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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1976-12-21 - Orange Coast PilotOIL FLOWS FREELY INTO RICH FISHING GROUNDS Uberlan 0 11 Tanker Carrying 7.6 Miiiion Gallons Spllt• ,.,. WlrepftolO Oil Flowing . DAILY PILOT Black Woman Named * * * 10' * * * To Carter's Cabinet TUESDAY AFTERNOON, DECEMBER 21, 1976 \fOL "· "0 J,. 1SECTIONS.1' PAGES Yacht Fire 5 Die • ID Crashes MASS. A flltfk O<tH Mesan Li3ted Among County V ictims Five persons, ancludtn~ a 24 · year·old Costa Mesa man, died as a result or injuries received an the past 24 hours in separate Orange County traffic accidents, according to cor oner's in· vestigators. Jn addition lQ the d('ath this !mornin g o r c; re gory Ly nn . Jordan, 24, of 87 1 Sonora Road. Costa M esa. the-following · fatalities were record<'d by lhl' coroner -James S. Morgan. 13, of 855 l N Woods Sl., Fullerton, who wa!> fatally Injured Monday aitemoon while riding ha s bicycle acrosl't the 1nter'>l'c t1 on of Com monwealth Avenu(' and Richmond Street an Fullerton Investigators s01d the youth was struck by a truck dnven by Roger Merrill, 25, oC Huntington Beach, shortly before 3 p m Merrill was not cited. -Cheryl Lee McMlllen, 23, of Crestline. who died in Anaheim early today when the car in which she was a passenger was Or:n:tJ:ast Weathe r Some variable cloudi· ness through Wednesday. but mos tly, fair. T em: peratures slicking around the 70 mark, lows to about 40. I NS IDE 'l'ODA \I Chicago'• "bou.'' IUcbard J. Dolq, di~ M~.ofter· noon of ,o heart ,ottock. Political lNdnt ore ueldng a NW ltodftr. Ste. P.agt A4. Index struck broadside by another car an an intersection. According to Anaheim Police, the a uto lb at collided with the car driven by Jerry Wayne Wooleridge. 27, of Anaheim. sped Crom the scene of the 2:25 a.m fatal accident at Harbor Boul evard and Katella Avenue. Erma Harlan, 87, of 728 E Washington St.. Orange, who was fatally injured shortly before 8 a.m. Monday morning a few FUMES BLITl C4FE AT PIER OCEANSIDE CAP> -Fire hit the Oceanside pier early today, destroying a landmark cafe that stood at the west end of the struc· tore for more than 30 years. The flames and s moke were seen ror a mile or more. The cause of the fire, confined to the Pier Cafe, was under in· vestigation. blocks from her home. Police said Mrs. Harlan was crossing Chapman Avenue at ShaCfer Street in a crosswalk when she was struck by a car. The driver of the auto was identified as Tad Lonergan, 43, of 17400 W. Irvine Blvd., Tustin. -Timothy DeGaynor. 20, of I 1431 Reva Drive, Garden Grove, who died Monday in UCf Medical Center three days after the motorcycle he was riding in Anaheim was hit by a car. Already dead as a result of the early Saturday morning collision at Ninth Street and Katf'lla /\venue in Anaheim was a passenger o n DeGayno r 's motorcycle. Donna Lynn Con· nell. 34, of Garden Grove. Driver or the auto that rear ended the motorcycle was arrest· cd at the scene and has been charged with felony drunk driv· ing as well as felony vehicular manslaughter. lf11t.chf {J'h. W A~[ T-'tr lr•s u, J 0 40 Miles A"WI,..,..... TANKER BREAKS UP -Liberian tanker Argo Merchant has split apart on the rocks on the Nantucket Shoals. spilling unknown quantities of oil into highly productive fishing grounds. Tanker Dumps Oil Imo Fishing Area Carter Adds Three NANTUCKET. Mass. (AP> - A Liberian oil tanker split in half amid stormy seas today, and the Coast Guard said oil was flowing freely Into the Atlantic 'at the edge or one or the world'!$ richest fishing grounds. The 640·foot vessel fractured almost at midships. The break was just a ft of the forward superstructure. ''Seas are breaking clean over the superstructure,'' Chambers said. ..... More tO Cabinet No one was aboard the tanker that had carried 7.6 million gallons of heavy Industrial oil. "There is a lot of oil coming out," said Coast Guard Cmdr. PLAINS, Ga . (AP> - Presldent·elect Carter today named three more Cabinet choices, including a black woman to head the Department or Housing and Urban Develop- ment. Washington attorney Patricia Roberts Harris was named HUD secretary, thus becoming the second woman and first black named to the Cartet Cabinet. Another black, Rep. Andrew Young (D·Ga.), previously was named to the Cabinet-level posl· lion of am bassador to lhe '=Jnited Nations. Other nominees announced at a nationally broadcast news con· ference were: -Harold Brown, president ol Caltech and a former Pentagon olllcf al in th• Jobnaon ad· mlniatratlon , at Defense aecretary. over Carter's selection of a labor Lynn Hein after viewing the secretary. wreckage of the Liberian tanker The AFL-CIO strongly support· Argo Merchant. ed John T. Dunlop, a Harvard Cmdr. Barry Chambers, head economist, to return to the job he of the Coast Guard Strike Force held briefly during the Ford ad· assigned to free the t.anker, said ministration. But Carter turned with Hein that ~ to 75 percent of to Marshall, apparently as a the ship's cargo spilled into the compromise choice, alter some water. groups representing blacks and "We'U sit down and look at It women complained that Dunlop again," Chambers said. "If we had not been a strona suppc>rter can salvage five gallons, that's ol minority hiring. five aallons that won 't 10 in the Marah all, a labor economist, is water," he said. accepta ble to labor and can ex-Some 1.5 million gallons of the peel to have its support. But bis oU bad already wuhed into the appointment ls a disappointment ocean before the tanker splll and to AFlrCIO President George it was considered a m ajor oil Meany and other union leaders spill at that point. who lobbied hard for Dunlop. 'lbe tanker, which piled onto Marsh all, 48, specializes in the Nantucket Shoala seven days minority employment problems ago, spill apart at 8:55 a.m. Seas and hu served on a number of in the area, 21 miles IOUtheast of 1ovemmentadvl1oryboard.s. Nantucket, were at eight feet and Jo .. ph A. Califano Jr., a upectedtobuildto210feet. Washlntton attorney who helped. Thtveasel'a bow ewun1 around draft major aocial leclllaUon as a at a 90·d•1ree anale. It was key White House alde lo Prelldent · afloat, but the stern was locked in ''The stern section Is complete· ly under water," said Heln. Soon after the break-up, the state of Massachusetts an· nounced it was asking President Ford for disaster relief to help <See SPILL, Page AZ) 'No Smoking' Eatery Burm LA MESA CAP) -A young man was in jail today for lh· vesti1atf on of arson alter rire damaged a restaurant Which on· ce won tntematlonal fame for prohibiting diners from smoking. La Villa restaurant burned Monday. For several months. it has been closed in preparation for belne torn down. An in· vesU1ator tald cl1arettes were found where the fire broke out. -Ray HarahaJI, a University of Texa1 labor economlat, to bud lbe DepartmentolLabor. , :"",-----------",.. There Mad been some qu ~~ . . <SeeCABINET, Pale"r> • tbMand. . ·~----- In 1955, when the restaurant opened, CJyde and Evelyn O'Qutnn prohibited smoking. Irate dlner1 launched a feud that spread the fame or thelr place, then called O'Qulnns Dining . .Room . s ·3 Bay Area landmark Destroyed SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A. fire started by a Christmas tree during a gala holiday party destroyed the St. Francis Yacht Club and, the fire department said, killed three persons. At least20others were injured. The 49·year.old club was in the front ranR of international yacht· ing, a virtual city institution where some of the world's most pres tigious class races were held. Damage was estimated at $500,000. The first body was found not long after the spectacular, five- alarm bl aze was brought t.<llder control, and the other two were found as firemen sifted through the rubble of the elegant club. fire omcials said. Flames shot more than 100 fe~t into the air as the fierce blaze consumed the 1, 700-member club at the northwest comer of t})e Marina Green, on the edge of San Fr ancisco Bay. About 200 persons were in the building when the fire broke out. Club Commodore Gene Hartel" stood outside as the bulldinc burned, stunned at t.he fate of the club just days after its 49th birtb· day . Firemen said the blaze broke. out shortly before 9:40 p.m. in the L-shaped club autldorlum where the party .was belng held. It raged out of control for two hour• before comil3B. under control, but by that lime it was rated a total loss. ~ The dead were not immediate. ly Identified. At Jeut one of t.ti; bodies, the first discovered, was (See CLUB, Pqe A!) l GOOD GRIEF .' · l OML 'f 3 SHOPPING DAVS: 'TfL CHRtSTMAS .' n , AZ DAILY PILOT s DEFENSE SECRETARY Harold Brown, 49 LABOR SECRETARY Dr. F. Ray Marshall HOUSING SECRETARY Patricia Harrla CABINET • • Johnson, was reported lo be the favorite for the post or secretary of the Department of Health. Education and W el fore. A Carter aide in Washington su~~ested that the President· elect would complete numan g his Cab· net Wednesday or Thursday. Others who had beenunder con. sideration for the HUD post in· eluded two othu blacks: Mayors KeMeth Gibson or Newark, N.J., and Richard Hatcher or Gary I Ind , and Baltimore housing ctuer Robert Embry. Mrs. Harris IS a former dean or the Howard University Law School hl're and served previous- ly as a mbassador to Luxem- bourg. Carter also is expected lo an· nounce later in the week that he has c hose n forme r Defense Secretary James R. Schlesinger, wbo was fired by President Ford, as energy chief for the new ad· ministration. Aides s a1d he a tso wi II name his director oC the Central In· telligence Agency, most likely 1 Theodore Sorenson, who served 1 as a top assistant to President KeMedy. ORAH0£ COAST t DAILY PILOT =:r.~~~::r.:::.:.::~= ON\t .,.,.,,.1\1\iftlO ~"Y !.it..,.._.,..,.._ IH.., ~·~ M.9,,,. •• .,,,._...,. , ..... , • .,. '-"'• -· ,....._, ., ..... 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'*'no ~ '916 °'"'" ~ ,,_,"'""' 0-.... ,, ............ , ... ·-1•14-.._,., =: ... -:.~~~r:i.:'.~ ... ~~;.:"~ ~ ""'""'-· ~~11~':.'ir.:~~1:11:1•.: (~::, ~:. =-.:::~'.\.:~~ __,, 1111111 .. , SecondTi•e Egypt, ·Syria i>Iall Merger CAIRO CAP) -Presidents Anwar Sadat of Egypt and Halu Assad or Syria have decided to unite theJr two countries and set up mechanisms to work out tho exact form of unity, Egyptian Foreign Minister Ismail FaJimy announced today. He indicated, however, it would ~ some time beCoro tho Three KKK Marines Tell Tlueats By the Associated Press Three Ku Klux Klan members in Marine uniforms say they tried to warn or growing racial tensions at Camp Pendleton but without success. .. There were threats upon us that they wer e going to kill us,'' said o n e , P f c. Dennis L. Campbell, referring lo black Marines without giving details. The views were given at a pre. trial bearing Monday for one of 14 blacks charged with con· spiracy and assaulting a half. dcnen while Marines in a bar· racks fight Nov. 12. Three of their pretrial bearings have been com- pleted. • Campbell was transferred to another Marine base after his name was reported found on a list of alleged Klan members in a room near one in which the fight took place. Weapons and pro· paganda also were found . Called back to testify with him were Pfc. Charles V. Smith and Pfc. Ronnie Harper, both of whom s aid they also belong to the KKK. The blacks knocked on a bar· r a cks door and ask ed for ''Chuck." Smith testified, "As far as I know, no one on that floor could be named Chuck but me." He and Campbell said they car· ried a knife in full view, and Harper said he wore a pocket knife, but all three said the blacks never carried knives, as far as they knew. The attack in which six whites were clubbed and stabbed with s crewdrive rs was a ctually m e ant for them. the three Marines told a Marine in· vesllgahng officer. Earlier, they said, they were threatened by blacks. The three said they were ad· milled lo the base Klan den a few months ago. Harper said he had attended about 10 meetings of the Klan unit at Camp Pendleton which drew an average of SO persons. Smith said he attended "six or s even" such meetings with only eight present. As the beaMng was being held, a group of 32 persons calling themselves the Committee Against Racism demonstrated outside the base's main gate. They passed out literature m sup· port of the accused blac~. F ,.._Pa9eAJ CLUB ••• reported lo be badly burned. Traffic headed for the Golden Ga t e Bridge on Ma r i n a Boulevard was diverted to Lom· bard Street. The fire was easily visible from the Eas t Bay and many parts of the city. Thick s moke, a caved·in roof and "hot wires bouncing around in the lobby" hampered firefight· ing efforts. Firemen batWng the blaze from land were aided by the fireboat Phoenix and the 82· foot Coast Guard cutter Point Heyer. One or those who was at the party a few minutes before the fire broke out was Flre Chief An· drew Casper. He said the ·nrc broke out in a nine-foot tree de· corated with Christmas lights. They suddenly "flared, ignited and exploded, said the chief, drenched in waler and covered with soot. "The Christmas tree went 'poof', just like that.'' said Ted Bakkila, a chemical engineer al· tc:ndin& the party. Other members sald the tree bad been in place several d•ys and appeared dry. The loss included many souvenirs of yachtlnC down tho yean and nautlcal books and re. cords. as well as palntlnas. trophies and i nnumerab le artifacts of the sport reachlDc 1n· to the la.st century. Casper said tbe fin!! started as party-aoers watched a choir perform on the ground floor staae. The first clue of nre came wben tbc aro"'p on st-ae spotted the bumln1 lree. "I'd say the people ~ormed remarkably well, • satd a atuMed Harter. "'lbere wu no panic. Tbue people ar. aaJlora · and are used lo emeraenclea at aea." merger takes place. And be said Egypt and Syria would be sendine separate de- legations to the Geneva peace talks with Israel when they are convened .. unless il is decided beforehand to send one combined delegation .. representing all Arab parties lo the conflict. These include Egypt, Syria, Jordan, the Palcstinine Ubera- tioo Organization and perhaps Lebanon. · _ Egypt and Syria were united for fotir years between 1958 and 1961, but the merger collapsed when the Syrians pulled out. Fahmy maintained tbat the spirit of union has continued and t he future merger was a manifestation or the current close ties between Cairo and Damascus. The two presidents met here Sunday and Monday. Fahmy said the decision, billed in advance as a "bombshell that will shake the world," was re· ached by Assad and Sadat in 15 hours of talks, most of them in private. A political declaration after Assad flew home announced the formation of a supreme political leadership made up of the two presidents ano other aides still to be named. Specialized committees also are to be formed "sooo," Fahmy said, for foreign affairs, defense, c ons t i lulion al questions, economics and other areas. Fahmy said the work or these committees will decide on the form of union between these countries. Their precious merger was a total union with one president, the late Gama! Abdel Nasser. The decision was a dramatic step in the reconciliation of the two countries, which until two months ago had been feuding bit· terly over peace steps with Israel and the Lebanese civil war. F ro•PageAJ SPILL ••• combat what was considered a major oil spill even before the ship split. On Monday dead and oil· soaked sea birds started washing onto the Nantucket shores. The sli ck from the tanker then was reported to be more than 60 miles long and heading seaward away from land. A s seas and frozen s pray pounded the vessel, eovironmen· lahsts were laking action to deal with the oil. Massachusetts En· vironmental Affairs Secretary Evelyn Murphy tol<f. The As· socialed Press that pnvale con· tractors were being sought to stand by if the oil washed ashore. The Coast Guard said it has already spent $500,000 on al· tempting to free the ship. The tanker was stuck on sand near the western edge of Georges Bank -for centuries one of the most prolific fishing grounds of the world. The tanker's oil posed a new and deadly threat to Yankee fis· h('rmcn trying to wrest a living from the sea orr New England. The oiJ that has spilled and leaked into the sea has con· laminated some shellfish and crippled or kiUed thousands of s ea birds. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Russell E. Train said Monday the tanker threat e n e d ''a p otential c atas trophe of major propor- lJons. "It poses a major risk lo of· fshore fisheries,'' he said. The record oil spill from a tanker was more than 29 million gallons from the supertanker Torrey Canyon after it ran aground orr England on May 18, 1967, and broke in half. A spokesman for Gov. Michael S. Dukakis, who has said he still supports oUshore oil develop· ment, said on hearing that the Uberian tanker split ofr Georges Bank, "Unfortunately there's not aheU of a lot we can do. "It's mostly a matter of work· ing with the Coast Guard, trying lo contain or clean up the spill,·· Alan Raymond, Dukakis' spokesman said today. He said the state's function would be mostly lo clean up the oil lf and when it comes ashore. WgSlips, Kifls Tourist SAN DIEGO <AP) -A t.ourl.lt from Albany, N.Y., was crushed to death by a 10. wblle takln1 pictures. The coroner'• office said John M. Zwack UI, 2', was standln& on the log at the ed1e of Ocean Beach when he fell off Monday. The lo&, wb1cb is 40 Ifft tons, apparently was debrta wblch washed ashore. Suralna with the Ude, It cru1bed Zwick ac11D1t a pier. • ~-1 ..-_ _./. 0.11, I'll .. si.tt 'Mt• Oaristrnas Cheer As a Christmas project, members of tho Balboa Is land Chamber of Commerce bought the ingredients for these turkey packs which contain all the makings for a holiday dinner . The packs will be dis· tributed to needy families identified by· chamber membe rs. Helping load the packs are (from left) Grant McNiff, Ken' Wasmann, Al Dunlap and Don Matheson. Price of Food Declines Holds Over-cill Hike to October's Level WASHINGTON CAP) -The flrst decline in food prices in eight months helped hold the over-all rise in consumer prices in November to three·lenths of a percent, the same as in October, the government said today. At the same time, the govern· ment s aid r eal spendable earn- ings -a worker·s take·home pay Help Needed In New York WASHINGTON (AP)-Mayor Abe Beame ;>aid today that the federal government must con· tinue lo pla'y a role in New York City's efforts to restructure its debts and achieve a balanced bud gel within 18 months. Beame told the Senate Banking Committee "the banks and unions both have indicated the federal government s hould be involved" in the city's efforts to refinance $1 billion in municipal securities. Speaking one day after key U.S. officials warned the city not to re· ly on massive federal aid, Beame said, "In the long term, New York City and all or our great cities can· not be what we want them to be without the federal government as s uming its proper responsibilities. ll is fundamental that all lo<: al government must be relieved from the burden of matching federal public and medical assistance to the in· digent." Boy Impaled After Fall BUELLTON (AP)-Fourteen· year.old Lance Mathews was resting in fair condition today after he fell out or a tree and was impaled on the leg of a steel chair. The accident required four hours of surgery to extricate the chair. Santa Barbara County authorities said Mathews was climing when he fell and landed on the overturned steel chair Monday. . The leg of the chair pierced the youth 's right hip and came out th rough the s tomach, s aid authorities. after adju!;lment for taxes and inflation -increased eight· tenths of a percent in November, the biggest monthly increase in buying ,power in more than a year. The Labor Department Hid that for the l2·month period end· ing in November, consumer prices increased 5 percent, the. smallest 12-month gain in more than three years. The favorable inflation report was certain to be welcomed by economists in both the Ford and incoming Carter administrations as confirmation of their belief that inflation will not gel out o( hand again in the near future. The Consumer Price Index stood at 173.8 last month, mean- ing that a mark et basket of goods costing $100 in 1967 now costs $173.80. Over·all food prices declined two-tenths of a percent in Nov· ember. The department's index of m ortgage interest rates fell 2.1 perce nt, while h o us e hold services costs were down one· tenth of a percent, the first decline in that category since early 1971. The Labor Department said the prices oC a large number of grocery items fell during the month, led by fresh vegetables, down 6.S percent; pork, down 3.1 percent; and dairy products, w~ch declined for the first time since early this year. There also were lower prices for poultry . C('real and bakery products. processed fruits and vegetables and sugar. Partia lly offsetting these declines were beef prices, up 2.2 percent, and the price of coffee, which has risen s teadily in recent months and Is no more tban SO percent high('r than a year ago. Much of the increase in the Consumer Price Index was due to higher prices for clothing, especially cotton items; physi· cian fees and hospital charges; auto insurance, and natural gas, which rose 2 percent. The Labor Department s aid the cost of m edica l care services rose 1.5 percent in November aJJd was 11 percent higher than a year earlier. The Labor Department said the eighl·tenlhs of a percent in· crease in real spendable earn· ings left work ers about where they ·were a year ago with respect to the buying power oC their paychecks. Benefit NiXed . Fired /or Sex, Man Hit Again ' SACRAMENTO (AP) -A Los Angeles store manager who was fired for having sex with a secretary on the job isn't entitled to unemployment benefits, says a Superior Court judge. The ruling Monday by Judge Frances Carr reversed a decision by the s tale Unemployment Insurance Appeals Board grant· lng benefits to J amesClaar. Claar was fired in October 1975 a s retail operations s tore manager of Montgomery Ward's Eagle Rock st.ore in Los Angeles County. a job he held 17years. Court records said Claar and Donna J. Yoµng, a part.time s witchboard operator and secretary al the store, had sexual intercourse both on and off duty. When the affair ended, wit· nesscs said, Ms. Young's work conditions became more difficult, and she said that wbm she com- plained lo Claar, he said her pro- blems were negotiatble. She eventually quit the job. "In this era of concern with personal and job rights, no woman is required Lo or should r>e required to barter for her job with sexual consideration," Ms. Cair said. She also s aid sexual encounters "have a tendency to djvert one's attentions from the work for which the employer is com- pensating the em ploye." Claar's application for joble!s benefits was rejected by the state Employm ent D evelopmetrt Department and an appeals re· feree on the grounds that he wa9 fired for willful misconduct con- nected with his work. 1 The board reversed that ruli~ Jast May. Thejudge'srulingh~~ the payments granted by the board. ~~afabuloua cbristmas ~ift ... .. '·' li~hl,wq,1~ht warmth with QCoci lool<s.100" coU.on eh<ill wiU1 contf"1&Ung tart.an lining. in cordu~ or brushed Cotton.also evai lable. in oolid TeVerni ble. rro::ie1. mede for us in ~larrl. @J~a~@J~@ 44 fashion Island, newport center ' \ , I I • 1 t I ' l I ' l I : I . I .~ • Tuesday Oocombor ~I 1!::'6 ( , i I ~(.. Juvenile Help Urged by Grand Jury BJGA&YGB~ • Of-O.lly ...... SUit Oruae County dtles lbould re- IOftlnf and other' N~•· that tend to block eata!)Usb· t o1 tomrnuoit care centers lroubled Juvenlf •. the county rand Jury satd Monday. The appeal for city action e ln • news release aimed at nc local aovernments to pond to le1lslaUve changes in JuvenJle juatJce system that lntoeftectJ an.1. Slaying '7ictim Found 'Ibe body of a woman who ap.. ttarenUy was shot in the head IMille her 2·year-old son looked on and then dumped in the San Juan Capistrano area was iden- tified today as that of Maria Padilla, 22, of Santa Ana. Orange County Sheriff's of- ficers found the body ~ yards north of the Orte1a Highway and about a mile east of the San _Diego Freeway Monday night aft~ the vietim 's weeping son was spotted by a local resident. Deputies said a 12-year-old girl tiding her hors e in the area hoticed the wandering child who was crying and calling "Mama, Mama". Her p arents im- medidately alerted sheriff's of- ficers. Investigators said Mrs. Padilla and her son, David Padilla Jr., were reported missing last Fri- d ay by her husband They said "Padilla could offer no explana· l ion for their sudden departure from hls hom e. Sheriff's officers sa1d they arc ,interviewing David Padilla Sr., 25, in the hope that he can help them with their inquiries into th<' killing of his wife. Thf' murder weapon has not been found. Coroner's officers i;a1d todJy they believe the body WJi. dumped in the Ortega Hi ghway location a bout 18 hours before its discovery. They fix the time of death as being Sunday night Investigators said the hodv of Mrs . Pad ill a was fully clothr-d They s:ud there was no evidence of sexual assault ·Cifts Hint Nixon Has Y~ Spirit Richard Nixon 1s feeling restive this Chnstmaloi season 1f th" .gifts h\; plani. to give are any 111dicallon. T he fo r m('r President has purchased three red, white and blue Bicentennial pipes as gi~ for somebody, but he won't say• for whom. San Clemente pipe shop owner Art Hatch said Mon· day. "The pipes have a white bowl almost two inches deep with red and blue stripes a UtUe bigger than panstnpes," Hatch said. "That's the kind he seems to pre· /er llt.>'s bou~hl lhem befOfe " There wa.s s~culat.aon that at )cast one of the pipes might be In- tended for Pn•s1denl Ford -also an ardent pipe smoker -but the re<:1pienl will be kept a secret un- tJI after Chnstmas. Hatch said. The pipes are made by Ven- turi. Inc of Rorlingame Nlxon buys hlS tobacco from Match's Regal Smoke Shop, the tobac· ronist said. "He buys three of our custom blends -our Black Velvet, which is a very light aromatic blend; our Bucca s ne e r , a light , sweet Turkish blend; and our ·Regal One. which is English and has a woodsy odor." Cadet Plea Told NEW YORK CA P) -Thomas J . DoWJ1ey CD-N. Y.) has asked Army Secretary Martin R. Hof- fman to reins tate cadets sus- pended in the cheating scandal that rocked the U S. Military Academy at West Point in time for the start or the January semester so as "not to drae lhls incident and Its rarpHlcaUons out tmW June 1978." 'C700dwill' Seals on 87 The third part in a series of articles on the bi.story or the s inking of the schooner Goodwill by Lindsley Parsons, former Newport Beach vice m ayor and mo- tion picture producer · director, appears today on P .. eB-7. Today's article dL"ctWCS the character of Oood'Wlll owner Ralph Larra~. Moat noteworthy or those chances is a mandate lo remove minor juven.lle offenders from in- stituUona where serious young lawbrtakers are kept. And lo do that, the Grand Jury said, Orange County's local gov- ernments should "make plans to strencthen, enhance and develop programs" designed lo meet the new lecal requirements. Those requirements limit the time such olfenders as truants and runaways can be detained JUVENILE JUSTICE 1976 and makes it illegal to detain them in insitutions where more se rious offenders s uch as youthful burglars and robbers are kept. Busier Than Ever The Cat in t he Ilat look~ on as Dr. St•us~. Theodore Geisel, works on one of the many school primers .llld oth~r books. as well ~ tclcv1s ton shows, v. luth l1t· savs arc keeping things hu.sy rn his La Jolla home and office. The Cat in the fl al ('harnrtcr .st Jrted Scus~ · books on the roud with children and Gc1~cl, 72, toward financ1:.il sue- Former NB Man Held in Arizona A £ormer Newport Beach man Monday turned himself in to Arizona authorities who had been seeking his extradictlon from Orange County to face charges in connection with a ~-5 million land fraud case. Clyde Dinnell. 56, who had made bia hom e at the Balboa Bay Club, was booked into Maricopa County, Ariz., jail and released after posting a $40,000 bond. A s pokesman for the special NB Surfer's Magazine Suit DU missed SAN DIEGO (AP) -A federal judg~ has reversed himseH and dismissed a S6 mlJlion invasion of privacy suit filed by a Newport Beach surfer against Sports JI. luatrated and Time, Inc. Tbe opinion was Issued Mon- day in the case o( Michael S. Virgil who sued in 1971 over an article In the sports magazine calling him "king of the wedge," referring lo a surfing area. The article by Thom .as Kirkpatrick cited Virgil's ex- ploits and described hlm as a man who ate insects and hurt himself to collect unemployment compensation so he would have Ume to bodysurf in the summer U.S . Distric t Court Judge Gordon Thompson Jr., cit.tog a federal standard of newsworthi- ness, said the incidents were "not sufficiently offensive to re· ach the very high level or of. rensiveness necessary ... to looe newsworthiness protection.•• Thompson said the incidents related in the article were generally unnattering but, on the olhel' hand, "they connote n.arly as strong a positive lma,~e as they do a negative one." ''This Is not to say that by e n saging in an activity or leliUmate public interest, one's entire private Ute and past his· lory become fair iame for news media exploitation." Thompson sald. "This opinion should not be re- ad as ln any way endorsin.c no- holda·barred rummacins by the media tbrou1h the private llves of pert0ns eo1aged in activities of public interest under lhe pre- tense or elucldntin1that 1cUvily or tho person's participation m It... l oro!>ecutor·~ off1cl' or t 11 .. An1.orw stak AtlornC'y Gl•rwral smd Din· nell was the la~t of 15 defendants to surrender in th(' case slated to go to trial 1n PhoC'nax 111 Marl'h. Another of th<' d(•fcnd<1nls 1s Dinnell's son Anthony. 28. Irvine. who surrendered to Ariiona authorities last month and was freed on $20.000 bail. All of the pt?oµle involved were officers or employes of a now d('· funct insurance company known as Combined Ef1u1ly /\s!iurancc. The com pany allei;t'dly sold land that was grossly mis- represented and then 11leJ?allv sold the mortgages to other 1n- dJ v1dunls. According to the 93 felony count indictment against tne two Dinnells. the elder man was in charge of the company's land sales operation. though not list('(! as an officer of the firm. I lis son was the company's executive vice president. Bus Finance Chief Quits Robert E . Soulerin has re- signed as the Orange County Transit District's COG7D J direc- tor of finance and administration aft er only three months on the job. OCTD General Manager Ed Lorltz said Soulcrin, who former· ly worked ns a consultant, re- sianed from the $30,000-a-year post Thursday. Loritz said r ec ruitment a lread y has begun for his replacement, and Lontz will fiJI tM post in tbe meantime. Lorllz said h e believed Soulerln decided h is interests lay ln private industry. Court Rules On Beer Bias WASHINGTON (AP) -The $\.lpreme Court has ruled that a state may not set different age minimums tor men and women who may buy "non-Intoxicating'' 3.2 percent beer. The court struck down Monday a n Okla ho rn a s tatute that permitted the sale of 3.2 percent beer lo females over the age ol ll but not to males unW they reach the •1c or 21. I ··No longer can the disobe- dient, the rebellious, the truant and the runaway be sent to Orange County Juvenile Hall " the jury srud. ' "CiUes within the county need to review zoning and other restrictions which impede the establishment of the group homes envisioned under the new law." "'Youth unemployment, depressingly high in some county 'Inside' Probe of F11nd Set A proposal t o hire Orange County Adminis trative Officer Robert Thom as to analyze the way the Oraoge County Transit District COCTD) budgets its money was defeated by directors Monday. Instead of asking Thomas to assign a county budget unalyst to OCTD offices 37 hours euch week, d irectors decided to t•on· sider hiring un nnalye.l of the ir own. Dirt?<'tors Tom Riley, a county supervisor. and Robin Young, u La Habra City Council member, were the only board members Monday who favored a contract with the county. Director William Farris said h.e wasa 't c.oAv1nced OCTD needed to spend what was ex peeled lo be $37 ,000 a year for the county budget analyst And Director Al Hollinden, who also 1s mayor of Fountain Vitlley. l'aid he had not been cnthus1ast1c ubout the proposal all alon~. ··1 think we have to run this transit district as a separall' agency," lfollinden said The propos ed contract JJolhnden claimed, would Just hr ing a county official into<><.. "'I'D 1 o ask a lot of questions and take uµ a lot of lime. Riley, who had proposed thl' county contract , ins1sh'd that us ing Thnmas' office was badly neecled by OCTD Riley had fin t m<1dc his pro posal in Octobc•r "lwn 1!1rcctors tempora ril y hired County Auditor Controlll'r V1 t Jll'1m ab the OCTD au1.hlnr In re1ectinJ( R.ln ·!I proposal, howe\er, 11!1 ct·tor'\ a~ kt'd OCfl> General M;:n~~(·r r-:d l.onlz to dev<>lnp job dl'!lcnpt1on!I for an OCTD bud~el an.ilyst as he al..,o makes 1 lans lo rl'rlaC'f' the audit sen·H'e" H1.·1111 1s Pl'd11rm1n~ with 0 ('1 n·s o" n aurl1tm~ <11·· partmt>nt Oil Foes Ask Brown Help SAN DIEGO CA P ) -Gov. Ed- mund Brown Jr. ilJ b<>ing ask<!d by regional public officials to help In opposing the federal gov- ernment 's planned sale of of. fshore oil and gas leases. The Com pr ehensive Planning Organization voted 13 1, with a National City councilman ln the minority. in ta k Ing thot ~tep Monday. County anrl clly of- ficials charged with r egional planning make up the group. Its chairman. Lorraine Royce, !laid arter m eeting with fcdrral officials last week that Rrown·~ help would be needed to stop the leasing. Something different? Something unusual? We get this request so often When the gift giving season 19 In full swing Perhaps on unusual gem like the speS$ert1te Garnet that we have aet In a clasa1c ring moont1ng with the frame ol 18 small d1amond1. Thia 11ve1v. soarkllng g49m weighing 5 47 carats Is a deep cognac color and would certainly fill tho requirements lor something unusual, and very beaurlful tool Or maybe a lovely chrome Tourmaline. We have one the customers are frequently Inquiring about and desc:rtb109 as ''that beautfful Emerald ... It does look hke an E~ld and the nice part or this Q9m Is rhat even set In a ring with .48 ~m of diamonds accenting its beauty. the coat Is vtry unlike en emerald ring •. , . Just $760.00. We also have Andalusltt s, p!nk Sapphire&, T11vorlles, regions. is another area which must be addressed by city coun- cils," the Grand Jury added. It went on to say It was disap- pointed that the county Board of Supervisors agreed to convert David R. Mc Millan School ror 90-day use to meet N!quirements of the new legislation. However, the jury added. Ume Jlmltalions placed the board ln a position that made McMillan's conve rsion to a shelter care facility neces_sary. Orance c.;o unty r esidents should become ramiliar wilb pro· vlslona of the new law "and as· surne an active role in useaslng present resources and making plans for providing mandat~ services within each com· munlty." "Thia would seem to mean that each city and community must play a ~really enlarged role in caring for its own (minor> offe n- ders," according to the Grand Jury. FIREMEN INSPECT APARTMENT HOUSE WHERE SIX DIED Bodies o f Victims Lie Under Sheets After Hollywood Blaze Six Die in Blaze, Arson Suspected LOS ANGELES CAP) -A fire that m ay have bl!en dclahcratelv set killed ~1x persons and lllJure<J :.> others in a do\\'lltown apurt menl bu1ldmg, fire officials said. Some residents of the stuc<'o two-story structure saved their lives Monday night by jumping from the second floor or lowenn.i.: themselves down the side on chains ·Of bedsheets, officials re- ported. The injured included more than a dozen persons who were criUcally burned. "All of a sudden we saw fire and heard people screaming," saJd Maria Avila, who lived with her three children in the gutted building, "and I got the children and ran out of the building. Thank God we made it." Maria Esperaza, 18, who lives next door , said, "We heard screaming and then saw the fire all over the building. People were running out, bringing out children. "The manager was there try- ing lo get children out of th<' building, everybody kept bnng- ing children out. It was horri- ble." Fire information offi cer Ed Recd, while refusing to flatly state that the fire was started by @ 6EA1 WISE Mary Barr. Cort1f1ed Gemologlsl 17111 • ini.. an arsonist. said, ··our arson people were here in a hurry. and they &ave m ore than a passing interest in what started 1t." The arson theory was raised by the speed with wtuch the blaze spread -it lasted just more than 20 minutes -and reports thal some persons m the building smelled a flammable liquid shortly before the fir e broke out aboutIO p.m . A fire department spokesman said early today that the cause of the blaze was still under in- vestigation. The dead were identified only as five adults and a child whose charred body was discovered by firemen sifting through the smoldering building after flames were out. "We sent five ambulance loads to County.USC Medical center with burns and fractures," a spokesman said. The (ire gutted eight apart- m ents m the 20·un1t building_ which primarily housed families. firemen said. One of the injured was a fireman who hurt his back rescu· ing people from the names. Damage to the bwlding, on Witmer Street just w~t of the central downtown area, w as estimated al $50,000. black Opals. Morganites and a lovely blue precious Topaz. All of them very beaulllul, very d1llerent and unusual. -'nother comment we hear ollen this lime ol the year is "oh, lt "9 dllllcult to find something for a man who has everything.·· We lry to be helpful with sugge911on1 of bluer buttons, qoll toes, stymie markers, 1oolh p1cics. swlzel sticks. book marks, letter openers. luggage 1egs. pill bo11e5, and sron&-topped wina bottle sroppers. Thoso Hem9 are in addition to a wide selecllon of bracelets, neck chains and medallions now ao popular ror the gentlemen. Our aterllng Chrlslrna tree ornamtnla IH A a good suggestion tor hospitality gifts. We have 30 different designs ond they range In price lrOrn SI s to Sl95. Merry Christmas from all your friend• on the stall or Charin H. Barr Jewalor.il Accl ... '4._ Llhr••t Wftfdffft-....._,.,..._. ., . . Ail DAIL y PILOT Tuesday, December 21. 1976 'Boss' Daley Dies Chicago Hierarchy Seeks Leader At last, I Believe HURRY·UP TIME: Pondering the calendar, I am begining to suspect that my time or the season has arrived. We are now getting warnings in the Christmas ads. Like Uus: •'THE LAST CHANCE SALE' Shelf Arter Shelf of Great Gift Savings ... ·• When I read one of these ads, I have to remind myself how I've usually reacled in the pasl. I never really believe it's the last chance. I am the guy who, preparing to motor out across the vast desert wastes. will drive right past the "Last Chance Saloon.'' I don't believe t hem. I figure the owners of the Last Chance are just trying to bent out the competition that is s urely just down lhe road. Usually. it turns oul the Last Chance really was. WITH MY MEMORY of last chances thus jogged, I am now reading the Christmas sale ads a bit more s eriously a5 the days dwindle down lo so precious few. Jusl chec~ some of these ad headlines: "One·Half Price Diamond Sale!" ·'Every Sheet on SaJe ! " "Chris tm as is U n - derwear!" "Nick of Time Gifts." "Only Four Days Until Christmas ." "Ev ery l.1 r l Lo ves Something F ancy " "$1.000 Off (lh1~ on a new t earl." J Thus if you :ir<• •lOC' of u1> among the le$!ion of la'l minute '>hop per~. )OU c·an hardly i.ay you • hav<•n't bct'n warnt><I r for one ' \\on 't he frctt in~ muC'h <>ver the half rmcf• dt::inond .;al<• Nor ci m I Lurnt>rl on m11C'h h~ ~h\'l'ls right now, i.1nc-e I don't h:Ave any t fril·nd~ tn the· K 11 Klw. Kl:m fo'u r lh (•r . I c11dn 't know Chr1!-.lma:-. 1'-un d t•rYo1 •;ir Chnst m JS ll> a lot of thlnJ:!-. to d lot or peopll' Somehow. howe\l•r, I've never linked 1t dll'l'Clly to un mentionabh:s Anvw ;n . som e of th<' ld!-.l• moment Chri-.tmas Jd., leave }Ou with more questions than tht·} answer For t''l(Jmpk . one ,firm advertised, "La i.l Parking Lot Sale ' NOW 'VOL' Ci\~ \\Onder 1( they are lo<;sng th<' parkrng lot Are! they throu~h with sales forcH•r " Wh at's happening he re" Ano the r outfit ~u itgestcd , "Price Riot!>'" Are th(•y f1 J:hltn#! over thl' merchandise in this store" One alcoholic bevrragt• outll'l offered a mos t stra1ghtforwan l m essag e, th u~ "Gt>t Our Crock " Which 1s probobly whHI vou'll want to c1o after tltt• ChnStm as bills roll in Anoth e r O r a n ~e Count y rf'l>taurant ad off erc.od its "Xm a!-. Menu " I won't be <'atm~ then: I don't need ;1 X r att'<i meal SOMF. l.i\ST·MINUTF. ad s '<'l'k )OUr ')m pJthy, hke lhf'on1· I hat declared . L-0..,l Our lA'ase " Another o(fers hope "Tax Reher When You Need II " Through it all. the one messafte that reallv came throu&h was rrom this store that used ju.st one big black word to warn th05e or us to scramble Cor those last -m inute glfU. ltsa1d "NOW!" CHICAGO (AP ) -Ills bodyguards wept, his city was stwmed, and his fellow naUonal leaders expressed grie( at the death of Mayor Richard Joseph Daley, lord or a politicaJ tsefdom whose like may never be seen again. The nation ·s m ost powerful mayor. last or the big-city political bosses, who cultivated family, Jove and, above aJl, party loyaJty, died Monday at 74 or a heart attack in his doctor's or- fice. WITHIN HOURS, while his body was being prepared Lo lie in state today, leaders or the city's aldermen met in his fifth floor Ci- ty HaJI office to probe Chicago's future leadership. State law provides that the city t council, Jong a rubber stamp tor DaJey, select one of of its own as mayor until a special election is held within six months. But Chic ago also has "home rule" under the lllinois Constitu· lion and, conceivably, could change the procedure, legal of- ficials said. UNTIL SOME ACTION is taken. Ald. Wilson Frost, council president pro te rn . may become acting mayor. Ir so. he will be the first black to assume the post in the city's history . P.oss ible permanent s ue cessors include Aid. Mic hael Rilandic, fro m Daley's own ward; Aid. Edward Vrdolyak, from a Southeast Side ward; and the late mayor's son, Rkhard. now a state senator. Daley's body was to lie in state from noon-8 p.m . today at The Nativity of Our Lord Church in th e ma yor 's 8 ridge p o rt neighborhood, where he took dai- ly Communion and from which both his pa rents were buried. Parish Secretary Sh1rley Con- nors said visitors would be :il- lowed to pass by to pdy respN·ts. but would not be permitted to ~•l down. A M as)\ W ll~ planned ror Wednesday. JN A MEMORIAL ser vice at the church Monday night, parish pastor The Rev John J . Lydon fought back tears al the service. "We the people of Bndge port are perhaps the most pn v1lcgcd people in the c-1ty," he said "We Pres ide nt F o rd says he p lans lo s ki nearly every day of his two-week vaca- tion at Vail. Col o .. and says he finds conditions "very good -excellent." despite the scarc ity of snow. knew him in a way no one else could. He was warm with a shy smile and shared jokes. When he said. 'How are you?• he meantit. "He shared the good and the bad with us. He was man who would reach out to help you before he was asked to. This man chose a hfe of service to the peo- ple oC Chicago and he gave his all. .. DALEY HAD GONE to see his personal physician, Dr. Thomas Coogan Jr.. Cor a regularly scheduled vis it, complaining of chest pains. Coogan ordered an electrocardiogr am, confirmed an irregular heart beat and le(t his office to make emergency ar- rangements at a nearby hospitaJ. Daley telephoned one o( his seven children, Michael. He ap- parently concluded the conversa- tion and then collapsed. Coogan, paramedics and doc- tors fro m Northwestern Memorial Hospital tried desperately for nearly two hours to revive Daley as family mem- bers recited the Rosary in his of- fice. DALEY WAS PRONOUNCED dead at 3:40 p .m. csr (1 :40 p.m. PST), a nd a rule that spanned three decades ended in a breath- less Last Hurrah. Eulogies poured in. President Ford, vacationing in Va ll , Colo .. c alled Daley "a towering fig ure on the American scene." President-elect Carter eaid he was "deeply saddened" by the death or .. a great and good Cr1end to m e and a gre at Democratic_leader ." SEN. EDWARD M. Kennedy <D-Mass .>. whose brother. John. received both Daley's blessings and the votes from Cllicago that gave him Illinois in his 1960 pre- sidential victory, called Daley ·•one or America's greatest mayors." James R . Thompson. a Republican who beat Daley's handpicked candidate for gov- ernor Nov. 2. said "a part of Chicago died." Thompson. who as U.S. proseculor jailed several of Daley's cronies for offi cial 'COr- ruption. said, "I am saddened by his death. His s pirit, his force, bis style and his 'I will" attitude made this c ity what it is, a great city." New York Mayor Abraham Beame struck a theme common among m any big-city mayors. saying Daley's death "marks the passing or one ,of the strongest, best-known mayors o( this cen- tury." - WORD OF DALEY'S death was slow in coming. the uncer- tainty reminiscent or the stroke he suffered in May 1974. He r e· quired surgery at the time but went on to win an unprecedented sixth term as mayor. At that time, friends and roes alike con- curred he'd have the job as long as he lived. Dr. John Sanders Jr .. i a sur- geon and one of the doctors from Northwestern Memorial who was summoned to Coogan's oHice. 11aid he doubts the "mayor knew what happened to him." "H this would have happened m the coronary unit of a major hospital, the resull would have been lhe same." COOGAN SAID DALEY ar- rived at his office about2 p.m. "He told m e he had a very brier episode or pain in his chest which lasted a Cew seconds." s aid Coogan, who was a close friend. "When I examined him. I found an atrial ribritlation, which is an abnormal rhythm, in the upper part of his heart, and I felt he should be in a hospital." 'Snow Dancers' Fail Liberty Bowl Marks Winter's Start "'"' L-""'~· Albany •• .. °' Al~rQut •• ·~ AmHtllo " 11 ""'""'-,. 1S All.,,IA "" 70 70 '"'"'' ...... "' tO n 44 9htN•Ck 10 , .,. .. u. I llo$1on •• n u 81111•10 •• ll .:i. O..r!fllOft ~s " ,. 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""· Jl is l"otll-.Of•. •t :n lllOldClty tt It S«r~o ,. » 5.1 LOuls ,, • ~" L.elrt l l IO SellFr-111<0 •• • Sullle .. ., Sjllll-,. ti T-,. •• Tlwfm.I 1) • WWW~Oft » • .14 ,,, 11 .JI • ·'' n .1. 11.s. s ••••• .,, Olt llllt fll"lt di, _. Wl111tr, cotd lllr Woutl\t --lltt•rdnvs drl•l"9 ~''°"' le ...... ., tllt n•lkln. llut Ill lftdltfl ."" f•lled to ((MIX tflOw tn 'blorMD, ~ !Kttl""tmtn In Menlo ""'' reti..t on lou; "low "11t111,., Mid lllt llhrly On .. t IO• t Wlllll °"t.llllHOlty•Cl•tonly IJOtorHi Te"1-t1Urt1 Ill Ille 10. •nclff 111rvo111 wllen on ere.Ile cotd ..... "'°"94 t11to ~llltllllt and Al«lolM llfft UCLA W. '· '" V<MI C••o. C"IUllltd .. ..., VI• I ... OI-fMf\C H to the Offl t i IOM-IOl'M In llrl9flC 1111'1\lllM Mid 111 ... ,, ... Mot> doly In I 'VIiie -•I 10 '"" c;r ... 1 s.ltft .,,, -111 Ith w111" 111• lttlf Vin lllrliH''""'· • , .. ,.. ... ,,.d ••I --..,..., Wfllrill .... , by ,_ ,_ .. -A'-..-11wr• cent" owr '*"""" ""'Yer• ,.,,tlll\IH lo P•-.C. I.At°" IOCI ..... •cr01\ lllt Grut Uktt NOIOft, ~ ._, Ofllo veuo •1>d ~'" ti# I~ ""'111 AltM\ltC coul •l•le•. The snow Wt\ C"'"''"J l>trarOOU~ drlvl119 toncll· llOft• f(ron r>0<tlo11S of,,,.-• Calfterrala A ftw tlcNdt wlll cnt ttlfolr INdew\ -5outMnl Caltfoml• tflrouQtt,,,.. wttk, bwt not •"•11011 10 ll'l•r otl>lenorke mlld -'"""' ,...n.tf. 0ev1•-~.,. • .i.,.., •Nuld"""' tr •r-..ct .. ,..., -"lOWft ~ Af\"IH, Wftfl• elOt19 , ... C-1 JI Wlould bl lour to five de9rMscooter. Thnlol9fl n. lf\ltll<I .,., .. "' ,,_.,,. S... ,..__ to Ille SM hrnM'dl"O, ~ ll!ollld, ... -·--'-'-" .Al mo.iM•l11 ·•-b, .,.~ tNlitd v ... y fr-tt.. II~ «IS to Mid IOt, Willi "'OM' 111 I,_ to, • .._ ao. 11-,.. 11\f "'et> deMl'O ll'llllld 119,.. de'n llftr 60 -lllG'lti -IOI Wflfle _, '"'°"' Wiii lie fl .. lo 10 ...,... .... ,.,,.,. . I air w.clM"'•r wflll lllohs ,.,., 70. LICllll .,.rlable wfflOt 11\qllt af\d imorf11119hour\. Hloh•frOl'flUfo 1t . CN•t•I 1empera1urt w111 ••"Ot MhllHll st tf\d lt, I f\la1>d lt"I -"'"'" wllf ••IWlt bfllw"" 4' .-Id .. The wtter l•l'fl1Mr•lu1e wtfl bl t.I. Sun, ltloon.. Tldf!• TUUOAY SoKond•-»•>o "'· ,,. SK-111911 10 U o "" • • WIONUOAY ~Intl-J-10• l'fl. '' """*"~ •. ,, •. ,.,,. • .. WeMlew • JOpm. 14 ~OftCIMOI> 10 Jto m •-' S...ntoo·U• m ... 1u "'"'"· ~nw11t'6•'" M••S n om Coogan said when he returned to the room atler maJdng ar- rangements. "he was on his chair, but unconscious and wit.bout a heartbeat." The doctor said he spoke with Michael Daley after the mayor's death and "he tMtcbael) told me he had seemed fine on the telephone.'• WHEN SANDERS AND Dr Barry Shapiro arrived, Daley's eyes were "open and ftxed.'' his Ups blue, according to Shapiro. "We gave him artirtclal respiration, and there was oo spark or life. At no lime did we think of open chest surgery." Shapiro said. Shapiro said that when be ar- rived, be made an incision ln the right side of Daley's chest to let out trapped air. Shortly after. more incisions were made. THE DOCTORS APPLIED ·electrical defibrtuation. When the external heart and pulmonary massage did not work. they injected the stimulant epinephrine. "There were no encouraging signs anywhere along the way," Shapiro said. Daley had had a full day Mon day. HI S LAST PUBLI C ap - pearance was posing with a San- ta Claus at 12:30 p.m. at the de dicatlon of rteldhous e at a neighborhood park. A devout Roman Catholic. Daley WM baptized in 1902 al the Bridgeport church and was mar- ried there in 1936. A,.Wlrt ..... I• RICHARD DALEY'S DEATH STUNS CITY . Most Powerful Mayor Succumbs to Heart Attack Dozens Reported Dead Lebanon Battle Flares BEIRUT , Lebanon (AP) P ro-Syrian and anti -Syrian Pale stinian g uerrillas biitlled each other Cor four hours today with mortars, rocket s a nd machine guns in camps on the south side o( Bci rut. Dozens qr casualties were re· ported. It was the second out break or fighting belWf'Cn the two factions with•n a week mE PALESTINE Liberation Organization a nnounced a ceai.e- fire four hours after the fighting started. Many street-; were closed to traffic. and the m ain tu~hway to the recently reopened airport wal> declared unsa(e. Police said Synan troops and tanks surrounded the camps and allowed only a m bu lances through their lines. Reµorts tha t the Syrians opened fire in an attempt to stop the fi ghting could not hl• confirmed "P EACEKEEPING FOUCF.S were ru~hed to cordCJn off th<' fighting a r e:is. ' a Lr birnP'ic police s pokesm an s<iid "/\II i;chools in the v1c1n1tywereclost·d a nd s tu de>nts sent h ornt· Prelimina r y re>po rt.o; at pol11·c headquarters l>ay dozens w1.•rc killed or wounded " He added t hat c:imbulance<; were unable> to reach ~ome areas where ther e was he:l\') fi ghting and that "many wounded people lay bleeding on the battle scenes w1thout any help." Palestinian s pokesmen would not comment. SKETCllY REPORTS SAID radical g uerrillas orthe Rejection 1-~ront were righting with troops of the Syrian-sponsored Saiqa or- ~anizalion . Dozens of persons ~ere reported killed or wounded in clashe>s last week between the two factions in the Beirut camps and in a camp in Tripoli. The police spokesman said new fi ght ing broke out al dawn in the Sabra camp and quickly spread te> other Pal<.'s linia n areas. The Christian Phalange party's radio station reported that Syrian tanks and r ocket launchers pounded the Sabra, Chatilla and Bourj el- Barajnch Palestimancamps. Kitchen Help for the Holidays Look to the food pages of the Daily Pilot for timely tips on menu planning, especially during the holidays Food Editor Barbara Gius offers a host or ideas and recipes to help you add sparkle to your holiday menus for family or friends. Along with guidance to the best food values of the season, you '11 find holiday bargains among the adve rtisements placed by the Orange Coast's leading grocery markets . For extra ·kitchen help during the holidays, tum to the food pages in the People section of the Wednesday DAILY PILOT 642-4321 ~~Delp s~en in . Drought ' By The Aaaoetakd Press A weak, water·totln& cold front aat off the tar North Coast today, but te slated to be ripped to shreds before it can come ashore and relieve the worst drought in a ·• century. It will be fair and haiy through r ~ Northern California's Christmas ~ holiday, the Weather Service said. f ? r . The Monster high pressure system that has "protected " Northern California from storms that seasonally arnve at this time of year rem ams m place. Ba~ Pa11• Ranaont SAN GABRIEL CAP> -An ex· tortionist who threatened to blow up a Security Pacific BanJ< bwld· lng bas made off v.ith $37 ,500 m ransom. A bank official eaid he received a telephone call Cro'1t a man who claimed that dynamite had been State ~ planted od the fOOflof the building and would be de1onated by re· mote eontrol unl,ss the money was left in a ba' urider the wheel of a car parked nearby. The bank ·~official complied then called • , .. police. ~atlo•Seen LOS ANGELES CAP> -or. ficials say a desegregation plan for the huge, polyglot Los Angeles city school dJstrict will begin next fall, endmg years of battles in and out of court. ~ It is uncertain whether the tJ plan, disclosed MoDday by Jerry Halverson, associate superinten· dent of the 600-school system, will include busing Superior Court Judge P~ks Stillwell. 58, who \\'\II oversee 1m- •11 plementation or the plan, is 1'• 1 scheduled to condirt hearings on 11 it in March and Apnl. ·, SAN SIMEON CAP> -The elegant Hearst Castle, closed •); since a teleohcned threat of .• r· sniper fire wa) made after Patricia Hearst appeared in a nationally televsed interview , , last Thursday, req>ened today. ,· " The decision to ·eopen the cas· ;·1 • tle built by her la~ grandfather, "' Wtlliam Randolp• Hearst. was made after consul13tion with the -Sz.n Luis Obispo C•unty shcriff"s , office, state Park :tld R~reation Director Herbert Rhodes said Monday. . . l • I I I I Venue Oaanse Dett~d SALINAS CAP) -Defense al· tomeys say they will go to a higher court to wn a new trial site for Inez Garcu. who's bcm.i: retried on r h:irgt'> of murder ing a man she !>ay,helpt'd to rape her. Monterey Co(nty Superior Court J udE:'C' i':at f\f[liano rcjert- ed a reQUC'lt f~ a chan~e of venue Monday saying ·the questioning of p;Jape<'l!Vt Jurors so far has failed i 11how "!'IJtntfi· cant bias ·again~ Mn. Garcia. I W--ere No Pla<!e Like Home Some cats jus t have it better than others. For example. .Jag, left, Ziggy, center. and Rosa, belonging to John Rux- ton of Salinas. have their very own apartments. Ruxton. who bwlt them for 'em 1n his front yard, says they are great for watching the world go by or as a shelter in case some unfriendly pooch s hows up. Mission Indians Nix Nuclear Bid SAN DIEGO CA P) -The Mi s- sion Indians are asking that the California Energy Comnussion reject an application by San Diego Gas & Electric Co. to build the Sundesert Nuclear Powt•r Plant. The high -volta~e lines would go through or near the Indian~· reservation, they said in a docu- mC'nl ft led Monday by the Brad/,ey Kin Nabbed Again LOS ANGELES <AP> - Los Angeles Mayor Tom Bradl ey's 31-year -old daughter bas been arrest- ed again on drug t'harges Phy llis Brad ley was taken into custody on a ch a rge o f possessin g dangerous drugs after an early mo rnin g chase throuch city streets Mon- day. Officers said they found the animal tranquilizer PCP, known as "anJ.:l'I dust." in her purse when they stopped he r car. She was released on $500 bond after paying a $65 fine on an old traffic warrant. California Indian Legal Services. THE UTILITY, they said. fruh.•d to notify them that 500· kilowatt transmission corridors would go through the Indian land. Afte r the action, San Diego Gas disclosed that the estimated cost of $300 million to $310 million for the transmission facilities failed to mclude the cost of purchasing more than 400 miles of right of way. A spokesman said it was impossible to estimate because much of the land was federally owned. MARK URBAN. nn attorney r epresenting the California Energy Commission, said be was "totally s urprised " that the right-of-way lines were not in- cluded in the cost esl.Jmate . A cost of $2 billion for the pro- posed nuclear power plant near Blythe m Riverside County was announced by the utility until r e· cently. when n e ws r eleases I began describing the cost as $2.3 biUion. FORAllOFUS • Unit.a~ Tueed.:y, Doc •moor 21. 1976 Ct" LY r .LOT ..45 Tax Relief Plan Told· LegUlators Mull Brown'a Open Letter SACRAMENTO (AP) -Top legislative leaders found some things they Uked in Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. 's open letter on property tax relief. They also found some t.h.inis to disagree with. ''Our point.a of view are toeether two·thirds of the way," Assembly Speaker Leo McCarthy said Mon- day after the Democratic governor Issued a letter outlining what he wants to see in a property tax pro-gram. JN THE STATEMENT released Sunday Brown said he supports "prompt but honest property tax relief" but said that will not come by "raising sales and Income taxes to reduce laxes on property." "Such an approach merely changes the form but not the substance," Drown said. McCarthy <D·San Francisco), and others have said lhe state may not be able to provide adequate property tax relief and meet court-ordered school financing requirements without some ktnd of a tax boost. BROWN'S LETTER also says that any property tax relief program should: .Mental Hospital Probes Continue NORWALK (AP) -The chief of Metropolitan State Hospital says six employes have been dis· ciplined over incidents involving worker conduct with patients and the action is only "the tip of the iceberg." Mal Towery. executive director of the hospitaJ, said Monday action against the six unidentified workers, including two program directors, included suspensions and pay cuts. "There is no doubt the list will grow as the in- vestigators conclude other cases and forward their reports to me.'' THE HOSPITAL has been investigated for ques- tionable patient deaths, including lhree this year that a coroner's jury decided the victims "died at the hands of another other than by accident." Meanwhile, five more persons have been charged in connection with the investigation of mental pa- uent deaths at Camanllo Slate Hospit al, including twodoctors accused of mans laughter. The doctors who surrendered Monday were Jack Borel and Leroy E. Moore Sr. -Restrain state and local government spending. -Allow residential and business property to be assessed at different levels so that "bu1inesa pays Its hiatorical share of local property taxes," a ltep some legislative leaden said would lead to a tu boost for business. -Target relief •'to those homeowners hardest hit. and in most need.·· mE LAST TWO points are Included in a $200 million relief plan outlined laat month by Brown's finance director, Roy Bell, that includes a split as· sessment system and targets aid to the middle and low-income homeowner. Currently all property is assessed at about 2S per· cent of market value. McCarthy said he agreed with most points in the letter but said it might be necessary to raise other taxes to provide both property tax relief and to meet the Serrano school financing decision. Find whot_you WEREN'T lool~ing for. If you're shopping for something specific. chances ore pretcy good chat Fashion Island hos it Due the true fun of shopping is browsing. Discovering something special. 5ometh1ng you weren't really lool~lng for. That's the excitement of shopping at Fashion Island. Over 60 fine scores offer o kaleidoscope of choices. So you never con tell whot you might find • If you JUSt fool~ 1n the right place. JR -,.....a FASH~ ISLAND NEWPORT# CENTER r c ;:;;i I n;;;,;11 ' • :x: I v F I u: =· e ., a All d R ·R, ,. -, 1 Ski learen/1 Ea111-1 I Four days, three nights from $53.00 1rrs•1HYRLAJ1 ...J I I I I .AIR C.ALIFORNIA. we·re easy to take. can I get Lifeline Tel .'