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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1976-12-22 - Orange Coast Pilott .. Garden Grove Arrest ,.. - Tanker Oil Flow Army Admits Worsens; Slick Germ Warfare eaehes Fishery Te~ts in 8 Cities WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, DECEMBER 22, 1976 anded to u VOL.-. HO m JS((TIOHS. J2 ~AGE\ tiger Tangle Touted ' Japanese karate expert Mamoru Yamamoto savs he \4-lll do battle with a 600 pound t1gcr next year in llaitt. AidNI here m a pres conferencc ckmon~trat1on of his pro"·c.·ss, Yamamoto said he has a lready la ken on a pig a nd a hull in previous bouts. Why? For his own s atisfaction. hC' :-.ays. Army Admits Tests . Of Germ Warf are WASllINGTON <AP) -The ,Ymy confirmed today it con- clucted simulated attacks with non-disease-causing sub.<11tances in eight areas to determine the country's vulnerability to germ warfare. An Army spbkesman said the tuts. conducted between 1950 and 1966, were performed with non-disease-causing biological subltances, and that "there is OGthing we have that shows any linkage between these tests and UIY outbreaks of infection or any deaths." The tests were conducted al the Pentaeon and San Francisco in 1950; Mechanicsburg, Pa., in ~J ; Key West , F1a. and Ft. ~cClellan, Ala. in 1952; Panama :.4.;QCJICK SHUT fJN COLDSPOr "••J eoJd it right awa,y. It I'd had •llht of them, I could have Md them all." Jlere'1 the "1d"thnt sparked the Jale for tblf Newport Beach znan: 1 4 ·cu ft ·-rros tfrcc Colchpot Nfr1a. $100 Xlnt 1 Cond. XXll·XlOCX ,.,.ll_1~ bave o rettiierator, or •rtmnl ttae, you•d Dke to con-"rirt to cuh -c1ll 6'2-S678. Dally PUot clatatneda malto it euy to ,.... a few words to work for you. ... City, Fla .. 1953; Point Mugu and Port Hueneme. Calif. in 1954 ; and on New York City's subway m 1966, the Ar my said. The purpose of the tests was to dete rm i n e the nation 's vulnerability to possible enemy biological attack and the U.S. ability to detect such an attack, the spokes m an said. Tbe substance used in all the tests was Serratla Marcescens, which the Army says "is present throughout the em1ironment and is considered not to cause dis· ease.'' The newspaper Newsday of Long Island, N .Y., reported Tuesday that one ma n -a hospital patient -died after the 19SO test in San Francisl'o and that death was caused by Ser- ratla in his bloodstream. Quoting unnamed sources and documents, the newspaper also said that following lhe 1952 test at Ft. McClellan, the number of pneumonia c ases more than doubled in the surrounding county. lt said there also was an ln· creue ln pneumonia deaths in the Key West area aft.er the test there and added lhatSerraUa has been ldenUfied as a rare cause or pneumonia. The Army aclmowledgtod that Serratia Mercescens "could con- cclvAbly act as an oppe>rtunlsl and produce an Infection'' tn . persona who lack Immunity to <See GERMS, Page AZ> Cops Kill Wolllan In Raid A 29·year-old woman was ac· cidentally shot to death Tues- day night wh<'n law enforce· ment officers arrested two San Bernardino murder s uspects holed up in a Garden Grove apartment. Police said Donna Russell of Hesperia was m ortally wounded by a bullet accidentally firt'd by a San B e rn ard in o County sheriff's deputy in the arresting party According to Garden Grove police, Mrs. Russell . wife or one of the murder suspects, was struck in the chest by the single s hot rircd b y Ll. Ronald l''orbush. The woman reportedly was one or three people inside Apartm ent 6 a t 1221 Beach Blvd. when four San Bernardino County d eputies and a cont- ingent of Garden Grove police went there in search of the murder s uspects. It was when the arresting of· ficers were jostling to g<'t inside the a partment that the fatal shot was fired, police said. Target of the arresting party were two men accused or the s hotgun s laying earlier this month of a 17-year-old San Bernardino youth. Arrested on the murder war- ranu a fter being captured in the Garden Grove apartment were Gary Lee Russell, 30, of Hesperia a nd Guy Sterling Stubbs, 21, of San Bernardino. Police said Stubbs was cap- tured when he tried to flee through a rear door while Russell, the shooting victim's husband, surrendered inside the apartment. OOf\J'T ~OrtGET.' QMLY 2 SHOP91NG OAVS 'TfL CHRISTMAS.' < Homage Nixed Group Won't Mourn Daley SAN DIEGO (AP> The lak Mayor Richard J . Dalc•y of Chicago was clescribcd as "ruthless" and ''corrupt·· by Si.Jn Diego County super visors as they refused to quit work early in memory of him. Thret' of the five supervisors voted Tuesday Lo re· JCCt a resolut ion honormg Da)('y. who died Mond~y The 22·ycar Chicago m ayor "ran a political m achine that ran roughshod over people's rights ... Super visor Dick Brown said. "The man is dead,'' commcntc<l Supervisor Jack Walsh. "If wt• have nothing good to ~ay, let"s go on to something e lse.'· America's Worst Oil Spill Flows NANTUCKET, Mass. (A P) The sinking bow or the fractured Liberian oi l tanker Argo Merchant split apart today, spill- ing what cargo it still held onto Nantucket Shoals . The ship's break-up was one or h.istory's worst oil spills. "There's nothing we can do," said Coast Guard Lt. Cmdr. Barry Chambers. Officials watched helplessly the progress or th& spreading oil slick amid a report that some oil alr ea d y h a d reac h e d northeastward to the Georges * * * Spilled Oil Wuld Power 4 Boston Days BOSTON (AP) -Ir the 5.7 mtllion gallons of industrial fuel oil spilled from the Liberia tanker Argo Merchant were con fined on a halt-acre lot, it would make a pool 46 feet. 1v. inches deep. If It were burned in the boilers of Boston Edison Company, it could generate that utility's elec· trlctty for four days. That's the eqQJvalent ot a year's use for 22,000 homes. If it were guollne, it could power 126,667 cars for a year, aa- sumtna 20 mUes per gallon. It could fuel one car oo 6,000 trips around the world at the equator. U it were the kind suJt.Able for burDinl in your home -which It lan't -it w6uld beat It for 9,459 wlnltr1. That's assumlnc you beve f alrly 1ood insulation. It you 1pre1d U out to a Wck· 1 nes1 of one Inch, It would cover 20 football fields. ~ B ank commerci a l fis hing grounds. Massachusetts waited for word from officials in Washington. D.C .. on the state's request for feder a l a id for businessmen whose livelihoods might be damaged by the spreadinR oil. Otl·coated birds have been spotted by the hundreds on Nan· tucket. but wind and wave were sweeping the oil from beaches. The break-up early Tuesday of the 640-foot t a nker /\rgo Merchant spewed 75 percent or her 7.6 million gallons of heavy industri al crude oil into a slick 75 miles long and more than 25 miles wide at its broadest point "This is the biggest oil spill dts· aster on the American coaslinour history," said Russell Train, head of the U .S. Environmental Protection Agency. The aged , rusting vessel - called a "suspect ship" by the Coast Guard becaui;e of 19 pre· vious mishaps since 1964 -piled onto the Middle Rip Shoals 27 miles southeast of this island re- sort. one week ago today. She was 10 miles off course when she hit. No was injured in the pile-up, d no one was aboard when she okeupTuesday. The Coast Guard said most of th cargo washed in.to the ocean w en her foredeck and aft sect.ion .p ed In lO·foot seas. 'I am convinced some of the oil gotten" to Georges Bank." utGuard Rear Adm.James P. art told reporters. The vessel was on its way from enezuela to Salem, Mass. ewart said an investigation bowed the ship's master'was not Inf all of naviiaung equipment aval able lo hJm, and that theahip wu no\ kept In repair. The captain of the Arco Merchant, George Papo.d()l)OU)oe, (See SPILL, Page A!) 'Forget He's a I Doctor' By TOM BARLEY Of llte O•llY ~1lol St•tt Jury d e l iber a t ions were scheduled to open today alter Tuesday's heated and sometimes lurid closing arguments in the rape trial of Dr. Ross McClure of South Laguna. The eight-wom an, four-m an Orange County Superior Court jury heard prosecutor Maurice Evans condemn the doctor as "perverted" as h e asked for a finding of guilty of rape and sex perversion charges. Dr. McClure's attorney. Leona rd McBride, challenged Evans' conclusions and r e- minded the jury of the tape switched on by Dr. McClure al the height of his admitted sexual activity. Dr. McClure is accused of in- jecting a 22-year-old patient with enough Valium so that s h e "couldn't talk, couldn't think and could barely keep her eyes open" before sexually assaulting her in his office Jan . 7. McBride throughout th<' trial has conceded that his client gave the young woman a small Valium injection but it was done as stan· dard practice to relax her and that the sexual encounter that followed was entered into will· <See DOCTOR, Page A2) C oast 7 Weather Sunny through Thursday with some high cloudiness. Highs near the coast about 68. lows down to about40. INSIDE TODA\' Coaat area churchea are pl anning .cs number of Chrl1tmoa eve and day aervfcea to celebrate the feltive holiday. Places and • tirMa on P.age A9 toda11. ... --r--... ~~ ---~ --------- 1 ._ A2 DAILY PILOT S Weonnoay Decembor 22. 1979 :Eu~gy: Power 'Low Priority' to Daley CllICAGO <A P > Mayor Richard J Daley, leader for almost a quarter or a century of the largest political machine in the nation, was eulogb.ed today as a man who would have placed political power "fa r down on his liat of priorities." Daley died Monday of a heart ' attack in his doctor 's office. He was 74. Prcs idenl ·t·h~cl Cartr r. Vice • President Nl'lson I\ Hockefcllt"r and Sen. Edward M. Kennedy <O·Mass.), wt-re umong the dignitaries and hundrcdl> of local and sta t e pol1l1c1ans, or ficeh olders and political jobholders wpo attended his funeral. The Roman C<ilhuhc sl'rvices were held in the Nativity of Our Lord Cburch, jJst a few mmulcs' walk from where the mayor was born and from the bungalow where he lived most of hi:. life. "lie was known everywhere us a man of power and incvitubly that meant political power," s aid the Hev Gtlbt'rl (;1 aham, a fnend of the Daley family, who delivered the eulogy. "J know he would have placed that far down on his list of priori lies." In accordance with the family's w1:.hes, r('porters were baned form the :.ervices. They wailed outside with a crowd of about 300 people in bitterly cold weather. The service was broad· r:.rst outside on speakers. After the Mass of the Resurrec· h on, Daley was buned in Holy sepulchre Cemetery in Worth, i.I oO N'T """-( Sn1ile, Dorn You, Smile \11111111:-.t:-t1·;1\'l'lrng north of 7.umbrota. \111111 . fi11tl :1 happ~ mc:-.sage on the build· 1n~ on lhc Ron Benson farm . Whil e n('nson 's grammar might nol be lht• grcatc~t. his message comes through lollcl and clear . From Page A I SPILL ... was !lummoncd today lo dehver a depoc;1tton on the grounding 111 open court Ill' said ttw r't'a'>on for tht• j.!rounrl ini: "'J., l v. as in the \\roni: µ<1-.1111111 • 111· 1-. lll'rn~ <11H•d b't Cape Coo f1shermt·n \\ho d1•mand Silo m1l11011 1111la m.1gcs The\ da1m 1n tht•1r .,Ult again:.t the captam and :-hip ., 11v. ners thJt th~ spill will i'fl'I m.10\ ur lht•m lhl·tr livrlihonds i>t:l·,1u:.c of pollulr'<I .\I ;1 ht•,mni.: thr:-morning. l'.S Mag1 '>tralt• Lawr<•ncc C.:ohcn ruled that l'<tpadopoul os' lt•!>t1monr v. ould he given in prr\'atc It v. a!I a reversal 1n <"oht>n 's po,1t1nn. and he ~aid he had "com1· lo ,1 different con <.'lus1on "' about allowmgpuhltcdc· pos111oni1 after re·cxamlning rulc.., go\ cm Ing court procedure. lntl•rnalif>nal mant1melawand l S en\ 1ronmcnlJI and ship· JJ1n~ l.iw ... arc 1mprcc1sc on lhe suhJl'~ l cir J1.1b11ttv. One theory had 11 th.it tht• ownl'rs could be "lro onl} for th<.• \< alue or !he :.hip .ind ll'I cargo which after the tl1i;a:-.ll'r could he nothin)( IC lht' 01 1 ~ J'.'>hc~ onto L' !'i ~horcs. lav. 'c•r'( t hrrc• b1:licve the 11~ nl'r'> o( I ht• \ t'"l'i roulc.l be pro- t'C'Ule<l for rn\·ironmcntal inf rue lion!\ Curfew Ordered RF.lRUT. l,('honon IAPI -The ,.:oH·rn ment oril1•rl'd a rurfew ;1round Parl1nmcnt's meetln" place al ~undown today In prt·· parat1on for u meeting nC th(' l<'glslature Thur11day. Premier Sahm el-Hoss a nd PrPs ldent Elias Sark I!! were expecl<'d lo ask for emerRenry powt'rs to rule by clt'Crl'e. ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT '" .. ~•"'Q"C,,,.. •0 .. 11,•j•ot wtl'\•"•"I•\•"""" "4_.., ,,.. ........ ""'" ., ..... ~.\l'litd "" , ..... (,., ~·\.ol'• (' t 1 P,,f't~ ,f'l,~(~f'INttfllly ""~··• Hj f l'M'f\Affl ~Jr1,01rlj M')~·'I ti,rOililOf'I, .. ,t4•'r t ~ (p '• "" I tf •• .,...,., fM•'" Mv~•• ..... M &--•'" r-,. It"" ._,.,. ... 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"""'"'• ,., "'"' u M ,..,_,flllf mun.,, .. 1 .... 1_ ~ lt-tMy ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 'Incest' Fear Ends Adoption Of His Lover WESTERLY, R.I. (/\Pl /\ JUdge who says he questions the arrangemt"nl hao; ;mnullcd tht· adoption of a 32.year-0ld v.oman b~ her 33· yea r·old boyfn cnd Judge John F LalloofWei;tcrly Probate Court. who appr1>Vcd the .1dopt1on last week. revoked 1t and ordered the couple lo appear before him with their lawyer Jan. 5. Jost\ph /\. C'omolll 111. who 1s divorcing his wifr. adoplt•d Elaine Ivy Tattersall la!ll Wed nesday, accordin~ to town re· cords Their atlornf'), Aram I\. Berberian. said thl• couple de· ridcd on the adoption "to legitimize their cohabitation" and "obtain respectab1hty 111 lhl' t'yes oft heir peers " Last"' eek. Lallo s;.ud he had no leg;il alternative but to approve the adoption bt·r a use C'omolh and ~1ss Tattt'rsall w1•rt• both con senttna adults However, he :.aid Monday that he annull ed the adoption "on the 1n1tiative of lhe court, basC'd on rcrtain inform ation that came lo my attention.'· lie did not rlnboratcon his decisicm ·Friday, Family Court Judgt> Angelo G. Rossi s aid he believC'd the adoption of a love1 "borders nn Incest '' and violate:. stale law. Her Honesty Hits Jackpot With Police tmCA, N.Y . (AP) -A woman bowler hit the jackpot in sub· urban Yorkville, and could have gone home with $10,000 if she weren't so honest, according to police. The unidentified woman wu driving into the Vista Bowling Lanes Tuesday night when she felt her left Cront tire run over something. It was about $10,000 in cash, neatly wrapped with a rubber band. She turned it over to the bowl· lng alley manager, who called pot lee. Authorities declined to reveal the denominations of the bills, so only the ortalnal-poeseuor could claim them. The aerial numbers were being fed into police com· puters to be checked a1alnst stolenbllls. lf no one claims It, Sgt. Robert Rou a aid, It wlll 10 to the finder. "She sure Is an honest lady," he uld. adding that the woman asked for anonymity beuuae ''She's a 1ln1le lady and didn't want to be ietUna phone calll." Frona Page Al DOCTOR ••• ingly by both the doctor and the patient. Evans, waving the patient's medical chart before the jury. pointed out that Dr. McClure failed to record the injection he admitted giving the patient as she lay on his examining table in her blue bikini panties. .. She was m his office for only one reason," the prosecutor said "She was in pain from a back in jury. But what she got in Lhe way or treatment was massage of breasts and sexual organs. an at•t of oral copulation and the act or rape." McBride based his closin~ argument on the tape of the inci- dent made by the doctor. lie ar~ucd that the Dana Point woman was a willing participant in the love making and that the Valium was not designed to en- courage her to res pond to his sex· ual overtures but was for relier or her pain "She never protested," McBride said. "She never told him lo slop. She ncver askC'd him what he was doing If you don't beheve me, listen to the tape. "None or us really knows the truth." McBride added. And he urged the Jury to remember wtule It deliberates. that "sexual intercourse and oral copulation outside marria ge arc not a crime "We're not trying the medical profession here.·' the defense at· torncy said. "We're trying one man. Forget he's a doctor and look at him as a man." "And what a man," Evans countered. describing the defen· dant as "a doctor who hides behind his hypodermic needle." Evans asked jurors not to aJ. low the Imminence of "Christmas and the traditional season of good will" to allow sympathy to influence their verdict. "This was an act of rape and an act of oral copulation," he said. "And the law Is the law at Christmas or any other time of theyear ·· Brown Mum On Penalty SACRAMENTO (AP) -Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. has refused to heed a demand from the Senate Republican leader that he reveal If he would sign or veto a bill reatorln1 Callfomia's death PtnaJty law. Brown called the demand from Sen . Oeortrc Deukmejlan ''polltlcal rhetoric." Brown, a capital punishment foe In the past, has refuaf'd to say what he would do lf one of several death penalty bllla Introduced in the le1lelature reaches bis desk. :.uburb south or Ch1cugu The mourners inrludt-d Sen George M cGovern , t h e Democratic party's presidential :.tandard·bear e r 111 1972 and among tho:.e who sharply criticized Daley and ht:. police Corre during the tumultuous 1968 Democr alic Na ti on al Convention in Chicago. Also there was Gov Daniel Walker, a frequc•nl rritic who wrote a special report on the 1968 convention and described it a.s a "police riot.'· Bells iJt the city's Romi1n Cathohc churches rang m unison at 9:30 am. as the funen&I service began in the 97-year·old church. where Daley was b•ap· t1zed and marrie d and worshipped almost every day. Mourners waited outside the church in \I-d egree weather through much of the night for a final look al the man who ruled their city longer than any other. Police officials estlmutcd that more than 100,000 persons fUed pabt his casket in the church. The wake atartcd al 0000 and was to have ended at 10p.m ., but more than 200 peraoos 1UU wall· ed for entry to lbe churcb atlu midnlabt. The church doors were cloaed at 5 a.m. to allow fl.on! an-anao· mentts and a security check tor Carter's arrival. Carter arrived at the church around 9 a.m. Other dignitaries arrived shortly afterwards. Hijacker Gives Up 'Sick' Mechanic Releases Hostages SAN FRANCISCO (/\£') /\ mentally disturbed airline mechamc quietly surrendered to the FBI today after hold.mg his boss and an other CO·"'orker hostage for 14 hours in a com· mandl'ered OC8 3etlincr The plane never lcrt th1• airstrip. Only one shot was fln.'d during the tense, all night stan· doff ::It San Francisco lnterna· honul Airport. The plane was empty when the mechanic forced his hostages aboard. The only inJury was to one hostage cut on lhl' arms by tht• would·be hijacker. Palm J . Hinnant, 37, turned himself over to the F'Bl al 6:40 a.m. aft er two friends boarded the plane in exchange for the n• lease of one hostage, authontu:s said. ··Whcre will "e be going from he re"" Hin nant asked l"Dl agents as he left the plane. ''1'11 be going to jail, right?" Hinnant 's key demand had been for another jet and a fl1~ht crew to pilot 1l to an unkn<>wn dest in ation somew h ere eastward "The people arc ull :-.aflo, ·• t:niled A1rhnl.'!:> spok(•sman G W Putman told a nl•w:-. t•onrcrt>nn· aft er the ordt'al cndNJ "Thl· Wt'apon w<is surrendered lo his friend .. FBI spokesman Frank Per· rone said IUnnant was taken to San Francisco General llospilal for obser vation. Ht> said wounded hostage Richard f'unk, 38, was treated al the airport by Umlcd physicians. The other hostage, .I l'rr y Dusenberry. 42, was relcast'd first by Hinnant and was un- harmed. authoritiessa.id Sho rtly before releasing Dusenberry, llinnant declared · "ll 's too late for me now I'm JUSl trying to gt•t av. ay rrom what :. bugging me." Umted officials sajd Hinnant had been on sick leave and went to scc his boss. Funk. on Tuc•:.day to discuss a request for sick pay bnsed on mental disab1hty and strcss·induced t>mollonal pro· blc•ms. "We understand Mr. f\.mk de nied the claim for occupational <;ick leavc." said Untlt'<l tnlorma- l10n offi cer M ardcn Leavt"r. "'They had a dispute al lt>gedly and al that poi nt tht• i::un man forced Mr. Funk and another gentlt'man namt•d Hector Spenccr into the plane." Hinnant, armed with a Luger- type a utomati c pistol. lalt'r swapped Spencer, a United mechanic. for Oust'nbcrry because Spencer was unable lo operate lhe plan<•'s rad.Jo. After a night of erratic de· mands, Hmnanl asked that his friend s Lincoln Jones and Diary Removed OAKLAND <AP) -A poster· sized enl argem ent of a page from Wendy Yoshimura's diary w a s re m oved fr o m th e courtroom after her attorney ob· jected to the display. Ile accused the prosecution of a "cheap shot" in using the diary pagr.i;, portions of which deall with Yoshimura 's intimate relations with underground associates. DJ Guilty Of Perjury NEWARK, N.J. (/\P) Frankie Crocker, a lending disc jockey and proeram director in New York and Los Angeles, was convict· cd today of lying toll lfand jury investigating payola In the record Industry. A federal court jury re· ·turned the verdict niter u two-week trial and nine hours of deliberations. Crocke r could be sen· tenced to five years in Jail and fined $10,000, said As· st. U.S. Attorney Robert Romano. Crocker, who has a home in Beverly Hilb and a pen· thouse fn Manhattan, was convicted of 1ivlng per· jured testimony to a cran<f jury investigating allega· li o n s h e re c eiv e d thousands of dollars In cash to plua and riv" air time to records on WBl.S. Radio. New York. where he la program director ) Clarence Hamel come to thl· pl ane. After Hinnant rclca:.ed Dusenberry, J ones tolcJ authorities over the plane's rudio that "everybody's coming off and we got the gun ·• Tht' drama bcgan al ·1 20 pm Tuesday when Jl1nn ant. a divorced father of two, forced his captives a board the empty aircruft and began issuing a senes of demands for fuel, food, rlothing, brandy and a Cligbt crew. '·Palm is saying he has definite feelings about the maintenance base and the people at the base," f'unk said . The standoff took place at the United maintenance area, about two m iles from the m ain terminals. Routine fli ght opera· Hons at the busy airport were not affected. Golden West College School's Founding President to Quit 'TIME FOR A CHANGE' Golden West's Boyce From Page A J GERMS •.• most diseases. "The number of incidents or Serratia M arcescens infection cannot be determined because it is not a reportable disease. It oc· rurs in Isolated circumstances and indi viduals or is invariably associated with some other dis· ease or injury whi ch lowers the resistance." the Army said. The Army said one substance used only at Mechanicsburg had the potential of causing a disease in persons lacking resistance. A spokesman said it was felt that the substance -Aspergillus f'um1gatus -was "rather harm· less." Newsday said the sub· stance is a Cungu:. '"'hich can he fatal to humans. A second substance wi:ed in the tests in all of the places except New York. the Pentaf(on and Key West. is cal l e d "Rnc1 1Ju s Globigii," which the Army said is not considered to cause disea!le. Also. the Army said, this h;idllus "will not produce infec- tion in weak individuals or those who Jack the capability lo de· velop immunity lo most dis· cases.·· A San Francisco physician, Dr. John Mills. coauthored an article in the publication "Annals of In· temal Medicine" last January In which It was suggested that "a possible explanation for the high frequency of Serratia infections here is that in September 1950, the U.S. Arm y aer osolized pigmented Serralia in the Bey Area to monitor wind and water currents.·· Ladies at Last For 01.d Club FRESNO <AP) -An all-men's social and luncheon club here will open tta doors to women for the first time alnce its Inception in 1963. directors announced. The executive board of the Downtown Club sa.Jd Tuesday that the motivatina factor for the r hange la to comply with new, non-discrimination policies at loenl banks. President Robert Klein said many or the private club's 250 members are bank employes subject to their company's policies . Dr. R. Dudley Boyce, found- ing president and chief ad· ministrative officer of Golden West College for the past 12 yea~. announced plans today to res ign, effective June 30, 1977. The SS·year-old educator and community leader said he con· sidered It an opportune time to make a change. "My wife and I simply have found this a time when we will welcome a c hange of pace," Boyce said in a Christmas let· ter lo faculty and staff. "We are excited that there are some new horizons toward which we may reach," he said. Coast Comm unity College District Chancellor Norman E. Watson said, •·1 was surprised and greatly saddened to learn of Dr. Boyce's decision to re· sign, but I can understand his desire for a, change of pace. "Dr. Boyce has done an out· standing Job building one of the most innovative commwtlty col· leg es in the nation," he said. Watson said the board of trustees wlll begin a nationwide searcb to find the most highly qualified successor. "We will hope to mi the position by July 1, 1977," he said. When Boyce took over as pre- sident or the college in l96S, the college campus was on 122 acres of farmland. The Institution now enrolls 20,000 students, employs 644 faculty and 315 staff, offers l ,600 courses and 47 career pro· aa m s. and has a mas ter· planned campus of 21 units. Boyce graduated from Fullerton College where bis father, the late Dr. William T. Boyce. ser ved as president from 1913·1950. He went to Stanford Universi· ty, Harvard graduate school of business as a naval officer can. didate, and back to Stanford to earn master or arts and doctor of education degrees. He joined the founding faculty when Orange Coast College was establis hed in 1948, serving there nine years as a teacher· counselor. During the next eight years he was a m ember or the prelSI· dent's staff and director of placement services at Stanford, before returning to Oranae County to become president of the new college. Boyce assisted in orl(anhlnl Christ Presbyterian Church 1n Huntington Beach where be served two terms as a member of the board of elders. Boyce has been a director and honorary director of the Huntington Beach Chamber of Commerce nnd a director of the West Orange County United Crusade. For the past six years he also has been a director of the Public Facilities Corporation, the body responsible for de· veloping Huntington Beach's new central library and civic center. Thief Hits Desks At County Plant A buralar stole SUSO ln cllb from unlocked desu at the Oran1e County Sanitation Ula· trlct plant at 10844 El.lit Ave. in Fountain Valley, police aatd. The thief used 1 wire clothes hanaer to open a bar lock door sometime alter the plant otftces closed Monday nlpt. EQ\P\otes dla~overed the misalna cu.b Tuesday morntns. > t i ' Dolly P llot St•ll Pftolo THEY TAKE A DIFFERENT ROUTE TO ANIMAL CONTROL Phil May Part of Pet Responslblllty Committee Laguna Pet Shelter ~ A Pro-life Haven By JACK CHAPPELL Of lht Dally PllOI ~t.lff Above the din of the Laguna Beach city pound, an unlikely trio -an Englis h l1t- cratur c professor. a former public r elations executive, and an artist who also t!> u city dog · catcher -talk about their com· moncausc. The dogs which provide the background c horus and the c:.it~ wh1t'h s talk their cag<•s in the pound won't face the same fate as 18 million animals dcstroyro in the United States last year for no other r eason thc.tn that they were unwanted, surplus. The reason they wrm't is partly due to the work of the three peo- ple, memhcrs of the Pel Responsibility Committc<'. a group or 20 citizen volunteers responsible for a turnaround in the way L ag-una H<.'a ch ap· proaches animal control. It has two basic goals. -First. to r educe dug and cat overpopulation by org anizing and promotin g a lo w co!>l neuter 'spay progr.im -Second. to care for animals ,·iclimized by man Dr. Cynthia l''ullcr, lhe college professor, expluinro· "Because lhts t!> ;m e'penment in local s hcltt•r.,, we rP v<·r v. very concernl·d to 1-t•cp the 1dc.t going or lh<' s h<'ltn not being a dump for unwanll'd animab " Unl ike m o.,t s hc·ll1·r., l"\(•n th o s e run h \ · human e soc1et1es. '' lht• LJ~uo:i Beach program dtH'S not des troy * * * Wam a Pet? Ca/,l Pound Th<' Laf:una fh'ach citv pound h<t'i dogs Jnd k1tlt•ns for adop t1on Informa tion Is :lvJllah'0 by t t'l1•phonin~ 4q; 3~52 Tht' P t'l Rl'"J>nn-;1h1lil y C"om - m1th'1• Is a nonprofit ('Orporation ;md t1 un.11 rnn~ arr tax df'dut ll- blc Ht'Prt''\cnll\ l"S m~1y bt· r~· t1th1"1 bv tt>lt'phonin~ th<' ab<>\ 1• telephone numtw r or wntmg to P 0 Rox 8'13. Ln~una Reach r nformnt1 n n o n low t ost rwutn •s1>av for do~ci rind rats Ill :J\'a 1l a bl <' b v t rl<'phon1ne 49'1 711-18. Second Victim Of Anaheim Crash Dies An <'arly mornini: traffic acci· d ent in Ana h eim Tuesday l'laimed a second lift" later in the day when 27·ye:ir-old J<'rry W. WooleridJ:c. of 2120 Malliet St, Anaheim, died in UCI Medical Center. According lo a eoroner's re· port, Woolerldge died at 12 ·:.> p .m., roughly 10 hours after the car he was driving was struck by another auto nnd flipped on il~ -side. Dead at the s cene was a passenger In Wooleridge's car. •Cheryl Lee M c Millen, 23, oC •<:testline. Driver of the auto that struck the Ill-fated Wooleridge car as it traveled southbound on Harbor Boulevard near Katella Avenue ned from the scene and is beinl( sought by police. ·Fund Use Probed ..... CONCORD. N.H. <AP> -The , FBI h as begun M lnvcstlgntlon or New HampKhlre Gov. ...)'eldrim Thomson's staff In con· • necUon with allefations that tho ,iovernor's o f Ice m lsusect federal money, Lhe Fnt said 2\laday. ' animals after an arbitrary time limit. Phil May, the former pubhr r<'· lat ions executive, said, "Never once have l heard anyone ta lk about a pro·life attitude, running a nondcstruction shclt<'r and that is what we've been attempting lo run here. "But at the saml' ltmt-1t ha" been balanced out wtlh lht• fact that we could be overwhelmed here. If we were all of a sudden backed against the wall with an overabundance of animals. our hand would be forced, but thl· other places, they haven't c9en trted," May s aid. Since the pound began ope ra· I ion 10 months ago, more than 300 do~s and 200 cats have been adopted out. Only one dog ha~ been destroyed. It was very old and very ill, May said. The city of Laguna Beach as· sumes respons ibility for im· pounded animals for the firs t fi ve days. After that, the volunlccrs take over. Som e animals have been kept for months before finally be· ing adopted by someone. I( there are medical bills, the committee pays them. All adult cats are neutered before being put up (or adoption. Again, lht• committee pays for the opera t1ons with pri vale don <.1tNI fund~. It didn't used to be like that The t·1ty of Laguna Reach formerly contrac ted with th<' Socielv for Prevention nf ('url'llv lo Animals for animal control ut an annual cost of $12,000. Impounded dogs and cats wcr<' de!>troyed 1f not picked up after a number of days. The SPCA abruptly canceled its contract with the city lar.t \·ear. The cant'ellat1on was due to ;lisagrecments over th<' role Laguna volunteers should play in the city approach to animal con· trot. Suzanne Howurd. a Lagun<i Rrach w alC'rcolorist and one of I wo Lagun:i Reach a nt mal sprvit'es officers. explainc-<I hnw the department functions When officers find J ~tray :m1mal. thev Sl'arch f1r1t for 11 s O'o'ner Only 1f their delcct1v<' work fails, 1s the ammnl 1m · pounded. · Loose dogs, instead of tm· pounding them ancJ lethng them ht• desertPd h er<' Ctn the pounrl >. we ~HttP a c1tat10n to I hat own1•r and t"au~e him to get the pumsh mcnt. not the cl oi;:, twcau~<' th<' way 1l 1s now with e very other system it 1s the do~ that 1s being put 1n Jail, not lhc owner," Mrs. Howard said. "The animals that come out here, lhe assumption is that they arP probably not owned," she said. Abandonment of animals is a misdemeanor c rime. The city now has a case pending against one dog owner . If found guilty, he could receive a sentence of a S500 fine and /or s ix months in county jail. "People hope, they ju.cit hope that we can take all the animals in. They just hope, they don't rt'· ason." Dr. Fuller said. "It Is a comm unity effort We are convinced that a localized ef· fort at a nimal control is the only practical -not only the most humanistic -answer. "Orange County pound is ccn· tralized control and its answer to pet population is simply to destroy, they don't even sponsor a low -cost n e uter /spay pro· gram," Dr. Fuller said. She said Laguna has been suc· cessful because of the support of the City Council, of the com· munity a nd o r th e area veterinarians. The neuter /spay progrnm has prevented the birth IO<'ally or thousands of dots and caL'l which would only hnve joined a s urplus populaUon, May said . "Thls t.rem endous destruction, this wanton d~struclion dot"' not have to ao on," he said. Wttdne$day December 2'2 1976 DAILY PILOT A.1 County Backs Judges Plan Proposal to Ease Civil Court Backlog Proposed state leg1slataoo ~<•II ing for the appointment of lour new Orange County Superior Court judges and providinl: $240,000 a year to help pay for them was endorsed Tuesday by county super visors. The action ends a lengthy state-county stalemate on the ad- ditional judges which court of· flclaJs said has helped creat e a roughly 8,000 civil case backlog in the courts . The four new judgeships were 30 Years For Heroin Smnggler NEW YORK (AP) -A41-year- old Bronx man, convicted with two others of conspinng to smug. gle 12 pounds of heroin frorr. Bangkok to New York, has been sentenced to a maximum term of 30 years in prison a nd fined $50,000. In imposing the sentence Tues- day on Matthew Madonna, Judge Robert L. Carter said it was lhe "severest sentence 1 have ever inflicted and hope never to have lo impose again." The sentence sonsisted of 15 years each on two counts to run consecutively and a S25.000 fine on each count and was the max- imum the court could have im · posed. "How many tens of thousands of fom1l1 cs co uld have been destroyed 1f the conspiracy had succeeded and 12 pounds of poison Pl'rmtlted to enter New York City'" the Judge askcc rhetoric ally. Authon ll<'!> estimated lhat the 12 pounds of purc heroin, cut to :.trcet-:.alc do~es. could he1vc had an ultimate value of $10 million. Carter, a federal judge for almost five years, said he wa~ "troubled by the destructive ef· feet of the d istn bu lion of heroin m New York City, µarticularly in llarlcm. a community about which J have a particular con- cern." Cartcr is black. Salvatore Lare a . 32, also of the Bronx. who J udge Carter charac· tcr1Zed as a "Junior partner" in the conspiracy, also received two IS-year terms, but to run concur· rcnUy. The t hird m an, Richard Kl· ineer. 34. of Oran~e. Calif .. was sentenced lo s ix m onths in prison and placed on probauon for 18 months. Noise Path Warning Plan Under Study A study of ways to warn poten· tial hom e buyers that their neighborhoods may be disturbed by aircraft noise was ordered Tues day by Orange County supervisors The study, wh~h is to be con- ducted by the county's Environ· mental Management Agency. was called for by Supervisor Phil Anthony. Anthony noted that, when supel""visors expanded a rcsiden- l1aJ building ban around El Toro Manne Corps Air Station two weeks ago, they look no action on a warning syst em for existing housing tracts or those that may be under development. Anthony suggC'sled that buyers of home~ around the EJ Toro base and othe r co mmercial a nd military airfields in the county should be warned about potential noise. While discussing nn enlarged r esidential construction ban around El Toro earlier this fall, supervisor s considered requiring that noise warning signs be post· ed at new housing developments and that warnings be written into sales agreem ents. But when the matter arose for final action, s uch stipulations were dropped. Jn addition , supervisors ex· empted previously -approved housing developments from the enlarge d residential building ban. Anthony s aid Tuesday that if such warnings a re later required for homes ar ound the El Toro base, similar warnings should be required in noisy areas around all county comme rcial a nd military airports. 'Goodwill' Saih onA.8 The fourth part in a series of articles on the hJs· tory of the sinking of the schoon er Goodwill by Undsley Parsons, former Newpo rt Beach vtcc mayor and motion picture produc(!r ·director, ap· pears tod'1Y on Pate AB. created al mid ycur by carht.•r state le11slulion Jnd c.·ould have been filled then hud succrv1sors asked the sovernor to fill them But the boar,i rerust'<i because the leglsl at1on left out the $240,000 annual !!late contnbu lion, or $60,000 per judg<', to h\'111 defray county costs or operating the s uperior courts. However , the board's action Tuesday still won't mean the ex tra judges will be hired im mediately. O•·puty Count) Coun~el John Anderson said tht< l l'~tslalJon may not be pusst·d UJlttl Marc·h. and it likely will b1• ~pnng before the additional Judges are lll> pointed and seated. SuJ)i!rvisor Ralph Clark t'O.,t the lone vote against the pt o posed legislation. While Clark said he reali1.es the judges are needed, he want1'tl hiis negative vote to renect the county's opposition to the way judicial seals are funded. Mo·ped Roles Please Open Before Yule It is likely that Santa Claus is going to be bringing a lot of mo-pedi. tn families e1long the Or ange Coast this Christm as and Burt Miles of the Department of Motor Vehicles wants to be sure everybody knows what's required of a mo-pcd rider. Herc is a basic check list for everyone who finds a mo· ped under the Christmas tree: DRIVE R 'S LICENSE -Miles s ays mo·ped riders must hold valid driv<.'r 's licenses or learner's permits . If under the age of 171h , Miles said, riders must he1ve certificates showing they successfully completed a driver's education and driver's training course in school. INSURANCE -Drivers licensed in this state must carry public liability and pr operty damage with a minimum coverage of $.15,000. This applies to mo·ped drivers, Miles says. LICENSE PLATES -Miles says that as long as the vehicle is less than two hors e power and cannot travel fas ter than 30 miles pe r hour, the only license it requires 1s a bicy- cle license He s aid U'lat a vehicle that excee<Js that en ten a must carry state license plates. Mo-pet.I owners who have questions about the operation ol their vehicles should contact the OMV at 631·2020 m Costa Mesa, 492·2266 1n San Cl emente and 893·2458 in Westminster. Woman Slain City, County Cops Seek Death Clues Santa Ana polict.• ~re working with Orange County Sheriff'~ of· fi cers today in a search for clues that could lead to the killer or e1 woman whose body was found near the Ortega llighway in lht· San Juan Capis trano area. Santa Ana officers W<'re the firs t to learn o f the• d1s.ip pearance of Maria Padtlla, 22, last Friday night when ht:r husband. David, 25, reporlC'd that his wife and their 2-year-old son had not returned home from a local bank and a subsequent Christmas shopping trip Mrs. Padilla'!> body was found Monday on top of a hill In the San Juan ar ea after a 12.year- old girl riding h<'r horse in brush·covered country spottt>d the weeping child and took him to her nearby home. Inves tigators s aid Mrs. Padilla was shot in the head. Robbery became a possible motive when t hey were unable to find any of the money she withdrew from the bank. But investigators arc barned today over the two-day lapse between the woman's possible abduction Friday night and what they believe was the dumping of her body Sunday night. "This cas e poses a lot of ques - tions," a senior sheriff's officer said t oday. "We don 't know where she was between Fnday and Sunda y and "e d'>n 't know If •he little boy we.ts with he r throughout that time. "All we can s ay today," he added, "is that we're working on l l." Predicter' s Keeping Mum HAWTHORNE (AP) -Dr. Henry Minturn says he'll no longer go public with earthquake pr ediction s after Southe rn California didn't s uffer the earth tremor he had for ecast to occur Monday. A large earthquake Monday in the Pacific about 100 miles off Vancouver Island was "a little far north for what l worked out, but the timing was beautiful," said Minturn, a geophysicist whose predictions are based on lunar and solar alignments. "They're going to hang me on that Dec. 20 date,'' Minturn added. Clark trn1d l'vt•n ir the istute al· IO<'ate:. $'240,000 to help detl'ay costs of the four judges, the COW\· ly will huvt• to spend another Sl nuJh on for s tare salaries and r e· lated court co~ts That t1xtr:1 t·uuuty l'O..,l. Clark ~aid , must bt• pusscd on to the ··over-burdt•ned property tax payer.'' But Arthur Cr ay. president of the Orange County Bar Assocla· lion. said the s ituation on court c•os1..q is the s ame locally~ it Is in cverv other California county. "The problem 1s that this coun· ty alone 1s not going to win that battle," Gray suid lie called th<' s1tua1ton in the courts impoi.s1blc, noting that whllt' Jllegt-d c riminals get s peedy trials, parties in ctvil suits mus t wait 18 months to get to court ofll'll tu have their cases delayed even longer "Right nnw th<.' c1VJI calendar is in shambles." Cray continued, "absoluk shambles. It is the public that 1:. being hurt, the civil lJtigant " Prc:.idinA .Judge Claude Owens said in a re port to supervisors the court backlog h as increased Crom 2,29-1 civil cases al the end of 1971 to 7 ,959 cases at the end of September. He said, the one-year delay in getting a civil case to trial that exis ted a year ago has now stretched to 18 m onths and con· tinues to grow worse. * * * County Court Operation . Audit Asked Along with efforts to add four new judges to Orange County Superior Court's 33-judge panel, county supervisors called Tues· day for a management audit of court practices. The board asked County Ad· ministrat1vc Officer Robert Thomas lo negotiate audit plans with su p erior court and municipal court judges. Supervisor Ralph Clark, who complained that past efforts to audit the courts had been reject- ed by judges, added "l l is not like we arc picking on any particular areas." He explained management audits are done in aJl other coun· ty departments lo learn where money could be saved. Presiding Judge Claude Owens s aid the courts are open to ex· am 1nat1on but cautioned he would want to learn more about the qualifications of someone ('onduclm~ s uch a n audit before lending hts support. Plot on Mom Earns Term LONG BEAC H (AP) -A 32· year-old Long Bcaeh man who admitted plotting the murder of his mother has been sentenced to one to five years in prison. The sentence was pronounced by Los Angeles S uperior Judge Elsworth Beam against Richard Salinas, who pleaded guilty Jast month to a charge of solicitation of murder. No motive was revealed. The purported plot reportedly fell apart when the person ap. proached by Salin us reported the offer lo police. Gem Talk ·Krugerrand (~,in,lcllcl~ ( h111cc f<)r<>ttncc, £Jr1 .I C Ill ,\I /I/I/ill·:.'\ RELIGIOUS SYMBOLS Religious symbols are a fascinatini; part of world history. To Christians, the cross symbolizes the exe<:ution of Jesus . Though the Romans used crucifixion to exhibit criminals, so the common people would heed the lessoms of punishment, the followers of J esus chose, instead, to heed their leader's teachings. Today, Christians of many denominations wear the c ros,, as a piece o( neck jewelry that is both meanlngrul and decorative. Catholics often wear special medals honoring favorite saints. For Jews, the Star of David is a sym· · bol of !alth. It has been around for so lon1 • more than 2,000 years ·that his· torianadlsagree aboutitsor1gin. Surprisingly, it is the younger set that wears most religiOWI jewelry nowedays. And women buy more re· llgioua items than men. Aho, religious symbols are worn more and m ore because they are faahionable • not just as an expression of faith. Sterling silver and aold·fillcd plecet arc most popular wl\h the )'OW\i· the hcstgifti11 thC\\Or)d. , • ~ I I ,' , . The Krugerrand Collection Is. more than Just beautiful jewelry. It also happens to be the world's best way to own gold. f That's because the Kruggerand Is the only coin minted that l contains exactly one troy ounce of pore gold -not a fractlonal · amount. llsgold content, therefore. is never In doubt. Soevenwhen It stands alone, the Kruooerandlsdeslrable. But when set In fashionable, 14K gold Wideband frames It's practically irr esistible. ' Stop in soon and seeourentlreglft collect Ion. 182 l NEWPORT Ol VO . COST A M(SA CONVENIENT lEAMS 30 YEARS IN THF SAME LOCATION ., I ------~ ...___ A4 DAILY PILOT 1976 . Jost • r ~ Air Power Failing? with Tom arphine MA BELL CALLING: lt'i; J>ro bable that ne xt Suturday morn, glowing with Christmas Day spirit, l shall pick up the phone and call my aunt and cousin in Modesto, my kids in Santa Barbara and maybe a few friends lo wish them all a merry, mury. The fact that I'm going to do th iii frets the phone company pe<>· pie som e. Actually. they 're not against me making m y Yule greeting calls. It's just that the phone Colks figure we're all going to bt• doing it. Tel ep h o n e spokes m en estimate that upon Christmas Day, 400,000 calls will be placed in and out of Orange County alone. That will be about a 14 percent ini;rease in the numbers of Yule greetings th at went ove r the wires hero last Christmas. IT'S NO WONDER the number of calls will increase Here on the coastline, we arc served by not one, but two telephone outfits. General Telephone operates in the Huntington Beach a nd Laguna Beach areas and Pacific Telephone holds forth most other places. Both compa nies, however, arc offering reduced phone rates on Chrii.tma i. Eve Friday and Christmas Day Saturday. Thus both com panies are an· ticipallng a Jam on the phone wires. Further thus. in news re· leases, they are urging you to place your Christ mu calls early Now. I ask you. JUSt what m j inglc bells docs that mean? Surely they don't want me to rail today whe n 1l isn't even Merry Christmas yet. Possibly they want me to do my calling early in the morning on Christmas Day. Fine. If ever· ybody takes the phone com- pany's advi('c that way, they'll have the lines jammed up in the morning instead of later on. I F A LOGJ AM of calls does oc c ur, teleph o n e co mpa n y spokesmen warn 1:r.ively that }OU may have to wait as long as 30 seconds before you can get a dial tone. Henry the Stilt? ' Larr y Rivers o f the Harlem G lobe Trotters, right, Wednes- day made g lob£>·trotting Henry Kissinger an honorary member of the tc<Jm in State Department-ceremonies. ~s~ingc~ said the numtH:r on thl• back of. his 1ersey con- f1rm£>d his o~ n op1111on <if himself It <:C1rned the number one. Globe Trotter .Jerry Vt•nablc stands at center. 'Witness' Perjurer In Illegitimacy Case ALBl'QUERQUE, N.M. /\ district court jury Tuesday found a Las Vegas, N<'V . man guilty of µl.'rJury in connection with his involve- ment in an attempt by another man lo be declared the illegitimate son of the late llow ard Hughes District Court .Judge• Wilham Hmrdan ordered a ro-day diagnostic Soviets · Outstrip U.S., Says Jane's LONDON CAP)-Soviet air power is outatrlpplng America 'Ii so fast that the United States mltht have to use major nuclear weaporus to counter a conven Uonal Communist attack, a lead· Ing British aviation a uthorlty said today. 'John W.R. Taylor, editor of the annual "Jane's All the World's Airc raft," urged the Unit ed States to go ahead w1th construc- tion of the controversial Bl bomber, lo order urgent replace· ments for the 1"106 interceptor and to insist on classifiut1on of the Soviet Bac:kfi re bomber as u strategic pla ne subject to thl• hmitallons being negol1ulcd 1n the SA LT talks m Vienna. WRITING I N hi s foreword to the authoritative 1976·77 survey of the world's air forces. Taylor said: ·'The Soviet Union and its Warsaw Pact allies outnumber the Weal in many key weapon.a as a result or America's preoccupa· lion wlth nuclear missiles, acain•l which no defenac la yel pucticable. "To avoid the mutual annihila-tion or an exchance of lntercon· tlnental mla1Ue1, lt Ls believed that both sldes ln any future con· frontatlon would attempt to restrict combat lo convenUonal or tactical nuclear weapons in· iUally. "BUT COULD THE United States do this ertectively?" Taylor wrote that Russia has 2,800 manned interceptors plus 12,000 aurface·to·&ir mi.sslles for defenae while the United States hu only 315 t~•lntaae FlOl ln· terceptors and no surf ace-to-air missiles "allocated to the de· fenae of the 48 home states.'' He Hid luting peace "can on· ly be a product of preclaely balllQfied strength, on any scale from extravagant overkill to common sense basic sell· defense." TAYLOR CRITICIZED U.S. representatives wbo accept Sov- 25.4 Million Face Medicare Cost Hike WASHINGTON CAP) -About 25.4 million Medicare beneficiaries will be pay ing 50 cents a month more for their hospital insurance and medical care beginning next July. The Department of Health, Education and Welfare announced the fee increases Tuesday. Secretary David Mathews said the higher fees were needed to cover partially the increasing cost of medicetl medicall nsurance is increasing care. by more than 20 percent a year,·' TIIE MONTHLY HEALTH in· he said. surance premium will increase, With the n ew premium In- to $7.70 from the present $7.20. crease, the elderly and disabled That will cost the nation's elderly will be paying for 28 percent of and disabled persons about $152.4 their doctor bills and related m111ion for the optional coverage medical expenses-in and out of of doctor bills and other medical the hospital. The government expenses for J2 months. will pay the balance. Out·oC-pocket expenditures for The need for the increase was Medicare hospital insurance, an tied to rising doctor fees, a trend autom atic be nefit when a person toward more expensive medical begins receiving Social &curity services. more use of services, checks, will Inc rease 19 percent and increased cost and use or on Jan. 1. hospitals out-patient services. The hike in hospital insurance EXPENDITUR ES FOR TIIE means that an elderly or disabled person entering a hospital in 1977 Medicare supplentary medical will be res ponsible for the first insurance program are expected .. ., .. f h · T 1 b'll to increase from about $6 b1llion •""" o t e tni ta I 'covering up in fiscal 1977 to $7.4 billion In fls· to two m onths, compared with the present c harge of $104. cal yPar 1978 which began last MATHEWS SAID THAT the in· Oc·fh1e cost or the Medicare creases will not come close to hospital insurance program r ose let H1urance1 that tbe new Bacldlre 1wln1·wlni bomber -a bar1alnln1 counter in the 1traw1lc arm• Umltatloll t.alb (SALT> ln Vienna -la a tacUcal combat plane and not a Ions· ran1e. 1trate1lc one subject t.o limltaUona ot the SALT afrH· meota. · Taylor aald a Backllre can fly from the Soviet Union t.o almOlt any part or the Untted Stal• and return home by re(uellnl only on- ce ln ftl1ht. Hence "any SALT. agreement that was alaned at t.be coet of accepting Bacldlre ., a tactical alrcran would leuen tbe hope of lutln1 peace," be 1a1d. Man, 168, Weds Girl TEHRAN, Iran CAP) - A farmer reputed to be 168 years old has married a 15-year·old glrl In a town in northeastern Iran, a Tehran newspaper sald to· day. Jt was the 13th marriage for All Ashraf Husseini, who comes from Azarbal- jan, an ar ea noted for its oldsters. the p aper, El· \elaat. said. The bride was identifi e d a s Akr a m Gholani. There was no word on the accuracy of Husseini'& a ge. Records are often missing in cases of claimed gr eat old age. Court Stays Death Dates WASHIN GTON <AP) Supreme Court Justice Lewis F. Powell Jr., Tuesday stayed the execution of three Texas men convicted of killing law enforce· ment officers. Powell stayed the scheduled Dec. 27 execution of Dolye GleM Boulware and the Jan. 31 execu- tions of Larry J oe Ross and Selwyn Barry Gholson. In both cases, Powell issued the stay without comm ent. This 1s terrible What an out· rage Wait an ent1re30seconds '' Well. t have news for the phone <:ompany people I can wait Thirty seconds I can spare 1f 1t means 1 get to put in the call when I want to evaluation of Grover W.ilktr. and said W:ilk<'r v.ould bl.' ~l'fl tenccd after that time m eeting higher medical costs. from $13.6 billion in 1976 to an Attorneys for all three defen- dants sought the stays to have more time to s eek Supreme Court review of lower court d e· cis ions arrirming the guilty verdicts and death sentences. H'rdict. Walker told Riordan, "I "The cosl of s upple m entary estimated S16.1 billion this year. will abide by the orders of the _______________ ;__ _________ .,;;,_ _______________ _ Further. the phone people arc ur~m~ that you d1n•ct dial thost• Christmas calb to save both tim e and money. Fine. I'll do that 1( they guarantee m y call won't end up going to Lincoln, Nebraska 'further. I don't want to direct dial onto the sam e line with pc<>· pie talking to Orlando. l'~lorida or Elko, Nevada. Let them hav<• their own hnes and l '11 keep mine to mysdf AODll'IONAJ,L\', 1( 1 fail in the direct dlahng try, 1 hopt> I don't 11et Mias Sancr06anct again a.'I my operator She is so pnss:. °"'h1le explaining to me how to d1rect dial when I've already trltd that ancl 1l clidn't work We ll . 1f I do get Miss Sa<'r06anc l a~am ltus year . I think I'll try 11torlint1 out our con versat1on by wl&hmit her a Merry Chnslmac; ,\FTER THE 1-'0l ft.)1;\I\, 1·1~ht wom ;in JU r::> r~·.ichc'<I 1h 2nd Swine Flu Case? MADISON. Wis cAPl Health officials think thl•y may have found their second cast· of s wine flu . But the state head of the suspended flu-shot program !lays. "Before wc arc going to call i.t anything. we a'r<' going to C'onfi rm it " Officials sll1d a Jefferson Coun ty farm youth -already re covered -If underJ?oing spPc1al tests to determine whether the• disease he had was swine flu 0 f r i (' I a I s I\ a I d t h t• Circumstances IO the C3S<' or the unidentifil'd 15 yr3r -old arc similar to those of Don llarns, a Green Countv hnnd who was the state's first knov. n r,1o;p nf "IWIO<' nu. ('OUrt." Walker went on trial Monday in connection with the attempt by Richard Hughes. also known as .Joseph Michael Brown. to have himself declared the son of Howard llughes. Walker testified 'al lhal hear- ing that he conrerred twice with l lughes on how to have Richard Hughes est ablished as the billionaire's son. That claim was dismissed last December. while Hughes was sti II ali vt'. RI C HARD H UGHES i s believed to be in Mexico. He never answered a warrant in Sandoval County charging him with fraud in connection with his claim to be Hughes' son. /\ state police examiner, Art Kivela of Santa Fe. testified Monday that signatures on docu- ments introduced a s part or Richard Hughes' claim. purport- ed to be those or the tale b1lhona1re, were tracings. ·Cold Grips East Coast Most of Region RegUters Below 20 T~,w,.at 11rc-• Ht u l"c•. Alf).1"1V •• • 01 AlhVflt""'''lU• •I ,. Atnttr•ltn lO ,. ,_,.,, Pw'\r .. O'f n )1 AUitl'\tA ,. n 8•,~·"~"' II IS Bo•"' 1\ II "'"'"" •• 14 O' 8ull••~ 1n ,, Oii O\.tt ... 1Dn 1• • 01 °'""'',,"' ,, .. (h!fAt)n •• II (1n<I'""'" •• • , ............ 10 4 °' °"""~' \I •• °"'' MQ.,,,., ,. 20 °''"'" ,, " °'''"'" ,, I """"' 8•v I , ........... tO ,., .....,.,,.,, .. t1 M -.1oo. 14 'lll 1-..!l.,.•DOll\ ,. • • ..,,,., r:11y " ,, Lot\ Vt~\ 61 "' Llllt. ltotk ~ ,. Ml,,...•POll\ St. Peul n ,. '"""'0.ltiln\ ., JD P•lm$prl"il\ ,, .0 o.-y "'-' ot1......, 1 ..... -...4 ,,,,.,\Ntty J t~.11~· II YC'.kl Cllt !'\"It ~•vt1t ""''' ~ .. ~, rw !• io om utt bft' "'• I 0"' IM W\ur r.<'lf\W' W!ll t.t 6..t1y.-,,...j C~f...,._. """41 Ol•"'I• C'nuntv ArNf •~ Ull N1~t1•• ,f H,f,,f1"9to111 ,_....,. •'Vt Wfll,tmtt'•f .. , .... Utt a.ti o-.... C..l'l\htl'C) llet(lt, ""Ju•n C.al><•lnl'O ' o-""'"' ~..,..,.,a........._ utuntN~ ,, ftM6M -·-•• t\ ...,.,_,.,,,. 1' " ~· ., ·~ ""'-Oii II 11 .... 1111'\41,M• ]] 0 n "°'11-,0f•. '.II ;ill ••tocnv •• , . •1e-., IS S.Ct-f\10 to ,, '4 ~· 11 " SllllUktClly 3• IJ lell ,.,.,,c,><O SI IO S.•111• " " *'AM ,, 11 n..r-' t• ,, Wa\hlnoton •O 70 v.s.s--•..., U"Hl\e<l•lllt (OICI C ev•rfod I ... ,..,i.111 h•tl ot 111t',.1ll~ tlll• ..-n 1"'11 T-r1t11r11t ttelew 10 °"°'"" ,..,... ~"'" lloe "0r1h Atlltf'lll< \lflf' -fffdi~lnlMIMfllCW~ lllt tM 0n.t ~kn ,..Olell. tht mlddlt 1111..,11( ,lalt\ Ill• Soull'ltt•l. '"" ~'""'"'"'' w•ll•1 •f'ld tllt ()tllo V•lln AfrOll~lr .. ,.w.fllll\t_, .... re.ct at rM\ M"th a~ <•"''i!tt ~tt)f'WJ,a rtl'llo.<•luru 1111 Ille '°' ti\ - MIGi• Ir.rt, •'l""VCI" .011111tm "torldol ...., , .... ll<l' '",,,.\Cl\ 1'1'11 ot ,,,. l!t•I ll•d bUlno winch I\ -0 ~(Old A lllQll wind -rnlllQ .... .,.,., ... tor \OUIM••ltrl\ ..... 'for-enll no•lhtrf'I N1w Jerwy lfw'OVOll lOlllqlll (illt Wlrl\lf'll" _. lf'I tlff<I lor l-•-• 0..11rto tnd ·~ tlW "°''" M ii OI ,,,. All•l\11( con• Mttf'IWllllt, \UC II nor"'"""' <old lrtH •• MonlAn• Ult Ot,OIH tllCI ~!Me.Oii llld mllO l•mtrtl-. A ,,.,m "°"'In,,,.""''"'"' ollMM kttM 1wrnlQht tot'l\Mrolurtl ,,,.,. tn lllt '°' El"w,.1tr• . .-arty marnlno tfl'm lotrtlvrt\ .,.,. 1n ,,,. IHI\\ or 10\, t~ oOI 10" .om• ~ tl\O 50• l ff'OO\ Ir. Pl\'tllt \Ill•• t ncl 'IOullltrn h HI. L•Qlll ...ow 1•11 l<ttU -1'-al ""' ,.,,,,,_,,. !11111\\. Ille -Ml> ""'11111 VllllY •nd I,,. 1-~t4 LOtl Trnal.,\ 1ov1 .. rlt1 rtt .... t,.td II\ Olltcl l tr t •l,,t'llt ..., ..... 1 °"''And c•lllr•I H ..... '\'()<' OMr .... , covered mo.I (II ltlt,.. lloll CloudlM\\ Wt\ rnlrkloel It I,,. ~n 11.r, TtH" IN P..:111< CM\l 1ndlMU1>PctrOlllov11t•v. OvornloM lemo,.r•lurot r1n~ Jrt'llf"O ptqnt !)flow lf'fO M Att'f1"10W, Colo. loU•I Et Toro CaHforttla ,,.. WUl"O•m•~ "'' mO"O f1>(>d ....... Bui \Om• tou111 rntcknu m~Y "4•• 10 ltWt ti wllll 4 or~ll\ ol "°'"' WM ff Wllilt mo.I ~ .. ,,.,,,,. Ct hlomlAn\ "~" loot lorward lo more \Unnv WPt1ther llW P>Ct,.A h •Qh ti°""' W'''H(h ·--........ ., . .,., ""'""'""" l"9 Zuma !MoKh aru lll•ouQll OranQI' Gfk;~h ~ l\H'\d•v Artt"n ovt" ., .. , T""' •~ or• on•v " bit 1_..r 1""" l 1M\d1y -• llHlcomp.o•fdllD 1fff'I ·we rt "'" •Mino ~ 101 of ~ "• l-• l\(IA<h t111ouar11 reDOrted. "Biii It'\ nollltnq llU .,..,ltrd4y, 11-111 ...OOl"'ll-".. .. A N1111on•I W 111ther S•rvto f6rKH lff Wld el lllt liOH. ''T"" I\ """''no v•o••nt. bllt II could c.111W • ptellltm In •r•u l>••M to l•O•I Ot""tt." l'flr Th.,,.•dty. LIOM vart1lllt wind\ nlqM •llcl fMl'1tlnqhoun. HIOM .. lo?l to•\l•I ••mPt••l11rn will f•"99 11111 .. 011 10 tnd ••. I nla"CI ltm· otr.iurt• w ill ••II .. btt-s.1 - , •• Tr. wll•r lt"'Otr•lura wOlllUO, Su~ Moo~ Tide-• WIONUOAY Wc:ondt... • •• ., f'I\, ,_. ~""'"''" 10·,.p.m. • • TM\IHOA'I' l't"l IOW • 01 e m. I t l'lntlli9'1 10,0,1.lfto. •> ~-1-I ltom ·10 S.C.,.,Ohl... " '7p "'' '. ....,,,_.\I U • m ·'°"'•em -llM18 Gt•""·""' O)pm.. STUDENT TEST SCORES CAPISTRANO UNIFIED SCHOOL DISTRICT Dear Community: During the past few years there has been a great deal of interest in test scores for California students. Otten there has been heavy criticism of public schools In California because these results were not comparable to those achieved in other states or were not as hiQh as local communities desired. · In California, test results are published district-by-district for public preview. To take this one step further. I would like to present you school-by-school test scores for Capistrano Unified School District. You. as taxpayers, deserve to have an honest repcrt of this aspect of your communities' schools. It should. however, be kept In mind that student achievement scores. while being extremely lmpcrtant. must be considered in light of many other factors associated with school achievement. Capistrano Unified School District's test scores are above the National and State averages: however. we recognize there is always room for improvement. You are invited and encouraged to contact your loca~ school principal who will be happy to provide you further information and interpretation of these test results. Our goal Is to inform you as a community and respect the value judgments which you may make concerning the Quality of education in our schools. 0=~"::::+ Jerome R. Thornsley, Ed.D District Superintendent 1975-76 CAUFOltMIA ASSISSMIHT rlOGUM IShlhTHtt SW. Pwc...tffe It .. Grade Grade ..... .... ' .-12 SCHOOL If i fl f d f i f tl"f j Barcelona 84 85 79 80 91 87 90 Capistrano 57 56 62 63 Castille 84 85 83 86 84 84 77 Concordia 57 45 40 49 43 52 32 Crown Valley 59 \ 87 91 76 66 45 56 A.H. Dana 67 90 64 70 69 70 75 Del ObiSPo 32 67 73 67 72 55 58 Las Palmas 28 21 32 20 24 19 32 Moulton 92 90 75 88 86 70 83 Ole Hanson 88 81 92 62 57 50 84 Palisades 58 37 52 San Juan 63 64 74 Viejo 75 89 87 Dana H iiia HS 75 84 88 83 San Clemente HS 81 88 70 49 lnt9")~atton· You Wiil note that the State required t .. tlng program takes pltce In QredH f . 2. Ind 3. RNdlno onlv. 1nd In OfldeS 8 1nd 12. Reeding, Written Ex~. Spelling. Ind M1them1tlcs. The chart libove preHnta to you the percentile r&nk1ngs by tubJect n• for .-ch tchOOl In th• ~latrano Unified School 0 11trict. 11, tOf lntlanc:e. 1 te~ hat 1 aoore of 80 In RHdlno, thla would mHn that the IChool acored t>ttter than ~of the eohOOla In Cllllornla In Reading, :! 11 ' I I I l I~ I . ' I,' I > I I Swanti H e ld In Grand Theft 'Cure' SAN BERNARDINO (APl-A fortune teller. whO promised to cure ber clients of evil spints ha6 been arrested on charges of grand thef't. The arrest of 32·year-old Rose Marie Yan is of San Bernardino on Monday night came after nearly a year of surveillance by authorities. P OLICE SAID they were helped in capturing Ma.'>s Vanis by one or her victims, 45-year-old Tiodola Loera or Redlands. whu . said she had paid the fortunt! teller $1,500 to cure her of·eval s pirits. When Miss Loera told relat1Vl''- in Arizona about the "cure" lht:v \jl'ged ber to c aJ I pol ice. · POLICE I NVESTIGATOR Joseph Halterman ~aid Mis.'> Yanis diagnosed her vicllms' ail mentJ as dead meat put into lhe1r • bodtes by enemies, and that among the cures was for the\ 1c 1*m to wrap three tomatoel> i.n $100 't'Orth of $10 bills and rub thl'm over their bodie~. The tomatoes -and the monry ±w~s then to be ddivcred to ~fo:-. l'arus. : In return, Miss Yarns would give the person the ''dNd meal and tell them to bury rt in :1 graveyard atm1dnighl WON'T A PPEAL CASE Judge Charles Older 'CHRISTMAS EARLY' Wiiiiam T. Farr Judge Older Drops Farr Case Appeal LOS ANGELES <A Pl -The Charles Manson trial Judge has de <'1dl'd not to appeal a court dec1 s1on throwing out his contempt con vie· twnofnewsmun Wimam f''arr The Los i\ngeles County counsel"s office• said Tuesday lhat Superior Court Judge Charles 11. Older would not fik· for a n·hearini: of the Farr matter before the C;,hfornta 2nd 01!.trict Court of Appeals. Tul·sday w.:is tht> deadline for such a requE:st. The l'ourt ruled Dec 6 thal f'arr, a i,l)s Angeles Time' n•porter could not be puni:.hl'CI further for rcfusmj? to rt'veal thu .!>nurcl' of J story written dunnit the 1~0·71 Manson trial. Farr then workc.-d for the Los Angeles Herald Eummc·r. "It's a greut relll'f to know for 1wre that I won't he going back t11 Jail," Farr sa1c1 Tuc,day "I fel'I hkl' Chra ... tme1~ haHome early Farr spent Chra..,tm<Jsof 197:! behind bars OEO Official Quits Over Staff Outings WednOlid1y Oec11mbe1 22. 1976 DAIL y PILOt A§ : \lirtinu Identified Yacht Ouh Fire Probed SAN FRANCISCO CAP) -An investigation Is under way tnlu the C hrislm as tree which emerged the villain m the $500,000 blaie that left three dead, more than a score injured and tht> prestigious St. Francis Yacht Club a pile of charred rubble "lt was a beautiful tree ... Fire Ctuef Andrew Casper t>aid Tues- day. "But after some arcing at the base, the names spread upward. They raced through the bwlding with astonishing speed." But Casper added that 1f it 1s found that the tree was not flameproofed misdemeanor charges would be filed. He said the probe is designed to de- termine whether the tree was flameproofed. as required for public assemblies by local fire rules. FAULTY WIRING caused the nine-foot tree to "explode" into names as Caspt>r and the other JOO guest s listent>d t o Christmas carols at the yacht club's Yule celebration Monday night. "I never saw anything explode so fast." said 73-year-old yachts ma n Malcolm Matheson. one of the ill-fated guests. "My first thought wtts to get the hell out. But then I went back and got mywtfe's mmkcoat. .. Fire Chief Casper said the dry tree, set up several days agom the club auditorium, was apparently ignited by a short-c1rcu1t or a frayed wire nl'ar the bul>C. "The garlands around the tree new in all d1rect1ons." he ~aid. ''It spread quickly over the lacquered floors and furm~hmgs FIRE!\t EN SI FTED through ashes and debris all night. un ey • coverlng three charrt'd bodie~ Onev1clim was AlbertS1mp~on, a 53·yeur -old Men!() Park englnel'r and former cluh c·ommodorc found ma second-floor closet near a kitchen. Jybumed. I Assistant coroner James Scan nell tentatively identified the· nthP.r vi<"l•ms found on tht.' mam stairway ab Charles and Kathleen Collins. of Coventry, England Jdentlficat1on wa!'. d1rr1cult because their bodies were ~o bad There were 22 prople u)Jurt'dt in. eluding several firemen, sulferi ing from s moke inhalation smged ha tr and minor burns. Everyone on the ground floor°' the bays1de yacht club wn.J. evacuated safely by waiters and other st arr m.em bcrs ... There wol no panic," said club commodore Gene Harter "Thl'sC' poople are :.a1lors and arc u!>ed lo omurgen· ciesatsea " ' Fuel Cost Offsets Edison Rate Hike LOS ANGELES <APJ-{;iven $44 .5 million with one hand, Southern California Edison Comoan .. ·. has had the same ~4.5 million a year taken away bythe1>tate Pubhc Utilities Comm1ss1on . As a result, utility rates will remain basically the same at least until May, 1977. Allowing the $44.5 million a year rate boost Tuesday finished a 21 :r-year-old rate incre~e case before the PUC, 1.0 which 7,000 pages ofleslimony was taken inlOOdaysofhearings. BUT T HE SAME amount of money was whisked away from Edison. the decision s aid, because costs of obtaining generating fuel have not been as high as anUci~aled. The fuel cost factor will be evaluated a~ain next May 1. The PUC said fuel <'Osls have been lower becaus1: fo:dison has reduced its re- liance on expensive 011 for generating, and has used more hydroelec- tric, coal-~enerated und natural gas.produced power. EDISON OFFICIAJA'\ called thl' dec1l>1on "d1sappointin~." in view of inOation since a $339 million rate increase request was filed in June, 1974. Another tncrease request will be filed soon, the company !>aid. . On Dec. 30. 1975. a $78.1 million interim increase was approved by lhe PUC Tuesday s final action raised the overall rate increase to Sl22.5 million. llowcver, the Cud coi.t is subject to a review in rates, as • ofnext May l. mia! SACRAMENTO (AP'l -Under fire for spending $2,500 on sttJJf seminars al the seashore, the stall' Economic· Opportunity OHice director has n · signed with a partjng shot at thl' Brown administration [..__ __ s_1_a _1 e _ ___.J Seagram's lowers the cost of entertaining. Roberto Rabago said the ad ministration had shown mdiffl'ren<'l' towards his oHice in a letter ~vnt to Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. la~t Frida} Rabago's boss as dtre<'tor of th•· Employment Development Depart ment. Martin Glick. denied Tut•sc1.•v that Rabago was for<'ed to rc.~1gn because of the starr outings OEO officials said the retreati. W<'re designed to improve the working rel a· tion.ship among staff members, but one staff m~mber descnbed one orthc retreats as "an encounter sc~s1on with sexual overtone~." •---~ Bdr Booft#d • : LOS ANG El.ES Ct\ Pl .lull an ~rmand H ammrr. 17 , ~on of Tilhonaire industrialist l\rmand 'am mer. has been book Ni for in !CShgatloo or rc~elving :.toll'n pro ,eerty . • Sheriff's detectives said they round 1$200 antique dagger and a S2S nng .it .atlian Hammer's home in suburban taclf1c P altsades. They said tht> lems had bttn stolen 'Hammer was taken into custody Tuesday along with a fnend. Jean Otannell, 37, who was booked for m- ~tigation of poss~slng rlangcrou' *°gs. . t ..u,, I'll~• §ult "' LOS ANGELES IAP> The ram1lv ' a woman patient who died :;t amarillo State llOBp1tal after brinR ven a powerful tranquibu•r has f1ll'rl S20 million s uit against the slate and e county of Los AngelM. The action filed Tuesday allege:-. ( \.\Tongtul death und rpa,lpract1ce m the ca.,e or M a nd1 Wnghl. 33, "'ho d1l'd last .June I four c1..i~s aftt'r cntl'rtng the hospit<.11 1l rson P r obe B e gun LOS ANGELES ti\P J An arson investigation h:.is begun 1nlo thl• apartment hou~e f1rc-th;it killed s1'C persons and inJur<"d JO othNs, and authorities say the fire may have been the result of a street gang feud. Tuesday. the coroner's office iden- t1fil'd the dead as Elvira Goml'z Chaure. 54 : her son Manuel Che1url', 22; h<'r niece Cecilia Chaurc, 23, Hernnna Lemos, 55: Marcelina Ramos, 24, and a 1 year old girl, Dora Lttt f:chC'verri a Officials also s1:11d two woml'n sur frred m1~carna~e~ cind IO!->l their children in the Monday ni~hl blaw. Guadalupe Manriqufl'z Carranza, 40. J!aVt> birth to a Stlllborn child and Elvina Pelayo, 46, who was eight months pregnant, lost her unborn t•htld. Sa11 Dirge B la•N? SAN DIEGO CAP) -The Justice Department has accused the city and county of Sun Oiego of bias in the hir· ing or women and minonlles. lo a suit filed Tu('Sday in U.S. Di!.· tncl Court. the Juc;tire Department asks for an tnJunct1on lo halt d11>· t'nminatory hiring and to mandate af hrma\lv(' <1ct1on programs lo h1r<' mor<• women, blacks and Spanish· !lurnamed worl<l'rs. Thl" swt said that of th<' firf.' depart· ment'11 667 uniformed personnel, only :?3 were Span1sh.sumamc'Cl. 22 were blacks and none• were women. CORDUROY S95.00 May we suggest two of our sport coats that may be worn with any trouser and fOf almoat any occasion and ... ... ne11er goes out of atyte. •-41flO,MDtlC'o\110 M.uTnl CHAllOC 'WffteWf Pl.ala 1028 lr'\'\O•, Nt1wpol1 Beech. C.hlorn1a, Pt.on• 642-1061 Seagram's Seagram's 7Crown V.O. I•. -••• srngru\l\s Sr11n1crolun ,~. \\ \11,lthll.,f' ., l.1; .' ;1 .. ~ \h '"'* -. ~ - Save FIFTHS REDUCED TO * Srlloronrs v.o. 1 ~~-'OIA 'I: Wiii~~\ ' ....... . . . lo •• ti " . ~....._(1\l (·\\\[' , ~---=-· .. -...-~~ HALF GALLONS REDUCED TO FIFTHS REDUCED TO $2.Q!. llOW$JJ49. $529 $JJ50 $699 Gift packaged fa the holidays. Gft packaged for rhe holidays. Wolfschmidt Seagram's Vodka Extra Dry Gin . , , 80'"'HALF GALLONS .~' HALF GALLONS -·--REDUCED TO REDUCED TO Snemis $999 s999 ~~ .. •• Gi11 (!-• ~-~~ ... ,._._ '• Save an ~itional 103 by buying a case of these fine products· · all one size·mix brands or niatch brands. ,., I•' l' 0 .C•t.10 IHOI I I flfllO OlH! OIO M HIOOI £(~111''S 1 CIO'/.N AUll•(J~ Wlft•MIY·A ltl,0 t0 ~OOf ~Allfj~'g Ulfl DlYCt~ OC,111'\ foll! D•UUIW 011 ~ .. 0.!1tti~ ~'!lctllC.IHU .. llOlf • IOI IOO't De 1 llo flCIJ '" x '° A\O 100 f'tOGI. u11:w, o •111.U-• coi.:'A#t, •TC. ... -----,.. - A6 DAILY Pl~OT EDITORIAL PAGI~ Foresight Lacking ' llomcown~rs in southeast Huntington Beach have had to cry "foul" long t.'nou"h. An Orange County Sanitation District COCSD) of· ficial has adrn1ttL'<l publicly that it was ''horribly wrong" to build homes so close lo the waste treatment plwit near the intersection of Coast Highway and Brookburst Street. Residents there have complained of foul odors, mosquitoes and latc·night noise since July when a : sludge drying process commenced on OCSD land near 'the plant. Homeowners have hroughl their complaints befor e city, county, OCSD, Mosquito Abatement Dis· tr1<:t 1.md even Air Pollutwn Control officials. Only this month have the residents been told something 1s goin~ to be done to end the situation caused by opera lions ut the waste treatment plant. ll was a lack of foresight on lhe part of both the sanitation district and the builders of the homes near the plant that c·uu.-.t.>d the problems. The open-air treatment or waste so close to JK'<>ple's homrs deserves a little more thought and care m the future. Trustee Deadline Two scats :ire uµ for grabs March 8 in the Coast Community College District board race. And potential 'Candidates for election to Districts l and 5 have unlll De<:. JO lo file declarations of can· didacy. The scats arc currently held by Trustees Worth Keene. of Seal lkach, and Dr. George Rodda, Jr., o( Corona del Mar. Keene has held his post. which covers Seal Beach, Westminster, Garden Grove and Huntington Beach, for the p:.ist 15 years. Rodda has been a member of that five·man panel since 196!1. Both men have announced they wiU seek re-elec· tioo to their respecuve scats. While there is no limit to the number of terms a college trustee may serve, and while the district is functioning well and the present board has performed conscientiously, competiUoo !or board positions would be healthy. The three other seats on the panel are held by men who have served as trustees for' at least 11 years, and, in one case, 20 years. Special Santa A Huntington Beach grandmother is showlng every evening that the joys of Cltristmas-time are still shining brightly in 1976. Though she wasn't expecting to do so, Mrs. Milton Schley has been fielding questions for Sanla Claus from many of the city's youngsters. The telephone calls started from out of the blue· recently when Mrs. Schley picked up her phone and a tiny voice asked to speak to Santa Claus. Rather than turning off the child, Mrs. Schley good naturedly answered that Santa was away but that she was Mrs. Claus. ' She asked the youngster if she had been a good girl and what she wanted for Christmas. The telephone call was the fir.;t. of many that she was to r eceive on succeeding evenings. The Schleys even arranged their schedule so that they would be home for the calls. Mrs. Schley said she believes she is getting the calls because of an apparent malfunction in her telephone. She said she couJdn't possibly turn away the re· quests of the young supplicants ''because they are so precious.'' Merry Chris tmas, Mrs. Santa Claus Schley! H/F Serving God and Police Shotgun Out of Place Mamrrwn . (SYDNEY HARRIS) One cannot help wondcrin~. this I lml• or year. what Jt'SUS m1:anl when he warned. "Ye can- not serve God nnd Mammon," ::ind whnt lie wou ld have thOUf'hl or the way we ubscrvc His birth day season. Each year around this time, we t:rumhle about the "com· m c r c i a I 1 z .1 • t1 on'' or ('hri ... t m ~IS. We say 1t ,., j!C'l t Ing \\II(..,,. 1·v1·n } ('.Ir and 1t -.1•1•rth t 11 h c• I h t• Th.1nk-.~1' 1nl! turk•'} ""' hard I} sell I L•tl 1n our -..tomach.., tlf'fotc we arc bom- h.1r1kd v. 11 h tht' t•ommcrcial bar· r.1~t· of <.:hri-..tmas propaganda. But 1r it '" had, or t·bcap. or vuh:<•r. \o ht• n•mmercial during the Chn:-.lma-.. celebration, what makes il ~oo<I lo ~)(· c:nmmrrc1aJ ;my oth1•r lllT'\l' or the }Car'! If it is wroni.: to 1:1t•rvc M,1mmon 1n l>eC'cmbt·r. v. hy 1s 1l right m ,\pril or S1•µ1l'mber'.' THIS II\ ;in unl'omforteblf' QU<'"-t111n. hc•c·au'le tht' only.hon~l ~w1·r rnu.,l ht• thnt we fl'Cl ob- "''·u 1 t IV i:utlt y ahoul rom· merc1.1lt'lm ;incl our gwlt shov.c; up 'I\ utlv "hen lhl' propaganda of bu:. in~ 1 •, l 1 ed 1n v. 1th thl- t ;osprl WP lt•c•I M>m('how thc1t lht' tv.udo not b<•long lOJi!Cth<'r Anrt . or 1·nur~e>. they do not 'Tiwr1• w:.-. on1· thin~ thnl Jesus opposNI all 1l11ring h11 ministry, and thl"' v. . .-.. I h<' dominance of matrnnlum. Ill' saw it ~·s the• c'nemy nf rrhJ!IOn. thr 1•n1•my of pcac<'. th<.' cnt"m y of lo\!' f le w;imc·!l us not lo l:.iy up trt'll'tUrt•s upon earth. One reason we rejeel Marxist <'omm un iscn, ;ind properly so, 1s because al i!'I a creed busL'd on Dear Gl09my Gus Motorists have paid the gasoline lax (15 percent or the cost of the fuel) without much kick because it pays for a basic tool. roads. Now Brown wants to use it lo build day-<'ar e centers. And all this lime l thought all he really wanted to do was run a railroad. J.11. eloomy ell\ (OIT\lfte"h 4r• •..c.n.1t•d 01 r•4Hkn •"d<lo not n•t~u•nly r~UKt tftt' VitW\ Of the MVf'\P•Pflf' \.-"° your Ptt .,,..""to Gloomr Gt.n, 0.:111, P001. materialism. notwithstanding its idealistic goals But the ironic part is that we hope tu deft•at 1t bv be<'oming more succt-ssfolly materialistic than they, by :.how- i n~ the world that our materialism can obtain more material goods than theirs can. This is a curious argumt'nt. H materialism is ripping and warp- ing the fabric of the human com- mU$llly -as l think it is -we can e!fectively oppose it only hy moral and spiritual vulues, by heeding the words or the Old Testament prophets and the new gospel of Christ. We cannot op· pose it simply hy becoming bi~· ger, fatter. richer and ~reedier materialists than our opponents. (ff COURSE. material things are necessary to su.'itam lire and to resist the brutalilat1on or modern poverty ( wh1ch 1s far from the kind or poverty dcpicte<I m the Riblf'J. Matcnahsm 1s a bcue on which lo build human in- stitutions. not a <·reed tu de· tennme human relauoru;hips. When &t becoml'S a t•rced. it eorrupt3 our nature and makes a mockery or our religious pre- tensions. H we arc busily engaged in buying and sclllni.t dubious treasures upon earth. let us frankly worship Mammon, and not profane the spirit or Christmas by invoking a once- a wttk God, or a once-a-year Messlab. F Or Railroad Buffs After a steam locomotive rf>· scmbling a stripped nlarm clO<'k pulled ate firsl payload m 1804, Ule world a woke to a great re· volution In land transport - e arth's enterprises would never move at a walk again. From the early American locomotive which blew up in 1830 to today·s P1treamlined Amtrak, the whole marvelous story is told -wtth over JOO illuslrntioM -In The American Heritage lll8tory of Railroads ln Amertca by Oliver Jen.sen (McGraw-mu, $29.95; de- Juxe edition $31.95>. ROI.UNG DOWN the entire main line of the U.S.A. '5 journey with trains, thts hands ome volume shows why r ailroads were quite po~~lbly the most im· portant phenomenon or the in- dustrial revolution -o.nd cer- tainly 'the moat ubJqultOWt. Yet their economic and social lm· portance was only pa.rt of thetr profound Impact on an age. They were abo a torm of art. ( THE BOOKMAN J As the author notes, the his· tory of Ame rican railroads sometimes seems a paradigm o( the history of the republic itself. .. Both were created Uvough he role stru ggles," Jensen writes; "both swelled to imperial infiuence and power ; both, as is the way with empires, have fallen on difficult, uncertain times. Each, in a sense, created the other: free government and open country offered boundless opportunity to enterprising men, and they In turn made a nnUon." The pages of Rallroad11 In America are rich with sple ndid machines, clever btminessmen, brave engineers, palatial dopotl, opulent cars, amasing archllec· lunt -hundred& of fine hl11torlcal pbolo&rapba, palntln1a, and drawlnp, many ln color. VICTOR DE KEYSERUNO Must We All Live With Fear? To the Editor: As I watched the Newport Beach Paramedics desperately try to save the mortally wounded bystander, who was shot by police in Albertson's Corona del Mar parking lot Friday night, I had to ask myself one question, WHY '? The USC or a high powere<I pollc:e shotgun in this situation seems not only ridiculous to me. but murderous. The crowded parking Jot was filled with grocery shoppers, Christmas tree buyers, children and senior citizens Like the one that is now dead. This is hardly the place to wield s ho t g un s which was cviden('ed by last night's fiasco . Will the police please re.peel the safety of its publJc they SC'rVe or shall we all Ii vein morbid fear or being involved In another police s takeout? K RISTIN LUNDBERG ROBERT LAMBERT GAYLE B05"TW1CK Raponnlrillt" To the Editor : Under what law d id th e Newport Beach police "in- vestigators" operate when they • • . "declined to release the name of the officer who fired the !atnl shot pending 'i nitial in- vestigation' of the incident" in the senseless and criminally negligent killing of "Old Joe" at the Corona del Mar parking Jot Friday night? lsn't it time that our law en- forcement personnel be required to face the consequences of their irresponsible actions as prompt· ly and as certainly as any other citizen? In my opinion. the offiC'er y.rho fired that fatal s hot is also responsible for a felony, as are hls superior officer who ordered the st ske·o ut without Jfroper plannin~ for the saJely of those using the parking lol and Chief or Police Glaves for failure to maintain strict rules ensuring such public sarcty. THE NEWPORT BEACH police department has been al- lowed generous budgets .to pro- vide them with virtually all the modern gadgetry that should make them one of the most modern departments in the state. But all the money and all the gadgetry h asn't provided them with the common sense to fulfill their mandated mission of protecting the public safety. The people or Newport Beach have been outraged. They are angry. They are delll8.'1ding a no-gloves approach to elimina· lion of such utter stupidity. Let the eotlre editorial staff of ~ ... nd rd Ilk• • huil>M7d that pr. ho,,,. on tJm. for Wf>Pfl', &w.tal. ( MAILBOX ) Le".nl_,.._..".,..wek-'n.trl..,.lotol\· oftftH fo"-r• t. fll \p.Ce Of' ell,,,."111 llllel I• .. . Mrved, L•"t<\ •t >00 Wt<d\ t< lt1' -.II Ii. o1 .. .. -••••"<•. All l~lter> m .... 