabama vs Notre Dame ! llllnola vs Michigan : Ohio State vs Minnesota • : Nebraska vs Iowa State : Mlssourt vs Oklahoma • : Oklahoma State vs Kanaaa State • : West Vtrgf nla vs Pitt : Brown va Columbia • • • • • • .. • .; .. • • ·-• • • .. • .. • • • . ' ... • • • • • • • .. . ' • • • • • • .. • • • • • • • • • • • .. • .. • • • • • • • • .. .. • •: .. .. .. ~ . ·' • • • • : Baylor va Rice : • • : Syracuse vs Boston College :-. • . ! Mlaalsstppt vs Tennessee ! · · : Washington State vs Cal : . • •• • • : TIE BRE AKE R -My g uess Oft tM ·~· : : number of points sconct In .ill 30 garnet 11 : .. • • . .. . . . .: . . . . . . . . . . . . . .• :-.,. I. e •• 1: :: : . ~ • : c • • • : • . ? .. ············································--.· . -· • . . ---. . --. - JANE DOWLING Wednesday. November 10, 1978 ··. Speed Is Key to GWC Success · 11The Better BarcJain .. CHINOOK $6S9S By HOWARD L. HANDY Of 1M O•lly Pllol St~lt Speed is the keynote of the Golden West College women's field hockey team this season and it didn't come about by chance. "Speed is one of the first things I look ror from the beginning of ,.practice," says coacti J ane Dowling. The Rustlers have an impressive record this year (7·2·1) and al the halfway mark in league play, have qualifiP.d for the A IAW regional tourney at S tanford University, Thursday through Saturday. The two GWC losses were both lo four-year school, Cal Poly (Pomona). In six league outings, the Ru stlers have scored 22 goals and held the op· position scoreless. Dowling is a devotee of the sport and not only is an instructor at clinics, but attends others to pick up new ideas. She is a member of an all-star team as a player and will be ln Sao J06e this weekend lo compete. •'Techniques and strategy are changing with Germany and England exerting a gre:1t deal of influence," she says. ··with 11 women on a team, 10 wbo move and a goalie, we try to keep the ball in motion with a fast break. 1 want a lot of movement on the field away from the ball and don't want any player to be standing around. This puts a lot of pressure on COSTA MESA the other team's de. a ttack ba:i been s o feruse." strong, we haven't had to Field hockey games play a great d.eal or. de· are played in two 35· fense. Merry 1s a little minute halves with a peanut, butqulck." five-minute break. Only Another t op star is two subs are allowed for tathy David who also the entire game and a rilayed second base for lale injury could cause a l\e Rustlers national team lo play short. c~ampionship softball Merry Wilbur is the 'tun last year. She is a Golden Wes t goal keeper letding pitching can- and has given up only didate this coming year. one goal in league play. A1lender. 5-9, David is "She is a very good the kev to s uccess for the goal keeper, primarily," Rus\lers. according to says Dowling,. "But our her ~ch. F o f lhc: best choice in Chinooks, • selec t trom the large inventory at Marquis Motors. '-Come in today I Marquis Avery Exit, Ms.sion Viejo (714) 83 1-2880 FULLERTON SANTAANA WESTMINSTER 2946 BRISTOL ST. 153 0 S. HARBOR BLVD. 12QE. FIRST ST. AT CYPRESS PHONE: 547-7477 15221 BEACH BLVD. SO. OF SAN DIEGO FWY. PHONE: 870·0700 PHONE: 893-8544 PHONE: 549·1533 SPECIAL VALUES FOR TODAY THRU SUNDAY OUR NEWEST PEP BOYS STORE & SERVICE CENTER OPEN MON. THRU FRI . 8 A.M.·9 P.M./SAT. 8 A.M.-6 P.M./SUN. 9 A.M.·5 P.M . TIRE SALE! . CHECK THESE LOW PRICES ON 'CORNELL TIRES CORNELL 100 ... OUR BIG MONEY SAVER TIRE! 4 PLY NYLON ------..... 15 MONTH '\ LIMITED WARRA~T_!.:) E78·14 ' •• plus • $2 1S fE r • 2 fl8£1GLASS BELTS om •PLIES OF POLYESTER CORO' • A TOUGH, OUU8l[ mr YOU CAN COUNT ON FOR .•• lRACllON 1 MILCAGE ! COMFORT! 3a MONTH LIMITED WARRANTY" FREE TIRE MOUNTING SALE PRICE! Hll(s;~~Elm PRICE fl~A~ll f78 14 S30.39 °"i7 39 S31 .79 -S1 ~s $34.89 -- $35·.-69 ,_ _ _, -S36.89 fUlfllSI e.oo.16s I a.1s.16s ~~.:· ~?..~~ ,ti lJ•I ''' '•'" NO TRADE-IN REQUIRED ,: All l'RIC(S PLUS rt DCRAl OCISE TAX epit~ STORE. WIDE ~°o ~Dowgard "< PRE· CHRISTMAS -<f COOLANT AND 13-INCH TRAIL BIKE e (HR0Mf0 MOIQ. IVH HANOl E 8AR e ~lMI PN(IJM/111( TIRE:. ro R MOST FORD PRODUCTS 1960-1974 2aa FllU~D 129 OZ. CAN AUTO HEATER £0\1ly '"'toll~tt an ony <<>". ,l~l"''obl. tc>r fllthet .,.,.,h or low curh\ PROUCTS TOUR TIRlS HOSE ANTI-FREEZE 6 PIECE COMBINATION WRENCH SET : ·= ~ .... ~,,, HEAVY PLATED STEEL 6 : 6 PIECE OPEN END AUTO COOLANT RETURN . SYSTEM '· PEP BOYS IS HEADQUARTERS FOR ' l L AM/FM CAR RADIOS & .1~ • • STEREO TAP£ PLAYERS MINI 8-TRACK STEREO 22~ .. PERFORMANCE BARDAHL NO. 1 Frees 1tic~ing valves ond rings, di1perses sludge ond corbon. Reduces smoke ond blowby, gui111J noisr engines. Reduces ol burning up to 100%. 1.5 OZ. CANS FU-L SYSTEM TREATMENT -· r INSIDE WOODY ALLEN GIMME' )t::)t)R AR€ ',W l(\c;>V'l tJG? WAL.L.E1'; OR 1°l1A1'~ JUSf A l"L.L. SHOOT! w~-re~ PtSf'~! FUNKY WINKERBEAN mR DINKLE, THE BAND 80C.6 HAVE CON51DERE.D ~R ~EOUEST FOR (Y'()lllE<.,) 10 (i) TO Tt1E. MAW~ THANK$61Vltl6 m>~? 1HATE ~t6HI, BVT 11.!;. FIL.l.E:D Wl1H HUOSO~ ~l\fe~ Wl\T~r<. WE JUST CAN'T AFFORD 10 EiC.ND Tl-IE BAND! by Joe Mai-then Orv~ F,o..~E" M OVt, Arv!? I't..L Ff71,...1...ure _ YOtJ ro OE"AIH ! . -:--i by Tom Batiuft O~ ... WELL, HOW Aea.Jr JUST ME! i •• THE VIRTUE OF VEU VALIANT DOOLEY'S WORLD MOM FINALLY Gar UP 1TIE N~l/f-10 ORI~ 1tJTo Of\Jf or TH051: ' ·-~ •AUTO BANKS ! DR. SMOCK t...OOK A-r WHA-r l'H A-r WOMAt-J P t P l'O M Y C.OLJC.H .' TANK McNAMARA by Jeff Miller & Bill Hinds GORDO NANCY -. l!",..,.,,r • 8J.$NH/tt~ UNITED Feature Syndicate '""'"1 • »uuie So1ve<1 ACROSS 46 One wilo t P1nta1t duck 5 Plundered tO Tneretore 14 Feets 01111 15 Destroy s1ow1v 16 Not well· done becomes less harsn 48 Active paS11mes 50 Top IVlllOt 5 1 Emest T11onipsoo •• 'NllQ • life auu1or 17 Resident of 53 Feoon I ot 48 5 l P1at10tm 19 Seine trlbu· 6 1 wandtr tary 62 E.,g royal 200ttawa and family 2 Waallnglon words bod•ea 64 ·Annabel 2 t Not man · lee 1no made 'l enorf 23 ·-up 65 Remove all Cond•h~ traces of 25 JOhn Sc~ 66 Oepteles 26 Inventor s 6 7 Gnat tor vr11111 cne 29 L•O convtt· 68 Edihces sauon 2 69 Sando11>ers wds 34 Weddll'IQ ----H I It E SITIOIS S lo!! .!'..~ .. 0 AM T IEIAIC H T R 0 T .... "I ' . '"" C:ATRA II T £R lll GI m A IE ~i'IP :1: ~,~ ~ll/ (F •SA V Wff IN T R ·-f I T j ;~U IC l f""l A l lf' H I ., 0 IP I• 10 .c N o-u l o IN L IV [ C !'llilt •n UT If I~ I§ 1'111 ll JllU 111,. i::;:=r ._IC ~~ I~ NII IAIL ~--~1 trac"s 39 Waltz. e g 10 Beat 40 Make hke ' I Berber s new concern 43 Best , .:' M •10< orgen1zeo Great Bear 45 Outhne '3 C1ose a 4 7 Lived under l'lsw~ s canv11 111yes ~9 Elegant In 16Pitt1 alma formtt mater 52 Uneven :>? Rec1t1ts ot 53 Sti1p s words 35 Not Odd DOWN rvents screw In 2• Wor<'/ war:s f0<me1 37 Sort or fri~ten.ng 38 Not tell 39 Furr11tu'e com part· men ta 4 1 W11hlngton, o.c .. 1lrport • code 42 Sports pal1ce 44 Shrivel Var. 45 Exchange medium 1 B acl\ 11 k 26 Qt11a or 54 Was CO'l • lnlOfmal 27 Like vpry veyed on an 2 Sm1tl much auto amoun t 28 B1ther 'ac 5~ PortOds pre· 3 J0te1:!• vlVTe cesaory cedtog 4 St11ble land 30 Som1thlng event• nOld~gs unl(Jlt: 56 Sp. atlver 5 Umbr1ge· Slang dollar I Mer 3 1 ZH I 58 Artifice 6 Orlgin1te 32 Legal 69 B1nllcl1ry 7 Seed veuet 33 HH a ol an act 6 T rH ol Lile prelerence 60 Muddle site 36 Flower 63 Foal's 9 Put oll the holder p1rent MOON MULLINS by Emie Bushmiller ·-·. ' . JUDGE PARKER TUMBLEWEEDS MISS PEACH by Charles M. Schulz El'E~ ~Tl'i<OiW N 6HT SHE AND KER F~lfNDS WENT TO THIS LITTLE Pl.ACE 'THAT HAD A Jl.}l(E BOX AND A DA:.lCE ~WOR AND S1X BOOTHS .. SHE u.AS 7,...E F.RSi O~E TC CAr?vE THOSE IMMORTAL WOROS ON THE FACK OF ONE OF Tl'!E 800Tr6, 'KILfOV LllAS ~ERE" ACTUAll'r' AcTh~6RAN~A WA5 A LOT OF FUN, ~E WASN'T vm1 (f(fATIVE ~ WHV CANi" VOO EJE LU<IS 01'Hl!R INUIANS!? WS POH'T U&e 6111.ET'R>Sl WE use tiUN'f'lN& f<NIVl!S! FOR6£r AfOU'f VER PUMP 5111..EtiU! \J C-..'1\...-- ,, by Harold Le Doux euT r MUST AOMIT IT WILL ALWAYS BUG ME .• NOT KNOWING WHETMER TllOSE CAROS ACTUALLY FELL THAT WAY OR ----WERE MANIPllLATEO! ANO ISN'T IT A --.,.-ll'!:Jll!IP:;;:• SHAME THAT YOU NEVER WILL KNOW? by Tom K. Ryan ANP JUS'f :~~ ~'( stJPPO~l> ~ fAN MAil.-• \,t l\llllllt •w. ~(0\1'1 I ·<•i'~'''~ f ! , . . ~t.+f'T' SY •l1Ni M!ICI Ml It.Alff~ fMi (;tt()ff NA'flONAI.. (IF'Ul..11\llNI~ ... Wednesd , November 10 1976 DAILY PILOT t.i X~~ortlljlf··ORAfAPN ... ~ t 7, J'/ I , i " I ~LL -~E WtlJ.IOREW 150 DOLLARS ... by Rodcjer lradflelct AND D£P05liEO 1WO ru.JDERS AND A TAILL.161-ff by Gus Arriola by Ferd Johson 111 t 'I H I' ' .. "I'll dror back ·tomorrow-I want to find out from mv Bo~ton km hqw ~he feels about .i contcmporJI) pl.t)llc h.1ngcr." DENNIS THE MENACE I I I NOW PlAYING I'> ..... ., ... ,, ti I f ..,.. .... ,,,.Ito , ,. ~~ .... ..., Ho' JO. JO• 10lOPM •"I "'h t..: ••I 4 16 it-kl \•I A ~U'-U JO 1 lO 4 JO "•,,.. • , .... • '° 1 JO A to JO"" THEATRES-ORANGE COUNTY MANN'S SO. COAST PLAZA (tlU Jllp\• 1411 l 11Utl 101111 MANN'S SO. COAST PLAZA t1111 .... l'lt •11101 )•~ 7111 MANN'S SO. COAST PLAZA IU So 01•tt iU ml ( MANN'S CINE MALAND Ute e "•••ti MANN'S CINEMALANO uu \1 ... , •• f h ••• ,. ili IHI MANN'S CINCMALAND l•H ·,, "''ti h.1J.r"' ··--'.01 "ALICE IN WONOERLAHO" (X) 1 >0.•4' iAT'iUN J IMIS-1:0'-9:>0 "S:LESH GORDON" I 4' U.T/\UM. 1 IC).l:5M;U \U IOCO>f .. CH "THE NEXT MAH" IRJ 110.•·n \&Tl\U.-J:OO.l•ll•I 4'-1 ... .,,. llHIHHM 0 MARA THOM MAH" WI D&U-1-1~4' UT/\V-1 lO.J ... , 0 • 10.lt 15 LEE M.ARVIM-ROGER MOORE ... "SHOUT AT THE DEVIL" 1 "'' )0 i&T il>M-1 I t..J 10.HM 06-U~U Atft•UM Ill "'MARATHON MAM'" 110 "' UT IU ... I )0.J •'-..-a 1'-IO·H IRI "MARA THON MAM" THE WORLD'S FAVORITE BEO·TIME STORY IS FINALLY A BED-TIME STORY .. x AN I AA TEO MUSICAL COMEOY SU.RAIN'; PLA' BOYS COVER GIRL -!CRISTINE DEBELL WITH ~RR f G(l MAN • Al LAN NOVAK • TERRY MALL «;PfCIAL r;uf«;l UPEARANCE llY FLESH GORDON OIRH. TOA OF PHOTOGRAPH~ JOSEPH BARDO ASSOCtA f£ PRODUCER JASON WIUIAMS l YR'C!> AN:l lol <;1C BY BUCICY SEAlllEc; &PRAl'lh £0 A"O CONJUCTEO BY JACIC STURN & PETER llo!ATZ PROOUC£0 8Y WILLIAM uSCO ·DIRECTED BY BUD TOWNSEND m ' .... ._ ... • SjlUIN COA.S1 ''l AlA "' .. ~' " ............... ,, t °'"" .. o UI t1U I 0th Bond .JEPie Finale for Moo..re? B)' BOB THOMAS CAIRO (AP) -Amid lhe pyramids and mos- ques or the ancient city, James Bond Is conduct- ing his loth movie caper, a $12 million effort de- signed to make the pre- vious 007s seem Uxe B pictures. i Arter that -well, ..::::::~..-;;~..:;:~ ll!!!!I'-----"~-:::::::::---nobody bas asked me. The company (United Artists) never plans a new one until the last one has opened and business proves good. You'd think they'd have more con- fidence after all these years The Fleming lode Is • Um1Uesa -Moonra.ker, ": plus the abort stories <#: "For Your Eyes On!Y.": and "Qct.opuasy." •• Said Broccoli: "ks'. \ooe u we keep meting: them good, we'll remain: In business.'' With or without Roeer Moore. On a recent day the in-I cumbent Bond, Roeer Moore, was battling a \ beefy Britis her who I wrestles under the name film and •From Russia with Love' were the lust successful, because the distributor didn't knOw what it had," s aid Broc- coli. ..Despite the Lon- don success, the pictures opened in Texas and Oklahoma drive-ins. 'li\e turning point came with 'Goldflnger.' " "I NEVER discuss--------------------business with Cubby; we of the Mighty Chang. The scene was on a parapet overlooking the 1,100- year-o Id Mosque of -~ Ahmed lbn Talan. To the delight of hundreds of Egyptians, Bond fell four stories into a cushion of ' cardboard cartons. Moore remained his cool self, especially since his double took the fall. Puffing on his ever - present cigar, the Lon· don-born actor discussed his third and possibly last portrayal of the Ian Fleming supe rhero in "The Spy Who Loved Me." just play our backgam- "' mon. He has his lawyer. to negotiate and I have mine. And 1 suspect that he has seven other actors in the wings waiting to play Bond." He referred to the im- probably named Albert R. "''Cobby" Broccoli, former Hollywood agent and confidant of Howard Hughes, now sole pro· prietor of the Bonds after the sellout of partner Harry Saltzman. "I'm not worried about Roger; we can aJways find somebody to play Bond,'' the producer said confidently. though one suspects the beginning of a backgammon strategy. Sean Connery starred in six of the series, George Luenby proved an over- night disappointment in .............. "On His Majesty's "THEY 'VE GONE crazy on this one," re· marked Moore, 49. "Already we've done in- teriors in London, wild chases in Sardinia, five nights at the pyramids. They've got companies shooting underwater ROGER MOORE CENTER OF ATTENTION Secret Service," yet the 'Spy' the Biggest of the Bonda film attracted $38 million in the world's theaters. stuff in the Baham as and a ski chase in the Balfin islands. "From Cairo we go to lhe Luxor and Karnak, then return to London to film in the biggest movie stage ever built. It's not only the biggest; it's also unheated, and I don1 look forward to working i n the w ater in t he English winter. "Will l do mor e Bonds? I don't really know. I simply take one picture at a time. This is the third picture of a three-picture contract. "That's a lot or broc- coli,'' said the producer. AND WILL "The Spy Who Loved M e" be faithful to the Fleming book? "All we're using is lhe PUBLIC NOTICE title," Broccoli ad· PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE -----------1----------------------• milted. "The book was l'ICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NA-STATEMENT TIY" tollow1nq ~r\On\ "',. dolnq ~" Thi toflow1nq person t\ dOH'MJ t>u'st-n,..., di\ nf'\\ •\ THE P41Nf STOile ?1118?(..,m . .., BUSINESS SYSTEMS,"'*-~ c-.,'"' •"O 8 1 L~9und N•<!Uf'f C4 SI Soll•173 Co\16M•s• C4'n6~ 91671 llo~rl W1tM1n H•ll•t>u<ton 8Sll A1nvud W p,.,, r •n Mv'11"' \t J~""1f1Ch Ave we,tm1niter CA. Wbll LAqun,.. 9, .• ,,_ CA qle>\t Tn1\ buS•f\e\S I\ conducted by an an- J111m,., 0 Stauff•t ""'' JArdu"WJ• divtdu&I M 1\'i.•l')I"\ Vtlllt'I CA Robf'rt w H•lllb4.trton T"'' bu\ n,.. ' I\ t onduCtf"d Ooi " Thi\ \tat•mt-nl ¥114\ fifed w.th tM Ql'"'Wl'r..t1 o trt""""~"·o Coun~v Clerk ot Or~no-County on Oc1 R_1rf'l•rO W Pr1tft' 11 1916 l"-• '\llt .. rn-nt Wd\ fdf"'d w tn ttw-F'51M (J)uf'llv c1,..,., ot OranQ• Counh on Oct Publi\~d OrAn~ COA'it Oa1ty P.t01, 71 ,.,, F•Slll Oct 11 Nov l , to, 11, 1976 U JS-16 Puh'•\~O O"a'°'Qt' (f')~\t Ocl•l'f' Pflot 0<1 11 Nov 1 10 17 "'b O"l 16 PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE CIHIM4LAHD THE.A TU ..... "' 635-7601 STADIUM DRIVEIH ~ 639-1770 o,_ Mlc)Mty 6:45 M..._.·S-dtlyl:45 lal THL\ TaE II ----. "FREEWHEELING" ALSO "LEGEND OF BIG FOOT" (G) "SHOUT Ito. T THI DEVIL" "SnAM61a A.MO THI GUHFt•NTH" (PG) .._.HM/lo.LOMI" "'TMI II• IU5" ..,.. WHHLIM•" ,_.....OP ll•f<>OT" "IXHllmOM" ...... HUR.LI" IXI FICTITIOUS BUSINEU quite dull -American NAME STATEMENT Thi' lollow1t>Q PU¥>nUr• 001t19 bu\I motels and Car Chases . ..,.~~~~iNE MASTEi! , .. 011.u 100 F1eming never wanted it Newoo•t C•nlor Ortv~ SU•lf' ''0 made into a film. I like Newl>0'18•1Kt1 C•"'o"'•• •1!>60 the title and I prevailed a c.a?.~!'::a c:;f\!:0~~0;::;,~:;.;::·:o upon the fa m ily to let me N•wport Cent•• Orlv• Suite '10 USe it With an entirely ,....,_, 8fo1Kh C.ehtorn1• '11!>60 Th" 1>u<>1M\\ "~.n9co11<1uc1Mor• different story.•• "°"0<01.1coroor•"°" Wilh writers Richard ~~~ri i.°~~'.:1,0n Maibaum and Christoper av icertneuiw En11w Wood, he devised the tale Thi\ \~~~=:~~Id;:~ ftl"'1 w1lh ·~ or a mysterious Nordic Coutltv C•••~ ot Orange Countv on<> shipping magnate (Curt tal>t'r 2e. 1m Fm«1 J u r g e n s ) w h o s e Put>ll\h•d O••nci~ Co•" o.i11v p;101 supertanker has an ap- Nov l 10 11 " 1•16 ••"' 16 petite for submarines. PUBLIC NOTICE The plot is interspersed with t he dozen "set- pieces" -fights, chases, stunts -that are part or the Bond formula. Plus Broccoli's technique of "when you think the pic- ture is over. it isn't." He added : "We have a tiger by the tail ; we always have to top what we did before." IT ALL started with "Dr. No" in 1962. "That "Splendllerou1ly Funny." "It'• a ball of a brawl." (R) Plu1 HER F MD U€ edwards BRISTOL CINEMA BRISTOL AT MACARTHUR 540-7444 ''THEOMEH" "PETEI PIOUD11 IRJ "MUIDll IY DIEATH .. IPG) "ILACKllltr ''SHOO'r' "SEX WITH A SMILE .. Ill "MAIA THOM MAM .. llJ "NOM MOOM TIL THIH .. IPGI ,_T_,..._, fUIWt9ILlN' ... ""' LIO .. e tf ... fOOT 11t loem-•Ul-SHOUT AT nee DIVIL,,_ "'"' . ~ - IMAll TOWN IN TUAlrNt ~~~-~~-~~~~~~~~~~IC, • .. T-.-. llllWMllUN' ... """ uoa.e Of .,. '°°'• ,, , --------------~R·' A lOOl -ftll -LOGAN'S IUN!Nt "'UI fU'fUll WOl1DC"9t ---·"'-SHOUT AT nee DIVll.,.. """ IMAU 10WN IH UW"' 1t1t111u--... ,..,, ,,.., .. "' ...... .__••• -fMf-ICtt ~-U,_11 ~-....... ·-" -·~·"··-~-.. ~) --·"'-14"0Uf Af M DIVIL!Nt 2•TAXt 111¥114'0 ~Clll ---•WlYf•UI 1.QAY MUNOIY I'll 2.-...oN IUUAClll9l .,_..wuT_.. ·-.,-~ Piii WMllUN' 191 -teOfMOfOOr1e1 • Will RING DOWN ON DIEP THROAT IFtH4L WHtU -IHDS nMSDA.Y, HOY. 11 ... fl/SJ , 1"4 I 1ou 1.._.,,, 0,0.Mt\I ... It '" . " .. ,. NOW SEE IT LIKE IT WAS MEANT TO BE SEEN - ON A LARGE SCREEN , UNCUT NO ADVERTISING BREAKS w ....... ., ·~·~•·" '" 1978 DAIL y PILOT @7 rr;.;;;;;;~ FILM Poli-sh Pianist Prai-sed ~ EVENTOFTHEYEARl , Our Orange County Philarmona c Soc1N y pro- gram made 1t cltar last wt!ek~nd that we were getting something out or the ordinary run or l'On · cer t pian ist:. 10 the person of Pola nd's Piotr Paleczny There it wa s an black and white· the Golden Medal ltl the l nte rna- t.mnal Music Competition in Munich, the same award at the P leven f'estivat in Bulgaria and the Grand Prix at the Fe s ti v al o f Young Solois ts 1n Borde aux, France. GLl'ITERING creden- PUBLIC NOTJtE ,. . .,,_ flllUU\ BU\lh (U l<l•N>L STATEMENT N "I .. ,,. .1n ttfl Jv, Jbu WEEKDAYS 8:00 CL \RKG.\BLE \'" lEN LFJGH SAT-SUN 1 :15-5:00·9:00 14' ,. "' .,Hf rOMPV'~ J I ~,. .. ,,, r I •JI 1 J ~ ....... II ~ .u r1 f 1 ·':Jrn11~>&e.1 N L RT t..NIC.HT CO , INC • . ' .· • (R) .· . . :: :· Lf.SLIE 110\\'.\RD OLIVL\ de lL\v 1LL ~\11) c ,. fOtft4 ) (Of r>0" ,, ,,. @ I ~ .tfrtv J.11•• Suiltt1'1 N -.i:io,.t 8"•" t t t, n • t?e.60 1 t-l'Jv\1ne\ J t 1 b't • tOt· CINEMA CENTER p,r-.1 tn 'N 8f'rt w ,,"J"1 Ct'I inc T"om ... -N U.H I ,, Pre\td••'•' HARIOR AT ADAMS. COST A MESA T .. OMASW. BURTON li50 f\1)1 We~tcl•ff Or1v,. $uHe )t? ......,woo'19ea.ch Cotl1torn14 "i..0 MESA VERDE CENTER 979-4141 ~ ;,t,i•1-.nt<1 Or ~'"f•• '' 1 Oa•t'I Pt11H ''J" •ut>t•r J lO 11 Jt 111~ 4"'.1 CLIFF ROBERTSON ERNEST BOAGNINE HENRY SILVA IN FOR SOME GUYS THE WAR IS NEVER OVER 7~E ;~S LEAlllll6 LAllGH SCORER the miracle mule who kicks 100-yard field goals 1 ~EDWARD ASNER, DON KNOTTS, GARY GRIMES ;ll11l TIM CONWAY ri' .{:!'"~ ·--.. , ..... I ,.,.., •• .., ........ 1500 t1als. lo be s ure, and Cioale that made the plea~anl reading for an pulses pound. Palecm y audience preparing tu gave those final bars all hear the Polish National be had and if the Santa R adio Orches tra 's Ana High S chool au- featured artist tackle the! dience had bad a gold very lovely yet tremen-medal in the house ht• dously demanding Con-would have h ad another certo No. 2 in C minor by one for hill collection. Rachmaninoff. ' Several conce rtgoers The work has pilfaJls tri e d very h a r d t o in plenty for t he unready persuade the rest of the or the unw4ry but it's ob-a u di e n c e t o g 1 v e vious that no one could PaJeciny -and a ~plen· ever place P alcczny 1Il d i d o rch es tr a -a eithercategory. thoro ughly d eserved Taking his time , es all standing ovation bul 1t top C11 g hl con cer t wasnottobc. pianists do. P aleczny The only way you'U gct drew every ounce of ex-some OC PS member.. to pression from a score stand m the presence of that has ofte n been genius is to set their seats on !m~ ITWAS obvious after ~ ~ ~1 t he interm1 s~1on that .,.. said seab be<.'a me ex -~ tremt>ly uncomfortable i,l fo r a Ct>w me mbers of the , audience who were won-f\{ dering alo n g with ~ yours truly -1r 1t c~ wouldn 't have been bet· ~ ter for the Polish Na-f:l llonal to leave the two &1 final works in Poland. ~ 1\ li/111 h~ ,JI ,\N I f(,\ '\t ( H.., I ),\\.'Y EXHIBITION CINEMA WEST WESTMINSTERATGOLDENWEST 892-4493 Lut oslawski 's Con-f:; certo for Orchestra and r,1 K.llar's "Krzesany" may ~: be al l the r age in [; Orzchuslk but t hey got a ! very lukewarm recep-1. tion in Orange County 1; despite preconcert as-1 suranccs that they are ~ • 'bn I l 1 an l e xamples or isl'l©l!l©~®"""'fi)ijwl!lwt!ll!l.ooi"""""' eu~t!.lli?ll(""l!\lfllt.,tll6ll!lw«:l!i:lll c on te mporary music ***'Ir*******.********* tt * * * fo rms with international ,. X-RATED AOULT M.OVI~::. .. 1denhficat1on ·• • . HOW IH COS1'4 MlsA • Someone had to be kid-it BEL co~Go MOTEL • ding. I lhought they were • " • two rathe r bad Polish ,.. jok~. described as the national ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-'--"-~~~~ anthem or romanticists. MAESTRO B ohtJan Wodiczko was with him all the way for an in- spired reading that was rounded off with a joyous PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUS 9 U51NESS N"IME STllTEMENT Ttoiio tollow1n9 par-,on 1\ ckHnq bus'· MUa\" FOUNT"llN V All EY eoov WO RKS l'Jft? Wdrn'l'r. f~our,u1n V•1t1•v CA ~1108 Jnhn Da"•d M~Hc h. t86·U Lo\ FIO't'\ Fount1t1., V&Hl .. 'f CA 'l"J1C8 Tiil buS1nB s IS COndUCled bV an In· d P1 1dU-*I Od..,•O J Maren Th'\ •.td,,.m,.111 Wl ' t1ltd With thfl t oun1y Ctt,.., 01 Ordnoc Councv on No~mber ' 1'1' f'-l Pubtf\l'\~f'I Or •n¥ Co,i-. t D•• '"f Pilot. Nov 10 II 7• •l>O Ott I IU6 •161·16 PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS flU~INli5S N"IME STATEMliNT Ttv roll<.iwtnQ pl '"°" I'\ ~1"19 bust· N \\oll._ PI ATVflE C UT T F RS 188'8 8'"">~nut tSI J'."nt1nl ttnV49lle'f .. C.A P..nnlt J r,..,'ll,, 11)h) Co1wnel. Cvi><•n. Cll 'IOoJO Th1 \ bu\1n<"\\ 1~ condvctrd by ari In· Ol~t0Ut'll P• nn1~ r '~"(" T"I\ 4 lfllPMWllf w 1'\ ,tl,•r.t Wttt\ t~ Coun1v C•~rk ul (Jr•n~ CJu"tr uo Ou .. .,, .. l'Ul?• Publ1>h<'d OtMQt Co•\I 0 11ty Pllol, Oct 20 U Nov J TO, "'6 412176 OBSESSION TOGETHER ROBERT DENIRO A bizarre story of love. "'Obsession· Is as good and of ten bet1er than ~tAXI llRl\7Ell -------· (R) anything Hitchcock has ever done:· edwards MESA CINEMA NEWPORT BLYD. AT 197H ST. ,~~-~~~~--i.COSTA MESA SHOUT ,AJ"THE. DEVIL l:'f!. (PG) ~-3~ ~: T EST AFRICAN ADVENTURE EVER FILMED LEE ROGER MARVIN MOORE ARBOR TWIN I M•llOt.•tW-.>Qlif C.0'\hMIU 1 t 4•-0T11 ---•41\ JIU FROM THE SMASH BROADWAY HIT! OBSESS/ON A b1111rre sto•r ol love. CLIFF R0 8EA'TION OEN EVIE YE IUJOLO ' 'Obsession S AS S and often better th.tn •nythlng Hitchcock • hAs e~ ctone:• PLUS ROBERT DE NI RO fAXI DRIVE ' •AI!'! folks ot lhe Olyme~~ld llket~ you over tor --0~ CO.HIT AT cn«MA WHT "SUPER FLY" -CINEMAWCST ... ,,,.,., .... ,~ ....... ,.,. """'""' Cl>flN tU HO IN THEATRE rt2 "FLESH GORDON" •'"' -.cdl (X) Wdnl~ ~ - (PG) ALEX f:r THE GYPSY JACK GENEVIEVE LEMMON BUJOlD PLUS ~~\~"W-~.(PG)~ II w.i& '"" 0111)' -ma 0 1 rov.: t,M.,,.f't.·ft u f.11m and" "'V''la'l "'''' • still torb,ddf n _Liza innelli\. Ingrid · Bergman !>ofne ••'<W'rl~n .. re horn to ha • 1lor•ou• Affair w11h lifr. ~~atter ifo of GJillle-' rPGJ ~1\l\~'i~ I t r I ' •• DAIL V PILOT Wednesday. November 10, 1976 ~· • • • . . Taste impact · of ~Enriched Flavor: breakthrough .;. reshaping smoker attitudes. U ntil today, lo \v tar meant lo \v taste . And sn1okc rs kne\v it. Eight o ut of ten --m a ke rs l1ad tried '' lo\v tarsn a nd \Vere disappo inted. No\v one lo\v tar cigarette ha changed all that. MERIT Only 9 mg. tar. Yet \Vith extraordinary taste. Taste m ade possible by a breakthro ugh in tobacco technology called the 'Enriched Flavor' process. By isolating certain ''key" fl avor-rich tobacco ingredie nts in cigarette smoke, MERIT researchers · h ave developed a _way to pack extra flavor into tobacco without ©Philip ~lotrlt Inc. 1?16 9 mg'. 'tar:· 0. 7 mg. mco11ne av. per cigarette by FTC Methor1. Warning: The Su rgeon General Has Determin ed That Cigarette Smok ing Is Dangerous to Your Health. the usual corresponding increase in tar. Tests Verify Taste 9 mg. tar MERIT was taste-tested against current leading low tar cigarettes ranging from 11 mg. to 15 mg. tar. Thousands of smokers were tested. The majority reported that even if the cigarette test.ed h ad up to 603 more tar than MERIT, MERIT delivered as ·much-or more-taste. You've been Smoking "low tar, good taste,, claims long enough. Now smoke the cigarette. MERIT and MERIT MENTHOL l / ' •I Firehouse ~ cooking: Fuel ·Food STORIES By BARBARA GIUS Olllw 01lly PlloC Stall The guys down at Fire Station 3, Newport Beacb''S Fire Sup- pression Headquarters on Santa Barbara Road, have all the luck. They have the department's newest s hiny rigs to go with its newest, shiny s tation (whi ch, before the addition of a contem- porary mural treatment by student architects at Cal Poly Pomona, "seemed a little like li ving under a freeway overpass, "they say). They also have an engineer named Parrish who's reportedly such a good cook. he s ays, ·'Not a week passes by that I don 'l get a proposal or m ar riage ... Parrish's name around the station is "Pretty Boy." His wife calls him Larry. Where kitchen duty is commonly left to rookies at most fire stations, Parrish ta kes charge at Station 3 "because I enjoy cook- ing and that's half the job. If a guy didn't like doing it, chances are we wouldn't like eating the results." BEA ANDERSON, Edttor BARBARA GIUS, Food Edttor Wednesday, November 10. 1976 Chef Je•n ufont•n C1 Firehouse cooking is a challenge. It involves putting out mid.day and evening chow in proportions generous enough to stoke battalion energy for a 24-hour duty period. Firehouse cooking, be says, is an interesting challenge in that it involves putting out midday and evening chow in proportions generous enough to stoke battalion energy for 24-bourduty. Since men must always be "on call." their meals must be pre- pared at the station, and nooe of the meals can be so delicate that they will be ruined if the alarm rings and the burners are turned off. CAnd they DO tum off the burners.) Parrish does all the shopping and menu planning after collect- ing a daily kitty of about$30-S3fromeachfireman. "Weeal pretty well on that," he says. "Jn fact, most of the men say they eat belleronthejobthantheydoalhome." Thal could be because the men get what they want, he admits. "We probably overdo it on ice cream and starch, but firemen as a rule generally like to feel full, bulked-up. "If you have two solid meals a day with sufficient protein and carbohydrates, you can usually go out and fight a fire all night, if you have to. I( you haven't eaten adequately, you could fold on the job." At Fire Station 3, most meals are well-balanced in both nutri- tion and texture. A day's menu might consist of a "healthy sandwich" of avocado, mayonnaise and sprouts on wheat bread, soup and chips for lunch. For dinner, they might have barbecued kabobs, burritos or one of Parrish's pasta dishes, a tossed salad and some bread. Parrish's specialties are lasagne, spaghetti and eggplant Parmesan , all of which call for his same "special sauce." "It's got punch to it," said one of the firemen. "Yeah," agreed another. "You 'II find that out about an hour after you have some." Other firehouse favorites include Parrish's "burritos deluxe" (heavy on meal and peppers) and a chili-cheese omelet which usually ignites energy on weekend shifts. "Sometimes we really get lucky and cook up some fresh trout or local fish one of the guys has caught, but mostly we stick to cheap cuts of meat," be said. For dessert, the spoons are put out for a group dive into the ice cream, "unless," says Parrish, "I get inspired to make carrot cake." LARRY'S fl REHOUSE PAST A SAUCE 1 pound Italian hot sausage, out of skin 1 large onion, chopped 1 large garlic clove, minced 2tablespoonsoliveoil 124-ounce can whole, peeled tomatoes 116·ounce can tomato sauce 1 pound fresh mush.rooms, cleaned and halved ~cup burgundy or cheap red wine 2 teas poons dried oregano 2 bay leaves, crumbled Saute onion, garlic and mushrooms in olive oil ; add sausage and brown. Add rest of ingredients and let simmer 2-3 hours until sauce is thickened. 14akes enough for 6-8 servings of spaghetti or 10-12 servings of eggplant Parmesan or las agne . (Nole: reduce expected number o( servings by 2 if you 're feeding firemen.) Newport Fire Department's Larry Parrish doubles as engineer and chef at Station 3. His three-way pasta sauce has 'punch, 'say battalion mates. Chef Spreads Holiday Secrets S t u f f e d l r o u l M o rn ay ... c hi c k e n Jerusalem ... chocolate mousse ... fresh pear Belle He lene ... clams Parisien· ne ... goose liver pate ... Once you know the basics of eooking, cnel J ean Lafontan tells bis stu- dents, these dishes that we know as "continental cuisine" are "a snap." "Unfortunately, people today a re too busy and hurried; and with both the husband and wile working. there is llWe lime to fix these dishes at home," said Lafontan, as he swished togetlier a butter and flour paste for the beginnings or a white sauce, or roux. ''So they buy prepared foods and lake shortcuts and come to me when lhey want good con- tinental food.•' Lafonlan baa returned as muter chef at the Victor Hugo Inn· i n Laguna Beach afte r several years as executive chef with Harrah's boteb in Reno and Lake Tahoe. When he returned to the Hugo, more than j ust the menu chanJed. Accohiinw to Jacques Mason, restaurant manager, the image changed too -from a senior citizens• eat-in lo a gou.rmet cllnnerhouse -and the clientele has changed, lhe dress code and lhe "spirlL" People also are coming to the inn for cooklnf classes, which ac- cordinC to class coordinator Sal- ly Jenkins, are filled lhrouib Dec.20. "All it took was one newspaper ad, wblcb leads us to think another-advanced series might go over well after the bqinning of lbe year," she said. "The studenta who come here are eameat.lJ lnteawted ln real gourtnet food. MOit of them have been exposed to it ln one way or anothu and they want to know how to fix it at home," Ms. Jenkins continued. "Of course, some students are just coming for the fun of watching Chef Lafontan." He is somewhat or a culinary spectacle. in a very French way. "He also bas a way of appearing just harried and flustered enough to make you feel totally relaxed about how you are In the kitchen," Ms. Jenkins added. Students have thus far learned to stuff a trout with crabmeat, blanch fresh pears in syrup and coat them in hot chocolate, stufr clams Parisienne-style, flambe a Cherries Jubilee, blend a smooth liver pate and whip a chocolate mousse. Chef Lafontan also has shared with them his favorite holiday re- cipe for Sweet Potato Jmperiale, which he says, is "the only way the French would ever eat a sweet potato." When cooked and assembled, the potatoes serve as "boats" for a cooked fruit salad, .~xoUcally navorful with the aooition of a ·maple topping. SWEET POTATO lMPERlALE For each serving, allow-one- half of a sweet potato, two un- peeled apple wedges, two man· darin orange segments, a banana and two spears of pineapple, canned or fresh. Boil and peel swKt potates. They should not be mushy when done, but firm enough to shape like a boat when cut in two lengthwise. Scoop out a little of the cooked pulp, by makine an In· sertloo about ~-lnc.h deep, then set uide for later use. Pour ve1etable oil in deep fryer about l lh inches deep. Heal over medium name. When oil is hot, deep fry the "boat.a" until u.y are crisp all around. Stack on paper towels to drain and arra111e on platter. In center cavity of each, nraqe apple, pineapple, m andarin oranges and bananas. Pour over each about a tablespoon of maple syrup and return to oven to bake at 400 degrees for 15·20 minutes. Moist, tasty and colorful sweet- potatoes are always popular for Thanksgiving. They can be boiled, baked,~ mashed, sliced. diced, stuffed and even pureed. Because or their honey-like taste, s weet potatoes are favorites of children, and they're packed with nutritional benefits. One medium, boiled, peeled sweetpotato 080 grams) offers mor e than twice the recom- mended daily allowanc..e. <RDA) of vitamin A for adults, a high count of vitamin C plus other vitamins and minerals. GOLDEN SWEET POTATO PUFF 3 cups mashed cooked sweet- potatoes (about 3 large ~ cup plus 1 tablespoon but- ter or margarine, divided a;., cup fresh orange juice Y.t cup chopped h'esbonion lh teaspoon salt 1til teaspoon pepper ~ teaspoon dried lear tar- ragon 4 eggs, separated To prepare sweet potatoes, bake in 3SO degree F . oven 40 minutes or cook in boiling water to cover for 20 minutes, until soft. Cool, peel and beat with electric mixer or potato 'masher until smooth in large mixing bowl. Beal in I/• cup buttttr and orange juice. In small skillet mP.lt remaining 1 tablespoon butter, add onJon and cook until tender; add lo sweet potatoes with aalt, pepper and tarragon. Beat in egg yolks. {n large mixing bowJ beat egg whJtes until stiff but not dry. Fold into sweet potato mixture. Turn into a greased 1 \.\-quart baking rush. Bake in 375 degree F . oven 50 minutes. or until mixture puffs and is lightly browned. Makes 6 servings. SWEET POTATO PINEAPPLE C~EROLE 2 cups cooked mashed sweet potatoes 1 can (8-ounces) crushed pineapple, drained 3 tablespoons margarine, melted 2 tablespoons firmly pacl(ed light brown sugar 'h teaspoon salt 1tii teaspoon pepper 1til teaspoon ground nutmeg 1 egg, beaten 'h cup chopped peanuts Combine sweet potaloH, pineapple, margarine, sug~. salt, pepper, nutmeg, egg lklcl peanuts. Mix thoroughly. SPoCIJl into a greased 1 quart casse •. Bake at 350 degrees F. minutes. BERRVSWEETPOTA'tO AND MARSHMAUOW • CASSEROLE ~ 8 large s weet potato,_, cooked. peeled and sliced 'h i6ch thick 2 cups fresh or frozen-~ cranberries, rtnsedanddraine,I ~ c up melted butter margarine ' 1 cup firmly packed b~ sugar Grated rind of l orange 1 cup orange juice 'h teaspoon nutmeg < 2 cups large manhmallow~ Jn a 3-quarl casserole, ~ potatoes, cranberries, but•, sugar, orange rind and juice aild nutmeg. Bake in a pre-he--1 moderate oven (350 degrees ~) for20minutes. Remove from oven and ~ top with marshmallows. ReplM,e in oven and bake for anolbef U minutes or unlll marsbmall~ are golden. I I DAILY PILOT Wednesoa . t -Jember \ Anxiety Rx: Overcome Guilt D E AR ANN LA N DERS · My best friend needs he lp but won 't a s k . Will you please-tell me what I can do for her ? N isn't even 30 yea r s old and she already has buried three husbands. Her first was killed in a huntin g accident. <They had been roamed 22 months> Two year.. later she married a won · de rful man. Ile had had one operallon for cancer a few years earlier bot cons id e r e d hims etr cured. A year after their honeymoon he had a rP- currence and died within eight months. It took her four years to get over his death. N ...----------then m et another fine man and they were mar- ried eight months ago. He died of a heart attack within 90 days of their m arriage. N won't show her face in public. She as ks he r neighbors or friends to do her m arket- ing and other outside chores. The poor woman feels as if she has kiUed these me n and the guilt is THE OPENING OF ORANGE COAST HYPNOSIS CENTER (PH.D. DIRECTEOJ BEACH MEDICAL VILLA Spec1aliz1n9 in Hypnosis for Sell Improvement Hypno-lherepy By Medical Referral Self Hypnosis Oasses Now Forming • for Sell lm:::::t:n~igure Control ORANGE COAS T HYPNOS IS CENTE 1?t:li~~ UCACH OOUL EVAAD M UNTINOTON D•ACM, C A . 92647 17141 848-0688 PUBLIC PACKAGING .SHIPPING CENTERS :~~ makmg her a recluse She refuses to t alk to a priest or a counselor Whal can I do to help her'' -WOR RIE D ABOtn'N DEAR WORRIED: Your friend needs to get rid of her 1wlt feeliD&lf. HoliDg DP and bldha& from the world wW ooly Increase her aasiety. I caa sugaest nothlnl bat tbe al&ernaUve she bas rejected -couasellag. Let's hope she will ac- cept lt In time. A woman who has been able to sur- vive widowhood twice and marry a third time has llDusual reslUency. DEAR A NN LANDERS: What does one do with a friend who never s tops talking ? We 've kn ow n one another for many years. T il lie was a l ways "wordy" but in recent years she has beeome unbearable -going from one subject to the next, pausing only to catch her breath or ask a question. Then she goes right on talking -not givi n g the p e r son a chance to ans wer. T illie 's principal topics are her loneliness. how all her old friends (ex c ept m e) hav e dropped out of sight, and how her hus band never talks to her. I 've been te mpted to sa y, "How can he'! You never give a person a chance to get a word in sideways.·· Interrupting doesn't work. She talks right over me. Any s ugges- tions? -ON E WITtl TWO TIRED EARS DEAK ONE: Yes. Ac· cept tbe fact that TtWe ls a compulsive talker and you can't do one tbJDg about lt. These types rat· tJe on and on becaue they are inaecare and andous. Until Tlllle comes to terms with whatever lt ls that ls bothering her abe wUl coa&laue to drive her friends away and become lncreaslngly lonesome. DEAR ANN LANDERS : I have rheumatoid arthritis and must use a walker. Very often when I pass people on the s treet they pat me on the shoulder as I go by . In the first place. I feet it is very rude to touch a stranger. It irritates me no end. I resent this de· Scholarships: A Medical Aid Ann~ Landers LOOK! -i YOUR lllU IOOIC STOH Slcnd TrUSUJI Housa I 121. llttl St. '46·Ul6 HEARING PROBlEM' I WtCIAUU IH HllVI DU.fHHS monstrali~ of pity and CASH wish I had the nerve to MAJO• tell them so -but I ha· MAHUfACTUOU ven 't. So -will you ientsD4nD please tell the m for me? TIH 'tl .... s IH Thank you so much, Mias COIOHA Dfl. MAR Landers. -LEAVE ME HAL AEIMSOtER BE HEARING AIDS DEAR L.M.B.: Your l.J•-I II t l 40t L Coftt Hwy. 1''1NE STATlO:'llERY • + It' a t I m o 1 a t bJ.n 1c Christmas Cards. 'PfrtY lnv1t11t1on1. and (tllt Stationery. Let us assist In ~ your holiday ehqj)Pl"V 1.>lttasant end telsur•'Yt ' ...,...,r a an esce en es· eor-detMw-•7s.JUJ ample of what cu bap. ~========~~!!!!!!!!!!!!I!!~ pea wltlea people don't ..: UDdentaad dae aaot.ber. What you Interpret as "plty" ta actually co•· .. --• p ... &oa. These atrUM'S are try lag to tell yoa Uliy are sorry you are baD- dlupped. The pat .U a gestllre of cartag. I hope ID-tbe future you will be able to see lttbat way. • WHITE'S SHOWCASE TWO LOCATIONS 28892 Marguerite Pkwy Mission Vieio (•ff Avery Pkwy) 495-5902 '"°" ·NlltS t•·• 1 4t ... , l.tt()()M.t- 369 E. 17th Street , •.. ,,.,, , ....... , ~Photography Studio ~ p onra 1ts/pa:.:-p ort'\/copies 1=11111;11.1: HA'"IJLE ·\f\f ITH l:AllE Schola rships for students in health related fields will be given from proceeds realized by the Auxilia ry lo the Orange County Medical Association. The group will present a benefit bridge luncheon Tuesday. Nov. 16, at the home of Mrs. John T. Chiu. Dr. Eric Stanbridge explains the study of genetic control of human malignancies to Mrs. Paul Hoernig, chairman, and Mrs. Chiu. PACKAGING SYSTEM YOUR PACKAGING & SHIPPING MADE EASY! BRING IN YOUR ITEMS WE LL PACKAGE. Virgo Learns Lesson LABEL & SHIP NEW FOAl41~CE ME™OD U , S , c-n Corri~.~ fr'Olll -door (71 4) 751-7482 COSTA MESA JD42 ENTERPRISE AVt. COSTA MESA. CA. 9m6 BREAK THE LAST MINUTE Christ01as Shopping HABIT WITH A rnm~~©({1 tt~rrffi~. {If 01110 Early Bird Special Order any Christmas Gift Paks totaling $15.00 or more and receive our gift to you ... A CHEESE BALL OR LOG FOR1~ OFFER EXPIRES NOV. 15th • 1f1fi~~~©f1 '1~f,!~ WESICLIFF PLAZA I 71to & 1•VIMt-MtW..OIT HACH•,.HC>tft U1·0'7Z MOM..Fll 'Tll 9 SAT. 'tll 6 SUM. 'TIL S MARINER'S VILLAGE. DAMA POINT _,___.,.. l'tf()l'C( 4tl-2'70 ... ' Ht. 'II • T II U R S o A y , quirements, security. NOVEMBER 11 GEMINI (May 21-June vers atUity combine - you meet people, go places. do things . Accent on possessions, c redits, .debits. Key is to analyze, to get ideas on paper. By SYDNEY OMARR 20)· Highlight curiosity, ARIES (Ma rc h 21. willingness to adapt, April 19 ): You get what versatility, enthusiasm you want by t'xercismg and . humor .. Accent .on independence or thought, profit potentia l. lo~atmg action. You'll be in con-what has been m1ssmg. tact with stubborn, tern-accommodation with peramental, cr eative loved one people. CANCER (June 21· VIRGO (Au~. 23-Sept. 22): Some promises may be broken but you learn v alu a bl e l esso n s. Member of opposite sex states cas e and il is like- ly to be the truth. TAURUS (A pril 20-JuJy 22 ); You are able lo May 20): Your direction cope with e mergency. 1s nol easily discerned. You turn thi ngs over, Y o u a r e b c i n g lake d~wn, re build. You persuaded, cajoled by s urp.ris e yours elf by more than one faction -working under pressure. simultaneous ly . Key is lo LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): be a wa re of basic re-Flexibility. enthusiasm , LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Career, standing in community are em- phasized. '(ou may be seeing through prism of wishlul thinking. Know it Credit Redefjned ~ Ma ny wo men surprisingly are wtaware of how credit works and what their rights are under new consumer credit laws. These facts were evidenced during the development of a new 36·page booklet, "Women: To Your Credit." Pre pa red by Com mercial Credit Corporation with the help of the Maryland Commission for Wom en and the National As· socialion for Women, the booklet 1S free to consumers. It may be obt ained by writing to Comm e rcial Credit , Baltimore, Md. 21202 . The Equal Credit Opportunity Act has greatly expanded the availabillty of credit for more than 35 million women in America, according to I. W. Martin, president of the corpora- tion. "But if this credit is to be ~ed wisely. women and men must clearly unders tand their rights and obligations.• .. The booklet defines the most common types of discriminatory practices and outlines steps to lake .if a person is denied credit or has a dispute with a creditor . It also describes how to establis h a credit record and what factors creditors consider when they e valuate applications. It gives examples of what con- stitutes credit worthiness, pro· vides a look at it from the len- der's viewpoint and drrines the most commonly used terms in the industry. Sections are devoted to specific rights of women who arc single, m arried, divorced or widowed. Information for men about the importance o f their wives establishing a nd maintaining their own credit ~iory also Is in- cluded. HAMS COSMETIC SURGERY MEN-WOMEN ..._._rfcwd M.-ttf' C'-? ORANGE '-•·-'""""" ,. ....... (714) 997·9960 '"So Good ••• ff W1I ,._... Y• 'fft ff's ~" • ORDER NOW FOR THE HOLIDAYS • GIFT SHIPPING OROERS ... ORDER TODAY! ftHOHE ORDBS ACCEf'TID • Ready to Serve with Honey'n Spice Glaze • Spiral Sfteed From Top to Bottom • We Package and Ship from Coast to Coast • Full Service Delicatessen • Imported Cheeses ANAHEIM The VIiiage Center 11111 ._...,,,, 1~18.tMl!d ) (714) 635·2461 CORONA DEL IAR 3711 t C.ast hJ. (714) 173-9000 PALM SPRINGS ?IUI HWl I ti IMUMCHOH«T RANCHO MIRAGE (7141 346-3194 ......... LOOK YOU.-ER! IMPIOVE · YOUR ArnARAMCE! • Eyes • Nose • Ears • Facelift • Breasts • Stomach • Hair Transplants • Dermebrasion • Skin Peel --( D ( ) JI I I I Cell For Free Brochure • Free Consulting Easy financing arranged AMERICAN COSNElC SURGERY aNTH INC. 6112 ......................... lti.e70I Member American Medical Ass'n. and do something about it. SCORPIO <Oct. 23- Nov. 21): Lunar aspects promote understanding o f s ubtle nuances , capability of acting on "ins ide i n formation." ComglUnications couJd be garbled. SAGITTARIUS <Nov. 22-Dec. 21 ): Complete project, a s signment. Finish what you start. Don't believe in limita· tions. The sk y is the Limit. .. if there is a stop- ping point. CAPRICORN <Dec. 22·Jan. 19): Accent on partnership, cooperative effort. sha keup in what was supposed to be a long-term arrangement . . You get fresh viewpoint from creative, active, energetic individual. AQlJARllJS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Basic mate rial requires re- view. Stick to factual in· formation. Strive to un- derst.and and improve special services. You are aided by one who pre- vious l y seem ed indif· ferent. PISCES (Feb. 19· M arch 20 ): Your creative urge is acUvat· ed. Your own style is im· printed. Horizons are ex· panded. You '11 have cause for laug htv. celebration. If November 11th I• your birthday you are a natural teacher, in- tuitive, loyal to family, intense, creative, affec. Uonate. Frnmes nol inclu<kd MOM-Start a collection for your chi ld \vith a 5x7 natural color portrait No appointmmL 49¢ needed. One offer per pcrson-Lwo per family. Sl.00 charge for CaC'h 4 Day Off er added person in groups. Thi~ (\ \c want you to try us) photograph off<·r "'- may not be combinccl\. OFFER ENDS with any otltcr advcrlised offer. SAT., NOV. lJ Photographer's Hours Dally 10-6; Sat. t :JO, Sun 12·5 ALHAMBRA · BUENA PAR K • SOUTH COAST PLAZA· TOR~ANCE PASADENA Diamond cutters are among the world's rJaost •. skilled craftsmen. It is their work that tucn~·,9 • J y pebble into the most br1111ant or alf tnS. ~ ' If • FOR YOUR DIAMONDS, CALl cdl~ Ray Beaudry, Master Diamond D.C.I. , ., .. Cutter~ 666 Baker St. C-353 C.OSta Mesa Ca. 540-6664 "OIAMCHlS ARE YOUR PORTFOLIO'S BEST FRIEND" , J I i t ..J t .J ' • \,, Mr. and Mrs. George Woods Couple Honored Mr. and Mrs. George Woods or Balboa Island celebrated their soth wedding anniversary with a family dinner at t.he Santa Ana Country Club followed by a party at their daughter's Eastbluff home. The couple married at the Harvard Military School Chapel in Los Angeles. Both California natives. they lived in Hollywood until 1962 when Woods, an attorney, retired. They bad owned a beach home on Balboa since 1940. Woods is a member or the Masons, Shriners. Santa Ana Country Club, Federated Seniors and Orange County Seniors. He has been a mertlber of the California Bar Asssociation for 50 years. Mn. Woods, who is active in church.work, is a member of Col. William Cabell Chapter of the Daughters of lbe American Revolution in Newport Beach and is a member of Delta Gam· ma Sorority. The couple attended the same grammar school in Los Angeles and Hollywood High School. They plan to repeat their honeymoon trip to northern California. Their daughters and sons-in-law are Mr. and Mrs. William MacGowan and Mr. and Mrs. Richard Kugel of Newport Beach; their son and daughter-in-law are Mr. and Mrs. George C. Woods, Jr. of Balboa Island. They have five grandchildren. TIRED of FAILURE? Start winnine-. · POIMOS AHO ltf°CHES DROPAWAT. f • NO DRUGS • NO EXERCISE Low cost. high results or money back w.·,.. che.,u, ... ,~ ·-.... ·-ra. pt'09"•tll fH" ~ ~ ,.o,i. ...... -.... "'°" effectl••· This Is ttt. ...._. .. w.i,ht lou ~ ciK•IHd Oft .... Tod41Y SMw. ASK ABOUT OUR FREE TRIP FOR TWO TO HAWAII OR ACAPULCO SLIMWAY 646-7933 645-2051 ,.._ t;n 9-afly • ., 642 c ... t~ St. Co~t• M•s•92'27 19. 50 let our stylists give your hair new shape for fall . . . plus a nice gift! F1r:>l n short, l:xJuncy cu;, then a Reahsuc no-s1 t r_,,)rm ... now yuu r sryle 1s b ·lJsh & go easy! With y "">ur nr->w st yl •"' & perm. ou1 gdt 10 you . a professKnal styhnq brush. A ll br only 19.50 tho p•111rc• mon:h of November. (Lonq ha.r sli9htly hiqher). SPCCIAL: "H I· n of T1 )y" chrome & Teflon curling iron. a &-auty St11d10 Cxclus1ve. only 11.88. Beauty Studh•, nil st~ros Wednesday. Nov!!mber 10 1P'e DAfLYPILOT Classes Opened .,. i["T'" _«<:'W./ • .._ ... ,., • ..,,, •• ~''""''-'• .... ·-·-·· ... ~ ....... ,,,\t" .. :o\t~\.'t~T ~ -• • ~ , • • ~~ Shaon Nlon'\ "~ )ERENITY ·~ . Skin Care Center f ~ ..... .,..~t•&fl"tl... ' .. ,~..;-~·· ~ c-ffc•YMC-.fttHf ,': MISSION VIEJO WOMEN'S Q.UB: A Christmaa Bazaar will be presented from 11 a .m. to 5 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 14, at 26221 Tierra Circle, Mission Viejo. WOMEN'S COUBS~: Orange Coast College is offering two nine-week courses for women who are interested in returning to school. tatioo to College and Career Op· porlunities will offer an ap- proach lo returning to college without fear and provide an in· troducUon lo the campus. Vocational Planning for Women will be taught at 6 p. m. Thursdays .. It will provide in· formation on Affirmative Action. · • • ~ecang a traan<.>d csthet1cian • : · ~ A\·oid thl!I costly wa te bv / · ond let he r u nu lyze and' ,, inform you of your skin's 1 needs f\ Sere nity Fa\'.1111 • The classes will begin Nov. 15, and registration will be taken during the week of Nov. 8. On Tuesdays at 10 a.m., Orlen· MENTAL HEALTH A S· SOCJATION: Suicide and Its Ef· feet on Friends and Relatives will be the topic of a workshop at 9:30 a.m . Friday, Nov. 12. in the Republic Savings and Loan, San· ta Ana. • takelt un hour and 11 hair and , •. ' the cost Is twenty dollars. : You will find your sklf\, ·. greatly Improved . your · quC'ihons un ... wcred :rnd an ' ; cusy ml•xpcn~lv\' home care ' program to follow. ;. ~ ... , .,.w .. ,. -•. N It Ill -"-nch. • • :--'-'-~ M•• ..... D 0 l (vu\pffn llAtlllod -A•Oil 0..... Coc.-hc. •' • ltow Arc11tn9 "'..:·~' l 90clY Wutflll •. ~ •• Family Surprised Because of limited seating, re- servations are requested. They may be made by c ailing the MHA office at 547·7559. In Lido Village :.s 3400 Via Oporto. Suite 6 )~. Oft the ~°"' ... &I041Aln : ·: Friends and relatives or Mr. and Mrs. Nick Mardesich belPGCI them celebrate their 30th wed· ---------• ding anniversary at a surprise party held in their Huntington Beach home. The party was hosted by their daughters Debi and Diane and Mrs. Mardesich 's sister, Laura Njavro. Mardesich, a member of the Elles, is past presi· dent of Mater Del "Re· bounders" and past pre- sident of the Board or Fairview County Water District. TMCotllplet~ G--t~ 67l-l444 Mrs. Mardes ich is past president of Newport Harbor area council Beta Sigma Phi and past presi- d e n l of Xi Kappa Lambda. J_!.29 E Cour Hw; Sears l[d / )' ) I I / : I / J( ! , Paekage of 5 / . ( Knee Hll(hs /-~ s I ... One size fih all. In loasl and sandstone shadei. Trieot Knit Bikinis Spet'lal 3 s 1 Purt'hase for In whit• and pastel shades. Sizes S, 6 and 7. Flattel'lng Bra s,:.: 99c PutthaR · Soft and contour cup style. In A, 8 and C cups. A speclol purchase. though not reduced. Is an uceplionol value. So. Coast Plaza 3333 8rlstol St. Newport Beach !!ll 714-675-6191 \ i;· . -· . . . .. -""~" WHOLESALE TlElS • SHRUIS • HOUSl PU.MTS $300.00 MINIMUM EACH-PURCHASE 24 .. BOX TREES 15 GAL. TREES & SHRUBS 5 GAL. TREES & SHRUBS WHOLESALE BOOK PRICES S.D. Wholesale Growers 11622 WARNER AVE. FOUNTAIN VALLEY PHONE 546-3429 DAILY 9 AM-5 PM get op - I 1lli.sses' Short Sleeve Tops ~and Double Knit Pants • Ponh loilored with stitched creases. Pullon style. Polytlter double knit in solid colors. Mines Sizes. •Tops with tie belts. lOOO/o polyesler. Solids and allrocflve prints. Small, medium ond lorg• Thit Ad Effective Through Sarurdoy, November 13th BuPna Park Oranf.((' STOii HOU.Si MOf>doy 1hr11 Jolcloy 10 ""' •• ' "" So1111doy 81 SO La 'olmQ Ave. I , " -. . LONG BEACH SANTA ANA POMONA PALOS vtRDES MARINA LAKEWCX)O l.A HABRA NLWPORT Com:J\ $.A.'11 DIEGO l.J\Gli"NA HlllS ARCADIA W£$TMINsn:R G!DIDAU:. Phone: s•0·3333 Phone: 828~400 .......... 2100 N. Tustin Ave Phone: 637-2100 9 30 AM It 9 '"' S1111cloy to,,_ , •• "" . _,.: ......... ' I Platter Dre5sing Flavor Fruitful Dress up your Thanksgiving platter With one of these relishes or conserves. flavored with the fruits or fall. Now'a the time to pre- serve cranberries. Or try tossing them with fresh grapes for a sassy com- panion to your holiday roast that required no make·ahead time. CRANBERRY FllVITFUL CONSERVE 1.i;, pounds fresh or froien-fresh cranber- ries, rinsed and dralned 1 "pound dried ap- pricots. chopped l ·'h pounds figs, chopped 1 package ClS. ounces) rais ins r a is ins . M a k es 4 Ya ~teaspoon 1lnter • quarts. alneer CRANBERRY WINE 2 cups (about 1 J ELLY pound> 1rape1, halved 2 pounds fresh or and seeded frozen -fres h cranber· In medium saucepan, ries. rinsed and drained combine all ln1redients 2 cups water . · except 1rapea. BrlnC lO a 2 cups Port wine ·: boll. Cook over meillum 7 cups sugar . .heat, uncovered, 10 1 bottle (6 ounces) 11-minutes atlrrlnl oc- quid pectin c as l o n ~ lly . Stir In In a large saucepan, or grar.es · h eat throuab. Dutch oven mix cranber-Coo . Serve chilled, to•c· ries and water. Bring to company meat course. a boil and boll ror 10 Makes 4 cups. minutes. Press mixture GRA'PE HOLIDAY through a strainer. RELISH. Replace strained juice in t pound (4 cups) saucepan and stir in fresh cranberries wine and sugar. Bring to 1 who le orance, a full rolling boll. Stir in quartered and seeded pectin and bring to a full >,..;cup sugar rolling ~ii again: ~U 3 cups grapes (abOut Cor 1 minute, starring l lh pounds), halved and constantly. seeded Remove Crom beat, 1 package (2 ounces) Thanksgiving: BBQ Style I lemon. chopped 1 orange, chopped 4 cups sugar 6cups water l leaspoon cinnamon 1 can (4 ounces) slivered almonds Combine all ingre- dients in a large saucepan or Dutch oven and simmer for 20 to 25 minutes. s tirring oc- cas1onally to prevent sticking. Spoon while hot into sterilized jars. Seal and C'OOI. skim off foam with metal c hop p ed pecans or spoon . Pour quickly walnuts while hot into sterilized 1 teaspoon oran1e jars. Seal and cool. Store rind in a cool dry place unW Grind cranberries and needed. Jelly can also be orange through fine covered with a v.. inch blade of food chopper or deep layer o r melted chop finely in blender. paraffin a nd cooled. Pour mixture into a Makes 4 pints. bowl, add sugar and let GRAPE·CRANBERRY stand 10 minutes lo allow Gtn'n thal we contmuc to be blc:-.sed with warm, balmv days throui::h the rest of Novcmbl•r. whv not prepare this yl•:.u·;:-. Tha nksJ?iving dinner on lbc• outdoor !. pit., F l•ature a c risply browm•cl barbecued h1rd flavored in a Lt.