-'1one year around warmth and comfort from I Se ice? 1c Telephone. traduced Lifeline Telephone nee customers with f 1xed or limited incom We offer 11 now for $2.50 o month for a Ii ited amount of kx:ol colling. Additional us costs more. If Lifeline f 1rs 'PU' income, coll your Pacific Telephone Serviq Representqt1ve. I In. OrOflO• COunty. so" Ooeoo. • • oreot uf 1t.e Eott Boy ond f'on•Mvlo L @t'aem; ... . - ~p~ " 44 fashion island, newport center 644·5070 >· • ·- ,;16 DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Facts to Face Jn time of peace-and certainly at this ~ason dedicated to peace and good will- lew topics are less popular than the grim l:>usiness of national defense, and espedally ~Janning and spending tor military hardware which may never be needed or used. percent to $82 million-and in many areas is barely f unclioning. So President Ford's lame duck decision to auU1orize limited production of the B-1 bomber was greeted with something less than enthusiasm. At issue in the next SALT sessions wiU be the new Soviet Backfire bomber-which we know has a range ol 6,000 miles though the Russians claim only 1,000-and the U.S. cruise missile, which the Soviets would like to see outlawed. It could be quite comfortable for the United States to decide at this point to hold back on defense production, in the interest of detente (and to avoid spending too much money). · : Why bother with this sort of nonsense when everyone-including the Russians- knows we theoretically have enough at-0mie missiles and bombs to wipe out most of Russia-and vice versa? This knowledge surely should make all-out nuclear war un- thinkable. Unfortunately. there is no indication the Soviets have any intention whatever of do- ing likewise, SALT notwithstanding. But that overlooks the fact that it doesn't necessarily take a major war to radically change the balance of power-and balance of freedom -in the world. The more real threat now is from a successful military blackmail where we would be faced with the awful choice of launching the ICBMs or helplessly do nothing. Since B-1 bombers and cruise missiles can't be conjured up in useful numbers in a matter of weeks or even months, waiting until a crisis or confrontation awakens everyone to the need won't be much help. The United States wants no new wars. But strength is the fundamental deterrent and continued delays and cutbacks in U.S. defense commitment could too easily be in- terpreted as an open invitation to renewed Soviet power grabs. Then what do we do? In Western Europe, NATO leaders are viewing with increasing alarm a gradual shift of Soviet military forces from de- fensive to offensive. · What if they should decide it's time, for example, to realize their long-held dream or control of all of Germany? Or of moving to the Mediterranean coast? How could the United States deter or counter this short of all-out atomic war? Happier News Much more in keeping with the spirit of good will is the latest news from United Way of Orange County. I Or what if the idea is to literally hold us For years the coWlly, despite its af- fluence, has had one of the poorest ratings in per capita giving. hostage in Western Europe to permit Russian power moves into the Middle East or into new Angolas "? But this year, despite inflation and soaring taxes, United Way's Orange County campaign has registered a 16 percent in- crease in fund raising-the highest increase in the state. We know the Soviets are experimenting with "hunter-killer" type satellites and the Pentagon has admitted concern for the safety of our own satellites. Orange County still has a way to go to improve its standing on the generosity scale, but the funds, which go toward sup - port of 76 human service agencies, are especially needed this year. We know they have undertaken an 1enormous and unprecedented naval buildup which now has far-reaching offensive c apability. And the figures are welcome evidence of community concern for those less fortunate. We know they spend $1 billion a year on a complex civil defense program, while our 9wn c ivil defense allocation has been cut 25 Payrolls Boost Taxes Scdary Ceilings for Officials Es sential .. While it now appears a near certainty that lbe 1977·78 •L egislature is serious about effecting tax relief for tlomeowners their remedies will ~be merely treatment or the symptoms rather than eradication or the dJSease unless 1hey act to bridle speoding. For that '" the virus that has brought about the s piral ling cost s or government to the point or exorbitance. • Lawmakers ~d even the governor bustled about Jas l week ,-ead ying -J>roperty tax reform proposals or :all sorts. Thtlr <OQCern evidenc~ the growine 4'evolt or the voters to property taxes which have become cppresslve. The governor and the legislators are fully aware that unless meaningful action is now taken property taxes will be the kt'Y 1~sue in the 1978elections. ASSURING THAT that this wtll be so is the property tax i.n1tJaUve being processed by Los Angeles County Tu Assessor Phil Watson and the threats by others lnclud· ing San Diego Mayor f'ete Wlllwn, toalsoofferinitiatives. But whatever plans are ad· vanced they can only be shifts of laxes, regardless of what they , are called, unless the way 1s ( EARL WATERS ] . regardless of the ProPnetY ol thet. · salaries paid, lt puts tbe finger squarely on where the reductions in spending must be.made. ._' found to curtail spending. And the attention should be centered on local government where, in . eight years, property lax revenues have increased by $5 billion despite the huge increases in outside revenues from federal and state government. The state alone bas upped its budget $1.4 billion this year for allocations to the locals just in property tax exemption reimbursements. SINCE THE authority for local governments stem from the extension or the state's power, it I is within the jurisdiction of the Legislature to place limitations oo both the taxation and spending by local government. This includes the school and special districts as well as the cities and counties. While any contention thet the Legislature should impose limits can be scoffed by opining that il is easier said than done, there is one sure and simple way to put a . handle on spending. Place a ceiling on the salaries oC top officials al all levels. For the plain fact is that government payrolls are the root of all the taxation problems. For most governmental entities the payrotl constitutes 8S percent or the total budget. While that percentage would probably be true The factors which encourage the expanaion of governtn.ent payrolls are too numerous· to dwell upon. There is no question that most agencies could reduce staff with no perce ptible diminishing of essential services. Unfortunately, when pressed because or budget limitations. administrators most often make cuts which have the greatest public visibility rather than where they hurt the least or not at all. It is their way of keepfng the pressure on the public for more taxes. And that problem is not easily solved. BUT THE otheT aspect of payrolls, the excessive salaries, can be readlly remedied All the Legislature needs to do is decree that no top public official at any level will be paid more than bis counterpart at the state level. Actually the pay shouldn't be more than 90 percent of the state pay. If a local public executive thinks he should be paid as much as the governor he should go into private industry. With fewer than 50 percent of Californians earning as much as · $10,000 a year and only 276,000 making more than $30,000 annually, salaries for government officials of more than $SO,OOO are not just excessive, they are scandalous. Sharing Our ~ongressmen An uneasy coalitioo of con- serv all on is tll, patriots, tax· payers and poUtlcal ref armers ia demanding a total embareo on the sale or u .s. Concresamen to roreip nations. Current revdallons or the wholesale purch~ of American Confreasmen 10 recent years by the South Korean government (fol' one) have created furoT. "Frankly, we dldn 't re- alize what a national treasure we had," said a spokesman roe th~ Preserve the Wild l.Ue Society. "By our last count there are only ~of t.bem. We f oel atronal,y that they ahotdd be dedared an en- dangered apecles and that CapU.ol JUU be set uJdo u a ConJreulonal B.reedlng Groond -otr limits to rePQl'len frqm the Wasblo1ton Poat and other )Jl"mient.-mlnded voyM&tS." PAT&IOTS •ppeared snore concerned about, tbere betnf ~'aometh1D1 un1Amerlcan ill tba • ( ARTHOPPE ) 0 sale of the nation's Coogressmtn to Sooth Korea. "Millions of honest, decent, bard-working Americana can't afford a Congressman ol their own," said Sergeaot·at-Arms Compton Stockpole of The Valley Force Fo~ever League. "How come these lousy little gooltl think they can march right in and take all tbey want~ to mucb as aby-7our·leave?" A somewhat. less fevered IP" pro•cb was taken bJ Walter W1laby of The Uttle Taxpayers Alsoclation. Wilsby, five.feet· ·one, said be objected to the Korean1 buying Congressmen in order to insu re tbat 40,000 American troops would remain . in Sol&b K01'fla. .. Hect, we could use that m1n1 In my neflbbot'bood llooo." he lad, upartlcularlY afttt dark. A.ad, bealdet, just lbe ether d'1 J bad to pay a IVY 50 bucks to trim a tree out tn rtoot ol my house - oat ctlt lt clown. m1Dd you, but. Jmt&l•e It a trlm.'' WOaby •uu•ted aimpbo ave-, Uoninc off tbe Congressmen to the highest American bidders. He aaid be relt "hm:tdreds of dollara" could be raised in this fubion and used to reduce taxes. "And even If they c1on•t bring in that much," be said, "the savinc on tbelr uPkeeP would be worth a bundle." A SPOKESMAN for Jimmy Carter, bow ever, said the President-elect had already re- jected th.lJ plan u uodemocraUc. Alfred Pablt bud of Mr. Carter'• Pabst Blue Ribbon Com· mls&ton oo conir...son.a Salee,. said th• croup favored • dollar tu cbeck.otf plan inlteed. Under t bta p roposal, all cltbena would be •bait to cbedt a b ox lab eled "l'or Your Coniru1111an.. on IMir lneome tu returns. U they dkl so, tbe In· temal Revenue &nice would reepond by malltn1 ~ eaeh a dollar blU In a pla1D want. • vtlope -whlcb tM:1 woolcl tlMa allp under the table (or. whlUvtr) to tbelr C-oNrtaman. ''We atroniJ,J feel we wW De¥S' have true parlklpatoq, de- IDOC!l'ac1,., aa1d Pablt. "uDtU evflty Amtrieu 1.-... rr lbe own:1 ~eol aCuaipWllm•,. - . ... • .. Conscience of t h e Senat e Goldwater's Campaign WASHINGTON -Sen. Hub e rt Humphrey, D.· Minn., isn 'l the only former pre- sidential candidate who would now like to become a Senate leader. The 1964 GOP standard bearer, Sen. Barry Goldwater, R.-Ariz., is waging a less publicized - campaign for the minority leadership. He had con- sidered seek-ing the post two years ago, but Sen. Hugh Scott, R .Pa .• wanted another term as Senate Republican leader. Goldwater de- cided, therefore, not to challenge bis friend Scott, but to put off his ambition until 1977. Among conservatives, Goldwater is regarded as the conscience or the Senate. His re- putation was so formidable dur- ing the Watergate years that he thoroughly intimidated Richard N°1'10n. · The deposed president planned his W~ergate strategy, accord- ing to foriner intimates, with one eye on Goldwater. Nixon deathly ·feared that Goldwater. who has a strong sense or decency. could undermine him with the con· servatives in Congress. IN THE END , it was Goldwater who headed the GOP deleeation that called on the em· battled president and apprised him of his plight the day before he resigned. For the senator from Arizona, it was a wasted meeting. "Talk· ing with Mr. Nixon," he told us, "was never a profitable thing ... I now doubt that Richard Nixon ever told me the truth in all the years I've known him." Goldwater tossed his wavy gray hair, indicating his Senate office. "I sat in here and though~ about it the other day," he said. "The one thing Important to re- member is that anything Nixon does, he does for Richard Milhous Nixon." Goldwater is a handsome man, with tanned, clean-cut features. His blue eyes twinkle behind black·rlmmed bifocals as he boasts how, al age 67, be weighs the same as he did when he played high school football. Abstinence from coffee and tobacco, coupled with a SOO-yard swim whenever possible, helps to keep him healthy. HE IS ALSO an inveterate tinkerer. He built his own TV set. He also personally customized his AMX sports car with every conceivable gadget, including a compass. wind meter and telephone. He is a talented photographer and an experienced ham operator. He also likes to note that be bas Oown alm01t every American military plane that 'has been produced since World War II. Now, be would like to get back into act.Ion aa the Senate GOP leader. GUM KEllOltlAL-Behind a small wooden bu(. guarding the eotrulee to Kentucky'• deadly Scotia mtne, hangs a single creea wreath. It ls not a autatmu decoration, but a izim Dear Gloomy ·Gus t All Amtrak wanl1 for Chrf.ltmu la • betta' track rteOrd. CA.SEY JONES " (JACK ANDERSON) memorial for the 26 men who died in the mine last spring. They were victims of two terri· fying explosions, which ripped through the mine. The disaster, like many before it, could have been avoided. For the Scotia mine is a monument to broken federal mine safely laws. We sent out roving reporter-, Hal Bernton, into the coal fields to find out why the mine safety laws aren't better enforced. He found that the federal mine in- spectors are underpaid, over- worked and harassed. They crawl through miles of narrow, damp passages, check- ing roof supports, measuring methane gas levels and checking air ventilation. Their reward is likely lo be a churlish reception, perhaps even physical violence. from the rugged mine operators. COMPLAINED one inspector: "You can make more money roofbolting the mines than you can as an inspector. What incen- tives do you have to crawl into every damn doghole? You are s ubject to constant abuse wherever you go. "You like to think you might have saved some daddy from getting killed. But merchants blackball you. And when you serve an order on an operator, he may draw his pistol and send bis dog after you.'• The physical danger is a real problem. Attacks on mine in· spectors aren't uncommon in the I brawling mining towns or Ap- palachia. Yet. Congress not only neglected to tnake it a federal crime to assault a mine inspec- tor, but the victimized inspectors are required to pay their own bills. The salaries are also poor. One • inspector swore to Bernt.m: "In my first 10 months as an inspec- tor. I earntd only $S,100. I worked three months as a coal miner and earned $5,000." The inspectors also com· plained that their condemnation orders are constantly ftxed. by their superiors who negotiate at the upper levels with the mine operators. ~You start out as a re· gulator,'' grumped an inspector, "but soon f ou become the re- gulated. The operators go to your higher· ups." Since 1970, the inspectors have discovered µterally thousands of safety law violations and have levied over $66 million in flnes. Yet the lnttrlor DepL bas been able to collect only $29 mlllion. THE COAt companies have been able to ~t out of paying by swampinf the federal bureaue!racy'l# with paperwork. The understued office has been inundated wli11 more than 20,000 requests for foe reductions. As a result, I~t~ior I>ept. lawyers have tbe1r Drlercases packed with mine sa'ety cases. The govenment is now collect- ing 80 percmt or the penalties that have be n imposed. But the small penal•es are likely to be charged off'!<> the consumers as operating e>c>enses. They aren't much of a de-erreot, therefore, to k~ the c~l companies from breaking thelaw. Can You Discover· What's in ConJm,.on? It's been many a moon since we've bad an "AJI in Common" quiz, which is almost as hard to devise as to answer. Today's is more than normally difficult, so J've offered a few clues, with a score of one-third right a good passing mark. What do the following items in each set have in common? (SYDNEY HA RWS) dolor, and pt }6'? 12 . .What ~~tinculalped these men: Gerr , Klng, Dallas, Hobart,and banka? ANSWEU: 1. What famillar mechanical contraption is divided into these types: Horizontal, Post, Smock, American, and Aerodynamic? · 2. What early consumer pro- ducts were called "Bon Ton," "Fragrant Vanity Fair," "Three King_s, .. "Old Judge," and "Can- vas 1$ack"? 1. Types oOvlndmills. 2. Earlit brands of ~ .S. clearets. I. •Named aftef re•l penot>.S~. Mac~. Sen .. tt ~-.. Keyaton Kops. 5. H\f'Un« ·tnlf e. e. 3. Beyond the obvious fact that they all are makes of automobiles, what is the com· mon li,nk among Chevrolet, Pon- tiac, Dodge, Oldsmobile and Studebaker? 4. \VQat generic title did these film performers share: Mack Riley, Edgar Kennedy, Slim Summerville, Bobby Dunn, and Hant Mann? 5. Whal parts of a common ob- ject are these: Pommel, Rlcasso. Choi!, Quillon, and Fuller! 6. What famous enterprise is named after these five brothers: Albert, Alfred, Charles, John, 'and Otto? 7. In put centuries, what were Scutage, TalJage, Cess, Gabel and Aids? 8. What ia the melodic thread uniting these musical compoet- tlooa: Haydn 's "~mperor's Hymn," Beethoven s "Batlle Sym phony 1 •• von Weber's ''lubllee Otfertu:re." 8Tabm's •·tri~phlied,f' and Debussy'• . "PldtWtck"? 9. What are tbelo aet.MUes ' mentioud ln Shakespeare'• play&: Galliard, Lavolta, Couraote, Canari.c9., and Dump! 10. Wbe.ce would you ftl)d the tollawlne: Hoy, Collier. Corvette, Smack. and Dandy? lL Wbat would you diacnose lf ;~detected: rubor, Nmor, color., Rlngl~C BrOIJ~ra Circus. 1 7. Ear. ly~ms of taxation ~ tribute. 8. elude "God~a tile Queen" nown here as 0 CounU., 'Tis •f Thee"). 9. dances.~. the.seas, as salli1* vessels. u. Tbey a.re the n• tloo: r a. s~ feve claaslc • om• ot ~amml pUD, •Dd I pall'ID«lt ol f&D\ tlon. 12. v~~ Prealdea&.a of U.S. DA LY PILOT Robffl N Wttd, PuOiuMr ThorrtG.!Ktniil. ~diJor &lrfWG Ktriblcll. Edllonal Po.gc Editor • • I The edltllri page of the Dally Pilot seek to Inform and stimulate readers by pNMDUng on this paa <I verse commentary on topics Interest b)' syndical· ed column ts and cartoonlsta, by providing forum for J"eQdOfl' views an I>)' presenUng this newspape • oplnlons and tdeu nn cutren lopte11. Tht editorial opinions o he Dally Pilot •PJ>tar only Jn th ltorlal column at the top or th ,P•ae. Oplnlona ex· presatd by the columnists and cutoonlsta •nd teller writen are their ~n ·~ no end2,fkmcint ol th r fteq by the DaltJ PU~ •should be lntrred. · Tuc!'d1y December 21 1 ~711 OAILYPILOI A7 Nuclear Pro Turns Foe Dangers Cited by Sc~ntiat in Suitch LA JOLLA (AP) -Physicist Hans Alfven says he no longer is one or the world's leading propo- nents of nuclear power. Quite the opposite. In the last decade, says the 68-year·old Nobel laureate, be has slowly changed his mind and today believes nuclear energy "cannot compete" and may be too dangerous !or its value to mankind. "THE PAONVCLEAR argu. ments were transferred by the pronuclear people ln Sweden. The important thing was to transfer also the other view, namely that it was a highly con· trovenial issue In this country. My views are that I had been strongly pronuclear for a very long lime but that the arguments -the critical arguments -have to me become more and more convincing." Control. at least, seems to be doubtful. "The second argument i.s the connection between nuclear energy and nuclear bombs and especially the proliferation or nuclear bombs. "TIIE THIRD JS that there are so many other ways of solving the energy problem. SAYE THE WHOLESALE WAY TIEH • SHRUIS • HOUSI PUHTS IQ.OW WHOUSAl! PllCES OM THE FOlLOwtMS. Black Pine, Tams Junl~rs. Nand1na. Abeita. Oleander, Moreas 111s. and many more. ··~- $.100 MINIMUM --· S.D. Wholesale Growers 11622 WARHERAVE. FOUMT AIM VALLEY PHOHIE 546-3429 ALFVEN WAS A member of the Swedish Equivalent of the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission and a director or the nationalized company operating nuclear facilities in the 1960s. "The first argument," Alfven said, "is that nuclear energy is connected with an enormous pro. duction and r elease of radio- active, poisonous elements - substances that one has not yet the poss1b1hty of keeping under control when nuclear energy 1s spreading all over the world. '"Tbe fourth is that, alter all, nuclear energy seems to be very expensive and cannot compete with other solutions to the energy -:=:;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=::;======:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:::::::;:::::;======::; ouAL1TY 1n1urance •~w1...,,.. .. .nt tor a King Bangkok skyscraper is bedecked as a 22-story candle in tribute lo Thailand's King Bhumipol Aduly adej on his 49lh birthday. A star filter on the camera gives the cff ecl of radiance. IA Judges Add Delay To Docket I..OS ANGELES CAP) -It used to take three years to get to trial after .. filing a lawsuit here. Now it takes three years and six months. 1 The extra six months comes because Superior "I was strongly pronuclear during that time," be said. "I worked bard for the introduction ol atomic energy up to the time 1 came to this country" in 1967. But Alfven said he began learn- ing, "to my great surprise, that nuclear energy was not at all so good and so innocent as I had thought . . . . There were so many scientific arguments by that time that were so complete· ly devastating to the nuclear energy, I had to change my mind." ALFVEN, NOW ON the faculty of UC San Diego, was a center of controversy in Sweden's Sept. 20 election woo by Thornjorn Faelldin in a crucial debate over the government's plan to build 13 new nuclear power plants. In ousting the 44-year reign or the Social Democratic party, Center party leader FaeUdin OP· · posed the nuclear option at Alfven 's advice. Court o(ficials have re-"I told him what is happening duced by 20 percent the pumber or cases they in this country," Alfveo said. BIUYMISSED IAW'SCALL PLAINS, Ga. (AP> -Perhaps Billy Carter should have gone to law school. President-elect Carter joked at his news conference Monday about making his brother at- torney genera 1, as President John F. Kennedy did with his brother. Robert. Announcing the sel~tion of Atlanta lawyer Griffin Bell for the post, Carter said someone bad suggested that Kennedy had appointed his own br-Olher and "I might appomt my brother." Since the President-elect 's brother, Billy. doeso't have a law degree, Carter quipped: "I've asked Griffin Bell to serve until Billy can become qualified." problem . . . . This was part of the information that I transferred to Sweden." Alfven denied reports in Sweden, however, that he was '"the key figure" in the downfall of socialism in his homeland. IN 1970 HE WAS awarded the Nobel Prize in physics as the re- cognized "father " or magn~tohydrodynamics, the study of the interaction of a magnetic field with an electrical ly conducting fluid, in the sense that plasma is a fluid. The discovery was regarded by many scie ntists as one of mankind's major advances. Magnetohydrodynamics has wide applications in geophysics. planetary scie n ce a nd astrophysics. Alfven and his wife Kirsten travel to San Diego every Setember and leave in April to spend the spring and summer in Stockholm, where he works at the Ro ya l In s titute of Technology. Last year, he finished a three.year term as chairman or the Pugwash Con- ference on Science and World Al- f airs, one of the world's most pre· stigious international as - semblies. at reasonable prices! ' AUTO -HOME . OWNERS MAUllD OYll 21 •••••••• s116. $25.000 •.. ~~-~!. 56 7. f"llYLU sso.ooo • :~~~~ ~ 5 1 6 6. C OLUGI STUDIHT • s1so. no.. lefttftg the Scnings & Loe S IH•LI OYll 20 • c"w y• ... ere ,.~ paying PEI YUl fcrtoo.-ch. INDUSTRIAL YACHTS STORE KEEPERS SMALL BOAT I . .. FACTORIES CARGE BOAT DISCOUNTS APARTMENTS EXTENDED CRUISING TO MEXICAN WATIRS CONTRACTORS COMMERCIAL BOATS . BOB PALEY HORTHOC-546-3205 & ASSOC, INC. SOUTHOC-642-6500 plan to try from now un· ---------------------------------------------------------- tilApril. ' BLAME IT on longer trials. A recent study of the 'Superior Court system in the central district of Los .Mieles shows there are 64 percent more civil trials taking 10 days or longer this year than in 1974. Trials takini, 25 or more days increased 170 p er cent in the same period. Court officials are cut· Ung the scheduled caseload in the next rew months because they say it's a waste or time for lawyers and liticants to be sitting around if there ·a r e n ' t e n o u g h courtrooms and judges to try all the cases on the schedule. Delay Kills Skydiver TAFT (AP) -An ex· perienced skydiver from San Bernardino County was killed near here when his main parachute failed t.o open until j~t before be hit the ground. The victim, Joseph McKinney , 37, of Newberry bad jumped from 13,000 feet Sunday, autboriUes-said Monday. McKinney was using a borrowed parachute that Opened with a lert hand pull instead of the right band pull be was used to, said Coroner Richard Gervais. REWARD lft ... _....,. ............. ...... ..... ..... ... .,...."' ,.. ... .. M!'~~ ~ .. :·~:: :::. .... -...--. No .. tlen. Phone: 546-&740 ·THI: PLUMllMG · HIATIHG All COHD. m .. -. .. ,__, ~In YOV' A<•t-<All t,OSSIOH Vt(J() '"" c.m.no c;.,,.,.,."° ( '°"' ..-..,.. ....... ""A / f\...,S 495-040 I COSTAl.'ESA 15?6 N..._1 Bllld ~ l• 642-1753 °1' 1 "' 1 GIFT IDEAS FROM OUR BOYS DEPT. Levra., f....,. cord Jeena with lmptOWd •hmk• control. lhetltokn.. Bop $10.80 Student $13.00 Levt'I~ •PG't lhlrt1 In check• and plekla. Never nMCla Ironing. From $11.00 Levf'I• belt In denlma end leethera with dtatlnctlYe buckln. From$8.50 1 RCA ColorTrak 25'' l . If you're looking for a 19" diaponal table model. be sure to see this ColorTrak beauty Has all the features lhat make ColorTrak RCA's most automattc TV ever RCA 2525r" l~co~LO~R~=;rr~iii~;il (diagonal) TRAK 1 1-V COLOR TRAK With RCA ColorTrak 19" • J With Swivel Base Remote CONSOLE COLOR TR.AK WITH REMOTE & FOLDING DOORS RCA l'Z' · {diagonal) BLACK& WHITE TV This 12" diagonal is High-Performance black · & white TV at its beSt. Easy to C1Jrry 100% solid state and weighs only 17 lbs. • TELEVISION • APPLIANCES SALIS & SIRVICI ,,. A• DAIL y PILOT Tuesday. December 21, 1978 If ·Park Sued ~J Over Blast hn Toilet Child Slayer Sentenced to Second Life Term •• ·: ;. A man who claims that :~ he was seriously Uijured ·:, on the Fourth of July ::. when fireworks exploded '.': in a rest room he was us-:!; ing at Knott 's Berry ::; Farm has sued the entcr-::i tainment facility and its ;!• operators for damages to ::! be determined rn trial ::~ court . ••• ~~ Naming founder t.,j Waller Knott and other "'members or the Knott family as co-defendants in his Orange County Superior Court lawsuit, Norman Christeni.cn claims that negligence led to the presence of cx- plosi ve devices m the men's rest room. . . . . . .. Manager•' Cltott!e Fountain Valley City l\lanager James Neal has been elect· cd president of the Orange County . City Managers Associa- tion . ~:~t~ Deaths Elsewhere :~ :~ BEVERLY HILLS ·~AP) -Song writer and !\lyricist Ned Washington, · :l:ts. a three-time Academy , :ifAward-winner who wrote : jf e words for s uch hit • ongs as "lligh Noon" ·~l''nd ''S lcllu b y :~ arli ght.'' died Monday 1 hishome. .• PITTSFIELD, N II . (AP) J. Frank Drake, 96, retired president and MAlllOWl VALll£ V MARLO'Wf ••·tOl'nl cl (O\fd M"\.11 Cttt·frirn14 P•\\oil'd a w,., DKMll>'• " .,,. ~,,_ I\ W<Y•wd t>y YW\ ft~ J P..I"'" 04'Vf1P'lrH W ,ncj t O•v1\ on--btor~r R,.vf'rt-0 9Ytt m ,.__, \tittn 8"1v• f 1\f'"01y lor""" Mc~ru•nf' •ho \Urvh'"d b'f \f"""'" Qrdf'ldt t'l!ltdren three 9r~•I chairman or the board of Gulf Oil Corp .. died Mon- day in a Concord hos pal.al. STANFORD CAP> David Locke Webster, 88, an av1ahon pioneer and a <levcloper of the klystron lube that powers linear accelerator s used an nuclear research, died, Stanford University an- nounced Monday. Death Notices FICTITIOUS euStNE\S NAM!! STATEMENT TlwO to11owln9 """'"' " cloo<IQ bu\< nM\J~· PAEMIER >ALES IJHI Alan W•• CHrci.nG•clv~.CA '11 .. J 1.. .. 111 Ooi\worlh Brown 1310 Al<tllW•Y GoroenG•ove C'I '71>4l Thi' DY\.O~t\\ I\ condutttd Oy •n In OlvlOWI Leille D Brow" Thi, \t•ftmen• w•\ tllfd ~'" the C:O..n\Y Cl•rlt 11f O••n9• County on Oeumbt• 1 191• qri1ndrh11oren Gr•"t\IOt ,,,....,,(t\ w,.,,. h tld •t ' 10 A M Tufl\dlly {')jiit;fmbe,-11, •1 RO\f' Hlfl\ Metnot"I Pitrk, Whlttltr, followrd by ,....,,,.,..101 s_.rvtCf'\ ..tf ltl 00 AM Tu~\dftV OK~mbor 11 "' H1ll\ld~ Churth Ro-.e Hiii\ Morlu.ary 01r" I Or\ Bv••rd ol fa91.-Roc1r; tw~lve O'•"C'<f'l'tdr~n P-ltYe-n qrf"•t · ,..,•ndtnddr•n Fr1end\m•vcat1t"'"''~ llatoon De91M•"'I •' 1 00 PM T...,...say di ~II 8ro.idWo CMi>el. Privett , ...... y C4tA'lf'\I~ ~rYltf"\ W .. dnt'!.OiJY •t 1 00 PM O.c.em~r 11 •• P•tU1c \11ew C@mtltrv. Mr Sh•l'r wa~ bcYn ,,, C~•no. CA O"'tmD<!r 16. 1401 C.O,,,.. 10 the H1rb0r ire• In 14'11. Wtn • c~ t'Y'llttclal fliherman tor-...0 y~4'\ Aetlrecl tr om fi\hl ng 1' S-4 w rw n he beurne a _.'--....;;...;..-'---""'-'-.;;.:...;.;.;..;;.._-<.,;=.;..:: P UBLIC NOTICE \Hl\FEA BENJAMIN OA\110 S••A'EP. pe\Y'd •w•v O..cembe• 19. 1~16 Rot OtM of Co\t• Mt·,.,., C~Utornt• Surv4v,..d by f'H\ Wtff' Evf'lyn !.n11h•r tour snn,, Edw•rd s,neter ot Tr1n1dAd John SJ\clf"!r of (0\\«11 M tu•"· J4mt11\ Sit\"'ftir rtt Nt'woort 9,..lrh, David Sl'\Mcr ot trv1nr, f'.MU'Jht"'r Nd"''V Sl.fn\.t>ury at 8.t61:rntl,.ld nrothf\r Ru\\t'lt Sht•ltr of Co\tA Mf'\d, ,,,,..,. "'"'"'" Mam·• S.•lt1,.,. of Hunt•nf')t~ 11,.1\th, Doro~t\'f M1nehMdt of Wt1')hh•1.1<u:t. •l"ld .-.,_.itn oouttry l•rmer unlll 1'1'. Bert Br°"""•Y Mortu••Y dtre<tors. HllUS JO~EPI< "JOE" HINES re\IO.nt of OdM1 Point C•llfornlrl Pd\'.ed •way •t MJf' ti\ V'•r\ on 0f",.,.f'T'ber '1 1'7• ~""Ct\ 119ndlng at ~MITH TUTHILL ~MBMortu•ry.~anlo An•. PEACH ANNA PEACH. re"d~n\ ... Ct"ta Mr111, (dll'o'"'~ P .A\Std 3W•Y OtcomtMl• t t, '''6 at •v~ n !>lw' '' .,,,. •l•fld t>v ''''•'Cl••• !>carrott 01 w ut MtdlMld, El\qldnd Se••I<•• tot>o P'teld •I SMITH TUTHlll LAMB Wt•trllfl Cll•O<'I .. I 00 PM on Wl!CIN'SO•v. OKomt>or n 1'711 Prtvate lnltr,.,..,t -----------~~~'v' !>M ITH TUTHILi.. LAMS IALT'I·IH~HOM FUMHAL HOMI Corona del Mar 673·9450 Costa Mesa 646·2424 IElL llOADWAY MOlTUAIY 1 10 Broadway Cl)'>la Me'ia 642-9150 McCOlMICIC MOlTUAllH lJguna Beach 494·9415 li1quna Hills 768-0933 San Juan CdP•'ilrano 495-1776 ,AClftC VIEW MIMOllAL r.AllC CPmelnry Mortuary Cn 1oe1 J~OO P 1<:1l1c View Drive Newoorl. Calilorn1a 644-2700 P'IHFAMILV COle>ftlAL FVMHAL HOMI 7801 Bolsa Ave Westm1ns1er 893-3525 SMITHS' MOlTUUT 627 Main SI Huntt"IQIOn 8"3Ch 536-6539 SMITH TUTHILL L.AMI ou• WISTCLIFF CHA,._ Mortuary • • 646-4888 427 E 17th SI. SHEA ANNE JACltS.ON ~HEA rt\10.-.I ot l•Qun• N1qu_.t C•lllOH'114 P4\'-Mt tt• .. v Oe<f"'bl'r 11. 1916 Su,....IWd bv "''o•nd Vtnc•nt Snf'' Mt'mor.•I ~rv1t .. w .. """"'•v D•<'"mber n. •t 1 l)O PM •t L-tf'JU1'a 8.-:ttrtt O\iitPf'I Priv.tl,. 1nt,.rf'T'I'*"' Shf"Uttr LtlQUf\6 &e•,~'1Mt>r1wrv O•tf'< IOt"\ LEIMIACl4 Af)AM lE•M8AC.H. , .. ld•nl ol ( 10· fr•rw> 8t H.h. C•H•orn•• p,..,.,..-.1 •#t1 ()fo· •mbl"r 10 lt16 Sur1111v-d t>Y ,,.,,,,,. t -.1~r lt•mb•<h t1J1Jqht•r M.td"'"' Mt1M\ of Webst .. , Gt~ M i\ 'X.lrl ~rYIC•\ l 00 PM Tnur\d•V O.-r•m()oflf 11 1•1• •t PAh'\'1dl'>\ Untl~ MtiotlV)d1 t CJ'lur<" C•~..-.rrdno 8tt4Ch C.. tntt·r~nl PMJflc VJt•'f# Ml"mot•·tl P·"" Ir\ UN of Uowe,.if•m11y~\i?QIP\I' !"nP,,,...r+•• c°"'tnbuOons to Ttw Ta~e f .Jnlj 'If '"'" Peh,•M\ Unltf'd Me1h0dl~l Q\ur(P\. P.c1t1c y,,.w Mortuttrv dire<.· tor\ CLEMENT\ \ltflOON 0 C.I EME'NTS r•\1'k'nl "' Hvnnnqton 81tiJt~. C•l1t,,rnt1t P1t\\fld ew•v Orn•mOP' I~ t•I& \ufv1v.-d bv wit,. Jo•n S C ,,.l'T'Wrrt\ ("110'"'" l(f"VH\ (t,.m4"nl\ K,1r~n (IP mrinl\ (..ollf'H rt_.M,.t'lh Chrt\tnoher C.l•nwnt\ CoU•f'n Cl,.m~nh, \"ter Non• ()oft•l'\u,. of 0 ,.ytt)n Onu> \trvl<•\ t1 1'l AM ThUf'\d~•v °"<.4tmbef' 11 •t T "-Ctth,•f'V 8.tP't•~t ff•11.1'rr' Hun1tnq1on (\11•c.t•. lt'ltHf1'Y n1 •1 P• •• v., w Mrrnort.al P•r• P~"''C \l.,,.,.M •f'1Udr y d1r•r tOr\ P UBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS •USINlSS NAME STATEMENT "n1wo foUOWHWJ p.or '.O'l h c»I"") t>v"• ,.,..~ ( f 'IT F R ME 0 t (AL Cl trll C "1\1 ~ti ft Hl•t1 Hunt t'WltO'\ 0.-!J(r. f'.> .,.., S."'"1 'i1•1ndel, Ml9 FI S.lv- .._ ... I Cll r A'IOSIS Thh ""'"'"" " cOflduCltd Dy.,. ll\-Ol•i-1 8Ar,..y St•l"""I MO Tilll ti ,,..,,.nl ... , lttOd wOti ,.,. CO<l"1Y c1 .. ~ ot Or•nv• County on DK""be' IJ 197'. ,, ... u PublitlMd Or•no-CoHt 0 .. ly PHot. • __________ _. DK.11, lt, ttl6anc!Jan.•, II. tf77 S.Tll·J~ Costa Mesa f'ICTITIOUS e USINESS NAME STATCMENT Tnt 10110 .. ino """'on I\ dO•ng bu\l· ~~·\· C «11M L SnowPr Door Com~nv, 118• Newaort Bl•d .. CO•I• Mo,e, c.111on110 t'lft21 James M. C,.nte, "'I Pnto 0. Vt91', I rvlne, Calllornt• 9?61'1 Thi• ti.alneU I• condutl9d by en In dlvldU•I. J~e\M Cr•nc.• Tiiis •l•lem1n1 wes 111~ with '"" CO<lnty Cleric of Orange Counly on Nov· etnbU 2, 1916 HJU4 Put>llsll~d Or•nge CoHt D•llY P1I01, Nov JO, •rid D•c 1, 14, 11, 1916 ~-16 P UBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS eUS.INlll NAME HATl!MENT T ...... IOUOWtn(I per)On I\ dootl(I Ml· rwU•\ 'INOA LO WIDE AATIST COOPERATIVE, 3101 PfrkVllW u,,., 11 O. lrv1no CA'11U Ao~rl A Ebtr\Old. )IOI P•r~"'"" u ne. 11 0 Irvin•, r A 917 IS Th•\ b\,i'\1nen 1\ condut ttd by a.n In dM""81 Aot>o-rl A (1>4'rM>ld nm \l•••m•nt WI\ tiled with tP'te CJNnly Cirri!. of O••noe Counl'ron Dt< J, I,,, .... In Pul>l•\IW<I Oranqe C~SI o.tly Ptlol, I><'< I 14.11 18 1'14 !Ot"'7l PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS e USINESS NAME SfATl!Ml!NT T"" 1ollowtn9 p.,M>n I> doing llu•I· IW)\ d'' AOI E CN TOOLS, >OSI Klllybrook• Ln , CD\IA "°"'""• C.A q16?6 Robort N Monro~. Jr , JOSI Kmv.,..ooio.tl l..n CO\I ........... CA "2616 ln•'» bu)lnt~~ l~ c.on<1uct10 by •n In · dl"lduill Aot>erl N. Monror, Jr. TlH\ st•1em"'" wA\ ttt1-o With •~ <:nun• v 01trk ot Or•n9' Count 1 on Nov. n,19/i.. fl•7•U PubltMWd O"lnQI" Cod\I 0.tly Piiot, ,..,. JO,-[)-c '· ,, 11. 1916 .~ .. ,. P UBLIC NOTICE '1CTITIOUS eUSINESS NAM( STATEMl!NT '"" 10110 .. 1ng !>«Wini.,, OOlnotiu•l· "''' .. , ASTER SPECIAL TtfS, 11UI ~lf"liQ\St .lr"'tnf" CA •?1141 Rt<.IWrd Gn<1\1tr, llHI H4\U"9\, lrvl"" CA '11714 Mark .All11n O•vl\, 17SSI H<l\11~, IM,..,CA '11114 Thi\ bu•ln•o It 'ondutttd by • OtMr•l ,_rt,...nlllo. Mark 08vl• Tiiis Uat•ment .,. ilted ""'~ tile Clounty Cl•rll ot O••no• Covn1v on OKtl'flller 1, 197'. ,. .. , .. Pvtlll~ Orange Co••t D•llv Piiot, O..omtMlr7, u 11,28.1'74 !OSI /6 Give Famous Brand Name Gifts And Save 30% · 60% 0 "1:: 1 ' ,.. - I· meBEL1r ......... $9.97 I IMITATIOH LEATHER ' sumE ·JACKETS LOH~ SLllVE Several styles Amerrcan made. Orig.· Vllve to $60.00 OUINICES WESTERN SPORT SHIRTS Full Yoke, Poly Cotton $14.99 to "IF GOD DID NOT EXIST, IT WOULD BE NECESSARY TO INVENT HIM:' -Voltai~ Regardless of the faith you embrace, most people find this seasQn of the year an appropriate ti me to celebrate-to-acknowledge the existence of God. The triumph of Faith, through Hanukkah or Christma s, inspires jubilation and catnaraderie and a joyous outpouring of the human spirit. Ev~n the infrequent faithful usually attend the church or synagog ue of their choice to share th e celebration and to pray for divir:ie guidance In the y~·ar ahead. And while many celebrate, the Newport Harbor Council of Churches continues to serve those in need, regardless of faith. A~ the 6fhtlat agency for FISH, the Council find s lodging for the homeless, food for the hungry, clothes for the needy. It's u year-around program, needing year·at<i>Und 6'APport, buth there's no better time to aid the Council and FISH than now. If ~ou can volunteer time to help, if you can make~ contribution to this vital program, if you would like to know more abqut the Council of Churches and FISH, call ... NEWPORT HARBOR COUNCIL OF CHURCHES ... President: The Rev. Don Maddox World Vision lnternallonal • (Home): Costa Mesa, Callfo1 n10 A t..Hl9d Wwf Merr0w ~ Tr<'asurc>r· Rob~rt F. Stoessel PO Box 684 ,.. Coronel dl?I Mar. Ca. 92625 T~lephone. 675·7730 ·i les of public service advertisements sponsored by Avc.o Financial Servlc~ Ncwpot1 ~ech. California + .... \ .... ,.. Tuesday, Decem~r 2f, 1978 D~ILV PILOT Af Science Tables Legend A New Service for Your Area! <V "I'm not tellin' ANYBODY what I wont for Christmas 'cause I already told Santo.'' LONDON CAP> -~ience has backed a hole in the legend of Kini Arthur's RoWldTable. A great oaken board where Arthur reputedJy sat with his kni&hts, dis played at Winchester Castle since the Middle Ages, was built some 800 years after his death, the Winchester Research Unit reported Monday. THAT PUTS IT IN the reign or K.ing Edward Ill, who ascended the English throne in a period or decline, vowed to bring back the glory or Camelot and even founded a short-lived Order of the Round Table. "I don't think we have destroyed a legend," said Martin Biddle, director of the gov- emment·sponsored urut, "What we've shown is the power of the Arthurian legend even in the M1ddJe Aees." Biddle said he wanted to study the table "becaus e nothing was known about it nt all except that 1t had been there a long time and people called 1t King Arthur's Round Table." JN AUGUST THE 18 -foot- dlameter table was taken down from the wall or the castle's Great Hall, where It had hung for more than 500 years, and a bat· tery of experts wenl lo work. Historians, including American Prof. John F1eming of Princeton University, went over the table. Some 224 X-rays were ta.ken, and other specialist.a from an art h istorian to Scotland Yard's forensic laboratory wt·re called in. "When we look it down we noticed about 35 holes in the back st uffed with wine bottle corks," Biddle said in a telephone interview. •'The Metropolitan Police Forensic Laboratory Iden· tified them as musketry holes." . THE TABLE apparently was used for target practice by Oliver Cromwell's raiding troops during the 17th-century Civil War, Bid· die said, adding that many or the bullet holes are around a portrait of King Arthur painted on the la· blesurface. Come and Go Travel SPECIALISTS IN: •AIRLINE RESERVATIONS •CRUISES •CONDOMINIUM RENTALS IN HAWAII, MEXICO & THE CARIBBEAN •SCUBA DIVING THROUGHOUT THE WORLD Come to us when yClU wont to go. anywhere. COME ANO GO TRAVEL 1145 S. COAST HWY. LAGUNA BEACH, CA 92t51 PHONE 497~2402 ' Hiring Norms Waste Best Employe Talent ATLANTA <AP> -At least four of every five people are an jobs that do not properly tap their talents because today's hiring standards fail to ;neasure a job applicant's potential accurately, according to a 16·year study. Jt least four out of every five people are attempting to perform Jobs that do not tap their best abil.Jt1es," Green- berg said. "THE MYTH THAT YOUNGER People would have more drive, mort_ energy. would be more open or have more growth potential simply does not hold up,'' according to the study. All Stores Open The study of 350,000 people show s lhat the five criteria described as the most commonly used youth, educ a· tion. experience. maleness and whiteness -"are completely irrele- vant in predicting how well a job ap- plicant will do in a job," said Dr. Herbert M. Greenberg or Princeton. N. J ., who conducted the study with his wire. Jeanne. Wom en perform "as well as ll)en even in those industnes that have up until now been considered a male bas - tion, such as automotive, data pro· cessing . s toc k brokerage and chemical pharmaceutical." the study added. The study said in-house training, particularly io the selling fields, can make the right person as erfectjve as someone with much more experience and education. "WHAT COUNTS ARE THE dynamics within a human being that either make him or her appropriate or not appropriate for a particular job," • thestudy said. Greenberg Is president of Market- ing Survey and Research Corp • which polled 350,000 job applicants and existing personnel for some 7 .000 ~rate clients. IT SAID J OB PROGllAMS for the dJsadvantaged usually faJI because they don't match individuals to the right jobs and follow up with intensive training to provide that person with required skills. "From survey after survey or many industries and from reviewing literal· Jy hundr eds of thousands or test evaJuations the survey concludes that Greenberg holds a Ph.D. from New York University in human relations and psychology. UfeTerm Ordered For Killer VENTURA CAP> Convicted · murderer Steven RockweU. who,,e case toppled Cali(omia's death penalty law, has been sentenced to a minimum of eight years to life in prison. "You deserve to die," said Deputy Dist. Atty. Jay Johnson, who pro- l!«uted RockwelJ. THE STATE Supreme Court. Dec. 1 ruled in faYOI" of VenlUra County Public Defender Richard Erwin 'a contention that a July U.S. Supreme Court ruling rendered the state's law un· constitution a J. .. I'm happy wllh lhe aenlence that he re- ceived but I'm unhappy that ~r the law that's the greate11l 11entence that he could receive," Johnson saJd Monday o( Superior Court Judie Donald Pollack's sen· tence llOCKWf!Ll., ZS, of Sepulvtd1. was conVlct· ed in last January·s I t1pe0 murder or Linda Betb CoverJy, 18, of MkhJgan. Mila Caverly ' w11 lridnaped in Van ' Nuys near Los Angeles and driven io the Lockwood Valley area ol Ventura Coun~, where 1he was raped and shot nvetimes. Robert Durham , 18, of Ariela, pleaded gullt1 to flrst·degree murder In the case and was sentenced to prison earlier this year . GOING OUT OF BUSINESS!! EVERYTHING MUST (SO • 300/o to 500/o OFF! ,U.l'O's-POTTHY-MACRA~MAClAMl SU"'LllS FAMCYPUMTS I S2S Mele Verdit Or., Cotta MHa 540.1'55 Of'IH MOl't. ttirw SAT.· 10.6 r&i aciti -~ d ewel(y Company UI ,\l\lf.1i\il 1 !:J;uK I HS • '.\!HOL ESAL ER~ [;UYl J\S i\1\10 t\Pl'RA ISE.RS . . HOLIDAY HOURS: MON.-FRI. 10 a.m.·9 p.m. SATURDAY 10 a.m.·5 p.m. unu NPv1:l<>r T H· 1ulevilrd • Costa Mt>Sil b4 b 774 l or 0 1.11 J E W E l R Y You're a customer. Not a shopper. Shoppers or<> those anonymous bodies ouoched to cold cosh You·11 rind chem nearly c>verywhere. At Fashion Island. we th1nl< or pPOple as customers Thor is. pc>ople who come bock Friends So we treat 1hem hl~e we expect to see them 0901n Warmly rosh1on lsfond 1s o special !>hopping experience With opPn·oir courtyards and over 60 fine scores. It s o ploce where people ore speool So when you·re tired of being created lll<e another shopper in a crowd. experience Fashion lsk>nd. Where ch1ngs ore wormer for the socisfoct1on of our customers 3111..._-p FASHIONJISLAND ~- NEWPORT*!) CENTER .••• educaffon for personal enrichment and growth EVENING EDUCATION PROGRAM at CHRIST COLLEGE IRVIME 1530 COM ..... lnlM, Ca. WINTER 9UARTER -Jan. 3 -Mar. 9, 1977 HISTOIY AND UTaA TUU OF THI NIW TISTAMIMT, l.C. I l 1 IMtr.:tor: Dr. Robert W. Hoitt fff:. HO lcrtdltl ttondmp _, W•••..,. $30 (melt) 7:~0 • t :IO ,_.... IMTROOUCT10t4 TO CHllSTIAMITY. lef. I 0 I C..._.DoctrW1of ....... I llllstr.t.. Prof. a.rt.. L MeMI&• fw. $30 lcndttJ -r...,.-7:20·9:10,..... SJO Ca.ditl EMIOU TODAY. CIHl$TIAM LIADllSHI' ~UM -n. adtap -7:JO""" A_.. of .-,W,.... ....... *'-.._ "FIEE ADMISSION ... of .t, I·~-.-le~ peltkt. Enry .. It cor•aly ••11941 to att.d! ,.._.al 75W222 ,_. addlllowal WonMtlow . CHllST COUIGI IRYIME •-c ..... a c.i .... D•h"' 9AM For you r shoppi ng convenience all stores } will be open 9 AM, Mon., December 20 through December 24. Nick of time gifts! Closeout 3 tor $5 Orig. 5. 50 ·S9. Men's anorted dre11 and caaual belt•. Included 1n this seleclod group aro many favorite styles .ind colors .. 1nclud1ng leather. Select several now for Jll the favorite men on your gill ltst. 1! J Hf ·1·. l l ":.t:i,-..l. 'f':\ .. ~\\•I J 7,, ,. .,~.h ,, I I~ f, ~ ·~ ! : I!. : : j , : ·: : I • • H:i.:t 1 !, •:·•~"'I~'·•• . . . ,,;/ ... I •'I . ~ : . . . . . : . . : \~ l ' . Closeout 6.99 Closeout 10.88 . . . c1 .. '~:{,: .. . •.. ' '·l· ' ... • !:: . \~=·; ;,:: ·: I I • . ~ . , . // c: :: .• I Orig. $25. For the outdoor men on your gill lisl ..: 1vc on this hot doq· vest In m•Jlti·color nylon shell quilled to polyes1rr 1111 Quanlllte' ltm1led ( I / ·' . !: . ,.'. ; ' ·1 . . .. . . . . . i I• ' • I f : . . ~. ~ · 1\L" 4•• ' : .,. ... • .. I~~· f '.\<. . \' ). I .. · 1 .. . . I ". ... \_ / ;"')... ..: ft \ \ \ I I Orig. $13 • Oren slaeks for men m 1 v.irtely of fabrics . solid:; .ind pallerns that orllJinally sold for much much more! Got his sire and put a pair or two under the tree for him. Quanllllu llmlttd. Sweater closeout! Now 7.99 Orig. $17·$20. Make hi• tweeter en embroJdered or jacquard acrylic 1n handsome colors :ind patterns. Included 1n th e group are lavorile Warner ~• ch;ir::icters. Hurry for best selection 1n men's sizes. JCPerney The CITistmas Place Available in Los Angeles, Orange, Rtv1rtlde, San B4rnardlno and Ventura counties. l , AJO DAIL y PILOT Tuesday. December 21. 1976 Top 10 Shows Honored Thia fs the third in a ~~•of fi~ column& revUun.ng the year 1976 m theattT along lhe Orange Coast. . When aJl 1s said and done, the struggle for artistic supremacy among the Orange Coast's com· munity theaters generally boils down to a faceorr between the Laguna Moulton Playhouse and the Westminster Community Theater. Both have led the Daily Pilot's annual yearend evaluations on more than one occasion, and this .year is no different, with the top rung of the 1976 hit parade occupied by l.aguna and Westminster a close second. The other coastal theater groups, however, are well represented in the final tabula· lion. Exempt, as usual, from consideration are those plays produced by the Irvine Community Theater, since this columnist is managing director of that group. Here is the 12th annual summation or this cor- ner's choices as the cream of the 1976 community theater crop, accompanied by an exerpt from the Daily Pilot's review of each production: 1. "SEASCAPE," Laguna Moulton Playhouse, directed by Marthella Randall. "A superb combina- tion of artistic and technicaJ expertise rarely en- countered on the commuruty theater stage." 2 ... GYPSY," Westminster Community Theater, directed by Sondra Evans. "A total treat. well coordinated and visually exciting ... directed with ambition and imagination." 3. "TH E PETRIFIED FOREST," Laguna Moulton Playhouse, directed by Doug Rowe. "A Intermission Tom Titus play which excels In all respects ... one or the finest community theater productions of the season.'' 4. "THE LITTLE FOXES," Huntington Beach Playhouse, directed by Alex Koba. "An Intriguing, compelling production (with) the hme aura of dramatic finesse that characterized the earlier show (''.Another Part of the Forest"). s. "GODSPELL," Westminster Community Theater. directed by Stan Pritchard. "A skillfully staged and totally fresh concept ••. a youthful cast brimming with energy." 6. "THAT CHAMPIONSIUP SEASON," Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse, directed by Pali Tambellini. "An engrossing, and extremely faithful production ... far and away the playhouse's fin est offering of the season." 7. "THE EFFECl'S OF GAMMA RAYS ON MAN JN THE MOON MARIGOLDS," San Clemente Community Theater, directed by Peggy O'Hara Gibble. "Two aspects of the show, its set- ting and Jean Downing 's superb performance, rank <See I NTERMISSION, Page All) ROBERT'S Con1emporary Furn1turP is ,lferinq some vPry special poccs on sorne extra sµec1al l.Jbles ThesP L'ltwmt c11rnng and ;icctnt tables <im OP.rf,..ct h1ghhqhts I Jr Jny hornc We have a w <Jr se!cc.tion of st1,JP•·.:> inn ~lylP . ull ::.pec1ally priced. So brigntcn a spot in yo1Jr home w1!h a glowing mur.ored t;.ible • I'\ , .. .J .. . , .... u ·. ,1 •• ll v) IJ') f t.; -7 a I\ > wes1c p · 1\vinlJc, Twinkle ·Thousands of lights ··In windows and trees at Wcstclif f Plaza these nights.· . Gifts alluring fill the stores Give with fondest love, . To yours ... Seasons Greetings Open Monday thra Friday W 9 Santa Claus visits 2-5 p.m. Dally CollN::TablP 30"x60" . . '"IJ $:'80.eale $168 5qu3rl· Coffee Tabl~. 4:>"x 42' . ...• . . . . .. rr CJ 5280. aale $188 Sof1t1ackTable. lt> x•iO" .. ·'"!J S?80.aale$168 [ M ldhle Incl shown! 24 x 30".. rr>q S 199 sale S 118 Corner Tablf', JO" x 30" . . . rr-ci S?09, sale S 128 01:-imq T.lnlt, (nnt ~hrwn) .1;:> ~ , • .., • ,, '1, i sale $498 Pedestal Tables: 1. '?4" .. 1.!"X JO' ..•...•. 1 ·' . x jl) ..•...••. 1,"l''XJI'.'" ...... ,., 1::> ·x 48" ....... .. One of the Southland's Largest & Finest Collections of Modern Furniture, Ughtlng and Accessories ~@~~~~~·~ contemporary furniture 225 NORTH HARBOR BLVD., r1·q S /'.J. aale $58 ru1 s 85. sale see r<'q ':, 1 00, sale S 78 11·0 Sl 10. sale $88 11 ·v S 1 ::>u. aale $98 FULLERTON, CALIFORNIA 92632 ·Phone (714) 871-5720 r S> (JI ~ fj ). • ! ~ Q • ~ ~ f ~# t LA MIRADA 4 • LAKEWOOD CU'fER 4 : W~ll.111 U .llQAlll Plllct t1 lfOllOAY""" U TUllOAY Cb"'4 .... ...,., lltM!el :te IVllOAY 6 MOllOAYt 11)tIt1111 two f N!Ml' lllTM lt llfttft _ ... AOAlldf A CIOOUD In 191 l'lll1 nil OUAl WllUH COWIOYftl W U ta-I t IU.l.ll Tll llMNT1 le •l•N• ontll SIOI Of l'MI MOUNTlllf 1,.1 ~111 MUSlANO COUNflYt•I l\IMAWAY Mii NIUll Wlllfl) rlUI toc.lllUll (ti aMT W ,__ CMmAW IOStt WWS~l ~llt StWIOW Of ntt KAWl~ l\IMAWAT Mlf NUftl ...... Wtll111 -'--531·9580 rlUI toc.lltW1 '" sJ~~iO ) MAii H-1 t MAtll'fll Mllln ontfl llOf Of l'MI MOUNT""l'l'll rlUI MUSTANG cOUHTIY111 t0e4t MOOll t U1 111.UV!M ''""'' SHOUl AT nll DlVllCNI .. ,_ 531-9580 Pllll lllAT SCOUT & CATMOUSI nMSDAT l'l'll WMWTWooe ,...., OUTLAW IOMI WWSl"I "'--531 -9580 'Wt IMADOW Of nfl MAWK,.J HIOl'HCI Ott•t• .. 111t111'W1t9'•"" 1111 I_. .... l ..... nM .. tft 111,,0llUllf llOllCfl CIU\011111 UllOU U fllll! AMJf\1111 .... Sl\lotHT IOOT ct! '"" Ill WWW A SMlll Ill IUMAWU Mlf "4.Ull CAlltl Ill ""' IOWtUU.111 .,.,. ......... IN NII ''*"" IClUllMlll """ 1'lNNIPUlftlll fAtl MIA!!! 1 ~-._,.. NITwOIK '" '"'' ln\ltN Of A ..... CAUfl MOISC Oii IOHf. llO IUNJ IOC«Y"' ""' IUIN'r Of PRIMOS CNt ..-r,NOP&llU . .,. ............. ~ .... fl) ~ 11 .... fWMM . I I ~~~~_...;:,~,~~-=::=.!...c_~MI ., " ~ ~ ~ I ; . ~ .. ~ ~ ~ J ~ ; 1 ~ .t ) J ow .i~,1 :a~~ I · -~lllii~:~f~i~:~1JI.~.=:...=·-~~~~~,~~;:~/~~~· ..,: ... =,-... 1 Tund•y. December 21. 1976 OAIL y PILOT A JI S COAST fllAl I\ MMlltltelll.1411111 , .. , ... ."SJllY • r oo , ......... -uMAllQ..ll .. .... SO COAST PLAZA >41tlllslelll,.1111 ,.,,. ... 11ROCKYu 7:JO a '141 CINEMALAND CINE MALAND · "llAUTHlll MAN" II) t:a'6T•u-1--. .. "THE LONGEST VAAD"I 711' 'llll~,U-4;111-7:40 , ...... """'" l 160 1111 llHllll: '11AUTHOM MAN" (R) 1-r.ii.t1H ""THI LONGEST YARD" ,,, .. , ... LOS ANGELES (A.Pl -Put Oscar winners will be reviewed on ABC ~lon Feb. 13 when till Academy of Motion Pl~tur e A rts a n d Sclences present.a ''And tbe Wlnner Ia ... " INTERMISSION •.•. CCooUnuedFrom PageAlO) with the best m their cla.sa this year in Oranee Coast theater." I. "SUGAR," Costa Mesa C1v1c Playhouse. directed by Patt Tambelllni. "The energy and bounce to keep an audience ente rtained throughout." t . •'THE SUNSIDNE BOYS," Laguna Moulton Playhouse. directed by William Bruce ... A total de· light . . . a breezy. bowicy script given a first rate production." Tbe p ri m e -t ime 1pecl al wiU· f eature ~ Crom all 48 win- ._. of the best-picture award. 10 ... HOW THE 0111Ell HALF LOVES," Hunt· Q~~~~~~~E'l ington Beach P layhouse, directed by J ohn Williams. "Moves i:lpplly along and manages to r aise the entertainment level of the play." f'OUN'TAIN VALU!V .. ....,...),,•~::!:.')! • n .,.,. .,,., I MATINEES I EVERY DAY DON'T MISS ITI "SHAGGY-0.A." 11 00.1 00..J.•l-1 ... , J ... ,, "AGAINST A CROOKED Ster" These wer e the year's most stageworthy shows, 'lbursday the t op performers step into the spotlight for a final curtam call as the outstanding actors and actresses ot 1976 are recogo.Wid. And Friday's col· umn will unveil the Daily Pilot's third annual m~ and woman of the year ln Orange Coast theater. ~ ~ CITY CEHTU CINEMA~ .. $A. FAWY tMANCMESTEA EX.I 0 Q , FAWY CCITY OR. EX.I ~!!!!!!!I:~~~~.,.. .. I.. WALT DISHIY'S iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil "THI SHAGGY D.A." IGI J • * * ... for only S19.77 Start 1977 right for only $19. 77 ! The Sheraton- Newport gala New Year's Eve party offers the most fun for the least money. The $19. 77 specral includes cocktails. dancing. noisemakers and tax Plus fun and games 1n the beautiful Brazil ha Room Make your reservations early' Call 8+~7:··: + ; t .. t ... Holrnas and W1taon A WALTDISHfY'S y '"ntl SHAGCH D.A." IGI • "IUGSY MALOMI'" "'THI ll(i IUS" INI FIUOA Y ·SATURDAY lH4f 'S 11\o HAl411\o"l l'WI zlll~--.. -A~G~A .. IN .. ST~A~--t 'J!.1--~~~ CROOKED SKY" J.'illffr, ~ Hf~CfEO fiiM.. "THE GREAT "IT!>/':; AMERICAN cowaov·· (G) ~UDERRJL LIF.£- CIHEM.AUHD THU.TIE .,...."' U S-7601 STADIUM DRIYEIH Or-. 6lf .. 170, Open Doily 12:30 p.m. llOAWEST w'''--"t'B•f~\f WU,... ... CINTlll Hl-40 I "IOIUllY NOl'USU' <PO> "One of the "'u• Year's Best" IWlrrITUM lllt·S2~roiA!lt5-ll·SAJtt 11NETWORK° CRt ''THE SONG Ra.AIMS THE SAME .. IPGJ "THI SHAGGY D.A. .. "llDE A WILD POHr' CGt .. OMI R.EW ova THI CUCKOO'S MIST" "L8*1Y'" flU .. SIUHT MOVIE" "IANAMAS .. CPGt ··auuTHOH MAH" Ill "HORMA"4. IS THAT YOU?" "KING KONG" CPGt Prepare you~lf for a perfectly outrageous motion picture. IU'TllO~rtll-rm WILLIAM PEI ER ROBERT DUJCAWAY HDLDEH FINCH DUVALL. NETWORK ... Pim CICAYUIXT '"'"'"., SIDNrf UfMlT ,,_...., llOWUD 50TTnJlll 'i>I l'CT~L::~ .,,,.,,.0 u.;;,;iim.ta -~ rA'U1~1i1· ST.t.ATIWID., ore; 22 EOWAllOI NEW HUNTINGTOH HOLIDAY' MATINEES "YOU'RE GOING TO HAVE A GOOD TIME AT TillS ONEf' -4IONA IAPllfTI, Ale· TV PLUS HOUDAY MATINEES SAT •• TUES. "SHOUT AT THE DEVIL" ROOERMOORE LEEMAAVIN . LOVE. ACTION. OOMEDY. SUSPENSE. EXCITEI\1ENT. If?• Ni7jKp,QDW~ 9:__ llYAN O'MEM. • TA TUM 0 HEAL . ...._ 9Uln' MYHOU>S STMTI WIO .. 0£C 22 (0WAll09 ICWPOtl'T CINEMA flWI •coNFESSIONS OF A YOUNG AMERICAN HOUSEWIFE" RATEO(X) A STORY OF A BOY AND Hll.!Jg WAl.TDllREY I fl IE LI If WWW \1 (l":'l "'' l r 4 SWGY I • IUL I I 'lbe Adventures or the WILml\mSS FAMILY s-..., ROllOIT F LIX'M SUSAN lliWAh 1£ SHAN • -, " ,__.,a ... fl"-il._.111 It .,. .,,....,lllOll~I o>t{•(a~N :Mia'( UA CflT Cl .. UIA UA IO\ll" COAIT ()' .... 6.14 "t9tt (.1-.•1 ........ "4(K ~· SAOOllUCll rLAV> H>llHIAI .. VAlllY "rw"'·41~ • •''" ..,.Ill..,,,,. .. ~ lfADtUM Ui.1•t IN f) ~,. ~ '~ '"°'' tOGUU IHlUAl "• '""' ····~11*13 ,. l unday. Oeeembe1 21. 19713 'IV Highlights CBS tJ 7: 30 -A Christmas Story. A cartoon special about a dog and mouse who help get a little boy's letter to Santa through in time for Christmas. KHJ fJ 8:00 -"Now Voyager." Be tte Davis s tars in this four - handkerchief drama from 1942 with Claude Rains, Paul Henreid and Hka Chase. KCET .@ 8 :00 -The Nutcracker. The Utah Symphony Orchestra backs the Salt Lake City's Ballet West in a com· plete performance or Tchaikovs ky's "The Nutcracker." TV DAILY LOG TUESDAY EVENING 6:00 o 0 Cl) [Gl l171 CD m !Ins 0 QJI (J) (Otl W €m Aews U ® S!Jr TrtlL cu Gomt1 flit D t.iMinfte m 1>1rtrld1e F1mllr Cl) Aditll' 12 fD U1d11c Com~n, Utl Oi111h! 0)1Jttle Ruub -6:30-0 Oinah! Cut1ts 1nclud• lo~v Curtis Doug Hcnnine. Billy Cry1l4f and Jon L uc"n C.U Amir Glifl1th (10• Mm C1111ln ~ 0> Fa1111J Alfarr f11l f3 J Cunsmoke fDloom 1:00 0 O ~({)QNtws U U,ii Cub m 111y nvu SoM (1 1 lo ltll lht Truth O ConuntratlOfl m I lO¥t lUCJ CD Tiie rs1 fD Amtriu/lstHf Jtwosll llO\lt 1~W7Ci11tl1tll W MatNeJ/lehrer Report ( ~ • ) 8oflan11 m 011m1h< ~llt:s {f) Addims h mtlJ -7:30- 0 A Chmtmu Stor1 A do·lo1·Mloilly \toarmhr 11l•d Jrtuon ~1lh •.urh 0" 11 an1mJI lro•nrl. ~. Gumd1op I'll' mousP and C:ooher. lht dog and lh, g,,JI lenglh~ lh1·y wcnl through 101 lhe11 looend. l11nmv to gel his letl>1 lo Santa in lime for Chro1lm~ 0 C.ndrd C•rntra U Bowline IGf Dollaii ( 6) The Odd Couple O c101 2SJ r a 1 Hollywood Squares ( v The eon, Show 0 Jiit Jlntr's Wiid m Brldy lluncll 11 l) CV llnllrilll On lht ROfd ratHoca.'1Ht!Otl fD a..-1 21 Ton11hl OJ Ari 's $poll's WOff4 U Cclel111ty S.-ps!J\u m FTm Co1c1on 8 :00 U <11 r 3 • Thi! Mttntur n of To11 St•JU toncru'"'" of "'''' ''"''n b lo•rd Am"'"" <IJ.,, st()f) nt '••'one !~t M1 .. "'•POI th,11 ~'~' ' mPmo11b1~ t I, ot I~• Ad•••lufllu l111n ot fam ind ht~ bt$I l11•nd' Huck fonn 0 >l • I~ Ci) lu llN •KIL Sllttp (H) Part I of the 1>1tm1m ep1\0de on wMh Pappy quit\ l~e "flvinc 1•1''' And tr1nUt1s 10 tht M111nft. out l1u .1111oon \000 sels 1• ind Ito~ 'iChtm1n2 lo loom an ~·r ~uadron ol h" own 1ewlh 1n •court 1Nrt1af U Ycme: IC.I (2111) "flbtd1lm" (U>m) '61 P•t11ck 0 Nul Donllld P,uMnct, 111 fursttnbtfl. Henty Sttn t 1 lloM (1111) "Un•-!WMtt· llttl" (doe)· 11 D 1.a • I >t K.m o"' ll!l Rorhot ,1cr1,•nt 1llt d•\C~ri 11111 fl)flt1• •ho h4\ b .... n bt>.l.t•nc nl • brf lloiHl•t W1I~ lflll,>U IS m1~1A b4v •lont (llr1.lrn•, I., 0 lhwM 11-r) ' No• v.,a111" IOU) •' 8'11• llh <' lll.,Of H11n • h .. 1 H•rrt1l llil l llA, ., LtitJ .. lllt ..... Cl) ,tf,. ..... fl> lktrv PWlic Alfa'" 4Jfl ..... Cl (lllr) "The _..". <••l ~/ Mochul ti1•lord 01.,., !!Pd H1rry ~nd••• ltn"\ l>ofwtd m TM llwtmtktr l h• comp cte pcrto1m1n<' nl lcll41~y \ ' lh• NuttrtO•r by 8'11tt WK! fll ~II L•k• City •nd lht Utlll Sympllony Orch•str1 01ncm1 le1d1n1 roln '" V1Cto111 Moiian A\ the Su111 Plum J 11rv and lomm Ruud '.s tllr S<irai Plum C'"'"'' m °""""• m~~ -8;30- 0 (\fl\ (f)) QIJ lmr111 I Slllttry "Oh Hm lht An1tlf Voi<"" It's ~ lun hlltd r.11111tmt\ . ..,,n lhe tt1'1 1nd lll'Jt 111,ndi 'ntert11n II a hcnj)olal Ch11)lnln p.irty. CD Cns·Wlb m C111Nst ""'1111 m S111.a11o11 t.o.nHy 9 :00 a <'71 rv 111•a•s•M lqw~tyt') lYlltndtr IO lhl e.lu111t1on bto111M on by Iona l'toti11 tJ su1ttrv takn 1 strance fonn: ht sktpwalh. pl1rrnr Jn 111qrntry pme ot ~ttbln. then lln • ftlCllC· 111111 111 whKh a boylloo4 lrltlld IS bud d for d!Ulltt '" • downllill run Oii "'' sltd D Qll 00 (II D ,.. """"' Gan1stt1s 1bduct the 17 ym Old -..n1er ol 1 man wllo owu tllem monty. but lltltn Ptntr and 8111 find Ille kidna~" they suptst 1n unusutt IOlullOft lo Ille t11m1. • (8 00) !»ti 11th ..... "°' Mlft R111l)"s aa1Menttt ull<IO'teta ' lr1ilor •llhln th l ll•P 1>11tnluUon: mttnwllllt filconettl ct1111n • ntw V!Chm. m The Sth 01mel!Jion & * Rodney O'nterfield Join Mel'f In Ve1u O> Mtl'f Cnlhtl Show Cl) V111inwt a> Cl1111Ut Proanms -9:30- 0 (tn (3) lf l Ont 01y 11 A Timt Alter i dos.i~Mus d.te ,.,\h a high )(hool htro, B<rhdr.! 1,kes Juhe'! 1d~1te ind t11rs lu cflante her omtRt. bul unloilundtrly s~e doe~ I 'nu11 l'lhrn lu 'ltop admtts1n1-m Movie: "Grnd llhlsion" (d1a) '~8 Jun Ga bin. Pim~ f irsnay. m Csf>o<tacul11 '76 10:00 o 111; r 11 1e 1 S••tth M~t 1s ham~d 101 muldfl ~nd rel' ltls nolhtnt 11and '" the 11Jy lo cle~r his parlnr1 O '" & 1 101 Em Police Story (ontlu~10~ 1 .. 0 pohte olf1cers under 1nd1\l•wnt on ~n acndenul ~ay1n& 1>1omr\I' !htu 41\0ul'V lhat lhrv II lit to 'il4y out ol trouble UONt.n IO Bon111u 0 ( 29 e ) l)t F u1ily On th~ f.r\I DJy of 'b11,t111as Plans '"' a IJm v Ch1 ''"''' 41 lht lawreuc.t h~u .. hotd ro awoy wh•n Dou~, l•fl·•r L1 •• ,., tu 1~, l•~l»•l•H 4 mu<.h 1 unit• wo1114n w 1om ht •» 11· tJ nolll 1 1& Cun~e ED 811iu dr Pnmavua -10:30- m m rn "'"' 11:00 0 fl f!) n News D a 10 13 r 6 Hews O ·~ love Am111<1n Style O Celeb11ty Aevut O> Mary Hartman, !hry Hartman m lain ol the 81m11 ED Movie: "Lisi Hohday" -11:30- 0 11'1\ r31 f8) CllS Late Movie: <Cl "Kola\-A Killin& in the Seund House; tCJ "Two Weeu In Another Town" (dro) 62-Krrk Douglas, [d .. .ird C Robinson 0 @ IJ) CW Em Jo11MJ CM-. m Jiit l'TL Club 0 (>fl rt I 1lt Tutsday MO'lie of tllt Wttk G)Ntws ,. Tht 700 Club m flkwsi lilovte 12:00 O Best ol CirOll<llo O Mowot: ''lrU ot Outll" lt11\'\) l ll· 1• fi ,.,, v. I•'' M.1lurr ~ 1• I \\ ~ C~r•en G•Ay m lllo-lte "fteve1 Sly Goodbye" (<.om) O fool flrnn [lnno1 l',11kt1 lorrnt lutkei Path Biady Donald Woods -12:30-0 •Hitflt si-: WMada Aft. 11111," "Hool• of Fear," "Aiftbldll in Ll'OCl•ri Street" a> Me.1t: IC).wUndtlWOfld SIOfY" (dral 50-0an Duryea. Gale Storm. Ht1btr1 M•nhall 1:00 D (ftl rJ) r101 TOlllOlro. m Tiit nt t11111 2:00 Iii Mowot Oollblc1utvtt: "Tem,U· .... "lll'ftf ~ Go·· m •11 "'•-· s11o.. "Quality $1tttf ," "llny Wolt," "lloa Wtld" 3:00 0 ..._; I c "T"-''" • ._,. , rw 1 ~O Tyro~~t Po•~, 01$011 Nt~•l M<~nl ReMir. DATTIMC MOV1U DCClMIU I~ Below, IN 1'M CiOllYtllitll<t, 1r1 the ...,., _,,, 10.00 e M"" 11 .. enc• tf luAhM" (•4•) '65 Clydt Rottrl. Cold• lou~k. Andrn ~1th. Ou1flo Mar 110 flNd to Uto,!1" (com) ·cs-Bob tlope, 81nc Cle»by !Ml <Cl "SuuA Slept Hert" (com) ·~4-0tbbit R'ynolds. D1Ck Powell. All• r ••n,.,, Glrl!d.t Finell U:OO D Hrt1tln11111 H11h School" (dra) '60-M>e~ey Rooney. Tl'fry Moolf, Oan Ouryu, Ywellt 11!1m1tdt, Jimmy Bord. R1Ch1rd J~ttlel 11;90 CD "UdJ it! Ille W e" (mn) '4 7 -llcbtrt Mon lpltly, l l'Oll Ames lloJd flolu. Audtey Tollff, l•Ynt Alu~ 1-00 lft) CC) "A ~ ff o." (com) '62-Roulrnd Ruuell. Alec G11nesi , ll1y Danlon. M1dty11 lllluf 2:00 m ........ If•• Ctlontl'' lttm) ·~-Omy Kl)e. CGrt urrrns. AA1m T 111111011. NICOie Maurey JJOO J5 a:'.> "OM. UflGll A T1111t" (COM) 'H -CirJ Gmt. l•ntt 81111, hmes Cteuon. hd Don.ildson 3:30 e ~ '1U Party" (com) '6~-rr1nkle A~•lon. D••rn• Mick111a11, Oe~ouh W1lltr. Yvonne Cnlt Robert Q Loul9. Goto prohlt:m" 1'hl•n u•rrtt> to J>at Vunr1 Put u.1ll cut n·d tap(' <1t•ltmr1 t/w ansu.•t·rs ortd octwn you Tlt'P<1 to .~11lt•t> irwqwtw.~ 111 qot•t•rnnumt aml bwil ness Muri yt1ta que:ilwns to Put [)unn At Your Serv1ct>. ora11~w Coast 1)01/y Pilot. P 0 . Box 156Q, Custa Mt·sa. Cl\ 926'2ti. I nclude your telephone 11uml>er 'flu! t·olunm appears daily e.tct•pt Saturdays. 'Lost' Manuf actlH en Traced DEAR READERS: One of the most freqiaent AYS Inquiries Lnvolves a problem ln louting the current address ol a particular manufacture r. "Lost" maouf•durers can be fOWld by• phone call OC' vi.sit to your locaJ Ubrary. Cbec:k the ''Thomas Register of Ameriuo Manufacturers." This book Ji•ls Items by brand name, followed by the manufacturer's name, address and pbooe number. Names and addrt'SSes of companles and their principal orrtct>rs also can be obtained from "Stan- dard & Poor's" annual dlredory at the library. Otht-r sources Include "Consumer ComplalDl Guide 197S" <Macmlllan. $10.9S) and "EM Complaint Directory," available for Sl .25 from Everybody's Money, Box 4318, Madison, W1 S3701. Trailer Dunt Bas a Blt~la DEAR PAT: We rccenUy purchased a 1972 Nomad Travel Trailer. The party from whom we bought it had the books and instructions for the ap- pliances, bul he lost them at the time of transfer.. We can't find any company that sells or makes this trailer. Can you help us locate the headquarters where we ran write to obtain information for our 1972 model'! 1 S.K .. Costa Mesa Write to Fleetwood Enterprises, 3125 Myers St., Box 7638, Riverside, CA 92503, or phone (714) 785·3500. lluntlngton Beach Trailer Supply provided A YS with the name and address of Nomad's manufacturer. Contacting a service or parts and re· pair firm specialiiing in recreational vehicles ls your best be t when trying to contact the manufac- turer of a model no longer on the market. •~Bread for Board..-rs? DEAR PAT. Exactly what kind of .. fiber" is In the nl'W low C'alone .thl~h fiber bread now on the markeL? L.W., Balboa This bread u11ually has 400 percent more fiber than wheat bread and 33 percent fewer calories. Powdered wood pulp or cellulose provides the extra Ober. This is a purified plant flbl'r which is accepted for use in food products by the J."ood and Drug Ad· ministration. It's, listed on the label as "powdered cellulose" (fiber). Tbe bread Is very moist wltb the taste and tex· ture or ordloary bread. It bas the same proteio aod tomparable amounts or nutrients (other than carbohydrate and fat) found in reguJar enriched bread. Recent claims that the extra rtber provides health benefits have been criticized by the FTC because they are not based oo sufficient research evidence. Busines• Cla.