11nc1110o •lqi-.1..,.. - ..... 11 ... -..... 11111 ....... ~mo .. wltlllleltl ...... o-• II wtCl<lt"I rHMll ll 1ppv ... 1 ...... ,, Will l'OtlM publl .... d , The Pilot know they have full support or their r eaders and the citizens or Newport Beach to in- sist upon full , open and complete answers to all question-; relating to this disgraceful episode. Such unnecessary tragedy must never be allowed lo happen again RUPERT M. HENDRICKS The name of the offu:er was re· leased f olloWJng identt/icat1on of the shoot.mg vachm. An znuestagation Lt underway. -Editor Airport Saf elfl To the Editor: Some people arc trying to pa nic U5 about safet y of Meadowlark Airport, but has anyone looked at the facts? Meadowlark is a private en· terprise. Why have a 2.600.fool runway when 2,100 reel docs the job? IC there had been a federal control tower in operation round the clock at Meadowlar'k for the past 30 years, it would have pre· vented only one minor accident - and think or the cost to us tax· payers! !TRIED to g~tdataon deatm in Huntington Beach, both from the city and from the county. but to no avail. But from talking to all the old·timers I could find, I believe that no flyer has ever died in a crash in the city limits of Hunt- ington Beach, and no non·flyer hfiseven been injured! Nationally. the death toU looks likethls for 1975: Trains l,iolOO (passengers and coll is ions). Planes 1,400 (commercial, business and pleasure). Boats 1,800 (mostly pleasure). Cycles3,400. Pedestrian 8,SOO. We should outlaw swimming pools , pedestrians. bicycles, boats , beaches and bathtubs before we close Meadowlar k for "safely.'' RALPH D. RICKS lllglat to 1'•010 To the Editor: The current dispute in our Hun- tington Beach City Council in· volving City Attorney Don BonJa ls ()f serious concern to us. Mr. Bonfa has been in office about JO years, been t wice re-elected without any opposition and as far as is known bas been doing a good job. On occasion be has vcn· tuttd legal opinions not t.o the Ilk· ing ol the city council, but that Is as It 1bould be. It ta imperative that hls office be free o( any out· 1lde pressure. Thal ia why the people of Huntington Beacb have made it an elective office. If he were appointed by the city coun- cll and serving et their pleasure, It is doubtful If his opinions could be completely indeptndent of their influence. NOW IT SEEMS this lndepen· dence of thouaht ls bclfll lm· periled. Mr. Boa!a hH been llngled out by tbe city council u lbe ool1 department bead lo lho ·- city government to be denied an automatic cost.or-li vmg pay in· crease. This action was taken because some or the council members did not like the way he was doing his job. The people of Huntington Beach have a rlght to know the full details of any charges against their city aUomcy. H there is any substance to the charges we can take appropriate action at the next election. On the other hand if these charges are without foundation and prove to be merely the outgrowth of a personal vendetta fomented and Jed by our newly elected coun- cilman Mr. Seibe rt, it is an en- tirely different matter. Taking up the council's time with such action shows a caustic disregard of the t axpayer 's money. It should be severely condemned. SAMUEL HA.KAM B°"' Con~fent! To the Editor: How convenient it ls for the ma- jor oil companies lo be able to blame the Arabs for 65·cent gasoline, while MobU is buying the Irvine Company properties and Montgomery Ward for hun· dreds of millions, Arco buys Anaconda copper and a London newspaper and Standard Oil of California buys the met.al produc- ing and refining Amax! Suppose the cost of these non· relaled properties was kicked back to the American moCorist in the form of gasoline price rcduc· lions, wouldn't it be lovely . • • and fair ... and reasooable? And not a peep is beard out of Congress or dumb John Q. Motorist about the benefits that s hould rigbUuJly come to him. FRANK KLOCK Raldetat• Lo•t To the Editor : The residents have already lost the airport hearing because our city attorney wrote a brief to the council exacUy as though they were attorneys for the airport. We thought they were going to evaluate both sides of the cue and then let the city council make tho choice. Nol so. The attorney's of: fi ce just plain told the city council that tbe airport was not a nuisance and that the signed and dated or iginal letters and maps used t.o gel the original permit were"obscure, ''at least to them. LADY JUSTICE holds a one- sided scale in Huntington Beach nnd the poor lady has a blindfold on and can 't even tell. J( the city can pay thousands of dollars for an outside attorney to settle the Bonfa-O'Connor report card case, they could spend some money for an outside attorneytowriteupthc resident.a' side. . The re11idents do have :i side and there are many laws on the bookJ explaining their right.a. bn't N V· tngllves aa lmportanta.'J a~rt card? J .COWNS Deat• Pea•llfl To the Editor: The Calltomla Supreme Court bas Invalidated this state'• capital punishment law. It waa their i n terpretation that CalllomJa's law did not me« the guld.ellnes establl<ihed bytbe U.S. Supreme Court. Tbo fact that the volerl ol California bothered to go to the polls in 1972 and voted to restore the death penalty made UWe dif· ference. rr IS or even less consequence that several hundred people will be killed in 1977 without the. slightest fear of a death sentence. to deter the killers from commit.- ling this heinous crhninal act. · In the unincorporated areas thus far this year we have ex· perienced 14 homicides, or 10· more over 1975. SigniricanUy, the majority is characterized as ~ ing premeditated. Countywide, cities have repo~ cd a total of 65 killings, or two more than last year. Between 80 and 70 percent are of the cold· blooded, planned and calculated type. How much longer and bo• many more deaths will our socfe: ty tolerate before we can re· institute the only logical deterrent to these senseless killings? BRADGAT~ Sheriff -Coroner Clta•gecf lflf•d To the Editor : I have changed my mind about having a.q elected city aUomey ill' Huntington Beach. because tho office rea lly answers to no one. Here ta an example: Some resi· dents are having poison sprayed into their homes by a nursery ancl, are becoming ill. Their t.axes pay for the city attorney. However, if they phone him, they are told, "The city attorney can't help you. He answers only to the city· council." Then the elected at.-. tomey can't be replaced when be gives poor advice to the ci1T council. .: THE POISONED r esldenl9 have only one choice: Pa)' another attorney to Rue the dt.y- for $28 million. In fact. they were actually told by city officials to. do that, and they are! Our clty attorney's office gives' "no" answers to everything puL to them. It is easier than going to. court. The odds being about 1,000' to one of moat realdents being able to afford lime and money l4' sue. "No" answers are free; wh1 pay $38,000 for Just Ol'le o( our sis' attorneys? We don'l gel she' opinJons because they all anawet' toBonfa. ROBERT COHEN" --~~~~~~~~----~. • ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT Rob«rt N. Wttcf, PublWltr t Mn1o1 Kt"'111, P.dltQr Harbara Krnblch, F.d1tonol l'oge Editor' ThC' C'llitorlnl page ot the Dally l'll<>l se('k5 lo Inform a nd st1m11latc renders by presenting on th1!! paj!C di verse <'Ommentary on topi<'s of int('r<'sl by syndical· ed columnist!! ond c~rtoonlstll, by providlnt n forum for renders' views 1.1nd by pre11enling thls newwp1pcr's opinions and ideas on current \opld. The editorial optnlons or the Dolly Pilot nppeu only In the edltoriul cnlumn ai the lop of tho p1111e. Opinion..• ex· prested by tho co\umn.lst.s and cartoonists and letter wrilcn1 are lhtlr own and no endorsement of lhf'1r vlrw11 by lho Dally Pllot should be l1tferN1d. Wednesday, Dec. 22, 1178 -- ~·· • -~~~------~--- Miffed Museum Muses Ban on Showing Head SHAMOKI N, Pa. (AP) -The mustachaood head oC an unidentified 1004 murder viclim is being kept un- der wraps while muc;eum oHicials here appeal a judge's order that says they can't display it for visitors. "We have lo obey the judge's rul- ing," an official or the Anthracite Heritage Museum said, "but we're waiting on the appeal to be ruled on" by the Pennsylvania Supreme Court. Robert Morgan. a member of the museum committee, said he thought the mustache m ade the head look dignified. Under Krehel 's ruling, County Coroner Ernest Kortin came to re- move the head, but an unofficial ar- . rangement was worked out whereby the Museum is keeping it out of sight until th~ case is solved. ,_ R Al'WI ......... i1rdlfl Mn THE EM BALM ED HEAD -which has curly hair, teeth and a mustache but no eyeballs -was a prime tourist attraction at the museum until Nov_ 24, when Northumberland County Judge Peter Krehel ordered it re- moved and buried. MUSEUM OFFICIALS SAY the head is an appropriate display for an institution that specializes in coal mining history. They say its owner was s lain in the aftermath of a violent 1902 coal strike. ~ The Rev. Ralph D. Abernathy says he is giving "prayerful" consideration lo quil- ting as president of the Southern Chris- tian Leadership Con- ferenc e to run for Congress. Call 642-5678. Put a l ew words lo work lor ou. AIC Color TelulalOft i..~tt1e91M ... Off.nfMJ J01Wory a.ar-ce ,.,.fcu Ofl An z.Nth 76 & '77 Models lit Tl-for S11111to to Mole H-Dellury! The oHicial said 75to 150 people who normally visit the museum during ats weekend hours are .. kind or burned up al the judge for coming out with a rul· ing lake thal. "WEJ STTELLthemwecan'tput at on display as long as I.he judge says we can't. .. We had a veil on it and ar someone wanted to see it, we showed 1l to them.•• r- Historical accounts say the victim's nude and headless body was found Nov . 19, 1904, riddled with bullets. Hunters reportedly found the head IO days later stuffed under a rock pile after their dog packed up a scent that made him "bark fearfully." The head wound up in a funeral home here, and the funeral home donated it to the museum which opened last June. SAVINGS!! CHROMACOLOR II 2511 DIAGONAL ALL.NEW PUSH-IUTTOH TUHIHG l· Ylt. l"ICTUltE TUil W ARUMTY HJ544 2511 DIAGONAL CHROMACOLOR II HZSJOI 100°0 SOUO.ST4TI lt77 MOO&. 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REG. 3.39 249 "SPORT GRIP" WHEEL COVER rt 1 ly for~ w•·ot1n9 von11 • ,,.,., ,,1 wh1·• I ' lV"r Ne .11 nt wp~r 1ole 1ov••"JI Buy r:-~~­ ~_J 2396 =3~1DAY 1398 "SHOT OF STEAM" WESTCLOX DIGITAL SUNBEAM IRON ALARM CLOCK Shot of steam , , , dry or steam iron. Multiple vents for even cover?ge. more. \'' \ (' . ~ .• 1 . ,. ,, .. ,,, I . t . ~· \~*:1 ~~. .,, , .. -..~_ .. ,..~ , A .... , .. , .u, .. If> • r. '"' ~~ ,, •ijj/-: oo:z II • • 'I i1:· . .. . ,. , .... ~ .'~-,... ._, •' : I\ \.:. ." ~ YOUR CHOICE MEN OF 76' ACTION FIGURES Revolutionary moveobl• figures, with changeable pa<ts. Choose from many• E 01y lo read digi tal cloclt wi th olorm. Buy now for Cnn\tmo\ 9111 gmng1 SUPfR BUY 499 SONIC STEREO HEADPHONES Plug into stereo and li\ltn to your lovOfite mu11c p11 • votely. Grt'ol q1ft idea. Fountain V ollty ..,... .. ,.., BToro rt, ..... l t1lf!tlf - WMIU Sloc:ll lU TI 999 REG. 12.99 IGLOO PLAYMATE BIG ICE CHEST With push button lid re· 1,ose, swing down top. I ovgh plo1tic won t bend. -·-.. .. . \ ~ O · f l I .J ~l-~'-." QPB ·"Keeper HOLIDAY 249 SPECIAL CRICKET KEEPER CASE & LIGHTER Keep yovr c 1gor~lfus ond c11cket lighter all together in lh11 OllrOClilfl' vinyl CO\e, REG. 12.96 896 PROCTOR SILEX 2 SLICE TOASTER Perfect toast everytlme. Sn op down c • umb troy eo1y lo clean. Save 4 00. YOUR CHOICE 2aa MASTER CRAFT BRIAR PIPES Impor ted Brio1 wood with hnnct '"'"''d or •iotural fin • 1~ 8tovtolul gilt lor h1111' t I \ , l ' ..t• DAILY PILOT Wednesday December 22 1976 c Larrabee: 'Should Have Been a Pirate' . .. ., ., .. ... .. .. .. .. :· ... ·~ .· ; ~ \ ' t I By lJNDSLEY PARSONS Carl Jr. 1>aid that Larrabee was an obstinate navigator, lay. ing out his charted course from point to point, with no aJJowance for passing to seaward. When he reached a point, he would swing around it, anti chart a course directly for the uext point. This was very dlsturbang to Captain fo"link, who wouJd sneak up to the auto pilot and make a few degrees of correction to al- low some seaway. Then Lar- rabee would come on deck. check the course, and put her back on the original heading. Carl Jr stated that the Goodwill had les1> working navigational equipment than the average sport f1s h1ng boat The auto pilot. which looked hke an early Wood Freeman, but bore no manufacturer's name. would so metim e~ e n gage, and sometimes wouldn't, and often, when at did engage, would be aJmost impossible to get back on hand steering T H E DEPTH Cinder was seldom operational. There was no radar. One of Larrabee's gues ts offered to buy him a radar, but Larrabee refused it. The only electronic device that did work was a powerful high seas radio. which Larrabee used constantly. Larrabec's wife, Irene. used to accompany him on some of the earh<'r c ruises. Mrs. Hsllgren said she was a gracious hostess, although she was sure that she must have grown a bit weary of acting as chief housekeeper on her husband's floating hotel. Mrs Larrabee didn't care for fishing, which was the principal s porting act1v1ty aboard the Goodwill. and s he eventually gave up the annuaJ southerly voyages. Some time later the Larrabees agreed to a legal scparallon. Knowing Larr a bee so well over the years. Carl Jr. was aware or his faults as well as Ills vil:lues. He said he was a man of great generosity on on<> hand. and capable of bl'lnJ: extremely pars1mon1ous on the other. Carl satcl he had a habit of arguing for hours over a few cen- tavos with tht' Mexican peddlers of fruit or lobstC'rs. Asked why he did it~ J.arrabt'e replied ··They enJOY it.' TO SA V f: A few hundred dollars. La rrahce loaded the Goodwill w11h diesel fuel (Qr the return tr•p , before the 1953 Honolulu race Ed1tor's Nole Account~ of the Carl lllllwrns and Carl Jr , who IDne frequent guesls aboard ttw Cioodwtll. 3hed m01 e hghl cm thc-fabled 161·/00I $Chooner'6 3mkmg m May. /!}QJ II~ audcu:u;u:r (JWflt'r. m1llumC1re Ralph Uirrabee. continues lo oulwtl harbor rule~ m today .i. fourth epuode of a nx-port senes When his sailing m1u.ter, Walter Elliott, found out what Larrabee had done, he insh1ted on pumping it out, and said that if the Goodwill won, he would pay for il This wasn·t the only time the Goodwill pumped out diesel fuel at sea. On another occasion one or the guest engineers turned the wrong vaJve and pumped 3.000 gallons into the Pacific before the error was discovered. On the other hand. the door to the pantry was always open. and the bar was never closed ll was Carl Jr 's belief that 1f you accepted Larrabee 's hospitality. you had to make up your mind to take tum for what he was. almost a~ though he were r~_m2 ~e!.!.n ~<!_w1~ d1f ·~-.......-...-..~ l.mdsley Parsons. author of lh1s senes on the smlung of the schooner CoodWlll, 1s former l/ICt' mayor oJ Newport Beach and a long llme Orange Coast yachlsman. lie 1s a rrwtion picture producer-direclor ~~ ferent manners and different customs. ''Larrabee was born 200 years too late. He should have been a pirate captain. I still remember him, dressed in faded shorts, frayed around the bottom. and no shirt, standing at the head of the dining table. car ving hams and turkeys, and wiping his greasy fingers on his bare chest." CAR L BELIEVES that the ship's safe. which was recessed into the s teel deck in the ma.c;ter stateroom. was loaded with gold "and currency. Larrabee was sort or a ship's banker, cashing cheeks for his guests. and Carl often saw the contents of the safe. wtuch was filled with Mexican gold coins, and stacks of U .S. currency in large denominations. As far as Carl was concerned, Larrabee made no secret of the fact that it was there. Carl. Jr. had been with the Goodwill so long that he had many interes ting anecdotes about her. For instance. the Goodwill started running into things early in he r career. When the Spauldings took her aJongside the wharf in Papeete, the jib boom de molished the local barber shop. CA PTAIN F LINK was aboard when s he was set aground on one of the Galapagos by an unusually high s well , wh i c h Flink described as "something like a tsunami or tidal wave." Flink managed to get her afloat again by taking the bow anchors out to sea in the ship's boats and heav ing her off with lhe anchor Wtndlass Fortunately. she had a strong keel. Carl Jr. dove under her many times. and said the keel was as wide a nd rial as a 1>1dewalk. Inside she was ballast-' ed with tons of cast lead ingots. ln deep water, under sail, the Goodwill was a gracefuJ sight In small. shallow harbors, with her reversible engines. she was a clumsy elephant. Il was the custom, on entering port, to have the anchor hanging ready at the bow, so that in case of trouble. the hook could be dropped and the ship brought to a stop. On crowded holidays a hand was sometimes stationed at the head of the bowsprit to war:i smaller c raft out of the way. At five knots the Goodwill needed nearly half a mile to come to a stop. The Goodwill was beginning to show her age. In 1969 she was just one year short of h alf a century. Carl said that the year before. a Mexican laborer , chipping rust with a chipping hammer near one of the forward portholes, had put his ham mer right through the :.sdc of the ship Carl last saw Larrabee and the Goodwill at Cabo San Lucas in May. 1969, just before her finaJ voyage up the Baja Coast Carl Jr borrowed a dinghy and motored over to pay his respects. He tied up, c limbed the Goodwill's accommodation lad- der. and found Larrabee sprawled an a deck chair, dressed in his frayed and faded shorts. with a three or four day growth of beard on his race. He didn't seem lo recognize his young friend and companion of many voyages. Without even rc- quesl1nJ: permis:.ion to come aboard, Carl turned sadly away and went back lo his dJnghy. THAT WAS THE last time Carl saw Larrabee. It was aJso close to the end of the hne. Captain Flink left Larrabee in 1968 and has departure was re- garded so signsficanUy by some PUBLIC NOTIC•: P UBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICF. PUBLIC NOTICE llU FICTITIOUS aUSIHEU NAM£ HATEM(Nf fr'I f~llt)W•~f'J fW f' on .. ,.,. ,,..... ~ t)u\t ... ~ P'l'l"41t t illii r F Q,.41\ftl\''"' <1r.tP0AA fl ON 'l'"I' 1 J. • I f' tf'O• J•C' \l•t• ' '-tl"llt., A"-I CA, 1h"-'4 J.,,.00 '. tfi t ~ ' ' ,.. , f ·~•·• tl'l•r••'"' "'"' tt N N 1.,..... A''"'" tn1t•1 fr9 CA 't1'1f) '"' c,., ... ,, ' , .nil•• " l ti.. • t ......... ,,.. '''"":I01• t ,f ''" t (flfl J• • t L '"" 1n .,, .. 1.-,_.,., I"'• ''ti "'1 "II • i I • t ""It'! fl\. , ,,,.,., 1 r""' • ,..,, '",. r , ,, 1 tr1 r> HI~ l~E PH Wl l\SM .. N Alty aUCHALTfll NEMElll l'IELOS & \AVITCH 100 \ .Flowor \I \w•I• 100 \J>\A,...._f\ C&tOOH l•.,f'I~• nt~ Q1 •f•'I• ( (\~f I [J I l'of Pllflt v 4 !\ f"I r:~ ,,,, ~,,. ,, SONNIE Will H(lP rou CHOOSl Tl<[ lllOHl PlAHl AHO CONT AIN(R fOR YOUR HOM( OR CHllllSTMl,S Olfl ll$T v • FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAM[STATEM[NT 'ff I Lf"W '1Qft ~ R'lAO 1ti ') N~ 1 r.t I A If q [ t q Arif ,, .. ,rOMM 1N1rVAt<•s·, ~, .. , -N•f' I •W Or'"'~ t-t ~"' 'H'U 1'\ ho V,., CA 11'".A I o\. (( <f.. I ., "l'J Art "" ' t n I , I • ..,._, • 1r lJI\' t1 rtft f' t• I w '"" JI • ... ~., ",,,,., , • t h (A t ~· t fti, t•U\lnl'\\ '(" l•Jt f1iJ b'f • I' ,,.,, .... ~ •rrf';\ 1 "'"''"" fl\ -t .... ,,.,.,,."' .,,,. ', .. ~¥Ir•'",.,.. 11M" f h t • ~t )•.If\ w C....-vnl 1 °'' P.·r ll"t I·~ I• '' 1t1•• h· "1 Or,,f\l' c ,, ,._. ()"'"' fl11ii1 l)t I "°' l ... f, ,,ndJ.tl'\ •t,ff MIRllOllEO CIJIEI> RIO"T·SIOE-UP ' I~ A Pl.ANT CONTAINER UPSIO( DOWN A PlOUlAl OISPlAY [ITH[ll WAY YOUll PlAHT"S FOllA0£ 15 AEHECTEO ANO [Nl AROED At Sunshine lnn·s Container Gardening Center we hove all the frills. Geoutiful greenery and desert plants. Containers of ceramic. wicker, chino and brass. Plant stands, mirror cubes. plant food. Purchase any plant and tM container of your choice ond w•'ll plant It. decorate the container for Christmas ond deliver It locolly, Otlng your Christmas gift list to Sunshine Inn. You'll find something for everybody. With all the frills. Dhec1ly oc1ou ltvl"-Av•nu• lcom 't.'•sccllff Ploio. (Dollvery on ord•ll ove1 I 1 ~. pleas•) SUNSHINE INM 's Container Gardening Center 486 Eost 17th SH.et In Costa M•so (7U) 6Ji-1262 FICTITIOUS BUSINEU NAM£ STATEM EIH fh,.. tallo••nq O"' 1o1tn• ..,, dotfV) th.I'• nr\\ ' o•O•' NO~ r •f-Nf)4)0 '"' <> .. • \t \ '''' )\'I N• ,rtpnrt to• t t. ,, ''"!'\~ I tf1MO 0111t Jin ( ')f'gn1 ti n I r,.,.1 1#.lt• ('>rpor\lt • ,,, 1.t~t> U11 ,,1 ,tt ' .-.~ ..... po,, St •. "' ( '""""*'' ~?~l Rrucr Nl)tf }'14 \ tn M •f'ltf' O••ot" NtWQl')f'f A""""' ,,. .. ,,..,,,,., Omf·r W l "nil l'•'> ''·'"' Mi 11,..1 On v,_ N.-wpmt fMoft< flt ( .1l1torn111 ''"' bu''" .. '' 1\ tonlJ••' ,,.,, riv ·• •)f>n.•t 11 f\t,1fh'W'f'\l'\1p 11!10 ,.. COR P<)Q" I ION Jnh n t (i.HtMt /\\\f\1An1 Sn rr•t _., y T ~• ,t.1h•mt1nt N.1-. f!h n w•lh tth ''"'"' f t "''' ol Or.tn"w <mmt~ nn (~<flrnbl'r I , .. ,,, ,. .. ,,o Pullh-.hrd 0f"ttnQ~ C.Orll\I Omlv t;>tlot °"' •m!>f'r I 1 s n 1• 1•" ~ 11 flCflTIOUS BUSINESS NAME \TATE ME NT ft'I• lf'tl t}N ""')l "I I'' }'lo"°l' I (lf , .... t\ f A fi l r A,' r ti' (. r ,, F u I\ I \tt)Q[ lhl\I l'1u11 U11qhw t'I • 1jfh \ -'1 •"·' r 111fo1n1 1 , .. ,.,, flOA r r f\NYON IN " C _.,,,,,, ,,, 1 (1.,, oar •hn" 1 ~ .. '1 '' "" (n,, t ff \f W jl t l '1fV'•.t ·~ ttn (flt fl')ff'I' ,/•\t u, •. blJ ,,,,... ·, ''" lut ti I ff"f J 1 t ,....,...r1on OO!ITCA .. Vl'J .. t>it ~:~n"~":.'~',.': nt•·r fP\1'\ ',f,O• m ttnl w.u. t.1"11 w "' H•· r4'Hnty ('l1•1t1. "'Or HHI• ( n\H•ty r"-, 11"1 I'll,. Pul"t11'\n1td ()f +H''Hl' (.(' I I ().uly t" l11f f>tlr t '1 ll 1l IO" ,,r.n 1.111 '• I~,' '·'~'' PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE INVITING BIOS ""'')flf'' I\ 'V•tt•t)v flt~t·O thdf lht• nn.tuf't r----~ ...... -----, t)t l:du(AflCH'\ ot ft\• l rv1nr· Un1f1t·f1 C,( hnnl Ot Inc I nt Or ano1 C ur\t, "4 GOOO MAH TO l(MOW .. When you thi n k o f making an 1 m port ant investment you lh1nk of your banker fo r sound advice -lhe man with the integrity, tho knowledge the expertence In making wise investments Dom Rac1t1 cs that kind of man a director of South Coast National B11nk in Costa Mesa When your interest 1s 1n acqu1nng fine 1ewelry the obvious place to go 1s to a teweler with lhe 1ntegnty the kn o wledge. lhe e>coerience to guide You W1sely For two decades Dom Rac1t1 has been that man When you re thinking of an important rnve'ltmenl on tine diamonds. shouldn t you think of Dom Aac1ll Ille man who can help you make that investment wisely? Al R aciti Jewelry Company you will find the highest quality diamonds at the lowest possible pnce. Y•. Dom Raciti Is a QOOd man to know ~ti ~1ry Co. DIAMOND BROKLRS JEWELRY • FINE ART 11131 Ncw-1 lloolnlfd CouaMnA • .. t-7?41 C•litMl'HA w ilt ,,.f'"tYt' • "'"•'""° b•cf't VO tt> > 00 om ,,, th,. 6th ft11v ,.,. '"'"..,_.,., '"' tt\ wh•tf\ t1m 1 \All't h•fh #,ft l>' publ1 111 '\Of "•·rt 1ntl • ,._,,, tnr ~'''°"--n' lf'I• l>llt \ f. 11rn1\h tn'1 h\'\I \11 \f•Ort Int v~"""" M!!JO" ¥,. 'lO ·•ntt V• Id Y• ,,.,_ ~~Y>I 8•rttl'l,"1•t•t'ln· 01rt1,hff1J1 l•f)f'\\ mt1 rt.11 ,,.,m ""''ho fr'llA•~ 11 ,.,. ()U1 • l)t 8v.,.11,,. • '•VC>O.,tl y_,.,, t"\ "'" "ttf'll\ l\,•n+1• lt,,,M• rAI t '''°' t th ... O• tr (t ,. '"'V"\ ·~ tlf.Jhl ,,, , .. ,. t ~y ,,, , t h•'1't , 1n w ··~ "'" ,, ''"l·•••H1lt•\f t tf\tDt,., 1r1t •\ l\ttnvb-'1\. tttr 1n 't\n tMtrt•n•r tr.,.n. lJntt .. 11\,.hoVt•n•"" 1 A "un1•<1(nhf <tuOI'• f\f' ,,q..,,, Pot.I ~.hrn Or 'n'l' (,,., I """' '• PHot D f"mhttr 1\ ttnd )1 IC'Ht \UO '' F1ncl \\hut ~ou wont rn l>ail) l '1h1l Clu:.~1r1c·cb. ~!Larrabee s acquw.ntances that they were reluctant to accept in vitallons to ~all on the Goodwill Even m h1~ 80 's Flick was u rugged man, and a thorough se<aman. Som e of the younger KUCSts and c r ew u~ed to challenge Flink to Lndian wrestl- ing. but they could never best tum. During the overnight runs 1t seemed as though Flink never slept. He would appear on deck from time to time in all of the night watchei. to check the ship's position and course. ACCORDING TO reguJallons a licensed officer is required on yachts of more than 100 net tons. The net tonnage of a vessel is a measurement of actual or poten- haJ enclosed cargo and cabin space. The Goodwill was slightly over the limit, so Larrabee had the after bulkhead of tbe forward declr house removed. making it into an open shelter, and thereby reduced the net tonnage to the point where a licensed master was not required. Nevertheless. he did employ Flink for many years. TOMORROW The aging t V "".-'/'<. R U.S MAii.. .. ~,. .. , .. .. . \ ."' MAil. EARLY ,_ CMRISTMA ............. ,. Larrabee wasn't actuaJly re- q u1 red to carry a licensed master. To the distress or the U.S. Coast Guard, Larrabee had made a slight alterallon in the cabin structu re that brought the Goodwill 1ust barely under the legal requirement for Licensed personnel . Goodwill. Wllh a crew Q/ 10 a"41 minimal nav1gat1onal a1d3 ap- fJ'OOChes treacherow Sacramento Reef en roull.' to Enseooda ''L.f.1'·~ TAl(f. Tl-IEM A&.L-T~f'Y"RE. GR.EAl FOR IN')UL~ilON !" IRS Fair ... Almost WASHINGTON IAP> The Internal Revenue Service 1s fair sn selccung returns for audit. but the agency needs to devote more attention to tu.payers who overpay. a congres1>1onaJ study said. The conclusions were contained in a report of the General Accounting Office and released by Congress' Joint Committee on Internal Revenue Tax a lion FLY TO SOUTH AMERICA VIA V ARIG AIRLINES 90 I Don St., Suite 290 Newport leach • 17141 752-9036 II!'· .·THE EARL'S Jgg~ Designers Shop. Design Plaza 1s a one of-a l~tnd shopping d1scncc ruc"ed into a qu1ec corner of bustling Newport Ceriter. Along these occrowve courcyords. 1n orry w ood studios and shops. ore ore galleries. home furnishings. occessor1es and specialty stores where the area s f1nesc 1ncenor decora tors shop for 1hoc specrol 1tem-or room-or service OHtees of !teverol interior des1gr. firms ore here along with those of graphic o ruscs. planners. orch1ceccs hair 1o'..h1or. ond ocher designers Looi~ for Muldoons oc the entrance co Design Plozo Shop where designers shop. And where they worl~ coo. DE51Gn PLAZA NEWPORT~ CENTER f'LUMllMG 7 DAY CHltlSTMAS SrtCIAL • HEATIMG AIR COMO. 1r, .... ,,.,.., .. ,..,. ..... , "" ,, v' , ' .. 495-040 I fA 'It ,fl, ' . ,., .... , ,., e i 642-1 753 Call 642-5678. Pul a rew words lo work for ou. DON'T DEC. 22. 23, 24, 27, 21, 2t Ir JO SUITS HAND T AILOltED TO FIT 4HY SltE 2 l'c. SUITS FtlOM S7t.SO It SHlltTS FltOM St.SO FREE Custom madr: shirt with ourchase of any suit FREE Pr ot Pants or ;:i Vesl with ourchasP ol 2 suits FREE Shirt with purchase ol 6 Custom made shirts And many stytes or garments on display Choose from over 7.000 labncs on display ' • • ' '' ' • • -•• 1 : • • • J .,·. f .\' ,. • • ... f ' ~ • ' •• \' ' , ' • , ' i. ' ' '• ' ,' , I , , 1 11 "-~ ~V\..11\. Ph: 586-5000. 9:30 to 7:30 p.m. TELL TIJUANA ABOUT OUR NEW VODKA- MARGARITA MIX •. Just add Vodka t . . -----~------~~ ~-~ ~---= -- Wttdnesday December 2:?. 1976 DAIL V PILO r " 9 -Coast Churches Offer Yule Services Christmas, the joyous hlghlighl of the Chrisliun year, will be celebrated in coast area churches in a wide variety and number of services. Most churches will feature their own or school L choirs in long.prepared-for concerts which will feature secular and sacred seasonal music r Some of the larger churches have choirs which challenge professional singing groups On the other I end of the Christmas musical spectrum will be i those churches which wtll feature s1ng-alongs, giv ing the congregation a chance to get in on the at'l. ' A few churches will present spcciul production:;. It of traditional seasonal pageants r-Probably most popular of all Will be the Christmas eve candle light services which combine .. the long trad1t1ons of fr.stivals of light, or Advent. with the traditions of nearly every organized church IN COSTA MESA: Christ Lutheran ('horcb, 760 Victoria St Christm as eve children's ~~rvicc . 7 p .m , candle light St!rv1cc at 11 p m ''1th choru~ Christm as day. worship and :.mg1~ ~l 10 30 pm Prince of P eace Lutheran Church, 2987 Mesa Verde Dr.; Christmas eve Cllndlc lighl serv1cci., 5 p.m. family service, 10:30 p.m Chancel choir Sermons al both serVlce:.. Central Bible Church. 190 23rd St., tonight at 7 p.m .. youth choir and Sunday school children pre- sent Christmas program. No Chnstmas day ser\'icc scheduled. Orange Coast Unitarian Universallst Church, 1259 Victoria St , cundlc light scrv1n:, 11 p m , ' <:ot a problt'm 1 T/1t•11 rcnl1' f11 /'C1I f)unn />al in/I cut red lapl!. cwtt11u1 tlw <msw1•n a11d m·t1011 11r111 m!1•d 111 .'W}t'1· ll1t'qwtw.~ 111c11111•n1mrrlf urid bU.\I t1(1ss /\1a1/ your q1wst11111.-; 111 /1111 Drmn Al Yo11r St•rl'1<:(', (}ra11y1· Cott.\I l>nllu l'1/1Jt. /' 0. Hnr 15fiu Cost11 ,Wl"!ln ('t\ fl:lli:!li Im lucle 11r111r tP/c>ph1Jt1<' 111rn1her '/ /11• nl/1111111 appears dw/11 cxc1•pt ~lurduys Na•e, lnlfu~f" Exiended DEAR PAT. I've seen the Agricultural Ex tension office referred lo by that name and also as Cooperative Extension. Which is proper, and how 1s this office funded" M M , Laguna Hills "Agricultural F.xtension" is the most common- ly used name for this office, but it Is not accurate. Cooperative Extension is correct. CE is a na· Uoawlde program estahtisbed by Congress as part of tbe land grant un.lvenlty system in every state. lbe purpose Is to enend information from the un· lverslty through advlsors to the ~pie of the state . Three levels of government cooperate In fund· ing the CE program. The federal government participates through the U.S. Department of Agriculture, which provides a portion or each state's buditet, some literature and mailing pfivileges. Thf' s tall' particlpate11 through the University of California, wbicb employs tbe county advisors, stat.-spe-c:lalis ts and staff and provides mOlt educational literature provided to the public. Orange County provides main offices and operating expens.-s for the extension advisors as well as secretarial and other support stan neceisnry lo the program at the local level. lftqedr11'• to Brr Crftlit DEAR PAT Where can I find a complete run· down of current women's r igbl'i guaranteed by law and I mean all women, not Just those who are stngle? H G .. fountain Valley Thf" rh1ht1 of womm as consumet11, <'itlzens, workers. s tudents and 11poust>s are outlined in a new C'allfornla Departml'flt ol Ju11tlc:e pamphlet, lhe Womea's Rl1bts Handbook. Free coplf''i, available ln late l>ffem ber, may be orderf'd by wrftlnfC to: At- W'ney Genenl'1 PublJc Inquiry l'nlt, SSS Capitol Mall. Sacra mrnto. CA 95814. One of thf' cha.,Wrs dlttul'lses credit, ancf ob suves that In California a bank, 11tore or other busl- nf'M which grants cf't'dit mu11t gin credit lo any quallfled applicant, bLwd on her earnings and as- sets. Earnings and assets includf' a wom an'ci salary. ber cblld and support payments, and her husband's salary and their ~mmunlty property, If they are married. Credit also mu11t be ~lvf'n to the applicant in II.er own name. A credit •Rency may not discriminate autn.st an applicant for credit on the bull of sex or marital status. -I • You con porl~ your car. And port~ the l~ids, too. At Fosh1on Island. you'll find convenient perimeter porl~ing for your car And o conven1en1 outdoor ploy oreo for the 1~1ds. The youngsters con shde. spin ond scompe~ to their heoru' delights while you're shopping 1n over 60 fine stores. Toking ume to find those special iterns you need And perhaps o surprise or two Lsn't It surprising, for one thing. to find o center thoc cores about people more than 1t cores about cars~ · ,~ FASH~N,ISLAND M&WPOJlT 0 CENTER Christm as eve, publtc Jotns choir 1n ~1ng1ng Fellowship, wassail follow service. Flrst United Mdhudli.t thurch, 2721 17th St . Christmas eve candle light service at 7 p.m. with 3 t'hOlrS. Plymuuth ('Ool{rt'gatlonal Church of N~wport llarbo1 , 3<!62 Broad St . c•undlc hghl Communion service Chn:.tmal> eve, 7 ~. 11.30 p.m. IN CORONA Ot;l. MAR: Com munlty Church, Congregatlonial, 611 Heliotrope Avt• : Christmas eve candle l1ghl service at 7 :30 p 11\ J>ubltc smging and worship Fahb Lulheran Church, 8200 Ellis /\v(• : C'hrtstma:. t'Vl", 6 und 7 30 p.m r1.111dlc hght services and at 11 p m with Communion IN l.A(:UNA AREA: St. James Eplscopal (;hurcb, 3209 Via Lido, Chri:.tma:. confes~ions, Thu1 sday. 5·tl pm , l"rld<•Y. 4·5 p m Chrtl>tmas eve t.t.•rv1ces; 7 .JO family candle llght Eucharist and trek fo manger for donation~ of gifts to go 11> F:s1rview':. children. 10.30 p.m ., an nual carol service with scn1or choir followed at 1 L pm by choral fest1vul Mass 1.1nd sermon Chrii.tmus day Communion ut 10 a.m.; Dec. 26, 9 and 11 a.m carol und lesi.on :.crvi<.·cs, no <'hurch' school IN FOUNTAIN VAIJ..EY: All Saints Anglican Episcopal Church, lllQ82 Dushard: Chnstm as eve carol singing followed by Cornmunlon and sermon, 10 :30p m. Christmas day, 9 JO a .m .. Communion Wld sermon Community Prei.byt<'rian Church, 415 Fon::-.t A\e Chrtstmas ,.,.,. (a11uly servt('l', 7 I'm. 'l\tth p;1geant and ltght111~ of udvt:nt randle:.. BJbysilttn!: for infarlts . Lak<' llllh1 Community Chunh, Moullon Parkway al RidgC' Route. Outdoor Chraslmus cvl :o.l•rvicl' Jt 7 30 p m with choir Jnd i.olotst Wt.'<•r v. .irm clothinJ! IN GARDEN GROVE: IN SAN CLEMENTE: Garden Grove Community Church, 12141 Lewb St , Candle light ser vice Christmas eve. Five services featuring Dr. Schuller, massed <1i0irs and public carol singing. Services at 5, 6 :30, 8, 9:30 and 11 p.m . Dec. 26, Season's end sing-1.1long, 7:30 p.m. Saint Paul's Lutheran Church, 1190 Morn- ingside Dr : Chnstma:. eve Eucharist al 7 30 P m with pageant by <·h1ldrcn and candle light Com mu· mon. Dec. 26. 10: 15 a.m , Day of St. Stephen Holy Eucharist servu .. •c. ChrlU L utheran Church, 35522 C:tm1no Capistrano. Chni.tmru. eve eandle ltght service <it 7 30 and 10 30 p. m Congregation and choir sing. Si~8 Nixed SAN DIEGO <AP) A REWARD IN HUNTINGTON BEACH: IN NEWPORT BEACH: Grace Lutheran Church. 6931 Edinger Ave . Christmas e\'e candle IJght services, 7 p m and at 11 p.m. with Communion. Christmas day, 10 a .m lloly Communion st'rvice. Saint James Episcopal Church, 3209 Via Ltdo Chra:.tmas eve ser v1cei.: 7:30 pm , famtlv Euchare:.t ; 10 · 30 p m . rarol service, 11 p m lloly Eucharest. Christmas day , 10 a m . lloly Eucharc:.l. new sign ordinance tn El Cajon is constttullonal, a judge says. oxcept for u section prohibiting all signs in a redevelopment except for idcntiffcat1on. '" .,. •"• .... t. to 1•11 \Pl• •lf•OI•• ,..,, ot tN• •O"•"l•l"'f '"•°'• •• •t 9'19'ft"9 • Ol't• w-ee\. Old ......... Fvtvte tor Ot) cw th• N•w (l.Ui• tor 1:199 ltfNll on• Ho O••I••• Phone: 546-6740 Guaranteed Satisfaction AS ro OUA&IFY & P•ICI! .• Or '"'" will r•fund your mon•y or •Jt . chong~ your rir•• w /rh/n JO doyl of pt1r· cha'•· JuJ t re turn your 1lre1 tor on •• .. chong• or r•fund. S(.IPER l .. Olt' I.ion· ••fff{'E.'t! --- MICHELIN X STEEL RADIALS 165/13 .... 195/14 ;;;su 205/15 6111" 175/13 • 91111 205/14 ;;7•1e 215/15 •• 91111 175/14 ... Ill 2 15/14 ft211" 225/15 67"" 185/14 ;;o8H 195/15 •• 1 1111 230/15 77 IH 235/15 82"11 111('11ELI:\ ZX Ill, \{'K",\1,1 .. S 14s110 21u 155113 aaaa 155;14 :UJaa 1151 14 tf;llK 155/12 :& IH 165113 :J788 155/14 t288 155/15 11 IUI 145/13 :&118 175113 IOK8 f75114 1:)88 165115 lfUlll -----~~--~~~~~~~~~-*50,000 MllJE Lll'1ESA\IER® ... • ....• ~~''' ---.. /A. f'}!:. DL',\l.i Sl'PEll STl~l .. 'l .i BEl.i1'EI) R . .\Dl,\l.i n ·11 ITEH'.·ll,il .. S 8R78/1J -l 9"" FR781 14 6 I HU ( 175113) ( 195/ 14) OR78114 ~•>HU CR78/14 66HU (11s1141 at.J (205114) ER78114 ~ 7H8 HR78/14 7•:>UJC 1185/14) a (215/14 1 - U 11 le UAl ft1.,,1 I u•• ht f .. Ol\' LflM' Priee,. fh• Great look of '•riorrnon<• & Dt<tonttoon! RAIS~D WHITE LETTER TIRES 70 SERIES 60 SERIES A.701 13 "2:i11" A60/13 "'281111 GR1811s 7· I me (205/15) HR1811:; 7 I me (215/15) • LR1a115 7 9 me (235/15) • 1)Mark C. lloome Li1nitttl Warruty MAltk C 94..00M( (-0_,,_.NV t ••H•fllfp to1 l tfe1•-.•• llll•G•"I "'•"··· ........ ,., ,,, .. , \ \ . • ... Where else do you find great p rices Ilka this? ICl :u •I," <tll-. 155113 •>C•llH -·' 165/13 """>•r 175/ 13 tClt I)) 115114 lCt•·••1 165/ 15 t '\6 Ill 0't?llH ·>-:JP" !l!IHK :J:}llll :J.1'"' \\hi et•\\ all .. AR78/13 :1:1811 ( 16Sl13 I ER78/14 :J9"" 11tSI U } FR78/14 .121111 ( 19;114) GR70/14 -161111 120511•) HR70/14 19llK f11)/14J ( ''""'.,.,,, "hih•\\:111 .. GR70/ 15 tfj"" 120)11)) HR70/ 15 .191us 111~11)1 J R78/15 52.u \ 72)11)) LR78/15 5~118 tU)llSI t .. tolWfed f•C••• T•• TIG.ERPAWS 5.60/15 (155/15) ''" f•d (• 1•· low low Pr.Ct• On OU\fr Sutt .. ~ A70/ 1~ "291llJ C60/15 "2~t"" •l'IO•ft M r• (OV•fl lteecf h·I• IOf 'O 000 mil•• ot ••If ••Huft \ ,,,.,, ffo"" '"• o••• ot PW' (h•I• wheft ht• 1e Wttd 0~ ,.,,,,,..o•• "'h•t••• '" "o''"'' ,..,~''' .,, lh• V"1t•d l hto C••dll •• •qwal 10 twrt•l'\t M4Alt C &LOOM( (:0M,AHf •• u,,..., PllC• bu•d •n PIO •• hOn of l•llt'I• 6• ft'ltl••t• vu•d •~U<h•••' U t•••tt' fA[f IJl(~l .. C(M[Nf to1 •ny d•f•CI UNIROYAL Tires, Any Size Listed 070/14 "!10lfll F60/14 t-i:J~·" E70/ 14 ":J!l"" G60/14 "!181111 F70/ 14 ':l:J •ll ":1811" ":J;'illll G60115 G70/14 ":Ht"" L60/14 ,,.,,,,_. l•t-lo• ~I tl te U 4' .,.. "',.,.,, ••• , ......... , ... uo dvune th• fin' 1 ., •• , •• , JO 000 '"•'•• .... , ..... , ,."' ... fo•I ••• <•'"P'•I• gv•,•nl•• fOotfW"Ht..-1• I It.I It 1• \ M ·' I tlfl IHI 5 60/ 13 6 . .t1s114 I a 2511s ( 155/13) (871-14) (G78/15) 6 00/ 13 6.95/ H IA781131 CC71/14) ,~ \ ... IH \h 645114 6.&s / 15 878113 ( 878/ 14) ( 165/ 15) 6.00/ 13 NOW ONE LOW PR/(£ ... s~a~~~ -HC't't\,tt 1,1 (U tu FIRESTONE GOODlrE /tR II.I·'. <•tltJllll I C'll .~ f , • 20fJ Glnss ff,.,,,.,, l '.\'I lltJ\ ·.11 .. 10.oofJ Hih· n,.,,,.,, .-t·r1:1~·1, Hodiob f"untrlli JoJM•• ftulwd Mhiff' LA'Uf'r Polye~'er (' d UI0/ '4 or 11as11•1 388U UH ••• l•t •• ,. .... , Sl~ARS Allstate f·'orc•igtt ,\ .~1wrt ('ur Tirc•s \'011· s 1388 ""'" • • 5.20/13 R\I 6.70/ 15 6.50/16 ....... u,. .... f•u.e '•• .\En· (',\.H 1•,.;n "\ 'Tlfl'{'K TIRl~.t; 1.00115 2988 1.0011& 3 7nn UUttUtlftf ltt4'\tttt l·'ort•iJ!n .. \ Satori ('ur Tir·,.,. 19!~t I Ill IJ • , .... ,. , . .... "'""' .. lladial H hit<•u·cdls AR 78/13 (165/13) (155/13) ~3688 ,, .. . .... '·· BHID<•E.-..Ttl,\·I~ vw 1:'oi·~i~" ~~ •. IC\' & s1•on·r .*'f ... pe,·icd! .-..1•01 ts Tu ( ~ New Snow S 14 88 Where elae do you find g r:•' prices hke lh•s" & Sand s110m 5.60/15 5.60/13 S 1688 Whitewalls Bom ( 155/ 15 > ( 155/ 13 ) ••·•••• •• • •.• ·• .... " •:Ma.. 1..w r.-•• r., GISLA \'ED ·"'"':"'·"'·"' .-.o.mm •111.1. Bt•lted ... TEl~I, ICudinls l1AELL'i ' "n ll n ·o :wi 11 un u . 111t 1: .... BAl811) 1111•.. f A111•S s4 3us OR71· U Hnt~ 1.& GR7111~ t ER781'4i fR.•1 1° HA7tl I~ 111f le IJ,t~ Jr4 ft .I• ~•J•hl, .l AhtOll\ ,.. .. , 11.1:. (•tlfllllll('ll 1, I 1 ,, "·"'':" "1111·•~ I I.I. 1"11. II 'II II l .'S T I ' ()(J "\ ill ."iERI E ."i ,\s s3~88 IAut· . ls . . . . ·~·:;:::::: .•.. ftl .' 1 .. 11'\' RETREADS 1ss112!191111 •175/13 t t11" 185/14;; I 1111 155/13!1!>1111 185/14 asu 155/15 a;;1111 16s113 t 1 u •175114 Uf"' •165115.;0111 145/12 175/13 s24uu ' s 12aa 155/14(165/13) llu1Mt 1"' S • II ... 111 I ,fH(" '-~ sin 1 ot 11 IUCtWhU ,,_,.,._., .. fot•Uft• , ... •• , ........... flt • ._., hw ... uar•o...tlte •• ,., "' h , .. , tH\ me · 1~-T~11'~; ''·1·~:~'"·~ TVNE-VP BRAKES ~ 1 0% 0 FF ~ ''' . 2 Q EACH. SIZE 'f11tesf lle••r•nfc •n9ine A1tafy1/1 A/I l 1eh I•••'"''"'' • .,, IESr Liii/ii'! CLIP THIS COUPON ? fJ(RHl'(;Jl.lH = '>/~ h -'3.5.5E-TOISH :3 WM l'HU I' ·= ~,-, :,-CAl'S& tucuva•Lu u . FRONT DISC --\ 1 ·«-· ~ ALL SIZES! POPULAR ~ ~; 011 all CB"S ••• : -." ~;1· .~ ~·:. e~AN~s1 ALL. !vPes ouR BEST TUNE-UP JOB D~·-·;t 1 BRAKE RELi.NE .~Tt:1n;11 {' ,,,,'tl·:T'Tl~S. { f :r t ... "-.: : , •. , s U~ 4!~ a on ~ "'"""' 0"'111' "•• '•r" 3 4 ~ 4\. ... ~,·,.;111;0 II Ullf)..4'-r:':.~ -~ ,. '" -..,4"'"., St•C ( •I) .... I llnJ!!" , ~.,,All••"•••''''"'' • ) ~ 8,. I \ ~l/JA• ' •\:.,;. '•• odd•I""' chi.ii'"'°''""-••t1I -v S.I Orlffll ·~ "·mn1r11nnnn1n\>\n\W1mm1mn _' ""f,""••f Mora.c 11oom•'•H I•· .,,11 ... ,.,.,.,,,.r•r'•"' -,, , .. • -~:='"':~~~======::!!!:==-=="------"=·::.:;-:::::.• .,:00.:.:::,.• .:;oa:,::s>i::.:••::.•..:;12::;":.:':..:":.• --I:' ~ w r \ ~ • ... '''"' ,,,,.,,,, ' , ..... ,,,., /. UIH ~'*~·~ f ,('Rf·~ .•oB.' "->-~ v ,,.,,.,, •• II.tr,. .... ,,,,,,,.,, ,..... :t •on a.s. I flllfllll ca11• '"'~,---°' tl:U\Tt;\,t\C't; t 'IU.'I·: -~·~~ ·11-lii I.I Bt:. ""' ('II' \'Gf.'. PER~. Al. I .f f .,I·; '89 '69 .. "~ d ffff f 'ffJ Jr I • -, ~24 ti ,llONTOISC • •·WHEUORUM JOD ·~· , -. "" • . ' •t :H B \TTf.'f• & v • .; 88 llfAR OllUM DIUKf JOI INCLUOEI. Olt ........... . I ; 'I 1;s 4 cyl Pinto oga ••CIUOI\ ................ 110 0 •• '"'""" ............ . ~·•"""-NIVI• MllD S WATI• '"•'••· ,.,. ~ ..... • "''" • ••••••"'' ••• '"'"'"' •·· "'"" 'nc'ud ••. lnetetl n•w Spin On ff I 4 cyl. Dot1un, V. W .. 1..w t-,.,~' .,..., ttlf~· • .,. •·•••• • ... 11••-., • '"'" · • "" r norma •perati1111 ~ 2 9 ct ct "'••• • ••''"' ·"-'" ••1··•• • Oii Fjllor, up to S qta. of 30 .. 1 Toyota, Opol ,.,, •••• 1"•"' '""''' ''"''"' • '"'' ... , ..... .,,,, .,1,.,., • ... 1. wt. Queller Slat• 011, lubri· s388 conu llonl 6 cyl. Mott US. <ors ..,...,, • t...,i 1''"' ,_,.., • ''"'•'• .. , .. ii.,., 1 ••. ..,, • eel• ell filling• (••c •pl • s443s ................. .t ............................. ""··· where b'ollen or plugged).. •ST ""CUI s34ss ~·~.:,:~r:.• "-'' 1 , .. ,,.,, ~=·:,;.~~'~;.":"' ~ ,_. , .. , Multi wt. oil utre. Moat cars, CHS UM m. zl I cyl. Mott U.S. (or1 Nl!'.W •ft AKI! ,. :rn 1•1 IC I ~=~I~• cell for en •PPOlnl · 141, 11.111. 14 St-.. INC HAftDWaft~ :! \\ tll} 1 ti:~ {7,\.IHf)\',\f.1 . Glass· ll••ltt-d •'m1irnk• 't'bec-1 /\liff11ment '1.,.~·D .'tllO('K .... ,,,,, .~ll(J<'K.... MUii (, llOOMC'S CONSUMll ,OUCY I 1 C llO""S ,_lDllO Ovt cuttom•r Pofic' 11 to Mtl•r ••tv• you tf ~ov fttw• • •n I.I . Ull AIA "' ,..,, 11u••llon coneorn••t fHoclUCI• oi .. ,.~ .. ••-•..S 10 rou. s98n s49r, s J 888 lll••M .. If OUI Olr4'C1or of Cont ....... Aftefrt, Mf 8 Alebf ~ ~ •011 .., UIJI llO·ITJJ or JOl·t1M If ••,....,._ H11 .._,oft°"' u CHI ... ~ .. .,':·;cm :.~:.: .;~i::::::;.!:. ";.:::-..... ""' ~°". l•t~cle· lltO .. TtlA CNA•U ltJUlUllll mu au ... ,., .... _. ...... __ fer Alr.C-4lt~e4 HI-...._:.__ ____________ __ ,...,ien •• <••tt RAAf.11( 1~ I) IHIJICAI( OllllR Sill JHA, IMoY Ill II•-, .. ,_ -hi 8UI 00£5 NOi IMPtv COMl'lll[ lllll!CH~Ntf.ARl\111 071/14 J11/15 (20S/14) (22$115) H71/15 l71/15 (215115) (235/15) LA HARA GA.ltDfH HOVE COSTA MESA 1000 ........... .,. 14040 ..... rat HUHTIMGTON IEACH i--.-.--"' .................................... ., I 1455 leach llYcl. 111 41111-2403 t7141 SJO.UOO JOOS HAllOtl ILYD. Cat Aw Poillht tc _ _.....__,,._..,I ' 1714) 557-1000 IU9&APAIK All..LBTOH OUNCH 1714) 141-1445 6tHU.•ll"-I JI I h9fll lml4 410 ....... , ........ _ (7141751-1691 1-.. ~--.,_...,.,,_....,I 11141UMJZI • . .m 41 U6-:HIO 17141170.0100 • , -111~.ld4 .Leadbt9 7c·u Vca f.ct-Silta 1924 ()/wt 7)a£4 K.-30-9 SIU K:30-7 S wt 9 -6 I r AJO DAILY PILOT W9drtesday, December 22. 1976 Hotel Magnate Hilto~ 87, Will Many Coast Lawmakers 'Busy · as Bees' . . -~ l From AP Dispatches Conrad Hilton took out a license to marry Mary Frances Kelly, 61, a longtime friend of the 87·year-old hotel m agnate. Hilton, who built rus 48-hotel empire from a single small-town hotel in T exas in 1919, and Miss K elly, a sales r epresentative for United Airlines. appeared .il the marriage license office of Santa M onica Superior Court and signed the paper s together. a court spokeswoman said. Miss K elly, who has been with United since 1942, attended Northwestern University and studied al the Royal Academy of Dramatic Arts in London. * Water gate bagm an Anthony UlasewJcz was leaving federal court in New York City for lunrh when he was abruptly served dessert a coconut cream pie sm acked into the sade of his head. His trial on t ax evasion charges had recessed when Ulasewaci was <Approached by a yowig m an who hurled the pie, shouted an obscenity and ran off. Ulascwicz told neWllmen the same young man h ad asked him ULAS1Ew1cz earlier if h e had investigated the U .S. Labor party while a New Y ork City policeman assigned to the police department's Oureau of Special Services in the 1960s. ft Robert S. Trippet, who founded the Home· Stake P~~ucti?n Co. and. built it into a huge oil and gas dnllang firm, was t(1ven three years' probation and fined $19,000 for allegedly defrauding the govern- ment and invest ors. Trippet, w as accused by the government of masterminding operations which led to losses of up to $40 m1ll1on. lie pleaded no contest to the ch ar ges in Tulsa U .S District Court Judge Allen E. Barrow also ordered Trippet lo pay $100,000 within 90 days as a fund for anyone Y.ho could prove he was m ade destitute by tn\'es tmg in Jlom e·Stake. Tripp(•t, w as accused by the government of m asterminding oper ations which led to l osses of up to sio million. lfc pleaded no contest to the charges in Tulsa. U .S. District Court [ J Judge Allen E. Barrow PEOPLf: also ordered Trippet to _ _ pay $100,000 within 90 ----------days as a fund for anyone who could prove he ww. m:1de dc~t1tut1.· 1Jy investing in llom e Stake. • An allorm•y seeking a new trial for mass murderer Juan Corona askt'd in Redwood City for a <'ourt·appointed psychiatrist, interpreter and private in vestigator. Super ior Court Judge Louis B. Dematteis told defense attorney Michael A. Mendelson that the r e· quests should be made to the ~tale Court of Appeal. Demat . te1s continued the hearing to Jan. 21. Corona, a onetime labor contractor , 1s .<.<•1•kmg to over- turn his Janu<1ry 1973 conviction in the mach('le murders of 25 atmE'r anl far m work<•rs whose bodies Y.er c found an l!.171 along the Feathc•r R 1 n·r north 11( Yuba City COllOHA • Country music !linger Kenny StarT, known for tt11· 1975 h at "Th<' Rh nd Man in the Bleacher s." had hJ<; 1?U1tar and case stolen dunng a power failure at M et re> Nashv1lll.' airport Starr. tryan~ to be a good Samaritan , said he )l'ft the t erm anal for his truC'k to get a !<intern to help people hnd their y,,:.i y thrnui:h the d arkened airport. When he returned, his guitar and case were ~one from lhl.' baKgage claim ar ea, he said. ThC'y havt> not b(•cn recovered. Deaths Elsewhere SAN D I EC.O I;\ Pl Jean While. a l nC'.il Rc·puhl11·;in p11rty lender c11{'(J an ..i ho~pltdl Tu<'~ d'1} ut 42 after a 'hort 111 nM<; M rs White wa<., l'X 1-<:Ull\ P '<'crt•t ar y nf th1• S a n D 1 c• J! o C '' 11 n t y R epubl11·.1n CC'ntrJI Cnmm11t1·1• LOS J\l'llGF:l.F:S CAP) -Funeral serv1cC'S will IAL n ·IHGHOH ,UMHALHOMI Corona dAI Mar 673 9450 Costa Mesa 646 2424 llLL llOADWAY MO•TUA•Y 1 10 Broadway Costa M""a 642·9150 McCO•MICK MOHU4•11S LaQuna Beach 494·9415 Laguna H ills 768·0933 San Juan Cap1'ltrano 495·1776 PAClflC VllW MIMO•IALP4H Cemetery Mortuary Chapel 3500 Pac1f1c View Onve Newport. Caltforma 644·2700 "HPAMILY COLOHIAL FUHllAL. HOMI 7801 Borsa Ave. Westminster 893-3525 SMJTHS' MOITUAIY 627 Main St. Hunlington Beach 536-6539 SMffH TUTHILL LA .. OUI WISTCLlff CHA* Mortuary • • 8"4&-4888 427 E 17th SI , CoataMeH be h eld Thursday for Louis Bo)'ar, a retired real estate devel oper and w e ll-k n own fund r aiser Cor I sr aeli caw.es Boyar. 79. died Tuesday at the CCLA Medical Center HINE\ JM HIN~S Ofl\VO ttW4'/ A1 ·~ .,1 w ,,, on O,,.t •mf)ll>f t I, 1•1• th" .-,,., r~ ,,n .. nt of 0•"• Point (At1f')r"t t ~r¥1Vf"·d nt ""''" f.,, .. H i.,_, o' ~\n1,, ·~ \.tlln F~ll c T hlOf l\f O•i• ~ ,,.,., ~OOWlt\ R,..v Fl'h 0 Hi,,.-\ M.~ 11. 4, M1N1\ N•\t\ H i""' '' .11·t Mr\ &.unit~ 'HJ"'" ""r'4H\ "I "' f r" .. .\ I ~o f)f W"trtuld~t'ln V,,,ttllf1f)u l'l"IY W~ d.1'f ()..., ftmt'Mr 11 lrnm ~ 00 AM Ft> t no PM to t'lf' .._,.10 ,,, ~IY.i rH l ut.111 ( ~MB O"IAP.I tn1,.rn1l"f\t "'till ~ l'vle'I In f •4A\ Otr,.ttftt1 hv S MI t •• TUH11LL LAMB Mo•lu••v. 811A8Alll£ JAME!> M BllABl\NE, r~ldr<>I Of Huntlnq!Of'I B4'~0• CaJolOr<>i•. P"'""' ftw&y t>-<•tnbtr 1•, 1~76 ~vr\'•W"d bv hi\ 0"''"" Aob~f't v . ttnd AllCt: Oritb•ne; four brotP\er\ Rl>twrt E 8r~b.!n.e .Mr•ld Br.tb.Jn4'. Tpnifn<r J 8rAtur'W" "T1mot"y F 8r.lb.itM ,,,,_,., Jflnnifflr E 8rllbtlf'\P Qr•nOMrf't"lh Mr "fd Mr\ A.nlt\onv OrM.Mnr ClfMWIMOl""r M" (81,,..nM WAI"' F-r•I m•u W•an•«l•Y 0•<-~mbor 1t ~ .. 00 AM al 51 S1mC111 & JUdf C.1 ... 11< Chourch HU1"t\1noton R,.a<" ('9 Int..,. ttwn• c.ood 5'we>h-ri::t Cttm•f,..ry OirKI· •ti ny 011aav 8rot1•••~ Mor1uuy &O 1111 PUBLIC NOTICE "CTITIOUS IUSINESS NAME STATEMENT T'twt fOtlOWlr.q tw>t\O'l\ .,,. 00.nq bv\t· ,..,~'" VllL4 CiE TRUST OEEO INVl!ST "°\ENl\ l0012 Garll~la A,_.,..,. H1H11•~1on S.a<ll, CA '1'ol6 Pt>lllD H M<Narn .... llSI SarNtr 0r1 .... Cot•• -.... '"" t16'6 w1111am H c:1 .. r~• o' '1S1 !ll'let, ~_.. 8Utll, CA '1W.J Tiii• bv\INH 11 <Ofttlut l90 by a 09Mrel parlMr\l'tlO, Wllll•m H. Cllf•t Tiii\ \l•ltlMftl Wll flleel Wit!> ! .... C»uftly Clerk of 0<•~9e C°""IYOfl DK, IO, 1'7•. ...... P\/1111~~ Orat1~ Coa\t O&llv 1>1101, O.c I\, 11, "· 1•7• ...a Je". !, "17 1176'7• Neutun·e Society C"IMATIOH 8Ult1Al AT SEA 646-7431 y--1e• -1tt1ty ..... ...... _, ""9•-• ..., ...... ~ c.oi.,....~ .. ....... ~..-r: By O.C. HUSTINGS 0t ... o.11,~i.tsutt ln the brief operung session of the Legislaturt-, seYeral Orange Coa.'>t lawmakers were pusy wath committee as::.agnmentb a.r\d pet projects. For instance, state Senator John Bnggs (R. Fullerton > was named lo the nine·man Busmess and Professions Committee. Senator Paul Carpenter (D-Garden Grove) was appointed to the nme-member H ealth and Welfare Committee. Both assignments were mnde by the Senate Rules Committee. • * • MEANWHILE, freshman Assemblyman Ron Cordova <D· El Toro) introduced his ftrsl bill which would restore the death penalty under certain circumstances. Cordova 's maid en effort could draw the support of a fellow Orange Countian, Bruce Nestande CR· Orange) who predicted last week that a capital punishment law wiJJ be passed by the Legislature this year Both men "'all be bucking Assembly Speaker Leo M cCarthy who m ade 1t clear he has st acked the Assembly Criminal Just.see Committee to block any proposed death penalty l egtslallon. INCLUDE D ON THE PANEL which i s dominated by a coa1Jt1on of six liberal 'oemocrats is Nestande. ' .McCarthy s aid he would not personally' lobby against any propos<.>d death penalty legislation but he added: "I think . my own position is known. I am op· posed to capital purushment. But I am going to al- low this committee to r eceive testimony that will pr obably be lengthy and then make up its own mind." * • • SENATOR BRIGGS put himself in Governor Jerry Brown's corner on the issue of tax relief. "Governor Brown is rjght in working towards property tax relief without~ <iccompanying lax in· crease and the D emocratic leadership in both houses 1s wrong t o oppose him on this issue. "I will v 1 ~orously support property tax r elief without an accompany ing tax mcreasc, a nd if the Govt>rnor as serious on this issue, J will do ever y- thing I can l o h elp him achieve it," Briggs declared. Hearing On Sanity Postponed A hearin~ that will de· krmine dcfcnd-..nt Ken Richard Hulhcrl 's nwn tal ability to facc trial on murder a nd rare charges has b ec:n dt .. layed until Jan 3 tn Orange County Superior Court. Judge Wilham S. Lee sent his jury home until after the holidays with the explanation that the delay w as cr eated when the public d erender's of. fice appeal ed his de· cision to open the hear- ing to the press and public . The appeal ..., a:; denied Friday b y the• Fourth District Court or Appeals in San Bernardmo. But the court granted a to day stay of execution Top Al.,_ George L. Argyros of Newport Beach has been named alumnus of the year by the C hapm an College Alumni Association. For the past year. he ha s se r ved as chairman of lhr col- I e g c 's Board o f Trustees. ODYSSEY 300 TY GAME OVERSTOCK CLOSE OUT! t · REG. $69.95 0 $48.«. WHILE THEY LAST ODYSSEY 400 $6·8 REG. $99.95 e 401 MAINST. HUlfTfNGT0 .. 1£ACH 536-7581 GOLDENW£ST & WARNER HUNTINGTON HACH THE OTllEft F RESHMAN Assemblyman from the Orange Coast , Dennis Mangers (0· Iluntuigton B ea.:h ) has announced the appointment ol K en Wtlhs ai. his admiruslralive assistant for the Mangers d1slrlct office ln Huntingtoo Beach . The JO.year.old Willis baa bad previous ex- perience working as a fi~d representaUve for Rep. Jim Lloyd ( D·Claremont) and ls a member of the state Democratic Central Committee. PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE INV ITING SEALE 0 PllOPOSAL S 1910SI FOA THE CONSTlllUCllON OF 4SSUSMIENT D1$fAICT HOH I f MllLIOH GALLON RESIEllVOlll CONTRACT NO I lltVIHE l!ANCH WATIEA DISTlllCT N()llCE I\ H( R~Ov C.IVEN 11\"I 1rwo f\uon1 rit Oir.-t to" ot \.4'•d (h'''" t 1'1\ttf .. '\ tit\() N ill ff'l ''hll" "'"lf'l(t Jtf!l D.J'\ol\ (bu.h, • \HI ttJ th .. hvur l)f I JU PM on fhf. t1rn o~v ot J.tnu.o y 11111 at \ht. othtt> ot WOOd\1 Jt' t..v~t• & A \OCldtt>\ Int ., 96.Y•'1 btlow ff')r tu'"hh•nQ t o \d•d Oi\t,1ct "" tr.;n\oorte\IOl'I. m•t•rlnl\ rQUIDIT'W'nt taoor \f'rV1(@\. •"O 'UDOlll"\ IW(.t')\4'f't to UW'l\truc.t ,.Id ""°'' lut tne Ohtri· 1. dt whlth 1Hn• '-'•d l)t1 °'°"'h. ,,.,.u t>e> oubh<l't ocwhf'O .-nd ,.,,"'" t lOud .ti th~ 1>H u -t>f wooo•.1of ~1i110T" A'"O A\ SOC1ATES •NC :4n •,quth Utr<n. S,..nl• Att-l (Altt •'" • V')lfH S..o 9.,,, '"•II < bnt?rm to M\fl ,,. '~"*"''v" to trw Coot'""' Oor-urf'W"f'lt\ IOt" W•O ,.or'-. t1\ tl9'.,totort' ·~\I~ ov \did o.,,,,,, .,no "1u\t bf> ,.. c'>m NnJf"d t»v t~e ie-curny ~,."'M! f'1 ,,,...,., n C.Op1f'\ 1)1 tf\• (Ol\tt Ac I Do.; """'""'•h ..-e °"' t11t •n•1 '"''" ~ ,., ''"'"'-<rfi 1n '"" otHcp ~ the 01\tritt ctn') 1n t~ ot••<f' ol WoocUJde KuC>ot• & A\'IOCI'""''· r"" df t~ •bov• •"°,,'~'' Coo••\ may t..1 ourt ni1~n •• thit ot tu"" {ft wooo .. •o;• rK.tJbot1 .'\ A\\Of;,,,,.., In< by o.avm••nt ot \?U ?0 or-r w-1 •nd '"'' c•1\t 1\ nut tttfundl\bl• r~rott•"\\ IJf w~tner the 01.;n' on1J \U.t.tf•tdtlC>n\ ,,.., t•lvr.-.f'd Pl•n\ •nO \OfClflC•t1on\ Will be m.ttlflld Yoon rt•Qu••\1 to f\rO\Q(_·(tlvl' 1><00..~ lor a" aoa1110"•' 1\ 00 lnon rf'fyndablt:l to (t)vrr t ht• cn\I Of IJO'\i~Qt> 4nd#4ndl1rig In •<eordinct wnn tnt' L~bor (Ode m the Stitte Of (t"lllforn1a the lr'41ntt Rttnch Witter 0~\tr.c I P'lb\ a\<tr1bHled1 ~lt-rm•f\t>-d °'"d ddo01f'C1 thf Qf'fW'fAI O'Pv~H1nq rd tr 11t ,,.., f'li~rn Wt'tQf'\ ••n<I the ~ntrt11 ortv.,111nq t•t1 tot l~~I nolla•v ~nd ·1vt-t1t101· w1H'-"' the> 1oc,..Mv '" wh1c h \ttle1 '""'" ., t·1 ,.. P""''~,.,.. o tor,.,.,", rl\tt '"''" d1 •I'"" 01 tv-or .,, wor._," '" n•·~''"" 111 1 ,.. uh the ton1r.\ \. .)f\I] 11 ·'"-' Ibo m.uYM!r"', uoon lhiP f"onlr u tnr tO whf)m tn. r,"' tr4tt '' ..twd•O.•d ... na upuf\ •"• ~_,.,. "" l••rtor uM,., h·m I<) (My no• 11·\\ II tt1 -..t1d '""'' ftt·f) ,,_,,' If' HI WI~••"" O •molOff''1 •n ,,,._ • .,., uft11n vt u ... ( "' tfM1 A t00Y ~I th .. Of""""'•I S)ff"w.,,l,f-c) Mt~'>t 'lllrAQI'\ I\ (JI\ l1lf' 1n ·~· 6'tl1r1 Qf It!(· .,.,, f'\t" R11nt h W6tf'r D• .lr•(I 4'"'1 "'4;11 ~ 00\lt'O ., ~·(" t<A> ,,,. by lht Contrvtor Eocn t110 or orooowl '"'" o m~ 4N1 QI \ubm1Utd on • totm tu,-n1W'llf'Cl 11t\ swrt ot '"" Con1t.ct Oo<t.1•l'N"f'lt· •"d mu· t b,. dtcomp.HH\"d by 11 C.t\t\•f''\ rhl'lt d rf'rl1llf'd c~~ ,,,-•• °"~' , bond in ~1n ttmov,,, oat 1.-.. .. 1 th.Jn '°' of tn• amount ot tf'lrrt· tud mik:k' Ool'f'Ablt ti) ll'lt• Qt(l1·, 1)1 ~ f1Jf ttvt t.iitn•''" ut ,.,d D1\tr1c1 " tr• , "' t'fHV ~ •nf'I ,,..,! " '1•1' n .. "' Otn\ ., • "\U f'o• -' ollrtf •ff1~f ftlt ff W'ift'I f nt f "''I I,.,,., ' ~ t"" (J1,t1 I .1t • t<tt•f")t•• lf9 t I~ 11 f~tl IH I• 'l• t' I ti r r"I "I m•1tH1.,n1 1 111 • o, h11n1f "''" I• U'"",, ''" ,,u.1•.tt\I! I·'"·•''"'"' b+dOt;r w•H HHtr 1l"lfn d tunft•U t w11n ""' "'''"' t jf .4#1H01•d fl11• \IWOI • MH.t Wiii h" ,,,..,,.,,"° tort1 d•·'J If rn• '\Vll.,.,\,UI b!d dif!lr ri•fu\,f'\ l,1 t•n1f'f rnto \,ttd ,..,,,.,,.,. 1 Each hid or D'OM\dl \'1.1fl l>-1 11tunm 0rittn1eo by '"" 11·.1 ot pr"~\•"fl 'o\IOrl.O'I trM. IOr\ lrw tonlrd<t cnn''''' "' ··~c.•v+•hnq <~n,,1rur1uir.1 Ml«t h.t(kflll1no • A "othon qallc>n ,,.,.~rvwr t!nd 11ppun,. Mnlwf)r' ,,...., &o..ro nt o, .. ,,.c tor\ ot ,...., 01\ lrl(f r~tr.tHVt''\ tn. ru}r\I lo rejM.t .tny ~ alt b•tt\ t\rwJ to w••v• 6ny 4ltKI •U lrr"'QUIAYttt~'\ tn •nv t>•d av H•E OROER OF THE BOA•W OF OIRECTOllS 0~ THE IRVINE llA .. CHWA TER OISTR1(T Odtfd 0-Hmb"r 14 .. ,, Belty J w~-···r a .. ~''' Jnt ~.·r,. t~r., Publ·V•--0 Or,,n•t"' CO•'t\ 0• ly P1~ t ~'•tnOrr>r 1) lO "'" \/'#t• 11 .PUBLIC NOTICE "CTITIOUS •USINIESS HAM[ STAT£MENT f"9 lollow1nq Pt''°" I> 004"9 bu\O ni,,, •. PUBLIC NOTICE Al I< AOS, Ill H4mlll0f'I SI CD•I• Mtw CA •1011 Alt .. MH Jo11n Ci•uct"""· 1?10 t\Ml!<nl CO\l•MU• C-' OOb 1h1\ f}v\lf'C:n 1-.. tonduc\td by 4tn 10 (Jlvldu•I A.It• 1n4Jtr Jo"" C•uMnll 1 P\1\ \I th •n•nl \NI\\ fll .. (I w ith tntt County''"'"-ot Or•nue County nn N011 ~mn.r 14 'Ut PuOll\ll"G OronQ<r Co."f O~•IV P•lo1 0e< I t IS, 11, 191• )ct~ I• PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE lllOTICIE OF IHSUl"FICIENT CANDIDATES NOTIC[ l\HEREBYCtVfNlhdl •n '"" sr Al BEACH SCHOOi.. 01srR1(l • OO'JPf n1'1Q bo•rd m•'T\t>f!r m11y br ap. oo"'t""' 1n 'lfu of hOfd1n9 •n e1ect1on °" MM< hi, 1'111 APOOlntfl'ltnt 1n litu ot ru'lll'11nQ n1> "'"'I Qn '""'' bl> m•d~ tx.r\u.onl ffl fou<.t\l•On Co<M S•<tlon 13111' oolvorwa '"'''\°" O" no 0(-r\ol"I for ~•rh ",)t' ..... , f..O\tl•f)n ""'' bt•·n nomlnAl~d '°' w <t\ .,,,,., 11nt PO\iht>n by S 00 pm on l.J•H' '""'t>t"' JD 1'76, ul'llt\\ • QrHhon ''~ t)y tw~"h hv• "oter\ot I~ O•' ''•C.f •n.d'<ttllnt.J lfHU 4 w r-h---•n <•m IMU~n Wiii M tO'l<lU<t•d h•\ ~"on~. )ien1f'd lo,.,_ Count.-Su0f"rmt~n1 Of S<l>OOI\ l>Y J ... uMy l1 1'11 ~h ioPOlntm~l'll w,u bf ~ by Ille QO•un1n9 boud of '"" SE4L BEACH SCHOOL DISTRICT...,,...,..,, 10EO"Ul•Ollc;o.,..St'C1oon l)l'I Ol\fEO !ht\ l•lh O•y ot 0.Umbt'r m• A E OLSON R,.Qhtr•r ol Vofjllr" fJr Jit•n11t1tt Sntlton 0. outy HOTICIAOIE IHSUF ICIE .. TES CA .. OIOATOS NOTlrtA POq l A PRESF .. tE f<. CiM•'I ~"' •'•I O•STRlfO ES((l\Aq fJf ,f Al ht Af H ,Jn Mtjlln'lbtOO. I (Of"I '"' 1 Jhnt rn.U•v J pu1•dr Mir ~t>'*"° • .,, 11111,11t drrl• t~nf'r vn._. 1. l1·c c 10" ~I d•.t 8 QI MM 10. 1Q11 '~""""'"'1'1fi'ntn f'n •vQl,-~ ltt¥r on., •·l~r , •on rt~n••, ,i \1 ' ru· c ho l!n coo. fnnrutJMt (nn ~J Cochqt> tk E.ducac•on ~I ( HJf\ t ])1 \I ... tJI Hnt•fth• Uno' P'"'''ll0"-1 o nHH)vn•1 rtn\onn OMi\ ••I OUf!,,O \14'.r ,,,,, h,tl\ tflil Ht+Otbf l(°fr)\ f)J\fA (dleitl f11V,..\tl)vM'1nh ''"'·••• \ nnn m H al• JOOt 0 1111-mtirt:' t'fll! • m• tWK «llJP ~ ,,.,..,,,ion t1r,,.-1Ad1t fi'1• '#u ntP c1nco yf)fllnll• ffl•• tJ1\tnf~ nlt11• .uvtn OUt• un.t trll"f'\J\an11 O•· oor • ,, 'lie V• l conc>v<: UcM h·t 10QO'f"'f'l'nlAOi' ,,, >uc>tor1nlt.oft.o. O"nl't o... c \.C.IJll'f,lj.., ,,, 1 \..Onoaoo p.a.ra el <J•• 17()9 ['lero '"" T •I Nnrnor"m" nlo ,.," Ni<.no""" ,., rnn\fl'jO qut>-r n•h1tO 6'1 QtSTAtTO f'>COLA q OE $E Al BE .. CH .., <-on f(..rmfdMJ 'O" e6 Cod•QO ov EOUC.•hon C,.·ccton lll'I H (llAOO ttl• .., •• 16 Cl" Otcif>mor•. ,.,. NOTICIE 01" ll~SU I' I" ICI £HT CANDIDATES 1'40TICE IS HEREBY C::.•V(N '""'Ill lh~ NEWPORT ·MESA UNll"IEO SCHOOL OISTAICT. TRUSTEE AREA~ l. • SAND 1. AQOvMnll'tQbMrd m.mber m•y hot.· ltJf>O•nt1•rJ ,,, llru ot N>ldl1n9 tVl(lh•t t•ooon March e 1•11 Anooinmtmtn' In •i.•u o• holdtnq ttn "''"'ct•Of"I '"oll rw m.ui,.. PU'"''"" to Educ,.tl"" Codf" ~rcttnl'I 117' it nrtly Qft#"' pe>rs,ot\Gr f'\Ot>ftrwn ,,,,.~Arn VM.t1t• DC>.,• tlontkt' bf-ton nom•ni•t"r'I for \u<n v•c-,,nt Q0\1t1on bv \ 00 o "' nt\ Oft<"'"~' 10 ltl•, ~If'''• ptl1f111f\ \lt')nt·d by 1~ty flw vot~• \ ot tM d"tttct 1nd•<•l•rtt1 t"91t • ..,,u,-1n c.,tn0d•o11 wlH twt c0f'tdut'r1>·•1 P\d\ bfi>t\n P'"'~n'"" II) ltw-(butlh ~rint+·~fl1 ol \<hoOI\ by JA/\(Mry 11.1'1/I. Sue." 4DC>Otntment will CM mMJf' bv ,,,,. 90W<n"'ll l><Mrd ol I"" NEWPOllT MESA UNll"IEO ~(HOOL Ot'>fRICl TRUSTEE ARE .. S 1; • SAND 1 °"' \U.Mlt 10 E c:h,<...thon Cock 5.4.K tton m'I OATEO 1n1s 161~ day of o,,c,,_, 101• A E 01.SOH RP91\trar ot V04tl\ 81 JEANNEne SHELTON °"°"'' NOTICIADf! INSUlllCllHTt:\ CAHOIDATDS NOTICll\ POii UI PRESE"T( E'> 0 .. 0A ~""·~•I 01Sl RITO EV.OLAR U .. 1> •<4()<) OE N[WPORI M£~'1 qec;ENT£ AREA7 .. \'( 1vf\mtt·h,hr•~ ,.,_, ,f>n..,1Q out>t•rnrtl1vn PVf'"'1-vt 110.n ttt~ •" luq,v ..,,,. '""'' una ... 1,.u.1on rt Oldltr't«M_.,,'> 1't11 NfJMbr4;mu•ntf) .. " IU'l" '1f-'"nil'' tJ")j Plotr1t)n df"bf'r,\ ,,., "'"'"'"' •" rnn Jorm1d .. d en,, rl Co<:hQO d~ EOV\44..IQt\ S.'<:r1on '111 \1 \Olo\m,..ntf' un8p.1r~n "'"QV'l·\ Of>r\(ma Odtl1 (. f)\jl)\fO YM1•11t•• ,,Ml \1°'1 nomot d<IO\ PMtl (/)(),,\ Pul"\IO \l"C""'" 0.Hol la\ \ 00 D m "''di• lO drf Ol!h mbr'"· lt76. a metm\ tll.W""""' ueU· eton firm•"" pior Y1Mtfl 'IMO vot""o~, '*"'' d•\t,.•o 1ii.o1c 4nOO '11Jfl' u,,. tl1,,'IC"-<1n • df' pat P'.(tllO Ya (l'lf'WhJ(tMJ., n,., ,,,,,, Of"e\ftntt•dt\, •I Su0f>r1n\erut• .,,,, n. E~..el•\ Gel ConaadO Para ti Old l l d<' e ... ,o 1•11 l#I ~•mlMtO Sf'4 ~"O l'JrOf"' ~I <""Y'IO tu<>e•n•llvo ~ti OISTlllCTO ESCOLA!I UNIFICAOO OE NEWPORT MESA, RECilENTE .. REA 1 .• s. v, ~ CO"lormiG•d (O'>fl Coa190 <IP'Edut.teconSKclon 1m PUBLIC NOTICE ,.CTtTIOU\IUSINISS NAMISTATIMINT TM 10110 .. 1119 Ptr~I\ hOOl1>9Nsl-s ., TRICIA'S. ••oo Wtrner ,. ........ """"'•In Valin, CA-•llot P.irlcle A 011111. 11100 11.onl• Luci• St ,Founl•lnV•llo,CA UIOI Tiii\ 1N1lnou 11 <ondutl.O 11'1 .o In. Glvldlul Ptlrlela A 01111' fllll \ltft-nl Wt\ fll(fd wifll I"" eo-1v Clt•k of Ortncie Co"'11Yort Nov· tmDt• ,., ,.,. l't'1U '"""'-o .. ,... Coeu oan., P1101. Oe<t,..ber l,t, U, n, 1tl• 507H• PUBLIC NOTICE l"ICTITIOUS IUSlllllU NAME STATIMINT' The lollowlnq oerson\ are dol"9 buii· lle\H\ JEWELRY P(OOLEA. !~?!Sum· .,,... Brrt1e, Hunlln9ton Buch, CA. 97~'8 01.il"ltt Hf!'k lm'"'"' •~·U1 Sum~r 0•~1". Hunllnqlo" 8"A( h CA mM! Tt-1•\ bY\1n,c)\ h conouc ted by Ml tn• dlvtd\IOI Olan• Ht~'"''"" Tni\ \1"tPMf'nt w•~ ••li·d with ttw-> County Clf'r1' Of Orange (ounl';' on ~OY· tMbor ?•. ",. l'tl7f0 Plohll\htd Or•n~" Co•'1 D"llY Polot. Dl'«•morr I. t I!. n, 1'14 !0'71 lo P UBLIC NOTICE l"ICTITIOUS •USIMISS NAMI STATEMENT TM loOOWll>C;j Pf'•!IOn~ e•t dOtnQ lluSi ne\U l THE CAEAT AMERICAN PRIN· TING CO , JI'° C·1 AlrPorl L-~ .• Colle Mew. CA t1t'6 Maurin c Woll~ 1I008 Rl<f?<Dhlll Cl.. PelO\ ll•<Ot\, (A..,,,. Lvl• T Ro\e, •100 E Ou.,, &hd • Lonq l\UCh CA-] Tiii• !Ntln•" I\ con.,ucl..o bv ~ Qtntf•i Ddrlntr\ttlO Mt1turttf' G Wolff' l ... ~ .. T Rov , lt,~• 1,u,.m.,,·nl w"\ f1trl1 with tt\i- rttv •f, 'h ,~ (Jf 'lrdn(;~ '-'"Jiiiy ort ~. 11, l~I• .... ,.0 Putth\"td Or"n~ Ca11't 01lll'I Piiot, 0t·1 11 ?<t 1oi...n<1 J•" s. 11, 1q11 SStl 7~ PUBLIC NOTICE > .. •>Ow NOTICE Ol'SALIE Ol'REALP'ltOllEltTY AT P'ltlVATE SALE Ho A·"l11 lrt r"4-\1N)l'lr•or Courr of lf'Wi Stall' of C..ll•orn•• forlhe (6unlyol~-ln lhe Meller ol lftt E\lt19 ol IOL4 STEPHE"IS ROBERTS,••• IOlA S. R09ERTS.D«••"<I NoCl<e •~ 11-r•bv 91vcn IMI lho ""' tt>.-.l~w11i '4111•1 P•lv"l•,..lt.IOIP>C h•9f'e\t •lld ~•bl-• )ubtrO locoro hrm.1t1on ot w10 Suprc,.~or Cour1, on or FECHAOO n t• di• .. a• 01(1.,mC<•. " E Ol SON all•• ,.,. Jrd G4'y ol Jaftuary 1m •' ,,,.. ,.,. OfflCt Of HOLMES E. HOBAllT, Joi» Rtqi\l•Mlor ~ Vnt•~I• A E OLSON WllSNrt Btvd No 1107, L'" AnQt•~•. ~:(j~,~~::7''" ~h··lf')f' ':,.,~~;~=~~s~:~1:~' CA'OOtO (Ovl\fyOf LO\A,,Qt'lt''t. St.ti-of ~·II t hm J:~ f :J'\l "11 h J);11 l\' Pvll'"n•~ <>••n<1' C ~" 1 O.>•ly P•k>I O•OU1..t" ~i.::~:·:..:~::::s:~::-..!!'~rr!':.; Piiot Want \rls -Dr<•m!>f'• °"' n 191• Puc.u.-0·•~ Co.tt 0••1• Piiol ~'"'""all I~ """' 11111 •ncl 1nl~MI -------------"------------s_m_1•_:.._Dt<_•_m_~_._n_._.,_,_• _____ s_1'1_1_1•~ ;:!~~=:!~;·,~~:~~!,s:'IM~~ ' I Milli nary Items Not Available San Fernando Kmort Oreuy or casual, top hondl• or should•r styles. luxury vinyls, fashion colors. Great gift idea. Charge It. A. Dressy top·hondle hond. bog with frame. 8. Casual odju•table·tlrap shoulder bag. C. "California Kid" bo9 with whip handle. Ow aec. 5.97 Hondbo91 .... UJ Our Rec. 6.97 Handbags .... 5.13 Buy Two ............ . On• for a Gift, and One for YOU! olhtt l~n or 1n Mtrlltu')n lo tn.ll ~ W.•d dll<u..a •• IM ""'' Of <tutti. I"""" ID •If the crrHtin rt•I. Pl"'Pt"'h \lhMft'<t In t"f' Cou"ll 'f o f OrAnq"· Stat,. n l Gll1fomlA. ~~rf1r11tdrtv dt>,(tlbed .u. foOOw\, to wit PARCtl t Ow• '''"0 Unll 81" Bull<!· lnq No iou ""••d 1Jr111 '' "'o""'"" "'"' certi111ln Conoom1nlum PIAn aft.)(Pv'it 10 and mMtea par~ ot t"atc~rta1nOKlitrA· lion ol Cov•'>Anl\, Condlllo..s ~"d Rnlrl'll""s r@cordo>d Oeumt»r ?J. !'10. In Oook q•'l'I, P•o• '~'·Of Ollorlat RM:O•d' In 11\t Oll•c~ ol '""' Cou"1'f RHordflr ~f Or llnC)f' Count.,, C.)l1torn•1•, INI a 1 l'ltlh ul\dl••Ota lnlerPst.,1...a 10 Loil,,, TrACI "'"· "'~ •• pt'r......., r•· corara 1n Book ,.,, P•9•• JI ana Je. ot M•-.cellA"t'OU\ M~O\, In t"'41tioff•<4!'of \Aid Cou"t• Rt<ord<tr, ~wn •na dtftne<I ,., "'Conln\Of\ ~r•••· on,,,.,. Abovr·refrrrf'd 10Condot'nrt1ium "'·"' E •Cttttlf'M) tP'frt-hom llr'IY oor1~ "' 1 oh A .ina e •' .,,., t , '" Ho. 1m ...,. Jn.niN)\4't1'lOl7 Alwt1<eotlnq er.cl rt"'rvlt>qunl~ , .... c;r.,,tOf U• \U<C-e$\Of'\ 6tt0 •btt)'\\, tr&m w1d I Mtf\ \lndlvldr'd f~tet"'Mt 11\ wia Loil non·•,.clu~I•• ., • ._.....,,, • .,., ~C(IU\1¥9 rl91'1\ of W•Y OWf'.Undl'f' •"" uoon '"°"'portion\ ol \ala lot J up. ., wl>•<ll,,., tNllcllnq or oll~r ,iruttu•e M\ t>Hn •l'KI ... lor ,...<"\wry or n---"'•bl* Ut9rru °' e-9r~u. tf'tf>lffVtJll'\ 1 •bf~. Uf"IOf'rqrouf'Mt wlr~ .net <ondv•t .. for ••-c.tr1ct1v. ••••oMn,., •f'd oo..,-r ~po~\ ~ .\CtOutrrmt11nn tntr~'"· wwer\, dr•ll'I•, ,..,,.,., 9<11\ 1'tn(1 \tum Otort\ ~ «"<OU1re,,...,u, t~r•to, ~ tor wen rool 01,.rr>anQ• •ncl °'""r ...,. crl)athm-nt\ of .e llti:., Of' Ol\,lmll.tf' 1untt ~·•w""tnhon adfMent L.ot~•" \Aid Tr.tc I tor roof 0¥f'rholf'\Q\ •nd oit'w>r tof\Crotc'"'ntnt, of A flk"' or dl\c..lmU,•r "n<I. IOQl't,,..r Wllh !he rlqnt lo con""" w+d e,n1m1nh lo •nv a.rMn, firm. oullllc 1111111¥ or11ovftrnm•<>talbO(ly, Al\Ofwt~Ptl"9 ••om \•Id LOI hll 9"\. oil. 1>yorourbon1, ml,..r~•• Mid ol""r wb\1,.,,..-.11ln<1 ll"IOw • d•Pll't of S00.00 '"'· bul wlllloul ,,.. rlqhl fe1t"1t<'l!OOn Inf write• or \Ub\urta<-e ol ll'oe prOIJ"r· IV Abo,,.. .. d•Plh ol ~ 00 1••1 lor .,y tirurp0\4! whAhotver •• , r111Hrwd 'n O..:• 'ICl\&l •etora. PARCEL f • Non ... t fu\1.-., HV• tnfl'nh for lnqrp\\ 4nd "0'""· put)t1c ullllll<!\, """"" •lld lor all,,.,,_, In· u"""t•I tlltreto. l"Cludl"Q bvl not llmll· '° to lht COl\\lructlOf'I, ln\ltllellon. repfa<tmf'nt, rflP•lr, m•lnttn•n<e, oot•ello•und "" 01 a1111tuo.kvoroe- .,,•lll• roe<tw~r•. \l#w••t• -c..... ~I\ owr loh A. 8 •tit C: ol l't.o<t f'fo. II,. '" tl>t Cov .. ty of Or•nfl", Slelo 01 ~ito..-n•• .• , °'' m•o rtc.orMd '" ~ ,.1, PM/H J1 And le ol Mo\tell~ M.tl1>t, In rn. 011tc .. of 11\t Gov11tr Ae<or.,..rof ,..Id Cou"tY. Pr~vlo-G tMI Ill!\ dHll I• -C<"PI"" ...a m-wt>lt<I to '"' tie""''" _. C>Urelt n• lmoostll upon llM> l•nd "9><oi.....,ln w '4 Ptr<•I I •bo~lorn.. -1-111.i1~0 .. -.. e1-_.. llOl'ttl'ltr~olt>r '""' cu1e1n OKl ... •llon ~'llllolD .. .i nt eo ........ I\. CO"<lllfOflt end Rt\lf'\<· ,...,, rKoni.<I o.<ern11t• n, "10, In 9oo4o .. ". P-167 ol Olfkltl Rt<O""' lnlllt0fflt•oh•l<1Covn1y Ro<orcltr. ~llJECT TO· All <O ... l'IMll\, ~· !Ion\, ~tt<'lcllo1,., us.rv•tlor>I.. U<•o- Clotft, N\emeftll, rl91>tt Ind r19"ft Of •IV .. rteord ........ (Om-y k-~ • lOU-9 Via Vht•, l•OU'l.t Hlllt, CA TerMtof 411• tHfl In lewtul ~Yllf l!lt U'llt<HI Stll!H °" conllrmtllOn OI ,.11,orpartu\11111C1 "'81•'><tt\ll-.O by llOlt MCU1'911 bV Mort.,._ w Tt"\11ol 0..0 Oft tl'lt -Ptrl y to WMI. 'ftn OW• Ctn! ol •l'nO\lllt .. d ti .. 0.00flltd WI"' bid. llOl w eflttt 16 lit In wr'lll"9•N"'ltl lie ~al""O .. tl\t llMtWld off~ et • ..., 11,... Ml.er ,.,. ""' itubtlcallofl ~ llflll•1ortO.ttohalt. Dttte111111u111c1evo10tc•-m•. HOWllff~lllfM!nl~Obffl' E-Killwfftllnolll of tolO bite..,,, NOl.MHt.~•T ......................... ., 1.a......,u..,. Aftlnoey'9r°bKllW "'* llllN o....., Co1\f o.lly "'4Gt. OK,tt,U .1', 1'1t • ....,. \ , .· . DAILY PILOT .4 J ( Kids Smoke to Ape Parents, Doctor Says l>ICI( A K"' w;t, A.NY Kt.J OB ~ ~ fQ B,y Dr.St.elD~r~ De&r Dr. Std.a~: It's lib aayinc UM sun rises In tbe East to say "'tt•s easier never to start llDOldai than to give 1l ..,:· 9'rt yo u u n 't con- vince youngsters of that. lly .on, 19, who bas taten up srnoJtloi cigarettes says, "I have r willpower. I can quit whenever I want to." And .......... -...z;:..-.::'--· -' ---~ I say, · ·oe Yeah! .. Tell I Jordan To Serve As Chief Willa.rd T. Jor4-l ~ Costa Mesa has been elected to ffrtt a second term u president of the board of diredOt'S of the • · Boys Cl\lb ol the Harbor Area. Other officers I« tbe 1977 year are Russ Rttll. first vice president; Kall Seely. second v~ pnin. dent ; Dan Ro1ers, secretary. and ErwiD de Moc:skonyi, treasllftr. la addition, all niDe directors were re-el.ected to serve tbree-1ear terms. The,. are Phil Iv\. thooy, Gary Burrill, Erwin de Moes llrmyi Fred Ellis, John H:,l'~ker: J r . , M i c h a 1; I L . Manaban, C 'a arles Trapp, John ~. Curtis and John Curc't. Job-s tudy PIPdl Open For Youth Applications for a mini·school youth YOCa· tiooal program are being accepted by lbe Hunt- ington Beach Employ· ment and Training Ad· ministration. A spokesman says the m ini-school combines paid vocatiOl'.al trainmg with classmom studjes for the genf!ral education test, the equivalent to a high schoc,1 diploma. "The mini-school is aimedt.oiward helping the higb s.c'nool dropout from a db/Jdvantaged fami· ly," said Ro b Cun· IWl'.(ham. director of the prr,tgram. lnteresled youths may t4>1>ly for the minl·s<:hool at the Huntington Beach Employment and Train· ing Center, 538 Main St OCC Team Takes 2 nd At Tourney Ora ng e Coa s t College's s peech team finished second at the Fall Debat e and Reader's Theater chnm· pionsh1p'I held al use More than JO school'I from throughout Cahfomia, Arizona and Utah competed. OCC's R ea der 's Theater entry grabbed second place honors in the competition with its production of • 'Sounds or the City." P erformers included Michele An· derson and Ben Watkins of Costa Mesa. Eric Pos· Ue of Huntington Beach an d Jill Wi ese of Newport Beach. Dave Lambertson of Costa Mesa rmished first in the Llncoln·Douglas debate. License Fees Due in SJC San Juan Capistrano 1977 business license, lees are due Jan. 1, ac· cordin1 to City Clerk Mary Ann Hanover. Pay- m e n t s mu s t b e poetmarked on or before Jan. 31 to avoid penalties. A11l1tance available at the city clerk'• office at city hall, 32400 Paseo Adelanto, or by phone at ·-.1111. TllRl1DJllll hwarkl ... RllAl.l(flJS -- • -r . me, Doctor, how can a r-------thinks : ''Nol everyone Let's tell them that It gets these comphcations. may cut down their wind Chances a re I won 't It they play tennis or they're looking for a job, smoking may lessen their c han ces ir their employer·lo-be 1s a non· smoker. most. I think. would bto di sa 11 owing TV a nd screen c ha racter~ lo smoke. JmpreHionable youngsters tend to bt· copycats as they watch their heroes and he~ nonchalantly reach fOI' their cigarettes, pipe or cigars. p a rent conv in ce a youngster not to smoke? -Mn.8. COMMENT: Do you smok e ? Does your hus band smok e? A po.rent who smokes is the reason why so m e youne.sters begin to take up cigarette:. early. Say you 'II quit. Sometimes a child will lake you up on It DOCTOR IN THE HOU SE ln my experience 1t':. almost a waste of breath to try t o sca r e " youngster into quitting or not starting. Paint ail the dreadful pictures of suf· fering due to angina, em- physema . and Jung cancer and the youngster either." engage ln other sp<)rts. PERHAPS WE are go- ing at it the wrong way . Why look so far into the future? Now is what con· cems the youog. Let's tell them that smoking interferes with their real enJoyment of food. LET'STELLtbemlhat I wi s h w e could a brain starved for OX· l r u t h f u l I y t e I I » ygen (displaced by youngster : "Smoking ln· carbon monoxide in terferesw1lhyoursex ap· cigarette s m oke) may peal. Every llme a girl or not adequately prepare boy sees you light up, it them for tomorrow's tumslhemoff." Yes, Mrs . 8 .• it's easier exam. never to start than to give Let's tell them that if . WHAT MIGHT help .it up. -~~·MJ.Q:.~~ • .J'~'5l~~.~'JU:·'t.~UJ!!;·~~~~~~~~ •:O WE WISH YOU ALL A VERY ... •rsa,.._~ ALL STATER BROS. MARKETS WILL BE CLOSED CHRISTMAS DAY RAN C H 0 Camp/"!'' _ J/"k/.111 _'-,~ /.., li1111 U K Ys F;;~~sT~~m~~;~~~;iE.;~o·wsn;;~~s T R E IOASTIH CHKKlllS • HCllS • HISE ~ . . ruRKEYS r-PORK •• ,., '' ;% . @ ~~E;E~ SELF-BASTING SHOULDER ROAST ...... l •. 69 4 .< TOMS ~~~~HR.. 4 7 c BOSTON BUTI[ROAST LI 9 8. FROZEN UUH • POii• • SHOUlOfA s 1 09 1 a-22 La. ~~:~ oR , '. Le. ""eun STEAKS ......... l• ~ ~'AVG. Wf IUttVI , .. , 110 .. , 10 llMIT 01 l llUH SALUIO C~t(IAL °"''"' Ot WMOUW.UI I c RIB ROAST CHUCK ROAST 7·aONIROAST •11• • ~ • •N..,tol'I> SHOULDIR ... .., ... u •tllf!ly#f"•""°""u\, Tiit ROAST ·····~ -~-RUMPROAST ........ t. ., •• ~··-GROUND Bllf BACON .. • t<6llW••/\O Al2 DAILY PILOT Weanesday Oecemce1 22. 1976 Makers Say Home TV Games Won't Hurt Screen r7iii.i,i~:~;t.w~s Day WASHINGTON CAP> The home video screen • A Canadian government consumer agency 1s-The video games nrl' home versions of games HOLIDAY SPECIAL $6.95 b ~ames lhal are a hot item on Chnstmas shoppmg sued a warning recenUy about ghostly images left llltroduced several years ago Ul taverns and amuse-Roast Young Tom Turkey Rout Leg of S9flng_ Um I..,.. 'l I h tr k burned th TV f ro1 ed ed J t d Pl tt h th I I " f .,,. __ .,~ Oooi< Oii><•"'.. "•'"'•'4••~Y.MW.lo4tv. _..,won eave Ol ac s m e screen on screens a ter p ong use. And the F era men area es. ayers a ac em to a te ev s1on o;;..,. · • . or ...,_,....., __ il they're turned off occas1ooally, their manufac-Trade Commission srud it was lookmg into \he pro-set, where they produce a "lenms" or "hockey" c-:•;:.::i:::'.::-· i.11W1tk.,,r,5-.. w..i torers say. ' bJem. field on the screen, with a movmg bhp of light that c..i11tt ._.....,.._ Spokesmen for Magnavox and Atari, the two A Magnavox spokesman said: "We left one set 1s batted back and forth using n:-oving bars of light 'J/ _ ..L/. __ L _ • ~~~~~=~:.~':'.' J~ading companies m the field, sajd th4!1r test re-on 72 hours to test, and there was no 1mpnnt. We left controlled by knobs on the games control box . / n,,e, ;'T~ sWt.s partially debunked reports that extended use ooeon for 2,000 hours, and there was burrung." An Atari spokesman said his company has un· f 17141,45-7077 f cl the games will leave outlines oo a TV screen Magnavox said it was informing dealers not to damaged TV sets that have been used on the as· f 3U4 w. COAST HW1 .. NIW,ORT llACH when the games are not in use. leave games on continuously. sembly line for a full year, testing the games. _._ .. ....._._._......_._._...,..._._ •• .._.,_._._ * ·ff * ·~· .GK ·~· ••• ·-t SWEET 'N LOW • -'••':~~_..,... Granulated ~--. ~\,/. ~~·,sugar 7:...~ ~ Substitute ';··~ 1 ~;~KEIS 1. 9 9 AT YOUR FRIENDLY By BRADUY-1 ho> h,1ppv l'Pnnul• 1·.10~ r.•·t~ tr.ri>ther to m tkl' ,, 111~ '41 ?O . 2~0 PC puule •4383 Monopoly EARLY CALIFORNIA ~OLIVES . ZEE. ,._.._.. Medium Pitted PAPER rowns Stroa1 Absorbat .160 S11££TS49c DUSKY BLUE APOLLO CALIFORNIA FANCY • ' >. masrr.r r.harge . ' .. "n•••• .,., i GLASSES Mixed Nuts Casual and contem· porary By ltbbey 13 oi mmcc ~~T4 1.49 Beautiful CRYSTAL MCKLACES They re timeless beauties on slerhnp silver chains• I 6. 75 Hd 9.50 .' Serpentine CHAINS •• 15·18·24" 3 45 lengths EA. • serpentine BRACELETS In gold or sllv~i tone. 1 77 Very r rJ111nint and Oatn· tyt CA. • Vi POnl SEASON'S CiREETINCi TO All OF OUR VALUED CUSTOMERS! • T~4l1t l~ ...... MAIMJ!ttfTI ptr#Af_..1.-¥1.i. . . ~ \ i ' ~ ' • . · l ' t j Wednesday. December 22. 1976 • DAILY PILOT A J3 - Manson Called 'Long.term Psycho' TELESCOPES ' tr VACAVILLE (AP) -Charles Manson ll a 1wtar-strummin1 prison lo ner who probably should be classified as a "lonc term psychotic" Wlwilllng to be treated, a pnson of· ficlal says. The description com es from Edward George, program ad· mlplatrat.or at the California Medical Facility unit where Manson is un- •I I . REGULAR OR SUGAR FREE 4 ~1.00 "MASUR CHEF" Hamburger & Sandwich Cooker ~::11o...-= by NOltTHlllN ·-·Coo~\ your I.