•rnon Butter 111arinadt. at· company it with fre!>h corn-on-the-cob a nd but· ter, a crisp i;alad and crunchv hcrbl'd bread sticks. ·and ht• th;mkful vbu lin• 1n Soulhc•rn Cahforn1J where the \'ll'ather a I lows \'OU tn ptJll off such outragt'OUS f 311 M:>asts' Whl'lhl·r 'ou choose a whole lurkt•Y 'Ir one of the new boneless roasts. mann:ill' 1t according to directions with Ll·mon· a nd· Uutter H a rhc•cu<• Sauce hl"lnw. lhl·n c·ouk 1l either on a s pit mer cha r coa l 111 lhL• ht1ck,vard. 1n ;1n l'lt·rtri(' rotisscrit.•. or uo;c· your nvt•n to lwrh1•cu1· 11 in door:-.. Don't slut I the• turk''.'. as an uns t ufft•d h1rcl balances beltt•r on a 'I'll and cooks faster. u ;;MON·BUTTER H.\RRF.CUEI> Tl!RK t:V Lemon·and·Butt.er Barbecue Sauce I • l 'UJI lt•m11n IUl('l' :! tuhlt•,µ111111., W11rc '''tt·r,h1r,· ,,1uc·1· • • 1•up Ii ~ht bro ' n :-.ug.ir I tt•.1,pn11n '"It • • ll'.t'poon i:arh c IJ()\I. 01·r -1.~,. 11 teaspoon dry mustard 1 ~ teaspoon paprika 1 ~ cup (I s tick> but- ter Blend all ingredients Cl•xcepl butler> :.it least two, or up to t'IJ.!hl hours h<.'fon• harbt•cuc time. L ay tu rk t•y on la rge sheet of wide, heavy- dulv aluminum foil and sha.pe foil slightly up around it . P o ur 111arinadc• O\'cr turkev and rompletcl~ seal foil around bird :.o rnannade 1s held m:.ide. Pl ace on rack in a s h a ll ow p u n and refngerute, turnin,:t oc- cas1onally. 2 to 8 hours. <Longer marinating lim e inten si fied barb<'cue fla\'C)r.) When read' to IJ:.irb<.'c u e turk1;,. r emove bird fro rn · ;,, a r 1 n a d c a nd dram Ml'll butler . add rC'maanin g marinade. Hrush on liberallv a nd frpqucntly during iiarbe· ('UJng To Spit a Wholt' Turkt'Y Bruloh in s ide body ca\'i li es of turkl•y j.!e n e rou s l y with harhccue sauce. Insert :-pit rod through center of ho<h ravitv. parallt.>1 to hac.kbunc." running il thro ug h neck c:k1n f;i:-.l 1•n o n e 'Pll [ork rirrn h into hn·;.1.,t. the 11tla('r intn l <t1I Tit• wmJ:(s d o.,<• t 1 hod~ with heavy .. tring TH.' ll'lo!' together m h..tck o r '-Pit so that th1~h., .in' not pressed .iJta m'l bod~ and dark meat will cook faster. Tes t and r e adjust balance by rotating spit between palms of hands. Bird mus t balance perfectly to rotate s moothly during cooking and reduce wear on motor. To Barbecue on Rotisserie Over Charcoal Start charcoal briquet fire about 20 to 30 minutes befor e you plan to begin cooking. When coals are r«>ady, knock off gcay ash and push coals:.'lo back of firebox. Place spitted turkey on rotisserie and insert meal thermometer in thickest part of ins ide thigh. making s ure thermometer bulb docs not touch bone or spit rod and making ~urc also that thermom ell:r will clear charcoal as spit turns . Put drip p:m madl• of heavy-duty aluroinurn foil directly under turkey . in front or t oals. Urusl'IJ turkey generously with barbecue s auce. then s ta rt motor running . Cook approximate length of time u you would in a 325-degrce fo~. oven . See time table below. Bas te often with Lemo n -a nd -Buller Barbecue Sauce . The turkey is dqnc wh e n r oas t meal thermometer registers 180 degree lo 185 degree F .. or when thickest purl of drumstick feels son . ~ _.:J/r:. \ \~·wo-q :.; ~ ·;i~· • r. {!~·;,-... I - Best Idea Since Shopping Carts ; I,' 1 !\ r·· Now you can do a week's shopping '~ \ ~., without forgettir-g a single ' item! Use pre-printed 'two-ye•r ~ply (104 11111) turmltted In con11lent tear-otf pad ~ ju1t $1 .50 CPoatage prepaid) Send Today To Pecome A Super Shopper ~----------1ti111n thla coupon, iNlll with S1 .50 to: 1,ilot Printing Shopping Ll•t •Pc>st Office Box 1560 •cost• Mesa, Calif. 92626 •• I I ' INAME--------------1 I ' I 1~en ___ ----- -----1 shopping lists prepared for you by PILOT PRINTING. 140 Hpara\e printed 1tem1, plul addltlonal 1pacH you can 1111 In yourH lf. 34 Staple• 21 Vegetabltt 1• Fruita 6 Bakery lten\I 5 .... ragH 111 MHt end flltl entrl•• 11 Oelry llemt 20 Mltc•ll•n•ou• Lltll ..... ,. •ctw .. .... DAILY PILOT To barbe cue on rotisserie in electri c oven, follow same direc- tions as above. Cooking time. however, will tend to be somewhat shorter. TIMETABLE FOR COOKING WHOLE TURKEY 6 to8 po unds Oven: 3 to 3112 hrs . ' I I Rot1ssene: 3 to 3Yi hrs. 8 to 10 pounds Oven : Ji.; to 4 hrs. Rotisserie: 31h to4hrs. JO to 12 pounds Oven: 4 to41h hrs. Rotisserie: 4to 4 IAI hrs. 12 to 16 pounds Oven: 41h to51h hrs. 16 lo 20 pounds Oven: 51h to6V2 hrs. Store in a cool dry place. A conserve is a preser ve made with the addition of nuts and R E LISH juices to form. 1 pound (4 cups ) Toss grapes, ~ind and fresh cranberries nuts together with cran· 1 cup sugar berry-orange mixtur~. ~cup rai~ins Cover and,_ chill until 1 cup water serving ~imtr. Serve as a If.a cup vinegar •relish with meat course. For delicious treats, nothing's nicer than ~ Hershey.'s Kisses and Miniature Bars! ~---~~-They're all individually wrapped bite- ~ + ~\~ sizedpiecesofHershey'sreal chocolate. ~ Rightno\v, youcansave25cents , l .. on each big 14-oz. bag. Buy both &/e::~b."--'1'\.~t~ · .... Big Bags and save 50 cents! ~\'ll~~'Nr""fl~~ • On the 6-oz. or9-oz. bags, o I ~ I .. I ~ I .. I I the savings are 10 cents. Use a CO\lponf or each brand and really save! . TOia. C<ll'l'lJN l1mf!-Ont COUIJOll per purd!Mt, KisSe"S""'°· ""' ··-------------- 16tTY--------• lJP-- - _ _J . L. • • -• -• • -• • • .;. "'----------------· I l')~~oo . *"' when )'OU buY the 14 01.. bag • 25~ Off when )'OU buy the J4oz. bag. I l > ' OAll Y Pl '1T Cl Fall Fare: Treat Sweet . ' Roast Pork This year, don't puss up the chance to match abundant fall apples with roast pork for holiday dinner fare. GLAZED ROAST PORK 6 pounds fresh pork loin, salt, pepper, garlic powder •/2 cup apple jelly 112 teaspoon groWld cloves l1h tablespoons vinegar 3 slightly tart apples 1/.i cup margarine or butter 1h teaspoort ginger lf.t cup honey 2 tablespoons lemon Julee Sprinkle pork roast with salt, pepper and garlic and roast at 350 degrees F .• until internal temperature is 180 d<.'grces F . This will take about 3 hours. Combin<.' apple jelly, cloves and vinegar for the glaze and brush thickly over roast. Continue roasting for another thirty minutes. Meanwhile, core and slice apples into lh·incb sections -leave lheskinson. Melt butter or margarine in a skillet. Add ginger, honey and lemon juice. Cook for one minute. Add the apple sections and cook about 5 minutes, turning twice. Serve as garnish for glazed pork. Serves 8. APPLE J ELLY BREAD STUFFING 1 :1 cup minced celery t,4 cup finely chopped onion 1h cup butter or margarine 6 cups day-old bread cubes· •;:i cup apple jelly I tablespoon gTated orange peel 1 tablespoon chopped parsley 1.11 teas poon salt 1ili teaspoon pepper Saute celery and onion in butter or margarine until ~olden. Add bread cubes and saute until lightly browned, stirring often. Mix in r emaining ingredients; toss well. Makes about 6 cups stuffing for roast or 6· to 8-pound bird. * GINGER APPLES 6 large golden Delicious apples, baked (use 1/:J to h cup sugar to fill core cavil ;,.'J) Juice o f 1:: lemon 14 cup (or more) slivered syrup-preserved . ginger root. 1 Remove any skin from baked apples, scoop- . ing pulp from skin with a teaspoon. Discard skin. Slice apples <adding scooped-out pulp) and mix 'with lemon juice; tum into serving dish and sprinkle with ginger slivers. Chill. Makes 12 servings when served as accompaniment tp roastpork, ham.or turkey. * , Prepare Holiday Stuffed Apples in your · slow-cooker and set yourself free for the rest of the day. ,. .. Mushrooms Cultivated Pizza Irresistible Mushrooms, like the pizza itseU. reached the world's tables from Italy a number of centuries ago. The grandparents of the modern cultivated mushroom reached America in the 1890's; the pizza came to this country with Italian immi- grants at about the same decade and the two of them have been growing steadily in popularity e ver since. Now irresistible mushroom pizzas can easily be made at home in less than an hour using the following Easy Mushroom P17.za recipe. The crust starts as a sort of popover batter; you just pour it into an oiled or greased pizza pan (or several pie pans if you haven't the regulation pizza pan). The sliced mushrooms and sausage chunks are spaced over thf> batter, the pizza is partially baked. then finished with tomato sauce, mozzarella cheese slices and more mushrooms and baked until brown EASY MUSHROOM PIZZA 1 pound fresh mushrooms or 2 cans (6 to 8 ounces each> sliced mushrooms 5 tablespoons oil. divided 1 '2 cup choppl'd onion 1 '2 cup diced green pepper 1 pound sweet Ila.Lian sausage links, sliced and cooked 1 cup all-purpose flour 1 2 teaspoon salt 111 teaspoon grounrl black pepp<>r 2 eggs. lightly bt•atl'n ;.:1cupm1lk 1 jar 051:: ounce" I nwatlcss s paghetti sauce 4 ounces Mouarellu c:hcese, sliced Rinse, pat dry and slice fresh mushrooms or drain canned mushrooms: set aside. lleat 4 tablespoons of th<' oil in a larJ!C skillet. Add mushrooms; saute for 5 minutes. Remove and set aside. " In same ::;'~1lli:'t , hc::il n•maming 1 tablespoon oil. Add onion anct gTt'C'n pl·pper: o;aute for 3 minutes Com bim' half of thl• ·.au-.Jge and h:ilf of the sauteed m ushnx>ms y, 1th the 't gl tJble~ in thc skil let· set as1dc In a medium boy,l mi-< nour, salt and black Pf>pper Stir in egg<; and milk lo m ake a !>mooth batter. Pour into a gn.•asi·d and fh urcd 12 inch pizza pan Pour sausage and 'l'gl·tahle mixture over all. Bake in a prehralcd hol II\ l'n t41)() F.) for 25 minutes. CO\ er with :.p,1glit.'lll saU\'C. Arrange cheese shcl'" in a < 1rrll• 1 np spal(hett1 sauce with resen·l·d sausa~e Ht'lurn lo hot oven. bake 1 O minutes Io n g e r . H l It l' a t r l' m a in in g mushrooms and use to i~Jrn1~h p1tza. Slice and serve. Yield : 6 portions. •. An unusually navorful. l'll·i.;ant finale l • an a1.1tumn dtnnrr bh nds mttmbrane-frec or.mp\• :.ert1ons and s \H'll 'l'rmouth Try JI alter ham, lamb or roast bt:d ORANGES VERMOllTU 1 Jcupsugar •;ic up s we e t vermouth 2 wh1)le cloHs rih ·m hrarw frN' sec· hons \\1th JUH'\' Crom 4 larl:(e sretllcss oranges ln " boy, I f.t ir toi;clher tht' <;ui•Jr ttnd Vl'rmouth; add the c:loves and orange sections. Cover tightly and chill over• rught to allow cloves to give off their flavor. . Makes 4 or 5 servings. The Arfnchair Hunter sa ys: Ringneck Pheasant Chukar Partri~ge Bobwhite Quail Mallard Duck Guinea Also available: hors d'oeuvres and boneless Cornish game hens. A 11•• ''l·trLJZ•'fl Orr~ <I r• 1dy tor·> I<. \\1111 FrPe Rrupc Folder 2 com, n1l'nt loc.111ons ' . HOLIDAY STUFFED APPLES 4 medium baking apples 1h cup prepared mincemeat 2 tablespoons chopped dates 2 tablespoons chopped almonds or filberts 2 tablespoons brown sugar 4 teaspoons lemon juice 4 teaspoons butter or margarine Cinnamon Change Pleasant Muffins are a pleasant change or pace from potatoes or rice at sup- per. CREESE OLIVE M UFFI NS 2 c ups sifted all: purpose flour THE TONKA TRUCK IS $4.99* THE SMILE AND . CorP apples. cnl ar~c openings s lightly. Place each apple on a 12 inch square of foil. Combine mincemeat, dates. nuts and sugar. Divide filling among apples Spnnkle each apple with 1 teaspoon lemon JWCe, cinnamon and dot with 1 teaspoon of butter BrinJ? foil up around apples, twist ends toRether to seal. Place in slow cooker. Cover ; cook on low setting 5 hours. Serve~ 4. • APPLE JAM PIE P:1-;try for two9 in<'h pie crusts 6 large. sli~htly tart apple-; 1 , <'UP apricot Jam 1, teas poon cinnamon 1 cup dairy !inur cream Pare. core and ~hcc upples and arrange in pie pan linl'd with pao;try Sofkn apricot jam. add cinnamon and s pread evenly over the ap- ples Spoon sour cream over all and top with pastry. Presc; edgcs toRether sealing top and bot· tom pastn . Cut slat.:. on top of pie. Bake at 425 del!rees F . for 40 to 45 minutes or until syr up bubbles through slits of top crust. Serves 6. 1 1 cup sugar 1 teaspoon baking powder 1 teaspoon eacb salt and onion powder 1 , cup ( 1 2 stick) but· ter. melted -" 1 jar CS ounces> sharp cheese spread 1 egg, beaten 1 cup milk 1 2 cup chopped ri olives Sift together dry ingre- dients. Blend butter and cheese spread together. Stir in egg and milk. Add all at once lo dry ingre- dients, stirring jus t to moisten. Stir in olives. Fill greased 2· lf.i·inch muffin pans a, full Bake an preheated 400-degrc<' m·en for 20 to 22 minutes. Serve warm . ere pleased to anncMtee ttMir return to HM Retail SEAFOOD BUSINESS This Week's SEAFOOD SPECIALS '1-tcft l'fffttfft '"-n.. Fri .. S.t. l>UMGEMESS CRAB •••••••••• 99c .. Vwyt.ty 99c ' CORBIMA FILET • • • • • • • • • • • • • • .. ............ .n .. MAHI MAHI FILET •••••••••••••• s I 0~ C41fa Me C ... M, Ho. I ..-., $229 SHRIMP •••••••••••••••• u.1t 2 .._ .. ..,_...,..... SI'' HALIBUT STEAKS • • .. • • .. • • • • • • • • .. ...................... 49c .. 7)e{4~ Z'it04. $e4 'JO<NU .,,..,....._ .. ~ 411 JOtlt s ...... Newport leoch f'h. 67l-ll 16 THE BATTERYTEST ARE FREE. Make a small fziend and yourself n appy this Christmas with this unique Chevron Service Truck m ade by Tonka. It has a working tailgate and three s pa re tires and it's made of meta l to deliver hours of fun. To get yours, just drive in lo m ost a n y Chevron Denier or Standard Station for a free battery test. It doesn't take long and could save a lot o f g rief late r. If you d o need a replacement, you can g et a quallty A tins battery ' on sale th is month. When you get your free battery test, get a Tonka truck while thev last for Just $4.Q9• plus ~tax (wh ere tnx a pplicable). Hurry. Supply limited. .· . . . • • • • • • ., • . . • • . .. . . . . •. . .. (.'6 DAIL v Pll or Wednesday Novemtier 10 1976 With Safety First, Holidays Enioyabl·e Jf ) OU ..ii l' <•1111k111~ Th;mk:-.g1 "Ill~ d inrwr f11r lh1· ftr:-.l t 1 nll', or l'\ t•n 1( ~ ou un· a •wa·-.uot'CI tovk \OU nnghl h..t\l' :-.omc am portant quc:-.twn::. th.it \OU 11ecd an::.\\t·n•d 111 ~e1 \'l' a ~uft• 111..1::.l ::.tuffrd turkc) Manv cook:-.. {'onfrunt ('d by 01:.irgt· ..lflHIUl\I:-. ol food ;incl nnl l'ncwgh -.pac(' in lht• rl'l rigl•rJl11r. agnorc lht• ha,1c· pnn c·1plcs of fouu s•1fl'l) and allow foods to ht• ldl lO<• Ion~ a I r o o 1n t t• rn per atun•, t·rt·al1ng a favoral)le ellm•1lt' foster· ang food poasonini:: bac lt•n..i Remt•mber ... ll is dangerous lo stuffa turkey hours before roast· inl(. ll.tcleri..i lhul cau::.e food poisoning may be trunsfern•d from hands, ukni.ib. t'Utling boar<t. or c·ounll'I' loµ to the t11rkc~ cir rln•s-.ing When <'<•IHl1l1on;. art• nghl , tllt•'>e baclt•na multiply Jn d pr u d u c· t· a lo' rn wh1c·h CaUSl'S food POl!>Oll· mg symplurns eom· monly rl'fc·rrcd to as "plonrnine µui::.oning," in people e~ling the fooct When the turkey 1::. ~luffed the night before cooking, the tt•mperuturc ut the stuffed cavity re- mains warm long enough for the bacteria to multip· ly. Most bacteria grow fastest at temperatures bet ween 60 and 100 degn•es F. If you w:.inl to save hmt', prepare, 1neasur e, :.ind refrigerate the mgrc· dients for the dn•ssing the night before cooking, but do not combine wet with dry ingredients. Com- bine ingredients and stuff Favorite Dressed Chicken Normandy 1s a new way to serve chicken using the fresh apple c r op 1n your market now. Apple Stuf. fing is new wath chicken, and to complete the meal serve fluffy m ashed yams and a tossed salad that 1nciudes fn.•sh spinach leave-, C1UCKF.N NOR~AND\' 4 tablespoons hutlN or marganrw . d1vidl'<l 1 ~ cup l'hoppt•d fresh onion •,. l'Up chopped celerv 2 t a b l 1· s p o o n s chopped celery IC'a\'cs l cup d1l·ed , p<Jrl'd. cored apple 1 2 cup rhopp(•d nut' I l'UP lo:.i~kd brt•Jd cube-, '• te.ispoon s.dt divided • , le asp o on t· in namon 1 1 Ll'aspoon dried leaf thyme 1 teaspoon fresh lemonjwce 4 s mall whole chicken bn•a::.ts . boned and pounded nJt Sauce: I tJblc::.poon ~orn stan:h 1 .. teaspoon salt ·~ teaspoon c1n namon 1 , teas p oc•n dried leaf th) me 2 cups frc.,h ur..ingt· JUIC'f' 2 a pple., unpart•d cut in wed gr" In 1arJ:e ::.1<1llN melt 2 tabre-.poons buttcr Ada omon. ccler:v and cclcl"} leaves. cook until tender. about 5 minutes. Stir in diced apple. nuts, bread cubes. J• teaspoon s alt, cinnamon, thyme and lemon 1u1ce. Place chicken breasts skin side down. Sprinkle with re- mainmg '2 teas poon sail Spoon ::.luffing on center of {'h1ckcn breasts, fold the sides over and fasten with skewers or string. In same skillet melt re· maining 2 tablespoons butter Brown chicken breasts o n both sides Remove to baking dash Jn mediu m saucepan mix together cornstarch, salt, cinna m o n and thyme. Stir in or ange j uice and cook over medium heat , stirring constantly, until mixture thickens and com es lo a boil. Stir in apples. Pour over chicken. Bake un· covered in 375 de~ree F. oven 45 minutes Yield: 4 servings FUTURIHG MAMMIMG'S BEEF From Emtem Meat Co. • nH FE0-4-6 MO • MO IHJECtlOMS, HO D.E.S. TO l'ROMOTE FA.ST WEIGHT GAIH • OVER 140 GOURMET &. SE»OOO ITTMS • MEATS C UT FllESH DAILY TO YOUR Sf'ECS. • HOME OR OF°f!ICE DWYBIY • Sf'fCIAl GROUP RATES • DIET l'ROGR.AMS • LARGE SflECTIOH OF Yf.M. • Sf'ECIAl FRfllH f'Aa<S a-----THIS WEB'S SPECIAL -----1 FREE 10 LB. TURKEY WllH A SIDE Of MAfNNG'S BEEF .... /~--: ~ PHONE: 768-5137 1~ FOR U.DIO DISf'ATCHEO SEOICE ~ • ..> _;;;:,: __ ~_._...:.,;Q-.....>1-- CHOPPl NG BLOCK I I 60 SUHROWIER. COST A MESA SUHFLOWU AT FA.IRVllW 545 0637 DA.ll 'f I 0 A.M.·7 l'.M. • SEAFOOD SALE SALMON STEAK SALE IH.ff or ~I ........ 'I.ti LI. RIO SMAH'U ...... , . '1.2t LI. SCAU.0,.S •........• '1." LI. MAHI MAHI ........•. 'l.U LI. ttoCK COD .......•.• '1.2' LI. T-BONE ....•..••. '1.68 LB. PORTER HOUSE •••• '1 .78 LB. TOP SIRLOIN •...•• 11.88 LB. BARM HAM H.tf ... Wllele HOLIDAY SPECIAL ~NISH A."'11 YA.WY TUHIYS ~ GAMIHIMS ./ GHSIE lfTUS DO THICOOKIMG ROAST SALE ... RIB ROAST .•.•.. '1.19 LB. I . ... .# ,, :, -~ .. RHZEl I <BEEF SALE USDA ,.RIME Sl•of Ifft Wlttl htr• ·-·· S.CtlCNI 79cu. c.t, W,..,,e4. (i>Wcllmw.t RUMP ROAST ..•• -'1.48 LB. TOP ROUND ROAST .•.•• '1.48 LB. SIRLOIN TIP ROAST ..••• '1.58lB GlOUMDIHF SALE LEANEST •• '1.09 LB. EXTRA LEAN ...... CJ9C lB .. LEAN •.•••• 59' lB. 119 HOHIY GLAD HAMS _.IRTUIDYS OIDH EAlltL Y CAU 545"°637 FARMER JOHN HAM , ............ '-...................... 1.09lB. BAR M HAM 1-.1 ...... '2.~ LB. FARMER JOHN HAM -· .................. '2.19 LB. -BANKAMERICARO Eiii§ISE WIWILCOMI FOOD STAM,. SHO"°S ClOSID SUHDAY ---=-~---:.-=-... -::.ii--~---~~ . .,..,,_ . -....... " the turke) JU:.t b<.>fore putting 1t 1n lht' oven. Bel· ter yet. cook the dressing an a separate dish The turkey and the dressing will be Just as good and )OU :ire s pared the chores of stuffing and unstuffing the turkey. It Is safe to freeze left- over turkey, dressing, and gravy arter a turkey dinne r b utflr!il: Remove stuffing from turkey cav it y im - mediately after cooking a nd kee p dressing, gravy, and meat at 140 degrees F. (to prevent bacterial growth> while dinner 1s being eaten. As soon as possible after dinner, cool foods quickly (rapid cooling prevents bacterial growth) and then freeze. Trv not to leave stuffing and gravy at room tern· perature (for example, on the dinner table) for more time than is necessary for serving. Remove them to the kitchen where they {'an be kept at 140 degrees tiJJ you can cool and freeze them. To freeze turkey, re. move meat from bones <handle as little as possi· ble) and pack in gravy, in rigid cont ainers . Leave 1 :i-inch heads pace and put piece or crurnptcd wax iwper on top lo keep meat submcrgeq_ Turkey will keep lonJ?er when frozen in gravy up lo 4 months at zero degrees. Turkey may a lso bt> frozen in slict•s for sJndwach m..iking::. !put wax paper bet ween sh~c:-. for t-asy scpara(1on later). Wrap 1n fn>ezer foil. Thin plastic bags are not suitable Sh(•t•s will keep up to 2 months at zero degrees. They will keep (safely l lon~l·r. but the quality will not be as good. Dressing may he frozen wrapped 1n freezerfoil or in rit:id con tainers. Stor age lime is I month a t zero degrees. To use frozen turkey, gr avy or stuffing, do not thaw. Turkey in gravy may be heate q, covered. in a saucepan until thawed and hot. The same for gravy. To heal dressing, place in a casserole. P l ace casserole in pan with about 1 inch hot water. Cover casserole loosdy with foil. Heat in preheat ed O\'en , 400 degree::. I'' WlW hot. What Is the sarest way to thaw a frozen turkty? There arc thrct' \\ ;.iys lo thaw a frozen u'n· stuffed raw turkey in the refrigcra~or. ut room temperature, and in cold water a t .room tem- perature. The first method is best because it b the safest. The bird will not spoil if it is left t here an <.•xtra day or I wo in the· event you s hfluld lw ('31Jed away for that time, or if you change• your mind about cookmg thf' turkey as planned The other two m ethods should be u::.ed only as secondary methods, a!> 1hercab0 u l s w h l' II you m ight forget about thawed s ufh<'ll•nth l111lu the turkey wh1l'h. if left s 0 • rem o ,. l' 1J di; 11 f al high kitchen tern· ~iblets from cavity peratures many hours, They can be cooked for water. Leave turkey in on~1na l wrup Immerse 1n cold water. Change water frequently to spe1•d thawing . Thaw poultry until it is phobic may spoil. Never thaw a gravy making frozen, s tufft'd bird Approximate Approxima te before cooking. Tu k Th l Thaw ind in th c r l'Y aw ng Turkty Weight Thawing Tlmt> ... Wt>lg ht Time refnger ator : Place the 4 to 12 lbs. 12 to 15 hoOrs 4 to 12 lbs. 12 to 20 lbs. 20to24 lbs 4 to 6 hours 6 to II hours 8to12 hours frozen turkey on a tray 12 to 24 lbs. Hi to 20 hour~ in it'i original wrapping, Th J w 1 n g in c 0 Id ref rr g c r a t e and a II ow to liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii( t h aw . 1 Approximatt' Turkey Thawing Weight Time 4 to 12 lbs. 1 to 2 days 12 to 20 ll~s. 2 to 3dayt. 20 to24lbs. 3lo4days Thawing at room lem- pe rat u r e : Leave the turkey in the original wrap. Place it in a dou- ble paper bag or wrap in Sl'\'eral lhicknesSes of paper. Close the bag with paper clips or s taple it shut. Place on a tray for easy handling and to catch drippingi.. Thaw at 70 degre es or Braiding Classes Learning how to mlikl· challah, braided Jl'wbh hreud, will hi~hlighl the firs t or a sl'ries of luncheon wor kshops, sponsored by T'cmplc Eilal The srss1on is planned from 10 a m . to 2 p.m. Monda\, Nov. JS Further m for mal1on is uv:11lable by callin ~ Shirley Suydman at M.17-320~ M.A.MMIHGS IEEF FLANK STEAK s1~~ MA.MMtMG lllF U.S.D.A. TOP SIRLOIN H.tforwttM .... ,, .. .. ....... c:.....,._ I WHK OHL 'f MAHtlll IG lfff HINDQT, OF BEEF W11h Roast Sec A11erage WI 190 10 250:: MAHMIMGIHI U.S.D.A. FILET MIGNON STEAKS or ROASTS S%!? MAMMIMGSll9 TRI TIP $139 ST£AK LI. IHflOIM E.XTU LEAH GROUMD CHUCK ··~- MAHHIMGS I HF 'i lb. l ox s 1.is FILET MIGNOM 1•·~:~s.~;-· 6. , 6•NRAt:lif?S CHARGE ~ -~!/[~~~.~.~~gt '~~~~ I OPEN MON ·SAT 10·6 • .:j..f. ~' ~~ CloHd Sunday 642-7191 ~~ __:-, DURE PTR"iCEs~·aa BETTER!'' "I SA YE s3 TO s4 A WEEK AT MARKET BASKET, AND YOU DO HA YE BETTER LOW PRICE MEATS ." RED DELICIOUS . ·~1 LI. ~. MAYONNAISE BEST FOODS I •• ¢ lllf lot• TAILESS MAZU SANDOW Of iA•fA ff SPIJIKS ... ,.., ... , 14" LOW ANY SIZE PKG~~l(E T-BONE STEAK GROUND BEEF ~"' ···-~~ ·~52¢· LI. c · . ·.~LI. ~ .\ -t Wmmay November 10 1976 ~AIL Y P•LOT (7 ~ With Low Everyday Prices front Super Foods lo Health & Beauty ••• ) : ·: • . . • • • • . t . • • • • . • , . • • • , • p . , • i ~ • . . . =· . . ·' , . The Consumer Line by Julie Grayson . . I am happy to say that many customers are discovering that shop- ping for health and beauty needs while they are doing their food shop- ping Is more than iust a convenience at Ralphs. •' ;. Unlrke some dr ug store and super- .: market chains who may regard these · Items as high profit products, Ralphs pricing policy on health and beauty items is like the othe r items we : carry . ..low priced for volume selling Ralphs features a generous selection •• of low priced health and beauty : . items, including cosmetics, vitamins. · · shampoo and dental care. And iust ·: as with everything else Ralphs sells. :· satisfaction 1s guaranteed or your .; money is refunded. :· As consumer representative at .' Ralphs, it's my job to see that Ralphs continues to offer you everyday low : pricing throughout the store So 11 f""you have a question, a complaint or a -price ~wy on anythiog yoo buy at Golden Premium Beef Blade Cut Qlldc ~ mperll ~lb. Golden Premium·Boneless Beel Chuck Swiss Steak .II per lb. Super Fresh Pack 3 lb. Pkg. Ground Beef 09 ' Medium Por1c Spareribs per II lb. (3 end cut •nd 6 ctnltr cul chopa) Mixed Port< Chops Ralphs Wafer Thin Sliced Bacon per lb. 09 Ralphs 4 '114 11 or4x7 Sliced Ham Roya l·Asaorted Flavors Gelatin ·Desserts Washinq,ton Golden Deliaous Apples Chicken of the Sea Light Chunk Tuna Strained-Fruits G~rb&~es Baby food jar Ralphs, including health and beauty items, give me a call 111 get right on 1t · and I'll get back to you w•th an answer. ;. :: Cal Julie Grayson. Chicken-Beet-Turkey Morton Dinners 1 /2 ounce Bottle Sinutab Sinus Spray 24 ounce Bottle Scope Mouthwash 09 Old Fashioned Ral~hs Ice Cream ~: 1-800-261-1600 Golden Premium Meats-USDA Choice Beef Pantry Fillers Fresh Produce per 69 D Campbell's 103' 16 1b. • Tomato Soup c;~z .• 1 19 U Aut'd Varieties-Except Wild Blend 39 ~~.r • ~Rice A Roni Rice Mix pkg. • ~ USDA Choice-Beef Round ~Beef Tip Roast · D USDA Choice-Freeh Whole or Point 1 29 : · Beef Brisket ~~~ • D PorK Shouloer·Plcnlc Style F r esh Pork Roast ~;;;khst~~k ~ Sweet, Juicy ~ D' Anjou Pears D California Avocados ~:~ 1.69 per 29 lb .• each .39 per 99 D ca.nada Dry 28 oz. 32 1b. • Gnigerale bu. • 79 D Plain or Iodized 26 oz. 18 ~~~ • Morton's Salt pkg. • 1 59 U Hershey's Milk Chocolate 1111 oz. 99 ~~~ • ~Chocolate Chips pkg .• ~~~ .99 D t<~dnoi~:;:s 1~~~~-.25 ~~.r 2.29 D s~lti;ec';;ckers · 1:k~~· .59 U Sweet~art-Pink 53 Deli Foods ~Liquid Detergent 3~t~_z .• ~RlbAE;-St:1kuB.af ~:~ 2,89 ~ USDA Chofct ·BontlHI 59 ~Stew Beef ~.r 1. D USDA Choict ·Bfff l oin Bone In 2 59 New Y ort< Steaks ~:~ • D G~;;t ch~kkg. ~:~ 1.19 D G~;;tR;;~kg. ~~~ 1 .29 U Shank Porl1on ~ Fresh Ham Roast U fresh Cahfornta Grown ~ R o asting Chickens ~L~ool;~t,h [JI Cooked·Whole ~ Dunge ness Crabs U Mild Flavor YJ Dover Sole D Ocean Spray·1 lb. Cello Bag Cranberries each .39 Bakery 24oz. 39 loaf • 801. 79 pkg .• 16oz. 2 09 pkg. • ·~F;.oSalad ~~~: .98 0 P~i;f;$~~ ~~~:1.59 DNi1 b'k!i;c=e 1 1~a0nz·.29 Wines & Spirits D R~brche.e ~~~: .99 ~ R;g~1;~s-MS~~arine . ~~:: .45 H~ir:;iC;t~hup 3~t~_z .• 79 ~ s~:t;:'v~ka ~t1•1 3. 79 D G~;;~·irJ~~ \~t I 79 D C1~~~;d H~m ~!~· 9.29 D al!d OreasiWhip ~·; .89 ~ s~~c~hre'08~;t;:;,, fifth 3.99 D Wiison Ctrtlfltd Sllctd 12 oz. 1 29 D Farmer John 1 lb. 89 ~The ~ig Job Clt1ner 54 oz. , . 25 D Burguntfy, Chabll• or Vln.Roee 111 2 99 Variety Pack pkg. , Meat Wieners pkg. • ~Spic & Span pkg. • Paul Masson Wane mer • Pricn Effective Nov. 11 thru Nov. 17, 1976 tT -Super Buy--~_,,:,.:~.-.od""" n ............. -1 r--r~Ho1 -•, r • lill r~?"'!!>1 • "•, I It I h G tlcl Premlu G l lflM'lwl11t.tv<f'it, .. -.~ntndtP«-l.lf~ f -_.......-~ ................... .., ••11• Ill m ., --------I Sew• .21 with Coupon #802 I I Save .21 + .01 IH with Couoon H01 I :; .. -a::.. ~1tea1c 1s " 1 D~verydaY Low Price ::;: .. '·-· -I PDISiil~t•Ch•• 39 I I Uquid :!,~,~59 I Copyright 1971byAllplllGroceryCompenr We ree;,ve the right to llmlt or refutt .. , •• to I Flour ~~I I I D_ ahwftent I I All "'lf!U A.-wd commercial dealers or wholfftltrs. V!Rft B I Limit One ti.in tno Ont Coupon Per Cuttomer I I Lin* Onl ltlm Ind Onl Colciori Per C..,_ I COU900 ElllCtlve NO'l.111htu No,, 17, 1971 C°"POfl Ellc:h Noot.111W Noil.17, 1t71. L RIG HT PR ICE COUP ON I L.:IGHT PRICE COUPON .I --------~ ,-------where you get what you want at the Right Price " 310 f. 17th ST., COSTA MESA 1204 IRVINE, TUSTIN, NEWPORT & IRVINE llVD. HARBOR & WILSON 9901 ADAMS Bl.VD., HUNTINGTON BfAO~ 15471 S. BROOltHURST, WESTMINSTtR 2'167 PASEO DE VALENCIA, LAGUNA HIUS 172h1 17th ST., TUSTIN COSTA MESA 401 N. LOARA, ANAHEIM 6942 WARNER, HUNTINGTON BEACH STORE HOURS: 9-10 Doily, 9.9 Sunday -... .._ ..... ·~ .,.. ~ ,,,. -.4> -~.,. .... -.. -........ -.,. "' ··-. .. DAIL V PILOT Wednosday No11ember 10 1976 Popular Pr.etzel B b 0 0 M .Jo' t E L 0 lnLLS, Mich. <A P) Some people cat them w ith mus t a r d , olhcr folks fancy them with ice cream or c heese spread. They are sold hot and soft directly from the o ven o r c r is p and crunchy in packages Pretzels. a food that dates back to the firth century, a nnuall y com· pile sales or well over I $160 million wholes ale in the United St ates. ac 1 cording to the Na tional Pretzel Bakers l nslalute -hardly a crum b for an item r egarded as a snack. ~ne person who can al· 'test to the popularity or pretzels 1s Julius Young, an enterprising Russian immigrant who parlayed a s mall stall in Livonia, Mich., into 130 s tores selling soft pretzels in s hopping m a lls an 24 states. Young, born Joseph Jagniatinsk y, arrived an this country in 1938. Two years later he changed On a '1s1t to Atlantic Ctty to com pete in a bridg e t ourname nt, Young saw a lane at a boardwa lk booth and j oined it out o f idle curiosity. It was a con- sess ion stand for hot pre· t:iels baked in a machine with 13 rotating s helves, like the co mme rcia l toasters used ut lunch counters. "I never had seen a hot pretzel and I didn't go for lhl' taste or it,·· he con- w..y fides. "Just between us. I'm not crazy about pre· tzels except as a bus1· ness proposition." Young invested a few hundred dollars in a pre- tzel machine and rented a small stall In the shop- ping mall in Livonia, a suburb or Detroit, cu.I ling it Hot Sam at the sugges- tion of his daughter. The stand was opened on March 24, 1966, and in- stant disaster loomed, he recalls. The first pretzel came out of the machine his name. "I got tired of spellirrg Jag n i :i tins ky . , over the phone.'· he says. "To tell the truth, I had trouble pronouncing it myself." Aft e r s tud y in g ps ychology a t Wayne Unive rsity in Detroit and serving three years with the infantry in the Pacific, Young sold s ur- plus Army coveralls until the supply or m <.'rchan- dise pete red out. STAH•••os. MONIYBACKGUA•ANTU ON QUALITY MIAH l't .. Y Plf(l 0 ' MIA f ti UHC0H01fl0WAlL 't GUAIAHTllO TO 'llAU TOU 01 t'OUI: MOHi 1 Will I( (HlllfUllf IUUHOIO 0\CAlt ... vc•. 8AAUHSCHW(t(i;(lit oq SANDWICH SPREAD ~.?it -..ctOf BEEF SAUSAGE ~~~' OSI: AP.llllA.tlA COTIO SALAMI !:ri . Given an a ::.ackly "h1l1· hloh HI· l>ll'Jd or J t:oldc n brown delicacy "Since I didn l have a razor lo cut m y throat , l rushed out or the mall lookmg for a 1:ood, tugh bridge I could Jump off,'' he s ays with a laugh. "Two hours later J re- turned and s aw a long line in front or m y stall. No one had' told me tht· mac h1n t: n e e ded 20 minutes to warm up." Young, 55 and a resi- dent of Bloomfield Jblls. has since sold Lhc con cession chain to General Host Corp and now has more time to md ulgl' an has hobbies or collccllng '11. jade. a ntique m atch boxes , cigar c utters , pipes and hundreds of objects m ade in the form of pretzels. The reci pe for pre tzels, Young points out, bas remained unc hanged lor 1,500 yeanJ. l"ather Francis X. Weiser of Bos ton College , who has written a book on earl Added Twist· Chnst1an kJ:l'nth. traces the on vin or lhl· prf't~t>I lo J monk HI northern lta l~ •To rewa r d pio u s children at Easter, the m onk t oo k s trips of dough for Lenll'n bread. folded them in the sh.ape or the crossed a rms of a pray ing c hild and sprinkled s a lt on the dough, after 11 was baked. He culled 1t a "pre ticola" a l1ttlc r'l'ward in tht• 1d1om or the re· c LB. Elsewhere thi' term York and Philadelphia r o r p r e t z c J :. w a s since the turn of lhe cen- "bracell ae." from lhc tury. classical Latin fo r arms, Smaller , crunch types but in the trans m1ss1on of pretzels became a sta· :o Germani c dialects on pie in bars and rree- the other side of the Alps, 1 u n c h c o u n le rs t h e word g r adually throughout the East evolved into pretzel. about the same time, but T he Penns y lvania the s alty tidbit was Dutch introduced the virtually unknown in thick . Bavaria n beer other parts or the coun· pretzel...tQ. th,e.Unite41 .... tzy unUI the late 1940s, States around 1850 and· w h &ll bi g h · s peed street vendors have been 'machin\t._ and improved s elling 5oft hot pretzels pacugil\g were de· froq:i pu c ls · n N v o d. • BAR·M •BULK "F o r w a nt o r: something better to do I designed a contra pti on with a tea bag suspi>nded from a plastic d isc that was put over the c up to keep the waler hot until the tea was stel'ped. The industry did not beat a path to my door," he ad· 0\t AA Jr!llA'tl M • Ut fl f rAlf II\ PORK SAUSAGE ~~~L •• ~Aii~ .... ..l:iiiiiii.~~.,-. I- ..._ 39~ 79~ U CSH 55c 11££r •AOU .. D•llONCI(~" $1 •• ' mils. Bake Treat The pe rfrct .11'rom p a n 1 m c n t l '' a Thanksg1\ ing <l1nner of 1 •>Ullry, gr<J v v. rclt ... ht.•s .1 n d ve g<' ta h 11' s ,1 r c humebakr•d buttL•rmtlk b1scwls This y e.t r . t r e a t Ih a n k f u I J.! u t.' s 1-. t 11 ('ord t'lt a K no tt .., orij!an.ils. "lr\<'d for o \'er 50 'l'•H " ~1th h11\ "cnhf·r ~' pn ... erH•.., .inrl frH·d chac l.en .il th1· h noll ·, Bi· rn· F .arm (.'h ick l' n H , .. ., l .111 r .i n l <.:OROF.LIA KSOTT'S Bl'TTER '11LK HISCl'ITS--·- 21·up' flour :! tabli: ... p111111 ... h.1k1n,.: powcl1•r I.: (('.J-.JlllUll ,,tit l ll'.l'P"''" 'hnrlt'n l t'UP plu.., :? l.1IJl1•.., poon., hut t1·r1111l" 1., 11'.I P•hlll h,11\111~· sud.1 ' C'llJI \ l'g1•t.1hll'11tl lnto .t 1111'\tnl! hov.1, 'lfl flnur. h.1kinc 1111\1.11<-r .mil '>illt \dtl ..,ho rt1·ntn.i .ind bh•nd v. 1 II 1\tlrl h.11\1111! soda t ll butt l'r rn 1 I I\ t h•·n 1iour into rl1111r rn 1\1 urc· Hl~nd Lh1111111 i.: II h Plac•• 1l11111•h 1111 .1 j.!encrou-.h floun•rl ho.1rtl :md sprm kh· ''1th 1rld1 lional flour ( 1>11 nnt overwork flnuj.!h l Holl ou t 1 .• 111('(1 th11·k ~ind cut with .1 :! inc·h cook ic culler or rfrinktn~ ~lass. Dip 1n 0 11 to c•o,tr all sicks anrl p lJ<'<' trrl mcdialelv on a n ndc•rl bakinJ: s hef'l 11111 will 1•1 in~ to dous:h wl11ch 1s d1• sirable) Uiscu1ts s houl<I 0111 be touchin g t.•a r h other. Bak£' in a prehralcd 500 degree oven for 8 JO minutes or until nicf'ly brown<.'d Ser ve p1pmU hot with butte r and pre- serves. Yie ld-. 20 Fresh Is Best An estimated 51.3 billion pounds or fresh fruits and vegetables re- t.alling ror approximate· Jy $12 billion were con- sumed in the United' St.ates last year, accord- ing to data compiled by the United Fresh Fruit & Vegetable Association. The figures are based Of\ carlot equivalent un· loads ror the 41 cities about 60% or the national total -we re 752, 183 in· dicating a total of ap proximately 1.3 mUUon car lot equ.i v a tents, rail abdtruck. 05.cAHMA'flR •\MO,:!( t1Nt11*tl q CHEESE SMOKIES ;~::' O~•~MAYlA COTIO SALAMI ~~::' HOAMll • WkAN(,ll n FRANKS ~~.1'. HUl~lfU •4 \t"•• re lllllN'S • APRICOT·PINEAPPlE -.PRESERVES ..... "01 SSC LYSOL :~~:~futA•l'\IW, ! . UPHOLSTERY CLEANER .!"' ~:-sl.29 .. s 109 "' s129 •K $16 9 18 s229 GROUND 811F l~ TIP STEAK .... I .. 11! ACAR•WAl[AAOOl D •POM S .. OUlDIA 69c sHr•l .. U. 99c 8(H •CHUC••80Ntll b $1 •• . SMOKID PICNIC,, 7·80NI ROAST ... 10 5HOULDIR •nu . te f~[Stt •(JtAA l(AN $109 Ullf •CMUCK•80NHlSS $139 8Hf•llONlLISS t•tHK !IONC $10• 1 GROUND ••• , . 18 SHOULDER HAIT .10 ROUND STIAK IN l~ BAA·M. 8111• $129 81H . AOUNO. BOHH •Ss $159 ew $1 •• SLICED BACON '" TIP ROAST .......... •u CU81D STIAK ..... 1a. $129 enro AOUND•OON[IN $10• BfH •CHUCK•PO! 99c 10 RUMP ROAST .... •e ARM ROAST ... lo • ORANGE JUICE G~L~~N $ 59 STATER BROS. ' '" J .... COMF8RTIOP .. I , AlllD 99.. Xa¥ ... .,."TJ59 OEOOORANT ~I i2-0Z. ~ IT'S NICE TO. HAVE ·A LITTLE MONEY 1. 2. 3. 4. OF YOUR OWNI I Here's how: Tear out this entire ad with the valuable Match-UP$ Symbols. Then tear out the Shopping List from the ad. Take it to your store and buy the products listed. Atter buying the products, cut out the purchase proof(s) from each package. The purchas&-proof Is this UP Code Symbol IMPORTANT TIP: As soon as you cut out the purchase proof, turn it over and write the product's name on the back. · .Ill.JI Then Individually cut out the Match-UP$ Symbols. IMPORTANT: Cut out the Match-UP$ Symbols only along the dotted lines. Do not staple, tape or otherwise affix the symbols to your proofs. Mail the purchase proofs along with . the corresponding Match-UP$ Symbols loose in an envelope with your name. address and zip code to: Unlver9al Product Dollara, P.O. Box 5963, Dalla•, THH 75222. PleaH note en... llddltlonal detalla: If fewer than 50 symbols arc onctosoo . .'.)0¢ will be deductlJd from yo..1r cash-back check to cover hand/mg and postage FaGs1m1los ot Match·UP$ Symbol!. are not nccepta~. Otter good onty tor CiJl1fornla residents. Off9f ••plres F*ulry 21, 11171. \ MATCH-UP$ SYMBOLS ARE NOT REDEEMABLE IN STORES. REDEEM THEM ONLY BY MAIL. Wednesday, November 10, 1978 DAILY PILOT £9 YOU GET WITH THIS NO. OF BACK PURCHASE PROOFS FROM THIS PRODUCT WITH THIS MATCH·UP$ SYMBOL 1 2 2 2 1 Schilling SLOPPY JOES SEASONING MIX r-~---------------------------------, r-----.1 : I I I I I ~ s ~·:]i['U 1J J ~I ==::::oo 1;( ~I ~": ~ ~ •~"'~! '1 ~ 1 lr",,~· 1 • .:..1 "1 \!q ~:'.:·~: •equal to normal retail price of this product I J ,,...., ,.ii.Vii• \lo• "" ,,,,_ 1.••• •~'" '' " f ' I L------------------------------------J r------------------------------------, : I I I I I Pillsbury® STREUSEL SWIRL ~· Dessert Cake Mix ~· II s ·~~1L2 6J JI~ L ii :~ ~: any flavor Pillsbury(!) RGURINES~ any flavor I ~, • " -..a• .., ... ",..I 1? ~-· . -·t• Lu _____ ::~~~------~-: ____ ,:--::_: _______ :J r------------------------------------1 I I I :! s "]~~LL f J L II •-~,,,,u .......... _........r... ... ..._4,.,.u ,..__...."'"' """' .,~, I l :J ..... • ;t111t'h• +V'• ••, , • • u:ll .. ,..,....,. I 10 ...... .c.-.•1••"C.-"'·~'t,;• •··· ........ ,, t L------------------------------------J r------------~~-------------------, RC;:;=:===--, ; I Pillsbury 10 HUNGRY JACK ~ Pancake Mixes . ·-Buttermilk, Extra Lights· or Complete 2 lbs. or larger Gorton's ASH STICKS 10 or 18 sticks GLAD~1 WRAP I I I I II s ~m[JU ll. L ii •J ~. :... . . ~. ::..:~: I a .-•b'' '-'l '"'" • , t.• .,._ v .... .., •• .a•ll a. L---~-------------------------------J r------------------------------------, I I I I I I ir 5 ~~"lin1 111r1 Ill I ii II 44J~ ,u~ ~ ..... II •t ~. I 1 I '. I , Iii •• ,., "t I ;a:·.:"".:"'·-:..· .~\>': .. ••• .... \"1 ........ ·,: •• ~1, ... .,.i •• {/I : L------------------------------------~ 1 s;;; 15" wide roll 1 1 1 GLAD®TRASH BAGS Special Family Pack 20 bags -~I Ken-L Ration '"' SPECIAL CUTS ., 4 or 8 pack V-8/R) Vegetable Juice Cocktail I r------------------------------------, I I I I 11 s ~1m~~~r ~~L .. :I 'j ~. 1 ~ r·~c•""''"~""''W 'urs .,,.,.,,,, ,,, "' .. °'"''"'.,~' :a ~:-:..:!.~t.:~·~~· ... "·:'·.. ; ':111: ..• ,.::.~f11•u·•a : L------------------------------------J r------------------------------------, I I I I I I I I i~ s I ~ 11 !~ ~i l ~ 2 0.01 ~! :~ ~: .... At.,,,-,.,,0"' 1 ... ~~-.1 ., ""' ....... .-, :a : # • ••.• 0.-;J'b;:': . ., t I"•••• .... , I .o a: L------------------------------------J ·-.... ~ . --~ -...... -...... .-. I \ ' CJO DAILY PILOT THE SLIM GOURMET Glazes For '76 If you 're tired of the same old hen or tom, or you jus t want to g ive it '76 look this Thanksgiv- ing, you might consider these tasty glazes from the Better Homes and Gardens Chicken and Turkey Cookbook. CURRIED APRICOT GLAZE 1 1 c up fi n e ly chopped dried a pricots 2 s lices bacon , chopped 1 1 cup chopped onion 3 i teas poon curry powder l tablespoon brow1 suga r l teas p o o n c or · nstarch 1 teas poon instant "beef bouillon granules 1 8 teaspoon s alt ln saucepa n combine apricots and l '/.i cups water. Simmer . covered. lilt lend e r . a bo ut 20 minutes. Do not drain. In ~a ucC'pan cook ba<'on, onion. a nd curry powder over low hea t till bacon is c ris p and onion 1s tende r , s tirrin g oc· casionally Stir in brown SuRar. corns tarch, b ouillon $!ranules. and salt. Add apri<'ols :ind liquid; cook ;and st 1r till thickened und · h u b b I y H r u s h o \' (' r poullr~ I.1s t 10 to 15 minulC'S or roas linJ? !'ass r e maind('r a ~ ~•J U<"t• Makes l cup. PJNEAPPLF.·OR/\!'JGE GLAZE 1 ~ or a Ii-ou nce can frozen pineapple Jwce <'onccntratc < 1 a c up l '• <'U P o r a n g e marma lade 2 tablespoons bottled stC'ak .,au<''' In sauct•p;rn combine .111 1nered1f'nts Cook and .. t1r till heated throuJ:h nru~h 0\ er pou llr) dur ane IJst 15 m 1n ut.il,.-roJ~t1n~ M ak es i3'c~. :-.P1n:o R.\SPBU&Y GLAZE 1, c;up red raspber~ Jt'll y ,. l l J blespoon lemon J lll('f" I lallk .. potin hull<-r ol' m.1rg an nc I ' J ll'J "poon<; ror n-;tard1 1, k us poon ~nit I 1 ;1 s h i.: r nu n d r 1 n namo11 J t<1bl1'"J>oon ·. am·~ar In )<Jur epan comh1nl' 11•11\. lemon JUIC<'. dnd butter. hc-:tl and 5l1r t1H Jl'll> meli.. Com hinc.' ror· n~t arch . c;:ill. :ind rin n amon hi• nd in \lnl'i;tJ r. ~ttr into J••llv mixture roo k anti <1 l1r till th1 <'kCn t'd .ind huhhly Brus h over poullr} lu'-l l!l minutes of roa!>lln~ :'.lakes 1 ~ c;u p Stuffing Appeals Try ~tuffinj? cclcry ";th Chicken Liver pale Put a half po und o f cooked livers and a hard bolled egg in the blender. Add this lo a packaae (3 ounces) of 5oflened cream cheese. minced parsley' a tablespoon or ,::rated onion. a d ash of pepper and :i, te aspoon salt. Makes about 1 ''.r cups pate or enough to stuff 24 pieces of celery. Pate will keep in the refrigerator two to three days. Custom Historical WI NSTON -SALEM, N.C. <AP> -Ctiopsticks .were used In China in the 4th century 8 .C .. well before Europeans alnrl· e d eating with knives and fork~. ac<'ord1n~ to Chun King. The naw~ chopsticks is J\'tuutro in Chinese. K ·uai rnc nn~ -quick or s peedy. Wednesday NovemMr 10 19!_6 Food for Thought: Balance the Facts By BARBARA GIBBONS weights'' ar c \ 1cl1m!> 11( the skinn} m odd ~~n d romc , s"r l''-'d h v fashion m ugaune!> und TV commercials Along with the c lolhln Jl und products a d vertised, they've also been sold a weight goal that's possi· ble ' ror only u sma ll p e rcent a g e of the population. lll'rl•s how l o tc•ll bo<ly typl' or laek of t'' YO l"RE :-.:oT TOt> t•rCl!>C' YOU'R E TOO THIN lF . .-you ftoel you IHI\ c· lo you've Jost lntetesl fast to rn 1untJ1n your in food. l'"t\T IF you'n · ph~Sll'UllV fat )ou r wcq;h t is w11h10 10 pC'rcent of tl1l· "1dciJ I" la~ll'd on :.l.m· dard charts. and ac;l1 ve, e1 nd han• t1ll the l'nergy) ou need lo do lhl'lhings )OU w ant -you enjoy takini? rare of your nppcur:ul<'e and lik t: to bc well · groomed. -·you likl' fushion and enjoy buying <'lolhes. (•very body, not just your mother . thinks so. -your doctor says so. -thin people s ay so. -lr you can't find anybody who's "thin," in your op in ion. -if clothes that fit are always too short. weight. if you think you -you h:.i vc to cut out dorn need to eat. basic foods to do so. At best, a preoccupa - -vou have to follow a lion with unnecessary pecuiiar regim e. craa_h dieting c~n t•e -you're tired all the the JOY oul or Jiving and time. • comp~omise health and -your nails ore s plit· nutrition. ting. Although Anorexia is -U your ~kin is dry rare, extreme dieting Some "wei~hl pn1- blems" exist only frorn Ute neck up. It's a condi· tlon that amicts m wnly women -though not ex- clusively. These are pt.'<>- p J e wh o tr o ubl e themselves, and every· one a round them. at· tempting lo attain an un· reasonable slimne!->s. an ideal that's not only un· =i tt:i i nable but un · healthy. These "menta l over· Excess pound<il':l' t S unhealthy and unuttrac- llve, but the ovl•nn·i~ht you 're worrying a bout ma)' all be in your head. -your blood pressure. sugar level, t holcsterol and triglycerides are all normal In other word-.. tf your doctor thinks so vou 'n • sktnn\' tn some · placj!S, but bulgy or sag~y in olhl•rs. m ·s not your w eight , but -your rnate thinks you're attractive. t'ven m orl' 1mpor tant. YOU think you 're altr active! YOU'RE TOO TIDN - AND H EADED FOR TROUBLE II<'"' ••• -you hav e lo skip m e al s to k eep your weleht. and na ky. towards inappropriate or -your huir is thinning unhealthy ~l enderness or falling out. goals can ultim ately pro· - you've Jost interest gress lo both physical in the opposite sex. and mental illness. Our lo it Luc Cut-up Fry.i~g Chicken .. 49c F~yi~g -~h.icke~ _Breast ,q gee f r¥i.~~-C~~~-ke~ D!umsticks •b 99e ~~~ss. ~i~ Roast 11 128 12s Boneless Rump Roast t ,1, 1 flt t Boneless Round Steak T-Bone Steak Large End Rib Steak t "'~0 to Boneless Top Round Steak ' . Fresh Beef Brisket . ·.•I• 128 i• 188 12s ' 158 138 Blade Cut Chuck Steak \U 79c Sliced Beef Liver G~~!~~ ... ~eef .. . .... •B. 59c Turkey Pan Roast 321 . ~·a ~~~.~~~.~~ !iP Roast ........................... s 1 a• ;LI) 281 Turkey Pan Roast O'hlf TIOAkf(&Wrnll ~1 •r Beef Neck Bones ... .. ........... le 28c Lady Lee Sliced Bacon thU Extra Lean Ground Beef 12a ' .. ~" Rath Sliced Bacon 111 Lower prices throughout the entire store. Produce Packaged & Conne d KraftMarshmall.ow~r~m~i ~45c Del i Foods Lady Lee er ~(~~.~berry ~uica Cock_~a!!"0~ ~ 7oc Cling Peaches 45c Lady Lee Pumpkin c c; ... 39c Large !iucEo oR HAL v Es 29.oz c AN De.1 0 Monte Pickled Beets .•. o:':: .. 45c Harvest Day ~ Del Monte Peas & Car.ro~~Ol:: 32~ Bob's Salad Dressing ~~een B~~~~AN 2QC Del Monte Spinach ~~~~F~E~T~ EA 39c t l f 1 C••US( Cro~n Chea.se Fondu~ ........ :::.r, 195 B?Mtjou .ffears 'u.s No , Loose Carrots Leaf lettuce Ffozen 8i Ge . lady lee Ice Cream ''~ ... 1 39 Imperial Soft Margarine Oh Boy Cheese Pizza Pet Ritz 9" Pie Shells .' •... 45e L!.s.eu.e~ Peas /~.--57c Plctsweet Cut Cont./ , ·;, .. 55c Health ,~ c;1 I I f\ J I ·, ~~-~. ~~ir ~~.~~y , ~ ··" _1 ":. 129 ~lb~!.!~"~~}.~~ .. ~ Condition~r ::: 11 1 Command Hair Spray ., aa ,..~ l • • • .-14 ~a~lon Flex Shampoo Liquoc &. Wine . l::. 129 • o·~ 127 Passport Scotch Whiskey ... ; 4 99 Gllbey's Gin ~~~~.~~~~.~~~~.~~ii~! Mmwn11 299 ~!~~~.~~('.~~~,~.t. Champagne .'.': 1 99 • N 7>0 W LA l'ALMA A\llNUf ·Casc~dder · ~ . . ~a!~~~~79c I " I \ ' Gret:tn.·$ant ~.. ~~ i' GoldeftCorn ~,"Yftc ' .• , 17,olfd~N-~'1 Harvest o.;;,. ~ ~E~~!!~l~D~GH 6.!T~~3 5 c Bakers Coconut Stove Top Stuffing Mix r . 61 c Dream Whip Topping Mix ~· ggc ~~.~.~ .. ~~rup ~ 51c ~nt.~~~Y .. ~~-odles .er:: 5 7c Lipton's Onion Soup Mix .. ~. 4gc lady lee Yams ~ 4 7c MJB Wild Rice Mix _7·~ 59c ~~dy ~.ee Cranberry Sauce ~~ 33c ~~s . ~~~bison1 Dressing ~·. 59c Nonsuch Mince Meat Nestle's Chocolate Chips 'AN.04 M o·• 115 ' . :: gge 'OUfNA l'AIUI 'COSTA MUii 110 10 ITU[ COll!OI!'. llLYO. fUlL£•UON •UI LA ,AU.~11 AVENUf HUNT INGTON llCACM n to 1411111011 Ill VO 'l.t.CUNA Hill S lll NO f UCllO AVl Pam Spray Coating • 11~ .. 120 Del .. ~-~-~te ,~.m ... ~ickles ·' ~C::A 59c Bett.Y -~~~~k.~~ !~n.~ l~elpe~~:, 59c lady Lee Chili ,·, i ', i I ~ • I • II , ~~~awberry Preserves .... M~J:R 121 ~~~~.~e. ~~1~.~v. Cer~al ... 16-0Z::. s2c Aunt .Jemima Pancake M~x ~ 71 c Date Bar Mix ''''"'' , Tide Detergent ,,.,,••·fl •110l~•428 ~~.!,d Water All Detergent ~ 0~. 203 Lady Lee Scouring Clean~er, :1 gc Rain Barrel liquid Rinse .. 1·~l 14& Formula 409 Cleaner ,.... 157 u.o.• &'L Woolite Rug Cleaner 1:1"4 144 :< Ol Bil ~~~nson's Pledge Polish ,.IJ,t: .. 84c Mighty Dog Dog Food ~ .. 21 c Kitty Queen Cat Food • u• (fflo1"1 • ., ... ''"' """ .......... -,-.c.._., .................. _...""""""',...._ ,_ ~ ... .., .... u...,.,,.. ..,.. -~~~cker Barrel Chees!.S~~~~-~89c Knudsen Cream Cheese eoO::•G 55c Ball .Park Franks A l ''lA.t '''~ ~Ll I I r Plumrose Cooked Ham SL•(;E() .. ~!~ .. Y!,i~.~~onsin Sausage ,1_0~.0 1 cz ~v~~~a~na Klub ~h~ese ,,0c;;.0 97~ ~~u.kauna Klub Cheese 8~~~~ c(_ 1 '5 ~~R~~M~fl~~R!~!rel Chadd~ ~~~~~e131 Swift Sliced Pepperoni . ~. 83~ Swift Ham Big Name Toya at Lucky Items Oclow Available al Discount Cenleri · Only, . 789 Crazy Face byChemtoy Ad1ustable d1s1ort1on mirror Cut 417 oul C11sgu1ses lor extra fun in- cluded #601. . . . . .... Creative Blocks by Fisher Price 10 Building Blocks tn S•IC bat•c 222 color• All unbreakable and WHh•ble #633... . . ... . .. Sllnky Dog by James Wnen pulled. dog strelcnes and 222 ;;o~~~.~.lo~~ w.1lh a funny w1gg~~'. .. Nu Splrograph by Kenner Draw a m1111on marvelous p;i1terns49 7 Set 1nc1udea book and lour new pens for brigtller colors. # 1421 ..... 'OAllOl!N OllOVf. !toll l!UC LID A\1£ 1'0 NO ll1'TOMONO 'OAllOfN OllOVE 110,, IOONOllA 1'VI! 'HUNTINGTON lllollCM t 0t1 o1I TL1'NTA AVlNUl 'MUNTINOTON l!ACH IHDO I OLSA CHICA A"INU( '5TANTON 'TUSTIN Ito~ l llOOllHUlllT SlllllT 'SUl C&IOT 110 4 0 AT l & P1'l LA MIOOA 1..A MlllAOA SMOl'l'IHO Cfl~ffll •011&NCE 100 I CMAl'M1'N AY(NUI! "SllNTA 1'Noll l ))t SO 9111STOl STllUT STOIUSOPEN DA ILY I A.M. IHO llATfl.LA AVE U t70 Nf'WPOllT AVl!NU[ 'WlSTMINST[ll "'WlSTMINIT£11 •wHITTIEll H OO WHTMltjlf(M OftjUf U011 5'111NOOALI ifllllT UOU [ MUlllllllT 011 , ll • ti ' I , ... ,., ... .,. .............. , .... I .. I / Casseroles Supper Savory .. Don't overlook vegetable casseroles both as main dishes a nd savory side dishes for <1utumn suppers. They're rspec1ally good for voung:.te rs "'ho think they don't Uke "egcta bl cs f'tlt:ESEV BEA"' B AKE :l tablc spoon.., huttl·r :1 tablcspoons flour 1 1 ~rup:-m1lk 1 cup shrcdd1·d Amc•ncan or t·hl'ddcir C'hce-;c Salt and pt>ppcr l paC'kar,:e <9 ounrc) fro1~n Frcnch·style green hcans, part1allv cooked :1~ cup<; dll'l'd cooked p<>t.iloe:-. :i -.ll ccs cris p t•oukcd IJacon. crumbled (\ t :-cup co;tr'>l'h ('rushed shoc'>tnng potatoes \kit built r in a s..1uc-1:p..1n; hlend in flour Add milk ,.:r<Jduall~ !'nok unlll ,,mooth and th1ckcnl'd. ~1rnng t·on slant I~ Bit nd in ch1.:c'>l.' sca.,un lo ta!>tC with ::.a ll <tnd pep per Combine lhl' sauce Y-1th thl· beans, potatoes and bacon. ma\. thorough!~ Spoon in1•1 bultt>red I-quart baking '11.,h Sprinklt• with shot•s trinJ? Pole.toes Bake in pr e-heated 350 degr ee oven for :m manult•s Ll'gumcs :.1r1• :.i m1ch1~ -.ource of\ C'l?l'lahle protein whcn complemented Y.1lh a h,.arly whok grain dis h sut·h a., bulgar pil aff or hnl\\n rrt L' ll1\CON-Bf:.\N BAKE 2 L'am, (Iii ounl'e' eaeh I C'Ut g reen beam., drained Ii s liecs bal'nn. Mokcd and crumbled :! ll'aspoon:. lrnsll 1 ~cup m ayonnaJSt' 1 , cup m ilk I tt•a-.pcwn pn•p.1n·d mu-.tard 1 t t'a::.poon \ 1n1•gar 1 1 ll''-'"IJoon .,;1)1 1 egg\\ hill'. st1fn\ bl•Jl!•11 PJpnl...1 Combinl' bl•an-;. h;u·on and bil-.rl 1n 5-cuµ C':.i.,scrolc In hoY-1 blc>nd m ,l\ onmll"<' milk mu ... t <ml. '1m•gar and salt Fold in cgg "hale> Pi IL· h ;.htl\ on lop of beans Sprinkle'>' 1lh p.1prit.a Rak.t• .11 11111 1·· 15 mmut1 ... ur until i>aUl't• puffs and bro'>' ni-;\I JKl'' t -.u 'mg" )'o.f' \ '\"l~ll GREE~ BEA~S :! t.1h1t-... pnun ... mJrg.trml.' or bullt•r 1 1·up t•hoprlt'<I onwn I lJllll''POOfl flour I I ("UJ.l tom..ito JUll"l' \ t·:.111 1 \h ounl·t•-. 1 ).!rcl•n bc,m ... drarnrd ':cup shrl•thit.'<1 ~'>' iss or Chl•ddar C'hCl'!--(' 1 grcl•n p1•p1wr fmt'ly t·hoppt•d 1 , teJspoon -.,111 ·' t <·up rn .. ,h hutlt red hn·:.itl { rumbs ~JUll' onrn11 111 margarine until knder. acid flour and tolll aw J u1 <'t· S t 1 r until th1ckenct1 Comb11w lwam .. chl't'"t' grl't'fl pl.'ppe r and :-a lt Spo1in tnln J grcusca baking d1 sn puu1 th1ckenl•d tom;ito m1xturP 11\t•r Jll. Spnnklt' bn·ao t•rumbs <l\e,· top. llakt· Jt :1~,o r', 211 manult!s M akt'" ·I lo h -.t>n mg'> Crisp \ I Soft JonnH:aiH's ;ire 111111 cnrnmt·Jl p .in r a k "... n 11 l 11 n re I •• 1 .. cl l •1 tortilla-. {,n~JJ nn lht· nuts1m· ;11111 !