• S~Mdtded A course to teach businessmen how to express ideas effectively and imaginatively. will be offered from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. Thursdays beginning Jan. 27 at Laguna Beach High School. The oral business techniques class is part of the Saddleback College off.campus program. Content includes im,promptu and extemporaneous speak· ing, problem-solving conference technique, in- terviewing procedure, sales communication , telephone s peaking, personality projection and voice color. Further information is available from the college Co.panle• Bllfl S"steM• Computer Automation. Tnc., Irvine, says its Sy FA minicomputer systems have been selected by Fireman's F'und American Insurance Companies to meet re<t uirements of a nationwide data processing network. The network, if fully implemented, will include SO systems and will result in revenues in excess or $5 million to Computer Automation's commercial systems division, according to Ivan Socher, CSD general manager. Deliven es begin this month and are expected to continue throughout 1977. • -.oc Ollll..w!OM. llllC • I 09 AHOl\U • e• "11QOP lft\ ~"'t;MMl 111'!111Te • NAf'°""" O.llLLfllt ""ICOUCll C>Olol•AllT Price of Coffee Continues to Rise WASHJNGTON <AP) -Reta.II corcee prices will continue risin& in 1977 and it may ~e two years before normal production brtnas much relief to consumers. the Agriculture Department said. The national avernge retail price of coffee in October was $2.12 a pound and the wholesale price, wblch reacts more quickly lo world s upply and demand, was $2.24 a pound. officials said. About 18 months ago, coffee wu $1.27 a pound in retail stores and $1.21 al wholesale. "Because there is a natural lag in price in- creases between the wholesale and retail levels, prices to con· sumers will aJmost certainly go up," tbe report said. CadHlacs Reealled DETROIT (AP) -General Motors is recalling 76,000 new Cadillacs and 28,000 new vans because or potentially dangerous manulactllring defects. The 1977 CadUlacs have defce· live cruise control systems. the company said. which could result in their speeding up unexpected· ly "any time the engine 1s run· ning except when the brake pedal is applied." The van recall Ul· vol ves right front brake as· semblies which the company said could be out of their proper position. Frirage Taz Nfzftl WASHI NGTON (AP) -For the time being, the clothing salesman who gets a price cut on purchases from his employer 's store and the airline worker who flies at less than full fare may not have to worry about paying In· come tax on the value of those discounts. The Tre33ury Department had been considering a change in rules that would tax these and similar fringe benefits, but sources reported the proposal has been vetoed by Treasury Secretary William E. Simon. PfU!Tel Telb Gcdn SAN FRANCISCO CAP) Pacific Telephone has. reported an increase in fourth quarter ( TAKING J --...,_ST_OC_K_ earnings, but company officials said some earnings may be sub· ject to refund pending the out· come of California Public UU.Uties CommissJon hearmgs. Board Chairman Jerocne V. Hull saJd an adverse ruling by the PUC could require the com· pany to make s ubstantial refunds d rate11 previously collected and require payments to the federal government or additional tax with interest. In addition. the P UC cou ld make Pacifi c Telephone inehgtble for federal tax deferrals and credits, he said. Fourth quarter earnings were 51 cenls a common share, up from 49 cents in the same period a year ago. F or the year ending Nov. 30, ea rnings were $2.06 a common share compared with $1.78 for the sam e period in 1975. Revenues were $.1.646,752,000, an 11. 7 percent increase over 1975 when r evenu es totaled $3,265,317,000. Mort.gage Rafe Drop• Weste rn Pacific Financial Corp., Newport Beach, is offer- ing a 7~ percent FHANA home mortgage lending rate, accord- ing to Frank O'Bryan, president. "This market-lending move r efl ects the continued trend toward lower hom e loan mortgage interest rates The cur· rent r ate. as established by the Department of Housing and Urban Development and the Veteran's Administration, ii. 8 percent, whic h r epresents a maxi mum that may b e charged," O'Bryansaid. Over 1 .. he Counh~r MASO Usti1t91 Polletl Sca11• W'tlllam l\t. Agee. president of Bendix Corp. and heir, apparent lo W. Michael Blumenthal a s board chairman. s ays he sees no reason to c h a nge the people-and-profits policy the next Treasury secretary used to double the corpora· tion's ea rnings. 'H e (Blumenthal) has kind of set the roadmap for us;• said Agee, 38. Club Eyes Few. Drivers' Woes Californians should encounter very few problems obtaining gasoline over the yearend holidays. However, the California State Automobile Association reminds motorists that a higher numbet' of gas stations close Christmas Day than at any other time, ad· dmg that an adequate number probably will be open along priQir cipal t ravel l'OUt<'s. Many neighborhood stations, usually open Sundays and holidays, •re expected to be cl~ed. Earlier than normal clos·. ings s hould also be expecled Christmas Eve. Vp• and Do.,... Pitt:. IJp ,. ' Up n e Up JS 6 VD 2S 0 Up 11 ? 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I UYI-\4 W.•fllfd fO 1 j 9\6 .. "' ~IE 11 ll h .... wtf\MU 1l ' 10 U ... • >\ Wtll\l'fCJO 1 I IO Ulli + \'t wtlll'M S-U 4# t\'t+ , .. WIPP of•.lO •• rlO ~\Ii+ 1"' Wl'°'""Pt 40 1 lt ,. + \Ii Wf'IAlrL .40<I ll tt '10 • , ... wn&i!< ' ., • 'I "~· .. ·~ :;:t!:~~ao11 t ,n ,1l.--; ~ w;ip;j~ toll • rt • + "' WIJnllWI l.<IO 10 • .. ""· •••• lUMOay December 21 1978 s DAIL v fllLOl A I 3 We're Slfpplng Will U.S. Lose Own Ad Game? By Mn:roN MOSKOWITZ In the bealnnloa tbere wu ... well . . • advertJslna. Even In 1776, when our DcclaraUon ol Independence was 1i111ed. there wu adv rtlslng ln America, to the tunt of about l200,000 a year, according to ~uesslimates made in l.fn6 by admen who want t.o have the benefit ol a long lradJ. tion. ln relation to the population or 1776, then about 2 million, that meunt M annual advertJslng expenditure or 10 cents a person. Of course, 10 cen~ bought much more ln 1776 than it does today. And the admen dldn't have lo worry about coming up With Sli0,000 for 30 second:s of television time. Nowadays , the weight of advertising placed against every American annually is '$140, a quantum leap Money Tree from the 10-cenl level of 1776. lt add& up to $32 billion a year. At least that is the total ln sight for this year. a record. WHEN IT COMF.s TO ADVERTISING. the UnlU<I Stales remains No. 1 in the world. The nearest any country comes to us is the S4 billion expenditure made by lhe ad- vertJsers in Japan. (Three J apanese companies -Toyota, Datsun and Sony -spend close to $100 million on U.S. ad- vert.iaing but that counts as part of our total.) Only four other countries in the world -West Germany, Britain, 1'Tance and Canada -are ''blessed .. with an advertising volume in excess of $1 billion a year. The United States is first not onJy in absolute volume of money spent on advertising but in per capita expenditure. The latest survey done by the New York-based Interna· tional Advertising Association (IAA> is based on 1974 figures and shows US. advertising to be equivalent to $125 a person a year. l<'ollowing us are Switzerland ($115), Bermuda ($85), Canada ($75). Denmark ($70 ), Australia ($65), Sweden ($60), Netherlands ($55) and -surprise - Finland ($55). THE SURVEY COVERED ONLY COUNTRIES in the non-Communist world and bringing up the rear was Ethiopia, with a wretched expenditure of a mere S20 a person a year. How can they expect to sell anything there with such timidity? They should send a study mission to Finland, where the per capita expenditure exceeds the com· parable levels in West Germany, Britain or Japan. While we are iitill the dominant power in advertising, even here, as in other economic areas, our leadership posi· tion is weakening. Twenty-five years ago U.S. ad expenditures accounted for 75 percent or the world total. FIFTEEN YEARS AGO U.S. ADVERTISING account- ed for 60 percent of the total. Five years ago the United Stales accounted for 58 per- cent of the world advertising volume. In 1974, when world advertising expenditures were estimated by the lAA at $49 billion, we accounted for S4 per· cent of the total. WHAT'S HAPPEMNG IS THAT countries all over the world have economics that are growing more rapidly than ours. As they do, they begin to lust for consumer goodies, and as soon as they do that they require the services of the adman. This 1s why American advertising agencies have put down satellite offices throughout the world. lt will not be long, then, before there will be more ad· vertising done outside of the United States than in it. Thal may be the beginning of the end for us. Beaten at our own game. Outadvert1scd. Bicentennial Red Brightens· Booklet WASHlNGTON CAP) -Government stat!slics have taken on a bicentennial flavor with the publication ol a 20- page paperback listing farm and food figures ranging from imports of abaca hemp Crom the Philippines to peanut out· put in Zambi a. Statistics also include historical t ables of U.S. wheat, com, cotton and other crop and livestock production from 1959-1975. Domestic programs such as food stamps and school programs also are included. THE BOOK IS "AGRICULTURALStatistics, 1978" and includes the US DA's official bicentennjal emblem -an old plow with a sheaf of grain, hoe and pitchfork -on its bright red cover. Copies of the book can be ordered for $5.60 each lrom the U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington, D.C. 20402. This year's price is $5.65, up 40 cents from $5.15 charged for the 1976 edition. The new edition was prepared under the direction of Melvin L. Koehn, chief of data services in USDA's Statistical Reporting Service. Koehn said "we just decided" to have a red cover this year Instead of the usual drab, butr- colored cover. A BRIEF INTRODUCTION TO the 1978 version said that the demand for timely statisUcs on U.S. agriculture "is almost as old os the republic Itself" since· George Washington, In his first term as president, conducted a mail survey or the young nation 's farming. Tracing the development or USDA statistics, the report said that the present sy~tem of compiling annual figures in- to a concise one-volume edition began in 1936. For those interested in the size and weights of bushels, bags, bales, gallons and other measures of various com- modities, the book includes tahles of definitions, both ln atandard U.S. terms and in the metric syst.er:n . Stang R eports Gains Stang Hydronics Inc., San Clemente, has rePorted. net Income ol $1,227,025 from revenues of $15,200,926 ror the 12 months ended Sept. :xi, compared with net Income of Sl,227,543 from revenues of $14,431,598 for the same period ln 1975. The company reported $1.62 a share earnings based oo o weighted average of 758,230 out.'ltandlng s hares for 1976. nu.a comrares with fl.69 • share based on • welahted average o 728, l 70 outstanding shares ln 1975. William J . Stock, president, said the company ex· ~meed a slight dedlne in rental Income this year but ob· t.lned • 25 percent increue in it& contract revenue volume compared with the same pc?riod ln 1975. WllVnol 6.. I Wll-Vt ~.r.1 ~h al ~':~·::4" ·~-~ . .,. ....,. ~ \ .. ' II<• ~ .... W\Cvaco' •oi " + I' I (l'l!bl Cto. 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' n+ • WN.. 2 >04 & lit Wl1 lif .... 1100 IOJ -'~ Wolwtll 110 6 11 ~·I'\ ~. 6 Ut 14" '" W!tl~~ 1 JO • ~ ,~,.-v. • 1.it" u '°"" .. 111 Welw~ t 10 21 it~··· .. = ·• > , t1'4-'~ 1 : ... ·: ... :~ JO ,::: ~ Wl,c,..t :11,9· ti' ~-1 ~ ~~ ~? ta ~i=,~ ~~J·t >u nt·: ~4J4 DAILY PILOT Soldie rs ,In the I :Dough Am repeatedly asked whr the American ~soldiers of World War I •were called doughboys. That eoes way back. To about the same time the ·Mexican youngsters herding cattle and rborses were first labeled as cowboys. Settlers pusblng ioto Texas saw 1those cowboys eating •tortillas, which seemed ij.ike mighty odd grub. so dubbed them dougbboys, and the frontier term .Jater was tacked onto tarmy recruits. It died out, as such nicknames kto, then was revived dur- t"lng World Wa r I, by whom I don't know. Is there anyone left in •,your family who was ' born in· the ' year 1900? -(1,;,.,Jw If so, con- g rat u I ate 1 that r e- lative. He or she has Ii ved just a bout 45 y e a r s longer than the statisti- cians predicted. Life ex- p ectancy of newborn babies then was only 31.l years. ( L. M. BOYD J PIZZA Q. "Who introduced pizza into the United States?" A . Your dad or granddad, possibly, if either soldiered in llaJy during World War ll. Those servicemen in the Italian campaign de· serve m ost of the credit. More specif1c ally, a veteran under treatment at Fitzsimmons General Hospital in Denver asked . one or the kitch<'n cooks for pizza. The cook ap- p eale d to a Denver newspaper for a r~ipe. The newspaper asked its tlaJian-her itage readers for sam e. Recipes then started showing up in papers natio nwide . Considering this was on- ly about 35 years ago, it's next to amazing, 1s 1l no!. that such a dish in so short a lime could push to the forefront past ap· pie pie, hot dogs. ham- burgers, whatev<'r ? An author it y on breakfast cereals con· tends that 1r more than JO percent or a new ccreal"s budg('t has to go lo pay for ingredients. it's re· garded as a bad n sk What costs so dearly 1s the packaging and ad· 1Yertising Addr•\\ ,,,.;t1I ti> l ~ 6oYd_ P 0 &111\&, (O\t~N•, .. '11•7" A G000 MAH TO KNOW •• Whe n you think of making an important Investment you think of your banker for sound advice -the man with the integnty. the knowledge the experience in making wise investments Dom Raciti is that kind of man . . a director of South Coast National Bank in Costa Mesa When your interest is in acQuinng fine jewelry, the obvious place to go 1s to a Jeweler with the 1ntegr1ty. the knowledge, the experience to guide vou wisely For two decades Dom Raciti has been that man. Wtien y0u're thinking of an 1moorfant investment In fine diamonds. shouldn't '1'0U think of Dom Raciti •.. the man who can help You make that Investment wisely? At Raciti J e welry Company You will ftnd the highest qu1llty diamonds at tho lowest Possible price. Yet. Dom Raciti Is 1 good "*' to know. lqgtJ dev.ttry Co. I 01~0 8ROK£AS JEWELRY • FINE AAT , .. Htwi-t .,..,...,, CetcaMIY• ... 17•1 • Valued Works Found 'Be Wise With lls' .. ·~ CBS News correspondeqt Morley Sater has fired potshots at 'Pope Barbara· Walters folJowing her interview with president-elect Carter last Tuesday. He called her closing comments to Carter, LONDON <AP) -A hoard ol 19th century papers discovered in ll bank vault, including an original Byron manuscript and possibly unknown poems by Shelley, was hailed by ex· perts as a "literary goldmine." of incredlble proPOrtions and quit. aat.oniahin•," Roy Davida, bead of m&auacript.I at Sotheby's said Moq. day. Sotheby's sold the manuscript~ Lord Byron's poem "Beppo" toe .,,500 earlier this year. • 'Be wise with us ... be good to us,' a bene diction Crom 'the first fem ale American Pope ' w a 'new cardinal.' 'I • guess l 'm an easy target these days/ replied Miss Walters. CBS's 270 radio stations carried SaCer 's remarks. 1'be papers, which lay undisturbed ror more than lSO years in the vault under .the Pall Mall branch of Barclay's Bank, have been valued al $&25,0l,)O-S8SO. ()()(). "ll Is a major literary ffnd The papera include an orl1ln1\ manuscript of Byron's .. Cbllcte Harold 'a Pilgrimage," an eart)I! manuscript of Sbelley•a "Hymn to 1ri.: t.ellectual Beauty," an early venlc>G of bis "Mont Blanc" and two poemp.. • FAIRVIEW STATE HOSPITAL THE OLDER Kl DS .... Santa Claus is a hoax. He does not exist. And Residence 34 at Fairview State Hospital proves it. Forty-eight clients from 21 to 60 years of age, each dev~lopmentally disabled, and not one of whom is as· smart as your family's six-year old. Oscar Wilde would grimly have thought of the entire Residence 34 population in Dorian Grey terms; without any evil covenant these clients are living portraits of "some foul parody." Their minds are locked into intellects of infants and children but their bodies age like yours and mine, even to the final parody of some of the older clients, senility. Indeed fate saved its best deck to deal to the clients of Residence 34. But why would Santa pass these guys, these grey-haired kids? Mainly because their appearance fakes him out. Can you imagine someone as old as your dad or grandad sitting on Santa's knee and asking him for a present like a rocking chair or a color T.V.? It's a role for Woody Allen. "Get that grown man out of here! What's he doing in line with those little kids?!" It's the same with the community's charity dollars, always gratefully accepted by the Fairview staff, because those dollars are usually directed to the tots or childrens ' wards. Residence 34 is home to the forgotten client -yet he's worked as hard as anyone to eliminate or reduce his .. primitive behavior'' and to become ambulatory and self-caring: he might have ·spent his whole life just learning to walk, -clothe· himself (buttons are probably still tough), feed himself,. and. care for himself hygienically. But, he 's makingit. And with or°without Santa he'll go on making it. It's just that a few comforts that Santa could supply would make life a,.bit more comfortable and a lot more challenging. The clients in this res idence have exactly one rocking chair an d one T .V . set and that 's the extent of their non-institutional furniture. The big social deal at night is to take turns in the rocking chair. These clients need an honest-to-goodness social surrounding; they're creatures of · habit just like you and I. How can they learn life's social graces without a social setting? If there really was a Santa he'd help these guys out. It's not a job for mortals because these residents are tough to buy for: they take a special kind · of giver, one who can see the kid in all of us especially a real-live adult-kid, one who gives just to give, one who give§ without thanks.· From all I've ever heard that's Santa Claus: He probably doesn 't make furniture and rugs and stuff but he could send money. Oh phshaw! What am I doing - almost hoping? Believing in him? Absolutely not! Else he'd send a check for any amount right now before he supposedly loads his supposed sleigh for his (and now get • this) Christmas Eve ride and he'd mail it to: VOLUNTEER SERVICES FOR RESIDENCE 34 FAIRVIEW STATE HOSPITAL 2501 HARBOR BOULEVARD COSTA MESA, CALIFORNIA 92626 . , 44 fashion island, newport center 644·5070 , ... •1J to 11 111 Ill 111 ·ii ,, r• nc ... . . v f!undrecls of shoppers, who ~ ' • ~ · stood in line for hours, try to crush through " 'f!oors the moment they open. ,. . '• ,~ \' .. ,, BEA ANDERSON, Editor Tuesday. December 21, 1976 81 ' Christmas By JUDITH OLJ)()N 01 tlM O•lly Pll04 SIAll "Our famil y r eall y di gs Christmas. There is a lot of lrad1 tion. My mother does a lot of bak· ing." • * * "I don't like Christmas. I don 'l ever remember having a happy one. Your life doesn't measure up to what you see -the pictures of happy families around a tree " * • * Christmas is a holiday taken for granted. It is assumed that all the people eyeing the merchan· dise in department stores or car- rying huge rolls of green and red wrapping paper to the car are having a good time But are they? of day, indicated that most pco· pie are celebrating Chnstmas the way they want to and that they are enjoying the fest1v1lic5 Several trends emerged as well. In general. people who don 'l work and have time to shop during off-hours in the middle of the week are in a better mood about buying. Men are not the shoppers If men had to do most or all of the purchasing, there would be few gifts under the tree. PEOPLE ARE not buying out of obl igation . Most shoppers said the people on their lists arc the ones they want on their lists . Spirit: Most people want the stores to wait until after Thanksgiving to put up decorations Many com· mentcd that there is far too much advertising connected with the holiday. Here are the m oods of Christmas. 1976· A Costa Mesa resident. who re· members always having to go to her grandmother's for the holi· day, said, "Christmas should be with your own family, not what othcrpeopk want you to do. A survey of nearly 50 shoppers , ·in various locations along the Orange Coast , at different times There is more reli gious cm· phasis this year. Both men and women are trying to get back lo the spiritual meaning of the holl day. "My mother will come to my house and t'ritieizc the turkey. But I have to make Christmas for h('r She's a widow. I would rather Just erase the holiday, or r emember th e religious signi fie a nee. "It's a made-up, eommercial holiday When you feel you have to. there goes the wanting." '/ Jove Christmas. It's a joyous sea'son. We are trying to get back to the meaning. I feel the spiritual aspects are important. ' Shirley Peters. a Newport Beach resident, said, ''Thi s is a beautiful time of year. I feel slightly trapped because TV commercials pressure us. We have a rule with our children. though. lf we see it on TV we don't buy "I would like to see more re- ligious emphasis.•· BARBARA HEFI, of Laguna Niguel, said s he has felt trapped by the traditional rituals other ':&l~~~~H . It's obvio.us Richard Voit has found' the tree just his size and doesn't hesitate pointing ~tllC',...~.,,~~ 1rotJt to 11is mother, Diana Voit. I I As You Like It years. but this year was going to be happy because four genera· lions of her family were to be together : "I would not start decorating until after Thanksgiving. That part is so commercial " Steven Parkins. holding his small infant while tus wife went for coffee. admitted he does feel "a little trapped." "We buy little things. It's the thought that counts. But I don't like to go shopping." he said. "I wish people would keep the same festive mood all year." A young woman. pushing her ehild in a stroller . asserted, "I'll only feel trapped if my mother· in-law tries to ruin the holiday for llS. ,, Asked why she goes to a family gathering where there is tension. she replied, "J would probably be hurting more people if I didn't go.·· She wishes people would ex· change more hand-crafted gifts. "We would· end up treasuring those items more." Judy Snow. a stewardess from Newport Beach, buys fo r 34 earh year but makes her purchases year-round so she can give a lot of thought to each person. "SOMETIMES I feel trapped but they are all meaningful pco· Tree Prices Climb pie," she said. "I've been ~ying for seven years and tlus 1s the first time I will be home for Christmas. "If I could change anything about the holiday, I would try to be with my family and friends more." Larry Cookus. a Yorba Linda resident taking a break for pizza. said he probably would scream if he had to do all the shopping. He and his wife buy for 20, he added. "It's easy to figure out what to get for them. I pretty much get what I like too, m re- turn." Dolly Booker, of Huntington Beach. beamed when she said "Christmas is ..beautiful this year. We're expecting a very wanted baby.·· She is trying to "take it easier" this year and not worry about whether people like what she buys for them. A Newport Beach secretary sounded bitter when she assert· ed, "I feel pressured into things I'm not mad about. Gifl giving is way out of perspective. It's hard physically. men tally and finan· cially. I don't like crowds or go- ing into the hole.'' She explained that she is a widow and so many people gave her gifts when her husband died that her list now has grown to 25. ANOTHERSECRETAllYs~d adamantly, "Christmas is for children. J would like to give gifts only to them. And why must you get something materialistic?" Peggi Hillis, a Corona del Mar resident . s miled when she thought about the holiday. "I love Christmas. We have a good income and I thank God for that. "It's a joyous season. We are trying to get back to the mean- ing Christ's birth. I have had a closer feeling to God in this past year and feel the spiritual aspects are more Important." Connie Leoni , a medical assis- tant. said as she perused the cos- metics counter, "l definitely feei trapped. It's hard deciding what gifts to gel. I wish we could draw names and buy one nice gift. J feel pressured time-wise." A man standing nearby almost shouted. "I hale to shop. No, l'Jn not having a good lime." Bob Stephan, one or the few men who admitted he liked to shop, perhaps found one of the best solutions. He took a week off early in December to make h.i$ purchases and put 250 miles on his car scouring the county for Just the right girts. "I'm enjoying the season now." he said with satisfaction. Buyers Branching Out By DENNIS McLELI.AN Of tlle D•lly f'llot S~ff The white light bulbs strung overhead looked like so many stars against the black backdrop of the night sky. Adults and children, decked out in winter parkas, passed through the sawdust-laden rows of Christmas trees. carefully ex· amining both quality -and price. "They just got off the truck to- day, fresh from Oregon," said the Boys Club volunteer. "They come in every day and go right out." "I want this one here," said a woman. "It's too skinny," protested her husband. "II you put ornaments on it, it will spread out,•' she reasoned. Her husband, however, was too busy looking at their three children to answer. "It's snowing," yelled the little girl throwing a handful or sawdust into the air, as her two brothers slid across the ground. Alld so it eoes as thousands or Orange Coast families go about their yearly ritual of buying the family Christmas tree. AMERICANS TIDS year were expeded to buy a record mhnber of trees -real and artificial - despite higher prices. Wholesale pricu for rresh trees bave risen about five per· cent, accordlnl to the National Christmas Tree Association. And prices for artificial trees, whicb are becoming increasingly more popular. also are up. American Tree and Wreath, the nation's largest artificial tree maker, say1 ret,Il prices have risen slx. or seven pet'*1t• ~ The debate over whether or not to buy a real or artillclal ttee Is one heard increa1tn111 throuebout the land. Each has its advantages. The fresh trees. proponents will ar1ue, are the real thing. They have that refreshing pine 1mell. And you can pick your own li%e and shape -that'• part of tbefun. And tbeJ abed, tN a,ponwl» will IQ. And bow 1 about the price? Putting out $18 or $20 a year for a 7-foot Douglas fir is not their idea of fun. THAT ARGUMENT explains why this year a record 26 million artificial trees will be sold, ac- cording lo American Tree and Wreath. The firm estimated sales of $35 million, up from $25 million last year. Although the fake firs cost more initially. the savings in the long run are considerable. The Broadway in Newport Beach carries artificial trees ranging in realism and price from SlO for a 4-foot model to SI 15 for a 7-foot one. Customers, obviously looking for trees as true to life as possi- ble, have been buying more of the higher priced models, said a saleswoman. "They look very natural from a distance," she sald, adding most customers are rebelling at the price or fresh trees. "They're also easy to set up." The only complaint from customers, she said, is that they do not have a scent. SILVER ALUMINUM trees appear to be a thing of the past. Neither the Broadway or Sears, which carries artificial trees in the $35·$(2 price range, carry them. Those not wishing to go either to the traditional or artificial way are turning lo living trees, which they can plant in their yard alt.he end of the season. Nurseryland Garden Centers in Huntington Beach carries liv- ing trees ranging in price from a one-gallon Star Pine for $3.99 up to a boxed Monterey Pine for $49. Ca.shier Cindy Miller said the store, one or 18 in the chain, is the only one that so far hasn't sold out. She said most o( the buyers have yards larae enough to ac- commodate the trees after t.be holiday season. She believes they -and thole who buy artificial trees -may, be motivated by ecology. Price, size, shape, real or artificial, it's all relative.Mone tree expert put it, "Beauty is in the eye of the beholder." Is Home Safe? SACRAMENTO (CNS) -Carelul safety precautions can keep the holiday season happy, says state Fire Marshal Phil Favro. The majority of ftres occur where people I eel the aaf est - at home. Favro said. And there are spedal hazards at the bolidaytimeofyear. · He listed the following safety precautions: -II you must rearHnge furniturefor a place to locate the tree, remove some items from the room rather than blocking an exit or creating undue congestion. -After euests have left, check all fumlture for ciaarettes and smoking materials which may have rallen between c-..1l4ons, etc. Cigarettes in upholstered furnJture are a prim'1'>' cause of residential fires. -Before leaving the house, or retiring for the evening, make .ure all candles are safely extinguished, that the ft.replace screen ls completely closed to contain rema.lning emf>erj, and all decorative llghtln.I -especially Chrlatmu tree lights -a.re turned off. "One of the most important thlnga you caft do for your lamlly b have 1 smoke deteetor installed 1n each sleeplna areaol your bome. 'Ibey .U..eareat Chrialmu 1!.ftl, ''Favro llid. I ·- .• ft DAIL V PILOT Tuesday, decemt>er 21 1978 - !7 Wife's Story Not SO Touching ' • • DEAR ANN LANDERS: PLEASE don't let ~ ~down now. Some poor woman (bJaa her) bad •' the courqe to write to YoU about her husband . ;) who bu lrnored her for four years -basn 't so • mucb u touched her arm. :~ There are ao many of us. Sometimes I ache « state Mental Dealt.It Depuim•t (look lD t.be pbooe book). A therapist will U.tea lo yoa aDd sua~t altenaUves. Tbat Is NO •lY lo bn. DEAR ANN: I am now 80 years old and your excellent booklet on alcobollam came 35 years too late for me. Although I was well aware that my wife had a terrible drlnkini problem, fool.lab pride and the "disgrace" ol admltUn1 I was married to an alcoholic woman kept my eyes closed and my mouth abut. YoW' column. U juat one pel'IOft takes my advice, l wUI reel I bavt done aome 1ood in the world. -OSHKOSH DEAa OSllKOSB: fta.U 70G for ~akln1 em. I'• so.re yMr ltaer will ldt plenty of raw aenea. I llope tbe J b•an at Alcobollca ~IDOU Id a lood~ &oday. Just to bave a man put bil arms around me. Give ua some concrete advice, Ann. What , ean we do! I'm ln my early 60&, and my husband ban't touched me ln TEN years. I finally insist· ·,.. ed that be go in for a physical. Although his "' hormone count is low, there is nothing physically DUR ANN LANDENJ: You helped settle one blC famlly argument. Now will you do ao again? No bfl deal, but there's been a tot of wran•Un1 over this one. • wrong with bim. He, too, is home every night. ._!~' ""'-d &uc octor who saw him suggested psychiatric I now firmly believe that afler six years ot living with a problem drinker, ii no progress has been made, a divorce $hould be recommended by you or a doctor. lt is not worth the 1acrlfice for iJiy sensible person to tolerate the bell of living .. 1t.rt an alcoholic indefinltelY. S~posin1 a woman wu married for three yean and then d ivorced. She did not remarry, but her fQrqier husband did. His second mar· rlage lut«S 35 years. lie then had a second divoree . : care. but my husband refuses to see a ·• psychiatrist. • I'm too old to gel a job and we can't maintain ~ two homes on his salary. Whal can women in my .. position do? There are so many of us . - .• ASHAMED OF MY NAME .; . DEAR ASHAMED: I hope you won't think . I'm cooobu~ out wbea f repeat the advice. II you cu't afford a private tberaplst, call your county It would have been an eay tllln1 for me to start a new life at 50 when I found gin in the hot- water botUe and dozens of bottles bwied in the bacllyard. How I wish I had had the 1ood sense and courage to end our miserable marriage then. Alter lh1s man dies, do either of his former wives have the right to refer to themselves as widows? It seems to me that the designation of "widow" should be reserved for a woman whose husband puses away while she is married to him. • .. . .. .. .. " .. .. . .. ' ~ .. . - ' . I hope you feel this letter is J(ood eoouch for She's Only Human Dishes 'Chafing ' Counselor MJcheel Castleman, Stephen Purser ·Roles Reversed SAN FRANCISCO CAP) -"Men are trained to believe birth control is a woman's responsibtlity. After all. the thinking goes -she's the one who gets pregnant." Out or such sentiment was born a birth control clinic for men only, says Michael Castleman, a counselor at the new Men's Reproductive Health Clinic here. ''We're really filling a vacuum," said Castleman. ''Women want their .. partners involved in birth control decisions. but there's no place for men in the usual family planning program which is geared mainly for women." Funded by a $43,000 federal heaJth Rrant, the clfoic is ooen two davs a week by appointment and on a drop-in-basis. Manned by two full-time counselors, a part-time counselor, a physician and medical technician -all in their 2Qs -the clime dispenses Cree contraceptives and advice on birth control and sexual problems. Free physical examinations are available for patients with venereal disease and other sexually related illnesses. In two months or operat.Jon, Castleman said the clinic has seen S4 persons, ranging an age from 16 to 51. About half the patients are in their 20s, and about two-thirds ol the pat.Je=its have annual incomes under $6,000 . "We place high pnonty m trying to give information to high school men," said Castleman. "If you look at the statistics, high school pregnancies are rncreasin~ " By ER MA BOMBECK Fat friends aren't born. They're built and molded out of gentle lumps of submissiveness by a group 1 call the Devil's Classmates. The Des prey upon the weak, spread ugly rumors about cot· tage cheese and have never known a fat Monday in their lives. They pretend to be your friend, but refuse a dessert at their house and you'll never be asked back. During the holiday sea.son, they come out of the woodwork. At Thanksgiving, J casually mentioned I was on a diet. The Devil's Classmates hit me with all the ammunition they had. First. Wanda, who is built like a _ piece of lint, stood over me and blubbered. ''Have another gravy sandwich . . . or I'll have to throw it out." (The guilt ap- proach.) Then Fern whispered in my ear, "You mean you're not going to try my sugar-layered torte that I slaved over all morning?" (The rejection number.) Finally my mother, who "made me a plate" in the even· Ing that would have fed California for a year, warned, "Eat something or you're going to be sic~." (The scare-them-lo- death rouUne.) They've been at work ever since. Marj's little boy -Che one with the broken leg wh<> is hobbl· ing around on a crutch -ap· r AT WIT'S END peared al my door selling Christmas peanut brittle. My sister-in-law sent her an- nual fruitcake with the cryptic message, "If you don't want it give it to a good person." ' My best friend plied me with chip d ip and coaxed, ''You can get too thin, you know - especially at your age." And even my kids look at me plaintively and whimper, "Mom, can you eat the rest or my fudge cake?" Lucky for me 1 'm on to all their tricks, lncluding the soothsayer who swears that carrots cause blindness and skim milk gives you bad skin. Last night at a party everyone was gathered around a chafing diab of calories when a man neict to me handed me a potato chip and said, ''There isn't a woman oo canvaa in the Louvre Museum under 155 pounds.'· l Jcnew he was a Devil 's Classmate .. , but what the heck, I'm only human. Sagittarius: Social Activity Increases (Ann L a nders 01 Am I right or wrong? IN NEED 01" AN UNB1ASED OPINION . DEAR IN NEED: Techalcally, you are ri.g1tt; but lf a woman wt.o.e former buabaod bas died feel• better ulll.ni beraell a widow IJ.latead ol adlvorcee, wbo iasbeba.rJQg? REWARD .,.. 9f't ..,.,.... to , •• , ~ ·"~ -·--..-........ ..i. •• ~~~~ 7~~·~:= :.::: tw ... UM« Oftt Ho dt •J ... • Phone: 546-6740 UPHOLSTERY 'W'""-Y•W_. ....... lt22 H..._, tl~d. CotteM-'4 EA$TILUI', CIENTEll Give her a gift to keep her looking and feeling great. Mad1ne's offers G ift Certtllcotes h varying denomi- nations fOf your special lodv. A gift of a rnembef~. a massage, or dues. No con- tracts. A phllos- ophy of greater quall!y and a smaner member- shp ,. mad1ne's a private health club for Orange County women .. 2036 Quall S1reet ()ustotT campus) Newport Beach (714) 75l-3200 \t..a--o.-~~•"-0.."-Clo.-o•t:oa-ci..-e..c:o..:,. ! I'm Dreaming of a ( } WHITE'S la.Z:8o~ l f Oarbtnacu ' WEDNESDAY , DECEMBERZ2 Wait and see. Play cards close to chest. greater effort towards self· unders tanding. Emotions tend now to dominate logic. You meet someone who is fascinating and a challenge. Social activity increases. You discuss weight, C05· t s, parties, travel, telephone calls, tele· grams. ' celebrate. Wbatwuhid· what you wished for is f· OVER 200 CHAIRS den, a cause for doubt available ... but now you f By SYDNEY OM ARR ARIES <March 21· April 19) If you attempt to challenge, chide, pu.sh -U.en enmity of lhooe m authonty is aroused. If, oo the other hand, you quietly assert beliefs. principles you cain valuable albea TAlJllUS <April 20· May 20 ): Practical mat· ters. connected with travel, command atten· t1on. You enlarge areas of communication. Ac· cent on long-range, LEO <July 23-Aug. 22 ); Stress value-insist or factual information. One who paints pie-in-sky pictures could be whistl · ing in dark. Get books, objects in order. VlRGO CAug. 23·Sept. 22): Your style becomes popular -you gain plaudits . especially where children and op. posite aex are con - cerned. Flni1b what you at.art. UBRA <Sept 23·0ct. 22>: Dig deep for in· form a t ion -m a ke SCORPIO (Oct. 23- Nov. 21): Hunch is valid -be confident. Heed in· ner feelings. One who claims to know what should be done is actual- ly seeking counsel. Know it and act accordingly. SAGl'MARIUS <Nov. 22-Dec. 21 ): You get money or gift wish, but some preconceived con- cepts, notions overturn. CAPRICOR N (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Lunar cycle promotes initiative, originality, utilizing as- sets, contacts to rise above "the crowd." Means red tape, delays can be avoided. Be confi. dent, optimistic. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Your situa- tion is better than ort&inally "diagnosed." You not only have hope, you ha.ve reason to travel. spi rltu al, con· ,----iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii:~~~~~iilE~i~~~~ij~~-, temptation. agreement associated with co· work en. GEMINI CMay 21·J\U'le 3>): You have more in yourlavorthanmiehtbe 'apparent on surfae!e. Keep resolutions con· cemlng vitamins. nutri- tion, diet. special r.mces. •. CANCER (June 21-l July 22>: Practical mat· ~' ten, legaJ rights, special permiaalona, partner, &;. maniare -these come £. under spotlight. Key Is to ~ be a shrewd observer. t:: !Colendo ' ! ALPHA XI DELTA: : The traditional holiday : brunch will be at 11 Lm. : Wednesday, Dec. 29, ln ;. tbe home of Mrs. Jerry i Money, Oranse . ~ Collegians and auesta • will been~rtained. JOB'S DAUGBTEBS: • Stacy Manabata was in- • stalled u honored queen of Bethel 313, Newport Beach, durln1 ceumonlea lo the Masonic Temple, Newport Beach. W. heft • watt 32 feet long by 10 f•t high full of atacka Ind atadc1 and atadc1 of Levi'•• cord• end JMn-. ~ Other ortlc'ora' are Stephanie Sebnlere, AM ~.wg::s:= ........, ..... Heftoo1 Bobble Beaublfft 1028 lmne, Newpor1 &Heh. c.tiJomle, ~ &U-?061 .~AD.nRu.asell. · ........................................ ~ ........ -. .. . . . . .. . .. .......... . and fear ia. merely a have doubts about it. f· 0 ~ D p shadow. Home, family, adjust-f: " IS LAY PISCES (Feb. 19· ment.s are featured. Key 9 _M_ar_c_h_20_)_:_Y_o_u_f_in_d_th_a_l _now __ t_a _dl_P_lo_m_ac_y_. ___ ,. 1001 RINGS TO CHOOSE FROM We&cak SPORTY chic REFINED Sophisticated timely CLASS/CAL casual DISTINCTIVE ~ <;#~ CFA8HI01'W3LE moo I I Priced from 5 149 .f I f ( FREE IMMEDIATE DELIVERY WHITE'S Sllowt:ISI ' 3375 Via Lido Ntwport Btoch · Collfomlo TtltphOM.' 675-7511 1211 Wtst Coo1t Hlghwdy Ntwport Beo'h lt1 the lobl>y of tht Bo/boa Boy Cfqb ·Mm10Nv .. H A-Y P•~) ' 28892 Marguetrte Pkwy _..._._ istis02 _...,. fW IAT. IM COSTA MESA 369 L 17tll Stnet twa1tan rt ...,.., ............... ,.., ...... .,... ................ , 542-8657 r . .. BOOMER di.L'I. 'f'Mt rzw cross Fl.-A6 IS ~"f'1JG A-r ~-r"':~ • ~Al.f-MAsr IOOA'< ... FUNKY WINKERBEAN TANK McNAMARA NANCY I WONDER -WHAT I'LL .. GET FOR CHRISTM AS TODAY'S CIDSSIDBD PUZZLI UNITED Feature Syndicate Mond1y l Puui. SOived ACROSS 1 V•olenl blow !l Master ·• •n India 10 l tvely 14 T11e Th•tt Wise Men 15 f< !ouch 16 Famoly l,neaoe d1•oi•m 17 S1tnunoer stress t9Cutg1a1n 20 Prldly plan I 21 U 8 II• deol 22 Eieelrleal umlt 23 Stcrtl valleys 25 T1111e of CS..y :18 L19Mlog 30 011111n111! In atrenoO"I 31 Hocllty PtllCtl 3'4Looaen1 knot 38 Shtlvt 38 Genevieve or Mu la. Abbr. 39Echo: 2 word1 _.2Llneman •3 Supemalurel cr111ur1 4 4 Okl1lloma city ,.5 Ten to anotlllr 47 T1x111e aur- lec. 49 Moat e•· ceHer>I 50 R0111an tiouaeootd deity 51 Surgical lhretd 53 N111ow me1a1 a111p 55 Stroh oenlly 50Ant1M plic aurgery IOul'lder 61 81ndlelder Sammy · • 9? M1e1oecop1c oro1n1sm 8 4 ROtllll!'I 101d 85 Noat SN!pe 66 A11 Comb latm e 7 Still Allt>f 88 General 1n cllnatton O~KIU DOWN ~A<;'S ............. ~ 'O~'Vi 'Nii'N~ s c ~A '1 If '1 I Ii c " AS ( I 0 I/ E s f A T S R I NS [ ' . 1£ N I S I! AN D f D s ( N 0 £ R . ( 0 u p l f I/Cl.T O N (' I IS R f lilAllln ll ( A T A q 0 ~-At"IAIR 0 T I S AN I ~ E-\IPl!nllll CA S l Hf NT A -El [ II c II I T S A V[N T\Rf l llfNfW c; • I P F • I s f s " r A II T 9 Gerden plots l I T ' Jo!! 10 Slruooltd I I Ad•Pled for t1llmo hold t 2 S111tont1's 'H ~ N 0 T C I U 'Oi --I l ~ •• 3~~~ 33 fienc;h UP• oerhou5e J5Mr Poe 37 An•mal 50\IOd 40 Pensioned um1 Abbr 13 Informal 4 I Plumbng alhrmallvet llxture 18 St1g1 ol1 46Cale journey pa trons 24 Eroded 48 Europetn 1 Dirt parllci. 25 Raise reg,ibllc 2 Grld11al upttghl 51Span1s11 1ttle Otcitt!llnv 26 Deeo 520 3 CUy ollndla think t r 53 AbscMd _. H1btfdunery 27 ·····Hr lnfatmal lfem1 1nd 5'4 Recently & Certain pie-dead tllf" 28Gambltr,ol 55Seoarate 9"··· you e sort: 2 6 7 Plant d11· rHdy ?H words ease 7 Enjoylnv 29 Can 58 Banet skirt onffelf·4 31Tot>y 59Tfllet WOfdl beverage 60 AnhQue 8 Cak• 32 ·····of Ille aulos dlcor11of1 c;04n 63 Can prov. by Wm. F. Brown .t Mel Casson bY, Tom Batiuk by Jeff Miller & Bill Hinds U}itf\I ~ ? rf 7 Ml/ OOMFtl?. If 6tN05 LIJUHJ THO~~ aoo.JNS llFT UP IHfCAR . by Emie Bushmiller PEANUTS JUDGE PARKER TUMBLEWEEDS NO ··· l'M LOOKING FOR SANTA CLUES SEE'"A TALE OF TWO OTIES" WA.5 JUST ON TV! I lUA.Tc.HEO TH£ !NME 50 NOW I ll)JN'T HAVE lO RfAD M SOOK W/51 flfFCRE: WE IH:GIN, I~ A ~Ru:F ANNOUNCEMENT: MISS PEACH l I THE VIRTUE OF VERA VAUAMT DR. SMOCK L-00 K ! A~O'T'H e Ft PERSO>-IAL-IZeP 1,..ICeNse PL-A'T'E! ! GORDO by Charles M. SclUi THE ONL'< lll1N6 I DIDN'T UNDERSTAND WE~ TllE PARTS A600T THE SHAMPOO, THE SOAP AND THE COFFEE ... by Harold Le Doux by Tom K. Ryan by Mel I' " .. DAil Y Ptl.OT • by Ferd Johnson· THE GIRLS 1'hls scarf is perfect for my husband -hc11 never wear enythi.. lhis lood and it will look bcautil\JI with my red coat." DENNIS THE MENACE r -DAILY PILOT Tuuda . December 21 1976 Bruins Can't Stand u -p · To Tidal Wave, 36-6 • • EMPffiS (AP) -Wbal's all it. Johnny Davis and Rick ''I think we took this game aboulAJabama's bowl jinx? Watson scored on one-yard seriously enouiti," he said, "but year ago, Bear Bryant and plunces -the latter with just 22 I doo't think It would be fair to Crimson Tide aoapped a str· second• to play -plus the •a.r otberwlte and detract Crom or eight fr~itless bowl ve!'· Nathan-tc>-O'Rear fleaflicker. an outatandinc Alabama effort. l by def~atlng Penn State m "We've been working on it in thought AJ1bama was a fine Sugar Bowl. practice a lot, but this is the fir.st team 1olng into the game and, d Monday nig.ht, the foxy old time we've used it in a game," alter getting beat as badJy as we dusted' off his ~ell.stocked said Nathan. "J reaJly didn't did, I h aven't changed my a of tricks for a Liberty Bowl want to do it. It seldom works in evaluation.'' tecord crowd of 52,736 and a na· practice and I was afraid It J.lpnal television audience, and would be interce pted, or itlabama sm ashed seventh· something." ~anked UCLA 36·6 for the biggest Krauss who was not sure he mismatch in the 18-year history was even 'going to play much this ~thegame. . . . year, was voted the game's out-t .li was the first victory tn three standing player . Besides bis in· ~for Alabama, which helped terception for Alabama's first mlugurate the I:J~rty Bowl in touchdown, he made two key l~d Philadelphia m 1959 tackles on a goal·line stand at the UCLA AlaNl!\a Al• -1'0 lerr•y '1 0 0 0 ·-· ,, l J •-46 Al• l(r ... " u ""' ,,,,."'"''°" c .. rreykkk) Ala -Oavl' I run (llerrey klO) At•-<> Rur?ONUft'Om N•U.... la.t .. yllldl) Al•-l'Cl 8-rr•v U .-...-1'0 l!Mrr•' 2t UC\.A-T 8'_,,.,,.un llcl<kfMl«I) Al• Wataon l run U.lc~ la1l.-ll A-U.13' Flnt"'°""'s UCLA A~ 17 u , ",, br-0ught the whoopee ooe-yal'd-line-lat.e-in &he~ jilt,· Bryant whooped after 16th· quarter. Ru ....... , ••• P~•l119 yar~ Rehwn yara.s p~- ~ ~ --l::.6i--~ 1'7 1°' tllftked ~labama trotted out such ·•on the interception, Charley •Jm~JCk s a s a 20-yard Hannah tipped it and it came fleaflicker touchdown pass from right to me. I got a couple of alfback T on y Nathan to bloc.ks, one I know from Charley, uarterback Jack O'Rear, an un· and just got on in." and s~ovel pass for a key UCLA coach Terry Donahue, )'ard gain and .an unbalanced who called Al •·a good old country licking," disagreed with Dankworth and said his team was ready to play. Mer a rocky 2-2 beginning, bama finished with a 9-3 re· . The losers wound up 9-2· 1. e Bruins, who committed no er than 13 glaring errors - luding three interceptions, a t fumble and two costly nallies -had all sorts of ex- atio114 for their loss. They amed the wind and the fact that . ey had really wanted to go to th e R ose Bowl i n s unny California. as Pac1fic·8 Con· ference champions. And at Limes they seemed like numbed statues fi the n ear-freezing Lem · atures and a wind chill factor U degrees. ' "I wanted to play tonight,·· said quart e rback Jeff E worlh, ''but l ttunk we felt 1t 't a game that would make eason. I think maybe we felt ilwas kind of a consolation game JW' us. We dido 't have intensity or lire. which l think was ob· vious, and we combined that with the fact that we sat back and waited for something to happen. "When you get up early, you're going to take away the running game, and they did a good job of that. Their strategy was to make us drive agains t the wind, establish field position and keep it for the game. They also managed to score some points." And in various and devious ways. Buclty Berrey set a Liberty Bowl record with field goals of 37. 25 and 28 yards. Llnebacker Barry Krauss rumbled 44 yards wilh an intercepted pass after tackle Charles Hannah deflected Stab Victim's Final Words: Send Help """' FUftll>l9' 1~1 ,..,.., ... , yard• 0 45 I0-11J ""'° MJ 1-11 >' 1.0 3-iZ •?t INOIYIOUAl..1.IADeltS RUStilNO -UC:l"', T. 8rown 16 107 0-WOtll\ 1~~. TJ'Mr 17·9'. AIMIMN, Natl\6n 9 61, D••lt II \t, Wohon 11·4> lll!C!IVIN(l -UCLA. w .. •w 744, T Brown 3-7•.Al•IMIM41,0'Rear11•,NewiomeM3 PASSINO -UCLA, Dan•wortll 10.11·3, 147 vucb Ala1>arn1, 111111.-1~ S.HI, ». "'-'"•" 1·1.0, "· Oltlly Piiot ~t• •v l>alrlO O'De!MWll BLACKWOOD . N J. (AP> "My wife stabbed me. I am bleeding Please send help," Blend a Gay told a telephone operator. Moments luter , the Philadelphi a Eagles' defensive end ••as dead. TERRY LOVINGIER (22) DRIBBLES AROUND STAN NYBO. The 27·year·old Gay made the call Monday morning t o a Campden County emergenC'y telephone number The operator ~corded the menage, then notified police and an am· bulance. Gloucester Townahip pol ice found Gay, a five-year veteran of ~ National Football League, 1n rus two-bedroom apartment with ~s throat slashed Aulhortties 3a1d he was stabbed In his sleep '*1th an eiaht·inch kitchen knife. Hls wife, Roxanne, 2S, was Ar· N.igned Monday on a general C!barge of homicide at a 10· fhinute hearing before Judge 'Peter Corruui. She was jailed in lieu or Sl00,000 bond. Stephens Sparkles; Paces UCI, 67-58 By HOWAlt D L. HANDY Ot ._ O•lly 1>1ioc SCMI A hot-shooting first hall and a tough. teflacious defense in the second period combined to glve ooach Tim Tift 's UC Irvine An· teatcrs basketball team a 67·58 victory over previously un· dereated (7·O1 Seoattle· Pacific College Monday night m UCl's Crawford Hall. Louu Stephens. a &-4 junior, sparked the first hall scoring spree with 18 points and wu in· strumental in pulling the aa· testers even alter they fell behind, 11·4 in the early gotni. uor hit 46.6 percent from the floor to 38.2 for the Falcons with sophomore reserve TerTY Lovingier the leading rebounder w1th eight. Jen}(lns had six. The Anteaters travel to Cal State CFullertop> Thursday night (8) tor their ne.xt outing. UClnhM 161) .. " ,, ... P ID 1 1 U Jertit. Int 4 4 , t2 """°'"' • t t t • l(llUOMft Chtndltr 2 t t • Tl...,,.,, TN!t Htlftl111t: UC lrvlM, U.U. .. " ...... 1 2 4 ' 4 0 :a • I 0 2 2 1 ' 3 J 271320•1 • AP ~ 'BAMA'S TONY NATHAN (22) SCOOTS PAST DAVE MORTON FOR A BIG GAIN. Vikings, Steelers Favored LAS VEGAS -The odds. makers have made the Min-nesota Vikings and the defending Super Bowl cbampio.n Pittsburgh Ste~lers the favorites to take their conference crowns Sunday. According to the Churchill Downs Sports Book here, the Steelers are 4 Yl·polnt favorites over Oakland in the clash for the American Football Conference tiUe. while the Vikings are also 41h·point ravorites t.o defeat the Los Angeles Rams for the Na· tional Football Conference ,crown.' IOC!"lu!p litJeir~d BOSTON -One jockey was hospitalized today with injuries suffered in a five·horse collision · at .Suffolk '-Dtswni': that injured anotfter jockey and killed one hoPse. Another horse bad to be destroyed. .:·. Hector Canales, 29, was re· ported in good condition at Massachusetts General Hospital with internal injuries. Jockey Joe Fabiano was treated for in· juries at the hospital and re· leased. Canales' mount, Native War- rior, was leadfng by five lengths in the second race Monday when he broke down at the top of the turn with two broken knees. The horse was destroyed oo the track. One of the followlng five horses, the 3-year·old filly Girlish Dream, suffered a broken neck in the pileup and was killed lnstanUy. Tftau T op Rfe~ Forwards Gree Bunch and Mite Niles paced a balanced scoring attack Monday night as boat Cal State (Fullerton> stunned a good Rice team, 74-62, in an int.eraectional basketball eame. Bunch and NJJea scored 14 pointa each and center Steve Shaw added 12, as did guard Keith Anderson. Tbe young Titans, starting five \D'lderclaaamen, were tied with See Brleft P11e 8s Minnesota to Mov e? Weather No Factor In Rams-Vikes Tiff BLOOMINGTON. Minn. (AP) -Minnesota coach Bud Grant and his Los Angeles counterpart, Chuck Knox, agree that bad weather doesn't make any dif· ference to good teams. Their teams are the best in the National Football Conference and they'll meet Sund ay in the coldest park in the league. "Weather should make no dif· ference to a good team," Knox said Monday about the Rams im· pending trip to the sub-freezing Minnesota air. "We're sure not going to worry about the weather this early in the week," said Grant. "We've got plenty of other things lo think about, namely the Rams." However. the freezing tern· peratures and a bone-chilling northerly wind left Grant faced with deciding today whether to leave town for practice. He is more concerned about the possibility of snow than the frigid temperature. ''They're the same team we played earlier this year," said Grant. referring to Minnesota's 10·10 overtime tie with the Rams, Sept. 19. ··Al this stage there's not much to separate us," added the 49· year-old Vikings coach. "Dallas and LA proved that." . Grant said he felt the similarities of the Rams and Vik· ings was responsible Tor the brutally-punishing games they've bad against each other in recent years. "lf one team can dominate the physical part Of it, the game SW• ings that way," said Grant. "lt the fight is even, like Dallu and LA, it gets very physical.". Both teams will be close to peak physical condition. Minnesota linebackers Jef£ Siemon and Matt Blair were in- jured in the Vikings 35·20 victory over Was hington Saturday. Siemon, who has been selected to the Pro Bowl three times in hls five year career. suffered a pulled calf muscle and is listed as doubtful. Blair, who spent two days in lhe hospital for observa- tion of a possible concuss.ion, is expected to be back in the start· ing lineup. The R ams r eported five players injured Monday, but all are expected lo be ready at gametime. Dodge r s Trade LOS .ANGELES -The Los Angeles Dodgers traded infielder Ted Si:temore to the Philadelphia Phillies Monday for catcher Johnny Oates and a player to be named later. Sizemore, 31, was National League Rookie of the Year with the Dodgers in 1969, but two years later was traded to St. Louis and returned to Los Angeles a year ago. He played second base and hit .3'1 in St games during the 1976 season. Wolverines Arrive Michigan Closes Practices PASADENA (AP> -The Wolverines of Michi gan left home in the snow and arrived ln sunny California Monday after· noon to bealn preparations for their Rose Bowl football en· counter Jan. 1 against Southern California. except to toss a few footballs around. Mostly, they were grabbed for interviews . Schembeehler said practices from now on would be closed and his players would work out once a day. in the mornlne, and have the rest of the day off. "The Camden County pro· Et.or's office saJd thedefree of omlclde charae would be de- lned after an tnvestJgat.ion. . Gay also was charged with Stephens, with a left.·ba.n<ied jump shot, was hittfna from 11 to 20 feet around the key· wlth consistency alter mlsslne hts first three attempts. He then connected on 8-of.9 to the in· termission as the Anteaters went from a 19·13 deficit to a 25·21 advantage. He look game scoring honors with 22. Ko~but's Fin6l Show Before t he 60 players plus co1ches even had a chance to check Into their hotel bead· quarters in Pasadena. they were ·husUed to Citrus College nearby for a photo and press day. One question that came up at both news conferences wu one . that has been an aut.omaUc u far as Michigan ta concerned: ''Do you expect to pass more 1n this game?" ocious assault and battery. ce said. ·• Tbe couple's 3-yenr-old ~augbter. Fonda, was In the ·-partment when the stabbing tpok place, police said. I Hugh Kell)t, the Gloucester 1'oWD$hlp public safety dJrectar, f. d "there was a history of mesUc problem• in lbe fami· . " Kelly said police visited the a7 apartment aeveral tlm•, ~e last time on Saturd_,. • 1 Mrs. Gay's attorney, Jeffrey tller, ttld Gar "pbyaically based" h1s client. ln her state. ent to police, Mrs. Gay re- rtedly aaid she was atraJd or bmband. · t CC in Action I · Southern CaHtomla College of osta Meaa hoatt Redlands nJversity tonJaht (8) In a non· erence ba11ketball game to nclude the pre-)ollday com· tlon. Co1cb Paul Peak's SoCal a.qua.rdt will take a 4·3 re into the 11me, 1htn wm re· a1n Idle until Jan. 1 wbeo tbey urue1 to Cal Stal• (Dom. Hilla). : In the final 6:47 ot the first ball, UCI put the decision away by out-scoring the Falcons, lM and taking ao ll·point lead to the dre.atnc room. ··1 thou1bt we ran the offense very well in the second half but we mlsaed four layups that could have pvt it away fer us." nit aald. At the same time, Seattle closed to within two at *43 ud to four at 61·57 with 1 :31 left before the Anteaters ran off another 6-2 barrage t.o close the game. "I was pleased with the way our defenae came through at the tnd wben we went to a zone," Tift added. "We also started bandllng their presa bet· ter. But U>oee thin,. come with experlen« and b8$\cally we are 1 youni team." Tilt ts 1tarUn1 two lrahmen (Davtd Knudsen and Sttve Rodtera) along with Stepbeu and senJon Tim 1\venaa Ud Scott Jenkins. ..... PHILADELPHIA -Olga Korbut said goodbye at the Spec· trum Monday night as the Soviet national gymnastlca team con· eluded its tour or the Unlted States. It was the last public performance for Korbut, 21, who enchanted mWlons of television viewers around the world in um dwinc her performances at the Olymptca in MunJcb. Korbut bu said she ptam to teacb cboreosrapby and min)' upon her return to Russia. Tbe crowd ot 12,349 went wild when she came out for the first time, treating them to a performance on the balance beam. She liter appeared in group exercleea and the floor ex- ercise. When the performance ended, the te1ftl received several stand· ing ovatlona and Korbut was cheered when she ran out c&JTy· tnc two red roses and waved a Jaet 1ooctbye. Coach Bo Schembechler, who earJier 1ave a brief press con· ference upon his arrival at lbe airport, held an impromptu news conference on the practice field. "I tallred to Woody Hayes and they seerned to think lhb was a good place to practice,·• Schtm· bechler said, referring to the Ohlo State coach whose team bad been the Big Ten's Rose Bowl representative the rour previous yean. The Wolverines didn't pr1cUce Schembechler Just stouabed otr the querle• and indicated that Michigan would do whatever was necessary, but he couldn't llY in advance If that meant more pa.u- ing for the traditionally around· oriented Big Ten co-champJoru. The Unlveralty of MlcbJgan wa~ In lt.s week of Clnal examln1- tlons when the team left. Three players weren't qulte flnlshed 3nd wound up taklnf a written exam on the charter fll1bt from Detroit. lJSC's Bell ·Wants to Be Left Alone . ' . LOS ANGELES (AP) -All· Amuiean runninc back Rlcky Bell. a moet cooperative fellow all •euoa Iona, bopee tbe news medta and professlonal agents will let hJrn alone until aftC' Uie ltole Bowl same. The USC football star 1119 hJ1 t.lepbone hal ruftl IO oft.en he haa had to ch1n1e the number. "J would el\joy It very much It tb'1 ..,..Id leave m• aJooe until aft.r tM Rote Bowl," Hild Bell. "I ~&nCed my pbono number ••UM ~ta wen 'MUOI me ... ln 1eneral. J'm not bomt much, but when I was, tbt phone wu llw.,s rinlinl· It · WIS ta.kine away my concentration from ev~a. lncludlne practice. "I m t.ryln1 to st.11 u much away from a1enta and talk about theprodralt aa much aa poulble. Pm ~inl to conccnttate on tbo 11me. • Bell, ndlllWUP in tht HellmlD Trophy vodn• aa mOlt valuable colle&iate football player Jn the nation, will be a prime candldate IOI'. tM Na&Mroal Footbell IAAl\M 1l drift, but he says: • ''There's been too much IPtCUlat.lon. I've heard too much already." Bell said the ankle Injury tbat slowed hJm In the latter part of the 1976 season wa1 nearly healed, addln1, "I'd like to bt 100 perctnte.': for the USC battle .,abut MJchlaan on New Year's Da.)' ln the Rose Bowl. .. Tbe t b ln1 l'm loottn1 forward to 11 pla.ylnc a same aQd 1otnt out to wtn, 1 ' be declared. ~·1 woWd rtall1 llte to have a &ot>cl • ' game after my lf\Jury the second ball of the season. .. The senior averaied 201.4 yard.a per 1amo tor tho tlnt five g1mea of the season, ~ wtth J>tttaburcb'a Tony Donetilar the Heilman Tl'opjyS. But aft.tr hllin· Jury, he 1atned 100 yardl caJ¥ on. ce althouch tn the decider aiaJ.nst UCLA be switched from tallback to fullback when lnjurles depleted thefullbackcorp1. · , In the USC ayate!l\. the fQJJb1ck prim~ ls the bocker .-u.. bactfleld. Final Prep F oothall Log ~dM's Blaclc,~T~z i:2 ! In Cage Scoring Derh! ........ I> ca. , ,,~... 0 ,4 IASAIWlllM ,, ,. Loew• " Cl All. Y•l'-T SI ......... ~.. 1 0 e.r-,, 1 WtttlftlMtw U ............ 21 ll'OUtfl'lllN WAU.•Y ,.,..._ . JI \.IWll-1 ,. ic...... • 14 K-4Y 0 .SI MefW 0 JD...._. 10 4 Hwlt. .. .,. • ,~ u HIWf'OltT '4.uao11 II 59,...tte '' ' CdM 0 fJ \.oere le ' ...,,_ 0 ,. Ml'°" ,. 10 ""-V•llW JO 1 w.t1m11tt1w-•• 16H ........ ~ 14 • M.tt1"" " .. ITMINSTElt 7Meflelm 1'~ IJMllll_.., > l8Wll- '4 Hurlt. tleedt IS EdiWft ' I n • • ,, > s..t• C...C L e•fllM! COtlOfolAO•LMA• 1 MMIM 0 e HewPOrt 1 t u..1,,.n1ty o 1 S.nO-nle 6 21 EITO<o t 11 0-Hlllt 6 ' ~llH<lt 0 lll MlnlOI\ Via lo lt 17 CosltlM\a ,. Cl" 7 C..jotl 11 UOUICll .. 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"''" 11 f,~=11 .. ?S 11 S<IM'f Hiii• ?J CIF o lS lnQl-11 7S SA V•llov 14 I• Cro V•lltv WHT(tlN " • c """" IJ & Loa<• ZI O low•ll • • ""'9<'011• ?1 14 Wnl\Y Htll~ 14 IC AntP!#lm :n U Troy 1' '!ti B"""a Ptrlt. a 0 S.v•ntlt Orafffle Uflfl~ 81tEA l'Ullt:tlTON f ,. I ,, I& ~ 11 )0 Q " I) • n .. •O .. ,, ,. n I 1• -.. II 0 " ,. 11 " II 10 It 14 ,. 8 l• 1 Lt9Uflt euch & El Toro 0 14 SuMy Hiii\ ?fl O EIOor-0 Esoer.,,t., 1 c.....,..., 0 Sonot• 0 L .. Habt• 0 FU41wtM ~ Vtl..-<1• CANYON 0 Mrtt~r 6 lllllaPttll . -· 10 l lDot- 0 Brlll IJ I.A Htbt.t 11 E\Pt<..,._. 7\ V•l•l'C•• 11 Fu11 ... 1 ... ELOOltAOO • P-'<lt1(,j) 1 11•i.110 IJ ... .. , c ... "°" ,. E-r ... ro '' Vtl""'I" 11 Fulltr\11'\ 11 Sor'Or• ) LA Habt• ISl'lltAltZA 1 Tr.,., • a.1111-. .. )) V•l-1• t1 ·~· 6 El Dotlldo 10 Fullenon 111 Clflvo11 ,. UHel>fl u Softor• cu• 70 0 lroy " Jl 1 LI Htbra 2• ,, " Sotlo<. 14 0 ,, 11•1-•ll 14 1 ?O E-'""'" 10 3• 0 EIOor-11 6~11,.• n .. 'V ~-" LAl4AlllA I 11 ~rr• ll 1 LOWf'll 14 11 FuU@rloot I 1' VAlol'CI• ' ,, 5onord • 1 " c ........ JO 1' A,.~,. ~ 1J EWl"r.,., .. >t 10 El Oor•dl> • Cl" 10 Hof''~ Vi\14t l• S014011A D 11 lc>w•ll ,,, l\~111111\ • 1• (Artyon 0 1• Fulltrlo" 0 0 le H•br• 10 1 er .. 10 11 Val"ft<lit 20 El Oor 41!10 I E1cier•nr• Cll" & 0 ,, °""',.. .. O VALINCI~ 14 ' EIToro 20 1• ,.._ Olm.ts 11 IJ Ewier.,,ra U 1 uH•br• 1 t• Punerton 0 EIOoredO 11 I 0 11 n )0 11 • ,. ti j) I 1) 7S ,. 10 Artflla U 1 '°""'' 71 c.1.... 