>. •II· lcrod• ·1~111.88 dergolng psychaatnc stud> Geor1e said he wiU presl'nt a report on Manson this week lo a state prison review board, wh1<·h Yt all decide whether to keep ham at tht• medical prison or return him to a general facility. ,Manson has been shifted from one prison to another since being sen· tenced to death in 1970 for '~SP(CIALS I mcswm PINK GRAPEFRUIT JUICE 460Z. 49c CAN PlAHHRS ' ' I ' EA 4.99 masterminding the k.illings or actress Sharon Tate and six persons The sen tence was changed to hfe in prison when the state's death penalty was struck down in 1972. He was transferred here from Folsom Prison in May alter becomlJlg "extremely withdrawn." according to prison ofricials. In August. he wrote a letter to a reporter that he had sent I. out a hst of pl'oplc to be murdered. In Octobt>r. hl1 wu.., put m a tight· secunty umt for u lime after shouting death thrl't.tl:. at guard. ... and refusing to eat has food. claamUlg 1\. was poisoned. George said Manson is allowed to mingle with olht>r pnsonera now and is "doing very well" but is "happiest when he '11 lt>Ct alone " LIQUORS ~ .-r · , I 1 r i I ' ) ....... 111 1 •8~30: 14 .88 .. ,~ l AM/f M PORT ABLE "le· I· Rad i 0 by SOUHD£SIGN O, • I • ~ 1 ' : U : 1 11:;, 11 I I 14 8 8 n1244 • ~ Ancient Age ---Christmas lnsemble BOURBON 4 gg WHISKEY Sth • FOR YOUR TABLE '·"' I . _ by C. A. RUD ,. I .. MEN'S & BOYS' UNDERWEAR , by HANCS 1'- I I I (,A_ I \ I I I ~-c··~r:•· , t, 1' t I •11 • ' I ,' ~f •\ The one to choose ii you " '\ : want comlort and tong \ , ~ wear! \ lritft-T Shirts & Shorts wm 2 i2.88 IOI!" 99~ MUNT. llA,..iCH,...._ r Passport 4 99 SCOTCH 5th ~~-. . AM Table Radio · ~-, . Y~~~.~~· \. , REALT ONE . . . ?l '~J r;,,.,, «•ind• 10 88 "" I 1111 '.I •I t • nJl20 • '. Kessler BLENDED 4 79 WHISKEY ~th • NORELCO t 'Rotary' SHAVER Old Grand Dad ~ai BOURBON 14 49 WHISKEY • Old Taylor BOURBON • 1 12 49 ONEIDA ... Whiskey Gal. • Tableware r; Ami r11 .tn R.tfl tc1 I 1'r• llt1 I ('( (),>v ,... Beefeater IJ11·,1m. 20 f'1roc,. 9 9 9 · l.75 Liter \rrv1cr for f nc•r • London Distilled 15 49 m • ~ DRY GIN • LADIES' ~---=~ Hand & Shoulder ~---~-· The Washin g Machine TOTES l ,.-...-fl neat w;,v to or r?n111• & t "' .1 I Hip v.1rh l•PPPIS and ~ • -• -, • dt~pPnSP fU\I thP rirht dmount ~·'1·:·~·, 14 9 5 ! ~' i' ~~nd~t1~~f>~• \ h ·•1m9~' c l•8t8 1 " 1 EA Chrt1rr.r . • lio1~h WMCIOI • ''( ... Clan MacGregor ~ BLENDED 1 1 1 0 9 9 ~ SCOTCH ca1. • t IN ASfllONOMIC AL OPllCSFOlf IS YfAllS . OPEN MON-SAT 9 30 lo 6 00 (714) 641·121t • 141-1711 .. .... '.,. '.•'"' W \ II ",. .! FOR YOUR PARTY ANO FOR GIFTS r 1 ...... SEAGRAM'S V .0. CANADIAN • 11 17 5 0 WHISKYGJI. • Calvert 'EXTRA' BLENDED 11 9 99 WHISKEY cal. • . ~ . . i ~ . .. ~ ~ Cluny ·· ~ (.-~~ BLENDED I} • SCOTCH ca1 14.98 ... i ;-c Gordon's 111slllled London g g g DRY GIN cal. • Canadian Mist CANADIAN 4 9 9 WHISKY ~th • Cutty Sark BLENDED SCOTS 7 99 ,WHISKY 51h • SEAGRAM'S 7-Crown 5 29 WHISKY ~th • t A)" DAIL y PILOT Wednesday. December 22. 1976 Irvine's Wolff 'Tops' Cites Need for Governmen t Leadership Thomas C. Wolff Jr , executive vice president of Tht I rv1ne Com· pany, has been named Southern California's economic develop ment leader of the year by the Los Angeles Arca Chamber of Commerce. He called for government to "take a leader ship role in re· cognizlng tbe Importance of well· m an aged, thoughtrul, con tributory econom ic growth In California" in accepting the award Tuesday. annually lo the company or m d.Jvidual most deserving or the leade rship title. This is the ftr~t lime the words "economic de· velopment leader" have been used, the trophy having gone to SQuthem California indu!ilrialist of the year since 1963. nation's largest master planned 111dustrial pa rk, and Newport Center , a mixed.use retail/com· m e r c1al center in Ne wport Beach. In accepting the award, Wolft said California's business com· munity cannot indefinitely sup. port the economic needs of the state without some major effort on the part of slate, county and local governm ent lO understand the importance of the business community to the well-being of the State The award, the Her b Nash memorial trophy, is presentt'<i WOLFF IS RESPONSIBLE for the land development progr11m of the Irvine Company on the 8>,000-acre Irvine Ranch. In ad· dition to residential villages, the company has developed the Irvine Indus tr ial Complex, the Ile said 250,000 people a re added to the work forc e in California each year, but that on· ly 200,000 jobs have been added each year since 1970. "Unless the sl ate does s omething lo en· courage the bus iness community to enlarge, the state will wallow and eventually founder," he said. Irvine Firm Sues Three Co01petitors ''WE HAVE G ONE from a period of over emph asis on eeonomic matte rs -·growth for growth's s ake' -to a period marked by attitudes of arrogant mdifference to economic matters Computer Automation, Inc., Irvine, has brought suit in Los Angeles Federal District Court against TRW, Inc., of Cleveland, Ohio; Data· point Corp., San Antonio, Tex., and TRW Datacom Internat ional on charges of conspiracy and monopoly in violation of federal anti-trust laws. The complaint charges the t hree o r g ani z<.1 t1 on s with restraint of trade, boycott of Computer Automation com· m ercial systems division pro· duels and m onopoly of relevant market areas in whjch Computer Automation and Datapoint com· pete. refusing to send new Datapoint technology or products to Com· puter Advances. · 'no-growt h for no-growth's sake'" he s aid. "It is time for a balance. it is time for reasonableness on both sides," Wolff said. THE SUIT ASKS FOR treble damages and an injunction en· joining the further prosecution of a Superior Court action brought by Datapoint in 1975 againi.t Computer Automation. The second part of the com· plaint alleges that Datapoint, with the assistance of TRW, act- ed in bad faith when it brought suit against rvan Socher and others and Computer Automa· lion. Socher is general manager of th e comm e rcial systems division of Computer Automa· lion. WOLFF JOINE D TIIE Irvine Company as president of the Irvine Industr ial Complex in 1972. Following t wo years as head or the Irvine Industrial Compl ex. Wolff was elected senior vice president. land de· velopmenl, for The Irvine Com· pany and a m e mber of that firm's thr ee-m a n executive management committee. In 1975 he was elected executive vice president. Computer Automation alleges that the defendants agreed to eliminate the company's SyFA compute r syste m as a com· petitor by conspinng to coer ce Sy FA ·s <and Oatapoint's) dis· tributor, Computer Advances of South Africiu, into not carryin g, de monstrating, promoting, or selling the SyFA system , and by The Datapoint suit all eged that the defendants in the action mis appropr iated Da tapoin t trade secr e ts that were in- corporated in the SyFA system. even though the Socher group de· nied this assertion and offered to disclose and demonstrate the en. lire SyFA syste m and its source code to any Datapoint rcpresen· taln•e. He 1s a founde r and mem ber of the national association of in· dustnal parks. He is a me mber of the UC Irvine graduate school o f admin1s l r a t1 on advisory board. the executive group of the industrial council of the Urban Land Institute and the Society of Industrial Re altors. P UBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS CALLI NG "OA BIOS yn • .,.,1 C>1\tr1r1 (1>it ,, Commvnlty <t)!IPQff 01\1r <t BIO ,, .. ,u:ll+nr 1 Olfltt"' lq11•..0.tV, foouAt .. 11 ,,,,, P'trttt>Q' n1rs Rf'i • r.t U••·t• (')t f••1t'""''"~l AQPn• C0•"1 C"t\mmun1tyrn11r~ p 1\fr1rt AdnlHH'\l utl•rJn Au1I01f\9 I HI\ AtJdm\ Avt'nuc (o\t.\ Mfl'l"a· 0fdr"W Cour~fv '=•"''"' "' 1 p,,, f'lrt IC1~t.111.U•r>f'\ N'Jtt'WI DISTRICT AOMINI ST RATION 9 UIL01 .. 0,INOAOOITION 8 10NO U ' Pl41"' Pl •n' •"• nn t 11 Offlr,. '1f 0•· Hi t O•r,.rtor of rt'l';\1(. •IF M:1l1tie-" 01 ''"" ot ow Af1 n1,;· 1 W1ll1Am ftllJfOC~ .-!'Y'S P&rtfW"r'\. 7)()1) N--wo1u1 Snv'"""'""n Nr N()t\'1 f\,..,,,, (At if Hn·• fl7"'6l lt4 \fl 0100•. 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'., ....,,._.,, M)f per l>O\ir mo<• IMll .,._.. (lfnlllC•l IOfl W11frvl \"4 O'lllATINC) (NGINll ltS a.-1 ...... . ............................ •n ~o.io? • • • (;<-oup J ............ . .. .. ... . . ,,,J ................. •.n PUBLIC NOTICE P UBLIC NOTICE U11111V Plpl'l1nt• r or~m"', ti) dMYI J M Uflllty r,,,..,.,,~ JourM•Vrfl11n A1rfO'H11llHl'\H'Hl & ~t-lt1'J~r.1t ii'\ ••. i... ... . • "' ~· (1\rflf1,.tt(J• n I F-ort•m.•n ')(' i•tJow Cnt J "A, Git-n·t f-o rt•Mti\n 10 .1lll•"''' J M (Jtr1d11~ • vn •MM'I tO· .lh••1t! (••ti f M, f ott·mttn 10 1Mv•1 Jf>Uf!wyn1ttn O•rt1fi. d lou•f"lt•vm.in Jnu•fi"''tnton RESILIE"'T Ft.0011 II OECORATIYE COYIElllNG Cd'fl"'I L1nol .. 1Jn"I ;c.. '"" 11f1 L • .,,., (ArOtfl't <,.t·••'' Mittf"t! II t41'"'"'" Y ,mi.·, , At1PI" "n' llOOFEllS Pitrf'\Qont I rittf.•I''' Forf'm.an SubFOnf'fMr"I )l)urtw tmttn 1~'1'\fY',-•l'V lirlp 1 .. EIET ME rllL WORICE R\ (,...,... ,,. F ,,-, m.•n 1111 o -.•·r t t\o•• w ••r Fo--.-,.,,-10: 11 ,...,, r n,. .,.. ~ ~"M•l1I WtH .. fr TEAMS TC AS t 0""m-tl' \A('*' Mitr •l\•f"'" tft.•nl\1'1'W"\I t• -tm'-trr «'• t ,.,.on,..v•rw•uhho ''' ,,,,,,.,n ~ t>' m•H•· h• \ff'l\lt r'\ut\f1•·' 111t1\ltttllt)l\GI ,,.,,,.,I•• t;n.nn • C(loJd1nqAn~t'1Ult."'1111fh'll\l~1,,~1n,., i"M1 ,.,.._.,,,t.,,,.,,.. • •'lu•n,.,,,.,., A .. ,,,,. . ., nr'\w ·f11 n('A"" "''\lmll•ttfl1"'"''1U•O'" ,,, r~'"'"' n* \/•hit h H (.1:1mb1n tfllJI" ut Vi ht1 h •, ''' l••h·· F()f\ l IU (,U11M True)-Mounh·'1 Pow1111r 6no'"' .. ~,,_,.., W\wh ''i"'" o, • ..,,., n )ftr tht'Vf'oJ4(11f10f'\t}l when t'°"'·''"'<I oow,..rw1n<hor "Mtll" \()t<f.ldl,tttArnmrnt\ Orl..,f'f"\f>f T'"'"'' ITHIC trucJr,t;nO•r ly•n'h WQr'!"nQ fru( II 0 ,.v,., TILE LAYIE ll 111'10 Tl!RRAU OWOlllCIE RS rnrwm•n 'I"\\ than 1 \"'""I U 00 nt'f <Mv .1b0vt ,,,""'n•·;i10.,n flt" L .. y;;or T1Lf HIEL~I R fH• H_,h>n Ot•1il•~<1 •• 14 S() ... l2 1l 7'I "l) "Olll 11 'Ill "'U . " ... " \l •• • I '1 .uo . .., ~ ~· • •••.•. ~II .. 8~ Tl'I .. frir,.q1J•"O Vh••1JtJlf t)f ''' rt11 m wt•Qt''• '' f\.1·tl1 IJ()(}n It wnr~ •no rM'I M ·1~• OJJ r1uuh Tn.._. r.tl ... for nvlichW ·•MfnYf'rt1~WOfk \hitU hi""' It•)~ t1mL• ;ind ;n,•"·•lt It '""" t)' "'"n11111ory UPM fhfl fONl RACTOR to W'Mm ,...,. c.onlrMt I\ ,.,,,.~n ·•f'lrt OlVt" .•nv • ,tyonh~'tor ~r ._.,.,, '" °"'"""'le\\,.,..,,, 1n~ ~1<1 f1iilH 1f1tttl ,,.,,.~ to•ll ""o' • ""' n 1·mr10.,,..tt f"ly IP\f'lm in trw-.-.. •,.vtionnf tM (ontrA<t No C"P>r' ''WMi; WUf\tlfAWh•\ btd for 14 pt·r ~odot Fo .. ly F1w f4U d•v• ••t•r ,,._,. tialf'I \I', fQt Ow Opt f'\lnQ ot bl CJ\ A 0'4T'n•t•t .,,~,, •nn .\ f"'Mrum.tt\U" tvW"tG will br tf>t1uirttd ouor toJ1iw11tOot ,,,_.., "''"' t The pitymt1nt bond ""·•ti tw-"" thr trnm Vol fnrtn 1n I~ (t)ntrA<.t Documr"'h COA\TCOMMU"'I TV COl LEGE OIST lllCT BOAROOI' TRUSTC:ES 8v '\ ~cM\ E WAl\On Y<olarv &o.iirdot Tru\t,.,., Phnt1• f\•n 01"-'rtQif (o,nt O.tlV Plfrtt 0-C.tmbtr 27. 21. 141'r1 "'" 16 P UBLIC NOTICE "Al(MENTO, AIANOONMI NT 0 "Vn 0 " ,ICTITIOUS a u "NESSNAMI JN' fOtlf'>WIMl'J 0-11'¥W°! J\4\ ~ IM 1f'\' t)f tnf' hf httfMJ\ bu\f'""'\ ".\mt COIT~lll BU .. I N!'~' \ERVICfS THE Tl\)( AOVISOR', l\'l'I 0 \ ~r•'W' Av~ (Q\fll Mr \o11 ('A"""" T....,.. •1cttfl'>V' tN .. •""''nArTWI '"'"''"" to "bovtt w•' fll,.O 1n Or •nqt" CA\tnty Ol"t Jul••. 1911 C/lorl•• ,. W~•r. •DI II 11114rf• • N--1 Ill'•< h CA ~7111>J Thi•""""""••• conovrtt<l llv •" '" l"tt'lldu.U Cl\it•I0\11 Watr Tt>I• 1l•l•ffl~nl ..,., fll•d with II•• Co Chul\IV Cln• nf Ora,.oe Covl'IV on ~ .. m..,.., 111 t•t• "111U P\.tbll-Or•nqe Co.~I O•ltv Pllol, ~ 11 1' 19'& •M J8n ) 17 "" PUBLIC NOTICE "CTITIOUSIUSINEU NAMIE UATIMI NT lN 10110••"'1 ""''°n' ••e dol"O bu\I f'W"\,., llSIEH CONSUL TAN TS ... C.OrOMd<> Orlvt, Co\I• Mou, CA"2&111 M irtq s_..,.. t·hl11tn. ''tJ Co,.on.ado Oro••. Co"•"'"" Cl\'7676 Alb"I 11\ino C~u"Q H\ltll. t1& taron.-00 O•l•t. Co\I• MM•, CA '71~7& Stw>.., V-H•l<I" 81& Kllcler" E 51r"I, L•rYot•l•t. CA ~JS)• M•rver•I Chl"Q Chloh H\1#11, •I• Co•on•do Orlv•, Co,I• M•"'· CA~&?~ Thi\ l)U\IN'SS I\ llolnQ tondlJ<led.,.,. O"'"''"' CMrtner\hlo, Al0er1 >hl.O (.l\Ul\Q U"•h Thi\ \llllt"""'I lll•d Wllh II~ Counly Cl••-o10r•nQ4!COunlvonNov ,., 19111. "'"0 Publl~d Ort nQ4! Cot \1 Otlly PllOI, OK 1,1 IS,11, 9'1• !011·76 >7S7 16 1------------- PUBLIC NOTICE ~lc;TITIOUS IUllN en NAMESTATUUNT T~ IOllOWll\Q l''"'IO"t •r1t doil\Q bv\I nt'\\A\ I NTE R IOltS OELIVE RV 5£AVICE INC 1UI 8ob<OC' SI Co\l•M•'141 CA.,UI ffttttiOf\ ~lfvttry S.rvt<.P trw: " C.llloml• <c>tPO•tllOI\ ••>9 8Al)(O<' Sl.,CO\l•M•-. CA•?UI T'Ns """""'" I\ conou< led by • '°' -•lion 1n1••~soe11v .. v S.-rvl<t Ill< Tiii\ \loi!tM•ftl Wt \ fl~ wl"' 1ht (.ouMy Cl••-ot Or•nQt CounlVP" N°" IO, 1•1• ,.....,. l'\ltll-Oun~ COl\I Olilty Piiot, o.< 1.1. u.n , 1•1' !011>1, P UBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE "ICTITIOUS IUSIN IESS NAME STATUUNT Tl-I,. fotlOWt"t 0-t \Ort\~,,. ~nq~I. ~~.\ '" WILll'IM HAAOLO Jl'W(I Ell~ Q '!?,.., Sit""' N•wf>O"I 8-M" CA .,.,.3 Wllll-'M H•rold )IU ~ .... l'IC>ft. "'°"'""'' 8'-M~ (II ~1"6) 'to\P H;uola Jt1l St,ot\Oft" N-00<1 ~-CP\. CA t76A) Th" l>u\I.,..\\ I\ (ONlu<IOd by Wll114iMHt•l\ld AIN'H•rokl Tiii• •l•l~m<'nl wd llltd wllll I,.. Countv C•t,. of O.t nci-COllfltt on O.C I0.1•1• PM61'I Publl~ O.t l\Qt C41~1 Otllv Piiot, OK u. n. "· ,.,. .,.c1 J •11 1, 1m '7»1• PUBLIC NOTICE ... '" 1-------------•.. 10 18 <i'OOO _. • • ' • c;,wo I . ' .... . 0.ouP• ........ .. Gl'GUO 1 .. , , G<'OUOI • eroup•......... .. • .... .. ,( for,,.,,." IQ( "'" nour mnr• "'"" lllClllO•I t14h 1fl• •11(111 •-rv•Md l'AIH'Tll.llS rnrtm.n l•r!\ff'Of lr~\1 *'~_,. WW""'VmM\r.tt• t\rWI. ~blu1tr 'iOrtV p_,,..~., 0.--,-11 fol\l<!Wt 1Pl~l TllA.OU Gtne<•I Fortin•" 10" ~"""'17''1\tJoumnll\MHll• ,_f'llMI I~ -llO~• QfO\\ Journoy......, ff lt ... _btft •"4 ,1 ..... 1111tn • •• • ~tn0'4«ft'I Or•tll JN•,...,,_ • ·•·• k, 'l"llY ,.,.llneO.-t l I'•,,,,__,....._ .. ., 1'11. 10 ,. . 10 41 ... •O.St • . I0.11 'tU ITIOUS DUSINEU NAMISTATEMENT n.. lottowl110 oe•\On '' d'>ll\Q 1'111\l llt11tS JO AN .. 'S, IOUO Adllm• S'lr .... 1, Hunlin<;IOI\ ~a< II CA•?~ .. Jnllnn M•" Col•, 1110 1\•M• 1~• ,oun111111 V•"<>• (A")ll'C Tiii\ ll0\11,.\\ I\ CnndutlMI bv "" 1,. dlv1(t14I JoA"I\ M ... (Oi, l'ICTITIOVS IUSIJll H S NAMf:nATl!MIMT TN fnllowlnQ l)<lf ton ~ dolnQ butl· ,..,., ,., . T t.8 PUllLl'!HIMO. ITJ't Sil.,_ ,..,.. • "ou'll••ll Vt ll•v, CA. tt1GI T IMOlh• JO\tOfl MrCAir111¥, 1r11 \.tlrnoll 11..,." , 011nltl11 Valley, (;A\ tt'Ot Hll• bu\llWU I\ (~dlltttd II'# .,, In· d<•IOUtl l ttnOlhy J M<Cnlllf '~" •M••mant ... , 111..i wilt\ I,... c;.o..n1v Ct or~ ot O.a1111• Ce11111y.,, Ott • 1'16 1111\ \161•""'111 wt \ lllH wllf\ Ille Cl\;l11ly Cltr-of O••nQt c;.unly on ,....,. OK-rJ 1'16 ~1,....., 0.t"V-C.0.0•1 l)ejly ll'llol ... ' 11 "" OK 11. ?1 ?' 1t1•.o11C1 J•ll S ••n 1'\/1111-..0 Or•not C:O.\I O<llly ,.tilt, • 1 n Ull 76 ~I, U, 11, :n. 1'1' SIU.16 ' LEADER OF THE YEAR Thomas C. Wottf Jr. 'Ex po '8 1' Gets Probable Okay VAIL. Colo. CAP ) -President Ford has given official recogm. lion for "Expo '81," clearing the way fo r the world's fair to be held at the Ontario Motor Speedway, but he took note of the project ·s poss ible shortcom ings. The Bur eau of l ntem ntional Exposit.Ions approved Expo '81, t o celebr a t e the 200th a n· niversary of the founding of the city of Los Angeles, ul a Paris meeting last m onth. THE PR ESIDENT SAID plans for the event in San Bernardino County have been evaluated by the Com merce De partment. "This report r ecognizes other tas k s r e mai n t o be ac · complished," Ford's announce- ment said or the federal report. "For example, env1ronmentnJ factors will be furthe r considered upon receipt of public comment on the draft environmental im- p a c t state m e nt now be ing circula ted, and adctitional finan· c ial arrangements must still be made. including the planned author ization of a $35 million bond issue by the state of California.·' Company Says Leaks Won't Delay Line ANCHORAGE, Alaska <AP) -Aly~ska PlpeUne Service Company says it is confident its plans for preventine corrosion.caused leaks on tho trans.Alaska pipeline will work, despite ne wly disclosed naw:s ln the a.nticorrosion material. The flaws, disclosed this week by tho state Pipeline Coordinator 's omce, were considered potential· ly mo'• mious than. ~mi.oos!v ( T' "'Kl NG ) rePorted welding def1c1enc1es Ul ft the $8 billion pip~line, because in S1"0CK the past corrosion has caused more leaks In existing pipelines than de fective welds. Go rd o n Ty r ee of th e coordinator's office said the flaws were found when sections of b~ried pipe were dug out to re· pair d efect ive wel d s. A sJ)Okesman for Alyeska. the con· sortium of oil companies building the 800-mile line, said no pro· blems are foreseen with the an· llcorrosion system , but any that developed would be repaired. Trading Rn...es MEXICO CITY (AP> -Mex· ican banks have begun trading in foreign currencies again for the first time since Nov. 22, when the Banco de Mexico centraJ sus· pended trading. Quoted prices for U.S . dollar opened T uesday at 20.03 sales and 20.20 purchase. Nov. 21, the rate was 28.50 pesos for dollar, the highest price in a century. Tar Talk S lated Percy L . Gr eaves J r ., New York, economist . teacher and author , will address the Ora nge County TRIM (Tax Reform lm- med.iately) committee, at 8 p.m Dec. 30 in the community room of Glenda le Sa vin gs and Loan, Newport Beach. T he meeting is open to the public with a donation of $2 a person at the door. Willi am Mcllha ny, TRIM com· m1ttee publicity chairman, said the group is a n ationwid e n <'t wo rk o f co mm ittees c>o;tablished by t he John Birch Society to promote lower taxes through reduced government. MC'llh any h as additional in· formation at 640·6392. (),·e r T he Count~r MASO listil'M)s Rate D e al Cllarpfl SAC RAME N TO CA I') Pacific Gas and Electric Com· pany wlll get cheap rates for federal power under a deal with the outgoing Ford adminlstra· tion, the Sacra m ento Bee says. Public power g roups denounced the arrangem ent as a $30 million giveaway, the newspaper s aid. The rates ofrered lo PG&E last week will r aise the electric bills of its 8 milllon customers by only 1.5 percent, but about 600,000 customers of publicity owned utilities will pay 8 to 19 percent more, the Bee said. Food Catches Vp WASHINGTON (AP) -World food production this year gained about 3. 7 percent over all but population growth eroded much or Lhe progress, according to the Agriculture Department. Even so, officials said. the world's food s upply on 11 per capita basis increased about 1.8 percent this year. In 1975 there was no increase in per capita food production. Dbut.er Claimed SAC RAM ENT O CAP ) Californ ia offi cials have asked t h e federal government to declare Mariposa County an agricultura l d is a st e r area because of the drought. Charles Manfred, director of the state Office of Emergency Services , said he made the re- quest Tuesday because 149 cattle ranche rs have suffered grazing grass losses totaling $1.5 million. About 342,000 acres of rangeland have been affected ln the county. Vps and Dow ns Pict Uo 00 0 VP 3J 3 Uo >I• UP 100 Uo 171' Up 1)0 Uo 14 J Up U) Up 14 J Up 17 S Up 11 ~ Up 112 Uo I? 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Giii 11 OJ HI. ,._ 10 1S 11.7$ ,.,_ C. 6 1t,t SI~ w.tltl ti U * 9"icl\ Ill • '° " ltll • n • Jt Lo , II NL lllCOf'll • ,. IO.tl ~ N • •• ktftl ·r ..... 11 It W..11tn •. , .... .... Grwo • ... Nl, ,, • 71 NI. '"¥11 !O.., to., ..... :r.; Of'D: ,_.,,. ' 00 ML """' • '·'• !041 IOD ,0 ID H (ifw1l'i l/t • U ....,.;... 1.U .. ·.. US Gow 1~ I0.97 I ' fa• ta.ti M 0 f.1~ ,f.)I WI'* lO.Jtt 1...- , .. W cdn esday's Afternoon Prices NYSE COMPOSITE· TRANSACTIONS O...i.uom lrcl""" ,,_,..,.,,,.,...Yon. Ml-•1. P•tlll<, •IW ~"" 0.Voll•lld (Jft<ln,..u stotll •"°*'Oii•-,_,,..,II\'"'° N•l""'•l A>-l•llonef S.wllif\ 0.•._., _ ln>ll,..l Wednosd11y, Decemb11r ?2. 1976 s DAILY PILOT AJS I Meant to Foil '1984' to Test Spirit of Privacy By JOHN C Nlf'}' ............ ,.,, . .,,, .. The possible extension of pnvacy legislation lo include the business sector. at a possible cost or many scores of rmlllons or dollars, will be a vital and painful issue for bust· nessmen in 1977. If enacted, privacy laws would require industry to maintain records of individuals in such n way that they could be usily r etrieved Md possibl,y challenged by the in· dividuals involved. AT PRES.ENT, ONLY GOVERNMENT agencies are covered by tne Pnvacy Act of 1974. which permits in· dtviduals the right of access to records in more than 8,000 systems. However, that same r act provided for establishment or the Privacy Pro tection Sludy Commission, ------------"' charge<J with determin· ing if the law's pro- visions s hould be ex- tended to state ~ind local governments and to the private sector. Since the commission is scheduled to submit its report to the president and Congress no later than next June, it hopes to receive comments from industry by January. which means some companies will have a headache right from the beginning or the year. COOPERS & LYBRAND, THE PUBLIC audlting firm, has told clients the extension of privacy laws "could have a stunning effect on many companies, and would have some effect on nearly aJI businesses and their information systems . . ·· Perhaps most directly impacted would be mailing list companies and direct-mail marketers. credit card issuers. lendlng institutions, insurers, underwriters, health-C'are providers. schools, personnel agencies and the like. Already harassed by provisions or the Occupational Health anti Safet y Act, many businesses can be expected to react strongly to proposed legislallon. JN DUST RY, 8011t LARGE AND SMALL. increasingly ha<> insisted that il is being submerged in a sea of existing regulations and paperwork requirements, and that new legislation would be a tidal wave atop all this. The legislation that would extend tht! privacy req11jr-!)o ments to business is the Koch·Goldwater Bill. introduced by Rep. Edward Koch (0-N.Y ) and Rep. Barry M. Goldwater Jr. <R·Calif. l. 1l is intentionally given the ominous number 1984. Goldwater and Koch chose the numerical designation for a reason, and 1t wasn't necessanly to frighten busi- nessmen into believing that the life· control worlrl or George Or"cll's novel, which carries the number as its title, is already hen" GOLDWATF.R HAS the hill won 't be I N }'ACT, stated he hnpcs enacted. CUNNI,, "And it won't." he has said, "1f sn fact industry and lbe private SC'Ctor capture the sptnt Of the principles or privacy and begin reviewing their practices and implementing those principles." The bill, therefore, may be more a threat than a pro· bability at the moment, a reminder that business should get Its files in order to protect the rights of individuals. But the immense costs involved are likely to retard pro· grcss in that direction. THE OFFICE OF MANAGEMENT AND Budget estimates the initial costs of fed eral compliance with the Privacy Ac t of 1974 at $100 million, and a continuing annual cost of mor e than $200 million. It might cost industry more. Analyzing the bill for its clients, Coopers & Lybrand says the legislation would mean: -Records would need to be maintained of organizations or employcs having regular access to personal information, and of the nature. date. and purpose of access to that in- formation by nt hers. -ALL RECORDS PERTAINING TO /\N individual would have to be identified and be capable or being retrieved. Such records would include correspondence as well as data contained w1thm other manual and computer files. Thal would be the beginning. From that base, the in- tricacies, t he details. the specifics would become more pre· cise and difhc ull to comply with, and as a consequence the <'osls would be extremely painful Privacy has a high price tag. Port of Seattle Zooms to Record SEATTLE <AP) The Pott of Seattle has come of age. A decade ago, the port that helped lame the Alaskan frontier and provided a door to Asia nevertheless w.s a "laughingstoc k." Now it is the fastei1t growing major port on the West Coast. according to port 0Hic1als. "WE GA M Bl.ED Wllfo:N WF. BUILT new facilities that we would get the business and we have." said Bob Fletcher, a spokesman for the port. Fletcher said It was i mpossiblc lo determine which port on the coast was the biggest because "everyone uses a dlf· ferent yardstick. "But In 1960 we were nowhere and today, over-all, we arc lhe fastest growing on the coast." AS AN EXAMPLE, PORT STATISTICIANS said gross Income from the port's marine teTminals has grown from S3.2 million In 1960 lo a projected $29 million this year, up 810 percent. That growth is outstripped by the 2,300 percent increase in airport gross income from $1.3 mllllon in 1960 to $31 million today. The stath~tieians have ample ammunition lo prove their point. The combined value or the port's water and air cargo was $1.36 billion in 1960 and this year it Is $8.3 billion. THE NUMBER ()lo' PASSENGt-.:RS through Seattle· Tacoma International Airport over the past 16 years Is up more than 300 percent and airborne cargo Is up almost S60 percent. But the statisticians are alM> quick to point out that such growth also generntes increased costa. Marine terminal costs lhal ln 1960 were $3 mllllon are now $30 million and airport cost., have risen from Sl milUon toSZ'JmUlion, said James L. Hogan, port finance dlr~tor. Firm Reports Investment The western home om~ of lite Prudential Insurance Company Invested S1,SOl,3al ln Orange County real estate loans durln1 the first 11 months of 1976. George A. Bremer. Southern California 1eneral manager for the company's real eat6te Investment depart- ment, said the entire amount was for farm loans. ln Callfornla. ttal estate loan dlsburaementa amounted. to Sl25,189,927 with $.'!'8,91!,271 for clty Joana arul -.Z,3~ wu for farm Joana. . , I .. A J8 DAILY PILOT Wednesda)' December 22 1976 Irvine F oumlation Aids Co~t Hospital South Coast Community Hospital has re<:eived a $100,000 grant from the James Jrvine Foundal.lon The South Laguna nonprofit hospital will use the funds lo acquire sophisticated n ew m edical equipment. The equipment purchases will permit treatment of certain malignancies which previously ~ have not been possible with , radiati o n therapy at th e hospital. a new ultra-sound imaging de- vice and a battery powered portable x-ray unit. ' "Thili gift for the purpo:-.e of purchasing radiation /oncoloi.:y therapy equipm ent 1s the nicest Christmas present we have {'V{'r recei ved .'· Bernard C;irr , hospital administrator. Mild Dr. Frank D Andrews. chief ft/ the radiology department kid the equipment will include Starts Wednesday, December 22. AP WINttlhoto ( Council Artions San Juan N·ewsletter Reported The Cap1:-.trano Business and Property Owners Asi.oc1atJon in San Juan Capistrano has an- nounced pubhcat1on of a newslet- ter, to be m ailed to all registered voters in the city . Tony Forster. repre.enung the association, sa id the purpo!->e of the newsletter 1s to keep city resi· dents informed on actions taken by San Juan's City Council. THE FIRST issue o f the publication was m ailed Dec. 16 and contains a community al · t1tude survey The survey 1s to be completed and returned to the as- soc1allon. which will make re- sults public. Forster said. The survey includes rating of city services, length ot residence in San Juan, choice ol locations for sh opping, preference for . generating city revenue. degr~ of satisfaction with the City Council. priority to be given to. development of open space and other opinion questions. FORSTER, A FORMER San Juan mayor. said the newsletter will be mailed out periodically but the association's goal is to ir -' make It a m onthly publication. The business group was or- aanized just over a year ago and, according to Fonter, was in- strumental in helping defeat an agriculture preservation tax measure on the March ballot. The association meets the second Wednesday of the month lo discuss how decisions made at City Hall affect San Juan busi- nessmen and property owners. Additional information on tbe organization or the newsletter Is a vaila ble by calling David Recupero, secretary. 846-2361. • .~enten~ed Willium A II . Williams has been sentcnn·<l in Atlanta to 40 yt•i.irs in pnson ,.,_..,on federal t·xtortion charges in the 1974 <ibcluction of former Atlanta Constitution edito r Reg Murphy, now publisher of the San Fran cisco Ex- aminer . For your Shopping convenience alt stores will be Ire Backs New-found Sonnet LONDON <A P J A newly discovered sonnet b~ Per cy Bysshe Shelley ~sprang from anger the 'poet fell when he saw theater audiences 160 years ago laugh a t actors who mocked the weak, 111 and frail. an expert on Shelley s ays Shelley put his feelings into the 14 ·hne sonnet. which he called "To Laughter... t he expert said Tuesday The poem \yas an a notebook that was a mong pap('rs re· "'°tly found in a trunk 111 a London bank vault A few or lht' papers were publis hed this week by newspapers. THE OPENING of the trunk. round lo hold manuscripts of Shelley and Byron. alon~ w1th letters a nd unpaid btlls from shirtmake rs and bookmak<'rs ~<'nt to j!amb ll·r Sc r o p e Berdmor<' l>avtt''>. has astonssht'd thl.' literary world Davies. a fnend of Byron. ten England m 1tl20 l>f'eause of J'l:lmbhng debL<> Geoffrey Mat thews. or Reading University and author of a forthcommJ'l book on Shell<'y's works, made the rapid ap · pra1 sal o f h ow the Shelley sonnet came tQ bewnlten "I TELEPHONED the bank but they wouldn't let me t'Xa m JO (' the papers." he s aid ··1 shall have lo wait. along with t>vt>ryont> else, until they go on show an the British Museum next month." Shelley. addressing Laughter. wrote : "Thy friends were never mine. thou heartless fiend." "SHELLEY HAD a keen sense of fun and playfulness, and he was not attacking humor," Matthews said. "We know from the writiniS of his friends that be laughed a lot. I am cer- tain that he was angered at the time by visits to tbe theater, where wtl 'was employed to attack the less fortunate. "Shelley's refdrenceio laughter as a 'heartless (lend' and the concluding llpes that he weeps to see 1}1ow many brokeD -art.a lle bare to \Me,• -~er to the theatrical Jaamor of the time imd •iot to any morbid hatred dhumor." · ~ - . open 9 AM now through Friday, December 24. '. (Bicycles not included) II Now take 103off our low, low • pnces on every toy in stock. UH your JCPenney charge card. JCPeriley The Christmas Place AACADl.A·SANTA ANITA BURBANK CANOGA PARK HUNTINGTON PAfU( LAGUNA HILLS LAKEWOOD CARSON LOS ANG!Ll!S SANTA MONICA PUINTE HILLS RIVERSIDE SAN BERNARDINO r CULVER CITY ''OX HILLS' DOWNEY FULLERTON GLENDALE MONTCLAIR Nl!WPOAT BEACH NORTH HOLLYWOOD NORTHAIOOE VENTURA WEST COVINA WHITTIER DOWNS WHITTWOOD. ' HUNTlNQTON BEACH OAANQE 'THE CITY' I 7 I I } \ I I l • l ' t \Tarot Designer: Secrets Revealed By MARCIA FORSBERG Ol 1"4 O•lly I'll" SC.If Two majestic steeds, one a shimmering neon blue, the other a deeper indigo, splash their way through wet sequined waves. The brilliant gold vehicle they draw is adorned with four po:.ts. two Of which are lopped With masks or d1rcerent facial ex J)Tess1ons A youthful cha rioteer holds no rems, yet appears to be in con trol or the vigorous arumals Five riverlets on the curving earth de- pict the rive senses The Chariot 1s the seventh ca.rd in a tarot deck . ll symbc>lizes vic- tory, leadership. success and triumph of ~elf over nature "We are hke a charioteer, .. s aid Laguna Beach artist Marty Yeager , whc> has paintt.'<l a new 56-card set<>( the anc1t.•nt fortune· telling rectangles "We have a body and we have Medic Alert Fills Need By J UDITH OLSON Oi .... Da lly 1"1194 Sl•lf Father George Twigg-Porter's maJn business is taJking about prayer. but s~veral d ays a month he sneak-s off to do a little work for the Medic AJert Foun- dation. It's hard to say which the J esuit pnest Is most interested in because he supports both with equal vigor. In the area of prayer, his primary Interest Is ln convincini 'BRAC ELETS: ·' a soul, which is what each horse represents. "We are on a physical plane, but we s houldn 't ignore the s piritual. We must be in balance, .. he advised. ms THOUGHT-PROVOKING cards are des igned a s a meditative tool to be used for self ·discovery. There ts no hocus. pocus going on here, no magic, he asserted. Yeager would ltkc to dispel the "misconception that they have something to do with the devil, black magic or anyUung eene " The popular cards sell steadily throughout the year al a number ol local specialty shops. accord· ing to proprietors. One metaphysieaJ book store reports that bo9ks on the subJect also are bris k sellers. "We've had a good re~pons e from customers lately and usually sell about a dozen decks each month," said the shop owner. A Lido Village game store stocks 13 different decks. "I've sold quite a few for Christmas gifts. People are becoming more open-minded about tarot cards, and at the moment the demand is high,·· said a sale man. \'EAGER'S spirituality and re- ligious background are an inte- gral part or the creative pro- e e s s e :. that manifested themselves in the making of the deck Born in Salt Lake City, the former Mormon has developed a "personal relationship with God .. His current purpose is to "help people find their own Christ within themselves. and to look for oth er entities that are Christlike." Breaking away from organized religions, the painter became in- terested in metaphysics after earning a BA in theater from the University of Utah. He has designed buildings in Kansas City, in addition to ex- hibiting his artwork in New York City and Earopl?. WIULE IN FLORIDA, he met a palmist and a teacher of tarot. "Of course. I had never believed m any of that stuff." he said. s miling. "This woman took m y palm and began to tell me practically my whole past and part of what would take place in the future. ··fl impressed me so much that I decided to look into the occult, which means mystery and secret," he explained. Eventually journeying to Lon- don, Yeager became acquainted with a man who read the tarot for fortune-telling. "He wanted lo write a new book. illustrated with new cards. We decided to do it together." Yeage r s pent s even full months researching the proJeCl in Europe. "I discovered that many dif- ferent dC'ck s were wrong in terms of symbolis m . They were just artistic expressions or cards to play games with ," he said. BECAUSE HE WANTED a "pure" deck. expressed with original symbology, he painted many of the characters in the nude. Past decks often showed the figures clothed in renaissance costumes, but Yeager avoided specific garm ents that would date them. "I wanted to have a timeless quality. Nudity represents in- nocence, honesty and punty," he added. Since the tarot are hoked to astrology, "We found models who had the proper astrological sign for each CCJrd ." THEY SEARCHED for a long time for th<· riJ:ht l..1bra to pose for the .. J us ti<'t'" card. Coin- cidentally. ht• s aid. "when s he was finally chos en, :.he rt'vt'aled hername Justina " "Several people have tried to paint the tarot. but couldn't paint past the s ixth card . either because of e motional, fenancial or other pro blems ... said Yeager The card, "The Lovers." represents a choice. One in- terpretation 1s Chat a man is faced with the dec1s1on between Father Twigg-Porter shows bracelet to Nona Ag_uilar, Cindy Bradley and Joan Carlos Zarate (left to nght). people to participate 10 the Morning Offering Prayer, which s imply is a commitment of one's life to God each day. For the Medic Alert Founda- tion, he al so campaigns for membership. So far, the Morn- irvt Offering Prayer is winning, however. Forty million people already are praying around the world each morning. while Medic Alert officials say there are 40,000,000 people who should be wearing the organization's warning bracelets but so far aren 'l. Father Twigg-'Porter serves as regional director or the Apostleship o r Prayer at the University of San Francisco and is a member or the Medic Alert Foundation's board of directors. He was in Orange County to assist the new Catholic diocese in organizing committees on family prayer. HIS rNTEREST in Medic Alert started .when one of his s uperiors in San Francisco asked him, several years ago, to check out the organization the next lime he was in the Turlock area, where it is headquartered. "I went and was most im- pressed," the priest said. "Some of the top doct<>t's are on the board." • Mecllc Alert. is an emergency medical ldentifJcatlon system · which was founded in 1954, he explained. People wiLb such '•hidden'' co ndltlona as diabetes, allergies. heart con<ll· tlons and epilepsy are among the members who wet.r bracelet. with the red MA aym. bol. Computerized data about each member la s tored with the emer1ency answering service, which Is available ar0U9<1 the clock from any location in the world. Medic Alert also administers a children's foundation, which of- fers exte nsive medical testing. "The average person who wc.:"s the symbol h as two medical problems." Father Twigg-Porter said. Either stainless steel, sterling silver or gold-filled bracelets are available. ''One man, though, wanted one with rubios and dlamonds," the priest recalled. Father Twigg-Porter, whq ad· mits to being called "Twiggy'' by aoq:ie of his friends, also serves Q volunteer chaplain for San Ft-Jnc\ICQ'• 1lx emergency bospitall pd is a member of tho dty's Suicide Rescue Team. BE RAS PLENTY of op· portunities to prpy tn emergency altuatlons , but he believes prayer should be a daily way ot Ule for all people. An euygolnf man who believes many Christians are tao aour, Father Twt11·Porter clailhl prayer gives life a new· dlmenslon. "We 1tvt each day to God as an act of prayer. We offer Him our pray..,, work, joy and IUlfer- ing. If we know we're doing aomethln g for God, It heJi>t us do <See MEDIC, Pq,82) The seventh card in the Tarot deck is the Chariot which symbolizes victory, leadership, success and triumph of self over nature. BEA ANDERSON, Editor Wednesday. December 22. 1976 61 .. I some artwork. • l 1 virtue and deeeit. Another is that he must pick between hi s mother , the secure, established way or life. or a femaJe compa- nion, a new direction. "NATURALLY, IT WAS a big temptation. l did two or three pieces, was never paid, and went back to the tarot." he said. "I was bound not to let anything get in the way of paint- ing this deck." said Yeager . But during the execution or the sixth card, he was offered a con- tract with a movie company to do Not for Everyone The entire project, including research and painting, ttiok seven years. The cards are manufactU(ed by the Credo Company 9C LagMa Beach. A Time for Joy · HARTFORD, Conn. {AP) -Watch out for the Christmas.'· I blues. ., A psychiatrist says that while Christmas brings joy to many, it stirs feelings or sadness in others, especially single people liv· ing aJone. "There is an increase in what we call neurotic depression as distinct from a nother kind or depression which Is called psychotic depression," said Dr. John P. Callan, 37, director of the· psychiatric crisis clinic at Hart.ford's St. Francis Hospital. Callan said neurotic depression, unlike the psychotic kind, · tends to last a short time. "Very often it will resolve shortly after the holid ay season without any particular treatment," he said. Why do some people feel blue al Christmas? "Christmas tends to be a family time and if people are not with their family, they can very often feel unloved, neglected and depressed," Callan said. • Another factor. he said, which may contribu(c lo depression is the economic pressure on people "to buy gifts, expensive gifts .. as a result or that, they may not be able to pay for it. Other people may have lo work harder, work longer hours and do ovel"- ti me, which of course leads to depression. "The weather may be another factor. colds and chills. And then people feel depressed when they are physically uncomforla· ble. r "And also one lends to reminisce about one 's past lite because Christm as is a time for childre n. Very orten, one thinks back to one's childhood when certain dependency needs were• satisfied. And if these dt>pendency needs arc not being satisfied when one is an adult, there may be a sense or nostalgia, a sense ot loss." 1 Callan suggested that Single people can avoid the Christmas blues by getting involved with other families and participating In community activities that otrer contact with other individuals. J Dr. John Cell en counHll petlent. I - I 2 DAILY PILOT Wednesday December 22 l!J7f5 'Doctor's' Really Santa's Hel pers By ROGER GIUDIT LOS ANGELES <AP> San· , ta's elves can't do 1t all by ~ Uiemselves. Sometimes it's necessary to icall in outsiders, al least to do the , repair work. And that's where M small, and until recently diminishing, group of "doll hospital&" come in. i • Doll doctors -"Dolls get sick, ~.just like people," one of them ··.Observed -aren 'l new, but they -.:have been making a comeback In the past few years because or the trend loward nostalgia. .,. This renewed Interest in re· +furbishing dolls -both for sen· •timental reasons and for antique ~collections -is especially (noticeable in December. t "I'm just inundat.ed," said Bet· ~Y Kilgore, 50, who operates Bet· "ty's Doll Shop and Hospital jn •suburban Huntington Park. .. Most of the year 1 'm open five lldays a w eek , but durin~ ~ " ~ • ~Public Benefits ChriJtmas season I can ooly stay open t.bttt days and have to use the rest of the time t.o do all lhe work I've taken in." One of the youngest local doll surgeons, Ingrid Knudson, 28, takes the opposite tack. "We just work around the clOC'k," she sald of her Long Beach shop, Ingrid's House of Arts and Crafts. But she said her b~lest time or year is yet to come -right after Christmas. "It has a lot to do with nostalgia," the former art stu· dent said . "People go to visit their Aunt Harriet for Christmas and she gives them a doll she got from her grandmother. And the next week they're in here asking me to restore it." The type or doctoring the dolls need ranges from replacing torn off limbs to transplanting hair . One wooden doll even had a bad ;_Art Shown "·· ~ In a new program, Western Federal Savings " will make available Lo the public examples of museum quality artworks. lnfection of termites. "There's a lot of satisfaction 1n this work," Mrs . Kilgore said "You can take a doll that has beeo badly battered and so· meone was going to lhrow away, and you can fix it up again." James White, 69, said most or the people who come to his American Doll Hospital and Toy Shoppe in Los Angeles are collec· tors, and most or the dolls they bring are of the wood·and- sawdust composition genre popular in the 19».>, many or them styled after such actresses as Shirley Temple, Deanna Durbin, Margaret O'Brien and Judy Garland. "Some of the dolls that were least popular in their day are the m06l popular now," said one doll restorer, "probably because there were so few of them made that they are collectors' items." Scropio But White said an era in doll re· pamng may be coming to an end. "Almost everyone who worked al refin1shmg the composition dolls of the '30s has reW'ed or died," he said. A quick check or phone books for the Los Angeles area showed that three doll hospitals had closed their doors for the last time within a year. One of those who closed up shop was Vivien Williams. 82, of Inglewood. "I loved the work," she mused, "but I bad been doing it for 38 years and I just decided il was lime to relax." Despite the trend, Miss Knudson was optimistic that another generation of doll doc· tors may be coming of age now. An increasing number of young persons are enrolling in craf\.s classes she teaches at her shop, she says. Be Gracious LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): THURSDAY, DECEMBER23 Emphasis on relalina to one whose views opPQSe By SYDNEY OMARR your own. Home, marital ARIES (March 21· status grab spotlight. t i 00 rirr COUPO>I ,.:;! is the Christmas Store . ' for Large and Half-Sizes · ~' See our happy ideas in: i~~ e PANTSUITS e DRESSES ~ JY e SWEATERS e BLOUSES . ~.: e GOWNS e SLIPS 2 ~. :~~-II you re~lly con'I decide,~"',-t:t .. ~ ~ give hero ·tJ 1 ~ •. \,~. GIFT CERTIFICATE t · •. /,~It:: ~!~s BALF-SIZEr SHOP FULLERTON 2'1' O•onoelol't Moll LAGUNA HILLS lo11uno Holh Moft HUNTINGTON BEACH ... ~""e*Oft ,.., .. , ~ COSTAM!SA 180Sfoltwpo<1 M . /\ collection of six original oil paintings by California artist Shirl Goedike will be exhibited in the Corona del Mar office ror three weeks, beginmn~ Tut•sday, Dec 28. April 19): Emphasis on You c.an ma~e accom· sur pri se. the u n . ~odallon which Settl4:5 SHOP ~UN DAY IM (!xctpfCOltl MIMI) orthodox wishes de· dispute. Legal m atter 15 BonkAmericard e Moster Chor"" On opening day the artist will be present from noon to2 pm. • Reproductions of his works will be dislribut-!if ed through daily drawings. A grand prize of a pair of fram ed reproductions, signed by the i: artist, will be awarded as a finale to the event. t•. Artist Shirl Goedike will be on hand for opening of exhibit. GOIMG OUT OF BUSINESS!! EVERYTHING MUST GO -300/o to 500/o OFF! ,LAHTS0,0TTEU-MACU.Ml-MACRAMI SU,,UIS FANCY Pt.AHTS I 525 M"4! Vtf'dt Or .• Cotta Mna 54G.16SS Of'DI MOH. ttwv SAT. • I G-6 HALLI DAY 'S MEN'S TRADITIONAL CLOTHING You II find the oerlect neckwear gilt from our o;efqc t 1011 o l Robert Talbott Ties Available in '1 t r 1 o e s , foulards. wool challis. clubs a n d' t h e e x c lu sive • hand-made patchwork TRAfJITlO~AL CLOTHTNG ~OOD TASTE Will. ALWAYS 11 IM STT\.a 1 7th & Irvine Ave • W~tchlf Plaza Newport Beach• 645..()792 Open Even1ng<J '!Ill 9.00 P.M. - From 81 sires. ' ' not as serious as it might ---------------"------TAURUS (April 20· appear on surface. May 20): What had been VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. an obstacle is removed. 22): Highlight originali· Legal matter is settled. ly, independence. Get t.o GEMINI <May 2l-June h~art of m alters. Be 20): Spiritual values sur· direct .-feel ~.orthy. of face. Your sense of be· afrection., ~ ~pec1al ing, direction figures 5 er vice w 111 be PromlJl. ently performed and gets you · "off the hook " CAN~ER (Jun~ 21· LIBRA (S~pl. 23-0ct. July. 22) · Key now LS or· 22): You are released gan1zation. What a.P· Crom tensions. You now P e a r s c h a 0 !' 1 5 are better able to enter temporary. ~now it and into holiday spirit. In· take hdart. tuilive friend offers sage counsel. You're able now to imprint style, to make , necessary changes. SCORPIO <Oct. 23· Nov. 21): Older in· dividuals make major concess ion s. Be a gracious "winner." • • • Medic Alert Social activity ac· celerates. Be versaUle with out scattering forces. Remember re· cent diet resolutions. JOIN THE GOLD HUSH llandmadc necklace of 18K yellow gold combined with wl111c gold tor supc1b ~ty/111q, S/, 12'i. Tin> ring, a t1e\1qm •r', I 'Cn1<m ot the fJld Chinese Y///l/ and ,1<1111/ in sm ooth I ; K gold and q1C•n1 r>f1)'\ from Germany as bright n' a pa11p t \ wing, $400. a better job. It lakes us out of our humdrum eight hour~ " The pries t recalled a bus driver who began to pray for each or his passengers as he rolled along the rughway. "Ile found that the freeway became a symphony of life for God." With this philosophy 1n mind. a woman at home could rind new meaning in he r cooking, sewing and washing, Father Twigg. Porter added . Father Twigg-Porter s aid he is optimistic about the future because he secs a turning to prayer and meditation. HE BELIEVES, however , that people must begin to take a more relaxed attitude toward their lives and work. "Will the whole world fall apart because I dldn't get that report done to· day? ''A sense or proportion is necessary in our lives. We can change because we are able to chanfe certain baste attitudes. Presidents are assassinated, Popes die, but the world goes on. "It will survive. It may strug- gle a Little, but it will survive." As a Jes uit, Father Tw1~g­ Porter has had opportun1t1es to do unusual tasks. He began to study for the priesthood as a young man but focused on missionary work after reading a book by Father Bernard Hubbard, the "Glacier Priest," whose work was in Alaska. By the time he entered seminary, he already had had a full life as the child actor Georgie McKay, with films such as ''Of Human Bondage," "David Copperfield" and "Oliver Twist" to his credit. Father Twigg-Porter also is a poet and author with one published book to his credit and another in preparation. · Though prayer is one of his favorite subjects. his books are about other aspects or the spirit.ual life. The first dealt with three saints and how each viewed the world and the second will be titled "We Prepare for Mass." REWARD Ill 1M1 ........ l .. t llM ........ -el "'40 .,..._ .. M..itO -•• elfettftt I .... ••ff Md,......, f-• ......... , ........ ~· ........ ..--............ . Phone: 546-6740 simp1y the. fine.st 1eatherware fbrher anywhere. ... SAGITTARIUS <Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Short tnp, relatives and visits arc highlighted. Details are unraveled, obstacle is re· moved. Your views are vindicated. CAPRICORN CDec. 22-Jan. 19): Count your change! Money, transac- tions, holiday crowds, shoppin g all become part of a montage. Em· phasis on possessions, lost-and-found objects. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Adjust lo needs of family in sense that you make creative, intelligent concessions and changes. Young person adores you and wilJ show It. PISCES (Feb. 19· March 20): Quiet talk with one who Is shy because or recent mis· calculation will do you good and prove of im· measurable aid to in· dividual in question. l/10 lido New{'nrt Bene h Cal1'nmia Tcli·phno, : 675·75// Shearllng Coat made oot of California Spring Lamb with fleece-trimmed outseams and a slightly suppressed waist. to give you a tailored expression. THI f.'"1/ ll'l'~f I fJO(f //iq/iwoy 1\L'\\ /lOI I lit'(}( II In flll' /nhl>y of tlll' {1.1lhr111 /j.Jy (I 1b Thi• genutne lamb •uede ahlrt la dlatlnctlvely tailored to give you styling, comfort end a lifetime of enjoyment. I ' I ~ l . . •• Wednesday December 22 1976 DAILY PH.OT #!' Family Situation No Comedy (An rl Lan d ers~ DEAR ANN LANDERS: Our daughter Sheila is 18 years old lier r.teady boyfriend ts 17. They 've been dating since January. 1976 and plan oo.aetting married wheo Earl turns 18. The situation is Utls: Earl left home four months ago after an argument with his fat.her. We took him ii} becaust he had no other place that was decent He's been sl~I on our couch m the livine room . Since Earl quit his JOb. he spends all his lime watching TV Sheila does n 't work either w they both do nothm~. Clnc1dt·ntal ly, she has colitis and finds 1t hard to hold a Job but sht.> plan.'> on entering college in February 1 Earl needs two more ) l'ars of high school before he gruduall'~. and he says he i~n 't goLng back. He feels that becaw.c Sheila 1s 18, she should decide for heri.elf whethe r or not to have pre· marital sex. l 'm sure he is pre· ssuring her and even though she has sent for your booklet. "Ten Ways To Cool It," HE claims you're a square old bat and says the booklet is lousy. !>!ease com· ment on thi i. whole mind· boggling situation. It's too much for me. SHEILA'S MOTHER DEAR MOTHER: Sorry, dear, I couldn't begin to respond to i.uch a multi-faceted Olt.>ss in one column. IA) \'ou bavf' an unemployed blgb.sebool dropout slt"eplng on your couch, pres11urlng your daughter to have sex. <B> The glrl bas ~oUUs, can't bold a job but wants to go to college. (CJ The boy tblnka my booklet is lousy. In Sly opln!on, that boy bas tunled your home lnlo a squ.lrret uie. I rttommend counsellag for the whole tacnUy. Good night, Mary llartman. DEAR ANN LANDERS: One might think your readership is exclusively women, but I assure you very few men skip your feature in the newspaper. So I wonder if you would do us golfers a big, big favor anCil print this let- ter . Ever y foursome has one member who t ake:. much too long preparing lo make his shot. The bad part of this is that he or she bolds up the game. If you're a good sport, you let the foursome behind you play through. This makes the other throe players mad and it atreets their game. You can't call attention to a player's pokiness because, a1though golf buddies orten ac- cuse each oth er jokingly or heinous crimes, they never say anything critical that could be taken seriously . Ann, if you print this letter, thousands of slow golfer:. will suspect this complaint was re· g1stered by one or their foursome but millions or golfers throughout the land will bless your name BIG HANDICAP DE~R HANOI: llere'H your lettu and I 'II oel'er ~II wbere it Ca1De f10m -SO belp me, Bobby Joaes -and If THAT doesn't da&e me, notbiag wW! DEAR ANN: It seems to me, in view or the muggings and rapes that go on inside and outside of apartment buildings the.e days. women should be told to slop trekking to the basement laundry rooms iQ their nightgown:-. I work In a :airly respeC'tabk high-rise ond almost every time l get on the service elevator some broad.beamed dolly is tn \httt· wearing a sheer, above-the-krtee negligee Cnot a cotton house coat), toling her laundry basket. Sometimes I think these women are looking ror trouble. Wh al do yo u th.ink ? - YONKERS DEAR YONk: Could be. In any event, be a good nelpbor and tell lbem what you ~d •e. Some of those dolliei. may Just be stupid. HEARING PROBl.fM? I S'ECIALlll IH HlllVE DUFHESS CASES H~~~~~;·p;.;·~~~;;, 1 • NUTS • HORS D'OEUVtlES Banner Message's Reio ice! MAJOI MAHUFACTUOIS Rf'RlSEt4T£D TEH YfAllS IH COllOH.A DEL MAR HAL AfBf SCHER HEAA1NG AIDS •PASTRY •CANDY • PAltTY TRAYS • DRIED AtUITS Get AcQua1nted with Corona del Mars New Swee ShOP' Let u~ help you W11h your Holiday Enle'1a1nino By JUDmt OLSON 01 IN O.lly 1'1lot St.tit Celebration! Joy! Thingi. are nght! I'm alive' These are the kinds of messages blight, col- orful banners convey. They're exciting and alive. "Banners are an emotional experience. We feast our eyes on them," asserted Margot Blair, a Mission Vlf4o des igner who specializes· in ban· ners. She and a friend. Cathy Lauridsen, have just completed a book titled "Banners and Flags: How to Sew a Celebration," which will be re- leased in the spring. It's difficult to define exactly what is ex cit· ing about a banner. Mrs. Blair said, but she sug gested that they appeal lo all the senses: sight. touch, sound.Cshc often puts bells on them! and s mell (sht> recomm ends lucking herbs in somewherei And, then: is a kinetic pleasure as they move in the wind. A banner is a •·message art form,·· she a<ided. "The format or a banner or flag is very basic. The way we develop it is through color, space, llne, form and texture." Flags can be made by any adult or child, she emphasized. "You can use paper and glue or any fabric. Any age can do 1t. It's 'child art.' Adults can become children again." Tbe purp~sc of the book, she said, is to con· vince people that ideas arc .seeds and that every person has the concept or creativity within him "lf you forget the ·1 cant's,' ideas begin Lu flow. The seed has all iLc; information. It 's a mat ter or you letting it develop .. Mrs . Blair. wife of a retired Navy oHi cer and mother of seven children, has made hundreds of banners in the last few years but her favorite ~till 1s the first one she ever made "ft was for my son's room -to cover a hole in the wall. Margot Blelr and her 'celebration' Mrs. Blair often uses material from her family's old favorite clothing and tries to select fabrics that convey the statement she is making. Iler work graces the walls or many churches. including some where she worked with th<' architectural firms and designed the hangings as the church was being built. 4 . GAIA NEW YEAR'S EVE CELEBRATION! • h t 011"• ( •• "I' 1111'1 I >1r11u , • I c1mpl11111 nt.rrv l h.1mp.1,:1w e f,l\(H, ''11~1' 111 1~, I I ' D.tn( t' 111 llw lelf H.mi<> Qu.lrlt'I ');()(} pm·tl:lO .1m ~I:'. iO prr pt''"'" ( ,\II now I or Rt'\('I\ ·''"'"' -l1U>l-l77 lJi ctor J1ugo Jtnn l\tutaurant lhl C1111 Dm·t· l .ig1 m,1 Bt •,H h I l.uu nit , rtd '' '"' '"''"''''' I Peering Around I Though she was immersed in the subject of banners for the last three years while the hook was in production, Mrs. Rla1r is equally a:, in· terestcd in ethnic clothing and other arts . Al1XILIARY \'O)Un· tel'.n. at Hoa~ 'kmonal Hos p1 ta I· P r<'S by trrtan contribull•d a total r1f 6.565 hour~ during Nov ember Service a wards were presented to Mrs Harry Kohaut who has ~W<'n a total of 5,000 hour~. Mr-. Ray Ford Bullock. 3,500. Mrs Ralph Waterman. 2.500. and Mrs W. R Boose and Mrs R. G Mower. 1.000 A PATIO party wa~ ~lven at t h<.' l.aguna R e a c h h o m <' n r t h t· Timnlcl to you it wortm ..• FGRAlllf US 0 . R1charc1 Campbc:lls to celebrate the OOth birth· day of ci n<.•1g hbor. Mary Moort-. Tht· rcs t1 vit1 es were planned by her son, and daughter-in-law. Mr. and Mrs Bry an Moore of Pasade na. Among the friends and relatives at· tending w e r e Mrs M oore 's five grandch1 ldrcn She obtained her formal trammg in Boston before her marriage with the idea of going into fashion des ign and illustration . "I did work al it for a while, then did a book on New York restaurants witn the E squire magazine lood editor I got marned s horUy thereafter and had a large family." Now comple tely submerged in fabrici., the designer is becoming more and more interested in ethnic clothing and 1~ fin ally brave enough to wear her own work. the. luxury of camel hair ... the most complete se1oction of came.1ha:ir sweaters a\la11ab1e. a nywhe.re.. a11 sty1ee ava11able 1n four ply yarns,w1th .9u.e.dti e lbow patches. ffl I ttlfflt,.1 '' ( U\f , ( hJft!f '· . • • lo nil our f ri~nda and t'culomttra .__ __ :..._ from oil nf "' nt ••• 1409 E. Coftt Hwy. c-• def Mar-67S·llll GOOIE CHEWIES 2'40 E. Coost H-.ry. • c-o de4 M• F•r11l••f Co11rfyor4 •.. Acron fro111 Sllen1~11 '-cWIOlll ·~ FRANCIS-ORR ,J.., F"INE STATJO~l-:J<Y C \I t.Ot.1!><. "' lL\11"'' r,1nc , , · '"' " •. 11 ",. Ctinstmas Card Wrap & Arbl>oni. Gifts Desk Accessories Chess and Backgammon Sets 11111 UUI lllOIOI lll-lflt COIU HI IUI CllYll!lll PUllH ,"-: 440.7°'2 ELLY BEANS GIRLS BOUTIQUE S1'lES: •to611-7to 14 SALE On Alt Holiday Dresses UP TO 50°/o Off Louted ocroH ~ SMt.. ,,_..,._ FEIHUAF COUUY"'° , 2640 L Coett Hwy. • ~ ..-. M.r, ' 44M212 • M41fer c:r..- Nabers Cadillac Cadillac Master Dealer 2600 Harbor Blvd .. Costa Me!.O 540-9100 SAYE THE WHOLESALE WAY TREES • SHRUBS • HOUSE Pl.ANTS SHOW WHOLESALE PRICES ON TH£ FOLLOWING: Black Pinc f a.ns Junipers Nandina. Aoel1a. Ole,1noo1 Morea'> '""' .tnd many morr ··~· S300 MINIMUM -,,,.......,. S.D. Wholesale Growers I 1622 WARHSl AVE. FOUNT AIM VALLEY PHONE 546-3429 al 1 our Haw1ck sweaters ar<z. made. e.xc1u9ively fbrue 1n SCot1and. truly the flnest you'l 1 eve,r see . _., I t ,. . " • ; . 1 ' ,.. ~ RANDY'S tsuTCHER .SHOP 44 fashion island, newport center 210 £. 17th 8t. Cott• MeH ___ J " ~--· -. - ,.C .. SADDL EBACK "'C PLAZA , Oranq~ •558 7022 O• .tnqe • 997 ·0832 --···~~ AU CINlMU•...-..MAn. IYlll'Mf"T" 1 ..JOPM.•,t.1) •A~.a•ACK ~LAZA ', ....... ,,.. u ... ····-·-···........... .. " .. ' CUMt.n...aoo • ™IEN'ORCIR BIG FEATURE/ I MATIN El'S I £\'ERV DAY DON'T MISS IT! "SHAGGY -D.A." I J ... Jto-J•\.-IJ0.110.•IS "AGAIMSTA caoono Sllr DAkt' t ..... •M.tt "GHAT AMetlCAH cow1or ) I \ •l••O 1!>61 W SUNFLOWER W OF BRISTOL CM. 540 0594 '"THI SILVllt STltlE.U• IPGI .:}.'THI ADVIHTUHS OF 1l4f 'TWILDlltMISS FAMILY" (G) ~ "SMALL CHAMGI" ll'GI HE ITV SHOPPING CENTRE ORANGE •532 6711 ~cm c1MTH CIMIMAs I S A FRWY !MANCHESTER EX.I G G FRWY ICITY OR. EX.I ~ WALT DISNEY'S '"THI SHAGGY D.A." IGI q WALT DISMIY'S "THI SHAGGY D.A." IGI ~ "C URIE" "ROLLHIALL" IRI "AGAINST A CROOKED SKY" "THE GREAT AMERICAN COWBOY" (G) "ONE HUNDRED PERCENT ENTERTAINMENT ... a case of an ingenious novel being turned into a terrific movie. A lean back and love it lark that is a practically incomparable family film ... a garland of cheers." Gene Sha/it , THE NBC TODAY SHOW ''Nothinq le..,.., thcln th<> mo..,t e 'hilardting c•nt ertdinment of the film year to dale. Ac ollec tor\ itPm in term\ of performance.," I t(I ' ( '.fW \1 1 h /1 \lf .., . ''An ingeniously contri ved s pree, with one of the wittiest wrap-ups of anv mystery movie.'' /'nu/trh' l\cwl i\'fW \'OH KER "A delightful pdc,t ir he ... brought to the screen b~· producer-director Herb Ross ... above all an excellent casf brings thi~ romantic ddve nture to life. A \ ery high class l ha rade that neither \\ink., dn eye nor sloops to simplistics. It conquers on its own le~el, and ve ry posh and pleasing it is." Judith Cri~t Sf\TURDAY REV/£lV THE SEVEN-PER-CENT SOLUTION From the =I Ber,,t·Sf'lling /\'out>/ .\ HERBERT RO% nt \I ALAN ARKIN· VANESSA REDGRAVE · ROBERT DUVALL and NICOL WILLIAMSON \l\ s~"'~'ld F ,, ... J U\ l <)>U °'"' •tlli.' 0> Dr Wlll>l"I OS Slwrlock Holmes in "THE SEVEN·PER-CENT SOLUTION" ol<0 ,w· "I LAURENCE OLIVIER os Prof~w Mona•r~· JOEL GREY ·SAMANTHA EGGAR CHARLES GRAY· GEORGIA BROWN · REGINE· and JEREMY KEMP S<r~l'f!l'llA~ I>~ NICHOLAS Ml VER 8.1«'d "" t'-.r ""'kt,.. NICHOLAS :.!EYER Pnlduced "''ld D"rrt!'d by HERBERT ROSS Mu~•c t.y JOHN ADDISON lxecutl\e Produ .. m ARLFNE SELLERS .ind Alf'< WINITSKY PG lfllllllt Q1C1 sGUTtt •• Ai\1.11 o.11t Produw STANLEY QiOOLE A UNIV~RSAL RELEASE H C HNICOLOR1 '• · .: • ,....,. Sttow "'- At C ......... I 1110.2:)~40 6:4M:41-1~0 . . . ....... Stto"' 11-'I At ......... •C:.... WIL D9Y1 1: I f..t:lO s .... -. 1:15-l:40 ~OM:20. I OllO ---edwllrds IUITOl Cl NENA IM~.tl W.KAf'tt\W ·h~•· ,I.flit S40-7'44 .... 0 ... ' .. I ... C•• .. ~ ..... t ....... \•tit.,.., •• .,,,_.MS I 3 DAYS OF THECONOOR HIS CIA CODE NAME IS CONDOR. IN THE NEXT SEVENTY-TWO HOURS ALMOST EVERYONE HE TRUSTS WILL TRY TO KILL HIM. • • BEAC H BLVD. AT ELLIS • • H UNTINGTON BEACH• 848-0388 His whole life was a million-to-one shot. ... .. -. .... . · ·· ..... ,.,, ... . 'l •.. ". • • • NOTHING LESS THAN THE MOST EXHILARATING ENTERTAINMENT OF THE ALM YEAR TO DATE." -N.Y. TIMES ,. . ~~~rn1 L~~~rnff-mw1~ w1~~lrn · J~~~ ~.~ 1w~rn · ~1l ~mm ~1~lm~r:~~L~r ,,,.. •IT• •1 I • -~1i~1mt · ~~m ~~~~b · ~~~l W[AJ~rn~ · ~~~brn~ Mrn rn1rn · ~~l~rnrr~ ~l~lmNt . . .., .. , f"Or'O'~J('~V I 111\ ••l 11,1!(r# 11<ttt •-.itf'll>r mw1~ w1~~lrn .. ~~~~rn1 L~~~rnH · J~~~ ~. ~~1rn~rn ·~mt ~m~w~~~ ·~I ll L~~n . . . ,.. ... OP•NS TODAYI S..nta AN •531·1271 m MANN SOUT H COAST PLAZA I 3410 811t1ol Street Co~tA M l'\;t • 546·2711 , . .... t * Ratings Radio N ost algi a Lead Won Value Soars Celebr ate ~ + 19f7 ~ ·~ _.L • • *+ ,,.-..... + _...._ ........ ~~r::--1~ ....... ·* * • • for only S I 9.77 Start 1977 right for only S 19 77' The Sheraton· Newport gala New Year s Ev<' pJrty offers the most fun for the least money The $19 77 sp1.:c1al includes cock tails <lancing noisemakers <rnd tax Plus fun and gilmes 1n tht.:: bPaut1ful Br1L1lha Room MakE:! your rr s1 rvnt1 ons earl/' Cill 833-0570 CK :· + +* * . ~ t .. + Sheraton New port I .,,. By Hope NEW YORK (AP> - NBC ran the week's two most popular programs, but ABC is s till in the lop spot in the network rat· ings race, 1 The ratings for the week e nding D~c. 19 showed that NBC 's Bob Hope Chr istmas s pecial, seen in an estimated 19.2 million hom es, w as the week's m ost-watched progr am . NB C a lso h a d the second m o.st p opula r show. "'Little Drummer Boy," but the network re mained at the bottom of the three net work!.. ABC"s h 1~hly promol ed ··v ictory at E ntcbbc" rnO\'te on Monday rughl Called to bl•at •ls com· pet1 l1on ... Rhoda" on CBS and ··t 1Ulc Drum· mer Boy ·· on NBC The three-hour mo\ 1c was seen in an avl'rage 14 .8 m illion ho m es, eam- pared with 12 8 m11lion for "'Rh oda" and 18.0 for .. Drummer Boy." THE NEWEST, PINKEST PANTHER OF All! • .._ • , r ., . \' . /--~, c-...,.. ,__ .... , c:b-. f t In "Q HERBERT LOM , '· J 1. .. 1/~ THE All·NEW ADVENTURES OF THE WORLD'S MOST BUMBLING DETECTIVE wr1th COLIH BlAKUY LEONARD ROSSIHR l£Slff ANNE DOWH ln1ma1ton by RICHARO WllllAMS STUDIO Music by HENRY MANCINI lmr atP Prtd"cer TONY ADAMS Comt lo Me Sunq by TOM JONES Wr•lttn Oy FRANK WALDMAN •"d BLAKE ED WARDS ProduttO dnO 01rected by BLAKE EDWARDS I 1mtd in PAHAVISIOH COLOR bt Deluxe PG ouor•l _.1t1 ~mo United Artists . ~· J>rc11arc )·ourself t(tr a 1>crfcct1)· o ut ra~~ous n1o t it >n 1>i "~tu re . I / FAYE DUNAWAY Mf.TRO GOLOWYN MAYER prnenl~ WILLIAM PETER ROBERT HOLDEN FINCH DUVALL Ill NETWORK By PADDY CHAYEFSKY D1m11d by SIDNEY LUMET On Premiums VILLA PARK, 111. <AP> -Even ln the sare con fines of this Chicago suburb. l.JltJe Orphan Annw and her pet, Sandy, once got thems elves into an awful predicamen t. But true to form, they wiggled their way out of potential disaster . LitUe Orphan Annie and Captain Midnight r adio pr emiums were saved in the nick of time Crom an incinerator, merely by chance. LYLE BERGMAN, CUSTOMER Ser vice Manager of the OvaJline Products Co. here, was hurrying through the company lot when he saw the old premiums being tossed into the in cinerator He managed to save some that were alre ady smolder- ing and prevented the rest from being destroyed. It was then, in the late 1960s, that he began to c atalogue Little Orphan Annie and Captain Mid· night radio show premiums offered between 1931 and 1960. The total collection contams thousands of Hems s till being catalogued. The premiums ranged from drinking mugs and secret decoders to Little Orphan Annie sheet music TH E PERMANENT EXJUBIT maintained for visitors to the plant here contains a representat1vC' s am ple of about 75 percent of them , some purchased from pri vale sources. The company 1s often asked to loan its collec· lion for display and is considering a tounng exh1b1t to other cities. "We base the value of the premiums on h gures published in the ·Premium Checklist -Price Guide and Rarity Sc ale.· The going price for a Little Orphan Annie c ardboard mask is $10 to $20, depend- ing on its condition," Bergman said . ACCORDING TO THE PUBLICATION, the most valuable premium is i,ittle Orphan Annie roller s kates, at $60. One of the rarest premiums ls the World 's Fair Souvenirs Wonder Robot Booklet. priced-at $45. Issued in 1935, it cost ub<Jut 10 cents and an Ovaltine seal, according to Bergman. Other premiums a re a Little Orphan Annie songbook. story books. a Secret Society Pin, a map of Simmons Corners, the Secret Decoder Pin, Cap· tam Midnight's 5-Way Detec-O·Scope, and a sundial watch-compass. These were once obtained for sea ls from inside the cans of the dnnk max and a few cents. Premiums in their origmal mailing package are most valuable . IN T HE 1930s AND '40s, one seal and 10 cent:; would bring a Captain Midnight Whirlwind Wh1sll ing Ring, used for summonmg help or sending secr et m essa ges. The ring lets off a s1ren-l1ke whis- tle when blown. It was manufactured by the Robbins Co of At· tleboro, Mass., at a cost of a bout 6 cents in 1941 . A similar r ing. Captain Midnight 's Mystic Sun - God Ring. has a pl3Stic stone which slips off to re· veal a com partment for :-.ccrct mcs~ar(es . Rock singer John Tillotson recently paid 5250 for one "Ever s ince the nostalgia craze, we've r e· ceived hund reds of letters from people inqu1rin~ about the value of a premium they found in their grandmot he r's attic. All the letters are <1n!>wer cd,' · Bergm an said SCHEDULE FOR CINEMA CENTER , :30-3.20-5:10-7:00-8:50-10: CIHEMAWEST _,\l..., ... '\Tle •f •O\.Df,.WUT I w u1 .. 1 .. Cl«Tll ,., .... > -,:30-3:20-5:1~7:isP I 9•15-11:15 "An ing"niously contrived s pree, with one of the wittlesl wrap-ups of any mystery movie." (PG) Poul·" Ku•I f\;fW ~'ORKIR Wednesda December 22. 1976 DAILY PILOT VOYAGE OF THE DAMNED HOLIDAY SCHEDULE 1 :00-4:00 7:00-10:00 RYAN O'NEAL J BURT REYNOLDS TATUM O'NEAL BRIAN ~~, ~KEITH (PG) ,, f ' HOLIDAY SCHEDULE t 1 :10.3:30-5:45 , 8:00·10:15 It lasted 30days. .. Youwll remember it aslolgas you Ive. HARBOR BLVD . AT WI LSON ST . COSTA ME SA 646·0573 2 MILES SOUTH OF SAN DIEGO FWY. NEWPORT CINEMAS ..... (O•UHW'f ..... c. .. u .. ue "'C"WM..,.0f'"lWfU 644 OP•O ~...,....... .-t:f. ,_ .... "'*' ~-•-•a.a. ' Of.AH JONES TIM COHWAV llYZAHHE PLESHETTt PLUS (oi "FANTASY ON SKIS" B8 DAILY PILOT Wednesday De<:ember 22. 1976 . .. •• •• .. • ~" )I( •• ){ RESTIUCTID I ... . STARTS SAT., DEC. 25 An.M om• 112 8902 LA MIRADA 4 • LAKEWOOD CENTER 4 : WALK 111 U•OAlll N ICI II M lfOllOAY .,.., •a•u•ou ti"•'' -"•"I 11->t to'* l]/12 I U•AY 6 MOLIOAYI U .M to U ICI lt • ., ... ., ...... , ... 994·2<t00 u .,,., ., .... ,, .. , 994 2400 i i •i•th ,1 ......... 994 2400 \f ••• ,. ,, ~ .... , ... 994 2400 .. ,, . --531 9S80 .... ,. , • ..i .. ..., SJ I 9S80 ...... " ............. 531·9580 ....... , ·~---SJ I ·9580 ....... •' ...... ~ S2S 3S26 ...... ) -· ~ ,_. 121 4070 ....... ....... ". ......... h '622411 ..... , ........ ..... ''" ' ........ .... 1171·1162 C\IHT I U TWOOO U:l ENFORCER 1•1 OAllT Al· I ~ 00· • u .. u .• 0 -10-0 atAU H I-I e -.UllTM MAINTI OTMll SIDI Of ntl MOUNTAIN(NI h.UI MUSTANG COUHTl'f101 IUtt llYN0\01 e I UN O''<IAl NICKELODEON 1-01 OAltt •T· t U l )0 • 00 t JO tO O UO ll''UIH "'COHClll •tn°"" SONG REMAINS THE SAME ''°' OAllT At •OOllO •OOI >O 104) CUNT l.tlf'WOOO THE EHfORCER1•1 PlU\ HIGH VELOCITY 'G Oll.,1 1) )0 OUIJO<IU OAllY I Ulf Ul'HC)(O\ • I YA.H 0 Nt.tt. NICKllODEON ll'<it ''"u' HU IT & WAlTll GO TO 0 YOH 1'°1 °'UO 11 )0 llUJIHtU OAtl T W000f A\\IJiil U THE fRONT1•G "UI OISISSION1•01 °""' I) JO OUltlNIU OAll T l lJHA'#At lfSf )U.t..U 1 CAHIE1•1 J\U\ 1tOLLEHAll111 OllHI I) lO OUllH4U OAllT lfO U•"tllH I SONG llMAIHS THI SAMI POI l JANIS 101 l JIMI lllHOtKCS 'DI ___ .. <l•""1 t•lfWOOO TH( ENfOICH 11 ..VI HIGH VllOCITY '° I Ut f tlf'lfO\.M • IT.IN 0 NIA~ NICKELODEON ""' l \Ul ~l WISNtt WlllTU DttW JoG1 "IU' ........... -· ,._. • SCWllMttl ""' ftNOO FUlflt•I -IATI -AWAT-.wi\U""° llOUICN ---... -1 .-.. -,, .-.. -i NETWORK 1•1 .... .,,",. ""' S27 2223 llT\llN Of a UN WLID llOIS« 1•1 \ ........... .. ·-C21·1131 -'·"° PUKI "A ~llllON fO ONI SHOT" IOCKY !NI "llt IUINT OfHllNOS 1,..1 -"f.MO PAHU -----.............. ·-'21·1131 .,, :ik.11 tUt1 ln'N«lll e IY&H O'NUI NICKILOOEONpo1 PlUI _,_, --AOAIMSt A CIOOCD MO'"' -'* .... , AMllKAN CO'MOT ... CUHI USfWOOO THI INFOICllrt1 ""' HIGH VILOCITY ll'Ol IUH.IW&T lllSI ltllfl CAllllttl Pl.US IOlLlllALLtt1 Countg f'erlor111ance LA Orchestra Nearly Perfect With one unrortunate exception, the Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra showed us tn noun· certain terms Saturday mght lhal the rave review~ generated by their recent European lour were richly earned analyses or a now firmly established interna· tional ensemble. Certainly, no music lover could have wished for a more fluent intcrpretallon of Mozart's ageless and errervescent Stnlonia Concertante or two more capable soloists than violuust Glenn D1cterow and violist Alan De Veritch THEY DREW Cllt:ERS FROM an Orange County Ph1lharmomc So«ety audience that must have looked on the Mozart as manna from heav·en after the horrors or an operung work that must have come from the other place But. pure JOY a:. lhe Mozart wa~. 1t has to take second place in this writer':. notebook to " performance of a work that :.o rarely gets the read· ing _acc~rded to 1t in the Santa Ana lligh School a uditorium: I;>vorak 's sweeping and utterly rhapsodic Symphony No 7. We understand that the LAPO's rendition of the Seventh drew c heer !. in Dvorak 's native Czechaslovakia where Zubin Mehta was forced to re. turn lime and lime ag:lUl for the homage of his au· dience. UTILF. WONDF.R; HE GOT a standing ova· lion Saturday nig ht and he ~hould have been given a lot more for the m a.-.terly wa} ht-brought every ouncea(express1on from that ~uperb score. Zubin resisted the call for encores and il was just as well. Far better, many thought, to leave the hall with the memory of that glittering Qvorak fresh in our thoughts. The one thing we wanted to leave m thl' hall was the memory of thl.' obl,cemty that opened the pro· gram. an alleged work by Krzysztof Penderecki that he calls "De natura ~onons" and we heard called lots of other things Saturday night. LEGEND HAS IT THAT the composer was in· spired to put this combination of belching, bleating and squeakin~ on paper by the sounds he heard when the plumbing system went kaput during a con· cert at the Corn Exchange in Cracow OCPS notable T Dum·an Stewart summed 1t up best, as usual. with the comment: "The LA PO played 0.1 r athcr bad PolishJOk l'On us ." A \'Cry ml'rry Christma!. to all and bad dreams to Pendt•rcck i Two Women Sue Country Singer NASHVILLE. Tenn <AP> -Country music singer George J ones has been accused in a lawsuit of hitting a woman after forcmg her to drink liquor and striking hrr com paruon. The suit, filed in Davidson County Circuit Court by Joyee Jones ::ind Sonja Northern, asked $51 ,000 for each plamttrr The lawsuit allcgl'~ that Miss Jones and Miss Northern were guesL'i Nov. 21. along with Jones, at the home of the singer's booking agent. Jones tried to embrace Miss Jones and force her to drink· liquor before striking her in the face with his hand, the suit alleges . The singer then rulegedly threw a briefcase at Mis~ Northern, striking her in the back of the head, according to the s111t. (PG LOVE. ACl'ION. COMEDY . Before Rhett kissed Scarlett Before Laurel met Hardy. Before Butch Cassidy met the Sundance Kid . Be fore any movie ever made you laugh or cry or fall in love . There was a handful of adventurers who made flickering pictures you could see for a nickel. BURT REYNOLDS TATUM O'NEAL HOLIDAY SHOW TIMES 1 :10-3:30-5:45 8:00-10:15 ISLAND • NEWPORT CENTth • • ••• • C06ST HWY. AT ftlACARTHUlt ILYO. • · NEWPO . IUCH • "4·07IO .. • -· ••• 9\ . .,.. -............. . M'ETRO GOLDWYN MAYER • presents SORRY, (R) FAYE DUNAWAY NO PASSES WILLIAM HOLDEN PETER FINCH ROBERT DUVALL"' ''llEJWORK" DAILY SCHEDULE: 1 :30-3:50-6:15 8:30-10:45 edwaffls BRISTOL CINEMA BRISTOL AT MACARTHUR 540-7444 BEAU BRIDGES THE OTHER SIDE ~EW PRICE OF THE MOUNTAIN' s100 Wf~ TMIHH fR A TIROO•HURST ~.AROEH GROVE 530-4401,, PLAYING TOGETHER ------------- A FRANK YABLANS Prl'5efltal100 A MARTIN RANSOHOFF-FRANK YA8LANS PRODUCTION (PG) s1arrmg GENE WILDER JILL CU\YBURGH RICHARD PRYOR AN ARTHUR HILLER FILM "SILVER STREAK" A MILLER-MILKIS-COLIN HIGGINS PICTURE ~ro5~~~fTY·CLIFTON JAMESand PATRICK McGQQHAN asAogcrDevcreau (xecuttvP Producers MARTIN RANSOHOfF and FRANK YABLANS Pfoducod bv THOMAS L MILLER and EOMRD MILKIS Directed by AATI1UR HILLER W'1tten by COLIN HIGGINS ~ LJ PG PAIUITAl C9AICl sscmt1 «» Music by HENRY MANCINI COLOR BY DE LUXE .. Wrtt~IWWU ,. ,_TLllliHtW:. EXCLUSIVE ORANGE COUNTY ENGAGEMENT NOW PLAYING ,.--.... ·-....... 0 Cll\ll DIJ\•f >11 Chllpmfn A~Mue 11 S.A. '•wv. Or~nqa • 134-2553 I• • I '· . Tonight's 1V Highlights KTLA 8 8:00 -''Christmas in Con· necticut." Dennis Morgan and Barbara Stanwyck head the cast of this 1945 movie comedy. KHJ 0 8:00 -"Destry Rides Again." A western classic from 1939 with James Stewart and Marlene Dietrich. CBS fJ 9 :00 -"Cahill, U .S. Marshal." John Wayne plays the title role of a lawman hunting a bank robber in this 1973 western with George Kennedy, Gary Grimes.and Neville Brand. TV DAILY LOG lwEDNESDAYf I EVENING I 6:00 o a 1e 1110 1111 , )J m """' D 1231 1 6 ( :it !J ) m Nt'll1 Cl 2', s,,, lit~ < 6 Gomer Pyle o eun~e m '•rtlld&e hm11, m Mf"'.12 m lltct11c Compin, 1lt Dillah! muu1eb~1~ -6:30- 0 01n•h! Cu• I rncludt Annt Ba•ltr, R1li Mnr~no. Ro~tmary floone1. IOYCf H•ber, ludtlh V1111~1. fa AIMly Cntfrth 110 Mell C11tt1n Show m hmrly Att11r 111 (31 Cuft-'t fD ZOOlll 7 :00 DU 1231 r&) m News O L111'i Club I 6 J My Thrtt Sonl Io • To hll lht Truth 0 Co11Ctftl11llOl1 m I love Lucy m fhe FBI ffi K01un 011m1 126 W, Cnlhth fD MacNe.l/lehrer Report ( 29) I 8 ) 8on1nu ED Dnmitrc Se11u ID Md•"'' hmtly -7:30- D ID N•mt Thil Tune O Bowlin& fo1 Oollari SJ flit Odd Couplf &abtch wmt 1 e"I Slll.000 Qvtltion 0 flit ltle1'1 Wrld 10 '"" 1s lhcht (D Budy Bu11<h 17 3 '°' Cot\ the Count1y n e C«ltbnty S•ttP111kn M Ho(111's IW!on fD Ol11111tl 2& Ton11hl Jt $2S,000 P'y11111HI m ftull Coi.i. 8:00 0 11 3 Goo4 l1111H 11 1M t 111ln th• 11•1•1 or thu111Cal man'~' "" nl " I• than 1 ,m3· h1n< 'UI ,. ·'· ... ,,~., h.·, «:.1nt:1n,.• ;tt'HIO ,. 11~, n•1I on him but hP bllun " b.ck "'th ,, •e< 11 d1 <Ov••1 h' c.li, In' 1i'IUt "htlo Mpo ' D 23 6 I 10J m cro Sharko lh• O•M lohn l'ltu" Wh1l1 h.lpinf ' IPCIUll l'llle ~ • dtar M mh,' ''°"· Sh"''I 1; 1nr,,.uo1td, Ch1d ltob1n-Hu tt• unhn1 .h•d Mte 111el m1Sundf1,tand\ 0 ....... (lllr) "QrrstlQI ill C.. nech<•t" (rom) ·cs 8111>111 ~larr•yr~ DtMI\ MMt'n , e """ (1-r) "Come te tllt SIJMI. 1d• 11 I~ I ''"' Voun1 U ( 2t • l lt l~1< W..u ll•lrt• .. td. t )ft I. l11m• •mmts, •~• '' tn lh• J'ol1Cf. Ar 4c!fmy 1 ~ '" ' ""'l" ~;:tnt •• C..A«• O Ihm (l~r) "Oolry •i4n Ac1111· l•r..l J') 111•"> !>1, .. ,,L m WiN WNW ti AA1111'I' a>'''" 1111-m .. WI hfiety tlollr at "''*"' '-'"''"' m ........... f .. ~ rhnll', •~1 lhf' sympMny n<ch•\W nl St Ol~f foll•&~ 1n forlhl1tld MtftnMOl1 ~,. tnturrd 1n an hour lo~a P"tlurman<r ol Ch11slm '" mu\1t W JIJ111t11 uncua&e r ro111ms -1:30- D 1111 f31 TM Jt11trlOl!s D 17JI 1611101 m Mcltu Slntn$0~ Sho• Ahr 1dy crowlltd cond1hons •I lhe modut f ertu~on coll~ge aie lurther slra1Md whtn f,1m1ly membtrs offer shtll'r lo 1 fM· out seminary studenl •nd 1 Yorkih11t IPllltr wa1trn1 for m11tn1-m C?ou.w111 9:00 D 1111 m <fl Cl$ Wt411nd1y Mot11: IC (2~1) "Cahill. U.S. lbrsllal'" (WH) 'Jl-lohn Wayne, Ceo11t Ktnnedy, Ciry C11mt1, Neville Stand John Wont stars " J 0 l:alldl 4 t~ugh vrc•llnl ta•m~n who sels h" gun11chl1 and skins u 1 tracker at11nsl r mt1, 1 .. 11y and sucunful ban~ rob~r D iltl m ltGI el Slr.U'i Court r1cu11n1 th•I tit's 1 1urc losu 1n 1 1udrNI tlechon, Jud't S11ota 1mmt1 ses ht"'stll 1n n11hl court cu•s 1ndud1111 llto$t of an all loo seuous clown and 1 p111 of d111y dtnhst' 8 (121 Cl)) l)tl laretta A convfl'.I sem to f)f1SOll by Barella ucapn to &et even 11nth him and d&ovtis that Ille &irl llt Ifft bthlnd 1s ro"'1nf1c1lly rnvolvtd with Bmlld m u s Vecu Ghtter • With Rich little And The Lennon Sisters m Merv C11fhn Shoor m Vor&inti IM The le111 Reed Shoor fD Creal Ptrlo1mances O> la Cmd1 lltn C111d1 -9:30- 0 OLD FLAME WOOS • JULES IN PRACTICE 0 23' ei 10 m The Pntlttt • C,11l61fd I die Adam\ RUt\lS as a .. t.lfhy a1do# and former lldmt ol l1r Jul's l!tdlurd s. who a11 .. P ar lhr d<XIOI s Cilf1ce on Nu· York ~ 1•1,st Srd, ;ind 11'\0lves to 'ta kt him a.11 from 11 a11 • 10:00 D n 61 10 m Tht Quut Qu•nltn luc ht> d young ()lphdn lo use a ~un on ~·If def ens•. then comes lo tti:rtl 11 whtn the ~nutll lurns 1nlo a cold blooded &unman. 0 0 lltws 1 e Boninu U ( 29 e l Ot Ch11lie'i An1el1 Jill bfeomr~ the hWd Sldr ol a rolle1 rl;rbv lr<m when ~h• lO•s undfr rov•r 1111ri•»lirdle th• .1cc1denlc1i" d• 11h nl a br .rn11lul ~• lll t M Cunimole -10:30-m W €!)Ne•n fDWom;in 11:00 0 D m >t "'"' U a 23 6 10 News U ( 29 8 ) 76 love Amt11c1n Style 6 Su Hunl 0 C«lfb11ty llnue m M•ry >Wrtnlin. M111 H1rtm1n muse ~, .. Mi 11 l Stwmp tM St.,s ID Movie· "Cran4 lltl$on" -11:30- 0 11 3 e CBS hit Movit : c "Outr 01nru1 llhcee" (w•sl I tn~, "•" • C.• •&'Kenned) D n • 10 (?;) Jolwty c..r- U ( 2t • ) 39 Tiie •ool1ut M)sttry of tllt Wttl m """ CE MIMt •c11111t '" t~e Slrtth" (dra ) ·~•-Sil M'"'°· John CuuvetH. 