>oft on lhl' '""'"'' lht•\ .1rt· marlt· b}' either fr) 1ng or ht1kmi.; J sirr. pie cornmeal h;itt1·r that ha!> neither <'l!J::' nor k .1\ Pntni.: Jonnycake!> an· most frequent- lv 1dent1f1cc1 with Rhod<' Island. jnct m that locJlt' n<•\cr have an II Outside Rhode Island they are usu.illy .Johnnyc<1kes Tht•rt> :irt' twn st11r11•s about lht• origin c)f tht• naml' One 1:-. that "jonnycakt•s'' cvolvt'rl from "journeycakcs," so called because th<'Y were pucked m sad dlebaJ!s for durable sustcnanet• on Ion~ trips. The other story 1'\ Iha~ .. Jonnycak<•s" 1s .1 rnrrup n Lm1. 01 'Sh<t'>' ncc-c·akc:-., · · n u med ,after the lndnrn-. who 1ntrodun•<.l thew lo ln11lpt'rs I tup bnrltnl! watl'r I l'UP whit<.• rornmcal l teaspoon salt 1 lo t~ c up milk Pour bo11tng water over corn- meal and salt in a large bowl : mix w t.•11 ano let stand 10 minutes. n e at 1n enough milk lo make a batter s tirr enough to just b.1rely hold its s hape an a spoon. Drop by hcaprnJ? tablespoons onto lig htly greased griddle• or skillet. Bake over moder ately low heat until ~olden brown on both sides, turni n~ once. 8crvc with butter. or with butler and honey or maple syrup. WednesdilV Novf'mtt •r 10 1971' DAILY PILOT £ J J Turkey: Budget Stretcher < :-.au1·1•11:1n 1\dd cati-up, water., \ 1n~•g. r. ~o~ !>a uce. honey. salt .111J s pr< t•s ~1mmer 5 minutes .! Cahfornta l utkl'\ uflt•r ::. Ml man) wa)., to stn•teh the budget &>sides the ,. Jnou-. p:u-ts. "htt•h are sold separatl'I). the "hok b1rdi. are o ft<.>n featured Jt budget prices . Uy planning a roa:.t turkey dinner, there will be several add1t1onal meals tu fo llow Crom generous trim· mings : turkey soup, sand\\-1t h fillings, cn >pcs, l'rea m saut•t• toppings for vegl'tubll.'!'i or n ee a n d (' a s :. c r o I c s of l' n ii I es s variety For tho:.l' \\ho enjoy thl· t.:ndcr, S\lo eel nw.it of turke) \\ tngs, this recipe fu1 b.iktng thl.'rn in a pit'). soy-honl) ~JUl'l' "rll be well re· telH!d The \\ tn~s an' first marinJtl'd. then co\'crcd and latilv baked in a i.low oven until tender. UnCO\'l'rtng the pan dur- ing the la:.t JO to 45 minutt>i. or bakin~ allows fur t•asy bastmi:t wrtb the pan :.auce. which m turn gt\f.4'S the wing:. a dehc1ou:. glan• To l'Omplt•ll' the ffil'nu, offcr parsley-buttered spaghetti or noodles and a green s alad. SWF.ET .\NO SOl It TURKE\' \';ING~ 6 C.1liforn1a turkt•) "111g., L\>01 Mean'>' hil<.•, rc mO\'I! "ml( tabout Jt • pounds 1 tip:, from turkey. and cut wings 1 ~cup finely choppl'll un1un apart at joint. Arran~e in a 1 z t ablespoon C'OOkmg oil 9x13x2 inch baking pan. Pour 1z cutl·atsup cooled sauce ove r wings 14 cup watl'r Refrigerate 2 hours, turning 2 tablespoons vincg..11 .,.. rngs oncl'. Covl'r pan with fml 1 tablespoon SO} s<HtL't' llakl• 10 a :.125 def!rl.~ F. oven 11 ~ I tablespoon hont>y hours. Unc1w er. and bake 30 to 45 I teaspoon :.alt minl.ll''> • ionf?t'r , until turkey is 1 J tt•aspoon cmnumon t t•mh•r anti nicely i;lazed, basting I !ti tl'aspoon clove::. st'\ t'rJI times. Makes 4 to 6 :;erv· Saute onion lightly 111 ml 111 .i 111gs See the difference. Taste the difference. Even before you taste it. you'll see the smoothly blended prune pulp that makes Mott's Prune Juice Blended With Prune Pulp different. with a mellower. richer prune fla- vor. And we've added Vitamin C. too. Try Mott's Prune Juice Blended With Prune Pulp. You'll never go back to ordinary prune juice again. ------------:i jt5c SAJI 15cl ~ 150 : I I ON MOTT'S PRUNE JUICE I I BLENDED WITH PRUNE PULP I <"' I I J I z 12 18 I ~ 0:: 18 I Vl j To C rocf'I II you oCI '1 '" "' oqr nl in •trill I o•cordonu w.lh tho l<·1rr1! <I 1h1· al!Pr allow o 1No1l cu11omcr tnrt 111r•1 v11lli~ of 1h11 rc;,upon I toward 1he pure ho•"""" ••I th•· p1oducl lf"'(I r "rt hNPOn lanrl upon our r~riuri,1 'ubm11 ,..,. I rlf'.,,..,. th f'rt'ol ~oti,.tocln•y tn u\J. wP wilt o•~l"•·m oh" rnupon lur 1t. I lr1 volu~ plu• \( lor loonrll1nq Cu•tam1•r mu•t l"'Y uny sole• 1ox ~ 0 :IJ rrl () 0 c "O 0 z I Void uni<"' arquor,.i 11,,,. 11y horn o tPl01I cu• tom• 1 ot whrtr p111h1h11•rl t•J1ed or rMtrlCll'd I Only on" roupon P<'t ,eurc hrisr Cood only on \J S A <:rish vnhnr I .0( To rnrlnum, mool fa I lJully Mull Comr uny, Jr1c . P 0 Bo• l134, Ch• '''·Pu 19CJl6. 1150 Expues Dccom bN 31, 1976 150 I L: __________ :._j 1•11 l•ull\ "•·11 (""'1•M''lo,h'' t IJ''"'''lnn.\\I ·' \ flf "t 1Ulll1 . . FRoM Fa shi on N ~wport Beach STEREO SOUNDS OF THE HARBOR , , > . ' . "" . . . . . (;J?, 01',ll,Y., ~ ':T • :i ""'~p' tJ 1~·6 1 SAFEWlt fOR lr[JUALITY YOU CAN COUNT ON AT PRICES YOU'LL LIKE! We Gledl1 A~t UIDA Frozen- All Regular Dinners Except Ham or Fish Pkg. . Lucerne Chilled- A Refresh· ing Beverage Half Gallon Large Roll Blade Cut U.S.O.A. Beet Chuck Safeway Great Buys ... Count On It! C ITS @Pork & Beans c:~r.~··29c · ::i.~a· 8~:"~s1 7-BONE ROAST USDA Choice Beef 7 9 la Chuck-Fine To ¥ Pot Roast. lb. ~R1·ce-A-Ron·1·Fried•Span~l-oz.39c M'-•Chicken •Beehv~~g. \ i5~ BREAD e i Hun t's K~tchup~::·39c \. ~"~~t·2~~~:· 54c AFEWAY FRANKS tMayonna1se ~~1~:: iJ~~Ot.59c @Pillsbu~ Flour 1it~ ~::&9c ~@Pepsi Cola ~~:i~: &~tt1:ss1!~ Q Crackers Bu~~~er ~~? 2 s-oz.$1°0 }91{ Varieties · · r Ptigs. @.Bread RhodesFrozenWhite f siVi• 5 99" "Bread For less Than '• ~o ,r· 1-lb ¥ • 20• A loaf' loaves ~oranges TownHo~se :.J:~~: 3 11 -oz$100 li9i.. Mandarin .11. ,1 Cans Applesauce e1ueRibbon 2s-oz.39c Golden Delicious Jar 0 Beef Hash·.· ~· ~:~ ·· 75' ~Stokely Gatorade ·""~;;:: 45c OK ftM · P~ck,1u~1c-1ve2'lA8C -' ra arganne ~11ck 1111 Ctn."f i~c . F d ~·.,,, .. M1( 7 lb $299 W at QQ P 1••11.1 15.lv~ ,'t I P~g Detergent t Great wllll Our USDA Choice Steaks! t,.. 1-lb. · Pkg. .__ Comet Cieanser l'~~~1~"0 \ 4 ,~ 29' California Variety Delicately Flavored! ·~ Ganlenlhofl8nl &-Inch Hanging Plants .......................... each 53" Ptlctt lftlcthe lie¥. 11-13, 1971. lft lot ........ 0rMte lfllll hllllll'I Cewltlll (blllll' Cet.11111). ..... '" ..... OUlfttlttN Otq. Meat or Beef 6 9;. A Zesty Treat Hb. ¥ with Sauerkraut. Pkg. w Liquor Depart1111!11l r Pnce~ flf~ctlve In Licensed saieways Fried Chicken lb. $199 i , ~~:~·~;~$N399 ~=~;.~;~;,; ... :::~:~~:slag . ,~~,~Wine Deparr111c111 Fish Fillets 24-oz.$199 )!\ Ljr Si'LiIROSE van de K•mps Fried .......... P•g. r ( $ 249 ~~!r~~~~~~!~.~ ..... 1b. 99c \ · ~ ~~!~~uan 25·4-oz. ..--Beef Ox tails 5-9c • ~I Fruity Wine Bottle _,,,J Frozen-Defrosted ................. lb. t'~!~ .. ,s3o3 FT8EN1E~ ~!~!D~I~~.~~ .~n.~~ ........ lb. 59e .~ i,t~:,., Final -oz. ¥ ~Touch Bottle ~~~l~:.~ .. ~~~·~·~·~·~ ...... lb. 89¢ (b$ BISCUIT MIX~ ~ ·-;.t,'f1._vl s Mrs 7 9;. ~ ,b i.J~Wrighr.s. 40-oz. ¥ .. · , Butterm111 Pkg. -~ Variety _Department Ull Lucerne 77 C 1-dozen Carton JOY LIQUID e\ Detergent 990 dOl (Includes 32-oz • .. .... ,; 2oc Ott llbetJ Size LUNCHEON MEAT }'$aii~ @Town 7 9" ~ House Y 12·oz. Can •IOI l.C..-.•••· S•C.._. ~!~!~t~~1~e~ ............. 1:k:~· 8 gc ~~~~P~rrs~~u~~?.~ ......... 1b. 69C BONELESS HAMS Smok-A-Aoma $17 9 Boneless Halves With Water Added. lb. IOOOleyli.Dr .. .....,..._11 • U6 .... CffetHltll-r,L.,...9"d • 211 I. 17111 St .. C..t1 MN ..... ".,..... ............ ltkll • 14417 e.e.., Dr ... ..,, .... '""" or s Porter- house U.S.O.A. Choice • Beef Loin - FOOD STAMP COUPON• 98 SLICED BACON Safeway Quality 89" A Great Breakfast 12-oz. 'I Served With Eggs Pkg. PORK SAUSAGE , Hog, Mild, ·Ot. 'I Safeway. Whole 12 89" Medium. Hot Pkg. ASSORTED PORK CHOPS Contains s End and Center Cuts. Approx. 1/• Pork Loin. lb. 09 n.. Key To Grut Eating ... Assures You .... TENDERNESS & FLAVOR We Guerentee #t/ 0011·1 le Confused By f ancy Names! When You Want Fine Quallly 8ee1. luy USDA Choice leel at Safeway and Be Assured ol Satisfaction. ZIPPE BURRITOS Four Varieties. Tastes Homemade! So Good! lO·OZ.39~ Pkg. ' , I .. '· Wednesday NoYember 10 1976 DAILY PILOT (; l ~ Chicken Makes Exciting Fare For exciting, Chinese fare, -serve ginger-spiked chicken wings on a bed of Just-steamed Bok choy <Chinese cabbage). CBICKEN WINGS WITH GINGER 8 chicken wings l Lablespoon vegetable oi l 1 one -inch pie<:e of fresh ginger root , peeled, finely chopped 1 clove garlic, crushed 1 tablespoon soy sauce 2 teaspoons honey 2 tablespoons Sake or sherry 1'l cup chicken broth or waler Heat an unbasted wok or large skillet over hlgh heat for about 30 seconds. Add oil, heal another 30 seconds, then add the ~ ginger and stir fry. Add chicken wings, garlic and stir-fry for 2 minutes. Add soy sauce. loss: then drizzle in honey and wine. Pour over water or broth and simmer gently for 20 minutes. Serves 2 hungry persons or 3 with accompanying salad and rice. CHICKEN P EACH 1 frying chicken, cut up Bulter or marJ;tarine Salt a nd pepper 1 can < 1 pound> sliced peaches, drained th cup chicken broth 3 tablespoons pr epared mustard Shopper Tested Are you an alert Coru5umer? Test yourself on the following questions and sec. 1. Ooyouplanyourmenuforthe week before you go to the super market? 2. Do you make a shopping List and follow it closely? J . Do you use a spcdfic budget for food items and stay within that budget? 4. Do you consistently cbe<;k the ads and gel the bargains? 5. Do you compare labels on products to obtain the best nutri· tional value? 6. Do you use unit pricing to de· t.ermlne price comparability or products? 7. Do you use open dating to be sure you 're getting the freshest product? 8 Do you understand and select meals by grades of USDA Prime, Choice and Good., 9. Do you rc~1st buyan~ over· pnced roods when you know that you can buy the foods dsc~herl' or later for less? 10. Do sou return products that you are d1ssat1she<l Wlth and dis· cuss it with the store mana~cr" Give yourself 5 points ror each question checked yes, J points for each que s ti o n c h ec k ed ~metimes. 1 po mt for each ques· lion checkl'd no Calculate your score 50·46 Alert Consum<'r 45 ·40 Kn o wl edgeable Consumer J9..30 Awarf'Cnnsum<'r 29-0 1\ ('onsumer Series Set Weight Watchers' chef Susan Beigbeder wall demonstrate "'le1a1·· Thanksgiving recipes at two Orange County locaUorui. Ms BeiRbeder wlll ap~ar Tuesday, Nov. 16 at 6 .30 p.m. m the We1gbt Watchers Cent.er 11• Costa Mesa; and a1ainSaturday, Nov. 20 al the Orangefrur Mall in FUllertoo, wbere demonstraUoos will be beld at 12 ·30 pm. 1·30 p.m. and 2 :30 p.m ~teaspoon e1'CJUDd nutmeg, ii desired 'I• cup dairy sour cream Brown c hicken in butter in large skillet: season with salt and pepper. Add peaches, chicken broth, mustard, and nutmeg. Cover; simmer 40 to SO minutes, until tender. Stir in sour cream and beat gently. Makes 4 to 5 servings. OVEN DRUMSJlCKS 4 chicken legs (about 2 powids> Salt Pepper Salad oil 1 can (16 ounces> pork & beans in tom ato sauce l can (8 ounces) whole kernel com. drained 2 tables poons prepared barbecue sauce Season chicken with salt and pepper. Arrange skin-side down in 2.quart shallow balcing dish < 12x8x2"" >. Brush with salad oil. Bake at 400 degrees F. for 20 minutes; tum. Bake 20 minutes more: pour off drippings. Combine remaining ingre · dients: spoon around chicken. Brush chicken with additional barbecue sauce. Bake 20 minutes more or until lender. Makes 4 servings. CJDCKENBR~ MANDARIN (8 servings> 4 large w hole c hick en breasts, skinned, boned, and cut in baJf 2 cups cooked rice Yi cup golden raisins :i,4 teaspoon salt Toothpicks and string 2 tablespoons melted butter 1 can (1 pound 4 ounces) pineapple tidbits 1 can Ma ndarin oranges l ~'z teaspoons lemon juice 21"'2 tablespoons sugar 2 tablespoons cornstarch 2 tablespoons soy sauce 2 tablespoons butter Cover each chicken breast half with plastic wra p, natten with mallet or rolling pin to ~-inch thickness. Peel off plastic wrap. Mix rice, raisins. and salt; place I I CUp Of mixture in cevter Of each breast. Roll up tightlj, luck· ing in the ends, and secure with toothpicks and string. Place chicken in buttered 13x9x2·inch baking pan. Brush with 2 tables- ·-·poons melted butter. Bake at 350 degrees for 30 minutes. Reduce heat to325degrees. Drain pineapple and oranges, r eserving syr ups . Combine syrups in heavy saucepan with lemon juice. sugar, cornstarch. and soy sauce; blend well. Cook over medium heat, stirring con- stantl y, until thickened and transparent. Remove from heat and add remaining buUer and fruit : mix well. Spoon fruit sauce over chicken pieces: cover with foil. Continue baiting at l2S degrees for JO m i nutes mo r e . Rem ove tooth picks a n d stri ng from ducken breasts: place on serving platter. Spoon s auce over chicken. Ser ve hot. Labels Are law Capitol News Service A bill whlcb will enable con· sumers to determine what is meant by the ""reguJar"", ··1ean" and ""premium" labels they fre· quently encounter at the meat counter has been signed lnlo law by ~v Edmund G. Brown Jr. The bill <AB 1823> authored by Assemblyman Joseph 8. Mon· toya <D-La Puente) requires the fat content or labeled ground beef to be printed on the package or posted in proximity lo the meat Ul the display case. It's Selling Like Hotcakes Suddenly the American homemaker is turnin(tto crepes as a means or opening a new world of entertaining dining. Crepes are not new, but a variety of electric crepe mak· lng a ppliances are. TI\rough controlled, even beat, they simplify crepe making. Manufacturers suggest you check out the following points before investing in one. •The handle and pan should be light and easy to dip in the batter and use. This can be esl)ttially Important if you are preparing more than one type of crepe for a number of people for a dinner. •A Tenon-coated surface makes clean-up easy. The pan itseLC sbould be im mersible for further ease of cleaning. •Check the recipe book that comes with the appliance. Does It provide thorough ~/care instructions and recipes for a wide variety of crepes? How about suggesUons for complete international meals, includlng the c repe ap- petiier, the main course and the dessert? •Finally, a crepe maker that bas more than one use is recommended. The cost of Ute unll plus the problenu ol storage space in the normal kitchen call for a unit that can do more than Just make crepes. Some crepe maJters, ror example, can serve as both a crepe maker and a mini frypa.n fo r frying meats, eggs, mak· lng an omelet or for sauleing of vegetables. ·, Store ours: 9 to 9 Dally -Sunday 9 to 8 Pricft M.cif ... rs., Mo•. 11 thru Wed., Mo•. I P'ricft~ .. ,..._ .... w. Gl.ty Acc.,t Food St.llpl W• Re;."t n. ltkjM To Ulllff 9'1autillH And RmtM U• To Deders AMI WholeMI..._ 4ROLL PACK , ONtY MEAT ".J. l~~ PRICES 1.).1"11::""1.T"oJ ~ BEEF CHUCK BLADE CUT SPllMM&D MAYONNAISE q«JAIT w...... 49 c_,_ 1r C ·~ .... c;-.......... c:_ ·-""'"-IJ TOP 9UAIJTY MEATS TRIMMB> LEAN PEllSOHAI. SEllV1CE ITS wtal TOUI DOI.LAI HAS MOU CEHTS CHUCK ROAST c LB. IEEFLOIM IOMaESS -TSTEAK 2.29LB. BAR M EASTERN NRK SPARERIBS 79~. FOSTBt FARMS or UCKT FRYllll CHICKEN 49~ LEANGROUHD BEEF FIESH 59! ORDBl YOUR FRESH FOSTER FARMS cw UCICYFARMS TURKEYS A.T MEAT DEPT. ~~=:99cF•~99c RSH -C:-•.•• •c-.._c.- •~,,..e- IARMAUIHF BONELESS LEAN STEWING BEEF 1.29LB. IA.I M IULK STYLE KNACKWURST SLICED BACON BEEF CHUCK SEVE~OHE BEEF ROAST 89~. WISCOHSIM OfEDDAR OfEESE • • • • • ~ "' • ' • ~ -....! I~' •,.. . •~ ~· • NiAiii.~Ps6fC iiiii~!!! c cOiliED BEEF 79c LiiiiD 0'5~~:MG 69c 12 0%. CAN QUART Di(iiLi~!!! 5 ~ $ 1 iiJiiG!!!~ 99c SPRINGFIELD FRUIT 3 s 1 SPRINGFIELD 59c COCKTAIL ~ SALAD OIL 303 CAN 24 0%. BOTILE SPRINGFIELD • c SPRINGFIELD IODIZED 1 oc MA YOllQ!~!PE• SAL' 2:~1. SPRINGFIELD 4 s1 SPRINGFIELD 69 APPLE S!!~E ~ . TOILET 4 !~!!!~ C PiARliA~!!!3 ~ 1 FLOUR :.~ 4 c ii ... A;ifRilT 39c EJ•M,·s RGAMScH FREs~~~ JUICE 46 O'.Z. CA.M AA c FRESHER PRODUC E -LOWER P ICES =======~ . MOIHIMe PUSH BRUSSEL SPROUTS 29! SWllr 'M JUICY GRAPEFRUIT 8 LI. CB.LO IAG 79c U.S. MO. I l"'SETT POTATOES .~=i~ LL49c ;. , ... ,_c_ ..... ,.,... ....... CALIFORNIA AYOACDOS isl l ...... ~ .. . Duncan Hines -all layer variet1ei. I Margarine. • • • • . 55 c lmpcmil -"" rloi;t• lu huttt'r' I Iii Buttermilk ••..•. 29c D:11rv l(Ondnc!-.1' fr,,m Springfirld -Qt. Coconut IAKO's ••• 59c An~el Flake or Shredded -7 Oz Club Soda Sil PACll • 39c Cannda Orv -10 111 NH (21 OZ ... llc) PAPER 45 TOWELS c t'uronet Studio Print-. .. roll Facial Tissue •• 45c KIPt•n1"1: prinb or colori; -12."i ct. Tomato Juice • . 49 c !'-.tH r.11ncnt11 Su rid1 ii phip~' 46 01. Star Kist Tuna 49c Chunk 1'1\'lt• lii::ht meal :\o. 1 : can Safflower Oil . . s 139 COLD MEDAL 69 FLOUR~:: c Re~. Scll-H1smi.:. l'nblc.1ched Cocktail Peanuts 93c J>Lontr r's anytime l ,1voriH·~ 12 m: c-an Cat Food .• :m.. 29c Thev lr1\'l' l\1t1\ (~u1•c·n! 6 ol ran ,Dash oancoo ••••• s3is &Ovc•r '• Iii-. lug' (40c off labtl) Clorox •..••••.• 77e .J..1qu11I ~Miu-h:ml<'i! Gallon i-izc : New! ·~ FOR DISHES s 1 09 rDAWN ~ <"ut -. thrnui:h 1:n •:l•t'! :t? "' I STEWED 33 : TOMATOES c • 111·1 \'41t1tl'1(11rdrn i:11rnlnr•"' '\11 'Ill.I ~;!·ARTICHOKE HEARTS . ~ CAUIU ... : So,,.., • ~ 'OZ.IAI 49c • ~~.~~~~~~~~ . When you select beef at El Rancho, you know that you w~ll always J ' l • ALWAYS •.• THE CHOICE OF V.S.D.A. CHOICE BEEF! Isn't it nice to know that you can be swe of the quality you'Q bf servin& at your house? Of course it is -that's why EJ Rancho offers you -always -the top of the grade .. in U.S.O.l Choice beef. Standing lib Roa Iii SELECT SMALL END ••••••••••••••• lb.. Ranchero Steak s 18\ • Ground Beef ••. 51°\ Chopped Steaks 512\ Extr.1 Iran ... bulk or p11 Uit·s LONDON s 1 a9· BROIL 111 CHUCK 6-9c STEAK 11t Hib cut nf IJ .S.l>.A. C'hoice IM ·f l't•nt c·r cut! U.S.D.A. Choitc href Leanest ground beef -3 per lb. (Bulk, tuo) SHORT S 169 RIBS .. Honclt•ss -rib cut -Choice bcef Spancar Staak U.S.D.A. / IJ 7 n CHOICE •••••• C. I i/11 Thrv'll lu\'c I ht• he.irt \' ~a ti,f ar t inn. I hl• jui1·t· h'ncl rrne-.;. lo be fc,und in thi,; rib cul ;.leak -U.S.D.i\. < 'holl'c beef Lamb Stew • . • . 39c. LAM' s 139 CHOPS lit !-ihouldcr f ill r i. .. 11 1 \'-l''lt•rn l.11n h 0 Bone Roast. • ggc. C'huc J.. c·11t 11f l '-S 0 A. Choice beef . SLl.CED s 1 09 BACON ... El Hum·hn\ thickc·r ram·h 'tyle Ground Lamb • . &9c. l.l'an1 lrom Western rnhed Choice l11mh LAMB s209 CHOPS lit Hounrl bone western choice lamb Park llaasi :~~ms~ ........... ~Lill A NJ OU PEARS Sweet, .Ju1rv •>rchurd!l fr11m N11 rt hern Super Fresh Produce Avoc1dos m~ ...... 81! Colifnmia'-. fi~rl'>I ... and the extru large i.ize offers you moire ~mooth hultery l(()ndncss, for ~alads, sondw1l'hes! Fresh Carrots 2i39e ('ri'JI and tendn ... I lb plio bog BROWN 2 29c ONIONS 1bs ll S :"\o I quality -oil purpose Banana Squash • • gc, Th1rk meated .•. excellent for baking JUICE 5 L$1 ORANGES I Lnri:e ... for mnn• ~werl juice! OUR STORES AIE OPEN oltd 1.n, stofft4 te stn• yeo Chicken rOR ROASTllC •• 69\ Frl'sh Gr. "A" -i,tulled with drel!l>ing Sausage rrALWI srru. s l 29• We make iL the "old '~orld" \\By! Beef Rib Bones sgc. l '.S .D.A. ClmH·c -bake OJ b-b·q! ' BONEUSS - CHICKEN $ 219 BREAST 11t Stuffed Cordon Hleu or Dressing FRESH FILLETS! PACIFIC RED s 119 Snapper ... For broiling, bnking or frying M . M h. s129 an1 a 1 • • • • • • From Hawaiian waters. Halibut Steak •• 532\ (\•nter cut ... from Northern seas. Sh · s299 r1mp .. S&ZI • • • • No I quaiity -while -shell on. CRAB LEGS Meaty! •.. From Alaskan crabs Frozen Food ORANGE 59c JUICE MiRute JI.laid from Florida! 12 oz Buitoni Entrees sgc L11sagne, Manicotti, Egg Plant or Meat Ravioli .•. 12 ounce package Jeno's Piua • • • sgc C'her.:-r, Pepperoni or ~ausagr! 13 01. Hash Browns. • • 59c From the pota to people! Ore ldu -2 lh. Potatoes~ • • • 49c Holloway House Cheese, Sour Cream! SHERBET All FUVClaS! Spriicfield Half-pion .79( .. Delicatessen ... ~ I 1nr1·~ in r/fi•rc Tht1r. Nou. 11 tl1r11u~h Wrd. No1J. 17 Liquor D ep 't. ~· r h WISCONSIN 9 9 ( t'9 e es e CHEDDAR •••••••••••• J,cmkt•~ ... froll' Amerirn'i. dairy ('enter' Chome Mild, 1..oni:hn m or C'olhy~ !l 111. ~ . eef Salami • • • s 129 M errywood Farms -8 <'Z stix SLICED SWISS 79~ ~ Krafl's sandwich fixin'! 6 oz pk~ Orange Juice •.• 45c Tropicana -chilled -ju;.t pnur! :12 oz Party Dips • • • • • • 43 Pen & quill 8 nt (AVOCADO ••• 49c) POLISH $98 HAM :J:· No waste! (UI 11A11 CWI • 10 It · Ski ()prn dmfr ~ In 9 Stmd()V In tr> 7 N 1J ,,,fr.~ In dr()(f'f~ S I h SAVE $1.00 ON OUR . $899 ( 0 ( HOLIDAY TIMES ••••• ~ •••• Uou led rxclusivl'ly for El Rancho -your assurance of q11nlily! llalf-i:allon T ·1 SJ99 equ1 a savn0c •••• 1:-;1 Hanchos' label l't'duccd! Fifth Ronrico Rum ••• 5499 Your choice · liithl or dark! Firth Canadian $699 CLUB Sth The Canadian whit'key! save Sic Early Times. • • • s4 99 Strai~hl whil<kry · snve 50¢ lirt h Vodka CROWll 11$$[ • • • • s 899 You save ROt on the hnlf-ga llon Seagram's s999 GIN Now you save Sl.00 • half.gallon . ARCADIA PASADENA SOUTH PASADENA HUNTINGTON BEACH NEWPORT BEACH EASTBLUFF IRVINE \, , .• ~"<' HlJ"'111.,t1111 . .._ otf'lr,tl1r Hl .... d 'If rl('lnl ;pwf H1Jnt1n•1t1J•l '..\.1rr•t-l, .Hlrl AlqOtH111111 ...... , N .. wport Blvd .'',C,', f.;1stti. ·" ()r lln1v,.,,,,v ind M1cht!ll"()n , f1 "" '"ltJ \ #''l'• I , ti (•t.llJQP..Ql0¥ft S.outhc.1·.t r\)tltPf H.;ubour M,111 On IP'\t' P..n1n~ul~ E.a.slbAutt v.11-.,. l ...N'lfPr Pttr .. VH·\N Cet1ter 1AWM SIWN> •......•.. $1.69 ~Ion for Oily or Normel hair. 16 01 IM ROLL·ON •••••••••••••••••• 89c : Jttll\ll&r or \Jnattnted doodor11nt ! I '1 o~ UCEDRI .................... $1.69 Fnr hudachrs and minot p111n .. J(l0 rt Alt TOOTH PASTE ............ 79c Fluoridt protfCt lnn ••. lite tuM-(12t tff} ~ . llfTY TRASH BAGS ......... $1.29 T11ll l.11r hrn mr . pka of :lei •• 44 qt. FAB DETERGENT ••••••••••••• $1.19 Gi&nt 4h~~ p11ckAlft (ilcWK ISe tff '*41 - VIOIU SAUSAC'l .••••••••.•••. 37 c Qtlll WATIR ~ ~ .•••• ~ $1.19 l\ttp • <'IHI on lumrl' Armnur'i; ••• 5 oz Sut PMk 10 vt. nr. htlM 121 OZ• ••• 3'cl TOMATOES• au .•.........•.. 27 c Ort11i:a mokl"A tomotol't ir~1y! 10 oi: con STRAWBERRIES ................. 59c l{rm'll frcr1os i:nodnc:"' 1n! 16 <rt. l>k1t ~ . .. .. , .. ; BUY ANY NEW 0 76 COURIER THIS WEEK-END & after makin9 your best deal receive A Camper Shell or AM-FM Radio Offer Good Wed. ...... S... Closiaq NEW '77 LTD· II AIR COHDITIOHING 1'1 .,/ il ..... , ,..., • I -..., •...-t '-1 # * t - 55877 " .. ... ,. • , t .~- . NEW '77 NEW '76 i 4 NEW '76 I MAVERICX \ MUSTANG Ii I GRANADA NEW '77 PINTO I I . I 2 + 2 : : I 53277 j !s4377: ;s3677l :542771 . • All COMDITIOHIHG i . I 2300 cc eng1n1> 4 'iOPPl1 tran-.m1s<>1on "Ael bel11• f rad1,11 w sw lire ~. detu .. buml>f!r qmup AM radio SN IHRIOY1002t6 172 PONTIAC FllHllD ; : 2 5 0 6 c y I 1 n d e r en q 1 n C'. • ! automatic tran'.m1-;<;1on steel b etted radial 111es. oower steering. powPr lront disc b<akes lront & r1>ar bumoer 1 guards tintf>d qtass complete Ser IJ7K91L 104061 ' 2300 cc engine 4 spPed 11.insm1ss1on steel belted rc1l11al w<;w ttres front & rear bl•moer quaros AM radio Ser lf6A03Yt56404 250 6 Cyl i nder engine automatic transmission. steel belted radial tires deluxe bumoer grouo. in1enor oecor qrouo l 1ntl'd qla5S complete Ser 116W81L 196665 Amp & oil qduge~ power steennq dual western mirrors. tinted windshield e11tra cooling radiator 800xt6'1) 8 otv ra t Pd t ire-; Ser • llF25BA020J5 I. BIG SELECTION OF TOP Ci)UALITY USED CARS • • • AND WE'RE DEAL.IN' •7 5 FORD MAVHICK U 7 IAMCHHO F250 P'ICICUP' •74 CHEVY MOMTE CARLO '75 COUGAR '75 FORD '69 FORD '73 FORD rlMTO WGM. NEW '76 TORINO ·.?.j •'• All COMDITIOHING ·-., 351 V-8 engine automatic'"' 1ransm1ss1on cower sleenng. ., power lronl disc brakes. v1nyf ... seat lnm. steel belled radial ~ wsw IHes. deluxe wheel '• covers, front & rear bumoer, guards. ltntcd glass complete deluxe sear Dells. left hand remote control mtrror Ser • #«SA25H108175. '71 GMC SP'llMT V-8. auto trans . factory atr cond1t1on1n g. pQw er steering. power brakes Extra Sharp• (8850Zll 6 cyl auto trans . factory air cond111on1ng . power steering. radio. heater. whllewall ttres (41 0MBE) -8 auto trans factory rur cond1t1on1ng . power s teerin.g . p o wer disc brakes. radio, heater (089LIB) V-8 auto trans factory air V-8 auto trans factory air Camoer Special V-8. auto cond1t1on1n9. power cond 1t1o n1nq oower tran s. fa c torv atr s1ee11ng. o o wer disc steenng. power brakes cond1 t1on1nq , oowe r t:>rake-:. radio. heater, v1ny1 AM/FM stereo radio. rallye steering. po wer brakes 4 soeed radio. heater. (854GGY) W /11be rgl ass s hell . (17034J) 52577 174 PONTIAC LlMAMS 2 Or. H T. V-8, auto trans,, factory air cond11toning, pawer steering. power dsic brakes. radio. heater. vinyl roof. Landau top (898UR). S'J!l77 FIRST IN IDYICI • FIRST IN IALll $2677 '69 CHEVY ElCAMIHO A uto tra ns • power steering. radio. heater. rallye wheels !656400) $ 77 169 MERCURY COU(iAI XU Aut o . trans . air cond1t1onlng.: power steering. radio,. healer. (YXR528) s1911-~1S77 roof !11547620) wheels Loaded & Sharp. AM/FM stereo radio. rallye s4477 ''646 F 1S4677 ~~~1$j s2177 '13 LINCOLN TOWM COUP'E V-8, auto trans . factory air conditioning . power steering power disc brakes. radio. heater. vinyl roof (494CFP). , 52277 •75 DATSUN '75 CHEVY 1210 4 DOOi !805Mlll s1977 ~ 169 FORD UOO YAM COMV. V-8. auto trans .. factQl'Y air cond1tlon1ng, h eater. (696SSR). 52477 '75 FORD \ ....... ,.,..11'"••··-.. -.... _. .. .,.. DAILY PILOT PUBLIC N011CE "ICTITIOU,8UMMHS MAMl ITATIMINT * n. ~j"' pet'IOl'I• ., ...... tiuoJ. .~: .. SflU!ET llltlf't'Al.S UOO ~Aw •>U.Coot•,,,_.• CA_,. OAVIO H llOURl(E, ~·El ~Aw .eo.i.-...~ CAtt.,. W ilOQNAlO l , MAHOElllSCHEIO. ~Or .<:o.taM .. a,CA"ltJt ., "'1t blK•,..n '' c .... c1uc1..i b• • ., "" lllt~•led M-WllOfl oilier t""" • l*'f_.v.to , 0.vkl H llovr•• ,!>111t \l.,..,.m w•• "*' wftll !flt ""'* CJ.r-or Oron,. Co1;111, en Ot• .,,.,.,., ,.011 PUllll•""d Or•nve Coo•I 0.lly PUot Clc1 JO, ?I encl How.>. 10. 1'1t , • ~JM• . , P UBLIC NOTICE 10,: e;_~UBLIC NOTICE ;--"CTITIOUS8 USIMISS ff2'? HAMUTATIEME~T ti TIWl ro11ow,,•<1 oer'IOn\ •re dolnq \>U\• "l'\11(..04" w~'·! STEWART HOME CONStRUC • n!HlH.. C0MP4NY ••• O?•~ ~lrt<t ' ~l~'"~·l CA '1~11 'l• l)dnoot J H,.mm.,,.\ Ill, .., 09'• I&.·• C'>\t"IM"' Cl\ "1•7' a.. .... ~·)1'10t4' L k ttmm.tt ~ '6i Otlh •• ~, .... , C~tA.W-" '" .,.,~11 ... ~'>T,,,~ buS•l'I'\' I\ t •t'\OU( l("d b'f ,, .. , ~reiN'l1W'r,n10 Sd"dr•l H•'Tlm4)(\ TPt~( '\l•l•mPnt w l\ lt'+d with ttw --=Cltt'' ot ()f.1n•w (Oul\•vonOu . "'"" --Pl.l~'""--0 o''",.,. (r ' I O·til/ p,,,.,, •1;!r: 11 'ilJV 1 U) ti 1 00 t• 'Wt 1,. PUBLIC NOTICE ( 6 .4 2 •• 5 6 7 8 D A I L y ·-···-·-···· .. ,. .. . . November tO. t975 . ~ • ..,,_ llCJtft MiwbtpNic• on tlM Onnce Coat DAILY PILOT CLASS IFIE D ADS ~c~'\=!·=!i (84 2 -5678) Fas~'~ ~ .m: ·-'·,., .. .· "'-<~ . IOOCM099 ', .• '.'' L .. 1 & f~ •• 5060-~ .._., & Mar1n1 • '• ''' • WttlcH & bpcwt ~ (~I , • 90(».91)99 ....... i-.i ..... & l .. y ...... & AutOlllOllllH ..... rw-w .. , .... 500t-sewt ot441 ... 1000.11'9 lrvn"*1.....,. ... 9100-9999 P\lbffshet''s Hoffc•: AJI real estate itdvertis ~~!.~.~ .•••... I~!!.~~ ...... . G........ IOOZ Gt•cel 1002 • JASMIMI -c:.D.M. Elegant 3 BR 2~ bath beauty ln new private area with security gate. Hardwood noors, lush cptng &·draJ)es. stained glass. beaut light fixtures . Tennis courts . pool & club house. $149,500 unfur n .. $169,500 (umished. . 2 111 .............. NEWPORT C!Ml'a. tU. 644-4910 1n thjs newspaper is sub Ject to the Federal Fai llousrng Act o f 196 14hicb makejl 1t illegal L advertjse "any pre · rerence. limilallon. or discrimination based raCt'. color. rt>h&ion. sex. or national on g.in. o r ap intention lo mak~ an Gaw el I 002 s~b pred.rert;nc~. tut.mil~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••-•••••• uoo. or iscnmma on. NEWPORT HTS. CORONA DEL MAR This newspaper will not JBR expandable, In a VIEW knowlnJIY accept an s uper nbrhood w/hrdwd A breathtaking view of advertising rot r eal nrs. R&O. w /w crpts. the Pacific ocean and estate whkh is in viola · Exl new Spanish texture cvaslline plus outstandJ ti-Ol)of the law. stucco,Jra trees & nicely ing qua Ii ty In l h is Hou f Sal !dscpd lot. Lol.s of rm for beautiful-custom borne. 5 HS or e xt.ra vehicles + dbl gar. bedroolJlS. family room. •••••••••••••••••••••• • $88.000. for fast sale • large enough for billiard G.....-al I 002 JACOBS REALTY table. formal dining. ••'••••••••••••••••••••• 675-.6670 Beame d ceil in gs, MESA VERDE planked noors and warm 48R--fAMILY IFYOU'VEALWAYS country decor. Special $84,500 WANTED TO LIVE features too numerous to tmrnaculate Mesa Verde BY TiiE OCEAN mention. $199.500. Call 4 bedroom doll house! Spectacular 180 deg. 673..SSSO ~~~.ll~~~C pe~~gc~ ~~~ :~tn l>IJV~~~S,& tttlsa~~~: r•=::;;;"';'":.:i°i:1·.•l~ijijajiii1ii~ifa•"11, t~l,i' 1· ~~:i~a~~~~a~~l~ir~ ~:~~li~g4i:I ~~~~sO'r~ ~='~1~~~~~t~i~t~·~·~·~·~~~·;\~~ r I ' I r ·1 nngton Ave. In cameo. >. -=--··=··~ trep acc. ~ugc am1 Y Shores is ltsled. at ooJy room SPoUesl> gourmet VA/FHA. k 1 l c h c n Sc c I u de d Sl98.500. masll'r wing-plus 3 ASAND&SE/\ $48,500 more r a m1ly s i zed REALTY 675-8800 Spacious 3 bdrm. 2 ba hedroomi.. Owne r ----------1 Cambome w/famrm.big lraru.ferrec.I Must l>C{' lo EASTSIDE dbl garage & btO lndscp- bchevc. llurry-c all COSTA M!SA . ing .. ctose tl> shoppmg. i52·l700now! , Seller wUI pay loan dis· vPf"'"q .,,.,,.,..,,011,.,.,.,. llOME Plus apartment. countPQints.B46·77ll. [ I $30.000 That's r ight 'IBM§ ~:~·~~"·i~~ .. '" iii ~~HERITAGE ·p I L 0 T c L A s s I F I ·E D 6 4 2 • REALTORS CcrrMO Hl9hlands Ol'l'•tn view .. p.r1vale bcath ri_ghto;. combine W/SPU<'16li>. ~U.ft 281\ In prime (.;d M •a r ea for Jit•ncct ram1 ly·hOml'. All lie"" C'r ph. firs, t·stm drps. ktl appl'-. Sl28.500 Shown by :l pµt • \>y o"ncc. Open llou:,,c Sul & Sun l s. 644-05~ SUPER4 ID $54,500 N1t·r 1 bet. 2 b.1 home· on l.:1• lot. Ila:. oddt•tl F H & hobb~ rm. fri:,..h point ~t.iny po-.~1b1IH1~s & pnn'<I Lo 5l'll at $54,SOO. ~~Ill. . . Quality Built Custom hom<'. near best Nl·v.1.1t1rt Bay hc:ichc!> 3 IJt.olf rm. 11111111(1 Im, r.1 m1· ly rm.::? Ii.1th~. F'<intasllc horn1· on :.trada. 0ffcred Jt St:n .500 Cull 540-1151 ~HERITAGE REALTORS NEWPORT !HORES 2·Story A·frame; wood beamed ceilings; 4 bdrms .• 2 balh s; secluded patio. Walk to beach. pools & tennis- $90.000 673-3663 642·2253 Eves. associated l!RO><ERS ~ REAL TORS ~O~( vw Eolf>c.u I\'' &6 1 Ex U'nVE REHTAL SERVICE HOMES. APTS. CON· DOS· from $400./mo. Agent, 673-7601 Fmd whnl you want an __;~-------- n a1ly Pilot Clnssifie<J-; CLASSl FIED will sell it. S©~dt}µ-l£r.,~se Thot lnlri911in 9 Word Gome with a ChucHe ------14•'4 ~y Cl.AT a 'Ol1AH O t-ro"°' ....,.,. ol "'-fo•• J(IOMblad WO<d• be low 10 '°'"' IOllr o1"°"'9 word• I HUGTEO I I 2 I I I I I 1" i y 1' "1· I j I r l L 0 0 I ~ Whet this world ,..,u~ needs j I' I I' r, •mother ln·low with o bvllt· In volume -. ' ..... I CAYMER I 6 UNs<:•A'4lf tnrE•s to I C.11 AN~WU rrrrrr1 I I I I I I I SCRAM--LITS Amwwt In ClfttHfcetl6e 1010 ~ I 002 G••"" I 002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• macnab / lrvlne realty PtMIMSfOM FOl GIACIOUS LMMet Spacious ?·stOtY plan ln The Colony w /sunken f amity room + dining; gallerln & formal· step-up livlng room w /high, soarln'g cqiJing. 4 bed.rooms -2~ baths. On cul-de· sac & close to community pbol & recreation racilities. Natalie Ben- jamln 752·1414. (N61) 642·8235 644-4200 f01 Donr Orltte H.,._,, View C.t\~f 1 rv1nir et C.mpus Vel i.y Center 752·141 4 ......A comm ON UFI for only $116,500. You can purchase a earner lot in Harbor View Homes. an Immaculate 3 bedrm wtth a view of twinlcllng lights by night, Catalina by day & easy access to tennis. swim· ming, and a jacuzii anytime you'd like. This investment is a reaJ comer on the good lire. for $116,500. . U,._1 001: tfVMtS 4 I I REA~ TORS~. 675-6000 2443 East Cotst Highw4y. Coro,,.del Mar also i" Mesa V•roe. at 546 5990 Attractive 4 bdrm. home on cornet lot. Bay viet.rs from living room & UP· stairs bedroom. $185,000. BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR J·ll Bcay~•dl· 011v" N R 67'J 6161 Ga111ral 1002 .............................................. ~~-~~J ~ . .,,._ --RmA.I.:r~ 2061m.nw..N.I. 646-4463 WANTS .. .. salesperson. Ple ase call or come by. PRICE REDUCTION A sweeping view from this immac. btrly de· coratt.'<1 & lndscpd 3 br. 2 ba , FR . atr1umed Turtlerock home. Wood decking. gas BBQ & more! 545-9491. 1111 . . Secluded Mansion 4 Lge bedrms on wooded corner lot. Formal dm· mg, step down ltvmg rm. fpfc: In (arruly room. sLt!P out the back shder Into private yord with pool & Jacutz1. Priced to sell. owner must move east. XTRALGELOT OHL Y $65,500 Doll house. 3 bd. 2 ba, de · corated in fine taste. Near new crpls. Fam din on huge irreg Jot.. Newly offered w/VA turns or assume. 545-9491-. ~ -BAYS Condo. end unit. up- graded. 3 br. Ph ba . 540· cooper&. associates P A.IHT-H-SAV! 3 +POOL $49,000 buys this 3 ~'. 2 ba. rec rm, H&F pool home. Needs T LC but what a buy ! Localed on qwet tree lined street. G l t F H A we lcome. 54!>-9491. ~ - D E V I S S E C E R G t H S t A H 0 C M A G C R l C K S U Z U B H C R A M R H E R E D I T Y G U E T R K H 0 S K 8 S N S C t H E G U E 0 S M 0 R H C l K H M U T A T A H C U H T H T 0 Y G 0 C 0 P G E H E T A H G t N L t M I £ Y R t H Y 8 l N F H R E M A T H E G N K A T C H 0 D 0 M 0 0 G 0 N D E 0 H E G M A R E M A I E l M E D I R B Y H T C A I H Y l D T C Y 0 N H M E W H Y I I L R G E N l A E H S E H 0 S l E N C E M A C U l N T R S U T K D G 0 G R S L 0 V E G R E U G ( N A T V 8 E A I 8 C O J C H R 0 M 0 S 0 M E S Y R It 0 H U M 0 A H A T A Y t S M U T H 0 T E H N Inn~ 0nt: Hlddtn wotdt below 1ppe., C>nft • • -d. up, down Of" d'-9t>nllly. Find uc:h eno bo11 It In.• Cell Eugenics Ml.ltat1on : ChromosOMs Gene Recess 1ve ~ ONA Genet ks RNA e Dom1nant Hybrid Var1at1ons Tomorrow : world War Il Ga•r• 1002 G1Mr.e IOOZ OM THI FAIRWAY New custom home ln Big Canyoo right on the golf course. 3 Bdrm~. 3 baths plus family room with wet bar. Lots or wood dee~. a Car garage. Truly a good value at ·~.()()() -t·----- 5 IDRM.·..SS1 • •114 Beautlfally upgNded bdnle .Neb, ~­ ble door entry tD fofer. FamiJ)' room. formal dining rm., & 3 car garage, Alr·conditioned. Mt. & canyon vlew. Owner transfe,r~. $12!5.000 . I THE BLUFFS 60l VISTA ~A OPI~ DAJtY 1·5 ProI~ssionally decorated . 3 bdrm., 2~ ba. condo. ExcepttonaUy attractlvi greenbelt. PRICE JUST REl)UCf;O $.5.000 -NOW ONLY $115,000 ' J .. I 0021 G...,:;.. I 002 ·••···•·········•••••·· ....................... . 1002 GaMrtll tOOZ .............................................. MESA VERDE DOVER SHORES $4& 500 Tr u I y fa n l ~ s tl c 4 l • t>edroom. ramify room lmmacula e . two·stor y pool home wllb :ex· ;rownho~ with central pa~ve view of the \Jp-alr·~ndifloning. private per Bay and sufroiUnd\ng patio. community pool mountains. EnUre,home qnd lo~ds of chi;a rm. built nround atrium and Price~ ,~or quick sale oval pool with unique with low interest rate as· custom fountain. Cov- su m abl e FHA loan. cred by cle~ retracta· CALL TSl-3191 ble dome. ""bulous • SEL:ECT 1 larte master 'i.dte wllh view. Has heated and PROPERTIES filtered Jacuzzi spa ~ _________ 111team bath and gari1en ~ ~~::::>-~ · UMWIMD-(' in lhe secluded custopl facuzzl surrounded by a lushly ptanted palio, theo enjoy the Cireplace in· side. 3 Bedroom. tiuge fanuly room. New offer· lng al $79,500. Call 640-9900 :1l..f71-/. &Jal.~ Valley Realty urea. Kitc he o wlfh brealcfast nook and r11ml· ty r m w /wet bar have view or the bay. There are too many ameniUes lo describe this fantastic home to list. Truly a.aQ.Od buy al $340,000. 1002 . ........................................... .. ,'CE 110111 ·1t1111 ca • OVER SO YEARS OF $ERVICE ........ $" R PUN CONDO Front Rqw on tbe PQlst Coast. Great Water View !' 1 S'ecttooms Family Room. SALE' OR LEAslttOPTION. OPIM DAILY fll ·' - J IO YI.\ ~Oil~~ UDO llLI Spacious Spllt-t@vel ContemP<>rary 5 Bedrooms. Entertainment l..ounge • J\'~t. ~r Se'!ftr4'-. G tt1Pl ~~ i ah'ht , pa•Jo wll~ Jt+st , Ua~ual ~a~unil .~ 631-1800 ' ' I t Wednelday, November fO. f978 => ~· • · -'· H~" IJ.er S-. H.H1 for S. Wednesday. November tO. t976 O{'IL Y PILOT 81 ....................... ····~·················· ~::.~.~ ...... J~::.~.~ ....... ~~:!.~.~ ............. , ....... 1007 ~~~:!' ••••••• !!.~~ ~:::.~.~ ....... ~:::.~ .. ~ ....... ~::.~.~ ........ ~=::::.~-:.~ ...... . ••••.. IOOJ••••., tooz' Cle.enl 1002 '7UNITS·SZ9SOOO Ov.nur. zer. d~n. ti.2bi. . ....,.. I0441r1• 1t44 ewportltech wpotthech ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• I 06t _Jf._f •••••••• • • •• •• • •• ••• •• ' ( _..,. d "''l? "I I • •••• •• •• • •• • •• ••• •• • • • •••• ••••••• ••••• •• ••••••• ... •••-••••••.,.••••"• .. •••••• •••• •• • .. heat'h Cotta gt> $84,SOO cw, n~-.. y . 'v " ap e. ••••••• •• ••• ••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ®herbert hawk ins FH: A LTORS . . . • HAT IMR.A'TtOM S11,t00 New paint & carpets. Good location, end condo unit, security gate, play. ground, pool, greenbelt, picnic area, BBQ area. Carport, 2 bedrooms, builtins. F /A heat, 1~ baths. IMCONI "°;:'" $6f,f00 ALL MS .J>upJex and separate home on I arge lot. Can build more units. 3 car garage, fenced yHrd. Near s hopping, schools, etc. MEW llACH 4 .. aOOM $17,tfO New 2 story home. Never occupied. l bloc'k to beach, 3 blocks to H.B. Pier, 214 baths~ wet bar. All gas built-ins, balcony & patio fenced. Excellent in· vestment. Show & sell. OPPottTVMtn CARia MtGHT ~me as you are and get the details on your ruture in the lucrative real estate profession. Speak directly with our Fountain Valley Manager. Available Tues. and Thu~. evening 6 to 9 p. m . or call for appt. flUH TOOA Y FOil YOUR TOMOltlOW 18055 Magnolia St., Fountain Valley . ' 963·8311 1002G...., 1002 ···~··················· ...................... . 14MZOO WantAds Call642-5'i ~ ... ,.. I 002 ........ • .............................................. ILUFFS WATER VIEW Out.standing Bluffs Tnna plan with panoramic B~y View. 3 Bedroom. 21": baths. new appliances. Desira- b~ end unil with 2 patios. $139,000. C.1164~161 MESA VERDE TRI-LEVEL Beaut1ru1 4 bedroom home. Prime Costa Mesa location. Large family . room w /fireplace. formal dining, beautllully landscaped. $86.900. -Call 640-6161. IEST WESTSIDE VALUE Very f arge customized 4 bedroom, 2 bath home. FA heating, copper plumbed, beautiful comer lot. Just perfect ror you. Call right now •nd ~ it ror only $59,500. can 96?·4454 EST A TE SIZE LOT 1Private yard on hug~ cul·de-sac lot. Close to beach and tennis club. Deane bul It 3 bedrm home with spacious, airy reeling. Decorator wallpaper and warm wood panel a teents. $63.000. Call now 962·4454 NICE HOME Just simJ>k! words describe a happy ramily home! Th.is cozy 3 bednn bome with game room sho\lld d() It all for you! Has nreptace and huge back lawn, fine north Costa Mesa location . Just $59,950. Call 546-414\. MINI FARM F.njoy ~ounlry Uvin• tn the cit.y in thia 3 bed'room, 2 ba'Dt home in lfun· ttnston Beach. Priced at only a1.soo. Call now 546-4141. (}•41c ,., •ocott"d., r· <>•ta Mr\.1 lbtMqton IC'ach . f'4 ,. .. ,,..., •. ~ro h S BR • 3 bu $164,SOO 149,500. 1213 )$91Ml004 OWHlll 4 BR,Jbw. ~31.000 fur.,e loURd 2BR & den 1129.SOO Don't mlb1> th1 !! CostQ Man.hall Rily 67~4600 ONLY Me•a. 4 bt:drm ho me Cor~ .. Mw 1022 rcatunng (or11\Jil dm1n1:. ••••••••••••••••••••••• tge kit w/dinclle Hug~ NOW and THEN . wm )'ou find sur h two· )tory eleganl't: wrapped 1n the linel>t traditional fashion Set 1n pre. stigious Easb1de fora· tlon, this 4 bedroom, 3 bath home with massive fireplace and Del Plso tiled foyer will ut1sfy the most di11c~te owner! DOLL HOUSE, in quiet area. 2 Bdrm. & convert. den. S14S,OOO llv1ns area t'entcrcd 3 llt + GUEST around many trees and ON ORCHID 4'' covered patio. Corner Io t' a t 1 0 n 1 0 t s 0 f C:.11 us about th1) 3 Bdrm pnvocy-r~m for motor charmer w/li;c: Mstr home. boat or trailer . Bdrm. sunny patio and Priced right at sw.~. detached 4t~ bdrm + SPUllNG OF APPOIHTMDITS SPACIOUS 2 bdrm. hom~. tarae bricl< patlo w /fountains & outdoor ga~ room. $165.QOO Call 546-SSl!O bath l'JIUe&t unit 510$,000. . Cati 644-7211 ... you'll really be excited to see the appointment s in this s tunning 3 bedroom 2~ bath Rancho San Joaquin Townhome. Enjoy the "Forever Vi ew", customized window shutters1 oak Ooors and many more elegant COZY brick rrplc. for snuggle Ume, adds an intimate touch to this 3 bdrm. home. $147 ,000 ~_.HERITAGE . • REALTORS r-•-· you must call ror an appointment -to ~ 1£. j!!.~ ~ upgrades. This is a celebrity owner, so LIDO 11:.aLTY =======• Prllflerl .. • . see the appointments. -ttoe,950. H77 Yle &.W.-H.1. '1J·1l• ------__. PltlV ATE ni-1'10 OHM ,..,_. Y 1·5 COST A MESA IEACH ACCISS '*' GUAIUl, fltWf'OI H A<tt ' ~ ~!~':1t!s~ri>~.bt-Abh:a~: 4 llt SI 15,000. CALL NOW 752-7315 ~~ ............ !~.~4 .~.~ .... !! .. . bri k r . The pnce is rlcht. lhe DONAL I c pk. Owner piunt· loeatlon is great. the INVESTMENT D M. I RD WOODBRIDOETwnhme, By owner, 4Bd, ZBa, ing thn.aout. new car~ts . m:str bdrm is giant. the A · t I It 3 Br 3 Ba. A/C, $79,900. Laiiuna Nlcttl. Loa S.r· Obie g ar Lee patio yard 1s pool sized, the SPECIAL!! ssocea es ea on Evs/~nds2t3-439-2634 ranos. Vu, Sat.Oto. w/bltn BllQ -. •• ,,,. Call day or night, I 3 n d i s f e e • l h ~amily home In residen· • ...... ..... 10 .. 1_............., _______ _ 6'6· t.'\'t!SS4G·BI~ bathrooms are two and Ual area on large Jot. 2 Fu1twV•ey 1014 9"Nt. 104 ...................... Maoarch Bay Terrace, lhe fire pl 3Ci)I are too BR. 2 BA. $51.000. ••••••••••••• ••••• ••• •• ..... •••••••••••••••••• br J '-tt•t~ Prin llGCAHYOM ....._,xModel Poel..,..Waterlar You'll love the digrufied decor in this prestigioul> Big Canyon home over lookin~ lhe golf cour:.e and lights' at nii:ht. New ''.L" shaped pool with water bar. Elleculi ve Master liulle with all the amenities for graelous living and su1 tc w Ith bedroom & den. The owner has h is mind made up to move now. Open Dally .till sold. l to S. NOW ~192.SOO Fee '44-7211 '45.•l474 Lu11uryJ.lra BahnhM. • UCHAMGI * ~1 ~a'tase s.;. 1-4 .I at R...a.o San l oaqpi•, rr 1'0a '-•• lftCOf'M pro &n4'4hft-··• · I $46,750 Greeablta. olymphi i pert1 anywb•r• f --· I I 1 1 • pool • jacii. Cwt alt', Orup CGQnt.y, we wll Approx 2000 sq. IH BR. 2 ONroom, 2 bath, in· w/el~k fU\ef It tr,.. a I Bdrm., Z bath 28A, H'ldl' fal"t\Tfn + ~~----.---'~"-• ~ _ -dividual Condominium. 2 purWer htehf. HI g ..,..fl\Ma. oceaa vie den. Lovely Ira cor lot·6 OWNER. Canyon Cres Car garage w/elec door beam ctp, •Ullff fplc ~e.om..st2$.000. yrs old. Nice bl\ri lit . Twnhm. 3 Br den & frml open e r -hi ghly up. 4 min'Gred 1"lhar. in MOllMS llALn Close to cood schls. dine. 21<>0 sqft or upgrd'd College Park, 3 Br 2 Ba, g ded ca,.,..tlnc wood U R f aJ da· .. ...., 000: Call m .1407 elegance. Fee land. new cpl. drnc. roor & ra ' ·r~ • v m. orm n ar~a. •4f .. -•057 • -cu'M,;..INGSR,.. ... ..v ~ .-paneling & mirrors. En· All w/sweepinc vi~ of ~ .. ~"~'u Sl l 7,000 . By appt . paint. Spac kit, w/bltns. joy the community pool, hills. Immediately adj to ---LA-..,-.... -.--4_::.=.::.::::.::..:.;:=-:.:.::::.:.::~·~. 644·1798 scp din, encl yd & patio. jacuni, tennJ.s courts & golf course & uclu rac· ~ SS6,950 Ownr 1 Agt · clubhouse. Who's fir1l? quet club of Irvine. HfOUWAY , , ' DOM'T IUY SS?-7648 -~t • II. Lowet level bdrms er 2 Bedrma & den in ca· A DUftLEX IH COM study. Mstr bdrm oeens nyon w /secluded rea Before you've seen our FOltl YOU! onto encl walled patio. i yard. Patio, terrace & ocean \•iew. Each unit FIVE HOMES Montanas Slab. 1115,000. tftehou8e.1Mlletotown hal> J Br. 2 na. w/almost Slt,500 to S4t,'50 ANYTIME Prine Only. S4'7·~14 for "beach. All lhls for only 2000 sq. rt .• 2 frplcs. wet p FF TT G o TT A appt. sea.~. Caltnowtosee bar. lndry + ovc>rs1ze 2 MINUTE? L' t · , ... r. ~,,,., • 15 en. you re TURT'EROCK G'EN. .,_ "' car i:araf!e All fo( not going to believe this. ~ ~ SM9.500. Total rent SOOO but I know where you can $74,fSO Plan II, (Br&: Atrium on WAUlTOAACtf Great Coast Royale area. 3 Bedroom Yie'lll home. Beamed cemnas. fireplace, (e nced y~rd. ne.lto new park. Walk lo shopping, buses, loo. 1127,500 .~70001 .. 1 ~a9;!:.~· ~~ buy your choice or s c_._. r.n ~~.':.;. ~~'!:da°!!· .,,,,,.--i..,.~E:UIGE: ..,_""' " ·• homes from only $39,500 ... ,,_., J~ HOME:~ -on_ly_. _______ 1 to $49,950. "Gone on Mon· Step down liv · rm· 4 :R-:A-:R::-:E:-::U::N::l::V:---:P:-:A:-:R:::K:I'~~-+.-.. ~~~~~~~~~ d .. · d" · bt!drm beauty. Anxious · -N N-t NB 1: - WATt:RFRONT tiOMtS REAL ESTATE Costa Meso I 024 631-1400 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ay . is our pre tct1on. owner. Call for appt. Chane.Hor ( Br, 2~ Ba, -. ewpor • Consider these features: r di -----'----1 1.AGUMA MIGUIL 2& 3BR. fireplace. shake tenlury 21• ~·1168 or am.rm, l'l·rm. many STOP New crpl1. New d~. • • • JRR. 28A. Westside Only s49.SOO Low down "OH " • • • Bran.d new 4BR, 38.\ lakefront. pri\'ate beach Only S89.000. il0.000 down llurry ! OW~R/AGE1'T 510·055!> 557-097:;eves. upgrades. on cul-de·aac. a .... roof. large yard and Appt. only. '752·'712i T'HIWOl&.D Newly painted. New mu<'h . much m ore. wkdays HERE'S A PLACE TO D/W le disposal walllna Hurry. call today You GET OFF. S uperb. for your family lo ap· know J can't keep a LOW MO. Pament Randi San Joaquin con-architecturally dealgned preclate. 4BR. 2BA. secret. Assume loan.-~h~rp 3 do. Lease option at home, blended into the frplc, priva te Jard. bedroom Condo. super todays market value. tt<>loeleal wonderment many fruit tree& altd location .,,,.000 Forrenlorfouale. of STATELY TREES. Viewolthehllls.Sdl«ls . ....,.,. . SM.500 ?52-!Al SANDY BE ACH & A motivated. $'19,900. ifJJlfiiS~)Wrl· · 'Rfia· . NEW Uni• Pk Peters NEVER ENDING VIEW ~CtM11S~ .....,... 71 ooo 11::.... OF THE OCEAN le ~oo.,i!f.ALT0"8 -·44 ,,.: ~· Twntlm 2Br, 2Bi, wet CATALINA ISLAND. E3C:::::..._4584 ~~~~~~~~~ bar frplc din rm bst loc D d ll ood SPANISH WALLS $88.750• ownr640""'26 te~~~l.e lo:ated on ~:; M.w,.,.t lteclt l0'9 OCEAN SIDE OF ~· ••••••••••••••••••••••• This one is for the de· --------•! • ""' corator. Custom hom H W Y • , W I T Jt IY OWMIR w/ separate area for 918 D£ll PATHWAY LEADING Bayfronl #8 Collins Ilk. swimming pool. entire TOTHEBEACH.Unique Trade or fina nce . r ard cnclo!.l'CI. Absolute· It's a big 4 bedrm + den 3 bdrm. floor plan has $298,000. 6?3· 1110 or I'' SUPEll upgraded. home andwhen you seett rustic liv. rm. with 10 558-8723 d~ Ir h you'll say "it's a dear·. FT. HIGH CEILJNGS•--------- 1 ea ort cexcc. There hasn't been such OF OPEN TIM BERS, HAlllOllYtEWHOMI un ideally located a EXTENSIVE USE OF Original Portoflno WF S T SIOl: REALTY INC 648 :?J2J decorated ho.-on the COLORED GLASS Model. 3 Br. 2\.'I Ba+ ma r ket for quite SKYLIGHTS. Massive bonusrmw/loflbdrm& somellme. Let's m ake a brick fireplace w/ornate (ull bath, air cond. deal-call hood. Center stairwell Spanish tile, pool, lotll or ll-4 c..,.t h a s a n t i q u e brick work, new l~CP· lte .. ten lll-1310 CATHEDRAL WINDOW lnG +much more .. Glen Mar Beautv ~~~~~~~~1 OF STAINED GLASS & OPEN HOUSE 'l ~ CRYS'l'AL. approx. 100 SAT&SUN l1·5ouPfl. Super added f a mily WOODlltlDGE yrs.old.Atrulygourmet 1824PortSberrletd Dog-Bone Afghan! Ho Waist Seam! room, 3 bedrms. l o/4 Warmington Model B kitchen w /ELEC . FeeLand S1~.soo baths. Neat as 3 pin, townhome. Xlnt location. RANG E le SEL F By owner (71.f) 998-22:21 mature landscap ing. Choose upgrades now. C LE A N . 0 V g N ., S6500 Down will handle. Call Steve, <2U~1068 ·DISHWSHR .• CUISINE THE COVE Co~y up· o" cold d<1ys or niahts with this aretr1n l.ta•c lhe family happy' Com. llinc 3 bualtt colors for lhr~ fringed t>uut11 Oog·bone moll! Is 111 u~1 11b double crochtt of l\il•lhng wo"ted. Patte1n 7123: di•tellons Sf ,ot for Hell oattetn, Ad4 35<' each pattern for l11st-tlass a1~il and llandtrnz. S111d le: Ahc~ 8100ks Nee<flecrall Oepl 105 Oa1ry P1101 Boll 163. Old ChelSH Sia New Yori! NY 1001 I Prin ~aine Address . Z 10 Patt~n Numt>er MOU lhlft mr btrorel 20C ::!'"J&,"1 g~:1TrfC~~-'h CATM.OC! Has mrylhlnc. 75t Crfdtet wlttt S.Oru Sl.10 ~' • Wtf'41ttk Sf.00 lllfty Jiftt Oullt1 ~ 1..00 Rlp,lt C~tl SI.GO Stw .i.. llnlt kolt SI .2$ Wu41epclnt ltd SUIO Flo1Hr Cmllct looll S 1.00 Mtlr,le Crec"'t looll . S U t l11tltllt Cnc:fltt IHll SIM lttst111t fOcflMt .. " f' ·" t1st111t Me11t1 19" • • . l.00 Ct11111ttt Cir( 19" 1.00 C.111111t'9 ••• ttc "·DO JHrln A~Ht ''Z _soc ,.._ .. tltelltl lf .. 501 .,. .. Mt .... n __ so fl t.i1t1 ftr Tt*J !3 ..SOt IMt•f 11 mtr~ ., ---'-----'---! 5Jl·S800 or <n.f >S52-4090 CENTER. Lower level h•ter_..OMI lell featUttS 3 bdrma. & 2 &tet• Hetworta baths. Mlitr. bdrra. suite "CHAMCaLOll'0 with MASSIVS OLD IH.cedTltoustlitds UMIY.ftAlllC ADOBE FIREPLACE, Mesa Verde Your ~hance for a "Newsboy" Bayfront award winning condo. With 4S • boat slip •t door. $220,000. Owner 640-8161 . Owner Is s1ashlng the Jluntlnaton Landmark Walkins d ista"ce to ELEGANT BATH HAS pr1re on this executive Condo. adlts over 40, 2 market, bus. school5, HUGE SUNKEN TUB. ~ ..... An9 home on the .:oil cour~e ! br. 2 ba. custom decor at· pools and park. This well db I . p u 11 man. a 11 Tustift Ir 2Jr4 SL Proressionally groomed ed. prv patio & ldry built Plan 111 needs a lit· lavatory &: bath trim are Lovely 3 BR honM w/3 yards. handsome decor beaut grn belt area. all tle TLCbut .. it's theonly ANTIQUED BRASS. fpl cs. Deeor•,or In r ich tones and lex· rec rac, available early Chancellor home avaita· Perfect blending of wallpaper " mirrored lures. 4 bedrms. ru 11 Dec. Shown by appoint. ble. Don't be an trry ... act casual elegance for doors. Side ' yard offers sized dining. Gourmet Owner $46,500 . Call now before the January St5t,OOt boat/trlr par1clnc. Oweer kllchen. family room _SJ6_.1_1_n_. _____ -1 lnc~ases go Into etrect. MISSION llAS.TY mowing north. wants with raised hearth. BKR, Time Is money and this 3 9855 ,,.._H L quick sale. r~11 for .. __.. ~all ""0 17"0 · ...... ~ wy., aguna ..... •rr , .,.. · .. . bdrm., 2 bath hom~ is ,..._ 4f4·07J t 645-7221 TRRBIU. $7900 DOWN wottJt conslderint . Century 21 "WesttUff" 2 bedrm, Townhome wit MYSTIC HtUS 11r .. CH -.1.4HT' t W d 3BR. 3BA, sauna, •iew-~ w-. ..., new crp s. ne rapes Highly up•rd'd b'"'ach "#I t. Calif.,.ttio" t T .. Vlew·View! Great exec. u ... new pain · aae ove home with man1 cstm Professionally lndi.cpd .. charming 3 Br, 2 Ba home. OPEN HOUSESUN t0·3 l''llA loan & owner wll ~~~~~~~~~I :f:'-r:o1 $1$9,900. Agent, features. asking sn.500. help finance. 1331. pe ---------I Aat.631-3900orMG-14l• mo. int'ludes all. 1.16. " FUii price. FOR ~mu&\.\.. MIWr<>IT SHOUS 926W. WilsonC.M. 147·9632 Rick 531·5800 SPECTACULAR WATHFltOMT 1 .. t.r...tlot1ll .... $72.500 WHITEWATER VIEW ... richt o• lhe bum. EASTSIDE & .... ...._.,.. .. you get 3 bedrooms • 2 and ~·acious living are Two-story 3 bedrQOIT'l.2 I~~~~~~~~~ tun ~ths . powder room yours In tbla stately 3 bath, lots or paUo &c deck· ()pen Hse Sat/Sun 1 ·5 Choice 3 Br. bigh beamed ceil's , large y ard. Ne wly rmld. S69.900. Own 645-0785 flteNace . family room . Bdrm. home. Large ln1. Owner a ndoos coty offic e . pantry ramlly room & richly ap· $95.000. Call PRES'MGE bteakrast bar . sundeck. pointed formal livina HOMES. 645·6646 and low maintenance room. Huge lot for pool.•--------- yard. Call to .iee ! . guest home, ete. 1156,000. By owner . $Br. 38a. din· ~fESA Verde 3 br. 2 ba. den. By owner. f'rin. on· ly. $86.900. Art 7PM SS?-7243 HOLIDAY HOUSE 1026 Autumn s hades o ••••••••••••••••••••••• coordina ted decorato Oc•en View o_,lea reatures. lnspiraliona Hr o .... Pt. Marina pattern& o r dealQne 2 Years new. 2 Bed· wsllp•pers. Sunshln rms. den. p ,4 bath5 , garden kitchen. family rtrep(aces. s pal'ious. rm w /cozy fireplace $112 500 formal DR. Collec D-.ftoint tt523 C'AMM~IRYM OPENDAILV IA.M. TO•P.M. . . 961'4451 W...W W1• lrohrs FOUMDIO .. I '75 .. YlllSATll.L ..... ,n.4s•s n 1 11b The sump's 111ut •r/ 1011 Ne wer 3 bdrm. La .. OOf'pan; rary,sew· /'\JEUJEL. 'L ' ' ,, .. l t ,. , , '·I I •J --- ..,/O/an REAL ES lAlf IJU\) ( .1, ,, tt',,. .,, J•l·l '<I\' ,1-. •Ill H•avelllv A new. athhln&led'home neiUed on I heavll~ wooded,lot. a 8R. RocnM tubs. loft, d k.s. 1159..s<'IO little girls to ~oo. sklo and • LOT • Over 10.000 Sq Cuesta. inland near Mall Ing rm .. music rm .• of. go 11110 1917' Whip up lone rt . Good commercial Vaulted cclllnirs. plus nu or bdrm ... take your and short vmron '" wtlrte location for stores & of. c a r p e t l n a . b r I e k choice. but come see thi1 ._ ___ _. ___ _ polyu1er knit or tollon lllend lice bldgs. $7$,000 rlreplace. earth tones beautifully lndscpd. le lnJ/den, xtrH. RV ._ boat storage. S41·316S. (JOAHIAOt FALLIMLOft •tr'"'" •A pride of ownerslJip nelghbottlood •Quality coristructlon •A low tuUlc street •4 sp:adous bdrm$ •A lovely formal dining room • •A s raelous llvhui rOclrn Vllltl!