7 A •C....vo~ • AM•ioo.vau~., ~t 14 8tH Then Fullerton outscored Rice 15-6, in the last 6 minutes 20 seeonds of the half to assume a 37·28 lead. The Owls were never closer than nine points after that. Ford Stars ST AN FORD -Stanford's Cardinals cruised to a 95-65 non· conference basketball victory over the University or California at Da"vis Monday night. High scorer for the Davis quintet was former Marina muntington Beach) High aCE Mark Ford. who scored 12 points. Stanford jumped to a 30-4 lead. Belko Clao•en BOISE, Idaho -Steve Belko, who spent 15 years as Oregon's basketball coach, was picked Monday as news commissioner ofthe Big Sky Conference. Penalties S e t LEXINGTON, Ky. -"This sad and unhappy business comes to a termination." University of Kentucky pres ide nt Otis Singletary said Monday as he an· nounced ofricial acceptance of athletic probation by the NCAA. The NCAA said Sunday it was punishing the football and basketball teams for a number of violations, most of them involv· mg illegal recruiting practices. The football team will be on probation for two years. but will be under sanctions for only one - meaning it cannot appear in televised games or be picked for a post.season bowl. The team ·also must cut from 30 to 25 the number of scholarships it may is- sue next year. The basketball team must cut f~om five to three its scholarship s1gnees per year for the next two seasons, but is not banned from either t~levision or post-season compelttton. Doable• f'INab DALLAS -Rosemary Casals j ammed Betty Stove with a vicious serve to break a 6·6 tiebreaker to tie in the decisive filth set and give her and Dick Stockton a marathon 4·6, 7-6, 6·7, 6·2, 7·6 victory over Stove and Frew McMillan in the finals of the $80,000 World Mixed Doubles Tennis Championship Monday night. The victory in the three-hour match gave the winners $30,000 first place money to split. Saddleback H o sts Fullerton Cager s Saddleback College tries to get over the .500 mark and Orange Coast attempts to halt a si;oc-game losing streak tonight in JC basket· ball play. Saddleback·s Gauchos. 5-5 for the !leason after dumping Rio Hondo Saturday, host Orange County rival Fullerton (3·6) at 8 o'clock. OCC's Pirates <2·6> visit El Camino College for a 7:30 meet· ing. The only other JC game this week has Saddleback at Golden West Thursday night (8). Orange Coast is led by Jeff Golden 04.Spolnts per game) and John Holland 02.1). Saddleback is sparked by freshman Tim Shaw (J9 .5 average) and sophomore Dennis Smith 08.5). l G•rclt (M.ior 0.1 I 10 ,,, 11 • 4 Bt<on (L19u.,t l • 11J 1• l S Scl\ulll IMtltt 0.1) ID Ul ll > • p.,,,.,. !Costa Mut I I •• 10 t 1.Pl>lrltr IUnl"t1t11yl 9 10 •• • I Ford Cfln ll•ll•yl I 10 11 • 'w.,, .. n IM¥1MI 'let U•. IO. 0...let IEI Toro I 1 IXI 1' O CffeM •1 M•r IMI Bleck Tut Alan E\00\lto A•iri.\ K llll•tJ t<oenltr H11chc0<k F•tr N<e<!son °"'°°" • It ti II• •"9· 10 •• ,. ~ 10 t 1D II J• 1'11 It e ' ,. I• .. 1 l 10 IS 7 J1 3 7 • n s ,. J l ~ 9 I It l8 .. 4 10 18 10 > 7 , Jn , , 0 'D 3 1 0 J 1 0 I l• , 3 Co•lt Mtlt (S-JI P•nlno W111' M111_, YO<M<I Ovwrt Sl'<lw Mull'9a'1 ...... ,.. 8ase11 t It ft Ip *"'' I SS J6 1~ , 20 I , •• .. Oil tJ 1 ,,. Ii 1) I )() 8 611 1n u n 1 IS • 1 l 7 • I I I Jf 1& to • 04,.. ""'' 1 .. 41 t It II "' ..... 9J II. Hton C••P<> A~v• Sluoi<1 er-n Pot\ttr Coolt Alldre•• Goller 6ol> lntrteS -rltHlll Mlot Hill Holmr.o s. ""°""' ""'"•"• AooO..rln Georoe • 0 ,, • 11 ll • ),j 1 1 ,. ll I lS U • • • ' , . s 4 • l 1 0 II TeN (t·JI 11 •• 1\ • J 611 ,, •l I I 11 JS •• 30 .. , . IC H ••• ft ....... 7 Sl ,, 1Jl It 0 1 CO ll 'S IH ,,. H ., ts 1 IS ll S1 7 l , 10 • t. 3' • " , ,. • D 1 J 11 11 1 l • , 1 • ll Let""• IU<ll !i..tl Ba< on M<Mtnlf\ Smllh kaUQhl Gf'Hnouqh Fri~r Ander""I BroO>erlon r,.,mp1 B<v•nl 05wtld Rlch•rd'°" • It II ltt tyt. ' 1) 11 Ill 1• 1 • n " '3 ie t76 11 ,, 70 ' 14 s 11 6 3 ' ,, 1l 0 so t IS t :II> 4 S I 1J 2 71 JS I I S 11 2 4 l 4 s I) ., s 4 0 • 1 •• 1 2 0 4 ?O 1 I I J l .S loo\lnhft Vlei. IS.JI . ,, " "' ..... " 1 101 lkKter H ... _,,,, p o.c..s.s Hull,...,, ~I e_,,... l(rutltr s O.C..as Al•u-r FelcM Blum I 41 11 '4 • u 1J 1:1 • ,. 11 .. , " 10 40 1 n • :JO I 11 • H ' 1 10 1• • ID 0 70 1 ' 0 ,. • 1 ' 11 l ' ? 10 S... Cl-le (4-JI Dunham Qr'°" Hrofllno- Fr..-• M<Oonald SO...ry Neely Mepl\tM Mllthtll .-~ Pl>lrltr H•llord GtN>ll Eykl\011 Bitql~y l(uti.< ·-·11~ Full~r Halaq•n !>101101! Hool< Mtlcholl • ,, ft , .. 1 S4 " 11t 1 JI 70 '1 1n 16 ,. • 11 1 .. ' IS II Cl ' u ' J9 s 14 • n 6 I) 3 2'I J 6 ' 11 1 0 l 2 U!'IYtrslty (3-61 II If II ltt ' ~ ,. 10 ,,. 1l" '" 18 ff ,,, ,. llO ' 73 s $1 • 1 s 19 8 ' 1 10 • S 0 lO 1 • 7 to 6 ' 1 IO 4 I 4 I 2 0 I I ,..,.,l•l~V•ti.y .... , "'~d &.rrlCK Hal~ Wllt ln><>n S.ehteo '""l"k'f '"'"'" &void H<l•de 11"4•• • ,, It '" • s• 7J ••• • S4 1S l'!J I 44 14 111 I •S 11 1111 I IJ 1' 40 & ., ' n 1 M I 71 3 6 l IS .) 1 I , 1 Marina Vies I? S1 ., l5 40 3) 1l 1 I J) ... II 0 II I ft •.8 59 6 ) ••• 4 9 70 10 ..... ... 1 11 0 106 .. II> 1 J I l 1.6 1. ,. 2.0 D.) ..... "6 ••• "0 ", s I) •I )0 lO 7l lO ¥arina (Huntington Beach) High's Vikings are at Garden Grove's Los Amigos High School .tonight for a non-league basketba ll m atch with the Lobos. It starts at 7. Win Soccer Final Mollica MVP The Vlkes of coach Steve Popovich, 5-4 for the season, are led by Tony Warren , who is av~aglng 15.6 points a game. Fountai n Va lley Hl&b'• Barons, who ad- vanced to tonlaht's Ken· n e~y Hllh aoccer tou r n ament c h am-ptomhip finals at 8 w1th a p alr of tle games. m eet Chaffey ffilh at W estern Jtlg h lo .Anaheim. Tbe Bar ona tled Alltambra•t Mart Kep- ~l and Gahr: Hl&h of Cage Ratings ...... •o ''° '°'° no , ..... .... ,. ,,, .,. ., Sit ., ,,,, ... "' .. , ,. .. "' ... -.... 111 ,., "' ... " N 61 ,.. ., ... . ~• n H 17, Cerritos, l ·l, Monday, but advanced via penal- ty Jrlckl. Hun tlnaton Beach meets Gahr High of Cer- ritos for third place ats. Dave Mo llica was chosen most valuable player at a sporta awards banquet honoring the Costa Mesa High varsity football team Monday night. Also honored were Mike BranUey and Dan Duddridge (captains), Qui.a Cathcart. (mOltlm· proved) and Steve Peru <mostlnspirational). HONDA MISSION VIEdO ZU71 AYMf rtCWY-..Jl.OllZ. 4tf.IOl6 Kt~S CHllSTMAS SPICW.! M150 $295 AND ~ Call U• For Dad'• Chritt~• PreMnt - .... ~ ..... -,owder-~-r-,~-.. ..i.• (f!J!!t~. tA:~~G= OHTAMA ATTHI 0 LAIE TAHOE ' ----....:: ..:...._ AMIASSADO~ INNS ~!'!C:::.-::~1.,. . I . New condos and Econo-"lnn" C1I4t 644-492' 14061 tf ~4411 Foll Room & BOlrd· a.oe1r1~11>w..,.. Why fist prices when we are a DISCOUNT DEALER CALL BEFORE YOU IUY -------· eon ~ MCCoun 0.Yh Gerrity Alie/I wuu .... , --OorNl K•ntmt111 F100.W S<."'-de' Etll,... 11 JI • ,, It • l6 ,, . ,, ' . ,, ,. • 17 \ • • • ' . . • c , } ,J • • • 0 J 1 • ' , 0 ) 0 "' n .. •> )t 11 1• u lc " 10 4 "-.............. ,,.,, ,,, ft. lur1 I 4' " 11' SI-I .. 11 10t COnlntfH e l1 10 .. 549!Mtu1 • U I s. ~ I II 1 7' ,,_5telMI ) 10 J U O'Aln-o 1 I ' 2J Sprow ' 10 , ,, C-tl•""' 3 1 J ,, p_,.111 • , l 1 Jollll\on 1 ' CJ 1 Mil<Mtl 0 1 w.,,.,, Koeller l<uce Torrn Glbbt c..- ~ H•WlllM Kltlrtor Woll• tloodtA Grtl\tm Let-le Mtri ... l\·O I It II • 44 IJ • 41 " ' 41 • ' ,., n • 7J 11 • 4 • ) s 0 ) , , 1 , 1 I I l 0 0 0 • ... tj tO n y ,, IO • ) • l 1 , ~Ha-U.JI Gel•~ ~hwalbe T1mrnon\ ••• It.,. • 311 ,, ..,, • 11 7S II • 11 10 ... Cr•lo Br-"" c;e,..,,1m1 6 11 ,, •S 6 1S 11 Al • • 11 » Ma\\tY Toiler er-,, 8rt<Mey Ke1• °'9111 -..... '-K rOl\nleldt ,..,.,. Corb4!11 '-' H•Y\ .. .,. .. " lltld Gerri• 5'hullr Ga'(ltl\ SltMle P9tbod1 MM<l\tm H.,lntll k..-n .. ,. Cfotll Hill N.tlll 4 s 3 13 l J 0 6 , 2 0 • 1 0 , 1 0 7 lttlfl<I• 1 .. 11 ' ,, It -1" 1t • •4 .. I 17 II • 1• 11 • 1• l . ,. ' I ID 5 • I 4 t 4 0 , 7 0 Meler 0.1 11·>1 t It n 10 1t ,. 10 ., 71 ID 0 ~ 10 11 n 10 ,. • ' 20 1D 1 ,, .. 1 16 • 1 ,, ' • 10 • 3 I "' IM 10'1 ., " ... )1 15 10 • , ........ "' tl.9 IU U? 110 110 ,. , . ... . .. 50 SS -)1 J6 ).I 1S 3.S ~· 1.6 ' 1.0 UMf1-, Cllrhll.,1 C4-t1 '• Rev ' •• ,, tp S 18 II •7 .... "" 13.4 G.Al • .....,r ""'"•rd GooclnlQl\I ~,,., E~y s,,.,,, Thur ma,. K..,ow•kl ))8. 65 .,. 11 s• • 11 • ~ • 19 6 ... 3 l 3 ' 7 3 0 6 , 2 ' , t s Hunt. Vtlley Cllrls1la• (~JI 13 0 •8 9) 7 l 30 3.0 IS H ..... _ ,,.,., KIAQ Htw 8rawt1 5'>yder ttttw 0.Usted ti• ft IP_.., • J4 12 .. l•O 6 J1 IC 1& ll I> • lt ' 11 \I.I 6 lt 1D Sl I 6 ) S I II 1 J l ) s 9 19 S J I 1 1 c l 1 0 2 0.6 Basketball Rvtoitr\ ~'• Prll\Cllon u T,mp1eU. Kl'l9\ SC Austin "9.ty "· Sto1son 66 Florldt 11. llllnols WuleyitAM Florlda Tatll 102. L•wrenc~eo C..Orol• ... Ev•,.svlltel4, OT N C.Orolln• 1 ll, Brlo~•m YOUAQ9l 5 M1\~\•IPl)l II, 8•11 SI .st lllrolnla Tech 9'. N llllAOh 5S 8owllr19 Grtetl •J, Mer>h•ll•. OT Cltt-n. C1>1ta90 St•• Oep.tul 77, Army 66 I 111..ols St 7.1, Kent 5169 Kan1•s H, SI Louis 61. 1 OT Mlcnlo•" St 11. N Carollrw suo N•bftskt 11, Norlhwt>l•rr1M Toi-"· O>letQO LOYOia 5"I Aru nws eo. K•nu\ St 6l C.I Polv·f'omon• •1. SF Slate~ Gr.,,,blll'IQ Col 62, Qnftel Wt\11 SI SI H•'f'#trd SI IOS. Llnlleld'1 !Awls & Cler-to, Curo II Col 10 Moftl..,• Tecl'I '<I. Al<llS COi 1' Nw.Me•lto 101. S.n 01090st I04 Ptc:tfl< U "· Loulsl.,,• St 1' ~ ... rdlM 11. W .. l\lnqlOflSU7 "°"1...011.CllltoSI U POl'fl-51 ... l.os At>Oett'SStlO ......... •1. Crelol'llOtl 6• '>l•nloro•s. UC D•••HS Y ..-kton 6'. S Ouo1•·5D'Ofldt.ll lndlMt 1• Ulan Sii I Ml•ml. Otilt> 74. Teoe. Tttl>4J Pro Hockey TorOl\IO •• Allal!i•, Monlro1 S, V•r><ouver • llVIN ADYANTAOU OUI PAOll omH COMrurl OaANH COUHn' COnlAH lltd1141et1 &...-..... S.. C ........ MIM'-Ylef•, ....,.. ...... &...., .......... efLA. ... 2 MONTH TO MONfH llN'TAI. IAtlS 3 NO DIPOStT 119-.1 ... ON APPIOYD CllDIT 4 ONLY ttr. 10 m MOwnf TOTAL con ........... ,...., 5 NIW COM,ACT &tNrT 11n 1111. 1•1 Va• 6 .OICI MIUAGI PA•DI j Al.SO AH AYAILAILI 7 AIU ,.ft MAINTINANCI OIW-iG£ ( OUNl\ IUOIO 7r l l l'llO~l Slll\'lff '"' SCORING LEADER ALEX BLACK. Basketball Score~ SOf'HOMOll E S.~tt A~• TourMY ldhM·lfStt"Ci.t TouPM1' ""'· Vtllel' IH I IJ4) SA Yatt.y • 14 ........ <II 1721 U1) Mater Oel !>toll Ill F (II Wllum~ • p..,,,_111 10 F IUI S<. .... Pt'r C.OW.n Ill F 161 Ba-,.rd EldndQI !IS)) F IOI C...11-.._rd Ill C 1101 O..lt Av•'•'" c 1101er ...... Reu1-1 .. 1 c. mc.e~ .,...,,, 1101 G Ill ~le R.,.urer l" G 10 cool! T1ylor 1131 C. 161 Hiii F V \COf l l\Q \U I>\· H A\koll 1, HB KorllMJ \ub\· Nori!\•. ClulOI •• Eot-•-r, Fltld• 10, PoOkrett\ J. Bolton\. WllllntV 4 Rt .. , ~·· CoPPOrn 4. •• MO .cor1n9 \UI>\ 1100 .... v 1. K ... 1... Htlttl-· Fii ,. 10 • 7, """"'• l. Dtlt ney 1. Le,.1ct 1. Sula.,.. Tour~ey H•llt1me· HB. 3? U o.,.. Hiii• Utl !Ml ~ .. 11 ... EcllsOO>TourMy S&muel• ru F ()I~ U9ll'I• Ull IS1l Ed•-Ci<0011 (01 r ((IP•"'-"' ~ .. IOI F 1191 eo-... !>m'(lh fl) c:; 161 \lrvd' Mdl'r;onll4) F lt11Hir\I -171 C. MllW,1111><\ Ford (4) c 1101 ,_. ~lltt 11•1 G Ml ~lo Smllh 141 G 141 Mt !>ondld Olhcorlnosub· G••Nlmt. S>.tll•t1 CO C. f1l ~" H•lfllme; OH, 70·14. LB KOfi"9 \Ubt: Frier ,, 81'11tv 1, BMk•rl . S."'8 .... '°",..., M¥11\a (UI IOI Ttnl"' Hallllme: Lagun•. 19 U. l!tlllOft·E•t•ncla TourMy Saylor (1 I F 1q I 51ett1rr New.-t (SSI In) Lot Aml'IOI Aulrt'f (qi F 161 C.OMr SulllYtA (JI F 101 1 omllnson Nrtvrr Ill C 1111 J•r4WJ" llou (11 G Ill BMClfY 81KI< I 141 F IOI "'*"11>y Sl,_t (U I C W CrOOI< Gr•""m 1111 Ci (41 W.CMM!' • O.nlol flU G (711 Lueltt Eul>.>rlkt f1I G 14I MllW!r NH t<orl119 sub\· Ooooy 1. Hllttime: NH. 17-16. Merlna .corlno ~ub•: Orlt rcl, 2,., er-n l . Holmes 2. C•lklt1 7. Mly~. ,,Ntll~n7 ' H•lfll-: Mtrlna, 37·111. Edlt-l!tlttlCIA T-f Ellttncl• (U) IJtl ltMcr.o Al..nl1os Gtl-rlll F mc.11- Mluloll Vie lo UI I (J 111,... Sdl"'ldl f10 F 11•1 OcN1o1n Bullty (SI F 111 SAl>lt 1(-1111 C Ill 0.Fttn<l\CO Ocnoa 111 F 111 Jo\lt•; l!elY'dl• fl)) c <41 ~~~· W•ll•ct 161 0 (1ll F1'9ft<o '°1v11"10A 191 Ci C11MoM HIJIOfl l6I 0 i.l Dow! 1<19 ~•-tl\tr ,., c. m swr EslM\clu cofl"9Wbl· M~•. Plr.cl!MYI. Ytmtmll , Tlw>mptoC\4. MY !o<orlno sub\. 11•mfllWI 2, 5om ,,,." 1. B•l>l<l'l 1 . Htlttl .... : E\\•n'I•. 71-lS. H•lll•me Mii. 11·10. ' ANOTHER TECHNOLOGICAL BREAKTHROUGH FROM SEIKO: THE FIRST LC DIGITAL QUARTZ CHRONOGRAPH. .... Cnet~ Bum.111 .~ , .... "llloO<t l'fllnt. ttm,,,,_, rt•dO<Jt A#/P!J lf>diutor Ind dfla. Stt1Altu llMI ,~ •• · •d7v11u11~ ,....,,, 1 HAROl(X m11-ru1 I< ,Y,111. This amazing watch !ells !he tltf\.e and date arid turns into a stopw.atch at lhe touch of a button. When functioning as a siopwatch It ind1cales minulcs; seconds, 1/10 second, elapsed time ~n~a" 11100 with • slmullaneous limek6eplng. Como ~ how t~is extraordinary woteh works. Seiko Ouem,sa SEIKd . A.H. WEINERT Fin~ Jewels l~ ~ IJaid. ~ 8eocJl 64Q)C> r I I • las OAILY PILOT OUEENIE Tueaday. December 21. 1978 By Phil lnte rlondi P VBUCN011CE PVISLJC NOTICE ''He says we can't put him on 'hold'. .. he's on the car phone Md approaching a bad reception area ... " f'ICTITIOUI I UllNIU NAMWSTATIMINT' 'tll• follo..lnt ""''°n I• doi"I _._ .. "•\ !>HEltltll.L'\ CEllAMIC1, ·~I Clete O•., HUllO<IQIOI\ lt•<h. CA m47 ~rte C Mltcl'lalt, •)01 Ct~e Or. HWllll~l'I l .. <'1. CA,,._, Nt -lrwu 11 tot1•0H Dr M lflo ......... $119,,141 Ml\tnell T?tO "•t•....-it .,. .. lli.d .tilt llW '°"'"' '"''k ol Or•ll .. c-ty on OoK-rt, 1'1• ,...,, l'ubll•fl•d Oral\Ot C:•••I O•llY PllO( O.Cember De<. H, ll, 18, '976 ....,,.11.4, ltl, ~]· PUBLIC NOTICE NOnc• TO CllSOITOIHOfl ..... 0' STOCK IN auL.I( ANONOTICtlOI' INTlNOlO TllANSf'RllOf' LIOUOll LICINS• OllLICINStlS NOTICE 15 HERE I V GIVl!l'f TM\ PUBLIC NOTICE SCl'CUNOE R C \.IN SI\ f 11 '1..,I • 1----.,..-------~....,.--•I SHUKUI E L.IN SI> tt• 141t·SO. HOTICETOClll OITOttl lta11•l.,0t\ •ncl Llctft•.,.>. --·· ~U ... 111011 COUllTO, TMtl ..... _, ..... 711 for .. 1 A•-. hi JTATaOl'CALll•OltNIAf'Oll tl'w (lly of t..Qu,.. luc .. , °""1t'1 ot THI ~UNTV Ol'OllANOI Or•-· Sl•I• 01 C•lllO•nl•, 1111-10 N•. A.ffMt .............. •ncl •"'fl" lo lllCltY EslAlt:e of AMY l!LLEl'f HAllNE.Y, IUKUOMATSUMOTO lr•l1>I--U• AMY ELL.EN DAN IE.LS lnt•nd.cl "•Mfettt, wl>c»e C>INMI> HARHl!.Y,o.<H'4!d «IOr••> I• 1407411> Korn 81uM A..-, NOTICE 15 HEREl)Y GIVEN to lfle lft I~ City •I MewU.OtJW, Gounty ..U--a.<JrmllU111~JIJJ.M IJIOVllJ!tmtll ~I N!~le\. 51•1• ot C•lllornltl, IN IOllOW· I.Tia\ Ill Ptnons tlavln9 tl•ltm ~Inst lnq OO<rlDtd person•• P•CIPl!rty. IO-,,.. Mid clK-nf ••• r•qvlrecl IO fli<o Wfl '"""'· wltll '"• MCUHlt lrOUC' ... ,., In -------------....... -------------1 All\lOC~lntr-,fl•lur ... -lprn0nt lfleotfkeofllleclt rkofllle-en• """ll'>Od wilt ot • <•fl•ln Rf'SI--1111..icout1.or101>nwn1tlleM,wlt11t,,. Bflf!k to Start New Initiative C;hange Made By THOMAS D. ELIAS For the thJrd tjme in the last three years, a ma jor change has been made m the initiative process that allows California voters lo bypass the LcgtSlature and make laws on lheir own. Like the other changes, this one is the direct re- sult of a controversial initiative campaign and like the others IL involves the Pol.ltical Reform Act o(. 1974, itself an initiative that passed as Prop. 9. THE LATEST REVISION WILL return the en· tire process almost to where 1t started when tbe changes began in mid-1974 . Since the voters passed Prop. 9 that June, no one has been able to spend more than 25 cents per ~ignaturc m attempting to quahry an mitiative for the ballot This Ii m ited spending r--!oi-.0-lJ-T_ll_f._:R-N--~ to about $80,000 for most mcasurc-s and about CALI FOR~IA $125,000 on constitutional FOCt IS amendml·nt!-The limit '-'----------~ was aimed at making in- itiatives :_1 strictly volunteer t'ffort, a backlash ·against a tree-spending drive to qualify a 1972 in· 1t1auvc which sought to place stnct limits on unions organizing farm workers l'nd<>r Prop. 9, iniLiallve spending was hmited not only during ~ignature drives, but also dunng election campaigns NOW ALL TllAT IS CHANGED. The first m a- JOr rev1s1on or the Political Reform Act came last spring, when the state Supreme Court ruled that limits on spending dunog the elecllon phase of an u11tiat1vt> l'ffort are unconst1tut1onal Th;H ruling has now been expanded to include s1gnatun• <lrin•s, as the <'Ourt adopted a new argu- ment· It now believes, in effect, that money is !'ii>f'f'Ch ben111s t· of the hjgh cost of advertising in todav's m:.t!-s 1nc1lia. 'Thus. any curb on spending in issue-oriented c:.imp:ugn~ ltk•• Califorrua m1tiat1ves can depnve soml·onc of frt·c 4'pccch Al.L TUA'r REMAINS OF THE rules Prop. 9 1mpose<l on 1111t1atives are the reportmg require- menL"> ln1t1alivc sponson; stilt must report where lhl'y ~et all their money The l'ha.1gcs last spring were the rcsull of the battle ovt·r th1• Nurlear Safeguards Initiative. which lu:.t In that campaign, an industrial and ldbor umbrella i;:roup called C1lizens for Jobs and Energy .sought to spend far more than Prop. 9 al· lowl'<i .ind 1t won that right The most n•cent court dcc1s1on stemmed from l.lS~ month's defeated dog rat'rng 1mt1at1ve. PROMOT•:R GEORGE G. llard1e ran afoul of the Political Jleform Act early an hts drive for th1~ 1nit1at1vc Ile was to have more trouble later with th• Fair Political Pra('llCu Commission over his reluctance to report his fund sources. but he has now WOil 00 the ISSUe O( .spending dur· "A1tO•E mg the signature dnve "The-Pl'hlll>O t'trt'ulators. whether paid or voluttle<>r . necessarily are a pnn- Clpal m('ans of advocacy for a proposed mit1at1ve. the court said "We cannot assume that any pro- posal capable of generating genuine voter support will neces~umly ;ittract at the outset sufTic1ent volunteer t"1rculators to do the Job. ''HENCE ... THERE REMAINS i\ demoostra· hie potcnltal for serious infriligement on the right to political communic.Uoo guaranteed by the First Amendment.'' Despite the two court rulings, the onginal bat"kers or the Political Reform Act are nol dis- couraged. "The main part.'I of the act were the provision against connict of interest and the ones rorcing d is· Closure Of the SOUt"t'es of political funds," said Roger J. Diamond, lawyer for I.be Los Angeles- based People's Lobby, the eitiiens' group that gathered most of the signatures that placed Prop. 9 on the ballot. •'Those uarts are untouched bv anv court de· ciaions and we're convinced they wtU s tand up. And IO long as the disclosure provisions remain, UJe pubUc will be able t.o decide for itself whether the money be bind any campaign is tainted.'· Herbal,ist Clainu Hit SACRAMENTO (AP) -A Superior Court judge has isauM an Wunction making it meaal for a Utah herb&llst to clalm that hit products bave medicinal or curative powers. Tbe rulinJ by Superior Court Judco William llorcan affects Dr. John R. Christopher and hls as. toclated flrms. Chlratopher, known lO followers as tho "whit• ha1.red dean of altanaUve beallnC methods.'' and Ids ton David agreed to drop any mcdJcal cJaJmJ for ~ thdr ~roduc:tl. bu\I "•H known •, T AltA·O. neu•wrywucllers, totlle11ndlnf9Md •net IOUltd et 711 F'Ott<\ A-, In •t tlw ollke ot IAlllARA A MIHDIH . ..... ,,,,Of l.AQU"• lucn. """''' ol HILL, W YHNI!., TllOOP AHO Oranqe, Sl•I• ol Ct llfornl• •• ,.d MEISINOEll, Attor,..n ot u•. SJO tr•n1ter 111• tollo•lnQ •l<ohollc ()mtury P•rk Pit .. , lllOI C.nW.y P•rk -••90 llctn\e IOI llOllW\I Ofl.S.le E»1. Lo• A ...... c.tlllo111I•. ""'>1<111• ~ • Wine Llctn .. No ., 11W76 -,,.. Ill•• of D<l•ltwU ot th• ...-MQned IU....i 10 preml .. \ IOCfled fl l22 ,,_ lnfll tMll•rt oertflt11AO IO, ... ~ni.ot Avon...,, L•oun• But n, c.tlltornl• wld o.<Adenl, within lour montll\ eller '1ts1 1or '"" ortm•'4> 1oc•1ed .,. m tM llrit P110ilu11on of'"'' 11oi1u. F'orttl Av•now In 11\0 City ol ~ 0.tedN..,,.mberlt ltl• 8u<l't. County ot Or•nge, !.tfle of CHARLESFRAHCIS c,.,1,rornlf HARNEY 111•1 t"" .mount 01 purc#la,. price o< A<lmlnlstrato• ot ll'tt E•l•teof con\1Mr•l•on 1n to11n.ct1on wltn ~•Id tM•boven•m•d~ •••n>lor 01 .. 10 lottnM! tor ll<•n-*•l •S IAftlAlt,1.A.lfl!'IOllf•I tl'lo •um 01 )100 00. whoch con>J\l\ot 11\e lflLL, WYlfNI:, IOllow•"fl co•n flt~AHOMtllllHGElt AH ou""' ou,1,_,, n .. m•s and .O· •ttarMY' 1t Llw Or"'''" u\<'<I bv Iha Trd.,•t•ror'\ wllllln Ull Cefltwrv fler• l'la1a thff"f' year, 141\1 Pol"' \0 '•' ., ~riown ro J•1 C:.ntw,., l'•rtc l •at \l\Plr.n>l•rn•re NO"IE LOIA"9f .. t.CA n..1 int •mo""' ol 1ne pUrc~ Tet: nu1 SU.Mt or•ce w c0f\\•O.r•t1on tn corww<ttOrt A...,_1' fer I ••<V1•r ... 1,. 1ne "•n>'" 01 ,.10 ou""'M'l" the Pvollihtd 0<•"90 coast o.llY Pltvl. \U"' OI UI '°° 00 whl(l't COfl\l\I\ pl Ille Oe<e-• 7, "· 21, ,., .. ,. 10110 .. 1nq ~I •00 00 In <•>h, note ~turtd by S.Cur1ty .AQreernont In 11'\e ...-1 of ~ 10,000 00 •nd • pnim1,..,., note lor ll0.000 00 lo oe rtol-.ed D'r , • .,,. on I> I 16, and • IM'OmlHOIY not• tor \I0,!00oo10 oe reoi•c•d iw """ •t Of prlof to CIO\it of •ltrow. tl'l•I 11 ,,., .,..." ooreed .,.,_.., wld l•<enMeiea nnd jntertdttd t'•n\fHetJ a-\,... QVtred by Set. 2f07• Of 11\c! 8u•I~• •nd Prole"I""' Cod9, fhel tl'lo <on.i4tt.o 1•0n to' the tr•f\,rtr ot , ... o buSfr"lte~' ~ tran\ttr of t•ld •lce"\e I\ totw pi9ld O"ly •f1tr 4'11ld tr4n\f .. r M\ bNft •P.. oro"1!0 DV •a•O O.cwrlm•nf ot Al<oN>ll< et .... ..,e control ftwt 1 '''' tr•n\ftr •nd au.lqnment o! ri. ••Orew•d uoo ,,. Ir-. l••turH llQUlCHftt'ftl fnd o-J .. Ill ol ,,_ Mid °""""'~ wlll lie m•cle fn<! I,_ COft. \IOl"t•hOf\ tl''ftf"for t09ettwr wut\ t""' '°'"1der•t1on tor tht' tr•n\t...-~ &i· '"'"~' 01 111t •lortuld ll~w <or h<f",,'W\1 ,., lo bit co"''"'"miliecl Of\ Of Aftf'' '"'-lt\l d·\Y ot O.c~mbtr tt16, ~t '""' •'4:<0W ""P•rtment Of 8'1NK OF .AMERICAN T &S .L•oune~.cll,;,r l'l'IOtun A••"'"'· 1ntl'ltCllvOf~ S.Mh. (oun1v ot Oren9t, SIAlt di C.1111ort11• provtoea 11\•I 11\e Oeoat1· f'N'f)t ot A1cor-ohc 9,...,,..,..,0t Corttro• has ftiC)Of'ov.d w1d ''•""''' ot w1d uceinw. OaleO Nov•m~r 13 t•lt Sc"lanO.r C Ltnn snu~ul L•n Tt.,,\l•rO<\ and L1ttt"'98'\ R•Oy AlkUO Matwmalo Int~ Tr1n\teree IANKOl'AMElllCA NATIONA L TltUST ANO SAVINGS ASSOCIAflON u.--. ... c" •••I'<" MO<••n A.,.n ... U4J""'" ... ,11. C•lll-la Pubft\h<!O O<•nQI Coe•I 0.lly PllOt, Oe<tmbtr 11. 1'1t Sll»-1• PUBLIC NOTICE -NOTICI 0' SALE 0" lllEAL l!SfATIE AT f'lllVAHSALI .... s. .... ,..,, SUPl 111011 COUllT Ol'T.ME \TATE 0' CALll'OllNIAf'Olt THE COUlfTY 01' LOi A NOEL ES Int~ M•n~· Of, ... E•l•ltOI FRANK HAROLD MILLEA, at'° --.. I'_ H•ROLO MILLER. 0•< .. - NOl•C' I• l\f'<•OY qlv•n '""' Wbl«' IO <0Mirmet1on bv the \•Id Superior Courl, int unat•tlon11J. as Ad· m1n•1Mfttor with wtll •nnea.ed of the ••••I• Of 1~ •00"" n•m@O Clee-t. will \4111 et pr Ivel••••~. lo Ille hfqhMI end bn\ b•OO<!r. Ul>Otl Ille ,,,,..,,. •nd t ondltton' .,.,,,,..,,.,.,. m•nt~. ort I~ 21111 O•y ol Ott•Mbet. 1'7•. or \l'llorultt• wllhll\ 11\e llmf' ••-by ...... , ""' ofllc• Of RAMSEY -llASMV~SEN . "' Wot OCUI\ Bo<ll"••rd Sulll• 1703 L-Beed\, C.tilOl'f'll•. all tl>e """. 1111•. 1n1 .... , -nl•I• ot Iha abovtt n•.-dKe--1. fl,,.. .. ,,,. ol 111, 0.•111 ano an""' •iQfll title •nd lftfe-1 ttwl ""' ~Id f9'\f•t• "•ti. bY 00tr•Uon ot ••w or °'""""1~. <><ou•••d otl'la# U•..,or lntO-Olt•en 10 IMI Of utd de<••-•• , ... """' Ol l'tlJ ot•lll. 01. 1n •rMI to 1M -Cer• t4Un tot, tM«~ Of' Ptrt.•I of l•nd. ~ltU.tt, lv•"'l "no o.1nq In \119 Co""'' Of LO\ """"'"'· Sl•le ot '•llfornl•. ftt(j ._.. ,,..,,o<ulerh• Ot\trlDeO •• IOllOW>, ~ NII t 1 oer<•<ll workll'O royally 1111.,.,1 ol ln!AI ptD<lu<fll)<\ Of 1)11 DrOOUctd. Mvf'd •nd '\04rt 4'nd of Pf'OC.ftd\ t•• r,.t¥tllod Ch 4'~"04'0' ffOff\ i•lf of 411 Ofl\. , .. .,,,q ... ad <1••. •rid""' o•IC!llno .,,.,.. llv''1't , .• ..,.o •rwJ "°." ''0'" ... , ""°""'" ., H S iCt>f'llbu'" Fowler No t. c_~ r;y •" o•t •"d o•t-\ubt••~ d•t,.d 10 t• 1• "' and b•l,.••'I Wh\ """"''<'"" 011 Company,• 'orpor.tlot\, ,., i.\\Or, .-.cl~ S IColllbuth, ft In-. ,.....,,,.. real ,,,_,,y •lllMMecl In lfle c.-ly of O•-. Statt of C:.flfOflll' tllor• p.,rllcul.,ly d•"rll>ad •l t\Mi.w•. Tll'I Sovtlleut qu•r1w of ,,.. ,_,,__, quarler of I lie Nort'-ft _...., of '"' loilll!H11 Q~ et'CS 1119 Ne.111 -11•11 01 llM ~ ...,..., "'Ille HorUIW•ll qUfftlt .. "" """111wftl 11u•rltl' OI ti.. s.utl9fffl ....,wtlf ef S.CUOft I•, l-l'lfMpUOwlll, Rt119tl\Wttl.S I .I ~M. 1. 1 IMICMI CIV•Nldl1'9 roy.i1y 1..- te...c 111 -11 kMWn •• f-• HO.._ c-,..., llY 111411 <•rtaln , .... WM. ~l._'3 _ r~o·-l·l~ll In Booltt.2', P-111. Offl<lal ll«o•dJ fll or.,. Cownly, C,.lllornl•, <owrlnQ IMI - .....,., JllV.t\td Ill'"' CoYn11 .. Ol'eftOI, 51"'9 of Celllornl•, "'°" ~~ OH<•lbod., •oo-•• Lot 14. 810<11 , , of Ml(I ()eff1ol4 SlrHI -!loll to Hul!ll"910tl ftptl'I, H per Meo r~orci.<I In 8-1. Mls-t«ll-• M•o•, _, 7? and2'. T~ l•rm• ond ,.,,.,111-ef Mi.: Ca\h In l•wful mono of -United St•'"· o• t t m.ty llt contr.c.ttd fOf: 1" .,., <•nl ol t"" wrtll&M _., to .,. j>tltl al llW tllM Of Ille Dkl; bll-.e 1111 tOftflnnetlO'I., Miit . Til9 llU<tlwlMr It le M•--~ M•rll of, •nd , ••• Ill• O•OINtlj purclwlMd 11v P!lm, •Wi.ct i9 -11 1111 SU4.e •"" e.-ty , ..... -.,, _ .. ll'W'llJ ef W"-t-Wf' 11-0 OI' Nltllf'f whlCl'I ere now or tft•Y MC.,,.. .,., ... ,., Cfl•• .. •lllo tt or • 1 .. ,. ....,..,,...,_,,,llV,C ... MWflln\. illl lll<K or 611•" ""''' .. In -'tint •"d mn lit l•fl ti Ill• olll<• of RAMSEY -,_ASMUSf'aN, _. Wlttll oc .... a.UloYtrd, Sul\• 11'*, LOl>f llffcll, c..111..,,1. A"°""'1t ... ~ Adtftl"'tlrator wltfl will 81\M-, ~ ty fll l.Ot Aft9911\, $ftlt of Cot~ Of tM'I tit o.tl-to Wld Ado'r!Ml•r•or Wllll Wfll tnM"'d --lly Ill Yid toun!~ OI t.a• ,-,,.,.,.,, fH mn i. lllff lntNofllooltf'lt Cl•rk ef tlll•Cour1,tl1 ... , "-oft ... '"' flrat llW!lullOt'I .. 1111• •k• of .... -_.,.,.. ,,,....,. MldMi.. DllH~t.tt1 .. HOttMAN aAtMUUIN., -~•lll1tr11• wtttlWflleMt ... ttf ....... aAMlaYa aA.Wut~• ... -...oc-......, .......... ma U.....,.,C»I ....... -............................ .... wfll__ • ~·--°' ..... (.Mtt OlflY ...... ~H,11,tl,1''6 JI.,. PUBLIC NOTICP; Cl.,'171 SVl'trlllOll COUllTOl'Tlttl iTAnl 01' CALll'OllNl•f'Oll TNI COUNlY 0, OllANOI .... A·""' NOTl(I! 01' If llAlllMO 01' fl•TITI~ ,011 f'llOIATI Of' WILL AHO '011 t.ITTlllS TUTAMEN• TAltY t;ttaw of l~ENE MA"Y LACEY, Oec:eased. NOTICI! IS MElll!IY GIVl!N INI THOMAS I!!. U Cl!.Y l\H 111..i ,,.,.,,,a petllloll 10. Pr.0.1• Of Wiii -IOf Ii- -· ot Lel\tt\ Tts\frntM"" to""' l"elll-• refertonee lo .,..lch I•.- tot 1111111ef -11culan. -llWl 111e time lMld plec• of hetrltlQ Ille-M• -tel tot Jtnuary 4, lt17, <tt 10.00 •.m .. In Ille"°""'°°"' et o.-tlY*ll No, J ol setd court, •I 100 ''"'< ~ 0r1 .. wu1. 111 t.,. c"" of SMta AM • C.lll«nlo. Oe(ed Oe<emller 10, 1'176. WIU.IA¥ •• MJOffN CoUttly C .. rtr. lttll"HIN A. oa111CUM ., •• ne41eA- AMMIM.CA .... ~··l'ellt9-r ,......,_ 0.tftQ<l Coo\! Ollly ....... Ott<. If, IS. )1, 1'7• PUBLIC N011CE PUBUC NOTICE CN1" f'ICTITIOUl8\fl1Mlb MAMa STAT.~llfT TJw tollowlllf pef--40lft9 ~ "9n••· SUO'S Ct'"fTlll. I.et __ ,, CM\f""9'6,CA .-..n ALf.XANOl!lt ~. OUTHll!, 11117 s.rta (;1•••· "-toh• v.11..,, CA "1'1 Melen C>vtllle, 111tr ~ O tr' "-'"'"Vat1<ty,CA'11te Tiii• ~""' k ~"" .-i -""...._ ....... _ .... .., ..,. ll*l. ~·· ....... Ov1111t T"I' .._,,, .. , llleel wllfl u.. Cown\v Cl•rti Of Or•n,. CQurlty Oii PUBLIC NOTICE PIC'l'ITIOUS IUllNISS NAMtr SfAT',MINT ,.... ,ol.....,lftf perM)ll• •r• dOlncl ..,.. ne\lat' I) S•A l"lilill! l(SHHl!L OH 8ltl\TOL, 71 HOME OF VON RIT· TEllOUT Gt!llMA"I !>Hl!PHl!AOS. 21115 E.lthlol,\enteAn• CA H•ln1 •nd •noal>O•Q Stllll._, 1'»tle"•••O Att , CelfllO•, CA.t0/01 Tiii• bll•IMU IS (9110..(IM I), t ........ ~ ....... lllp. IWll\ll.s.Ml ... ft Nt •!Ale-wn 11...i wltll ,,.. O.-tr Clorll 01 Or•nDO Counlr on DKefNMf ), .. , .. -l'loell-0.M>Oe Cont o.lly ~~ ~,,.,,,, .. Atl>• o.c.mtier ,, IA, 11,U.1'7• ~U-1' flltOl'alllOlfAL .. llYICH "'' '"'111 flltllfl A .... s.111a Aae, CA. •mt IK'9W lte. r .. ttlt-Mfl •1c11ow P90!1-0.-c ... 1 Oally Pilot • Oec.11. tt, 1t1•.•tldJ•n . ._ 11, .. ,, )301-)• PUBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PVBUC NOTICE l'l(TITIOUS autiNll1S HAM•UATIMl'IJT TIW lollOWlllQ -Miii I• dOlr'Q ~· .. ~.fl 'AM US 'PORTS IP4'1!~NA T l 0"1A L 1'1' W IM<AMnur 111vd No 1. c~w ~ ... 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II• wld deUdonl •rt requlrM tD 1119 .....,., """ l"-necessary ~ II\ lie .ittco of the c•er-o4 IM ... -lllled COUfl, ot 1• O"tHM tfltnl. .. 1'11 ... _,.,., ,,.VCl'tell, to tflO "°*"' .... 11 UM office o4 LEUINO, HOf"l"MAN, Kl<LIK. AHO !(LE.IN, Att-'f". at U.. '660Wllsl'lfr• 81vo., 8_,,.Hlll6, c;.lllomlf 'Wit Wltlt lt 11 the pf-of buslf\H' of \lie unO.rllfll\OCI lft ell II*· .. " 1terulnlng to IM A11•1• of Mid• ftdtf'tt. wlU>ln lour mOll(llt antt Ole llnl pwbllqllono11hll noU<.e. OiMed NOvtmber ?•, 1'1' Mor•<t IC•llfttnd 8ew•ly K•llk S<timtv Co-Exuu1or~ot '"' Wllloflhe•bow ftllmecl<le<• ... <11 llLANO, HOl'P'MAN, ltALllt & l(Ll lN A-~atLew -WHJ!llr• llwf ~ .. rfy lflll'-CA tt112 ,..., lltSI tn ... 11 A_.,.forOt.&uu t.,t ~lV..d Oronoa C.Ot \I Delly Pilot, H6v. JO.ano Oft. I, 14, l 1, 1tl• l013-16 J4U SU,.lfltlD• COUllT O"TNe •STA f l 01' CALl,OltNIAflOI THI COU!ITY O' 0flAN041 N•.A- 1'0Tl(I Oft MIAlllM O~ ~ltlOlf FO" THl lllMOVA&. OI" O~i>t(ATION 01" C•Mlfllt't ~·•TY TA'E ~~~t~A~1H'~.~O::~'°"c: ORANGE •• <o•oor.ilO<I iOle, '"" Remov•I Of 0.dlcallon ot ~ ,.,.,11<''1y. NOTICE 1$ HEREBY QIVEN !!let Tl4E ~OMAN CATHOLIC lllSHOPOF ORANGE.• CO•l>Oftlio1> ..Olt. IMrt llltd ht•tln an Aoottcollon lor R•l'lllW•I of D..ilctllon 01 Ctmttt•Y Pt-'1'1. ,._ ftrtn<e lo which I• ,,,_ tor ,.,,,_ oet1tcul•"· end 111•1 \ht llmt "'4 !llt<e Ill M •ttnQ h WI IOI J_., 4. \t17 •I ' 00 A M In 1711 C-1..-rn of O.c»rt,.,..nl tt, of tne Court Houw tt /OOCIYI< G4ntt' Otlv• Wes I. s.rrt•Anl. c.111om11 nw Prooerty """' wttl'l'I dtdl<Mloft •• ~ lo be ttrnO'ttd It CltK,-. tt lol-\: Tllose porflon> of Ut t0 M tN RflftCllo c.tntd1 dt 10\ All-lft llM '°""'' ot O••n<af. Ct•I• or CollMrllio, •• ..,_,, on map r11co1dtd In 8oOll l, P199~ 1'IO end 1" ol Ml.ufl- R11<oro1 01 lo• At\Qlllt\ COU'lly, ,,... eluded within ll'lo lollo•l"9 dH1t.flbe4 -ceis ot ••n<1! f'A.-CIL 114 A strip ef t.tnd, 60 00 Ifft Ill wlcltlt., t1w -1~Y 11,.. 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M,tr lett ll'ltOUQh I Ctnttal 41i/14lt Of It defjr.,., JS lt<tl t7 lnctie• 1 I~ J0\111! u ~"' II lncl'l•f\ M lne._ ~. l<llftql'n\ \0 ~aid CUl'llll, f0t1 ... ~ to 11\e llttQlnn~ ol • l•"Ofln4 ~ <'l"- Ct.,. -111ef\lttlf, MYI ... ,. ,..,"6 al woo 00 tof; th,no •ou111t~•ltr1Y ·~ Ml._ ourw• 211 II ~I .....,.,. • <.,..,., anv•t o• > "''", ff f1'lt .b 111- ctWS. ti.no ""''" •• <N9r19J t1fllttPt11 inci..t ettl. tanqeM -. t.W cww, 4M.441eel. llXCEPTINO t11trt#r-9llt _. 11111111ln0 "'"""Mid Tree I""'...,_ ALSO EXCEPTING t~lft lh•I e>0•11011 lylno w1111111 TrtW<• Roa4, 10 +HI lt1 wldll't, ••~Ill dM!CI recOl'dtd S.OllmlHlf Jo, "21. llOOll Sit. 11ett., ot 0111c111 Recorduhald )" } -\ \ •.:. '( LI ? n iJ 0 11 a n q L b ,, ti ,, '" " ., II ., . , ,. ... , Or_eount,. ~ l'AllCILIU • A ttrlp el tt"" W.oo Ifft tt ..... ""9 sovtlle''' lln• •' Hid 1!rlo ._1,.. JI oncrlbed"' follow•· e.0111111119 •t ti. 1111 ... ,.alM of I,,. -11\-\ltrly 11,. 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EXCl!PTINO href'9"1 ... ,,,,,... floll 1'/lflt ""111111 T•DllC•-., •tMC 111 wlll\11, •• e1ttcrltt.d 111 ,... ,... nq C9'dotd ~-bt• '°· ""· 111 '*'-)lJ. ~ n 111 Ofllclel rftwdi • U4d rm Or...-Olunty_ t"'" •r• •nd lltw ~ llO ~ _..,, """1 • In 11\11 -lloll of Ille ,,...,,., '" n.rttn lthcrlllff trom '""'"'Mid• •m dle•IO!I II '°"91\I to lit,.._..., o.tw· Dectm4>tt I, 1'16 lltANOUlf &M<At.UITl't ly JOt4H J. taAHO\.IN,Ji.. MA.NCH.IN a MCAL\.ISTI .. ............. 1 CWllW•"-2222"'-• W ........ . ""'wtlillllre ....... ... UI ""'9'n. CA...,. ==~~ r,q """""" °'""" c..tl ....., .... OK. M, 21, •• ttf\ ...,. 1h\ I /J ,, I sraeli Voting ~. ~ rY' S.flowdown Due "CM~Rl~M/\? WMA'r EV£R rr ~ YOU MAV£ .. 'T GOT IT/'' JE~SALEM CAP) -Prime Minister Yitzbak Rabtn's resignation has a the stage for an election showdown between Israel's doves and haw verfuturemovestowardpeacewlth the Arabs. Rain's resignation Monday night was a tactical maneuver designed toundrcutrlvalswtthlnhisrulingLaborpartyandtakelsraeltot.b.epolls befonanembryonlccenlristmov------------- emeqcould get strong enough to ( J chall~gehim. I N SHORT Thcovemtnenl was preparing a biUJissolving the Knesset and Tuesday. December 2t 1976 DAILY PILOT •i calll1¥anelectionforaoewparlia- ment.Tbere must be at least 143 days :>elween the resignation of the c~inet and the balloting, and anels:tionln late Maywasexpect ed. 1his would be five months before the Knesset's term would have-erutett:'1! eanWhtle, Rabin and hs cabinet remain in office lll5 acarttaker government. mostly of businessmen and academicians, urges Carter to move quickly to negotiate a new canal treaty with Panama and to seek an end to the 17-year estrangement with Cuba. SCHOONER GOODWILL UNDER WAY ON A VOYAGE ~umoraPer•l•t That Ralph larrabee Waa Buying Gold •nd Sliver ALEXANDRIA. La. CAP) Two magazines, Oui and Girls Playboy II. have been declar obscene by a state judge her opening the way for possible pr secution of distributors. Rapides Parish Dist. AUy. Ware, who brought suit agai the publications, said he would d cide today whether to begin t ing action against anyooe selli the magazines. - DIST&IBlJTORS HAVE sa that if the magazines were rul obscene in Rapides Palish, t might disappear fro newsstands around the state. "Louisiana's statute on o scenity calls for a three-prong test, and I found the t maga%ines' primary appeal ls prurient interests," State Dist ' Judge Robert Jackson said M day night. At the same Ume, Jackson s~ two issues of Playboy and one f Gallery contained eno1 literary merit to avoid classiJca- tion as obscene. m E JUDGE SAID he ¥A.Lid decide later on Ware's reqest that he declare Penthoi>e, Hustler, Club, Climax and hie magazines obscene. Harold Chamberlin, who Es Shreveport News Agency an S· tributes many of the magaz , said he was concerned about 11at could follow Jackson's rulingHe said that although the carts forbid prior restraint, reta•rs might refuse to handle he magazjnes out of fear of crirmal prosecution. Baja Isles Class Goal An upcoming Orangt Coast College biology cla.s.1 on Baja California will feature an eight-day cruise to study Baja's islands, lagoons, plants and animal life. The trip for the two-unit class Is scheduled during OCC's fall aod spring semester break, Jan. 29 • Feb. S. A $HS FEE covers course-related expenses, mclud1n1 berthing and meall aboard the 95-foot, lon1-ru1e fishin~ boat "Searcher." The boat will serve as a floating laboratory. Pre-trip class meetings will be held Jan. 11 and Jan. 2S from 4~ p.m. 1n Science Room 14. Stud~t.s may r~isler (or the cl ass ln OOC's admissions and records otrlce Mondays throuiJ! Thurtdays from 8 ,:l.m. -10 p.m. and Frid&)'S from 8 a.m.·S p.m. For more Information, phone Ml·SM8. Bell Critlrized WASHJNGTON CAP> -The selction by President-elect Carter of Griffin E . Bell, Atlanta lawyer, as his attorney general is spurring statements of regret and alarm from the Congressional Black Caucus and from top NAACP of- ficials. Some black leaders who said BeUwasnotacceptableweremak- ing their first public criticism or Carter on bis appointments. They said they found it hard to credit Carter's statement that after an intense, nationwide search, the best qualified individual he could find for attorney general was a Jong-time friend who s upported G. Harrold Carswell 's nomination to theU.S.SupremeCourtinl970. C'aaal Pact Soilgltt WASHINGTON (AP> -A private panel is recommending a series of measures to the Carter administration to improve U.S. re- lations with Latin America, but cautions against close ties with "brutally repressive govern- ments"there. The 20-member panel, made up Woman Mayor Reigns O ver 'Tough' Town TOMBSTONE, Ariz. (AP) - Some residents think Wyatt Earp and ''Doc" Holliday roUed over in their graves as the first woman was sworn in as mayor or "the town too tough to die." Marge Colvin, 55, said some men, including current Mayor Jack Hendrickson. didn't think a woman would fit in with the his- toric image or the southeastern Arizona town. But etiough of the 1,400 residents disagreed to choose Mrs. Colvin over the town magistrate by a 72-vote margin. THE INAUGURATION was held Monday night in the 1882 ci- ty ball, next door to the OK Cor· ral, where Earp, his brothers and Holliday gunned down BilJy Clan- ton and the McLaury brothers in one of the most celebrated shootouts of the Old West. The campaign for mayor of the 98-year·old town was as colorful as the characters who now are buried on Boot Hill. Mrs. Colvtn said she spent between SSO and $00 on a few posters and spoke at three meet- ings. "MY OPPONENT SPENT a fortune and said publicly th<lt we ~houJdn 't let a bartender run our town." said Mrs. Colvin. who tends bar and manages lhe Tombstone American Legion Club. "That's ironic, since the out.,RolnR mayor owns the Lucky Cuss Saloon and one ot the coun· ell members owns Johnny Ringo's Bar." Shy You11g Dancer Slain in ~acant Lot PORTLAND, Ore. <AP> .. Sharon Ryan was a 11·year-old dancer. "She was ln love with danc$cj she was in love with life,'.' said her hilh school drama teach Wanda Nichols. "Whenever she danced, e~e seeQl~ to U1ht up s~e." LAST TBVaSD.\V NIGHI', ~E failed to return from a trip to a neighborhood arocery at.ore t<b\IY eggs for the cooties she was bUinJ. Her stranC)ed, part.laJ~lthed body was fouhd Saturday tn a lot behind a Northeast Portlan partment a few blocks from her home. A box of brohn egg, wu i near the body. Police satd Monday they hav o suspects: SHAaON WAS 11IE YOU~l:ST OF eight children. Her pm-enta are dlvorC!edi her lathe~ llliam Ryan, lives in Portland, and her mothet, Maro\ r.&solstyn vei1 ln Hollywood. Sharon beBAI'\ d11ncing In ' and Parks Bureau programs when ab~ was 6 )'eara old. Shell ed immecUat.e promise and her mother, o rormcr danttr, cmroU er In prtvate classes. At Jetrer1ob Nt«h School, Sh& quickly earned a reputation as a top )191'(ormer In the school'• t'ellent dance departqicnt.. She planned to enl'QJl next September New York University, then try her luck on tbe profeulonaJ atace. n.IENDS SAID DANCIN~alao Sharon's way ol meet.ln1 A qwe\, slrl, bet' aomeUmes bothered her. ~ llad a~ of lrieds, but didn't know It," said a doee friend and fellow danctt, Manha en, lS. '• ... • ..... #ii •• ·-.... ---.... -.. ATLANTA CAP> -Public health officials have begun a na- tionwide search for cases of a paralyzing syndrome to try to learn if it is linked with the sus- pended swine nu immunization program. Pirates Hit Goodwill? The National Center for Disease Control said Monday itischecking health departments, neurologists and emergency rooms. "We are • looking for cases which we know havenorelationshiptotheinocula- tion program so they can be com- pared with those who have been in- oculated," aspokesmansaid. Did R11mors of Gold, Silver Spark Ide a ? f'a-.,on E%pected NICOSIJ\, Cyprus <AP) -The Saudi Arabi an oil ministermadeit clear todal that he expects pro- gress in (titving the Arab-Israeli conflict in return for holding down oil prices. ''Thedecision is an economic de· cision bu lit also will serve political ends," said Sheik Ahmed Zaki Yamanl in a statement broadcast by the official Saucti radio. "These are the same ends that the kingdom fought for and led the oil battle for." Yamani refused to go along with a two-lier lSpercentoil price rise decided upon by a ma- jority of the Organization or Petroleum ExportingCountnes. Fmcr /tlore Kiiied SALISBURY, Rhodesia CAP)- Black nationalist guerrillas killed four more whites in the past 24 hours, the Rhodesian government reported today. One was a South African vaca· tioner killed in northwest Rhodesia when guerrillas raked a ferry on Lake KaribaMondaywith machine-gun fire, security chiefs reported today. The others were young Rhodesian policemen killed in clashes with insurgents, a com- munique announced. Pilot Logbook Edi1or's Note· In the /irst two episodes, the schoon~ Coodwlll cr!>'ised reckles:sly in Newport Harbor .and tried twice unsuc- Ce$Sfully to break the . all-time panage record for the Trarupoc Race. Thir is the third m. a series of six.articles describmg t~ notonous lJleSSel, IYWned bJI Ralph l..arrabet, that sank of/ the Ba1a coo.st m May, 1969. :By LINDSLEY PARSONS According to the Orange Coast Daily Pilot of July 1, 1969, a de- composed body was found by American searchers on Scavenger's Beach near Scam- mon's Lagoon on Sebastian Vi~­ caino Bay, about 150 miles south ot the scene or the wreck. There was also a report that two other bodies had been ctis· covered and buried by Me)(ican fishermen. Marlow V. Marrs, president of Larrabee's L .&F. Industries, slated that only two bodies were positive ly identified. A third body, found near Scammoo's Lagoon was identified with some certainty from photographs. The report or the other two bodies was never substantiated, accord- ing to Marrs. THE RECU R RING rumor around Newport Beach states tbal a fourth body was dis- covered and temporarily buried in a shallow grave, but when the searchers returned to remove the body, it had disappeared. Reports persist that Larrabee was always buying Mexican gold Medic Must Buy Icy Christmas By ARTHUR R. VINSEL <M !'-O.fly ""°' Su If The guys at I luntington Beach's Lake Street Fire Station are dreaming of a vanilla-white Chnstmas, also Neapolitan, toasted almond, butter brickJe and spumoni. THbS IS BECAUSE of a tradition within riredepartment ranks, which adds a light touch to the serious busin~ss of sav- ing lives and property. Paramedic Bob Filipek is its latest pleased victim. Any man who so distinguishes himself in the line of duty that he merits a mug shot in the newspaper must buy his whole station house a supply of ice cream for evening desserts. Naturally, beverage-type treats of the sort used to toast special achieve· mehts are forbidden. SO IT WORKS out fine for firemen and paramedics to salute anyone's special personal recognition with ice cream. "Oh Lord ...• "moaned Paraltledic Filipek when word leaked out that through a chance encounter, vigilance vtNHL and a sixth sense, his efforts saved the life or a young at- torney's wife "This is really going to cost me, "he quipped. A NEWSMAN explained that the cost of n~ting fame may be dear -the prtct' of a gallon or black walnut ripple - but more important ii' public knowlcd~e o( what vital servicl.'s he and his colleagues perform. Filipek was adamant on Nov. 28 t.bata young Huntington Beach woman he happened to spot crouched beside her fallen bicycle on Adams Avenue receive medical attention. She dismissed her severe pain and weakness symptoms and asked to 1ust go home, but through his efforts she was hospitallted ti.nd rushed into emergency surgery for certuln- ly lethal first-pregnancy complications. BV THE TIME she arrived, t.he woman's wailing pbysi· cian said 60 percent of her life's blood h3d hemorrhaged i"to tier abdominal cavity. Her veins were collapsing from low blood prtssure. Death was about JO minutes away. Today, Paramedic Fllipekfslnlinetor t1 (.'Ommendehon. And some Ice rrca.m vendor will turn a bit more profit, It the men of the Lake Street Fire St:. ti on get their way. "OKA V, OKAY, I'll buy the ice err am, but none or th3t htnd·pucked ~·Q·quart stuff you turkeys always want."· snapped Filipek as aphotogrnphcrsnapped his picture. "Actually," he whia~red, "l'm thankful to be able to " nllpek knows how UWe a gallon or Ice cream cost.a com· pered to the co~tol a llte. and silver. Whether these reports were true or not, there could have been enough substance to them to make piracy appear at- tractive. , Certainly many American yachts have been pirated over the years. A United Press In- ternational news story of August 28, 1974, stated that the Coast Guard had warned ·yacht owners to beware of hijacking drug smugglers, but denied a con- gressional report that more than The Coast Guard stated that only four reports of actual hijack- ing had been documented, but there was a possiblity that as many as 30 or more other vessels may have fallen victim to hi- jackers or pirates, despite the lack of hard evidence. Und.Yley Parsons,. authm of this ieriei on the nnking of the schooner Goodwill, i.t former vice mayor of Newport Beach .and .a long·time Orange Coast yachtsman. He i.f a motion picture prodw:er-director. Bill Lyon, a Newport Beach yacht captain, repeated the cons- tant gossip that "Larrabee pro- bably sank the boat himself and is sitting on a mountain top in Mexico or South America with the gold." I checked with Al Tiffany of Corona del Mar, a member of the original syndicate, and asked him if Larrabee bought Mexican gold. "Larrabee was always buying gold," he replied. I asked Tiffany if Larrabee was in trouble with the Internal Revenue. The reply was emphatic. "He was always in trouble with the Internal Revenue.'' The more people I interviewed, the more I thought we were talk- ing about two different men. nlERE WAS the Ralph Lar- rabee who owned the 40 root twin screw converted fishing boat Amiga during the 1940's, and belonged to the Balboa Angling Club where some people remem- bered him as a kindly, thoughtful man, always willing to lend a hand. This was the Larrabee whc was concerned for the welfare of his crew and guests aboard the Goodwill. This Larrabee loaded the Goodwill with magazines, books and clothing for distribution in the little Mexican ports, provided paint, roofing paper and carpet- ing for a Catholic church, and took sporting goods to Zihuan· tenejo. This Larrabee was fond of children and liked to have them aboard. Then there was the other Lar- rabee. This one defied the In- ternal Revenue and flouted harbor regulations. This Lar- rabee drank too much and made enemies in every port from Newport Beach to Acapulco. Marlow V. Marrs, · called Larrabee'' a rugged individual isl of the old school." HE SAID THAT Larrabee "formed judgments that were bard to change," and that "he made a lot of enemies." At the same time, Larrabee formed friendships that lasted for years, such as with Bud Gardner and Harry Boller, a Cal Tech engineer 'and industrialist. Boller wu with Larrabee on the !irst Trana Pac race, and sailed on lhe South Pacific ex· pedltlort as second mate and navigator. He also new i.n a Coast Guard heUcopter over the wreck of t.be Goodwill on Sacramento Ree! to see which ot tbe ship's small boat.s were still aboard. Marrs didn't believe that Lar· rabee was carrying any treasure ln the safe aboard the Goodwill et the lime sbc was wrecked. It Is his opinion that since Larrabee had been ln southem waters for several 1nontbs, If there was anyt.hlna tn lbe sale, it was a minimal amount of Cash. Larrabee was a sell made man and rubbed many people the wron1 way, bot Marn prcfen to re,member him fot his many charities. • Marrs Is annoyed by the many stories which have been in circulation since the wreck, but conceded that in the absence or positive evidence, there is no way to stop them. OF ALL THE people ·1 in· terviewed, the two who had known Larrabee the longest, ac- cepted him for what he was, and really liked him, were Mrs. Carl J . Hillgren of Little Balboa Island and he r son, Carl, Jr., of Laguna Beach. Yet even the Hillgrens, like many of Larrabee's old friends, had grown a little remote from him towards the end, and were saddened by his increasing de- pendence on alcohol. They agreed to discuss Lar- r a bee frankly, with the un- derstanding that any criticism or the man must be accepted as a small part of their recollections of someone for whom they had the fondest regard. The elder Hillgr en had been the proprietor of the Westlock Company. Jock manufacturers, which was a neighbor of Lar· rabee's L.&F. Industries in Hunt- ington Park. Hillgren and Lar· rabee were good friends, and often accommodated each other with the Joan of warehouse and milUng space. When · Larrabee became sole owner of the Goodwill, the Hillgrens were invited to join him on several voyages lo Acapulco. Arter the death of bis father. young Carl continued to sail with Larrabee, accompany- ing him on so many voyages to Acapulco and Caho San Lucas, that he has actually lost count. It was Larrabee's usual prac- tice to put three people on each watch, two guests and a paid hand. One person was on lookout, one at the wheel aud one in the engine room. The Goodwill was not pilot house controlled. There was a telegraph near the steering wheel on the afler deck with poin· ters and bells connected lo the engine room signalling forward, astern, neutral and st.op, and the various intermediate speeds. SOMETIMES THE englneer was not immediately available. or failed to hear the bells, and there was no response. The Goodwill was a big ship, but she was often awash in rough seas. Mrs. Hillgren recalls comlng on deck one night to see deck chairs, cushions and buckets sweep by her in the scuppers, and looked above to discover alJ the fishing rods, which bad been laid loosely on the cabin top, spread out over her head like a fan. TOMORROW : A minimum of navigational equipment results ;,. several groundlng.t of the . aJmo!t 50-year-old yacl1t t/1a1 rl'quired ball a mile to stori at five /mots. 'White Bre ad' Playing SA A Christmas con('ert that will feature the rock ~roup White Bread w 111 bl' off<>red to the public Wedncsduy ut Lhe Orange County Civic Center In Santa Ana. Funded by the city, the free concert will also feature Tony Stone, cousin of rock star Sly Stone, and comedian Chris Woods plus the rock 1>iroup Quo Vadls. City officials 11afd tile concert wiJI be staged during lhe noon hour in the Phua of the Sun, located between the Santa An a city hall, the Santa Ana public library And the Orange County courthouse. Barricading Ends MOUNTAIN VIEW (AP) - Authorities say Jnmc., Scott, also known as James Crawford. sur- •rendered peacefully 12 hours after he barricaded himself ln his parents' home and fired slx shotgun blasts at Police. • , t , . ---------n OAILY PILOT htote . . . . . • I 000 '1999 The Bluest Marketplace on the Oran1e Coast fmployment & ~ •.... ~ ........ in...atmem & Ananciat ......... 5000-5049 DAILY Pl' 01 CLASSIFIED A S Preparation • • . • • • 7000.7199 MefthondiM ••.... 8000-8099 Boot1 & Morine Amouncernent1, Pw.ona11. Lott & Found ...... ~~ s.vke1 & Repain 6()()(M099 You Can S~ll It, Find It, ( 8-42 •S&'7B] Trade It With a Want Ad One Call Ser ice Fast Credit App~ val fqulpment ........ 9000-9099 Automobllea & °"* Transportation .... 9lGe-9999 CLASSIFIED INDEX ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• t---------1G1Mral 1002 1002 ~.~.~...... ~:.~~ ....... ~.~.~ ............. ~~.~ ....... ,~~:.~~-... .. G ... ra1 1002 Ge•ral 1002 Ci••r• 1002 tooz G-..e1wl 1002 ................................................................................................................. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ERROR$: AdftirtiMn COVIHGTOM ~ dlltck 1hW och ~ le Pta Y11r Ad, can daily and ,.port ~ $123,500 ron 1 ... ~ty. TM 1700 sq. Cl . owner's s uite DAIL y PILOT 01,_1 with fireplace plus three ,_ & Pl.OAT AYAILAILI If you'd like a nice place to dock your boat. see thi.s ; you can lease out the duplex that goes with it while it grows in value enough to pay for a bigger boat next Christmas. 642-5678 HOUSfS FOR SAlE -· ~1.1.....i e.tboe P.wiuul• ~MOll .. th C..,_delM•r Ca1te Mn• 0...l'ooftl f"JTaro r owthlf\ ~.fltn1 ~MlnilllO" ~·"" ,,...,,.... 1Jll'JllT1lurll 1.e.a~•1111 .. lAIUfta f\••~,·I W1'4!111t1\1r1(; ~:ri-:w!~~.~ .. ~-Jwen ( i1p111lr 1nt1 '-Nt AAI Wal JMIK'h ~"'~'°' l.4!1una 'Ar"\m1M\ft Wrbil• llom"'' ~•I' REAL ESTATE Arft'la(fl ltf/f ., .. ,,. Av.-nnwnb It~ ~.1 .. hhrhJ'thJ>f'rt'I ""''•""''" •tr~...,.n\ f tl'rTW'ltlf't l.r1h I fll t 1.mm.-rr1•I f1rnr..,·11. l f"""1m1nv.,~ •..,.1._ r~ ..... 1,..,.,h ~.,,. ~lot>t MtJ\t'd IN"OI.• t'tfl~~rh 1.t*-ln aJ l'trlfl"'th' lie• fnr ~•If' M~•Hl'YW' 'Trlr J'''° a.n..N" O•urt Ko .. • f!-..,~ ~~,.:~,~~p 0.. f!I ilfil# .JfO~J ~~·""'""• Uro~""• ....., I.al.Ilk f~uh•"'il'" --·•llled IDHALS -,.,..,., . ...., "'*"'-U"hWftUMd _,.,.,...0<l"nl GamiorMWNM• f ur1111 ~'"'"1111 lnt T~'"'" T-l 'nr ~-,.."'" f:ac>N•• U•t ..,..,,.,. ~L•lw• -,.,.."' lnl --•fl<wd .......... °' .... _...._, -. ... rke11U.I• .... ~ "•"'•'• ........ \o~•r•• ,.,. .... f'-k•IW <•-M"'4el .......... R .. M•I Jlld-..nM R•nl•f ~:••nt..-1 M.w M•ftUla BUSINESS, INVEST· huge bedrooms. Three 2 labilty for h f1nt I• t>edroom. 2 bath apart icxr COf'T'WC .. nMt"ffotl only. men ts. 5 car garage . 11rr. Best buy in this VERY ::m popu.Jar model. Call lo· 11.(Q day. 646-7171. :: Pubilher•sMotiee: (Jf'fN '••~·l'""'J'''"'lll''' ,, 1~ ~~~E~~~~~1~~ [~ IHMH! :;: Housing Ar l of l!Hi!I . ~ ----·•••-I' :.~ whu:h rn;1kci. 1t 1llci.:al to -- , .. ,. atl vt•rli1>1· •·an) prt· BEST VALUE ::;;~ fert•nl'c, ltm1lalm11. or IM BLUFFS! 673-4400 '"' d1.1>tnmrnullon ba1>cd on neduced Sl0,000! View of :;: rat-e, color, religion. :,ex. wal.t:r & night lighb. 3 ]'{,: ur national ori~m. or an bdrms .. 2\.', baths; sphl rntt.'nt1on lo make :my lcvt.'I. Vt•ry pn v~ll'. G...-al 1002 G...-al 1002 ~uch prc·fl'ft:'Ol'l", ltmtlu c.-n I a r g l" d p n t t o . ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,,i. 1:u 1 S).") lion. nr dt.st•nmrnatwn .. Cooperative seller will :~~ nus ncw:.paix·r will nut r;~i knowing ly accept any ""' adverl1~10g ror real ~ est.ate which 1s in viola- mo lloflofthe law. Z..ll ------ aUow for some dt>rorat- 1ng chanl(es . $133,000. Ca 11 Lo S4.>e C. F. Colesworthv REAL n:>RS 640-0010 1'.ll)I) ~---------1 nm 2'11> ~ l'f.00 l lffl .... () U» HARBOR HIGH Charming 3 l>edroom with hardwood floors. on a big lot. Full price $.50.~. Spruce up and saw ~ CALL 7:i1·319l «;::SELECT T' PROPERTIES IAYFROHT 4 Bdrms .. 4 baths: new. never occupied! 2-Story. lots of wood & glas!;; pier ror boat Nice water VlCW ~.500 associated BROKERS.-REALTORS 202\ W eulbon b 1 1 I tb l WESLEY N TAYLOR CO. HJ-;A t ,T< )}{S ~t lll't ' I ~H(; llG CANYON -MEW EXCWSIYI Lovely view of area from this prof. de· corated 4 BR & fam rm home. Formal dining rm & cozy conversation area in LR. Many lovely features. ~3.5.000 Z I I I S• JOCllpift tlls Rood ~ CENTER. M.I. 644-491 O 1002 GeMral 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• COSTA MESA CHARMER f'antastic 3 Br family home. Costa Mesa 's most popular area. As· sumable VA loan. Easy monthly p ayments . Don 't m iss this one . $47,500 rull price. Call now646-717l GEORGIAN COLONIAL SIXIB>ROOM NEARllEACH Fonnal double door en· try to classic old world charm. Large II ving room with noor to celling fireplace. Banquet sized formal dining room is conveniently secluded from huge cou ntry 5 BDRM. SPECIAL One of the finest homes in Mission Viejo. is now ava ilable due to transfer. 5 Spacious bdrms .. family rm., form a l dining rm. & 3 car garage. Beautiful patio overlooking canyon & mts. $125,000. HPlt Utobwiub -M~Wl 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 5 Bdrms., 41h baths. family rm. & formal dining. Large tile patio. & waterfront deck. $275,000. Bill GRUNDY, REALTOR 34 I Boys•rl•· 011111· N B b 7~ 6161 GeMral 1002 GtMral 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• FOR LEASE Al AH DOH ED PRICE SLASHED COlY coma LOT 11\ an.. ori~al Harbor ...Yiew.--H.ill1, prime loca~on with room for boat. trailer or Q'>Ol. Several patios. three bsirooms ~d beamed ceilings. In· ~g fl plan with opportunity to eicpand. N paint inside and out. Asking $124000. U flllll llJU I: t1()Mt:S RE(L TORS-. 675-6000 2443 East Highway, Corona~ Met also in C$ll Verde. at 546 .5990 G91wral 1001 ..•.....••...•• , .......................... ... 1 Happy HoHday~ ,,._ ~ COATS&WAL~CE REAL ESTATEINC 4PUX HUHTIMGTOM HACH Beach area, pride of ownership and excellent rental! Bike to ocean from 3 Br owner's unit With fireplace. Two, 2 Br plus a 1 Br unit! SeUer bought oew and must aell immediately. Try any of. fer. 847-8010 . ""'"' "' q." s •iJH rotlf ,.,.,;1 • Better than new. Sharp 3 bci. 2 ba, FP, huge yd. $450 mo. Fayette Cir. C .M . Greenbrook "Camelot". 4 bd, 2 ba FP. FR. great area. No pets. $500 mo. Fuschia. C.M. 545-9491. 4 IR + pool PlttcE SLASIU> ,.. ·i private roadway leads to $3000 ~:, :~ tripl e car garage . ·· ~ Secluded executive tile 5 ll!DROOM mH ""' ., ... >iJ1 THE REAL , ESTATE RS ~ -. entry! Dtning e ntertain· POOL-$6~, RENTALS me n t . E p I c u re a a Spread out in · t.18• J S.,CJlos• Ifft View • . ' MENT. FINANCE ::::w:~· :::::::;:: ~~ .. ~~~ \ ~Buy --G·i·v·e·H·e·~---a;;~.1 [ ij.jjijijj kitchen. i''amily casual 1---------- kitc h en . Soari ng bedroom ho rn plH 48R.famrm ,__ ·• staircase to bedroom bonus r oom a de· • •..--am.a ... retreats. Lush tropical llghtluJ swimmlnj pooi. vu lot. Fum. or unfurn. backyard w /shimmering Ideal for Camill~bo Beaut ldscp, 4 YT old !:&- summer run pool. Skinny lllw lbeir rec~ a at cc. home. Sl2SO/mo Cun· <:tippers delight! Owner home. pool tabl in· furn). Yrly lae. bought new. Must s ell. clwed. Call for l· C~~C ..._ """"' tn Lo•" w,.,,.._., W•ntffi• W011Muu Th~ ANNOUNCEMENTS. PUSONAlS & lOST & FOUNO ~emctnlt. r., , . .....,. Vitt:_, NoU th i-• '"""" , ...... 1 •• ~1aJ f'1wr.• "Trn tlll• SERVICES EMPlOYMEHT & PREPARATION ~··"·""''"'""' J;"'~•ttf•t• ll•i. "•nt"'1 M I\ F M£RCHANOISE A.fW•t'.-t ... ,..., ....... \w t .. -. "'~"""" 1-..Witit\a ... •It I it I.,..., ... 4 t '•·~H•l'f\• f 1 .. ,. '"•" .... "' .. ,.\jt1'itMt• • 'll•t• ~l ...... ._..'" 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C:0.111 Mfo Ull6 Merry Christmas MESA DEL MAR & A Happy Outst.andinit 4 bedroom. family room and 2 bath New Year model on one of Costa Mesa's best streets. This • (; BEJ..>ROOM w /all the fine home has a n un· luxurious trimmings. usually long Last of ex· Dover Shores. $379.500. Lras, Including separate ·~ IJEOROOM One laundry room . n ew e nte rta I nmc nt room overlook s g rounds. Guest quarters. Sweep· ing open bannister stairs lo massi ve bedroom s uites. Hurry for this "G<>ne With The Wind" charmer. Call 963·7881. OP!N Ill Q •HS IUN 1081 NI({' ~IMI level Frml l>m. Santa Spanish textured s tucco. Ana He1ghLo; $X2,500. comple t e intercom 1---------• •4 HEUROOM One yr. system. new builtin dis· new Ofl I r v1ne Blvtl hwasher and the list goes $12!>.!WJO on and on. Full pnce is • 3 BEJ..>ROOM + Ii.: S78.900. CALL now. fam rm. Picturesque ~2660 Cw dt• Sac. olf lrvinl· .SELECT Bl~. $112,700 Hcrbor Vu Hiiis Shows Hke a dre am. One owner. Many extras, custom ca rpets, drapes. wall coverings. 4 Bedrm, lge famHy room w/fplc. Bltn kitchen with pass thru window l.o patio and beautifully landscaped yard with sprinklers. A real buy for $138,SOO. 1144-7270 WE WISH YOU A PROPERTIES ME.RHY CHRISTM AS' 400 ,.,.. mo a11 LIVE-IH lu *""" N..L IMVESTMEHT t.M,, \.-~:_-..._MW PEOPStTY .Jt~ BeauWul owner's unit in Lbis pride of ownership lncome property. Ideal 1----------c for the live-in ownr NEWPORT IEACH manager. Also 2 apart· Oldest bar & restaurant menls for lax shelter and in area . 3 doors to the wa1l111g hst or nice le· waler $1~.000-Tcrms nanL'i. No deferred main· 3 1.,...ROOM Bot.oo lay Prop. t.enance here. Heal value ...., RHlton at $149,000. Call 673-8550. PWS 22 x 20 • 675-7060 • ort,.,,,.,.,,,,,,,,,,,,11,,.,. FAMILYROOM [ .-1 Prestige home in pre· _______ _ . : . '. sUge l<?Caltiocn. 1 Sedclusded VILLAGEWALK , on qu1e u · e · ac st.reel. Walk to schools, TR'-LEVEL i--------•I c hurches, parks a nd Sparmu.-. 3 bdrm. 3 ba. MESA DEL MAR shopping center . Custom w l>1g ~amc rm for xlra built 22 x 20 Family family "togetherness". z Super sharp 4 bedroom & Room with beam ceil· ~patio areas. & big dbl family. 1'~sh paint, new ings. Call 963·6767. car gar11ge Ideal lO<'a car Pets th r u 0 u l · Ol1N rr1 q. ,, s IUN ro N NrC" lion 111 proximity lo So Beautiful kitchen. Large [ •. I Pl 646 n yard on t.tuicl s treet. ''IJlJ!l'l!!'lJ eoost ~~ . u ~r~~Y ~~ ;~sJ~~oc~i i' ..... <iJ'iLifjlf 540-1151 -Walker C lee Real Estate CALLUS FOR eo.fos~wMMI fro~l:.~~;= EXCELLENT TERMS THE HOMESELLERS 752-SlSl POOLSIDE IEAUTY °"" tfle Olltly l'tlot .... "' ..... .,...~_ ... ,..., ..... __,_ . ....,. 1@1114@• ~,.. HERITAGE • • REALTORS $59,950 4 Bedroom. 2 bath, ~~~~~~~~~~j r ha rmin g home with near new plush carpet. Ing. Wood shingle roof. Beautiful la ndscaping with sprinklers. Localed In fioe neighborhood nr $. Coa.st·Ptaza. ~~ -ANYTIME 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• macnab I lrvtne realty A CHICK UST The discerning buyer looks ror: Ex· cellent location ; fabulous view; lg. beautiful pool; 4 spacious bedrooms + family room; formal dining ; wonde rful school district; conve- nient shopping & all the extras . . . wet bar, luxurious baths, extra storage -all featured in THJS Galaxy Dr. property. Beverly Morphy 642-8235. (V63) 642..UlS 644-6200 901 OoV'tr Orlw Harbor View Otntef Irvine •1 C8mpul Valley Cen•r 752-1414 ~ Try $8990 total down! ment 842-2535. m DM 847-«llO. Ol'fNrr1Q•1t\•1..it(l .,<1• 5BR, J ba. w /fam rm .. [&:1:Ei~i~~~l7 :m9!w~·~·,. ~.!~~~~~~~~: ~ fitiiJ;~ ~~~~~~!M~~ =uf~i~frl1 ..:. -~­Uvelylheleach .. . in this custom-built Con t em porary 41·--------•I b ed r oom , 2 bath Peninsula home. Ter · razzo. natural wood, huge patio. Great for in· formal living. $132,005. Cal 640.9900 ff"k~&lo#~ Valley Realty $56,900. PRESENT CUSTOM· IUILT . .. TO LAST. Exceptional custom home, built by Leimke-Lath & plaster ronstruclion. Has poten· lial for RP zoning on over ~rd . acrt: lot. Beautiful 3 bedroom, family room home is In brand·new conditio n with many custom up· grades. Separate l2'x8' workshop. 12581 Newport Avenue, Tustin. YULEUKEUS! With our professional staff includes: /Free appraisals at your convenience day /eve /Personalized service- still maintains il today. /Ultimate advertising- we want to sell your OOme. /Open house s pecialllts. These feature& o nly available a t your in· dependent broker. 646-3928, eves :673-4577 Lachenmye R~..iltor SECLUDED EXECUTIVE ESTATE 41R-HACH AREA Arched formal two story entrance to new world of elegance. Spacious sun· ken living room wilb crackling floor to celling fireplace. Cathedral ceil· ing. Huge family room with convenient wet bar has commanding view of pool sized yard and ler· race through wall or glass. G<>'Urmet kitchen. Dine. Sweeping stairs to 2 huge mast.er suites and guest quarter. Hurry. won't last . $84,900 rull price. Call 963· 7881. OAN Ill Q • H \ IUN 101111\11(1 • !•1111 411DROOM Secluded on tree lined cul·de ·sac str eet. One mile to beach. Highly up· graded home, hardwood floor throughout. Vault· ed. ceillnga. Formal dint gourme t kitchen . As· sumable VA. Payments $276.00 per mooth. Call DONALD M. BIRD ~!! ... , s II.IN IO~I k<('(' GiMYow . AHoMef\t" Chri1 .. A Huntington ~.acb Deane Home. tf'l i1 ! Clean, neat, 4=, fam rm. recently pa in and out. Boat patio, lgc backyard. Xll Cami· ly home. Otferedl a low sm.500. · HEWOMM LIMOHHEI 2lll. I IA. SPlCIAL DRIVE BY AND SEE ANY ONE OFTHJtEE 6021At Narcl.saua <Back hse > ..•••• SJ25mo 706 Marguerite • tFmt hse > ....•. $375mo'. 706,,., Marguerite CUpstrs bk> •... $325mo. ~~~ REAL ESTATE 644·6397 NORTH TUSTIN Large home on a ~ lot for a large famu,.. 4.Br, fam rm, din rn11 Quiet residential loc:atioft nr the Junction of GG/Nwpt Fwya. $71,000. TIIE'HOMF.sELLERS 752.515.J Sensational hoe wltlt CoroM .. W. 1021 pool. v iew d all •••••••••••••••••••••-A a me nities. N in~ 11 PRIY•'TE needed but tt ragbt A .. family who r.nt1 a 11.ACHACCISS , "Showplace' home . 