2' l1lt 700 Clu~ m """' Mow111 12:00 u Be11 ol Cto«tlo CJ Mo"t "SG111e•htrt 1n the llr&ht" 1J•1) '46-John llod11k, N llltY Guild G) Mn ie: "Pun Model" (com) ~l l•h11lyn Ma.well. Paul•11, r,ndda1 d £ n G1bor, B~rbar l L1.it11<t, Leif [td!.lln. -12:30- .. All lttpt $liow: "Tht Cf Kh· !llift," •a Pnn ot Anll~" Q) Mowtt 111.t rlufldtms" l>dw) 411-lrll C~•ndl•r John Sa• n Oo~u H••I Mir.hi Hunt 2 :00 0 M"1t· •C\ "A K1u Belore °"111" fn•1 •) 'f, llJtb<rl Yi;illnPt ltllr•v ltunror lo4nn• 't'i'l!IJ,..a•d V11£1n11 I "th. MMy l \IO< C!I Mevtt Dou.r1futu11 "A Welu1l'l VttlfHfl<t." "T" Tho. 51114 ..,_. .. m M 111ctitsi.: .,Nit,; ""••ht· -·~· -3:45- D Mo-tit· "O!tlr Two tin l'tly" le<1m) bl Prier Sellers. M11 lcllerling DArTIME MO'llU 0£COdU 2l ...... ftr your C-MllU, IA the diy'l -Ill. 10:00 O "A lru Grows ift llroollrn" (d11) '4~-0orolhy McCune "lload to MtrK<•" (co"') '42-Bob Hope, B•ni Cto~y !Hl C "Say One ror Me" (mus) ·~9-0ebbtt Reynolds, Rr"& Cto~y 11.00 D "0ftct U'°ft A Ho~eJ· -H (com) '•?-C.lry Crant 12:00 m HIJlr. Sett TOIK•-(dra) ·•9-Glenn foid. £vttyn ke~'s 1:00 l2'i \C1 "Slllftft lHy IA T-" (dra) ·~~-G1ett CarSQn Z:OO Cl "The YMlll Sanau" (dra) '61-Burt unuster. 3:00 Ml ~) ''Y•'H Nmr Ctt ti" (com) 'fl-fled Aslwe 3:30 8 CC) "Wllltt C•rist111u"' Part I. (mus) '54-81"1 Crosby, Danny Kaye. KOCE Television (50) --- WednttSday. December 22 1976 DAILY PILOT 87 'True' Hoover Produced By BOB THOMAS LOS ANGELES (A P ) -Movie goers will soon be seeing a different view of the late J . Edgar Hoover from the one portrayed in films and television series extolling the longtime FBI direc· tor. The film is called .. The Private Files of J . Edgar Hoover,•' and is completing production here after extensive s hooting in Washington, O.C. Larry Cohen is the producer·director·wrlter. Broderick Crawford s tars as the No. 1 G·man. "WE TELL THE TRUE story of Hoover's Jue.'' rep<>rts Cohen, a television veteran who made the current film "God Told Me To." "A lot of it will be unflattering." "We'll tell the good things about Hoover, too." adds Crawford, who did his share of cop work tn "Highway Patrol." "Hoover did a helluva job up to a certain point The trouble was that power corrupts, and he had the power -for 48 years." COHEN SAID TIIAT HE began his project two years ago. Al that time, flaws were beginning to ap· pear in the marble image of Hoover, who died in 1972, i.till in command of the bureau. Cohen drew from the knowledge of the New York Times FBI ex· pert John M. Crewdson and did research on bis own. SOUTH COAST P'LAV. Cotto Mn o S49·ll52 CIHEMALAHD THEATRE Aft.ti.if'll 635·7601 STADIUM OIUYllH °"Clft9' 6l 9 •• 77 0 ForClass1t1l'd 1\ll ,\<.;TIO;>. C.ol I .J 1),111\ 1·11111 AD\ l~Oll t;I:! :>li';X so~:.~·~ .. ~-~H.ST 0,.. MhJl!tty 6:45 ........... ~1 :45 ,_THEATRE I CAR~tE IF THEY (R) ONLY KNEW SHE HAO lHE POWER ~ THIEA TRE II __ _. "MARATHON MAN" IRI ORANGE MALL 6 , .... "''"' •l •f >lo n. ...... ,,, "'4!J i11i EDWARDS \II' HARIDR CINIMA 1 a lDWARDS '9J CHIUHWISI I ....... ...,.. ~ ,, ••• ,. •' ....... (W> ....... f, 1414 \ l't1·M• A..,.,,.._, •• (;)<111 ..... .,,. ... ft.0\'1 .... ,,...,.. ..... CALL THEATRE FOR SHOWTIM£S1 WED.-THURS.-FRI. ONLY THE \_ ,.... , ROB( RT r lOCAN SUSAN 0.00NH 511AW. STARTS SAT. 11A STAR IS BORN" (PG) , & ~ ., f « ._ 'I Htl ti. 11 ' •• ... 1 I[• 1 It ••t. ;11•\tl W l\'U t \ I ~_.,. ,,.,..., l•l'MM r~~ U& Ctrf CIN(ll& UA IOUTM CO.UT <> .... ·~'4 '!011 c:. .... -~ .. &AOOlll&C1t l'lAU -&IN Wloll ll (1 T..,.M1 "'*' r,._y_._llOO lllOOI!_,, -....111 .. oe ....,.L fMAT11l .. l--•N "~~any thin~:. Uwl I ~ugge-.tcd 111 m y script ha_ve sLnce been pnwt•n in congrcssionJI reports,:.· sald Cohen The script mcludei. the i.py1ng on M1trtin Luther King, Hoover's stormy relalronsh.ip w1Lh Robert Kennedy, plus ltCl'W>atsons of a homosexual rela· tionship between Hoowr and h1i. lonct1me compa· ruon and assistant. Clyde Tobllrt ..HOOVER R ESPONDED TO THE homosex· ual charge the s aml' us he did to all accus alloni.: IJke a Sherman tank," smd Cohen The cast is impressive Be~1dt>s Crawford there are Michael Parks as Robl'rt Kt>nn(.'<iy. Dan Dailey as Tolson, Raymond St. Jacqucs as Martin Luther King, Andrew Duggan as Lyndon Johnson, Howard Da Silva as Franklin D. Hoosevclt, June Havoc as lloover 's mother. Lloyd Nolan as llarlan 1''. Stone, Lloyd Gough as Walll•r Winchell. plus Jo:.e Ferrer, Ronee Blakely. Rip Trlrn, Cele!-.le Holm and J ohn Marley as less r ecogruzable figures Following in the tracks o "ON ANY SUNDAY" <' Wil~~~~!l.~qj) ) ~~~if fi!T~ 11NICKELODEON11 IPGI "NETWORK" IRI '"THE SONG REM.AIMS THE SAME" lPGJ "THE SHAGGY D.A." "RIDE A WILD POHY" IGI ADVENTURES OF A W•LDERHESS FAMILY "MISTER SUPf:R INVISIBLE" IGI "MARA NON MAH" IRI "THREE DAYS OF THE COMDOR" IRI "CARRIE" IRI "THE.ATER OF ILOOD" IRI 11KING KONG0 tPGt I 9~: .. ._G'l~ / \ CHRISTMAS SPECIALS! • irst Quality TE BOARDS • OSI DAYPACKS ... ~-K PACXS s 10 • The most exciting original motion picture event of all time. 2 MILES SOllTH OF SAN DIEGO FWY. HOLIDAY SHOW TIMES 1:00-3:30-e:00 1:30-11:00 DJfD A STORY OF A BOY AND HIS1>9G. WALTDKMY "'MW"°" Tiil SHAGGY ~~ ; " ~~-.-::~· MANN'S SO. COAST PLAZA tuu llllru l'll lmltl \ll /111 MANN'S SO. COAST PLAZA Ct\U fll1u )Utl 11\UI Ill ll\I MANN'S so. com PLAZA lO 1o llt•U Ill JUI MANN'S CINEMALANO !tit !• "., • ., ·~··· .. 61) IWI MANN'S CIN[MALANO 1ua St 10111111 ,.,,.,. 6111111 MANN'S CINEMALAND Ult St tf1rllt1 J111d1t1"' tll 1111 "MARA THOM MAM"., t 0\ I II "J 1JAYS OF THE CONDOR" ''" ,. ...... ~ Ito~ "Tit£ SONG REMAINS THC SAME" 1 10 •n100.ns nuru11-. "ROCKY" WUI O&'t'"-110.• 4\ 1,Af \UH-I )0.)40.\•,tff IOU "KING KONG" IPGJ CQomMUOUl O.tJl.f 1110 1 ... uo.1 o ttH h f O"lY-ll I\ "''4 Alf,~lltiC "Tit£ SEVEN PERCCHT SOLUTION" 11 JO J H·4 40..6 0 .... I 4\..16 tO .. •• , .... Ill "MARATHON MAM11 I 00.t l0.1~00 "J 1!AYS Of THE CONDOR" 110.7 0 THE NEWEST, PINKEST PANTHER OF ALLI PETER SEIJ.ERS SORRY, NU PASSES awrtnQ HERBERT LOM iN wrlll COLIN BLAKELY LEONARD ROSSITER l£SLEY·ANN[ DOWN Aalmatio. by RICHARD WILLIAMS STUDIO MUSIC by HENRY MANCINI A$$0Ciate Proctuctt TONY ADAMS· ·c. r. w.· S4#to by TOM JONES wuuee bf FRANK WALDMAN •Ad BLAKE EDWARDS HOLIDAY SHOW TIMES 1 :00-3:00-5:00 7:15-9:15 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT CENTER • • ••• •• COAST HWY. AT MACARTHUR llVO • NfWPORT BEACH * 644-0760 BOOMER by Wm. F. Brown \In~ Mel Casson ~NoLD. Cb {ou ~1.1~v~ rtJ NOM~IZOL06{~ INSIDE WOODY ALLEN , . C>R. /le-t.!(llcth, /rlROR;S £PIA£.'/r P/{lt.OSOff(~R. V'f 5ffS AJGIU YORK. /.115 -SCARcfl R.?R IJ6W-t<J~'-P £1Jt-1Glff~AJM&l.ff A/ArvRAt.t.y '-~ADS /11,4{ i2> Me . r FUNKY WINKERBEAN ~ 'itA~,bJV~~ A..J Aec oo.ir A.ii r / r r()()(tooe FlGUSZ~. 311 23-36 . AMP AUNE , 35-34·37, Ar.IP £AN •~~"' r~rwix;..i A COMf'Uf~! 12-12i by Joe .Morthen AND A 6WD fOUR- a:>oM APARIMC:NI r:-OR UtJD6R :f5cx:> A MO\.llfi. by Tom Batiuk ~ {(Ef\4 I Jt»JGLE. BE.U.5 ! I'VE SEEN fT ! TANK McNAMARA by Jeff Miller & Bill Hinds ~~-------------------. NANCY ~itENCt, DICK, PAfrtt-lef". IT'? Lf~ Ti.IAN A MOOf H UNnL IHE 7{}P£RBOWL . AW TH£N µf ~rrat~ TO ~T~. by Ernie Bushmiller ~--------------~ l ALWAYS BRING MY TEACHER AN APPLE ---euT NOT A JAR OF APPLESAUCE FOR MY TEACHER TO::>AV TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLl UNITED Feature Syndicate t .... ,, 'Puule sol•t!ll v1oer 4J Give vi• 1erance to , ... 1 l 1'> rrench l •P l 11 t \C>IUml· un1I 'I •''"''Jltl 46 Trr.-1' •lc•1L I Of'~ &;<JllOOS t I·'"" u11 48Human , ., 1111 ,,, ... ~, bo•no• I• .\ "t' • ~1 52 Rivaged • t•I•• V41 siate 1 l r ti SFI 11 s 3 t IU T I • n l I " 5 7 Ot c• c• "• SFI Vtrtrcal pole I '()•... • S'l Oona111c:1 "'''I 'II bO Ni<:ktl.11io1 'O <..o 1 11t.iy 61 City on lllt' 7 t Auto 1.1c Oka • "st'Hv , "'Orr.N t"n :' \ T,rr o'" pot I! Seti 6J Gr1,,c:ltnQ ;'5 ft11 IOl""'ll~d ma""'' II I f\4 <"".tlfl•nu~ 7(8•Slf' •t> 6~T~llQ•HS .1ppendage ---------..... A T 5 A fl I fl ~!. !.! '" Air I . r T o ~ r "· '4 II f It 1 f v lr lo .! l[ ~~ ._I ' A r It • I • s OH "'~ ,, l f ., ~· { v E ~ I ~ I • s . (; I A p ( 'I A < I N T I f I I A II l £• S I ( s 0 :u N 0. F I ( r T I 0 N f N 0 (; £ 1'11 I I TU l S A R C P E A T N j P• 8 [ S T L A R S I T r N ' l A I p [ T I 1 I S T r II ',, y E AN 1 1~ Al cu l f J....! ... L! • 0 11 AN A T ~~ r r R ~ T R E I! 0 .... ~ ..§..!!.?.1 I. Rral Uldll! unrli I I Oetec;I •I! 35 Enter 2 words 36FtaldtS- pronunc•a-p~y1nQ skill l•On ol r 38 CIOlhed I 2 Ending w•lh Var d•V 0< 1ev •2 So Amerr 13 Palm can cape ~I So be •I 29Whete Frisco•• 31 ··---rne Beou•nl!" DOWN rea"-r. e g.. 44 Very greallv 21 fu1n11tted 45 Play a llute I Aoolaud wllh 41 No Amero· 2 F0tmer s111chn can snake PEANUTS • ,i JUDGE PARKER SHE'S HAVING TROUBLE WITH HER NEW FALSE TEETH I HAD A GRANDFATHE~ WHO DIDN'T THINK MVCH OF fZEAD:NG ... iHt "iit<i~t Or YtRA VALIAMi DR. SMOCK YA GaffA 1-lAVE AN OFFICE TO HAVE' AN OfftCE rARTY, DUMMY WHA °T" e ucSS MS Aeou-r ee1NG A PARK AVeNue SOCI E:IY c::>OC1"0R ? A""C' W HY C'O ;t HAl"e MAKING A GORDO MOON MULLINS OON'r l(A/OW ABQ.IT ,:,.l \ T.l (./.AL):} aur- SIJRE <!:tL.AO THER.E':3 REALLY ..4 TE>JL'AAIA MAMA norrrrn:::::c::::::::--;;7 l GOT TA A SK R OLJ1"1N5 Pf:'-'i"'HOUS5 CAt..L.-? .,,,.1 • I • '• -4 - S,AN1A FOR ONE NOW! by Charles M. Schulz ____________ _, f.lE ~Lle..l'-~ SAi:> THAT IF ~OU RE~C' TOO fot\AN'( f300io..S, 'iCt:R ~EAO ll.XJULD FALL CFF . '{OV STAK'T THE Fff?5T CliAPTEI?, SIR AND l'LL HOLD ONTO ~'OUR HEAD! WHAi AM I GONtJA DO wrrn FOUR GALLONS OF HOT-BU1iEl<£D i;.uar BEER? by Geol"C)e Lem~nt THE GIRLS by Gus Arriola ·'~ ' JS Singer Campbell J6 Farm build Frenc:tt n Pottenls 48 Money money 241 Onl1rtc,.1 hoerder 3 Prevent ··---R111er 49 Humble <I Old En gt 2 7 Parcel ovt SO Quay "Whut I love ahout the sherry j, one gla~~ and you don't care how many caloric\ you eat." 1no J7 Gain 38 Chrld't loyt 39Russ1en k1n11 Ver. •O Silver 4 I Wild ch1fur· bane• 4 2 Unple11anlly mo11I 43 Hof'ned 14 20 lJ ·- le1ter 28 Dissolve 51 Ending Wlll't 5 Flat·bol· 30 Turkish in or bed 1omedak1ll reo1ment 52Greek com-TUMBLEWEEDS 6 Looked 3 1 lady's hus· mune 1 ;ri=gtt 32 ~~~dor ray sJ ~~~~1~y IN CLOSING, GIJVS, I REMINrJI ANl7 I JUS1' KNOW YOUR 8 Frog'•,.,,_ :J3 Heed aP-sc Andy's '()(J1HAi ANami:R CHll!.=: APPRE.CIA110N WIJ..I. i:Je 11111 otndaoes partner AWRJCIA110N rJA'( 1 15 J ReFl.~'7 IN1HE: &IFT 9 ~~~J:8'· 34 ~0=.:iom ~~ ~~.:i°i!':1: ~ING' LJP:;, I . YOO SfLECf ~~10~11~1~,.,-1l-. ~ --V-~ FOR Mf! MISS PEACH r ! l UH, HAS 11-iE G-IF-r COMMliff:E CHAIRMAN ANmlN6' l"OADll? --y-- . AIT .. IJfl'S &IFT ADV'tlE 1'YE 60,. MONIY, 8t.itT X 1-fATIS 'T"O 81-()W rr ON (l;1s:r~ ~ie:: ( ' I ! ~>--------~~.........- IVG(YS()t"(. WHAl' ~N t GIVE "THAT'S nALL.V, iEAl.LV Cl-flAP? by Tom K. Ryan DENNIS THE MENACE . ~ I .AP Worept,oto MINNESOTA STAR AMOS MARTIN SCANS THE ICY SCENE FOR NFC TITLE GAME. France Not Thinking of Cold Rams Star Worried About Marshall LOS ANGELES CAP) -Min nesota's cold weather has long been the topic of conv!'r~at.wn among Los Angl'lcs Ham., fan:,, journalists, bartendc•rs. cab drivers and others who follow pro football here. Jovial Doug France, however, doesn't think about it much I because he's got something much bigger on his mind. l Namely, Jim Marshall. "If I start thinkmg about the l cold, it might affect the way I play," said France, the ofrensave tackle who'll line up opposite de- fensive behemoth Marshall of the Minnesota Vikings . "All I do these days is think. 'Jim Marshall. Jim Marshall. Jim Marshall.' That's the way I prepare for this game." France knows it'll be cold an Minnesota this Sunday when the Rams and Vikings tolhdc for th1· National Football Conference championship, but he said. "When I get started and my blood starts to now, it doesn't fet-1 too cold. What bothers me 1s when I have to get down on my three-point stance and my fingers have to go into that muck on the ground. "Then your fingers feel so frozen you can't bl'nd ·em" France has great respect for Marshall. "He's played great football for the 17 years he's been m the NFL, and just because I'm one of the youn g guys I won't be doing any beating up on him." Marshall, 6-4 and 2AO. is part of one of football's top front de· fons1ve fours and France knows he and his lincmate:. are in for a rugged d ay. ''After beating my head against Marshall 's chest for an hour or so. I may just go after a defensive back and flatten one of em. I mean. 1 havl' lo fl't·I hke l ~ S rts in Brief Firm Gets Rights To TV Olympics MOSCOW -Th<' Semel Ol vm- pic Commiltcl' conf1rml'<1 todJv that at had s1s:n(•d a ··cooperJ· t1on " :.igre<'ml•nt with an American trading company for the U S tell'\ 1s11>n nghls tn th1• 1980 Summer c; Jml'" 1n Mvstow. But a spokesman for the Sov iets stressed th at thl' "righh have not been sold to anyone .. and said the committ<'<' woul<I <'Ontinue to nl'got1Jtl' with 11tht•r l ' S C'nmpanH."" 'urh ,1s the mJ JOr network<; ~Ul', CBS and l ABC A reprt'"l'ntJttvt• fnr Satra Corp , ~ 'IJ1•w 'r'ork-ba~l'<I com pany with ZS years o( buslncss de altngs with the Russaam~. said th<' Sov iets had provisionally award~ the rlahts to his firm, for a "noable · pnc<· he dad not Wlsh to reveal, P<'ndinJ,? upproval by thr lnternat1on:d Olymp1<' Committee Gunn, 20, a 1unaor center, l'n· t€.'r('(J a hospital Dec 1 t with an Ill- ness doctors diagnosed as Stevens-Johnson syndrome. a condition that attacks the body's mucous membram•. I losp1lal officials said Gunn ~uf· fered a collapsed left lung Mon- day night and that a tracheotomy WW> performed Tuesday morn· mg Dndnrs said his condition worsl'nl'd considerably ,1fl<.'r th\• throat sur):!ery. Gunn was a mam.stuv of lhl' ~1E'mph1s Slate learn, avC'r<Jgin~ 12 3 poml!> and 12 rl'boun<ls lh1::. :-ea son Cartn-to lall PATERSON. NJ -Forml'r figher Rubin Hurricane" C'artt'r and <'O·defcndant John Artis are back in Jail after losing their f1~ht to prove themselve~ 1..nnoeenl of three murders at a bar 10 years ago. accomplished someltung, so 1 'll go after a defensive back. ''I'm 270 and thev weigh in at about 180 Now. if we colhde. so· meonc's going down and l know 1t won't be me." Coincidentally. both Marshall and France went to Ohio State But France doesn't want to get mentally ready too soon. "Back an school. 1f some kid said he wanted to fight you on the playground a fte r school, you might clench your fist all day wailing for him. and then after school you wer e so tired you couldn't even close your hand m· to a fist. "I don't want to get really re· ady until about an hour before the game " llow will France get mentally ready to play th<! Vikings'> .. I'm not worne<I about the Vik1n~s : I'm worned about Jim Marshall." Lakers Roll To 97-89 Win INGLEWOOD CAP) -Kareem Abdul-Jabbar's 26 points 31'd 21 rebounds led the Los Angeles Lakers to their fifth victory in a row, a 97 89 conquest of the Buf· Calo Braves in a Nallonal Basket- ball Association game Tuesday ni~ht. Ernie DiGregorio hit two con- secut.Jve baskets to bnng Buffalo within three points at 91·88 with I :46 remaining , but Abdul· Jabbar converted two free throws and Don Chaney hit a 16· foot jump shot with l ·07 re main- ing to give Los Angeles a seven- poant lrad. It was Los Angeles' 11th con· sccutave home court victory and gave them a 19-12 season record. The Lahrs havt• won 15 of their 17 home gam es this season. Abdul-J abbar had 15 points and 16 rebounds in the first half as the Lakers took a 43-42 lead. High scorer for the game was Lucius Allen of Los Angeles with 27 pornts, 23 in the second half nvr r AL o •-•1 At:~m• 6. o .. n11~.-•S. ~••• n OrGrrooroo I) Smtih 14 Fo<I• r ll. C.w,.1111 T•rry 1, "••rtll t l0S.ANC.£LfS 1•11 -Fo<d•. Ru• ..... 11 IA Alltlvl Jobb•r H Allen 17, Ch•,..v b l•mM 1 WoV.lnqton •.Kupec•, N•v<n"""l r Alum4 R11fl•lo 72 10 ?• '1 II? L~\ .Af'Qeln n Jt 11 n •1 l'out.n out -N.,.,.. Totel 1ou1, -0•J"•'o u L•'' MQ'llot 11 A 10,•M . ' Wednesday December 22. 1976 Of .. LY P LCT f:3 Confusion, Politics Mar Davis Cup Play TUCSON CA P ) -Can the Davis Cup be saved? Can the 76-year-old ritual, once the centerpiece of world tennis. be restored to its former glamor and prestige? Or is it slated for extinction in the new big money, h ighly commercialized al· mosphere of the modem game? The s port's administrators. architects. players and pla10 buffs pondered the questions to- day in the wake of another con- fusing Davis Cup weekend. Italy and Chile were playing in Santiago for pos~ess1on of the fitlver bowl which Uwaght Davis put into circulation in 1900 Argentina and Brazil were sup- posed to be playing somewhere an South America nobody was quite sure. The United States and Mexico were knocking fuzzy yellow baits at each other here an the North American zone semifinals. What's happening anyway? Nobody knew for sure. People In the United States. all lathered up over the pro football playoffs, hardly cared. It was all too con· fusing to understand. Italy and Chile were playing in the 1976 final. They were playing lo see who. was the lop tennis na· tion in the world. Italy woo. The best in the world? What about America, with Jimmy Connors. Stan Smith. Arthur Ashe, etc ·1 What about Sweden. with B1orn Oor1f 1 or Australia with J ohn Newcombe, Tony Roche, John Alexander, etc ? The matches here -as those involving Argentina and Brazil -were in the 1977 eliminations. The seasons crass-cross. Top players-Connors in the United Stutes, Borg in Sweden, among others -decline to play for their countries. They are too busy making hundreds of thousands of dollars in rich tournaments and ex.hibltions. Meanwhile, the Davis Cup na· lions ar e r ipped by pohtical squabbling. The Soviet bloc, with support of African nations, is boycotting the competition because of the presence of apartheid South Africa and Chile. The Russians have a distaste for Chile because of the political overthrow of the late President Allende. "Our first job is to clear the political air," says W. Harcourt Woods, America's delegate to the Davis Cup Management Com- mittee . "We hope to put through a rule suspending any nation which re- fuse& to play because of the pre- sence of a n other n ation on political grounds. ''Then we can go about trying to work out a more practical and a more exciting format. Right now we are having trouble get· ting sponsors because of the threatened boycott by some na- tions.'' Like many more progressive administrators in the game, Woods would Jake to set.: a con- densed format permitting the top 16 or so countries to batUc for the trophy m at wo-week period. William F . Talbert. former 0•11• fli1lot Pfltoto Oy "'<IMre K~ler FV'S JOAOUIM SCHEW ((EFT) BATTLES RIVAL. U.S. Davis Cup player and <'UP· lain as w e ll as one-time chairman ot the U.S. Open. is the most outspoken proponent of this plan. ''Pr o p erly ha ndled," says Talbert, "It could be a tennis Super Bowl. Pick the 12 leading tennis nations on their record - United States. Australia, Italy, Brit.a.in. Mexico. etc and give them a bye into the finals "Then let all thl' smaller coun- tries play an elim ination for four at-large teams. This could be enlarged If need be llave the 16 teams m eet at a single site for two weeks to decide the cham- pionship. "You can 1mag1..ne the public Interest. The TV networks would be fighting for the show. No player of stature would dare spurn It. Too much prestige and national exposure would be in· volved." Stan Malless, president of the U.S. Tennis Association, likes the idea but recog n izes th e roadblocks. "Thjs would be grC'at for the United States and a few of the other leading tennis nations," he said. "But the countries in Europe and all the small coun- tries prefer the formal as it is. They fear that any change would be an attempt by the big nations to take control "Since the Davis Cup is con- trolled by the Davis Cup nations -one vote, one nation, with Puerto Ri co huvang lhc ~amc voice as the United States -1t would be hard to pu~h such a pro· posaJ through." Barons Fall · OnDisputed Kick, 4-3 By HOWARD L. HANDY • 04 t~e Dally l'tlel S~ll A disputed re-kick or a penalty shol that Fountain Valley coach Joe Caruana feels never should have been allowed. gave the Chaffey Tigers the championship of the Kennedy soccer tourna- ment Tuesday night. The Tigers defeated Fountain Valley's Barons. 4-3. in the title game with the disputed penalty kick the difference. In a battle for third place. Hun- tington Beach's Oilers dropped a 3-2 verdict to Gahr and had to sel· Ue for fourth. Emilio Contreras and Ken Koldsbaek scored for the Oilers and Eric Hitchcock made the all-tourney team. The FV·ChaHey struggle was a tight defensive battle for most of the first half with Chaffey scor- ing the only goal on an inbounds pas& a nd kick by Frank Fernandez 30 minutes into the period. The disputed penalty s hot came after the Barons had tied the count at two with 12 minutes left to play. The first try was wide or the li!oal but a Fountain Valley player moved in before the kick, according to the r eferee. and he awarded a second try. This time, Jaime Ramirez booted it into the goal and the score appeared to unnerve the Barons a.s the Tigers came back a minute later on a drive for another tally. John Becker scored a pair or goals on penalty kicks for the Barons anct was picke<l for the all-tournament team while Joa- quim &hew made the other on a pass from Steve Steinke. Th<' I hrec top Am1•ri<'an networkc; walked out of n1·~ot1a lions w1lh the Sovit•ts last Frid1n after bean~ lolcl lht· y, inning firm would h;]v<' to ):!twr.inlrr S.SO million for ha.,1c f:te•ahlt<'" ht'''intl payment for the righb CagrrDle• MEMPHIS, Tenn. -Memphis State basketball player John Gunn died Tuesday after a brief illness. A JUTY of eight men and four women, including two blacks, un nounC'ed the guilty verdicts Tues· day night after dt'hberatang !l hours and 15 minul<'s. Coaclt Selee!ted LARAMIE. Wyn. -The selec· lion or University of Ark a.nus as- sistant coach Bill Lewis as Wyoming head football coach Tuesday night e nded a hunt for a successor to Fred Akers. Steelers Face Dilemma "The referee a pparently doesn't know the rules of high school soccer.'' Caruana said after the game. "He gave them a re-kick when he s houldn't have. Their second player put the ball in play on the first kick and they shouldn 'l have had a re-kick. Vanguards Sail, 91-70 Ted Be rgerson and Randy Adams paced coach Paul Peak's ·southern California College Vanguards basketball team lo a 91·70 victory over Redlands University Tuesday night ln the winner's gym. .Bergerson hit 24 points. had 15 rebounds and stole the ball six times. Adams scored 19 and had 12 rebounds. The Van1uards tell behind, 6G-SS with 10 minutes to play but a tun-court preu turned the Ude in lbeir favor with a 36-lO•corinl ad· vantage to the final buzzer. Bergerson was the ttont man of the presa and was the leader In the final seven minutes as the Vanguards improved their season record to .S-3. .. Cit c.t .... "II ....... ......... ) • 4 • Mt&Mtl ~ l01 4C_,.4111 OllllW ,.,,~ ~ t • IH TMett ---•••tt ..... ,,. • • t • ., 1 J ' S I I It • " f7 ., "9!fltnw1 See.ti c.ri.w, ..... ' \ I Akers became head football coach at the University of Texas last week. RllUfa Prel'alb MOSCOW -Third period goals by Helmut Balderis and Vladimir Petrov sparked Russia to a 3-2 victor ~ over Czechoslovakia in the cham - pionship game of ttK! Izvestia In· ternational hockey tournament Tuesday night. JrUlaBreeze SOUTH BEND, Ind. -Don "Duck" Willi ams scored 20 points and Bill Paterno added 15 Tues· day night as second-ranked Notre Dame trounced Vermont 89-48 in a college basketball game. Former Marina star Rich Bran- nin1scor ed six points. Woll'el"f..a Roll ANN ARBOR, Mich. -Olym· pie gold medalist Phil Hubbard led top-ranked Mlchlcan wlt.b • carotr-bigh 2e point.a and erobbed 15 ribounds as t.bt.. Wolve.rtn blasted Centr-1 Mlcb1pa 1°'"83 In a nonconte...-nce e~Uect buketball 1ameTuesdaynl•ht. ' Pittsburgh's Problem; Stopping Biletnikoff OAKLAND (A P ) -For Fred Biletnikoff, wbo can make catching passes look easy, the yards have come the hard way. "I guess when you've been run- ning hooks, curls and outs all your <'areer, 8,000 yards is a lot." the Oakland Raiders' 12-year veteran said. Biletnikoff passed the 8,000· yard milestone this season and became the sixth-leading re - ceiver in National Football League history with 536 ~atches. Short patterns are his spedal· ty. Thus, often with a defender nowhere in sight, Biletknikoff will catch a pass while standing six Inches fro m the sideline and a foot or two past the first-down ·marker. "As far as I'm concerned, he's the best recelver who's ever played the gam e," says Ken Stabler. who hit Biletnikoff nine times for 137 yards In last Saturday's 24·21 playoff victory over New England. The Pitt.1bur1b Steelers, play· inl the R"d•ra Sundll)' . for the third consocpt.lve yoar ln the American Cottference tttJe 1ame, face a familiar dilemma: l whether to double-t eam Oakland's decp·pass threat Cliff Branch or Brletnikoff, or bolh, and what to do about tight end Dave Casper. who led the team with 53 receptions this season. Jn the regular season opener here. won bv Oakland 31·28 with a J7.point outburst in the final three m inutes against lhl' Steelers, Casper caught seven passes for 124 yards and two touchdowns. while BiletnikoH and Branch snared four passes apiece. In the AFC tiUe gam e of 1974. Branch set a playoff record with nine catches for 186 yards. Because Blletnikoff rarely ven· lures more than 15 yards downfield. he has the element of i>urprlae on his side when he goes deep. Trojans in Action LOS ANGELES -Southern California (2·6) faces Oral Roberta Unlveralt y of Tulsa tonight at the Los Angeles Sports Areno ln a n on· conterence basketball game 1t 8 o'clock. "That gave me a big boost. I'm feeling good physically this year, and it was good to prove lo myself l can still beat a guy deep," he said after grabbing a 3l·yard Stabl er bomb against Denver in midseason. In Saturday's playoff victory. he got behind comerback Bob Howard and held onto another 21-yard touchdown pass des pite berng pushed and elbowed by the defender. who drew an in· terferencc penalty . "Like I've said before, it just depends on who wants the ball more," said Biletnikoff. The former Florida State star has caught at least at least 40 passes a year since breaking into the starting lineup in 1967, when the Raiders made their only Super Bowl appearance. But he began th.is season without a con- tract and said this migflt be his last year with lhe team. Then, early In the season he quietly signed a two-year con· tract for about $225,000. The Raiders never a nnounce contract signings a nd Biletnikoff, not overly talkative, did not disclose theslgninj until last week. "It was bad judgment by tho referee which led to the goal. "I felt we were on the offense- most of the 1ame but Chaffey did a good job on de!enae and in clearing the ball." Jn the Huntington Beach game, a penalty kick after time had run out by the Oilers, mbsed and the chance for an overtime batUe wag thwarted. ·College All-star Grid Game Off CHICAGO • Tbe College All· star football game which matches star rookies against the !"iational Footba ll League Super Bowl wam Is beln1 discontinued, the sponsoring Chicago Tribune Charities Inc., said Tuesday. The midsummer game, staged ln Soldier Field since 1934, ls be· Ing dis continued because of lo· creasing e xpenses and uncertain· ties ln recrultln1 player person- nel, the organlaallonsaid. "The game l.lm-ply hu priced 1 Itself out of exlltence," sald a spokesman. - f l l 1 I I , 8 J 0 DAILYPILOT Area Cage Results JUHIO" YA•t1TV ~-lllft Yolltp To.,rt1amttll S....1111'411 "'"· Yallt Y 10) fO ) lhtao><l1 Reiff tlOI F !I I M4>1Y>""V fspt"°U f2) r 11)11..Ml-r --1111 c llll ll•""""°°'' To«>IU 1121 (; 181 (.,n(IO S. ,,_ tt I G U I M<M1<1ot ~ Fount•1n V•lley \COr1nQ 'l.UO\ Slckm<1nl.McCarlhy 4 Htllllme Ftl\. Ytllev.1' II S.11~-tfltt IU ) UJ) IClttllt &.ktr 1111 f 101 "''"""'' W-Ill F ll?l ,O'l-.t<t•/ Qtdnov !Ill C 101 'w•Q•l>n S MulllQ<ln (ti c, 1101 lOOtt 8 MulllQ.on I Ill (, llOl llo\IWI( It SC. \<Ol'U''9 \ub Ou.,,all • Malttlme !.C lT n MarlM IM I fU I Villa P1rto Bollm 1111 F f 111 AIAllO t :~::,., 1101 ~ 111 ~:~::~<:: ( :::::: ;;: g ·~~~;;:;:. M•rl"• S<Orlftt) \Ub\ Mt•l"t I I !.pvey S. 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Alvdr"t to Co\ta M4'"' )(Orinq \Ub\ W Hltt.1m\ '· W ill ir'M)h•m 1 O'N''itl 1 H•lftjmr M.tt1,..d, 3S·1• 501'HOMOll E C.0.11 ~\I IU ) 1111 LOI Al•mltol 6"•\IP,y fl\) ( ,,,, Alh n Oom1n1c ,,,, F •01 l'O..·,,ht s.-.rttHfi~l(I ,,., ( rcu \m+I" N<lt.'"1i)n '11 <, 1?1, It·' tienf•<lr\ ,,, G ••''~I•" CM U.')rU'\Q \UO H 11 ,,. ,.,,_,,, w 4 (.CM1 Hdllftlf'n• CM ) 11 Ed"o" E\tA"''' Tovr'MY (C11\lfl 1'41 fS'I a11t a. ... • 8owMi 0) F tll P~""'" Crook, Koeller Spark Marina Rally, 52-50 Monarchs In 60-52 Triumph 8)' ED BURGART Of Ille O.lly .. , ... St ... Reserve Ken Crook came up with a key steal, Charlie Koeller sank the winning free throws with 29 seconds lert, and the Marina High Vikings of Huntington Beach emerged with a come· from-behind 52·50 win over Fountain Valley's Los Amigos Tuesday night. In the non-league basketball tilt at Los Amigos High, the host Loboe bad taken advan- taJte o/. a lopsided free throw edge in the last quarter-they sank nine of 11 to the Vikings' three or four-to bold a :-A>-46 lead with 1: 12 left. But the Vikings scored the remaining six points. First, it was 6-4 forward Tony Warren driving the lane for two point.a with S4 seconds remaining. Then, it w/s the 6-7 Crook stealin a pass at mid court with 45 seconds left and hitting Gauchos Breeze To 94-76 Victory By CRAIG SHEFF Ota. O.lly ""•Uwff Dennis "Bubba" Smith poured in 24 points Tues- day night, sparking Saddleback College's basketball team to a runaway 94·76 win over visiting Fullerton Co11ege. Smith didn 'l start out in a blaze, missing his first three allots. But he was deadly alter that -canning seven in a row -most fropi the 12· 16·foot range -in tielping the Gauchos lo a50-29haJrtlme lead. It was a breeze the rest of the way as Saddteback built the margin to 73-47 with eight minutes left in lhe game. Gauchos coach BUI Mulligan went wilb re- serves after that. Saddleback broke it open with a wild blitz in the last six minutes of the first half. Leading 29-24, the Gauchos outscored Ezra Van Horn's Hornets, 18·1 in the next five minutes and it was allover. In that spree. the Hornets turned 1t over seven limes -thanks mainlytotheGauchos' press. an eight-foot jumper 16 seconds later. And while Crook was hitting the tying basket, Koeller was get.ting fouled under the basket. The 6-2 senior guard con· verted tbe charity tosses, and Los Amigos couldn't get a shot otr against M arln a 's tight 2·3 ione until three seconds remained when the Lobos fired a 20· foot.er that bounced off the rim. The final period was reminiscent of most ol the game as first ~arfna , then Los Amigos, would find its abooting eyes against both i9nes and man de· fenses. Against Marina's 1·2·2 zone in the first half. the Lobos only committed one turnover and sank six. of 13 field goal at· tempts in the second period to take a 25-21 haJftime lead. An d against Los Ami.gos' man defense in the first quarter. Marina opened an early 11·4 lead with the aid of four long jumpers by Leland Bruce. M•rlM fU ) tq It ,,. '" Warr1>n 9 n l ti G•l>O' 1 1 ' • Torr .. \ 0 0 1 8•u<t ' ' ll IC.ot~•'r J ' s ~ I 0 0 1 Crook I 0 0 • Ton" n ' I) S1 Lo1Am1ta\ UOt Cq It ,,. Ip LAS VEGAS-Maler Del Hlgb School scored 18 point.a in the fourth quarter lo brea1' a Ue and post a 60·53 victory over Edison High of Hun- tington Beach Tuesday in the first round of the Las Vegas Western basketball tournament. Maler Del returns to action ln the cham· pionship bracket tOnighl (6) while Edison played in consolation round play this afternoon. The Mater Dei MQnarchs of Santa Ana were elven a big assist at the charity Une. making 10 free throws in the final quarter or the battle. The Monarchs too" advan· lagt Of tbe boftUS situa· Uon at the line until they bad a 10.polnt lead. Jill\ Schultz had six as- sists as Mal er Dei hit 22 ol 34 attempts at Ute line. Tim Peabody was high point man with 13 with John Garcia hitting 12 for the victors. Three players bad 10 points each for Edison includ· ing Ray Gomez, Mike McCourl and Ed Be11. Ma'°rO.I IH I ,, . It "' Ip Mti<1'1"' 4 t .) 10 PUOOOY l , 1 ll IC•mo•• ) ' Cl • Sct>ullr ' ' II c:.a11•n , 0 ' 4 StMlf 0 ' 0 ' (i.Ar(lol ~ , • ,, HatlJ>lll I 1 • • Tot•h •• ,, ,. "° 10.tlOI\ till •• It "' tr Mitr"-On • I l 9 ~· • 1 10 W CO<lrt 5 0 10 8"11 5 0 10 Hlr'I m F 1" £10<~ ...... ;.-~~ .. ~---!*-'Ill' (uOMor_. 1) C l,,i A~"ld A M<Oonal~ ISi G SI C,o.nn Smith started the spree with an 18·foot jumper and Rich McElrath then scored on a layup after Srnith'ssteal. Tim Shaw then hil from in close. After a Fullerton free throw. the Gauchos reeled off 12 points in a row -six in a 15·second span. 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G•dlll\ '· "-· 51i!loo4 H•lrtl""'; NH. ti 11 Pro Scores .... ,._. ~---" ••-IMi.1 HY l("l<h tn O.troh IOl Cl•"91-IOI. ~I ... IOI N-0-IMI\\ IU lncll•11• ll) Sa<IAntOlllo IU Golde" Slfl~ 110 Ollc-101. Sulllt 101 flotl o.n-'°'· ""'1-IOllll .. l.os ,.,. .. , n . tuffalo" "°'11.,,..,, ll•flt•' City .. ... , ... ,".'-'~ NY I 1tal\de" ), 80\lon 0 Ollt-.O),MI"""'°'•) Ille) Futl'fM 0 I ' I ........... 0 7 0 1 00.m 0 0 ) 0 5otl>r-r I 0 4 , O.)ty l'llot -·.., l>•lrkk 0'-11 Rut rum 0 ' 0 I 0.¥1\ J l • 9 Tol•t\ t9 ,, ll so Sc.er• lty Qu.1r11n Tat•I\ tl • 2T st so .. lllY Quarters .. ~ LAGUNA BEACH'S CHRIS ANDERSON GOES HIGH TO SPtKE A BALL. Miarirw I) • .. IS S1 MAii•• 0.1 10 " II l.J>\Aml90\ 10 15 12 tl ~ fell~ ., 10 10 t0-S2 Anderson Top Standout For CIF Champ Laguna Shortly after , Tim Knight scored on a tip· in, Shaw scorched the nets with a shot from the baseline and Knight added an easy bucket after McElrath's lob throw. Thal made it 47·2.5 and Saddleback had its sixth win in 11 games. The Gauchos hit 42 of 78 shots from the fi eld, a 53.Spercentage. OCC Falls, 59-49 TORRANCE A cold start in the second half cost the Orange Coast Co11ege Pirates a chance at victory Tuesday night as the host El Camino Warriors basketball team captured a 59-49, non-conference decision. to within six on two oc- casions. the last with 4: 12 to play when Jeff Golden hit a jumper but the next four scoring at- tempts missed . By HOWAR D L. HANDY Ol 1,,. Otllf Piiat Sl•lt Chris Anderson is a fierce competitor and as such, was the leader of the Laguna Beach High girls volleyball team lhal captured the CIF 4·A championship re· cently. "She gained a lot of maturity and poise Uus year and learned to set as well as hitting and blocking," coach George Carey says of his star. "She was never a set· ter before this year and she "orked extremely hard learning how to do 1t properly and it paid off. She would stay after practice and ask ques- tions, then work on set- ting the ball. '·Another neat thing she did that helped her and released her to play good volleyball was to bring the team together. We railed 1l together· ncss ' Andt'rson was scleded a'-mMI valuable player tn the Cl F this year "Chris also learned to control he r temper and was a g reat person to be around this year. She had a J!ood time in our Rames and one of the key elements was lt\;ll she would rome up with a smile even though she madl' a mistake or we were behind. "Before we played ('orona del Mar in the finals, she hurt her root. After we split the first two games. she told me there was no way I was Roin~ to take her out in that third game regard· less or how mu~h the foot hurt.'' Carey recalls how An· derson and Dawn Spurlock also helped br· Inc the team closer together by having them visit their homes before CIF playoff games for meats together. "At no time did we talk about volleyball." Carey says. "Everything else, but no volleyball." Carey feels Anderson wu the catalyst but that Spurlock was equally im· portant to lhc success of lionaJs this year." An· * * * * * * the team. derson says. "I feel that too often Is there any part or the the tittle seller doesn't game she enjoys most? get a lot of r ecognition." "I guess hitting makes Carey says or Spurlock. you feel the greatest but "She also played super I think setting is reaJly Fullort.., (141 w~ber It 11 pl IP ) 0 , 6 l(ntQM 0 McEtr•tt> I w .. 1 ) • J 1) 0 tO OCC hit 40 percent from the floor. or....-CMtl (491 Luci\ • ) ) I) S1mp..on I J s 8'-1\ • 0 , ' defense and without her neat too." setting, the hitters She started playing wouldn't be nearly as volleyball in the ninth flashy." grade and caught on W4111K• Ror•r Cone!~ S.MOll Hite "'<ooor TOtl l\ Srrutt\ • . ,. ' 0 I) Ml-1.,..l<t , 7 ., Nl•ort ) ' • Z09<1 ' 1 0 • Royl\Old\ , I 4 s Heim 1' 11 IT 16 lf'tlm11t' S..<ll•NOIM) H1ttruo 1, 11 pt Ip 11..,. ., 0 tH Total\ 1 1 1 4 J ' , 1 ' I 0 s 0 0 I 0 I , I 4 0 0 l 0 I 0 ' ' ' 0 0 l ., 10 Hi ... It was Orange Coast's seventh straight loss. ,, " Gol6"n , 0 -1ane1 , 0 Y.trdtt:y 0 I Oma<\ I 0 Lr~oll ' ' 8ofCll 7 0 Kf'r"u1 3 0 SoowMt 4 , Total\ 70 0 Anderson is a senior quickly. Othe r school 0.y 3 0 • ' Hattttmf' S•ddlrbac•. \0·1• El Camino out scored the Pirates, 12·2 in the first 51h·minutes of the second half to move in front. 4-0-27 . OCC closed H•lftlfM El CUTllM, ?t-tS this year and is un· sports don't interest her iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiii decided about her future. but she enjoys sailing She lists Hawaii, UCLA and living a block from :dpo~;nt~:i"!~h::i~b~~ ~wah~,e~n!flhho~e~aowklfee~ahhlehe~er~:l.S LOS ALAMITOS QUARTER H. ORSES will take two classes at UC Irvine in the spring right DAY ~~~nh~g:~~~o~f:'tr1:ting fir~i~~e8i~3~~c1~s~firr~ TOMORROW . AND FRI She will attend the fin a I two p I ayoff schoolwiththebestoffer th then came ~lat~r:1 fy~o~~1~::~:1i s~~~:e~?s~in. Was she D· AY RACING 12·.45 will be a mong her ''No, I didn't think pursuits and s he has we'd lose. I felt confident chosen the three schools in both matches. Our because of their pro· coachputalotofworkin 6 6 ~ grams. mental preparation and "' •• , " I • 3 t 5 2 J • ' 4 0 6 1 10 " ~ "I've never been to we worked all year on Hawaii but I want to pl ay being confident in -~£_a1~--:::::_e=~~d=::~=}=~lnl=f~=~~e=1. =~={_fi=f_~e=e_l~=·:_;T=~-~=e_shs~:_~~-~ NIGHT RA Cl NG BEG 1·N s ANOTHER TECHNOLOGICAL BREAKTHROUGH FROM SEIKO: THE FIRST LC DIGITAL QUARTZ CHRONOGRAPH . 11o C•oo1M-1nue. n · ,, .,, .,., ""'r''"'· ,, ,• . '4,'} r•4 1"'~t("'IO• .. 1th'~ '°·II"''" 1 ,,rt-IC." , .'!'j 1; ··~·_. t,,, ... •. tiAnOlC~ m1•·•· ••. I <1111111 XMAS NIGHT 7 :45 , featuring WORLD'S 10 FASTEST 2-Yr.-OLD QUARTER HORSES IN THE RICH $185,000 GOLDEN STATE FUTURITY! NIGHT RACING CONTINUES MON. THRU SAT. DEC. 25 ·FEB . 10 f • Basketball Scores This amazing watch tells the time and data· and turns into a stopwatch at the.touch GRANDSTAND SPECIALS: • Uidln 50c Wtdnetd1y1 ALWAYS 4 EXACTAS Gounnet Dl nln& On Th• New Turf Terrace. Reaerv1tlon1: (213) 431-0922 or (714) 995-3877. ,,. • ~ • • • cou.•o• U5' ... Ot1I R041tMt I• wu1tlfltlon • 1. Colo< tctot .,._....,, 111-11t, H•twardSt ~ CAI M.tte ll.A) tt, Gtlll Wetlt t1 l'...wiSl.M. ~er-$1. St c:;..,.,b1111t n, ,..,Utlld SC 1' uc 1u .. n1oe 11. •"'" l"ac111ut .,,,_ $4 ... Monl• ... ., N. T11<n$1 110, TVKI 10) 111111-1'.Mleml,0 U Ul•lt S4 n. T•••• feel! .. 0.1-· ... .,, .... ., ,. ....... 11.V)'°',MyrUyll 1'J 1-t:l O.et11it OeftOft•,S.1111 Cttn ti Mll'l!IHI ti .... MIMl\tWl II ~I ... C:..0'-Ml<l't tJ 11111~•"-MM•l•f' HIMN o-... V•n,..,.1 • " °''' .. '· ... T" ,._M Sllt@t1, SI "''•"tit, pa to T-•\elf1, l(1yltf 1* ""-111111 ••.•ow• $1 ... W•'• l'orUI tt, l'alrlf'l9h C>kllll'80flt3 MI OMSCHOOI.. l.V WHi.r1170, Wa"ftlltl\\tf' SJ .. ,.,. ,.,,.6', l!!_.,lf\H6t T>ntlft ... Alll ... I"'" Coll Uctl<lnel61 O•r~n0fi!W47 '"""' Hilt\ 9'. ht .. G•Aftdl t0 Prep Soccer of a button. When luncllooing as a stopwatch It 1nd1catcs minutes, seconds, 1/10 second, elapsed hme and tao 1tme with simultaneous timok11ep1ng. Come see how this cKtraord1nnry walch work~. Seiko Ouart?.5 SEIKO A.H. WC/NERT Fmc J~wels )? FoNwt ~ ~ ~ .... 2040 r • StnlO"f 60 and over $1 Mon. thru Thur. Heat inc Throuahout •r•••r••••••• • f ••• , • ~. --•• ~ ' .. -. - Information: (213) 431·1361 or (714) 995·1234. . -. I r I Marine Radio Passing By ALMON LOC.KABEV D•llY 1'1101 ao.11,.. E•ltt The days of the double- sideband marine radio are numbered -and' the numbers are becomin~ short. Come Jan. I use of the old faHhful double- s id e band rig s will become illegal even 1f they ar~ still on board. And they are not re- licensable. In their place wm be VHF-FM marine rad!<JS which have a muc h shorter range than the AM set s, prim a rily because communication is limited to line of s ight The reason g 1 ven by the FCC for banning or the double.sideband AM sets of whatever power was that the airways were getting too crowded for efficient communication on the emergency band (2182 mHz), Lhc ship·Lo· sh.ip channels and the ship-to·shore te lephone frequencies. BUT LONG b efore the Jan. 1 deadline for non· use of the AM c hannels t he VHF·FM ch annels h ave becom e j ust as crowded if not m ore so. The VllF·FM is now used by a n estimated quarte r of a m 11l11)n pleasure boat !>k1pp<>rs Add another estimated 200,000 marine usl'rs after Jan. l a nd as Al Jolson used to suy: "You ain't heard nothtn' yet." Already the FCC, Lhc Coas t Guard and marine telephone oper ators are complainin~ or m1s·ll!>eof the VHF·FM channels. Most common viol at1on is the use of the em ergency Channel 16 for chit-chat between boats, requests to the Coust Gu;,ird for radio c hecks, und at· tempts to reach m arine ope rators. Ther e have even been r eported cast.'S of some fi r ms usinJ! the channel for ad verllsing purposes. AND T H E r agrn g Citize ns Band lCB> fad 1s not helping the s1tuat100, according to som e ex· perts who cite the h appy· go-lucky use of such CB lm go as "10·4," "10·20," ··come on b ig buddy" over the marine ;11 rwa)'h Sk.ippers who have CB outfits a board thl'ir bollts have also b een c rat1c1wd for Ja mming Lht> aJrY.ays with re al or 1mug1ncd em e rgencies in which they call a base station ashore, who in turn cnJls the Coast Guard on the land line with a lot or mis· tnformallon. The Coa.<1t Guard elm's not mon1lor CB CB equ1pmt nt on boats has long been re ferred to in marine circles as tht' "M1c.-key Mouse ·· It as mostt)' used by f as· h4r.-. for ch1l ·ch11t and pa&Jlnt. llOlllt Othlnl-? IO· fotmaUao. BUT SOME experts opine ~bat tho d ay m ay come when the FCC will limit s9'lp.to011hip com· mun1c-.t1o n to en - especially wlUl the ocf. vent or the expanded 4-0 c.-hannels. It would be one way lo limit the erowding of the airways by st'nS<' less chatter on the part of VHF-FM usen. Large y achts which travel long distonceg or. !shore will be required to have the s ingle·sideband rigs for long·distance commun icalion since botbVHF·Fl'ti and CB are Jtmlted in power . Alr eady, most yadt clubl which sponsor long distance races require that skippers have single- sideband equipment in addJtion to VHF· FM. "Hom" (amateur) equipment also ls being used by many skippers who cruis e long dis- tances. This equipment is capable or world-wide communlcation wllfi other hams, but ls not monitored by the Coos\ Gu ard or other emergen· cy 1tat1on$. IT GOES wUhout say· inc that "ha m " equip· meat ls limited aboard pleasure traft wince the FCC license r equire· men ts arc very strict and the exami~tlon 11 dlr f Jicuk~paN. PltHare .._craft 11klp- P«twoukl d6 wtU to ktep ·In 'niod lhat tM marlne d dfe': ij •af•ty-ortenled ahould be UNd u .. ti}' II D t , .. PVBUC NOTICE ,.ICTITIOUS IUSINIU NAMI STATIMENT 0.. lollOW•f\9 P.<\On> 6'0 .,..... Du\I ..... .q PV8LJC NO'l1CE $.JJJM PUBLIC NOTICE )4tlJI NOTICI" 011ULI.01' AaA .. D O NIO f'EllS O Nl\'- l'llOl'llnT IAI ~RANOSTAND 181 OllA,.G( CO U .. T Y Gll AN O)'tll N D MAGAllNE. 100 N•*PD" C"•"'"' Or "JG.I N....,OC>fl !Hach CA '1..0 NOTICI TOClllOITC>lti S~lllOll COUil OP 11'1[ STATI eP CALI ,.CHtNIA l'Oll Tlla COUNTY 0 ,. OllANGE I MeA"'tt •" fhtt M•ll•• o• th" C ''•'• ot c;eo•c.E HUMPH At y. H~ArtE\ Al(A OEOA(,E tt ~RAK(\ At(A Gl!ORGE FtU,KE~ O•o•\'<I NoUt_.. ~ "ffe:Ov ~¥•" O••I ~, tnet OUr\v•f'll to \•f t•n " ••lilt '' tnt C.IHor"I• (Iv•• Coese ow Ol'Oflll'"tv 11,t (IQ, t»low bthew,.o fQ tJit .. o.AC,•w·\I ov ~am. o A\\fX ••t~n lttt wh0"9 l•\f .ct ftt~\ ••\ 1.01 0011• Stltf'I Su•ff 1~ "'-oor1 llH•<~. C.••llornl• '1..0 wttl ti9 \@Id tit' OUbhC. AVC 00" ., I.Of Oovt- St .. •tt Nt woort Btl'o(t\ (•lttorf'Hd ~. ~n ~ttmbtt 1t ltl• .11 10 00 0'<100 A M Aontrt ii' Aou1, loot E A.v•IOft 5"tlt1l•Allol CA9'/IOll JO\"i>I\ C Hon11tn<1, 71'31 ~vmbl• 0.. Ct loro C.A "'" t>utlrlh\ " conouc ... l>y • QM'\lf .. IOtf-UWr\f\lp R-rl I" AO\\I TI\,, )tit1•mt"t W•\ l1ltd with t~ COUnlv Cl~•• of Or•ng~ CownlvOll ,.._ ""'""' •. It/a ,_ P\lbll>lle<I 0•61\0* Coa\I 0..lly Piiot. ()o(tonbol• I ti 11 1' l~lb Shi,. PUBLIC NOTICE PIC'TITIOUS eUSINISS KAMI STATllirllNT -rn. totlOwlng '""'"'"•••-"II bv\I <IH\<O\ 8&1 AN TIOUI C.LOC.KS. nu Wr·.tnUMtM" Ave • Wt''""'"''•"• CA "611 Nol'<• •t fttt•••h Qlvtn '" ,,..,.,~,, "'-•""1 tt•1m\ 4'4i•tn\t ltw u..ct <lfW• Ofl\I lO 1ti. H•d tl••lfl• II\ '"" <illl<I" elf llW Cletk ot 11\41 etore••ld <our! 0t lc IW t W!ll Ill..,. IC ll>t lll'O•<>•Qnecl •l l"" Olli'• ol llOI ERT J POLIC!i Al -4.n ti L&*. 1120 S H•""""'" 01"° S,.Cte 10), In '"" Cllv ot """''""O• ·"*lolllt. In Lo\ 4n~tn Cnur"v. wt>•(~ lellt< O!llct I• IN ptou 01 l>u"""'' ol lhf Uf\!Opr~~ .. , •It m.i''"'' Ol',1••n •1\9 to w4d nt•l• Such chtlm\ W1t1tn '"" ,...f~Uf';' l/OU(t'Ntf'~ tnU\I r"W• hi~ Ot Ot•M~t•d ., •f0f P\'91d wHhln four l'T'IOftU'I\ •f~tt the flf\t c>utu1,•t•Uf\Of thi\ <>01ltt D•IW O.c l. t'I• GEORGE AN N FA.t.ICES <fUTHtLL E •tcuto• 011iw ,.,., ol.,,.oOO.~e .. nl Beve•ly LOUl\t 8 •ut• IH» M6tl••v CO.rot I\ Cron. CA 9?.-\ Wllll•m M 8r11c. 110J MMll@V ll09•11T J l'OLICll A"'°' ... .,.•l·UW '12'$ 14.cl...Ulhf 5'11W 1ff OV•"f'f' .,,d o~,t rtnt1nn J .e "'•*'• Ill• r.•bt,,.n ltt•,••11 o• 1"11 t\bur9n tf'H t t Woott ~t,•no, 4'40h4Jr'' <ht\i.: wUt\ tlUf"tt h•'"1 f•lurn ) -W~ •·Clt•wor ptu\ 7 \tldlnq OOOt S.loot cr-ntA•: 1 ~ 1001 -"' t'CUtlV~ \ Ot\lli 1 ' ) t001 W00CJ t V «ut1w·, ct.\11., 1 t foot w e)Od ownltt loP t-.<ullv•'\ ""'~; J Str.0'131110.Clr vlnyl<ow red O(CA\lof\•I Chllf' 3-- Bl•cl O<<atlon•I <h11r\ 011 ""''•' .,.."'" (0Ytred Witt\ Old(k Vl"Y' t- Oc:u,lon•t e1 .. 1, ••l>•l<·COYer@d .., ""'1•1 l••m• I St•no <h•ir "'°""'...,. i.ot•l•<y CntOMt INH, 1--0C<.0\l"'ltl (f\•t" cov•r•c:t •C--o<o100 't'lf\yl 1""' E•tcvll••'t 11""'"'1 Cfl•or •~oc­ -" 1-tc •• "'"''· I EM<ut1..,·1 \w lv•I < .. •i' <0¥,.f'Pd 1n bro•" ,..........,. t E ~•<vl•vf' ~ cf\11r <ev• •'9'd In ... w ••tt,IC •net ~unyt f e,,... T*e 'I w lO WOOO •lfP't~•trtt~lf Gtn,.~ G'OW' C.A '1U' "•I-Ht••flh. CA Pl.IOl•V..d Otdl\Qt C.oe\I 0••· PtlOI t>c l1sn.~ m• D•ltd 1~1• 1111 O•v 01 Ooctmllo,r 191 .. G4f'btn HOPil'\tn• Thi\ CHl'\I~\ t\ Condu<.lf'd by .:11'1 tf\. Oi'ltd\HI 8f"~rlv L 8 tt.lf:" I 111) J6 'rru, \t4'fftnenl ¥t•\ hl{llf1 ._,,," lfvtrt 1-------------Publl\IWO 0..~qe (Od\t Od1ly P•ltrf O.oml>Olr IS .. ,. SUI/~ c.o..int\' C.ltr"-o t Or4nqt_ County on ~ov 16. ,.,. PUBLIC NOTICE 1'411•1 , ______ _. _____ _,. , ____________ _ Pubf•\h~ Or1"oe C.Ott\t D••l't ~llot S->,.>O Dt< 1 1 u. n . "'• W71 I& s~~~~~~;:~~:~~iA'.:!:11 P UBLIC NOTICE PU BUC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUS aUSINESS NAMESTATEMEHT frwt fot1ow1nq penon\ t1rt 00."Q' C>u\l ,..,, ·~ TH(" SOUTHWE~T COMPA>jV J•&1 '"A . Ed\l L• Pelma. Al\•ll•llm CA '11ll06 Jo~n M ltht el 1-r .. n k 3•10? FctitV'•f'w Southlllf(1.lJf\4 (A r/'Jt,/1 John J FrAnk , Jl6 W Vdltey View Or. FuHPrton C.A. V1rq1nl• W F"•r'l-, 516 W Viitlt!'t V1~w Or FuUl\rtor'l C ,\, TPu\ bU\•n•\' I\ condurt,.d bv ,, 0-Wt•I Hr tn.f\Php JonnM r:''"'"' Trt•\ ., '<tlt·m• nt w.n f1l .. d ,,.,.,h HY Gountv (INlr. l)f Or11nq1• to1mtr 111\ Nov ombo·r 1& 191• F•l1J4 P\.il>'•\11fl>d Or 1,,q~ Co"' Or11lv P•tot O-t~mbl"r I A 1\ 71 111,,. \01 .. 1ti PUBLJC NOTICE FICTITIOUS I USINESS NAlirlE STATEMEHT Tf\• f1Jllow1nq Pf''°"' df•· oo.riq ,,.,,, nen•\ J EAONIMO PLAZA ?Ill""'" JO<t ouin Hill\. AOdcJ N.,.woott ~¥". (.A 9?..0 Fl,.tef'1•,. Jon ... , 1noo E wn11ti.t_•, Blvd Wtutt+er CA 9GM>1 Wltt••m J M11rony, 1"ll9 s...it• MOntcaBtvd LO\AnQf'I""\ CAta002S Tftl\ bu'"'~'\ 1\ conduc.re-o o-v ~ ~"•I p.art,,,,.r\hip ~lttc~r J°"'""' flu~ \l•tfl"mfnt W\)\ ftl"'d With tktt County Cltrll 'Jf OtttnQ" Countv °" ()J>(-11 .. ,. F-• Publ•\hrd Oran91• Coai\t O.u1v Poot, OK.1l.1'.1916dncl 1i1n s. 11 1911 lll116 PUB U C NOTICE Ft CT ITIOUS BUSI HESS NAME ST ATEMENT lt\~ tnllow "'I Pl'' ...on\ art' dO•"'O bY 11 ,.,.., ... , \&r< PROPERfY MANAGfMf Nf 00 Mont•,, v t ,.,.,. ~n ( 1;.m.•nl., r A if/,.,17 \ldnh•Y Pt.,, ' 00 Monu·""Y l ,.,... <,...ln(1.,.~nt1 (A1'11>,ll Kttthl""" p,., ,., •>n M.,.,.,,,.,, v U,..... S,,.n(H·m1111ntf' (.A ~1•'1 Th•\ ou ... ,,,... ,\I\ tunch.1<1"''1 fty I hflM ~PMt""'''"•O ,,,,.,.,,,,,.:,,, ... ,.,., ,,.,tUU•MP•••Y T~•1 t~t,.rnf'nl w '' 1.1. ft #1th tn. (nuh•., (l•O "'O; •"'*' c •.•• f .,,., , .... •O 1<11-. s:-.,"°' ...... , 11 Or ,,,qo C • ' o., ., P1Jt>1 o---, '' u ,.. •·•.,..,no,,,,, ' t!'Jl1 \11jj ~, PUBtJC NOTICE FICTITIOU' llVSINESS NAMI 5 T•nlMl•H ~ lottowu•QIM'''ll>") ffl'_..."9lh•4i ,.. "'. r JUNTRY Mtl'-4f H N 1•,11,.. &-••,. 8t•d • HUl\linqlon llc·IC.ll, CA .,..., ,.., F 8 Alft"L 4111 E. An..,..,,lt'n, L-8•.o< "· CA OO'l<I• Andy <;. 8•1'"· 6000 Lo• A<tO\, ltnO~•<ll CA ~I\ '"'' tx.\IM\I I'\ c,o nrh1c.ttd '>Y • .,...,.1.,.r1ne,~nl• tttn 8•1ff1 Thl1 , ••• 4Jft'\~f'lt Wit\ h l,.d w lh ttv OM,,ftty Ct•"" Of ()f 11f'\ )• Cnuo' y ~Nov ......... ,., "" PIJbl ''"'""'1 ,.,, ""D• ,. ",,, O,Hl'f' J'1h"lf °"'""'""'' I • 1\ > I H• ">17,. PUBLIC NOTICE lllCTITIOUS llUSINESS HAM' !.TATIEMENT lh• tiiO'lW\"9 Pl"'~' •f't: 00-"Q bv\1 ..... " LAMl .. Ato<. t •l"tt y,.,,,. Ore• llf\f,,.fW'\ V1,.10 ( 4 ft•1S P..t~' l. tutl\SC". ,.,.,, Tt""'•;: ' (tie M •,\'Of'\V'_."°,t-4 .,•l'\ IA I JVfO\tUI. J•U2 T ••tt• 0«~. M "i.,.,, V•.,.10 CA •ltU ""' ~~'\ '" tondwt•d by l'tn •n dtW'tOl.MI P,.f,.,-l Jy' •\•Ch Th•' \tAt,..m.-M wA\ t11 ""' w it" ltw ,,...,..,. <.1r•• o• 0••"91' ro .... 1v tin I>< 10 ,.,. ~sn Pvf>llo••" Or,... .. t'o.\t Deity 1'1101 Otoe " n 1'. "'' ""o ,.., \. "" 1?7" I• PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICT ITIOU! BUSINESS NAlirlJ:S'TATUHNf Th~ IGllOwll\Q Pf''"'"'••• dOHIQ bv\I "f\\ A\ !>E.V[N SEAS. • C.•lllotl\I• P t •lfter\nlo, JHt8 Vlt 0Hrio, ,,..._DOrl 8'>"'"· CA •?Ml GOYIOfO s Waqn•r. 0.ft•"•I P~rtntr. 71 LU'l(ttt "'•· New POf't a.M'h, CA. Mimi WOQtltr. 0.Mr•I ,..,,,..,,,, Ll-hle,Nnt00"1 IOCl'l.C.lll Tt\tt &u\lfteo 19 condu<IKI bv • ooner•t CMrtMt•..,.lp G•yloro wao11er, °*"••.i ...,,,..r Mimi E. W•111•r, Gefltr .. """,., TN• ll•le.-t "'" fl~ wlll> 1t1e eo.-.1., t te•-ot O••~ c-.oun.., on De<em""r 3. 1~6 ,_ THE COUNTY 0 "011AN01 No 4 ·- HOTI C E O F "liAll lNO OF PETITION FOii PROBATE 0,. WILL ANO FOii LET"TlillS TESTAMIN TAllY ANO AUTHOllllATION TOAO- MIN IS TI! R UNOlilt THE INOl.l'INOliHT AOMINISTlt4TtON 0,. ES-rATES AC.T E'late ot MERLIN 0 YODER D<>c~a'4!<1 NOTICE IS H!,RCQY Gii/EN lt\dl :11t~:~.r p~~~~ :.·~·.::~·;~~: \uql'ICt o' Leth'''> l(•\t•m•n1MV and Ault'lorlt•lton lo A.dm1n1\lflr t.i+"O'lr th!• l~Detnd-nt Adm1n1 .tr4Jt1on ot E.\t•ff•'\ -.c• r.-•t-nncr-to wnrc n ~ • m.1dllr-Mr '"''"""' 1Mt'hr u1ur' .lnd IP'IM ff'Mtt '"""' ftnd C}t.t<.fl of tif' tftnq ttv• \ •m1 n..•\ °'""" ,,,_,few Janudr't'" 1'11 ,11 tO 00 i; 1n t'M courtrootn of 0. 04' Im• ttt ~ l of \did tourt di 100 (•li•f (M\l"' C>tw• W~\t •n 1n~ r11v ot S tntA A.1111 CiiMotNd D•ll'd O.c 1 J 1•11, WILLIAM [ \t IOH .. (OJnty (l,.f'\ PAULE GA1tB•1t II• Wttl Foottwll lll•d Mofwew••. (A ''°'· A'1.of"My tor H liltOl'Mf' ~~1\Nod-Of .. f'l')4t ,.,..,, o,.11v PH')t Oo!<emotr I~ •• U in• \?11 16 P UBLIC NOTICE NOTICE INVITING ale>\ NO'TIC.E IS HER€8V GIVEN IMI I ... BcMt<o OI EduUtlOI\ ol IM""-" ~ Un1f1.-d !.<Mot O•\lflClotOr- Counh Ca10orn1a will fUfl6V,. 'W:41f'd btd\ up 10 It 00 4 m on I two 19'tn cs.IV 1)4 Dtc•,,,t>-r. 1•r•. at trw-otllf" of \.-lo School 01\frl(1 •oc-ttttd 4f 18~1 Pi•'t" ti• .Awnue c~td M(•\d CtthfornM i.U whicn timto \dtO btd \ \#~II ~· PVbll<•y f)Ql'!"9•d 11nd '"~d •nr SMALL SCHOOL 8U\C~ 4t! b-uh •r• to br '" t1uord.lnv· w1tn t.onoitton\, ln\ttU' t1on\ .1nrt ._.Qf"C•''''' Hon\ w"1<n It'~ now Of't t1h· 1n ltw Off1(1 ot lht' Pur<ha\1nq Otr,.c tor Of '\r'lld School 01\trict t8S/ Placrnh 1 Avenue (_O'\tA Ml'-\•, C~llforn1,-, tt1b1' Jlfo b•ctct-r rnav wlfl'\dr 11w h•\ bHt tor • .,,.,.,,., ot tort 'f fl'tlf' CO t CfffY'\ """' '""' ditl.., Yt rof OM OP"n1r.o thf't• t>i """" 8o•rd ot Educ.,t1on l)f ti'\• N.-wovt ~\., Untf1..a S< hovl Of\trlct <•vt"'t>\ l~ t•Oht to rttlf•<t •lnY Ot t1tll bid\ and Ml f1""Cf',\.trlly ft"(f"C)t f""" '~'' bid .tnd tn '#d1\I,. ittnv 1nf0t,,,.ll Iv or 1rt..-qvl•r1ty '" •nv but ,.,.<••Vf'd OAT ED 0-cm"""' 14. IOI~ NEWPORT MESA UNIFIED \CHOOl OtSTAIC f n•O'""°"'C.ovl"lly (..,.t1tt)1n ' 0Uf'00'\y M .. ,..,,,.., F l'\"'r Du,<PM1\1nq O•,.•<tor 1~-neo Pvbli\h• d Or.tnQf" Coa\t O.•lv P•ll)f Ott l\dn<I 11 1'1• >?l'l 1~ PUBLIC NOTICE MUNICll'AL COURT. WESY OllANGE COUNTY JUDICIAL DIST., 1 144 Wt1tml1t 1 ter AlftftVe , W.•lmlntler. C..lllorn11. PLAINTIFF SARA E LEAHY OEFENOANT CAL·PACIFIC C.ORPORATION. • ~orporallon. RUSS MILLE ffE LARAT KE,.EMORE, JR. DOES 1 lh•""'lh v '"''"'"'" SVlirlMON5 C..lt Nu111btr: JUIS NOTICE! You ltove lle•n ...._ tM c.o.irt ""'' •chle as.eln1t yeu wllllo<ll your bet~ ...... , UftltH yio rHfOM wlllllft JO d1y .. llHd tile i11 .... INUM -·-· AVISO! V\1 .. 1!• tldOd•'T!l no.<lt,lll Trl"""'°I ,..,,~. d•cldl• conl•• lkl '"' •tlfl..,cl• • -"°' qut Ud ,__,,.. delllro .. )0 dlH U I l.l ,,,, ........... _ .... " ... TO THE OEFEN04N r At1v·•<-· 04••nt tw~ blfl•n til•n r>v tf\l• O'·''""" 4U) •. Un\t vou 'St-I' tootnoh • • It you WI\/\ tn IU•f•fWl '"'' '••w•• 'fOU MU\l w 1lf'hft 11 d,.y· lttf'f' U\. \ 'tllln "'°"' t\ fltVt·d Otl y hi,.. Ywllf'I fhl\ tou'1~wr•U•"1>l•,..d-N:t ff'I f-~M UM> <omo1111nt <II d Ju·•·•' Co>U<1 tou MV\I f11 .. w ith,.,,.. cc;,,nt '.,...,.,ttf'nP'tacJ •""1 or <d.1 ·"' ln nr.u "'"•(,i•"q 10 bJ> '" tert"d 1n ,,.. do< o t 1n r•'PGft""· 10 '"' '0 'C>lv1nl w•IP\10 ti) •J·•Y .rll<t t~\ """"'°"''It \•tv• d t)t'I 'fO\'' ta Unl~v.10>0\I)•• llfJO·J ft:M.Jt0tt1u.1•t 11111;111 bl' rntf tttd unon 'f)f\11 thf)n 111 Cflif P'•+nt1ft and thl'\ rou•l '""V •~I~ tit jV"'tqn,f.,'lt ~,.jn\t •nu •or 1"4 ,,.,, ... ,,.. manoeo "' 1~ to,.,ol•mt wh1c.n ccw10 f~· "" ~''""''"~n\ &f Wit°"" '"~1nq °'""'°"''or ffOOit,tv or ot~r rel11 f '" Q\ie\ttd '" tr,itc.omr>tdlnt C If YOW wfi\h 10 \•tk UM .Nlvt<• of ,an .CtorMY lft "''' m.011 ... YOW -·o CIO •• prom'"' ,. '"'' your wrtUt n "'"'*°"M• tf •llY, m•y M filtdOf'lhMito O~•t<I JAouMy 211 ,.,, RICHAllO J WACtC Clo••> 6v NtJtmi'.t P•lmr r (>put'f ISEl\Lt 'Tht fW!Ord tl\Mpll)1nl 1nrh.MJ"' '"0"'' r")mo1~1nt .. c>lt1H'\t1H iN ludt•\ < 'l'l"·compl.t1n.in• ' dtitrntM01 If'\ Cludf \ 'rO'•\ d,.r-nd1nt \lnqut"r '"°' tl•b'>" 1"4• nlurdl dnO mtt\(yl1nt• In rluO \ '"'"'1n1ri" •nd nrutt'r A. w'lll•n ph ,.dln-tJ 1r1dun1n1) An dn~wtr ri.•muf'"· , •. , rtr mu\t bl" '" '""" torm 'f'QUirtd ny IN' (Aliforr1i1a Ruljlo' of Couf"'l V~ Of'•QU'"'' ptf11Jdlno mu\t bf' hli"C'I 1n th•' c°"'t wltl'I prO(>"r fll1nq ,,,., clnd ~C)()f that • COPY th'trtof Wi\ \trv..ct Of\ "'"(h DfAlr'ltlff ~ auorn .. .-"'nd 61' ••<"' oM•n 11ft not rror-"tC'nt,.d by an •lfOI'~ l~ ttme wnf"n 4' \ummon\ '' Ottmed \#rv•O ~ • °"'rty mi1y v•rv dtiM"no•no on""" mflthOd l')f \t ,..,,,,. ~or t•u~e. .... C.CP"l 101~ro11?h •tS .ta U •Otli<•I PAVLll MOllGAN MO NtwM<t C.ftter Orl¥t . SM1tt' l'tS Newport .... o . CA '1"0 AftOt'lWY ,., ~t11"tttt Publ••h..a Oranq.t Coa\t Ott11v Pil°' Cle< I, I 1\ 71. 1'16 S010-16 PUBLIC NOTICE NOTl~ O~ OOVEllNING IOAllOlirlEMal!ll EU!CTION ANO HOTICE YO OIC\..t.111 CANOIOACV lllOll SCHOOL OISTlllCY CM>VlllNING 1104110MIMalll ll\.ECTIOH TOBI llELO IN fll[ SEAL IEACH KHOOL DISTRICT NOTtC.E IS HEREBY GIVEN TOALLOUALIFICO PEqt;ONSln•l •l\~I"< '"'" w111 6e Mid •n lh~ !Mt•I Bl'~ S<'-4 Oltlrlcl. Co""'' 01 o '""""· ">tat• o1 (.4ttto'l"I'• on the 8tn d•V of ~r<h ... .,.,, fOf" tPM ouroo~ of ttrc••n<1 membff~ to .,,. 90YO•OlllQ "° .. " Of the IOl towlnQ dlllr I<.,. OtSTlllCf SEAL BEACH SCHOOL O•ST~iCT HUNTINGTON BEACH UNION HUMIEll OF GOVIEllNING BOAllOMIEMBl!llS TO llE E'-ECTEO l Hie;.. SCHOOL OISfRICT COAST COMMUNITY COlLECE Ott.i-RICl 1 Tru\t-••Arpa t 1 Tru\ff"PAt•AS Form\ tor P c t•r1nq < a"dl1'« y 1J"(t fnr lfW t'Om1t'\IU10" of canl".ltd.tf"' tor r~ "'""'''°" -'"' •vAllnOlr tr om tht otUte at'"'°' Ar.q1\\'d" ot Vot1 "•I \JOOS Vr ind Av•nu-\an1a An,. (A1t1orn1• ~'•'•tion\ ot t •ndtdMV Mld nc>m1Mtf0"" by pcn._,,f.., mu\\ DP t1Jrd witn '""' R~l\fter of \/fJI"'' •t tf'tc' •oow .oi:tr~\no t•ter tn~n ~ OOp m Of't O"trimt""' JO ,.,. O• TED'"'' 1'1"' ""'" o• Nov.mb-'r ,.,,, A E OL \ON ltMJ•\lrM o1 Vol,." Bv JEANNE TT£ 'Hfl TON Dtl>\JIY l401'1CI" OE ILE C.CION ........ Mll!MBllO OIL CONSl!JO OUB ERNA Tl VO Y HOT I CIA l'AllA OECLAllAll CAHOIOATUllA 1'411A MtlMBllO OE LA MISA 0 1111'.CTIVA l.>j I.A 11.JCCIOH 9Vt: SE VEltl FICAllA EN IEL OISTll ITOUGOlAll 01! SIAL a EACH rolf\.J PAESC .. T I! \E LC DA AVI~ A TOOA PEltS()NA CALll'IC>toA -..-YWrlll(ar• Ufl3 N•<tiOn tnet clt•trllo-.. « Cle~ k .. h CO<\d_.,. Or~. E•I-~ CAlllOrnt•. el ell.. 8 df MM10 tie ttn .,., .. •t Pf"-\110 de • ._..,,...., • ....,,o, p•r.-la m•wt')t-nltdt "'•••""'9ft!H d"lrlto> NUMlllOOE GOYEllNANTE.; OISYltlTO MllMlllOSOIMnA OllllECTIV/\ l'.t.ltASlll ELIGll>oi OIJTR•TOE!>COLAll OE 'fALl!fACH OISTltlTO HCOL.All OE SEC\INOAlttAS ' EH UNION OE HUNTINGTON!IEACH 01$Tl.ITOCOLCG•AL COMUNIOAOCOSTAL ' t. R~nt• Ar•• I f ~POf"ntt A.r'""' S l'O.r..,... o•rt ,..,., ••r..,. ce ftd'Ottlur•y Olr• "°""brM c.•nd•dttfo\ ,,.,,. '" ••"'• <Iott f"\t...,, Iii lfiu dl\po\lttonM\ '" nflC•M O<t hQl\:tr•r Of Voh•r\ t-n t'lOO S G'•nd A._,."'-""' \A"fA An1t (lillfl)ff"I'" f.AI•\ dfl>C"IArt1tlOnf'\,.,. <•ndldo:ltur, "'MIN>r•m..,,ltt'10 OOf"' SU\ fl,,ctoffl\ 6'" t'Jf>n ~,., itrCf'\lv•Ocn ton el Reql\trflr of Vot"'" Mt onmlcllio wn••<800 .tn· t•r10t,.,,.nt~ A"''' ••tdl'r • ••s) OOP,., ,,,.., di• >Ooe Otc.1embr"' 04· tt1' FCC:HAOOMI~ Hdt Novtemt><•d" l•lo A E Ol SON, R•O"I<•• 91 VOlfl\ PM JC.ANETTE 'Hl!'l TON, OllNlad• Pul>l•\l"'d O••~O• C.o•\I 0~11y Pltol 0..umbttr l I\, 71. 10• P \IBLIC NOTICE P UBLIC NOTICE NOTICI O~ OOltCllNINO llOAltO Ml.Mal II ANP 11,ICTION ANO NOTICI TO DacLAlll CANOIOACY POii SCllOOL OISTltlC'r oov••MINO llOA•OMI Mllllt I LI CTI ON TO •• lllLO IN n•I MIWl'O•'f·MUA VNll'llO SCffOOI.. DISTltlCT. NOTICE ISHERE8Y OIVENTOA~LOUALl,.110 PEllSONSll\et •n•te<• lion wlll lie Mid In IN NtwPOrt•Mt .. Uftlll.O Sc.,_ 01\lrltl. CAlunty ot Or-, Sltte of C.lllomla. °" Ille 1111 O.V ol Ma'"'-1'71. ~ ~ .,..,._ ol elt<ll"'I ,,_" to.lfte <i0vtrnlnt -•d ol U.. IOl-l"Q dhl•lch ; OISTIUCT ltl!Wl'ORf-Ml!.4 UNIFIED SQfOOL Dl~TlltC.T •u lllll• Ol'GOVEllNINO llOAllOMI MBlllS TO I I! ILICHO Pl.llJll""" ~ (otsl o.llV Pit«, COASTCOMMUlllTY _o.c ____ ' '-·-'-~·_»_._~_. 1_'_7• ___ ,..,_u_ .• _ 1 COLLEGE DISTRICT t •Tru-..A-.•J I · TrvtlffA'"a I I T r111tte ArH I I Tr"'l•A<•• 1 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 D A I L y p I L 0 T c L A s s I F I E D 6 4 2 • 5 6 '1 8 ' Wedoesdey. December 22. 1976 * DAILY PILOT €J The 81ccest Marketplace on the Oran&• Coast DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS You Can Sell It, Find It , Trade It With a Want Ad (642-5678) One Cal I Service Fast Credit Approvat Real htote Aentol1 .... 1000-2999 J000."699 Announ,ernents, Per s lost & Found ...... 5050.S.C,, Mtfchondl ........ 8000·8099 8usineu, lm1 .. fment & Finonciol . . . .. S000-~9 S«vic•• & Repairs 6000-6099 fmpfoyment & Preporofion . . . 7000.7199 ~n~ •••• 9000.9099 Automobh~ & other Tron otiOn ••.• 9100-99'99 ~~::: .~~ .~~ ....... ·I ~~~!~.~~~.~~ ...... . .... ol I 002 G......-of I 002 .•.......••...•........ t······················· PEACOCK HILL Spacious exec utive home in pre- stigious North Tustin. 3 Bedroom. 3 bath with view from balcony, on large estale·sized lot, near schools and rid· ing stable. $102,000. SEE TODAY ' CALL NOW 75 2-7315 DONALD M . BIRD Assoc iote s , Re a I tors NEWPORT ISLAND DUPLEX New lis ting in a prime rental area. r Year old duple x shows pride·of- owne rship lhruout. 3 Bdrms .. 2 baths each. Water sports are a few feet aw.iy. $162,000 Htut«! e~uoli~ • • tJi£U.ia! Uut CORONA OEL MAR · 675-3000 , _________ G..wrol 1002 ERRORS: Adnrtl1ers should ch.ck their ads daity and ,,.port er· rors lmmediat,ly. T ... DAILY "LOT aswmu liability for th. first in· correct inHrtion only. Pubis ... r's Notice: .•......•..•.••...••••• IAYFRONT llllrm~ .. I bath)>. new. 111•11•r mt·11111(·d: 2 Slllrv, it1l1o 11f "11111! & J!IJS~. J.ll\'I r111 lllla I :o\ H'I' Waler \ ll'W !)211!1,:'100 . associated - 9ROKER~-AEALTORS J OH W 9olboo &71.J661 NORTH TUSTIN l.;11 ~,. home on a l;,rgl' 1111 ltu ,1 larg<' family lllr l.1m rm. dm rm 11Ut•·t rc:-.1t1l•nl1al hwat111n n r t h ,. J u n ,. t 1 n n o ( c;i; '"Pl I-\•~~ Sil 000 1111-: 110 \11-:SELl.EHS i52 :'>3$:1 HouHs For Sale Kouns for Sale •••••••••••••••••••••• • ••••••••••••••••••••• G.....-ol I OOZ GeMral I 002 ·······················I······················· PIER & FLOAT AVAILU&.l If you'd like a nice place to dock your boat, see this; you can lease out the duplex that goes with it while it grows in value enough to pay for a bigger boat next Christmas. ,7).4400 REALTY DMlloll of H.t.or In• ......... Co. G....,.al IOH •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• SHOIECLlffS -POOL -SZlS,000 Want an exclusive address? A most distinguished looking exterior? Qu.iet neighborhood? A lovely 3 BR Enghsb rustic home with a picturesque set- ting? Then hurry to see this! 2 111 S• Jnqada tR1 Roed MEWPOIT CEHTB. N.I. '44-4' I 0 1002·G.....-al 1002 ....................... ····················~· SHINGLED ON THE ISL.AMO Shingled and charming 3 bedroom. 2 · story. close in on Balboa Island and in pe rfect condition with hardwood floors, brick patio. copper plumbing and sunny decor. Walk to bay and to buy. Asking $119,500. Ul-.il VU I: t1VMI:§ REAL TORS'. 675-6000 2443 East Coa\t H1qhwav, Corona del Mar ..il\o 111 M1·~.1 V1·1Cf•• •. 11 !J·IG !>090 All rcJI e'lJlC a<IH•rt1~cd '"LhJS lll'Y.Sl>·•J.l•:r I~ :-uh Jl'lt lo the Ft•tlcral F.11r llou~tn~ \l l of l !lltll Y.hH:h mJkl'' 1t 1lll•g<tl IO :.1 d n :rl1sl' ··Jn~ µn· r<•rcncc. llm1lJtion 11r d1!>cn mmat1on huscd un rac·e. c-olor. n •h.:111n. ~t''· or national or1.l!m. or :.in 1nll'nuon to mak<' 11n\ ;,IJ(.'h prrl<'rl'nt·,•. ltm1la t1on.nrd1:.t·nmm;.itwn · -G~ I 002 General 1002 Thi~ ncw:.pJJ)l'r will not knn.,.1ni:I~ at·t·,·pt ;111y 11dvcrL1;.1ni:: for n•<t l c;,tulr which 1~ HI \llOla· lion of tht' la w. HcMises for Sale ................•...... 1002 ..••..•......•...•..... ---------Happy Holidays From ~ COATS& WALLACE REAL ESTATE. INC . NEW ON MARKET LEMON HEIGHTS ~ni..111onal homr .... 1th l•----------µool. v It! w ,1 n tl a 11 Ciive Your Wife .• mrn1lH'" "1,oth1n.: " A Home For 11el•d1•1I hut th,• rr )!ht J.1m1h w ho w,1nl ~ .1 Chri~tmas ··shuwpl.tn• homl' ,\ ll untini:t fln ilt?al"li lhght•n.ih1llJnc1 ..i \ll'" Ot•anc llomt·. iildt 1:.! 111 ltK' world helt1Y. "1th I Cleon. nc11t. 4 Burm. f.i m lldrms, l.irl!l' rJmll) rm. recently p:.11ntcd m r •>om I! I J m n r nu' ;.ind out llnat door. palro, k11 chcn. formal d1n1n1t l)!e ba(•i<yard Xl nt fa m1 rm Jnd a bc..iulilul Jl•IOI I) home Olfcrrd at a low andpat10 arl'a . Fanl11st1c:-S60,500. groundb Call for ap po1n1 m c n t ta sec ~UPERB ~.soo. HOMES Wi\TI HrnOro/T -RfAlfY .... ltOMI.!> 1555 W B•k•r.C M. REAL ESTATE Neat 10 Markel 8u ke1 631· 1400 549 • 86SS '~.~~:rr~·I . ~----_,,__ Uva ~The leach IFYOU ha vc a ;.erv1rr to offt•r or 1111otls 111 !.ell. plan.' an ad 1 n I h l' I> a t I v I' 1 I o 1 ClasMf 1ed Sect ion !'hone fi<IZ.56711. ...............................•............•. NEWPORT IEACH Oldest bar & restauca nl 111 area ; J doors l•> the "Jler $150,000· Terms Bolboa lay Prop. R.aftors .. 675-7060 . l IDRMS $39,500 Sharply up~raded, rt<'hly lndscptl 3 hd, I', bo . 1-:rl·en bt>lb . rec ar<'u. comm pool, an fo r undl•r SIOK Lo.in a .. sum uhlc or new V/\ 1-'llA term:.. f>.'6-M!ll ----fllll MESA VERDE + CiUEST HOUSE Lovely J bd, 2 Im home. llas oew crpl.9 & drps. J>rurrwt1 c floor to t•c1hni: i.ltme frplc. All of thi:. + J(Ul'St apt w/bd. Lil. & h11t h Onl y S65.fl511. 5-15·!~!.ll. CiOLF COURSE VIEW fllflly u p~radcd. \'Cry spacious home on golf course. 4 bds. master down. 21~ ho, frmJ din, Ille lam rm, wet bar & expansi \'C view. 545-!149) . • EXEC MESA VERDE HUCiELOT 4 bd, 2 ba home in.~olct> Me:.a Verde. Lge-LH. w/stone frple, frml din rm, fam kitchen <.:ul·dc· sac st & xtra Jgc lot. N~w­ ly listed at $115,000. 5-15 9491. • CALLUS FOR C:0...1fTwnhse1 111 Tustin /Irvine From $36,000 Co St~ll.()(l(f EXCl':Ll.ENT TERMS THE HOMESELLERS 752-5353 ... in this custom-built Co nte?m po r ury 4 hcdroo m . 2 b a th P e ninsula home . Tcr · rauo, natura l wood , hu&e patio. G~ot (or tn fotmol llving $132,005. GaMrol I 002 G......e I 0o2 _ ...... -............ 111 ............................................. . CCII 640-9900 .t4'tW-1e~~ Valley Realty OPPORTUNITY knocks often when you U.'4! result.getlmfl 0111ly rilot Clas~if1ed Ads lo r<'ach the Orange Coa~l market. " Phone 842·5678 ----------· mecneb /Irvine realty .· A YICTOllAM C ... STMAS Move into this very special view · home in time ror the Holidays. It of. fers 2 bedroom studio, 2 baths,· paneled woodburnlng tireplace, country kitchen, leaded glass win· dows -all the amenities for an Old· Fash ioned ·C h ristm as! Asking $168,500 on lea~e /option basis. Polly Johnston &42·8235. (V65> IA YNOMI' LOT The only Jot for sale on Promontory Bay! Large (approx. 50x100) -well located -the wide-end. Owner has Coast a l perm it for dock. A ref.l va lu e at $189 ,SOO . Ca t hy Schweickert 6'2·8235. CV33> 642 .. 23$ 644·'200 901 Dover Drive HarbOr Vltw C.nttr lrvlne •t C.m!IUI Vtllty Center 752·1414 ! . (2 DAILY PILOT * WednMday. Decemlw 22 1978 ~~!~!.~~~•••••••• ~:!!.~~•~•••••••• 1~~!!!.~~~•~••••••• . , Houu. For S• Ha.M~ For Sale HCMt,H For ScM CorOfto ct.I Mar I OU lniM I 044 ....._ I 044 HCMI~ FOt' Sciff Hotls•s For Sc:M Other ll•al &tot• ·•······••·•··•·····•· ·•··········•·········· .•••.•.....•.•..••..... •······················ ··········••···········•·••• .....••••••••...•..•.•..•••.•...•.••...........•..•......•........... •••••••••••••••••• le-.h I 041 .......... ...__. le-L. I 0•9 hK"9 p----. 2000 o._.,.... I 002 G~ I 002 G~rot I 002 ,RIVA TE --------------L9l)lllMI -....,_,.... • -" 9 • -,..... ·1 ••••••••• •••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••• ••••••• • •• • ••• •• ••• ••••• •••••• 11..ACH ACCISS TUl"l'U IOCIC •••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• S56,900. " IA Redund OPEN HOUSE IY OWMbll s.,..-d0c •• vt.w NEW PRIME $30,000. Per Unit A F.AMIL Y DELIGHT S5~.500 4 br, H~ bath home with family room , Swedish woodburning fireplace. new til<' paint. PV stone patio with bnck B13Q m Costa Mesa. NEW COST A MESA LISTINGS! REDUCED TO $59,900 Lovely 3 bdrm., 2 ba. new ('arpet. Xlnt l<x:ation. Near :.Ill !-.ehooh. frwys & shopping. f,,ob of t•harm Large lot. Quiet street. EXCELLENT CONDO S54,900 2 br., 21h ba., 2 car garage w/ garage door opcnl'r. Lar ge size ~ooms. bltns . lovely patio. 2 pools, Jacuzzi, 2 tennis eourts, dubhouse. Llkc having a vacation !! Near m a jor shopping, schools & freeways. Priced for quick sale. OPf'OltTUHITY C4R.Ell NIGHT Come as you a r e and get the details on your future in the lucrative real estate profession. Speak directly with out Fountain Valley ~anager. Available Tues and Thu:\ evening 6 to 9 p.m . or call for appt. Pl.AH TODAY FOR YOUR TOMORROW 18055 Magnolta St .. Fountain Valley 963·831 1 Gette-rol 1002~of toSl09,500. ~ ~ Seclude Easyh\•'i;,2 br. WcrterfroettCCHtdo PRESENT The 11m•t• I~ rlKhl, the _,DEC l6TN nn 1'llln DIC le>tt. den. 2''z ba, wood & 2 Br. j! s ly tri l~Vt•I Newport Beach rtei.enl yo111 l<'tn1ly th1:. lvt Jllnn 1:. i.:rcal, the 2 Stor y, 6 BR-Plan 7. Giant wood &lass. Earth ~ned l.'On· fo1mal dln rm 00' flout If )our dwnl will put ui• hiin<bomc 31m homt• tor m-ar lxlrm I~ i;:1unl, the beamed step down living room w /floor do. $118.~. 499·4148. s I i p . $ 2 0 0 • 0 0 u . .1t ll'll~t ZS'(. duwn untl tilt! hohd••>i. Shake roof yard i>. pool i.111.-d, the to ceiling frplc. Formal dining room 1-'h.~ 7091.__ -wanl!I bt:twt-t•n 12 & 2C & warm frplr 1•1t-nty of I u n d 1 i-f e 1• . l h <" • umt:. 'A 1th ., N,•wport 'A OOd&g1ec11t'rv l'nmr balhrooin11 arc two 11ml family room. kitchen wmool<. Beaut. MR.EXECUTIVE Bcuch a c.ltlr c1'!>. ut lo<'. 1n i.lnt nlJrhood lhd1rt·1>l1H'c11urc100. landscaped, low maint . yard . Don't mlsa this beauty UNl>Jo:Rs.:•O.OOOJX•rumt, PJr asH11ll tod11y 644°721 I Secluded master bedroom, lower floor l()(:aLed in exclusive fl1.: CALL r111ht uwuy" 898-8755 5'"0-3666 t d •· · Canyon! 4 bd, loaded .,, rooms open o gar en \X patio areas. 3 wircature~ on iirune ·~ 11 .Quail ~ • ~~ Car garage, loads of storage & many acre view lol' Muhl sec • Plac• , f[ c:; ft ]j a extras. LOCATION Lo a.pprecla~c. Cull ror Prop1trti•• i Jl#Uu# Call Don Olk 1714113~9609 Of' Few short blkll to tennii. details. "311~ 7S1·'920 ~~·-··-·-"·-CAM.,:os11otu·:s ~ cou rt11, with 40 un i•ooou•n" 1o1tw1>0u11"c"' We're he re to help! Liv rm.&•µ l>inrni:. 3 Br, l714 I 751-4642 dewloped ocres behind a ---- 3bJ Prol d,,,. Poul, pnvaLe palio Ocean & 18 UNITS NEWPORT BEACH D·U·P·l·E·X fll'llc1 lhan rww two '>l11n .1 'hllfl "'alk fl Olll the l~ad1 Jloll1 u1111:. .1rc !. lll·druom 2 hjth. lux urv w11t-.. 1111 1·011ll'r lt·e 1111 l'ull pnl'c :>l~.000 ( . 'u. ~:.b·ltibll C:::SELECT T' PROPERTIES VA Buyers Call 'Now vurkUke }ti. Slllll.~IOO by city vus. 2 Ddrm s own('r.t:Jll6'\4 11111 HYntincJto"~och 1040 lrviM \044 ICM.~ At.I. 2 llEUK OOM •••••••••• •• ••• • • •• • •• • •••••••• •• •••••• •• ••• ··~~~~~~~~~1 ___ ;;~;; ___ mlll! FOUR Y t: A llS 0 I. U CHOICE EASTSIDE JUST LISTED CLIFF DRIVE UNDl::R $116.~l l'Ett UNIT 48R 2HA homc 11\•ar Wc!>td1l I shopp1n~ lit :.chool'I l'layhou,,e 111 re ar yard , boat 1·amp..r i.torJI(<' CA l.L toda) lo :O.l·1· llll'i fllll' fam1lv home t>l5 ftEHG • l'pgraded 3 Bedroom Yorktown Villa w1tb «W>Wm drupe1>. A!'isuma- hle FHA Loan C:.ill An)11me! .......... Loccrtion TRADE/SELL A Greenbelt loccitivn und Extra spacious l bedrm W1lh view. walk lo beii<'h I£ .Quail ~ a mountain view are only home. mint cond, Ira or boat. Sunbalh on lar.:c • Pl .. sundeck. 2 bcd rnorn, ac• the lit art of a long lis t ol fenced } a rd. '-eCludcd Pr ti specialties. A 4 Bedroom CIOSC·IO $57.50-0. "Z' family room. 2 h;it ap•r •• + I)(' s Bed cw.I.Om f'c'Apor1cr. ~lui.t 752·1920 n or room Realtor. 4!H St. I I ~·-· ,0 lw•lic\'", Sl.t9,c .. w• 1•00 OUAll s1 NlWl'OIT ttACH SCOTIREALTY 536-7533 lldmpton Ill Greentree ~~ • ~ ~ "'"' Homes. that makei. )Ou l.acJunaHiffs 1050 645-3474 feel like you·re J country ••••••••••••••••••••••• •• I.,..,.._.,_ ,. _ __.......,P,...,R"'-€H IG€ ----_•_•_-_•_·~~~~~ resident. Give )Ourst:lf a Beaut3 Br, cntrl ;i1r, huge 1 I 1 • I _.__-+-_HOME:S SOL VISTA pre-Chnstmus treat and gar. frµlc, sprklr1>, dose 1 _ ___ call. to shops, schoo~. frwy. Custom beauty with J Br. Red Carpet Rcultori. ~7-4425 anytime. :::::·::~:!=::::..i Two 3 OR 1Jou1tcs, on s ep & formal dining. could be 833 3380 • C·I lolb. nt•ar C \f. Civic .i br. Atnum & family ~~~~~~~~~ILoglMG NICJUel I 052 Center. SJS.000. e<1 r 0 0 m . s u p e r -••••••••••••••••••••••• ~7-4834 11(1 6pm. or 702, neighborhood. Priced t.o PRICED TO S~LL, by 298 2400 Owner. sell. owner. SllS,000 Im med Shaded Trtt1-Garden $57,950-Vacant Move rii:ht in ' C:ool. :.hudy y11rd' uround this 3 ~droom hom1• w 11 h den und dimng room Pul &-lly i.tO\'e to warni your toe:. IJ)'. Trailt·r parkm~ Minimum tore yard. l,oL-. tu orfor, llKH, t•Jll WES'T SIDE REAL TY INC 84 H-2J73 Real Estate byN.rNAY occup<&ncy. Luxury 2 BR, library, Rancho Snn Joa. quin Condo. Jo'ully ap· po inted, inc ld oir. M7·3S67 or vn . Spm & wko<h ~4·5704 Elbow Room! Family Rm. + D.n $69,500 -Hurry TWO.STORY NJGU~LSHORES 3 Bt + den. Exclusive gate guarded area. Mir11 vu, mtn.s & night lights. $129,500. JAY W. Y£AT~ Rt;ALTORS 499·22.li SEA TERRACE 1076 ......•................ THE VIEW Al.ONE IS WORTH $115,000. Mo\'e in nnw. ROYAL REALTORS 10049Camino<le Estrt•lla Capo. Bch. 4113·2\.13 San Juan Capistrano 1078 ..•.••••.............•. Uy O\\ ner :! n It rnrulo S42.500 Assume Fiii\ loan C31149S·03:!:l Macnab· Irvine ln .. \1.1\ t U~l l 'A;\'I 6 UNITS EASTSIDE Brand new unit!>. 3 BR . hou11e; 2 BR/dtlnowner·:-. unit PLUS 4 two bedroom units. Ilwlt·in:;; pd vatt• putlos; laundr) room: 6 .iarai:es Net•d tax free cxd1angc • will tradl' cl o wn Lo con clommium 11 or 2). l::x ccllenl locution ! $275,00U <V34) Lynne llolhdl 64.i.ti200 4..PLEX, $76,500 1--------------1 ~WliW RADIAHT IEAUTY r RELL Z Slory POOL home IEST v ALUE mR l"euturi:s plu:;b carpels, ...................................•........•. \'t'r..allle floor pl:in 1n Ous bUnbhin~ 3 Bedroom humC'. Jncludci. central air condillo01nl(. t'Ot)' f1repluce, ull dclui.c k1l r he n. Great family neighborhood. Ju.-.t ll11t ed, hurry, UK ll, call ~1720 4BR 2ba popular ·•J· Plan. Corner lot, qwct cul·de·sac. heated Po<>I. l..oca1ed in !he pn \ate comm.·4 Lenmb courts. rec. center. walk tc heach. ENJOY T llE GOOD LIFE. $125,000. Well bwlt. 2 ~ r old m xlnl 31901 PASEO CIELO appreciation location c Off Del Obii.po)· ncarpropo:.cclnewshop Charming 2700 :.ii. ft pmi: cenler. Low vac<1n· 48R. on approx. 1 ~ acre c:y fJclor Ill l>mog . free Formal d1n, pan'ld fam llemet Valley, a wmler rm w/wet bar Prorty .rt'S<irt often refrrn:d to Luxurious 4 BR. home. Family rm. & formal dining, with view toward Harbor Island. Boat s lip. $325,000. BI LL CR UN DY, RE A LT o·R . 341 Boy~1d(· Orn'" N 8 675 · 6161 IH 11\LUFFS! decorawr drupes. 4 l:idr .. Raluced $10,000' \ iew of "#1 ht Colifornlo" man 1 c u red ya rd i.. water & night light:>; 3 -------;-.;Jlural wood:., fJm1ly bdrms., 21., baths, i.pht -----------1 r oom w 1 l h cot Y level. Very prt \-Ulc, 2 S.parote HOtlMS (1rcpl.1ce. Wallpaper e n I a r g e d p a 1 1 o on 1 tot. !-\ill or Ea:.t.side Clo!>C lo schools, park, Cooperul1\-e seller will Charm $85.000. shopping ~4450 __ _ ;Jllow for 1-0me tlt'l't1r.1t 3 Bedroom/2 loth TARBIU .. #I I" CaliforaJcr" mi: than~"'· St:IJ,000 Ubl Raragt> t'ence<I Call&nsel' ~ard.S.'i0,750 'fl•rm~. Roy McCordt. f HA MOVE RIGHT IN F abulou:.. locutio n , C. F. Colesworthv REALTORS 640-oofo R eoftor 18 I 0 Newport Costa Me'a 548-7729 1r-sUMABLE stone·~ throw rrnm ll·n· l"1 rus & pool, lll'W puinl, Choil'l' opportunity for a tarpet, dr;1pl':.. bO<I & i:ood home and a 1:rcat · kl • lkl m 2 C::::::CUATIS 8AA01.EY CO ,REAlTORS ~ •H·4S8A WALK TO IEACH Great Coast Royalc area. 3 Bedroom vie" home. Beamed l'l'ilingi., fireplace, renl'ed yard . · , as ''Lillie Pa lm Spr. ldscpd grounds. $164.500 inl(S ''. Seller nwy con *BOHO REAL TY * :.1der VA. GAl.1..ERYofHOM 1-;s PROf'ESSfONAI. (714>831-9411 HEALESTATt: 714 !12S·77!itl; 925 7Sl3. Ask for Ann next to.new park. Walk h. Santo Ana I 080 s hopp1n11 . buses, too. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lok for Sole 2200 $127,SOO UWNll 2br. !(Ootl lon1t10n. ••••••••••••••••••••••• .ni·wly dl'1,:0r'11i JUl!t So Loh-Costa Meso Oak St. SJti,!100 5!.li l2<MI 2 va cunt, I w /olJ c r etteral 100 1002 H El G HTS UH 0 [ R • l':xtru mci· Spu n1i.h 3 Br, ludn •n lhc <'t'nlcr of 11. li. spnn er!'>. .. r :.. · -famrm. rrml cl111, new r I haths, famil y rm !'lta~:.1vt• stone 1rep 8l·c. Cuherdalc. S73,900 $60 000 paint. J>aJ)('r. <'Pl & ro<>f. 24· family rcXJm, rarpct· 72 8 36 house. nxl. door is ncw1·r 496-22 • 31-08 Othet-Real Estate 1'0nst Can be bou..:ht a!> a •·•··················· Give Her a Merry Christmas & A Happy New Year • 1, Bt.1'R00)l 'A Jll 1111• ltl\11r1nu, lrrmm1n,_;, l.l.1\•·r !-ihlln•, '17'1 ,tOll EARLY BALBOA,.. 2 C11ll.JJ:••' un H 3 lot. On tht• 1J1.'t1111 .. ula :1 111-drm-., .mil one ht•d• m ~.01.M1 PETE BARRETT -REALTY- 6tM200 • j u .-; n f( 0 () \[ () n ,, • • • lt•\cl Frml 1>1n SJnt.1 Pa~ Ro~ Ana llt>11!hb -.x:?,.ll'NJ 21 18 Santa Ano A •e. ·~ Hl:.IHttHl\1 Ont• )r nc" 011 I" 1111.; 111 u l Costa Meso s12s.0011 'l'ou ~re the "Inner of '.! • ;J Ut:IJl{()()\I 1 h: Ill k1•l1-In lh" f~m rm 1'1< I 1111 "'u" Sporh. Yacotion Cul de S.tl' •>I I I 1 'uw & Rec.reationof Bh·d SI 12 700 V h" ._ Sho WE Wl~ll YOl" \ e tc.. w 111 th,• MJo~RHY l'll HISI :\1 \.'\' AXAHEl\f 400[.17"* FOtt.~ll! ...: l) ~ v I:: ~ T I II ~ CM • • ,.. C'F.:>:Ttm ' ·~· .. · .·~-.. I I I ~'°==== -.. 111 .! I 1r11 . Jll 'l l',ill h42 ~IR, •"<l :t.1.1 h> -..---------c 1 1.11111 your lH"kL'I ., 1002~1 t002 ....... .. .............. ............ .......... . fllc~~11 •• ~,'il~r IN A CLASS IY R'SB.F An authentic "W11liam.sburg'" col- on i a I has Just been c r eated' Custom. quality features incl. the most mmutt· d etail~. make this architectural c1rc<1m an outstanding achfovem~nl & d•~ttnct asset to the community nf Corona dC'I Mar. Particulars a vail w/app't. Present· ed al $175.000 A COU>WEU. UNkY CO. 644-1766 ••••••••••••••••••••••• package or i.epar alt• 11.i :. evcryth1nie. 2110 mi.: and drapes. 515.000 ~ Churm 111g ':1 hl'.Uroom ,\lonr11\ ia. 1;.Jti 11111!1. down pays to f'H/\ TSSH2·E1.000 ....• with hunl"<lCi<l ll1lC1r~. 011 Owni•r halunl'e and S409 per .i h1Jl tu1 ~ .. w1111rt Cot M 1024 month pays all. $5!1,900 ll:lrbor ll11:h Srhool I>" s a esa full price HURRY ! VIL AGE .. Minion Viejo I 067 Mobile Homes C:ill for more 111for J\~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• For S• 1100 1Ji3·71i01 NEED MORE ROOM ? ••••••••••••••••••••••• • Mobilt'. Modular Jlomr Ai. 'fo th11> lovely starter Hui ld1ng Uchvcry, St•t * ... * M. Trafton lr1t!l. Sµrut:~ u11 and •.••••••••••;••••••••••• 531·5800 L ·· · . 'ave.CALl.751 :ll!tl l•uw \h•:.a \t•rdc2Slory. l~Real REALTORS ho m '-' o 11 a h u I( e , up, & Service. 675·75711 l>eautrfully landHaped fur frece:.t. or info. 2034 Cherrie Costo Meso SELECT .11n1·111t 1e' :>!lG:700 Ph -----------I Ornngc Tree L..1k1· Condo !p S fir. :!'• ha, man\ EstateHe-twork -------- PROPERTIES 151 "1:J30pr111only lbr + loft. AC. Up lol. you <·an add two -. ---.--more bed r mi.. This 8x26 self contd. full hath, s hakc -rooft•d h o m e ju.5trefm1shed1n!>1de Sri w firepldl'l' is in a up \\'Ith awnm~. Sl!IOO You urC' the wlnner of :! llcke~ to the $36.950 Ulll d1•r11r,111n~ ,,_, .i,. l11:htlul linr k pauu ,1r•'<1' 111 mpl1mrnt th1, 'PJ•·1ou~ I 'torv to" n htorn•· II \1111 Jn• pa\lnit \\ •" t 1 • d I t' 11 l Ill (Ill(' \ • lll'll•' \•)Ill dl.HltT \o ~ct "'ml· La" dt>cluc t101h " a -..1\ 111~s ar cnt :.l.1rtl·d Sm dn pymnl IJll:>bllilc •~'6-7711 . ..---.... Walker & lee Real Estate OCEAN VIEW '\11r1h LaRuna ll1·.1e h Cnnno Lariw I ho.••h m . I ' b;Jlh (m•pl;H ;o t-;\ 11.•nslv1• o,umlel'k w •fun 1n~111· \ ll''A .. :,r1u .. 1vc Sllll.~ f>.14·7270 FIXER UPPER llarhnr P<1c1f1c lgt> studio, 1mmae , sunken fplc, In nin· nrr~hllorbood pool. JJ l'Utz1, ocean llnni: your J>Jtnl & fLC vww. 1681i2 Pacific Coast ~110.01111 .crea, J~ktnK ll w'. HB. $43 ,000 ~1.!1~1 Ah'l n7:l 7t>Ol 71 1 R-16·9516 afl Ii wkdy!>. grade.,, Tennis. SJ:?. 700 675 6327 aft 6pm THE TERRACE ~ll \LI TY l.OCA Tl ON !'Hll·6_17_J _____ _ and t'lo!>e to bhnpping~ Conwnerciol Sti:!,500. Property I 600 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sports, V occrtion & Recrecrttonal Vehicle Show :'11",,i \'••rdi• 1 hr. 3 h.i, __________ • __ 12 soR:'>t .. 2BA .• LARGE .,..Quail~ 1,1m 11111 I:,'(. It\ rm l.vc fam1ly /k1tche:n areci Iii Plcac• · I REMODELED opens onto your own ti 1:r.x111 ,,.m " J..1,·uL11. pri\'atc. co,•crcd p:itlo. Prap•r •• 1•0\ •·n '<I 11.1110 O" nr. "' 1 ( 1s2·1•no , COTTAGE (2wet location. ub o ''°° OllA1Ln. HIWPOIT HACH a11PI 551i 11:\.I ~1:!0.000 greenbelts and close to - at thl' A"l1\J1t-:1M CONV~NT JO N SSS$$$ ci-;;-.;nrn. Jan. 2 thru Jan.!