_t flrJplace.-.aod ROOM fOR A POOL! PHONE for 11'1 appolat· menl to see a 1peclal B11crest home .a t 1154,000. -checks. print sohd1 J y R l Nice 1 y d 0 n e w It decorated 4 <or SI bdrm .• 'r•nled P11tern 9216· C~1~ ay't,Ceats H~a ty lands"a,..d Y•rds. A• Sballl ...... thendttlde. k & .. ~ drtn s Siles 2. 4 6 8. 10 Sue 3t7Vll', oa&t wy ' ,.. 18$ llOO , 6 "'" I'. y11ds 4S.11'1<n So. u~ui4a 499.2237 sumable VA loan! Cal • T.LC. I 00 f t collect! 981-44~ Srnd i . or '"n O'I er11. C H N ... has ,_... '-to ma .. lnc Add JS<' ror facfl oatttrn fcr ustom ome ear V1"' m ,. • lirst·t lau alrmai1. handHna M:arina. 3 Br. F /R, DIR, swa MEAT lhlu home )'OU'll be pro· UNIQUE ,... ... n --~;:.;· Ma'M ~.1$oo. 5s~ t:W:lr~r~~; :~';;a2d!1· :::=i :' ~~:.":,~;.~! Archlt~llraliy de.lined ELUXME 2 br. 1 h tt. £ond · ..,/O/an RlJ\L ( ', lt,Tf ,I\., I I ,, t •,, ~ J l • • I ... , '' Pa1t1tm Dept, 442 W7·8957or <1>998·11~. covers " lnttrlor . 3 home ruturtna belm do . o•e n eo.,. . o1,1vp,10, , ... ,..Y .. •y 101_.. Bdrm .• 3ba., Unlvenlt)' cellinfa, llle e ntry. w/lot.ga 11traa. "3.~ 23,, ...... '. h s N "' ... .. Park. MD.800 sk)'li"h\, <treat \IUll , 3 Call ror appt. ~·-' .. ,,si .,, t ew • •• •• •• • • • •• • • • •• • •• • • • • • ProPer\)' Hou11e vor~ NV 1001 1 Print Smart & Modern, 3 Br. ~ bdrms.$112.000 NAME ADDRESS ZIP Townhome with view. 8"1M 1044 552·70 Br 3 83 on water;~= S I l E 1 a n d S T Y L E Sh I $97 "00 •3" NUMBER. Prime F V. location. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Suf:ir ~ean le Coastal r • •" • • •\o,l. D tM IM t t SSUOO. Agt. 963·6'767. RANCHO SAN J OAQUIN THE v ewsi spacious 3 BR. 2 ~jb·hb:!:"':~·o"tolocn: ,!ttr,: free~ se!1 ~:•ft~ TRVTH!SON 3 Br 2.,.. Ba. popvlar Son Vlll Ba hi ltop ho!M. 194.900. MU2lt • ., ... r111<Wlllttr htttf" .. fORLUXURY•• Lula Rey. Many u p REALTORS SUbmllolfen.4~2109 1--------- CetNf-tll• CffJt• lwill• ''' .vv., J •cuzz1 2000 grades. View golf course ....,._•LO I •y HIAa THI OCIAM •-· .. f .... le •vvv -" -It lake. SllS.000. $41.104 ~ .._ ..... ,. ... "' • 1"" ,,... • sq. H . decorat ed to or833·...,1S BRA.'110 NEW Turtlerock Custom 3 Br. 2 Be, .. m s .. 1 u, 111w! --OCIAM SIDI ... 20 ooo 1 U Stw .i. Kftlt "'~ It JS perfection. cathtdral Glen Plan Ul. completed ·~-.... 92 1 rm.... . ease op on ll11tallt ... ,..., Cutts 1.01 C:Cllll\1.1. custom drapes. NEW Univ Pk Peurs Nov. lS. Choice view lot. ..._ ..... SI • 00 °'offer. 645·::018 O'#ftW ht1t111t ,..,. ...... k 1.01 IH BBQ. auto. 1ar dr. Twnhm 3 Rr 2'.\ Ba On 1reenbelt .. 4 Br. Fam 18rat~n(or48rl,8ba. •f· hlsttllt S.wl• tHa suo Unbellevable, S98.SOO. popular C Plan. Xlnt loc. rm. Ubtary, din rm, 2 s., White wate.r view. 8y•-..._------,- Ph: ~·7151 $98.SOO. 5 47·7044 or puwder rm, club priv. owner.C11114!n·2124orlrsELL ldl• lte~•"•ii .. a INT'L R. E . ~ETWO RI\ 1133·3215 1129,*· Ownr. 144.o688 no ans SU·ll4S Dall)' P11ot ClasslWl\d. ..... r. ••••.. ..,,,_ .. J~:':'t"•#>/~ •r.1 •"' H ... ~I r I I • ••••• •••••• •••f'• ···~·· flf' #••• ••••• •• ,, ·• I .. ~ . • I ..-.,.. • ••'i , ,I . ., • \.,.... c .•• I I .... v,, •'"' •.. ( • ; .. . • , . • .• •• I .. •• • • • ~' .u ... l&..&...Lt•••· A1A R _ _._, •• ' .:Id I • Wldiaadey. N°"mMir 10,.18'11 , 1 _uww~--.. ApOr led&ldl·~· • ~c• --• .. ti.II • ~n~lda. ~ovember tO. ,978 OAtLY PILO?.. •. • f ~Avr-I _. • • • f ••••••••••••••••••• ,... , ......... ~ ... ~ ........ ,, ...................... ,. J ' ~ 1'I c j AIA • • ~·· ,_...,, ..,,_."' ...... '-.hh <WW.:' ,.,.. .....,.,, °""""' · ~ ,.,.o ~p0rtl'e~h .Jin 1 PRl-LOCATIO~ hio.u . . . Lod Ii.found 5300 enono11 ... .... "f!··~····•·····-· ................. ,~···· . .:. ... ,.~········-·---. , ... ,.~r·•r··r··"~~ ...... -......... ~ ••• :J. 10-i *posune. ~••rt Opportunity soos ······~················ ···············i-&••&l•r · Ni.,.,. hedt 37 6f sto M~o • 3124 C9itCl.Mtto ll'H J.JtU l t'l•ttMr. ll~S. ~y • • ~· , ~. ,~ "._.,,.ffSc ~nty d t•••••••••••••••••••'~ ·)roONo Wht s.1moycd AIORTIOM ~1l4 • ••-~N••••••n••n•• ............................................... IHc.:f'rile I''\'• ' • •OEL.U ?' '• ~ Qft &~•i.t ' JrOeplOutlc\ lQro "' \11c l.ag !111,ucl Coun!leUn.1i!&R1i!tlc.-.I • . • • DD&-..rH NCMI l\l.Jln HcntJl:I, :'>-ao·5370 E;:ii.t~u(C 3... r. ~~ ~·A•~•ata an Hu~ Id I r l N J ' . c;u;:..i220. t'rc•· k llt-avail ' ~ bn wlnlAll\ ren~l S300 DnlV"".., a;,'"' r::: -· LA>~~l' l.o.ol ~~ot" lfl .,. • "9..-V . t!J or t'OUl,ll l' • · cu "' : .1... s;h3) «$-"6:J o. 1213; • ·" • • 1' Jl"° 12 .br:l, J;JrJgc, pool. suitt< rlin. rn); & 11 Bnch.1 l\~pr;umotc y !SlOOO ('}~. ~n1uoo fuH .FOUND pnrt Siatne~e l ~lrllelphne~.r· ! ~"'44.3 . • --It -~~ U~d-lok r1.'<: ~arttJ(e, Au.Lo cruur ·~· ~~~11M?.,;'Mmo ,pnci•"!Wh Mb),s. Aat. wtt old kitten. Vu: C.M PREGNAr'nD~ fLytrontluxury2br,2 ba, ~ il.1111: -tn~~sco.mo oi>l•ncr uv:111 .• Pool L .t!.rrl'~tr . 'iftJ:'..,;m-o r< 'Sum 1111:t.6l.5"1l'l0 • Paf-lt.'919-2520. C11r1n1t conf1'dn•~ pvt c:Jub. Ref~ruce• ......,~on· ::.~rct11)«~ -0r~:a.: /\IJukw GM~b'T. · • Pino & SCMdwlc1t r'OUNl)' Wris twa trh counseling & "•'*r~i; Avail Nov. l,COf .l Dljl • !-~ It H.~r · 3142 Y.J'!f> pelt-. . I $2000. mthly nel Vic. Balbo:i Pier, 1''rl l\bortion, udop,t ... ~.~ • 41 , • ' ' LI~ t••\o.J ..... , .... :•u••• ~J\muoii Way • IGre itl So-.Lh Orange J.~.545·2277\plQl:flllly kct1)mg. '· l:t · , Nt.'f.;i Dr 2 B1! i.;oo'dt'I ~· anai.~ b~ County l~t\l!M. St'Uls 48. ---• --APCAUE •n!~ciltftONTJ ~for Stroll thf p.,,hways c>f l'I ptne for~t. Me.>11dl'1 P<J~l.4 , IQ t(•ni\li;~ l\00~·~ J:lt'ur..tl. GT(l~djl, ):m CQ'.. 1-\r!lt <.-la~st 1·11rms. IJBI, FOUND:, Old Engl!sh --~--.,.....,... k •aijlts, $225 tno. tumbling wa1erfall$ <in~ quiet f)6ols. U..111t to th~ ~!lo 9Ul! !5700 C''~. • , Nwprt Shores 2 br a ~ij. 751 :ncl • I She~p doi; puppy ~r Snn vi. 6 S.3824 sound of bub\>llng $treamsM~;:CM>'l~9 thin~. r Irvine j~~4 '~~q1~:~~~~\-~R1~" .. ' . !coff~~Shop 5'12 Davs ~~le;~:•le Hoy$ C lub. 'rbur adult Zll).lrll'l'lCnt hqnl(I JI I inecr~k Vill.ige ts •O••••••••••••••h'•.._• ~ · &; , 1 $SOU() ~·r/mo ·~ a,tOtul l'f\le~ lilere you <;..Ill t'll)<>y unusual privacy • ' ' Rancho~ , 8racb.~Yiferl.y' ·: .1 •. ; IY:i Mite 'frQm b~acti•, and luxury • Joa~n',j.pt1. , . .-3 hr, l iar.,..,lc. v· :t 1 'need5 tcnd~loving care.: · • ' R I ~ ..,..,.. 6'16·9218 ·~· ~ Terms UlU 751-374 1 A RECREATION PARAOlS)::. TIM.~ tenrns cour1i. " 1·nr nir om '"""'· -.-. . . I t 'i' " t mm1 I plu~ u111Qi11c1 voile~ poo~ Jaouul.' . Adult· apt~. :asrng 'pre· SOR.Cl.._nt~ • , .• ~7 . j Beer'T~ef.n-C.M. n4t poo vu!w' now b u. pr~iltl~e •--..l"t"·~·,•,.•t..,,.•t•t .. .,.... · .--~ + P /Mo ~ndvoll~llcourt.Mpuntafl'llodye dubtMHbfl llnin\: t•ommu'f\tly Wl-'LT• ""·'"'A""E.R: y ! 6°'P.~"'U' N b. _,. i .. f ,_ ,. nit'th 11· d n'tl • . . c· . • ' ~"'"'.. • u. ,, ' ..,. • .... . 0 neur y ..... mpcl1t ()fl, • ·~*t••t"81-0tl1 ~h· 1repioce.CQnversa ic>n,,..il-' 1ar S,!:?t'fll.SdU, . I 'l!wi.:nly·Pc~gola ~ . uher garden seU.ihg. fge•2 rsr. ,~&1.fW·~. ~ ~P· ~pr1v1tll' office, lutche11 $'hlaO'tlse. ~ It bcb. F Hurry to the good hJ't .mi:l thl!rfrekix . . of San D~cgo lrl ~>'· M'Gl'q UitJI: ~42. ~'"'' ~ I • •< r75J.Jf41' f'OlJND: Puppy, parl Terrier, vie. 735 .Joann ________ ..,. .St. C.M. Apt 3 f14CH~•l8J Tirtldof "BoobT l''OUNO: L~t>malodog, golden rel. tyl)I:!. llarbtV1r,(..,'l\1642·2170 Dull'· Parly·'l'ake EVEFOTO l>iC'~~~du~· FOlJNl>: Lri;: ""l bird Sun 834·023f, R34· "' :• ,..~ , ___ 2_nm·8prn. 1 .,. ,u.)• 1 , Nov 7, vie Method1s1,_ ,. . ., -~ .• !.<. C hur c h, H e l l & ~!it · IHoufiteepi~Sb are . • '4-~~11d~rg. 2 bl!S\:ks so. ad11.S. $263 'JnO .• 245 \Y . •,' AG1 . ~41~. J • a\ :iii Ciood ~rm£. lJ lll. ~21~~ 613· d .. y$, fROM $265 TO $355 ,. • : • ~1100 "'*~-. ,, ..... I... j FOR L ASE .__ ___._ _________ _ --r ·· ... ...t... R 1 • ' J, ' •' • • ' • .l •Ot:t:ICIS ' ' S ..-a-S • ., .. ~ . Including Heat & vv~er . .'.,.,Lease .:'quired. ~V{~Olli pt:~ ' . OCEANl-~RON1' Juxur1n 2 f ., • w~'"3 ~·ice-LOST • at J oily Ro~cr . GokiNJwesl. 842-8518. * KAREM1 ~\ltl,'1., Ol!l'CAf.L MASSAGt t3PM 2AM 1780 area. winter S32S·"5Q. \.....IJ.~ lM>~mornT ... 11B.i1h ,I. 2 & 3 btlro1 ut\Jts. t<r.i;wi:iStio.~.~ P'tf\ee2STA .~ffl;Sl'1.6f'J n~J·s ·. •..-'le lnet.otil,gal"&laundry lJOOAd<Jrns·A~ ~1Costa Mesa J)"t.'ugo"d hl<e u rJy ' ''"· "•• j ,52.11oq. < q\MMLOn~ {.gabl;antv.bch.llest ~ Ond~oorr1.0n<>&lh PINl'..SA P'r5.,' br den tr;;lc~prtst~ $'15SM<?E~~tt . SlOOO.monthly (N.U.) lath es tv&llL'l , fatil. 962~, 111~ w. ~ro:.s fr6qi 0tra~' Coost ColleSc 4;i.IJ1forn1a buni:ulowll Ocean •Jew, -11e d~ekd~~::;;;::""iiliJiii!iP.1 d!IJ1~1\. , ~, Ba!aoa Bl. '--··-· u~.1.-F t-• r o.:rn ~2 7·0 . 1 ~ 5 br, 1 ba, -,s2~·mo. ~(l • 1;..:.~_,;g....,.,.._"--...;.~~'"11~~'"'1-;r--1f-1t-I Ot'UM'e~ ,_..,.,t . <11New. l'me,,tone. Ofc hr5 \J·5 .30 6pm. 496·~31··· • · • llt!lll'tif -I .Mu uel------_...;-~- 1 ON THE BEACH . C7Ml 540·1300 \ .. ' V' v.!)<<bys, 9 s·30 w~nds. c:_ ..... L ~•a• ' ~ 1'~ m:d ' at.Cat : ~ ~ ~. SUI$ ' •'·I ..t :'>S2·o400' -CICJl"l9 '· •• • . A.,.~~~~~: i]' ~~~,,.~I Endoymut & • .,,.,..~~ ."~~tl!, ,~~~r.:.J~· ~til t " .... -................. ~ .. -oo ' 'ICHt'l!l"I ·-Pr tr. f!?S _!l} ' ~ osto Mesa 38.,.\ Costo)ll~b 3824 rrowntiomu 2 br Z \x.1 l.g~. qui~l. 1· ' .. u· n·ous' e_.· · ~.000 or submit. UBI, ~T r b k t Bl reparation· • " 4 ~ u... ,. J.SO 1 W I. llill) rom as c . u~ ••••••••••••••ri•l • <"Oi'!anwlMS9~Jrbf·S?2ti. ~ ............. _,~.._ ... 0\,•.••·,~~·r .... , .... P<>o!. OKA . ..i~9w.·S:lf5 Pf:. 2 J>r, 2 b~ apr, .. eSJcun r. '"41 •• A· ... dur0y ~laclt5, plml Schools& ·},~ · • Utit pd. f'ee Main l\eo-• G(lAHD OPEHl~G , rt~ lrulflll• (;ml. SS2·0 :l> t:!e~itt<?r t~~~f'nlt:._pffl, N•wport F111~nctltd <..'lr • • • • LAIJ\.U>llO MAT • blouse: Reward. u...5-sq,.4 lnstnlction 'f'!Y. 5 ,·'81s,541-537o ~ ' ~··lfot'.J.bw VILLAGE ' ~l .• , J ~' •' • bCb P ar.ty r.atn~r~. LeasS~~eSpace "r'"'"'"'".1'"".010. Please IH'e'tp . Los t ••••••••••••••" ... -·~~·· .• .,~ ..... tt.;i;;oN· T 1 Dr a~. ~ .,..><z'· .. ' v ,1.J • • ,i L~I sPt. .rld:~"Jwrn~ · Calton Sile Manager 1 ~ -,,_.,., _ ~ nv ttEFRH~t · '-1.I l' 3~~'2 ua. "'''· T' or >V!lnd relteUl Ml' the t'7l4)'642-:nn ellt 2M , Out!>'t~nd1ng ~rouble fre~ Wirehair Fox Terrier, NJ 15{ I util pd,'yrly ktlch & lctAWtto1f'W;t S'A'r &:SUH • .uu~ lridry.~ro. ~. WJ •. 114vent~"Nf~tt~.j§l~.. loc. 32 Was hc.rs, 12 llei ge m a l e . Ans to IEA .'1 (,..J;' -.. ~r.ly .. SlAiO. 6'{3·12'{1, ''S..C..:-Mo-DfpOSit.cii941 ' . Av.:nll!Qw . .&:IB.~•"'7i !~o.n1y.1~~4,W·m?· 1 ~n .... x101..parki11i; ... Rags". Vic nr tilth & f'~a fl "\'0 NPll ' ..... I • • .... ,. • \. ').f48 ' 5:4 • ~New 8 ~ I Ow nc~ frnlVJ D~ ()Ul or Orange, Charil's llcllcr TRAVEL Aa.nl ~ •·-~·~.·'"•....__tfr, '::1 :''., '. 377 • 8 . , .. Porqualifit<11T"."Cl!Jfs · . . .~t.~~ .... ~.~.-..... Wtslmit,stet'·~·~"Bl'ill omees with privaLe urea & fn uM sell! Goo<l P ark. C.M. k eward. ~ ...,~ Liv~ ncpt' t he -peach' tn a• sparkling. . . . . . ·•··~··•1•!~~··.•n.,.~ .. , bnths.45C:.:cot~.tuci.Jtda:s· _c_er_m-'.s .... _A~gi_._837_....-4_2 .... oo ____ 64_' _6·_7G_'7_o_a_fl_4_.____ Mornlng.An~JM·~·;., t -'-~ [ 0 · t • ......... ,, En.i....&-. f'l~w 2 br.•2u.a ba lu~1.1ry l BR Condo newly.r~c clurling utilrttes, ,:iot).tlotJ · l Evnn1'niJ! ~-Il,L . .i.r ........ ,............. ne~ OW1H~m c 0 y .u ··~.na. .,.,~ 'rn_n<lo. U\·c.-an vie.WI w.,,lk l?QOI, itatio,. gan ... ;;ict'ul,ts: ~tlnils. ! ... 1'6J\N.C4EMsNTE• OST little girl!: blk CLASSESS't'~R~.' ~. -~a~ .. coodo,-~ompletely Ar tv~cy, w oodbu~ning> .H f eplace, lo· bt:~. AU. ..apph1111u s. 00 pels. A.fl. Gpm.., R-.. M•'""~• Gjf!&Cards , 515,000 Cockapoo. No .}~Jt!· MONTH' 'ti -Isa. '9Cd ineJ, SJCM> mo. swimtning pool & Jacuzzi. Attached 1 rozs mo or c.-an lie.-furn. :>ll·6Sll.Jt~11 , , .. ,. ~--Burgers & ice cream Answers ..... T.p,.i'J o . ...~ •. ~·., · • .. 4;ell499-~i.' •' ' garage.30'bac)cy<t<L2bedroqmsJY~ ~5-446899 ' .'.~. 't:.f' ishe ~orl8iOM~port Oft0e6-M.a11 ~ S22,000 PLEA.SE\~11 8'12·.J•m. PACIFlt'.';.~7 .... ··idflfiil...... j716 baths!£:ults. Enjohy ~he tuxury. a·r ~~8¥1 .. • ' 2 q. U . ish~ n1o Costa M••Hl·7729 ::~'ft~~".f " ~.500 LOS'f;,Jtfed., ~.ar:w.:e TRAVEL scttOO\:" N•••••n••A••••••••-..• nl•who without avmg to.pwntl. ~ ••••.•~·.·~~·"..•.••,••·~·· ••'•••'•.\'T• cee~\. •• ;e•••---------"-"Patt.elttlndscu:lp-.cal, -.n.'Cd~ vicu11ty 610 Er7th St.S:~tit.·~· "Bftr't lt;t 06 the otean. flett CJU~; . for I YHr J\aoqrai\\1c ~O:lM;YU 2 'Br ';Q-1"'!.fjrhl-lG " l OM 350 10•1020 SQ. fl, lur<' . ~ S25,000 640·0090or673-4572 50-66~ 1'(~11~ • • . iftin. f704l.i .. nfdm SLJOO. • COtilQQ 1' l..i~11m. Pool~ v · • AIC. ioewly ~orated. Crlhhed and cubed LOST male Co.&.~le-I · • "' I rt• ... I 621 Vf. •Costa Mff• rec ~rn ,ii.Ct ric. l sl PALM M A'.APTS. Masters, Br)(r,6'f34100 ' S34 n50 • "''"' " Accrcd1led by :5fS' &Ola secu .... e tvalors, 64%-4991 • • • · Vi)lagl'.' Adil:'. $JSS )(;IN\JTEB.f-0 {llffi' lt'C~' . ·"' · • • 0 11 ndol p h • •• w a II EstabhshedJ , · raclllties. 499 '\;.4(1. (6-U & S.iH 2873 1 • , .. BCH.. l{ You Nl-cl A Stalf\d 4c B.f:lR'I'HAli t;N RY answer tJ> a whi&ll .. Vic. Financial Aid P.'t 1 t :11.-taoictt Costa ..,_50 J•24 ,._'w.0• Me"'a 31~4 ,, .. ". r -.. . • a. aehiU;2Bll. Furnished omc~. call REALTOR&· 4~2-4121 Wll5'>n &. V1ctor,a. CM.l~~~~~~~~e ~ ._ '" ,..~, ~ ' , ... _.. ___ ., 7 b'om~i THE EXE "U""IVi;-21SDelMar,SaoClem. S25.Rcward.&16·237~ I· .......... ~ •••••••••••••••••••••••"'••••••••••••••••••-..,_. • .-,...... a .1. . . w ,, 'Ii' ••••••••••••••&e•-.••••• · . · B '1-••••• 1., •• J.''''~••••••• nd~ o.J>et~ SUITE. Henl includes • IE A BART..._ l. ~~.1--..1 .,806 Adult E·s.1.de 2 r •• e!',1 PA.J:l ,.,EW O~T ... -.Uel;'!tesaIDrt · •. ~ tf1urm:n reecpt., J>honet ~ COROHADiLM.AR ROEOGWASRhDep/1'CoOlltl'1eLrOeSmT, -..'' -'h°' g;.1r, pallO, frplt'. t.i)l1• KK" ·K (SB~-EastoC'N-l t .. 1-'ull orPart·l'I~· •. •• ••• ,y..~-..\\i...... oew. N'f pt:t~. ~:i:; APA.RTMEN'S · BlvdJ ---r-• .!'11 ~.cr1tce~.u 1 .Gift, & decqr:,itrve ::ic· ''Queenie'', lie. (00272~>. Be ready to wdtld '''·' . vRl. Y l br .,.rear '.&u~l «>W-<>A78 • 1 ... '""d .. nd• ..r . .! t: JaTutCX'lal. &Icy :. & ofr cl.-!\i.1>ries stfel)f>l'. Reat'ly v 1 c S un f I o w c r & profc s o ... , ba----"-c .,se . Net.\ far1:"· l 22S.' · . • · .. '. or·rC:n~:~~~ r _...... 646 !MJ · · ~ 1 equip ~'·:.i t'!. Newporl tu' r'r1:1ke h'lt>ncy. ~.~ + Smailey. C~t 557-6168 1 wc;k'. ~ee j;b'.;ti;;.{'.' •1 2f·~.. , , '1 3.!~.;~~·cmh~d.[,,~~.~!i.~~, 1 J-"romSJ:ll.60 R~ .•.• 40QP .center 6-I0·547o Jh~~lblllYI .Tak~over l'Ql· LOST S -1-mcnt ass1slance. ,,~,. ~..,.""' · · -r """"" ' · Open 9 6 U1111&t . •-.••·t~··•,••··~,., ..... P.laz:n..t:xccul.lves ~1tes tTK.'u•a e Y· • F1 me11e £a e · America_n Bart~ ltll»ooPettipuld 3107 540~~ · • ·• ·: Spa.Pools.'llln1US • noo~1s "'"'5 .......... !n., ... t.,h 125G't"· fl view ore . .All BAY & BiACH wl(l~a <'= · l aJ: School'·: .. }.,) ··1·· ·-~-~···:::~~'c;:~t_,.~~: PIHECREElt 2 St apt siro. C.M . .t' 1tr ·Mross from' !"u~~n k,•tC'hen: .... S40Utt"';,k~p 9erVl;s. A!rpoct Towur REALTY 675-3000 w/C.M. Ml . W•/?A; 1104E.17lhSt_.'&;\·. -"' UVES UP apt W/.Rar;ige S2 l5. •N.'H lslllnd al. Jamb<*llO ·oo ':ipls'. 5-ll!-9755 or 6~:.31l;.,... ,f>l~a... '2082 M iehelson, ~'.~!:r,7~18s'1C:; 834·1000: : f. -l.:·~ !I~ o W.,P;i,ll><lll~~l JO ITS .... A .. E For details call 5·1&-ti6¥ SM\ Jooqwn lltlls. Jto•.1 ~ . . ': " '·" Irvine, 752·0234 ' 531·34.----------.-llr.I· ~Af /OWnc ...., .., or Eves 557·ll97~'A~. 'f714J644·f90C>" Wrk~,£.em,.Cbn1>l1aq. k1l ..,.......,---,~ . "" ' ov,•r soo tutlt\',.~·stlnd l _? ___ ._ • ' .~"l'l• • .... 1,, ,,.,, pr\rl ~r.:!tcPs tobc;t\.N.B. TOPLOCATIOHS ;\~'FILlATE Jobs Wanted. ···•.W! 'NBlll' wetcT. Sl75. Utll. Pel. .sLn•iirns "•l~\w;iLcrfalls " ~ • \ . • ii. . _SJ50. ti7~· l3WJ ~5·2Z'l:l Jta~r .irca's best. !IHI SE~Ot,ilD ' ' FOUND Wirehaircd Tcr-............... ,.""""if' Stv &refrig. Fee 1:1'<.'<ttl' a t'l•hix 11~ :-elltn Dona ro••' . lu2ll •• •• 'Fe 600 sq fl l''l-MY\. SMI rier, S1lvcr /1?r:,y, Costa MALE NUHSE, aVl!d~~ll Maio Renlall;, !'>40.S:nii tor \'Our· .spa<~io11s n<'W l •••••••••••••••,••••••• llOTEL.k'.p~ffl~I .h~~· RE'AL(lNOl\ff<.:~'. Coiil ., , • • INCOME! ' ' _Mesa. Call 645 7544 pnvalc duly. L;lt'l.' 'ci4#Jk Coi-onadelMar 3812 or l l.it•tlrouni .ipa.rt· Ex, I&~ 2 h_r. 2 ba, frP.I<: ~w\!~ ·Pt ... ·2.'J Gor Brokl·r-.. 675b'700 ·Pt•rtr toll tnnc·manai.!c· FOllND llo '· l;lii;,; n 4 ing & hs kpg, !.~eh . •• .._J.";'9t•~·,i'~••••••••• llH' 0 1 s Jo' r tJ m s2 10, dr<'~s1ni: rm. A<Jult!> + 1 645-000:1~tg._!h:1~ mt•nt bu:s .. ur ~our own. . >" Y s ,.,,. i I 4!Hi·7G,15 ii/ • .., Furniture .J\JllJlJJe. t~~na~ttr. Froni $ZR5 .,. ... · h,. · ~ . -~ ,.:, ! 11 Fa:shlcJn Isl. H t~ rlo111'. Nol•x'pl'r rcq~com1,lete ~~a~o!a :rr~ct. Junl . , ~>..' I ~mall pl'IS llK Adll\L$ Olis & ~\'Ul"r pd. 49g.7379 ~ \..C Ccnl.ral ~g u.n ~. ·~ r. ror.~•suitc. ~pact lrl'Ut;1r '.tra1nmi; + xlnl llll'llffiC. Bch. 962·J668 afl 5 BOOKK EEi E R;. O'ltP\:(f '. ;~. ... _.. I only. Oflic~ ol)t•n !1.l1U \o -;------...__ • , ::i.aH.::t lx.t t'On<lvf.Wll ·~~~· u~~~ait~tocr.•fo ot·e?n/~ln v1e-w. l d~al l.!''tci.:troeQJ.· <l'le1:ured ~ FO.UND small mixed, ~u·llt ·char~e. thrd t11t.a I. ___ · __ • {, 1N) 23(1<1 Fain ·icw R'\ SU NY Spttious Jn~ '" l SEA WIND CONDO AM aft 5 PM 494.1g;rz (qr 2 or 3 mun (1rm L<4W Cull culled Mr. Ame:; t)e1gedog. Short, f;1 l. llas a a n c e • SSOO m l /;:IT-. ~ Coi.ta :'11 csil. Phon :SO!l~n;9/~~tn ,~ic~ 2 nR .den 2bnS46Q,. :. · 'r'"'··· . ., •"fl.: ·~.iJ~~15<1Ze(o~ Ol \al l. t2l.3)64(Hl.ti25 blkonstomach.645·0!><1!1 5464650 , ,,,, 1.. , · :;.is 230e · · , .IA laU:)hlT HOME lcepuu:. 9_t~ ~ -~\.1!..< ~·· F d . A 11 h . l Secretary. good"S T I ' ':00ft6HA l>EL M/\R ll Pffr+o Mese '&<ud\o· 1\pl. Newly de. 3 Bti. 2 ~"· S2000 Moyrly Q~;i ·~~ s~~k~:!Yllh~ Cll:'l1 dlx suite's rrom $150. : • RESTAURANT H~~k~/Saotoyc..'<I ~c~3l~ ini.? skills. X.lnl'v-' ' ; ~~w Crlllr 'orated, SIW. l!JJ·Oli!l o1 SfMJS TO BEACH pets. '.Qicrc,( lad~,'C> Pi~r. Ul1I inc Id .. (\ t C, nkg, M1:;siot1 \'icj~ area d.og . M <!~a V e r de. ~1na .. c~~~~u4n9d3.'n1'~1s~-rs -Pool.~ c~nl•nlal 28EOROOM ~IOQ769 . 21\fl..2balhs.Slll0 G4i-Sus· • "' Jamlor675·WOO Evening only oJ')Cration. 549·3579Arter5:JO _ .. _._.,.,_ .. __ .,_-;-a~~ ~~~ Soyne ~"itn & .tJs.e I .. ,. '-" t)l\1 V16w. Ne~ 2Br, 21ia -': ' ~h 1 l I l;rosllc:; Sl3.000 mo. .;,,\ t 'I Hefp Wonted ·~· I CAtaJina ~e't"S. Close to t\11rh1ldrco. aopet.o tHD c;.n: gar. S37:ii ppr mo Hotels. Motels. 4HJO , l' '~s .sf'a.ce . n O\\ncr rct~oing *U> FOUND:. Catf a I white. •••••••••••••••4• • sl)O\)pbli l ftne beJC'h l'ool & ltl'Crl'Jllon ti•l.5titi6 or .J!l:l 'i"i<US! ••••••,e•• ......... ._ •• ••• i'\~ari nHs M 1lc Squ:i.ri: .. 1-'rp.Hl<'l' an~ ,i~st sefl. small. vie Son ta Ana lits. · ~~ ................ _ .. __ , 1959 M.,t~ A"~ .. CM ---~ Holida G .d t) N .. B. 1000 rt. WCll fal.'lnl,: ""°l!C sJan<ho~ fiwluing in Call545-0366. ACCOUHTI~~ ~. I r ~'"Jf I ch le4 Y' ae ... s •. ' -s1~t11n g &,,:iiu.11d41Q)4. •• ' AC'curatew/f1guro~~1 fil'.' ' -.\dull t-: i.ttll' .! l>r Llthyul>t-.... , ... !':'..~ ....... l ' l,.aguna l rca rf!sideotS: iH-211 1." ;naJ~f ~~1J1>~~!1g c~~·Legr. FOUND, Oran~e C.H. t:ul. 10 Key l:Jy iq '1 • I' •· I cXPl'Ctins g uestt; •~· -.---. 0~• e < pa io sc '" · male wJnca collar. Vu-. Good typist. ~l · ''l v. 2 ;l ba apt.So of 11.,.)' ' "''· p.iiw. •·n~ >t·•r 7' c " 0 w n ~ r ll 0 i mt.K Rn r. l"c-' '1 !Ar i k a. r.i~t.t.·r th~ a• <:;.is l)c Qc,1r, t;:stak Brpkcr· ,\\fa 1't!l_· 83'1·'1~.IO-Live O a ... Ci r . & N. ".I ..... ..,."48 H• " ' adllJi, •nO '1>4!~ S28:l 1'110 ~ff IX'IS l.tkC rll'Y, :i:lt.V U . '4>u .... I Ant l"J'-p ,._ '-'-' v .~ k rr 0> U V'-.,...,-t<) I Call t\.l2 595\' wkth 1 • l..Jl Oii; .. u..·J,.. ... vuv ,..., '>. , " ~" ricwl\' dertcl 1111 p~I~ Y1-.dguh~· . n'lr'~ 1e'w, sh;;~~ 2 des O ~c·c Bi:; A U If y ~ALON, l\la~uolia. f'.V. 96&·1987 -----.• ',. ~,· 673-3983 or 1>45~ c\~, • -~l.1~11<11t.1, II H . urr~1 ~f " I) lw S525 1>12 :Jl43 ' • \ 111:'1 "''°a ~~elt or tnbl-d P,n on ,c s e, r v ' c: t; '-:l''' pMl Rejch :\I us~ . --ACCOUNJ~ ,rt, f tAwtuwts. 1 1 l...irl!e3brtownhvv~.-\,r.! hr, :?l1a. 111011 "14 t ,"i -_.._ -&rccc1ve•10''-cl1seounr. cu.nrcr <'nt1,• 1'0)· 11 , .•. · ·r · LOS T: Wh it e cat RECEIVAaLE ~ .. • -------....----~i..Pa&be. JrJk:..-~lio k ~c<•urity apt w 1110.,11 Spl·1•t.ieu~:ir 1.1<,to . ls l1• N1wl™l' onfy. for 'r.c; 'a'mertrt1t-s. Sl55 '1m.'o. ~3131~7~~~/tt!~· ot S!~· w/orangc, male. hluc pt y hL 1 b -i:"•·~ 2 Br. t baU-. ,..:.,, i;arai.:t• ld1•al 101: .\t1u11~. J,•cuui. Ai C. dsh'"h' brwfl'OfU"Hpts. 3 lxh'Rl~ 2 i;cn;itionscafl494·2996 l 645·636!1 ·-·~· • flea collac. V"3. '2.t.h 1& " • ac c u,~ncc dN.,._ · 1 Adults 11nly. ?\tt tJCll' b;,ilh,, 11cwl) oc\:or;1tucl.--· -~--1 .-.--• • Ora1me1J.lJ.~i:f91 • /\/ltClcrk fullf~'ol'e pd3tchil ~ $300, :'iOo ~tll r..is.: 11>4I or ~o C\111 m·\\ l\l gr. 11 1 t·ar µNull &•c.Jr:1pctl. Call Guest HetM?· -,' ·4 l5Q W, , TED 1'o l'.Cll~ P(O• lkuinH~ W~ed 50 IP "'?• , ,•" Sun. Mu~t be· I •1 •• &iO·U3S 9511 ... ~~·!HOO. _ ~ riit :r111~.~tNl:!'tl/;t t' ••••··~'"··"·~·~·"'-•·i (Csl>.lona bloc '"•••••••••••••,.•••••••••LOST•:.Sl.ri.c~ El~l.lon workw/clubmt:tfl~ ONBEGONIA~ Adu ~ br wit nrl. .:ur , ..• ,•• •• , Lo\'lng care. ~·I llri;1 !':t·~1'°'·t,W;it~,P.Q.~x ·HEEDACTION! : Day.M~:s~M ;11"tn:1ladc C?mputcr 1$~Yc.f1V. Ch rmi ,2'brm c()fner 2009 . ;tplt '225 mo . BYTHESEA WES I'< l.IH 2l1r .. 11JulJ~. halanccd cJje Ls. P.vf 22!l6.N°wpt llch'.Ca .926t>U U .l d B . t· ·e<>lor I ers1an .M. ot. hclp(ul but not•.~ ·• iot 1Nt 1'llit ..... c;....,t n M~rAµtO OJI JZ77 '.'(IW 3 IJr ckluiw t11hM·, 1H1 ·Pl'l.'>. S'llfl rnv.,Jnq. room pul•o~·.$·~1;'3f!~3', D • -R t 1 4 ,.5.0 mte· 1 usin,~~s1)~v~~~ West clifr area , NB. dalory. Call ~ctt:S~ '. lltt , --•· 211114lhSl5:lli·nlH 17<)()W1•-:1l')l(i;'nr.A11l.t!\• -4-°'~ ...,,_,.,u$1.n~ss en a •"' mcn_s. nc.,"'ato.rn .. ,,, Ownrs ofr liber.al & 673-3555. •""''l\:• '3SG.~ly. :nm duplf':ii, l 'l'I ba, cpt~. - --'-~ -· !.' • ·-· VacafionRetttaR 42~d .,.,~ ...... ~ ............ l:ih:e~t b~~·~l'ss' 5311:'.8 generous r eward . Call . ·'· ':><::: C~JCIW~Olt'{ drp'I, frpl<". hlln"\ 2br.cpli..pool playyt.I lm1rr.11·.Jhrw1"."\1.at. ., ••••••••• 44 ....... ~...... •TOP• team.~~ Offt'~~ st.ha 6'15·4689 ' Apphanc4·P.arii>fj>1 ,. , ~~-A~T.W\t• ~3'i:t:i0(}1'0'4!"~~:it> • n 11 p l'I ~ . 2 :!~II 1:1 ,\ 'Yl'h I~~ ~7l1'.'1111 . Luxurious, ftirn. \'illa 00 • LOCATIO~ *' ¥ni~. 6. ill Ora11gci Coun~~ . . • I":' med. ope_nli\i'. :S~·I '-!~~ ... C!il~H)ir)' Crl~ ~ l>cl.man· b;.1r.1.1!l 1 ... < <Hi.Ii Sa}'uljla Bc;ich nc;.r' . 1 fo'S4!rv1ce yoar needs.~ Lost. Man s Gold IO starter wfpa~$ b.t< ~ .,.OJ-;>$' J ratVt new K pit>\:, :i llr. :t ., ·_ -, ., • • • • -'l'ul·rl V,;.ill· rta. 4 Ji. .f S~ C',cessf.u . rt'l a• I ~.r JTC' desperate for bu!li. brllcelet w /initi:il~ CDC. ground, a must! SS hr L . • --R,1 nwm .. uiut •1J..ol.l-.L&e·~ll•••lJ oum;4hJW, ~f:\\I OHI HF:\(11 3 ha~ wk t 31.37'i6 ! .. Str\lC~ loc.1t1~111 0.11 I. .. nes.'ll!s lo llcll, we hav~ Crab c.ool<cr, .N,IJ (714~ st:irt.CallK:ite,u.i2.wr .. OldCcf.\t~'ll~ +tll'n.•~ Ur.JJ•li.. no 1.u•t,. <rU• • n~b\:.t(lf l\•1'!rtM'ln1. f:1m1h· roun1, __ ._7_·-:-_'.I 17Lh 'S trcet •fl (:o~t.-people Wllh S.,SOOO.: 88.5·63!17,t)cbb\c 11ar.'ito'ddl:~. &s Oav41 '-?7:!A7'1 S..'t.., .>3t.!•!•K7 Hl'l'.tll \ll'W, loOk·'•Jl. rur. Bt:J\RJIO\JsC fo4 ;\~i;sa. •. •.cxx".-iw,,._,.,e,rc.ady. APT HO • ~~.;,,• s. Agt ·-...n11 • • ~~lfl mo ,\At i52 731$ <cm... J lk., ~ ~ .. ~ •.hmS. quar<' (l·ct w.illKlg "' tri>I,.-t o buy HEWPOfl~·· \'-1, l.Cl~a arln~rwh "'"·•r HeorLohPark , , · -'-: oavC<ill<trt·~A96<1l92 .• f 21\uto bays · now. Personals 5'350 Ass t. Mg r -'-4't. ~'$ ~I~ pa1nu.-<1 2 nr likwP"-HJ liJ, .Jdlts Dl'lu ... t· 3 hr :!': li.1 .1tt "111-.W l>t)lt r :-.llOIU-:S -· -_,_:_ ~..! •Oh -.1te patk•nl! CALL UBI ••••••••••• ••••••••••o t:NANCE C • .,. .li 81'. b,.b,IW.ff'l'fc-.t1111 rcf11'37"8821!<1fll cJl1ll!Jr JJJllo frplt lit. ~;iblk" tomi.-.rn ~upt·~1.1\RGB CAB 1N ;8J~1 -t.f;xccllcntexpo~uro·' 1525 Mesa Verde Or Dnnkm .. rirnblem? ti:Oe.Sal;ry~u~pt.'i':r ev ftfltftf. ~&-~239 Of ---\l.1hJm ... :>3ti316~ 01· 2 11r dur,Je"C O\\nr <!'41 BEAR· nr ski s lopell. •Lan:c.m~n;irca " I N h'ld u• ,. • • 8ttst'>~c · :?R R. b;ith Ill: Cl:Jb 11114 870.0003 Sips 12 Col T\1: p<>ol~'t ll£i\LON0~1lCS. Curp Ea~l. Suite 106, Costa Call All'ohol lll'lphnc on y. o c 1 r .v l ~!f!t~~--.....:L.---1 II\' rm. blllh. ~.mi . c.1r • ; .. • --:----~ ble :>i-J.H6i s.IO·<l3t4 'lJt 'Bro\v-'rs fi7~ t;?I Mesi •: 2-ltV's;ida.y 63!1 31130 ..!_i4-l_~ll l or~ .• .j:; ~......,, •• ll24 sl.\Mt't'~.Uh1tt~,·;·t .!ll 1 . ,._. b J. Nl'\\'IRr,3bJ~IUd}.2«it4!>4~ll • . .•• -~5PJ1'41 . " • ··-··-··••'•·•··~···· 1\c°'ultl' hnty'. "'' rwt-t t'Vh clri.i.. ci•>tr ,_, n·!11.: J?~r. llQOI -...iun:i & trnm!'> • -.. ·' f»RIME' · De.ii w the? prof1•!>siona1 £X0n'C C.1RLS .Nrw adultwo\iltflJllll&fll'\ &121ifl;nf!'lplll mtJ ~l'\\ 11a111L s:n;., NJ:~C"rl''l S1T5/ITI O,Rentalsfo,Sllare 4300. ,..· •ats .-tm t - . i\la:i.'t<i~c&M&11:ho~ ASSEMBtrDG:J t: Ju~'~ Verde·. 1kaut1ful • -• Cull ~w; ~l2.J.11t ;, :«1 1""' "'1·'5 1la)_1~_ l'v~--. •••··~~~·:.••,•••••··~,~•!-~Cl poc •"95 '" ' t .J Uuteall Only 542 316!1 ._,.'1u. J nd.s t:A~ui> 2 nil I ur11, f.: l nfurn . , . • • i\VOlDIN<.;l\.\t.~~TIB~fl ' ilOO' ·!ff. Co'\l'lt' t.1 csa • Op~ilt 50 :, . Min 6 mo·s rx~r~ll\. • u~.,~r~~flntor~r~. ·~hltu.~· J\diJt!f (;11 lot '";w :t llr 2 na, n ·1· t.rll. '.\c~por1 tll\'it. urii:w.ivct HOO;\(MA'f.£$4 ~ -• Su1tabte ror11ffwesur rc ••••···~··•••••:·~··~·· P. 0 BOXES of lhl? followmit:i .,· . t ....... ~ ~o.'m 1$ ~Qli:l'.l ... •·<r rm. llll<l. nr t1tv •1 I IJu 11oot. •Jh-'Jtuui; rt .• • t ·~·11 .. • ~ail i,\1·r1>~-. rr-o~ )1roftl :-i11:111ng investors • .., :s.:mbly, llarnc~:. .. ..,,.. r · · -:-11 II UHUS •·•5u !>!'Tltn:l. trnni.;, 1· mt'C' • '-lol\it '''l\e ., • •.. 1,,. • 1r .. ""' t 1 • nrctor or Soltll'ln-...a. Meu Ve • \as, 1$&6 ~ SR2 BATQYfNl-IOl'~~ :V.~.57ci . · .,.,. v, Rrc II 11:1,. F11m nm. b ' Tak~ift1'-~1~-;;work I 0~P.•pl All:!c h~n' f ~· .. n't~, •. to oivr"'. "' r11 for Rent rnt:lt• nol f'l•Q'd · t>i.~ . ttcsa .vetcf• A!'V E~Y. Patio & C.ndrtt1tltu1> •r _ <'"..'· __ __ 1 • npt )~l 'O'l:J 23.1~ ·, <M t)t t'ftil'l'in , · /\lhlctic,. Clu~. (cOod ~l'On rnrn:tran Charter Bust 1 b r ·~ I : ·~•l• M ·~· (.91.'4 ) sm ~·t!l· 1!*11 V.atnnl t br"i h:i, fp&· ~ -___ .. •• ·-.....-'t'lmT lf"Sl'll ~Slltlj l.Jge. <:all h:tl;ZOOO ... ~I "~·~· N.Jf., .f.7H >Al75·70l7 631-0727 I ~0ks ~~.~~~o~· ~1·:; 5tt-887l. • ' ; -1..,-:n----... , -. bal<'ony,Jl.:i: ~ .• .,o. i,u' L~ t: I\ ~1 • T . I F, .,u ~ Save $S ~y ~~rjng t ~dilcsinger, Agt. -· •Mi~Jll\o ·' • • • ----mu·~. 11 l'a1d h ~\ • ' ' ... ;:..i..a · 1 E~Scc 2 ROupl111<.~2s Ala'PMJ·_gjb~k •• W/\1 1-.tl~llONIJ, ---:: ' ~.:-~-i lndastriMRl'fttd 45oq ~11n s:'l ooo. )°00'4' l ::ix ''Tll0EXPERIENCE" .:roup 1nsuran~~f·MJ I . w"'!'· OT • <.:pts. dr(lb. stovr .. ~ard • -. I --;-i 2 RH .. up.i:raflt•li ('8rj>.'.i Share ,llO\l~I: .• 110 . pc~ ........................... ~'h~ct 'this Yl'n " 1 20·~ Adult motel. Closed (l oy of hi rt• ~; • Syllltn..ll~nl rOom ~uillO~ cpl , no pds Spal'iou!I ~ FJr. 511 xlrn~. m1rTor .bnr, ~·nvnll' c-lu}~ vi r in 1'1 y1 ~ lta. l,l'.'°. f PRl.J~ LOCATION l 1 disu al ~ulns ~tllrn of 111, 1'trt'uit TV. For lksl·rv~, more. · · • 3 Cathedralcclllnl'! 6-12 2.jlh,lllR W12 . ;Av•1tl now. ~u:. qK, MSCJnfotl(' ... ~.G31 llW' Crt>ltlcnw(.'i.l f ;utlily ~t "'! . \l(!!U er1\ rn 1977 ('l'A lions 5.UJ.9755 Apply l'(•rsvdl .• :rn. ll.~ .:~J 2bWro61ns. Hlb11ths • 1 . ~--,.-S':!C;; COAl.;!I;\ T l'r o · -,,-r::rT"f'• t "":' _..,.,...t-, nHu,1herri. 'l5.0.mo C.ond cxposurc.,)':ttsy 111J · ~,. :d il(J ~ .. 7 ' ~ -r --• !lti'ltx 4mc~~;~l<: .. 3 µ1t. J.JOO. k1us. pc~ .R4?·113??!1 ~J.?lc • ~'11 1 k, N~WflOl'lr ·!WI <lG47 , r Arcs~ & t'Rr <'ss. PknlY of .~n~<:: c.:.._ M 9 82 • 1 ,•PALM READER• OOCUMEtmllt~ WJI~~ r!'ook:u;1 sgl~. ~75 l<'..id1cvrnber. ~ -·· ~ ~1.1\oony, 152~1).\l'llO·iL : . .,•: ,I ; ' • ' purkin~. On Drool< hunt ~ey to Ldoh"'' • '5025 111~~ pr('5('11l & f'tll\Jro :;;~ PifYn ~iillo I rte: c'~I. 20 l. "547~1 . or SEElH~,S~A . ~"'IM U.~l!..!!•·..;'i~ Stjl\ M or 1' lo s'harp :rs t\t A~lairta.111 .tl,flnUrl•ti11 UhH•.oUh••·•'-··~ I.IC 213/ij\).l.f:l5()1i97 9272 DIYISIOl:M . " I •. mo. ~000 2 Rr. <Mi-.~ trpl. C'Ot'I 1-\foiNJIL-2 bib 'new 1>""'14 np«. O.lboa Perin; il2 . Jk~chl Approx1ltl•hJI' I st ?n4,lrlrd TD 's --:-ft•. t • ~ f"()Xif LLOW NEW 2 hr 2 ba 'frJJk ')!al'. View akon~. Nu .1 'Rr i! n·i d plx , fr~ Imo +.ulri .673"549to. ·~· l!OO!>.q. ft. of Arounllfluo • • lfr\"'SAVAtLl\l), ,·E . 11~" '}.KE" 'l /\drlrr~~nl(•&pli' ~ Vil.LA~ · ' · ~ts 205"1~ 1 ~t 536-1172 • · • ,--r--• ' · " • , I !.paL·c g,~ninl! $3:25/m · '"'' ,.. ;, A Mullii:rtfl'b•~ ·~\lli&Jc)n,C~' d /W,JOCUnt. gar. V1fW 536l718 • IJltrl:l.1)3ltO,Jtar Nopet Stude n\ s~c'k.s cn'l\4irt c1111 '1'i.r Pi1lmme t' redlloo~1111pot:lant y SE&.fTH.IH 2921S.o~· -,,; •l_:c :...,.• Q(occan.Tecnrhildbk.~....'..-• 1°JIO(lj'H~dJ45·161lJ ~ .. , non-~okec.~125 -•ut.i ,..., __ _. • '· 1 • 'n73-~Btokcr "~llh ',1. l S"' .... T"', .. · • ' • ... ~-.... 0.*'"79\'2 • ~ , . ~ -r-....-.-.. , ' ' ,_, UIOI. • -.v11 <>Ur UlllllUC I\ mu Cll "'"" ~ , , ' [. . • ' ~ • f~f\GE 2 1:1rl 'Ba . )'arrl 1.·Br. Stind~k. 2 ~»1.\10 S57·~~0pm. ~ W Morl9C!CJ~~ .. "(~. u Day.Pounds owny • F.qual Oppnd ;ro11u11irYr I fc' ~bt .:!_PCt\.R\Rrn ·~/;& z Br. 2 b:i. prf'f mati.ire (1r L"/..:,,lt~~~~ ~ ~k bC'h Yl'arly. ut1I pd, no M/F . i B(. ~l>a CA.lif tqi\ ~=~~.~.~':!~~ .. !~.~~ , Offds . ... SOJ5 "Total ,J.>crform:i1nc<' • i------•iijiMIJftit t'Pt+ ·~·A"'. n,.. rollr<'d . No pt-t$. cio ~·"--·-~ '!' J>('t... S..100 mo. 1 1 ~fain,~rAl'\f{tir f Si\ • .1 ••••••••,•••••••••••••• Program 51.1 ~!IS;> "'-iiO . s. '"'11 bclw°"n chlldren S19:i &1:n>K111 • 8 .._ .'-"' .. ~· ..... : • ~ . p..u:a"'-........ " UT 11 lf4. QUtel, rL>sP • • . •. • .:. ASSEMB'-~ $. ; ---_· -·-~ to"'af't79{tit:~~ ~,1,p Rr 2 Ra room)'. new ~~ .,.,.."·~·.1;)1 ·~1!1 fom. dcsu:es I llr (JI' h:• '· 1.0ANS9'% ,HAPftY~l,RTHOAY "' "\c ' -~ tr · 1 'x OR.. lBA w•n11ts. drps: Bea<'h'!M:t 81J.l·5\)8. rpts. SUnQ<'rk. blln~,. brh Born ncatn<;britltilO' l !>··c~.Mtt·03'UI d..\)'!:.:..Ll . 0 N~ll ·1~1 t• t Full Ta-s~ ...... · .... , ,...,,.,• Q_~~ a •• .,,. P• • bltn~. S2661m o. OPE;-; •• I &bay)rly.$375tl15 1Ki8, 1-·~mAk rto ~'\titv.MlC4 ..... .,,~ ... tj '' -, Atso2ndTDLoans ....,, ..,..J .• -~ -; Xlntopportuni t:.:,.in t.~ ettt. . en~. Afr. S AT & $.ll N . 214 2 bc;lr • 2. b:.lh Twn,. ---.--, 4 Br, twnhllf' 10 fl ~ . .,,mss ...... es .• a l-'al~P')Uilf1Cl'IU49 UIVOt'(•t• • ch.>Pr~ 1-ed, Mu lndrY.. . l'l\o~ 16'1 Scott l\VOC:JOO, c ~~1 Hou /R't/E.'!t h ~hild a, Jk uly .. )l.arai;ie, W~Of S8i 2?! ••• -'" p 11'9) nn«MC • ,1 Mtc). Co. 'desponde11t. & dc.;p.tlrt~ sinn V1t>Jn I SI rt., pt.Npt•2. 751~• l • ........__ ·. 0 Kse. ~~-S::.~33l l w1lh&ijl bqJ~.duc'k . .$.la.~ ~-?1W , • · n: 1 1 !' ··~·-••••'-"••••••••• ,642 2171 S•M611 JJoctor de~1rei1. fttTHll(! ~~~~e~ext~r'fa,1 11~~~ 5-8364 eve~. • LOV'Et. Y I~. 3 br. oewly · .. no · · ·-. 673·2•9.3 , , ladinns ' ' • coropant1>1\~1p .. r.wat hr .Ii.. ...... _.:.L."'~ H 1t -l...1 redkorOlt.'d. idital loc. ~ & '3 br apt$>\c~I d'J' -,--1 n l •· :.t..I: Ger•• for A;,.. 4150 Oppot1wity 900 SAYC c.<t HI yri; old• .. ,,. 'OVf . C.:;111 rnmponents F· ill:Jllt ~.~1 ... ~~ ~ No pels 5275 M•r al F.amily .~.ne ' M_. D~nUft \o A l'aJ!Or:t111r1 •••••• ...., ................ , ••••••••••••••••"••••• . ........ 675 11.155, u!\tn~ microsc41lit \l·r. gar. llO pdl. -naO. 919-2631 288S Nen(IOZO .. , h • Qtfl. ..,..,9 l'\ity, Oc~an lit ·~~.lll jft:l .• '""· • ......... •'l'rtvalc pai;l.,y will huv --.-r:--r-. hrlpful Gci 11f.11~1 • 2lfl B. American A c. · • ;.:•a.tl e~s """i-ev V1ew_Qwe1 top Ooor 2~a.1t~.~3rn~~·rc!r /c?~· ,•umlter'e~f'IY"."1.~1~Rf your:tot1Til>-ti4la57J B.IMBQ 'l1l;1ry l.'om m~&:tl• ~ or ·8 -tt21 ~~ ~~14days ' Urt'2 H,i. luxuri)'. aporl' ri;;MR.tl9~l\'\tff)l~_A.~, •Loti~~Wtnr.H•·Cl .~~s. -_ ... •'J w(1•xpr. C'a 11; .r o •~H;% 1 ''""+· 2nr.1•,bn.('lo~e11 irac:. u ."l'~nt. (?uric, N~·pnrl't µts._s__N., '.,n..,·~~ :f>~~is~~~I\ 0 ht~2~dl~cm~ 'I LOVE YOU 5813830tor :w•• · ,,..~ ·it fi)i; •;f' ' f&2 ...... ~" I patol drl)s. Nr :s~ /. lll'!il 10,0H!-111.· ·llll"ry\ II lboa J~J':l!H\ .3 £3!" l. (\'/1 m c1l ~t ..... tnir~I ac1llC'Ftnancial • .11 ,,> ... ~~ ~IJ1cpt·tt>Nr~'''"~ $l4S'to !175. tJM & wa~.r lrt1Mp, $!30roo. IW7·~f41 'f"l,.flD('WIHI l las.~. A.vo1 ~Jr:IJ.:l'~stof~~e~rfryd: .. ~(N 'fil': f{;f~ I .~ <.mnpa~v,t>40 H2D2 _ --~.G. -. A.SSISTAH'1~ lilc1 •• Udo. ,646·825G or pd. No kidl\, P\«. 133')~ U.~~1,·fl:l\I ,..!.--_j,_ ''.:.~~~ .... '.....:-......: ~y lse>J":1-t~~. ' '1 f cb111!\1. i\ ntii11nt~rt111<1 A.~s/. , GRAHD'C9~1HGI ' TR~~- • r4 , 1 ir.th st .. <'M 1265 11.P1(.X, 2 1tr ·t 'ni1. cP1.~. Tl~ f!C"'~·'"" Sl\t'ci:(il .. (}AfV\G~ 'l>ln~<t C.J. _:714>ll45·•1111> __ s.to 06(_ ~~/. • • ' S,;it:itual fl~c\dm~l ' 1-·o~o)I~~~ orlv'T ,, n rue• .__..,d.rps.$21~. r·~.i.no l)(•" t\~ \iJ IV.~p-4 · 1.1bfi ~o Blork of l\MJ~i~.·twlN.C BUslNtSS'fo 1,1 Lostl~. An\1oundn~l~~n~Mn~ electronic m" r. ,, fhb•\r ,. · lft.A~ U~toJra. ll!S'JZ ~ .J(;r ct11. ap .. ~'Iii 'CdM. IH~ 8 ., ·'1\1'11 ~Mc· ·;.10£ bcdspr \Hl ·~""••·.:o~•,..•••••I'••·-of our new ofJ1~ lodtcd Must be fam11tar w/:1.1m ~4-10 · l'i38t.2•W.'aptslft · 1 • .,Uft.waw ~t'nt 54~p : :.•. 1 f~.7211 •" ••' .'·"' plUo~t'S'~icskirts.scat LecJal. Hofices S.l09 ~lU:llS3E.lComlno'Rcat. ple •con~oli~tt . ._.,1, /,.<A ::t; .:! • ' *L E . ~do tocauon. • ""'""' "'"'" • 1 s · . 2 • lll\r~ -___, '• '•.•• • • wt•oNO etc. Call a l\ •••••••"-••41• ......... !ion Cll•mf'ntc . 01h•n ment~; foreca CL~-"" t Ir a p l , ~~ W/palMllll1t Crfllc, U3r, S:W tn0; 283 ~ ~ , ' er '1 u 7 • Office Re..I~ ~10' ~ 1i44m •· • N~1c;r Is -"cr~by glvt' l.oatn·Wr.tn. Nqw fot a reporting: t spacious, CRU. patloi,. bltn1 indd'C d~hwsl\r, mo dlXllQl>~· 11pnrlo~1 Ad~~ gp • 1 :., ......... \.~~--·-.•• , _ ?'..:. ·~ l ~' C 3 l ti.er in c hmlted' time ,Ol\IY. our tal ·returns. llllall!LSltsmb.MS-.2tlf "~rt.hy .. cpts .t drJ>s rnts. xlflt I~. nr lluot1-.. -~. JJ.j •1MOFtttE11E~.• ! 'M:»tul1i'ttitknt:•Wt>ld1n1t• <.: rhteO~.Pn. 1s r:I QI lx'st rcadlnJt, T<'I: 5'!5 Clt1"irted od on~· • _ ..1... thruoul. p\I\ patio, J<lr, C~ 18!>\SClr): St. 2 ~lk NWPT 1 andJlC"° i.a.a.~ oCfl"~'·-rt~ ·~1.lJ..~~int-Jo'abr\c;it,;, • rci.~1btefot :inydcbt\ i:l.ow s.Jl50. Smalkr rr Dmly r ilot ro~ ... _ ........ ,,,._ • 11Wla~ 4tll\9 lo...IOe tndry ,.~ frMn $3.W nto. S <i Sdilla.D A\'~· W. l'll lM.-t~...n trf'T'TTr.9 n S'" trlfr"""11'" A1ff 11i~"Tln0 . ~ r Att · flt' tf'nfttti'ttl'~ c Otltt ort1t tfdtT!lZ'> :ilso :rt:'ltlnhlr C~la P.1cs;:. Cultt~ Wes-\, •. a Dal&y Pilot frnmt•1lt:1ll' ol'Cup.rnc)'. Bch Bl vd. 0 J)f·n Sat Sun frplcs, 2 cor mr, no pcl~ A1rportt>r Hntel. Nn l~asc shup N,'\ S3m Cru1w II\ ;m)onl' but m~sc·lr A~1pt'" not nt'l 1'12 lK>;M •~uJI Opr)()(' Emrilo)tr Qassllled Ad. St2·SG7R. Uoll~ Aj(\ 55!l llWI _ 1·5 1146·4900 Avail. 1m~c fU4 ro34 rtq. 833-322!! Til ~~n__ &i$-4170 /l;ov 1, um, or 192 72'Jfi __ __ i---------· .. . .. ·----·-· .. ·I. I '. · . ... ... . .. • .. Ii# , .. . ' ... ' I .. . ,, .. .. .. .... . . , • .. "\I' I • " IHI DAILY PILOT . . . . ... ..... Li • .. - ... ' .. . . • • J . \, ... :.1c1 1. I I . . .. ••• . .. • • I Wed.-esda>J NOV:mber tp. i~I 't • ' " "tlir/ I Add 1t ... 8uild lt. .. Oiaper 1t...Hammer it .•. CarPet S!E:IFI~· te.I !; 1t ... Cement i t. .. Wire it. .. Hoe it ... Clean iL.Move ;J .. it ... Pr'ess it. .. Paint lt. .. Nail it ... Pl~ster it. .. Flx it... 'DIRECl!O~AY Plumb ·it. .. Patch 1t...Pipe Jf ... R•moaet il\t·"'1 . • ' " • ~f ,lt ... Lan~pe iL .TU~ tt.~ .. 'Tr'll'n}~~VAU ~ • 'O H auJ it ... Add It. .. Pl~t (f::itfter IL.t:ear~IL .. Appl.c:e R~r Carpet S.vlce· Contractor 1 G....,_.Sw•ice1 "1ou.Cle•ltCJ 1 -, • , P'~f''l"'i"9 ,._,..;.,~ 11\ lfle. : : 1 ••••••••• ·• ••• •• ••• ••• • •••••••••••••• •• ••• ·-.·· ••••••••• ••• •• ••••••••• •••••••••••• •• • •••• •• •• •••••••••••••••• •• ••• •• ···• •• , ••••••••• •• ·• ••• •• -;;ir~-~! ••••••• •••••••• ···~!:r •••••••···· •I•••,· I~··~···•• .. •••*•••·· • APPl.lANC£ rt t:;l'J\IH tSh:>mJ>OO & i.tCJin dclo· ~ · f.~t;,l>Jl\RVIS-;~~e •& Pt<t S1ll1og. No Uo~i.rrleanmi; & Build mat l'"t.-e~st SlU01P8tonc. tilt' •CUSTOM PAINTlNG• P,\ll:H Pl.ASTERINCh, i<:cf'll"Jn.l~' ti re . .'l'u,'1 ' $lO-~rv11:e t:a II mg. Color lm~hlencr:s ; Addlttuos & K~moduhng chlH'gc for Ion~ ~Ul)':t. M aintenJncl'. Wry btock.w4'1h •• lmc:k. plan l~,\. Q U A l. Lt. 'l, ~S. , • •!'Ll· 'CV l't;.';-~·.:... li~~1·& drl.lD~J"~~. (714)~9·2-12'l wht CJrpti. 10 fllln ~lti2·$67J L1c317~ Locnl kf'fS ti44·ti720, rul150llable.SSS.l~2 tt'1"'S.Q1.1:illty')'orkutre K"A,.ES-f"reeEal MO.~ l l"r~eesl.4PJ1.i:i _ ~ blcactr. Clc:tn hv rm, din ---ti7~~ ' -aS pticj.'!\, Ho~ TSQ;J3!14 Call Brurc~ti.q?~eves .-~ir...._ I ,. • --r•lffi"9 rm & bait St~ J\\fg rm FATHER & SON p,.1.5 J &nit6rial St.'f"\lt'c 960-ll!IS:I -. VY.llY NF.AT PA1' lV, 1•p• .-.-• o•· • ••••••,•••••••••••••••• S1.i0, couch SlO. chJir s;.. A.rlditrnn!., rcmodel1ni:. Com6aniqn. dn"er, fllioP' vW: dirty cm. wo c lc.ui ' QUA ltANTL EU Paint 1 JOBS & T}:XTU K~ "'••••:··~···~ ••• '•• Olre(orAnerSt·hooleri.. <>u•relimpctodor Crpl r>lons.l''ree l's~il-17·7111;H b~r~ h.s-0kpr, h:sewifc. Cfll.008-7914 • lllodt, ti1ick, :1l11P?P8tOJ:1t ing. lnlr & ~tr. l-'rec ,f)'ecEst. ll!l.'·i4.l(uou>.YAU.~'4.U.Uf4d, Morrctl or Pctcr:.nn. rtipair 15 yrs Cl'I>~ l>or....:i _ _,_ Cg •Joi:e bckitnd , · -w•lls &'pluntt:~.e~rt es\,expertwork.t>ft·0295 Plr:!&PetC , .. ,.~ti·l .... i;d, l.1c ~IS/wk.91>3~7 wvrk. m y:. elf. Heh -..,.nHring . N ,rweg1an. !l i t.oc. R~~hibJe. tdfic:lenl, ~ lrt's~utle·~. ~p~cuU} ~~ .... ERJOR, /L'XTERIOR •• ••••••••••~~••••'••• l)llylnsur'61r.m·,~~~; --531. 01 •••••••................... lt~~r ..t505 Ne11port Beach, Jlun\· •t>f'\~. Olli Dob S3G·~ ""• . "'. , _ , -.~T .J.n.~ .... f· Wtll Bab)':.ll 111glH or UJ · . • STRUC'I'URA!• F.NG . IQRtbn Beach nrea. J\nllu orlif5·4381 Ac:cousli~11I ~)I gs ~V! S~NT S Prof. Pel ~ ~ ec Prurun• 1or Utt• wknds or for work 's c41rl)<tMan will f::y'yours For plan check~. s11!n Gr · !Wi.qG-17 ~·r.119(~aft 6~M' ant Care s vi;-ln home. :i,on &. ~9flilU'·. ,:\1:.1111 mothe r In my hmo. or-ir11tio. Hi·ii ,iirs & ~\rurture5.btdgs'IS42·~iHCi •••• ••••••••••••••••••, . . . Mo~}IMJ A"'f."'i.' p ·. 1 ·~t R t~p~~bol&ll.I· t oh~n ~e ;~tf~ij ~i1 i; S45·37GS cluuniri& too! l;u1tr work -~tptbader. Jump tr.ul'k, Xlnt .~~e.clearuns dune ·~·~··•••••*-'•...,..,.• cf~~ll~a:,bkt/ F~~c e~~· tl\& .. ;1~~~ ro(r)~-7511~250$.\,'e..,.l~, :..: . a ..• 1 S I ;i\bigi:crsuvings. l"re~I Garde'""4J huu&iajt. lrC<' wk, grad· by lad) w /cxpr, depen. MOVING?l.tt 21!lxpr·d ~ ·c \111.1 •64 .. .:,.....,.. ~. U c.M.I .~.SI ·86SA. TkJI• ·, t . , -Mness er• ce 64~3646 •••••••••••••••• ... ••••"' lng~dernolition el" dob(e,-o.wn trcins&17 ·3637 mc"'"NIO\lt you Hcas 9 .Juy .,.,,,,_ . Pt' ibinf ' l • ~V· .,". ••••••••••••••••••••••• F' rd II t • ~. ¥ ... --••-~ •-..•••••••••••'•,.••••• BOOKKf'.F'."IN(,' llOLIDA\' ''P'·'CIA-1 -,·~. I aw11a11 i:uri cn1•r. 7~!· 30 • • JOIGfodql . Hef •. S4~W.494-«}36' I 'Painllng ·lnt & Extr ··~····· .... , .............. r~·~r' i:;,rvl~o 5..1 Ile! r "' .:. • ~ c c canup.~. l11mrn1nl(. ~'!'!'j , • · ·--'Cusl u·no / . "" • ' i • ;\JI pha:'ll!i. 1Jookkl·1·µ1ni:. S hampoo or ~ltfr 1fl run1ni;. L t Jl uul ·..: H IMJ ·--·••••••••••••••••••• F'nendly Mov1nc l:o. t:/fi . um puio -.w uc Vlum}tl•lr & lloattiw ochers cHlrtlJr.:.i}l". -.toilefJ\enll'. p.1yroll, l·k . ,(;Ltl,an~. 2 Rrns. Jf.1l or ~5-0087. ... •• •••••••• ••••••.-••• tOIJ\PI <'Jie: h u it or i a I c1e1Jl. friendly st.Yvice ~it un Rn~atne~s. ~~ Xs\~ [lepa1r. No job too s rnall ! tit w"'.!1 n'!t•ft'. a> ·• I'll · l yr1>.cxvur.w/('1'1\'i., broh SlS.!,15. J-1 1:.1517 &~. ll1ullng/mov1ngdciinUp ~er\ll ce6~ Comm/R,s. Lo,.,e~' 1>0SS rat.to""! scr.J349'd~~>'~1t·i & cnth0averipon751·!Ml71' ~lllf I c.,.f ~' L&/srnallacd' ~M:!UO $37·'D'J6 S~a1frs oC Grccn·Yar<l S1.Jp: 1're~wurk Hl'a:. Laguna F lour Car e &17 D'J'J2 . I. • wk.:,•~ ·7"").....! ,.,. . lJ!t°'.;.&....!..'~· .. ; ---'-'-Cart>. Ho) a l :.erv1ct:, f ..._ . .,, • ' !lll'l·J7::!7 ' .l. . •iu->ti .>-;>JJV Pl ~ll.M.B.ER....nep:11;.,1.,~· ~ ~ ... , ~'J. Borr&Auoc:iatf:s •CAHl'l':TSAVY.HS• duwnto"~;1rth"pn cc:.! ~ili n¢eest342•4~ · •• ~. • , ~pji,~,......lwy .. ......,. p3.:1_ · -' p'1=f>4. TnH.att atio o~· .. , .......... ~ ...... . Bui.in~ .. servin•s Hydro :.lt!Jm ~ll·an ·g t>l0·9-185 ~O~HJ\Vf:ITREJ\l>V l.....dscoptftC) •••••••••••••••• .. -.•••• .V'IJ'/P&IJ\l. 20 yrs elf• tsµvices. G. Gidley, 01\VENfOftT~Cll~llt MOnthlyStatcments 25~8JVlllflSon allt"arp\!I • n .. 1.HAULITAWAY ;;.;.1:.,,,e'°M"•~':"'•0 f)a1nt·lttpai~3& y rs ,if: ~~\t ~~~~·Sr~~~· c •tit?-9315. • 1 l'r0fe~lctiall1cl':ll\~'TI lncomeTax Pa>rull C!ea n1ng . t'r es t;-ca.bcllert.1 & Sons. Expr • ·TUt548.ti30ji ~}<PJ dt L3ndscap~rs. ~rea. •Workman~h i~ 1' • • R~ 'for~.Ph:96Ch1IO:'. •TaxJ>lannm~• 963-"297 • gardtµier. F"r csts. re l , ,Sptihklet!': ~l:i1f1&r<l' guar Ta~advant -oim> lctY•ftC) • • • r:--"ll . '_..,,Cl~ 124 8 road w 3 v c ~1 --nsondble. 646·4654 art Remove ~menl. asphalt. ~ii'\ Concrete &·brick cxpef 530.10~ • .... , •••••• _. ......... ,. •• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Wutdow t_....,, ' ') . • Carpe.t & Furniture Clean· 4pm. •• . -,.. • .din, lrecs. e tc. t'r est. WOrk..'645·7978 Malone ___.._. .. .. Rep a 1 r s & c 0 '" p 0 ..... , ... ~ .............. . 64~0511 ___ 1111( Sale. 10 yrs In busl· • ~·~lJc/insrd. , • , F'ETERSPAt!'lo'Tf~ , 1 ' Shing les. l ns pcct1oos .Cle3r Vie w W ilH'l uw Carpentet" rw.~. 840·2135 " " E~pr J3pancse Rordener -...-,, • , ALL PHASES t;xpr'd. (C~, rillfs re< ASPHALT ft~AUtS 1"'5rd/lic'd. Lo 11nces. Ir w..,.ing & H~l'it-... ,. ••••••••••••••••••••••• C rnent/C t <.:ompl maintenance & HousK.leQfttlMJ ~prinkters,luri,plans. cst.C\i11Ccne~52· .,. .. • ~ ~ ' ekt.8.'10·Sll20&AorS11·~30 ing. Q u allty "1\1 lc., It • ,_1 I", e onc:ree rle:.nup,frt•:.t,reas lhro •••••••••,•••••••••••••• <1lc.Statehc2831114 --• ....----\ ' ' , • icihr an\.!;Cd. m;,\IJ\l t~nvuemi.: Our i.~1t't'ial·•h•••••••••••••••••••• 751-1937 ~L\nr a n~ALLYCLEAN CalrMitchell54&-1S88 ' PaintYounCostle ~·= ·· ~WlftCJ/AJterat1011• cves&wltfidt. :.',· r~p.iir !-. r.::.i~l ·con ,r artor . Cu s t o m --, . • . HOUSE? Call Gio~ham __..• l\vrgExtrlSty ~'l-15 • i . • ....... ,.............. / ~~"'Tl 1· 1'.11 wnrk . ., g~ar work:. culur, ai;~rt·i;ate, \VF.EDIN<,·( l.t:AN~PS Gfrt. F'ree est:<, 645·512:1 M~9(VY 2&y $465/lntr S45rm <:Jstomixed pcro;o11ttl sew• ., alumbo Coni:.t 96~·1131 I. Jlsoicuncrctc cullit~g. All ~Complete !\1!!111tenam·c . .. .. !•.••••••••••••••••• Prices incl mtr'l/labor Call 63 I ·2440 iog. reasonnblc prh•es. Jt,, *! * * tf •.• •. • • -• :t.ihrs. wnrk g uar . l.1c'J, F'reet'sl 1 • '£~~...2 llo~secleanm~ByANN Fi~~pl?CeH"l anters : Gu:.ir.~d:JC'ff,Jt.:q Ortrnge Co.~phak Co. l'fen IUmik<J.) womcn1" i ·',I • • Carpet Set"vicl' ~mdcd. 1~r~d 4!.12·37<!14 FALL cr.EA!':Jll.RS~_,Q _.,. E,xpcri.cn~ed w/rcfi.. llnc_k Concrete Valio . Tod 6:..>7·7900or 552·0134. ,..... 1 , ~chi1dren . Call De tl,Y : ~\.~~~\hi:-: •••••••••••••••••••••••LEONIT"' CONCREf'"' c·1h~ TOP JOB Fr c~l. 49J..06l!Oafter5pm Bloc;kWaJl:i . llllQ,Pit~ h . • fti-1.0...._T-"-842·7880. " <:i\~~tHff • "' ,., ' · . · • . Ref, Ests646·b4f>i ra1nling: l'nl /Ext . Lu .,....... ,.,..,;" ··~ • • • •• . , • .. · , " \~c Care C~rpet Cll'un<'r\i ~ T J\ M p I NC . co ti 1 C"~l only 548·8422 • ~rofess1ooal carpet c lean· ;t:Q , , . 11~931. n cr. Fret' est •: .. ~ .... ! ............ ~. Televi11oaRepa1r , • • ~Wda~~~(i: • • t-ite~ clc;m or i.ham1><10 blcstom· brick & tile , •mi:. ulso Cloor ~are & CU~ l\j BRICl\'\VORK ~ork •ulir Won't bci mi 1•0llGANTUNll'/C• .. ~~ ................... • • • Abo Uphol!>lcry All work patios. et~· 640"1349 SELL idle items with a 'wrndo~ ca re. Di,itch , BLOCK WALLS .(fcrbld!i~fl · nptn 91.18~$7 :. l\llen·Conn-ftocf~s CANOPVTV,SVC CO. • l'1•11 i;it ~ill &'~•Ii. 1"' • gu:.ir.Hef~/:\IC',fr,•.,l --'. ~ • DailyPilotCla!'s1f1l'dAd. Mu1nlcnancc Servit:e 1'ree.Es1.Lic.29432ll ·. ·_ .' • • • Ney.iport011.(aalt645'~.530 1 l stRateSt•rvice Hi ~•r \..hn~1 °'''"''j1·\l-;~·1 " HJ!as Hutc,, 1.15·:.17 IU Cl;iss1fted .-'._c~i:. &12-Sti'll 1<_f!l2·5678. f l• .1,~ ~ ,\ -$37 ~~ , • Ji93·8~-, . 8'12-952! W~n~s.. Cnll 642·567~ Wan( ad res ults 642-561S at Fair Prices 96(HS33 : :"~n·r~·';':l"~ f~.:- ~~~~~·:.~ ..... !!.~~ ~~1!.~;.a.~·.-.~ ..... ~L~~ !!~!.~:-,~•:.~:~.:~!!.~~ ~1!,~:~•:.~ .... ~~L~~ ~~!.~!!·~~ ...... ~!.~~ ~~~~::!., ... !!~~ ~~~~~~.: .. :.!!~~ ~~~~ ...... ?!~.~ ~~!.:;'::Uul .. !' ~~ \.-1sociate Rep ' r • • T.NGlNEER . rT,-Sl l ' t ';t·..ir ' l""""'UR ... """C._ ll1ASSEUS.lj: U8·28J let:it. M'EN, perm. p/tame Cur 18 OR OVER ' Dt>ll vurymc.n LA Times . • . . . . u atr1 y is \\' "'q.w~g. n.> ~':' s:' • rull time pojltlon ·ill LAT" ti delt DATA ~RY ' home delive ry route. Pfftlft~ mionnt ~•lion 00"/o + ~nus. ucruuye ToP SS+ or minus Cjlr.& t . cc . tinett ome. v~•.Y ¥0 EXP ER. NEt '' ACCOUNTl~"G 1 ""4Ll!!nK 3.:J0.6AM . S27S m~. Must open. 768·~ afll,>PM. shop ~l\gd ~ocnti!'n• l\S>P· fiiu>eo.ses )Vjll be.paid ~or ~:~~~!~n. ~~1ftio-~s:i ~~u~':a~!l~~p.!~:~·1•~ If you 're new lo Orange . . • . " ~ ,r;I\ . ~~6~:.is~~1>41nd ab e car. !SCROW /S~C~ . ~eJ~'. ~ent~~~sl~~tart ,.bJe ~~coh "l~~~~i~·l!:"~~· '.Rnytimc car Ii be reliable. $275 lo Co., lempl)r;inly dlSl'Oll . Full lime pos ition open as a video p~ Esc.r~ Officer In MtS· Co1Cfoocs , 18052 Culver , cterw'rllirtlL r a t ing. !WEDICAL Back omce. S350mo.S48·1740. - t111wng >uur euucJlion. display ter~inat'opeFalor for a Bas ic/ DEL TACO i;ion VtCJa. ~lnl atl.Yaiwc· rrvinc 552·80RO claims. etc. Must J>c able-sharp, ·1 yr e.tP·· In all Mtr" trne F.i.hiot.s rcc11 ntlv d1:..t·hari.:u d .Four' m .in1.·com1hiter. Some ex -·Need~ t-;1tchc1\1lelp !{e~ £t ·~ncfl~~ Lt\. th~ l'Jh~TESS ~ <.'rf fl·al to qualify t hru_Lcsting & duties: lrvinepinlc. Mr. Major .mass merdta.n· lrmn the ~t·n •n· •Jr hJt penencc lS des,iratile. but Wlll tram In· P/ltml' :pos1ttons 11uil. m~n"~::~:· 'w ay(cv cope~· d~~ed to wor~eon one of iotpa,o,s st at&e inbcsurl'!~de J(elly, 833·94• dncr seeks retail orient ·"" rcJsw1 ).l·t·krni.: lt"m d' 'd l 'th d D 1y h ~lp S2 30 hr ..,.. •r .... • c oxam te -r ed · d' ( j · pur;Jt} "' l-.irecr l'IrlPl•>Y IVI ua WI e m90s tra led t y.p10g aC· 6Jl·JllJl l720 s"upcrio; TrallSA.qierj Ctl T il I e the WORLD'S M 08'f l. bendils... Cull Mrs. l\I ED I C A~ D 0 0 K . tn iv. or exc t111i:: ""'nt. l·on~•tlt·r th•,, um cur~cy n nd speed. 'W ork in p leasant• ,\,e. 0 1 ln,'(uranceCo. s.i'l-9~71. 8 BA Y'1' u :u L !' N ~ ~~kcr,JW-95oo. '' KE~PEH~J:I ont office. ~E:~~~· ~~~~ •1ul' vrpur \'ou t•j11 earn e n VI r.Onf!1Cnt ~ith good ~Of!lpa.ny Ot:mont.tralo rs wanted ~EC.:: SECRll:l;~RY for ~~!~~~~U~c:'l~ll~~~ · ~J:!!~r :p :~tic-::. nb " ~nls Pet~i~I S 196 PER WEEK ben eflts mcludmg 2 weeks _vacatio n p /llme. will tr:nn tow()rk Jn v e.$ l lll e n li::q. ln 1''rcnch ll1vlera:. ~reek 1-· 'LAMIMATORS ~Mr: Bllflcy, 82G·3600 Sl'fvice or Hunli{l£~0!1 ~fter one year._ conwany paid JlrOUD 111 dept store. Hrly'we«e f'.as;b\Qll .l~l an •: 1J U$l Jsl1111ds and ijte ~arib· Westsajl Corp. sailbool . . ~ Be,ech.16168 BeecbJUv1 • rns u rance, credit uruon, etc. Apply at.. + b oquses. l\~van_!:e· have 4 yrs ex ~·type bean are3s. Must have m:inur. h as i mmed. Cfassit1ed.;ds 642·567~ &11te121. · :1;•~r,t1t ~n ~0~1~, r~~01.luc+· ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT mrnt f¥lssib11itic!'.-OPcn1 6.5-?l)wp?n, &hi!(). w'?m· SUl,)ER ~.l'lA1.¥~Nq~ v:iaanrics for h a nd, · · • • 111~!4 In Beach C:IHe:\ & .A&;>Ph •. 'llMJ 3_ti9 LSan und love<'tbvc waler ~ '· t · / t 1 ·t 1 • 111c1•nlo\,., & 1·~tra prolll 330 W lay Sf Costa Mfta C>run"c Co. '',·ill.Collc'"t ttfigueh V1 . Suite• .200. d d t·• ·.... ..· arrwia ors w 3 eAl!I I • -:;.;. L~ :: : 1 · .J 1 •rt • •• .. "" .. un 8 •en ure .... v c ..... ; r expcr. We have open· '•Jrrn ~ 11•nui. · "'~'between the h o urs of 8:00AM·5:00PM.· Juhn~l3t873·4737, N.& ·periencc nec.,'will truit1. ·· th t l\f / \\ 0 ,,,,.11 &· ,1,.11 '"' ri'l' ?li9 <n'i!H • " ll)gs on e rhcgu ar on 1 :.. lo1Pki!J1~ fol' ma~· 11,. li~c·<I Call for appoit1t111tnt pleos. J>l..:NT1H. ASSISTi>NT.'At E.X. S 'E J;t V't C El\I £ N . Of' appl. U\r~ T~urs s ifl of 7.AM I • '' • ' } ut 1y.µ1 11)!. 1t>ld11111 p,q1t•t'1<. 642°432.I , ext 276. ll·u~t .l yr cxp ct· Ex· WIT H good records , HOSTESS to.5.30~1 :'II +a pnrt·time • ·' ~ wari•howw JCllh °' \lot I. Equal Op~qrtunity Empt,oyer p<illUt.'<i. <lult1.·~. x .ray.-!1Cc<lt'd-klr a:1s1gnments Morrlhru Fri 11·5. Apply .~~~r~~l ,~hru, Su~osatr:;: 0 ~::.·· .... 'l ' I \\ '" k w v11u11.ll 1.1t:•1µlt> • Wemer. 841·11501., • 'Un si<? tTainini: lnol re· Rd. Laguna lhlls. 'u ccormfck i; Ave 'costa u "'.~tor ,1 ll1111•l0d 111t1rn1u • t'a!~·llme Ca.U. U r .. lO' tbe a~t'VC Army. Del T a'co, !5252 Lu l':iz securit . PP ;rd 215 • • u ~ .,, H;1111cl Jdv.1111·•·m <"nl I , , qUired in maoy Ct1ses. -~ .. , • ( " )-•1 I J ~1~;1~1~~1·0~11i'~~·~·~·::1~ ~;. ~~~:.~~-~ ..... !L~~~~'r.~~•410•!!~ ~~~t~/nc~Sd~~:~;o;r.,~ .ij~nr~t~~· yo~r Arm y ~~o:~~·WP~~T~o~~o Mt>sa . Jr 'v ~J '. ·,__ ,~·-~"',1'·-·''.,.~, ... 11 ,1;1rt \\ot'k 1mmrcl t'Jll •EAUTY STYLISt I per. ~al mornuii.: & !\Jon· 15251\tesaVerde E. Stavrows ..'>w'f le Sirloin ' r• ~ u bctwn!JJm & Jrim ~rui.t 00 1.itcs t trend" in BUSY· HOH SMOKING day a, U r . Scbum~-.foila Mesa 540·1026 a.'!JO \Y. ~l.Uw."t.N.IS •• : LEAD WOMAN \.\-._. . .---,.-.-" ' V' llJtural ~t v llnj!. 837-4250: 0 r r i c c n e e <1 s , 2 g.tHlfi·OI.' . • .. . . ' I t~\ihirtk~S ri'l~ XJnt vpJ?Orluoity in ~ 1,' '1> ...... -I . "' ' ~ 1, ~ · 539-1 183 837·14i7!1 . ' salespersons . Drop hy OEN'PAL RELDSERVIC& ::i~s~~lur~ · ..;.:l.."I~ !'~ c ~g f9m~~n:~ '" ) n·~ J-1 . • ~]J• > -IOAT BUILDER Kahl<' Rlty, s10 w. rnlh Ortho0ontrccha1rs1de a,. ~EPttESEkrATIVE t·~rocc. To;;;~' reramicl$,1or ~m1. e~c· ~. n ."W.~·.. _ y \ltrnct.int p 11rkin~ Lot St C !\l G-t6·3!)97 ;.1:.l. i-;x~~· !_>reC'd. CoS~a West.sail Corp. b\IS im· i---tronlc comwoents \flt.1 ! •• ..., \\kntJ-; L0.1m1,pm Stu $mJll r-.tm y.ird Of~S ci"'"'ltfVE"'S ~u~a S4ti;,l 10. m ed. vacanc1cs ror a HOUSEC!t.£ANER. ~r's minimum e:vpr. 11,1ftpnl'tl ,;;;,;10~1 .111 l,HJ\':. of '-'"Pr'd (X)O\l _., " versatil1; s.a i lbnat ..Prefer 2)ia. ~ys wk..-., Salary commensurate ...,.. bu1ldt'r:o.&toolt-n~ ~knorWomen Dental-Orthodontic Alilll, cral\,!lmao·w(at least 3 r er. H a!~~r. V 1 ~w . wtexpr. Xlnt bentfits. • .. -·~· \u1om11tl\1' I' ~2li1\llt::D BOATS :'tlustlx•25or over 'exper or dt!ntal .asslog. yrs expcr. in all phases 5-0SJO Call Carole 581·38l> for .. ,. l\cY. l.>dd1:~.,~hop ncctJs Sil ~3 A~~·~~,~~n ~h~l.St2_::?S.S2 or b o.~l e:sr p e n~r y, Uoi.i~eepet" -& Va ··--appl. •" -, n";•"' 1'11p \V:ll!I'' p.1111 l-:111:11~ BOAT CARPENTERS 11251 Slater An•nue Dcnt.;.&J Hecepliornst plumtiinj & electrical. Di1tu~5~ A~crnoon shift. 1.EGAL SECRET1'RY Got' .twe·lve I C. lM l ""I \Haab ~ rhere ""4t ~ cons1dera· M~. ~it,c i & dinill•,. . . • :-.1 •• 1nwr • ni.: 11.1111t1•1.. '" Iii' ,., > n FounlJll"I \'allP}" i-:xp<'nencc ne~. blo travelulg from o.ur ·~m help 11, "ue~t h'·m.:-:. f:.:xpcr1eoced Co•f<>i;~c;.,. ftull(i1 , ~ '"'l1'h"'' up N it 1111) r.1tc tiiJ 7~ -'-'~ ---581 !MIOC> d • • -u .. Nwpt Ctr '4o"""" d • t,rol ~h·n llJJlll"'""' '·I tla\' jt~·Urltl'~1ft-i:.· 'l .: CAREER SAttS • ~_.. p~~ lo our walerst e "-"l(;.67ltJ. . • -. . rum ·...-. Ars sl\owrctom \the re Y1>U ....---·--• 1t.RK ' 111 ~ '111·1 .. VIII ""Jo. llJl ... th· BO ltC~ "~ t• Ohl Es tab'!. 'l'O CXjla~cl· . • Wiii d<>'~prtanly wor k & HOUSEKE£D-=.tl LU~UOR c~ . . • I ' 11 ··r.' 'l'l•h .11 · A . A 1ng i11 Or;in l!~ .~"·.DIETARY AIDE boat'!h\~'pret>irh'\iOn i 11rrm;" Experd. So. Laguna, ctru-• ~ · .:1t.'1'•\l·•IIM•I 1\1 ('\I I ~l·1·tl-+4ll';.~IA~"~l"'bl • .;:.r\ Complct,c tr;ilnll\g Jll'O C all "!\'l s"M~tll>h alcl : lu ntinlll Oll llarliclr ;\.lalure perso11 pref'd. mrnt'" -Y.:!lett-.... ,-.. · 1-1 .. w.111 • '":'lie.'.' . n·.c.i 11. A o. 1H~l·a Jlr.im. Xhtl hl-l\f.!11,.~ Car M.it\Jr(• lndlvlduut rl': S49·9'1lt ·ext 47 for more !Jome. zo. hr::. wk. S2 :l(I <.;uU Mr. She9'ard 9:Mn· • 1 • -lit•I < 11.1l ro11c h up m.111 ~lllow , S{arl al S8400 .1n·f'orma'l hr. ~ut1cs Ind Ille lpm,499·2581. • { ,\ppl) Ill pur~on. 7 :w :1. w/quarturly rar .. e.... q11 i n •1l fur dc :.i.c"rt~. 100. h.'skps; & t•a rc of I ~h1ld ·• wa•t ... r,"""O AVON !-tk•PJ ·"k'lloJL~. litJ:J Call 5~11·5001 Wcellcnt1s,ti:i m .·Z::ro ___ .___ aftrr :..cboo1:11rs2·7 p th. llVHC1tarqeHurs.e .. -: Ill• lt."V C J'latt-a;;c :-.1 ----S II '-S II I p.m. l'll.•n ~c t•all M s FOODSERVICE :\1/'J'rTh •f'.,'•·•.t1''"11n""."v A.MIP~ . , . • nc llll!<>< ti\" in~v C;.1rq•v at11:~78000. • ., .. 