4•1ect.ced High on a hlll ah ~· ._ $ 1 _ SOO. of the world betj.: w1lh 4 sv v-r. Bdrms, larg family The price is right, ~ room, gla o r ou 1 location is great, tl\.c kitchen, form dining mstr bdrm Is gianl. t!¥? rm aod a bea rul pool rard is . pool sized, ~ and patio area. ant..aslic a n d 1 s f e e • l h e grounds. Cal for up-bet.brooms are lwo and polntment o see . lheftreplacesareloo. $239,500. 644-7Z 11 - WA FRONT I MES R ESTATE 6 1400 9UAIMTC Completely r looks lilc:e a Bedrmhome New k.llcben new carpets all done! N sm.soo. PETE -REA CAMEOSHORF.s • Uv rm, Sep Dining, 3 Br, 3ba. Prof dee. Pool. parklike yd. $189.500 by ~t ure ! 3 owner. Call 644-4140 huge lot. Costa Mna I OZA balh, •••••••••••••••••••··~ pal.nl-llstlng Floe Mesa Ve rde 2 Sto • 5 Br, 2>,li ba , many RElT amenities. $96,700 P.h 751-3930 prta only AUO(iote,, R*"li0ts FIXER UPPER , In nlce nelgbborb004j. Bring your pa.lat."'"-'· $80,000 area, aeking SSl.950. Agt. 673·7601 T~!~ ~~i:,rdf!~ s~1{h'°! [1 ·=·~;· ~-J~'~t~~~l~·~;l~J~'~'~'! 5~fr~\~~ :ir~~d. Classified ad. 642·5678 ::: · -.,. ·== •• ,.,.,-. 642·5678. Want Ad Results 64Z·S!JP 1001 GtMral IOOZ GtMr.e IOOZ •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• IOOlG ....... ••••••••••• ......... . ................... .... CLASSIC l.ALIOA HOMI Peninsula location, steps to ocean & bay. Fun two bedroom with wood noors. Best buy at $85,000. A C0LDWBJ. 1AMD1 CO. 644-1766 '181 INNOAOUIN HILU RD. IN NIWllOAT UNTER ADMOClt PLAN m llG CANYON View • COmolete Privacy ooms, Lusb1y Planted w /Pool & Fireplt. Jacuzzi 1 Master Suite. GoU Course erslze Lot on Quiet Cul De ~000 DIM .. .,.._,.._ ,_. S. ....._. ,_. S. Home. Por S4iM Hwt '°" S. T~. o.c.nt>w 71, 1978 DAil Y Pl\.OT .. ... .. .. ............... .......... ............. .... .... .. .. ........... .... ... ... ........ .. ... . ........... ._.......... ------~---------...----------------------= lttllllll._.•.._. ICMOlr"'-1044 ............. IOSZS..._ INdl 316' ....... U.fw •• • "-"Uwfw:dt1d .._..Uwfw 't d ••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• c•••llw 1071 ............................................................................................ . V_. 4 br, s ba, IMCOMI ••••••••••••••••••••••• • Zbe Dpl.Jt. Anll now c..e. MitM J224 9"W 3244 ~....,... JJIJ i'dia'1 • Uv rm. Lee raor•• y c:llr+a'-• low SEA TBRACE By owner 2 BR condo to June l$. Nwpt Shott& .••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• UO' pool w/Jaco.1 . z~--Guaranteed to hep you .OR 2biil popular "J " ~2.SOO Assume FHA QOO mo llOOc/b Ph 1 t br dplx, fMd yd, ~ESAVAJJ..ABLE Oollhouse 48r Zbe. view, _,_.Ml paUO. Ownr. by nvv-comfy at at\Yf.lme of tbe Ptan Comrr lot. qwet. loan Call 4~ 548-Gl2, (2L3)881MIT7 stove • refri&. Nr UCI. Uve ln Irvine Village ntw dtcor . 1425 mo •MM.'121>,000 OH A LOT year. Owner'• Jut\ bad cuJ-de-uc. bealt'd pool $1SS. Ou pd.~ W. bave bomeuvaaJ. Cur ~.83t·2"f00 Bllr Two Iara• new homee on I.he eolite bouM lnlulal Locatfd m lhtt private s.te .,_ I OIO ....... U.fw wl*d kue IA.. Mhlloe Vie"" 326 7 .-SA Y&DI a lot located In prime ~ That wlll keep your romm ·4 t.rnrus court~. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Jt. fMd yd. aar. cpl.$, WalnulSqua~ ,.. 4• FAMILY H\mti.ngton Beucb rent.a.I I I cood' nl rer eenll'r walk to u d:rpa kkil/ OK ~ Ranch Cal Homea ••••••••••••••••••••••• • atta. Eachbomehas <3> ~e:Joa bl:~·~on~ beHh F.Njoy THE o~1~~~~1~~9 s:· GeMo.. l202 F.31c·'Ml6-G • . Detrf~ld Univ Pk Ukenewb1a3br.famrm. W 4.soo three larse bedroom• mmimum. 3 lkdrooms GOODUft: S125,000. s · · · ••••••••••••••••••••••• · Culverdalo Col Park 2bl&, fprlc, blLM, 2 car cu.lat.e lleH veflle aod double aaraae. The aod a den and Ju.,t ~ Oak l 536·900· 'Ml6-l200. BELMONT SHORES On for t• Y*r 3234 Turtle Rock a•r Lil' rncd yd Kida BrdoUhouM~~~!: massive llitchen.s have cently bad ut.erior sloc -~~ Other _.11...._ wai.r, 2aly. cape Cod. 3 ....................... 2 bdnn. your choice or 3 ok. No fee.~ mo. tst o•trJwaJ. <H••ntlc allthebulll·IJU'l.Ownerla co repatnled. For ap· ·41K>-'5&4 ••••••!!.••••••••••••••• :Ck2 :0!:: ~~· ~~:· Redee.3br.2ba,nucpts, rromS340to~.. PloneerRlty.KU-4421 Iona.I llvlna room . willlna to a.ell on an In polnt.menttoaeetbebest MoblM ..... • 4.'J3.s(mor(2ll)6IU:S331 • drpe, fplc, encl patio. 3bdrm. your choice of l4 Ctn 3 Br. 2 ba 00 clll-de· maaalve wall or lcmltool.yloan.Ca.lllor ~town.call HIGUB.SHOIES f.ol-S. · 1100 nnt mo. 963 ·4569 "Y:,.S335.to~1!,1 rs uc. fnrd yd. covered ~'·~.!_!uae famllyl 6(7hl~w)!~ .. ·-~.polntmenl ca833~3380l Realtors 3 Bedroom. i"' bnth ••••••••••••••••••••••• lallo.1"-d 3206 _51U·9545Aat. Not~. L ~.l~re:r c ce 0 patio. $375 Wlr pd. Call ~ ~u aourme • ~ ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• iivm.,.,,,,,,"" S86 1195 ~it ·b S 1 d d ,.,,,,,,1•1Y·•'\'1J1•101•1"'''' lownhom1· <itr Ma&ter Moblle. Modular Home & t Bdrm 1 ... _ Good 1 FOR LEAS!:: l"o1.1nlain No eee ---·------ .. c •0 • ec u e r• I bedroom W/rlrt•nlacc. "··'ld1n" n...llverv 0 -t . .. ..... oc. Vall 3bd 2L.a , , ..... ~H ...... TY Cod 5 J~~:=~;: .~ .$1l~ftJl~t P~~.0 ~~Et,:;~~ ::~~~~>& ~~f1~;~~~~ ;Err~ ~[?l~~:~s.1S1o U~~~eW~MTON ~:~rt°"£ i~a~ Ss 1·2000 3~~ki:-:~:C~ ~~5 P:~: , ., --=·==-••u•!!!!? occupancy. Lu•ury 2 Sil, to community pool. lcn· . Real Eat.ate 67~33.31 cl. In 1420 mo. Call -------see to believe. Hurry call ' library, Rancho San J ou ru:. & beach. $92,MIO 8x26 selr C?nl d , f~I bath, ......... __ • •--'-3207 963-2764 2 Br. rplc. yard. clean. *-Z3l3now! quin Condo Pully 1111 JW.lrcfllll.5bedlnside."-l _,..,,__ jl J *"""' ~ ~ 1 10., ••• 1 ,. """" * 1-... •s • ava an. l. _,.,, mo. ~·"''ij v·• \IV"' ~ • pointed, lncld air up w1tll awrung. $1900. •••••••••••••••••••••••LG 3 BR. 3 BA. rrpl. _...,,,_. l.;lt~I. jlll ,·~· DOLL HOUSE 5'1-3987 or af\. 5pm & 541l-6l73 ~ge 2br. lba, alove, dshwsr. Many upgrades. l BR, den .......... M75 S3l·l.2.56or8ll 229'l 1-~-lill ... lij-M··li-M-lil-11 The owner in Europe wlmds$44·5704 49~7222 831-0816 ._~ -....... 2000 refng. No pell or sngls. $385 . 714 -963-4569 or 2 BR,den · ..... · · $385 Mewportleodt ll69 ..,.. "aell" his Hansel -rr0peny Yrly.$280.644--0897 Sll·~.Agt.NoFee. 2BR ... ···· · • 1385 ..................... .. .!:::~~~~~~~~ aod Gretel dream home. Elbow Room' ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,._., 2 BR. · · · · · · · · · • 1425 H A R D T o F 1 N o He must leave h is 4 • -Mer lZ22 OONOO 2 sty.' Br. 2 .... 2BR.,2~Ba ....... S.SSO East.bluff Exec. home. CHOICE IASTSIDE •BR 28A bome near 1'HtcUff ahoppinf 9dloola. Playhouse in re ar 1ard, boat/campe *-"ate· CALL today ••• lb1s fine family ~.~ bedrm. 2 bath home with F.wlf1 Ra. + 0... Mt_. leoch I 069 8 UHITS ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ba. frpl. dsbwshr . 2 car 2 BR, 2 Ba . . . . . . SSOO 4br. 2ba. tam rm. Soll 4.S' pool aod apa. You'll $69,500-...,.,, ••• ;:::-.: •••••••••••••• Sanl.3 Ana. Five 2 bdrm. •S. ol Hwy. newer. 3 br, gar.. patio. $31 5. 3 BR. Den .... . . SSOO water. New crpt.s. drpe, love au the wood and Versatile .noor plan fn FHl>THEDUCKS & 3 l·bdrm. Prime pro-2ba, fplc, lndry, no pets, 714·~ or 531·~. 3 BR.2ba · · ·· .ts75 paint. Walk to schools, bri~ir Se~ Utis op-thissunshine-38edroom pe.rly SUS.OOD · ll'1c ref.,g.ar,$49$.87~ Aal.NoFee 3BR.FR.2"'aba .... "50 shops, lenols c111.b. unit home. Includes central · from the lge . down -• iJ lBDRM.llll.Ba.Prestige lBR.2Ba .......... $4.25 S750/mo. Lse. Reh. port y. air condlllon1ng cozy waterfront deck: 2·sty, 5 llLLGRUNDY area. $400 mo. Agt 3BR.28a .......... ssoo MCMrn5or~21AO fireplace, all deluxe BR & ptayrm : 3 ba REALTOR 675-6161 3BR,28a ........... $S6S CLASSIC BY lutcben. Great family Xlntcond.Walktopools. !f2-4471,5M-8103 3BR.2Ba.... . .. $400 •HOWAVAIL• neighborhood. JUlll Usl tenrus &ocean 196.500 LG. Bonus Rm, 3 BR. 2 3 BR. FR. · · · · .. -$4.25 TifE BLUFFS, SSOO lo JHE SEA ed. burry, BKR. call CAYWOOD REALTY UNITS BA. frpl, dabwshr. cpts, ~=:·~BaBa.,den · .. ~~g 179Spermooth 4 f "€HIG€ 540-1720 * 541-1290 • RENTALS drps. Call about our • ·· ·· ·· · · ·· ·~ HIG CANYON, $750 lo -_! ...._ean breetes play a -,......_._ Bo _...... JBR 2V.Ba u--pe th HOM€~ ""' 4 7 16·18·30·32·48·64 ·80· JASMINE CREEK'S ............ troas nus. -... · ··· ·· .. ,,.._, _....., rmon ' ! sll'ell's song around this 3 TARIBL SPYGLASS HILL. Vu. 3 224"2:86· SOME Fixer Up· 714-963-4569 or Sll-9MS. 3 BR, 3 Ba ........... l600 HASTINGS & CO. ---------• bedrm gem . Plush Br 2 Ba. last brand new pers, SOM.E brand new, most popular model Agl.NoFee. 4BR.3Ba ........... $S7S Realtors 640-S560 E-Slde 4br, ram.rm, 2~ carpets. lush land.scpg & ~by owner. 640-1751 5 0 M ~ . d f Plan 2 with 2 bednns & S BR, 2~ Ba .••..•.• SSSO --------- ba, 173,900. By owner superb decor make this "'# 1 ht CalifonU •• c. P r 1 e · 0 • den; on areenbell with NO FEE. gracious 4 BR. HV Hms. Carmel 3 er Prinonly.~149 an exceptional buy at a UOOISLE·By owner ownersh.ip. oceanv1ewrrompaUo.A l~ Ba, frplc, lge gar. +FR.nrpark&school. TWo3 BR Houses. on sep .• f19.9SO. WOULD YOU ~~~67~~i6:~· palio. ::r::~~,:~e~.'i:~1~~ ~~d~spar~l.tnJea~t SSSOmo. 752·06l1 'C-1 lots. near C.M. Civic Ruberts BELIEVE 1£ IQPluaa~I a 11 ame n it I e 1 ... red bckyrd, cov. patio. BluHs 1-level 3 BR. 2 ba. ~ente r . $45,000. ea. HEWPORTSHORES llClr • Clubhouse, pool jacuui, lovely tndscp'g. Avail. Lovely greenbelt & pool. ,NJ-48M aft. 6pm. or 702, -Realty A 2 BDRM .. 2 BA. PLUS 2 br. 2 ba. den. 2 patios. 1 Praperti-teruu.courts. DOW, ~. mo. 751~ 3B 2ba Id I $450Agt644-1133 •JtOS.Owner. den ln the low $W's sty. v1llo1 . $73,000. 7S2•1920 ONBEGONIA ... Charm-bef.noon.orSll-0924 r, .oncu esac, '•--------... ,._....,, Fresl)ly pa1nled. de 642-0U7owner a-ooou•1LSt.Ht MACH Ing 2 bdrm on comer lot. yd. close lo scllls & prk. Shaded ......._._.. coraled wilh paneling UNITS-to. East.side. No pets or children. Sl50 llwlk II•._.. 3240 $375. 1st mo . only . Our rental apec1aU1ta. --------• and wallpaper. Owner s h 0 w 5 Pride 0 f permlh. ••••••••••••••••••••••• SSZ-04J0aft1PM Barbara or Carol, are ' T,_1-G.... wants FAST action. UDO ISLE ownership! Call 645-0303 ON LARKSPUR .. 2 always avat.lable to help 1 $57,950-¥ecml 2 Bdrm +de-~: frplr .. 2 Forest E. Olson loc. bdrm. 2 bath. DO pell, FOR LEASE: 3 bedrm, 2 4~::~.t!;r':~!~::'~:· YOU rind a tenant, or If patio:.; beamcu cell. l1v 0 • $375 ... ..__... ,. you are renUng help you rllove right In ! Cool. rm $145.000 Rltrs. ne car ,.ar. per ...,.,. ....... oew,l700aq .••. 7~. 1 • ,~y yards around this mth, yearly lease. Very Landina home w /3 car ocale your new re· ,J Bedroom home with 3 Bdrm. updated kllt'h . RESORT PROP. rure. gar. $525/mo. incldg NEWER38R,2BA.cpts. sidence. idnaoddJniogroom.Pol lrµI . s pic & 6PJO ' 32 UNITS on 4 acres in BREAKERS DRIVE .. on gardeoer.Nopet.s. drps, frpl, dahwshr, lay&leadl Belly stove to warm your $147.000 downtown BIG BEAR 3 Big Corona Beach. 1 FOR LEA.SE: 3 bedrm, 2 patio. $375 714-963~ Realty 675-3000 toM by. Trailer parking blk.s from lake. Income bdrm & convertable den. ba. brand oeW 1900 sq.ft. orSll·95'5. Agt. No Fee Min1mum·care yard. ts SS0.000. yrly. Sales Fabulous view. $650 per Landing home w/formal IRVlNE Lota '° otrer. BKR, call pnce is 1260.000./ $60.000 mlh. Yearly lease. din rm fam rm w~t 2 BR 2 Ba .....c .. u. Bluffs 3 br, 2"'9 ba! on i 1720 183.500. Call 546-2313 COLIOFMEWPOIT · " · · · ...... .._.,.....,., super green bell. $490. bef<nit'sloolate! lt523CAMPU,Dt·IPN11'E =ce~~e~~wp~l~~ REALTORS bar.$575./mo. incldg 2BR,28a ....... $37S.525 mo.6"-3722 11.11.L ()'f"1"0 ·•1\"""'0 iu"'or1• OPEN DAILY desperate. oeedscashor ~1Hi;is.~sriCdM: ~.::~ ~=::~.!8~::::~=-Ne-wpo--rt-Sho_r_es_3_B_r.-2 __ • 8A.M.T06P.M. llGCAMYOM trJ~AuHs-6646 141·1611 4BR,2.,.,ba,fum .. 1595 &. near bch & tennis. .. #I a..CGlfonl&a" YIEW-$215,000 2 Bedrooms. lart1e open 48R,2~8a ....... $795 beams, frplc m ram.rm. -' THE REAL . 2S.pmatetto... on 1 loL FuU of Easts1de Olarm. 185.000. l•choMf2latll Obi. garage. fenecd yard. SS0.750. Terms. loyMcC_. ...._. lllOW.wporl Cotta M.sa 541.17z9 •Extra nice Spanish 3 Br, tam·rm, fnnJ dJn. new paint.. paper, cpt & roof. Haa everylllin((. 2110 lfo•rov1a. 648 1009 0.--. 1026 ....................... View Newport. Bay lo beamed living room, BlGCANYON leliSe $450 mo. Unique MOYIRIGHT IH Catalina! lron gate en-€HIG€ large family or dlnlnl 3 Br. nr schla, pub, bcb, 38R, 21,; Ba ......... $700 Home:s.675-0000 b try. Mammoth laving HOM€~ room. dishwasher xlnl cood. Fplc, $38S mo. Fa ulous local1on • room with VJEW ' Mar bulll·lna. fireplace. Carol,6'2-4000. 4 BR. 2 BA, frpl., 1 blk. + stone's throw from Len· ble fireplace. Paneled from ocean. Yrly. Ren· nis & pool ; new paint. formal dining room. Wet •PRIME PROPERTY• Washer & dryer In· Clean. 3 br. 2 ba, RIO. tal. ~75. Agt. ~1151. rarpel, drapes. sod & bar. Spacious ktlchen & Newport's Back. Bay-clud.ed. Good locallon. cpla, drpa, 2 car gar. •-As._k_f_o_r_Le_s ____ _ sprinklers. 4 Bdrms. 2 pantry . F.xlra large Vacant acreage zoned ~.month.M0-3358 $345. 963-4569 531·9545 baths. family rm master wing. Glassed R-2. Two acres w tview. Spacious, new 2 br, 2 ba, _AIJ._,_no_fee_. ____ _ CUJve~ale 173.900 view palio. Loads of Pnnc_ip~~nlyEALTY &ltns. fplc, 2 car gar. S. H u N T I N o T o N storaRe 3 Car garaJ,?e YEA ~~71 of Hwy. $385/mo. 675..fiOOO HARBOUR AREA, 3 BR, ESTATE RS ----_ _, Macnab-Irvine 552·7000 Call now for personal UnjqueHornes. 2 BA w/huge family HE/\LTY COM PANV START THE RA.DIANTl!AUfY prev1l'w 7521700 S27KDOWN & f I •523l'AMPU5~IPN11fE S POOL b c;H,1•111"'\''''"""'1 2 Br, 1 ba house. AvaU. room rp c, near YUARIGHT! ~~plush c~~~ i~LtACE.· ·: :.'. 1~ 111Ji·1IL11 2ho~~plex. ~~:.:.~Ad~~4nl/ri ~~·J425lE°A~'¥t OPEN DAILY ~ ror ~months or =.~~~~a:C~~rd~·: ·REALTORS ""Jjij'U~\ S~CLEMENTE 5 wlcdays,allwlcnd ~vk37~rw:ro~~ N~:~~::~:~.2.,.. bed~~~ ~:1~u~oa~~o~ - Hal'¥' al wood.a, family ---------• -----' •• ·-~ l3EACH UNITS Beaut. duplex with view. 3 ror rent. Homes, Apt.a. & Ba. ram rm, cpls. drps, Town home!.. . prt vate r oo m w I lb co% Y BR, 2 ba .. many extras. Ccindos. tbruout. Dep req 'd. poolf!vtce'ruusr ~urtslJved. Ul·nru&'t fireplace. Wallpaper. Ltlglllllaleach I 048 ''TRIPLEX"--8parklin $SOOMo yearly 640-007• has... .,.,., .. ao.e to schools. park. ••••••••••••••••••••••• JUST LISTEO 2·2·2-townbse units jll5l 2 WIWAM wlMTOM ' BR Condo pool tennis haa GREAT VlEW or the aboppmg. 968~ MYSTIC HILLS HEWrORTSHORES blockll from surf. 4 Yn. &al Eilt.at.e 6753331 handball & ba~lletbali Like new 4 Br, 2 ba . ten· golf courae. $975/Mo . HAI.IOI UGHTS ..._ _______ _, A home to remember! 2 new. $119,SOO. · m>mo.m.1888 ois rt & pool. Colony <V64) ... 3 br. 3 ba. Sauna, spec· n-.. __ ... d 1· bath BobLane6".QOO Great Mean • harbor """'rm'".... en. "• · rona Highlands. 448 ~ Br 2.L Ba ....,c: mo area. Paul Marun .tow from this Oana FHA t.acular vu. great Exec. Complete ly carpe ted. '·FOUR PL EX" Morning Canyon Rd. 3 .. m•) ~ ii.,... · Real Eat.ate &M-138Je~~~~~~~~ Pomtlot su.ooo. ~o~:e ~~;·~5 01~~ Atrium view Cro m S3p3a2cL2ous.lw2ellblpl~ned BR. lYI Ba, lge kitcb.. C2U)~ or evea. San •. .:-Re ....__ ... __ .. S-Cll•"'9 l276 HOIUMS llALTY lt"f'llMABLE . . bedroom & living rm . . ·JUS oc ... to flagstone pauo, ae<:haded Br lBa fi 1' .. '"~ .. ••••••••••••••••••••••• * 49 .. •057 * ~ Coral. Agt 673-7601 ~YantJ'~h:r~~/':n1~~ ~g~~·~.~· New backyard. $625. M0-5719 ' Br. 2 sly, 2.,., Ba, blw, higb~ upgfa~·e:.e ne~ c1oua 3Bd, 2Ba. & den .,.. Odee opportunily ror a S.-e>ce.V .. w rors. Dbl~ gllr w1aulo •BERTiiAHENRY• or67~3222 wrw cpt, fam rm. Super drps&cpt.sthruout. Lov· Htd pool on golf cou~. C\."°J:eC::!:o1•:.:~ SedwledEuy1Jv'g,2br, opener.Ownerneedsfasl REALTORS 492-4121 cleanl M95.962-9!57l ely view, walk to pool, Many extraa. S4TS " •••.-., 1014 Mau.I~ atone fireplace, den. 2 ~ ba, wood & sale Ci.lllMO 1151 21SDelMar.,San.Clem. CotfeMna JZJ4 11.95. 2 + 1~. Kids or golf & tennis. No pell, _494_-84Sl ______ _ ........................ M' laonlly room. carpet· ~~~~con ....................... singles ok. Beach· SSOOmo. 75.2-9259 Presldenllal Hgta, 2 Br 2 ---------1 • and drapes. SlS.000 ---·--·---·--DUPLEX Br, 2ba Condo. Encl comber. fee 11.S. 631·20U Ba. ocean view, pool. down payi lo FHA LAGUNA Corona del Mar. ' petio, gar, adulla only. or5'7·2501 a..,.a1eoc1t 3241 ava11.aftJanl8.$400mo. balance and $409 per Bdrm .. 2.,., ba.; lO yn. No pets 581~1 eves ••••••••••••••••••••••• ss.z 7657 month paya all. 1:58.900 HIDIA WAY old. Frplc .• Spanish de· ~1627 • ' 4 BR: 2 Ba, avail. Jan. 9· 3 1BR,2 BR & 3 br. bchfmt. --· ------- 1'\all price-HURRY! 2 Bedroom & den in sign. Much cbarml Im-mo a only. $400 mo. on Cliff Dr. 494·2033; San.-.. Sll-$800 Canyon w/secludt!d rear HEW PRIME maculate. Plus I-bdrm. New E. side, lge. deluxe '151-0465 C213l876-2723evea Capistr.o 3271 Woo wtl a 1 JI Real yard. PaUo, terrace & Waterlrood Coftdo apt. $15S,000 triplex; 2 BR, 1 ~ ba .. Cl.EAN 3 BR 2 BA frpl ..................... .. ....._...._orii treebouae.Onemileto 2 Dr. 2 s l y lri-level. DAVIDD.CARLSOM frpl. & priv. rear yd. dllbW'lhr,2c~t'gar.'s:ws'. RENTALS =~~itlli•-------mt town6beach. Allthlsfor fOf'mal din rm. 60' Boal RIAL.TOR lll-92U From $360mo. Agt daya 71~ or ~l-91545 U~.AIUCH IMCHilMIMG ~SUPER LOCATION only .. ~. Call now lO !I I t P S 2 O O . 0 O 0 ---------• 552·7000; 111.ght.I 552-0507 Al}.. No Fee · 3 BDRM. newer home OLD SAM JUAN roa SALE by OW"DeT in 1042 aie~ Ph S52 7or,n_. ____ Income Pro~rty ~All. N~~: L~:S2 sty• Br house avail. now. 2 t>!;t!~a1.n t08~~r~~~ ~mc,h2a;a~1:~e~ r o11ota1n Valley Jbd. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ Beach Jocat.lon. Strona Cantor~~ cm 73S5 mo. beths, cpts, drps. Bltns. fireplace, ocean. view. lba . fam rm home. WAT&R. 30• BOAT _ tR€H IG€ CLIFF DRIVE net worth tet\aot oo · · S350.962·lm Excellent fam. home. ~g~~r~~fa~~t>':nft~i'.:~ o-om bltawim PoOl•ll SUP. 3br + 3ba Coodo. _ HOM€~ With view. walk to beach lease. Spendable cash on MESA VERDE family 2Br 2 Ba adlt condo fab S550Mo. 2 car garage. Won't la.st ~•au l. fl n 1 •he d Aaklq $1$8 990 Make or boat Sunbath on large cash return. ~o.ooo bome, 3 br. ram rm, 2 Rec a~a. ~ ml bch., Jong! Call 646-2158 days; 'w tovnalnd p•llo • olr Ownr (7io!Mo.18'19 300N. Newport, NB. :.undeck 2 bedroom. down.Call rordetails: fplc, 2~ ba, MOO/mo. gar.$.100. Ph:~SOt8. 2 BDRM. HOME. lge. 493.0588 evenings & fburh more. Easy trrm.s ----·-----fa mily room. 2 bath UnlqueHomeas.6-5890. sundeck w/ocean view. weekend.a. 'al191A-~ '"'-1044 ••LARGILOT cu.slomNewporter. Must MAY 0 CK . LARGE21ly.3br,2~ba. Uv. rm. with fireplace.--------••••••••••••••••••••••• Preleveled rad see lo hchevei $14!1,500 < ""'°''",.,o.. S225 E /Side 2 br, dee., c~l, fam. rm, frpl, dahwshr, W /W Carpet lhruout. 2br, lba, Condo. Clean, fiOTSOMI CASH? ~hue .Uc. f'V horn( J•ct to eslatln~ .tOO VA lo.a •/SDI payment. l&e lot. ana. Ml-l3'71 or -.11~. I• ~ Wa lk1:r 1; I ta: NearTown &c Beach 645-1474 lAG(JNA llEICH drps, gar, fncd. yd, paliO. eta. to bcb. C.U about our Kitchen w/range & oven washer. dryer. pool. no ""• J Lee._ Country Setllnf( • C'n4)404•2Me Mat. adlts. 646-1078 Cluiltmas Bonus. $495. $425 Mo. pels. $275. 494-0315 !._ ~.~:beof~tYl.1:clon.:;,~c:..tndoly ___ ·_·z_ .. _~_E_·~_ro_R__ I '.. I I· . I ULIX. $76,500 cr1rge Park. 3 Br. l ~hba. ;:~= or ~l-954.5. l ·BDRM . APT. at Wood.a Sc.ta Ana 3210 ....,. ... ~ ,. .. "4.a&ll Wellbwll.2yroldlnxlnl rpc,dlxlul,refng,s ag · · Cove Beach. Lanai ••••••••••••••••••••••• ll*ialties. A 4 Bedroom .._ ________ 1 appreciation location cpls. many decorlor 1 story condo. tennis, w11wim pool. One of the a Br,lge yard, nr Tustin + Den or 5 Bedroom ,.... near proPQBed new shop· xtcas. M2S lie. No peta. sauna, jacl.IUi, prkg for best rentals ln Laguna Ave & Irvine Blvd, $385 "'"0 center. Low vacan· c.au~75211. boatortrlr. Clubbouae. l f«...,5Mo. mo 832·7151 aak for Nan· Hampton 10 Greentree ,...... -· ftolDM, that makes you cy factor In smog free 5275. 2 br + kldl pet or ml to beach. 968-2287 or MISSIOMllALTY cy t>ruett. nof~. -...uk~:You'reacouat.ry Hemet Valley, a winter •lnalcs. Beachcombtr. 9t!M405Agt. PHONl494-0731 Wnluu&A9r 3298 ._....l. Give younetr • SanClttwtntt 1076 ~Llotftel n Preflerreds to fee SU. 4531-2011 or a Br 2 Ba cnt• drps ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~tma· treat and ••••••••••••••••••••••• as l e a m pr· 54'7·2:i01 bltm. rncc1 'sBQ;' ie.o. ...... ... 1250 all. Adjacent ocean & Marina lJ.lia". Seller may con-• .,._ ..; 84'1-2'7~ •••••••• .. ••••••••••••• 2 Sty, 4 br. 2 ba, nu lil)ll. At RedCarpetRult«a $ECLUDED view ealal.C air.eel lot In aiderVA. AVAIL NOW: 4 Br 2 Ba, .. _..,. · NEAR New 3 BR 2 BA drps, fplc , DW. $435/mo. -.....,. a.-&. 1 8D-33llO area of SUO·S200,000 PROF~IONAL brand new borne oever 't=z::" . dabwahr, rrpt .' 1350: ~ 531·9MS Agt. No ...,.._.. ... __. 040 Woods Cove home on ho 41!11 ooof both l\EALESTATE lived ln Good 0 -• *<"" foe N~al fstate ••••••••••••••••••••••• .a-.... ,_ .... , G-t &arden mes . ..,1, or . n• """77.,. """" 7""' c' 11 r --· _..t 3242 114·96a-45ee or 531·95'5 --·-------' 1 • ..-............ -lftA, .... ··Ak ...,;.._. """'• m o. 8 or •PP · M••••••••••••••••••••• Agt.NoFee CLF:AN 4 br, 2 ba, frpl , &, ~m rm,•--c---.. ·•0•ALI--... =· ::!'c:e~k&s~~ AHCHOIAGI 11 for AM 557-7355• Mr. Sparb 3 Br, a ba townhouse. Lav-a Mlglltl lZS2 dshwsbr, cpts, d!1'!'· Cl1. 11oet iate. Cell 968.flOl9 188.SOO IHVISTMIMTS HARBOR/GISLER 3 Br, 2 Sparkllnl new co ad. ••••••••••••••••••••••• W sch ls. & shop g. S36S 4IOIM~AM.IM. ~~~~~~~~' ,7149 49,..7711 1 _._ ..__r....._ ba, c pl, drps, frpl, $410. Call "Llla ", EAN VIEW d I 7lH63-4Sa> or Sll-9545. 5'6ReaaJeSpecial&ats.3. IONUSIOOM 1.: -.._.....,.._ 2200 dthwebr . $385 . 84&-1.fllorl48-54Meves. • ~ u t Agt.Nuf'L-e fwSbdrmmodelsava1l. 5"ce1al.loretnthis1tun· IMOAN4HllD ========~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• n .. ~ or 531·~. com'!'unlty spac M Dr,------------- llOmlw/pools.96MeQZ -bomewlt.h•bdrms.. SPICllS IUYTHIS Loh-<:o•Mna Agt.NoFee WA~ den. 2 Ba. lae. 1475 mo. SEU. ldh• Items with a ~ Propertk-s an on .... -r left.I, away ..__ ._. 2 Id --------• 3 br delu.u r&neb w/'1' '96-4482 Dally PllotClaaained Ad .... ..-r ....... ..,.. Ute tbJs •Ju.st ForChri1tw.1 vacant. l w/o er Mesa Verde atta 4 br 2 pvt dock. ~early leue. ---------==~=~~ ~ t.e'=•:t,~tg:::: Golf Course hae over· =·~!·~b'::,e~ ba.crpt.a,dpn,bltna.tle 146-9100 ~ JUST USTID ..... rate dreaaing are loolung duck pond, 38r. ..· comer lot. encl. back yd. ____ ......_ ___ _ 'i\. "raded 3 Bedroom -..-•· Be.ch. wtUt tremendous atrium, mirrored c&oMt pacaage or ~eparate. Drive by S20Z .. l.ftaetoUt. lnW lZ44 un Ph•• btal• boom room eommettlal or realden· drs. tiled roof, AC, Call tor roore inlor. A.gt. ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Drklown Villa wltb dHiaoed for coanp)ete Ual pot ential ; fnr A...,..,..,.. 673-7601 • .-om drapea. At.tum•-family fun. Beallt.ilully ..,_ . ........., Woodbrid .. Twllbme J Br FHA Loan. Call deeora,•d tbr•o11t. l*'\lculars,call THEvlEW o.tof~ F.utsE n~ !!!R +deft.• 2 Be, A/C, 11Parade1, • -· d • ,__~, 2150 ·.,,.,,,.....,mo. J.aUtr-...i-v ~ S©\\JllA-~£trs· That lntrlguin9 Word Game with a Clr11c!I• ..... .,. QAY L ~ ----- ·~ -:~ low IO loroo ,_ ....... -di scO!rr llALTY ._..ate on an ea'ra ALONE IS WORTH ••••~~•••••••••••••• m.Z'7•0wnert8lr:r ...,... ,.., . 1111.a.7111 ~~ lotCdr~• ct:':.11 Sll.5.000. Movelnt\OW. Apple Valle s <2>2 bdrm.1"betb I H '"TA s ~ ~~~~-~~~~~ OCMM1s. ·~·--uat lOYAl.llALTottS ....,_ ....... ., acre Condo9.SllO.-ab.t 1• I J I I .......,..,_ l&N9Camlnodel'Atrella wtca....,..~iarea,reu .... -....... E¥M,94UI -•500 •--------Capo. Och. 4"·21., _ea_u_m._e_m_a11._. 7_.P_m __ , ___________ 1---------• ... _..._.. __ .._...~ I 050 .... • ... 1'arUeroek lllr, :abe, auto I M J P E R I f' ..... ••••••••••••••• .. •• S-...._ ......,. • 2br, 1 .... pa-. aprklr1, cul·d ·aac • aar.c:mr1a1r.b111• c.,........ io1e ....................... :-ru:C:: .,.... •· .-111e.ss.sm I* I I r . pr, ttple, 't!::· cloec ....................... ......,,. I laecl ' SM built CoU. e Put 0 m • s u p .e f to ahope.:R~I • rrwy. • ................... .,. ES6de stir newt~ doU boWM! tnm!c I br I " £ " "0 f I borbood. Prited ~ · 5f7-"2S .. .,ume. JlfOI 'ASEOCllLO lctltoaPs k •• 3107 hme. 11• yd• P.111.-or abe,'375.Eftll_.ml '1 I' I I I • "*• 11 • olrl ~It'° Oranp"-LabCondo. ....... 1052 (OU Del Oblapo).-••••••••••••••••••••••• acbools, ... Mf,2389. . ____ . lnduatrlou1thttwhen1hehe• lbr + Joh. AC, Up-••••••••••••••••••••••• Charming 2700 11q . ft. pQO. Penn. Pt. Nr Bey & NEW Sm o k •tr e • "<>riling •1 .. to do,..._'"' tf>d ......... Tmnia. $31,700. TWO.STOIY •BR. oo acprox.,,.. Mere. ocean. 2 Br until J\.IJMl. • Br w/pool, 1aa BBQ. Townbom.. ZB~.~Ba. I It o c a o R f kn"' - -•J.11 i1M.WaAtpm. NlGUELSHORES Formal d n,.,:an·~~b <213>243-5818. ~· r~u1~~="::1 :::'.;~"=·~-=~' f' I I I f O ~TW: ~ ~ "!::! Paclt1clpetudio, Gr.nine. J BR, 2 be, I Br~ Escluaive S:c;st~r.S1&UOO ~cf.ous4Br,2Ba,ocean M2-t4os • Available lmmed. ...,......_,,om..,,...!Jbelow. acjac•unhn rplc, C!INll&l'Jtit.,nu.ltedetfl· ~m~ltlll~:~:inl •IOMDuAlTY•. ronl home. f;•rplc, 551.•lal .N!Nlllflt.~~.ur r r 1· r r f7 r I • .:.;uni, ocHD ...... ~ 2'1t car 1ar, $129$00 • GA.U.~RYofHOYQ wtbr/dryr, dabwahr, 2 rui.t dnw ln tM ___ .!• ~ ~!:!~~ ___ • __ L _ . ·' HBPa·l~;c::zt :=pdm.::·:oo· .. , JAYW.'YKATS C714tlJl-t411 rr ·:.;~~&HU Wei& •••• ADda~p:~ ~.· ~ ~:} • ~~'Oil I I • I .I I I I ea•~.' ~1UE.JNT, 'T Qllll. UALTOU -.mT .:.:SZa11.1J.. peta. =t.d -... m-. _..._ ~wtt . ______ .. . •mo. TIMl11 ICl...+J4.Un Amwwl .. C ........... SlOO red htl l .-. , ·1 ,' iSOO Ii 8 J0 DAILY PILOT Tooed"X Oecembt'r 21, 1978 Add it...Build 1t. .. D1apc:r 1t ... Hammer it. Cctroet SERVICE 1t...Cement it... Wire 1t ... Hoe It .. Clean it .. M ove ft...Press 1t.. Paint It Nall it .PlcJster 1t...F1x 1t • DIRECTORY '"'c.ce RepclW Carpet S«•lce tta•1cieanMq ~/Paper.. 'aWt.gJP~9 ,......, •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ······················ ..•..................•. APPLtANC:t; REPAlk Shampoo & -i>tom clean SKCUf<t1'Y UUtLOl':kS Fvi.pn! Jla wU.n aardeaer SOftny & Jer f'r~ haul· ("t.F.ANINC BY ANN , .. Yow C oste. l>on'l be homsw•1Ull.,d. $10 -Berv1ce Call mg t:.>lor bnl?hteMrs. All phs,1·11 t'Onc re te. Yd cle&nuJ)I. trimming, Ing, ci.aoup, tree worll: Experienc(.~. with rers Avr1 Extr tSty $345 1-'or floe qual. cia.mting & (714 )S492422 wht r1irpt"I ltl m 1n l>lockwall 11nd t"ustom prun1ns. Lt H aul'g for uaahl• 1lem1 f''~n Aller S PM.400~ 2·Styl465/lntr"'5rm f11i' pnc~• too, ull ........._---aw&... bleach Cll.'anh11rm ,dm bnck~(ll'k Llcenaedand 6'5-87 cu /llld&~ rem o ve d PnC'e-llinclmtr'l/labor Richard l hipre11ure PLUM BER·Repalr, rtt pipe. ln1tallat1on :iervlcu. G. Gidley, ~ 1131.S. -1-··--. .. h II • L A bonded 00 2031 $$7 20()(') JAPANESE llou<1eclenn ,. _. r dun Clrst. do lbeyT • rm "' 0 •1" vii rm --GARDElNlNG S""RVlCE • •n" Own trans. d'"penda vuar. IJ\llru, ree est a~ •••• ••••••••••••••••• rt5't.tuueh S10.chzur$5 c. • •a ~ Ted636 7085or s.52·0134 Llc/los836-SSS$ ......... ...., lhturo. reUabl<' lady will ti r i•hm t odor Crpl Child Core C LEAN UP JOBS & Hauhnj, moving. cleanup ble. 67~2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 11l roe chlldn-n nr elders u~ 15 Pt' Vo ••••••••••••••••••••••• HAULING Reasonable 11 /up Treeworli. Reaa, Pl!."TEttS Pi\lN1'1NC Fut, professional quality Repairs & Compoaltloo evenin~.~C& 548M46 :·~~·~ m y~';1f'xp~~h I'll provid~ lo ving worm rMates. CoNewpordt, 1 CoMsta fast.freeeat84.2-4.587 ~~•••••••••••••••• Expr't.1 reai. rat.es. free rp~~Uc'!f .. ~J .. very low Shln1le1. lnapecUooa . ..._. S«YI 53JOIOI 11tmo11phcrc Cor yo ur ~· rona e •r. ~ e.st Ca11Gene~·0458 u ....... ..,..,........, lnsnJ /Ucd.Lowpri~a.Cr t u --dukJ wh1l~ you work or llunungt.on &4S-7588 .. ••••••••••••••••••••• ~t YfMovdln1g Co Errl p . 1 E R ~L.:/:~=•I.... ttt830-5020or541·5930 •••••••••••• •• •• •• •• ••• ('.;&rµt"t Mufi will lay yours shop Jn)"Umc 768 ~ • c1en • ncn Y service ainung nl/ xt eas. _,,•'JI,_ "T - Boo kkeeping & UChce nr mirtl.' ttl'p•irs & -HOUSECLEANING Lowut poss rat e~ dependable Free est Custom ur s838--55SS T•.tllonltepaff- 1erv1t'e" thru st ate tkunm.: LOO ' Guar work eo.troctor C.oclllcJ Byreliablecouple. ij47-0992 Ca11Jay64519GS fltolterllt-..i. ...................... . me11b, lyplnti. ma1Llng:i. at t;1ggl'r savings t-'r ei.t ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ref's · 963 S8t3 -----,._.,_. CANOPV1V SVC CO. )48-0324or64.2172S flil~'llffi u ;t:M JARVIS Sk1ploader dume truck Ex Allied Mover. top Workm1rnahlp Cuarn 'd •••••-•••••••••••••••• latRatt'Servlce · " Ad 1 , ~-od 1 .. •.-l. • Two high school girls 111111 equipment. &uve money. lnter /Exter. t'ree esl VERY NEAT PATCH at Fuir "n,...... """'l'""• ( 1Laons"' Item e Ing l\auuuf(. l"f'C w • grad .. _.__ I d Good r .. ~ .....r-...... C:C.petwt.. 1-'Hl-:t-: .. n ra c le:i111n~ 962 5573 Lir 317~ mg, demo.etc 7513930 '"""""' .cean ays . lnsured.rreeest 49311105 ZSYr-sexp.64.2·0295. JOBS&TEXTURE --- ••••••••••••••••••••••• w 'minimum r a r pt• t --refs. Call Sue 979·9621 or P-'-"--/P~ •CU~'TOM PAINTING• Free Est. 1193·1439 Trw StrYtc:.. sll.•Jm l'l<'anl-d 546 6H61 GardlflincJ llCllfiu g Tammy $4S-9100 _.._,, ~· .ng -..................... .. l"INISH, 1-<EMOOEL & · .. ••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• -••••••••••••••••••••••• lntr1Extr Reas Rates Darrell's PAINT&STUC· Removing l Rpr Sm•ll Jobs OK Exp e r l · Exp r · d Call Bruce532 20otSeves CO Qual wrk, reas · rimmln&. Reu 9790379 ('ARl't7T'Cl.1'.:ANING WEEDING CLEANUPS YOUHAVEITREADY housecleanertoclean for lntr/Exl Painting Avg pnces 548-l67l lopping. lns'd , lte. $7 ltOOM CALL. •Weekly Mamwnance• l'U..HAlfLIT AWAY the holidays. Call Linda rm $35, all pnce:; Incl Sc-11 Llungs fast with Daily bonded. Winte r rates. 642 5ti7H tl46 5167 Ato~n:rt NOON Frl'C' Est 642 9907 TIM 548-6308 536-3341 prunl. t'ree est. 642·3194 Pilot Want Ads Want Ads Ca.11642·~78 _645-_S_l.2' ______ _ Sell idle 1l~m~ ~ U.fwwisMd AparttMttts fwlli.a..d Af>ca ........ u.t.w.. .... .............. ..... ·-··· u.fwa. Ralah to Shan 4 300 ...-..s ...... 4450 -...SS Lost & Fcwcl 5300 •• •• •• • • • • •• •• ••• ••• • • • • •• • • • • •• • • • •••••••• •• • • ••• • •• ••• ••••• •• •••••• •• •• •• • •• • ............. •• ••• •• ••• •• ••••••••••• •••• •• • •••••• •••••••• •• •••••••••••••• •••• ••• •• Opipotf I "Y 5001 ••••••••••••••••••••••• w ........ ..,. 329 8 wporl~ach 3769 Cotto Meta 3824 Costa~ 3124 llwlMcjtoeleoch 3840 Femah! rmmtt: lo shim• Quamt3lstSt retaJl slorce ....................... f'ound Blk remai41 COck ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••_. .. ~·· house. Laguna Naguet avatl. Cnnnery area c~T ILS ta pco(! > Snuall,• youna~ JSTORY 4 br. 2 ba. new L!(c 20r. 2ba. rrplr. f(ar. l br. ll.'J h1. Crplc, patio, AskforShereen49S·6L4L Good for antiques. etc ~ A Nr Maanollt1 /Allallta cpt & drps, rrpl Cor lot pauo $350 IM: 673-6753 or E OME TO encl. gar. Avail Jan.l. Neil Brooks 673-.6597 Newport Beach JIB Call 962·2218 ' Hoat gate. Call about llur bi~ lo58 PIS 846-4990 He.cf A.Roommate? Plus h . sea ls l 00 .1--· ------- Chrutmas &nui. S4SO • be h FOX HOLLOW VILLAGE To Profol>$10naJly Find NEWPORT BCHSTORE Partn e rs feud ing. FOUND: 12118• Collie. 714 ~ or 531954~ I tU<.atross!rom ac SK.,ftyo.positW.t•ed N:br~:~l~:/B~~hSm\ TilATRIGHTPERSON ~AvonSt $270Mo. Tcrms.Agt.837-4200 mix. rem. Broolthurst& Agt No Fee ~~~or~021~rport For ~ffedT__.. chldok $285.962-0778 ~E-COArt.SUNuMml> Jerry Wynn 1213)477-i 70I A,IFIUA.TE W e s. m inst e r . -Li p ·vate street;.. 2 Uulboa Island . rctall. Opport 0 ·t •o 0 n a Westminster SJl-728$ NO FEE. 1<tranous 4 tilt. t --"-L-a 3786 ve on your own n u• a SP ...... ISH STYLE Ult--..~~ ~)tR " 1 Y ' w E -..n -~· bed h 'th rd & l "'" l'OmmerC. Or 0Cf1ce branch office 0( U SUC· VS. 1"'• Ba. rrplc. lgt• gar........................ room town ouse W1 ya arge 3Br. 2 s tory w /frplc , Q) «-~IWQ space. ore.street park· f l v ---------cpu drp~ bltn5> nr t ' ood b · r· I •-t 832 s ccss u idt>o Dating FOUND: Shep Mix, re m achOOI& & 'µJrk ueJul tJH. 2 ba on lhl· OCe.ln pa 10, W Umtng lrep ace m a · balcony, patio, plush ·4134 Ince l!Yll ang. Approx 500 Sq rt.; Club. Call While w/browo spols 4 S led bcl>ynJ, rnv f!Jlh• F'urn S700 .. unlurn $GOO tached garage. LOTS OF ROOM FOR crpt'g & dbl encl gar f'emale roommate lo priv. rest room. Rltr Videovlew mos old. Vis. Fairview & lovely lnd:.cp.: i\\Jll Totid secanty,elevators. STORAGE ANO HOBBIES! Pets/children OK Bkr share 3 Bk home on G44"234JMon tof'n .9·5 997-5400 Warner , Sanla Ana. now. $4.25 m•> 7.,t tlll:i:. rec facihues 4992835_ Adults. $375 SJ&.l4S4orS47 •.slOev_es. Balboa Isl Janll Furn :-.J .CAP STORE. 5701----------•_m-__ 100 ______ _ tier ~n or 531 O'J24 -~nh 621 W. Wibon. Cotto Meta lrYiM 3844 ul & last mo. rent ~ sq ft._ Camano Ca~. No. of Mot.y to L.oCllt 5025 la;t. Sat eve Dec. 18. Oil T ....-&......... Unfurnished 646-20 I 0 ••••••••••••••••••••••• clean. de p. 67>4074 M1ss1on $.110 per mo o~M WOODB .. JDCE 00 S . r I PH:••••••••••••••••••••••• nr Pav1Uon Queen. Cold Unfunlished 3525 ••••••••••••••••••••••• .. Offlu Rental 4400 :fwnr 6~J1.: so. . sc•t'ffS bracelet with gold COIO, ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~al 3802 Costa Mesa 38 24 Costa Mesa 3824 PIJ\ES APTS ••••••••••••••••••••••• • . M Reward 8'13·7487. BttANDNEW3 Ur 2•.,B;a, ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• l , 2 & 3 bdrm un1ts. lil~ii~il ~ii NEW STORES M' .... 1c,YJmlfromOohency 28RWATelFROHT Dealgned like early f L v · Xl J Ce 155100 HOMEOWNERSborrow LOST Small grey '"' · 2 Br wli.:ar $230. New Au.ractive l br. 111·111 cpts. Cahforn1a bungalows. . ... · yr,1· . ie)O. nt r nt.er m at low bank rates to con· Miniature Schnauz.er. St lkh & Uan.i Wharf Bwltms. crpts, d~. B crpt.lgefnc:dydw/pallo drps. bjtns. adults, no From $270 . 11 5 ==---:-::=·::::= dynamic growth area sohdatcdebts,paylaxes. Male Age 14 Need 1450 ~r mo ti34·84!ij2, B Q. huge dl'ck. i:arage Water pd 2224 "O" pets. l1psla1rs, 1910 Pines\.one. Ofc lln 3.5;30 ,/',..,~_,. Prom $636 net n;io. & ~p take a vacation. room medl~ation. Rewards 14 SPM. 5:i.1-1oi2 l::v:-. $43S Placcnlla, call betwn l S Wallace. 646--0176. $200. wltdays, 9·S:30 wknds ..t°""""'* ,......w Good exposure m active addition. s wim pool, pay Hunt . Harb o u r · J Br ~ bnnw.. :! b<i Uark 3001 ~~INl.EY A VI':. N B 636-41.20 mo. $52·0400 ./=.,. renter orr existing 2nd or any (213)592·5659. Call col: ,,_ ,. d "'ll JACOBS REALTY ././,.,..__ W~M. T~Co. "''""' .. "· lect . ..... y -..·~1.5. rr:. " II!> 2 B i•~ 0 -t~-.. -~ brk v--..-....--$425 G4S!l~3 675--6670 2Dr28a.fplc.pool,2 sty r ~ °"' ... u..,.., Upg raded 28r . 2 ba ,,..;;;__ NEW RT C NTER MECHAMICS -------- E S1de Children OK fplc.gar.lgepallo.adlts, Desirable WALNUT ./~...,....,. &'44910 MATIOMA.LIAMK REWARD Cor gold & ~u1 Unfum 3600 Balboa Island 3806 $200 548 0016 no pets $27~ 2447 Elden SQUARE. Encl l(ar. lg diamond rose on stem ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ave. 979 1651S. Evs. enclyd.$52-6095,962·8118 ~sjln••1t/ C71416l8-l9S4 pm. Lost 12117 10 N.8 . l l{r 2 Ba, rpl.~. rtrps, I hlk J flit, carp. bll tni.. µriv Ca!a d~ Hermosa 646-7027 ....._____. •---'-3869 AftanCe I t ....... & 3rdT D • Call673-T177. hc·h. $395 mo I ~r lw dL·rk Garn ge Year ~~h~p~a~~~.re~~:~~·d'.~ East.side nice 2 Br 2 Ba.=;:::-.::'::.": •••••••• •lMOFREERENT• ~~·•••••••••••••• ~;NsAVA.lLAiu:: LOST : Gr ay Tabby SHM; Nl'µtunt• f,lfi SJ:!il le~ only $300 Mo Bkr bw:isher, S320 Afso 3 br encl gar. l child OK. 1·2·3 Rm. orricei from lL c-...1.l not rt l w/wht ••Amach, male 10 ' • G44 Zl43 !I lo 5 ti2'75. 642.3488 PARK HEWPORT Oppot .._rt 5005 '"'" 1 mpo an o.., ZIJu JH\ r•"•&l·hildr"n --tsep bldg)S370 ..... ...,.M~s $1 25 pe r mo . At.IJ ••••••••••••••••••••••• 673-4883Broker yr1. w /flea cir. Vic w~l~omc ~"" • lal:loo Pett ns.ulo 3807 160 W Wilson EA.STSlDE 1 Br. adults. 1 ;-;&ciroo";'s'and Airport.er Hotel. No lease ~OWft' Tools ~ '--s. Tnnt Seaward Rd, CdM. 1.2/16 $225 mo 545 Jfiiij ••••••••••••••••••••••• --r>N\ req 833·3223 Tll noon ~·'r' .-·~ Reward 673-3684 __ _ 2 Br duplc·x Cros'> :.l. lo 3 Dr. 2 ha, luxury lwnhse no pets. ;_0505 Townhouses Prove $33,000 in '76. On Deid$ 5035 · . d heach 'r'rly Pvt party New s ha1< & kit appl. From $2S9.SO 60< PER 59 FT ly $35.000 f' /P. Owner ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~nh FvnusM , 52' I ·n 1204 lluge mstr, Npt Hts loc CLEAN I 2 B I Open9·6 Daily 1617 WESTCLIFF ND reuring. Won'llast ! ...._ __ k 5350 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~-' 1 nrf, · ~ Cal16337059or545-4931 . ge r ower Spa·Pool:i-Tenms AGT 541·5032 Ull A~. 751-3741 LOANS 9% ••••••••••••••••••••••• ........... 1_,_... 3706 ----apt, in 4 ple x Cpt.s. drps. A f F h. T -a _.., I.I'll 3Rr, 2ba yrly Brh. closed gar. adults. no cross rom as ion --Dnnldng problem! ••••••••••••••••••••••• tennis. f rpl, pallu. ISTMOMTHFREE pels. Apphcallons taken laland at.Jamboree oo 1501 WntdiffDr. CCMISidttinqalul? Fa=~rm~~949 CallAlcoholHelpUne LC E I Rr rbhw-;hr Wl\hr. dshwshr. bltns Milts. no e Syd TownhcMtws DOW 645· 7485 San Joaqwn lillls Road. Newport Financial Ctr BE YOUR OWN t ............... U6-Co. 24 llrs a day 8J5..3830 dryr. lgl.' ~undl•ck $325 ~~ )1100 mo 640:1.lJS 2br.1YtbafromS2!15 Air 1714'644-1900 LeoslflCJOffiC•Spau BOSS '77 ~ .... .,. Yrly. 675 9378 -rond. pvt patios. Adults Lovely lge 3 br. newly de· Call S M Over 500 ucllve local bu:i 642·2 I 71 54S.061 I PREGNANT! --<Xconfmnt yrly 2 Ur. no See Mgr 1920 Meyer. oH corated. Ideal loc. No •DB.UXE• on ite anaRer lJsllnRs . Please call or Caring confidenllal iab)a Pettlnsula 3707 chtltlrcn or !)<'ts Call 19th Wkdays ll·S. wknds pets $245 Mgr at 2885 Eastblulf 3 br, 2 ba. __E!4~ 3m ext 246 sloµ l>y Cor Cree info. All SA.VE SS counseling & referral. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ew!> 673·3971 10-4. 642 0282 Mendoza. Apt A. 979.2531 Lease. Incl. spac. master If You Need A Staffed & calegones & types. We Pnvate party will buy Abortion. adoption & U(e 2 hr 2 ha Incl Ulll t'".-J ......_:-.. .: h 38 18 ---SUlte, d10 rm & dbl Furnished Off1Ae. ~all "uaranteelopleaseyou. uour2ndT.D.642·3573 keeping. Nr brll~h uis 1115 w __,...s~ -oc J & 2 br S210 & $230 No 2 Br . cpls. bllns. kJds ok. garage. Auto d oor THE Ex E CUT Iv E .. , APCARE 541·~ l•-1 Blvd '"''' 11'-''S ••••••••••.••••••••••••• Atuldr"n or pets 731 W ri1omo 751-3741 -"'Ko '711 " " .,.. opene r avail. Pool & SUITE. Rent includ"s UNTTEO BUSINESS OCEANVll::W 2 llr. 2 ha 18th. Aµt ll&c67J.TI87 645-2978 recreation area. Adults (/time-rece pt.. phone"'& INV"'<'TMENTS ht & 2ndTO Loans •SHAROllJ'S* Ba lboa l'cn111 £'n 1nl, Cb to beac-h. $325 mo. -.,.., " wanter 1 Dr. nl'ar !fay & Hkr,r-.4511392ask rorTed. l.t(e 3 br. 2 ba townhouse Lovely lgc 2 br upper, only.Nope~.From$360. mail service. utll & 1525MesaVerdeDrE 8¥.% • 640-8~ OUTCALLMASSAGE Ocean K.1.:111111 ...... M 3822 m qwet complex Garal(e newly decorated. Ideal 865 Amigos Way janil.onal Secy's & ore <across from Kona Lns> Irvine Pacific F lnancial 499·122A CoronaQllC't er &patio Adul"only No •~.No""lS ..,.,c.Mgr.at Managedby equip avail Newport Stutel06CostaMesa Cotta Mesa 3724 ••••••••••••••••••••••• pet:-$325 1>45.3331 or 979.2531, 288SMendoz.a A Granada Mgmt Co. Center 640-5470 UBI ' Open 7 days ~, _ __..._ nh/ ''THE EXPERIENCE" ~·I Adult motel. Cloaed ••••••••••••••••••••••• K37 ust7 1 O t d STEPS TO OCEAN CDM dlx swtes from $150 •DVERT151 .... G 1 --' & I!......:-.... circwt TV. For Reserva. •40 00 w 1:g & UP r • c p 5 • r P 5 • Del N l Sh 2 "' " _ .. , ..._ • · '" "" Sew Zl>r . 2ba. gar adults stove/reCng, laund. gar. uxe wp · ores Ulll meld. A/C. ample $72.000. NET ••••••••••••••••••••••• t1oos. ~97SS •St udio & I an J\µl.:> ~ ... v no peL<, $265 & $295. )912 No pets, ad Its. $190. br dplx. 714.a70-9203 pkg, jarutor675·0000 Specific media specialty ..... ~·-· 5 I 00 •TV & M1ud ~rv /\\Jal fl f •KAREllJ'S • Phnnt· St•rv. llld pool ,, l.C:':.C$. Wallace. 645-3356 557·0032 Prime locallon 10 Hunt· company. E·Z operation. ....................... n * 11 .• •• -R.&• .. 11u11ouT .. h Only 29'1., down. Special Artists & Craftsmen OUTCA' 'M""'"AGE 2:l76i'w~1•ort hu.t:,•l ZUr.nlCl'&clean,closeto Nice l br. frt>lc. pool, __...."' " 1ngton u e ac o n ....... """"' 541\'.17»or64SJ!lli7 l'OltO'i1\0EL \1 Alt shoppinl( Adults only adults,nopels $230.mo. 2BR.,2ba.SSOO Brookhurst. 800 square training r equires -net..'<ied Cor wk.nd Cran. 6PM·2AM 838·1780 5USCASITAS Minult'S tu 'h 1 RR f urn ,\rlulb 1111 l't'l~ 2110 "<l'Wll41rl Bl ... d V'1. 2 Br ro~nhou~\I' frplc Nopels 645-8939 548-4757or6463798 IAYRlOMTHOME feet. Single. garden type personality. Sale, major shop 'g•---------- 1'1101 t.enm~ Stiml· at•ean -----3 BR, 2 ba. $2000 Mo yrly store or omce. Good ex· Ult/A.fl 751-3741 cent.er.~ p/day. 540--0940 MASSAGE & C:atal.lna Vil'~~ t'lo:1l' 2 UH. 2 BA. apt ror I Br, $200. all uhl pd. STEPS TO IEACH posure. ass1gm.>d park· •FA.ST FOOD• Lost & Fomd 5300 RGURE MODELS l.t> shoppmg & fint! bl•ach ~~o~;!!::c. =e~~"fia;d~ts9s~: 3 BR, 2 ba .. uni. $425 ~.:a,~11 Mr. Plummer All types, all sir.ea. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ESCORTS 6442'>11 ---· ' · . 38R,2 ba.,unf.$400 7513741 FOUND: L1dle1 Rini OUTCA.UOMLY 1 & 2 Br apts. Gas paid . ...__ p-L..& 3826 DIE.LUXE OFRCES UNITED BUSINESS Call to identJfy eves. 1151J l~•<'h .. utll • pool l~.1rhr.,ml"·r ,, ... $15 C3t :.!<tl l 1r ~~1· "'"••1 B ._ hr I 400 Me mmac Way, Apt -uwn Co J •·ind.st! spaces INVESTMENTS _646-_254_7 ______ 1 ___ .:.6 .:.J ...:.1_·3.:.8.:.....:.l ...:.I __ 2 R. 2 ba .,w1-d1~ rp 2 m 1911 ••••••••••••••••••••••• mm "' , l"~ d r~:itm m~ ~·h1ld or _ Ex. lge 2 br. 2 ba. frplc, 200 to 2000 sq rt. As low 1525 Mesa Verde Dr E Lost· Reward. 1 ma11 L99 f,,m.. 2 8r 11•1•ll. ~ f.40 72\in -Large 2 l>r. I ba collal(e dresaing rm. Adult.a + 1 as~ sq ft Lag Niguel & (acrosa from Kooa Lns) black dog w /wht chest, W I 11 I flllli,.._,,..,.......,......,.,,,...__...._ Encl "arnuc East C M teenage r . From .-.95, Missio n V1eJo are as . Su1tel06.Costa Mesa s k1nn1 legs , male . A.IO«TIOH Counseling & Referral Preg. test·avatl. wknds 2'I llr Hel pllne 547 ·9495 •. 'l1l6. •tin' poo 1 " " -Handy lo S.D. Frwy. UBI ()pen7daya 642·L303aft.5:30pm ~1~1 rw 1•t t~ $22:, CUTE ~~.~·no pets Gaa&waterpd496-73'19. Cal1:8JJ.1400 c.-, hcdmorn, olW hath r-o.t• V6y 3834 WESTCLIFF ~br. mat. WESTCUFF Fw-n'd ol CICTL-HIC)ht Cle FOUND: Fem. 2mo. old 'f.vartm11 nt South of NEWBREEOAPTS ••••••••••••••••••-••• adlLs. no pets. $28S. Loq. Sl..20 • e. $54.<XM> net. Beach k>c. while w / b lk spots. w11y t'lc1$e to bt!ach I Br apt. encl garage 3 Br. 2 Ba. in 4 plex. 2 car 1700 Westclilf Or. apt 18 mo. M2-4007 Very uruque type opera· Dalmatian/ Terrier?? nr1 ibops i2$0 per fo'rplr . applns. pool & ""cl gar. pat.Jo, frple. QM & Coiy 2 B r 1 Lion. Has no competition Well cared for Vic. Spr- •SPIRITUAL READER Fully Ucen.sed month ,\sk (or MlsM, Jncuzz:J S230 ~II nkil area 968-IM74 view. $425/mo. ~int'f~: Balboa Inn,~· mo. and. or aoythmg 51mllar . ~~ & Edinger. HB. Qw~t I bdrm MJturt 67$ 2311 M~ Verde 28r. 1•,;Ba, M.awtlftclon •aclt 3840 8kr.645-6392a1k for Ted. :~: MBlD St, Balboa. U.i' A.9, 751·374 l FOUN 0 : Ooxl"'. a 11 RELAXING MASSAGE lldwt .,n1y 113."> 'A11 .,,......__.._.....,.~...._,......, no dog~. pvt patio. avail ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 Br 1 ----------t .. BobJames·Lic. Masseur HOWD>. Y Pl.AZ•\ OelUllf' 1 hr apl S18U mo Al.lulu only 110 ~l., l l'omon& 1\v1• Apt I~ 181SS El Camino Real San Clemente. For appt. 492.9034 492· 7296 1112 .... "" 549 'Z7•2 year y, garage, w/or LIQUOR STORE brown male Springdale Agc-nt&.13 '1781 THEIA.SILL.EAf __ -..~ · .. N e w o wners of without boat dock. S325."'"-_,.....,_......-...._,._._.....,. • • Outcalls9-9,494·5111 lt..•._.o.a.och 374 Ne..,ly rerll'cor•ted 2 SU,ERCLUH Beachwood Apla. 19132 673-2493 CotlOMA.DB.MAR Top store, prestige loc _&Bolsa.HB,898-64.32 Ni I &Si •••• ."::':.............. hdrm. I bn ·•Pl t>nol 31 200 ~.. No Magnolia. H.B .. offer a 2 ---------Office space available. Cross SSS.<XM> mo. Book FOUND: Pug 110 11ed ~co e mmer. atlrac- Near beach Adul~ s:lOO ;~ ~oo;';"'S46~Ss hr. 2 ba, 1000 sq. rt. 0.. 11w lay Southside or highway. shows $6.000 mo. net Boston Temer blk face Uve redheads would Uko HMhel1tt" apl SI~ security apt w /pool, Lovely 4br. 2 ba upper. $1 7 ~I mo n l h . C a 11 Wlll consider terms. Call big eyes tao 'body vie to meet Gentlemen for Allulllp~:!!Jlt 646--0183 '165 1 hrdplx. Kldl\or jacuui, A tC. dshwhr. Beam ceiling, frplc. 67~2311,askfor.Missi. quickforspecificdetalls MarketBasket,Bal 'Pen. dayor eve run.535-S363. -sml(les ik'achcombcr. Adults only. No pets. patio, dshwshr, gar.~~~~~~~~~ Ull Afl. 751-3741 673·2648 ~:=flt& L.agima H" J br 2 Im. frnlr r •ts "31 2011 S2SO. Call new Mgr al ... ""' 673 5719 1-s ,. · ee • · " 0 r stora7ge. -... · or 7,""" sq ".ore bid ·g' 17th & 'OUN ........ '°" .... •• & dr""' 962 1800 uuu •• •-~ JWi.... Ta•"" t l> blk & wht rem un ...................... "'°"nu..-~~;6'r:i 2t~ ~7 2.501 · 54().l 20 NewJ)OrtBlvd.CtLzone N'Efrif;OOo MO. dog. P o:.s1ble ne w Sd;;;;;;• .. •• ........ ALIC IA ,LAZA --Adult dtluxe 1 br. cpts. 2 br. cpu ·pool. play yd .. l BR Park Newport top Prime fo r architect. Plushiest bar In area mother. Tustin & 20th, a.--&.1-7005 ~n1c M1>unwin v1,•w' l'Vt ZRr.2B:1.beout.JfuJly drps. s tove , re tr1g , no p e ts . 2208 A . noor. Avail June 1 or e ngineers : reg1onul BusyStreet Outstandmo C M 6'2279(1 ~.-- 1 di I It I&' k t d vtlndry rm Delaware :;36-0959 I k -' d · · t i · " · · ••••••••••••••••••••••• .Of!I«' x at u 1 !("Orrt <' . p . dshwhr, Crplc. gar. pool · · longer, Be ow m t puce serv /a m1n1stra ve parking. Owner must FOUND:! fem blk y()unl( M""N WOMEN Bdrm Apt-. !-'urn & un pvt l(arage. pvt patio. No peL\. Hl7S Pomona. ..._. __ 1 _.__ p-1. $289.SO. 64Hl481. an 5pm. cnlr: or' Will nel( lse for leave slate to handle pro· dogs. <>all •. Nutwood, "' ,,... ...... FO furn S3SOmo 675-2051 548 3007 .----..... major tenant. Ownr. bate n rt A I 0 "' llUUn R .,ool J.iruzZJ. R1lbard..~ Deluxe 3 br. 2"4.1 ba. alt. S-C"-• 3876 644-0997 .,rope '¥· ,,nx ou.. Anaheim 772·6821 S81 1115l or581 6130 Nrw 2 br. 1 ba. fprlc dblgar .• patlo,frplc.1713 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ----------i Goodt.erms.Agt .83'1 . -'--IUTIHDIMG 25211 Stockport , La bltns. garage Adult.a, no Alabama, 536·3465 or OCEANFRONT Luxury 2 CdM390lol0:50sqfl.Cpt.a. IUIGB STA.MD ~o~~~. dJ~~5~1!1 Tr~~i. ~,g~J:~o~~ Hilb ptl.~ S385 6401840 ~1718 br den Crpl,pvtsteps\.o d r ps, A/C. Jani tor. LagunaBeac~ . leg.ownrcallt.oldenUly. PLACEMENT Sorry. oo pet.A 2 Br. 2 ba duplex. View or bcb. s:wis-499-2807 park'g. Masters 57S-4L20 Free 11tandln1< bt11ldm 1168-6705. ASSISTANCE Newportleach 1 769 bay. Seasonal. USO. •"-'91MeWAMa• ~lllhfunllllMd OFFICE SPACE. N.8 . with plenty &r parkJng, GOOD J OB ••••••••••••••••••••••• 675 ~or675·3tl24 1·2·3 bedroom. dilldren or Uwfwwllllltd 3900 1649 WcstclHC Or. Air. Grosses $15.000. mo. yea FOUND kltten, 21nos old. OPPORTUNITIES IEST IUY ok. pet's considered. ••••••••••••••••••••••• pvt. toilet, etc. Two unlts round. Owner reUrtna. We11r lng red collar. A.MlllCAM Some people say you get C:O.to ~ 3824 d1shwaahers, carpet1. TIIE EXCmNC 400 aq fl ea. $200/mo-no Will accept ~ down Npfkh. 673-2928. I A. R T I M D I a S wtuityoupay for' We or ••••••••••••••••••••••• drapes. closed garage. PA.LMMISA.A.J'TS. nraa. Ont! unil 1300 sq A~.837..UOO FOUND Parakeet, SCHOOL fermo-Aftdthcpn"•1. WHY .... OT? cl<lf!e \.()schools. super MlNUTESTONPT fl. 2 lollets. as "· c-..t•sH-Banded Calltodescrlbe ll04E 17lhSt s· '"' ''" "' -" '--------... 1 ni 4 le fu-•t $400/mo PACIFIC ~ .,,..... ~• &b. nd c.9 7'"" · .. " kiu Mem~r5h1p in 11 Sunkenllvm1troom -ce P XII, .... ure BCH · G NETSJZ()OO. MO. "v-(lr a '·'" ·1 -· 834·1960 H41allb Club A tennis Cathedral ce1hng ?tvoofOrangeCounl'(s av a i 1ab 1 e · Ca 11 Bach 162 Bit. R_F:t'\L ~ATE. ene Perfect Mom & Pop loco Found small beagle·like School11Coo11t To Coast club. Free ten ms lessoiu. 2 bedrooms. l'I\ baths most beoutlful opartmeol (714 )841-7~. lOam-Spm. fro~ $195. Hiii, &4Z lion. Free 1tandlng build dog w tblk & whl a pots. w.-.......a 7075 Ullllards Swim ming Attached garagt! communtlles. A relaxi'lg 7 days. Adult.a. No Pela 1200 Sq. rt. or s pace avail. 1og with plenty of park Please aill 646-8485 - Goll Ort Vin ft Range Wal1her/dryerhook up selftogwtltlsteoms. ~l Mesa Or Jan l. S.00 mo. 1ncld ing. Heavy root trarrtc·--------- Saunns + a r eal ac Pvt yard with patio WOlelfolS,ond mo)esllc DELUXE 1 br, frpl, run CSBllu EaaloCNewport janllonal servtce. N B loc. Short hours. Good UNO, bm/&old stripe tlvtUu. Sunday RBQs Adults. $375 mil. lr8es Feoluflng pools. amenities w/full rec. Blvd.> on Pac. Csl Hwy. Call terms. Agt. 837..UOO Cat w/rhlnHlODe collar. Parties with live bands. t'OXHOLLOW Jacuzzi bllord$, rac1ls. Sec to believe! S46-9860 Robbie, 548-0757 Allto W "'--Vic. Buch & Bolaa, Froo&lndoybrunch. Vl LLAGE ondex=bhouse 847-6407 aoo. 4000 AIRPORTOFFlCES nte--., 8Q8.IL4' 1-------- Yourrcnldollangoeve 621 ws:;_~.C M. Wl!rlsoelqltvena Tennis, Brand new, 3 bdrm apta, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Palisades Commercial ~ec:· ~~.N~l FoundTOOLBoxw/toota. 7100 further• .. A terrific gyrn,oncholeybolot studio & conventional, ~I ~~ S25_,wk up .. wlth Cntr, lfblk OC. AINrpo1rt. locauona. FuUyU~Med Ooast Uwy Nr Promoa· .. C~MA maintenance crew. pro CASA VICTORIA Xmas move In al· a lcncn. -··50 Wa up Suites rom $1.25. o ff A&f,.837-4200 '°"Y Pt.. Call to ldeot.lfy. "" '-'~ w reaalonal maoagemeo 1 & 2 BR, unr or rum. gas ThlVIOgt. More of lowance. 2 wk.a free rent. apt.1.$48.e7$5or~M7 req'd. tncl's, cpu, drps. ~ Exper'ie Good m atb atatr that cares. and &wtrpd.Adlta.nopeu. ~Y°'fre~ (714) 847·7566, lOam· ...,.tose..r. 4300 janltorisl service. FM AoW9n&,._.. •---------•backsrouod,lOkey,t~ friendly neighbors. Pool. rec rm. sec gate. rat.F\lnlluftll<MJIOble. 5pm system. all ut il + Net.s$3,500.mo. FOUND: Biil fl Tan mln~.able to w~t Models open dally 10.7. 525 Victoria . 642-8970 Oneond lw eeoroom · ••••••••••••••••••••••• se<:retMtal ser~ce avail. San Franc:Ulco style. SbepMrd, Can't Keep. under m I n l m u_fO Sorry. no one under 21 2 Br. 1 ba, new paint • Pleasant bu.I\. male w/cln Lle'I ofc· St.tile 200, 2082 Ptl"IOn operiUoo. Bua Owaer pleaae e all. supervlalon. Good CO. 00 pels. Roommate Adult E·slde 2 br. encl Mui~ crpt. Nr majOr &hopplna 3.BR, f /p, nr. bcb. Nice So. EIJat Brts\.ol, NpBch. Mall loc. Only S31,000 lllNSM. benefit.a. AP.Pb NaUonal Mt"V1ee available. Mon gar, pal.lo. Uke new. No Offtceaopen ~I08:00. & fryWI. No pel;I. $22$. area Brookh unt. H8. (714)557·7010 (Beh ind full price. wllb term1 System1 Corp .• OU lh ~monlhoccupancy. peta.644-<Ml71S Now ,.,_ 545--0760 want.s nice fem to abr. Carl's Jr.> A#/. 983'7""200 N'BIU 'ETS Birch St, Newport OeJrwood Ca rd en Apta 880 lrvlne (at 16th> (714~ 1700 Ullb Sl <al Dover> (714>&42--8170 Find what you want In Da.U.1 PUot Clualfleda. MOW IS THE TIME tor job MJeke111 to check the Dally Pilot Help Wanted class iflcotlon. If the job you want ta not there you mlgbl consider offertna your aenlccs wit.b •n a.d In I.be Jub Wanted cat•irory. Phone ~8 .... -....... . .._,all .. pm •---------~ Beach. 1Br.$200mo, Ideal ror Architect , HSt .. U• ... .,,_ 16591Le0rand Wanl.ed3females toabare losurance Broker. Ade· "" _,.., ANSWERS ADMIMSIC'Y 846-3811<> 4 Br home. w/pool. un• quate parking, Newpor1 UI Gem on Balboa Isl. Cum.over21. North CM. Blvd. addresll. Three E·Z operation. Short Sb.an\.Y -Prime -Penonnel,Umo'1.,8 br. Nrl.v nu 2Brl..~be, or bch, mmt bet employed. $175 bltndesb.600 sq fl.126: hours. Freo trainlna Women -Bronco-day, hlarY ranp: t9I cmcl gar. ~/mo. Call mo. !M8-t472 btwo 5 & mo Please call. 67s-3SSJ Owner lcavln~ state. A RER BROWS \.o SUBS pet mo. + frli ~701 aft~ 30. 7PM M~Fri steal! Otck Part, BKR 1'bere b • lirl wbo la ao be.oe'a. Shthd 110 wp • C 87).7348 lndu1U101&1 that •hen l)'plq eo wpm . A tBR. 2 BA 4 PLEX. ;pta, 2 Br 2 Ba, has apt, fem APPROX 8001q ft . c 2111 --------abehuno&hlnullltodo O&t. ()(c •• La,-una dlw, clean. 121$. Call pref •uo + ~ dep. 1.30 E. mh St, Suite T sw. Idle Items with &be sits and kda BE~ Unified Sehl. Ol • ea-.~orSM-1441. 511\.11117 S250/mo.OOyleS48-0fT9 DailyPll<>'Cl...tfted Ad BROWS. ~bel.U/30(7t I ~ ... ~.~~ ..... ~~~ ~~!!::'!1~ ..... !!.~~ ~f.~~·~ ..... ?!.~~ ~~~~ ..... !!~ ~~~.~ ..... ?!~~ ~~~~ ....... ~~•'•~ m. to Yo. T'*;';~·~ece•·~b"' n 1!!76 DAILY PILOT O J .I AU•M IMSTALLBt CA.MMET MA•B HORSES '8X AMWfW SerY. T...... ~ Coldapot Ft09tJc-u ....................... ..-~ 8080 M.u:Jon•o•H 1080 l.apmenaed MZ~ ROUTER MILL MAN 2 BU SI •Jualtt1ed. S RS Expc.r pref'd. but wdl ~ 11Fr.r':1'..._IJColcur !!·.~~old Freelot(dbme.1mlwb1te ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• -----l03ynC"xpr Roaton~nt lrai.ned •c:r~pt4 bh! mu1t lrat.n Paid whll~ traJn PART TI M E WORK "" ~"VQ6,I fem Cockapoo lype. THA.l.N S t:TS Mtn tlXlnt Lpr-11ht Fr•t1ttr AD•• tr 1n11! Ser v ed~l sc.110 br· \U'lllllll' &: frl't' ol ing EOE 848 02S2 t-' ROM HO M K Y O R 4 year old avocado W"t adorable, &ood w/ll ldl i:nx N !>cah·. J ft X li ft commtr<'1•I C'apaclly <ll>erator,9-:>M F Exp'd --t1~i. Sut>mtt portolololl• OI E , U"'fT•o CEREBAL an11h f d ., • .,21563 Cerman <'Ublcm l"yout nno f' ·n~h Min .. • ooly HI f orest /\ve '"AulNF.T M "KL"R. "X p 0 "o x 30:i~ L"n•• PE 'L PEHSON •~ c. • ouae re r1jl. 110<> ..-h ... v >u • ,. • "' u " L " .. ., v " L ' ___ ,,, ll .... .,L·y '"UAR WAGE ~nd na~ comprc••or Wit :1lal10n!> vllllljll' ·-'-·->~.-• '"arl .... " Mint L.l\IM 8e1('b -ran d1spl1y "1tor~ r.x Beach. ca YUl!03 a:.Xec °""'s p lfll' ll'l ru..>C. -v • '" • "'-... Sb ( ............ " ' .. ... ~ 11 ~ 1nwh.slnsupply Ful NO EXPF.R. lMM ED ll7S 837·1341 erman ep mtl. cm, mounuun&.hik(',lunnt•ls, Marun rull nu \lolan ATI'lACT1Vl GIRL turt"I Ca I Mr Par"'das. Hot.el ---ly c1p1tahud 673 2223 OPENING IMU·400\ or spayt!d, approx 9 mos. r u r flat "'' c M u .. t ~ ~ 1~ SopluauC1~. stable. all ~ ~37 for appt --HOUSBllPIMG ---996 "'8l!j W:~~ca!'l?~~rSl~: ~~~7~~c:i 11hou ,om flee ' Cull MZ 0138 lonenti1I r\18 . <'h1nue ~o Amertcan &lrl type, nice CAHPt:T Cl.F.ANERS. PORT!R Ta.Ll:R/P /TIME Kenmort> Wu her or WANTEO lt't' tbl. 1111\Hlut' dole fif W"e w model pnvalely exp Good pay for nght N 11! ht , h 'fl u n ti.> n Branch ofr Hf'k:1 bond11 G E Elec Dryer S'IS ea Black Lab. 10 mos male. TOr CAS H UOLLA H Mink .. ~.I,. ~ 41'1.t! ~hnWHk Great pay per~ 64fi~27 IA-nefllS Please rnll for PHONE s•LES ble Taller to wo r'-Guar /del 546-8672 nds eood home w/yard, Ulmmt discretion, n~x1 --3P"' .. >tt S20. ti45 5000 ft "' " shots. hou~e. papers PA I 0 ti• 0 rt Y 0 U R Wat~r OOds iV C'Omh bl• bour1 Wr l lt' CASHIEA ""----l'hone ~alu people ptllme. Exper. pref'd REFRIGERATORS Apt ~.6J.S6 J~WELHY. WATCHE.'>. ~ll·rt·o Mol<>rt'vdt'' a .,,.... male or rc m•le 16 lo '" Contact Hilda Terranove "-J\RT OBJ E~ GOI u I w i....., Ad U03. C>aaly Wt>t>t.endi. pcrm:in\!11l, llousekeeper & VJfh•u~ " · ""' ,714 1644 7255. ~ ~. La.e 2dr t'/f ~ .....,.......,. "·~. ' Clolhlllll ~k1s Tool• Pilot, p 0 Box 1500. llU.Onl(hl,d~pc01.l.ihh• dul1t•s . malurl' t or )eunoru~e Guarantee< Westem FederalSuvmgs Holhgwar 750·4441 ••••••••••••••••••!?.~~ SlLVEK Sti;KVl<.:t:: 1'111111:. 0111pl11y cu!lf'1 Colt. Mesa m26___ ~~ll itt;~~~· 8~0~~ ~1 ~~ t~~~1~'c"M 3 11 'hifl ~:OgeEa1~~ ~~~mSsts~:~~ 2744 E Coaat Hwy. CdM Gas ranar w /hood. dbl Glas ii cotfet> tab!\' & f114u~F~t~& "N 9tlll 3li30 Mrter •pm AllC.OmOtlv• Nnon Suite 0 . t 'oslu Ml"llll Equ"I Oppor Employer oven, BBQ, a/s fin, gd l1lllll"hlnll end lable·S2~. ------Waterbed. tounnic t11ry N.w o.taU Shop needi, ----~luut1ekeeper. l''fll'r'd bt'tween S.00 & 11 30 pm cond. Sl~/otr Elect op\ M11gnavox strreo con:1ole LUGGAGE TAGS cle. set scuba tank& & re help ll\'I? m to take t•huritc !146·-4223 l'rav~l atienry mgr. for range w /hQOd & oven In a beautiful walnut trom your bu.slnesa card gulator. 7Sl 1562 Top w1gea paid Engme CHE,F, $11.00 mn ";). "'arn uf 2. Rd 1111· ref's t:;qualOPPortumty new ofr N.8 . dr~n olr 75HI067uft6pm ' cab1ne t -S17S : call "'" d _.. r h - ---d SJ Ill "-Retail Ax p req d """'n one Cll•~ or cac "'·-n"eadboa-'~•1c * .-earners, eng pamtcr5, pn 11, > ue .,.,cl. Top IO<' & h vmit rond:-Jo;mployer ' · . 6'2·0138 Must sell! laa plw. one spare We 'w• '' '"" • .,, .,ur buffen & polishers. up 107 2161 I l, N.6 . urt 4 Uays 833 '.14IO cH"i Resumes m confidence 2 refril(erator11. GE 17 cu rt'turn prrmanently fboartl $10. II l4 rad111 hoblery ahampoocrs pm 67S3333 ti44H4lS 1.0 Ad lf710, Dally Pilot. ft . w11cemaker. nip Nal.ijC or llerculoo Sofa & sealed attrucllve tag & fl. glassware w . lluJ1e• cbeclt out. pick up & de PO Boit 15$>, CM, Ca p e r t o n e . $ 2 :> o toveseat. barrel chair. strup. me<'ltn" airline dothci. 14 16. SJ ~ 5044 IJvery. Apply al Compa nwn for Elderly lfouc;(•w1 \'l's port t amt' Pool !'leaner. exp'd Mus• 92626 COLDSPOT 14 cu Cl wht. Kng or Qn s1zt! bedrooom " 205i9 Harbor Bl, CM IJd)I. M uturf' 1 30 S help. day., 11 3 Heg1:-.l..r huve truck Wt•6t ·s Poo $l25 both xlnt. best ofr. swte w /armoire. mat l D reqwremi•nL-1 Pre Ill ('t C:olcl Omeii11 porke 6'5-I030 Mon Pri r M 54S-4614 1>1·r.,on 54!l 5'!42 Sup1JIY 495 4190 Typrng, filing & llghl of S48·7200. 962·7l3l lres.~.& all wood gaml' vt!nt IO!iS & lht'fl' fo"or a watdi, llt'rl pre1>ervt'd __ __ --nee work, nex1ble hni. set with matrhmg rorree personallied tag enclose S200 Ouli.tand1ng Tur ---------·1Cook & liro1h.•rm:.i11 1·om J1:1olt1>r work part t1ml' 1n C.M 675-1463 bC.wn 4 & Allcffoft 8015 tables. server, wall urut wal lp11pe r . f11br1 c or quoise & Sal ver Bract'h.1t t11n.it1on Appl) 2!>3o W 1'''-'~ O <: loC'.1t111n., PRlllJTllllJG r.PM ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~mps. bookcases. xlnl ··Day Glo" paper & Wt' $150 Beaut Molas from AVON t"Ou!>t llwy N U htwn SJ oo hr +. f:xper al.lult-. 1""111 f"'lll New imported far to ry cond 554"4760 wlll ba<'k & tnm your Panama S20 ea<'h See :.! 30& 5 .. 1on s ... t__ --tin.I)' t2l3 I 921 011~. l-;xl)t!nenced prt'~!>mar TYPIST pnces 100% rot ton shirts. lag~ Or try two C.ird!I lo UPl)l"t'C'lale !>81 7141 or Owf -1'1 /fl for Dav1dsor 65-7SwJ.m GdEng back· tops 130 E 17th CM **IBUY** backtcback 8312423 ~ ~.... COOK JA.HrTOR Arerllelo11.olr, Medult1 1250 anc ~roun . Will tram A/P 646·9287,645 5071 ,..__. ··-_. Furnrtu-& ..,ea or ~~!Ct;s Y It h --...,..nuw l-;it!*r Appl} m J>('r:.on Daytime Janitor ro1 po mm 1ute oJJ1:n ~tmo.t.o st.art.xlnlfr ----"""""""" '"' ... J.., e ow ... 1te01netLeSet Fo.-A.YOH Lo Sam's St!ufood N1• 2 Country Club For m in.-: Duy shirt MlnimurT mt:c benefits Apply in lky~ 8020 Appliances-OR I will 4 S tags Sl 60ea 4 rhrs ~ Masterwork 11.aHEHTATIVES 3901 E.Coast H1,1,y.t:d'.\i tervlewcall 64454()q on\! year expe1t'nce person Bob Leaverton.••••••••••••••••••••••• seUorSELLrorYou 6 9tagsSl !>Oea Slert'(), r~rvr. lrnlbl. 2 ::::o~~-lfn~':!>~~~~i---------•I :~~·asc upply an µcri.01 !~il ~~~~~~a~e~ontr , ~~b;~~r~~.~~~-~~~ ~~~S&A~~~~:s lOo~=r~:!·~:i~ed ~:~:::n~ = tenni ~ll S40-7041 or Zenith DATADfTRY KEYPUNCH s uperChn stmasgtrt• S80 --NOCARO• s 7-L3S9. OPERATOR DATA ENTilY MARTEC TYPIST for a bake tn excellent SAVE' New & used rum. Draw your own or send ra<-quet S20. VW ski rack ~~~~~~~--·I i'hl' Jolly Roger. Inc 1s OPERATOR BusyofcinOrangeCoun condition! Mus t sell' appl"s. misc Wilson's name. address. pllone & nu S20. ;iuto Bushnell · taluni.; apphcatmns for a The J olly Ruger. Inc 1s Repodllcffofts. Inc. ly Airport area nds 64.2-0138 Bargain Nook. Now 2 we'll make one card per lJ!>mm telephoto lemi Data Entry Operator t · r 3311 Wei.t -' ----Stores -545 & 814 W lag Add~ each bke new s&i bsl ofr Call Babysitte r n eeded. 2 amall ~.rldren Mon Fri eves S59·1838 Irvine. Mm of l yrs t•xrwr on takinD~t·ag~~~/ycaotup>~~a~~/ MacArthurBlvd typilust w /progSram_edusE D. REBUI LT & t9th C M 6427930& Sendcheckormooeyor 57:>t349 Ky m the IBM 3741or374l 1s re .. h Santa Ana, Ca. mac ne exper. tarting Guaranteed Alt types. 548~3262 · WE BUY der lo ---Mmof l yrs cxi.ier ool e NOPHONECALl...S s al $600 + travel parts.repairs TradtHns . Pl -OT .....,. ....a---~· Babys1Uer wanl(>d for !I yr old. C M a rea Own trans. All school & !>Ome eves. Non smolwr. <.:all quired l'l.'rm:1nt•nt IBM 3741 or :n42 1s re l'LEASI': benefits. Send resume or accepted6Jt.2101 S4" Round oak tbl. anll L PRl ... ,IMG ,.._, C time day bh1ft. Ad,·:111 q u1 r•!d . P e rm a ne n l lelle.r to ad #793, c/o Dai· que ton, reproduction P 0 Box 1!>60 W.t.d 808 r•• tl\cnt to com putl!r C llme day shift. /\dvun E<1ual OpportunJly ly Palot Newspaper. P .0 . •NEW·USED BIKES• base 4 ~hrs 673.8&}2 Coftta Mesa. Ca 92626 •••••••••••••••• ••••••• operator pobstlill' ro r rcmt!nt to <'o mputcr EmployM1F Box 1500. Costa Mesa. Buy-Sell-Trad~ · · Wanted O\'Crstuffedturn. !>M-8826 or 644_-4:160 __ _ rii;ht 1nd1v 1-'ily wtll ~ op1:rator possible for _ __ Ca 92626. Parts & Repairs Fr Provincial Dresser & Bc!er drafter . holds~. Keg will pay cuh, damaged habed on cxpcr level h Cl p 11 ,., Sk _. N' d or beer. new cond. S200 ok 968 2251\evcs I · · nit l in 1v ay w1 ...,.. l',t Sales. $40-$70 wk up UTOTEM aleboarus. 1teslao S18S. Mirror 673 c...,6 Call rt llAM · __ BAR GIRL Nights /\t t ractive. Coltc.ie OK Apply n person 81\M ln.is<.'<1 Qn exper . level Men. lad1ei.. students Cycle &Co. 2488 Newport avail 646-1128 ""' · a __ !>PM Monday Lhru Frt Apply tn J>t'n>On 8AM Eves/Sal. 554·78~1. RFTAILCLERKS Blvd C M 6427910 Wha le boxes r o r WoodednRock1dog~orrse1n SaJary +. ~5544 __ _ duy, 17042 li1llclle Ave, 5PM Monday lhru fo'ri 839.7ooe Wanted. Opportunities --(,"'hampagneVetvet Sofa& ri , goo co o .,e ore lrvme day. 17""" Gillette l\v1•, t ad a l I 10 ~pd Schwinn S"-'cial Loveseal "Penthouse Ch stmas girts, cookic!I Chnstmas 631 2129 V'Uo or v ncemen av1u · ,... . . or candy 2'• ·· h1, 9 :>18 UaR;s.cty -----Irvine RECEPTIOMIST Operungs tn Costa Mesa. Suburban Xlnt rond Quality Xlnl co nd long&6S/8 wtdc Scea Mln'cal Small business. CM. full l!Jchvery man for t.'arl) Anaheim. Garden Grove w1xtras. $60. 219 Avenue 554-4760 642.3379· lnstrumtntt 8083 lime. ~22« afl 9 AM . mom L /\.Times. home i\Uractive, over lil, for & Westman.st.er. Poruente, San Clem ••••••••••••••••••••••• 10 .a.T delivery route 2''l hrs a L.AIORERS llEALTH SPA. We wall 642·7702 SC'hwinn Paramount 24 " ~e~~1~~ef~~nol?qu~r~; Give yourself a preisent' CoM Mln·O Mat1c elec "" day Mui.t have econ ASSEMll.ERS tram right person for full campy, xlnl cood rum. Reasobl 963·4807. All natural weight loss oritan, excellent con<h CA.RPEHTERS ('ar Ad ults only No 26 needed now Must be easy run JOb Mr Cee. WAITRESSES Must sell. S3SO/blt orr. pmducts. Guaranteed to uon. SIGOO. p p S32 t2S9 l II dependable w 1th o wn C24hrs I 752 ~!