> Vacant lot 5!lx2!lo in C1ll 642-567R. rxt 333 to <.:o:.La )lc:.a, L01Wd C·J. Great for s mall b1C>1nl·~~ elo1m your t1ck1·1~. or • ,inH•!>lmC'nl for only ____ • * * GRACIOUS LIVING + INCOME UHIT Tlu·cc luxunoui.ly lar~e bedroomi. kcynolc one of our bci.t East Side orfrr· lll~S. The :!Ox30 Ii \'Ing room, pool. i;cut'~t house, :1 <'.Ir .i11r:i~e with i.hop spnre an<f loft mnkl' this a wonclerfully rlt•xible home lor ll lar1o:e fom1ly 'ew pa1nl und plush cnrpcl1ng too .· PLUS Rental Unit 1n hack. orEN UOUSE'SUN 1·5: 197\JTui.tm Orand new carpels, dr:cpes, paint and leaked noon.. Enclosed g;Jrden room hi gh lii,:hts thii. i.pectac u lar home . :.I Bedrm .. 1 1~ Bath, 2 lireplaccs. Just a 's hort · walk from ~olr course in o ne or Huntington cvcryth•n,:?. HURRY, Hewportluch 1069 won •t labt long al $68,500 •••••• • • ••••••••• •• •••• 565.000. CALL 008;33UI. Out of County Property 2550 1.k'ach 's I inest areas. /\II 833·8600 lhJ.S lor only $83,000 . HOLIDAY SPECIAL '+523 CAMPU5l>a:IRVOfE OPEN DAILY 8A.M. T06 P.M. FEED THE DUCKS katila .. rrom the l i?"c . waterfront deck; 2·sty. s ••••••••••••••••••••••• Apple Valley s a crt· W11:abin. Rest Jren. rca:.. Call G7S·9123 <1rt. 7pm BR. & playrm.: 3 ba. ....11 Inn Xlnt cond. Walk to Po<>ls, '----~--•RI. tennis & ocean. $96.500 -----Rtontols CAYWOOD REALTY · ••••••••••••••••••••••• * 548· I 290 * lrte:Oftle Property lOOO HouMs narnlshed ---------............................................. . SPYGLASS JllLL. Vu, 31--------•llcrlbocrP•nlnsulcr 3107 Br 2 Ba, lust brand new 8 UNITS ••••••••••••••••••••••• howiebyowner.G'.!_0.:_l~ Santa Ana. Five2 bdrm. $300. Penn. Pl. Nr Buy & UDO ISLE. By owner & 3 l·bdrm. Prime pr~· ocean. 2 Ur unlll June. perty. $125,000; l S/f (213)2.!3·5316. • T:.ike 4 Bedrms, Den and1_________ 3 Br. 2 Ila, I~. patio. down Family room, add Po<>l. la It 1""'9Dculoh1 $150,000. 673"1610 llLL GRUNDY Sp.1c111u~ •1 llr, 2 Ba. f>Cean Jacuz7i. hre·ring and Thill home would make NEWPORT SHORES REALTOR 675-6161 lront homt•. i-·rple, IA jQ "I ~ ~uperbdel.'orating Sel in anything In "Better d 2 · l wshr dryr, dshwshr, 2 Ual I Vely nn ghborhood on 2 br, 2 ba. en. patios, $7"'' I 0 d Homes" look take the 3 000 rar J1.1r. .,.., mo. ava1 L,.:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:1 Plac• • pnvat.c. tree lined Cul de Santana Wmds just blew ~041;~~~~r. $7 . . UNITS Jan tu.July I. No pct~. Prap•rtl•a Sac, PJY Qnly S92.ooo and lhroUJ1h! The decor or .:....:~-------644·95tl2 aft 7PM 7s2 920 happ1ne~s is sur e lo ·---------"4 80 -------------1 -1 follow' this "Deane llomc" is ~-7·.lll:l8·30·3.2-~f1.,, · · Hewport Beoch 3 I 69 S59 950 ••oo_OllAll si Htw~ llACM II nolhin1t but lit class and LIDO ISLE 2:)4-286-SOM!:: 1' 1xcr Up· ••••••••••••••••••••••• , Dono Point 1026 R b rt all 3 Bedrooms nre bill 2 Bdrm.+ den; frplc .. 2 pen. SOME brand new, 28 2h 0 IK Av .1 .. '' .. h 0 e S and brl0 ht l The W~tk patios·, beamed "ell. t1·v. S 0 M E Pr l d c ·Of r. 8 p . :ll now f ftturoom.' 1111t t ••••••••••••••••••••••• "' .. " toJunctSNwplShores rrom lhe Cam1ty kitchen $14S ooo ownership · • · ··ti ,,1 n11nit h1>1nt• "it h H"'RIOR LIGHTS Realty rm. ' . . $:100 mo $J00c/b P h 1w 11r ni·w plu~h r11rnl't """ looo lhe yard and the 3 Bdrm .. urvtatcd kitch.. c:u ,.,11 2 ,·,,1., )o"" 1.,7•7 fl{-;Jtlltful l.1nt1 .. 1·,q1111i: Vl('W from th1:1 Dana Muollncto• 11eat11 you leave without want· $147,000 llJ with !>pnnklcr~ l.lil'll\l'tl l'oiul lhl. $45,000. ln1t 1t! Try It-you'll see. ' Plac• Houses Uftfuml1hed .... OR, .... S RE"'LTY ------........ 11: Pr LI• ••••••••••••••••••••••• '"~ Wood ><hmgll' r:; .. c. c:rt>at m•c•nn «< hnrhor l8Ulkublh4. <:tlSlom Ga:r;cbowon'tlel frpl., spr~ & span ! I aauall ~ .......... 'c. ... ""''~"--. 1n r1ne 111•1.:hborhoml nr f"ll " """ ..... ap..... • S. Co11::.l l'J.1111 * 49~ no57 * ......... Oft Red Cerpel lleultor TS2•lf20 G9Mrol 3202 216 I SAN JOAQUIN HILLS AO. li ~-HcrrbOur I 042 "'33-3.'l80 ,1400 QUAil Sf. ,..,W,Oaf UACM ••••••••••• ••••••••• •• • INHEWPOATCE!!l!Hl!TE!!!q~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~J 64 11 ~-~ Triplex under cons true-•••••••••••••••••••••••1~~~~~~~~~11~~~~~~~~~ U-NITS=io.-F:oi.;tsldc, BELMONT SHORES On ·0·8811 uon. Upper units have ON WATER, 30' BOA1' &..pMa.ech 1041i: shows prid e o f watcr.2s1y.C.apeCod,3 ocean view and each unit SLIP. 3br + 3ba Condo. ••••••••••••••••••••••• llG CANYON ownership! Call 645 0303 nr. 2 9.8 · fam rm, s un· &.Mt-.. t002GeMMll 1002 ANYTIME hai,rireplacc.$140000. Allking $158.990. M•ke MYSTICHILLS v~-s21s.ooo Forelit E. Olson Jnc. deck.$600mo.Avl.Jan, ••• ••• • • • •• • • ••• •• •••• • •• • • • ••. • ••• ••• ••• ••. •• ' ofr. Ownr. (7141840-1879 ,., '"' Rltrs. ~·5093 or (213) 68\ ·5331 l~~~~~~~~~J 4 3 br, 3 ba, Sauna, 9Pf'C· View Newport Bay lo .-....... t~'-~ 320• ---~---- cae: 110111 ELKINS CD. OVER SO YEARS OF SERVICE FIRST OfRllHG! LOVIL Y UDO ISLE Charming 3 Be droom Ho m e. Features Unusual Wall-Paneling & Coverings. M str. Bedroom Has Separate Dressing Area, Walk-in Closets. Street to Strada Location For Extra Privacy. Large Patio - Great For Entertalning. $149,500. llOADMOOll Pl.AM Ill 11«5 CANYON Fantastic View & Complete Privacy 4 Bedrooms , Lus hly Planted Grounds w /Pool & Fircplt. Jacuzzi A<ljoins Master Suite. Golf Course View. Ovenlzc Lot on Quiet Cul De Sac 1295,000 • 1 DOYIR DlllYI 631·1• 1· ~MCHOIAGI t..cular vu, aront Exec. Catalina I Iron aat.e en· RESORT PROP -a -9 •-'--. '044 hom"'. $15£,000. Open M oth Ji l • • •••••••••••••••••••••• ,...-ti:TM.wTt ......,_. " ~ ~m· waltmb mVIEW! Mv a"ri· ..., UNITS on 4 acres In l·Bdrm., t h". Good l"", MESA DEL MAit ""-_.., ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• House Sun . l ·S, 1433 ,..,., -B G BE .. "" Soper sharp 4 bedroom & 1714) 49 .. 771 I Coral, Al(t. 673·7601 blc ftrcpl11ce. Paneled downtown 1 AR 3 Un/. $315, ye11rly family. Fresh paint, new -PETYS formal dming room. Wet blks. from lake. lncomt W1LLIAM WIHTOH r ;:i r Pel 9 th r u out . Pountoht Volley I 034 TOW,,..HOUSE LA«iUNA b:ir. Spacious kitchen & is $50.000. yrly. Salet. Real ~late 675·3331 "·· t ( I k teh n L e • t E tra la r g price la S240,000./ $60,00C -°"auiu 1 e · ar1t. ••••••••••••••••••• ••• 28DRM-1'LANA HIDEAWAY pan r y. x e down. Seller will carry Cot-oftcr•tM.-3222 )•ard on quiet !ltreet FOR SALE by owner in Pl A od 1 master wing. Glassed balance at s•~P. Ownc.-r ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ready lo mo\.~ Into Of ~·ounlain Valley 3bd, Stunning an m c 2 Bedroom & den i view patio. Loads of h fl'red at $611 500 Call localed on g reenbelt. Canyon w/secluded rear storaae. 3 '"or aaraae. trdcsdepetate. needs ens Or •S. of Jlwy, newer, 3 hr, · 2ha . f am rm home l>on't m1~~ seelnn lh\a ""rd. PaUo, •Arrac• •· " " " a 540-1151 c lo bit · I all " " ,,. "' " .. Call now for ""'rsonal CA. LL 645 •• 6 .. 6 21>.J, lpk, lndry, no poll;, us m swim. poo lo~el" 2 bdrm. end unit •--hourA. One m ile "" • .,, b l C • h c d J .... "' """' preview. 752·1700 . re( .. gar .. 1495. 675 6800 e 8 u · d1 n 1 5 •. with 2 balhs nn<l your town & beach. All lhl11 fo rnr; r~ .,, ,, '" "' 11 1r<t • • w /overa1 ie pa t io .,. choice oC colortt of only $64,500. Call nowt f . ~ 2R€HIG€ 2 Bedroonu, lftrao open ~\f~~~· E11i.y U?rms f,~r/c~·;sa;e~~ie~.t~I~ ke~ [.\ii5'.1 l~&lijl /--4--~ -. MOME:~ r•ocro:£.ef~:tt'~1'~~:.~!"r~~i Huttt'"tt°" .. och 1·040 home can be yours tr you . ~ =·-, .• 1._.. i---------1 ...... ~•••••••••••••••• clllltoday. Onb'$89,900 ~ f R.E:n~€ 1 S27KDOWN buill·ln1, fireplace . STARTTHE ---HO €'' _______ __. 2houscs+Duplex. Wosher & dryer in· NEW YI.AR LAHDMAaK 1 JUS'1'. LISTID 752·~ eluded. Good lntation. IN YOUR OWN HOME ~a~;an~~ J:ia ~l~:n· llOON. Newport, N.B. NEWPORT SHOllS SAN CLEMENTE ~. month. 640-3358 LOW OOWN IMDAMGDID A home t.o remcrnberl l BEACH UNITS Spacious, new 2 br. 2 bn. Upgraded C0tt• Mesa S&S Rc,.lc Speclaltata. S, ~~~~~~~~~ Bedrm and dtn, l~ bath. , bll.Nl, (pie, 2 car ((ar. s. homo. 3 Odrm .. 2 D•. 4 or s bdrm rnodola •vAll, = SllCllS Complettly cu~ttd. ''TlUPLEX' ~parkllns of Hwy. $385/mo. 675·6000 Fireplace, bltn11., now 1ome•Jpoofl. 968·<1602 THE RANCH Few left like thlA & JW!1 Atrium view rrom 2-2-Z·townhse unit• Just 2 Unique Uomea., cpu ., profeulonally PoMlnlton Properties 2 sty 4 Br, 2~'-Ba, ram lilted! 4 ncunrront IOU ~droum & llvln1 rm. bfockt from surf. 4 Yrs. -• painted. Dbl.1U1r11c. l1&. ----rm.c11nrm,3c8 r gar,up· In the heart ol L11(un1 ll:njoy the warmth ot .,.....,1119.SOO. 2 nr, 1 ba houNe . Avail. bark.ya.rd w /BBQ. blk. anded cpt• k dtpa. Beach, with trernondou• ~'Ood and charm or mir· Jan. l~th. Adull.3 only, wall fence Vacant, ran ForCl1111J1ifll'd Ad ~·1889 romm(lrclal or re1lden rora. Obie 1nr w/autc .. FO U R PL t X " No pols. $350. 673·8214 art •howdayorniaht. ACTION tl•l pot~nt la l ; for °"ner.OYttMrnee<'.bf1u11 SpAclous, w•ll planned _!.wkday9,•llwknd _ ~.eves: ~.-3104 Calle Gretnttee. 3 BR, 2 ba, putlcuhm , call ult. CallS40-ll&l H ·H ·J1.11t 2 block• to Beaut. due>lex with view. 3 Dally Pilot OOWltty t Jt, vaul""' cell· swf. S11,SZ9 (fOSI. New 00 AO·VlSOR lnp. patio. 2\~ car pr, lisUng aU139~~· BR. 2 .. m•ny utra11 • 64H4l18 lodacp~t S10,f00. By •BERTHA~NRY• $SOOMo., yearly. owner. ~ by app\. Rf.ALTORS 492-412> WlW•M WIMTOM CallSSJ.IU7, 215 Del Mat.1San. Cltm . RHI Fatate 67S..3?jl_ ~~HERITAGE ·•· REALTORS Lachenmyer: Hr.t1 f'11 ======= .. ~,. .... HERITAGE RE/\LlORS ----· .. -----~ .... . . . . .. . .. . .... ,. .. . .... ---... -... --· &13 ""•!I t t, n,,, .._., •UtJ• .!'! 19!K Ap2rt.n~r.t. U1tf\n\. •;ic.rlmc11h 1.Jnf\n\. Hov,,, Unf*""tht-d Ho.lat• UnfW"Niihed Ho.1••• UnfUll'lt~ •• • • • •• • • • • • • •• •• • •• •• • • •• •• • •• • • • • •• ••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • •••• ::.:::~·..:_:;:;:_•••3•2•:·~ ~: •. ::.··oc··· .. ·-;2•4••0• i::.:.::-i;~~;;·····;.:~· San~"-1271 :C:!!~~•••ta•••••••·3··'·2•4• Costa Me'° 3824 Aporlmenfa llftfun&. leftt9ato S..... 4300 luaJMu Rental 445 ~............. '' ~_,.. ~ ~ . . ···•·········••·····•·· ···•··················• ..•...••......•....•..........••.••.......... .. ••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• • ••••••••••••••••••••• •---~-,:~,,,..~~~P.1191!!1!1!flll ___ .._..._.Oft leach 38,. BR R 2bt' Iba C-Ondo Clean OM · -.... "f' ... Female rmmle to slllir"' Qu.aml 31st SI ~t:ul stor ""-rona lll1hl1nd1 ••• CLJ::AN 3 BR. :? BA. frpl, I • 2 8 & 3 br t>chfrnt. w,: .... _r • d""' r I 0 •••••••••••••••••••••• h I C ~ .. ..., c If ..... ., .,c pou no ouse. Laguna Nl~uel ava1 . iannt'ry ittt!61 Mern.ln1 Canyon Rd 3 dahwah.r. 2 ciar giar. $34$. on 11 Dr. 4~4 :?OJJ, pell 1275 41M 001~ ' FOX HOLLOW VILLAGE AskforShereen 4~$·6!41 Uo<xl for unt1Qut!11, ell BR, 1'2 Ba. l11e kltch., 71•983~ or 5J1·95'S. 1213>87S.2723cvM •l GrCJt"'-•Aph• Nf'll ttrookse?!-M97 Ol&lt.one patio, i.eclUded ~V). No P'te RtLrP •Ls ___ Santo Ana 3210 S•curf ... ~ Wm ........ I :! .I ht·llrwm. cf11ldrcn ~d A ll ..... t.7 .... c'-'ard ..,.>< ··" c.719 "'"I"' •••••••••••• •• ••••• •• •• . , ....... k I ' rl T p t lo II ... d NJ.-;\\ PORT OCH STOR t ~47'!322i __. . ...., . ., c Br house avail. now. 2 U.GUMAHACH J Br.lite yard. nr Tu~tin For 9..mi Tefttlth ~1~h~:~~l.;i.~n~~r';l'~~: o roeH n1 Yrln 2WOAvonSt.·s:?'iO Mu -'-'----------' baths, rpt..s, drps. Bltru>. 3 BDRM . newc-r homr /we & Irvine Blvd S385 Live on your own pnvutt! ~lrcct tn a 2 l.lrupc11, clo:>t'd gur11ge, THAT KIGH'f l'~JlSON Jerry Wynn 1213)477 770 c..t.Mn. 3214 $350 982·3S33 located in Port11f1110 mo 834?-71~1 ai.k ror'Nun· bed_room townhoust! with yard & large clO!>c to i.e·hool:1, super ~f-02.An.s °UHUMmD ••••••••••••••••••••••• 28;2B;., udll condo, tab La Bun a · 2 Ba. l h " · cy Pruett, nor~. patio. wood burning fi rcpluce & ut-n1<'1! 4 11tex:4, fur11tlurt' Uk.;~~ ~lf" ....._trial Rental 4501 a Br. 2b11 Condo. Encl Rtt area, y, ml bch., fireplace, ocean. vlt•W ----tached gara~e. LOTS Of"' HOOM FOR .. v •' I I a ti It•. C' tt 11 m "'~ ~·.,.q ••••••••••••••••••••••• paUo, gar, adult.a only . gar. SJOO. Ph:M0-5048. Excollent {a rn. home 'W•sfMM•ter 3298 STORAG a.~ 17141~7 7566, 10am.5pm Lease or Rent, lite• in No ~~· 581·58Sl , eves -SS50 Mo. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ..:; AND 110 881 ES! 7dayl\ 832 4l~Since 1971 dw.U'lal 14,000 1>1)1't, n 55&--627 LARGE 2 sty. 3 br. 2~ ba. 2 Sty, c br, 2 bu, nu cpts. A d ull<>. $375 .,. gross, hllavy pwt, goo. N E ram. rm , (rpl, dshwshr. 2 BDRM. HOM E, l~e dl'})(I. !pie, DW. $'35/mo. 621 W. Wilton..l Cotto Mnca r c m a le roommate to ntftcl'S Acruu fr O< ew ·aide. lae. deluxe cls.tolx'h.Call about our sundeck w/ocean view 9634$5Jl !ls.45Agt. No 646..2ul0 Ul<:LUXE I hr, frpl, lull share 3 Bit home on Airport C.tll S•IG>17J trlpleK: 2 BH, 1"1 ha Christma:s Honus. $495 Liv. rm. with fireplace. fee. am1·nit1('s w/full rec Balboa Isl. J 11n u . t'urn. Uyi., $40·'1713 F.vs. frJ>l. & priv. rear yd: 714·96.'.1·4569 or 531·954S. W/W Carpet lh ruoul. far1h . Sec lo bcllevtA! 1st & la:st mo. renl t ------- From SJ60 mo. /\gt days Agt. No ,..~. Kllrl'len w/range & oven. O.,EAN 4 br. 2 ba, frpl, lolboa fa.land 3106 Coda Mesa 847 ti407 clean. dep. 67S407'4 .,..,_11/fn•est/ SS2·7000; nii:hlllSS2 0507 $42S Mo. d$hwthr, cpts. drp:i. Cb ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••• • --~ AVAIL NOW: Loe ., s ty 1 story condo, tennis. to ~chis. & shop'g. $36S 1 BR, carp, bit im .. pnv IST MONTH FREE 05r1a00nd10fl<'&w.,.30el1wtvernml10anp~t.' Pleasant bus. male w/rlJI •••••••••~••••••••••••• ho .. • sauna. jacuiz1, prkg for t -BORM. APT. Ml Woods 71•·96.1-4569 or 531·U54S. deck. Gara.:i·. Yeui ' g 3BR. f/p, nr . bch. Nice lkDine me w/fplc. $495 mo. boatorlrlr.Clubhouse.I Cove l.lt>nch Lanai Agt No Fee le~only.SJOOMo.Bkr EISydTownhouaet Xmab mo\'C II\ :.II· area Brookhursl, Ill.I, ~-It 500! r.::r~~~·::·7r:ily ~be;~~· 968·2297 or ~t~~n~\~"~:~~~: 2 STORY 4 br, 2 ba, new ~-23.aJ_!l~ ~~~i1';~up~t~;:.~Jut~r :~~t~c~4~.~~::~e~o';~~: ;,_~n~£:4~~m lo shr •• :;rr.:'.'.7..?. •••••••. home, 3 br, fa m rm. 2 3 Br 2 Ba cpts drps lor$275 Mo. rpt & drps, frpl. Cor. lot ~cw 1 Br, frpk, yrly, $.1110 !'lt'i' Mi:r 1!120 Mt•yt•r, ol! 5pm W cd Mf~owerTool~ '1>1c, 2•.; ba, $600/mo. bllns,fncd.'RBQ.~lean& MISSIOHREALTY ~~~~~~ln~u~o;:,~ ;;i~nclud i n g Ulll :~.~t~:~~s ll S,wknds 2 Br, Iba, new p:11nt & 4a~~ ~~:,111!c,s:,~.h~~~ iro~.~~·,i~\.'i~w~:1 Unique Homes 546-5990. sharp. S390. 847·2160 PHONE 494-0731 714 96.'.1·4569 or 531·9~5. ---------------crpt Nr maJor shopplna furn, over 21. North CM. reLuiu~. Won 't 111111 , $225 .£/S'd 2 b d -AV). No Fee 1 br $210 Stv & retnii No & fry"s. No pets. $225. musl be employed. $175 Ull ... ..,. 751 •3741 1 e r. cc .. cpl, Sharp 3 Br, 2 ba, Cam rm 3 Br, 2 bath hou:.e. frpk, ------lcAoo P•nfnsuta 3807 t·h1ldrl•n ur !>\'ts 7Jl w S45-07ti0 mo. 548-6472 btwn 5 & ___ ~'.r• :,rps. gar , fn cd. yd, pa ho. It v r m. rllnch style yard, 5425/mo. 494·76ti9, NO FF:!-:, graclou11 4 BR. ••••••••••••••••••••••• J8lh, \pl H&C 673-7787 -----7PM at.adlts.646-1078 F.dwards & Sister. Free 494-1"82or49-t-4152 t:i• Ba, trpk, 11-te gar, Oceanfront )'rly 2 Br. no I Hr,$200mo. 1---------- $275. 2 br + kads, pet or yard maint & water. 1-__ H.11_ 325-0 cpts, drpb, bltns. n children or Pt!ts. l:Jll l.lo!l' 3 hr, 4! ba to\lnhuu~l' l~l LcGr .. nd 2 Br 2 Ba. lux upt, fem . Coftiideri1t9 a IH7 AEYOUROWN I .,_ Close to central purk & .......,_... •-schools & park. Beau! e\tAS, b"7J·3971 inqwct rnmµtc,. Garat.:l' "46·3950 pref S150 + '.:i dep Mn~ es. °"achcombcr, '--h. Kids/pets ok uoo ••••••••••••••••••••••• ft·1t "-kyr1I, cov. pal10 w. 11 \I I I " - ---581-8177 ree $15. 631·2011 or .,.. ..., "'EA" N BR 2 "'' ----~" i>a o '~uh on Y ,,v . I • uoss 77 0\f'r !'100 .irtivc lorJI IJu, h)lmgi.. Pleas~ l'all or i.top l.>y for fr<·c i11fo. All t·atcgones & ~pcs Wi: guarunt~e to pte .. se you. ~7.2501 842 9496 aft 6pm. ,, ..., ew 3 • DA, lo\ely lnd!>rp'g Avail ,. ___ 0 .... _1 Mar 3822 f14'\b $J:.!5 6'1S·331U or "'' Y nu .lllr. ll.ta . nr lli•h, Offfc .. -R-__.-al-----d bh ws hr, Jrpl $350 now. $425 mo. 751 _689 ~ ~ K37 !1517 •'rll'I s:ar. S2b0 1m11. t:..111 ... """ 4400 AVAIL NOW : 4 Br 2 Ra, Hllnti~o" 714 963-4~ or 531 9545 be! noon or 53! o~r.M ••••••••••••••••••••••• ' ~t1 57oi arr 5 JO ••••••••••••••••••••••• brand new home ne\'l.'r HarbOur 3242 Agt. NI) I' et' -----1----------1 'li(•w :!br, 2b;i, 1:.1r. adulh 3 b l ' b r I li~lia~il!~i'I Uved in. Cood are". "~"5 •••••••••••••••••••••••I ---... ,_, 3252 To.~sel-... -d 3525 no Jld., S2t>S & $2!15 l!ll2 • r, 2 a. rµ.c, patio.; ~ _.. ._..,... ... ,... .,--~ _ -W.illal'<' .,15 33.~ ~ncl ~ar. /\v.111 Jan 1. . ... • ~~ .. i mo. Call for appL.3 Br, 3_ba townhoulie ••••••••••••••••••••••• re ~ . ' ~.84t»49!l0 --·--==:=:'!'::::= 557·7355,Mr.Spark:> Sparkling new _cond .OCEAN VI E W •<J It ••••••••••••••••••••••• '['I,, lr~r~s '.!llr,nit·e &clean.l'loi.e tv N.~""""' }IARBOR/GISLER J Dr. 2 !~..7.,037. l Cora,,1,,16·:.'c~ e' lvaes, .• • community spuc ~ Br, BfRANl D NEW 3 Br 21-'l Ba. ~ ~hopp1n~. Adult:> only. ~.r 11;1rn11ton/ Br<>C!kh~r't ~~· ....,.°'..., 751-3741 UNITED BUSIN J.;ss INVESTMENTS 15.25 Mesa Verde Dr I'~ Cacro5s from Kone Lns) Suilc 106, Costa Mel-la ooov .,.. .,.,.,., d Ba P c, •,2 mi from Doheney Nu pct.'> ti4S·S!IJ!I .hr, 2ba, gar, patio Srnl ,/ ba, cpl, d rpi., fr p l. en, 2 • lse. $47S mo SL. Bch & Dana Wharf CORONA DEL M.\H chldok. SUS. 962·0778 ~:::..l>olconle• d ah w l5 hr . $ 3 11 5 . 'WATERFRONT _4_96_·_448_2______ S4SO per mo. 634-82112, 2 Br Townhouse. frplc 2 BR, 2 RA, apt ror v.x.. .. ..-. UBI O~n '1 day~ 714·963-4500 or 531·9545. 3 br deluxe ranch w/41' Dollhouse <IBr 2ba view S.5PM. 524 1012 Evs. Pool. tennis. SOrne oce_.n :-;2:!5 S.16 4144 . SPANISH STYLE ~::;..-..;::.,:"*· Agt.NoFee pvt <lock. Yearly lease new decor.' s425 mo'. & Catalina view::.. 1,;lo:.c _Al>kforGl•orgl'. :inr. 2 i.tory w /frpl c. ADVERTISING ~ fWS.9103 495·4653, 83l 2700 Hkr. 3 Br + bonUJj, 2 b<J. HnC'k h . f oakony, p.Atao, plu~h $72,000. NET .. 1esa Verde area 4 br, 2 Bay. Cpts, drps, bltns ti> s oppmg & inc beach. I.a.rite :! I.Ir, I ba rollagl' t'rpl'~ & dbl encl gar. Sped(1c media i.pecialty ba. crpts. dprs, bltns. lge lniM 3 24 4 Miuioft Vieto' 326 7 $1\25. 645-9543 &l4·2Sll 1-;11d r;..ir a~c t:: .. st C M PcLs1ch1ldrcn OK . Bkr rompany. E·Z operation. corner lot. encl. back yd. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• i\rlull!:. only• no pcl'o 5.16·1484 or !W7-4510eves. •l MO Jo'REE RENT• Only 29';, down . Special Dnveby3202M1nnesota. LEASES AVA.lLABLE Lik b 3b f· Duple11es Unfurn 360 S~lOS.18 5300 1·2·3 Rm. olflces from 54B..W7l , . 1 enew 1g r, am rm, •••••••••••••••••••••• 2 UR. 2 ba Swedish hpl. l"ine 3844 s125 p e r m o. Adj trn1n1n g r e qui re, • .... ve in T\lme V1ll~e. 2 ba, fprlc, bllns. 2 car :ov'd l h 11 personality EasUi1de 3 BR + den :!88 E. B..ly. S450mo. 613-2749 Owner/Rkr Good I::. Side locaL1on . 3Br. lBa, S375 mo. 642·S466 Condo. 2br. l ba, patio garage. No peu.. $293. mo. 751-6543 ESJde 3br newly decor !lf'M, lge yd & patio. nr schools. S39S 6-16·238!>. Small l br dplx, fncd } rl, i;tovc & rcfr1 s:. Nr CCI -~·Gas pd _S-'8 66HO 3BR, fnc:d. yd, i.:ar. l'PI~. rtrps, k1d~ipcl~ OK. S.1.">0 l!:nc, 556·7777 We ha.vc homes l.l\'!111. for gar. Lge fncd yd . Kids 3 Br 2 Bu , cpl.Ii drps l blk c . pa 10, 110 l' 11 or NEW lltll-:1':1) J\I' rs ••••••••••••••••••••••• Alrporter Hotel. No leai.c Ull·/....... . 751 37 I ,,... ht·h. SJ!IS mo ' l y~ lsc pe~. $325. t.40-7;it;H I Hr aµt, (•m·I g;.m1s:e WOOUUIU uc; £ reQ. 83J..3223 T1I noon _ _ '"'~ ___ ~ _ 41 _ Cal>e ~a·l~utSquarc ~~~~rf~~tv~~ ~~l ht 5106Ncptunc,t>l6 mo ......,_._....__...~ 1-rrilc• .. 1ppl11-., puul «. PINI-::-> .\l'TS ------CIGARETIESUPPl.Y Ranch Cal llomes -. . 2BR. IU/\ Pet:. & ch1ldrc CUTE j.Jl'U/ll !.230 1;.1s .. u11_ j 1. :i .... 'I hdrin Unit~ lbl~~~~tLYlt! NB orstR1BUTORsn11• Deerfield UnivPkCln 3 Br. 2 ba on culd(' wclt·omr· One bedroom t1nt• h;.ith SJl..'i 1 br dplll Kuh or I~• 'il:111•d lik1· earl> i\\.T 541.5032 f'Jrtor f'ullTimc Cul11erdalc Col.Park !>ac. rncd yd; covered S22.S mo 545.lfi711 apartment~ 'south ol "''"l(h•:. &· .. t hcoml.>e r .I <.Jliforn1,1 ..,ll!!ng.llow' ------lmmed1:.atenecllrnt:ost.i Turtle Rock patio. s:ns. Wlr pd. Call ----h •h . t'l IK• h floe ~1 5 t;J l .,01 t I' r om S-• 0. I l s 1501 W t llff D Mesa and/or :.urro1,1nd 2bdrm,your choiccof 586-1195. Nwpt8ch.3Br 2 Ra,fplc rgdway. IJ~('lll ac-5-17 25~)1·· -l)I l'in••,lonf' Ufl'hrs3·5 30 . ••c r. IOI: tnW1b ro r d1,. from$340to$-WO. iiar, patio, bltnlo, 2 blk an s hops. s2so 1'"r . -wkdays,!l·S :10wknc1s NewportFananC1alnr lnbulOrs. 1\ll retail out 3 bdrm, your choice of J.I 3 Br Condo No pets. l'ool. hdt $1-00 yrly. 645 lt.82 :;;~-~~1 Ask for M i:.-.i Adult dclux<' I br, <'Pis. ____ 5.';2~100 Le~sll'MJ Offlc• Spoc• lets are secured by com - from $335. to $475 ~ncl garage. SJZ5 mo drps. :.IOH' rcrn i: , CallonS1te Managcr pany, t her efore no 4 bdrm your choice of 168-5220 .-...,...__...~ dshwhr frplc ·~r pool. Upgrad ed 2Br. 2 ba. (714l642·3111 ext246 product selling. Become from$4SO to S550 ~rwhfvrni&hed :'llo 1' 1,..,5· 1, • · Desirable WALNUT .... ·trtb t f h No Fe"'s 2 Br. fplc, yard. clean, ••••••••••••••••••••••• THE BASIL LEAF ~ ... .!?!:1"' "' omona, SQUARE Encl ~ar, lg If You Need A Starred & '"" u or or sue na· ~ avail Jan. 1. S300 mo. •-11...-oP-'n··.10 370 Newly r cdecoratecl 2 ""'""" I d 552609 I'' 'hed Off I tionally advertised RANCH REALTY -ftU -Pnc Y • 5 9'i2·Sll8 urms ice. ca 1 cigaretlC's as Wini.ton, 831·1256or 831-2292 ••••••••••••••••••••••• bdr m. 1 ba apt. Pool Altrat'liw• I br w w cpls L --._ h TH F. EXEC UT JV E Cam Is M 1.... u ll 551-2000 Li:e 2 br. 2 ba, ancl. util Nl•ar beach. Adults. S300 drps, hltn~. ~dulti;, n~ OCJlll'CI ucOC 3848 SU ITE. Rent includes c. • ar "'>ro . .-a --------1Hewportleach 3269 Nr be~ch. $325. 11 15 W. mo. l U "7 ••••••••••••••••••••••• f/lJmc recept phone & Mall, Salems, Kool~. W11odhnd""'Twr1hme3Ur ••••••••••••••••••••••• " Pl'S P'!la1rs , 1.0..,? fl '' K"nlctcToqu·l1C y ,,... Ual.Blvd9620SOS 646-0883 WallJn• ti-lt.·0176. Sl75 .,.25, 1 r duplex. frplc, mail ser vice. u til & ~ • · a You 2 UJ, 1\/C, upgrades.H ARD TO F IN D mo near tuwn Thalia & janiton at. Se1:y's & ofc must huvc a e;1r 2-8 hrb l.ik<'&poolpriv.640-ll542 Easlblulf Exec. home. Ba.lboa Pen1n Point , Pvt.2 Br,2Ba.beaul1lully t'.i talma 1!l-11277adults. l''l\JIP avuil. Newport pcrwcck~~~i.orcves) c2)2 bdrm.l '::bath 4hrt, 2b~,· fam rm.dSoft winter I Br.n('ar Uay de<'orated,p\'tlndry rm, 2.Br 11 2 Bn lwnhM• hrk MewportD-ach 3869 Center.640-5470 CA"'lllNVL',",'TME"'T (' I $3 wner. ,,cw t•rpts, rp:·;, On:un.113311111 P'1 1:aral!e, fH'l patio. lplC'./llff.ll-!<'JlJll11,4<llr:.. uc ---------'"" ,.,.., ., one os. IO. month. ll<i•nt Walk to sd10111 .... Co t M - 37 -SJ.1C.1 mo. 6i5 2051 no IX'li. ~-'75 :M 17 1-:ldt•n ••••• •••••••••••••• •••• COM dlx suill's from $150. H t-;Qlll RF.O J-:H·~<.SMHS.36. s hop~. lt•nn1s c·luh 'a Ha 24 ----\\e. :J?!J-lfj:;I!, 1-;\'.., PARKMEWPORT Ulil indd, A/C. ample For mon• 1nform:itiori 4 Br w,pi111I, f.!a" lllHI. frplc, qu11·t n·~1dt•nllc1l area. for lea:.~ $..\50 mo Turtlf'rock 3Rr. 2bu. auto &l:?-140:f s p r k l r s . r u l • d • s .i c $750 mu L"·· Heh ••••••••••••••••••••••• Nl'w 2 I.Ir. 1 ba, fprk. 61ti 70'l7 APARTMENTS pki:.Jan1lor67!>·1i!:IOO wr11r to "CIGARETTE ti40·ti775nr645·2240 $40.00'WEBC&UP bltns.~ar.ige.AdulL-..no IJI VIS I ON'' ll23W" ----pets S3llS •l40-l!WO 1-.:a.,t~1dc n1c1• :! fir 2 JIJ 1or2 lkdro<Jm' and Prime locat111n an Hunt· P.O Rox 14. Rosemead. s.1!15. be. 5.">9 5229 •HOW.4VAIL.• •Studro&l BR Apts . · ------('ncl J.:;.ir, 1 t'111hJ OK. Townhoust·s 1ngton Ue nch on Cit. 91770. inclul.le your Fo.!tain Vafley 3234 S&S built College Park TI IE BLUF FS, $SOO to •y,vh &. M~id SellrvdAvail 2 Br , 2 ba duplex. View of $275 1>12 ~ l·'rorn S2S!.l.50 Brookhurst, 800 ~quarl' phone numlx.-r -'-II ho I ~ h * One...:rv, l pool bay. Seasonal. "350. - -O""n!.16Ua1ly f ..... t. 51·nglc. g"rdnn lY""·' -------••••••••••••••••••••••• "" use mma<". 3 br, ..,""'permont '"'76 N ~ .,... .... ~ " • '" .. A BIG CA .. 'YO"' L.. ewport Blvd, CM 675-520Sor67S-3824 CLt-:AN lne 2 Br lower Sµa l•ools-Tennis slore or offic'>. Good Ax •f•"'T FOOD* Redec.3br,2ha,nu cp•• 2.,...,SJ75,,.;\'C!S&40·15Jit n.n ,,, $750 lo c..•a 97cc ,,.5396 "' '"' " ~ d ..,, -------S995per mOnlh . ....., .... or .,.." 1 upt,anl-pll'X Cpts,drp:i. A"ross from Fa~h1on ~urc. assigned park· J\Jl typcs,all siz.es. rps, fplr, e;~~ .~.,~~09 NE W S m oke tree HASTINGS & CO SU 2 Br_ 1 Ba. gar, stove, dosed l(dr. adult~. no f,f,mct ;it J a mboree on rng. Call Mr. Plummer 751·3741 !.;11 7.!!5".! ~; N t Townhome. 2Br. 2Ba Realtors G40.~~"" . S CASIT AS refn g, no children or pets. Appht·at1on:. taken SJn Joaquin ll1lls Road. 003~767 UN ITED BUSINESS .,.. . .,.... "~·· o et-. l'oo.Oubhoust'.Closeto -o>J<74.I Minutes to NB. J BR pets. Avatl. 1/2/77. SJOO now 645 i 4115 17141644-1900 INV',."'TMENTS l furn. Adults. no re ts. mo. 833·0821: li40 0109 DElUXE OFFICES c..:> -FOR LEASE Fountain <•nn1s rouns. $385 HV Hms. Carmel 3 Br 2llONewportBlvd.CM. l,ovclylgc:lbr.nt•\\lydt• l.52SMcsaVerdcDrE Valley :lb<J. 2ba + r.im Av .111 a b I c 1 mm e d I +F'R. nr park & 1>chool coratcd. Ideal loc: !\Ju •DELUXE• Com ml & indsll spaces (atro:.s from Kona Lni.) rm. htd l)ool, "" IH ls. ·~111 .. !'.I ------~mo.752-0617 $1SO.Bach.1"i ulll.+pool. CodoMeao 3824 pell>. S24~. Mgr at 2K!IS Ea~tbluff J br, 2 ba. 200to2000 ~q ft.As low So1tcl06.Costa Mesa ~rdcncr & 11001 ,«n· 1n -----Beachcombrr . fee $15 . ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~f d \ Lc:i:o.t• lnrl s pac mas ter as 35< sq ft. L3K N1Rucl Ac UBI Open 7 days <'I. '" $4;.!ll mu ( Jll Bluff<. 1 l<''l'l 3 RR, 2 ba. 631·2011 or5<17·250l . en o1a,..:...et 1\,!l792531 suite. din rm & dbl Mission V1e10 area~ "~Z7t>.t -RENTALS• fJ1\<'l vi.:r<'t·nht·ll&r>ool 'WHYHOT7 Zl:lr.cpb,hltns,kid:.ok i.:arJgc. 1\uto l.loor Handy to S .O. fo'rwy CXTL-HightClub 11111 111-n Hi"'i ~i;,u \1..'l.1.i111JJ LgeFurn.2 Ir Sunken living room S210mo. 11µc>n\'r avail. Pool & Olll 831 -1400 s,s.i,ooo net. Beach In(· LG 3 UH . .J fl\, l rµI cL'hwsr :\tan)' u11i;r.1tk ., S335. 111 •rn:i 1.,11·1 "' SJI 9515 J\.lrt ~II 1-'t••• :! l!ft dl'll S.~ w .1 '·I Cathedral ceiling recreJlion area i\rlulls , Ill ·--------• tw, urps, utans, pool ? ._... b h 6"5·:?978 WESTCLIFF F .,, f Very unique type opera :. { ~~, 1\dlts. no pets. $22". -.,.,.,rooms. l ''J al s only No "'·l~ Jo'rom "'"60. urn u . o I.', t II o11r r"nt 1 '" I 1 .., A h d ~ .., S120 ion dS no compct1L1on .! HH S·1"5 ,· d !>,,.'r1.1 i:-. '" '"5 3971 tlac e garage Lovely l"n 2 '-r uripcr, ljtj.) Amigo" Way mo. h -fl rt ,. I .,.. w h d .. ~ '' 0 642 097 or anyt rng &im1lar in :1 llH ''• n.1 SS~ ·1 iara or ... uro • are -------1 as er! ryer hook u11 newly decorated. Ideal Managed hy ·4 ____ ,area. ..! trn. ·• B.1 ••• ~ alwa}!> a vJ1 lable tu help HOLIDAY PLAZA Pvt yard with put10 Joe No pets $22.1. Mi:r. at _Granada M~ml Co. Balboa Inn. S25-0. mo. lnrl. Ult Atjt 751 374 t CONDO :? My 4 Dr. l 1 ~ J llR. Den .... , ... $..500 you find a tenant. or 1f Deluxe 1 br 3pt $180 mo. Adults. $375. mo. !nS.2531. 2885 Mend01.a A S"rEPSTO OCEAN ulJI. lo.5 Main SL, Balboa -_• • Ba, frpl, dshwshr . 2 car 3 .RR. 2 ba ........ $575 you are renting, help you Adults only, no pctii. 196S f'OXHOLLOW -----Ll"'U f a r .. pa t io . $375 JBR.F'R.2•2 ba ..... $4 locate your n ew re Pomona Ave,Apt.15. VILLAGE Nice I hr, frplr, pool, Deluxe Nwpt. Shores 2 _6_7_s.._8_740 _______ 1 ,.. OR STORE 714·963-4563 or 531·9~5. 3 BR, 2 Ba ........... $42S sidence. 621 W. Wilson, C.M. adults. no pets. $230, mu br. dplx. 714-870-9203 T<,op store, prestige loc. Ast.No f.'ee J IJR,2Ba.......... loy&leach locJuMleach 3741 646-ZOIO 5484757(lr646·3798 COROHADl!LMAR ,ross $55,000 mo. Book ----------1 3 BR ? Ba '565 ••••••••••••••••••••••• :.:..:..:.:_ __ ,__________ shows $6,000 mo. net. J BDRM. 1'4 &. Prest111e ' -·· · · ... · ll.edty '75-1000 s ud CASA VICTORIA 1 Br, $200. all util pd. OCEANFllOHT Offi<.-e space a vailable Will consider terms. Call a re11 1400 m A t JBR.2 8a ..... • ... $4~--------· t lo, utllitie!I pd, SISS & BR S f Southsld f hi h · kf · o. & JBR FR $4-· mo re f N t 1 2 ,un!orfurn.gas tovc,rcng,adullll,no 2BR.,2ba.SSOO eo &way QI.DC or specific delails. 962-4471. S46·8103 R. .. .. ·.... 25 497 i.8Js . 1 0 pc s & wtr pd. Adlts. no pels pcL'I. 383 W Ba y 5'11!·!J!>lli BAYFROHT HOME S 17 SI month . C a 11 Ull A~. 751·3741 3 B · 2 Ba ·den · · · $475 Bluffs 3 br, 2\~ ba. on · Pool. rec rm. :-.cc. gale -- - -675-2311 , ask for Mlssi. ,,. LG. Bonus Rm. 3 BR. 3RR.2 8a .... • 1410 ~uper green belt. $400.$250 --.-,.u-m--be-a_u_t_._l_B_R_, 525Victona.642·H970 * * • J llll,2 ba.$2000 Moyrly a.er/Wine To•""' BA. frpl. di.hwshr. cpt11, 3nR.2•.,f13 ..••. SSJO mo.644-8722 ni L-h R He•---J -obs STEPSTOIEACH 1-ltl!_llfll_,..__.....,_...._.,.. _ _....,,._~~--11111 .,.....,. d " II 3 HK 3 n S600 ---------a., •. nr"" · esp cmpl'd ~ .... 3 RR Cd M390 N,.,, .. ,$2000 MO nx .. a :about OU • ;a... dlts Ullpd '194 200 /\dull &side 2 br, end ,.... ,2ba .• unf.$425 lo tOSOaq Cl.Cpts. Pl h:. . . Chn't'""s llonu~ SJ.95 4Bl! 3611 ....... $575 BR.2BA.frpl .. lblk.+ • 1 · 4 gar .patro.Like new No -Camofion JliR,2ba .. unf.~OO d r ps , A !C. j a n itor. us iest bar in area. 714·9ti:J.~ or 531·9~5 SUH.~·, Ra .... ~ from tX't?an . Yrly Ren· pets 644·®8. Co.ta Meta park's. Masters 673 4120 Busy Street. Outslaodang Act No i''<'c tal. $475. Agt. 54~1151, Newport leach 3769 You are thr wmner of 2 parkanii . Owner musl FOR LEM E: 3 btdrm. 2 be, ti.'and IM!W, 1700 fiQ n Landina home w /3 car gat. SS2S/mo. lncld g Pfdon.r. No pet.s. ~·oa LEASE : :t bedrm. 2 be, brand new 1900 sq .rt. {.fndlna home w /formal din. rm., tam rm. wet bar,SS75 ./mo. tncldg ~•ner. No pets. . ....,....""' ........ 3 Ir, nr t<:hla, parb. bch. xW cond. f'plc, QiS mo. carol, 84.2-4000. ~·· 3 be', 2 ba, R /O, c..U. dr.-. 2 car gar. ~. Ma.4~ "1·9~5 Af;l.aoree. red hill ~ .. :. 552-7500 l\$kfor l.es ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 Br w/gar. $230. New tarkl'lstolhe OFFICE SPACE , N.B. leavest.ate lohandlepro- crpt. l~e fncd yd w /pa Lio Sports, y ocation 1649 Westcliff Dr. Air. balt: property. Anltious. IEST IUY Water pd. 2224 · • o · · pvt. toilet. etc. Two units Good terms. Ai,ot. 837-4200 Some people say you gel Placentia, call bctwn 1.5 & RecreotioftCll 400 sq. fl. ea. $200/mo-no what you pay for! We of· 636-4120 Ymicle Show xtras. One unlt 1300 sq IURGER ST AHD fer more. And the pnce Is ----------! at the ft , 2 t oi let s , as ts. Laguna Beach lei!!. Membership in a 2 Br 2 Ba, fpk. pool, 2 sly ANAlfl':l M 2 Br yearly, garage, wfor $400 I m o. PAC 1 Fl c FrCil standm~ buJlding Health Club. A tennis E-Sade. Children OK . C O N V E N T J o N w1lhoul boat dock. $325. R EAL ESTATE, Gene wilh plenty of parl.ing. club. t'rte Lennis lessons . S2!l0. 548·0!H6 Ct:NTER 673 2493 Hill, 64.2--0200 Gr'06scS $15,000. mo. year D1 lliard11. Swimming. Jan 2 thruJan !I -------------------•round. Owner retiring. Golf Dnvlng Range. CasadeHermosa C;i ll 642.56711, ext. J33 lo On The lay 1200Sq.ft.of space avail. Will accept 297o down. Saunas + g reat ac· 2hr apt W/lircplarc, 1 ''2 r la1m yourllckels Lnvcly 4br. 2 ba upper. Jan. 1. $400. mo. incld Agt.837-4200 ta vitics: Sunday BBQs. l>alh, range, oven. d1>1 • * • Ueam ceiling, lrplc, janitorial service. N.D. --'-------- Parties with hve band:1. hwasher. $320. Al so 3 hr ----_ pal10, dshwshr. ga r. oo Pac. Cst llwy. Cull COHEE SHOP Jl'ree Sum:.lay brunch. (bep. hl~g) $370. Adult 2 bedroom ll('am ttloroJ,1l', $550. 673-5719 or Robbie, 548·0757 NETS $2000. MO. 160 W. Wilson___ ceiling no JlCL'I i200 5118 540 1720 AIRPORT Ol-'FICES Perfect Mnm & Pop loca · Your rent dollars go".v~n 3 Br, 2)>a, luxury twnhsc. W. W1l!!On lnq apt~· ~ BRl'ark New rt t Palisades Commercial :ion. Frcestundlnl{ build· furthc r•••A le rri f1r New Rhag &. kit appl B n A ·1 J po op Cntr. 1 blk O.C. Airport, ng with plenty of park· mamtenancc r rcw, pro· Huge mslr Npt HL'I loc. 2 r upts. Gas pu1d I oor. va1 une 1 .or Suites from $125. No lsr Ing. Heavy rool traffic ressional managem ent Call 633-7o.59 o 545-4»31 . J\dulLo;, nn pets. '400 Mer unger. ~low m kl pnce loe. Short hours. Good sta ff lhal cur es. a nd --r ~ n mac Wa y. /\pt 2. J2R9.S/l.644·8481.aft 5pm. J~;f~~~~l'!~rc!i~e.d~ t.erm.s.Agt.837 4200 frie n d ly n ei11 hbors. 979·1911 21lr, 1'.<i BaTwnhi;estyle, system, all otll + AutoW,..cldncJ Models open daily 10.1. East Side . N<'w duplex. bltns. c pts, cl rps incl. secretarial servlCil Avail. Sl600. MON ET Sorry, no one under 21 & er H-'J Ba, frplc, dbl ga l'atio. hcol.c'd pool. Adlts, lM!'g oic: Suite 200, 2082 OrAnge & L.A. counties 1u;ALTYC'Ol\IP"NY no pet s . Roommate S.100 mo.548·S0.1S n<1pcu.S23S.5'48·2682 So.Ea~tBrtJtol,NpBch localioM.Fl.lllyll«nsed. TH! COVI aervicc available. Mon· (714 )557·7010 (Be h ind Luxury l·bedroom, den th.to.month occupancy. 3 Br 2 Da upper, $265. N San ca.,,.nte 3876 Carl's Jr.) _A_et_._837_-000 _____ _ le dining room. Rough pel-'. 1027 Valencia. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Row.rt & Pl•b sawn dtaeonal cedar Oakwood Garde nApt.s 546·0080or 546·698S OCEANFRONT Luxury 2 ldeal fo r Arc hitect . N paneling w/matcblng .. __ br, den. frpl, pvt Stell$ lo Insurance Broker. Ade· San F;.~n':i.~' ':ioy.le. 1 wtde blade s hutte ra . 880 Irvine Cat t6t.b) -Point 382 bch. $SllS49'J-280'7 quate parkine. Newport ., handsome wallpapers. (710645~ Ir----..:...:..:...:;;;::::::::=::::; •••••••••••••••••••••• Blvd. address. Three ...c!rson OJ)('rotlon. Buav Avail. boat sUp. Pool & 'PNoOIOrongeCoonl'('s Ex. tge 2 br, 2 b:i. frJ>lc •SPAilKLING• bltndeska,6001q. ft. S26S Mall loc. Only $31,000. 't513 CMtPUsl>l:hl\'M jacuzzi. SIOO/Mo. (V66) 170016th St (at Dover) most l>eoulffut opoi1ment dressing rm. Adults + 1 2br, l bn apt, Just re-mo. Please call. 67S.3SSI full Priei!, with. lf'rma. MaJtineWIJUams (714>642-8170 communlles.Areloxilg t unager. Fro m $295 novated. 2 blks lo heh. Moa·Fri. AStt.9837~200 OPEN DAILY ..... ........ .,-..,.. u-.... Gas•-water pd 496 737n $225. & $235. Stove & ---------I c~t 8 AM.TO&P.M. .,...._...., Lge.2Br. 2ba, frplc, gar . ....,., .. 'ltll ... q"...,eoms. • . '" r efri g. 150·152 W . APPROX800sq.ft,C.2at ""'""AILS HU.NT IN 0 T CJ N paUO.S3SO lae.673-67S3or woterfols,ondmojesftc llOlll1W..Vcilley 383 &calones, San Clem . J:.> E. 17th St, Suite T. NewportDc11ch ~URAREA,38R, NEARNEW 2aty4Br,2...., Newport Helsht.s, 3 Br, I 61!H058 l"ee&.Fta1Ultngpools, ••••••••••••••••••••••• 492.7072 $'2.'IO/mo.Doyle 548-0479 Plus h , scats lOO, 2 Bf\ w/huae lam Uy Ba. tam rm. c:pta, d~. Ba. •Int cu.1-M-cac loc-, ---------JoCUZZlsouoo,bllards, 3 Br, 2 83, in 4 pltx. 2 car _.__._,...£-1 • ...._d P a rtncrs fe ud i o a. rffl'D fl frplc, near thruo1.1t. Dc p r o q d . wallctobcach. I yTleaae 1 BR. acrosa from beach. Ondtxellngcklbtlouse e ncl 111r . patio. frplc, '"";;~~HOO ...,...tlt..tal 4450 Terms.Agt.837-.i200 ~. $GS/mo. CALL 640-00t4 M25 mo. MUMlJ No pets. S170. carport. Wllrl SOCIO! ewnts. Ten.u.. ruce an:a 00tl·9474 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ... ar..u •TE T(),8 JN R E ALT y . 67S.s.206or833-210$ ·-Dalbo "m ,.. uiit·U71 ... WE ALSO Uken<iw48r,2 ba.,ten·S.Cletmlde 3216 s..lllL 3716 gvm.ondVOleybolot ....... °'9 .. och JUO 'rnE EXClTING a hlaod: retail, Opportunity lo own a u. ....... _r p---•-a nit c:t II~·· Colony-••••••••••••••••••••• ..... ThtVlloge.Moreof ••••••••••••••••••••••• r••uM•s• •ns commerc. o r ortlc e branr h office or A 1uc. "D ......, • v~•..., atta Paul a ... 'n ••••••••••••••••••••••• _... 5 ""' • SPllcct Otf ·a t.reot park r I v d for mt. Hornes, Apt.I.• l\eaJ.btat.e n.• 644_7_ PresldenUal Hr.•· 2 Br 2 a BR. 2 ba on the ocean. ewwythtlgyotfrt looking No w o w n e r 1 o f Ml.NlJTES TO NPT ini. Appro~. 500 Sq, n..; g'~~ Call 1 eo Daune c::Joddoe. _, 8-, oeean vow, pool, F\am rroo Wllu.m l800 fOf.FIJnllurellOYOloble. Beachwood Ap~. 19132 BCH. priv. reat room. Rllr. 418 ~-l.unnb San Lula Rey hob.a•, 3 avaU.al'tJan18,$440mo. ToUl.securlu.elevators: Onool)d~Bedroom Ma~ll•.H.B .. o((era2 8Ach,1&2BR. &u-23C3Mon toFrt 9•5 Videovlew _. ,...... • Br 2\\ Ba fEplc wet'--m.76$7 r lllLI ~ _..., ..... 1.._ br, 2 ba, 1000 sq. ft. rmm$lts. ' " ' 997·5400 lla.,..bell baakelball b l I ' • ... r , rec. ac •··---,,.,IJI.,..~"" securt ty apt w/pool. Adult.aMNoPe•· S.J .CAP STORE. "'70 •mo ,.,...,. fh 1y up1radtd, new S. ..._ .a. Otfic""" "'""" 6 .., v 1 .. 5 ' drpl&cpUUlruouLLov· Cmlsh. _ J271 A~Btta_..,__llhh -°'*'••uuto :00. Jac:uul, A /C. dsbwhr. 1!161 esaDr. sq.n .camtnoC.p.No.of ., TAUi.AMT 4 .._ 2••u 2u.. n-bl ely view w lk to I ..,.. 0 -............ Now r~"". Adults only. No pets. (5 8lka EulofNewporl Misalon. $310. -r mo. UJ Gem on Balboa l ·' -· ....,, ~ .... Loa, . • • poo • ••••••••••••••••••••••• .. .... 'ltll .-.vi ,.,_,I ..... 81 d 1 00 c-I.... E ~· = 0 cpt. ram rm. Super «oll fc ten.nla. No peu, tM CHAIMIH• ....................... -... ..... ne w 1 .. 1r at v . > 1 ""'.ft. 1110. PH: ·Z opeullon. S hort ! sns. M2·8Sn SMC> mo. 752-9259 OlO SA.H JU•... G11111011f 3102 982·1800 546-9860 Ownr.f1Hl71. boure. Free treinto .. "'" ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 br I d EW Owner lea vlnit «late. A **' I + 1 ~. Kida or V\e•, Tur\lerock Terr. 3 Th I• ch• rm I n I 2 TB • c~ .. poo • Pl•Y Y •• ltoou. 4000 N STOR F.S Miu Ion 1t.e•ll Dick Park BKR llqle1 ok. Beac h · Br•Jo'•m Rm, bea ut bedloom.2balb"den 2•WA PIONT n o pe t f . 2 208 "·••••••••••••••••••••••• V\ejo.XlntJr.Oenter ln t'TJ.1348 ' • coaJmr, ree as. ai.:ou MOO mo. 752 oen home h&1 pluab carpet-bulluns, ~~';.t""· · V.low•n-. 5318-0959. ROOMS $25 wk up wi dynamic ar°'fUa area.1--------- •10·$1 Ina. flreplac., bullt•ll\I • S.Q. "'I• d , I • • ..._. L..llllt Plril kitchen. S37 .$0 wk u From 1631 net mo. fr up. ~ .. Lo-. 102$ ua.:n., ... 11.•••·•·• •,,:,r.:-i..~"!~· t.":;: f.::; g;:r:.:=~.'::'. ~.IN .. a. Del .... ""· • ., ... "'" ..... -.... _, Good • ._.,.,. ... , ...... ;: ...... :~·· lrll~ on11. scoo mo. with bakony • rpk . O :l·OSH oenlosa • J4COll H.4&.TY dbl1at •• paUo,frJ>lc. 1713 Sleeptns rm, pvt ba. =M. TewtwC ltt, 2ad & ltctT.o: · • ._ 13.1 lllZM weekendt 671-6670 Alabama. 5H·a.4U or ttmpl'd dara. 125. wk. RTcbnEt LOAN'SAVAILA • j~~~-=====::::;;;l.;:====1iP:======~====:==:·::===r==:b==~~~~====~~-=~,~l~~~~~SJ1.~ag1~w~r===::=::=;=~ll~rmt~.~8"~c~6~.5.18;~1G5f~~J:~~JM~•~•~•~o::;:~~o.ct.~~~k~oot~~1~~~~- • ) • DAILY PILOT * Wednesday, December 22 1976 ,1 Add it. .. Build it...D1aper i t...Hammer it... Carpet .1.it...Cem ent it ... Wir e it ... Hoe 1t...Clean 1t...M ove IL .Press it.. Paint it ... Nail 1t...Plaster 1t...Fix it... SERVICE DIRECTORY Plumb 1t. .. Patch lt...P1pe 1t. .. Remoae1 1t .... , Roof it ... Landscape it...T1 le lt ... Trtr!l 1t...Sew ~t..~ H aul it ... Add it... Plant It ... Alter 1t Learn 1t ~ ~once 1.,.1r Ccrpet Ser•I" Contractor G.-odinq Houwcleaniltcj Mo°'""J Palnthiigj1'aperi'") PalntlftcJ/ftapennCJ RooffncJ . ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Al'PLJANCE REPAllt Stuunpoo & steam c-~an Lt:£ M JARVIS Sk1pload1•r, dump tr u~:k. Want a Rt:ALLY CLl::AN l-'r1endly Me>vin& Co .,;m PaMt YOW' CatM fas~. proression~I qu.iht! Rrp•11rs & C'ompo111~\on S11>-Serv1ce Call inti Color bnahtencr:., Add1110Jl!j & Remodl!hni: huu11n11. lrl'l' wk, ~rad· HOUSE? Cull Cingh11m c1ent. fnt>ndly !>erv1cc Avrg Extr lSty $345 pa~nll~-s!~4 \ery 10 Shlllllll'i. I ll1>1ll'dJCTn" (714)s.4!J2422 wht t•arpU 10 min 962M7J J.1c3178SG m11.dl'mo.etc 751·3:130 G1rl.fo'reecstJ>,645·5123 Lo w e:.L poi.:. r a tes 2·Sly $465/lntr$45rm ~s..:..... _ lrtsrd>lu·d.Lowpnc~~.lr ·~lttitMJ llleuch. Clean ltv rm, dtn ----~10992 Prices mcl mlr'l/labor Orig Supenjrophlcs estllJO 5020or Ml 593~ ,..,.•••••••••••••••••••• rm & hull SIS. Avg rm ~-~!':J•••••••••••••••• Exp er l. F. x 1, r • d Ex Allied M --l -Guar, insni. Cree est . Custom Murols836 ~\~ ,..._ ... _ $1 50, <'ouch $10, chuar $5 ··7 hou•acleaner lo c·leun for . over• op 1\!d 6.16-7® or s.sl-0134 Telt•ltion Rtpoir .. t.ure, reliublc lady will ''uar elJ m ""'t 1·-'or. Cri)t •••••••••••••• ••••••••• 'l'<lll llAV t; IT It l''.ADY ~ eqwpment. s11ve mont!y, ... _, ..... _/R•palr Sil io h 'ld Id v "'" ,., E _, H d I '1 L I \U IT the holidays. Cull Linda d r r-tu "'" ,.. •••••••••••••••• ••• •••• r C 1 ren ore er:. reiiair. lS yr!> exl)r. 1.)() XP•u nw1111n 1tar ener. , I 1 L A WAY s:lt>-J34l lllllUTC . ree ei.l. 4!>3 810.S PET Jo; HS PAINTING ••••••••••••••••••••• •• Ci\NOl'Y TV SVC CQ _evenings,re!s 5485446 w ork m ys£>lf. ttr f:l Yd deanvp:.. 1nmming, TIMS48 ~00 Pcaintf-"'---a"CJ -Expr'd reas. rat.es. free Vfo:RY NF.ATPATCll l~t ltute~l\tt·~ 1utJM S. I 531 0101 p runing. Lt llau l 'j( -"""':!'/'..,....-" est.<.:a llGe nes.sl-0458 JOBS&TEXTUIU: Jo' I H ry ce -------645-W87 lluul111g, mov111g, cleanup Two high school girls will ••••••••••••••••••••••• . Free Est. 893 143!1 ut uir 'rH'CN!>liO·l6J:t ••••••••••••••••••••••• t:ARPF:TCLt:ANING ----S7tup. 'l'rcework lteui., house clean days (;o00 •CUSTOM P AINTING • Painting. lnl/E xl. Reas, --- -Uook~eep1nl( &. OH1t•e $7 HOOM CALl. CARUEN INU SJo:llVICt-:. fast. frt·c l'St l:W2 4597 ref:.. Call Sue 979·\ll~l or lntr/Extr. Heal\ nates dependable. 1-'ree est. Darrell's PAINT & STlJC Tree Service ...... ser vices lbr u state 646Slti7Al-'TERNOON CLEAN UP JOUS & -T:tmmy545-916*1 Call BruceS322045 c,•t•s Cal1 Jay645-196S CO Qual .wrk. rt•ui. •••••••••••• .. ••••••••• ments, typing, mallmgs. - -HAULING Reasonable Sonny & Jcr. Free h.iul --pn<.'es.548 11>71 llcmov.i ls, trimmin~. 548-0324or642·1725 Carpet Mun w11l l11y yours rates, Newport, Co:.tu mg, .tll'anup. lrt.!c woak CLEANING BY ANN lntr1Ext Painting. Avg , --. --prumnic. free est. Lac d ,._ ...... _ or mine. Rep a ars & Me-sa, Corona del Mur, for usable items Yen Expenenced, with rcrs. rm $35, all pnl·es incl Don t be hornswag_gled. ,...,..IMJ Jo\all'' tn!>ured. 642.2624 -P9'f'twr C'ltanrng too' Guar work Hunlmgton 6«'>·7S88 ce:. t bid gs removed Afters PM, 493·0680 pamt. Jo'reeest f"'2 3194 For frne _quul. pu1nt11\g & ....................... J ••••••••••••••••••••••• atbigger:..ivings.Frest 5$72005 --rair prices loo, cull PLUMBER·Repa1r, re· Removing, lrt mmini:. topp1nc In:.'d, lie. bonded. Winter rates. 00·5121 FlNJSH, R EMODEL & 64S<l64b WEEDING·CLEANUPS HOUSECLEANING Workmanship Guarn 'd Richard. l hi-pressure pipe. 1ns ta11 at Ion Rpr. Small jobs OK •WeeklyMaintenanre• Scll lhmi::. IJ:.l \.\llh Ua1ly By reliable couple Inter /Exle r 1-'reeei.l clean r1rs t. do lbey? service&. t>. Gadley, Reas. 979-0379 Want Ads Call &t2-S678 Pree Est 642 9'J07 1'1ll•l WJnl \d!>. Ref':. 963·5813 2S Yrs exp. 642 0295. w e/Ins 836-SSSS 642·9315. MotteytoLoan 5025Lost&Fo.d 5300 Schoofs& ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Instruction 7005 I .. OST S m a l J g r l" ) •••••••• •• •••••• • • •• • • • $CASH$ MmtttlUrl' Sl'hnau1er llOMEOWNt::llSborro>4 Male Ai:e I~ Nl.'cd:. llA med1('Jllo11 . R c"'ard TRAVEL AGENT ~t low bank ralt'~ to con 11 u n l . II a r b 0 u r 1 t10hdatedebtb.p<1ytaxl's. 12131592-5659 Call tol· like a vacation. room lect. -41ddilton, swam pool, ~a> _ _ _ ---~existing 2nd or any HEWARD ror gold & ~· diamond r~c-on s tem MECHANICS p111 Lo:.l 12111 m N H NA TI OM AL IAHK Uill 6732!_77 __ _ C7 I 4J638-3954 LOST : Gray Tahb y ----------• w/wht slo11U1 ch. malt! 10 Mortp«JI~. Trust yrb, w /rlea cir. Var Deeds 5035 Seaward Rd, CdM. 12116 .t•·~··•••••••!••••••••• RewanJ 673-3684. Mornini: ·Afternoon t::venmi: CLASSES STA RT l\IONTHLY PACIFIC TU VEL SCHOOL 610 E 17lh St. S Ana 543·6655 Acc-rc<l1led by NAT1'S ~l:.1bllshed 1963 Finunc-1al Aid Projlrams LOANS 9% FOUND li1cyrles-Mun Also 2nd TD Loans ll<•(•ycle, lloyre Union. --. _ f'atrest Term~ since lVlfl lluffy, Senator & 2 other Jobs Wonted, 7075 un1l1t'ntaf1e<t bike!'>~••••••••••••••••••••••• Sottter Mt9-Co. t 1 t d t r t 642.2171 545-061 I Wlll'r o' t•n I Y JY :.•U! t\pt :\lgr a\'all Jan t~t F ..: c•o lor, brand. :.l'r!JI pr. maturt•, t•rlucatul --number&dJtclo!>I (all 10 bO 1'1 cl Hcl SAVE SS llunttnRtmf lich 1•0111·1 1213138-1 121-1 J'ri,Jte party y,111 lrny LX•pt 536 5621 ---- H•lp Want~d 7100 Help W..ted 7100 H.tp Want.d 7100 Help Woated 7100 Help W0ttted 7100 Help Wonted 7100 ..•....................•••.••..•••••....•......•.•..•.••.•......•••.. •·············•·······• ..••.........•......•...••.•.••............... .oys .&uD GIRLS FOREMAN llousel'lca11l'r, l'"-1>er'll, ""'URSES "IDES RF.TAIL WAJJRESSES "'" Paint & Uela1l l\tan w /3 5 Fr1dJ~ '• ~.11txi.1 li.IJnd " " Groc~ry fOeli C~rll for Daily P1lol re>ull's in )ear!> <'-'per. m murinc blS.32'lll llPM 7AM. Expcr pre· rarl lllnl' & ru11 lime HOSTESSES . \rt·h Bl'at·h Jrt•a o r pa1nt1ng needed b} f'd Mesa Verde Conv. n 0::. It 1 0 n s u \I a I I I u.. I •1 t .... f Hou<>•kc'"'""r & \anou~ II ""lC l St cu " l'·1rt t1111" • rull l\1 .... . :tj!Una .xael au:-•1'! West!>a1ICorp .. makero dul~!>.""~a turl' 1-'or ospuv ~-:._''' w /Lav1 c1 o 's l.)el1 ' •"" . '" at lcJ'l Ill )cars uld the wo rld 's f1nebl Markel Shift munager du)' & night i.hi(I, apph Ph11lll' ti42·4321, Ji>k for Ibo Q 1-r· .• l!WSl home. 3 11 sh I fl m pcr:.on: :i.11 <tlS. ua 1 1eu can· li4\t.blWC.l\I. ""'URS"'S ""IDES pos1t1on rc11 '~ night eirrnlatlun _ _ d1dale must be capable _ _ " '" " work. Deli Clerk will Denny's Jr. • BOYS .AND GIRLS-or super\'ising a c rew or HOUSEKEEPERS & ORDERLIES work eam-tpm Good Sal 1600 Coast Hwy ll·IO men for paint & dt.!· ALL SHI FTS &company pJ1d ben1rits. Loguna_t.ac_h, Ca. 10 to 15 year s Earn tail work. Xlnt op · t:ml)loycr11 pay ftot-i., Exp.pref'd. Willtrainin· Apply in person al 612 Chm,tmas mont•y · $20 to portun1ty for the right I• v e · 1 n · S d a Y 11 • 2 tcrcskd individuals Baker, C.M. Waitrei.s. Food/Cocktaij::.. S40i.it.•rwl•cksellm.:sub-man. Good salary & c:l11ldren,SSOomo. LldoConvalescentCtr --Applyaft4pm,Sid's Bkic ~l'npt1oni. to the Ua1ly bcnerats . Cal l M s MorgoKinq IS5SSuperiorAve. >ALES Ueet,10721stPl.N.B. l'ilol Transporlal1on McDonald S49-9711 ext 47 P~rsoniwl AC)ency Newport Beach 646·1764 ATHLETICS provided. No dehvcnl's torappointment. 638-0862 ---BOYS & or l'Olll'l't1nH. Phone ---__ __ PAINTER, i.Jcilled in 530!>712 Fri.P~rson $650 llousckcl'Jler. e xpcr'd, s pray rinishes. color GIRLS Vanety lover sou~ht for ltve 111 lo IJki• 1.:hJri:t·. matching. staining. Call !Women s tart the new year out with som e e~tra rash. Interested? Hel11 m e in my businc11:. Diune 96l 8!J57. BOYS AND GIRLS kl'y posit1t•n w ·tumous 1".im of :!. i:d lor ref's. Mr. Parad1:1, 556-3937 for FUH JOI ~~~~llJn~:~:~l;~o \ 11~:11 ·~:·::~ 1•0 Will Ix-assist di~-'l'oll lc1c• & II v1nl! c-ond:; ;ippl __ ~arn up to $125 .~r ~rck Wo ml' 11 0 e ._. d l' d t 0 r l>Utl·her Supt'r oppor & 11.t )' 11:13 ~110 eve-. PIX•-S ta_k.c horn. l'. Oil· _}r~.>: ho••."'Clc •nln" -cr,.1 .. ,. mone\• sl'lltni: ..,ubM·r111 111.•ncnh Call !"an Ll<'t:k. 1;.i,11o :1ri ,..,.swer er•. T k I l 1. , .. ~ ~ " ~ " llun..., .irll·r .. t11011I Fur 111 ll-lM·l.2811 L>enni~ & Den· l':xpcr vrd'd, but will It cl sa l'' 0 s por s t·all ltoblnc:. Hai: 'N i•to11 I• d "tl . e\cnts, hours ·HI dJll). •11111;.7 l111111at1un. l'otll ISJO •111J m:. Pt•ri.onncl S...n 1te of Jlou:.cM. nc,.. µ.,rt u ~ tram. a1 w,, C tram· 10·4 Sat. hourly wai:l' i ~ " _ _ BUS DRIVER )our 2nd TU G-12 3573 :\1 a1 n t < u ' t '' 111 ,111 St.11t111g ,,ii.tty )1'15 l'N ---• l.Al!-1 Smlmaleblat·kp<io churc:hc:,, :-t hl ,, f"I lllulllh V.d1 1I (',dif llu11tanJ.,'lt1n lkath. ll1lt~ hd1> da)' 11 :t 11<'1:1:.tcr tnJl. J:: 0 1-; ~~lt.'2 __ b o n u i. . n o c x per WO~l i':N "hv not start thc lli•Jt'h Hhcl,Su1t1• 121 IJl'r,1111 !l.1:1 !:12~;! l'EOl'Lt-; PBHSON nrcess:iry We tr<11n l\CM. Yl'ar ~alh some<''- Exel· needs p ttime as-Work pt'rm1l required, Ira l'a~h lnterc~lerl ' :-oc tn Y.h:.lc supply. Jo'ul· CJr helpful. !-'or 1m lll'lp me 111 my hu~mc:.' J.1111l11r \.\Ork 11.111 l1mt• I''"' ()I' l11c·Jl1un-. ~l Oil hr +. Jo:\pt.•r adult~ 0111} 121:1> !127UI15 1st & 2nd TD loans dlc. M1~-.1on V1e1u Jrl'J l'SlJlc' 2:1 ~r-. l',_p 1n ,111 t'l.i.. II clrl\o'I ' 111· n• oH 1\\ef) Ans to "Salm pha!>es ~ 3357 q'cl 1\11111'. 1'1•r,11111ll'I 01 fHY COOK purt l1m1• Dick Chwch's Redouront ly cap1lultted 673-2223. mediate plac-cmcnt on Call Sharon, ~--1378 one or our cr<'ws. Also --I!'•'. hlO 11292 1n:w All D 495 4917 I ll'l', Cll y of I.·' I: UOJ ln•me Pat•1f1c-t-'inunc1al 1 ')S'f l\I 1, ,. 11 • 1 ~Ip Want~d 7100 1~.idi, 505 f''on,-.t Avl', 0C1'<1 crew manager:. 18 * * * • _,...____ ""' i J c vO lt • .1n •••••••• •• • • • •• • •• • •• • • MP1000 Is l TO w /rehd ~ ch.11n l'O llJr V1r f\ ll~kpr. lt\'r m, ref~ Sol La~runa ~ath. l''mal Iii dause covenni,: 40 Acre:. Orangr. & ltoe hl•;.lcr Pvt rmt lla. TV ltte rnok. in.: dall' I 5 i7 Gc·neral Acct j!. Si50 JANITOR Daytime jJ111tor for Country Cluh l"or 111 (t.;!r\ l('W call 6H·S.I0.1. &alJo\'ew/c-ar. Dale Finley PHONE SALES Cati Sue 18589 Santa An•ea Jfl'ightwood puy;able ~:\1 Gar) lla nnur CdM&ll !Ni66t'-.lol !IHOI; C"'Bl""'ETMAl<ER -i\b1hty. knowlto<lgr of f400 mo incl Ill', clut• 3 ti.'11 I~ -" " EUP Xlnl Co. ht•nl'f1ts Phone Sules people. male or female, 16 to !if> yc;irs or ai.:e. Guaranteed "'a~e:. or comm1s:;ion:.. :!SO i':asl l7lh Street, Suite O. Costa Mesa, lll'tWccn 5 .00 & 8.30 p m. ti·16 ·1223 (714) 893-861 3 Fowitoin ~alley. American National You ore the winner of 2 t'J'i. 15', cl1sl·ounl Und('r . An s w l' ring St• r, llOUTJ::H :\Ill.I. Mi\N. 2 Plea,.<' cull ror appt devlpmnt ror 8 2' 1 A<·rl' Losl : Sm ~hill' doi.:. uu' l• O~r<ttor. !J 5 M r' E.\I> cl lo 3 yr;. t:\pr. lloal orient· Jn int· Pt.!rscmnt'I Al:l'lll.'Y Legal Secrl•t;iry, muture. Volley Ball Assoc. tickets to the ----Sports, Vacatlol\ , I r I I h '1't:ddy V1t liu,.,hMll & I ,,. • l'U S.11 51110 ·~ r: 17th Costa l\lc:.a parcc s or mo 11 r ms. T ·k· hi , Hll All 4 m on y . w2K rort,.,t ,\\t: To start uflt•r thl· Nt·w 'frur C)..14·S73o SALES REP TRME & R~creational Wtr & pwr vv.ial (714 1 , lK ,u l':, · p La!!una Ue.ich ('i\ltlNl-:'I' ~IA"Ell. l'X Suitc22-I 6-12·M70 751 -182,1. .1611 ·1.J55 ~ LEGAL SECRET ARY $13,200 +CAR Vehicle Show n :E PAIJ) al th1• ATTRACTIVE GIRL Ill'• m 111,.,µl;i) & i>tor,• I Ix Annotlft t / l..u;.I Oranl:l' & Whl m.i.li tun·" (.;all Mr· l'urud1s. Gener al Office l'ermanunl p ltmf' Nl'WIJorl lkat·h 1';>1pr'd reqwn·d ('.di lk\t·rly 11 5, al K:t:l:rrn;, F.ntry ll'\'cl career •IP ,\:-;A111•:D1 1J s::a.rmn s nit. I m11::. old, blue rnlla1 ,Sophi~llCJlc•cl, -.whlc•, all ~i ~:r. for appl ~r s/ w uaml' kci: Vic C.:d '' 1\int.!nn 111 i.:1rl \\'II\'. 1111T -PC'r manent pu rt t rnw :\lull• ~ illivn Doll.11 corp starrin~ new oft-111 I r v 1 n l' . N c e d c• n thUl\laSLIC', po ~1t1 Vl' minded people to 111 lroduce inexpcns1 ve na· t11mally known prodUl'L' from our ofc. Pree park 1ng & othe r brner1t:. pleasant surroundtn~s & relaxed atmosphere No c..:per nee & no selhng 111\'olvcd Xlnt oppor ror JO\anccmcnl C.ill 1133 ·8095 , Tlmel lf e L1branes. Inc E<!ll>JI Op por Employer M F Equal Oppoa tUl\ltJr 1',rnplO.)l'I' por. for dcgrl'l'd 1111llv (; O N \' E N 'I' I O :-; W/m ajor m.1nuf or c·r:"'Tr:H ·Lost & Found I.HO It~~ or 1133 HOK4 ftl{Url' to mocll'I pri vatt•h' C ,\It 11 ET CL r:A NE HS . ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3" hrs week c;rl•Jl µ.1v t'\P G<>otl pa\• 1111 n.:ht ht.!<1\'y equip Call l);i11 ,lan.:!th1u.Ja11 ~ •. Propp, IWIH288 Abo l"ce C.11l •H2 5ti711. ''"!. 3.'lJ 111 Allnouncemtnts 5100 Penonals 5350 lJtmosl thM·rc•tmn fh•"'' p1·r~on-. t>lh 0427 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• hll ... hour:.. W11tt• MAID FULLTl ~f-: l'ool t'll'unt·r, exp d. Must ha\'l' truck We::.t's Pool Supply. 495·4190 Jubi.. Dennis & Dennis du1m )Our ltl'kl'\s. l•ersonnel Serv1rc of * * * ,,rt11.h & Cr,tfhm1·n 1>nnk1ni.: prohlt•m" Clas~1f1ed Ad ::110:1. ll.111\' t'lll':F. ~11110 mo E"'- ne«lcd for "'knd <.:rart Call Akohol llt-lpl11w l'ilnt, I'. 0 llox l :'lfiO, r11.·r d ~tel" Hluc lk-ct 'k~•l Verde• COO\ Ho'" ti61 Ccnll'r St . C ~1 lluntm1.rton Bcuch. lfHH8 Beach Blvd, Su1ll' 121 M.rchondiae s" I c. ma Jo r :-. h n p • i.i ;i..1 hr' J day SJ5 :JK:IO l'o:.lu l\k';i !12t121, lln 21st 1'1. ;.; 11 alt ·I n.>nll'r. S5 p day !'>411 0'110 --pm 675 3J:JJ -----SECRET.ARY ••••••••••••••••••··~·· MJna~er Traml't. * * • Chart.s Williams 1474 Santo Clora C ir . PHt;t;N.\NT" •\utornot1•l' (',arani.: C'unlitkotiul :".cw lkt.111 Sho11 m•c•cb Comp;in111n fur, 1-.lch•rly 111un,elmJ: & rd\'rr.JI h\'lp l.1dy, :\1alun• 7 :111.5 \bor t1on, adopt1011 & 'top \.\J~es p.iul 1-:ni.:inl' \Ion Fri <.: \1 !JI!> -Iii! I krt•pan~ Sll'amer,, en~ puanll'r' • Sportinq Goods :\t a~' :\t t• r l' h .1 n d 1 ~ l' r i.ttk' i::n J:l'llcr for out :.tJndani: \'tlf<'<'r oppor Fanta,llc bcncr1t-.' Ct1ll Oan l'ropp. 1!411 121111 Dennl5 & Ol'nna:. Per!>On· nel ~'f\'ICl' or llunl1ngton Beach. 16168 fkath Uh ti. PRINTING f-:xpcnenccd pressman 1\1 Fl lor Ua\ldson Pt>rlec'lor. Multi 1250 and ,\pr11lo lmmed1ale opcn- 111~ Day !>hifl. !\1mimum Olll' \'l•ar e"'pc1ence. l'le.i:.c .ipply tn person lo Fi • l /"'d . • Alltiques 8Q05 nanc1a "' mane s-••••••••••••••••••••••• Wonderland trative assist to $1 ,000. Person Prnlu v to SliOO Of Antiques! Costa Me~ ,\l'C.'\RE 547-2563 buffer' Ill polt~hcr-.. u11 Cook & Bro1ll·r~~n. l'om holsten :.hampuocr:.. hinat1on Appl~ 25.tO W dwck out 1111 I< up & de CoJst 11~ > N n [}t \lo n Employcrs Pay All 1-'l'l·s II u (~ E war ch 0 u ~ 1• L1L. Re1ndl'r:-Ai:ency crammed with over ~111 You .ire the wtnn('r of 2 tu·k<·ls to the Sports. V ocotfo11 *SHARON'S* Ol."rc \LI. MASSi\GE .j!t!) 1224 h\'Pry Aiiply Jt 2 JO & 5 \Ion S11I 4020B1rl'hSl,Slt•HH music: bo..:es, narkelo Ncwport Lk•ach 833 8l90 deon pianos. car cUb or Uillforappt F.'\tab'li5 gans. wall clf)<.'k:., & Rec~otioftOI V ... ic .. Show <it thr A~AJH:I M <'O'lVENTION C:t:NTER Jan 2 thru J,an !I Cnll 642 S6711, t•xl. 33.'l to duun your t1ckd' ••• Lod&Fowtd SJOO 2059 llurlJ<ir UL CM fi45 10:10 TllE t:XPERIE:'\CE" li:ib}s1tter n(•rfl1·1l :! \dull mot~I C'lo,,t•cl :;mall children Mon t'11 1m·wt TV I-or Rt">{'f\a l''e" 5.'l!J-1838 rn·111c-t1oru.. S48-ll7M *KAREN'S* Ol.JTCALL MASSA{; t: fll'M·2AM IJ38·17RO MASSAGE Ba byi.1ller wanted Im !I> r old. C }1. arl.'a. Own truns. Mt :H·hool & soml' eves Non smoker. <.:all 556-8826 or 644-4360. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Bank Teller Trainet' Stosh~Cosh Jl'OtlNo l.a d1r ... rt1n.: FIGUq MODELS •scORTS A.~ earn tv learn w/fan <'all to 1drntif) ('\c:o '" t.ist1c bank that seeks Ut•llH•n man for carl\' morn L ,\ Tame~. hom"c dehVl·n roulc 21 i hr:. .1 clay l\lusl h:tvl' l't·on. t·ar. 1\1lult:. 0111) No :.11ltt'ltll\g, 110 \'Olll'C( 1111:. Westm111sl('r / llu11l. Uch art•a tl.11! 0121,; Uclt very l'crs1)n 25·30 hr a wel'k. Own lra11:-.1111rl:lt1•in . rf'1m hur,l'ml'nt for milcal{c. Co1tta Mt•~a Mccltcal re n I l· r I' h .1 rm at· y ti42 OIOH ---------·1 Su1ll' 121 Scrv1re Stot1on Allen i:rancHal hcr clock:.. GUARDS SECURITY GUARDS ~1 anagemen l Trainee MARTEC danl. l'Xper'd l)ay & rai.cinatmganl1ques .. Young man lo work m l::vc' ~'Ull & piltmc. J\p Over Sl.000,000 Wofth Growing Tool Hcnlal R~Pf'Oductions, Inc. ply, Shell Station. 17th & American lntcrnaCK>nal · Uu.o;mess, mu~t be neut 1n 3311 Wcst lrvinl', NB Galleries. 1802· T Kettt!r- appcarant•e &. have very MacArthur Ulvd --ing St .• Irvine . Tel Join a progressive, rust neat handwr1tini:. 6 d<iy Santa Ana. Ca. SOCIABLE ASSOC ?54·1717. Open Wed thru growing c:o. w/new u p· wk, w /week duy Mr. NOPllON ECALL.S need e d by I<:XEC in Sal.9AMto4PM.Visil! prouches to security. If Pref. married man for PLEASE ':"hsle Fully c·~p1t.all1.cd. HORSE DRAWN WAlfER you're tired of lhe oltl permanent, resPons1blc Equal OpPorlunity s upp I y . r I lim e . WAGON.,,.,....,. • time guard compa nies pc1!.11lion. cxper. not re Employ MW (213)592 3295 ~ w,their old idem, or 1C ti'd. a1>ply 1930 Ncwportl•---------i--_:__: · 552·7091 • you're looking for a .new Ulvd. Cosw Mesu STOCK RM CLERK '~more cxc1lin1? cart."er -MANAG L'R , L" ._, • . Wests ail Corp. has a 1-;UilNOHF. ~ ~1 OUTC All. OHL Y c-~eerful mrh~ l\1 II Lrl' O..•ln'l'ry man. c•aily /\;\I l.o~l llt>wurd, 'm;ill 631-3111 ~l'slon. "'111 I~ l><'nn1' T . l • <.:o t mntact r. s r4 xr u cou P /TIME IKKPR vacancy ror a pC'rson pie to manage fit units. for trade association. In· with al lcusl l yr ex per • adult com plex. C M. office work. Dues billinl!. an stockroom work . CASTLt: GAi.i.ERIES Announces a urnquQ ne\v t·onccpl in :i nLi qoe mert·handismg. Earn up to 150' < per mo. !:lee ad under Class 5015. bhtc-k 1Joa w wM rlw'iit. --& Denni<> l'f'r,onn1·I 1 me:. 1 ou ~' ' .t S f II l\lf·,,1 Nn t•ollrcl 111).(, ,·~l~4J4S'S "'., 1.1 28R1 · 2ba. :~µt, uhL•1l':1 &11 A P. A R, payroll. $4 . hr. !'t1 a nne :-lockroom ex --~ • s a ar)' Soul an Cal l ror inte r view. per. preferred, but will sk1nnv ll'it' m .ilt• AIORTIOH en1rc o_ unl1111:t on rnu,.,l h.Jvt' dl'pc·mlJhll' 1142 1303 .ift S .l>i>m C'oun•••lin" &. llt•frrral Beach. 161~ Heut·h Blvd. .. r cir 1_ ... 1 --• :; ._:~ ProJ>('rl1es M,m,igemcnt, 557 7970 consider sailing b11ffs .._ " Suite 121. I .t •1' ' "' l'rei;c te'>l·avaal "'knd" __ _ If ) ou -mee t lhesf' 548·!>300 _ _ __ •---------t wilb a real know how . quahhcalions -you \I.Ill MECHANIC --Apply, to the receptionist-----=--:=== Jo"OUND l'u.i no1,l·d ~llrllelplme:>47 !U!t:, Boston Trrn«'r hlk r.ace hig t'yt·~. tnn budy, v11 •SPIRITUAL READ1-:n )forkfl U,1skc-t, h.11 rc-n Jo'Ully L1t-t•11!1t:<l BAR GIRL Nights Al tractive. Colll.!1te 0 1\ Salwry + 646-~4 ~i3 2t~Ul _ ___ __ llHM t-;t Canunu l!e11I IKKPR/Scciy f'OUNl> hlk ~ wht fc-m S;in Clf'm('ntc•. fo'or iappt Sm:11l bu.'im1·~!1. l'\1 rull dog. Pn'\<1 1ble f\ew 4929034 49272'J6 tJme 64522441111!1 ,\M rnothttr Tu'ltln & 20th. REl_,AXl\'IG MASS/\t:t-; ---f M t;42·2'7!IO 8oh JJme!I l.1c: l\la"~eur loai Caf1M•r. '""0 2 r b-lk -, Outcnll<1!1!1,49't511l Atlantic: l'at·if11· v .. cm youn$: Mortt1me Compuny . Ball & .Nutwood. N1rolt' & Simmer. ntlrnc 646->i91 heim 772·6821. t1"c redhead'< would Uke ----t------to meet GenUC'men Cor BouL'l fOUNO dog, hlk mule. duy ori-vt• fun 535·5JIJ.1 Atmbly/C--ntu Vouni;c Unusunl frnnt · · · · -;· r- eg. ownr c11ll ln 1denllry. * • *' Exper r<''I <I , good ll68-670S hencrats. a1111ly Cou:1tal ' Mn. F. G. SOCJ95 Recreation. 17422 Ocrion I~( JJNO kitten, 2mo.'I nld 323 P.tt.Mtfla Ave, Irv. 551;-3720 ~.-ri ng red collar. CoroftadelMor BOOKs------- II Ukh. 673 29211. You Dr'e lhC' winner or 2 Shldetth J • U N D p a r a k e e t • lJckeU to the Houwwh••• & ftded . ea11 to c1eacnt>c Sporta, Yacotio11 Moonlie• !Cit& band J . 549-1762. & ltecreaffolHll V-... cle ., .. _w Million Do lar corp. l lod 11mall beagle·llkc """ ~ needs men & women or I w/blk & wht spots. nllhe any age who e njoy ~coll 646-8485 ANAHEIM: speaking w/olhers & who .._---------4 C 0 NV ENT l 0 N are bored w/the average JrouJl/D. bm/gold stripe CENTER runorthe m11l jobs. C.l w/rhinestonc collar. Jan. 2 thru J un 9 JJlr. Beach " Bolsa. Call 642-567ft. ext. 333 to No actual selling In· 11911-1144 chum your l1rkels. volved & no setting a p '"'1""~----. -Bl-k-fema--l-e_C_oc_k_·1 ----*-*-* ____ 1 pointments. Work w/one or the most popular & ll·J>OO(?) Small & young. ~ ..t & f I r'fr Magnollo/Atlnnla, ,.r-ati..._ success u Product!! on ,_. the market today. An In JIB. Call 962·2218 ....................... expensive product who'• ~TOOL Box w/tools. Sc:Mols & name is a ho11sehold t llwy Nr Promon· IMtr.:tlOft 7005 word thr110ut the world. ~Pt. Call to idenliry. •••• .. ••••••••••••••••• Work in 11 youqJful , Jrl3~4632 MEN WOME N friendly atmosphere & ~ TIAIN FOil have tun white you ~a.m J'OUND: Blk & Tnn IAITIHDING top pay, You receive a ~pberd, Can't Kel'p. TWO WEEKCLASS guoranwed salary+ n · pwner please call. NATlON-WlD!JOB tremely llbtral com· ~-4. Pl-ACEME",... mi.s11lon & bonuses. Con-.I.-~ , .. ' tc11U & ol.hcr ln.centlvea. TUUND: 12/181 Collie. ASS1$l'ANCE Xlnt advancement ......_ rem. Broo1tburat & 0000 JOB pessiblUUcs for both men W ID 1 t m I n 11 l • r • OPPOltTUNITlES iiwo W~ltmln1ter. &31-721~ A.MRICAH men. ~ IAITIMDllS i'ouNo: Shep Mix, fem. SCHOOL ,,..... w /brown aPQll. 4;$ a uw a. m.h st., SA -old. Vis. F•itvitw 6 IM-.IMO ••fHr. Santa An•. Scliool.aCOUlToCout ~llMS 0 L EONARD FENTON, I.Git: Sat tvt Dee. II. OtJ FLUTIST.. ~nl))r ar· ..,. Pa~ QuH11. Oold rh-.d rrom P.,it ls now .tntti.&. wttJt 1old fOln acctptJn1 l\udenll at all Jlwd ..,,.7417. levels. Call US.rm No exper. nee. Vo11 ro· Qflfve foU P.ll>' while beln1 lTalned. You C•n work moraiftl or eve. h.n;. On· 11 10 Ulln. by Fwy. from all Hrroul'ldln1 com · munlUea. You owe lt to yourielf '° •l lcNt ln· •caU1ete tbla unu•&aal oppgr. Cont1cl Rtaeo ROl".m'808L DENTAL OFFICE MGR. f:"-11Cr1enc-c necessary Bui.y pral'llC{'. Short work wl•1•k. Benefit:. ll u11t1ngton Bea c h K47 1.071> llt'nt.11 ORTHODONTIC Chairsicle Assist 1-~l<pr prdcrrcd <:M :>iG :mo rt'C<'I\'<' P l Sales. $40·$70 wk up. at Z75 tt1C'Corm1ck Ave, PR~HRISTMAS Best pay/benerat~ Automobiles Class A he. Men. ladies, students . Costa Mesa. S "LE Rl[r pdl re q 'd S 3 S Q • t:ves/Sal. SS4·7851, ----------• " s . raining ~"" p 'bl r ood T-•-..a...-Loads or rum. c"io:i, -Uniforms Furn .....,.,+ ossi c or g 1139 7006. -r-·~ 4 Bonus for state cert man. lo'ront end ahgn ex ----------• Solidor m1rron., Ille nxtureai, d per, tuneups, elcc exper RECEPTIOHIST etc ., • -Unbmite PART T IMJo: WORK Comucopiat\nti'quec .. , etc. Re ply to: Class1r1cd .. At.vancemenl FROM R O ME Jo'OR •Nt.31•tSt,N ". ad no. 775 c/o Daily Pilot, Attractive, over 18, for .. w " " WPNSQual $2.l!Ohr PO Box 1560, Costa HEALTH SPA. We will UNITED CEREBAL 11 5Tuesth ruSut1 . Mature Personnel PALSEY-GUAR WAGF., --------rrererred M_!sa.ea 92626_· ____ , tram right per son for-NO EXPEll, 1MMED 1-'rcnch sideboard. xlnt. SIS Security Med FrntOfc to$600 easy fun job. Mr Gee. OPENING. 963-4001 or $475. Sterling pit~hf'r Industria l Services D•llClhtful Doctor (24hrs) 752·9561. 9954819 $250. AnUque silv&\"• & 4320Campus,Ste 130 Seeks 1rlendly rel'cp· Receptionist to$500 ~ bruss ilem~ S50 lo s.!oo. Newport Beach s-49 11011 TELLERS mJ-0069 ' lionasl! Beautiful orrice, Front & CHttf' l><'nt.11 llec·cpt, for S Lic.No.C6117. "N!at beneftts. CUii Lisa 1-'EEPAID nanklngcxpcr .only. ---( 1.uguna ore. P /T1 me.1---------• " Contact Bob CrelJ(hton Antique 1900 Uprli;hl V c 1-:xpcr, w/htc bkpng. Kay. 848·1288. Dennis & Up Fronl oppor. in cor· Irvine National Uank trol11 , 125 r ecords, int l'1I 49!H l tID GUARDS Denn 1 s J> e r s on n e I poralc ofc of beautlfol 1133•3100 Caruso's. G4IHl40:l , Service· of Huntington co. that seeks friendly In - Desk clerk, full time: Th<' Inn at Laguna. 21 l No Coa:.l llw y .. Laguna Beach Apply In person. Cotta M.1e1 Beach, 16168 Oe<tch Blvd, div. Call Ceclia Will, TELLERfPfTIME Rare Chinese Mongolian Permanent. Full & P•rt Suite 121. ' 848·1288. Also Fee Jobs. CpL. 8xl0, xlnr.. aof'fd . time. Phone & transp re· Dennis & Dennis Person· Bra nch ofc seeks bonda $1950./bst ofr. 997.4404,. q'd. Retired welcome. Medlcaf ltecpf. nclServkeofffuntington hie 'fe lle r to w o rk - - Call 546-0214, ofc brs 10.2, Exp. required. ·t ype 55 Beach, 16168 Beach Blvd, p/tlme. Eltper. prC'f'd Antique armolr.,~ cbc~l. Earn exlrn s pending Closed Wednesday. W(•M. Able to wor k un· Sultel21. Contact Hilda 'forrunO\•e c h r s. table , nut.~h . money! Sell i;ourmet ---------der pressure. Takes own (714)644-7255. f>iS-6472, Thur. Prl. roods & wines. C&ll Bob Initiative. Handle RECEPTIONIST WestcrnFc<1er11ISavln11!1 --------- 540-6446 AVON responslbllltiea well. Call SECRETARY 2744 E. Coast Hwy, CdM Appianc.1 IOI 0 for appt. Ask for Susan, Neal. attractive, for new Equal Oppor F.mployer 0 •0 ••••••••••••••••-'• E-.r -" ~-.. _, D P I y b Cl b REFlUGERATO~ ..,...pmtm ,...c,,_c 640-0140 ana 0 rtt ac l u • Travel agency m~r. for WASllERS.DRYF,J{S Slartlng salary $979 per Ha .. 4VeryMeny -L I •.rs ST (714).496-6681 new o fc. N.U. a rra . Recondltloos·Reprqs ,& month. Apprenticeship Chrittw.at-M...,. A ·-I • Reto ll exp. req 'd , FrgtOamaae.Guarli'~t or Auto Mecha nic o r :ind the money 10 pay for Exp. In blood drawlnJi. RECEPTIONIST Resumes In confidence ~ Vrs in Orange CO .• :. F.Qulpmeot Training U · It . P:xce1Tent pl-lime C.h(.Llc.notreq. Prefer TYPIST to Ad 11110. Dally Pilot. DUNLAP'S ' per req'd. Apply, Person· earning opportunity. Call ~sUs~1.::.0~~Cl. Ask For Nollonal Sports PO Box 1560, CM, Ca • ne l .orrl ce • Clty of 540-704lor Zenith7-l3S9 Organization, pleasant 92626 1815 Newport Bl, CM • La1tuna Beac h, 505 CALL548778Q F oresl Ave, L aguna Mgmt Tme, perm. Earn f reeter & good phone Typing, filing & light of· . •'' - Beach. Final riling dale HORSES S17S·$200 wk. Fuller voice necessary. Basic rice work; nexible hrs; MuytOJ( Gas Dryer ~· 1/5/71. BHSI qualified, S RS Brush Sales, s.54·7851• omccAllls&wlWngneu in C.M. 61S·WU btwo 4 & Kenmore Gas Dryer.,.,.5. lned bl I to learn. Ca II Ms. ,. ~ tra accel)U c mu11 Moltil Maid needed, In• Lawrenceat751·9800 6PM. Kt<nmorc WAahc:t' ~ iXPIDITIHG be versatile 4t Cree o~ cludM wHhln.r windows, O.E. Elec Dryer $7:f,~a. SICltlTARY Ues. Submit portofolo to. 4hrsd.ay. 5day wk, 9AM-R.epro Typist wanted So. TYPIST . Guar/del. 546·8672 • •• Wcstsall C-Orp. has a n P .O. Box 3035 Lona 1PM. $3.50hr.493·1664 Lagu na area . Light 6S-75wpm. Gd En11 back· tmmed. vacancy for ex• Bcach,Ca.90803 secretarial le clerical around. WIU lrnln A/P. Gas range w/hood.·,d-t pedltlna 11ecrctary to Uotel MOTOtHtOUTI dlille1. Call for interview $6SO/mo. to stort, xlnt fr· oven, BBQ, s /s flll.,•ld worlc In busy stock room. t DILtY•Y ....... 499-4563 lnae ..__..,1•·. Apply In cond. $125/ofr. Etcci-wt Must have at least 1 year HOUSB• HG .,..,.. ~'&;b .. Leaverton, range w /hood & ~ite.n, of cxpcr. In purchaalna PORnR ~~!1~0~uC:11=~.~~ ~0AUUCRANT ..,. tne, Plumbln1 Contr., olr. 751-<1087 •ft 6pm or 1tock r oom worlc. Night s hift, union ners 1n South Leiuoa -.. A HOME""CAN 16'721H&lc,Jrv1n•. Port Kenmore w')lr . S h o uld be familiar boncllu. Pleue call for ud LallWl Nljuel. Re· RESTAUltANT UTO-u perfect. cond, g~at /or w/manne part..•. l(ponl· apptextS!I0,6'5-!iOOO.. qlll,... t taUon waaon or now acceptlf\I •PJ>l1ca· •-A l d II ble . Pltue call Ma. vu. Phoae MZ·cl.l. ftk tlon1 tor waltre11ea. Rf..'TAJLCLERKS · ~.ziis'7 w e eu. ~H · McDonald, 549-9711 for HOWlSTMlnMI torllalT)'Setit)'. bo1teu .. • cocttall W11ntd. Opporlunillet _ more lnlormatJon . for job 1etlien io dlittk &qua I Oppo rtunity waltreues. Pleue apVly for advan~menl avail. 2 refrll(orators, OE 17 ~u MOTICI the D~lly Pllot Help Empaoytr 3PM·TPM, 21332 Mc n· OpenJ"" In C:O.ta Me.a, ft, w /lcemakcr, c:qp· how Dally P1lot Clau· Waated mulllcat.loa. U tyre St. Phone 7•.oeQ. Anahelm~rden Orove p e r l o n e • s 2 ~:Ck Ul_.. d d' 1 t"'-1 U. job 1ou want la not MUISIS AIDIS RetaU H let ln Mlaston "Wutm r. COLDSPOT 14 cu fl\ wtlt. W\.I • ' lll> •Y ... r lhere)'OU mlabtc.'09tider All Shlftt. Ex:pm:. pref'd. Viejo, approx 20 hrs wk. . 64~7702 $125. t»th xlnt, beat o(r. moAllJet wltb lealbllil)' olfenn1 your Hrvlc .. WUI tniio u nec. IGMIO. No e..-r MC. Mu.st be 549·'1'200, 962 TUl '··-· and Impact 1 Ourada, we wtth u ed In tM Jobi---------~ .... are proud to say, nally avail t>et 1oam ar 7pm. Try a Dally Piiot Philco P /F Refrit~l'ir i•t renht. Pb one Wanted cat.e(Ory. PbOcae SELL Idle fl m1 with a App11 fll FotomaL O>rp. Clurlfled M to ~Tq. actl ouve. H Y.a c u fit. Cd &42-SG78. , • ~ .J. Dally PllotClau lfled Ad • .,...ltt. orrentsomtthinj. c:ond. Sl2S/bet84U276 ·-··- ~ICMees IOI 0 GGrOCJit Sd• 1055 Gar09t S• 8055 '··············· ............................... ················· ..... . ' ··WASHER-DRYER l..l.lt.e model, su~r tl1•lu% Nulll cycle, hke new P¢ con<:! Sa4·nf1rt• ut $2.2~ ro r h vt h ('.ill ~$1-5177 8015 .•••••......••...•....• 'New 1mpo1lt'J IJdOr> SH'ice:. 100•~ l'ollon :o.l11rt:., t ops. 1:10 ,.: 17th 1·~ 1146·9'.!87, 1"15 W1 I ••••••••••••••••• DO YOU LOVE HER? Then -Buy her a lovely 70 1>c ~t-t of New Wallace Sterling S1lvt•r at 20,..~ below retail pnce. 4127 C Hllcrlo Wfrf Newport leoch, Co. fHeor Hooq Hospital I 646.-7631 8080 Mlac~IONCMll 1010 locrh. Po...-9040 ...•.•••.........••••.• ·············•·•······· .........••••.•..•.•... IJel·r drnftt<1 . hot~ '• K1·e Ont'otal r~ Chlnetoe rot ~ C'lllU~CHAf'T 30' t"n of bl-t:r, n"" rood $:?00 r, .... tbl . .,nt111uc dc1>k t<n.:. hJult·d. rl'fir111tht•d 613-~6 CJ ll Jh t lA \t \link swh• ~5 4t!J2 !><.'pt iii. SU3ort !>46 ~3 <:1w your,t'll .1 prt·•w111' AH nutural Wt•1.iht lo'~ 11rodut·ti. Gu..ir JOtct:d lo work l 11et•tl d"tn !Ju Lor~' b4~ 2051 & 1>46 7933 llA V Jo; SA "'i'r,\ \'ISi I' SOMJo;oNt-: YOU LOVE M111(l' }our resrrvatmn 1'oow 1;.10 :!029. d:i,·-; l•I •'Vl'~ Merry Chni.tm.1s' ltO)'lll l'lt•c t) .IJ(:WTI lcr. ufr "'l'. $l.2S. Squa:ih blo:.som stcr l1ni: nt'1'kl.icc S2Ull firm \<le Lane lawn mo" l'r, 7 bl,ct1e. SlOO S1ti ti8til, !)79 9.184 Vi.ed (~rl)l•I appro'< 150 .Hb S3 oo l')j'f ~ J Orum "'l $1 ')(). 495 ti18ti C.:hord organ, l:wn•·h. & ump. $35. 10 speed $1~ Ca fl !l63·1154l nl7 I lltJ,ln11 WhJkt 11 J" 'i~ 15 ll v John:.1111 molur "1th onlv 10 hour-. ~1100 111 m llc·11lan•m1·nt ',11111 ~lOO l'<11l lyl;! -1 ~ :! I . J\ t 11 h u n \ 1 .1 h 1 n 1..'hrv:.l1·c \'111. \'llF. :!:!Jhp " tr Ir :>I I ,5!111 [>HI ,')ji7:! 7:1 l'rut'l'" V Jl utioru·r 1•1 . 1·ut1~11 l,1h1n , x.'ifll'. trualcr, many 'l:lr a~ $4301). 5.'12 (lli15 Wedne9d.}y, December 22 1976 * DAILY PILOT 9 Motor Ho1M1, TrucJu 95'0 Auto5. ~d s-.11...t '160 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ···················~-••••••••••••••••••••••• '76 Dod.:c ',ton 11100 Ful ~al 97 . I &.'6' ti ML MOTOIIJIOM .. ~ Iv lt1.illed. lo m1 . W.00 ••••••••••••••••••••• • Slp:.r. Wntr ralt•is P\t C'uh 1195 350tl. &llj 73.t-1 RARE '62 ll!vlb:l :!fiW, i6 uooi.:e 318 Truck, lull MASHATI t.. • &l:t 4097 Nwp_t __ llmc4 wheel dn\e 3500 GT CCMlpe ,•• C.:\IC Lale '73. xlnt. cond • _ _ 549 0726 S Sl'(b. lll!W lire:;, Bor- slp ' ti Sl9.200. 1238 IS" Ton .,·urcl Lnatk•I roru win• wheels, fuel an· l'<•lan-.. NR. 833 26111 Mu~t Sl'll ~":!SU. l'h ~<.11un ... Jumloum ~Y; Dale's HV Rentul1o SSl-31 U AM s Xlnt rnnd. VNy fial4l' 23,000 m1 Too hol C~Mt s t\i·rci. '7S• '71) moc..ll'ls. The fu:.tc~t tlruw 111 lhl' w 1 ft.' • T r a d l' f~T lnutl' !°l::l\l·44 u; W1·:.t a l>JllY l'llot 1>ometh1ni: tumcr. ~­ fll'rH 1!17i :tU' Owrlund Cla1>1>Jf1ed Ad 11honc tora, Lotus, Etc, or •'I'' !-\illy llllflll . rt·!l~onal>lc t).12 ~i78 Pvt pty. 675·366a,or ------1················· •PUILIC• Fu to YOM 8045 Gar«KJe Sale 8055 HAUIO Control 1-;ll'l'trtt' Muckl 1vr &1Jl, 11v1•r :1 fl loni; • ..irt•n. water 1·a11 non. 2 SJ"Ct'ds. t.'ll' \'1•1 ~· \ir ho<'kry i.:ame SW Strn :.opb1:.l1l':il~·d toy <her ~ray b1lce:. $5 & ~. Cull !>111011 rcvlal't.·mcnt 963115-11 Pvt. Pty . !>..">I 12:.'7 Vans 9570 645·2200 __ ----..a. ----------Trailers, Trav•I 9170 ••*'•••••••••••••••••••• • * • * RNITURE • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• GllANU H ,\~l\S .Jti, ••••••••••••••••••••••• 'illl'hl''Y '•to11,3SOt•llj.1,3 '•t.G.ndron " :>;l'),000 & tiraml Banko. lS' Sll.\STA. w/awnani: & ~pd, 17,llOll m1 , $4500. 519 SlgnalRd. .. •.AUCTION• Thlrs Dec 23rd At 7:30 PM Consignmtnts Storoge Loh I· rel· Lu gd hme. :.1111 wh1k fl-m !'111.'kJf)Oil l~p(', Jdur J hit'. i;uo<l w kids. s.t!~ RADIO C'ontrol cll'l'lrll' ,\toot'! ,,., noal. 0\l'r 3 (t Ion~ ... rn·n l.\Jlcr l',1n non. :! :.µt!ctb, ell' Ver) ..,oph~llc..ilt'd tov th'l'r '$1800 rl'l.'1.JI l llll'll l Sdl'Olit't• ~)() lrt1 lr1tfl'' e\cr) thin~ hi~ :lbl;:.! nr tw~ :?:.•oo !:Jal'nf1c,• $.'MXI Includes ----l'Vt<rythrn~ 675 36ti2 or Misc:elfCllteO\ls :i:.: • ~ ~ ~1 . o o o r u 1 1 \ J••<'k". SOOO ~18 30ti6 Newport hach '. l'<1111ppl•u for cru1..,111i:. !'HS·SS?ti ·w vw \' Jll, iti l.'llC. ~rr) You :art: Uw w111ncr nf l 8081 p ,1 l'I ' O 14 >5ji• 27 t7 Troi~. Utility 9180 i:ood rnnd, ;i~k1111t $:lOOt lll'ket.:. to lh<' ,0 ••• • •• • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • 8-MJ..1296 c.. ...... ~ •• Vacation • • ~~2200 Wanted ....................... <•l'rm;111 Shep m1" ft:m, "VJ)t:d JIJl>rOX ~ mo:.. "'"''' ha-. ralm.-s shots ~(j ~)~:! >I-Ii l'r:t7 CUSTOM WOVEMWOODS 50•, TOSO'. on· Wanted· owrl>tuffrd furn. .,....... ' wrll pay cash. dam.agt•d loots. Soll 9060 lhlllflal l~·d tr:ult•r · 1 •--~ & R•c:,..atlonal .,,,,. Stock Liquidations •0.aten Welcome ctt ""~' ll UV1li:t· Sµorl \',1n, \'II, •I O'. 9ti8·'""0 "' "~. •••••••••••••••••••••• • ~ • I ' V•hlc:le Show 1 " """""~ '' 7t>K·ll-l~ aulo. Ill'" 111 c:. a." lOl "'i. ... dedn .., 1:!!15 ll4t. 111111 01 al the llol111• ti., trlr 111'"-11.1f1, ~ ":: SS SAVE SS 111.11·1<. I .1h llJ m•l" m.1lt" 11.i,. !:'""' h11m1· " '.inl '"""· huu ,,. ll•llll'r!\ "{•1 ·~SJ; 0\'<'r 10 in ~tot•t.. p..illerns \\ oodl'n l{(){'k1ng llor:.t• 111 \bo ~11NI Uhnds good 1·o nll hl•for.: more• Sl 125 c.1'1 H:!.1.\ or Auto Senice,Ports t..l:! 15:!X \NAIH:IM _. Footl J\Jil.1hll' 1111 lh• 111 t!mr"\'" lto•m., 1-oUhJl'l I lo pre:..ilc Wt• h1111u1 ll.Jnk \llll'rl(',Jrd \I ,"I' 1 l., h .J r~\' • (' ,1' h 11' I Chl'l'lo." Jllll ( \S II \o JX'r.(lllctl dll'd\" 1•ll'.l\t' MASTERS AUCTION 20751/1 Nwpt.11. COSTA MESA UJ-9625 646-8686 Bicycles 8020 ··~··················· lt3lf•iJ:h "Gr.1nd l'l'I ~" II · ~JX'<•d hike. :.?II'," fr.11nt• :1,upcr Chn-;tma' i.:tll' Slit tor a l11lo.l' 111 t"'C<'\'lh•nt 1·nnd1l1on' :'ilui.l 'ell' 1,1;! Ol:IX {; S t: l>, H t-: U 11 1 I. T (... Gu..ir.intt•cJ .\II l> ll''" purh. rq1.111. 'I 1.11/t· 111• Jl ll'j..lll•d 1;:11 2 IOl • • • Suz.ie Defranco 320 I I So. Coast Hwy So.lo9una Y11u .1r1· tlw "inner of :.! ll«'kl'G to tht• Sports, Vocation & Recreational Vt'hic:le Show "The GaraCJf Sale" C lottiu! Clothes! • '\Oflll.NG 0\ ~:It'!>.',• lilt.Ur.ingt• CnrOl'rol OrJnl(e 17th M C.:~I Opl'n c\Cry Wl.'d Thur:. ~·11 IU·4 ~l'ar 111·". S1min11n' {~11 mallrt""· ho\ .. pnni:s, f r:Jrn<' & br;is,, hdhonrrl, <! dressers w malt'h1n1: <.,; \) ut t he 1\;\Allfo:Dr NV I-:~ T I t 'E'.':T~:H ntll' !>lands. 19" tJl.1ck & "hk liCATV,krl<'h sl'l, GE retng, sot.1 },..•ti . ·I l'Oll ta!Jlt•s 8-lll !15Jti J fl ti 0 N - .I ;111 :!' thru J :in !I C'.111 1.t:! ~mt t•xl :1:1J lu rl;11m }IHlr ll<'kl'h • • * Horses 8060 ............•...•..•... For S.ih: :.! pontl'~ & :.ho" quurtl·rhurM· C;,ll ~7 IO!ll Rl'gis lltr horst?, II~ r i:elrt f;.t~ll'I~ SJ:i9770 ChrL.,Lm.a-. 1'31 :!12'J Siii i50.'i & Acceuories 9400 ••••••••••••••••••••••• t-iJ \".10 :\ldJ.! 'Ahrcb. ~oo"I 'l'" 1>ort lkat:h T.:nn1~ Musicol Clb\kmWrlohtµ lmtrwnenh 8083 ti73 1751 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Conn Min 0 Matll' l'll't.: \nli1pll' 1ru11 l1t ti l1,1ml' & orl(an. "''-<'<'lll!nl rontl1 r J th SI ~ U1IJJ(onal twn.S600.l'P.SJ:!l:t5!1 :oh<11>\'d l(.•m<' or 1llnini: 1,1IJIC' "1th t t·h.irr" $125 fluffl'l 1•larinl'l, i.lnt l'la~lll' uw111ni:'>. l.1r~t·. l'nnd . $100 <'all ~J:l llHS SS c.H'h tllrl'(•n <'I. wh1lc1. bl'tween6&8 J' :'11 Har or r oom d1v1der . ~ , 1Maplt>l f1 n1-.hcrl or.th l.~ITARS. 12 ~ln ng i.1dci. Sl::JO ur f>l'~t offt'r. "~m~ha, p~ush ca ... e Ne<'d to ~ell. Call 557 4305 S~20. (,rc·lch Chet At_k1~1 ~ nn.>'llllll! N;i:.hv11lr elee !)l 1S. ~; It I (' ~ () '.'II .! ~I f II 11 1 fUl:.l' (Jfl', ~~'I IMIO ol It I 1175 18;1(1 t' \ l'" ~ "k.nd:. HOBIE CAT J .5 Meter (I I', ~'I -.malll'I \'l'"IOll of Hobll' !ti & 11 I l.1 kl' nt•w. l'OlOl'l'U i.a1b anrl l''<lrJs Gn·Jt lur huvl. (1r.,t 4 at. \'1•ry «1,.l StiOO li75 ~or 6'15 2200 12' Kile. xlnt l'onll, i.ton•d. mu..,l s1•ll SSSO. !.17!H.i3911 or 557 2319 I in· ... 1:> 1 iOtl\ Hi li1llldyear 'llll~ l1rt•.., with JCCp µ.1111t .\ uphul . 1 un:. ~· .. ltl :>11;)(1 :ll:l 0711'1 nnl'> i.:1.wd lrt'Jd Sti~> i:! Uoll._'l'. Tr.i1fr~111.111 100 ~ !);l5i l.B. Skrt·u. l .1rw t•Jlll'I i.:n 11 t• n•.., 5-UI t l:.!'1 ...•.•......•.•..•••.•. Autos for Sole Autos Wont.d ~neraJ 9510 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••• ••••• •••••••• CASH FOR CARS! 1975 C'hl·vrokt Mah bu lo Top S Ooll11r S pu 111 for 1111, S:!9!J5. l!IH Surnkt clean u~cd eors, trutks & mulorc} cfe, TM 125, Ith• C'ondteb Ask for P a ul new. make offer. 008·4637 O 'Neill Hft6PM HOWARD Chorolet ~1 i l41or831-244!:1 Hdn1•. twm lacd:. l'Qmpl. 3 ---2b' Endl',l\'c1r Slrn>p 5 Antiques/ l'ht:,:,l of urwr:.. ladie3 Mns~ma n. Tennes~l'e llut i..Hh, ~lpi. .1 11111 Ii re Classics 9 520 l11kt'. arlfl. flocked trcl'. lop Guitur w ,ease . hnes. llk1• nrw llavc ••••••••••••••••••••••• Dow & Quail Sls . N~Wl'OllT Bl::ACll l'}l'k hl'lmet. l~e :.nta Mai:niftl'ent s700 Ph 'ltt> $5.:!5-0 or l>l'sl otf,·r MG·TF Rott I 500 \Jll'l thr. v.1nc rJl'k:>. &1282~ti _ 5~·7Hlll or 11:13 2~1 1 or J,rlt hand drl\·e . ~,w111· 6-111 5:!90 rir 5111i6ti00 ask Orum s.tt. ·Pearl". d.irk ~U74~ \\heels & an rxc1•ll•nt for Ann • Hi f(· t •-Ritl nmd111on' <XP EG239V J l(rav ... pc, a "' c llUlill:: 11> . .:uuJ n111cl ~d tond $175 1):11 0323 many '<trJs $ISOOor 1x-,1 MUST BE SEEM Office hmiture & offer S.-Mi-sm BEACH IMPORTS W~ PAY TOP L>OL.l~A lt l"OB TOI' liSEU CAHS FOREIG'.'11, DOMESTIC.: orCL,\SSll'S JI 'our C'.ir 1:. cxl r.1 • lt·,rn ~l!l' ll-'> Cir..t BAU~IUICK :!925 llarbor Uh ti Co,,lJ !\t cSJ !li!J ;!500 •!lo t:W l:~1'.lJ lSll, I'.~• Uu, ~•·II 1"r..idt• l'Jrh &. Rt•/1J1r, !'.kJtrbl1.1rd-. ro i:u t11m• K ll lt'n" 1 '""' Or.1ni.:e &. "ht ·1 .1h l.111·' l'l.1vful Cont.HI !'i<1c •1:4 iii5 mi:. :o.lnl tr:J•I. "l'll Ill Jn l'11mmen· 1JI Sv. ini.: nl'rrt1 si;oo 1>40 70!1'i r ·u..,tom. big. SIOO. WE BUY Eqwi~nt 8085 SABOT Full~ •'rtuip!>(•d IWI l>o\I' Slrt.'<'l Sl!t •••••••••• .. ••••••••••• "Ith hJnd doll) $3:?~ '\Jo:WPOHT Ui':.\('11 Complete ofrrt'l' sl't up. Uill 67J 570:1 752·0900 ( '\cdo· ,\ Cn. :.>11111'li1•"1111rt Blvd I \I h-li/ i!Hu Ill 'f"I Sch" 11111 :..111·1 1.1 •Sobu1 h.111 :>-1111 o 111111 Tu l;ood I lomf• \Idle Sumo\ ed. I vr ~.:1111171ill . "'"'"lrJ:. 560 :.!1!1 i\\l'llUl , I I I ''h 1'11nl{'nll' S.m Cl1•1 1 ·•l'\'c HlW ur " ni.tmJS. 1 Wi:t•lht•r ;111.11 t ownr ;;I (;11b ~dmmn l11k1·. 111 \l'I ll-rr.?11· •· m11 Sht•11 Lall. IXl'•I. ·1 ,11.i ''" c..t 1 r.11·rt1•r111' Ii mo kitten K:l!I :1:.!;1!1 h 11h h'hkrn i~1H 0060£'\l' St.1l1k )(11, 111..: ~.di• llorsci. rqu1pna11t, Jump :-.tJndJnh l'l1· i!'i l If..!::.>() RARE OFFERING ((,.g But k'k1n 1111.11 l<'r Hor"' !-.hu" l':\p1 ii !'rd nd1•r \\ .il11tr1 \ 1.t:! 5'11).)...:. ,;12 :!171 !:>Iii 'N>W l'r<1Jctlvr C: \I'' •I u.11 I! $35 mens ICI ""'' llrkt. >l-0 "omans s1 I! roller l>kj ll!~, $15 .. 111llf!Ue "'hllC dresst•r, 1, tlr;iwer " ll:t' mirror 52\ c ll) m flll' stereo. S:!U i-:"'" '.>Ill ·113.\ Ctrl, .:1, · :..o·ft,,11111 .:011.t Fumiture 8050 SJddlr. Wl·..,tcrn -.how. MustSrll i.:110.l lt111tl '>111 ••••••••••••••••••••••• -..ho·r i.h<iri• ~~75 c.111 IHSULATIOH J 1/1" t.ll ·»lll'I f; 1.1 '' •·11 fl' ' I .tlil ,. ,\ 1..t I ~·iK1 ttiic:lc, 12 sheets, MY•r 111 111 11111~: 1•1111 t .1hlt-$:!:!.). ..;l "" 11111 ~11 1w1 :..piu 1 'l.•1:11 •• ,.,, ~1•·1•·•>1·1111:-1111· Household Goods 8065 uied, all for S20. Call SSO. 64 5-7359 111 .1 io1·.111l1lul \\,tlnut ••••••••••••••••••••••• 645-7857 eYes. Xl11I l'hr-"1111." gill !'It l\1.\11111 lli•;1d1 t 'ruh1·1 • ·"" "" l ~I • ~' 1"1 II 1 ;oorl u"·d 1·.1l'pl't 111g ~ l•I:! •II~~ \l u~t ~t·IJ' µ.id. gd 11'\l'l-.ihll• k111: '' "' ;! •IHI :\Ind n•11d Sl~I '\Jug 11r I kn·ulun Sot.1 & 1.1,, 1,w2 hl\t'"l'Jt. hJrrr·I d1.11r. htbprtl i.11, 111:11 J ewelry 8070 ,)\.olu (I"'' 111• ~1 k '" ·~.11t., llr.1ncl 11.1m1, ''\, . .,,. & l.!11.11 ll•·dut,•cl P! ~l' :If.;! 'll•IX llnumph '"'" ' 1111..1• " ' I~ !l ' I II '> f• d '1, Jl,1Wlt•11!h 1,1( 1111111 :)I'll MO ltil . 