1;: "00 ~ ""'' ''·~ 'f~Milf'tr.hmtlGf ' ? " b IOA Et'AIRMEH !'ltt·11·roortlwat11 A~1·m·y. ,_EVERLYMAHOR i\ll iir.oupa helper . mini or <t!J3!11GG~. ,,1 days, i"ttlm c .' Lid<> <:ooN. • U1;"1i' 9'1~1.mas • H~ExtreSS 1\tu~t lll\t' per \t11•ht __ 13411 Camp11.,llr1v.. 2+H>~V1:iK~tradJ 'restil~i!nl al n~w local' 't\Sk!orJ~~..!.'._~r:-.un _ Ce!lt,r. 1 ~55 Superior • ; lo Molw l'Wll "'~.1lr,.. 1•:1111L111).! CARPENTERS· •Jla).!una lltlb ·• ~ec. athletic dub. ~Ion· llousckl'l'r>Cr for 2 :idults Ave, NBG4~7764· , ChrhMloO•Merner1 l\t'l'tl nMI w urk .. 1' BOATS y.quat Opportum•y r'rl. approx 10 30.2·30. GO!)d'pf;.11)l cqok LVHorRN M th d U t I JI II ,111(,11.11 IO 1111 l'\\'rv "'I l" I u ~. 1t II ... I' cl f.:rnr>IOyflr . Call for appt . 551·6232 ff.16·0\17:1 ove em un er 0 r ree. ~lc•l\ouwll.i;o..•ll \\U:'li HLt i k •c"~ Soul 'JIU. \1111 l.'r ''"PW'. n~y•t ----._~.._,__ . -·3·11 :30. Charge Nune, •· 1., l't l """l ~i l•, ,. ~~fl •t .. :I '"'-')I \111 ,1 h; 0 1\\' f'\11 '1ti0l ~ F'Ul~:'lil~ltl': Ptoui.PkCl'pt.>r, must IH! nu•tJicalions ~ tr.ca l· iw.111111111 ~\th 111\1·l r\' -lrJ11s11 To1•'-':11:r,&\l1tl 'o.ISHWASHEll .OELIVf.ltY \hit ~f <.'leaning. lndrv. ment:<. Xlnt Salary & ' •l• rh• I 11 • 111 "It'. I If llool.1't•••1>c1 ~r.1v11;1 h111l'l 11, \pfll\ l o S1•r11n l<ekcf Shin :if 3n \\ antt•d lull llml' for irnutni: tkr:-•'-r ar. ~ l>cncf1ls. ,,111.,. \uu h''" C1H MAliEiOOK t~<.u.11.i \\l'-.h.ullutfl HOUSEKEEPER/CHIEF Curn1t11rrdeh1cry,ware· hrswkSJS4.lmo&14 tli~ P'arkSupmor . -u I. 1 -1 ;:-;-, .\l rL'ornud. \•~· tv>~"'mg &hwltlmi;:m.1111 J145SupcriorAve '"'' .1 l 11r ·• 1111 1 • J;,!f, On U1 i-; t1ppo1.40 J•1111 J•' Cust:i .\Ii·'·' t.1<10 (.'om .1ll'!IC'C:rtt<..'lr 'tellJl\<'t:. Knu" fc1l gc of llOUSP.KEEl'f~H. live in Ncw~t Bch &IZ·ZllRI t 11.-•h•pl or ).!ro'Alh ---tf>SS:)ttpt'rtor\vt·"'-~s me~J rhanll t ool s w.)JJc.isant (Jt.,. .. onahty, • ,,.,. . . 11.\f1,-.,JT'll"I< "ho 1.,111 m.inuf \.trfc~ dul1t"• C~t¢1eoner ~ew11or11kacb..:Jllb·11ti·J noce:.~.Y. ~\U~r"IJ PH. pla l\ .ictivilte'I ror \lJ\ClllNIST. ruJI lif\le. lnv l• •1 111 ,.111 11 u ltl l'.illt'l•di i \\'111.~ll(l'.!llh l'I0 27Wlt\\nx ·111 ·311 f<'r.r>d ,d11ldfe11 hkclocook cx1 Ill'' ~mil Mf llt'"'ll' ~ 1)('1101'1 l'cr .... 111 • I • " OO"lllT S\11w ttttp. r;t ·~ ( ' r I (i I c. . ;.i I g. \l.11111:'. t •·h ,1hl" "'~ rMll~·nlri•ollluntin~lur tA-SHIER -1·~f ,IJ.ifl Nt>hpt•i''iwc Cric;~l'flnf~riors abletolak<'cttrt'IJ <1m:il lrm111 lrv1nc.Mr.1ti1ey, h'.1m1• _ . tlJ'~ J \\t•cl-.. Hi.· oti. H)\.:.&u..i.~ul vd . • . • • 1-'~·~lc. :.i1tl'2S ~S /\wty 492•41 3 1 h.ow.c on 0.111>0:11 lsl. 2 97!1ftOllO \\ , • ., t 1111 11 t •• r llol" J ~.~C' 121 ,,..,.._ < Jfllt•n.1. ' dJ\ c; < n 111 fll'I' 111 Mr \:ffniut 1'15 Ch1ldrc11. l>oy 7. 111rl 8 S ---------- 1 htt .1 »•t.' "·•t•il -~~ --• bt-nttfit, l'Jll Ion .i11~. I':". l~Ll~rst' (·11s'la ~l i::i.'1 . GAS Mun wonted. loral 1>.1y wk. N(ln ·~mok<:r. \1.AIDS-Apl l~!llf'V•Ce. iu1111.:s ir.3 HU.c ,, ., .. '-•... ~~-C'J r wosh. Sula.t'y + S~~1ry fll'"1bl1•. 1145.4130 :;;ala""ed . Frin ge ll.1h)i..tll1Jr 'ff'lt h1•1 "tnt~ VV",... • a.....t..l. , , , , -;-,-; , , DRIVER comm. Cnll &U·"'60 (.'l 1 or ti75·:14i25 aru; benefits. Reg_ hrs. Park 111.1tu11• lu\~1k ,~oin:1n tv S~"'s ~ l':i8hll'J:. \,tfc\rn.1 ~e)11. !? , • -::.:.:...__._ Newport ou. l Park ,,l w tt) mu old h:ih\ Hou•ewivo& ix>s•l1'~('~"'~~.e I u rt tim<' ''?" H21;ll • GenerolOfficl' Jlou11c.w1vl'~ or •. ~.l(l·&OS. Newport L>r . N .O . .\Ion 1-'r1 tonm :!flm 1111!~ • Meottlhthteni • & 011t•1>00n·llJ>m. ~·uu 4•hlcJrn. must bt.> ovr 5· 1• ' • mio.1<! i>r Jtm~I~ p1fo11' •iJ44 2G'.t2 rc•11'd 1 .. u: lk h 1•11 2;;:ic; J.l illcon Dufl a r corp. 5'11\·lfmt ext 495 lid flnm l.iv11"' Ill\ area. No sp1.·<; Merr:n,:ment pnrt lime. from ' y,onr Mmr' s:!'hr .. _._·-~------- l\:ohy <,1l l1•r \\ .1111t•cl for HVl'rni.:hb. 111111un• laity 111·cdl'll 1o '" ~.1 i :1 h"t . .17pm ,. ht· n·qd :-,.a .:1:i2s. , utt• P.I 111 f-? n ·On 11 n r (;7~.7JIJ6 or 11:JI .:1t;;.i;'. • ' ~laintenance Ill Un w11nted 11~1.:d:. (TH.'n & ~-Omen °l t.:ll':lmnl! w11rnc1'\.,\\;:l)ll1·d, • 1 qrp. ~'taffin.I( new ofc in ---part time--.P(cJ)onalih;. n ny tlltl' w ho enJOY SJ.:XI+ fl(:rhr Mu1>lh•"'' ELECTRONIC !~vine . !'-4e1•1} 1·n · SJ.OOltr.5fiC·:Jt43,. ·'"' ht1rr11 w1tht'.UVcrn1t~ ---'-~ Oat•k)o-"und tli)tibefl4 \\ ·ffJln~!--~. Pl'nplc : lo Ill· . ' t l '.\tanager r~nu $!)K ~tlt'r1kl11A w 'ollwri;&whq t:ar.llP71«11! 1 , • TECHNICIAN lhv.s;llsllc, po~illVI' ' l'~DECTQRS · ---~-.er.I;,.-..--- -· • 1 runurll1cu11ll-,uhs.".· •. ;11131111!' ('i r l'oltM .• Lcoduce.uwxpcns1vc OM-~: ••. ~ • f Sport1n9Gobd1 ll11hv:oth•r tlf1n"1'lw1•~1', ' C~K !VIII~ 1>1vor.Sit'•t•d work load 1n llonally known prorl~di. * celvlnn/Mech'I U~ique u~P<lf'· r.,r .. ~~ln•I hVt"ln. ~ IW\~, 11.(. :1 "''-'' No .Jctua l ~cHio.JJ Ill ,l.TJ ',l Clc~IJlfl & t~tng of If)• '(J'(lm.uur.of11. r'ree ll·•.rk. • l. "'JI • • orlt'nlcd 1ooiv. l~ Jnln l•J\e ch1tdrt>n. h:i\I' l''<llt'r \1)1\ cd, & no ,,eltltl~ ill'! lm111e< 1 c 1/>en1n).! 'fqr 11,I r ltm c n t :1 ti on. Ad. 11\g ~ ..oLh•r ~nel 1.lt.~ 2 · ~:\p <'Cent l''q1er , t m11jor corp,.w/super ·dto- & refs Gnocl 11.1~ .,OmtrflcnlS. Wbr~ w/(ine clerk typist. Co11:-.idrr1l' vnt1cL-tl t-;inl•lics, Inc. p~·asa9t£µrf~Hl1t1iS.ft s~~~i~t'L·'"t l~~,..;~i>c grnm. Ca(l D .. Prqpp, 1>1.t 1!"l37 ••f the most popular & ble telephone cont11rt & l:!ll Victoi ia St . C.J\1. r~axcd .:ilmospr:,c,rc. ,'f'io mpc ~ ~ar J 1 848·l288. Lleflnis & Oen· --~uC're.,srut riroducts on detail work. 't;'ypt·, ~A ~71J;S.t:.0.P: ciCpcr n{'(•.·«c 1110 w ll11fg ex.-,~ c ire ml! PersMnel Scrvict .of 11A UY S 11' TE H. ~ d ct\c mai'kl'\ toil'tly Arfm· Wl'~l. rrwsl bc<:1Cl'ltrnlc. -u:r u1vnh ·t.'d. Xh1t 01>POr !-Or • !IW'i:ouss . . llunllngt;n Beach. ·1$168 m,1\url-' womJ11. :> liJ:fl>, C!t\X.'fl!>tVe product who'~ CoU 644-3389' Et.IOTlltONtC TECH •"' a.<1 Yan <'ctn.C n t. C a 11 ri\iti I )~r li"P<'r 'fjf ~:.ich H}\·d. Solle \2" , 30to4pm Exprd.n1,, ,n;HT\e ·~a b~c.ehuht !l,\M 'lllNonn F:lcctronlcii mitnuf. luls ~J:l 8~95. Timclifc prckl•s(oC411 Cl\•ttr 1 .,.--:1 My hom~lU ~16 27i I• \\1.>i;d thruvul the ~mid . THE IRVIHE co. . ''" lmmt'll openin!( ror Hhr~ru:s.. Inc. EQ~JI 01>· 10spcct19n; Must k1 I fli_A,..AGE~ llh -'"j'•1 • r' Wcirk in :i :,oulhful. :i:>ONt•wfX!rl,l'trOr ,. !ln.Qltlctfon1r,tr'h&.tci;t _IX!"Brn;ro~~M l fo! __ 1 ... c~tm:1·cxl~!C.hlul'Jlrl{ll' , r:111erA1al. Bob1. Old "'.ky~l~~~ ":;~1 .;_' ~1??, 111cn<ll> ."tmut'4>hf!:t' & ~IWp(Jrt tk ·II rnc;1>4•t.tnr 2 \'rs of el'°' • • • • .. :.,hl•nlMh& i\ , l·a~hloned lce\'ream , 0u)·11 7 & :i ~.II:\;., 11111•"11 .. hll\'l' t\ln. ~hlll:\f~ ~r~ 1-:Qu~ll'OpPor e~:•IOH'r lHlf11C 'ludy '"rollcJ(c or GUARDS •Proto-Sourcf , llun~ngton Cent.H Mall. t..12 11.ij\fl.''· \'.\Ju n."11,:ivt •1 l'<1u1vJlerll w urk or Co1taMiesa 4Vr"e"~r 1n 1mur('i\df Nt•11f" 'li\~1r1.....,.n t _ .#.l;\r;iplo~1l1:1l;iry+ex· .• -• ., ··~mtl1l~rl' ~·~l)l•r req'd Perrnancnt.r"ull&part iatlf'let'tronl<'lll"l>C<'tlOll ~1,11agt•r . ~n rl t~rc Habyi;iltcr hYc m. ~µ,•.ik lroro~IY l\bu".;il .com· icoM t>A1'1 t o :'h (~mal .. • :\l"I l11~~f1ts 11\t'lll<lil\g \ttno Phone & lrnm;p re· Must know color code . ...,,,/nan 11 rti 1•• C~l I EnJ.(lish, N. U an"<•. own m\s.sio"n ~ ~huses.1 Con· ove" tWyr'~ N'tl'H'!Cfttt7KC~ ml!<1i!J\1dcntal 'E.O.E. ' q'Jl . Hetired w elcome. blueprints. schl!m11Ut;!i.. II,; 8 · 5 I Ii L.'F+ I I li'u t rm. &W· 1660.1\33 7676 tt>i1 1 t'I & Mdh,.. mt:en ivec;t. Cqc>king. nu ho1>'lc.clt-11n Disc lns......,,rib • Call 5.1()·0274 ofc hrs 10 2 Will pcrfnrm iH!lpert ion 1Jam.4pm.. ·: • -A • • ---,... ~ nt O v~nce-m e n ing, )'art l 1mr 0111)1 . 102 E n k St'C ~f CloscdW""'' .' at 11uhNmtraclors & a~ -n~\OVSITI'ER NF:Eot::t.> ·Po;.s1bihtlcs fur botb·men 1;73.151tG . !I~:.·. . . . I ry . !list with inrlW\.ISe laspc• Marinf Ef~rtfc <.trl 1 ~·1 7 y r !I nllt &wo1"9cn.. -'*'""'er-r• H~IRCUT'TING · • t1bnwhenrequired.,. f 5-r•~f,T.-c'-'icifl'I /\ y /\I I. A.II 1. E &. • • • K:9u1n-~'111';t;r , ·:.1 • PJ\RLOUH · • '• • Sccki11Jt exp. bench man ll f. l. I/\ BI. I'. r I) r O(• :'1111 ex per. n~c. \OU re· Kust~r.s, t:lc•am-r~. iu s ENGINEER 2 i\ss1slan\:1 Nccdt•d Exccll('nt co l>\•11cr11 s,1 \\'II h 1~cc Radar !,le. ra'llonul \'\ \!llln11 1oltlt16:. q:I'¢ fuij PoX \\Pllf bl'1n11 New pn,-1 LHv d <'Ill .. l\lu~l ~ 1,lt'cnsc1l <'ltule 1 r '~'l' ,,·11111Jfe,n c:ou<t pny & hf•nrfits. {'l\I arrn lil5 !111111 (ruined. Vnu c:un \\ nrk ~·4'.?13 :M · • , ft'i5·hll014 after e 11nofs...: 11' /'ft.I ~./i &15·3ft3:i ... • f.• mor~n¥ or,,·1•t•. h(~. On ----anuf"ctur1n1 ..1... ---holldn p. ).!I"'':/. Ill ___ ...,.-___ ...,. llABVSl l 'l\.,•,IL• 1..¥•~ ty {1>t11l11 by~ rronl COUNTER.GIRL. Cl H"l'lfl\t~>Clcls nce1lcif f~ 11ur;inC'tv:.•n.-lsJ. y ;o1 USE THIS clt•ra11rtcn N\aah~ atJs. """ '111tl'Toun6ma,.f o m' 811100,, Island. "I:o S3 Ill', Far p't~lul'lftht 1tlcvti OP· hair cuttlqg clus!I, hail· hir ,~ 11 v 1wr worl'll4l.l.O cur~ for >'t ol~\ GWl'IUy.,.·~114_,.1,.e tit to c111I t>75.S5'21. i:n•nt nf 111m11ll cl~1·ct11rtf"• <'utt.fng & rond1t1on1ni: ~ lf\\~ly~)~rln "-• ' DAILY PILOT boy, dli,rit'I; 11c-hnol l'lri. flrl\lr:i~J( tq ,4t 1~,t J1,1 -. .mec"un1co 11&:1r01 > c~. free 6'j5 03ll r · 11m~ c.L i\ly Mmvhr ,S. CIA t•fd111 yl!§.tj,1tolc ~l~ vo11~ual OKLI Assistant Mnwl'c txpc'r. •i\ dor um'eflt11• ' ~ ·•. ,. ' AQCUME QR.. .~...r.IS~U'1LT ...... ,. s.t:>-• ' """~ ·' op~r. Ct\"t!lft Jt!ne lle 1)9r11<>n. APf>IY '"/.~11~ tlon. proau"ttloq ll'rir ' If 0 .. .., l"'w . .,.. .• , .,.t11.1lbt'e.lll.'.MMl9i. ~ _ 1~ NewJ)Mt Div , ~:_ trouht,•iihoot1ng & c~t To Place your J}l U k I SllVICI ..,""1)ClNv , re~uctlo11 . Oo11reed J'l H1W ACCOUMTS IOYS A..,D o••Ls Delicatessen, full t1tn'c 11n,lncer pr~f'd. "Fast R~11ult" i9-~h't, "1' DlllCTORY ' CLHIC " "" Sant.a Ana 4rt1t. S ... COSWITCH l..,C Se I n.1 , ~1 .... • r.111,loo VJeJo .,.EL..l'ot'Q 836-4760 "' ,... rv ce,., rectory,, ,, u rir.,.. For R esult · B:mk r11per reoq'd . 11rca ~ol'n ybOi own -----· -1139 BakerGM\a Me a ad .... C-11 Now 2921 10ollRler Service Call Conliu't llnh {'rcl~hton lllOf\4')' 11~lllnA aubacrip· Ot-llvel') men for home de 549°3041 64Z 56 71 S •Ana lnlne Nutlon.al H.ank ~ hon~ nOC'r ~chool For In Uv. LA Time" Equ11l Oppor Emplny('r • 1-:qual por F:mptoycr 642·5' 71 833-3700 t; 0 F, forinat11111 cull 830 091:1 Call~ Ii JO ht. l2J ht. 122 I -' 1 , .. I On e ach Thur~day: ,from November 11th through December 16th tfie Daily Pilot will pubhsh ..special pages to make it easier for you to convert your s aleable items to Christmas cash. c I Buy a box und~r ou~ ~re~ .4 sell your toys , 1 st>orts e(\ lli p ·m 'e'"ltt';· I u g gage, a p p Ii a n c:e s ·, f u r nit~ re .• antiques, harr'dmadc & ua.ique gilts and no matt~r ~at yout' business -we have a' tiox for 'you! I I!•• f I ' Putting a ~x under .. our _tree i~f ~·sy and ine xpensive. Rates are $4.PO tuf.·'lhe smaller box to S22.SO for the I a r g est box.· B~(i , ·t~l.'1 SAVINGS tf you rlUJ more than one tlrn~. informaUOJl~· ·~ ,.qr,'1~ is geod with us. We'll but you or ,_.. can ·charge your ad ·to y.ru r M a s t er Ch ~ r g e () r B~Am~rlc.ar~~ 1, ,· .. : • "Stmui ' ~ . . ' ... ' . " .a , .__.~. -- , • -l I 1 ., , ......... CHRISTMAS CASH 1r,e.c-. ............. DAILY PILOT ClllSTMAS TREE ••••••••••••• • -ClwtttMn • • Gfftt,_. « : 1~.,.,.... • 41 wtuat • wondurCuS Wil)' i.t • 4i llttll yuur ~ooclfc11 for• • Chri11JmaH . rt.iht uut• rrum tinder our • ·: * ~·~•t,\~'ill''l ··~: * :· .............. . • if:p fll YOU•• : • IUStMISS• IS « ii OS,.'TS TOVS « : , Sf'()ltTl~CGOOO:) 4l t:LOTHl~G l'OTTt'll\' • ~ Jl::W .. ;1.nv llAIK • • llUSIC fo'Uft~ITU6f.! • « ASTfl.lUt:S llOIJffl~ ii « IJOOJ~(·s,·A~\PPlllA:ltt;ii ii • > '""; u ~t;.'l ·-491 ....... "' ........ ........ ..... ..... t.SUa •· ( AVTUMOlilf.1-:s fl •Sert thc:m the i;imptc • _,.r=T......,,,,.. • 11nd t'UK)' wu~' rrom ii und4•re>ur • ti <..itfU~'T~IA.-t1'R9':9': ii ***~********* ·. ~ ... , I !)I' ~ ~. B ~ Ii,_ .. ~ ~J t \I:.... H1_P•4"1'4 ... ~' _iN B[ ........ .;...l ..... '">!, '.J ;) .. .:~ 1973 2002. 2BM ml, sunroof "air. ssooo. 833-8701 •~~~~~~~~~· 1 .. ............ 1, HONDA Cars OYElt 100 T • Choose ft-OM! UNIVERSITY Olds....We ..._. C.s • GMC TNClls 2850 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa 54Q,9640 1975 HOftCle Cl•ic $2000 548· 1319 art 6P M '77 TOYOTAs HERE HOW ... ·- . . ·' 1 • ..... ,. .. ' • • t • ... ~ . • ~CLUOES' · • Body Side Mouldings • POwer Steering .• Pow~r Disc Brakos · ~ ~utomat1c Transm1ssron I . • I .. ...._ ···-.. , .. • Spcrt Mirrors • Rallye II Wheels • Accent Slnpes • 350. v-a Engine • Factory Air • WSW Steel Belted Radial Tires • Rallye Gauges • Tinted Glass . . '16 SPECIAL BR ~~D NEW SUNBIRD .. . " ·AS LO.W .. AS, 2 ~"2786C1 04846 COL ~JS)0 ~4 DA~~A.GED SPECI ALS Sometimes one of our cc:-s c.;e:s ban9ed up or creased. We have i~eci~ io~. prices on these cars. Expertly . repaired by .our o~~dy shop. ' · • S Speed Transmission : i~~~h::1t10~1ng s3995 • WSW Steel Belted Radial Tires • A"' radio Ser. #2M27BGc'101 923 • • • ------....... -----~--------------------------------~-• Automatic rransm1ss1on • 1\M Radio • Tinted Glass • Tilt Wheel • Power Steering s351 a • Power1Brakes • Luggage Carrier : • Custom Interior St'r #2C1 !i8GU546113 ... Wectneiday November 10, 1976 DAil V PILOT 0~ ... 1 ;BRAND NEW 1977 IRAND ·P~~I • • • f AS LOW AS IMMEDIATE · .. • to • . ' ·DELIVERY Ser #2J57R7P163282 LEASE ·DEPT'@ SPECIALS EXAMPlE: WE LEASE ALL ,. 1977 FIREBIRD , .5 122~~ .... Onlv $~73.93 Delivers · ~ l so 00 Secunrv Oeoos11 s 127 93 Ftrsl Payment Including Tax $94 00 License Fees PARTIAL EOUlPMENi INCLUDES • F•ctory Air ConcS111oning • Powe< willdOwS • Automatic transmission • Power steering • Tilt wheel • Aallye II ~heels. Ser. #2T87R7N108669 . · .. MAKES & MODELS 2'4 MOHTH CLOSID EHD LUSE Mo O~ To l.y At &Id of LMSt l asW Oft J 5,000 ~ Ptr Year I ... • OH Am<>VID CUDIT 197 6 DEMONSTRATOtrS / ~17~.,~ ~=-l--. 2,Ji' . ,, ....... p ,. -~ .-~ ·J; -~-~-¥_/- 'CHOOSE FROM GRAND PJllX, TRANS AMS, BOMNEYILLES, ASTRES, SUNBIRDS . . SEE & D~IVE THEM TODAY! -r -' •74 CADILLAC SEDAM D'VILLE '74 VOLKSWAGEN 3 SEAT BUS 175 FORD GRANADA ,. · '73 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX FJC!ory air cond • IJ 1' I $ 56 POWlf LllM l •J l'JI' A'.' F \I s!eteo. utt wheel '9051. 5 4 :pen:! AM 1a~·o. ;ow 1ows4395 6 cyl, auto lrllJ'ls .. AM radio. s3395 m.1,.s '4.'JBLPUI Landau rop ratlye wh~s less • than 1',000 miles {84 tNJMl . '73 '°HTIAC FfREBIRD 173 PLYMOUTH DUSTER '72 CADILLAC a DORADO .. ' ~76 CHEVROLET NOVA '74 MERC URY t.:iAR~.~~S '73 OL~$~0BILE CUSTOM . 395 ~!rid~~,'gn,~~~s iu:;~:oi:;: '2795 ~~~,~~'~ s~:l~~~a:~~$2495 uindau top, 1111 wheel Oond1hon1ng, power 1tllenng. (6JeKFRJ AM/FM radio. roor rack. , · , ·(804NIFI · ..., . . " ~Xk· auto trans . ftdory air $ llonlng. pow<!r ~tl'er1n9 AM tad10 (909NLWI, . '75 PONTIAC ~STRE 4 cyl . auJ01• 11ans .. AM radio $ 1995 (589NAC) . . . . . . I . I fl ., .... #·~~--------; . ..,,,. ' . . .OPEN DAIL Yr--9 A.M. TO I 0 P.M. WE DPHTL Y DO PONTIAC WAHAMTY WOO •. UG,AIOl.l~S OF WH~ YOU Oll41MAU Y MCHASIO YOUR CAR · WE LEASE ALL MAKES AND MODELS . ·, .. I ~ l ,, DJ. DAIL y PILOT BRAND NEW 1976 PLYMOUTH ARROW 2-Dr. 4-soeed. power brak8I.. bucket seats. tilt steering wheel. tinted glass. Serial No. 7L24K67301357 --WHAT MORE CAM A LITTLE CAR GtVE? '7 6 PLYMOUTH VOLARE COUPE v·& auto trans lactory air cond1t1on1ng vuwi.r ~l eering power brakes power w"ldOW!. AMIFM stereo radio sunroof rallye ~·, 229NRR '73 PLYMOUTH FURY CPE.. V-8 automahc ractory air cona111oning oower sreering power 1>rakes rad•o hearer wMewall ttres vinyl roof 1669JNAl '74 TOYOTA LAMD CRUISB 414 4 cyl . 4 speed, radio heater. 4 wheel drive 1850LFH) 53695 Bench seat vinyl, standard transm1ss1on. bumper guards fr ont & rear Ser #HL41 -C6F-264355. '74 FORD PIMTOWAGOM 4 CVI auro trans radio. l'le8t81' wsw tires 162~1 '7 6 PLYMOUTH FURY SALOM SB>AM V 8. auro lrans factory air cond1honing, power steenng. power brakes. radio. heater. wsw tires. vinyl top side moldings (319PECI '76 PLYMOUTH ROAD RUMMER COUPE V-8. auto trans . power steeriog. radio. heater. (067PCV). '76 CHRYSLE@...R ....---:-;ii MEW YORKER Brouonam Seoan V-8. au10 trans . IDdory air c:ond11tonino. Power ~teenno. power brakes. PoW9f windows power seats. AM/FM stereo radio. heater wsw tires hit steenno wneet ""1yl IOC> Mir 107084 57195 '73 MERCURY 9 PASSENGER WAGO.. V-8 auto trans factory air concl11ton1n11 oower brakes. pcwer winoows. oower sears AM/FM stereo radio & 8 tracll. 1uggage rack 1564KEJI '72 CHRYSLER MEW YOIKER SB>AM V-8. auto trans . factory air oond1t1onlno power Jleerln9., power brakes, power windows. AM/FM radio. heater. wsw tires. power seats. vinyl top. (669GIU). AU. C/4lS 1411 SUIJICT TO PltOI S4LI. ALL P'MCIS Alt Y /4IJO UMT'IL I 0 I' .M. ALt.. l'IJCIS .UI PWS TAI Aflt UC..-SAU INOS I 1-14-76., Hoavy Oury AA sreo bu gas 3 Sooea ITIOer OOwer st aurolTllric 1, eermg. Se 78•t5tAe1 anSh!iss1on riar "Foo12F ires . G017239 ............ _ ~~ COMPLETE ·--~ • .,,-·~HEAVY DUTY" SERVICE ( . AVAILABLE FOR YOUR R.V. OMEOFTHE FINEST SERVICE FACILITIES ~ IN ORANGE COUNTY ~.. Ol'fN SATUltDAYS 1:00 AM TO 5:00 l'M ..... .,. MOND/4T 'IHIU FllDAT 7:JO AM TO S:lO PM ........ M C:-. ,.... Soeloot h --' Iii MOM "'° ... -II , ... Al ,...., M .... f• ... ---11·1•1' Huntington Beaeh Fountain Valley EDITION * * Afterooo11 N.Y. Stocks VOL. 69, NO. 315, 4 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1976 TEN CENTS1 Suspect . To Plead NoV.23 By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Ol 1 ... D•ll' PlloC Staff William Gene Campbell, who is charged with killing his estr~nged wife and her ex- husband in a hail of bullets at a Huntington Beach condominium six days ago, made a brief court appearance Tuesday. Campbell, 48, is held without bail at Orange County Jail. His scheduled arraignment on multi· ple charges Tuesday was con· tinued for two weeks. The double murder suspect. must return Nov. 23 to en~ a plea to the charges after con- sultation with his public de- f ender, who needs time to familiarize himself with the case. A public defender has yet to be assigned specifically to represent Campbell. 1 Campbell was brought before Judge Patrick Mc Cray in West Orange County Judicial District Court only briefly for the motion by the public defender's office to continue the proceeding. The suspect is accused or shooting to death Mrs. Beverly Campbell, 39, and her divorced husband, Verne E. Howell, 42, Thursday night in her home at 17847 Beard Lane. Police assert he fired at least six shots from a .38 caliber re- volver, hitting each victim more than once , s mas hing a nightstand with one slug and fir· ing another at Mrs. Howell's ter· rified 10-year-old daughter by a previous marriage. The youngster fled to a neighbor's home screaming and telephoned police. Funeral services for Mrs . Campbell, who had recently separated from her current husband, and for Howell were held separately Tuesday in Santa Ana. Authorities have disclosed .Campbell served prison Ume (or armed robbery and escape and assert be has a history of violent behavior. He was also being sought at the time of the murders on an arrest warrant charging him with the $1,000 burglary of one of two El Don Liquors outlets from which he had just. been fired. Information compiled in the in· vestigation led to Cam1>bell 's capture about 48 hours later in Costa Mesa by a force of more <Set: SUSPECT, PageA2) HB Cyclist Critical After Collision A 26-year-old Huntington Beach man was critically injured Monday whf'n his motorcycle and an automobile coll1ded in Laguna Beach The cyclis t, off-duty Los Angeles Police officer Alan J . Boyce, was reported in guarded condition today at the lntensive care unit of South Coast Com· munity Hospital. Boyce 's right leg was crushed In the mishap. The-cyclist also received a broken collar bone. Boyce was northbound on South Coast Highway at Brooks Street' when he collided with a vehicle driven by Kathryn Anna Calkins, 23, of 270ll Camino de Estrella, Capistrano Beach. The cause of the accident is un-. Jtnown. Carmen Pollastro, · Laguna Beach traffic officer said. Preliminary investigation showed that driver Calkins had pulled into the intersection from Brooks Street to make a left turn onto Coast Highway. Pollastro said the driver re· ported she was unable to see the cyclist due to construction of a water main with heavy equip· ment working along the road edge. HER MICROWAJ/E A HOT SEUER ,;The second person who called bought it. I'm really tickled with my instant success!" Here's the classified ad that sparked the sale for this Coslt Mesa woman: AMA NA MICRO WAVE OVEN . 6 mos. old. Tr1.1nsrerablc wnrr. $325. XXlMtXX~ • If you'd like to oonvert an ap- pliance to cash, or anythJng else, call tho Daily Pilot at 6U·S678 . The people 's . marketplace. • Kiddie ~arpentry Daily Pli.t Sutt ""'• Tracy Dugan, 5, a kindergartner at Circle View School in Huntington Beach, gets some expert help as she learns some basic carpentry. Her mentor is Rudy Borgonia, grandfather of one of her classmates. Teacher Inez Bruno said working with tools helps the youngsters in her class with small muscle coordination. Besides, she adds, it's fun for all concerned. No Dignity Left, Second Wife Says SIOUX FALLS, S.D. (AP)-"I don't have a shred of dignity left," says Patricia Martin, who learned after Bob Martin's death three •eeks ago her husband had a second wife and family200miles away. "l 've been reduced to having to beg for ADC (Aid to Dependent Children> and food stamps," Mrs. Martin told a reporter. "But'I'm prote<:ling my children. I can go through anything, but those children have to eat. All they know is that their daddy is dead and that they loved their daddy dearly." Martin. South Dakota 's direc· tor of economic development,· died of a heart attack at 52. ll was learned then he had a wife and five children here, a wife and four children in Pierre. "l 'm very angry that I have been put in this position." said Patricia Martin, 33, "My thoughts are 'How dare you do this tome, and remember, I'm not just some sweetie stashedin the · comer.' 'Tm a very simple person. I'm a mother first, and I was or the opinion that Bob was married, had three children and was divorced.·· Stale Atty . Gen. William Janklow confirmed reports Martin lived a dual life. Janklow ~aid travel and motel vouchers wiJJ be examined by a grand jury to check •·some· questions in- volved in the use of state funds.'' Jack Allmon, the state's secretary or economic and Stereo Equipment Stolen by Burglar A burglar who cut his way through a window screen with a knife took stereo equipment valued at $950 from a Sunset Beach home, Orange County sheriff's officers said, Deputies said the break-in OC· curred while t eacher Ruth Schrote Jackson, 41, was away from her home. The stereo unit was taken from her living room. tourism development and Martin's boss in Pierre, said he never suspected the "Tally·Ho" listed on Martin's \favel vouchers was the name of the apartment complex in which his Sioux Falls family lived. The state agency bas offices in -t>oth Pierre and Sioux Falls. Allmon said Martin generally listed the Tally-Ho for lodging on travel vouctiers turned in for Sioux Falls. Hesaidheassumedit was a motel. The family in Pierre, which has refused to comment on the mat· ter, lives in a single-family house. Allmon said Martin usually asked $11.50 per day. the state max- imum, for lodging in Sioux Falls. Patricia Martin said she mar- ried Martin in 1968 but has been unable to find a marriage license. "I remember signing a docu- ment, that's all. He took careofit. They have tried to check it out legally, but obviously I was duped, and I don 'tltnowwhy. "I believe this other wife was just as much in the dark as 1 was. She had to go through the shock of this also. I feel very sorry for her. Her children must be old enough (See WIFE, Page AZ> Thieves Draw Jail Sentence Two men jailed by Huntington Beach police last March 26 after they allegedly took stereo equip- ment, a television set and a tool box from a home at 4690 Heil Ave. have received six-month Orange County Jail terms. Judge James H. Walsworth or- dered the jail sentence and three years probation each·for Claude Raymond Creasey, 23, and Raymond Lawrence Nelson, 18, both of 15723 Brookburst· St., Westminster. Both men pleaded guilty to c harges of second degree burglary. Later applications by both men for reduction of sen- tence were denied by Judge Walsworth. Carter Backs Plan Cong.ress 'Cautious' OVer Tax Cut Idea WASHINGTON CAP) -As President-elect Jimmy Carter considers wheCher to propose a new tax cut in January, key con· gressional Democrats say it's too early to tell if one will be needed and warn they will approach any proposal cautiously. Carter said la at week, that if the economy does not begin improv· ing by January, there is a "strong possibility" that he would ask for a tax cut to 1 stimulate it. But Congress' chief taxwriter, Hou s e W a y s a n_d M ea n s CARTER GETTING ORGANIZED-PAGE A4 Chairman Al Ullman, said Tues· day that Congress should ap· proach any such propo~a! "with great caution." ' "We would be deceiving the American people if they were led to believe they would be getting major lax deduction." Ullman said at a news conference in Colorado Springs, Colo. In more detailed remarks re· leased through his Washington office, the Oregon Democrat said it is too early to determine whether an additional lax cul on top of the $19 billion tax cut already approved by Congress would be appropriate. Ullman said anti-recession job programs and incentives for in· vestments in high unemployment areas "would be more effective in dealing with the problem." In a related development, Dr. Gary Fromm of the Stanford Research Institute told a con· gressional panel today that the only question about a tax cut is how large it should be. A tax cut or some other means of stimulating the economy is needed in the near future not only for American consumers but also for stability of the free world economy, he said. "The state of demand still is weak and the Cree-world system might easily be plunged into another downturn by moderate shocks from large Arab nation oil price increases, an international monetary crisis or widespread harvest failures, he told a House· Senate economic committee hearing on the future of the economy. "The principal issue currently con.fronting economic policymakers in the United States is the size of a tax cul needed to put the economy back on its growth path," Fromm added. Oil Beauty Exteruhd The deadline for landscaping of permanent oil wells in Huntington Beach bas been extended to next April 1. Landscaping provision originally were scheduled to take effect on Dec. 1. The deadline was ex- tended 90 days by the city council thi s week , however, after the city's oil committee asked for more time to complete a study. Effective April 1, a six· foot masonry wall will be required to be placed around permanent 011· wells. · All .setbacks created by, the placement of the walls will have to be land· scaped and permanently maintained. Prof. Jay W. Forrest.er of the Mass achusetts . Institute of Technology testified that lo:ng- term cycles may have more bearing on the present economy than recent problems and said that depressions and recessions have been occurring about every 50years. "We beUeve it is urgent to ex-amine the possibility that the 1980s could repeat behavior like that experienced in the 19.105,' • he said. Threats Reported Patty's Tantrums Told by Inmates By tbe Associated Press The San Diego Union quote<.1 an unnamed ~ource..-in-Northe.rn California today as staling that threats bad been made lo Patty Hearst while the she was at a federal correctional institution al Pleasanton~ The Union also quoted Dr. Owen Kennedy, assistant re· gional director for the Federal Bureau of Prisons in San Fran· cisco, as saying the swtich was al Miss Hearst's request "for security purposes." The New York Times also re- ported today that inmates at the Pleasanton prison said Miss Hearst had "a number of tan- trums," in which she went to her room and beat her fists against the wall until the knuckles were scraped and red. Last week, the Times' ac- count said, Miss Hearst refused to report to her job of helping clean a dormitory unit. When Fog Shrouds West County; No Boat Loss Sporadic fog, heavy at times, moved in on areas of West Orange County as early as 3 p.m. Tuesday. Police and lifeguard authorities said the fog would lift intermittently, providing enough visibility for boaters to find their way home. Lt. Bill Richardson of the Hunt· ington Beach Harbors and Beaches Department said vis- ibility wavered between 50 feet and a half mile before beginning to clear at 7 p.m . . An Orange County Harbor Patrolman at Sunset Aquatics Park said one boat became lost in the fog during the early even- ing and was guided to shore by one of their vessels. There were no other reports of lost boats or vessels running aground. ''There wasn't much traffic out •there," a spokesman for the hilrbor patrol said. "People were toosmarttogetoutinthefog." Delay Noted On Autopsy Riverside County coroner's in- vestigators said a pathologist was unable to perform an autopsy Tuesday on a Huntington Beach woman found dead mysteriously Monday in Palm Springs, but it was scheduled for this afternoon. Irene Dorothy Ma.son, 63, of 17171 Bolsa Chica St., was found dead in t he J acuz.zi whirlpool bath at The Dunes Hotel about midnight Monday by a hotel employe. told by aut.horities she would be put in isolation as punishment.. she reportedly.-.said that wu what she wanted. Miss Hearst had been at the campus-like Pleasanton facility since Sept. 24, when she was sentenced by U.S. District Court Judge William Orrick. She wil~ become eligible for parole in lS months. She was moved from the spacious federal prison in Northern California lo a 12· story facility in San Diego at her own reque~t for security re- asons, officials say. Cbncern for Miss Hearst's safety was believed to stem from reports that she bas agreed to testify for ihe pro- secution at two upco~ involving her former under- ground companions. One trial at which Miss Hearst is expected to be a gov- ernment witness is that of Sym· bionese Liberation Army mem- bers William and Emily Harris on charges of ki$taping Miss Hearst in February 1974. The other is the weapons and ex- plosives trial of Wendy Yoshimura, with whom Miss Hearst was living when she was captured last year. · Mass Hearst, 22, who is serv-, ing a seven-year sentence for 1 a rmed bank r obbery, was! driven to the Metropolitan Cor- rectional Center in San Diego Tuesday. Bill Garrison, warden at Pleasanton, said Miss .Hearst filed a written request for the transfer last week~ "The decision to move her was made Monday with her at- torney's approval," Garrison (See PA TTY• Page AZ) Cyc~st Hurt In FV Mishap I A 16-year-old youth was hurt' Tuesday afternoon when t\e drove his bicycle into a car pull- ing out of a Fountain Valley restaurant parking lot, accord· ing to police. The accident occurred at Brookhurst Street between Ed- inger Avenue and Thistle Avenue at2:30p.m . Police said the bicycle rider. was riding in the wrong direction on Brookhurst. He was treated Ly paramedics alter complaining of pain in bis legs. He was later treated at the hospital. Coast Weather Elderly to Be Warned Seminar Aimed at Cutting Pre-Yule Crime No indications of foul play were evident, investigators said. Ther said Mrs. Mason was spending the weekend at The Dunes With a friend, Mrs. Ruth lcl8'tera, who had cone to bed a half ·hour before the victim was found. Night and morning fog, otherwise fair with high clouda Thursday. Days to cool with highs in low 70s, lows to near 50. INSIDE TODA '1 Tltrtt San Quentin inmatH were caught in.a 67-foot hm· Ml, 10 Jed uMeTpround, f'M. ing a month-long attempt at escape. Wlum captured. they 1«1'e onl71 35 Itel. OWQJf trom frtedom. Story P.agt AS. Huntington Beach police have announced plans for a seminar to warn senior citizens who might ~me victims of fraud or bunco schemes as the Christmas season approaches. Offlcen said they want to do something to thwart the crlm.es rather than simply take a report after ~lderly people have been'. victim lied. A three·m 1n panel of speclalist.s will speak next Tues· day at a 9 a.m. to nOO(l seminar In Huntiniton Boacb City Council chambers, both for senior ' citizen s or a nyone else in- terested.. . "This time of year is the most dangerous one for senior citizens who may be victimised," says Officer Mike Relic, ot the Police· and .,_.blic Affairs otnce. "We will discuss tbe latest bun- co and fraud schemes Md tell people what to loot for in sales solicitaUOnJ, for such things u carpeting and drapertes," be ex· plained. Nationwide, law enfon:emeat authorities point out crimiDala wbo prey OD senior dURllS f\nd L J the most unwery victims durin1 the Thanksgiving and Christmu holiday season. Seotimentallt.,y lulls many -especially loo.elf oldsters -into a trusting at- titude. Officer Relic po1n&a out the de- partment Is by no ._ene '"'atl.n« the senior citizen u ~pleas and naive bt th• Tuteday present.a. tlon.. Youni bouaewives are also en· couraccd . to attend and learn both clues to avoldlq beeomtfta •cooaumer fraud victim• and . <lee WAaNING, PqeAZ) . -·--•• t .... ii! I Resources Council Seeks Vol•teers .. · Volunteen at"e needed to serve an tbe Huntincton Beadl Human Besourcea Council. AJ>Plicailoo.s m_, be obtalned from tbe ltecHat.lon, Pub and Human Services Department. 2000 Jlaln St. Tbe llumaa Resourcet COuncU ls an~ = deallnt primarily wllb ems of sen.tor cithenl, a d · . t.Y tpakesmD l;&Jd.. , ' 'A2 DAILY PILOT H/F ., ·~ wi,..,...t. PHILADELPHIA HOTB. WILL CLOSE ITS DOORS SOON Bellevue-Stratford Done In by Legionnaire's Dlaeaae Hotel Joins Legion .As Disease Victim PHlLADELPHIA (AP) -The . 72-year -old Bellevue-Stratford Hotel will close its doors Nov. 18, a victim of ruinous business declines s temming from last summer's still unsolved legion- naire's disease . .. T he Bellevue-Stratford has found it impossible any longer to withstand the economic im· pact or the worldwide adverse publicity which has been as· sociated with the 'legionnaire's disease' even though no in- vestigative agency found any link whatsoever to hotel opera- tions," William Chadwick, hotel vice president , said. Intermediate Study Group Seeks Voices The Fountain Valley Celemen· lary ) School Di strict 1s seeking a pplkant.s for a 68-member com- munity committee lo study the feasibility or inte rmediate schools. Trustees approved rormatjon of the committee after a pre· llminary study indicated a ma· jorit) of parent~ and teachers m the Harper School Mea favored the scparatJon or ~eventh and t'1 ghth graders rrom younger stu· denL'I Tht' cammattee wall be com p osed o f tw o t:Ommun i l y representati ves from t"ach school area One memlX'r will be ap· pointed by the parent panel or each school com mun1ty council. The other member will be ran- domly selected by the parent panels No" 22 Trustees a re seeking input from all community residents, whether they are current parents or students or not. according tQ Superintendent Bill Plaster Plaster 5U$t#?<'Sted interested residents s ubmit a written re· quest to the chairman of their local school-communJty parent panel. These requests will be ac· cepted throu"h Nov. 17, he said. For more infor mation, contact Assist a nt Supe rintendent Ed Moon. 842-6651, extension 202. ORANGE COAST " ~ DAILY PILOT ,,..Ou'W'.M'C"-*·'0•1tyP·•o• •lftw'l'H'"' r f'loW'f t---1 '"" ... ..,..... Pr""'\ 1\ OVb''""""',.,.,, lf'WI 0i-Af<')I"' CN\t °'"'"'h"·~(.,"'et•n• ..,,...,.,•" .,., tf"'\ft\ u• Pvbll\ ... f"ld MOflli!f•~ '"'~ firtdil• •cw '\ ... , .. ~W f>ffo'llfDOf'I f"•.tC" HUl'lil•f"191J"l"""' C" ' .,, f.t111 Vlt ''"' ''"""'-\•d,,l•tt.K-Vftt .. , .. "'" l4qVl'\,I 8~M." \o!i#•" (04'f A,.~. f"f'O"""'".Jlf'O hOf\ I\ o-,,~1V.M ~1vr~.ty\ M'IO ~\ '"""° 0--lfll(IOll °""'"'"'"°Q O'•"' ., •t uo W.tt .... \tr-"t ('\laAIYY (.thl ... rWA~ ltollfrtN -p .. , ,..,., """° Pvf)t .~ 1•0 It (.,,..,,. V~•flf'~•drlf"t •fll:1<i4"'ff .. ~ t ttem•t 10tw11 6.0•M., Tlfiloefftf\AM~ Mo ........ , .... curio• M l-1t1<....,.,. ... ~ ...... , •• ,,t ~~,,., lct,t9'' .. ...,.. ....... W.tt Ori~ c~, £dOOt' Huntln~on lelldl Office 1111J 8•.t<f\ fto!Mw•td Millllnq AOdr .. \\ P 0 &o• ttO. t1't4 Offlcu L•l~:,~ ~::: ;~~~·,~:~~~:~' $.tdd••~•' 11. v .. Hfly Ul~H l..t P.tJ Ro.itd .tt \Mi D••99 """"" tY Tetepflone (11•16424321 Cluelfled Acfnrtfllng&U·5'1' ".__,ft 0ro"90 Cow••IY '°"""""",.. N0-1220 ~i= :.:~ °:.::, ~::!.:::="':,fo,-:, ,,..T.., et •••tltlH""•tth fllitr4i" "'-'¥ tM rt1tMucM •UMt11t '""'• "'"'lu••n •f c---~'=,.'·~",.::::~r..,:··.:·,~::::. -:i':o MMthly t.¥ fft•lt "ti ~tl'ltf. ~U•t•'\' .. , ..... _.,,._..., "Despite the lack or credible evidence that any causal factor existed, the continuous public reports linking the hotel to re- ports of the illnei;s has been ruinous to its business,'' Chadwick said. "The-average cash loss for the last 90 days has been $10,000 per day, adding up to aggregate losses in the order of $1 million for t he period of adverse publicity," the s tatement said. The hotel was the head- quarters for the ill-fated state American Legion convention July 21-24 following which 29 persons d ied and 151 others became ill from a mysterious disease. The Bellevue recently has hosted a number of publicity· oriented events a imed at restor· mg business. Special arrangements are be· ing made to relocate permanent hotel residents, said Gustave Ams terdam , c h airm a n of Bankers Securities Corp. which owns a controlling interest in the hotel. ··we will make every effort to assist in relocating atl our hotel personnel in other positions lo the maximum extent possible," he said . Health officials included in their definition or the Illness that a person had to have visit- ed the BelJevue between July 1 and Aug. 18. Froia rag~ AJ WARNING. • methods of recourse lo pursue if they do become vict ims. Leadoff speaker in council chambers at 2000 Main St. will be Detective Randy Toburen of the police consumer fraud det.aiJ. Orange Cou nty Office of Consumer Affairs Director Jim Shlmanoff wilJ also speak on self· protection in that area. His office has processed 20,000 complaints from citizens who believe they have been wronged in a consumer-business transac- tion ln its 4~ years' existence. Results of Shimanoff's staff in· vestigations have been the return of $9me $1.5 million in goods and services where those complaints were round valid. The third speaker or the day will be Officer Relic himself. dis· cussing personal and home security precautions that should be taken by any citizen to avoid betomjng a crime victim. They will range from an ex· planation of the long-used Pigeon Drop bunco scheme which has defrauded thousands out of their life's savings to the be3t types or locks and burglar alarms. Rummage Sale Set In Huntington The Huntinetoo Beach-Seal Beach League or Women voters will hold a rummage sale Satur· day from 9:30 a.m. to3:30p.m . at the HunUneton Beach Communi· ty Methodist Church, 66162 Hell Ave. Many items wW be sold ln· cluding baited goocb and plants, according to League President Sherry Baum . Trustees To Study Borders Huntington Beach Union High School District trustees have approved studies or proposed boundary changes i~ high school attendance areas. Tbe first area of st~y would involve about 60 incoming freshmen next fall who would be transferred from the Edison Hieb School area to Fountain Valley High School. The study area is bounded by· the S anta Ana Riv er, Brookhurst Street and Ellis and Garfield Avenues. • The other area under study is situated between Westminster Boulevard, Bolsa Avenue and Bo lsa C h ica and Edwards Streets. IC approved, this boundary change would shift 132 incoming freshmen from the Marina High School attendance area to Westminster High School. Trustee Ralph Bauer said the district allows some flexibility to students who want to attend· the high school in the area formerly designated for them. Trustees are expected to make a final decision on the proposed boundary changes by Feb. 1, Bauer said. District officials said they will be contacting parents and students in the study areas dur- ing the next two months. Huntington's ~· Couiieil" Meet Time Changed Huntington Beach City Co~cil members have set a new time for their city council meetin.zs. Officials this week changed the starting time from 7 to 7:30 p.m. for the first and third Mondays of each month. The council has been meeting virtually every Monday at 7 p.m . When the occasion demands. study sessions and executive sessions will be held at 5:30 p.m., preceding the regular meeting. City Administrator Bud Belsito said the agreement to alter the meeting schedule was made at a recent city retreat. Belsito said the meetings also will be allowed to go beyond 11 p.m . which has been the curlew times for regular sessions. He said that some council members had grown disenchant·· ed with weekly rpeetings and the new schedule generally will permit j ust two meetings a m o nth "unl ess there i s something or real urgency." HB Physician Loses License Over Conduct The license of a Huntington Beach physician has been rev- oked effective Sept. 20 on charges of unprofessional conduct. ac· cording to officials of the Board of Med ical Quality Assurance. Or. Harold Robbins, 16511 Golden West Street, was charged with gross negligence and incom· petence as well as excessive treatments that were termed detrimental to patients. The action was disclosed in a report of disciplinary activities by the Consumer Affairs division of the state of California. Ca thle Und e rwood. as a spokesman at the Board of Medical Quality Assurance, said that Robbins could petition to have his license reinstated a year after the revocation. $5,000 Rare Coins Stolen Burglars who made entry through some undetectable means have looted a Huntington Beach man's apartment of near- ly SS.008 in old and rare coins, in· eluding 11 separate series collec- tions. Greg Allomong or the Warner West Apartments, 6401 Warner Ave., told police he discovered his collections missing Monday when he returned home from work. Investicators said $llO in cash kept for routine expenses also was stolen from the victim's apartment. f.,.._PageAJ WIFE ••• to understand all th is. Mine ar~n't, fortunately." Tbe Lyon County clerk ln Em· porla, Kan., confirmed that Mary Lou Martin w., married to Bob Martin ln May 1948. Huntington Stronghold In case you wondered, that little building going up in a shopping center across Main Street from the Huntington Beach Civic Center actually is a bb.ilding within a building. It's the vault for a new savings and loan office that will be built around it. Froa P"fle A J PAITY ... said. "I don't know if her fami· ly had any say in this action." He said the bureau's head· quarters in Washington and the U.S. attorney general were in· volved in the decision. 'But Asst. U.S. Atty. F. Steele Langford, in San Francisco, said he was surprised to learn of the sudden transfer . He said h e had been sch eduled lo participate Friday in a hearing in the Hearst case. She had spent several months at the San Diego facility this year undergoing a diagnostic study ordered by the court. The Pleasanton fac ility, which opened in 1974 , houses 250 inmates , mostly under the age or 26. The San Diego pnson houses about 500 inmates, most of whom a re in fo r short terms or not yet senlenced. Free Throw Contest Set For Area Kids A baskeball free throw contest for Fountain Valley and Hunt- ington Beach youngsters wUI be held next month by the Hunt- ington Beach Elks Lodge. The contes t ·ror Fountain Valley boys and girls between the ages or 8 and 13 is scheduled at 10 a .m. at tbe Fountain Valley Recreation Center. Huntington Beach participants, will compete at 10 a.m. Dec. 11 at the Huntington Beach High School gym. Tom Davidson, chairman or the event, said that entry forms are now available at Huntington Beach Elks Lodge or at the Foun- tain Valley or Huntington Beach recreation departments. FroaPageAJ SUSPECT ••• than 30 Huntington Beach and Costa Mesa officers. The SWAT team contingent ac· companied by detectives took hlm into custody at the Mediter- ranean Village Apartments a.t 431 Fair Drive. Police evacuated surrounding units quietly and then telephoned Campbell, who s urrendered peaceably. 118 House Looted A burglar who forced ope.n 1 dining r-00m window Tuesday lo oted a Huntington Beach home o more than $250 worth o valuables including a stere• sound system and television set Victim Rochelle Sharknack, o 17113 Elm St., discovered thE break-in when she arrived home. __ ........... .. ....... .. .. .. ' Delicious money-saving secrets of slow crock pot cooking! l\lablC' lIC)ffm an's famm1~ guide to rnok0rs. too. And a handy Cr()("/,·r•n 1 (:n11/:r·1·!1 ('()okliook rnakc•s nwn11 planning-~uidc. the mystcl'i<·s of slow <'noking Uut don't wail to get your <:rystnl cl<•ar. fn•e copy. T lw supply'~ limilt.•d. One And it won't CMl yo11 a pC'nny P<'I' fa mily while they lust. nette r tn cliscm•,•r its <k•liciou~ SN'l'els. hurry in. l~nrl',V. linob arc not Now this ~r('at hook is your~-available !)\· mail.) fn·c-at California Ft"dl'ral. Other money-saving ideas. Eat better and save money. \\'hC'n you rome in, tnkc n minute I::vc·n k·afi 11~ thrnuJ.(h the pagC's or two to fi011tl out ahoul our high- of Crock< ry Cnnkr ,.,, is a mouthwater-interest savings aeroun ts: Gr 1 % pass- ing CXJH.'l'i<'nC<'. Discm•cr more than hooks. Ccrlilil'alt•s up lo 73,{1 %~And ~liO n•<:ipt.·~ fo r lw:.irty main cJi.,h<!s, ht? sure to usk ahout our free tl'3V· ~uup~. !:iandwid1e:-;. nppcLizcrs, bcv-elers checks, monev order s and other C'l'ngcs-C'VC'n hrPacls nnd cakes-to free sc1·vic:cs . Thc,;'re r ours whC'n lwlp you fl•t•cl your fam il y well and you Je.:1vc .s1.ooo \Vit~ tis. ' . kPep ~·cu rr h11dsrc•t t1·im. . Stop m, now. You r e bclter off 111 Th1.•r,"s n H7-pagt• consumer California t edcral. • J/,llllll ••l•ifl••"'· /J /II~,..,,'''""· !i•'"' .. '"'' ••ln••I '"""''~ ~q•lrnl !-" ""'" "11/1./mu•8lt /m'" Cut1r~•I• A~r~•~I•. C CALIFORNIA FEDERAL Nation's largest f-ede:ral C'11llfornl1 F\-rlt'rtl Savinl{S 11nd Loan A ~5odatlon Hll~°'l;Tl.SCTON nP.,'\C II. ljtl!W Gothard S~. near Edin1t1•r. In Hunt1n1tt"n r1u11 17141 8!17-S~. Irvine EDIT ION VOL. 69, NO. 31S, 4 SECTIONS, -'8 PAGES ORANGE CpUNTY, CALIFORNIA Today's Closing N •• Stoeks WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1976 TEN CENT Threats ProDipt · Jail Switch for Patty By tile Associated Press Tbe San Diego Union quoted an unnamed source in Northern· California today as stating that threats bad been made to Patty Hearst while the she was al a federal correctional institution at Pleasanton. i The Union also quoted Dr. Owen Kennedy. assistant re- gional director for the Federal Bureau of Prisons in San Fran- cisco, u saying the swUcb was at Miss Hearst's request "for security pUJ"POSeS." The New York Times a1ao re- ported today that inmates at the Pleasanton prison said Miss Hearst bad ••a number of tan- trums," in which she went to her room and beat her fists against the wall until the knuckles were scraped and red. Last week, the Times' ac· A~Wl ....... t• PHILADELPHIA HOTEl. WILL CLOSE ITS DOORS SOON Bellevue-StrMford Done In by Leglonnelre'a DtaeHe Hotel ]oim Legion As Disease Victim I PIULADELPH1A CAP) -The '12-year·old Bellevue-Stratford Hotel will close its doors Nov. lB. a victim of ruinous business decUnes ste mming from last aummer's still unsolved legion- ' naire's disease. "The Betlevue-SUatford bas found it impossible any longer to withstand the economic lm· pact of Ute worldwide adverse publicity which has been as· IOCiated with the 'legionnaire's !disease' even though no in· •estlgatlve a1ency found a ny link whatsoever to hotel opera· lions," William Chadwick, h~I vice president, said. ''Despite the lack of credible evidence that any causal factor existed, the continuous public reports linking the hotel to re- ports of the illnes.s has been rulnous t o· its business," Chadwick aaid. Coast Weather Nilbt and morning fog, otherwise fair with high clouds Thursday. Days to cool with highs in low 70s, Iowa to near SO. INSIDE TODA~ ft1" San Qwfttlrs ~ _,. covgM "9 ,a '7-/oaC hot· • ?Id, JO fnt vnMrfrovnd, nd- ~ .a mMllh·lofto .att..,.,..ot acape. Wlan capfUttd, tMs/ ~ only " f Hf ·otDCIY from freedom. StOf)I. P.ag~ AS. "The average cash loss, for the last 90 days has been $10:000 per day, adding up to aggregate losses in the order of $1 million for the period of adverse publicity." the statement said. The hotel w as the head - quarters for the iU-fated sta te American Legion convention July 21·24 following which 29 peNions died and 151 othe rs became ill from a mysterious disease. The Bellevue recently has hosted a number of publicity- oriented events aimed at restor- ing business. Special arrangements are be· ing made to relocate permanent hotel residents, said Gustave Amsterdam , chairman ot &nkers Securities Corp. which owns a controlling in!erest in the hotel. "We will make every effort to usiat lo relocating all our hotel personnel in other positions to the maximum extent possible," he said. Health officials included in their definition or the illness that a person bad to have visit- ed the Bellevue between July 1 and Aug.18. The hotel, which has 750 rooms. has had . an occupancy (See HOTEL, Page A%) Big Sprinkler Tuner Stolen lnine police are iDftltlg•tinc a d'and tbeft in wbJcb a sprinkler control ti.mer valued at more than $500 was taken from a con- ltrucUon alte in the Ttartle Rock Darea. 