>61 Blk Vinyl Ra-•·-er same work Are you a boal ca-nter ao 1c1llng. no ro rct1ng Eves S49~1dy546-0724 ~......,, · mterested in work:;g for w~tmmsler llunl lkh transportation No e:ttpr -HOSTESSES as new Less than y, I need dlstnbutors• Lewi" Herman Violin the m!gr. of I.he world"s area 6:JH-0126_·____ nee. all shifts Short or R~~~~~:~~T Glrls Schwinn bike. never pnce 64tHl7\4 __ 645 ~I & ~ 7!1!3_ Bought new. pd $360. r l S I b t ., longterm. Part lime & full time, used. 3 spd, $70. Call Sharp Contemporary 42" u"VESANT/\ VISIT used 2 wks. S a c for 1nes .a• oa s De1·ve...uman.carlyA .. l 'EMPO Neat,allrarll\C.fornew D<>O'>'>C.ft "" b r c I W tsaLlCo ke or u ., ,.., day & rught shift. apply ~-. SO ... EONEYOULOVE st 10 r a se in c es rp ·ma r Tt mes r u utc. Cos la 17802Skypark,Stc IOI Dana Point Yacht Club md walnut dUlette set. '" 962-8623 11111 excellent craft, 1s M ~sa Nn <'Ollecting lrvuie ~-<14~ t714l 4966681 111 perso~ J Girl's 26" Schwinn. Jspd, w/form1ca t.op, like ww Make your reservation ---- now accepung appllca must h3 ve dependalll~ l-:0 E. ----·r'• r . goodcond,$40. S16!>/best ofr.S487~ Now 640..2029. days or Burrel l"lari ne l . xlnt tJOns from skilled bout car S46-441H ---------RECEPTIONIST 1600 COOlt Hwy 642-4809 eves Merry Chnstrruu • rond • $100 Ca II IW-8145 carpenters with al least 2 · l.A.•l(al Secretary, ITllllurt> TY LOCJllllG leoch, Ca. ---? Loveseats, refrigerator -----between 6 & HP M yrs woodworking expr m DENTAL To start after the New PIST SchwinnSuper Sport 4212 Seashore N B AADIO Control Electric - the boal.lllg industry. for Year 644 5730 1-·nr Na lion a I Sports Waitress. Food/Coektails $50. 645-7359 645-7881 days, 673-1204 Model PT Boat. over 3 rt 1; U IT A RS. 12 8 t rt n l! full time or paerc work OFFICE MGR. --OrJ,!an1iat1on. plt·asBnt Apply aft 4pm. Sid"s Blue -evt: long. siren, water can Ynmnhn . plus h t·a~t· employment. If you a rc Expen en1·1• nere:.sary LEGAL SECRETARY greeter & good phone Beet.10721St PL N.B X lnt Christmai. 1:1fl 8055 non.;: i.pecds, etc Very Sl20 1;retcll Chet Atkin ~ an unco mpro m1s1n g Bully pra<'lH'C, Short Pe rmanant p t lime. vmce necessary. lia!ol <' Schwinn Beach CruJ~er CicrocpSale sopll1st1cated toy. Over Nashv1lll' ell'<" ~175 craftsman. who i:lves on· work wt>c k Bl' nt!f 1t-. Newport Beach. t:xpr '<1 Offl l·e skills & w1lllngness Women start the new year w 12 spd. X.lnd cond $130 •••• ••• •• •• •• •••••• ••• • $1800 re PI a ce m c n t 51H 7141 or KJI 2-123 ly I.he best or h1mi.ctr to 1tunt1n1:t on Bea di rl'<tuired C.ill Uc vcrly to lt·nrn C J ll Mi. out with i.omc extra 646·6102 RADIO Control e lectnr Sacnf1ce $500. 111rlu1Jcs his Job. apply to the re 847 6070 H s. at 833 3776 Lawr('ncc al 751 9800 cash. Interested? Help Model PT Boal, over 3 ft. everylh1ng 675 Jti02 or Offiu Fund~ & ce p l i o n 1 s l a t 27 5 -me in my bus1u11ss Moto·Cross B1cy<'lc & long, s iren. water can-645-2200 ~pnwnt 8085 McCormick, Costa Mesa loent11l Lci:al Tr.i111ec llriithl, IC.Cpro Typist wanted So. l.)lane962·8957. Ports Ur and names non. 2 speeds. etc Very ••••••••0 •••••••••••• ORTHODONTIC xlnl ty pmJ.t skills ror J,al(una area. Light New & guar. Reduced sophi.sU<:atcd toy. Over CUSTOM Complete ofrlcc set up ChoirsldeAn ist curc.-eropporton MAG II secretarial & <'lerical Wo men needed f o r pnce 962·5648 $1800 re placement. xlnt steeldcsks&chairs loot c..,,. ....... At l anti c P ac if ic Maritime Compuny. ~S491 E f ty1~wntt:r 1n Newport dul1c~ Call for utlerv1ew housecleaning service . Sacnflce $500. Includes WOVEN WOODS swivels also 675 3000. xpr pre erred l'M l~:ach, estate planning. appt 499-4563 call Robb1l!s Rag 'N Mop Triumph Boys Bike w/x everyUung. 675-3662 or 50'7nT080"1. OFF Bay & Beac h Rlty ~St7o l'Orporate ldw prat'l1ce --------548·07~7 l r a s 1 O S P d · b Y 64S·2200 Over40in·stock patterns Dt-ntal H1•r1·11l for S Boats Lagun.i Ore I' •Time Ju#bty/C..,,.nt... ElCper. 11; lilt• hkpni: E x per r e q 'd . I( o o d 499 13al benefits. apply Coastal ----Re<"reallon, 17422 Den an l)l-<;k dt·rk, full Lr me . Thl' Ave. Irv ~3720 IM al 1.J~11na, 21 t Nf) ----C°OJ'll llw) l.a)luna BOOKS &•11<'h Ap1JI) tn person Studetth ---- Ho..wwiYH & Dr.ift-.man. arch . Apt t>uthkr , Cost<.1 Ml'i..i MooNi~ Good '1,1lar) 1f fast , cx- M t 1 h on Doflar corp pt'rit-nc...ct M 2 4907 <1ays needs '™'n & 1,1,-omen of an y &Kc w ho enjuy E=irn t·xtra spending apea.klnit w te>thl'rs & who mone>' Sell i:ourmet are bon.'<i w lhc J •l'rJ~·· roncts & ~me ... Cit ll Bob run of t.M m 111 JO~ S41> 6446 ~o actual bt'lltn..t IO )o'ftYC001' part t1ml· Yl)lvcd & no :r.ell1r11t .ip Dick Chlrch'1 pomtmenl'I Work w 1one Reatciurelllt o( rh.-mo:11 populitr & 2008 Nt•w1xirt Bl. C M. :1u<'<'t'S,ful product" .in --- the rrwrkt'l loduy An 111 ~ Offic.4t c.XpellJllV(' pmdlJ<'l who ~ f'l'rll)a1ll'nl r1ert timc n•me '" a huu'lchol•I Mull• M 11l11in Ooll.ir wunl thruout th1• world COfTl -.tJHln" nl'w of<' in Work 111 ,i youthful . lrv1n1 'l:1•cd en fnl'1tdly 1um11 .. ph{'r(' & lhU~IK<.lH' JIO$lliv1· hav .. fun whtll' )OU earn m tnlll'd P••uplt' l•1 an lap pay 'OU N't'l'IVC a \.nlC1U(t' 1neic1>ens1vr na iu.arenu..-d -..11.;ry ..-I'll llOnllllY known producu tnmf'ly llt>f'rl'I <'nm flTlm our ofr Frl't.' p11rk UU.POrl At boou!IC'a C•m inl( & 11thl•r benefit,, &aata & ott..r anc4>nUvc 1)£eu.11nl \urrowidm~s & Xlnl 1dvanC"e m enl ,....._.td 81mo&phcre No poaaibU1tJe1 for both men •upc:r nec & nu bl'lllnl? 6 women llDvofv~ Xlnt 09por for a dvan ce ml'nl Ca I I Mo ..-per IK'<" You re 8U ·80Y), T1meld1• <*w full pay whllt> ~1n11 Ubranes, Inc Equal Op tlr.ui.d Y~ can work ~ Employt'r M F' • mornlnR or,...,.. hni On --- 17 10 min hy .. ·wy from ---- •II 1urround1n~ com ~al Aet1.I( 1750 cn\lftl.UM, Vou owe 1l l<: Ability. knowle<1Rr 11r 1'0'lll"Mllf w al least 1n Enl' Xlnt Co bencfltll ... u11te this unusun 1 Pleo&.-C'llll lur appt CJA>Of'. Contact RenN• lrv1nt! l'er!M>f\nel Agency Reial.~ 488 E 17th Costa Mesa --SwlAI 234 642 1470 IOYS AHO GIRLS for l>aJly Piiot routes m Arch Baa ch :irea ol Lll\IN Beach Muat be at ~aat 10 years old Pt.cine &U·4321, u k for GEH'L OFFICE tr you are ilblc lo lYl'I! 4Swpm & 1•njoy comPoS· Uli lclwl'$. wrr have nn lnterestinii pos1t1un avail. l'usl at>rv1ces CrculaUon. -barkground helpful Ap IOYS AHD GIRLS ply National Systems dO to 1$ yu.ra. Earn Corp .• 4361 Bir ch St , ChrtslmH money . $20 le Newport BeaC'h. $40 per week scllt ng sub M!JJ an ??)Jll!ltlCRftJJt.s tJlTJOTJ::tl acripcjons to the Daily ,._--.....-...y TUT~ Pllol. Tran1porLat1or ~·,~ Vft provided. No dellvenei lmmedlate. l hr daily. or collectlnc Phone before Christmas My L• .. 9712 houte near Harbor Hlah ~----~~---l $48-~ IOYS AHO GIRLS 1111laaioo Vie}(> · El Toro J f'U. Earn your own GUARDS i_..Y aell1na aubmip-Cotto Meaa t~ after &c.hool For In• Permanent. Full & Part· Jcrmalion, call 83().081.3 Umc:. Phone &i tran.sp re ."".~-,.-... -.-Dl-IV-.. -5---11 q'd. Retired welcome • ~--~II S4&-02'74. ore hrs 10-2. • Men or Women Cloeed Wedneaday. Mua1 be2Sorover AWIY In Peraon Y•wc• ll~l Slater Avenuo AYON r~ Fountain Valley ~ ~ fulftt draw ln Ute Haw A Very MftTy Chrhtw.t-. ~ eat . .a Daily Pilot •nd the money to pay ror ~laulnod Ad. Phone ll. Excelltnl pMlm e ..... ~_·_567_....ll. ______ , oamlnll opportunity Call HaYt aomcthlni t.o M-ll ? W().70UorZenltb7·WO _Qualfled ad.a do It well. MAG 11 exper preferred. He la1l s ales tn Mission Rawle1gh Gd cond. S80 Also MINI Dhndi. IBM Standard Typewnter but will tra in . <;all V1eJo,approx20 hrswk WOMENwhynol slartthe 640\474 .,.._G:Sale .. 64S-8950 "339770 ror sale Xlnt conrl n 14 1113J Will No exp.:r nee Must be new year with some ex-c~•. ......_51• ----Unus ual 19" carnag~ avail bet IOam & 7pm tra cash. Interested~ C..rcn & _....,.... """" Newport Bearh Tennis Ideal for Eng1neerin~ ~an,1gemcn l Tr:11neC' Applyatt~olomat Corp Helpmem mybusiness Eqli,.....t 8030 •NCmtJNGOVERt!>• ClbMembersh1p farm Pleabe call Youn.: m.ln to work m iG8 4171 Call Sharon. 556--4378 ••••n••••••••••••••••• 17160range. Corner or 673 1751 675 3551 <;rowing Tool Rental --_______ , NIKON F '73, perf cond Orange/17th St. CM riU.'>IOt''>'>. mu:.t bl' ncJt In SAIL CUTTERS MtrchandiM 14 Lens. w /falters. CISe. Open AntJque iron bed frame & rm 8087 ,1ppearance & h.ivl' ,cry HA.HD WORKERS ••••••••••••••••••••••• cam b $370 every Wed/Thurs/1-'ra ra ils US Oc tagonal •••••••••••••••••••••• .a...AL... a· 005 c r a a g . . h -A d S neat handwnllnK 1; day 1llt' manufacturl'r or the _..,..,_1 SIU 7141 or 831 2423 H>-4 s a""" game or ming o Wrsl Pet Center wk. w week day off beautiful Wcstsa1I crws ••••••••••••••••••••••• -table with " r ha1rs SI~ Wo rld · s I a r g e !. t Pref marned man for ing saalhouts has 1m· Cah 1035 Movtng Must sell._ sngl Plastic awnangs. larue. Bnstol/Mc/\rthur S A permanent. responsible mediate openings for sail Wonderland ••••••••••••••••••••••• bed. dresser wtmarror. $S each <.:reen & whit e 1 s.:;i; 199-1 pos1t1on, exper. not rr c utteri.1hand workers Of Ant• I BURMESEKJTTENS r hest of drwrs, refrig. Bar or room d1v1°der - 11"d ..ipply 1930 Newpurt with al le11st l yrs expr 1n ••es. CFA registered wshr. mower· 1644 A. 1Maple1 hn1shed both Anaconda~ 5111' Blvd.Costa Mesa. sallmakmg Must have HUGE wa r ehouse 963-4205 lowaSt .• C.M.9794621 s1desll50.orbest0Her SlOO 96282&1 hand tools A 1 w crammed with over 500 G S 1 S ood Need to sell. Call 5S7 '1305 MANAGERS-Exp'd coU· own pp Y music boxes, nickclo· Himalayan Kittens CFA aragc; 8 e · uper g anytime. !>' Retic ulated Python pie to manc1ge 61 units, t.~-rX.r::~i~!!'!:plpa~~~: deon pianos, circus or· Registered babedsrgam.sb Clo~,5.: :urnits' llealthy . beaut. E Z adult compl~x. C M uon with secunty guard gans. wall clocks . 768-4776 M 'th umaw" 'h' ~ · Refng,twinbedscompl,3 care $30 675-3724 2BR 2ba a pt util'~ & grandfat her c loc ks, ar 8 35 ang on chest of drwrs ladies !>a t ;iry · So~ th I~ nd ~:r!5 M~~;ormtck Ave. rascrnaUng antiques. Purr-feet Christmas Girt. ~d.spread. melmac d•s· bike, artll. Oock 0 ed tree. Pianos & °"Jan• 8090 PropertJes Manogt'me nt, ------Over Sl.000.000 Worth CFA Himalayarui seals & '""'•vacuum. many toys-cycle he lmet. lge aofa •••••••••••••••••••••• 548 S30tJ SALES Amen can International name Point.s 838-0339 books. 220 La Ellpranza. valet chr. wine racks GI .. A Gift -""THLETICS G 11 . 1802 T K tt n..-San Clem. 492-8992 640-5296 or S86·G600 uk Of M111ic _.... 'Im Ing St.. Irvine. Tel. ••••••••••••••••••••••• _ ... u ..... _..a.tc.-1 Re-c~. BAOYS & a enes; -e er· .._,.. 8040 Near neou. Sammons Qn for Ann Sear'•. eplnel organ 2 WExPp"'t n;A,qbul1rc-dt.o . oypck 55 Sa7S4-t.1977A7MOtope4nPMW.edv1!~1t~.u POODUS..°"EOPLE mattress. box s prings, Bicycles. typewrtr. accor key board, chord pedals " c w r un GIRLS ., AJl clr.s (7l4 >S46·284S rrame&brasshdboa~.2 dian , piano. clarine t , Like new condition der pressure T akes own dressers w 1match1ng 3HPeng 642 WJS Moved, lo small home 1n1l1at1Vl•. ll ancl lc FUN JOI HORSEDRAWNWATERChn --------F--i nite stands. 19'" black & -------' more room. #"""l l II ,. WAGON. $600 stmas puppies. em ·~ .....,, rt•,pons1b1 1ues we ,_,111 Earn up to $1~ per week ssi.7001 German Shepherd pup-whte RCA TV, kllch. set. Comme rcial Swmit Set S52·75S2 for a 1>pl. 1\bll Cor SU!oan, take home U6·' yrio. l py, S2S Avail 19th Dec. GE ref rig sora bed 4 Cust.om big SJOO - -640-0140 Ticket soles to SPorts ---------1 642·3379 endtables ·846-9Sl6afi6 '5469020 ClllCKERING UpriJ(h 1:1.<cn~. hours 4·11 dally. ELSlNORE Plano. Natural f1n1sh UH Sat. hourly wage + CA.5TLEGALLERIES Registered Lhasa Apse Horw. 8060 ProJector. GAf' dual 8, Fa ir price $1 200, my Exp 10 blood drawmit b on u !> , n o e x p e r AnnoWlces a uruque new pupp1e1, male & female, ••••••••••••••••••••••• $35, men.'i 10 spd bike. pnce S'l2S Lewis Piano \_.hf l..i<' not rt•q.Prcfcr nece~s .iry . w e train concept 10 antique champsired.$150&up ForSale.2ponies&show $40. womansszR roller Strv1ct" Lagun11 494-8440 CT.A Call for 11ppt. Ast. work permit required, merchandising. Earn up (714)734·0222 quarte.rborae \kJ tes. SIS. anl1Que p jA N 0-K , h 1--.. MB>. LAI. ASSIST. fnr Su-.:1n 640 0140 h I r I F Ca ll 847 1001. white dresser, 6 drawer c er "" -____: <'.H e P u . o r im t.o 15'n per mo. See ad Yorkie Pups, champ ----------1 w/l"e mirror. S2S. Olym· Campbell walnut spinet. Md ml Tr .... ..,..rm Earn med1.itc placement on under Class SOlS p r t d h t "' m ust •ac F d " '"" ~ r 1 sired. beautiful coats, ro . ra1ne un er. pie stereo. $20. Eves , _,,,.,, ... ~ """u 1ne con · Sl7S S200 wk Fu lier one 0 our crews. A so will hold UJ Christmas. Grey. 1 yrs, 15 3 hand&, 546 44JS ~ ~""' R~bSales. SS4 7851 Ol'ed crew manasters 18 PRt>-CHRISTMAS llfl2.8'7l7 Arab/Quarter. SlOOO In ,._ • Modt' 0 --&abovewtcar the nbbons' Must sell' .-WNM) ••• 1 93 Motel Maid needed, in Cal Sue SALE Sa cd AKC I ••••••••••••••••••••••• lud h _.. moy . ma e pup $1000. 494.3422 Matt W c es was lnj!WlnuOW' (71 4)893-8613 Loads or furn. china. pies. 8 wks. champ line. -IHSULATIOH l '/ .. s1.n11er Golden Toucb &. 4 hrs day, Sday wk, !11\M Americ an Natio nal mirrors. lite fixtures. S200 529-9470, 992·1S36 s yr old s H Reid. 111 2 Sf?w 11 ew1na machine. I PM $3.SO hr •'93 1664 etc. <714 > hands. black w 12 white tt.ic:J&. 12 1hffta. nit•ff 008·6555 MOTOR ROUTE -~lley Ball Assoc. Cornucopia Antiques hind l!OCks. $9SO. w/tack. UMd, Gill to.-$20. Call C-rlt -G-oock---1094 • .., ... ,.RET/\RY 4093\stSt,N.8. AKCCockerPups,blk~& Canjump'MS-1036 64"'7857e1r--~ "9 DB.IV!IY ""'" ll·STues lhruSun blond. male & fe male · __ .,. ____ ·-••••••••••••••••••••••• 1-·1nancial /Admin1s· Re 1-Qtrho 8 Id ''C M " LI k Sunday Only delivery of lrotav" a•sist Lo $l.OOO Sl00.·S17S. 979·1471 g.. rse. yr ge · AM /FM Tape Turn ta 1.o .--ro·.-oc ey Ice ..... D 1 P'I t l ~ .. French s1debo. ard,_ xlnt, Ina, xlnt traJI, well man b ' T. skates, sue ll shoe, 12S . ... ..: niy '0 n i·ar· PcrsonFrldaytc~ $475. Sterhng p1l c herAKC Doberman Pup1', 8 i;;'red.$600.640-7099 le . Des k . rA c Ii<', ~'>10644 rte r!I in South Laguna Employers Pay All 1-'e<!s $2!!0. Antique sliver & week.a, black & rW1t. Xlnt LlRhl!, bc.'<1s. misc Good --------~:1re';8:~~0~'!~:~nnir Uz Relndeni Agen<'y brass ite ms S6C> to $200. poeslbllltle11. $189. Call Ha1111hokl Gooch 8065 I>~ Movin1< IW·l792 TVHI, RRocloS.:...__ 1098 van Phone 642.4321. ask 4020 Barch St, Ste 104 673 fi069 at\A!r2 pm, 493-7591 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Rlajck & Decker e lert • ~ t Newport Beach 833-1!190 d ••••••••••••••••••••••• or Harry Seeley. <.:a ll for appt/F.iitab '65 Antique 1906 Upright Vic· i\KC Golden Retriever Good used carpetang & lawn mower Xlnt Mn ' FS %l Ch C 8 B (o;q ua 1 Op po rlu nit>' trole, l25 records, lncl'd Pups, xlnt hunters. fama· C:· ~ ~~rsable kng s .r: $30 8.17 9304 after Ii __ ":;~orwitumer .& 2 po;:~ Employer Ser vice Station Allen C.arl1SO's. 646-&403 ly pet, wtr dog 493 68Gl P · • 8.17 , Rose Bowl 'J'lckcts ror m1c Wall t1d1pt to new NURSES AIDES All Sbltla Exper. pref'd W1ll tra10 1( nee. 6'2·2410 NURSES AIDES 11PM-7AM Exper pre· f"d . Mesa Verde Conv Hosp, 661 Center St. CM NURSES AIDES & OttDERUES ALL SHIFTS Exp. pref'd. Will train In· terested andlvldual! Udo Convalescent Ctr lSSSSuperior Ave Newport Buch 646·7764 PAINTER. s k illed In spray f1nl11hea . rolor rmtchlntt. lltalnlnt(. Ct'll Mr. Paradis. 5S6-f137 for appt To pl.ace your mesuge befonilhe ttadlng publk. phone Daily Pilot O...lrlcd. &u-se78 d ant, exper'd. Day & Je-'-8070 l M k rr I 1 I Sl.50C 115 Evea. Full & p/llme AP· Appl~ 10 I 0 Cocker Spanlel pupp1ea .••• ';:;.~ ••• ••• su e . a e o _er r t on ·' a teve ply, Shell SL11llon, 171.h & ••••••••••••••••••••••• AKC. 7 wka old, $17S. • •••••••• 897-11641 646 7M! Irvine, NB DRYERS. Delx Oas or 493-U78 WANTED sl!l!K & l!IND. AM£RICAH HAYN. SEWl EJec S85 ea. Washer & AKC Cock S I I s TOP CASH 001..1..AR 55 r . HEROES NG MACHINE gas dryer. matched pr l.llOI. Llkeae~hi:::ne Ex p A Io I' o R you R Nr. JbP~~~~mmc-d 114!>. Like new cond. cellent pet. $7$/ofr JEWELRY. WATCH ES. openJngs"'"'..., Guar. 7»-4441 ~U07 ART OBJECTS. GOLD. McKJbbinSails REFRIGERATORS SILVER SERVICE, ~3684 WASHERS-DRYERS LHASAAPSOPUPPIES FINE FU RN & AN· Reconditions·Repros Ir Purebred. 6 wka, S2.5 up TIQUES MS-2200 SOClABL'EASSOC Frg\ Damage. Guar/Del. Be rorc Chrl • t m aa U...tocll t075 needed by EXEC In 29VrslnOraoef!Co 1_&4G-_568S ______ _ whsle Fully cap1taURd. DUN' •p·s ,.,_, .. _ lrl I ••••••••••••••••••••••• s u Pp I Y . p I t I me . ~ uueucn Re ever, ma e 1 Reg. Morgt1n ma.re. broke <.'l13)~·329:S. 1.81.SNewportBl.CM yr, obedience trained, to ride & drive. blk CAILS48--T780 $70/bltolr768-8404 parade Moraan &f!ldlng. STOttlRM.CL8K Dark Golden Retrtever. Enl(, Wesh:rn t714 > Westual Corp. h11 • WASHIR..oRYM AKC Champion 1toclt.1-XJll. __ io_u _____ _ ~tcha::fe~~~ yar ;:;:.~~ Lite model. super delux. 1lre. for pick or lltwr. · · • , 1071 atockroom work. Manne Mulll·cycle, like new. 54.2-6& ••••••••••••••••••••••• s tockroom expr . pre· :;~5 ~-b~tc~~.~~12 Yr old rem. Shellle for B{bo1pt Sm1~t1h MK s1 wh / ferred but wlll coiulder 7~l·SlT7 sa le. All 1hol1 Cell on er. IHW/ at e sailln1t buffs with a real · 983-9035 0011. LI e now S'1SO. know how. Apply to thee M2·~or~1$3 ~~~~;1~~e~tc!i! ForClaullled Ad P~Jn~~r1:~:~'0,~'ft~.1~ Mhcel-.... 1010 Mcae Ag:i~~N ma I ct '100 ta. 640.33'77 ••• .. ••••••••• ••••••• • • 0 -•1 Pll C -Pini P<>ni Tbl, Cott $90. ., Y ot AJ< COCKER SPA.HI-.., Sell fotQ F•nder Outtar AD·VlSOR 21 moa. Male, buff. lllnt SSS £lee dryer, teo. Oun· e.u.wrs •/tkll, ad allow • atud. can Phyfe dln'I Tbl. sso *'65.lt. Oar 1tereo. 644-176!> The f .. tat dr•w In lhe WOil. .a Dally Pilot Clusl/led Ad. &U-M78. I T R A W E T S Y R E H L 0 8 P I H T 0 0 " Y E W F A R R A C U T A G l N £ T E A Qrl E P I L A R GAW I H A 1 S R Y C F H l l H 0 A M £ R £ H R W M A I T 0 A E 8 l ( l S ¥ N P 0 8 E R I M T r 0 R R E u N H c " I " I R T E T p a H H R I R H 0 U H H K 0 P I R H Z S U 0 0 A C P F S M l T P Y A D 0 C H E T S U IN A V -A 1.1 Ji E R O E SI G P E ' N A P G El! D GE SY Z H C 0 £ W HU 0 C M H C R H J H L R A J S A M P C 0 P E A P H A l S E Y H 0 R H C T P S H 0 0 S 0 R F l f M t N C E H 0 P K I H S P AF I K 0 E W £ Y S AM P 0 A S CH l, 0 M R 0 E T S A G U T L E H I R Y H 0 lnwuc1iona H•~ ..otch C>etow ~· IOfWt•d. b4dl· we<d, up, down Of dlltOfltUy. FIM •ectl ""° bo• It !ft. ~ Dewey Hul 1 Perry - Farragut Jonu Porter ~ H11 l sey Hlledonough StMPson .. Ho~tns Ntmftz Schl ey TQlllOrTOw: A Chrhtmu Carol I I I ~~~~ .... !?!.~ Mtoa. lapon.d A&ltoi, lmportcd ~t.~~·.1.":~~•~••••••• ~-~~•••••••••••• ~ ... ~~ ......... i:· CASH FOR CARS! 0-;;.:.··••••••••••;;20 ~;·~·h;;····974c) Toyota 9765 AMC 9905 fwd "'O BJ% DAILY PILOT Tue'<tay Deeernber21. 1i76 rop I Dullur I p~td for ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~··•:•••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• c~11n ui.ed cari. truc.·~i. & DRIVE A L..aN I~ (A.'hClll :n Aulo, l\t:. 74 . t.rcmhn. ~·w:! ~Ii':'~ ·cw Falcon Spnnl Au..,, IDoh&Marine lqllipMlnt 91SO <;orwttc:. A!>k (or l .iul ..&-w.u--..1 \M f''M \l~rco 14.000 U(W tir~ll,,'kl~' S:!IOO aoociC'O~ $700 &uJelf: 0 Neill LITILE ._ a.u \' II w u.,., '"'10 30.000. ,. ii 2Canal<.:r NB HOW ARD Ch.Y1"0iet ... OVER I 00 llU l' 11 ......, .... S48 1340 --:::-;v. ••••••••••••••••••••••• :?6 f:nt.h.'J\.'OS Slu<>P :1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• G41•1 d 90 I 0 u1b. ,11>' ~ Ubl llfc YEAR lHD ••••••••••••••••••••••• lllll'b, llkl' n1·w fl.tvt-CLEAJIANCE HADIO l'untrol el<'rl ril' ,111.1 ~.~ u1 bl-st nfler Modd PT lk1Jl. ""cr J fl SS6 7HIH or KJl 2241 ur SA.LE DIM & Quail Mi. SAVE A LOT MERCEDES Trlwnph 9767 CoclUoc 9915 '?~.TD. 2 dr. Landa~~·;, Nfo:Wl'ORT BEACll SllOI' & l'OM PAR I!: ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••• ••••••••••• l S I P tt . M 1 n l (00 wt: f'I\ v TOI' L>OLLA K IARWlcK DA TSUH OH DISPLA y 1976 Tri .. TR7 197l CADIUAC !~:Olb•t ofr. 671 12>!# J-'ORTOPUSl';U('AHS SanJuan Cap1~tr1.1110 Houwof lmDOrlt f, l'YI · 4 'Pl'l'<I. power &DORAOOCOUPE MKU742 Harlt')I D11,·11hon or ~¥. s1~n '4Jtl•r eun Westmm5lt'r. !1306 llobu oln 2 sµet.'tl:.. l'l" Vt•n ---eoiiu.llcll('(I toy fhl·r <..1lll~tmo!lo L..1i.er. rradle Ave, Westm 531 6440 $1KOO rt>pl11t·1·m1•nl a. C'O\'t·r. Ille blue 1 k .,~,.. M 67!> sa:n 'nals b1 1• z..., nnll·~.; FOllEIGN. L>OM t::STll' 831-1 l75 493.3375 AUTllOlllZtl> 1hsc brakes, ht>atcr, tml tOOOHSU> '72 Pinto Sedm url'l.i\S!:>H.:s MF.HCEOES Dl::AL!-.;lt t't1 lo(IJ&S, AM l"M stereo. Dark ICl'totln. auwm•~I 1C yourcartsl·lltr,1rlt-.an ti862Manrhester. fum·y whc.>l•li. & onl> $5495 tronsmllls1on, n•w M.'t' us first B~na Purk I I 0 0 II m 1 It' lll I m brakes & battery. r~ SacnhC'{' ~lo lndudl'b '76 <.:ota Uke n<'w mJn)' t>verythm.: 67!> JliG:! ur IWBI .. ; lb, ..:ood rond X\rs $WIJ0 Call 847 7131 M:>-2200 many xlr t•' $1~ or best loah, MariM 0U1·r ~16 8279 IAUER IUlct< 523-7250 n11.1tuJale' l4H~Jr1 icrtiat Good C'cono Ecpiipmtnt 9030 ~AllO'I' 1'\lllv cqWPl>t'd ••••••••••••••••••••••• with hund dolly $325 l:I M W 74 Ri5 tb l'Oll 1•ourse. 8000 ma. ll.lrao; Must bell. movmH North Sl!Yl5 ~9 0733 ~llarborBlvtl SPECIALS OnlheSantaAn11F'wv HOWS5595 l'ur!' ~367961 Le"j , Co8tu Mei.a tlW ~ H2IO 4 Ooor 4 i.p1•rtl 1!114 280 4 <Ir St'(! SSllf)O, NEWPORT DATSUN mes:.age for Linda ...wt ----•7357 t:,> C)l1°Vl'"r••0 n XJ .NTt•1•11·• KMDOVES1l '68"' rdL' I ... HADIO I 'ontrol l':lcl·tm• <:..all 673 !>703 Model l'T llM1l , 11\'l'r '.I rt Jon~. !>1ren. w<1ll•r 1·.ar1 loab. SUpt./ non. 2 ~l>t'<'ll!>., l'l• \'1•ry Docln 9070 "°phastscah•<J t~•Y ()\t.•r ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sl800 r1·plan•111••11\ SI.II' W,1nll·d Nt'wp<>rt Sacnhl'•' ~ lnl'lutl1•., o1n•J JI!' ~·.•lo(oin~ house (•YerythtOI-: fi7~> Jtill:! 11r ltt1 .1 I J 11h11 I' 0 !'> \' Y 00 2200 <l 13 17'15 77tii or t'vc:o. 11', l)or\ J:!IJ17'.)4 ~!I ·73 Yamaha GT H-0, :o11lvcr. u.~'tl ooly 30 hr" $2:>() '7H Ytom •. 1h .. Chapp)' ;tUIOfOtltlC. 2011 m1, lk OC'4 $.:100 '7h \'amaha Stn•cl. mai:,.., clrl \•· :;hart, 1.150 1111 Uraod new ~M)() Call ,1ft lipm <&94 7049 w 2 \el!'> 111 II.JI" Call··~··'· fi7~. :!1111 Slq1 .p;s1·1• l or 25' 35 75 Honda X.l.75, xlnt l'llntl ritit•rjlld'' 'ltllboat Sacnflcc.~1!15 "\1''41l1trt lkh fi75 7213 !168·2828 Boats, Power 9040 ····•·•·········••·•··· ~ t.:tlHl!:>CllAt'T JO 1'411 t•ng haulc·d T•·f1111 h1·cl Sept 76, $!1:100 ·~•Ii :-,.11;:1 < 'hnstm::a.., .:1r1 111 t.111 ,..; <.:l:i:.:o.ll ,,,111.thh· 10 SLIP fur Mo..__._. __ 1iow1•r hoJl l'\1 n1m ..,... nunwS, 1n110ll\ "\o hVl'aboart.l Sak/Refit 9160 h7S '--->4K ••••••••••••••••••••••• Boats, Spttd & Sid 9080 .....•................. 2ti' GMC MOTORllOM fo: Sips 6 Wntr rates l'vt ply 833·2616. 642·4097 Nw1>l --- 1!174 ,Boston Wh.11,•r 11 :1 I 4' Boat w /trtf'. GMC Lille '73. idnl c·ontl . 751$h p J11hn~11n m11th1 SlSO 1145.7359 11lp!> 6, Sl9.200 1238 with only 10 huur-. :SI IOO Polans. NB 833 2616 firm Ht•pl,H't•nu·n~ \ .tlU\.' T rt·.-.&:.--- - -s.?100 C.tll HI:! •llX:.! ranspo vnvn Dale'5 RV Rental!. •••••• ••• •• ••••••• •• •• • !) Acre::. ·1:-,, '76 mode lb 24 llt•llhuuv 1·,tl11r1 Campen.S•/ lrvmc 5!>94446 Chry,kr (In \llf Rent 9120 225hp w 11 Ir :SI I .~oo ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~I 51\72 · 7 o V W p 0 p T 0 p Traiwrs., Utillty 9180 . , , . Wt•-.lphalta Camper.••••••••••••••••••••••• '7J l~w~j'r-. \" •11~!11~1; lt<-bll, rtcfni;. new patn· 4'x.8' Ut1I Trlr. W/2' :.olltl I.II · lUo t'V '·~ 1111· ·1 • l ratl1;ib. $2950 492·3109 sideboards. like new trlr, nwny ~tr • .-. 491! J6lb S225 675·40CYL MJI-.> xr,2 0111~. · __ . _____ _ ·m VW Caml)('r Poptop 8xlOnat bed t.ra1lcr Boats, Sail 9060 Wt• ... 1phalt5, equ1ppt-d. SJSO ••••••••••••••••••••••• rl.'bll t·n~. nd:. pain 761\IWO<I 1loh1<· l!l. 1rlr n••w tr Jn:. & $1650 <.:all IW6·25li morc SI ,42!• •~1t. 11~~ or • ----Autos for Sole 51!1 7505 <.:ampcr lOll for Courier ••••••••••••••••••••••• · Regular P1rkup campc EH I<.:!'.'.> O "i ;! 'l f u l 1 t.o1> Mak<' off<'r ~/ rrwse r:trt· S<! 1.11()(11or 673·6105 C!ass•cs l.:r 67~ lH3U \• \fl'S & ••••••••••••••••••••••• wkmls MG-TF Rare 1500 Motoriz.e.dlikes 9140 Left hand dnve. w 1w1re HOBIE CAT J.S M~ter ••••••••••••••••••••••• wheels & m excellenl Ill~ F'1. smaller version Moped Balavm. con<hl1on' CXPEG2300l E Uy .._.OW ._,,895 "" . ' u Nt::Wl'OHT BEACH r O .-air ane .... r . W B " ...., Slcrt.-o. :ur. 11wr1 wnl1w"' ... 00 552 1551 l®I OOVEST.REET me('h pcrf , :111M m1 Call 833-1300 -• • CllAM CARS Near MacArthur ~~·U361or 403 J7•tr> 'l)Ci Galu1e " & TRUCKS & Jambort"t! Roadi. ·75 Tll7, xlnt t•ond Call Good rond. new paint CONNELL CHEVROLET 2828 llarbor Blvd ('OSTA l'tH:.<;A 546-1200 1'01' OOLLAH PAID 1'1MEDIATF.LV FOR ALL FORl-.:IGN C:AltS CALL.OH COM I': IN TO! El'; US NEWPORT IMPORTS 3100 W CstH14y,NB 642-9405 WE BUY •US~D CARS & TH UC KS• Com~ m or <:all FREE Appraisal Groth CIM•rolet 18211 Beach Blvd lfontini,rton Beach 847·6087 * 549-3331 TOP DOLLAR PAID t'OH<.:U:AN IMPORT CARS 833-1300 '7l 450SE 7~ 7~ h4.'l 1 JO ~.ii! 30• S:,00 831 3320 <.'1rnrour' Conit111un urt3,9ti02054 TOP BUYER ~ us first, & last' T1111 dollar 1>31d for imports COSTA MESA DATSUN 21WS Harbor UI HI Cottita Mesa 540 &HO t975DATSUH 2801 Automatic· trao:. .11r rond & AM ffM radio 1205351) 5395 Ma1Mf5Codlloc z ........ .... c.to .... $4IO 9100 l\J72 240Z. s l1<·k. :Jlr. AM1FM. inag:., pvt ply snoo 551 W2:.! '70 Dal.!.un 510 1 Ur St W~n Ong owrwr 417 000 m1 S141MI 54!1·253'J \1 lkl' '75 2HOZ. Pun·hust>d 111 '11; Xlnl cond Air. \1t1g' AM /FM cas:.<•tk, Hn\·al Blue Carl'\ r & bra ISl;(l( nu. $650() Ph 67~·K!)4:1 73 Datsun 240Z. Xlnl ('Ond ~any t•i.trJ!. S3800 Ph 552·M65 15 Datsun PU. xlnt t·ond Like new Many x1ras $3500 846 3006 Rat 9725 ···················'··· HIWJLWlSull•' $10,999 HOUSE OF IMPORTS 213/921-8588 714/523-7250 '72 Mil 350SL !;kith Top<;• 1740f'I. V > SI0,499 HOUSE OF IMPORTS 213/921-8588 714/523· 7250 Clauic Mercedes abl970 280SE Cn¥t. Xlnt c:ond. $17.500 . 552-7091 '75 450SEL S1lwr w 1 hlack 1nli.'r1Ur. ~at.her, !-.Unroof. slcreu lap...-1:>2SLWG I Spei.'1al JI ~16,399 HOUSE OF IMPORTS 213/921-8588 714/523-7250 '65 MllbOO 6!1 (;Tei Triumph . AM FM. \Cf)' <'knn. 1 ov.nr. $1005 PP !K.H 7793 '70SPITRRE l!:conom) weekentl s11<'cial 1 Ont• or a k1nJ 1333PPX> OHLY $1975 BRITISH CAR CO. 213/990-2525 .. 7141694-2854 70 GT+61 heaut. ~porty 14ht htchbk Real lookcr ~2tl0 r1rm 4!13 0011 Mu:.l ~l'll' '71 TR6. "Int c'Ond On~ 0'4ncr 35,000 m1 063 !1.J67 VolksWGCJrn 9770 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 'W 8u~. Lh'l hlue. xlnt l'Ond, Compll rt>blt. nll papers M usl H•ll , bst1ofr aft 6. 6'1'1·44:n, 12131389 1626 '71 VW C;impcr. ongtnal rond. x.lnl 01t!Chanirally 4~ 116211 {!) Nabers Cadillac Quality anc.J Price Guarant~eoc.J Ll· '""I! ">ptc1.1lr\I' l'n 1,·,,,LI R.11" I '" ~l'\I '>t·k~ lH '" ,,1 N, . ..., & U-.ctl L1d1ll,K\ In 01,111>.:1· C.UUl't I y 01H·11 \undoy CaJillJc Master Dcak1 }hO<I H.11 ho1 Rlvd C.o\I .1 M1·'·' 'i 10 •1100 Nabers Cadillac '67 LTD 4 Or. Maroon, blk padded \•nyl top PS. PB. crwseomat1c, 390 eng.w .ur, he.it, aulo dr l<><:lilil ~ll belted wbl s1dew'll lire:. XJnl cood . l owner $7:,11 firm S.S7·S478 1,,..na1 ••••••••••••••••••••• IMPEllAL SALE 1967 Chrysle r lmpenal Sedan <VJ 003>. ..,. ONLY $1299 Hewporiet" Moton l!JOO Harbor Blvd • C w., CALL 642-0795 ------Uncoln 99 .. ······················-" '75LIHCOLN TOWM COUPE 1: Full power 1nclud1~ vinyl top, till whee • rrwse control, AM1F tape, air cond . look!\ good! (Ltc 087REC) '' $6686. ~ GUSTAFSON LINCOL N MlilCURY 16800 Beach Blvd Huntington Beach 842-8844 61 VW BaJll Bug New pain t . lires . eng , l\M/PM. askm.i Sl2W Ca II !162 3453 MaYHick 9947 Cad '76 <:UV cabr. lthr. ••••••••••••••••••••••" 'tl! VW Sqblt. auto. looks xtras. lo m1 , sh:trp S84.SO l9'1l Maven ck 20 ooo mi1 .: o •> d . r u n s .: o o ti Pr ply 492 1112 blk vinyl lop.' xl~l «)";(f $1200 Ost ofr, 496 9789 $14nc. 493 7237 • • ----Classic ·16 Cati Eldontdo -~-__ 'G8 VW Auto Xlnl rond ConH!rt Fully loaded. Mln:wy 99S& Jll '4a)~ l.l(t blue. $11W xlnl c•ond $17,000 Call ••••••••••••••••••••••• .;1 Hobie 16 & 14 1 Lt kt Xlnl cond. I mo old. MUST IE SEEM oew, colori.'d 5;11b and Must :sell ~6-60!>4 n1:.•cH IMPORTS Alltos,l~d '68 Spyder 850 Con\•ert Xlnt cond Mom nt·eds larger car. $1050 ofr 673-0193 lmmuc: Unusually low m 1 ~ 0 o c u ml' n t <' d service n·ds fnr ca 3.000 m1 Tht• ult1matt' Chnstma:. l(lft $11.~J~ Ca II ownr. 614 5 793 l'hS46·0020 V1rg1111a . K35 3232 or •76 MONARCH ,, 'tll VW BUU Rc-d . good ~~~ - -Co mes w t l h V · S l ••••·•··•·············· tt?Ktl'a5 Grcal for hOY"• ~ first CJll Very fa::.l S600 F.lcc'tnc Moped 9701 MG 9742 cond $900 ofr Cad '67 SDV on.:inal, aulomall(', radio & 1175-3662 or 645 2200 Lt·ss than 650 mile:-. >Ukm)( $375 644 21~ KJTE I yrol1l~lnl ~>n<t Yellow ;oo <.:.ill f>42 21 0 Moton:yclH/ Scoo~N 9150 ............•..•....... 1.2· K.lt~. ,iClnt conn. 'll•irl••I. must sell s:i-5() !J7!1 l;J<JH nr S$7 2319 74 SUZUKI 1(>0 ioo m1 L1k1: nl'W S..100 673·~9 &ELL 1dl" 1t1·ms with ,1 7 S 1111 n d :i XL I 2 5 l Daily Pllot Cllls~arietJ Au w cover. many t•x.lrns. XJnt rond S:>2S 646 O'Jlli ~ff.aT.ffjir..oir Softly Does It! 9427 SIZES 8 18 "" 1lT""'; ..... 1lf(.,..,: .. THf ARI ot \Oii llttuin~ ·~ •~ the \hAo•nP. ol A nl'rkltnl' tie ol A 11\h llo• 01 1 sktrl fOf dly n•P.hl \uPtrb 1n u ept hn•I blrnd Ponied P1t1ern 94?7 M1ue~ S•m I! 10 11. 14 16 18 ~ire 17 lbu~I 341 l~h~\ l yard \ 60~11Ch lab11c Stnd $I 00 lor HCh pa Item Add 35, tor each p1ttem tor f11st cltls .,.rm111 htndhnA s.N ti: Manin Marl•n Paltern Oepl 442 ,;p.t_ly Pilot 232 Weal 181h St New Yo1k NY 1001 I Pront NAME ADDRESS ZIP Sil[ n nd S TYL( NUMBER 0. "' kllOW llow IO Ill t ,.tttfll tru' Stnd •• tor ,., 111• Fall·Wlnter P1tt1r11 ht11t1-cllp coupo• l111IM tor frtt """" ti ygur clltlc• Seid 75, llOW! Stw ~ lllllt look IMbtll MeltJ Cratts ... , .. , , .......... . ,lda•t Stwt ..... II II 2S 1.00 I 00 St 00 New and Hovel! Amu\t t~n1111 I 11end$ wit!\ 1he1~ ea\, ~•ellies i'>•~c11nl' Covpr ealia roll of P~ll~' will\ d11wn cdl!OY. CM ~ nPI O•l(lV! .11 rtr hunny M~ ••, '"' •111Q ,,1rhrl\ Usr wur .,, l 11~1H• rll~"·' Pallt•n I }"-1 ·Jtttt lte~; IOI ~II lout Sl.00 101 eacll p~ttern Add 35t U th p~tttrn for ltrsl-t13SS a1rma11 an l hanrthn,% Send to Ahce Brooi..s Nt"e<l•ecr all Oep1 I OS O.wvP1101 Bo• 163 Old Chelsea Sta New Yori. NY 1001 t Pttnl Name Address Zip Pattern Number · MOR£ tll1n ever before! 200 deslcns plus 3 frff printed In· side NEW 1976 NEEDltcllAFl C4TALOG! Hu everythlnc. 75c. Cl'fflltt wltll S<1111rtt 11.00 CtW!tl 1 W•ntro-• I .00 1t1.,, nrtJ au11ts 1.00 Rlppl1 Ctt$111t -St .00 Stw + Knit tool $1.M llttdlQOllrt ltolt Sl.00 lower Cttclttt l oel 11.00 M•lrpht Crtclttt holl t .00 IHtMt Cro1h1t took t .00 lht111t llbcru1 took t .oo l111'41t Monty look }' .00 Co•pltt• Clft look t .oo CoMpltta AtJ11t111 614 1.00 17 "'n Aflhns 612 50' loell of ti Qulttc II '°' ..... ,. Qullt .._ 12 _ liOf 11 Witt ttr ltU, II -50' .... •f 1t Jlffr .... -., . . . --. . ~··· . . . . . . . 84R Dove Slret!l NEWPORT BEACH 752-0900 RARE '62 MASER A Tl 3500 GT COUPE ··•·•··············•··· RARE'62 MASER.All 3500 GT Coupe .............•.•••••.•• 73 Fl AT 128 SLC. nl'14 !>8 MG A <.:lau1r, new engine, 10.000 mi. flared lll'V'I. 1·n1ot, nn1ot miles, I w h t' c I s , ,I l f s T family SIOOO 1\73 ·11 1!.I REPAINTF.ll, "I.ow ' MGB 9744 rnags. /\ M FM t·a~~t"tH· ••••• •••••••••••••••••• new intcnor. looks hr;in1I ... ,., M'' II' 'T , h , ·I Aft 6, 9f>B·222.3 xlnt cond. loaded. heater, power steenng & 644-0962 brakes. air rond Look a t '67 12K, rbll eng Nu tirks. ---Ltus pnc~' Yours for im cllch. paint /\ 1 Sil '74 Blat·k Eldorado medtale delivery (Ltr Firm 654 ·7377 L-Oaden , hkt• new' l!l.IMJO Z74MMNl - -m1. New M 1t•hdm tire-, 8 '70 VW 7 pasbcnger bus. 645.2!)5.S $45 6. l(Ood 1·untl. $185<1 675 3125 Clw•rolet 9920 S Spds. nt·w lire:.. Bor roni wire wheels. fuel in )ection. aluminum body XJnt cond Very fasl' ZJ.000 m1. Too hol Cor my w if e Trad e f or .ometlune tamer f"an I.era, Lotus. Elc, or H Pvt Ply 675 3662 o-r 00-2200 5 Spds. new lire!>, Bor roru w1rl' whN'I!>, fuel tn jCct1on, aluminum body Xlnl c•ond Very fa~l 23,000 m1 Too hut for my W lf(• TraUl' rur 1onwthmg lamer l'an tera, Lotus. 1-:tc, or ~ ~ Pvt ply Ci75·3662 or Ol'W' 64~·7588 "° u u •Wirt W ~~ !\, ral'm~ ~recn. Slll(Ml rbe~l ·vw Sli bk Xlnl con•I 'ID Spider Looks an1I runs orrer m!> 2filili Must !.Ce Lo upprcc1a~ .................••••.. 'fi3 Impala 2 Or SS. Floor stick . 283 cnl! Fine mec-hanical comJ Good >.Int 8111 Chn:.Ll•n::.en ~ 9746 SXMl lr..lofr 751·8301 54(). 74R l , ~7 ·1596 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·35 Chevy 2dr Coach lOO'l ong 3rd ownr Ca II 547 .52:11 Xlnt investment · 51 Chcvy Stn. Wstn ChC'rry body. As is w 2 cng S600 631·3320 4 Whffl Dri YH Cl550 ....•..••.............. 1974TOYOTA LAHDCRUISER Roll bar. off road Ure!\, rsd.to. etc Low miles' (tl.5()LrHI ONLY $4495 HEWPORT DATSUH 8tl8 {)()ve Stret>t NEWPORT BEACH 833-1300 '72 CHEVY BLAZER 350 VH. nuto. full pwr AM/FM 8 track, many was Should be seen lo be apprec $4500 ~l 1424 eves. 7!>2·8924 days·J 1m or752·6246 i2 Suburban Carry·all. helter than new. PS. AC. hea~rs. SJ6..977 I 76 CJ7 Jeep. xtras. lo m1. SJ6. 7964 or 7 ~ l 6005 alt !>l'M Tf'WCb 9560 .............•••....•.. H' Servis Ulll be<! for 1"2 or "'• lon truck. Ask IOI(. ~2200 '71 Fiat Spuicr 75 t-ni: good cont! S2600• bl'sl nf Ami 9707 fer 642_·1_858 ___ _ ••••••••••••••••••••••• '68 8!>0 SPYDER Cnnvl il Audi lOOLS. A M tF M. Xlnl ('Ond $!150 Mom air cond. new r:tdlllli.. needs I a r g e r r a r good cond. S3SOO 49-1 IOU 673-0193 d ays or 675 ·8834 ._.__..._ e\l\'S wknds ~ 9727 ---...................... . IMW 9712 ••••••••••••••••••••••• SADDLEBACK BMW '77 BMWs HERE NOW BMW SALES '7 0 2800CS ·4 Sp . C%SSCFS>. Brand Hew '76 HONDA Cars OVER 100 To Choose From! UNIVERSITY Oldsmobile Honda Can • GMC Trucks 2850 llarbor Hl vd Costa Mesa ~o !1640 '73 CIVIC. MC. 4 spd Must sell. StlOO or bsl 5!>1·3144 AM's i2 ~·A,. (SJSRKK I Joq»ar 9730 •7 3 l OCS ·t1 ~P ·-·•••••••••••••••••••••• ~967KLM 1 Pnvate Party 73 Bavar1:t -<I sp .73 Jaguar XJ·6 Stl\'n <6lk>PPM I hlack Very dean $5495 ·74 Bava r111 1 ., P 006.JQO ~·2196 1348LFM > '7S2002 /\ .(0341 I '1$ SJOI A A (906M VG l SADDLEIACK VALLEY IMPORTS 831-2040 495.4949 CREVIER '72 XKE 2+2. Lo miles. xlnl <'ond . Nt•w tire!> Loaded' S58!15 Ph 494·6189 aft 6:30. Kannann Ghio 9735 •·····•······•········· 64 Karmann \.hia Huns perf'. rtJlt cnit. 2 bJrrel C'arh 12 \Oil sy::.tm . C B + radio. chrome whls. Sba111 cur W75, 645·11614 11rcs. c:oulrl uw puint Joh ...._·-t - -9-9~5 S350 Call 893 6460 :irter ~ CllMJ r~l 7PM ••••••••••••••••••••••• l!n2VW BUG HF.I> IN <.:OLOll Xlnt cond $1.XSO/bat GHEEN WITH ENVY' Call 67!>·13'W Kyn1 'W Opel GT Rtld N~w llres. n"w nrakes. ta~ Vol•o 977 ci(>('k /\ <>lC'ill for SllOO • ••• ••• •• •••• • •• •• •••• '65 MUSTANG 6 cyl sue". '75 Nova 2 dr, /\M/FM chrome eng. & wbl•. stereo lape. xlnl cond Many x l r as. S99" SJ4()(). Call 646·5967 an 646-8148or646-4993 (S2\JO below lnw hook I 642 6El95 f'6 t\adett Good l1res, new hallery. JOOOm1 on cng <.:leon body. t•cono trans Needi. brake r. &100 Mfi · lic>t9 Pone~ 9750 ....••••.•••........••• ·75 Porsche !Jl4 2 0. bop per metalhr, blk ml. magi.. llra ~harp. 'tras. rac·mg sll.:cnnl( whl, new i.pkr::.. rear rt'flcclors $6950. 842·44Ci4 day or 6.11·2647 eve '66 !)I lS. new n•d 1>aml . nrw black int. front ~pmlcr. rcbll en~ & 5 spd tran!. , ma~s. radials. .IUll. heater, /\MSW/FM. $6750 751 KOl!I Collectors ltrm. 1965 912. ~pd New eng, lruly a ~arnhre al $3600 or tr ad plus rash 4!Jfi 7ti20 o 496-1>432 Rolls Roy« 9 7 5 .•......•...........•. #l DEALER IN U.S.A ROY IRR CARVER r ROllS·ROYCl IMOJ•"'-" Newport llH<" ,.._ __ ...... ~ ClOSlO SUNOllYS '77 VOLVO HERE MOW 6 .JOpm ----:-J' ---75 Mustang II Ghia, aut.O. 71 Capnce. mm1mum bid air. P IS. P /B. !.!!Y $1000 /\ C. auto trans. great. Ul,000 m1. -., 963-8321. x21!1 City o l Call 752-79869-SPM Fountain Valley '68 Capnce Sia '4 ~n. xlnl runmn~ Nds brake job $4()() b<; t ofr !163 4807 · •MEW COLORS •HEWMODB.S Pnvale Party~ '69 Mustang M arh 35,000 mile car. 105 SIS95 or best o ffe r . 54.'1·2196 Monle Carll) '75 Super llugc :.uvmgs on ;111 re· clean. xlnt cond. AC. m111n1ng nl'W 761 & PW.$3895 045.7253 1~7 Muslang,$650. Dem0t. m slock Evs. 645 4560 r MARQUIS VOLVO fi8 Javelin 4 Spd, ma.is. MIS.SION VIEJO headers Sharp' $675 ·75 Mustang II hardtop. 831-2880495-1210 6735295 only 8.000 mi. $3,400. In _ ___ Chrysler 9925 minl cond. PP 644·9!>112 <>RA.HGE COUHTY •••••••••• ••••• •• •••••• ~~PM • VOLVO '76Conlova Beautiful, re OldsmobUe 995 EXll,USIVELY VOLVO ally loacled. Best re ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lar1otesl Volvo Dealer asonahleofr 7!>1 6263 1!114 Cutlass. old Poll~ mOrange County! ec;_t 9927 car. minimum bid of OUV or LEASE SJ.000 /\fC, auto lraru DIRECT ••••••••• • • ••• ••••••••• 963-8321 x219 City or FUi ·75 Comd. Zl,QOU M1. 4 Vly ~~, [;i-O::::~f f;:~~~ ~-!"'°-.-.-~.-.-.-•••••••••••• ~----. -----67~7060 '72 Dark gruo Sett 2025 S. Manchester -new ballery & brak Anahe.1m 750-2011 C011HMntat 9930 aotnmallc transm1.n ••••••••••••••••••••••• runs ~real. Mov1n1. must sell 536·'1961 . aak for Linda 1972 Pinto R~aboJr Nmosl new t1rea. o• w /green interior . Lo• nuleaae. one owner . Ui good (ondtlion. SlC!OO °' sn5 Call 962·345.J Minda -9738 Toyota 976 ioliliillilliilll best oHer . Call after• 1!171 Lincoln C-0upc f''ull PM or all day SatW'de power. ll•athcr uph , andSunday 545"8l5T. '76 Dodge 1-'I ton BIOO Pul ly lo~ded. lo ml, SSOOO. rash. m.3506. 898 7334. 76 Dodge 318 Trurk, full t.Jme 4 wheel dnvr. ~9·0726 '5 Dodge Sport Ven. V8, auto, new tires & shocka. clean , $1295. 646-8148 or 642·W8 '63 Van, Mag wheels, good paint & uphol.. runa iood. SJ 1.M>. M5--0789 9190 ••••••••••••••••••••••• MECHANIC wanla run alDI repai rable 01 wndrad ura. IMT-49115. ·GUSTAFSON l INCOl N ME.JICURY tfiROO 111.,Fh lltv<1 Hunlmgton R<•.1rh 84:' 8844 ••.•..•.•....•.......•. ················••••·• '74 Mazda RXJ Cou~ . .i spd. under wmty. very clean 8l7 ·3202 '73 Maida RX3 Cpe N~w eng, stl radial Ures, xlnt cond. 96H 633 -' '77 TOYOTAs HERE MOW . -. -.. Overseas DeUv~ &:rv1cc & parts now o~n on St\t 's I! lu •1 Cor YIJU r conVl'mence vinyl lop. new i.tcel belt -. cu radials & 1n 1m· 77 Pinto, won an ~t. marula lt• cond1t1on • suckahlf\. (467 BSX> Speclal al 646_·2982 ___ _ OMLY~75 '72 Runabout, 3S,OOO -. auto, R/H. l"OO. l!YT2 Cont Mark IV·Full 960·38'70 power i nc fi way ------- separate pwr seala ~ 9960 ..,._,... Always serviced by a H•••••••••••••••••••&. local dealer . (97SMX H > Special al OHlY S4S75 CA.U 1>42-0795 AJ~~~· Ope~Uy &Tn. 'W, tO PM LI 29'l9 tlarbor Blvd "H '76 COUGA.R XR7 Colita Meaa Com u wHh V •tl, 546-lfJ4 rJ• a utomatic. radlo & heat.er. power st"rlna • '74 Gold Duster. all mu. brakes, vinyl top. air 50,000ml. Xlntcood. ll cond • looklnic llOOd ! M5-M04 Youl"I for lmoiodlKl.AI d.i· i2 Fury 111. 53,000 mi. N I I v e r y . ( s • r eni. beaut. c:ood. ..re SA»3H$43713). aell. 116'75. 58l·TH1i; 5416. 831 ·242~ UUl X, • ... -~, ... ..... Arevalo, M.V. • '"' '73VEGAKAMBA AJr. a.weqlae: ... SUITS UM.In I ' H~tington Beaeh Fo1•ntain Valley A t'tti.rnoo11 N. l:'. Stocks VOL. 69, NO. 356, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ~ ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORN IA TUESDAY, DECEMBER 21 , 1976 TEN CENTS Council Rules Meadowlark No Nuisance By ROBERT BARKER Of tM D•llf .. , ... StiH Meadowlark Airport in Hunt '!pgton Beach withstood another ~hallenge to its existence Mon- ~ay night. Huntington Beach City Council m embers dedded, 6-0, that the airport is not a publlc nuisance and that a 320-foot runway ex- tension granted in 1970 by the city $hould not be revoked. The airport al Warner Avenue and Bols a Chica Street has been under siege from nearby res1 dents who have complained of noise, safely hazards and an cadences of buzzing or homes and a school. Monday night's council de c1sion followed pubhc testimony Nov. 1 a nd subsequent anaJy~1s by city officials. Councilman Ron Shenkman, who said that public mput at the hearing had no influence on his thoughts, declared he was unwill- ing to take arbitrary action against the airport. "l can't make a d ecision to re- voke the runway extension," he said. ''The possible litigation in· volved is not defensible and s hortening of the runway could cause more of a hazard. "Some day there will be an ac- OIL FLOWS FREELY INTO RICH FISHING GROUNDS NEAR NANTUCKET SHOALS Liberian 00 ·Tantcer Carrying 7.6 Mllllon Gallons Splits Under Assault by Waves Tanker Spilling Oil Liberian Ship Split; Nantucket Threatened NANTUCKET, Ma.-.~ lAPl A Liberian oil tanker spht in half amid storm y S<'aS tcxla~, and thl• Coast Guard ... aid 011 was flowing freely into th<' Atlant1C' at thl· ed1ite or nn<' or tht• world'., rlC'ht.•.,l fish.ng ground., No one wa" ,1hOi1ril lht• t ank..r that had c.1rr11·d 7 6 mlll111n gallons or hcavv 1ndustn~1l 111I "There 1s J lot of oil comani.: out." c;a1d Coa"t <;uard Cmdr Lynn lie in arh•r \ 1cwani.: th• wreckage or tht• l.1bt•nan t.mkN Argo Mer('hnnt Cmdr Barn Ch<imbcrc;, head ol the Coast Guard Slnke 1-'orrt· assigned to free th<' tanker. said with Hean that !Kl to 75 pcrcl'nl of the ship's cargo sp1ll<'d into th<' water "We'll sit down and look <it 1l again," Cha mbers srud . "If w t' ran salvage fi ve 1tallom;, that's five gallons that won't go an the water," he said Some 1.5 million gallons of th<' oll had a lready wa11ht'd into the ocean before the tanker split and it wa~ considered a m aJor 011 spill al that point. The lanker, which paled onto Coast \\eather Some variable cloud1· ness through Wednesday, but m ostly fa ir. Tem- peratures s ticking around the 70 mark, lows to about 40. INSIDE TODA l', Chicago'• "bou," RJcbord J. DoJey, died Monday after- noon of a heart attack. Political leod<'r1are1eeldng a new leader. See P.age A4. lnde~ the Nantucket Shoals seven days aiw. spht apa rt at 8:55 a m. S<>a!-. in the area, 27 miles southeast or :-.:antucket. were at eight reet and <''Cpt>ctf'd ln build to20feet The vessel's bow swung around at a 90 ·dei::n·e angle It was . 1noat. but the stern was locked an thC' sand The 640.root vessel fractured almost al midships. The break was JUSt a ft o f the forward superstructure "Seas arc hr<'akmg dean over the supers t ructure." Chambers !>aid "The s tern !>ect1on 1s complet~­ ISee SPILL, Pagl' A2 ) Consumer Price Rise Held Low WASHINGTON (APJ The• first decline an food pnces rn e1~ht months helped hold the over-a ll rise :n consumer pnces rn November to three-tenths of a percent, the same as m October, the ~overnment said today. At the same time, the govern ment said real s pendable <'arn ings a worker's take·homc pay after adjustment for taxes and inflation inc reased eight· tenths of a percent in November. the biggest monthly increase in buying power in more than u year The Labor Department s aid that for the 12-month period end 1n g in Novem ber , cons umer prices increased 5 percent, the smallest 12-m onth gain in more than three years. The favorable inflation report was certain lo be welcomed by economists in both the Ford and mcommg Carter adminis trations Petri Dishes Fowul, Blank A crat.eload of plastic Petri db - hes for growing germ and virus cultures, discovered at a Hunt· ington Beach fire scene five days ago was harmtess as authorities suspected, Jt was announced lo· day. The discarded laboratory sup- plies found in a scrap and junkyard operation at 7391 Talbert Ave. were thrown away as no longer good in July. as confirmation of their belief th::it inflation will not get out of hand again in the near future. The Consumer Price Index stood at 173.8 last month, mean· mg that a market basket of goods costing SIOO in 1967 now costs $173.80. Over-all food pnces declined two-tenths or a percent in Nov- ember The dcpartmcnt·s index of mortgage interest rates fell 2.1 perc ent. whi le househ old ser vices costs were down one· tenth or a percent. the rirst decline in that category since early 1971 The Labor Department said the prices of a large number of grocery items fell during the month, led by fres h vegetables, down 6.5 percent; pork. down 3.1 perceT1t; and dairy products, which declined for the first time since early this year. <~PRICES, Page A2 ) GOOD GRIEF! ONLV 3 SHOPPING OAVS 'TIL CHRISTMAS.' cident," he said. "Many condi· lions are not enforced and there will be violations by some pilots. ··we must be dictated by rules and r egulations. however, and the city does not have the right to take any action again s t Meadowlark." Al Coen, along with acting Mayor Ron Pattinson, said the ci- ty should impose a night curfew on flights. Pattinson, who was presiding in the absence of Mayor Harriett Wieder, suggested that landing liehts should be shut off to halt night operatfons. ln a legal opinion, City Al· tomey Don Bonra said the city does not have the power lo re- gulate the hours of flight from a privately owned airport within its boundaries. In a memorandum lo the city council, Bonra said tht• control of the airport a nd the u:.e or airspace is ves ted in the state a nd n ot in vario u s municipalities Police Chief Earll' Robitaille said that ther e also 1s a probl<'m of apprehending night flight violators. "H they arc going any faster than 60 miles per hour it's <See AIRPORT, Page A2> Anti-sex Suit Seal Beach Cops Settle Dispute By ARTHUR R. VlNSEL Of tlw Oa11, .. 11114 S~H Terms of a negotiated settle· ment of an anti-sex d1scrimina· lion suit fil ed by six women employes or the Seal Beach Police Department were an- nounced today by Chief Ed C1b· barelli. The settlement will cost thl' c1 ty of Seal Beach $55,000 m back pay and benefits due the women over the long-standing challenge HB Council Hires New Legal Aide By ROBE RT BARKER OttM D•lly .. llotMatl Huntington Beach City Council members voted 4 to 2 Monday night to hire a special legal ad· viser for the city's police depart- ment. The $27 ,500 position was ap· proved on a one-year trial basis to see how 1t works out, council members said. Police Chief Earle Robitaille said the position has been budly needed to deal with the complex- ities or present day law enforce- ment and court procedures which require an attorney's review. "The re are 220 pages nf legislative changes on my desk now as well as many new laws,·· Robitaille told the council. "I don't know how to move without a legal adviser ." Councilman Richard Siebert and Ron Shenkman criticized the proposal . "I am not convinced that we need the gentleman," Siebert said. Siebert said he believed the only reason for prior approval of the position in the police department budget is that 1t would produce re venue. Siebert said at the time he was led to believe that the legal ad· viser would work in cons umer (See ADVISOR, Page A2) of department employment prac· llces. A consent agreement reached by city, s tate a nd fed e ral negotiators was expected to be signed t oday and contained several key points. One e mploye fired for what Chief Cibbare ll i descnbed as suf fi clent cause r e lating to a criminal investigation will be back on the job Wednesday A second female employc Onea aek automat1cally comes to work Wednesday mornmg as a patrol seq~eant , her instant promotion guar anteed by the pact filed in U.S . D1str1ct Court in Los An geles 1he lawsuit was initially fi led by snc female e mployes in 1972 under prov1s1ons of st ate and federal sex discrimination laws. which they interpreted to mean they had hecn discriminated (St>e SUIT, Page A2 ) Carter Names 3 To Cabinet Jobs PLAINS , Ga . CAP) President-elect Carter today named three more Cabinet choices, in cluding a black woma n to head the Department of Housing a nd Urban Develop- ment. Washington attorney Patricia Roberts Harns was named HUD secretary. thus becoming the second wom a n and first black named to the Carter Cabinet. Another black, Rep. Andrew Young CD-Ga.>. previously was na med to the Cabinet·level posi- tion of a m bassador to the United Nations . Other nom inees announced at a nationally broadcast news con- ference were: Harold Brown, president of Caltech and a former Pentagon ofricial in the J ohnson ad· minis tration, a s De fe nse secretary. Ray Marshall, a University of Texa s labor economist, lo head the Departm ent of Labor There had been some question over Carte r's selection of a labor secretary. The AFL-CIO strongly s upport- ed John T. Dunlop, a Harvard economist, to return to the job he held brieny during the Ford ad· ministration. But Carter turned to Mars hall, apparently as a HOUSING SECRETARY Patricia Harris comprom ise choice, after some groups representing blacks and women complained that Dumop had not been a strong supporter of mlnority hiring Marshall , a labor economist, 1s ISee Ci\ BINET, Page A2) Bicyclist slogs aloni Coast Highway in Sunset Beach where high Ude caused minor flooding this morning. Tide pushed ocean waters across Coast Highway ln Sunset Beach and at some spots along Bolsa Chica State Beach, slowing traffic to a crawl. In addition, there were reports or some homes flooding in Sunset Beach and Surfside Colony. Tide peaked at 7 feet this morning, but is expected to drop to 6.8 feet by Wednesday. ' I ' A% DAIL y PILOT H/F Helpless. Claims Defended By TOM BARLEY Of ,,.. D••tr ,.,..,. \utt A Dana Point woman's claim that a drug injected into her by Dr. Ross Todd McClurt-made her incapable of resisting his sexual advances was defended t oday in Orange County Supenor Court testimony. Dr. John Kramer, a medical specialist called by the prOl>ccu· tion as a rebuttal witness, told the jury that the dosage of Valium administered at Dr. McClure's South Laguna office last Jan. 7 might well have had that impact on her powers to resist. Dr. M cClure. 55, is being tried on char ges of rape and ~ex perversion. It is alleged that th e ac t of sexual 1n · tercourse t ook place while he was treating his 22-year·old pa- tient for a back injury The defendant has denied the t ape allegation from the wit· ness stand. Ile admits having sex with his patient but claims she was a willing participant and her decision was not in· nucnced by the drug. Or Kramer who repeatedly tangled with defense attorney Leonard McRridc· during his t csti m ony, told the jury that Valium 1s oft<'n used in pre· surgery situations where the pa· lient experiences rear and ap· prehens1on He testified that Valium, used in lesser quantities than that used by Dr. McClure Jan. 7, will remove rear and ap- prehen~ion lo the point that the patient w1lh n ~ly accepts the surgical anesthet ic mask He testified that moraJ values may becom e less important to a person IOJ CClcd with Valium. And he cited many instances where animals lost' their will to rrsist and are easil)I tamed after Valium 1-. administered by tnjCCtion n r M t c 111 r I'. s pat I (' n t k st1f1ed that ~IH• "becamt• a ,.,,get able" ; . .rt Pr the Va hum was adm1 nisll'r<'Cl . She said she ''as dazt•d and d1son ented while the doctor rnpcd her <Jncl had ht.>r part1c1pJlC in an act of sex ual perversion The alleged v1cl1m said the cond1t1on per~isted after she left Dr McClure's office. She said she was stall feehng the effects of the drug when she reported the alleged rapt• to 11henrfs of· f1cers. Memberi. of the st.aff al South Coast Comm unity Hospital in South Laguna. ~here she was examined. tr.11f1t'd for lhe dt• fcnse that ~h<' appcMcd normal when '>he n·ported the incident and ~as tes ted for rape t•v1denct' by ,1 phys1c1an. l.a~yers for both sides said tht'y hope to nrfer rmaJ aq~U· m1•nts IJter tod'*> Judge Ken· neth E Lat• w i II then instruct his jury and i.end st lo dd1bera· llf'lnS Fro•Pa~Al SUIT ... .. ~.11 n~t Thl· lctt<'r or lht' law 1f rarr1ed out ~oulcl h;1vr requ1rc'<i Sc;il Bc.ich Pol1 r 1• l>1•p:trlm<'nl to namt' thrt'l· nf thl· \\Omen police r apta1n-., 1•\ 1•11 thouRh no vacan •IC" for rapt.11n l'Xlsted for males or frmoles Chief C'1bbart.<lh sa1d today he 1s definitely l<•ss than happy with the· agr<'cmPnt but ft'els all partH'S t'an accept and hvt' with It He sa id wryly in a mid· morning press conference that at could have been better but it could have been a whole lot worse. noting the approximately $125.000 expended by the city to hash out the matter was a frac. tlon or the $750,000 the city stood to lose al one oolnt. ORANGE COAST ". ""-°'• Co•\tO•lfyPHot """"''~l(l't l\tl'Wn n.~t'W>ffW\ """'' ''°""''""""""',,....°'~ (1)01nt Pvbh\t'ill"4 Co,.,,,o•l'llY ~4'ft-<f1t~\ ,,.. pw&lt\~ MOMA't tl"ltlttitQ"t '-'•0.t fOI' (~t· ,..V N•wOOff 8f"e<" Hvf'ltlfl11Qt91\ 8'°t<" '°""' t•1" V•ll•t hvtft'" \•OOi•O.W• Y6H•., •tlWJ \~ .. •"'Sovt"(041U A"""'""f0'0"-41-0• t'O" I\ e»vbti,'w"d \aturd•o ~ ~"' '""" t:::~~~'~':;~!t.~.·.:~.~'~ °' W.t• ••• ._ ..... _ ltrntelfftt •nd ... l.,.f' , .. ,.cw'" Yl<• ......... ~I •ftCI 0o-•• """- l -u W"91I Ed•I .. 'l'M-•A M .......... ""-"'''"' c ..... O.rl .. N.L-111(_,,,..NaH Att'\t•nt M.l"'fH»'r'IO !dit9'\ 11twr1 ••"i"' W.•I 0<•"90 twflly l<lllW H11nt1Mton hNfl Offtce ,,., .... .., .. -... 0 Mo1111ne """'"" ~ o It•"°·•-Offlce1 ~l:'.~ '::.-::· ~~ .. .:=!.""' S.Ooll-,Y•lloy HIOILAhrlloM 111 ... 01 ... ,,-.. Telephone (714)~1 C111llflff Adnrt111noM2·M1t ,,_,..,,.,o. ..... c..,...,c-..111 .. 540-1220 ~14111· .. ,. ()t-'°•" """"'"' .... °""' ..., '-,. .. , • .,r.,, 11tv\tft4:~. flllff•tM M•tttr t t H•t,-11ftt"'""'' M r•t" ft!W\I' .. r•~Hwc .. wtOt•v~ •••t:l•I .. ,,._", .. ~ tf t...,,...,._ ~tfi:.ft'1 ':01:::!~T:11:1•.:• t ~::. ~ ':. .......... , •• , "'•" .... -Mr, MlllU•r ••--u•-.,. l Tuesday, December 2t. 1978 A'1-W1rePf'M)IO THREE DIE IN SAN FRANCISCO YACHT CLUB FIRE Christmas Tree Spark Starts Blaze During Party SF Yacht Club Blaze Takes Three Lives SJ\N FRANCISCO IJ\P> -A fi re started by a Chri11tmas tr<'c during a gala holiday party destroyed the St. Francis Y<icht Club and. the fire deparlml•nt said, killed three person~. At It> a st 20 others were injured From Page 1t I SPILL ... I:. under water." said lle1n Soon after the break.up, the sta te of Massachusetts an nounced st was asking President Ford for disaster relief to help combat what was considered a major oi l spill even before the ship spht On Monday dead and oil· soaked sea birds started washing onto the Nantucket shor es. The :-.hck from the tanker then was reported to be more than 60 miles long and heading seaward a way from land. As seas and frozen s pray pounded the vessel, env1ronmen· tahsts were taking action to deal ~ith the 011. M assachusctts En· \'lronmental Affairs Secretary En>lyn Murphy told T he As· soc1atcd Press that pnvate con· tractors were being sought to stand by 1f the oil washed ashore. The Coast Guard said it has Jlready spent SS00,000 on at· tempting lo free the stu p The tanker was stuck nn sand near the western edge of Gcorgcs Bank for centuries one of the most prolific fishing grounds of the world The tanker's oil posed ;a new and dcadlv threat to Yankee fis- hermen trying to wrest a living from the sea off New England. T he oil that h as spilled and leaked into the sea has con· laminated some shellfish and t'nppled or killed thous ands of sea birds. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Russell E. Train said Monday the tanker threaten ed "a potential catastrophe of major propor· tions. "It poses a major risk lo of· fshore fisheries," he said. The 49 year·old club was in the front rank or internallonaJ yacht· ing, a virtual city institution where som e of the world's most pr<'st1gious class races were held Damage was estimated al :SJ()(). 000. The first body was found not Jong after the spectacular, five· alarm blaze was brought under control, and the other two were found as firemen s ifted through the rubble of the elegant club, fire offi cials said. Flames s hot more than 100 feet into the air as the fierce blaze consumed the 1,700-member club at the northwest comer of the Marina Green, on the edge of San Francisco Bay. About 200 persons were in the building when the fire broke out. Club Commodore Gene Harter !'itood outside as the building burned, stunned at the fate of the club Just days after its 49th birth- day. Firemen said the blaze broke out shortly before 9:40 p.m. in the (,..s haped club autidorium where the party was being held. It raged out of control for two hours before coming under t'ontrol, but by that time it was rated a total loss. The dead were not immediate· ly identified . At least one of the bodies, the first discovered, was reported to be badly burned. Trame headed for the Golden Ga t e Bridge o n Marina .Boulevard was diverted lo Lorn· bard Street. The fire was easily visible from the East Bay and many parts of the city. Thick smoke, a t'aved-in roof and "hot wires bouncing around m the lobby" hampered firefight· ing efforts. Firemen batWng the blaze Crom land were aided by the fireboat Pho~nix and the 82· foot Coast Guard culler Point Heyer. One of those who wa.'i at the party a few minutes before the fire broke out was Fire Ch.ieC An· drew Casper. He said the fire broke out In a nine-root tree de- corated with Christmas lb?bts. Woman Committed In HB Shooting A Huntington Beach woman who allegedly s hot her hwiband three times when he dedded to end their 30-year marriage was found mentally incompetent Monday and commltted to Pat· ton Stale Hospital for an in· def mite term. Orange County Superior Court .Tudre James H. Walsworth or· dered the commitment of Dorothy June Ellis, M, alter Judge Lloyd E . Blanpied Jr. closed an earlier hearing ln hJs courtroom by suspending crimlnal charge1. Mrs. Ellis, formerly of 8tr71 Tulare Drive, Huntington Beach, had been scheduled to face trial on charge8 or attempted murder and auault with a deadly weapon. Those charge!' were meet Sept. 8 when Sta.oley Raymond E1U1 54, w .. shot in the chest. chln and rllht 1bou.lder. He bas since re- covered from his wounds. Police caJled to the retirement condominium complex said they found the victim lying face down on the 1ldewalk out.side his apart· ment bulldlng. Officers who, rushed him to the ernergency room of Paclllca Hospital said be told them his wlfe shot him. They satd he was asked who shot him and responded with one word: "Divorce." Officers said Mrs. Ellil wu round lying on the bedroom noor' crylng hy1tertcally and repeal· lng "Where ls my husband?'' They said they found a .22· c.allber pistol lying on the mat· tres• ln the bedroom. A pre·hearina report sub· milted by tbct Oranie County Probation Department contaln!I the comment that Mn. Ellis was mentally upset at the time of the •bootln•· BB Pay Talks at Impasse Non-teaching employes in the Huntington Beach City (clemen tary) School District have declared an impasse in saJary negotiations. Don Slaven. prt'sident o( the employe group, Friday said 75 workers voted Friday lo go to im· passe proceedings after district negotiatiors Thursday refused to accept the bargaining unit's re· quest for a 6.95 percent across the board pay hike. The employe group, represent· ing the distnct 's 300 full and part· lime workers, voted not to strike Friday over the deadJocked pay talks, Slaven said. District negotiators are re- portedly offering the bus drivers, clerks, secretaries, custodians, maintenance workers and food service personnel a 4.8 percent pay boost. Sue Stockdale, an e mploye negotiator Crom the California State Employe Associa tion CCS EA), said her group has notified the s tate Educational Employment Relations Board <EERB> of the impasse. Mrs. Stockdale said EERB will send a mediator lo meet with employes and district officials lo determine whether an impasse actually exists. District Superintendent S. A. "Al " Moffett said it may be two months before EERB appoints a mediator to assess the situation in Huntington City Schools. No further negotiation sessions have been scheduled between employes and the district, of· ficials said. Fro.a Page Al AIRPORT • • adios," he said . One resident told council mem· bers M o nday ni g h t th at neighbors of the airport had been harassed by low flying airplanes. noise and obvious breaking of the laws. He said there is noise pollution and that the skies a r c too crowded. Tom Livengood, a represen· tative of the HOME Council, said that a number of rules had never been complied with by the airport. He said if the city didn't think concerns of a public nujsance were not representative or the people, it should take a survey. Gunman Kills Two LOS ANGELES <AP) -A gun- man apparently angered by a barroom argument s hot and killed John Mendoza, 49. and Ricardo Guardo, 41, and injured two others who tned to detain h.im. DEFENSE SECRETARY Harold Brown, 49 LABOR SECRETARY Dr. F. Ray Marshell CABINET CHOICES • • • acceptable to labor and can ex peel to have its support. But his appointment is a disappointment to AFL-CIO President George Meany and other union leaders who lobbied hard for Dunlop. Marshall, 48, specializes in minority e mployment problems and has served on a number of government advisory boards. J oseph A. Califano Jr., a Washington attorney who helped draft major social legislation as a key White House aide to President Johnson, was reported to be the favorite for the post of secretary of the Department of Health, Education and Welfare. A Carter aide in Washington su.ggested that the President· elect would complete naming his Cabinet WednesdayorThursday. Fro• Page A I PRICES ••• There also were lower prices for poultry, cereal and bakery products. processed fruits and vegetables and sugar. P artial ly offsetting these declines were beef prices, up 2.2 percent , a nd the price of coffee, which has risen steadily in recent months and is no more than 50 percent higher than a year ago. Much of the increase in the Consumer Price Index was due to higher prices for clothing, especially cotton items: physi· cian fees a nd hospital charges; auto insurance, and natural gas, which rose 2 percent. The Labor Department said the cost of medical care services rose 1.5 percent in November and was 11 percent higher than a year earlier. The Labor Department sajd the eight·lenths of a percent in- crease in real spendable earn· 1ngs left wor kers about where they were a year ago with respect to the buying power of their paychecks. Others who had been under con· sideration for the HUD P05t in· eluded two other blacks: Mayor~. Kenneth Gibson of Newark, N.J., and Richard Hatcher or Gary, Ind .. and Baltimore housing chief Robert Embry. Mrs. Harris is a former dean()[ the Howard University Law School here and served previous~ ly as ambassador lo Luxem· bourg. Carter also is expected to an· nounce later in the week that he h as chosen former Defens11 Secretary James R. Schlesinger, who was fired by President Ford, as energy chief for the new a~­ m inistra tion. Aides said he also will name his director of the Central In· telligence Agency, most likely Theodore Sorenson, who serve4 as a top assistant to Presiden~ Kennedy. Fro. Page Al ADVISER •.. fraud arrairs and provide money for the city. City Administrator Bud Belsito said, however , that r esponsibili- ty has been preempted by other agencies. . Shenkman said that the job description is vague. He said he believed the $27,500 cost was unrealistic. "Jt will be more like $50,000 per year when you consider a secretary and of- fi ce space and other require· ments," he said . Council m embers Ron Pat· tison, Ted Bari Bartlett. Norma Gi bbs and Al Coen voted to go along with the selection Mayor Ha rriet Wieder was absent. Pattinson said the city's police department is one of the finest in the nation. "We need preventive main· tenance, however , to keep it go- ing in the right direction," ht said. · Robita ille said the costs Benefit Nixed wouldn 't exceed $27 ,500. , He said that office space has already been provided in the police fa cility and that pool secretaries would do the necessary support work. Fired for Sex, Man Hit A.gain Robitaille added that the legal library in the city attorney's o(- fice would be sufficient for the ad· viser's needs. SACRAMENTO (AP) -A Los Angeles store manager who was fired for having sex with a secretary on the job isn't entitled to unemployment benefits, says a Superior Court judge. The ruling Monday by Judge Frances Carr reversed a decision by the state Unemployment .. Insurance Appeals Board grant· ing benefits lo James Claar. Claar was fired in October 1975 as retail operations store manager of Montgomery Ward's Eagle Rock store in Los Angeles County, a job he held 17years. Court records said Claar and Donna J . Young, a part-lime switchboard operator and secretary at the store, had sexual int~rcourse both on and off duty. When the affair ended, wit· nesses said, Ms. Young's work conditions became more difficult. and she said that when she com· , plained to Claar, he said her pro- blems we re negotiatble. She eventually quit the job. "In this era of concern with per sonal and job rig hts, no woman is r equired to or should be required to barter for her jOb with sexual consideration," Ms. Carr said. She also said sexual encounters "have a tendency lo divert one's attentions from the work for which the e mployer is com· pensating the employe." Claar 's application for jobless benefits was rejected by the state Employment Deve lopme nt Department and an appeals re· reree on the grounds that he was fired for willful misconduct con- nected with his work. The board reversed that ruling last May. The judge's ruJing halts the payments granted by the board. The position will be under th~ supervision of the city attorney but will be housed full-time in the police department. Officials said the city attome'Y must have control over leg!ll a~~ t1vities because of provisions ii). the city charter. The legal adviser position was attacked at a preVJous council meeting. Attorney Tom Whaling said that services are available through the district altomey's * flee. He added that costs of salary, logistics and benefits should be carefully looked into. Marie Buckland also said tt<e costs would likely go ovell $27,500. She called for a formal staff study and asked the council lo have second thoughts befor• implementing the plan. " r ~~a.fabulous christma.s gift ... lishLwii1~ht warmth with ~ loolG. lOO~coLlon ehe.11 w1Lh c.onLreetmg tart.an lining. in corduroy or brushed cot.ton.also ave\ lab!