1'•711 '"h1l.1 ln"''''-•t1 .. 11,; nc•w •111 ''ti 'l•o.> I .111 117411!•1, k.ni.: or t)n ~11.l' heJrnoom ... 111t,. " Jrmn1n·. mat 111·-.-..·, ,'\. .111 """'' >(a ml' "'l "'1th rn.i tchmi: u1ffol' tahl1•, M'rH•r wJll unit I.amt" tiookra:-.r-;, 'Int r11n1 I '.1:\4 rn.11 **I BUY** •·••id '"t'd Fu rrutun• 1.\ ....................... WANTED TOI' C1\Sll Ulll,1.1\ It PAID FOil Y!ll 11 .I I-:\\ El ft' W HC'll ~;<., \HT OllH.t "I!'> !~Ill I> SI L \' ~ It 'I E It V 11 ' ~; Fl._E I l I<'\ I\ \'\ l'IQl FS 1..t.1 '·1~1 \1111h.1nt·•·' <Ill I "'111 Livestock 807 5 ,,,fl or ~rf.L fur \ Oll ••••••••••••• •••••••••• MASTERS AUCTION Ill'!-! \t11ri.:.111 m •11 1• 111111<. .. Coimros & 64t..8686 & 8 33-9625 111 r1<l1· ,'t ''' ",. ldk Equipment 8030 parucfr ~turi.:.111 .:.-111111~ •••••••••••••••••••••··~\\)-, '•'"d..U~t'dlurn t:ng. \\t•,lt111 •i ll '\Jl+.t 1'\ I , 1 1;.·11 11111tl .111111 , m1:.t• W1 h11n ' :138 1011 1 ,1 IA•n, " 1111,.1., 1 .. 1,,. fl.1r1•.1111 '\vuh.. :-.io" .! h' 8078 <'.t llllr.1 IL1 ~ ~;1,11 St111" .i ll & 811W Moc11~ry f)Kf ';111 ur K.11 :!\!'J t•tth l' ,, t.42 7910 t~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• • ~IX m.:• WI·: Ill'\' Shop Sm 11 h '\II, :-1 w Coh 8035 JOtnlN p~ ... :111 Lith1· ••••••••••••••••••••••• . ..i H11u1HI o,1k lhl. ;11111 tonh L1k1• 1ww -;,.,11 Ol 1(\1,..'<I-: 1\111 ~ '\\ q111· l11p, rc1>rudu1·t11in ~:! 111.fSor tilrl 1,t ,;/ \;\I F\I. Ta1w. Turnta hl1· lh·.,k, Trt11· 111·. J ,1ghb. bl·tb. m1,t GtX><I huy' :'.IC>\ 111.i K:l3 I i!I'.! lll.1ck & lll-ck1•r l'll't'l l.1v.n mo"rr Xlnt nmd ~I K37 9304 ah1•r ti I ltu ... e Ho" I T1c·krt-. for ""'l' \l,1kt' llflt'I' H!li ~I I 'mi.: l'nn~ Tbl. C.:o't SW :-it•fl '-10 Fend<'r liuat.ir ~ Elt•c llryc·r. S6(J Dun l'Jn l'h,\ h' d1n·i: Thi. SSO Cir ... 1rrc11 1;.14 lit>5 Xlnt t;µrrght Fr1'l'/1•r. 1·11mm1•n·1al c.ipdt'llY ''.! 1111 It "n ch \I 1 n k :1 sl.1nilt'd ... 1 arl. S75 M tnt :'itJrlln 1 ull "ze 'wlin. S!:!.5 l'I I 7~165 Wutcr hcd'>. TV romtJ ... 11· n•o :.1 ol11rt· v .. h•.., Clot htn~ Ski.. .. Turi I' Pt,1111~ 1>1.<,plav 1·uses. xlnt ~leel desk~ & cham. ----- "11 'eb also 675 3000. -.n· 1-'euthcr <!:.et:. sa1t... RARE '62 MASERATI U.1~ t..: UeJch Riiy Wood. t'ng, S2.ooo orr 3500 GT COUPE ~-1723 Mu:.t sa1· :! new & I used desk, 1 ofr chair, new Call aft S, r: 12 WOl loats, Slips/ Doctcs 9070 •.•.•.....•...•........ P~ts 8087 !->I.II' Wunted. :\t'"fi<>rt ••••••••••••••••••••••• Jrl'J ~· S..·u~u11\~ huu"t"' So. Wl':.l l'l'l <..'1•11 tcr hn.1 t John l'o"' \. World ' 1.1r).!l'S l . t:.?13171)577ti7111· ,.,.,.,. l3r1st11l \11·.\rthur S ,\ 1:.:1.117\!I \J!WH :t.56 1:r.1 1 Slip spun• lnr :!:1 :1;, Anoc:ondo Sno~ 5112· 11ht•1 i: '""'' '.11 I hu .1 t SllJO. 9t>:! 11211·1 :>.t·\\ '"" t lklt 1;;;, i;!l:I 5 ' ltelln.llalt•cl P)thon 1\\,1il.d1I\· 111· SI.II' l11r lllo;1I thy, bl· a ut . i:; z pow~r l.Joat l'vt t•om 1·are. SJO i;75 :n2.i munity 1'oo h\·t:al111J1d ti7!'>-904!! PAIUlOT · l>outilc yellow. S300 loots. Speed & 557·3159 Ski 9080 .............••.•••••.. Pianos & O"JOnS 8090 .•........•••..••..••.. 14' loaf w /trlr. SJSO ti IS i:l~'I G ive A Gift Of Music Transportation ScJ.r"' ~p1nt'l orgJn 2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1.cy board. chord pedals ~"·Sale/ l.1kl' new l'Ond1tton Rent 9120 :'ilo\'ecl, to ~mJ II home. •••••• ••• •••••••• ••• ••• need more room. S300. 552-7SS<! P I ,\ =-: O · I\ 11 h I c r & CJmpbcll \\;;lout l>IJIOCl, mu~t :-.at'. Fine 1·on<l StilJO. 5-tts·tr,t9.1. Hammond S.panel Ori::in. Walnut f1nh h. $5SO .\ft l or tx-1 !!. r;45.:~:wa Sewin<J Machines 8093 .•....•...•.....•..•••• 'i ll VW l'Oll T op Wt· ... tph;1l1.1 C;;mpc·r ftl•bll. ((l•fng. lll'W llJIO t r.iclt.tb s.!~50 ·SU:! :H~I 4911 ;Jtiltl f~ VW CJ mp«r t•oplnp W1·~lphuh1>. t:'IUlfJl'l'<I. rt•bll rni:. nd ... p;11nl SlfiS(I ( ';i II 11-lti 2.'i 17 S S1>1b. new lift':., Bor roru "ire wheels. fuel 1n Jl!Ct1on, alun1111um OOd} Xlnt cond \'erv fa:.t ' z:J OUO nu. 1'1Jo hut lor rn \ w I I t• T r .1 cl 1• I •1 1 '"ml·lhini.: tJml'r. Pan l<'l'J, Lotu~. t-:t1'. or I' \'l l't y li7 5-3t;1;.i •ti 1,1!1 221MI Xlnt 111 \ ~·i.t m1·nl JI <'h1.•\) Sin Wgn l'hl'fl') l-1tl). '" ,,, " :! en~. SliO<J t;;Jl:l:l:!O 4 Wheel Dri vu 9550 ................••.•... 1974TOYOTA LAHDCRUISER 111111 bar. 11rr road tirl'S r .1t!10. l'll' Low mile:-.' 11!.'iO L I" ll 1 ONLY S4495 NEWPORT DA TSUH 888 l>o\C Sln•ct .'\t:WPOHT BJ-:,\Cll 8 33-1300 '72 CHEVY BLAZER 3So \'II. autu, lull pv.r. \ '' I'';\! ll track, man) \l1.1:. Should llc "l'cn to llt! apprec. S..1500 551·11:!1 1'\l''· 7Sl 1!924 <.la\•:. .l1m Ill i52 tk!-lti . '72 Suburban Carr} ·all. ll(·ll.ir lhan new , PS, AC. hraderl-., 53G 9774 !Hifl :r.1:10 :illt'r \pm --• ('f' \ ft'/.:I lt'ltd lt.1>1' I C hrl< 117:1111;92 :ltlJ I 'II' -~ln~l·r Golden To1wh c.l C.:<ampcr lop lor C1111nt·r lt1·i:11l.1r l'11•kuµ l',llTIJ"'r lop MJkt• olf1·r ti7:H:i105 '76 CJ7 Jeep, xtras. lo ml. 5.'16·796'1 or 751 ·6695 aft 5PM llJ11V1l,1)Jll "1111 '" 1'1· kt·i:"tt•n•d ';°hH 17 ••• 1 ·h,1111p.w111 I .11\1'" .11 lJu.1111, \'i-t 1i1iO \O'l\N sot,1 & Watt•rbcd. lounni: r11cy Sc.:w :.cwrng mal'hlnc. l't·nthuuH' MltetiloneCHls 808 <'It•. "t'I .,n1ha t;111k-. & n· '1611-6S.'i5 Motori••d li'k•• ll:l\r '0ml'thini.: to sell'! -.... 9140 c 1.1 ..... 1t11•dadsdollwell. '<Int or1111l ••••••••••••••••••••••• )!ulalor,7;,115ti:! '.\iE\V \!-:CCIII Mdl S:i:l ••••••••••••••••••••••• T n ,, 1 " ~ E ·1 s " 1 11 1j \luJ)(•ll BJtuvui. CLEAN CARS &TRUCKS CONNELL CHEVROLET 2X28 Harbor Bh 11 COSTA MES1\ 546·1200 TOI' 001.1.1\ll I',\ II) 11\l~l t-:U IA l'l-,1. \ FOH i\l.l. FOHEIG:--1 Ci\flS CALLOltCO:'tl~ IN TOSl-:t: L'S HEWPORT IMPORTS :11110 W C.::,t llwy, NU 642·9405 WE llUY •CSEU C1\ HS & Tl<UCKS• Come in or <.'all FREE Approi1ol Groth Che...role t 18211 Bt•;ith Oh 11 lluntmgton 8'.•a1 h 847-6087 * 549-3331 TOP DOLLAR PAID FO RCLl::1\N IMPORTC.ARS .ALL MODELS l' U N V 1-; "\ T I <> 'f CE'l'fl£H .\\ JJn 2 thruJJn !j • •• C1ll CH:! 5678, t•:-.l 33:1 111 C'la1m) our t1d..ct:.. • • • IMW 9712 '77 BMW$·~ HERE NOW: .. BMW SALES . 70 :!llOOCS -1 :.iJ. • (235CFSl 'i:!200:! \ ·15:15HKK) ... 73 :1 ocs 4 ,;f>-:. l!lli7K l.:'il l · 1 3 Ba ,. a r 1 .1 11;1101' I' \1 1 "v • 1 I n .I \ J r I .I I .. I• -• t.!4/ILDI I ·75 20W A WJ.I l '75S301A A t900;\t \G I. SADDLEIACK., VALLEY IMPORTS 831-2040 495.494t CREVIER &t SI'-HOADVf~~ SAH1A AHA •, 835·3111.. l"l VUIMATE ORIVING MAC"!!,°:}(. •USED BMW•s1" i:1 H,1 varia· (f)(ttil.VY~' i5 2fM1:! lllJ:I;\: ,JM I .a~ ~ llAlo (ZXXllt;t;I ··n1. Ck> .. d On Sundays· ORAHGE COUHTY.'S. OLDEST Sale~ Senter l.cas1rn( Roy Carver.Inc. Rolb ftoycc BMW I S.l\l .Jam bo 1r<'c !\t.•wpe>rl £.lejl'h &l()..(i4 I I l!lm nMW ltiOO ,\~f F\l, ltlt<'hrhns. s1:11.15 li7:1515i 833 ;;1111: BMW 'it Ua\i1na it;pfl.. lllr l'Ond, ,.unrt etr .15,000 mi. S7,5!15 Wkdy .... 558 t.991. Wknd., & 1·wt<,. 64-1 !12&1 '. .. ,.., . Don't drop th1• hull! Get..a JOb Wllh ;} lnW·CO~l liiUl.ll' Pllut c I.I I\'> I ri (•d ~<\: I 'hone 612·SIJ78. .11..._ 1 .. , I 1'11rr f1•1t Chl'htm.1 .. 1:111 ...1.-1 \ lhrn.11.1,,111 .. -.1h A. nJmc· 11111111, ~ 1111·1 l • t\ 111,1.1 I H\lllfl \ fOU,( 1 II lo I !Ill Ill q11.illl) turn lt'""nhl •11.:1 ·111117 rn' ~ S1·alr .I It \ 11 It I Will headhonrdb SIS, :.ur lll'tatl $14~. Will :.ell $250 <;erm.in 1 11,tnm ia\uul fboard Siii, 11·11 r.11J1al Ph540·Ji7i _ Xlnt <'Onll. I m11clltl \\\Ii.I 'I'll ~Ill l~J:tl \\1th ,t,1lmn' \111.•Jll' ~1. l(la'>s"are 50, 1.1d1e~ Sporlin<jGOOds 8094 mounlJ1ni. l.11\c tunnl'li. <·li1thc' 1-1 lh. SI 5-UI SCJ.14 ••••••••••••••••••••••• )o.lrl'lrll' ;\101>1.·rl FIND·YQUR NAME ,it• \\-\Vrt-:1> I ,,.,. r1•,1 ~11 It'll for C:hrt,lm,,~ 01 ~hJri• l unit ni1111r.11 \ I' rntl ".t111ut d111dto· "'t " l1trrn11 • 1011 ltt..1• 111 v. \lf.:t t)e•-..l ul 1 "~ ~ 1.!UO 111 r er' I , /' llll' .. , '11.,~ '> l Ill Ct. C:old Omt•t;t.1 ;ck1•t CC ;\I Pro-Hockey Ice iA''' th.in t.50 mrlt·' ''" n ttc " •~•~ 11 "" \\,1ll'h. perf prl!,,l'rved !>I.ate,., ~•le 11 l.hoc, $25 ,\.,kml! s;n;, M4 21'1'1 hnm• 1, .1n ,. •" V1>1• • WANTED ~IMI Out,landsnl( Tur 5.'>Hlti44 .I \W, MOl'l-.1> ll•lll\ 11u111:.1· & ~11\..r Bracelrl. Surlho-d I·--:-. i.:ocxl $1~ l'h t>l5 :.?:!:.!II Docp i0'40 " I •l\c''•' ol r· !rt" •r 111 r TOP CA.S ii DOC.(. \H Sl50 ~.IUl Mota .. from ar . n~~: p JSlH I' \I l> F o R Yo l H l'annma $20 each. See fantastic. 6 fi · nr~'l'r Motorcycles/ ••• «f•• • • • • e • • • e • •. e • • • • .,. \ ,..t ' I 1.:1 • s ... , ...... , ,. '\ II ,OODLES.J..,EO,LE hi .,)\'.'() .1. •• ~ 1,7:1 I 'HI H:\H .(.R). WA1'Cllt-:S. louppr('e1.1te S81-71Hor used. askm" SOO Call ScoofeN 9150 \1<1' OBJ i::c.-rs. <:CH.I> 11:i1 2423 Steve 846·5907_. __ ••••••••••••••••••••••• '\II 1 Ir' ldl 1 \I!, 'MIX ( \ ,. ~ITlll\ "rl \ l\t m.1 ti· l'"I' \111\ 111~' llrn1n11 1 rn ,pt. !'. pu,•i-. 11 wk, c h.1mp hm· 1111•·111 1 I \11 n i.: I r•·o· ~tlO ~ • .:•1 •11,11 'I'•" 1~.:11; " ''"'" 1/11 1{ dir .Hill SI I. V ~; R S E H V I <.: E ---. -TV Rocf ' ; a 11 n n rl .1 X I. I 2 5 ~I 'Ir: n (( "1 ~ \ t-. Ydlow 14 hit(.' D1tll'lle :X.,t, HIFf s~· 8098 " rnver. rn;tllY exlr ..... TH'l ~-~ f>.l!i 220tl I 1·hr:1 SSO ~1.istl'rwork • e~o < h • Stereo n ·i•\ r. lrnlul. ;i ••••••••••••••••••••••• Xlnt rim.I S.52!1 1>4fi tl'll1i til4 I '""' ,111toLllK11:1"' fl.II.I LUGG.AGE y AGS "llkr~ $-l!i !HiO :1mo Sonar F'S 23 Ch. C.B. Hase YEAR EMD st.1 w 'lurrwr & 2 power fr11m \UUr hU'.'olllt'~I> (',1rcl N•·w Wtl!-011 r.:UHHI lt•ntJIS AJi<: ('o,:k1' l'up ,, 1.11.~ ~ f, .\ tJ I IS f r !': ,. 1 .. .1" 111 S.·nd ·nne currl l•.r 1•al'l1 1 JCIJUl'l $<!0, VW ski rac·k h)npd, m.il1• A lo•m,dt• 111111111 bf'tf, m 1rr11rf'tl la~ t>ilL' onp 'llJUl'I'. W1· nu fiW. nutc) llushut•ll Sllttt '!>li:-,:17'11 171 h1•.1dhu1•1•1J uJu•. t l ll • ,, ~ e urn p11rm11ocn Y 135rnm te lephoto ll·n~ \L."1 ' l"' ... "'rnt· 1 I' u 11ll'll'O•t11•., l..c-uv111w, ~ur •rnlr<t altrat'tt\l' ta'1 & hkc 1ww Sil!• hl>t ofr ('all ·' .,~. "''"' Lil up ... n -~·11r· ., ,wtK•ks.hl.it•ki'Vru,1 Xlut •·· " _ strap. m«'et1nl( uarllnc 6751:11111\'m r>Ofl~lllllillr<1 SIR!• t'.111 l'lli Drn ,, thl, t; l'halr" & l.L>. rcquiremunls. Pre · f ~ vent loss & theft! For u * * • ~~~pm, 49:t·7~I I\ ul r" l ~a 11 d a Y s • per80nall1.ed tag enclose I . C. Sch,..fber A"C Golden Retriever 645·5.'L't! ------wallpaper, f abr ic or 24001 Mulri0ftd$ ll•d. Pups, xlnt hunter!\, foml ~;verylhina Goes'•~ "Da.y Glo" paper & we Et Toro ly~oet. wtrdog. 493·6861 House full or quahtv furn wlll back & tnm your =:;a.;. ' la o t "· You arc tho winner of 2 01C~ker Spaniel pupptM, 8-!6 4170 ba':k to bac';1', twQ c ar..., Uc.kcts lo lhe ~C. 7 wks old. Sm Gcrege Sole 8055 PRICES Sporh. Vocation ~8 ••••• •• • • •• •• • •• • • •• •• • $2 ea or J SS & Rec,..otlonol mre. Wrll adapt 111 new CLEARAMCE c·h on 111 Sl5o Call Stevr SALE tW. i!>-1:1. Har Icy. l> u v 1 d son o I Midl:md. CB rn<lio. Brand new. SIOO or bes t otter Wrslmlnst<'r. !131lli l.lolsu 1he. Wt•)'olm 5:11 r;-\110 ~'17 8.'11l3after8pm Trial11 blkl' 2~10 Mnnt"~a · ------. -'76 Cola, llkl' new muny Stereo Pre·A mpllf1cr. xtrs $900. lAlll 847·7131. Dyna Pas J.X . A 8uperb --- pre amp, extremely '70"360" Bulta1·0 Bandito. Quiel. lab tes ted. 8 /o Good cond1llon. {Iver Sl30. 644·9S39 S400 -----loots&M.-iM ---...... Equipmt nt ••••••••••••••••••••••• A~C Cocker S pantt'I. S ~onni: Must sell. s ngl 4iStagsS1.60ea. VetllcleShow Gt.real 9010 rhos. Like" chilrlrt'n i:;'<. l>N:I, dr<'sser w, mirror. S/9 t.ags Sl .50 ea· 11t the ••• ••• ••••••••••••• •••• BMW '74. R7S 6, con ('()Uf11e. 8000 m1, xlras Mu!>t sell, moving North $19iS 549 0733 II t t ~7< f eht>~I nf dr r!I efn IOormor-e St 4-0ea. A ... ',•LI EJM '73Yamahu GT 110, "1lvcr. WIN TICKETS WORTH $5.00 c e en Pl' • ' 0 r w · · r g, Sales Ta'{ Included •• Vl N Ri\010 control eleclric ~1107 w11hr. mqwcr . 1644 A C 0 N V E N T f 0 , IJMld only 30 hrll $250. '76 -•' - --lnwn .SI . C.:\t 979•4621 NO CARO? CF.'lfTf:R \1odel PT Boat. over 3 fl. y 8 m 3 h 3 <.: h J p P )' Ft9'111M1 Clllllu 1)1~ \ APSO Pl~PPlf:S ----Drt&w your own or send Jan. 2 thru Jan 9 1nng .. siren, water can· aulomati<.·. 200 m1. lk , '~~!·.~"' Purebred, 6 wk!>. 52:-. up Garai:t: Sale Super 11ood name. address. phone & C...ll 642 5678. Cl(l. :\33 lo non. _2 ~pceds, clc. Very new SJOO .. 76 YHmnhu 1..,, r. ft ~ 640·5685 bc1h., human hair '311!<. ta1?.Add25<eech. * • * ~1800. rcpl11cc mcnt llhart, 1,450 mi RrAnd .._•.,t•r.l,.,·~ ,,. / * • ,._ '•I Uc to rt' ch r.., t ma, h.irj!:itns· Clothes. furn, we'll make one C's rd per daim )our Ltckel.'\ M1ph1st1ca1cd toy. Over Street, ma 11~, d rl ve RY'a: Wut'• tertHt .. ,... ~ ·• ,. -'"----rthrthJ W ashington Sendchcckormnncyor S;1er1fi~ S.S00 l n_rludc! new $20011 C.lllafl oµm. &1"°" y ,. ,M rATIH•~ a .•..._ • Ooft!en Relr11'Ver. mOllt' I 81.'rt .. prNld. mc.<lmac di~ deTlO' Sky· Dive ! Firsl JUmp {lli4\'5~ry2200thtn~. 67S-31162 or 494·7_049_ 11 .,, I· I .... c.i, 8l<>wQ11~s~""''"O '\ • * ~rn'\ lf• • yr.-obcdtencr lrJIO<!d , hr,,HICUUm ,manylo)'!J· PILOTPRIMTING Ch r11dmo s .:ift Wh· '· v, .. , ''"'I'"'• .. o"°t'V'.~ ... ...., ... ~~t ofr 768 8404 hooks. 220 La ~pronze . P .O. Box U60. rertificalc tor pe9ple loots, Molnt.nanu/ 7~ llondu XL!~· xlnt l'Ond. '-t d., "n ~ ~ h c 11,. GH4 SHIDB.Ett * * '* \,.0 ':<..\,."( ~\0 ~C\~''lf' '1'Ark Golden Rc lrrcvcr ' San Clem. 492.8992 Costa >-Sosa, Ca . 92il26 _wteverylh1nii. 497·2326 Sft'yic• f020 Sacnf1cc, Sl~ N. 'I\· '»1.. 'lovn<1, ""'-" • 0t' ~~ ... o.,t ~ '). *' "J\~"C Champion :.lock , ~CICJ' Sole IOSSW.09t SClllct 8055 New Maiinovox Odyssey ••••••••••••••••••••••• 968 ---DOORS OPEN: '!~:~0~~1.v.!'.l • '1-~\G"'~~._f' * * 1"• •'dltt: for µlc:k of ltller .•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 570. R oyal e l oc. Experl Boot Painting & JAW/\ MOPED. Xlnl Weekdaya-2 PM • .. ~'I'),,.~•* ~, 2 )'r old fem . Shcltlci for ':jale . i\11 8hots Call ; .,:9035 GARAGE AND ESTATE SALE Ill 4 old gold men's & ladies watches. 2 Chinese rugs and furniture. Rare hand crafted i;tein.~ and porcelalns. 70 pcs Walhtce Sterlipg Silver. (20% below mkt.) 9 drawer dresser, nnti- qul! mirror. porcelain jewelry. l ll(e amethyst. and turquoise pendant. plu much m ore 4127-C Hilaria Way f\fuwpOrt Beach (near Hoag Hosp.} 646-7638 ,._~ ty""wrller $10. Guiler Rcnni.shrng.Rcfs.Makc cond. $225/bst ofr 2 N If. •* Vicetf"1t' m .-768-7537 appt. today tor tree est1 644·262.4 Weenend1 -1 oon • * * rr1an":>~ ... 'rt>-----rlJPPlES St11Uortbhlre BoH 'f.rrlt>r11, AKC. 3 • rmll'S SlOOta 540·837'7 ~<;OCKER SPANIEL, .in. m~. Mtll'. bo!f. xlnt ·\lt/kJd!I, ~J ahow .. stud. 54&-SSl.9. ,. e£MBflOKE wnsH • • COllOt PUPPIES " C.11 S4Mtat (or work done nfl ,74 YAMi\Jf-/\-lOO_M_X-·11 Adutt1S2.SO • .Jr.'a(12·11)t2.00,IQ~•(S.11)$1 .25 * "f{i. 1•--------1 holiday~ 67S-317S Looks & rumi xlnl. $295 For Ad Actl'on Boob. MwiH or be8t nrfcr 752·86111 "'' •••y;;'t.OOk lot~ nMM .., todlly'• OlaMfffM MCtlon. I;,> ~........ 9010 ---It you flnd yovr n ..... ceM ~"i ..... on m . we•n.~·" Call a ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1:J HUSKY 250, >tint run enenge for rou to~ ~ your QO~efttlltY tlc"-tt et i:1 RADIO Cm~rot Electric nlng cond .. xtns, $5b(J the M8'elt oHlce Of "'9 D ·1 P'J Model PT &at. over~ f\. 646'8621 aft 3_r _M __ _ al J I ot Ion•. llll't!n , water can· '74 Yamaha 12Srd X AD-VISOR non. 2 s~'· t\c. Very Xlntcond $4'0/bstt)fr. M>phlatkaled toy. Over Call 5411 0350 SUOO. rtplacemenl . 642·~678 Sacnfl~c $300. lnclodea SELL 1dlt 1lem.11 with n eve.rythlng, f'75-3M% or Oa.lly Pilot C:lu allied Ad. '4.S-DOO 642-5678. Avtoi, hnporled ~. UMd ..•.......•..........•.....•....•.••••..•..... DAILY PILOT Wect11esd1y December 2:2 1976 bto1, Imported Auto5, Imported Awto5, lmporffd Volbwogett 9770 Coclll oc 99 JS , •..•...••............• ·••·•··•··•···•····•···••······•·········•··•· •·····•····•····•······ ........•.••........... ....................... "' . Clrytlef' 9925 ~~·.~~~ ••••••••••• ~~·-~~ •••••••••••• ~"!.~~·.~:::'. ......... ::\ •...•........•......... "--' 9715 ICcrmctnn GhJo 9735 MGI 9744 ·w Mu~ Litt blue, xlnt __,... cund. Comµlt n·hlt. ull CADILLAC SALE '76 Cordovu Bcaullful. n• Ford 9940 Mercury 9950 Pinto 991'7 ally londt:'d He~t r, ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ' .. ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• JJUP~r~ ~1u~t !lelJ. 1967 Cad•tltu~ S<"dun de· '76 CAPRI GHIA '64 Karmann Gh111 Hun!> '68 MGB GT, wire wht•l·b, ~t urr Jlt 11 b4-H 437. Ville t920USW 1 asonable ofr 751 6263 '72 Pinto S.don '76 MOH.ARCH 12 llunJoout, J5,UOO ll)I, Comes wllb vs. 4 ~petd. perf, rblt enK. 2 b11rrd ru1·1n~ i:reen. $1000 bc:.t 121311119 1621; OML f S 1399 AM/FM, power brake!>, curb, 12 \'Oil sy,lm, CIB offl·r m1 .!11811 l>ark rirct•n, autom11t 1(' Co m e !> w 1 t h V tt 11uli•, It II $1~ 99]0 tr.in!>mt;.•.ioo. new 11u1 o mJl1<', r •Hl10 & 960 36111 vmyl top. decor group T rJdto. chrome whb. n.-i 9746 11 VW l'arn1>1.·r o11~tnJI "*•porter Motor-s with m ag!> t:as l'conomy Sharp car. $975, blS lib1" ::':':••••••••••••••••••• rnncl, xlrit ntlch.1mi·ull> 1!1411 ll;trbor Bl\d . t.; ;\1. ·····················•· brake!> & buttery runi1 heater. powt•t i-ll•t·nni.: & mouth 9940 i:reat Guud ct•onom)' llrakes. uir t•1111d l.c>ttk al •••••••••••••••••••••"• '70 C.:onunenlul Lcutheor. 1alore! Your~ for 1~ M,.----9738 IU:U INt'OLOH, 1~1.lliti2>$ CALL642-0795 tn~·<llote tJ~h vt rv <L•~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• G1n:.1-~N WITll t:NV' ' 'tit VW 11.tJJ llu~ N"w Cud '7ti CDV N•hr. hhr. AM/!-'M :.lt>reo. u1r, pwr. dl' $12\JS ~tt l!tl7tl t•ur'' SJti 7!11il l.t•o \le this f1MC'('1 Your:. Im 1m ml·~:-.1i.:c for L101ta nwdlllh' tll'llH•r' 1L1t' ATLAS 774MMN) H MJ1d.a t<XJ C11u1>e. 1 w Opt•I tit' ltt-d "'"" p.11111. 11rt"'• f'lll(, \lr,1,,loml.!>harv SK450 $3166. :.~l. under "rnt). \l'r) ltrt'!>, 11.:w btJk•'· IJJ>t' \ \t F\t <t'.>ktn.: $1250 l'r pt) 4!1l 1112 bbGalu"'I<' •••••••••••••••••• •• ••• GootJ c.:ond. n~w r'-unt Cor••"-'932 ;naM MNl $4586. Chryi'9r /Plymo.-tt\ °"''" IJ1uly & ~un . 'Ul lll p\1 GUSTAFSON LINCOLN MERCURY 16800 Beach Blvd. Huntington Beach clean is:r1·:tro2 dl•tk \ :.kJI fur SI IUO C.11191)2 :.145:1 :Z I UIJrk li:ldurado 'liJ VW Sq bk, JUlo, look:. Loade1I. ltkt• nc" 1 ltl,000 ·1:-icoR\'l:.'TI'E ~.i ll31 :u20 J,()AUED1 sw•1:-i GUSTAFSON LINCOLN MERCURY 16800 Bcl'lch Blvd Huntington Beach IS!OO below Juw l>ook 1 '73 M.ndJ RX:S Cix• .'-.:e" t~i.! ti8!J5 enl(. :.ti radial t1r(':,, '<lnl l'ond. 963·1633 Pone~ 9 750 ...•....•...•.•........ 842-8844 '76 M1~r St Wgn 4 ('yl, ·75 l'or:.l'lte tll-' ;:: o, ltup D,.hwt 9720 good mileage 5000 mt ~r. ml·IJlhc, l>lk 111t •}••••!•••••••••••••••• iww_~ 5-1!1 50IStl IT\J !l:.. xtrJ :.hJq1. 'tr.1-. t DRIVE A ·73 RX3 Wagun, fully ral'lftl: :.tt.~mng whl, nt•w • LITTLE eqwppcd, take over or?'! s pkr!>, rNlr rdlcl'lor~. ••• I' r Perre el <·ond iO!JSO ~l! 4-'li·l duv VI 548 35<i8 1)31 :!1&17 e V\' • &&11·1400dys, S36 ll2~5 ,., 67 L. TD -I Ur M.11ocm. hlk good . run i. ~ o o d mi Nl•w Mll'hl'ltn l irc:s. Sl2001b.'>lofr.400971!9 H·152'J55 Cougar 9933 -...•.••................ padded ''"YI top YS. Pll. 1·rw:.eurnullc· :190 ••ni: • 842-8844 :!'J2ll lh1rlJor Bhd .• t:c1st11 Mei.11 546-1934 .. l>K VW Auto Xlnl l'Ond 73(.'Jdillae S4:d<111 l>eV1llc. JI! wayi. Li.:t \Jluc_ $11~ 'Int cund. GoJJ, "h1l4: Ph ~t; !JO~ ""top, 56,000 m1, $4,700. ----&1-1 5147 III vw UUG Heu, good cond. SOOU olr. Chevrolet 9920 Att ti, 968 222.1 ••••••• •• •••• •• ••••• ••• Jcr, heJt, auto dr lucl<i. •. '76 COUGAR XR 7 i.tl l>l.>lll'd whl 1>1de"ull u.. t -9952 -;~.:olcl t>u~tt>r, Jll xll'd.-. C o m l' s w 1 t h V II . Urt-:. Xlnt t•ond I owner ,...,, ClnCJ 50,000 mt Xlnt cund auto mat 1 c. r .ad 1 o & $i50 firm 557 5478 •••••• • •• •• • • • • • •• •• • • • ti4~ 84(}1 heal<•r, power :.leenni: & - -6.5 MUSTANG 6 <·yl i.ltek. - -- brake:., vinyl tup. uir Uncoln 9945 t·hrome t•ni.:. & whb. ;2 f''Ury Ill, 53,000 mi.,J11K ('o d lo k . .., ••••••••••••••••••••••• Muny xlra ~ $'195 l'tl", IM"•Ul. cont.I M"•t n • o 1ng i.:oou , '. , .. ·, . ' .. "'' ... " Yours tor immediate de 75 LIHCOLH 1>4h 8118 t>r ti4t1 4 ~1.1 !>l'll $1675. !)gJ -7141 ur ,SAVE A LOT SHOP&COMPAHI:: 7<! \tazda618-bpd. I I v{' r y . (Sc r TOWHCOUPE 75 Mustang II Gh1.1 , uutu. ~~~v.71~1.2~1 ~.3351 v-..1 6J\93H543713l. Full po~•t•r 1neludini: air I' s. I' B ru11~ u, .,. VolYo 9772 Monte Curio '75 Super '66 !JI IS, ne" rl'd µa1nt ••••••••••••••••••••••• dean, xlnl cond AC. ne" blat·k tnl , lro11l PW. S389S 645 7253 BARWICK DATSUN .; San Ju11n Capislrano :J31-137S 493.3375 NEWPORT DATSUN SPECIALS ll210 4 Door 1 ::.µcl!d (735715). -HOW$2895 888 00VESTR l::~T Near MacArlhur &J amhor(•e Roads 833-1300 TOP BUYER See us first, & lui.t~ Tup q olhtr paid for 1mp11rb. C~STAMESA DATSUN 28-15 ll•trbor 8f\ cJ Costa Mc:.J S·IO·h·llO Sl200 orofler. Ca II 5"8 9$11<1 MercedH len1 9740 ..•..••...•............ ~ase Hew-Ua.ed OVER 100 MERCEDES OH DISPLAY House of Imports AUTllOlll Z~:o M EflCEl>ES l>EALlm 1.862 ~l anchci.ll-r, liucna P:irk 523-7250 On lhl' Sanh1 Ana "'" v 1~171 21!1) 4 dr ~cd SX!I()(>, Oh\'c green. XL:'.'\T cond. Stere<1, arr, P" r "ndw .. mc<'h perf., :itl't mt CJll ~Hi !J:~1 or 1!13 J7 •~ ~po1ler, rl!l>lt l!og & 5 :.fld trans . mag!>, r.1di.tl-. JUX. hl•:tlcr. i\M~W, F:\1 , Sii750 751 HOW Collcl'lor~ I k rn l!.lti~1'I12, :; 'pd '111•\\ l'll'-!. lruh .1 ,,1t-rif11t• Jl $3li00 or tr.11.)1 µlu., l'J'h l!Jh 7h:!CI or -l!li.iO-U~ Rolls Roye~ 9756 .•..•..•........•..•.•• UO~lO ~UNOAY\ 6-1 Holh Hoyc-1· I' C:Jtt-;J)IHL \' bl'JUlll 111 LcJ\ llli.:. ~JI' 75!1 0077 1972 2,IOZ. 'tll'k. air, AMt r'M. mai.:~. 1nL pl)' ~00. 557 !/!l~l! • '73 45 ~SE Toyota 9 765 ( o n t• o u r s C '' n d 1 l t u u • • • • • • • • • • • •••••• • ••••• 69 Dabun 11;011 !\ u dutch, lrJn' & tup_ 5:J.110o mi. Imm.it· t.11 no 1 S::!HJ5 '70 Dat:.un 510 't Dr .SI Wgn Orri: ow11<'r. :nooo rru. Sl400 54'1 <!539 :\l 1lw '75 280Z. l'urchJ-.cd in '7t. Xlnt cond. t\1r, ~f:1~' AM/FM cu:s:.ctlc, Hoyal Blue. Cir cvr & bra. 8600 mi. S6500. Ph 675 1!943 '73 Dal~un :!IOZ. Xlnl eond. ,\l.t11v <'X tru-. S3llO\J Ph 55:! l~lti5 75 Dut:-un l'lJ. xlnt eoncl IJk<' new Many xtra:. S3:ill0_ ~Iii ;,r.>t;ti Fiat 9 725 1%0.J 1.W) S.ilc:' SI 0,999 HOUSE OF IMPORTS 213/921 -8588 714/523· 7250 '72 MBZ 350SL llothTup:,! IHOFL\ I SI 0,499 HOUSE OF IMPORTS 213/921-8588 71 4/523-7250 Classic M~rcede s !!Jill :!1i11SE Cnvl :\Int !'Ond :)17,500 ~>52 711'11 '75 450SEL ••••••••••••••••••••••• 811\(.lr ~ black 1nll'nor. '68 Spydl·r 850 C.:110\crl 1,.,.,jlhcr , ~unroof. !>lt·rco Xlnt cond Mom need:. tJPt' 15251.W<i l Spt·l·wl larger cur. s1uso1olr at ti7J.0193 73 FIAT 1211 ~t.C. nt'" cog1nt•. 10.000 m 1 rl.ut•cl w h -t-,. I " J l' S T REPAINT .. :U. "Low mag~. J\~I l''M eJ~~C'lh' new mtcrmr. looks brJnd new! 645 7588 s 16.399 HOUSE OF IMPORTS 213/921 -8588 71 4/523-7250 '65 MZB 600 'tfl Sptdt•r Louk~ Jntl run' lmm.1c l nu ... uJll\ '"" 'lnl Btll Chrl'lc:n.,cn m 1 i.: 1> o <'um t' 11 t •'II 54~7"'81 , ~17 4596 '<•r\ll<' rte\:, lut 1 .1 .I.IOI Ill I T h •• u I I I Ill .1 I •• rhn-.tma:-l!tll ~I I •1•15 Ca II ownr 1;.1~ 57!J:I 71 Fiat Spider 75 ·<'Ill-: . .i:ood cond. SlliClO, bt::.l ul rer 642· lSSH • '73 M BZ. -l50 "iLC. 1111 68 ~ SPYOER Con't m.tl', ltke nl·W lo m1 Xlnt cond S!ISO Mom 'al'. mtc>t sell, l'P. 1;11 1 ii e e d 'i I J r I! t• r l' a r . !171 1761 173-0193 1975 Mcrc-edes 450 St;, \HI '77 TOYOTAs HERE NOW •HEW COLORS *MEW MODELS llu1tc Sa \IOI!!> on A I.I. rt• ITI:JIOllll! llC'°' 7ti' ~ IA•mo,. Tht• Ul'lt<'r Ila ri.:0t m MARQUIS TOY OT A \llSSt();... VIE.JO 83 1-2880 495-1210 Triumph 9767 .•......•.•..••.....•.• 1976 Triumph TR7 ti e' I I !oJ>l•t•d. I"'"' 1 r d1s(' ln akt•s. hcJH't. I 111t eel gl,1:.i.. 1\~I F.\1 i.tc•rt•11. fanl·~ Whl•cb & 0111\ 11 ,0110 milt·., 1111 m.!CUl,1ll'' l U\5~ .I I' I HOW SSS9 5 NEWPORT DA TSUH 11118 L>OVE ~T ""-Wl'ORT HE \<'II 833-1 300 '70 SPITFIRE i-; co n «> m v " t• l' k 1• 11 d s p<'c-1.tl' i>m·ot .1 kind cJJ,31'1')\ I OHLY 5 1975 BRITISH CAR CO. 213/990·2525 714/894-2854 70 GT+6 beaut. 'JlOrt\ wht htchbk Heal lookl·r S2200 firm ·193·0017 HotMlo 9727 tier li,000 mt, J ownr, lu~t .st'll! 'i•I Tllli. "Int •••••••••••••••••••••• Sl6,500 PP.~ 1\577 l'Ond Oni.: uw11l'r ;i:,,tHtll 7ti \tllZ JOO()[) Im mnr All ,.~tru., Sl:?,UOU ~u iSSI \t 1-· 'l to:. m1 1163 ~Hi7 VolbwOCJtn 9770 •..•...••••............ lrandMew '76 HOMDACars OVH 100 To Choote Fron1! 1,7 :!:lu\t B Ju lo .11r '70 \'W 1 1rn.,~<'ni-:1•1 ltu:;, UHIVERSITY 1·unil I n1·w 1 .. d1uh, aood rnrul. $1R~I 1·l1"tn ht1d) hkmg S.WMJ ll75 31:!~ · Otckmobii. Hondo Con • GMC Tntclu ~ 1f.1rhnr Hl,11 bllo ~frlS t'H'• 7'> 'h'n·t·ile' 1:-ios .. :1 .!0.0110 ml. ~lnl • ond Slli, 1!;0 I~ 6f.i!'I COfltJ Ml'~J ·''° !M>.11 ll6 MkZ :i.si;:; i\11111, 1\ C. '73 CIVIC. \ C' i 'Pd Must sell ~ 11.10 <1r bst SSt-3144 ,\ \1 's 2nd llWIH'I. m u~l !\Cl'. s:mo ss1 JIM"·''~ '75 CVC(' Ille hh r k Loadl'd :n.uoo m1 , J)l'rfect roo<l. S.1300/bst -o<r .. 673·4079nrf17:J 3891 Mc;. WAHTB>!!! \I U i.!H() SL l\uto t:.:111 S18 40:ill 9742 \'W Sqhk Xlnl c·und 'tu1t w1· tn .1pprt t tJlt• s:lJO 11'>1 oft 751 8:JO I \!17:! vw JHl<t Xlnl rnnd $111.'iO h:o.t <\111 ll75 1:11:1 K ym YW Squareback 91:>41 "4:! l!U~. \.W fl·lll' llaJa kit VOO i.:u.1i.:1·,, trM\ll, h1i.: tire:.. fl 1•11cl & mort'. 646·6 IOO '11 VOLVO HERE NOW 'b8 J,H·elin. 4 Spd, mugs, hl•aders . Sh:ir p! $675. 673 .~295 '66 Impala S.150 642 4945 - $5486. '1nyl lop. ltll wheel. i:1e.1l. tli.000 mt, ::>J!J90 POfttiac 9f~5 c·rw:.e c·onlrol, A,\1t f''M L:Jll752-7lltlti\I ~>l'M ••••••••••••••••••••t-• GUSTAFSON LINCOLN MERCURY 16800 Beach Blvd_ Huntington ~ach 842-8844 tape. t11r cond .. look!> 'i:.! GruncJ P rue. fu>h good! (l.1t•.OtiiHEC1 loudc:d, xlnt met·h n)}'ld $6686. l!!Ui ~tu:.tani.: ~i:.tl ... t ofr 4ll3·2'J2'1 aft 5 to;\!> 1>'15 t[>till ""' GUSTAFSON -;,, :\lu~lang II h.irdlufl lltundtrbird 9970 j ,, \VJgon. ltUIO. air, P ,S, Ford 9940 *MEW COLORS I' Li, radio. w/w tires . .a••••••••••••••••••••• •HEW MODELS X tr a clean . $2~ 7 5 . ·72 LTD. 2 d r , Landau top. llu/.:I' s:ivmi::. on all n • 552 !179? · P S P B . J\11 n l <·o 1111 ' LINCOLN MERCURY 16800 Beach Blvd. Huntcngton Beach 842·8844 only li.000 mi. SJ 1110 I 11 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • .~ • mml t·und, l'I' 1114 !f5tt:: 1971 Coupe'. \\htll' l.;ndt111 all 7PM top On1: ownr, :i7,000 t\')1. - ---S2 8!15 (;40 l~1ill P.into 9957 . m,1 1n 1n f.! 111.w 7ti!> & --....,,.-------1 $l1W01bl>t ofr. c;n 3219 Movericlc lJ\. mos an :io.to-.:k ~ve~ •••••••••••• •• •• • ••••• • 9947 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ve-qa 9t?4 77 Pinto. ~on 1n <·onll'st. ••••••• • ••••••• •• ••••• • MARQUIS VOLVO i''orCla~l>1fuxl Ad •68 Ford Fatrlanc 4dr 1971 Mavenck. 20 000 m1 . \ll'"SIC):ll VI ... J<) ACTION S_.00 552 8558 blk vinyl top ldnl cond !'>llCk !>htft '74 llJkhbuck. A I'. l<fm1. &462'.!82 nu tar~"" i\-1. Sl STS. . ·~ ' "' Call :i ~ • • $14!15. 4!13 7237 831-2880495-1210 O:iilyPilot llont ~l\C' uµ the !>hep' Q> ~ 64.t '1877 D VISOI llavt> !>Om<'thm~ you want '70 Maverick. uulo. ArC, "Lc:.t" 1t in das:.cf1l•d. ORANGE COUNTY A ti4.::! 5678 l t.11 :.ell'! Cla:.stficd Jib do P S, clcan Sll!l5 848·1400, Ship lo :;horc n •s ulls • VOLVO ti well ti42 5671! day:.,~ ti2KS <'Ve:.. t>l2 5ti7tl. '73 VEGA KAM HA~ 1\tr, new cn.:inc. SlG7S K3Hti77 EXCl.liSl\'f<~I.' VOL\'Q Awtos, Us;d -~s. Used Awtos, UHd ----·Awtoi. U.ed Alltoi , Used LJt J.:l•,t Vol\.o U.-..tll.'r ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 111 I >r ,1 nl(l' t'ounly • Ill \ 11r LEASE l>l JI !"LT [ff~~~ 2025 S. M anchester Anaheim 750-2011 •SALES •SERVICE •LEASING Overseas Delivery ~11 'll'•' ,\I"'' b """'ii"'" 1111 ~.II·, K 111 I lo>1' )11111 l •UH l'll U.-IH. \' VOLVO 1966 Harbor C M. 646-9303 Awtos, Uied ...........•..•..••.... AMC 9905 ........••............. 1 I t:tt•mltn i.:11od C'IHl1I. 111·\• t111' le.,:. than :Ill 0110 \ "k In I! $:! I 011 .• Iii t:l-hl Cadillac 991 5 . .••.•.•........••.••.. (!) Nabers Cadillac Qu.1lily .1nd PriCl· < .u,11 Jnli:cd •111• .,,,, 11.tlc I• I', t.-11 • .J KJll'' I 11 ·" •I ~.Int 1nn . " :-.;, \\ s IJ'l'd ( .. .1111 .. ,' 111 I lt.tllf;• C1111nly f lpn l 'o1111J.1v CJdill.H MJ\H'r l>r.11l-r (1!1iltl11t .. , lllHI ( . "'·' M,.,,, I 10 1)1 (I() Nabers Cadillac MEET Ron McLeod THE NEW GE NERAL MANAGlR HERE IS '(' 11.t top. ''0•\,\llVi .,tt•1 ri ,,.. nvil.11 Of\IC•«.HI . ~,, ·tnd ,,., ' ~n IUf yl ,,,. n t '"·'' .,,,, ,., •• l"QN HlP O''dll'f\f'I P tt1,1t \ trt,.ly t11lft t• nl ltw u•·no14 eot\ Ill/ \t\lf\,\f"ld \1•rvH•' IC ,u1\• t.nc,w ~ti..t ''' rn11n .. ~t1Pl' rn ,.,(f • 11ft 1• i'i\l•t• 1, ltH• univ"'-'¥ fu tlwld ,,, tu,c1 lV\H,nH·r '-O'\h\11 1\11• SOLID PROOF \\II\' 'Of lol\ I II 11 \I 11 I ., \\ I .., I I II \\I I 111 1'1111\1 -'11 FOR KIDS ~SouR PLEDoitOYOU: .,. \H-\I \M \'Ill H !'-t-.1 H r111\ r-'"' E\ un 111-. -< llll 'r PHI< t. I~ 11.E.\HI \ -< \1\111\Ell 0\ Tll E \\I\ r4 Slllt-.LI) or E\(11 \!-.\\ 6. ~ l 3.:U \ EHi( I.E. ~ .... ,:,- -Cl h. "t ! ~ 1 NO HIGH PllSSUI( 1 T1 f-,,j CJl ll ill SAUSMANll .ll A .a:; fRU \f'PR \I:-. \I II\ \Ill H PHESt.\T H.1111 U \\1111 r\6.\0ll Tt:I. \' \0 0111 I(,\ Tll)' TO 'or \'OL'l.I. llA \'E ('O;l!l'tt:n : ' PRl('l\c; l,"ffl)R~I H iii' BEF'ORE \'OL' FILL Ill T \ l HEUIT \Pl'LIC\TIO\ Oil ~I(,,/\ Tlll\r.. lil . ~ ONLY!. \\tit\ \Ill \llt IH \II\ . Ol 11 1'111 111. '\I I-.., l'H I· l'lt-\\111.1.IH \Ill TllE l'I \l\ t-\t 1' O\ ~\1,1\E. Ettl ll'\11.\1 \:-.111'~.HHHl· ;It.\:-,{ ~ .• ¢ , r FREE GIFfS ~ t \ FOR EACH CHILD \ \H 'I I II \l'l'll \ "lie I\\ \Ill I tit l\t.1.1.t \ Ill I I HllOll. l'llJI t II\ \\\ l 'I fl I \It ,, ..,,Cl(". \ 1) SANTA WILL BE HERE ,, SAT. & SUN . 10 -4 \ AHO 1' MON . thru THUR . 4-8! / ~--"J fll'\ II ITll C 11\f"I Of. \(E.. \I.I. 'n' '''1 I \fll I \I( II \HH \\TIES \II~. l'0:-.1 Hl (I\ TllE 1\1\ll~lllt.1 ll Hiit \ Ol R I~· SI'~;( TIO\:' I ••• ADULT TOYS REASOHABL Y PRICED Wl SPlCIALIZE IN FREE CHRISTMAS TREE! MILITARY FINANCING! ABSOLUTEU NO DULER 10% OFF PREPARATION ON ANY WOii( OONI CHARGE ON ANY IN OUI SUVICf DEPT. CAR IN STOCK! 0 • ~~~:M~~~: IN SEE f OR YOURSELF I I HOW MUCH YOU I - CAN SAVE!' : ~ i.;;_.--811: BARRY PONTIAC ~~ See for yourself ... We're Now the Dealership that is Different! 2000 E rtRST ST SANTA ANA At the Santa Ana Fwy. 558-1000 D11c·ou11r. PRICll PRICES R-E·E-EAL Y GIVEN OVER THE PHONE -847-6087 e PHONE e 549-3331- BARGAIN SPECIALS on ALL USED CARS 1972 VEGA HATCHU CIC :. .'~i:"'u~; ', $1 099 t "' 't..::r ! ., J .f-~~~~~-=:.:::::~.L...1 1971 CHEVROLET 172 FORD T·llRD Towftflf!G" Srotlon W•t•n .... • ,. , ~; ~~j.,.,:"::, s1399 ~.~:. ·· .. :, ... :: 52899 col!Cllt-"9 ..._ ·~ .; • Cl .. l(JCI ' •l 1• .> ' •T'•" \l .. \ .. 9M'f .,.A .... "' Di-'-•f ..... ~· ........ ' ..... -. ........ ~ ..., .,.,__,., rw.-..t• ', .. , ' ,. ..... Joi' S3389 l"CIAL IAU 1t•ICll IMMEDIATE DILIVERY UAll INCIAL 1977 C~~= Pickup ' .. ' ., 1 .. '"'"1"1 ON.LY'101" m MO. ... ~ ~ ( . ••••• t It ·~A I I '"' • ~ t • 1977 MONTE CARLO •• olllft • ..;, .J ' ..... ~ OMLY 1127'',. MO.. ..,"""' 4 , .... ..,.. ,.,. ........... t·•1' ••• .-. ....... h ..... ,.,. ........... -....... • h ()"1•t\. t\O.M 1977 CAMilO \ I \ I I DUJttington Beaeh Fountain Valley EDITION * * * * Aft.e .. tauop ~. l''. Sfueks VOL. 69, NO. 357, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 22, 1976 TEN CENT ::Bonfa Offer Irks Huntington Council~ By ROBERT BARKER Of IM Oaoty Piiot Sl•ft A controversy has broken out between Huntington Bt'arh city Attorney Don Bonfa and me m bers of the city council. Council officials say that Bonfo, who has been engaged in a two year grievance battle with deputy ~ity attorney John O'Connor, sent a letter on Dec. 16 without their authorization offering a com promise in the case. The council declared early Tuesday morning that the letter was totally inappropriate and should be considered void and having no e((ect. Further, the city council direct ed City Administrator Bud Bels ito not to provide a ny representation lo the city person- nel board for the city and Bonfa in the O'Connor grievance. 1Deputy's Gun Fires The city had been providing out- side legal counsel on behalf of • ' Bonfa but decided De<:. 6 lo cut 1t off. Bonra ·s letter was sent to O'Connor's attorney, Cecil Ricks. It reportedly offered to substitute a critical 12-page performance evaluation that -has been the source of the grievance for another evaluation Councilman Richard Siebert 'i GG Wonian Slain l In Arrest Mishap A 29-year-old woman w<.1s ac • cidentaUy shot to death Tues day night when law enforce ment officers a rres ted two San Bernardino murder sus pects holed up in a Garden Grove apartment. Police said Donna Russell of Hesperia was mortally wounded by a bullet accidentally fired by a San B e rn a rdino County sheriff's deputy in the arresting party. According to Garden Grove police, Mrs . Hussell. wife or one of the murdl'r su!>pCNs. was Army Says struck in thc t'h<..'St by th(· single shot fir ed by Lt Honald Forbu!>h. The woman reportedly was one of thrt'l'' people ins1dl' Apartment 6 :.it 1221 Beach Blvd. when four San Bernardino County deputies and a cont ingent of Garden Grove police went there in search of the murder s us pects. It was when the arresting of· ficers were jostling to ~t'l ms1dl' the apartment that tht• fatal shot w a:. fired . police said Tar get of the arrcstin~ party were: t v. o m l'n uct'ill>t"<l of the shotgun sta11ng Nn-llrr th1c; month of u 17 year-old Siln Bernardino youth ArrC'sted on th<• murdl•r w:.ir- rants after being captured in the Garden Grove apartment were Gary Lee Russell. 30, or Hes peria and Guy Ste rling Stubbs. 21, of San Bernardino. Police said Stubbs v. as cap- tured when ht• tried to flee throu~h a rl•:.ir door whill' Hussell. the ~hooting v1ct1m's husband, ~urrl'ndt>red m~1de thl· <iparlmt•nt said that Bonra had no right to write the letter "The city council 1~ spcc1f1cally In control of the City's legal ar fairs," he said. Bonla said Tuesday th;it he finds it "regr ettable and re ehensible that the council has decl support the employe- grievant a inst management and the depa ment head in this matter. ··r am going to apf)<'~b<.'fore tht• personnel board and argue very strongly in my defense ... Bonfasaid Vice Mayor Ron Pattinson l>ald Bonfa is free to do whatever he wants before the personnel board ''The city, however. 1s not going to spend an y more money in lhe grievance m alter/· he said. Ile said it was nonsense to believe that the <'ity has acted in favor of the grlevaol by directing the city administrator not to. pursue the matter further Siebert s aid the case has bt•en reviewed by an impartial ad · mjnistrative law judge and he ha~ is&ued his finding to the city. The hearing o!Cicer charac- terized the report as an "abusive diatribe'' against O'Connor. A member of the personnel board (See BONFA, Page Al) ~~~-~~~~~~~~~~~ \ DON'T KU\\~ - 1 7 1 Germ Tests FV Rezones land for 84 Houses , .-Held in U.S. t \ WASHINGTON <API The Army confirmed tocfay 1t eon ductt'd slm ulatcd <itlacks with non-d1sease -caus1n~ !>uhstanc<.•s io eight areas to dctt•m11ne tht• country's vulnc·rab1bty to germ warfare. An Army !.pokesman said the teats. conducted between 1950 and 1966. were performed with non·d1sease-causrng biological substances. and that "there 1s notJung w~ have that shows any J.jnlc age bctw<.•c·n these tt'St'> anrl any outbreaks or infrct1on or any deaths ." The tests w<.•rc conducted at the l!enla((on and Sclll f"ranc1sco in 1950. Mech anicsburg, PJ , 1n 1951 . Key West, t-1:a and Ft McClellan. Ala in 1952. Panama City, 1-'la., 19SJ, Point Mugu and Port Huent'mC'. CJ.lrf in WS.1. and on New York City"., subwav in 1966, the l\rmy sai<l The purpose or the tc~t" wao; tu dete rm1n t' the nalton '' vulne rability to possible enl'my b1olog1cal att ack and th<.> US ability to df'lect such an atl;1<.•k . the spokesm an s aid The substance:' uc;cd 1n all lht• tests was Ser rat1a Marcf'Srrni;. l which the Army says •·1s prese nt throughout the cnv1ronml'nl and IS cons1derl'd not to cause dis case" The newspaper Nc wsday of Long I sland, N Y .. reported Tuesday that one m .rn a hospital patient -died alter the 1950 test in San Francisco and that death was caused by Ser ratia in his bloodstream (SttGERMS, Page AZ) Or :n:cA2:~s l Weather Sunny through Thursday .j • wtth some high cloudiness. Hl l\,UT. lhe coast about 88, down to about40. l~SIDE TODA l' C<XUt arta churches are planning a number "I Christmas e't"! and day iervlcu to celebfote the Jt&tlve holiday. Places and time• on P.age A9 t&fay. Index ' I ,., .. Al4 ... All 11-1 •::~· 414·U ., •.. , ... ,.. 'TIME FOR A CHANGE' Golden West's Boyce GWC's Boyce Plans Jww Retirement Dr fl. Dudll•y Roye<'. f1>und inj.! prl.'sidl·nl and rh1cf all min 1st r .itive officl'r of Goldt•n West College for the pa!>l 12 years. announced plans today to resign, effective .June 30, 1977. The 55 year-old educator and commumty leader said he l'QO s1dercd it an opportune lime to m ake a change:' "My wife and I simply have found this a time when we will welcome a change of pace." Boyce said in a Christmas let· ter to fa~ulty and stall , "We are excited that there are some new horizons toward which we may r each." he said. Coast Community College District Chancellor Normav E Watson said. "I was surprised and greatly s addened to learn ol Dr. Boyce's decision to re· sign, but I can understand his desire for a change of pace- "Dr. Boyce h as done an out- standing job building one of the most innovative community col leg es in the nation,·· hesa1d. Watson said the board of trustees witl begin a nationwide search to find the most higbJy qualified successor. "We will hope to fill the position by July 1, 1977," be said. When Boyce took over as pre· sident of the college in 196.S. the collece campus was on 122 ac~ of farml~nd. The lnstitutlon now enrolls ~.ooo 11tudente, employs ~4 faculty and 315 atatr, otters 1.,000 courte1 and 47 career pro- a ams. and h us a master-planned campus of2J urut.<J. Boyce graduated from Fullerton College where hla father, the la\e Dr. Wllliam T. Boyce, served as president from 1913'l9SO . He went to Stanford Unlvcr:11 <Set BOYCE, Page A.%) The Founta111 Valley City Council voted Tuesday to rl.'zonc three parcels of land for as r.'lany as 84 new homes The council voted 3 to t to re- zone an 8.7-acr e parcel lr,catcd on the west s i<lc of llarbl)r Boulevard south or llcil A venue Mayor Pro Tt'm Roger Slanton voted against the action because. he said. "We'r e giving up prime commercial land on llarbor too soon." The land's developers . M «i.11lon Builders. Inc., r cquci;tl'<I lhc zone change to construd :10 homes on the silt' In anolhl'r rezonin,:: action. lh<• council voted 4 to O to changt• a 6.23-acre pared from t•urrent farming use t o a 44 unit townhouse development. The townhouses arc planned for a triangular shaped lot at the 1unc tion of Warner and Win- lerburg A venue!> and the Santa Ana River. The council also ~ave ll'ntative approval to rl'7onmg a 2 5-acrc parcel l)f land on T albert Avl'nuc west of Rush a rd Street. The land 's tlevelopt•r, the Warmington Company. plans lo build 10 single fum1ly homt•s on the SitC'. fn a separa te action, lJll' coun- cil gave tentative approval to re- 7.-0ne a two-acre parcel of land on the north side of TaJlx-rt /\venue east of Brookhurst Street from farming to commerciaJ use. City planners said several restaurant d evelopers arc eying this s ite. ' Air Cal Deal Facing Some Opposition SAN DI EGO (AP> -Air Califorpla is to merge into the Westgate-California Corp., sub- ject to court approval, but the owners or J9 percent of the airline may refuse to go along. A spokesman said after Tuesday's vote that people hold- ing a total ol 165,525 shares may ta1ce Sl3 in cash per s hare. The conglomerate is r eorganh- ing in bankruptcy court. H the merger is approved by a bankruptcy judge on Jan. 14, 1 West1ate wouJd pay S:HS million for the remaining Air California stock. Westgntc-CaJlfornia already ownea 722,975 ,.,.r ' or 81 per- cent, of the airline bas :d ln Orange County. Max Van Oordrecht, executive vice pr~sldent ot tht airline, said the vote was 7~.22S shares forJ lbe merger nod 16,57~ agalnsl. Smile, Darn l'o~ S111ile l\lotori!>ls travc:ling north of Zumbrota. :\1inn . finct a happy ml•ss:.age on the build ini:: on lht• Hon Benson !arm While Benson 's grammar might not be the greatest, his mes!'>agc comes through loud and clear Watchers Helpless As Oil Hits Sea I NJ\NTl'CKF:T. Mass !AP> The sink1nJ! bh\\ or the• Irut•turl'<J L1be r1a n oil tanker Argo Merchant split a part toduy, spill ing what r :1rj?n it !.till held onto Nantucket Shoals. The ship's break-up was one• of history's worst oil spills. "There's nothing wl' can do." said Coas t G11•1rd Ll Cmdr Harr~ Chambers Bike-riding Bandits Get $150 in Cash A we ll-built young gunman and his talle r bandit companion robbed a Huntin~lon Bench service station o r a bout $150 Tuesday night, then sped aw:.iy on 10-specd bicycll's Police said the attendant on duty m the Shell Oil Company outlet al Springdale Street and Heil Avenue was not harmed in the gunpoint he1 s( Patrolman Joe Guarnera said the unidentified attendant was first forced to hand over money from the pump island cash box . then to open the ofCice safe. He told inves tigators he last saw the two suspects, who wore ski masks and used a blue !\!eel revolver in the holdup, pedaling wildly off down Heil Avenue in an easterly direction. A QUICK SHlfI' • ONCOLDSPOf "I sold it right away. It I 'd had eight of them, l could have sold them all ." Here's the ad that sparked the ~ale for this Newport Beach man: H C u Ft f'rosttret ,COld!\pol rrfna. SIOO Xlnl Cond. xxx xxxx If you h ave a refrtgerator, or anythlna else, you 'd like to con· vert to cosh -call 642·5618. Daily Pilot classifieds snake it eaay lo put a few words to work for you Offk1uls watched helplessly the pro~rrss of the spreading rnl shck ar.11d a rl'port that some rnl alreadv h a d reach <'d northeastward to the Georges Bank commerrial fis hing grounds. Massachusetts waited for word from officials in Washington, D.C., on the state's request for federal aid for businessmen whose llvel1hoods might he damaged by the spreading oil. Oil-coated birds have been spotted hy the hundrl'ds on Nan- tucket, but wind ~ind wave: were sweeping the oil from beaches. The break-up early Tuesday or the 640-f oot tank e r Argo Merchant spewed 7!'-i percent or her 7.6 million gallons or heavy mdustrial crude oil into a slick 75 males long and more than 25 miles wide at its broadest point "This is the biggest oil spill dis- aster on the American coast in our history." said Russell Train, hcud <See SPILi,, Page' AZ> * * * Spilled Oil ComdPmoor 4 &swn Days BOSTON CAP> If the 5.7 million gnllons of industrial fuel oil spilled from the Liberian tanker Argo Merchant were con· fined on a hair-acre lot, it would make a pool 46 feet. 7~~1nches deep. If it were burned in the boilers of Boston Edison Company, it could generate that utility's elec· lricity for four days_ That's the equivalent of <l year's use for 22,000 homes. If it were gasoline, it could power 126,667 cars for a year, as· suming 20 miles per gallon. It could fuel on e car on 6.000 trips around the world at the equator. If it were the kind suitable for burning in your home--which lt isn't -It would hcnt il for 8,4S9 winters. That's assuming you have falrly flood Insulation. If you sprtad It out lo a thick ncss of one inch, It would cover 20 football fields. Surf Soaring Along Coast;· More Coming High winter tid es· an-d ~oulhwesterl y s wells turned Orange Coast beaches into a sur· rer's paradise today. Consistent breakers ranging from three to seven feet were rc- parted by Lifeguards from Hunt ington to Laguna Beach and weather forecasts call for more or the same on Thur!>day. About 700 surfers took advan- tage of the winter surf today, ac cording to a Huntington Beach lifef(uard . Large crowds or vacationing surfers were also reported in Newport 8l'ach and Laguna Beach. The combination or steady surf and a seven.foot high tide Tues· day caused some minor flooding alon~ th e cousl. The tide is drop- ping. however. and bcachfront officials said temporary Ooodinti: was reduced today Post Office Slate Given The m ain Huntington Beach post office at 677 Warner Ave. will be open on 11 norma l schedule from 8 :30 a.m. ·to 5 p.m . Friday. Stations at. 316 Olive Ave_ and al 9151 Atlanta Ave. will operate from 8:30 a .m . to 11 a.m . Fri· day. AIJ offices wilJ be closed Christmas Day and will resume their regular schedules Dec. TT. oo...,·r FORGET.' O Ml.V 2 SHOPPING OAVS 'TIL CHRISTMAS •1 1 Wednesday. December 22 1916 School's Office To Move? MD Rape Case Up To Jury 0 .. ly l'llot ~WI l'llolO TAKES LIBRARY HELM Fountain Valley's Richard Rob Richard ·New Valley Library Chief Rob Richard, a form e r Fullerton llbrary official, has been named chief administrator of the Fountain Valley Branch of the Orange County Library. Richard, 29, succe~ the late Ronald Rice, who died Aug. 2. A native San Franciscan, . Richard has Jived ln Orange County since 1950. Richard, his wife and their three daughters li ve in Fullerton. The new chief librarian, who began his duties at the Fountain Valley library last week, re- ceived his BA in biology Crom C hapm an College and his master's in library science from Cal State Fullerton. Richard receives a $1,312 monthly salary in his new post. BOYCE ... ty, Harvard graduate school of business as a naval officer can- dida te, and back to Stanford to earn master of arts and doctor or education degrees. He joined the founding faculty when Orange Coast College was , est ablished in 1948, serving there nine years as a teacher- counselor. During the next eight years he was a m ember of the presi- dent's staCf and director of placement services at Stanford, before returnin~ to Orange County lo bccom e president of the new college. Boyce assisted In organizinl( Chnst Presbyterian Church m Huntington Bea<'h v. hl'rc he :.erved two terms ;.es a rn<.'mb<.'r of the board of eld<.'rs Boy<'e has been ~1 dirC'ctor and honorary director of the Huntington 8C'a<'h Chamber of Commerrc and u d1rC'Ctor of thr West Orange County United Crusade. r or the past SIX Y<':lrS hC' ulso has been a d1re<'lor of thC' Publle Facilities Corporation, tht• body rcspon~ible for d<'· vcloping Huntington Beach·s new central library and civic center Valley Okays Land Zoning The Fountain Valley City \ounc1I took another step Tues· day toward annexation of a three-acre parcC'I o( lund near Edinger A VC'nuc and II arbor Boolevard The <'0Unc1l voted lo prezone the land for commercial use. The property is local('(t on the cily limits next to a bank and tire store. The proposed unnexation or the <'urrently unincorporated pro- perty is expected to he brought before the Local Agency Forma· lion Commission in January, city planners said ORANOICOAST w~ DAILY PILOT =:t'.~~~~·,"~, '::1::::: &:. ™'' ~t\llllAt Como.it I\¥ ~th· "'4t!Oi'\ '""' CM#Mf\Md Mtf\Cl•t lfttt~ft rrj.,_., ,., (~1• __...._. H_.#Mitl ~M"' "fwl'\t1,,..,. .. ~f\ ''-""" I••" ~Alll'# lf'Vl#tf> \,. lffl~O.C:• \111 .. y A~ ~~=~~~~~.~~~~,;~ :::: .. c!,::.':';1.~1·.~~~~·.::,. »t W.4t tM• ·-Oj-Pff ,1 lk'nt •'Wt PuH· ..,..,. Joe-II (""lt1 V~I> ,_,t~t .. ,.t •"fl '°4~ .. Mt~" Tlll•MHl(t ••O (410., ,_, .... _.... "'en•t'"'O [d-W Cit.rt.•" l... lllt!Mnl .... " .'"''''"' Mfl\eQ!"O l•toir ·-"···· .. We•I Ott_ (.,."4• lllllw Ht11tlfMto11 ae.c11 Offloe '"'" ..... ~ ....... ..,. IMlll"Cl"d01'9Hl ,. 0 ..... ,me Ottlc•• I.Act.-::·;~~~:.~ ~•tl)e(• Voll•• ioo1 u "•• """" •t SM Ot•to ,..,...,.., Tel-.,flOne (114)'4M321 eta .. lfl.O Advertl~ .....-r1 -·-....... Orl1!0t c.v ... , CilfMMlll'" M6-t220 c..wi: Mlt o. ..... C.•,. -•lfllno C.m • CT.,, ... -~ •• '!:r!:'M~~~·.::~ =-~~~ .. ~ ..... -.v, , .. ,,., .... , .. ,_.'"'*' •• ._,..,.._ .. t'm:..~~".:-.:!~ .. ~ .. .:'. ~~~.:. ~·:. ~~~·& ;'~~ _,.,,, m1111 .. , By RAV ESTRADA 0t 1 ... D•lly I'll .. $1•11 Ocean View <elementary) School District off1ciaJs arc eying the possible transfer of their ad- ministrative orfices to whut 1s now Rancho VJcw School in Hunl· ington Beach. The Raneho View campus, at 16940 B St. near Warner Avenue, is scheduled for closure as an elementary S<'hool rn J une because of declining enrollment. offkials said The eighl-ll<'re parcel of land whkh now holds the current dis trict offices, is worth at leil!it $1 million. a loc a I real tor told trustees Monday. .. You're sittihg in a good loca· tion here," said Larry Schley, n representative of the Huntington Beach-Fountain Valley Board of Realtors. The district offices, nov. loc<.it ed at the <'Orner of Beach Boulevard and Warner A venue, were called~ 'in adequate.'' by As· sistant Superintendent Jim Jones. Jones said the potential sale of the Beach-Warner property couJd bring in revenue for future school building needs. .. We could live with the exist- ing office s ite,'' said Superinten- dent Dale Coogan, "If need be, we could a lways move relocata- ble buildings for extra space.·· District building superinll'n· dent Milt Berg said, "We're Just outgrowing our offices." Coogan said, "We feel almost guilty sitting on a million-dollar piece of property when we may haveother-possibilities." District officials said the mov- ing plan is "up in the air" at this time. But officials plan to cornpiJe in- formation on costs involved with the possible m ove lo Rancho View School and on the potential sale of the Beach-Warner site. Trustees will reconsider the move in January. "We must bear in mind that there is no real urgency in muv· ing our offices,'' said Trustee Jay Rivera. Coogan said it may be spring before trus t ees establish a minimum acceptable bid on the land. Ocean View officiaJs arc also <'Onsid e r ing the Huntington Beach Union High School Dis· trict's interest in the possible lease of the Rancho View facility 11.igh school district officials said they are looking for an)' elementary school facilities slat· ed for closure. T hese Cac11it1C.'s could be used to alleviate over <'rowded conditions al Wc:.t Orange County high S<'hools, lh<'Y said. ~ugh school district Superin· tf'ndcnt Frank Abbott told trustees Dec. 14 that the Rancho \'1ew site should be C'onsidered for use as a continuation s<'hool. f 'ro"' Page 1\ I BONFA •.• said recently that thl.' report con- tained a ccrlain amount or editorializing. "The decision is now in th" hands of the personnel board whkh is mad<' up of impart1t1I specialists. We are saying, kl them look al it and analyze •l ~1thout dirc<'tion from lhc city," Siebert said. "We are not grnog lo spend another penny.·· The personnel board could rt• ach a decision Jan. 19 when 1l lakf's up the matter. Bon! as aid th<' city council 1s not Justified or authonzed lo take thl· <'ity attorney out of the Ca!>c "in asmuch as he's a department head who performed .i performance cv alualion. '· "The city council has no right lo intermeddle in personnel mat. ters," Bonfa declared. He added that it was proper and desirable to work oot a C'Om· promise. Grove Man Charged in Knife Death Garden Grove police arrested Kevin J. McAndrews, 22. Tuesday and charged him with the murder oC a man apparently stabbed lo death in the living room of McAn drews' apartment. Jt was a telephone t'all from the murder suspect that led police to the apartment and discovery of 29·year-old CllHord Wayne Haase'• battered body, poUce said. Though the precise cause or death has not yet been de· termlned, police believe Haase, an Anahetm resident, died of a stab wound In his torso. Tbey aave no possible motiv«i (or tho slaying that npparentJy OC· cuned early Tuffd-.y morning but wae not reported by the murder 1uapect for an estimated aixhoun. THOUSANDS JAM CHURCH TO PAY FINAL RESPECTS TO RICHARD DALEY President-elect Carter, Sen. Edwud Kennedy Join In Eulogy Al'WI•• ...... Daley Eulogy Cal/,s Power 'Low Priority' CHICAGO <AP) -Mayor • Richard J . Daley, leader for almost a quarter of a century of the largest political m achine in the nation, wa:. eulogized today as a man who would have placed political power · ·rar down on his hst or priorities." Daley died Monday of a heart attack in his doctor's office. He W3S74 President-elect Carter, Vice President Nelscm A. Rockefeller and Sen. Edward M. Kennedy 10-Mass >. Wt'rc among the dignitaries and hundreds of local and state politicians, of. f1ccholdcrs and political Jobholders who attended his funeral. The Rom an Catholic serVices were ht'ld in the Nativity of Our t.ord Church. Just a few minutes' walk from where the mayor was born and from the bungalow where he liv<.'d most of his life. "Ile was known everywhere as a man of power and inevitably that meant political power,·· said the Rev. Gilbert Graham, a friend of the Daley family, who delivered the eulogy. "1 know he would have placed that far down on his list of priorities.·· Jn ac<'ordance with the family's "ishes. reporters were barred form the services. They wrutcd outsid e with a crowd or about 300 people in bitterly cold weather. The service was bro<1d· cast outs ide on speakers. After the Mass of the Resurrec- tion. Daley was buned in Jloly Sc>pulchre Cemetery in Worth, a s uburb south of Chicago. The mourners included Sen. r.corgc McGovern , lh l' 0<.'mocratic party·s presidential blandard-bearer in 1972 and a mong those who sharply criticized Daley and his polict' fore<' during the tumultuous 1968 Democratic Na lion al Conventinn . Couple Jailed On Fraud Rap A Santa Ana couple were scn- ten<'ed Tuesday lo six months m Orange County Jail after being found j?Ullt v or welfare fraud that <'O~t th<· °C'1>unty more than SHi.000 Superior Court Judge H W ~•Iler Sl<'iner ordered the jail l<•rms for Ray F.. and Geraldine Jt.irris. both 37, and ordered lh<'m to m ake restitution of $16,079 a ft<'r a jur y in his <'Ourtroom found the pair guilty. Homage Nixed Group Won't Mourn Daley SAN 0 1 l'~GO (AP ) -1'ht.> late Mayor Richard J Daley of Chicago was described as "ruth less" and "corrupt" by San Diego County supervisors as they refused to quit work early in memory of hi m. Thret• of l'h<· five supervisors voted Tuesday to re- Jf•ct iJ r''!>olut1on honnnnj! ();11f.'y, "ho died ~londay. Tht• 22 v1•ar Chicago m.J\.ol' "ran a pnlttital machint• lhat •·(Jn roughshod O\'£•r pc•ople's rights," Supervilior D1<·k Brown S(J1d "The man l~ dcatl, .. commented Supcrvbor J ack Walsh "ff we have nothmg good to say, lct"s go on to !>Omelhing C'bt• '' Huntington Police Roof Breaks Up City II all workmt.•n W<n: C';Jll("(I in today to n•placc ;i i-mall 1>1•1· lion of th<' $6 million llw1tan~lon Beach police department lobby ceiling which suddenly plu111~{·d to the floor without w arnrniz The <'hunk of plaster. about 12 inches square. crashed onto lhl' carpeting in front of the Watch Command(•r':. Office, posi-.1bly loosened by door-slamming:. over the four years !>IOCe the ~tructurc was built Front Desk OCC1ccr Chr1.., Schneider observed happily lhal the portion of the ce1lrng O\'Cr his desk didn't fall He noted 1l could h::.ivc been worse, sin<'e the new municipal library in Central Park 1s now cracking due lo structural Jlro blems and the slightly oldi•r municipal court complex in Westminst er 1s s inking into a peat bog. Front Pagt9 A I GERMS ... Quoting unnamed sources and dO<'uments. the newspaper also said that following the 1952 test at Ft McClellan, the number or pneumonia cases more than doubled in the surrounding county. It said there also was an in· crease m pnl'umonia deaths in the Key West area after the t<'st there and added that &-rratia hus been identified us a rare cause• or pn<'umoma The Army acknowled$led that Serratia Marcesccns "could <'On· <'eivably act a11 an opportunist and produ<'e un 1nrcct1on" in persons who la<'k immunity to most diseases. Frona Pllfl«9 Al SPILL ... of the l ' S . Environmental Protection Agency. The aged, rustin~ vessel called a "suspect ship'' hy the Coast Guard bccausl' of 19 pr<' vious mil.haps sinct• 1961 -piled onto the Middle Rip Shoals 27 miles southeast of this island re- sort one week ago today, She was 10 miles off course when she hit. No was injured in the pile-up. and no one was aboard when she broke up Tuesday .. The Coast Guar d said most of the <'argo washed into the ocean when her forede<'k and aft section parted in 10-foot seas. "I am convinced someof theoil has gotten to Georges Bank," Coast Guard Rear Adm.James P. Stewart told reporlel'"S. The vessel was on its way from Venezuela to Salem. Mass. Stewart said an investigation showed the ship's master was not using all of navigating equipment available to him, and that the ship was not kept in repair. The captain or t he Argo Merchant, George Papadopoulos, was summoned today to deliver a de'position on the groun9ing in open court. lie said the reason for ttw grounding was 001 was in lht wrong position." lie is being sued by Cape Cod fis hermen who d emand $60 m1llionindamages. They claim in their suit against the captain and sh1p·s owners that the spill wlll cost many or them their hvehhoods because of polluted seas. At a hearing thi~ morning, U.S Magis trate Lawrence Cohen ruled that Papadopoulos· testimony would be giv<'n in private. It was a reversal in Cohen's position, and he said he had ··come to a different con dusion" about allowing public dl·· positions after re-examining rules governing court.procedure. By TOM BARLEY Of ... 0•1111'119f ..... Jury dellbe r at\ons were sch1..>duled to open today after Tuesday's heated and sometimes lund closing a rguments ln the rape trial of Dr. Roes McClure~ South Laguna. The eight-woman, four-man Orange County Superior Court JUry heard prosecutor Maurice Evans condemn the doctor as "perverted" as he asked for a finding of guilty of rape and sex perversion charges. Dr. M cClure's attorney, Leonard McBride, cbaUenged Evans' condusions and re- minded the jury ot the tape switched on by Dr. McClure at the height of his admitted sexual activity. Dr. McClure is accused of in- Jttting a 22-ycar-old patient with enough Vallum so that s he .. couJdn't talk, couldn't think and couJd barely keep her eyes open" before sexually assauJting her in h.ls office Jan. 7. Mc Bride throughout the trial has conceded that his client gave the young woman a smaJl Valium injection but it was done as stan- dard practice to relax her and that the sexual encounter that followed was entered into will- inaly by both the doctor and the patient. Evans, waving the patient·s medical chart before the jury, pointed out that Or. McClure failed lo record the injection he admitted giving the patient as she lay on his examining table in her blue bikini panties. "She was in his office for only one reason.'' t~e pr05ccutor said. "'She was in pain from a back in· jury. But what she got in the way or treatment was massage or breasts and sexual organs, an acl of oral copulation and lhe act of rape." McBride based his closing argument on the tape of the i.nci· dent made by the doctor. He argued that the Dana Point woman was a willing participant in the IO\'e making and that the Valium was not designed to en· <'our age her to respond to his sex- ual overtures but was for relief of her pain. "She never protested," McBride said. "She never told him to stop. She never asked him what he was doing. If you don't believe me, listen to the tape. "None of us really knows the truth," McBride added. And be urged the jury to remember while i( deliberates, that .. sexual intercourse and oral copulation outside m arriage are not a crime. "We're not trying the medical profession here,'' the defense at- torney said. "We're Lrying one man. Forget he's a doctor and look at him as a man." "And what a man," Evans countered, describing the defen- dant as "a doctor who hides behind his hypodermic needle." Evans asked juror's not to al- 1 ow the imminence o f '"Christmas and th<' traditlonal season of good will" to allow sympathy to lnCluc nce their verdict. "This was an act of rape and an act of oral copuJation,'' he sajd. "And the law is the law at Christmas or oiny other time of the year." $525,000 Robbery MONTREAL (A P) -A bandit <'arrying a rifle concealed under Christmas wrapping paper, and two accomplices robbed Brink's guards of an estimated $525,000 Tuesday, police reported. They said the robbery occurred as two guards were transferring money to their truck from a Bank of Montri•al bran<'h in an cast-end shopping center. It was suc<'e11sfully aJleged that lhe couple, who havP three children. fraudulently claimed and received welfare assi11tance, food stamps and health care from the county. DJ Guilty Of Perjury "The number or lncldcnLc; of Serr atia Marcescens lnfecUon cannot be determined bccau11e 1l is not a reportable disease. It OC· curs In Isolated circumstanrc.o; and individuals or Is invarlahly associated with some other dis ease or injury whi<'h low<'ts lhl' resistance,•· the Army said. The Army said one substanct' used only al Mechanicsburg had the potential of causing a diseas1• in persons lacking resistWlce. A spokesman Raid ll was fell that the substance -Aspcrgillus Fumigatus -wi.s "rather harm less ... Newsday said the sub stance is a fungus which can be fatal to humans. Kuyper's Contract Renewed by County NEWARK. N.J . CA P) - Frankie Crocker, a leading disc jockey and program director In New York and 14' Angeles, was convict· ed today of lying to a grand jury Investigating payoJain the record Industry. A federal court jury re- turned the verdict after a two-wee k trial and nine hours of deliberations. Crocker could be sen- tenced to five years in jall and tined $10.000. said As- st. U.S. Attorney Robert. Romano. Crocker, who has a home In Beverly ff Ills and a pen- thouse in Ma nhattan, was convicted of glvlng per- jured testimony to a grand jury Investigating allega. tio n a he recelved thou11ands of dollars in cosh to plug and ~vc alr time to records on WBLS Radio, New York. Whtte he fa pro1ram director. A second substance used In th<' tests in au of the place8 except New York, the Pentagon and Key West, Is called "Bacillus Globigii," which the Army said is not consider ed to cause disease. 'Ihief Hits Desks At County Plant A b\l.fglar· stole $150 tn cash from unloc ked desks at the Oran1e County Sanltatfon Dis-· tr1ct plant at 10844 Ellli. Ave. In Fou1'tain V llllcy, police saJd. Tho thief used • wt~ clothes han1er to open a bar loek door eotnetime alter the plant omees clOffd Mon.day night. Employcs discovered the mlsstn1 cash Tuelday mornlna. 0.llYl'l•9'tfl,._.. FOUR MORE YEARS County Counnl Kuyper Orange County isupervisors un· animously voted Tuesday to rc- hi re County Counsel Adrian Kuyper of Laguna Beach for another four years. Kuyper's rehirln~ camr as part ol a ritual that gives county superviaors a chance to review their chi e f legal counsel'11 performance. Jn Kuyper's case. the board's contldence was expressed in a S-0 vote that, for the fourth limo since 1964, m ade him chief of the county's battery of 25 attorneys. The 48·year -old county counsel Is paid "'l,288 a year for hi11 legal and administrative services. Arafat An8wer8 NICOSIA, C)'prus (AP) Paleatlntan leader Yasir Ar~t said today bl1 m overnent wtn set up a PaJestlnlan state on "aft.V piece of. liberated PalesUnJ&h soil," the Sa'ldl ala~ radio re-· Ported. Irvine EDI T ION 'I ' I • ('I . OC a)· ~ , OSlll~ :'\I., .. S•o~ks VOL. 69, NO. 357, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TEN CENTS Watchers Helpless NANTUCKl::'r. MJsS (Al') The sinking bo\\-or the rral'lUrl'tl Liberian 01 1 tank (·r J\r~o Merchant split Jpart today. spill mg what cargo 1t still ht·ld onto Nantucket ShoJb Tht· -.hip's break-up wa:. onl' or h1sl11n ., \.\Orst 011 sp1lb .. There's nolh1nJ: \.\l' tan clu,"' said Coas t Guard l.l Cmdr Barry Chamb(•rs Officials watl'hl•cl hdr>ll's:-.1~ the progress of the sprcadmi: 1111 ::.lick amid a report that :.ome Oil already had reached northeastward to the George-. Ua nk commercial r1 :.h1ng grounds Massat•husetls "a1tt-d for word from 0H1c1;.ils in W<1sh1ngtnn. D C . on the state's r('Qucsl ror frderal aid for businc::.smt•n "hose livelihoods might bl· damaged by the s preading oil Cra~h \lit1'tim Aided The s pill could co.'it the state t•conomy about $235 million. statc officials estimated tc-4ay in the draft or a letter to President l'ord :-.cl•kin~ foderaJ assistance 011 coated birds have bc£>n spotted by the hundrl'<is on Nan· tucket, but wind and wave were i.weeping the c>il from bt>aches. The break up t•arly Tuesday of the 640·foot tank e r Argo Merchant spewed 75 percent of F1n·nwn .uid fJ<1r.111wd1 t~ lift Irvine r·l'~t 1Jc.11l ~Ian :\d~11r. IB, ot 4:1i t Winl er~wcel St from h1•r 1·:1r Tue~d av afternoon after IL 1·r.i~ht•d into .1 I rel' 1war. the mt .. rseclion of ( 'ampu~ Drl\'l' ;111d Qu;ul St reel 111 :'°\('\\port Beach. :\lr .... Adi.Ill" was liskd in fair eon <l1tion today al I loag Memorial llosp1tal Jet Noise Study Hearing Scheduled To Review Survey ,\.Jan I:! pulilit· lll'annJ! on th1• worth of .1 ('ontrov1·r ... 1..tl l'00'-111 tant'., 'lil \,.,or p11hlH' n •iJrl1on 111 Oranj;!t· ('ounf\ 1\1rp11rl \\a'> ,,., Tul''>d;n h\ 1·011nl ~ "lllWr\ lsor ... aftt'r ;1 nl111•11:0. j.'roup1·h.1rg1•d th1· report";,-, tJ1·1·1·1\111..: l'l'tt•r 1>11, an. n·pn''l'flllng .i i?roup ht• 1·.1ll1•d ''''\J1ort 1!1·s1 denb AK:•in ... t .Jto1 .... 1·onlt•rHktl th1• l'l''-J)(lll'>I'' or :\J pt•opl1• ..,,11,j I 11 ltt h' in~ lrt n111<,1• 1 rrlpat'lt'(I .1r1-.1~ W('rt' l11mp1·d "'1th r1·1••n't'' 11f ;•,I oth<·r 11 -.ult•nr... It\ tnl' rw.1r th•· airport hul not ...... 1fr1•11t'(I h' """'' llt• <'1:111111•1! nut 1•11011~h rt''-1 dt•nh 1n lh1• no''' .111•," "''"' rn t1•r\1t'\\1cl ·'"'"'·I' .11ul th.it lumpin1: th1•1r rt ftt tn"'' \\Ith other.., m.1111• t h1• -.un ,., 11 ... ulh deC'<'I\ lllf,! Supen1-.11r-. rum Uric•\ "ho ,11 fir!;t 'Ul!lo!t>"l1·d th.11 th1· r1•-.11l1•11h brin~ th1•1r rom pl.11 nt' up L1lt•1 when lht· hoard l'l•n,11l1·r-. an ('n \'1ronmPntal 1n1p.1<·c r1•p<1t"I on th1• Jlrpor·t <·a tl1•d lh1· 1u11up., l'harge.., "\'er' ... 1 ro11~ a1•1·11s;1I 11111 tomakl' " lie lhl'n l"allt•ll for 1111· 10 am . I .in 12 heci ri n~ .111t1 stJ~l!e'I c'<I that C'Omm1•nts l'rlll<'U! or th(' o;11r \('~ be prC'Sl'Olt•tl HI \\l'd111g t•arher :-11 lht'y l':Jn ht.· -.tucltt•<I arnl .m .. w«>n•<l The SlO,()()() s ur' t·~, 1·omptl1•d Ii\ l'OS A -,sor1ateo;. "';1.; tak1·11 .1moni:: 666 county n•.,1den1-.. :lOfl nl "horn ll\t' nl'ar th1· .m1>ort Thi• r<'..,ulto; 'howed that. l''<l'!'lll for t ho..,l' II\ ing 'l'r) c•lo'I' 111 llw .11rport. count\ n·o;1dt•nt... tlo 1111t n>n'lcler the a 1rport a prohlt•m l>an F:mor~, ;in11th1·r mC'mbcr 11( '-<t'" port Hc•...idt•nt-. Ag:un..i .lrh. c;a1d the ronsultanl was t11 in lf•f\ 1t'" 100 rt•sidents in lhP an•a m-.tl'ad of 306 Rut. Emorv cl.11ml-d . tht· ron ~ullant 1ntcr\·1t•w1•cl lht• 11th1•1 !}.1 proplc in areas M'H'n to 12 mill's frl1m lhC' ;11rpor1 <Sc<' AIRPORT, f'agt' i\21 Stockholders OK Westgate Air Cal Ties Shareholders or Air California approvt:<l plans Tuesday for the 1m.·rger of the airline into a wholly 11\\-ncd subs idiary of Wt'sl,::ate Cali rorn I a The rorpor" 11on currenlly holds 81 p<'rc01•nl. of thl· airline's -;trn·k . ll-avins.: 165,52!1 i.hares out ... 1anlltni.?. W1thTuC'-.d ay :.. shart'holdcr ap prll\ ,11. th1• proposal nt•t-ds onl~ tht.· blt•:-.:-1111-: of lhl' federal b;tnk ruptn court 11fftc1 at... hefon· 1t takc•s effrrt West.Rate California 1s current I\' unclC'r~1uni: r1'or ,::amzat1on .1ftt•r f1hn f! ror hankr1111t<')' tn San Du.•go Thl' trr ms of the· takeover agreement cal l for each shureholder to r<'cc•rVC' Wrstgat<' t•ommon equivalent c·<'rt1ficatcs worth $13 a sh arr Those Cl•rt1hrates mav be re- rlt•c•m('Ci for cash or convl'rted into Westg al<' s h<i res nnr<' rt>organ1za ~ lion or thl' p,1r('nt Company IS rompleted City Hall Worker An Oldtimer at 18 Diiiy 1"1191 St.all ....... NEW 'OLDTIMER' Vicky Jimenez By HILARY KAYE Of,,,_ 011ty PllOI St•fl Most peoplt> view Irvine as a place where things are just gel· ting under way. An Jrvlne "oldtimer" is anyone who lived in the area before the city in· corporated in 1972. By those s tandards. 18-year· old Vicky Jimenez is something of a relic. Vicky is the new receptionist at Irvine City Hall, but she really isn't new at all. She was born on the lrvine Ranch and has lived in farm houses on the ranch since. She's probably lived in Irvine longer than an yone else on the ci· ty staff, c ity aides point out. Vicky's father, Felipe Jimenez. has been employed by a tenant farmer on the Irvine Ranch for 42 years. He's tended crops, driven the tomato-picking machines t1nd ge nerally manaeed the farm ndJncent to his home on Sand Canyon Rood, near Barranca Road. And Vicky 's mother, Lu pt Perez Jimenez, a native ot Santa Ana and a 30-year resident ot Irvine, hos left her imprint on Irvine, too. "They nnmcd a s treet after my mother. Perez Road. It happened years ago when the mailman needed a name for a street m y parent!i lived on.·• explains Vicky "Wh<'n the mail man a..'lked her what to call th<' street. she sug. gested her maiden name. Perez, and it's been called that ever since and 1s even on the map," Vicky continues. The street is located east of Yale Avenue. between Trabuco Road and Irvine Boulevard. Vicky began school at Irvine Elementary School, which h as since been torn down. The big- gest class In those days was 25 childr en and everyone knew everyone else even before school began. berause they were all "ranch kids ." The new receplloni.st continued her education at the old Rancho San Joaquin intermediate school on Sand Canyon Road and then wu bused to University High, where ahe received her diploma last June. Of the 25 children she began kinderRarten with. six finlmed <SttOLD·TIMER. Pa1e i\2) as Oil her 7.6 milhon gallons of heavy industrial crude oil into a slick 75 miles long and more than 25 miles wide at its broadest Point "This is the biggest oil spill dis· aster on the American coa::.t m our history," said Russell Train, head of the U S. Env1ronmt>ntal Protection Agency The aged , rus ting \'esscl called a "suspect ship" by the Coast Guard beciJusc of 19 pre· v1ous mishaps sin c 1964 -piled onto the Middle ip Shoals 27 miles southeast of this island re· sort one week ago today. She was 10 miles off course when she hit. No was injured in the pile-up, and no one was aboard when she broke up Tuesday. The Coast Guard scud most of lhe cargo washed into the ocean when her foredeck and aft :-.ection parted in lO·foot seas. ls Sea "J am convinced someoftheoll has gotten lo Geor,::es Bank," Coast Guard Rear Adm James P Stewart told r eporters. The vessel was on its way from Venezuela to Salem, Mass. Stewart said an investigation showed the s hip's master was nol using all of navigating equipment. available to him, and that the ship was not kept in re pair. <SeeSPILL, PageA2> Germ War Tests Army Denies Links to Deaths WASllINCTO!\ tJ\1'1 Thl' Army conr1rm!'tl lotl:t) II !'Oil ducted ~1mulall'd allJt·k-. with non·d1seast•·cau:.1n..: o.,uh'ilan<·t·s in eight an·as to dt•lt•rminl' tht• rountry's vulncrab11it) to gl•rm warfare An /\rm~ -.pol.l''>mJn said tht· tt.'StS , C'OOdUC'I ('(I bt•t °" l't'll 1950 and 1966. were pt•rformc'(J "1th non·d1st•a-.e l'au:-.mg hiolol(1cul substances. und that · lht•n• 1-. nothing "'c ha\ t• that o.,ho"'' .in~ hnkagt· bet" l't•n tht•si• lt'sts and any outhrl'aks of inrt•t•t111n or an) deaths ... The tests "'en· rondut'll'<I ut th1• Pcnlagon and San Franc1s1•11 111 1950. M(•chanicsburj.!, Pa . 1n 1951 . Ke\ West, Fla and 1"t MrCldlan. Ala in 1952 . l'anam,1 e1 ty. Fl a , 1953: Po mt :\1 ugu .inti Port llue ncme. CaltL. in 195-1 <ind on New York City s ~ub"'ay .n 1966. Lhe Arm\' said. The purpose or the tcsL.., \\-all to determine th e nat ion's 'utnerab1hty to possrbll· <'nCm) b1olog1cal alt ark and the L' S ab1hty to dl•tccl such an att..icl... the spokesman said. The substance used m ;.ill thl· tesb was Scrralla Marccscens. "h1rh the Army says "is pre~ent throui::hout thl' en \'imnOJ<'nl and 1s ronsidered not lo cause dis l'<ISC " Thl' n£>wspapcr Newsday of Long Is l and, N .Y . reported Tuesday that one m an -a hospital patient died after the 1950 test in San f.'rancisco and th<it death was caused by Scr- rat1a 1n hie; bloodstream Quotin~ unnamed sourres and documents. the newspaper also :.aid that Jollowin~ the 1952 test <See GERMS. Page A2l County Approves Cop Kills Paramedic Funding GG Woman In Raid Orangl' Count) s upervisor.., agreed Tul'l>d;iy that the CC Tr\'ine Medical C(•ntt·r !ihould he given a one.year. $236.000 con tract to train paramedics The Supervisors· action had the effect of ending a Ion~ n valr) between the m edit·aJ cent(•r and Santa Ana.Tustin Cummun1I) Hospital for the paraml'fh<' train ing contract However. lhe door "as ldt ajar fo r the h01-.p 1t<.1l wht•n hospital ad min 1strator Waynt- Schroeder s aid 1t might be poss1 bl<' to train par a ml'tl1cs al no t•ost to the county Thal pro1>osal "a:-. b;1,1'(J un a suggestH>r t thJ t SanlJ 1\na College and St·hroc<kr's hospital might comb1:H· lo orft•r a tr:11ning program as parl nr lhc colll'gl'0S regular curri('1tlum. For n 1> w • h ow t' v t• r . U < • I Med1t·al Cl'nl1•r 1s 111 anc'f Santa Ana·Tus tin C11mm11nity llosp1tal 1s out. Only Supervisor Laurence Schmit fa\ ort"d 1·ont1nu1ng compN1t1on bclwt·cn the two farilities as he cast tht• lone dis '>tmting vote in the 4 lo I ballot that won the day for tht• mcd1cal crntr r Woman Seeks Irvine School Board Seat A sixth potential cancl1dat1". Dorotht•u H "Dnttit•" Rhunc'. took out nomination papc.•rs toc.l.1y for the lrvint• Unified School Board. Mrs. Blaine, No. 2 Lupin<', lists her occupation as a county ad ministrative analys t. So far, three people have com pleted their nom inallon paper ... They are Louis C Zcjda. Ron Lun ceford and Fred Gahm. In udd1 tion to Mrs Blame, Kathv Larkin and Bob Gray have t~kcn out nomination papers The seats up for election next March are those currently held bv Charles Boulanger and Frank Hurd. Boulanger says he will not run a~am, but llurd il> still un· decided The hl1ng period closes Dec.30. DO...,'T FOllGET.1 0Nl.V 2 SHOPPING OA VS 'TIL CHRISTMAS .' Srhm11 pointed out that lhc medical center had lowered its paramedic training bid by $63,000 after the hospital began its bid for the contract And . Schmit n oted. Schroeder's proposal was lower in cost than the UCI Medical Center offer. Rut Schmit ·s arguments were offset by a report from the county Emer~ency MedicaJ Care Com· m1Uec that s ui:gested the proven quality of medical center tram· mg JUSllricd the higher cost. Both the committee and the '-Upt.•rv1sors who supp<>rted the medical cenler contract made il clear that Santa Ana-Tustin Community Hospital's ser vice is not helow rar DA to Enter Investigation Of Shooting By JOANNE REYNOLDS 01111• O•••v Pilot St•!! The Orange County Distn ct At torney has b een asked by Newport Reach police to in- vrst1gate F'nda~"s fatal shooting of a bystander during a robbery stakeout. The District Attorney has been brought into the invC'stigat1on in an effort to allay community rc•ars that any wrong doin~ Ill tht• inr1denl could br covered up by police. said Newport polire C<ipl H1chard Hamilton The man arrested in the cast'. Ridwrd William Sutton, 20, San Clemrnte, was slated to appear in court to<lay to hear the readinsi of the 34 ch arges filed against him. Thos<' rharges inC'lude 17 counts of armed robbery with a prior conviction and 17 rounls of commission of a robbery with a loaded gun Sutton still faces the poss1blily of n murder charge being filed against him under the state law which holds that any homicide committed during a relony crime can result in a charge of murder aginst the defendant in the cas1> The v1ct1m of the accidental shooting, Joe Hines, 61. was a re· sident or Dana Potnt and a well· known figure in Corona del Mar where he worked as a handyman. Visitation was scheduled until 9 o'clock tonight at Smith, Tuthill and Lamb Mortuary. 518 N. Broadway, Santa Ana. A mortuary spokesman said funeral services and burial will take place later this week in Marshall, Tex. Capt. Hamilton said the DA '1' Investigation of th e shootinf( began Tuesday nftemoon. "We have turned over all of our r e· ports and physical evidence to them," he said. Hamilton stre1u1ed that the de· partment is interested ln getting a lblrd party to Investigate the <See PROBE. Pace A2) A 29·year·old woman wa~ ac cidcntally shot to death Tues day night when law enfor ce ment officers arrested two San Bernardino murder s us pects holed up in a Garden Grove apartment Police s aid Donna Russell of Hesperia was mortally wounded by a bullet accidentally rircd by a· Sa n B e rn a rdin o County sheriff's deputy in the arresting party. According lo Garden Grove police, Mrs. Russell, wife of one of the murder suspects, was struck in the chest by the single s hot fi red b y Lt. Ronald Forbus h . The woman reportedly was one or three p eople inside Apartmen t 6 at 1221 B each Blvd. when four San Bernardino County d~uties and a cont ingent or Gurden Grove police went there in search of the murder suspects. It was when the arresting of· f1cers were Jostling to get inside lh e apartment that the ratal i.hot was fired. police said Target of the arresting party were two men accused of the shotgun slaying earlier this month nf a 17 year old S o.in flernardino youth.' Arrested on tht• murder war· rants after bPtn~ captured in the Garden (;rove ap<irlmcnt were Gary Lcr Russell. 30, of Hes peria and Guy Sterl ing Stubbs, 2t , of Sun Aernardino. Police s aid Stubbs was cap~ lured whl'n he tried to n ee through a rear door while Russell, the s hooting victim's husband, s urrcndcn'CI inside the apartment \\euther Sunny through Thursday with some high cloudiness Highs near the coast about 68, lows down to about 40 l~SIDE TODA,. COC3t area churches ure planntng a number of Christmas eve and day urvices to celebrate the /ealive holiday. Places and times on Page A9 today. Ind_. •o •• A14 "' All ll•t •• It All Att>U 11 .., AC ... .. f I A.2 DAIL v PILO r 1 THOUSANDS JAM CHURCH TO PAY FINAL RESPECTS TO RICHARD DALEY President-elect Carter. Sen. Edward Kennedy Join In Eulogy ,.,. Wlr•-"olO Super Agency Stalled Supervisors to Resolve Department Conflict,s By Gi\RY GRANVH.U ; Ot thf Ot11I'; P••ot \t.u• Efrort:. tu form a lhirc.J Orunge County :-.upl'r ugcnt·y stalled again T uesd;iy wht•n superv1!>ors "ere handed connicting recom mendationi, bv admini!>trator!> Inst ead of . founding the pro- posed mammoth H uman Sen ices Agency. super visor ... form ed a com m itt ct.• or a d m1n1stralors J nd ordered the comm1 ltl'l' to iron out the d1f. ferenrcs Appotnll•d hc>ad of the commit tee "as County 1\dmm1slr.it1H• Officer Robert Thomas St•li·cted lo sen con the tounc1l were Hu m an Sen 'll't''i J\gcr11·y runt'tion'> as probation, we>lfarc c11 rl'rlur [)a\' id Otll-11 . C'11u111 y and ht•ullh into a single' agent}'. CmtnSl'I At.Iraan Ku~1>t•1 , Alulilor Hy lhl• end of lh1· day, lhere Controll er V1t· Jl cim :md Johll was growing s kepticism about ~l cDon a l d , d irector of ll11· theproposal / Orange County Ll•gJ I ,\1d "I'm not · H.urc that we aren't ~iety Lr) mg to put too much in~o a s i n gl'n cy," Supervisor It wul be the comrrultcc's task P i<.'drich said after the to ascertain how 10 l'X d meet g. isling county departmenl\::.t'z· :,__,,.