1be theft. which apparently oc. curred o•er the weekend, wu re- J)Ol'ted Tuesday by a workman foe-8\llldera Landscape Inc. of AaabeilO. The 100.pound aprtnkler device was not pioperly HCUnd and the thieves apparently cart4d lt my in a truck, poUee uJd. Tbe 1prill1er wu to be uaed foe-dfteloplna a irembelt in tbe TurUe Rock II enclave. count said, Miss Hearst refused to report to her job of helping clean a dormitory unit. When told by authorities she would be put in isolation as punishment. she reportedly said that was what she wanted. Miss Hearst bad been al the campus·Wte Pleasanton facility since Sept. 24, when she was sentenced by U.S. District Court Judge William Orrick. Sbe will become eligible for parole in 16 months. She was moved from the s pacious federal prison in Northern California lo a 12· story facility in San Diego at her own requ.est for security re- asons, officials say. Concern for Miss Hearst 's safety was believed to stem from reports that she bas agreed lo testify for the pro- seeution at two upcoming trials involving her former under- eround companions. One trial at which Miss Hearst is expected to be a gov- emment witness is that d Sym- bionese Liberation Army mem- bers William and Emily Harris on charges of kidoaping Miss Hearst in February 1974. the other is the weapons and ex- plosives trt al of Wendy Yoshimura, with whom Mias Hearst was living when she was captured last year. Miss Hearst, 22, who is serv· ing a seven-year sentence ror armed bank ro bbery, was driven to the Metropolitan Coe· rectiooal Center in San Diego Tuesday. Bill Garrison, warden at Pleasanton, said Miss Hearst (See PATrY, PaieAZ) €. ty Halts Till1her Cry Council Wants Second Opinion By MICHAEL PASKEVICH Ollho Dolly ~llet SuH About 22,000 citrus trees will be removed from Woodbridge, but Irvine city councilmen have hedged on a request that would feU 888 eucalyptus on the 159-acre site the Irvine Company plans to develop. The City Council decided Tues- day night to seek further input from independent sources on whether 51 percent of the site's 1,707 eucalyptus should be re- moved because they are un- healthy and pose a threat to adja- cent trees and public safety. Preliminary environmental surveys by Larry Seeman lnc. and the Reynolds Environmental Group backed the Irvine Com· pany's requests. However, after announcing the Reynolds survey was financed by the Irvine Company, CoWlcilman Bill Vardoulis said, "l think we'd reel a lot better if someone else took a look at il." • The reports will be turned over to UC Irvine Plant Biology and Social Ecology Departments. in addition to homeowners associa· lions from the Deerfield, Ranch and North Irvine areas. The groups will return with comments at the next regular coun cil meeting, November23. Council111en expressed concern over the possible damage to Woodbridge windbreaks although councilman John Burton con· ceded that many of the trees will eventually die. But a before-and-after depic· tion of the removal in the Seeman report drew some derisive com· meqts from the council and chucldes from the audience. Pussycat ,Swaps 'X' For a 'G' Seniors Happy lroine Approves Building Balboa's controversial Pussycat Theater will close for good Friday and the movie house will reopen by Thanksgiving as a "family oriented theater," a spokesman for the theater said today. The change from X-rated mov- ies to G-rated films is the result of a)ease negotiated between the Pussycat owners Walnut Properties and Great Western Theaters. There were a lot or happy senior citizens Tuesday night as the Irvine City CoWlcil approved plans for a,new $345,000 multi-use building overlooking the Rancho San Joaquio Golf Course. The senior citizens were particularly enthused because, as a wing of the Commwiity Services Commission, they will get first crack at reserving the facility. The council will now move to open construction bids for the plans drawn up by McCulloch Development of Newport Beach. The f acility , located o n Sandburg Way, will cover 5,000 square feel with a two-acre park and parking spaces for72 cars. City funds will cover $301,300 or the costs with $32,800 in fees from the Irvine Company. These fees are in lieu of a donatioa of park land for.devlopment. The estimated construction cost of $345,000 combined with $31,000 for architect fees, leaves the city with a cost overrun of more than "3,000. But arcbiteet Wllliam McCulloch said OJ>eD bidding and construction options should lower the cost overrun substantially. The council is expected to open bids on the project within 90 days. Last night's approval was unanimous. A s pokes man for Walnut Properties said details of the changeover would be available later this week but indicated that Friday definitely would be the last day for the Pussycat and its long-running movie, "Deep Throat." · The Pussycat Theater opened in what used to be the Balboa Theater, 709 E. Balboa Blvd., in the spring of 1975, to the dismay of city oUlcials, poJice and Peninsula residents. Ragtime Pursuing Ki8Ioa to Mazatlan ln the long legal batUe that followed, there were seizures of a variety of films police and the district attorney believed were pornographic. The theat er emerged a partial victor when a municipal court jury in May of 1975 found \wo films, "Deep Throat"' and tTbe Devil In Miss (See PUSSYCAT, Page A2) Lead yacht Kialoa drove toward Cape San La.taro today but Jim Kilroy's ~foot ketch was losing ground in the 1,032· mile Los Angeles to Mazatlan yacht race to Ragtime, the 62· foot sloop out of Long Beach. Kialoa 's boat-for-boat lead or SO miles Tuesday was down to 29 miles, according to this morn· ing's position reports. Winds continued to be "very, very light," radio reports from the fleet indicated. Kialoa also dropped to fourth in the handicap race during' the 24·bour period after leading in botb overall and Class A the day before. Class leaders on handicap time: ClaH A 1. WbisUe Wing 2. Kialoa 3. Aorangi Clau B 1. Mamie 2. Hurricane Deck3. Racy Oass C 1. Bingo 2. Vector 3. Cottontail Clau D 1. America Jane m 2. Captain Marvel 3. Broomhilda Overall 1. Whistle Wing 2. Mamie 3. America Jane4. Kialoa lroine Sets Special Week Observances It's going to be a special Npv- ember for residents or Irvine. After opening Tuesday night's ci- ty council meeting with homage to the late Smokey the Bear, councllmeo adopted a number of special weeks, thus: American Legion Opem lrVine Post -No.ember H ·Zl will be Teen CbaUenee Week. The Challenge group is a drug rehabilitation and education program for teenagers. -Nonmber H·tl will also be "Week of Concern'' in lrib)lle to the March of Dimes. -November 15·!1 will be Alcoboliam Action Week. -NoHmber Zl·Za wlll be Oranee County Adoptions Week. -NOTember M-ZI will also be lrvtne Tennis Festival Week . The Laguna Poets The American Legion is open· ing a new post in Irvine. Official opening ceremonies will be held Thursday al 7:30 p.m . at Newport Harbor Chapter, 215 15th St., Newport Beach. Supervisor Thomas Riley and Irvine Mayor David Sills will take part in the opening ceremonJes and cake cuttinf. Of- ficers will be lnstalled at the lint meeting. Irvine's post, No. 345, will be headed by Commander L. Sc:otty Showers, 1st vice-commander Gold Rush Hikes Co8t ·Schedule Reading The taguna Poets will hold a LONDON <AP)-A 11.ad- readin1 from noon to 1 p.m . den ruab of buyers sent Thunday at Gateway Plaza at gold prices in London up by UC lrvlne. more than "·'° an ounce Poeta partJclpatlnl are Mac today to $138, It.a highest Witter,, But Yoder, Brenda level llnce early th1s )'QI'. Hederlcb and D.vid Ralnw•W. Dealers repo~ bQ'lna The Laguna Poeta also will con· b y t b e F a r E a a t , tlnue in.formal readlna at I p.m . fl)eeU)ators and lndult.rtal ftidaya at Harris Hall, 421 Part Mdjewe~u1enof eokl. Ave., Laguna &each. 4 • .).Z .. ~~ . ...._ _____ ..,....,.., Jerry Keen aod second com· mand~r Jim .Champlin: At present, there are 2:5 charter members, almost equally divided among Work! War II, Korea and Vietnam veterans. Membership ls open to any veterans of American action. The American Legion ia·a na- tionwide organization dedicated to serving veterans in boepitals or retirement homes. Penons wishing to aid the lqion lD tbis capacity need not bememben. The Le1lon also sponsors numerous youth programs ·lD- cluding baseball and Boy's State. One of the first ga.11 of lrvtne'a new post is to send two young m..-i to Sacramento in April to part!dpate in th4$ Boy'• State pl'Olfam in which they will learn about 1overnment.I ~· Pait No. 3'5 members hope to or1anlae an lrvln• American Ledon baseball team. ThOee interested ln jolnlnt the new postor aervln1 as an adV!Mr mlQ' attad tlae ttnt mett1q or wri1.e to Dolores Wood, laG S. P.mia. Santa Ana. for men lD· fGnmUoll. . . .. It looks like an ad for a war movie after the German Armt had walked through," Mayor David Sills quipped, referring to the considerably thinned grova shown in the report . The Irvine Company submitted the request for the tree removal on Aug. 26, in hopes of beginning the work by Dec. l. The council unanimously ap. proved removal of citrus trees in the area bordered by Irvine Center Drive, Jeffrey Road, Bar· (~TREES, Page AZ) Suit Urged On Sle01ons S01ear Note Saddleback Valley taxpayers' advocate Ed McKean has pro- posed that the County Board ol Supervisors institute a suit for damages against tbe parties responsible for one of Jim Slemona' political mailings. In a Jetter sent to SuperviSOl" Thomas Riley, McKean contends that grounds for the suit would in· elude "defamatory acts against the people" and ''Willful mis· management of public monies ... He also bas asked the coun! postal inspector to determine · • the mailings were a violation the U.S. Postal Regulations. The mailing McKean has tat exception to was sent to voters the 74tb Assembly District where Slemons was the Republican · nominee. The leaflet ,aid that Democrat Ron Cordova -w was elected to the assembly sea the next day -"bas recen been charged with miscooduct · a $10 million lawsuit invol · massage pirlors.' • The lawsuit apparently nev bas been filed and was related ~ a case Cordova handled while! working as a deputy District At· t.orney. If the action bas not been filed, McKean said, the letter is a falsehood and .. a blatant attempt to defame tbe character or Roca Cordova." McKean, chairman of Sad· dleback Homeowners Outraged Over Taxes, contends the tax· payers subsidize both the Postal Service and voter mailing lists. He said taxpayers have a "vest, ed interest" in the mail but have no right to stop getting such mail "I feel the people have been damaged and I think it's time the people act," he said. "I think tbe people are bigger than this." McKean said be is asking the supervisors to get an opinion <JG the possibility of a ault from the' county counsel. Confab Resumes WASHINGTON (AP) Bar1ainers for Hughes Alnrelt and It.I mechanics union resumed contract negotiations Tuesday tn a final attempt to avert a strike threatened for mJdatgbt~ HER MICROW..4J'E ..4. H<TI' SEUER ''The second penoa who called bought It. I'm really tickled wt.ta. my lnltantauccea1 I.. • Heret1 the clasail'led ad Ulat IPUked the sale for Ulla Coe"' llesawoman: I AMANA MlCROWAVE OVEN. e mos. old. Transferable warr. '325. lallt•DXX U rou td lite to ccmtert • lip. pllance to caab, Cll" ~ elJe, uU the DaUJ Piiat 'at 1'2·1111. Tb• peopl•'• marketplace. d *i t : :'A2 DAILY PILOT Wednesday. November 10, 1978 -· Tax Cut Pondered Hinshaw Carter May Ask; Democrats Wary ~ .. c ___ • Defense WASHINGTON CAP) -As Pl-esident-elect J immy Carter considers whether lo propose a new tax cut in January, key con- gressional Democrats say it's too early to tell if one will be needed and warn they will approach any proposal cautiously. Chairman Al Ullman, said Tues- day that Congress should ap- proach any such proposal "with great caution.'' already approved by CongTeSs would be appropriale. ·Deleted Carter said last week that if the economy does not begin improv- ing by January, there Is a "strong possibility" that he 1 would as k for a t ax cut to · stimulate it. But Congress' cruel taxwriter, House ';Na ys and Means "We wo11ld be deceiving the American people if they were led to believe they would be gelling major tax deduction," Ullman said at a news conference in Colorado Springs, Colo. In more detailed remarks re- leased through his Washington office, the Oregon Democrat said it is too early to determine whether an additional tax cut on top of the $19 billion tax cut Mynah Error Luck May Be a Curse ERIE, Pa. CAP)-Rajah the psychic mynah bird has some explainingtodo. Ullman said anti-recession job programs and incentives for in- vestments In high unemployment areas "would be more effedive in dealing with the problem.'' In a related development, Dr. Gary Fromm of the Stanford Research lnsUtute told a con- gressional panel today that the only question about a tax cut is how large it should be. A tax cut or some other means of stimulating the economy is CARTER GETTING ORGANIZED-f»AGE A4 needed in the near future not only for American consumers but also for stability of the free world economy, he said. A11ti-Enaperor Rajah a nd his master, Colin Kerr, are trying to drum up guests for their SS-a-head "Luck Ball" at an Erie hotel Nov. :!7. But they're frequently r eminded that the bird bombed oo his last prediction :_-that Preside nt Ford would win the election. "They mus t have taken it out of context," Kerr argued when shown a news story quoting the bird as squawking "Ford wins" afewdays before the election. "The state of demand still is weak and the free-world system might easily be plunged into another downturn by moderate shocks from large Arab n'atioo oil price Increases, an international monetary crisis or widespread harvest failures, be toJd a House- Sen.ate economic committee hearing on the future of the economy. Leftist students s nake dance down a Tokyo street in pro- test of a government-sponsored ceremony to celebrate Japanese Emperor Hirohito's 50-year reign. , In addition to the problem with the prediction, another dete rrent to sale of tickets may be the reward promised to one participant. Kerr said Rajah will be set free to fly through the audience, landing on someone's head and leaving his droppings. "This will bring good luck to the patron," Kerr said. Carpooling Agency Gets County Space Office space and clerical sup- plies for Commuter Computer, a car pool matching service, will be donated by Orange County government in exchange for a re- duction in the county's subsidy to .the private oq°'anization. Supervisors agreed Tuesday to .an $8.500 reduction m the coun- ty's $117,114 grant wruch covers an 18-month pe riod expiring in June in return for providing the free office space. The only opposition t o the change C'am e from Supervisor Laurence Schmit who cast the f'ro.a Page A J PATTY .•. filed a written request Cor the transfer last week "The decision to move her was made Monday Wllh her at t orney's approval .. , Garrison said "I don't know if her fami- ly had any s ay in this action.·· lie said the bureau's head- quarters in Washington and the U.S. a ttorney genera.I "'ere in· \'Olved in the dec1s1on But Asst. lJ S All} F' Steele Langford, in San f'ranc1sco. said he "'as surpn sed h> learn of the sudden transfer He said tie had been sC'heduled lo part1c1pate F'rntay to a hearing U\ the Hearst cast• She had spent sevt>ral months at the San D1e~o facility this year undergo1n~ a diagnostic s tudy orderPd bv the C'ourt lone no vote. He did not give a re- ason for his vote. Commuter Computer compiles lis ts of cars and commuters, matching them in carpools. Skadl Session "The principal issue currently confronting e conomi c policymakers in the United States is the size of a tax cut , needed to put the economy back on its growth path," Fromm added. Prof. Jay W. Forrester of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology t estified that long- term cycles may have more bearing on the present economy than recent problems and said that depressions and recessions have been occurring about every 50years. "We believe it is urgent lo ex· amine the possibility that the 1980s could repeat behavior like that experienced in the 1930s," he said. Fro111Po~AJ TREES ••. ranca Road and Woodbridge Lake. The company will retW'll on the 23rd to receive further comments from the council on the eucalyp- tus trees, which Councilwoman Mary Ann Gaido c alled a "sensitive and important part of lrv.ine. ·• The eucalyptus trees arc between 70 and 100 years old and range from 60to 120feetlnheight. In addition lo the 865 eucalyptus decl a red unhealthy in the Reynolds report, 23 heaJlby trees would be removed for the pro- posed E ast YaleLooprightofway 11nder the present plan. Al' Wlre ..... to T he P le ..i s ... nt on faC'1llty. which opened in 1974. houses 250 mmates, mo'IUy under the age of 26. The San Diego pnson houses a bout 500 mmatcs. most or whom arc 1n for i;hort term!> or not yet :.entenccd. A young iady shows a copy of the so- called Tumi a n instrume nt for s kull operations which was used about l.200 years ago in P eru. and the skulJ of an In- ca who s urvived the operation. T he items are part of an exhibition at Dusseldorf, West Germ a n y , where medica l memorabilia of the past 4,000 years is on display. Aid Lo s Looms NEW YORK <AP> -The city's schools could face loss or $200 milUon in federal aJd unless the Board or Education draws up plans within 90 days for elimlnat- i ng discri mlnation against minonties and women in hiring and promo! ion or teachers. ORANOl COAST DAILY PILOT ~ 0-.neie , .. ,, 0.lly otlot \IMtftWNfft ., .. ~ f'H~ IN ....... , p,.,.,, '' °'-!bM ......... ""9 Or..-... ( _.I ~bh"'"-1"'t~("mo°'""" .... ....,,_~•flCl1IM'W\\•'~ ('"CM•\l\•O MoNtttf tf'V~Ll'I J.t""°" ~ (O\tl ..,,.,W "'t •OO'I Rt\('f\ M\IM1,.0f"li 9-it<Ll'I '"°""' 11 " Velir t H "'"I' \ tctdl"" II(• Y•lf!Jy .,._, L4Ml~Al'tlft\ ~t"(A""'' A •"''0tr""'~""•1•'J; lllOl"I l\ 0Ub'4'1Wd \.th;tOlf\ -"'O ~f\ t~ Of+IWI0.1 f'o1t\h\ft "Q ft'.t"f 11 Jlt 'tl>J W.'lof &•1 \trftt. t00tl• Mr\• (•flfor"''"',. •-"w'" ,,,,, 0.f\t .tf\G Pvftt1'111H he t II (ll'"Y Y• •Pr~'',.."' •"' t (,-.....,,,,Mil~ ,,_~, .... _.. £fUN" ,,.."" .. '. ,....,,..,...,.. -.w~•o·~ f ',..., CMf1t'\M l.fft ••C'ttrit,.._., .... A\\l\Nl"lt MllfllAQ•"O £0ttor\ owe .. (~, .. ~, .. J>OWt UfMy\l'"tl Uqll"•t.•c" ,,_.GltfW'W'\l••\.f,...t tr4vfl!t1flltt~ f'lt•'"' .,.,, n.-11<." "°"'•'1••d 't-<tdle~t' V•ll•• U~t l.A ,,,., ,_o.ttt .. ,~o"'""'"'',....,.,,, T•l•phon• (714).,.2-4321 ' Cl1ulf11d Adw111111119 642-$171 SA<tdltl'NC~ V•ll•'I ~MCltt .... H1-t)10 r roM S•f\ r-t.fft'lf\N O S.0630 (Af'W"'l'•G"t 'th °'"""• C.t"''' "*"~NJ (pM ,._~V ,~ ,... •I·," '''"'"·"' ""' tf't1t""••I mntM •' a1uot1,.-f"',.l\h ""'•·" ""•" •• ••f'tf)f vt•f w1tf\t1i1t \D•C••I ffffft6\''-'flll tt C(lpft~ft-1 O..~•f ~,,,_. "''" fl ''•O~ tt••d •t Co\t• Mu a <•t1torft11 '"•ur1t't Oft •• ,.,,,,, u '-' ~'"''• .... "' ...... \0 '""'"'hlf ; ,., .... .,. ati\tfMhM;.,, ,.,...,,,._If 'No Shred of Dignity' Second Widow Devoid of Death Benefit,s SIOUX FALLS. S.D. CAP) -"J don't have a shred of dignity lert ," s ays Patrici a Mart in, who learned after Bob Martin's death three weeks ago her husband had a second wile and family 200 miles away ...... . ''I've been reduce<t to ha.ving to beg for ADC (Aid to Dependent Children) and food stamps," Mr-S: Martin told a reporter. "But I'm protecting my children. I can go through a nything, but tho~ children have to eat. AU they know is that their daddy is dead and that they loved their daddy dearly." . Martin, South Dakota's direc- tor of economic development.- died or a heart attack at 52. It was learned then he had a wife and nve children here, a wife and four children in Pierre. 'Tm very angry that I have been put in this position," said Patricia Martin, 33, ''My thoughts are 'How dare you do this tome, and remember. I'mnot jwit some sweetie stashed In the comer.' "I'm a very simple person. I'm a mother first, and 1 was of lhe opinion that Bob was married, had three children and was dJvorced." Stale Atty. Gen. Willia m Janklow contlrmed reports Martin lived a dual life. Jaoklow said travel and motel vouchers will be examined by a grand jury to check "some questions in- volved In the use of state funds.·· Jac k Allmon , the state's secretary o r economic and touri s m development and Martin's boss in Pierre, said he Fro• Page A J ~?,!.~~·,: .. ·~. out. br~r of legionnaire's disease. the Philadelphia Daily News said today. The paper s aid that every 10 days, the Bellevue's parent company, Bankers Security Corp., has tra nsferred $100,000 of its own assets to the hotel to keep it anoat. The Daily News said lhe city intends to try to bllY the hotel with hopes or immediately sell ing the property to a developer for construction of a hotel with complete conv.-n~on facilities. "We don't have the economic power that the larger outfits have ," said an unidentified hotel official. "We have contact- ed the Hilton and Sheraton chains and neither has ex· f,reued any lnlcr~t whatever n operating or laking over the Bellevue." never suspected the "Tally-Ho" listed on M artln 's travel vouchers was the name of the apartment complex in which his Sioux Falls family lived. The state agency has offices in both Pierre and Sioux Falls. Allmon said Martin generally listed the Tally-Ho for lodging on travel vouchers turned in for Sioux Falls. He said he aSsumed il was a motel. The family in Pierro, wruch has refl.tsed to comment on the mat- ter, Uves in a single-famUy house. Allmon said Martin usually asked Sll.50 per day, the slate max- imum, for lodging In Sioux Falls. Patricia Martin said she mar- ried Martin in 1968 but bas been unable lo find a marriage license. "I remember silO'ling a docu· ment, that's all. He tookcareofit. They have tried to check it out "I believe this other wile was just as much in the dark as I was. She had to go through the shock or lh1.s also. J feel very sorry for her. Her children must be old enough legally, but obviously J was duped, and I don'tknowwhy. to understand all this Mine aren't, fortunately." The Lyon County clerk ln Em· poria, Kan., confirmed that Mary Lou Martin was married lo Bob Martin In May 1948. Pupih Watch ·As Teac~r Slwt to Death DETROIT (AP) -An elemen- tary school teacher was abot to death in her clasaroom on the city's northwest side today as her first and second-grade pupils watched in horror. Police said the woman, whose name was not released pending notification of relatives, was shot twice in the back of the head for no apparent reason. After the gunman fled the Burt Elementary School, the p11pils ran from their classroom to the school's office to report the shoot- ing. A teacher across the ball told police she heard the noise but said she didn't realize they were gunshots. School was dismissed for the day following the incident and police said they were questioning pupils and parents. Police said they bad no one In custody in the shootµig. 'Joke' Lighter Blasts Hand ARROYO GRANDE CAP) -A m an who thought he was the vic- tim of a practical joke was in sta - ble condition today after he blew his hand off when a joke cigarette lighter exploded. Arroyo Grand Pon~e Chief Jim Clark said Michael Bickford, 30, of Arroyo Grand stopped for an oil change at a service station and found the. device in the engine compartment of his car. "Someone's playing a joke on me," Bickford said as he fllpped the lever on the device wrule he showed it to Michael Eidsvig, 24. of Grover City, the station atten- dant. The device exploded, blowing orr Bickford 's hand. Woodpecker Derwtes Fwi The acorn woodpecker, which frequents at least three Orange County regional parks, was named the county's recreation symbol Tuesday. Supervisors approved using the bird in connection with coun- ty parks programs and authorized a contest allowing · children to name the wood- pecker. .. A report to supervisors saJd the red, black and white bird can be found lo O'Neill, Irvine and Caspers Regional Parks. F,....PageAJ PUSSYCAT .. Jones," not to be obscene. Since then, those are the only movies the theater bas screened. The Pussyca t cbaio spokesman declined to comment on the possibility lhat ~onomic factors brought about the change from "X " back to "G." CR.4511 CAUSED BY Ol!TH<JVSE VISTA CAP) -Edwa rd Edwar~ s werved to avoid hit· Ung an outhouse and three people were hurt sUghtly when his car and theirs colllded. The outhouae. which had (all~ oU a truck onto C.Ufomla 78, escaped unscathed. • By TOM BAN.EY OUM Dall, ll'UM IUft Orange County Superior Cow1 Judge Frank Domenlcblnl re· fused toda)' to allow df'taill or . setUement between \be counts and 33 uaesaor'• offtc. employ~ to be discussed bef~ the JW'Y 111 the trial or Congressman Andre-. Hinshaw. "It's not related to the iuues in tb1a trial," be told defense at· tomey John McNlcbolas while conceding that the overtime pay- ments spelled out in the aetUe- ment were lraudule"tly ob-tained. The ruling ends McNicbolas' hopes that the jury might accept his argument that \be county's willingnesa to abandon its claim to overtime paid during Hinshaw's term as assessor similarly rules out any possibili- ty of .H.lnabaw's guilt on related charges. Jt is alleged that Hl.nsbaw knew that overtime was beinc claimed from tbe co11nty by employes who were actuaUy working o0 b_is congressional campaign in 'lin2 when \be funds were paid. Hinshaw has denied the charge frorp th~ witness stand. But pro- secutttni witnesses have testified that he ordered assessor's office personnel to work on bis cam- .paign and promised dismissal for thole who did not comply. McNicbolas bad hoped to in- lrodllCe evidence to the effect that the county agreed to drop its lawsuit aeainst assessor's office employes who drew overtime in 1972 in return for dismissal of their counters ult. The employes agreed and abandoned an ,attempt to obtain payment lrom the county for 32,000 hours of overtime they said they worked between 1986 and 1978. McNlcholas arcued that the agreement clearly absolves Hinshaw of blame since the coun· ty would not have ne1<>tiated such a settlement ii there had been any evidence of criminal acts . Pro11Pr11tnr William Evans said the action by the county board did not approve payments made to employes for time spent on Hinlbaw's campaign. Evans said the eettlement with the employes wu nothing more or less than a good .will gesture and was never intended to be a comment on Hlnabaw's guilt or innocence. Judee Domenichini's ruling to- day out or the presence of \be jury now leaves tbeway clear for the defense to call further wit· nesses. Chief Probation officer Margaret Grier was waiting out- side the courtroom today and presumably will be the first wit- ness to follow Hinshaw to the stand. Hinshaw, 51, (aces charges or grand theft, conspiracy, em- bezzlement and violation of state codes, all contained in a grand jury indictment. He has been sentenced to one to 14 years in state prison after be- i ng found guilty of bribery charges in an earUer t.rtal. He is free on appeal. Solon's Mom Heist Victim NEW YORK (AP) -The 74-year-old mother of Rep. John M. Murphy (D-N.Y.), bas been robbed of $25 at knifepoint in the Staten Island home where she, her husband and the con- gressman live. "She's all r\ght but scared," said a neighbor who called police. Police said Florence Murphy, 74, answered a knock on the door Tue s day while her hus band and the congressman were out and found a slim young man asking ii she knew a Mrs. Johnson In th e neighborhood. When she went to look up the addreu In a telephone directory, he entered the house. Then he threatened her with an eight-inch knife, forced her to give him the money In he r purae. and escaped. Offices CkJse Veterans Day Federal and county otttces will be open but state ornces and some schools will be cloeed Thuraday In reco1nition of Veteran• Day. Federal and county employes were elven Monday. Oct. 25, on in keeping with Congress~ thrH· day holiday weekend policy. Saddleback Valley Unified School District will be clo.ed Thursday. Schools ln the Garden Grove. Oranee. Pla~a. Salt.a Ana and 'l'uilln dlatrid.s will be cloeed Thursday and Friday. Other school dlatricta and mott banks report that they wru be open Thursday. • I r I - - .. r • Wedne day's Clo~ing Prices NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS Ouol•ll-lncl-1•-•..,IM-Yotk M-•• ,....,,, Pllw ttHteoi Oorl,...l•flCIGi11<1n,..Ua10<' H (l\ .. 19 .. -r-ledl>'ftlWfltatloft.ol~le"-!ellie<WJl!n~-tftallfWt l/N DAILY PILOT I\ f 6 la.tant Ca•eras Polite Giants Face Sayonara? By MILTON MOSKOWl'l'Z This wu supJ)06ed lo be the year In wbJcJ1 Ea.nman Kodak and Pol aroid finally aquattd orr against each other However, up to now it has been mostly shadow boxin1i. Kodak, formerly a suppller to Polaroid, introduced its OWIJ inst.ant camerH early ln the year, setting the ataae for • dramatic showdown Can the champion of photography from Rochester. N Y . take the measure or the young ups t art from Cambridge. Mass? But at samply h85n't happened There bas been no eyeball-to· eyeball confrontation Money Tree Maybe dramatic showdowns are a rehc of the past, occur· nng only an western movies. Today's business competitor$ are too polite Look at the ads that Kodak and Polaroid have been run- ning Neither mentions the other's product Each talks about its own camera It's u 1( there was no competing pro- duct WHILE THETWOCOMPANlESMAY behasshngeacb other in the courts, their public stance 1s to make belJeve tht other doesn't exist Thats no way to conduct a fight The fact is, there are now two companies m the instant photography business. And either the mark et expands a lot or someone is going to be hurt The crunch may come next year arter Kodnk ha$ solved its production problems and brings in its elaborate folding model from <nrmany Surveying the battle to date, one would have to award the early rounds to Polaroid It has m anaged to s tave o(( the initial assault from mighty Kodak KODAK HAS DISCLOSED THAT 1t will ship about 1 million instant cameras in 1976 For a new Kodak product, that's a wretched performance. Polaroid sold S mlllioo cameras last year and 1t expects to go over the 6 mllhol) mark m 1976 • That's a sizeable lead for Polaroid It's also important to keep m mmd that this 1s not merely a race to sell cameras The ob1ect or the game 1s film sales. Stnce the Kodak and Polaroid £1lm packs are not interchangeable, its crucial for each company to have its own camera m the hands of amateur photographers No one knows that better than Kodak, which has made a fine art of selling inex- pensive easy to use cameras that consume heaps of ex· pensive Kodak color film So Polaroid 1s enJoytng a shghlly better year thaq Kodak. In the first rune months of 1976, Polaroid boosted its profits 26 percent lo $47 8 m1lhon Kodak's profits over tht same period were up only 5 percent lo $429 m11tion. THE TRUTH MAY BE THAT this as a battle which has so far produced no wmners Both Polaroid and Kodak are a long way from the palmy days of 1968 and 1969 when each company boasted an operating margin or 33 percent. Polaroid 1s now down to 19 percent and Kodak to 27 percent, which means that neither company can s queeze as much profil out or a sales dollar as 1t used to Also. the real winner may be waiting m the wmgs -1r, Japan FUJI Photo. the Japanese photographic giant, re• cently beat Kodak to the punch with a new available hght color £1lm Now FUJI tells us that at , too, has developed an m· stant camera system The J apanese have decimated the US telev1s101"1 manufacturmg mdustry They are making sharp mroads in the automobile market Will mstant photography be next? Rally Fails, Stocks Lose More Ground NEW YORK <P> -The stock market ran mto some af· temoon seJllng today and continued its slide smce the presidential election. Trading was moderately act1ve Analysts said the market was still suffenng from uncer· tainty over what President elect Carter 's adm1mstrat1on would mean for the economy -and (or stock pnces. ' The market advanced bnefly this mornmg on the strength of bargain huntmg with some or the populat averages at a 10 month low. But the upswing didn t lasi Ion~ • In this kmd of market traders are nervous," sald Charles J ensen at Merkin & Co "U they don't see a rally contmwng they bail out " The Dow Jones average of 30 stocks lost 6 '13 pomts to 924 04 ~~-f'n 710 IO-I 7' "'! 1J-OO'I 701 WI · I I• I&" 100 t~eOO 40'I 100 2 lSS 900 Siock11 In The Spoillght Uo uo Vo Up Vo Up Vo '"' Vil Vo Up VD Up Vo VD uo "" Vo Vo Up :; ,. 17 11 11 10) .. . " B ,4 B &) J 9 Sf J1 Si n !'ti Oft 10 :a Ott •o , Ott • ~. 00 , • Otf 1 " OH •• ()fl • ~ Ott • , Ott •if Off ... Oii ... g:: ~~ g:: ~~ g:: a·, Olt ir Ott ~ .. ~ ()It s.-•: Laguna/South Coast Afternoon .Y. Stoek , VOL. 69, NO. 315, 4 SECTIONS, ..a PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1976 TEN CENT • ID Laguna Beach Dark Over Smog . By PHILIP ROSMARIN 01111• O•llY l'llolStall If you think it's been smoggy the past couple of weeks along lhe South Coast and particularly in Laguna Beach, you'reright. And, you'll have to depend on your lungs and/or smarting eyes to tell you just how smoggy it's been, particularly in Laguna Beach. The local air pollution control district, wbicb is supposed to measure these things, can't tell you. It hasn't been able to. for more than a year. That's bow long the district's Laguna Beach monitoring device has been out of commission, ac· cording to Ed Camarena, county air pollution control officer. "It was so old it was no longer capable of being repaired," he said today. Camarena added that there are no immediate plans to replace it. "We have no money. We have no manpower,'' be said. The Southern California Air Pollution Control Distrjct, of which Orange County ls a part, has no plans to fund the station, Camarena said. In fact, the station, which is sup- posed lo monitor oxides of nitrogen and ozone levels -the basic components of smog-may be dismantled altogether, accord· ing t.o Marty Kay, the county's senior air pollution engineer. Kay said today that the district intends to redraw monii.<>rlog . boundaries, wbich would throw Laguna Beach into an area cov· ered either by a statioo already at San Juan Capistrano or at Costa Mesa. That would at least give the Art Colony an inkling of smog condi· tioo.s. As it stands, Kay aaid, "Tbe area is unprotected." A smog monitoring station is more than just a data collector. APCD uses it to broadcast ~ called smog alerts to warn penoossensitive.tosmog. 1n a first-stage alert, the dis· trict is required by law, to notify cities, school districts, hospitals Manahan Lead Narrows D•llY l'Oot SIMI -O• HOLDS NARROW LEAD Wiiiiam ¥•nahan Bandits Hit LB Shop, ,, ~ ~Strip Clerk A "Mutt and J eff" team of pistol-packing robbers hit a small Laguna Beach gift shop Monday taking $63 and fleeing after forcing the lone female clerk to disrobe ma back room. The two men, one well over six feet tall and with a hefty midsee· lion, the other short and slight, entered tbe Forever Fancy shop at 276 S. Coast Highway JUSl before closing After browsing about, the big man pulled out a concealed re- volver and turning to the young woman clerk. ordered her to (!1Ve him all the store's cash. After grabbing the money. the men, both of whom now bran- dished guns, told the clerk to go into the s tore's back room where she was ordered to stnp. Tht! woman removed her clothing and she was told to stay in the room. The men fled. I The cle rk quickly clothed )lerself and called police. First police units arnved on the scene less than a minute af\er the call, Capt. Neil Purcell said. Additional police units and off. duty detectives were thrown into the search, but the bandits eluded authorities. Both men were of latin ap- pevance and had dark collar· length hair. Orang~ Coast b;1•L' .. Weather Night and morning fog, otherwise fair with high clouds Thursday. Days to cool with highs in low 70s, lows to near so. INSIDE TODA V T~r Sora Quentira inmatr1 wsrc CGU{lht in o 67·/oct tun- nel, 10 feet vllMrground, md· mo 0 moralh·lo1tg o.tft'f'nf'C ot rteCJPf!. Whn captured, th.rt/ were only 35 /ert away from /Tredom. SIOrJI Page A5. Absentees Cut Gap to 6 Votes By JACK CHAPPELL 01111• oan, Pll°' st:att William Manaban's narrow lead in the Capistrano Unified School District trustee election narrowed even further Monday as previously overlooked absentee ballots were tallied. Manahan had led opponent Jan Overton by 30 votes when elec· lion day votes were counted. That lead evaporated to only six votes Monday with more ballots remaining to be counted today. The apparent victor in the race, Manahan. was to have been seated on the school board next Monday. The trustee seat vacated by Stephen Smith earlier this year represents the Laguna Niguel, Monarch Bay, and Dana Point area o(' the Capistrano Unified School District. Both Ma n a h an and Mrs. Overton are Dana Point res- idents. The contest for the seat had drawn four candidates. The person elected to the position will serve only until March when the post again will be up for grabs. Manahan is an elementary school teacher in the Saddleback Unified School District. Mrs. Overton has worked as a com- puter programmer and has been active in school affairs. The ballots being counted are absentee votes which were placed in ballot boxes at polls. These ballots were kept separate and were not counted with the re- gular ones. A registrar's office spokeswoman said today she wouldn't know the total number of the ballots 1nvolved until the counting was completed. Trend Reversed Estimates are that about 3,000 such absentee ballots were de· posited at the polls throughout the county and were routinely be· ing processed by the registrar's office. Another 1,800 ballots were. found Monday by co unt~ employes as they were checking precinct supplies. "Those ballots were in the warehouse a nd hadn't been brought forward for checking. They were from aJI over the county." County Registrar Al Olson said. Earlier he had said he didn't believe any races would be af. fected by the found baUots. Todav. however . Olson ad· milted the Capistrano trustee ele~tion could be turned around. (See MANAHAN, Page A.2) CLOSING IN FAST Jan Overton Threats Senior Housing Dumped Tio Patty By GARY GRANVILLE ganizations throughout the coun· for elderly residents. Alllle,u~d oi1 ... o.11,,..1«1U11 ty, including the county's Senior However, a recent study In· ~ ~ ~ . Plans to develop what ~as Citizens Council. dicated that Miller's plan would b_•l.led as a. low·C?Sl senior But it was opposed by Laguna not produce true low cost hous· c~tizens housing project on the Beach city officials, the Laguna ing. hills above Laguna Beach were Greenbelt and, in the end, the Miller contended the tilt up un- scotcbed Tue~day by th~ <?range Orange County Housing Coali· its to be built on hillside pilings Coun~y ~tanning Commission. lion. would sell for between $22,000 . Re1ecllon of a land use de-Those favoring Santa Ana de· and $26,000. s1gnati?n chan~e n~ed to get velope r Howard Miller's pro-But the study said the price the seruor hous ing project off the posed senior's project obviously range would likely be from g!ound was part ~fa larger plan· saw the issue solely as an at-between $32,000 and $38,000. rung scheme of~hmgs. tempt to provide low cost housin~ (See PROJECT Page A2) It was a portion of a proposed • amendment to the land use ele· ment of the . county's general plan. Gener ally, the commission re· versed a trend of recent months and. in effect, recommended-tbat the Board of Supervisors detay some land use decisions until growth impact can be measured. Before voting to reject the con- troversial senior citizens project. however, commissioners did not say why they would vote 4·1 for rejection. The proposed 1,28.S-unit project was heavily backtd by senior or· Three Firms Bid on Pier Three consulting firms make their bids b efore the San Clemente City Council at 7:30. tonight on a contract \o design the pier-bowl redevelopment area. The council is expected lo select one of the firms next Wed· nesday in a regular meeting. Tonight's meeting is a study session. Consultants to be interviewed are Bissell-August Associates of Newpor t Beach, Keisker· Johnson of San Clemente, and Uallace & McHarg. City officials have estimated that a study of the redevelopment area would take six months and cost $40,000. Moch Smoke Bot No Fire ' Huge puffs of what looked to Huntington Cyclist Hurt in Collision A 26-year-old Huntington Beach man was critically injured Monday when his motorcycle and an automobile collided in Laguna Beach. The c yclist, off-duty Los Angeles Police officer Alan J. Boyce, was r\!ported in guarded condition today at the intensive care unit of South Coast Com· munity Hospital. Boyce's right leg was crushed in the mishap. The cyclist also reeeived a broken collar bone. Boyce was northbound on South Coast Highway at Brooks Street when be, collided with a Fatal Crash vehicle driven by Kathryn Anna Calkins, 23, of 27011 Camino de Estrella, Capistrano Beach. The cause of the accident is un. known, Carmen Pollastro, Laguna Beach traffic officer said. Preliminary Investigation showed that driver Calkins had pulled into the intersection from Brooks Street to mld<e a left tum onto Coast Highway. Pollastro said the driver re· ported she was unable to see the cyclist due to construction of a water main with heavy equip· ment working along the road edge. Driver to Fa~e Manslaughter Rap A West Covina man who was booked on manslaughter charges Aug. 13 alter a Laguna Canyon Road collision that claimed the life of the woman passenger in the oncomlng car has been or· dered to face arraignment Nov. 2G ln Oranae Couot.y Superior Court. Thief Gets 83, 700 Loot in S. Laguna Judge James H. Walsworth s~t the court appearance'for Morris Lyon WH t , 28, who is additional· ly charged with being under t.be influence of drugs and drink ! while operating a vehicle. Reports filed by Irvine police indicate that West was dri vine on lhewrongsiieof adou~eyellow line when his a•to smashed into a plckllP truck occupied by Morwn Solberg, 40, and his wife, Unda Suzanne. 26, of Running Springs, Cali f. By the Associated Press The San Diego Union quoted an unnamed source in Northern California today as stating that threats had been made to Patty Hearst while the she was at a federal correctional institution at Pleasanton. The Union also quoted Dr. Owen Kennedy, assistant re- gional director for the Federal Bureau of Prisons in San Fran- cisco, as saying the swticb was at. Miss Hearst's request "for security purposes." The New York Times also re- ported today that inmates at the Pleasanton prison said Miss Hearst had "a number of tan· trums," in which she went to her room and beat her fists against the wall until the knuckles were s craped and red. Last week, the Times' ac· count said, Miss Hearst refused to report to her job of helping clean a dormitory unit. What told by authorities she would be put in isolation as punishment. she reportedly said that was what she wanted. Miss Hearst had been at the campus-like Pleasanton facility since Sept. 24, when she was sentenced by U.S. District Court Judge William Orrick. She wUJ become eligible for parole in 16 months. She was moved from the spacfous federal prison in Northern California to a 12- story faclUty in San Diego at her own request for security re- asons. o((lcials say. Concern for Miss Hearst's safety was. believed. to stem from reports that she baa agreed to testify for the pro- secution at two upcoming trials involving her former under· ground companions. One trial at which Miss Hearst la expected to be a gov· (See PA'ITY, Pace AZ) IA.s Rios Plan Hearing Set The San Juan Capistrano Pl&D- nlnl Commission bas 1cbedu~ a public bearing Thursday on re- development of the city's historic Ul8 ruoe area. I The beartng will begin at 1 San Clemente re&idents like smoke billowing from a large de· partment store touched off a full· fledged response from the flre department Tuesday night. Twenty.six men riding 1ix H · sorted lite engines and LNcks, raced to the K·Mart store, S.SO Camino de E&lrella, to fln· A South Laguna pUot has re· ported lhe theft of n cash box con.· tainln1 cub. traveler's checks and bonds valued at$3,700. Orange County sheriff's of· ncen H id vlcUm Jordan Vick Mrs. Solberg died ln the wreckage of the truck. Her hu1b1nd baa recovered after treatment-at Saddleback Com· munit.y H~Pftal. p.m. at the mission gymnul~i f located behind the mJ11iaD, oa r;J Camino Real. d. .. buge pufla of steam. Firemen called off the aeneraJ alarm, which rouses all aw.ta· ble nren1bters ln the city. Cause of all the steam wu a mallu.nc· Uooinl pipe. firemen said. Gerber1, 32, or 31874 8th St., told A probation o!llcer who com· them be was ln San Francisco piled 1 pre·court f!20rl al\tt In· whb buratan entered his home terviewing West aDCI Id• woman by removin1 lbe panes of a puaenter asserts that she told louvtred wlndow The cash box him ab• and Wetl drank "1.ne and wu taken from a bedroom s moked nurlJuaoa ebo~Uy · cloe•L -Wore"'t.be accident. • l .. The Arroyo GroQS> consalt•nc srouP and th.e Loa Rioe ~ Committee will make ptteenll· Uona OD &Mir recommeodalionl to City Council. A aecond pul>Uc heartnc ls scheduled befOTe Qty CwJl Dec.1. and public officials. Durinll such an alert, persons sensitive to amog -and these include achoolchlldren and bosJ>ital patients, the elderly or Infirm, and a host of others with respiratory problems - are urged to stay indoors and avoid smoking. Athletic events are curtailed, as well as re<:rea· Uoo periods. <SeeSMOG, P11e ..U> Heights Parents Protest Parent s of Ar ch Beach Heights school children in Laguna Beach , where a speclal cit.y bus route to transport children down the hillt.Op com- munity to a bus stop waa halted Monday, are expected to pretest the action before the City Coun- cil tonight. City and school district or. flclals have been besieged by ir- ate telephone callers demanding to know. first , why the service was interrupted, and second, why they weren 'l notified. For more than a year, tbe city has bused Arch Beach Heights children to the Bluebird Park school bus stop: where a school bus picked them up for school. The school district has never provided downhill transport because, officials there said, it is too dangerous . The district had instead paid parents a mileage allowance to pay for other arrangements. The city line was started to ac- commodate the children, and it took the preasure off the school district. Tbe municipal bus run was halted Monday after the city told by C.i~ Atty. George Logan that the practice violated state legislation prohibiting special bu.sing of school children by any agency but the school district. Now the pressure is back on the school district. • Parents complained th~ neither the district nor the ci gave adequate notification o cancellation of the buses. School district officials sai since the bus was a municip vehicle, it wasn't their busin to notify parents. The city's plan to notify th students was to give the notices as they boarded the cit bus Friday afternoon to g home. The trouble with that was th most students either took th school bua home, which d (See BEIGlf.l'S, Page ,U) Anti-whaling . I Stand Backed · In Clemente The San Clemente City CouncD has ganged up on the Sovie\ Union and Japan, voting to sup. port the public outcry against whaling. The two coun;ries are the world's major whaling nations. The councll lent particular sup- port to the California gray whale. the official state marine mam. mal, an endangered species un· der protection by international agreement. In a re1tolutlon sent to Gov~· mund G. Brown, the council ~'1m· mended a Nov. 20 pf'Oll'am ha Sacramento celebrating the whale through exhibits, art, films, speakers and entertaiD· metlt. The measure was introduced by San Clemente Mayor B. Patrick Lane. who said, "I see no Justiflcation for whaling." . HER MICROWAJ'E A HUI'SEUER •'The second penon w!>o called boupt It. rm really tickled wiCft my loltant 1ucce11 l" ' Here's the elaasllled ad that sparked the sale for tb1a Cos~ Mesa woman: , AMA.NA MICROWAVE OVEN. 8 mos. old . Trtin.<iferable warr. $325 lDUt•:UX~ U 10ll'd like to eonvert an q. pllance to cub, or ~ else, call the DailJ PUot at '42·H71. The people•• iwtetplaff. s rt .. 'jl,f DAILY PILOT L/SC Wednesday. Novo~r 10, 1978 (" Dignity l..~ft'. .~.Tax Cut 'No Caution ;·12~f ~~AP) -A •~ Presidenl·elec.'l Jimmy Carter Second Wife Angry, in Need SIOUX FALLS,S.D. CAP>->·1 don't have a shred of dilft,ity left," s ays Patricia Martin. who teamed after Bob Martin's death three weeks ago her hu,,band had a second wiCe and r amily 200 miles away. Just some sweetie stashed in the corner.' 'Tm a very simple penon. I'm a mother first, and l was of the oplnion that Bob was married, had three children and was divorced." Sioux Falls. Hesaidbeassumedit was a motel. Tbe family ln Pierre, which has refused to comment on the mat- ter, lives in a sin1le-famlly house. Allmon said Martin usually asked $11.50 per day, the state max· imum, for lodgina in Sioux Falls. considers whether lo propose a new tax cut in J anuary, key con- gressional Democrats say it's too early to tell if one will be needed and warn they will approach any prop()Sal cautiously. Carter said last week that if the economy does not begm improv- ing by J anua ry, there is a .. strong possibility" that he I would as k for a tax cut to ..stimulate it. I But Congress· ch.ieC taxwriter. H ou se Ways a nd M ean s CARTER GETI'ING ORGANIZED-PAGE A4 Chairman Al Ullman, saicl Tues- day that Congress should ap- proach any such proposal "with great caution.·· "We would be deceiving the American people if they were led to believe they would be getting major tax deduction," Ullman said al a news conference in Color ado Springs, Colo. I In more deta iled remarks re- leased through hi s Washington office. the Orei:o n Democrat said it is too early to determine whether an additional true cut on top of the $19 biWon tax cut I already approved by Congress would be appropriate. Ullman said anti-recession job programs and incentives for in- vestments in high unemployment area~ "would be more effective in dealing with the problem." Jn a related development, Dr. Gary Fromm or the Stanford Research Institute told a con- gressional panel today that the onl y question about a tax cul is how large it should be. I A tax cut or some other means of stimulating the economy is needed in the near future not only for American consumers but also for stability of the free world f conomy, he said. f'ro• Pag~ Al 1SMOG ... Lagun a Beach s c hoo ls, hospitals and city officials are not -and have not been for more than a year -notified of any a lerts at either the San Juan Capistrano or Costa Mesa monitoring stations. Camarena and Kay said it is . not district policy to do so. Both men agrtt that smog conditions in Laguna Beach and San J uan Cap is t r a no a r e gene r ally similar, despite dt!ferences in topography. (Laguna Beach is closed in by mountains A major interstate freeway passes through San Juan Capistrano.) But Kay said, "It's something we s houl d p r obably think about." 1 Laguna Beach has had only one firllt·Slage s mog alert in the tiistory of the monitoring sta- tion. which was only operational for three years. I Since the station matrunc- tloned, San J uan Capistrano has had few first-stage alerts, the in~t recent one Aug. 28. ~ Meanwhile. smog conditions, -which have been aggravated 1the past two week!! by . Santa ,Ana wind condition~. with in 1Jand i1moggy .air b<!mg biown 1coastwar~. ure expected to ease rlong the coasL. thf' APCD said. Gold Rmh Hikes Cost LONDON <AP> -Asud- den rush or buyers sent gold prices In London up by more tha n $4.SO an ounce today to $136, its highnt level sin ce early this year. Dealers reported ~I by the Far Eas t , speculators and industrial and jewelry users or gold. L.S( DAILY PILOT ::::.:t.~~~:·r,::.;::~~~= 0..\f~l'-"l"41(01ft(H"Y ~litl'fdtt~~· ~1\#Wil MO"@•; tMWtf\ ,,'61~ tot Co\l• ~ N•WOO't t\"Af'li H~~ """°'" ,..,.,_ t•ift V•"•• II ••ft• S•oct!•b.c\ Y•lf•• ~ i....,...11o ... •~1•c .. .i ·-··-•-,...,I\_.,_ ht~r!Nn -~ ''-=~~~~~!i.~.·.~~~UO ~ ••Y ·-·-............ _ -- Joc• 11 Cwl" v,.,,.,,.,.,.., ... o....-.o1w- ~••ll".it £91• ... ~ .. ,,....,...... ........... ~ ..... ~" ~-•t<_ ....... Auot•"' ~,...YIWtl .. ter~ L .. u"• l••cll OMoe n .. G .. M•Y" 14'"1' .. M<llllM ""°"'" ,. 0 .. , ..... ti.It OffkH (MttMow JJOW.ott...,"'"' Hmt••41tl"kK • 11''l-• ....... •>ff ~"•·•OVoll•y· ll~l.ol'•r-•l~"O'•""'­ Telepho"• (714)1C2~ Cllttlfled Ad¥•ttltil!t Mi,"71 Lagul\1 IHCll AJI Depertme"''· Telepllofte 4...._ "·-~<··-· 4K~ c:iw,..1.,.t .... o. •• .,. ("~" ~"'·~ c-..,.., Ht fWw\ tt,.,.,, Ullll\tfMM!M td•IM••I Mettff •r ffyfrHu me nt1 111-.r•lft Mt• fWI f _I .. WllM•t , ... clol -!f\101"" ot u., • ...,._, ~.r.:.:.~",.::m:":. .. .:' .~:::. ~-:. ;:-.:::J...