~ in aolid T'eV<lf'3\ bJe. mxie.1. made ibr us in E.ngla.rrl. 44 fashion island. newport center 844·5070 .. .. .. " . :; :1 .. ,l :t :! •• '.S . ' - , Irvine ED ITION '.foday"s Closiu~. N.Y. Stocks VOL. 69, NO. 356, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORN IA TUESDAY, DECEMB ER 21, 1976 TEN CENTS Residents Seek Tunnel Under Tracks A group of lrvine homeowners have told city aides they want a tunnel built instead of a bridge over the railroad tracks al YaJe Avenue. · Homeowne rs near the pro· posed vehicula r bridge site met with city aides recently to hear the city's tentative plans for the bridge. However, when they heard the details, they told city Construe· tion Manager John Brown they prefer a tunnel. "It's possible to bwld a tunnel, but jt would be extremely ex- pensive," Brown said. He said he could not estimate the cost of the tunnel, but said there would be a "significant di(- ference" between the two pro- jects. Brown s aid a conc r e te vehicular bridge would cost about $540,000. The state would pay 83 percent of the cost, leav- ing the eity a tab of about $75,000. Several proble ms are connect· APWl...-o ed with building a twmel, accord· ing to Brown, including: -There would be a ground water problem. r equiring almost continual pumping. -The tunnel would ha ve to be built beneath the eJUSting Oood control channel. -The city would have to forfeit all future opportunity lo have the railroad tr acks lowered using state money. The existing wooden bicycle bridge adJacent to the vehicular bridge site "ould have lo be taken down Homeowners are apparent!> concerne d a b out a bridge because they fear problems or noise and safely and believe il would be unattractive. Brown said he will wnte a re port to the trans portation com m1ss 1o n , r e fl ect i n g th e homeowners' opinions. The issue wlll be heard before the com- m ii;s 1on within t he next few months, hesa1d. Tanker Splits, .Oil Flows Free NANTUCKET, Mass. <AP) A Liberian oil lanker sphl 111 half amid stormy seas today, and the Coast Guard s aid 011 was nowing freely into the Atlantic al the edge of one of the world's richest fishing grounds. No one was aboard the tanker lhat ha d carried 7 6 m1llwn gallons of heavy industrial Oi i "There IS a lot of 011 comin.: out." said Coast Guard Cmdr Lynn Hem a fter v1cwmi:: th<' wreckage of thc l,1bcnan tanker Argo Merchant. Onea Blaek Cmdr. Harry Chambers. head of the Coast Guard Stnke Furcl' assigned to free the t.mker, S<Jld with Hein lhal 50 lo 75 ix•rc('nl of the ship's cargo s pillt.'<i 111111 till' water "We'll sit down and look at 1t again." Ch ambers said. "If "'l' can sah·agc five galloru., that's rive gallons that won t go in tht· "'at<'r. · · he said Some I 5 million ~allons of th1· oil had aln•;1dv washt'<.I ml1J the ocean before lhl• tanker :.pill and 1l was considered a maNr vii Carter Names 3 To Cabinet Jobs PLAIN S, Ga <AP > spill at that point T he tanker, which piled unto the Nantucket Shoals seven days ago. spht apart at 8:55 a.m. Seas in the area, 27 miles southeast of Nantu<"ket. were at eight feet and expected to build to20fect. The vessl•l 's bo w swung around at a 90-degr ee angle. It was afloat. but the stern was locked 1n the sand The 640-foot vt•sscl fractured almo:.t <1l m1dsh1ps. The break wJs just aft of the forward tSee SPILL, Page A2l Drug Claiin Backed by Specialist By TOM BARLEY 01 lite D•oly Pllo4 St•ll OIL FLOWS FREELY INTO RICH FISHING GROUNDS NEAR NANTUCKET SHOALS Liberian OH Tanker Carrying 7.6 Million Gallona Spllta Under Aaaault by Waves President-elect Carter tod ay name d three m ore Cabinet c hoices. in cluding a blac k woman lo head the Department of Housing and Urban Develop- ment. A Dana Point woman's claim lhat a drug injected into her by Dr. Ross Todd McClure made her incapable of resisting his sexual advan ces was defended to d ay in Ora n ge Co unty Supenor Court testimony. Witness Backs Prosecution In Heir Case The opl•r atnr 1 of ,1 Sant a An<1 motC'l leMlf1t•d tuda.> that ~hr sa~ one of pot ill<> chip hc.'ir John Scud der's ac·cu:.t•d k11lrrnrx•r ... with lhr mob1ll' h111nt• ust•d to .1hducl lh1· v1ct1m from .1 llunltnJ!ton BeuC'h parkm~ lot lJst .\uf.! 19 ThP cl;1\ of th1· k1dnapm~. dt• fend.1111 W1ll1.1rn Hu<h ~<'""''" 44, of Tu ... t111 . ~ "'' n·~1 ... tt•rt.'<I at Uwmotc·l Arul ~1tnc• ... , .Jn t,IJ('n filt·nn ~did tht· 11111lnr h11m1• ~a~ pJrkNi ,11 th1• m utt'( th1• 1IJ\ 11( St·udtkr' ahchll'l llln Pl.i< 111.: \\ ''"""" ~1l11 llw kul nap \ eh11 It• 11n lh€' <IJ\! r1f lht• bunJ,!ll'rl ca 1wr ~ii' an r ffort hy the proc;rc·ut inn lo c.how thal Wesson mc1 ... tt·rm1ndtod the hr1c.l &udder WJ.., kulnap<'d Aug 19 and held c.1pl1H• for roughly !1> minutes in th<> motor homt' until breakini:: fr1•1• from his captors 111 Fountain \' .11l1•v The nl'xt dny, W<•i;.,on and h1.., brot her 1n law. H1cki Dale Sellc.'rs. 21. ~t'rt• arrt'slC'd and char gl'd with tht' $2~.000 kidnap cons piracy Late Monrl ny ;iflt'rnoon. the mobilt' hom e's ownt·r lt'stificd in <See-KION1\ P. Pagt' A2l oranJ!a co .... • .... .C:_,, nOr ;-- \\ t"a th er Some variable cloud1· ness through Wednesday, but m ostly fo1r T e m- peratures sticking around the 70 mark, lows to about 40. INSIDE TODA 'W Chicago's "boss." Richard J. Daley. du~d Monday after· noon of a heart .attack Political leaders. are seeld~ a new leader. See Page A4 lnd~x I I Benefit Nixed Fired for Sex, Man Hit Again SAC RAMENTO <AP> A Los AnJ{eles store manager who was fired for h a\·ing Sl'x with a serrctary on lhe job isn 'l cnllllt'd to unemployme nt benefits, says a :)uperior Court j udge Th<' ruling Monday by Judgl' France~ Car r r eversc<i a decision by the ~ta lc Un em ployment Insurance Appeals Board grant tnJ{ benefits to James Claar cond1t1ons hecamt' more difficult. and she said that when she com· plained to Claar. he said her pm· blc ms wen· negotia tble. Sh e eventually quit tht• job. "In this era of concern with per sona l and job rights, no woman is require d to or should be req uired to barter for her job with s<'xua l cons1dC'ration." Ms. Carr said Washington attorney l'atnc1a Roberts Harris w as namc<l llUO secretar y, thus becoming the se<.>ond woma n and fi rst black na med to the Carte r Cabinet Anothe r black. R<>p And rew Young < D-G a J. previously was named to the Cabtn<'l·lcvcl poss tion of ambassad or to the United Nations. Other nominees announC'cd at a nationally broa dcast news con ference wr re· Harold Rrown, president or Caltech and a former Pentagon offic ia l in the J ohnson ad mini s tr a ti o n . a s Def e nse secret ary -Ray Marshall. a University of Texas labor economist, to head the Depa rtment of Labor. There had been some question over Carter 's selection of a labor secretarv. HOUSING SECRETARY Patricia Harris Or. John Kram er, a medical specialis t called by the prosecu- tion as a r ebutt al witness, told the jury th at the dosage of Valium administ ere d at Dr. McClure's South Laguna office last J an. 7 m ight well have had that impact on her powers to resist Dr McClure, 55, is being tried on charges of rape and sex per vers ion . It is alleged th a t the a c t of sexual in ler coursc look place while he was trea ting his 22-ycar-old pa- tient for a back injury. The defenda nt has denied the rape all egation from the wit- ness sta nd. lie admits having sex with his patient but claims she was a willing participant <See SEX CASE, Page A2 ) ('laar was rircd in October 1975 ,,., retail operations stort• manager of Montgomery Ward 's Eagle Rock store 1n Los Angelei; Count}. a Job he held 17 year!> Court r ecords said Claar and Donna J Young, a part-lime s"1tch board operator a nd St'<'ret ary al the store, had sexual intercouri;e both on and off duty She abo said sexual encounters "ha ve a lt'ndcncy to divert one's allcnl1ons from the work for which the e m ployer 1s com pensating the <'mploye ... Claa r's apµhca t1on for jobless lleneri~ wm. rt'JCC'll'<l b) the stale Em pl oy m e n l Develo pme n t Department a nd an appeals rc- rcree on the grounds that he was r1rcd for willful m isconduct con· nected with his work The AFL·CIO strongly support ed John T. Dunlop, a I larvard economist. to retum to the job he held briefly durrng the Ford ad ministration Bu t Carter turned to Marshall, apparently as a compromise choice. after some groups r epresenting bla<"ks and women com plained that Ouniop had not been a strong sup1>or1cr of m inority hiring Motocross Course When the affa ir ended, wit nesscs said . Ms Younj:!'l> work Lion Country Menagerie Spirited Off Unknown thieves stole a large hippopot a mus, two m ediurn li ons. one large rhinoceros and one medium tiger from Lion Country Safari, Irvine Police re· ported today. But there was no cause for gener al alarm. The man most concerned about the theft is Harry B. Heath of Mission Viejo. who told police the stufred animals were lifted from his con- cession s tand at the wild animal park. Heath, 39, said he discovered $36 worth of toy animals missing Monday morning. The bigger beasts weighed between 20 and 25 pounds, he said, and the smaller critte rs each weighed five pounds. The concessionaire said he was also missing a $1S calculator. Import Ban Okayed BONN, West Germany (AP) - West Germany has 8MOWICed It would refrain from exporting nuclear technoloj(y that could boost the spread or nuclear weapons. ) Eyed at New Site GOOD GRIEF •1 ONLV 3 SHOPPING DA.VS 'TIL Ct-4RISTMAS .' e ... 0 't to•fUt111tef fe•h•t• Ma rshall. a labor economist. 1s acceptable to lahor and can ex peel to have its support. But his appointment is a disappointment to AFL-CIO President George Meany and other union leadt'rs who lobbied hard for Dunlop. Marshall. 48, s pecializes in minority em ployment problems and has served on a number of government advisory boards Joseph A. Califano Jr., a Washington attorney who helped draft major social leg1slation as a key White House aide to President Johnson. was reported lo be the favoril~ for the post of secretary o( the Department of Health, <SeeCABfNET, Page All T he bicycle motocross course may h<• completed as soon as mid-Fehrua ry a t a new l1X'alton in Woodbridge, an lrviM c1ly nf ficial said today Assista nt City Manager Puul Orady said a proposed agree- ment between the city and th<' Warmington Development Com pany will come before the city council next Tuesday If approved by the council. Warmington would bc~in con struction early next month and would require about six weeks to complete the bicycle obstacle course. Bra dy sa id 'The new s ite is localed in <1 J>ark bordered by Jeffrey Road. Barra nca Road, East Yale Loop and the San Diego Creek. He said Bui, That's the Way Her Cookies Crumble One Angel's Christmas spirit was thoroughly doused Monday. Angel Anast, 15. of 25761 Cervantes Lane in Mis- slon Viejo, plugged the hose into her waterbed to fill it, llgurtng she could bake her Christmas cookies a t the same time. with 350 gallons of water -about three times it's normal size. ll had broken the bed frame but. amazingly, was still intact and holding the waler. Firemen helped hook up the hose to siphon the water out. They left, thinking everyting was fine. An hour later, howev •r , the bed burst. The cookies turned out fine, as firemen later Firemen were called bacJt to the home and tesUlied. The bed. however, was a bit overdone. spent two hours vacuum.ine about 1so gallons or Miss Anast said she "kind of foreot" the bed water which had spreMI through the house. while she was bakin«i. When she finally re· Miss Anut's father, Zacharia, was starting to membered, she found the plastic ~attress balginf wonder If bl• dauehtu Is, in fact, an anger. ~~~~~..._........~ tht• motocro~~ course would he placed bC'tween the exisling San Diego Creek and the pl anned re· aligned creek. Brady s111d the> course will be the same size a nd design as the one planned for t he site in the Edison Company right-of-way. between the r uil road tracks :i n.I th<' Smokl'lrcc Townhomcs o'f .Jeffrey Ro11d Construction began on thal mot ocr oss co urse sev e r a l months ago, but was halted when Smoketrec hom eowners com- plained to lh<' c1ly that tht'y were unaware or the project and that it was too closc lo their homes. Many claimed that when they bo ug ht th e ir h om <.'s, the salesman for the Warmington Developme nt Company did not tell t he m the course would be built, but promised instead a greenbelt area with picnic tables and barbecue pits. After numerous hearings and committee meetings. the Warm mgton Development Company agreed to pay the <'ost of moving the project to a new site Witnesses Mute DUARTE (AP) -Police s ay some 600 persons s aw 18-year-old Frank Garcia stabbed to death in a fight at a Duarte dance ball, but that none or them could or would give a r eliable description or Garcia's ktller or a clear account of events leadina to the stabbing. ' A Z DAIL y PILOT Tuesday December 21 1976 Crashes 5 Die • m Mesan Listed Among County Victims 1-·1ve personl>. including a 24 year-old Custa Me1>a mun, dJed as a re!>ult of 1nJuries received m the past 24 t.our:-in :-.eparate Orange County traffic accident&, accord ing to coron e r 's in· vestigalors. Jn add1t11.1n lo the dl'ath this morning of (; ngory L ynn Jordan, 24, of 871 Sonora Road, Cost a M esa , the following fatalities were recorded by the coroner· -James S. Morgan, 13, of 855 N. Woods St., 1-'ullerton, who was fatally inJured Monday afternoon while r1d1ng his bicycle acrol>s the lnterl>ection of Com · monweallh Avenu e and Richmond Street 1n Jo'uJlerton. lnve!llt~ators said the }OUth was struck by a truck dnven by Roger l\1 crrill , 25, of Huntington LABOR SECRETARY Dr. F. Ray M arshall DEFENSE SECRETARY Harold Brown, 49 f "r ont P a g t-.t l CABINET • t:d111·.1t11111 and \\>\·lf.11 t• • \ <'.•rt••r a1dt• 1n W:1-.hington 'u.:.,:t•stc•cl th.1t ttw l'rC'i.ld<'nl l'll•ct \lo nulrl t'Om plt>ll' naming his C.1b1nt1l Wf'c1111·<1d..i-. nrThur.,dJ' r )\her-. \lo ho hMI hN•n unrlc·r cnn .,11l1•rt11lnn fu1 lh1• lit 'I> po't Ill C'ludNI I"''' nth1·r hl.H"k' :\1,n or-. Ki>nn••th I; 1h,11n 11( '\1·"'·•rk NJ .u1d R1ch.1rct JldtChl'r of <tan Ind .mJ A;1lt1mnr('h11u .. 1n~<'h11·r Hoht·rt Emlin \Ir-. ll.1rri' 1, .1 form1·r rk,1n of lht• """'ard 1·n1\'rr,1tv LJ"- "l<'hool ht•rf' nnrl 11ervPd pn•\ 11111' I'. J:. .1mh,,,,,t1l•1r In l.U\l'm hourg Carter also l.'i <'Xpectt'd to 11n noun<'e latrr an th<' week that he ha:-. r ho:-.t•n formrr l>efense Secretary Jam('s ll &hlesmjler. who was fired hv Presu1enl Fnrd, as t'ncq~y <'h1('f fnr the nt'w ad· ministration OAANOE COAST DAILY PILOT n,,O,.tfllOt (••"' Ot •1Y,... ... ""''"-" ri!llH, ~ biMdlf'w-Mf'W\ ,.., .. ,, lhfl" "'*''"•',...0'.t")" (N\I ~&t""'f\IQ C•.nn•"• ._.,_, .. ,. -0•1 airt" ••• ovb~• •"•" tiAo"Cf•• '"' lvQ'-',,,,.." • , Co,•• ,..,. ~·*00'' " •• ,"' ... "". "O't"W'f ,... fl'I .. ~ l41f\ V• "'" ~'" "" '• tOl•I:\• • V•H•• ..... '...,..... ~-~ ~" ,,tt'lt • ,._, ... ,_.. l'tft._ •• .,. I ·-n \ OV&t•"Wd \•lytdAt\ .,_.. ~f\ t .. 1••·....-•D•I Gou,._. •t\ "\(I f'I'• I 11 ))"' Wir\t DtY ~""' (~t• Mf 1.t (•• 10,,,.,..,,,.. ••Mtttlf WH4 Pt•,•Of'nl •"d Pvf'o ~· JH11 Ill ("'Nt vu, p, • ._,_"' .,,.,., y.,..., •• Mot~' '"'•""'" ....... l cm0t '"•"'''. ,....,..,.. M .. n•Q l'llO &d••or 0.t .. \ N \.ff\ ltlC"t ... II' fll-*tt Al\Ul•nt M.en•QlnQ (CfllM~ OfflCH Co\tlM•H ))0W•\tt.V\tr,.,.t l.tOV"'• 9,.,C.~ I It• Olt,.,.yn \''"' HV"'''~'""" 8t1tfli , ,.,~~~"~!,.•Ard \.-Odlf!0..0 Vttlfy JUOI ~ ... , AoeO •t \•ft OltOO ,,,.._,.., Telephon• (714)642-<'321 CIHalfled Adv•rll1lr19 642 &e78 \Adtl'•°""t' Vt ll•• ,_.,.~nm " 511·8310 ''"""'•""'"""'fl'" 4'5-ot'° lteacb, abortly before 3 p.m. Merrill WU not clled. -Cheryl Lee McMllleo, 23, or Crestline, who died ui Anaheim early today when the car in which she was a passenger was l>lruck broadside by another car in an intersection. According to Anaheim police, the auto that collided with the car d ri ve n by Jerry Wayne Wool eridge, 27, of Anaheim, sped from the scene of the 2:25 a.m fatal acddent at Harbor Boulevard and Katt>lla Avenue. Erma Harlan, 87, of 728 E. Washington St., Orange, who was fatally injured shortly before 8 a.m. Monday morning a few blocks from her home. Police said Mrs. Harlan was crossing Chapman Avenue al Shaffer Street in a crosswalk when ahe was struck by a car. The driver o( the auto was identified as Tad Lonergan, 43, of 17400 W Irvine Blvd., Tustin. Timoth y DeGaynor, 20, oC 11431 Reva Drive, G<irdcn Grove, who died Monday in UCI M~1cal Center three days after the motorcycle he was riding in Anaheim was hit by a car. Already dead as a result of the early Saturday morning collision at Ninth Street and Katella /\ve nue in Anaheim was a passen ger o n DeGaynor's motorcycle, Donna Lynn Con- nell, 34, of Garden Grove. Driver of the auto that rear ended the motorcycle was arrest· ed at the scene and has been charged with felony drunk driv- ing as well as felony vehicular manslaughte r. SF Yacht Club Blaze Takes Three Lives SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A fire started by a Christmas tree during a gal a holiday party destroyed the St. Francis Yacht Club and, the fire d epartm ent said . killed three persons. At least 20 othe rs were injured. The 49-year·old club was in the front rank of inte rnational yacht· ing, a virtual city institution where some of the world's most prestigious class races were held. Damage was ~t1mated at $.300,000. The first body was found not long after the spectacular, C1ve- alarm blaze was brought under control, and the other two were found as firemen sifted through the rubble of the elegant club, firl' officials said. Fro m Page ,, l SPILL ... superstructure. "Seas are breaking clean over thl' superstructure," Chambers said. "The s tern sN·tion is complete· h under waler." said Hein. · Soon after the break·up, the s tate o f Massachuset ts an· nounced it was asking President Ford !or disaster relief to help combat what was considered a major oil spill even before tho ship split. On Monday dead and oil- soaked sea birds started washing onto the Nantucket shores. The slick from the tanker then was reported to be more than 60 miles long and heading seaward away from land . As seas and frozen spray pounded the vessel. envi ronmen- talists were laking action to deaJ Wlth lhe oi I. M assachusetls En· vironment al AHairs Secr etary Evelyn Murphy told The As· soc1ated Press that private con tractors were being sought to stand by 1f the oil washed ashore. The Coa st Guard said it has already s pent SS-00.000 on at · tempting to free the ship. The tanker was stuck on sand near the western edge or Georges Bank -for centuries one of the most prolific fishing grounds of the world. The tanker's oil posed a new and deadlv threal to Yankee fo.- herml'n tr~ m~ to wr<'sl a li ving from the sea off New England The oil that has spilled and leaked into the 'Ca ha~ con tjmmated some· sh<>llf1sh and crippled or killed lhou!>ands of sea birds l ' S Environmental Protection \gcncy Administrator Rus11ell E Tram said Monday the tankl'r threatened "a potenti a l catastroph(• of m ajor propor· lions. "It poses a major risk to of· fshore fisheries," he said. The record oil spill from a tanker was more than 29 milllon gallons from the s upertanker Torrey Canyon after it ran aground off England on May 18, 1967. and broke In half. A spokesman for Gov. Michael S. Dukakis, who has said he still supports offshore oil develop- ment, said on hearing that the Liberian tanker 11plit oCC Georges Banlt. "Unfortunately there's not a hell of a lot we can do. "It's mostly a matter of work· ing with the Coa st Guard, trying to contain or clean up the spill," Alan Ra y mond , Dukakis' spokesman said today. He said the state's function would be mostly to clean up the oil if and when it comes ashore. Protesters Ignored SAN FRANCISCO CAP) - Demonstrators, proleatlng the treatment of American prisoners in Mexican jails, picketed lhe building houslna the Mellican consulate but were motUy ii· nored by paaseraby. The pro· testua Monday were reported to havo included some ol the parents ot Americana now ln jalla south of the border. Flames s hot more than 100 feel into the air as the fierce blaze consumed the I, 700-member club at the northwest comer of the Marina Green. on the edge of San Fran c isco Ba y. Abo ut 200 persons were in the building when the fire broke out. Club Commodore Gene Harter stood outside as the building burned, stunned al the fate of the club just days a fter its 49th birth- day. Firemen said the blaze broke out s hortly before 9: 40 p.m . in the L·shaped club aut1donum where the party was being held. It raged out of control for two hours before coming under control. but by that time 1l was rated a total loss The dead were nnl immediate- ly ident1f1ed. At least one of the bodies, the first discovered, was reported to be badly burned. Traffic headed for the Golden Gate Br i d ge o n Marinu Boulevard was diverted to Lom- bard Street. The fire was t.•asily visible from the East Bay and many parts of the city. Thick s moke. a caved-in roof and "hot win•s bouncing a round In the lobby" hampered firefight· mg efforts. Firemen battling the blaze from land were aided by the fireboat Phoenix and the 82· foot Coast Guard cutter Point Heyer. One of those who was at the party a few minutes before the fire broke out was Fire Chief An - dr ew Casper. He said the fire broke out in a nine-foot tree de- corated with Christm as ltj?hts. The ater Trip ' Tick e t s S till Await Patrons Tickets are still available for two bus trips with Irvine Ex· curs ions to the Ahm anson Theater in Los Angeles. Eleven tickets are available for the fin1t trip, Feb. 12. to see "Lon~ Day's Journey lnlo Night." starrinf( Deborah Kerr and Charlton Heston. Tickets arc SS.SO Another trip will be made April 16 to see "Merton of the Movies" starring Rich ard Thom as. Thert! are still 36 seats available for that trip, a lso costing $8.SO. The round tr ip bus Care for each trip Is $3 a person, plus the $8.SO ticket cost. To make re· servatlons. write to Irvine Ex- cursions. Inc., P .O. Box 19575, Irvint:', CA. 92714. Irvine Excursions is a non- profit group formed to promote cultural activities in Irvine. FrolR Page Al KIDNAP •.. Superior Court Judge Richard Beaco m 's courtroom th al Wesson and Sellers had rented the motor hom e from him a few days before the kidnaping. Neither defendant attempted to disguise their i<lentily when renting the motor home for a trip to the Colorado River. Steven Burgett of St anton testilied. Earlier in the day, Scudder's wife, Valerie, identified the voice on a tape played In court as the voice of a man who called her and demanded $250,000 ransom. The tape voice was Wesson's. It was a recording, of a business phone conversation not related to the kidnap plot. However, Mrs. Scudder did not ld entify the ransom caller voice as Wesson's . She described jt as a "male voice, pleasant. not rude, not angry. not hurried and well controlled.·· But Mrs. Scudder told the jury. the caller told her that should she fall to have $250,000 ready for de· livery by tbe next day her husband would be "eliminated." , O•llr ,.11e1 s .. 11 ,..,.,. B~king the Tide Bicyclist slogs along Coast Highway in Sunset Beach where high tide caused minor flooding this morning. Tide pushed ocean wa ters across Coast Highway in Sunset Beach and at some spots along Bol!ta Chica State Beach, slowing traffic to a crawl. In addition, there were reports of some homes flooding in Sunset Beach and Surfside Colony. Tide peaked at 7 feet this morning, but is expected to drop to 6.8 feet by Wednesday. Pay Hiked to $42,500 CVSD Chief Gets 6.5 Percem Increase Jerome Thornsley, superinten· dent of Capistrano Unified schools !or 18 months, has been given a pay boos t to $42,500, cffec- llve Jan. 1. Dr. Edward Westberg, school board president, announced the raise Monday. He said the 6.5 per· cent raise puts Thornsley's salary on a par with other supcnntcn- Fro• Page Al SEX CASE. • and her deeision was not in· fluenced by the drug. Dr. Kramer who repeatedly tangled with defense attorney Leon ard McBride during his testim ony, told the jury that Valium is often used in pre· surgery s ituations where the pa· tient experiences fear and ap· prehension. He testified that VaJ1um, used in lesser quanlllies than that used by Dr. McClure Jan. 7, will rem ove fea r and ap- prehension lo th<' point that the patient willin gly accepts the surgical anesthetic mask. I le testified that moral value~ may become less important lo a person JnJeCl('d with Valium And he cited many instances where animals Jose their will to resist and arc easily letmed after Valium is administered by injection. Dr . McClu re's p a ti e nt testified that she "became a veget able" after the Valium was administered. She said she was dazed and disoriented while the doctor raped her and had her participate in an act of sex- ual perversion. The alleged victim said the condition persisted after s he left Dr. McClure's office She said she was still feeling the effects or the drug when s he reported tne alleged r ape lo sheriff's of- ficers. Members of the staff at South Coast Community Hospital in South Laguna. where she was examined, testified for the de· fense that she appeared normal when s he reported the incident a nd was tes ted for r a pe evidence by a physician. Lawyers for both sides said they hope to offer final ar$(U· ments later today. Judge Ken· nelh E. Lae will then instruct his jury and send it to delibera· lions. dents of Orange County unified school districts. Thomsley was hired in April, 1975, and assumed full lime duties July 1. He currently earns $37,500, but the understanding when he was hired was that he would earn an additional $3,400 each full year. Thornsley, 42, came. t o the ThieFs Haul Just PeaJWts lnBurlgary A burglar who apparently was doing his Christmas shopping broke into an l rvine residence Monday and got away with a peanut machine and a one·pound can of peanuts -both wrapped as Christmas presents. According to Irvine police, the thief was not s atisfied with just the gilts and went upstairs to the bedroom, where he took a S300 portable color television !>el. Police said the theft occurr<.'d al 19 Skipper Lane, the home of Steven Roco L obosco. The Loboscos returned home lo !ind the front door knob twisted opt>n and the rear s liding glass door left ajar, police said. The peanut machine was valued al S50 and the can of peanuts was worth $1, according to the police re;:>ort. Thieves Get Artifacts In Irvine Thieves broke into a recrea· tional vehicle s ales otrice in Irvin e and stole two glass showc ases containing rocks and arrowheads valued at $1,000, ac- cording to Irvine Police. The theft occurred either Sun- day n ight o r Mond ay at Travel and, the RV sales offi ce of Louis E . Wysocki. Wysocki, who lives at No. 2 Rue Ducal, Newport Beach, is cur- rently on vacation in Hawaii. An employe, Angel Sanlistaban of Huntington Beach. discovercrl the showcase missing from the or. Cicewall. Santastaban told police• each showcase was worth $500 and was three and one-half feet by two feet in size. Capistrano U nified dis trict, which has a student enrollment of nearly 15,000, from the Yucaipa Joint Unified School District in Riverside a nd San Bernardino Counties. Thornsley's raise compares as follows to recent hikes of other south count y unified district superintendents: "Dr. Robert Sanchis, superin- tendent o f the 3.250-sludent Laguna Beach Unified District, received a six percent raise. br· inging his salary Crom $34,000 lo $36,040 . -Dr. Richard Welte, Sad - dleback Valley Unified superin· tendent, turned down a raise last year for administe ring the 16,700-student district. lie cur- rently earns $38,000. A possible salary boost has not come up this year to date. -Stan Cor ey. superintendent of the 10,SOO·student Irvine Unified district, was given a 10 percent pay hike this year , rais ing his salary from $40,000toS44,000. Dr John Nicoli's salary was boosted this year 12 percent, br- inging 1t lo $43, 154 for adminil>ler- 1ng the 26,000·l>ludenl Newport· Mesa Unified district YoWige r As ks De ath Ruling LOS ANGELES <AP) -State Attorney Gene ral Evelle J . Younger has asked the slate Supreme Court to mochfy its re- c.en I rul i n g that declared California's d eath penalty un· constitutional. Younger said Monday in a peti- tion for rehearing that the court's Dec. 7 decision was too broad m declaring all mandatory death sentences invalid FUMES BLl'll CAFE AT PIER OCEANSIDE C/\P) -Fi re hit the Oceanside pier t>arly today, destroying a landmark cafe that stood at the west <•nd or the struc· lure for more than 30 years. The flam es and :-.moke were seen ror a mile or more. The cause of the fire. confined to the Pier Cafe, was under m· vestigation. ~~ fa ~~a bulous christmas ~ift ... l1~ht..we.t~ht warmth w1tI1 g<:x:>c:i lool<s. lCO'~ cotton she.11 wi l,h contrestmg lartan hning incorduro; or brushed coLLon.aloo avai l abl<i in sohd reve.rn\ ble. mxie1. made lbr \J!l m Eajlard. @)~o@@J~~ . 44 faalion Island, newport center 844-5070 \ . ~ \ T u e 8d ay'ti CJoaing P r ices ~' ' ,..,.., P 1 "Jo' c~... <', -•-A-&" 1"41 IO I U .tl ... -"' ....... " 7 '7 '" " llK 11' 10 m 10•, • " All't..CM9 1 S )I IOH· ~. '"'""' ·1 10 u no ,," 1 ASAUO -'D 111 ~ + •. ATOlnc 2' • S• •111 + ~ 4*L..-I•• HI 41\,0-~ M....Clv 'Cl IJ J1 I\. AdmOI (M s II 1 • .. ~ Admti ••• 60 1JV.-'• AdrniNlllll• 1 ,, ••• .. v. -~'11 10. tr A}• 1ti.. + '• Mi""'-I I ~ t ~ 3' > t I• ~.,.c,o " • 11 111 ~ n • ,,, "'• '• All41e11llK H •• ),. Air Prod 1014 3)1 31 • ' ' Alr'l>nFrt 60 II S• U • Alrcolnc 1 1s 1 14 30,._ ,,. 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Cltlro.• •...,Clll(IM4111 •I<>< .. ~Hlwnyt\ '""" •*OOtl.o Oy IM N•llOl\al Aa-t•tlo<UW S..."'il!.• Du lo" IAO lftUl .. 1 .. . '• . . ... • .. , '• '> . :I Tuesday Ducemt>er 21 1976 ' l /N DAIL v PILOT A J :J We're Slipping Will U.S. Lose Own Ad Game? By MILTON MOSKOWITZ ln the beginntng there wiu . . well •. advertising. Even in 1776, when our Declaration of Independence was sJgned, there was advertising in Amen ca, to the lune of about $200 000 a year, accorda.ng to g uesstim ates made ln 1976 by admen who want to have the benefit of a lona tnacti· tioo In relation to the population of 1776, then about 2 million, that meant an annuaJ advert.iSmg eitpenditure of 10 cents a pe rson o r course 10 cents bought much more ln 17'16 than 1t does today And the admen didn't have to worry about coming up with $60,000 for 30 seconds or telev1s1on tame N ow a d a y ~ th<· weight of advertising placed agains t everv American annually 1!. $140. a qua ntum leap Money Tree from the 10 cent IC\ cl of 1776 Jt adds up to $32 billion a year. At least that 1s the total m sight for this year, a record. WHEN IT COMES TO ADVERTISING, the Uruted Slates remains No I m the world The nearest any country romes lo us as the S4 btllion expenditure made by the ad- vertisers m Japan ('Ibree Japanese companies -Toyota, Datsun and Sony spend clm.e lo $100 million on U S ad· vcrt1smg but lhat counts as part of our tot al ) Only fo ur other countries rn the world -West Germany. Bn t.11n, France and Canada -a re "blessed" Wlth an advertising volume Ill excess of $1 billion a year The United States 1s first not only m absolute volume of money spent on advert1s10g but tn per capita expenditure. The latest survey done by the New York based lnterna- t1onal Advertising Association (JAA) 1s based on 1974 fi gures and shows U S advert.ismg to be equivalent to $125 a person a year Following us are Switzerland ($115), Rermuda ($85), Canada ($75), Denmark ($70), Australia (S65) Sweden ($60), Netherlands ($55) and -surprue - Finland ($.55). THE SURVE Y COVERED ONLY COUNTRIES m the non Communist \\orld and bringing up the r ear was Ethiopia, ~ 11 h a wretched expenditure or a mere $20 a person :i ) ear I low can they expect to sell anything there "1th such llm1d1ty" They should send a study m1ss1on to Finland "here the per capita expenctiture exceeds the com- parable levels m West Ger many, Bntam or Japan While we arc still the dommant power in advertising, 1.·ven here a s 1n other economic areas, our leadership posi· hon 1s weakening T\\enh five H'ar.> ago US ad expenditures accounted for 75 percent of the \\Orld total FI FTE E N YEARS AGO v s. ADVE RTISING account4 cd for 60 pcrc cnt of lhl' tolal F1\i e Y<'Ms ago the United Stales accounted for 58 per· cent of the world advertising volume In 1974 when world advertising expenditures we.re ("Stlmated by the lAA at $19 b1lhon, we accounted for 54 per- cent of the total WHAT'S llAPPF.NlNG IS THAT countries a ll over lhe world have economics that are growmg more rapidly than ours As they do they begin lo lust for consume r goodies, and as soon a:. th<'y do that they require the services of the adman This 1s w hv Amencan advert1smg agencies have put down satellite offlce.s throughout the world It wall not be long, then, before there w1ll be more ad- vertising done outside of the United States than m it That may be the bcgmnmg of the end for us Beaten at our own game Outad\ ert1scd Market Rebounds From Loss String NEW YOR K <AP> -The stock m arket swung upward today reboundmg from the dechnes of the sessions Trad- ing was active The Labor Department reported that i•s consumer price index ros<' 0 3 percent last month, mat cbmg the restrained pace of October Some forecasters had been look- ing for an upturn m the key measure of inflationary trends . The data also showed the largest increase 10 more than a year m workers lake home pay, alter adjustment for in- fl ation Wit h that news providing some support, the m arket worked its way ~radually ahead through most of the day, and then packed up momentum m the last hour. 'The Dow Jones average of 30 stocks gamed 5 98 potnts to 978 39 Ip~ and Do1~11• StocblnThe Spotlight I CA!>'>IC •b f' ) T Al(ntl f4 '' J COOl>ln<l plO • r-~•ro1~ \ Am lnv1 •t o CM ISi r •• , 1 M rro<N ...,, 8 fiut,,v,. Wt\t 4' W A l'M'U :~ ~~~':1? 0 l\tv1n ltt(f 11 NoNG • •'le>! ~; ~::;','!:/ 16 ICN Pn••m 11 ()((lllF'f-1 wl 11 \Ambo\ R\I i• ACl4m M illi\ 10 AmfAm Iv N•rn"' 1 C....llllRll'f ? !;oM\I. l Mt l'>ulh Sii 4 !)qMI (I) S Amr on ~V\ & 'IPOIO MA'l I l"heln \ )Opl I WomtfCft • (nlMllw of 10 Eloc.I A\\.o< 11 USRllv Inv 12 (;ePw '..,,.,, 1J P'ilnG • ••1>• ti 91MtQ I 1V :: ~~~~ ~? '1 Arrt'OH' pt 18 Colo<n 1"'1 I' C~P I MOid 10 {BS pl UP~ / II\ 1 • ~ , 11. 10 • I • I• I• 1111• ". ""'• 1)\a 11 I '. ·~ . I& ' .... "" DOWNS l'9\I 1 ) ... 11 •· ,. ' l • 1>to ~8 17 n1. 1 • , . •• •l ) . 11• 41 II '. , .. )~ "" lH .. Uo 1' I\ < llU 11 7 l" \Ir U) I , lln ton • vu / / I > t}p II > Uo I 4 If UC\ ' .. t \JO 'I , ... uo l I llP • & NEW YORI( (API S•I•• 4 p rn P'it~ er><I ""' cMn~ of In• flltN>n mc>\I ,,. tlvfl-,..,,.w Yor~ Stoctr E 1c1Wl'lQt 1\MM\ 1•.i<J•no n..llon•llv Al mot~ IMn \I Or rtO..n ir..t ••• 100 73"' + " Va £1Pow 311 llOO 11 .... + ', C •O•I HOl<I 111 1100 tt<o • c;..n Molo•• 111 200 "'"'"' I'm Ttll.T•I i10700 631>• •1 T••Aro Inc 1U 700 lf>'"•-.. c;.-n CIK lSl 100 Sl-', IC ,.,O" SS 10 900 40 t .a-, ""'I~ El"' 71' 100 11 It Am ~~ ?17 Jl)O 1'Vo ~ ', <;ony Corp ?01 100 9 h 11. F ,.on 111 )()() Sll4 + 'II D<>•rtCo IM 000 ll No•\l•P'# 11>1000 19"11 • 'o NAI S.m><n 1 S• JOO '6 • tie • """ ''" hh • Up tt \ Uo ti .. • \lo n 1 • ur, t. 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WnPoc Ind 6 116 •, WnPubl 9(Jt> 6 J6 W\1111on I 4ll 10 1t7 •, WnVnpU60 1 '• W..Vnof & I '. WnVn pl! S4 IJ W.•10£1 ., 6 1011 "' Wst•aro I 1090 t6 " W.ybt9 I lt. I • Wt~''" 80?$ •ae • ~y(pl 180 l7 '• ~!Fr 60• 11 U --•IP11 Sii t 11 -IP11pl & ISO -IPilOI S 1$0 W!>ttlOOI 10 14 "11 Wttti.C....\ I• • u W!lltC lllC J • WlllttMOI 12 'tt ~:::~.! )01t "~ Wlc-n 111 10 1 i. Wlfbdl~I l? • II Will-CO\ I • 0 ) Wll~O l!t I JI W1nnD11 1 M 14 44 wi-.... .H ., • ~aguna/South Coast EDITION .\l·1-._•rnou11 ~.\·. S•o~ks VOL. 69, NO. 356, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, DECEMBER 21, 1976 TEN CENTS Wonian's Claim.s Backed • m Sex Case By TOM BARLEY Of ttw 0 •11• ,, ... ~" A Dana Point woman's claim that a drug injected into her by Dr. Ross Todd McClure made her incapable of resisting his .sexual advances was defended t od ay 1n Ora nge County Superior Court testimony Dr. John Kramer, a medical .specia list called by the prosecu lion as a rebuttal witness. told the jury that the dosage or Valium administered at Dr. McClure's South Laguna office last Jan. 7 might well have had that impact on her powers to resist. Dr. McClur e, 55, 1s being tried on charges of rape and sex perversion. It is alleged that lbe act or sexual in· tercourse took place wlule he was treating his 22·year·old pa- uent for a back inJury The defendant has denied the rape allegation from the wit- ness stand lie admits ha ving sex with his patient but claims she was a willing participant and her decision was not in fluenced by the drug. Dr. Kra mer who repeatedly tangled with defense attorney Leonard Mc Bride during his testimony. told the Jury that OIL FLOWS FREELY INTO RICH FISHING GROUNDS NEAR NANTUCKET SHOALS Liberian OU Tanker Carrying 7.6 Miiiion Gallons Splits Under Assault by Waves Pay Hiked to $42,500 CUSD Chief Gets 6.5 Percenl Increase Jt'rnm(· Thorni-IC'y, '>up~:rintcn d ent of <:ap1~trano Un1f1e d sc·hnol-; for HI month.<,. has Ix-en f'tlVl'll ,1 PJY boo~l lo $42,500, c•ffC'r t1v1'.lan I Dr Ed"' .1nJ \'-\•Mlx·ri:. \t'hool boJrd pre .... 1d.·nl . ;innounct'<i lht• ra1..,e Moncl.n lit• ~;itd the 6 S per t•t•nt 1 atse· puh Thnrn,ley i. ..,,iJ._tr\ cm ,, fhl r '"' h ot h<'r ..,up<•nnten <frnh of Or.111~1· County untfwd 5t l<iool cli<.tr H'l' Thorn'I"' "' ... , h1rt.-d in Apnl 1975. and ""'uml•d full l1mt•dutw.., Juh I II <' rurrcnll' 1•dl"Jl\ S37.500 hut lht• un<kr,landtni! "'h<•n he· "''a' htn'ft "'a<, thdl he \\Ou ld Ntrn an .111<11t111n.tl SJ ·100 ('.1< h full \e:.ar Thnrn<.l c•\. \2. <·.1mC' lo the· ('ap1'>tr.1no l 111f1ed d1!>lrtcl. "htr h h:.i -. <t .;tu<l<'nt t.'nrollm<•nt of nearly 15.000, from th<' Yucaipa .Joint Uniht>d School D1.,tnrt in Hivcrs1de and San Rt.•rnardmo Counties ThornslC'y ·, raise rompares as follows to rt-cC'nl hikes o( other south rounty unthl'd district superintendents "Dr Rnb('rl Sanch1s. supenn Or an;!~ Coast .... 4 . ;-~ lendt>nl or the 3.250-s tudcnl Laguna Bc ;.1ch Unified District, rccc1v('(J a six percent rais<'. br m~mg his sala ry from $34,000 tu $36.040 Dr Ric h ard Welte. Sad dleback Valley Umfi('(J superin tcnctent. turned dOIA'll a raise last )car for ad m1n1s lcrang lht· 16,700-studenl distnct lie cur rently earns $38.000 A possible * * * salary boo~l hns not coml.' up lh1s veartodall'. · Stan Con·y. s uperintendent or tht> 10.500-slutknl Irvine Un1f1t•d chstricl. wa:. given :.i 10 percent pay hike thl' y<:ar. rat!-iing his !>&lary from $40.000loS44.000. Or Joh11 N 1coll":. salary w..is hoostt'd this y<'ar 12 Jl('rccnt. hr mgmg 1t to $43. J 5q for aclmmi...tc·r tn~ the :?6,000 studl•nl !'ic1Aport Mesa Unifi ed dl\trart. * * * CUSD Chief Picks Two New Principals Capistrano Unified Schllol District Superintendent Jerome Thornsley announced Monday selection of two new pnncipals. both of whom arc women pro· moted from within the district. Maureen Redfield. C'urrently assistant principal a t Dana Hill s High School in Da na Point. will be princ ipa l of Shoreclirrs Junior High, cur renlly under construction in San Clemente. Clemente , Capis trano Beitrh, Dana P o int . San Juan Capistrano. Laguna Niguel and part of Mission Viejo Supt Thornslcy said sC'lcction of lhC' two women followed S<'rcening of more than 100 can- didates who had applied from throughout the state /\ six-member scrc<:ning com mittcc interviewed a number of qualifie d applicants before choosing Mrs . Redfield and Mrs. Barr. Thornsley said (See WOMEN, Page A2) Va lium is often used in pre· surgery s1luat1ons where the pa tient experiences fear and ap- prehension Ile testified lh:.at Vahum. used tn lesser quanl1llc~ than that used by Dr McClure J an 7. will rem o ve ft·ar and ap prehen:.1on to the point that the pallent w11l1ngly a ccepts the surgical anesthetic mask. He testifi ed that moral value:. may becom e less important to a person injccti.:d with Valium And he cited many instances where animals lose their will to r esist and arc easily lamed after Valium is administered by mJection Or M rClurc 's pati e nt testifi ed that she "became a vegetable" after the Valium was administered. She said shl' was dazed and disonentcd while the doctor raped her and had her participate in an act of sex- ual perversion The alleged victim said the condition persisted after she len Dr McClure's offlc('. She said she was still feeling the effects of the drug when she reported the alleged rape to sheriff's of- fi cers. Members of the staff at South <See SEX CASE, Page A2> Tanker Splits, Oil Flows Free NANTUCKET. l\lass IAPl A Liberian 1111 tunkcr sphl in half amid stormy M~a:. toduy. and lhl' Coast Guard said oil was Oowm~ frcel~· into lht• Allant1r al lhl• c.>dge.of one of thl· 1!.orld 'ncht·~t fis hing ground' No one wai. abourd th(: tJnkt>r that had c:trrit•d 7 Ii m11l1on g;.illons or hcav~ 1nduslnal 1111 ··Then• 1s a lot of 011 coming out.·· sa11J Cm1'>l Guard L'mdr Lynn Hein after v1l'w1ng the wreckaJ:e of the Ltlx•nan tanker Argo Mt>rchant One a Blaek Cmdr Barry Chamber-;. ht•ad or the Coast Gu.i rd Strikl• l"urcl• ass1~nC'd to frCl' the tanker. s.11d with fll'tn that 50 lo 75 f.f'r('(•flt 'r the ship s cargo s pilled mto the wat<:r "We II stl down and look al 11 <1ga1:i. Chambt•r!\ said "If \H' can :.al \"age fan· g:.illons. that 0!> f1H' gallons that "on'l go in tht· 1!.alc r. 'hesa1d SonH• I 5 m 1 Ilion gal!ons of lh1• 011 had al ready washed into the OC('an before the tanker spht and 1l was cons idered a major Oil Carter Names 3 To Cabinet Jobs PLA I NS. Ga . !Al'J Prcsidenl·c lcct Carter today nam ed three mor<' Cabine t choices. including a blc1t.·k ... oman to head the Oep·1rtm1•nt of Housing .tnd l 'rban DeH'lop mcnt Washing ton attorney Patnc1:.a Roberts Harris "'a' named llUO secretary. lhu~ bcC'om1n g th<.• second wom an :rnd fir:-.l l>lack named to th<' C<1 rtt.'r Cabint•l Another bl ;.irk . Rep /\nd1 cw Young ( D-G a l. previously wa:. named to the Cubinet lt•vcl po:-1 hon of ambas~ador to the Un1lcd Nations. Other nominees announced al a nationally broadcast nC'ws con ferencc were · Harold Brown. prt•sidenl of Caltech and a formt•r Pl.'nta).(on offi c ial in the• .Johnson <HI· minis tratio n , a s Ucfcn!-ic secretary. Ray Ma rshall. a University or Texas labor ('COnom1st. to head the Department of L:1bor There had been l>Ornc que'it1on over Cart~r.:s s c·lecl1on of a lahor secretary. The A Fl.-CIO strongly supporl c.-d John T. Dunlop. a 11;.irvard economist . lo r eturn to the JOb ht.' held briefly durtni! the 1-'ord :.111 ministration But Carter turnto<l to Marshall. apparently as a compromise c hoice. after som<· ~roups reprcsC'nttng blacks and women complained that Uumop had not been a s trong supporter of minority hinn~ Marshall. a labor economist. 1s acceptable to labor and can ex· peel to have its s upport. nut his appointment is a d1s appotnlm1•11t to AFL-CIO President Gc1>r~c Meany and other union leaders who lobbied hard for Dunlop, Marshall , 48, specializes in minority employment problems and has served on a numhcr of government advisory boards . Joseph A Califano Jr . a Washington attorney who hcl~d HOUSING SECRETARY Patricia Harris draft major social legislation as a key While House aide to President Johnson. was reported to be the favorite for the post or secretary of the Ocpartment of Health. Education and Wclfar<' /\ Carter aide m Wai.h111gt11n ~uggcsted that the Pre!>t<l<·nt dect would completl' naming his Cabin<>t WC'dncsda y or Thursday Othe rs who had been under con· siderntmn for the HUD post in· eluded two other blacks: Mayors Kenneth Gibson of Newark. N . .J.. and Richard Hatchl'r of Gary. Ind . and Baltimore housinll{ chief Robert Embry Mrs Harris 1s a former dean of the How ard Univers ity Law School here and servetl previous- ly as ambassador to Luxem- bourg Carter also is e xpected lo an· <See CABINF.T. Page A2) spill at tha t point. The tanker. whic~ piled onto thl· !':antuckct Shoals seven days "~o. spht apart at 8.55 a.m. SeH.S 111 the area. 27 miles southeast or Nan1ucket. we re al eight feel and expected lo build to20 feet. The '·cssel's bow swung around :.at a OO·degrec angle. It was afloat. but the stern was locked m the s and. The 640 foot vessel fractured almost at midships. The break. "'as JUSl aft of the forward <See SPILL, Page A2> Dana Point Youths Held In Thefts Laguna Beach police believe they have cleared up a rash or Arch Beach Heights burglaries with the arrests or 16 and 19-year- old Dana Point youths. Property valued al more than $5.000 taken in four burglaries on Ensenada. Cortez and Oro Str eets has been recovered. Police Capt. Neil Purcell said today. The two youths were arrested Friday after police sealed off the hilltop community when a resi- dent called officers to report a pair of m en draggi11g articles from the darkened house of a neighbor. Police officer Linda Phillips. s potted a car matching the d escription given by the citizen as it cam e down Nycs Place from Arch Bea ch Heights. A search of the vehicle turned up no properly. llowcver. police recovered several credit cards belonging to one of the burglary victims when lhc 16-year-old youth was searc hed, Capt. Purcell said. Stephen Howard Crabtree, 19, of 33895 Sal ver Lantern. Apt. 12, Dana Point, was booked on suspi- cion of burglary. He was due to be a rraigned in Laguna Niguel Municipa l Court today. The juvenile was detained and then released to the custody of ~outh authorities. Although police searched the Arch Beach lleights for hours that night, officers were unable to locale stolen property. Police using the department Jeep combed undeveloped pro- perties and back land trails Satur- day. Later after questioning the sus- pects . officers said they ur- covcred a cache. Televisi11n . stereo equipment. rings, walchct> and cash were localed at the dead end of Unlboa Street. the goods were wrapped In blankets , buried and then c o vered with tumbleweeds. \l'eath c r Some variable cloudi- ness through Wednesday, but mostly fnir. Te rn peratures slicking around the 70 mark, lows to about 40. Mrs. Redfield ·1' appointment is effective April 1. when s he will begin preparation for the school's opening in September The seventh and eighth grade school wll~accommodatc about ~ studen . Wendell B. Lo.,ell Although initially only four burglaries have been cleared up. Capt. Purcell said there were numerous others wher e the m ethod of operation closeliY matched that used in the four. l~SID E TODA"t' Chicago's ··bo~, .. Richard J. Daley, died nday,afler· noon of o he rl attack PoW1col leoders ore &Hieing o new leader Sre P'lge A4. lnd .. x At V-S.rvlc• A tr lrm.tlomlleO It L.M.loyd AU C..111.,.,.1. Al CIHtlfl941 1 .. 12 Qmlo 1> l>'Mt•-I> DN•ll llttltH Al ...... , . .,.... .. f:Mft1elft .... "' Al .. 11 "-• A!2 U ...,... C"I"' II Corene arr, assistant prin· c ipal at Vie jo Elementary School in Miss ion Viejo, was named "principal designate." Thornsley said elementary school principals will be rotated in February, and Mrs. Barr will be assigned to a school at that time. The Capistrano district will have a new elementary school opening in San Juan Capistrano in Stplember, bringing the num~r of schools for kin· dergarten through sixth grade toH. The two appointees will be the flrst women principals in the sprawling Capistrano d us trict. which takes ln 20 percent ol Orange County's land area. The dhtrl ct serves San Past Police Chief Dies Wendell B. Lovell. a clubhouse caretaker who helped bu1ld the new city of San Cle!mente and rose lo chief of the city's police department, died this morning ai San Clemente General Hospital. Lovell was 72. Cause of death was bronchial pneumonia. Services were pending. 1..-0vell, of 1220 Estrella. was chief of police from May 15. 1936 until Aug. 7, 1939. when he leftthe rity to work as a civilian security guard at Camp Pendleton. which wos then being bulll, to help with l.be war effort He rejoined the city in 1943 as a police officer and was appointed captain two years later lie re tired March 28. 1969. Born March 30. 1904 in Nashville. Minnesota, Lovell's family moved lo Deluz in San Diego County in 19\0. As a young man. Lovell worked at the Irvine Ranch. He came to San Clemente in 19'l8 to work for Ole Hanson, the city'a founder. Together lhcy helped develop the clly's park systeD\3. Lovell joined the City of San Clemente ln U31 where he worked in the streets depart- ment. Late r he served as a clubhouse caretaker and part· time police otrlcer until his ap- pointment in 1936 as C~ief ot Police. Lovell was one ol the last sur- vl vlng m e mbers of the Ole Hnnson organization. He wore a commemorative ring up to his death. The ring was given to Lh<l$e who helped build the new city. Lovell is survived by h.ls wile Edith, a daughter Betty Jo Cates, ol San Clemente, three grandchildren and bis sisters. GOOD GRIEF .' OPtllV 3 SHOPPING DAVS' 'TIL CH R.1 ST MAS .' AZ DAILY PILOT L/~C Tuesday December 21 1976 TV Not a Monster CUSD '{~acher Defends Mediwn By ANNE COOPER Of IN O••lt Pti.t St.off Telev1s1on 1:.n·t nccc~sarily bad for ch1ldn:n, 'accorc.ting lo Ka'tin Lynch. readmg 1>pcc1alii.t with the Capistrano U111f1cd School District "I often s ay l 'll like to run my reading classes like 'Electric Company' or 'Sesame Street,• she said "There would be much less problem hole.ling lh c O•ily P1I01 St.tff Pf\Oto DEFENDS KIDS' TV Reading Specialist Lynch children's attention. Actually. quality television offers the classroom teacher some pretty stiff competition " Television ha1> become a favorite "h1µp1ng boy 11mon~ educators attempting to explain declining test scores in recent years. Mrs. Lynch :>aid no one re11Jly knows why test score:. appear lo be dccltning ur C\'Cn whether D•lly Piiot "•ti Pl>oto TEST SCORES NOT LOW Curriculum Chief Hester Three KKK Marines Warned of Threats By t he J\ssodated Press Three Ku Klux Klan members in Manne un1rorms say they tried to warn nf growing racial tensions at Camp Pcrnlkton but without success. "There were threats upon us that they w<·r<' go1ni:i to kill us.·· s a i d o n c , P f t' . D <' n n 1 s L . Campbell. rerernng to black Marines without giving dt•tail~ The views were g1vt•n at a pre· tnal hearing Monday for one of 14 blacks charged wtth con- spiracy and a ssaulting a hair dozen white Mannes 1n a bar r acks r1 ght Nov 12 Three of the1 r pretrial hl·anngs have been com· pJeted. Campbl'll ~as transferred to another M;.inne bast' after hh name was reported found on ·' hst of alleged Klan members in J room near one 1n wh.tch the fight took place Weapons and pro paganda also~ ere found Called back to testify "1th him were Pfc. Charles V Smith and Pfc. Ronnie Harper . both of whom said they also h\.•long to the KKK. The black-. knnr\..rd on a bar racks door dnd asked for "Chuck · · S n11lh te-.t1f1ed. '1\s far as I kno\\. no onl· on that noor couhl be named Chuck hut mt• ·· CABINET • • nounce latc•r 1n thl' "r<'k that hf' has c hosen form1·r Dden<,f• St>crE'lan .J Jmr't H S<-hl('<;mgcr who was rarc>d hy J>re'1dt>nt Ford a!i encrJity <'h1ei fur the n('w ad m1111~tr11t1on Aides s111d ht• .1bo"111 name his director o f 1 h1· <'t•ntr61 In tclh~rnct· AJ?f•nr\. mMl hkeh Theodore Sorrn<.on, ~ho 'if'f\ 1'11 as a top .1ss1 .. 1 ant to l'r t•~lfl<'nl Kennl'd} Gunma n Kills Two LOSANGELESCAPI Agun man apparently an~ercd by a barroom argument shot and killed John M enrlola. 49, and Ricardo Guardo. 41, and mjured two others who tried to detain Him. OAANQf! COAST t. sc DAILY PILOT TM 0rltft9' (OA\t D•il'f Pilot -u~ wf\1(fi1 +'lot~ 0.M-tlt"-Nf'.-, Pt•\l 1\,,..,,l.,ti\if"f'dt.. .... Or~ '*"'t Puf')ln."·~ Comn•~, ._..,~tf'ld•t.....,.,., PovfM1\f\4lft Mol"W'I•" IPtrnuQf\ f r,,.,_w fM· (O't• ,..., ..... wpiott lt••<ft "4Wfl\tl~Qil'll ftif.C:fll ,_.....,. t•ln VeH•1 ""'"• '•ttdlrtMtr' V•ll"Y •"'1 ~ &f'°'f\ ,.._,.tlli(fH \t 4,,,.qer.-0-,,.,...l,.O• tM#t I\ DUblt~ \Al1.1•04t\ ~ ~--'#\ f'- Of'l'WtNt p..,bh,fllli~Q •'•"t '' •t )JO Wf." l•l' \tr"'t Co\t• *'M~ (•llf')f'n·•"...,. ..... ., .. -Ptt\tOfl"lt •f'ld Pv'h•"""'' , .... c • ...,. V•ct ""'''~"t •flid (ir"'t '"'' ..... ~•¥" Tt111.mullt••¥11 , ,,,,0, , ... ,....,. M_,,..... M•MOttwa~•* °'*"'"M LM• •1cu~f' N•" A\\f\f•'tf ~~Q1"1 l•tor• Laaune l ••ch Office nM GlntMyre "-'"t M.tltl"f Addtt\\ P 0 lo• ..... tl6)1 OfflcH Co•I• "'-•• UO Wt\I .. ¥ ~lrHI HtJlf'ttl"41tOft &fjit~ 111,S 8t.c,f\ 8ov'f¥A•d ~l~fll V•l .. y tOOt l• PAI .-o..i et Wn Olfll!QO ,,...., • ., T•lephont (114)642-4321 ClaHlfled Adverlltll'IQ M2·M18 Laguna leech All°"'"'"""'': Ttlt phone4M-t4tt ,,_ .... , .......... 4ff.otl0 lie and Campbell said they car ried a knife in full view, and llarper said he wore a po<·kcl knifl', but all thret• said the blacks ne,·cr carnt:d knives. as far as they knew. The attuck m which six whiles wen' clubbed and stabhed with sere\\ drivers w<.1s adtwllv meant ror them. the three Marines told a M;iranc in vestigating officer Earlier. lhl'Y said. they were thrc;itcnc.'<1 by blacks The three said they were ad- mitted to the base Klan den a few months ago. Harper said he had attended about 10 meetings of the Klan unit al Camp Pendleton wtuch drew an average of 50 persons Smith said he attended "six or seven" such m~tmgs with only eight present As the hearing "as being ht·lc.I. a group of 32 persons calling t h e m s e I ,. c "' l h c.• Com m 1 l t cl' Agamst Racism demonstrated outside the base's main gate. Thf'y passed out literature 111 sup- port of the uccu~cd blacks f'rOlll Page A I WOMEN .•. Mrs Redfield. 43, has been a counselor and administrator with the Capistrano district san<'e 1963. She is a graduate of the Uni vers1ty of Ilhno1s and holds a master 's del'(rec from San Dieli(o Slate Umver~1ly Mrs Barr. 31. ('a me to lh<' Capistrano c.l1str1ct an 1971 as an intern resource teachl·r She· 1s a graduate> of LTl..A, holds a masters degree Crum l.<tVcrnc College and 1s \\ork1ng on J doctorate at l;n1ted Stale'> In ternalional Un1vers1ly in San Diego f'rona Pag~ A J SEX CASE. • Coast Community ltospital in South Laguna, where she was examined, testified for the de fense that she appeared normal when she reported the incident an d was tested fo r rape evidence by a physician. Lawyers for both sides said they hope to offer final argu- ments later today. Judge Ken- neth E. Lae will then instruct his jury and send it to delibcra· lions. Carpet Thief Get 90 Days A man whq admitted stealing six Oriental carpets valued at $7,340 from a Dana Point home has been sentenced to 90 days in Orange County Jail and placed on three years probation. Superior Court Judge James H . Walsworth sentenced Leroy Palmer, 20, of Upland, alter be pleaded guilty to charges or grand theft. Palmer admitted entering an Interior decorator's home al33892 Marrlana Drive and stealing the rua• while the owner was asleep ln bed. He was arressted by lheriff'a officers. any meaningful decline exists. Testing procedures have changed over the yt•a rs, and compansons oC scores may not be valid, :.he :,aid. The Cap1i.trano c.tistrict 11> at tempting lo s trengtl1cn its in- structional and testing program through Project LEAP (Learn- ing Experience Appraisal Pro- gram ). "Our lest scores arc not low in any sense," said Dr. Harold Hester, the distriel's director of curriculum "Still, we feel there is room for i mprovcment. We are getting more specific in identify. mg objectives, m keymg content to ob1ect1ves and m asses:.mg performance " A key component or Project LEAP 1s a reading support system to provide mdtvidualiied r eading instruction to all Capistrano school children, not JUSt to those "1th reading dif- f1cult1 es. "We tend to think ur reading as the ability to unlock meaning from a set of written symbols," said Mrs. Lynch, "but there is more lo 1l than that. "Our emphasis is less on establishing why a child is at a particular level or reading ability than on takin~ him from where he is and helping him to pro- gress.·· To do this, district teachers and reading specialists are de- veloping procedures lo assure that each child is reading at a level at which he is challenged but able lo progress and ex- perience accomplishment. Teachers will be involved in training programs to f~m1liari2e them with the new techniques and procedures, said Mrs. Lynch, and parent volunteers wil l be trained to supple- ment teacher efforts. Later in the school year mobile reading labs will be available to elementary schools both during and after school hours for sup- plementary reading instruction. "One social benefit of the in- d1v1dualized reading instruction 11> that a child doesn't identify with a group to which a social stigma may ht• attached." said Mrs. Lynch. ''In the traditional reading group structure. all the kids know the Bluebirds are the good readers and the Jaybirds are thedummies." One bird all students relate lo is Big Bird, of Ses:ime Street. "This is another reason I'm not down on television," said Mrs. Lynch. "It has provided a com- mon frame of reference for the children. This shared experience can be drawn upon to great ucner1t by a resourceful classroom teacher." 