--:tilut'~~ u:h along with three ing with the d elivery of of his llow supcrvisors. have services can be blended rnto a already app roved the super single super agency. agency in concept, deeided on its So far. the plan ha.., bet.!n mired make up and assigned county do"'n in a series of d1sagret> personnel a~ well as a citizens ments and legal s narls rclatt'<.f to comm1tt0t• to develop the agl'O· ;itlempt1ng to bll!nd :-ouch d1v1:1 st• <.';."s fr.1me\.\ork 'Boss9 Praised ~ Power '*Low on Daky's Priority List' CHICAGO <A PI Mayor Rlchard J . Dain •. ll·uder for almost a quarter of a century nf the largest pol1t1caJ mach1n1.• 111 the nation. was e ulog11ed today as a m an who would h ave pluc:etl political power "fur <luwn on his bst of priorities ·' Daley dwd Monday of ti heart attack in his doctor's office. tk was 74. Presldent-ef eel Carter, Vice President Nelson A. Rockefelli:r and Sen i-:dwar d M. Kcnnt."lY (D·Mass.I. w<.•re am ()ng the dJgnitar1es and hundreds of local a nd s t a t e p o l i t1c 1a ns, of ficeh o lders a n d po lit1 cul jobho lder s who ultcnded hi~ funeral. The Roman Catholic serv1et·" were held 1n lhc Nut1v1ty of Our Lord Churc h, JUSl a few mmutes walk from where the mayor ~as born and from t he bungalow where he hved m osc of his life "He was kno\.\ n t.>verywhcrc as a m an of power and inevitably that meant politic:il power." sul(I the Rev. Gilbert Graha m , a friend of the Da ley family, who dellvered the eulogy. "I know he would have placed that far down on his list of priorities." I n a ccordan ce w ith the family's wishes. reporters were barred form the services. They waited outside with a crowd of about 300 people in bitterly cold weather. The ser vice was broad· cast outside on s peakers. After the Mass of the Resurrcc· lion. Daley was buried in lloly Sepulchre Ceme t ery in Worth, a suburb south of Chicago The m ourners included Sen. Geo rg e McG ov<.•r n, t h e Democratic party's presidential standa rd-bear er in 1972 and amon g th ose who s h a r ply criticized Daley and his police force during the tumultuous 1968 Democratic National Convention in Chicago. Also ther e was Gov Daniel Walker. a frequ ent cnllc \.\ho wrote a i.pec1al report on l~<.> 1968 con\'ention and dl'M'nlx'<I 1t as a "1X>hcc riot." Rdls nt ltll' <'1l y's Homun C.ithuli1· l'hurchcs rang in umson J t 9 30 a 01. as the funt>ral service began in tht• 97 ye<1r old church, where Daky was hap t ized .ind murr1od und worshippcd a lmost every day Mourners wailed outside the church in 11 -d egrN• weather through much of the night for a final look at thl' man who rull'fi their city longer than any other l'ohce ofhc111ls ci.tlmated that more tha n 100,000 person.s filed pai.t his c asket in t he church. The wake started at noon aild wtu to have ended at 10 p.m., but more than 200 persons !\till wait ed ror entry to the ehw-ch after midnight. The church doors were closed at 5 n.m . to allow final arrange - ments and a security check for Carter's nrrivul. Carter arrived at the c hurch around 9 a.m. Otlwr dignitaries arnved shortly afterwards Homage Nixed Group Won't Mown Daley SAi\' DIEGO <Al» Thl' talc Ma) or Richard J . Daley of Chicago was dt•scn bC'd as "ruthless·• and "corr upt" by San l>ll'go County 1>uperv1sors as they refused to quit work l'<u-ly tn memory of him. Three of the fi ve supervisors voted Tuesday to re. jcct a resolution honoring Daley, who died Monday. The 22-ycar Chicago mayor "ran a political machine that r an roughshod over people's rights,'' Supervisor Dick Brown said. "The m an is dead." commented Supervisor Jack Walsh. "If w e have nothing good to say. let's go on to something else." fi'rotn Page A I OLD-TIMER AT 18 Uni High with +.er and all six stlll li ve in Irvine. Life was different for a "ranch kid", she recalls. For one thing. the word "neig hbor" was never even heard a round the house, she says, since the nearest person lived blocks away. She says :.he loves Lhe job, her first, but plans to take s horthand at Saddtebac k College n ext semester so she c an adyance in thec1ty . Vicky. who speaks English. MD's Rape Case Goes to Jury Her earliest memories eons1st of an Irvine covered with or· chards and fi elds and litUe else. Iler mother used to say that one day there would be houses across the street fro m the J1 mcncl house. "She was only JOkin~. but it's almost com e true," says Vit'k}, shak ing her head with disbelief. Spanish and Fren ch, s ays she's always hoped she'd never have to leave Irvine. But within the next few weeks her family will leave their hom e on Sand Canyon Road and move to San Juan Capistrano, where her father will work for another fa rmer . "The man my fatherworked for here is retiring, so we have to mov(', "she s ays. "I hate the thought of leaving Irvine. but may he it won't be so bad. Jl 'II be a situ<.1tion similar lo the one here. and I'll still work for the city." s ht" says. By TOM BARI.EV Of Ht• D••lv Pilot ~t.1U Ju r v d t' I llH· r i.l t 10 n s w c r (• sched1i1t·d to open tod ay after Tues<fay ·~ he atl•d and sometimes Jund closinSt arguments in the· rape trial of l>r Hos~ McClure of South Laguna The c•1ght "'oman. fou r man Orange County Supl!nor Court Jury hea rd prosN'utor Maunre Evans condemn lh(• doctor a!> "pervt'rled " J" hC' ask<'<! for ,1 flndm~ of J.! u 1 It' of rapl' Jnd <,1·~ perverston 1·h.1rgt•" Dr :'ott•Clurt· .., Jttornl'}. 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JIOI t n1-.1ch Rcs1 dent" Ai:ta1no.t .I 1•t<;. "J11f 1hc J.:roup ha1'about JOomrinllf'r' She saHI tht• i:roup plans 'to file lawsuits to collt•ct <lamagcs for a irpor t no1s C' and "ha t she claimed was 1ti; nrlv('r~c im part on property value11 ORANG[ COAST DAILY PILOT '"',. t')••no-(,,... d t>•1tv •.1 ·• •'" •"'u f\ t\ -,._,...I tftilt ,,. .... Pt,. \ I\ Dll"*'""' 1' • '""""" t"Qoo fl'A I Pi;N•'-"'"' 1f'nmrt•"• '-N IM ,.., I· ""' ,,,. .,..,".''"'"'. ii'ofllld., '"''••Of' • ,~ .. ,,.. '" '·• w t ~'""'°"''' R·"'"' ._.,,.,,.._,,,,. t\.o.,"' o• lt "i y4111~., ''"'"' \•'1-l1~•1;1t • Vt,.., 1111 t, 4")11" • ..... t IOI \t)v-tf'I (ftA t A •fW)W' t• J t ~ t 1'41W\ , .. ""'"' , .. d \411\l'O•r• .. ~ ', "'"'"' 1"°" CY ""tO.I OIJO••\"'°•"CI pl1"tt '' •' )l!) .V.\t A•• \tr•• I (.oJ\\I i ~\41 (•I IO'" ••1to/t. .... ,, ...... Ptf''>f'f•,_t •illod jltyCW • .,,_., I•<•-C-Y•,.,,,,,, ..,..,.,,.,._,r.,-..,,.,_ """"~' '"'"'" ....... ld1IOf l"t~t1' M .......... 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Dr. McClure is accuse<l of in jt.'cting a 22-year-old patu:nt with eno ug h Vali um so t hat she "couldn't talk. couldn't think and could bar ely keep ht•r e) es oprn" before sexually assauJtmg he r 111 his office Jan. 7 McBride throughout thC' tnJI has conceded that his cliPnt ga\ 1· the young worn an a small Valium mJection but 1l "as donC' a:-st<.1n dard pract1re to relax h<'r ancl thal th<' Sf"'<Ual l'ncountcr th<•' followed wa ... t·nl<'rl'<I into "111 mgl) b) hoth lhl· dtK'lor and lhl• pn11ent. Evans. waving lhl' ml'<llc al rh;irt h<'fon• pointc·d out th:1t J>r SPILL ... pall<'nt ·.., tht• jun. McClure· The captain nf rhc• Ari::11 Merchant. Georj!e l'aµadopoulo:., ".i:-. summoned today lodt•hver u deposition nn th1· grournJin~ 111 nr>1•ncourt llt' said lhf• r eJ son for th1• .:rounding w a~ · l "'ao., in tht· wrongi>0s1t1on " lie 1c; bl•ing sued l>) <:ape Cod f ishermen ~ho demand $60 mil lion In damages They claim in their s111t aga1n ... t th1• <'Jptam anti -.hip's owners thJI the '>Pill will coc;t m.iny of lhPm lhl'1r II vell hoods ht•c· <HS...l' or pollull'<I .,cas At a hearing thi' nwrning. l ' S. Mag1str ah• L;e wrt>ncr Cohen rul e d th a t Papadopoulo~· testimony would be ~iven in private It w as :.t reversal in Cohen's position, and he said he had "come lo a different con· cl us ion" about a llowing public de· positions a fter re-exam ining rules governing court proct."<iure International marl time law and US. environmental and s hip ping laws are imprecise on tht> subject of li ability One theory had it that the owneri:. could tw sued only for lhe value of the ship and its cargo which afkr lht! disas ter could be nothing. If the oil was hes onto U.S. shores. lawye rs there believe the owners of the vessel could be pro- secuted for en vironmental infrac tions AQVICKSHOF ONCOWSP<H "l sold it right away. If I'd had eight of them, I could have sold them all.'' Here's the ad that sparked the sale for this Newport Beach man: 14 Cu Jo't F ro11 trrc>C' ColdsPot r~friR $100 Xlnl Cond. XXX·XXXX Jr you have a refrigeret.or. or anything else. you'd like to con· vert to cash -call &f.2·5678. Dally Pilot classifieds mue It easy to put • few words to work f« you. failed to record the injection he admitted giving the patient as shl' lay on his ex amining table in ht•r blue bikin i panties. "Sh<.' was in his offi ce for only one r eason," the prosecutor sajd. "She was in pain from a back in- jury. Rut what s he go=in the ay of treatment was mass e of breasts and sexual or • an acl of or al copula tion and the acl of rape " Mc Bride based his closing argument on the tape of the inci- dent m ade bv the doctor lie argued that the Dana Point "om a n was a \.\ 1lling participant m thC' lo\'£• making and that lhc \'alium WCI~ not designed lo en- couragc h<'r to resp<>nd to his sex- ual ovC'rturcs but was for relief of her pain "She n <.'vcr prol<'sted ," DJ Guilty Of Perjury NEWARK.NJ. <AP> - Frankie Crocker . a leading disc jockey a nd progra m director in New York and Los Angeles, was convict- t'() today of lying to a grand Jury investigating payola 1n the record industry: A fede ral court Jury re- turned the verdict after a two week trial nnd nine hours of deliberations. Crock er could be ~en · tcnccd to fi ve years in jail <ind fined SI0.000, said As· st U S. Attorney Robert Romano. Crocke r. who has a home in Beverly Hills a nd a pen- thouse in Manhattan, was convicted of giving per- jured test imony lo a grand jury investigating altega. lion s he r e c e ived thousands of dollars in cas h lo plug and give air time to r ecords on WBLS· Radio, New York, where he is progra m director. Irvine Park Grass Mowing To Continue The Irvine City Council bas agreed lo continue mowing the grass at Culverdale Wilderness Park every six weeks to main· tain it as a semi-wild area. The city had originally de<.>ided to mow the 5.5 acre park onJy twice a year. However. residents complained that the park looked wild and unruly. The council t hen decided to ex· pcrimenl and told city :staff members lo have the grass mowed eight times o year, or every s ix weeks. The pcark lies In the Edison Company right-of-way between the rear or the CulverdaJe tract and the San Diego Fl"eew•Y· Mc Bride sa1C1 . "She-never 1111<1 him to stop. Shc never asked him what he was' doin~. If you don't believe me, listen to the tape. "None of us really knows the truth." Mc Bride added. And he urged the jury to rem em ber while it deli ber ates, that "sexual intercourse and oral copulation outside marri age arc not a crime .. ··w e'r e not trying the mcd1eal profession here." the defense at tomey said "We're trying one m an. Forget he's a doctor and look al film as a man " "And wha t a m an," P.vans countered, describing the dcfcn· da nt a s "a doctor who hides behind his hypod erm1c nc~edle." Front Page Al GERMS •.. at Ft. McClellan, the number of pneumonia cases m or e than doubled in the s urro unding county. It said ther e also was an in· crease rn pneumonia deaths in the Key West area alter the test there and added that Scrratia hai, been identified as a rar e cause o( pneumonia. Records m the Alabama State J leallh Department confirm an increase in the numbt>r of rcp<>rt- c d rases o f pneumoni:.i 1n Calhoun County. Ala • where F't McClell an 1s located. But Dr. Frede rick Wolr. head of the Al a bama Bureau o f Preventable Diseases, s1ud the increase could have com<' from other causes. He said the number of cases jumped from 42 in 1950 to 98 the following year and 333 in 1952. then dropped to 139 in 1953. Ry 1957, it had dropped to eight. Wolf said there was a mild epidemic of Influe nza late in 1951 and early 1952 which could have led to an increase in pneumonia. The Army acknowledged that Serratia M arcescens "could con- ceivably act a! an opportunist and produce an infection" in persons who lack immunity to motst diseases . "The numbe r of incident'> of Serr a ti a M arcescens infection cannot be determined becau!'le it is not a reportable disease. It OC· curs in isolated circumstances and indJviduals or ls Invariably associated with some other dis- ease or Injury wt)lch lowers the resistance,'' the Army said. The Army said one substance used only at M echanicsburg had the potential or ca using a disease ln persons lacking resistance. A spokesm an said It was felt that the substance -Asperglllus Fumlgatus -was "rath~r narm· less." Newsday said the sub· stance is a fungus which can be fatal to humaniJ. A second 1ubsUlncc used tn the testa In a1J o( the places except New York, the Pent.ion and Key West, ls called "8eclllus Globtcli." wbJcb the Army uJd 1..5 not conatdered to cause dlaeue. Vicky says she's always known that progr ess would come sooner or la ter to Irvine. but insists that it's come sooner than anyone c•X · peeled. She's s pent much of her life see- ing familiar buildings lorn down lo make wav for new houses. When the old Francis Packing !louse rt>ccn tlv was torn down, Vicky says she· wasn 'l particul ar· ly~ad. , "But when thev demolii;hed the old elementary school. that n •:.illy hurt." she admits. "I remember walking throug h the halls of the old school and it felt really weird "henit wasgone> ·· Years ago, Vicky and her mother would shop in downtown Santa Ana, because there were no stores in Irvine and South Coast Plaza hndn 't been buiJt. ·'Whe n they fin ally b u ilt Pni.versity P ark, m y Mom could go shopping a l the Alpha Beta, which was much easier," she says. Living in the country had somt• disadva ntages. s uch as being isolated from he r school friends after class was out. But she says she wouldn't have had it any other way, and ratU es off a list of ad vantages she says made il worth it. She recalls sitting outside on clear, q u iet wa rm summer nights, eating freshly picked vegetables everyday and h<1v1ni: plenty of elbow room. Those were the bonuses, s he says. Vicky fell into her receptionist job accidentally. She appli ed first for a clerk-typist position. When she d idn't receive th al Job, she tried and won lhe job as r et<'1>- t1onist, where she greets all v1s- 1tors to the new city haO on J a m- boree Boulevard. "If I had to leave Irvine and I didn't h ave the city job, I'd be just misera ble." says the Irvine native, who emphatically insists that she doubts she'll ever find an <-qual to Irvine. Fro• Page Al PROBE •.. incid ent lie said Newport police had asked-for a coroner's inquest. but were told Lhal one has not been conduct ed in the county for more tha n JO years. Hines died Friday night about an hour afte r being hit with a shotgun blast from the gun of Of· fi cer Doug Thomas. Thom as and two other officers w crc s tak e d out at t h e Albertson's market in Corona de! Mar waiting for a repeat hold up by a m an who had victimized markets in the south county area for the past two months. They were p ursuing Sutton • who ha d all egedly just robbed lhC' market. when Thomas fired and Hines apparently stepped in the hn~ of fire Nuclear Test Made YUCCA Ft.AT, Nev. (AP> - T he E n er gy R esearch a nd Development Administration conduc t e d an o ther s m a ll. weapo ns-r elated underground nuclear test ::it the Nevada Test S1t<•Tuesday. ... Kuyper's Contract Renewed by Coullty D•llY ~ SUH ""°4• FOUR MORE YEARS County Counset Kuyper· Orange County super visors un. animously voted Tuesday to re· hire County Counsel Adrian Kuyper of La guna Beach for another four years. Kuyper's r e hiring came as part of a ritual that gives county supervisors a chance to review their chi e f lega l counsel's performance. In Kuyper's case, the board's confidence was expressed in a S-0 vote that, for the· fourth time since 1964, made him chief or the county 'a battery or 2.5 attorneys. The 48.ycar-old county counsel is pald ~1,288 a year for his legal and adminletratlve services. Arafat Answers NICOSIA, Cyprus CAP) - Paleatlnlan leader Yuir Arafat said today his movement will aet up a Palestinian state on "an)' piece of liberated Palestinian sou," the Saudi at.ate radio r&-ported. I I I J \ W ~due~ul uy'\ CloMin~ Pri(•<• NYSE ... WdOnuSdoy Dttcembur 22 1976 l/N DAILY PILOT A IS COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS Meant to Fail Ouol•J•Olt-\U'l(IUO. ,,..,,.,,,...,. "'•· Yot' M.a-.,. P., HI< Paw 8o'\tOn Drtro I •rtd c ""••l'Wll \\ut' ••tf\61..-_,.,Mtd AJOQnf'CI b; 1hlf N•tkWl•t A.uOC.t•ttOn Of S.Cvrn.,., De• et\ •Ad'"'''""' .. .. ' '1984' to Test Spirit of Privacy By JOHN CUNJ FF A~aw-•M•t'r'I The possible extension of pnvacy leg1:.latJon to include the business sector, at u possible cost or many :.cores or millions of dollars, will be a vital and p1unful issue for busi- nessmen tn 1977 If enacted, pnvacy laws would require industry lo mamtam records or lnd1v1duals in such a way that they could be easily retrieved and pos:.ably challenged by them· div1duals involved AT PRESENT, ONLY GOVERNMENT agencies are covered by the Pn\at:y l\ct of 1974, which permits in d.iv1duals the right of accc:.:. lo rerords in more than 8,000 systems However, that same act provided for . '• 'I establishment of the Privacy Protection Study Com m 1sston, \.._ ___________ ,. charged with determln .· • '. Ing 1f the law's pro- v1s1ons should be ex- tended to state and local governments and to the pnvale sector Smee the commission 1s scheduled to submit its report to the president and Congress no later than next June, it hopes to receive comments from Industry by January, which m eans some comparues will have a headache nght from the egmmng of the year C PERS & LYBRAND, T HE P UBLIC auditing firm, has a ch en ts the extension of pnvacy laws "could have a st mg effect on many companies, and would have some Pct on nearly all businesses and their mformat1on s stems Perhaps most dJrectly impacted would be ma ang hsl c pames and dtreC't mn1I marketers cred1t card ssuers. le ding mst1tutions, insurer!., undcrwril . alth care pr v1ders, schools, personnel agencies and the like Already harassed by prov1s1ons of the Occupahonal He Ith and Safety Act many businesses can be expected lo react strongly to proposl'<i leg1s lat1on INDUSTRY, BOTH LARGE ANO SMALL, increasingly has ms1sted that it 1s being submerged m a sea or existing regulallons and paperwork requirements, and that new leg1slat1on would be a tidal wave atop all this The leg1slat1on that would extend the privacy require- ments to business 1s the Koch Goldwater 8111, mtroduced by Rep Edward Koch CD NY ) and Rep Barry M Goldwater Jr <R Calir l It 1s mtent1on.'.llly given the o minous number 19!l<i Cold\\ atcr and Koch chose lhc numencal rie~1gnat 1on for a real.on apd 1l wasn t ncccssar1l.> to fnithll'n bus1 nessmen mlo believing that the hfe control world of Ge<>rl!c Orwell's novel which carries tht• nurnbt•r a~ 1t:. title, is already here IN FACT, GOLDWATER HAS stated he hopes the bill won'l be enacted CUNN"F · And 11 won 't,·' h<' h • • !.JJ'.I. ·•1f m fa cl tndustry and the pnvate sector captun· t' Jllfll or the principles or pnvacy and begin rl'v1e\\ ing t .r practices and 1mplementmg those principles · The bill. there for<' 1.Jy he more a threat than a pro· bab1htv at the rn o ml'r.l,. l'rninde r that business should get its fli es in order to protH'l the rights of md1v1duals But the immense cosL-> mvolved arc likely to retard pro gress m that d1rect1on T H E OFFICE OF IUANAGEMENT AND Budget estimates the 1n1t1al costs of federal compliance with the Privacy Act of 1974 at $100 m1llaon, and a continumg annual cost or more than S200 m1lhon It might cost mduslry more Analvzing the bill for its clients, Coopers & Lybrand says the legislation would mean -Records would nC<'d to be maanlaaned of organizations or emploves havmg re~ular acc(?ss lo personal mformatlon, and of the nature dat~. and purpose of access to that m fo rmation by others -ALL R ECORDS P ERTAINING TO AN tnd1V1dual wou1d have to be 1denl1f1ed and be capable of being retrieved Such r ecords would include cor respondence as well as rlala contained within other manual and computer files Thal would b<.' the begmmng From that base. the m lracac1es the details, the specifics would become more pre c1se and difficult to comply with. and as a consequence the costs would be extremely painful Privacy has a high pnce tag Stocks Take Rally Imo Second Day NEW YORK CAP> Th<.' stock market climbed again m active tradmg today continuing Tuesday's rally The Dow Jones average of 30 mdustr1al stocks, up 5 98 Tuesday, was ahead unother6 15 points to984 54 Gamers outpaced losers by about u 2 1 margin among New York Stock Exchange hstcd issues Ups and Do1t,11• NEW YORK IAP) -The foltt'>wl nQ II I -.now\ t,.,_, Nl'v., York ~tnrk l-<nrn~ \fOtk\ MiO warrrtnh th•t httv• Ql"ln~ u11 tht mo\t tlncJ down fht mo\I thl\"11 on J*fWIH of ch.anoe ft.:Q9rCll"\\ ot YOIU"\I lor Monday No i.ecurll1~ traalng below l? ••• Int I UCl d HM tJnd Qe.tC~ntaq• C.""'tnO"!t •rt "•'" 01Untn<,tt ~tW'f"H\ th~ rtn11ot10U\ tl°'1nQ "'''' •no IO<l•v'. ()"' P•l<P N•,.,. ltt\f Cl>O Prf 1 UMET Tr , • ._ Up 'On 1 Taltotl N•I 6 , + I Up to 0 l MoPrt Cttm ,6... + l'\ Up II 0 ~ R!'OM!g fn 1 + '• Up 14 1 ) UnlTflf wt 7'• • .. Uo • \ 6 N111qr~ Sh•~ 11 • I UD • ~ 1 Cooc>er L~b 10 • '• Up •II II Cl•11'rt"'r Co ' 1 '... Up 1 I O (Apll HOid lO • + I ... Uo I ) 10 Plt\"'V lid 11 UP I J Stock• ltt The Spotlight NEW YORI( IAPI ~atu 4 pm Pflt• Md ""' < h•no• ot th~ flllten "'°"' •< ::"::t1n~·~.11~~tv ~f<~or~•{:,"r, 1"'"'" C'Jitp<l<'n P~t <IOl 000 ,.,,. ~ •, !>ouH,..rn C.O 311 of()O U'• '"' 01ck Al) l'6 lOO l U t;.<tn MOIO" 311 100 n • ' > Gon (I"( 111 100 $3 + \lo l=""N•I MIO 16\ 'ClO 1'"1t'" '• WI Oii U4 !00 2ht -~t ~~ ~f ~1:= J~!,:~ l)r"nlff 1n1 106 tOO u • 1 • • • Oow Ch 1.a 000 0 •11 • • • Arn Tflt&. T"'I 11-4 (0) •l'• -t '• X•ro, (p 11b a ~S • 1 • .. Am Ho,... llJ 100 ~ • '" E•\I ICOCIA~ 171 700 11'l-• 1 N~rn.. t l"chn1c.,rr DOWNS L11\t )\ CllQ . , IJowJottr• A verages p,' Nf'W York IA Pl"'""' Dow J<JfW\ ..... _. ()II I' ' $TO(!($ > C..bolCab 1" J Munlord ~ ~~~;: r~c 6 GllA~ plA 1 F•dPac>Od & NSPw • 1101 • !.o<o••I 8k'l 10 ~tit('"' , I' ) ''• ... n . 18 , \() ,~ .. •• ', Qll 11 I C>Hn HIO!I l6w (IOM Cho ()If 10' JO Ind ... ,. f'JJ rs .,, IJ ... S4. 6 I) " .. It , . > ... '• OU e 0 10 l!I\ 7l5 ,. n1 •A ,,. ,. 1l5 7l • 0 M 011 I I I\ Ull 105 H IOI> II IOI 10 104 tJ-0 CM Oii ~ J 6S Slk J1' '1 111 0 Jll JI ~1' SS• I 45 OH 51 I""'" l O'l6 IOO ()II S 1 lr•n '7t 100 Ol1 \I UHi\ 01 '°" Olf H 1--•;.;;s_s_•_• __ ...;.......;........;... ______ );.,n_1;.,'ooo __ 1"'1 (h<J 7 r r Lag11na /South Coas t • • ·~"· • • • -:"' • \ ~ . • . Ii... ..... . . • ..... :· #, """ . • . ........ --•) .\f f t•r11 0011 :\. V. Sfo t•ks I EDIT I ON ~DAI.LY :P·I ·~, T '~ .. ~ . .. .. * * * * . 1111 VOL. 69, NO. 357, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 22, 1976 TEN CENT~ :Watchers Helpless NANTUCKET, Mass. IAJ~) - The sinking bow or the fractured Liberian oil tanker Argo Merchant split apart toduy, spill- ing what cargo it sttll held onto Nantucket Shoals. The ship's break-up was one or history's worst oil spills. "There's nothing we can do." said Coast Guard Lt. Cmdr Barry Chambers. Officials watched helplessly Lhe progress of thl' spreading 01! slJck amid a report that some 011 a l re ad y h a d r cached· northeastward to the Gt.'Or~es Bank commerc1iil f1 sh1ng grounds. Massachusetts waited for word from officials sn Washtn~ton, 0 C .. on the slate's request for federal aid for businessmen >Ahose liveli hoods might be damaged by the sprl'ad1ng 011. <>il ·coated h1rds have been '>Polled by the hundrl'ds on Nan- lut·ket, but wind and wavl' were !>weeping the oil from beaches The break-uJi early Tuesday of the 640-foot t a nk e r Argo Merchant spewt-d 75 percent of her 7 6 m1llton gallons of heavy industrial crude oil into a shck 75 miles long and more than 25 miles wide at its broadest paint "This 1s the biggest 011 spill dis· The liquid .cws lanker Hilli (background), which has a gross tonmigl' of 90.000 tons. towers over other \'csseb tn lh<• I lamburg harbor. Th1..· giant !->hip is undergoing n· pu1r!'> 111 on<' of I ht• drrclocks _Boxhoy's 'Pursuit ' Ends Fast I\ superm ark l't box boy pursu lnlil two th1ev1•s knocked down one of them 1n La~una Beach Tuesday whrn the m;m turnNI Md confronted lht• youth '.\1th a switchblade kn1f1• Tt.e incident took placr out!'o11f1· Acord's Markel. 2~ Hroadwa\ Boxboy Alan ,J . Dnv1s, 19. told police oHicers th<•l h1..• fled aflt'r knockin~ !ht• kn1fr w11.'lding man to the ground bt-c.1U'>l' a group 11f rough lcM>k1n~ mt•n rr•-,..,1'<1 lhl' street .ind h1•<1tkd tn his d1n•1 lion Davis !laid he rl11I nol know tlw extent of them an ·, 1nJ11r1t•-. Davis ~u1d he had "''(•n om• of the two m1..•n p1<·k up a l.1rRt' h.1rn and then !>:i"' hnth m1•'1 kav1· 1 throu~h ;1 rf••tr t•nl r.1nc·1' to thr ' market H1• s;urf ht• r.in ,ind ~ot tht' walk1n~ 1· .1111· .ind t'ha"rd the· two men I I One or lhl' 1 WO stopp<-d afl(•f molaonmg to th<.• m.m carr)mg Lhe barn to ronlinuc I le 1>r11 duccd the switchbl.1ck and con ltonted the boxhov Davis said hl' was running <\O fast he couldn't dod11e fast enough to avoid hilling the man. .He said he put up th<.• cane and ~t rue!( the man on the head, knocking him to the 1u·ouncl. Total loss was placed at S7.2.S. Heated Arguments End MD Sex Case By TOM BARJ,E\' 0. Utt' D••ly Pilot St.-tf .J ury tlel1ber<it10ps wer<· -;chedult-d tn open today artcr Tu«>sday 's h('aled and sometimes lund dosing argum1'nts in th(' rape trial of Dr. Hoss McClure or ~uth Laguna The e1ght·>Aoman, four-man Orange County Supcr-.or C<1urt jury heard prosecutor Maunrt• Evans condemn the d<x·tor :1o; "pervf'rted" a.s h1..• ~1skcd for ;1 finding of gUJlty or rape and st'" ix·rn•rs1on charges Or M cCI u rt' '!-i al tornt'} Leonard !\1 c Rndl'. challeng1•d E\'anc;' condusron.., and re minded the Jury of 1hl' tap(' ... w1tchc•d on bv Dr Mc-<.:lurc at thp ht•ighl o( hi<; ac1m1ttr'tl 'it''CU.JI • 1t't1v1lv Dr McClurc> ,., HC'<'U'c-.1 of in Jt'Cting a 22-year-old pat1(•nt -with c·nouRh Valium .,o th:it sh1· couldn't t <ilk . couldn't thmk and could barely k«>cp hl•r C'}l'" <•Jl<.'O before sexually a<,1>aultm~ lwr 111 h1sorrice.Jan 7 OOt-l'T FORGE T .1 O NLY Z SHOPPING DAYS 'TIL CHRISTMAS •1 McBride throughout the tnal has conceded that his d11mt gave the young woman a small Valium Jnjcrtion but it was done as stan- dard practice to relax her and that the• sexual encounter that rollowed was entered mlo w11l- mgly by both the doctor and the patient. . Evan:o;, waving th<' p<tt1ent's m1'<11ral chart before lht' jury, pointed out that Or McClure faikd to recor d lhl' injection he adm1tt<'d giving the patu·nt as ISct> DOCTOR. Pag<' All Woman Hurt As Car Slips In Clement e An eldt'rl '< San Cl1:m<'nt<· woman escaped serious lnjllfY 'fucsday m a harrowm~ car ride huc:kwards alon,1.? busy El C'am1110 Heal fort wo hlocks Police <ind firemen said 1-:lma (' Mead. 77. of 21:1 A /\ven1da Santa Barbara. tried lo back out of a parkmg lot ;.it 2222 S El Cammo Reai when she lost con· trol of her car . The car moved in reverse north on El Camino Heal. with other traffic dodging it for two blocks before the vehicle boundt'd off a tree into a hand railing. demohshed it ttnd Cin ally bumped to a stop agatn!'it the wall of a building. The woma n was treated for cuts on her head at San Clemente General llospital and then driven home as Oil Fouls ~ Sea ai.ter'bn the American coast m our history, .. said Russell Tram, head of the U .S. Environmental Protection Agency The aged, rustmg vc:-iscl called a "suspect ship" by the Coast Guard because o( 19 pre- vious mishaps since 1964 piled onto the Middle Rip Shoals 27 miles southeast of th.ls is land re· sort one week ago today. She was 10 miles off course when she hit. No was injured lO lhe!!l'1lc up, dlld no one "'as aboard \fticn she broke up Tuesday The Coast Guard smd most of the cargo washed into the ocean when her fored eck and aft section parted in 10-foot seas. "I am convinced some or the 011 has gotten to Georges Bank," CoastGuard Rear Adm JamcsP. Stewart told reporters The vessel was on iU. way from \ Venezuela to Salem. M1:1S!'i. Stewart said an investigation showed the shi\l's ":laster ~as not using all of navigating equipment available to him. and that the ship was not keplin r('pair. The cap tain of the Argo Merchant, George Papadopoulos, was summoned today to deliver a de~sition on the grounding in open court. (See SPILL, Page i\2) Germ War Tests' Army Denies Links to Deaths WASlllNGTON l '\P1 The Army confirmed today 11 con· duclt'd simulated attaeks with non·d1sease·c a using substances in c1~ht areas to d<'tc•rmine the country's vulnerability lo germ warfare An Army spokei.man said the l<."bls, conduNed betwct·n 1950 and 196fi. ~ crl' pcrformt't.I with non d1sl•asc causing b1t1log1cal substances. and that "there 1s nothing we ha\ e that shows any linkage betwc.:n lht.-se tcsb and any ou tbre;iks of infection or any dt:'alhs." The tests were condueted al the Pentagon and San Franc1sro in 1950; Mechanicsburg, Pa. 1n 19.'i I . Key West. Fla <.ind f't McClellan. Ala 111 1952 . Panam.1 City. Fla . 1953: Point Mugu ;md Port Hueneme, Cahf in 1954. and on New York Caty·~ subw<1y in 1966. the Army said. The purpose of the tests was to determine the nation's vulnerability to possible enemy biological attack and the.• US. ab1hty to detect such an attack. the spokesman said The substance used in all the tests was ScrralJa Martc!'>Cl'nh, which the Army says "Jh pre!>t'nl throughout the environment and i!; considered not to cause dis ease." The new~paper Newbday of Long Island , N Y , reported Tuesday that one mun a hospital patient -died after the 1950 test m San Francisco and that death was caused by Ser- ratia in his bloodstream. Quoting unnamed sources and documents. the newspaper also said that following the 1952 test at Ft. McClellan. the number of pneumonia eases more than doubled in the s urrounding county. rt said there a lso was an in- crease in pneumoma deaths m the Key West area a fter the test there and added that Scrratia has been idcnt ified as a rare cause of pneumonia . Records in the Alabama State Health Department confirm an increase in the number of report· ed cases o f pneumonia in Calhoun County, Ala., where Ft. (See GERMS, Page A2) Chicag o Ma yor Eulogized Police Kill W olllan In Apartment Raid CllJCAGO IAP> Mayor Richard J Daley, lcoder for almost a quarter of a century of the lar~esl political machine in the nation, was euloR1zt-d today as a man who would have· pliJced political power "far down on his list or priorities ... Oaley d ied Monday of a heart attack 1n his doctor's office I le was74 President-elect Carter. Vice Prcs1d(•nt r-oelson A Hockcfclll'r and Sen Edward M Kennedy <D-Mass ). were among the dignitaries and hundreds of local and stale politicians. or - f1Cl'h t1lders and pol1t1 ca l Jobholder!> "'ho attended his funeral The.• Roman Catholic services were held in the Nativity of Our IAlrd Church, just a few minutes' walk from where the mayor was born and from the bungalow whf'rc he lived most of his life. "He was known everywhere as a man of power and inevitably that meant political powt'r." said <Sre DALEY, Page A2l A 29-year-old woman was ac- cidentally s hot to death Tut•s· day night · when law enforce- ment officers arrested two San Bernardino murder suspects holed up 1n a Garden Grove apartment. Police said Donna Ru ss<.•11 of llespcria was mortally wounded by a bullet accidentally fire-cl by a San Bernardini) Cou nty sheriff's deputy in the arresting party ~ According to Garden Crovc poltct', Mr!!. Russell. wife of one nf the murder suspects. was struck in the r hcsl by the single s ho t (ired by Lt Ron a ld Forbush The woman reportedly was one or three people inside Apartment 6 al 1221 Beach Blvd. when four San Bernardino County deputies and a cont· ingent of Garden \.rove police went there in search or the murder s us pects . lt was when the arresting of- ficers were josllinJ( to ~cl inside the apartment that tht• fatal shot was fired, police s~ud T arget of the arresting party Homage Nixed Group Won't Mouni Daley SAN DJI~GO (AP) -The late Mayor Richard J . Daley of Chicago was described as "ruthless" and "corrupt" by San Diego County supervisor s as they refused to quit work early in memory of him. Three of the five supervisors voted Tuesday to re· JCCt a resol ut~on honoring Daley, who died Monday. The 22-year Chicago mayor "ran a political machine that ran roughshod over people's rights," Supervisor Dick Brown said. "The man is dead," commented Super visor Jack Wal sh. "Jf we have nothing good to s ay, let's go on to something else.·· -W('re two men accused or the shotgun s laying earlie r this month of a 17 ·year-old San Bernardino youth. Arrested on the murder war· rants after being captured in the Garden Grove apartment were Gary Lee Russell, 30, of Hesperia and Guy Sterling Stubbs, 21. of San Bernardino Police said Stubbs was cap- tured when he tried to ,flee through :i rear door while Russell, the s hooting victim 's husband. surrendered msidc lhc apartment. DA to Ente r Investigation Of S hooting ' By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of l~t O•llY P1kll Sl•lf The Orange County District At- torney has been asked by Newport Beach police to in- vestigate Friday's fatal shooting of a bystander during a robbery stakeout. The District Attorney has been brought into the investigation in an effort to all ay community fears that any wrong doing in the incident could be covered up by police, said Newport police Capt. Richard Ha milton. The ma n arrested in lhe case, Richard William Sutton, 20, San Clemente, was slated to appear in court today to hear the r eading or the 34 charges filed against him. Those cha rges include 11 counts or armed robbery with a prior conviction and 17 counts of commission or a robbery with a loaded ~un . Sutton still faces the posslblity ' 1 l~~IDE T OD:\\' Test Disparities 'Expected' ~ of a murder c ha rge being med against him under the state law which holdS' that any homicide committed during a felony crim e can res ult in a char~e of murder aginst the defendant in the cas«> <See PROBE, Page i\2) I CO<Ut area d'ttrrches ore planning a number of Chriatmas etu and day ttroicea lo ct'lebrolt the f eitive holldaJI Plcx:e1 crnd hmea cm Page A9 bJ<ly. ... , •• AU A4 Alf IM •.. ,. .,. ... ,, ., ... , A4 ... By ANNE COOPER and WILLIAM SCHREIBER Of tM D•llY l'llet St.t" San Clemente's Las Palmas School logged some of Orange County's Jowest California As- sessment Program test scori!S thi~ year -but Lhat was just about what t he state ex:pected. And al Moulton School tn lAIUftft Ntiuet. the ~oies were amona the hlcbest in the county, atain falling wlthln or near the pre-d.-t~rmtncd state "expectan- cy bind" for thol particular school. , Both schools ore In lhe same dletrlct, Capistrano Unified . They are separated by les. .. than 10 mlles in a district thot covers 20 percel1t of the county's land area. Two top CUSD administrators contended in an intervtew this week that there are mMy re- asons for the wide disparity of scor es in a breakdown of the dis- trict's 15 schools, including such things as student attitudes and familiarity with testing formab. ' But they a rgued that th• primary factors Jendint to sucb a variety a re family ltfestyle1 paretltal Involvement and broao social, cultural and economic difference~ of the district 's population. District Supt. J ero me Thomsley and Philip Grignon assistant supcrinl~cmt for lnJ A struclional services, sald CUSD ls "the most heterogeneou~" in terms of ethnic af\(l cultural makeup of all distri~ south of Costa Mesa. "A high correlation exists between socio-economic condi- tl on s and te s t scores,·· Tbornsley said. "Test results reflect the make up ot the dis· trict." Thi slate testing pl'O(lr m U · amU\es first, second, third, sixth and 12t.b 1raders in areas such as readJ111, writt.C?n exprcssJon, spe)IJn1 and mathematics. Baaed on teat r esults, each school gets a percentile ranklns based on a statewide scale of 100 points for each grade 4.~el and subject. In addition. Grignon noted, every school has an expectancy band prepared by the state using demographic information sup- plied by the district -data on the composition of the popula· lion aerving each school -and past teat results. The administrators said the populllion serving Laa Palma.s, for example, is comprised of a number o f low income or tranalcnl families (11uch a ll mllltary dependents) and a slgnutcanl number of Mcxlcap- Americans afld Vietnamese. Hence. Thornsley conla1dod, fStt TESTS, P age Al) .4. QUICK SHar ON COLDSPOI' "I sold it right away. If I'd had eight of them. I could have sold them all." Here's the ad that sparked the s ale for this Newport Beach man: 14 Cu Ft FrostfrCl' Cnldspot refriit, '100 Xlnt Cond. XXX ·XXX>t t II you have a refrigerator. or anythln1 else, you'd like to con· vert to cash -call 6'2-5678. Dally Pilot classifieds make It easy to put a few words lo work for you . ~ A2 DAILY PILOT L/SC Wednesday December 22 1978 Clemente F ..... rage A l ~ GERMS .•• 7o Fight Checks I Bcgt0n1nl( the rirsl or n1·xt year, San Clement~ JU.'>t may be the worst place in Orang~ County to bounce a bad check The me rchants arc lland1ng together there under lhe • • leadership of the J><>licc depart· m ent and the chamber or com- merce to <'rack down on l'hC<'ks drawn a~a1nst insutfic1l•nt funds A central <'h<.•ek inrlc·x will lie establis hed, s1m1lnr to a cowity mdex used by law enforcement ·agencies. to collect bounced checks A :.a ngle passer of several bad checks at differenl i-hops an town <'an then be pro secuted with the collection or evidence against him , . It's the idea of Si::t Craig Steckler, a pol ice detecl1 ve whose JOb 1t 1s to Jail the so-c:Uled paper hangers. San Clemente 1s believed to be the first Oran~c County city to try the systt•m Other bus1nt•!>s communil1es will be watching to see if 1t works. Jt hasn 't been 1ricd befor1.• because it hasn 'l been needed before. Merchants have been able to make individual cases against bad chet·k paSSl'r:; But the hullC' volume of bad checks has made prosecution an unwieldy business. Beginning Jan l , new l<.'g1~la· lton desigm'd to clear -;omc of the minor casework Crom the district ~llorney's desk goes into effect. No longer will prosecultons be pursued against bad check violu- ttons of under $100. Hut the district attorney will still prosecute, 1f evidence 1s comp1led, on cases mvolvmg an ;iccumulataon of small checks that together add to $100 or more. That, said Steckler. will be the value of San Clemente's central 1.·hcck index The chamber of commerce will b<' used as a clcanng house for merchants to r eport bad checks. The chamber wall distribute f orms t o Sa n Clemente mt'rchants on which they·ll re· cord the boum·cd checks and turn them back 111 to the chamber weekly, whcrc the poh<'c will col . lect tht·m Then St('t·kkr and his crew in· tend to go about collecting the paper hangers Fro• Page ill PROBE ... 'Th<' v1ct1m of the accidental shoollnJ! . .Joe llmes. 61, was a re- sid ent or t>J na Point and a well kno\\n f1~un• an Corona del ~Tar "hf'rc he worked as a handyman V1s1tat1on was Sl'heduled until 9o'cl()(.'k ton1F:ht at Smith. Tuthill and Limb M nrtu.iry, 518 N Broad" ay, Santa Ana A mortuary spokl-sman sa1<I funeral scn •1ccs and bunal v.1ll tJke plar<' latl'r this week in 1\farshall. Tex C<ipt lfam1ltnn said lhc DA's invc>st1i::a t wn of the shooting h<>J.!an Tut•Mlay .tftcmoon "Wt• have turnt·d o\'er all r1r nur rt'· port.; and physical 1•v1dcnce lo ttw m ." ht• said 11 .imilton 'lrt•\~c'<i that the rfr p<irlrnt·nt is 1nh·resttod an ~t"lting a third party to investigate the an<'id<'nt Ill' 'Jlcl ~t·wport pohc:t' had a!>kc-.t for a coron€'r's anqut•'>t. but Y.~rr told lhal nn" h:i-. not lw1·n ('cmd1IC'tl'd an the nmnty for mor•· lh.m IO~car<. llanco; d1Pd Frnl.1y ntJ.?ht Jbout an hnur c1ftcr hc·1ng h1l with ;1 'lhOtF:Un bl.1 ~t rrnm the gun o ( OF fiC'l'r DouJ.! Thom .• , Thoma' .ind IY.o othn f'lrrirrrc; Wf'rc !.t:ik<'li ou t :ll th 1· AJ~rt~on'c; m urk€'t an Corona del Mar waiting ror 11 rcf)('at hold up by n m:in who hail v1ct1m1zcd mark<'ts in the south county are:1 ror thl: past two months. Tht'Y were pursuing Sutton, who had allegedly just rohbftt th(• m urkt't. whPn Thoma.c; fir('d :ind Hines :ippar~ntly stepped an the line of fire ORANGE COAST l \C DAILY PILOT fMOtA...-c~•" n••'Y ~.,,.. ..,.,._..,.,."''""""°' bi""" 0'11111 Ntiwr" r, .. •\ t\ D\lf)lt\Nlie bf ttv t>~O" (4'A 1~1 flltl'lfJf"11~•"" ... tMf'M•ttd•t~1u,. Ckfb'1\Md Monoo• '~'°"'Q" • ,,.,., t .. t"'''• -.....u JH•"'9f't n .... ._ H•i"''""""""' n.tef\ ·~ t••" Vtllf'y h Wll"tf' ~(f(ll•t>•o. ¥A114'w •""11 \_.tq\lf\I .. M ftl \Mltt\ ("•\I A,,..._.,. •~1 •0• '°""' ,, ~•\Ntd S•ttrd-t" ~ ~.,, ,,_.. OtttW•P•t 1Mibtl\A;""41 Dt..,.. t\ .tt l .. ""°'' lh'f' )0 ... 1. Co\t• Mof\A ( ..... ,-. •• .,.,. __ ,,,. ·-,., .. , ... ".•Ad~·~"'­ JK-11 C .. loy "'(. Pft\IOfof"I .. ,., C.,,.t'1H*9 Mt~· ttt.,..HKHV .. [dit64' TNnwt4. Mt'9'"111MN ~"'fQit'19 [~l•;t CMrtttH l-•t<..,.rf~ II.OH Attl•l•r.t MaftAttftQ Pitt,_, l Nun• I H cfl Offloe n .. 01"~~.,,. \tf#t Molll"Q/UldrH\1 ~ 0 lo•-fUl1 OfflCH (O\t• ,...w 1l0 W.lt IH• $1-MU!tl•"V!on ll.,.th; llUl•«•-•«1 ~ ....... v ..... 11191 l • "•ll•-•tS.n01"9 ,, ..... ., Telephone t714)1U-U21 CIHelfllld Adv•rtlelng 142-1117'1 Legun• .. Hh All De,tartment1: Telephont 4M-teM rram"'nClo-nte •tJ.OtJO r..,.,,,.,., 1'16 Ot-• (.,., "'"'II"""' c-...,_., He Mtt'\ •tofN'-IUU"tt-1~ tid·fOil'l•I "'•Uer tf •f""'"""u"'' "•t •1111 m•y ff tept94VfH WU~t.tt 1Mc.••t ...,Mh•I" tt _,,...,_ ~-CltH Ot•l•tf .-14 Al (Mta Nn~l Clttu•'"'• '""'" l•tl•'t ~· <•0 '•' " " ~'71.:~1:--•ly; "'lll!My McClellan is localed 8ut Dr. F'rederick Wolf, h<';id of the Alabama Bureau oC Preventable D1seas~. :.aid th'-• in<'re&St! could huve come from other causes. He saJd the number or crues jumped from 42 ln 1950 to 98 the following year and 113 In 1952. then dropped to 139 In 1~. By 1957, il hud dropped to eight Wolf s aid there was a m11<.I t-pidem1c of influenza lat(' m 1951 and early 1952 which could have led lo an increase in pneumonia. The Army CJt"knowled.:l-<l that Serratia Marcescens "could c·ori cl'ivably act as :rn opportunist .ind produce an infection" in persons who lack immunity to most diseases .. The number or incid<'nts of Serra ti a M arcescens infection cannot be determined because 1l 1s not a reportable disease. It oc curs in isolated circumstances and individuals or is invariably associated with some other dis· ease or injury which lowers the resistance.'' the Army said. The Army said one substance . used only at Mechanicsburg had the potential of caus ing a disease m persons lacking resistance A spokesman said it was felt that the substance -Aspergillus Fumigatus -was "rather harm- less." Newsday said the sub- stance 1s a fungus which can be fatal to humans. A second substanrc ust'Cl in the tests in all of the places except New York, the P entagon and Key Wes t . is called "U acillu~ Globigii," which the Army said 1s not considerer! to cause disease. DJ Guilty Of Perjury NEWARK. N.J . <AP> - Frankie Crocker, a leading disc jockey and program director in New York and Los Angeles. was convi<'l· ed today of lying to a grand jury investigating payola tn the record industry. A federal court jury re- turned the verdict after a two-week trial and nine hours of del1beratio nc; C rocker could he S('n · tenced to fivc years 1n Jail and fined S!0,000, said As· st. U.S. Attorney Hob<•rt Roma nu Crocker. who has a home in Beverly Hills and a pen thouse in M anhatlan, was convicted of givmg per- jured testimony to a grand JUry inves tigating allega· li o n s h e r ecei ved thousands or dollars an cash to plug and give air time lo records on WAt.';. Radio. New York, where he is proJ?ram director Fro• Page 1\ l DOCTOR ... she lay on his cxaminlllg table an her blue bikini panties. ··she was in his office for only one reason," the prosecutor s aid. "She was in pain from a back in Jury. But what she got in the way or treatment was massage ur breasts and sexu al ori::ans, an act of oral copulation •md the act of r.1pe." McBride bas<'d has c losing argument on thl' tape of the 1nci ch·nt m:t<ic h\ lht• doctor He argued that the Dana Po1nl W<)m <m was a "illini: part1c1pan1 an Lh l' lo\'e making and that thl' \'ahum was not designed to en· coura~c her to rt'sponcl lo has st•x 11<cl oven urC'' but w;is for relief of ht•r 11ain "Shl' n<'' rr protested," McBride said .. She never told him to stop Sh" never asked him what he was doin~. If you don't bd1cvc m e. lis ten to the t;ir.>e '·None of us really knows the truth." McBride added And he urged the jury to re member while il deliberate!!, that "sexual intercourse and oral copulation outs ide marriage arc not u crime. "We're not try ing the medical profession here." the defense al· torney said. "We're trying one man. Forget he's a doctor and look at him as a m an." ··And what a man." Evans countered. describing the d eren· dant as "a doctor who hides behind his hypodcrr.1ic needle.'' Lovell Rites Set Thursday Funeral services for Wendell B. Lovell, 3 48-year resident of San Clem ente who helped bulld the city and served three years a.' its police chief, nre scheduled al 10:30 a.m . Thursday al Sheffer Mortuary Chapel. t,ovcll died Tuesday at San Cle m ente Gen eral Hospital. ~rvlces will be conducted by members of Ma sonic LndRe 87 l. Burlnl will be ln Escondido. where he attended school aa a child. The family rt>Quests that. in lieu or Oowers. donaUons be mad e to lhe cancer and leukemia funds. DonaUon tnvtle>Ptt are avallable al the mort\ltJ"1, First for Capo lJniffed 0 •••• Plltl Si•lt ~hOIO Maureen Redfield (left> and Corene B~rr . arc t~c firs~ women to be appointed school prmc1pal~ 1n the Capistra no Unified School District.. Mrs .. Redfield, cu_r · rently assistant principal at Dan~ Hills High School, will be principal of Shorcchffs Junior I hgh, scheduled _to open in S an Cle mente in September. Mrs. B~rr, ~s~1:, tant principal at the Viejo Elem.entary School m M1ss10n Viejo, will be assigned a school m F ebruary. FrOlll Page AJ TEST DISPERARITY ..• test s cores there arc far lowl·r than the CUSD Sl'huols Sl•rvinl;{ m ore s table. ho mo,:tcneouo;, rn1ddle class communities such os Laguna Niguel and Mission Viejo. Las P alm as' highest score was in sixth grade math a percentile ranking of 32. That means 32 percent of all sixth graders 1n (;aliforrua scored l.be same or lower and 68 percent scored higher. The lowest scor e at I.as Palmas was a 19 in sixth gr.idc spe lling, which Grignon said re fl ects the d e f1cic•ncy 1n language s kills of studl•nts who speak little ·En~lish. By contrast. Moulton School's lughcst was the 92nd p(!rccnt1lc tn firs t grade r eading, with a low of 70 m sixth grade spelling. Even w1thm communities with more th::in one school, Thornsl<-y noted thal the re can be s1zeablt• var1at1ons in scor es. San Clemente's Ole Hanson School consistently st•ored 00 p(!rcentile µmnts mort~ than Las Palma!), which is only a few miles away According to Thomsley, such a variation het ween schools can throw off the district's overall average on the lest scores, mak mg it appear lower than those or surrounding districts. "But if you look al ocr schools in M1ss1on Viejo, for example. you won't see much difference between the ir scores and those of the Saddleback Unified School District, which also serves part of M1ss1on Vido." he~uid. The CUSD c h ief said Sad· dleback Unified ·s overall district scores were higher because 1t serves a more "homogl'neous" community. One of the things thut con· cerned Thorns lcy about lhe state testing program is the use of the SACC Veep Making Bid For Board Robert L. Price, top ad m1nis trator of Laguna ~ill !> Leasure World and vice president of the Saddleha ek Area Coord1natmg Council . riled Tu1•:-. tlay for e lection to tht' Sali dlebac k College b oard of trustee5. Pric e, 64. of 2547 2 Charlemagne Road, completed the necessar y forms for can- didacy just befor~ leaving .on a three week vacation, a Le isure World spokesman said today .. The spokes man chara~tenzed Price's job at the re.t1rement community as "com par111g loose· ly to that of a city mW"!ager. · '. . The trustee post he 1s seektn~ 1s now held by Or. James Marshall. also or Leisure World. Marshall has been seriously ill and has not indicated if he will run for another term. Price has bl'en active in Sad· dleback Valley community af- fairs since moving to the ar ea 12 years ago. Prior to ta king his present Joh. Price served as city manager in municipalities in the east and midwest over an 11-year span. He also worked as an ad· ministration :ind lo~istics cons~l­ tant for the federal government tn such places as Afghanistan, the Marshall Islands and Guatemala. Price is a registered civil engineer a n d surveyor, a lonJ(Umc mem ber of the Interna- lional City Management Associa- tion ond a ScoltlRh Rite Mason. Furniture Stolen Stained glass wlndows and sofas were stolen from a Dnna Point restaurant. 's dining room by intrud ers whose method or entry ta unknown . Or ange County 1beiff'1 ornccrs said the theft at the Pelican Fish Company, 34130 Paclnc Coast Highway, Is valued at.$1,280. expectancy hands. He said that while a school may be expected lo score at the low e nd of the percentile scale, its students must cope with a "re- al world" full Of people who prO· bablv fell near or above the mid· dleo.fthat r ange. Thornsley said it is the dis· tricl's respons1 bility to prevent its students from betn{( locked io· to a category that will prevent them from operating in society as a whole. fhornsley and Gngnon said they attribute far less im· portancc to the state scores than to the district's own testing pro- gram. Despite that, the ad- ministrators said the state t('Sts have shown areas where the dis· trict could improve its educa- tional program~ For one thing , ThcwnslPy s;11d, the schools could :.tart tt•acr.1ng subJeCts such a:-. :-;pdhng anti rr ading in a Corm at !>1milar to the· ll'SlS "Having thc·sC' kids take thl' state tests without und<.'rstand1n).! the form at can CJ mount to having them play a game when they don't know the r ules." he said Jn addition, th<.· ~tudc·nts' fra me of mind towJrd the tci.l~ <'an be adJustecl by inst1lhn~ th1· thought that th<' re~ult~ JrC "the district's report caret " Grignon noted th;H more em· phasis Y.11l be given to !>UhJet·ts s uch as r e ad 1 n g and som l' thought 1s being given to adopt mg a standCJrd d1stnct spcllmJ! textbook lo bring u1> lagging scores in that area And dcpendmg on how cac_h school principal cv.lluatcs his !>chool's perform<tnC•'. Thornsley said there may also be a need to exa min e admini s tration performance clS wl'll. Fro• Page Al DALEY ... the Rev. Gilbert Graham. :1 friend of the Daley fom1ly, who delivered the eulogy "I know he would have pl:it'cd that far down on his hst of praonlle' " J n <1ccorrlan cc w1lh the family 's wishes. reporters were barr('(f form tht• services They waited outside with .1 crowd nf about 300 people tn bitterly cold weather . The service wa!> hroad· cast outside on speaker~. After the Mass of the Resurrec- tion, Daley was huncd in lloly Sepukhr<' Cemetery m Worth, a suburb south of Chicago. The mourners included Sen. George M c Govern , th e Democrntic purty's presidential standarr1·b carer in 1972 and a mong tho~c who s harply criticized Daley and his Police force during the tumultuous 1968 Democratic National Convention Rape-slayer Guilty Again LOS ANGELES CAP> -An ex convict has pleaded guilty to r ap- ing and murdering an 88-year-old Claremont worn an onJy 10 days alter he was paroled from prison for assaulting another woman, aged 62. six ye:irs earlier. Albert Irving. 26, entered the plea to a first-degree murder charge Tues day in Pomona Superior Court. He will be sen· tenced Jan. 11. LB COVNCIL WON'T MEET The Laguna Beach Cily Coun· ell which of late ha.' been meet· ing weekly eithflr ln regular or special sessions Wednesdays, wm not mtet again unUl Jan. s. S an cie..ente Park Question Goes to Vote Dy PHILJP ROSMARJ N Of the P<1lly "'°' "'°" A citizens group ht.tS quallfic.'(J ti ballot initiative ror the Marc h , 1978 San Clemente general election requiring de- dication of more park land by housini: subdivision developer·~. San Clemente Senior Planm•r tlay Dillman said today 1f th1· initrntive were carried by lhl' city's 12.811 registered voters. it would drive the cost of housing hhzher. Gene Atherton. backer of lhl• initiative who spearheaded nn identical and successful petition m Newport Beach. said the pro posed ordinance would require a developer to dedica te five acres or park for each 1 ,000 persons a housing tract would acrommodate. In heu of land. a develop(!r would be required to pay a fee equal to the value of land that would have been required. The option -land d edication or in- Jieu Cee -would be the city's. The choice would usually be based on whether the city general plan calls for a park or recreational facility within the area of a proposed subdivision. The amount of land to be granted the city for recreational use would be determined by a formula taking into account the unit density of the housing pro· ject. The initiative differs from San Clemente's present park dedication requirements in that the new formula predicts a somewhat higher average number of persons that will OC· cupy the housing units. That m eans more land area per development would have to be given up by the develope r. Another difference is that the 1mtiali ve proposes that in-heu New Library Chief Named For Clemente A former head librarian of the Anaheim Public Library has been named chief of San Clemente's county bra nch library. Carol Ann Witten lalces over the job vacated by Phyllis Rauch in Sept<•mbcr. Pay ra nges from $13.416 to $18,012 per year. Mrs Witten. :10. had worked as young adult ser viC't's coordinator for four years with the <'Ounty library system before joining the Anaheim city library in January A graduate of CaJ State Loni: Beach where she s tudied Spanish. she receivt:d he r master's in library science from Immaculate Heart College in Los Angeles. Before joinini: the county library in 1971, she was communi- ty librarian with the Los Angeles City Public Library. She lives with her husband Sam in Anaheim Hills. Mrs. Witten said she plans to emphasize the m aint~nancc of good reference services at the San Clemente branch library and work on programs for young adults. She has already assumed her new duties 2 Hurt in Cras h LOS ANGELES CAP) -Two persons were seriously injured 111 a Wilshire District cra-;h that Ot ... curred after a 55-year-old dnvcr suffered an epileptic seizure and his car ran throu~h Audrey's llot Do~ stand. Injured were Louis Gorbein, 69, of Los Angeles, an employe of Audrey's, and Chung Hee Lee, 28, wife or the owner, Tom Lee. fees be based on lhe prcvalll11g market cost per acre ot existing communtly pur ks. Current San Clemente code requires $400 per dwelJinit unit ln in-lieu tees. Dillman snld t hat while thl' new ordinance. If adopted by 'oters. would bring more ~•<'reagc and higher lll·lie'! rcei., with it would come h1gher- pnced hous ing us developers seek lo make up losRes by pass· mg the costs to the home buyer. Atherton s aid that San C:lemente's c urrent formulae for park d edication are based on a 21 :i :i <'re dedication for every 1.000 persons the develop- ment generates. The code actually calls for four acres per 1.000, but 1 ~ of those acres are satisfied through cooperative arrange. ments between the city and local school districts in which the districts give up land. Developers are actually re- quired, then, t o dedicate onJy 21,2 acres. Athe rton said along with Newp<>rl Beach, San Clemente has the lowest dedication stan· dards among cities In the coun- ty. San Clemente standuds arc identical lo county standards, At)lerton said. Spilled Oil WuldPower 4 Boston Days BOSTON (AP> -If the 5.7 m111ion gallons of industriaJ fuel oil s pilled from the Liberian tanker Argo Merchant were con- fined on a haJr-acre lot, it would malce a pool 46 feet, 1v .. inches deep. . If it were burned In the boilers of Boston Edison Compuny. It could generate that utihty's elec- tricity for four days. That's the <'Quivalent of a year's use for 22,000 homes. . If it were gasoline, it could p<>wer 126,667 cars for a year, as· s uming 20 miles per gallon. a could fuel one car on 6,000 trips around the world at the equator. If it were the kind suitable for burning in your home -which it is n't il would heat it for 9,459 winters. That '!I assuming you have fairly good insulation. H you spread it out to a thick· ness of one in ch , it wouJd cover 20 football fields. • * * * Fro• Page A 1 SPILL ••. He said the reason for the grounding was "l was In the wrong position." He is being sued by Cape Cod fis hermen who deman d $60 million in dam ages. They claim in their suit against the captain and ship's owners that the spill will cost m a n y of them their livelihoods because of p<>lluted seas. At a hearing this morning, U.S. Magis trale La wrence Cohen ruled that Papa dopoulos ' testimony would be given in private. It was a rcversaJ in Cohen's position, and he s aid he had "come to a different con· clusion" about allowing public de- posJtions llftcr re-examining rules governing court procedure. Destroyer Home SAN DIEGO CAP) -The guided missile destroyer Gridl~y cumc home Tuesday after six months in the Western Pacific. Aboard we re 25 officers and 356 enlisted men. Kuyper's Contract Renewed by Couniy o.lly ...... $Uff ~· FOUR MORE YEARS County Coun.HI Kuyper Orange County s upervisors un- animously voted Tuesday lo re· hire County Counsel Adrian Kuyper of Laguna Beach for nnothcr four years. Kuyper's rehiring came as part or a ritual that gives county supervisors u chance to review their chi('( Jegal counsel's performance. In Kuypcr's caiie, the board'R confidence was expressed in a 5..0 vole that, for t he fourth tim e since 1964, made him chief of the county's battery or 25 attorneys. The 48-year-old county counsel Is paid $M,28R a year for his legal and administrative services. Arafat Answers NICOSIA, Cypr us <AP) PaJestJnlan leader Yasir Arafat aaJd todfty his movement will set up a Palc11tinlan st.ate on "any piece of liberated Palest.lnlan soil." the Snudl slate radlo re- port~. 7 • ' > ·~.- Orange Coast· EDITI O N T~~l.a,y ·s Clo!!iin gJ ~. • Sto~k~ -... ~~ I ·1 ;.Diedrich Pushes Riley t~ Back of Bu ·'. I ,Uon this year. 1t has (Xlwer to re-' view and appr.ove all transporta- tion planning withlnthecounty. \ By GAR\' G Rl\NVILLF. Of lft• O"IY PlltOl•ll Supervisor Ralph Diednch's last act today a s 1976 chairman or the Or ange Count y Board of Supervbors was lo engineer his own electrnn to the powerful new county trans p o rtation com· mission. Diedrich 's election came after the board had completed It!> 1 scheduled meeting work for the year and without advance notice And 1t met with uncharac- teristic outs poken resis tance.•• from Supervisor Thomas Riley. The Newport Beach supervisor <lid not object to Supervisor Ralph Clark's election to the com- mission alongs ide Diedrich But he said hew as "strongly op· posed" to a representative Crom the south county Fifth Supervisorial District not being 0111• PllOI P"810 II• V• P~Y•t THIS IS ONE VIEW OF PROPERTY SOUGHT FOR PARK Near the Santa Ana River. Natural Brush and Wlldllfe Canyon Buy Means More Than Land ff> STF. \'t' .~ITOIF.t.L 011 ... O••I V "''°'\\Alf If Jmt "'lwn ('m.~a :'t\1•,,1 1·01111 C'ilmt•n apprll\ 1• pur<'h.l!-l' of lht' ca nyon:; J r,•u in lhl' wf"'t•·rn por tton of Ow r 1ty . lh1•\ will he j:?rt ttn~ ,1 lot morl• th.in 1uc;t 35 a<'rl'" of opt•n '~'Jt'I' "'1 th .in 11t·ean \It'"' 1 hl'\ II ht ~t·ll 101• f>!I '~'('II'' 111 hard,· J'I <1 1rf1•r1·nt kinrh 11( no~rran~· p l.111h l'l tvpt'' of mammal' ,incl .1h1111t 11 \,Ji,'"'' of rt> pt 1 I<'' 'And tho<11• :ir•• 111,t thro"'n tn with tht• rlt'.tl ..... \ .. t.1n}on' .1r1 \'OC'jt(.' P .1t llul.tn who h;a, J>U"'h<'fl for (' 11' ,tt•qul\lllcm 11( tht• canyon ... I.met ht.'tw('rn \1rtnnil and 19th Strt'<'ls for muny yl'ar'I Dol an. a '1al1•c.m an, live•\ n,•nr thf' ('an\on .... 1n•a, and has sr><·nt Brothe r Hurt In Collision Said 'Critical' A commerr1al fisherman r<' mamed In critical rond1l1on at Hoag M<.'morinl llospital today !following a one cur arc1dcnt Tuesday m otning that lefl h1~ younger brother dead Earl Michae l Jordan, 27. whose pjlrents live :.it 871 Sonora d.,t. . Mesa. is 1n the in· ten~i ~ unit ut the Newport :Beach".b88P~Ull . where he was taken after the 2:30 "B.m . crash Tuesday on Victoria Street near Valley Road. Jordan and his brother, Gregory Lynn Jordan. 24, had re- 1 t\D'ned Monday night. from eight month!'J of commercial fishing In Alaska and were enrooteto visit friends at the lime or the crash, police said. TraUic investigators said to· d ey they are still uncertain who WJJ at the wheel of the Porsche Wht1' tt shimmed lnt.o a telephone pole, ejecting both brothers. the impact also dJslodal.'d the cnsrinc. "trans mission and dif· fertnUal or the 3mall c&lr. Tht- paru were found strewn around the scene by rescuers al\er the crash. -- manv hours with his family pok mg arnund lhl' open ~pact.' m·at the Santa Ana R1vt•r wC'llancts The critter C'ounl. offl•rt'<i h~ Oolan. 1s from a n·c<•nt environ mental report on <• prop<1M•tl marina for the r1l~ Prepared by Em rr onment al Impart Reports. Im· of ('osta M~.1. th<• docum1?nl "'a~ pn• ... c·nl t'(l to r11\ 11H1c1a ls ~l!vcrnl vc•;.1r ... .. ~n ;i ... a r1•as1h1ht ) n·port for lh1 marina proJ1•c l. currl'nll) 111 la:.ed by coa stal lcj:?1slat1on Cost a M esa council memher.., IJst month approved a plan h\ <.'th M ana~er Fred Sorsobal In ~o · aftt'r f c d r r a l fun1h to purr hase the canyons land Crom Stal<' Mutual Sav in~.., and Loan Association An appr"'isal of thP t•anyon'> land earlier th as year s howed the open space pa rcel to l>e worth S000.000. lf the federal funding n~qucst is approved, the cit y stands to gain S4SO 000 from the Land and Water Con~ervation Fund ProJ.(ram. And, if the city ran Jlel u better price from the savings and loan association, the stale is still good for the $450,000 figure. Sorsabal said. • Rerent mtrrest in acq!Mring the canyons land by city officials has met with enthusiasm Crom Dolan and other Freedom I lomes rei.1 dents. wbo have often been vocal in their criticism of therity's park priorities. Dolan claims the west.side is 32 acres shy of parks, according lo an adopted park standard of 2.5 <SeeVIEW, Pa&eAZ> DON'T l=O ltGET.' O NLY 2 S HOPPING OAVS 1T IL C HRIS T MAS .1 c 1H•e,u~•1•• ••••••• .. ,_..,..,. "'' ' onthecommf$sion, Hiley said most transportation planning will occur in the south county and. as a result, it should be represented on t he com- m1s:.ion. But Diedrich argued tha t a board appointee does not work for a particula r district and it makes little d ifference where the com- misaioner com es from. When nominating himself and Clark' for the two available posts. Diedrich got a quick second from Supervisor Laure nceSchmll. And when SuperviSOT Philip An· thony voted with Schmit and Diedrich, Clark lamely threw in his vote lo make u 4·1 ballot. It is custom ary on the board of supervisors that the chairman make appointments to com- missions and committees. But as the first scheduled business of 1977, Diedrkh will Cof e1t his chairman position to another supervisor Until today, Riley had the sup- port h> win the 1977 chairmanship But, he admitted after the ha.!>ty election, his resis tance t o Diedrich's maneuver might cost him support. The transportation comm1i.sion was mandated by state legi:.la- Already appointl.'d to the com: mission by the county's 26 cities are Fountain Valley Mayor Al HoUinden and Santa Ana City Councilman David Brandt. A fifth public member will be chosen by the four a ppoinled com. missioners. 1 More School Sales?-~ Board Ponders Sites for Mesa Shutdown.S By MICHAEL PASKEVICH Of the O•lly Pilot Sl•ll Newport-Mesa School trustees are keying on two areas of Costa Mes a for the possible future clos ing of as many as five schools. Superintendent John Nicoll s rud the s chool board will be tak· ing a hard look at schools in cen- tral Costa M cs a (Bay View. Lindb<.'rgh, Woodland, Monte Oil Spill Spreading To Fishery :-.IANTUCKET. Mass. <AP) The s1nkinJ{ l)ow of the fractun.'CI L1bcr1an oil t anker A r go Mcn •hanl split apart today, spill- ing what cargo 1t !>WI held onto Nantuck<.'l Shoals. The sh ip's bT<.'ak·up was one of history's worst oil spill!> "There's nothing we can do, .. s aid Coast Guard Lt Cmdr Barry Chambers. OHicials watched helplessly the progre:-.s of the spreading oil shrk amid a report that some oil alr e adv had re a ched northeastward to the Georges Hank romm e rcial fis hing grounds • Massarhusetts wa.ited for word rrom officials in Washington, O.C .. on the s late's request for fedNal aid for businessmen whos e livelihoods ml$ht be rlamaged by the spreading oil. The spill could cost the state 1.>conomy a bout $235 milJion, slate offi cials estimated today in the draft of a letter to President Ford seeking frderal assistanrc. Oil·coat('d bards have been ~potted by the hundreds on Nan- lur kt'l, but wind and wave were sw<.'epmg the oil from beaches. The break ·UP early Tuesday of the fi40 f o ol tanker Argo Merchant s pewe d 75 percent of hl'r 7.6 million gallons of heavy industrial c·rudc 011 into a slick 75 m1lt1s lonJ? and more than 25 males wide at its broadest POint. "This. IS the b1J.tgest oil s pill dis· aster on the A mencancoast in our history," said Russell Train, head of the U S. Environm ental Protection Agency. The a~ed, rusting vessel - railed a "s us pect ship" by the Coast Guard because of 19 pre· <See SPILL, Page A2} * * * Spilled Oil Could Power 4 Boston Days BOSTON {Ar) J( the 5. 7 million gallons of industrial fuel oil s pilled from the Liberian tanker Argo Merchant were con- fined on a half-acre lot. it would make a pool 46 feet. 7"4 inches deep~ IC it wer~ burned in the boilers or Boston Edison Company, It could generate that utility's elec· lricity for tour days. That's the equivalent of a year's use for 22,000 homes. If It were gasoline, it could power 126.667 cars for a year, as· sumlng 20 miles per gallon. It fOl.lld fuel one car on 6.000 trips around the world at the equator . rr it were the kind suitable ror burni111 tn your home -which it Isn't -It would heat It for 9,459 winters. That's assuming you have fairly «ood insulation. If you epreod it out to a thick· nep of one Inch, lt would cover 20 I football fields . · . Vista and Kaiser I and in Wl'SI Costa Mesa (Whittier. Victona. Pomona and WilsOh ) Sch ool board President Donald Smallwood has asked district oCficials to come up with a study of the board's options by February. However, it appears unlikely that trustees will close any more schools for the 1977-78 s r h ool year . a c cord1n~ t o Smallwood and Nicoll TrusCees already have dt·cidc<.I to close Harper and Balearic Schools in Costa Mesa at the end of this school year. Trustees also decided to put three undeveloped school sites on the marke t as part o( a d1s- lrict effor t lo cut expenses. Declimng en)'ollmenl as the major reasnn for the cutback!>. After proJectmg a district enroll· menl of nearly 30,000 student!>, Homage Nixed Group Won't Mourn Daley SAN DI ECO (/\!') The late Mayor Richard J. Daley of Chitago was described as "ruthless" and "corrupt" lly Sun Diego County s upcrvjsors as thcj refused to quit work early in m emory or him. Three of the five supervisors voted Tuesday to re· ject a resolution honoring Daley, who died Monday. The 22-year Chicago mayor "ran a political machine that ran roughshod over people's rights," Supervisor Dick Brown said . "The man is dead," commented Supervisor J ack Walsh. "If we have nothing good to say, let's go on to som ething else ." DA Office to Probe Bystander Shooting By JOANNE REYNOLDS Ol lht 0.ally PllotSIJlll The Orange County District Al torney h a s been asked by Newport Beach police lo in· vestigate Friday's fatal shooting ~f a bystander during a robbery stakeout. The District Attorney has been brought into the investigation in an effort to allay community fears that any wrong doing in the incident could be covered up by police. said Newport PQ1ice Capt Richard Hamilton The m an arres ted tn the case. Richard William Sutton. 20, San Clemente. was slated to appear in court today to hear the reading of the 34 charges hied against him. Those c h arges inc lude 17 counts of armed robbery with a prior ~onviction and 17 cou~ts of commission of a robbery with a loaded gun. Sutton still faces the poss1blity of a murder charge being filed against him under ,the state law which holds that any homicide committed during a felony crime can result In a charge of murder aginsl the defendant in the case The victim of the accidental shooting, Joe flines. 61, was a re- sident of Dana Point and a well· known figure in Corona del Mar where he worked as a handy man . Visitation was s cheduled until 9 o'clock tonight al Smith. Tuthill and Lamb Mortuary, 5111 N Broadway. Santa Ana. A mortuary spokesman said funeral services and bunal will take place later this week in MarshaJI, Tex. Capt. Hamilton said the DA's A QUICK SH(TI' ' ONCOLDSPOT "I sold it right away. I( I'd.bad eight of t hem , I could have sold them all." Here's the ad that s parked the sale for t hts Newport Beach man: t4 Cu F t Fro11Uri:c /Coldspot refria. $100 Xlnt Cond. X'ltlMUtXX 11 you bave a refrlgc_rator, or anythin1 elu , you'd Ukc to COii· Yett to catb -nu MZ.~. Dally Pilot cla.Mlfiedl make it easy lo put a few word.a to work for you. investigation of t h<' shooi1n~ began Tuesday afternoon. "Wt• have turned over all of our r e· (Xlrts and physical <'videnrc to them," he said. Hamilton stressed that the de· partment is interested in gelling a third party to invesUgate the incident. He said Newport (X>Lice had asked for a cotoner's inquest, but we re told that one has not been conducted in the county for more than 10 years. Hines died Friday m~hl about an hour after being hit with a shotgun blast from the gun or or ficer Doug Tholnas. Thomas and two other officers were staked out a t the (~ROBE, PageA2) Woman Slain By Accide nt In Dragnet A 29-year-old woman was a<· cidentally shot to death Tues day night when law enforce ment officers arrested two San Bernardino murder suspects holed up in a Garden Grov4' apartment Police said Donna Russ ell or Hesperia was mortally wounded by a bullet accidentally fired by a San B e rn a rdino County sheriff's deputy In tht• arreslini.: party. According to Garden Grove police, Mrs. Russell, wile of one of the murder suspe~ was struck In the chest by ~'single shot tired by Lt. Ro n al<l Forbush. The woman r eportedJy wa11 one of three people inside Apartment 6 at 1221 Beach 'Blvd. when four San Bernardino County deputies and a cont· in1ent of Garden Grove police went there in search of the murder suspects. It was when the arresting of- ftcers were jostling to gel iMlde the apartm ent that the hatal shot was Ored, police 11aid. Tarcet or the arresting party were two men accused or the 11bot1un slaying urUer this month of a 17·Jtar ·old San Bemardlno youth. --~-----.......... -..-----------------. ---- actual enrollment has dropped t" <iboul 25,000. Nicoll s aid ifpre!:ent conditions continue, the district: expects only 20,000 students b~ 1980. ,. The 1mpendmg imple~c~t~ lion of the Serrano dec1s1oq, wharb limits the amount OC money wealthy districts can spend on students, will further hamper the <! istrict's financial (See SCHOOLS. Page AZ) Chicago Mayor Eulogized ~ ' C HICAGO (AP) Mayo1J Richard J . Daley, le:ider for' almost a quarter of a century of the largest political' machine ilt the nation, was eulogized today as a man who would have pla~ political power "far down on his Usl of priorities." 1 Daley died Monday or a hea~ attack in his doctor 's office. He was74. President-e lect Carter, Vice .President Nelson A. Rockefeller and Sen. Edward M. Kennedy (D·Ma11s. >. were among the dignitaries and hundreds of local and state politician s . o f · ficehold e r s and political jobholders who attended his funer al. The Roman Catholic services were held in the Nativity of Our Lord Church, just a few minutes' walk from where the mayor·was born and from the bungalow where he Ii ved mpst or his life. ''He was known everywhere as a man of power and inevitably that meant political power," said the Rev. Gilbert Graham, a friend of the DaJey family, who delivered the eulogy. "l know he would have placed that far down on his list or priorities " lo a c cordance with the family's wishes, reporters were barred form the services. They waited outside with a crowd of about 300 pf'ople in bitterly cold weather The ser vice was broad· cast outs ide on speakers. After t he Mass of the Hcsurrec- tion, Daley was buried in Holy Sepulchre Cem etery in Worth, a suburb south of ChicaJ?o. The mourners included Sen. George M rGove rn . the Democratic party's presidential standard-bearer in 1972 and amoni:t those who sha rply criticized Daley and his police force durini:? the tumultuous 1968 Oemoc:ratic• Nulional Convention in Chicago. Or~n=~~::·~• We n th er Sunny through Thursday with some high cloudiness. Highs near the coast about 68. lows down lo about 40. I NSIDE TODA. 'l' Coaal area churcMs are planning a number of Chrtatma• tt>t and day aervicea to celebrate the feative holiday. Place1J and lime11 on Page A9. • f Jl.2 DAILY PILOT C Wednesday. Oeeemoer 22. 1978 1 9 77 Retirement '1 GWC's "Woyce L e a ve s Post ... 'TIME FOR A CHANGE' Golden West's Boyce County Legal Chief Kuyper Keeps Off ice Orange County supt·r\'i!'tors un animously voted Tuesday to rl' hire County Counsel Ad rian Kuyper of Laguna Be:ich for another four) rars Kuyper's re hiring came as part of a ritual that gives county supervisors a chance to revu•\I. their chief leg.JI c·oun:-.t·I -. perform<mcc , In _ Kuyper'::. ca~l'. Lhe board ~ conf1dC'nce was expressed m a 5-0 i'·ote that, for thl• fourth t1mt· smcc 1964. m.idC' him d1tl'r of U1l' count v·s batt1•ry of l5 uttorne)s The 48-yt-ar o ld countv counsel js paid S.S t .2R8 ,1 Yl'ar for hb lei:!al and admm1:-.trcit1vc~l·rv1c<·~ Front Page .it I VIEW ••. acres per 1,000 populJt1on Dolan sees great t.L'>e for th(' C'J nyons a rea ·'Clubs u:.e lhC' (an yon~ for out mgs, .. he said. ''And there 1s aJ~o the potential for .1J'cheolog1cal sites in thl' rJn~lln!'t, ·he odd<'<l. pointing to d1g.g1ng:-. in neart)~ ra1n1e"' Hrg1on<il 1'.trk \l.htch have unearthl'd the rt•mam~ of ;in rarly CaMorn1a lnd1J.11 ti\ tlltJ lion Oolan :.aid th1· l.tnd " .. 1 .. 0 d valuable '>ourt·1• ·for lrl('al "rhool ch1ldn·n to l'onH' d1JY.n and loolo. at th1 '!1 \I. lf<lhh.· "I've M'l'n rox. p(t'\SUm . .,kllflk<; and even owls that burro" into the h1lb11de out tht•re, ·· l>olan said 'This 1s <In ,ilholutdy fantJst1r buy We're t.1lk1ng J hout ocean .. ,._.w land at bt•hHt'n S20,000 and S28.00Q dn UI rt• 1\nd 1f "t' i.irt th1 S4.JC1.ooo from tn1• :-.tJlc•, thf'll tht• 1111t'1• llO<.'' d11-..11 ,., c·n rnf)n f'ro• Pa~AI PROBE ..• Albert.'>on 's m arktt 1n Corona del Mar wa1t1ng for a r<'peat hold up by a man who had v1ct1m1z('(f markets in the south r11u11ty arc·J for lhl' past two month'! They were pursuing Sutton. who had alll'gedly Just robbed the market, when Thomas fired and Hines apparently i;tepped in the line of fire ORANQE COAST DAILY PILOT tl'W ,,, .. no--c"' .. ,o •• 1,P11"' -.."''"'" f'I•\'~"' ft..,_ 'l '"°' N•""' p • .,,, 1" owt)l1..,_•1 hv ow~"' > r •·tl"\;t)l•'"'"•Co,.,o•'t'f ~, .. , •• ,,1!0ft' •'"" tt1,,.1, .r.•ct Ml\~lt•• HHO·~ '''"'-"' ' • f , •• ~··• ~-N•f ... .," H•;~.,..itl' ..,..._"I I~ t ••ft !/• ·~ If t•f'I• , .. til,.1)"'11\ V t P'f t t ',.,.,,,. .... ..,. \111."t" (('•\I A \..,....'"'> -,.,_ f !')'\ I OttN••"'"0 \4hl•tf•t en-1 \ .l\d •.-1,..., :;,:;·~r;;:.;:~1.~11t~~~ ;.:;~·.,. """)' J ., .... ,, ... ... ..,."*"' ..... """"· ...... JKlll• C.,,-.. -. '4/• ,. Pf• l-ol'lt.. I,,,,.,.,,., ti M.,..,.,.,.. , •• ,,.,,, •hhtf (d1l()f T ... ~\lt M ....... flllf ,__.,...,,n.q f. dfl ... O •rtin M LM' ••c...,..' frU;U A\\1\t•f\I ~"11tOl""l 'tllfN\ CotltMet•Off~ now'"' ••Ifs''"' M<l•ll"t """"" ~ 0 ... ,..., ~,.. otfleet l-•ovn• &t•ffril t1 .. 0..-""9Y''''',....' t~~t1"'Qton8,1tCl'I 1Ht~~M'._Ro\llt•'9t/t \.Mcflf!OAC• Vt llt' 7\1')t l.A p., .. 4)111d et \Mi DI• .. ~,.,.,."' T tltpltone (71'1 MM321 CIHtllled Advertltlnt t4a-M7t ~:'(t: :~ o;.:%, ~~~.,~.=:.= metor or •d•trtlo"'•~'' .. ,..,.,,_ "'•• .,. , •• ,._ftli!( ........ "."' , .. ".' ... "''"'•" •• ._ •• ,,..,,. O'Wft•' ., Mt•~ Cl•\t INtl•t• tettl •I (e•t• Mto t•hfOfflltt 'v•tt fleH•" ..., '" ,,., U '6 ~'"'' Dy .._ ...... M f"91'1thlf' l'fttht•" .., .... ,._., ·-~·,. Dr. R. Dudley Boyce, found- rng president and chief ad· ministrative officer of Golden West College for the past 12 years, announced plans today lo resign, effective June JO, 1977. The 55-year-old educator and community leader said he con· :-.1dered it an opport.Wle time to muke a change. "My wife and I simply have found this .a lime when we will welcome a change of pace," Boyce said in a Christmas let· ter to faculty and s taff. ··w e are e xcited that there Me some new horizons toward which we may reach," he said Coast Com m unity College District Chancellor Norman E. Watson said. "I was surprised and greatly saddened lo learn of Dr Boyce's decision to r('· sign, but I can understand his desire for a change of pace. "Dr. Boyce has done an out· standing job building one of the most innovative community col- leges in the nation," he said. Watson said the board of trustees will begin a nauonw1de search to find lhl' mo~t highly qualified successor. ··we will hope to fill the position by July l. 1977." he s aid. When Boycl' took over as prl'· sident of the college in 1965, the college campus was on 122 acres of farmland. The institution now enrolls 20.000 s tudents, employs 64•1 faculty and 315 !