•la.:=..::..:o "°''ll~ly • "'1111.,y "I've been reduced to having to beg for ADC (Aid to Dependent. Children> and food stampe," Mrs. Martin told a reporter. "But I'm protecting my children. I can go through anythinc, but those children bave to eat. All they know ls that their daddy is dead and that they loved their daddy dearly." Mart.in, South Dakota's direc- tor of economic development, died of a heart attack at S2. lt was learned then he bad a wife and five children here, a wife and four 'children in PierTe. "I'm very angry that I have been put in this position," said Patri c ia Ma rtin, 33, .. My thoughts are 'How dare you do this to me. and remember, I'm not County Gives ·Equipment To Car Pool .,.Wl ...... i. PHILADELPHIA HOTEL WILL CLOSE ITS DOORS SOON Bellevue-Stratford Done In by Legfonnalre'• DIHan Hotel Joins Legion As Disease Victim PillLADELPHIA CAP) -The 72-year -old Be llevue-Str atford Hotel will close its doors Nov , 18, a victim of ruinous business declines stem ming from last summer's still unsolved legion- naire's disease. "The Bellevue -Stratford has found it im possible any longer to withstand the economi c im· pact of the worldwide adverse publicit y which has been as· sociated with the 'legionnaire 's diseas e' even though no in· vestigative agency found any link whatsoever to hotel opera- tions." William Chadwick , hotel vice president, said. ''Despite lbe lack of credible evidence that any causal factor existed, the continuous public reports linking the hotel to re- ports of the illness has been r uinou s t o i t s bus in es s ," Chiidwick said. "The average cash loss for the last 90 days has been $10,000 per day. adding up to aggregate losses in the order or $1 million for th e period of adv'ersc publicity," the statement said. The hot e l was the he ad - quarters for the iU-fated state American Legion convention July 21-24 following which 29 pe rsons die d and 151 other s became ill Crom a mysterious disease. The Belle vue r ecently has hosted a number of publicity. oriented events aimed at restor- ing business. Special arrangements are be- lng made to relocate permanent hotel residents, said Gustave A m s t e r d am , ch airman o r Bankers Securities Corp. which owns a con trolling interest in tbe hotel. ··we will make every effort to assist in relocating all our hotel personnel in other positions to the maximum extent possible," he s aid. Health officials included i n their definition or the illness that a person had to ha ve visit· ed the Bellevue between July 1 and Aug. 18. Damage Suit Asked In Slemons Smear Saddleback Valley taxpayers· advocate Ed McKean has pro- posed that the County Board oi Supervisors institute a suit for da mages agamst the parties responsible for one or J im Slemons ·political mailings. ln a letter sent to Supervisor Thomas Riley, McKean contends that grounds for the suit would in- clude "defamatory acts against the people" and "willful mis- management of public monies." He also has asked the county l>O$tal inspector fo determine if the mailings were a violation or the U.S. Postal Hegul atiuns. Over Taxes, contends the tax- payers subsidize both the Postal Service and voter mailing lists. He said taxpayers have a "vest- ed interest" In the mail but have no right to stop getting such mail. .., reel the people have been. damaged and J think it's time the people act." he said. "I think the people are bigger than th.is." McKean said he is asking the supervisors lo get an opinion on the possibility of a suit from the county counsel. He said he will also talk to an a ttorney to see If it's possible for people to sue on lheirown. Office space and clerical sup- plies for Commuter Computer, a car pool matching service, will be dOQaled by Orange County govenflnenl 1n exchange for i re- duction in the cC1unty's subsidy to the private organization. Supervisors akreed Tuesday to. an $8,500 reduction in the coun- ty's $117,114 grant which covers an 18-month period expiring in June in return for providing the free office space. The only opposition to the change came from Supervisor Laurence Schmit who cast the lone no vote. He did not give a re- ason for his vote. Commuter Computer compiles lists or cars and commuters. matching them in carpools. Fr ... Paflf! A I PROJECT ••• It als~ contended that upkeep in the area, especially needed fire retardation measures, would be more costly than anticipated by the project's promoter . County fire officials told the commissioners Tuesday that prospective residents would have trouble obtaining fire insurance to cover their hilltop dwellings. And, they added, the cost or adequate fire controls could be as much as $2 milUon, including the cost of an elaborate sprin.kler system. In an addition to his original re- port, the consultant said senior residents would be a distance from easy access to stores and other needed facilities. What argume nts pers uaded the planners to cast their vote or rejection weren't known because the vote came on a straight roll call uninterrupted by words of. e xpla nation b y the com- missioners. Miller and the senior citizens supportlni the ploject have not had their final say. It Is the County Board of Supervisors that will make the amendment decision. And the boa rd is free to either accept or reject the planners' re- commendation. Confab Resumes WASHINGTON (AP) Bargainers for Hughes Airwest and ita mechanics union resumed contract negoUaUons Tuesday in a n.nal attempt to avert • strike threatened for midnight Sunday. State Atty. Gen. Willlam Janklow c onfirmed reports Martin lived a dual life. Janldow said travel and motel voucMrs . will be examined by a grand jury to check "some questions in- volved in the use of state fund.a.'' Jack Allmo n, the s tate 's secretary or economic and t ourism d e velo pment and Martin's boss in Pierre, said he never suspected the ''Tally-Ho" listed on Martin's travel vouchers was the name of the apartment complex in which his Sioux Falls family lived. The slate agency has otficu in both Pierre and Sioux Falls. Allmon said Martin generally listed the TaJJy-Ho for lodging on travel vouchers turned in for F,....PageAJ. PATTY ••• emment witness is that o( Sym- bionese Liberation Army mem- bers William and Emily Harris on charges or kidnaping Miss . Hearst in February 1974. The other is the weapons and ex- p 1 os iv es trial or Wendy Yoshimura, with whom Miss Hearst was living when she was captured last ye~ ldl.Ss Hearst, 22, ho is serv- ing a seven-year ce for armed bank robbery, was driven to the Metropolitan Cor- rectional Center in San Diego Tuesday. Bill Garris on, warden at Pleasanton, said Miss Hearst filed a written request for the transfer last week. "The decision to move her was made Monday with her at-torney 's approval," Garrison said. "I don't know if her fami- ly bad any say in this action." He said the bureau·s head- quarters in Washington and th~ U.S. attorney general were in· volved in the decision. But Asst. U.S. Atty. F. Steele Langford, in San Francisco. said be was surprised to learn of the sudden transfer. He said he had been scheduled to participate Friday in a hearing in the Hearst case. She had spent several months at the San Diego facility this year unde rgoing a diagnostic study ordered by the ~urt. The J>leas anton facility, which opened in 1974, houses 2SO inmates, mostly under the age of 26. The San Diego prison houses about 500 inmates, most of whom are in for short terms or not yet sentenced. Mrs. Randolph Service Held Memorial service for Laguna Beach Resident Lillian Margaret Randolph died Saturday. She was76. Mrs. Randolph was a SO.year member or the order or Eastern Star. a member of the Laguna Beach Women's Club, the Mon- day Morning Club and Miriam C ircle o r th e Community Presbyterian Church. Burial will be at sea by the Nep- tune Society. Memorial Dona- tions may be made to the American Cancer Society. Mrs. Randolph is survived by daughter. Belly Johnson and grandson Anthony Merrill of Il- linois. The malling McKean has taken exception to was sent to·voters in the 74lh Assembly District where Slemons was the Republican nominee. The leafl et said that Democrat Ron Cordova -who was elected to the assembly seal the next day -"has recently b«n charged with misconduct in a $10 million laws uit involving massage parlors.•• Overtime Pact Sealed The lawsuit apparently never has been filed and was related to a case Cordova handled while working as a deputy District Al· tomey. Ir the action has not been filed, McKean said, the letter is a falsehood and "a blatant attempt to defame the character or Ron Cordova." McKean, chairman of Sad· dleback Homeowners Outra1ed The Laguna Poets Schedule Rea~~ The Laguna Poets will hold a reeding from noon to t p.m. Thursday at Gateway Piasa at UC Irvine. Poet.a particlpaUne are Mac Witter. »art Yoder, Brenda Hederich and David Rainwater. The lA.guna Poets also wlll COD· Unue lnlormal readi.np at 8 p.m. Fridays at Hanis Hall, 428 Park Ave., l•l!Wl Beach. Action Closes Himhaw Def enae Path By TOM BARLEY Oi IM D•llY ...... Stttt Orange County Superior Court Judge Frank Domen.icbini re- fused today to allow details of a settlement between the county and 32 aaaessor's olflce employes to be dl5cussed before the jury in the trial or Congreasman Andrew Hinshaw. • 'Jt 's not related to the issues IJt thb trial," he told defense at- torney John McNicholas while concedina that the overUme t>&Y· ments spelled out In the settle- ment were rraudulel\tlY ob- tained. The 1 ruling ends McNlcholas' hopes that the jury might accept h1a argument that tho coonty's wUlingneu to abandon Jts claim to o vertl me plld durln1 Hinshaw's term aa asseaaor almllarly rules out any posslbill- t,y of Hlnaberw '• cutJt on related char1e1. Jt la alteced that Hinlbaw mew that overtJme was bti.nf claimed from the county by em1>loyes who wue actuall1 ~ onbif congressional campaicn ln 1972 when the funds were pald. Hinshaw has denied the charge from the witness stand. But pro- secution witnesses have testified that be ordered assessor's office personnel lo work on his cam- paJcn and promised dlamiual for thoeewbodld not comply . McNlcbolu bad boped to ln· troduce evidence to the effect that the county •creed to drop Ila lawsuit against asaeesor's ottlce employes who drew onrtime in · 1m in return f<rr dlamlual of their countenult. The employee agreed and abandoaed an attempt·to obtain payment trom the county for 32,000 boura or overtime they a aid they worked belweeil 1186 and 1576._ McNlcbolH arruect tlial the agreement clearly absolves Hlnsbaw of blame since the coun- ty would not have ne1otJated such a settlement lf t.tHrre had been a~ evidence ot crimtnal aeta. PrnaHutnr WU Uam Evant wd the action by the county board dM1 not approve paymenta made to employes for time spent on Hlmbaw'• campaicn- Evans said UM aeWement with tbe employes was DOthi.ng more or less than a good will 1esture and was never intended to be a comment on Hinsbaw's guilt or innocence. Judee Domenicblnl•a rulln1 to- d~ out of the presence of the Jury now leaves the way clear for the defense to call further wil· nesaes. Cblel Probation officer Mar1aret Grier was waiUn1 out- side tb• courtroom today and p,.._umably will ~ the flnt wit· neu lo follow Hinshaw to the stand. !Unshaw, 51, fa«S charges of grand theft, conaplracy, em- bes.llement and viol1Uoa of at.ate codes, all contained ln a crand jury lndktm ent. He bas been sentenced to aoe to 14 yun In ttate prtaoo alter be- ing found 1uilty of bribery cbara11 In a.n earlier trlal. Ht Is lreeoaappeal. ' Patricia Martin said she mar- ried Martin ln 1968 but bas been unable to flnd am arrlage license. "I remember signing a 4Qou· menl, that's all. Hetookcarlofit. They have tried lo check it out legally, but obviously I was duped, and I don't know why. "I believe this other wile was just as much in the dark as I was. She bad to go through the shock or this also. I feel very sorry for her. Her children must be old enough to unders tand all this. Mine aren't, fortunately." The Lyon County clerk in Em- poria, Kan., confirmed that Mary Lou Martin was married to Bob Martin in May 1948. Motor Stolen From Boat at Dana Harbor An outboard motor valued by the victim at more than $1,000 bas been stolen from a boat moored at Dana Polnt Harbor, Orange County sheriff's officers' s~d. · Deputies said the theft was dis- covered by Pomona teacher Robert Frank Loncar, 45. He told officers that intruders broke padlocks on the vessel to gain ac- cess to the motor and other pro-perty. Deputies are also investigating the theft of an anchor from a moored boat owned by Azusa re. tiree Richard Johnson, 52. Johnson told deputies the anchor, valued at $'70.15. was taken from the foredeck of bis vessel. F,....PageAI HEIGHTS ••• drive up the hill to Arch Beach Heights, or round some other transportation. So most parents, and students. didn't know the city bus was canceled. And, judging from the parent · protest Monday quite a few oC the students learned about the situation Monday morning, as they waited in vain ror the city bus. Solutions to the problem were scanty today. Stan Scholl , di rector of municipal services, said today the city will seek an interpreta- tion from tbe slate attorney general's office about whether relJU}ar bus runs migbt be start- ed. Such a run, he said, would include any passengers, not just school children (the prior bus wauimilarily run, however). School said it would take "at least a Wffk to work things out -if they can be worted out." School officials were reluctant to comment, arguing that it i.s a city problem. George Owen Rites Today Funeral services lot George Henry Allen Owen of Laguna Beach were to be held today at Sheffer Chapel. Mr. Owen died Monday at h is Lacuna Beach home. He was 91. The Rev. Robert L Bonball of St. George's Epiacopal Cburcb ln Laguna Hllls was to ofticlate at the servlce. Mr. Owen bad been a rt1ldent of the Lasuna Beach ania for 31 yean. He worked aa an employe at Gene's Market. Tbe deceued ia survived by dau1hter, Vera Cowie of South La1una and granddau1bter Elalno Cowie of Huntington Beach. Mr. Owen WIS il 50·year member ofthe Mizpah Maaonic .• Lodge in San Bernardino. F,...P_,,eAl MANAHAN •• "At that Ume, I hadn't bad rDJ attention drawn to that particular race. I wu lootinC at rac-n thal bad more ot a marstn. So, here's one where lt pocqibly could make a diffenmce," Olaoo l aid. Man Pleads Guilty LOS ANGELES (AP) - MJcha•I Joseph Behar, 41. bu pletded cutlty to consplrlnc .. to evade taxes on mare \ban ~l million ln income after he ad· mttted ln court that be bid U· les,ally duplicated thouhndl of tlJbt-track •teno tapa over a four·year pel'lod. • rL Orange Coast. EDITION Today's Closing N •. 'tocks VOL. 69, NO. 31S, 4 SECTIONS, ..S PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1976 C TEN CENT McNally Relocation S~elved Two Years Tri&.stees of the Newport·Mesa Unified School District set a new deadline Tuesday for a decision on· the relocation of the McNally Continuation High School ll is September 1979. Trustees agreed to a two-year wait in moving the school from its downtown Costa Mesa site after district ofticials and a representative of the Costa Mesa Suit Hits Another Center Attorneys for the city of Costa Mesa have fileJ a lawsuit against a second community care center they claim is operating in a re- sidential zone without a proper permit. Th\.: city attorney's office is seeking a court order that would prevent overcrowding in area homes currently being used to house juveniles. . The Orange County Superior Court action, filed ~Y Deputy Ci· ty Attorney To m Pasbalides. claims that more than six female juveniles currently are being housed in a home at 3165 Bermuda Drive. The !\Uit claims Oak Tree Homes ' owners failed to apply for a zone exception permit for the juvenile home. Named as defendants in the most recent lawsuit are the state and county departments of health, and Oak Tree Homes operators David Tuttle, Tom 'Carpenter and Tom Bernower. The suit is aimed at the county and state health departments for baving licensed the care center -to operate in a residential area. .. An earlier lawsuit, f1Jed by the ~city · las t Afril, names the 4irectors o Family Group Homes, operating a center in a residential area at 550 Sturgeon Drive. That suit also names the California Department of Health and the Orange County Depart· mentof Mental Health. In that case, however, the owners sought a zone exception permit from the city. The request was denied, but the Family Group Homes operators re · mained in operation. Both care center operations say they have state licenses, is· s ued under health and safely codes. The conflict appears lo be over local agency planning and zoning statutes. which give cities a degree of control over local mat- ters. and a health and safety sec- tion of the state code that says cities must consider the family group homes as residences. even though they are commercial ven tures. Ragtime Edges Near Kialoa In Yacht Race Lead yacht Kialoa drove toward Cape San Luaro today but Jim Kilroy's 79-foot ketch was losing ground in the 1,032· mile Los Angeles to MazaUan yacht race to Ragtime, the 62· foot sloop out o( Long Beach. Kialoa's boat-for-boat lead of 50 miles Tuesday WM down to 29 miles, according to this mom· ing's posiUon reports~\ Winds continued to be "very, very light,'' radio reports from the fleet indicated. Kialoa also dropped to fourth in the handicap race during the :It-bow' period after leading In both overall and Class A the day before. Class leaders on handicap time: ClaH A 1. WhisUe Wing 2. K:ialoa 3. Aorangi a .. 1 B 1. Mamie 2. Hurricane Deck3.Racy Clap C 1. Bingo 2. Vector 3. Colton tall Cius D 1. America Jane Ill 2. Captain Marvel 3. Broomhllda Onrall 1. Whistle Wlnf 2. Mamie3.AmericaJane4.Kialoa. Confab R esumes WASHINGTON CAP)° - Bar1atners tor HUC}tes Airwest and ita mechanics union resumed contract ne1oUatJClftS Tuelday in •final attempt to avert a 1t.rUto threatened for mictm,htSunday. ... Downtown Redevelopment Agen· cy recommended the delay. The school, located on 19th Street between Harbor ~d New- port Boulevards, is considered the keystone to the redevelop- ment of the downtown area. The city spokesman t~I trustees the two-year-delay w · ve the ci· ty time to prepare for'the redevelopment. Superintendent John Nicoll also convinced trustees to lawicb an $80,000 rennovation of the McNally site. That work includes re· furbishing four classrooms in the old building for about $11,000. The balaoce will be spent on im- proving utilities and providing equipment for the relocatable classrooms on the site. Nicoll stressed that, while the decision on McNally has been deferred for two years, the school board will continue to study the declining enrollment problems throughout the district and will consider the closure of schools where enrollment has dropped significantly. One of the factors in the de- cision on McNally was the re· commendation from Nicoll and his staff that the school district could probably make more money in the appreciation of the value of the property than it could in interest on the money gained by selling the land now. One of the reaspns the sale wa~ contemplated was that it was seen as the source of fUnds for capital improvements in the dls· trict. But Nicoll told school board members that there is no press· ing need for McNally funds for capital improvement projects. The district is selling two unused sites in Costa Mesa and expects to get federa l public works money, all or which will go into the capital Improvement fund, be said. Carter Backs Plan Congress 'Cautious' Over Tax Cut Idea· Storied Vessel A,.WI ......... WASHI NGTON CAP) -As President-elect Jimmy Carter considers whether to propose a new tax cut in January, key con- gressional Democrats say it's too early to tell if one will be needed and warn they will approach.any propos·a1 cautiously. Carter said last week that if the economy does not begin improv· Ing by Janua ry . there is a "strong possibility " that he would ask for a tax cut to stimulate it. Threats To P~tty Alleged B)' &1-e AHoc:lated Pr~ You 've heard the song, "The "W'k'eck o( the Edmund Fitzgerald" by Gordon Lightfoot. This 1e the ship. Just one year ago today, the Edmund Fitzger~a,.san.k in a storm on Lake Superior, taking its crew of 29 aJ:ia watery grave 530 feet below the surface. It was known fo.r its ore cargo record -30..000 tons of taconite pellets in u;\8. The San Dleco tJnion quoted an unnamed source in Northern California today as slating that threats bad been made to Patty Hearst while the ahe was at a federal correctional Institution a t Pleasanton. The Union also quoted Dr. Owen Kennedy, assistant re· gional director for the Federal Bureau of Prisons in San Fran- cisco. as saying the swtich was at Miss Hearst's request "for security purposes." Pussycat Theater Trades '~'for 'G' The New York Times also re- ported today that inmates at the Pleasanton prison said Miss Hearst had "a number of tan- trums," in which she went to her room and beat her fists against the wall until the knuckles were scraped and red. Balboa's co ntroversi'a-1 Pussycat Theater will close for good Friday and lbe movie house will reopen by Thanksgiving as a "family oriented theater," a spokesman for the theater said today. The change from X-rated mov- ies to G-rated films is the result of a lease negotiated between the Pussycat o wner s Walnut Properties and Great Western Theaters. A spokesman for Walnut Properties said details of the changeover would be available later this week but indicated that Friday definitely would be the lut day for the Pussycat and its long-running movie, "Deep Throat.'' The Pussycat Theater opened in what used to be the Balboa Theater, 709 E . Balboa Blvd., in the spring of 1975, to the dismay of city officials, police and Peninsula residents. In the long legal batUe that followed, there were seizures of a variety of films police and the district attorney believed were pornographic. The theater emerged a partial victor when a municipal court jury in May or 1975 found two films, "Deep Throat" and "The Devil Jn Miss Jones," not to be obscene. Since then, those are the only movies the theater bas screened. The Pussycat chain spokes man declined to comment on the possjb\lity that economic factors brougqt about the change from "X" back to "G.'' HER MICROWAVE .4 HOT SELLER "The second person who called bought it. I'm really tickled with my instant success!" Here's the classified ad that sparked the sale for this Cost£ Mesa woman: AMANA MICROWAVE OVEN. 6 mos. old. Transferable warr. $325. XXX·XXXX U you'd like to'convert an ap- pliance to cash, or anything else, call the Daily Pilot at 642-5678. The people's marketplace. Last week, the Times' ac· count said. Miss Hearst refused to report to her job of helpirig clean a dormitory unit. When told by authorities she would be put in isolation as punishment. she reportedly said that was what she wanted. Miss Hearst bad been at the campus-like Pleasanton facility since Sept. 24, when she was sentenced by U.S. District Court Judge William Orrick. She will ~ome eligible for parole in 16 months. She was moved from the s pacious federal prison In Northern California to a 12- story facility in San Diego at her own request for security re- asons. officials say. Concern for Miss Hearst·s safet y was believed to stem from r e ports that she bas agreed to testify for the pro- secution at two upcoming trials involving her former under· ground companions. One trial at which Miss Hearst is expected to be a gov· emment witaess is that of 8Ym- bionese Liberation Anny mem- bers William and Emily Hanis on charges of lti<baaping Miss Hearst in February 1974. The <See PATrY, Page A!) For Estatlda Band Year {)pens With R'Oses Estancia High School's marching band will start next year off on a high note as participants in the Tournament of Roses Parade Jn. 1 in Paaadena. The 106-member organisatlon was one of five Southern California bands selected by the Pasadena Tournament ol Roses Auoclation music committee to perform In the Rose Parade. MO\"e than 60 bands partlclpat· eel in two separate competJUons, held Oct. 30 In Chino and last Saturday in Santa Monica. The Rose Bowl judging was held at both band reviews in con· Junction with judging by the Southern California School Band and Orcbe1tr1 Anociation. the Rose Parade selection "one ol the moet presttcious appoin\· ments in the country." Besides Eatanctal olber Sou.them CaWorni• hl&h ~ebool In tbu Cblno band review, btnds to play ~an. 1 will be two Estancia received fln\ place from San Dleso County, ono h onors from the Southern frdm Glendora and PaclUca CalilornJa School Band Judces. Hllh School.ill Garden Grove. They placed second in the Santa Tbe bands were JudCed for Monte• band review by the their music, "'aroblnc abd 1cbool band committee. 1bowinu1blp, F~er aald. Pet.er Fournier, di.rector o1 in· Eatucia'• dnam mNo-r i• 1trumental muss.: for Eltucla Crail. Morton. 'I'M bmd • 801o •• Hlgb Scbool. •aid be, ccNkl ~.si4' la LIAda ~~ ' I ' , But Congress' chief taxwriter. House Ways and M eans Chairman Al Ullman, said Tues· day that Congress should ap· proach any such proposal "with great caution." "We would be deceiving the American people if they were led to believe they would be getting major lax deduction," Ullman said at l news conference in Colorado Springs, Colo. In more detailed remarks re. leased through his Washington Fog BlaMed office. the Oregon Democrat sai<J it is too early to determine whether an additional tax cut on top of the $19 billion tax cut already approved by Congress would be appropriate. Ullman said anti-recession job programs and incentives for in· vestments in high unemployment areas "would be more effective in dealing with the problem." In a related development, Dr. Gary Fromm of the Stanford (SffTAX CUT, Page A.Z) Mesa Cyclist, 32, Dies in Accident A~ ..... motorc,oleft!la' was killed early this morning when bis cycle hit a planter box in a parking Jot. The rider n.tpped over the handleb~rs and onto the pavem*tt. It was the 13th traffic death in Costa Mesa this year. Computer technician Rests Neja Johnny. 32, of2179 Fairview Road, died at Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital about an hour after lbe 2 a . m. accident. A liquor atore operator lock· ing up his store at about 2 a.m., saw the accident in front of the K- M art store at 2200 Harbor Blvd. The wltne111 told police it was foggy and dark in the parking lot when the cy~list hit a planter box. in front of the sto"re. The witness called police and Officer Eric Snow responded. He said be had trouble rmding the cyclist in the heavy fog. Police said the victim was not wearing a helmet. Five or the 13 persons killed in road-related accidents in Costa Mesa in 1976 have been motorcy· cleriders. In all five cases, the cyclists were not wearing helmets. ac• cording to police Traffic In• vestigator Dave Walker. Himhaw Tack Hurt I By Overtime Rulingl By TOM BARLEY Of 11>4 O•llY l'tlot St•lf Orange County Superior Court Judge Frank Domenicbini re· fused today lo allow details of a settlement between the county Mesa Reports Two Robberies In One Day· Two youths, slrnulattng a weapon, escaped with $1!5 Tues- day night in the second robbery of Costa Mesa service stations that day. In an earlier robbery Tuesday, two Los Angeles county men were arrested by police as they allegedly fled the scene of a rob· bery with an undisclosed amount of cash. Today police are seeking two men in the robbery of the Economy Self·Serv station at 1740Wewport Blvd.· Attendant Edward Handley told police two men approached him o.a loot at abc>l4 10 p.m. He said one of the bandJta simulated a gun in bi• pocket. teUin1 Haa41ey to "Do it right or you're a dead man." The pair then fled down Newpart Boulevard. , 'J'be att.odant de9Crlbed one IU1pect u belhl five feet five in· cbn tall, ol medJwn build and wi~Uptbloodhalr. Tbe ••cood bandit was described 11 betni five feet eight 1Dtbel ...U, wttb • Udn build, dark tdon4 hair and •Uinl • wat.ebcap. Police arrHted two Los Mp) .. •• In d eerti'er rob-Mr7 TueMay at the Cbe'mlD •t:•· U. at UIO Hanoi BMl. 'n.t pe1r are betAI held ln Colla Mesa Jail wttb ball Mt a .... . . and 32 assessor's office employes to be discussed before the jury in the trial ol Congressman Andrew Hinshaw. "It's not related lothe issues in this trial," he told defense at.- tomey John McNicbolas while concedlng that the overtime pay· ments spelled out in the settle- ment were fraudulently ob· tained. The ruling ends McNicbolas• hopes that the jury might accept his argument that the county's willingness to abandon its claim to overtinYe paid during Hinshaw's term as assessor similarly rules out any possiblli· CSee HJNSHA W, Page A%) Coast Weather NJgbt and morning fog, otherwise fair with high clouds Thursday. Days lo cool with highs in low 70s, lows to near 50. I NSIDE TODA~ Three San Qumtin inmGtea were ccwghl in.a 61·/oot hm· . nel, 10 feet underground, nd- ing . a month-long. ate~. at escape. When coptur«l, fhet/ ~• onl11 35 I ett OWOI/ from /f"eedom. Story P.age AS. A2 DAILY PILOT c Wednesday NA)vetnber 10, 1976 ~..; ·. Slemons Mailing Suit Eye d Saddleback Valley taxpayers' edvocate Ed McKean has pro- posed that the County Board of Supervisors institult\ a suit for '1amages against the parties res pons ible for one of J im Slemons' political mailinas. ln a letter sent to Supervisor Thomas Riley, McKean contends that grounds for the s uit would in- clude "defamatory acts against the people" and "willful mis- management of public monies." He also has asked the county postal inspector to determine if the mailings were a violation of the U.S. Postal Regulations. The mailing McKean has taken exception to was sent to voters in the 74th Assembly District where Slemons was lhl' Republican nominee. The leafl et s~ud tbat l>emocrat Ron Cordova -who was elected to the assembly scat the next day ''has recently been charged with misconduct in a $10 million lawswt involving massage parlors ... 1 The lawsuit apparently never has been filed and was related to a case Cordova handled while working as a deputy District At- torney. If the action has not been filed , McKean s aid. the letter is a falsehood and •·a blatant attempt to defame the character of Ron Cordova." McKean, chairman of Sad- dleback Homeowners Outraged Over Taxes. contends the tax-• payers subsidize both ~~e P~tal Service and voter mailing lists He said taxpayers have a "vest- ed interest" in the mail but have no right to stop getting such mail. "I feel the people have been damaged and I think it's lime the people act." he said. "I trunk the people are bigger than th.ls ... McKean s aid he 1s asking the supervisors to get an opinion on the possibility of a suit from the county counsel. He said he will also talk to an attorney to sec if it's possible for people to sue on their own. f'rOfll P age A I T AX CUT .•. Research Institute told a con· gressional panel today that the only question about a lax cut 1s how large 1t should be. A tax cut or some other means of stimulating the eronomy 1s needed in the near future not only for American consumers but also for stability or the free world economy, he said. "The state or demand still IS weak and the free-world system might easily be plunged into another downturn by moderall' CARTER GETilNG ORGANIZED--PAGE A4 shocks from large Arab nation oil pnce increases, an international monetary crisis or widespread harvest failures. he told a House Senat1' e1·on om1c-romm1ttec hcann~ on the futun· of the ec-onomv "The pnncipal 1s!lue currently 1• n n f r o n l 1 n i.: c c 11 n o m I c policym,1kt•rs 1n lht• l 'n1ll'd ~tales 1s lh<' s ue of a tax cut needed to put the economy back on 1ts gro" th rath " F'romm added Prof Jay W l,.orr<>strr or thl.' Massac-hust'llt; Institute of TechnolORY testified that long term c,>cles may have more beanng on the present economy than recent problf'ms nnd said t.hat deprf'!l'i1on~ and recessions have been ocrurring about every SO years · Man Pleads Guilty LOS ANGELES (AP) Michael Joseph Behar, 41 , has pleaded guilty to conspiring tn evade taxes on more than Sl. I million in income alter he ad- mitted in court that he had ii legally duplicated thousands of t'i~ht-track steref> tapes over a four-year period. ... ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT ttwot)••~(O.\I 0.H, ,..fO\.Wl"'wN("'''~ oi-o '""' ,...W'\ p.,.,, '' ou&tt"""""' m ,,.. n. ..... .,. (...._.\I P~•nt~\.h·f'Q <""""°•"' ,..,. ... f"f'til~' JN CNbl+\~•"' Mft"CI•¥ t"Mive)f'I ,,.CMV '°"" C ,, ... IN~ ~ .. 'lifoott ft14(h H\iAll"l'llift ... " J."".tft '•'" Y•ll••. "'""' S.•dd~' Y•ll•v ·~ l .,...~•"'""""J1"C04\t """*•~1•11~ ''"" ,, """"'•""""' ~·'""'e•n _.... ~ ,,,.. '" ,.., 10.1 rubthf\·f'IQ ol•"t •\ •i U> 'Nit'U e.., SHHt CMt• IM\...t t•Ut••f'W•,,.,. lte .. r1 N -r•ro.•lff>At .,... Pv0f1...,., l•c• tt CW"\ft y ,.p,, ~"'•"'JC.,.,,.... .. ~, T~MJ:\A MY~ Mfln•Qt~ff:tlt\11" C~•rtuM \. .. , ••1"6fil,. "'" A•''''""' Mi1n•'11no C61tor\ Coat• M•n Off'IC9 J)GWt" 9~y ~'HT' MA~hftfl Al)ftrrH P 0 &Jt tMO .,.,.. OtllcH \"'QIJnttS•iU"' 1 1111~v11-,.,....,,, .. , ....... , •~""''"'">'nn R••'"" •111\ -..-.ri ~1•1i1ieut '-'""l'~t ~ V411tY lUOt U P•I Ao.-J "' \•" 01~ ',,._'*"' T•l•pllone (714)~1 Cl•u"I" Advertlt'"cl 142-M71 eoo.,.,, ... ,.,. l>f•"'I• Ctwn• """°'"""' c..... ~y N8 #WI~ \tl'tfft\ OIV\b .. I.OM., Mtll'Wl•t rneU•r or •dvtrtl\•"'flfth "•otft "'" "" ••btA.dvt•• ••tflit vt U•U.••l """''"IOI'\ •• t...-rt9ht~. ~~:~e~:,':"$!::!~,: .. ~~"',:•' ~?:!:, ~';. ~ltUlf IU "'•It \• .0 "-"tf\ly; milltefy 9\t1MtHW11tN ,.,,....M,, Mate We d Tteire Dignity Gone; ' . TONIGHT CO AST COMMUNITY COLLEj;E SOARD -Regular meeting, 1370 Adams, 8 p.m. Widow Angry COSTA MESA COUNTY WATER DISTRICT -Re1ular board meeting, 1971 Placentia, 7 p.m. "CYRANO DE BERGERAC" -OCC Drama, Student Center Cafeteria, Nov. 10-13, 8 p.m. OCC LECTURE "Antiques and Collectibles." Allen Lawton lecturer, Fine Arts Bldg. 119, 7:300.rn. TBUllSDAY, NOV.'U LIBRARY STORY HOUR - Costa Mesa Library, 10:30a.m. OCC LECTURE -"Family Estate Planning," Michael Gertner lecturer, Fine Arts Bldg. 119, 7 :30 p.m. SIOUX FALLS, S.D. CAP)-"l don't have a shred of dignjty left.'' says Patricia Martin. who learned after Bob Martin•s death threo weeks ago her husband had a second wlfe and family 200 miles away. "l 've been reduced to having to beg for ADC (Aid to Dependent Children ) and food stamps," Mrs. Martin told a reporter. "But I'm protecting my children. I can go through •nything, but those children have to eat. All they know is that their daddy is dead and that they loved their daddy dearly.': Martin, South Dakota's direc- tor of economic development, Mynah Error Luck May Be a Curse ERIE, Pa. (AP) -Rajah the psychjc mynah bird has some explainingtodo. Rajah and his master, Colin Kerr, are trying to drum up guests for their ~-a-head "Luck Ball'' at an Erie hotel Nov. 27. But they're frequently reminded that the bird bombed on his last prediction -that President Ford would win the election. "They must have taken it out of context," Kerr argued when shown a news st?ry quoting the bir~ as squawking" Ford wins" a few days ~fore the ele.ch_on. In addition to the problem with the pred1ct1on, another deterrent to sale of tickets may be the reward promised to one participant. Kerr said Rajah will be set free to fly through the audience, landing on someone's head and leaving his droppings. "This will bring good luck to the patron." Kerr said. Car Pooling Agency Gets County Space Office space and clerical s up- plies for Commuter Computer, a car pool matching service, _will be donated by Orange County government in exchange for a re- duction in the county's subsidy to the private organization. Supervisors agreed Tuesday to an $8,500 reductior\, in the coun- ty's $117.114 &rant w~~ ~~efi aa 11-month rperiod eaPll'Ul.f, fn June in return for providing the free office space. The only opposition to the change came from Supervisor Laurence Schmit who cast the Air Cal Ask s Tahoe Route 'Monopoly' SOUTH LAKE TAKOE (AP> The president of Air California has told the Civil Aeronautics Board here certain air routes to Lake Tahoe s hould be operated as monopolies. Robert Clifford explained his statement Tuesday by saying the Lake Tahoe market may nolsup- port an open and competitive market. llis firm, along with Pacific Southwest Airlines and Air Nevada are seeking certification to service the High Sierra airport. In the course of that quest, local agencies want to know If t.he airport should be regulated by the California Public Utilities Commission or the CAP. PSA and Air Nevada were scheduled to make their cases to· day and Thursday. Earlier. El Dorado County Airport Director Peter Boyes told the board that jets should not be allowed to serve the Lake Tahoe Basin beca1.1se they generate too much noise. Navy Snafus Fl4 Raising WASHINGTON CAP> -Tbe Navy bu auffered its third set· beck in trying to recover an Fl4 fighter plane that fell Into the Atlantic Ocean from an aircraft carrier deck nearly two montha ago. A spokesman said today the Fl4's landing gear broke from the plane •bile tt waa being dragged underwater toward the Orkne)' Islands. The line pulling the plane was attached to the landing gear. . At last report, the fl4 was ly- ln1 lo about 120 feet of ocean 110me four miles trom abore. The fighter 6riginally sank In nearly 1.900 leet of the AUanUc aft.er rolUn.c from th• d~of the aJr. craft canier John P'-Kennedy on Sept. H during NATO o maneuvers . lone no vote. He did not give a re· ason for his vote. Commuter Computer compiles lists of cars and commuters matching the m in carpools. ' Fro• Page A J r.~:iJ!.:..: :Od ex plosives trial o r Wend y Yoshimura, with whom Miss Hearst was living when she was captured las t year. Miss Hearst, 22, who is serv- ing a seven·year sentence for arnied bank robbery, was driven to the Metropolitan Cor- rectional Center in San Diego Tuesday. Bill Garris on, warden at Pleasanton, said Miss Hearst filed a written request for the transfer last week. "The decision to move her was made Monday with her at- torney's approval.'' Garrison said. "I don't know·if her Cami· ly had any say in this action." He said the bureau's head- quarters in Washington and the U.S. attorney general were in- volved in the decision. But Asst. U.S. Atty. F. Stei!le Langford, In San Francisco, said he was s urprised to learn of the sudden transfer. He said he had b een scheduled to participate Friday in a hearing in the Hearst case. WoocknLeg Bares Heroin SAN FRANCISCO CAP) -A veteran who lost a limb in the Vietnam war was arrested by airport customs officials who said they found $1 million worth or heroin inside his artificial leg. Ronald Odom Carter, 29, of San Francisco, was jailed Tuesday on $50,000 bond after appearing before a federal magistrate on charges of smuggling 2.2 pounds of heroin into lbe country. The federal complaint says Cart.er WU'Searched upon arriv· ing at San Francisco Interna- tional Airport on a flight from Hong Kong. Woodpecker Denotes Fun The acorn woodpeclcer, which frequents at least three Orange County1 regional parks. wu named the county's recreation symbol Tuesday. Supervisors •PProved using the bird In connection with coun- ty park 1 p rograma and autborbed a contest allowing children to name the wood· pecker. A report to auperviaonJ said the red, bl1c1 and while blrd can be found in O 'Nelll, lrv1ne and Cu'*' Reaional Parks. died of a heart attack at 52. ll was learned then he had a wife and five children here, a wife and four children in Pierre. "I'm very angry that I have been put In this position," said Patricia Mart in. 33. "My thoughts ar e 'How dare you do Uus tome, and remember, l'mnot just some sweetie stashed in the comer.' "I'm a very simple person. I'm a mother first. and I was of the oi>inion that Bob was married, had three children and was divorced." State Atty. Gen. William Janklow confirmed reports Martin lived a dual life. Janklo" said travel and motel vouchers wiU be examined by a grand jury lo cf\eck "som e que&tions in- volved in the use of state funds." Jack Allmon, the state's s e cretary of economic and touris m deve lopment and Martin's boss in Pierre. said he never suspected the "Tally·Ho" listed on Martin's travel vouchers was the name of the apartmenl complex in which his Sioux Falls family lived. The state agency has offices in both Pierre and Sioux Falls. Allmon said Martin generaJly listed the Tally-Ho for lodging on travel vouchers turned in for Sioux Falls. He said he assumed ll was a motel. The lamily in Pierre, which has refused to comment on the mat- ter, lives in a single!family house. Allmon said Martin usually asked $11.50 per day. the state max- imum, for lodging in Siou.x Falls. Patricia Martin said she mar- ried Martin in 1968 but has been unable to find am arriage li cense. "I remember signing a docu- ment, that's all. He took care of it. They have tried to check it out legally, but obviously I was duped, and I don't know wby. "I believe this other wife was just as much in the dark as I was. She had to go through the shock of this also. I feet very sorry for her. Her children must be old enough to understand all this. Mine aren't, fortunately." The Lyon County clerk in Em- poria, Kan., confirmed that Mary Lou Martin was married to Bob Martin in May 1948. Volunteer s Soug ht I T o Aid Re tarde d Parson s School for the trainable mentally retarded is seeking weekday morning volun· leers to aid their Preschool class. There are presently eight children aged 3 to 5 at the Costa Mesa school. Those interested in donating one or more mornings a week should call 556-3406 for more information. Gold Rush Hikes Cost LONDON (AP) -A sud- den rush of buyers sent gold prices in London up by more than $4.50 an OWlCe today to $136, its highest level since early this year. Dealers reported buying by the Far East , speculators and industrial and jewelry users of gold. Anti-Et11peror .~ .. ...,..,.,. PHILADELPHIA HOTEL WILL CLOSE ITS DOORS SOON Bellevue-Stratford Done In by Legionnaire'• OlaeaH Hotel Joim Legion As Disease Victim PHILADELPHIA <AP) -The 72-year-old Bellevue-Stratford Hotel will close its doors Nov 18, a victim of ruinous business declines Stemming from last summer's still unsolved legion- naire's disease. "The Bellevue-Str atford has found it impossible any longer to withstand the economic im· pact of the worldwide adverse publicity which has been as- sociated with the 'legionnaire's disease• even though no in· vestigative agency found any llnlc whatsoever to hotel opera- tions," William Chadwick, hotel vice"president, said. "~pile the lack of credible evidence that any causal factor existed, the continuous public reports linking the hotel to re- ports of the illness has been ruinous to its business,•' Chadwick said. ''The average cash loss for the last 90 days has been $10.000 per day, adding up to aggregate losses in the order of Sl million for the period of adv'erse publicity,'.' the statement said. The h~tel was the head - quarters 76r the ill-fated state American Legion convention July 21-24 following which 29 persons died and 151 others became ill from a mysterious wsease. T he Be'Il eVue· recenUy has hosted a number of publicity. oriented events aimed at restor· ing bus mess. Special arrangements are be- ing made to r elocate permanent hotel residents. said Gustave Amsterdam. chairman or Bankers SecuriUes Corp. wb.lcb owns a controlling interest in the hotel. "We will make every effort to assist in relocating all our hotel personnel in other positions lo the maximum extent possible." he said. Health orhcials included in their definition or the illness that a person had to have visit- ed the Bellevue between July 1 and Aug. 18. The h ot el, which has 750 rooms. has had an occupancy rate of 8 percent since the out- break of legionnaire's disease. the Philadelphia Daily News said today. The paper said that every 10 days, the Be llevue's parent compan y, Bankers Security Corp., has transf<'rred $100,000 of its own assets to the hotel to keep it afloat. The Daily News said the city intends to try to buy the hotel with hopes of immediately sell· ing the property to a developer for construction of a hotel with complete convention facilities. "We don't have the economic power that the larger outfits have," said a n unidentified hotel official. "We have contact- ed the ~i lton and Sheraton ·chains and neither has ex- pressed any interest whatever in operating or taking over the Bellevue." FrmaPage A J mNSHAW. • ty of Hinshaw's guilt on related charges. It is alleged that Hinshaw knew that overtime was being claimed from the county by employes who were actually working on his congressional campaign in 1972 when the funds were paid. Hinshaw has denied the charge from the witness stand. But pro- secution witnesses have testified that he ordered assessor's office personnel to work on his cam- paign and promised dismissal for those who did not comply. McNicholas had hoped to in· troduce evidence to the effect that the county agreed to drop its lawsuit against assessor's office cmployes who drew overtlme in 1972 In return for dismlssal of their countersuit. The employes agreed and abandoned an attempt to obtain payment fr om the county fop 32,000 hours of overtime they said they worked between 1966 and 1976. McNlcbolu ariued that the a1reement clearly abt'olves Hinshaw of blame since lbe coun· ty would not have negotiated such a s ettlement if there bad been any evidence ol criminal am. Prm1,.r11tnr William Evans ,ald. the action by the county board did not approve payments made to employes for time spent on Hlnshaw's campaign .• Evans said the settlement with the employes was nothing more or less than a good will gesture and was never intended to be a comment on Hinahaw'a guilt or innocence. Leftist students snake dance down a Tokyo street in pro- test of a government-sponsored ceremony to celebrate Japanese Emperor lllrohlto's SO.year reign. JU<ite Domenlchfni'a ndlnc to· day out of the presence ot the jury now leaves the WIJ clear for the def enae to call further wit. neue&. , ) Orange Coast ' EDITION Today's Closing N.Y.Stoeks VOL. 69, NO. 315, 4' SECTIONS, ~ PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CAL.IFORNIA. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1976 N TEN CENTS Thre~ts· ProDlpt J .ail SwitCh for .Patty By tbe Auoclated Press The San Diego Union quoted an unnamed source in Northern California today as stating that threats had been made to !'atty Hearst· while the she was at a federal correctional institution at Pleasanton. The Union alao quoted Dr. Owen Kennedy, assistant re· gional director for the Federal Bureau of Prisons in Sall Fran- cisco. as saying the swtich was at Miss Hearst's request "for security purposes." The New York Times also re. ported today that inmates at the Pleasanton prison said Miss Hearst bad "a number of tan- trums," in which she went to her room and beat her fists against the wall until the knuckles were scraped and red. Last week, the Times' ac· count aaid, Miss Hearst refused to report to her job or helping clean a dormitory unit. When told by authorities she would be put in isolation as punishment, she reportedly said that was what she wanted. Miss Hearst bad t>een at the campus·like Pleasant.oo facility since Sept. 24, when sh«j was sentenced by U.S. District Court Judge William Orrick. She will Work of Grading A rt 0..11, Pllo1 Plloto Illy 111<1.,ro K.,.~,~ Heavy equipment operator sculpts in dirt as he grades Newport Center site or the f future Newport Harbor Art Museum and the future branch of the Newport Beach library sys tem. Grading for bo~ projects is being done ln one, large job. Both facilities will be built on San Clemente Drive near the city's police headquarters. ... Ragtime Edges Hinsha~ Tack Hurt Near Kialoa • • In Yacht Race By Overtime Ruling Lead yacht Kialoa drove toward Cape San Lazaro today but Jim K1lroy's 79-foot ketch was losing ground in tbe l ,032· mile Los Angeles to Mazatlan yacht race to Ragtime. the 62· foot sloop out or Long Beach. Kialoa 's boat-for·boal lead or SO miles Tuesday was down to 29 miles, according lo this morn · ing's position reports. Winds continued to be ''very, very hght." radio reports from lhe neet indicated. Kialoa also dropped to fourth In the handicap race durin& the 24·bour penod after leading in both overall and Class A the day before Class Jcadets on handicap time · Class A J. Whistle Wing 2. Kialoa 3. Aorangi Class B 1. Mamie 2. Hurricane Deck3. Racy Class C 1. Bingo 2. Vector 3. Cottontail Class D 1. America Jane llJ 2. Captain Marvel 3. Broomhilda Onrall l. Whistle Wing 2. Mamie3. Amert ea Jane4. Kialoa. Coast \\'eather Night and morning fog, otherwise fair with high clou& Thursday. Days to cool with highs in low 70s, lows to near 50. INSIDE TODAY By TOM BARLEY 0t llM O•llY PtlOC Si.ti Orange County Superior Court J udge Frank Domenichlni re- fused today to allow details or a settlement between the county and 32 assessor's office employes to be discussed before the jury.in the trial of Congressman Andrew Hinshaw "It's not related to the issues in this trial." he told defense al· tom ey J ohn McNjcholas whil e conceding th al the overt.Jme pay. ments spelled out m the settle· ment we r e fraudulently ob- tained The ruling ends McNicholas' hopes that the jury might accept tus argument that the county's willingness to abandon its claim Woodpecker Derwtes Fwi The acorn woodpecker, which frequenU; at least three Orange County regiona l parks, was named the county's recreation symbol Tuesday. Supervisors approved using the bird in connection with coun. ty parks programs and authorized a contest allowing children to name the wood- pecker. A report lo supervisors said the red, black and white bird can be found in O'Neill, Irvine and Caapers Regional Parks. lo overtime paid during Hinshaw's term as assessor similarly rules out any possibili· ty of Hinshaw's gwlt on related charges. It is alleged that Hlnshlw kftew that overtime was bein~laimed from the county by employes who were actually working on his congressional campaign in 1972 when the funds were paid. Hinshaw has denied the Charge from the witness stand. But pro- secution witnesses have testified that he ordered assessor's office personnel to work on his cam· paign and promised dismissal for those who did not comply. McNicholaS\ had hoped to in- troduce evidence lo the errect that the count)'. agreed to drop its lawsuit against assessor's office employes who drew overtime in 1972 in return for dismissal of their countersuit. The employes agreed and abandoned an attempt to obtain payment from the county for 32,000 hours or overtime they said they worked between 1966,and 1976. McNicbolas argued that the agreement clearly absolves Hinshaw of blame since the coun· ty would not have negotiated such a settlement if there had been any evidence of crlrrunal acts. PrMPr11t.or William Evans said the action by the cowity board did not approve payments made to employes for time spent on Hi.nahaw's campaign. (See HINSHAW, P•ge AZ) FamUg-tgpe Fil•• become eligible for parole in 16 months. She was moved from the spacious fede ral prison in Northern California to a 12· story facility in San Diego at her own request for security re- asons, officials say. Concern for Miss Hearst's ·safety was believed lo stem from r eports that she bas agreed to testily for the pro- secution at two upcoming trials involving her former udder· ground companions. One trial al which Miss Hearst is expected to be a gov· ernmenl witness is that of Sym- biooese Liberation Army mem· bers William and-Emily Harris on charges of kidnaping Miss Hearst in February 1974. The other is the weapons and ex· plosives trial of Wendy Yoshimura, with whom Miss Hearst was living wben she waa captured last year. Miss Hearst: 22, who is serv- ing a seveo-year sentence for armed bank robbery, was driven lo the Metropolitan Cor- rectional Center in San Diego Tueaday. BilJ Garrison, warden at Pleasanton, said Miss Hearst <See PATl'Y, Page AZ) Carter Backs Plan Congress 'Cautious' Over Tax Cut Idea WASHINGTON <AP) -As President-elect Jimmy Carter considers whether to propose a new tax cut in January, key con· gTessional Democrats say it's too early to tell if one will be needed and warn they will approach any proposal cautiously. Carter said last week that if the economy does not begin improv· ing by January. there is a . "strong possibility" that he would ask for a tax cul to . stimulate it. Suit Urged On Sle01ons Slllear Note Saddleback. Valley laxpayera' advocate Ed McKean has pro- posed that lhe County Board o( Supervisors institute a suit for damages against the parties responsible for one of Jim Slemons' political mailings. In a letter sent lo Supervisor Thomas Riley, McKean contends that grounds for the suit would in· elude ''defamatory acts against the people" and "willful mis- management of public monies." He also has asked the county postal inspector to determine if the mailings were a violation of the U.S. Postal Regulations . The mailing has tai<en exception to as s_; to voters in the 14th Ass bly District where Slemons was the Republican nominee. The leaflet said that Democrat Ron Cordova -who was elected to the assembly seat the next day -"has recently been charged with misconduct in a SlO million lawsuit involving massage parlors." The lawsuit apparently never has been riled and was related to a case Cordova handled while working as a deputy District At· tomey. rr the action has not been filed. McKean said , the letter is a falsehood and ·'a blatant attempt to defame lhe character of Ron Cordova." McKean, chairman oi Sao· <See SLEMONS, Page n2) GoldRwh Hikes Cost LONDON (AP> -A su<i· den rush or buyers sent gold prtces In London up by more than $4.50 an ounce today to $136, its highest level since early this year. Dealers reported buying by the Far East , specuJators and Industrial and jewelry users of gold. But Congress' chief taxwriter, House Ways and Means Chairman Al Ullman, said Tues· day that Congress should ap· proach any such profl0$al "with great caution." "We would be deceiving the American people if they were led to believe they would be getting major tax deduction," UlJman said at a news conference in Colorado Springs, Colo. ln more deta iled remarks re· leased through bis Washington office, the Oregon Democrat said it is too early to determine whether an additional tax cut on top of the $19 billion tax cut already approved by Congress would be appropriate. Ullman said anli·recession job programs and incentives for in· vestments in high unemployment areas "would be more effective in dealing with the problem." In a related development, Dr • Gary Fromm of the Stanford <See TAX CUT, Page A%) Mynah Error Luck May Be a Curse ERIE, Pa. (AP)-Rajah the psychic mynah bird has some explainingtodo. Bajah ~nd ~a iqaster. Colin Kerr, are trying to drum up guests for tbetr S.S·a-bead ''Luck Ball" at an Erie hotel Nov. Zl. But they're frequently.reminded that the bird bombed on his last prediction -that President Ford would win the election. "They must have taken it out of context," Kerr arguej[ when shown a news story quoting the bird as squawking "Ford wins" afewdaysbeforetbeeJection. In addition to the problem with the prediction, another deterrent to sale of tickets may be the reward promised to one participant. Kerr said Rajah will be set free to fly through the audience, landing on someone's he a a and leaving his droppings. "This will bring good luck to the patron," Kerr said. McNally Decision Delayed Two Years Trustees of the Newport-Mesa Unified School District set a new deadline Tuesday for a decision on the relocation of the McNally Continuation High School. It is 'September 1979. Trustees agreed to a two-year wait in moving the school from its downtown Costa Mesa site after district officials and a representative of the Costa Mesa Downtown Redevelopment Agen· cy recommended the delay. The school1 located on 19th Street i>elween Harbor and New· port Boulevards, is considered the keystone to the redevelop. menl oC the downtown area. The city spokesman told trustees the two-year delay would give the ci· ly time to prepare plans for the redevelopment. Superintendent J ohn Nicoll also convinced trustees lo launch an $80,000 rennovation of the McNaUy site. Thal work incl udes re· furbishing four classrooms in the old building for about $,11,000. The bal°ance will be spent on im· proving utilities and providing equipment for the relocatable classrooms on the site. Nicoll stressed that, while the decision on McNally has been deferred for two years, thescbool board will continue lo study the declining enrollment problems throughout the district and will consider the closure of schools where enrollment has dropped signiricanUy. One of the factors in the de· clsion on McNally was the re· commendation from Nicoll and his staff that the school district could probably m ake more' money in the appreciation of the value of the property than it could in interest on the money gainet\ by selling the land now. One of the reasons the sale was contemplated was that it was seen as the source of funds for capital improvements in the dls· trict. But Nicoll told school board members that there is no press· ing need for McNally funds for capital improvement projects. .The diatrict Is selling two unu.sed sites tn Costa Mesa and expect.a to gel federal public works money, all of which will go into the capital improvement fund, he said. Three San Quentin inmalei were caught in a 61·/oot Cun· Ml, 10 feet undvgrovnd, end· ing a month·lOng attempt. at ueape. Wiim captured, thefl U)ltre onl11 35 feet alDOJI from frtftlom. Swry P.age AS. What's New, P~ssyc;at? Wooden Leg Bares Heroin SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A vetel'an who lost a limb lo the Vietnam war was arrested by aJrport cu1tom1 officials wbO said they round $1 •milllon worth of heroin inside his iartifici-1 leg. HER MICROJJ7A.J'E A HUT SELLER ''The second person who called bought it. I'm reaJly tickled wilt\,. Balboa's controversial Pussycat Theater will close for good Friday and the movfe house will reopen by Thanksgiving as a ''family oriented theater," a apoltcsman for the the•ter said today. The change from X·r ated mov· les lo G·rated films is the r~ult of a lease ne1otiated between the Puuyca l owners Walnut Properties and Gl"'eal Western Theaters. A 1pokesman Cot Wal nut t>ropertlea said details of the changeover would be available later this week but indicated that Friday definitely would ·be the last day tor the Pussycat and lt.a long.running movie, "Deep Throat." 