0•11• Pilot SWt Pl>oto Bllf!king the Tide Bicyclist slogs along Coast Highway in Sunset Beach where high tide caused minor flooding thjs morning. Tide pushed ocean waters across Coast llighway in Sunset Beach and at some spots along Bolsa Chica State Beach, slowing traffic to a crawl. In addJtfon, there were reports of some homes flooding in Sunset Beach and Surfside Colony. Tide peaked al 7 feet this morning, but is expected to drop to 6.8 feet by Wednesday. OC Traffic Claims Five Costa Mesan Anwng Talley of· Victi~ Five persons, including a 24- year-old Costa Mesa man, died as a result of injuries received m the past 24 hours in separate Orange County traffic accidents, according to cor oner's in- vestigators. In addition to the death this morning of Gregory Lynn Jordan, 2A, of 871 Sonora Road, Cost a Mesa, the following fatalities were recorded by the coroner: -Jam.es S. Morgan, 13. of 855 N. Woods St.. Fullerton, who was , fatally injured Monday afternoon while riding his bicycle across the intersection or Com - monwea 1th Avenue and Richmond Street in Fullerton. Investigators said the youth was struck by a truck driven by Roger Merrill, 25, of llunt.mgton Beach, shortly before 3 p.m. Merrill was not cited. -Cheryl Lee McM11len, 23, or Crestline, who died in Anaheim early today when the car in which she was a passenger was struck broadside by another car m an intersection According to Anaheim poltce. the auto that collided with the car driv e n by Jerry Wa y n e Wooleridge, 27, of Anaheim, sped from the scene of the 2:25 a.m. fatal accident at Harbor Boulevard and Kalella Avenue. -Erma Harlan, 87, of 728 E. Washington St., Orange, who was fatally injured shortly before 8 a.m. Monday morning a few blocks from her home. Police said Mrs . Harlan was crossing Chapman Avenue at Shaffer Street in a crosswalk when she was struck by a car. The driver of the auto was identified as Tad Lonergan, 43, of 17400 W. Irvine Blvd., Tustin. Timothy DeGaynor, 20, of 11431 Reva Drive, Garden Gfovc. who died Monday in UCI Medical Center three days after the motorcycle he was riding in Anaheim was hit by a car. Already dead as a result. of the early Saturday monting collision ·at Ninth Street and Katella Avenue in Anaheim was a passenger on DeGaynor's motorcycle. Donna Lynn Con- nell, 34. of Garden Grove Driver of the auto that rear ended the motorcycle was arrest- ed at the scene and has been charged with felony drunk driv- mg as well as felony vehicular manslaughter. f'ro• Page A l SPILL ... superstructure. "Seas arc breaking clean over the superslruclur<.'," Chambers said. "The stern section is complete- ly under waler," said Hein. Soon after the break-up, the state of M assachusclls a n- nounced it was asking President Ford for disaster relief to help combat what was considered a ma1or oil spill even before the ship split. On Monday dead and oil- soaked sea birds started washing onto the N antuckel shores. The slick from the tanker then was reported to be more than 60 miles long and heading seaward away from land Angel Raises Devil As seas and froien spray pounded the vessel. environmcn· talists were taking action to deal wtlh the oil Massachusetts En- v1 ronmenta I AHa1rs Secretary Evelyn Murphy told The As- sociated Prl.'SS that pnvate con- tractors were being sought lo stand by if the oil washed ashore. One Angel's Christmas spirit was thoroughly doused Monday. with 350 gallons or waler ·-about three times it's normal siic. It had broken the bed frame but, amazingly, was still mtact and holding the Wl\ter. J\ngel Anast, 15, of 25761 Cervantes Lane an M1s- s1on Viejo, plugged the hose into her waterbed to rill it, figuring she could bake her Chnslmas cookies at the same lime. f<'iremen helped hook up the hose to siphon the water oul. They left, thjnJdng cveryting was fine . The cookies turned out fine, as firemen later testified. The bed. however, was a bit overdone. An hour later, however, the bed burst. Firemen were called back to the home and spent two hours vacuuming about 150 gallons of waler which had spread through the house. Miss Anast said she ''kind of forgot" the bed while she was bakinll. When she finallv re· membered. she found the plastic mattress bulging Miss Anast's rather, Zacharia, was starting to wonder If his daughter is. in fact, an angel. Yacht Club Fire Kills 3 SAN FRANCISCO CA P J -J\ fire started by a Chnstmas tree during a gala holiday party destroyed the St. Francis Yacht Club and, the fire department said, killed three persons. Al least 20 others were injured. The 49-year-old club was in the front rank of international yacht- ing, a virtual city institution where some of the world's most prestigious c lass races were held . Damage was estimated al $.'i00,000. ThE> fir11t body was found nol long after the spectacular, hve- alarm blaie was brought under control, and the other two were found as firemen sifted through the rubble of the elegant club, fire 0Hic1als said. Flames shot more than 100 feel into the air as the fierce blaze consumed the 1,700-membcr club at the northwest corner of the Marina Green, on the edge of San Francisco Bay. About 200 persons were in the building when the fire broke out. Club Commodore Gene Harter stood outside as the building burned, stunned at the fate or the club just days after its 49th birth- day. Firemen said the blaze broke out shortly before 9:40 p.m. In the L-sbaped club autidorium where the party was being held. It raged out of control for two hours before coming under control, but by that time it was rated a total loss. r The dead were not immediate- ly identified. At least one of the bodies, the first discovered, was reported to be badly burned. The Coast Guard said it has already spent $500.000 on at- temptrng to free the ship. The tanker was stuck on s and near the western edge of George~ Bank for centuries one of the most prolific fishing grounds of the world. The tanker's oil posed a new and deadly threat to Yankee fis· hermen trying to wrest a living from the sea off New England. The oil that has spilled and leaked into the sea has con- taminated some shellfish and cripplC.-Or killed thousands of sea birds. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Russell E. Train s aid Monday the tanker threatened "a potential catastrophe of major propor- tions. ··it poses a major ri sk to of- fshore fishenes, •·he said. U .N. Upholds Figh t UN ITED NJ\TIONS, N .Y. rAPl The U.N. General As- sembly adopted ::i resolution Monday that for the first time declares that t he assembly up· holds armed struggle as a meaos of throwing off colonial rule Onorato Files First for LB Sclwol Board ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- Michael P . Onorato, professor of Southeast Asian history at. Cal State Fullerton, is the first can- didate to file for election to the Laguna Beach Unified School District. where three seats are contested. Only two other proope<:tive can- didates have taken ootpapers for the March 8 election so far. They are Marylyn Pauley, a school volunteer coordin ator, and Raymond C. Lawson, former dis- trict director or maintenance, operations and transportation. All are residents of Laguna Beach. T r ustees Jane Boyd a nd Norman Browne and board Prest· dent Michael Sagar face re- election, but. Mrs. Boyd and Browne are not expected to run. Filing al the county registrar of voteni closes at 5 p. m. Dec. 30. ' ~~ ~ .. ~a. fabulous christmae ~ift ... liShLwcz.1~ht. warrnth w1U' gx><:i lool<s. 100% coLt.on ehell wiLh con~reat..mg tart.an hrnng. in cordurr1J or brushed coLton.oloo avai !able. in 90hd. rew.rs\ ble, m:xiel. made for us in £nglarrl. 44 fashion ls1andt newport center 644-5070 ·' .. . Orange·.,,Coast EDITION ,.l'oduy"'s Closh1~ N. \'.'.Sloe-ks VOL. 69, NO. 356, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNI A TUESDAY, DECEMBER 21 , 1976 C TEN CENTS Vows Cut Carter Names 3 to Cabinet HOUSING SECRETARY Patricia Harris PLAINS, Ga . <AP> - President-elect Carter named three more Cabinet choices to· day, reaffirmed his pledge to cul defense spending by $5 billion to $7 billion. and said he'll convene the top officials of his admirtlstra· lion for a post-Christmas plan· rtlng session. Carter 's latest appointees: Patricia Roberts Harris, a Washington attorney and former dean of Howard University Law School, to be secretarv of Housinj? and Urban DPvelopment She 1s the second woman and first black named to the Carter Cabinet. Harold Brown, president or Caltech and a former secretary or thl' Air Force, to be secretary of Defense. Ray Marshall. a University of Texas labor economist. as secretary of Labor. In addition, Carter named Houston businessman Charles Duncan Jr to become deputy secretary of defense. AP Wl..,,.,oto Carter acknowledged that some leaders of organized labor wanted John T. Dunlop reappoint· ed to the Labor Department post he held in President Ford's ad ministration. But the pres1dent- elect said Mars hall had been his choice all along. OIL FLOWS FREELY INTO RICH FISHING GROUNDS NEAR NANTUCKET SHOALS Liberian Oil Tanker Carrying 7.6 Miiiion Gallons Split• Under AHault by Waves .. ,..,,,.~, .. DEFENSE SECRETARY Cal Tech's Harold Brown Another Burt He said he will name "the last remaining lop leaders in my ad- m in is tr at ion'· at news con- ference Thursday. There is one Cabinet appoint- ment left. a nd Joseph A Califano. a Washington lawyer who was a key aide to President Johnson. is reported in line to become secretary of Health, Education and Welfare At the post-Christmas con- rerence that will include Vice President-elect Walter F'. Mon- dale. Carter said the whole range of problems facing the new ad· ministration will be discussed "so that when we do reach in· auguration day, we'll be well prepared to work to~ether." lie also said each Cabinet ap· pointee is meeting with his op· pos1t e n umber 1n the F'ord (Sf;'e C'ABINET, Page Al) Brothers' Reunion Ends With Death T\\o broth<'r' c<'lcbratin~ their return Munda) n1J!ht from eight months or com merc1al fishing in Aluska. ran thl'1r SPQrts car into a tel<•phone fXlll' rn Costa Mesa ear ly this morning, killing one and lenvmg thl' other m cnt1cal condi- Uon Gregory Lynn Jordan. 24, and Earl Michael Jordan. Z7, whose parents live at 871 Sonora Road. Costa Mesa. were tossed from the small foreign car after 1t hit the pole on Victoria Street near Valley Road in west Costa Mesa. The younger brother was killed in the 2:20 a .m . crash. Earl Jordan was in critical condition today in the intensive care unit at Hoag Memorial Hospital. Police said today the impact of the cr as h tore the engine, transmission and d1fferent1al from the car. and also ejected the two brothers. Traf£ic lnvcsliJ?al or Dave Walker said the two brothers evidently returned from Alaska Monday night. stopped by the home of their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Harlan Jordan, picked up their Porsche automobile and left to visit friends. Walker said it appears the pair were not wearing seatbelts at the lime of the crash. He said the im- pact spun the car 180 degrees around the telephone pole. The fatal cresb brings to 16 the number of deaths attributed to traffic accidents this year in Costa Mesa. Mesa Adding -Acreage to Super Block Cos ta Mesa has acquired another 6.120 feet of land for its downtown Super BIQCk project. but it took a condemnation hear- ing and some bargaining to do it. Councilmen Monday night agreed to award S50.!l>O to Mr. and Mrs. Kosen Soflan for their lot at 587 Plumer St. The city had originally offered $47.000 for the parcel, an offer that was rejected by the property owners. Thal leaves Costa Mesa only three parcels shy or completing land acqu1s1t1on for the Super Bock project. City Manager Fred Sorsabal said the Super Block project is the first time the city has used conde mnation action to acquire land m Costa Mesa. Assistant City Manager Bill Dunn said today the city is going ahead with pla ns on the $2.8 million Super Block project m thecity'sdowntown area. The proJect area is localed between Plumer and Center Str eets on the north and south. and Park a nd Anaheim Avenues on the east and west. Design work is under way on a $500,000 fire station at the southeast portion of the block, and renovation is nearly com- plete on a youth community center In old Boys Club building. Expans ion of the existing library will also be undertaken in January or February. Dunn said. hnport Ban Okayed BONN, West Germany CAP> - West Germany has announced it would refrain from exporting nuclear technology that could boost the spread of nuclear weapons. Angel Raises Devil Bu.I, That's t~ Way Her Cookies Cnimble One Angel's Christmas spirit was t.boroughly doused Monday. Angel Anast, 15, of 25761 Cervantes Lane in Mls-aion Viejo, plugged the hose lnto her waterbed to fill it, llguring she could bake her Christmas ~iea at the sameUme. The cooklet t urned out fine, u firemen later testified. The bed, however, wu a bit overdone. Mils Anast said she "klnd of forgot" the bed ~bile she was bakln1. When abe finally re-rnt ·· ~~ !, ~h• found the plutic mattress bulglnl with 350 gallons of water -abouL three times it's normal abe. It had broken the bed rrame but, amasingly, was atill lntact and boldlng the water. Firemen helped hook up the hose to siphon the water out. They left, th1.nJtl.n1 everyt.inc was rlne. An hou.t' later, however, the bed bunt. Firemen wen called back to the home and spent two houn vacuumlng about lSO 1allons or water which had spread through the house. Miss Anast's father, Zacharia, was startin& to wonder lf his daughter ls, ln ract, an angel. SF Yacht Club Blaze Takes Three Lives SAN FRANCISCO 1AP1 A fire started by a Christmas tree during a gala holiday party des troyed the St. Francis Yacht Club and, the fire department said . killed three persons. At least 20 others were injured The 49·year -old club was m the front rank of international yacht· ing, a virtual city institution where some of the world 's most prestigious class races were held. Damage was estimatc<l at $.i()(),000. The first body was found not long after the spectacular. fi ve- alarm blaze was brought under control, and the other two were found as firemen sifted through the rubble of the elegant club. fire officials said. Flames shot more than 100 feet into the air as the fierce blaze consumed the 1,700-member club at the northwest comer of the Marina Green, on the edge of San Francisco Bay About 200 persons were in the building when the fire broke out. Club Commodore Gene !tarter stood outside as the building burned. stunned at the fate of the club JUSt days aftl'r its 49th birth· day Firemen said the blaze broke out shortly before 9:40 p.m. in the L·shaped dub autidorium where the party was being held. ll raged out of control for two hours before coming under control, but by that time it was r<.1ted a total loss. The dead were not immediate- ly identified. At least one of the bodies. the first discovered, was reported to be badly burned. Traffic headed for the Golde n Gate Bridge on Marin a Boulevard was diverted to Lom- bard Street. The fire was easily visible from the East Bay and many parts of the city. Thick smoke. a caved-in roof and "hot wires bouncing around io the lobby" hampered firefight- ing efforts . F iremen battling the blaze from land were aidc<l by <Me CLUB, Page A2 l Ex-manager Admits Error in Paycheck Fired Orange County Fair Manager Jim Porterfield said to. day "we obviously erred'' when a temporary employe's paychecks were made out to her husband to circumvent state regulations. At issue In the discrepancy is one month's pay for a steno· grapher temporarily hired in a crowded work period earlier lhis year. Stale regulations say such help can only work 119days. GOOD GRIEF ! ONLY 3 SHOPPING C>A'i~ 'TIL. CHRISTMAS .' . c ... 0 •t totrU•K•thot"'• Portt>rfield said today that the stenographer 's supervisor ap· parently allowed her to work a month beyond the 119-day limit and issued pay checks in her husband's name. "{t was simply a mtsun- derst anding with the person's s upervisor who authori~ed the work,·· Porterfield said. "I didn't discover it Wltll after the fact and the situation was quickly corrected." the fired fair manager said. With in a few hours of Porterfield's abrupt dismissal last Friday, Fair Board Presi· dent Warren Finley took the al· leged payroll impropriety to the District Attorney's Office. At the time, Deputy District Attorney WUUam Evans said the alleged falsification would be in· vestigated. ''l( found to be true the matter would simply be a misdemeanor falsification," Evans said. Howeve r . he added, in· vestigalors wlll make certaln the part-time employe worked the houri declared on the payroll but paid for, for at least a one month period in the worker's husband's name. ii. Fishery In Path Of Spill NANTUCKET, Mass. (AP > - A river of oil poured today from a Liberian tanker s plit in half by stormy Atlantic seas and spread into the fertile Georges Bank fishing grounds m one of the world's worst oil spills. Environmental Protection Ad· ministrator Russell Train called it the worst spill in the nation's history ~nd said he had a feeling of helplessness which "makes me f Pel sick." .. ,, would b e extremely. 'lbsolutely impossible at the mo· ment to do anythmg with it," roast Guard Cmdr Barry Cham· hPrs s aid here as the bow and c;tern halves of the tanker Argo Merch ant were separately pounded by growing seas 27 miles southea:.t of th1s resort island . omcials could only estimate, but said as much as 75 per cent of the vessel's 7 .6 mill.Jon gallons of heavy, industrial oil spilled into the sea. Brutal North Atlantic weather took aim on the halved vessel. Seas were building to 20 feet and the wind. pus hing s heets of frozen spray, gusted at4Sknots. One of the first observers to fly over the wreck said : "All the waves were brown around it. .The tanker was splattered with black otl. Brown foam was everywhere. As each wave crashed over it, the bow looked as though 1t was sink- ing ... The biggest thing was seeing the waves completely sub· · merge the whole thing." The 640-foot ship, which went aground Wednesday while s teaming from Venezuela, to Salem, Mass., fractured at 8:55 a.m . No one was aboard the vessel when it split. The ship's bow was was hed in· to a right angle with the stern. Later. the waves parted the front <See SPILL, Page AZ> Comber Tally: Tii.ree W reeks, Head Injury A Costa Mesa woman told police she lost control of her car on Santa Ana A venue this morn- ing when she reached across the seal to get a comb from her purse. The results. Three smashed cars and head inJunes for for Mrs. Antonie Adriana Hom, 24, of 1955 Fullerton St., who told of- ficers she was on her way to work when her auto swerved into two parked cars. flipping one on its top She was treated at Costa Mesa Memorial llosp1tal after the 7:35 a.m. accident in front of an apartment building al 2466 Santa Ana Ave .. but s he was n 't hospit alized. police said. The car that was knocked up. s ide down be longs l o John Shelby. The other car belongs to Steven J . Furlan. Roth live in the Santa Ana Avenue apartment complex. Coast Weather Some variable cloud•· ness through Wednesday, but mostly fair. Tern· peratures sticking around the 70 mark, lows to about 40. INSIDE TOD/\ l' Chicago's "boaa," Rkbard J. Daley. died Mond.a11.afier- noon of .a heart .attack. Political leaders. are •ttldng a ntw LtOIUr. Ste P.agt A4. lnde¥ " A% DAIL v PILOT c TueSday. December 21 1976 Helpless Claims Defended By TOM BARLEY Of llW D•lly .. , ... \tett /\ Dana Potnt woman·~ claim :.hat a drug lnJCCled mto her by Dr. Ross Todd McClure made :-ier incapable of resisting his ;exual advances was defended t oday in Orange County Superior Court testimony. Or. John Kramer, a medical specialist called by the prosecu· lion as a rebuttal witness, told . tbe Jury that the dosage of Va lium administered at Dr McClure's South Laguna office la5l Jan. 7 might weU have had Ulat impact on her powers to l"esist. Dr McClure, 55. is being Lried on charges of rape and ;ex perver sion ll as alleged th at the acl o f sexual tn· tercourse took place while he was treating his 22-year-old Plf· tient for a back injury The defendant has denied the rape a llegation from the wal ness stand. lie admits having i CX with his patient but claims ;he was a willing participant md her decision was not in· nuenced by the drug. Dr. Kram er who repeatedly tangled with defense altorney Leonard McBride during his testimony. told the j ury that Valium is often used in pre- surgery situations where the pa- Uent experiences fear and ap· prehension. The alleged v1ct1m said the condition persisted after she left Dr. McClure's office She ~aid :1he was still feeling the effecLc; of the drug when she reported the alleged rape to shcnff's or 1kers. Member:-. of the :-.taff at South Coast Commun1ly Hospital in South Laguna. where she was exam ined, lest1hed for the de- fense that s he appeared normal when s he reported the incident <ind was t ested for rape evidence by a physician. Lawyers for both sades said they hope to offer rmal argu- ments later today Judge Ken· ncth F, Lac wall then instruct has Jury and :.end it to delil><!ra· t aons Ouner Denies Mafia Swindle STOCKTON IAPJ /\ bakC'ry owner \\as :.\\ 1ndll-d by a nng d1reC'led by the Maf1J wht•n he :.OUghl rini!.nCang for ht~ bw.1ne:.:., the Stockton Hccord reported. quoting 1n\t•s t1gJtors 1n ('ahfornia and /\rawn.i The :.tory Monday was dcnwd by thl-' businessman. who told lh1· ne\\ :.paper ThJt ·., wronJ: fhdt'sso\~rong tt ~crJIY ' Tht> ft C'rord qunlctl 1n 11e:.tai.:;1tor'> as ..,.iymg .John lnghs l~l ~7.000 when he tned to get r e f in;inc1ng for :.hort l<'rm d t•bt ohl1gat1un.., U\H•tl h~ ht'> firm . William lns:hs & Son:. Sunlwam ll akin~ C'11 Thi• hukr•ry has :.11w1• falt-d f11r hank a 11pt1·y .md huo;; '\hilt rf11\\ n th•' par>er :Hiid Ille a Bru~h Fir~ Blamed on Kids T\\O c•nJ!tnt• rompanws from Co<,t.t Mesa respondt>d to a brush fire m the \\es tern portion of th1• nty Monrl;I\. l'~ltn)!111'>htnJ! the hl,ue an ,1 hJIC hour The ruhb1sh far(', whkh Cir f1c1als b<'llcvf' wm. :.tart('<! hy ch11dren playinii with matchc:.. began ahoot 4 30 p m near the· ~nnta Ana River bed behind the· Mesa VC'rdeCountryCluh. There were no inJunes tn the I aflernoon blaze, firemen said. i OAANOE COAST DAILY PILOT 11w-Or.,,... c .. ,, o ••• ., ~11,,, Witt\""""' "h, ,,,,.,,, ~tNiJr.t•W\ Pr•u ,,O~l\N<Cfr"tyt.._.(\.-.,,,.. •c°"'' ,,.,,11,rww~r-,.""o•nv ~.' .. ""'''Of'\ ,, ... -cK1bl1\.,,...d Mt)N'te~ '"'°"~ r tic.MY hu r •"14 ~~ v~;,:~:,~:~"· l!'::=. 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CMl• Ml•• !(•llh1,,ua l~..a•trltU•" t• Ct,,l•r n )I "'-"'~'• by ..,911 U IO -..1~1,, "'""°'' .. l!Mt-t,1 Jt-1"'' l.-----.-------------~--• Cuts in Food Sex Bias Charge Settled ,, I • I Balance Hikes WASHINGTON <AP> -The fi rst decline in food pnCl'S an eight months helped hold the over-all rise in consumer prices in November to three tenths of a percent, the same as in October, the government said today. At the sam.e lime. the govern· ment said real spend:1ble earn· ings -a worker's take-home pay after adjus tment for taxes and inflation increased eight· tenths of a perce nt an November. the biggest monthly increase in buying power in more than a year. The Labor Department said that for the 12-month period end- ing in November. con~umer pnces increased 5 percent, the .... wi ...... 1o LABOR SECRETARY Dr. F. Ray Marshall FrOtM Page A I CABINET • • administration. and called il another area of unprecedented cooperation in the trnnsilion from Republican to Democratic rule. Carter was asked whether he wlll meet his campa.Jgn pledges to cut de fense spendmi; and withdraw American forces from Korea. Carter smlled and said 1f he doesn't, he'll be very disappoint C'd in h1:. new Pentagon high com m and. Then he pledgl'<i that "we wtll s tart immediately with effl· c1enc1es and t>conom1cs m the Oefen:-.e Department " He aid the new .tdmm1strJtion will work to improve organiza 11 00. Jon g -range planning, Jog1st1 cs. military equipment maintenance. and to c ul un· necessar y personnel assign· ments. Carter did not use fi gures that would indicate the defense budget level from whir h he would seek to achieve the r(-duc· t1ons he promised during the c.impaign. Armed Men llob Brinks' MONTREAL (AP) - Two armed men rohbed Brinks' guards of about $525,000 today as they werf' transferring the money from a Bank of Montreul br<1nrh to :i Brinks' lrurk ;II a !>hopping C'l'ntcr. pohce said The bandits apprrwch<.>d the two ji?uards, disarmed them. took the money they w<•re carrying and ordcr<.>d them to return to the l)ank. pohce said. The handits then fled in a yellow car. No m oney was taken from the Uranks' truck itself, police said. smalles t 12·rnonth gain in more than three years. The favorable inOation report was certain to be welcomed by economists in both the Ford and mcominJ Carter admiJUl\1.rations as confirm ation of their belief that innation will not get out of hand again in the near future. 'the Consumer Price Index • stood at 173.8 last month, mean- ing that a market basket or goods costing $100 in 1967 now costs $173.80. Over-all food prices declined two-tenths or a percent in Nov- ember. The department's index of mortg age anterest rates fell 2.1 p ercent. while h ouseho ld services costs were down one- tent h o f a percent, the first dechne in that category since early 1971 . The Labor Department said the price~ of a large number of grocery items fell during the month. led by fresh vegetables. down 6.5 pe rcent; pork, down 3.1 percent; and dairy products, which declined for the first time sance early this year. Fro• Page A J SPILL •.. and aft sections. The bow was afloat while the stem was stuck on the shoals. almost entirely submerged. "Seas are breaking clean over the superstructure," said Cham· be rs. The Com monwealth o f Massach usetts asked President Big Top at Fairview Ringmaster Margo and Frenchy the Clown were among 60 members of the Paul Eagle Circus Luncheon Club who delig~ted Fairview State I lospital patients Monday under a b1gtop set up on hospital grounds. Club mem- bers. many of_ whom are retir~ circus performers, put on s how that included clown s. Jugglers, trapeze artists. an orchestra and even an elephant. Ford for disast er relief fWlds to F aJ B )J help combat the spreading oil. at u et Froia Page A 1 Sen. Edward M . Kennedy (D· Mass.), did th e same. In Wash ington, Train said of the spill: "By all odds, this is the biggest oil spill disaster in our ·history." He noted that it was on· Jy a fifth as big as England's Tor· rey Canyon oil spill of 1967 but worse tha n the Santa Barbara spill from a n off-shore oil well blow-out in 1969. The river of oil out of the Argo Merchant was as wide as lhe ship is wide, about 50 feet, said Coast Guard s pokes man Richard Griggs. The Coast Guard said the slick by midday had drifted 70 miles to the northeast , reaching the Georges Bank fishing grounds. It was about 35 miles at sea off the outer elbow of Cape Cod. "It's a solid mass coming out from the s hip. The n it breaks up mlo big globs." a Coast Guard sookesman said . The schooling and spawning waters for cod, h addock, herring and sole. a single 100-square-mile area or Georges Bank yield more than 32,000 tons of fi sh in just one year This does not include bottom fish like nounder , and cruslacea like scallops and lobster that are harvested nea r.by. It was rear ed that much of the "No. 6" oil. because of its density and its mixing with sand al the wreck , w o uld harde n into globules and sink. Many of the fish in the area are bollom - rceders Jnch Too Near, Doctor Says A pathologist testified today that if one or four bullets fi red at point blank range into a Costa Mesa woman's head last May had been an i nc h lower the woman would have survived. Dr. Richard I. Fukumoto said only one or the bulleL'i that ent(•red Shirley Mae Foreman's head caused her de a th. His testimon y came in the murder trial or Charles Edwetrd Mosteller, 44 . 2182 Rural Lane, Costa Mesa. Mosteller as accused or :.hoot ing his so-called girlfnend as she rested on a couch in the Mostell er home last May 20. Monday afternoon, a l)alh:.t1c expert told the jury an Orange County Superior Court Judge Frank Domenichmi's court room that the woman was shot at point blank range. The expert said the murder weapon was probably held one to three feet from the victim's head when the four shots were fired. Earlier an th e day, the Jury listened to audio r ecordings and saw video tape recordinRs or the accused man's s tateme nt to police shortly after the shooting. In those recordings, M06teller admitted that he had shot the woman and regretted that his a.im was not better. lie a lso told police he was drinkif)g a t the time o r the murder4and that it came after the victim had slapped tum. CLUB ..• the fireboat Phoenix and the 82· foot Coast Guard cutter Pomt Heyer. One of those who was at the party a few minutes before the fire broke out was Fire Chief An- drew Casper. He said the fire broke out in a nine-fool tree de· corated with Christ mas lights. They suddenly '·flarcd,-igmled and explod ed, s aid the chief, drenched in water and covered with soot. "The Christmas tree we nt 'poof', just like that," said Ted Bakkila, a chemical engineer at· tending the party Other m embers said the tree had been in place several days and appeared dry. The loss incl uded m a ny souvenirs of ya chting down the years and nautical books and re- cords. as well as paintings. trophies a nd innumerable artifacts or the sport reaching in· to the last century. Casper said the fire started as party-goers watched a choir perform on the ground floor stage. The first clue or fire came when the group on stage spotted the burning tree. ''I'd say the peopl e performed r e markably well," said a stunned Harter. "There was no panic. These people are sailors and are used to emergencies al sea.·• Eyewitnesses said the fire spread quickly from the tree lo lhC' ceiling. The two-story , Spanish-style structure was well involved when firemen arnvcd. Witness 'Saw Accused' Motel Operator 'Identifies' Mobile Home The operator of a Santa Ana motel testified today that she saw On(.' or potato chip heir John Scud- der's a ccused kidnapers with the mobile hom e used to abduct the victim from a Huntington Beach parking lot last Aug. 19. The d ay of the kidnaping. de- fendant William Rudy Wesson .. 44. of Tustin, was registered at the motel. abduction. · brother-in-Jaw, Ricki D a l e Placing Wesson with the Jc1d-Sellers. 21, were arrested and nap vehicle on the day of the charged with the S250.000 kidnap bungled caper w us an effort by conspiracy. the prosecution to show that Wesson masterminded the heist. Lale Mond ay afternoon, the Scudder was kidnaped Aug. 19 mobile home's owner testified in and held captive for roughly 00 Superior Court Judge Richard minutes in the motor home until B eaco m 's courtroom that breaking free from his caplors in Wesson and Sellers had rented Fountain Valley. the motor home from him a few By ARTHUR R. VJNSEl. OHlle O•lly "ll•Ul•lt Terms or a negotiated settle· ment of an anti·M?X d iscnmina· uon suit hied by six women employes of the Seal Beach Pollce Depar tmenl were an- nounced today by Chief Ed Cib- barelU. The settlement will cost the ci· ty of Seal Beach SSS,000 in back pay and benefits due the women over the long-standing challenge or department employment prac· lices. A consent agreement reached by city, s tate and fede ral negotiators was expected to be signed today and containt!d several kcy points One employe fired for what Chief Cibbarelli described as su!- h c 1 ent cause relating lo a criminal investigation will be back on the Job Wednesday. A second female employe automatically comes to work Wednesday morning as a patrol ser geant. her instant promotion i:?Uarantced by the pact filed in U.S. District Court in Los Angeles. The lawsuit was initially filed by six female employes in 1972 under provisions of state and federal sex discrimination laws, which they interpreted to mean they had been discriminated agamst. The letter or the law, if carried out, would have required Seal Beach Police Department to name three or the women police captains, even though no vacan- cies for captain existed for males or females. Chief Cibbarelli said today he as definitely less than Happy with the agreement but feels all parties can accept and live with it. lie said wryly in a mid- morning press conference that it could hav~ been better but it could h ave been a whole lot worse, noting the approximately $125,000 expended by the city to hash out the matter was a frac- tion of the $750.000 the city stood t11 lose al one point. Rites Slated For Mesa Fisherman Private graveside services will be held Wednesday for Costa Mesan Benja min David Shafer, a commerical fisherman who died Sunday at the age or 74. Mr. Shafer operated his 47-foot fi shing boat for 40 years off the Orange Coast, hauling anchovies for sport boat fishing landings in Newport Harbor. He retired from fishing ln 1954 when he moved to a poultry farm in Fountain Valley. lie and his wife worked the farm until 1959 when they r eturned to Costa Mesa. H.ls wife of 51 years, Evelyn, s urvives. He is a lso survived by four sons, Edward Sha fer or Trinidad, J o hn Shafer of Costa Mesa, J ames Shafer of Newport Beach, and David Shaft>r of Irvine and a daughter . Nancy Stansbury of Bakersfield Also surviving arc his brother, Russell Shafer of Costa Mesa, and three sisters, Mamie Seltzer or Huntington Beach; Dorothy Minehardt of Wnghtwood and J lei en Bylard of Eagle Rock. In addition, he leaves 12 grandchildren and 12 great- grandchildrcn. Aid Unit to Leave GENEVA, Switzerland CAP) - Human riJ?hts conditions in Chile have improved to such an extent that the lnternutional Committee o f the Red Cross pla ns to terminate its activities on behalf or pollticul prisoners there within the next s ix months, the head of the organization s aid today. And witness Jo Ellen Glenn said the motor home was parked at the motel the day of Scudde r's The next day . Wesson and his days before !he kidnaping. ~~~~~--'--~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Three KKK Marines Warned of Threats ~~afabulous christrnas gift .. _ By th~ Assodat.td Pres$ Three Ku Klux Klan members in Marine uniforms say they tried lo warn or growing raclaJ tensions at Camp Pendleton but without success. •'There were threats upon us thal they were going to kill us, .. s aid o n e, Pfc. Dennh L . Campbell, re ferr ing to black Marines without giving deteUs. The views were given at a pre- trial hearing Monday for one of 14 blacks c harged with con- spiracy and assaulting a hftlf dozen whlte Marines in a bar· raclufightNo v.12. Threeofthelr pretrial hearings have been com· pleted. Campbell was tran.,ren-td to another Marine base after bla name was re ported found on a list of a lleged Klan members in a room near one in which the fight took place. Weapons and pro- paganda also were found. Called back to tesUfy with him were Pfc. Charles V. Smith and Pfc . Ronnie Harper, both of whom said they also belong lo the KKK. The blacks knocked on a bar· racks door nnd asked fo r "Chuck." Sm ith testified. "As far as J know. no one on th al noor could be named Chuck but me." He and Campbell said they car- ried o knlfe ln full view, and Harper aald ho wore a pocket knife, bul all three aald the blacks never earned Jcnlves, as f u u they knew. li~hLwe.1~ht., warmth w1t.h ~ 1ool<s.100% cot,t.on shell wiLh contresLin9 t..artan I ming. in cordurc1j or brushed. cotton.also ave\ lable. in oolid rew.rs\ ble. rrod.e.1. made. ibr us in Engla.rxi. 44 faeNon island, newport center 644-5070 .. I I • Orange ~oast • ED I T I O N * • . . '"roda1·"'s Closino· ~ Pl 1 .y. Stol'ks ' 1.V OL. ,69, NO. 356, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA T UESDAY, DECEMBER 21 , 1976 N ( TEN CENT$ I . fCarter ' Adds 3 HOUSING SECRETARY Patricia Harris aPWtrtpMto\ DEFENSE SECRETAR"f Huold Brown, 49 PLA I NS, Ga . (AP ) -• President-elect Carter named • three more CabinH choices to· day. reamrmed his pledge to cut defense spending by $S billion to $7 billion, and said he'll convene the top officials of his admirustra- tton for a post-Christmas phrn· ning session. Carter's latest appointees. Patricia Roberts Harris. a Washington attorney and former Sex Bias Charge Settled By ARTHUR R. VI NSEL Of tl>e O••ly PllOC Sutt Terms of a negotiated settle· ment of an anti-sex dtscnmtna· lion suit filed by six women cmploycs of the Seal Beach PoltCl' De partme nt were an- nounced today by Ch1l'f Ed C1b barelli The settlement will cost tht· Cl· ty of Seal Bl'ach $.55,llOO in bat•k pay and benefits due the women over the long ·Slandmg challenj!e of department employment prac t1Cel> A consent agreement rei.lChl'd b~ c1tv. s t a t e and federal n~~ot1ators was l'X pt;octed to be signed today a nd cont;.11 ned several key poiols. One employe fired for what Chief C1bbarelh dcscnb<·ll ai. suf fH·1ent cause rel atin ~ to a criminal in vestigation wi ll he back on the Job Wednesday t\ Sl'cond fe male t•m ployc automa t1Ci.1ll y comes to work Wl'dnesday morning as a patrol sergeant, her instant promotion ~uarante<.'d by the pact f1ll'd in l' S D1 !>tri cl Court 1n Los 1\ngeles dean of Howard University Law School, to be secretary of Housing and Urban Development. She is the second woman and first black named to the Carter Cabmet. -Harold Brown, president of Caltech and a former secretary of the Air Force, to be secretary of Defense. -Ray Marshall, a University of Texas labor economis t , a ~ secretary of Labor. to Cabinet In addition, Carter named Houston businessman Charles Duncan Jr. to become deputy secretary of defense. • Carter at:knowledged that some leaders of organized labor wanted JohnT. Dunlop reappoint· ed to the Labor Department post he held in President Ford's ad- ministration. But the president· elect said Marshall had been his choice a ll along. • He said he will name "the last remaining top leaders in my ad· ministration '' at news con- ference Thursd ay There is one C"binet appoml- m en t lert, and J oseph A. Califano , a Washington lawyer who was a key aide to President Johnson, 1s rep&rted in line to becom e secretary of Health, Education and Welfare. At the post-Christmas ~con It~ ........... . Egypt, Syria Plan Merger IFor 2nd Time The lawsuit was intlially Cilcd by six female employcs 1n 1972 under prov1s1ons of stalt· and floderal sex dtscrimmation luws. which thl.'y intcrpl'eled to mt•an they had been d1scraminatt•d Jg a inst OtL f=LOWS FREELY INTO RICH FISHING GROUNDS NEAR NANTUCKET SHOALS Liberian Ott Tanker Carrying 7.6 Miiiion Gallons Spllts Under AHault by Waves . 1 1 c •\I R o 1 A I' 1 -Prcs1dent<- Am1. ar SJd<tt nf Eio pt and liar el A4'sad of S\'ra.1 han· d(.'('tded tn The letter of the Jaw. 1f carried out, \\Ould have rt'quirl'd Seal Hcach Police Department lo name three of tht.• women police captains. e\'en though no \'acan r1cs for captain existed for males or females Oil Spills • m Atlantic un1lt• th1•1 r i" o l'ountnes and sl't 1up ml'<·hant'>m" to work out the ex art form of unit~. F.gypt1an Fort'11tn "'11 n1.,t1·r hma1I f-'<i hm\ annour}l't•rl l•>fl ,I\ Chief C1bbarclh said today he ts deftnitely less than happy with the agreement but fe<.'ls all parties can accept and livt· with ll 'Biggest ... Disaster' in American History II(• 1ncl1e·.tt1•c1 ho\\,., 1•r 11 ~maid tw .,11m1• t1m1• bdnn• lh1• ml'rgt•r t.1k1·., pl Ju· And h1• .,Jtd f:J:~pt and SH1,1 woultl lw .,,,ncltni? 'l'parale <fr Je.:JllOO., Ill thP {;pneva p<>art• talks "1th h.r ,11•1 \\hl'n they an· convent•d ' unh•!-s tt ts rl~r1dt,.I •beforehand to <;('ncl one rnmhmNI delegation·' rt•prt•!>enting all Arab p~irtn•s to thl' Mnfli ct These tndude Egypt, Syna, Jordan. tht' Pale5tmine ljbcra lion Or~an11Jtwn and perhap-; Lebanon Egypt J ncl s~ raa \\Pre Untted for four Hars betw<'<'n 19511 and 1961. but thP merger collapsed when the Syrians pulled out rahmy maintained that the spirit of union has continued and th e future merger was a manifes tation of the current close ti cs b«'t ween Cairo and Damnsrus Fahmy s aid the decision, billed in advance as. a "bombshell that will shake the world." was re· ached by Assad and Sadat m 15 hours of talks. most of them in private. A political declaration alter Assad flew home announced the formation of a s upreme political leadership made up or the two presidents and other aides still to be named. li e said "n Iv in a mid morning press COn.ferenCl' tha t ll 1•ould have been better hut 1t 1 ould haH' been a wholt• lot \\Of'>C'. not1n~ the approx1matcl~ $125.000 expended b) the• r1ty to hash out the ma tter \\as a fri.lc lion of the $750,000 thl' cit) stood to lose at one p<>inl NANTUCKET. Mass iAP l A Liberian oil tanker split an half amid storm} seas today, <met lhe Coast Guard said 011 was Oowm1;; freely into the Allani1c Ocean at the edge of one of the world's n chest fi shmg ground.'> No one was aboard the lanke r tha\ had earned 7 6 million gallons of heavy industrial 011 "By all odds, this 1s the biggest Newport Allocates Fireworks Funds In a 4 3 vote Mond ay, the Newport Beach City Council committed itself to a $6,500 fireworks show next July 4 That commitment consists of $4,000 of city money and a cam paign to raise the remaining $2,500 from local homeowners and business groups. The contract with California Fireworks Displ ay Company.was recommended to the council by the city's Bicentennial O>mmit- tee, which set up a similar show this year . This year marked the first year that the city sponsored a fireworks show and the $6,500 display, also put on by California Fireworks, was paid for with $4,000 in city money and a $2,500 donation from Pa<.'if1c Mutual Life Insurance. The three councilmen who op- oosed the prop osal Ray Williams, Lucill e Kuehn and Don Mcinnis -said they believe there are better ways to s pend ci- ty money. "I would rather sec the money go to new books for the new library or some other mor e permane nt aspec t of ' city •services," said Mrs. Keuhn. Williams. agreeing with Mrs. Kuehn, noted that lack of a city fireworks display "does not (See JULY 4, Page A2) Angel Raises Devil But, That's the Way Her Cookies Crombie One Angel's Christmas spirit was thoroughly doused Monday. Angel Anast. 15, of 25761 Cervantes Lane in Mis- sion Viejo, plugged the hose into her waterbed to fill it, figuring she could bake her Christmas cookies al the same time. with 350 gallons of water -about three times it's normal size. It had broken the bed frame but, amazingly, was sUll intact ancfholding the waler. Firemen helped book up the hose to siphon the water out. They le(\, thinking everyting was fine. An hour later, howe'lef', tbe bed burst. The cookies tumed out fine, as firemen later F\remen were called back to the home an<, testified. The bed. however, wu,.. bit overdone. spent two hours vacuuming about 150 gaJlom of Mias Anast said she "kind of for«ol" the bed water which had spread throu1h the houn. while she waa bakintt. When abe floally r e-Miss An11t'1 father, Zacharia. was •tart.Ina to membered, 1be found the j>lutlc mattress bul1tn1 . wondtt If h1a dau1hter is, in fact, an an1el. oil spill disaster on the American coas t in our history," Environ- menial Protection Administrator Russell E Trai n said in Washington "There is a lot of oil coming out," s aid Coast Guard Cmdr . Lynn Hean a fter viewing the wreckage of the Liberian tanker Argo Merchant Cmdr. Barry F Chambers, head of the Coast Guard Strike Force ass igned to free t h e lanker , said with Hein that 50 to 75 percent of the ship's cargo had spilled into the water, and Train said in Washington that up to six million gallons may have gone into the sea. The EPA official said the oil was moving away from land but could endanger over a long term the fishing area of Georges Bank. Train said he believed the Coast Guard shares fccling of helpless· ness. Some 1.5 million gallons of the oil had already washed into the ocean before the tanker split and it was considered a major oil spill at that poin t. The tanker, which piled onto the Nantucket Shoals seven days ·ago, spUt apart al 8:55 a.m. Seas .in the area, 27 miles southeast of Nantucket, were at eight feet and expected to build to20feet. The vessel's bow swung around at a 90-degree angle. It was afloat, but the stern was locked in the s and. The 640-foot vessel fractured almost at m idships. The break GOOD GRIEF! O~LY 3 SMC>r>PING C>AVS 'TIL CMRISTMAS .' was jus t aft o r the forwurd superslrurture. "Seas are breaking clean over the supers tructure," Chambers said. "The stern section is complete ly under water," said Hein. Soon after the break-up, the state of M assachuselts an· <See SPILL, Page A2) Scrooge Act Puts Meters Back on Lido Newport Beach City Manager Robert Wy nn get s t o play Scrooge this Christmas Monday night, city councilmen gave Wynn the power lo take away the city'~ Christmas gift to motorists -a power he put to use this morning by or dering parking meters in the Lido shopping area back into action. For years. the city has put hoods bearing holiday greetings over t he city's 1,800 parking meters as a Christmas present to motorists. This year, however, a group or merchants in the Via Udo shop- ping area petitioned the council to have the hoods removed because, they said, employes of the businesses were parking in the street spots normally used by customers. :\ Sa I d C o u n c II ma•\ Pa u I Ryckoff, a member or'f.he Via Lido business group, "parking in the area ls a big mess beeause of the reconstruction at the Hughes market." Ryekoff, who owns Harbor Travel, urged bis fellow coun- cilmen to grant Wynn t.he ad- mlnistrall ve power t.o remove the hoods wh en petillon.ed by bu.slneasmen. • "ll would be helpful to us this year," Ryckoff said. The only opposition to the meuure came from City Coun· cllman Don Mcinnis who first dl..sclalmtd any confUcl of ln· tereat In the matter since hl..s (See SCROOGE, Paie AJ) List ference that .)Nill include Vice Presidenl-eled Walter F. Mon- dale. Carter said the whole range of problems facing the new ad· ministration will be discussed "so that when we do reach in- auguration day. we'll be well· prepared to work together." He also said each Cabinet ap- pointee is meeting with his op- posite number in the For~ <See CABIN ET, Page 1\2) ~ •1 Bay City ~ Bastion Burned i .; . t . . J SAN FRANCISCO CAP) -Al fire started by a Christmas tre( during a gala holiday part.y destroyed the St. Francis Yach6 Club and. the fire departme,. said. killed three persons. A\ least 20 others were injured. The 49-year -old club was in~ front r ank of inter!'ati~nal .yac.~ ing, a virtual cit y inst1tul1 where some of the world's mo prestigious class r;ices. we re held . Damage was e!.timated al $.JOO.()()(). The first body was found not long after the spectacular, five aJarm blaze was brought under control. and the other two were found as firemen sifted through the rubble of the elegant club, fire offi cials said. Flames shot more than 100 feet into the air as the fierce blaze consumed the 1,700-member club at the northwest come·· of the Marina Green, on the ed1' of San Fiancisco Bay. About 200, persons were in ttie building when the fire broke out. Club Commodore Gene llartJ:.i;. stood outside a s the building burned. stunned at the fate of ~e f club just days after its 49th birth· j day. Firemen said the blaze broke out shortly before 9:40 p.m. in the L-shaped club autidorium where the party was being held . It raged put of control for two hours before coming under control, but by that time it was rated a total loss The dead were not immcd1ate- ly identified . At least one of the bodies, the first discovered, was reported to be badly burned. Ti:affic-headed for·the·Goldcn Ga t e Bridge on M ari n a Boulevard was diverted to Lorn bard Street. The fire was easily visible from the East Bay and many parts of the city. Thick smoke, a caved-in roof and "hot wires bouncing around in the lobby" hampered firefight· ing efforts. Firemen battling th<' blaze from land were aided by the fireboat Phoenix and the !!2• foot Coast Guard cutter Point Heyer. One of those who was at the party a few minutes before the fire broke out was Fire Chief An· drew Casper. He said the fire broke out in a nine-fool tree de· corated with Christmas !ili!hls. They suddenly "flared,-ignited and exploded, said the chier. drenched in waler and covered with soot. "The Chr istmas tree we nt 'poof ', just like that,'' said Ted Bakkila, a chemical engineer at· tending the party. Other members said the tree had been in place several days and appeared dry. Coast Weather Some variable cloudi· ness through .Wednesday, but mos tly fair . Tem- peratures sticking around the 70 mark, lows to about 40. INSIDE TOD"" Chicago's "bo11,". Rkha.rd , J. DoUJ1, ditd M ondaJI. alt~· • noon o/ .a heart .attack 6i Political ~na art 1tt1dng a MW ltadet. Stt. P.agt A4. Index AIY-S.rYlte AU ._. ... _,. • a.-..-c11 8J ~ AU ~ .. ~J: .,. ., .. ,.' At .,... •l a-it1w ... ,. 0r ty c:i.Nu ., •• , °"'-~ ., ttent ... ........ ~ Al--~~ I =..::: ..... ~~ ~ .J,, ,..._.. AIM> WMtW • A• ...._.,.. .. ..,,..._. ., ~----------------------~1 ......... --~~~~~·~-------.. ---' .. I N Tuesd-v December 21 1918 ............. LABOR SECRETARY Dr. F. R•y Marahalt F,....PageAI CABINET • • administr.atwn. 01nd c.alled it another area of unpreCl'dented cooperation in the trans1l1on from Hcpubltcan to OemocrJtl<' rule Carter was ;.iskcd wbt.-ther he will m<'et his CJffipaJgn pll-t1~"" to cut ddcnsc "Pl'nd1ng and withdraw American forcl'!> from Korea Carter i.m iJed and said ii he doesn't. he'll he very dis<1ppomt ed an hu. n ew Pe ntagon h1J(h cum mand. Then he pledged that "we W111 start immediately with eff1 c1enc1cs and <'conomies in the Defrnse Department. .. " He said the new administration will work to improve organiu· taon. lon g -r a nge pla nning, logis tics. military equipmt'nt m ainte na nce. C:ind to cul un- necessary personnel assa~n ­ menb Carter did not use fi gures th<1t would indicate the d efe nse budget level from which he would set>k t(J achieve the r("Cfuc \Joos he promii.e<l dunn~ the <•a mpaagn Minor Floods Hit NB Shores At High Tide A seven-foot high Lide JOmed westerly swelb of four to fJvc• feet early today. result.mg m mmor flooding along the ocean and bay front m Newport Beach. The highest tide of the year pc'aked at about 8 :.> a m . cau~ mg temporary flooding on Mam Street nl'ar the Balboa Pavilion and Jlring th<· ol'can front Th<.•re wPre no reports nf damage or ma1or tralflt' !Jro bit-ms. hut at least one dock with a boat attache<l reporkdly noat- t'<l awJy when tnt' tJde forced the dock lt• rtlle abo' e its ceml-nl p1I 111g!I The ooat and dtxk were IJlt•1 rt'Cm l'rt•d The llde dropped olf qu1ckh but ,-ie~ port Beach Marine Ot-vartment Safely Offtct'r Larry r.1b'>on i.;ud he expects tht' samf" l'ond1twn1 to contJnu{• for th•• next coupl1• of rlay'I Wl-dn<' day & tide ts expected w rt•:1ch Ii 11 rl't>t However. G1~on said lht• moderately high "urf mJ )' l'du'>e mon• m inor noodllli! I le l'!'llmJtt•d thJt tocl.1y ~ C<>m b1na11on 11( 'utf .1nrl l1dt· t .JuSt-<l J pc'ak tidr of 7 :, h·1·t It'., not .ill thJl u.n~u.:.il '-J•d (~IMon ro1ntanic out that "1ntt"r flood1111-: " c-n mmon on the Pt>ntnsula ·w,. knew it w&L' rom mi:: an<! .1 good "11111 hlo"' ms: on '-hurt· woulcl havt• k1ckt'<I 1t up .-ven more ... hr s aid G1b11on rt'ported that the Marint' Department, loratl.'d nf'ar Nf'wport Pier. experiencC'd ~e water under the building and lht'rf' wa!'I mommg Ooodmg alontt Ralboa Rnulevan:I and «th Strttt He 11a1d the noodtn~ IO this art' a "'as com pounded by water back an~ up throu~h old strn m drains which art> not equipped wtth ~ales to !!hut off thl' n ow of wat<'r OAA140f COAST " DAILY PILOT "l'MI).-•~( .. tO•u~P ~ ,..,,~tlt'll\t~t"•ll'ft .............. .._ ,.,,., l'ftu~ti¥tf'llrt0.~ c,,...._,.,,,.,.....,"'"'"'' .,.,,.. .. ,. .. ~.._ • ...,.,.,,..*' ..,. r 1rti "-•.<I M~"11'f' '"'~ ft ~,9 I• fo ft ltAI" t Nt •MH H· .lM" Hu~tlNl"IV'I n-Al"i f • 1•"' V• .,.,, ''., 1111• Wct11•"4M·' "'• 1,.,, "'"° t•"fl•"'•"".,"' ~ ... ( ... '"• 4\otftflllflt .. q""•'•l'tt 1•1'11'1 Dwbt1't.hf'O ~....-d•n 6tltd ~,.. '"'"" f)f'•l'ltf net ~·'"'"" ••~t '' • T"O ._,,, """ '""' to\t• M-\.it t•h,.,.,,,,,..,~ ..... ,, N "'"" ,..,.,,.1'1•MPveif.i..,,... , .... _ VKe ~•t•~fl1 •nc"t c;..,_..; AMt'\fU .. , l-••-M l•tor ·-··_,....... AUl\,tQt"41 f:••or -·"~ _ .... . A\WW-*t .... IW.•flllJI• ... °' OffleH CM••~• 1MW.\t-.~\t,...., ~ .. "' ..... ()4~ytpfirit .... t41"""1"'1fM .... ~,_ tYl 1, .. Mfl...,lifwf'd ---v .... , 1119•1.A"••ll-•• \.A" o~ , ,.,....,.,.. l•l•phon• (11CIM2-4321 Clu.iti.d Advertltlfig M2-M71 Consumer Pri«!es Cuts in Food Balance Hikes WASHINGTON <AP> The first decline m food J>n cf'S 10 eiti:ht months helped hold the o\ t'r all rise il'I c·on!)u.mer prtcl•:. in November to th n•t-t<'nths or a pt.orcent, tht· sum e a'> lfl Octobt.•r. the government said today At the same time. ~ ,govc·rn· m4"11t said real spendable earn- ings -a worker'!) take-home pay ufter adjustment for taxt•s and inflation increasl•cl eight tenths of a perceot w Novcmbf-r, the biggest monthly mcrell.:>e ill buying power in more than u year. The Liibor Department said that for the 12-month period end- ing jn November , consumer prices increased 5 percent, the smallest 12-moolh gain in more than three years. The favorable inflation report was certain to be welcomed by economists in both the Ford and incoming C<.irter l.ldmmi.,trations as confirmation or their lx.•lid that innat1on will not get out or hand again m the near future The Consumer Pnce lnd(•X stood at 173.8 la.st month, mean 1ng that a market basket of ~oods cost ing SlOO in 1967 now costs $173.80. Witness Backs Prosecution In Heir Case The opt>rator of a Santa Ana motel testified today that she saw one of potato chip hear John Scud· der's accused kidna~rs wtth the mobile home ui.ed to :.ibdul't the v1ct1m from a lluntiJ1gt1>n Beach parking lot las t Aug 19. The day of the k1clnapmf:. dt·· fondant Wil liam Rudy We~son . 44, of Tustin. wa:. rt>gJSlered al the motel. And witness Jo Ellen Glenn said the motor home wa.-. parked at the motel the day of S<:udder 's abduction. l'lat'ing Wesson with the kid nap vehicle on the day of the bungled caper was an l'ffort by the prosecution to i.how that Wesson m aste rm inded the heist Scudder was k1dnapc"Cf• Aui: 19 and held captive for roughly 90 mmutes in lhe motor home until breaking free fro m h1~ captor!) in Fountain Valley. The next day. W<.-sson and his b roth er·in-law , R1ck1 Dal e Sellers. 21 , were arn.>Sted and charged with the $250,000 kidnap conspiracy. Lale Monday aftc>rnoon. the mobile home ·s owner testified in Superior Court .Ju1lgt• Richard Bt•acom'-; courtroom that We~son and Sl'llt•r.., had n •nted the motor homt• from him J frw cl.n " before the k 1dnapt11~ 'lt·1thC'r defendant attempted to d1..,gu1se their 1dt>nllty whrn rent mg the motor homC' ror a trip to thr Colorado H.1v<.•r . Skvt•n Burg<.·tt of Stanton h 'Slif1<.>d 1-:Jrht•r 1n the> dav. S<·udrll'r'<> WI((', \'<1ll'r1e. 11it•ntii1f'(f th(' VOICl' on a tap<' playl'fl 1n court as lht· \ rnc·r or a man 14'ho <' allt'<l hl'r and tlemandE:'d $250.000 1 """"m "'"- Over·ull food pnccs declined two tenths of a per('ft)l w Nov· em~r Tht' dt'partmt'1lt':o1 index of mortgage 1nt<·n•st rate!> fell 2 1 p e r c c n l . \\ h 1 I l· h o u s c h o Id serv1ct>S coi.ts W<'r<' down one tenth of a 1wr<'t•nt, the r1r st decline in that t•at.egory since early 1971. The L abor lh•partment said the prices of a l<ir~t· num~r of grocery item!. fl'll durmJ{ the moolh, l<..-d by frc1ih vegetables, down 6.5 percent. poric, down 3.1 percent, and dairy products, which declined for lb.e flrst time smce earl) t.tus year. ThreeKKK Marines Te ll Threats By the AssO<'lated Pres.s T hrtt Ku Klux Klan members 111 Manne uniforms say they tried to v. arn of growing raciaJ tensions at Camp Pendleton but without success. ·'There were threats upon us that they were going lo kill us ," said one, Pfc . Dennis L . Campbell. referring to black Marines without giving delatls . The views were given al a pre- trial hearing Monday for one or J4 blacks charged with con - spiracy and assaultmg a half. dozen while Marin<>S in a bar- racks fight Nov. 12 Threcoftheir pretrial hearings have been com- pleted. Campbell wa:. transferred lo another M a rinc• base after his name was n'pOrtl"<i found on C:1 hst of alleged Klan members in a room near one 111 wtuch the fight took place Weapons and pro- paganda also were found Called bC:ick to tesL1Jy with tum were Pfc Charles V. Smith and Pfc . Ronnie ll arper , both of whom said they also belong to the KKK The blacks knocked on a bar- r acks door and ask ed fo r "Chuck." S mith testified, "As far as I know, no one on that floor could be named Chuck but me." He and Campbell said they car- ried a knife in full view. and Harper said he wore a pocket knife. but all thrcc said the blacks never carnl'<i knives, as far as they knew F,....P~Al SCROOGE •. family 1s no longl'r oper ating a shop i"n th<' l.1tlo Village . lie µ0111tt•d out that there 1s a i,econd husant'SS an·a 1n Lido, the Lido V1ll<.1g<'r. and lw wanted to know how thusc• hu'>mc•<,smcn felt about t hc m alter b(•fore agrecmg to RyckoH's proposal Councilml.'n volL'<1 6 1 to ap- prove Ryckorf's proposal. It was noted that a('hOn would have to be taken quickly to provide relier to thC' Lido bus messes. Spare That Tree City crewman ponders next move after learning about mist.alee he and co-workers made this morning . It seems there was a tree in front of the Newport Beach Police Sta- tion. ll blocked the view of Santa Barbara Drive traffic from motorists lt>oving the police parkln1 lot. It was or- dered removed, bot city workm-s removed t..his tree -the wrong one. They later found the right tree and cut it down, too. ··; ·~ •.• Oarist•a• Cheer As a Christmas project. ml'mhC'rs of the Balboa Is land Chamber of Commerce bought the ingredients for tht·sc turkey packs which contain all the m:.i~mgs for. a tnbuted to needy familie~ 1denllfied by chambN mt·mbers. Helping load the packs are (from left) Grant McNiff, Ken Wasmann. t\I Dunlap and Don M atheson . holiday dinner. The packs wall bc~d_1s_· ______ _ Newport Council Mulling Meters Jn action Monday night. the Newport Beach city c·oun· cat · WEST NEWPORT: Approved preliminary plans for the widening of Wes t Coast Highway from S7th Street to the Santa Ana River and awarded a $274,000 contract for initial ronstruction of West Newport Park and improvement!> oo Seashore Drive. METERS: Agreed lo give Caty Manager Robert Wynn the discretionary power to uncover parking m eters which have been hooded as a Christmas #!lfl to motorists from the city. COMMITTEES: Set for d1scuss1on on J an. 10 the ques· t.aon or reappointment of J6 mcmhers of five advisory com- mittees. B ULKHEAD: Changed city pohcy on seawalls to force residents of the peninsula to maintain sandy beaches on the watt'r side of a ny future seawalls built betw~ A and K strttts. fl RE WOR KS: Voted 4-J to spend $4,000 on a fireworks display for July 4 while seeking an additional $2 ,500 for the s how in contributions from homeowner and business groups. Dana Point Wolllan Aided in Sex Case By TOM BARLEY Of "'-O•llr ~I"" SCMf A Dana Point woman's claim that a drug injected into her by Dr. Ross Todd McClure made her incapable of resisting his sexual advances was defonded today in Orange County Superior Court t estimony. Or John Kramer, a m edical F,.._Pog~Al JULY 4 ••• renect less patriotic fervor on the part of the city." Mcinnis said he would vote for a city fireworks display if the proponents of the measure couJd prove to him that it would cut down on the large numbers of il- legal private fireworks displays. "Fra nkly." he said, "l think It only encoura~es the private djs. plays." Mayor Mila n Dostal, a backer oC the show. said he lhoo~hl it would be a wort.hwh.ile project because it draw s people together specialist called by ~e prosecu· t.aon as a rebuttal witness. told the jury that the dosage of Valium administered at Or. McClure's South Laguna officc last Jan. 7 might well have h;id that impact on her powers lo resist Or . McClure. 55, 1s being tried on c harges of rape and sex perve rs ion. It is alleged that the act of sexual in- tercourse took place while he was treating his 22-year old pa· tiE:'nt for a back inJury The defendant has denied the rape allegation from the wit· ness stand. lie admits h aving sex with his patient but claims she was a willing participant and her decision was not m nuenced by the drug Or. Kramer who repeatedly tangled with d efense attorney Leonard Mc Bride during his testimony, told the jury that Va lium is often used in prl' surgery situations where the pa· ticnt experiences fear und ap· prehension. ~~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~~- ,.,..... Pa9t-A I SPILL ... nounced it was asking President Ford for disaster relier to help combat wbat was considered a· maJor oil s pill even before the ship split. On Monday d e ad a nd oil· soaked sea birds started washing onto the Nantucket shores. The slick from the lanker then was reported to be more than 60 miles long and heading seaward away from land. As seas and frozen spra~ pounded the vessel, enV1ronm~ talists were laking action lo deal with the oi I. Massachusetts En· vironmental Affairs Secretary Evelyn Murphy told The AS· socialed Press that private con. tractors wer e b<>ing sought to stand by if the oil washed ashore. The Coast Guard said it has already spent $500,000 on at- tempting to free the ship. The tanker was stuck on sand near the western edge of Georges Bank -for centuries one of the most prolific fishing grounds q! the world. t The tanker 's oil posed a new and deadly threat to Yankee fis- hermen trying to wrest a living from the sea off New E ngland. The oil that has spilled and leaked into thl' sea has con- taminated some shellfish and crippled or killed thousands or sea birds. The record 01 I spill from a tanker was more than 29 million ~allons from the supertanker T o rrey Canyon after 1t ran aground off England on May 18, 1967, and broke in h alf. Roof Fan Doorway For NB Burglary Thieves whC> r emoved a fao from a roof vent took !.urlboard, wetsuits and cash worth an estimC:ited $1.428 from a West Newport B each surf s ho p, Newport Beach pc1'1cc said to- day. The theft was discovered Mon~ day m orning by Charles Dent , an employe at the South Shore S urfboard s, 6310 W. Coast Highway. 2 nd Kidnap Fear ed MADRID, Spain CAPJ An in- dustrialist in the Rnsque region, Eamon Lope7. Pastor. -41, ap- parently h as heen k1dnaped as polic<' continue lo hunt for An· tonio d<• Oriol, 63. the con- s<-rvative l<'ader ahductc•d 10 days a~o ~~ ~~a. fa.bulou.s christmas ~ift ... lighLwrz.i~ht. warmth w1Lh ~ Jod<s. 100%; cot,Lon shell wi\.,h contresting Lartan llr.m8 in oordurrrj or brushed col.ton also ave\ lable. m 90Jid revern1 ble.. m:del. made tor us in E.nglarri. 44 falhk>n island, newport center 644·5070 ·.