-tlaff, offers 1,600 courses and 47 career pro· ~ams. and has a master · pla nned campus of21 uruts. Boyce graduated fr om Fuller ton College whe re his father. the late Dr William T Boy<'e. ser ved as president from 1913-1950. He went lo Stanford Universi- ty, Harvard grcidualc school of business as a navaJ officer can- didate. and back to Stanford to rarn master of art:-. :.i nd doctor uf <.'due at ion degrees. He joined the founding faculty when Orange Coast CollC'gc was established in 1948, s l'r v1ng tht>re nine years as a teacher· counselor. During the next eight year::. he was a member of the prcs1- il t'nt 's staff and director or placement services at Stanford, bdor e returning to Orange Count y to become president of the new college Bo,·ce assisted m organizing Christ Presbvterian Church an Huntington ·Beach where he served two terms as a member of the board of elders Bo) ce has been a director Jnd honorary director of the Huntington Beach Chamber of Commerce :ind a d1r<'Clor of the Wc.;t Orang<.' Count~ L'n1tcd Crusade For the past s ix )ears he also has been a di r(•ctor of the Public Facil1t1es Corporation, the body responsible for dl' vetop1ng Hun tington Beach 's new central library and civic center DJ Guilty Of Perjury NEWARK.NJ <AP) f-rankie Crocker, a leading d1!.c jockey and program dJre<'lor in New York and Los Angeles. was convkt· ed today of lying to a grand Jury investigating payola an Lhe record industry A federal court Jury re- turned the verdict after a two-week trial and nine hours of deliberations. Cr ocker could be sen- tt>nced tn fi ve years in Jail and hned Sl0.000, srud As- st. U.S. Attorney Robert Romano Crocker. who has a home in Beverly Hills and a pen- thouse In Manhattan, was convict cd of gl ving per - jured testimony to a grand jury investigating allega- tions h e received thousands of dollars In c_asb to plug and ({Ive air time lo records on WBLS- Radio, New York, where he is program dir~tor. F ue l Oil Barge R11ns Aground DAHLGREN, Va. CAP) -A barge carrying about 1.7 million gallons of heavy fuel oil wu mired in soft mud near here to- day after running qround while heading up the Potomac River toward Wasbin1ton, a U.S. Coast Guard spokesman aaid. Spokesman Bob Baeten said the Coast Guard wu notified of the grounding by the Steuart Transportation Co. of Piney Point, Md. Baetea said no oU had been spilled and the barge wu reported undamased. Baeten aaid tbe Coa.,t Guard Is handlJna the mishap u a "polen· Ual m~or spill" because ~ the quantity of oil on the batae . Smile, Darn Y o u., Sntile 41' Wlrtl>Mto Motorists travelin~ north of Zumbrota. Minn .. find a huppy message on the build ing on lhc Ron Benson f arm . While Benson 's grammar might not be the greatest. his message comes through loud and dear. Jury Sees Evidence Of Kidnap When k1dn:ip victim John Scud- der clawed his way to fr~om from captivity in a motorized home last August . his captors ap- p arently panic k ed. lea\ing behind them A haltered and bruised 64· year-old potato chip heir calling for help on a Fountain Valley thoroughfare after tumbling from his motor hom e prison. The motorized home in which Scudder had been held prisoner for an estimated 90 minutes. Enough physical evidem·e to warrant bringing kidnap charges against William Rudy Wesson, 44, and Ricki Dale Sellers, 22. Today, that evidence was being shown to an Orange County Superior Court J jury Included in the carefully sealed brown sacks h auled into the courtroom by Huntington Beach police investigators was: -Wesson's wallet. containing h1~ driver 's license and credit cards. A rental agreement s howing that Wesson and Sellers had rent· ed the mobile prison fro m a Stan- ton man two days before Scud· der's August 19 abduction in Hunt· ington Beach A rifle and handgun allegedly belonging to Wesson. Sellers· high school gradua- tion ring witn the initials RDS in· scrib<'d inside the band. The key lo a Santa Ana motel where Wesson was registered. Four of Scudder's teeth. ap· parently knocked out as the heir to the Laura Scudder food fortune battled his way to freedom on Euc lid Avenue in Fountain Valley Presentation of these and other items seized from the motorized home came as Deputy District At· torney William Morrisey began winding down his case against Wesson and Se! lers. Wesson, a long-lime friend of the kidnap victim, allcgedJy en- ticed his young hrother-in·law in· to joining him in a $250,000 kidnap plot. Chile Con Coinage WASHINGTON (AP ) - Without support from many Western European nations, the World Bank has approved two . economic d evelopm ent loans totaling S60 million for Chile. Five Scandinavian countries voted against thf' loans. and live other European nations abs- tained from voting. He aring Scheduled To R eview Survey A Jan. 12 public heanng on the worth of a contr oversial consul tanl's survey of puLhc react.Jon to Orange County Airport was Sll Tuesday by county supervisors after a citizens group chargt'<i the report wasdecl'1vang Peter Du yan. representing a group he called Newport Resi- dents Ag ainst J ets. contended the responses of 3.1 people said to be Ii ving in noisc-1 m paclt.'<i areas were I umped w 1th reponscs of 273 other residents living near lhC' airport but not as affected by noise. He claimed not enough re::.i· dents in the noisy areas were in terv1ewed anyway, and that lumping their responses with others made the survey resulL., deceiving. ,Supervisors Tom Riley, who at first suggested that the residents bring their complaints up later when the board considers an en vironmcntal impact report on the airport . called the g roup's charges "very strong accusation lo make." He then called for the 10 a.m. Jan. 12 tiearmg and suggested that comments critical of the sur vey be pres ented in writing l'arlier so they can be studied and ans wered. The $10,000survey, compiled by POS Associates. was taken among 666 county residents, 306 of whom Ii ve nea r the airport. The results showed that. except for those laving very close lo lhe airport. county residenLo; do not consider the airport a prC1blem. Dan Emory. another member of Newport Res1dl'nLc; Againi;t Jets. said the consultant was to in terview 400 res idents in the area instead of 306. But. Emory claimed, the con- sultant interviewed the other 94 people in areas seven to 12 miles from the airport. R. I. "Cuba" Morris, director of the county General Servi<'es Agency, said a fl er the meeting he did not know what Emory was re ferringto. He did say county officials re· viewed the consultant's work and found it to be in compliance with his contract. "The report has been made. and it is n very factual report based on whnt the people told them," Morris said. Emory a lleged during the meeting that airport studies. "have been. and continue to be. done by a contractual process that's being manipulated behind cl05ed doors to achieve unnamed objectives ... Morris said later county of· ficiaJs did not interfere with the consultant "in any manner, shape or form." Jean Wegener. anoth er member of Newport Beach Resi- dents Against J ets. said the group has about 100 members. She said the group plans to file lawsuits to collect damages for airport noise and what she claimed was its adverse impact on property values. F,....P~AJ SPI LL ... vious mishaps since 1964 -piled onto the Middle Rip Shoals 27 miles southeast or this 1!.land re· sort one week ago today She was 10 miles off course when she hit. No was injured in the pile-up. and no one was aboard when she broke up Tuesday . The Coast Guard said most of the cargo washed into the ocean when her foredeck and aft section parted in 10-foot seas. "I am convinced some of the oil has gotten to Georges Bank ... Coast Guard Rear Adm. James P. Stewart told reporters. The vessel was on its way from Venezuela to Salem, Mass. Stewart said an investigation showed the ship's master was not using all of navigating equipment available to him. and that the ship was not kept in repair. The captain of lrie Argo Merchant, George Papadopoulos, was summoned today to deliver a deposition on the grounding m open court. He said the reason for the grounding was ··1 was In the wrong position." He is being sued by Cape Cod fishermen who demand $60 million in damages They claim in their suit against the captain and s hip's owners that the spill will cost many of them their livelihoods because of polluted seas. At a hearing this morning, U.S. Magistrate Lawrence Cohen ruled that Papadopoulos ' testimony would be given in private. Fro• Pag~ Al SCHOOLS. • cap;ibllllies, according to d11>· trlct officials. At present, Bay View School in Santa Ana Heights appears to bt- the next school targeted for closure. The shutting down of Victoria School also is hsted as a possibility. Nicoll also said he might ask for Bear Street School near South Coast Pina to be Included in the list of schools coruiidcrud for closure. Parents from Hu,>er School C'Titicized trustees for using un- specific criteria in deciding which schools s hould be closed A number of the parents who at tempted to halt the closing of Harper said trustees did n ot have an overall plan for the cut· backs. ''We do h ave to exercise a number of decisions that are nol objective. but subjective," said Nicoll. He said, however, that \ " he is satisfied with the way lhe board Is handling criteria for cJ05lng schools. Smallwood said be is oppo.sed to trustees "developing a scien- tific, computerized process," in deciding which sohoob to close. ''That would be a mistake," he said. Smallwood said the <'rileria for c losing schools s hould remain open to any changes. Although he admitted that many of the concerns expressed by Harpe r parents were legitimate, Smallwood said. "parents arc never going to be happy If you shut down their schools. It's an e motional thing ... Mesa Leases School Set For Closure C08ta Mesa councilmen have approved a Sl·a -year lease with the Newport-Mesa Unified School District for the use of Balearic School. which is slated fordosure by the district in June. The five-year lease for the i.chool a t 1975 Balearic Ave. an Mesa Verde will give the city ad- ditional s pace for park and recreation use, according to City Manager Fred Sorsabal. who negotiated the lease with district Superintendent John Nicoll. The city will be responsible for maintenan<'e of the 10-acre play- ground area with the seven· classroom building, and will also have to provide fire insurance. The play field will be used for the city's recreation program. Uses for the school building re- commended by the city manager include: Moving a pre-kindergarten program from fire stallon into the school classrooms. -{Jtillze classroom areas for Costa Mesa Art League for dis· play of art by local artists. -Provide space for Costa Mesa Historical Society for display. Creative c rafts and .trls classes in the evening. Couple Jailed On Fraud Rap A Santa Ana couple were sen. tenced Tuesday lo six months in Orange County Jail after being found guilty of welfare fraud that cost the county more than $16,000. Superior Court Judge JI . Walter Steiner ordered the jail terms for Ray E. and Geraldine Harris. both 37. and ordered them to make r estitution or $16,079 after a j ury in his courtroom found the pair guilty. It was successfully alleged that the couple, who have three children. fraudulently claimed' and received welfare assistance, food stamps and health care from the county. Suicide Threatened SAN MATEO CAP> -A 22· vear -old Sn n Bruno woman ihreatening suicide fired about eight shots al police and store employes Tuesday during a two- hour siege that ended with her surrender. Sgt. Ed Trucco said that Sally Neilson apparently was trying to get police to shoot her at a shopping center here. ) MD's Rape Case Goes to Jury By TOM BARLEY Of tlM 0•11' PH.C U.H Jury deliberations were scheduled lo open today aCter Tuesday'• heated and sometimes lurid cla.ln1 argument.a in the rape trial of Or. R08S McClure of Soulh Laguna. The eight-woman, four-man Orange County Superior Court JW'Y heard prosecutor Maurice Evans condemn the doctor as "perverted" 811 he asked for a nndlng of guilty of rape and sex perversion charges. Dr. McClure's attorney, Leonard McBride, challenged Evans• conclusions and re· minded the j ury of the tape switched on by Or. McClure at the hellht of hl1 admitted sexual actlvtty. Dr. McClure Is accused of in- jecting a 22-year-old patient with enough Valium so that she "couldn't talk, couldn't think and could barely keep her eyes open'· before sexually assaulting her in his oCfice Jan. 7. McBride throughout lhe trial has conceded that his client gave the young woman a small Valium tnjecUon but it was done as stan- dard practice to relax her and that the sexual encounter that followed was entered lnto wm. lncl.Y by both the doctor and the patient. Evans, wavtnc the paUent's medical chart bef~e the Jury. polnted out. lbat. Dr. McClure failed to ...eol'd the lQJecUon ht' admlUed •MnlS t.be patient as she lay on hi1 exarniniJll table in hu blue bikini panties. "She wu in his office for only one reuon," the prosecutor said. "She was in pain from a back in· Jury. But what she gol in lhe way of treatment was masaage of breuts and sexual organs, an act of oral copuJ a lion and the act or rape." McBride based his closing argument on the tape of the incl· dent made by the doctor. He argued that the Dana Point woman was a willing participant In the Jove makin1 and that the Valium waa not designed to en· courage her to reapcnd to hl!. Hx· ual overtures but wes for relief of her pain. "She never protested," McBride said. "She never told him to stop. She never asked him what he was doing. lf you don't believe me, llaten to the tape. "None or us really knows the truth," McBride added. And he urced the jury to remember while It deliberates, that "sexual intercourse and oral copulaUon outside marriage are not a crime. "We're not trying the medical profession here," the defense at- torney said. "We're trytna one man. For1et he's a doctor and look at him as a man." •·And wbal a m~ \t Evans count~red, desc ribing the defen- dant as "a doc Lor who hides behind bla hr~~rmloneedle." Orange Coas t EDITION 'l 'ocht)'·s ('lusin~ ~-l'. Stocks VOL. 69, NO. 357, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER22, 1976 N TEN CENTS Diedrich Pushes Riley to Back of Bus By GAR \I GRANVILLE Ottf\e D•lty PllotSIAlt Supervisor Ralph Oiednch's last act today as 1976 chairman or the Orange County Board of Supervisors wai-. to engint'er his own election to the pow('rful new county transportation t•om mission. Diedrich 's election came after the board had completed its scheduled meeting work for the year and without ad vance notice. And it m et with unchara('· teris tic outspoken resist ance from Super visor Thomas Riley. T he Newport Beach supervisor did not object lo Supervisor Ralph Clark"s e lection to the com mission alongside 01ednch But he said he was .. strong!\ OP· posed" to a representative Crom the so uth county Fifth Superv1sorial District not being on thccomm1ss10n . Riley said most transportation planning will ol·cur in the south county and , as a result, it should be represented on the com· mission. But Diedrich argued that a board appointee does not work for a particula r district and 1t makes lilllt· difference where the com· m1ss1oner comes from. When nominating himself and IDA Probe Asked To Ease F ear of Cop Co verup By JOANNE REYNOLDS 0111\t 0411y PllotSl•lf The Orange County District At· torney ha s b een a sked by Newport Beach police to in- vestigate Friday's fatal shooting of a bystander during a robbery stakeout. The Distric"t Attorney has bt't'n brought into th<' m vcst1gat1on in an errort to allay community fears that a ny wrong dom~ in th(' incident could be covered up by police, said Newport police Capt Richard Hamilton. The man arrested 1n the case. Oil Spill Sp reading T o Fishery NANTUCKET . Mass IA P i The sinking bow uf th<· fractun•d L1ber1an o il t ankrr Aq~o Merchant s plit :.ipart today, spill· mg what carj!o it s till held onto Nantucket Shoals The ship 's break-up was one of h1story'i. worst oil s pills '"There's noth1nJ.! wr can do:· said Coa:.t Guard Lt Cmdr Harry Chamber.., Officials \\ atchc·d hl'lplt•s!>I~ the pro~r<'SS ()( the s prc-:.1dtng ml slick amid a n•port th.it s1)mt• 1111 a 1 r e a ct v h .i d r t• a c h <' d northeast~ ant t•> tht· (;t·<>ri:tt'" Bank l''>mm1•r<'1Jl f1 s h1n J! grounds M assachus<'tb "a1tt-d for word from off1c1als 1n Washml(tnn. D.C . on the· st .ilt,.s rrquest for feder al <li d for businessm en whose l1v{'l1hoods m1~ht bt• dama~ed by thr spreadml( ml The :.pill could coi-.t lhc• state ecnnonn atwut $235 mllhrrn, state offi<"1ab t• ... t1matt>d today m the draft of a ll'ller to t>rrsulrnt Ford ..,,.,.k u\g f t•ckral ass1.,1 :mr1: 011 ('0.1t1•ct turd' havt• hct•n spotted hv tht• hundn'<b on Nan IU{'k1•I, hut wend .en1t \\ d\l' wc•r(' !'>W<'l'ptns;: l ht• oil frorn I)(' a Ch<..., The• br<'Jk uri t•Jrl> Tuc•sdav of the 6 4 0 ront tanker Argo Merchant 'P<'W ed 75 pcr<'ent of M-r 7 fi million l(altons of he;J\v C ~eSPILI,. Pa~~A2> Choir to P~rf orm The I IO·m(•mb('r Capp<'lla Choir fro m An .1hC'1m's Wesl(•rn Hiith School will p<'rforM Christmas carols 1n a concert tonight on Balboa Island. The choir will sini:t at 8 p.m. from Christmas.tree-shaped bleachers set up at the southern end of Marine Avenue . O r~::~. Cna~• \\'ea th er Richard William Sulton. 20, San Clemente. was slated to appc::ir in court today to hear the reading of the 34 charges filed against him. Those charges include 17 counts of armed robbery with a prior conviction and 17 count~ or commission of a robbery with a loaded g\In. Sutton still face's the pos..,iblily of a murder charge being riled against him under the state law which holds that any hom1c1de committed during a felony cnmc can result in a charge of murder oo~·r f=ORGET.1 O NLY 2 SHOPPING DAYS 'TIL C HRISTMAS .' Parktvay Tree Cutting Not Mishap-Chief Cal Stew::irt. director of parki.. beaches and r <'ercation in Nrwport Beach said today th<'r<' was no mis take made when c1tv rrC'ws cut down a parkway lr<'e 10 front of the pol1C·e st ation Tuesday citv crews cut down two ctty trees· on Santa Rarbar a Dnve. One was in front of the fir<' :-.talion Members of the police· and fire d<'partment had com plamed that thC' tree bl!x:kl>d th1• view of tht• road when they wt•rt• driv1n~ out of tht• £•mploye purk mg lot Ste" art explained that lht• '>econd tree, In front or the polict• station was ordered cut down at the same time so lh:.it all of the> tree~ on Santa Barbara would be or the same v a net v "There was no-<'rror made on the p:irt of the crew. Tht>y wen• doing what they were ass1gne<l l11 do," Stewart said of r~ports that the tree in front of the police sta lion had been cut down by m is take lie said the v1cw·blocking tree was a black wood acacia. as was the one in front of the police sta- tion. He said a ll of the other trees on Santa Barbara are tristama, s o it was decided to remove the view· blocking tree completely as well as to remove the only remaining black wood acacia and replace 1t with a tristania. aginst the defendant in the casP. The victim of the accidental shooting, .Joe Hines. 61. was a re· s1dcnt of Dana Point and a well· known figure in Corona del Mar where he worked as a handyman. V1s1tation was scheduled until 9 o'clock lon1,:?hl al Sm1lh. Tuthill and Lamb Mortuan . 518 N llroadway, S<1 1jla Ana - A mortuary :-.pokesman said funeral serv1cl'i-. and burial will take place lalt•r Uu s week in Marshall. Tex Capt. Hamilton said the DA"s <Sec PROBE. Page A2l Jury Sees Evidence Of Kidnap When kidnap victim John Scud- der clawed his way to freedom from captivity in a motorized home last August. his captors ap- paTcnt ly panicked. leaving behind them A battered and bruised 64· year old potato ch1p heir calling for help on a Fountain Valley thorough( ar e after tumbling from h1:. molor horn e prison The motorized home in which Scudder had been held pnsoner for an csllmal<'d 90 mmutcs. Enough physical evidence to warrant brmging kidnap charges against Wilham Rudy Wesson.44, Jlld Ricki Dale Sellers. 22. Today, that evide nce was being s hown to an Orange County SuperiorCourtJjur y. Included in the carefully sealed brown sacks hauled into the courtroom by lluntin~ton Beach police investigators was: Wesson·s wallet, containing his driver's license and credit cards. A rental agreement showing that We sson and Sellers had rent- l'Cf tht> mobile prison from a Stan· ton man two days before &ud- der's August 19 abduction in Hunt mgton Beach A rifle and handgun allegedly belonging to Wesson. Sellers' h1~h school gradua- tion ring with the initials RDS in· scribed ins ide the band. The key to a Santa Ana motel <See HEIR, Page /\2) Brush Fire Quelled By NB Firemen A Rmall brush rire that broke out lute this morning near the Ae ronulronic Ford plant in Newport Beach was quickly doused by firemen. The fire, according to a plant spokesman, burned less than an ·acre off Ford Road behind the firm 's aero therm al chemical lab. There were no injuries reported. Clark for the lwo uvailable posts, Diedrich got 11 quick second from Supervisor Laurence Schmit. And when Supervisor Philip An· thony voted with Schmit and Diedrich, Clark lamely threw in hisvotetomakea4 t ballot. lt 1s customary on the board or supervisors that the chairman make appointments t o com- missions and committees. But as the first scheduled business or 1977, Diedrich will forfeit h is chairman poi.itlon lo another supervisor. Until today. Riley had the sup- port to wm the 1977 chairmanship. But. he admitted after the hasty elecllon. h is r esislaM'c to Diedrich's maneuver might cost tum support. The transportation eomm1ssion was mandated by state leg1sla- S mile, Darn Y ou, Snaile tion this year. It has power to re· 'view and approve all transporta· ti on planning within the county. Already appointed to the com mission by the county's 26 cities are Fountain Valley Mayor Al Hollinden and Santa Ana City Councilman David Brandt A firth pubfic member will be chosen by the f our appointed com · missioners. o\P WtrtphOto Motorists lr<J vcling north of Zumbrot a. Minn . fmd a h upp.} message on the build· 1ng on the Hon Benson farm While Benson 's gra mmar might not be the greatest, his m<'ssagt• comes through loud and clear. Cold Batte r y Foils Hot Car S usp ect A hot car with a cold battery proved to bt• th<' undotni:l or a Tustin man who is in cm;to<ly in Newport Beach on a charge of car theft ar.d Qurglary. Police said Wcrnl'r Macyossky Perez. 28. was arrcstl'd earlier this week in the Denver area, when a polieeman in th<1t city becam e s us picious of Perez' Corvette. Perez had a pparently hailc.-d the patrolman lo a sk for help get- ting the car started sin<'c the bat tery was dead. The policeman told the Tustin man he couldn 't help him. so Perez asked that the officer not issue a parking ticket while a new battery was sought Alter Perez le ft. the policeman said he fell uneasy about the car and ran a c heck on it. lie dis covered it w as stolen in a burglary at lloward Chevrolet a month ago. The plates on the car also were stolen in that break-in. Police staked out the cur and when Perez returned with the new battery, they arrested him on suspicion of c ar theft. He w as brought back to Newport Bea<'h Tues day by Detective Ken Smith and he Is being held in the city jail on a warrant carrying $25.000 bail City Plans Tree P ickup Newport Beach refuse rollection crews will pick up Christmas trees along with regular trash during the week after Christmas and the week aft er New Years. Trees may be placed at the curb or in the alley on regularly scheduled collec- tion days. However. resi- dents must eut large trees into no more than four-foot lengths . The Fire Department no longer designates sites ror Christmas tree burns as it did in previous years. The fires were canceled in 1975 because of increasing costs ofliability ins urance. Woma n Slain By Accid ent In Dragne t A 29-year -old woman was ac· cidentally shot to death Tues· day night when law enforce- ment offi cers arr<'~ted two San Bernardino murder suspects holed up in a Garden Grove apartment. Stockholde r s OK W est g ate Air Cal Ties Shareholders of Afr California approved plans Tuesday for the merger of the airline into a wholly owned subs idiary of Westgate California. The corpor ation currently holds 81 percent of the airline's stock, leaving 165,525 shares out· standing With Tuesday's s hareholder ap- proval. the proposal needs only the blessing of the fede r al bankruptcy court orficiaJs befort> 1t takes errcct. Westgate California is current- ly undergoing reorganization after filing for bankruptcy in San Diego. The te rm s of the takeover agr ee ment call fo r each sharehold"r to receivt' Westgate comm on t>qu1valent certificates worth $13 a share. Those ccrtiricates m .iy be re· deemed for cash or converted into Westgate shares once reorganiza· tion of the p arent company is completed . Air Cat Preside nt Robert Clif· ford said that the agreement C!llls for the m aintPnance or t\1r California's e x isling manage. ment s tructure . License Revoked Sunny through Thursday with some high cloudines~. Highs near the coast about 68, lows down to about40. Mesa Schools to Close? Police said Donna Russell of Hesperia was mortally wounded by a bullet accidentally fired by a S an B e rnardino County sheriff's deputy in the arresting party. SACRA MENTO CAP) Revocation of the license of a Pomona home for the r etarded has been recommended by state officials. who said drugs are dis· pensed in wholesale amounts and medical care and prOfJrams are p oor. I NSIDE T ODA\' Coo.st area churc~s ore planning a number of Chri1tma~ evf' and doy aervlcea to celebrate the feative holiday. Ploce1 and timei tm P.oge A9 Index &ard Eyes Five for Future Slwtdowns By MICHAEL PASKEVICH Of lM D•llY ~Itel ~ff Newport-Mesa School trustees are keying on two areas of Costa Mesa for the p ossible future closing of as many as five schools. Superintendent John Nicoll said the school board will be tak· lng a hard look at schools ln cen· tral Costa Mesa <Bay View. Lindberght. Woodland, Monte Visla and l\alser> and In w~t Costa Mesa (Whittler, Victoria, Pomona and Wilson). School board President Donald Smallwood has asked district offlciab to come up wtth a study of.1he board's options by February. n~ever. it appears unlikely that ttustees will close any more schools for the 1977-78 school yea r , according to Smallwood and Nicoll. Trustees already hnve decided to close Harper and Balearic Schools in Costa Mesa at the end of this school year. Trustees also declded to put three undeveloped school sites oo the market as part of a dis· trlct effort to cut expenses. DeclloinS enrollment is the major reason for the cut.backs. M er projecting a dlstrlct enroll· ment of nculy 30,000 students •. actual enrollment has dropped to about ~.000. Nicoll aa.id if present condlotlons continue, the district expects only 20,000 students by 1980. The impending implementa· tlon of tbe Serrano decision, which ltmits the amount of money wealthy districts can spend on students. will further hamper the district's flnancial capabilities, according to dis· trict otnclals. At present, Bay View School in 8-nta Ana Heisbts appears to be the next school t1r1eted tor doeu.re. The ahuUJnc down of (See SCllOOLS, P .. e AJ) • ' According to Cardell Grove police, Mrs . Russell, wife of one of the murder suspects, was struck in the chest by the single s hot fired b y Lt. Ronald Forbush. Tbe worn an reportedly was one of three people inside Apartment 6 a t 1221 Beach Blvd. when four San Bernardino County deputies and a cont· lngent or Garden Grove polico went lhere in search or the murder suspects. It wu when the arresting or. flcera were jostling to get inside tbe apartment that the fatal shot was fired, police said. Target of the arresting party we.re two men accused or the 1botgun slaying earlier thl11 month of a 17·year-old San · ~ard.Loo youth. A QUICKSHOI' ONCOLDSPOI "I sold it right away. ll l 'd had eight of them , l could have sold them all." Here's the ad that sparked the sale for this Newport Beach man: 14 'Cu Fl ·l'ros tfree Coldspot refrig. $100 Xlrll Cond .. XXX·XXXX • If you have a refrigerator. Ot' anything else, YoU 'd like to con- vert to cuh -call &U-5678. Daily PUot classifieds make it easy to put a !ew words to work for you. • A2 DAILY PILOT N Wednasdav Oecamb4r 22 1978 •• f WEST NEWPORT PARK CITY OF NEWPORT BEACH ~ t; :~ (./J ~ t> w w <.:> Q. (/) \~ ~.. to 0 -------\ JLJLJl ....... - ~ I~ .. l l Jl H Jl a: Jl J Q. 1 r ,, "· Mf1 r · · ' West Newport Park Planned Initial work on West Newport P ark · is slated tu get un- der way in .Ja nuur·y. City councilmen have awarded the S274 .000 contrnt'l for t'onstruction of the first phase bclwl'cn 55th and 59th Str<.·ets. Pla ns also c all for gut- I PACIFIC COAST HIGHWAY 1r 'l.r '" ,H , .. , l("'"t-t"ff lr' ..c . ~ ·--.. ters, curbs and sidewalks to be installed on lhe north s ide of Seashore Drive from 5Sth Street to the end of th(? road at Summit Street. Meanwhile. the city has appliec: for county funds to help pay for the $663.000 widening of -~ West Coast Highway from 5.5th Street lo I he San tu Ana River. Whe n that is completed. the st ate will give the ci- ty the strip of land between the highway :.ind Seashore Drive for the s econd phase uf the park • 'Boss' Praised Poioor 'Low on Daley's Priority List' CHICAGO CAPI Mayor R ichard J Daley, leader for almost a quarter or a century of the largest political machine 1n the nation, was eulogized tcxlay as a man who would have placed politica l power "far down on his list or priortlie:;." Daley dwd Mond;iy of a ht•arl attack 1n his doctor·:; offi ce lie was 74. Pres1dent·clcl'l Carter , Vice President Nels on A Rockefeller and Sen Edward M Kennedy f D·Ma ~s t. w t•n · among the dlgmtartl's .rnd hundreds of loc.il a nd ~t a lt• p o l 1ttc·1a n'>. o f- f1ceh o ldt'r' and p ol1t 1cal JO bholdC'rs ~ho ,ittcmded ht~ funeral The Roman Catholic services were held in the Nativity of Our Lord Church. just a few minutes ' walk from where the mayor was born and from the bungalow where he lived most of his life. "lie was known everywhere as a man of power and inevitably that meant politic al power ," said the Rev . Gilbert Graham. a friend oC the Daley family, who delivered the eulogy. "J know he would have placed that fur down on his list of priorities." In accordance with the family's wishes. reporters were barred form the services. They waited outside with a crowd ()f about JOO people in bitterly cold weather The service was broad Homage Nixed Group Won't Mourn Daley S,\j'o; DI 1-:Go <AP> The late Mayor Richard J. Dal~) of C hicago was described as "ruthless'' a nrl "('(ll'f'UJll . by s ... n Dll'~O County super visors :.IS they rt'fu1:>t•d lt> quit work ear!y in m emory 'of him. T hr1•<· oft tw fl\'l' supervisors voted Tuesday to re- wt't a r l'solulion honor ing Daley. who died Monday. 'l'ht• 22·ye<.1r Chtl'ago muyor "r<Jn a political m:rchlnl' that l'<tn roug hshod O\'c r people 's rights ," Su1w rv1sor Dick Hrov:n said. 'Th <· m<.rn 1s dead," commented Supervisor Jack W<llsh "If "" huvl' nothing good to s ay. let 's go on to somdhrng t•lst'." f 'r o m Pagr Al SCHOOLS. • \ 1t•lnrt J St· h11ol .d "'' h 11-.ted <iS a ~>,s1h1ht\ ; ~ott ••bo ,,ud he might ;,,sk f11r B1'.11 ...,, 11 (·f St'huul nc•ar ~111th C'o,1-.1 l'l.11.1 lo tw 1nC'ludrd 1rl lht• list of 'l'honl-< 1 011.,1dl•rt-d f11r 1 lu:-.ur 1• 1',1rl'nh ltom ll.111wr ~·hool 'rit11·11.t<ci Ir ll'•l•·t•, for 11:-.1nJ: un !\JH'('lfl<' 1·11t 1•1 l.1 tn d1•1·1<J111).! 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M .--J11Wf!~ ft,.t ..... f 0\11'\ t•·f'I '1•11•'1 flw l'lr '\ tfj~f,.,H·f' V.at1•1 tfll f \.•t!JMl•.,f'I "'"'fll(l'M: I A\11 ..... ,_,~l •fJ I 'll'I 1• OWb'·\""''I \,_,,.,_.,.,. tflllt '""""'' '"' r.;:~~~::-:-~1·'":1 ,"',·~~::.~,.I~ Whl t'•Y ................. Pu· '""' 1"-J r .;CM ..,,,,.t ,., •• (lff'lfo; \/ f1 ,.,,. ·~ It .... ,,... •4 ¥io4""'t't' '"•Mt•• '-'...wtt·• M•f'\.tQ•"1 l l1iltM 0-.frtu ilil l••\ ••CM,." N•lt A..ti\,'-lfU't ,._ft•t'fllrl &.Otlttf\ omc .. (.tt\IAAM\4 l>"W•\lf'Mf\UHt \Atyf\.A 1•4('°1 tlkt)l~Y'f'~t,....t jf"'"'''"'•°" n111o,.r"' ,,.,, "-"" '* .... ,, \aftfl•O"'"' VeH•v 1\1'0' L • ft•f ••.O • , !.•n (),.,...., "'""•n Telephone (714)642·~1 Ctau 1nec1 ~dnrtl•lnt 142·Mrt CAPYflOf't ,.,. Ot•#\ .. c ... ,. ~IV.lltq '""' Olff'\Y ... ,,.., \tOf'I•\, 1Uw\tf4itl"\ fld1te' ·•I "'•"•' "' ••"•"''""" .. "'' ... ,.1n '"'• ,.. ,,., .... u1f •11,.ovl '"'''' ,.,,..,0,~,. tf (..,,,""'~" kt•M cln ' .. ,.,, .. ,..,,. .t ('.,t• ,....,, (•1tftff'Ut ~tlfU"lfftOft tty ''""' U M IM"t .. ly t.i, ''"II l• \0 ~,,_,, '"IM1ry ••--u to.....,,.,,. Mesa Le a se s School Set For Closure Costa Ml'sa councilmen ha\'t' approved a $1-a year lea-;e with thl' 'ewport·;\tcsd L'nif1ed School Ohtnct for the use of Baleanl' S<:hool, which r:. slakd fordosun· bv lhe d istract in .June. The five y ear lease for th(' srhool at 1975 Bakanc Ave. in ~h'<>a \'t•rde "'ill give the city a<I dtl 1on al s patt• for park a nd rt•1·reat1on us l'. according to C1ly ~1 .rna ger Fred Sorsabal, wh11 n<'r.otiated the lcusc with d1stnrt Superintendent J ohn Nicoll. The c ity will be r esponsible for matntenan ce or the 10.acr~ plav ,::round a r <'a with the seven t l.tssroom butldmg. and wall ulso h,1 ve to provide fire tnsurance ·1 ht> play f1<>ld will be used for lhr C'1ty s recrf'allon progra m l 'ses for the schoQl hu1lding n• rnmmended b) the city mana~er mrludt' Mo\mg a prt' k1n<ll'l 1!8rtcn ro ram from fir(' station mlr1thr ~C'h< C'las~ruom'> U 1ze c lassroom areas for Costa esa J\rt League for dis play of a t by local artists Pr ide space for (h.;;tu Mesa Histor · al Society fordispl;1y r eat1vc C'rafts anci urts r.s rs m the cn•nmg. f 'ro,,. Page 11 I HEIR ... where Wesson was registered. -Four of Scudder 's teeth, ap· parently knocked out as the heir to the Laura Scudder food fortunr battled his way to freedom on Euclid Avenue in Fountain Valley. Presentati'ln of these and other 1tems seued from the motorized home cam e as Deputy District At: tomey William Morrii1ey began wind ing down h is case against W~son and Sett ers. Wesson. a long·Ume friend of the kidnap victim. allegedly en· tked his young brother-in-law in· to Joining him In a S'2SO,OOO kidnap plot. Suicide Threate ned SAN MATEO (AP) -A 22· year-old San Bruno wom an threatening suicide fired •boul eilht shots at police and store cmployet1 Tuesday durtna a two. hour ~lege that ended wtth her sunender. Sgt. Ed Trucco said that Sally Nell,.on apparenUy waa trying to 1~t police to ahoot her at a 1hoppln1 center here. C9.lSl outside on speakers. After the M ass of the Resurrec- Uon, Daley was buried in Holy Sepulchre Cem etery in Worth, a suburb south of Chicago. The mourners included Sen. George M cGovern , the Democratic party's presidential sta nda rd-bearer in 1972 and among those who s ha rply criticized Daley and his police force during the tumultuous 1968 Democratic National Convention in Chicago. Also ther e was Gov. Daniel Walker. a frequent critic who wrote a special report on the 1968 convention and described it as a "police riot ." Bells at Lbe city's Rom an Catholic c hurches rang in unison at 9·30 a .m . as the funeral service began in the 97-year-old church. where Daley was bap- t n e d and married and worshipped almos t every day. Mourners waited outside the church in ll·d egree weather through much of the night for a final look at the man who ruled their c ity longer than any other. Police officials estimated that more than 100.000 persons filed past his casket in the church. The wake started at noon and was to have ~oded -at 10 p.m .. but more than 200 persons still wait- ed for entry to the church after midnight The church doors were closed at 5 a.m . to allow fmal arrange- ments and a s ecurity check for Carter 's arrival. Carter arrived Jt the churc h around 9 a.m. Other dignitaries arrived shortly afterwards. f'ro. Page A J PROBE ... 1nvcstigat1on of the shooting began Tuesday a fternoon. ··we haveiu ned over all of our re- ports a d physical e \'idence to them," c said. Ila ilton stressed th11t the de· partmcnt 1s interested tn getting a third party lo investii:atc: the incident. lie s aid Newport police had asked for a coroner·s inquest, but were told that one has not been conducted in the county for more than 10 years . Hjncs died Friday njght about an hour after being hit with a shotgun blast from the gun of Of- ficer Doug Thomas. Thom as and two other officers we.re s taked out at th e Albertson's m a rket in Corona del Mar waiting for a re~at hold up by a m a n who had victimized markets in the south county area for the past two months They wer e pursuing Sutton. who had allegedly just robbed the market. when Thoma.~ fired and !lines apparently stepped in the line of fire. >4th ''not Stitt P"9•o Tennis Anyone? This 1s the sitt• propoi-.c·d fo r a t ennis court when thr lh1ys1dt• Diw t· l'ark 1s complct· ed in Corun<J dl•I M:.ir \"ll'\\' is from Goldenr~d A vcntil' foot hnd.Ji£.. Som e prn- f)(•rty o" rl t'rs 111 thl.' tt n•a h:.i' c ()n>leslC'<I mdusion of a l1·nnt:o. court in plans for lh<· park. Thl· mattl•r f..!OC•s bef'ort• the Ne\\ port Hc•ach Pl <.r nn111~ Cnmmi..,~r on .Ja n 20 Heated Arguments End MD Sex Case By TOM BARLEY 01 tlte O•ltr "''loC ll•lf J u r y d e 1 i b e r a t ions w c r 1• scheduled to open today after Tuesday's heated and sometimes lurid closing arguments in the rape tria l of Dr. Ho'ls McClur<· of South Lagun a The eight.woma n. four-m un Orange County Supc•Mor Court jury heard prosecutor Maunct• Evans condemn the doctor ai. "perverted" as he asked for a finding of guilty of rape and sex perversion C'h arges Dr McC lure 's attor ney. Leonard Mc Bride. challenged Evans' conclus ions and re- minded the j ury of the tape switched on by Dr. McClure at the height of his admitted sexual activity. Dr. McClu re is accused of in· jecting a 22·year·old patient with e nough Valium so that she "couldn't talk. couldn't think and could barely keep her eye~ open" before sexually assaulting her in his office Jan. 7 McBride throughout the tria l has conceded that hjs chent gave the young woman a small Valium injection but it w as done as s tar dard practice to relax her a. that the sexual encOW'lter the• followed was entered into will ingly by both the doctor and the patient. Evans, waving lht· palicnt·s medical chart before the jury, pointed out that Dr. McClure failed to record the injection he admitted givinii the patient as she .lay on his examining table 1n her blue bikini pantics. "She was in h is office for only one reason." the prosecutor s aid .. She was in pain from a back tn· jury But what she got in the wav of treatment was massage of breasts and sexua l organs. an at'l or oral copulation and the act of rape." McBride bas ed his closing argument on the tape of lhe 1nc1 - dent m ade by the doctor. He argued that the Dana Point woman was a willing partiC'ip<inl tn the love making and that the Valium was not designed to C'n courage her to ,..espond to his sex ual overtures but was ror r elief of her pain. "She never p r otested," McBride sa1ct. "She never told him to stop. She never asked him what he was d oing. If you don't believe me, listen lo the tape. "None of us really knows the truth," McBride added. And he . urged the jury lo remember while it deliberates. that "sexual intercourse and oral copulation o utside marriage are not a crime. "We're not trying the medical profession here,·· the dcf~nse at torney s aid. "We're trymg one man. Forget he's a doctor and look at him as a man.·· "And what a man," Evans countered. describing the defen- dant as ·•a doctor who h ides behind his hypodermic needle " f'ro'" Page A l SPILL ... industrial crudt• oil tnth a slick 7!'> miles long and more than 25 miles wide at its broadest p0inl. .. This is the biggest oil spill dis- aster on the Amencancoaslinour history," s aid Russell Train. head or the U .S Environme ntal Protection Agency The aged . rustrn~ vessel - called a "'suspect ship" by lll(' Coast Guard because or 19 pre vious mishaps since 1964 piled onto the M 1ddle Rip Shoals 27 males southear.t of this island re- sort one week a~o today. She w:£s 10 miles off course when sht-hit. No was injured in the ptle ·up. and no one was aboard when she broke up Tuesday. The Coast Gua rd said most of the cargo washed into lht> ocean when her foredeck and aft section parted in l O·footscas. "I am convinced some orthe oi l has gotten to G eorji!cs Bank." Coast Guard Rear Adm. James P. Stewart told reporters. The vessel was on its way from Venezue l a to Sa le m , Mass. Stewart s aid an investigation showed the s hip's m aster was not using all of na vigating equipment available to him. and thatthrship was not kept 1n repair. T h e c aptain of the Argo Merchant, George Papadopoulos, was sum mon cd tod:.iy 111 deh \er a dcpos1lron on the: grounding m open court. He s aid lht' r ruson for ttw grounding was "f was 1n th!! WTOng pos t lion " He is be1nJ? s ued hy Cape Cod fi shermen who dl'mand SGO million in dama~<·s. * * * Air Noise Hearing Slated by County Earthquake Pioneering Scholar Dies Pioneerinf' earthquake scholar Lydik Jacobsen. a professor e m eritu s fr o m Stanf ord University. died of a stroke Tuei; day at Hoag Me morial Jlospilal in Newport Beach. Spilled Oil WuldPmver 4 Boston Days BOSTON (AP I -If the 5.7 million ~allons of Industrial fu<'I oil spilled from the Llber1un tanker Argo Merchant wer e con- fined on a half.~re lot. it would m3ke a pool 46 feet, 71.~ inches deep. A Jan t2 public hearing on the worth of a controversial consul- tant's survey of public reaction to Orange County Airport was sel Tuesday by county supervisors after a cit izens group charged the r eport was deceiv\ng. Peter Duyan, representing a group he called Newport Resi- dent.a A1ainst Jets, contended the responses of 33 people said to be living in noise·impacted areas were lumped with reJIOO'es of 273 other residents living near the airport but not as alf~ted by noise . He claimed not enough resi- dent.s ln the not.y areas were In - terviewed anyway, and that lumping their r esponses with othtn made the 11urvey resulu decelvlne. Supervisors Tom RJJey, who at ftrtt 1u1te1t ed that tho residents brine their complaint.a up later when lbe board conalders an tn· vtroamental impact report on the ~ airport, c alled the J(roup's charges "very slrong accusation tomake." He then called for the 10 a.m. Jan. 12 hearing and su~gestcd that comments cr itical of the sur· vey be pres ented in writing earlier so they can be studied and answered. The $10,000 survey, compiled by POS Associates. was taken among 666 county residents, 306 or wbom live near the airport. The results showed that, except for those living very close to the airport, county r etldenls do not consider the al11>ort a problem. Dan Emory,· another member of Newport Residents A&a.lnst Jeta, said the consultant was to In· tervlew 400 residents In the arel.l instead of306. But, Emory clolmed, the c<1n· sultant Interviewed the other 94 people ln areas seven to 12 mJles from the al.rport. Dr. Jacobsen. a resident or Huntington Beach. was 79 al the lime of his death He dir ected earthquake re sear ch at Stanford from 1926 lo 1943 and from J 946 to his retire ment ln 1962. Jaco bse n received his bachelor's d egree in mechanical engineering from Stanford In 1921 and his doctorate in physics at the northe rn California un· iver1ity in 1926. Following his retirement, he fOWldcd n consulting firm, A•ba- blan-Jacobsen Aaaoclat~. Survivors include hlA widow, Mary, of Huntinaton Beach; two M>nJ, Erland or Fresno and Ian of Hawaii, and a dauabter, Ellen Yazarof Ankara, Turk~)'. No funeral or memorial services arc pla nned. If It were burned in lhe boilers of Boston Edison Company. it could generate that utility's elec- tricity for four days. That's the equivalent of a year's use for 22.000 homes. (( It were gasoline. it could power l26,667 car s for a year, as- suming 20 miles per gallon. ll could fuel one car on 6,000 trips around the wor ld at the equator. II It wer e the lcind suUable for burnin1 in your home which it Isn't -it would heat it for 9,459 winters. That's assuming you have fairly 1ood insulation. If you spread ll out to a thick· nesa of one Inch. ll would cover 20 football fields. Saddlebaek ED ITI ON * * * 1\.l'ter-110011 1 .;\"'. ,tocks * ti ,. ~ 1 VOL. 69, NO. 357, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES -I ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER22, 1976 TEN CENTS " ' .Sad·dlehack Raises to Re1nain Secret By LAURIE KASPER Of IM 0411, Pllo< SC•ll Saddlebac k Valley Un ified School District officials have declar ed raises given to district administrators are no longer public information. Despite the fact that salaries are an expenditure of pubhc funds, district oHiciaJs say dis- closure or raises will henceforth be considered an "unwarranted mvasion of personal privacy." Superintendent Richard Welle expl ained that th1s is because r aises are given to ad ·.• ministrators on the basis of evaluations under the district's new merit pay system for 67 con· fide ntial , s upe r visor y ;.ind management empJoyes. Welte contended individuals' evaluations -which are reflect· ed in the pay raises -are not considered public information. Admitting 1l 1s a ''thorny pro- blem," the superintendent added that disclosurl' of the raises may prove embarrassing to some ad· ministrators and raise unwar- ra nted concerns m the com- munity. He said it would be "delrimen· tal to what I want to do •.. build schools, not destroy them.'· The Daily Pilot had been trying for several weeks to obtain in formation on the raises and salaries being paid to district ad· ministr ators. On Tuesday, Gil bert Moreno, the district's business manager. said he had been advised by the county counsel 's office that mak· ing either raises or salaries or ad· m111istrators public may be infr· inging personal privacy rights Wlder s tate law. Ile said the district could give only the total money ,and in creases paid to groups of e mploycs and an average percentage or the raises given. Salaries of individual ;.id - ministrators in school districl!) and other governmental agen cies have been made public as a common practice m the past Moreno said he was not trying to withhold public information. "We're trying to walk that fine line between full chsclosurci and personal n ghts," he said. Today however, W(•ltc said salaries but not raises may be disclosed. Jle provided th!' an· nual sala ries currently being paid to his top administrators, in· eluding : -Donald Ames. assistant s uperintendent. $34,826. (See RAISES, Page AZ> I I Germ War Tests Army Denies Links to Deaths WASlllNGTON 11\I» The Army confi rmed today 1t c<m · dllcted simulated attacks with non-diseasc-caui.ing !>ubstances ii) eight areas to determme the country's vulnerability to germ warfare. An Army spokesman s aid the tests, conducted between 1950 .wd 1966, were performed with non-disease-causing biological substances, and that "there 1s nothing we have that shows any linkage between these tests and any outbreaks of infection or <my deaths." The tests " ere conducted <it the Pentagon and San Francisco m 1950; Mechanics burg, Pe1 ., 1n 1951; Key West. 1'1a. and Ft. McClellan. Ala . m 1952; Panama City, F la., 1953; Point Mugu and Port Hueneme. Calif. in 1954 . and on New York City'~ subway Watchers Helpless As Oil Hits Sea NANTUC KET, l\fass. <AP1 ' The sinking bow of thl' fractur<'<l Liberian 0 1 I lanker Arg11 Merchant split apart today, sprll mg what car~o 1t still held onto Nantucket Shoals The ship's J break-up was one of history 's 1 worst oil spills ' ''There's nothing we can do,·· said Coast G uard Lt. Cmdr. Barry Cha mbers ._ Officials watc hed b('lplessly , the progress of the spreading oil slick amid <• report that some 011 al r ead y had r e a c hed northeastward to th<> George-; R an k co m m l' r c· 1 ;II f 1 sh 1 n g grounds Massachusetts" a1lt'd for word from ofhcials 1n Washington, D.C . on the -.tilll'''> reqU('!lt for fede r dl aid fur bus1nt''>'>mr·n \\hose livelihoods might In· damaged h\· th<' spn•admi.: <111 Oll·co.lti'd lurch• hd\'C bet•n spotted by tht' hundreds on Nan tucket, but "rnd and °"ave wt•rc sweeping the oil from bear he5 The break·up early Tuesday of the 640 ·f o ut tank('r Ar~o Merchant spr wt•d 75 perrC'nt of her 7 n million J,la llons of ht'av~ indus trial cru<lt• oll 1nto a s l1<'k 75 mill's lonJ: am1 more than 25 mi ks wide at tt!I hroadE''I 1101nt "Thi'>,., the• h1.:i:1•,t rnl 'Pill d1' DON'T J:OR.GE T .' 0 MLV 2 SHOPPtN6 DAYS 'TIL C ... R.ISTMAS .1 oranga c._ .. ~1 "" ' 4 ..... ' .;;:-- asl<'r on the A m cncan c·oast m our historv." said H ussl•ll Tram, hl0.1d of th·e U.S . En v1ronme nlal Protection Agency The aged, rusting \'esscl called a "sus p('Ct ship" by thl· Coast Guard because of 19 pn· v1ous m ishaps since 1964 pikrl onto the Middle Hip Shoals '1.7 miles southeast of this island re sort one week ago today Sh<' wa'i 10 miles off course whl•nshehlt No was injured m the pile.up , and no one was aboard when she brokeupTuesday. The Coast Guard SaJd mc, .. t or the cargo washed into thc oce<1n "hen her foredeck and aft sect111n parted in 10 foot seas "J am convinccd some or the 011 has gotten to <il·org<'s Hank. · Coast Guard Rt•ar Adm Jamt'!> P Stewart told reporll'r~ The \'t'SSel was on its way from \'enezuela l o Salcm . Ma s., Stewart s aid an investigation 'bowed the s hip's mast<'r was nut using all of navigating cqu1pm1•nt avail able to h 1 m. and that th(' sh111 was not kept in repair <See SPILL. Pagf' 1\2) Saddle back's School Vote Field Now 10 Thf' number or pottonllal I' Jn d1dates m the Saddlt'hack \'allt'Y L'nified School Dis t net ., M arrh ij trustee election hJs incn'asl'<l to 10 Arthur E. Kre1us. ;.i retired bust ness consuftant who lives at 3317 n Via Carrizo. Laguna Hills.· look papers from the county Registrar of Voters office Tuesday ind1cat ing his intent to run for one or two vacant seats. Only one person, Marvin Sliver of Mission Viejo, has actually filed the papers which will of ficially put' his n ameon\hc ballot Candidates have until 5 11 m Dec. 3-0 to file the papers. Others who have said they will run a re incumbents William. Kohler and Dennis Smith, .plus Gi!rald Kl ein. Mary Phil~ps. Clif- ford Boehmer , Michael Clancy, Steven Hackbarth and William Kelly in 1966, the Army s aid. The purpose or the tests was to determin e th e nation 's vulnerability lo possible enemy biological attack and the U.S. ability to detect such an attack, the spokesman said. The s ubstance u~ed in aJI the tests was Serratia Marcescens, which the Army says "is present throughout the environment and <See GERM S, PageA2> AP Wl•t0"61<1 Hot Dog Stand Wrecked Chicago Mayor Eulogized CHICAGO IAPI Mayor Hichard J. Dulcy, leader for almos t a qu<irter of a century of the largest political machine in the nation, was eulogized today as a man who would have placed political power "[ar down on his list of prior ities." F'ircmen s weep up thl' remains of a hot dog stand near tht· downtown section of Los An geles after a motorist lo!->l control of his ('<JI' an<J <.'rashetl throu~h the !'>land. Two people· wcrl' serious ly injured a nd thc- drivcr was <.irrcstc..'<i. Daley died Monday of a heart attack in his dol·tor's office. He was 74 President elect Carter. Vice President Nelson A Rockefeller and Sen. Edward M. Kennedy <D·Mass I , were among the dignitaries and hundreds of local a nd s tate pol1t1cians. of- fi cehold ers :ind p o l itical Jobholders who Jllcnded his funeral Heated Arguments End MD Sex Case The Roman Catholic sen.·ices wert' held in th(' Nativity of Our Lor<f Church, Just a few minutes' walk from where the mavor was born and from the bungalow where ht> livl'd most of his life ''lk was known everywhere as a man of power and inevitably that meant oolttical oower." said lht• Rt•v . Gilbert Graham, a fri€'nd of the J);1ley family, who dehv('rcd th<.' culogy "I know he would have placed that far down on his list or priorities ... I n acc ord ance w1lh the family's wish('S, rl'porters were barred form thl' ser vices. They wa1tC'd outside with a crowd of about 300 people in bitterly cold weather The scrv1ce was broad- f~c DALEY. PageA2> By TOM BARLEY Of ti.. 0•11• '°"°'Suri ,Jury d c lt be rat1ons were scheduled to open today after Tuesday's heated and somet.Jmes lurid closing arguments 1n the rape trial of Dr. Ross McClure of South Laguna. The eight·woman. four-man Orange County Superior Court jury heard prosecutor Maurice Evans condemn the doctor as "perverted .. as h<' asked for a finding of guilty of rape and s(·x perversion charges Dr . McClure's attorney , Leon ard Mcflrid<', che1llcngcd E vans· conclusions and re- minded the jury or the tape switched on by Dr. McClure at the height of his admitted sexual activity Dr. McClure is accused of in Jecting a 22·year-old patient w1lh enough Valium so that sh(' "couldn't talk. couldn't think and could barely keep her eyes open .. before sexually assaulting her m hisofficeJan . 7 Homage Nixed Group Won't Mourn Daley SAN DI EGO <AP) -The late Mayor Ric~ard J Daley of Chicago was described as "ruthl ess" a nd "corrupt" by San Diego County supervisors as they refused to quit work early in memory of him. Three of lhe fi ve supervisors voted Tuesday to re- ject a resolution honoring DaJey, who died Monday. The 22-year Chicago mayor "ran a political machine that ran roughshod over people's rights." Supervisor Dick Brown said. "The man is dead," commenlcd Supervisor Jack Walsh. "If we havC1nothing good to say, let's go on to something else." Mc Bride throughout the trial has <'onceded that his cUent gave the young wom an a small Valium injection but it was done as stan- dard practice to relax her and that the sexual encounter that. followed was entered into wili ingly by both the doctor and the patient. Evans, waving the pati<.'nL's medical chart before the jury, pointed out that Dr. McClure failed to record the injection he admitted giving lh!' patient as (See DOCTOR, Page A21 Hearing Set On Mental Health Lease /\. J an 4 public hcanng has been scheduled by Orange Coun- ty supervisors on the proposed lease of a five-bedroom Mission Viejo home to the Cflunty Depart· ment of Mental Health. The home. at 27112 Jeronimo Road, wou ld be used as a shelter home to provide counsehng to troubled teenagers. The proposed SSOO·a -month lease was recommended ma 3·1 vote by members of the Mission Viejo Municipal Advisory Coun- cil. .,. The proposal has been opposed by neighbors immediately sur- rounding the First Christian Church proper\.y but has won support from high school slu- denls and othe r community groups . The hearing will be held during supervisors' 9:30 a.m. session at the board meeting room. Sixth and Sycamore Streets, Santa Ana Cop KiJls GG WollUlll In Raid , ' A 29-year-old woman was ac· c1dentally shot to death Tues- day night whe n law enforce. ment .officers a rrested two San Bernardino mu rdcr s us pects holed up in a Garden Grove apartment Police said Donna Russell or Hesperia was mortally wounded by a bullet accidentally fired by a Sao Bernardino County sheriff's deputy in the arresting party. According lo Garden Grove police, Mrs. Russell, wife of one of the murd<>r s uspects , was struck in the chest by the single s hot fi red by L t. Ronald Forbush The woman reportedly was one of three people inside Apartme nt G o.1t 1221 Beach Blvd when four San Bernardino County dcput1c:. and a cont· ingent of Garden Grove police went ther e m :.earch ol the murder suc;pects It was whl•n th<' arrcslmg or- f1cers were Jostling to get inside the apartment that the fatal shot was fired, polite i.auf. Target of the arresting party were two men accused or the shotgun slaying earlier this month of a 17 year .old San Bernardino youth Arrested on tht• murder war. rants after .hcmg captured in the G ardC'n Grove apartment were Gary L<'c Hussell, 30, or Hesperia and Guy Sterling Stubbs. 21. of San Bernardino. Pohee sairl Stubbs was cap· lured when he tri<'d to fl ee through a r ear door while Russell, the s hooting victim 's husband, surtf'n der<'CI inside tho apartment Destroyer Home \\" f! at her Sunny through Thursday -with some high cloud.inesa. , Hi r the coast about 81, n to about 40 Test Disparities 'Expected' SAN DIEGO CAP) T he guided missile destroyer Gridley came home Tuesday after six months in the Western Pacific. l~SID E TfJO..\ ~ Coaat nrea churches are plann i ng a number of Chrhtmos eve and day aervicea to celebrate the /e,c~ holtdoy. Plocea and timu on Page A9 tqday lnde~ By ANNE COOPER and WILUA M SCHREIBER OI "'9 O•llY l>llot Slaft San Clemente's Las PaJmas School logged some of Orange County's lowest California As- sessment Program test scores this' year -but that was jus t about what the state expected. And at Moulton School In Lacuna Niguel, the scores were among the highest in the county, aaaln falling within or near the pre-determined state "expectan· cy band" for that particular IChool. Both schools arc in the same district, Capistrano Unified. 11>ey are sep1rated by 1ess than 10 mile! ln a district \Mt covers 20 percen~ of the county's land area. Two top CUSD administrators contended in an interview th.ls week that there are many re- asons for the wide disparity of scores In a breakdown of the dis· tricl's 15 schools, Including such thln'-s as student attitudes and !am1liarity with testing formats. ' But they argued that the primary factors leading to such a variety are family lifestyle, parental lnvolvetnent and broad social, cultural and economic differences of the district's populaUon. District Supt. Jerome Thomsley and Pbillp Crignoo. assistant aupetin~t for tn·J structional services, said CUSD is "the most beterogeileous" in terms of ethnic and cultural makeup of all dlstric\s south of Costa Mesa. "A high correlation exi11ts between socio.economic condi· U o ns afld test scores," Thornsley said. "Test results rf'Oert the makeup of tho dis· trict. \I Thn atate testing program ex· amint-s first, second, third, sixth and 12th 1raders in arta.s such as readlna. w?1ttcn expression, apelllni and metbematlca. Butd on test results, each school iets a percentile ranking based on a statewide scale ol 100 ---_..... -------------------- points for each grade ~el and subject. In addition, Grignon noted, every school has an expect81?cy band prepared by the stale using de mographic information sup- plied by the dlslri<'t data on the composition of the popula· Uon serving each school -and past test results. The ndmloistrators !'laid the population serving l..as Palmas, for example, is comprised of a numbe r of l o w i ncome or transient hmllles C!'luch as mllltary dependents) and a significant number ol MeJtican- Amerlcan1 and Vietnamese. Hence. Thornsley conterided, <See TESTS, P a1e A2> AQVICKSHOT ON COLDSP<Tf ''I sold It right away. If I'd had eight of the m, I could have sold t.h.em all." Here's the ad that sparked the sale for this Ncwpcrt Beach man: '" Cu n f'ros trrrr Coldspot refrlg. S1'l° Xlnt Cond. XXX·XXXX ti you have a refrigerator, or anythlng else, you'd like to con- vert to cash -call 642-5678. Daily P\Jot clHslneds ml\kc it easy to put a few words to work for you. ·A ... :;;;;2==0=A•IL=-Y;;;;P;;;;l;;;;L;:;O;:T,....;o,.S•8--m;;;:::w_ed_neaday. Oee11 mber 22, 1978 DJ Guilty Of Perjury f',.._P~AJ TE ST DISPARITY. • • Nt;Wi\HK, N J <AP> - Frankie Crocker , ;,a h•;idmg c1a11c Jockey and proaram dJrector In New York J1n<t lm Anr.eles, wus convict cd today of lying to a 1;rtlncl jury investiga ting payola in the record industry A federa l court JW"Y re· turnl•d the Yt'rtJ1rt aftt·r a two week trrnl und nine hours of d t•libcraliuns. Crooker c ould be sen· teneed to fi ve year s in jail and fined $10,000, said Ai-· :;t. ll S, Attorney Hobt·rt rtomuno. Crocker. who hus J home in Heverly Jl1ll "l and a )X!n· thouse in Manhattan, was convicted of i:aving per- jured testi mony to a grand JUry inves tigatani.: allc~a li o n s h e r ece i ved thousands of d ullJrs In cash lo plug and gave air time to records on WHl."i- Hadio, New York. when· he is progrJm director test scorts there are far lower than the CUSD :schools serving more stable, homogeneous. middle class c ommwutle!\ such u Laguna Niguel and Ml:s:sion Viejo. Las Palm as• highest score was in s ixth grade math -a percentJle ranking of 32. That means 32 percent of all sixth graders In California scored the same or lower and 68 (>(!rcenl scored higher . The lowes t score a l Las Palmas wais a 19 in sixth grade spelling, which Grignon said r e fle cts l h e d c fi c i (•n c y an language skills of studenb who i.peak little English By contrast. Moulton School 'i. highest was the 92nd JX:n•cntiJe in first grade rcHding, with a low of 70 in sixth grade spelling Even within commumties with mor e than one school. Thornsley noted that there can be sizeable va r iatio n s in scores. S an Clemente's Ole Hanson School consistently scored 60 percentile points more than Las Palmas, which is only a fe w rrules away. 8238,000 Yearly Pact County Approves Paramedic Funding ' Orange County supervisors agreed Tuesd ay that the UC Irvine Medi cal Center should be given a one-year, $236,000 con· tract to tr a an par a medics. The Supervisors' action had the effect of ending a long rivalry 'between the med ical center and Santa Ana-Tustin Community Hospital for the paramedic tram· ing contract. However , the door was left a ja r for the hos pital whe n hospital administrator Wayne Schroeder said 1t might be poss1- 'ble to train pa ramedics al no cost to the county . · Thal proposal was based on a suggestion th;it SantJ /\na College and S('hrot'<ll•r !> ho!>p1tal might com btnl' to offc·r a train mg progra m as p:.irl of the college's regular ~·urric ulum . fo~o r n ow . h o wever, UC l Mediral Ccntt•r as 1n and Santa ~a-Tustin Com murlJly llosp1tal JS OUI Only Supc r vi!>or Laurc·ncc Schmit f a v o r e d continuing com pt't1t1on be tween the two faci lities as he> c asl tht• lone dis sentmg vote 1n the 4 lo 1 ballot that won the day for the mcdicaJ center. Schmit pointed out that the m c'<1 1cJl ccnt<'r had Jowert"'<l its par am4'!11 c training b ad by $63.000 afll•r the hO!"pitaJ began it:> bid for the contract /\n d . S c h mit notC'd. Schroeder's proposal was low<'r in cost than thl' UC! Ml'<l•<'al Center offer But Schmit ' arguments were offset by a report from the county Emergt•ncv ~T cd1t.1I Care Com mittee that s uirncst\XI the proven SPILL ... Th e capta in o f t h<' Ar~o Merchant. G <>or~c Papadopoulos, was summon<>rl l<>day to clellver a . d<•po,1t 1on Cln t h•· ~roundan~ in ()pen rourt lie <11a 1d the rrnson for the ~round 1ni: w:t"I "I ~as an th4• wrong po'i1llon " He 1~ bein~ 'IU<'d by C JJX' Cod f1 11 hprmen ~h o dPmand S60 m1ll1on In dam agt'i. Th<>y rl.um 1n lhc1r 'iUll aJ?aan\l thc captain and ~h1 p'"I owner' that U\(' <1p1ll wall rollt man y o f th f'm t he tr hvehhoods bee nusc oC polluted seas At a hcar ln>i this momlng, US Magistra t e Lawrence Cohen ruled that P a p nd op oulos' testimony would ht• g1vrn in priva te fl was a revers nl In Cohen's position, and he 11ald he· had "come to a differe nt con· clusion" about allowingpuhltc de· positions after r e.e xamining rules f!Ovt'rning court prl'l('l'dure. Oi.ANOf COAST DAILY PILOT ~:r.~~~~~,~··r, ~'=·= :~:: c:,=. CM\t l>\ltUl\"'"'°4 Comc,;u'" ~1•t•rf1lt0fli\ u• ~fl\~ ~#\dAy lf\fOiuQI\ f:rt1',.-V ffW' (O'll• ........ N~WCM'M"t A•.t<,.. t1Wl"l1•""'"" """"" f """" ''""' V•ll•• ''"'*",. \•dflf'b ... 11; V.-i'lf"f 4M l ~<it ..... f't \owlf'l,(N\f ~\f~f"'9...,._.ffod1 '""''" '" PVN•\ltf-4 \•h1td•n .,., ~ •• , ,.._ O'•MtO.I DVt>0"'•"4l •'•"' •.•• 1'IO wrut ··~ \UH i CMt,. Mt-"" (•htA1*'1•9'•1" .... ,., ...... ~'"* .. f'lt ~ °""''""' JH•• (-\I "•<t lt'tt\Hknt •ftd ti...,•I M.iMqtr T_,,11_.I (ftllft~ , ... _,.,,,__ ............ ,.,. ... a. ....... .._ ... _. "'" """'..,, ............... ..... t.dcflebHll Vlllley Ottlce 'llOI U ,ti lilt .. •I~~,,_,., OfflcH t.Mlo Mtu ))Owt11 .. , Sl....i lf""<lf'tlfl\llOt~· llllt .. llC~-·.,O u-.. H~ 11~0,_.,,t\lr .. 1 Ttltpllone (7 H )M2'4321 CIH alfled Adw1,,llll1'111 Ml·N1' t.oollt!Wlt-Vlllty-Otfl<• 6t1·.,10 "·-~c .......... 4tl-M)O ="T: :.::.:. °:.:%. c::::.:::1:t.:.~:-;. ....... , ., .. ".'''""'•"" ,_.,.,,. ........ "•'••vctf •lt"•wt ,_..<••• •tt"'ltu tM et _ ...... _. ~ft':',.c,~•.",O::!~r.. ,:,",;' ,~::, ~·:. =~~~ :~~ _,,. "'"".,, quahly of medical center train- ing j ustified the higher cost. Both the committee and the supervisors who supported the medical center contract made it clear that Santa Ana·Tustin Community Hospital's service as not below par. Fro.. Page A J GERMS ... is considered not lo cause dis- ease." The news paper Newsday of Long Jslancl . ~ Y , r l•porlC'd T uesday tha t one m ;rn a hos pital pat1C'nt clied after the 1950 lest an San Francisco and that dea th was caused by Ser rat1a in his bloodstream. Quoting unnamed sources and documents, lhC' newspaper alsc1 said that following the 1952 lest at fo't . McClella n, the numb<Jr of pneumoni a cases more than doubled i n the s urrounding county. ll said there also wa~ an an creasE' in pne umorua d(·aths in the Key West ar ea after the tesl there and added that Serratia has been identified as a ran ? cause of pneumonia. Records an the Alabama Stale lleaJth Depar tment confirm an increase in the number or report· ed cases of pneumoni a an Calhoun County. Ala • where Ft McClellan 1s locJte<i But Dr Freder ick Wolf, head of the Ala ba ma Bu reau uf Preventable Diseases, said the increase could have come Crom other causes. He said the numt>f'r of cases j\1mped from 42 in 1950 lo 9fl the followang year and 33.1 In 1952. then d roppt'd to 139 an 195.1. By 1!157, it had dropped Lo l'ight. Wolf said there was a mild 1•p1dt•mic of in!Jueni a late in 1951 .ind t>:ulv 1952 which t ould havt• lt'<i to an ancrcasl' an pneumorua. The Army acknowl e<hied that Serratia Ma rces ccn' "rould con ce1vably act as ;&n opportunist .lnd produce a n infection" in persons who lack immunity lo most diseases "The number of incidents of Serratia Ma r ccscens infection cannot be determined because it is not a reportable disease It oc· curs in isola ted circumstances and ind1v1duals or is invanably associated with some other dis· ease or injury which lowers the resistance.•' the Army said. The Army said one substance used only at Mechanicsburg had the potential of causin~ a disease in persons lacking resistance. A spokesman s aid it was felt that the s ubstance -Aspergillus FUmigatus was "rather harm· less." Newsday said the s ub· stance is a fungus which can be fatal to humans. A s econd subs tance used in the tests m all of the places except New York, the Pentagon and Key West. is celled "Bacillus Globigii," which the Army said is not considered to cause disease. F,....PageAJ DALEY ••. caat outalde on speakers. After the Mass of the Resurrec· lion, Daley was burled ln Holy Sepulchre Cemetery i" Worth, a suburb south o( Chicago. The mourners Included Sen. Georee McGover n , the Democratic party's pruldent.ial atandard ·bearer In 1972 and a.mon e those who sharply criUctied Daley and hia pollc force during Use tumultuous 1988 Democratic National Convention According to Thomsley. such a variation between schools can throw off the d1~trlcl'i. overull average on the lest scon 'S, ma>c- i.nat it appear lowt•r lhMn lb08e of aw-roundin& districts. "But if you look at our schools In Mission Viejo, for example, you won't see much difference between their scores and those or the Saddleback Unified School District, which also serves part of Mission Viejo," he s aid. The CUSD <'hier said Sad- dleback Unified 's overall district scores wer e hig her because it serves a mon • .. homogeneous" community. One of the things that con cerned Thornsl{'y about the state testing progra m is the use of the expectancy bands lie said that while a school may be expected to score at the low end of the percentile scale. its students must cope with a "re- al world" Cull of people who pro- bably fe ll near or above the mid- dle of that range. Thornsley said 1t is the dis- lr1ct 's r esponsibility to prevent its students from being locked in· to a category that will prevent them from oper ating in society as a whole. 'fhornsley and Grignon s aid they a ttribute far less im· portance to the stale scores than to the district's own testing pro- gram. Despite that, the ad· minis lrators said the state tests have shown areas where the dis· trict could improve its edura· llonal programs . For one thing, Thomsley said, the schools could start teaching subJects such as spelling and re- ading in a form at similar to the tes ts. "Having these kids take the stale tests without understanding the formal can amount to having them play a game when they don't know the rules,'' he said Jn addition , the s tudents' fra me of mind toward the tests can be adJus ted by insWling the U\ought that the resul ts arc "the district's report card." Grignon noted that more e m- phasis -will be given to subjects such a s rl'ad in g and som e thought 1s being given lo adopt· ing a standa rd district spelling tl'xtbook tQ bring up lagging :.cores in that ar ea . And depending on how each school prinC'i pa I evaluates his school's perform a nee. Thornsley said there may o lso be a n('C() lo c•x amin c adm1nis trn t1 o n performan<'e ai-well. Burglars Hit Viejo Homes Burglarli active in the Mis;;ion V1eJo area have carried off Jewelry, tools and a s urfboard Jointly valued at more than $000 in raids on two homes. Orange County sheriff's of· ficcrs s aid jewe lry valued at $450 was lilolen from the mas ter bedroom at the home or John Walter Gould. 54, of 25881 Via Pera. The m ethod of entry has no~ been determined. OC'pulies said a surf board and tool boxes valued al $460 were stolen from the home of Lyle E. Hopp, 40, of 24575 Mosquero Drive, by burglars who pried open the door while the family was oul Christmas shopping. Utah Killer In I solation SA LT L AKE ClT Y CAP> -Of· fi cials at the Utah Stale Prison s ay Gary Gilmore has been or- dered into isolation for 45 days, more than long enough to last Un· t1l his J an. 17 C'xecut1on date. Deputy w arden Leon Hatch, chairman or the Utah State Prison disciplinary committee. s aid Tuesday that officials had given the convicted killer .three 15-day terms of isolation for mis· behavior. I' I First for Capo Unified Of!IY """' St.II ....... Maureen Hcdfield (left> and Corene Barr are the first wo m en t o b <' appoinll•<.l !-.Chool prin c ipa ls in the C:.s pistr:.sno U01r1t'li School L>istrict.. Mrs ._ Redfield, cu_r· rcntly a ssist ant pnnc1p:.sl a l Dana Hill~ High School, will be pr ind pal of Shor cchffs J unior J h gh, scheduled .to open m S;m Clemente in September . Mrs. B~rr, ~~IS· tartl princ ipal nt the VieJO Elem.entary School m Mission Viejo, will be C\Ss ignoo a school sn F ebrua r y. ~~~~~~~~~~~~ Kuyper's Contract Renewed by County O~•ly Pllol Stiff P"Olo FOUR MORE YEARS County Counsel Kuyper Orange County supervisors un- ammously voted Tuesday to re· ha re County Counsel Adrian Kuyper of Laguna Beach for another four years. Kuyper's re hiring came as part of a ritu1ll that gives county 1;upervisors a chance to review the ir c hie f legal counsel'l> perform an cc. Jn Kuyper 's case, the board's confidence was expressed in a S-0 \'Ole that. for the fourth time ~•nee 1964. m ade him chief of the county's battery of 25 attorneys Thl' 48-ycar·old county counsel ,., paid S.Sl .288 a year for his lei;:al and administra tive services. Arafa t An swe r s NIC0 $1A. Cyprus (AP) Palestinian leader Yas ir Arafat said today his movement will set up a Palestinian state on "any piece of liberated Palestinian soil," the Saudi slate radio re· ported. RAISES PRIVATE? • • • Robert Fl•r gu .. on. l11rct·tor of planni ng and d cve lopml·Ot. S32.340 J am<'!> M ti d11•l I , ad min 1s t rat o r '' r JH• r s on n 1• I services, S32 ,639 -Gilhert Mon•no, bu.,mt'ss manager. SJ0.680. -John Cooper. assistant to the superintende nt and d1 rt'clor of classified pe rsonnel, 529,196. Unde r the merit pay system. ''confide ntial " SN'r e larics , s upervisory and mana~emenl employes could have recc1vC'd anywhe re from a zer o Lo s ix per· r ent raise. The nine secretaries received the highest perccnta~c raise but the least money or thC' three groupings of employt's. These serr e t <1r1cs, c·a ch of who m d ea ls w ith e mploye negotiations and other matteri. conside red confldent1al, rece1vt'd the maximum !>IX 1wrc1•nt ra1sE' The g roup 1i. being paid a total or $119,820. T his as ~.782 more than they were pa id last year, The district 's 11 classified supervisory employes, who do not hold edurat1onal credentials but perform management Cunc t1ons. received an avcral(e 5 048 percent r aise. This group of c mploycs, th is year. is receiving a totul 11f $186,783, or $8,976 more than tht·y were paid last year. The district 's 47 certifi cated management employes, which includes district administrators, sr hool principals and vice prin· c1pals. received an average 4.432 percent raise. Managemcnl cmploycs arc re· ceiving a total of $1 ,274,453 this year , which is $54,081 more than last year . Dr. Welte's s alary stiJl is set al tJB.000, the same figure included an his r ontract. when he was made superintendent in June, 1975. Any ra ise for the superinten- dent would be determined by trustees. Last year. he refused the trustees' off er of a raise. Viejo Man Cited For P e tty Theft A Miss ion Viejo resident who allegc>dly took Christmas lights valued at $3.56 from a Laguna Halls Mall store without paying for them has been cited by Orange County sheriff's orticers on petty theft-shoplift charges. Deputies issued the citation to Charles Elmer Kriss. 36, of 368.')2 Magdalena Lane, after a com· plaint was filed by officials of the J .C. Penney department store DA to Probe Shooting NB Police Seek Halt to Coverup Fears By JOANNE REYNOWS OIWM Oelly 11'1 ... St•ff The Orange County District At· torney has been asked by Newport Beach police to in· ve:atigate Friday's fatal shooting ol a bystander during a robbery stakeout. The District Attorney has been brought into the inve!llgatlon In an effort to nllay community fears that any wrong dolng in lhc incldent could be covered Ut> by police, said Newport police Capt. Richard Ham ilton. The man arr ested in the Cite, Richard William Sutton. 20, San Clemente, wa~ 11lated to appear ln court today to hear the reading of the 34 char1es filed Allllnst him. Those ch ar1es include 17 count.a or armed robbery with a prior conviction and l'7 count.a of commlaaion of a robbery wtt.b a loaded l\Ul. · Sutton still faces the possibhty of a murder c har~c being filed aiainst him under lhe stale tuw which holds tha t any homicide committed during a felony cnme can result in a chari::e or murdrr agiMt the defendant In the case. The vlctl m of the accldentnJ shooting, Joe Hines. 61, was a re· sident of Dana Point and a well· known figure In Corona del Mar where he worked as a htindyman. Vlaltatlon was scheduled until 9 o'clock tonight at Smith, Tuthlll and Lamb Mortuary. 518 N. Broadway, Santa Ana. A mortuary spokesman said ttineral services and burial will talte place later lhls WCClk ln Mushall, Te~. Capt. Hamilton said the DA 's lnve1t111tlon or the shooting btran Tuesday afternoon. "We have turned ovtr all of our ~ porta and phyalcaJ evidence to tbem,"bonld. Hamilton stressed that the de· partment is interested in getting a third party to tnvestigate the incident. He i;ald Newport police had asked for e coroner's inquest, hut were told that one has not been conducted in the county for more than 10 years. Hines died Friday night about an hour after being hit wlth a shotgun blast from the gun or Of· fleer Doug Thomas. Thomas a nd two other officers were s t aked out a t t he Albert.Ion 's m ark et in Corona del Mar walling tor a repeal hold up by a man who had vicUmbed markets ln the aouth county area for the past two months. They were pursuing Sutt.on, who bad allqedly Just robbed the market, when Thomas flred and Hinu appaNinUy stepped ln the line of flre. ' SACC VP Seeking SC Post Robert l .. Price, top ad· minialrator of Latcunu Hills Leisure World and vice president. of the Saddl c back Area Coordinat1n1 Council, filed Tues· day for elecllon to thu S11d· dlcback College board o f lru8tees. . Prico , 64 , o r 2547 2 Charlemagne ltoad. completed the neces sary forms for can· didacy just before ltiavlng on a three week vacation, a Leisure World :1pokesman said today. The spokes m an characterized Price's job at the retirement community as "companng loose- ly to that of a city manager." The trustee post he is seeking is now held by Dr. James Marshall. also of Leisure World. Marshall has been ser iously ill and has not indicated if he will run for another term. Price has been active in Sad- dleback Valley community aJ. fairs since moving to the area 12 years ago. Prior to taking his present job. Price s erved as city manager In municipahtses in the east and midwest over an 11-year span. lie also worked as an ad- ministration and lo~istics consul· tant for the federal government in such places as Afghanistan, the Marshall Islands and Guatemala. Price is a registered civil engineer and surveyor, a longtime member or the Interna- tional City Manage ment Associa- tion and a Scottish Rite Mason. Surf Soaring Along Coast; More Coming High winter tid es and :rnuthwesterly swells turned Orange Coast beaches into a s ur- fer's paradise tod ay. Consistent breakers r anging from three to seven feet were re- ported by lifeguards from Hunt- ington lo Laguna Beach and weather forecas ts call for more of the same on Thursday. About 700 s urfers took advan· tage or the winter surf today, ac- cording to a Huntington Beach lifeguard. Large crowds of vacationing surfers were als o r eported in Ne wport Be ac h and Laguna Beach. The combination or steady surf and a seven-fool high tide Tues· day caused some minor flooding along the coa st. The tide is drop- ping, however. and beachfronl officials said lemporary flooding was reauced today. E'rm. Page Al DOCTOR ... she lay on his examining table m her blue bikini panties. "She was in his office for only one reason." the prosecutor said. ''She was in pain Crom a back in·· jury. But what she got in the way of treatment was massage of breasts and sexual organs, an acl of or al copulation and the act of rape." McBride based his closing argument on the t ape of the inci- dent made by the doctor. He argued that the Dana Point woman was a willing participant in the love making and that the Valium was not designed to en· courage her Lo respond to his sex· ual overtures but was for relief of her pain "She n c vcr protested," McBride said . "She never told him to stop. She never asked him what he was doing. If you don't believe me. listen to the tape. "None of us really knows the truth," McBride added. And he urg('d the jur y to remember while it deliberates, that "sexual intercourse and oral copulation outs ide marr iage are not a crime. •'We're not trying the ml'dical profession here," the defense at· tomey said. "We're trying one man. Forget he's a doctor and look at him as a man." "And what a man," Evnns countered describing lhe defen· dant as :.a doctor who hides behind his hypodermic needle.'· Evans asked jurors not to al· low the imminence o f "Christmas and the traditional sea.on of good will" to allow sympath y to Influence their verdict. "This was M Act ot rape and an ad of oral copulation,'' he said. "And the law la the law at Chrfst maa or any other tJme of the year." Conflict Hinted WASHI NGTON CAP) -At least u Federal Commu.nlta· Uona Com ml11lon empl<»'tl havo financial tnteresta in companies re(ulated by the FCC, aecon:tint to a Cioneral AccounUnc Offtco stud)•.