'lbe Pussycat Theater opened In what used to be t.be Balboa Theater, 709 E. Balboa Blvd., ln the aprtn1 of 1915, to the dismay of city of(tclals, police and PemMula resident.a. ln .the Ions legal balUe that followed, there were se~ ot a van \y of rum.a police and lbe~ l ·~ district attorney believed were pornographic. The theater emerged a partial victor when a munJcipal court jwy in May of 1915 found two films, "Deep Throat" and "The Devil ln Miss Jones.'' not to be obscene. Slnce then, t.bose are the or\Jy movies the theater bu screened. The Pu11ycat cbaln apolsesman declined to comment on the poutbtllly that economic factors brou1ht about the cbane trpm "'X" back to "G." . . . ,,,. "J-• ; Ronald Odom C~r1 29, ol San FrQclKo, waa JaiJea Tuaday on $$0,000 bond after a_ppeartng before a fed eral mqlstrate on charse• ot .. muuim. 2.2 pounds ol berolll Lnt.o lbe country. The federal compla1Dt aays Carter wu 1earched UPQll aniY-ln• at San Francisco lntema~ Uoaal A lrport on a fil&bt Crom HaqKoq. . . ' I .. my instant success!" 1 Here's lbe classified ad that sparked the sale for this Costs- Mesa woman: AMANA ~ICROWAVE OVEN. 6 mo11 . old. Transferable warr. $325. ltlUC-lCXXJ! . • l lf you'd Uke lo convert an ap. pllance to casb, or anythln1 elae, can the Daily Pilot at 1 642 -5678. The people's mark«place. f __,:...;; ii ~ A2 DAIL v PILOT N Wednesday, November 10. 1976 .Private Encroaclunents?,~ ~ . Parks Commissi.on to Await Legal Research on Issue Arter nearly two hours of public testimony. members or the Newport Be a ch Parks, . Beaches and Recreauon Com· mission decided Tuesday to wait . two months before ma.king a re- , commendation on the private use of public beach on the Balboa Peninsula. The commission has been 'sked by the ci ty council to com· ment on possible e ncroachments alon~ Buena Vista Boulevard Sailboat Rescue d Fro1n Sea After being grounded and then sinking, the 32-foot sailboat Gam- bol was successfully towed into Newport Harbor Monday night, escaping the pounding surf that destroyed another boat under similar circumstances. The Gambol was one or two sailboats that ran aground in Newport Beach late Sunday and early Monday in dense fog. The 27-foot Santana that went ag round at l Street was destroyed in the pounding surf before she could be pulled orr the sand. Salvage crews worked through the ·morning on Gambol and, shortly art er noon . she was towed• off the sand. only to sink about 400 yards offs hore. A spokesman for the lifeguard department said today that the Gambol was renoated Monday night and towed into the harbor for repairs . Both boats went onto the beach on return trips frorr> Catalina Lifeguards said no one was in· jured in either mishap. Fro• Pag~ A J TAX CUT ••. 0 Research Institute told a con· _gressional panel today that the only question about a tax cut is -bow large 1t should be. A tax cut or some other means or stimulating the economy is needed in the near future not only for Amertcan consumers but also for stability of the free world ec:onomy, he said. "The state or demand still 1s ·"'eak and the free-world system might easily be plunged into another downturn by moderate CARTER GETT1NG ORGANIZED-PAGE A4 :,hocks rrom large Arab nation 011 pnu mcrcast.>s. an International 111111.etary cns1:, or v.1d<.>Spread har\ t-:.l failure!), he told a llou!)c· Stn;,tc cconorn1c committee hearing un the fu ture of lhl• <.·cnnnn,, 'Th._. pnnc·1p;ll issue currently (" 11 II f r 0 n I l n ~ (! l" 0 n 0 m I C pnli<"~ maker:. in the United State-, I!-tht• Sit.(' or .1 '"" C'Ut O\'C<kd lo put lhl' cconom~ bark <m 11., t;rov. th path .. f''romm <idded · Prot Jav W Forrt'St<.>r of th<.' )1.issat·hu !)el l ' I n:.l 1tute of 'rerhnolo~' tt>!°it1f1ed that lonil tt'rm t'v«lr' ma' ha,·.-more beanng«m thr prr,ent <·ronomy than recent prohlrm:, <1nd said that deprM.,1onr; and reress1om; have been occurring ahout every 50 vear-. :.We bt'h1·\ r 1t '" UrJ:enl to rx amine the rw.,-.1h1lit v that the 1980s could ri·rw•1I hehav1or hke that experienced in the l!J.30s," hr said Activities Halted NEW YORK (API -Activities of a campus military fraternity h ave bc:cn s us pended while authorities investigate the stab- bing death of Thomas Fitzgerald. a 19-year -old pledge. ORANGE COAST " DAILY PILOT ~~ .. fll"l"" (1'4\I OAll't llJ1~ _,,.._.,_.,"''''9"" b41"ttrlftt."i""" p,,.,, 1\0<Jbh""""'Oft""Or~ (o•t t P\,f'll·V~ t\1r"ll't\eAft1' ~9MA .. l'\)11eot'\''' py"hlf"lfoft MoM 1y '"'l')WQll\ P"t•h., lf't (.o,t• """..,,. ..,., ""f'IO'' t'-.,., ••W""ll•'¥.Jltl'W\ A-ac'°I ,....,. H 1f'I V•I'•' '""'""" SAH1'""-'' V49lltpy ·~ •·ll~fll·• tr\ ~t"t (""'' .. ~, .... ~l•d• f'°""' I °''"It\ ... ~ ~hft(t,_,, """" ~·\P\; f frrl .. r.;:~'t~~:~,:~~1.t't~~,.:~ t)O Wnt O.t .. .... rtN W.... p,.,.. ~"'•'Wt r"t. ,,.., , .. , • Cp'n Vot t Prn10t "I •rwl C,.l\t rat~t 'T_.,ICtt•ll (dHOf T ... m.\A M~flilt M•"•Qt"9 (OltO' O.•tt•\ M t.Mt tt•C.,..,.. P "'" A-. I '""'' MA,Y,?t"'tC.'"''*'' Ot11~1 co""'-W'• uow,,,,_,,.,,,"•'1 l •q1M'I'-' 1'1 •t ~ t!"-Ol"fW'lllJ'r•\tr••t H~•,,.tl>f' B••cn tll/\A-1ttf1~1t, • ....-f ~.trtitO•rMit • Vitll•<r l\1'01 I it,,,., '-\Md •• \•n D••l)O r , .. .,. .. , Telephon• (714)842-4321 CIH•llled Adverll•l"0 '42·5e7t Cr>o'f'rl~t 1'1"ii Ot•f'l1-Cftiut flil\Mf\l\•ftiQ '•"' ~y N"t Nl'W <1oftt''"''· 1t•11,lt•fi'lf\\ r•J h"lt1,_I "'•Un or .tdnrH ,,,,,.,,, n•r•'" ""'' a. t•ttrt()_,, •• wlHUh1~ , • .,.(IAI .. tMt\\W.~ 4f c ... ,....,..,...,.,,,. ~~1~:-.·r:. ':~ \:::! ~~:, .~:·i1.:• ( ~::, ":~~ l'NfttOUf ., ,.,..,, •• 't ~'hly m•ht•tf .......... ,_u ,.......,,.,, ' and ·Edgewater Avenue. The public beach there also is a street rigbt-Of·W~ . Commissioners concluded Tuesday that they would not be able to reach a conclusion until some legal research on the issue has been done. Two attorneys who serve on the commission, Gary Lovell and Per Treblcr, were appointed to make the s tudy and report back an January. Rodeo Rider The subject is a sensitive one which has pitted some Peninsula residents against beachfront homeowners. Beachgoers argue that there should be unlimited access to the public beach from the sidewalk, which occupies the inland six feet or the street right-or-way. The right-of-way varies in width from 30 to 50 feet and in some locations · there are private lots on the water s ide of the right-of-way. 0111• 1'1101 Sl•ll PMto ' .. Homeowners contend that, his· ·torically, they have been allowed to build and maintain paUos, landscaping and feneff on the water side .of the sidewalk. A recom mendatlon by the city attomey tnd director of public worrs calls for re moval of everything but the 'andscaplng. The city c&uncll has deferred action on the issue until the PB and R Commission makes a re. commendation. Old Hotel Is Victim, Of Disease PlULADELPHIA (AP) -The 72-year-old Bellevue-Stratford Hotel will close its doors Nov. 18, a victim or ruinous business declines stemming rrom last summer's still unsolved legion· naire's disease. ·'The Bellevue-Stratford bas found it impossible any longer to withstand the economic im- pact of the worldwide adverse publicity which has been as· sociated with the 'legionnaire's disease' even though no in· vestigative agency found any link whatsoever to hotel opera- tions," WllUam Chadwick, hotel vice president, said. "Despite the lack or credible evidence that any causal factor existed, the continuous public reports linking the hotel to re- ports or the illness has been ruinous to its business,'' Chadwick said. "The average cash loss for the last 90 days has been'$10,000 per day, adding up to aggregate losses in the order of $1 million for the period or adv'erse publicity," the statement sajd. The hotel was tht head· quarters for the ill-fated state American Legion convention July 21·24 foJlowing wruch 29 persons died and 151 others became ill from a mysterious disease. Storied \! essel You've heard the song, "The Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald " by Gordon Lightfoot. This is the ship. J ust one year ago today, the Edmund Fitzgerald sank in a storm on Lake Superior, taking its crew of 29 to a watery grave 530 feet below the surf ace. It was known for its ore cargo record -30.000 tons of taconite pellets in 1968. Carpooling Agency Gets County Space -+ Office s pace and clerical sup- plies for Commuter Computer, a car pool matching service, will be jfonated by Prange County government in exchange for a re· duction in the county's subsidy to the priv ale organization. Supervisors agreed Tuesday lo an $8,500 reduction in the coun- ty's $117,114 grant which covers an 18-month period expiring in June ii1 return for providing the free office space. The only opposition to the change came from Supervisor Laurence Schmit who cast the lone no vote. He did not give a re- ason for his vote. Commuter Computer compiles lists of cars and commuters, matching them in carpools. Bobby Martinez. 8. :J student at Mariners School in l'\cwport Reach. prep;o1rcs lo negotiate bicycle rodeo course under the critit<JI eye of Officer Mic hael Mullins. The l'\ewport Ilcach lr<Jffic officer teaches bicycle safet y at elementary schools. then has his students apply what they ha\'e lcarnt:d on a course he sets up on play· ground~. f',.._PageAI PA'ITY •• -•. .. c~Mcil Calls 3 Meetings, filed a written request for ·the transfer last week. ·· f'r .. PageAJ IDNSHAW. • No Dignity Left, Second Wife Says SIOU X FALLS,S.D CA P ) "I don't have a shred of dJgruty left." s ays P atri cia Martin , who learned after Bob Martin's death three weeks ago her husband had a second wife and family 200 miles away "I've been reduced to having to beg for ADC (Aid to Dependent Children> and food stamps," Mrs. Martin told a reporter. ··nut I'm protecting my children. I can go through anything. but those children have to eat All thry know as that their daddy 1s dead and thal they loved their daddy dearly.·· Martin, South Dakota·s d1rec- lor or econom ic development, died of a heart attack at52. rt was leame<l then he had a wale and rive children here. a WLfe and four chjldren in Pierre never suspected the "Tally-Ho" listed on Martin's travel vouchers was the name of the apartment complex in which his Sfoux Falls ramily lived. The state agency has offices in both Pierre and Sioux Falls. Allmon said Mart.in generally listed the Tally-Ho for lodging on travel vouchers turned in for Sioux Falls. Hesaidheassumedit was amolel. The family in Pierre. whkh has refused to comment on the mat- ler, Ii ves in a single-family house. Allmon said Martin usually asked $11.50 per day, the state max· imum. for lodging in Sioux Falls. "The decision to move her was made Monday with her at- torney's approval,'' Garriscm said. "I don't know if her fami- ly had any say in this action." He said the bureau's head· quarters in Washington and the U.S. aU'orney general were in· volved in the decision. But Asst. U.S. Atty. F. St~le Langford, in San Francisco, said he was surprised to learn of the sudden transfer. He said he had been scheduled to participate Friday in a hearing in the Hearst case. She had spent several months at the San Diego facility this · year undergoing a diagnostic study ordered by the court. The Pleasant on facility. which opened in 1974. houses 250 inmates, mostly under the age of 26. The San Diego prison houses about 500 Inmates. most of whom are in for short terms or not yet sentenced. For December Members of the Ne'7t'port Beach city council will be seeing a lot of each other in December. Councjlmen agreed to meet on three consecutive Mondays so they could have a vacation dur· ing the Christmas holidays. Noralally the council meets on the second and fourth Monday, but councilmen decided to change that to the second and third Monday in December. That means they will meet on Dec. 13 andDec.20. A third meeting was added on Dec. 6, when City Manager Robert Wynn told councilmen a special study session would be needed to discuss additions to the Newport Center traffic study with members of the Planning Commission , the Transportation Citizens Advisory Committee and representatives of the Irvine Company. Evans said the settlement with the employes was nothing more or less than a good will gesture and was never intended to be a comment on Hinshaw's guilt or innocence. Judge Domenichini's ruling to· day out of the presence or the jury now leaves the way clear f?r. the defense to call further wit· nesses. Chier Probation officer Margaret Grier was waiting out- side the courtroom today and pres•Jmably will be the first wit- ness to follow Hinshaw to the stand. Hinshaw, 51, faces charges or grand theft, conspiracy. em- bezzlement and violalion of state codes, all contained in a grand jury indictment. He has been s entenced to one to 14 years in s late prison after be- ing round guilty of bribery charges in an earlier lrial. He is free on appeal. "Tm very angry that I have been put in this J>051l1on," said Patri<'ia M a rtin, 33, "M y thoughts are 'How dare you do Uus tome, and remember, I'm not JUSl some sweetie stashed in the corner.' Pilot Logbook Inside the 'In' Issue 'Tm a very simple person. I'm a mother first, and I was of the opinion that Bob was married, bad three children and was divorced." State Atty . Gen. William Janklow confirmed reports Mart.in lived a dual life. Janklow said travel and motel vouchers wiU be examined by a grand jury to check "some questions in- volved in the use or state funds.•· Jack Allmon. the state's secretary of economic and tourism development and Martin ·s boss in Pierre. said he f'ro.a Page Al • SLEMONS. • dleback Homeowners Outraged Over Taxes, contends the tax- payers subsidize both the Postal Service and voter mailing lists. He said taxpayers have a ''vest· ed interest" in the mail bul have no right to stop getting such mail. "I feel the people have been damaged and I think it's timt> the people act," he said. "I think the people are bigger than this.•· McKean said he is asking the 1 • supervisors to get an opinion on lbc possibility of a suit from the ~ounty counse1. He said he will also talk to an attorney to see If. it's possible ror people to sue on their own . By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of IM D•lly l"llot Stall After two years during which it received little pubUc attention. the proposal for a Newport Beach senior citizens center has emerged into full-blown controversy. It js a lso becoming a political tar baby. There just doesn'tseem to be any wayofletting goof It. On the city council, the primary backer or the center and the three-year Housing and Urban Development grant that pays for it is Lucille Kuehn. IN THE PAST year she bas seen two other projects she backed -the large library for Newport Center and the University Drive EIS -shot down. She has told friends she will consider this term on the council a success if the senior center opens as planned. Her two most vocal opponents on the counci1 are Paul Ryckoff and Ray Williams. Both oppose the use or the OYHOl.OS federal grant because of the strings attached to the money. Williams was upset the other day when Sonia Buck, president of the Harbor View ltills Homeowners Asaocia· lion, was quoted as !;aying she was just following his or· ders when she circulated an anonymous and error-fllled leaflet in her neighborhood to rally public opinion against I the center. WILLIAMS AND Mrs. Buck contend that what she meant to convey was that Williams had told the assoc!!I· lion board of directors that if they oppose the center, they should read all of the studies on the subject, then inform their members and write letters to the city council. . Neither can explain the errors and half.truths in the leaflet. Ryckort went to the trouble for Monday's hcalin' to gd professtonal pollster Gary Lawrence lrom Santa Ana • to testify about the survey which is required to "establis h a need" for the federal grant. THE POLLSTER, who claims he's one of lhe best in his fi eld: said the survey is amateurish, biased, Un• professional and a lot o( other unflatterin~ things. Neithe r the pollster nor Ryckofr announced their con· nection to each other. Mrs. Kuehn, who was obviously angered by the tesUmony, finally elicited the information that lbe pollster had been "Invited" to testify by Ryckoff Orbiting on the fringe of the opposition are the owners or the private school which is leaslng the site for the senior citizen center from the city. John and Judith Wilson deny any complicity In the barrage of anti-senior citizen center letters and phone calla that have bit city hall, but they will add, when pre· ssed. that they have no control over the parents or their school's 150 students. THOSE STUD,:NTS, the Wilsons say. will be without a school when the senior citizens take over the site in August -at the expiration of their lease -because they have not been able to find another site on the east side '>f the bay. The letter writing and phone call campaign is similar to the one mounted by the school's parents last spring when the school was seeking a lease renewal for this one, last year at the site. 11"' Some senior citizens are adamantly In favor of the center, some do~·t care and some oppose it because they don't like the location in Corona del Mar, or because they don't Wee the city using federal funds. Les Steffensen, one of the city's most colorful senior citizens and a backer or Lucille Kuehn, s ummed up the pro-center view: "NOBODY SEEMED to mind when we took state aild federal money to buy the Upper Day. Now we've got a migratory bird sanctuary. How about spending some money for a sanctunry for us old birds 7" . --- l Saddlebaek Afternoon .Y. Stocks VOL. 69, NO. 315, 4 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FOR NIA WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1976 TEN CENTS Threats PrOnipt ·Jail Switch for Patty By the Associated Press The San Diego Union quoted an unnamed source in Northern California today as stating that threats had been made to Patty Hearst while the she was at a federal correctional institution at Pleasanton. -The Union also quoted Dr. Owen Kennedy. assistant re· gional director for the Federal Bureau of Prisons in San Fran· cisco, as saying the awtlch was at Miss Hearst's request "for security purposes." The New York Times al.so re. ported today that inmates at the Pleasanton prison said Miss Hearst had "a number of tan· trums," in which she went to her room and beat her fists against the wall until the knuckles were scraped and red. Last week, tbe Times' ac· count said, Miss Hearst refused to report to her job of helping clean a dormitory unit. When told by authorities she would be put in isolation as punishment, she reportedly said lbat was . what she wanted. Miss Hearst bad been at the campus·like Pleasanton facility since Sept. 24, when she was sentenced by U.S. District Court Judge William Orrick. She will become eligible for parole in 16 months. She was moved from the spacious federal prison in Northern California to a 12· , story facility in San Diego at her own request for security re· asons, orricials say. Concern for Miss Hearst's safety was believed to stem from reports that she bas agreed to testily for the pro· seculion at two upcoming trlala involving her former under· ground companions. One trial al which Miss Hearst is expected to be a gov· emment witness is that ol Sym- blonese Liberation Army mem· bers William and.Emily Harris on charges of kidnaping Miss Hearst In February 1974. The other is lbe weapons and ex· ploslves trial of Wendy Yoshimura, with whom Miss Hearst waa living when she was captured last year. Miss Hearst, 22, who is serv- ing a seven.year senl.ence for armed bank robbery, waa driven to the Metropolitan Coe· rectl_onal Center in San Diego Tuesday. Bill Garrison, warden at Pleasanton, sald Miss Hearst (See PATl'Y, Pace.U) Manahan _Lead Narrows Housing Resales Battled O•ol• l"tlol Slall Pllolos HOLDS NARROW LEAD William Manahan Absentees Cut Gap to 6 Votes By JACK CHAPPEU Both M aoaban and Mrs. Estimates are thal about l,000 0t•h• 0111' "'110151111 Overton are Dana Point res· such absentee ballots were d'- William Manaban's narrow idents. posited at the polls throughou•. lead in the Capistrano Unified The contest for the seat bad the county and were routinely be· School District trustee election drawn four candidates. The ing processed by the registrar's narrowed even further Monday person elected to the position will office. , as previousl y overlooked serve only until March when the Another 1,800 ballots were absentee ballots were tallied. post again will be up for grabs. found Monday by county Manahan bad led opponent Jan Manahan is an elementary • employes as they were checking Overton by 30 votes when elec-school teacher in the Saddleback precinct supplies. tion day votes were counted. Unified School District. Mrs. That lead e\lllporated to only six Overton has worked as a com· votes Monday with more ballots puter programmer and bas been remaining to be counted today. active in school affairs. The apparent victor in the The ballots being counted are race, Manahan, was to have been absentee votes which were seated on the school board next placed in ballot boxes at polls. Monday. These ballots were kept separate The trustee seat vacated by and were not counted with the re- Stephen Smith earlier this year gular ones. A registrar's omce represents the Laguna Niguel, spokeswoman said today she Monarch Bay. and Dana Point wouldn't know the total number area of the Capistrano Unified or the ballots involved until the School District. counting was completed. "Those ballots were in the warehouse and hadn't been brought forward for checking. They were from all over the county," County Registrar Al Olson said. Earlier he had said he didn 'l believe any races would be af. fected by the found ballots. Todav. however . Olson ad-mitted the Capistrano trustee election could be turned around. <See MANAHAN, Page A2) CLOSING IN FAST Jen Overton The Rossmoor Corporation has renewed its battle against real estate s peculators it plames for inflated housing prices in the Laguna Hills Leisure World retirement com· munity. Elm Weingarden, vice presi· dent for corporate marketing at.. Rossmoor. has notified officials of six Saddleback Valley realty firms that handle Leisure World resales that new restrictions will be put into effect and dutifully enforced. The most stringent new rule prohibits brokers and salesmen from s howing their clients Leisure World homes that are under construction or completed homes where escrow bas not closed. , Damage Suit Asked .~n. Slemons Smear GoldR.ush Hikes Cost LONDON (AP) -A sud- den rush of buyers sent gold pricea in London up by more than $4.50 an OWlce today to $136, its highest level alnce early th.is year. ·Pussycat Theater 'f'rades 'X' /Or 'G-'' · ... ·'Such homes are sWI the pro- perty of Rossmoor Corporation and we can prohibit such show· in g s," said Rossmoor spokesman Frank LaClave. According to Welngarden, the latest effort is deslgned to cool the current speculation in the bowling market. The primary targets of' (See HOUSING, Page.U) , Saddleback Valley taxpayers' advocate Ed McKean has pro-posed that the County Board of Supervisors in stitute a swt for damages against the parties respons1ble for one of Jim Slemons' political mailings In a Jetter sent to Supervisor Thomas Riley. McKean contends that grounds ror the swt would in· elude "defamatory acts against the people'' and "wtlllul mjs. management of pubhc monies." He also has asked the county postal inspector to determine if tbe m ailings were a violation of tbe U.S. Postal Regulations. The mailing McKean has taken exception lo was sent to voters in the 74th Assembly District where Slemons was the Republican lhOminee. The leaflet said that Democrat Ron Cordova -who was elected to the assembly seat the next day -"has recently been charged with misconduct m Ila $10 m1lhon lawswt involving massage parlors." The lawsuit apparently never bas been filed and was related lo a case Cordova handled while working as a deputy District At· torney. H the action has not been hied, McKean said, the letter is a fahehood and '·a blatant attempt to defame the character of Ron Cordova." McKean. chairman of Sad· dleback Homeowners Outraged Over Taxes. contends the tax· payers subsidize both the Postal Service and voter mailing lists. Ne aaid taxpayers have a "vest- Weather Night and morning fog, otherwise fair with high clouds Thursday. Days to · cool with highs In low 70s, lows lo near so. I NSIDE TODA~ Thr~e Son QuenU1t inmote• wrre caught in o 11·/oot tura· . nel, JO feet unclngrovnd, md· ing . 0 n\on1h·long. attempt ct t~. When captured, thitsl were onlJI 35 fut. a~ from fuedom. StO'I/ Pagt AS. Index ed interest" in the mail but bave no right to stop getting such mail. "I feel the people have been damaged and I think it's time the people act." he said. "I tbin1c the people are bigger than lb.is." McKean said he is asking the supervisors to get an opinion on the possibility of a suit from the county counsel. • Dealers reported buying b y the Far East, speculators and industrial and jewelry users of gold. Rose ~arade Entry . ' Bal boa's controversial Pues7ut ft..W wm dole for good Friday and the movie bou.se will reopen by Thanksgiving as a "family oriented theater," a spokesman for the theater said today. The change from X·raled mov- ies to G·rated films ls the result of a lease negotiated between the Puss7cat owners Waloat ~es ancl Great w--. Theaters. Pupils Watch As Teacher Shot to Death ' A spokesman for Walnut Properties said details or the changeover would be available later this week but indicated that. Friday definitely would be the last day for the Pussycat and its long-running movie, "Deep Throat."........_ DETROIT CAP) -An elemen- The Pussycat Theater opened tary school teacher was lbot to In what used to be the Balboa death in her classroom on the D ' T h $ 35 000 Theater, 709 E. Balboa Blvd .• in (f~;s =~:eC:!:~~!,~p~pbUS' ream S a the spring of 1975, to the dismay e• ' ' of city officials, police and watched in horror. Peninsula residents. Police said the woman. whose name was not released pencliDg "' In the long legal battle that notification of relatives, was shot By ANNE COOPER he said. Final selection of the six He said the float features such followed. lbere were setzures of twice in the back of the bead for °' ._... 0 •11' ll'l•otsi." successful candidates took the t Y Pi c a 1 M i s s ion Viejo a variety of films police and the no apparent reason. Mission Viejo's float entry in committee more than two trademarks as low. flower· district attorney believed were AftertbeeunmanfledtheBurt the Pasadena Rose Parade bas months. decked Barcelona walls; the pornographic. The theater Elementary School, the pupils been tilled "A Dream Come Mission Viejo will probably be community's unofficial flower, emerged a partial victor when a ran from their classroom to tbel True," and Activity Committee invited to participate in future the agapanthus; a tropical municipal court jury in May of scbool'sofficetoreportthesboot- members learned Tuesday night Rose Parades , s aid Bud Baker, garden and many hanging 1975 found two films, "Deep ing. the float is a dream with a $35,000 vice president of the Tournament baskets. Throat" and "The Devil In Miss A teacher across the ball told price tag. of Roses Association, because it Olympic gold m~al swim· Jones," not to be obscene. police she heard the noise bat Art Cook. director of environ· is the associa~ion's policy to lake ming champion Brian Goodell said she didn't realize they we"* mental affairs for the Mission back any ent•ant that floes a de-will stand at lbe front of the float S~ceththelbn, thtosehare the oednly gunshots. Viejo Company, told Mission Vie· cent job. y.rith a junior Nadadores swim movies e ea er as screen · School was dismissed for the JO Activity Committee members This year's· Rose Parade on team member. Tb e Pussycat c b a in day following the incident and Tuesday that the company made New Year's Day will be viewed Also riding the float will be a-spokesman declined to comment police said they were questionin& a $.15,000 commitment in its float by 125 million people around lbe pair of grandparents from the on the possibility that economic pupils and parents. application to the Tournament of world on a two· hour telecast. The community with their grandchild factors brought about the change Police said they bad no one in Roses Association. parade will be five and a ball <See DREAM Page .U) from "X" back to "G." custody in the shooting. Cook said this puts the Mission miles long and will include 61 -------•:.....,_~;___;_ __________________ ~------=.---- Viejo fioat midmay in the S20,000 floats, 21 bands and 220 to $50,000 range of typical Rose equealrians. Parade float costs. The Mission Viejo float has Mission Viejo was one of hun-been desllned to reflect the am- dreds or applicants for the aix biance oflbe Saddleback Valley float openings this year, said planned community, said Vinton Gordon Odell. a member or the Anderson, president of Fiesta associaUon's float entry commit-Floats. tee. Anderson said hia company. Original applicants were nar-which bas design ed pri&e- rowed to 8S serious possibilities, winning floats in previous Rose Experimental Kindergarten To Continue Saddleback Valley Unifled School District trustees have agreed to continue an "early age" kindergarten program on a pilot basis for the next two years. The program allows yaunpters whose fifth birthday falls between Dec. 1 and Feb. 1 to attend kindergarten during the second half of the school year. Normally, only children who tum five before Dec. 1 are allowed to enter kindergarten. Although the program was started tast year, its effect oo the progress of these cblldren has not been determined, accordin& to Dr. Joeepb Platow, director of pupil Hrvlces. He said lnlonna· t.loa needed to decide the pro- sram•a effect could be obtained b7 conUnuinc lhe pilot procrui. ~ ~ Parades, la building six other floats this year, including floats for Western Airlines and the Mormon Church. Andenon said Fiesta Floats espe-c;ially wanted to build the Mission VleJo fioal and went throulh a long design session to come up with a potentially prize· winning plan. HER MICROW.4.J'E A HUiSE R ''The second person who called bouJht lt. l 'm really Uckled with Ill)' lmtant success!" Here's the classtned ad that sparked the sale for this Coet'-1 Mesa woman: AMANA MI CROWAVE ~ OVEN . 6 mo1. old. ,..,..,_..._ ~!?:!~~able warr. ~. One W•ll Be a Q11ee11 fl you'd like to convert an ap-These Ove El Toro Rl&h School coeds are "val JllAlon Viejo Hiab on Friday. The pllance to cHb, or anything ln the running to be CbaJ'lera' 1'76·71 · candidates an, from left, Lisa Patterson. ehe, call the Dally Pllot at Homecoming 9ueen. 1be cbolce will be Mlcbelle Dramis. Cathie Van Liew, Hope 6' 2·5t11 . The pe op l • • s announced dunna cJ'OWlainl ceremonies at Moylu aDcl Aqela Cheap. _m_an_e_tp_la_c_•_· _____ ...,...,,..i$11a1Nme of tbe 11Cbodl'1• 1ame a&ailllt . ..... .... ._:1~·~' t ,, - , it2 DAILY PILOT SB ' Wednnclay. November 10, 1976 Go-•lotDA•ked v • -~-Senior Housing .Bites the Dust By GAaY GRANVILLE Oftlle O•llY ~llllMMf Plans to d evelop what was billed as a low-cost senior cJtizens housing project on the bill5 above Laguna Beach were scotched Tuesday by the Orange I County Planning Commission. Rejection or a land use de- signation change needed to get the senior housing project off the 8!'f>und was part of a larger plan- ning schc;me or things. I It "'.8S 8 portion or a proposed amenament to the land use ele- ment or the county's general plan. I Gerrerally. the commission re· versed a trend or recent months and, in ecrect, recommended that the Board of Supervisors delay .some land use decisions until growth impact can be measured. Before voting to reject the con- troversial senior citizens project, however, commissioners did not say wh y they would vote 4-1 for rejection. Fro• Page A J HOUSING ... Rossmoor's new drive are real estate firms in the Saddleback Valley that specialize in Leisure World resales. Weingarden said these are the realtors soug ht out by speculators to sell their 'properties for a quick profit. In ~is letter, the Rossmoor of- ficial pointed out the dangers of speculation. "Recently, one of the leading ·analysts or the housing industry 'Stated that between 30 and 40 percent of new home sales in Orange County were the result of sales t o s peculators who bought these homes not for the p\Ul)OSe or living in them now .or i~ the future but to gain im-mediate or longterm profit," he said. Weingarden said that de· velopers and realtors who en- courage such speculative buy- ing and selling may be "plant- ·ing the seeds " for the next recession in the housing busi- ness. "If it 's not effectively stopped, we will come to a time when all of us have runaway cancellations by the speculators who will be the fi rst to desert , the market and once again there will be widespread ex- istence of finished ho mes without buyers," he added Weingarden warned that such a recession would cause even more critical unemployment in construction trades and severe financial problems for bwlders. "It 1s time we act responsibly and stop talking out or both sides of our mouth.'· Rossmoor has been reqwring all buyers of new homes m the community to sign a stalemtnl guaranteeing they wi ll Ii ve in the house they buy and not re· sell it Immediately. Weingarden encouraged the realtors handling resales to do the same and said they are .. not welcome'' lo show potential buyers the homes under con- structi on or with escrows that haven't closed. "All of our new home sales people will rarry out the spirit of this policy." he said. "We mean 1t •• Rossmoor began 11.) war on speculators al its most recent new home lottery by posting large signs demanding that s pecul ato r s abs t ain f r o m participating and requinng that the special form oe rompleted Fro. Page A I MANAHAN •.. "At that time, I hadn't bad my attention drawn to th a t · particular r ace. I was looking at racff that had more o( a margin. So, here's one where it possibly could make a difference " Olson said. ' OR ANOE COAST s11 DAILY PILOT ThoOo-CANU n.11, ...... '"'""'"'<" k<-.. flifid,,_. flW#'\ Ptn\ ....... ,-.ct ... tN>Or~ °""'' """'"'""Q ,_ • .,. ,_..ow9dlt....,. ••• =:i:::.::~i;..~"':1.=-:.::. ~::.:.· lltf'I Vall•f ''"''"• ~,..,....,_, Y•IN>f •-.cl ....._lloa<I\ Sovll\CN\I ~---lffl ''°" k "*i~ $11tWfU'f'\ wcf ,...._..,"-T,_ r.;:: .. ~~.._:.~71.~.·.-;~,~~~"' .. ,, e..., ·---............ --·-JMll C........ \lo<• Po-~··"" Ge_ .. _...,.. ~···-, ... ., n::::.~;..~ 0.11fl M '--a l(Mo11 P. NII A•\1\1..-1 IWWN9l"Olltllton S.ddleltacll ValleY Office HIOI U Pu II_.., W.. or ... ,.,....., Offk•• C.\loMou uow.11 ... s1 .... """"""'"' .. <IC" ""~""-"°"'""'° ~hkll; tt•~-...... M-t T .. epflo11e (7t4)tu-U2t Q111ffled Adveru11111 W •M1t ~It~-vo11n .....,Ol!tt. Slt .. 310 Frtm \•l'I (I•,...,. .. U5·°'30 , .. "''""' '"• o.-c~.-1 ,..,.,.,.;,, .. c...... ...,,_, Hf) N W\ \•Of•t\ lltW\lt .. tOfn f't~t ..... t M•U•~ er •••ttl•lfM•fth "''''" nMf ... ~~::..:Ufttvt '"C'tel '"'"'htl.,._ •• k t-..... 19'1, ........... , "1•• ,,,..,. C..nt•t-.1• '"'"'iptlett 1W CMOf't' UM =~':i ,::!,.~~~ ,,....."''• fftt11t•r• • The pr~posed I ,~unit project was heavily backed by senior or· ganizations throughout the coun· ty, including the county's Senior Citizens Council. But it was opposed by Laguna Beach city officials, the Laguna Greenbelt and, in the end , the Orange County Housing Coali· tion. Those favoring Santa Ana de- veloper Howard Miller's pro- posed senior's project obviously saw the issue solely as an at- tempt to provide low cost bousin~ for elderly residents. However. a recent study in·. dicated that Miller's plan would not produce true low cost hous· ing. Miller contended the lilt up un- its to be built on hillside pilings would sell for between $22,000 and $26,000. But the study said the price range would likely be from between $32,000 and $38,000. It also contended that upkeep in the area. especially needed fire retardation measures, would be more costly than anticipated by the project's promoter. County fire officials told the commissioners Tuesday that prospective residents would have trouble obtaining fire insurance to cover their hilltop dwellings. And, they added, the c~t or adequate fire controls could be as much as $2 million, including the cost of an elaborate sprinkler system. In an addition to his original re· port, the consultant said senior residents would be a distance from easy access lo stores and other needed facilities. Wh at arguments persuaded the planners to cast their vote or rejection weren't known because tbe vote came on a straight roll call uninterrupted by words or explanation by the com · missioners . Miller and the senior citizens supporting the pioject have not had their final say. It is the County Board of Supervisors that will make the amendment decision. And the board is free lo either accept or reject the planners' re- commendation. Saddleback CofC Opens New Drive This is chamber of commerce week in the Saddleback Valley and the focal point or the week's activities will be a six-hour mem- bership drive Thursday from 10 a.m. Lo4 p.m. A chamber spokesman said the aim or the dri ve is to personally contact every business establish· menl in the valley. Members of the valley <.'hamber's board or directors. membership commit· tee and others have pledged their time to the effort. The Saddleback Valley chamber was chartered in 1969 and serves the unincorporated communities or El Toro. Lake Forest, Laguna Hills, Mission VieJO and Laguna Niguel. It has ~rown to a current membership of 323. Membersh ip dues in the chamber are based on a sliding scale deter mined by the number of full time employes. Basic busi· ness dues for one to five employes are $55 per year. For more inform at ion call t he chamber at 837-4753 or 8.1'7.JOOO. Woodpecker Denotes Frm The acorn woodpecker, which frequents at least three Orange County r egiona l parks, was named the county's t"ccreation symbol Tuesday. · Supervisors approved using the bird in connection with coun· l y parks programs and authorized a contest allowing children lo name the wood- pecker. A report to supervisors said the red, black and white bird can be found in O'Neill, Irvine and Caspers Regional Parks. ·Art Auction to Aid Viejo's Musicians Mission Viejo High School's Music Boosters will benefit rrorn an art exhibition and auction pre· sented by the Mission Vi ejo Jaycees Sunday in the New DeaJ Soup Klt~hen ln the Saddleback Volley Plaia. Cocktails and hors d'oeuvres will be served belinnin& at 2:30 p.m. The aucllon or ori1inal cuphtc1. oil paintings and watercolors will beeln al 4 p.rn . DooAUoa ls S2 ~r penon. o.ltyl'llel-- FANTASTIKS_ STA~ng-running, off. Broadway hit m1.1.51ca1 will be performed by Mission Viejo High drama students starting this weekend. Cast members· shown in picture are, from left, Ken Tomlii:ison . ~erri Hartman, Bart Rukstalls, Robrn Satterlee, Rob Nimmo Mall Miller, Mark7.olanandJackSchoos . ' 'No Shred of Dignity' Second Widow Devoid of Death Benefit,s SIOUX FALLS. S.D. (AP)-"I don't have a shred of dignity left," s ays Patricia Martin, who learned after Bob Martin's death three weeks ago her husband had a second wife and family200miles away. ·'I've been reduced to having to beg for ADC (A id to Dependent Children) and food stamps," Mrs. Martin told a r eporter. "But I'm protecting my children. I can go through anything, but those children have to eat. All tbey know is that their daddy is dead and that they loved their daddy dearly.•• Janklow confirmed reports Martin lived a dual life. Janklow said travel and motel vouchers will be examined by a grand jury to check "some questions in- volved in the use of state funds.'' J ack Allmon, the state's secretary of economic and touris m development a nd Martin's boss in Pierre, said he never suspected the ''TaJly-Ho" listed on Martin's t ravel vouchers was the name or the apartment complex in which his Sioux Falls family lived. The state agency has offi ces in both Pierre and Sioux Falls. Patricia Martin said she mar· ried Martin in 1968 but has been unable to find am arriage license. "I remember signing a docu- ment, that's all. He took care of it. They have tried to check it out "I believe this other wife was just as much in the dark as I was. She bad to go through the shock of this also. I feel very sorry for her. Her children must be old enough legally, but obviously I was duped,andldon'tknowwby. to understand all this. Mine aren't, fortunately·~" The Lyon County cle in Em· poria. Kan., confirm at Mary Lou Martin~ "ed to Bob Martin i~l948. Viejo Staging Mmical ~ "The Fantastiu," II musical now ln lu 16th year as an off. Broadway bit in New York, wUl be st-aeed by Mission Viejo Hi&h School drama students stutinl Saturday evening. The event wllJ be the school 's annual Musi cal Tueater Workshop production for the falJ semester. The opening n ig ht performance begins a\ 7:30 p.m. and there wlll be a 2 p.m. matinee the following day. There wiU also be evening shows Nov. 18, 19 and 20 and another matinee on Nov. 21 . Tickets are available in the student store for $2. All performances will be s taged in the school's multipurpose room, which is located near the center ot the campus. ''The Fantastiks" is a musical adaptation of Edmund Rostand's play, "Les Romanesques" (The Romances). It is a SWTealistic story of youthful romance, with its light and dark moments of life, according to Anne Varda- ni an. directo r and staging supervisor. The cast for the show includes Jack Schoos as El Gallo, \he nar- rator ; Robb Nimmo.as Matt, the hero; Robh) Satterlee and Julie McDowell, double cast as the girl; Luisa ; Bart Rukstalls as Bellamy; Steve Levine and Matt Muter, double cast in the role of Hu::klebee; Terri Hartman as the mute, Ken Tomlinson as Henry and Mark Zolan as Mortimer, the Indian. Piano accompanist will be Steve Sivcovich, Nancy Curran is production assistant, Pa m Mabry is stage manager and Barbara Arnold is musical direc- tor. Mrs. Vardanian noted that the students themselves cboreo· graphed the production. Martin. South Dakota's direc- tor of economic development, died of a heart attack at 52. It was teamed then he had a wife and five children here, a wife and four children in Pierre. 'Tm very angry that I have been put in this position," said Patricia Martin. 33, "My thoughts are 'How dare you do this to me, and remember, I'm not just some sweetie stashed in the . Allmon said Martin generally listed the Tally-Ho for lodging on travel vouchers turned in for Sioux Falls. He said he assumed it was a motel. The family in Pierre, which has refused to comment on the mat· ter. lives in a single-family house. Allmon said Martin usually asked $11.50 per day, the state max- imum. for lodging in Sioux Falls. Hinshaw Tack Hurt comer.' By Overtime Ruling By TOM BARLEY OftheO•llrP'lie.si..lf "I'm a very simple person. I'm a mother first. and I was of the opinion that Bob was married, ilUices Close nad three children and was ._,JJ j Orange County Superior Court Judge Frank Domenicbini re- fused today to allow details of a settlement between the county and 32 assessor 's office employes to be discussed before the jury in the trial of Congressman Andrew Hinshaw. McNicholas had hoped to in· troduce evidence to the effect that the county agreed to drop its lawsuit against assessor's office employes who drew overtime in divorced.'' State Alty. Gen. William DREAM •.. (to reflect the age span of Mis· s1~n Viejo residents), a painter with an easel (lo indicate the cultural opportunities available In the _Planned community ), and a _pa1r o f Mission Viejo High School cheerleaders (to em- phasize the role or local youth ). Bake r. who has worked 28 years for the Tournament or Roses Association, said Roy Rogers and Dale Evans were selected this year's parade marshals . He said th e parade h as changed a great deal since the first one was held in 1890 to. publicize Pasadena's year-round sunshine and flowers. Horse-drawn floats and n ower- decked carriages paraded past 3,000 spectators in 1890. In 1901 the first horseless carriages were added -but at the end or the parade , where they wouldn't frighten the horses. The first football game follow- ing the parade was held in 1902, the first queen chosen in 1905. In 1923 USC played Penn State in the first Rose Bowl game. This year 105,000 will pack the Rose Bowl stadium on New Year's Day, and another 70 million will watch the game on television . Even the Rose Parade has its mundane aspects. Pasadena will be left with 82,000 tons of refuse to clean up J an. 2. Ji',.._ Pa.,e A J PATTY ••• med a written~request for the transfer last week. "The decision to move her was made Monday with her al- torney 's appr oval," Garrison said. "I don't know lt her fami- ly bad any say in this action." He said the bureau's head· quarters in Washington and the U.S. attorney general were in· volved in the decision. Bot Asst. U.S. Atty. F. Steele Langford, ln Sao Francisco, said be was surprised to learn o( the sudden transfer. He said h e bad been scheduled to participate Friday in a hearing ln the Hearst case. She had spent several months at the San Diego facility this year undergoing a diagnostic study ordered by the court. The Pleasanton facility. which opened in 1974, hou11es 2SO inmates, mostly under the age or 26. The San Diego prison houses about 500 inmates, most o( whom are in for abort terms or not yet sentenced. Veterans Day Federal and county offices wilJ be open but state offices and some schools will be closed Thursd ay in recognition of Veterans Day. Federal and county employes were given Monday, Oct. 25, off in keeping with Congress' three- day holiday weekend policy. Saddleback Vall ey Un ifi ed School District will be closed Thursday. Schools in the Garden Grove, Orange, Placentia, Santa Ana and Tustin districts will be closed Thursday and Friday. Other school districts and mosl banks report that they will be open Thursday. Dime-dip Dinner Due at Olivewood A "Dime a Dip Dinner" will be served from 5: 30 to 8 p. m. Friday in Olivewood Elementary School. The dinner. which includes main dishes. salads, desserts and drinks, is sponsored by the school's Student Teacher Parent Organization. "It's not related to the issues in this trial," he told defense at· tomey J ohn McNicbolas while conceding that the overtime pay· ments spelled out in the settle- ment we r e fraudulently ob· tained. The ruling ends McNicbolas' h~pes that the jury might accept bi~ .argument that the county's wilbngness to abandon its claim to overtime paid during Hinshaw's term as assessor similarly rules out any possibili· ty of Hinsbaw's guilt. on related charges. . It is alleged that Hinshaw knew that overtime was being claimed from the county by employes who were actually working on his congressional campaign in 1972 when the funds were paid. Hinshaw bas denied the charge from the witness stand. But pro· secution witnesses have testified that he ordered assessor's office personnel to work on his cam· paign and promised dismissal for those who did not comply. Craftsmen Invited to Shom · 1972 in return for dismissal of their countersuil. The employes agreed and abandoned an attempt to obtain payment from the county for 32,000 hours of overtime they said they worked between 1966 and 1976. McNicholas argued that the agreement clearly absolves HinBbaw of blame since the coun· ty would not have negotiated such a settlement lf \here had been any evidence of criminal acts . Prn!IPr11t.nr William Evans !laid_ the action by the eowtty board did not approve payments made to employes for time spent on Hinshaw's campaign. Evans said the settlement with the employes was nothing more or less than a good will gesture and was never intended to be a ~omment on Hinshaw's guilt or mnocence. Judge Domenichini's ruling to-~ay out of the presence of the Jury now leaves the way clear for the defense to caU further wit- nesses. O•lly ,.., .. s1 .. 1 ~· Diana Morris (lC?ft) and Jan Northrup make posters advertising lbe Seville Homeowners Association's annual arts and crart.s show from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 13, oo lhe Glen Yermo Elementary School grounds. Craftsmen and artists are invited to reserve s pace for the annual afloi r by calling Mrs. Northrup at 581·1911. • ,